THE SUNDAY OREGOXIA, PORTLAND, HAT iti. 1915. rOHTMXD, OREGON.' Entered at Portland. Orfgon, Poatofflce as tiecond-cluss matter. Subscription Kales Invariably in advance: i By 'Mull, i Dally. Sunday Included. usie year $8.00 iHi)y, Sunday Included, six month Jiaily, Sunday included, three months ... 2; lJuily, Sunday included, one m( nth . - Iially, without Sunday, one year p-1'!? Jially, without Sunday, six months JJaily, without Sunday, three months ... Dally, without Sunday, one month ...... W eekly, one year l.oO Sunday, one year teunday and Weekly, one year 3.u By farrier. ) Tai!y, Sunday Included, one year Daily. Sunday Included, one month 3 How to Kemlt Send Postoffiee money or der, expreca order or personal check on your loial bank. Stamps, coin or curreucy are at shriller s i lyk. Give postortlce auartsa iu lull, including county and state. Pontage Kates 12 to 1 pages. 1 cent: IS to pages, 2 cents; li to 4S pages, 3 cents; f.u lo o" pages. 4 tents; tl:2 to 7ti pages, rents; 7S lo 2 pages, b cents. foreign po-stace, double rales. Ka-drrn Iliwinrs Office Veree & Conklln, New York, Uruiiswick building; Chicago, SteliRur building. Han I rum lBco Office H. J. Bidwell Com pany. 42 Market street. rOKTLAM), nl'NUAV, MAY 10. 1913. THK KLI'MBKKINU UIAXT. Imminent Ptudeiits of American his tory have expended much effort with in the last few years to lay bare the motives anil interests of tho men who framed the Constitution of the United States. It has been shown pretty clearly that those men were neither saints nor inspired philoso phers. They were moved by the ordinary feelings of human beings and in writing the articles of the Con stitution they often had In mind the special interests of the social class to which they belonged. All this may be admitted without detracting front the substantial merit of their work. It was not faultless, for It had soon to bo amended In fundamental par ticulars. It has not brought the mil lennium to pass, for the Jnited States has its troubles like other countries and is confronted with problems cry ing for solution. But one thing the authors of tho Constitution did ac complish. One piece of work they did which time has not impaired and the stress of events has not shaken. Krom thirteen weak, discordant, imutually suspicious colonies they founded a united nation. Tho federal principle had been tried timo and again before their day, tout it never had worked In practice. Jt was tried in Greece and brought forth nothing but weakness. It was tried by tho allied opponents of Rome In her Italian wars, but for them it Was a rope of sand. They fell asun der before the armies of the Imperial city and, her insatiate hunger for ipower devoured them piecemeal. The federal principle was tried by the cities of medieval Italy In their strug gles with domestic and foreign enemies, but when brought to the tern test of war it always betrayed those who trusted it. Never until the Fathers of the American Republic ap plied their genius to the problem was a federation of states made to endure through foreign and civil war. Until their day the only lasting unions of sovereignties formerly Independent were effected by conquest. It was pure reason and the persuasive voice of justice that cemented the thirteen wrangling colonies of the Revolution into the United States of America. But the mighty work Was not com pleted in a moment. Many decades lapsed before the national spirit, born when Hamilton and Madison taught the people the meaning of the federal principle, grew to its fullnessH of power. For many years the state came first in the hearts of the people, the Nation second. The right of a state to withdraw from the Union was upheld in New England and the South and many a. threat was made to apply it before the great secession of the slave-holding oligarchy occurred. Very early in our history there was a conspiracy to separate the West with the mouths of the Mississippi from the rest of the country and found in the regions tributary to the mighty river an empire hostile to the original Union. The conspiracy failed by the Providence of God and In that fertile territory, doubly endowed by nature with blessings for human kind, the. Americanism that lives and dies for the whole country sprang into flam ing grandeur. The new states of the Mississippi Valley and the Pacific Coast entered the Union, not as inde pendent sovereignties cementing an alliance with their equals, but as youthful communities admitted to membership in a great and splendid Nation and they felt that the union thus formed was forever inseparable. When the Federal principle had stood tho test of the Civil War it was safe forever and the subsequent de velopment of the United States was that of an indivisible Nation, not a mere alliance of sovereign states. That development has been pursued in almost unbroken peace. Few and widely separated have been our wars compared with the strife that per petually desolates the stricken coun tries of the old world. The revolu tions of 1848, the repeated overturns In France, the birth struggles of Italy, the tremendous wars that built up the German Empire, the Crimean war which France, Italy and England waged against Russia, and the recent war between Japan and Russia were all fought while the United States was at peace. With the blessings of prolonged peace we have felt something also of Its disadvantages. Few Americana know the real meaning of war. The miseries of invasion seem to us like the imaginery horrors of a night mare. We read of the pitiful fate of the Belgians and thank God for our blessed immunity, but our vision of their woe is faint. With our long ex eruption from the interminable strife that ravages the old world we have come to believe that its troubles can never touch us. Wars, we protest, may blast the earth with their fury elsewhere, but never here. We dwell in an enchanted palace surrounded with delights and, gazing through its crystal windows upon the troubles of the rest of mankind, we fatuously ex claim "they never can be ours." But they can be and we may rest assured that in the course of events they will be. No nation in all history has ever endured long without having to fight for its existence. Unforeseen destiny Involves them inextricably in its web and. once entangled, woe to the people who cannot strike in eelf-de-v tense when the aggressor aims his blows at their heart. "To be weak is to he miserable." This is the great practical lesson of history. If the American people are weak it is by their own choice. No other nation ever had our wealth of natural resources, none ever came of better blood. We have mingled in our veins the richest vital currents of the world. We have levied upon all the earth for genius, courage and patriotic fervor. The men who have tome to share destinies with us are not Englishmen any more, or French men, or Italians, or Germans. They are Americans now, Americans first and forever. Their only flag is the Stars and Stripes, their only hope is in the welfare of the United States. Old loyalties fade and die in the splendor of their new patriotism. Old hatreds perish in the glory of their love for our common country. Who touches the honor of that country touches the soul of every American. The peaceful citizen becomes an armed warrior, millions of lives are laid upon the altar. . "Sweet and beautiful It is to die for our country," wrote the classic poet. Sweet and beautiful we find it still. America is a giant who has long slumbered, but the giant can awake. WHERE THE DECISION LIES. The Oregonian has from an ex cited citizen we guess he is a citi zen a letter charging that we are trying to "drag the United States into war." The letter ought to have been addressed to the Presi-dent of the United States, who is the sole author of the recent note to Germany and who is responsible for the policy it declares and the action It portends.' Yet it Is well enough to say that, if there Is war, it will be because Ger many wants war, not the United States. The issue is squarely up to Germany, and the decision rests there and there alone. The whole case for the United States has been stated by President Wilson. We approve it, and so does every loyal American, without reser vation or qualification, and without concession to a false-hearted Ameri canism which would lower the flag upon the demand of any enemy, ac tual or possible, foreign or domestic. We desire peace." We have said so, and we mean so. But we are not will ing to pay for it at a cost which de nies to our citizens men, women and children the right to go and come on proper business on the high seas, which do not belong to Germany or any nation, and which involves our assent to the doctrine that they may be slain by Germany for any reason, lawful or unlawful,, humane or in humane, satisfactory to Germany, or for no reason. WATER, NOT MONEY. TO . WASTE. The immediate question as to water meters is tho authorization through a referendum of the people for Com missioner Daly to install 5000 meters. The large issue is a formal declara tion of public policy on the meter question. If the .public approves, the meters will have been endorsed, and the Commissioner will pursue the pol icy of universal meter installation. Will Commissioner Daly, or any of his handy newspaper allies, deny it or avow a purpose then to limit the me ter programme to a paltry 5000? The meter question, reduced to the simplest terms, is that Commissioner Daly purposes, at a cost of many hun dred thousand dollars, to restrict the use of our over-abundant water. It will stop waste, he says, and ulti mately bring about lower charges to the consumer. The real duty of the Commissioner is to stimulate, not limit, the general use of water. Portland has the water, and it Is spilling out of the overflow ing reservoirs into the sewers. It ought to be in the homes and on lawns of Portland, in the fullest measure and to the extent of the citizen's ca pacity to use it. Commissioner Daly's idea of econo my is to employ an army of inspec tors to read the meters and to flood the town with water bills, and to put in more meters as the present meters deteriorate and become useless. But always there must be meters and inspectors the first to prevent the user from getting all the water he wants and the second to annoy him about constant meter readings. The people of Portland have water to waste, but not money. Daly would stop the one, but encourage the other. HEROINES OF FICTION. A writer in the Unpopular Review deserves great praise for a courageous attack which he has made upon the "heroine of fiction." This female has pestered novel readers ever since the days of Sir Charles Grandison. She simpers and swoons through the "Scottish Chiefs," meekly ambles through Dickens as the faint shadow of the male characters, wearies us in Scott and feebly annoys us in Thack eray. In current fiction the heroine is like an algebraic problem. She clamors for a solution which most of us are too much irritated to give her if we could. And we could not if we would. It is the simple truth that half the novels In the world would be more en joyable if the heroine were left out The author feels obliged to bring her in now and then in order to keep up "the heart interest," but he almost always shows plainly enough that he hates to do it and would banish her if he dared. It is a great pity that he does not follow his inclination rather than the dictate of fashion. The Unpopular Review writer to whom we refer speaks of the heroine as an "incumbrance" and a "plague." She seems to be exceptionally annoy ing to him in Rider Haggard's stories, where, to quote his words, "she is simply intolerable," combining "the stateliness of a queen with the style of a professional elocutionist and the lo quacity of a cook off duty." And yet all who wish to enjoy Rider Hag gard's incomparable tales of adven ture must put up with this disagree able young lady. There are times when literary fashions almost force one to rise in rebellion. Stevenson managed to write the "Treasure Island" without any hero ine to bother his readers. Why can not other authors do the same? The superfluous young lady overflowing with emotion and ever bursting into kisses is even more annoying in the movies than in novels. No sooner does the spectator begin to thrill with expectation of a bloody murder or the arson of a cathedral than everything has to stop indefinitely while a pair of idiotic lovers hug and kiss one an other. It is an imposition upon the public. The Chehalls Bee-Nugget, which is the oldest newspaper in Southwest ern Washington, has Issued an anni versary and historical souvenir edi tion of unusual merit. The souvenir Is in magazine form and is printed on book paper. The cover is a beautiful photo-engraving of Mount SL. Helens. Inside is much valuable information In early and current history and on the progress of the community, all adequately illustrated. Its issuance commemorates the close of thirty-two years of existence. It is a souvenir that any weekly newspaper might be proud of. The Bee - Nugget comes about as near being our ideal of what a small city weekly newspaper should be as any printed in the Northwest. Its columns are devoted almost ex clusively to local news, which is writ ten entertainingly and without pad ding or flamboyant expression. More over, practically every Hue in the pa per .is written at home, set up at home and printed at home. In addition it presents an ably conducted editorial page. The handsome souvenir is worthy of such a publication. A BILUON-BCSHEL WHEAT CROP. The United States seems In a fair way to make up deficiencies tia Europe's wheat crop due to the war, as it did last year. The acreage in this country is about 14 per cent greater this year than' last, and the Government crop report for May indi cates a yield of 693,000,000 bushels of Winter wheat as compared with 619, 000,000 Indicated in April. If the Spring wheat crop should be no larger than that of last year, 206,027,000 bushels, it would swell the total to 900,000,000 bushels, but the -acreage Is so much larger and the condition so much better that a record-breaking crop is promised. In fact, there is confident talk of a 1.000,000.000-bushel crop. This, with the surplus from India and Argentine, should suffice to feed the world. Prices promise, to rule high so long as the war continues, but are held down by two speculative factors aside from crop prospects the possi bility that fo- ng of the Dardanelles may release a large store of -Russian wheat and the possibility of peace. These bear factors account for the fact that the September option is 40 cents below May, while the differ ence last year was only 10 cents. But, whatever happens, the farmer is likely to earn a fat profit on this year's crop. OCR MILITARY LIMITATIONS. At a time when the American thoughts have turned to possible war it is opportune to present a brief in ventory of our war-like attributes and assets; not that a prospect is present that we shall be called upon to use them, but rather for the purpose of determining how powerful a case we might be able to present in that in ternational tribunal of last appeal armed conflict. In the event that war should be de clared upon the United States it is Inconceivable that we would declare war on anyone how much of an army could we muster for defensive purposes? At the outset let us look over our regular army. On paper this force runs into the neighborhood of three full corps; mobilized, about one corps of 25.000 men respond for the call. This corps, in morale, training and all the elements that make for effective soldiery, would be unsurpassed by any force of its size which it might be called upon to cope with. The particular defect is that there would be only enough men for a very small sector of the extended firing lines that develop in modern warfare. How would our one little corps hold its own with the forty or fifty corps that any first-class nation might precipitate upon us? After the regular . Army we may next set down our organized militia, which on paper measures up to the full dignity of some four corps, al though "corps" is referred to here merely as a standard of measurement. The necessity of organizing even our regular Army into larger units does not appear to have impressed our military experts to the extent that any such adjustment has been carried out. In fact, our, brigades, and certainly our divisions, have no existence be yond the realm of office records. Of the four corps of organized militia military men agree that a period of preliminary training in consolidation camps would be necessary.' Even then this force would not be ideal for active service against trained regu lars. It is apparent that we would have to have more than five corps to do effective fighting. On the theory that we would want 1,000,000 men with which to meet a serious situation, it is apparent that at least 800,000 would have to come from civil life from the shops and wheat fields. Store and office clerks would have to be con verted into soldiers and this, of neces sity, requires time and patience. Getting the men would be a small matter. As no less a military author ity than Colonel Bryan has agreed, one day would suffice to raise an army of 1,000,000 men. . This eminent ex pert ' neglected to mention where the equipment for such a force would come from and when we consider that there are only 600,000 stands of arms available and that our facilities for manufacturing small arms and can non are very limited the question of equipping an army of 1.000,000 men becomes more perplexing. What we would have would be a mob of 1,000,000 men; and reducing this mob to an army would require not less than six months. To render them ef fective would require at least a year. "Where, the officers would . come from; where the supply system would come from; where the field equip ment would come from; where the sanitary and medical supply system would come from, are all matters that even our War Department seems to know in the vaguest way. Being a resourceful Nation, no doubt we would get these things in time, but it is beyond the most optimistic expecta tions that a few months would suf fice to develop not only all this equip ment, but efficient officers- particu larly general officers to command the higher units and provide a system of supplies, of administration and of re serves such as would meet the re quirements of a real war. The best available information on the subject leads to the conclusion that at the outset of a big war the first few weeks would be spent in utter confusion rather' than systematic organization. We would be present ed with the spectacle of politicians seeking command of high units; of men insisting on being given regi ments, brigades and divisions who were not fit to command squads. The ancient struggle between states and Federal Government for control of the appointment of officers would break forth again and add an element of in ternal turmoil. That Incompetents would gain com mand is assured, for the deep-rooted reason that there are not enough trained officers to go around. Cer tainly the regular Army does not pro vide a sufficient surplus. Hence, of ficers as well as men would have to learn the science -of war during war. We might ' get somewhere, even in the light of such a handicap, were the enemy kind enough to defer at tacking us for a year or two while j w were getting ready. But what enemy is going to show any such char ity unless prevented by physical ob stacles not of our own making from launching an attack at the outset? Without ' discussing our naval strength, which is accredited wit! e ing more or less formidable, it is .ain that we have neither an army n. r any means of raising one on shor notice. With our Navy once pushed asid we should have to depend on the effi cacy of prayer and raw levies until such time as these levies could be buffeted about and the survivors molded into an army. The results in event of attack are something fear ful to contemplate unless, as already suggested, our national opponent were unable to get at us until we had gotten through floundering around in our present shallow military policy axid developed a fighting capacity worthy of the greatest o" nations. Per haps the existing crirls will at -.-ken us to a sense of our shortcomings. It ought to, even if it be settled by diplomacy. AMERICA FIRST. r- Dr. F. H. Dammasch, president of the. Confederation of German-Speaking Societies in Oregon, made the an swer as a patriotic American he might have been expected to make when he was asked about the atti tude of that organization in the pres ent National crisis. "We will support the President of the United States first, last and all the time," said Dr. Dammasch. "We are all true American citizens and it is America before all others with us." When Herman Ridder, editor of the New York Staats-Zeitung, was asked where German-Americans stand, he replied: X ipeak for myself and. I believe, for the great majority of German-Americans, when I say that we are with the President or the United States to the finish In all matters affecting National bonor or National pres tige. I subscribe unqualifiedly to the state ment of Carl Schurz: "My country, right or wrong; If right. 16 be kept right; If wrong, to be set right." When George Washington Vierick, the violent editor of the abusive -and mischievous Fatherland, says the President has brought "our country face to face with civic discontent and foreign war," he grossly maligns all German-Americans. 050 YEARS OF DANTE. The poet Dante, who was born at Florence fn the middle or May six hundred and fifty years ago, lived in an age of great men. Only two or three times in the history of the world has genius been so common as it was then, but it has- often been more fruitful. Men of first-rate abil ity were to be found In all parts of Europe in Dante's day, but their minds had little material to work upon and if material had been ever I so abundant they did not know how I to use it, for scientific method had not yet been rediscovered and what the Greeks knew of it had long been forgotten. A little later the remains of the ancient world were brought to light and able men found sufficient occupation in adapting them to mod ern needs. In our own day the rapid ly accumulating discoveries of science furnish all the material required to keep the greatest minds profitably at work. Dante's contemporaries were obliged to exercise their brains upon sterile metaphysical theories and barren, speculations concerning un known worlds. It is wonderful to think what the poet made of this un promising "material in his Divine Comedy, but we can- not help re gretting that he had nothing more worthy of his genius to. work upon. He made the most marvelous bricks without straw that have ever been seen. His theme Is somewhat similar to that of Milton and. like Milton's, while it was once intensely interest ing to intelligent men, it is so no longer. The literature that deals with Dante and his poetry Is of colossal ex tent. Twenty-four complete transla tions of the Divine Comedy have ap peared in English alone and other languages have their full share, while commentaries upon his text and com mentaries upon the commentaries are almost countless. Some writers as sure us that no book in the world has been written ' about so much as Dante's poetry except the Bible itself. This Is probably. true, since the myth ical and miraculous character of his narrative is singularly attractive to a certain class of minds, while his spec ulations concerning the unknowable give the widest scope to men of kindred spirit for the exercise of their unreined wits. And yet it by no means follows that Dante is a popular poet. There are certain passages in the Divine Comedy which are quoted quit,e frequently, but not a great many after all. Not a tenth as many as Shakespeare has given us. Virgil is quoted more commonly than Dante by literary men. He was from the first admired by scholars. The reader will recall that Boccaccio lec tured on his works and naturally the Italians have always made much of him. But even In Italy he was not especially popular in the true sense of the word until the struggle for na tional unity had taken hold of the public mind. Dante was a great ad vocate of a united Italy which might be able to defend Itself from foreign aggression and quench internal dis cord. But this remained with him nothing more than a dream. It did not gain a footing in the practical world until the middle of the last cen tury. When it did, the Italians re called the vision of their great poet and began to heap upon him the honors he had long merited but only scantily received. Dante has received a great deal of attention from American scholars. Of the twenty-four English versions of his great work four were made in this country, while our college professors have deluged their classrooms with commentaries upon him. Longfellow translated the Divine Comedy into blank verse. Charles Eliot Norton rendered it into biblical prose. Pro fessor Johnson's translation, which has just appeared. Is In the same meter as Dante's original, but without rhymes. Our tongue is not nearly so fertile in these ornaments as the Italian and the work of inserting them wherever the poet did would be enough to discourage the most de voted worshiper of medievalism. American scholarship has won many laurels at home and abroad by its work upon Dante, but it has not suc ceeded in gaining many readers for the great poet outside of college class rooms. In common with other mod ern languages Italian is much more studied in our colleges than it was half a century ago and Dante has profited by the change, but students forget him as they do their Homer wheJn they part with their professors. There is nothing in Dante to awaken vital interest outside academic halls. Of course his style is incomparable and his treatment of theological sub jects .marvelous. But we all know the predestined fate of sermons whether in prosi or verse. Milton and Dante sjtand slje by side upon the modern bookshelf both immensely honored and both unread. The great Florentine was first taught in this country by Luigl da Ponte, a wandering Venetian who lec turea upon his works at Columbia University without pay. He continued this lab.- of love -or twenty-eight ye?-s from a few years after his ar rival in New York until his death in 18S8. In that time he proudly re c rds that he Instructed 2500 per eo'.j, it the Italian language. o course inducting all of them into the cult of Dante. In fact it was his custom to teach the language from the pages of the inspire poet. A little before Ponte's . death, Pietro 1 Maroncelll began to glvt. Italian lessons at Har vard, though by that time Professor George TIcknorhad taken up the subject.- Tickno was followed by Long fellow, In whose day there was quite a rage for Italian medievalism at Har vard. Longfellow carried his love of old and musty literature so far that he delved into the forgotten Scandi navian sagas. His own poetry smells strongly o the midnight oil by which he pursued his absorbing studies. Dante's 0th anniversary would have been celebrated with imposing exer cises throughout the Christian woed had it not been for the European wr. As it Is, the rlncipal commemoration will be in t v United States. Some of the Washington High School senior would take to the sim plicity doctrine gradually and spar ingly. The; are willing to adopt cot ton gowns for graduation, but there's a division of sentiment on the propri ety of giving up the coveted elaborate bouquet. Truly, tradition mingles with fond r morles and high hopes of commen.tt lent day the day of days In the student's life. A famous dramatic critic has just come to the help of the legitimate stage by saying that the movies can not depict Foul-struggles. For this words are Indispensable. 'If he Is right about it, then a good deal of music has been sadly misunderstood. It is supposed to depict soul-strygglcs and to do It wlihout the help of words. Ever since the victories of the. Swiss peasan. over Carlos the Bold, Infantry has een the most valued military arm. In this war it is sub ordinate to cavalry and artillery. The best observers tell us that while infantry-is recklessly sacrificed the com manders think twice before sending a cavalryman or a gunner to death. When the tide of prosperity ebbs and flows at Marshfield some of it must stay ashore, for Mr. O'Brien, of the Record, has Just bought ground upon which to erect a newspaper home of iron, concrete and glass. Since a newspaper is the index of its city, a view of Marshfield through the Record shows it' is all right. The new interest in Russia has led to a fresh translation of Dostoevski's novel, "The House of the Dead." This ibook ranks in literature with "Don Quixote," "Robinson Crusoe" and "The Vicar of Wakefield," with all of which it has affinities. It is one of the great monuments of Rus sian literature. The water meter peddlers have fallen down temporarily In Tacoma. That city does not want water meters. It does not need water meters. Hut If the peddlers have their eye on that city nothing can save It. Water meters It will have.. Seattle Argus. Nothing can save such a city? Well, watch Portland. We may ask other neutrals to voice their sentiments. It is doubtful, how ever, if Holland or Sweden or' Den mark would caie to speak out of their turn in this matter. Harry Thaw is to have anoth" trial by Jury as his sanity. It must be the Thaw theory that eventually he will find a Jury crazy enough to adjudge him sane. Huerta's daughters and their hus bands and children lave now joined him. No wonder mere war and an archy had no terrors for poor old Vlctoriano. The biggest rose crop and the big gest Fose Restiy.j ever would seem .o be assured. The weather certainly Is- doing its full share these days. The combatants are now hurling great broadsides of ink and l.eir press bureaus are black with the grime of rattling typewriters. What will the Kaiser say? That's now the question of the hour. And if we don't like what he says, what are we going to do about It? However, If the situation becomes tense we may rly on W. Jennings Bryan to provide a way out. A. B. C. mediation, for example. Missouri is indignant at Oregon quarantine on Missouri stock and hence will have to be "shown." As to the note, so far so good. But we can't quite forget Vera Cruz as bearing on the issue at hand. It may be that Germany will hold out diplomatic straws in the hope that we will clutch them. The only flies we have noted were in the immediate vicinity of the b.rne team at the ball grounds. In event of trouble one of our greatest mainstays will be the German-American. Federal probe of the cement trust Is in prospect. It will be hard dig ging, no doubt. While the note was signed "Bryan," we wager sixteen to one that Bryan didn't sign it. Who 6ald there wasn't much pa triotism and unity in this great coun try of ours? The Greek King is down with a fever. Not the war fever, we take it. Arbitration hinted at. What music to the Bryan ears. For1 our part we ain't seen no flies to swat thus f;fr. The vacation lure is beginning to stir us strongly. This is the weather that makes the roses. " " Press and President's Note What Newspapers of lotted States Say Concerning; the Communica tion to Germany Comuiled by A e aoclated Press. Buffalo (N. Y.) Courier Right-minded men of every party will approve Its tone and tenor . The clearness, the defintteness with which the presentation Is made can satisfy the most rigid Americanism that views large affairs sanejy. It seems to meet very requirement of American patriotism and honor. Buffalo (N. Y. ) Express There has been no backdown. Let the people's response go out from every corner of the land. We are all Americana. Albany (N. T.) Argus Dignified in its tone, logical in Its argument and conclu sions; firm in its demands, the United States note to Germany reflects the poise of the President. Wood row Wilson, under most trying circumstances. Albany (N. T.) Knickerbocker Press The not places the Issue squarely before Germany for action; and an announcement of future policy acceptable, to the United States Ooverninent, particularly a policy ot sea warfare, must nut long be delayed. Bt. Louis Republic There Is not In the note any slightest hint that this Government will stop short of the fullest reparation for the past and the guarantee of the recog nition of the full rights of American ctuzeus in the future. Cincinnati Commercial Tribune The strength of a Just man armed Is apparent In ttie protest sent by President Wilson. Devoid or truculence. breathing the highest Ideals of International Justice, this remark able paper, freighted with momentous possi bilities, brushes aside all furmulltles and is frank, and In unmistakable language tells the Kaiser's government what the Amer ican people think of tile series of incidents leaaink up tu the slaughter ot innocents ou board the Luiluma. Boston Globe Piesldent Wilson hu not shirked a grave responsibility. The Amer ican note cleily shows that Germany must relent jr take whatever consequences we may decide to adopt. Boston Herald President Wilson has never written a great slate paper more ex actly suited to the occasion. We hope most fervently that In a spirit of reusonable ntn Germany will coincide with the en lightened position set form with clarity and power by the I'resideut. Boston Journal President Wilson's words are those tf a patriot. We cannot believe that a nation which is bound b so many ties of friendship to this Nation Is so lar possessed by war madness that sne will fail to heed the message. Boston Post The note Is all that such a message from a Justly aggrieved nation to the aggressor nation should be. lit It U the voice of the American people at Its finest and best. It is a powenul appeal to German sanity. Philadelphia Publlo Ledger The Admin istration has spoken and spoken lo the point. The German government cannot have the slightest doubt as lo its meaning Will Ger many listen to the voice of prudence be fore It is loo later Pueblo (Colo. Chieftain A wise, strong, patriotic message free from Jingo hysteria. Colorado Springs (Colo.) Telegraph The Um id States should Insist upon a separa tion of the, passenger traffic and the war traffic. We should he prepared to uphold the Nation's honor at any cost. Pueblo (Colo.) Star-Journal The note fully meets the expectations of the Amer ican people, that Germany be held lo a strict accountability for its actions. Kaunas City Star President Wilson has said what was In the hearts of his coun trymen. He has said it with dignity, with consideration. but with unmistakable di rectness. His words embody the Idealism of the American Aeople and the obligation to maintain the principles of high humanity which they feel has devolved upon them In a world In which some of the hard-won gains of civilization have been submerged by the passions of war. The President has notably met the demands of this critical situation. Salt Lake City Tribune We take It for granted that the President's position is his note to the German government will be upheld with practical unanimity. Great Falls (Mont.) Tribune The Presi dent's message leaves the door open for con tinuance of good relations within the United States if Germany Is so minded. That Is undoubtedly the position nine-tenths of his countrymen would have the President take. This country wants war only as a last resort. Bozeman (Mont.) Chronicle Couched in friendliest terms, the note Is none the less frank in its statements of America's cause for complaint and direct in its demands upon the German government. Billings (Mont.) Gazette While tho note is absolutely lacking In bomba-ttc utter ances or threats, the note makes it plain to Germany that this Nation is not going to tolerato recurrence of the horrible events that have destroyed American lives. Anaconda (Mont.) Standard The note la strong, firm and dignified, jet courteous. Butte tMont.) Miner The Question whether the United States Is to take part In defense In this great war waged upon civilization no longer rests with It, but re poses entirely In the hands of the autocratic and blood-mad ruler of Germany. San Francisco Examiner In opening the broad question of the legality and propriety of a submarine blockade, the President has abandoned the safe and firm bssls of ob- slous and unquestioned American rights and ventures upon the debatable ground ot ntei national exigency and morality, and has opened, tn- way to a retort which It will be difficult for the United Stales to bear calmly. Los Angeles (Cal.) Germanla A condi tion of war between the United states and Germany Is unthinkable. Millions ot good American citizens claim Germany as the land ot their birth. These citizens must now exert their Influence to prevent a war which Is not Justified In any degree. The merlcan people must remain calm and trust the sincere Intentions of our Govern ment. Sacramento (Cal.Bee The American peo ple today have rich reason to be proud of their president. Woodrow Wilson has met a grave crisis splendlaly, facing it with firmness, without fireworks. Los Angeles Times It Is apparent that the feeling and attitude of the president aMtd his advisers Is conciliatory. That is the state of mind of the country. But America will Insist to the last that there oo no more murderous attacks on merchanl ment carrying non-combatants, women and children. Fresno (Cal.) Republican If Germany Is prepared to make its submarine blockade of England physically as well as psychologic ally effective, we may be sure the imperial government will yield to no argument ex cept force, and we do not understand that the word "art" contemplates the use of force, nor that the American Nation is In possession of any force to use if It were so contemplated. Seattle Times It is a temperate and meaningful note. Nlnty per cent of the American people will stand behind the President In his efforts to carry cut those real American declarations of true patriot ism. Seattle Post-Tntelligesrer It is no Jingo utterance; no "mere scrap of paper," but a cool, calm declaration ultimatum It you please ot this American Nation, and in support of It there will be no faltering or dlvialon. ' Salem (Or.) Statesman There Is In the note a reaffirmation of the former atiituue of President Wllsou. - Our Government and our people cannot recede from this stand. It must be consistently held, even to the point of breaking oft diplomatic relations with Germany, or worse, Boise (Idaho) Statesman It is a "show down." If the President's words mean any thing It is that Germany must abandon Its policy of naval anarchy or accept the con sequences of our "other action-' Missoula (Mont.) Mlssoulan Its general tone Is most conciliatory. Lewlstown (Mont.) Democrat The note la much In accord with the expectations and wishes of the American people. Walla Walla Union If the American peo ple ever had cause for thankfulness it has been in the past few days In the realization of the fact that Theodore Roosevelt does not now hold the reins of executive power. Aberdeen (Wash.) World If Germany either wants wsr with the United States or Is indifferent to such a clash the say Is certainly open and made easy by the note. If Germany cares for the friendship of this country, there Is nothing in the note to pre vent. Whatever the outcome of the note. Americans have only one clear duty to stand btrhind the President and give hlra every possible support. Walla Walla (Wah. Bulletin We have all conflden-e In President Wilson.- There is no President since Abraham Lincoln who has so nearly the undivided confidence of all the people. Gleams Through the Mist By Dean Collin. SionsTlesa. I cannot sing a song of spring. Kor riprlng is almost out of data; Nor csn my song to Summer ring, Kor there Is still a month to wait; With one too soon snd one too lata It boLhers me like anything; O'er neither can I Jubilate So hanged it I know what to sing. I cannot sing a song of pride. About Britannia and the waves; My friend who's on the other side Against that sort of lyric raves: With equal rape likewise behaves My British friend If I should fling A laurel to the Teuton braves So hatuzed If I know what to sing. I cannot sing a song of peace Some of my friends for war are strong- If t should urge that war should cease. The Jingo bunch would hold me wroua ; Nor can I boost In accents strong. The flag of Mars abroad to fling: Neither pface pipe nor battle song So Hanged if I know what to sins. L'KNVOI. My friends, your differing tastes do fall Too. far apart for me to sing A sunt? that's bound to please you all So hanged if I know what to sing. e We have seen more yardage made and less rooting about in from tha bleachers in a brueh college football game, than the combatants are ac complishing: at present in Flanders. Solemn Thoiaa b r. They may bang, they may batter those forta if they will. But tlie Dardanelles seem to be tioldlng out stlil. A mother's pride over her babe's first tooth Is a weak and colorlees tiling compared with the pride of the gubur ban householder on beholdlnar tha first bean-sprout tHat nets clear of tho ground In his hack-yard garden. "Sir," eaid the Courteous Office Boy, and I was instantly ail attention for I knew that he had brought out anothr volume, of the capnurr classics on the Five Inch Bookshelf for Busy Men. "in this volume." said the C. O. B. "we offer the busy public a two-minute version of Hen. Longfellow's famous epic of Kvangeline." Primeval forest green; Evangeline. Village queen; Her heart won Mv Gii be. stirjli's son; War; ho;is shattered; Village N';attere,l . Mie thinks ni:i; be She'll find Gb, ; ; Ljul'P, pitir fkiiti , loesn't waii; In many a spot He's alm'jt And harilly ma l'odge fiuncee. But. wily, he , Just keeps quite free. Vange quits quist; G.lbc gets rest; Found at last Wneti years have passed; To., sh.k to fly. linbe must die; Wtieu he Is through. She creaks too; Vi'Iaire qu:n, tC angellne ; l'rmietal forest green. There are scores of soldiers in the Islands who have not yet been able to read "The Eyes of the World," says an article booktlng donations to a cir culating library for U. S. soldiers. After all. we see that tho soldier's life lias Its advantages. e Tho United States is now about the only big nation left in which there are etlll citizens who feel that one of em could clean up a whole regiment of any other nationality. A morning Ftroll with a eooial up lift theorist might be referred to with, propriety aa a bored walk. The Appropriate Thing.. 'TIs folly to feed to the sngle worm base. A puddlnjf tuned up to the epicure's blood. Your guest would prefer in this sort uf a case A nice little, delicate dumpling of mud. 'TIs foolish to offer a rabbit a steak. Kor cabbage Is very much more to his taste; No hll with a lion a balad would make; And soup to an oyster would be quite a waste. Why offer white wine to the mers billy goat ? Who much would prefer a nice paper or can ; And wny should the struggling, sorrowful pole Uncork high-brow odes on the average man ? e It iu worth while to pause, once in a while, and look back over our past, and in this connection we would gay, at this time, regarding thoso decadent Komanx: In the days of old. when the Romans bold Sailed galleys on the ses. They had no sort 'of submsrlne Who knows now where they beT e Which is not especially good, we believe, as is the following refe.t,ace to the baker of the old days: The bskrr rolls home with a bun. Instead of raisin cake. Oh. who can like this loafing one. Though much dough he may make? s s We thought of the following last week, but dropped it en route to the coinpoejing room: The boy stood on the burning deck Nor thought of submarines; They'd made the deck a total wreck Because he held five queens. riometlmes a man stands on his rec ord In Jiopea that bis brogans will cover up the unattractive part of It. THK IJRKAMKH- Tou of the gay metropolitan life. Bred In the blaze cf the city'g wild strife. Worshiping fashion and custom and throng. O. do you think as you hasten along That, in the progress of these advanced days, I am a dreamer too strange for your ways? You love the rush and the roar of the town, I adore nature from upland to down; You are content to remain where you are, I long to follow the course of each star. Long to forget mart's existence and strife Out where peace fosters an Idyllic life. Weighed with the wanderlust paxtskm, aflame, I listen all things of the mist mouth my name; Breeze of the everglades, flower of the Nile, Waters of blue lakes that dimple and smile. Lost, ruined cities, Malay mysteries Ail, all they beckon ine over the seas. Often you wonder why I hate the stresst That echoes the treading of myriad feet. Wonder no more. In the crowd's cease less roar I am a dreamer; the dark deeds of war Swell but the calls of the wildertiess where No sounds of battle lefile the pure a3r. MILDRED K. JIUDSOrV Trip of An Airship. Philadelphia Ledger. "The airship went up in smoke." "Burnt?" "No; ascended in Pittsburg.'