" " 7 i 10 THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL. PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING. MAY 14, 1916. WATER WASTE AND EABOR CAPACITY i By Franklin. B ARE living today in the dawn y of an age in which power Is the ' ' basis for our material progress, i'ha productive abilities of our 100.000. 00 people are increased by the use of robabljr 126,000,000 horse power of me hanlcal energy, not including animal ;Ower .flirntshed by 30,000,000 horses ind mules. M"ost of the mechanical -nergy is used in the form of electrical current When applied to industrial uses 'one electrical horse power does 1 ha work of .ten men without tirinf?. .That Is, tone electrical horse jower, (continuously operated, does as much fvork as 30 men working in eight-hour hlfts. Conservation of human labor goes iand In hand with utllltizatlon of me chanical energy, and utilization- of that form of energy mom cheaply and J east wasteully developed accom plishes the maximum In freeing man from muscular toil and -Increasing hie productivity. In the last decade we have harnessed for our utilities and Industrial needs something like 6,000. '000 horse power of water. This means, in terms of human" energy, that streams which, before that time, flowed to waste are now doing work equiva lent to the labor of 180,000,000 men working eight nours a day. This de velopment alone represents three times the productive capacity of tlie unaided ' hand labor of our adult population. ) Thl accomplishment" stands for real progress, but. as compared with out possibilities, It la not such progress as We should have obtained. Although wa are utilizing today H, 000,000 horse power Of water, we are annually, dally neglecting and wasting ten times that amount, largely because of our inap plicable laws, since most of the water powers not In use are under govern .ment control, and the present laws do not adequately make provision for their fullest development and use. There Is In non-use Jn the I'nlted States enough water power to equal. If harnessed to the wheels of Industry, tha dally labor of 1,800,000,000 men. or SO times our present udult population. We are depleting our fuel supply In tha manufacturing sections of the east and middle west, while In the far west are mountains of undeveloped raw ma terials -adjacent to unused water pow ers whose development would mean the establishment of srrat new In dustries In new manufacturing centers. " Wi are robbing our farm lands of fertility and failing to realize the ut most of our agricultural opportuni ties because of our dependence upon foreign sources of high priced sup plies for chemical plant foods or fer tilisers, while mountains or phosphate rock, lime and lignite in the west await only the magic touch of atmos pheric nitrogen extracted and fixed with the aid of cheap hydro-electricity to furnish a low priced and plentiful supply of fertilizing elements. Millions of acres of lands rich In plant foods lie arid and waste in the .western country which can be con verted into fertile and productive farms, gardens and orchards merely by pumping into them the waters of the streams flowing through them. This miracle of making the desert bloom awaits for accomplishment only the laws which will permit capital and enterprise to engage In the harnessing of these streams so that they can pump themselves onto the thirsty soil. To conserve these vast natural re sources Is the greatest attainment to Which the statesmanship of our day can supply itself. . To be truly prepared for war is to be fully prepared for peace. HOW HINDU CARE: f- FOR HIS By Dinshah Dadabhai Dordi. WHY should such a dire disease as pyorrhoea alveolarts be peculiar to the "civilized" people only? Why Is it not common in India, ex cept perhaps among the Europeans and Parsees, who presume to pass "themselves as the most educated peo- pie? I will draw a superficial sketch Of the oriental people in the observ ance of their dally life; perhaps It lyrill serve to prevent, to some extent, the spread of this disease. In any '.event the American people can find In it food for thought. When the orthodox oriental rises in .the early morning he does not drink a ' Cup of hot coffee without washing his . mouth and cleansing his teeth. Fre quently he uses a twig of babul or ' acacia tree or even a nimb tree's ten der twig for a toothbrush. First he ' chews one of the ends of the twig and forma it Into a. hnmh with thu . provlsed brush he cleanses each and . every tooth and washes out the dlrtv sediment and gargles with clean water. '..This done, he washes thoroughly the aame brush and again employs It to crape his tongue. i It takes him aboutflve to ten min utes to cleanse. Then again he gar- ,'gles the whole mouth with the tongue .But this final task is to gargle me throat In order to carry out this ! end he thrusts his fore and middle . fingers right into the pharynx, and -.thus tries to throw out all the phlegm. V. This done, he goes straight to his bath. There he again cleanses his mouth, nose and eyes, with frequent draughts of warm water. This being over, many persons usually take a cup ' ,f hot tea or coffee. But those who . (d0 not make use of such drinks enjoy ; themselves by chewing betel nut. betel leaves, cardahons. cloves and the like. AI the same time they make particu lar use of catechu, lime paste and ' : sometimes tobacco. Now, what is the significance of this daily practice of chewing pans supari (betal leaf and nut)? How and why this simple dally practice is su perior to many antiseptic tooth pow- . ders and brushes of the civilised na- iiuuo uutui w oe mnue clear. As I -'did in a recent letter to the New York . liedlcal Journal, let us refer to the ;wuui or ine in in o twig. A babul tree is the nrod gum acacia, us oarx la extensively usea ror tanning purposes. To brush ; the teeth s early in the morning with -'Its twig Wans, then, to make the mouth and gums astringent. Again, -to use a nimb twig means to disinfect -(the whole . mouth, because nimb tree leaves, bark, roots and seeds arc ,-tenalvely used as disinfectants and germicides. (In malaria fever this If Hair's Your Pride '. Use Herpicide K. Lane This preparation, in its best sense. Involves the fullest use and coordina tion of all the natural resources and industrial attainments and activities of the nation. There is no good rea son why the United States, with its wealth of resources, its leadership in science and Invention and its peerage of labor, brains and democratic ideals, should be dependent upon any other nation or country for any of the things necessary to either the fullest enjoy ment of peace or the most complete preparedness for undesired conflict. More than 40 per cent of the poten tial water power of the United States lies in the comparatively narrow strip bounded by the Cascade mountains and Sierras In the east, the Pacific ocean In the west, Canada in the north, and. Mexico in the south. Some of these water powers, now unused, are among the cheapest 1n the world. Long dis tance, high voltage transmission has almost annihilated distance In making hydro-electricity available in this great western empire. Development will open to the west an industrial era of such possibilities as have been almost undreamed of. The fuels available include natural gas. oil, lignite and coal. The coal, reduced to coke, offers raw material for the production, by electric smelt ing processes, of the carbide extensive ly used for illuminating purposes. Here at hand are great deposits of limestone that will furbish the lime required to form calcium carbide used In the fixation of nitrogen and the pro duction of ammonia. At hand, also, are mountains of phosphate rock awaiting the irrstal lation of appliances to free Its content of phosphoric acid and combine It with ammonia as a fertilizing agency at less cost than any known. Sodium sulphate, sodium carbonate, and sodium chloride are here, the lat ter offering material for electro chemical production of soaps, bleaching powder, etc., In time of peace and for the making lm wartime of the deadly chlorine gas now devastating the trenches of Kuropean battle fields. Iron deposits are here in abundance, which, with fluxing and reducing ma terials at hand and cheap hydro-electric power as the agency of reduc tion, may make the Pacific coast a competitor with the Ohio valley In the production of special grades of pig Iron and the manufacture in electrical furnaces of high grade steels. Also at hand are the materials for the man ufacture of such steel alloys as fer romanganese, ferrochrome, ferrosilicon, ferrotungsten, ferromolybdenum and others. There are rare metals bari um in the form of sulphate and carbon ate, zinc and copper, gold and silver all awaiting the magical touch of the cheap electrical potentiality In our wasted stream flow. As a by-product, and not an unim portant one, of the atmospheric nitro gen plants, we can produce cyanide, giving new life and impetus to the mining and production of precious metals from low grade ores. In fact, this material either as a by-product or from metallic sodium produced with the cheap power available, should make the Pacific coast the logical dis tributing center for cyanide used in gold extraction. Our Alaskan copper, now shipped aa far away as New Jer sey for smelting, may be cheaply and profitably reduced and manufactured by electrical processes, on the Pacific coast, and the same hydro-electric power which will bring these indus tries into existence will 'afford the energy for cheapened transportation of their products over electrified rail ways. MOUT tree is very useful because its bark, leaves and oil are used as febrifuges.) As disinfectants its bark, leaves and root are burned and the smoke is allowed to spread in the surrounding atmosphere, and thus purification of air is aimed at. Thus the act of wash ing the mouth, throat and the nose with copious amount of water means to thoroughly cleanse these organs from the decaying particles and sedi ment accumulated there during the night. This washing process refreshes those organs and prepares them afresh to undertake the whole day's function. leaving those adjuncts, we come to the betel nut and leaf. Such Celicacies are used sometimes before oreakfast. Dut mostly after taking food. Now the betel nut Is again an astringent, which encourages the flow of saliva, so a quantity of water accumulates in the mouth. This nut also cleanses the gums and teeth. Then we come to the betel nut. It is a fibrous sub stance which cleanses the sediment ac cumulated on the tongue generally. It Is also a strong carminative and di gestive. Leaving that, we come to th other ingredients namely. lime paste, cloves, cardamons, tobacco and the like. Now the catechu gum is always a first class astringent. It acts on the swol len throat and furred tongue and in flamed gums. In conjunction with lime paste. It acts aa an astringent and an antiseptic, stops bleeding gums and disinfects the whole mouth (gumc, teeth. saliva, tongue throat, etc.) Then cardamons and cloves come into requisition; these act as carmina tives, deodorants (or purifiers of foul breath) and disinfectants. And over and above these characteristics the latter (cloves) acts as a powerful anti septic. It soothes pains of inflamed gums and decayed teeth It is rea'ly a powerful and at the same time aro matic germicide. Then comes the turn of tobacco Those who cannot take alcoholic drinks, opium, etc, require some stim ulant. In tobacco such people find a suitable agent to appease their crav ings. Those who chew tobacco with the betel leaf assert that it helps not only the digestion but It prevents gum boils and acts as a powerful germicide. Some native physicians recommend a tooth powder consisting of the com mon salt, seeds of mueuna prurlens. cummin seeds and tobacco in suitable proportions. This is a fine recipe, ex cept perhaps it blackens the teeth It kills the germs of the teeth and fixes the loose teeth. A very common tooth powder is prepared by burning almond shells and betel nuts together. But the one thing always to be re membered is that they wash their mouth, teeth, tongue and nose as well as their eyes several times a day, es pecially after meals. No wonder, then, that the people On tne whole are free from pyorrhea. Leather and canvas covers to be laced over automobile springs to keep them clean and dry have been patented. TOE "A. B. C" OF EL i : : As soon as I make up my By Jack Lait. (fonyrlEht. br J. Keeler.) SMYTH & FL'RMAY was a grand old firm. Smyth was Just Smyth John or Jacob or James It didn't matter. He was Smyth, and Smyth. There had never been any male other. But Furmay was Jr. He not only was the junior partner, he was the junior Furmay, D. E. Furmay. Don E. Furmay was his full name. What the "E"' stood for doesn't count. It had been his father's name. But father, who had gone into busi ness with Smyth many years ago, had retired, and the young Don sonned into the firm, which manufactured tele scopes, or pumping machinery or glue or something. Old man Furmay proposed to spend the residue of his life span in pleas ure, recreation and laziness. He waa incredibly wealthy, so he bought a deep, sea going yacht. It came F. O. B., somewhere in Maine, arriving at a private landing near New York on the flossy side of the Hudson. Old man Furmay liked his yacht much. And he announced that a cruise of a few lands and a sea or two was about to begin. Furmay and Smyth sat on the ve randa of the Furmay summer home, looking out at the yacht, and Furmay said to his old companion in com merce: "Do you think the kid can run the works alone?" "Why should he?" asked Smyth, who was likewise rich enough to re tire, but was not of a retiring dispo sition. "I was thinking of taking you and family along on the cruise," said Fur may. Now, a sea voyage, in search of Pleasure Island is an attractive propo sition to anybody. It struck Smyth In a very weak spot. He hemmed and coughed and said he didn't see why not. Young Don, when he heard of It. was for it. He loved the idea of being left alone in charge of the big, plant, with full power, unham pered to kick out a few of the old fogy methods which had earned a few million dollars and to install a few of his own which had occurred to him 'while he was at college. There being no dissenting voice,, the ayes had it, and the plans started. WOMEN live longer than men. es pecially if they have Insured their lives with an endowment policy, which puts more of a premium on life than on death. This Is the remarkable statement made by an insurance company which has been making a study of the rela tive longevity of the sexes. The com pany has come to the conclusion that men die younger because they live harder after the age of 60 or there abouts. Women notoriously take all sorts pf liberties with their health. They wear thin clothes and expose their necks and shoulders and ankles to the wintry winds without a shiver. When they are young they take chances with their digestions that no man ever would take. However, they do these things when they are young. As their years ad vance they lead a quieter life, with less and less social gayety. m Men, on the other hand, says this actuary, always act as if they were young. When mother's life work is practically done father still is hustl ing for a living and he is being pressed more closely everywhere by the boys. The result is that men's bodies age much faster than their brains, and no matter how good they may feel thev pay for their good time with short ened life. Then, too, as their years advance there is no let-up in the chances they have to eat, drink and be merry with the boys and girls, while the signs of advancing age usually bar a woman from participation in gayety of this sort. Statistics show that the greater number of centenarians are women I and that there are nearly a third again as many old women as there are old men. Between 55 and 65 the deaths of men exceed those of women in a marked degree. And, as the insurance company pointed out, the average, woman pol icyholder with an endowment policy lives longer than the one who has a straight life policy. "The longevity of the endowment woman undoubtedly is a question of spirit and the determination to live until the policy matures," is the way it is summed up. Non-Skid Attachment. A brand new Idea In an anti-skid dins attachment for " automobiles has mind I'll writ. Oh, no. Tell you Don had not been let in, somehow, in the first announcement, on the fact that Smyth's family had been invited along and had accepted. Smyth's family consisted of an el derly Mrs. Smyth, who suffered ter ribly from colds, and Olive Smyth, less than 20. a combination peony and violet, brunette, slender, dreamy, opalescent. So this guessing contest dies young Don's interest was in Olive. - He didn't want Olive to go on the cruise or on any cruise except one in the Justly overwritten fbarque of matrimony upon the high sea of bliss, etc. The idea of having her sail away for months wasn't to his taste from any angle. But he was helpless. Her father had said she was to go,, and in the Smyth family that ended spec ulation. The night before the good yacht Mermaid was to cast off, there was a party aboard her -nice, new upper deck, where there was a parlor, a set of amazing cabins, a ballroom, a smoking lounge and other architec tural equipments of a millionaire's man-of-Joy. A string band teased its instruments. The breeze blew soft and swishy. The moon was ruddy but not rude., Don and Olive had just ended a dance of delirious delight. He led her out to a hammock where he sat her, and she, with a pressure of her hand In his, sat beside her. They had been friends for many bully years. They had gone to schools together. Don had never thought of any other girl more than maybe once. Olive let him take her to picnics in childhood, proms in adolescence and formal functions in the post-debut ma turity of youth at its most adorable stage. In the Smyth-Furmay walk of life young folks Jo not "go to gether." But Don and Olive had gone together nevertheless. Everybody had It that they would marry. Still the question had never been directly put and no answer had been directly hinted. Tonight, with the wonderful girl beside him, the river calm and the breeze, oh, so fondling; with the girl about to sail away, far away, for a long time, a very long time, weeks maybe It had to come! It was not unexpected. Olive didn't even say that It was. It couldn't have been. But her answer did not come. CE been recently patented by a Missouri genius. It is not an Improved tire, as most of the non-skidding schemes are, but an attachment which is placed on the hubs, and, when occasion arises, it is thrown into action by a lever operated from the chauffeur's seat. The apparatus as placed on the end of the axle has a cam arrangement which, under normal conditions, holds the legs or blades in a position clear of the ground, but when any tendency of the car to .skid is shown a move ment of the lever turns the cam and the blades are thrown into action and protrude beyong the periphery of the wheel, where they engage with the ground and hold the machine steady in Its course. These blades are sup plied with an automatic action by which they accommodate themselves to hard or soft ground, as the case may be. Effect of Altitude. The curious fact has been demon strated that high altitudes apparently have a marked effect on the power obtainable from a gas engine. Re cently one was erected several thou sand feet above sea level, but upon testing failed to give the desired power. An investigation followed, and the loss in power was attributed to the height at which the engine was operating. The general conclusion was reached that a gas engine loses about 1 per cent of Its Indicated horse power per 1000 feet of elevation. Concealing Periscopes. By painting periscope tubes with parallel stripes ' representing the colors of the spectrum it is reported that the United States navy depart ment hopes to make these members of submarine craft Invisible to an enemy. It is thought that when re fracted the colors will appear as a white ray, practically indistinguish able at a distance. , In Place of Gasoline. E. D. Lewis, of Elmira. N. Y.. an inventor, says he can make a motor perform the same function as gasoline, with one ounce of sulphuric acid to each gallon of water. The acid can be purchased for less than a cent an ounce. Lewis says the hydrogen gas generated by a battery current would show a hlg-her test than the best gasoline on the market. He would equip the regular gasoline tank with two electrodes, .one positive and tha other negative. . ; These, con what, I'll wireless." She was voiceless for what seemed a long time. Then she took Don's hand and said to him like the honest dar ling that she was: "Don, dear, I've known you about all my life, and never for a moment did I less than like you very awfly. I never saw any, other man that I liked nearly as well. But when you talk of marriage, that means more than liking. . To me It means the love of my whole heart a gushing love, not a calm, complacent giving In. Whether I have such love for you I do not know. I have never let my self ask myself. I never knew whether you would ask me to, so I could not ask myself. But now that you have been so dear and lovable and have asked me, I must ask myself." "Sweet girl," said Don. "Ask your self. I'll help you. And I'll coach you on an answer to yourself and then you can transmit it to me." "No, Don,'' said she. "I must wait till I am alone. It isn't fair to me or to you that I should be hasty. We wouldn't be married, anyway, before tomorrow, and after tomorrow I shall be sailing away. When I'Tn away if I feel lonesome and such if I miss you you know." Don bit his lips, rubbed his palms together nervously and refrained from doing the two things on earth he wanted to do most at the moment kiss Olive and light a cigaret. "Well, honey when am I to know? And how?" he pleaded. "As soon as I make up my mind I will write oh, no. Tell you what. It will be so romantic. I'll wireless you!" And that is where it remained. Next day the Mermaid sailed. Don was at the landing with not enough flowers to inaugurate an alderman, just enough . for a corsage bouquet. He saw the yacht pull away, his father and mother waving handker chiefs from the back rail. Olive wav ing her hand to him and he bereaved, bewildered, bewitched and burning. To add another alliterative quality, he was busy. He had a great institution on his hands and no little responsibility. But he found himself wandering at his desk. He sat there, but his spirit was on the Mermaid, out on a gentle sea under an amiable moon, in a sociable breeze, with Olive. Telegrams from everywhere came nected with a storage battery, would generate hydrogen gas, which, Mr. Lewis says, will pass through any carburetor into the motor as effect ively as gasoline. An open-air vent in the tank would give an outlet for too high a pressure of gas and backfire would be quenched by the water. For the Golfer. Addressing the ball on the golf field is almost as serious a matter as ad dressing a big meeting, for there are a thousand ways of going wrong and one lonely way of doing it according to Hoyle. The angle of the head and the tilt of the nose must be arrived at with mathematical accuracy, and after that sucn matters as the position of the feet with regard to each other and the "pill" on the ground must be given some attention. After that the club must be seized with due regard to the position of the thumbs and swished through the air while the eye is kept glued to the ball. In order to assist the golf player In taking care of all these matters, a Min neapolis man. A. A. Peck, has re cently invented a device to be worn on the hat by which it is intended that the stunt shall be somewhat simplified by making use of a "sight" somewhat in the same manner as the sharp shooter has on his gun. Cotton in War. One thousand tons .of cotton are fired every day from the mouths of the German and Austrian cannon. Cordite, one of the explosives employed by the artillery of the present day, ts two-thirds cotton. The raw material is dipped into nitric acid, washed and dried, and the material thus supplied becomes the base of t h 1 It takes 400 pounds of guncotton to make the charge for one shot from the Queen Elizabeth's guns or from one of the German 17-inch guns Ouncotlon can only be made from raw cotton. Thunder Claps. If the number of seconds between the time of seeing a Hash of lightning and of hearing the thunder be counted an estimate may be formed of the distance of the thunderstorm, because lightning; is seen instantaneously, while the sound of thunder travels at a definite rate. An Interval of about five seconds would Indicate that the flash Is a mile away. rushing at him all day long. They had lost their punch. He was waiting for the message the wireless. And the second day out it came. And here was what It said: "78. 214 S. Don looked twice. What in the name of How Old is Ann did it mean? He looked again and some more. It was from Olive, certainly. The message had been sent from the Mer maid. She had promised him her answer. But there had been no code agreed on. And he knew no code that might have been understood between them. He couldn't make head of foot of it. He added up the figures He knew there was no such solution intended. But he added them up any way. They totaled 27. That meant nothing. He could see that it con tained two words the first one of two letters and the second of four. What could that combination be? It couldn't be "Yes. Don." could it? It might be "No. dear." But if it were "no." why the "dear?" And in what language? But. that "no" had two let ters scared him. Don knew our old schoolboy code where each letter In the alphabet is numbered, running consecutively from 1 to 26, so that A is 1, B is 2, and so forth until Y Is 16 and Z is 28. He wrote it out laboriously and then read the message with the key. He got: "GH BADE." That had no rhyme or sense. Ah. maybe she had reversed the alphabet, making Z 1 and A 26. So he turned the code upside down and read his aerogram and came out with this: "TS YZWY." That was worse than the first. Maybe the letters were Initials of a series af words. Probably not. He tried the first, "GH BADE." The D might stand for Don. The rest might stand for anything. Ditto when re versed. Don called up the wireless office and inquired whether there were any official code any established code any code at all. They had two or three codes. But the message didn't fit any of them. They suggested that hi try making A 1, B 2, and Don hung up. He called in Killifer. Killifer was a shipping clerk. " He ought to know something about codes. Killifer puck ered his forehead and looked at It sideways, up and down, bottom up, rear end first and, after deep reflec tion, said It was probably two words, one with two letters and one with Don ordered him back to the shipping department. A whole day went by. Don tried to reach the Mermaid with his S. O. S. to relieve his doubt and suspense. The air waves were tricky and com munication couldn't be established. Before many days should go by, how ever, the wireless agent helpfully volunteered oh, what was the use? Before one more day Don would be insane. Don took the cryptic numerals home with him. He got out a book on such things. He read a mystery story by Robert Louis Stevenson. He closed his eyes and tried to think. No go. Even as a boy he had always been a rummy at solving puzzles. The night was sleepless. Business went to the dogs for the time being next morning. Don locked himself in his private office and studied with red eyes and smoked one cigarette after another and swore a little at himself, of course and ground his teeth and paced up and across and kicked the desk and rep rimanded the janitor, who insisted on washing his windows at that particu lar time and well, he put In the kind of day you might expect he would. It was almost time to go home. What for? No one was home except the servants. He could bite his under lip just as well in the office. And, all jesting aside, he had neglected a lot of work which, wireless or no Marconigram, had to be attended to. So he fiercely grabbed a gob of papers and started plowing through them, writing "O. K. D. E. F." on each as passed. There were some questions of prices. He had to set some figures. In the affairs of Smyth & Furmay numeral figures were not used. There was a house code. And it was all in the one name that was on Don's heart Olive Smyth. Observe the name. There are ten letters in it. No letter is duplicated. Almost every commercial house has some such similar price making sys tem. Olive was a baby when the sys tem was Introduced by her father. Taking the letters, left to right. O was 1. L, 2. I 3, V , E 5, S 6, M 7, Y 8, T 9, H 10. Don was marking in some rrices. He bad the familiar translations at his fingers' ends. He never pondered over the code. He always thought by It when he thought prices. But to night anything that had to do with code got him. And In a minute It flashed on him. Olive had doubled back. She had presumed that he was so familiar with the figures as indicated by the letters of her name that he could read let ters from the figures. He spelled it out in a moment: "7 S 21 45' "My love." Don danced. He hugged the adding mach:ne He rubbed the bruise where he had kicked his desk, he determined he would raise the janitor's pay. "My love!" Whew! That w'as something to come hurtling through the air oif a vacht. And Just then the wireless company called up and said that Its senders had found the Mermaid's receivers. Was there anything? Was tWere? Walt a minute. If Olive had wired him in code In the exuberance of her heart or be cause she didn't want any other soul on earth except him to know what she was sending him he could do no less. So he started to figure out an answier in the same ten figures. It couldn't be done. Try It yourself. See what you can extract from "Olive Smyth" that he could send back to fit the occasion. The words he picked out In addition to hers, werp: "Let, me. this some." He over looked two which will be found at the tall of this narrative, showing that Olive knew her own name better than he knew it. Den couldn't squeeze any sort of a sentiment out of the ten letter limit. So he thought of his own name. Don E. Furmay. Hurrah! His name was just as applicable as hers. Ten let ters, no two alike. And In his name he found plenty. So he wirelessed her: "Miss Olive Smyth, aboard yacht Mermaid. "Take the key In the signature, read and answer: g97 7 10 84. 12 1497 "Don E. Furmay." Olive got the flying answer. And, since her Key came right with her precious Jewel of a message, she un locked the thin mystery and she fig ured out that the figures read: "Marry me, do dear." Whereupon she smiled and gave this to the operator: And when Don got It he flew to his name and unkeyed the phrase and it read: "MFTJ UNOOM." What the Oh, of course. Her name, not. his. And this is what he got: -Yes. silly.' ... ,v : ; ' ' ' - fV , : CURRICULUM FOR MODERN SCHOOL ESTABLISHMENT of a "modern school." in which the courses of study would not be dictated by tradition. Is being considered by the general education board, founded by John D. Rockefeller, and an outline of the plan has been prepared by Dr. Abraham Flexner, assistant secretary to the board. Formal grammar, ancient languages, theoretical studies In modern languages and the bulk of history and of puro mathematics in the way they are now presented are the subjects Dr. Flex ner would remove from the curriculum as useless and cumbersome. "Aside from reading, writing, spell ing and figuring," he writes, "the c ti riculum would be built out of actual activities in science, industry, aesthe tics, civics." These' studies would be forwarded with the use of "the access ible world" as a laboratory to train children "with an eye to the realities of life and existence." The features of this accessible world which a school In New York, for Instance, would em ploy, would be the harbor, the Metro politan museum, the public library, the Natural History museum, the Zoologi cal gardens, the city government, the weather bureau, the transportation sys tems, lectures, concerts, plays. Mr. Flexner makes no distinction be tween the sexes. He says: It Is just as important for a girl as It is for a boy to be interested in the phenomenal world to know how to ob serve, to infer, and to reason, to under stand industrial, social and political de velopments, to read good books and to finish school by theTBRe of 20. Dif ferentiation at one point or another may be suggested bv experience In any event, the modern school, with Its strongly realistic emphasis, will un doubtedly not overlook woman's do mestic role and family function. Not only do American children as a class fail to gain either knowledge or power through the traditional curricu lum, but Mr. Flexner asserts that they spend an Inordinately long time In fail ing. He says: j The period spent in school and col-' lege before students begin professional studies is longer in the United States than in any other western country. An economy of two or three years Is urg ently necessary. The modern school must therefore not only find what stu dents can really learn it must feel itself required to solve its problem within a given number of years th precise number being settled in advance on social, economic, and professional grounds. Its problem may perhaps iir formulated in these terms: how much education of a given type can a boy or girl get before reaching the age of. let us say, 20. on the theory that a that age general opportunities auto matically terminate? The education which we are criticising is overwhelmingly formal and tradi tional. If objection ts made to this or that study on the eround that It ,s useless or unsuitable, the answer comes that it "trains the rhind" or lias bee.i valued for centuries. "Training the mind" in the sense in which the claim Is made for algebra or ancient lan guages, is an assumption none too well founded; traditional esteem Is an Insuf ficient offset to present and future, uselessness. A man educated in the modern sense will forego the some what doubtful mental dlsclnllne re ceived from formal studies: he will be contentedly ignorant of things for learning which no better reason than tradition can be assigned. Instead, his education will be obtained from stu dies that serve real -urposes. Its con tent, spirit and aim will be realistic and genuine, not formal or traditional. Thus the man educated in the modern sense will be trained to know, to care about, and to understand the world he lives In. both the physical world and the social world. Mr. Flexner would place the burden of proof upon the subject. If the sub ject serves a purpose, it is eligible to the curriculum, he says, otherwise not. He continues: Modern education will Include noth ing simply because tradition recom mends it or because Its Inutility has not been conclusively established, it proceeds in precisely the opposite way; It includes nothing for which an af firmative case cannot now be made out. As has already been intimated, this method of approach would orobably re sult in greatly reducing the time al lowed to mathematics, and In decidedly changing the form of what Is still re tained. If, for example, only so much arithmetic is taught as people actually have occasion to use, the subject will shrink to modest proportions; and if this reduced amount Is taught so as to serve real purposes, the teachers of science, industry and domestic econ omy will do much of it Incidentally. Th" same policy may be emnloyed in deallnir with algebra and geometry. What is taught, when it Is taught and ho - it is taught will In that event de pend altogether on what is needed, when it is needed and the form In which It is needed. Precisely the same line of reasoning would be applied to English, history and literature. For example: There has been a heated discussion for years on the subject of formal grammar, i which has been defended, first, on the ground that it furnishes a valuable mental discipline: second, on th.' ground that it assists the correct use of language. It Is passing strange how many ill-disciplined minds there aio among those who have spent years be ing mentally disciplined, now in this subject, tiow in that. Tho modern school would not hesitate to take the risk to metnal discipline Involved in dropping the study of formal grammar. It would tentatively, at least, also risk the consequences to correct speech in volved in the same step. For such evidence as we possess points to the futility of formal grammar as an aid to correct speaking and writing. The study would be Introduced later, only if a real need for it were felt and only In such amounts and at such pe riods as this need clearly required. In respect to history and literature. a modern scnooi wouia nave me cour age not to go through the form or teaching children useless facts Just be cause previous generations of children have learned ana forgotten tnem; and PORE TREATMENT New Pore Treatment Best Healing Preparation Known for Inflammation or Soreness, Any Ache or Pain, Rheuma tism, Neuralgia or Lumbago. "1 HE new treatment relieves neu- ralgla and rheumatism In a few minutes. Internal medicines cannot recch rheumatism of the Joints and muscles. Fresh blood must be made to circulate in and around the af f ex ted parts. The pores must be kept at work and thg inflamatlon and poi sons removed. This treatment relieves neuralgia and rheumatism when all else falls. Just rub It over the tender spots and around tha acnlng Joints. If tha treublevis long-standing, rub It also the courage not to read obsolete and uncongenial classics, simply be cause tradition has made this sort of acquaintance a kind of good form. Neither Latin nor Greek would be rinlaln.it In tVi. .Iirrlniil nm .. . . V. .t ern school not. of course, because their literatures are less wonderful than they are reputed to be, but. be cause their present position in the curriculum rests upon tradition and as sumption. A positive case can be made out for neither. The literary argument falls because .stumbling and blunder-in- through a few patches of Latin classics do not establish a contact with Latin literature. Nor does present dav teaching result in a practical mas tery of Iatln useful for other pur poses. Mature students who studied j-atin throu-1! the high school and per haps to some extent in college, find t difficult or impossible to understand a Latin document encountered In, say, a course in history. If practical mastery is desired, more Latin can be learned in enormously less time bv postponing the study until the student needs the language or wants It. At that stags n can learn mote l.atln In a few months than he would have succeeded In ac quiring thtougb four or five years of reluctant effort In vouth Finally, the disciplinary argument falls, because mental dls'"llne Is not a real purpose; moreover It would in any event con stitute an argument Hgalnst rather than for the study of Latin Literature Is to be taucht In the modern school primarily for the pur pose of developing taste. Interest and appreciation, not for the purpose of producing persons who make litera ture or who seem to know Its history; we hope to train persons, not to writ ! poems, or to discuss their historic place, but to care vitally for poetry -thoug-h not perhaps without a suspi cion that this is the surest way of lib erating latent creative talent. The mod ern school would. In the same way, en deavor to develop a simultaneous dis criminating and genuine artistic inter est and appreciation rather than to fashion makers of music and art. So far I have discussed the modern school only from ttie standpoint of Its course of study. It Is time now to mention other Implications of the real istic or genuine point of view. If chil dren are to be taught and trained with an eye to the realities of life and exist ence, tie accessible world ts llie lab oratory to !e used for that purpose. Let us imagine a modern school located In New York city; consider for a moment its assets for educational purposes: the harbor, the Metropolitan museum, the public library, the Natural History museum the Zoological garden, thi city government, the weather bureau, the transportation systems, lectures, concerts, plays and so on. It is evident that, while in soma di rections, the model n school would hav ? a fairly lear path. In others It would have to feel its way. Ir others it would tltnde w'ould be distinctly tentative and experimental. To no small extent It would have to create apparatus and paraphernalia as It mm eeds. Text books, for example, almost invariably conform to tradition; or innovate so ellghtly as to be. from our point of view, far from satisfactory The mod ern school would thus at the start bo at a great disadvantage as compared with established schools that Seek gradual improvement through read justment. Hut it would have this ad vantage. that it could reallv try Its experiments with a file hand. We go on teaching this or that sub ject in this or that way for no better reason than that Its ineffectiveness or harmfulnet-s has not been established. Medicines were once generally and are still not Infrequently prescribed on ex actly the same basis. Modern teach ing, like modern medicine, should be controlled by positive Indications The schools should teih Latin ami alge bra, if at all, just as the Intelligent rtn e Nil' im ii nreHcrioew imiiiiwi-. irm iibii it serves a purpose that lie knows and can state. Nor will tact and Insight and enthusiasm cease to be efficient virtues. simply because elrrleiilum and teaching method are constant ol-Ject-a of scientific scrutiny. In education, as In other realms, the innulrlng spirit will be the productive spirit. There is an Important , t hough not verv extensive body of ed ucw t Ions I literature of philosophical and inspira tional character; but thcr Is little of scientific nunlltv I he scientific spir it la lout beginning to creep Into ele mentary and secondary schools: and progress Is slow, because the condi tions are im fa vora tile. The modern school should be a laboratory from which would issue scientific studies or all kinds of educational problems a laboratory, first of all. which would test and evaluate critically the funda mental propositions on which It Is It self based, and the results as they are obtained. P-innllv the modern school, seeking not only to train a particular group of children, but to influence educational practice, can be a seminary for the training or xeacpers. iirst, us own. mun others who will go out Into service. The difficult v of recruiting a satisfac tory staff to begin with must not be overlooked . I'd n n I i ti - -... , r. been brought up and haye taught on traditional lines. m the otner nana. h nlrlt of revolt Is rife; and teachers can be found whose riioriw nave ni- niilv nassed bevond conventional lim its. With these the, new enterprise would be started. Bath and Clean. Food Too Much for Him Milwaukee, May 1 3. Starving be cause be was given wholesome food, and wretched because the accumulated dirt of 20 years had been scrubbed from his body, Ferdinand Numbers;. 48 years old. Milwaukee s cave-man, CJiea in llie lli;unn wt imcidmiuci, wicbi he had been removed. The man's stomach, accustomed . to the refuse of the garbage plant, re volted at cleanly food. Vnr 20 vears Numbers: has lived within a few feet of the lake, bu ho never took a bath. At a local powder and scrub brushes. over the nerve centers along the pin' nor atlnn l lnat sick Imnortant mm r. Diooa action, it mey ccuiq an per there would be no such thing as neu ralgla and rheumatism. The New Pore Treatment also giTe bad coughs, nasal catarrh, bronchltl and tonsllltis. Don't fail to use H i an open cuts or sores ana ror enronu skin diseases. It Is simply magical for pimply skins and sallow complex ions. Ask for t Know - Doc Pore Treatment (Japanese Style) Three sixes, 35c, 50c and $1.00 What Thsy I&7J "W a s nervous and could not sleep. Application along spine and on back of neck cured roe." (QJ(S , Y -1