6 TITTC -MORNING CTREGONIAN. MONDAY. APRIL 20, 1914. rOMXAND, OREGON. ; Entered at Portland, Oregon. Foatoffics aa fc.cond-clasa matter. 'Subscription ftatea Invariably In Advance; - (BI MAID Dally, Sunday Included, one year .Daily, (Sunday Included, six months... ;Daily, Sunday Included, three montha. Dully, fcunday included, ona month... '.Batly, without Sunday, one year ;Euily, without Sunday, nix montha..,. ;lal3y, without Sunday, three months.. .Daily, without Sunday, ona month. . .. Weekly, one year,,,, Sunday, one year Sunday and Weekly, one year,,.....-. : (BI CARRIER) 'Dally, Bunday Included, one year..... ;paily. Sunday included, one month. . . 18.00 4.25 2.1:5 .75 6.0U 8.23 l.tr. .00 1.50 S.50 , 3,U .S9.0O . How to Remit Send postofflce money or '.der, express order or personal check on your Oocal bank. Stamps, coin or vorruuey axe at -tender's risk. Give postotiice address In CulU ;lut--tudlng- county and state. footage Kates 12 to IS paces. 1 cent; IS to $2 pages, 2 cents; 34 to 48 pages, 3 cents; 80 to 80 pages, 4 cents; 91 to 76 pages, 5 cents: 78 to 02 pages. 6 cents. Foreign post age, double rates. ; JSastern Business Ortices Verree & Conk--liu, New York. .Brunswick building. Chi ll's go. titcger building. , San Francisco Office R. J. Bldwell Co. -T42 Market street. J"0TLASB, MONDAY, APRIL. 20. 1914. ;"I1NDLNG A QUARREL, IN A STRAW." With its accustomed shudder at any 'move toward war, the New York 'Evening Post Beys. President Wilson :"cannot fail to be hurt and disgusted by the raucous approval with which imperialists and professional stirrers up of international strife and delight ers in war have greeted bis action" toward Huerta. It finds "the final touch of mortification" in- Mr. Hearst's rejoicing. It belittles the ;Tmpico offense to the American flag, saying "the affair at Tampico looks ilike finding a quarrel in a straw." It tells how filr. Wilson has borne pa tiently destruction of American prop .erty and sacrifice of American lives Jin Mexico, and gays: ; Why the sudden change when it was a incase at Tampico of an affront to the uni-ifoi-m of the navy? Are we, perchance, to liniuort hastily German notion of the saored na of the "Kaiser's coat" ? That there was a deliberate intention by any responsible Mex-:i-au to insult the symbol of the United -Slates sovereignty is absolutely unbeliev .able. On the contrary, there is every rea son to believe the Mexicans intended, iwith Huerta's approval, to insult the American Nation. The Tampico inci 'dent was only the last of a series of affronts, all aimed at the American .Nation through its seamen. All other ".nations were exempt from such in sults. The obvious intent was to make :a mark of Americans and to insult the ;Nation through the men wearing its : uniform". ' An affront to men wearing the uhi ; form and carrying the flag of a na ; tion is an affront to the nation Itself. ; That is the opinion of the world, ex jtepting the Evening Post and news- papers of the same ultra-paclfib turn .of mind. With a nation, as with a tman, honor is precious above all raa ; terial possessions and it must enforce ! respect at any cost or endure the con I tempt of the universe. . International ; law and long-established custom have : decreed that insult to a nation shall ! be wiped out not only by verbal or ; written apology, but by a public sign ; of respect, which can be witnessed by ; a II -within sight and hearing. Such : is a national salute. To forego the salute would be to proclaim ourselves ; a nation which did not respect itself : sufficiently to compel respect from J others. ; - The Post is not alone in its aversion ! to jingoes and stlrrers-up of war, but 5 that aversion sho'uld not restrain ! cool-headed 'patriots from demanding warlike action when the vindieation I of the Nation's honor demands it. The Oregonian hopes that this end may ; be gained and that Huerta may be ' brought to his senses by measures ; which fall far short of war or of a ; general military occupation of Mexico, with all the troubles which would fol '. low in its train. But if these extreme -measures prove necessary to inspire the Mexican swashbucklers with : proper respect for the American Na- tion, the purpose sought will be well worth the cost. There is an under current of regret i'at Admiral Mayo's action in the Brooklyn Eagle's comment. The Eagle tr"is inclined to believe that our heady Admiral has run away with the situa tion." It says: "It had been better, Zot course, not to permit a too hlgh " strung Navy to get away at long range with a pacific Administration," and it speaks of the " 'cockiness of an Ad miral who appears to regard gun- powder as his only snuff." :. If that is the way Admiral Mayo's conduct is regarded in New York the rmore shame for New York. Admiral "J Mayo at Tampico was the guardian ; of the honor and good name of the United States, and his first duty was jto preserve them unsullied. So far r.from having been heady and cocky. lie had parsed over several offensive tacts with a simple exaction of amends fand apology. Not until men wearing 5 the American uniform were taken by Zforce from a boat flying the American -flag, which was cumulative evidence of a deliberately offensive purpose. did he demand that the insult to our flag should be wiped out with a sa lute to our flag. He emulated Mr. Wilson in the patience with which he had endured less wrongs, but when further patience would have branded him and his Nation as cravens he acted with the decision which became a patriotic American. POLITICAL. ISSUES IN FRANCE. The Caijlaux scandal in France may lead to Important changes in the man ner of conducting the French govern ment. That scandal was the out growth . of factional quarrels which .have, overturned one Cabinet after an ' other. Those quarrels could not have brought such results but for the par .liamentary omnipotence which has made Parliament the supreme execu five and judicial as well as the legis lative power. Fortified by the re luctance of former Presidents to dis solve the Chamber of Deputies when the Cabinet is defeated on an impor -tant measure. Parliament overturns Cabinets with reckless abandon and interferes with judicial procedure. Its proneness to this amusement eneour- - aged m. camaux s enemies to make a campaign against him, and fhe climax - .was the murder of M. Calmette. The cause of the Chamber's irre- ' sponsible conduct is the practical as eurance of the members that they will ".serve their full four-year term. The v President has power to dissolve the - Chamber, subject to certain restric -:tions, but he has not exercised it since x-1877. Were this power exercised, as it is in England, the Deputies would know that a majority against the gov' ernment would bring about dissolution of the Chamber, with the expense of ITa campaign and the risk of defeat In f its train, and they would not help to -. overturn a Cabinet on slight pretext f President Poincare is believed to favor exercise of the dissolution power in order to give stability to the gov ernment. The recent sudden, changes of administration and their evil fruits have turned discussion to this sub ject, and some of the political leaders declare that the present way or carry ing, on the republic must eno. . A now Chamber Is to be elected at the end of April and the fixing of re sponsibility on the Chamber by ren dering it actually, instead of only the oretically, subject to dissolution may be an important issue. The first ex ercise of his unused power by the President will probably cause cries of "Dictator" in the Chamber, but. if the voters punish the factionista who have upset a Cabinet without good cause by leaving them at home future gov ernments may retain office long enough to accomplish something: PROFITING BY TITAJfIC'8 FATE. Two years ago, on April 15, the Ti tanic went down, and the world has profited by the lesson. The latest steamships have double bottoms, and the bulkhead are carried up to the main deck. Many more 'lifeboats ''are carried, and wireless is required on all ships carrying mere than a cer tain number of . persons. Atlantic liners travel farther south during the ice season and an ice patrol watches for bergs. The Safety at Sea Confer ence has agreed on regulations for all nations and the seamen's bill has passed the Senate. There we stop,' that is, when we come to' giving legal effect to proyi 1 slons for safety. The agreement of the London conference still rests in the Senate committee, while tba Sen ate talks of everything else under the gun. That body permitted the La Follette seamen's bill, with its exces sive precautions destructive to com merce, to be rushed through, and then rested. The House committee does nothing with the La Follette bill, though it needs radical amendment to be made practical.' Every reasonable precaution for safety could be made if the Senate would ratify the London agreement, and if the House would make the La Follette bill conform to that agree ment. Ships of all nations would then be governed by the same rules, and there would be no occasion" to annul-treaties with all maritime na tions, as the seamen's bill requires. When ships of several nations hurried to the relief of one In distress, as in the case of the Volturno, there would be concert of action such as would be impossible if those of one nation were governed by different rules. Self-interest and the pressure of public opinion have been far more effective than legislation in inducing ship-owners to apply the lessons of the Titanic" s fate. By the time Con gress acts, its action may serve only to confirm rules which have already been voluntarily established and to bring a few. laggards into line. The best and promptest of all lawmakers is public opinion. LOCATING A REGIONAL. BANK. The Oregonian has. received a sin- fgularly intemperate letter from a for- mer resident of Richmond, now a Portland cltlsen, who takes for his. text the comment of The Oregonian on the selection of Richmond as the location for one of the regional banks. The Oregonian has frequently admon ished correspondents to exercise self- control, particularly when writing under a pen name, if they desire to have their contributions published The writer in question not only vio lates established rules but attempts an invidious comparison between Portland and Richmond with the- ap parent expectation that it will be puh lished without his identity being re- ealed. Such letters are not admissa ble to the columns of The Oregonian. The correspondent, however, makes one moderately-toned suggestion that is worth a reply. He says: You felicitate vourself on the fact that poll oT the banks of the Northwest showed maiorlty favorable to Portland wltn reference to the location of a reserve bank, and you assume that this fact would largely determine- the ultimate location of tne bank when one is placed in this section. f the wishes of the member banks are sig nificant, why is not that test applied by you to. the district ef which Richmond is he seat? . . The overwhelming vote of he banks In District No. Five was In lavor of Richmond and against Baltimore. In district No. 5 431 banks voted; 167 of them favored Richmond and 128 Baltimore. These banks voted without knowing what would be the boundaries of the district Five cities within the district as finally estab lished were competitors and three cities outside the district received sixty-four votes from banks within it. Richmond did not receive a majority, but a plurality. In West Virginia, for example, only sixteen b9.nka favored Richmond, while sixty expressed pref erences for cities outside the district It is quite obvious taht the banks that voted for Pittsburg and Cincinnati both outside the fifth district, and the District of Columbia banks, . which voted for Washington, would vote for Baltimore in preference to Richmond if they were confined to the two choices. Such votes would give Balti more a clear majority. Portland received a clear majority over the combined votes for Seattle and Spokane registered by Oregon Washington and Idaho banks. In this district, too, it is true that some Ore gon and Idaho banks voted for a re gional bank Jocatlon outside the Northwest. It is also obvious that these banks, almost without excep tion, would vote for Portland If a r' gional bank or a branch regional bank were to be located in the Northwest. RADIUM AND CANCER, Just at the moment when Ameri can surgeons are growing very hope ful that in radium they have found a universal cure for cancer, doubt heard from the seats of the learned in Europe. An Austrian savant, Dr Eiselberg, of Vienna, reports that he has treated fifty-two inoperable can cers with radium with Improvement in only six of them. Fourteen cases were mads . worse by the radium while five were not affected in any way. Seventeen patients out of th fifty-two - died under treatment and eleven died from the direct effect of the cancers, These figures do not look very promising for radium, but it is only fair to say that Dr. Eiselbergs view Is not upheld by all his colleagues, even In Vienna. His report was de llvered at the Congress of the Amerl can Surgical Association in New York and it. was not left unanswered. Al though his . statistics made out strong case against the use of radium for cancer, Dr, Robert Abbe made better showing on the other side. He explained Dr. Elselberg's failures by suggesting that he, had treated a dif ferent species of cancer from that which is becoming so common in the United States. Dr. Abbe's Judgment is that "ra diuro, i tremendously. -useful jn, the treatment of cancer." Both the Aus trian and the American surgeons warn the public against overdoses of radium. It destroys other tissues as rapidly as. the cancerous and may easily sever a blood vessel if it is incautiously applied. Nor does it prevent the recurrence of the tumors as effectively as some have expected. In fact, by irritating the tissues it may even jnike the return more rapid and dangerous. V From this difference '.of opinion among the doctors we may perhaps feel less confidence in radium than wo formerly did. It does not quite come up to its early promise, but be yond all question there is great vir tue in it. By the application of ra dium in the early stages of cancer the disease will be greatly alleviated If ot entirely eradicated-. it Is one among many remedies which must be used as mutual auxiliaries until the appy day comes when we know what cancer is and how it may be radi cally cured. NEW VIEW OK NLLY SUNDAY. The current number of - the Out- 00k contains some curious particu lars about the Reverend Billy Sunday hich may modify some people's pinions of that celebrated character. hey are given by a Presbyterian minister who is evidently a man of scholastic cultivation and rather ta,rchy in his tastes. He lives and preaches in Scranton, and when the question came up of inviting Billy to conduct a revival there his church voted against it. Subsequently this vote was reversed for reasons which the reverend gentleman now discloses to the world. They are most inter esting. . It is admitted, we are told, that Billy's theology Is antiquated, his language frequently shocking, his pulpit manners unspeakable and his perversions ' of the Scriptures some thing frightful. But what of It? In plte of all these faults he "gets re- ults" which, to a fair-minded critic, atone for everything, Billy Sunday appears to present us with an In stance where, in the opinion of good udges, the results Justify doubtful means. His work in Pittsburg is probably typical of what he does everywhere, n that city there was a group ot practical politicians" who had man ipulated the wards "for Penrose and the liquor interests" year after year. Billy Sunday so changed the hearts of these hardened veterans in sin that nobody could get their indorsement. even for dogcatcher, unless he was antl-Penrose and anti-booze." Some thing of a conversion that. When he was done in Pittsburg Billy Sunday received a big "free-will offering," some $40,000 in cold cash. It came from three sources totally unlike one another. The first was a group of people who had been "re generated" by his preaching. They gave him money in gratitude for sav ing their souls. The second source was a group whose relatives and friends had been "saved," The third was a group of men who wished to recognize substantially Billy Sunday's 'communal . and industrial benefit to Pittsburg." He had made so many workingmen sober and diligent that their employers felt willing to Pay him liberally for his work. A man who can do things of this sort is not to be sneered at. He is power in the- world, which sensible people will recognize and try to appreciate. ' KVERYBODV BVlf BVT UNCEE 8AM. While the United States Govern ment is operating under a policy which practically- prevents the devel opment of its coal lands, under the guise of conservation, British Colum bia, to the north, is preparing to take advantage of the coal trade oppor tunities which will develop with the opening of the Panama Canal. Inci dentally, British Columbia is offering other opportunities to capital which seeks to develop other of. its natural resources, which can be readily mar keted when the canal Is thrown open to commerce. The Department of Commerce at Washington has been advised only re cently that D. A. Thomas, a Welsh coal magnate, has secured options on the anthraelta coal lands controlled by the British Columbia Anthracite Syndicate, in the Groundhog district in British Columbia, estimated to con tain 1,141,444,000 tons. In addition to the coal deposits the company holds charters from the Canadian and British - Columbia governments for constructing a railway from the mouth of Naas River into its coal fields, a distance of 140 miles. The coal of the Groundhog district Is said to be the only hard smokeless steam anthracite coal in the world outside of Wales, Pennsylvania and West Virginia, but notwithstanding its ,tv. on ,! ni.ioi,oKu v9i, t. e it.t -v. v. : is .nrnnrarlnrlta Afvrlnnm.nt hv r.rl- vate capital. This coal is to be de livered at Naaoga Bay, where an ex cellent harbor is ready- for-uae. The company proposing to develop this coal, being encouraged by the British Columbia government,, is expending $10,000,000 In building its railway, equipping it, opening up its mines and buying coal-carrying ships. It Is the expectation of the British Columbia coaj producers that they will find a considerable market for their coal In Washington, Oregon and California; in fact, they are figuring on selling a part of their product to the United States Government for naval use. To add insult to injury, it is intimated that some of the coal from the Groundhog district in Brit ish Columbia may in time be shipped into Alaska, to compete with Alaskan native jcoals, for surveys already have been made disclosing the feasibility of extending this coal road to connect with the proposed Alaska Government railway system, by way of the Skeena and Stlklne rivers, to Whitehorse, and then through Chisana Pass into the Tanana Valley and Copper River country. But this roalroad Is being built by private enterprise, encouraged by the British Columbia government, and there is no theoretical conservation theory to be overcome before devel opment and construction may- begin. Coal land development and railroad building are to be coincident. Alaska railroads are now assured, but reform of our land laws is needed to give them traffic and obtain real local Alaskan benefit from their construc tion, and Insure competition with British Columbia. The land bills are pigeon-holed in Congress to give the right-of-way to a movement to cumin. ish the benefits of the Panama Canal. Repeal of canal tolls involves more than the one Issue. New York has at last thought of a suitable memorial for our hundred years of peace with. Great Britain. Better still, the money has been raised to build and equip it, a solid million and a half. It la a "musedm of peaoe ful arts," which will serve not only as a memorial but also as an inspira tion to industrial training and civic progress. ON THE RADICAL, TOBOGGAN. The British Labor party has in- structed its forty 'members of Parlia ment to act independently of the gov ernment and to make only such, alli ances as seem calculated to advance the ends of organized labor. In other words, they are to keep in the middle of the road and may at any time break away from the Liberal coalition. Their defection ' would make the government more dependent on the Irish Nationalists, and therefore would dimlnlah the possibility of com promise with the Ulster Orangemen. The Labor party is likely, however. to continue its support of home rule and to vote for disestablishment of the Anglican church in Wales, which Herbert Samuel says will be carried through next year.' It is also likely to support the bill for abolition of plural voting, which air- Samuel say will be pushed through next year, ror that measure will diminish the voting power of property owners and add corresponding weight to the vote of the proletariat. - But the Labor men and the Radl- cals may balk at the other measure which Mr, Samuel promises for next year "complete elimination from Parliament of the hereditary peerage principle and the thorough democrat izing of the. second chamber." As now constituted and deprived of Its veto, the House of Lords is weak and assailable. Reformed, democratized and again possessed of equal legisla tive power, It would be strong and unassailable. The Radicals do not de sire such an effective check on the execution o their programme. They would probably consent to Mr. As quith's plan only If the democratizing of the secondchamber made it prac tically a duplicate In political com plexion of the House of Commons Then the Tories' boasted bulwark of the crown and constitution would be torn down and the - British people might find themselves embarked on a career of social and democratic ex perlment which would .make the American and French republics ap pear conservative by comparison. How long would the monarchy last then? The voting machine received a black eye" at the recent municipal election at Hartford. Conn. Joseph H. Lawler, Democrat, ran ahead of his ticket for Mayor in every ward except the Fourth, where he got 1P3 votes and every other Democrat about 300. Examination of the machine showed that some of Its parts failed to count Just enough Lawler votes to elect Louis Cheney. Republican. Mr. Cheney -refused to accept an office won through the blunders of a ma chine and thus prevented serious trouble. It seems that we must still rely 'on election boards to count votes in order to get accurate results. Mr. Bryan is not entirely In a pleasant situation In his borne state of Nebraska. His appointee at Panama, Mr. Richard !. Met- ealf. is being accused by Nebraskans of having "flashed In the pan" at the Isthmus. Hi brother, Charles W. Mryam 01 Lincoln, is apparently on the eve of embarrassing the good Secretary by running for Governor. and to cap the climax. Mr, Bryan himself is being called by the home folks "the least influential member of the taDinet" Decause he is the only Minister who failed to land regional bank in his own territory. -m- eago Evening lost. And when Huerta is threatened with punishment if he does not sa lute the American flag, he refuses to believe a Government of which Mr- Bryan Is a member would shoot. It seems like a waste of good ma terial to put lace on the tops of wom en's stockings, as the new fashion or ders. In Atlantic City, where the style began, there is usually a favorable breeze, so that not a great deal is missed even though.it la seen by fits and starts. But in a calm city like Portland the spectators have a real grievance. Would It be permissioie for each man to carry a bellows? Prussia la about to repeat the his tory of Ulster by planting Germans in the Polish province or r-osen ana 01 vidlng land among- them in holdings of not less than twenty-nve acres. The Poles refuse to be Germanized. as the Irish refused to be Anglicized and the colonists are to be sent there, nn Kinir James sent the Scotch to Ulster, to hold down the natives. Th. vacation of RsDresentstlve Richmond Punnii Hdhion. of Alabama, has come la an end. He took a long one, but the Na tional House struggled on witnout mm Upringfleld Republican That explains why there has been mention of Japan and war in Congress recently. If Alabama will I oil I V KfleD Jir, nyiwuii at November we may have peace The Winter wheat crop promises to be a bumper, the yield being esti mated on April 1 at over .550,000.000 bushels, as compared with 523,561,' 000 bushels last year. The acreage ia larger and the condition is 4 per cent better. The earth does not reel dusi- ness depression. If the New York World really wants to irnnw vhtt a hiEhbrow Is. it is a man ec small Intelligence who haa a great opinion of his Intellect. Louisville uouner-journai. Conversely, then, a low-brow should be a man of large intelligence, who has a small opinion of hi- intellect, The Heppner Gaette-Tlmes Is the latest Oregon weekly newspaper to be sure of enough matter on publication day. Mr. Crawford has just installed a latest model linotype. A vounsr Chinaman has arrived to stir up a new revolution. In China But the world has had about enough of this revolution business. The spectacle of a Los Angeles ed itor suing another for libel is ghastly humor. The damages can be paid In stage money. The Third Oregon Is hungry for frijole and tamale, smokeless powder. served with Varying fruit crop estimates ci focus Into plenty at harvest time. Calling her the Pacific fleet i wrong, watcn ner in action. Chicago cornea by the cognomen 'Windy City" naturally! -y- historic April 19 is a war t date o this Nation. Bryan cannot economize on powder, anyway. - IRELAND'S HOME RULE I'ROBI.KM I Some Objections) on the Matter Pro-I rated by Correspondent. CORVALLIS, April IS. (To the Ed itor.)- have read The Oregonian for over 30 years, and am generally in full sympathy with the opinions you so ably express. However, In the Irish home rule question you certainly present a very one-sided view to your readers. You evidently judge Irishmen in Ire land by Irishmen in America, . Here Irishmen, no matter whether from Ulster or Munster. Protestant or Ro man Catholic, are good cltlaens. attend to their business, and live peaceably with each other. The fact that a man cornea from the Green Isle Is a bond of sympathy between of us. If things were bo in Ireland home rule would have, been easily accomplished ages ago. Jn Ireland, unfortunately, this Is not so. There strife and animosity abound. Neither party will submit to be gov erned by the other. Home rule may cause civil war with troubles that may last for generations. . Undoubtedly Ireland baa suffered great wrongs from England, but these wrongs are in the past, and continually harping on them does nothing . but aggravate tne passions of ihe present generation. During the past B0 and mere years Ireland and especially the Jrlsh peasant class has had in real ma terial things justice, and more than Justice, from England- By their acts English statesmen have shown them selves willing to help the under classes ci Ireland against the landlord classes. Mr. Gladstone's bills have enabled the tenant farmers to have their rents re duced "Judiqiously" to what haa been considered a reasonable rent by a court mainly composed of tenant farrnora Under the first land act of 1!03 vast sums of money have been voted by the English Parliament to enable the Irish tenants to purchase their holdings. This act is too complicated to explain here, but under it a tenant who 1a paying say 100 pounds a ,yenr "judicial rent would probably agree to pay 20 years' rent to purchase, i. e.. 2000 pounds for his holding. This sum the government would pay to the landlord, charg ing the tenant Z per cent on It for interest and sinking fund. That is TS pounds a year for 68 H years, when the tenant would own his farm rent free in fee simple The tenant farmers of Eng land or any other country would only be too glad of a similar bill I am reliably informed that the men who have purchased their holdings un der this act (they are a very large number), do not particularly want home rule or anything that will make disturbance, but peace to perfect their holdings and attend to their business. Nor are the Ulster men the only men to repel home rule. Scattered all through reland are many men very much op posed to it who. though in a minority as regards votes,' are the class that has added luster to the Irish name wher ever the stars shine or the wind blows. The Oregonian has for some time been sneering at Luster and hinting at tne cowardice of the army officers 'who would sooner resign their commissions than fight against loyal Ulster, and you explain to your readers the reason hat an apparently different brand or justice is meted out to the BUffraglsta and to the army oficers is that the army officers spring from an aristo cratic stock and the suffragists from a mora humble one. This is not exact ly so. In the first place the English army officers are not such tremendous ly aristocratic fellows. Many of them came from the middle classes and many of them are quite poor men and often have a very hard time to keep up ap- oearances and make both ends meet. Of course, they are. as wen as an American Army officers, fairly well ed ucated men. They have to be educated nowadays to be worth their salt as offi cers. The radical government now in power In England is largely elected by the votes of more or lesa illiterate men Their votes, which largely predominate. are able to elect the governing bodies bv the preponderance of their votes. but. thouah they have and hold the ma Jorlty of the votes, they do not hold the influence mat tne amauer una uci ler educated classes hold in the govern ment of the country. But the real reaaon la that the great biar middle classes of England who, un loss they are very mueh aroused, do not bother their neaaa muon aoout ponwca, know and feel in their hearts that ui ster and the British army are thor ouKhlv loyal to the British Empire re gardless of what hind of government may be in power. rney aiso Know that manv of tne men vvno represent the Nationalists are disloyal to tne British Empire. Durinir the Boer war tney nau many nnnortunlties of seeing this and how much the empire was lovea oy iueo Xntlonalists. who at the end of the Boer war elected an Irishman who had served as a colonel in the Boer army to represent them in Parliament. The middle class English are dull, but they are not fools When men like Lord Hoherts and Lord Charles iJeresrora and others who for many a day have well served the British J-Jmpire uy tana and sea, when these men show their sympathy with loyal Ulster the big Kiiiriish middle classes are apt to think there is something in it, nor are they likely to censure men whom they know are loyal to the empire. Uc.urtvjr. Att,uainvj.u VICE-FnKSIDKNT'S MOW VEST Beautiful I'rrnlon tiarment 2MO Years Old Olveu to Mr. Marshall. Washington, D. C. correspondent New Vice-President Marshall has a new vest 200 years old. He wore it recently for the first time. It was given to mm bv Mirza All Kull Khan, of the Persian Legation, The material, an antique Khorasan. la of the Song-boulak pat tern and embodies the Kurdish and Heratl motif, according to the undis puted statement made by a Persian rug dealer. Thia means tnat ma vent ia ot cars: brown with soft tones of blue ana yel low makinsr up the color scheme. Min ute figures of flowers, leaves ana twigs are employed In carrying out the un usual design. "Mv wife dared me to wear the vest In public" explained the vice-tresiaent. so I took tne a are. Let Owaers Choese Manic, PORTLAND. April 19. (To the Editor.)- As a taxpayer and non-dog own er, why should I be taxed to lend City Commissioners Daly and Bigelow on a junketing trip to inspect the class of muzales In vogue with the well-bred dears of Seattle? Why should not stringent muzzling act be passed and let the do owners Investigate the various 'class, grade or make of dog muzzles. This haggling over the muzzling or. dinanee looks to me like cheap ad' vertisment for further political prefer ment, and. if euch be the case, what a contempt we should feel for such men. Does Mayor Albee's humanitarian impulse lead him to prefer the good will of some dog owner, who la op- nosed to muzzling, to that of the gen eral public who cannot afford to ride In autos and thus escape a part of the menace of rabies-affected dogs? R. II. ROY, Juvenile (iromrtry. People's- Home Journal. Teacher (to a scholar) Johnny, what Is a cube? Johnny A cube Is a solid surrounded by six equal squares. ' Teacher Right! . Willie, what Is cone? Willie A cone? Why a cone la- er a funnel, stuffed with ice cream. WUEJi VOTERS' INTEREST WANES Then Minority Rule Is Apt to Follow, aaya Writer. SALEM. April !. (To the Editor.) Is it strange that the people are tired Of politics? I say no, and that most emphatically. Jt is Ketttnsr so that for one purpose or another elections are held every year, and the political agitation over this or that never Ceases. Is it strange that the average citizen, finding bo much responsibility heaped upon him, refuses to accept the burden? This state must look right sharp here or the power the people have in our system will turn and become only another prop for the system of bOFsism. The etate Is in a fair way of being tun by the minority, and the reason for this Is that the politicians are un loading so much work onto the voters that the latter give up in disgust and ltt the results go by the board. The active few those who for one reason or another can afford to stay "on the Job" then take charge and run things. Where does "popular government" then come in? I do not say this because I am opposed to our-system of Kovern- ment in this state, but that something must be done to impress upon the minds of the citizens or the State of Oregon the importance of registering and after having registered, the importance of going to the polls and votirjg and voting Intelligently. It la almost an impossibility for the average eitiaen who haa to work for a livelihood in a line of employment that does not bring him In contact with the needs of the state and the workings of the Btate government, and who does not have time to study and figure out tne law tnat he is required to pass upon at the polls. The last general election of this state was a fair sample of the ballet sheet that a voter has confronting him when he goes to the polls to vote. That is one reason that the voters of this state voted "No" all the way down the line upon measures that were necessary for the common wealth, and some were measures that the Legislature passed in 1913 session and were referred to the .people in our special election last Fall and were passed by the people by a Jarge ma jority. This condition does not exist in Ore gon alone, but in other states that have adopted the popular form of gov ernment. Take Ohio for instance. The license system was fastened on that state by a referendum vote of the peo pie, supposedly. Yet only about one fifth of the normal vote of the state was sufficient to write this provision into the state constitution. By the same method less than one-third served to defeat woman sufferage. Take New Jersey. In their primaries in 1912 to decide who should be Senator. Con gressman Hughes was the choice, al though he received only about one-nfth of the nominal vote of the state, These are merely recent instances of a condition which Is practically uni versal, u'lia. "stay at home vote" la growing constantly larger and minority ruio la coming to be the common thin Of course you might say that it is men's business to go to the polls and vote every time there is an election, but in practice this does not hold good. There are ao many intricacies about registering that it requires a reason able amount uf a citizen's time to at tend to these political details. Thus it is that thousand of business men and the best people do not get around to vote, and the minority decides things for them. The power of "the stay-at- home vote" is still potentially there. The citizens of Oregon should look upon registering ana voting as a duty of vital importance to their welfare whether they are taxpayers or not, for all good citizens look forward to th time when they will hold property, for nothing so affects and engages the imagination of mankind as the right to hold property and exercise domain over it to the exclusion of others. And aa good citizens it is our duty to get out and- register and take a peep Into the workings of our Oregon system, and not let the minority rule. RALPH W. KARRIS. IIIUIIKK I.lCElVSKl KKWKK l0S Citizen Believes It Well 10 Get Hid of Most noKa-ia city. PORTLAND. April 19 (To the Kdi- tor.)-r-Jn the name of suffering human ity, why doesn't the City Council get busy and Impose, a license so hign that it would get rid of about 90 per cent of the dog population of this city? How long would we stand for hogs. cows and horses to run at large, and what is the difference? If there is any. it is in favor of the latter for tliov do rest at nights, while the dog roams during the day over your norctiea. lawns and gardens, and howls under your window at nights. If you lived in our neighborhood. where It seems that every other fam ily keeps from one to three curs, you would feel as we do about it. To impose a license of 125 on male and $50 on female dogs would elimi nate about 90 per cent of the mongrel stock that ia now running at large. Owners of blooded stock should take no offense at paying such a license when it is considered that they real-, is from Ma to $100 for certain breeds of dogs when they are but a few months old. From a humane standpoint, we think it far better to cholorform a dog than to keep him muaxled during the hot months of the year. In this letter I am voicing the sentiments of 30 or 40 of as good citizens as we have, all residing in a radius ot u few blocks. AVe hope that the City Council will take the same view of the situation as we do, as, God knows, it is a se rious matter. None of ua wants to be the next one to be carried away by the bite of a rabid dog. A CITIZEN. . Again the Bridge Approach. PORTLAND. April l..(To the Edi tor.). To paraphrase Mr. llyland's lit. terview this morning, I regret to note that he fails to see the bridge approach situation In its true relation to the public good." And I regret to note that in attempting to show that the Cnion-avenue approach is more expen sive by 181.000 than the Derby. avenue approach he charges up against Union avenue, in five items alone, over $58,. 000 which ia paid for by the abutting property owners and of which not one cent comes out of the bridge fund. An analysis of all his figures sim ply confirms the estimates of Harring ton Ac wauueii, snowing Union avenue is the least expensive route. The fact that more than to per cent of the pea pie of Portland would be better served by way of Union avenue, he does not even disc-UBS. and the facj that the question of railway rights of way Is not in Issue at all in- selecting the approach is' now so fully understood that it ia no longer a matter tor fur. ther controversy. CHARLES B. MOORES. l.-t Losjaera Whip Meafeo. STELLA, Wash.. April 18. (To the Editor.) .Why all of the excitement and expense of sending such a fleet to Mexico? Hvo , hundred unemployed loggers from tne Mate or Washingto could whip the federals and rebels also, and also help conditions ln the state at the same time, as there would not do so many unemployed men around for the Summer. Telegraph orape-juice isryan. A LOGGER. ORIWO.V. On the brink of the Pacific Rippling waters at her feet. Endless scenes of verdant beauty, uiant treea our vision greet. Over all the golden sunshine. Smiling 'neath the azure sky. Never fairer picture painted To delight the human ey-e. Leila Goldomlth. Twenty-five Years Ago From The Oregonian of April 50. lSs. New York. April 19 Fire swept the east bank of North River today from Fifty-ninth to Sixty-fifth streets. It destroyed more than $1,51)0.000 of prop erty belonging to the New York Cen tral Railroad, and the total loss is esti mated at 13.335.000. Several lives were lost and many persona injured. Seattle, April 19 The Gity Council tonight elected O. D. Buttertield Chief of Police vice J. C. Mitchell, removed. Corvallia. April IS A larce and en thusiastic meeting of citizens was hold last evening in the parlors of Hamil ton, Job fc Co., for the curuose of tak ing active steps towards brinrinc water into the city for manufacturing pur poses. A committee was appointed to draft articles of Incorporation of the Corvallis Water Ditch Company. Hon. ... n. McKiroy and w. A. Wells todav purchased from Sol King- 175 acres of land one-mile west of the city at 190 per acre. The present owners will plat the land in live and 10-acre tracts. Colfax. April 19 Mr. and Mrs. fharloa S. Voorhees arrived from Washington this morning to make Colfax their home. Brownsville. April 19. The Woolen Mills Company organised here today with the following ofhuers; President, W. B- Kirk; secretary and treasurer. Peter Hume; superintendent. J. W. Jager. Arrangements are consummated by which an abundance of Dure water will be conducted to the top of Mount Tabor. 11 is proposed to pump water from the famous Paradise Springs into a reser voir on the highest point. Dr. R. G. Rex, who left this city about two years ago for San Francisco, dis appeared shortly after his arrival there and nothing has bean heard from him by his friends since. Herbert Bradley. F. C. Heed. R. C. Campbell. A. H. Crook. Lewis Russell and E. P. Thompson have organized the Oregon Stone Company, which haa pur chased Mr. Thompson's sandstone quarry at Mach'a Arch, Curry County. D. R. Davis, superintendent of con struction of the Western Union Tele graph Company, arrived yetserday to superintend the bringing Ln and con necting of the new copper wire con necting Portland with San Francisco. Rev. Alfred Kummer lectured to a large audience la6t evening in Taylor Street M. K. Church. S. Barr'a horse, while hitched in front of Atkinson oi Wakefleld'a yesterday, broke a plate glass window. George Sunderland, the 21-year-old son of Dairy Commissioner Sunderland, cut a deep gash in his foot while cut ting a tree on Sauvte's Island yester day. S. A. Wood says he yesterday paid for 90 tons of rails for a motor line to West Portland, and they are to be de livered In 60 daya. The City Council last evening had a breezy discussion of the site for the hew city hall. Mayor De Lashmutt said the Market block could not be used for the purpose. Half a Century Ago From The Oregenian of April 20, i4. A correspondent of the Washington Statesman, writing from Colvllle, says a Mr. Sinkllghter. an employe of Hud son's Bay Company, arrived at the lat ter place from the Kootenai and Colum bia Head mines, reporting that rich diggings have been struck, having made as high as J-S per day with ptck. shovel and pan. Chicago. April 17 Letters in regard to the capture of Fort Billow give even a more appalling account of the flendUhnesa of the rebels than the ac counts telegraphed. Many wounded were ehot in the hospitals; the re mainder were driven out and the hos pital burned. On the morning after the battle the rebels went on the held to Shoot negroes who had not died from previous wounds. Many were ordered into line and inhumanly ehot down. Of 350 colored troops not more than 60 or 60 escaped, and not a single ottlcer in command of the colored troops sur vives. New Y"ork. April 15. Dispatches from headquarters of the Army of the Poto mao state that a party or rebel cavalry made an attack on Bristow Station yes terday and were drtven off after a brief skirmish. The mail train with General Grant on board passed a few minutes afterwards. It ia supposed it waa the intention of the rebels to capture him. John S. Caldwell writes from Hell- gate. Bitter Root Valley, under date or January 31: "On the 21th inst. 21 of the vigilance committee visited Hell gate and hung . Skinner. John Cooper and Alex Carter, and on the 5th they hung (ieorge Shears and Robert Zachary. At Fort Owen they hung William Graves, alias Whisky BUI, and In December and January they hung 21 of the rascals. The committee made their appearance unexpectedly and had no trouble in getting their vie- tima. They came to the house where I waa stopping and got George Shears and hung him in 15 minutes. The com mittee bury none they hang, ao tne citizens have to bury the dead." Amonar the passengers on the steamer Wilson G. Hunt from the Cascades last evening waa a poor woman with a fam ily of small children that had oeen furnished with a free ride from Uma tilla City by the O. S. N.' Co.'a line on their way from Grand Rondo to Salem. Thev were received on board the P. T. Company's steamer Senator, where they obtalned supper, and win proceea up the Willamette this morning. Charlea Barrett has received Godey'a Ladv's Hook for April, an admirable number, which every lady will be glad to see. Aband of young cattle passed through the city and crossed the river yester- i.-, i i .' He -'tiling iffiu'l eats of the Cascades. They hail from the Long Tom country. A very attractive gas burner may be seen at the office of C. H. Myers, plum ber, on First street. The novelty con sists in its motion, and being set with four jets, it works aa a circular venti lator, forming an admirable light for show windows. News-Value of Advertising Readers of The OregonTan who make a practice of studying the ad vertising can testify to the remark able amount of interesting and re liable Information they acquire. It Is a form of education which many readers follow quite uncon sciously hut none the less to their distinct advantage. A period of fifteen minutes a day devoted to reading of advertise ments Is as surely productive of re. suits as Is the same amount of time devoted to reading ln Dr. Kliot'a famous five feet of books and per haps the results are more immedi ately practical and helpful. Not to take advantage of adver tising is to neglect a plain duty to oneself.