0 THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING. 'MARCH 2. 1319. X . !! Vs. AS INDEPENDENT KEMTSPAPEtt C. g JACKSOW , thMshat Fubltabed titt day, afternoon nd mornin le ept Bandar f Uirnownl , at The Journal 4ng. Bfoeiieay m4 ItaUU etaset, rorUasd, Oregoav - " fentefed at the Peetoffioe at rortlend, Owi ir tnwmwlm through tl wOl scod4 ;. ci saatterw -s ' -, --:- ;-- THI-El'llONES Wain. 7JT! Hoeae,- A-SOSl. in J.n..nt MnW h these itabtn. - Tell the operate what eeoertaseat yo wast. lXRRIOM ADVERTISING KKPSBftKMTATITS , Heniemln Jtentnor Co.. Brunswwk BaUdi". ' 225 t'Uth STenaa. Raw Yorkj 900 Mailers Bonding. Chicago. Subscription term by nail is Qrego M,Wsh. ingtom - ; VAiuf iuobjtwo a Arnsajfoojo Om year...,. $300 t On Mouth.,.., f .80 SCKDAT One year.,. '..j.SQ I Una wantli . ... . .25 PAIXT (Jt0BiCO OB A8TEBWOOM) AND , SUNDAY On year. . . . t7.B0 1 I Ona month . . , . . t . ik': We. eir,: ara Amerfcaaa-f-n4 we stand for human libarty ! The -uplifting force of the American idee I imder oeery throne on earth. Franca. Brwil than ara ana victories. To redeem tba earth from king craft and oppression this is our mission I And we shall not fail. - God baa sown in oar. soil the seed of His millennial harvest. nd Ha will not lay the atekla to the ripen ing crop until His full and perfect daj baa one. -Henry W. Oredy. fc address before Merchants' Association, at Boston. Decem ber J3. 1S89. . WAVELETS AXD WAVES HE annual motion of the planets In their orbits deceives our eyes. They really move round the sun in. circles, or almost In circles. But if you look at a ring, a stove lid, or any other circle edgo- l wise you will see it as a straight r-1!V . . ... - people on ; tne eartn are ooiigea to look'at the orbits of the planets edgewise because they lie . la tha same; plane with the earth's orbit 5 AH the members of our solar system - go circling round the 6un on about the same level. So to use the other : planets ' seem to swing' first a fixed distance to the right. Then they i slop and swing the same distance -back to the left, like a pendulum vibrating. , .... ' Each planet might, so far as our : eyes-are : concerned, be the bob tf ; a pendulum swinging back and forth in the sky. This illusion made -it very, difficult for the old "astrono 1 mers to figures out their real move meats. It was only by the accumu lation of small hints and suggestions 1 that. the trutnaA. built up in the ? process of the ages. A pendulum or ! a. star . which swings back and t forth, repeating the same path per 1 petually, is said to oscillate, or vi j brate Men of science rather-prefer ; the word "oscillate" in their books, ! though It means essentially the samel the bother hand, that - New Thought ; lecturers- seldom speak of Moscnia- JMiops,. but usually of "vibrations" When an-oscillation is set up in I' air or. water It travels forward in the form of a wave. First one set T of particles oscillate. They impart " their motion to the set next them and themselves come to rest The second set of particles oscillate .in m their , turn "and, pass tlje motion on it- to a third set. Each set of particles after It has oscillated comes to rest ' f again,- though not always instantly. The vibration may die out slowly j5 er instantaneously. It depends on ; cireumstaooeav l The ocean is continuously osoil-l- lating under the force of vinds. i tides, earthquakes. The tides swing the entire body ; of the ocean back I - and forth twice a day.;. 'The vInds , cause "Waves, which travel in all I directions. They run up along the -1 sands of the shore , in a- thousand j. forms, little and big, slow and swift 1 But if you will stand by the shore ; and watch the waves for an hour f; you wille rewarded with the sight j of -. two -or three enormous ones, i' which eome in from China, perhaps, V or Honolulu at least, overtopping j; all f the wavelets, ' frothing at the r crest, combing as they : break, and ; dashing far -up the beach before they I lose their momentum. ' It you have an inquiring mind you will, wonder what caused Hue" over towering billow among u the little . ones. The ; answer is obvious. It was caused by the union of .count- . less wavelets- which-- happened to vibrate In harmony. Wave; motions r .have the habit of adding- themselves f 'together with astonishing . results. ' m. The phenomenon can be made 1 visible by. tying one end of a long half inch, rope . to a post and holding ;the other in the1 hand. While it f Swings freely Jerk It suddenly, aA wave . will travel along the rope to 2 the post- .Thera.ft will be reflected. or -turned back on its course, and. finally, reach your hand; again, If tne rope is not too, stiff. By adding jerk to jerk in due succession .you can set a series of waves .traveling, some running one way.? some tha other. .Occasionally two of them will meet or Interfere. If : their v vibrations are in unison they will produce double the effect of either one aloneand you will be delighted with a repetition :of. the mammoth ,wav -on thesea shor or something -of the: same nature. t if, cot quite so ' big.- - Little wavo added ..to little waya;makes uiy mately - a big. wave. Nobody an; foretell Just bow big it , may become. - But "the caretakers of suspension bridges are constantly on guard aaginst such accumulation of wavelets. Aa a rule they' do riot like to see either dogs or horses trotting across, A dor, oo matter how email "he may be, ' starts - vibra tions In the metal of the bridge every time he puts down a paw- Xf be were . allowed to trot all . the way across, the vibrations he sets going might so accumulate asto endanger the structures Certainly -it would be endangered if dogs and horses were allowed to trot across habitually. The strongest suspension bridge o the world could be shaken down by continually tapping one of the cables with v tack hammer if ,the taps were properly timed, r." v Beware of little waves. The Wg waves which travel cross the seas in .mountain bjghts can be guarded against Danger . lurks in the Im perceptible' vibrations which suddenly join' forces 'In' a way that cannot be foreseen and wreck a suspension bridge or a civilization. , The guardians of our suspension bridges -would be grateful-' If they could keep all the vibrations in their structures ' in plain sight for they could then take measures to counter act their effect It is the hidden waves that they fear and have reason to fear, the ; waves that travel back and 'forth in the, substance of thu metal, never showing themselves on the surface, .but preparing for a union that means destruction. So vibrations travel under the smooth, inert surface of the . social order. The constant taps of stealthy commercialism and secret rapacity ; on the wires of great enterprises. like tne League or rations, mat promise delivery of ; the masses of mankind from ' super life burdens might gather in one mighty power wave and break down a social order. , Two workers in a Brooklyn brush factory were found to be ipfected with anthrax. Bristles imported from China and used In maklngthe brushes were scraped, and white mice inocu lated with a solution of the scraping, dievl in 21 to AS hours. Post mortem showed : the organs of the mice to be infected with anthrax bacilli. The workings of science are marvelous. A WORLD EVENT It wuuijj De worm a journey across the continent to be present at Ifcrr New York mass meeting A C J -X L S - " ; J a. tT t: I 10 u auaressea oy iresiueui vvii- son and former President Taft The speakers, the time, the themo will create a scene inspiring be-yjid compare. The president and the only living ex-president, 'standing before an audience that .will jam the great theatre ' to r capacity, standing there and togethjerdeliveringibiow3 in de fense oft te causey rip which the masses ana the best minds- of the whole word are struggling, will be a setting for - an,, occasion that men now young will " tell about in the days of their sere and yellovTleaf. .The theme will be the noblest that has been before the world In a cen tury, and the cause, in what it prom ises for mankind, the greatest since Jesus Christ began his labors. , A mighty f audience moved by it and thrilled i with it will create such an atmosphere as. was never felt in the old Metropolitan; Opera House, over whose stage the mightiest figures in every- walk in America have passed. I ' " Not in what will be said there, but invhal will be done there, the oc casion will have an electrical effect throughout this ' country and thja world. To Americans It will be; a mighty i express! on of the fixed fact that inj extraordinary times and ex traordinary causes, great Americans are Americans first and partisans afterward. To the war-wrecked peo ples off Europe it will be a reassur ing omen' that the two living Ameri cans la. whom . the people of this country have expressed their greatest confidence and on whom they have bestowed Hheir greatest ' gifts and highest' authority are exponents and advocates of an . order on earth in which wars will be stayed, rule be by reason, justice be triumphant and the rights- of man be supreme. The occasion will not be a great mass meeting merely. It will be a work! event. You must pay one fourth of the tax on your net 1918 - Income bv Marches. You may paye balahce in quarterly installments, or you may .pay all . on f March 15- Hereto fore ,the full amount; of the . tax has been payable on June 13, but the process is changed by the new reve nue , law. A full statement of tha workings of , the law appeared in last sunaay's Journal. - WALT WHITMAN THIS - is Walt Whitman's centen nial, year." Ho was born In 1819. He died 1892,' 17 years ago, but he has not yetsbeoome quite respectable. Our free j libraries keep his "Leaves , of Grass" Under t lock and key lesOt pollute the morals of the public, ; , . ; - Walt did not pass his early years at college, luckily, for our literature. He, started out as an errand boy and graduated from that exoellent school Into a printing ; office. Then he taught school for a, while, and finally edited i paper of his - own. Thus he acquired the best kind of an old fashioned genuine American educa tion .like' Lincoln and Franklin, i. ' - He - traveled -.- a ' good deal but not in palaoe cars. His carpenter's trade, w-hiolA.be -r learned of bis i father, enabled him to earn1 a living any where. Like another carpenter, ; he slept where night overtook him, and knade friends with publicans and sinners. . - ; . . 4 All his . life Walt sought pref erence the company and talk of com mon - worklngmen. Intelligent ; him self, he" liked . intelligent company. The society ; of ' "uncommon"! people requires i one . to adopt their: habits of thought, beliefs, prejudices, Tftfey detest, argument. .They, outlaw od dities, i. Everybody, 'must conform. Walt never conformed in everything. It if : easy to Imagine the figure he would have cut in refined circles with hlreasy, muscular manners, bis flannel shirt, his habit of going to the roots, of things in his talk. But he never entered any drawlqg rooms In, person ' and his books seldom enter them now, Like Byron, Shelley, Keats, he did his great work around the age o( 30. ' His "Leaves ; of Grass" was Ignored by everybody until Ralph Waldo Emerson praised' It, and thea It shocked everybody. It mentioned subjects which chaste Victorian liter ature was supposed to pass over in silence. Walt Whitman was? one of our greatest poets. With Mark Twain he stands in the forefront of our literature. ' It is assumed that the: public realized and appreciated the very fall, very complete and very, f a:r reports of ', the legislative proceedings carried by The Journal. Debates, parliamentary moves and. all the other proceedings were faithfully and impartially recounted as they happened. The Journal's work is a new high record in reporting; legis lative lessions In Oregon. THE LATE. SESSION ' IN THE past It has been usual for the people; to follow each recur ring i session of . the legislature to its grave with doubled fists and menacing . lamentations. Thje time The Journal fails to hear the custom ary Ululation. There appears to be a sentiment, new as it may seem in Oregon history, that the legislature vvas, on the whole, a good legisla ture. There is reason for the senti ment. Politics, until the last few days of the session, was subordinated to leg islative ; effort. The result was leg islative j enactments .rather than po litical achievement Earnest men were n -thesenate and the house who had gone to Salem with a more insistent desire to pass bills than to pass the buck. These men predomi nated and made the session credi table. Esnecial credit for the generally pleasing outcome of. the session is due, , undoubtedly, to the hard work- ing members of the joint, ways and means committee 'of the senate and house, who, by their careful and tireless work, accomplished the seem ingly' impossible task of keeping the appropriations within the six per cent tax limitation amendment. When thg; session "opened, it was the concensus'"of ' oplalon that this qould foot be done. ; The governor called attention to the existing con ditions in his message and -doubted the ability of the leglslatorsTto; meet the money . demands .without disre garding the ltaUUUon.;;2hAt! they were able to do so and ' stm have money in tha bank was a pleasant surprise, 1 .V .- . It was a peculiar ; session. ;With the exception of . few perennial wan derers there was no lobby; to. hamper the. work or entangle the efforts of the members. There was no . Iron- bound organization in the senate, and. none at all in; the house. -There was no delegated leadership, do "or ganization whips?' no steam rollers toflattn out recalcitrant men or unwelcome measures. Individual leadership in either house sprang from personal ability and not from delegated authority. Generally speaking, men fought their own battles and won or lost them upon merit more than upon dicta tion. : ' It has been many times contended that a legislative : body without an organizatio.n machine would ; disinte grate! into a :mob, inefficient and in effective. The late session seems to belie i the theory. It did much work well. 4t took seven 'weeks to "finisn its labors, but, for the first time in the legislative history' of the state. it closed in the afternoon twilight and vvithout turmoil; strife, bitterness or hasty and. thoughtless action, in stead oi meeting its end in the pale hours of dawn with white faced and haggard members filling the last mo ments with discord and contention. It has done ; much to make people believe that even ; a legislative ses sion may"hot be entirely bad. after aU. Apartments in New York at $50,000 a year rental are the newest Idea; Nearly 140 a. day for mere rent -on the home nest , is some overhead. The ; new structure 1$ to be at the, corner of Fifth avenue and Seventy second street, the site for which H 62 by 172 feet and cost $1,250,000, The ; building will be 12 stories ' and Uf$ i biU for Its . constructlo will total $1,730,000. THE TAX TOTAL TAXES" to be raised in Multnomah county!r this year total $9,790,- 005.40. lit is an increase over last 1 yw of $1,314,231. .The oounty will pay 36.15 per cent, of the entire state axes. v The city of Portland wilt pay 96 per cent of the county taxes, : according to compilations by Assessor Reed, . . - - ..The growth in the cost of govern ment iai one of " the unexplained, facts fn civilization. The cost of the fed eral government before the late war had Increased more than 400 per cent since 1878,' though the population had Increased but 84 per TcenL The cost per capita increased nearly five fold id the period. , In 1816 there were 6327 names on the' federal' payrolls, or about one to every ,1300 of population. In 191t there -was one salary drawer on the federal payroll to every. 242 of popu lation. Our taxation has so risen that the total of all forms of taxes, federal, state and locai,t now eats . up one tenth , of. the" - national income. It means that one family in ten Is now supported 'byovernmental expend' ture directly, and probably three times as many indirectly. ;The in crease in what it costs us to : govern ourselves is going on,' at a'treroen dous ' pace: and npbody seems to know how to put on the brakes The Journal's League of Nations vote is not for those alone who favor the league. The balloting is .open asj well to those opposed. What is wanted is. a fair test of publio senti ment. Mail or bring -your ballot- ti The Journal. The Voting will not last "long. THE HORRORS OVER THERE TWO dollars a pound for dog meat, $7.50 a pound for horse meat and $30 a pound for pork are given out by the state depart ment at Washington as ruling prices for foods - in Russia.- Milk is sof scarce that thousands of babies are dying. ' The country is almost baro of all manufactured articles, espe cially wearing apparel. General strikes, assassination, hope lessness as to the future and turbu lence are prevalent In Germany. .When revolution is quieted by armed force, in one part of the country it breaks out in another. . . ! Famine conditions in Bohemia, hun ger, starvation and agony in Austria, desolation and destitution in Siberia and Bulgaria, slow death by starva tion In Poland and multitudes per ishing miserably from lack of food, clothing and the implements of agri culture in Armenia glimpse the hu man wretchedness still prevalent in countries touched by the war, nearly four months after the armistice was signed. Yet it is but a faint , oomparisou with! the horrible conditions in all these lands during the 51 months of the terrible conflict. The present slow ieath by the tortures of desti tution cannot kill In the numbers and, with the awful cruelty and bru tality that appalled civilization while actual fighting was in progress. It : is a strange thing for men to contend that the nations should not agree to act tSgether in an effort to prevent these horrors by estab lishing a system in which wars may beminimized, If hot prevented alto gether. Men in high.places at Wash ington are arguing -Walnst such, an agreement, semiiigly'oblfvfous to ah-i unconcerned about the awful misery. and suffering among the peoples of war stricken Europe. They seem not to realize that, if no League of Na tions is. formed, in the next . great war America may be the land into which these horrors will, be brought, with . our own people as the war racked and suffering victims of con-, fllct ; . , ' You have the opportunity now "to throw your influence against war and in favor of an agreement to en force peace. If "you f avop. su.oh , an agreement, fill out a coupon and mail or bring It to The Journal. It way help save your son or brother or husband from having to go out and fight in another war. r1-O A price list of the text books printed "and "sold by the state of Kansas reveals that the ordinary price of a "reading chart" is $12. Kansas 'sells It to the schools for $10.90. The saving exceeds, 10 per cent. On the third reader the saving is almost exactly 20 per cent Ga the Civics book it is barely less than 50 per cent. Word -oomes froni Kansas that' the state printed books are as good or better than those sold by the trust at higher prices. A CITY CHORUS THE great municipal chorus which is organizing in St Paul, capital i of j Minnesota, is . said to .have three purposes. The first is '"to fulfill the desire for musical expres sion." j Everybody who -desires to express; himself musically under competent direction is welcome in the choru without money and with out price. i ' . . - The second purpose Is "to create the ' desire for' musical expression," wh'ch is supposed to be a good thing in itself apart from any possible fi nancial returns. The St Paul au thorities, including the mayor whose name is Hodgson, believe in expres sion, at least they believe in one kind of expression. Some poet has remarked that the Almignty's rea son for creating the world was to express himself, .' : The third reason for forming and supporting this chorus, ; which is likely" to include a thousand voices, is "to ,i add to the happiness of the people of St Paul." Here are a mayor In all his glory, and a city council, ; together with " V quantity of musical people, merchants and lawyers, openly ; proclaiming, that human happiness ; Is a thing .worth spending, municipal ' money on. . The city chorus seems to be a develop ment from - a Schubert club ' In St. Paul, -"which has had the curious habit of encouraging "assembly slng iQf'V ail ' ' performances. . -This Is very much . as If 'our symphony orchestra should take a recesS of half an r hour at , every performance and play old - home . songs - for i the audience to join : In singing. ' We wonder if . that would not be an at traction. In its way , "My Old Ken tucky Home" is Just as sound music as the VP'athetio Symphony," though not so grandly pretentious,' of course. Americans usually function only as listeners at musical performances. If they .were encouraged to Junction as performers, even slightly. It might help arouse- enthusiasm. It might kindle a latent' spark of genius here and there-into living flame. Any way, they I are going to try some thing of the sort in St Paul. ; The big municipal chorus of a thousand voices would delight the heart of the old hymn writer j who craved. "Oh for a thousand tongues to sing.' because it is obviously a direct answer to his prayer. . Letters From the People ( OomraunieaUona sent to The Journal for pub lication in this department should be written on only one aide of the paper, siiould not exceed SOO words in length and moat be signed by the w. ter, - whose mail address in iuli miut aooom pany the contribution. ) Does Not Aflree With Mrs. tlnruh Redmond, Feb. 24. To the Editor of The Joura.l--I note la recent Inter view that Adah Wallaoa Unruh says: " 'A man's home la his castle. may sound good; it smacks of old cave days, and that his authority has been constantly limited and his government has gone o far that today it compels him to 'give certain educational privileges to his children and respect to his wife's au thority." Asrain in heY letter of Febru ary 21 she condemn the man for doing: aa his wife asked. There is ho question but what - Harme should be man's castle and a srood wife (few there be who fol low such teaching- as set forth in these two articles) should be his queen and helpmate. And as to his authority: If he Is to be considered head of the house hold why should he not be in authority? Today even if the women have . what they call equal right, if as man fails to provide for his wife it is grounds for a divorce and he Is halld Into ?court and raked over the coals. And she, dear angel, may be out chasing; around 'in club and society, while he Js working hard to -get along, perchance has to go to a restaurant or hotel for his meals or wait until she sees fit to come home and do a little cooking. As for this particular legislator, I believe he' did right in voting as he did. If an honest vote of the women of the state could be gotten I believe that Adah Wallace Unruh would lose her right to cast that Jittle scrap of paper that she thinks amounts to so much. She says that she happens to know that "a great majority of the thinking women of the state have come reluctantly to believe that the path of duty in the direction of the; jury room Is a very plain one. and one that they cannot longer conscientiously ig nore." I, too, happen to know a little about this line, and I find that this agitation comes from women f wanted to, and nave married, but-uo not want to settle down and be j-ife and helpmeet as their maker had in tended. -Yet they claim to be 'the. lead ing lights of the community and the young and coming wives are trying to follow In thei- footsteps la Jt ,;any wonder that there's so mucijf dissatisfac tion among the later ;eds?; i'll venture to say that the legislator who voted "no" on the" "Jury; question does not look upon his wife Ws. hl slave or as his' chatteL but' aft Ibelng his superior in her realm s fio most men who have good wives. - SAH BROWSi. k f' - f r "a," Irrigation Money Well Spent Seattle, FeWjl- To the Editor of The Journal -No money spent by the states or by thelfederal government will bring as 'large returns or continue to bring them for the present generation and for the, generations to come ats the money spent for Irrigation. Every acre of arable' land brought under, water will bring better return' per acre than any non-irrigable land. There are many suggestions from all parts of the Un'ted States to provide -work and homes for our returned soldiers. Tiiere la nothinar that will give as jmany men wdrk.- and provide homes for all who wish to; leave the city aa to put the irrigable' land under water. As a starter, the land bo. tween the-Cascades nnd the HooaUes will do. Twenty acres of saga brush; land under water will support a family f five, or six, and then some. . Twanty acres of land will take care of 15 milk cows, or for raising apples, hogs and everyUilng that a farmer raisea. except grain, and that also If used for the rais ing of stock. No man need be idle for Ue, next two years if thiaproposition la put through. You who have the proeperity of the country at heart, write your congress man, your legislators and tell them to work for the irrigation appropriations. Start the work. Don't wait untU we have two million more men with us who will have to work for a living. Start now. "Push it along. It will bring prosperity to all, whether rich or; poor, ana your children will thank you for having the foresight to do this work. Go to It. Put Jn the pep. If you want to eeo the result of irrigation, investi gate Utah, Arizona and Colorado.; - W. K. COL.TOM. Daylight,. Saving on the Farm - Philomath, Feb. 21. To the Editor of the Journal!, a .farmer's wife, would like to give you a few. of the reasons why farmers protest against turning the docks ahead this summer. Farmers rise, between four and five o'clock J.t we tarn the clock ahead one hour, that means three or four. They have to get up at that time to gettheir chores done. Three o'clock leaves quite a while- until daylight. They go to bed -at "nine, that means eight, with the sua shining in at the window. Do you call that daylight saving? - And that means 16 hours work for the farmer. While other are striking because they have to work, eight hours. The hottest part ,f the day ts between 12 and 3 o'clock. The farmer eats bis dinner and rests between 12 and '1, so has two hot hours in which to work.. i; If he eats dinner at 11, he has three hot hour to work. Try pitching hay la he top of a hay loft, with the. sun shining on the roof, and the hot dusty hay pour ing in on you, and see if two hours in the heat of the day Is not enough. The children have a mile er two to walk to school. We are determined they; shall have enough sleep and rest even If we can not, so they get up and eat and go to school; no time to- help father and mother, : The farmer doesn't quit for supper by the clock, but by- the r sun, which mean S or. 9 o'clock means eight or nine hauri between dinner and sup per. Mother ha to oook two supper, or the children -have to eat between meals. I it any wonder they have headaches next morning, and are' unable to go to school T . The kaiser could ? not have thought up v better plan to hinder Am erican production than .turning the clocks ahead. The farmer is the real producer. If you fasten a bait and- chain on hi foot, you cat down production. If there are any of - the city ' people who have - spunk and backbone enough to make a garden, they wUl : have - back hone enough to get .up at i o'clock like THE PLOUGHMAN By Oliver Wendell Holmes "'LEAR, the brown path, to . Lol on he comes, behind his smoking team, . r V With-toll's bright dewdropj on his sunburnt brov, . The. lord of earth, the hero of the plough j First in the field before the reddening sun, Last la. th -shadows when tii e day Is done, Line after line, alonr the bursting sodj ' -Marks the broad acres where Still, where he treads, the stubborn clods divide, , The' smooth, fresh furrow cunsdeep land Jwide; -Matted and dense the tangled turttipheaves Mellow and dark the ridgy cornfield cleaves Up the steep hillside, where the laboring train . Slants the long track'that scores the level plain; " Through theinoist valley, clogged with! oozing clay, The patient convoy breaks Its destined way; At every turn the loosening chains rejsound, ' ; The swinfinf ploughshare; circles glistenlnel round, Till the wide field one billowy waste appears. And wearied hands unbind the panting steers. v .These are the bands whose sturdy labor brings The peasant's food, the golden ponip of kings; This is the page, whose letters shall be seen Changed by the sun to words of living jgreen; Thls is the scholar, whose immortal pen. r 'r-Spells the first lesson hangar taught to men; . 'These are the lines which heaven-commanded Toil Showjs.on his deed the charter of the ioill I ::y. '.,i: - O-Gracious Mother, whose,benIgnant breast ' "Wakes iis to life, and lulls us all to rest, How thy sweet features, kind to every iclime, j r Mock with their smile the wrinkled front of time I 1 We stain thy flowers they. blossom o'er the deads We rend thy bosom, and it gives us bread; , K O'er the red field that trampling strife has torn Waves the green plumage " , Our maddening conflicts scar thy fairest p ain, . - Still thy soft answer. is the growing grain. . ; "f; JOURNAL MAN AT HOME Fred Iiockley. . I Kid atoriea are the bill of fare today. Mr. Lockley haa it all his own way, to be wire: and so, if other parenta think they can tell neUar stories than ha citn well, let them set that to him fn their own way. He baa brought it on himself. My little gtrfs name is Hope. She is three years old. She takes after one In being very "set." Or; to use a less harsh term, she -: is quite determined. She takes after her mother In" being very good looking and exceedingly bright. A day or so ago I was going over to Van couver by auto with ex-Governor Oswald West, C. S. Jackson and Francis Jack son and a naval officer, Ensign Gage. I happened to repeat a bright saying of my little girl. I noticed that both C. S. Jackson and 6xis West seemed restive and could hardly wait UU I got through. 4 ; , The minute I finished Mr. Jackson said: "My little grandson, Sam,, isn't quite"' so old as your, little, sjirl, and he said something a whole lot' cuter than that a day or so ago. He was at kinder garten and the teacher had a Washing ton' birthday! program and told the lit tle tots all about the father of our country. My 'wife wanted to know how much he had learned "about our "first t, so she said, 'Well, Sammie, hat dldV you learn about Washington, today? Sam looked up at her reflect ively and ffeld- 'About Washington? Do you mean(Clorge? " ' Before 1 could make 'any. comment Ozzie West said, speaking of the father of our , country x "My little girl said something mighty clever when she was a little tot. She went to Sunday school, where the teacher told her ,. tat GoS was her Heavenly. Father. She cam home, and while we were eating, supper that night she said in a very , self -satis tied- way, I Just learned today I had two fathers. " My wife gasped and " .said; What do you mean? Who has been telling you that? Well, I got my regu. lar father, the one I knew about alt the time, and Ood ; so I've got two father now.'" , ,. - " .- , e e - Yesterday I was In Corvallis. I start ed to tell C. E, Ingalls, president of the Oregon "Editorial ' association, something cute my little-girl had eft id. He saldj "Go en. I'm listening. When you are through I will tell you something thatn really , was elevr that my mtie ooy said, and be' is only ZVk years old." It was clever, all right, bnt I think he and his wife made it up. Isn't It funny how every parent will squirm and wriggle while you are telling them the really clever thing your children ay and consider the time wasted while they are listening, and then tell you things' that -are neither clever nor funny-that their children have said, and. think they are perfectly wonder ful. 7 My wife l trying to teach our small daughter good table manners. If 'eh take too big a bite my wife, looks shocked and says. "Why. Hone : what would the people at the Haaelwood think of a little girl that takes big bites. I can't take you totunch at the Hazelwood unless you eat politely. Hope ay. "Why does father take, big bites?" "Poor father doesnt know any better. No one would, ever cH him a perfect lady,, and I "want people to say when they see you eat, What a perfect little lady," my wife respond. In a half-hearted way I cooperate with my wife in my daughter' training, a" much as a pernon-who is used a a horrible ex ample could be expected to. cooperat, A day or' two ago I aw my ltttt Hope squirming and wrie-glinjr Rj she ate her supper, so I asked. "Why do you act that way?" - She gave another squirm., and said; "I think I must have a scootieon me." "Aunt Mary" had cut out a paper A work up a good appetite for hi breakfast, and give tlw weeds au day io win in uib uui cm., -stead of transplanting them, as he does if hejUga them up in the evening, Most city "people are using the extra hour to burn no good gasoline. We pay the fiddler. MRS. X. E. 'HATHAWAY. Forever?" - Vajicouver. Wash., Feb. 23. To the Editor of The Journal A Oresham cor respondent, replytPS to a contribution anent or present capitalistic eystem, by Mr. Julnsoott, writes r "Iv say that the system which i -rullnar today is the y tera that WiU rulw 'orever,' . Now, to all modernists "forever" means a fong time. I am nearlng my four-score years i Jrt I feel that this Greshsm contributor must be at least four score years my senior, and that bis outlook on nature ha In no . wis changed since the day of hi child hood. Prior to the Civil war bo Intell gent slaveholder would assert that the slave system would "rule' forever. To day the most .Ignorant whiskey man. would refuser to predict that Ktng Alco hol would "rule forever." At thla pres. ent - writing ther are " emperor - and king In Europe who would hesitate to affirm 1 that monarchy will "rule for ever." S Possibly thla correspondent de votes more time to contemplation of things . spiritual and celestial than he doe to Investigation of his temporal and natural surroundings, . f" . "Even thl will pas away.. Is the Infallible sentence 'pronounced en -and eeer yth-rng - which exists;- Nothing ean - - withstand omnipotent .evolution. Nothing stays Its onward course. -And It never hesitates. Students of history meet his coulter's gleam V his feet .have trod: of thy tasseled orn; cow for her. She put the cow out to eat grass on our green rug. She got the silver cup Ira Powers sent hec to. muK tne cow, air-tne time carrying on an extended conversation witl the cow. Presently she bent the cow's bead clear over toward her back.' My wife said,' "Hope, why arej you doing that to your cow?" Hope said, "I'm fixing the cow so she can bite her fleas." f The other day my daughter came to me with a very ting her hands at me and said troubled look, and put on my knee looked up in a very -grave voice. Father, do you think mother always tries to be poUte?" I said, "Yesv in deed; mother la always very polite." Hop shook tier head doubtfully, - and aid, "I -hope so; but. sometimes she doesn't -answer me very politely." j i - a - . ' . My wife; has the very annoying habit of usually being right. If I insist on having my way I my wife is very eweet and resigned and I go ahead and i do what I said . I was going to, and later wish I hadn't. .'. -. a e ' a ' -...-When-;w Vere first married we dw cided it. would "! be undignified ever . to quarrel, BO I eajd whenever we couldn't agree or I felt like sayuig semething I would later regret, I Hvould go out Ih . i. a mamjI Bnf .linn wau4 ' lX7a III .no " Di'VU l V " I' - wvw. Vere married In June. Th nelghcbr said they never (had seen a more indus trious man than .1 war-that. I spent most of my time - chopping woodland that oftentimes I was lout chopping wood whet they went to bed. I chopped up all the fir wood we had and had to order two loads of oak knots for; the fireplace, y Christmas I had chopped more" thari seven cards of wood. ; My wife had taught 40 children In the East Salem ilgh school and when the disci pline required to .keep 40 children straight is all applied to one poor man, no wonder he takes to the, woodshed. We finally Qecided that to prevent the clashing of our wills she. In all un important matters, could have her "way and do the deciding. In Important mat ter I would do the deciding. My wife says it work fine.; She ha never had a chance to test my Judgment, for an important matter to be decided has never arisen yet. To save my face, we usually jafompromlse on. what we can't agree jn. fVor example, if I want coal and my wife wants briquets we compromise)' and set briquets. Once in a wiile I kick over the traces when, my wife happens' to leava,the ivelvet glove off the hand of steel.' When my son. was j small-his mother used to tell him that God didn't Ilk lltUeiboys that didn't mind. f One day ray wife told me bow to do some thing. I (said : "For once in my life I'm going; to use my own Judgment-and do as X please." My little boy looked at me sadly and. turning to hi mother, said, "Mamma, what 'does God do to papas that don't mind? I a a - Yesterday I saw a baby . that , could never hope to stop a pig In a blind, alley. I have seen a heap of bowl'egged babies In I my day, "but thla. baby ' was more than bowlegged -it . wa hoop- legged. While i, wa framing- up-j a sympathetic remark for the mother the baby's, father smiled with pride , and 'said, .'-Say, Isn't he the cutest thing you ever aw? He's so differ ent from mere common, ordinary chil dren with leg like broomsticks. Say, can'tVyou Just ' see his legs are 'built for horseback riding. Like as hot he'll win all the championship prises at the Round-TJpi or maybfr as a cavalry gen eral Ilka Phil Sheridan." Can you beat It ! - v i a - ' Well, sir, whenyotx lead a double life or go , in I double harness or whatever Is the proper expression ' for double blessedness, isn't 1t strange how proud you are of the- little pink package the atork hands you? in years to come will pronounce our present , day . economic system insane. Insane and stultifying. -And-the yourve; and frivolous of future generation will read our religious creeds, doctrine and dogma as in idle pastime Just as the child of today reads the Arabian Nights and Gulliver' .Travels. AMOS. TheRed Cross urse tamr Simmons, in Ne-York Tribune I cannot nel, -oh Christ, by crae of blessed gar ment's touch. Bat bear me .pray for wteadfast strengths end - eonrase eeernuehi . My cacer '. tbey nay not tread tba' wa sea l of CaUttee. v But make Uiem awtft is bitter seed, tireless- la serrinc Tbeet ; Mine are the broken ones of earth ; tle maimed, the enieified: Grant foe of Joe u at tinted store, leet one ahonld ha deaiedJ -. ., Behold ny a 1 baiter box. my ointment rare end ' sweet, , ' . .. My sifta of iprloa. wherewith I kneel to dry thy . . o holy feetl . Te see Thee face to face, each day my .heart eriea ant in rain . ..- . ,-t. And yet, fO soul of mine, rejoioet be comforted ataisl . Bar X not! known, la iIU dear beside -soae ; .-I angajslied bed - i The fayrtie,! tender radfanea- of that sorrowing ,i thorn-crowned beadf j -, " l - Si'T J V ' ntothe rfrer-Yt-f V" .. JTrem the AtfanU Ccnstitittion ; V; "To protect himself against the high price," Mr. Armour la quoted, "tho consumer-can quit eating meat" Just as If the vegetable trust wouldn't raise 'rates on htm 1 , Ragtag arid Bobtail Stories From Everywhere. The Artie Little Artist MISS OLIVB, TEMPLETON. leading Woman of th Hiib.r Klnclt pnm. wny, who m the l anor guest at a tea givenT Thursday at the University Club by the Professional Women's league, said in the course -of her little talk: -:,..., ; t, . "I wonder if any of you share the thought that wa held by a jittle Port land gtri iio la playing this week, for the first time in her ' life, in ."Daddy Long Lgs." I asked her how she liked being an actress arid she said. 'I don't like the part I plar.-at all ; but I would like it If I had a part like you and Mr. McGovern, and could . :y Just what I wanted to Say Just like you do.' ""ho dear child I If we ehouid say what wa , want to say a assure you tt wouldn't sound at all like what we do say.;' "Only" Only a little word of lore. "UWen with smile so hrlahr. - ' Tet it counted far more than gold. In Uod our father's sight. Only lovely ffower. But it lightened Mother's' woe A a ctrangf-r l)d it gently .' In the -Uny-hands of snow. Only a friendly greeting. Hut it lifted a fainting heart, AncT gave to a weaker brother, - The strength to du hla part. .,- "Only" God help u irmeUiber And aver keeiv in tnind The sreateet lesson we hare to learn Ja ever and always be kind. Maria W. It. rortland, February 22.- ' Uncle Jeff8no.v Says: I wisht I could b'lleve this war's the last one. but I can't. When the peace ta!k and powwow la. over, If the landed gentry In Germany .and Austria Is left to. climb Into' the saddle agin, there'll sure be some more -waVsome time or nuther. If a debt of more billions of dollars is piled on the people than most of folks has got that many dimes, them bondholders'U git fewer and richer and grab and swell till the people'U have a mlxup agin. War breed In special priv ilege jist like disease and file hatches In .certain places. . ' ; Tlfe News in Piaragraphs World Happenings Briefed tor Benefit of Journal Readers - . GENERAL Irrl Ration snd waterpower projects tc cost - S3.60O.O0O have been Inaugurated in California. , , ' :''(-; Oakland.' strike of shipyard men def initely ended Thursday, and the workers have returned , to work. ' Teri thousand men are affected by a 15 per cent cut In wages at the Calumet and Hecla copper mine, in Michigan. A resolution for an investigation of tha price of bread, milk and eggs ha beeu adopted by the California legislature. President Wilson haa granted a f re prieve to Sergeant Edgar Caldwe1na. soldier at Anniston, Cal., sentenced by a courtmartlal to be hanged. A Villa band swept down on the town of Moctezuma, Mexico, Thursday, drove the small garrison away, burned the sta- tlon and dynamited the bridges!. t The three Northwest states will be rep resented on the committee on committee In congress by Hawley of Oregon, John son ot Washington and Frenctjof Idaho. The engineer was killed, the fireman -scalded and another? member ot the tralil crew pinned beneath the wreckag6-when ' ' a Southern PucLf to train Jumped the track at San Mateo, Cal., Friday. , ? ' Final' action wa taken Friday night in the senate to furnish Information t-e garding promotions in overseas serine, and altto the names of officers who have not seen oversea service, NORTHWEST NOTES . J. M. Pevera of Eugene has been 'ap pointed assistant attorney general of the state.- ' A sulphur and Iron spring has been lo cated on the ranch of Silas Pearson, near Elma, Wash. For refusing to send his children to' school, Oru:n Lynch, a dairyman of JUan county, wa fined $25. , - . The seed corn twed In the jTaklma valley- this year will be f urnlHhijd In a large measure by boys' corn clubs. , About 100 union painter- went on strike at Sookane Saturday to enforce a wage Increase from to $7 a day. Striking Washington shipyard worker are cohsidering taking a referendum tote on the question of returnlnif to work. Echd lifted the last of the flu restric tions on February 2. The'vent was cel ebrated by a -ball In the evening.. Mr. and Mr. rA E. -Hoffman if Sandy have received word that their son Ed ward was killed in action on July 19 last,'. ' ,-,' ' ;"' ' ' Representative men and women of Everett' have formed an "AnftrUari. , league" for the discussion of subjects ol Interest, .v .vMj'-.i ;-,-- - , The capture of two sacks filled with bottled liquor at Drain Thursday wa followed by the arrest of Ed Smith and Tom Burns.. ,-. ' ; Necessity of caring for the city's hew Industrial population has caused the launching of a housing campaign al Vancouver. : - ' ' Gertrude M. Kress of Klaniath Kallf, 19 years old. and Mrs.' Louise Oof f, hi, died at the state hospital for the insane last Thursday night. A nude Infant boy tp a pasteboard box. tightly wrapped' with string, wa fpun.t Friday morning In the tiaacineut of the public library in iSalem. " : . v. Patsy Dllllam, a Seaside txiy. Is borne from overseas. He enliated In the . A C in' 191T, and went over the top In all , the big battle to France, - Fifty-five Clatsop county boy, mem ber of ; the Sixty-fifth artillery, wer given an enthusiastic roptlan and ban quet on thelf return to Astoria Saturday, A 'record for. marital adventures In that of Mrs. Ktta Nelson of Yakima, whd married Dan Nelson oh February 15 and started divorce proceedings on Febru ary 27. " FOREIGN Bolshevik forces on the MunnanW front wer repulwed with heavy losses by ' allied troop last Monday. . , . Heavy fighting with serious losses ori both vide took place Thursday between Esthonian nd Boishevikl pear Salis bury. ; ; ' V ' The former !Crfnan emperor declares hels entirely without funds, and has ap pealed to the German government I of money.- v - . , - Captain Coll. a French aviator. whl recently crossed the Mediterranean an-l mad the return trip " In 24 hours, will toon make a flight from Paris, by way of Madrid, to Morocco. , j APlea to the Children to t Continue Their Saving ' I Stories of aehleremeet In tha aeennmla rlon of War Savings . SUsope. sent to The Journal and aeeeptad for puhheatioa, wuJ be awarded a lbriftSump. J The -pennie. little rhlldren, which you so gladly gave. - The nickels and the qatrter which you have helped to rave. They sent our valiant soldier far, ' far across the sea . Our gallant, fearless laddies, who fought for Liberty. And now the war 1s iover. what will . that money do , . , . ., For our soldier boys In khaki, and ; our sailor boys In blue? It , will help them to return to us, tall, straight and daunUenamen. You have helpeJ to send them ovr. , y and to bring thc-rn back atr"1"! Catherine Pri"ntri-. In the Ft-b-...-i ruary St. Nicholas. . ' Ttinn tramps hu v jr oav. i Ing Stamps now on sal at usual J igenclea. I 1