THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, MARCH 7, 1920 11 OREGONIAN READERS AIR THEIR VIEWS ON VARIOUS TOPICS . , , ,. , ... , I,., ' , . ' .... i - im r ' . - 1 . - - , , , ,,, . Contributors Discuss Current News From Individual Standpoints in Budget of Interesting Correspondence. . v ' SATA-VS AGEXCY" QCESTIOXED SplritnulNfs Test Held Too. Vn talr by Eleanor Hall. PORTLAND. Feb. 27. (To the .ai tor.) I have read In The Oregonian Mr. H. W. Cottrell's article declaring that the materialized shapes at spirit ual seances are not tne snape ui progressive lives? Strange teachings dead friends but are rather tne mam- these, for devils. testations of Satan. To prove his; No: our dear friends in spirit life theory Mr Cottrell quotes copiously j can and do come to us to guide, guard from that' most misquoted book on d protect us. They come with their .u t.i ends wun tne: " "- RESPONSIBILITY IS DISCUSSED Passing the Buck to Oneself Is De clared Good Joke. manifest in the seances and homes are evil-minded, why do they give so much good advice and wise counsel? Why do they warn us of danger that is unknown to the recipients of their messages? Why do they often heal the . sick. comfort thtx snrrnwlnc. ;"",;":,:V6'r. 71 ."1': captioned "Murder Is Murder- children of erfrth to live pure, upright, , most timely contribution on a subject or the utmost gravity, and wnicn is becoming obscured to a most alarm ing extent as the direct result largely virtue In himself ever envieth virtue in others, and whoso is ont of hope to attain another's virtue, will seek to come at even hand byadepressing another's fortune." There are many plain words that could be spoken on TAPnMA. Wonh K (To the Editor.) The Oregonian's editorial . J""".""!' is a SPIRITUALISM IS LAUDED Article . by Critic Declared , to Be - . " Unreasonable. . ear! h. demand that the spiritualists tnem selves give us "definite Information with unquestionable proofs where they were, what their occupations and etanding rcre before they entered their present bodies." This he de clares is a reasonable test. Now the writer of this letter is not a spiritual ist. She has never really decided whether these "bodies" which Mr. Cottreil admits do exist are really spirits or wonderful manifestations of our own limitless sub-conscious pow er over matter. But, open-minded as h insiders herself, she can truth-. fully say that she never heard a niore preposterously unreasonable as this one Mr. Cottrell has made at . v, n;,.l,1ial(Kta- Surely Mr. Cottrell never went to spiritualism for his cata. i Indeed enter that limitless field of In vestigation for his information he went as one,too greatly biased by his own pet tleorles to do more than glean a few Isolated bits which he felt would serve to substantiate i s already formed ideas. Such an atti tude as he expressed is manifestly unjust, both to the science of spirit ualism and to the world. It is indeed a great misfortune that the uniformed public mind be fed on such prejudices. This is the age of specialists. Knowledge Is too large to be grasped by any one man in its entirety. No man can "know it all." Our ayetenv has evolved great minds especially fitted for the different branches of learning. We call these men and women "specialists" They give their years and thought to their own par ticular lines of endeavor and benefit. the world greatly by tne emcieuL ar rangement which enables them to do so. No longer need there be hit or miss theories on any subject. We all recognize this truth. When we need legal advice we consult the lawyer, when we need medical advice we con sult the doctor, or. finer still, when we want to know anything about such particular organs as the eye, ear or nose, we go to that specialist of specialists, the eye. ear and nose doctor. But having visited one of these specialists a few times we are never conceited enough to insult his i.n!no- iv ihinkine that we have in those few "hours grasped all of what took him many years to learn, ihen whv. may 1 ask, do any of us have the temeritv to think we have embraced the whole subject of spiritual science, the most mysterious specialty of them all. after going to a few seances? The writer desires: to add that if Mr. Cottrell had felt impelled to warn the public against spiritualism and the evils of the indiscriminate prac tice thereof he had but to go to the piritualists themselves to have gained sufficient data to have written a really intelligent article. The truly great spiritualists (Sir Oliver Lodge included) all warn the public posi tively against the indiscriminate practice of spiritualism. One of such has termed such practices "The Great Psvdhologlcal Crime." He declared that the "forcing" of spiritual devel onment was as harmful to the medi um as the picllag of its shell from its tender body is to the unhatched chick. He earnestly advised us to let good ness and self-control do the unfold ing of our spiritual selves. All au thorities do not agree with this one but all join in warning the public that "a little (spiritual) knowledge is dangerous thing." Mr. Cottrell does well to cry out: "Danger, keep away!' but he does wrong in trying to ex nlain the nature of that danger with out having made the requisite investi gations There is only one way for any of us to learn whether spiritualism is right or wrong, good wor harmful. Let us consult the writings of the Knppia.list.3 in spiritualism, not only one. but many. Let us read all the works obtainable on this most inter esting subject in the world. Apd above all,, let us keep our minds free from prejudices, pro and con. It is only by doing this that we will be able to keep our mental poise and meet with intelligent argument the Knglish-born wave of spiritual in vestigation which is rapidly inundat ing America. ELEANOR HALL. der regard. They differ as much in their personalities and mannerisms as when in -die body. They identify themselves by many convincing tests. If We are dej?elveH and rhev are all devils or fallen angels, I ask in the J came of reason how are we to know that all the inhabitants of earth are not devils or fallen angels in disguise, masquerading as fathers, brothers and sisters? If the evidence we have is not suf ficient to prove that these visitors from the unseen world are the spirits of discarnate human beings, then in deed evidence is inadequate to estab lish any fact. We are told that the Bible condemns communion with spir its. Where, I would ask? If it is wrong, why dio Jesus hold a seance with Moses and Elias? Why did John on the Isle of Patmos commune with one of the prophets from the spirit world? (See Rev. xxii:8-9.) The Bi ble does condemn black magic; so do all spiritualists. There is not a pas sage in the Bible that condemns or forbids communion with spirits, as practice) by the spiritualists of today. W. C. of pernicious propaganda and mass movement, viz: personal responsibil ity. . - The keynote of that splendid edi torial is struck in the following sen tences: "ft is not a question of capi tal and labor.. It Is a question of human guilt, and of personal ac countability therefor." When Daniel Webster was asked i what was the greatest thought that mis suDject duc tne time is not op-, t PORTLAND" -r The splendid effort and , . vi" conduct df our men Jn-the late war J "" :o commends to your should be made to count for the high-i reaaers tne- letter appearing In The est. They struggled to destroy mill-l rmng : uregonian, February 12 tarism forever, as they were told, but . cottrell,. as a better motners, i v v, i ; t . ta said he replied, The thought of my personal responsibility to Almighty God." - There (s no domain of mental ac tivity where man has displayed a higher degree of dexterity, adroitness and skill than in the invention of cleverly devised delustions by which to deceive himself. The habit of shifting the blame, or, as expressed in common , parlance, "passing the buck," is as old as the race, beginning with Adam, who blamed Eve. and Eve. who blamed the serpent, down to our day when we do things by proxy, shift responsi bility to "George" and establish an alibi. - The mother shifts the physical wel what does the world gain by destroy ir.g the venomous Berpent in Germany only to transfer her fertile eggs here? When our millions are trained, whatever we may think or say, will not alter the view of other' nations. To them it will be a menace, and they will think it necessary to prepare against it by a concerted action, like Prance, England and Russia did with Germany. . We may persuade our selves that we are very lamblike, but other nations will cry wolf. We shall immediately become en- Tgulfed in what the late Sir Wilfrid Laurier of Canada termed "The vor tex of European militarism." The mind and character of every future male citixen will be governed at the poll and in all his actions by the taint of militarism, because these principles will have become part of their lives. Australia's population is decreas ing already. Switzerland is unique inasmuch' that it has declared itself for centuries a permanent neutral, and has been accepted as such by in ternational law. .. . The potential strength of .-the United States in men, morals and wealth, is- such "that no nation will suddenly attack it, provided it- main tains its tradition of no "mailed fists" which is the only instrument known MILITARISM. NOT AX JSSCE Party Capital Cannot Be Made From Service Bill. BELIEF IX SPIRITS ASSERTED Bible Holds Xo Condemnation of Communion With Departed Ones. VANCOUVER, Wash., Feb. 28. (To the Editor.) I have noticed nu merous letters appearing recently in the secular press treating on spirit ualism, both pro and con. Some of the opponents of spiritualism admit the genuineness of the phenomena, but deny that incarnate human spirits are the agencies that produce them and ascribe all of the various phe-. nomena to malevolent spirits that have never worn the garb of flesh. but are the rebellious entities that were cast out of h"?aven with their master, Satan. Just at this point 1 wish to ask these writers how they came into possession of this knowl edge. No doubt they are ready to an swer thafthe book of Jude refers to these fallen angels. . In Jude we read: "And the angels which (who) kept not their first estate, but left their own habitation, he hath reserved in ever lasting chains under darkness unto the judgment of the great day." It would be interesting to have our opposing friends explain how these fallen angels (?) can visit the seance rooms, and the tens of thousands of private homes where the phenomena In great variety are daily occurring, when they are bound in chains under darkness and will be unto the judg ment of the great day, if the passage quoted in Jude is true. Still others contend that devils per sonate our departed . loved ones and friends and deceive us. Will our ob jectors to the spiritualistic hypothe sis kindly tell us where these terrible devils came from? If God is the cre ator of all -that -is-, - he must be the father of these lying, deceiving devils. If he did create them, for what pur pose were they created? And has he no power to thwart their evil pur poses. And counteract' their malevo lent influences. Are these devils wirer and more powerful than God? Are they omnipresent? The phenomena, are. transpiring All . .ever the whole civilized world and la hundreds of instances at the sme time. They must be omnipresent, to know the Mines -of 4fee -fifteen hun dred millions f earth: all about their private affairs yes. even their secret thoughts. Does it not seem . most wonderful that these devils can imi tate the mannerisms, peculiarities and Idiosyncrasies of the whole human fxmiXyi U the intelligence that PORTLAND, Feb. 28. (To the Edi to.) The evident attemfct to make party capital of the problem of uni versal military training i is seen in every line of The Oregonian editorial, "Back to Pacificism,' Thursday. Not the merits of the issue, but party ad vantage is all you seem to see in the question. "There is not a subject on which the republicans could with more advantage place themselves in opposition to the declared sentiment of the democrats." Here is a sugges tion, fellow republicans, that will bring you many voles. But It is this sort of political outlook which dis gusts right thinking men. Instead of following sentiment for the votes to be gained, let the republican party face the issue fairly and decide their platform upon that basis It is evi dent that sbme thir.gs have been for gotten. When America entered the war we Yvere assured that the only purpose was to "crush militarism." The young men of America went out to foreign service with the spirit of holy crusaders, believing that they were to fight the last "war against war." Our sons laid down their lives "over there" for their faith in the principle that "right makes might." We fought to crush Prussianism with its doctrine that "might makes right." Most patriotic Americans do not be lieve that arms is the last resort of nations in settlement of disputes. You say, "back to pacifism," tut we fought, with 'our eyes set upon the day "when the -war drums throb no longer, and the tattle flags unfurl, in the parliament of can, the federation of the world." An international agreement which would eliminate war was held out to the world as the aim of the allied na tions The war for a "lasting peace" was won and the agreement was reached in the peace conference, which is at least the noblest attempt ever made to abolish war, with its attendant waste of life and property. The other great powers have signed the agreement, thereby prong their sincerity. But Americans are asked, before their representatives have given the league a chance, to begin the exercise of a distrust that can but result in national disaster. We are now askcj to get ready for the next war, when the nations of the world are on the verge of bankruptcy from the last catastrophe. With tlMusan 3s starving to doath in foreign , lands we are asked to appropriate : millions; for a larger navy and army, j If we adopt universal military train ing in America we then admit that not right but might is the basis of peace. Having beaten the Germans shall we now adept the policy that brought them ruin? It is either, on to pacifism or back to nMlitarism. A pacifist is not a quitter but one who believes that there is a better way to settle international disputes than by war. Lit the peace delegates get together before the resort to arms and war will not be neces.'-ary. Let reason replace paspion. That is what the league of nations means. Because of America's fiiiure to ratify the treaty the nations of Europe are turning to the old principle of na tionalism, with Its secret agreements and selfish aspirations. Shall the rew day of peace promised by such lenders as Wilson, Tart and Lowell in this country and Lloyd George and Grey in England, be turned into "der tag" whn hate and jealousy shall again begin Its fearful harvest? We have been promised better things. America is for the lcaguo of nations, and if put Into effect It will show any attempt at the imitation of mili tarism to be inrincere. I understand that the American Legion has in its vote favored uni versal military training. I cannot but wonder If that represents the real feeling of America's service men. It was my privilege to be In many of the caatonments and training sta tions during and following the war. I stood on the docks as many of our men set their feet upon the home soil after their service In France. I min gled with them Intimately and I had many testimonies that the "ninety day men," both officers and privates, served quite as acceptably as the regular In the rout of the Germans. American intelligence and ingenuity were more than a match for the Ger man military automatons, although the literacy tests were as high in the German army as in our own. They said, "No militarism for us." Let righteousness be our prepara tion, and peace will he our reward. Prepare for war and you will get it. The argument that our young men need physical training is well taken. Let us have it. But physical training and military training are as different as a prizefight and a track meet. One makes a brute the other a skillful athlete with sound body and mind. I am pelther a democrat or a re publican by party affiliation. My vote shall go the party with the plat form which best safeguards the inter ests of the nation and the peace of the world. If the republican party is to "assume "f esponsrbtlity for the aspira tions of the militarists I feel certain that as a vote getter It will prove disappointing. The world looks to America still for the leadership that' shall guide to a reconstruction based on right relations and mutual helpful ness. The great Christian forces of this nation will not be betrayed into a policy of duplicity that can but viti ate their influence for righteousness and peace. OWEN T. DAY. ' rare or ner cnua to tne nurse, tne , mllii.rv thnrht secular education to the public school, Mr. Barnes seem, to think' that a its religious culture to the fcunday person who selects hls asS0ciates is school, church, preacher, priest, rabbi, and on to the higher institutions of learning. The citizen shifts personal respon sibility in community relationships to the ward heeler, the, alderman, the mayor, the governor, the congress man, the president. - The confirmed criminal whose mind has become obsessed with the insane idea that society owes him a living; that he is too smart to engage in honest toil, contributes nothing to so ciety but its criminal code, courts and prisons; and then, when society em ploys his own contribution for its pro tection against him, he rants like an anarchist and raves like a maniac vows deathless vengeance upon soci ety as the one and only cruel Nemesis that haunts his footsteps, the one brutal and barbaric agency that seized him as an innocent youth and degraded and deformed him into a hard-ened though clever (?) criminal. The up-to-the-minute psychologist tells us man is composed of three dis- inct "selves" the material "self." the social "self," the spiritual "self." A very alluring and popular cult informs us that man is not material; he is spiritual. He cannot commit sin, since sin is non-existent; sin is a false concept, an illusion, a lie, for there is no matter, and therefore it matters not! Dr. Waite, the New York dentist, who was electrocuted for the murder of his father-in-law. declared in his confession that the "little black man from Egypt" was the real culprit. This silly piffle and idiotic drivel relating to a duality of personality received a forceful Impetus from the graphic though grotesque story of "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde." Inasmuch as no spectroscope or scalpel has yet been devised by which to separate the various "selves." de tach and determine the degree of their respective culpability, and ap portion a just and equitable penalty therefor, the courts must continue to jog along with their antiquated pro cedure of recognizing only individual responsibility, and impose sentences on single personality. . The time may come when Inventive ingenuity and scientific, mental and moral surgery will catch up with these advanced (?) metaphysicians and magicians, psychologists and prestidigitators. Then judicial tribu nals will be. able to determine with mathematical accuracy and scientific precision the exact degree of guilt belonging to the different fractional selves, and apportion to each its just deserts. The material "self" will be sent to the penitentiary; the social "self to the house of correction; the spiritual "self to the asylum for the feeble minded; the "little black man from Egypt" to the electric chair; the rav ing Dr. Jekyll to the madhouse, and Mr. Hyde, the genial gentleman of polished manners and cultured mind, to congress. "Passing the buck" te oneself and then to one another would be the one best joke on the human race were it not the most terrible tragedy of all time. All our efforts to reform the world are not only utterly unavailing, but a hypocritical pretense until we first of all set our own individual house in order. For To thine own eelf be true; Then follows as the day the night. Thou canst not be false to any man. JAMES T. MINEHART a . snob." Well, I would rather De a "snob" than a "libertine," but purity does not produce a "snob." The pur est life that ever lived selected his associates, befriended the lowly, and suffered for his principles. ' The "snob" was in the Roman army then, and all the armies in the world, have had the highest rating of snob bishness ever since. - My friend says, my letter is" fool-, ish. The Persian sage said:. "Eool thou must be, though wisest .of the wise, then be thou fool of virtue, not of vice." : FATHER. WILSOX'S STAXD IS UPHELD Jealous Senate Is Blamed for De lay to Treaty. ' WALLA'WALLA, Wash., Feb.. 28. ARMY TRAIXIXG DISCUSSED Concentrated Camp Life Is Con demned by Correspondent. PORTLAND, March 6. (To the Ed itor.) In answer to A. Barnes in The Oregonian of February 14, permit me to state that we quite understand tha,t any civil or moral benefit ob tained in the army is a by-product, and so is the evil influence a by product. We do not suggest that the army of any country aims at the destruc tion of morals. It is the condition, environment and atmosphere of con centrated camp life that we condemn. Most of us have passed, through pub lic schools, but it is an insult to com pare public schools with army camps. We are told contact with evil is only injurious to the evil. Why do we segregate our prisoners? If contam ination is injurious to the moral standing of criminals of various de grees, how much more should we guard against it in the youth, out of which all our criminals come? He has not seen "one lowering his stand ard in the army." "Thou dost pro test too much." If my friend will consult the army medical reports, of any, or all the armies of the world, for any of the last 50 years, and com pare them with the civil medical re ports, be will be better able to judge. May be, my friend is not a father, for the childless are all experts in giving advice regarding that which they know not of, find his letter sa vors of the expert. To him there ie no significance in the beautiful words "Lead us not into temptation," nor In the precept, "Evil communica tions corrupt good manners." These words are too simple for such as he. (To the Editor.) In your editorial, "The Anti-Climax," The Oregonian implies that the United States', depre ciated standing in world affairs is the fault of the president.- You becloud the issues. The election of a republi can congress did not mean that. the president should surrender to anyone his right, to make and submit treaties to the senate He was elected by the people with this authority for a full four years. Though the republicans made political talk out of. the presi dent's request, for af democratic con gress to co-operate . with him,' .yet the country has paid dearly .for. not following his advice, because the re publican congress has failed to settle the peace treaty- issue, as well as having failed to pass any other much needed legislation. . It is true that had the president forgotten.hls better friends and taken Senator Lodge along to help with the treaty the lat ter could probably have arranged with his colleagues to get the treaty through, for it has sorely hurt them that the president is to have all. the honor for the treaty. The president is only to blame for our present state of foreign rela tions' if his work has not been well done and if the American people do not approve it. It is unmistakably certain that a big majority of the people favor-compromise between the Lodge and democratic reservations, yet the republicans in the senate have just refused to modify the Lodge reservations, so the fault for delay Is theirs. . - The president has done his work and submitted the treaty to the sen ate for its advice and consent. Yet it withholds its advice and consent In spite, of a great public demand. If the president has ever been blind to public opinion'' the senate has proved both deaf and-blind in this matter. I don't see any of the tech nical objectors to this league submit ting any plan for a league of nations that is burning any. portion of this old world np with enthusiasm. The onlv reason our eople want any res ervations at all of this leagufe is be cause they think' it would have a better chance to get by a jealous sen ate. But why should America-ask reser vations at all?. Our allies had to make greater sacrifices in this war than we did-and they have taken the treaty unconditionally, even the neu tral kingdom of Spain, the republic of Switzerland and the American Brazil. If the treaty did not have real merit such nations a these would not be obliged to. take it if it were not O. K. The United States knows that she will always stand for the right; that if wrong is done her by any nation she can get ready for war as quick as any and that she will always fight to uphold her rights, league er no league. The treaty will probably have to be revised anyhow. In the light of working experience. What do reservations to allow us this and that special privilege get us, anyhow, in the way of world leadership and respect? In view of the fact that the Monroe doctrine and our former pol icy of Isolation failed to keep us out of the last war such reservations will only tend to give us a false sense ol protection against war. ' LEWIS R. BURNS. man-average specimen of the kinu oi enort oeing put forth to hold back the oncoming tide of spiritualistic knowledge.. How futile it Is and how unreasonable any keen observer may know. . The Christian Bible contains truths that make it virtually the word of God. But the gentleman in its use ignores the very foundation prin ciple of its interpretation as laid down by -the Master himself: "The letter killeth, the spirit Ziaketh alive." One of the most commOnfy known facts i miu uioie is, tnat almost any- ' nnA mav finj .. . . . ...iu ouhic support in it lor his own theological kinks, which is proof evident that-one must go back of thie exterior, literal, -part to the opim vi ic as a wnoie. Because one may find jt teaching that it required several Gods to create the earth, in six days of 24 hours' length, and that after, it "was created it was found to be ,flat and that the sun arises and travels over the heavens from ea4t to west while the earth remains sta tionary, does not invalidate the book as a guide in character building and fitness to enter" into a greater world of activity about which the Old Testa ment writers had scarcely any con ception. ' . .If the spiritual philosophy, the dem onstration of the nearness and nos- ihility of conscious communication -with that other world, rested upon.) ucn superficial reasoning as is used against it would not be worthy of no tice. But It is based upon a world of accumulated facts beginning with the oldest records we possess and contin uing right on down to the present day, wnen we are now coming to under-, stand that there is a fundamental law which every voice and every sign that nascome irom the other plane of life, whether coming, as from a God or from any other intelligence, had to use.. That this law was not under stood is no more strange than that only until recent years did the world know anything aiout the law control ling the use oiVelectriclty. although its power has always been felt and in the time when mediums were mis understood, and called wizards they said that the shafts of lightning were signs of God's anger. Never could one of the hundreds of signs and messages have come that are related in our Bible, but there was a medium pres ent, exactly the same today. very likely all persons have this potential psychic quality but it seem to come forth spontaneously wit some, just as the musical instinct blooms forth qjjickly in one person wnue another must labor and etrug gie to develop it. One. is as much gift of God as the other and should be treated in that way. If one uses the musical instinct for base purposes we do not condemn music itself. Allow trie to say, in closing, that it will be quite easy for those who have the devil theory to shake off that ob session" if they will only break, out oi tneir theological prison , and ge "iiw wuu sunnnine or trutn. 1' - CHARLES F. BARBER. or 8-cent fare is necessary to.elim-.a legal deed to real property wben in ate.- As a matter of fact the com- the title rests In her name, without pany has not defaulted upon any of! the signature of her husband? its financial obligations and is not READER." iiKeiy to ana its mommy statements, always show a surplus.'-' j A peculiar ieaiure vi mew rro-. No. with these clarifying reservations Is defeated, which now seems more ha likely, or if the league is ratified with the Lodge reservation to Art. X then tht, leaerue will be the dominant Issue in .the coming presidential campaign., T Dra.tMt WIlsATI William I -.'. . ,V n.illni im that th .nhloW nf ran. Gibbs McAdoo and ueroert nopiir - - - elrMrl urnu three of the g r e a t e s t - patriotic, .enable rate I. seldom discussed. SNOWFALL VEflY SCANTY v. -V.m in nnr ooun- everything seems to depend upon the "7" wli I I try. I heartilv indorse the policies 1 company's sbility to earn s certain V . : v. , i Dercentaare upon a certain sum of or president vvuson, um uc -"" -., i.i,.-, -j ... candidate! -..w..v ,,.n..,u. --( aucxiou oi expenses re evrr men" and will not be & third term for the presidency. IT William wddi McAdoo is nominated for president .he will get my unqualified support. On the other hand if the league is the dominant issue, and Herbert Hoover approves of oui platform and takes a firm stand thereon,. ana is nomi nated for president by. the national democratic convention, he will have my hearty support. " ' - I will appreciate votes at the pri mary for delegate at large to the na tional democratic convention, but don't instruct me whom to vote for as a candidate for president, for I fear I will be unable to carry out those instructions. T. H. CRAWFORD. CARFARE SOLUTIOX OFFERED HE COULD . SUPPORT EITHER Judge Crawford Admires McAdoo and Hoover? Wants Xo Instructions PICKET RULIXG'IS IXDORSED Unions Should Xot Use Uniform in Gaining Ends, Is Opinion. PORTLAND, Feb. 28. (To the Edi tor.) Judge McCourt, in granting an injunction in favor of Greenfield Shoe company, permittee the use of one picket. A number of people have commented on the fact that the pi eke: stationed in front of this store is wearing a portion of the army uni foririj at least so far as his coat and hat are concerned. The grievance against the Green field stores was that they refused to! discharge nonunion men and have come out tor tne American plan, which permits equal opportunities for all. Recently the business men of LA GRANDE, Or., March 4. (To the Editor.) The interview with me pub lished in The Oregonian Thursday is substantially correct, but is somewhat misleading. It is my understanding that neither Mr. McAdoo " nor Mr. Hoover is a candidate for the nomi aation for president. Mr. McAdoo will accept the democratic nomination if it comes to him voluntarily and unsolicited. Mr. Hoover, jnay accept the democratic nomination if the prin ciples and platform of the convention meet his approval. Neither one o them desires his name placed upon the primary ballot in : any of the states. . They both desire the dele gates to go to convention uninstructed and unpledged to any man.. For this reason I am against the Oregon demo cracy's instructing its - delegates to vote for any certain man for the nomination for president. Again, the dominant issues in the next presidential election are not yet made, and will not be made until the conventions meet and adopt their platforms. We fought and won the late war to gain a world peace of justice. We are entitled to the fruits of that victory. The fundamental principle controlling us was an nounced by President Wilsen to be "That the people of every nation both great and small have the inherent right to select their own form of gov eminent, make their own laws and control their own internal and do mestic affairs without interference by any other nations." This is the funda mental, underlying principle of the covenant of the league of nations. This principle is stated In Art. X of the league as follows: "The members of the league undertake to respectand preserve as against external aggres sion -tae territorial integrity and ex Isting political independence of all members of the league." The Lodge reservation to Art.' X as I understand it, repudiates this and says that the United States will not undertake any such obligations. Art, X is the very heart of. the league. This Lodge res ervation cuts the heart out of the league and destroys it. The league Is in no sense a super state.. It simply investigates, hears, determines and recommends what ought to be done in certain events in order to put down or prevent war. It leaves to the sev eral members of the league tv carry out or not in a constitutional nd lawful way its recommendations. If does not impair, destroy or modify our Monroe doctrine, but on the other hand it recognises it. It does not impair or abrogate any rights guaran teed by our constitution, or the sole power of the congress to declare war or authorize the use of the military or naval forces therein. It impliedly at least recognizes these rights and powers. No advocate of the league, not even the president, objects to clarifying reservations making these Implica tions specific. I am for ratification of the league with these clarifying reservations. I am uncompromisingly opposed to ratification with the Lodge reservation to Art. X. It ratification i Management, XoU Hates, Is Prob lem, Declares Writer. PORTLAND, Feb. 28. (To the Ed itor.) "There are equities in the matter- calling for more consideration than merely the immediate financial distress of the corporation, says William F. Woodward in closing his article in The Oregonian on the sub Ject of street-car service ana rates. Here is a mighty text standing out like a beacon light In the waste of theory, impractical ideas. Insincerity and misapplication of racts wnicn have surfeited the public for the past three years. ' ' ' Why not get back to. first princi ples now and' steer by this beacon, which should'' have governed the course at the outset? Supreme law teaches-' that the in terest of the public In such cases is for paramount consideration, what ever equities the company may pos sess being of secondary Importance, but the proceedings from " the start seem to have been oredicted upon the reverse of . this principal. That the company never could have maintained confiscation 'proceedings In any court based upon its franchise contract for a 5-cent fare goes without saying, but aside from the franchise contract, I venture the assertion that no court would have accepted the testimony which has been Introduced at various hearings of the public service com mission as evidence of a confiscatory rate, if the findings of Justice Hughes in the Minnesota rate cases were fol lowed, as they must be. But the public service commission' exercises powers superior to those of any court In this respect. Its judgment is supreme if there is any evidence, good, bad or Indifferent. It is the superior in power even of the legislature because Its acts are not subject to the referendum and in this respect It is also superior to the people whose servant It is. Possessing such extraordinary Ju rticial and leelslative powers, tn nubile - service commission 'should nevertheless be governed in its find inn-a hv the naramounl interest of tn public and the public certainly does not profit from higher carfares and is under no obligation to pay them unless service is demanded beyond that which the company is obligated to provide. The obligation which the company assumed under the conditions or u franchise was a voluntary one. was not solicited to engage in the business here, nor did it propose as a consideration of being allowed to do so that the public should share in the profits of its operations; neither was any suggestion made that the public . should ever assume any deficit from its operations. It was an arm's length proposition. They wanted the entire field and a 100 per cent monopoly, and they got It with all its advantages ana aisaa vantages. They financed the ven ture in their own way without the advice or consent of the public They, zealously looked alter tneir rights. In the slx-tickets-for-a-quar- ter case the company very promptly took refuge in Its contract for a 5 cenC fare. In the bridge toll fight the 'Company held out for Its alleged riehts under an old contract and finally compromised on a rate for crossing-the bridges that was satis- factorv and -advantageous to tnem. nnrine the Jitney "epidemic- tne street-car company's earnings reached a low ebb but they were game ana no attempt was made to increase tares tn recouo earnings at tnat time, They managed to pull through tnat distressful period witnout appealing to the public service commission or the courts. Now tne Jitneys nave hun stifled, street car traffic Is nearly 100 per cent greater and the company! monopoly wnicn it ao liberately established ia 1906 is un impaired,' still it is proposed to fur thfw Increase the fare. It,. Is conceivable, or course,, tnat private corporation performing a public service migni reacn a pnii where after exercising the highest decree-, of skilled management and long continued sonciiuae ior tne in terests of the public oecarae n neiiient and necessary for the pro- . m ii . tectlon ot an to appeal ior icci and co-oneration. To such a situa tion would necessarily be attached a complete, sincere, honest and frank xnnsitlon of all the facts in the firil light of publicity, without propaganda and unhampered Dy tecnnicaimes, to gether with some concessions, per haps. But in the local problem, all those elements are absent.- We are met with a demand supported by a ass of prepared data. mucn. or n irrelevant, highly theoretical, com posed of msary estimates and assump tions, all presented in a pugnacious spirit. Primarily tne company aemanas as a right, to earn 7 per cent upon a value tentatively fixed by the public service commission In 1917 to which has been added the company's Own igures for subsequent expenditures. The records show clearly that the valuation fieura emnloyed as a basts in no sense the actual physical aluatlon at all but is a composite; gure involving many estimates, as sumptions and theories. It embraces ucn items as an estimated propor tion -of the water power plant as signed to Portland street railway Derations amounting to over j,ou,- 000- and A variety of other intangible Items aggregating a large amount. This valuation is always the basis or starting point for the assertions not only of the company but others that a deficit exists and that a t. 1 tlpned, My investigation of the company's affairs long ago convinced me that the street railway property, if con servatively capitalized and operated efficiently, would be able to pay Its way at a S-cent fare, but that what ever the amount of the fare, the property never will be able to carry the excessive debt charged against it together- with the enormous items of actual and estimated operating ex penses. ' x The question now before the public as I view it and as I think the records show. s not shall the rate be fixed at a fair and reasonable figure. Just to the company and the"' patron, but shall the public pay the company 7 per cent on an assumed valuation of nearly $19,000,600, accepting its state ment for charges to operating ex penses as proper. I have not. seen anything but the latter in this last or the (-cent case. .There never has been any determination bf what a fair and reasonable rate is or should be and until .the lawful elements of a reasonable rate are applied there never will be. The fact. If it be a fact, that the company does not earn 8 or 7 per cent upon a fixed sum is far removed from a 5 or 6-ccnt fare. Rates reasonable or otherwise can not be figured out by engineers and accountants to a "mathematical cer tainty. As a matter of fact the com pany never yet earned T per cent upon the valuation claimed even when it was paying dividends and had a large surplus, and never will, regardless of the rate because it Is not in the business. The solution of the street-car prob lem is management, not rates. KDWARD M. COUSrtV. 427 Railway Exchange Building. of rVpth Considerably Below Wafer ahed Average. JV.L.AA1 ath FALLS, March . (Spe del.) Three and one-half feet of snow lies on the watershed of the Crater Lake National park. uy H. K. Momyer, assistant park superintend ent who Is here for a short visit. Usually there la three or four tlmrs as much at this season. Last year the depth of the snow In early March was 11 feet and the average depth for the past four years has been 11 feet. Only six inches of snow fell In the last storm, and the prospects for any considerable snowfall between now and summer are nrglirlhle. ID APPLY SAGE IEA Another Family af Smiths. PORTLAND, Or., March 4. (To the Editor.) Regarding a statement March 3 in The Oregonian I wish to state that Charles Smith of Seattle is in no way related to Hrltt Pmlth. Will you kindlv make ths correc tion? MRS. LOUIS C. SMITH. Sister of Brltt Smith. Deed rd Husband's Slsnure. PORTLAND, March 4. (To the Editor.) rn a married woman give Look Toun! Brine: Hack Its Natural Color, Gloss and Attractiveness. Common garden sage brewed Into a heavy tea with sulphur added, will turn gray, streaked and Tided hair beautifully dark and luxuriant. Junt a few yipplKvii tons will prove a reve lation if your hair is fading, streaked or gray. Mixing the sag tea and sulphur recipe at home, though. Is troublesome. An easier way la to get a bottle of Wyeth'a Sage and Hul phur Compound at any drug store all ready for use. This Is the old-time recipe Improved by the addition ef other Ingredients. While wispy, gray, fndxd hair Is not sinful, we all desire to retain our youthful appearance and attractive ness. By darkening your hair with Wyeth's Sage snd Sulphur Compound, no one can tell, hecatift tt doen U so naturally, so evenly. Vou Jimt damp en aponge or sort brush with It snd draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morn ing all grey hairs have disappeared, and, after another application or two, your hair becomes beautifully fl:irk, glossy, soft and luxuriant. Adv. "California Syrup of Figs" ,For a Child' Liver and BoweU Mother! Say "California," then you will get genuine "California. Syrup of Figs." Full directions for babies and children of all ages who are constipated, bilious, feverish, tongue coated, or full of cold, are plainly printed on the bottle. . Children love this delicious laxative. v. Vw'T !.,".V" ' Ilk. . Vi felv.VSv. 2: ?j Your Hair Needs Danderine IfBBVaVaVaVA-aBVaVMala-aVaaaV-WBVaSMaaBVa Save your hair and double its beauty. You can have lots of long, thick, strong, lustrous hair. Don't let It stay lifeless, thin, scraggly or fading. Bring tack its color, vigor and vitality. Get a 3 S-cent bottle of delightful "Danderine" at any drug or toilet counter to freshen your scalp; check dandruff and falling hair. Your hair needs stimulating, beautifying "Danderine" to restore its life, color, brightness, abundance Hurry, Girls I Aft IHIWlMMftf this cltv made every effort to secure I wonder if he would accept Emerson J employment for returning, service as an authority. Emerson, in his Essays, says: "It makes no difference in looking back five years, how you have been dieted or dressed, whether you have lodged in the first floor- or an attic, whether you have been carried in a neat equi page or in a ridiculous truck; but it counts much whether we have had good companions in that time, almost as much as what we have been doing." Bacon saicL "O man that hath- no men. A great many comments are being made as to whether servicemen are to be used for the persecution oi Uousiness men. No one questions, of eouree, the ngnt oi a service man to belong to the union, but at -iast he should not wear the government's uniform to convey the impression that the American Legion or the govern ment was a party to the persecution of business men. THOMAS McCUSKER. 532SS51 Rtib Backache Awaij. Back hurt you? Can't straighten up without feeling mdden pains, sharp aches and twinges? Now listen! That's lumsago,' sciatica or maybe from a etraln. and you'll get blessed relief tho moment you rub your back with soothing, penetrating "St, Jacobs Oil." Nothing elso takes out soreness, lameness and stiffness so quickly. Vou simply, rub it on and out cornea the pain. It is perfectly harmless and I ooesn i Durn or mecoior tne Kin. Limber up! Don't sufftr! Get a small trial bottle from any drugstore, and aftei using it just once, you'll forget that you ever had backache. " lumbago or sciatica, because your back will never hurt or cause any fMi ofllce more misery. ' It never dlsnnno'nts nu has been recomiueiiui-u ior bu yeaxs. Adv. . CAN BE CURED Free Proof To You all I want is your same and sdrireoi so f ran (end roo a free trial creatment. I want you jiut to fry this treatment that ail last try It. lost ray only nrome. , I've been In the Ketail Drug Bininen for tn yesra. I am rreaidetu er the taritan Srati Board of Pharmacy snd I'rejidenlef the Ketail IHnrr-la' Aaaecielioo. Nesrly fn- In Hm Wayne knows me and Icnowa loul my urwwrul Ireslment. Over twelve thousand flv undred Men, Women and Children oiitiitie of Knrt Wayne have, srenrdiuc to thar no aUte nenta. been cured hy thia treatment ainoe I nrt made this oner pii'ihr. If you har Eczema. Itch, Salt Rheuna. Tetter never mind hew had my treatment hai aired the worat cases I ever asw give an a chance te preve any claim. Send sne roar name and addn-M oa the eennnn below and ret the trial treatment I want tt lend yoa FREE. The wonders aranriDliaked in your eo-a cm will be arael. Ml CUT aNO aav TOaV saaasawsassasiaal awnonnnnanatnMnnaMaaaa I. C. HUTZELL, Drugjlst, No. 3497 West Mfti St, Fort Way. Itvd Please send without cost or obligation to me your Fret Proof Treatment Stat f tract and No I'.: