TFTK OFnON fiT A ttpsm A "W, SALFM. OFftON. SUNDAY MORNING. JANUARY 15. 1928 Monks Of Old Drew Pictures Now Used To ; ' Carry Messages ' :l ". History Of Earth Found By Scientist In Butterfly Wings isms TIKE EVEN COURSE F 1 Mm Competition Wiil Bring In This Organization Will Soon It's' a Wise Father Who Newspapers Cause Things Knows His Own Son; or Himself, for That Matter They Advise Other Forc es To Suppress -f crease: In Efficiency During 1928 Celebrate- Its. Forty Sixth Birthday 6 s y h BOOK SSOOOLO mm SSMMMSBTB DFTHE SALEM WCTU If - '' t ft-- ) . i (Book review written especially for The Statesman by Beatrice Crawford-Newcomb) -The .Inner Wtorld of Child hood, by Frances O. - Wickei (Appleton's) with an lntrodactlon by Carl O. Jans. Switzerland, on der whom Mrs. Wlckee has studied and by - whom she was arced -to write this book. The mental and emotional life of the child as revealed by snalyt leal psychology Is here the subject of-a moat Important and readable stndr. In "The Inner World of ChildhoodMrs. Wickee has writ tea a book -.of special Interest to parents, educators, and child spec ialists. No one who deals1 with children, no matter bow sym pathetic he may be, can expect to attain a complete understanding of the child's Inner life without the aid of such a volume as this. Mrs. Wickes describes the Inner world of a child's conscious ac tivities and its relation to the es tablishment of sound mental and spiritual health. Contrary to' Freudian analysis Ir. Jung has become convinced through bis laboratory work with adult patients, that the funda mental problem of a neurosis was not to found In the disturbing experiences that lay in the early Ufa of the patient but was rather concerned with the present, and was shown in a failure to meet some duty or task which life now presented. The obstacle which was considered too great might lie in some outer circumstance, or it. might arise from some inner necessity. In either case there was need for a new attitude to ward life, for a different concep tion of the. self and of human re lationships. Failure to make the new adaptation produced conflict, and a desire for retreat, which re sulted in a sense of defeat. To overcome this the patient took refuge In a more infantile form of life, 'or in a neurotic illness which furnished him with an ex cuse which he could present; not only to others but even to his own unconscious, for his failure to ac cept life. The real problem in the analysis became: from what pres ent duty Is the patient retreating? It Is true that to understand a neurosis it must be traced back to its very beginning. It is not enough to cut off the top of a weed; the roots must be dug up. Often a shock, either real or in phantasy. U found to be the start lng point of a neurosis. Never theless, the crucial problem con tinues to be the present attitude. When we study children, no matter how young, we see that thls principle holds good also with them. It Is when the task la too hard that there is a tendency to slip back into an easier way, a more babyish adaptation. In ord er to avoid the feelings of Infer iority that this would give, the problem is pushed down into the unconscious, and much of the life energy la withdrawn from use in the conscious life and becomes busy with regressive phantasies. or finds expression in infantile acta whose meaning Is not under stood by the actor himself. In the unconscious of each of us lies izj- an Image of childhood as a pro tected, carefree time, a - period when life makes no difficult de mands. This picture may be ab solutely untrue in any individual fm, yvi ii remains m me uncon scions of each one of us and may operate regressively. - Two Kinds of Children If a child falls to make,. his adaptation to a new situation, he may be seised 'With wild furies of self-assertion. By these rages he tries to obtain for himself the thing which he cannot get in any other way, and tries also to com pensate for his sense of defeat lie.. may make childish demands upon, the mother, or cruelty to a smaller child or animal, or a sick ness used to command attention Throughout the book Mrs Wickes places emphasis upon the understanding of the parents, teachers, or others in charge of children, to be used in solving ineir proDiema ana stress Is laid upon love properly used as a tre mendous asset. When the child feels back ' of the personal love the- parents' adherence to the higher guiding principle and the desire to help him to be true to that higher law. all the forces of loyalty and truth are enlisted on the-; side of obedience. Dr. Jung has found that all children can be placed in one of 'two classes: Extra verted or In troverted. " The -former is the child who finds his chief relation ships In the outer world of things and people. , and the latter one whoso inner thoughts and phan tasy life are the greater reality to him: 1 ? f ' .-- Mrs. Wickes has a particularly helpful chapter dealing with the problems of adolescence.. It Is during this period when the new lndlvldual'ty is unfolding and as sert lag Itself that parents are jtnost often baffled. ' Here - again - she places ' the blame - where it truly belongs and is often,' hardest to accepts : upon the parents them selves :, . ' : ; '.-' i Children Belong to Selvee i ' She says: "From'the first we must remember that-our children 6o xiot belong-to na.: htj belong i. .v.. 'J Illustrations drawn bv monks Books of Hours are reproduced on twentieth century post cards. One of the cards shows "Christ in Majesty" (above), from the Arundel manuscript in the British Museum. r GREAT flDUANEEMENT PREDICTED FOR 1920 Movement To Relate School and College With Needs -of Homa Hopeful By Ji. W. Crabtree :8rTctary. Nation! Edaeattoa BocUty) WASHINGTON (AP) r By studying the tendencies in educa tion one can forecast the condi tions ahead with the same degree of accuracy that the weather bu reau forecasts weather conditions. An appreciation of this tact en ables those who understand the racial mind to stimulate and pro- value. In 1117 and 1918 men and women of vision In education, as in business, seised upon this prin ciple to accomplish - great ends. There was the desire to not only rehabilitate education but to place It for all time on a better basis than ever before. The work was necessarily accomplished largely through the National Education association. There is no way of knowing how much the recent advancement is due to the vision of those leaders and to the work of the national as sociation. A few of the striking gains since 1918 are as follows: Then l.COO.000 students in high school and now 1.000.000; then about 1.000 groups of teach ers studying the problems of the profession and now about 25, 000; and then 8.000 members in the N. E. A. and now 180.000. There is a growing tendency to look upon education as guided growth. The influence of this point of view has already led to Important changes fat method and policy, and will produce results of tremendous value on the schools of tomorrow. The closer relation ship between thweehools and the i?s w it. . a. puouc is aemonsiraiea dj iae ob servance of American Education week Is a tendency which means reacer actual progren tor the schools than have yet been real ized. ; -. The- movement ta : relate the work of the school and college more closely with the wofk and needs of the home and community ia one of the most hopeful of ten dencies. "It gives point and pur pose to courses of study and puts life into daily tasks. It Increases school and college attendance.' It adds buildings for the schools. It creates new Junior and senior col leges and adds vchalra In colleges In harmotfy with the ' movement adn It will later result In vacant chairs In others. It Is having and will have for many years a most marvelous effect on educational development. v.. -'f- Battles are yet to be fought. With the backtnr of public senti ment they will be more easily won than were the earlier battles for common schools at public expense, high schools at public expense and nnlversltleai public expense. The next are to be battles for school betterment, for efficiency, for anal oppoitanliy.-and'fof general Im provement In the territory which has "been won.' The tendencies that have given the outstanding results of the Oast decade snd that promise still greater achievements for 1988 and the years following ire ss fixed in their course as the current , of the gulf stream, and Just as certain. PREFERS CELL TO FREEDOM ELTRIA, O. The city Jan has one inmate who Is so well satisfied with The treatment received, there that he refuses to leave. The man is 78 years old and was placed1 in Jail for a minor x offense several days ago. Bis ttee Is' vp but ev ery time police swing; "the door and askliim to go' he most emphat ically refuses. Authorities are pus- jled what to tfo. The man says he has no home, - - - - s V . 1 1; ,VH .'t t-' of the middle ages for Missals and LONDON (AP) The cowled monks of the middle ages who sat at heavy oaken tables in mouldy, stone cells, busy the live-long day illuminating Missals and Books of Hours, little thought that they were painting, for post cards of the Tear of. Our Lord 1928. Out of the dim recesses of the past the authorities of the British Museum have drawn some of these page illustrations and have repro duced them as emblems of good wishes to be mailed to friends, ' Three cards In particular have been Issued. One Is "The Building of the Tower of Babel," from the famous Bedford Hears, done in Paris In the early part of the flf teenth century. Another Is "Christ in Majesty," from the Arundel manuscript, and a third. "June," a pastoral sheep sheering scene. by the famous Flemish Illumi nator. 8imon Bening. Two series of pictorial cards have also been Issued by the Brit i&h Museum for post cards. One set consists of reproductions from the Westminister Abbey Psalter, considered among the finest ex amples of late twelfth; century English illumination. The other comprises reproductions from a Flemish Book of Hours of about the year 1500. Applause of Home Folk Pleasing To Harry Lauder EDINBURGH. Scotland (AP) Sir Harry Lauder, in receiving, the freedom of Edinburgh, his native city, said it was the proudest mo ment of his life. He had been honored by many citiea he said, but to be honored by Edinburgh was the great finale. The honor had given him fresh In spiration he said, and he had de cided to return to the stage from which he retired after the death of his wife several months ago. ali -din War-Proof Vaults D eep in Uy lamis P. Howe V LON'DON ( AP) At sbe ripe old sge of 234 years, ?the old lady of Threadneedle street" is putting her hotrse In order for other cetH The Old Lady, as the Bank of England is known, began the task of rebuilding in 192S, and It will take five years more to complete the task at a cost of approximately 25.000.0jj0. ' - , -t :i The new bank .win be the most substantial burglar proof structure in the British Empire and it will last. It has been - estimated,' at least a thousand years' . The most Important problem is the construction of vaults where the nation's gold will be kept Special attention has been paid to precaution against attack In time of war, and it is said that means of safety hare been designed with a view of resisting any bomb at tacks yet conceived by man. , Down underground In the heart of London's financial district the Editor Statesman: I am sending yon for publica tion a letter which I sent to the Morning Oregonian on December 88 and which was returned to me on December 88 with a note from the editor saying the letter was too long by publication. A. M. DALRTMPLE, Salem. Ore., Jan. IS, 1928. Salem. Oregon, Dec. If, 1927. To the Editor of the Oregonian: Since Hickman Is on his way to prison, trial and probably death. for a most atrocious crime, may we hope to find something more wholesome, more elevating.. In the the papers for the next few days? We are all "fed up" on crime news., Take the Oregonian of De cember 23 and we find every one of the eight columns on the front page leading with stuff about Hickman and his crime. Four of these front page columns have top heads in large black type standing out boldly to catch the eye of the reader quickly and hold his atten tion while he devours the news of one of the greatest crimes In the history of the Pacific coast coun try. Other papers have done as well as the Oregonian, Insofar as their ability permitted. It begins to look as If the trag edy of this awful thing were being capitalized by every individual and every agency tn any way con nected with it. Men never before heard of rush forward to get their photographs on front pages. News papers vie with one another to be first with an "extra" on the street We behold the notorious Hickman In his grated cell and near by half a dozen officers who have come to take him back to the scene of his crime. There are pictures of the ghastly packages containing the body ' of the murdered child all played up In aspects most hor rible. For what purpose T Every warden of every prison in the country who is honest snough to tell the truth, knows. t he nses the brains that God ?ave him to think with, that the publication of crime news in all lta lurid details results In the making of more criminals than any other agency in existence. What else can be reasonably ex pected when crime is commercial ized? Column after column, day after day, devoted to crime news, ud "extras" put out several times a day when a flash Is received giving some unpublished detail of the crime committed 'or the hunt d criminal The effect of all this Is as cer tain as death or taxes.' But the warden who might have the cour age to tell the truth and defy the commercialised press w h ten thrives and fattens every time a Leopold, a Pender or a Hickman appears, would probably lose his Job, because some politician re sponsible for his appointment would be forced by the press to oust him. Right or wrong, we must stand In with the all-powerful press. If one of the dally papers sees fit to publish, in all its filthy de tails, the "Peaches' Browning di vorce case, as one of the Portland daily papers did. of course we Gold in N ew Bank of England Il:f. H - ! nil i in - ' 1 . . .. left mi&vm pM-'.te; -; . h t Vaults far underground, built will bold Great Britain's gold in land in London, shown above as Is the- present home of the -13 4 iTraaiuonai ucaname u . ine oiu . jtn a. . aa . in "old lady" is shown at the right as c&rtooued la 1894 In Punch, br permission of which It Is reproduced. N- L . - - The following statement rela tive to business i conditions In the United States was made recently by Earl C. Sams, president of J. C. Penney company. 'General business during 1928 should continue along about the same lines that it followed during the year Just passed. It will be a good year tor such business enter prises as are properly adjusted' to the general j economic conditions of today. ; "General commodity prices will undoubtedly' be subject to the us ual short swings! up or down de pending upon local conditions and upon the changing phases of In dustrial and agricultural activi ties governing Income and produc tion. Any general movement in com modity prices should be downward out there is no reason at the pres- enttlme to believe that there will be any marked lowering of prices. The usual discussions which characterise! any presidential elec tion year will prevail but the ec onomic structure of the country is on such a well defined basis of ec onomy and progression that It Is unlikely that political differences bearing on economic activities will have any pronounced effect on general business. Any differences which may exist In relation to the present economic standards on the part of political parties are appar ently too slight to be disturbing in their import. Competition in all lines is in creasing and the effects of this ipetltion; will be keenly felt during the present year. The mar gin of profit which may be antic ipated by the distributor of gen eral merchandise ' 1 s growing smaller and greater efficiency Is being shown In distribution metta ods. i I V a ; ja ' in me j. u. renney co. we hare been j studying the elements of working efficiency in each of the retail store units and have been organizing all phases of our general distribution methods down to the point which main tains the highest standards of ec onomy In handling fnem the time the merchandise is completed by the manufacturers until it Is fin ally placed in the hands of the re- tall buyer.; "This applies to shipments made by rail or by water, to pricing of our merchandise and to organiza tion of individual effort in the J C. Penney; Co. stores. "The percentage set aside for gross profit is, I believe, on a bas is which Is eminently fair to re tail customers, to competing mer chants and to the J. C. Penney Co it is a low percentsge and yet the operations of the individual J. C. Penney Co. stores has shown that it is a percentage which will give the company a fair return while affording-j the buyer a high value. . "It. Is on such a basis as this that general business will have to organise Itself this year If It is to survive in the competitive condl A. . uons woicn are certain to pre vail." Did yon ever notice that all the husband killers immediately put on deep mourning for them. Earth Guard to withstand any' sort of attack, the new borne of the Bank of Eng it will look when finished. --Below year bid 1 institution. . The bank's a a . m ;.. im si a,as .am. lauy oi i i oreauneeaie eireew oe 'M- ... I ; -. ' t .., V- . ... 4 .- :.,.v..C.:- '; . t -11 V -. ,v .iw- s, s Butterflies become more brilliant in their coloring as the ell mate grows colder. J. D. Gunder, Pasadena entomologist, finds after rears of research. Above is Gunder in his "butterfly den." Below is a normal specimen of modem B. C. EVOLUTION FIGHT TO BE COmiUED Science League Presents Interesting Report of Various Activities SAN FRANCISCO (AP) The war between anti-evolutionist and teacher of evolution, according to an informal report of the Science League of America,, Is likely to continue in 1928. The substance of a s u r v e y. made public by Maynard Shipley, president of the league, sets forth that advocates of enti-erolutlon bills, defeated in various legislt- turea In 1927, plan to revive the Issue this year. The league also declares that there Is an organised and well financed effort to "purge" the pub lic libraries of the country of books and magazines regarded as too tfoder n." The -crusade against evolution, the Science- Lea gue's report asserts, did not die at Dayton, Tenn., scene of . the Scodos trial, but got renewed in spiration there. The Science League of America Is an organization of scientists. consisting largely of university professors and research workers. George B. Coleman, research bac teriologist of the Hooper Founds Uon, University of California, Is secretary-treasurer and Dr. David Starr Jordan, chancellor emeri tus of Stanford University, heads Its national advisory board. In the league's resume of actlv-j Ities for and against evolution It says in Its report that In Florida, Arkansas and Louisiana antl-ev olutlon bills passed the lower house of the state legislatures, but were killed in senate, in some cases by a close vote. In Oklaho ma, Alabama, Maine, West Vir-j gin la. North Carolina and Missouri the bills were defeated in the low er house, but in the case of Mis souri by a narrow majority. In California, Delaware, New Hamp-I shire, North Dakota, and Minne sota the bills were killed In com mittee. In each case, says the report. the advocates of the measures say they will renew their effort at the next session. In 1928, It is declar ed, the opponents of the evolu Uoaaryw theory witleenter their attack on Arkansas through a in ltlative measure which now has 9,000 names out of a necessary 12,800 necessary to quallyf an in itiative petition. The . only two states having laws prohibiting the teaching of evolution at present are Tennessee, which passed the law in 1925, and Mississippi, which passed a simi lar law In 1928. w The, report also deals with tea-! ehers and professors dismissed, al legedly for their views with re-j ard to evolution and - other doc trines" considered' by some as not tn accord with religious teachings. An instance, of this as cited by the report Is Des Moines University, wnere u is declared -20 or more members pf the faculty ware die- answer satisfactorily a question missed because they could not, nalre In which questions were ed touching their views. ;i y j The report continues: TroL W. G. Burgin . was dismissed from Wlnthrop collegeT South. Carolina, because ef his anti-fundamentalist views In scientific matters; and in Brooklyn, Charles A. Wagner was discharged as a high ' school instructor because he taught evo lution In bis geography classes.' CHIVALRY PARAMOUNT KNOXVILLE, Tsnn -Chivalry In the south again has won a vic tory. Signs posted In elevators of a building here lnstrnctint men removed, after several months' ex- , ice- oecause no neeo wae given -thenx- . '"' I times (left) and the type of 8073 PASADENA, Cal. (AP) His study of butterflies has convinced J. D. Gunder, Pasadena entomol ogist, that the hues of butterly wings reflect the waning of the ice age and in effect tell much of the j history of the earth. When a climate grows colder. Gunder declares after many years of research, wing colors are less brilliant. The present trend away from glacial days Is recorded in the increasing brightness of the nues. it is posstDie, ne Deiievesj to predict the wing patterns for the erratic little garden butterly 10,000 years hence. In the vear 11.927. he says. man's" descendants will fin4 that the butterfly la somewhat .larger in size and has more vivid and lighter hues on its wings. "It It were possible to bring as many humans together as we have butterflies, he adds, we probably could look posterity . In the face and predict1 the physical and men tal characteristics of the person" who would catch, those butterfller in 11,927." America Said To Be Produc ing Greatest Amount of Standard Works NEW YORK (AP) America Is producing the greatest quantity of I high standard literature of . any time in the history of the Held of letters, asserts M las Viola Roee-i boro, literary adviser, magazine editor, and author. "Today and every day there are new books off the press, books by very young authors, first, novels by older people, and great num bers ot works by authors of es taoiunea standing." she says. "There is more literary outpnt. to day than at any other period of American history. ' : "And it Is all of excellent Qual ity. Of course with the greater quantity there la much that is lost In the scramble of, literary evalu atlon. But even the -material that is lost is of greater merit than the stuff that was lost a few decades ago. The. whole standard has ris en." . Miss Roseboro, who has grown up with literary. New York; since before the days ot O. Henry, bas seen great changes in the Ameri can output. It was during the days when she was a reader on magazine staff that she read a manuscript by a man who signed himself "O. Henry." ' 4 , " 'It's a gift from Heaven.' I told Mr. McCIure (the publisher) who had been in the depths of de spair over the standard of . our fiction," Miss Roseboro said. "He read it out ot deference to me but sent It back to the author In the routine of editorship. :; 'When I heard what he - had done I cried. I Just couldn't help It. It was such a : lovely little story, so American, and so much what we wanted. - "Well, when Mr. McCIure saw those tears, he couldn't stand it. iiTrninu ninrniiT Nrr li i ttifln i uu i r u ask-l"4 t about six office boys out after O. Henry, to get -the stbry back. . ;:; :-:a:; - That was the ; history of O. Henry's first recognition : In American magaslne. 21 Her reminiscences brought forth stories of ' other "discoveries. Among them are Booth Tar king- ton. Wills Cather, Dana" Oatlin, Amelle Rives Samuel Hopkins Adams." Marcaret Banning and Mateel Howe Farnnam. v ATl I try to do In this work of mine la to aive writers some sort of a stimulation. People of tal ent are discoaraged easily because thev have nut real feeling Into Ithsir, effort, and if it Is despised. vLt k .a.. if.an their van- i 7 - liUes. are. bruised. Editor Statesman : It occurs to me that your r era will be Interested In tbe-Yu lowing' historical events as con nected with the W. C. T. U., of i Salem, as It was organized so Ions ago. when Salem was young, and j has kept np the organization con tinually since, until at the present time an incorporated institution. t: and occupying Its own building in J Dusy portion or me city, tneSat W, C T U. is now as it ever has J been a strong force In the city when we reckon up the organiza tions' for righteousness and so briety. The first day of February, 1882. a little, band of women met to or ganize the "Woman's Christian Temperance Union of Salem." (Let me note here that the State W. C. T. U. had not yet been or ganized).; We find from the rec ords that are carefully preserved "The object of this organization shall be to : plan and . carry fur- ward measures which, with th blessing of God, will result In the 1, suppression of ; intemperance." Thns it was at the beginning of I what these women knew would bo ' t a nara ana a long ngnt, xney in voked the help and the blessing r Almighty God upon the cause, and lie' Surely strengthened the hand of " these brave women, and not only those who came together at that time, but down through the years since: All they who, lifting up the mantle of some sister, who XjF heard the higher call, have placed aced If this garment of service upon shoulders and Invoked the bl lng of her Heavenly Father upon tier efforts. We here give the "pledge" as we find they took it at that far away in the past meet ing: "We the temperance women of Salem, feeling that-the use of Intoxicating liquors has reached a point no. longer silently to be en dured, do, ! by the help of God. promise to use our utmost en deavors to banish the evil from smong us. We hereby pledge our selyes to discourage the use of anything" which" can Intoxicate,, and, in order to strengthen our in fluence In this regard, we promise not to use any intoxicating liquors as a beverage, nor In cookies, and not to furnish them for social en tertainment." ''r:-:;: f'Gentlemea may be admitted to honoray membership by signing a corresponding pledge and payr msnt of enet dollar t or a vr?' (The' dues ot women tfimbers w first 50 cents, but "iatet raised to annually.);-; At "this- meeting twelve women signed , the pledge, and thus was "tl sUrted a force that the liquor in- JT tereata.hare ever feared, for they found that the numbers sometimes were few, but God was the leader and the. purpose. was a high one. The names of the twelve charter member I give here: - Mrs. 8. C Hatch, Congreca- Mrs. . & M. Patty, Methodist Episcopal church.' Mrs. W. O. Piper, Methodist Episcopal church. Mrs, L. H. McCullough, Con gregatlonal church. Mrsv F. A. Mstthews, church not known. Mrs. A. J. Leslie, Methidost Episcopal church. tionaL Mrs. A. M. Bewley. Methodist Episcopal church. V Miss M, L. Allen, Presbyterian church. Mrs. 8. C. Gsrdner, Methodist Episcopal church. ' Mrs. T. Jeffries, Methodist Episcopal church. Mrs. B. W. Cooke. Congrega tional church. Mrs. L W. Huston. Presbyter ian church. ,We find that although Mrs. S. C. Hatch . presided as temporary president at that first meeting. that Mrs M. A. Royal, who jomea at ther next meeting, following March Kth was elected the first permanent president of the organ ization, and that Mrs. Belle W. Cooke was the first secretary. Mrs. Hatch was , the second president elected. - She was the mother oi George Hatch, spoken of recently as one of the first mall carriers In Salem, Mrr. Belle W. Cooke. whose beautiful penmanship re corded the facts thst I am able to give to you, served as secretary for several years, and was heart and soul a part of the Womans Christian Temperance Union of those years. In fact, such wss the seal of all the women who in those "Dloneer days" of the or ganization wore the little bow of white ribbon, that Qot rrom the minutes of a meeting several years later; when Mrs. L. Hstcn was secretary, the words. "The little knot of white ribbon Is small thins In itself but the ..t..n r which it is an em blem, has msde Its Influence felt throughout the world, until the sight of this same little white rib bon strikes terror 10 w Z the home; so to strengwwa Influence should be our i . ... v fnnnif without we snouia b ----- - , ,w. Sur badge." f will endeavor from , s time to lime w vi - tide' snd to give to the readers ..... m 1 Va will many iscis "s"" impress npon each and every one whst Oddr batb : wronght. and thst this ' little - praying band oi twelve women have sent tneir m- - Mtfcnttaia frica page U) I i i 1 1 J .(OoatlMd ea.pag 18V (CoatiatW irom psf 14)