THE MORNING OREGONIAJC. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1916. Bw$nxxm PORTLAND, OKEGOX. Entered at Portland (Oregon) Postofflee as second-class mall matter. Subscription rates Invariably In advance. (By MalL) 0 Dally. Sunday Included, one year.......? "" Daily, Sunday Included, six months..... Daily, Sunday Included, three months. Dally, Sunday Included, one month. .... Daily, without Sunday, one year. ...... . Dally, without Sunday, six months Dally, without Sunday, three months... Dally, without Sunday, ono month Weekly, one year Sunday, on year ' Sunday ana "Weekly 4.35 8.23 .75 6.25 8.25 1.75 .60 1.50 2.60 8.B0 (By Carrier.) Pally, Sunday Included, one year. Daily, Sunday Included, one month How to Kemlt Send poBtofflce money order, express order or personal checK on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at sender s risk. Give postofllce address In full. Including county and state. Postaa-e Kates 12 to 18 pages. 1 cent; 18 to !S2 ptgti, -i cents; 81 to S pages. 8 cents. to to 6i pages, 4 cents; 62 to 16 pages, 6 cents; 78 to S2 pages. cents. Foreign postage, double rates. Kastern Business Office Verree Conk Iln, Brunswick Dullding, New York; Verree & Conklln, Steger building. Chicago. San Francisco representative, R. J. Bldwell, H-i Market street. rORTLAND, SATURDAY, SEPT. 16, 1916. 1 WHAT TUB MAINE VOTE INDICATES. The full significance of the Repub lican victory In Maine can only be appreciated by studying its bearings on political opinion in the country at large. It is a typical American community as to occupation and ratio of native to foreign-born, and it points which way the people incline polit ically. The vote for Senators In that state la the truest index to opinion on Na tional Issues. An average between the vote for the two candidates of each party is: Republican, 78,686: Demo cratic, 67,552. This is a gain on the vote for Representatives in 1914 of 18,868 or 30.45 per cent for the Re publicans and of 6869 or 11.3 per cent for the Democrats. By applying these percentages to the vote cast for the two parties in 1914 on National issues we can make a fair forecast of the way the states will vote on President In November. The following table shows the result of such a calculation. In general the aggregate vote for Rep resentatives is taken as a basis, as in several instances the vote for Senator was confounded with local Issues and with personalities, Oregon being an example. In a few cases where the vote on Senator is a fair test it has been adopted as a basis. This was necessary in California because party lines were obliterated by fusion in several districts. In close states like Indiana, Colorado and Nevada the vote on both Senator and Representative has been used: Gain 191 Sover Estimated vote on this basis. ltfU vote for STATS, Dem.ll Rep. Dem, t Rep. Alabama ...... Arisona ....... Arkansas California (Sen) Colorado (Rep.) Colorado (Sen.) Connecticut .... Delaware ...... Florida Georgia ...... Idaho 7,2171 8.20SI 71, 0S8 2,790 28.715. 2.91&1 4.101 1.244 H1 B2S 77.301 311.524 ll,53i' 80.0e-iill3,57 8.82I.V 2T,10l s,wso 2,S3rt! 6 979, 23.017 2,713 9,130 ..I... 36.72 I 80.U3O 4.335 1.1 SIR 42.703 58.234 Illinois 44.234 111,171 !435.6S8'6K4.1 16 Indiana (Rep). (Sen.). 81.070 Indiana Iowa . , 3U,7t4 15.6B0 68,830i303.013i205,606 B8,139!154,15424.43 87,871221.939.245,484 87, 611I20O,37 161, 129 45.126 Kansas . Kentucky Louisiana Maine . . Maryland 2.129. 4.581 6,8891 18.868 67.562 78,8 12,5S9t 29,105 123.9HU 124,691 Massachusetts .21.265 Michigan 16.9i3 67.953 2O0, 45 1.200. IBS 66.S16 16o,6.S6;284.7l 66,261 97,170,236,743 Minnesota .....I U.fcGrri Mlaslsslniil .... 4.074 40.1841 Missouri (Rep.) B5,mS 78,859 854.5i6!814,276 Missouri (Sen.) 3,207 78.273 346,780 385.829 7,948! 46,161 84.061 88.860 126,642 145,Oi9 Montana ....... NeBraska . . . . . Nevada (Rep.). Tseveda (Sen.).. New Hampshire. : New Jersey.... New Mexico.... New York North Carolina. N. Dakota (Sen) Ohio Oklahoma (Sen) Oregon Pennsylvania . . Rhode Island . . . South Caroline;. South Dakota. .. Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont ....... Virginia Washington ... "Wost Virginia. . Wlaoottsln Wyoming 14.077 12,756 007 912 2,714 8.9S8L 11.620 2.447 8.90O 10.4O6 12,826 89,2231 66.878 64,'SS 104.788,234,718 8.982 19.771 2,237 7. 250 22.0421 81.062 60.166 183,285692.61 07785.209 18.711 26,622)135.058,118,623 8.016 15.a 29.699 66.258 A4 7R1 tl J A ftn RRft n7frfi'rt ISA 18.497 22,417132,840 95.709 7.610 81.03O 74,95M82,937 40.781 165,227 401,63,707,854 1 3.9761 11.814 89.102 60.61 8.737 M 86.810 96 1 4.2H.V 1HOS9 42017 68.938 17,6631 IS. 687172. S06f 68.638 IdU.otti -Oil lyj, 4ti. li.uui! 0,900 btt.Uit-l I l,t9 1.640 11,260 15.231 68,240 6,690 7,82 64,910' 30,056 10.2ll 88.976 107.57 81166.7 7 7 12,018 82.822;118.830;i40,O14 13.148 47.277 129,694 202. 689 2,41B 6.251 28.7751 22,497 If the percentages of increase shown by Maine should be maintained In every state, Hughes will carry Cali fornia, Connecticut, Delaware. Idaho, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Maine, Mary land, .Massachusetts, Michigan, Minne acta, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hamp shire, New Jersey, New York, North Dakota, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Dakota. Utah Vermont, Washington, West Virginia and Wisconsin with a total electoral vote of 833, while Wilson will "carry Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, CJeorgia, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, North . Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia and Wyo ming, a total of 192 electoral votes. On one basis of calculation Colorado would go Democratic and on the other Republican. It is therefore omitted from both totals, this fact accounting for the six votes less than the total of 531 to be cast. As 266 are neces sary to elect, Hughes would have, without Colorado, sixty-seven more than enough and Wilson seventy-four less than enough. While the basis of estimate adopted gives Indiana to Wilson, It does so by only a few thousand, and that state Is highly debatable ground. The mar- gins in Maryland and Nevada are also small, and they may swing either way. One basis of figures gives Mis sourl to the Democrats by about 40 000, but the other gives them only 11,000, and there is good cause for a fight there. Though the Senatorial vote gives Wyoming to the Demo crats, that state is normally Repub llcan. The Maine vote shows the Repub lican party to be united and, that be. ing the case, the odds favor it and there is every reason for confidence on Its part. Yet some states are so close and new issues have brought such change in public sentiment that victory can be assured only by united, constant and well-directed effort. New York meat consumers have been awakened to the fact that they have been paying twenty-six cents and more a pound for paper supplied them in the form of wrappings for hams and bacon by certain packing-houses, which have been haled into court un der the provisions of a container clause of the general business law. The defense of the packers is that wrapping paper is not a "container' and the cases are to be tried on that issue. The aggregate importance of many small items i3 illustrated In this instance. Although no single person pays a large amount of excess, the to tal is estimated by the State Depart ment of Weights and Measures to be $5,000,000 a year. It has long been the custom of the trade to mark gross weight on products of this nature, but the laws of many states require that 13,746 9. 806 B.BSi 831.550 130,819 128.790 116,100 89.0V1 the set weight shall be stated. . --SJ single buyer la said to pay about ten cents, at meat prices, for paper cost ing: two and one-half cents or there abouts. ARE THE RAILROADS STUPID T The railroads musrt fln4 umnrhan thn urns needed to meet the advanced cost of rotherhood labor. It must be. they say. from higher freight rates. The publlo will. f course, pay the higher freight rates the consumer, the shipper and the producer. Oregonlan. Then why are the- railroads so onnosed to the, eight-hour law? If this contention Is true, why do they defy it 7 Benton County Courier. The assumption of our Socialist con temporary is, of course, that the rail roads are Indifferent as to whether freight rates are high or low. Can that be so? If It were bo, we should find, of course, that they were appro priate subjects for castlgation by every self-respecting newspaper and every thinking citizen in the country. There would be a revolt among ship pers and travelers. We should have either Government ownership as a result, or at the least a stricter and more comprehensive scheme of public control. Railroad managers are usually cred ited with intelligence of the first or der. The Socialist Courier assumes that they are both stupid and vicious. No merchant, or dealer, or broker can be indifferent to the price of his commodity. High prices, of course. restrict business, and tend to stifle It; low prices mean Increased volume, wider distribution, better satisfaction. more buyers. Transportation is a commodity. The railroad sells it. It Is preposterous to say that the sales man, as a pure matter of business, cares nothing as to what the buyer pays. The Corvallis paper attacks the rail roads because they complained about a scheme of legislation which would in evitably advance their rates. They might better be criticised if they viewed with unconcern any plan to raise rates. IGXOBLK SCHEME. The petty scheme t cast discredit upon Simon 3enson by opposing his application in count for final citizen ship papers came to an ignominious end. The witnesses who were relied upon to say something to the discredit of Mr. Benson either didn't say it, or didn't show up. Of course they didn't. Mr. Benson is by birth a Norwegian, by adoption and adaptation an Ameri can. He came to America a long time ago as a boy! His father was natural ized, which should have made young Benson a citizen, but the record was Incomplete and some years ago Mr. Benson thought it expedient to take out his first papers. The matter was neglected until lately, when he sought to procure his final papers an act accomplished after about fifty years' actual residence in the United States and after nearly fifty years' exercise of the electoral rights of an American citizen, . The ostensible ground of attack upon Mr. Benson's title to be a good and true American citizen was that he had sought to intimidate sundry public officials. The complainant who took this lofty view of the noble func tions of American citizenship was Mr. Eugene E. Smith, aided and abetted by Mr. W. S. U'Ren. This is the same Eugene E. Smith that appeared before the County Com missioners a year or two ago and pub licly threatened to fight, and Incite organized labor to fight, the proposed $1,250,000 road bond Issue unless the Commissioners would agree to a cer tain wage concession to Mr. Smith and the Interests he claimed to repre sent. The Commissioners refused to bargain for the support of Mr. Smith in this way, and he sought then to make good his threat, with conspicu ous lack of suecess. There are citizens and citizens. The man who challenges the right of an other to be a citizen ought to have a proved record of devotion to American ideals, service to American institu tions, reverence for American tradi tions and loyalty to the American flag. IMPOVERISHED FOOD. That a state of refinement too high for the good of the consumer may be reached In the preparation of food delicacies is shown as an incident of Investigations by the United States Public Health Service Into the causes and the cure of pellagra, which it has been definitely concluded is a disease of malnutrition and one than can be cured easily, provided proper atten tion is given to the diet of the sufferer. Proper food is the remedy, but the word "proper" needs especial explana tion in this connection. It has been found that the mere balancing of the ration as between the essential pro- teids, carbohydrates and fats is not sufficient. So far as mere bodily fuel may be concerned, people In a pinch can do with a poorly balanced diet for a time, due to the fact that to some extent the different nutrients can do the work of one another. But chemis try has made wonderful strides in the past few years, and among other things it has shown that certain ele ments known as "vltamlnes" are quite as important in sustaining health as are the better-known food properties In preserving life and strength. It has been demonstrated beyond serious doubt that diet deficient in organic salts rather than in the commonly called nutritive elements is the cause of pellagra, and that - restoration of these necessary salts will effect a cure. It is not commonly known that the discovery of our white bread is due to the desire of an English epicure and society man to devise a dinner for a company of friends in which all the decorations, the table service and even the food should match perfectly. Ev erything had been arranged for ex cept the bread, which in those days was made from whole wheaand con sequently was ci a. i k. ui color, aji aus trian volunteered to fill the long-felt want and succeeded in making a bread even whiter than that now In use by rejecting a large part of the grain The new bread became a favorite with the rich, and later with those in more moderate circumstances who liked to imitate the rich. Manufacturing meth ods, however, have been greatly im proved since that time, and the white loaf of today has vastly more all around food value than had the origi nal. But it is still found that polished rice Is the cause of Beri-Beri and that barley and other grains that have been too greatly refined are a menace to health if their use is per. sisted In. The average dweller In a civilized land who is earning wages sufficient for the purchase of a variety of food is in no peril from the refined foods toward which we are tending because of the fact that the organic salts he falls to get In one item of his diet are likely to be present in some other ar ticle on the bill of fare. These vita. mines are widely distributed in nature, and are present in sufficient quanti ties In many of the vegetables as well as the grains. There Is danger, how ever, to the person who habitually re stricts the variety of the things he eats, whether from poverty or other causes. It is a noteworthy fact, how ever, which is attested by physicians, that many persons who can afford to choose Jhelr own way of living fall to oultlvate taste for enough different things for their own good. Final announcement that pellagra has been placed on the list of prevent able diseases may be classed as one of the marked achievements of the present century. This is true not only because of the way It opens to stamp ing out pellagra Itself, but because of the discoveries made Incidentally to the search for Its underlying cause. Chemistry Is coming to play a greater and greater part in the comforts and conveniences, as well as the necessities, of our complex civilization. TS DOLLARS AXD CENTS. A project is under way for a first -olass trunk road through the Hood River Valley. The design is not so much to attract tourists, though that has come to be important In. Oregon, but to accommodate the producers, particularly the apple raisers. The Oregonlan has no notion of ad vising the people of Hood River to approve this particular plan, nor to reject It; but it is willing to repeat to them, and to others, that a well laid and well-built road la the best Investment a community anywhere can make. It is much struck by the Ingenious and convincing nature of the argument made by some of the advocates of the valley road plan and reproduces it elsewhere. There Is an attempt to show the average citizen who in Hood River is the apple grower in dollars and cents Just what a good road leading to his market place means to him. It Involves a direct and substantial sav ing in money, in time. In wear and tear and In comfort. If It bo permissi ble to speak of the pleasure to be de rived from a well-graded permanent highway, where In the world can more of it be had than In Hood River? TBCB FARMERS' BOYS. The Country Gentleman In a recent Issue asked some pertinent questions relating to the treatment of boys on the farm, the most Important being this: "Is your boy getting his chance?" That means the chance he is entitled to not only for his own good and the good of his parents and his home, but for the good of the community. The Country Gentleman asks other questions which It would be wise for the fathers of farm boys to ponder over, among them the following: Are yoa merely giving your boy food, olothes and shelter as the law requires or Are you training him to help himself? Does he have work that he likes because he earns praise and pockets money, or Does he merely work because you com mand himT Do you work with him or merely talk at himT Do you make him feel that he has the chance to earn more, do more and be more than you If ha will try? Times have changed greatly since the fathers of today first lived on the farm, and the boys are as quick to note these changes as the fathers. The lures of the city are stronger now and the means of reaching them are nearer at hand than ever before. So to keep the boys at home the fathers must use somewhat different tactics from those of even a generation ago. The first of these should be to make the home so pleasant that the boys will not care to seek any place that may at first glance seem more agreeable. Of course. In this the mother cuts a large figure larger even than the father but we are now talking to the fathers of the boys. The first step the father should take when his boy becomes of a discerning age should be to give the boy some living thing in the way of a farm ani mal as the boy's very own. A calf, a colt, a pig, some chickens or turkeys some living thing or things that the boy will delight in seeing grow and prosper. Many and many a boy has not only been kept on the farm and In the right path but has earned enough money from such a simple start to astonish the father arid give the boy a start in life when ready to strike out in the big world for him self more than likely on a career that will outstrip that of his father. Added to this he should have a little plot of ground, If not more than two or three square rods. He should be encouraged to plant this and then to attend to the cultivation later, and finally to reap the harvest. Any. boy worth while will thus at an early age begin to ask the whys and wherefores of riant growth, and In most cases will appeal for help to the school or college where such subjects are taught. In this way the boy will become an adept himself and In thousands of cases the result of his labors has taught the father better ways of farm ing than he ever dreamed of before. Numerous cases might be cited of boys here In the Northwest taking up on their own account and with their own calves better dairy methods, whereby the father has profited to such an extent that he has not only cast aside his old method but has made more money than before. All the boys need Is a chance to do something for themselves. The mo ment the labor Is done on his own ac count it becomes congenial it be comes play. The moment the boy gets thus deeply Interested he forgets the lure of the city, for he has tasted something far, far more lmpelllng- the lure of the home and the home farm. IMAGINARY irrSBANDS. The imagination is stirred by the possibilities of what has been de. scribed as an "extremely practical course In home economics" established In Leland Stanford University by Dr. Jessica Peixotto. To each girl in this course is assigned an imaginary hus band, with a stipulated (Imaginary) income. Her task is to furnish a home for him, feed him, care for sundry children and settle all domestic prob lems. It is not to be forgotten that in the nature of things the children are also imaginary. So, to a great extent, must be the domestic prob lems. But the purpose of the course is attained in the end, if, when the books have been balanced, the imaginary wife has come out with a balance op hand and has solved her problems to the satisfaction of her mentor. There are many advantages in pos sessing an imaginary husband. A few will suggest themselves. He will not be late to his meals., He will not smoke in the house, causing sundry odors to linger in the Imaginary lace curtains after he has gone to his im aginary work. Presumably he will wipe his feet on the mat on rainy days at any rate, there will be no mud in the imaginary house. Then he will not lose his temper and complain about the food or swear at the cat, and especially, no matter how high the bills may run, he will have no fault to find with them. The Ideal husband has been found at Stanford. He Is the Imaginary one. So the course might be extended in definitely. Why pause at food prob lems and matters of purely household economy? It Is well known that poor ly cooked meals and badly managed households are not the only causes of domestic Infelicity, although it must be admitted that they are frequent contributing factors. There Is, In our highly refined state of civilization, a good deal too much "temperament" in married life. Commonly it appears In court as "lnoompatablllty." Clearly, If married lives are to be happy ones, it will be necessary to know how to eliminate, or at least greatly to re duce, this vague but seriously dis turbing element. While the fair co-ed is studying the management of the imaginary home, why not endow her husband with some of the frailties that are common to husbands all over the world, and let her wrestle with that problem, too? It would be high ly practical; it would dovetail nicely with the course In psychology with out which ho true university Is com plete; and the girl who passed a satis factory examination would be a wife to tie to while life should last. The growing figures presented by our divorce courts, unfortunately, are not Imaginary. Learning to cook for an Imaginary husband probably will not greatly lessen the evil. The prac tical husband is far harder to please, as any wife can testify, than the Im-. aginary one. For the matter of that, the Stanford course cannot be said to be complete until it includes also a corelated course of special training for Its young men. A I.B8SON TO BE 1EARVED FROM WAR. The experience of the belligerent nations seems to suggest that the scope of the forthcoming survey of the pupils in the Oregon State School for the Blind be greatly broadened. So many otherwise able-bodied men have been blinded in action that the belligerent nations have engaged on a large scale In training them to earn their living. Many blinded soldiers are men of high education and some have genius. The purpose Is to enable all of them to exercise their faculties notwithstanding loss of sight. They have learned some occupations of which the blind would not have been thought capable. There Is a way of overcoming every handicap imposed by nature, disease or accident. Necessity has compelled the warring nations to find that way as regards not only the blind but the deaf and dumb, the armless and the legless. Europe at present affords a fruitful field for study. Oregon could not do better than provide for that study and then apply the lessons learned to the treatment of Its physi cally defective citizens. It would not be necessary that they become inmates of a state Institution or even public charges. The state, however, or some of its public-spirited citizens, could well provide far their Instruction In occupations which they are capable of following. More is to be gained than merely to make the physically afflicted self- supporting. Their happiness would be enhanced by occupation in place of helpless Idleness, and even more by the consciousness of Independence. The Chicago Judge who gave the young thief the option of a year In a reformatory or a year In the United States Army had strange ideas of the functions and duties of a soldier. It was appropriate enough that Captain Kinney, a recruiting officer, should register a vigorous protest. The Army is a body of self-respecting men, who are there for patriotic service and not for reform. The would-be recruit who confessed that he had a criminal rec ord would have small chance of ac ceptance; and, if he were by any mis chance to be taken In, he would find that his intrusion Into the company of honest men was resented. Since the day when a genius advised to "keep your eye on Pasco" and an other later entreated to "watch Taco- ma grow," the writing of slogans has been an active brain industry. New somebody is due to win a few dollars for a catchy phrase about Portland It must be the real thing to take the money. ' According to a ruling of the court. swearing by a husband Is insufficient ground for granting a decree. It may be said, however, that much depends on the man. Profanity can roll from the Hps of some men In tone and vol ume to inspire awe; from others it incites desire to use a club. The crossing of the Snake River at Old's Ferry is a historic spot In east ern Oregon. Five months ago C. C Morton sold the ferryboat and fran chise to an Ontario man for $1000 He has just bought It back for $2000 which shows there is business revival in that end of the state. Those three men at Oswego who drilled holes in the nostrils of cows that they might easier lead them with ropes are living In the wrong age. They belong to ,the time when man "belted" his mate with a club to de velop her affection. x Justifying the assertion that any kind of game can be played In Chi cago, a private bank with $50,000 of depositors' money has Just been closed with $119 cash on hand. Y Turkey Is willing to admit relief supplies from America for the Syrians, who will enjoy the cobs and shells. no doubt, when the Turk has passed the lot. Hermlston has produced a nineteen pound muskmelon and fifty-pound watermelons are grown there. That' Just Hermlston, however. These local scientists will frighten a lot of bathers away from swimming if they continue finding "bugs" in the pools. It's a wise daughter who marries the same day her mother remarries. She sidesteps the warmed-over honey moon. There will be healthy rivalry at the State Fair, with nineteen counties ex. hibitlng, to win first prize. Hanging a circus elephant for kill ing a trainer looks like a spectacle for purposes of publicity. Connie Mack can draft the best of the Beavers, and he needs them. The good news of the Congress dis aster Is that no lives were lost. Ideal weather to negotiate the Co lumbia Highway. Flour is becoming a self-rising ar tide In price. CLEANLINESS IS PUBLIC PLACES I Highway Already Suffering From Fall al- te Curb Dlsregardfnl Unmans. PORTLAND. 6epC 14. (To the Edi tor.) Laet year at the San Francisco Exposition I held an illuminating con versation with a parson seated next to ne on a bench In the lovely Court of the A area. It was at the noon hour and the plaoe was deserted. The individual, well dressed am well groomed, was engaged in peeling a banana and throwing the peelings on the floor. I entured a remonstrance: "If you were In your own oountry you would not be doing this." No." he replied calmly. would not be allowed to." and he went on casting his swine before earls. . This waa a new experience to ma. I have often wallowed in the lunch and dinner leavings or my fellow-cltlaens n our publlo plaoea. but never before had I grasped the viewpoint of the thrower of debris. Of, course, thiet is not the viewpoint of the entire lot of them. The others are people too stupid to think. The easiest thing to do la to drop things, so they follow Instinct and let gravity take its course. But the comparison of our puDllo parks with those of Europe Indicate that there la something lacking. Peo ple are the same the world over, ao the lack must be In our system of gov- rnlng such thin era. The man throw- ng down banana peelings gave me the clew. Granted that most people are pigs, la there no such thing as clvlo pride? Any person who has ever vis ited our City Park on a Monday (or any other morning) must feel that omething la wrong with a system that allows" auch an array of dlaorder and dirt on grass, benches and walks. But moat distressing la the deteriora tion apparent on the Columbia High way, still lesa than two yeara old. Last Saturday I noted the wholesale dirti ness of that most magnificent of the scenic roads of the world. Almost the entire route waa strewn with gunny sacka, newspapers, paper boxes, burnt out and burning fires (one of them blazing unattended In the high wind), melon rinds and other kinds of food. About Multnomah Falls the filth In creased, and to reach the brink of Horsetail Falls we had to wane through human filth of all klnda and watch quantltlea of newspapers eddy- ng about the basin before sinking to the bottom. At Wah-keena Falls there waa a good deal of bustle. A carpen- er or two were ereotlng a cheap uttie fountain aurmountej by the advertla- ni slogan of a local club. There waa not the excuse of necessity for thla, aa a neat drinking fountain had been set up tome time before Just acroas the road. We In the West have to learn that beauty unadorned Is adorned the most ami that cleanllnests is desirable in public places, we also must learn thai reventton is better than an attempted cure. For in nature, aa eisewnere, a oure Is usually "impossible and almost nvariably leaves a scar. (For example. the Mount Hood road to Government Camp, where after the expenditure of much time and money and the cutting of trees for a boulevard 100 feet wide, an attempt le now being made to re claim the old road.) Let ua not be slothful in regard to the Columbia Highway. Now la the time for inter ference. Let ua not "allow" vandalism. Let us organise a force to preserve tta wondrous beauty. Let these men. and women permit no cheap, tawdry monu ments, let ua maintain oners to ar rest all persona destroying parts of the scenery or throwing rubbish on It. The Highway la one of the world's masterpieces: nature naa aono ner duty the engineer and hla men did their duty let ua do ours! GENEVIEVE TBUJir-lu.l. WOMAlf GLAD SHE IS DIVORCEI! Sneaklna- From Experience, sae sT Uni Are None Too Lax. PORTLAND. Sept. 14. (To the Ed- linr No doubt the ordinary human being ought to defer most humbly when a commission of rive Disnops ana an ennoi number of clergymen and lay men of the Episcopal Church decides that no more divorced persona may oe married bv an Episcopalian clergyman. Yet, somehow, that decision, which The Oregonlan printed in its newa columns Thursday, Is not aa formidable upon analysis aa it seems. It will have an effect only on a limited nunrner 01 per sons. Is dlvoree. then, auch a terrible thing? Episcopalians are trying to make out that It Is. xne trutn is me American people believe divorce ehould be allowed where certain shameful and obnoxious conditlona of married life have arisen; and secular law, under democratic control, will continue to permit remarriage. If Episcopal clergy men will not perform the ceremony other clersrvmen or Governmental offt- ciala will be found to do so to their eternal credit be it said. If the EDiscoDallana or any other religious body think they can make divorce practically Impossible under American law or can. by Implication, cast a cloud of Infamy over the napie of a woman who haa obtained a divorce. they will live to find themselves mucn mistaken. Our divorce laws are by no means too lax. In the main they are fair and Just. Why should a woman be rnmnelled to live with a brutal or a drunken or a dissolute or an Indolent and worthless husband? Ia there any thing aacred about such a union? It la hell on earth and I apeak from bitter experience. Oh, but the children, cry the unco good people. The children are infinitely better off away from the vile Influences of a home where sus picion and quarrela and hatred and blowa are the common thing. By all means let the children's welfare be con sidered aa a primary element In ar ranging the conditlona of every divorce. Tlie law at present la In fact not neg ligent on thla very point. Let no set of men think that Amer ican women are so low-spirited, servile and Indecent as always to live with husbands whom they have ceased to love and whom all too frequently they cannot even respect. You could per haps Impose that antiquated and cruel code upon a Nation whose" women are fools and slaves. The majority of American women happen to be neither. That Is why most divorces are sought by women to maintain their self-respect and sense of decency. Let us not forget either that in nine or more states now women have the vote. They will have a voice In the making of di vorce laws. The Episcopal commission forgot to take the spirit of American womanhood Into consideration in making its recom mendations. Henc its efforts are very likely to be futile. The only real ef fect will probably be to reduce mem bership in the Episcopal church. DIVORCED AND GLAD OF IT. Ladles' Aid of Centenary Chnrcb. OREGON CITY, Or., Sept. 10. (To the Editor.) According to J. D. Lee a statement of the history of Centenary Methodist Episcopal Church, published In The Oregonlan. the Iadiea Aid so ciety was organized in 1875. The first Ladies' Aid Society waa or ganized in 1871. I have not the exact date. I waa aecretary, and have a copy of the minutes, constitution and by laws stating tht.t Mrs. Susan E. Miller, wife of Rev. J. W. Miller, pastor of East Portland ' Methodist Episcopal Church, was president, and Mrs. Jennie Kerns Williamson, -now of Oakland. Cal., wife of A. J. Williamson, member of the East Portland Methodist Episco pal Church choir, waa treasurer and one of the main leaders In organizing the first Ladies' Aid Society of the East Portland, now called Centenary Church. LOUISE GRAYDON BRADLEY. Hose for Zeppellna.' London Punch. Woman (In London garden) We al ways keep the hose ready in case of a Zeppelin raid. Visitor But aurely, my dear, it would never reach them at the height they fly. HOW TO MAKE AND SAVE MONET Good Read Means Great Gains to Pro ducer and Traveler. From a Hood River Road Circular. One million boxes of apples; 10,000 wagon loada of 100 boxea each. Every one produced at an elevation or over ISO feeet above the railroad station at Hood River. Fifty million pounds of apples and boxea All these apples and the boxea have to get down to the rail road station. Seven million pounda of boxea have to be hauled up thla hill. Say nothing of getting the boxea up the hill. It costa an average of S cents per box to get them down the hill. It costs 60,000 to haul the applea to the rail road, an average haul of .07 miles per dox; isuu.uuu to haul them from Hood River to New York. 8000 miles, an average haul of 4.3 miles per box. It ooata $.0057 per box per mile from the orchard to the railroad, by wagon $.0001 per box per mile from Hood River to marked by ralL It costa only t-1000 aa much to haul by rail aa it doea by wagon, owing to lnoreaaed quantity hauled and lack of grades. A railroad couldn't do business at any price if It had to haul Ha cars over 6 per oent grades. A 6 per cent grade la pie for a team, even though Ifa down hllL It lan't hauling the applea down hill that counts, It'a get ting back. Saving one-half the time getting 10,000 empty or half empty wagons back up the hill at a half hour savins per wagon la $2600 per year. Hard surface thla 5 per cent grade which the w a irons should have to haul over and another $2600 would be saved per year in wear and tear, aa well aa In creased time, and $6000 la low; $5000 a year would be saved In the way the fruit would keep on account of lack of bruises that come from bumps. A aavlng of $10,000 a year would nay the Interest on $176,000 of bonds to build the 6 per cent grade and hard surface It. But the Individual says: "It would not come Into my pocket. But It would, Mr. Individual. The truth la. you would save twice what your share of Interest money would be. It is not In big amounts that the saving would come. The wear and tear la not In $10 clips, but In the broken buckle, the buated tug, the looae apple rack, the new. collar pad, the nut that haa to be replaced, the hundred and one little 5 and 10-oent Items. Do you keep a cash account of your small repair bills? If you do not, you have no figures to prove otherwise. Get a little cash book and start today to keep account of the little repairs that ateal your nickels. See how soon you've got a dollar Into the bands of the repair bill. A dollar pays a lot of Interest when you come to figure your share. Why does the railroad paint the 20.- 000 gallon tank just .west of the pas senger depot every year? Figure It out. Why do they have a track walker? Why, oh why, do they keep every little detail of their system right up to the notch every minute? In order to haul apples at $.0003 per mile, that's why. And the most Important thing Is the roadbed a nil the grade. That's the starting point of a railroad. A and Hla Children Are Citizens. SHERWOOD. Or., Sept. IB. (To the Editor.) A'9 father and mother moved te the United States when A was years old, and took out full citizenship papers, A enlisted at the age of 23 years and served four years during the Civil War and la now drawing a pen slon. Doea A have to show his father"a naturalization papers In order to regis ter and vote? What Is the statua of A's children aa to citizenship? M. M. F. A Is a citizen of the United States and hla children are citizens. If his citizenship were disputed, reference to the record of his father's naturaliza tion would be proof of hla rights. Olttalnlna Patent en Washing? Machine. STANFIELD. Or.. Sept. 1J. (To the Editor.) I have a clothea washer which I made for my own use, which my friends are urging me to have pat ented. How shall I go about obtaining a patent? What should It be worth If eold outright? MRS. M. H. You should consult a patent attorney, as the requirements In the way of drawings, models, etc., are quite tech nlcal. It Is not possible to estimate the value of the machine until it la put on the market. Much depends on Its merit and more on ability to find a buyer. Wide Range of Interesting Inform ation in News and Feature Stories of The Sunday Oregonian WITAT MODERN MAN HAS THE THEWS OF SAMPSON? The day of conquest by sheer brute vip;or has slipped by in the calendar of centuries, maintains Allen Sinsheimer, special writer in the Sun day magazine of The Oreponian. Under the title, "Is Muscular Strength Going Out of Fashion?" he contrasts the doughty deeds of history with the conquests achieved by an increasing brain ca pacity. A scholarly, yet vivid, argument in narrative style. WITH FRANK G. CARPENTER IN WINTRY TAN ANA This trav eler's message from the very heart of Alaska transports the reader ' to the banks of the frost-silenced Yukon, where the little town of Tanana waits for Spring. But the happy folk of Tanana won't admit that it is really cold, and they raise Rhode Island Reds and Plymouth Rocks. The better half of bacon and eggs bring 51-50 a dozen and, in the midsummer daytime of 24 hours, chicken raisera darken the coops so the weary fowls may sleep. With pictures and anecdotal "punch." ANOTHER ALASKAN STORY Really two of them, told by women who camped with little Dan Cupid among the frozen peaks of Alaska. Romance with the snap and flash of snow-crystals in it, the patter of dog teams and the luring white mystery of the North. How a troth was plighted at a mountain top. In the Sunday maga zine section, with photographs. CniPS OF THE OLD BLOCK A feature article in the Sunday maga zine of special interest to those who place their faith in the influ ences of heredity. Children of famous artists, who followed the parental bent, are the characters in this most interesting chat by Gustav Kobbe. THE AUTUMN GIRL Concerning togs for the chic maiden who re gards the seasons as timely opportunities for smart costuming. The Autumn girl is fully aware of the advantages that are hers and the article in the Sunday magazine section depicts her in the outdoorish suits that are now. in vogue. "THIS IS THE FREAK YEAR" Consider the Hottentot. Turn then to the Sunday magazine section and consider Miss America, who has borrowed her heathen sister's nose ring at the behest of fashion. Skin stencils, tog, and natural-flower hats. Live foxes, stuffed monkeys and other whims of the feminine mode of the moment. With paragraphs and pictures for each fad. THE TEENIE WEENIES Turn over! This is the children's very own page of the Sunday magazine. These merry little people were almost made forlorn the Cook was out of cornmeal mush, they hadn't any corn! But 'twas the Dunce who saved them and filled the empty bin. They've set the stage, spread out the page and. Daddy, please begin! A Weekly Clearing House of the World's News and Progress, THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN. A newspaper that your friend3 will appreciate. Five cents. SEND IT! In Other Days. Twenty-Five Yeara Ago. From The Oreaontaa of September le, 18UL. Boston, Sept. IB Hon. Henry Cabot Lodge will be permanent chairman of the Republican convention, which opens here tomorrow. The foundatlona for the City Hall still stand, but there la no algn of life or movement about the place and there ia no prospect of any work being done on the building until next Spring. The cable cars will atart a few hours late thla morning, aa a new piece will be spliced onto the cable In order to operate the extension from H to I street. 1 Jack Dempsey, the ex-champton rold- dlewelght pugilist, who haa been making hla home In Portland alnoe his fight with Fitzslmmons, leavea tomor row night for San Franclsoo by steamer. A petition addressed to the common Council, asking that body to consider the advantages of H or G atreet aa the East Side location for the free bridge, is being circulated. A number of plckpocketa followed Forepaugh'a circus and robbed sev eral persons of amall amounts. ROUTING OF CARS TO ST. JOHNS Plea Made for Restoration of Old War Via Broadway Bridge. PORTLAND. Sept. 14. (To the Ed itor.) We, the (all-the-tlme) patrons of the St. Johns carllne. have read with much Interest the little publication is sued every little while by the Portland Railway Light & Power Company, en titled "Watts Watt." We have been Im pressed with the truthful argumenta therein presented relative to the atti tude of the public toward the company. When the jltneya threatened to mo nopolize the transportation business of our city we, the (all-the-time) patrons of the St- Johna carllne stoically atood on the atormy street and shrugged our shivering shoulders aa the Inviting jit ney passed in the direction that we de aired to go. after offering ua quick service. We loyally waited the IS minutes between trains to pay our nickel to the party whom we thought would best serve us and whom we In return should serve. We thought for a time that our loyalty waa not to go unrewarded, aa this service was Im proved by the addition of aeveral cars, but not for long, aa we were soon back to the old achedule of 18 minutes. But we were billl loyal and answered the complaints made when the routing waa changed to the railway bridge and Third street that It waa only tempo rary, made necessary by the contem plated Improvements on Broadway, and that the old routing would be resumed when the improvements were com pleted. We are now Informed, not by any direct statement or Information from the company, but from other sources, that It haa been discovered that a few of the 'Williams avenue cars can be laid off by having the St. Johna cara do lo cal work thereon, and for this reason they are not to be rerouted, but will continue to deliver their rafsengers on Third street. We are not spasmodio nor chronlo In making complaints, but believe In and expect progression and that our car aervice should be kept up to Its former standard. What we want ia that the St. Johns oars be rerouted over the Broadway bridge and street to Washington, with out local stops south of KUllngsworth avenue In the morning and evening. C. W. HOPKINS. Salutation of Letter. PORTLAND, Sept. 16. (To the Ed itor.) Kindly Inform me If It la cor rect to capitalize the "d" In "dear" when used as the second word In the salutation of a letter, e. g., "My Dear Mrs. Smith?" Some are of the opinion that the small letter Is preferable In personal correspondence and the capital in busi ness letters. Are both forms permissible regard less of the nature of the letter? READER. It Is the custom to write "My dear Mrs. Smith" in both business and social correspondence, although the pronoun la commonly omitted by business men. when the word "Dear" would be capi talized by virtue of Its position at the boainnfvjr of the phrase.