THE MOKNTX-G OBEGOTAlT, TTTCR ST) AT, D'EC'EMTSE'R 28, 1916. PORTLAND. OREGON. Entered at Portland (Oregon) Postofflce as second-class mall matter. Subscription rates Invariably In advance. (By Mall.) Pally. Sunday Included, one year ....... .$8.00 Daily, Sunday Included, six months 4.2a Dally, Sunday included, three months . . 2.2D Dally, Sunday Included, one month 75 Daily, without Sunday, one year ........ 6.O0 Daily, without Sunday, three months ... 1.73 Daily, without Sunday, one month ' Weekly, one year - l.&G fSunday, one year ........... .......... 2.50 Sunday and Weekly 8.50 (By Carrier.) Dally, Sunday lncludled. one year 9.00 Dally, Sunday Included, one month ..... .75 How to Remit Send postofflce money rder, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at sender's risk. Give postofflce address In full, including county and state. Postace Kate.- 12 to 16 pages, 1 cent; 18 to 32 pages. 2 cents; 34 to 48 pages. 8 cents; 60 to 80 pages. 4 cents 82 to 78 pagea, 5 cents. 78 to 1:2 pages. 8 cents. Foreign post age, double rates. ' Eastern Business Office Verre A Cor.U lln, Brunswick building. New York; Verree A Conklln, Stenger building, Chicago. San Francisco representative. It. J. Bldwell, 742 Market street. PORTLAND, TlICRSDAt, DEC. 28. 1918. THE SPENDERS. A ten-line news dispatch from Washington the other day contained the pleasing: information that Presi dent Wilson was seriously considering the distressed financial condition of the Government and would probably address a message to Congress on the subject. It is high time. A singular and inexplicable phase of the late election was that no con sideration was given by the electorate to the Democratic party's gross, palpa ble and undenied violation of its pledges of economy. The record of shameful and inexcusable extrav agance made by the Sixty-fourth Con press, in ordinary times, would have deservedly led to the overwhelming defeat of the party responsible for it. But other issues crowded the impor tant and vital question of public ex penditure to the background. Congress appears to think that it has license to go ahead with an un bridled orgy of distribution of the pub lic funds a monumental National potlatch. The other day a rule was reported In the House limiting to four hours discussion of the $35,000,000 public buildings grab. In this gro tesque measure items such as $120, 000 for Nogales. Ariz. (6000 popula tion). $40,000 for Hazard, Ky. (5 37 population), and $30,000 for Mount Olive, N. C. (1171 population), ap pear. There are many such Instances. Secretary McAdoo notifies Congress that the. Treasury faces a deficit of $185,000,000, and Representative Rainey, a member of the House ways and means committee, says that in 1918, at the present rate, the deficit will be $230,000,000. The House ways and means committee itself Is figuring on the staggering deficit of $370,000, 000 at the end of the next fiscal year. The spenders rule the roost at Washington. Who cares? TEACHINGS OF THE ELECTION. Official returns on the Presidential election dispose of some false conclu sions which were drawn from the earlier returns. Mr. Hughes polled 943,011 more votes than were cast in 1912 for Mr. Taft and Colonel Roose velt combined, an increase of 12.4 per cent. Mr. Wilson polled 2,823,277 more votes in 1916 than In 1912, an Increase of 44.8 per cent. The total vote was 3,593,549 more than in 1912. The increase in the Hughes and Wil son votes combined over the Wilson, Taft and Roosevelt votes combined is partly explained by losses of the So cialists and Prohibitionists. Mr. Hughes then polled substantial ly the combined Republican and Pro gressive vote of 1912 with its normal increase, but subject to such loss as is naturally to be expected in such a re union. The great increase in the Democratic vote Is due less to cap ture of Progressive votes, for which he made a strong bid, than to the fact that he captured a great majority among those who voted this year after having abstained in 1912, and of the women's votes. This conclusion is warranted by the abnormal Increase in the total vote and by the fact that Mr. Wilson carried every woman suffrage state except Oregon and Illi nois. Although in the main the reunion of the two wings of the Republican party was complete, Mr. Hughes' defeat was due to the failure to make it complete in certain states. Where the Pro gressives were received into full fel lowship in the old party and where their counsel was heeded, Mr. Hughes won. Where the old-line Republicans retained control of the organization and treated the Progressives rather as penitent sinners, Mr. Hughes lost. Illinois, Indiana, Michigan and Oregon fall in the former category; New Hampshire, California and Washing ton in the latter. In Ohio the coun sels of Walter P. Brown and James R. Garfield were ignored and the re united party lost the state. New Hampshire showed its weariness of that typical standpatter. Senator Gal linger, by voting for Wilson. An open feud between old-line Republicans and Progressives was continued till elec tion Say in California and Washington and was clearly reflected In the elec tion of Senators Johnson and Poin dexter and the defeat of Mr. Hughes. The three states last mentioned would have sufficed to give Mr. Hughes a majority of the electoral vote and there is good reason to believe that, had he carried them, the same in fluences would have won other states for him. The Republicans nominated their strongest candidate and they would have elected him if they had put their strongest men in the lead in the dif ferent states. The party was carried down by such dead weights as Gal linger and the old guard of other states. These men are no longer the leaders of the party, for the party has twice refused to follow them. Tfet so wedded are Republican Senators to the old fetish of seniority that they have again chosen Old-Man-of-the-Sea Galllnger as their leader. Even revival of the dissensions of 1912 would not have sufficed to elect Mr. Wilson had not the Repub licans been compelled to start with the entire vote of the solid South against them as a handicap. Had the South been given representation only In proportion to the vote actually cast, or had there been a fair ballot, free from intimidation and fraud, in that section, Mr. Wilson would not have been elected. Republicans do not vote In the South because they are not per mitted or because they consider It use less, and many Democrats do not vote because they know the result is fixed In advance. Adding together the vote for tho two leading candidates in each state, we find that 126,440 voters in Alabama cast the same number of electoral votes as 358,698 In Minnesota. Geor gia, ba fourteen electoral votes for 137,056 actual voters, while California has only thirteen for 928,805. As sume that 400,000 votes in California were cast by women, a man's vote in Georgia still has three times as much weight as in the Golden State. Wis consin with only thirteen electoral votes and no women voters cast 414, 365, and Iowa with the same number cast 502,148, or two and a half and three times as many as Georgia. Louisiana with 85,534 votes, or Mis sissippi with 84.636, has an equal voice in the choice of President with Kansas, which polled 592.244. South Dakota's 123,452 count only for five, while South Carolina's 63,653 count for nine. Texas gets twenty electoral votes for 350,858 polled, while Ohio gets only twenty-four for 1,119,782, or more than three times as many. Aside from the fact that the South's representation of votes which are not allowed to be cast is -grossly unfair, the condition of affairs which prevails in that section Is a corrupting sore to the whole Nation. It would be bet ter for the South as well as the North to hold genuine elections in the for mer section. Even if the result were to leave the South solidly Democratic, it would be better for the North that the , vote should be full and fairly counted. Knowledge that the South ern elections are unfair is used as a Justification for fraud in the North, both in the management of elections and in gerrymandering of districts. The result of the election shows that there is abundant work for earnest Republicans to do. The discredited leaders whom the party has repu diated must be thrown overboard. The party management must be made truly representative of all elements. The sore spots remaining from the schism must be healed. The people having plainly shown their determina tion not to trust the party until its progressive elements are in the saddle, all the fusty old rules which block the way must be swept as!e. The men who have led the party to defeat should be retired; new men must be put in command who will lead to victory. THE UNRESPONSIVE WEST. Mrs. Gertrude Atherton prints hsr com plaint that she has had little or no response from people of the Western States In her appeal for funds for the wounded soldiers of France. She seems to have become Quite bitter about It. accusing them of selfish ness. Indifference and stupidity because they have failed to answer quickly and generous ly to her gracious enterprise. A New York paper conveys the above painful information to the peo ple of an unresponsive Nation. Mrs. Atherton, who came out of the West, find? that it is indifferent to the woes and wants of struggling humanity on the other side of the world. But is It so? Or is it merely that the West is deaf to the Atherton ap peal? Just now a fund of $15,000 for the starving Armenians is being completed in Portland. Thousands of dollars have been sent to Poland by sympa thetic Americans, not all of them vol untary exiles from Europe, or their descendants, by any means. We have no Idea of the amounts subscribed through the Red Cross and otherwise for the British, or the Germans, or the Italians, or the Belgians, or others, but they have been quite large. Re quests have been constant and insist ent and the response in Oregon has been generous. A remarkable feature of the subscriptions is their wide dis tribution, all classes and conditions of men and women being represented. The extreme West has been a mate rial sufferer from the war. Yet it has glveD liberally from what It had, and has claimed no exemption as an inno cent bystander. It could not look on at the spectacle of human misery abroad, whosoever is responsible, and steel Its heart or close its pocket. The other day In New York a West erner gave $100,000 for the fund be ing raised by American Jews for their helpless friends and brothers abroad. He had it to give, of course. Charity, or philanthropy, or human ity, is not a sectional matter. It is a common American attribute, a noble trait of a fine American instinct. Bel glum proves it; Poland proves it; Ar menia proves it. There will be more calls for help, and West and East, North and South will not fail to re spond. WHICH THE MORE HONEST 8EXT Recent Investigations designed to throw light on the question whether men or women are the more honest would seem to be inclusive. Cleveland Moffett, acting under commission from McClure's Magazine, recently discov ered that a little more than three fifths of both sexes are honest accord ing to the terms of the test given, and that while thirty-three women out of fifty returned a dollar sent to them, presumably "by mistake," only thirty one men did the same thing. The scheme arranged for the pur pose of thus determining the "hon esty" of the general public consisted of mailing to each selected individual a letter, in which was enclosed a one dollar bill, that clearly showed that the money was not intended for the person receiving it. As to the result, it is analyzed by Mr. Moffett as fol lows: Taking the fifty women by groups, ot five wives of prosperous citizens, three sent back the dollar. Of five actresses, three sent It back. Of five stenographers, three sent It back. Of five trained nurses, three sent It back. Of five teachers, four sent It back. Of the five successful business women, five sent It back. Of five miscel laneous women, three sent It back. Of flvo working girls, three sent It back. Of five doctors, three sent it back. Of five lawyers, throe sent It back. Taking the fifty men by groups. I found that of the five successful business men. three returned the dollar. Of five rich men, four returned It. Of five lawyers, four returned It. Of five saloonkeepers. one returned It. Of five plumbers, three returned It. Of five New York Aldermen, three returned it. Of five newspaper men. four returned It. Of five actors, four re turned It. Of flva doctors, two returned It. Of five New "York policemen, three returned it. Not only more women than men returned the money, but they returned It more promptly. One woman put a special deliv ery stamp on the envelope in which she sent the $1 back. Another brought It to m personally at great Inconvenience. On the other hand, a man worth $1,000,000, who lives at one of the big hotels, never sent it back at all. I allowed six weeks In each case before I reached a verdict. Bo I think the honesty of the public at large and of women particularly is fairly well established. Which was what I set out to prove. So far as the showing of relative fconesty of the sexes is concerned, no conclusion can be reached. The re sult might have been reversed in an other group of equal size. But more important still is the fact ctiat the test called for the manifestation of an other spirit than honesty alone, and that was willingness to go to consider able trouble, promptly, to correct an error that was certainly not the fault of the recipient of the letter. The woman mentioned as having put a special-delivery stamp on the letter and the other who carried it, person ally and at great inconvenience, to its destination, were evidently actu ated by belief that honesty is sacred enough to deserve to be vindicated in a positive manner, but there are oth ers, who. were not actually dishoeeat. no doubt, among those who failed to return the money at all. There are men and women who are Indolent, and those who procrastinate, and others who make light of little things a dol lar is a small matter to some and among these there are conceivably several to whom we might with safety trust our watch or whom we might entertain in our homes without lock ing up the silverware. There are degrees of honesty, it seems. It is rather comforting, upon the whole, to know that more than three-fifths of our fellow-citizens will return a dollar under circumstances that imply no penalty for failure to do so, or even knowledge of their guilty neglect, together with those others who perhaps merely "forgot" or put it off; and that other large pro portion who have been convinced by experience that in open dealings with their fellow-men honesty is not only good morals but good business. THE DANUBE'S PLACE IN THE WAR. Marshal von Mackensen's army has but a short distance farther to go to win for the central powers control of the entire course of the River Danube, and with It an outlet on the Black Sea. Capture of the bridgehead at Machin would lead to an attack on Bralla, which Is at the head of navigation for sea-going vessels, then on Galatz, at the bend where the river turns east to flow through several channels which penetrate the swamps forming the delta. At Galatz the Teutons would be close to the Russo-Roumanian frontier, which follows tho most northerly of these channels, known as the Killa mouth, to the sea. They would need only to drtve eastward through the delta in order to gain complete control of all tho navigable channels. Control of the Danube gives the central powers the whole length of the greatest waterway in Europe. Rising at Donaueschlngen in Wurtem burg, It flows through that kingdom, Bavaria, Austria, Hungary, between the latter country and Serbia, between Roumanla on the north and Serbia and Bulgaria on the south, through Roumanla from Turtukai to Reni, and thence between Russia and Roumanla to the Black Sea. Its total length is 1750 miles, it drains all of Central Europe from Bohemia and the Car pathian Mountains on the north to the Alps and the Balkans on the south, and It has a watershed of 300,000 square miles. It is navigable for 100 ton boats from its confluence with the Iller at Ulm, where It leaves Wur temburg and enters Bavaria, and for 600-ton barges from Regensburg down to Vienna. From that city to Orsova, Just above the Iron Gates, boats of five-feet draft can navigate, while from Orsova to Turnu Severin, In Rou manla, six-feet draft is possible. From the latter city to Bralla sea-going ves sels of 600 tons and flat barges of 1500 to 2000 tons can navigate. From Bralla through the Sulina mouth the channel Is deep enough for sea-going vessels up to 4000 tons register. Since 1856 the improvement of the lower Danube from the Iron Gates to the mouth has been under the charge of an international commission, the respective countries having deepened and straightened the channel and drained the swamps of the upper river. Several rapids above the Iron Gates have been made navigable, and at the Iron Gates a channel has been cut through the ridge of rock in the river bed which bears that name. In the delta tho Sulina channel has been deepened and shortened by cutting out bends, Jetties have been extended from the mouth, dredging is kept up and a minimum depth of 20 feet has been attained. The river is now the main artery of commerce for Southeastern Europe, and between 1861 and 190 2 the total tonnage of ships entering the river has been increased fivefold, while the mean size of ships has in creased tenfold. The Danube will be of immense value to the Teutons for conduct of the war. They can transport troops and material of war along It In un limited amount, and can import grain and oil from Roumanla and Bulgaria. They may also send submarines and destroyers down its lower channel to destroy Russian ships and attack Rus sian coast towns. Success in these operations may wrest naval supremacy on the Black Sea from Russia and give it to Turkey, seriously obstructing op erations against the latter country. The Importance of the Danube raises the expectation that Russia will make great efforts to prevent its outlet from falling into the hands of the enemy. SUFFRAGE FOR THE DEAD. "Let the dead heroes speak," is the slogan of a new political movement that is gaining headway in France. It is a proposal for the reform of the suf frage system of a country hard hit by war, applicable in particular to the regions that have been virtually de populated by the conflict. It looks toward the reconstruction of the coun try after the war Is over, and its pur pose is to give voice to those who have made the greatest sacrifice of all. The novelty of the Idea and its poetic quality are essentially French. One would almost know without pos session of further information that the author of the plan is a Frenchman and that, even though it cannot be said to be unopposed, there is an exceed ingly strong sentiment in Its favor. The sponsor of this suggestion of suffrage for the dead is Maurice Barres, eminent in letters and a mem ber of the French Academy. By co incidence, it happens that he is the same man who caused the creation of the "Croix de Guerre," the military decoration awarded to a soldier or officer for bravery cited in the order of the day by army, corps or division commander. It Is his plan to transfer automatically the right of suffrage from the dead soldier to his living wire, or mother or sister. He pro poses some further details as to the tenure of this franchise. According to M. Barres, this would continue for a period that might be calculated as the probable life expectancy of the soldier if he had not fallen on the battlefield. It Is his idea that these loved ones would be Influenced, more than would any other proxy, by a sentimental desire to act as the sol dier would have acted in affairs polit ical. These women would be expected to Know, in large measure, the aims and aspirations of their dead as they Know their lost voices and lost smiles. They would be expected to accept the ballot thus bestowed upon them as a sacred trust. There Is not only jus tlce. But gratitude, in the Idea," ob serves M. Barres. He adds that he re gards It as not exclusively poetical, but as eminently practical. He pic tures the wire in her silent home con siaenng ner nusDana s views unon things in general and guided by the influence of his memory. Further to show that he is really practical, M. Barres reminds the na tion that "human nature is human nature," and that it is entirely possi ble lox legislators and filficiais of the future to become, if not more ungrate ful, "at least more coldly disposed" toward the just appeal of a mere woman, unless that woman should be armed with the ballot of her soldier husband, or brother or son. In this M. Barres only shows his realization of what already has dawned upon the people of the suffrage states of the United States. But conditions, it would appear, are not the same in France. Until we have comprehended fully the psychology of the nation, it would be superficial to criticise the plan as proposing only partial justice, or as accomplishing by indirection what we might do by striking straight for the mark. But it Is undoubtedly true that the women of the belligerent nations have earned a right to a voice in the councils of the nation whether they happen to have won a "soldier proxy" or not. The sacrifice has been universal. It is for reasons associated with the practicability of the scheme, no doubt, that its proponent has seen fit to ac company it with a pledge that it "is not an entering wedge toward general suffrage for women.'' But if It is not such aaj entering wedge It la much like one. Movements of this kind go forward, not back. If France shall decide to give bereaved women of the nation the ballot, it is wholly con ceivable that it will come in time to a realization of the fundamental jus tice of a greater extension of this principle of political justice. Suffrage for the dead! It is a sen timent to conjure with. It proposes, one would think, the most practical of all monuments to the heroes of the war. In a time when individual heroes are so common that they are hardly mentioned. M. Barres sees in his idea a way almost literally of bringing tho dead to life. It would not be surpris ing if the plan were adopted espe cially in view of the broad necessities of certain local situations nor would it bo more singular if the Idea should spread to other countries. Women stand to gain at last some reward for the sacrifices they have made since the war began. TRAVEL ABROAD AND AT HOME. No more will the cheap "personally conducted" tour be a feature of travel in Europe after the war Is over, in the opinion of those who have studied the outlook. Increase In the cost of labor, the prime necessity for employ ment of the survivors of the conflict in creative work and in making the machinery for it, and heavy taxes im posed by the burden of war debt will be reflected not only in the rates at hotels and the cost of railway tickets, but in every other department of hu man activity, these men predict; so that the cost of a sojourn in Europe, all items included, is likely to exceed greatly the cost of traveling for tho same period in the United States. It will be remembered by those who a few years ago spent their vacations across the water" that many of them figured in advance on certain econ omies of living abroad as a result of which they were able to save their steamship fares and have the experi ence of seeing tho old world to boot. This will not be possible In future. for hotels will be compelled to charge more, railroad fares will bo higher. cabs will cost more, and so on all down the line. Even the walking tour will be more expensive. There will be, of course, some .per sons in the United States to whom these Increased expenditures will not mean any self-denial. They will in the future, as, they have done in the past, go to Kurope and display their wealth, and the people of the stricken countries will make the most of their opportunity. But for the family of average means, to whom vacation- planning is a matter ot careful finance. America will prove more attractive In the years to come. Our own country meanwhile will have adapted itself to the new situation. It already is be ginning to show signs of doing so. Travel at home is more comfortable than It ever was, and provision for those in moderate circumstances was never so complete as It Is now. Our roads are better, our trains faster and more- commodious, and our points of National interest within easier reach. Now Is the time for the West to prepare for the new movement of sightseers. It Is not at all likely that people will stay at home Just because rates in Europe are higher than be fore. We are a people who enjoy travel, and It will be all the better for us If we make a habit of "seeing America first." What chance Is there for the hemp industry to thrive In North Dakota when the states are either abolishing capital punishment or turning to electrocution ? The Russians talk a great deal about fighting until a decisive victory is won. Why don't they go ahead and win some Instead of merely talking about it? It must have been a native police man who was so badly beaten when soldiers and civilians mixed at Hono lulu. An alien knows bettor than to interfere. Of course if the Treasury Depart ment chooses to mint new coins, no one will object, but we shall be content with an abundance of the old ones. Tho murderous type of character always breaks Into violence about Christmas, when the rest of us are thinking of peace and good will. No matter how low the tempera ture at a boxing match, spectators warm up when the mixing begins. Provide a short board or clear a space on which to put out food for the birds, and watch the prowling cat. Do not complain about the east wind. It is a balmy zephyr compared with that Arkansas tornado. If Villa's success continues, Car ranza may yet wish he had let Per shing run the bandit down. With neither party holding a ma jority vote, the hybrid In the lower house has real value. If the schoolma'am Is tardy at the convention! she knows all the stock excuses. Many men want something better for their second cars and second wives. Time approaches when a man won ders on what he can "swear off." Where are the roses that usually bloom at Christmas time? Portland does not need snow and does not want it. J fiat your anU-giuda Hov to Keep Well By Dr. W. A. Evans Questions pertinent to hygiene,, sanitation and prevention of disease. If matters of gen eral interest, will be answered In this col umn. Where apace will not permit or the subject Is not suitable, latter will be per sonally answered, subject to proper limita tions and where stamped addressed envelops Is Inclosed. Dr. Evans will not make diagnosis or prescribe for individual dlseasea Re quests for such services cannot be answered. (Copyright. 1916, by Dr. W. A- Evans. Published by arrangement with the Chicago Tribune.) TREATMENT OF" INFECTED WOUNDS ONE good thing that has come from the European war is a method of treating suppurating wounds. The proof is positive that suppurating wounds should be treated by this method and no other. The method as employed in the war hospitals Is given by Dr. Noland in the December number of the Southern Medical Journal as follows: The patient with an Infected wound is taken to the dressing-room and thor oughly examined. The skin around the wound Is cleaned and painted with tincture of Iodine. The wound Is opened up well and all fragments of clothing, dirt and other foreign bodies are removed. Next the wound Is cleaned out with sponges wet with Dakln's fluid. Small rubber tubes are run into the wound. These run from a bag suspended about 30 inches above the wound. The tubes are lightly packed in the wound with gauze soaked in Dakln's fluid. The tube leading from the bag to the wound is closed with a clip. The bag is filled with Dakln's fluid. At two-hour Intervals the nurse presses on the clip and flushes out the wound with the fluid. New dressings are applied once a day. Every second day a specimen of the wound secretion Is taken for roicroscoplo examination. At first there are thousands of bac teria in each microscopic field. When the wound secretion contains only one bacterium In five microscopic fields and the condition has lasted one day the time has come to sew up the wound. The tubes are removed, the wound is dried out with Dakln's fluid gauze and the sides are sewn together exactly as Is done with a fresh wound. It has been found that the wounds thus treated, although suppurating in the first place heal up nearly as well (93 per cent as well) as do clean fresh wounds. Dakln's fluid is made by dissolving 200 g. of bleaching powder". 80 g. of dry sodium bicarbonate and 100 g. of so dium bicarbonate in 10 litres of water. The solution must be made exactly right, otherwise it does not work right. The hypochlorite must be tested and the solution must be tested and titrated. Minute directions are given both In the Southern Medical Journal for December and In the Journal of the American Medical Association for December 9. The solution can be made by any fairly qualified druggist, pro vided he gets good materials and fol lows the directions closely. It Is fairly stable, keeping two months stored in a dark place. Calllns a Doctor. An old wife writes: "Please write some advice to women along the line of self-control and endurance. A young man on a fair salary told me that the first two years he was married his doctor's bills amounted to nearly $3000. Nothing more serious than the usual baby et al. Women say, "I can't stand It,' and don't try. Some pain and illness, as you know only needs 'stand ing it' for a few hours. Then It is all over, without medkral attendance and bills. Something ought to be done to lift the burden of needless expense from the shoulders of young husbands. Do preach some sense Into these help less, and I almost said, senseless wives who fly to the telephone for every trifle at a dollar a fly." REPLY. I do not think I could preach any better sense than you have done In your letter. Studies show that some families do not call physicians when they should be called. It Is common knowledge that others call them needlessly. What Is needed In many of these cases Is self-control. The calling of a phy sician should be based upon reasonable knowledge and common sense. Your point relates not so much to the calling of the physician as to the on-edgeneae. tha lack of poise, the absence of self-control, the ten dency to unduly emphasise pains and other discomforts, all of which are so much In evidence among certain groups. Chose-Stekri Respiration. T. S. writes: "Two or three times a week, toward morning, my husband's respiration becomes what is called Cheyne-Stokes. The Interval when respiration seems to cease altogether is so prolonged at times that I become nervous and arouse him. Is this any thing unusual? His general health is very good, though he eats little and complains of feeling tired most of the time. REPLY. You might have your husband's heart ex amined; also have his urine examined for albumin, sugar, dlacetlc acid, and ammonia. I give you this advice because a perlodlo health examination la advisable In every case. However. I am certain your husband Is not having Cheyne-Stokes respiration. Either he Is too fat or ha has an obstruc tion In his nolo and he Is having the usual nightly struggle of she exalted rank of snorera. Enouu Not Beneficial. S. D. writes: "1. Several weeks ago I read an article by a doctor In which he stated that everyone should take an enema at least once a week, as 11 purified the system and in general improved the health. Do you approve of this? "2. Is It harmful for me, 22 years old, to take an enema several times a week? I am constipated. REPLY. 1. No. 2. Yes. Efficiency Purpose of Preparedness. WALLA WALLA. Wash.. Dec. 27. (To the Editor.) Referring to your j editorial, "New Army System Impera tive, I ruiiy siae in wun mis, as with others you have written on a similar subject, but why do you wind up with "compulsory srevice performed at the behest of an Imperial master for pur poses of conquest?" I know you are fully aware that the Imperial master you refer to has not the power to de clare war for the purpose you mention. When in the course of a war this mas ter should, as example shows, be the conqueror it would be only what we would be striving for. as your editorial explains. It la only one of the effi ciencies we should be aiming at. Our sister republic across the sea thought it worth while to have even a larger standing army and was there fore a larger military power for Eng land to destroy, which she is now on the hiirh road to doing. 1 A. I LORjSZEN, CITY IS IGNORANT OF COUNTRY Coat of Raising Poultry Not Under stood by Those oa Outside. H1LLSBORO. Or.. Dec 2. (To the Editor.) -While the egg boycott proved a failure, it emphasized the fact that there is much Ignorance about the profits in poultry. I am reminded of the question we used to debate In schoolhouse lyceums as to which was the greener a country person In the city or a city person in the country. I will state as a proved fact that there is no money here In the business of raising poultry for the market. I kept boohs one year on 235 hens and my In come from chickens and eggs was $295. The feed cost $385. I paid 90 cents a bushel for wheat, which was cheaper than raising my own feed. I have fig ured that on land costing $250 an acre (a low average for tillable chicken ranches) It costs $1.50 a bushel to raise wheat- Now on my year's poultry busi ness I had what your city boycotter would call $10 profit, but if I should figure Interest on my Investment. In surance, depreciation of fences and building, also labor, I was away be hind. I know by the testimony of neigh bors and my own observation that I did fully as well as the average In this part of the county. I now keep about 50 hens, largely because I like It, as a recreation. It being less hazardous than football and not so expensive as bil liards, while as for the fascination that lies in uncertainty, it Is away ahead of poker. Not counting those who cater to fads and fancies, there have been over 100, 000 people who have tried to raise poul try for the market In Oregon, and not one of them has over succeeded in mak ing a profit sufficient to live on. That man from the Salem hospital, who claims to have made about 80 cents a hen on 400 hens for two years in suc successlon possibly succeeded. If be did not count labor. If he counted labor, I challenge him to show his Items and prove 80 cents profit on the whole 400 In. two years. Now why this widespread belief that poultry is so profitable? There are sev eral reasons for it. First, those who sell blooded birds. Incubators, medicine or appliances ("dope and junk") to the would-be chicken raisers, have a plaus ible set of figures.. Then the seductive real estate agent proceeds to picture the most plausible bag of gold that ever lay at the end of a rainbow. Man, woman, or child, old or young, sick or well, married or single, learned or igno rant, regardless of race, color or previ ous condition of servitude, all can Join a happy home this side of stormy Jor dan by gently stroking this feathered "lamp of Aladdin." THOMAS H. BROWN. MUTE til I I. STILL CAN KICK Analogy Drawn Between II ray lea a Ani mal and Human Worker. PORTLAND, Dec 27. (To the Edi tor.) At last we have a materializa tion of one of the many blessings which unsquelchable optimists have always predicted must come from tho great war. A press dispatch from Paris says that to silence the protest of American mules agalnet enforced military service in a foreign land the veterinary ex perts discovered by experiment that a slight operation on the nostril produced a brayleaa mule. What a triumph for science: All the horrors of the Euro pean inferno with its tremendous finan cial cost stand warranted because of this addition to the knowledge of the human race. The only drawback is that the I. W. W. parlance, which calls our mute tollers working mules, now becomes particularly apt, as at last by the loss of his voice the four-footed mule is placed on the level of his two footed brother. The American mule Is noted for bis sure, vigorous kick when opportunity offers, and has been known to kick his master into the next county for real or fancied invasion of his inalienable mulish rights. As an optimist I predict that the Eu ropean mule wearing trousers and car rying a rifle will catch the spirit of personal dignity from our exported American mule and develop his kick ing propensity by practicing on his masters. LOUIS HONSTEIN. APPEAL MADE TO SAVE CHURCH Colored Members In Danger of Losing; House of Worship. PORTLAND, Dec. 27. (To the Ed itor.) In the hope that some good man or woman able and willing to help the helpless by saving to tha colored peo ple of Portland their place of worship, now about to be lost, to them the dear est place on earth, with the under standing that the property shall not again be endangered by mortgage, this appeal Is made. Against the property of the Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Larrabee, near Broadway, on the East Side, is a mortgage of $$000 on church and parsonage. Of this $1000 of the principal and $250 Interest must be paid. Because of economic conditions, 50 members have been compelled to move. The people are struggling, but they need and must have help. I have Investigated the case and be lieve Portland needs this house of wor ship to help care for the 1200 colored people in our city. Dr. C. E. Cllne and Dr. W. T. Kerr, veterans of the Civil War. are familiar with the case. To them or to me checks may be sent and we will safeguard all interests. Please help these good people to help them selves after all the best kind of char ity. WILLIAM WALLACE YOUNGSON. District Superintendent Methodist Episcopal Church. UNIFORM JITNEYS ADV(KATEl) Wrfter Insists on torn fort able chicles, for 20 or More Paasengera. PORTLAND. Dec 27. (To the Ed itor.) The public mind Is being some what disturbed concerning the regula tion of the Jitney Bervice in this city. The Mayor and City Council seem to be overwhelmed with a plethora of ideas as to the proper manner to handle the situation. To my mind the whole jitney scheme Is wrong. To permit large numbers of ordinary automobiles on the streets competing with each other for passen ger business is wrong, as it seems to me. The whole lot should be denied the use of the streets for auch purposes. If we are to have a bus for Jitney service why not define the sort of a vehicle that may be used. It would seem that cars to be used for public service should be of uniform construction with a capacity for seating not fewer than 20 people. No freight trucks should be permitted; but a passenger coach, com fortable for people to ride In. and operated over certain well-defined routes established by the City Council and authorized by city franchise pro viding for a uniform fare for each pas senger. This free-for-all rush for business by an unnumbered host of Jitneys is a constant menace to life and property. H. S. FAKGO. Pleee-Work Wrldlntr. Industrial Management. In order to make piece work a sat isfactory arrangement, even with the varying class of operators that were used, each operator was allowed so much oxygen per 100 pieces; this was easily determined, as the oxygen was obtained from Individual bottles for each welder. If the allowed amount was exceeded, the cost of the oxygen was charged against the welder, and If the operator made a reduction on the oxygen used per hundred parts he was given a premium, thus making the cost of the parts practically the same whether made by a skilled or unskilled operator, Black Sea Isle of Serpents. LESS than 30 miles east of Sulina. the only Important Black Sea port remaining in the possession of Rou manla since Field Marsha) von Maok ensen captured Constantza. la the tiny Island of Serpents, around which cling many fantastic legends of fascinating Interest aa well as several historical episodes which at one time threatened to become of international moment, says a war geograDhy bulletin Issued by the National Geographic Society. Unlike the monotonous reaches of reed-covered marsh land which stretch for 50 miles along the Roumanian and Russian shores to the north and south of the Sulina mouth of the Danube, and seldom attaining an elevation of mo ra th an two feet above the level of tho Black Sea, the Inland of Serpents, or Fldo-nlsi. thrusts its precipitous cliffs above the water to heights ranging from 60 to 100 feet. It is a mere fleck of rock In a sea whose depth a few yards from shore Is to fathoms. The islet Is scarcely more than a mile in circumference, but It has been a bea con guiding ships to the Danube for many centuries, its elevation being; in such striking contrast to the delta land of the great river. In ancient times Fido-nlsl had a va riety of names, but Grecian poets and travelers referred to it most frequently as Leuce. or tho White Island, on ac count of the numerous aea fowls which at certain seasons of the year swarmed over its cliffs. It was to this island that Thetis, the marine goddess, is supposed to have carried the ashes of her son, Achilles, hence the temple erected here in honor of the hero of the Trojan war. Another le- iiil re nlt-s 1 lit-t.s snfttelit.it The tnat no was restored to life, and there after he lived on tho island with Iphl genia. the daughter of Agamemnon, wnk hnd been saved from sacrifice by the goddess Artemis. One of the most poetic descriptions of the island and its temple is given by Arrian in the account of his voyage around the Black Sea In the second century of tho Christian era He wrote: "It is related that Thetis gave this island to Achilles and that he still in habits it. His temple and statues, both of very ancient workmanship, are seen there. No human being dwells on it; it has only a few goats, which mariners convey to it as votive offerings. Other offerings or sacred gifts are suspended In honor of Achilles, such as vases, rings and precious gems. "Sea birds, divers and fowl Innumer able frequent the island, and these birds alone have the care of the shrine. Every morning they repair to the sea, and. dipping their wings In the waves, sprinkle the temple, and afterwards sweep with their plumage Its sacred pavement." The nnme Island of Serpents grew out of the fact that numerous black snakes from four to five feet long were discovered here by mariners. Many of the reptiles are said to have fallen In the cisterns of the island and polluted the waters, which are now un drlnkable. It Is interesting to recall in connection with the name of the island that Achilles was often referred to as "the snake-born." and that his mother, Thetis, frequently assumed tho form of a snake. The Amazons are supposed to have attempted to seize this island on one occasion, but the ghost of Achilles ap peared and so terrified the horses of the female warriors that the riders were thrown and severely trampled upon, whereupon the expedition was abandoned. This meager rock brought England and Russia to the verge of war 60 years ago, following the treaty of peace which ended th.e Crimean con flict. The Island was not mentioned In the terms of the treaty, and when Turkey sent a small party to relight the lighthouse, which hnd been dark throughout the struggle of 1853-56. Russia attempted to take control of the beacon which atands as a guide post to the Danube's mouths. England protested, and sent a fleet across the Black Sea to enforce her demands In behalf of her recent ally, the Sultan. Russia, after a brief threat of re sistance, yielded. Tho Island passed into Roumanian hands when that na tion threw off the Ottoman shackles in 1877. In Other Days. Twenty-ftvo Ymn Alto Today. From The Orogonlan of December 28, IBM. Riverside. Cal., Dec. i6. The wind, which Tor the past few days has saved the orange crop from injury by frost, ceased blowing on Christmas evening and the night proved one of the coldest on record, the mercury ranging from 26 to 28 degrees for at least 10 houra. In the article on the life and death or Medorem Crawford, published today, the name of John L. Morrison, from whom Morrison street in this city takes its name, is mentioned. From Postmaster Steel It was learned yesterday that the postofflce depart ment will have the entire first floor of the new building for its use. Berlin, Dec. 26. The Emperor and Empress on Christmas evening presided at the distribution of presents in the new palace at Pottsdam. George N. Curzon, the new united secretary for Ireland, is said to be the J a 1 Vi i . . , ..f lrVYV d est uicaat-u uiuii i L w. s mons. W. B. Russell, the carpenter who re cently fell down the elevator shaft from the roof of tha new Oregouian building, will probably recover, not withstanding the serious nature of his Injuries- Dr. Henry W. Coe, the phy sician attending him. reported yester day that the injured man was doing re markably well. Half a Century Ago. From The Oregonlan of December 28. 1S6S. The Temperance Banner Is the title of a new paper to be issued In Salem about the first of January. A new nostoffice has been established In Yamhill County. From the Courier wo infer that the name of the new of fice Is Panther Creek. If rumor may be believed, there will be a line of opposition steamers on the Columbia River from Portland to The Dalles that will bring a noticeable re duction in the fares. In Germany there has Just been In vented a rifle entirely of Iron. A breech-loading, double-barreled cannon also has Just made its appearance in that country. The Lesson of tbe Dead Nations. Agnes Reppller, in the November Atlantic. We can know nothing of any nation unless we know its hlttory; and we can know nothing of the history of any nation unlcBS we know something of the history of all nations. The book of the world Is full of knowledge we need to acquire, of lessons we need to learn, of wisdom we need to assimilate. Consider only this brief sentence of Poly blue, quoted by Plutarch: 'In Car thage no one Is blamed, however he may have gained his wealth." A plea sant place, no doubt, for business en terprise; a place where young men were taught how to get on, and extravagance kept pace with shrewd finance. A self-e-ttsfied. self-confident, money-getting, money-loving people, honoring success, and hugging its fancied security, while in far-off Rome Cato pronounced Its doom.