13 THE 3IORXIXG OREGONIAN, TUESDAY, JUNE 12, 1917. rORTLASD, OBEOOX. Entered at Portland (Oregon) Postoffloe as - eeood-clau mall matter. Subscrpitlou ratea invariably In advance: (By Mall) Pally, Sunday Included, one year ...$8 00 laily, Sunday Included, six months -5 Dally. Sunday Included, three montba. ... 3-5 lailv, Sunday Included, one month ...... Diiily. without Sunday, one year ........ 0.00 laily, without Sunday, three montha, . . . . LV- Lially. without Sunday, one month ...... Weekly, one year Sunday, one year -' Sunday and weekly (By Carrier.) Dally. Sunday Included, one year 9.00 D&l.y, Sunday Included, one month ...... .73 How to Remit Send poetofflce money or der, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at sender's risk. Olve poatofflce address la-full. Including county and state. Fostace Kates 12 to 16 pares. 1 cent; 18 to 32 pages, 2 cents; 84 to 48 pages. 8 cents; 60 to 60 pages. 4 cents; 82 to 76 pages, 0 cents: 78 to 82 pages, 6 cents. Foreign post age double rates. Kaatern Bu-dness Office Verree A Conklln. Brunswick building, New Tork; Verree & Conklln. Steger building. Chicago; San Fran cisco representative. R. J. Bldwell, 742 itar ket street. 1DHTLAND, TUESDAY, JUXTE 11. 1917. SERIOUS. Germany makes war a national in dustry. The) German nation as a whole la at -war. All the units of Ger many's resouces, power, life, strength, prowess, kultur, are employed to make) the war a success. It is serious business, a vital service, an exclusive duty, for Germany and all Germans. The United States Is at war with Germany. The Nation officially has cone Into the war with due delibera . tion. but the citizen has not taken the duty of doing1 his part home to him self. Somehow we hope to muddle through without really hurtful conse quences. The war Is not only the Nation's business, but every citizen's In It. He 5s going1 to find, before the end, that he is in it, for Germany is not beaten, nor even nearly beaten not so nearly els uio suiies. iut is uis uituu auu 'blunt truth. Some of us thought that the walls of the German Jericho would fall when we tooted our horn. But they did not: they will not. There is some thing to war besides noise. "We are going to find it out, too. Let the optimistic citizen who thinks Germany is done ' for read the sum mary of Germany's sources of strength, reprinted in another column. It is the truth, and the whole truth. We shall be better off as citizens when we learn not to despise, but to appreciate, our enemy. FOB A GREAT EVENT. The Portland Festival Association announces a programme for its pre mier event opening of the great Port land Auditorium that ought to at tract the gratified attention of the entire public, music-lpving and other wise. For it is obvious that the oc casion Is to be celebrated In a way suited to its Importance. Distinguished artists of international reputation are to be brought here for participation in the oratorio, "Klijah," a classic and memorable production of Mendelssohn, and of the "Golden Legend," the beau tiful work of Sir Arthur Sullivan, and of the miscellaneous song and orches tral numbers. It Is true enough that there has been a sentiment that Portland ar- occasion, which marks the high tide of Portland's enterprise in cultural pursuits: but undoubtedly a wise de cision was made in the arrangement for other talent. Portland has indeed many high-class soloists of both sexes; -but their employment would have made it a purely local affair, while the true policy Is of course to give Port land a rank among the great musical centers of the country, which select their talent for their annual festivals on merit, without regard to sectional or racial preferences and with a view to the finest results. It Is to the credit of the local musicians that they have agreed heartily to this plan, and that they will co-operate to make the three days' Festival a mighty success. The names of the artists are among the most celebrated in America for oratorio and concert work, it hap pens that the two sopranos are Port land women, but their professional reputations have been made principal ly elsewhere. The others have not . previously come here, but the reason doubtless is that they have not here tofore been offered a proper vehicle for their appearance. It is to be added that the oratorio will be sung by more than 200 of Portland's best voices, in -.- support of the principals, and that . the Portland Symphony Orchestra, of which the city may well be, and is, proud, has a prominent and worthy . part in the programme. The Auditorium will seat 5000 or more people, and the prices for the . three days' events have been made so low as to insure very large audiences. The Auditorium was built so that the people might enjoy at the least prac ticable cost entertainment of all suit able kinds. The Festival management has understood perfectly its duty to the public. SOUTH COSTING TO ITS SENSES. Good is resulting to the Southern negroes who remain in the South from the migration of many of their race to the North. Whites recognize that the attraction is not only high wages, but better treatment by the whites, better schools and better living con ditions. They also recognize that the negro is necessary to the prosperity and development of the South, for that section does not attract immi grants from abroad. Accordingly, Dr. W. J. Schieffelin, of New Tork, says that leading news papers are pleading for better treat ment of the negro and - better com munity feeling because of the de pendence of the whites on the blacks. The subject is studied in Southern colleges, secretaries of the T. M. C..A. are lecturing on it and hundreds . of ', young whites are studying the living conditions, health, sanitation and training of the colored people. The conclusion is that the negroes should be given better opportunities and en couraged to have homos of their own, and that greater respect should be shown to their women. It Is. being realized that the South needs an in telligent, able-bodied laboring class for the development of its great wealth in agriculture, timber and minerals, which cannot be developed without It. As the negroes are the only avail able source for this labor, there will grow up a better understanding, bet ter treatment, better living conditions and better schools. Public opinion is forming in favor of education of the negro In higher as well as primary schools, that they mav have well equipped ministers and doctors and may be efficient in farming and trade. The truth is coming home to the South that, though the negro cannot fight back against lynchers, depriva tion of the ballot and general race discrimination, he can get up and leave, and that the South cannot get along well without him. The level headed whites may, for their own pro tection, rise up to protect the negro against the mob spirit. 1 STUCK IN THE MUD. The Oregonlan says that Linn. Lane and Clackamas counties have, by their votes, an nounced that they do not want good roads, least of all a. good trunk line through the state, and hints that we are likely to get what we voted for. What mistake for The Oregonlan to make. We do want good roads, every man of us up this way, but we have our Ideas, and though they may be many and varied, nevertheless they are our Ideas. We want so many good roads and so many kinds of good roads, and we wanted to provide the funds necessary to construct these good roads In so many ways that we could not make up our minds to take the kind Portland was willing to help us get. Eugene Guard. ' The late Colonel Patrick Henry Winston used to tell about a deplora ble failure of the inmates of an Insane asylum to seize one of many golden opportunities to find the way out and escape. The doors and windows were all open, the guards were often asleep, and there was nothing in the way of a grand outpouring. But the poor deluded charges of the state never could agree how to go by day or night, singly or in groups, through the windows or the doors. "And do you know," the Colonel would add impressively, "the poor fel lows are there yet." It looks to us as if some of our misguided friends In the recent elec tion were unanimous for any kind of a road except the road, or roads, it was immediately practicable to get. DOING WITHOUT GERMANY. The United States has already gone far toward independence of Germany for a supply of dyestuffs. It also has learned to make photographic paper and Is making optical lens glass. For merly all the potash fertilizer used in this country came from Germany, our Imports of 1913 having been 1,000,000 tons, worth $40 a ton. Under pressure of necessity and a price of $450 a ton, we are now producing potash from the kelp of the Pacific Coast, and may obtain our entire supply from that and other domestic sources. Kelp contains 25 to 30 per cent of potash, and grows in great beds off the coast in water 100 feet deep. One corporation Is cutting it ' for the acetone It contains, and two others for the potash. The Agricultural Depart ment has built a floating reaping ma chine for the purpose of experiment to determine whether the potash can be extracted profitably to use as fer tilizer. The machine cuts 200 tons a day, which yield about five tons of potassium chloride, and the weed grows so quickly that four crops a year can be harvested, as with alfalfa. Practice of efficiency equal to that of the Germans may make kelp-cutting profitable by using all the in gredients. It is proposed to distill dried kelp In retorts, by which ammonia as well as potash can be recovered, char coal and tarry products are obtained which can be used as fuel, while com bustible gas Is yielded which will serve as fuel for the retorts and evaporators. The necessities caused by the war have put all nations on their mettle, and one result of Germany's folly in attacking the civilized world prom ises to be the permanent loss of sev eral valuable branches of trade, to say nothing of the good will of nearly all nations. PATRIOTIC SONGS. Writing of a patriotic song is clearly not a task that can be done to order. This Is shown by the experience of the National Arts Club, which offered a prize of $250 for the best song con forming to certain requirements, and which, after having completed exami nation of some thousands of manu scripts, has Just announced that the prize will not be awarded. No song of sufficient merit, in the opinion of the committee on awards, was sub mitted. Similar lack of success, it would seem, has attended efforts to obtain a substitute for "Dixie" one which would nationalize that Inspiring song and avail Itself of the prevailing pop ularity of its music. At a service of patriotic self-dedication In New Tork the other day a new "Dixie," called 'A Battle Cry of Freedom," was of fered, but it is extremely improbable that it will be heard from further. Sung by a trained choir, it aroused moderate enthusiasm, but one some how cannot conceive a crowd spon taneously breaking "into song, the words of which run this way: Lo, for blood, for fire, seven stripes of crim son Heaven's cup of sacrifice o'erbrlms on Ever-pllght To the white Of pure light A re unfurled! The field Is square sky blue, unclouded With five-rayed stars of white fire crowded To unite For the right All the might Of the world I It Is quite impossible to define the requirements of a patriotic anthem. They do not go by rule. All we know Is that the vast number of attempts now being made are unacceptable and that more that will be made in the future probably will be. And at the same time it may come to us at any moment. The real genius may be In our very midst. We can only go on trying not too consciously. The song that is finally adopted by the people Is quite unlikely to be inspired by the offer of a money prize. It may be born overnight and be so simple .that every other genius will wonder why he did not think of it long ago. BIRTH RECORDS. The high importance of complete ness of vital statistics is pointed out in a statement by the Federal Census Bureau, which takes the experience of the country in registration for mill tary service as its text. Lack of birth records has complicated the National task In many ways and in innumer able Instances will operate to the em barrassment of individuals. The average citizen will not be In clined at first to consider seriously the simple question, "How old are you?" Of course, he Is of a certain age, and he knows it, or thinks he does. But it may be that he has just "turned thirty-one" and bears his years exceptionally well, "and the neighbors suspect him of unpatriotic evasion of military duty. It would be convenient for him to be able to put his finger on the record, in some place where statistics of that kind are kept on file. How many can produce real proof that their age Is what they say it Is? The number of those who would fail is surprisingly large, for three de cades or so ago provision for keeping the records was not as general as it Is today. The Census Bureau relates the story of an American arrested in London as a German spy, who was unable to obtain a birth certificate because his birth had never been recorded and because the doctor had died, and who was saved only by the timely discovery of an old letter describing the event. But this is only one of the possible occasions upon which official records would prove valuable. They are needed to prove men of voting age, to establish claims for pensions and to set forth rights of inheritance. So, too, they might become necessary to establish the claim of a traveling American to the protection of his own Hag. Call to the colors of -every citizen between the ages of twenty-one and thirty has served to emphasize again, as has been said, the importance of recorded vital statistics. Men who have not registered will not be put down as slackers if they can prove their immunity, which can be much more conclusively done by citation of book and page than by common hearsay. EARLT RISING. One need not wait for the slow operation of the daylight-saving laws In these times in order to get a good deal of work done on his own account. We are rapidly approaching the long est day of the year, and it is a fact that the average man is wasting two or three perfectly good hours of light every morning by lying In bed. They are hours that he. cannot atone for at the end of the day. The garden calls him, and the early morning hours are fittest for the task. Put ting "off until evening what can be done in the morning is not good prac tice in the present emergency. There is a peculiar charm in early morning work. Somehow, one accom plishes more out of doors before the sun has grown too old. Any farmer knows that the early hours of the dawn are the ones in which to swat the weeds, and every other man who has tried it knows that, while an hour or two in the garden is the best kind of preparation for a business day, the rule is not by any means reversible. At least until the harvest is in, it would be a good plan to make early rising a custom, for utilitarian reasons. It is a habit that grows on one, be cause It has so many manifest advan tages. It is particularly a good thing for men approaching middle age. We waste too much daylight, anyway, for our own good. THE MASTERY OF DIPHTHERIA. News of the death of Dr. Emit Adolph von Behrlng, which has only recently reached This country, owing to interrupted communication with Europe, although it is probable that he died as long ago as March or April, deserves especial comment, because of the debt the world owes to this sci entist for depriving diphtheria of its terrors. Many scientists reprard this as the crowning medical achievement of the nineteenth century. It is cer tain that its importance was very great. More than any other single discovery, that of Von Behrlng re duced the rate of infant mortality. Not only' has occurrence of the dis ease been checked by preventive treat ment, but the number of fatal termi nations has been reduced from about 40 per cent to 6 per cent. Von Behring, however, was not the discoverer of the bacillus of diph theria. This was the work of Kebbs and Loeffler, working independently,' and in their honor the name Kebbs- Loeffler bacillus was given. It was Von Behring, however, who made use of the discovery by his predecessors to develop the blood serum, or anti toxin, which is now employed in com bating the malady. The bacterial growths In diphtheria produce certain poisonous chemical substances that permeate the cellular system and cause death. This automatically sets up in the human body a process of pro ducing "."anti-bodies," which fight the toxic bacteria, and patients who re cover owe their lives to the achieve ment In time of mastery by the anti bodies. It was Von Behrlng's mission to aid nature, which he did by estab lishing a technic for reinforcing the anti-bodies. This was done by injecr tion of treated blood serum from im munized animals. Announcement of this epochal dis covery was made in 1894. .While statistics are lacking for all sections of the country, and while the serum has not been employed in some ' of the remoter districts, it is believed that the estimate that three-quarters of a million of youthful lives have been saved in America in the past twenty- three, years does not overstate the case. The number may be consider ably greater than that. ' ' Formerly diphtheria was the scourge or tne young. Now its ravages are negligi ble, and It is recognized that a cure is probable If enlightened treatment is begun In time, while those who have been exposed to Infection and who a quarter of a century ago would have been In serious danger fare now prac tically always saved by preventive treatment. Von Behring had all the enthusiasm of the true scientist. He was first to receive the Nobel prize for the great est discovery in medicine, a prize hav ing a cash value of $40,000, and he was the recipient of prizes worth $15,- 000 bestowed by French scientific academies, but he gave this money back to science and continued his work. In more recent years he had been making further investigations of tuberculosis, continuing: thus the work of. Koch, and he collaborated with Ehrlich. who also was an associate of Koch. These three men repre sented a real democracy of science, profiting by one another's discoveries. and all together doing more for the world than can be computed. It Is pe culiarly distressing that Von Behring should have been taken at this stage of our history, when the problem of tuberculosis promises to be one of the most serious ones of the reconstruc tion period. We are, not yet, however, at the end of our work as to diphtheria. Within only a few years there has been developed a technic known as the "Schick test," which makes It possible to discriminate between immune and non-immune persons, especially nurses, children and others who may be ex. posed to diphtheria, thus rendering It unnecessary to administer prophylac tic doses of serum to those who are found to be immune. It Is also of high value In detecting "carriers, who may aid in the spread of the dis ease, while not themselves seriously attacked. It has also been determined only recently that the percentage of children under 15 years old .who are not Immune is between 40 and 50, and that immunity conferred by prophy lactic serum Injections is entirely lost within four weeks. All of these facts, while they mean most to the physician, are of the highest importance to the layman also, who is chiefly affected by the ravages of disease. It 18 good to know that the work is going on. but this does not lessen the loss the whole world has suffered in Von Behrlngs death. - . - Ot the many wiles and minor strat egies -of .war, none is more Interesting than the device reported to have been adopted by German submarines v to elude pursuit by creating a false im pression that they have been sunk. This ruse, news of which comes from Denmark, consists of the discharge of a quantity of oil to the surface, by use of a special apparatus. OH on the water being accepted as evidence that the vessel has been hit, the pur suers draw off and the U-boat escapes at leisure. Thus the race between the destructive agency and increased measures for defense against it con tinues,, as it has done ever since the war began. It is comparable with the announcement that with the construc tion of heavier nets for trapping sub marines the latter ' have ladopted pow erful" buzz-saw adjuncts to cut them. It is plain 'that no nation can stand still and win. and it seems more and more probable that the decision may yet go to the one possessing the great est Inventive genius. While the British army under Gen eral Haig is driving toward the Ger man submarine bases on the coast of Belgium,- the army of inventors striv ing to .solve the U-boat problem in other ways continues to multiply. The genius who proposes that ships dis charge a "thick viscous substance which a torpedo cannot penetrate to reach the vessel's side" is not the least visionary of them, it would seem. An other has been bombarding the news papers with the suggestion that "since electricity is generative," it by all means ought to be employed. He would generate on board 'every ship electrical currents of sufficient force to estab lish a wall which would explode a torpedo harmlessly. Another inventor, also utilizing electricity, would create a powerful whirlpool about the ship, which would draw the submarine to its destruction. And Btill we .used to laugh at the ' fantastic ideas of the Chinese! For years and years, since he suc ceeded the lamented John P. Jones, Willis H. Jenkins has gone up and down the state of Oregon as chief traveling passenger agent of the Southern Pacific system, interesting people In his line and getting them acquainted with it. .He has had, so to speak, the front and backdoor keys of all the newspaper offices. Now that he has been promoted to head of the advertising bureau of the road, he has a working capital that is in valuable. The '. "personal" columns will miss him. China is getting: some sound advice from Uncle Sam, who does not propose to dictate the form of government the people shall adopt,, but knows- that agreement among the people is essen tial to progress; The people who can not govern themselves sooner or-later will find the Job taken off their hands. Now see what's coming in the evo lution of dress. eEngland is. talking of kilts instead of -trousers for men, of course. With women, the costume of today approaches the bathing, af fair of the past, and nothing further need be looked for in that line. . Principal Draper was a man who knew boys and there, are many glad they knew him. His influence had a practical side . for ' their betternxent. The world was better because he lived in it, and his. end, at 52, is altogether too eoon. - . - . That, painter whose trousers were stolen while he was at work, causing embarrassment . when he essayed to leave, . is not resourceful.- He might have striped 'his legs and passed as something novel, even if freakish, Portland will miss the letter-carriers if they do not parade, but they must be consulted before being ordered out. If they do not care to march, Port land will not .feel offended. They do considerable "marching" every day. The International Typographical Union has subscribed fo $50,000 in liberty bonds. Individual - subscrip tions of members will aggregate ten times that amount.. Printers' are pa triots and earn good money. Interest on the British war debt is expected to reach $972,500,000 by the end of March, 1918. This is almost as much as the principal of the United States' debt before' this country went to war. ' - , Don't laugh when an up-state visitor chases. .belter skelter after a cat. . If you. watch, you'll see him make it It's a way those people have of suc ceeding. : ' The murderers of.the'Keet baby will.be found if it is necessary to comb Missouri.. Not all rtiemjiers of a gang can keep quiet on a crime of that kind, i , ': . The Middle Columbia needs straw berry pickers. The work is light, the air is fine, and the picker has choice of the crop when hungry. . . .. The $15,000,000 in liberty bonds is not' half the comfort to Rockefeller that the $50- bond is to the man Of small means. ' The firemen will not be censured this year if the apparatus does . not appear as units of bloom in the big parade. " - Certain young men who failed to register are likely to be cured of the cigarette habit, at any rate. The altitude of everything' has hit the grandstands, and you'll be done two bits more for a seat. Rose Festival visitors are appearing on the streets. Let each citizen be an Information bureau. - ' " Does anyone suppose Pershing asked the Queen to pass the butter at lunch eon yesterday? . It was high time somebody "called down" Jane Addams in a gentlemanly way. -. " - , Buy a bond for your wife and make her the -envy of the neighborhood. - The bells do not toll for your funeral If you buy a bond. A liberty bond is better collateral than a diamond. If the baby wants a bond, let him have It. . Gleams Through the Mist Bx-Desa CalUna. ROSE FESTIVAL. White are the clouds on a field of blue. Red, bright red, is the rose's hue This is the flag we fling and fly. Thus to the world we make our cry: "Called from play, to the country's weal: Festival song, to trumpet peal; Say, have our roses thorns of steelT" The City of Roses answers: "Aye!" Death is laughter and loss Is gain. And tears are sweet as a gust of rain. When 0-eath is dared and tears are shed To keep unsullied those bands of red- Red as the rose. In sunset blown; Red as the brands of battle thrown Red as the blood of heroes sown The brave, red bands of our flag out spread. This is our fairest feast of flowers Fair, though the blackest war cloud lowers The flaming red and the white and blue. Shine in a symbol rich and new; The thorn ot steel In the rosehedge runs; And her richest flowers, her fighting sons. The City of Roses gives, nor shuns To offer, O Freedom, her best to you. So. In the high hour of our pride We offer our flowers, whate'er betide. Rosea and sons, to floom or die. And thus to the world we make our cry: "Called from play to the country's weal; Festival song to trumpet peal; Say. have our rosea thorns of steelT" The City of Roses answers: "Aye!" see "Sir," said the Courteous Office Boy. blowing In on a breeze of festive spirit. I'll bet the Hohenzollern Head envies the king and queen of our Rose Fes tival." "Why so, son?" I queried. "Well." said the C O. B., "they're In no suspense about when or how their reign will end." "And no misgiving? about where they'll go when It does end," I am plified. e . e ' e " THE POTE HOUND. G. Pythagoras Bimelack, our es teemed pote hound, has dispatched an other free verse blurt from his latest capture, Aloyslus Smyths (rhyming w.ith lithe). . - - "I can't tell - from the evidence whether he is genuine or not," he writes. "Please read this and try to figure it out. "He say) it is another of his moods of nature and is about the Multnomah Falls. "This Is It": " " OPUS 81. A black, shining witch Lives in the .whirlpool. She reaches foam fingers. Endlessly, endlessly Dragging down a single silver raveling From the clouds that sleep on ' the cliff. Endlessly she drags it down; I see her wind it , Round "and" round and round A great. - whirling silver ball. Turning ' Id the shadows Under the black whirlpool. e e . e THE SEARCH FOB THE LAST "-ANALYSIS. Last Friday didn't -write a colyum for' Sunday. ', And this was because we had started on a trip to the LAST' ANALYSIS all by our . lone. . " We took the BACILLUS ROUTE and we had got as far as the Good Samari tan Hospital, going strong, when Doe Brooks came up and called the trip off. We are still open to suggestions as to the most feasible route to the LAST ANALYSIS. The route we started on will,- we are convinced, take one there very expedi tiously, tout we advise nq one to take that specific method -unless he enjoys swallowing a thermometer every time Miss Leslie goes by his bunk, or thinks he would enjoy reaching the LAST ANALYSIS in a rosewood sport, suit. trimmed with silver buckles and, lined with soft, mauve velvet. Communications should still be ad dressed to us at -the PRESENT CRISIS. . ... LGGE5D OP THE ROSE.. In the garden of Eden the fairy queen Found a flower as perfect as ever was . seen. She cultured it dally with infinite care. Till the angels in heaven pronounced it moat fair. Then, dipping her' wand in a morning sunbeam. She tinted . ita leaves with a roseate crleam. And, distilling the dew from the sweet- scented air. She srave It a fragrance exotic and rare. Then she said to her nymphs: J'Go and seek out a Dower That will nourish and prosper this beautiful flower. Plant It In profusion and give It a name That will mark well the spot in the annals of fame." So they hied to the East and they hied - to the West. The Holy Ora.il had no more earnest a quest. s And when they sucoeeded, returned to the Queen. Inspired with love of the place they had seen. And recounting: to her where wander ings led. ' And the fortunes they'd met. they hap pily said: , "We have found where this flower In excellence grows. And have Joyously named it the 'Port land rose.' " S. C. E. Children of William Penn. - BAY CENTER. Wash.. June 10. (To the Editor.) Can you tell me who William Penn married end how many children they had. Some folks who claim to be descendants are trying to trace their lineage. A READER, William Penn's first 'wife was Gull elma Maria, daughter of Sir William Sprlngett. She died In 1694. In 1696 he' mprried Hannah Collowhill, of Bris tol. Penn bad two sons, Springett and William, and a daughter.' Letttta. by his first wife. Letltia was married to Will lam Aubrey.' Two other daughters died In infancy. Springett died soon after his father's second marriage. There were three sons by the second mar riage, John, Thomas end Richard. Positions In Munition Plants. PORTLAND. : June 11. (To the Ed itor.) Will you tell me where to write to 'get information concerning positions open to women in munition plants? Or will you give me the names and ad dresses of munition plants employing women? READER. Write for Information to Adjutant General. Washington, D. C, where In formation bureau Is maintained. Soldiers Extraordinary. By Hakibnnc I. lobe of the Vljtllantrs. I 'saw all these fine warriors In one day, during a drive of 25 miles, and It made me glad to call myself a Tennes sean; it made me proud of the people of this section . of the Old Volunteer State. I have no doubt thet the peo ple of the other states are doing Just as well, you understand; I'm telling you this in order that you may know that Eastern Tennessee is trying hard to do her bit. Before I left town I saw the park way around the home of one of our best men in Irish potatoes. Yes, Irish potatoes instead of the usual grass and prettily bordered canna beds. More than that, there were Irish potatoes in the flower beds of that man's lawn. Also he had had bis back yard spaded up. and that, too, was filled with pota toes. The man who was with me was a Dollar American. If you don't know what that is. It's a sort of a cross be tween a polecat and a hornet's nest. He raid to me as we drove by: "Why. everybody's planting potatoes; they won't be worth 50 cents per bushel!" I hope to God they won't. Get me? I hope they won't be worth 20 cents per ousnei. r or it s hard to starve a peo ple or a family that has plenty of po tatoes. Leaving town, I saw a half-blind, rheumatic old man down on his knees hoeing an acre lot of potatoes. I know him; he Is fairly well-to-do; he didn't have to do that, really. - As I passed him on my way home late In the af ternoon he was still down on his knees to that potato patch and therefore serving the Almighty and the American flag to the utmost of his ability. Man, woman, whoever you are that reads this. I gay to you here that that old man Is a patriot and a soldier extraor dinary; and lesser men have worn a Colonel's shoulder straps and been ban queted as conquering heroes. Down on his knees to hoe potatoes! It was finer. In this our time f desperation, with hellfire stalking footloose over the world, than being- down on his knees to pray. Back In the hills I saw an old gran ny woman and her daughter and her daughter's two half-grown daughters all at work In a field that they had lit erally wrested from the mountain wil derness. On Inquiry I learned that the younger woman's husband was dead. "We're a doln' all we can, shore," the granny woman told hie, "acause the's a goin' to be war. I went through wl' one war. sonnyf and I know that men folks cain't do much good a fightin' on a empty stummick. Acause the belly and the heart, sonny. Is closter akin than most o folks knows." Amen and amen, say L And again, amen. I've been In the trenches and I've fought on an empty stomach, and I tell you I know. A few miles further on I saw the wife of a railroad section foreman cultivat ing a part of the railroad's right of way. And less than two miles from that point I came upon a remarkably pretty 15-year-old girl plowing off fur rows for corn. Now listen! She didn't have on Star-Spangled Banner hosiery and she didn't have an American flag tied to. her mule's head and she didn't have a small metal edition of Old Glory pinned to her anywhere but she was plowing for corn. Get me? She was a soldier In her trench, doing her bit. Aye. nobly doing her bit. "We'll need It." she told me. "The's a goln' to be war. It's all right to trust In the Lord." she went on. quoting from the inscription on the monument to King's Mountain men. "but it's also a good thing to keep the gunpowder dry." "Trust in the' Lord and keep the powder dry " is a good motto for any nation. When I think of women doing their bit in times of war. I like to think of them as God's brigade. And God's bri gade it certainly is. It 4s this that makes war so insufferable: for the shadow of the sword is always a cross, always a cross, and It always falls heaviest on the hearts of women. TOO FEW SEE NATURE'S WONDERS. Scenery, Like Prophet. ' Is TVIthout Honor In Own Country. PORTLAND. June 11. (To the Edi tor.) We say a prophet has no honor in his own country. We might say neither has scenery. It is safe to say that not more than 80 per cent of all the people of Portland have seen the wondrous beauties of the vicinity of Multnomah Falls. When. I state that not more than 80 per cent of the people of Portland have seen the falls or seen the greatest pan oramic view in the world from the top of Larch Mountain. I base it from ask ing people. As high as two persons out of 20 have made the trip. These per sons . owned automobiles, as did also some of those who had never been able to make the trip. If some of the people coming to our city during the Festival could only be induced to make this trip, they would have every reason to know why we boost the locality of our city. The total cost would only be -about $3.00 for the round trip, as the trip can be easily made In a few hours. To the person who lives Inland and does not have the opportunity to see waterfalls hundreds of feet hierh. tumbling cascades of creamy, foamy. rivers, falling sheer down the. sides of a mountain it Is surely an awe Inspir ing sight. To the man from the prairie country, the view from Larch Moun tain up and down the Columbia is a sight he will surely remember as long as he lives. It is an awful thing to move away from a part of the country where you have been living and have others tell you how they had traveled several thousands of miles at great ex pense, to see something you lived with in 50 miles of for 10 years and didn't take enough interest in to visit. I my self lived within oO miles of the Grand Canyon of the Colorado for seven months, when I was 20 years old. I would give a good deal now, if I had taken the opportunities to have seen this s.cenlc marvel, but should I desire to make the trip now, it would cost many hundreds of dollars. GEORGE W. S A., BORN. INVESTORS PLEASED BY RESl'LT Contrratalatlons en Election Come to Portland From Kentucky. LOUISVILLE, Ky.. June 6. (To the Editor.) I am In receipt of your tele grams in response to my request for result of last Monday's election, and for which I thank and congratulate you most sincerely, ' not alone for the splendid fight you have made in be half of the candidate elected, but also on the great principles Involved. , Surely this election is the beginning of a new era in the history of Portland. Sane and wise counsels have prevailed and one can now look forward to the upbuilding of Portland rather than the drag of the last few years that Port land has suffered. The result of this election is not altogether watched lo cally. -There are people outside of Portland who have interests In your city that have been most anxious re garding the outcome of same. It seems whenever some bheap poli tician wants to attain office he tries to ride in by some propaganda, notably against public service corporations; once it Is for 3-centfare and another time for a municipal lighting plant, etc. It seems "you can fool some of the people all the time and all the peo ple some of the time, but you cannot fool all the people all the time," and this your election showed. I again thank you and congratulate the people of Portland. M. S. KOHLER. Real Estate, 1610 Inter-Southern Bldg. In Otherays. Half a Cem Asst. From The Oregonlan June 12. 1MT. Omaha Three an die-fourth miles of track were laid rthe .Union Pa- , clflc Railroad on the h. and the feat is unparalleled In thiistory of rail road building. Paris All powers Mnsr diplomatic relations with Austriixcept America, will be represented aho coronation of the Emperor Framjoseph tomor row. An amnesty w be proclalir ;d to all Austrian subje charged with political offenses. An Indian, says theiumbta Press, has announced his witness to sh- w where gold can be fou in abundance in the Blue Mountains.0ut 150 miles from Umatilla. His rorts are fab ulous and the rock he duced is said to be very rich. Wherle obtained it Is not so certain. ( Walla Walla Mr. Chs Russell, of the Pioneer Mill, in ims us that within the rst week. , has shipped 1000 barrels of flour to in Francisco. Chicago Sherman h withdrawal his troops to he soutlside of the Platte, between Forts iagwlck and McPherson. 7ha stages have been withdrawn fron that se.lon. Sher man will probahly abandi the expe dition to the hetrt of thendlan coun try and concentmte the tiops to pro tect the Etasres irtd rallrols, deeming that the more imjortant. , Twcnry-ft Years karo. From The Oregon,, f jun 12 1S9C. Berlin The meting bcween the Czar and Emperor Ynilam i the lead ing topic of convrsatlon here this week. Comments e the lewspapers) show It is felt therets nttl room for congratulation over ne resilt of the ' meeting, since It had e app.arance of the Emperor running fter te Ciar. Washington The veland forces are packing their prlps;.k8 for a move on Chicago. The frequtt conferences between Hill and Gorma, have given rise to the suspicion tha Hill is pre paring to make the sli Maryland boss the residuary legateecf the New York vote In the conventloi Cincinnati Harrison's omlnatlon was celebrated here tonight lr the Lin coln Club with fireworks, speches and a brass band. Arrangemns were made to meet the Blaim. Csji on Its return from Minneapolis tomorrow. Colonel Mitchell, of the etlosltlon, was made happy yesterday bi We re ceipt or a letter from Direct Sousa, of the Washington Marine Barll, com plimenting htm upon his selecon cf the American band, of Providence, R. I., for the exposition. The high water is a great blessnar for the East Side. It covers the low lands and flows under the roadway,, where there Is an accumulation oV refuse of Averv klnri. and carries m rtnt of the stuff away. It would be almost impossible to live and do business on Union avenue but for this periodical overflow. Hfndenburg's Mighty Pen. By Jimfi Barton Adams. When Haig assaults the boches' lines with his resistless might mows down a host of kaisermen and puts the rest to flight, repulses the return attacks and holds his captured ground, while cheers of his brave warriors through smoke-charged air resounds. Von Hin denburg with firm set Jaws gTabs up the waiting pen and tells the people God has brought him victory again, and all the German masses shout and toss their hats on high, believing he's Infallible and cannot tell a lie. The not be gainsaid, cn many a sanguinary field herolo hands they've played, and stubbornly they yield the ground. In Hlndenburg confide believing that, he yet will stem the fierce onrolling tide, and as they battle and fall back their chief in written words tells how they made a ghastly wreck of French and English hordes, and all save German people will agree with one accord the pen in hand of Hlndenburg is mightier than the sword. WHY GERMANY' IS YET UNBEATEN. Summary of Reasons for Empire's Great Frowns. F. W. Wile in London Dally Mall. 1. All the men, women and children in the Empire regard themselves as be ing at war and are conducting them selves accordingly. 2. The Empire has a Government which governs with no other consider ation whatever than that of waging and winning the war. 3. The Government leaves absolute ly nothing to chance, anticipating con tingencies and not temporizing with them after they have arisen. , 4. The nation's food suddIt. thouarh disastrously low, has been organized since November, 1914, on a basis which makes "starvation" impossible. 5. Failures in public office mili tary, naval and civil are ruthlessly relegated, no matter how high-sounding a name or brilliant a reputation re quires to be sacrificed. 6. The industrial classes realizing that their own existence as well as that of Germany is at stake, are work ing tooth and nail in the national cause. 7. Strikes tre mercilessly dealt with and broken ,'fore they have had time n -1. 1 .1 Kv rutfnc vnnlH.hA stllrnra and their leaders as common enemies of the state 8. Despite their failings and dis agreeable qualities as a nation, the German people are thrifty, frugal, highly patriotic, and endlessly willing to sacrifice for the Fatherland. 9. The German armies, after 84 months of fighting, are still in occupa tion, with minor exceptions, of the vast territories which their superior prepar edness enabled them to conquer and hold. 10. The German fleet Is still Intact, numerically more powerful than ever, capable of risking daring sorties Into mined British waters, and Is sinking hundreds of thousands of tons of allied and neutral shipping per month. 11. German man-power, which rests on a pre-war population of roundly 70. 000,000. is no nearer "exhaustion" than the man-power of the United Kingdom with a pre-war population of 46,000, ooo. . 12. German statesmanrhlp. eschew ing "war measures" like the stoppage of racing to save oats, doals with buinv lng necessities like rat'onlng of bread stuffs. The perman Government wlU not shrink from rationing the air mail breathe if tt will promote the winnins; of the war. And It will not wait until the nation has no more breath left be fore issuing breath-cards. Money In ClrcnlnUon. RAINIER. Or June 11. (To the Btf itor.) What is the amount of Kjgney in circulation in the United States of America and what is the amount of banking capital. C G. THATSsR. (1) In 1916 the total of money In circulation in the United States, in cluding currency, was $i.018,04$,555. (2) The capital of National banks was $1,067,481,000. The capital stock paid In of reporting state, savings, private banks and loan and trust companies was $1,159,052,115.