8 : -- - ' TTTE , MORNING OREGOXIATT, MONDAY, MARCII 5, 1917. r - A ' . ! ;': vot l ! I k ;? xnxxm PORTLAND, OREGON. , i Entered at Portland (Oregon) Postofflce aa second-class mail matter. . Subscription rates invariably In advance: )r .. - . (By Mail.) gaily, eunday Included, one year ...... .18.00 f- Ially. Sunday Included, six months 4.25 ally. Sunday Included, three months . .. 2.25 ally, Sunday included, one month 73 ally, without Sunday, one year 6.00 ' ai!y' w't-uout Sunday, three months 1.75 ? tally. without Sunday, one month 60 veekly, one year J. 60 ' fuDday, one year ...................... 2.50 unday and "Weekly 3.00 , ., ' (By Carrier.) . f Ps.!ly. Sunday Included, one year 9.00 : lal!y, Sunday Included one month 75 v 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; county and state. Postage Bates 12 to 16 pases, 1 cent: , . 18 to 82 pages, 2 cents: 84 to 48 pases. 3 - cents: BO to 60 pases. 4 cents; 62 to 76 pases, .'. 6 cents; 78 to 82 pases. 6 cents. Foreign : posta.se double rates. Eastern Business Office Verree A Conk . , lln. Brunswick buildlns. New York; Verree ii Conklln. Steger building, Chicago; San 1 ; J ranclaco representative, ii. J. Bldwell, 742 1 Market street. POXTLAXD. MONDAY. MARCH 8. 1917. . ; LET OREGON DECLARE ITSELF, it Through the disloyal conduct of ' twelve Senators, the Sixty-fourth Con ; trress has expired without having: given : to President Wilson the authority he asked to protect American citizens and American ships on the sea from ?. threatened attack by Germany. In an emergency without precedent these twelve Senators have basely deserted the President. They have in effect de clared that the United States must abandon the freedom of the sea at the dictation of Germany; that Germany lias the right to make the law of the sea, and that this Nation must obey; that Germany Is free to murder our citizens at sea, and that the United Estates must do nothing to protect them ..'or to avenge them. If the United States were to accept ' this position, we should no longer be a free. Independent Nation. Such craven conduct would be a direct invitation to i further encroachment. Our National ;i existence would continue only on suf 'f fe ranee. We should have forfeited m the right to be free, for that right is !',; founded not only on ability but on ! -' readiness to defend it. A Nation which 'i Is not willing to defend that inesti- mable blessing Is not worthy to en joy It. i The Oregonian believes that the American people are truly represented by the 403 Representatives who voted for the armed neutrality bill and Dy e 84 Senators who were ready to te for It, not by the thirteen Repre- ieentatives who voted against it nor by the twelve Senators who prevented a vote on It. The time has come for the great voice of the American people .;to be heard. The Oregonian calls upon ie-. ery public body in Oregon, every or . ganization of any kind, and every clti ' J ten of Oregon who believes that Con . ; ' gress should uphold the i President in : this crisis, to declare themselves. We ! i. owe it to our country to stand by the President In his defense of our Na- ; tional rights and honor. We can best do bo by declaring that we stand with the loyal, patriotic majority of Con- , gress, not with the disloyal or cowardly s minority. Action should be prompt, ', plain and emphatic. As an outline of what will bo ap- ; propriate, The Oregonian suggests that the declaration bo Introduced by a ; statement that, after exhausting the ; resources of diplomacy, the President s has now taken the only course con i sistent with National self-respect; that war with Germany will not ensue un ' less Germany knowingly violates well settled principles of international law l with Intent hostile to the United States; ' that in that event. If war should fol- low. It will follow, not by our own act - but through the deliberate aggression .i of another country; that the responsi j bility of extending the war to the American hemisphere will then rest upon Germany alone; that, lest Ger- - many act upon possible misinforma tion as to the temper of the Ameri can people, that country should be made aware of the essential unity of ' our people and of their loyal determi nation to make all sacrifices necessary to protect our liberty and to maintain our honor. The Oregonian recom mends that resolutions to the follow ing effect be adopted, the form not . being important provided the sub ' stance is preserved: First That the act of the Executive In . sjeverins diplomatic relations with Germany ls one to be approved and commended by all who have the best interests of the United Htates at heart. Second That the German declaration of January 31, 1017, represents an unjustified and unjustifiable attempt to destroy the freedom of the sea to abridse the com mercial liberty suaranteed to us by estab lished law and custom; and that If the Gov ernment of the United States were to ac quiesce therein such action would be re sented by all sood citizens as in the highest degree pusillanimous and as altogether in consistent with the spirit and tradition of - a free people. Third rThat the President was Justified in asking from Congress support in protecting American life, liberty and property at sea; that the action of those Senators who by their opposition prevented the Senate from Slvlng this support Is condemned as dis- ' luyal; that the President In Justified in taking the proposed protective steps with out awaiting action by Congress; and that it Is our duty and that of all loyal citizens to tender immediately to the Government II the service of which we severally and collectively are capable Fourth That while all should stand ready . to volunteer If voluntary service Is called - rtr, yet Congress should not adopt emerg ency measures merely, but should definitely recognize the principle that the duty of de fending the Nation rests equally "upon all citizens capable of service by establishing ..Immediately a permanent and democratic system of defense based upon universal serv ice and training under direct and exclusive -Federal control. - , A copy of such resolutions should ; be sent to the President, to each mem. : ber of the Cabinet and to each member of the Senate. To the shame of Oregon, one of our Senators, Harry Lane, is among the disloyal twelve. Every organization of 'any kind In Oregon, every citizen of the state, owes it to the good name of Oregon to repudiate him as a repre sentative of the state la his attitude on the armed neutrality bill, to call .upon him for support of the President and to commend the action of Senator Chamberlain in aligning himself with the patriotic majority. Now Is the time to determine where each man and woman in Oregon, as in other states, stands. Each Is called upon to take one of two positions either with the President for his coun try, its rights and Its honor or against "all of these. In such a time we know no party. We are all Americans or we . are false to our country. . ; DAIRYMEN SEEK PERFECTION'. i More importance is to be . at. -: tached to the . recent meeting of the ' Western Dairy Instructors Assoc! a i ; tion in Portland than the casual reader '. " of newspapers may suppose. It aims I i at the final, standardizing of all dairy . products in this section through co operation by instructors of the agri cultural colleges and the . dairymen of the West. We shall then have ona standard of perfection for milk, cream, butter and cheese. All persons en- r gaged In the dairy industry are striv ing for perfection, but they are not agreed on what constitutes perfec tion. The aim, is to make its at tainment an exact science. At this time, when the. price of al most every article of food has gone soaring almost beyond the reach of the ordinary citizen. It is noticeable that all over the country the price of milk is the same as it was two, three, four or five years ago. Than milk and the products of milk there is no better food.' 1 Somebody has said that to eliminate the dairy cow would be to uproot civilization. That may be overstating the truth, but an absence of milk and its products v-ould make the modern table vastly different. Yet the most essential thing in good table fare stands prac tically still in price. ft seems that to the dairymen we owe a debt of gratitude not simply because they do not boost their prices, but for serving the public well with milk and cream. No other food prod uct comes to us so attractively and so uniformly good. The days when the dairyman's best friend was the pump have gone never to return, and pure milk is as easy to get as pure eggs. Indeed the dairymen have made such great strides and handle their bus iness In such an expensive way that of late years they have scarcely made the net returns to which they were really entitled. It speaks well for Portland, well for Western Oregon, that the better ment of airy methods is to be looked after here by the experts at least for another year. The entire North Pa cific coast is destined to be a won derful dairy section, for our climate and soil conditions are practically ideal for the dairy cow. But we made no headway in the business worth while until the changes were wrought by as intelligent a lot of dairymen and dairy instructors as ever were gathered in any business men who determined to get the best cows to be had, keep them in the best manner, feed them with the best food and then take care of the milk scien tifically and perfectly. With dairy men thus determined and instructors to lead the way the business was sure to prosper. TWO MESSAGES. Through the medium of the reliable Associated Press, the following repot t of the patriotic action of Stanford University was the other day conveyed to the public: Stanford University. Cal.. Feb. 28. Ninety-eight members of the faculties of Stanford University signed a telegram to President Wilson today declaring "the time has come when the highest interests of hu manity require that all means at the com mand of the United States be .employed te defeat the purposes of the nation that sank the L.usltanla and the Laconla." President Ray Lyman Wilbur's name headed the signatures. "We pledge our support," the message read, "to whatever action you take to gain that end." There are 110 professors and instructors at Stanford. Chancellor Emeritus David Starr Jordan, first president of Stanford and In recent years Identified with world peace propaganda, was absent from the campus ana nis name did not appear on the telegram. Two days later the University of Washington, through ninety members of its faculty, sent the following ring ing message to Senator Poindexter at Washington: Will you communicate to President Wilson an Indorsement of hjs foreign policy on the part of the undersigned members of the faculty of the University of Washington, and also to the members of Congress from Washington our request for their immediate and hearty co-operation with the President? The Oregonian, with no unfriendly spirit toward Reed College, commends to its president, faculty and students the high service Stanford and Wash ington have rendered President Wilson and the Nation In this perilous hour. THE "GET READY" IDEA. Good roads enterprise is advo cated for Douglas County by the Rose bur? Review. That newspaper has grasped the full meaning of the J6, 000,000 bonding proposal. It under stands that the measure is for co-operation between state and counties .'n the particulars that the state will do the paving if the counties will prepare the grade; it understands, moreover, that only $1,000,000 of the bonds may bo sold this year and $2,000,000 next year. Therefore, suggests the Review to Douglas County, it would be good busi ness judgment to prepare a strong case for consideration by the Highway Commission. It would haveDouglas County busy itself on a through high way or two: Every live community will be anxious to be first served remembering the old adage that "the Lord helps those who help them selves." While Douglas County perhaps needs It worse than anywhere else. It does not follow that we are going to get any con siderable portion of this road fund unless a lot of very active work Is done and specific, preparation Is made for Its application on our toads. A paved road clear through the country le well worth working for. Let's have It. It Is the old but golden idea that It is wise to be prepared to grasp an op portunity. It is a spirit that other countries could well emulate. We pre dict that Douglas County, which be cause of, its topography and area, knows so well the dlffir-iiltlps thnt H- set permanent road construction with out some outside aid, will be in line tor early expenditures from the paving fund. THE HEIGHT OF IMPUDENCE. An example of the cool cynicism of German statesmanship was the at tempt to induce Ambassador Gerard to reaffirm and enlarge the treaty of 1828 at the precise time when he had Just been recalled from his post because Germany openly proclaimed the purpose to violate that treaty. It is a peculiarly Teuton theory of international relations which assumes that one party to a treaty will bo bound tighter when the other party has repudiated Its obligation. The first Prussian-American treaty was made in 1785, was revised in 1799, expired In 1810 and was revived in 1828. Article 12 of 1785, reaffirmed In 1828, directly applies to the rights now in controversy. It reads: If one of the contracting parties should be engaged In war with any other power. the free intercourse and commerce of the subjects or citizens of the party remaining neutral witn the belligerent powers shall not be interrupted. On the contrary. In that case, as In full peace, the vessels of the neutral party may navigate freely to and from the ports and on the coasts of the belligerent parties, free vessels making free goods, insomuch as all things shall be ad Judged free which shall be on board any vessel belonging to the neutral party, al though such things belong to an enemy of the other; and the same freedom shall be extenaea to persons who shall be on board a tree vessel, although they should be en emles to he other party, unless they be soiaiers in actual service or such enemy. So far from recognizing that . "the vessels of the neutral party may navi gate freely to and from the ports and on the coasts of the belligerent par ties," Germany now decrees that such vessels shall be sunk on sight without warning. So far from "the same free dom" being "extended .to persons who shall be on board a free vessel", they are killed or wounded by torpedoes or shells and at best are driven to open boats, where many of them perish of cold, hunger or exposure. Other ar ticles of the 1799 treaty which were revived In 1828 provide that contra band carried in neutral bottoms may not be confiscated, but must be duly paid for; and that after a contra band cargo is removed, a neutral ves sel must be allowed to proceed to Its destination. In practice, Germany sends both ship and cargo to the bot tom of the sea without even examining the cargo to "determine whether it is contraband. Germany not only violates the ac cepted principles of International law; it violates the express terms of a treaty with this country, the obliga tions of which it has assumed from Prussia, .Germany treats this explicit agreement as a scrap of paper so far as her obligations under it are con cerned, yet she has the Impudence not only to assume that It is still binding on this country but to ask the United States to reaffirm and ex tend its obligation. This is the spe cies of diplomacy which drew Great Britain into the war by violation of the Belgian treaty and which prac tically released Italy from the triple alliance by a war of aggression. Ger many's troubles are the direct result of the crimes and blunders of her own statesmen. HICKS AND 8CIEXCK. A stockman of Grant County writes The Oregonian for comforting assur ance in a period of anxiety. No, his perturbation has nothing to do with war clouds. It is with rain clouds. It appears that an almanac predicts disaster for that section. "Many stock men, he Informs us, "rely entirely upon Hicks and are scared by the forecast for March and April, think ing haystacks will not last over the awful storm period predicted." "Could you," asks this stockman. "state what is the opinion of scientists and astronomers about weather fore casts such as made by the almanacs of Hicks and others?" Let it be repeated once more that as between science and popular opin ion. The Oregonian maintains an armed neutrality. With that position well understood we venture to diffuse our Information on the position and assumption of science on this im portant subject. The United States maintains a weather bureau. It is a bureau com posed of scientists. The Rev. Iri R. Hicks Is not a member of that bureau nor even a consulting scientist. Prob ably he will not be until the recall. the direct election and the direct pri mary are applied to bureaucratic of fices. The coldly scientific weather bureau does not ordinarily make predictions more than a week ahead and such as are made are severely guarded. This attitude, we think, is.fairly representa tive of the attitude of science in gener al. But If more information be re quired it may be said that a prominent encyclopedia asserts that, except among the ignorant, the astrological and other predictions of almanacs ex cite amusement rather than stronger emotions. This Is, of course, a dogmatic asser tion and obviously was written by someone who was not acquainted In Grant County, Oregon. If anybody desires to start a referendum on the question of boycotting this encyclope dia for the implied insult we shall be glad to furnish its name, but in subse quent proceedings will continue to pre serve our well known position of armed neutrality. THE NATION'S FOOD SUPPLY. Riots In New Tork caused by food scarcity and high prices have forced the attention of the American people to production, distribution and waste. Just as depletion of the forests forced attention to conservation twenty years ago. This Nation is in the position of a man who has inherited so vast a for tune that he has embarked on a ca reer of reckless spending under the im pression that the supply cannot be ex hausted, but who finally discovers that his income is reduced to an amount which is only sufficient for his rea sonable needs. For many years we produced such an abundance that we could sell all that other nations wished to buy and could waste without restraint and still have plenty left. Production was 60 cheap and the general standard of prosperity was so high that we could permit the intervention of a chain of middlemen between producer and con sumer, each adding his profit to the original cost, and we could still pay the final price. Our transportation was so excellent that It constantly poured a stream of food from the agri cultural districts into the cities without serious interruption. We could waste without stint and without thought of the morrow, yet still not want, and waste we did. We are now brought up short by hard facts. Urban has outgrown rural population, bringing producers and consumers of food near a balance. The virgin richness of the soil has been exhausted, and farmers must use fer tilizers and rotate crops. The open range has been brought under culti vation, and we raise meat animals on the farm. Cold storage has enabled middlemen to withhold the surplus of Summer and Fall for cale in Winter and Spring, and, when there Is no surplus, - to extort exotbitant prices. Growth of population and industry has overtaken and exceeded capacity of railroads to carry traffic, while river transportation has been almost aban doned. Before the war came all these conditions had combined to reduce supplies, increase consumption, dimin ish the surplus for export, create arti ficial scarcity in great cities and es tablish prices above our ability to pay. The war has in two years brought us suddenly face to face with the con sequences of our National improvi dence. Nature, not our own fore thought, gave us bountiful crops In 1914 and 1916, but practically all of the surplus above our own needs was poured into the great vacuum which the war had made in Europe. The wheat crop of 1916 was barely enough to feed ourselves and to provide seed for the next crop; we had available for export only the carry-over from 1915, but high prices and Europe's urgent demand have tempted us even to cut Into our reserves for seed. The potato crop is also short, the seed re serve is impaired and the price of seed potatoes is twice that of a year ago. The same statement Is true of onions, and seed corn Is reduced below the margin of safety. Blockades and em bargoes hinder our buying other vegj table seeds abroad. To maintain the productivity of the soil we must have fertilizers, but we can no longer get potash from Germany, and high freights and war demand have sent Chilean nitrates to- enormous prices. The Industrial boom has drawn labor from agriculture to other Industries while the war has cut off three-fourths of the immigrant labor supply. If this country should throw its whole strength into the war. as may happen this year, the labor supply will be still further depleted. If nature should be ever so kind the prospect of greater aggregate production of staple crops this year is not bright, but Europe threatens to draw still more heavily on our supply as war ravages more of Its area and destroys more of its people. This, situation has turned many minds to consideration of plans for in suring, that all our people shall have opportunity to buy enough food nt reasonable prices. Government and states are already doing about all that is possible to increase production. The present need is improved means of distribution. Some cities have resort ed to direct purchase or transporta tion of food to meet an immediate emergency, but this does not seem necessary as a general, permanent remedy. Enough food is now produced In this country to feed all our people. The difficulty to be overcome is that of getting it into the hands of all the people at reasonable cost. Warehouses in some sections are choked with goods which people In other sections urgently need. The goods in question are prevented from getting to these people, either by the refusal of the owner to sell, or by the failure of the railroads to transport them. Choked with traffic of all kinds and in many places blocked by snow, the railroads. like the rest of s, are governed more by self-interest than by the public needs. States and cities can provide a remedy in only a limited degree. For example, the lines of trade by which New York City obtains its sus tenance extend to Oregon and Cali fornia on the west and to Florida and Texas on the south. Only the supreme National authority can meet the case. Somebody in the National Govern ment should have power to compel the sale of goods that are withheld from market when they are needed any where within our boundaries to sustain life. Power is also needed by the Interstate Commerce Commission to enforce peremptory orders that in emergencies food and fuel for our own people shall be carried in pref erence to all other traffic. The Com mission should also have broad power to regulate the distribution and use of cars that they may be fully load ed, promptly loaded and unloaded, so distributed that one section shall not monopolize the supply to the injury of another section, and that the supply be ample to carry the peak load of traffic. Some have suggested an embargo on food exports, in order that our domes tic supply be not reduced below our needs, but that remedy might easily prove worse than the disease. It would be construed as an unfriendly act by the nations which are our best cus tomers and it would powerfully aid the cause of Germany, which has done us such grievous wrong as to drive us to the verge of war. It would greatly damage our foreign commerce and consequently our industries, anl would provoke retaliation from those nations which would suffer by it. Possibly a limit might be placed on the quantity of foodstuffs which could lawfully be exported, though that measure would be fraught with many difficulties. One remedy is a National campaign against waste, which Secretary Hous ton says costs us the immense total of $700,000,000 a year. In this the Gov ernment can do little beyond spreading Information and appealing to our con science and self-interest. It must be left to the voluntary action of the in dividual and the family. Each ono must realize that in wasting that which is useful he injures both himself and the community. We must learn the lesson which war is teaching the na tions of Europe. If we refuse to learn except from that teacher, then war will have some compensation. The car which killed a woman Saturday was said to be coasting, go ing south on Tenth and Washington, which demonstrates It must have had considerable initial speed on an up grade. There is small chance for those who derive their incomes from fashion in Europe these days. Styles are grad ually gravitating back to the aborig inal blankets or skins of wild ani mals. The Germans chuckle at the thought of the difficulty the British will have in making trenches in the abandoned territory on the Ancre. It has been reduced to mush by shells and rain. The name of the Austrian premier. Count Clam-Martinic, suggests one way of relieving the food shortage. He might eat the first half and with a slight alteration drink the other. By. edict of an imperial commis sion, German women may wear last, year's -costumes without disgrace. This Is sacrifice that should be re warded when opportunity arrives. The Honorable Myers and the Hon orable Miller, did not furnish a uku lele duet at the Hornibrook banquet at Albany, but the harmony was there just the same. One woman certainly will forego the habit of reading In bed after tip ping the lamp and making a hurried exit in angel clothes; or she will In stall electric lights. Reprisals on prisoners seem to the dispassionate spectator poor tactics. They only provoke the enemy's sol diers to fight to the death rather than be captured. Dutch newspapers think Germany will be "nui vomica" with the United States after the war. It Is possible she may be too small to count. Douglas County prunes are going to. the allies in large quantity. While they may not Impart the fighting spir it, they are excellent fillers. The boys of forty-five In the Ef ficiency Club are determined they shall not be crowded by the old men of lesser years. England wants all the surplus cheese of Coos County. The English man knows good stuff on the first bite. So there are professional ethics even among Jitney drivers, and they may be enforced with bare fists. Suffragettes contribute the humor in an otherwise solemn affair at Washington today. If the people could vote now, many of the dozen disloyal Senators would be left at home. Wilson Is doing some swearing Just now, but the "iob demands it. It's a four-year cinch. The groundhog was right. This la not Winter: it's a mild Spring. Regular Inauguration weather here. How to Keep Well By Dr. W. A. Enuk Questions pertinent to hygiene, sanitation and prevention of disease. If matters of geo erl interest, will be answered In this col umn. Where space will not permit or the subject is not suitable letters will be per sonally answered, subject .o proper limita tions and wirre atamped addressed envelope Is Inclosed. Dr. Evans will not make diagnosis or prescribe for Individual diseases. Re 'juestv for such services cannot be answered. (Copj right. 1918. by Dr. W. A. Evans. Published by arrangement with the Chlcaso Tribune.) PAINTERS PERILS. . ARE you a painter? Does your work brine; you In contact with lead, tur pentine or benzine? Or is your husband or any relative a painter? If the an swer to either of those questions is yes, then you are ;nterested in some facts brought out in an investigation made by the New York City health depart ment. The facts may be a little misleading, for the following reason: The health department sent out 30,000 circulars and tried to get every painter in the city to submit 4o an examination. Only 338 came forward. Those who stayed away might have done so because they knew they were sick or, on the other hand, because they thought themselves well. Then let us understand that the following results were obtained by ex amination of 280 painters. Just how far the conclusions drawn can be ap plied to the trade in general remains to be decided. Of the 289, 14S had some one or more eisna of lead poisoning; 146 had none. The report calls attention to certain bad conditions under which painters work. Speaking generally, they work in places where there is a poor supply of drinking water, poor toilet facilities and poor washing facilities. They are compelled to eat in the place where they work. They store their street clothes In the rooms where they are working. Backache was the moot frequent sign of lead poisoning. Constipation was present in more than half the cases. Headache was present In nearly half the cases. Fifty-three had colicky pains in the abdomen. Loss of muscular strength was prominent as a symptom. When the lead line on the gums is present It Is almost certain oroof. but only 10 of these several hundred had it. The result from testing the urine for lead was found to be satisfactory. When there were signs of lead poison ing the urine was nearly certain to give a test for lead. Sixty-three of the men examined complained of symptoms attributable to poisoning by turpentine or benzine or both. Some told of being suddenly overcome (fainting or becoming faint) while at work In confined or Illy ven tilated places. Some suffered from naueea, vertigo or headache. In a number of instances men told of fall ing from ladders or scaffolding as a result of being overcome by the fumes of turpentine. Generally the painters were disposed to complain more of turpentine than of lead. The symp toms of 'turpentine poisoning are im pressive; those of lead poisoning are subtle and insidious. It was found that painters do not live long. Men enter the trade early. In most cases they had never had any other trade before becoming painters. Having become painters, they stuck until It got them, and it got them in most cases before the average age for disability and death. Essentially the precautions required for painters to prevent poisoning are cleanliness of the skin, arid especially the hands, eating with clean hands away from the work shop, refraining from the use of tobacco and good ventilation in the work place. TRAIN YOUR HIND. W. J. writes: "I have been told that I have neurasthenia, but would like your opinion. My symptoms are dizzi ness, periods of depression, lack of mental concentration, this seems to be my principal trouble), and at times a choking sensation in my throat which Is only relieved by a fit of crying.. I am also bothered with pains in my chest which move about at various points. I will be troubled with one of these spells and others will keep oc curring In succession until they seem to reach a climax and I am practically 'all in,' then I am better for a while. Do you think I have neurasthenia? , A course in physical culture with special diet has been advised.- Will it cure me? What had I better do? , am a man 23 years of age and have always been in good health and taken good care of myself. I am employed in a factory where I work at a machine 10 hours a day and In the last three manths have put in considerable overtime." REPLY. Tou are either neurasthenic or hysterical. A course In physical culture may help you, but It will not cure you. Neurasthenia and hysteria can .only be cured by mental train ing, since they are the result of bad mental habit. BUNION SUFFERERS. E. I writes: "I am 12 years of age. Since about a year ago I have a bun ion. It gradually grew larger, and is now quite big, and lately it hurts in the morning when I put on my shoes. I have been rubbing it with musterole and there is a blister on It now. Please tell me if it can be cured and if It can not be cured how can it be prevented from becoming larger?" REPLY. We get a great many letters about banlons We have picked this one for an answer be cause you developed this bunion when you were 11 years old. Bunions result from wear ing tight shoes, especially those which pinch the toea together at the front. A pointed shoe draws the front end of the toea to gether. This throws the back end out and widens the ball of the foot. When the hard leather presses on the hard bone at the ball the soft tissue builds up a protect ing pad. This pad la called a bunion. - Take off the pressure and the bunion disappears. How can you take off this pressure? By wearing shoes that are broad lb the toe and In the ball. Separate the toes by wearlns cotton or cloth between them. If this does not cure you you must have an operation on the ball of your foot to draw your foot bones back together. Rubbing stuff on the bunion does no good. ELECTRICITY IN HAIR. Miss A. H. writes: "I have so much electricity in my hair that when I brush it in a dark room you can see the electric sparks. When I comb it my hair snaps. 1. Is this beneficial or harmful? 2. What explanation is there for so much electricity in the hair?" REPLY. 1. Neither.' 2. Your hair is dry. The matter is of no consequence. GALLSTONES. C. M. F. writes: "Can gallstones be successfully disposed of without an operatlonl Are they dangerous? I have been having attacks withi increasing regularity. For the last six weeks they have occurred every week, usually coming on after midnight. Have had X-rays. The stones did not show in the plate, but operator saw them through rays. I am 41 years of age." REPLY. Gallstones cannot be removed except by operation. However, gallstones that have been the source of pain are liable to be come fixed and cease to cause attacks. TTie operation for . gallstones is" not especially dangerous. . SALTS NOT FOR RHEUMATISM. J. O. S. writes: "Will you kindly Inform me through your paper if salts are good for rheumatism? If so, how much should be taken at one time and how often?" REPLY. No. COPPERHEAD RANKS ANALYZED Civil War Recrultlmir Officer Dissects Breeds as Found Today. VANCOUVER, Wash., March S. (To the Editor.) I. have never voted for President Wilson, yet in the present crisis my voice, humble though it be, will uphold him in any or all efforts to maintain the rights of the people of the United States. . Few understand the true 'definition of ."Copperhead" better than does the writer. I was engaged in the recruit ing service during the period when this venomous and loathesome reptile Infested the land. My experience in this branch of the service afforded excep tional opportunity of studying adverse influences to enlistment. In those days, as now, the popular song and dance of the Copperhead was religious paci ficism. . They were at all times as full of Bible peace platitudes as a cur dog is of barks. But under all this their hope, aim and sole purpose was to pre vent men from enlisting in the Union cause. President Wilson is "at this moment confronted by a species of Copperhead equally . venomous and much more numerous than those which confronted Lincoln. First, there is the hyphenate who in the fatherland 'glories and eulogizes military preparedness and thorough efficiency. Yet, wonder of wonders, and seven hands around! This hyphen Is today. In our United States, a pacificist of the first water, pure and undefiled, undiluted and uncontam inated, a man who loves peace, abhors war and mocks at any attempt, (by the United States) toward National de fense. Surely the leopard can change his spots and the Ethopian his skin, and Saul is not among the prophets. We next come to the Quinns and Cal loways, to whom you refer editorially. While this element 4s not numerous it is particularly dangerous. It Is at tached to no Country or flag in par ticular. In 1862 its efforts were ex erted to drive us Into war with Great Britain over the Trent embroglio. In 1866 and again In 1S70 It attempted "to force war between the two nations through an invasion of Canada. Dur ing the Franco-Prussian war It, for reasons, was rabidly anti-German. To day, for reasons, it is avidly pro-German. Next we come to our domestic Cop perhead. This product was not made in Germany nor Imported from the United Kingdom It is our 6wn make. Yet we are ashamed of It. While this home-grown product is a self-conceited, vain and simple-minded creature, it is probably the most confusing of the Copperhead family." Its sole aim is spot-light notoriety. With a plow share In one hand and a pruning hook in the other it delights to pose as a "holler than thou" in the public places. It assumes the role of John the Bap tist, and we may believe would also assume his scant style of dress, or even less, if doing so would attract public attention. While this being is inoffensive and thoughtless, it is par ticularly annoying to the Administra tion. As an instance of its mentality It asks President Wilson to send Dr. Aked to the trenches in Flanders to play "Sweet Hour of Prayer" on a Jewsharp in order to have the soldier throw down his arms and go home to his plow. Yes. the President is located be tween the devil and the deep sea, and very close to a lunatic asylum. All worthy of the name American will sup port him. AN OLD SOLDIER- DUAL CITIZENSHIP ENACTMENT Correspondent Calls Attention to Re puted Law of Germany. MMINNVILLE. Or., March 3. (To the Editor.) The "Living Age" for February 24 publishes, from the "Nine teenth Century and After." an article on Germany and South America, writ ten by a Brazilian, which contains much that Is of interest to the people of this country. I wish to call atten tion to one point made in this article, relating to the naturalization of Ger mans. This article quotes from a law of Germany said to have been passed on July 2. 1913, called the Delbruck law, the following passage: A German citizen need not lose his na tlonality If, at his request and before the acquisition of his foreign nationality, he shall have received the written consent of competent authority. If this is the German law, a German, desiring to become an American citi zen, for economio or other reasons, may apply to competent German authority and obtain the consent of Germany thereto, and he may then receive nat uralization in our courts and become, an American citizen and still remain a German citizen. That seems to be the effect of the German law referred to, and that is "the construction put upon it by the writer referred to. It is possible that the writer referred to may be in error, but if the German law is as he represents it to be, it seems to me that those who have in charge the naturalization of foreign ers should give it serious attention. Every German naturalized in this country, when he takes the required oath expressly renounces his allegiance to the Emperor of Germany, etc.. but these would-be citizens may take this oath "with mental reservations." It is a little strange that any gov ernment would snact such a law as the one referred to. AMERICAN. Turnip Soup. Four medium turnips, two ounces of butter or vegetable butter, two ounces of grated stale cheese, slices of bread. Peel the turnips and cut into thin strips. Melt the butter and fry the turnips until hot. not browned. Cover with as much water or stock as you require soup and simmer for three quarters of an hour. Cut some fingers of bread, sprinkle with cheese, toast till the cheese melts. Pour the turnip soup over them. Serve at once. The Copperheads. By James Barton Adams. When tralt'rous hands were tugging at the sacred union chain and striving on the fields of war to rend the links in twain, some hissing snakes through out the North would nerve rebellion's hand and aid it in disloyal way to wreck our troubled land. Our noble president was but a tyrant who should be dragged from his seat and shorn of power and cast into the sea, our gen erals were butchers who but sneered at women's tears, and cries of abject misery were music in their ears. Our gallant men who wore the Blue and battled 'gainst the Gray were "Lin coln hirelings" who but cared to draw their monthly pay; all through the war these copperheads ejected tralt'rous slime; the warfare waged against the South was an infamous crime. They spat their venom viciously, to Union's foes gave aid and for secession's tri umph with their snaklsh voices prayed. And when at last the sun of peace cast rays athwart our skies, their glory was reflected In all loyal patriots' eyes, and he who led the Nation through those dark and bloody days raised up his voice to God on high in words of grate ful praise. His heart was free from malice 'gainst the crippled, bleeding South, no words of conqueror's triumph reached the vanquished from h!smouth, and when the grievous burden had been lifted from his soul, when hand of peace had from his lips removed the bitter bowl, he fell by an assassin's hand, a deadly bullet sped and blot ted out his noble life the hand of copperhead. Again our flag has been assailed by kingly ruler's hand, again the patriotic fire Is felt throughout the land, again the leader who'd defend Old Glory's blood-bought fame, hears protests from the tongues of men who'd see it smirched with shame, and some there are of rabid speech who seem Inclined to tread within polluted footsteps of the olden copperhead. i In Other Days V Tweaty-flv W" 7oal" t March 5. 1S92. rell "tu- d Thoraf" Far excuVioZ t2 iest1er?a5from a hunting shot is J bachelors' Island. They samel Jnv"back "d about the umber of other ducks. inhTd1.". ' f H"vard men was held Savings "r,f Tm of the Security afternoon" Ji , J Company yesterday President x,,ecld ,how to receive who will vi.i of. Harvard College. - Portland about April 1. Frank J. Mo. , nection with tii"re J"11 "ever his con 1. He will gclatho": Sentinel April take editorial cl San rFancisco to succeeding Stephtse of tne Monitor, merly of Portland- McCormlck. for- The Portland poli paid in silver, and t.wer yesterday always glad when ugh they are around, they prefer to"' daV comes paid in gold. Quite a number of P. cluding Messrs. A. G. janders, ln McGuire. J. A. Logan and w- W. made a trip the first of t?-. House, that home of horses. Spring wek to in Washington County. H farm, E. E. Cooper, of the Sheridai lng Mills, was in the city yeJ"r- Dpnutv fitpa. c.n i. , . . j k'uctiui?uucai J.VL and a force of men cut down 134 Vr transparencies, barber poles and aV lngs yesterday and 30 on Thursd. They made a clean sweep of Chim town on Second and on Alder and re moved about 100 signs and hanging lanterns. The Chinese made no re sistance. Fifty Years Aeo. From The Oregonian of March. 5, 1867. "The Oregonians lately gave to one of their mountains the name of Mount Hood. It at once turned volcano and has been spouting: fire ever since." The foregoing interesting and wonderful piece of Intelligence is from the young man Just beginning to be known in the Kentucky settlements as Prentice. He ' has recently started a newspaper called the Louisville Journal. When we get Mount Hood finished we hope that Prenty may get his mama's consent to come out and see it. The articles of Incorporation for a company to construct a wagon road from Portland to Tualatin plains have been agreed upon and only await the signatures of two or three men to be complete for filing, according to law. The names of the incorporators are Messrs. James Emery, T. R. Cornelius, Amos N. King. J. P. O. Lownsdale, Levi Estes, A. H. Johnson, T. J. Carter and William McMillen. William P. Blake. Deputy Sheriff of this county, returned from Salem Sat urday evening, having taken up on Thursday four prisoners sent from this county. Messrs. W. E. Cooper & Co., of this city, have made and shipped a coach for the use of the Pioneer Stage Com pany, of Eastern Oregon and Idaho. The Concord coaches are too high and heavy for a mountain road, hence thir order for an Oregon-made coach. We learn fron outside parties that the Turn Verein Society of Portland will give a "Calico Ball" at their hall on the evening of Friday, the 22d lnst. Messrs. F. Osthelm, D. L. Walter and N. A. Hlrstel constitute the committee of arrangements. PATRIOTISM FOUND IN TWO SIZES One Fits Men, the Other Boys, and Lat ter Kind Is Taught In Colleges. SALEM, Or., March 3. (To the Edi tor.) Back in the '70's there was a prominent writer on political economy named Van Buren Denslow. I well re member this saying In one of his ar ticles: "There were two kinds of po litical economy In the country, a man's size and a boy's size. The former was that learned from experience in busi ness; the latter was such as was taught in the colleges and based on theory alone." It now occur to me that there are two sizenof patriotism In the country, a man's size and a boy's size. The former is that which Is represented by men of nerve and love of uountry, with a determination and a willingness to defend its honor at any cost; the other Is that taught by college professors and based on theory alone. It Is the veriest nonsense to talk of peace when there is no peace. The sermon on the Mpunt serves as a text to preach peace from, but a practical application of the doctrine would wipe the Christian religion from the face of the earth within a generation. If the doctrine of that sermon had been strict ly adhered to by those professing Christianity from the early days to the present, there would be now no Chris tians except those hiding in the caves and catacombs of deserted regions. Christianity prospers and flourishes best where liberty of person and con science are most widely recognized and observed, and this liberty was gained only by bloody warfare. Christians themselves may not have taken active personal part in the wars, but they are and have been beneficiaries of those wars and could not have existed had not men who loved their country and risked their lives in defense of Its honor, organized and prosecuted those wars to victory. . D. WEBSTER, CHAIR OF MOLLYFINICS PROPOSED Grand Opportunity for Some Millionaire Pacifist. Says Writer. PORTLAND. March 4. (To the Edi tor.) Judging by recent utterances of the heads of some of the educa tional institulons of the Pacific Coast, it would seem timely for some of our most ardent millionaire pacifists to endow a chair of mollyflnlcs in one or more of our colleges, to the end that we may all be Instructed in the proper mollyfinlcal atitude to be maintained by us when any perfidious rascal, while professing undying friendship, tries to bribe others to slip a knife between our ribs. Or how to maintain that much vaunted honor while we stand idly by and see mothers, wives or daughters wantonly murdered. What sublime intellectual heights must have been atained to enable a man calmly to contemplate the repeated wholesale murder of fellow citizens, and yet to be able to extend an inter posing hand to prevent retributive Jus tice from rudely shocking tne super sensitive feelings of the assassins. Yea, verily! The man whose con science will not allow him to make an effort to protect his family, hoLte and country needs a new conscience. S. L. OSBORNE, 60 Killingsworth avenue. Savagres and Laws of War. WENDLING. Or.. March 3. (To the Editor.) In view of the present situa tion in the world. I think an extract . from Lewis and Clarks Journals, writ ten on August 21, 1804, would be of interest to your readers. "Thus we find even among savages certain principles deemed sacred, by which the rigors of their merciless system of warfare are mitigated. The importance of preserving the known and settled rules of warfare among civilized nations. In all their Integrity, becomes strikingly evident; since even savages, with their few precarious wants, cannot exist In a state of peace or war where this faith Is once violat ed." A CONSTANT READER, I - - J-.-""- s - - " - . - r '1 ' -' 0 J: J .'r-;i -1