TIIE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, rORTLAXD, MAY 12, 1918. 8. (Ditxroiitntt ffllllUNB. OREGON. Xatrrod LI Portland (OrtM) Postafttca M Koad-claa aaU matter. Fsiwcrtption rates Invariably ta advance: Fy Mall.) ri:. Jfnndiy lnclU'1l. one yar. .. ft M ?1 loir. fuller luc;udl. aim muni ri l-t . i-urvl r luc.u'l-d. three months Suixlav mcHnled. month.., I.;. Kiititfut sumiy. one yar Jai V. wtr 'lout Sun-1jr. Ill months... without Sunday, one- month.... VArrh:. no yr ' m. yor tuUal Old vVeoklJ Br Carrier.) TTT. Jan-lav lnc u-1"!. ono year l.r fi'ireiav Inclti'V.!. ooo month... Ii t, rmtr iDi-iu.tt. month. Ii jr. w if ioll uti-l t v. ono oor J. .i,y. wi'Mout funl . thro month. . 1oii. wltbnul mii1. one month 01 .HO l.nn . SO S.&0 . .0 1. .60 How to KoM inl poolofflce moror tT currrnfr or o -.' n.b - xoinff- address la lull, iuriudlng county and elotr. Rim I Pl-m. 1 rnt: 1 1o SJ I...". J cn... to po'. 2 ronte a. - , a rpf. - to pagoo. c.ma T to - D.C.. tenia Foreign pool ao. doublr ratra k- . m orflro vrro Conk Jin. H.-analrk hoiMInc, N-w Aora; V.rroo Cook'in. !-r building, fhlraao: karroo r k ' . !. - buiidlnr. I stroll, jiim. o rranrix o r-prlitatl a. K. J. Bldwell. Market acre. t. mi mrir or Tiir. AoiTrn rr.. t .-..rr.l IT i nclualvely .. . . i , uv f.,r r ru M t ion n f a'l o .B.irlift rrrtt trd lo It or pot oth r-.t.f-ri io tri patHrr. ait.I i'io Iho lorol l Otit .'! II.XH. .i tisnt rpublB all-Ml of special dis- Jttrha irrolo in also firtttl. foRTl-Wli. HIW. XT It, J1S. T.HIO AND WOOL Kotrt Si.Tfi.-l-i is a candidate be fore the Kppiihliran primary for the 1 iiiir.i si.itr . senator. He I." a cittxen f coii.sc-iurif e and successful achieve ment. It Is not the purpose of The ormonian lo make an appeal for Mr. Stanfield' nomination: but it has not failed to note that he is bclnr steadily, persistently and wantonly muckraked for his vital work in creating ai ron land a National wool market through taNlshment and operation herd of the Columbia Basin Wool Warehouse "ompany. and the chars is made that lie is a "profiteer" and a "hoarder." A "profiteer" Is one who makes dis honest and exorbitant profits by tax lng- advantage of his country's needs In the crisis of -war. A "boarder" is one who, for the purpose of manipu lating a market and advancing prices. procures and withhold from sale any article or product which the nation or the public desires and in the ordl nary course of business would be able to get at a price determined legiti mately by the rule of supply and de mand. If Mr. Stanfield has profited out of all proportion to the measure in which other producers of and dealers In wool have profited, he Is a profiteer. If Mr. Stanfield has accumulated large stores of wool to prevent the norma! operation of purchase and sale on the market, keeping It when the Govern ment or the buying public wanted It. and was willing to pay the prevailing price for It. he Is a hoarder. The Oregonian is able to say on in formation and knowledge that he Is neither a profiteer nor a hoarder. It says It now. because it ought in fair ness to be said now. It would pot have him. or any man.' penalised through politics, or partisanship,- or newspaper unfairness, for having per formed to the state of Oregon and to the Northwest an invaluable service In creating here a great wool depot, and In helping lay the foundations for an important industry In the manu facture of wool products of all kinds. What encouragement can Portland offer to others to Invest their capital here, contributing a share to the de velopment of desirable enterprise, if they are to be assailed and libeled merely because they happen to be candidates for office? The facts about Mr. Stanfield and wool are that he has beeti a sheepman from boyhood. He has been a dealer In wool buyer and seller for a decade or more. Through his thorough methods his business expanded, until he became the largest producer of sheep and wool in America, and one of the largest dealers. With other sheep and wool men he became dis satisfied with the conditions of the wool Industry and he aided In locating storage warehouse at Portland, thus making it one of the primary markets of America. He thus helped to take the Western grower out of the grip of the Kastern dealer. A storage warehouse performs the function of supplying wool for the market It Is Indispensable that It have on hand adequate quantities. The wool comes to the warehouse In the grease, and ,1s there graded, and then sold, as the owner directs. Let It be understood that the Portland warehouse operates on commission and Is not a buyer. Mr. Stanfield con signs his wool to Portland, as other producers and dealer do. He sells It through Portland, as others do. He takes his profit when there is a profit as others do; and he pays all commis sion and storage charges as others do. The Portland wool warehouse han dled last year about 1. 000.000 pounds of wool, of which Mr. Stanfield had about . 000. 000 pounds. It represents about 13.000.000 in money, and Is a large operation. The entire wool prod uct of this Northwestern territory is about SO. 000. 000 pounds, and of the Nation 140.000,000 pounds, and of the world nearly 3.000.000.000 pounds. Wool, a world product.- sells at prices absolutely controlled by world condi tions. America produces ' less than one-tenth of the world's supply, and Mr. Stanfield. though an active and Important dealer and the largest single producer, handles about one-fortieth of the American output. It ought thus to be clear that any endeavor by him to manipulate the market by "hoarding" would be wholly futile. Alt the dealers In America together could not greatly influence prices. It would appear that it should be an occasion fo pride that any man In Oregon might by his ability, energy and vision become a large factor in a great Industry, both as a producer and as a merchant. It would appear, also, that there would come from the people of Oregon a chorus of appro bation that he had sought to make as others had not made, though Ore gon fcr maay years been a great wool state the city of Portland a real center of wool trade. The storage warehouse Is. Indeed, a large asset, and Is the forerunner of definite and profitable expansion In wool manu facture: for where wool may be had in quantity, and other conditions are favorable (locution, freight rates, water power and the like), as they are In Portland, there will be mills to convert wool Into finished mate rials. Now. indeed, a genuine start has been made, largely by tho efforts of Mr. Stanfield. The Oregonian had sought to be a mere spectator In the Senatorial con test.. It will not pretend that it Is cot sympathetic with the cause of Mr. Stanfield. In his campaign: but it has sought, nevertheless, to give both him and Mr. McNary a, fair field, and it has not sought to influence any citi zen for the one or the other. But it would not have Mr. Stanfield nor Mr. McNary. in the same situation, made the victim of false representations in matters not properly related to the campaign: nor would It have him, or his opponent, elected to the Senate for any reason except his worth to the state in its service. The facts in detail about Mr. Stan field and the Portland wool warehouse are presented elsewhere In The Ore gonian today. WHAT 1H riOXOMY? Nothing mould he more appropriate. In connection with the many injunc tions we are reiciving upon the sub ject of economizing, than a symposium upon the subject of what constitutes true economy. A few years ago it would have been possible to save a few dollars a year by going without a telephone, but now it would cause a w-tc of time that would run into more money than the telephone rent would come to. The man who has tried wearing shoddy clothing to save the difference between Its price and the cost of an all-wool garment prolwbly has his own views on that score. One can econo mize on fuel to the point of increas ing .his doctor's bills, and economize on filling his teeth only to be com pelled to buy an entire new set, and he ran economize unwisely as to food and lower his efficiency and lose his Job. Still there undoubtedly is room for economy In the scheme of things. It Is admitted that we are extravagant. The difficulty lies in distinguishing true economy front fa He. nriuo.r.u.int:D atrx.Ks. The State Supreme Court has able and respected Judges, all from places outside Mnltnomah County, with a single exception:, and the latter is Justice McCamant, an appointee of the Governor. It cannot be true that the people at large are suspicious of judgeship candidates from Multnomah, for there are In the bar here eminent lawyers who would adorn the bench. But it is true that their claims have been given little consideration, evi dently because better men, in the de terminative opinion of the infallible electorate, are to be had in the country. Now there are three candidates for the Supreme Bench, to fill one va cancy. One Is from Multnomah and two from the state. It Is not the pur pose herein to say that any of them should be elected: only to say that all are men of high personal and profes sional repute: and that the people are fortunate in having so choice a field to pick from. Whoever shall be nomi nated there will be no mistake. The sole regret will be. as it must be, that there is only one place to fill, and that while one will be selected, two must be left at home. It would be difficult, indeed Impossible, to find three other men better qualified to be Supreme Judges than C. A. Johns, Percy R. Kelly and John S. Coke. It might be wished that as much might be said of all the candidates for Circuit Judge in Multnomah County. We would not be Invidious. but a sense of duty to the public Impels us to say that Judge Stapleton meas ures up to the requirements. ALLIES RELATIONS WITH RtSSIA. Demands of the Bolshevik govern ment are a sign of the delicate state of the allies' relations with that which remains of Russia. On the part of the Bolshevik! they betray a desire to force the hand of the allies, both as to the tatter's policy in Siberia and as to recognition of the Lenine govern ment. On the part of the Germans they show a desire to force the Bol shevikl Into an attitude of open en mity to the allies and consequently into an alliance with Germany. The circumstances Indicate that any of the Bolshevik ministers who are not willing tools of Germany have been intimidated by that country, for the demand for recall of the consuls from Vladivostok came Immediately after arrival of the new German am bassador at Moscow. Germany's aim seems to be to force the allies to leave the military stores at Vladivostok un protected by driving the Bolshevik! to hreaten open war. By this trick the Bolshevlkl would be used as a tool by which the stores would pass ultimate ly Into the possession of Germany. Also ir the allies were to have deal ings with the Lcnlne government In regard to Siberia, they might be led Into some sort of recognition of the Bolshevlkl as the lawfully established government of Russia. This recognition would play into the hands of Germany. By withholding it the allies treat Russia as a country without a government, which has been forcibly occupied by the armed forces of another nation, and they are In a position to occupy Russian territory themselves for the purpose of expel ling the Invaders without laying them selves open to the charge of having attacked Russia. They also impose circumspection on Lenine and the German In order that no valid pre text may be given for occupation by the allies, also In order that the Rus sian people may be kept In submission and may not start any .movement which could be construed as an invi tation to the allies to emancipate their country from the Germans and the Lenine government. In view of the character, deeds and words of the Bolshevik leaders, they cannot safely be regarded as capable of sincere co-operation with the allies, or even of neutrality; willingly or by coercion, they are tools of Germany. Probably the longer they and the Ger mans hold mastery In Russia, the more ruthless they will become In exploit ing the country to meet the growing necessities of the Teutons, the more open will become German domination and consequently the more earnestly the people will look to the allies for deliverance. Thus time will work for the allies, and the state of Russia must grow worse before it can grow better. But the allies need to guard them selves against repetition of the mis take they made with regard to Bul garia and Greece of treating as friend ly or neutral governments in secret al liance with their enemies. The military situation In the west makes a certain amount of temporis ing necessary in any event, for, unless they should entrust the task to Japan alone, the allies lack the forces and the ships for a military. expedition to Russia. . But they need to prepare for a move at as early a moment as they have men and transports available, in order that they may drtvo out the Germans and put the government in the hands of the Russian people be fore Germany has become too strong ly entrenched and has developed the resources of the country to the point where they may be made effective to continue the war In the west of Ku ropa. The time to move will be the time when the allies can bring superior forces to bear, can maintain it and can be sure that all classes of Rus sians win welcome them as deliverers. BAKERS AND JITNEYS. Announcement Is made that the price of bread will advance another cent tomorrow. It ia an increase in cost of living that will be wider in its effect than the advance of ono cent in streetcar fares. It has been accom plished by a process similar to that which brought about the six-cent fare. The bakers made a showing to the Food Administrator that cost of mate rials and fuel, advance in wage scale, the eight-hour day and pay for over time made production at the former price unprofitable. The street railway company went before another public agency, the Pub lic Service Commission, and made i similar showing. The cases are iden tical. . But no public charges of political collusion will he made against the Food Administration. There will be no meetings or resolutions. There will be no proposals for cut-throat compe tltion with the bakers. There is some thing lacking In the situation. It is the chance to bait a corporation and gain public acclaim. Yet there might bo a counter pro posal offered as there Is In the case of the street railway. We -might pro pose to relieve the bakers of taxation so they could sell bread cheaper. There Is a similar measure on the ballot affecting the streetcar company. Or there might be offered a measure to Invite new bakers into the field by relieving them, and them only, of the prohibition against hoarding of flour. or by letting them use mill offal for bread-making, or by encouraging them to pay lower wages and work em ployes overtime without extra pay, or by relieving them of sanitary regula tions, any or all of which would be detrimental to the public welfare but would enable them to sell bread at a lower price and force the present bakers into bankruptcy. There is a similar measure affecting the street railway company on the ballot. It is proposed therein to let jitneys operate without Imposing upon them the regulations imposed upon the street railway and thereby en danger public safety and public wel fare, as was done in the past, in order to save the extra cent and drive the company Into receivership. The bakery business Is simpler than that of running a street railway sys tem. The ingredients of a loaf of bread are matters of common knowl edge. It Is also a matter of common knowledge that those ingredients have greatly advanced in price. But the necessary purchases of a street railway company are more or less of a mystery to the people. It is a false fancy that once constructed tho plant will run Itself with only the aid of employed labor. The fact that the street railway company advanced wages to a decent figure and estab lished the eight-hour day at a time when every sort of necessary equip ment and replacement had also ad vanced In price is ignored. Moreover, it is a corporation, and It is assumed that nobody loves a corporation. But there would be just as much logic in denunciation of the Food Administration as there is in denun ciation of the Public Service Commis sion. There is Just as much ground for complaint against the bakers as there is against the street railway company. Yet the public would re sent an attack upon the Food Admin istration. A jitney baker measure, one that proposed sacrifice of public wel fare to unreasoning prejudice against payment of a just price for service rendered, would be hooted off fhe ballot. A bill to relieve, the bakers of taxes would meet a similar fate. 1-et us be honest and consistent. The wide-open jitney measure Is 117 No. The amendment to relieve the street railway company of certain taxations Is 119 No. Defeat them. OI.n-FASHIONKI CI.EAN-LP WEEK. The New York State Health De partment performed a distinct serv ice when it gave currency to the con cise statement that "public health is purchasable." A good deal Is ac complished by a slogan that crystal lizes a truth. The point of the New York argument Is that any community can practically free Itself from con tagious and Infectious diseases, and particularly those which are dissemi nated through the agency of dirt, if It is willing to pay the price. Nor isf it wholly a question of money. A part of the price is vigilant supervi sion and hearty co-operation by indl vlduala. The old-fashioned clean-np week, which we have been enjoined to re store to fashion. - had the merit of thoroughness, and was stimulated by the spirit of emulation. . There was a time when citizens vied with one an other In the effort to show the big gest pile of rubbish. The bigger the pile, it was argued, the more thor ough the cleaning up had been. It might also have been evidence that the householder had been the more neglectful of his duty during the pre ceedlng twelve months, but that fact usually escaped attention; at any rate it was not emphasized. It is unde niable that the annual cleaning was far better than none at all. The modern view that it Is easier to prevent disease than to cure it has as Its corollary, the belief that It is easier to prevent the accumulation of rubbish than to spend a week or so once a year piling it in an inconveni ent spot to await the coming of a tardy and already overburdened ash cart. The trouble with the violent, once-a-year clean-up is that it Is usu ally followed by relaxation. The glow ing sensation of duty done generally lasts longer than is good for us. By the end of Summer there is another unobserved accumulation of dust and cobwebs, and scraps and junk, that invites the breeding of flies and the outbreak of spontaneous combustion. Then Winter seta in and the mischief multiplies. By the time the aver age annual house-cleaning is complet ed the early batch of disease-disseminating flies is doing its worst. The liveliest tittle fly-swatter in the family cannot begin to undo the damage that already has been done. Under ideal conditions there would be no Spring rubbish piles, which would be re garded as testimonials to the slovenli ness and not the cleanliness of thoye who exhibit them. . The practice of assigning a week to first one and then another duty has the merit only of being better than nothing. Recently, however, the coun try progressed from the "baby week" stage to the more enlightened "baby year. It is seen that If babies are worth saving in any one week, they are worth an effort the other fifty one weeks of the year. The same is true of the clean-up week.. ; There is no doubt that the world is awakening to the importance of sanitary meas ures. Health officers do not encounter a much resistance to their decrees as they did a few years ago. We shall not discourage anyone from observing the annual custom this year, whether housecleaning is needed or not, but only call attention to the desirability of persistent effort throughout the year. It will be a sign of progress when the rubbish piles, which are now as intimately associated with the month of May as the dogwood and the wistaria, have become a thing of the past. THE GIFT HORSK. h One good thing about the next book drive for the soldiers' libraries will be that it will be productive of much less literary junk. The amazing ex tent to which stay-at-home patriots disregarded advice and warnings in making- donations to the last collec tion is only now beginning to be re vealed. Theodore Wesley Koch, of the Library of Congress, tells about it in a pamphlet on "The War Service of the American Library Association." Mistaken judgment was exhibited In the donation of "at least one copy of every improper book that was ever written," but since they were offered for the use of adults presumably pos sessing some discriminating judgment of their own it is -doubtful if the donors went much farther astray than those who sent shelves full of the Klsle books and Alger's juveniles. There was a file of the Undertakers' Review. ." School readers printed be fore the Civil War and many out-of- date textbooks were taken from the home shelves. Clearly, if the gift is to be Judged by the thought bestowed upon it by the giver, there are many whose sense of duty to others is easily satisfied. One wonders what was running through the mind of the citizen who sent a copy of the "Postal and Tele graphic Code of the Argentine Re public," or of the other who thought that our soldiers would be interested in the twenty-year-old reports of the Kpiscopal Eye and Ear Hospital. Mr. Koch thinks that special mention should be made of Ruskin's "Letters to Young Girls', and of Miss Leslie' American Girl's Book, or Occupa tions for Play Hours" (1866). But there were several -copies of house wives' books on home needlework, and the prize gift was a 1916 diary, partly filled by the donor. ' Fortunately, the books passed through a sifting process before reach ing the cantonment shelves. As has been said, the effect must have been favorable upon a good many of the home shelves, and there should ba a clearer atmosphere for the next book drive. The cantonment library is a,n essential part of the soldier's recrea tion. It is especially noteworthy that it has been pronounced by one au thority to be desirable as a "refuge from the constant music, songs, movies and other distractions at many of the welfare agencies." GEOLOGICAL OPTIMISM. Those who are by nature inclined to view the world's future through dark glasses will be cheered by the con clusions derived by Dr. Marsden Man- son, of San Francisco, from the Ant arctic explorations of Captain Robert Scott and Sir Krnest Shackleton, that the world is growing warmer, that the same energies which have but recently converted the glacial lake beds of Canada into the most pro ductive grain fields of the world will n time convert the tundras of today into the grain fields of tomorrow." The student of history, bent on dis covering whether the world is growing better or worse, is limited to a few thousand years In the scope of his research. Happier is the geologist, with his eons to work with. Dr. Hanson's "recently" falls from his pen as easily as one writing about the present war would speak of the day before yesterday, or week before last. But he means, of course, some hun dreds of thousands, perhaps millions. of years ago. And what has come to pass in the "recent" geological past gives us a clew to what we may expect in the "near" future a few millions of years hence. It is comforting to realize that the earth is growing warmer, but more reassuring to know that generations of which we shall be the remote an cestors are not going to starve. The population of the earth will not eat itself out of existence, for it holds the vast plains of the Southern Continent, and the tundras of the North, and the higher slopes of great mountain ranges in reserve. Mount Hood some day will cease to be capped with per petual snow, and growers of strawber ries and apples will push their plant ing tool and their marketing methods to its very summit. That is, if by that time they have not decided to grow bananas instead. For by the time the world is getting Its grain from the Antarctic plateau and Greenland, Ore gon ought to be in the tropics, with not even an oldest inhabitant living who can talk reminiscently of the last silver thaw. PROTECTION OF TIIE SIORATORICM. The so-called "Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil Relief Act," passed by Congress. accomplishes In effect a complete change in court practice concerning default judgments, and extends a greater measure of protection to per sons in the military service of their country than has ever before been given in our history. The fundamental reason why an act of Congress was required, instead of legislation by the separate states, is set forth In - an analysis of the new statute made by Archibald R. Watson, former corpora tion counsel of New York, in a letter to the New. York Times. This reason is that State Legislatures are for bidden by the Federal Constitution to impair the obligation of a contract, which in effect is done by the Fed eral moratorium. The essential aim of the law is to relieve all persons in the service of anxiety as to their civil rights. In order that they may be able to devote their entire energies to the military needs of the Nation. The law is exceedingly broad in Its scope. The protected classes Include not only all officers and enlisted men of the Tegular Army and the reserves, and also of the National Guard, the Navy, Marine Corps and Coast Guard, but also all officers of the Public Health Service on duty with the Army and Navy, and of the personnel of the Lighthouse Service and the Coast and Geodetic Survey under jurisdic tion of the War and Navy Depart ments. Members of the Nurses' Corps, field clerks and even civilian clerks and employes on duty with the mili tary forces detailed for service abroad are also included. Most conspicuous of all the pro visions of the law is that made in Section ZOO, which "provides that no judgment shall be entered by default unless there Is filed an affidavit show ing that the defendant is not In the military service." It is this provision which, for example, has recently led to the reopening of several divorce proceedings. Including those in which the defendants were not in the mili tary service, but in which formal showing to this effect had not been made. But the law also extends a measure of protection to the just creditor, by providing that no order of judgment shall be entered without securing an order of the court, which shall not be made until the court shall have appointed an attorney to repre sent the defendant's interests. Plaintiff may be required to file bond, to indemnify the defendant against any damage he may suffer if the judgment should afterward be set aside. Numerous details of the pro jection of defendants are included in the law, and the whole is capped by a broad provision that a stay of pro ceedings may be ordered at any stage in any case where it shall appear that the ability of the defendant to defend the action is impaired by reason of his service to his country. Eviction for non-payment of rent not exceeding S50 a month is for bidden, except on express order of the court. Anyone who participates in an illegal action of this kind may be inv prisoned a year and fined $1000. Pro tection is given against forfeiture of property being purchased on install ments, and there is a unique provision against the lapse of life insurance policies to an aggregate of $5000. . The Secretary of the Treasury is required to deliver United States bonds to the life insurance companies as security for the payment of the premiums. The spirit of the law is that every defendant shall have the full benefit of his day in court. It extends the especial favor of the civil law to all in the military service of the Nation. But there will not be much disposi tion to quarrel with the liberality of the Government's policy in this re spect. It is realized that the protec tion of the Government extended to the stay-at-homes is being made valid by the efforts of the defenders of the flag. Plaintiffs in litigation against soldiers and sailors will suffer only a fraction of the deprivation and incon venience to which its beneficiaries are exposing themselves, and all alike will share the general benefits in the end. LEARNING FROM THE FARMER. Those self-satisfied city persons who proffer their services to the farmer this season to help him make and save his crops, and, incidentally, are inclined to the notion that they are going to "teach him something," would do well to turn to the pages of Adam Smith, esteemed as a political philoso pher and observer. It was Adam Smith's belief that the tiller of the soil was the skilled worker par ex cellence, and that "not only the art of the farmer, the general direction of husbandry, but the many inferior branches of country labor, require much more skill and experience than the greater part of the mechanical trades." This fact, we predict, will be rediscovered by a good many vol unteer farm laborers on their own account. The' jokesmiths have been wont to picture their rural cousin with chin whiskers and a single gallus, and to poke no end of fun at him for his bewilderment amid the clangor of city streets. He is the stock victim of the lightning rod agent and the gold brick man. He gets credit for shrewdness only when he Is camou flaging- his produce or piling his big apples at the ends of the barrel. He has borne it patiently enough, and has had few spokesmen to point out that the city man in the country is as "green" as the farmer In town But Adam Smith goes more deeply into the subject than is implied by discussion of the relative opportuni ties of each class to acquire informa tion. He thinks that the countryman is an individual of greater innate ca pacity; that the nature of his employ ment makes him more resourceful and gives him command of a greater va riety of expedients. . He goes on, for example, to say: The man who works upon brass and Iron works with Instruments and upon materiais of which the temper Is always the same. But the man who plows the ground with a team of horses or oxen works with Instru ments of which the health, strength and temper are very different upon different occasions. The condition of the materials which he works upon, too, is as variable as that of the instruments he works with and both require to be managed with much .Judgment and discretion. The common ploughman, though commonly regarded as the pattern of stupidity and Ignorance. Is seldom defective In this Judgment and dis cretion.- His voice and language are more difficult to be understood by those who are not used to them. His understanding, how ever. Is accustomed to consider great varl ety of objects, is generally superior to that of the other, wnose whole attention irom morning until night is commonly occupied In nerformlnK one or two very simple oper ations. How much the lower ranka of the people in the country are really superior to those in the town Is well known to every man whom either business or curiosity baa led to converse with both. It is true that this was written be fore the modern city had reached its present stage of development. Cap tains of industry were rarer than they are now, and the modern intricacies of trade had not so sharpened tne wits of the merchant and the clerk. But it remains true that the farmer still must adapt himself to changing seasons even more uncertain than market vagaries, and be master of a score of trades and have a smattering of a few of the professions. He Is a kind of mechanic and botanist and doctor and utility man all rolled into one. He may not be versed in the fine-spun theories of physics, but he knows how to empty a barrel of cider with an improvised syphon, and he can keep a hydraulic ram chugging day and night. If he does not know the name of the peony that captured the latest grand prize, he can spot a poison weed in a sheep pasture on sight. He has studied the anatomy of livestock from the inside, and he knows, how to make a pair of gate hinges out of a hickory crotch and two pieces of barbed wire. He knows when to let the chickens into the garden to get rid of a maximum of bugs and lose a minimum of vege tables. He knows whether a heifer calf is more likely to develop Into a beef or a milk animal, and instinct tells him almost as much as the scales about the point at which it ceases to be profitable to feed 60-cent corn into a young hog. There is a knack in cutting hay at just the right time to obtain the most nourishment in proportion to woody fiber, and an other trick in curing it and piling it in the stack. Every day of the three hundred and sixty-five in the year is a new problem to him, and no one year furnishes a reliable precedent for the next. The city youth who ventures Into the country this season will be wise if he takes a reasonable humility with him. What he can teach his farmer employer about books may or may not bo worth while, but it is probable that it will not be a fair exchange for the information he will acquire. He will, among other things, have an oppor tunity to enrich his vocabulary greatly. He will learn the difference between horse's withers -and his pastern Joint, and the number of stomachs possessed by a cow and more names of the different parts, of a harness than he ever dreamed of. Ho will be a long time learning to distinguish one horse from another by looking It in the face, and all sheep will look alike to him, in all probability, after he has worked a whole season. He has prided himself on his sense of orientation, in town, but he will lose himself in the woods. If he does not carry his watch with him, he will be too late or too eaxly for his meals, although he will not get up too early In the morning. His resources will be taxed by a hundred emergencies and as many unfamiliar tasks. Perhaps he will acquit himself creditably. We do not subscribe to the extreme notion of Adam Smith, and, besides, times have changed, but if he does so he will be richer for the experience. The farmer may not be versed in peda gogics, but he will need to be a teacher if he gets his money's worth out of the new help that is being offered to him. And somehow, we think, he is going to succeed. It will be a familiar task to solve one more new problem. He has been confronted with strange situations every year of his life. It would be unfair, perhaps, to com pare the successful farm proprietor with the average city laborer. But the country man suffers little when he is set side by side with his city cousin, grade for grade. Those whom Adam Smith calls the "lower ranks of the people of the country" cer tainly manage to get more out of life than those in a relatively similar sit uation in the town. And the farmer, if given his choice, would rather have their labor than that of the city men, whose coming he views with curiosity, not unmixed with dread. Our city friends are about to have the tables turned on them. They are going to go out into the barn and harness the horse wrong end to, and be "hicks' for a while. They will find that being "green" is almost altogether a matter of the point .of view. And it will do them good. A writer 1n the Bulletin of the Pan American Union thinks that Ameri cans have been too prone to accept without analysis the deprecatory state ment that they have been inefficient In their efforts to obtain their share of the trade of Latin America. They have been told so often that the Ger man trader was superefticient and that the American was not "giving the peo pie what they wanted" that they bad come to take it for granted. But the figures are illuminating. In one-half of tho twenty Latin-American coun tries before the war, the imports from Germany had sunk to one-fifth of those from the United States, and in the other half American imports were rapidly gaining on Germany. The fact seems to be that Germans in ther struggle to maintain their ground had taken to imitating American and Brit ish goods, but it took so much time to do this with characteristic German thoroughness that they could not keep pace with changing styles. Latin Americans like to be up to date, and German imitations of old goods were being left on the importers' hands. "Liberty" Potato week la an impor tant time this year from the viewpoint of the National interest. The fact stands out that the United States pro duced a crop of more than 442,000,000 bushels in 1917, which was 92,000,000 bushels in excess of the average of the five preceding years, and that a large part of the crop Is still on hand. There are only two months in which to dis pose of it, for by July the new crop will begin to claim attention. Every householder knows by this time that grains are scarce and that even a bum per crop of wheat is not likely to result in relaxation of restrictions as to the use of bread. The potato con sumer, therefore, performs a double duty. He prevents waste of a desir able commodity at the same time that he encourages the grower to repeat the production of a bumper crop, which he is unlikely to try to do If he fin ishes the present season with a large unsold surplus on his hands. The total number of subscribers to the third liberty loan approaches the 20,000,000 mark, and if the pace' is maintained in succeeding loans it will be as unfashionable to be without one as it would be to attend church in a bathing suit. It being quite clear that the sheep industry must be reorganized if the country is to have wool and mutton enough to meet its demands, it is up to the small farmer to figure whether he cannot find room for one more lamb. The shipbuilders of Oregon, having got into their stride, are making the National record for per capita sub scriptions to the liberty loan, and they are out for the per capita record for ship production as well. Appearance - of dairy cows in the beef market at this time is not a good sign, but it takes a man who has been face to face with the inexorable re currence of "cow time," . 730 times a year, to appreciate the situation fully. It is fitting that Oregon women should be favored in -the purchase of sugar for canning. For where on earth is there a greater profusion of excellent material for canning pur poses ? The 3000 or so reported to be vol untarily idle in Portland should go to Petrograd, where they will hardly be noticed among the 350,000 who can't find work. One advantage that the Emperor of Austria has over the Kaiser is that he hasn't got six sons whose safety he need worry about. It looks as if Hindenburg might be due for an eclipse almost a month ahead of the sun that he was looking for a place in. Still, there is something to be said In favor of a knowledge of German if one happens to be assigned to a listen ing post. Regardless of who first made use of the submarine, a good many Ger mans have used theirs for the last time. Once again it is appropriate to sug gest to the war gardener that a little land well tilled means a big cellar well filled. The big German drivo is pausing while the Kaiser's shock troops are re covering from the shock. Conscription of Irish potatoes prom ises not to arouse opposition anywhere. The British navy seems to be simply filled to overflowing with Hobsons. Clipping liberty bond coupons is fine exercise for the hands. The Peripterous. Pertpterons A Structure Having Rows of Columns on -All Sides. Dictionary. (Synopsis of preceding synopses.) The Oregonian, a great morning news paper, employs a distinguished literary architect to construct a perlpteroua. He doea it. It Uaa rows of columns on east. west, north and south. The Peripterous becomes a Free Audito rium for the expreasion of incompetent, ir rolovent and immaterial opinion. new verse and anecdotea. s WAR POETS CANDIDATE. Senator Gluten, who is pursuing a novel campaign, having removed him sell from the hands of his friends, is now ready to announce the certainty of his election by a handsome majority. Senator Gluten has made an appeal to a distinctive class never before Im portant in politics for the reason that it never before existed. "1 expect to get the "unanimous vote of the war poets," said the noted can didate, yesterday. "Through the sym pathy of a newspaper editor of verse I have obtained a complete roster of the war poets in Oregon. "There are 75.4SS of them. "Nothing has ever been dons for thl deserving class of people by Congress. No body of citizens is doing more to keep the home fires burning or at least the home fires of my newspaper friend than the war poets. "I am, as is well known, committed to the enactment of a law that will pro vide for the publication of all war poetry "at Government expei.se. When the National Committee on Publication of War Poetry has been established, there will be no more painful rejections of earnest and patriotic effort. "I feel that the publications by this committee will be a welcome diversion from the Congressional Record, the Official Bulletin, and the voluminous propaganda of countless bureau press agents now franked to a helpless public "As the savior of the war poets 1 shall of course get all their votes. I figure it is a cinch." THE TEST POSITIVE. The heartless local . organization known as the Society for the Supprei sioa of War Poetry, after a long silence, has announced that the infallible test of war poetry is the inclusion some where in the poem of lines ending as follows: . .... across the sea . ... to fight for liberty. Sounds Familiar. Old Tom Moon, the blind newsboy, remarked the other day that one of the six candidates for Governor talked to him so convincingly abcut the cer tainty of his election that he would have congratulated him on the spot had not the other five candidates got to him first with the same line of conversa tion. The Chump. (Dedicated to the Kaiser's American Dentist.) There's one guy I don't understand. Some folks don't know luck when they meet it! He had a chance to beat the band And passed it up Now can you beat It? He had the Kaiser on his baok! He had his nose where he could hit It. He was all set to take a whack He could have pinched it, pulled It, bit it. He had the fork-tailed Dutchman down. He could have Just hauled off and eoaked him; He could have beaned him with his crown. He could have tied him there and choked him. He could have say, the chance was big! There were a dozen ways to do him. He could have took that buzzer Jig And drilled him, drilled right through and through him. He could have Oh! gee, what's the use? I 'spose it ain't my place to sass him.. But, jimminy cripes, he turned him loose; Great snakes'. He didn't even gas him. v He had his mouth pried open wide. He could have made him drink it, eat it; What did he do? He let him slide. Well, let me ask you. Can you beat It? PAT RIOT, D. D. S. The Great Bee Contest. KLAMATH FALLS, Or., May 6. (To the Architect.) Last New Year's eve I was having a watch party at my home. About 15 minutes before mid night I noticed a loud, curious buzzing sound. As midnight approached it be came louder, and at exactly midnight my overhead porch light darkened and then became entirely obscured. As I rushed forth to ascertain the cause I tripped over a bulky object in front of the door. I then looked up and saw that a swarm of bees had clustered themselves about the globe covering the porch light, apparently for the sake of warmth, and hence the darkening. As I returned to the house I picked up the object over which I had tripped. I found it to be four combs of fine honey. It was perfectly apparent that the bees had brought it as payment for their rental privilege around the porch light, i In the morning the bees left or their own accord and hived themselves In an old joint of stovepipe lying by the woodshed. They are there yet, and are turning out excellent, though slightly sooty, honey. I have not yet heard of any bees swarming earlier this year than mine. This is, perhaps, due to our mild cli mate, which is an advantage thou not the only one of living near C. fornia. B. HICK HONETWAX. Bona of the Bread. Sing a song of sixpence, Our bread is made of rye. Four and twenty other kinds We are going to try. And when this war Is over. Then we all will sing: "Wasn't that a pretty loaf. To set before the King?' We here in the home land Are loaning out our money. Saving with our sugar. And in its place eat honey. We send our wheat and sugar Away across the sea. To feed the boys in khaki Who fight for liberty. The girls are In the garden Hoeing out the corn; We none of us are happy, And sometimes feel forlorn. But we are going to work and save And do just all we can. To help our soldiers lick the boche And bring them home again. MRS. WILLIAM WILLIAMSON. Questions of the Hour. PORTLAND, May 11. (To the Archi tect.) These vital questions which confront us at the present time might be discussed thoroughly in the Perin terous just before election: (1) Does Gus Moser expect to ba elected Governor of Oregon? (2) In a group of people taken in this city recently, why was not George Baker included? (3) When people have their pictures taken nowadays why do they open their mouths and show teeth like a young colt? (4) Who Is the wiser of the twain, Baker or Withycombe? (5) Is J. Hennessy Murphy a Par nelllte, Redmondite or Ulsterite? (6) What form of law and order will make the world safe for Democracy with a capital "D"? (7) I turned my clock back an hour. Now it is two hours behind schedule time. Does it make any difference in standard time? IVAN BELL.