AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER V -SV JACKSON. ..Publtabef fvbiiabed every day. . (except budoi BalMlng, Sunday after noon) at The Jonraal Broadwaj aoa xamaiu aireeie. fertland. Or. b tared at the poatofflce at Portland, Or., for ,. tranemlaalon tbroafb tbe mails aa aecoud claas mattar. XKLEfHONES Main TITJ. Horn, -OSl. All department! reached by tbeae number. Tall the operator what department yoo want. yoBCHIN AUVEKTiai.NO BEr"UE8ENTATl Va? Benjamin Kaotnor Co., Brunawick bldg.. 225 Fifth ae.. New Xurk. izis revpta a Uaa bide.. Chicago. Sobscriptioa term by mall or to any addrcaa ta the United Htatea or Mexico: DAILX (IIOHNINQ OB ArTEBNOON) Ooe 7 ear . . .$5.00 I Od moms f .50 BUN DA V On year 12.00 1 one montn DAILY (M0RNINO OK AJTEHNOON) AND SON PAY One year IT.SO I On month $ 95 trical discovery, already comes close, to that mark. Bat. he, or ' those concerned with hla work, are not much given - to boasting, which makes the announcement doubly significant, particularly since Mr. Edison is known to be searching to find a cure for the U-boat scourge. A MODERN INSTANCE w , . . . classics,, through legend and tradi tion, through the experience of pre ceding generations we are the heirs of the ages' and we enter most largely. Into our Inheritance by acquiring knowledge of the thought and. achievements yOf other men. of other lands and of other times. Is going some with copper and Iron at their present prices. "All obatructlone to the execution of the law, all coubinaUm and aeeooUUona. under whatever plauelble character, wltb the real 5alga to direct, control, coun teract, or awe the regular deliberation and action of the constituted authorities, are deatrnrtlre of this fundamental principle, and of fatal tendency." George Washington. A TWOFOLD BENEFIT PARADOXICAL as it may be to: Portland people to be consid ering the coal supply while the thermometer hovers about the top of the bulb, yet they doubt less were cheered by the report of Senator Chamberlain,, to the Port land Chamber of Commerce that Alaska coal would be in the Port land markets next summer. Fuel prices have been on the up grade in Portland for several years past. Doubtless there is valid rea son for some of the increase. Stag nation in the lumber business has reduced the slab output. The clear ing .of close-in lands has increased the cost of transportation from the available supply to the Portland. market. But nevertheless it has seemed and does seem that the price has risen faster than the added burdens and difficulties of the dealers made necessary. Portland has never been a great consumer of coal. Wood has been too plentiful and we have been too close to it. Coal mines have been too far away, entailing long hauls over mountain ranges, with the consequent transportation charges added to the consumers' price. Alaska coal should do much to bring the price of fuel down to a normal level again. But Its en trance into the Portland market means more than the addition to the fuel supply and the consequent decrease in fuel cost. It will come by water, and it will furnish south bound cargoes for ships that will need northbound cargoes when they return to Alaskan waters. It will form the basis for a- two way busi ness for water carriers plying be tween Portland and Alaska. It will mark one more step forward in the upbuilding of water commerce, which must be the basis of Port land's future growth and prosper ity. Senator Chamberlain's news is good news for Portland, both as to the fuel and the future. E MET a farmer out on the road the other day. We are notgoing to tell where we met him because he seemed to be . a pretty rrood sort 01 fellow, in spite of bis peculiar views, nd we do not wishto fix Mr. Reames' attention upon him. When we Bay that hisviews were not exactly what one would call patriotic the reader may Jump to the conclusion hat he was of Ger man origin, jrat that is a mistake. He was a Scandinavian and he lived ina Scandinavian neighbor hood We infer that perhaps a score of farmers in that little cen ter feel and think as he does. His views have some current interest from his being a member of the Lutheran church, which is now under severe criticism in Ne 1 braska for its reported disloyalty. This farmer said, quite as a mat ter of coursef that all the "highW ups" In the Lutheran church were pro-German. We do not profess to know how much truth there vjas in his words, but as a" member of that church he perhaps had oppor tunities to examine the facts of the situation from the inside. The farmer himself was quite openly opposed to the war. He said it was a matter in which we had no concern. He did not know what we were fighting for and, so far as he was concerned, if he couli learn of some part of the world where ho could settle down and be at peace 'he would forsake all he had, if he could not sell it, and go there. Out of curiosity, which we hope was not impertinent, we asked the farmer what papers he read. His reply was significant. He said he read nothing whatever except one religious paper of th Lutheran persuasion published in South Caro lina. To him The Journal, the Oregonian, all our esteemed con temporaries, are anathema. While we might commend his Judgment of current newspapers in some par ticulars, we must take exception to it in ono case at least. The farmer had mueh to say about the prophecies in the Bible which foretell, as he beieves, the present war. According to these prophecies Mr. Taft's League to Dr. Van Hlse, personal repre sentative f Herbert Hoover, made the following recommendations to the Arjfclub: "A wheatless meal a day; two meals a day without beer, pork or mutton; tnree ounces of sugar instead of four; the sub stitutlon of corn for wheat and of vegetables for meat." It sounds like a lecture on "how to eat and grow thin." POWEIt OF THE PURSE T HE "power of the purse" which has played such a part In the history of English liberty is coming .to the fore In Ger many. The reichstag has begun to bargain with the kaiser Just as the parliaments in London used to dicker with the Stuart kings. In these bits of higgling over taxes parliament, in the long run, goi the better of the kings. Even the most arbitrary sover eigns dislike to impose taxes with out the sanction of the legislative body if there is one. People who will bow meekly under every other form of tyranny are apt to rise in rebellion when the monarch emp ties their pocket books. Our own revolution took its cue from oppo sltion to "taxation without repre 8entation." When subjects can go through the forms of granting taxes to the monarch they will bear almost any degree of extortion. But if the money Is extorted arbitrarily there is trouble ahead for the anointed of the Most High. It is quite likel7 that Wlltelm will make substan tial concessions to the reichstag for the sake of the money he needs. When the war is over he can o? cpurse, after' the manner of his dynasty, forget inconvenient promises. Letters From the People Mexico is about to sign a treaty binding herself to return to the United States authorities all those who fled to that country to escape conscription. It seems that the young gentlemen who emigrated some short time ago Jumped out of the frying pan into the fire. GOLD UNDER THE SEA w E HAVE been reading the account in the day's news of a ship laden with gold which was attacked by a Enforce Peace Is the mystical Baby- submarine. It was a United States Ion described in the thirteenth ship and the gold was going to chapter of Revelations, which is France to pay our soldiers. The said to have "made all nations submarine was beaten off and the drunken with the wine of her for- galloon escaped. nicatlons," -while Mr. Tart himself The idea has occurred to ns that. is anti-Christ who is to "deceive the very elect," as we read in Mat thew's gospel. if no lives had been endangered. the ship's precious cargo would have been fairly safe at the bottom It will be Inferred by the dls- of the sea. Most of the world's French writers are now paying homage to the American dollar, calling it the "idealistic dollar." It has been demonstrated that i' the American business man- excels in making dollars he excels no less In putting those dollars at the serv ice of the Just causes and moral interests of humanity. PRICE FIXING "W cernlng reader from this scrappy report of a roadside conversation that the war is accountable for a good deal more insanity than is gold coin is kept locked up In vaults resemDung those ocean caves at great depths which we read of in Jules Verne. Piled up under commenly supposed. It may also the ocean It would be quite as safe furnish a setting for the reports from robbers and Just as useful "as of Lutheran disloyalty coming from it is now. far Nebraska. Agitators and food speculators will realize some day that a nation at war is a nation In earnest. No one disputes the right of the in dividual to express his opinion or ask for a profit on his wares. But this right must be limited by con siderations of public welfare and national safety. With honest con victions there can be no quarrel, but with Intemperate and seditious speech, with an undue control of the price of products there can be under the sea as It Is locked up Gold certificates could be issued against It. The ownership could be transferred from nation to na tlon as might be required by cheek or bill of sale. The coins would lose nothing by attrition since sci entific men tell us that all is quiet down there. It is foolish to look upon gold in sunken ships as lost. It is really In the best of keeping. A careful account should be kept of it and it should be given Its proper place among the assets of the world. Gold Is quite as useful no compromise. in a vault. CLASSICAL STUDIES I Back In Washington they are putting "dry zones" a quarter of a milA wide around army camnn tional Education association Uh.t to , 11 x 1 1 a - .a I l J uier naiuraiiy enterea many w no haye tad tQ gQ clear t(J Horn. N THE discussions of the Na- iE HAVE thousands of organisations that occu py themselves with price l 1 m 1 . tijung. iney meet in secret and consider no other inter ests than their own." This remark Is made editorially by .the New Re public. It depicts a state of affairs ' which grave senators call "liberty." To take price fixing out of the hands of these secret and irrespon sible camerillas and turn it over to a responsible branch of the gov ernment they call "tyranny." S The power to fix prices without appeal is .nothing more nor less than the power to levy an income tax on the whole country. At pres ent this income tax is levied In a thousand forms by irresponsible cliques of plunderers among whom ; .the public Is not represented. Our fathers proclaimed the prin ' dpi that "taxation without repre ' ' sentation is tyranny." The obstruc tionists in the senate call it "11b ' erty." We prefer the nomenclature " of the fathers. In the United States . government we are all represented. o In - the underground chambers .where war prices ar manipulated t. nobody is represented except the manipulators themselves. .The general manager of the Edi son company says that Thomas A Edison "may soon become the most important figure in the nation , Mr.4 Edison, by reason of his many v achievements In the field, of , eleo- phases of prevailing war con ditions. This is significant of the moveraentfor such courses of 6tu&y In ouf educational institutions as will bring home to old and young the profound lessons of the world conflict of which we are a part There is a tendency to seek out the origin of things. Leading uni versities have led off with confer ences on classical and historical studies. brook, even in times of peace. IN PENNSYLVANIA W roearann lea Lion ant ta The Joatrnal fat poblleaUoe, la tale department ehenld be writ tea on eoly one eld e the paper. ehockJ aet xeoed BOO words la teaglft aa euet be ne eds pentad by tke name tad address at taa eeaujer. If the writer doee not aealra to ha to taa mm pubuaaed ha abouU aa etate.J A Conservation Flea Portland. July 13. To the Editor of The Journal Let me say a word about food conservation. There are few, if any, grocery stores where one can buy In bulk. Crackers and many other things are done up in paper cartona that weigh from one fourth to one half pound. Moreover, one can not so to a drug atore with some mall bottlea from the family med icine chest to have them refilled with common druse, aa one can In the east, but the druggist brings out his bottle done up, and you must buy his bottle, and consequently get an ac cumulation of bottles which must in the end go to the trash barrel, and you must pay the garbage man to haul them away. Why don't, they start at the very bottom of the ladder and make it possible to buy any amount one's pocketbook warrants at grocery or drug store and not be compelled to take their done up packages that often sell for more than one has to buy with? Hence, we poor people of ten do without many needfuls be cause we cannot buy 5 or 10 cents' worth. N. M. A Proffered Slogan Portland. July 13. To the Editor of The Journal Having read of so many attempts to find a good and true slogan for our Sammies in this war, I offer you the use of my name (nom de' guerre) for a slogan. SAMMY RUSHDEBUSH (Sammy, rush de Boches) After so many years of cleansing and purifying the German language from foreign words, and Germany's "kultur" from the baneful Influence of the culture of other nations, why Tots tausend sacrament do the Kai ser and hi Junker clique keep on playing "Va banque"'? The name? The same. P. N. KING Sending Money to Sailors Portland, July 14. To the Editor of The Journal Please tell me how to send money to a sailor aboard a war ship. I have to send letters to the ship in care of the navy yard. Could send a moneyi order or registered letter. MRS. M. E. W. The question, referred to the money order department of the Portland post- office, elicits the answer that one may send either money order or registered mail to any address in the navy. The chaplain aboard ship ' ia postmaster and banker for the sailor boys and would cash a money order. The actual money could be sent under registered cover and the chief yeoman would handle it and pass It directly to the person addressed. An advantage in the case of a money order la that a regis tered letter containing money might be lost and the money with It, whereas there would be a chance of recovering the amount deposited, if a money order were lost. " v "Lumberjacks" In War From the Seattle Poat-IntelUgeBcer Yesterday's dispatches announce that 10 unit of American "lumberjacks" have reached England, and w)ll soon begin the task of turning various for ests of the United Kingdom into lum ber for war needs. ' This force comprises 150 men and is divided into 10 companies of 86 men. Each company is supplied with VI horses and a sawmill. It fa the busineas of this force to reduce the fine old forests of England to rough lumber, and this is to be shipped across the channel to the armies in France. The material will be used for trench building, bridge repair, new hospital buildings behind the lines, and for the temporary rehabili tation of ruined villages now being evacuated by the Germans. Within a few days a similar contingent will leave America for France to reduce the forests of Northern France to stumps. Europe has no available trained men for this work, and the services of the Americans will be quite as Important to the allies : service with the army In the field. England and France are to be de nuded of their fine old forests, but It Is a sacrifice that Is made willingly to war's necessities. Lumber in any large quantities cannot be Imported by the allies until the war ends. Such merchant ships as are available must be utilized In the transportation of food. Besides the need of timber for trenches, hospitals and bridges, there Is urgent demand for shelter for the civilians of the ruined villages now coming into the occupation of the al lied armies. Once the war Is over, American mills will be called upon to practically rebuild towns and cities of France. beyond such superficial anticipations his view did not go. He did not un derstand the Russian people, he did not - understand the essential spirit .of the revolution, he did not under stand, er else refused to understand, the world complex which made the cause of Russian freedom and the cause of the allies n and Indissolu ble. It may yet turn out that the revolution was a gain for Russian military strategy. It enabled Brua siloff tc outguess Hlndenburg. While the . latter was presumably waiting for the automatic demoralisation- of the Russian army, Brusslloff was utilising the respite to prepare the materials of his new offensive. The five months slnee February 1 have been for the German government a tragedy of errors. It is now facing the problem of making atonement to the disillusioned German people. Kerensky rrom the Chicago Past The whole story is not yet written. Tet the young radical Kerensky has made his country perform the most wonderful miracle that ever followed a revolution. He has taken hold of an army weary of war, tasting its first liberty and tempted by all the wiles of a lying enemy; he has re fitted it out of the midst of indus trial, confusion: he has disciplined It out of" "anarchy : he has revitalised it out of apathy and himself led It across the first-line trenches in an offensive that has already netted 20,000 Austro- German prisoners. The thing that America wanted to happen has happened; and this was just the thing Germany did not want to happen. Yet many Americans by their attl tude of contemptuous disgust toward a people who have already given a million lives In this evar helped for ward the thing; which Germany wished and held back the thing which Amer ica. wished. Though it was but a spoken or written word, it was a very real Influence. Germany saw to it that such declarations of lack of faith went through into Petrograd while their opposite did not. In the same way Germany saw to it that the on fortunate outbursts against the new Russia by a few English tories went through to Petrograd. And their ef feet was almost the break-up of the Russian alliance. Prussianised Amer icans seek to adopt the Prussian phll- osphy in their estimate of war events. They seek to impose the cynical ma terialism of a dying autocracy upon the democracy of the new world Every time they do so they help Ger many. PERTINENT COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF CHAN UK The situation at Berlin seems te bo In an I regret to state. Is It on a sal a. or off as-a la. with wboever's who In China todajrt Io those ladies who so Dicketlne? at the White House take their tatuna along T Speaking as one who on his war down town every day passes some hun- areas 01 oacK yard ana vacant lot gardens tay, did you over in all your me see anything that skinned 'euit Thoush the Deonlea of the entente have tax en to tne s'ourth of July very nicely, still If those of the central powers shall happen to select some other date, we, of course, will not insist. The name of wne of the principal avenues in Klo Janeiro has boen changed to Avenida Presldente Wilson. Ana 110 w, 11 you don t. know the name of the president of. Brazil it is up to you to tied out e "The car was badly damaged, but strange to say the occupants escaped wnnoui a scraicn. ' uo tnose wno es cape without a scratch ever come across with any thank offering, to be expended in any way the owner 01 the car sees fit? Secretary Daniels has announced that 24 of the daatrovara now under con struction will bear the names of offi cers of the navy who have won dis tinction, namely, Little, McKee, Ste vens, Philip, Bell. StrlMing, Kimberly, noDinson, xuurray, wickes. Israel, Ringgold. Woolsey, Slgournoy, Gregory, Evans. Colhoun. Stringbam. Grldley. iJyer. Harding. McKean. Fairfax and Taylor. Step forward, gentlemen, and display your broad knowledge of Amer ican nistory oy picking out those whose names you are favmiliar witn. OHfcUON bUJKUO UTS Tillamook county's court house has been Improved by the building of a jail lSx.lt feet. In the basement, and a grand move-fest of offices has taken place In consequence. The Herald say no more court house building will be needed for several year a Thus gloats the Hood River News: "No sooner do the last of the sea son's strawberries grace our tables and tickle our palates than the Hoyal Ann, Bing and Lambert make their welcome appearance, and yum. yum -how good they are! Hood River with Us succession of delkuous fruua. is a paradise for the epicure." The HUlsboro Argus bears up under the L W, W. troubles in this fashion. "The I. W. W. lack machine guns and 41-centimeters in their fight against American industries In time of war. so while their efforts against the gov ernment are annoying it will be just one of the petty troubles which niuit be met and dealt with in firmness." Here is a "13" story from the Salem Capital Journal: "One man who . immune from all terrors of war ia Don H. Moore, and he Is a haiem noy. His war registration number is ISIS. Me married a folk county gin on junt 13, and his was the thirteenth license to be issued that month. When he went over to Dallas to get the license he called up phone No. 12. The season's best cherry story, to date, from the Eugene Register: "T. E Stabno brought to this office a branch of Royal Anne cherries whlcii weighed 15 pounds. The cherries were as thick as grapes and were large and Juicy. They were grown on the oll Insanh Tunnell Dlaeo. five . lies west of the city. Iast year the tree from which thev were taken bore 25 worth of the cherries." Rag Tag and Boltail St, ones rrom THE GOVERNMENT CENSORSHIP The Advertising Remedy 'Prom the Boston Globe The committee on public safety has called attention to the way in which a threatened serious waste of food stuff was turned to a public benefit by a little common sense. Farmers about Springfield had grown a large crop of spinach for which they looked in vain for a market. In spite of the fact that It costs 1 to raise a barrel of spinach they were seeking to get rid of 1000 barrels of their product at 80 cents a barrel. They did not find any one to buy it. A local committee of pub lic safety wisely suggested that the product be advertised.' This was done. The slogan "Buy a peck of spinach" immediately brought results'. The whole 1000 barrels was sold. Instead of 80 cents per barrel it brought 11.25. The demand once stimulated, the bal ance of the crop, nearly as much as the first offering, was marketed. Many farmers and some private gar deners will have a surplus this sum mer. When they fail to sell It through the channels ordinarily used to reach the consumers they should do as was done with the spinach crop. They should advertise. Housekeepers can not be expected to discover unusual supplies of food by intuition. But when they see an advertisement Indi cating an abundance of this or that fruit or vegetable at a reasonable price they will rush to profit by the bargain. Most of them have made up their minds to preserve perishable stuff this year on a scale they have never attempted before. They are eager to know when and where an unusual supply is to be had. This year the producer must deal with new conditions. He cannot do so properly if he remains silent. With proper advertising the tragedy of pro duce rotting, because those who would willingly consume it are ignorant of their opportunity, should be eliminated. Darld Lawrence in New York . -ntnt Poat Handling the press still ems to be a thorn In the side of the govern ment. It is the one important thing now in the development of war plans which has been carelessly managed. The events of the last three days glvu proof of a friction between the gov ernment and the press that. If con tinued, will not help win the war. The fault is on both sides Just now. but. had the administration taken the newspapers into its counsels early and obtained from them practical sugges tions for the settlement of problems that must Inevitably arise, there would today be no confusion, no rivalry of authorities, no baiting by newspapers and correspondents of government of ficials a better spirit all around. a The first mistake was the adminis tration's attempt to froce a pres cen sorship through congress under the guise of espionage legislation. The protests of the press were brushed aside as Inconsequential, but congress Itself got suspicious, and the censor ship law failed. The antagonisms then bred have their fruition today. In stead of a sympathetic Interest which would assist the government In work ing out the problem for the national good, wquld-be Northcllffes have arisen to fling criticism after criti cism, much of it irrelevant and much of It unfair. One large newspaper for example, has been baiting Secre tary Daniels with long telegrams ask ing him everything under the sun, re gardless whether or not It lies within his department and whether or not It is manifestly proper to give out the Interior organization of the navy. e Then there Is the alleged "lurid" ac count of the naval "battle as de scribed in the Fourth of July an nouncement concerning the safe ar rival of American troops in France. Efforts are being made by certain newspaper men to belittle that avecom- E CANNOT help admiring the thrift of the Pennsyl vania politicians. The son who stole the pennies off his mother's eyelids at her funeral is a prodigal compared with them. It is said by perfectly responsible They have been followed persons that these shininr models by the parent Chautauqua, which of efficiency have got themselves announces that in its regular course chosen on the draft exemption of reading and home instruction boards all over the state for the coming year classical sub- ia Lackawanna county; Pennsyl jects shall be the main feature. vanla. there are four "desnieablo In announcing Its course the I politicians" who are at this' moment Chautauqua says: running for office, named to sit on The great war has awakened a the exemption board. We can fore profound and intense desire to under- see how easy they will make it for stand the long hidden causes and im- theIr political supporters and how memorial principles that lie back of ... . . . . such a catastrophe, it has brought rapidly they Will ship off their also to multitudes of people a need enemies to France. It would be for frequent refuge in larger and criminal in a Pennsylvania politl more tranquil realms of thought, I 4 ii u , That wisdom and IdeaJa dr, not ntt.rlv X- tO neglect SUCh a gOlden OP die in the storm is one of the com-1 portunlty and we may feel perfectly fortlng reassurances of such study, certain that they will make the Never was the "long 1001c more lm- most of It. For the eood of the armv and uecause or ignorance or the the country we hore that nrofes philosophy and the politics of past slonal politicians, particularly those ages and lands across the seas old now running for office, will be expioaea tneones are ioistea upoa kept out of this business. Scandals us under new names and poor imi- wjh be difficult to avoid in any tatlons of well proved devices find 0,. The presence of politicians acceptance as though they were on the hoards will set the doors genuine, continues me announce- wide open to scandal. ment A little knowledge of the history , rhe city's Junk dealers want an of the world's thought and its in-1 ordinance forcing all those engaged stitutions would save ua from being! in that business to close their shops led astray. . Through a study of the i at 8 o'clock ia the evening, which Berlin's Blundering From the New York Events Poet (July 10) What will come out of the political crisis at Berlin is less certain at this moment than our knowledge of the causes that have brought the crisis lqto being. These are plainly writ ten on the face of events. The sub marine campaign, America, Russia on all three counts the German gov ernment stands convicted of criminal lack of foresight and ghastly failure. It is now five months slnee the kaiser challenged America by letting loose the U-boatj for the speedy starvation of England, a task that was to be measured in weeks. Today the U boats are weaker than they were last winter, and the entente nations are on the eve of the harvest, secure in their food until the spring of 1118. If Bethmann-Hollweg meant what he said when he declared that Germany was staking her all on the submarine and the challenge to America, then Germany Is lost.. If he did not mean what he said, then the German peo ple finds itself today the victim of a policy of frivolous deception. The outstanding facts are that American troops are on French soil, and that the submarine campaign has failed, failed so signally that its abandon ment was one of the demands brought forward by the clerical leader Erx- berger in the attack that has preclpl tated the crisis. "What- has hap penea," asks one Berlin organ plain tively, "that our armies and our peo ple cannot prepare for another win ter of war?" ' The question is its own reply. There was to have been no fourth winter of war for Germany, This fourth winter will only find Germany confronting an enemy enor mously strengthened in a physical. sense by the advent of America and in a moral sense by thJ advent of democratic Russia. German miscalculation concerning the military results of the submarine war and the speed of American mo bilisation was matched by a pitiful misunderstanding of Russian condi tions. Bethmann-Hollweg must have foreseen the revolution in Russia when he flung his challenge to - America last February; that did not call for extraordinary, gifts of prophecy. He foresaw th confusion-which followed at Petrograd and th temporary slack ening of - Russia's : military energies, i These , things were inevitable. - But The Call to American Women Prom the Dallas (Texas) News The success of the effort Mr. Hoover Is making would be of Immense Importance In the economic sense. It would perceptibly lower prices, and thus ease a burden that Is felt by all of us. But the military effects would be even more important. It would, for one thing, assure the adequate ration ing of our own soldiers and workers. as well as those of our allies, for we shall have ne crop shortage that can not be more than counterbalanced by such economics as it lies within the power of the women to practice. And. wtith that done, the chief -menace to our prospect of victory will be tre moved. It would have the still fur ther military effect of removing the last vestige of doubt from tho minds oi our amies ana enemies alike, com fort the one and discomfort the other by convincing them that the United States is grimly determined to strike with all the force of a united nation possessed of Incalculable resources. If there were none of the other Impor tant reasons for urging the women to respond to the Hoover call, this one alone would be sufficient to make it an imperative obligation of patriotism. it wouia not De for the women to ques tion the practicability of this move ment, even If there were any reason to question it. It is for them to salute ana answer present for service, as the men have in answer to every call made on tnem. The Real Food Problem From the CBicago Herald .me Buvci iiiiieni estimate or crop conditions show wheat below the rec ord Dut sun wen above tne yield for last year. Beautiful as an army with banners, and a great deal more im portant In some respects Just at this stage, corn, with the biggest acreage in our history, promises well over a half billion bushel increase. Other gram crops snow a substantial ad vance. while the potato crop bids fair to be tne oiggest on record- There will thus probably be food and to aspire m this country if it is carefully conserved. There will be food and to - spare if people don' cling to the idea that they must have one particular sort of food in as great a quantity as they have been accustomed to. In brief, the food problem. In ,the light of the Promise of a billlon-bushe. increase In food production, resolves to a great extent into a question of getting our people to give all varieties of food a fair show. They must be willing to sub stltute more or less for the wheat which our allies are sure to need In great quantities. ' And here Is where corn comes in. Begin to learn to eat and like corn right now. It has a food value fully equal to wheat -and when properly prepared it is Just aa - palatable. It should sot be long before one or two pllshment of the navy, to create the false impression that the navy depart ment told an untruth, and demands are being made for the "original." No original telegrams are ever given out by the navy department because of the ease with which enemy wireless operators who have copied the code messages can decipher them with the aid of the real text. All governmen messages are paraphrased nowadays but the essential thing is that the facts in Secretary Daniels' announce ment still stand. Our transports were attacked twice. Five torpedoes were seen. One submarine was sunk Wreckage and large quantities of oil on the surface were reported by th American naval officer In command to have been found exactly where th hot took effect. George Creel wrote the announce ment. He added an exultant phras about the coincidence of this new with the Fourth of July. Immedlatel a hue and cry is set up about "lurid" story. The plcayuneness o these acts makes them of little per manent 111, but what is important 1 that they reveal the disagreement and conflicts between the government and the press. If the public once I given the idea that the governmen doesn't tell the truth in its official announcements, the results may be se rious to the effective prosecution the war by American public opinion The situation calls for a revision of plans with regard to the presa, the in stilling of a better spirit than has prevailed, so that real patriotism may banish petty fault-finding. But the government has erred so many times that the Initiative must come from 1 The government should call to Its al a council of the large newspaper edi tors, and ways and means will soon be devised to meet the whole sltuatlo without embarrassment to any Inter est. Evtrywlwf ITe Uila col am ait hiIm ml tv are Urlted to coo tribute original matter ia ' " Starr. U Vena or la nhllnaonhW l r,h.., . . ttn i or atrlklas quotation: traaa any aource. Ooev ijBa vi urepiionai stent wui ke sale for, , A Chicago Tionoer Story MRS. EMILY BEAUB1EN LE BEAU. who lived In Chicago eS years ago, ' esieruay observed her 93d birthday anniversary, says the Chicago Herald or juiy . Mrs. Le Beau, who wit-V", cssed the landing of General Scott's n iuovs on tne snore oc lano Michigan . tne outbreak or tne Indian war of - o32, and to whom the Cavil war and the great Chicago fire are relatively recent events, observed her annlver- tary by receiving the friends who dropped in during the afternoon. She was presented during the day with a recently discovered picture of her father, Mark Beaubien. founder of Chicago's first hotel. The portrait was picked up In a bookstore some weeks ago by a. man who recognised t. on removing it from the frame a two column ncwiDLDtr atorv. dated May 28, 1879, was discovered, con-, tainlng an account of a reception giv en him In the old Calumet club. Its under asked the Chicago Historical society to get in touch with the daugh ter or Marie tieaublen and give her the picture. Mrs. Le Beau was born in 1111 In Detroit and came to Chicago when she was 4 years old. While living at her father's hotel the Utile r-.rl rttanded school on the North Side. Among the recollections of her schooling la the occasion when she was lost In the Im penetrable forests of Lake street. bhortly fcfter !er marriage to Rob ert Le Beau she wcut with her hus band to live in Texas, but returnad to Chicago upon his death. 8 he is livlnc at 3334 Warren avenue. HOW TO BE HEALTHY CepyrtgaU 1S1T. y J. Stele. FOOD REQUIREMENTS. The food needs of the body can be calculated with almost equal exactness to Its needs In sixes of clothes. A husband would not think of sending is wife to the store to buy him a pair or shoes about size seven, or a collar around 15, nor would she risk buying her1 own dresses and waists without knowing the sires of what she was getting. Tet the family food shopping is done on Just such a blind basis. The body has definite needs and roods differently supply those needs. Just ss feet have sixes and certain shoes definitely fit their requirements. Many minor ailments ana aiscom- forts are traceable directly to malfits in foods, and the degenerative dis eases of heart, blood vessels and kid neys, which are Increasing in their ravages, are in part the direct result of the wear and tear of wrong food selections. Food requirements vary with age. weight and occupation. The require ments Of children are greater, in pro portion to sixes, than are those of adults, while the requirements of the aged are less. A man engaged in severe muscular exercise has twice the food requirements of tne man in a sedentary occupation. A baby up to 2 years of age needs aoout 45 calories, or rood units; per day for each pound of weight, but. after the second year, he needs only aoout 0 calories per day per pound. The requirement then drops 10 per cent at the end of each three year period up to age 17, at which time the average will be about 20 calories per day per pound. The normal adult weighing about 151 pounds anqV en gaged in light exorcise requires about 18 calories per day per pound. In old age the food requirement di minishes, and at 60 years drops 10 per cent below the ration in midile life. At 70 there Is a drop of 10 per cent more, and after a person reaches 80 be snould eat not more than two thirds of what he needed In adult life. Occupation Is another Important factor influencing food requirements. A man engaged in severe muscular exercise needs six times as many calories per hour as when he is sit ting, at which time he needs sbout one j and a half aa many as when he is sleeping. A shoemaker requires about 18 calories per day per pound, while a painter requires about kl and a sawyer as many as S3. A seam stress requires about 14 calories per day per pound, whereas a washer woman requires 28 calories. . . 'inese calculations per pound are based on normal weights. People who are under or over weight for their height should calculate their require ments on the basts of normal weights rather than on their own. The appetite normally assists in regulating the Intake of calories to the body's needs, but Is an Inade quate guide upon which to depend. We find appetising most of the food that is placed in front of us, whether It properly meets the body's require ments or not. One should correctly ascertain his body needs and assist the appetite In regulating the day's ration accordingly. Tomorrow The Higher Life. The Flag's Genesis In a tiny room so spick jid clean. .urn neau scruoueu iioor tnat caught the gleam Of the sunlight filtering through the n aca And doors set wide to catch the breexe rwi sail ana crisp rrom orr the bay, Sat u dear little woman one summer day, And talked with a man with a noble face And kingly bearing and courtly grace, ion bsb,' eaid the man in a kindly tone, We want a flag that is all our own; Something like this, with thirteen bara. A field of blue and some silver stars. And so old Glory was planned that day. Not tar from the shore of Delaware bay. And a woman stitched the red and the whit That should be to the world a shin ing light The light yf hope and of liberty . That makes all men equal and all men free; And ttie stars that arose In that field of blue Became stars of hope to a world made new. Now other worlds seem to catch the gleam Of their light shed forth in a golden sheen That pierces the darkness of a far off shore And a people feels hope in their soul once more "Thank God for Old Glory!" my soul cries out. If I hold my peace,' the rocks will shout. For I love every blood-bought fold of her bars And every ray of her shining stars. God pity the man, if there be such an one, wno loves not tne nag that our fathers have won Whose heart thrills not when he looks and sees Her folds leap out on the mornins breese. Rosetta Eby Taylor. Much Ado About Nothing; Policeman Savage Is not what- his name implies. In fact, he is very gen tle. Sergeant Skull is the man wlio uses his head. Both do their bet. says the Philadelphia Evening Ledg-sr, to preserve tne peace in the bailiwick controlled by the Thirty-second and Woodland avenue station. Someone informed the sergeant that a house at 3603 Chestnut street ws wide open with no one In It. Skull concluded that it was probably inhab ited by thieves. Looking over the list of cops available, he selected Savage to charge upon the house. Although he has been a' policeman ' two weeks. Savage is industrious. He entered the house with revolver fh one hand and club In the other. The. house In question is a big, weird af fair. Echoes chase each other about lthout regard to consistency. The cop expected combat at the entrance to every room, but he encountered He heard a sound on the rear porch and bravely stepped out on it. There is a crash, the roof collapsed and the next moment the policeman found himself astride a dog house In the yard. The dog, which was rather a wise animal, had evidently heard of air raids. He ran at the first creak of danger and when the debris clattered over his apartment he was many yards away. He is probably running yet. The policeman was slightly cut and bruised by his fall and is undergoing repairs at the University hospital. The house is owned by the uunnam estate. No one knows why the estate weut away without locking its doors. corn days a week become a national Mrs. A. W. Quinn and Mlaa Ruth Institution. Incidentally, it is not! Quinn arrived at the Multnomah hotel necessary to ovenoon tne ract tna . f rom San Francisco this morning, corn is a Sreat deal cheaper than . Mr and Mr c M Tracy are t wneat, inow mat ma turn crup n , t Wanhintrtdn from Seat t ha ll rs. Belle Watson of Pasadena, shown such a readiness to do its part we ought all to begin to think of do ing ours. Pershing's Nickname From the Boeton Globe To the British soldier who to the world 1 Tommy Atkins Lord Roberts Is still "Bobs" and Lord Kitchener U, of K." To Tommy Sir Douglas Halg la never anything but "D. H."; Sir Wil liam Robertson Is always "Wullie"; General Sir Robert Whlgham, "Wig. wam": General Sir Hubert Gough, "Goffy"; General AUenby, "The Bull"; General Rawlinson, "Rilly," and Gen eral Maude "The Strafer." What will General Pershing's nickname be? PERSONAL MENTION SS .b, Theatre Man Is Back J. H. von Herberg, theatre owner, of Seattle, returned to Portland this morning. He has been in the city fre quently during the last few weeks to supervise the construction of the new Liberty theatre, which is to be opened Tuesday evening. e e Captain Henry Davis of the Benlela (Cal.) arsenal Is at the Portland. B. R. Dorr of Dorr, Wash., is at the Nortonia. E. E. Ellsworth, prominent resident of Cascade Locks. Is registered at the Imperial. .. Charles Kuykendall is a Perkins ruest from TamhllL R, Hartman ef The Dalles Is reg istered at the Nortonia. Cal.. Is at the Portland. Miss Vera MeKenna of Reno, Nev., is registered at the Multnomah. Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Ferguson of Athena, Or., are guests at the Im perial. S. W. Anderson la at the Cornelius from Spokane. . 1L C. Blgler and Mrs. Bigley of St. Louis, Mo., are Nortonia guests, Miss Lauretta P. Clark and Miss Jessie Cuthbertson of Palo Alto are at the Washington. Mrs. C. Marshall of Tacolt, Wash Is at the Cornelius. J. E. 81ett is at the Perkins from Condon, Or. MUi Jennie Cameron Is at' the Port land from Ban Francisco. wimara u. Tait of Aiaarora is a Multnomah guest. Mrs. Eugene Rumbold of Burns, Or. is registered at the -imperial. Dr. A. Esson and Mrs. Esson of The Dalles are registered at the Cornelius. Mr. and Mrs. F. J- Sleeper of Elden dale, Wash., axe Kortonla guests. tj. ft. Trowbrrnge ox Denver is at the Multnomah, v E. J. Newton or La Grande, Or:, Is at the Perkins. Mrs. G. B. Small of Baker, Or., Is at tne Washington. Misses Ovena Larson and Olive M Grubb are Berkeley, CaL, residents si tne Muitnoman. Mel Sigman, prominent business man of Dufur, Or., is at the Cornelius. Mrs. Hugh O'Kane of Bend, Or, Is ai tne imperial. o. a. .Ericsson or Bead Is at the Muitnoman. Adventure Black wave the trees in the forest And a rough wind hurries by. But the swineherd's toddling daughter Knows where fallen pine cones lie. And. girt with a snowy apron. She scampers, alert and gay,' To the hidden pool in the hollow Where the wan witch-people play. They smile, the wee wrinkled women. They creep to her pinafore And lay in her lap strange treasures Trolls brought from the ocean's floor. And they marvel at her blend tresses And braid them with seen tad fern: And they lave her dusty brown ankles) With snow-water from the burn. But nobody listens or heeds them The swineherd hws a new trail; The swineherd's wife in the cottage Pours the sour milk from the palL And little Oerta lags homeward Dream shod through the shadows deep. Her lashes heavy with wonder They whisper. "She been asleep! Laura Benet in Philadelphia Evening Ledger. Uncle Jeff Snow Says: Down to Florence. Arixony, oncet, the moral and law-abldln' element tuck a notion to clean out the gamLllh' In dustry and got the sheriff with em and all the officers. Al Meacbsm was a member of the city council; a mighty smart lawyer, and kep' many a tin horn out of jail. He talked and talked and moved and seconded, and pal- a v axed wnne tne ga-cioiera mca im tne money paid out to a lot of. soldiers, some minin' contractors Md a raft of harvest hands, rinally. wbet. ever body's patience vas most e tared out, the raid cn the gamblers started, bet 'fore they was chastdt. out. There Is some mighty smart lawyers ta con gress Jest nowl .