s TIIE MORNING OREGONIAN, FRIDAY, JULY 7, 1916. PORTLAND. OREGON. . Entered at Portland (Oregon) Postoffice as second-class mall matter. Subscription. Kates Invariably In advance: (By Mail. 2ally, gunday Included, one year. .. ..$8.00 Jpally, Sunday included, six month 4.23 J-'ally, Sunday included, three months... 2.23 2aily, Sunday included, one month..... ally. without Sunday, one year .- 6.00 pally, without Sunday, six months. lJaily, without Sunday, three months... l-'; I'aily, without Sunday, one month -J' J weekly, one year i.0 Kunday, one year 2-0 Sunday and Weekly, one year -5u (By Carrier.) Pally, Sunday Included, one year 8.00 Xally, Sunday included, one month..... Mow to Remit Send postoffice money order;-' express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency re at sender's risk. Give postoffice address In full, including- county and state. Pontage Rated 12 to 16 pages, 1 cent; 18 to o pases, 2 cents; 34 to 48 pages. 3 cents; f to tiO pages, 4 cents; 02 to T6 pages, cents; 78 to 82 pages, 6 cents. Foreign postage, double rates. Kantern Business Office Verree & ConV lin, Brunswick building. New York; Verree Conklin, Steger building, Chicago. San Kranclsco representative, R. J. Bidweil. 743 Market ntree. rOKTLAND, FRIDAY, JULY 7, 1916. CAUSBS OF PROSPERITY. " The following letter la typical not only of other letters which, reach The Oregonian from time to time but of many political discussions which oc cur and are likely to occur. Therefore they are answered once for all: Myrtle Creek, Or., July 4. (To the !Editor. ) In conversation, a Democratic neighbor made the assertion, that the pros perity in the East is due to the present Administration and that the output of our manufacturing plants for war supplies would not exceed 5 per cent. Also that no lumber has been shipped from the United States to European countries for war pur poses. A READER. If the Democratic Administration had caused the present prosperity, it would have 'been apparent before the war began. There had not been, such industrial depression in this country Since the panic of 1893 as there was in the fiscal year ending' June 30, 1914, during- the last nine months of "Which the Underwood tariff was in operation. During- that year our ex ports were more than $101,000,000 less and our imports over $80,000,000 more than tn the preceding- year, and the excess of exports over imports, called the favorable balance of trade, was less by $181,000,000 than during the previous year, less in fact than any year since 1910. This is proved by official statistics of the Govern ment. As to the proportion of our manu facturing output which consists of war supplies, that depends on what we call war supplies. If the term be limited to arms and ammunition, 5 per cent may be an over-estimate. But there are vast quantities of other commodi ties supplied to the armies clothing, shoes, saddles, harness, horses, mules, automobiles, beef, many other articles of food, machinery, gasoline and so forth. We have also supplied to neu tral countries many commodities which they formerly bought from belliger ents, but which they cannot now ob tain there. Commerce Department re. ports show a vast increase in our ex ports to every continent, those wJiich are outside the main field of hostil ities as well as Europe. This great foreign demand for our products is certainly due to the war, and not at all to Democratic legislation. This foreign trade has spread such prosperity at home that it has greatly increased home demand for our prod ucts also an indirect result of the war. We also buy at home many commodities which were imported from Europe in peace times another result of the war. The measure of this war prosperity is indicated by the increase in our balance of trade from $503,269,936 in the year ending May, 1914, to $2,025,934,437 in the year ending May, 1916, an increase of more than $1,500,000,000 in one year. The only Democratic legislation which can have appreciably contrib uted to our prosperity is the Federal reserve law. The main structure of that law was the work of the National Monetary Commission, composed of both Republicans and Democrats, who unanimously recommended it. The Democrats changed the machinery for operating the plan, the Republicans participated in perfecting the Demo cratic bill and with few exceptions voted for its passage. The Democrats can fairly take credit for having com pleted a work begun under a Repub lican Administration by a non-partisan body; but it is the joint work of both parties. That law has eased the mon ey market and removed danger of panic, thereby contributing to pros perity. The Federal reserve law extended temporarily the Aldrich - Vreeland emergency currency law, enacted in 1908 to relieve financial stringency. When that law was before Congress, the Democrats fought it bitterly, but when war broke out they had recourse to it for relief from the first shock. They may take credit for that action, but must give the Republicans credit for providing the remedy against their opposition. Another cause of prosperity Is the two consecutive bumper wheat crops of 1914 and 1915, both of which were sold at high prices. These were the Joint product of good weather and farmers' ind.UBtry, not of Democratic of shipping and high ocean freights have almost stopped. Pacific Coast lumber shipments to Europe. Oregon has shipped about 10,000,000 feet of spruce to Europe for use in aeroplanes and. a few cargoes of ties have been sent to Europe and to Vladivostok. DOCTOR'S PROMISE MAJXE GOOD. On the list of young women who have volunteered for service as nurses in event the United States becomes involve In war appears a name that aroused country-wid-e interest a rela tively few years ago In a far different manner. It is that of Lollta Armour, daughter of J. Ogden Armour, rich Chicagoan. It does not seem long since Miss Armour, then a child, be came the center of attraction because of her father's efforts to obtain the services of a surgeon capable of re moving the serious disability caused by a congenital bone deformityl Little Lolita Armour, it was said then, had little chance to be other than a hopeless cripple. Then there appeared a famous Austrian surgeon. Dr. Adolf Lorenz, of Vienna, who, by a mecnoa not even then wholly new, but highly developed by his own skill. gave to the little girl a promise of happy, normal life and made her sound and well. It was hailed as a remarkable achievement in "bloodless surgery," and it was noteworthy be cause at the same time it opened the door of ' hope to thousands of little cripples all over the land. Little Lolita' s ordeal was tedious and painful. She contributed not a little to its success by .her own un complaining fortitude, and by char acteristica that those who accept the doctrine of heredity will say were transmitted from a parent who had made it a rule of his life to sweep ob stacles aside. At any rate, the cure was accomplished, and how successful the efforts of the good doctor were will be attested by. the records of Miss Armour's application, now on file in Washington, to be sent to the front at the first opportunity as a Red Cross nurse. The sequel shows that the girl has a sense of Justice that is practical as well as sentimental. She is 19 now, an age when a good many girls are thinking most of the pleasures of life. She is rosy and hearty and strong, a fact made possible by the outdoor life she has lived and that would have been denied to her if tfce- great sur geon had not been found in the nick of time. A few years ago she was among the entrants at the Horse Show at Chicago, and since then she has won laurels in amateur open-air sports. It is vastly to her credit that she is dominated by ambition to pay with her own efforts for the blessing that has come to her. She proposes by kindness to others to show her thankfulness for having escaped a life of misery. In an ideal world one would accept her action as a matter of course, perhaps, but she deserves praise for having by her own initiative set a high example. BACK WIEENCB THEY CAME. In deserting the Progressive for the Democratic party Francis J. Heney has simply gone home, as have those Progressives who were formerly Re publicans. The third party men are going back whence they came. So are the Republicans who from diverse motives voted for Wilson in 1912. They were probably at least as numerous as the Democrats who flopped- to Roose velt. Hence, if the vote of 1912 is to be taken as a criterion, the com bined Taft and Roosevelt votes form the basis of Hughes", strength. In or der to win, Wilson must play upon the new issues with sufficient. skill to win over about 1,500,000 Republicans. This will require greater skill than is shown in his telegram to Mr. Heney. He begins with an explanation of his party's failure to enact a Federal Presidential primary law, which, serves only to direct attention to the com plete control of the solid South over the Democracy. He thus emphasizes the reactionary character of his party and repels any who might have been deluded by its professions of progres slvism. In view of the manner in which Hughes was nominated and of the contrast with the manner of his own nomination which it presents, .the President's allusion to "those who have tried physically to conduct and control our choices of Presidents and of policies" is particularly unfortu nate. The only disgruntled men in the Republican party today are those who tried, but whom the convention did not permit, to control its cholce.- The one man who bossed a convention and dictated a platform this year is Mr. Wilson himself. By saying- that the bosses controlled the Republican convention he attracts attention to this contrast. SENSE READ LXTO THE IAW. The text of the Washington Su preme Court decision on the prohibi tion statute of that state is not yet at hand, but apparently the law is con strued so that it is identical in one important respect with the Oregon dry statute. In Oregon, possession in the home of more than the quantity a person or head of family may import within a stated period is not unlaw ful. In Washington, it has been as sumed to he in violation of the statute. One section of the Washington law reads as follows: ; Section 22. It shall te unlawful for any person to have in his possession more than one-half gallon or two quarts of Intoxicat ing liquor other than beer, or more than twelve quarts or twenty-four pints of beer. Provided, however, that this section shall not apply to registered pharmacists or to persons keeping- alcohol to be used for me chanical purposes only. Considered alone, this section seems definitely to prohibit mere possession of a greater quantity of intoxicants than the law elsewhere permits to be imported within a twenty-day period. But the next succeeding section gives at least color of ambiguity when the two are read together. It follows: Section 23. In any prosecution for the violation of any provisions of this act it shall be com-petent to prove that any person had in his possession more than two quarts of intoxicating liquor other than beer, or more than twelve quarts tff beer, and such possession and proof thereof shall be prima facie evidence that said liquor was so held and kept for the purposes of unlawful sale or disposition. Strictly construed, the section last quoted creates a- legal fiction. Pos session toy a person in his own home of twelve quarts of beer and one quart of whisky is not in fact evidence that he keeps it there to sell. Yet the law said it was. The law either at tempted to establish an absurdity or its intent was not to reach the man who had legally imported two twenty day allotments and had failed to drink it all. The state of Washington has had much more difficulty in enforcing prohibition than has Oregon, particu larly in Seattle. It may toe that the greater nurwber of violations was due in large part to . stronger local senti ment against prohibition there than in Portland. But an unreasonably dras tic prohibition law is usually provo cative of violations. If reports are true, the number of Seattle persons-who violated the law as it was commonly construed num bered thousands. The citizen had his cache in a hole in the back yard, in a secret closet or in a dark attic. 'It is hardly conducive to good morals to provoke breaches of the law among ordinarily law-abiding citizens. Nor does Oregon's experience with pro hibition indicate that drunkenness and bootlegging are encouraged by lack of legal inhibition against posses sion in the home. ASHI-AND'S NEW SPA. The people of Ashland, who are just concluding a three-day celebration in which their neighbors have Joined with enthusiasm - that gives much promise for the future, are among the first to give practical expression to their appreciation of the possibilities of Oregon as a tourist resort. Mu nicipal action and co-operation of the citizens of Ashland and vicinity, bld fair to make possible a real departure in the development of Oregon. We who live here have known all along that these wonders existed at our doors. It is only recently that we have begun to see the importance of de veloping them, of making them known and of rendering them accessible to the people of a world outside. The Pacific Northwest, with its mountains and lakes, its rivers and springs, its wonderful scenery and Its ideal Summer weather, needs only the completing touches to whi6h reference is made to become a favorite resort for travelers from all parts of the land. California capitalized fewer real natural advantages and made, of Itself the tourist resort of America. Oregon, with more material to work with, is in a position to surpass the efforts of Its southern neighbor, and yet in no spirit of competition that seeks to tear down the one to build up the other. There is room for both. The states of the Pacific Northwest are situated on the natural route of travel. "Seeing the West" until re cently has meant to the Easterner a trip to California; soon it will be real ized that the trip is not complete un til all tle i West has been included. In the line of preparation for that day, development of Ashland's spa plays an important part. In the same spirit the Columbia Highway was con ceived and will be still further devel oped until a loop trip is made pos sible around Mount Hood; in the same j uirecuon our new roaas mrougn uie forest reserves will point. Our parks will be made more attractive and easier of access to all tourists. Our snowclad mountains lend themselves to the scheme as if made for the pur pose. Nature smiles on the plan to make the Northwest one of the chief pleasure resorts of a world seeking recreation and healing. Queen Lithia and King Sulphur: Hail to the new monarchs, appointed to rule in a new epoch for Oregon and the Northwest! Their reign, begins auspiciously and the future under the new dispensation is bright. NEW RECIPE FOR LONGEVITY. Deaths of centenarians, of which we still read occasionally, serve to re mind us that there are as many recipes for long life as there are folk who live to a good age. ' There is. for example, the case of "Grandpa" Miller, of Joplin, Mo., who was a little more than 102 years old when he died the other day, and who attributed both his extreme age and his excellent health in his later years to the fact that he never let a day go by without drinking copious drafts of sassafras tea. Reasoning by the law of asso ciation and exclusion, he was sure he. had hit on the real reason. The sassafras drinking habit was the only one that distinguished him from his neighbors who had died young; hence his conclusion. It would be & happy circumstance if it proved that "Grandpa" Miller was right, for there are few plants that grow over a wider area in the United States. From the New England states, where it appears as a. small shrub, to the south, where it becomes a tree fifty feet high, and extending far into the ' west, the sassafras lives and thrives. It has lQng been recognized for certain aromatic properties it pos sesses, but has most commonly been used rather as an adjuvant for other medicines, which it renders more ac ceptable to the stomach, than for any merit it is believed to possess on Its own. account. Both the pith and the bark of the root contain some active principles, and the chemistry of these is quite complicated, including a nar cotic that in sufficient doses may cause death. Nevertheless, it has not lately enjoyed to any considerable ex tent the confidence of the medical profession. ' Another explanation of the long life of "Grandpa" Miller is more plausible. The inf usiont of the bark prepared in the ordinary way of culinary art prob ably contained little except the aro matic principle and little if any at all of the more subtle chemical proper ties. Agreeably warm drinks, in suit able quantities, are excellent for the health, physicians say, and in this instance might have helped to pro long life, but an even more reasonable theory is found in the fact that "Grandpa" Miller does not mention having used any other drinks. Being a devotee .of- Bassafras, he probably eschewed coffee, tea and other stimu lating beverages, which fact in itself would add to the sum of the years of a man 'blessed in the first place with a good constitution and better than the average expectation of life. The moral Is plain, even without crediting sassa fras with any therapeutic properties at all. HAY ARMY LAW PXJT TO THE TEST. By mobilizing the National Guard President Wilson has given the Hay Army law the opportunity to come into operation under the most favor able conditions. . Upon becoming ef fective, that law finds the Guard al ready mustered into the Federal serv ice and in process of being recruited to war strength, but it finds the Guard officered 'by the states and a lawsuit in one state about appointment of an officer. It gives the President power to appoint new officers upon taking the militia into Federal service, but there Is such utter lack of new mate rial for officers that he must make the best of the state appointees until he can sift out the incompetents and undesirables and discover better men as substitutes for them. By providing that, upon being taken Into the Federal service, the militia should become subject to volunteer army regulations,, be organized like the regular Army and be officered by the President, Congress betrayed its lack of confidence in the National Guard as an efficient military body. That is the plain inference from its provision that no sooner are the citi zen soldiers called into service than their existing organization shall be abandoned. That Congress Judged rightly is shown by the opinion of the War Col lege and by the experience of Canada. The War College holds that 12 months' intensive training is the minimum to prepare troops for war service, but the National Guard is to have only 4 8 drills a year and is to attend such annual maneuvers as the President directs. The Canadian militia, after more thorough training and isfter sev eral months drill at- Val Cartier, underwent bIx months' intensive train ing in England before being sent to the front. In case of invasion, our Guardsmen would be under fire long before any such period had passed, if they were the second line of defense. Further evidence to the same effect is afforded by the fact that the units now assembling on the border are composed half of only partially trained men and the other half of raw re cruits. If they should be needed for a campaign in Mexico, they would be needed very promptly to reinforce our meager regular Army, but would not be prepared for several months at least. Meanwhile we should have to rely solely on the regular Army, which is inferior in numbers to that of Car- ranza, though doubtless superior in every other respect except experience in actual warfare. The Hay law seeks, to remove these defects by prescribing the organization and discipline of the militia and by making Federal pay conditional upon the state soldiers' meeting these re quirements, but the states will appoint the officers and will retain authority over training. As Henry Brecken- ridge, wno was Mr, Garrison's Assist ant Secretary of War, .says: I The President la lime of ce cannot give one legitimate order to a member of the state militia. Thf reply may -be that, if the state troops do not take the Federal medi cine, the War Department will stop their pay. But would it. and if it did. would Congress sustain it? The Nation al Guard has proyed powerful enough to control the action of the House mili tary committee and of the House itself, and to bring the Senate to accept the House terms. What reason have we to believe that it would not also be able to Induce Congress to override any executive . officer who attempted to penalize any state for not living up to the terms laid down by Congress? If experience under the Dick law is any guide, we have small reason. Under that law between $7,000,000 and $8,000,000 a year, are disbursed among the ViUItla. but in 1915 564 officers and 19,382 men were absent from the annual inspection, during 1914 an av erage of 63,201 - men, or nearly half the entire strength, was absent from each weekly drill, and there is a short age of $1,352,761 in property fur nished by the Government to the Guard. Having provided a second line of land defense which, from its nature. cannot be ready for the field for sev eral months at best. Congress should have taken all the more pains to pro vide a first line adequate to withstand an invading army until the second line could aid it. It has provided a regular Army with a maximum paper strength of 175.000 men, but, according to the Adjutant-General, with a maximum possible strength of 150,000 men un der our present system of voluntary enlistment. To this would be added a reserve the strength of which would be contingent on success in recruiting the maximum with, the colors. The total trained force available would certainly fall short of the 500,000 men which the War College considers necessary to cope with the invading force that could be landed in less than a month. Only a naval victory assur ing the United States control of the sea could prevent this Invasion. The Hay law also permits repetition of the mistake which was made at the outbreak of both the Mexican and Civil wars competition for recruits between the regular Army and the militia. While the regulars are striv ing to gather in the additional 20,000 men authorized by Congress, the Na tional Guard seeks men to bring it to war strength and volunteer organiza tions enter the same market. Com mon sense dictates that the first line be filled up before the second line calls for men and that new organiza tions stay out of the field until all the men needed for active service have been obtained. The Democratic party's sincerity in the cause of preparedness Is disproved by its acts. As with every other vital need of the Nation, it is profuse with promises but niggardly in performance. Women have gained an Important victory in Germany in obtaining ap pointment to a nutrition committee, the duties of which are to harmonize the food resources of the nation with the needs of its people. English writ, ers on the subject, despite the tradi tional attitude of the British public as to woman's proper sphere, are dis posed frankly to give credit to their enemy for having, taken a wise step, and there is an increasing demand that England shall take similar ac tion. Women do know the needs of the home, and there is no better time than when the men of the country are engaged in the actual fighting for them to devote their attention to so lution of the important food problem. Excessive prices in one locality for commodities which are being wasted in another only a few miles away are of common occurrence. The long training of women in domestic econ omy and their natural ability to make much of little when the family larder Is concerned fit them especially for the new task. Massachusetts is just beginning to realize the peril of permitting out worn laws to remain on the statute books. Efforts have been made re cently to revive and put into effect some of the so-called "blue laws" which, were enacted so many years ago that most of them had been forgotten. Investigation has been made recently and it has been discovered that among other things it is Unlawful in the Bay State to go to the postoffice on Sun. day to get a business letter, to repair or clean an automobile, to work in the home garden, to get a shine, to hire a horse at a livery stable or to post up or audit a set of books. These are only a few of the acts that would subject a Massachusetts man to prose cution if the law were enforced. Sprin kling the lawn" is another illegal act. So is the taking of a photograph, if prints are subsequently sold from the negative. The average citizen of ev eryday probity and good' intentions probably violates the Massachusetts law a dozen times every Sunday. In view of the announcement by Francis J. Heney that he has shifted his unfaltering support to President Wilson, it -'will be remembered that Francis J. was originally a Democrat, without trimmings. It was in the parlous days of 1912 that he became one of the chief tongue-sluggers for the Progressive party. His home coming to the faith of his earlier days is in line with the retrocession set forth in Thanatopsls: Earth that nourished thee shall claim Thy growth to e resolved to Earth again. That holiday for the police force is a long time coming. Better make it two days, for the men earned them, and the city is now on its good be havior. Prospects no sooner seem favorable for settling all differences of opinion between Wilson and Car ran za than that pesky Villa bobs up again. The Turks took Kermanshah, but if they left the rugs undisturbed for sale In this country they are welcome to the rest. There is a chance for possible war brides to help fill the ranks of the Third Oregon by a little persuasive en. deavor. Washington citizens, too, will have opportunity to vote on the proposition to make and sell "Just beer." What will Southern Pacific track men do with all the money? They are getting $2 a day now. "Social Insurance" may be a cure of poverty, but the real remedy is a Bteady Job and thrift. It was hers to dispose of and Hetty Green's will keeps the money in the family. ' The length of the khaki skirt should depend on. the age of $h wearer. How to Keep Well. By Dr. W. A. Evans. Questions pertinent to hygiene, sanitation and prevention of disease, if matters of gen eral interest, will be answered in this col umn. Where space will not permit or the subject is not suitable, letter will be per sonally answered, subject to proper limita tions and where stamped addressed en velope la inclosed. Dr. Evans will not make diagnosis or prescribe for Individual dis eases. Requests for such service cannot be answered. (Copyright. 1916. by Dr. W. A. Evmi Published by arrangement with the Chicago Tribune.) Migraine. 'A BOT of 15 complains of frequent XX headaches. He wakes up in the morning with a heavy, loggy feeling. Before noon he had developed a head ache. He goes to bed at night and sleeps his headache off. Upon inquiry we learn that he has been having head aches since he was eight' years old He has migraine. The headaches of childhood are migrainous, practically all of them. A young woman has periodic head aches. Upon inquiry it is found that headaches run in her family. Her mother had sick headaches until she was 60 years of age. Her uncles and aunts were subject to headaches. It was in. the family of the grandparents. This young woman's headaches are probably due to migraine. Migraine runs In the stock. It is a form, and the only form, of inherited headaches. A woman in the prime 'of life is sub ject to sick headaches. About every so often she must go to bed for a head ache. The headache is likely to last three days. Nausea and vomiting are prominent In the sickness and in con sequence she calls the spells sick head ache. Perhaps, Instead -of nausea, she has flashes of light which make her think her headache comes from her eyes. Perhaps the spells have some relation to menstruation and she calls her attack the menstrual headache. . She has migraine. A few years ago a correspondent grew quite excited about migraine. The word migraine meant that only half of the brain was affected. In migraine he contended the pain was limited to one sideof the head, etc. Patrick says: "The location of the pain has nothing to do with the diag nosis of migraine, although it has been called hemicrania," Then on what is the diagnosis to be based? Migraine runs in the family. It starts in youth. It comes in spells with some tendency to periodicity. It is disabling. The "feelings" of no other headache are similar to those of migraine. Can anything be done for It? Yes. Shall headache mixtures be taken? No. Every person subject to migraine soon learns that headache mixtures do not get him anywhere. They Increase the frequency of the attacks. A mi graine subject learns after a few ex periences that coal tar headache medi cines d not even give relief. . For the relief of the pain Kellogg advises hot and cold to the back of the neck and cold to the forehead or top of the head. If the face is pale use hot applications. If flushed, cold ones. If the person subject to migraine will lead a simple, out-of-doors life, getting plenty of exercise and fresh air; will eat lightly and simply and keep his bowels in order, he will ma terially lessen his trouble. The best physicians are now using thyroid extract, ovarian extract, or other appropriate ductless gland medi cation in these cases. But that is a matter for the physician. Stopped Grewlai. , E. A. W. writes: "1. What is the cor rect weight and height of a 19-yar-old boy? My height is 5 feet. 6 Inches and weight 137 pounds, not stripped. "2. At what age does growth cease? "3. I haven't grown for the last three years. Does that indicate I will not grow any more? "4. What can stimulate an Increase in my height and weight, especially the fornier, since on It would depend a cor responding increase in weight? "5. Is there a possibility of me grow ing after a three-year standstill? REPLf, X. Tou are of a very rood height. Taking all boys of your aire and grouping; them in hundreds, 25 would be shorter than you and 70 taller. In a similar weight grouping 40 would be lighter and SO would be heavier. This on the authority of Dr. MacMlllan. ot the Chicago Board of Education. 2. Usually until the 20th year. Some boys grow slowly In height until they are 24. 3 and 4. It is very unusual for a boy to stop growing at 16. If you were stunted from Insufficient food. Improper food for example, too much corn bread, too little fresh milk or meat you may start growing again. Otherwise you will not. 4. Plenty of milk, butter, eggs, meat, wheat bread. - X-IUy Treatment. U. B. writes: 'Are repeated X-ray pictures dangerous? I have had pic tures taken of all'my teeth twice, which shows them in very bad condi tion, and It will be necessary to have the teeth X-rayed again as they are being treated." REPLY. Not if It is done properly. Twins. Anxious wife writes: "Is it true that If twin boys both were married Just one of them could have children, or is it possible for both to have children?" REPLY. Both. President Cannot Declare War. BROOjKINGS. Or.. July 6. (To the Editor.) (1) Can the President declare war. except with the advice and con sent of Congress? (2) Suppose Con gress is not in session at the time of a crisis, what then? JOH.V F. CHRISTAL. (1) Congress alone is empowered by the Constitution to declare war. (2) The President could call a special ses sion. N World's Population l.G2S,SIM),000. PORTLAND. July 6. (To the Editor.) (1 What Is the population of -the world? (2) Who is considered the rich est man in the United State? JAMES N. RITCHIE. 1 The National Geographical Society estimates the population of the world as 1,628.890.000. (2) Probably John D. Rockefeller. Cat's Owner Wanted. PORTLAND, July 6. (To the Edi tor.) Please help me in finding the owner of a large cat which came to us. He Is somebody's pet and he is lonesome. I advertised him in the pa per. I cannot keep him. as I have one. Please help me as you did a friend to find his home. MRS. DAVEY. 144S Lenore Street. Bayer Not Subject to Special Tax. PORTLAND. July 6. (To the Edi tor.) Is an individual who purchases mortgages and notes for his own In vestment and not for sale subject to any special tax by the United States Government? B. F. WALLING. The individual would not be subject to tax in his capacity as investor. BUIle Burke's Addreaa. WASHTUCNA. Wash.. July 4. (To the Editor.) What is the address of Billle Burke or her mother? W. Care of George Kline, New York Life building, Chicago, ' Sl'MMlfOF MOOT HOOD SOT GOAL Auto Ascent Merely for Record Achieve ment Sa-ya Mr. Dots. PORTLAND. July 6. (To the Editor.) Would Frank Branch Riley, president of the Mazamas, have us infer from his spirited communication published in yesterday's Oregonian that the Maza mas are jealous because sua automobile has, with the aid of at few latticed boards placed by eight men. climbed more than three-fourths up the south side of Mount Hood, under the power of its own engine? He complains that this record-break ing accomplishment belittles Mount Hood. Perhaps it does belittle the boasted feats of the Mazamas, but how does it belittle the mountain? How many people are attracted to Oregon because they understand Mount Hood is hard to climb? Does the fact that it is accessible detract from Its beauty or injure its reputation as scenery? Do the people of Oregon advertise the Columbia River Highway as inac cessible and hard to climb? No; we advertise "pavement and no grades to exceed 4 per cent." Would Mr. Riley preserve the crags along the Columbia Kiver tor climbers and bar the auto mobile? At the instance of the public SDirited citisens of Oregon and the state's Rep resentatives In Congress the Federal Qovernment is about to build a perma nent road along the east shoulder of Mount Hood thus making a loop trip around the mountain possible. Are all loyal Oregonlans rejoicing over this be cause they feel that automobiles should stay away from Mount Hood? Mr. Riley frets lest Mounnt Hood might be classed in the same division with Pike's Peak, which he says it is possible to ascend by trarocar. motor or donkey. Can he deny that Pike's Peak is perhaps better advertised than any other mountain In the country and tnat it has given Colorado favorable and-wholesome publicity worth a tre mendous sum of money? Two moving-picture concerns of Na tion-wide importance sent photograph ers to catch the partial ascent of Mount Hood by automobile and as a result countless thousands of moving picture fans throughout the country will learn of Mount Hood for the first time. Un doubtedly this representation of Ore gon's mountain in the "movie" weeklies will do Oregon and Mount Hood more good than all the Mazama ascents past, present and future. But why should Mr. Riley rush into print and complain about the matter? Let him save his breath for other mountain climbs. Mr. Riley contends that no automo bile can climb to the top of Mount Hood or to the moon, intending to drop the Inference, no doubt, that Mafcamas ascend to the moon quite often. We never at any time presumed to reach the pinnacle of Mount Hood by auto mobile. We merely wanted to -ascend farther than any automobile had reached or probably will ever reach and we succeeded. All the moving pictures and articles describing the feat illustrate that Mount Hood is a far tougher nut to crack than Pike's Peak and that the Mazamas are really en titled to some credit after all for get ting there on foot. Which is nearer "childlike fancy" to drive an automobile higher than any other car has ascended on Mount Hood, or to -climb there on foot by the aid of "Ice axes, life ropes and profes sional "guides"? We drove our car on its own power, to a point within 1300 feet elevation of Crater Rock, which is miles farther than Mr. Riley claims it is possible to drive an automobile. The exact spot is to be officially -marked by a bronze tablet. W. B. DO AN. President and treasurer, Paige Motor Sales Company. STOKIKS OK THE LOST ATLANTIS Translation of Reputed Account of Disaster iuoted by Writer. ASI1LAXD, Or., July 5. (To the Ed itor.) Your interesting editorial on the lost Atlantis is entirely correct. Some day such theories will be estab lished history. There is a submarine tableland ex tending the entire distance from the Gulf to the African shore and the Azores. This is why the Gulf Stream runs as it does. Following the deeper channel, its spread is increased because the ocean's depth obviates the drag on the bottom, whereas if the stream went' straight ahead It would break itself up. After the submergence of Atlantis the land was an impassable bog for centuries. Here is one of the records of that event, written apparently between the time of Moses and that of Christ. There certainly was no collusion with Egypt or Greece: In the year 6 Kan, on the 11th Muluc. In the month Zac. there occurred terrible earthquakes, which continued without inter ruption until the 13th Chucn. The country of the hills of mud, the land of Mu. was sacrificed; being twice upheaved, it sud denly disappeared during the night, the basin being continually shaken by volcanic forces. Being confined, these caused the land to sink and to rise several times and in various places. At last the surface gave way, and ten countries were torn asunder and scattered. Unable to withstand the forco of the convulsions, they sank with their 64. 000.000 of inhabitants 8060 years before the writing of this book. I am not the author of this trans lation. If you should happen to go to the city of Xochicalco, about 65 miles south of Mexico City, you will find a pyramid built by survivors of that lost continent, who were living on the western edge at the time, and succeed ed in making good their escape. On one Bide of "this pyramid they carved the statement that it was erected to commemorate their escape, and the ad dltional statement that It was a copy of the great pyramid that stood in the middle of Atlantis. It corresponds pre cisely with Plato's description of the latter. When the continent submerged "six fertile lands came up' in Cuba and lour Islands in the Carlbbees. "Atlantis" is not Greek, It is Na hault. from Atl (between) and Tlan tthe seas). We must not let the Europeans twit us about our country being young. It is not- it is old, old. old. R. D. RILEY. - China's Cheap Nobility. After the re-establishment of the monarchy Chinese Emperors will re ceive $12,000 gold as an annual allow ance granted because of their rank. This decision has Just been reached by the government, and a mandate setting it fortn is to De issued tn a few days. Princes will each receive $8000 trold annually. The allowance for a Duke will be 14800. Marquises of the first, second and third classes will receive $4000. $3200. $2400. respectively. The allowance to a first-class Earl will be $2400. An Earl of the second class will receive $1500 and one of the third will be paid only $1200, and so on through the lower ranks. The late Yuan Shi Kal Issued a mandate addressing the son of" the murdered Admiral Tseng Ju-cheng as Marquis, and ordered the young man to report to Pekln for serv ice on the bodyguard. When Guardsmen tin Hat. M'MINNVILLE. Or., July 5. (To the Editor.) The Oregon National Guard boys who have taken their sec ond oath think It is only to finish the unexpired term as guardsmen. Are they now bound for further service of three more years? We have heard this from several -sources and know this oath was explained to the boys as being only the portion of their un expired term of service. , LEAM SMITH. They are held only for the unexpired term of enlistment in the National Guard. In Other Days. Tweitj.re Years Aao. From The Oregonian July 7. 1S91. The consolidation charter went into effect yesterday at -noon, and the olH clals of the consolidated city took of- nce. Auditor Branch, received the Keys and records from Mr. Matthews: W. S. Chapman shook hands and turned the street department over -to D. W. Taylor ana Mr. Hurlburt was inducted Into office as Surveyor. City Assessor Flower displaced no one. At 12:43 Mayor Mason took his seat. Galveston. Tex.. has Just gone through the most disastrous storm that has occurred there for years. Sing Sing. Slocum Smller. Wood and Jugiro were electrocuted at Sing Sing between 4:4 2 and 6:06 the morning of July 6. The property ot the late William Beck, ex-president of the Willamette Bridge Company, was sold at auction yesterday. The total amount realized was more than $(8,000. Miss. Charlotte Nichols, of Empire City, killed a bear near there the other day. The second day of the First Regi ment at Camp Gibbon was one of work for everybody. Drill, began at 8:30 o'clock: under the command of Captain Beebe. German ladies, it Is understood, are about to make a demand to be allowed to wear the divided skirt- Half a Century Age. From The Oregonian July 1, 1866. H. M. McNary and R- Deal have pub lished some interesting and valuable information concerning the condition of the roads from White Bluff to Hang man Creek and on into the Fend d'Oreille country and into the Colville country, in Washington. They report the roads satisfactory for freighters and other travelers. The Stockton Independent says of the Oregon election: "The Oregon election inspires us with hope such as we have not felt in months." Work is progressing on the new quarts mills at the Dardanelles. William Squires started the Tilla mook weekly mail July 2. The route begins on this side at Lafayette. The Hudson's Bay Company are at work in the endeavor to substantiate the claims which they have brought against the United States for damages alleged to have been sustained by them In their business in Oregon through the interference of our people with the. rights that were guaranteed them by the treaty of 1846. Their claims amount to $3,000,000. ' The annual fire In the woods east of the city began yesterday id black clouds of smoke rolled over us all day. Mr. Minto, of Marion County, this year sheared a buck IS months old. ob taining a fleece of 18 pounds. T. L. Da vidson obtained a 17Vi-pound fleece. PARTY HARMOXY COMES KIR ST Republican Deprecates Raking Over Old Coals ot 1913 Convention. PORTLAND. July 6. (To the Edi tor.) In The Oregonian there appears a letter relative to the lone Oregon Progreesaive v who is advertising his Intention to support Wilson. As a Re publican wishing to see party harmony I desire respectfully to protest against the spirit of the article. . In any event It serves to magnify an incident that is of no interest to the general public, and to give desired notoriety to the ; man who poses as being so much more patriotic than his late associates. No good can possibly result from raking over the old coals of the 1912 convention, and the great army of Re publicans who followed the standard of President Taft and who are Just an sincere champions of clean and pro gressive politics as those who differed with them bitterly resent the gratui tous attacks that are made upon them. The great mass of both wings of the party want harmony. Both wings have been charged with using the steam roller and with being subservent to the bosses. Isn't it about time to bury these old animosities and tor one side to stop ranting about "steam rollers" and "standpatters." and for the other to "let up" on "Teddy toadies" and "hare-brained enthusiasts"? Epithets are not arguments, and the people have had a surfeit of them. In St- Louis the bosses all supported Wilson, who was himself the party boss. The Chicago convention was a people's convention, but even some of the bosses were for Hughes, while. Perkins and Lodge were for Roosevelt, and even Penrose was keen to go to his support. In Oregon Cummins was the choice of friends of Colonel Roose velt, but a great majority of the voters accepted Hughes in preference to either Cummins, Burton or Roosevelt. In Chicago the people, speaking througli the convention, were overwhelmingly for Hughes over any other candidate. Now that they have spoken and since all of the great leaden of both Re publican factions . from Roosevelt and Taft down have lined up In support of the ticket, what good does It do for either faction to be continually re minding the other that It has a monop oly of all the patriotism and political virtue of the country? If we are to have harmony let us have It. . REPUBLICAN. AITOISTS SHOULD DIM LIGHTS Objector Says California Has Law and. Enforce It. PORTLAND. July 5. (To the Edi tor.) I have been greatly . surprised since coming to Portland by noticing In the dally papers accounts of acci dents on the roads near Portland, caused by drivers of automobiles not using any sort of a device to kill the glare of the headlights of their ma chines. Is it possible that the state has not made provision in the motorcar regulations for mitigating the danger of night driving from this source? In California all machines are re quired by law to have a shield or other device to do away with the blinding rays that ordinarily shine into the eyes of a driver of a car coming from the opposite direction. What is more im portant is the fact that the law Is en forced to the letter. Every motorcar is equipped with some sort of device to prevent the dangerous glare. There are any number of contrivances on the market which will eliminate the danger of blinding the drivers of meeting cars at night, and at the same time do not hinder the effective light ing of the roadway. The writer believes that If some of vour City Commissioners could be in terested in subjects such as this, in stead of such things as what consti tutes "impure literature." the "mystery of the missing wood" and other pa thetic matters, that they would come nearer to performing the duties of the offices to which they were elected than they are now doing. T. HOWARD VARNEY-. There is a Portland ordinance re quiring the dimming of too brilliant automobile headlights and efforts are made to enforce It. Difficulty has been experienced in obtaining a standard of brilliancy beyond which the autoist should not go. and this has hampered officials in their work. .