10 THE 3IORXING OREGOXIAN, FRIDAY, JUNE 22, 1917. POETLAXD, OREGON. Entered at Portland (Oregon) Postofflce as second-class mall matter, fiubscrpition rates Invariably in advance: By Hall) rally, Sunday included, one year .. .18.00 Iaily. Sunday Included, tlx mocthi ..... Ifaily. Sunday included, three months... 2-? lJaily. Sunday Included, one month ...... IJally, without Sunday, one year o.OO Lally, without Sunday, three months..... 1.75 Daily, without Sundav on month ...... -6 "Weekly, one year ...................- 1-50 Sunday, one year 2.50 Sunday and weekly .- 8-3u (Br Carrier.) Dally. Sunday included, one year -9 xajiy, aunoaj included, one montn ...... How to Kemit Send poatofflce money or der, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at enaer s risK. Oive postofflce address in iuiv. inciuatng county ana state. Postage Rates 12 to 16 pages, 1 cent: 18 u o- pages. cents; a-i to 4S pases, a ttu... 60 to of) naees. 4 cents 2 to 76 pages, 6 cents; 7H to 2 pages. 6 cents. Foreign post age double rates. Eastern Business Offir Verree 4 Conklln, Brunswick building. New York; Verree & Conklln. Steger building, Chicago; San Fran cisco representative. K. J. Bidwell. 742 Mar- street. PORTIIXD, FRIDAY. JUNE 2S, 1917, WHO OWNS TIIK XEWKf The Associated Press has, through Judicial decision, Just established the Important principle that news is a commodity and that the agency which may have spent large sums in procur ing it is entitled to enjoy the legiti mate fruits of its enterprise. Simply stated, this is the principal feature of the opinion just rendered in the Fed eral Court of Appeals for New York, In the case of the Associated Press versus the International News Service. The International News Service, a Hearst organization, is conducted on the wide-open plan . of getting the news, or what passes for the news, in any way it can, preferably by stealing it outright from the Associated Press, or by piracy, or wire tapping, or by corrupting the employes of the latter organization to "tip it off by tele phone or telegraph, or in any way. A few months since the Associated Press began suit against the Interna tional News Service, making outright charges of news theft, and citing nu merous offenses. It was further asked that the News Service be restrained from taking news from early editions of Associated Press papers and using It In later editions of its own papers, or selling it to other papers. The Associated Press prevailed in its pri mary charges against theHearst organ ization but the District Court of New York was not prepared to rule that news already made public in part was yet the property of the Associated Press, though the court said such was his first impression. The Federal Court of Appeals now declares ex plicitly that the latter contention also is sound. So the Associated Press is sustained by high judicial authority in every phase of the issue with the Hearst concern. Obviously, the act of procuring news surreptitiously, or by stealth through dishonest employes, is straight-out theft; and the Associated Press had only to establish the fact that such a thing was done. Proof was abundant that crooked methods were used by the "I. N. B." to get news through arranged leaks, and repeated cases wore cited. But the claim that the Associated Press had a proprietary in terest In any news matter after pub lication in early editions of a news paper was more difficult. Yet the equities of the case were so clear that the court had no alternative but to concede and declare them. The Associated Press gathers news from all over the world at great cost for distribution among its member newspapers in the United States and Canada. The European war has heav ily added not only to the burden of expense but to the difficulties of gath ering the news. For example, on the occasion of the Austro-Hungarian re ply to the Ancona note of this Gov ernment, the full text was transmitted by telegraph from Vienna to Berlin, relayed at Berlin to The Hague, re layed at The Hague to London and re layed from London to New York. In order to be certain of its transmission, it was also sent by telegraph from Berlin to Nauen, from Nauen by wire less to Sayville, and by telegraph from Sayville to New York. The cost was all together more than $1 a word. There are many instances of this kind. The first editions of the New York papers print such news as the Ancona note reply. There is three hoifrs dif ference in time between New York and Portland or San Francisco or Los Angeles. Obviously, this same news matter, obtained by the Associated Press from original sources at great expense, may be taken in New York by the International News Service and sent to its subscribers throughout the United States and printed elsewhere than In New York on equal terms with the Associated Press newspapers. The United States" Court of Appeals holds substantially that this is news piracy, and prohibits it. The effect of this far-reaching decision-will be to protect the Associated Press from illegitimate and dishonest competition. Clearly it can have no proprietary interest in news which has been made generally public, for then it is common information. But it can have, and now will have, reasonable time and opportunity to publish what ever it may have gathered exclusively. The International News Service has precisely the same privilege or once had of going to the capitals of the world for its news the same news but it cannot procure by copying from New York newspapers or from bulle tin boards European or other world news in America and selling it as its own, and thus enjoy the fruits and profits of another's enterprise. To be sure, the News Service has been ex cluded from Great Britain and the allied countries for sundry flagrant offenses in news faking, and thus can not get anything in the allied war zone at first hand. But its corrupt ways of getting at second-hand news stories or reports gathered by another, or of making news out of nothing, cannot on that account be excused, though they may be explained. The increase in the cost of living even under conditions of wholesale buying and presumably careful atten tion to food economies is illustrated by the figures made by the Quar termaster - General of the Army, which show that while 100 ra tions for an American soldier could have been bought in 1890 for $13.18, the same amount of food now costs the Government $32. There has been an increase of 8 cents a ration since the beginning of the present year, and this means that it will cost $15,000 a day more to feed an army of half a million men now than it would have cost six months ago. It requires an Increase of only a llttla more than half a cent a ration to make a differ ence of $1,000,000 a year. The ration does not necessarily" mean the same articles of food each day, but It is cal culated on a basis of nutritive values, and is a good gauge of the trend of living costs in the entire country. SETTING A HOT PACE. The Oregoniaa has not observed what became? of the request of the enthusiastic workers in the Red Cross at Hood River for the Rev. William A. Sunday to increase his $50 sub scription to the local fund to a greater amount. Probably Centerfielder Billy was so busy making that final home run in the great game at New York that he overlooked it. For BUly had just put the ball over the fence with a grand gift of $116,000, or there abouts, divided equally between the Red Cross and the Y. M. C. A. "Give," commands the Word, "give every man according to his ways." Billy Sunday's way was not to give a farthing nor a titije, but everything he had. For the $116,000 was his share in the proceeds of the New York meetings which he has been holding for many weeks. The Sunday plan Is to arrange for a great revival In a given city. The local committee guarantees certain expenses, and Sunday gets only a free will offering on the final day. He takes the gambler's chance that it will be big or little. Often it is big. Sometimes, due to bad weather, or perhaps to feeble publlo Interest, it is small. But, great or small, it is Sun day's. Now Sunday turns over all the financial fruits of his many weeks' work to good causes. Probably he has nothing left to add to his Hood .River contribution. We are sure Hood River is satisfied. It ought to be. For has not its most famous citizen set a pace along the sawdust trail of hu manltarianism and patriotism that only the biggest hitters in the Lord's Big League can follow? THE PACIFIST'S DCTI TN WAR. The duty of the sincere pacifist In time of war is clearly pointed out by George H. Mead, professor of phil osophy in the University of Chicago, in an article in which he draws the plain distinction between discussion and criticism in time of peace and the same conduct while war is- In prog ress. He says that "all such discus sions and criticisms must in their spirit measure up to the gravity of the sit uation," and that "they ought to real ize that they must be helpful to work the proper settlement of the Issues at the front if they are to Justify them selves." In other words, we are in the war, and we must, first of all, strike hard and win. No theories we hold as in dividuals have the slightest chance of acceptance if put forward by a de feated Nation. All criticism, as Pro fessor Mead says, must In spirit meas ure up to the gravity of the situa tion, and nothing "measures up to the gravity of the situation" that in any way hampers our own Government in the execution of its task or prolongs the war by giving aid or comfort to the enemy. The gravity of the situation also demands that . full consideration be given to the fact that hostile groups within the country have adopted the policy of encouraging sedition, in the guise of free speech. Their purpose is to divide the people. They realize that the enemy cannot prevail against a united America. Stubborn pacifists and theoretical internationalists only play into their hands. "Even the con scientious objector," says Professor Mead, must "realize that all opposi tion will be eagerly welcomed and in terpreted in their own sense by those who find themselves through racial and hereditary motives out of sym pathy with this Nation in Its great democratic effort." The present task of all Americans Is truly to realize that the Nation has determined to make the last sacrifice in order that such sacrifice may not be required of nations in the future. It is the least of sacrifices to refrain from aiding the enemy, directly or in directly, until the issue has been set tled. Our arms must win if our views are to prevail. The gravity of the sit uation must be comprehended, and no obstacle, verbal or otherwise, put in the way of complete victory. HOPS! POR THE DRCO ADDICT, New hope for the drunkard and the drug addict is held out in a report recently submitted to the Council of National Defense by the Municipal Board of Inebriety of Warwick Farms, Orange County, New York, in the de sire that the recent experience of its supervising medical officer may prove of value to the Nation in' increasing its man power in every possible way. Obviously, the dipsomaniac and the narcotic habitue are a deplorable waste. If these can be restored to health a distinct gain will be made, not only for war but in the peace that is to follow. Interest in the report of the War wick Farms board will be increased by the fact that its medical officer is Dr. Charles F. Stokes, a former Surgeon General of the Navy, who recently has devoted much time to seeking a solu tion of the drug and liquor problem. His new method is based upon the use of the substances pilocarpine hydro chloride and eserine, and one of its striking features is that it has per mitted the sharp withdrawal of nar cotics or alcoholic liquor from their victims without distress, when accom panied by sufficient after-care, ac cording to a technic still in process of adaptation to varying individual cases. Dr. Stokes is convinced, after a series of experiments, that the drugs he em ploys are valuable in doses far below the minimum in common use, and that patients who co-operate with the phy sician and who desire to be cured and exercise reasonable will power can hope for complete escape from their enthral lment. Perhaps the most attractive feature of the reported discovery by Dr. Stokes is the accompanying statement that refreshing sleep often follows admin istration of the first dose and that the patient is hungry and tranquillized." We dread the pains and penalties of our mistakes and transgressions as much as we ever,, did, and there is little doubt that accounts of the suf ferings of drug addicts in the process of being restored to health have de terred many from seeking help. But the former Surgeon-General reports that "all craving ceases after the treatment is under way and that pa tients cannot tell when the narcotics are discontinued." The process is like that often seen in the crisis of pneu monia a condition of complete tran quillity. Physical damage, it is said, is soon corrected,, for complicated or ganic lesions of consequence are not often encountered: but final readjust ment of the nervous system takes, a long time. There is no royal road to freedom, Something is sUU exacted by way of penalty, but it will be of high importance if the insidious drug crav ing can be removed by a relatively painless method. The great social duty of the people toward these unfortunates will not be materially lessened even by discovery of a preliminary "cure." Authorities differ widely as to the number of ad dicts in the United States, but there is general agreement that return to the habits of the past is almost as much a matter of human association as of physical weakness. Relapses both to narcotics and liquor are. at tributed in perhaps a majority of cases to old "pals' and old haunts. Sincere and practical reformers hope to see provision made for removal of temp tation from victims who have re sponded to treatment. This is one of the new features of the method now proposed, and explains in part its sub mission to the Council of National De fense. It is believed that the addict, once a substantial cure has been ef fected, will be benefited by the clean living and discipline of the Army un der present conditions, and that such service would help to re-establish his confidence in himself and "make a man of him." -But it is not proposed that this part of the treatment shall j be unduly hastened. The man, first of all, must be made physically sound. Army service would supplement this by preventing "baokslidlng." PROM PORTLAND THE SPINSTER. The people of Oregon may take a prideful interest in the results of the late liberty loan campaign; and now they are showing to the world, in their Red Cross contributions, the same high measure of humanitarian Ism that they had previously displayed though then their impulse was pure ly 'patriotic in the liberty loan. Let us review the fruits of the lib erty loan campaign in the states and cities of the Pacific Coast. They were (unofficial estimate): . Pet. Amonttt Federal over subscribed, allotment, quota. Oregon S 13L''l.oon Jio.fioo.ooo 32 Washington.. 24.nn.4io 20.fl78.4no 14 California.... 10. 3 O'j.aoo yi.o'15,750 Irt Portland 8.750. OHO 6.300,000 8f Seattle n.ono.noo S.200.00O 9i Tacoma 2.44.750 2. 200,000 13 Spokane 3.400,000 3.300 000 3 9an Franolsoo M. 400.000 42. 000.000 27 Los Angeles.. 10,117:1,400 18.000.000 12 Deficit. Just now we are hearing a lot about "Portland the Spinster" and our "first families" from voices of envy and de traction. It is our understanding that most of the noblo Red Cross women who succor the wounded and relieve the dying on the battlefront are spin sters. In the lexicon of duty and patriotism, all the families of the sons and brothers and fathers who are doing their bit anywhere in America or in the war zone are our first families. The slackers stay at home and whine. THE SUN AND THE WEATHER. Those who have long held to the theory that there is a close associa tion between sun spots and the weather will find comfort in the re cently published conclusions of sci entists of the Smithsonian Institution that the temperature of the earth is "materially affected by the variation of the sun's output of radiation." This announcement follows investigations covering a period of fifteen years con ducted by the astrophysical observa tory of the institution. The important conclusion is summarized in the state ment that there is an "intimate rela tion between solar changes and me teorological changes of short period." Value of the "discovery," however, is disputed by many authorities on me teorology, because the laws governing the variation in the sun's radiation have not yet been codified, in a scien tific sense, and until they are better understood weather forecasters will be no better off than they are today. It does not help us much to know that changes in the "weather" of the sun will be followed by changes here on earth, unless at the same time we know what the sun changes are going to be. So we are forced back on the old method of studying the areas of barometric pressure and the direction and drift of storms, and in this our chief reliance must be placed as usual on the cable and the telegraph. Per fection of means of communication of intelligence has done more for weather predictors than any other re cent advance made by man. There is no reason, however, for discontinuing investigations on this account. The United States Weather Bureau has been studying the relation between solar phenomena and mun dane affairs for a good deal more than fifteen years, and has not scorned the counsel of astronomers or scientists in any other field. A decade or two does not mean much in the field of re search. Every ascertainable fact as to the chemical, radioactive and other properties of sun and earth may have a bearing on the ultimate shaping of a system of real long-distance fore casting. For the present we shall have to be content with getting our weather three or four days at a time, but team work of the scientists can well be con tinued. It is the multiplicity of effort that counts. IOCXC MEN FOR HIGH COMMAND. The young man is to command American troops in this war, when he proves his ability, but old Generals arenot to be supplanted Just because they are old. That is the position of Secretary of War Baker, who is only 43 and has held executive offices for the last ten years. As in the Civil and Spanish wars, we may expect to see young officers jumped over the heads of their elders to high command when they demonstrate that the stuff is in them. Modern war more than ever re quires men of energy, quick decision, initiative and capacity to endure pro longed mental and physical toll. Mar shal Joffre is one of the oldest men who have held high command with conspicuous success, and his powers have burned out. General Petain, the new French commander-in-chief, wa a Major, and General Nivelle, the new Chief of Staff, was a Colonel at the beginning of the war. Lieutenant General Bridges, of the British war mission, is under 40 and was a Major when war began, and a Brigadier-General on his staff is only 19. Old Gen erals are soon scrapped or relegated to service in the rear. We hear no more of Von Kluck and Von Hauscn, of the German army; of French, Ham ilton and Nixon, of the British army, whose names figured in early dis patches. Germany has displaced two chiefs of staff Von Moltke and Von Falkenhayn and who ever hears of the Austrian Generals who led the first disastrous invasion of Russian Poland? Almost all the great Generals of his tory have been under 40 when they won their-first or greatest victories. Alexander Um Great tided, -at the P-4a ol 33, after completing the conquest of the ancient world. Hannibal was only 29 when he invaded Italy. By compari son, Julius Caesar was decidedly old when he began the conquest of Gaul, for he was then 44. Henry V of Eng land was only 28 when he won the battle of Agincourt. Solyman the Magnificent, of Turkey, was 25 when he entered upon his career of con quest. Charles XII began his meteoric military career at the ago of 17. Fred erick the Great won his first victory at 29. Gustavus Adolphus was 36 when he Intervened in the Thirty Years' War. Robert Clive was 82 when he laid the foundation of Britain's Indian empire by winning the battle of Plassey. Wolfe conquered and died at Quebec when only 32. Napoleon was but 2 7 when he conquered Italy. Prince Eugene, the famous Austrian General, first took command of an army at 25. Washington and the other principal Generals of the American Revolution were men of more mature years, but Lafayette was but 20 when he Joined the patriot commander's staff, and Alexander Hamilton led the assault on Yorktown at 24. In the -Civil-War Sheridan reached his zenith at 32. Funston was made a Brigadier at 32 after his capture of Agulnaldo. General Leonard Wood was 37 when he took command of the Rough Riders In the Spanish War. By com parison with these men. General Per shing is well along In years, for he is in his 67th year. American Generals now average 62 years old, but before this war ends much younger men are likely to be in high command, for war is the young officer's opportunity of rapid promotion. Howard Elliott, "81, president of the Harvard Alumni Association, sum marized the duty of college men in his address yesterday when he said: Our degrees mean that not only are we educated men. but that we have a respon sibility as men and citizens to stand for the right and against the destruction of Justice and the trampling down of civilisation to give service, service to the community In which we live in addition to that which Is necessary for the care of ourselves and our families. Ve and alt educated men owe this service to our country so that It shall never be said that this great experiment In gov ernment failed because of the lack of moral courage and the incompetency of Its cltlsens. College men by their action in every part of the country are giving proof that the higher education has not failed in its first duty to make good citizens. If it made only spineless theorists and weak-kneed pacifists, it would fail to Justify Itself. The alumni are taking their places in the defense of the country side by side with all real patriots. It was not by carrying banners de nying the sincerity of their country's devotion to the cause of democracy that the British suffragists won Par liament over to their cause. They have won by forgetting their partic ular wrongs and by working bo de votedly for their country that it now gives willingly that which it formerly refused tinder the compulsion of vio lence. The suffragists who carry ban ners at the White House would do well to profit by tho experience of their British sisters. We are quite willing to believe that the enlightened opinion of Germany views with alarm the entrance of the United States into the war. It must have penetrated the consciousness of a good many Germans by this time that a nation - that is losing all its friends must have something funda mentally the matter with it. General Goothals tells the Senate sub-committee that aircraft, big guns, food and ships are going to be the big factors in winning the war. It is a good thing he realizes that ships are needed, and it will be better when he begins to comprehend that the mate rial of which they are made is inciden tal to the big programme. The line between undernourishment and starvation is not easy to define with precision, and the best way to avoid finding where it is by bitter ex perience is to practice economy in the use of food while there is time. Balfour says America is In the war to stay and Northcliffe says the war has only begun. The 15 to 20-year-old boys may yet have a chance to follow their big brothers. It is up to us to strike hard. Government is to investigate that hoary old fetish, the Elgin butter board, which essays to fix the price for the country. As usual, the Govern ment probably will find "notl Ing wrong." That was an old-time school meet ing at Crescent, in Lake County, wherein the electors came to blows and four arrests have been made. It was a touch of the "real life." . The soldiers in the Russian trenches are voting to continue the fighting, and if they are willing the stay-at-homes are not likely to have much Influence in the end. Oregon has pledged more than half Its Red Cross quota but will go right on getting more. Our oversubscrip tion of the liberty loan set an inspiring example. Just as the dove of peace is settling over this municipality, somebody must again spring the proposal to bell the cats. If the applause on the streets is a true sign, many proud Portland moth ers did raise their boys to be sailors. When the Russian Amazons break loose, the Germans will become more anxious than ever for a separate peace. One of these nights a marauder will be perforated by a bridge guard and all the fun taken out of the game. If the Belgian commission visits Oregon, people will learn more of the facts about that stricken country. , The regiment of Russian girls, said to be going to the trenches, will find war is war. once they get into it. Street dancing is a big improvement over firecrackers for a Fourth of July celebration. These are the clover hay days, but a change is likely at any time. The next big thing will be the mil lion schoolma'ams. The vessel that gets into Coos Bay dry" is a wonder. Go the- limit with the -barbae today. How to Keep Well Br Da W. A. Evana, Questions pertinent to fcrglene. sanitation ana prevention of disease, if matters of gen eral interest, will be answered in this col umn. Where space will not permit or the subject Is not suitable letters will be per sonally answered, subject to proper limita tions and where stamped addressed envelope is Inclosed. Lr. Evans will not make diagnosis or prescribe for individual diseases. Re quests for such eervices cannot be answered Copyright, 116, by Ir. W. A. Kvansl Published by arrangement with the Chicago Tribune.) WHY NOT JPXRE ICE CREAM t STREET" tells us In the "Modern Hos pital" that the people of this coun try eat annually 100,000,000 gallons of ice cream and they pay for it annually $150,000,000. Isn't it about time that the ice cream business was put on a business basis and supervised as are other foods? As It is now a fair pro portion of the typhoid fever is due to eating ice cream; likewise some part of diarrheas and cases of food poison ing any disease liable to be spread bv ice cream. On top of all this ice cream often offends the esthetlo sense. The average baoterlal count of ice cream Is well up in the millions In fact, ofttlmes in the hundreds of mil lions. No other food eaten by man or by other animals has so high an aver age baoterlal count as ice cream. MontclaJr, N. J., has proven that high bacterial counts in ice cream are not necessary that they are due to filthy methods of handling In vogue merely because the health authorities have never stopped them, the public is In different end the manufacturers have no incentive to do better. The New York commission on milk standards for ice cream has drawn up certain standards for Ice cream and these standards, having been published by the public health service, are avail able for the public Is It not about time for public sentiment to force health and food departments to adopt these standards or others equally as high? Street reports finding Ice creams on the market ranging from J to 19 per cent in butter fat. He quotes McOill as having found a range of butter fat from 2.3 to 30.3. The man who makes a rich ice cream should not be asked to compote with the man who makes one that contains only 2 per cent fat. It is impossible for the consumer to tell the approximate content of butter fat from the taste or the appearance, for ice cream is not now a simple com pound. It Is made from skim milk or oondomsed milk homogenized with but ter. No cream as such is used now In Ice cream. To this there are added fillers, binders, sugars and flavors. The smoothness and the absence of gran ulations end crystallizations are due to the fillers and binders and to the aging of the product prior to freezing. Twelve per cent milk properly aged and properly mixed with fillers and binders will make a smoother cream with more body than an IS per cent pure cream mixed with sugar and fla vors and froaen when fresh. The calories In three and one-third ounces of several foods are as fol lows: v 01rt-tyle ce erffim 21(1 Modern lee cream ........... ... . . .""177 Sirloin steak ............. . " ""'r,l Halibut ....J V'fl SSV .::::::::::::::::::: Hutter """Iimri'sil Cottage cheese 112 Cream ........................... . 20 In ice cream the heat-producing ele ments of the milk are supplemented by those of butter and sugar. Ice cream Is a good food,. It should become a staple article of diet. It will come into its own when health depart ments are active enough to guarantee Its safety and supervision prevents the man who makes 2 per cent cream from driving out of business the man who makes a richer, better product. Ealargei) Gland. H. H. s. writes: "I have been treated for an 'enlarged prostate gland' on several occasions and for months at a time, but am not cured of It. Will you let me know whether there Is any known oure for it: also whether It can cause death or Is dangerous in any way?" Reply. Enlargement of the prostate gland causes great Inconvenience and disability. It Is often an indirect cause or death, it can be cured by operation. High-power X-rays cure some cases. I-ocal treatment cures some cases. Radium, while very efficacious against cancer of the prostate. Is not of much eer-vlce In benign enlargement of the gland. Enlargement of the prostate la usu ally due to gonococcal Infections and sow 1ns; of wild oats. Mallearrlera and Draft. Elk Point writes: "Are Government employes, such as mailcarriers and substitutes, substituting for three or more routes, subject to draft or con scription and more especially if they are farming. Reply. They are. The authorities may excuse them. Dlabete Mrs. G. H. writes: "I would be pleased if you could tell me if malted milk is harmful to a person having diabetes. Aleo having heard that pure honey contains no sugar. I would like to know whether honey Is harmful. We have heard that oranges and apples can be eaten by a diabetic What Is correct about this?" Reply. A dlahetlo can stand a certain amount of carbohydrate. Malted milk, honey, or anges, and apples all contnin carbohydrates. A diabetic, having .determined how much carbohydrate he can stand, next figures In what form he will take his carbohydrate allowance. Oenerally speaking, he will not want to use up any pnrt ot his carbo hydrate allowance as malted milk or honey. Depends I.araely on Care. Mrs. Q. M. E. writes: "1 have a daughter 21 years of age, 5 feet 2 inches tall and weighing 187 pounds. She has been going with a young man for eight months. He has been trouDlea with colds. Finally he got sick one day. The dootor said that he had a touch of tuberculosis. What I want to know is, will ray daughter have trouble with the same thing? She is in good health now and she is strong. I will thank you very much for advice." Reply. Tuberculosis Is contsrlous. Careful people do -not spread It. "Whether or not your daughter has already contracted It depends on how careful the young man waa If your daughter should develop colds, cough, slight fever, loss of weight or undue fa. tlgue she should be carefully examined. If she remains free from any of these symp toms she can feel safe. Position ta Merchant Marine. PORTLAND, June 21. (To the Edi tor.) Where shall one apply for a po sition in the merchant marine? J. W. HARRISON. The question Is rather indefinite. If you are a sailor apply to some ship master; If an engineer or fireman, see the chief engineer of some vessel in person; if looking for work in the steward's department, see the steward of some steamer about to sail. Information About Auto Trips. CENTR ALIA, Wash, June 19. (To the Editor.) Kindly advise as to whom I might write and secure In formation in regard to auto trips near Portland. I am planning on a week or ten days' outing and would like to go where there is fair trout fishing and also hotel acnon-imodations. 3. T. LEWIS. Write tor details to the Oregon Stats Motor Association. Oregon build Lus. Portland. STOP TALKING, BUILD SHIPS. Mr. Chlleott laaersea Captain Hopkins Absat Wooden Vessels. PORTLAND, June 21. (To the Edi tor.) In the Interest of Pacific Coast shipbuilding I desire to confirm all that Captain Hopkins has uttered in The Oregonian and wish also to add thereto such information as I trust will dispel any skepticism in this di rection. My experience has brought me in contact with all classes of wooden ships, the exclusive soft wood ship of Eastern Canada, the hardwood ship of Europe and the combination of the two built on the eastern coast of the United States. Superior to the whole of these I find that the Pacific Coast vessel built of Douglas fir. when the same is cut at the right time of the year, and after being placed in position the vessel properly and thoroughly salted, there is no danger of decay in the first 25 or 30 years. Criticism in some quarters Is made through our use it green lumber. Sixty days' air exposure of our Oregon fir will protect all that Is necessary to do so for that portion of lumber entering into a ship's construction that needs any seasoning whatever, or rather that cannot otherwise be provided for. This latter exception Includes the ceiling of the vessel which, whether seasoned or not, must, at the end of say five years' time, be reinforced by wedging, which is always done in a vessel that Is thoroughly and intelligently cared for. War has been declared somewhere In the neighborhood of 90 days, at which time it was given out by the Shipping .Board that we were to en gage In the construction of 1000 wooden ships to meet the submarine menace. For 90 days the preliminaries to these contracts, the preliminaries only, have been in evidence through the press of the country. Why? For the lack of ef ficient, practical, executive ability. It is no use of our endeavoring to flatter ourselves that we are the great est country on earth, and it la not possible to display any efficiency in this direction with an Army civil en gineer, aided with two magnificent mining engineers and superintended by a board of railroad operators, and if we are to aid our allies in this war let us take some action by which we shall build ships to do our part, and quit talking and playing politics. RICHARD CHtLCOTT. TO MV SOX. (The following poem, originally sent to the Chicago 1'oHt by a mother whoe son was about to leave with bis regiment for the front, and printed In that newspaper, is re printed by request of a Portland mother in a similar situation, snd carries an especial appeal to tho mothers of soldiers, present and prospective, all over ths United States. My son. at last the fateful day has come For us to part. The hours have nearly run. Slay God return you safe to land and home; Yet. what God wills, so may his will be done. Draw tight the belt about your slen der frame; Flash blue your eyes! Hold high your proud young head I Today you march in L'.berty'a fair name. To save the line enriched by France's dead! I would not it were otherwise! And yet 'Tie hard to speed your marohing forth, my sonl 'Ts doubly hard to live without regret For love unsaid, and kindnesses un done. But would the chance were mine with you to stand Upon those shores and see our flag unfurled! To fight on Franoe's brave, uncon quered land With Liberty's great sword for all the world I Beyond the waves, my eon, the siren calls. The sky Is black and Fastnet lies abreast: A signal rocket flings its pale stars and falls Across the night to welcome Eng - land's guest. When midst the scud yon see the Cor nish lights. And through the mist you hear faint Devon chimes. Thank Ood for memories of those other nights And days on other ships In happier times. Perhaps you'll stand within the pil lared nave And aisles where colored sundust falls, and see Old Canterbury Church where Becket gave His life's best blood for England's liberty! Some night yonli walk, perhaps, on Salisbury Plain; Above Stonehenge the Druid's stars still sleep. And on the turf within the circled fane Beneath the Autumn moon still lie the sheep. , And if you march beside some Kentish hedge. And blackberries hang thick clus tered o'er the ways. Pluck down a branch; Rest by the road's brown edge; Eat! Nor forget our last vacation days I And then the trench iif battle-scarred Lorraine; The town half burned, but held In spite of hell: The bridge twice taken, lost, and won again; The cratered glacis ripped with mine and shell. The leafless trees, bare-branched in spite of June; The sodden road, the desolated plain; The mateless birds, the season out of tune; Fair France, at bay. is calling through her pain. Oh, son! My son! God keep you safe and free Our flag and you! But If the hour must come To choose at last 'twlxt self and lib erty We'll close our eyes! So let God's will be done! Peculiar Status of Allen. PORTLAND, June 21. (To the Edi tor.) A came from England to the United States in 1908. In 1911 he de clared his Intention to become a citi zen. Has England any claim on him? If drafted will he have to serve In the English army or the United States Army. READER. The United States Immigration Serv Icm mt Pnrtlnnd Ravi that A is not a dtin of the United States, but that hi peculiar situation Is probably with out precedent and will need to be es pecially decided when occasion arises. What Is a Fine Sight T Judge. Corporal (Instructing awkward squad In rifle practloe) I told you to take a fine eight, you dub; don't you know what a fine sight Is? Rookie Sure, a boat full of cor porals sinking. Her Delicate Hint. Puck. Over Twenty One Do you think women should propose? Vnnnr Thine T llftn't Vnov. HV vou tried everything el set In Other Day. Twenty-five Years Ago. From The Oregonian June 22, 1S9S. New Tork. Senator Dubois, of Idaho, In behalf of the notification committee, yesterday notified Whitlaw Reid of hi nomination for Vice-President. Chicago. By a singular coincidences at the National Democratic Convention, which opened and was in session two hours today. Grover Cleveland, who Is destined to be the nominee of the con vention and who la the Democratic idol, was not mentioned during the proceed.4 ings, but James G. Blaine was. Frank Zan. formerly one of the most popular and energetic business men of this city but now located In San Kran Cisco. Is In the city on a flying trip. Lord Tennyson is said to have made more money from his verse than any poet who has ever lived. Messrs. Braden and Halsey. two young men, have Just opened a boolc and stationery store at 1S7 Third street. TV F TVtnnhi,. in., r 1 , tin were married at Va-nconver- Wn,h Juno 20. Half a Century Ago. From The Oregonian June 22, 1S7. Washington. Surratfa trial was eon ttnued yesterday. Judge Fisher presid ing. Surratt submitted an affidavit that his means were exhausted and prayed the court to procure the at tendance Of witnesses at the expense of the Government. "Mark Twain." who has acquire celebrity In California as a humorous writer, U making a sensation In New York. His name is Samuel Clemens. a son of ex-Governor Clemens, of Mis souri. Senator Corbett and famllv. Mr, Schuyler and wife. Senator Williams and several ladles yesterday left on a pleasure trip up the Columbia The little son of Captain Hopkins, of this city, 6 years of age, yesterday fell from the wharf at tho foot of Mor rison street, but waa fortunately res cued. Phillip Wasserman, Esq., who for a long time has been absent on a tour of Europe, returned on the Orlflamme yes terday, much to the satisfaction of his many friends. Alexander P. Ankeny and Mrs. Kate Staples were married June 21 at the Trinity Church. MORALS OF SOI.DIF.R GCARDED Temptations) Fewer I'nder Discipline Thin In t'n restricted city Life. PORTLAND, June 21. (To the Ed- ltor.) There seems to be an Impres sion, more or less oommon, that our son, gone and going Into the Army, are constantly exposed to unusual temptations: or. a one pastor in Port land said In his prayer last Sunday! "Graciously care for our boys In camp, surrounded by immoral dangers wore and more deadly than the bullets of the enemy." This Is a mistake. Temptations la the United Ftatej Army are on the average less for a young man than in Portland or Beattle. Rigid military discipline, with Its frequent roll calls, drill, guard duty, inspection and what not, leaves pre cious little opportunity, especially In time of actual war, for dissipations of any sort. Every man must aooount for himself every minute of tho time. A mighty good thing. Nor is it true that our young men. aa soon as they put on the uniform and get away from home, tumble to the call of the wild. Far from lt In their quarters and mingling with each other, they are, as a rule, manly and up right, aided constantly, as they are. by the chaplains, the ever-present in fluences of the V. M. C A. and the Red Cross. In addition, considering the fact thatbad women and booze are not now alio wed around the Army, little occasion remains for anxiety. C. E. CLINE. Commander Loyal Legion. SAILORS LIKE TUB OREGOMAN Policy of Printing All the Nevra All the Time la Popular One. SEAMEN'S BARRACKS, Mare Island, CaL, June 18. (To the Editor.) We would like to express our views of The Oregonian compared with the papers we buy and read here. While I was living near Portland and visited that city frequently, and aa often visited The Oregonian building, I naturally Fupposed most of the papers of the United States were like The Oregonian. Bince enlisting in the United States Navy I have formed a different opinion. The daily papers we now get scream with red ink and murder stories and carry as much honest-to-goodness news as an Australian gnat carries on hia back. To get to what I meant to say, I received an Oregonian In the mall and the contrast between the "yellow" papers of San Francisco and the reliable paper of Oregon was so great it gave us all a shock. No exaggerated head lines, no red Ink, no impassioned oratory for The Oregonian, but Just all the news all the time." I want you to know how much we boys of the Navy appreciate the clean, scrupulously good paper that you publish and value it above any and all the journals we find here. Whenever The Oregonian appears in the barracks it is pulled to pieces and read piece meal. The editorials you publish are worthy of a book edition. We have no motive except appreciation in sending this letter and sincerely wish you success. Publishing the beat paper we have seen In our travels. SAMUEL B. GROFF. BUY BURNS Seamen Second Class. GREAT FORAGE) PLANT DECEPTTVK Growers Advised An-ainst Planting "Eureka Clover" for Own Vse, PORTLAND, June 21. (To the Ed itorsCan you inform me where I can get some of the roots of that wonderful forage plant which Is growing at the Yamhill entrance to the Portland Post office? I noticed it April 1, when it waa Just coming up, and again yester day, when It waa 14 feet high. 1 hear that the name of it is Eureka clover. I want to give It a trial on my farm. N. REEVE. According to the Oregon Agricultural College experiment station the plant growing near the Yamhlll-etreet en trance of the Portland Postofflce Is technically known as polygonum sach- altnemse. and its common name is sach- allne. It has practically no merit as a forage plant and it is a troublesome pest when It becomes established on the farm. It Is not a member of the clover family, but is commonly known as giant knot weed. It is a persistent perennial. Ornament is about the limit of its usefulness. Oregon has a great many forage plants that are more desirable in every way, especially In yield of nutriment to the acre. Made In Germany. Goderlch, Ont, Signal. The latest riddle: "What goods are still being made In Germany ana fln LaUsd In. KnglandT" Zejignllnn,