10 TIIE MORNING OREGONIAW. TUESDAY, APRIL . 18, 1916. m$B PORTLAND, OREGON. Entered at Portland (Oregon) Fotofflce itecand-claM mail matter. Subscription Rates Invariably in advance: t Rv f ait k rafly. Sunday Included, one year fft.OO Daily, Sunday lnr-luiied. six month! 4.-.1 Laily, Sunday lnciu-led, three montha... iJally, Sunday lncluoed, one rnoolh liiii.v. without Sunday, one year Dally, without Sunday, six months 3 .:" Imilv with.mr Smhiimv Ihrca montha. ... 1 Iai;v. without Sunday, one mon in . . . . -0 Weeklv cm . vear ............ 1 fcundav. one vear U.5 Sunday and "Weekly, one year.......... St.OO Hv rarrler I Daily, Sunday included, one year xai.y, eunuay niciuueu. one moniu How to Kemit Send DoBtofliee money or ier, express order or personal check on your loral bank. Stamp, coin or currency are at sender a risk. Give poatomee aaur.ees iu lull, includinje county and state. I'oMare Kutm l:! to 16 pages. 1 cent: 18 to a-' iatfes. '1 i-ents: 34 to 4 ut-s. 3 cents: 6 to tio Daees 4 cents: 62 to 76 pages, 6 cents: 78 to pages, 6 cents. Foreign postage, double rates. Ka-lrrn Iiiiine Office Verree & Conk l!n. i;rutiswi( k building. New York: Yerree A Conkiin. Merer building, Chicago. fan Francisco representative, II. J. Bidwell, 7--Market street. PORTLAND, TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 1916, AN EYE-OPENER. "When the Portland business men visit, the Takima Valley next week they will without -doubt be profoundly impressed by the progress and wealth of that section of the state of Wash ington. It is a rich and smiling: coun try. Its people are hospitable and friendly. It is all right to promote neighborly terms with them. The Ore gonian would not for a moment dis courage the enterprise of those who have promoted the excursion. But it now seems opportune to point out that unless certain conditions are called to public attention this event is likely to be productive of little more than Oh's! and Ah's! of admiration, cordial handshakes and fond good-byes. The truth is that the jobbers of Portland have not a - look-in on the trade of much of the Yakima Valley. Nor can they secure a share of that business by mere promotion of ac quaintance. As the crow flies it is about 125 miles from Portland to North Yakima. As the crow flies it is about thesame distance from Seattle to North Yak ima. Yet the shortest route-by rail1 from Portland to North Yakima is 320 miles, while the rail distance from Seattle to North. Yakima is only 163 miles. Naturally there is not a parity of freight rates. If the Portland Jobber would compete with the Seattle Jobber for Yakima trade he must quote lower prices for the same quality of goods or absorb the freight differential Even then he is handicapped by slow ness of delivery incident to longer haul. - There ought to be direct rail con nection between this city and North Yakima. The obstacles to -construction are not nearly so great as those which have been overcome by the Northern Pacific in. connecting North Yakima with Puget Sound. Topo graphically, the Yakima Valley Is Portland's trade territory. Practical ly, it is Puget Sound's, despite an in tervening mountain range. If one will examine the entire length of the North Bank railroad from Portland to Spokane 377 miles he will discover not a single feeder for that road extended into territory served by either the Great Northern or Northern Pacific, the two railroads which own the North Bank. There is but one "Washington feeder for that great and expensively constructed rail road. It is the line to Goldendale. From Goldendale to North Yakima it is about fifty miles in a straight line. Sixty to seventy-five miles of new con struction would give Portland direct rail connection with North Yakima, It is a logical extension. It is one that would have long ago been built had the North Bank been an inde pendent line. If built it would put the Yakima Valley more than 120 miles nearer Portland. It would open that country to the competition of Portland merchants. It would traverse a good country and it would undoubt edly put the Goldendale branch on a paying basis, which now it is not. Yet, so far as the public knows, It la not even projected. Since the North Bank railroad was constructed the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul has extended its system to the Coast. That railroad, young as it is, has not neglected the construction of feeders. In building them it has paid little or no attention to whether those feeders invade territory already erved by another railroad or two. But the North Bank road sits con tentedly among the castellated hills of the Columbia gorge and takes Jhe crumbs the Northern Pacific and the Great Northern choose to throw it. The people of Portland, we are con fident, are not ungrateful to the North Bank Railroad for the business it has brought to this city. But they have expected, and they have a right to expect, more of it than It has pro vided. If the Portland excursionists will bear these facts in mind when looking upon the wonders of the Yakima Val ley they will see the commercial folly of permitting', without protest, the oc cupancy of a tremendously favored railroad route for a purpose which primarily seems to be the exclusion of other users and not development of traffic. They will likely return as mis sionaries in a great cause. DixosAnts. The little coterie of old ladies of both sexes which persists in adhering to peace-at-any-price dreams has delved into natural history for sus tenance and unearthed the armored dinosaur as its emblem. Where, oh w here, are the dinosaurs of yesteryear? they cry. Despite its heavy armor the creature has passed on. Whereupon the militarists conduct a reconnois sance into natural history and discover the dodo bird. It could not run or fly or fight and it, too. Is extinct. So New York is regaled with pacifist parades headed by replicas of armored dino saurs or with preparedness processions bearing the Impotent dodobird. About the' worst thing the pacifists could have done was to open the chap, ters of natural history. The eternal strife for survival began with the dawn of animal existence and continued re lentlessly through each succeeding form. As for the armored dinosaurs, were they not masters of all they sur veyed until a more powerful form came to claim the feeding grounds? The armored dinosaurs made life miser able for the unarmored species. They drove their unprepared brothers into the waters for safety, while a third species maintained a precarious earthly existence by developing fleet limbs. The armored dinosaurs survived for millions of years after their pacifist neighbors had become extinct. If these powerful brutes and their successors finally perished was it not because Nature developed a new power in the world the power of ideation, the power to hurl a stone or wield a club. Now the brainy, predominating form of animal life continues the life- long struggle. Even now the armored dinosaurs of Europe are fighting ove the feeding places while the unarmed dodos of America, perceiving that great expanses of water may not pro tect them forever, are seeking to equl themselves against the new menace o the distant horizon. WHAT ARE THEY THERE FOR? The American troops have gone into Mexico, under explicit instructions to avoid exciting the resentment of th native population, and especially admonished to have no conflict with the Carranza troops. The pacific at titude of the President and the Wa Department is thus reflected in paragraph from an Associated Press account of the fight at Parral: Major Tompkins was still averse t fighting anything but a defensive manner against this force, since every officer wh has entered Mexico with the punitive ex pedltion has had It Impressed upon him that clashes with the troops of the de facto government muat be avoided. . But when the United States troops acting in strict accordance with the! orders, retreated before the disorderly and belligerent Mexicans, and fired at them only through the necessity of self-preservation, we find this: General Funston said tonight that whll Major Tompkins undoubtedly acted In ac cordance with his best Judgment In retreat ins. l: regretted mat no naa not mane a stand on account of the bad effect the story will have on the Mexican people, who naturally will regard the Incident as an American defeat. Dear, dear! We wonder what ought to be done with a General who thinks the soldiers are sent to Mexico to fight, and not to run. Court-martialed of course! WHICH T The esteemed Post-Intelligencer, of Seattle, is disposed to indulge in t measure of mild sarcasm over the lat- est Portland project for participation in Alaskan trade. It has this: Portland ha, nothing to lose except money, and everything to gain except trade by such an enterprise, and, further. It has no commerce to lose to Seattle by reprisals. Snugly located 125 miles up the Columbia River from the sea, the city Is In a position to look the trade of the world In tho eye and fondly wish for It. No plan Is too ambitious, no trade too comprehensive for Portland to wish for, or Indeed try for, if it so elect. Like niendower, the Portlandera can call spirits from the vasty deep: but will they come when they do call for them? It may be said that, if Portland de cides to-' risk its own money in establishment and operation of an Alaska steamship line, it will be Port land's loss, or gain, as the case may be, and no other's. We suspect that until Portland makes up its mind thoroughly that its salvation commer cially lies within itself, no great for ward movement toward Alaska trade, nor other ocean-borne traffic, will be made. It is interesting also to get the Se attle view as to the disadvantage of a port situated 125 miles from the sea. It is to be inferred that Seattle now regards itself as an ocean port, and not as a city snugly located ISO miles from the sea, on a long and deep in let, which takes its waters through Puget Sound from the Pacific. It is strange that when it comes to consideration of the question of parity of railroad rates with Astoria Seattle chooses to look upon itself as an inland por and when it comes to a definition of its geographical re lations with Portland, Seattle imme diately assumes the status of an ocean port. POWER OF PCBLJC OPINION. By mail to every newspaper editor of the country come daily the cam paign offerings of the two parties to the threatened railroad strike. The transportation brotherhoods have a publicity bureau at Cleveland; the railroads have a "well-organized press agency. Each is prolific with argu ments supporting its side of the con troversy. This evidence that employes and employers now realize that public opinion generally directs the outcome of a labor controversy leads us to in quire why public opinion should not be formally made the arbiter in la bor disputes, instead of being left to formulate in haphazard way. That is the method in Canada and it Is successful. There neither side pledges itself or is compelled to abide by the result of the hearing. But strikes must await inquiry and effort at settlement by a commission, which Is a conciliator as well as Judge. When one side or the other will not yield to formal findings, then public opinion ultimately brings it to time. As American employers and em ployes admit they need the support of public opinion, it is time the Govern ment stepped in and gave to them in Justly measured doses. AN OrT-DATED OBJECTION. The principal objection to the per petual grant of public land to water power companies is that these compa nies would include in their charges an income on this property which had cost them nothing and also on the increase in its value from year to year. That assumption Is directly contrary to pres ent practice of public service commis sions involving public utilities for ratemaking purposes. It is contrary to the principles followed by the Ore gon Commission, as defined by J. P. Newell, its consulting engineer, in an article published by the Engineering News. Two basic principles must be fol lowed In the valuation of public utili ties, says Mr. Newell. These are: Tho "fair value" of property devoted to puM:c service Is the highest value that can be found for the property in any use, publlo or private. The values arising from privileges granted by the public for the sole purpose of serving the public cannot De made the basis ox charges against the public. One of the "privileges granted by the public" is the right to condemn property, which the Western Water power Conference proposed that the Government give to power companies. That right is not a right to acquire absolute ownership; it is a right only to apply property to a public use. The land used can only be included in the company's investment at actual cost; no unearned increment can attach to it. Were power companies permitted to acquire powersites and right of way over public land free of cost under ex isting Federal law, they would not be permitted to add anything on that ac count to the value of their investment as a basis for rates. The same state ment is true of municipal franchises to such companies. Mr. Nev.-ell says of all these rights: They are giver solely for the purpose of enabling the grantee to serve the public They cannot be used except in public service. Thy are not granted for private ue, and any profit arising from them Is purely inci dental. There is a. growing tendency among; courts and commissions to deny any fran chise value In rate regulation, except under unusual circumstances. This being; the practice which courts and commissions show a growing ten dency to follow and which many com missions already follow, there is no cause for alarm lest free use of public land become the basis of inflated valu ations on which rates are to be paid. If corporations choose to inflate capi talization on this score, they are free to do so, but cannot harm the con sumer, for utility commissions ignore capital stock and bonds, going behind them to the actual property repre sented by them in order to ascertain the value upon which rates should be paid. The arguments in favor of Federal leasing and against perpetual right-of-way grants apply to a condition of af fairs which no longer exists, and are therefore obsolete. They would have been valid fifteen or twenty years ago, but are so no longer. OCR INCOMPETENT COOKS. Senator Smoot must have received his housekeeping bills for the pasf month or else his breakfast had not agreed with him when he arose In the Senate the other day to remark upon the incompetence of American house keepers. His observations were not gentle. "It is a crime," he exclaimed, "and is wicked in the sight of God, to have the products of the farm made next to useless by poor cooking. Tens of thousands of homes are ruined by helpless and ignorant housekeepers, and the American garbage can is the fattest in alr-vthe world." Legislation should follow. Plainly enough the abuse has reached a point where something must bj done. It is inconceivable that the Senator will look for adjustment solely through publication of his strictures in the Congressional Record. Why not an Interstate cooking commission, a sys tem of Federal control or compulsory service in the kitchen for all able. bodied women between the ages of eighteen and forty-five? A Federal bureau and a secretary of kitchens in the Cabinet should be made a part of the plan. Make it a felony to burn the pudding or spill the beans. No National problem is in greater need of solution unless it is that of getting something to cook. PREPAREDNESS IN" 186S. In these days, when preparedness for perils from abroad has become the watchword of the Nation, it is inter esting to recall the spirit with which the people turned from the Civil War to face like perils which then menaced them. During the first year of the war there was constant dread of in tervention by Great Britain and France on behalf of the Confederacy, and on January 15, 1862, J. W. Jolui son. Assistant Adjutant-General of Washington Territory, issued a proc- amation, headed: Paternal vfcilance is the price of liberty. To arms! To arms!! To arms!!! After announcing the danger of war with England and France, it reads: The storm Is gathering! Let us then look well to it that it does not burst upon our heads while we are unprepared!! Let us not remain quietly a: our firesides and permit the ruthless savage to be turned upon us. "Wei: do we know it has ever been the policy of those nations to arouse the merciless ace, whose inhumanity is too well known to require comment. Let us then thoroughly organize the mlli tia. receive arms and equipments and be ready, at a moment's warning, to defend our nomes like men. He who prate of love of country and will not place himself in readiness, in time of danger, to defend It. Is unworthy of .that proud name we all bear, American citizens. There was no thought then of in ability to withstand one foreign na tion or of warning American citizens not to exercise their rights lest they offend that nation. Though the coun try was engaged in civil war and though the weak settlements in Wash ngton were surrounded by hostile savages, they did not flinch, but, in pired by the sentiment of the last paragraph we have quoted, they en rolled themselves for defense against rebels, Indians and two foreign foes at .the same time. The spirit of 76 was still alive from 1861 to 1865. It may be needed now. EFFECTS OF PEACE ON BUSINESS. One of the most remarkable devel pments of the trade boom growing out of the war has been the enormous increase In production of pig iron. The total . for March, 1916, -was sixty-one per cent above that for March, 1915; nd the Iron Age estimates that, if this rate of output should continue, the year will show a total of 40,000,000 ons. This would be two and one-half times the production in 1901, the year in which the steel trust was formed. and would be six times the production of 1887, the year when most railroad mileage was constructed. As the out- ut of the steel works Is contracted far ahead, there is a good prospect that this record will be made. In discussing the probable effect of peace on business conditions, the Financial Chronicle does not indorse James J. Hill's prediction of depres sion in our industries following the cessation of war orders and continuing while Europe slowly and painfully re covers from the war. The Chronicle foresees a possibility that "the loss of his foreign business may be made good by a greater home demand and that In such revival of the domestic inquiry our railroad transportation systems would play the most prom inent part. It says: It would not be strange If the railroads should now regain their former position hrough a great augmentation In their con- umptlve requirements of Iron and steel and other products. After a long period of hrlnklng revenue, they have, since last September, been enjoying phenomenal ex panslon In revenues. Current returns are howinr 20 to 25 per cent gain In gross revenue and in excess of 50 per cent gain in nt revenues. This puts them in position to spend money with greater freedom and they have consequently been giving orders latterly on a more liberal scale than for a long time past. These orders will go to fill tho void to be created by the withdrawal of fcrelgn orders on the ending- of (he war. By thus filling the void in demand for steel, the railroads would help the country more easily to undergo that readjustment of commodity values which will follow the falling off in foreign purchases and the reopening of foreign supplies. Prices of metals have doubled and trebled in the last fifteen months, while chemicals have risen to. four and more times their former value. These will come down, but consumption of steel may be main tained at a high figure not only by railroad demand but by exports for the rebuilding of railroads, bridges and factories in Europe. Continued activity in the steel industry will re act favorably on those industries which supply it with raw material and, by sustaining the consuming capacity of those -who are engaged in steel-making, on all other Industries. Nor is the opinion that peace will be followed by the dumping in this coun try of low-priced, competitive mer chandise from Europe shared by Alex, ander Dana Noyes, financial editor of Scribner's. He believes that labor will not be cheap in Europe, but that the Labor party will hold the balance in the British Parliament and in dictat ing wages. He quotes a symposium of "practical German business men" as showing them to be unanimous in pre- dieting that "to enable the people to meet the heavy taxes imposed for war expenses, wages of labor must be either maintained or advanced, in spite of the fact that they are now un precedented! high." If these predictions should be veri fied, the "pauper labor of Europe" may prove to be a thing of the past, and the United States may be able to compete with Europe on equal terms as to labor cost, while it will have an advantage in greater use of labor saving machinery. This is one of many economic results of the war which it would devolve upon a tariff commis sion to study out. WHY WOMEN LIVE LONGER. pr. Albert U. Burr has set out to explain why women live longer than men, and he accomplishes his pur pose with one sweeping broadside di rected against use of tobacco. If women live longer than men it is be cause they do not smoke, he tells us, and by way of laying a foundation for his charges seems to prove, with the aid of United States census reports, that women do live longer than men. According to these figures, men come into the world in a preponderance of number, there being 1076 males of five years of age to every 1000 females in. the United States. This lead is maintained by a narrow margin until the highest-age groups are reached. At seventyehe women have overcome the handicap and are thirty-three in the majority out of every 1000 of pop ulation. At the 100 mark there are 1576 women to every 1000 men. In the state of Massachusetts it is shown that of thirty-five centenarians thirty were women. With these figures as a foundation. Dr. Burr lays it all up to the physio logical effects of tobacco, which is de scribed as inducing deleterious changes in the cells and tissues of the vascular system. Thus the subtle toxin of nico tine brings on cardiovascular presenil Ity in those who are addicted to to bacco. The fact that tobacco acts as a slow poison, requiring long years in which to perform its deadly work, is held as its chief danger, since the warnings are not heeded by the hap lees victims. In this the doctor is probably cor rect. It would perhaps be rather dif ficult to alarm a devotee of the fra grant and soothing weed by warning him that he might live to be only ninety-seven instead of 100 unless he fore swore the allurements of tobacco However, the remedy suggested is not unreasonable or drastic. Dr. Burr would not legislate against tobacco, but he urges that its perils be heralded broadcast and that teachers, preachers, fathers and those to whom the younger generations look for moral conduct, set the goodly example of abstinence. One night, when George W. Peck was Governor, he was the principal speaker at a temperance rally in Wisconsin town. On the speaker's desk was the customary glass of wa ter. At one of his periods he raised the glass, brimming full, and discov ered a fly floating on the surface. He could not flip it out, and he did the next best thing. That raised a titter that grew into a roar of applause, which Peck met in his genial way by explaining that a man from Mil waukee could not take a drink of wa ter without first blowing the foam from the top. If Villa is really dead, his identity should be established beyond doubt and his body should be buried deep with a great weight over it. If this be not done, either bogus Villas will plague Mexico for years or his grave will become a shrine to every bandit With the wireless carrying bulletins between churches, the saints would have difficulty in reviving the hermit industry. If a modern Simeon Stylites were to roost on a column in the desert, his meditations would be dis turbed by an S. O. S. call. The dignity of the United States is disturbed by a 16-year-old Greek boy wtjn smuggled himself into this coun try and he may be deported and the United States lose what in a few years would be a good citizen. If report be true that more than a million Armenians have been killed by Turks "through ill treatment and star vation, one need have no doubt which side the Almighty Is on in this war. New York actors may attend a mili tary training camp, 1000 strong. If each could be provided with the full dress regalia of a Lieutenant-General the plan could not fail. The Germans who talk of blowing up the ships interned in the United States forget that, while the dyna miters are busy, Uncle Sam may be busy also. To do away with warrant shaving, county employes of the lesser class will be paid twice a month, which is a good way to overcome an evil. Portland's reputation as the best baseball city on the Coast must be maintained today by making the rec ord attendance of 20,001. The only means the Greek Cabinet can find of holding its Job is to ad journ Parliament before Venizelos gets control. The man whose will gives widow and divorced wife equal shares did the best he could to square the record. Gifford Pinchot was given a medal yesterday for "distinguished "services" in stirring up all kinds of trouble. He's an old grouch of a boss who goes to the game today and does not let the "boys" off. Umbrellas are barred at Twenty fourth and Vaughn. This Is not a hoodoo year. A bootlegger easily is found, guilty, but with the man who pays rent it is different. Villareal Is the new revolutionist to succeed Villa dead. Mr. Beals, you are all right, and the fans will prove It. The first rose has bloomed and the season is on. The Evening Telegram is "fair, fat and forty." Uncle Sam, Coroner, must first see the corpse. Poor Grandma! ernoon. She dies this aft- She'll be an old-time opening day: Gleams Through the Mist By Dean Collins. THE DAY OF DAYS. Look at the throng, full of Jubilant cusses Hiding on streetcars and jitneys and busses. Who are they? What are they? Where are they heading? - See the excitement a-spreadLng and spreading. Until the whole city seems headed one way, And humanity flows to the ball park t today. Oh, pity the chap who must stick to his labors While all of his friends and compan ions and neighbors Have pulled down the roll-tops and put on their lids And skidded away upon frolicsome skids. To join the mad mob of exuberant screechers Who perch on the grandstand and bask on the bleachers. The poets may burble and babble and sing About the sweet fiowrets that bloom in the Spring, But say, there was never a lovelier crop That springs from each store and each ' office and shop And blossoms in all the available room Today in the ball park the fans are in bloom. " i Doc Anderson, Dcidrick and Polltz and Pangle Are mixed mid the fans in tumultuous tangle; Bill Strandbourg is out with the maniac band; The voice of Ed Werlein Is heard in the land; And, betting the Beavers a sure pen nant-taker. Looms over the others Commissioner Baker, John Coffey is there in the Tanks of the loyal; Doc Emerson's caught in the Joyful turmoil; Bob Stevens is out and Dow Walker is there; Doc Smith has forsaken his medical lair; Judge Gatens and Berg are inviting all comers To join the mad fans such as Stubling and Sommers. Gadzooks! I could jingle like this for a year Announcing the fans as today they ap pear. A-thronging the street and a-throng- ing the ground. And shooting and scooting and tooting around. Pervading the landscape till every man In all the wide city seems out as a fan. I may say at random, if fandom alone Can sport the high nest whither Vict'ry has flown And bring the bird back just like well trained retrievers By jove, it looks good for the hopes of the Beavers; For it seems everybody is out and aflame To start things off right for the open lng game. "Sir," said the courteous office boy, you Know there is a baseball game this afternoon, and " "Well?" I retorted, coldly. "Well, you know my grandmother ' began the C. O. B. "Aha!" I snarled, sinking my talon in his throat. "You expect to put over that grandmother's funeral gag on me do you?" "No, sir," said he, with - an upright expression. I merely wished to 4ell you that grandmother went through my pockets last night and swiped my passes to the opening game, and she and grandpa refuse to give them up But he got no further, for I had gone to beg the Sporting Ed for another pass for the courteous office boy, who was able to put a new front on the grand mother myth. SOLEMN" THOUGHT. With Eastern hats all in array Suppose It rains on Easter day. THAT SHORTEST POEM CONTEST. To Editor In reply to your invita tion concerning knowledge of a shorter verse than Miss; Kiss; Bliss; I suggest: Matrimony; Alimony. Hoping you will not deem it a cyn ical ending of the "bliss," I remain. M. D. L. P. S. I am not a spinster. (M. D. L. is getting warm, but she still misses the shortest poem in the language. Unless it Is guessed soon. we fear that we shall be obliged to tell it ourselves. Ed Note.) NAMES IS NAMES STILL. Lincoln Jones was lost one day; They searched the river's brink Till he was found, then cried, "Hooray! "We've' found the missing Link." When Glenn, In error, at a pin, Then all the solemn medic men, Consulting, said: "Let's now begin To go a-hunting through the Glenn." An altruistic furniture engineer came up the other day ana put tne castors back on our office chair. Now it rolls so easy that we can't indite a noble line on our typewriter without giving ourselves a shove that shoots us clear out into the telegraph room. Moral: Handsome is as handsome does; or, a rolling chair and its occu pant are soon started. Penalty for Bigamy. THE DALLES, Or.. April 16. (To the Editor.) (1) What is the penalty for bigamy? (2) Is it necessary .for a person mar rying a bigamist to take any legal steps to free themselves? (1) Imprisonment of not less than six months nor more than one' year In the County Jail or of not less than one year nor more than four years in the Penitentiary. A fine of not less than $300 nor more than $1000 may be levied in some cases instead of County Jail sentences. (2) If bigamy is proved the second marriage is automatically , made null. To make a record of the fact the court will always grant an official annul ment of marriage. Formal annulment should always be obtained by a party to a presumably illegal marriage if marriage to another is contemplated. UNJUST ASSIMPTIOS IS TAKES Newspaper 1'nJnstIy Construes Vote on McLemore Resolution. VANCOUVER, Wash., April 16. (To the Editor.) In the Portland Journal, in the editorial, "A Crazy Leadership," I notice the following sentence: "The 102 Republican Congressmen who voted for the McLemore resolu tion wanted to take no chances on war with Germany." Now, is it true that 102 Republican Congressmen voted for the McLemore resolution? Is it not a fact that the vote in Congress was on the tabling of the resolution? And is it not a fact that many Congressmen who voted against tabling the resolution statod that they were strongly opposed to the resolution, but that they did not want to stifle debate upon it?- If these are the facts, is it just and right to say that these Congressmen voted for the resolution, when they were opposed to the resolution, but merely wanted to have a debate upon it? It appears to me also that the edi torial alluded to, and other editorials that have appeared in the Journal, intimate and insinuate in an extremely bitter and unjust manner that every one who sincerely believes that thi3 Nation should uphold its sacred rights is a blood-thirsty monster and wants to "cram war" onto their fellow citi zens. As every sensible person knows, we do not want war any more than Presi dent Lincoln wanted war in 1861, but we do firmly insist that the rights of this Nation be maintained and the lives of its citizens be protected. We do not ask any of our citizens to waive or neglect any of their undisputed rights; we want them all to be freely exercised and maintained inviolate, now and at all times. That is what we insist upon not one jot more, not one whit less. We will fight all com promises on this proposition and all cowardly McLemore resolutions. GLENN N. RAUCK. LITTER 'OS COLUMBIA HIGHWAY People Who Mar Beauty Should Be Punished, Says Writer. PORTLAND, April 17. (To the Edi tor.) Can nothing be done to stop the indiscriminate throwing of paper, pic nic boxes, tin cans and other litter along the Columbia -River Highway? The conditions along the road last year were disgraceful. Picnic parties after occupying beautiful spots would leave behind them quantities of paper boxes, paper napkins, empty tin cans and other picnic rubbish with never a thought as to how it looked or how objectionable it was to other pleasure seekers who had some sense of decency and refinement. The- comments made by many of our visiting tourists were far from pleas ing, and the disgraceful condition of affairs last Summer was not flattering to our civic pride. e have invited the world to come to see our wonderful highway, and what opinion will they have of us as a community when they see such evi denccs of vulgarity? I have seen some of the finest drives in Europe, and along only a quarter of a mile of our highway I have no ticed more rubbish than I did along miles and miles of Europe's highways. If a tew arrests were made and real punishment meted out (Jail sentences not fines), then this pernicious prac tice would stop. GEORGE P. DEKUM. I Range of Ksval Guns. PORTLAND. April 17. (To the Ed itor.) Please inform me the total dis tance 12, 14 and 15-inch guns wil shoot, mounted on a battleship. A READER. It is difficult to give a specific an swer to this question without creating a, false impression. There is a differ ence between maximum range and ef- lectlve range and the danger to or wear on a gun is considered in putting it to use. Furthermore, individual guns of the same caliber vary. An ef fective range in a battle at sea be tween ships may be much shorter than an effective range in bombardment of fortifications. Generally speaking a rifted cannon will carry obout one mile to the inch ot caliber up to 12 inches. Experience in the European war indi cates that guns of larger caliber may send a projectile proportionately far ther. Dunkirke was bombarded at distance of 22 miles. Yet when the British ship Lion, carrying 13.z-inch guns attacked the Blucher she waited until about eight and one-half miles distant. Origin of Saylntrs. PORTLAND. April 17 (To the Edi tor.) (1) Kindly inform me which is correct: "Will you have more potato? or "Will you have more potatoes?" (2) Also, if the expression is "Mad as a hadder," or"'Mad as a hatter." and where did the expression originate? (3) Also, if the expression is "In the nick of time," and where did this originate? A READER. (1) Either way if referring to a dish prepared of rotatoes; use the plural if referring to two or more potatoes. served whole. (2) "Mad as a hatter" is correct. The term originated in England. The com parison was probably ironical when first invented and was designed as a forceful expression to denote extreme anger. Its present meaning is Insanity or dementia. (3) "In the nick of time" is simply an often-used phrase, of plain meaning when one knows that "nick" may bo defined as "the critical moment or point." Ground Rent for Garage. OSWEGO. Or., April 16. (To the Ed itor.) A lets B have ground enough to erect ,a garage on, charging him nothing, but there is no written agree ment. After one year A sells his whole place to C, but tells him the garage is owned by B. B and C never meet till one year later, when he tries to collect $30 rent for use of ground. C did not tell A or B that he ex pected any rent and as ground was not being used, such a thing was not ex pected by B. Kindly state if rent can be collected. II. A. W. If C had knowledge of the arrange ment between A and B that no charge would be made, he probably could not force collection of rent without first giving notice to B. In event judg ment was given C in a legal action it would be only for a reasonable amount. Secretary and Cabinet. MONMOUTH, Or., April 16. (To the Editor.) In the Oregon Blue Book the secretary to the President is included with the Cabinet officers. Our text book does not include the President's secretary. Would you please give us the correct information? E. L. RUDEN. The President's secretary is member of the Cabinet. not a Enlisted Men In Army. FOSSIL. Or., April 15 (To the Edi tor.) Kindly print in The Oregonian the number of enlisted troops in the regular. Army of the United States, ex clusive of the state troops. W. N. BYARS. Approximately listed. 80.000 actually en- In Other Days. Twenty-five Years A (to. From The Orcgonlan of April IS. 1801. Chicago. April 17. The fight between Phoebe Cousins and the executive com mittee of the lady managers of the World's Fair over the secretaryship continues. A number of ladies are anxious to see a Woman's Exchange organized and conducted in a businesslike way in thia city. It is understood that the cable rail way is to be extended out Jefferson street to the west boundary of the City Park. The Arlington Club has secured for their new home now in course of con struction 100,000 Japanese brick that came over on the Eclipse sometime ago. The boat-building business in this section now looks more promising than it ever has before. No less than i-'8 new steamers are at the present time in course of construction at points on the Willamette and Columbia rivers. Half a Century Afro. From The Ortgonian of April IS, 1SG6. Pennsylvania boasts that of the 21 8 state flags carried by their regiments to meet the rebels, but four were lost and those in battle. I The Boston Advertiser is Informed that Mr. William Dean Howells. late United States Consul at Venice, is to assist Mr. P'ields in editing the At lantic Monthly. "The stockholders of the Southern Pacific Fin ilroad have held a meetinff at New Orleans to take measures for the early prosecution of the work. Th road is proposed to be constructed from the Texas state line to El Paso, a distance of 800 miles. Surveyor Burrage has just finished a map of McMillen's Addition to East Portland, situated on the right bank of the Willamette River on a portion, of the land claim of' Jacob Wheeler, opposite the gas works. East Port land is really branching out. VALLEY LOOP IS PLEASANT TRIP aic.Miniiville Autoists Offer Good Ad vice to Portland Brethren. M'MIXN V1LLE, Or., April 16. (To tho Editor.) A great many people of the Willamette Valley have thus far not had an opportunity to motor over the Columbia River Highway. Sunday is about the only time that businessmen can very well absent themselves to make this trip, and the reports of the congested conditton or this highway on Sunday is having a tendency to dis courage them from making this antici pated trip. It has occurred to many automobile owners that this would be an oppor tune time to call the attention of the Portland motorists to what might be termed the "Willamette Valley Ioop." Jf they were to occasionally travel over this loop on Sundays, thus giving oth ers an opportunity to see the Columbia River Highway, we believe it would bn a very desirable thing to do. It is with this object in view that I wish to call your attention to the Willamette Valley Loop. It contemplates a trip through the beautiful Willamette Val ley, leaving Portland and coming out Sixth street and over tho Terwllliger boulevard, and over the West Side Highway through Newberg, McMinn ville, and thence through the fine farm ing country and over the rolling foot hills to Dallas; thence from Dallas through Monmouth and Independence to Salem, and then over the Tacific Highway into Portland. Tliis makes a run of about 125 miles. There are many beautiful streams where parties can stop and eat their lunch if desired, or accommodations "an be had at hotels at any of the more prominer.i. towns. Such an arrangement would be to the mutual advantage cf both the country and city motorists. This West Side Highway would also be a very desir able run for Eastern tourists to make, and there are many automobile owners throughout this district in the valley who are only waiting a favorable op portunity to -motor over the Columbia River Highway, but until the congested condition is relieved they are going to be slow to do so, and many are of the opinion that if the Portland motorists would divert some of their travel to this Willamette Valley Loop it would give others an opportunity to see tho Columbia River Highway and its beau tiful scenery. M'MIKXVILLE AUTOMOBILE CLUB. By G. S. Wright, President. Origin of "Gringo." DALLAS. Or., April 16. (To the Ed itor.) Recently a correspondent made an inquiry as to the origin of the Mexican name "Gringo." No definite explanation was given or attempted. The other day I was reading in the Globe-Democrat an article by John Paul Dana, ao American who had lived in Mexico City a number of years, and who was well acquainted with the ed ucated class of that cosmopolitan capi tal. He became interested in the name "Gringo" and made many inqui ries as to its derivation, etc. Finally an old gentleman, a literary Castilian, handed him an old Spanish newspaper which purported to give the origin and etymology of tho name. It would seem that at the time of the American invastion of Mexico one of our popular songs was "Green Grow the Leaves of the Hawthorne Tree." Tho American soldier sang this popu lar song from Vera Cruz to Chapulte- pec and from Tampico to Monterey, just as the British "Tommy Atkins" is singing "It's a Long Way to Tippe rary" along the Flanders battle line to day. The Mexicans became familiar with 'Green grow," the accented words of the song. In the , evolution of time this became "Green-grow," a compound word, and finally became condensed into tho euphonic epithet, "Gringo." as now applied to all Americans. A plausible explanation, but whether historically or etymologically correct I am not able to say. J. T. FORD. Adjournment of Congrress. PORTLAND, April 17. (To the Edi tor.) When does Congress adjourn this year? CONSTANT READER. The date has not been set. The pres ent Congress, however, will automatic ally expire March 4, 1917, if not sooner adjourned. Heaviest Daily Reftlfftrntion. PORTLAND, April 17. (To the Ed itor. In recent years -what was the largest registration in one day? READER. August 14, 1913; 3182 in a single day. This year the heaviest day so far has been April 17, when 2644 registered. ' s Advertising for the Wolf Do jou want him to come nosing around your business door? You are Inviting him when you don't go after business. You may think you are merely not advertising, but: In reality you are advertising to the wolf. You are cultivating the sure but not altogether painless business death from dry rot. The finish is in sight. A