THE "MORNING OREGOMAN, WEDNESDAY, 3IAY 3, 1920 7 INTEREST MOUSED IL IN NATION! Progress Made Towards Get ting Force Into Shape. MEMBERS PAID FOR TIME Adjutant-General White Still Hope ful or Seeing Great Federal Training; Plan Inaugurated. SALEM, Or., May t. (Special.) "Failure of congress to pass anything in the way of progressive military legislation means that the country is right back to where it was before the war co far as preparedness is con cerned and it means that the old problem of national defense falls right back in a large degree upon the shoul ders of the national guard of the country." This is the view expressed by George A. "White, who has resumed his duties as adjutant-general of the state after two years with the American expe ditionary forces abroad and who ad mits his disappointment that the coun try has fallen back upon the old vol unteer system without any provision for a systematic plan for training the whole youth of the land in higher citizenship. "However. I look for a great fed eral training plan in due time," Colonel White added, optimistically, "since I believe the lessons of the re cent war will be applied in due time." Problem Closely Studied. Just how to stimulate interest and sustain morale in the national guard of the state is a problem which Colo nel White and the members of the state general staff are studying close ly now that the guard has again been set down as the backbone of national defense. A great deal of progress has been made in getting the national guard in Oregon up to the strength apportioned to the state by the war department. Hundreds of thousands of dollars' worth of equipment . has been received from the government's arsenals and warehouses, so that the service is being rapidly equipped with brand new military stores of every kind. The government has also sent two regular army colonels and five army non-commissioned officers to Oregon and attached them to the na tional guard here to assist in -the in struction and organization adminis tration. Rifle practice, pistol practice, a period of two weeks of field maneu vers with army troops at Camp Lewis, a school for officers and non-commissioned officers at Vancouver, and the ttate and national rifle competitions are part of the interesting military programme for the present spring and summer. The field maneuvers will be held during July, when the organl cations from all parts of the state will be taken in federal troop trains to the Puget sound district. The instruction programme is now being worked out by the western department of the army at San Francisco. The men will receive all their expenses and be paid for the time spent away from home The fruard as now made up consists of a regiment of infantry, the 3d Oregon (reorganized) and three com panies of coast artillery and a com pany of engineers. When the guard was mobilized in 1917 there was, in addition to the 3d infantry, a full regiment of coast artillery, a squad ron of cavalry, a battalion of engi neers, two batteries of field artillery and a field hospital company. It is planned to build up the present organ ization as soon as funds are available from state and government. A full regiment of heavy artillery is listed among the plans for future expansion, the equipment to be six-inch cannon, tractor drawn. The present coast ar tillery may be equipped with the big cannon within the next few months, it is said, and arrangements have al ready been made to send the coast artillery units to the Puget sound dis trict for heavy artillery practice in July , instead of to the coast defense forts. l'olt Accepted by Government. The present distribution of the new Oregon national guard and the num ber of men carried on the rolls of each organizaton is as follows: Third infantry: regimental head quarters company, supply and machine gun companies andlettered companies B, E, F, G and H, Portland: company C, Eugene; company D, Medford; com pany A, McMinnville; company L, Dallas; company I. Silverton and Woodbuxn; company K, Independ ence; company M, Salem. otrengtn, 51 officers, 934 men. Coast artillery: first company, Ash land; second company, Marshfield: third company. Newport. Strength, 8 officers and 208 men. . Engineers; company A, Portland. Strength, 4 officers, 114 men. Practically all of these units have been accepted by the'government and the majority of them have qualified for federal pay for armory drills. The Dalles company'has not yet qualified foT acceptance by the government and two of the lettered companies at Port land are said to have fallen below all the requirements at recent federal inspection, which may result in their disbandment or consolidation. Two organizations are now being formed, battery A at Portland and" a field hospital, at La Grande. World war veterans are taking the lead in getting both these units ready for in spections. The staff plans also to put companies later at Roseburg and Al bany, where the state armories now stand vacant. STATE MAY HAVE TP PAY $240,000 CLAIMED FOR PAVE MENT ROYALTIES. Highway Department Said to Hare Infringed Patents Property of Warren Brothers. SALEM,"" Or.. May 4. (Special.) Because the state highway depart ment is alleged to have infringed upon paving patents of Warren Brothers in disregard of a legal opin ion submitted by Attorney-General Brown, the state now faces the pos sibility of having to pay to the cor poration , approximately 8240,000 In royalties. Roy Klein, secretary of the com mission, announced Monday that when Warren Brothers' alleged patent ex pires on May 5, the state will have laid approximately 1,200,000 yards of this pavement. On a royalty basis of 20 cents a yard, as claimed by Warren Brothers, there will be due from the state 8240,000. Had the weather been more favorable this spring Mr. Klein says much more of this pavement would have been laid. " Whether the state will be obliged eventually to pay the royalties claimed probably will be determined by a suit filed recently by the cor poration in federal court. In this ac tion Warren Brothers seek to enjoin Oscar Huber, now engaged in con structing state highways, from lay ing any more of the pavement covered by the alleged patent, and to recover damages equivalent to royalty at the rate of 20 cents a yard. Under a state law the highway de partment has assumed all financial responsibility for Mr. Huber and the action will be defended by Attorney- General Brown. The defense prob ably will hold that the patent is in valid, although Mr. Brown says most courts in which the question has been tried out have held with the corpora tion. I to appropriate water from Klamath r river for the irrigation of .254 acres of land in Klamath county. Clint O. Harrison of Pilot Rock asks for the appropriation of water from Stewart creek for the irriga tion of a small tract of land in Uma tilla county. Edward - Copperficld of Tainax would appropriate water from Whisky creek for the irrigation of 35 acres of land in Klamath county. PORT CAMPAIGN BEGUN Grays Harbor Citizens Sleet to Work for Bond Issue. ABERDEEN. Wash., May 4. (Spe cial.) About 130 Grays Harbor resi dents, representing Aberdeen, Ho quiam, Montesano, Elma and other towns of the county, attended a mass meeting at a local hotel last night, held for the purpose of organizing an active campaign organization to urge passage of an 8800,000 port bond is sue which will be voted June 26. The principal speaker was C. S. France, executive secretary of the Seattle port commission, who urged the development of the port of Grays Harbor as th,e greatest need of the aistrict. Auto Ferry to Be Operated. KELSO, Wash., May 4. (Special.) A. E. Hayes has made arrangements to operate an automobile ferry be tween Astoria, Or., and Chinook, Wash., on the lower Columbia river. An auto ferry has been badly needed by the beaches on the north side of the Columbia. A dredge will be taken to Chinook to clear the channel. PATROL WORK IS STARTED State Forester Begins Mobilization of Forces for Season. SALEM. Or, May 4. (Special.) Due to the fact that only one squad ron of airplanes will be assigned to the Pacific coast for forest fire patrol work during the summer of 1920, and that this patrol will be confined to California, F. A. Elliott, state .for ester, has started arranging his field forces for the coming season. Reports received at Mr. Elliott s of fices indicate that the timbered coun ties of the state are much Inter ested in fire prevention and that more men will be assigned to patrol duty this year than ever before. Look out stations in all parts of the state are being put in shape, telephone lines are being repaired ' and the trails are being improved, eo that no time will be lost in getting men oi the ground in case of fires. Mr. Elliott will go to eastern Ore gon next week, where he will assist in the separation and reorganization of the Union and Wallowa county fire patrol associations. BONUS CRUSADE PLANNED Campaign to Be Outlined at Spo kanc Legion Meeting. SPOKANE. Wash., May 4. Plans for a campaign throughout Washing ton in favor of the proposed state soldier bonus are to be discussed at the meeting of representatives of le gion posts of Washington, Oregon Idaho, Montana and Utah to be held here Friday and Saturday, it was announced today by C. S. Albert, com mander of the local post. The matter is to be voted on at the November election. A referendum of members of the Spokane post on state and national soldier bonuses and on the Question of erecting a home for -the local post is to be conducted through the local legion weekly, it was announced to day. Read The Oregonfan classified ads. IRRIGATORS SEEK WATER Applications Filed With State En gineer for Appropriations. SALEM, Or., May 4. (Special.) C. E. Woolfolk of Grants Pass has filed application with the state engineer to appropriate water from Gilbert ceek for the irrigation of a small tract of land in Josephine county. James N. Cornutt of Central Point would appropriate water from an un named spring for the Irrigation of a small tract of land in Jackson county. G. G. Kerns of Klamath Falls seeks YAKIMA MAN HIGH PRIEST Frederick Jj. Janeck Choice at Con vocation of Masons. SPOKANE, Wash., May 4. Freder ick L. Janeck of Takima was selected most excellent grand high priest of the grand Masonic York Rite bodies of Washington here today and next years convocation of York Rite bod ies was awarded to Seattle. Other officers chosen were: John Arnston. Tacoma, deputy grand high priest; Horace Walter Tyler, Tacoma, grand treasurer; Yancy Crawford. Blalock, grand secretary; Harry Scott Haynes, Walla Walla, grand scribe; Samuel Endslow, Spokane, grand cap tain of hosts; William Elliott, Yates, grand principal sojourner; William Thomas Drips, Montesano, grand royal arch captain; Charles Henry Steffen, Seattle, grand master third veil; John Hoffer Johnson, Chehalls, grand master first veil; Robert Edgar Sul livan, Seattle, grand orator; Fred Matthies, Pomeroy, grand steward. Mr. Janeck today 'named J. H. Heinz of Sunnyside grand high priest. 680-ACRE FARM SOLD French. Place Xear Cove Purchased for $53,500 Consideration. COVE, Or., May 4. (Special.) French Bros., dealers in thorough bred sheep, and their mother, Mrs. Adelaide McKennon, of Clarksville, Ark., completed the sale of their 680 acre farm, one mile out of Cove, Sat urday to Stewart McAnish and sons J. S. and L. B. The consideration was 853,500. Robert and Harris French are nephews of Stephen French of New Jersey, who came to Cove In the early 70s for his health, and through whose will the several properties. Ascension Episcopal , church rectory and Episco pal girls' school were erected, and 100 acres of land fenced and set to a park, an orchard and grain field, designed as an endowment for :hurch and Interwoven Hosiery Hart Schaffher V &.Marx 7 Vassar Underwear Clothes Saving Starts With All Wool All-wool fabrics and fine tailoring in clothes mean longer wear longer wear means fewer clothes to buy each year. If you want style, you must have all-wool the style does not last without it. You'll get all this here in Hart Schaff ner & Marx clothes; your money back if you don't. Sam'l Rosenblatt & Co. Fifth and Alder Gasco Building ! i H i .mm . u q 4 i fPK When you find out how much Sugar you can school, the latter to have at least one three-month term in each year. When failure met the-trustees' ef forts Bishop B. Wistar Morris, a per sonal friend of Stephen French, pre served the intention of the' will by :eing the proceeds from the 100-acre endowment land for the Episcopal girls' school in Portland. CONCESSION GIVEN LEGION Fourth of July Celebration at Hood River to Aid Veterans. HOOD RIVER. Or..- May 4. (Spe cial.) At a meeting of the city coun cil last night a blanket concession was given the American Legion post for Fourth of July entertainments. The organization will appoint a com mittee soon to make plans for In dependence day celebration. All funds raised will be appropriated toward the construction of a legion home. At the annual election last night Edward W. Van Horn, organizer of the old 12th company, coast artillery. who was in France as captain of a battery of the 65th coast artillery regiment, was elected commander of the post for the ensuing year. by .using ,M AMI TOP (3 in your cooking you'll be surprised! Cascara Peeling to Begin. ELMA, Wash., May 4. (Special.) Cascara bark peeling, the regular summer vacation trip for many fami lies, will commence in this sectton soon. Peelers already are shipping their camp equipment to the areas where the cascara grows. Rev. B. F. FcIIman Takes Charge. ALBANY, Or., May 4. (Special.) Rev. B. F. Fellman began his pas torate of the First Baptist church of Albany Monday. He arrived here Fri day evening and preached in the church at both services. Rev. Mr. Fellman has been city missionary at Des Moines, Iowa, for the past three years. As pastor of the local church Tl Semct CONNER siifr 0 co. Bar enn of 1'rlmnon Rambler Syrup; end u tkf label an! lOe, v will Rfnd you the recipe cabinet. he succeeds Dr. George H. Young:, who is now director of relisrions edu cational work for the Baptist church in thp Pacific northwest. PORTLAND CITY AND COUNTY MEDICAL SOCIETY PORTLAND, OREGON Dear Sir:- SELLING BUILDING, April 27, 1920. DO YOU WANT TO BE ELECTED? The city and county Medical Society, practically all the practicing- physicians in Multnomah County, will hold a meeting in the Turkish Room of the Portland Hotel May 5th next, at which time you, as a candidate for public office, will be given an opportunity to state your qualifications. The physician in your community has a wide acquaintance and his judgment is relied upon in the ballot box and, if interested, his influence reaches every home and ' individual in the state. The meeting will be from 8 to 10 P. M. and each speaker will be given five minutes in which to state what he can and will do for the medical pro fession and for public health. Names will appear on the programme in the order in which they are received by the undersigned. In order that the programme may be made up and printed before the meeting, it will be necessary for us to receive the enclosed card not later than Thursday, April 29. Yours very sincerely, SECRETARY. . Yeteirs ml PORTLAND CITT AND COUNTY MEDICAL SOCIETY. Portland, -Or., Selling Bldg., April 29, 1920. Dear Sir: As members of the medical profession, we are interested in health legislation and all that pertains thereto and in the development of medical science to Us very highest efficiency. We are also much interested in both general and special education, therefore we address this questionnaire to you and ask for a reply at your earliest convenience. You are invited to attend a meeting on Wednesday. May 5. 190. at 8 o'clock P. M.. Portland Hotel, and asked to express your views on these subjects: 1. Do you believe in public health legislation having a tendency to increase longevity and comforts of mankind based on time-honored research and scientific investigation? Answer ". Do you favor the development of medicine as a science based on the investiga tion and research of medical men covering a long period of time and would you. if fleeted, favor the regulation of the various "New Schools'" of medicine so many of which have come into existence the past few years? Answer 3 Do you favor legislation in the interest of humanity and Us betterment as ex emplified by our Child Welfare Commission Medical Department, University of Oregon, etc.? Answer Name Candidate for Please return this at once in the enclosed stamped envelope. Thanking you tor an early reply, we are, ' Yours very truly, PORTLAND CITY AND COL'.N'TV MEDICAL SOCIETY. Special Legislative Committee. By The above two letters, dated April 27, followed by Questionnaire, Letter No. 2 under date of April 29, are self explanatory. DO YOU WANT TO BE ELECTED? Heading of letter No. 1, then again I will quote from paragraph No. 2 of letter No. 2, both of which are on file at my office. "Do you favor the development of Medicine as a science based on investigation and research of medical men covering a long period of time and would you if elected favor the regulations of the various 'new schools' of medicine, so many of which have come into existence in the past few years?" - After acknowledging profound respect for the liberal-minded physicians and surgeons of our city, of whom there are many, I wish to make a few observations directed to the few who are making this effort to Germanize our legislature ami to gather to their profession and for themselves autocratic power. The accompanying letter, states: "You Trill be given an opportunity to state your qualifications." Qualifications for the Legislature, in the eyes of this group of men, 'consist only In the subserviency of the candidate to'the will and wish of these men, who are now assuming claims over the will and conscience or other men. In effect, they state for the whole people of Multnomah county, and to the men who offer themselves to the whole people of the county: "We are the authority, we are the Judge, and we are the Instrument through which and by which 500 rnn he elected, and without which influence you must Ignominionsly.f ail." In other. words, "After hearing your qualifications WE will JIDGB as to your fitness, and your fitness will depend. upon whether'or not you will get down on your knees and pledge your life, year aoul and your sacred "honor to u." By this manifesto, this group ' want the candidate to pledge himself before election to support monopoly of method and business in the prevention and treatment of diseases. In 1919 professional lobbyists, employed by the American Medical Association, urged in congress seven different bills for the creation of a so-called Krderal Department of Public Health. These bills called for the appropriation of forty-eight million dollars for Institutions operated by medical doctors; and for ten million dollars to carry on a so-called Department of Education for Medical Doctors. In. other words, to create a Pension Department for the cause of the M. D. lest he misiht pcrarl venture be starved out by the ordinary course of evolution and progress. All the work pertaining to public health proposed by these bills, was at that time being done by other branches of the Government and obviously, therefore, there could have been no other purpose. The purpose of such legislation waa to foster monopoly in the Interest or the American Medical Association under the cloak of a Krdrral Department of Public Health. In every State of the Union, -the American Medical Association has passed laws under which practitioners of all other schools have been prosecuted and in some instances jailed and humiliated and in the above proposed measures they only sought to Federalize authority to do the same thing. The bills introduced at that time, and still being attempted, not only at Washington, but clear down to the Turkish Room of the Portland Hotel, would tike from the American citizen the right to choose the method or healing that seems good to him; every other practitioner would be driven out of business and only prescriptive writers would survive. Nothing more Infamous has ever been proposed. Note the emphasis put on the "new schools" in their challenge to candidates for the legislature. They do not want anything new or progressive built upon research with progress unvexed For two thousand years they have been the custodians of the people's health. They have occupied this field with undisputed sway all this time: and if they had made good, no other methods of healing would have appeared, and certainly would not have flourished; bnt long continued failures have art the people thinking; and newer and better methods of combating diseases arc being discovered; and this cult of ancient medicine men, seeing their field invaded, rush to the law makers, national and state, county and precinct, for protection, that their monopoly may not ,be disturbed. If Materia Medica were the only, or the best, road to health and. higher efficiency, it would be complacent and confident In the assurance of its strength and the Justice of its position. It would not need to be bolstered up by law. This campaign to invade the next legislature shows the last stage of a falling; cmh, which, like other dogmas In the past, founded on wrong; hypothesis, have first tried to frown down advancement with prejudice and. falling in ttai, kair sought legal protection. There are now. in active practice in the United States, 40,000 varloirs drugless physicians. They are all doing good. In fact, the very poorest of them are doing, better than can be done with drugs. Thla la proven by 45.000,000 people who have been helped or cured, and who believe In drugless therapy. The laws that are being attempted, under the cloak of conserving; public health, would deprive these millions of their inalienable right to be free. It would make criminals of those who undertook to practice any ysteni except that prescribed by the American Medical Association. Such Iws would force the United Stales Government to turn aside from Justice and lofty ideals, to prosecute, at public expense, her noble sons and daughters outside the Medical Association, who attempted to administer to the sick and suffering. Thus would the government unwittingly levy a tax on 45,000,000 of good people, who want drugless therapy, to bolster up the medical profession. , 't his in a mean conception to have had Its origin In the brains of man. The only way thla pernicious attempt a law making can be prevented la to elect to congress and to the legislature fair minded men and women. No candidate should be asked to do more than to be fair and Just. And when he is elected and enters upon the discharge of his duties, he should be bound by no pre-election pledges that would come between him and the discharge of bis duty to a.11 of the people. ANY MAN, OR SK.T OK IEX, WHO WOIXD SEEK TO BIND BY PLEDGES, SHOULD BE SPIRNED BV THE PEOPLE WHO CHOOSE LEGISLATORS! LIKEWISE, A LEGISLATOR WHO, TO SECURE SUPPORT, WILL SUCCUMB TO THE BLANDISHMENT, THREATS OR FLATTER' OF A CLASS, IS NOT TO BE TRUSTED. There is but ONE pledge that a man should make who seeks the suffrage of the people, and that is thafhe will do his DUTY, as God gives him power to know his duty; that he will ever have In the foreground of his thoughts the welfare of, not any cult or Class, but of the WHOLE PEOPLE. This is a government "of the people, by the people and for the people"; and not a government of the doctors, by the doctors and for the doctors. ""'" . Until next election day I will address any club, societies or gatherings further on this subject; also give my opinion as to who are fair-minded candidates. . . x Park and Yamhill; Office Phone, Main 1014. Residence Phone, dlawn 686. Blame no society, cult or organization of any kind for the above article. This is a paid advertisement by Yours truly, OSCAR W. ELLIOTT, President of the PACIFIC CHIROPRACTIC COLLEGE (Paid- Advertisement.)