10 THE 3I01XXING OREGONIA, FRIDAY. 3IAT 12, 1916. mm PORTLAND, OREGON. Entered at Portland (Oreg-on Postofflce as second-class mail matter. Eubscriptlou Rates Invariably in advance: (By Mail.) Daily. Sunday Included, one year. . . .. .s8:eo l'aily. Sunday included, six months..-. 4. Jjaily. Sunday included, three months. . 2.:-- lJaiy, Sunday included, one month,-... -Jo L'aily, without Sunday, one year. ...... l-aily, without Sunday, six montha..... o.25 l-faily, without Sunday, three montha... L"i Uaily, without Sunday, one month..... Weekly, one year ffunday, one year Euiiday and "Weekly, one year. ....... ..3.o0 (By Carrier.) Ia!)y. Sunday included, ene year...... v.ou r Uaily. Sunday Included, one month. .... .7a How to Remit Send postoff ice money order, express order or personal check on J our local bank. Stamps, coin or currency .are at sender'a risk. Give poatoff ice ad dresses in full, including county and atate. " Postage Kates la to 18 pages. 1 cent; 18 'to 32 pages. 2 cents; 34 to 48 pages, 3 cents; 0 to 00 pages. 4 cents; 82 to 78 pages, 5 .cents; 78 to S2 pages, 6 cents. Foreign postage, double rates. Eaotern Business Office Varree & Conk lin. Brunswick building. New York; Verree A; Conklin, steger building. Chicago. San Krancisco representative, R. J. Bidwell, 742 Market street. FOBTLAND, FRIDAY, HAT 1918. shows, dances and other public enter tainments, but the law should reach back to the parents who permit their children to go and should punish them. Certain picture dramas which are safe for adults but are unfit for young- eyes should be forbidden to minors, but what of the mother who permits a child to select such shows for itself? The parents are responsible, but with increased need of control they now exercise less. Atl the power and influence of law and social influence should be exerted to bring them back to their duty. They are shirking it at the cost of their own children's morals and happiness, for vice brings only misery. being more than 8,000,000 miles and that political, industrial and military their total travel approximating $250.- efficiency in which we are behind the 000. Court officials, witnesses and allies. Mr. Davenport truly says: "It Jurors, even members of the Tennessee Is the spiritual reserve which is the Legislature, were among the favored I final test of the-fitness of a people ones. A communication was found in to survive. the company's records from an agent I The Democratic parXy has proved Its who wanted ' passes for the family of incapacity to call forth this spiritual a certain Judge. It was pleaded that reserve in the Nation, for it has not thi3 judge decided nearly all of the called forth that quality within itself. companys cases favorably and that, I The coming convention and the cam by doing him this favor, better jurors paign which will succeed it will prove could be secured in the trial of future whether the Republican party pos- cases. Needless to say, the Judge got sesses that capacity. Its traditions ms passes, ana, no aouDt, tne com- ana acnievements incline us to look pany continued to win its cases. there first and with the most hope The pass evil was put to sleep near- 1 But it must cast aside old leaders who ly a generation ago and its resurrec- are hold-overs from the strife of 1912 rARKXTS ARE RESPONSIBLE. The greatest task before the Nation today is the proper training of the young for citizenship. The essence of such training is development of moral character in children so that, as their minds discover more of the facts of life, they may also learn how to apply the knowledge they acquire. Recog nition of this truth caused the dis cussion in the Religious Education Convention to turn to the evils which beset the young in these days and to the means to be given them of pro tecting themselves. Religion was rightly regarded as a most valuable means to that end, but surely the com munity as a whole has a duty to per form, acting independently of, though in sympathy and co-operation with, religion. For lack of moral training, the life of the Nation is in danger of being poisoned at its source. The most critical period in a child's life is that during which it passes from childhood through adolescence to manhood and womanhood. Then its mind learns the mystery of sex. That knowledge, rightly acquired and right ly used, gives rise to the highest as pirations and the purest pleasure; wrongly acquired and wrongly used, it. leads to the deepest degradation and the direst misery. Upon the bent given to the child's thoughts and pas sjons during this period of adolescence, when the mind is in its most plastic state, hangs the decision whether it shall experience a normal, healthy de velopment upward or shall descend Into greater or less depth of mere animalism. In the days when schools were scattered, communication slight and pleasures few and simple, this instruc tion and training were imparted by the parents. Then, too, parental dis cipline was strict often too strict and parents only slightly shared con trol with agencies outside of their families. A gradual slackening of the reins of Puritan discipline followed, which was a salutary reaction from too great severity. Had the change stopped there, all might have' been well. But modern means of communi cation and greater- wealth enabled many parents to send their children to distant schools and enabled children to travel miles for an evening's en tertainment. The ban on theaters, dancing and cards was lifted; well and good, so long as the parents censored the plays their children saw, so long as the mother watched over her brood at the dances and these dances were of the harmless kind, and so long as the card games were no more exciting than a rubber of whist. But the drama became so thoroughly commercial that authors and managers rivaled one an other in crowding the borders of de cency; new dances were introduced which threw off all restraint of our mothers' sense of propriety; and no card games were worth playing un less money was starked. Girls went where they would without a chap eron, boys could no longer have fun in '"the old man's" company, and the old folks, become easygoing, abdicated. Having thus gained their independ ence, boys and girls have broadened - it and exercised it without limit. At the" same time, the need of its restric tion has steadily grown. The old style play has largely given place to the musical comedy, to the problem play, to vaudeville and finally to the moving picture. Each strove to out do the other in brevity of costume and in broad suggestiveness of lan guage. Anything goes which has any chance to get by the censor, official or unofficial. Intricate problems of sex relationship are depicted before audiences of immature youths, setting their minds to puzzling and their blood to tingling. Women try how much Of their persons they may expose on the stage without provoking police inter ference. Girls copy their stage hero ines in abbreviating their skirts and in revealing their outlines by the style of their costumes, to attract the boys, who are nothing loath. The sexes go to the extreme in physical display at bathing beaches and girls are photo graphed in bathing costumes which in former days would have driven them from decent society. This growing license and lack of parental restraint have borne their natural fruit in increase of Juvenile vice and crime. Boys copy criminal heroes of the drama and become thieves and burglars. Girls copy their heroines in dress and conduct and fall a prey to the boys' unguarded pas sions. Society in alarm organizes so cieties and establishes Juvenile courts and censorship boards to combat the evil. It has good cause for alarm, but has it struck at the root of the un healthy tree? This, after all. is the neglect of parents to train and control their chil dren. The juvenile courts, the so cieties and all other agencies for bringing erring youth back to the path of right living are used as substitutes for parental control. It is as true now as ever that parents are responsible before the law and society for the conduct of their children- The courts and the various civic agencies, by do ing the parents' duty for them, weaken their already weak sense of responsi bility. They should do their utmost to f restore and strengthen it. The Juvenile Court should punish the par ents of a delinquent child for their neglect, and no morbid sympathy for a remorseful distressed couple should stay its handTThe civic societies formed to redeem young sinners should reach over the children's heads to the par ents, who are really to blame, and should strive for the right upbringing of the young by instructing parents in their duty. The churches should not only combine moral with religious teaching for the children, but should impress the parents with their duty in this respect. It is well enough for the law to censor picture shows and bath ing suits and to forbid minors, unac crnpanied by adults, to visit these , OREGON'S ISIXrEXCE. Mr. Perkins, the Progressive, 'makes a fair enough proposal. If you will not take Roosevelt, he says in effect, let us have some other candidate, and, if he stands for Progressive principles and is able to put them through, we'll accept him. There are such candidates before the Republican convention. If the Progressives will not accept Hughes, or Cummins, or Burton, or McCall, or any one of several others, it means that they will not take anybody exoept Roosevelt. Yet they say they will. It happens that the name of Hughes is on the Oregon ballot. The others are Cummins and Burton. Here is the only state where there will be a real showing of the strength of Hughes, and i is one of a few states where the judgment of the voter as to the availability of Cummins and Burton is uninfluenced by favorite-son or sectional considerations. It is an opportunity the voter ought not to neglect, for whatever benefit the Ore gon verdict may be to the National convention. RAPPING HARRY LANK, TOO. The nasty political plot to show that somebody in Oregon and nobody much at Washington is responsible for the failure of Congress and the Federal departments to consent to th "forty- forty" division of expected land-grant money finds the usual faithful support in the Pendleton East Oregonian, al though indeed the Pendleton cuckoo concedes that there are a Senator and a Representative who might have done more for the school children. Its sum mary of the reasons why the loud call from Oregon, or the vocal part of Oregon, was not heeded Is (according to Pendleton): in MAKE THE MOST OF IT. The Oregonian takes note of the fact that Mr. McCue, who has elected to become a candidate for District At torney, has made an appeal for public sympathy because he has been "sin gled out for defeat by this paper. There are also one or two client-hunt ing and favor-seeking young lawyers vv-ho have thought that they might prejudice the voter in favor of McCue by describing Mr. Evans as "The Ore- gonian's candidate." Ah, yes. We invite the group of disappointed applicants for deputyshlps under Dis trict Attorney Evans, and all others who have for their own reasons iden tified themselves with the McCue can didacy, to make the most out of The Oregonian's declared opposition to Mr. McCue and support of Mr. Evans. Let them go ahead and bluster and fus3 about The Oregonian seeking to dic tate to the sovereign voter what he should or should not do. Let them juggle and distort and emasculate the figures about the cost of the District Attorney's office under Evans. Let them show, if they can, that he has been extravagant and careless about public expenditure. Let them promise with hand or heart and with tear in eye that the good McCue, late attor ney for Schultz, and friend at court of the old sailor boarding-house ring, will work by day and lie awake by night devising ways to enforce the law against all malefactors, including some of his late clients; yet The Ore gonian desires it known that, if all they say about the Evans indifference to economy and his lack of efficiency were true, it would still protest against the substitution of McCue for Evans; aye, if it were true, twice and thrice over which it is not. The balance would yet be in Evans' favor. How to Keep Well Br W. A. Evana. tion. should be prevented by such drastic means as may be necessary. There is no species of graft more al luring or more iniquitous. Men who could not be induced to accept a dis- and must forget old animosities which are hang-overs from that delirious year. . It must reject favoritism to any interest, pork and perversion of patronage to personal and political honest penny in cash have been known ends and must install social and in to take passes freely and to be in- dustrial justice and Governmental ef- fluenced from their sworn duty in ficiency'in their place. The former consequence. The pass must pass. vices are fatal and the latter virtues are essential to that organization of the material forces oC the Nation for the attainment of its spiritual ends. With policies shaped by the Nation's spirit, with leaders inspired by that spirit and with these forces organized as the instruments for putting these policies in effect, the American, peo ple cannot fail to rise to the great emergency. President Wilson has spoken as though service to the Nation and serv ice to humanity might part company at some point in the work which the war has set before us, but that can not be. The duty of the Nation's servants is to serve the United States, but in so doing they cannot fail to do the highest service to humanity. Believing, as do all true Americans, that American Democracy has brought 1. One Oregon Senator has not, been line on this subject. 2. One Oresron Coneressman has been out of line and talking for something entirely liberty, humanity and civilization to airrerent- I th hie-hest nArfoptinn vor nttnlnori u 3. When the Oovernor of Or,?nn of- I flcially asked by Congress to make a sue- lna-i it is Detter capame man any gestlon aa to the disposal of the a-rant'lands. Ialiea to respond. 4. Vvhen the Oregon Legislature passed its midnight resolution " Imploring the Su preme Court for a ruling favorable to the railroad company, saying nothing about the school Tuna. t. when a so-called land grant con ference held at the solicitation of the Gov ernor, failed to say a 'word in favor of lifting the grant lands to build up the school fund. The falsehoods that the Governor of Oregon "failed to respond" and that the "midnight" resolution favored the railroad company, have been repeat edly exploded. But the old adage about a lie well stuck to finds firm adherence in Pendleton. The summary otherwise will do well enough; but it is not complete. Why not add that the school children of Oregon would be generously and fair ly treated, except for: (1) Congress. (2) Secretary of the Interior. (3) Secretary of Agriculture. (4) Land Commissioner. . (5) The entire Federal bureaucracy. Why the painstaking effort to ex culpate an Administration which is completely responsible and will not deny its responsibility, and blame a Governor and a few innocent bystand ers who are not at all responsible? Except Lane and Hawley, of course. They are to be blamed, too. The sad truth seems to be that the ruling Democratic family in Oregon has kicked Lane out of bed. Some body else wants his job. other organized force of bringing them to still higher perfection, we believe that the President's duty to humanity is best performed by doing his duty to the American Nation. t A voice from Monmouth--the Her ald appears to have sounded the key note of the whole Mexican trouble. The Herald says: Didn't It ever occur to you. gentle reader. that this watchful waiting policy might have a few disadvantages? To us th actions of Mexico and Qerraany in regard to the United States are distinctly re mindful of the actions of an incorrigible pupil in school who deliberately seta about seeing how much the teacher will stand. There are some teachers with whom It is always self-evident that It does not do to menkey. A more forceful executive would not have kept this country constantly on me ragged eage or trouble. There may be limits to our pa cificism. But, so far as an impatient public can see, it is boundless. A well-known man in Portland Is dead. Kind and gentle in manner, his greeting was always that of a friend Rich and poor that he met in busi ness received alike the courteous treatment that went -with his great good humor. He lived up to the tenets of the Golden Rule and his am bition was to do a good day's work never counting the hours. He had earned his reward long before he heard the summons. The name is Maurice Barryjnore Smith. WOMKN' UNDER CANVAS. An innovation that should attract Nation-wide interest is the training camp at Chevy Chase, near Washing ton, where patriotic American women are preparing themselves to lend in telligent service to the country should the hour of National necessity ever be tolled. There is a small army of 500 of these patriots in skirts, an even larger number than has been, noted at some of the training camps rax em bryonic male warriors. Accounts agree that the women are entering into the camp work with zeal, learning just how to conduct themselves in the im portant work of succoring the wounded men from the firing line. Women have always had an impor tant part in shaping the fighting qual ities of nations. The vomen of Sparta were no less responsible for the virility of their little country than the first line fighting men. Now that the necessity for preparedness has been forced upon the country, now that an awakened citizenry is struggling with a problem that baffles ready solution, there is no more hopeful sign in these days of a poTk-barrel Congress than that of 500 women training themselves for emergency. Intelligent Red Cross work requires careful preparation. Those who en gage in it must learn discipline, self reliance and the technique of battle field nursing. Such training in time of peace is certain to save the many lives added by incompetent nursing to the toll always claimed by incompetent leadership on the firing line. Trained nurses would be able to render ef fective service in the field with very little special drilling, but If every trained nurse in the country were available the force would be inade quate for the needs of a great de fensive war. So it remains for the women to prepare themselves in large numibers, even though they do this in hope and confidence that their serv ices will never be required. The Chevy Chase camp should be repeated in every section-of the country. It is a far more valuable work than the citizens' training camps in the prac ticable possibilities that it offers. FINDING A NATION'S ROIL. The division of opinion and sent! ment now existing among the Amerl can people as to their duty in dealing with other nations is well explained by Frederick M. Davenport in the Out look with thene sentence: "The soul of the Nation is finding itself." The action of the coming party conven tions and the vote at the November election will tell whether the Nation is guided by its highest aspirations or whether it has chosen the temporarily easier but more ignoble way of facing the issues raised by the war, by Mex ico and by the Philippines. Shall we Even though everything possible has been done to satisfy the legitimate demands of labor, strikes continue In Great Britain. In March there were forty-four trade disputes involving 58,000 workers, who lost over S27.000 working days, more than three tim as many as In February. Wages of nearly 459,000 workers -were raised an aggregate of 35,200 a week. Of these 377,000 were coal miners and 18,500 machinists and shipbuilders on the Clyde. , Bishop Lawrence talks to the wrong people in urging simple living. Those who have adopted the higher mode rise to the occasion and set duty above WU nt o back, anJ those vho are ease and -luxury? Shall we prefer an in the simple class will not heed ad honorable, enduring peace which may vice from a bishop, Every man wants be won onlv bv struggle but which his son to have a better Job and every shall hand down undiminished to our mother insists her daughter shall have children our heritage of liberty and all the advantages she was denied enlightenment, or shall we choose the Those two courses knock at simplicity deceptive peace of duty shirked and honor smirched which will merely leave the problems of today to be solved at terrible cost of blood, tears and treasure by our children? The American Nation is like a man That disaster in Norfolk, Va. wherein twenty-six people died in fire in a movie house, emphasizes the admonition to sit tight and wait for the apparatus. Stampedes are deadly Questions pertinent to hygiene, aanltation and prevention of disease. If matters of gen eral Interest, will be anawered in thla col umn. Where apace will not permit or the ubject Is not suitable, letter will be per sonally answered, subject to proper limita tions and where stamped, addressed en velop is Inclosed. Dr. Kvans will not make diagnosis or prescribe for Individual dis eases. Kequests for such service cannot be answered. (Copyright. 1918, by Dr. W. A. Evans. Published by arrangement with the Chicago Tribune.) A Live Health Department. ABOUT the livest health' department operated by any city of 25,000 in this country ia that of Montclair, X. J. To read its annual report ia to find a record of s number of activities that might well be emulated, by health de partments of other cities. The follow ing were found In the report for 1915: 1. A number of cases have come to the attention of the board in which servants and nursemaids have been af flicted with tuberculosis or with vene real diseases without the knowledge of the employer, and In order that the em ployer may protect herself she now has the privilege of sending her servant to the office of the board, where, upon the payment of a fee of 3, a careful examination will be made of the serv ant. The examination will be supple mented by blood testa and by any other teats that may be deemed advisable. If the servant passes the examination she (or he) will be given a certificate of health. 2. Owners of peanut vending ma chines were required to remove the cup into which the peanuts fall. This ao tion was necessary on account of vthe dirt that accumulates in the cup and on account of the manner in which nuch cupa are handled by- children. 3. Proprietora of soda water foun tains, ice cream parlors and saloons were required to provide hot water fa cilities for washing all utensils. 4. A large amount of time was spent In the supervision of the ice cream supply of the town. The plants were rated for cleanliness on an ice cream score card and the product was exam ined bactenologically. The ice cream produced by these firms had Ice cream so pure that 100 per cent of the sam ples had a bacterial count of less than 100.00O. Kvery firm had some sample. as low as that. One hundred per cent of the samples frr-m five firms had counts lower than 500.000. I do not think there Is another city in America where, the Ice cream could make o stood a showing IComparing 1915 with 1914. we find that the ice cream in Montclair has lm proved very much in the year.) 5. All the milk sold In Montclair Is fatm tuberculin tested cows or else it i pasteurized. Forty-three per cent of the .milk sold has a bacterial count below 10.000. 2 per cent below 25,000, 86 per cent below 50.000 and 94 per cent below 100.000. The milk of two firms averaged less than 5000 bacteria for the year. Montclair of all American cities has the best-controlled milk budpIv Aa to both milk and Ice cream, tne health department gives the names, ad dressea and record for cleanliness and Bacteria of the milk dealers. Can we wonder that Montclair has a baby death rate of 65 about one-half the average rate for the country? 6. All employes of bakeries must ,-sft thorough physical examination every three montha. The cleanliness of bakeries la rated. Any citizen can get tne record or any bakery, aa ho can of his milk dealer and ice cream man. 7. The fly campaign has been vigor ously conducted. "During the latter part of Summer there waa rractlcaly no fly hreedlng In town and. with the con tinued co-operation of the stable own ers, there, should be very ?w riles town next Summer." The wort of fly suppression was directed against fly Breeding places, and especially manure Doxes. Pi who has been suddenly startled out of and modern fire-fighting efficiency has reached such degree that there is not occasion for fear. a sound sleep by an earthquake. All the lights which have hitherto guided him are out and all landmarks are destroyed. This Nation has regarded But a few years have elapsed since the affairs of other nations as things Edward C. Sammons was office boy which do not concern it except as mat- In The Oregonian editorial rooms. Now ters of curiosity. Unwilling to study he is assistant cashier of a big local them, it did not understand why na-1 bank and president of the banking tions armed and why they fought. In-I chapter. The eighth floor Is a great dulging a false sense of security from 1 training ground for the right mate its supposed isolation, it called their rial. conduct folly. Suddenly awakened by a war which I After -a wait of thirty years, that overspreads three continents, causes section of Malheur County for miles turmoil and dissension in its midst and radiating from Vale is , likely to be araws- it into acute controversy wun irrigated this year. Home of it now the belligerents, this Nation finds its is under ditch, but the greater projects isolation a delusion and feels that it will develop a small empire ot twenty is being drawn into the whirlpool in and forty-acre homes. spite of its struggle to keep out. Torn paIsing 'oct PASSES. It has been currently supposed that the iniquitous railroad pass was a thing of the past. Legislators, these days of quickened public virtue and vigilance, are supposed to travel to and from their biennial wrangling con clave equipped with regulation railway tickets purchased on mileage allow ances. Judges and other public of ficials are pictured buying full-fare tickets out of their own pockets -when traveling abroad. But the illusion has been shattered by the Interstate Com merce Commission, which appears to have something of a Missouri tem perament. The discoveries made by agents of the Commission in Southern states suggests that all communities might well look closely at the fallen monster of pass graft. Perhaps the creature is only slumbering, possum like, and prowls about with virile ac tivity when not under surveillance by an unsuspecting public. Twenty thousand passes were is sued by a single Southern road, it is recorded. This was in the good year 1913, when no one was supposed to re ceive a pass. These were not short haul passes, either, their total mileage Relative Humidity. M. M. writes: "I have aften noted your articles on relative humidity. Have been unable to learn what Is the relative humidity of 20 degrees. 40 de grees. SO degrees, 80 degrees and 100 degree!". I cannot find It in my text books. REPLY. There can be ni answer to vour Question. By relative humidity of the air we mean the dogTee of saturation with moisture. A cubic foot of air holds, at 20 degrees. 1.5 grams of moisture: at 40 decrees, a rrams: at HO de -grees. 5.8 grams: SO degrees. 10 grams; loo degrees. 10 1 grams. A relative humidity of 00 at these temperatures would mean tha the nir held at -l degrees. .7 gram; at 40 agreea. 1.0 grams: ho degrees, grams SO drgrees. 3 grams: at loo degrees, n t grams. One and five-tenths grama of water dissolved in a eublo foot of air would give relative humtditina as follows: Twenty degrees, loo per cent: 40 degrees. f0 per cent: no degrees. IT per rent: SO degrees. 13 per cent; juo degrees, s per cent. Chorea. A. B. P. writes: "Boy 13 years of age has chorea: has been circumcised: Is fidgety, but the only other outward sign is a twitching of eyes, especially when very tired or excited. 1. Is he curable? 2. Will he improve or get over this nervousness after he has passed age of puberty? 3. would you recommend glasses? 4. Is there dan ger of this eventually developing Into a bad case of St. Vitus?"" REPLY. 1 Yes. - By proper care he should ret over It mis summer. a Mis eyes should be examined. 4 Some. The rule to employ none but native- born citizens on mine-layers works a hardship on good men and citizens. The native born has no monopoly of patriotism. It was not his kind wholly Death is the alternative of accepting Mexican money at Mazatlan. Death Js also the penalty of having any money on your person In bandit-rid den Mexico. So the choice Is, not pleasant one. Think of what may come to North Portland some day. There are 40,000 employes In the Chicago stockyards district and each has just received an increase in pay. Short skirts are declared a menace to good morals. Why not follow Ber lin's example and prohibit them by ordinance? by the conflicting emotions of pro German and pro-ally, pacifist and champion of National honor and of preparedness, it seeks new leaders and new guiding lights. Those to whom it naturally looks for leadership the tnat kept this Union Intact. president ana uongress were cnosen without any view to their fitness to deal with such a crisis. The President has halted and hesitated, obsessed with the fallacies of Bryanism which he only gradually and reluctantly dis cards. His party Is much slower than he to adjust its ideas to the new sit uation. The wilful blindness to the patent facts about . them which still characterizes the great majority of its members in Congress has extended Into the Republican party, as evi denced by the votes on the warning resolution and on the Army bill. With proof all about them that our Isola tion has been destroyed 'by modern Invention and with the spectacle of weak, defenseless nations stamped out of existence by armed hosts, these provincial Congressmen ask why and against whom we should prepare for defense Our preparation to cope with the new perils which have been forced upon us by the war and which will continue to threaten us after the war must begin, as Mr. Davenport says, with "the mobilization of the spiritual reserve of the people of the United States, the revitalization of the coun try through the breaking up of the deeps of National consciousness by the impulse of the terrible war." With the allies this spiritual reserve came to the aid of their "deplorable political Itest. and industrial and military weak nesses" and formed the rock against which "Germany is beating her blind efficiency out." With the United States it must be called out first in I The strike of 500 "white wings' order to choose new leaders, to shape I makes a flutter in Chicago. new policies adapted to the changed world, and to develop and organize I Down with the short skirt! Judging by the scarcity of the pest this year, the swat-the-fly activities of recent years must be bearing re sults. - Americans are being called out of Mexico. That has been go Wig on for three years. Henry Ford is an aggressive peace candidate in seeking the Pennsylvania preference. The dog pound in Kenton! Never! Let the eaters of "dog" unite in pro- Whaleskin shoes for women Is the latest. So they can be In the swim. Pleurisy. F. W. S. writes: "I am Interested 1 your reply to A. M. about pleurisy and tuberculosis, will you please tell me f a person who had pleurisy last Spring and two months ago foun tubercle bacilli in her sputum would effect a cure sooner in a sanitarium. fclie haa now been away In a high alti tude in ermont for eix months. I which time she has gained 15 pound despite a setback from the grippe, whlcn she had two months ago. He sputum was tested when recoverln from the grippe. v REPLY. Tea, Not Advisable. Mrs. J. E. W. writes: "From, you long experience will you tell me what you think of the advisability of tu berculosis patients returning East after a residence of some years In th West? I do not mean to reside in th East but to return for a visit or for the Summer montha I have been We five yeara. My case is chronle fibroid tuberculosis, no fever, and apparently strong and well, except that I cough and expectorate yet. Do you thin that a visit home this Fummer (near Chicago) will injure me?" REPLY. Generally speaking, it Is bad judgment. have known of ecses In which tha disease lightened up during the visit. WHO WANTS HltillESf THE PEOPLE Before? Sa Strlktag: mm Kxaaaple f the Office Seekias the Mask (George Harvey In The North American lievttw.) Nobody wants Hughes nobody but the people, la not that so? You know It. We know it. They. whom we have mentioned (Barnes. Davison. Perkins, Root, Roosevelt, Arch bold. Wilson, etc) know it. Even Hughes may know it. though we have our doubts. But why la it? That ia the question. We can understand why many who are Repub licans want Root, why many who are not Republicans want Roosevelt, and why the great body of Democrats, headed by a small body of office-holders and pacifists, want Wilson.. Mr. Josgph 11. Choate, for example, after enumerating Mr. Root's excep tional qualifications and denouncing Mr. Roosevelt for having "deliberately ttempted to destroy the Republican party to gratify his own selfish alms," says: It should, aa 1 think." be regarded as a fatal drawback to Justice Hughes nomlna- un that he is a Justice of the "supreme Court, a court which must be kept forever inviolate from wllhr.ut or within. Its spot- ess ermine should never be smirched In tne muddy turmoil of politics ... To this the people say: We. too. wish to keep the Supreme Court Inviolate and in ordinary times we would not nominate a Justice for President. But there is no law against ur doing so, and we deny the validity of the precedent cited by Mr. Choate. Justice Story did not decline to become a candidate because he was member of the court- . . Nor ob- iously was such a consideration held to be binding by Justice McLean . in 1856. nor by Chief Justice Chase, who was an avowed candidate in 1S68. nor by Justice David Davis, for whom three electoral votes were cast 1S72. It is our Inalienable right at this most critical juncture in our coun- ry's progress to put at the bead of the atlon any citizen who most adequately satisfies all requlremefits. and it Is no less the bounden duty of that citizen to answer such a calf. Incidentally we re convinced that the election of Jus tice Hughes as President would be far more likely to clarify "the muddy tur moil of politics" than to bespatter the Judicial ermine. Is It quite accurate to any that no man knows what justice Hughes" iews are on this or any other of the uestions which now agitate the peo- le of the Lnited States'? Does not is work as Governor of the State of New York, hia "perfect judicial record" nd his many utterances in published documents and before constitute as omplete a portrayal as one could de ire 'for his attitude toward all funda mental questions related to popular government? More significant than these or many other utterances (which are detailed) which might be cited is the living fact f Mr. Hughes' undoubted sincerity and perfect rectitude. We, the people, care more for what a man la than for what he lays. If we know a man through and through and believe in him aa we believed In Washington, in Lincoln and Cleveland, we do not need to be in formed of hia opinion upon every sub ject that may come up. from peonage in Mexico to ruffled birds in the West ndies. We do not think Mr. Hughes is a better American than Mr. Roosevelt, but we think he is Just aa good, twice as aound and many times aa trust worthy. . . In a word and this may be taken as fact if not as law and gospel this old fashioned man holds firmly to the old- fashioned idea that the responsibilities of the Presidency are so great that it ought not to be aought and must not be declined. Never since the Republic de manded that George Washington be come ita first President haa there ap pearcd so striking an instance of the office seeking the man. . . Rightly or wrongly, wisely or not, the will of the people will prevail, and Charlea Kvan Hughes will be the next Republl can candidate for President of the United States. Hughes or Wilson? That will be all. When the lively wedding lie Chicago shall have been supplemented by the sedate funeral in St. Louis, patriotism must dictate a choice between the two. Oh Lord, save thy people! In Other Days, i Twealy.Flve Tears Aa. From Tha Oregonian of May 12. 1M1. , San Diego. Mar 11. United -States Solidltor-General Taft today received a dispatch from President Harrison di recting him to go to Lo Angeles and take charge of the Robert and Minnie case for the Government. San Francisco, May 11. The fact is no longer concealed, even in "official Naval circles, that the swift United States cruiser Charleston Is off on a hot chase after the Chilean transport Itata, which left San Diego laat Wednesday while under arrest and car rying off a deputy United States Mar shal. Ignatius Donnelly announces that within a year he will publish a book that will cause his bitterest opponents) to deny Bacon's authorship of the Shakespearean plays. The Oregon Pioneer and Historical Society of Astoria held a meeting today to arrange for the celebration in honor of the 100th anniversary of the dis covery of the Columbia by Captain Rob ert Gray. The store of Lipman & Co. will be closed today because of the death of Goeta Wolfe in Hohenxollern. Ger many. Mr. Wolfe, who lived many years in Portland, was the lather ot Adolphe and Henry G. Wolfe and Mrs. H. Metzger. Mr. Wolfe died April is at the age of SO years- Half a Century Ago. From The Oregonian of May 12. ISftd. The Oregon Centenary convention of the Methodist Church will be held In Salem on May 16. This is merely aj celebration of the one hundredth an niversary of American Methodism. Dr. Hawthorne, who is at prcser traveling in the Kast, has visited aev eral asylums, and his accounts of the i management present quite an interest! ing theme. The Washington Guards. Captai' Mills, was out on parade last evening and its membera seem to have lo: none of their energy to keep up th organisation under the militia la of the state, although the law In itsel? presents little Inducement to them. , We are informed by passengers just returned from &fan Francisco that the recent earthquakes have caused a radi cal change in the architecture ot the city's buildings. Rush Mendenhnil has announced himself as a candidate for the Pouse of Representatives of the Oregon lr islative assembly. R If. EvA Treason. PORTLAND. May 11. (To the Kd Itor.) In view of certain articles have recently read and of statements heard expressed on the street, will you kindly publish a short synopsis of what constitutes treason against the Lnlted States and the penalties therefor? LNyiiKEK. In the United States treason against the United States is defined by the Con stitution (Article 3, section 3) to con sist "only In levying war against them or In adhering to their enemies, giving aid and comfort to them." In general treason consists In attempting by overt act to overthrow the government to which the offender owes allegiance. The penalty is put, by the Constitution. in the hands of Congress. The modern penalty is death or imprisonment generally. COXCERMti WALTE W. Thornton, Whs Haa Known D trlct Attorney S3 Years, A riles. WILSO.YV1LLK. Or., May 10. (To Editor. More than 25 years ago made the acquaintance of Waller Evan?. Me as young and ambitio and a teacher in the public achools Illinois and was satisfactory to a Hia ambition to master the law led him to other fields and I lost sight of him. Ten years ago we went West to Oregon to make our home. Wo must rind a substitute for the ChicaKO Trih une and naturally took tip The Ore gonian. as 1 ani an Abraham Lincoln Republican and not ashamed of it. Mr. Kvans' portrait there allraclej our at tention. We found unaijed he had I made hia goal and was an - ', " under Mr. McCourt Then came election In Multnomah County us Pre . ssv ruling Attorney. Haa be maritv pond. He has been there long enntiirli to be tried out; it is no longer an experi ment as to ability, or honesty or ms to the supremacy of the, law. His of fice is one that deals largely with those, who respect no law and they ami tli friends are tradueers an.! againft unless he is remiss and fails a force the la-. The officer who studies bis own eat- we do not want. Mr. Kvans has com manded the respect of those he prose cuted. An inefficient officer Is dear any price. I write thla unknown to Mr. Kvans hut I feci it Is due the voter to have all the knowledge that ia possible from the disinterested witnesses as to lh: character of the one seeking their suf frage. A man self-made who ia honest and fair, who enforces the law but does not persecute, the man who is perfectly fearless In prosecuting the lawbreaker for arson, murder or lesser crimes, should command the votes of every good citizen. And 1 feel that in the future his efficiency will command a higher compliment. J. W. THORNTON. Chevy Chase Training Camp. PORTLAND. May 10. (To the Edi tor.) Will you kindly Inform me the exact purpose of the Chevy Chase girls' training camp near Washington? SUBSCRIBER. The training camp is a volunteer or ganization where patriotic American women are training preparing them selves to lend intelligent service to the country should the United States be come involved In war. The principal object sought is to teach the women how to succor the wounded and to train them to be fit for work of this kind In the field. Discipline, self-reliance and the science of battlefield nursing are taught them., PolUklag Marble. PORTLAND. Or.. May M. (To the Editor.) tl) How Is marble polished? (2) How many years la tha life of a patent In the United States' SUBSCRIBER. (1) Marble is first polished by the application of different grades of grit over the surface. It Is then rubbed with pumice stone and the final gloss la put on by an application of putty and acid. (2) Every patent contains a grant to the patentee, his heirs or assigns, for the term of 17 years. Look t p Reed Operation. Mrs. J. V. writes: "I will consider it a great favor if you will enlighten me about my troubles. I have for the last 15 years been afflicted with some nerv ous affliction. I get some kind of spasms, generally at night. I am al ways 'inconscious at the time, but the next morning 1 suffer from- a aevere headache in the back of my head. I am very nervous and have a very poor appetite. I am the mother of nine children." r.EPi.T. You. have epilepsy. Ask Tour physician as to the advisability of tbe Heed operation for your case, is there a colony for epileptics in your state? If so, consider the advisabil ity of some there. t-'ort McKlnley. JUNCTION CITY. Or.. May 10. (To the Editor.) Will you please tell me where Fot McKinley is and how should a letter be addressed to reach it? MRS. I. N. H. . Fort McKlnley is near Portland. Maine, and a letter addressed to Fort McKlnley. Portland. Me., should be properly delivered. (lueatlon In Astronomy. PORTLAND. May 10. (To the Edi tor.) According to the latest viaia. which is the second brightest star? I have seen Arcturus. Canopus. Vega, Ca pella and another, all rated as such. How many planets can we see now? Is any comet visible in the sky now? T. L. N. Canopus is given by W. F. Adams. astronomer, aa the second brightest star. Its light is estimated as being equivalent to that ot E5.000 suns. As seen from the earth Sirius is the bright est. Venus, we understand, is visible with the naked eye at this time. Wc know ot no comet visible now. Dark of the Moon. KINGS VALLEY, Or.. May 9. (To the Editor.) Wefehave The Oregonian in our schoolroom and prize It very hich ly for its current events. Now and then questions arise which we canot decide on. We have two at present. They are: 1. What time of the moon is termed 'the dark oi the moon"? 2. Could Alaska. Porto Rico and Hawaii become states? INEZ NYMAN. 1. The dark of the moon Is that period after the moon Is full, and on the decrease; particularly after the last, quarter sets in. 2. Yes. "Kirty-Konr Kerry or Flshi.- REEDSPORT. Or.. May 10. (To the Editor.) There has been a discussion in our engineering camp over the "Fifty-four Forty or Fight" slogan and campaign. Will you Inform us whether we suceeded in having the boundary set at 64-40? E. G. DiNSMORE. The boundary waa set at 49 degrees. The agreement with Great Britain was made during James K. Polk's Adminis tration. Hia party slogan wars "Fifty Four. Forty or Ficht-" Quotation Fram Longfellow, TORTLAND. May 11. (To the Ed itor.) The Information regarding quo tation asked for by Elisabeth Raker In The Oregonian May is from Longfel low's "The Masque of Pandora." Prome theus argues with Epimetheus. when the latter ays: "Whom the gods love they honor with such guests." Prome theus answers. "Whom the gods would destroy they first make mad." V. L. H. . " No. TYGH VALLEY. Or., May 10. (To the Editor.) Is Madame Sarah Bern hardt dead? If so. where and when did she die? HARPER, & HOUSEK. t "The Most Imitated Sauce" Makers of a certain well-known sauce are proud of the fact that it is the most Imitated article of that kind in the world. Tbey regard the imitations as tributes to their brand's merit yet none are "just as good" in quality. Advertising haa made the sauce's name a household word. Just as quality has made It a household favorite. These Imitations, like every other Imitation, are Injurious to well-intending cubtomers. They get an inferior article be cause they allow a storekeeper to persuade them to accept something else. It pays to ask for an advertised article by name and Insist on get ting what you ask for.