lO THE MORNING OREGONIAN, FRIDAY, MAT 4, 1917. PORTLAND, OKEGOX. Entered at Portland (Oregon) Postofflce a second-class mail matter. Subscription ratea Invariably in advance: (By Mall.) Dally, Sunday included, one year $8.00 laily, Sunday included, six months ..... 4.25 laily. Sunday included, three month 2.-5 JJaily, Sunday Included, one month .75 iJaily, without Sunday, one year 6.00 Lally, without Sunday three months .... 1.75 Oally, without Sunday, one month 60 Weekly, one year - 159, Funday, one year 2.50 Sunday and Weekly 3.50 (By Carrier.) "Dally, Sunday included, one year ....... w.oo "Dally, Sunday included, one month 75 Hotr to Remit Send poatof f ice money erder, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at sender's risk. Cilve postofflce address In full, including county and ata-te. Postage Rates la to 16 -pases, 1 cent; 18 to 32 pages. 2 cents; 34 to 48 pages. 3 cents; 60 to 60 pages, 4 cents; 62 to 76 pages, 6 cents; 78 to 2 pages. 6 cents. Foreign post age double rates. Kantern Business Office Verree Conkltn. Brunswick building. New York; Verree & Conklin. Steger building, Chicago: San Fran cisco representative, K. J. Bldwell, 742 Mar ket street. "PORTLAND, FRIDAY, MAY 1917. WHKKK DITV LIES. We shall be constantly confronted, as time runs on, with problems sim ilar to that of the farmer and father of six sons, all of whom strongly de sire to serve their country in the best sense and whose letter on the subject Is printed In another' column on this page. His case Is exceptional only In the respect that he and the "boys" have more' than the average equip ment for either branch of the Nation al service that they may choose. They are trained farmers,' but they are also the material of which the best sol diers are made.. The younger men have felt the call to duty in a more spectacular field, where there will be no end of excitement and, also, a greater prospect that they will be called upon to make the supreme sac rifice. The father, although beyond military age, believes with reason that there are many things at the front that he could do as well as a younger man. It Is not hard to understand how men In this situation feel about their duty. The question with them, as with many another " farmer, is not what they would best like to do but what they can do that will be of great est service to the Nation. Doubtless the young men referred to In the let ter. If they consulted only their own desires, would be off to the nearest aviation recruiting station at once. But they are more than commonly useful where they are. It is worth noting that they own a tractor and that they have several gas engines and other machinery. They are pre pared to carry on .food growing on a big scale. No city man, however pa triotic, could quite take their places, and other farmers are needed else where. The common laborer cannot supplant the skilled farmer In - this emergency, though he can help. "We are inclined to agree with the writer that if he should turn his farm over to the Government to be operated in the absence of its present possessors production would suffer. Army meth ods have not yet been nicely adjusted to farm conditions, and probably will not be for a good while. Vastly great er results will be obtained If this farm er and his sons remain on the soil. There Is no question of the willing ness of the farmers of the country to co-operate in all measures necessary to win the war. A great many doubt less would be willing, as this writer suggests, to surrender their properties to the Government for a nominal compensation if that were the better way, which It is not. It is food the country wants, particularly grain-, an j plenty of it, both for ourselves and for our allies and the starving vic tims of the conflict wherever they may be. Men who know how to farm are badly needed on the farm, and a good many men in the cities are needed on the farm besides. Men are not going to be called slackers who stand by the tractor and the threshing machine and keep both moving In their seasons, nor is their patriotism going to be called into question. That much Is settled now. It would seem that this farmer and his family ought to stand by the coun try by sticking to the land. Doubt less the authorities will take the same view when they begin to enforce the universal service law. It is a funda mental principle of universal service that It does not rob our vital indus tries, as would the system of pell mell volunteering. It may seem a little hard to stay back of the firing line, and away from the music of the band, but it is sound patriotism. Also It is common sense. The tractor and the separator have as much work to do as the guns. A REAL MOVEMENT TO THE SOTJL. The present enthusiasm for greater production of food may prove more effective in sending the people back to the land than all the exhortations and dissertations of the last ten years, The average town dweller's Idea of working on the soil is associated with "hayseeds," "rubes," horse - drawn plows and driving a slow team over muddy or dusty roads, also with isola tion and with deprivation of social amusements. He thus had an aver sion for country life which could not be overcome, by appeals to reason or even to desire. for gain. An appeal is now made to patriot ism on behalf of the farm and gar den, and sentiment will overcome aversion in the minds of many. They may begin by cultivating a garden in the back yard, but that will give them a taste of the pleasures of outdoor exercise, of watching things grow un der their care and of the superiority of vegetables taken fresh from the ground to those bought from the ped dler or the grocer. me iitrie tney learn there may tempt them to a suburban acre and ultimately to a real farm. In many sections they will find that the farm life which they have pictured in their minds is a fiction. Many neighbors will prove to be well-educated men, graduates of agricultural colleges and ther universities instead of "rubes." On large farms plows are drawn by tractors, and on all farms machinery is used for work which was formerly laboriously done by hand. Neighbors will be found going to town in auto mobiles over paved roads, and will ex tend invitations to accompany them to a dance, a theater or a movie in town in the evening. Much of the drudgery and isolation will be found a thing of the past, and the physical vigor derived from outdoor work will be found full compensation for tho garish pleasures of the city which have been sacrificed. There may result a general revival of farming in sections, like New Eng land, where farming has been largely abandoned as unprofitable, - New England raises less than one-fifth of the food it consumes, but the strain which the war will put on the trans portation system may be bo great that needed supplies can no longer be brought from a distance, and neces sity may compel home production, within easy reach by wagon or auto truck. Many an abandoned acre may again be brought under cultivation, and by application of scientific meth ods, to be learned from Agricultural College bulletins or from the county agricultural agent, may be made to yield a good living. Patriotic citizens who fail to pass muster at the draft may resolve to "do their bit" by adding to the Nation's food supply. Every war is followed by great so cial changes, and by redistribution of population. As a result of this war. there may be a genuine backward flow of people from the cities to the country which will restore our badly disturbed balance. HIS WRECKED HOBBY. Put yourself in the place of Mr. Daly for a moment. Suppose you had nursed along for four years a presumably popular political issue in hope of getting into higher office and at the last moment discovered that it was full of holes. What would you do? Mr. Daly's choice is to stand pat. He impudently pretends superior knowledge. The world is wrong and Daly is right. Three -engineers, one of his own approval, do not know as much as Daly about costs of mu nicipal lighting plants. Training and experience in hydroelectric engineer ing cannot cope with the wisdom ob tained from sticking type in a Job office. fo Mr. Daly informs his fellows on the Council that a sieve will hold water, that nature will be kindly dis posed toward 'an open flume con structed on a sidehill angle of 45 de grees, and -that the drain of a three years' war on tho world's supply of materials has only a momentary influ ence on prices. These trifling matters having been disposed of so satisfactorily, Mr. Daly proposes that the honest taxpayer dig up a million and three-quarters of money to prove that there is no god but Daly. So far as the municipal light project or Daly's political fortunes are con cerned, it does not make much dif ference whether the measure now goes on the ballot or is kept off by the intelligent members of the Coun cil. The scheme has been thoroughly discredited and its sponsor has con victed himself of political charlatanry. But there are worthy measures which, if associated with the light measure, would be adversely affected. The mere submission to vote by a. re sponsible official body of a proposal criminally to waste millions of public money would create doubt as to the good faith and common sense of that body in presenting any measure on the ballot. KAISERISM LOSING ITS GRIT. The fury with which submarines are attacking commerce and the reck lessness with which fresh divisions are hurled against the British line in France, only to wither before 'ar tillery and machine-gun fire, are the measure of the desperation with which the ruling class in Germany is striv ing to hold its power. Such a gov ernment can survive only by contin ued success, but President Wilson has proclaimed that the aim of the United States is Its destruction, and proof multiplies that the conviction of fail ure Is spreading among the German people. Internal discontent approaches the point of open revolt, and domestic foes are being added to those without the empire. The most direct evidence that Kai- serism la losing its grip on the Ger man people is given by A. Curtis Roth, former American Vice-Consul at Plauen, Saxony, in an article in World's Work. He remained In Ger many until shortly before Mr. Gerard left Berlin, and he tells facts about internal conditions which have been concealed by rigid censorship. Be hind the veil there Is "smoldering, growing, torturing discontent," and Liebknecht's attack on the govern ment was only a little premature, for "the sentiment for revolt was broad cast." . The Socialists are propagating this sentiment surreptitiously by means of pamphlets and leaflets passed from hand -to hand. One of these he quotes from memory as fol lows: We are winning victories and bleedine- tn death. We are devastating ever more of our neighbors' lands and dying of slow starvation. We are defying the anger of a world in arms and staring ruin In the face. The physical strength of our people is ex hausting; the financial power of our nation is exhausting; our aupplles of raw material are exhausting; our great organizations for the work of peace are slowly disintegrating. We must have peace. If our government cannot procure peace, what must we do? Mr. Roth says he has heard many such phrases as these: Our enemies will never make peace with our government. what have the French and English against us? It Is our Kaiser and his friends they are fighting. The Kaiser and his officers stand between us ana peace. If It weren't for our Kaiser and junkers, the English would make peace with us. Why should we be hated? The leaders are nated ; we suffer. The "fighting machine is still in splendid condition," but danger threatens from the ranks of a fagged, dispirited, tormented people, grown sullen in their misery." This senti ment spreads all over Germany. The boasted equal division of food is a farce, for the workers "cannot find tne money tnrougn twelve hours a day of drudgery" to buy the" rations, while the well-to-do are full fed on luxuries. "A strong leader," he says. "could sweep the workers in desperate surge against the conditions of their misery." Terrible riots have occurred in Plauen, Chemnitz, Leipsic and Mu nich. The riot in Munich, which is described in detail from information given by an officer of the secret po lice, was particularly menacing and was a determined battle, not being suppressed until "after several hours of embittered conflict." Abuse of the Kaiser no longer causes arrest, for a woman who vented it in the presence of a policeman was not arrested and the policeman "slunk out of the room." Old enmities of the Saxons and Bavarians against the Prussians have been revived, and a soldier Is quoted as saying that "many in tho Saxon regiments would desert to tho French and British lines wero It not for their fear that they would bo traded back when once the war U over," Saxons "have had more than their share of forlorn-hope attacks and of covering retreats because there were so many Socialists among them," The mass ef the people are beginning to feel that their Interests are diametrically ep posed to those of their leaders, and they "only lack a leader and the eour- C of -organization' but the Social Democrats are quietly striving for the latter. ,The article concludes: According to my observations intimate observations covering various parts of Ger many German officialdom Is riding the whirlwind, and Its Inst desperate cards are the submarine and a final mighty offensive. President Wilson's declaration that the United States would make war on the government, not on the people, of Germany was shrewdly calculated to fan this smoldering revolt into a flame. No doubt the Kaiser and his officials received its -full text and, perceiving its import, did their utmost to keep it from the people, while they redoubled their efforts to wear out the allies by slaughter at sea and terror ism on land. But that message will be scattered broadcast through Ger many by the allies' airmen, and it will widen the gulf between the Kaiser and his Junkers and the people. HEALTH AS AN ASSET. Life and time are more than ever Important in a national crisis. The more efficient we become in the In dustrial sense and the faster we are able to turn out not only munitions but every other prime necessity of our industrial life, the fewer men we shall be forced to sacrifice In battle. The highest possible state of individual efficiency is essential to the shortest possible war. It is therefore the duty of citizens iV all occupations to safeguard their health as a National asset. It has been estimated that the average worker in the United States loses nine days a year because of sickness. Dr." Fred eric W. Loughran, medical adviser of the New York State Insurance Fund, puts the probable annual total loss to all workers in the country at 739, 7 36 years. If the average wage is $2.60 a day and the average cost of medical at tendance and medicine $1 a day, the annual loss of 30.000,000 workers Is nearly $1,000,000,000. There is no compensation for this. The product which the worker might have turned out Is lost forever. The employer also loses heavily by the sickness of the employe, but the amount is not so easy to ascertain precisely. Twenty-five per cent of present- day illness is regarded as preventable by methods now known to medical and sanitary science. If It were pos sible to add 65,500,000 days to the average working time of the men in America, the economic gain to the Nation as well as to the men them- Tselves would he enormous. These figures point to the Impor tance of individual study of health measures and sanitation. The worker who takes care of his health is also 'doing his bit." It is important that every man should take especial pains to "keep well." CONSCRIPTION OF IEMOCKATIC ORIGIN Conscription has acquired, a bad reputation because of its association the public mind with aggressive military monarchies. The very men tion of the word causes advocates of voluntaryism to rave as a red rag in furiates a bull. The truth is that the word is of democratic origin, and the system to which it applies, at least in modern times, was first used by a democracy to repel invasion by the volunteer armies of absolute mon archies. Conscription was mentioned In the French National Assembly in 1789, but It was then decreed that free enlist ment alone befitted a free people, al though the army of the Bourbon kings had been raised by that means. The remnants of the old regular army checked the invading Austrians and Prussians at Valmy and Jemappes in 1792, but in 1793 the execution of Louis XVI and the French invasion of Belgium raised a host of new ene mies. Dumouriez's army, composed of a few old regulars and a host of new, raw levies, was routed at Neerwinden and fled in disorder across the border. The road to Paris lay open before the Austro-Prusslan forces and the cap ital was saved only by the dissensions of the allies and their fear that prompt -advance would cause the execution of Marie Antoinette. Then the National Convention established universal lia bility to service, and the Committee of Public Safety decreed: "The levy is to be universal. Unmarried citizens and widowers without children of ages from 18 to 25 are to be called up first." This levy brought 450,000 re cruits. At first the army was an un disciplined, disorderly rabble, but Car- not gradually whipped it into shape, the invasion was stopped and in 1795 the French became the invaders of Germany. When Napoleon became supreme, he simply continued to use conscription as a tool which the republic had made and left ready to his hand. The mon archies of Europe learned from revo lutionary France, but so did the repub lie of Switzerland, the British domin ions of Australia and New Zealand, and the republics of Brazil and Ar gentlna, for universal service became generally recognized as the most effi cient means of democratic defense as of autocratic aggression. It Is not in Itself militarism, but, like other effi cient tools, may be used" for either good or evil purposes, according to the will of the power which wields it. - 11" TO THE SHIPPING BOARD. The strictures of Chairman Denman of the United States Shipping Board, on shipbuilding companies which have taken contracts for slow-time con struction for foreign account since the board announced its programme of rapid construction, including wooden ships, cannot apply to the wooden shipyards of the Columbia -River dis trict. Shipbuilders of this district have been ready to take contracts from the Government for fully a month, and have even gone so far as to refuse private contracts in or der to keep their facilities free for Government service. Although Mr. Denman says that the Government realized the necessity of speeding up ship construction as long ago as the third week in February, the board has as yet done nothing to avail itself of the resources" of the Pacific Coast, where material Is most abundant and where the greatest out put could be secured In the shortest time. But it lias been able to let a contract for twelve ships to a Tensa cola company and has given enough definite encouragement to New York capitalists to induce them to lay down seven ways on the Texas coast near Beaumont, Statements of Mr, Don man himself and of Secretary Lane shtw that in creased destruction of tonnage by pub marines makes prompt, inareass of the American output an urgent necessity Such vessels as the J'acifis Cuatt can supply are pest iuieii to eorry sup plies to the allies and to $ght the U-boats, for Admiral Browning, of tins uritisn navy, is quoted as saying tha the effectively armed merchantman Is probably the best weapon for use against a submarine." If contracts are let at the present time for the ships contemplated by the Shipping Board, the first fleet should be ready for service about the beginning of November. The domes tic crops of the allies should suffice to feed them beyond that period, and these ships would carry some of the first cargoes of American and Cana dian wheat from the new crop. Nothing but absolute assurance that these 6hips would be ready at that time to take up the work of feeding the allies can justify diversion of much tonnage in the meantime to carry an American contingent to France, for that course would impose on an al ready depleted supply of vessels the task of carrying the troops and of keeping them supplied with food and munitions. We are told that wooden shipbuilding will not be in full swing till some time in the Fall. It should be in full swing long before that time. If it should not be, the good results of the appearance of American troops on the western front might be annulled by under-nourlshment of French, British and Italian troops. Oregon is ready to do its part. Log gers an waiting to cut the timbers in the woods, mills are waiting to saw them and shipyards are waiting to frame them. The Shipping Board has the next move. Efforts to revive the sheep Industry in the Kast, stimulated by recent high prices of wool, have culminated in passage by the New York State Leg islature of one of the most drastic laws ror trie control of dogs ever enacted in any state. The new law requires a license for every dog and provides that any unlicensed dog may be shot on sight. It is easy to fore see trouble on account of both pro visions, for a good many mistakes will be made and a good many persons are ikely to take advantage of the oppor tunity to vent their spite on dogs tn general. No provision Is made for discriminating between dogs that kill sheep and the harmless and law-abid ing kind, and the old provision of the common law that every dog was en titled to one bite is entirely ignored. City folks, wno are not commonly equipped to shoot wandering dogs, view the outlook with unconcern, but farmers who do not own sheep have been deeply aroused. The law be longs to the class that promotes acrl mony among neighbors, and it remains to be seen whether the good it will do will outweigh Its disadvantages. A Massachusetts man, writing In the Springfield ' Republican, recalls Johnny Appleseed," an altruist of years ago, who went about the coun try planting apple seeds by the way side, and offers the suggestion that automobile tourists this Spring can serve their country in a small way by following his example, but by substi tutlng sunflower seeds for apple seeds. The sunflower is a hardy plant and will grow almost anywhere, while the seed Is valuable for poultry and every pound consumed will take the place of an equal amount of grain. The har vest, the Springfield man believes, can be left to the poultrymen. The idea has merit, even If it Is not a big idea. but it ought to be carried out early In the growing season to be effective. In sending Slgnor Marconi to the United States to discuss war prob lems, Italy is merely returning him to his old friends. No people have benefited more from his work In per fecting the wireless than the Amer icans. Mr. Kerensky, the new Russian Minister of Justice, learns the ways of democracy quickly. Instead of ar resting Lenlne, the anarchist peace agitator, he let his man discredit him self by continuous talking. There is none to question the ac curacy of statements made by Carl W. Ackerman of sex conditions and s sexual relation in Germany. If what he tells is kultur, a little is enough. The thing to keep uppermost is what kind of practical service the cltl zen can do best. A good many are still talking of fighting who belong in the back yard with a hoe. In campaigning for a big poultry product, the possibilities of the Bel gian hare should not be overlooked The hare makes liner meat and is a cleaner feeder. Now It is predicted that there will be a shortage of coal next Winter, which is another reason why we should raise all the heat-producing foods possible. It's a pretty safe guess Captain Koc nig, who brought over the Deutsch land, is not in command of one of the submarines sinking American vessels. Nevada, the haven for divorce-seek ers,, leads all tho states in the union in the percentage of enlistments. Here is a real problem for the sociologists, If you can. get off, arrange to go to Champoeg tomorrow and see where Uncle Sam grabbed a root on this North Pacific Coast. Haiti has asked for a part of the loan. The best help Haiti can give in the war is to keep quiet and enjoy the novelty of peace. Mayor Thompson calls Chicago the sixth German city In the- world. He is a misfit, and should be in the land of Verboten. One of the best ways to get early vegetables is to get up early in the morning and plant them. How would it do to suspend the Sunday law on fishing and then eat more fish? The wild goose that damages wheat flfcld must bo treated aa a cen tral ally. Time for the wind to get into the Northwest and pollenlze the early bloom. Jf we cannot exterminate the dan delion, we can at least eat the greens: Sinee the p.6ent loaf get into bis euit size, U is a a well to lrep it. 'Blessings pn i;pu. bartfeet boy,' You are saving shoe leather, Fire Marshal Stevens should da. cide and relieve tile agony. Buy a liberty lean bond and frame it. How to Keep Well. Dy Dr. W. A. Evans. Questions nertlnent tn Trl,n sanitation and prevention of disease. If matters of gen eral Utrntt, will be answered in this col umn. v here space wlil not permit or the subject Is not suitable tetters will be per sonally answered, subject to proper limita tions and where stamped addrewed envelope Is inclosei. Dr. Evans will not make diagnosis or prescribe for Individual diseases. Re quests for such services cannot be answered. (Copjrlght, 116. by Dr. W. A. Evans. Published by arrangement with the Chicago Tribune.) Ml'MTIOS WORKS HEALTH PERILS, From all parts of the world where high explosives are manufactured there come reports of. in some cases, fatal, in others serious but nonfatal, poison ing due to the fumes and dust- Dr. Hudson, of the Du Pont factories, tells us that his people have largely escaped such Injuries and this is how it has been done. In the acid rooms the men suffer from acid splashing and add fumes. All munition factory rooms are thoroughly ventilated. The air is re- oved by exhaust fans through multi ple outlets In the floors and fresh air enters through multiple inlets located In the celling. Near every acid vat there are water nozzles, tubs or showers. When a man gets a splash he turns on the water or Jumps into a tub at once. Next he applies saturated solution of bicarbonate of soda until the foaming stops. Next he applies a burn ointment. Cabinets conveniently located con tain soda solution, aromatic spirits of i ammonia, cocaine, glasses, eyecups, bandages and absorbent cotton. In the nitro-aromatio room especial cuiJiiiii o la (im uijuii , i ti, urn iv7ii , i v. washing facilities. Washing the hands Is made . attractive, comfortable and easy. The blood of every workman is ex amined twice a month. A blood exami nation will point out developing trou ble days before symptoms appear. Men who are heading for trouble are put at work in the open air for two or three weeks. Gas and oxygen helmets are In the factories. If a man shows symptoms he is stripped of all clothing and his skin Is thoroughly scrubbed with soap and sand. If he Is working In an aniline room vinegar Is added to the scrub bing mixture. He is given effervescing phosphate of soda and aromatlo spirits of ammonia and plenty of milk to drink. Tho men who work in picric acid rooms get an inflammation of the skin similar to poison ivy. If they scratch the irritated areas they are liable .to become poisoned constitutionally. The methods of prevention employed In these rooms relate largely to clean liness of "the skin. There are ample toilet facilities. Floors are kept clean and free from dust- Much depends upon the worklngmen. A physician should examine them pe riodically. If the early symptoms are recognized and the men are transferred temporarily to open air work a toler ance for these poisons can be gradually established. Then, again, personal cleanliness Is something more than the provision of washing facilities. The men must use them. Just as Important as cleanliness Is the necessity that munition workers shall not drink. It has been proven conclusively that drinking alcohol pre disposes to poisoning. Munition work ers must go without alcohol outside of working hours as well as during them. That Is the keynote of safety. Illegal In Some States. B. K. writes: "Where several people In an office use the same glass for drinking water. If one of the users had a cold or grip, would the others be likely to contract it? If so. would rinsing the glass in the drinking water prevent this? Isn't there some law which compels office managers to pro vide a glass for each employe? I would greatly appreciate a reply." . REPLY". The common drinking cup is now Illegal In most states. Cold, grippe, diphtheria and other diseases are spread by common drink ing cups. Varicose Veins Cause. W. J. writes: "Kindly let me know through the columns of your paper what is the cause of varicose veins in a woman who Is pregnant." REPLY. Pressure on the veins In the pelvis. Inter fering with return circulation from the legs. ROSE FESTIVAL MONEY NOT SPENT It Is Circulated Among; Those Whose Interests Opponents Profess to Serve. PORTLAND. May 3. (To the Edi tor.) I have read the letter, "Sum Is Too Great for Gaiety," in The Orego- nian tods-y and wish to say a word in reply. At a meeting of the Rose Festival Auxiliary, held last Saturday night at the Chamber of Commerce, there were representatives of over 100 civic, busi ness and fraternal organizations of .the city of Portland, organizations which in past years have all contribut ed liberally to the support of the an nual Rose Festival. It was adopted with but a single dis senting vote, and this dissenting vote was under instructions, to go ahead with the Rose Festival, and the board was empowered to put on a rose show, and was thus empowered by represen tatives of people who have always borne the brunt of the subscriptions to the fund. If contributors to a fund wish a project to be carried on, I feel that that should settle the matter. Your correspondent seems to dwell on the fact that "so much money is being spent." Bless his heart, can't he reason out that this money fas not spent, but that It Is only circulated, and that it Is circulated among the very class of people that your cor respondent and others who signed that protest seem (at least from their pro test) to be deeply interested tn? He further states that I misconstrued the remarks of Miss Burke at the Pro gressiva Business Men's lunch last Thursday. I wish to stats that I mis construed nothing. I quoted her exact worda, taken down in shorthand, and ran bring testimony from scores of men who heard the remark that I have quoted her exactly. Now then, if It was a Joka for her to have made the remarks she did. It was most certainly most ill-timed and Inopportune. If it Is unadvisedly wrong for the Rose Festival to lie held this year in the face of the present war crisis does your correspondent think the "Joking re mark" and the "Joking spirit" In the face of such a crisis well timed or opportune? Subscribers to and supporters ef the Rose Festival fund have decided to hold the festival, and the proper thing for every real, true, patriotic eltiaen of Portland to do is to get behind the movement and make it a success. Knockers never, made a city, E, B, LAR1MORE, President Kota Festival Assn. FARMER IS Pl'ZZLED AS TO Dt'TY Question la Whether Man and Sons Are More Needed at Front or Home. THE DALLES. Or., May 2. (To the Editor.) During these times of "wars and rumors of wars" so many different conditions confront a person within a short space of time that it Is really difficult to discern Just which way duty lies, and what Is the most urgent thing to do in order to serve one's country best. With this In mind I am asking your oplnton on the following, which I am sure is of Importance to many citizens and parents within reach of your paper: I am a farmer, the father of six sons, three of. military age. Two of these are macried and the third is soon to be. We are all on a big combined grain and stock ranch. Two of these sons are and have been anxious to Join the aviation corps of the Army, for which they are quite well equipped by reason not only of their University of Oregon course, but by practical experi ence with electrical apparatus and gas ensrlnes. As a parent I have rather retarded such a. move, especially after President Wilton's recent appeal to the farmers to raise more foodstuffs, and his urging the need of farmers, factory men and miners to stick to theit tasks. Now comes the conscrip tion. The question that confronts me, and I am sure others along with me, is. if our boys and hands go away to the Army who will do our field work? I have several gas engines and one 75 horsepower "caterpillar" tractor which does part of the field work on the farm. Common laborers on handle the teams and ordinary implements quite well, but not so with the tractor, the thresher, the combine, the thresher en gine, etc. and who is to do it With common laborers who a year ago were Klad of Joba at so to 40 ft ionth and keep now refusing double that pay, whore will we get off for expert help. and that we must have or no crops, for wise In a recent issue of The Oregonlan I noticed your comment on the letter from Grass Valley, where it seems they have a surplus of laborers. I wish some would ship for these parts, for no such condition exists here. Then In yesterday's editorial, "Pouring Water Into a Sieve." you note how the Employment Bureau cannot rurnlsn re quired farm help and at the same time the Army and Navy are recruiting men all the time, and for the moat part from the small towns and rural dts tricts, and the Government is still ask ing, nay, urging us to enlarge our out put of foodstuffs. If such wiseacres as they make such blunders, how are we shortsighted ones from the bacK woods and sagebrush to overcome this handicap and deliver the required eoods? If tho call Is so urgent as to need our expert help, they need us. too. I am 65 years old. but, like "our Teddy," I am ready for service. I can tire many a younger man in the saddle. and even afoot. When it comes to lashing a pack onto a bucking mule I can "throw the hitch"; or I can come as near as the next man, be he young or old, to making a balky horse hit the collar when Indisposed, and such help is tndlspenslble In the Army. I will go even further than this. I note that some -of the manufac turers are offering the Government their plants at 10 per cent profit. They can have my "riant" while the war lasts, and it Is above the average In Its possibilities, and I will cut the per centage In two. which will a trifle more than pay taxes. At the same time, I doubt if with a lot of theorists (ex cuse me!) to run It they could get the results from boII or stock which we old hard-headed ones have produced in the , na.su They cannot get results without help any more than can we I am at Uncle Sam's service and I think I voice the sentiments of a large majority of the farmers. If not all, when I say we are ready to co-operate anywhere and In any way; we are ready to do our duty. We wish to avoid clashing of the departments. If we are to produce foodstuffs we need the Government s help just as much as It needs ours. ALBERT S. ROBERTS. OVERPOPl'LATION AS WAR CAVSE Statistic on Side of Dr. Gilbert In "Rib, bit Theory," Says Writer. PORTLAND. May 3. (To the Editor.) May I suggest to Mrs. M. A. Albin, who seeks to disprove Dr. J. Allen Gil bert a contention that war Is caused by overpopulation, the advisability of reading over her communications before sending them to the editor? In this way she may discover a contradiction or two. Thus In her letter in rne ore gonian. April 29. she tells us first that man has a free will, and therefore free choice. A little farther on she says the laws of Nature are Immutable. Man being himself part of Nature, how can he sfe called truly free, if he has to obey Immutable law? These two propositions cannot be reconciled. If we believe in Immutable law. all conduct then Is necessary con duct, that Is, determined as cause and effect, with no place for a will that acts independently of that natural law which Is unvarying and invincible. Free will then is at best a delusion. This was also the opinion of the great philoso pher Spinoza. But after all suppose man had a free will. That would In no way affect Dr. Gilbert's argument. He contended that mankind breeds so rapidly that It out strips food supply. The statistics are all on the doctor's side, regardless of toe truth or falsity of determinism. His critic produces no evidence whatever to overthrow Dr. Gilbert's facts. She meets his argument by saying substan tially that man Is not so foolish as to overbreed. In making this statemen Mrs. Albln makes a fatal blunder. She assumes that mankind has a higher av erage Intelligence than Is actually the case. She displays her own generosity of spirit but Is none the less mistaken when she Infers that because she her self l.i a wise and gifted lady, exercis ing an ideal self-control, therefore the most of us are like her. Her opinion of us is really too flattering. Has it never come over her In the course of her career as a controversial ist how difficult It Is to bring others to her way of thinking? That is proof of her own superiority and of the uncon querable stupidity of a majority of the rest of us. If she reflects on this fact long enough she may gradually come to see that there is something to the rabbit theorv of population after all. OBSERVANT SPINSTER. Ssesee for Bonds In 1912. ' TILLAMOOK. Or.. May 1. (To the Editor.) Can you advise me as to the authorship of the bill providing tor bonding counties for building roads which was passed in 1912. I believe, and was attributed to Mr. Spence? F. R. BEALS. No county bonding bill was passed In 1912. One "providing the methods by which voters of any county in this state may provide for the Issuing of bonds for the construction of perma nent public roads in that county" was promoted by a state Grange committee. Mr. Bpence signed the argument in favor of the bill aa published in the official voters' pamphlet. The bill was defeated. - Price Paid for Coin. NEWBERO. Or.. May 3. (To the Editor.) (1) Please Inform me the valua of an American $2 60 gold piece dated 1861. (1) Also inform me of hotliM or banks that deal In oM coins. SUBSCRIBER. (1) It Is. not Hated among cftlns for which eolleetors pay a substantial pre mium. (2)' New York Coin Sk Stamp Co., New Yolk. In Other Days. Tvrenty-Flve Yearn Ago. From The Oregonlan of May 4. 1S92. The street railway horses that have been replaced by electricity were al most given away at the sale at the company's barns at Seventh and G streets yesterday. The'resldents of Beaverton hope that the proposed motor line from the end of the Portland Heights cable carllne to that place will soon be built. If this line is built it will add another at tractive suburb to Portland. A. W. Cuthbert. from Pendleton, is exhibiting some samples of the opal discovery. on the Big and Little McKay creeks, about 20 miles from Pendleton. Emperor William has donated 3000 marks to encourage outdoor athletics in Germany. The hired-help problem has become a serious one to farmers all over the country. Steady and reliable men who will stay on the farms cannot be found. Brick and materials are being hauled for the three-story brick building to be built by Charles Locus at Fifteenth and Washington streets. Fifty Yearn Abo. From The Oregonlan of May 4. 1867. Chicago. May 2. A mob of 500 work lngmen. representing all trades, swept in a disorderly manner through the streets this morning, protestlmr against the ten-hour working day. They en deavored to get the men from all the manufacturing plants to join in a strike for an eight-hour day. Some of the principal citizens of On. wego who did not fancy the name Sucker Lake, met last night end decided to have the name changed to Oswego Lake. The California steamer last In from Panama took about 10.000 barrels of Pacific Coast flour to Now York. Anion; the lot was about 2000 barrels from Oregon City. The Rev. I. D. Driver will deliver the sermon at the 18th annual meeting of the Oregon Bible Society to be held at the M. E. Church Wednesday. Judge Phattuck will deliver the fifth lecture of the citizens' course at tho Oro Flno Hall Saturday evening. A society has been formed In S.in Francisco with a capital of 3,000,0U0 to promote the Im migration of farmers from Europe. It, is proposed to furnish materials to them on easy terms. NAVAL I1ATTL.E WORTH RKfALLIMi Walt Whitman Compliments HdcII.i Pluck In Veralun of Srrapln Defeat. EUGENE. Or.. May 2. (To tho Edi tor.) I was greatly pleated by a re cent editorial in your paper wherein you sot forth tha details of sonic of our earlier sea fights. We hear far less about those thrilling encounters than we used to do 30 or 40 years aso. What Is more worthy of reprint oc casionally than Walt Whitman's ver sion of the Paul Jones' fight of the lion Homme Richard against the Scrapis? And Is It not a little wonderful tiat Whitman was so appreciative of Eiik lish daring that the poem reads espe cially well now when we are allies of England? Would you read In the sea-books of the old fashioned sea lights? Would you learn who won by the light of the moon and stars? Our foe was no skulk tn his ships. I tsll you : His was the English pluck, and there's no tougher or truer, and never was and never will be! Along the lowered evening ho came, horri bly raking us. We closed with him, our yards entangled. the cannon touched: My captain Uslied fast with his own handsl We had received some eighteen-pound shots under water. On our lower gundeck two large pieces had burst, killing all around, and blowing up overhead Ten o'clock at night, and the full mooa shining, and the leaks on the gain, and five feet of water reported. The master loosing the prisoners confined In the after-hold to give them a chance for themselves! Our frigate Is on fire. The other asks if we demand quarter, if our colors are struck and the fighting done ? I laugh content when I hear the voice of my little captain. "We have not struck." he composedly cries: "we have Just begun our part of the flghtlngl" Only three guns are In use. On Is directed by the captain himself against tha enemy's mainmast; Two .well served with grape and canister silence his musketry and clear his decks! No. a moment's cease: The leaks gain fast on the pumps, ths fire eats toward the powder magazine: One of the pumps is shot away. It Is gen erally thought we are sinking! Serene stands the little captain! He Is not hurried, his voice Is neither hlglt nor low; His eyes give more light than our battle lanterns! Toward twelve at night, there In the beams of the moon, they surrendered to us! As Teddy might say, "Wasn't that a bully fight?" S. D. ALLEN. Exemptions From Draft. . PORTLAND. May 1. (To the Edi tor.) Does the new conscription bill require the registration of married men? Are married men without chil dren required to register? Would doc tors, dentists and chemists be drafted into the regular ranks? READER Presumably, yes. Detailed Instruc tions have not yet been received by the Governor or Adjutant-General. The President is authorized to exclude or discharge persons In a status, with re spect to persons dependent on them, for support, which makes their exclu sion or discharge advisable. He Is also empowered to excuse or discharge persons whose occupation is necessary to maintenance of National interests during the emergency. In other words, the persons enumerated would. It ap pears, be registered, but their selec tion for military duty would be dis cretionary with the President. R ecru Ulna Drains Country. MORO. Or.. May 2. (To tho Editor.) In The Oregonlan recently much has been said about needing the boys for the farms. The country around here Is entirely & wheat-raising district and yet tho re cruiting officer for the Navy comes here and entices our hiKh school boys awsy from us with alluring stories, and the people here'resert this, as our boys aro stronger and more used to farm work thfcn city hoys, and we cannot get help to take their p!a- s. Will yci tell us whuhi r we can rrevent this, and how? FARMER'S WIFE. No Petition Referendum! June 4. PENDLETON. -Or., May 2. (To the Editor.) Please state if l.y petition the Insurance and the sterilixatloa measures are. to 1? voted on at the election Jun 4. What other petition measures will aluo then be referred t" the people? J. W. r.l,ISVCUTIi. No lr.f isut e.-i referred to the voter by uet!ti-ti jite'e'ti the ballot Jun 4. l.'.l's culi.li li. tr, I if . l lu. i-.iu petltit-u ulll be v-ta uti .ii Nv . - r. IS-li.