THE 3IORNIXG OREGOXIAX WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1916. PORTLAND, UUEGON. Entered at Portland (Oregon) Postofflce as lecond-clus mall matter. Subscription rates Invariably in advance. (By Mail.) Dally. Sunday included, one year - s-;2 Daily. Sunday included, six months...... 4-- Daily, Sunday included, three months.'. . 2.-5 Ially. Sunday included, one month....- Xtally, without Sunday, one year........ e.OO Daily, -without Sunday, six months 3.s Dally, without Sunday, three months... l.io Daily, without Sunday, onemonth.. . . . . -60 "Weekly, one year. 1-50 liunday, one year Sunday and Weekly 3.60 (By Carrier.) Ually, Sunday included, one year 8.00 Dally, Sunday included, one month .75 How to Remit Send postofflce money order, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at sender's risk. Give postofflce address in full, including coifnty and state. Postage Rates 12 to 18 pages, 1 cent; 18 to 32 pages, 2 cents; 84 to 48 pages, 3 cents; BO to 60 pages, 4 cents; 62 to 76 pages, 6 cents; 78 to 82 pages, 6 cents. Foreign postage, double rates. Eastern Business Office Verree Conk lln. Brunswick building. New York; Verree & Conklln. Sieger building. Chicago. San Francisco representative, H. J. BldweU. 742 Market street. PORTLAND, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 25, 1916. WHO WANTS WART The Democratic party is for peace and the Republican party is for war. The President says bo, and all the cuckoo orators and mocking-bird newspapers are echoing his words down the line. Undoubtedly, the slogan "He kept us out of war" makes a strong appeal. For, despite the bald Democratic as sertion that the Republicans want war, nobody wants war. Everybody knows that. But may war always be avoided by unwillingness to wage war, or a hum ble display of a spirit "too proud to fight"? When it is said that President Wil son "kept us out of war," It is perti nent to ask what war? Not with Mexico, of course, for we have been in a state of war with Mex ico for months and have twice ad vanced upon Mexico with tb.e armed forces of war. But Mexico doesn't count. What our pacifist friends who wish at any cost to keep out of war mean doubt less is that Wilson kept us out of the European war. How? By his "strict-accountability" note? By the provocative mes sage threatening to "omit no word nor act"? By the threat to sever diplo matic relations? By repeated declara tions, or implications, that the "act" would be suited to the "word ? Clearly, a belligerent attitude on the part of Germany toward us or a hos tile reception of our repeated warn ings and occasional menacing words, would have made war Inevitable. - Germany doesn't want war with us; nor .Great Britain, nor any foreign power, now engaged in the European conflict. There was no chance to get into war, and is not now, except by an act of inexcusable aggression on our part. We don't want war. We have not been "kept out of war." We have stayed out of war because everybody every party wanted no war and nobody chose to fight us. But it is different as to Mexico Just what particular phase of the whole sorry Mexican episode for three and one-half years are the supporters of President Wilson most proud of? Are they proud of his assertion that Mexico is none of our business and cannot be deprived of the right of revolution? Or of the fact that we made Mexico our business after say ing that it was not our business? If Mexico is not our business, let us withdraw our troops and bring our boys home. But we cannot withdraw, we hear, without precipitating chaos and pro voking renewed border troubles. Ah, yes. Then Mexico is our busi ness. We know it is. We cannot help it. We merely shut our eyes to the facts and hope for the impossible to happen a sort of automatic restora tion of peace there without any effort on our part. But we know better. We know that the Mexican problem presses for solution solution with our aid and we know that a futile policy of procrastination and opportunism for over three years has but served to postpone the day of final account ing. A problem avoided is not a problem solved. Duty ignored is not con science salved, nor difficulty met and overcome. ing, regardless of the rights of others. He scorns the painful steps by which others have climbed to affluence. His parents-in-law have money and his wife is their heir. He wants the money; why should a middle-aged couple stand in his way? So, as he himself has confessed, he plotted to remove the obstacles to his own de sires. If he had . been of a different type and had lived in another place. he might have used a club and had it over with Quickly. Being more refined," he made a nicer job of it. Nevertheless, his victims are dead, and from the extremely modern point of view they are to be forgotten. Why worry about them, when we cannot bring them back to life? We have before us the living, breathing and only excessively abnormal Dr. Waite to grow sentimental over. To be sure, extreme selfishness Is a crime com paratively easy to make unpopular, in the very nature of it; but we are so tender-hearted Just now as to the present that both tho past and the future are ignored. Mr. Osborne has done a work of great importance in his chosen field. He has in fact opened a door of hope to many a convict who under the former system would only have gone from bad to worse. But, like so many reformers, he has to a very consider able extent lost the power to differ entiate. The ideal will not be at tained by extremists working- alone; it probably will result from co-operation of such enthusiasts as Mr. Os borne and such practical men of af fairs, not blind to ideals but calmly sensible about them, as Governor Whitman. WORK, NOT WAR. The ghastly doctrine of the late Lord Roberts that civilization may be saved only through blood-letting and man-killing wars is an echo of the dark ages. It may be' true that na tions have lived only because they were physically fit to live, as individ uals have survived the inexorable ap plication of nature's laws; but if that is so today, the intellectual progress and moral development of two thou sand years leave us no better off than the nations of the pagan era. No doubt nations become soft and enervated through over-civilization, or what is miscalled civilization. There is too much leisure and too much edu cation education that teaches the subject to despise labor that must be done with the hands and to devise ways to make someone elso do it. Education ought not to mean exclu sive employment of the mind and the tongue. It ought to mean also not only skill at physical labor, but a willingness to do it. Work is the salvation of a nation or a people, and not war. We rear our boys to despise the occupations of their fathers and our girls to scorn household service. It is a sorrowful mistake. .Our boys and our girls are no better than the young and am bitious farmer boy of a generation ago, who rose with the sun, fed the stocki chopped the wood, ploughed the fields and passed a long day out of doors in hard toil to earn enough for a few months' schooling in Win tep. Nor are our daughters better than the woman who a few years ago helped her mother in tho kitchen and did her own household work long after her marriage to the industrious fellow who had his own way to make. We would spare our -children the hard knocks we had. That is the beginning of individual and National decline. When the time comes that every boy able to work must work and every girl able to work must work whether for money or for discipline or humility tho Nation will be safe. city-planning commission. But the I ment, in course of time, would be in movement toward city planning has , evitable. extended, and such cities as Fort Wayne, Indiana and Indianapolis are already laying a foundation by pre paring municipal exhibitions as the forerunner, it is believed, of definite action. Modern city planning takes account not only of the arrangement of streets and parks and public buildings, tout fie education of people in the har monies of architecture. There has re cently been a revival in this direction in New England, which has suffered, but perhaps not more than the West, from the intrusion of the hodge-podge into the style of its dwellings. These have borrowed a feature here and another there until there is neither beauty nor consistency about them. The mock-Colonial is doomed under the new dispensation, along with much else that is undesirable, and systematic efforts to cultivate the tastes of prospective builders have proved successful in a marked degree. There still remain certain difficulties of a practical nature, however, due to the growing demand for apartment buildings and houses for two and four families. It is in these that utility exacts the most from art. Where each family demands its own windows and its exits and its entrances and its modern conveniences, all under a sin gle roof, the problem of the architect is truly difficult. There is hope for its solution, designers say, and if this is achieved there is compensation for the cities that have waited until' now to make their plans for future sys tematic beautification. We in the United States are in a position to set an example In this re gard. It is doubtful that Europe, as a whole, will furnish much inspiration after the war, judging from past ex perience. Periods immediately follow ing destructive wars have as a rule been marked by absence of the finer sense of beauty. It has been smothered by the pressing need for speed and utility in repairing waste. Concrete and steel have not yet lent themselves to artistic treatment to the extent that we might hope, 'and it is certain that these materials will be extensively- employed in rebuilding op erations. But where new cities are continually springing up and old ones expanding rapidly, the situation from the point of view of city planning is nearly ideal. There is a broad field for the combined efforts of the archi tect, the engineer and the public spirited citizen. If not. then why waste time and effort In trying to get the amendment through Congress? The answer was not In the negative. Besides, why worry about Congress wasting time and effort? It wastes enough on other things that it can afford to devote some time and effort to this issue. And what does Mr. Hughes' advocacy amount to practically ? It amounts to a great deal. It in dicates that he intends to be a leader of his party if elected President, not a mere automatic register of changing public clamor. It means that he will try to guide the thought of the Na tion; that he is outspoken for what he believes to be the right, whether the country has made up its mind on the matter or not. But perhaps more practically, it means that the weight of Presidential influence, which in the immediate past has, by working through the dominant party, over thrown in Congress that party's plat form declaration of free tolls and has extorted from it a surrender of the established principle of arbitration in labor disputes It means that this Presidential influence thus shown to be great will be back of the Anthony amendment. And let it not be unnoticed, that if there had been no leaders, no work ers, no educators undismayed by tem porary adverseness of public opinion, we should not today have direct election of United States Senators, a Federal income tax, a prohibition or woman suffrage in Oregon. What is herein said concerns the status of the movement for National woman's suffrage today. We do not aver that the South will always be opposed to the equal suffrage. But the South modifies its opinions slower than any other part of the country. It has maintained an unbroken Demo cratic record for more than half a century. The point ought to be clear that with the Solid South and Presi dent Wilson opposed to the National amendment, the only hope for its early adoption is success of the party which has its strength in states more yielding in convictions and whose can didate vigorously espouses the cause. How to Keep Well By Dr. W. A. Evana. WiKDEJi OSBORNE'S VIEWS. The resignation of Thomas Mott Os borne as warden of Sing Sing prison illustrates once more the danger that highly specialized reformers are in They are likely to close their eyes to the fact that there are other points of view than their own. Like the fre quently occurring type of medical spe cialist whose professional zeal leads him to see his pet ailment in a large proportion of cases, the reformer is apt, if he is not careful, to come to believe that his diagnosis and his rem edy for social ills are the only ones. Mr. Osborne was loyally sustained by Governor Whitman when base polit ical attacks were made upon'- him; when he was under indictment the Governor named a successor condi tionally upon the ultimate restoration of the warden to his post when he should be acquitted; and later Mr. Osborne was without question rein stated in his office. This should have demonstrated that Governor Whitman was in sympathy with the warden in a broad sense; yet Mr. Osborne now conceives that the powers above are arraigned against him because upon a question of what particular danger ous criminals shall be chosen for the bestowal of special liberties the Gov ernor does not feel justified in giving him his own unrestricted way. Sidelights often are valuable in showing real character. One of these, Mr. Osborne's declared views upon the case of Dr. Arthur Warren Waite, Is particularly illuminating. Dr. Waite murdered his wife's parents; Mrs, Waite is convinced that he intended also to murder her. The essential facts of the case are admitted; even Mr. Osborne does not dispute them. But the reforming warden finds that Dr. Waite is not a "bad man"; he is only "excessively abnormal." So, be ing only "excessively abnormal," Dr. Waite would not be put to death, under the Osborne idea. Restraint, for the protection of society, is not objected to; Mr. Osborne does not go so far as that. But it does not seem to have occurred to him that there might be further protection to so ciety in demonstrating to other "ex- icessively abnormal" individuals that for them it is not a good thing to let their excessive abnormality run to ex- treme bounds. Dr. Walte's chief abnormality ap pears to have been his abnormal sel fishness. Wita even higher mental ity, he might be called a "super man," or something like that; as it Js, he is simply a man who proposes ..to extract pertain fipjnX.orta put fit Uv- MERELY A WARNING. The Oregonlan Is fighting the election of George Taswell for County Judge and supporting George M. Mclirlde. In unswer lng a criticism of its course. It says: "It does not bow to the verdict of a primary of 40,000 or any other number of voters in its selection of a nominee for an im portant offlre who is not fit." This stand shows admirable backbone, but the question still remains; "Is The Oreronian correct in its estimate of the nominee or are the voters who n.imed him the better Judges?" If it has the facts to justify its stand then it is correct, for a newspaper has a duty to perform for the public and thiB some times when the public objects to the duty kbelng performed. No paper is worthy of inti namo mat win inuorse a canaiuate whom it knows to be unfit Just because the party it is affiliated with s'-es fit to nomlnato him. There are times when blind loyalty to party Is treachery to the com munity. Salem Capital-Journal. The Orcgonian begs to say to the Capital Journal, and to any others, that the records of Tazwell's adminis tration of the Police Court afford all needed evidence as to his unfitness to be Probate Judge. They are avail able and voluminous. They are in disputable and damning. Every Port land newspaper at the time had sur prising disclosures of the Tazwell op erations, and every newspaper ought now to concern itself about his pos sible, and even probable, election to a responsible office, calling for con scientious and judicious discharge of onerous, delicate and important du ties. The Oregonian has no concern about Tazwell that is not the public con cern none whatever. It is not doing much in the way of "fighting" him, It is a disagreeable task. But it could not in conscience permit his can didacy to be approved without a note of warning to the public. CITIES BEACTim. , Recent cable dispatches told briefly of adoption of measures for the re construction, along lines of combined beauty and efficiency, of the city of Dublin, the capital of Ireland, and it is of especial interest that not only the money to finance the enterprise but the plans upon which the entire work will be based will be provided by the United States. The winning group of plans placed emphasis upon the need for new and more adequate housing facilities, a new city center and an extensive scheme for reclama tion of the flat lands of the bay. It is quite obvious that in undertaking an extensive work of this nature, for which the $2,000,000 suggested is probably only the beginning, it is the height of wisdom to adopt in advance a well-co-ordinated system. Thus the mistakes that characterize the hur riedly built and unbeautiful cities with which so many are familiar are most likely -to be avoided. New York, the metropolis of our country and destined to be in some respects the most important city in the world, is a fair example of neglect in this respect. The residence dis tricts of Manhattan Island are of rela tively modern development, so the early settlement with its narrow, crooked streets xpd the defensive wall that has given its name to a famous street, can well be left out of ac count. But the city always has grown in haphazard fashion, without fore thought, until ground values have be come so high that extensive making over is as good as out of the question. People now see too late what mfght have been done a few years ago by. a WHERE LIES HOPE? If the painstaking reader will glance over another column on this page he will discover that Mr. R. M. Ross has fired a whoie broadside of ques tions at us regarding the Susan B. Anthony amendment. It is our painful necessity to remark that Mr. Ross has trained his gun in the wrong direc tion. It was Dr. Pohl-Lovejoy who asserted that the best chance for the National suffrage amendment was election of Woodrow Wilson. We quite humbly disputed the assertion. Mr. Ross agrees with us in a way and yet he does not. He seems to convey the thought that there is no chance for a National suffrage amendment if Mr. Wilson be elected, ojr Mr. Hughes, either. Clearly, he has a more formidable dispute with Dr. Pohl-Lovejoy than with The Ore gonian. Still we have not the slightest ob jection to answering Mr. Ross' inter esting and important queries as best we can. Here they are: Is it not a fact that a constitutional amendment must be ratified by three- fourths of all the states before it becomes operative ? It is. Is It likely that the members of Congress from auy given state could be Induced to support the Susan 11. Anthony amendment If a. majority of the people of that state were opposed to It 7 Why not? Did not Oregon's Sen ators vote for the Underwood bill? No Northern state has such violent antipathy to woman's suffrage that it would hold a Congressman to "strict accountability" for voting his honest convictions in support of it. Is It rot a well-established principle that each siato should determine ihe qualifica tions of its own voters? And if that be true, la not the President consistent when he says the woman suffrage question Is one to be determined first by the several states? It is an established principle that the states shall determine the qualifi cations of their own voters subject to the limitations in the Federal Consti tution. The Federal Constitution pro vides that the right of suffrage shall not be denied because of race, color or previous condition of servitude. We think there is no more reason for basing voting qualifications upon sex than upon color, and that means none at all. The bar to disfranchisement because of color was deemed of suffi cient consequence to put into the Fed eral Constitution without waiting for individual state action. If the Presi dent approves the fifteenth amend ment we think he is inconsistent in opposing the . Susan B. Anthony amendment. What evidence have you that the President has changed his mind on this subject? None at all. It is the one subject on which he seems to stand pat. That Is what caused our puzzled inquiry as to how the amendment could best be secured by electing a President who is openly opposed to It. How many states do you Include In the South 7 Another "lifelong Lincoln Repub lican" who is going to support Mr. Wilson is confronted by the record. Witness this little communication to a local newspaper which makes a specialty of anonymous letters from "Wilson Republicans." It is from Pilot Rock, Or., and is signed by E. B. Casteel: " Having read In today's Journal your editorial relative to G. S. Andrus. of Grant County, being a lifelong Lincoln Republican and going to vote lor Wilson lor r resident. I want to inform your readers that Mr. Anrirus'has never voted anything but the Democratic ticket. While it Is his priv ilege to vote for Mr. Wilson for President, yet it is unfair for him to pose as a Lin coln Republican. Let us have the names of other "Lincoln Democrats," that their neigh bors may come forward and say a word or two. If the building of ships at Portland continues at the present pace the rail roads will soon be begging the ship pers to join them in a movement for genuine competitive rates, while the shippers will be supremely indifferent whether they use cars or ships. The Interstate Commerce Commission, meanwhile, always a lap behind de velopments, will still be considering what rates should be made in conse quence of elimination of water com petition. It is impossible to beat Portland; it can always take to the water, for it is an amphibian in com-merce. 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 envelope Is inclosed. Dr. Evans will not make diagnosis or prescribe for Individual diseases. Re quests for such services cannot be answered. Copyright, 1918. by Dr. W. A. Evans. Published by arrangement with the Chicago Tribune.) CERfc.BRO-SPI.VAL. MEXISGlTU. THE great epidemic of infantile par alysis is coming to an end. The reports from all parts of the United States except Holyoke, Mass., show the disease to be rapidly declining. In the history of epidemics in tho United States there has never been any out break after the middle of October. On tha other hand, cerebro-epinal menin gitis Is a disease of the Winter months. The disease can be expected to begin to Increase in October, to gradually mount during Autumn and Winter, and to reach Its maximum during April. England had a rather severe epidemic of It last Winter and Spring. Cerebro-spin&l meningitis ia duo to nfeotion with a coccus similar to tho pneumoccus. This coccus enters the body through the nose and, in some in stances, reaches the membranes cov ering the Drain and cord. If it reaches these coverings it causes cerebros pinal meningitis. If It remains on tho membranes of the nose it causes cold. Cerebro-splnal meningitis starts with soreness In the muscles of tho neck A day or two later, usually in tho af ternoon, the real onset of the disease, comes with a fever, headache, vomiting, and. In some instances, convulsions. Tho fever continues. Tho patient be comes delirious. His head, neck and back bpw backward. Fever blisters develop on tho skin of tho face, rarely n tho rod lino of tho lips. There is no paralysis of legs or arms, as in infan tile paralysis. The death rate ranges from 30 to 80, orae people who recover loso tho nso of one or both eyes and some loso their earing. There Is no wasting of the muscles of the legs and arms subse uent to recovery. There Is a serum antitoxin for this disease. Tho reports are that It is very effective. Cerebro-spinal meningitis is apread by tho noso secretions. Tho cocci get Into the nose and may remain there for long time. It Is like infantile paraly is in that it carries and contacts are more potent In spreading the disease than are cases. Nicholls tells us, in tho Public Health Journal, that there are three classes of carriers first, those who have recov ered from cerebro-splnal fever, but still arbor the cocci; tests have shown that the cocci may persist In tho noses of uch for more than: three months. Sec- nd, those who have been in contact with cases of the disease and have ac- uired tho germ. Third, those who ap pear to be in good health, who pre- umably havo not been In contact with known cases, and yet who harbor tho germ. Tho disease is very much more prev alent among children than amonir dults, but the disproportion is not so great as In tho caso of infantile paraly- ls. The passing of Judge Thomas II. Brents at Walla Walla removes a figure long conspicuous in Oregon and Washington. He was a pioneer, who had the usual early-day experiences of the old settlers; he was a lawyer, who had In an exceptional degree the con fidence of his clients: he was a Rep resentative in Congress, who wastwice re-elected (an unusual record In a territory like Washington); and he was a judge whom all classes trusted Implicitly. He had a long life, and a busy and useful one. A good name is his principal heritage. The Department of Agriculture again is telling . housewives how to mix - potatoes with flour to produce excellent" bread. Potato bread is poverty food. What tho housewives of the American Nation want is wheat bread of the best, and that is what they will have following the exodus of poverty stalkers from this Govern ment In March and as soon as affairs can be put In shape for renewal of prosperous times. A good substitute for the spelling bee would be a contest among the mathematical sharps In the schools to decide who can count the most broken Democratic promises or who can count the President's numerous Mex ican policies Eleven- If. as you seem to think, the South can defeat the amendment in Congress, could not that same Houth defeat ratification of the amendment If passed by Congress? We have not said that the South could defeat the amendment in Con gress if Mr. Hughes is elected. More over, an amendment once submitted Is pending until it is adopted. Nor is the South individually strong enough to defeat the amendment either in Congress or in the subsequent ratifi cation. The point is this: No Re publican Northern state not now hav ing woman suffrage is likely to give the cause any aid if it shall happen that the women's vote puts normally Republican states like Oregon, Cali fornia and Washington into the Dem ocratic column. And the South is so hidebound that no Democratic vie tory due to women will now change its course of opposition. Have ' not recent elections shown that certain Eastern states are strongly op posed to woman suffrage? Tes. But so did elections not long since show Oregon to be hostile to woman's suffrage. Yet persistence and education carried the day. If the South be solidly against It and also some of the Eastern states, would It be possible at this time to secure ratifica tion by three-fourths of the states? Perhaps not immediately. But the pendency of the amendment would not prevent individual state action Not a thing in the world would be sacrificed by those slates which de sired to try woman suffrage on their own account. The movement would spread and ratification of tb.e amend' By the same rule which made) Bill O'Hara, the ballplayer, a great bomb thrower, baseball should become pop ular among European soldiers and the war should develop some great ballplayers. The Southern Pacific might take a hint from the Union Pacific as to the best means of relieving the car short age build cars in Portland and load them as fast as they are finished. Railroad men not under the benefit of the Adamson law are wasting time In petitioning the President. To give in was plain bunk, but to respond to an encore is absurd.. After two weeks on a test diet of alligator pears, a Berkeley student ad mltted he was very hungry. So, too, did the horse trained to eat sawdust. Just before he died. To counteract a high cost of living. eat plainer food and less of it. Come to think of it, that always is the way toward the end of a Democratic Ad ministration. Does Samuel Gompers take the stump for Wilson as an ordinary Democratic speaker or as president of the American Federation of Labor? This thing of being kept out of war, but with all the disadvantages and discomforts of actual warfare, is not the benefit some profess it to be. The Portland Commission has quali fied for honors In a Democratic Ad ministration. The chief requisite is ability as a spender. For a one-legged bandit. Villa cov ers a surprising amount of ground and keeps Carranza's two-legged soldiers on the Jump, WHAT MR, WILSOX SAID OF LABOR Trade Unions Contemned on More Than One Occasion In Past. RAYMOND, Wash., Oct. 21. (To the Editor.) (1) A saya a boy born in the United. States of foreign parents will havo to bo naturalized in order to vote unless tho father was naturalised be fore tho boy was 21. B says if the parents' home was in this country a boy born hero can vote whether the father was naturalized or not. (2) A says President Wilson never made a remark about the labor unions being a detriment to tho country. B says ho did, but cannot remember Just when and where, aa it was aomo time ago. If this la true, will you please state when and where? W. D. FULLER. (1) Tho boy la a citizen of the United States unless he prefers to chooso the citizenship of his parents. Ho need sot bo naturalized in order to vote. (2) Mr. Wilson, before becoming President, several times voiced un pleasant things about labor unions. among others that because o? trades union policies the economic supremacy of this country may be lost. In an address delivered at tho Wal dorf Hotel. New York. March 18. 1907, he Bald: We speak too exclusively of the capital- Istlo class. There Is another as formida ble aa enemy to equality and free dom of opportunity aa It Is, and that Is the class formed by the labor organizations and leaders of the country. Again Mr. Wilson, speaking to grad uates of Princeton University. June IS, 1909. said, as published in tho Now York World (Dem.) Juno 14. 1909: Too know what the usual standard of the employe Is In our day. It la to give as little as ho may for his wages. Labor Is standardized by tho trades unions, and this Is the standard to which he Is made to conform. No one Is suffered to do more than the averaga rworkman can do. In some trades and handicrafts no one is suf fered to do more than the least skilled of his fellows can do within the hours allotted to a day's labor, and no one may work out of his hours at all or volunteer anything- be yond the minimum. I need not point out how economically disastrous such a regulation of labor la. It la so unprofitable to the employer that In some trades It will presently not bo worth bis while to attempt anything at all. He had better stop altogether than operate at an Inevitable and Invariable loss. Tho labor of America Is rapidly becom ing unprofitable tinder Its present regula tion by those who have determined to re duce It to a minimum. Our economic su premacy may be lost because the country grows more and more full of unprofitable servants. Food for Baby. I Mrs. M. K. S. writes: "My baby la now 11 months old and weighs about 19 pounds, having weighed only six und one-half pounds at birth. Ho is breast fed every four hours, and all he gets n the meantime is a graham cracker or plain cookie. But now I think he needs more -besides the breast, and I would like to have your advice through he 'column.' " REPLT. A baby 11 months old requires some food In addition to breast milk. Give him orange uice and prune Juice, spinach chopped fine. clear vegetable soup, a little well-mashed vegetables from the soup, mashed potatoes. zwieback, graham crackers, cookies, well- toasted bread, butter, cereal, a little finely chopped meat, meat soup, a little egg. Begin giving him meat by letting him suck a bone, then give meat soup, finally a little chopped meat. Begin giving vegetables by giving a clear vegetable soup. Begin cereals with a thin cereal gruel. Not. 1 begin giving cow's milk from a cup instead of letting him breaat-feed. Begin with milk diluted with an equal part of water. Increase the strength later. Do not feed too often. Whooping Cough Vaccine. Subscriber writes: "I have several small children. Tho youngest has whooping cough wlthoUt question: tho other two are showing symptoms. What shall I do to relievo the whooping and strangling? Have been greasing chest with camphorated oil and administering syrup of wild cherry bark, rock candy and lemon Juice." REPLY. Whooping cough vaccine Is sometimes of service. That la about all you can give with any advantage. Oreaslng the chest with camphorated oil does no good, neither does it do any harm. About the same can be said of wild cherry, rock candy and lemon Juice. Should Inquire Further. Worried writes: "I havo & very good friend who has been troubled with chronic bronchitis since she was child. She takes cold very easily, and lately she had a severe one, and one day she spit blood. What treatment do you. advise? One doctor told her she had strong lungs. Nona of her family had weak lungs. If you will kindly advise her, I know she will appreciate it- Ia olive oil good, for building up REPLY. Do not fee satisfied with one opinion. A bronchitis accompanied by spitting of blood Is auspicious, even though It Is of long standing. Olive oil Is a good food, about as good as butter, but not batter. Meaning; of Provision In Bill. MONMOUTH. Or.. Oct. 23. (To the Editor.) Will establishing of a normal school at Pendleton re-establish the normals that have previously existed in the state? The last part of the bill saya "and ratifying tho location of cer tain state institutions heretofore located away from tho State Capital." E. E. SICKAFOOSE. i Not in the sense that those now closed would be reopened. Tho provl slon Is incorporated to remove any question aa to the legality of locating the several institutions in places other than the capital. In Other Days Twenty-Five Yeara Ago. From The Creeodan of October 25. 1891. Berlin. Oct. 24. The Reichstag will reassemble on Tuesday, November IT. The leading feature of tho speech from tho throne will be- congratulations upon tho formation of a commercial union between Germany, Austria and Italy. It Is now definitely determined that Bismarck will again make hia appear ance in Parliament. San Francisco. Oct. 24. Tho United Stn-tts Fish Commission steamer Alba tross, which has been employed In mak ing soundings in connection with tho proposed laying of a submarine cablo between tho United States and Hawaii, returned today, havtng accomplished the objects of tho cruise. Washington. Oct. 24. Secretary Blaine returned to Washington today from his unexpectedly prolonged ab sence from tha city since May last. Honorable Solomon Hlrsh. TTnlted States Minister to Turkey, is coming home via tho Union Pacific and is duo noints tomorrow or Tuesday. - The caso against Professor G. A. Adams, principal of tho Stephen School, for assault OH Tom Blonmnr. alleged to have been committed In tho scnooiroom. was tried in Justice Bul lock's court yesterday. Tho Jury de liberated about three minutes and re turned a verdict of not guilty. Chaplain C. C. Bateman. United States Army, closed his work with a farewell sermon at Vancouver Barracks last Sunday afternoon. The chapel hall waa packed with soldiers and their f ri'.'nds. SALVO OF QUESTIONS IS FIRED Mr. Rosa Aiks If Fresldent Is Not Con alatent on Anthony Amendment. PORTLAND. (October. 26. (To the Editor.) In Tho Oregonlan there ap pears unaer tno caption neaaing n is Mind." an editorial dealing with Dr. Pohl-Lovejoy'a statements regarding the position President Wilson has taken on the woman suffrage question, and a careful reading prompts me to ask a few questions. Is It not a fact that a Constitutional amendment must be ratified by three- fourths of all the states before it be comes operative? Is It likely that the members of Congress from any given state could be Induced to support the Susan B. Anthony amendment if a ma jority of tho people of that state were opposed to It? Ia it not a well es tablished principle that each state should determine the qualifications of its own voters? And. If that be true, is-not tho President consistent when ho says the woman suffrage question is one to be determined first by the several states? What evidence have you that the President has changed his mind on this subject? How many states do you include in the South? If. as you seem to think, the South can defeat the amendment In Congress, could not that same South defeat ratifi cation of the amendment If passed by Congress? Have not recent elections shown that certain Eastern states are strongly opposed to woman suffrage? If the South be solidly against it. and also some of the Eastern states, would it be possible at this time to secure ratification by three-fourths of the states? If not, then why waste time and effort In trying to pet tho amend ment through Congress? And what does Mr. Hughes' advocacy amount to. practically? I have voted for woman suffrage at every opportunity, but it does appear that all this agitation for the passage of an amendment by Congress ia like a proposal to build a house by erecting the superstructure first. It 1 am wrong, I would like to be put right. As a matter of Information to me and to your many other readers, I trust you will answer these questions through your columns. R. M. ROSS. S35 Kenllworth avenue. v The questions are answered In an other column. WHAT A WOMAN SAW IX MEXICO Mra. O'ShauKhneaay Telia Why She Haas Declared for Hug bra. Mrs. Edith O'Sliaughnetay, wife of Nelson O'Sbaughnessy, who was United States Charge d'Affaires at Mexico City while President Wilson was eliminat ing Hueria. gives thesu reasons "Why 1 Am for Hughes : I am for Hughes because with my o eyea: 1 havo seen the destruction of a nation; with my own ears 1 have heard tho cries of that bleeding, agonized remnant of what three years ago was the Mexican people. I have seen, under the auspices of the Democratic Administration, organised gov ernment destroyed in -a sovereign state whoso greatest misfortune at this time la to be our neighbor. I have seen authority deatroyed as cer tainly a if wo bad taken the machinery of administration into our physical hands and broken It. And In regard to ail this have seen Installed an organized campaign of misrepresentation where the wrongs of thla sister nation are concerned whereby the cries of the people have been stifled. their agonies concealed, their rights their human rights trampled to earth. 1 have seen the house of God profaned, the ministers of Christ cast Into ignominy, holy women felled. And last, but mil least I havo seen our citizen, whose rights to protection there Is aa indisputable as that of tho sons of Kngiand. Germany, t rance. Spain, Japan, despoiled if the fruits of honest labor. Our women have been outraged, our chll dren tortured, our men left to Ho In their blood. Now. with the help of God. and con fidlng In the underlying greatness of our Nation, I hope for the vindication of our honor where other nations are concerned and the performance of our duty where our own people are concerned. 1 am for Hughes, because I believe a man has arisen who, as our (Jhier executive, wi safeguard our most precious possession on land and sea, at noma and abroad our national honor. Half a Century A to. From The Oregonlan of October 2-5. lSOA. WALLA WALLA. Oct. 19. Tho build ing hereafter to bo known as tho Whit man Seminary was dedicated last Sat urday with appropriate ceremonies. The building Is two stories, with a cupola on top, and is possibly tho most Imposing structure east of the moun tains. . y Tho subscription list for tho balloon ascension is now being circulated and good success has been found. A large number have already subscribed. There was a larso crowd at tho cir cus last night. The Hook and Ladder Company had a "bumper" sure enough. Good for the boys we are glad of your success. Tho dredcer will becrin operations at Swan Island bar on Friday. Tho com mittee on river improvements will visit tho mouth of the river today ror the purpose of making a thorough ex amination of the work. The Marquis de Larochejaquelin has published in pamphlet form in Paris what would have been pronounced In tho form of a speech in the French legislature but for his ill health. Tho substance of his argument is that Eu rope is on the verge of a general war. LAW FOR. CLASS WITHI.V CLASS A d am son Art Helps 400,000 and Ignores 1.600,000 Railway Workers. PENDLETON. Or.. Oct- 23 T th Editor.) Tie writer has for a genera tion been a e-oldicr in tho warfare for social Justice, a supporter of the propa ganda of union labor, and an advocate of a universal elsht-hour day. inereiore he claims the rieht at thla time to protest on behalf of the av erage Workingmnn. in behalf of the common weal, against tho Injustice of tno class legislation, for the enact ment of which tho President in appeal ing for the support of labor. The Adamson bill Is In fact a Wilson bill. It became a law becausa of tha insistence of the President, and not otherwise. As usual with Mr. Wilson. ho followed the line of leoet reststanco and played tho game of personal poli tics, in public supposed, until after tha bill had been signed by tha Presi dent, that it covered all tho employes of Interstate commerce rillroads. and mereiore tor u, season tne law waa approved. when the text was given out to tho public, analysis demonstrated that ita benefits were limited to engineers, firemen, conductotrs and brakemen. Thereafter no fair-minded man of any party could support or approve it American .citlzenn believe in Justice. There are 2.000.0O0 people in tha em ploy of interstate railroads. Of these 400.000 aro by this statute selected for special privilege, and 1.600.000 aro de nied tho beneflta accorded their fel lows. While the bill was before Congress Pennsylvania Congressman offered.. the following amendment: "Add to sec tion 1 tho following languacre, 'Pro vided further, that this section shall also Include and apply to station agnt, train dispatchers, trackmen, office employe, workers in railway smops and all other employes of a rail road carrier engaged In interstate car riage of passengers and freight." " This amendment was voted down. Could thre bo anything clearer than the purpose of Mr. Wilson to deny equal and Jurt laws to the worklns people of the land? He dominated the Demo cratic majority of Congress absolutely. A word from him would havo secured the adoption of that amendment. STEPHEN A. LOWELL. Xot Compulsory. LA GRANDE. Or., Oct. 22. (To the Editor.) To settle a dispute kindl;. state whether It Is compulsory to give your party affiliations when register ing. J. R. BROWNE The County Clerk Is authorized to register voters who refusa to state their party preference, Lumber Imports Large. SK AMOK AW A, Wash., Oct, 3. (To tho Editor.) 1. Please let mo know how many cars of lumber and shingles came into this country, from Canada tho last year. 2. Also when waa the tariff commission passed. Respectfully, SUBSCRIBER. (1) Wo cannot glvo the car-load quantities. Tho last available statis tics are for tho eleven months ending Ma 31. 1916. Our Imports of lumber from Canada totaled 1,080.360.000 feet valued at $20,107,172. Shingles Im ported from Canada in 1915 aggregated 1,487.116,000. as compared with 660. 297.000 In 1913 under protection. (2) The tariff commission provision Is Included in the new revenue law passed last August, ' DEFECTS IX RURAL CREIJIT BILL Chance for Sharp Practice Offered. Cost to State Laurite. WARRENTON. Or.. Oct. 23. (To tho Editor.) Tho rural credits amendment to bo votod on November 7 is nearly as bad as the single tax amendment, though it docs not evoke as much criti cism. It ia clearly class legislation and I see no reason why the prosperous farmer of Oregon should be made a preferred class. It Is proposed to Issue 4 per cent bonds and loan the money to farmers only at 5 per cent. I am not a financier, but it seems to me the margin of 1 per cent allowed the state for handling this money is altogether too small. Section 5 provides that the money shall be loaned (a) for the payment of lands purchased; (b) the purchase of livestock and other equipment, etc.; (c) for tha satisfaction of incum brances, etc.; but section 6 says: "No failure to apply such funds to tho purposes stated anall Invalidate a loan: but if he shall violate hi con tract by applying the moneys borrowed to purposes other than those stated in his application" the loan becomes payable upon six months' notice. . A borrower could, then, secure money from the state and reloan it at a great er rate and he would be getting tho money at 2 V4 per cent for six months. The money is to be lent for S6 years and the state will have to keep track of all changes in title. The borrower Is to pay 1 per cent of the loan granted for appraisal and ex amination of title, including, I assume, the making of abstract and an attor ney's opinion. One per cent of 1000 ia 110. and. as small loans are to bo given the preference, wo may assume that this $1000 will be tha average loan. Will It pay for appraisal and abstract, and. If not. will not thla item bo a big expense to the state? I notice It has the Indorsement of the State Federation of Labor, which also indorses the single tax amend ment. E. II. FLAGG. January 27. 150. '"' PORTLAND. Or.. Oct. 24. (To the ditor.) When was Kaiser Wilhelro born? " AMERICAN.