THE MORNING OREGONIAN, WEDNESDAY, APR IE 1, 1914. - POKILASD, OREGON". Catered at Portland. Oregon. Foatoff Ice aa second-class matter. ubacrliiUos Rates Invariably In Advance: (BT HAIL) Dally. Sunday Included, one year 18.00 Caily. Sunday included, six months. 4.25 IJaily, 'Sunday Included, three montns. Xaily. Sunday included, one mouth. . . .75 pally, without Sunday, one year ... 6.00 baUy. without Sunday, six months.... .25 Only, without Sunday, three months.. 1.75 Jjaily. without Sunday, one montb. ... -HO Weekly, one year. ................... Sunday, one year......... .......... z.&o feunday and weekly, one year 8.&0 (BT CARRIER) Eally. Sunday included, one year JK.OO ally, Sunday included, one month..... .75 How to Remit Send postozflce money or. der. express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at vender's risk. Give postofflce addreas in lull, including county and state. i'onluxe Rates 12 to IS pages. 1 cent; IS to S2 pages, i cents; 34 to 48 pages. 3 cents; SO to tiO pcgea. 4 cents; 62 to 76 pages, fi cents; 78 to 82 pages, ft cents. Foreign post age, double rates. Eastern Business Offices Verree & Com. lln. New York. Brunswick building. Chi cago. Sieger building. Ban Francisco Ofrlce R. J. Bid well Co.. T4Z Market atreet. rOKTLAXD, WIDXESDA, AHilL 1, 1914. OREGON JUEARN8 A LESSON. Oregon is having the faot brought Some to it that, although it has be come enamored of the non-partisan Idea of politics, the rest of the coun try has not. Oregon elects two Demo crats to the Senate in its lordly con tempt for party distinctions, but when they reach Washington they are called upon to vote as Democrats for Democratic policies or remain iso lated units. In order to retain their standing as good party men, they vote for a tariff bill -which exposes the wool, lumber and fish industries of their state to foreign competition. They shake off the party yoke only when it is proposed to subject these same industries to the competition of our Canadian neighbors in our do mestic commerce, by admitting the Canadians to the use of our canal In coastwise trade on equal terms iwith our own ships.' On the eve of a campaign for re election Senator Chamberlain displays a. sudden interest in the affairs of his constituents, but it is too late. He has co-operated in forming the habit among his party associates in Con gress of heeding -the master's voice. Now that he asserts his Independence in sudden solicitude for the interests of his state and for his place in the Senate, he finds this habit so strong that not enough men will break it to follow him in opposition to the Presi dent and make those Interests secure. Let there be no misconception as to the vital importance to Oregon's staple industries of exempting coast wise commerce from canal tolls. By putting lumber on the free list Con gress has done much to open our home market to the competition of Canadian lumber. Our antique ship ping laws subject our lumber men to a. hardship of $1 to $1.50 per thou sand feet, even if coastwise vessels passed the canal toll free. Our neigh bors in British Columbia would, even then, have had this advantage over us in shipping to the Atlantic Coast. Repeal of exemption and collection of tolls on deckloads, as is now pro posed, would add about J1.75 per thousand feet to this advantage. We may be treated to the pleasant spec tacle of British Columbia mills in full operation to supply American markets "while the mills of Oregon and Washington are idle or on part time. This is the promised fruit of Ore gon's delusion that party divisions are of no consequence in politics and have no bearing on the prosperity of the tate. Under the delusion of non partisanship we have sent to the Senate men who have permitted Ore gon to be robbed of her fair share of the reclamation fund, men who have thrown open our leading indus tries to foreign competition and men who, as a consequence of their indo lence or pliancy on those occasions, are now powerless to secure for those Industries the advantage they right fully expected to derive from Ameri can construction and ownership of the Panama Canal. We suffer from a. condition of industrial and business depression which causes armies of unemployed to spring up on all hands. Oregon should have learrfed its les on by this time. It should know by the experience of the last few years that a non-partisan is but a Democrat in disguise and that he is no sooner safely ensconced in his seat in the Senate than he sheds the dis guise and comes out in his true col ors. Oregon should have learned that the only safeguard for her interests is the Republican party, which looks first to the welfare of the American people, which does not, in devotion to an abstract economic theory, favor foreign interests at their expense and which does not, on the pretense, of lofty moral principles and with a show of generosity, sacrifice Ameri can interests in order to escape from foreign entanglements. A Republi can Administration would never have yielded our markets to the foreigner without an equivalent. It would never have surrendered our rights in the canal until all disputed points had been tried out by arbitration. Those achievements were reserved for a Democratic Administration, which promises to emancipate us from mon opoly and the money trust, but de livers us, under a severe handicap, to our foreign competitors. DIVOBXE AND JUDGE PETIT. Adelor J. Petit, one of the Chicago Judges, has been indulging in a little rleasant hysteria over the divorce "evil," as he calls it. Chicago has a municipal bureau of divorce and mar riage statistics whose first report Judge Petit has analyzed with terri fying consequences to his own judi cial soul. To others less liable" to attacks of panic the. facts he unveils may not appear quite so frightful. Since July, 1S99. the Chicago Juvenire Court records show that 60,358 peti tions for the care of children have been filed. Of thee petitions, 33,750, according to Judge Petit, "were the direct result of divorce or the neglect of parents through drunkenness or desertion that would have constituted sufficient grounds for dlvoree." He then goes on to show from these premises what a dreadful evil divorce has come to bj. This is one of the most barefaced Pieces of special pleading we have ner been permitted to enjoy seeing. The good judge charges up against divorce not only the woes which are properly attributable to it, but alBO those arising from drunkenness and desertion. ' t We submit that this is unfair. No doubt divorce has much to answer for, but it should not be forced to bear the sins of the demon rum and wife-desertion, too. Judge Peiit's re flections on this Interesting subject would become more lucid and a great aeai more valuable if he could mus ter up the intellectual courage to face the facts squarely.- He knows per fectly well, or ought to know it. that "the divorce evil" is not a primary disease of society. It is secondary and results from other troubles lying much nearer the heart of things. THE SOCRCE OF ALL OUR WOK. Now we see the terrible conse quences of not having sent Henry M. Pindell to make a pleasure tour of Europe with his family and at odd in tervals to adjust our relations with Russia. Senator Lewis has warned us. We dare not intervene in Mexico lest Japan seize the Philippines and Ha waii, lest Russia seize Alaska and lest somebody seize the Panama Canal. Japanese would then flood the Pacific Coast and make this region an Ori ental colony. Had Mr. Pindell gone to St. Peters burg, the charms of the Pindell fam ily would have fascinated the Roman offs, and the greatest autocracy would have formed a hard, and fast alliance with the greatest democracy. Ex hausted Japan would not have dared to move against us lest the Russians swarm along the Siberian Railroad and take revenge for their recent de feats. Our armies could have safely pacified Mexico and then could have continued their triumphant march southward to realize Champ Clark's vision of the American flag floating from the Pole to Panama. All these glorious consequences would have flowed from the Pindell mission. They could all have been made 'Secure in the one year which, Mr. Lewis stipulated, Mr. Pindell was to spend in Europe. Then, having closest his brief diplomatic career in a meteoric blaze of glory, Mr. Pindell would have returned to his editorial desk at Peoria, as Clnclnnatus re turned to his plow, proudly conscious that he had made the Nation safe against danger from those matters of "greater delicacy and nearer conse quence" whereof President Wilson has ominously spoken. t Of course Mr. Lewis did not men tion Mr. Pindell or what Mr. Pindell would have done. But one can read between his glowing lines the sugges tion of what might have been, had the President heeded the wise counsels of the Illinois statesman and stood by the man of his and Mr. Bryan's and Mr. Lewis' choice. Instead he ar ranged a little epistolary comedy wherein Mr. Pindell rejected the honor that was already within his grasp and Mr. Wilson replied with deep regret and some of those well turned compliments which he knows well how to pen. The country will never know what it lost In being deprived of the serv ices of the eminent diplomat whom Mr. Lewis discovered in Peoria and who was ready to devote one year no more to the Nation's weal. A COURAGEOUS MAYOR. Much praise is due to the Mayor of Oregon City for the bold stand he has taken against profanity. He goes so far in his valiant attack upon this hateful viee as to hint that the ordi nance against it may some time or other be enforced unless conditions change for the better. Such talk is most encouraging. No doubt the friends of decency in Oregon City will now take heart again and perhaps get another ordinance passed. Fifty years hereafter some other Mayor, if he is as bold for righteousness as his present Worship, will suggest that this new ordinance may be enforced if the bad young men don't look out. Threats of enforcement are about as far as most of our officials often get with anti-vice ordinances. These enactments stand upon the books as a species of scarecrows. They are not really dangerous, but it is fondly hoped that wicked people will believe they are dangerous. If they would only do so the effect would be all that one could desire. The trouble is the same with human beings as with crows. The wily birds soon find out how devitalized the scarecrow is with all his aimless fluttering, and it does not take a great while, as a usual thing, for the wicked element to dis cover the emptiness of an anti-vice ordinance? The Mayor of Oregon City has an other word of wisdom for us. He says with sapience which seems al most, if not quite, inspired, that he thinks the ordinance against profan ity 13 more important than the one which forbids the sale of tobacco to youths. No doubt he is right about it. Tobacco merely ruins the heart and destroys the nerves. It blights the stomach and dwarfs the growth of the whole body. These things are trifles compared with the evil con sequences of a swear word and the Mayor is to be complimented on. the discrimination which enables him to discefn the full horror of blasphemy. We dare say he Is wise to drop the tobacco ordinance and throw the full weight of his administration upon the one against swearing. Of course it would be bad manners to enforce both of them. It is the duty of the police to enforce only such laws as the Mayor may select out of the abundance on the books. It Is pre posterous to think of enforcing them all. Who ever heard of such a thing? A FREXCH CRITIC OF SHAKESPEARE. A distinguished Frenchman, Georges Pellissier, has lately published some disparaging remarks about Shake speare. To some of the more devout worshipers of ' our dramatic' deity much that M. Pellissier says may even appear blasphemous. In his opinion, the plays, as a whole, are badly con structed. The action does not hold together. Tho historical references are usually wrong. The geography Is Ignorant and, worse than all the rest, the psychology, which we have heard praised so often and so loudly, is all awry. M. Pellissier says it is only extremely simple characters that Shakespeare can portray with any ac curacy. Macbeth is probably well enough drawn, but then he is nothing more than a howling savage and who cares about him? Othello belongs In the same class. He is- as gullible as an Infant and as passionate as a wild Indian. The wiles by which Iago de ceives him are perfectly transparent. If Othello had possessed even ordi nary common sense he would not have been beguiled to kill his wife and ruin his own career, Lear, says M. Pellissier, starts out In the play as a simpleton and' ends as a mad man. To cap the climax of his im pieties the French critic goes on to tell us that the greater part of Shake speare's text Is pure b&lderdash. though it is illumined here and there by undeniably fine poetry. It will not do to pooh-pooh Georges Pelllssier's criticisms. He is a man of standing in the world of letters and has famous works to his credit. Some of the strictures he makes have been made before by. British writers. We pass over Bernard Shaw's unfa vorable comparisons of Shakespeare's plays with his own. Perhaps they were meant for nothing more serious than advertisements. But Dr. Samuel Johnson ventured to find fault with such a play as "As You Like It," for Instance. He said the plot was brought to a forced and improbable ending. The conversion of the wicked Duke looks rather fishy. It must be admitted, and it Is hard to see what connection the phil osophic Jacques -has with the action. But these matters are trifles. Shake speare is great because of his great poetry, the finest, upon the whole, ever written by mortal man. Until M. Pellissier can rave this out - of the plays he may as well hold his peace. FANDOM. Again the Pacific Coast Is out en masse, gathered In clusters or great throngs about the highways, the by ways, the public places and the tele graph offices. There are countries, they say, where the populace grows agitated much after this fashion In the face of great political Issues or Impending war. It may be. But no mere war could be responsible for any such show of agitated interest as is now in evidence up and down the length of the Pacific Coast. It takes the opening of the baseball season to do the trick. From now on such minor topics as free tolls, foreign relations, politics, trust-busting and the like will have to take a back seat, at least with that considerable portion of - the populace which comes under the classification of fandom. Discussion henceforward will center about batteries, averaged, prize-arm squads and other Intrica cies of baseball technique. Villa can take Torreon and Mexico City with out half the interest that would at tend the cleaning up of the Senators and Oaks by the Beavers. In fact the selling of the Panama Canal to Great Britain for one dollar ninety-nine might not strike the devoted fan as anything bordering on the calamity of a run of bad luck for the home team. Baseball has seized on the -fancy of the American public as no other hobby has ever fastened on any peo ple, modern, ancient or medieval.' Its real exponents perform other func tions of earthly existence grudgingly that they may live to enjoy baseball. What real fan would pass up the opening game for the sake of mere business? Fans have even been known to postpone their wedding hour when It Interfered with the time of an opening game and no' doubt the gen uine fan would succeed in postponing the moment of his demise for the same reason. While the Interest and enthusiasm spread over the whole country, these Pacific Coast states are the fan's paradise for the reason that the Coast League gets into action well ahead of the Eastern aggregations. Balmy weather and early Spring permit this. Hence the Coast fans, now that the play Is on, are happy as so many children on Christmas morning; while the fans in less favored climes must content themselves for a few more wretched weeks with a fretful policy of watchful waiting. REMEDIES FOR V'N EMPLOYMENT. Remedy for unemployment is mere ly a matter of co-operation and dis tribution, Just as Is the remedy for inability to sell farm produce. Under normal conditions there is a job for almost every willing worker and there Is & willing worker for almost every job, but the means of bringing the man and the job together are mis erably inefficient. To provide the remedy for this con dition the North American Civic League for Immigrants proposes measures to extend National, state. municipal and private agencies for dealing with unemployment and to bring them Into co-operation. The Federal Immigration Bureau has made a small beginning to direct the immigrant to the place where he can find work or buy land. It Is pro posed to expand the division of in formation Into a bureau of distribu tion, with branches In all important cities and co-operating with state and city employment bureaus. This di vision would ascertain where men are wanted or are available and would bring man and Job together. It would license all private agencies which send men from state to state and would prosecute frauds upon laborers. It would thus prevent such swindles as were perpetrated In Wisconsin. when men were hired from another state in squads of 200. charged 3 fees, employed three days and then discharged to make room for another batch. The contractor and agent each made $600 a week by this swindle. It would also prevent a repetition of what happened in Oklahoma in 1907, when cotton farmers lost one-fourth of their crop, or J12.500.0007 for want of pickers. A division of this bureau is pro posed which would register and fur nish Information regarding land for settlers and the terms of sale. It is proposed that the Government adopt a system of long-time, low-interest loans to settlers for land Im provement, as have Australia and New Zealand. It la hoped by this means to prevent the frauds by which green immigrants are induced to buy lands, sandpits and jungles under the Impression that they are buying farms; also to correct the condition wherein only about 30 per cent of the foreign-born white males live in the country, though 40 per cent of the un skilled aliens admitted in 1913 were farm laborers. More than 60 per cent of Italian immigrants come from rural districts, but only 6.2 per cent of male Italian population is en gaged in agriculture. Swarming of new immigrants into the cities to obtain casual employment at occupations which cease in Winter. subject to the exactions of fraudulent agents and padrones. is largely re sponsible for unemployment. It is promoted by the practice of dumping Immigrants in the seaboard cities without direction to the places where they are wanted. These men have to live in haphazard fashion through idle times until they acquire the loaf ing habit. Then they become tramps and organize unemployed armies, which are composed largely, if not mainly, of aliens. This will soon be a problem of the first importance on the Pacific Coast, for in another year the dumping proc ess trill begin on this side of the con tinent. The Government has made no preparations as yet to receive In creased immigration on this coast, though It should begin now. We ! have no desire for renetitton in Port. Iland of such scenes aa New York has recently witnessed, but -they will eoon be enacted unless the Government Joins the state In establishing a. sys tem of distribution. ' One of the most romantic episodes in the history of the Rockefeller dy nasty .Is the war of William Rocke feller and old man Lam or a. William was forming a barony of 69.000 acres in tne Adirondack. Lamora's little place lay In the middle of It. William tried to drive him out by all the arts of money, power and law, but the old fellow manfully stood his ground. A forest, Hampden with dauntless breast, he withstood the tyrant of his fields. Now old man Lamora is dead and his son has sold out to William. It is a great victory for the baron. The announcement that some Chi cago scientific men are arranging to weigh the moon need not startle us. The moon has been weighed many a time and oft. What the savants de sire is a more accurate determina tion of our satellite's mass in order to compute its exact effect on the tides. The moon outdoes the sun many times over In raising tides, but there Is still some uncertainty about the precise ratio of their respective influ ences. Talk grows more lively about changing the British Empire Into a federal republic. Sir Edward Grey mentioned the project seriously the other day In Parliament, and he was heard respectfully. The only great change required to bring about fed eration would be seats and votes for colonial delegates in the Parliament at London. The empire in already federated as far as England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland are concerned. The tilled area in Vermont fell oft by one-fourth In the decade from 1900 to 1910. At the same time Poles and Italians were demonstrating that New England land could be farmed profitably. These Industrious and In telligent settlers, would soon possess the whole of the Yankees' historic patrimony if they had a little more capital. Genuine rural banks would soon make New England rich with varied crops. The public market project now. In its latest manifestations, becomes a private market. Some individual 'of noble Impulses Is to build It and rent the stalls and thus, as if by magic, we shall have a public market without any expense to the city. Why Is it that these great conceptions are mo rare? How we shall crow over Seat tle with our privately owned public market. In this matter of closing grocery stores on Sunday. It l"well to remem ber there are Christian men in the business whose religion Impels them to keep their establishments closed on another day. To compel them to close two days in the week savors of per secution. According to a noted Minneapolis educator, the Monroe Doctrine is too big for us. He has lost sight of the fact, doubtless, that we are a great people and that only the present pol icy of a mistaken Administration Is small. While litigation pends, residents of Toledo. O., ride free on the trolley line. Here's one instance, we take it, where litigation extending over many weary years would be quite generally welcomed. Of course Governor West meant nothing personal in wiring Secretary Lane to call off National Committee man King in the Interest of "less whisky and more water." This Is metaphor. A ilispatch from Alaska records that a forest ranger was pursued by a mad bull moose. We thought this species was now confined to the Jun gles of South America. After thirty-seven years a woman is suing for divorce. She alleges she supported the family by keeping a boarding-house. She is long-suffering. President Wilson, following au at tack on his tolls stand, laments the "degeneracy of debate." How about the degeneracy of Americanism? If a San Francisco girl with a broken lieck can dance the tansro. there Is a ray of hope for the man with surplus weight amidships. It would seem that not only the files and the breeding places, but some of the knockers . of the anti-fly cam paign need swatting. There was an awful waste of water when Hazard, K. wasi flooded, but what else can Kentucky do with water? That tattooed bandit should have had "sure death" instead of "true love" lettered on his murderous right hand. As soon as we are rid of the Pan ama Canal it would be the logical thing to discard the Monroe Doctrine. Scientists are engaged in weighing the moon. It is now up to some pro moter to stake it off in town lots. If Villa wants to arouse any fur ther Interest he will have to organize a Northern Mexico ball league. The author of "God Save Ireland" is dead at the age of 87 with his prayer remaining unanswered. Sir Edward Grey's proposal for a Federal Government of Britain does not contain enough strychnine. There, Is little use In passing the harmony bottle among Oregon Dem ocrats. It must be empty. Doc Wiley says his eugenic boy of 23 months speaks some Latin. They usually do at that age. California claims a record of one baby every twelve minutes. Speed up. Oregon. A Kentucky town is flooded by water. The irony of fate. How would it suit Dr. Calvin White to pickle the dead flies? The Beavers are swatting the flies in shipshape fashion. They're loading up the anti-trust musket again. Same old Beavers and same old game. LIFE SHOULD LAST 10O YEARS The Beat Work la Done After -to. Say Lfarsrd Authority. - London Cor. New York Sun. "Don't atop Work at 70. do more of It." remarked Sir Gilbert Parker a few days ago. and Sir James Crlchton Browne, an acknowledged authority on longevity, agrees with Sir Gilbert thoroughly. "If you want a feeble and miserable old age, give up working." lud Sir James, who, although born as long ago as 1840. Is one of the busiest men In the kingdom today. "The most vigor ous period of human life In Its entirety Is obviously between 25 and 40 years of age." he added." but to say that men above the latter age ar com paratively useless la to fly In the face of the biographical dictionary. Much of the best work of the world has been done by men over 40. and we should by no means stand where we are. but be back In the twilight ages It bereft of what these men accomplished. "Musical expression, like speech, reaches Its acme In late middle life. But higher la the cerebral hierarchy than speech or music centers are others con cerned In the manifestation of purely Intellectual powers, euctj as reason and. Judgment, which come to perfection late, and may long preserve their In tegrity. A preponderance of the work Involving calm and powerful reason Is done by men from 65 to 70 years of age. Our Judicial system In this coun try has been built up mainly by Judges from 65 to 85 years of age, and in al most all countries the most momentous affairs of state have been reserved for the decision of men at this time of Ufa "And even memory, bo often treach erous in old age. may be preserved in tact. Dr. Dollinger. when 70 years old and cursed by Insomnia, learned by heart three books and the "Odyssey' In order that he might be able to repeat them to himself In the silent watches of the night. Henry DanUolo, Gibbon tells us, waa elected Doge of Venice when 84. and lived till 97. shining In his last yeare as one of the most il lustrious men of hla time. "The way to make old age peevish and repulsive is to rob it of the hopes by which It is sustained and tran- nuiiuiou. Depend on It. the beat an tiseptic against senile decay ia an ac tive interest in human affairs, and those keep young longest who love most. It is a cogent argument against celibacy and the limitation of families that they deprive old age of thoae vernal Influences In which par ents renew their youth. "We ar Justified In holding that, given favorable conditions and barring accidents, loo years la the normal du ration of man'a Ufa the goal which we should hold In view and at which, if we guide our footsteps aright, an ever Increasing number of men and women should arrive." "Sir Jamea added that very often old age waa mado feeble and decrepit be cause of the maladies of early life. All these maladies leave their footprints behind them and In aged men were often found the tracka of measles or the marks of whooping cough. MODERN GARDEN OF EDE.V. Gt'RELT Olathe. Kaau. Ilaa Dispelled the Last Trace of the Serprst's Trail. Philadelphia Inquirer. The perfect community has been found at last, and It la located, of all places In the world. In Kansas. it exists under the picturesque designa tion .of Olathe, and one of Its most eminent citizens la ex-Governor John P. St. John, the man "who dried up Kan sas" in 18S0 and who will be more generally recalled aa a one-time Pro hibition party candidate for President of the United States. Grape Juice Is the strongest beverage that is dispensed in Olathe; the town drunkard died many, many years ago. and the town Jail baa been rented out as a garage, because no one breaks the law In Olathe, and for that reason there are no prisoners to put under lock and key. Boys are not allowed to amoke cigarettes, the curfew rings promptly at 9 o'clock, and on Sunday everything Is closed except the 16 churches. It Is said that even these are not needed by the citizens, but are used to convert sinners from neighboring towns. There may be some other unknown paradise located In some other part of the country that will compare with Olathe. but we doubt It. FERRVJI.VJ1 IS OX Dl'TVi 12 HOI RS. Hence He Questions Opinion Handed Down by Mr. Crawford. HAF.RISBCRG. Or March 30. (To the Editor.) I eee in The Oreionlan Sunday that Attorney-General Craw ford has ruled that ferrymen employed by the counties of this state do not come under the provisions of the eight hour law enacted by the Legislature and approved by the voters for the rea aon that such men do not work more than eight hours a day. I would like very much to know how Mr. Crawford obtained his information that they do not work more than eight hours. I have been county ferryman here for five years and can say that in my case the reason given for aald de cision Is absolutely false, aa I work 12 hours a day and no laborer works steadier than I. I am not making any complalnt against the County Court that employs me, us they are aware of the facts stated. But I wish to say that if Mr. Crawford can thus overrule the plain Intent of the State Legisla ture, the Governor and the voters of the state, we might aa well abolish the Legislature, the Governor and the rest and let him govern the state. R. L INGRAM. Send Back the Sparrema. St. Louis Post-Dispatch. There Is something that will strike a great many people like sentimental tommyrot in the suggestion that the celebration of the 100 years of peace between the United States and England be marked by returning to Great Britain the battle flags and other trophies captured from Invaders dur Ing the Revolution and the War of 1S12. The English cannot restore the American relics which their ancestor! destroyed when they burned the Can ltol at Washington. The spoils of war which Jackson captured at New Orleans have more significance on this side of the Atlantic an attestations of Ameri can valor than they could' possibly possess If sent abroad. To part with them in that way would represent an extinction of values- It It la desired to make a pretty present to the British, why not send back the Engliah spar rows, which would be worth as much to them aa they are to us 7 Origin, of Oo to-Ctaurr a Sunday. PORTLAND. March 31. (To the. "Edi tor.) Go-to-church Sunday Is now a popular thought. Everybody Is to go to son.e church Sunday, April 19. A great many people are asklngr What started It? Who la back of the move ment? Why, everybody Is back of It; but who started it? As the other great movements, this Go-to-church Sunday waa started by the Christian Endeavor organization. With ita 1.000.000 socie ties and 5,000. 000 members, led by Dr. Frances E. Clark, president of the United Society of Christian Endeavor, and the C. E. World's Union, this or ganisation la doing a mighty work and is leading in many world movements. It- suggested, pushed, advertised and developed the Go-to-church Idea, and Kndeavorera are largely responsible for the success of the plans used. G- EVERT BAKER. wn.iov3 rtrp-rtop ox tolls I Ambassador's Speech at Londoa Really ! Reflected Prealdent'a V terra. SALEM. Or, March 30 (To the Edi tor.) President Wilson haa sustained Ambassador Page In hla famous after dinner apeech delivered at the English banquet In London a short time since, where he went Into the details of the Monroe Doctrine and the Hay-Paunce-fote treaty In a way that was delight ful to the ears of hla audience. It waa thought by tome who saw the speech In cold print that our Ambassa dor had slopped over in the exuberance of the occasion, and his diplomatic mind, encouraged by a gastronomical satisfaction which is experienced after having been wined and dined at an in formal (unction of that sort, took on a benevolent attitude toward all with whom he came In contact. But we learn now that he said Just the right thing, and if -our President had been there he would have sail the same thing, perhaps. When we read the speech ef Ambassador Page we thought . of the plank In Mr. Wil son's platform that atood for exemp tion of tolls for all American coast wise vessels that ahould use the canal, and wondered what the mighty Wood row would do to punish our erstwhile Ambassador. President Wilson la a very hard man to argue with. When asked why it waa that be had changed his mind alnc the campaign days of 191J. he very aptly explains that he was wrong, and asks: "What are you going to do about it?" All great men change their mlnda because it is necessary as the exigency arises. During the Presidential campaign he had to say something about Tammany. In order to secure the political aid of that powerful organization, and It wl'.l be remembered that he Issued a con gratulation to the society upon its an niversary, and spoke of It as being one of the institutions cherished by "all lovers of America"; he also said that "It is upon the hearths of this kind that the fires of liberty are kept burn ing." tjineo tne scandalous exposure In New York the President haa had to take sides against Tammany. it Is Just possible that he Is wrong in his tariff plank, or his currency plank, and some of the others that he so warmly advocated In hla campaign days. No doubt he will see the impracticability of free tariff or a gradual reduction before 1916. RALPH W. FARRIS. HOW XOT TO BE LOXELY IS TOLD. Advice Given Those Who Complain ef Village Inhoapitalltr. LEBANON, Or, March 28 (To the Editor.) The Oregonian baa published two letters from women living In the Valley towns who complain of loneli ness, one lack of cordiality on the part of their neighbors. I am a. native daughter of Oregon, have never been out of my state and have lived in a small town all of my life. I am firm In the belief that if the city woman who goes to the small town to live will only be willing to meet her neighbors half way she will not be long in finding true and lasting friends. Too often she carries with her an air of superiority, which forbids advances, forgetting that the population of the city is made up largely of people born and reared In the country and that human nature Is much the same every where. If the city woman is fitted to enjoy club work she has only to prove her worth and In due time she will be elected to membership and will find that the club of the email town does creditable work. If she cares for civic work, nearly every town In the Vallev haa well-organized civic improvement ciuos. that will be glad to bar, her services. If she Is a temperance worker the doors of the W. C. T. U. are always open to newcomers. If she Is a Chris tian she will not have to go far to Join a church, and her attendance and work In the church societies will be appre ciated. If she Is a mother, the Parent Teacher Circle is a fine place to get acquainted. There are also a few card playing cluba in the email towna. but bridge whist haa not yet Invaded these precincts. If all of these attractions fall to satisfy, there is the great world of nature waiting to be explored. There the will find "books In the running brooks, sermons in atones, and good In everything." There is a very old book called the Bible, In which will be found some very up-to-date advice on this subject, in a passage which reads: "He that hath friends must show himself friend ly." If the writers of these letters will "go Into the silence" and consider these words, and then go forth to cheer and encourage some one less fortunate than themselves, they will no longer have time to complain of loneliness. Life will take on a new meaning. , WILMA WAGGONER. BIRDS OP THE CANAL IOE Single Settlement Contains Greater Vnriety Than Any One State. Louisville Courier-Journal. It Is estimated that there are about 900 varieties of birds In the Canal Zona a larger number of species than is to be found In any one state in the United States. In a recent number of the Canal Rec ord there Is published a list of 230 dif ferent species of birds found in the Im mediate vicinity of Gatun Lake. From this list It appeara that many of the birds known tn this section of the coun try are to be found In the Canal Zone, along with others which are strangers to this part of the United States. According to the Canal Record, Lion Hill, one of the settlements on the old line of the Panama Railroad, is said to have furnished "more type species of birds than any one locality in the Americas." A representative of the biological survey at Washington, In the course of two short collecting trips to the zone, procured some 300 differ ent speclmena There never has been any published work of the ornithology of the isthmus, but such publications doubtless will be forthcoming at an early data ' A number of the birds In Panama are mere Winter visitors from the United Statea These Include auch familiar varieties aa sparrows, tanagera orioles, flycatchera. swallows, thrushes, warb lera and catbirds. The bird resources of the Canal Zone evidently are of much Importance. Pos sibly If they are properly conserved they will become one of the valuable assets of the United States. Having permitted so much reckless bird slaugh ter In this country that insect pesta are increasing at an alarming rate, it would be well to take care of the birds that have been added to our National possessions by reason of the acquisition of a section of Panama April Fool-ish? "We hope The first writh Spring and many problems of dress, home furnishing, and what not. If you are not already an active beneficiary of newspaper advertising begin today. Turn All Fool's Day insido out. Put the joke onto the other fellow who hasn't the enterprise to take advantage of all the good advice and suggestions fonnd every day in The Oregonian 's advertising columns. Better still, invite the whola family to become acquainted with all the good things advertised. Result: Economy, convenience, satisfaction. Twcnty.fi ve Years Ago From The Oregonian of April 1. 18S9. Chicago; March SI The fight be tween the feather-welghta Ike Weir and Frank Murphy, of England, took place at Koutts. Ind.. this morninjr. and after the soth the referee de clared it off for the day. bUv .onounrM that It would have to be finished bef.e Tuesday. The fight will probably be declared draw. San Franelseo. March SI An agree ment was nied yesterday by the South ern Paclnc Company for a lease to it of the Central racific Railroad. Any fisherman who wishes to be Im mortalised can attain his desire by Cty'pa"7 eal r th pon1 ln tbe Colonel Mendell. of the United Suites Engineers. Colonel Cralghlll and Ma jor Post will sail for Europe April 10 to get information relating to the ob structions to the Columbia River at The Dalles. The main building of the Convent of the Holy Names haa bean removed to the block west of where it stood. Mrs. Annie Jennes Miller, of Bos ton, the advocate of divided skirts, will shortly arrive ln this city. The O. n. N. Co.'a steel bridge across the Snake River at Ripariawlll be completed about April 10. There is scarcely an unoccupied house ln Portland. Eaat Portland and Aiolna. and agents say that if 1000 or even J000 houxea were built, they could rent them In no time. While driving a buggy hired from Magoon Bros, along the White House f". y't'rttr. Philip Blumaej.r col lided with Jamea Cannon', carriage. One of the shafts ran into the nigh horse's neck of the Magoon team and broke off. The tern continued their mad flight and narrowly missed ve hicles occupied by c. A. Malarkey and faml jr and B. L ttono and emlly. Finally the wounded horse dronned ,4 ... .4 - " - Half a Century Ag& From The Oregonian of April 1. 1884. W. S. Ladd has received a dispatch from his correspondents In New York etating that the project for establish ment of a mint for Oregon was defeat ed in Congress. Charles Llshan. an old resident of Clark County, while in attendance at court In Vancouver, last week as a Juror, lost his dwelling, barn and all their contents by fire. Even clothing was not saved. He is utterly destitute. The name of Bannock City. Boise County. Idaho, has been changed to Idaho City. Washington. March 28. Lieutenant General Grant was In consultation with the President. Stanton and Halleck last night. He returned to the front today and has established his headquarter at Culpepper. Chicago, March 29. A correspondent gives an account of the rebel attack on Paducah. An army of 6500 entered Paducah on the 25th, when the 900 Union troops retreated to the fort. Tho rebels made a gallant charge of the fort, but were repulsed with great slaughter. They sacked the town, burned nine buildings and left on the I6th ln the direction of Columbus. London. March 16. La France says England and Rutsia are inducing Den mark to accept an armistice. Salem. March 31. The Marion County Democratic convention today nominat ed for Sheriff. Samuel Clark; for treas urer. G. M. Stroud; for Assessor. James Cooper; for Legislature, Joseph Tehe, jacoo oodslde, Jackson and -Picar.l. Albany. March 31. The Union State Convention nominated for Presidential electors, George L. Woods, of Wasco: H. N. George, of Linn and J. T. Gasley. of Douglas. For district officers: Sec ond Judicial district, R. E. Stratton. Judge, and J. F. Watson. District At torney; third district, R. P. Boise, Judge, and K. Mallory, Pietrict Attor ney; fifth district. J. G. Watson. Judge, and C. K Meigs, District Attorney. A cougar or panther measuring nine feet from the tip of the nose to the tip of the tall was killed near Lewis River a few days since and brought to this city by Mr. GltchelL S. S. Douglas, tax idermist, purchased the carcaes and the akin will be preserved for a New Tork museum. While workmen were tearing up tho sidewalk on the corner of First and Washington streets yesterday, some 19 or a doxen rata were laid out in rapid succession. Testerday afternoon sia a young man was riding- on Front street near thn store of Mr. Law. his horse stepped into a hole and broke his leg. The ani mal waa shot.. He belonged .to Amos Eaton. A very select audience was In at tendance at the Courthoune last evening to listen to the lecture of Mrs. Salllo B. Thayer. The April Fool' By Dean Collins. Prince of Boobs, Is my title plain. I am the merrymakers" tool; Never have I been safe and sane . Upon the day of the April FooL I quaff sharp vinegar, served as beer, I bite soap candiea with childish cheer. And practical Jokers grin with glee At the practical Jokes they play on me. They hall me all. as the April Fool. And I am the butt of all their Jests, A graduate of the bonehead school. Bound unto Momus' mad behests: I kick the brick 'neath the derby hat. I club the India rubber rat. And yet I wonder. If truth were known. If I am an April Fool alone. For there Is the guy who. on this day Puts Winter fiannela upon tbe shelf. And there la the chap who tries to say Which team will win. and who bets his pelf. And there Is the ever-hopeful gink Who fishes te-dav at the river's brink. "La-la!" say I, "I may be. 'tis true. An April fool there are others, too!" not. of April brings you face to face S