THE OREGON STATESMAN? SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 1018. The Oregon Statesman Issued Dally Except Monday by . THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY 216 S. Commercial SI, Salem, Oregon. MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In this paper and also the local news published herein, R. J. Hendricks. Manager Stephen A. Stone Managing Editor Ralph OloTer. . . Cashier W. C Squler.. .. .....Advertising Manager Prank Jaskoski Manager Job Dept. DAILY STATESMAN, served by carrier In Salem and suburbs, IS cents a week, 60 cents a month. DAILY STATESMAN, by mall, ft a year; $3 for six months; 60 cents a month. For three months or more, paid in advance, at rate of $5 a year. SUNDAY STATESMAN, f 1 a year; 60 cents for six months; 26 cents for three months. ; WEEKLY STATESMAN, Issued in two six-page sections. Tuesdays and Fridays, $1 a year; 60 cents for six months; 26 cents for three months. TELEPHONES: Business Office. 23. . " Circulation Department, 6 S3. Job Department, 683. Entered at the Postotfice in Salem, Oregon, as second "class matter! The battles of battles goes on, and it may continue for weeks. The striking power of the German armies is growing weaker, how ever; and the resistance of the Allied forces greater. And General Foch has the reserve resources to turn back the Teutons completely, whenever he believes the sacrifice is worth the cost in precious lives. - - The getting together of the forces to pick the loganberries is going forward. It will have to be hurried, and it will have to be done on a large scale, to save all the loganberries, which is im portant. After the loganberries will come the prunes. And there will be a bumper crop of prunes, too ; the greatest Oregon ever produced. Talk about your Hale fellows, the State of Maine has them to gloat over. Take Eugene Hale of Maine, for instance. He is the grandson of a United States Senator, the son of a United States Senator and the brother of a United States Senator. Incidentally he is a millionaire in .his own right and 41 years of age, yet he induced the war board to waive his exemption and enlisted as a pri vate in the army. He might have, had a commission, but insisted on starting in the ranks. It is little incidents like this that encourage the thought that the world is being made safe for democracy. EDITORIAL. . .... ...... ... In Russia self-determination Is case of national extermination. New German law that any person wishing to leave the empire mast pay five years' taxes In advance is like the old one-ring circus which charg ed nothing to get In. but a dollar to get out. It may be worth the if Ice. i: . iMore taxes to support the Ameri cans in the field. The nation will respond. It is the least we can do. f An old-fashioned friend says the fact that the kaiser is carrying on the war as he is has done much to revive, the belief in the old-fashioned hell; that if there is not a hell, and a hell of the old-fashioned, kind. were surely ought to be. . mm uerman porcn cumber, was at work aagin trying to make trouble between Cuba and Mexico. But he is too well advertised now to make much headway. ' It, now appears that when John Redmond, the leader of the Irish Nationalists died he left no suc cessor. ' . - The Germans may blow the heart out of Rheims and Ypres, but they can not blow the heart out of Frinni T1l la nfPIll ? - - . . . k w mm v..aM . i THE MONEY REMAINS. Secretary MeAdoo has authorized an Increase of $200,000,000 in the wages of railroad employes. The railroad employes will pay $200,000, 000 more for the food and clothing and commodities they purchase, and the merchants and others from whom they purchase them will pay $200, 000,000 more for freight and pass age money, and that $200,000,000 will travel around and around and around like a blind horse in an ar rastra. It will not leave the cemtry and will be found at last In the banks and in the pockets of the peo ple from whence it came. v i " ; IFIf I4t rWm "met tvtn nuniis run, ' Say a : writer in ad exchange: The object of all labor and effort, whether of muscle or brain, and of the use of capital to increase the re sults 6f their application Is not to get money for its own sake, but to get those things which sustain our lives and minister to our comfort and enjoyment What really mat ters is not the amount of money we get but the amount of those things which money is used to buy, for it is rxmrnm dates June I to I Order your Fuel early week: June 4, 8. and 7 State Grange con vention in Salem. June S. Saturday Tot! eclipse of un. Juno I and 4 State Jewelers conven tion In Salem. Juno I, Wednesday Draft registra tion for young men who bare reach their majority during- last year. June IS. Wednesday Commencement oar at Willamette university. Jane 14. Friday High School grad uation. Juno 14.. rrtday Klar dsy. June 14. Friday High School com mencement exercises. June 17. Monday Annual school election. ,US Thursday. Reunion of Ore-g-on Pioneer assocUUm. Portland. Anirust . J7 and IS Western Wal nut tsrowem' Association to tour nut groves of Willamette valley. only a medium of exchange, some thing that we receive for what we give In labor or the product of labor, in order to pay it out for what we wish to obtain in other labor or the product of , labor The things really exchanged are the labor or service or their products, and the money only enables ns to bring about the exchange of what we have for what we want What we get for our work, then, be it the work of muscle or brain, is measured not by the number of dollars received, but by what the dollars will buy In rent for shelter, food and raiment and the comforts, pleasures and enjoyments of life. If our wages are low and the cost of these is correspondingly low we are just as well off as though wages were high and costs were corre spondingly high, provided there Is the same amount of production and we get In each case our fair share of what we help to produce. By production we mean everything that contributes to getting the needed or desired things from their natural sources to those who are to have and enjoy them In their final form for consumption or use. .... POETRY OP. THE WAIL The poets were at first flustered by the war. Most of them had been busily experimenting i with Involu tions of expression and obscure rhythms; and when the war crashed down through the sky they blew pan icky refrains on their penny whistles and it seemed for a while as thouja no voice and word appropriate to the hour would be lifted. In England Henry Chappell, a railroad porter, was among th eflrst to achieve the savage intensity of truly emotional verse; and his "The Day- was quot ed and copied wherever the English tongue went One of the stanzas of this poem addressed to Germany is: "You have wronged for the Day, you have longed for the Day That lit the awful flame. Tis nothing to you that hill and plain Yield sheaves of dead men amid the grain; That widows mourn for their loved ones slain. And mothers curse your name. There Is no escaping the fact that war poetry, to be popular, to be ta ken up by the lips of men. must ap peal to the elemental passions of hate for the enemy and loyalty for the homeland. Some of the very finest poetry about the war. and evoked by the war, has been written in America by Amy Lowell; notably "Toy Soldiers." But It is too Intel lectual. being whqlly allegorical, for the storm and stress of the hour. When the war is over, then Amy Lowell will paradixically have a better chance to come Into promi nence as a war poet The names of Alan Seegar and Rupert Brooke are too well known to need more than mention. Seegar's "Rendexvous with Death." with its lyrical melancholy and overtone of loyalty to duty, all of which was In tensified by the regrettable fact that he faithfully kept the rendezvous, has received something like the hon or due it Rupert Brooke's poetry would probably have passed quickly from public gaze had it not been that so many eminent friends of his. keenly feeliag the sense of loss that came with his death, directed atten tion the extreme merit of his slend der volume. Kipling's "For Ail We Have and Are" is a magnificent poem, closing as it does with the reverberant lines: There is but one task for all or eaFch one life to give. Who stands If freedom fall? Who dies if England live?" In America there has been a grad ual Increase or quality to compen sate for the bewildering quantity. Hermann Hagedorn." both In prose and verse, has distinguishably attest ed the loyalty that some people of German descent have cherished for America. Among those unknown who suddenly rose to prominence none are more conspicuous 1 than Marlon Couthouy Smith, a, true sing er of rire and vision; and "The An swer." addressed to pacifists and their irk, should not escape atten tion: "There Is noe answer to all dreams of ease Belgium! One answer to the Teuton's cunning pleas Belgium! One test and touchstone for all hearts that feel. One word that Is a stroke of steel on steel, A stroke whose clangor sets a long note ringing That falls upon our ears like) distant singing." Among those who have celebrated the Incidents tof war, Amelia Jose phine Burr," Cant. Gilbert Frankau, Owen Seaman and Patrick McGIU will perhaps not be soon forgotten. Captain Frankau and McGill wrote In the trenches with the crash of guns echoing throush the heavens; and the former achieved a particu larly vivid conception In "Head quarters': "A league and a league from the trenches from the traverse! maze of the lines. Where daylong the sniper watches and daylong the bullet whines. And the cratered earth Is In travail with mines and with counter mines Here, where haply some woman dreamed (are those her roses in that bloom In the garden beyond the windows "of my littered working room?) We have decked the map for our masters as a bride is decked for the groom." Even the gentle poets, such as Walter de la Mare,, whose child rhymes ("Peacock Pie") would nev er suggest a martial spirit, and Sara Teasdale, one of the . finest lyrical writers America has produced, have given their attentions to Mars and with felicity. But these have not been emotional enough1 for general appreciation. It is only the reflect ive lover of poetry who enjoys the delicacy and tenuous sorrow, more of melancholy than of anger. In those singers. Many poets who never were poets until they got Into the war, some of them as privates have ap peared with their little offerlnsg of song; and these songs, gtt within the hearts of those who read and the echoes are heard there long after the name of the author has slipped away. Take for Instance the little volume of "Rough Rhymes by a Padre," by one who calls himself Woodbine Willie, and the lines titled "Prayer Before Attack." As Is gen erally known. In the trenches a eu phemism for death is "to go West 'It ain't as I 'opes 'E '11 keep me safe While the other blokes goes down It ain't as I wants to leave this world And year an 'ero's crown. It alnt for that as I says my prayers When I goes to the attack. But I pray tat whatever comes my way I may never turn me back. I leave the matter o' life and death To the Father who knows what's best And I prays that I still may play the man Whether I turns east or west So much to convey mere an inti mation of what the poets are doing; but It Is not to omuch to say that many of them are writing as' stirring and as fine martial verse as may be found in the length and breadth of the language. THE BIBLE AND THE BATTLE. One of the paragraphers of the Los Angeles Times. In the issue of that paper of last Wednesday, gave evidence In the following paragraphs that the batUe of battles had set him to reading his Bible: Stand fast and see the salvation of the Lord. ---To Qrour knees, job. Americans, and when yon pray, like Daniel of old. open your windows toward Jer usalem. "Lord, Thou hast been our dwell ing place in all generations." So wrote Moses, the lawgiver; so say all true and patriotic Americans. "All they that take the sword shall perish with the sword. This is the warning uttered for the bene fit of Peter, but It applies to the kaiser. Look np yonr St Matthew. The prophet Hosea foretold the doom of the kaiser when he said: "I will also reject thee, that thou shalt be no priest to me; seeing thou hast forgotten the law of thy God. I will also forget tby children." Let us, like Moses, who held up his hand so that Israel prevailed, hold up the hands of tbe allies on the western battle front When Moses let down h's hand Amalek prevailed. This is no tluie for Ama lek to win.. Blood-stained France Is holding out her suppliant hands in praUe to God that the Americans have come to btr assistance. When Solo mon prayed at the dedication or th? temple which he had built at Jeru salem he included the "stranger that is not of thy people Israel, but com eth out of a far country for Thy name's sake." A pointer for the kaiser: "These six things the Lord hates; yea. seven are fan abomination unto him; a proud look, a lying tongue and hands that shed Innocent blood; a heart that devlseth wicked Imagin ations, feet that be swift in running to mischief; a false witness that speaketh lies, and he that soweth discord among brethren." Read your Proverbs. The travail of the nation is at hand, but. as written by Isaiah, the triumph Is at hand. Hear the word: "Put on thy beautiful garments, O Jerusalem, the holy city. . fc . weeping shall no more be heard In her, nor the voice of crylg. ., . . And mine elect shall long enjoy the work of thy hands." And I will rejoice in Jerusalem, and joy in my people; and the voice of I BITS FOR BREAKFAST I Wanted hot weather, then rain. " W Is The first to kill the aphis, or rather the aphides, ror they are de cidedly pluraL The second for the benefit of late sown crops. B The allies are still swapping land 1 A Wonderful Romance of Harried Life Wonderfully Told by ADELE GARRISON AN UNPRECEDENTED SUCCESS IN A SERIAL FORM Commencing in the Statesman, Tuesday, June 4 Whether von are a man or woman married or tingle, happily married or lest happy than von could with, this throbbing ttorv of a woman! heart, will seize and hold yonr deepest and tincercst interest Through this story you look, in fact, into a wo man's soul. No matter what you may know about life, this frank, personal confession vibrant with feeling, tingling with the sensibility of an affection ate, clear sighted, high idealed woman will teach you impressively of the workings of the human heart. THAT DEADLY EVIL, JEALOUSY Whether you are jealous, whether you have suffered from jealously, or have watched it happen in oth ers, you will follow its workings in Adele Garrison's often startling story of a honeymoon, "Revelations of a Wife," with more than intensity of interest. A VIVID PICTURE OF THE CONFLICTS OF LOVE You sea the flash of human feeling, you feel the throb of real heart life, you are made to see more clearly than you ever before have seen, that one heart doesn't know how the other heart lives. AN IMPRESSIVE DRAMA RIGHT OUT OF . REAL LIFE e It is the woman's story told with a woman's power to express the subtle emotional colors of love drama in its most human shades and meanings. A Chapter a Day Read the. Opening Chapter in the Statesman Tuesday, June 4 ror lives, but this transfer is slowing up. ( S V The strategists tn far away capitals have-a lot to say; and they do not argee. Hut General Foch is not talking. He may be waiting lor one or a score or things that may or may not happen. ' S One thing, the Germans have evi dently decided that the Americans can hold all they have taken. It will take all the willing hands to pick the loganberries and prunes. But it must be done. STANFIELDRUNS UP BIG EXPENSE Statement Filed by Secretary Shows Campaign Expendi ture $26,841.62 W. C E. Pruitt or Pendleton, secretary-treasurer ot the Stanfield Sen alnrl.il loarae. Yesterday filed statement with the secretary of state i showing that he expended f.26.841.62 I In behalf of Stanfield's candidacy for rmm nation for United States senator. Stanfield's personal statement has not yet been filed. Pruitt's state ment shows that J. R. Haley. F. S. Curl. Miles Lee. J. N. Burgess. W. L. Thompson and Marlon Jack each eon trihuted $500 to the campaign fund and that 173000 was spent for pos tage. George F. Brlce. treasurer of the Moser campaign committee, swear to an expenditure or $1924.69 and Mr. Moser personally paid out en r tit. imnnntt mntrihut- ed to Mosefs campaign the state ment shows that $725 has been paid and $1450 it not yet paid In. n p Hoff. ii a candidate for state treasurer, expended I and W. A. nurse in oeuau ui . im nainh E. Williams sycui . - - r campaign for national commlttmew cost him $2060.48. S. U. nu"--who withdrew rrom the race for Unit ed States senator, files a personal expense statement of $858.25 and E. Runyon in behaU of Huston spnt 7 Yesterday marked the end of the TUrin1 within whlCtt ---- The Story of I gtatemenU on oe ruea qnqer i - mwm S a Wife. law. It Is expected thst several can didates will be late. Other statements filed yesterday were:. Ben F. West state treasurer. Re publican. $219.81 Sam H. Brown, representative, first district. Repub'ican. $84.70. M. B. Meacham. representative eighteenth. , district Republican. $20.50. Henry A. Dolman, representative sixteenth district. Republican. $46.50 Colon n. Eberhard. state senator nineteenth district. Republican, iSS- Elmer E. Pettlngell. representa tive eighteenth district Republican $82.07. George C. Browrfcll. -tato srrator. twelfth district. K-puM'f i. 519.50 John C. Nickmrn. be- ct-mmls-sioner. Republican. $249.5- O. W. Hosford. representatlve elghteenth district. Republican. $50- v.. N. Hurd. representative .nine teenth district. Republican. $17.25. H.'M. Patton. state senator, four teenth district Republican. $33.75. George M. Brown, attorney Gener al. Republican. $33.90. John S. Coke. Justice of the su preme court. Republican. $381.55. William A. Carter, circuit Judge fourth Judicial district department T?rn M Ira n 1 3 2 3. X 8. J. B. Schaefer. superintendent of water division No. 1. Republican. $116.35. Robert C. Morror. cvircult ulr fourth Judicial district, department No. 2 Republican. $373.30. W. Al. Jones, state senator, first district. Republican. $96.65. P. O. Bonebrake. reoresentatlve eighteenth district. Republican. $33. Ralph A. Conn, representative, eighteenth district. Republican. $93 Robert S. Acheson. representative second district. Republican, $10. George T. Wlllett representative eighteenth district. Republican. $215 Elwood Wiles. representative, eighteenth district. Republican 19.90 Three Fatal Accidents Are Reported for Week Three fatal accidents were report ed to the state Industrial accident commission rorlhe week ending May 30. the eommisslon's weekly report shows. The toUl number of acci dents for tbe week was 432. tThe fa tal cases were: " R. V. DeWitt. Falls City, sawmill worker: W. coiaensoir. uregoo a Honeymoon f& M, -Mo "Look mi Uo. JUrguniT0 "I WILL BE HAPPY. I WILL! I WILL!" A woman's heart cry sounds at the beginning of the story and never loses its longing or the grip on the reader's fascinated attention. . PAINS IN BACK AND SIDE Yield to Lydla . Plnldiam't Vegetable Compound. Kansas CSty. Kansas. "I suffered from peins in my beck and side caosd vj m luocuonaj de rangement I was nervous end had headaches most of the time. So many people recom mended Lydia E, Pinkham's Veg. table Compound to me, I tried it and af ter taking six bot tles 1 tun welL I da not think the Yet table Compound can be beaten for we man's aflrnents." Mrs. ZTxxxexmax. 3011 N. Hatchings St, Kansas G:7, Kan i as. Women who suffer from headaches, iterrousness. backache, the blues and other symptoms of a functional derange ment should give this famous root and herb remedy a trial. For forty years it has been overcom ing such ailments of women after other medicines have failed. If yoa want special coggestions la regard to your condition, write Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. The result of long experience is at yocr service, and your ktter will be held ta strict confidence. . paper mill worker; David L. Middle ton. Grants Pass, traveler on public highway. Of the total number of cases re ported. 398 come under the provl slons of the workmen's compensation act. 18 were from firms and corpor ations that have rejected the provi sions or the act and zi were iron public utility corporations that are not tnbleet to the enactment. MCHERSPIL15 t . ... MH4mMSMk biaV sbas riixa, I '. V "I !f -sr I I - 1 o -