io rOSTUXD, OREGON. JEatarsd St Portland. Oregon. Poatotflc second-class matter. Bobaoriptlon Kiiw-Invariably In Advanoa: BT MAIL) Paily,- "onday included, ena year Ia!;r, Sunday Included, lis months. )ii;t. BundaT Included, three months... i.io (BT CARRIER) Pally, Sunday Included, ono year.. J Dally, Sunday Included, ono month, e Hew to Remit Send postofflee money or der, express order or personal oheck on your local bank. Btampa. coin or currency are at sender's risk. Gio postofflee address tn (nil. Including county and state. rootage Kates Ten to 14 pages, 1 cent; 1 to puree, t cents; 80 to pages 1 cents; to paces, 4 cents. Foreign postage, doublo rates. Eulrn Business Offices Vorroo Conk Hn, New York. Brunswick buUdlng. Chi cago, fcteg-er building. rWui Francisco Office R. J. BldweU Co, Ta Maraot otroet. Etiropeaa Offlca W.. London. Recast street & PORTLAND, WEDNESDAY. MAT 14. lls. HOW TO REDEEM THK fiOLDIER- The plea for restoration of the Army poet exchange, called the can teen. Is renewed by almost all com manding officers of the Army; by the Secretary of War, by the medical staff, by medical men and Burgeons, by the American Public Health Association, by the soldiers themselves and by the women of the Army. The post ex change Is opposed by two elements the extreme Prohibitionists, - repre sented by the Women"! Christian Tem perance Union, and the liquor dealers. The canteen was abolished "to In crease the efficiency of the military establishment." but the evidence Is overwhelming that the canteen greatly Increased efficiency, and that its aboli tion Is destroying the health and mor als of the soldiers, and with them all efficiency. This Is not the biased opinion of drinking men; it is the opinion of men who so abhor liquor that one of them said: "If I had my way I would destroy alcohol from .the face of the earth." But this same man said: "We have situations to deal with, not theories." The effect of the abolition of the canteen can best be Judged by com parison of conditions while It was In operation with conditions since Its abolition. First of all let us under stand what is commonly termed the canteen. It was not a saloon; It was a club, where soldiers went for recre ation, to read newspapers, to play cards or billiards, to have a light lunch, to smoke a pipe and have a glass of beer, light wine or a soft drink. There was no object In Induc ing a man to drink more than he would voluntarily, as there Is In a sa loon. Being under the eye of officers and comrades, a soldier was more apt to restrain his appetite. The oppor tunity to buy beer or wine was a very mall part of the conveniences afford ed. Major L. L. Seaman said in an article in the North American Review: The purpose of the post exchange or con fess cambused the features of a reading room and recreation room, a co-operative store and a restaurant. Its primary purpose was to furnish to the troops at reasonable prices the articles of ordinary use. wear and consumption not supplied by the Govern ment, and to afford them means of rational tecretation am! amusement suitable to their taste and station la life, which. If denied, they would seek outside the limits of camp. The canteen supplanted the post trader's store, where liquor could be bought without limit. Soldiers began a debauch in camp and continued It at the dives which crowded around the gates. The canteen came into full operation In 18S1'. and Major Seaman says of its effects: I. iiqi m t cot when the eenteene had been established throughout the Army, the number ot admissions to puaf"1 from c!e.t ollom. and -Its results was reduced . in ... --.. Tn one noetL WlllettS Point. v - - nw wn t.nm, th. admissions for this cause In 18SS were 272.97 for every 1000 troops. Two years alter tne essaonsn ment ot the canteen they fell to 70. 4 to the 100 AL Fort Spokane the amount of dls- . i.i itiMM.i.. n InriimAtlv from Intoxicant diminished SO per oent during the rrst six monins iouowjuk ,ul,vuuw ton of tbo canteen. Cantain Munson. assistant surgeon In the Army, reported that "during the seven vean of the existence oi tne can teen the reduction, of Insanity in the a rmv amounted to 11. 7 per cent. Drunkenness was prevented by con stant military supervision or tne can teen. Trials and convictions of drunk enness and conditions arising there from decreased from 423 in 1889, be fore the canteen was started, to 142 in 1S97. when it was In run operation Desertions decreased from 11 per cent in 1888-9 to Z per cent in is. rTm 1886 to 1891, before the canteen was in full oneratlon. the average number of men making savings deposits with the Army paymaster was 727 J, wnne irom 1892 to 1897, with the canteen, the cumber was 8882, an Increase of over It per cent. TV, Tina been the effect of aboil tion of the canteen In 1901 T General TVirn e v describes the growing up out side the gates of the Presidio at San Francisco of "dozens of the lowest s-Tozshons and brothels that one could ever imagine," which sent runners into the post and Into the hospital. He tells of seeing day after day "hun rire.de nf soldiers coins: Into the post from the grogshops, many of them under the Influence or uquor. General Frederick D. Grant re nnrted that abolition of the canteen had Increased consumption of strong drink, and that ruliy i per cent oi courtsmartial "were due to use of bad liquor dispensed to our soldiers by persons who conduct dens of vice in (ha vicinity of military posts. In 1906 he espoused the belief that "no less than 99 per cent of all the trou bles that occur In the Army are due tn the use of llauor. Th most al&rmina- result of the prevalence of dissoluteness In the Armv le the growth of venereal dis eases, which often show after effects manr years later by causing paresis or locomotor ataxia. The admissions tn hosDltal for this cause were 84.66 per thousand in 1889 before the can teen was Introduced; in 1893, after the canteen was established, they de creased to 73.8 per thousand; three voar after the canteen was abolished they increased to 200, 34 per thou sand, or one-fifth or tne total en lis tea strength of the Army. Major Sea man save of the enthusiasts of the W. C. T. U.: "In killing a mouse they rfiirrotprt a monster. The soldiers resent the limitation on their independence involved in aboli tion of the canteen by going outside the post and Indulging to excess in linnnr of a vl: OualitT. MfS. AllCC G. Burbank, one of the women of the Army who testified before tne riouse committee, said: f , v . honor r,t the vounr men of the eervlr-e be It said that when the choice lay between the enjoyment of a glass of beer io the company of their comrades) .fas pro- IJSliy, DUnatf mciuaea, one --- Duly, without Bunday, one year I:iy, without Sunday, six month. ... .. Paily, without Sunday, three monuia,... Daily, without Sunday, ono month.. -J? Weekly, one year Sunday, ena year. f-?!I k . n Sunday and Weakly, ono year Tided "by the canteen, and tha license and debauchery of the evil resorts outside their posts, they chose the former. Given the opportunity to partake in moderation of mild beverages, the sol diers gladly did so. Only deprivation of this opportunity drove them to drink the vile stuff sold In the dives and to go on to the use of drugs and to the brothels. If Congress has any moral courage. It will brave the wrath of the Prohi bitionists and the dive-keepers, who om in unnatural alliance, and will save the soldiers from moral and physical deterioration by restoring tne canteen. SAFETY OXLT IN UNITY. Tr nns e-i-min nf citizens SUPPOftS four candidates for Commissioner, a second group supports four other can didates, another group supports a third ticket of four, and so on all in the belief that they have cnosen mo ,t tmninneri for the places what will happen? Everybody knows what will happen. Or, ratner. every body knows what win not nappen. Mm ciifh four candidates win oc elected. Not one of any such four may be elected, perhaps. The candidate who has continued to keep himself in the public eye, and has In himself somehow the elements is most formidable. There are several such candidates, and they are not the best canaiaates. come hm are. an undesirable as candi dates that their election would be a positive public misfortune. Tf th fit candidates or their friends are to confine themselves to the task of 'cutting one another s tnroats, tne .,nr will rertaJnlv sliD in. There is no question about It. The way of wis dom lies in unity, and agreement may be had only through intelligent un derstanding of the common peril, mu tual concession and aggressive ana pa triotic action. innnvistinn of a sreneral danger is half the battle. Let us see if the Com mittee of One Hundred can point the way to safety. FRESERTE THE OREGON. r-nmotional Navy Department utili tarians now plan to use the proud old battleship Oregon as a target, xney would bare her massive hulk to a brief bombardment that the gunners . r fln-hrinir rft mieht have Ul JUUUQCI ...--.B a single lesson In marksmanship. In ,hi. tit thev arx-ue. the splendid old sea warrior can be of a last service to th countrv she has served so long and well. The target plan follows the failure of these same strategists to send the obsolete craft to the bone- yrd- . . Our naval experts overiooK one im portant fact. Wars, naval as well as land engagements, depend to an im sentiment. Why does the gunner, wounded, dying, stand by his heroio task with his last spark of llfeT Sentiment- Discipline, material efficiency and mathematical precision ail tend to make our isavy an effective first line of National de fense. But it is sentiment and the traditions of the Navy that are its bul warks. The Navy thrives on it, is built on it anrl fls-hts on it. So lust why any fit naval officer should plan to destroy with a few volleys a rare iinomars In our naval history is incomprehen sible. p9aivji tut a tralnine ship in x"ort- inn hirhnr the old warrior will thrill generation after generation with the Story Of an exploit mat reveam m grim effectiveness and dauntless spirit of the American fighting man. The story of her heroio cruise around the Horn and Into battle will be told and onH will foster patriotism and National pride. Surely that is the mission of the old uregon. v e cumu hnr nfforrt to destroy a new battle ship than this historic hulk which has become an institution in tne American pride and affectioiu ONE WEAKNESS OF CARE ACT. Mn thnn half the trouble arising between the promoters of Carey proj ects and the purchasers of lands under the projects are caused by non-resl-Thev are people who get on the ground early and make the first payment on their selection wimoui the intention of proceeding farther, save to rake in a fat profit from some person who is expected to arrive land, hungry within a short time. Tj,it enfh a. nroflt-nroducer does not arrive as per the schedule, and soon the trouble begins, ror more man likely the purchaser has tied himself up with a contract mat ne s wiiuuj unable to fulfill. Of course, he never Intended to carry it out, never wanted the land, never expected to spend a cent in Improving it. Being unable to make his payments, ne Begins iu find fault with the projectors, taking any trivial excuse that can be scraped up. Having a few score or hundred in the same boat with him, no trouble i. em.nH In AiKfovnrins: loooholes in the operations of the projectors, for the very law under wnicn tne prvjcn la being worked out is as full of holes as a sieve. If the projectors cause the pur chaser to pay up by legal methods. the troubles are accentuatea many fold; If they deliver water on tne place the purchaser alleges It has been brought to the wrong point, er he ..'onn riitch n each Bide or tne lana. He does not know what he wants save to make trouble for the projectors, so that he will not be ejected and lose his initial payment. Of course there is anotner ciass oi non-resident owners who are not quite so bad, but bad enough. They are the ones who got in ahead of the pro jectors and took up desert claims, get- ing In that way acres, or pernajw only 160 acres. For this they contract with the projectors for water, and pos sibly have money enough to meet the payments. They build a snacK on tne land, or perhaps live in an adjacent town and rarm tne tract aner a fashion. But they are really holding it with the expectation that a great h of settlors will soon come along and then that they can sell at a big o.ofit ThoM nwnprw are well within their rights, but, being disappointed in their hopes ot a quick saie ana large profit, they soon become kickers and knockers and cause about as much trouble as the impecunious class. - Meantime- how about the projec tors? Perhaps there are no promoters known, anyhow in the West, who carry the load of troubles that these people carry. More than likely half of the troubles are due solely to dis appointed buyers, for the real settlers on the land who are making there a home for themselves and families are too busy with their own business to try to make trouble for others. The worst evil of all, however, is that these petty speculators stand be tween the real settler and the land. When settlers came, seeking irrigated land under a Carey project, what did they find? They discovered that they t only had to pay tor tne land ana i the water, but they had to pay a big THE BIORXIXG OREG OXI AN, WEDNESDAY. bonus to these speculators, or go away landless. Most of them chose not o be held up, and returned to their homes to turn back those who were expected to follow them. When you hear of troubles between settlers and projectors of such proj ects remember these facts. They do not prevail seriously on some of the projects; there are other troubles on some, and in certain cases the projec tors have been dishonest. But, as a rule, the difficulties have arisen throueh the men who stood between the settler and the land. THE HOO AND THE COW. The people of Stanfleld, a beautiful little town In Umatilla County, with a splendid surrounding country, are to have "a Hog and Cow day," the event being set for May 24. This is cer tainly a movement in the right direc tion, for if the Irrigated sections of this state east of the Cascades ever become the prosperous localities to which merit entitles them, they must take first cognizance of the cow and the hog. The Hog and Cow flay at btan fleld is planned to bring out the best stock in that section for the inspection t -of the people at large. They will have blue ribbons to distribute to the best specimens even r uw riair nn monfv Drizes. Ff'eo.uent- ly one of these blue ribbons, as trivial as they may seem, lays the founaation to. a hroodoi'n fortune, aside from af fecting the whole neighborhood and causing hundreas to improve ineir stock. ' Tt- hniu rherA will be a large at tendance at Stanfleld on te day men tioned, and Portland should encourage Stanfleld by sending a large delega tion. A special sleeper will be at tached to the O.-W. R. & N. train which leaves Portland at 8 o'clock Friday evening. The same coach will reach Portland on the return trip oun- day morning. NUGGETS FROM THE CONGRESSIONAL BlKttlUttl. t, 1 o r-nt mistnke to believe that the Congressional Directory Is an un profitable -book, -mere us i in the world. though we must confess that most of the biographies it contains are more Interesting for what they leave out t.nn tnr in-hot tVlAV tell. The blUShing new member who elaborately relates the story of his ri3e in the world and onflHe. tn the breathless reader the names of his wife's aunts, his three prattling inf anU and his paternal grandfather is evidently bowed down nnjor ihn burden of unaccustomed greatness. When he has become a little better habituated to tne toaa no will shorten up his biography and the world will love him the better the more taciturn he becomes. Oregon's ornament and pride, Abraham Walter Lafferty, finds It impossible to tell all he wants the public to know about himself in less than 57 lines oi me ni.uton nf the Klxtv-third Congress. James McAndrews, of Chicago, turns the trick very neatly in two lines con taining sixteen words. What a con kotmoon tha rherublo innocence of Mr. Lafferty, who has absolutely nothing to hide, and the secretive rar. McAndrews, who hides everything ex r h b!rA fart that he was elected to Congress, and who cares about that? Or do we err 7 can it De true mv i- if. Toffurlv xrhn baa most tO hide 13 .HI. J and that he tells the admiring nations all about his four sisters ana tnree Krnth.rs bis mother's first cousin, ma jor Luther H. Cowan, and his mater nal grandmother, Mary Ann trunn, ia order to divert impertinent Inquiry thrilling; circumstances which he prefers not to mention? Would that every congressman were as brief as Mr. McAndrews. If they were, the Congressional Directory would be almost as entertaining as the dictionary. Wordy as some of his fel lom.m Ambers are. especially the younger ones, he is not without worthy competitors in taciturnity. xneio the Hon. Ed L. Hamilton, of Michi gan, for instance, who condenses his adventures Into 17 words, omitting nothing that anybody wishes to learn. His colleague, S. W. Smith, does better still. This genial gentleman from Michigan manages to write his biogra phy in 14 words, and not a solitary In cident of any importance is left out. What did Michigan mean by sending to Congress a man to whom no more had happened than that? Mr. Smith was not even born, if we may trust his account. All that he says of him self is: "Republican of Pontlac; was elected to the fifty-fifth Congress; re elected to each succeeding Congress." There you have Mr. Smith's biography, the whole of It, or at least all that he ventures to disclose. Compare his suspicious secretlveness with the can did garrulity of Mr. Lafferty, who oc cupies almost a page and even then has to leave out much that he would probably love to unveil. Many a ten der romance which would have adorned the Directory far more ap pealingly than dreary election statis tics has been suppressed. We suppose the editor of that arid volume, who ever he may be, is responsible. We feel assured that Mr. Lanerty ot nis own accord would have suppressed nothing that ever happened to' him. Perfect innocence is always perrecuy frank. Rni tha nnJm of brevity remains yet to be awarded. It goes, not, as the eager reader may suppose, to .no Deri E. Lee, of Pennsylvania, who tells his history In 15 burning words, but to J. W. Ragdale, of South Carolina, who uses but nine. Think of condensing an entire human life, and that life blazing with the splendor of Congres. slonal glory, into nine brief words: "Democrat, of Florence; was elected to the sixty-third Congress." Did Mr. Ragdale aspire to outdo the taciturn ity of Caesar? The famous "veni, vldl, vici" was hardly more curt, but we cannot help thinking that the South Carolina Congressman took refuge in brevity because he had something to be ashamed of and was afraid it might slip . out if he really began to talk. Perhaps the damning fact was that he heinniren' to the same carty as Gov ernor Blease. Mr. Lafferty modestly forbears to speak of his literary pro ductions, which, as the reader knows, have mostly assumed the epistolary form, but other members both of the House and Senate refer to that aspect of their own careers with pardonable pride. Would that Portland's mem ber had been as generous in this par ticular as Senator Lodge. The dates and addresses, with excerpts from the contents of his more celebrated epis tles, would have added a certain Juici ea to tbA Directory which one sadly misses. Senator Lodge is decidedly the moBt literary of all our National lawmakers. He speaks of himself as e ntmrv man by profession and the list of his works fills eleven lines of fine type. He has no second in this hnnni-abie distinction. The only men who come within hailing distance of him are Senator Burton, or Ohio, wno is the author of four books and proud ly records the fact, while Henry George, Jr., of New York, sets himself down as the author of three books a "Life" of his famous father, "The Menace of Privilege" and "The Ro mance of John Bainbridge." As far as literature is concerned, the British Parliament could outrank the Amer ican Congress and not half try. But when it comes toemlnence In other lines of human effort, we shine with a brighter radiance and a good deal more of It Some congressmen anu Senators have bereft the judicial bench ot almost indispensable services in or der to make laws instead of interpret ing them. There is Senator w imam Howard Thompson, of Kansas, for ex ample. Oh, what a fall was there when he stopped Judging In order to wear the toga! He "is the author of a number of articles on legal reform which have attracted attention throne-bout the United States." tie was elected District Judge at the tender age of thirty-four years, and that, too, in spite of the riamsicHnB- fact that he was a Demo crat. The tolerant people of Kansas sometimes overlook such congenital defects. Moreover, he "was consid ered one of the ablest and most popu lar Judges in Kansas." 'We warn the render that thin is onlv half the truth. for Senator Thompson writes it him self and we can all see from the trem bling of his pen- how modest he is. It is acknowledged by an wno Know him," he confesses shyly, "that as Senator he will not only bring credit and honor to himself, but to the state and Nation as well." The shrinking Mr. Lafferty had not the assurance to say anything like this of himself, but we all know how true it would have been if he had said it. T-iemoernta are so hunery for office that thev east envious eyes on even the menial positions in the Govern ment service held by negroes, oeos tor stone bus introduced a resolution nallina- for an Investigation of the sub ject, and quotes figures showing 22,540 negroes now in the Government serv ice receive salaries aggregating 312, 4RR.760 a vear. The New Tork Evening Post says this is an average of only 552, and asks If the Democrats be grudge the porters, elevator men or charwomen their places. Some of them eertainlv do. It Is a peculiarity of office-seekers that they would rather have a soft snap at small pay unaer the Government than honestly earn ton or rhre times as much In private employment. Office-seekers of that typo are first cousin to tne weary mi lls. rhsriM Freer's new manuscript of the gospels ought to be authorita tive in some ways, seeing tnai it aaiea from perhaps the fourth Christian cen tnrv Tt ! said to be particularly full of new matter in the sixteenth chap ter of Mark. This will excite suspi oihn instead of confidence among .ohniura fnr that chanter has been sadly tampered with as it stands in the received text and new variations can only make matters worse. The chances are that we know as much as we ever shall about the savior's life and teach ings. aviators are said to have perfected a device for determining the position of an airship In a fog by aid of wireless, and thus for avoiding the necessity of a descent on foreign soil, as was the case with the Zeppelin IV at Lunnevllle. It is said to nave Deen successfully tested on a Zeppelin which ran over 1000 miles in thirty-one hours through a fog and reached its des tination That Invention may become an aid to aerial Invasion of a country by surprise and will add to the thrills of Anglo-German war talk. t Irwin F. Smith, plant pathologist in the Department of Agriculture, is xiiinH a fool bv manv for preferring his present position at 34000 a year to one at 310,000 in tne KocKereuer in stitution for Medical 'Research. Per haps he is in love with his work and measiiree fineness bv the results he ac complishes rather than by the dollars he accumulates. Then pernaps nis tastes are so simple that he would not know what to do with more than $4000 a year. A contemporary gives the following list of happenings for and against "feminism" in a single day. Norway extended the suffrage, England raided the suffragettes, Mr. Taft denounced suffrage, Mr. Roosevelt lauded It and New York began to make ready for the world's greatest suffrage demon stration. When so much happens for their weal and woe in twenty-four hours, women cannot complain that they are neglected. That more people were not killed in the wreck near Lakevlew is a piece of good fortune. Sudden stoppage of a train hurtling at 65 miles an hour tc fearful to eontemDlate. Superior ity of steel over wood In car construc tion has no better demonstration, in time all equipment must and will be of that quality. Until then the trav eler must take the greater chances. New Hampshire, like Washington, has a Governor who puts a damper on the enthusiasm of the people for' good roads. He has vetoed a bill appro priating $1,400,000 for trunk highways, which were Intended to attract auto mobile tourists. This Is an unpopu lar move, for tourists are a chief source of New Hampshire wealth. How large a place politics fills in the minds of Wisconsin University students is shown by the fact that five of the nineteen great men whose portraits were chosen to hang In the Institution are politicians, four of them from Wisconsin. Since the rise of La Follette that state has rivalled Ohio as a breeder of politicians. "Xy tear her tattered ensign down!"' Make a, target of the Oregon. Never mind what she was and has done. Sell the old horse to the soap man. Turn the old people out to starve. Let this be a Nation that treats lightly its traditions and be come a decaying republic. Many await In trepidation the ex pose, and some In fear. Many wives will learn just how much their hus bands are earning. Then will the trouble begin. A successful raid on the underworld by the Sheriff indicates what the Po lice Department might do. Johnson will not veto the bill, that is certain. He Is not catering to the Japanese "vote." The fun will begin when the candi dates attack the records of the other fellows. ' ' ' " ' ' e. Many are called, but four will be chosen, . MAY 14, 1913. CUT COST OF GARBAGE) STSTEM Reduction Plant Would Prune Bill 9200,000 Yearly, Says Writer. PORTLAND, May 13. (To the Edi tor.) The municipal research expert, who reported on the disposal of Port land's garbage, estimated that Us col lection cost the people of the city $300,000 yearly. In addition the city pays the cost of cremating at, say, $50 per day. He -estimated that $200,000 could be saved by municipal collection, reduc ing that expense to $300,000. Of course this annual sum would continue to in crease. Besides he recommended the erection of one or two more inciner ators, which would proportionally in crease that expense. We Bhould have municipal collec tion, using tight steel-bodied wagons, and what is still more important, inau gurate, as soon as possible, an up-to-date reduction plant. 'Without going into the details of the latter -process, suffice it to say that many of our large progressive cities have adopted it with gratifying re sults. At present there ere 25 reduction plants in the United States, from which there is produced annually approxi mately 60,000,000 pounds of grease and 150,000 tons of tankage, having an average market value of $3,500,000. Previous to 1905 private companies carried on such of these enterprises as were in operation. In that year Cleveland, O., purchased the plant from the contracting company and has operated it since with satisfactory re sults, Columbus, O., in 1910 placed In oper ation one of the best perfected plants of the kind. It has shown a profit over and above the operating costs and the fixed charges. Including interest at 4 per cent and depreciation at 6 per cent, m EJ nnta nor ton During 1912 a further improvement, . . ..nnl.llif nlont wan nil t In II LI L Ul II yni tvmuuB l""' operation, which increased the net earnings to $1.82 per ton. Now is the opportune time for Port land to act, before any more expense is put on Incinerators. o. manv lercro and nrOB-resnive CitieB have demonstrated the success of this method there need te no nesitancy on our city adopting It. Unquestionably there would be a saving of more than $500,000 per annum. The legislative committee of the Portland realty board has been asked to gather complete data on the sub ject and report the outline of a work able plan. J- D. LEE. DR. FRIEDMAN1Y BRANDED FRAUD Operations of Hnsje Fake Should be Restricted, Says Doctor. PORTLAND, May 12. (To the Edi tor.) I hope that many physicians, as well as laymen, read the editorial in The Oregonian yesterday commenting upon Friedmann and his cure. It would only be a waste of time to argue that the competent medical men of America who nave lnvestigatea tne "turtle serum" of Friedmann's did so without prejudice, even with the most fevent hopes that it would do all that its exploiter claimed it would do. The Oregonian has earned the thanks of the medical profession. Our protests, however, will not avail. We cannot in voke any Federal Btatute to issue an injunction against the syndicate which proposes to exploit the Friedmann cure at the expense of the tubercular sufferers. The regulation of the prac tice of medicine belongs to the states; even the states are powerless in the matter of passing laws to prohibit any normal adult from submitting to any sort of treatment, from any sort of pretender to cure disease. It is significant of much that Colo rado should be chosen as the first place in which to found one of the Friedmann Institutions, tjoioraao n long been the mecca of tubercular pa tients, and many incipient cases re cover there. Why did not the Fried mann syndicate found their first In stitute In New York, Chicago or some other great tubercular center? The Deculiar optimism o the tuber cular subject who is always expecting that the newest exploited remedy is the cure he has so long sought will undoubtedly bring a good many $500 fees to the "Tubercular Trust." It Is a pity that we cannot prevent this, but we cannot. They do some things bet ter in Germany than we do in America. Friedmann s syndicate couia not or ganize in Germany. DR. JOHN MADDEN. DANGER LIRKS IN CANNED GOODS. Great Care Should Be Taken In Use of Preserved Foods. NEW YORK. May 9. (To the Edl tor.) An article In The Oregonian gives an account or unaries isaney De intr afflicted with ptomaine poisoning. I believe no better work can be done by the preBs than to warn the public of the danger existing from partaking of foods not properly preserved and the necessity of utilizing canned goods as soon as possible after opening the can. Scientific experiments have deter mined time and time again that numer ous articles of food when not kept in a hyglonio condition readily deteriosr ate bo as to become poisonous bud 6 4; L ri G G 9 The formation of ptomaines general ly, although not always, accompanies putrefaction; therefore great care should be taken that meat, fish, fowl, oysters, canned goods, etc., are. eaten only when they are in good condition. It Is not economy to partake of food when outrefaction has commenced. Food can be kept In a hygienio con dition either by heat or refrigeration bv the exclusion of air, or oy tne ap plication of substances which on ac count of tneir antiseptic properties. nrevent the errowth of poisonous germs. Statistics show that since the en actment of the Pure Food Law there have been 36,400 cases of ptomaine poisoning, 1541 of which were fatal. It is certainly distressing to think of this vast number of persons becoming ill and of so many innocent lives lost merely because food products are not nreserved so as to keep tnem in a ny erienio condition until consumed. Such distressing conditions will continue to prevail as long as consumers do not heed the warning oi tne aanger exist ing In consuming foods not kept in hygienic conaition. . i. nAniua. MAY BUY ASITIETAM LANDMARK Dnnkard Church on Battle' Field Will Probably Go te Government. Hagerstown, Md., Baltimore News. It is now said" on gdod authority that the United States Government is desirous of acquiring the old Dunkard Church on Antietam battle field, and that the War Department will use It aa an office, if it can be purchased. The church is a small, rough cast structure, built in 1851, and it la located along the Hagerstown and Sharpsburg turnpike near Bloody Lane. It is still used for services by the Manor Congre gation Church of the Brethren, and the congregation wishes to dispose of the property. The title to the church, however, is complicated, as the deed of gift for the site from Samuel Mumma provided that it be used by the Church of the Breth ren to erect a house of public worship thereon and hold therein their servlce.v Any deviation from this purpose would, in the opinion of lawyers, cause title to revert to the Mumma heirs, who are numerous and scattered. The Maryland Monument Is near the church, also those of Indiana, New Jer sey and the Philadelphia Brigade Sermon On Marrlasre. Illustrated Bits. ' Husband Ah, me! Marriage Is a lottery. She And I heartily wish some one else had my tlcketl UNDESIRABLES SEEKING OFFICE Much Poor Material Noted In List of Local Aspirants. prmTLAND. Mav 13: (To the Edi- itor.) It is wonderful the amount of gall some people have In tneir sj s tom. as shown by the mad scramble and eagerness for office. Nearly a hundred citizens have shown their ae sir to Drove their patriotism to a confiding public, one-half of whom could not command one-third oi tne salary to be paid to the Mayor and Commissioners under any well-gov erned business house nor even mane it by their own native talent and ex ertions in any calling outside of petty politics. The purpose of a great many -who are in the race (knowing they cannot be elected) is to impress those who are elected of their im portance and incidentally to obtain a position under them. Corrupt politics by corrupt politicians is dangerous to any community. There are politicians and politicians. A good politician must be a patriot. one whose mind and heart look be yond self. Foxiness and low cunning are often mistaken for shrewdness and sagacity. A petty politician is a trickster looking only for self inter ests and aggrandizement and inci dentally to get a good fat living at the expense of the taxpayers. There are men on the ticket who have not the least conception of the duties ana responsibilities. These men should be sat down on hard. Among the names filed for "Mayor and Commissioners there is some good material. There is also some very poor or indifferent material. Ther is every chance ofl securing five good men from among them. The Commis sioners should be picked for their fit ness for certain duties which might be . designated and promulgated through the medium of the daily news papers and framed into the new char ter. All tne faults In tne new char ter can be eliminated and suitable provisions substituted to suit the re quirements. Any and all differences can and will be changed If the people will elect men of unimpeachable char acter and Integrity who will co-operate and work in harmony for the public good. Let the candidates come out openly and state where and how they will revise and amend the charter to suit the needs of the city and its citi zens. The men elected to the office of Mayor and Commissioners should be seasoned business men of experience who, through hard knocks, have be come experts in handling delicate questions; men of some sense and judgment, having thorough knowledge of the details which will enable them to discriminate in the hiring of ca pable and efficient help and not rob the taxpayers by hiring a lot of unfit petty politicians and place hunters. W. H. GORDON. BREAK DISHES NOW AT CONEY Blase New Yorkers at Wit's End to Care a Fit of the Blues. New York Herald. America need have no fear of mili tant suffragists; a safety valve for the escape of the surplus energy of the women of the Nation has been found. This Is an assertion fr.im Coney Is land. It is the result of a discovery made In the last few days. In which, because of the pleasant Spring weather, the first crowds of the season have been flocking to the seaside resort. "Breaking Up Housekeeping" is the name of Coney's new amusement. It is warranted to cure any grouch and af fords an escape for any a nount of sur plus steam' or energy, whether of : suffrage or any other type of enthusi asm. Several booths furnishing the sport are already In operation, and several more are to be erected in the Bowery and in the big amusement parks by per sons enticed by the prospects of big profits. The game is simply to pay one or more nickels for the purpose of smashing perfectly good dishes until the grouch has worn off and the fit i destructlveness is ended. It is verj simple. No person has a patent on the Idea. All that is required is to provide dishes for persons to smash and a place in which to smash them. It is a variation of the old game In which you throw baseballs at a large number of dolls or at a negro s head and every time you make a hit you re ceive a cigar or a cane. But In the new game there are no prizes of any kind. All one gets for his money is the satis faction one always feels when he has made something break. Over one stand in Surf avenue is a large sign, saying: ': If you can't break up your own ! home, break up ours. At the back of the stand are rows of porcelain plates, so close together that one cannot help but smash one at every throw. At the counter in front are a number of baseballs, and when one has had his three shots for his nickel the Joy of smashing something has general ly seized hold of him and he keeps throwing bail alter ban. PEOPLE WILL DEFEAT DIPLOMACY Anti-Allen Law Will Be Upheld, Says Callfornlan. SAN FRANCISCO, May 11. (To the Editor.) The Oregonian suggests that a Kood plan to "override the camornia law" will be for President Wilson to negotiate a new treaty with Japan by which "each nation grants citizens of the other tire same rights as to land holdlne." Were Japan willing to grant foreign,. ers the privileges that she is insolently demanding of the United States, the situation would lose some of its stren- uoslty. She not only refuses to let for Rierners own land within her domain but she renders leasing a most difficult matter. And why should you desire the over riding of a California law? Are, you of the impression that California does not know her own needs; as you wisely remark the President, In case he nego tlated such a- treaty, "would risk i stormy time in securing ratification by the Senate. And if, after the storm had subsided tha President should find hlmsell-a vie tor, then the -people would have found further proof of the necessity for the direct election of benators. E. D. DEMENT. AMERICAN MUSTACHE WINS. OUT Short - Cropped Style In Favor London, England. London Cor. The American mustache ia coming into Into fashion here. London doesn't know that it is American or it would never adopt It, but it is, nevertheless, The newspapers describe It as of the "eyebrow" or "toothbrush", variety "just a smudge on the upper lip. The Daily Mail qjiotes an West End hairdresser as saying that the small mustache is cultivated chiefly by the army officer. "It Is a short, closely-trimmed mus tache which adorns the upper lip with out hiding the mouth," he said. "The fashionable mustache is etubby and sharply denned. It must not overlap the corners of the mouth and It must not conceal the contour of the upper lip. "These small mustaches serve the same purpose as the patch of the Geor srian ladies. They call attention to a well-iormea mourn ano excellent teetn. After a while London will learn that this is the kind of mustache which Americans were those who wear any at alL Then the Englishmen will declare that the fashion really originated here and that tnose "Daily lanks copieo from them. Polite, Bat Awkward. 1 "London Tit Bits. HosTess Miss Robinson has no part ner for this waltz. Would you mind dancing-with her, instead of with me? Hawkward On the contrary, I shall be only too delighted Twenty-five Years Ago From Ths Oregonian of May 14, 1888. San Francisco. May 13. Misses Mary Potter and Clara" Cogswell, of Euttene City, who have been attending busi ness college, returned home Friday last. Seattle. W. T., May 13. All trains for the baseball grounds were crowded this afternoon. About 1800 saw the sec ond game between the Willamettes and the Browns. Score: Vt uiameiies n. Browns 5. London. May 12. Anton Rubinstein, the noted pianist, has accepted $20, 000 for 50 performances in America during the present year. T w. Tteddinc-ton. who formerly pub lished the Heppner Gazette, has started a humorous paper at Walla Walla, which he calls The only wana wana Wan Wah. it. phariA, nirkens. Jr.. will crive readings at the new Park Theater on the evenings of tne aist ana jju mat. Mr. J. C. Miller, of the firm of Miller & West, 'died Saturday night. Mr. Robert C. Washburn, of the Se attle Post-Intelligencer, is at the Es mond. Mr. W. T. Orlswold. In charge of the Oregon district of the United States geological survey, returned yesterday from Ashland. Mr. Tyler Woodward, superintendent of the Transcontinental Street Railway Company, who has been in California for several weeks on business, returned yesterday. A meeting of the general committee appointed from the various G. A. R. posts in regard to the arrangements for Memorial day exercises was held yesterday afternoon in G. A. R. Hall, First and Taylor streets. Mr. A. E. Borthwick, department commander, was in the chair and the following members of the committee were pres ent: C. E. Dubois, T. B. McDevitt, Charles Duggan, E. W. Eaton, O. Sum mers, H. C Allen, J. E. Mayo. R. M. McMasters, W. B. Taylor and L. J. Jacobs. Half a Century Ago From The Oregonian of May 14, 1863. New York. May 7. The Tribune cor respondent says the Army of the Po tomac crossed the river at tne u. &. ford to the old camp along the Aqua Railroad. The crossing was effected with loss. Sedgwick at Fredericks burg was overwhelmed by numbers and barely able to escape. He saved his artillery and trains. Fredericksburg. May 6. The heights are occupied by the enemy. Hooker commenced crossing Tuesday night. Lee's sharpshooters picked oft a num ber of artillerv horses and officers. Their batteries occupied all the ad vantageous positions and were piled with vieror on our forces. un con sultation of commanders, it Was de cided that the enemy were too power ful. Sedgwick's unsuccessful attempt to join Hooker, added to the counsel of the corps commanders, Bhook Hooker's confidence and he ordered the evacua tion. The Times correspondent says there was a time from Friday morn ing to Monday night that Hooker might have attacked and defeated Lee, but he lacked the ability to give the orders. The army was greatly de moralized by this Inglorious retreat. Th ladies of Portland and vicinity are requested to meet at the Methodist Church In this city on Saturday next at 2 P. M. to devise measures for se curing a liberal contribution in aia of the objects of the Sanitary Commis sion. A correspondent writing from Placerville says: "At the lowest pos sible estlmata the diggings of Placer district are now yielding $50,000 per day. ' A Union League was organized at Claquato, Lewis County, W. T., on the 8th inst. LAY ALL WALLS IN CEMENT Building Lessons From the Recent Disaster at Omaha, Neb. Engineering News. The "reckless caprice" of whirling storms, 80 often figuring in current de scription, disappears before the trained observer. The madness of the storm is discovered to be essentialy methodical. Except in a few cases, buildings moved from their foundations (at Omaha) were rotated in a direction opposite to that of the hands of a clock. And the great prime destructive force of the tornado is not the impact of whirling air. It is the explosive force of air confined. A tornado is the low pressure center of a great, inrushlng whirl of air. When the part vacuum which the storm carries at its heart envelops a building the air within the building presses out ward. Windows are great safety valves. Buildings with large auditoriums suf fer more than those with small .rooms. Solid walls suffer relatively little, but brick walls with an air space between courses are split by the explosive force of the confined' air. Mortar-lald walls go down where cement resists. Recommendations for tornado-proof construction are somewhat as follows: Lay all walls in cement. Do not leave air spares In brick walls. Provide ample window space. Tie buildings to foundations and roots to walls. The outrushlng air follows the easiest path. It pays to have the windows blown out rather than to have the roof lifted to equalize the wind pressure and then dropped back upon the house, or the house Itself lift ed from Its foundations by the upbulge ot the confined air In the basement. Use diagonal bracing wherever possible. Since these are counsels of good building sense. Irrespective of the pe culiar stresses of tornadoes, It will surely pay architects and engineers to take them seriously into consideration. While it seems probable that nothing can resist the tornado's maximum vio lence, that violence Is exerted in but an insignilicant part of the area of a given storm. Delaying; the Game a Little. New York Times Murray L. Pennell, a defendant in the Indianapolis dynamiting case, caused a little diversion in court pro ceedings while under cross-examination. Pennell had been vigorously chewing gum while on the stand. "If you'll take your gum out of yom moutli we'll get along faster we wouldn't be wasting so much time, said United States Attorney Miller. "Yes, take your chewing gum out ot your mouth," commanded Judge Ander son. , , Pennell sat In the witness chair ap parently not making any effort to obey the order of the court. "What, don't you hear the -older?" asked Miller after there had been si lence in the courtroom tor fully a min ute and Pennell had made no jrisible movement. "I swallowed it, mumbled Pennell. Court proceedings were suspended, while. Judge Anderson spun around twice in his swivel chair and hemmed vigorously Glrla Taagjht TO Be Beauties. Anita d'Este. In Good Housekeeping. . in Aii.l.ln flnH TtAlu t h A in i'liWli-c, - . ' knowledge of physical culture, hygiene and "beauty culture" is as much a part of the young girl's education as the rudiments of reading and writing. The child is carefully trained in the regime of beauty cultivation, the v.n-l, fa Tuno-lit to nrpservo Its youiui-ui u uj.. io - --- i " flexibility and suppleness. The hair is. cared for and protecieu. ine emu ami features are Improved by every known means, so that old age advances Blowly and always gracefully. i