6 THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAXD, MAT 2G, 1918. PORTLAND. OREGON. . Entered at Portland Oregon)( Postoffice as second-class mail matter. Subscription rates Invariably in advance: (By Mail.) JDaily. Sunday included, one y?r: ..IS. 00 J 'ally. Sunday Included, six monthi -4.25 rnily. Sunday included, three months... Iinilv, Sunday included, one month..... Kaily. without Sunday, one year 6.00 Xa.ily, without Sunday. six months...... 3--i Xailv. without Sunday, one month .60 Aeekly, one year K u n d.iy, one year Sunday and Weekly l.OO a. .to 3.50 (By Carrier.) Daily. Sunday included, one year .I9.00 l;tilv. Sunday included, one month....- -i5 Iaily. Sunday included, three months.... J.J. J;iil . without Sunday, one year 7.80 Iily. without Sunday, three months.... Uaily. without Sunday, one month 05 How to Remit Send poatoffice money order, express or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are jit owner's risk. Give poatoffice address in full. Including- county and state. fontaire Rates 12 to 18 paces. 1 cent: 18 to 3- pages, 2 cents; 34 to 4S pages, 3 cents; CO to 60 pages, 4 cents; 62 to 76 pages. 5 cents; 78 to H2 pages, 6 cents.- Foreign post age, double rates. Eastern Business Office Verree. Conk lln, IJrunswick building. New York; Verree & Conklin. Steger building. Chicago: Verree & Conklin, Free Press building. Oetroit. Mich.; San Kranclsco representative, K. J. Bidwell, 742 Market street. 21EMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Associated Press Is exclusively enti tled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited to this paper, and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dis patches herein are also reserved. PORTLAND, SrXDAI, MAT 26, 1S18. VACATION TIME. Neither the fact that the time of ievery individual in the country is ex fccedingly valuable this Summer, nor the closing: of many of the routes of travel to the tourist, -will stand as a reason for omitting the usual vaca tion of 1918. It is probably true, on the contrary, that most men and women will need a vacation more than ever, and that in the interest of ulti mate efficiency vacation plans ought to be laid with exceptional care. Re laxation from the strain of increased business effort is highly essential. We cls a people are working under higher tension than we ever felt in all our history. Employers and proprietors fire embarrassed by shortage of help; executives are under the necessity of doing much of the detail work which formerly they committed to subordi nates; there has been speeding up all along the line. Our business organi zation even before the war began was B. breeder of neurasthenia. The re sponsibilities and anxieties of the past year have only Intensified the need of suitable relaxation- and ' complete rest. For something like two millions of tour young men the vacation problem Is taking -care of itself. They are be ginning by "seeing America first" a part of America, at least and pres ently they are going abroad, where they will be personally conducted over regions in Europe where history is be ing made. For the present they are to have a monopoly of foreign travel. Sundry difficulties of transportation present obstacles to civilians who would like to join them in foreign lands. It promises, therefore, to be pre-eminently for the 98,000,000 or eo of those, who are not, in the military service an opportunity to develop a different set of vacation plans. Now is the time to see our own country,- to make ourselves fa miliar with its great outdoors, and to relieve the pressure upon shipping by finding .enjoyment nearer home. It is a good time, for example, for people who live in the Pacific North west to learn that there are something like thirty Switzerlands within easy travel distance of their own homes. From British Columbia to California the mountains beckon to the venture some. The Pacific Northwest Touring Association, for example, has per formed a real public service by point ing out that there is no similar region in all of Europe which possesses so many snow-capped, peaks, or beauti ful inland lakes, or deep forests, and none which is so alluring to the fisher man. We have our own spas and our own yachting harbors and bathing beaches and well-developed roads. It ought to be known to more people that there are in the terriitory men tioned more than 15,000 miles of splendid roads, that hotel facilities liave been wonderfully developed within a decade and that there is economy as well as pleasure in the vacation near home. The essence of the vacation, wher ever and however it is taken. Is complete change, which means riot only change of locality, of weather and scenery, but of occu pation, of personality and of thought. The high value of a rest in the deep woods, s on a fishing trip, lies in its remoteness from the affairs? of the outer world. It is difficult at best to escape from the cares of the day. lUodern inventions have conspired to keep us too much in touch with events: the wireless at sea and the telephone- line to the heart of the forest reserve keep up the pace of Civilization everywhere. But it is pos sible, with some determination and a little self-denial, to dedicate the period at least to a complete change of thinking. "Feeding the soul" is not so mysterious a matter as it may seem: It needs only to be remembered that the soul requires a complete change pf diet once in a while. We have our own doubts as to the efficacy, for very many persons, of the plan adopted by one superior in dividual, who "stole." his vacation one busy season by getting up an hour earlier in the morning and giving the extra time to outdoor adventures. He has boasted how he was able com pletely to submerge himself in his new personality for a brief period each day. and to emerge fresh as any daisy and ready to take up the old threads where he had dropped them. He was able to point out that he thus en joyed ISO hours of complete rest, . which is as much as the average busi ness man counts on in a vacation taken in a single piece, but he was an exceptional individual a highly exceptional one and his scheme pre supposes certain intellectual and spiritual capabilities which most of us do not possess. But he was right in principle, for the basis of his vaca tion was a complete change of him self. One need not travel far afield to find new and strange surroundings if he has the gift of minute observation. But the point is that the change ought to be found. Those who need to go to a foreign country to find some thing vastly different from that to which they are accustomed are lack ing in a faculty that it would be to their own advantage to cultivate especially in times like these. Our own attractions this year ought to suffice for most of us. We in Ore iron have our Mount Heod and Mount Jefferson, and Crater Lake and the Pauline lakes and the Oregon Caves, and a. Ions stretch, of the finest beaches in the world and trout streams almost innumerable. The mountains will call to those who have lived on the lower levels and the seashore to those whose homes are in the mountains. Camping out is especially to be recommended for those who dwell in apartment houses, and travel for those who dur ing the past months have lived too close to Wieir work. It will bear repe tition, that the essence of the vacation is the completest possible change. The annual vacation" is a compara tively modern innovation, but it is made necessary by the way moderns live. It is absolutely essential to effi ciency under present conditions. Least of all should it be omitted in times Jike tlie present. . It is no sign of lack of interest in the affairs of the world for a man to abandon the world to its fate,, at least occasionally, while he is gathering" new reserves for the fight. TRIUMPH OF .AMERICAN CHEMISTS. The United States bids fair to wrest supremacy in the chemical industry from Germany, and is already making triumphs in that line that contribute to new mechanical successes. As a result of establishment at Columbus, G-a., of a mill which is capable of fifty three different kinds of cotton weave, the Government has placed orders for many million yards of cotton goods of peculiar weaves. -It has found that these weaves with certain chemical combinations have made it possible to substitute cotton for linen on aircraft wings, and to use cotton cloth In place of rubber in gas masks and in air men's coats. Research continues with a view to using cotton in many other ways. ' These discoveries compare well with Austrian invention of cloth made of nettle fiber and with the -German use of paper for clothing, which are re sults of war necessity. They may well be followed by many others, in which the newly awakened energy of Ameri can chemists will combine with our well-recognized superiority as me chanics to take the lead in chemistry away from Germany. This is the more probable because. Germany has ex celled in developing the discoverits of other nations rather, than in original invention. America has already made great progress during the last four years in making coal tar products, ex plosives, photographic paper, optical glass and other things which were formerly bought from Germany. By the assault on civilization Ger many has done more than array the world in arms against her. The em pire has awakened the vast, dormant energies of other nations and has di rected them into channels which were formerly t occupied exclusively or chiefly by Germans. By trying to seize supremacy in world trade, Ger many has made her rivals more for midable and has bred a race of new rivals. Since these rivals will be ani mated by common distrust, if not hatred, of Germany, that country will suffer a serious handicap in future commercial competition. DOWN TO A WORKING BASIS. The compromise between the Ad ministration and opposing forces in the Senate on the Chamberlain reso lution authorizing investigation of War Department activities should prove a basis of a good working ar rangement between the President and Congress for effective co-operation in the conduct o the war. It authorizes the military committee to inquire into production of aircraft and ordnance and other work for the War Depart ment, but it omits the phrase "conduct of the war," which was so. obnoxious to the President that, in his mind, any resolution containing it would have been a vote of no confidence. Such a vote, in countries where the life of the government depends on a majority In the Legislature, would have meant the downfall of the Cabinet. Mr. Wilson objected for the further reason that the committee on conduct of the war is held to have been a serious obstruction to President Lincoln's ac tion half a century ago. The outcome is that by bold strategy the President has won in .a contro versy. in which he was under hot fire because of the aircraft scandal, while his critics by faulty strategy have failed to gain their broadest ends, though they have gained their imme diate end. Senator Chamberlain and his associates in both parties had a good case for inquiry into the aircraft scandal and delay in machine gun pro duction, but they tried to use it as the thin end of the wedge to open inquiry into all war activities. While some of them were doubtless ' ani mated by sincere anxiety to speed up war industries, others were with some cause suspected of a desire to use the Administration's shortcomings for political effect. The President took the wind out of the sails of those who charged that an inquiry by the Department of Justice would end in a whitewash, for he put that Inquiry in the hands of Charles K. Hughes, his rival for the Presidency in 1916. By so doing he silenced the cry of whitewash, for Mr. Hughes is .known as a man who will dig to the bottom and who would not accept the task under any restrictions on his digging. The President now makes practical admission of the benefits to be de rived from independent inquiry, as well as of the right of Congress to make such inquiry, by assenting to the military committee's investigation of this and like matters. The former extensive changes for the better in the War Department are certainly the result of public criticism evoked by the exposures made . last December, and the aircraft exposures have caused radical reorganization pf the Aircraft Board. On the other hand. Congress is estopped with its own consent from invading the entire field of military operations with its activities. If the military committee .had limited its proposal to aircraft .affairs and had then discovered serious wrongdoing. it would have had a good case for further inquiry until it might have finally gained its full purpose to in vestigate the entire conduct of the war. By trying to base a case for sweeping Inquiry on exposures in a single branch of war industry, it has lost the chance to go beyond the limits now placed on its activity. Tet it may go to great lengths, so long as it does not invade the field of actual mill tary operations. wfaich is reserved to the President as commander-in-chief. This settlement should be highly satisfactory to the people, whose chief desire is that the war be won with the minimum of waste and who re sent any attempt of either party to use success or failure for its selfish ad vantage. Both the President and his critics asked too much, and neither gets all that was asked, but each gets what is for the good of the Nation. The President, perhaps with reason, suspected that his political opponents designed to use war inquiries to his injury, and, therefore, he sought en tire freedom from them. His critics, resenting this attitude and, probably suspecting that the facts were worse than they are because he opposed ef forts to shed light on them, tried to widen thcfleld of inquiry to an ex tent which would have hampered him and might have invaded his Execu tive powers. A balance has been struck by which Congressional vigi lance will act as a driving, and at the same time restraining, force upon officials who are prone to become too complacent and too arbitrary, yet by which the President will suffer from no legislative interference with his exercise of the Executive power. The people recognize that this power has been and must be greatly enlarged in order to meet the imperative neces sities of war. They only demand that the men who are entrusted with this power, outside the field of actual mili tary operations, shall do so in the open and shall be held accountable to their representatives. This definition of the war powers of the President and Congress having at last been made, it is time, that both make up for the time spent in con troversy by speeding up their work. The President is at last surrounding himself with a splendid organization. and he should begin to show substan tial results. Congress has much vital legislation to pass. . and should not think of adjourning until it is passed. War legislation, like battles, will not wait while anybody rests. WHERE COLLEGES HAVE SUFFERED. It is deducible from the figures just compiled by the Federal Bureau of Education that college students have not been deeply impressed by efforts to - restrain them from completing their education with a view to en hancing their usefulness to the coun try, in peace or war, later on. "Do it now", is the motto of young America, and "now" is visualized as a state of war. The boys prefer tangible serv ice to the promise of greater efficiency in the future. The total loss in numbers of male students of colleges of liberal arts since the war began has been more than one-fifth the entire enrollment, or 20.6 per tent., while the gain in women students has been 1.6 per cent, and the loss in the entire enrollment has been 11 per cent. Comparison is made with the last preceding school year. Normally, a gain of 5 per cent was to have been expected. There are 625 colleges and univer sities in the United States, and the figures are based upon returns from 313 of them. These Indicate that the war has deterred many high school graduates from continuing their edu cation, and also that the higher grades have contributed the largest propor tion of their men to the National forces. Of juniors 2 3.7 per cent and of seniors 2 9.4 per cent have taken up war work of some kind. This has been due, no doubt, to the greater maturity of the students in the higher grades. - The .same explanation probably holds good for the fact that the technical and professional schools have furnished even larger propor tionate quotas. Only the medical schools show a gain, and this is due to the definite policy of the War De partment to encourage medical stu dents to complete their work. It is obvious that a potential physician can be of greater service to the Army by perfecting his education than by hur rying into .a branch of the service In which his special education would be wholly lost. But the schools of for estry have lost 61 per cent of their men, those of journalism 48.3 per cent and of the law 40.1 per cent. The War Department's order to engineer ing students, corresponding to that applicable to students of medicine, was issued too late to stem the tide of enlistments, and this class of schools lost 18 per cent of their male students. Viewed in the abstract, the duty of the student, as Dr. Eliot, of Harvard, pointed out more than a year ago, would be to continue to equip him self, by increasing his technical knowl edge, for future service. But abstrac tions have ceased to count for much, in the presence of the reality of. war. - CENTENARY OF A REFORMER. The 27th of May. 1918. ought not to pass unnoticed by those who ob serve the centenaries of impprtant events in our history, for it is the 100th anniversary of the birth of Amelia Jenks Bloomer, who was a famous woman in her day. It is no longer commonly known that she was a gifted orator, a clear thinker and a noteworthy leader in charitable en terprises. Her name is indissolubly linked with a certain article of wear ing apparel which she tried in vain to persuade women to adopt, which has been known as "bloomers" for more than sixty years. It is a curious fact that she finally abandoned the effort because she feared that she would be known to posterity for her connection with dress reform rather than for her connection with other movements which she valued much more highly. But precisely the thing which she sought to avoid came to pass. It is recorded that Mrs. -Bloomer laughed heartily, for she had a strong sense of humor, when she ' first saw the daughter of Gerrit Smith attired in a short skirt, with full trousers and regular bodice. A few days later Mrs. Stanton appeared in a similar costume, consisting of trousers only partly softened by a short skirt. Within a week, it is said, Mrs. Bloomer herself was persuaded to discard her con ventional dress in favor of the bifur cated garment. But she designed her own costume and tried to .reserve some of its feminine qualities. It was fabricated from figured silk, for ex ample. .There was an open front jacket and the skirt was of modest length by comparison with some skirts which excite no particular com ment nowadays. . The trousers were the revolutionary feature, ' but they were not tne trousers worn bv men. They were wide, like those worn by the Turks, but were gathered closely just above the shoe tops. , Later the figured silk trousers were made more ample and the skirt was laid aside as a superfluity. The resulting cos tume was not "immodest," even ac cording to the standards of that dav. but it drew upon itself a storm of ridicule which it could not survive. Bloomers were more famous in Eng land than in the United States about 'tne middle of the last centurv. Mrs Bloomer had worn them publicly for the first time in 1849, in delivering a lecture in wnicn she made no refer. ence to the subject of dress, and she continued to appear in the costume during an extended tour of the West, which she made in 1852, in company with Rev. Antoinette Brown, who also was a famous woman of her day and was one of the first to break down the barriers which excluded women from pulpits. American women were slow to follow her example, but there were smouldering in London some of the fires which, afterward burst into flame in the militant suffrage move ment, and bloomers were adopted by a considerable number of women in the fashionable West End. who wore them militantly in the face of the jeers of unsympathetic multitudes. A good deal of the fame of Mrs. Bloomer was due to . the drawings of the artist Cruikshank. who caricatured the cos tume good humoredly. Mrs. Bloomer stopped wearing it after six or seven years, but it was in vogue in reform circles in England for some years after that. Mrs. Bloomer deserved better than to be known chiefly as a dress re former. Bloomers were a compara tively trifling incident in her career. She was early in her life impressed by the growing evil of intemperance, and her investigations Into this sub ject led her to make further efforts to obtain greater legal rights for women, the statutes of the times being notoriously unjust, and her efforts were all the more praiseworthy be cause they were the efforts of the pio neer. She was for years the editor of a semi-monthly magazine the Lily devoted to temperance and the legal rights of women, and the magazine acquired a circulation previously un heard of in those days as a result of the bloomer Incident. She was an ex ceptionally graceful and forceful writer. Mr. Bloomer, who has been doomed to obscurity through no fault of his own, was a modest but effective philanthropist, and the couple worked in sympathy to accomplish many things which the country now takes for granted. The intrinsic merit of the idea which Mrs. Bloomer championed Is only now obtaining general recogni tion. Her notion was distinct from that of Dr. Mary Walker and others who sought only dress as nearly like men as possible, but it suffered fro the same prejudice which professed to see in every effort of women to improve their condition an attempt to break the boundaries of their pecu liar "sphere." Dr. Walker's example did not advance the cause of dress re form. It is significant, however.' that Industrial needs are now beginning to accomplish the very things which Amelia Bloomer set out to do. Under various names, and with numerous modifications, the bifurcated garment now seems to have come to stay. The flowing skirt was doomed as a work ing garment when women began ' to be employed in the running ot ma chinery: it was no more than a step to the highly convenient and not alto. gether ungraceful coveralls of the farmerette: and there is ground for suspicion that a good many women who are not quite ready to brave public scrutiny' have dared to adven ture in the direction of comfort in the guarded precincts of their own homes. For, after all, a movement that is fun damentally sound may survive even ridicule, and there are signs that Mrs. Bloomer will be vindicated before many years. BOOKS FOB WAR PRISONERS. Persons who have made gifts 'oi books to soldiers' libraries, or have contributed money to- the library fund will find incentive for contin ued effort in a discussion by Theodore Koch, of the Library of Congress, of the Important bearing of books upon the psychology of the war prisoner. It is even more necessary that the spirit of the prisoner should be main tained, if he is to return from cap tivity efficient and undeteriorated than that the soldier in camp should be entertained and instructed. The purpose of the book movement is to minister to both, but as facilities are presented it is intended that books shall be sent to prison camps in ene my countries in increasing quantities Mr. Koch quotes . Professor Gilbert Murray as saying that one of the most demoralizing aspects of prison life is the utter aimlessness of existence. Re ports both from escaped prisoners and from visitors to the camps agree as to the principal facta. "The men. says Professor Murray, "who fill their days with some purposeful occupa tion come through safely; the men who cannot do so in one way or an other break or fail." This is particu larly true, it would seem, of the pris oners who before the war were men tally alert. As to these. It, is essen tial that the occupation should have a definite aim. Playing cards or walking up and down the prison yard will not suffice. The best antidote of all against dejection and surrender to the "fates" is some species of educa tion, which contains the important elements of hope, of preparation for the future, and of visible progress. Americans number among their men an especially large proportion who chafe under conditions of mental stagnation. Professor Murray cites instances in which prisoners have been saved by the effort to learn a foreign language in order to be able to talk to foreign prisoners. An elec trician who is able to employ his leisure in the study of electricity is helped by the thought that he will be a better craftsman when he regains bis liberty. Students who left school in mid-term to enter the Army are buoyed up when they find opportuni ties to tak-e up the threads of study where they left them off. But in each instance - the underlying prin ciple is the same. It is demanded that a. useful purpose shall be served by the occupation undertaken. Digging a hole and filling it again would give employment only for the hands. It Is the mental phase of prison life which most requires attention. This will require different treat ment by the book distributors than the mere selection of volumes to while away odd hours. Fiction does not find so much room in the scheme of things, and obviously a large percent age of the books donated by private givers will be found unsuited for the purpose. It is one function of the American Library Association, ' in whose behalf Mr. Koch writes, to as certain the precise needs of men in differing circumstances and to meet them whenever possible. The prison library will require more educational books more books on technical sub jects and ot foreign languages. The British have organized a' "Prisoners of War Book Scheme." In which this has been dealt with rather effectively. On account of the throwing together of English and Italian prisoners in one German camp, it is reported that "more Italian is now being studied there than at the Universities of Lon don, Oxford and Cambridge in normal times." To go Into details would be only to multiply instances, but it will re quire no extended argument to sup port the contention that the plan of supplying prisoners with the right kind of books is worth all that it will cost. The slow demoralization of prison life is an important item on the casualty list, not less real because It does not appear In any list of tabu lated causes of lessened ' efficiency. Only the physically incapacitated are being . exchanged; for the others there may be a long period pf con finement and idleness. Plans to as sist them in self -education are a practical part of the scheme of "re habilitation" which is now receiving attention everywhere. MORE REFORM? If the plans of some of the state's well wishers are fulfilled by the next Legislature we shall have an amend ment to the corrupt practices act lim iting the amount of money that may be expended by others in behalf of a candidate. The law now limits only the amount that may be expended by the candidate himself or by relatives, employers or employes in his behalf. One may be pardoned some curi osity as to how the proposed change Is to be accomplished. If Smith pays out of his own pocket the maximum permitted in behalf of Jones, and Robinson does also, who is to be pun ished. Smith, Jones or Robinson? Aid how are. Smith and Robinson to know what the other has spent? There might be an election commissioner. who alone would be authorized to re ceive contributions and make expendi tures in behalf of candidates. But that would mean another office in a state now well supplied with offices. But what of the candidate who Is already in office? He has innumer able ways of advertising his activities and virtues and as many more ways of getting his mere name before the public. If he Is in Congress he can conduct a circular campaign without payment of postage, while his oppo nent . out of Congress can. out of his own pocket, circularize just 37,500 voters. That is for postage alone. The sum would exhaust the entire amount that could be expended by him or friends under the proposed amendment. It would cost him in stamps alone his entire fund to reach far less than one fifth of the Republican voters, figur ing on the first-class postage rate. By sending unsealed letters he could, after paying for printing, possibly reach one-third of his party voters with one letter. If the newspapers conspired to publish nothing about his candidacy his aspirations would be practically unknown. , This is said with doe regard to the fact that one may advertise in the official state pamphlet without having the sum thus expended counted. A census of those who did not look in side the last edition of that interest ing work would without doubt reveal a painful state of affairs. But what is there so wrong about expenditure of money in a political campaign for legitimate purposes traveling, hiring halls, circularizing, advertising? The large expenditures charged against certain candidates in the late primary came a long, long way from electing the ones most in veighed against on that account. There was no attempt to corrupt the voters and the mind of the voters was not changed by circulars or ad vertisements. But, assuredly, if there Is to be a further limitation It ought to be made to extend somehow to those in office who can campaign at state or Government expense. Other wise we shall make politics a profes sion and erect a bar to the election of any man to important office who has not somehow at some time slipped into a minor office. FRUITS OF GERM-VN ZEITGEIST. No ' better way of realizing how deeply the American people were de. ceived about Germany can be found than to compare what we know abou' that country today with what we thought of it in the early months of the war. An opportunity to make this comparison has been afforded by the discovery among a pile of old pa per In -a Portland hotel of a piece of an old newspaper containing an ar ticle by Elbert Hubbard under the suggestive . title, "Germans Wiser Than Americans in Many Ways." The date of the paper is unknown, but apparently it. is early in the war. Beginning with the statement, "Germany is the land of education," Hubbard said that "Germany main tains the biggest, best and most ef fective publicity bureau in the world" under the immediate supervision of the Kaiser. Saying that publicity bu reaus are "interested in leading the public to certain conclusions," he said that they "have certain alleged truths that they desire to fix in the public consciousness." He laid down the axiom that "governments exis through and by being backed by pub lic opinion." which Germans call Zeitgeist, and quoted the Kaiser as saying: My business Is not to rule; it Is to edu cate, so as to form a highly Intelligent and efficient Zeitgeist. Through the publicity bureau the Kaiser "evolves the Zeitgeist of his country." Hubbard said: "The Emperor is not a warrior primarily. He is a busi ness man first and second a soldier." As such he is "a great economist, an efficiency engineer. . . . intent on having his people well fed. well clothed, well housed. . . . stands for education. industry, economy, knows especially 'the value of advertising' and 'plays no favor ites.' " The Kaiser was quoted as saying that German army discipline "makes for manhood" and that its "business is not to destroy it is to protect'.': that it is "a vast school, which not only makes good soldiers in time of war, but good citizens in time of peace." Hubbard's concluding com ment was: . These ringing words of-wisdom were given out to the Uerman public through the offi cial publicity bureau and. let us hope, passed Into the sum of conscious thought that makes up the Zeitgeist. One of the first results of the ef ficiency produced by the German Zeitgeist was the killing of Hubbard by the sinking of the Lusitania. 1 would be interesting to know whether he changed his opinion about "these ringing words of wisdom" as he sank with the cries of drowning women and children ringing in his ears. The German publicity bureau is still at work. - and an official of the Federal Government, "one of whose duties brings him into contact with German propaganda in all parts ' of the world." is quoted by the New York Times as saying that it has be come "a very wonderful organiza tion" whose "tentacles reach into every country in the world." and which costs $500,000,000 a year. It is developing the desired Zeitgeist by spreading "discontent. particularly among the uneducated people in all the countries of the allies." It has ruined Russia and has brought that country into the clutch of the Kaiser. It almost destroyed Italy. It culti vated hatred of Great Britain and sowed distrust of that country in France and Italy, and it now diverts German hatred to America and sows the same evil sentiment against us in the minds of the allies. It main tains In the United States a "whis pering: propaganda" against the war, which, "has penetrated into the moun tain fastnesses of the Carolinas and Georgia"" and to the negroes of the' black belt. It tries to terrify the peo- pie with stories of fake disasters to transput la kb ar nuu lu uui ai luy in France. j A propaganda "directed from Spain and inspired and paid for in Berlin" spreads all over Central and South America, where a, pamphlet is circu lated which calls the United States "the Vampire of the Continent" and which contains "the most vicious at tack on a nation ever published." It has published a spurious edition of the American official pamphlet. "Why America Went to War." inserting a preface which contradicts every state ment contained in the text. It has bought up newspapers in South Amer ica and Mexico, and the propaganda in the latter country "is more pow erful than In any nation of the world, with the possible exception' of Spain." Any business man in Mexico who fa vors the allies is refused advertising space until he Is ruined or turns proi German. It employs "nothing but expert liars, trained in falsehood from their youth," and German owned newspapers "print the most scandalous stories about public men in America." It alarms fathers and mothers of American soldiers by painting "French women as moral lepers and the men as little better" and by circulating stories "to the ef fect that the morale and health of the American troops under General Pershing had been destroyed as a re sult of the ravages of disease." These are the fruits of that "most effective publicity bureau in the world" of which Elbert Hubbard wrote in such high praise. The gov ernment which maintains it has the audacity to Invite self-respecting na tions to enter into peace negotiations with It, and some citizens of those nations are so blind or so craven that they would have their statesmen grasp the filthy hand which Gcr many extends. There still are Ameri cans who conscientiously object to the war, though that is the only means by which t2e world can be rid of this foul thing." The greatest danger to democracy is not the German army: it Is the mental and moral poison which is spread by the German prop aganda to infect the minds and weak en the wills of the peoples who are fighting against . Germany to de velop in the allied countries a pro- German Zeitgeist. The President's call upon the Boy Scouts to help in taking a census of the black walnut trees of the country is another reminder of our past prodi gality, and yet our forefathers will not be seriously blamed for their de struction. Great areas covered with this now valuable wood were settled in times when transportation was dif ficult, there was no local market and it was necessary to clear the land In order to produce the necessities of life. There are regions in the Middle West in which houses and barns made from walnut still bear testimony to the enduring character of the wood and its former plenitude, and there are isolated groves still standing that will bring more to their owners than the farms were worth when clearing was begun. It is possible that half a century hence we shall look with the same feelings upon the people who are now burning fir stumps to be rid of them, but meanwhile the clearing of land will go on in the same old way. - Advocates of the too-much negcted Jerusalem artichoke for planting as part of the ration for hogs will be stimulated in their propaganda by the statement of Montague Free, writer of a book on "War Gardens," that practically every vegetable has its par ticular enemy except this particular artichoke, which is not an artichoke, -but is. nevertheless, an excellent article 1 of food for pigs, a substantial soup vegetable, and especially valuable for its starch content, which is higher than that of the potato. It deserves atten tion also because it thrives on poor land, which otherwise would go to waste, and because it requires no labor of harvesting if the farmer breeds hogs with intelligence enough to root for themselves. Recent discovery that the tops make a fair quality of silage also points the way to its wider use In seasons when feed of other kinds is scarce, although no one contends that it is superior to corn. "Peace with economic advantages" may sound better, in the case of Rou mania, than "peace with indemni ties," but we have the word of the German expert that it amounts to the same thing. Meanwhile it must be kept in mind that the war is still be ing decided on the western front. The red man as a contributor to the Red Cross is a final testimonial to the influence of civilization upon the Indian. We may have been a lit tle slow about It. and undoubtedly we have made our mistakes, but at last we are winning Lo's confidence to the mutual advantage of both. The proposed charge for baggage shows what Government, control means. Consider the postal service when you buy a money order the clerk does not throw in a stamp or two. It's a cafeteria sort of Government. Some statistician will soon be figur ing how far those $6,000,000,000 worth of guns would reach if placed end to end, but what we all want to know is, how soon they can begin shooting up the other bank of the Rhine. The Council of Soldiers and Work men at Kursk has just discovered that Germany is violating the Brest-I Jtovsk treaty. We would hate to be Trotsky when the whole Russian nation wakes up to what is going on: Kaiser Wilhelm announces that "Lithuania will participate in the war burdens of Germany, which secured her liberation." There you are, Lithu ania! What are you going to do about it? If Jeff Baldwin joins the Army, as he Is said to have announced he will do, there is a fair prospect that the Germans some day will have a mighty slippery prisoner on their hands. J Wouldn't it be an ideal situation If the "non-essential" line should con tinue to be drawn voluntarily even after the war Is over? When Oregon gets under way you simply can't stop her, as witness the runaway finish she made in the Red Cross drive. " Treason is treason in France, and it looks as if the United States would soon begin to view it in the same light- After all, why should a British naval raid on Heligoland be consid ered as beyond the possibilities? The Peripterous. Peripterous A Structure Having Row of Columns on All Sides. Diet '.oners. (Synopsis of preceding synopsee. The Oreconiao. a great morning news paper, emptoya a distinguished Uteimry architect to construct a peripterous. He does It it has rows of columns oa eau west, north and south. The Perlnterous becomes a Free Avails- rl u m for the expression of Incompetent. Ir- re.event ana immaterial opinion. sew verse and anecdotes. KCI.1PSI IS ECUPM5D. The pacifist board of scientists hav ing settled numerous enthralling ques tions, such as the great hatrack prob lem and the Identity of the tripe fish, has, after a season of rest, attacked with great vim and determination an unusually important problem submitted by a bewildered housewife as follows: "Pear Spicy Sandwich Between the War Bread slices of Earnest Editorials and Relics of the Past: I have a bou quet of wilted roses which I wish to dispose of and nowhere on my card of garrmge instructions can 1 find a Place for them. "They are certainly neither ashes nor cans, so cannot find a home in the ash can. "It would not do to put them In the fuel box. and thus give some lovely ararbargess a taste for luxury. Imagine the result: Her poor husband working overtime to keep the home fires bright in these Arctic May days, wlt hot house roses as the fuel. "I debated as to the last receptacle -2 the food can. Roses are surely food for the soul, but are they food for piers? And the fate of our cast-off food. wtii-h at 53.50 per goes to feed pigs otit Ken ton way. deters me. Would it not be too much like casting pearls or roses before swine? And that, of course. Is the last word in criminality. "I await your verdict. Where shall I throw my roses, "A L." The board announces that it will not be overshadowed by the' trifling pur suits of other scientists In relation to the forthcoming total eclipse of the sun. nor will It be distracted by an unneces sary and wholly unjustified public in terest in a perfectly natural event, from researches so Important to tie real public interest. m A Tight I-lttse Job That Kit.. Ex-Candidate Heehawtry. having failed to secure the nomination in the late interesting event known as the Republican primaries, announces that he has offered his services to the Gov ernment as a "dollar-a-year patriot." Now that the Government Is regulat ing the Importation of crude rubber. It Is intimated that Mr. Heehawtry stands a good chance of being named garter administrator for this district a posi tion for which it is known he holds peculiar qualifications. It Ala Startea a Klght. Portland, May 25. To the Architect: I notice that a famous editor has delved into a book on Ireland for sesquipeda lian words. In the days before the ordinance pro hibiting smoking onhe streetcars was passed one of our learned citizens' was heard to address this remark to an Irish laborer: "Sir, the fumigation arising from your tobacconlstlc reservoir so over shadows the organlstio powers of our oculars and so, obfuscates the atmos pheric validity that our apparel will shortly become abominably odoriferous unless through the abundant sauvity of your eminent politeness you disem bogue the luminous tube of the sten torian "ingredient which replenishes Its concavity." I understand thet a candidate for Councilman later slid into office on that slogan. S. LOGAN SLIDER. She's Kle. Statistics have proven, alack and alas. That poets of war are a husky, bold . class. But Oregon's legions have caused roe to go Where poets are fewer Into Idaho. No essence of firs nor the ocean's moist breeze Ignite the war-fuse or disturb the mind's ease: No lines from "Peripterous Columns" to show The strength of war poets In Idaho. No editors' fires to rekindle with work From poets who've striven to never once shirk. The pines, in compassion, shed cones which you know Blaze brighter than poemfrln Idaho. However, if ever the Kaiser lands here. I fear that again I will turn in great fear To Oregon's poets for shrapnel, since lo. The snipers are fewer in Idaho. In Idaho. ALYCE EOSALTEE RUSTING Mistake Identity. In California, so they say. An auto met a bike one day. Said the auto to the bike. "You're a chap I seldom like. For you often cross my path Giving rise, to auto, wrath. Can't you use your biky. wits? Shall I smash your frame- to bits?" Said the bike then ,to the auto. "You don't go the way you ought to. You get drunk on gaedtine. Then you vent your metal spleen Running over folks and chickens. Raising dust to beat the dickens!' Auto answered, "You're a simp. Your first name is 'Satan's Imp! You ape of wheeldom. skinny gink. Wobbly, one-eyed missing link Talk about my 'metal spleen' You use legs for gasoline!" Bike replied. "That's what they're made for; Anyway, by George, they're paid for! Growling hard his rage to smother. Auto shouted. "You're another!" Had not Something Intervened Little Bike would have been beaned. Suddenly, with direful sound. A dreadful earthquake shook the ground. Making more than usual din. Like dishes in a house of tin! They rubbed their lamps from being dizzy "Gee whiz!" they both exclaimed, "that's Lizzie." EDGAR M. M CM FORD. Where la Hef It is reported that a tracer has found In- Clearfield. Penn.. the old-fashioned man who wears a peach stone watch charm and carries a combination pen, pencil, button hook and rubber stamp. This search having been so satis factorily rewarded, it is now necessary to find the other old-fashioned man who wears congress shoes and picks his teeth with a telescopltfg gold tooth pick. Plrtwrea sr S Idlers. PORTLAND, May 24. (To the Edi tor.) Is there a law prohibiting the soldiers in France from sending pic tures of themselves or snapshots to this country? Are officers granted more privileges than privates in this respect? MISS MAE STERLING. Pictures mailed by American soldiers in France are subject to a rigid cen sorship. Photographs and snapshots which disclose no military information of value to the enemy are mailable without hindrance. Officers have no more privileges in this respect than the privates enjoy.