8 TXIE MORNING OREGONIAT?. SATURDAY, APR Hi 22, 1916. " PORTLAND. OREGON. . Entered at Portland (Orenon) Foetoffice aj accond-clasa mail matter. Subscription Kales Invariably in advance: (By Mail.) Tally. Funday lnclnde'i. one year . X-aily. Sunday Included, elx monthl. .. I'aily. Sunday included. thre mnnlhl T'ally, Sunday included, one month... X'ali. -without Sunday, one year...... r. lally, without Sunday, tlx. months... Xial!y. without Sun'iay. three montha. . Tai;y. without Sunday, one month.... "Weekly, on. year r Sunday, one year... fcuaday and. Weekly, one year. ....... (By Carrier.) TtnlTv Cmaw InKl.tH.H ...... -Anf . 2. -.'5 . .7 . e oo . 1.75 . I. so . 2.50 . a . jo .oo Xaljy. Sunday Included! one month..... .73 How to Kemit Send postoffice money or ier, express order or personal check on your loral bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at sender's rink. (live postoffice addresses In luli. including county and state. Poetaire Kates 12 to la pages, 1 cent: 18 TO pages. X cents; 8-ft to -ta pag. t,n in ttlt o l. . , . A. c. rT. t' In T ti DHfM. O -ents; 78 to oi pases, 6 cent, foreign postage, double rates. Ewlrrn BiiKineM Office Verree Conk- I n. Krumwick buildlnp, New Torn: erreo - A- Conklin. Merer building-. ChlcaKO. Fan ' Kranrisco representative. R. J. Bidwell. 742 Mtmet street. PORTLAND. SATURDAY. APRIL 22. 1916. BCBTOX ON THE ISSUES Ex-Senator Burton clearly stated the .principal Issues of .the coming campaign in his speech in Portland. In our policy toward Germany, Brit ain and Mexico, in fact in our foreign policy generally, tne ot-i-asiun t-vna iui firmness and experience in place of "the halting, the vacillation and the hesitancy" of the present Adminlstra lion. In our domestic policy we need more than ever "a reasonable protec tive tariff, which, while fostering- no monopoly, shall give to industry stimulus and support and afford to labor its fair share of prosperity." The vacillation of the President In hi3 dealings with Germany and Mex ico Is the chief cause of that confused thinking -which has produced a serious division of opinion in crisea where the Xation should be united in sentiment and purpose. It has been responsible for the loss of many American lives and much American property in Mex ico which a firm and consistent policy would have saved. His hesitancy for nearly a year to make the demanXI which he has now made, that Germany desLst from lawless acts, has added to the American deathroll and has given the pro-German propagandists oppor-turiits- to spread false impressions based on misstatements of fact re garding our dispute with that coun try. To that propaganda is due In part the division In both parties as to the Government's duty to uphold without flinching the right of our citl zens to travel the sea and to trade with belligerents, whether In war mu ritions or non-contraband goods. The President has at last taken a firm stand against German lawless vesa. and we doubt not that the great body of the Republican party will join all other loyal citizens in sustain ing him. But we cannot close our eyes to the fact that a considerable body of opinion opposes him and will render his task more arduous. Had he done at the first what he has now done and had he not wobbled from the course marked out in his first Lusi- Ltiiiia. nuiCi siiijl ui iiua ujiueiiiuii might have been prevented. The Republican party, throughout the last three years, has always sup ported the President in any action he has taken to maintain, our rights abroad and has sought to derive no party advantage from his difficulties. It has criticised him only when he hesitated to take such action or when, having begun, he drew back. It will Jn the main support him in any action against the probable enemy which he may recommend. For whatever meas ure of dissent there may be, he Is chiefly responsible. But our tangled foreign relations de mand an Administration which has been chosen with a view especially to their untangling with a. firm, skillful hand guided by a clear, unwavering purpose. Mr. "Wilson was chosen not with that end in. view but at a time when domestic problems were upper most In the public mind and when there were no serious foreign prob lems calling: for settlement. He and his party have proved their incapacity for the task which has been unex pectedly thrust upon them, his party even, more so than he. The people should turn to the Republican party, which has proved through a long pe riod its capacity to care for the Na tional interests abroad. That party steered the republic through the Spanish "War, solved all the difficulties growing out of it as well as those arising from the Panama Canal, the Japanese dispute and the Venezuelan blockade. It kept the peace, but kept it with, honor, and "without procrastination, hesitation, evasion or scuttling. The party which provided Roosevelt to mediate be tween Russia and Japan. Taft to estab lish government in the Philippines and to begin and end intervention in Cuba, and Hay, Root and Knox as Secretaries of State is the party to guide the. Na tion through the present world crisis. The close relation of that crisis to the tariff question has been borne in on the public mind by observation of industrial conditions in Europe and of the effect of the war on American industry. There is possibility of in tensified competition with Europe after the ar, the injurious effects of which can only be averted by careful revision of the tariff. Our industries have suffered severely from lack of materials, the supply of which has been cut off by the war. Such injury "a only be prevented by establish ment of new industries in this coun try under a tariff which will prevent their destruction In peace times by ruinous competition. The Republican party is recognized as the party of protection and is now- pledged to the establishment of a tariff commission which shall collect the information on which revision shall be based. The subject of preparedness which is now uppermost in the public mind is closely related not cnly-to our for eign relations but to the tariff. De fense of the Nation has come to be recognized as requiring not merely the organization of an Army and Xavy but the training and organization of the citizens for service In the fighting line of in the production of war material. It requires that the Nation be made independent of foreign supply for mu nitions, and that the physical and in tellectual powers of each individual be brought to the highest -efficiency. By Its achievements the Republican party has shewn that it alone is quali fied for this great work. This work involves Just such meas ures against monopoly and .for the encouragement of honest business as the Republican party has been chiefly instrumental in enacting and enforc ing. It requires use as well as conser vation of natural resources, while the Democracy has been so zealous for their conservation that It has pre vented their use. Reunited and reinvigorated. the Re publican party- is ready; to continue b.e record of achievement which reaches back to the outbreak of the Civil War. Its successes shine the brighter by contrast with the failures of its oppo nents. JCST AX OCCrPANT. It was pointed out by The Orego nian the other day that North Yakim is naturally in Portland's trade zone, but that the two cities are denle commercial intercourse by the round about character of the rail route be tween the two. A branch railroad connecting th North Bank road with North Yakima is feasible. It would shorten the dis tance between Portland and North Yakima by 120 miles, or more. It is reasonable to suppose that an inde pendent railroad, situated as is th North Bank, would long ago hav built the connection. But 50 per cent of the stock of the North Bank i owned by the Northern Pacific and the Northern Pacific Is quite con tent with the arrangement whereby it gets North Yakima business for its own railroad leading to Puget Sound A striking contrast may be obtained by comparing the building pro grammes of other railroads. Willapa Harbor and Grays Harbor were served by the Northern Pacific at the time the Milwaukee was constructed. But that did not prevent the independen Milwaukee from building its own branches to the same territory. The Milwaukee also built a branch from Cedar Kails to Everett, where it competes for business with the Grea Northern. It operates a ferry line be tween Bellingham and Seattle in com petition with the rail services of both Great Northern and Northern Pa cific. It has built several branches in Eastern Washington and has others about ready for construction work. Likewise, the O.-W. R. & N. Com pany, as soon as it had gained access to Puget Sound, built its own branches to Grays Harbor and Olympia, a.1 though both places were already served by the Northern Pacific. Moreover, tne .ortn uanK Railroad, itself, ac quired the Oregon Electric, operating" into the Oregon field of the Southern Pacific, and extended it. It also built the Oregon Trunk Railway up the Deschutes, where the O.-W. R. & N Company was also building. It does not neglect construction of branch lines southward into the rich territory of its competitors, but opportunity to get business out of the north, where that business might be taken away from its railroad owners the Great Northern and Northern Pacific is neglected. There ought to be some way to bring the owners of the North Bank Railroad to a realization that they have a duty to the public which they are not fulfilling. The railroad oc cupies a strategic route of tremendous possibilities. But when one has stated that the North Bank "occu pies" that route there i3 not much more that can at present be said. ART, LETTERS AND PORK. It is a far cry from art and letters to Congressional pork; and yet not so far, either, when one contemplates the conduct of Congress the other day when the American Academy of Arts and Letters was up for Federal recog nition. Although the House voted to permit the Academy to incorporate, a process requiring no appropriation, the negative vote was a large one. Ninety seven members voted no. Such opposition is difficult to un derstand when the slender basis of opposition is considered. The oppo nents feared no raid on the National Treasury nor the playing of politics in an organization which counts among its favored members both Woodrow Wilson and Theodore Roose velt, authors. But the failure of the Academy to recognize sectional celeb rities was what galled the obstinate ninety-seven. Eastern men of let ters and artistic attainments monopo lized the membership. Possibly a few of the ninety-seven were goaded by the sting of personal disappointment that their literary contributions to the Congressional Record had not won them recognition as men of literary achievement. It Is doubtless true that the Amer ican Academy has not always acted with the greatest wisdom in selecting its members, when treating the pa tient But that Is a shortcom ing characteristic of such acad emies. Did not the French Academy reject Flaubert, Daudet, Maupassant, Mollere, Descartes and Zola while ac cepting a coterie of notables whose names no one would recognize today? But these oversights are the exception rather than the rule. An academy of this character must maintain a high standard and an eternal vigil if it would maintain its integrity and worth. Artistic and lit erary achievement of the highest standard must be the one badge of ad. mission. It is better that it should overlook a few notables of real worth than that It should recognize the great horde of community notables and near-notables who would clamor for admission were Congressional pull of any benefit. WHEN GOLF IS DANGEROUS. Quite a flutter of excitement among golfers of mature age has been caused by an article of Theodore H. Price in timating that golf is dangerous for old men, because he knows of a consid erable number of men of fifty or over who have died of heart failure, or paralysis while playing golf or imme diately after. In his paper. Commerce and Finance, he publishes several opinions of men who only partly agree with him. Edgar C. Bradley, of Berke. ley, Cal., tells of having benefited greatly by following his doctor's ad vice to "play golf three times week, not more than eighteen holes at a time." He says: The trouble about arolf la that men overdo. They play too many holes at one time. They play what 1 known aa the "nineteenth hole." They do not play leisurely. The Cincinnati Times-Star ridicules the game of the elderly golfer with a sedentary past" by comparing it with that of the man who was an athlete in lis youth. It says that with the former "the drive is redolent of the swiveling office chair" and explains that one of nature's "salutary re straints is the deterring hand she places upon the man who passes at a mature age from the office chair to the golf course." The Hartford Times says: Tho evidence at present la not sufficient to make anything- like a clear case, but It harmonizes with the senerai belief that after certain physical changes which attend advancing age the game may have real danger. Tike any other form of exerolse to which those attempting it have not been accustomed earlier. All of this goes to show that slight exercise not too long continued is sa lutary for men who have passed their fiftieth year, but that vigorous or long-continued exercise Is injurious, especially for men of sedentary habits. The trouble with the "old boys" is that they become (warmed UR-jvlth, the. sport, permit the spirit of emulation to be aroused and go in to win, im agining that they are still young boys, Then they feel a twinge of pain. sudden weakness and the full weight of their years falls upon them. Unless a man has been something of an ath lete all his life, he cannot safely be come an "old sport" after fifty. He may play golf leis.-ely, but he must not piay tne nineteenth ftole or a match. He may take an hour's easy walk, but he cannot enter a pedestrian contest or run for a train. He must ease up, out of respect for his heart or his arteries, lest some part of the human machine break. He may play golf for exercise, but must not play for sport. CHEERLESS HOSPITAL ARCHITECTURE, It is recorded that over Virchow's hospital in the German capital there is an admonition not to forget the man when treating the patient. This might be set down as the text of pampmet issued by a New York ar chitect who urges . a more cheerful atmosphere for American hospitals, He sees in the present hospital a mere workshop for a methodical treatment of "cases" brought in for professional attention. Glittering white tiles, dead white plaster, huge windows, their glare undimmed by curtains; high walls, their rigid lines unbroken an gular, unrelieved bareness, inhospita ble, depressing in its monotony. Such is the picture that the writer draws and it will awaken familiar, if not pleasant, memories among those tvho have been confined in such a "work shop" of the surgeons and nurses. In urging that the walls be tinted tne iioors colored, tne windows cur tained and the whole aspect made more cheerful, the critic remarks upon the curative benefits of healthful and pleasant environs. While it mav be true that the majority of those who are sent to hospitals hafe not been accustomed to pretty surroundings, the fact remains that they are susceptible to them. As the pamphlet says: "The less educated, the less intelligent the patient is the more he depends on sensuous feelings for contentment. Sensuous ideas, the first to emerge from the mind, are the first to arouse delight, and constitute primitive hap piness and content." Medical science will accept these observations. The lay mind has already seen the curative properties of a cheerful sicjtroom, and put the idea into practice by carrying flowers In profusion to the sickroom. A wider professional recognition of the value of this field of useful endeavor is cer tain to be followed by results. The providing of cheerful surroundings will be undertaken with the same thoroughness and intelligent care that has been devoted already to cleanli ness, lighting, heating and ventila tion. PROHIBITION IN CALIFORNIA. The California voter this year is to have the choice of two prohibition amendments with, of course, the pri vilege of defeating both. Both come from the same source. Proposition No. would give California a prohibi tion law like Arizona's. It would be absolute. Mail orders for liauors to be used in the home in limited guan ines, such as are permitted jn Ore gon, Washington and Colorado, would be denied the Californian. Proposition No. 2 prohibits the sale. keeping or giving away of intoxicants In any store, hotel, restaurant, cafe. lub or other place of public resort. Permanent residents of California, however, would be permitted to buy r the manufacturer in quantities of not less than two gallons. Deliveries would be confined to common carriers. The exception in this measure is de igned to appeal to those who would save" the wine industry of California. Proposition No. 1, if adopted, will go into force January 1, 1920; proposi tion No. 2, if adopted, will become ef fective two years sooner. The charge of political shrewdness Is already made against the proponents of the measures on the theory that the dry voter need vote for but one measure in order to register a vote for prohibition, while the iw.et voter must vote against both. The rea soning is not exactly clear. He who votes "yes" on proposition No. 1 and falls to vote on proposition No. 2 does no more than offset him who votes "no" on proposition No. 1 and fails to vote on proposition No. 2. On the contrary, we would accuse the Anti-Saloon League management of lack of shrewdness in presenting two amendments. Smith, who is op posed to all prohibition, will vote against both measures. Jones, who might have voted for absolute pro- ibition if no other measure were be fore him, but who sees economic bene fit and minor harm in saving the wine industry, is likely to vote "no" against absolute prohibition and. "yes" for the alternative. Brown, who is a radical, would undoubtedly vote for the milder measure If submitted alone, but will vote against it and for the radical measure. Thus a certain element that might ave been counted with the prohibi- ion forces will be divided, while align. ment of the strictly anti-prohibition forces will be undisturbed. Of course there will be some who would not ave voted for absolute prohibition who will vote for near-prohibition. But standing alone the latter meas- re would have much better chance of carrying, w hile the other is practically certain of defeat, even though Califor-- la should at heart bo for some form of prohibition. The situation provides an interest ing speculative study in mathematics. Tho total vote of California is about 900,000. It . must be conceded that conservative prohibition measure would stand more chance of adoption tnan a radical measure, for the strict prohibitionist is ready to accept a half-loaf if a whole one is not of fered. Assume, merely for illustration. that a conservative measure will arry, if standing alone, by a vote of 00,000 to 400.000. Then consider the effect when a radical meas- re is submitted with the con servative measure. If there are 60,- 00 radicals represented in the 500,000 previously credited to the conserva tive measure, they are quite likely to vote against the conservative measure for fear that it will have more votes than the radical measure and thereby displace it if both carry. What is the result? The 400,000 wets stand net gainst both amendments and the con. servatlve measure loses 60,000 votes it would otherwise have obtained. The flna-l score stands 460,000 no, 440,000 yes, and the measure is defeated. Assuming, again, that there are 60.- 000 voters in favor of the conservative measure who are opposed to the rad ical measure and one gets the same result as to absolute prohibition. Tho vote on that amendment also stands 60,000 no, 440,000 yes. Certain tactics might have been adopteA ibx- iap, Ajjxi-alopft League, however, that would have convicted it of the charge of shrewd practice. If I proposition No. 2, the measure to save the wine Industry under a prohibitory law, had been put into the form of an initiative statute instead of constitu tional amendment, the radical pro hibitionlst would have had no reaso for not voting for both. No matter how large the affirmative vote cast for the statutory enactment, the con stitutional amendment proposition -o. 1 would prevail if it received bare majority. Nor would there be danger of legislative tinkering with th statutory enactment pending the tak ing effect two years later of th amendment, for it is one of the won ders of the California system that the Legislature may not repeal o amend a law enacted by the people. But ignoring the confusion of th issue, if California votes out th liquor traffic this year there will hav been indicated a large reversal of sen timent. Proportionately this would perhaps not be greater than that in dicated in Oregon, when prohibition carried two years ago. But in Oregon the balance is assumed to have been affected by the women's vote. Call fornia had woman suffrage in 191 and rejected prohibition that year by a vote of 355,536 to 524,781 a ma Jority against of 169,245 Russian troops have probably been sent to France as much for the moral effect of their presence as for the! value at the front. The sixty-days continuous fighting around Verdun must have been a sore trial to French morale and staying power, besides drawing heavily on their reserves Practical evidence of Russian sym pathy is likely to hearten up the sen timental French. The Russian move ment is also an evidence of pooling or allied resources as an outgrowth o close co-operation. Russia supplies men, Britain provides ships to carry them and France will provide arms Germany is thus given a hint that Russia has men to spare and that the allies are pulling together There are approximately 24,000 automobiles in use in Oregon thus early in the Spring, and they do not all belong to the larger cities. One firm at Forest Grove reports sales of twenty-one popular-priced cars, a Eu. gene dealer -sells six in a weekend t NVhite Salmon five have bought cheaper vehicles. Thus it goes. Any weekly paper, picked" at random, will show that people are investing in the means to take them to town and home In little less time than required to get up and harness the team. One sale In a neighborhood makes the rest easy ror the dealer, and in many cases where the head of the family is dim dent the wife is decidedly not. More watchful waiting in Mexico. out now it is in the heart of the coun try with prospective enemies all around and with a "thin line of com munication to the base. The waiters are no longer only in revolving chairs at Washington; they are soldiers with arms in their hands, with a heart for a fight and with freedom to repel at tack. That is more dangerous but far more satisfactory to the waiters. Count von Bernstorff seems to be up against it. If he claims Von Igel's papers as official, he will implicate his government in the latter's plots. If he repudiates them, they will prove valuable ammunition to the enemy and may be the means of his subor dinate's conviction. In such a pre dicament what can a poor diplomat ao : Only half a million Armenians have been killed, it is now reported, instead or the million as given out a few weeks ago. That makes the Turk only half as bad as he might be, but bad enough to get what is due. The editor of the Chicago Abend post is so enthusiastic as to be "crazy in the head." It's up to the secret service to see that he disappears until after the war, if such a thing happens outside of fiction. Competition between Sheriff Hodge and the Seattle police has brought en forcement of prohibition very close to the Sheriff and Is causing much good liquor to run down the sewers. Von der Goltz says Irishmen were in the plots to blow up Canada, but that cannot be true. An Irishman in them would be bossing the Job, and that is not developed. ine boutn Americans are very ready with their pats on the back for President Wilson, but would they line up with the. United States if we got into a fight? These are palmy days for the lum berjacks, for they can easily earn good wages and cannot get rid of their money with as much ease as a year ago, Part of the Atlantic fleet is being put in trim at the Chaiiestown Navy- yard, tor fapring maneuvers, very likely. Canada will get into trouble by boarding Americun boats on the Great Lakes and removing German seamen Possibly in the next century ball parks will have glass roofs a half mile high; but it's a long time to wait. Bryan is pretty much as the men who tried to put drags on Lincoln, and they were known as Copperheads. Wilson is human, if President. He visited his latest grandchild yesterday, going all the way to Philadelphia. In the matter of delegate-at-large from Nebraska, Bryan shows up with those "dragged in by the cat." It is said that Germany's answer will be dictated by necessity. Which Is the Kaiser's first law. It is a pity a film cannot be made of the Commissioners touring the Montavilla sewer. The less a man says to his neighbor about this crisis, the better for both. The hunt for Villa stops until the Board of Health locates the corpse. It is not the war news nor the scores, bnjti -will It rain tomorrow? It may be that so many riding them gave Hanry his pull in Nebraska. Switzerland is making a start to- ward a navy by chartering ships., Only in Seattle could a cashier get away with 120.000. Baseball and strawberries are not in oason, in- AjnriU, OPENING OF ROAD CELEBRATED 1 Parade and Barbecue Held in isai, When Flanks Were Laid. PORTLAND, April 21. (To the Edi tor.) The Oregonian gives an inter eeting interview with F. W. Petty grove, of San Francisco, son of Francis W. Pettygrove, a pioneer of 1843, who was associated with A. L. Lovejoy in the naming of Portland in 184a. I say "1845," because I knew both gentlemen well, and that was the year they al ways claimed the name of "Portland" was given as a result, of tossing the copper cent of 1835, as stated by Mr. Pettygrove, Jr., That was the year the first survey was made by Thomas Brown. While there are a number of errors in Mr. PettygroveS's statements, I will not take space to particularize further than to say that the "red paint" al luded to was used upon his father's store at Oregon Gity, instead of the Portland store. In proof of this I quote from the Pettygrove advertisement which appeared in the Oregon Specta tor, February 5, 1846, giving an Item ized list of the articles of merchandise on hand "at the Red House, Oregon City, and at Portland, 12 miles below." And exception must be taken to the statement that "The Canyon road was built from the private finances ef Mr. Pettygrove." First, for the reason that in 1S48 Mr. Pettygrove sold all his in terest in Portland to T. H. Lownsdale for $5000, the deed to that effect being of record in the Multnomah County Courthouse. Second, for the reason that the Canyon road was not opened to anv great extent for travel until 1851, the year that Mr. Pettygrove left Portland permanently and located at Port Townsend, and therefore was not connected with the "Portland and Val ley Plank. Road Company," chartered by the Legislature in January of that year. Under that charter the company was organized for business on July 30, 1851, a full report appearing in The Orego nian, August 9, leal. In the same paper there was a notice to stock holders calling for the payment to the secretary of 10 per cent of all subscrip tions. On September 6, 1851, proposals signed by Thomas Carter, Z. C. Norton. A. J. Hembree, J. W. Chambers and William M. King, directors, were ad vertised, calling for 100,000 feet of three-inch plank and for clearing and grading two miles. On September 20 the announcement was made that the first plank would be laid on September 27, and 'the contractor. Stephen Coffin, announced that One mile of the road would be ready for the plank that day On October 2. a detailed account ap peared in the Oregon Weekly Times, descriptive of the celebration on Sep tember 27. This mentions a procession, directed by Simon B. Marye, marshal, with Cap tain George H. Flanders, assistant marshal, "to a point one mile west of the city," where, after an invocation by Rev. Horace Lyman, of the F'irst Congregational Church, Colonel Will lam At. js.ing, president and superin tendent of the road, laid the first plank and-placed a gold coin underneath the same, with a few appropriate remarks. Frank Tilford. Colonel King. Beniamln htark and Thomas J. Dryer, editor of The Oregonian. At the conclusion r.t the speeches, a spacious table was set upon the new-laid planks of the rond and all partook of the refreshments placed thereon. Among the "dainties observed by the reporter of the mo mentous event was "a largo and well- roasted ox." GEORGHJ II. HIMES. Sweet Potatoes From Cuttings. PAULINA, Or., April 18. (To the Editor.) (1) Do such, vegetables as cabbage, beets, carrots ad turnips ever go to seed.' in what way If they do? J ney never mature in this country f!l How do you get a start of sweet pota toes.- xjo tney nave eyes like other no- tatoes or seeds? A SUBSCRIBER. (1) Seed of cabbage, beets, carrots and turnips is produced in this state, particularly seed of the late cabbage ana of the early varieties of beets, car rots and turnips. R. W. Gill, of Gill Bros., Portland. R. F. D. No. 1, has been breeding varieties of these vege tables for quite a number of years. (2) It is possible to get suitable plants by taking the sweet potatoes and making a cross section of the tubers and placing them in a hotbed, which should be made up about this time of the year, so that the tubers may have the benefit of the heat of the bed. After a few weeks the sweet potato tubers will begin to produce plants and you will be able to break these off at the juncture of the root system with the tuber, thereby being able to transfer them to the field, for transplanting. You will be able to get two or three bulletins on this particu- ar subject three by writing to the Di vision of Publications, Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C, asking for the three publications on sweet po tato culture. THE WILD ROSE'S LAMENT. Down the floral ages I have budded and bloomed. Sun-kissed into beauty, And by soft winds gloomed; O'er Oregon's green plains My petals have shed Their delicious fragrance From my heart's deep red; And in each glad May-June, My coquettish wiles. Flushed the landscape crimson With blushes and smiles. The pioneer maiden Braided me in her hair. Wreathed me around her waist. So slender and fair; And the blush on her cheeks Juite rivaled the glow Of my .brilliant crimson 'Twas her own, you know And my praises were chanted By both old and young, "The queen of wild flowers" Was the chorus sung. My Jeweled crown is now A thing of the past. And Nature's proud flower Is humbled at last; Portland's beautiful rose Has usurped my throne The haughty exotic ' Is lovely, I own It's bejeweled and feted. Caressed with fond care. And crowned queen of roses At the Festival Fair. J. T. FORD. Dallas, Or. Maybe Our Letters Bore Germany. BAY CENTER, Wash., April 20. (To the Editor.) One of my neighbors in- ists that the German Foreign Office Is clearly entitled to intimate to our Administration that It is becoming bored by our correspondence, and to ask for its discontinuance. Come to think of it, there may be omething in this view. Our notes have been admirable in courtesy and phrasing, to be sure; but this Is Ger many s busy day. Ages ago a wise man advised: "Let thy foot be seldom in thy neighbor's ouse, lest he be weary of thee." Does ot the rule apply to correspondence much as to personal visits? And are we not then forgetting our man ors? Worse yet, we are materially help- ing the allies by taking up the time that His Imperial Majesty's privy coun- II needs for more pressing matters. Are we not thereby guilty ot gross vl- lation of a pretended neutrality? L L. BUSH. How Much Looser? England's occupation of Gibraltar dates from, 1714t - . . . SO POLITICAL TAGS IN CHURCH Pastor Resents Request That He Clas sify His Congregation. ST. HELENS, Or., April 20. (To the Editor.) The great bugaboo of our Americanism is public opinion. It stalks the hopes of all aspirants to fa vorable recognition in "hall and hearth" and menaces with impending death those who would banish the banshee. This hobgoblin is admittedly psy chological without being necessarily ethical and as a minister and teacher with a dominant interest in human -life, I challenge the method of the Anti Saloon League of forcing issues be tween pastors and laymen in the mat ters of its propaganda. The league recently asked for a list of names, politically classified, from the pastors of the different churches, and is now asking for a list of an swered questions. As a minister I have no right to furnish it. Men should be able to attend church with out being "tagged" or "buttoned" as belonging to any particular party, pro hibition or otherwise. Drink is far from being the one alone vital issue of life if we admit the evidence of the history of ethnic faiths which stand for prohilbtion. These classified lists and questions look like a species of blackmail thinly veiled with the euphemism .of "sta tistics." So long as parties or Individuals can "use" the church for egotistic pur poses, to the exclusion of minimiza tion of the altruistic message of the Christ, so long will the generality of men be indifferent to the church. JOHN FOSTER. Ph. B., B. D., Minister Congregational Church, St. Helens, Or. . REASONS FOR NOT CHOOSING T. R. Correspondent Nnntes Several Which He Believes Spell Defeat. SALEM, Or.. April 20. (To the Edi tor.) Since Colonel Roosevelt seeks the Republican nomination for President it might be in order to secure from him an ironclad bond of assurance that he will not bolt if he fails to win. His word will not suffice. He is on record us having no reeard for promises heretofore made. This Is one reason why he should not be nominated. -The wise custom of the fathers lim ting the Presidency to two terms is highly regarded by the neoiile. It is a uilhcult matter to overcome public opinion. These are two reasons why he should not be nominated. Ihe vituperation and calumny he heaped upon the rank and file of loyal nepuoncans in ii are another reason why he should not be nominated. Every Republican convention has chosen a consistent, loyal Republican as the party's standard bearer. To dis regard party precedence would be cen soring those who established them. The Colonel's actions four years ago were the cause of the present vacil lating, spineless diplomatic hote writing, deficit-increasing, job-losing Administration. The people are weary of it and want a change. It the strenuous Colonel succeeds in "butting in" he is liable to be "the goat" that will cause history to repeat Itself. w. O. BINNS. EVOLITIO.V, A swoory little pollywog lived in a swalf ; His only way to travel was by wiglin' his tail; He hadn't any hands, he hadn't any feet. But when he went a swimmin' he was mighty hard to beat. One day after dinner he swam around the swale. And found his legs w-ere longer than his funny little tail: This made him feel so jolly, he jumped up and ran. And always ever after, he's been just like a man. C. E. CLINE. Museums of Safety. There are 26 museums of safety and institutes for the study of industrial hygiene in the world, 2a in Europe, three in the United States and one in Canada. Easter From -in- The Sunday Easter Sunday naturally turns the newspaper reader's thoughts to the story of the resurrection and its related subjects. The Ore gonian tomorrow will give it proportionate attention. The front cover page will bear an allegorical picture, combining the message of Easter Sunday arid the glad tidings of the presence of Spring. It will be printed in colors. EGG-ROLLING AT WHITE HOUSE To the children of the city of Washington the ancient custom of rolling Easter eggs on the White House lawn is one of the rare privileges of living in that city. Elaborate plans are being made this year for the joyous event which takes place every year on Easter Monday. The Oregonian tomorrow will present a full page descriptive of this custom. GROWING EASTER LILIES Originally the familiar white lily that usually forms so prominent a part of Easter decorations was grown almost exclusively in Japan and other countries of the Pacific seas. Now many of the southern states in America are producing a su perior quality of lilies. Pictures of these plants growing in the fields and in hothouses will be printed tomorrow. A brief story will tell of the progress American growers have made in raising them. OTHER EASTER ITEMS A series of amusing photographs will show the little folks that the Easter rabbit is capable of perform ing many remarkable tricks of which he heretofore has been thought incapable. The Easter rites observed in some other countries also will be described in a brief story. Ben Hur Lampman presents an original Easter poem. Other features bear an Easter flavor. HERBERT KAUFMAN'S PAGE Don't miss the weekly page by this optimistic writer. No one can read Kaufman's poems, epigrams and editorials without gaining from the doctrine of success that he preaches. FAVORITE POEMS Another page of verses from the scrap-books of Oregonian readers. ROSE FESTIVAL PLANS The Rose Festival is less than two months distant. Tomorrow The Oregonian will print pictures of the men in charge this year and the latest plans for the big fete. THE IRON CLAW The big Sunday paper will present the fourth installment of "The Iron Claw," the sensational story now being told simultaneously in The Oregonian and on the motion-picture screens. THE ALASKAN FRONTIER Frank G. Carpenter tomorrow will de scribe the resources contained in the 4,000,000 acres of rich farming lands at the southern end of Uncle Sam's new railroad now being built into Alaska. Other resources that help to make Southern Alaska a paradise of wealth and opportunity also will be pointed out with illustrations. 1 HOW WAR CHARITIES APPEAL TO BIRSKY AND ZAPP Here is a timely topic with which most Americans have had experience, described in an original way by Montague Glass, who speaks through his newly created characters Birsky and Zapp. TEMPLE'S SKETCHES All Oregonian readers are interested in Temple's "Sketches From Life," which are finding weekly favor through the columns of the Sunday paper. Three more pictures will be printed tomorrow. THE TEENIE WEENIES The spirit of Easter even has invaded the sanctum of the artists. Donahey's Teenie Weenies tomorrow will be. presented in an Easter escapade. ALSO THE FOLLOWING Up-to-the-minute news from the realm of sports, a complete review of the motion-picture worlds. what society is preparing to do now that the Lenten season is over, activities of the automobile dealers, owners and manufacturers; developments in the real estate market, complete reports of marine, shipping and the commercial world; full accounts from the public schools, plans for observing Easter in the churches and other items of interest and information. In Other Days. Twenty-five Years Ago. From The Oregonian April 22, 1891. Cincinnati The praises of Blaino were shouted loudly and long at tho Republican League' convention. Tim President's name was not so noticeably honored and Cole, of Indiana, showed anger at what ho considered a slight of Harrison by Foraker. Mr. McKinley was boomed for President at the night meeting. Seattle The greatest steamboat race which Puget Sound hs ever seen, probably, was staged here yesterday between the Bailey Gatzc-rt and the. Greyhound. The latter proved the better boat. The race was between Tacoma and Seattle and return. The Gatzert won going over but tho Grey hound took the lead on the return trip. The streetcar lines of Detroit aro tied up by a strike. Miss Gabrielle Greeley, only surviv ing child of Horace tJreeley. will b married soon to Rev. Frank Montroso Glondennintr. Some of the Irish papers are an nouncing that Buddhism will get a convert soon in Mr. Justin Huntley McCarthy. The water committee will make river soundings at once to locate the best place for pipes to bring Bull Run water across to the city. Burglars visited George Blodgett's rooms in the Multnomah block Mon day night. MR. WILSON I S NOT CA N DID.VTK Corvallls Mnn Not In Contest for Mr. Hartley's Seat. CORVALIJS, Or.. April 20. (To the Editor.) So many friends have asked me and have written asking me if I am a candidate for Congress in the FirHt district that I will answer, if you please, through The Oregonian. I am not a candidate. I .was mistaken. Like all faddists. I have thought that all persons would be inclined to the same fads that have swayed me. But such is not the case. Very recently I discovered that two bills in Congress, embodying the only reason why a should attempt to stand for Congress, in ve been turned down by that body, and further, that our beloved President is unalterably opposed to anything of the kind. Reason enough. Next election, it is understood, Mr. Ifawley will stand for the Senate for the seat now occupied by Senator Lane. Mr. Jones, of Newport, expects to try again for the Hawley seat. I may be so foolish next election. And I apprehend that there will be plenty of candidates to furnish a fair choice for the prole tariat and others in that election. The more the merrier. I still believe my ideas on the sub ject of the Government lending direct to farmers on adequate security from money created lor that purpose are correct. Notwithstanding the solons in Congress and watchful waiting. I am thinking something else ngain. But, as Blackstone says, more hereafter. J. H. WILSON. Metal Wall rapcr. Thin metal plates, which weigh about four pounds to the square yard, are being used in France instead of plaster and wall paper. The Technical World magazine tells some of the advantages of using this material: "it cati be bought and placed in position at less coFt than cah the old materials; the room can be kept at a more even temperature; workmen have little troubje In learning to use the new ma terial. Something to Worry About. It is estimated that the annual loss to agriculture in this country from depredation of insects and rodents alone is 110,000,000,000 about $1 a month for every man, woman and child in the United States. Many Angles Oregonian