TlTE MORNTTG OREGOXIAIf, WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 20, 1916. fOBTLA3IDt OKEXHKt. '-entered at Portland (Oregon) Poatofflee aa second-class mail matter. Bubsorlptloa ratee-Invarlably advance. (By Mall.) pally. Bnoday Included, on year. .. ....$8,00 pally, Sunday included, aiz montha,... 4.25 Pally, Sunday Included, three monchi.. 3.25 lily, Sunday included, one month.. .75 pally, without Sunday, one year 0 25 Ually, without Sunday, six months 8.25 Xally, without Sunday, three month!.. . 1.75 Pally, without Sunday, one month 60 weekly, one year....... l.&o Eunday, on year.... 2.50 fcuuday and weekly. a. 60 (By Carrier.) pally. Sunday Included, one year 8.00 Dally, 0unday Included, one month..... .75 How te Remit Send Postofflce money . order, express order or personal check on your local bank, titamps, coin or currency are at sender's risk. Give postofflce address la full. Including county and state. Postaere Rates 12 to 19 pases. 1 cent; 18 to 82 pages, 2 cents; 84 to 48 pages, a cents; 60 to 6t pages, 4 cents; t!2 to 76 pages, cents; 73 to 82 pages, 6 cents. Foreign postage, double rates. Esrters Business Office Verree Conk lin. Brunswick building. New York; Verree : & Con kiln, gteger building, Chicago. Kan ranclsco representative, K. J. .Bidwell, 742 . Market street. PORTIAN'L), WEDNESDAY, SEPT. SO, 1916 OVIt RETALIATION POLICY, The main difference In principle be . tween the allied and German methods of injury to each other's trade is that the former has shown respect for hu man life, -while the latter did not do 'so until an American ultimatum brought about a change. Both claim, the right to place their own construc tion on international law. Both main tain that military necessity is superior to neutral rights. There being no tribunal authorized to lay down the law to them or capable of enforcing respect for its own construction of the law, neutral nations have no recourse except to retaliate upon the commerce . of the offending nations. War upon ' all offenders is Impracticable while . they are engaged in war with each other, and war upon any one group of ' offenders would enroll the injured neutral nation on the side of the other group. Commercial retaliation re mains the only means available of en- forcing respect for neutral rights. To this Congress has authorized the Presi dent to resort. Under the leadership of Great Brlt , aln the allies have adopted several hostile measures against Germany which the United States holds to be unlawful. The blockade of German Baltic ports being Ineffective as against Scandinavian nations, we maintain that it Is ineffective as against neutral nations. Limitation of Imports to those nations to their do mestic needs as prevailing before the . war, in order to prevent re-exports to ' Germany, is an aggravation of that Illegality. A further aggravation is , the limitation of imports of European neutrals to certain agencies such as the Netherlands Overseas Trust, which contracts to permit no re-exports to Germany. It is a practical invasion of neutral sovereignty. This Invasion extends to the United States, for im ports of wool from British territory to American ports are permitted only to a combination of textile manufac turers. Still more arbitrary is the prohibition of trade with certain American firms alleged to be con trolled by Germans, to be using their neutral status as a means of evading the blockade and to be adding to Ger many's financial resources. The right ;of a belligerent to prevent trade be- . tween its subjects and its enemies is not denied, but it has no right to pre vent trade between two neutrals on its mere assertion that one of the parties is in fact an enemy. Restriction of use of allied ships to certain commodities and prohibition or limitation of carriage by sea of other commodities is defensible on the ground that a Nation may control its own ships and that when war has rendered the supply of tonnage insuf ficient for normal commerce, it may designate for carriage those com modities which are necessary to war . and its own sustenance. But exercise of this power is open to grave abuse and should not be permitted by neu trals without consideration for their commerce. Right of a belligerent to search mails for contraband of war is con ceded by International law, but until the present war private correspond ence was exempted by special agree ment between nations, and great laxity was shown In exercising the right. It was held that the possible injury which might result was too slight to justify the labor of search and the Irritation which might be provoked among neutrals. But in this war the mails have been extensively used by both parties for purposes of propa ganda and espionage, the extension of parcel past has caused large quanti ties of contraband to be sent from neutral countries to Germany by mail, and business with Germany has been kept alive. Hence the allies are exer cising the full rights which had lain dormant. The complaint is that they have gone far beyond their rights by delaying business correspondence, by revealing business secrets to their own people who compete with neutral firms, by actually destroying letters, by confiscating printed matter and preventing transmission of news let- ' ters or altering their text. In fact, the allies have established a censor ship over all Intercourse by mail anions: all nations and to that extent have assumed sovereignty over the world. The allies deny avoidable delay or destruction of correspondence, but they admit seizure of letters written for purposes of espionage, of mer chandise and of seditious and inflam matory literature designed to promote uprisings. They say that information obtained from business correspondence Is used "for the sole purpose of guld ' ing the action of the government in the conduct of the war," but that "honest business and trade secrets" are safe in their hands. They- defend censorship of press dispatches on the ground that they are "German lies" designed to poison the mind against the allies. That- last plea shows the length to which the allies are going in censor ing what the world shall read. They are free to contradict the so-called "German lies," but they deny neutrals the opportunity to read the German side of the case, while they proclaim their own case by Industrious prop aganda. They have undertaken to say what Americans shall or shall not read about the war. When they usurp such power, what value can we at tach to their assurances that the cen sorship does not Invade our rights in other respects, or that the blockade ..does not far exceed their lawful au thority? In order to force the allies to bring their action within international law. the President has been given author ity to deny the use of United States mails, express, telegraph, wireless and cable facilities to any offending na tion; to deny clearance to vessels which give undue advantage to any persons or descriptions of traffic, or yhlch discriminate between classes of traffic; to deny commercial privileges to any nation which does not accord full and equal facilities to American citizens, even to the point of prohibit ing' Imports from such a nation. The allies depend to so large an ex tent upon this country that these re taliatory measures should bring them to reason. Denial of clearance to their vessels would deprive them of many supplies which they sorely need. De nial of commercial rights would pre vent borrowing of American capital and would obstruct purchase of Amer ican goods. Prohibition of imports would seriously reduce the foreign trade upon which they largely rely to maintain their economic strength. If- these measures should fail, an em bargo could be placed on exports of food and munitions. That measure would not injure us so much this year, when our wheat crop is short and our meat supply depleted as it would in a year of bountiful crops. The United States is so strong economically that it has ample weapons of defense short of war. MIXING WITH THEIR OPPONENTS. The Aberdeen World has made the not astounding discovery that Demo crats participated in large numbers in the recent Republican primary there. For proof if proof is needed of a fact and a condition known to the least acute observation the . testimony of the Aberdeen Herald, a Democratic newspaper, is adduced- The Herald makes this altogether reasonable ex planation: riesnfte the ft forts of the state Democratic organization, the vote in the county (Gray! Harbor) shows tnat democrats generally Darticinated in the Republican primaries. This is due largely to the fact that there were no filings for county offices by Demo crats, which left the -oters of that party open game for the army of aspirants on the Kepubllcan tlcKet, so tnat tne oiame, if blame there be, is at least divided be tween the parties. Some Democrats voted in the opposition primaries as a protest against the Drovision of the law which compels sep arate ballots for local officials, and with mem tins practice win not cease until a ballot is provided containing all candidates the same as those at the general election. Thus a Republican primary in Ore gon and Washington is an election where the members of all parties meet and vote. Why, then, a primary, if there is no protection for a party and no pre tense of compliance with the rules, which are that there Is a Democratic primary for Democrats, a Republican primary for Republicans, and so on? In point of fact, the first in oractiee is a farcef the second a mere form. Quite clearly, the end will be that there will be no primaries or no par ties. Or both. POrNDEXTEB AMI HUGHES. The Oregonian observes with inter est and not without satisfaction that Mr. Poindexter, Republican candidate for United States Senator from Wash ington, does not look upon his re nomination as a "vote of confidence in President Wilson" an interpretation placed by sundry hair-trigger Demo cratic oracles upon the result of the Washington Republican primary. A letter written by Mr. Poindexter to a supporter Mr. J. E. Chllberg, of Se attle appears to be designed to clear up the misunderstandings various citi zens. Republicans and Democrats alike, have had about his attitude to ward issues of National moment, and particularly toward Mr. Hughes on the one hand and Mr. Wilson on the other. The Oregonian quotes the let ter in full: SPOKANE -Wash.. Sept. 15, 1916. J. E. Chllberg, Alaska Bldg., Seattle, Wash.: Hope you will make it plain to every one Inter ested, particularly Republicans, that I have consistently voted and worked for a tariff upon lumber, shingles, wheat, wool, coal and all the other raw products which con stitute the production of the Pacific North west. The same thing is true as to every article of American production which needs protection. I mention the foregoing as ot special interest in this state. I declared in the primary campaign un equivocally my support of Hughes and Fair banks and shall work for their election and urge others to do likewise. My objections to the Underwood tariff bill are shown by scores of votes to change its schedule In the particulars mentioned and many others, and I shall take advantage of the earliest opportunity and every occa sion to substitute for this bill a tariff bill carrying out the policies' of the Republican party as expressed In its recent platforms end distributing uniformly the benefits of protection. m. I am very much In hopes that all elements In the Republican party can unite for the election of the entire ticket. MILES POINDEXTER. Thus we find that Mr. Poindexter pledgesjiimself unequivocally to th6 Republican nominees and to protec tion, and specifically to a tariff for those articles of production in which his state is particularly concerned. Meanwhile his Democratic opponent, Mr. Turner, in a public statement at Spokane, indorses President Wilson and all the Wilson policies, declaring that he is wholly in sympathy with the Democratic record. "I will be," he says, "a Democratic Senator." Obviously, those Democrats who en tered the Republican primary for the purpose of giving a "vote of confi dence" in President Wilson through the nomination of Mr. Poindexter were in the wrong pew. The voters of Washington are, after all, to have the opportunity of choos ing between a candidate for Senator who has the Republican nomination and who is for Mr. Hughes and his policies, and a Democratic candidate for Senator who is for Mr. Wilson and his policies. TRADE WITH ALASKA. During August Seattle exported to Alaska goods to the value of $2,339, 104 and imparted thence goods worth $8,696,153, dispatching forty-one ves sels northbound and receiving forty eight vessels. Twenty years ago Se attle shipments to Alaska were less than a million dollars for the entire year. The trade In one month is now more than double that of the entire year 1896. This is the result of nurs ing along a trade that was in its in fancy, of not despising the day of small things. If Portland should now engage In the Alaska trade it would be late at the feast and would find the daintiest dishes consumed, but there is always room for one more at the Alaska banquet-table and there is still plenty to eat. The letters from Frank Carpen ter which are appearing in The Sun day Oregonian give us to understand that the development of the great northern territory is about to begin on a large scale with construction of the Government railroad. Opening of coal mines will supply cheap fuel, which will make development of low-grade metal mines profitable. Miners of coal and metals and employes of rail roads will make a market for products of Alaska farms and ranches, and other industries will naturally follow. The trade of Alaska will be too great to be absorbed by a single port. Alas kans will welcome competition, and Portland may yet win a share. The time when this port la building its own ships is peculiarly propitious for making this long-postponed ven ture. At no excessive cost wooden motorshlps could be built and operated in the trade with Southeastern and Western Alaska, carrying supplies to the mines and canneries and bringing back: coal, ore and canned fish, The one requisite is permanence, for Alas kans will not break established busi ness relations to patronize a line which abandons the field after one season. It would be better to start on a small scale with one ship and build up year by year than to start on a grand scale and break down. WHY NOT BOTH? Quite a natural inquiry from Mr. McCants ' Stewart, one of the leaders of the colored race In Portland, is printed elsewhere in The Oregonian today. It concerns the failure of the Legislature, when it submitted an amendment to repeal an inoperative section of the constitution prohibiting the franchise to negroes, to Include in the repeal another inoperative section denying the right of negroes to settle in Oregon or own property in this state. 1 Both sections are part of the original constitution which was adopted prior to enactment of the fourteenth and fifteenth amendments to the Fed eral Constitution. The latter insure equal rights to all citizens regardless of race or color and override the Ore gon sections. Both are relics of another age. Neither has the slightest force or ef fect. Both should be eliminated from the constitution. Probably failure to include both sec tions in the repealing amendment was pure oversight. In any event, omis sion of one should not prevent adop tion of the repeal as it is submitted. SPRING SHOOTINO PROHIBITED. From the southern border of the United States to the northernmost lim its of the British possessions in Amer ica, which is almost synonymous with the North Pole, Spring shooting of wild game birds is made unlawful by the terms of the game-protection treaty into which we have just en tered with Great Britain. These birds, including swan, geese and several va rieties of the duck, have breeding grounds far from the haunts of men, in the gTeat swamps west of Hudson's Bay and along the fringes of the Arctic Ocean. Once in these inacces sible places they are safe as can be from interference by hunters. The real aim. of the treaty has been to protect them while on their way and in the mating season. Other migratory game birds that are protected include woodcock, plover and snipe. Their migrations cover nearly the entire country, and under unrestricted shoot ing they were threatened with the ex tinction which already has overtaken the passenger pigeon and is about to engulf the wood duck. These waterfowl are valuable ad juncts to our food supply and they furnish sport for hunters, but another issue is involved in the protection of insectivorous birds that also are in cluded in the treaty. The actual loss to crops as the result of ravages of insects is enormous and there is no feasible way to check them, or even to make appreciable inroads on their numbers, except by protecting the birds that live on them. A young bird that will eat more than its own weight of insects every day is the farmer's best ally and the appetite of a grow ing bird is marvelous. It is held by some agricultural authorities that the only salvation of the cotton crop lies In cultivation of birds to combat the boll weevil, and every farmer knows what the commoner birds mean to him. Game protection has a double val ue. It has its present benefits in dol lars and cents and it cultivates the spirit of doing something for the com ing generation. If the bars were let down it is possible that we should not suffer for years to come, for it would take years to make serious in roads on the present supply of birds, but the day of their extinction would come eventually. By our protective measures we are storing up treasures that will be rich indeed for our descendants COMMAND OF THE AIR. That "command of the air" is only a relative military phrase is asserted by Claude Grahame-White and Harry Harper in a review of the first two years of operations by aviators in the war in Europe, in the Fortnightly Re view. War secretaries may talk in boastful vein of holding such com mand, and to the superficial observer It may seem that one side or the other actually does dominate the situation in the skies, but the writers observe that "only on occasions has it been possible to win and hold some temporary su periority." This is due to the fact that the personnel of the service al ways has been entirely insufficient One reads in the official dispatches from time to time of clouds of aero planes on scouting duty or engaged in aerial combats, but thrilling as these are, they fall far short of what the enthusiastic advocate of the aeroplane in warfare would have them accom plish. There is a constant dearth of men. The fatalities are high. Ma chines would be plentiful, if men could be trained to operate them. But where millions are sent to the trenches, rela tively few are found fit for the essen tial duty of the aviator. The writers give interesting com parisons of the uses made of aircraft by the various belligerents. The Ger mans were first to show conclusively how the aerial observer, by signaling to the gunners below, could increase to a marked extent the accuracy of shellfire. This was so because the Ger mans had gone seriously into the ques tion before the war and had made a series of experiments. It was not new to them. The details had been worked out, even to the systenvof signals. Then the entente allies learned the lesson. The review of their work says that the British soon gained superiority in scouting- because they had built their machines for speed rather than pri marily for stability. The Germans made use of their- machines in the beginning rather for defensive pur poses. They were brave, but not so venturesome aa British or French. They contented themselves for a long time with defensive tactics. "That is to say," the writers observe, "they sought to keep the enemy's aeroplanes away from the front by attacking them when they appeared." But both French and British sought combat and carried the war over the German lines. They were not more courageous, but were more bold. It seemed as if they made use of more initiative, or else the Germans were restrained by their superior officers from undertaking enterprises in purely adventurous spirit. It 'is Interesting also to learn that the airmen of the entente allies have to a much greater extent than the Germans cultivated the raid. Par. ticularly the French have engaged In large expeditions of this nature, hunt ing out Zeppelin sheds, munitions fac tories and storehouses and attacking them, Lven the movements of troops have on occasions been interrupted but this, the writers assert. . has not given them the "command of the air.' At soma other point, and perhaps at the same time, their enemies have been able to send up numbers of aero planes. It will be remembered that only a day or so ago the Germans told of an attack by seaplanes on allies' ships off the coast of Flanders. There is disagreement In the official reports as to whether damage was done, but that fact is relatively unimportant. The point is that the Germans found an unguarded spot and were able to venture an attack on what seems to have been a rather large scale. To be able to meet air attacks at all points would require a veritable army corps of aviators and machines, which it is quite apparent none of the belliger ents, even after two years of war, pos sesses. The article contains a warning to Americans who will read it. Mr. Grahame-White believes that there will come a time when wars will be begun by "great fleets of powerful aeroplanes," which will unite in paralyzing attacks, "destroying gov ernment buildings, arsenals, factories and railways, paralyzing all communi cations and blotting out whole cities." Three years ago even at the be ginning of the present war this would have seemed fantastic. Now it will be accepted by nearly everyone as at least a reasonable possibility. He adds that disaster awaits a nation that ignores the lesson. The aeroplane is as clearly in Its infancy as was the steamboat a cen tury ago. Its development in the past two years is only an indication of the rapidity with which changes can, be brought about. It is not impossi ble that a war in the near future may bo won by a nation that because of its foresight is able actually to take and hold command of the region of the clouds. Finding of a note in a bottle on the California coast the other day serves to recall some noteworthy journeys made by messages cast into the sea. The most remarkable bottle adventure in all history probably was the one recorded by the Boston Herald. A doctor started a sealed bottle from Mozambique and it was picked up thirty-seven months later, twenty- seven miles above the Impassable Maredo Falls, on the Sunrlam River, in- Dutch Guiana, and contained traces of clay peculiar to a diamond district far in the interior of South America. Numerous other bottle tests have been made, but they seem by comparison like staying: at home and reading the guide books would seem to an ex plorer. A fellow of the Royal Geo graphical Society once sent out five bottles from East London, of which four were returned to him from the west T;oast of Africa and the fifth from New Zealand. Most bottle mes sages have proved to be hoaxes, but they have been seriously employed in efforts to obtain information about the ocean currents, only infrequently with effect. Puddlers, the men who "boil the iron" in the mills in the East, having recently agreed on a wage adjustment on the basis of $9.30 a ton, which was acclaimed as the "highest rate of wages ever paid," the Pittsburg Leader dusts off its history and shows that the highest rate ever paid was, as a matter of fact, $16 a ton. In the years immediately following the Civil War, when iron was literally king in the industrial world and prices were paid for it that would paralyze the industry in the present day. Iron rails at that time commanded as high a price as 6 cents a pound. The pres ent rate, however, is regarded as high ly satisfactory by the men, and Is not expected to continue forever. The present extraordinary demand Is due to war conditions, and it is predicted that there will be a return to normal when peace has been declared and the uses to which Iron is put and for which steel is not equally suitable be come fewer. Chaplain Gilbert is mistaken. The public is not indifferent to the troops. Almost every citizen has a friend or two in the ranks of whom he is proud and whose career he has watched with approval. He rejoiced at the quick response to the call and was glad when his friend returned unhurt. But he long since began to look upon the whole affair as a play-day thrill, and until the Third Oregons get back to their armories and resume their old standing he cannot change his view. What man with wealth and in his prime can escape a trap baited with voluptuous feminine beauty? Even Ulysses only withstood the song of the Siren by plugging the ears of his crew and binding himself to the mast of his ship. The Mexican commissioners, speak ing for the republic, promise to run down and capture Villa; but that is what the de facto government has been trying to do for a year or more. It is always the doings of the other fellow of similar name that put the joke on a man, and it Is the one great bit of humor to enliven a dull world. Who should worry? Von Hindenburg plans to hold the allies in the west while he smashes the Russians, but he has not consulted Douglas Haig at all as to the way the plan will work out. One unfortunate side of the strike to be pulled off in New Tork Friday Is that the wages of 700,000 will cease, with a hard Winter in sight. Pershing has been a kind of goat in this Mexican trouble, but he's go ing to be made a Major-General ; so it's worth while. Insantiy is said to be on the de crease in Ireland, due, no doubt, to the fact that the "tyrant" is busy else where. The injunction may lose 'its terrors for labor unions if they find it an effective weapon against employers. Spend one afternoon at Forest Grove and another at St. Helens and see two good county fairs. Seattle has a lower death rate than Portland, for the obvious reason of al leged population. The sun is about to cross the line and bad weather is due, but all signs fall in Oregon. Horse chestnuts are ripening and soon the early frost will put on the finish. The "outlaws" are taking their oats uncrushed at Pendleton this week. There's a pretty good fair running at Canby, too. Isn't Is great to be alive) these Sep tember days? . , ." , . How to Keep Well. By Dr. W. A. C -vans- Questions pertiaent 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 la not suitable, letter will be per sonally answered, subject to proper limita tions and where stamped addressed envelope Is inclosed. Dr. Evans will not make diagnosis or prescribe for Individual diseases. Re Quests for such services cannot be answered. (Copyright, 1916, by Dr. W. A. Evans. Published by arrangement with the Chicago Tribune.) PUEVESTIOJf OP DIABETES. DIABETES is not exactly a disease. In a certain sense it is a symptom. In another sense it is an expression of the fact that the individual concerned can assimilate only a limited amount of sugar and starch. We speak of 150-grain (10-gram) tolerance or 1500-graln (100- gram tolerance, or ZOOO-graln (200 gram) tolerance, meaning thereby that if the individual should eat more than 150. 1500 or 3000 grama of sugars and starches in the 24 hours he would ex crete some sugar in the urine. Under these circumstances it is proper to speak of finding sugar in the urine under the head of diabetes. Every person should have his urine examined for sugar and also for albu min once a year. Fat folks and folks who inherit diabetes should have a urine anaysia twice a year at least. Joslin auggesta that every person should have an examination on every birthday. One factor that will prove helpful in controlling dlabetea la the Increasing tendency of the people to take out in surance and the increasing tendency of insurance companies periodically to. ex amine their policy holders. Dlabetea runs In families. It Is in herited In soma cases. Jews are very subject to it. Persona who inherit a tendency to diabetes should have the urine examined twice a year. They should guard against obesity and espe cially against diabetes by eating no candy or other sweets and by limiting the amount of starches and particularly breads, cakea and pastries any food made from flour. Obesity Fat people are very prone to dlabetea. They should have their urine examined for sugar twice a year. They should experiment to determine the amount of sugar and starch which they can stand and keep alwaya below the, limit. Physical inactivity and mental over work Joslin aays: "The man who, in middle life, gives up hard physical work and is promoted to an office chair with increased mental worry is exposed to dlabetea." An essential part of the Allen treat ment of dlabetea la regulated exercise. This is almost as important aa a regu lated diet. It follows that one way to prevent diabetea is to keep physically fit; to keep the muscles firm, solid and well under control of the nerves. In the Allen treatment the patients are direct ed to take aome exercise immediately after eating. It la a matter of common information that when on has eaten heavily he will feel better if he will take a walk in the open air or other wise exercise. If exercise just after eat ing helps to cure diabetes it should help to prevent, and it does. Joslin aaya: "It is too early to cay whether we shall be able to train the soft muscle diabetlo into an athlete, but there la no doubt but that it is worth whila to try to do no." Allen aaya: "It is hoped that an end may be put to the period of the pale, feeble diabetlo dressed in double unaerwaar. hugging the radiator and growing mora neu rasthenic all the time." This applies to the prevention of dia betes as well as Its cure. Mental Hygiene Hodgson says that diabetics should be kept mentally Indo lent and physically active. A factor in the prevention of diabetea is freedom from -worry, great mental excitement and mental overwork. Itch Is Contagious. Mrs. H. M. writes: "I have the Itch. It cornea in groups of little Ted pim ples, then forms a blister. Have used several medicines on it. but it will heal and then come back. The Itching la ter rible. Can you answer in your column? I have several friends who have this, so it must be contagious. You would be doing a favor, REPLY. There la such a disease as the itch and It Is contagious. It la due to the female Itch mite. At bedtime take a hot bath. Scrub the Infected parts with a towel and some yellow laundry soap. Dry the skin by vigor ous rubbing. Rub sulphur ointment vigor ously Into the akin over the affected areas. Do this on Saturday, night. Monday night and Wednesday night, three applications. Put on fresh undsrwear after each applica tion. Boil underwear used while the Itch la active. Baby la Hun gry. Mrs. C. E. D. writes: "I have a baby girl almost 9 months old. and it seems that, in spite of frequent breaat feed ings day and night, aha always appeara hungry. Do you advise alternating the breast food with other? If ao. what is a good diet, please? I give her a zwieback or two each day with butter spread over It and ahe likes It. She has never had a day's Illness." REPLY. Give her no food but breast, awelback; and butter until after October 1. When the weather sets cooler civ her the breast twice a day and artificially feed her at the other feeding times. Attsr October 1 ahe can eat swleback. cereals, orange and prune Juice, vegetables, chopped very fine, meat broths. and even very finely chopped meat, milk and eggs. Begin the use of cow's milk b using- pasteurized or boiled milk diluted with an equal quantity of water. After two weeks if all goes well change to milk, two parts; water, on part. Give the mils: out ot a cup. Hives. V. a. A. wrltea: "(1) Ara there dif ferent kinds of hives? "(2) Is there any cure after they become habitual, or, rather, after they have given trouble for years? "(8) What is the direct causa of hives? "(4) What is a cure for hivea?" REPLY. 1. Tea 9. S and Hivss is a disease ot the akin In which the blood vessels dilate, local swell ing occurs, and Itching; Is very prominent. The cause of hives Is poisoning by food. The food which causes hma in one person may be wholesome for everybody but that one person. In faot, the person affeoted is more at fault than la the food. He baa a sensi tiveness to the particular foods which cause the disease In him. The cure of hives Is a matter of finding out which foods disagree and avoiding- them. Sometimes a person csn experiment with foods and find out for him self what to avoid. Some physicians are able to make vaccinating tests with foods and in that way find out the cause la a ive case, . REAL FAULT IS WITH PEOPLE Those Who Litter Hlajhway Need Rev erence for Nature's Beauty. PORTLAND, Sept. 19. (To the Edi tor.) I have read with much interest and satisfaction the letter in The Ore gonian on "Preserving the Beauties of the Columbia River Highway." Two weeks ago I went over the Highway with some Eastern friends and was much distressed, to notice the manner in which some of our good-natured. but careless, pleasure-seekers threw their lunch boxes and refuse in all di rections. Ten years ago, when I flfst beheld the wondrous beauty of the Columbia River and the marvelous scenery along lt banks, I considered that such a river and auch surroundings must surely be a great asset to any city in the vicinity. As the train wound its way along the river bank and I feasted my eyes on the beauty all around, I felt indeed blessed that fortune had cast my lot amid such sublime surroundings. 1 meditated on the time when a good road would be built along the banks of this lovely river; little thinking it would come so soon. The Columbia River Highway needs no decorations; the artistic bridges and unique atone work are enough. Nature's lavish hand has done the rest. Mr. MacLaren, who laid out Golden Gate Park, when asked by the park board of Ashland, Or., what he would advise them to do to beautify their City Park, said: "Do nothing, you cannot Improve it." We cannot improve the Columbia River Highway. Our privilege being to protect It. The many beauty spots of the old world are jealously guarded. People are not allowed to throw refuse about. They would be arrested. Yet we want some higher motive than fear to in spire our sightseers to protect our scenery. The writer in The Oregonian thinks that something is lacking in our Gov ernment, Is the fault with the Govern men or with the people themselves? We are reminded that the standards of a people, do not depend on their gov ernment, but are the effect of their manners and customs and their man ners and customs are the effect of their character or habitual mode of think ing. "As a man thlnketh In his heart, so is he." What is really lacking:, then. i "reverence." the kind of reverence that John Mulr felt as he uncovered his head when confronted by nature In all its majesty and mystery. Let us clean out the weeds that are choking it and give this much-neglected virtue a chance to blossom anew in our Na tional character. However, until that time comes we are compelled to call on the strong arm of the law to enforce- decency and order. MRS. JOHN M. SCOTT. FOR STOCKRAXC.E OR SETTLEMENT f Crane Prairie Withdrawal Asserted Benefit Livestock Men. PORTLAND. Sept. 19. (To the Edi tor.) I respectfully submit these facts In answer to Roscoe Howard, general manager of the Central Oregon Irriga tion Company, whose letter appeared recently in The Oregonian. He claims the cheapest storage is at Crane Prairie in Central Oregon, which is not the truth, aa time will prove. They have Big Cultus Lake, only two miles above there, which is about one mile wide and four miles lonsr and has been sounded to 160 feet in depth and no bottom found. They also have 16 other lakes above there that are natural storage reservoirs, but the prass does not look as green to Mr. Howard or the association of stockmen he refers to, as the grass on Crane Prairie. We have an acknowledgment from the Reclamation Service that the with drawal was made without any investi gation aa to other storage possibilities. Now I will leave the public to judge which would be best for the state, to let the stockmen have it with about 1800 head of cattle at little or no ex pense or let 100 families make good homes and have about 4000 head of cattle which the prairie would sup nort bv cleaning: up tho balance of the valley. We will admit that it snows some there In the winter, dui tms aues not necessarily mean that this would in any way detract from the agricul tural qualities of the land. The water he refers to was caused mostly by a dam at the lower end of the prairie, but Mr. Howard need not worry, it will be drained. As the matter stands now, this close corporation, with its herds of cattle, is securing unwarranted benefits from the Government at the expense of misin formed Government officials and many families who are ready and willing to homestead the land. They (the present beneficiaries) are simply endeavoring tn rilscouraare an Impartial hearing. fearful, no doubt, that the revealing of the real facts would take rrora tnera the easy pickings which they are now enjoying. A hearing would not hurt anyone un justly and in this case should right a present great mistake. S. S. MOHLEH, 1031 Arnold street. ACTIOV TAKEN IV GOOD FAITH So Saya Mr. I'Ren Concerning Protest In Benson Hesring. PORTLAND, Sept. 18. (To the Edi tor.) I believe that it is only fair that you and your readers should know my aide of the Smith protest asainst Mr. Benson's admission to citizenship be fore passing final Judgment. Mr. Llghtner's official position and standing in this community Justified Mr. Smith and myself in believing his statements and accepting his promise to repeat them in court under oath. Mr. Llghtner has been County Commis sioner for 12 years, and I believe has had the continuous support of The Ore gonian. In this position he has baen a leader in doing things. When ha waa elected, the county was several hundred thousand dollars in debt. Since his election the county has built the Court house, has built miles of paved roada. paid all its debts, and has money In the treasury. There are plenty to tell Mr. LIghtner'a shortcomings, but in these things he ia credited with having been a leader. Before I wrote Mr. Smith's affidavit of protest. Mr. Llghtner told me that he had testified before the grand Jury that Mr. Benson had threatened to spend $35,000 to recall him if he did not vote for tha use of what Is com monly known aa Warrenlte or bitu llthlo pavement for the Columbia High way. He said Mr. Kiernan would cor roborate his statement. Afterward he told the same story to Mr. Hazzard. the Federal naturalization officer. In tha presenoe of Mr. Smith and myself. He said he had made thla statement to the grand Jury when his enemies were try ing to "get something on him." I waa unable to see Mr. Kiernan per sonally before tho protest waa filed and when I did see him a few minutes be fore the hearing, ha refused to corrob orate Mr. Lightner. Mr. Llghtner's courage deserted him and he left the courtroom after Mr. Benson was called for examination. I do not believe that Mr. Smith waa moved by any personal feeling and I know that I was not. WILLIAM 3. U'REN. Indemnity. Exchange. The indemnity demanded of Turkey at the close of the Russo-Turkish war of 1877 was 6725.000.000. but Russia agreed to accept territories for $500, 000,000 of that sum. It seems incredi ble that indemnities bearing a like re lation to costs can be assessed at tiie close of the present struggle. In Other Days. Twenty-five Years Ago. 'From The Oregonian of Sept. 20, 1S01. The bear hunt In the hills northwest of the city did not materialize last Sunday, but if the weather is at all favorable, an effort will be made to hunt bruin down today. There is one bear that has had his home on the hills for several years. Ha has been seen and shot at several times. Notwithstanding the threatening weather and sloppy streets, 10,000 peo ple found their way out to the Expo sition last night and there was a perfect jam in the art gallery. The laying of the water main along the Macadam road to the city limits will be completed in a few days and then the extension x of distribution mains for this season will be finished. San Antonio, Tex., Sept. 10. Tha revolutionary movement in Mexico Is looked upon with the gravest appre hension by the authorities of that re public A dispatch from tho City of Mexico states that President Diaz called his councillors about him and discussed the impending trouble. The steamer City of The Dalles, built here to run in connection with the portage railway, and the steamer Regulator in the middle river, was in spected yesterday and given a certif icate and will leave this morning on a trial trip to the Cascades. Half a Century Asro. Krom The Oregonian of Sept. 20, 1S88. Tho Chicago papers say that the "Grapd Army of the Republic." a benev olent and patriotic association of of ficers and soldiers of the late volun teer army. Is rapidly Increasing in numbers throughout the state. It now has posts In evary county and all tha eoldiera ara flocking: Into it. The woods are on fire In the moun tains north of Mount Anderson, imme diately adjacent to tho southwestern part of the city. The friends of William Harrington will be pleased to learn of his reap pointment as marshal of Washington Territory. Mr. Harrison has proved himself an efficient officer and haa discharged his duties with general sat isfaction. The appointment was well bestowed. The mail route from Salem, via Jef ferson, to Lebanon, has been changed to run via Condit and Scio to Lebanon. The public service is a weekly one. but the people along the route are carrying- one a week by private enterprise, so that they have semi-weekly mails. WHY ONE BUT NOT TIIE OTHER! Submitted Repeal Leaves In Constitu tion Inoperative Block-Law Section. PORTLAND. Sept. 19. (To tho Edi tor.) In the "Proposed constitutional amendments and measures (with argu ments) to be submitted to tho voter of Orefron at the general election Tues day. November 7. 1916." attention la called to the constitutional amend ment referred to tha people by tho Legislative Assembly negro and mu latto suffrage amendment to remove the discrimination against the negro citizen by repealing Section 6 of Ar ticle II thereof, which reads as follows: "No negro. Chinaman or mulatto shall have the right of suffrage." There appears to be no affirmative or negative argument In tho pamphlet Issued and compiled by the Secretary of State. I have wondered ever since I first saw the general laws of Ore gon, 1916, who was responsible for this enactment and why? Tho fifteenth amendment to the United States Consti tution rendered of no legal force or effect this provision restricting- tho elective franchise to whito persons: Wood vs. Fitzgerald. 3 Ore., 679. Ne groes or mulattos born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the Jurisdiction thereof by virtue of the fourteenth amendment are now citi zens of tho United States and of tho state wherein they reside, and, there fore, by virtue of the fifteenth amend ment are entitled to the right of suf frage in this state the same as whito persons. The same is true of all per sons born or naturalized in the United States and subject to tho jurisdiction thereof. I would rather have removed Section 35 of Article I providing that: No free negro or mulatto, not residing in this stute at the time of the adoption of this constitution, shall come, reside or be within this state, or hold any rest estate, or make any contracts, or maintain any suit therein; and the Legislative Assembly shall provide by penal lav. s for the removal by publlo officers of all such negroes snd mulattos, and for their effectual exclusion from the state, snd for the punishment of persons who shall bring them Into the stute or employ or harbor them. Also. Sections 2 and 4 of Article XVIII had to do with tho negro. Now, Oregon Is known as a "black law" state and if an attempt is being made to erase from the face of the constitution those ante bellum laws, why not have done so with one swoop? Are you going to take them one by one? Isn't it more expensive? Again, is It proposed in this to continue and. also, reject Section 2163 of Lord'a Oregon laws providing: Hereafter it shall not be lawful within this state for ' any white person, male or female, to Intermarry with any negro. Chinese, or any person having one-fourth or more negro, Chinese or Kanaka blood, op any person having more than one-half Indian blood; and all such marriages, or attempted marriages, shall be absolutely null and void. Also. Sections 2164 and 216S? Any one of these sections is as barbarous aa the other. Who started this and why? Waa tho Legislature flirting with the Colored Woman's Republican Club or the Na tional Association for the Advancement of Colored People? M'CANTS STEWART. UHEMSM IS BLIGHT OF COUXTRT Continual Meddling; Frightens Away Investors, Saya Writer. PORTLAND. Sept, 19. (To tho Ed itor.) It is Indeed disgusting to see such men as ITRen appearing in court trying to keep Simon Benson from becoming a citizen. If we had a few hundreds more men like Mr. Benson and a few hundred less like ITRen, Oregon would soon take on the con dition of prosperity its resources, cli mate and geographical position justify. U'Renlsm is the curse of Oregon, and wo can never amount to much until we can get rid of it. How to do this ia a serious question. Several times the voters hava told him they do not want single tax. and yet he tries to force It onto us through fraud and deception by covering it up In his land and loan bill. Oregon needs capital to build rail roads into the unsettled districts and develop the latent resources, but we can never get capital to come into the state for investment until tho danger of U'Renism is removed. I voted for the initiative, believing it -waa right to put the law-making power in the hands of the people, but its operation is proving our undoing; because of the use and abuse that are being made of it by a lot of disgrun tled political experimenters. Capital will not Invest In an enter prise so long- aa a lot of political wolves loose with power are ready to Jump on and legislate it out of all Its profits. If wo could load a barge with these political meddlers and tow it out to sea and submarine it. we would clear the financial atmosphere and encourage tho investor of outside capital to come in and start something. J. A SOESBE. 452 Fourth Street.