12 THE MORXIXG OKEGOXIAX, WEDNESDAY, MAT 13, 1918. CDiTrriJittan rOKTLJH. OUKGOM. Eatera al FortUa4 Oc-oa) Peetefflee MCM4-CIW aaall "' liniUM raiee Invariably Is advaac: IS Mall.) far, feafia htrlnii Ml. year........!- 1 K ISO lay v.. -- - . , -. I . t. muAtU. . - ' A- .J. - U U ' 1 . J I - -. . X . . Sun.lar lncl-il. " snoota -1 !.... "Hhul Irair. eee er "7. 1.. . H i ' tkat. I lUB4l e.e Boat ha. . - .ir. without fusdar. eoe sseBtn.. y. arte yaar. ........ ......... aaa vaar. " uiiajr Bad ea.y . FT carrier.) ra!!r. ooT lnclarfe.1. es 7ar ' !... sun-las !arlila4. aaa ' !.... anA7 Inc. udl. three Hioa-.ba.... J I.a . wi'hout SundaJ. aaa Tear... J"' T. I'tout t andlT. I VM imiiIM.... " . . . k m. mania. ..... Ll.ar 1. lend Daetofrice meney snaar. lDnu er Hmul check ea your Iwil baak. tttmpn coin er currency ara at nun run. tine paetoffiee addeee la " Im-.tidiaa coajjty Bad stale. ftaa atea 12 te IS pas'. 1 rent: 18 ta J J paara. S casta: la pas'. canta: fc l pas-a. 4 canta; 92 to T pagee. ewe: 78 ta aJ psfea, ceota. rereif a poat age. daub-la raiae. Kaatam Baataaaa OffU T.rraa Cobb . Lmaiairn aul.illna. .r TarB; acree rotia'ia. Staser kul.ding. Cnlcase; Verree Cooaln. ee Fraae i.dliK. 1alrolt. -a rranrtara repreeealaUia. H. J. Blavail. 1 4J Alar Set atraeL. MCMBCB OF THE AMOTUTID MESS. Thm Aaaeelaraal Prsae la avefuslvely l'e-1 ta the Baa tar rapubllcatloa aC a. I Bew aliaratrhaa eradltad la It ar Bat elerwlee ar.n.a ta thie papar, sad eiea tae local pahttaha4 Bare. A'l nana af rutmttoa af special 41s- ate &aa hereta ara alaa rard- rOTUD. WEDROAT. MAT 15. 1PI. AT AJTA3fCX AXD ITS TEACHINGS. . Recommendation that all railroad rates ba Increased at least Zi per cent Is a belated recognition f a necessity which has existed for several rears, but which has now become so acute that It could no loncr Ignored. Voder OoTcrnment operation It Is pro posed to do at one stroke that which (he Interstate Commerce Commission .ad perslstenUr refused to permit tinder private operation, Actlnr ae cordlrf to the plain facta of the sltua tioa Instead of belns; swayed by preju elica, Director-General SicAdoo la not like to delay lone bla acceptance of tha advice riven by the men to whom al! Govern meet authorltlea war for snarly deaf. Tha oft-reiterated arrument tha railroad revenue only seamed to be deficient because, tha railroads were overcapitalised la now thrown Into the ttlacard. Those who advanced that argument rave no heed to tha truth that tha Government and tha states which permitted overcapitalisation inuit share the responsibility with the railroad companies, or that the water liad lone since been aqueesed out by Investment of eamlnr In Improve ments or by enhancement of value. In opposing advances In rates, ship pers cloaed their minds to tha fact that they would have been amply compensated for the additional pay menta by better, prompter service. They were punished for their short ness of stjht by the congestion ' ot tra.Se In It If culminating in the titter breakdown In 117. which prob ably mulcted them In a larirer sum than they would have paid out In the nlrhest advance of rates for which the railroads ever asked. They themselves rendered Govern ment operation Inevitable, and with H sfntrle advance In rates which ex-rK-is the total of all for which the railroads had asked. They have merely aucceeded In postponlnc pay ment of the full value for the service rendered In past years, and they have paid dearly In Inefficient service for the time f-alned la ma kin J this pay rcf nt. Thourh much has been said about the tneficlency of railroad manaire, ment. It baa been surpassed by the Inefficiency of Government regulation of the railroads. If reg-ulalton had been efficient. It would have recog nized that poor service Is dear at any price, that revenue adequate to main tain. Improve and extend the lines Is essential to good service, and that any attempt to punish owners of railroads by denying them such revenue falls ultimately on the shippers and through them on the people In general. The men who made and adminis tered railroad laws were prevented by the clamor of demagogues and railroad batters from following the guidance of their own Judgment. Because one railroad had been mismanaged, they punished also the ninety-nine which liad been well managed, and their patrons with them. Because traffic had been pooled to the Injury of the public, they refused to permit pooling so directed by public regulation that it would have inured to the public good. Political passion raged so furi ously around the railroads that states men and administrators were Incap able of that broad vision which sees the railroads as a necessary Instru suant for transacting the Nation's business. The' degree to which pa.ston and pretudlce had blinded the people and their leaders to their own Interests la plain, for they now not merely suffer without a murmur, but welcome as public benefits acta under Government operation against which they formerly stormed. There was small protest against Government guaranty of a reasonable return on the Investment. Tooling of traffic met with general approval, and the traveling public finds that passenger train service re duced as much as one-third In some Instances Is sufficient. Terminals are pooled without any outcry against a trust. Traffic la distributed among many ports without objection from the few which formerly monopolised 1 ports and exports. A huge ad vance in rates Is admitted to be neces sary to pay enhanced wages, cost of fuel and other materials, though It Is In part deferred payment of advances which had formerly been dented. Why could we not have done these things before? Because we were so busy swatting the railroads that we did not realise that In so doing we were swat ting ourselves. be hoped that Congress will remain In session long enough to dispose of these questions. MR. SMITH'S BOLD TEXT I RE. A bold man is John U. Smith, of Tamhill County. He Is against the primary law, and he says so, and he submits his candidacy for County Commissioner with that . understand ing. If not on that platform. Let as hear what the temerarious Air. Emith has to say: Tha Orason primary law. while Its ablarta ara food, la practice Is sodaiBocrstle. unfair and Inimical to rapraeaatatlve sovarnmant. Oaa aiust have time aao Booty ta enable aaa ta tbruat bis "card" indar tha aoee ot vary volar aad "shake 4a hand and pat da hark" of the roes aad k!aa the children. .a lima sew (or all theae pleasaatrles. Sot I Ba4 only aaa vote mora than eae (osrth of all to oaa who go to tha primary Oiactioa. aavler the primary law ao why worry? if I ware rannlas for Oeverear eae-elslA t the people cou.d elect: I did sot help nake this law. I mi Breva n allhL John I. Pmiib. (The efily candidate ta Orafaa wha 4are say what ha truly taiaks out the prmay law.. We have no Idea that Mr. Smith will get far In bis candidacy. He has laid his hands on the sacred ark of the primary, and he will be cast Into outer darkness. The average voter doesn't like to have his pet Ideals shattered, or even attacked. One of these days Mr. Smith will try again on a platform demanding a public return to the convention sys tem. True, we have it; but Its use Is reserved for privileged bodies like the Kon-Partlsan League and the Central Labor Council, and the Innumerable "patriotic" societies which are indors ing candidates, and stirring up bed lam. Only the Republican party la denied the right of assembly. It Is still being punished for its sins. Some day. Indeed. It will dawaon the public that the primary and the convention are not Incompatible, and that a scheme of political action and espreaston may be devised which will retain the valuable features of both. PRACTICAL ROMS Wit WOK. War work begins at home. And the particular part of war work which the 8urgeon-Oeneral of the United States has called on Tortland to per- form makes a powerful appeal to our humanitarian Impulses. He asks us to train aides for the rehabilitation of our wounded soldiers. Because of the reputation of the Reed College Ijepartment of Physical Education, the Surgeon-General ha named Reed College as the only cen ter west of Michigan for the training of reconstruction aides. These aides must be prepared at once to give remedial exercises and massage and other therapeutia treatments to re turned soldiers, that they may grad ually recover the use of fractured and shell-shocked limbs and be prepared for re-education. The college needs at once 110.000 for this and other war work, and also the loan of a house for three Summer months, possibly for the duration of the war, to be used as a hospital and clinic In connection with the training of reconstruction aides and the treat ment of wounded men and crippled children. Of all the opnortunltles we hare had of beginning war work at home. we doubt If any leads more directly to healing the human ravages of war, famine sufferers. In his later years he made tedious efforts to introduce the metric system Into the United States, and exerted prodigious energy to fur nishing wireless news about the Wall street markets to yachting parties on pleasure cruises. The gulf between Mr. Bennett and his public widened with the passage of the years. Senators have already begun to talk ef adjourning Congress as soon as the appropriation bills and other pending bills have been passed, so that they may go home about July 10. The water power bill, now being prepared by a House committee, and the gen eral land-leasing bill are as essential trar measures as even war appropria tions, for It Is evident that prepara tion must be made for a long war. during which much development could be effected nnder those bills. The general leasing bill should result In great Increase In production of fuel and of phosphates for fertiliser, while the water power bill should cause much fuel to be saved aad production of other commodities to be Increased. It would economise railroad transpor tation and the labor employed in that service and La mining coal. It la to JAMES GORDO! BEXXETT. James Gordon Bennett, who died In Parts yesterday, was the most pic. turesrjue figure In the American news paper field. He was the absentee landlord of Journalism, and It was due to this fact that, the Influence his chief newspaper, the New York Herald, had declined steadily in re. cent years. He was a man given to whimsicalities; he gave little consider. atlon to the demand or desires of his public, although for many year he held them by sheer force of erratic genius. The Herald under his proprie. torship was personally conducted In the highest possible degree, but quite as often conducted to gratify a per. sonal whim as to adhere to a definite editorial policy. This personal su pervlsion was made possible by lavish employment of the cable, and by an elaborate system of reports upon the minutest details of Herald ad minis tration. It did not, however, as events ap pear, to have shown, atone for the dis advantage of his non-residence, be. cause of which he Inevitably grew to be out of touch with the spirit of the times. It was said ot the elder Ben nett. his father, that he was the dis coverer of the principle of news, that It was he who first taught newspaper readers that the occurrences of every day are a part of history, and that knowledge of the present Is no less necessary to enlightenment than knowledge of the past. The son In herited a newspaper that was the leader In the recording of world events. This character he preserved only in part. For a time the Herald was the newspaper of the New Yorker, reflecting the New Torkers typical unconcern for the world west of Ho. boken. N. J. He spent fabulous sums for cable tolls, however, and the Herald foreign news service was a conspicuous feature during all of Mr, Bennett s life. Decline of the parochial viewpoint f New Yorkers, which Mr. Bennett living In France or traveling In the Orient did not detect, or which out of the perversity of his peculiar -vanity e would not admit probably accounts for the overshadowing ef the Herald In the esteem of New York readers by such newspapers of broader poll dee as the Times and the World. In dditlon to this, virtual absence of an editorial policy probably was In flu en tlal. The Herald had few edttoiial opinions, or none at all. The fact that Its owner was better known In London and Palis, and Berlin and lenna. than In New York, which lent certain romance to his name In the early days, ceased to draw. Public In terest In news that was merely freak Ish also waned as readers became more serious and purposeful. The Herald contributed much to the edu cation ef Americans In news values. and then failed to keep pace with Its pupils. Those who like to read books of the "Count of Monte Chrlsto order would delight In Mr. Bennett's biography. If no should nnd a Boswell. His chateaux In France: his palatial steam yacht on which was always kept s cow that he might drink fresh milk, even at sea: his "master's certificate," of which he was Inordinately proud: bis erratic system of hiring and dis charging his employes: his professed contempt for college training and a thousand other peculiarities made him at one time the most talked-about newspaper proprietor in the world, and furnished the groundwork for anecdote without end. But he lost his sense of proportion with the great growth of egotism, which amounted in the end to mania. Where In the be ginning of his career he sent Henry M. Stanley to Africa and raised a huge subscription to save the Irish. El out oct or twelve. Th Oregooian has had many re quests to recommend to the public at the Republican -primary a ticket of twelve candidates for the Legisla ture from Multnomah, lower house, at Salem. It is a service which is not to be lightly undertaken or hastily and Imperfectly performed, and The Oregonian would avtod it for it knows t'.iat In the list of thirty-seven candi dates there are many men of worth and promise, and It would give them all a full and free opportunity to test their standing with the voters. There are. however, some names among them which stand out with prominence through former service In the Legislature, and In other posi tions. It is desirable that their avail ability be emphasized and that the chance that they may be overlooked, in the general mess, be reduced to a minimum. In that spirit The Ore gonian offers, with Its Indorsement the names of eight candidates for the House of Representatives. They are: HERBERT OORDOM. O. W. HOKrOKU. St. K. klHI L OSCAR HOKXf. john B. torrrT. JOalCrH a. KK-HARDSOX. . K. V. Mrt'ARLA.VU. RALPH A. COAM. In this list are represented many branches of professional and Indus trial activity, so that In this respect It Is fully representative. There are a builder and abstractor (Gordon); a steamboat man (Hosford); a printer ajid stationer (Kubll); a bricklayer (Horn); an Insurance man (Coffey); a lawyer and manufacturer (Richard son): a dentist and sportsman (Mc Farland), and a lawyer (Coan). Men like Kubll, Coffey. Gordon and Home have served acceptably In previous Legislatures, and the others are all familiar with affairs, skilled In their various callings, desirous of promot ing the public welfare, and of good repute among all who know them. There are four vacancies to fill. Assuming that the eight will be elected, as most of them from the known favor of the public undoubt edly will be, there will still be ample opportunity for an open choice at the primary. There are many others who may well be elected on their merits; but whatever happens with the four remaining places the people of Mult nomah County may be assured that they will be well served at Salem if the eight shall be nominated at the primary and elected In November. FALSE HOPES. The rising cost of wages, equipment replacements, fuel and other operating expenses has the same Influence upon steam railroad income as it has upon street railway Income. There la now Government control of th railroads. They are operated as a unit Various economies have been put into effect such as elimina tion of unnecessary trains, consolida tion of ticket offices and withdrawal of solicitors. Other outgrowths of the competitive system are to be cut off. Still a deficit is In prospect, and It 1 now recommended to Director-Gen eral McAdoo by his advisers that pas senger and freight rates be Increased 18 per cent This Increase Is deemed necessary In spite of the fact that the volume of traffic has greatly increased, just a the volume of traffic has greatly increased on the street railways. ' It ta clearly understood that much of the vociferous objection to the 6 cent fare In Portland Is raised by ad vocates of municipal ownership. They are not Interested so much in getting back the 6-cent fare as they are in putting their theories Into effect The 6-cent fare order la a mere convent ence for carrying their propaganda. It ought now to be made clear by the results of Government control of railroad that Government ownership or control does not necessarily mean lower rates. There is no honest pros pect that a successful effort to throw the Portland Railway. Light & Power Company into the hands of a receiver would restore the 6-cent fare. There Is no honest prospect that city owner ship of the system would bring about that desired reduction. Whether city or receiver or present owners operate the property, the management will be confronted by the same higher cost of labor and materials that are now to force up railroad rates. It is not going to help pay the in flexible . costs of operation of the streetcar system to compel a division of revenues with Jitneys. It may be doubted, too, that if that is attempted the owners of the property will con sent to dig Into their own pockets to pay deficits. The outcome of an ex pression of Injustice and unfairness at the polls next Friday, in the face oCfondlttons that are matters of com mon knowledge, cannot be forecast except In one particular. It is not likely to cause a reduction of streetcar fares. It Is the fate of the company that la uncertain. The Government under a law passed April 22, may comman deer street railways used In whole or In part for the transfer or transporta tion of shipyard employes. We might in -fact get Government ownership quicker than those who are steering toward that goal imagine. But the Government as Is evidenced by the proposal to Increase railroad rates, is Just as reluctant as private capital to pay operating deficits. There Is every Indication that the 6-cent fare has come to stay as long as wages and material costs remain at the present level. To open the streets to every Irresponsible person who wants to run a Jitney is to sacri fice publlo welfare without profit or return. happen to be measurably fit for the job. It Is doubtful that the proposal to release men from the Army can tonments for farm work will amount to more than the proverbial drop in the bucket Meanwhile, urban indus tries continue to lure men away from the farms. Some districts are prac tlcally denuded of their skilled agri cultural help. Matters promise to be worse before they get any better. At the same time there Is a "satls- I factory and encouraging Increase in ' the acreage of the most essential crops." This will continue to be sat isfactory only In the event that the crops are safely housed in cellar, barn and granary. Crops in the -field are less than half the battle. A every farmer knows, the pressure comes In July, August and September.' It will require something more than a mere wage adjustment to stem the tide of voluntary enlistments. -Men are not going into the Army at .T30 or so a month because they have been refused $60, or any other particular sum, for farm work. They are men who want to take part in the big ad venture, and who would be in the front line If farm wages were ten times as high as -they are today. Ten thousand untrained women and boys will not make up for the apparent deficit of 9000 skilled farmers and the deficit probably Is greater than that . It is common report that there are some 3000 men idle in Portland for no particular reason, except that they do not choose to work, or that they are finical about- the kind of work they will do, or that they are holding out for fanciful wages Which they Imagine themselves to be worth. Portland probably Is not peculiar in this respect: other cities no doubt have similar experiences. If a way can be found to shame these men into going to work on the farms, or com pelling them to do so, or making it uncomfortable for them to remain Idle, there will be real reason for optimism. There are some thousands of skilled farm laborers, as has been said, who have 'been attracted to more or less non-essential industries in the cities. Co-operation of the employers of these men, by which the latter would be released for farm service, might pro duce results, but It Is high time that something were being done about it It Is a rather big problem of organ! cation and administration, as a stu dent of labor problems is presumed to know. Optimism Is a delightful state of mind, but It does not get any hay into the stack or corn Into the shock, and it does not put back on the farms the thousands of young men who have flocked to the colors or struck out In search of jobs in town. The emer gency calls for a highly practical remedy, and we think the farmers themselves will be more inclined to be optimistic when it is shown that meas ures are actually under way to or ganize the remedy and put It Into effect A Line o' Type or Two. Hew te the Line. It the Q.nlps Fall Where They May. When Mrs. Van Winkle's alleged second husband ordered her to give the old man a cold potato and let him go, he did not know Its goodness. Next time you are hungry at night and do not know what to eat get one from the cupboard. With a bit of butter for each mouthful, it is novel and satisfying. Unlike Ole. who could make it In "two yumps," the Coqullle antoist who essayed to board a departing ferryboat came to grief. There are more varie ties of. the automaniac than all the rest bunched. The one difficulty about a political combination against the pro-Germans is that they refuse to come out In their true colors and fight, but there will be some pleasure in exposing their camouflage. At the present rate of growth the man power of the American Navy will soon equal that of the British. Our development as a fighting Nation promises to be one of the phenomena of the war. If there are a million rifle In the hands of Germans In this country if there is even a dozen every holder is due for the inside of a barbed wire enclosure, and he will get what Is due. Bmerlnus Versteeg is no longer a solitary nominee on the local Demo cratic ticket The Jackson Club gives him a running mate, as if the Hon. Km. needed speeding up. Stretching the Monroe Doctrine a bit might cover German radios in Mexico. If necessary, Mexico would be a fine training field for one of the millions going abroad. American aviators are doing great work with foreign machines, and when they get something made In America it will be good-bye to the Hun. (By B. L. T. Published by Arrange ment With Chicago Tribune.) HOME bound from the battle front Commander Sekl, of the Japanese navy. In reply to the question. ."What was the purpose of your visit?" said In part: "America is a wonderful country." Well, If it comes to that, the Japs tire a won derful little people. Problem of Conduct. Sir: At a Red Cross sale a young woman put up a lot to be auctioned. The final bidder took it only with the stipulation that the original owne take him to Michigan and show him the land. The bidder is an unincum bered bachelor. What shall the young woman doT MAB. A Berlin newspaper advertises new drug that allays hunger and en ables one "to hold out until the next meal time." When, presumably, one ta4ces another dose. But the contln uous smoking; of tobacco is almost as good. It was a German philosopher who said that smoking, with his people, was a substitute for thought. It is a pretty fair substitute tor food. Testimonial. Sir: We have lately observed a rem edy for Summer complaints which may be of service to others. The remedy consists simply in having your phone removed. Our landlord submitted to this operation two weeks ago and we have been unable to lodge a complaint since. . PAN. Speaking of sugar, J. F. nominates for the academy. Miss Maple Grove, of aaiiaa, uolo. Luck, including the luck of the weather, is said to be against the Ger mans. This is ominous, as they have had nearly all the breaks of the game, and It may presage the withdrawal of Von Gott from the firm. Cleanllneaa and Godliness. (From the Niles, Mich.', Star.) Mr. Crume, formerly a preacher and whose education as a Bible student Is known and accepted for miles around, is now a manufacturer of brooms. Advice to Voters. In the o. f. novel, when the hero or heroine was packed off to boarding school, the reader knew that he could settle down to 10 or 15 chapters de voted to that particular Institution of learning. In the new novel one may get by the school In 100 or 400 words. This is how Mr. Fuller manages it in "ON THE STAIRS." First, however, this: I do not Intend to magnify the academy and its stair way. The academy did very well in its day ana it happened to be within easy distance of James Prince's resi dence. If its big green doors were flanked on one side by a grocery and on the other by a laundry, and if its stair way was worn untidily by other feet than those of Dr. Grant's boys, I shall simply point opt that this was In the day of small things, and that Fastid iousness was still upon her way. Should this not satisfy you, I will state that In the year following the academy moved Into other quarters; It lodged Itself In a nearby private residence whose owner, in real estate, senses down-heeled Decadence stealing that way a few years before any of his neighbors felt it. and who ,made his shifts accordingly. If even this does not satisfy you. I might sketch the en trance and stairway somewhere In Massachusetts, which are to know the footfalls of Lawrence D. McComas, aged 10. grandson of Johnny;' but such a step would perhaps take us too far afield as well as slightly Into the future, One does not pass a lad through that gateway on the spur of the moment. Nor ought I to magnify, on the other hand, the marble stairway of the Mid Continent. This was not one of the town's greater banks; and the stairway was at the disposal not only of the bank's clientele, but at that of 16 tiers of tenants. However, it represented some advanced architect's ideal ot grandeur and it served to make the bank s president seem haughty when in truth he was only- preoccupied.' "Let's put Normal, 111., on the list writes Curly the Gadder. "Chief White wears a red helmet labeled Chler when on the hose cart and has a bright star on his breast labeled "Chief of Police.' In his 1917 report to the village board he mentions 23 fire alrams and 11 ar rests. Why hire two men?" Why the Germans Fled. (From "Songs the Soldiers and Sailors Sing.") Dixie gave us men like Robert Lee, Men like old Jeff Davis, too. And Stonewall Jackson was there In action. Sherman marched through Dixie to the Antl-Ioafing laws are spreading a reign of terror among those who toll not What a sad world it will be when they can find nothing to do but work. The American troops have found the way to make the Germans aban don poison gas. It is to give them a double dose of the same medicine. EATrOC OPTTMISM. It will not be possible for thought ful observers of the farm labor situa tion In the Northwest to share the optimism" of the Oregon State Labor Commissioner, unless there shall be definite Indication, and more than a mere belief, that there will be suffi cient labor on hand to put in the crops and harvest them. Making a '-'survey" of the number of men and women and boys available is, unfor- unately, far short of turning their efforts to account It seems, according to the estimate now made, that there are approxi mately 10,000 farm laborers for all year work, and about 17,000 available for haying season help, with a pros pective need of 36,000 laborers for the 60.000 farmers of Oregon. This on Its face leaves a shortage of some 6000 men. which may be partly made good by employment of the Boys' Working Reserve, and of women who Verily, the times have gone Into Innocuous desuetude. No big rallies. no whooping er up, and, best of all, no promiscuous booze. If the defeated candidates only kept lists of the men who promise to vote for them, what a census of grand liars could be made! Summer this year will begin May 25, which is the date set by Mr. Cord ray, according to his time-honored custom. ' The Turks are having so much practice that they ehould win all the long-distance races at the next Olym pic games. Every man with a few dollars in the bank is proud to note the gain in Portland deposits. The municipality, like the Indi vidual, needs more money and has but one way to get it ' Diver dreadnoughts will be bigger targets. Bring them out O, Hun, and speedily! Regular old-time Oregon rain, Just tight for the early gardens. The war is not over. Why Is your pole bare? Fly that flag! - sea. We're taught that they fought in the South to win our Liberty, In Civil war time. Sixty-four time; If these grand old heroes were alive today, . They would fight our battles too; They're the kind we sigh for. They would gladly die for Mother, Dixie and You: "Don't let 'em -bluff you," writes C. C. from Camp Grant "about the soldier on the Lit'ry Digest cover.- I blistered my hand on the same sort of gun with the same 'jollng jacKei. Ttoaan-Lake Sir: Has anyone reported to you the engagement of Miss Emily V. Rough and Dr.Guy Melvln Lake? Oh, yes, both live in Weeping Water, Neb. W. S. The next offensive will bring "the longed-for German success," declares the German press. Always the next one. Hope deferred maketh the Hun sick. Wooed and Willing. Great Phoebus, northing, hastes his flaming steeds From south the line through space's countless miles. He warmly wooes the while he swiftly speeds. And darling Mistress Nature shyly smiles. I Br blasts belabored while he fled afar, Bereft of bloom, her case exceeding dire. She thrills throughout to view bis shin lng car. And burgeoning anew dons fair attire. Full amorous he, and eager in his suit, His gase more ardent grown with every glance. She dreams of bud and leafage, bloom and fruit And waking, yields her to his each ad vance. Her features, frigid late and hid 'neatb hoar Ah me, for moons how wan and woed . her face! Beneath his fond caresslngs more and more Take on again their lovely vernal grace. But prithee, Phoeb, Just mind thy q's and d s. Nor let thy beams be mixed with burn ing bombs. Few folks are fain to melt as few to freese. So Hooverlxe on heat when Summer comes. AKlLb. A Flying Start Toward Fame. Sir: Mr. Settle Is the check-out clerk at the Statler, -in -St' Louis. My first contribution, so please give a beginner a chance. W. o. F. The Oregonian herewith publishes its conclusions as to the merits of the measures submitted for vote of the peo ple in the special city election. May 17. Only a portion of the official title sufficient to enable the voter to iden tify each measure Is given, but the measures are listed In the order they will appear on the ballot: Ordinance requiring any person operating a motor bua over a definite route to take out lleenie. obtain bond, define route, etc 100 Tea; 101 No. Vote 101. Ko. An act to amend tha charter by adding a new section authorizing an additional levy oi i miu to cover increased expensea ot tha city cauaed by the war. 102 Tea; 103 No. Vote 102. Yes. An act to amend the charter as as to give the council discretion. In awarding contracts, to accept bids of Oregon persona when aucn blda do not exceed the lowea submitted by mora than a par cent. 104 Yea; 103 No. Vote 104. -Yes. An act to amend tha charter by addln a new section permitting tha reorganization of the Fire Bureau into two platoons and authorizing a lour-tentha-mill tax. 10S las 107 No. Vote 107. No. An act to amend section 22ft of tha charter authorizing tha refunding- ot water bonds. ius ici; iu ra. Vote 108. Yes, An act to amend tha charter by repealln three sections and substituting therefor three naw aecttons authorizing a levy of not to exceed 1 siill lor a free garbage collec tion system. 110 Tea; 111 No. Vote 111. No. An act to amend the charter by addln a new aection provldinc an additional method of collecting delinquent assessment by Issuing- bonds not exceeding 11.500,000 113 las; IIS No. Vote 112. Yes. An set to amend section 192 of the char ter so as to authorise transfer to tha general fund of balances left In special funds no longer needed. 114 Yes: 113 Mo. Vote 114. Yea. An ordtnanoa reaulrinr operators ef mo tor vehicles to file bonds. 116 Yea; 117 No. Vote 117. No. An act to amend the charter by vestln In the council power to relieve transporta- tion agenclea ot bridge tolls, paving costs and other extraordinary charges. IIS xes 11 No. Vote 119. No. In Other Days. NOTHING TO JUSTIFY QUARREL Mr. Schnabel Deprecates Tenor of He Nary-Stanfield Campaign. PORTLAND. May 14. (To the EdI tor.) You are to be commended in en deavorlng to pour oil upon the troubled waters in the Senatorial contest for the long term. It must be conceded that the present acrimony does not augur well for Republican success In November. Things are being said about the candidates which would not be said other than during a political campaign. ' Mr. McNary and Mr. Stanfleld are both splendid and capable men and both would make excellent Senators. The Republican party Is a party principles and not of men. It is not interested in the political fortunes or misfortunes of either. The paramount question is which would make the best candidate and who could lead our ban ner to success. That Is what the rank and file of Republicans wish to know. It has been a long time since a Re publican has sat in the United States Senate from Oregon by virtue of an election. No Republican has sat in the Senate from this state for years except by an act of God. It is high time that we should ceese to consti tute ourselves to be "a bouse divided afcalnst Itself. Let the merits of these gentlemen oe placed before the electorate solely upon the question as to who could win In Novmeber. Let the Republicans decide this question in the primaries and then let all Republicans abide oy the primary choice and present united front to the enemy. CHARLES J. SCHNABEL. WILLINGNESS TO FIGHT COMPARED Coatraat Drawn Between McArthurand Lafferty In Hour of Need. PORTLAND. May 14. (To the Edi tor.) When the President or tne united States called for volunteers In 1898 our present Representative in Congress, Hon. C. N. McArthur, volunteered his services. Mr. McArthur did not volunteer his services as an officer, but as a "buck private. It was then Dr. Kuykendall discovered that "Pat" had an athletic heart and refused to allow him to enter the service. Tha SDanish-American War Veterans of Scout Young camp appreciated iur. McArthur's efforts to enlist, his noble fforts In working for pensions for veterans of all wars, and so, though the vigilance of the examining physi- ian did not allow him to enter the service, he was made an honorary mem ber of the camp. "Where was Lafferty In 1898 7 Whv didn't he attempt to enlist in defending our country? He must have passed the physical examination to go to the training school, so he must be fit to enter the service. Why has he not taken any place In the service, es pecially when the need for able-bodied men Is so great? A. C STUBLING. 66 Sixth street. - Slackers of the Knitting Needles. CORVAMJS, Or., May 13. (To the Editor.) When tha service flag was being dedicated at the Oregon Agri cultural College, President Kerr aeked everybody to bow the head In prayer. While the prayer was being made two young women students sat knitting, on a pink and one a bluo sweater, for their own use. The following lines have been suggested by a mother who has a boy In France: The people came, an earnest throng. To dedicate by speech and song. Tha aervlce flag a thousand strong 6be knit on. And when wa bowed In reverent prayer For all those dear boys "over there" That God would have them In his care She knit on. Her face waa wondrous sweet and fair, ' A glorioua ntmbua was her hair. She sat with an absorbed air. And knit on. The dainty garment that she wrought No help to suffering mortals brought, A Blacker she. In deed and thought. She knit on. MRS. ANNIE M. BEALS. jrweaty.iveYears Age. From The Oregonian of slay 15, 1893. Jacksonville, Or. Old Jennie, the last of the famous tribe of the Rogue Rivers, died here this morning after a pro tracted illness. A number of local turfmen went out to take a look at the new Albina race track yesterday. The roads leading to it are in a bad condition. There were numerous Impromptu Democratic caucuses yesterday In Port land. The work of paving Morrison street, now that the weather is settled, is be ing vigorously pushed by the con tractors, who have quite an army of men employed. Webfoot Volunteer Fire Company has ordered appropriate uniforms and in a short time the members will appear in their new costume. Fifty Years Ago. From Tha Oregonian of May IS. 186S. Washington, D. C A joint resolution was offered today to restore North Carolina. Georgia. Alabama, Florida and Louisiana to representation in Con gress. The Astor estate Is valued by one who professes to know at about S144, 000,000. San Francisco The Golden Age sailed for Panama this morning with 224 pas sengers and 11,006,829 in treasure. San Francisco After a long period of distrust or indifference with refer ence to the railroad project to traverse the state from the Columbia River to the California border, the Oregonians seem at last to be convinced that the building of the road has been under taken in good faith by responsible parties. WARNING AGAINST PRECEDENT Abandonment of Public Trust Opposed by High Sense of Honor. AMITY, Or., May 13. (To the Editor.) Great wrongs may be committed against our democratic institutions by establishing bad precedents, even though It is done by the compelling Influence of some strong personality. The Father of Our Country under stood the danger of a bad precedent and wisely counseled against It. The offices of State Treasurer and Secretary of State constitute a large and vital part of a state's business machinery. The heads of both of these offices are elected by the people, to whom they are directly responsible for the proper administration of a great publlo trust. Neither of the offices just mentioned was ever Intended to be filled by an appointee except when unavoidably necessary. Abandonment of either of these offices unless owing to some kind of disquali fication of the Incumbent would be a breach of public trust. It would be supporting a bad precedent and It would be substituting the principle of autocracy for democracy. A high eense of honor and a feeling of responsibility to the people who elected them is the only thing that can save officers of great public trust from becoming mere playthings In the hands of overambitlous men. MRS. ROBERT ARMSBY. Mall to Sqldlera Abroad. DREW, Or., May 13. (To the Editor.) -(1) My husband took out S10.0U0 in surance since he enlisted. Will the In surance papers be sent to me or will they Keep them on record at washing- ton, D. C? (2) I have received one letter from my husband since he arrived in Eng land and it has been some time ago and I haven't received any more letters Please tell me where I could write te - find out about him. (3) Can one register letters to sol diers In France or England? (4) Are letters we write from here censored? (5) Can one send newspapers to sol diers in England or France? MK3, V. tr. (1) You should receive a certificate from the Bureau of War Risk Insur ance, Washington, D. C. (2) Delays In receipt of mall from overseas are to be expected. You would have been notified If anything disas trous had happened. (3) Letters may not be registered to soldiers abroad. (4) They are subject to censorship. but the extent of examination Is not dis closed by the authorities. (5) Yes. Campaign Methods Questioned. PORTLAND. May 14. (To the Edi tor.) Is there not some way of pre venting what seems to many of us the unpatriotic method of advertising of some of our political candidates in usins-. on moving picture screens and elsewhere the flag of our country and our boys at the front for the purpose f furthering their own political aas bltions? I have noticed at one of the local theaters such advertising In behalf of candidate for Governor and a candi date for Senator. Is this not Illegal as well as unpatriotic? MRS. ROSCOE HOWARD. Germany In New World. WATTNA. Or.. May 13. (To the Ed itor.) Does Germany own any land or territory in the new world If so, how does It affect the great war? Germany had no possessions In the new world at the outbreak of the war. FORGIVENESS. As the Spring forgives the Winter For his crimes In Ice and snow, Slftinar lilies o'er his hoary locks. Braiding voilets round his brow. As the morn forgives the darkness For a long and starless night Binding up her dusky tresses With a thousand loops of light. As the grass forgives the battle. Growing green above each tomb; That the dead may rest more sweetly In each silent, sunless room. As the sea forgives the river For the poison In Its tide, Sending back the land's pollution In a snow cloud wnite and wide. So let human hearts give pardon For the scars they have to wear. Shedding mercy 'round about them Like rose petals on the air. Guy Fitch Phelps. FREE BOOKS! FREE INFORMA TION. The service rendered by The Oregonian Information Bureau at Washington in distribution of publications is designed to be continuous. From time to time new books have been listed, but those pre viously announced are still avail able. Either of the following may be obtained for a 2-cent stamp to cover coat of mailing. There is no charge of any kind: Book on Canning. "German War Practices." Book on Colds. Garden Book. Book on Knitting. War Cookbook. Book on Navy. Book on Drying Fruits. Book of Recipes. Bread Book. "How War Came to America. Write today and ask for free copy. Inclose a 2-cent stamp for return postage and be sure to write your name and address plainly. Direct your letter to The Oregonian Information Bureau, Frederic J. Haskin, director, Washington, D. C. P, S. The Oregonian Informa tion Bureau at Washington will answer any question you may submit. Answer will be sent by letter. Just Inclose a 3-cent stamp for return postage. Do not write to The Oregonian at Portland for these books or for 'letter replies to questions. Note carefully the address given above. r