TITE SUTTOAT OKEGOXIAX. PORTLAND. JAXTJART . 24, 1915. mercy. POBTLATD, OREGON. 4i Entered at Portland. Oregon, Poatoffic aa I second-class mauer. i ' fiabscnpUon Bates Invariably In advance: I By Mail.) :f Iailr, Sunday included, one year . - Xai:y, Sunday Included, six months .. Dally, Sunday Included, three months Pally. Sunday Included, one month . - " !DaL,y, witiiout Sunday, one year . ... Xaily, without Sunday. slxTnonths ... ;' Daily, without Sunday, three months ' Zally, without 6 on flay, one month ... DISHOJTEST AJO TT5TWOBTHT, Wow that Conn-ess has made liberal appro- Ipriations for Oregon rivers and harbors, we ...$8.00 barrel" flght. and thus destroy all the work --?lof the state delegation at w aaningto; -rr I bale in capita journal. f w I if The Oregonian was in any meaa- a 75 1 nre responsiDie ior ovenuuw o the bloated pork-barrel sought 10 d "W'eeUIy. one year i-.'V I fiiri nr. hv dtoaHt trmhtwrfl In the wunday.on? year S'-S i i ii.,9hlA hnnoAT &na nMHiToafl tar ........... ..-v icui u ,suu,t.i - - 'By carrier.) service to the public and to congress. TJulW. Snndav Included, one year ...... -la-' "J I T-i,-m,..3 w .Hnal Indmtrlfll alli Sunday Included one month 7S . der. express order or personal cheek on your I cerned about the approaching deficit JQCAI nan, cumpi, cm or ,u , , - , w "-((.. -cnT-oa th. sender's risk. Give postoffice address in lull. VJ,"'C'"'""' -including county and state. I Democratic majority yet went fatuous- , fHUii Bates 12 to 18 pages. i cent. ij ly aneaa with its programme to im To 3Z pages, cents; 4 to .a pe vcuw., i . . An nAn co to o pages. cents: 62 to 7 pages. 5 1 pose upon the people a $45,000,000 cents: 78 to a2 pages, cents. Foreign post- 1 appropriation for rivers and harbors. - -i- . rnnk- with contingent appropriations or ta .' Iin. n-w York. Brunswicit building; Chicago, I 000,000 more. It failed because an Ctenxer building. 8an Franrtseo Office K, J. Bldweu tym pany, 742 MarKet street. JPOBTIAXD. 60TJAY, JAN. Z4. WIS. By this ; within the next lew mourns, xier vw improvements were cared for, ;orous forces thrown into the balance We think they will be again; but, at a critical Juncture might turn It in I whether or not they shall be. It is clear i favor of the allies, with whom Hour that the project that is not willing to nanian svmnathies are naturally stand before Congress on its merits, active. The little country has plenty and is ready to be tied up to every e , t?.,.,! hut thieving scheme from every part of . uu 0a Uwbw o - I .V.-. - Hit v ?; anno Hit a I OT-rl ; ;one so bitter as against the Turk and probaDly rejected. The greasy pork- Magyar. i.ariy in tne raieenm """ barrel era is over. tury, when Turkey was expansive, her I The people of Oregon cannot In troops overran the eastern territory I conscience say to Congress: "If you ::f tho Rnnminlans with those incl-I will give us what we deserve we shall dents of horror which always attend- help you to give others wnat iney ao .d Mohammedan conquests. At about not deserve." une oaiem paper us, ui -ho cam. timo the Mae-vars eained course, ready to dicker and trade and possession of the Roumanian country sell out, Put xne uregomaat is not. : west of the Carpathians, the region much as you can and face it out. until lit would not affect the Socialists, ior trapped. Then confess and beg for I such an enterprise from a municipal standpoint is even more socialistic than municipal electric railways. A jitney service can be established without a great amount of capital. A hundred or a thousand individuals may go into the business, each on his own account. In one large city. If the jitney proves to be a permanent profit maker no district that has decent highways need lack rapid transporta tion, and new opportunities will be opened to countless persons of small capital to engage In business for them selves. For a city to engage in Jitney transportation Is for the people as- a whole to compete with themselves. Because a detriment to individual private enterprise It likely would not receive much encouragement. Tet municipal railway lines may have the same aspect in a more subtle way. The street railway corporation is often but the physical expression of. the combined capital of numerous citizens of the same city In which a municipal line engages in competitive trans portation. . By such concrete examples as the proposal In Seattle to save the face of city railway management by embarking more generally into com petition with private enterprise may the eyes of many persons be opened to what municipal ownership of rail lines really means. unbought minority, led by Burton, and supported by almost the entire free press of the country, conducted a filibuster, and forced a surrenaer by the organized grafters. kottmama. . I A $20,000,000 bill was passed, ana Roumania may be destined to play the Army engineers were authorized decisive part in European affairs l known as Transylvania. Ever since "those unhappy days the Roumanians ";'have vainly longed for the reunion of their divided people. They have risen repeatedly for "liberty," as they call ;'lt, but each successive effort has been put down with increasing atrocities. I.Transylvania's population is more than half Roumanian today In spite -icf centuries of Magyar tyranny. ". The Hungarians have always been 'zealous of their own liberties, but It "never has occurred to them that the ; Roumanians had any similar rights. The original inhabitants of Transyl vania have been oppressed with more ' than. Russian severity. The Czar has not striven to extirpate- the language and national feeling of the Poles with half the rigor the Hungarians have used toward the Roumanians for a , similar purpose. But oppression has been in vain. The subject Roumanians retain their traditions and their 6peech intact and no doubt always . will, whether they throw off the Hun- FIFTY YEARS. The San Francisco Chronicle on January 16, 1915, Issued an elaborate Jubilee edition, celebrating the com pletion of its fiftieth year. It was an issue worthy of the occasion. There were many special articles dealing with the history of journalism In Call fornia, with other subjects of Interest and Importance, and including a fine showing of the forthcoming Panama- Pacific Exposition. The Illustrations were admirably selected and printed. There is nothing remarkable about the fact that a newspaper may have survived the obstacles that beset all journalism for a period of half a cen tury. But it Is remarkable that any newspaper should remain under single direction all that time. The Chronicle was founded January 16, 1865, by Charles and M. H. DeToung, brothers. Charles DeYoung died at the assassin's hand In 1880 and since that time M. H. DeToung has been the sy unuw uu. iu """" I . nd nnhiishor. In that garian yoke or not. In the heart oir"'rJ-""-"--a , Transylvania Is an old Saxon colony completely surrounded by alien na tionalities. Like all colonists in such circumstances these Saxons are more German than the Kaiser. They care fully insulate themselves from all Magyar and Roumanian Influences and preserve their language and loy alty with ferocious fidelity. Were the Roumanians of Transylvania to join more with tne growin or tjamorma. and is now, as it has long been, one of the conspicuous dally newspapers of the United States, The Oregonian notes that some of its contemporaries, in bestowing de served congratulations upon Mr. De Young, say there Is no present parallel of a publisher or owner who has re mained in "active control" of any ; xne a.u . tt ,XThP7r metropolitan newspaper for so long a - would prove a formidable foe to their f ,,,. e rrv, national aspirations. East of the Carpathian Mountains dwell the division of the people who ! are commonly called Roumanians. Thev formed an independent kingdom in 18S1, after a series of struggles with the Turk and Greek, Russia al- ways openly or secretly favoring them. I But when a convenient moment came ; for plundering her old friends, Russia did not hesitate for a moment to an nex their province of Bessarabia which circles around the Black Sea to the northeast. The Roumanians are time as fifty years. The Oregonian feels that it ought. In the Interest of historical truth, to point out that the statement is an error. Mr. H. u. Pit- tock, of The Oregonian, came to this paper in 1853 nearly 62 years ago and soon thereafter became Its pro prietor. On February 4, 1861 nearly fifty-four years ago he founded the Morning Oregonian, and ho Is still at the helm. SEATTLE'S LOSING .TENTUBE. Seattle is having a most enlighten- mountaineers with all the vigor and I ing experience with municipal owner- : manly virtue which naturally belong ShiD of electric railways. The city ; to such people. Ii their old wars now has two divisions in operation with successive invaders tney sougmiand In XJecemDer tney snowea au ; safety, like the British Celts, in the operating loss, to say nothing of in- mountains. where they found pastur- terest and depreciation charges, . are for their flocks and natural fort-I amounting to nearly $1500. resses for defense. Here they dwelt i -Ve do not recall how long seatue and multiplied, while Goths, Avars, has been engaged In this unprofitable , Huns, Bulgarians, Magyars and Tar- I enterprise, but we assume that it has tars swept devastatlngly over their been for some time, as Mayor till! i country. After each invasion they avers that ''the city has acted as fairy crept slowly back into the plain of godmother to the Lake Burien Cm the Danube and began anew the build- I derella long enough." The division , lng of their civilization, only to see that sustains the greater . losses oper- everything they had done harried into ates to a' section known aa .Lake ruin by the next deluge of barbarism. I Burien. t If God keeps a record of .human mis- I Mavor Gill's -observation was con- ery the page wnicn is consecrated to talned in a veto message in wnicn ne ; the Roumanians must be stained from disapproved the submission of a bond- , top to bottom with blood. How they ing issue for the purchase of Jitney have lived through it air is a mys- buses. On its face tne proposal was ' tery. or would be did we ribt know so a bond issue of $50,000 for motor Veil the survival power"-of man. buses to connect the two municipal Had misery been able to extir- railways. Mayor Gill thought he saw .rate our race earth-' would have Been a subterfuge therein. The amount of the fast of it thousands of years ago. I the bond issue was excessive for the The Roumanians count among their I purpose named and he inferred that ncestors whole legions of Roman jt was the intent of those back of the . soldiers, who settled An the land of I movement to operate city buses In the Dacians after they had served out the downtown districts In competition their time in the army. Colonists with the privately-owned street rail- i from Italy also flocked to the lower wavs and also in competition with in plains of the Danube after Trajan had dividuals who might engage In tne I Jitney business, and thereby attempt to retrieve the fortunes of a losing municipal venture. The. tendency in municipal owner ship of street railways is either to build into districts where private cap ital recognizes that a new line would be unprofitable, or to buy up some pacined the country. The mingled blood of the Italians and Dacians has 1 given us the modern" Roumanians, ' hardy,' handsome and progressive, yet . picturesque with many a world-old i tradition and costume. Their language .Is fragrant with Latin memories. '"Flange" means mourn, "moartea" is death, "verde" is green and so on by property which has failed to produce the hundred. It is in truth a fto- the revenues demanded by private cap- mance language with older flavor ital. From Mayor Gill's veto message than any other. Up to very recent it may be inferred that the Lake times the Roumanians had little lit- Burien line In particular was acquired erature except their translation of the or constructed with a general lack of Bible and some ecclesiastical trifles business sense. Its patrons have ac- which their devotion to the orthodox cess to other lines, and the municipal Oreek church made indispensable, but railway does not take them to the they have always possessed a rich business center of the city. Nor ap- store of folk sonps. Many of these I parently can It be extended pending re collected and translated in Tereza the construction of permanent bridges Stratilesco's "From Carpathian to over the Lake Washington canal and Pindus. which may be obtained at the acquirement of common user the Public Library. It gives an enter- privileges. talnine and sympathetic account of I When a city once gets into the the Roumanians from earliest times, transportation business a clear mind with picturesque descriptions of their and a steady hand usually are needed national customs. I to steer it straight. Mayor Gill seems Of late years the progress of mod- I to possess both. The jitney bus Is frnization has been rapid in the lower I practically an untried business ven Danubian region. Roumania has two I ture. It has operated in some sections. national universities, which are well attended. The larger, at Bucharest, has more than 4000 students. There ;ls also a system of free public schools. at an apparent profit, but whether these profits will not ultimately be wiped out by rapid deterioration of the vehicles Is problematical. Proba- Should-the Roumanians of the east I bly the Seattle Councilmen who pro- -and west succeed in forming a united pose entering into the new transporta- 'natlon it will be one of the most vig- I tlon enterprise can produce calcula- orously progressive In the world. . I tlons which show that the city, by I changing its municipal electric rail- Fraudulent politics appears to be I ways into gasoline motor bus lines. -the principal means of livelihood in I cannot possibly lose more than it , "Terre Haute. Charles Lamb's Aunt I does now. But that is cold 'comfort Betsey cared nothing for whist unless I to the taxpayer who foots the losses, ''played "tth the rffcor of the game." We -should think a proposal by a jlf politics Is a Same it must have city to go into motor bus transporta- rules and tne man who breaks them I uon would open me eyes or many wno Is a blackleg. The one conspicuous I have been committed to municipal .rule in Terrs Haute la to cheat aa I ownership in 411U phases. Doubtless WHICH IS SHE AMERICAN" POIJCYT Two Ideas of American duty in Mexico are set forth in President Wil son's speech at Indianapolis and in Senator Borah's reply delivered in the Senate. ' They should be read together, In the light of recent and present events in Mexico, that we may fully understand their respective merits. The facts in Mexico, are that hun dreds of Americans have been killed, hundreds have been brutally abused and Imprisoned, and thousands have been robbed, their homes and prop erty destroyed and themselves reduced to poverty by the several warring fac tions which have contended for su premacy in Mexico. These Americans had been encouraged, if not actually Invited by the former government of Mexico, to entrust their lives and for tunes to Its protection. Many more Americans have been killed or wounded In border towns by Mexican bullets. Nothing has been done to obtain Justice for these wronged Amer icans or to bring about the punish ment of their murderers and plunderers. This is why Mr. Wilson has done nothing, as stated by him at Indian apolis: I hold It as a fundamental principle, and so do you, that every people has the right to determine Its own form of government; and until this recent revolution in Mexico, until the entr. of the Diaz reign, 80 per cent of the people of Mexico never had a "look-In" in determining who should be their Governor or what their government should be. Now, I am for the 80 per cent. It Is none of my business, and it is none of your business, how long- they take in determining it. It is none of my bualness and it is none of yours how they go . about the business. ' The country is theirs. The government theirs. The liberty, If they can get It, and Godspeed them In getting It, la theirs. And so far as my Influence goes while I am President nobody shall interfere with them. This is Mr. -Borah's view of what Mr. Wilson should have done: I am desirous of peace with Mexico; want no war; and I know we shall never. take any cart of the territory of that re public, but above- and beyond that and more Important to my mind Is the fact that we smmld at least protect our own citizenship, securing our women against ravishment and murder at the hands ox those rerocious men who prey upon our nationals wherever they find them in their territory. There are some things which are dearer to me than peace. Mr. President, tne mistreatment oz Ameri can citizens in Mexico Is due to the fact that there has pasesd into the Mexican mind ja. firm belief that we will not protect our citizens, and I say whatever criticism shall come to me from those who love peace more than tney love honor, that the nag which will not protect Its people is a dirty rag that contaminates the air in which it floats." We cannot have peace, we cannot have honor unless we are prepared to protect our own citizens, and I believe, verily be lieve, that we may do so and still have no war with Mexico. We leave it to our readers to de cide which of the two men voices the truly American sentiment. Other nations succeed in enforcing respect for the lives, liberty and property of their citizens in foreign countries. Do they succeed by the Wilson policy or by the Borah policy? fund and that the" Legislature specif ically appropriate so much thereof as is needed for protection and propaga tion of game and game fish, and that the balance be devoted to other use ful purposes. Game is a state resource and be longs to the whole people. The license is payment, in part at least, for the right to convert this resource to pri vate use. The state has another re source, for example, in the potash de posits of Central Oregon. If the state permits the conversion of these salts to private use It will exact a royalty. It is as unreasonable to hold that this entire royalty shall be expended in policing pipe lines, checking sales and shipments and in aiding private en terprise to develop new reduction works, as to contend that all the rev enues from game shall be expended to conserve game or provide more of It. A PROTEST AGAINST WASTE. To the Medford Mail-Tribune ' The Oregonian "seems drunk; with power over its success in organizing tne Legislature and electing a Republican Governor." To The Oregonian the Medford Mail-Tribune seems drunk with something else. Without a doubt our little friend in Southern Oregon Is seeing things." The complaint this tune, from our petulant contemporary is that through advocacy of a different method of handling the fish and garne t und The Oregonian is bent .upon organizing a political machine. ' We are open to instruction. If there Is' a better scheme for organizing a. political maehine than the- one presented by -(existing fish and game laws we should like to be enlightened. ' '-' There can be no political maehine without political hangers-on, yet the Mail-Tribune fears that a change In the method of-handling the funds will deprive the state of game protection and. game propagation. . In other words there will be fewer deputy game wardens, fewer game-farm and refuge keepers, fewer biological ex perts, fewer office clerks and stenog raphers, fewer trouthatchery em ployes. It Is the common tinderstand ing that an army of officials, who owe their positions to a common head is an essential of a political machine. It is only a befuddled brain that can dis cern possibilities of a political ma chine in a proposal to cut off useless jobholders. The proposed change in the game laws is a part of a practical economy programme. Nothing more. Nobody asks that the Game Commission be deprived of money actually needed for game protection and game prop- gation. The demand is that the sur plus derived from the sale of hunting and fishing licenses be expended for the public's benefit. In the twelve months ending No vember 1, 1914, the fishing and hunt ing licenses produced more than $119,- 00. This money was deposited in the office of the State Treasurer subject to the warrants of the Fish and Game Commission. In effect it was as thor oughly in the control of the Commis sion as if It had been deposited in a National Bank subject to the order of the Commission. Every dollar was expended and part of a balance car ried over from the previous year as well. The Oregonian believes that the Commission spent all the money be cause it had it and because the fund could not be used for any other pur- pose not because that much money was needed for carrying out the func tions of the Commission. The proposal now is that the li cense money be paid into the general EMERGENCY MEASURES NOT ENOUGH. ' We are frequently informed that the war has created an emergency which requires prompt and extreme action in this country. Our supply of chem icals and dyes from Germany was cut off, and immediately there was much talk of producing these commodities ourselves, not only for our own needs but to supply Germany's other cus tomers. There Is scarcity of vessels to carry American commerce, and the Administration proposes to meet the emergency by authorizing the Government to subscribe 61 per cent of the stock in a corporation" to be managed by the Government, which should buy and build ships. Secretary McAdoo says this is the only way in which we can meet a "critical emer gency. He says the proposed snip ping board would give large orders to shipyards in order to encourage them. Much capital, labor and technical skill are necessary to establish a chem ical factory. This would probably oc cupy two years. The building of ships would occupy at least a year and half. The longest estimate yet made of the duration of the war three years. It has already con tinued for nearly six months, leaving only a year . to eighteen months during which our new ships and our new chemical factories would have the advantage of the emergency which the war has created. After that period German chemical manu facturers and foreign shipowners would re-enter the field, and our manufacturers and shipowners would be exposed to the same competition which kept them out of the field be fore the war. No temporary measures will meet the emergency. No man will make the large investment necessary to chemical factijry, with the prospect of being killed by competition a year ortwo after he has begun operations, If the Government builds ships and retains our present laws as to opera tion, it will have to operate them itself at a loss for an indefinite time. for no private capitalist will take them off its hands. The only measures which will meet the emergency are such as will permit the industry to continue and to grow after the emergency has passed. To build up a chemical industry we need development of raw materials, cheap waterpower and the broad extension of technical education that we may have an ample supply of skilled labor, To build up a merchant marine, we must be able to build and operate ships in competition with the world, in peace times as well as in war. times. The measures which would make this possible can be passed as quickly and would show their effects as readily as would Mr. McAdoo's emergency measure. Their beneficial effects would continue after normal condi tions were restored, while the good effects of purely emergency measures would pass away with the emergency. wilL " But it would be better to en courage building of ships in foreign yards for American commerce than not to have them built at all. . ' This is no time for half measures or for 6purious remedies such as Govern ment purchase and operation. It is a time to offer Inducements for mil lions of capita? to flow out into the shipping business. By inducements we do not mean subsidies; we mean simply removal of the shackles which still bind the industry. Our country overflows with the commodities which the world needs and will need for years' to come, but we cannot get the ships to carry them. We are prac titcally dependent on British ships such as Britain will spare from her war service and her own commerce. The control of the sea Is not yet de cided; it will not be decided until Brit ain and Germany have fought out their quarrel on the sea. If a Ger man naval victory were to liberate her cruisers to ravage the sea while naval supremacy remained in doubt, our commerce would be paralyzed, for It is carried chiefly in British ships. The only hope of safety and expansion for our foreign commerce is to provide more ships, sailing under the Ameri can flag, and giving preference to American commerce. That requires building of: new ships, not buying of old ones. worth having on such terms, but little reflection may change their minds. After all, eating and drink ing are" not the only Joys in the world BITI.U MORE SHIPS. The greatest present need, not of this country only, but of the whole world, is more ships to carry com merce. The war has caused nearly the whole of the German and Austrian merchant marine to be tied up; it has caused destruction of many ships of the allied nations, of Germany and of neutrals; it has diverted great fleets of ships from commerce to military uses. Shipyards in Great Britain, France and Germany are probably so busy build ing and repairing warships that few merchant ships are on the ways. The other neutral nations cannot build ships fast enough to make up the de ficiency thus created. The decrease in the number of vessels available for American commerce is estimated at 30 to 40 per cent, and Senator Fletcher says that in some instances charter rates have advanced 400 per cent In sixty days. The consequence is that, while all the world is crying out for our prod ucts, we have not and cannot get ships to carry them or can get ships only at prohibitive rates. . Our export lum ber trade Jjo Europe has been killed by double or triple freight rates and war-risk Insurance. Cotton, which is worth 19 cents a pound at Hamburg, is worth only 7 cents at Southern ports, the bulk of the difference rep resenting exorbitant freight. W. N. White, of New York, informed the House committee on merchant marine that it costs $1.10 a box to send apples from New York to South America in twenty-one to twenty-five days, while apples go- from Tasmania to England in forty-two days at only 66 cents. The only way to bring down freight rates to a normal basis is to increase the world's supply of ships, but Presi dent Wilson proposes purchase of for eign ships by the Government as a remedy, which resembles swapping jackknives. True, his ship-purchase bill permits Government construction of merchant ships, but the tonnage which could be built with the pro posed capital of $30,000,000 would be but a drop in the ocean and the Gov ernment would proceed with Its pro verbial slowness. The Wilson policy would not materially Increase the number of ships available to carry our commerce and would not appreciably reduce the prohibitive ocean freight rates. In order to get more ships, Congress should make it profitable to build them, in either American or foreign ports, and to operate them under the American flag. The war offers only a temporary Inducement to shipbuilding unless owners are permitted to oper ate ships at equal cost with foreigners. If Congress will revise the shipping laws in such a manner as to equalize operating cost, Americans will be tempted to build ships. Owing to de pletion of the supply by war's destruc tion, freights are likely to continue above normal not only throughout the war, but for some time after its close. This may induce capitalists to pay the extra cost of building iu the United States. They would more willingly do so If given freedom to engage in either foreign or coastwise- trade at DIET AND HEALTH. Dr. Louis Faugers Bishop has some new theories concerning life and its preservation which people approach ing middle years would do well to heed. It Is commonly understood that a frequent cause of death in later years is arteriosclerosis, a word which signifies hardening of the blood ves sels. With it goes a general weaken ing of the bodily frame, stiff joints and flabbily useless muscles. At about the same time the kidneys begin to idle and the heart throbs wearily or with feverish energy. All these symptoms portend dissolution. By the time they make their appearance the pitcher has already gone far too often to the fountain, the wheel Is broken at the cistern and the golden bowl will last but little longer. The cause of arterio sclerosis is more or less mysterious. Some attribute it to hard work, others to idleness and high living. Both fac tors no doubt play a part In bringing it upon the foolish victim. Many have preached that alcoholic beverages are the prime cause of brittle arteries and diseased kidneys, but Dr. Bishop thinks otherwise. We dare say alcoholic drinks are re sponsible for a multitude of untimely deaths. The chances are that the average of our lives would be a great deal longer if their use were given up once and for all, but it seems likely enough that they have very little to do with that breaking down of tho circulatory system which opens the bodily fortifications to death like a traitor within the gates. The secret of that great disaster, says Dr. Bishop, is to be sought in defective metabol ism. In- the economy of the body metabolism follows digestion. . The stomach and its humble allies turn the food we eat into liquids which are sucked up into tne circulation through the walls of the intestines. Then metabolism begins. It is the sum total of those chemical changes in the bodily cells which keep up the supply of energy for our activities and repair waste. The word is long and forbidding, but. its meaning is com paratively simple. -Nobody pretends to know quite what these chemical activities are in the deepest reality, but ' scientists understand perfectly their outward laws, which in many cases are wonderful to think of. The metabolism of each individual follows ways of Its own. The cells of our bodies are singular, squeamish and irrational. It is never possible to predict how they will feel toward any given article of food until it has been offered to them. If they accept It, well and good. That is the food we should choose and cling to. If they reject a substance, it is poison for that man. Just as some cannot aoiae a gaping pig and some a harmless nec essary cat, so the cells of some bodies shy at strawberries and shrink with horror from fried chicken. Popular wisdom has enshrined these facts of metabolism in proverbs. "One man's meat Is another's poison," De gustibus non est disputandum, and the like. On facts of this nature Dr. Bishop builds his dietetic sermon. Food which the cells dislike is a poison to the man who eats it. Not only does it deprive the cells of their necessary nutriment, but it sends waves of male ficent substances ' throughout the sys tem. In particular It hardens the walls of the blood vessels. It Is not strong drink, therefore, nor too much food nor excessive luxury that brings so many elderly people down to un timely graves but eating the wrong kind of food, the kind that their bod ily cells reject with loathing. Now learn a mystery. We cannot always tell when the cells are dis gusted and poisoned. The process is secret, esoteric, insidious. There may be no pain to warn us. There may even be an exaltation of what seems delusively to be health and energy. Let the man of 50 who. feels "younger than he did at 20" beware. His ex uberance is probable due to heightened blood pressure and that again comes from lurking poisons in his system. Almost certainly he eats something from day to day which his cells reject. Normally a man should not feel stronger at 60 than at 20. He should be perceptibly weaker and should tire more readily. There is still an enor mous amount of good work In him, but he must husband his resources. There is some valuable preaching on this text In The Autocrat of the, Breakfast Table. Usually the treach erous poisons which thus invade and undermine the body are of the nature f proteids, lean meat and the like. Physicians well know the symptoms of incipient arteriosclerosis. They are heightened color in the face, brilliant eyes, cheery voice and a treacherous feeling of well-being. Of course there in also that increased blood pressure which always portends 'death and from which the other symptoms flow. Perhaps the worst of all is inability to sleep in the small hours of the night. One drops off into sweet slum bers as soon as the head strikes the pillow, but at 2 or 3 o'clock wakeful ness begins. The mind starts grinding some worthless grist and keeps at it our after hour. At about the time when a person ought to get up and go to work he falls asleep again. This is as dangerous as it is exasperating. It indicates something wrong with the circulatory system, probably arterio sclerosis. The patient should go to a physician and follow the advice he gives. Usually he will counsel less meat, more fresh air and relaxation from w.orry. A spare diet largely of graham bread, cold water and an oc casional cup of weak tea will make elderly people healthy, wealthy and wise. To come. 14fe max not seem DEFICIT DUE TO BI.rTEKS. In a plain recital of facts Represen tative Steenerson disposed of the fic tion that the war is responsible for the decrease in revenue and in the treas ury balance. He showed that the cause has been Democratic blunders in over-estimating income and in un der-estimating expenses. In his final speech on the tariff bill on September 30, 1913, Representativ Underwood estimated customs revenue for the fiscal year 1915 at $249,000, 000, revenue from the income and corporation tax at $122, 000, 000s an total revenue at $1,026,000,000, whil he estimated expenditures for that year at $1,008,000,000, leaving a sur plus of $18,000,000. President Wilson has attributed the deficit in revenue to a falling off in imports and consequently in customs revenue due to the war, but Mr. Steen erson showed that the actual revenue from that source for eleven months of 1914 with an estimate for December added, fell short of Mr. Underwood estimate by only between $5,000,000 and $6,000,000. Had Mr. Underwood other estimates proved correct, there would still -have been a surplus of more than $12,000,000 and no deficit taxes would have been necessary. But revenue from income and corporation taxes fell short of the Underwood es timate $51,000,000, while appropria tions for the fiscal year 1915 reached a total of $1,094,168,102 Instead of $1,008,000,000. Thus total revenue fell short of the estimate by more than $57,000,000 and total expenditures exceeded the estimate by more than $86,000,000 This explains the decrease in th treasury balance from $144,000,000 to a little more than $66,000,000. Had the much maligned Payne tariff re mained in operation, it would hav produced more than enough additiona revenue to offset the deficiency from Income and corporation tax. for produced in excess of $311,000,000 I the fiscal year 1912, or $68,000,000 more than the Underwood tariff pro duced in the calendar year 1914 Indisputable figures prove that th Democrats fall short $57,000,000 of making the tariff produce enough rev enue to meet the expenses of the Gov ernment under what they term Re publican extravagance. They fall short $125,000,000 of mfceting expenses un der Democratic extravagance. They always promise a tariff for revenue only, but their tariffs never produce enough revenue. They always prom ise economy, but they always practlc extravagance. it Britons and Teutons are p'anning their fashions along widely different lines. Paris, once the clearlng-hous and regulator of fashions, has lost her grip. The date is not far distant when we shall be able to distinguish the nationality of an individual by the cut of his garments. Just as we now dis tinguish a Chinaman at a glance. Andrew Carnegie says he gained hi fortune by concentration. Perhaps the tariff helped a little, but if he had dissipated his energies no law could have saved him. A wise writer says. "Concentrate upon essentials,' which implies neglect of trifles, it is trifles that worry us and often destroy our usefulness. Chicago is in the grasp of an epi demic of compound hypermetropic astigmatism. However, cheer up 1 you have friends or relatives in cm cago. Despite the terrifying name the "disease" is merely one of tired eyes and, we suspect, is very largely lmagin ative. An effort will be made by American manufacturers to install mush as an article of diet among tho peasantry of Europe. But how, we are led to Inquire, are the peasants going to get the necessary corn meal .' London now takes the view that we will not force the Issue. Evidently, on sober second thought, the English have reckoned with our spineless diplomacy. As the result of a joyride a local youth must serve three months in Jail. He's lucky at having escaped the clutches of the undertaker. While the armies appear to have fought ono another to a standstill, much will happen when they begin to catch their second breath. If Winter is going to give us a touch of hieh life it will have to hurry. So far we haven't had so much as a real touch of overcoat weather. a. The Russians are seeking to envelop the Austrian force in Buckowina. Can't be done. The Austrians are too skillful as sprinters. The weather man thinks wc shall have snow today. Of course if we do have it all of us will have to admit that ho is a wizard. The economy rorce is' advancing steadily and the legions of extrava gance are reported retreating ail along the line. Congress has refused to increase the Army. One day we shall attempt to lock the barn after the mare has been stolen. But imagine how we'd feel If a flock of Jap airships carrying dyna mite were reported on the way up the Columbia. The crinoline, skirt is coming. Fine news for the manufacturer of dress goods but sad intelligence to the rest of us. Between the Rose Festival and the Panama Fair we're going to have no trouble laying vacation plans this year. A local club is to be entertained to morrow by a memory expert. Unless, of course, he forgets the appointment. The price of oats is declining so that we may be able to have mush for breakfast, anyway. Spring training camp days ap proach and the ball fan is taking a new lease en life. Maybe what the Britons heard over head was a flock of ducks headed up he Thames. Gleams Through the Mist By Oris C'olllae. Content meat. I used to yearn to travel far. To England's lovely land. And wander where her cities are Along the ocean strand; I used to yearn abroad to roam But now I'm strong for home, sweet home. For here I wake at morning's call And eat my mush In peace; Nor fear a German bomb may fall And caue my meal to cease; They bounce no missle on my dome While 1 abide in home, sweet noma. Think how annoying it would be If In the gardun fair. While with some Isdy strolling fice A bomb fell from the air And mashed ma deep Into the loam! This cannot hap at home, sweet lioms. Or If I went to gather moss Beside the ocean shoro. Some airship suddenly across The Dover Straits might soar And scatter me upon the foam Which cannot be at home, awi-ct hutne. I fear those big aerial sloops; 1 fear their deadly aim. Which, though 'tis p'anned for Uilii.lt troops. May get me just the Fame. And so I pen this thoushtcul pninr; I am content with borne, sweet home. The casualty list Is something frightful In the ranks of legislative bills, ...... "Sir," snid the courteous office hoy, "in spite of this Impending prohibition, we must es till allow ttiut- " "That what, hoy?" 1 sniffed. "That the acorn must have its cup." "Or for that matter tho window Its glass," 1 came back. "Yep; or the cotton its boll " re torted the C. O. B. "Or the Beavers their pitcher." "And the orchestra its viol " "And the river its schooner " "And the shotgun lt Irurrel " "Who started this, anyhow," I roarrd as I impaled the C. O. H. on copy hook. . e . Kolemn Thought. When solons meet 'tis ssd lo sr.. In this fslr country of the free, llow many, many lobbies b. Wrlth vim a-hum lo pry them from Their programme of economy. ... Vr Forveaat for he Week, Miltladea J. Hyperbole. Hie world famed military expert, dopes tit n follow the war situation It "V 1 1 1 probably develop In the coming week: Continued victories will he not-d on the eastern frontier, the Russians nnd German carrying all beforo tticm In their respective advances upon HerMu and Warsaw (see Uriiln and l'etro grad dispatches of any date). The center of Int.rest will move. however, to tho French frontl -r. H re unparalleled u- will crown in.i arm of the French and tho Gernmiu. each side advancing on several oc casions a number of yards and some time as much a a rod. In America cases of colds in the he.iO ill develop widely, duo to the strain upon the soft palate, readjusting n- lf from tho pronoiinelatitui of ruhk and rrzeniyl, to yoissuna and A.snr. The movement for Universal I'eai-o will receive a powerful forward im pulse, when member of thn Primary Classes of tho Sunday School o Kant Hlckvllle, Ark., conduct a parade, pro testing against the dreadful carmine In Europe. Tho Ladles' Uplift of Kasl Hickvillo will engineer the demonstra tion which is designed to he a stern re buke upon the pride of Princes I hat plunge nations Into strife. ... We thought that we had dealt pretty thoroughly with tho cat of tho car penter, but. reading the following from W. M. A." w e aro Inclined to slip him the wreath: ... Of the curpentor we've read. But nothing's bren said. Except things nice. O'er looking his vise. Dean, now we reiusl. Tell awl the rsl. If out of words you run. While trylnc to pun, .lust make up a tool, There Is no rule. Even you can't, swfar. Th fellow's on the square. He's an auier, they say. , Though he works by the day. You think he's level. But I know he's a devil, llo'd like to draw-knlle And murder his wife. And so we will iorset the i-arpenter and sing a Utile chantey of l!t!6: The poor thing he msrs. T saw-tcrth scars. He was seen to plnchfr, s'ome sny he'll lynch lier Krom his chiseled pro-file. He appeers to smile. As the bits he's grlndlnt. From those who're flndlns. His tacks quite as heavy, As the war stamp levy. ... What funny beasts, most any day About the town we find; I've seen tho Hull Bun, rd thry ssy That there aro liters blind. - - Hesitating and giane-vlmnc tu the left, we daneo this one also: And one who sees the tiger blind .. Too often at his plsy, Blue crocodiles ynsyhsp niay find Vpon the broad highway. ... And looking suddenly armind, wn aw the rest of our audience besting it through the elde-door. ... Tho orchestra ceased iilaymR. e e And the Janitor came and turned out the lights. l ady Laughter. Ah. my Lady LatiKliter. fhadowa fade, atvt gloom; Where your feot are dancing Only violeta bloom; Sparkling of th aunnhlnr, t-hlmmer of the dew Spirit of tho rose When the skies burn blue. Ah, my Lady Laughter, How shall I be s-i,i When, a golden bubble. You turn sorrow Kind. Rippling of a river, .-urKing of a sea RliiKlets of the Hhlne-gold. Uiinple on your kneo. Ah, my I,ady Laughter. Spring 1 in the latrr; Silver In the sunbeam. Shower on tho pane; Bulling of a bird's note. Rapturing of a stream Fairlea in the front yard Bringing homo a dream. Ah. my Lady Laughter. After you the spell. Morning on the hilltop. nloFsnms In the dell; Butterflies on lllit wings Clover ton to clover Suddenly the night eing.i. Then the whole thing overt r Baltimore un .