6 TnE MORNING OKEGOXIAS. WEDNESDAY, MAY 17. 191G. UNITED METHODISM 15 STEP NEARER General Conference Delegates Vote to Join Southern and v Protestant Churches. BISHOP WEEPS JOYFULLY Obstacles to Vilification Relieved Overcome Perfection of Com- ' inc is Expected to Be Realized f ' at Meeting in 1020. .4 SARATOGA SPRINGS N. Y. May 16. i The unification ot American Meth odism was advanced another step toward consummation today when by a vote that virtually was unanimous the 880 delegates to the general con ference of the Methodist episcopal Church adopted, the report of the spe cial committee on unification, paving the way to an amalgamation with the Metholist Kpiscopal Church, South, and the Methodist Kpiscopal Protestant Church. The -adoption of the report, which was the most important and far-reaching legislation that has been enacted by a Methodist general conference in many years, was attended by a tremen dous demonstration of enthusiasm. The great auditorium rang; with cheers and applause as the aged bishop. Earl Cranston, who presided while the action was taken and Bishop E.. R. liendrix. senior member of the board of bishops of the Southern Church, clasped hands on the platform and wept with emotion. Applaune Im Terrific. "This is the supre'me moment of my life," cried Bishop Cranston. "A marvelous result has been achieved," Bishop Hendrix said. "I pray that the whole Methodist body through out the world may, more and more, see eye to eye, and JBishop Cranston and myself may live to stand jointly over the united general conference of United .Methodism in America. A terrific outburst of applause quick ly gave way to song as the delegates Joined in the hymn "Praise God. From "Whom All Blessings Flow," and then took up the strains of "Blest Be the Tie That Binds." On the platfdrm with Bishop Crans ton and Bishop liendrix was one Eng lishman who attended the historic gen eral conference in 1844 in New York the last in whiph the Southern church "was represented before Methodism was split over the question of slavery. He is Dr. Thompson H. Landon, of Bor dentown, N. J. Negotiations Are Continued. Today's action does not unite the two Branches of the Methodist denomina tions, but continues the negotiations for a reunion. "The points of agreement are many the points of disagreement are few,' Bishop Hendrix said. It is generally believed that the ob stacles in the way of unification have been overcome and that two years hence the general conference of the Methodist Church. South will accept the plan for reunion, which the Northern Church hopes to bring to final fulfill ment at its general conference in 1920. WILSON FRANK IN VIEWS (Continurd From First Page.) fciantially. lie said, among other things: "One of the greatest points of strain upon me, if 1 may be permitted to point it out, was this: "There are two reasons why the chief wish of Americans is for peace. One Is that they love peace and have noth ing to do with the present quarrel, and the other is that they believe the pres ent quarrel has carried those engaged in it so far that they cannot be held to ordinary standards of responsibil ity and that therefore as some men have expressed it to me, since the rest of the world is mad. why should we not simply refuse to have anything to do with the rest of the world? Why. not let the storm pass, and then, when it is all over, have the reckonings? "Knowing that from both these two points of view the passion of America was for peace, I was. nevertheless, aware that America is not only one of the nations of the world but one of the chief nations of the world a nation that grows more and more powerful almost In spite of herself: .that grows morally more and more influential even when, she is not aware of it. It is necessary that she should act more o? less from the point of view of the rest of the world. If I cannot retain my moral influence over a man except by occasionally knocking him down, if that is the only basis upon which he will respect me, then for the sake of his soul, I have got occasionally to knock him down. Souls Saved by Fists. "Yon know how we have read in Isn't it Ralph Connor's stories of life in Canada? that all his skypilots are ready for a fracas at any time: and how the ultimate salvation of the souls of their parishioners depends on their using their fists occasionally. If man will not listen to you quietly in a seat, sit on his neck and make him listen, just as 1 have always main tained, particularly in view of certain experiences of mine, that the shortest road to a boy s moral sense is through his cuticle. There is a direct and, if I may be permitted the pun, a fun damental connection between the sur fare of his skin and his moral con science. You arrest his attention first in that way and then get the moral lesson conveyed to him in milder ways that, if he were grown up. would b the only ways you would use. "So I say'that I have been aware that in order to do the very thing that we are proudest of the ability to do. there might come a time - when we would have to do it in a way that we would prefer not to do it; and the great burden on my spirits, gentlemen, hag been tnat it has been up to me to choose when that time came. "Writers of Rumor Warned. "In domestic matters I think I can in most cases come pretty near a guess where the thought of America is going, but in foreign affairs the chief element is where action is going on in other quarters of the world and not where thought is feoing in the United Btatea Therefore. I have several times taken the liberty of urging upon you gentle men not yourselves to know more than the State Department knows about for eign affairs. Some of you have shown a singular range of omniscience, and certain things have beeji reported as understood in administrative circles' which I never heard of until I read the newspapers. X am constantly taken by surprise in regard to decisions which are said to be my own,' "Now, that is pretty dangerous, gen tleman, because it happens that re marks start fireR. There is tinder lying everywhere, and a man that spreads sparks may be responsible for some thing a great deal worse than burning a town on the Mexican border. Thoughts may be bandits. Thoughts may De raiders. Thoughts may be invaders. Thoughts mav bs dis turbers of international neace: and when you reflect upon the importance of this country keeping out of the present war you will know what tre mendous elements we are all dealing with. I tell you. gentlemen, the onlv thing that saves the world Is the little handful of disinterested men that are in it. "You may recall that I said on a pre vious occasion that I felt constantly a personal detachment from the Presi dency; that one thing that I resented when I was not performing the duties of the office was being reminded that I was the President of . the United States. I felt toward It as a man feels toward a great function which, in working hours, he is obliged to per form, but which, out of working hours, he is glad to get away from. I am constantly reminded as I go about, as I Wo sometimes at the week-end. of the personal inconvenience of being Presi dent of the United States. If I want to know how many people live in a small town,- all I have to do is to go there, and they at once line up to be counted. I might, in a census-taking year, save the censustakers a great deal of trouble by asking them to ac company me and count the people on the spot. Effective Dlaculse Longed For. "Sometimes when I am most beset 1 seriously think of renting a pair of whiskers or of doing something else that will furnish me with an adequate disguise, because I am sorry to find that-the cut. of my jib is unmistakable and unust sail under false colors if I am going to sail incognito. "When the fortunes of your own country are, so to say, subject to the incalculable winds of passion that axe blowing through other parts of the world then the strain is of a singular and unprecedented kind, because you do not know by what turn of the wheel of fortune the control of things is going 10 De taKen out of your hands; it makes no difference how deerj the passion of the nation lies, that passion may oe so overborne by the rush of fortune "in circumstances like those which now exist that you feel the sort of I had almost said resentment that a man feels when his own affairs are not within his own hands. You can (imagine the strain upon the feelinar of any man who is' trying to interpret the spirit of his country when he feels that spirit cannot have its own way beyond a certain point. Sheer Character Is In Demand. "Now, 1 have found a fe'w disinter ested men. I wish I had found more. I can name two or three men with whom I have conferred again and again and again, and I have never caught them by any inadvertence thinking about tnemseives for their own interests, and I tie to those men as you would tie to an anchor. I tie to them as you would tie to the voices of conscience, if you could be sure that you always heard them. Men who have no axes to grind Men who love America so that thev would give their lives for it and never care whether anybody heard that they had given their lives for it; willing to die In obscurity If only they might serve! Those are the men, and nations like those men are the nations that are going to serve the world and save it. There never was a time in the history of the world when character. Just sheer character, all by itself, told more than it does now. a iriena or mine says that every man who takes office In Washington eitner grows or swells, .and when give a man an office I watch him care fully to see whether he is swelling or growing, me miscniet of It Is that when they swell they do not swell enough to burst. If they would only swell to the point where you might in sert a pin and let out the gas it would be a great delight. I do not know any pastime that would be more diverting. ine men who grow are the balance wheel of the whole thing. They are the ballast that enables the craft to carry sail and make port in the long run, no matter what the weather is. diaries M. Carey Candidate for Delegate at Large to the Republican National Convention (N. B. At the primaries, May 19, there are four delegates from the stato at large to be elected to attend the Chiiago Convention, besides two from each Congressional District.) ' x - (Paid Advertisement.) REPUBLICAN There's But One WBtKBKBBKSKXSBSSMSBIOBBS ttEEBUESBL 0B5gg3j-Xmm9-m9 Campaign Issue Decency and Good Government vs. "Invisible Government" i?ome into my office sometimes and say, Mr. President, I am an American." Their hearts are right, their instinct true, they are going in, the right direc tion, and will take the right leadership if tney believe mat ine icsuo co- man who thinks first 01 America. HONE RATE ORDER VOID Court "Reverses Public Service Body in Wood burn Case. SALEM. Or.. Mav 16. (Special.) An order of the Public Service Commission ncreasing the rates of the western Telephone Company, of -Woodburn, was pronounced invalid today by Circuit Judge Galloway, who held that a fran chise between a municipality and a public utility could not be changed ex- ept by consent or both parties. Following a merger of tne wetiern Telephone Company with another com pany, the Public Service commission raised rates, holding that thoce- fixed bv the franchise were Insufficient. Under the terms of the franchise the maximum rate was l.a0 a month. The citv of "Woodburn instituted suit to vacate the Commission's order. The Gomiog Bsby! - Hooray! Bcoray Nothing else can so completely endear 03 to the present and the future as the expected arrival of a baby. But in the mean time the comfort of the mother is of vast importance. There is a splendid external rem edy known as "Moth er's Friend" which ex erts .a wonderful influ ence upon the expand. Ins muscles. They be come more pliant, stretch without undue pain, make the period one of pleasant antic ipation instead ef ap prehension. In a scries of splendid letters from all over the country mothers tell of the rreat help "Mother s Friend was to them. Even grandmothers tell the wonderful atory to. their own daughters about to enter the Ftate of motherhood. Get a bottle of "Moth er's Friend" today of your nearest druggist. lse this splendid help with your own hand guided by your own mind. For a free book of interest and importance to all mothers write to Bradfleld Regulator Co., 403 Lamar Bldg., Atlanta, Ga. It relates the personal experiences of many happy mothers, it tells many things that all women should be fa miliar with; it is at once a grid, B$ ftB Inspiration. .Write for tii book. hSwMaaMfL'-nrt WOMEN ROPE CONGRESS IN (Continued From First Pane.) that the Anthony amendment be passed. Mrs. Elizabeth tleberdlne and Mrs. Wal lace Williams, of Washington. Mrs. Frances Haire, of Montana, and Miss Alice Reynolds, of Utah, spoke along the same line, and then Mrs. Florence Bayard Hllles. of Delaware, and Miss Ann Martin, of Montana, told the Con gressmen that their aid was expectea. 'It is most necessary tnat you j-'emu- crats remain in power," .Mrs. .nines said. "But it is also necessary that you recognize the paramount Issue lacing you in the enfranchisement of women. As a Democrat, 1 appeal not oniy iu Democrats, but every man who stands for a republican form of government." Miss Martin said tne sunragists honed to be "friendly and that they would not have to oppose any political unrtv " An iced cake weigning no puunus wa brought back from the West by the envoys as a present lor l'resiaem Wilson. Greshnm to Discuss Candidates. GRESHAM. Or.. May 16. (Special.) Meetings will be held In the lecture- room of the public library here tomor row at 2 o'clock and at 7:30 for dis cussion of the merits of the candidates. No candidates will be admitted. Read The .Oregonian classified ads. Contempt Felt for Certain Men. 'I have come through the fire since I talked to you last. Whether the metal is purer than it was God only Knows; out tne rtre has been there, If I may believe my own thoughts have less partisan feeling, more lm patience of party maneuvers, more en thusiasm for the right thing, no matte whom it hurts, than I ever had before in my life. And I have something tha it is no doubt dangerous to have, bu that I cannot help having. I have profound Intellectual contempt for men who cannot see the signs of the times. I have to deal with some men wh know no more of the modern processes of politics than if they were living in tne 18th century, and for them have r. profound and comprehensiv intellectual contempt. They are blind and the worst of It is I have to spend nours or my time talking to them when I know before I start as much as if had finished that it is absolutely use less to talk to them. I am talking in vacuo. "You will remember the red Queen in 'Alice in Wonderland,' or 'Alice Through- the Looking Glass' I forget which, it has been so long since I read them who takes Alice by the hand and they rush along at a great pace, and then when they stop Alice looks around and says 'But we are just where we were when we started.' 'Yes,' says the red Queen, 'you have to run twice as fast as that to get anywhere else.' Fast Running Neeessnry. "That is also true, gentlemen, of the world and of affairs. You have got to run fast merely to stay where you are, and in order to get anywhere you have got to run twice as fast as that. That is what people do not realize. That is the mischief of these hopeless dams against the stream known as reaction aries and standpatters and other words of obloquy. They are sinking further back in what will sometime com fortably close over their heads as the black waters of oblivion. I sometimes imagine that I see their heads going down, and I am not Inclined even to throw them 'a life-preserver. The sooner they disappear, the better. "We need their places for people who are awake and we particularly need now, gentlemen, men who will divest themselves of party passion and of per sonal preference and will try to think in the terms of America. II a man de scribes himself to me now In any other terms than those terms I am not sure of him, and 1 love the fellows that fa I '1 ; A BUSINESS MAV TOK A EUSINESS POSITION C. W. HODSON CANDIDATE FOP. State Senator No. 65 ON" THE OFFICIAL BALLOT. .Paid Advertisement.) all IM frii fa...'ii5. 1 THOMAS J. CLEET0N Candidate for Re-election as County and Juvenile Judge. Judge' Cleeton has served as County and Probate Judge for six years; has had the Juvenile Court work since May, 1913. Has reduced the Juvenile Court ex penses 20 per cent, and saved the tax payers J i 000. Has organized child home-finding department.- placing in family homes 187 dependent and delinquent children. lieducr.d the number or cnuaren in the Frazer Home from a maximum of 0 In May to five in March. Has investigated over 1800 dependent and delinquent cases, and has entered Judgments of delinquency In less than 5 per cent, restoring a per cent to parents without records of delinquency. Has Vield the parents responsible and by work outside the court, through pro bation orricers and other agencies, pre vented delinquency in a number of other cases. Has taken no child awav from its parents without their consent, unless by reason of some moral delinquency in the parent, or tne home environ ment was destructive to the welfare of the child. , In placing children in religious in stitutions has recognized the right of parents to direct without suggestion from the court. If this record anneals to you. Judge Cleeton would be plensed to have your support on tne ivin any or May. (Paid Advertisement.) , . t ; A "-Ki v - f fTi t" i Mufcuuskl -V.-iat . --"- ' - W. H. CHAT TEN Rfmihliran Candidate for Joint Rep resentative Clackamas and Multnomah Counties. tPaid Adertleuient. ' ' " ' J W. B. STEELE FOR COUNTY COMMISSIONER VOTE X 123 Mr. Steele was elected County Commit lon.-r of Multnomah County in by 1- mot a unanimous vote of all the voter of the ounty. During the litiu- he held office he conducted lnmvlf in auch a manner as lO receive the confident'' nf the nn hi In anH demonstrated thorounhlv hia abilitv to nrnn- criy Baminuior tne a u tit-a or county cora- mi?nioner. M r. .eea friend a, knowing his quali fication, have induced him to become a candidate in thia election. The people ef Multnomah County will bn extremely for tunate It' he la elected and hia eervices se cured, for the reason that It la difficult t- get able, aucccar-ful men of Mr. Steele a lyp4 to consent to run for or rice. Mr. gteclf has been a resident and tax payer of Multnomah County for more than .'JO years, and la married and has a fanillv I of nine children, all residing In Multnomah County. M r. Steel has exnert know led ae of road build In a; and road cunet ruction, and. as will be remembered by many, whs one of th pioneers in the pood roads movement of this county and state. In fact. Mr. "Mecle built the first hard -surface macadamized road in Multnomah County. 4l"aM Ad-rfUemeiit. Protect YOUR Home Protect YOUR City Protect YOUR State Protect YOUR Country There's But Que Right Way to Vote 46 X LITTLEFIELD, E. V. KF ' land and Orecon at OF MULTNOMAH COUNTY the Xationa, apitol. REPUBLICAN (Paid advertisement by Littlefield for Congress Committee. 519 Henry Bid.. foruana, ur.i Re-Elect W. L. Lightner County Commissioner rz !.VgWjWy.'.SW Vole fcr Ko. S6 on. the ballot. Hamilton F. Corbett Hepubllc&n CaAdidale for REPRESENTATIVE Reduction In taxation with economy and efficiency in administration. (Paid Advertisement.) xi '.' . - - ..) it- 1 Fred A. Jacobs . Republican Candidate for DELEUATK National Convention Chicago. III.. June 7, 1916 Third C'oniEreaalonal Dlatrlet (Paid advertisement) Hood roads and economical business administration. i If re-elected will continue economi cal policy, on the job six days, morn ing and afternoon, every week. (This Adv. Paid by John K. Wilson.) i' . - X ; f . . w . id . . ' K i RODERICK L. MACLEAY Republican Candidate for Legislature BALLOT NUMBER 99 Stands for Business and Industrial Development. (Paid Advertisement by O. Voorhles. 406 ; :: T'--' .-A... . V-. t J: ; VOTE (BALLOT NO. 117) FOR John C. Mc Cue REPUBLICAN FOR DISTRICT ATTORNEY and rid the District Attorney's office of extravagance, inefficiency and machine politics. John C. McCue is backed by no special interest. He is aligned Trith no political combination. John C. McCue stands for "strict law enforcement and impartial and economical administration." (Paid advertisement by Mr. It. Kleppcr. lTiCt Yeon Bldg.). Mc Cormick Cauaty School Saperlatrndeat , VOTE 131 Paid Adv. Hural TeacheiV Club. VOTE No. 96 X O. LAURGAARD for REPRESENTATIVE The Only Civil Knorinrrr Candidate la the Male for the l.rgiKlatare. tt'ntd Advertisement.)