o n, PORTLAfOV OREGON,' e,. ? JACKSON lss-JJats Jpitif svanlng ; ( saocpt Bnnday ) . 'and every Sunday moraine at MINORITY INTERESTS IN1 FOREST RESERVES. OCAL INTERESTS are not . tion.Jn.-creating forest, reserves. Theory and, ; 4 Practice in this program look but to the farmer . in the, distant valley, "or .future generation' who will need ,v timber. Central Idaho Ji at arisen in i withdrawal of something like t.ooo.ooo acre there, as every other community blanketed by t done. Interests' embraced ' within . character suffer -Immediately , and "' : where that the reserve policy has been inaugurated those "', most directly affected have protested OregonV Blue i mountain . withdrawal, the Cascade reserve, Rogue' river and Warner reserves stirred up a hornet's nest, which 'only an unalterable purpose on the i went and inexorable progress toward' the end, have V quieted. ' , a.v :'':'' .''v'.'-4 . r-; There is the element of justice in "f 'demand attention. Majority rule is ;; hilation of minority interests could scarcely be warranted ;.; by any stretch of this principle. The man who has taken , property by location or purchase regions, builds., upon ; the future1, around him, development of resources and natural evolu tion of industrial condition. . When he is permanently isolated by 'a reserve withdrawal, the holdings is eliminated. Railways can hi property, and all the benefits of community work are ; ; forever checked. . . ,; .r;-. v ' -"" ' The world i not ready to tay that the rights' oTthese J pioneer in forest regions should stop' preservation. of timber resources from wasteful consumption iythe present generation. ; Reserve must be maintained by 1 "government, else' timber in the United States will be ftlestroped within a very few decades. But tie rights, of vested interest within the area of proposed withdrawals must be given every-possible recognition, consonant with , the broad purpose executed. -'v. j n'-r' . The sweeping order for approximately 1,000,000 acres , withdrawal in central Idaho no doubt embraces large areas more valuable for agriculture than growth of ' timber, The state men surrounded by the withdrawal, ' mug inac mc uiuiuei care ,ic cjicrtiscu in determining v what shall be permanent reserve and open to development. It must be past, government agents have been exceedingly miscel laneous. Complete isolation of promising districts hat been frequent, and the inspection upon, which -recom- : : raendations of ultimate boundaries were based, was not of the. thorough, painstaking order demanded. .. If the government had proceeded with greater ; care in the ' early stages of this work, and had been less susceptible to the methods of great timber syndicates, it would- be Wound that there would be vastly Jess protest from com munities adjacent to the withdrawals. ' Under the new and infinitely -better regime that now exists these mat ters should receive the painstaking attention they de- : : wUl. r. CONTRACTORS AND CITY OFFICIALS.- . " HE PLEADINGSin a case at ' run in hntk law and -canity, flow are before thte circuit ' pretty kettle of fish." Not that, anybody -is "much sur prised -at the dish presented by the. papers in the cases, for they present only specimens of a system that the pub lie has long been more or less aware in a general way was in .vogue herev "'. 'A,'.'-" .'-.? ".' "'':" Just, how many hundreds or thousands of dollars the taxpayers have paid or agreed to pay to the drydock con structors beyond a fair, legitimate competitive bid, we do , not yet know, but ia the contest between various parties to the transaction it see'ms to be admitted on all hands, and in fact is contended by some, that the taxpayers were bunkoed. ' This has evidently and undoubtedly been go - ing on, with regard to many contract for city work, for years, and while it may have been fun for the stork con tractors, it has been hard on the fish taxpayers, Tht contractors are not to be severely . censured bff ' hand. . Such combination and agreement are perhaps ' regular trick of their trade, not only here bmielsewhere .whenever the public is to be dealt with, and in their judg ment are no doubt legitimate and even laudable unless . they fall out among themselves. .But have, the city of- ficials done all they could to prevent ' ing on the body politieMHave they not known all along v of these contractors poolsTarid winked at them?'7r Would :""it be too much to suspect that in some cases, like those .. of the Tanner Creek sewer, the Morrison street bridge and the Marquam gulch improvements, there, was prob- ably en official rake-off somewhere? . Certainly, the ' ."work" wa '"raw" enough to give color to uch an idea. ; . Is it not possible to have honest competitive bids on 1 public work of these kinds? Why cannot a city look out for itself the same as an individual, a firm or a corpora tion does? j. Contractors could not easily combine to get s-a large percentage more than a job was worth from ail individual, a firm or a private corporation. But a city, it seems, is helpless against them. ' Why? Is it too much to suggest that it is simply and solely because the of . 'ficials having the duty of looking after the city's interests - in these respect have been either incompetent or dis v honest? -,- -' s . ' v ' ' ; . VVe think that this Is not only' a natural and reasonable i, DUt an inevitable conclusion. If this be" the case, it is the people's business to cadeavor wjU all their might to secure a city administration that i both honest and com petent, and that will neither stand in with nor be hood- ; winicea oy a contractor' pool.; ; ; ' "WE MUST HELP OURSELVES. VlIE. IIA&RIMAN SYSTEM .way of building cutoffs when shorten the. line to the east , ' .San Francisco paper Mr. Harriman has already given order to spend without delay $560,000 in building a cut-,-off line in Nevada a8, miles iq length between Hazen, ; ,a sUtion,on the Central Pacific,' and Churchill, a station on the Carton and Colorado branch of the Southern Pa cific, and by this means reduce the distance 75 miles in the handling of all traffic from the east into the Tonopah and Goldfield country. This ia easy, natural and proper; V there are no difficulties in the wy either in getting the ' ,t-;orvauis linn. v . f 'I Ttni la a Benton county In Iowa. .and thereby bans a tale. Mr.v Marietta from that county ta out - In - Benton unty, Oregmi. He arrived Thursday, and luces the look of things. He says the court bnuae yard In Benton county. Iowa, lUs exactly, as does the yard in Bentnn county, Oron. and like the Int. 'tr. la wivered. wrth maple trwwu. The iall Is about the same SIM and shape, and ooruplea the same -comer of the Neck. The enurt houae la In course tit , caaatraeUoa, and Wbea completed, Mr. , ' . : -;A' ' $. Vi v.v '-'" PUBLISHED BY JOURNAL " PUBLISHING (Jo. trs-aw, 1 r-orusoo, -.uregoa, v;-,f OFFICIAL PAPER Of THE CITY OF PORTLAND - needed money or' given full consider But it is very tween Rioaria and mendous stretch protest against the ,a reserve order ha; withdrawals of this heavily," and every part of. the govern people that they be helped and the these protest that is already assuming admitted, but fthnK out in the mountain growth of interests the course of a real Value of his never' penetrate to , v , THE TALKS OF THE PRESIDENT. print commonplaces were they uttered and other industries and especially the have the right to de- what shall be left confessed that in the way. It will do The president is some occasions yet he has thrown most unscrupulous the . country.' But law, or in equity, or that have been or court, disclose "a is sowing.- - t r our fruit is . ; grocerymen stantial pocket-filling profit ' . . s that the material aid unlimited 1111 this species of graft Oregon have known were winning medal HIS PACT ;;'. f . - finds nothing in the the purpose -is to According to the so as to proclaim Marietta avers will took almoa! exactly like the Benton county, Oregon court house. ' More remarkable still, - Benton county, Iowa, Joins Linn county, Iowa. Just as Benton ' county, : Oregon; Joins Linn " county; 1 0regon. ' "It's ail very strange," said Mr. Marietta, Mrmdiy, aa he drew a long breath, "about " the strangest thing all around, t ever met" waMeBjaBwaaBaBi '). ; PeeaUarlty af a STams. , ' ' . Few people have such a px-ullar name as Miss KHa I Allen, a Main school teacher. Whether spelled forward or backward, tha name spells Just the same, Th Jo-urnal' BuOdaog, Fifth and Yamhill y-" ?,r .-.; ' in doing the work.' The work is' or dered and tne money is forthcoming as a mater 01 course different with the little 80-mile gap be Lewiston. which would give a tre of marvelous country a water level road clear to Portland.'; Much of that work is now practically done; what remains to be done would not require over four months' timeJ It doing would be advantageous to the Harriman system from the standpoint of traffic, but it isn't done. The. reason it isn't done is that it would disturb the existing relations between the O. R- & N, and the Northern Pacific and Great Northern which are again cordial, each company charging for freight upon the basis of the long and difficult haul to Tacoma instead of the thort and gravity,grade haul to Portland... ; ! . But the lesson is not without its uses: it is teaching the must help themselves if they wish' to movement from Portland t.lwiston such proportions and it' is backed by such determination of purpose that-there can be no doubt of the character pf the outcome. . The lesson that the river is the "safeguard "antf salvation of the country is being well learned. From that lesson to its application is but a thort step. . -The starting point of it all it boats for the upper Columbia to supplement the portage railway it Celilo. These will gradually solve the problem-end in shoj - t time settle it to the satisfaction of T X THAT THE PRESIDENT SAYS when read In it oftentimes almost altogether com .,w... ...... monplace, what. might-b-said -by -almost any body, -though few would express themselves to the same effect so readily and vigorously. Yet it is well, and to some extent important, for the president to repeat these simply because he is president, for that reason they are listened to, read, and we may pre sume remembered and acted upon, as they would not be by plain Josiah Tompkins. Inst the president says .them makes them n6ne the more trueor Important, yet comingfrom hit tongue they have aft in terest and perhaps a value that they would not have if uttered by a "private citixen. .-vt .'.' . The president in these sophomoric homilies rarely says anything that anybody can , reasonably disagree witn. He preaches the gospel of work, "activity, industry, en deavor, effort honesty, usefulness, reliability, account ability, virtue and achievement all of which we all know to be good and right and worthy of acceptance; and though we know it we are glad to hear the president reiterating these homely old truths in his vigorous,' virile the country good.. .v - .- " somewhat of , a curiosity, in spite of his seemingly bluff downnghtness and - manifest up riKhtnes. ' Undoubtedly honest in every fiber, he has on thrown his influence on the J palpably wrong side, for polities' sake, as in the. case of certain federal judgeships, in Chicago. He certainly ha a good deal of independence, and that quality called backbone, his influence in favor of tome of the and unclean politicians that ' afflict these comparatively , small idiosyn- cracies may be-passed over as of light consequencen view of the good the president has done and is doing, and the good seed that, often unconsciously, perhaps, he ' "-...." ' ' '?.:' , ....-' ---j' AN OBJECT LESSON IN FINE FRUIT RAISING. - Fine' California oranges 5 cents a dozen; New York Baldwins, four pounds for 3$ 'cents; Hood Rivor Spitzenbergs, two pound's for .as cents. y; .. IGURES .TELL' Oregon's triumph. The glory of not an empty honor when California publish . such prices as the above. Mr. Franz of Hood River says he found these rates at Pasadena, under the shadow of the far-famed orange groves, and where New York apple knew, for years no competitor. The Oregonian' heart was filled with pride, while his fellow orchardist experienced the more sub iuchbcmjfacts as thMeJhaveJeenJsmih'aJLloLHood River horticulturists for some time, but it is only lately results of high price, steady demand ket Mve"bceri circulated. PebpIeoT that their big apple and other (fruit at, public fair, but they dp not yet realize fully that, the more gratifying .medal bearing the eagle stamp is being captured with equal celerity. ' If all Oregon land owner having good orchard site appre ciated that their property only await . intelligent cultiva tion to yield fruit bringing a figure equal to the pro duct of the famed orange groves of California, would they permit it to continue year after year bearing stumps and brush, or, as in many instances, the decaying grove of fruit trees that yield a wormy product unfit for cider? All of this state cannot be expected fo become second Hood river and southern Oregon districts, but it is ap parent to the most casual observer that thousands upon thousands of acres are untouched, which will in the near future become the scene of the most profitable fruit in dustry. Hood. River and a few more enterprising com munities are merely pioneering the way. ; - , :'-f'l!' WHO SHOULD REGISTER. M v cannot be made too plain nobody caii vote at the primaries who ha not registered his -' psrty politic. It is not enough that one ha al ready registered is the usual way. ' That will permit him to vote at the elections. But if he wishes to have a hand jn the selection of the two candidates for mayor whom the Republicans and Democrats will nominate he must in addition register his party politics on or before the night of 'April 14 't.?-- - i ":. r 1 ; Each and every voter should make a . note of this for his own information. , Doe he want fo vote for a party nominee at tne primaries? then he must register again his party politics. Doe he (imply wish to vote at the election?; Then if he is already registered that is eufficient- ' The ordinary registration, however, does not carry the privilege of voting at the primaries. He told his love good-night. Oood-night, good-night rood-night; ", Ha told his love good-night, all repetl ... tlon scorning: . ,. Oood-nlght sood-nlfhf iood-nlht; - Oood-hlght. good-night tood-nlght; Until tha milkman cams along and told r them both good-momin. . Comvrford Oasette. :: .m,. 11 -.. ; Xt Mas. i .. r 'Prom th New Tork Tlmea .1 The truth generally has a sting In Us tali. Small Charge Bxtt th loot araad Jury. ' j Oot your bail bon4 readyr , ' Tha hena em I nellnad to b goad. ," Only ; tw waeka till EaUr brtnr . Don t let polities tatarfar wiUl' It Llnavitch ' eeuld - gat rid et hla nanks ha would na all right - . Then wouldn't It be wrens te take ao poor a man s money, anyway ; ' .Ha can't do anythlni ta and tha war. for if be did ha wouldn't b tha eaar. The Damocrata can always carry aome towna In oft years, so aa to keep hope ana courage aaive. y- ; . . Alas. an4 aome more alaal Mayor- meet uunne waa ror tree silver la It. ruy poorjchioagoi , t v If Sir Thomee Upton will come to our fair he will have permlaaloa to mi any -cup la roruand. . . Bealster .your pollUea, It .Republican or Democrat and vote at tha primarlaa or eiae oon t kick arterward. Mrs. .Welchtmaa-Walker. the richest woman, perhapa, ia th country; aeema to do one or the moat miserable. ..Carter Uarriaon probably thinks he oould hare wo a too, but probably he oouian t, ho aaa straddled too much. The mayor of Richmond, Va., objecta to the display In store windows of hoalarr modala How so sensitive a" soul muat ' It la suepectcd that It will take a Ions tTm tor bring- to trial the oases' ot some people indicted by the Uat county grand jury. : . ., . . j; ".., . Most ot the candidates for councilman want to run at larare. Some of them .will be left to run at large aa private A larae reward would be paid by people easily awakened early. In the mornms. but who wlah to aleep, tot the invention or a crowleas cock. . Some crook raised a dollar bill to 110 and paaaed It ea,jt aTOoaryman- But It la nothing new for Kverett street Dollar Bill to have to ralae 0. ' . ' nocKereiiers , money can t be any worse than some that 001ms Into church collection plates from people who rent nouses ror immoral purposes. , It was reported that Presldant Roose velt, desired Mr.. Harlan's election aa mayor of Chloaaro. But as mayor-elect Dunne has It children the president will be reconciled. . fi ; Chicago that rave 180.000 - majority. more or Iftss. for Rooawvalt and Deneen only Ave months aro, elects a Dmoeratlo mayor by ZE.OO or so. Mloral; Partisan ship cuts little flgura any .mora la mu aid pal elections. i"'f. ' The Portland airl wha, being strad by the Seattle man whom she had Jilted, for the rumitoro ha had given her. compro mised the ease by again agreeing to marry him, keeptns the goods, may have some thoughts up her mental sleeve as to what she. will do after marriage. f Oregon Sidelights . Carlton Is to have a newspaper, 1 1 ' Wild strawberries la bloom up south. v Wild geese flying north, up the valley. A takevlew man haa ordered aa au tomobile. . . ; il ; ' Eugene thinks population. .i , It has close to 7,6eo - Sixteen divorce eases cnthe -Jackson county docatu------ ; . Owing- to a well signed remonstrance, Talent will have no saloon. - It ls a small or sleepy town hasn't a baseball, team. , -. that Passenger cars coming to Orsaoa an loaded, going east mostly empty." - Bumpier people have faith in that city and district The mineral Is there. Three Bellfontaino men chased a coy ote for two days, and then didn't get him. , New people are oomlng to! Amity each week, and there la not a hoSse there to rent- .: " ' - : ' V ." 1 Cor van la expects a building ' b 00m this summer, 23 houses having already been planned.. :. c . The Newberg handle factory -will make Insulator brackets. 11,000 a day If a mar ket can be found. ...,; ; ; The Amity Advance aays that town promises to improve mora In six months than la a dosen years past A Farsntngton dairyman's IT sows yielded 182. Si eaeh for tha past year, a net profit of I5S.II each, r; - t John Day News: Whs said, "No snow in the- mountains," and "No molaturo In ths ground?" O ye of little falthl Benton county - married . people are setting a good example., At the last term of court there was not a divorce case on the , docket ' . .- .- - ' Tor Chreo days there wera six preach ers In Irrlgon. and the Irrigator says that there were some ehlckens left after th preachers were gone. , ,. . - 1 ' Marriages and divorces of Indian al lottees pf land according to their own custom are illegal, and a lot of them don't know where they are at matri monially..,..: -j;. j ' t V,'.:. - - :y,iK It Is expected that In a little time there will be telephone connections be tween Waldport 'and- Cprvsllla The Alaesns now have a line to the head of tide on the Alsea bay, only 10 miles from Waldport, and the people of -the latter place will shortly complete th extension to their own town. ' " - Fifty-roar towns and cities 1ft Ore gon and Waahipgton own and operate their own water" worka. . The number Is far larger than mnat people would have giieeeed. . The Information was obtained ny -tha sub-committee that I earning, data for the use of the water committee: In devising a plan for con trucUon or a plant lor corvame. Sunday ScKool 'Av-l, LcSOn-r.'?':-A . (By M. B. Jeaklas, S. S.) April , 106 Toplot Ths Raising ot Iaaarua John xt ll-ii. Oolden text Jesaa salth unto her, I ara the reaurrectlon and the life -John - Responsive reading; Psalm xct - -Zatrodasttoav' Jtsus was drawing near tha end of his earthly mlaaloa The aulmoalty of the rulers In Jerusalem was open and de clared (vv. , St, ).. It was Impossible for them to deny that Jesus wss becom ing ths popular Idol (vv. 47, 41). lie had mads no attack upon public order; be had even counseled respectful atten tion to the teaching of .the established schools" (Matt, xxia II). But selfish and unaptrltual men realised Instinc tively that the religion of Jesus waa not ths religion-they lived. Just ss today the Sultan of Turkey believes ths open Bible nis most powerful roe, ' Outside Jerusalem and Ita immediate neighborhood Jesus was safe from per sonal violence, it, waa only m -Jewry' that peril threatened him (John vlL I), Just as in the middle ages a man whoas life waa not worth a ruah In Rome was seoura lu Florence, although Florence was. also professedly Catholic. . It waa equivalent to giving himself UP to die when Jesus cams bsck to the. capital where a price bad been put upon bla head. In the aospels we have three lnatances of raising from the dead, and one, in our Lord's caae, of a resurrection from the desd. The widows' son (Luke vil), the daughter of Jaime (Matt. IS) and Lata rue of Bethany (John xl).. were all liable to new attacks of disease. They were "reprieved," not set free. They muat experience death a second , time.' But Jesus "dleth no more" Rome vL ). He paaaed completely from ths abode of death into the realm of Ufa It -should be noted ta -the'-throe) ln stances to which ws refer.: that the young daughter who was restored to her parents had Just breathed her laat The widow's son was, on the contrary, being borne to his burial. But in the caae of Lasarus three days had intervened. , It is quite probable that skeptics had said of the .other cases that they were only "happy coincldenoea" No attempt had been made to establish the reality of the dlseeae. It might be considered an open question, whether death had really taken Dlaoe. But the Jews believed that on the third day the separation of soul and body was complete. -If not still In the body, the spirit hovered about the body for that length or time, this is tne reason Why Jesus waited for ths expira tion of three days before he raised Lasarus . from ths tomb. Jesus would put th miracle' beyond all cavil. At the oloss of three days he presented himself at- the house ot bis friend. In Bethany. - -. i Tha Xjaasoa. Teres II. ; Nothing teats our faith so fearfully aa th death of our beloved opes. Fortune, health, lire iteeit may be snatched away and- ws ' can . still smile. But when our household circle Is broken, tt is only divine grses which will enable ua to say, "Tha JUrd gave and tha Lord hath taken away, blessed be the name of ths Lord." Let us mark In this Interview between Jesus and Mary that despite' tha unsolved mys tery of her Saviour's absence la - the erttteel hour, she threw herself humbly at his feet when he did appear; and de spite her evident disposition to murmur, Jesug addressed her in the gentlest and most loving terms. "lie knoweth our frame; ho remembareUi that we are duet" (Ps. cUI:14). Mary was sight In asserting that death never appeared where Jesus waa present Wo must live Ilk Christ In our own home to assure the spiritual life of Its members. . . Verse tl. Jesus was not in haste to resent Mary's Implied reproof. He was. howsver. deeply touched by the poign ancy - of her grief. His distress was mors marked even-than her own. Roll gioh doea not demand ths suppression of our natural emotions. Stoicism is ths worst possible substitute for Chris tianity, "' Verse 14.. Every cemetery is a saerea shrine. Ot every civilisation the tombs outlast ' the palaces. Joseph had ' not our "sure word of prophecy" concerning ths ' future world and the resurrection of the body.-but he wished his bones to Its beside those of his ancestors in the old horns (Hen. xl:i). Wo may spend three-fourths ot our lives where duty has called us. but ws would' be carried back to ths (rod's acre" uf ftilldnooa after deathp Jesus would see ths grave where his friend's body lay,- Versa St. The shortest veree in tns Bible. and ths best known! . The- tears of- Jesus , were never expressive of despondency but alwaya of . sympathy. and they revolutionised the aspect , of rellgton. The fatalistic philosophy of the Koran will never stand much ot a show beside th precious .sympathy of a divine Redeemer. ; not . even nis miracles Of help. . so. endear Jeaus to us as bis tears of love. "The Son of Ood in tears" makes known to us how alien to ideal life is death! . Tha very per fections of a Greek vaae show that it was not fashioned In order to be shat tered. Our Uf with all Its precious en dearments was not formed to bo broken by tha hand of death. To see it in Its ruins - might, well sxclts the Maker's tesrs.,','- ' 4 -; ' ,., Verse It. . The tears of ths Savior did not witness to ths greatness of Lasarus but to ths affection of his divine Friend. Ws are left In total Ignorance ss to ths personal trait of Lasarus. lie no where else figures In ths gospel history. But Just . as the mother does not al waya love the brightest child most ten derly, but 1 ths rather drawn toward th ona moat dependent upon her care, so we may believe that Jeaus loves tha disciple not simply for what ths disciple does but also for what no neeas to nave dons for him. .'. ' , 1 '. - Versa 17. Ths onlookers of our Lord's day eould not understand tne mystery of his girts and tne. witnnoiaings- any better than we. With" these disputants the question waa merely a question of power. One miracle Is ss eaay.- or ss difficult as 'Its fellow. - The return of Jesus to the neighborhood of Jerusalem wss proof of his courage.. They hsd In many miracles seen tokens of his power. They hsd demonstration of his affection In emotions. What could It-all meant They wvrs ss dumbly confused ss we by our own sorrows. . w ' Verse IS. Natural or artificial 'caves were commonly used - for . sepulchers throughout tha east wherever evllable. They did not occupy space, useful for agriculture, and they were not liable to spoliation. The revised version notes that the tomb was closed by a stons laid "against" it, and not "upon" It. - Verse I. One of ths greatest of our trials, is th dscay of ths body. If w eould only keep ths , body sweet snd beautiful as we have known It In' it prime, or grave and serious ss we have found it In Its age. we would never permit It to dlsappesr. The Pinters had doubtless visited ths tomb svery day until forced to close the gravs sgslnat all future entrance, Th Incident ls mentioned here- to show that whatever might have been objected to other rais ings front tbs dead, it waa beyond all controversy that Lasarus was dead. Vers 40.' Vary gently Jeaus replies to- ths sorrowing sister. He simply reiterates his promise that In obedience she will behold something of. Ood' power and goodness Of whioh she had uot dreamed.' -1 ; - v ' ' 1 '-" - -Verses 41-41.' We have here recorded the thanksgiving of our . Lord, but not the preycr to which he refers. It msy bavs been short mad slaculaXory, or it may have been extended and consola tory. But Jesus would have thoss who stood by realise that he did not perform so solemn an act as this out ot impulse or - personal affection, or as' a mere demonstration of the extent of his power. It waa ta show1 that all he felt, Ood felt; all h, would do. the Father WOUld do. - .... - 1 - '. , Verve - 41.. Jesus prays . heaven but commands msn , Living or dead, he speaks to men aa their sovereign He would not simply have Lasarus breathe again, but arise; not simply arise, but com from the grave unaided.. Now that his ministry is so soon to termi nate, ho crowns the work wfcn aa aot which was witnessed by friends and foes alike: witnessed by mOltltudca , and which- embraces within Itself all that could be demanded by the most captious as complete evldenoe of his divine com mission and his divine oneness 'with the Father. ' W -,;,-v Versa 44, '. We believe it waa Huxley who asaerted that ths '.evolution of life from non-living matter waa credible to anyone who had seen an egg become a chicken, Tha Illustration waa not vary happily chosen, because . an egg Is as much aUva ss a hen.', .But ths .elements which we find' In a loaf of bread, and which become ' living In na-weraa few weeks before tha harvest aa lifeless as the body of Lasarus. To make them live in ths wheat and later in ourselves requires omnipotence ss truly as did the raising of Lasarus from his tomb. 1 - Verse 4. Ths result ot thla miracle was at once to make converts and to multiply enemies (w. 47-60). Ths, vary success ot tha gospel hardens - some heart a. ''Missionaries ara seldom mo lested until their teaching begins to raise dead sinners to Ufa ? Persecutions do not follow failure but suocesa The word of Jesus is as potent - today .aa ever. What, we need v Is not to amuse the, sick but to wake tha dead. Jeaus alone can do that. But ho will do it for us if we seek him tightly. ' From tha Washington Post - ' Ws have waited long and patiently for an official intimation as Ml the fate of the Hon. John Barrett miniater to Panama It haa not coma Announoa- wient haa been mads of ths reorganisa tion ot ths Isthmian .canal commission, which will supersede the present ar rangement. It Is dimly understood-that ths Hon. Charles EL Msgoon will become the diplomatic head ot the new canal regime. Mr. Barrett H is said, will be provided with "something equally aa good. .... .. " :' ' . ' . - J But whatT And now; what latn no- come or nimx ratience is ev toreiy thing, but it cesses to be a virtue when ths fate of th lion. John Barrett bangs In ths balance. Ws want to know wnat will become ot Mr. Barrett and wo want to know it now. Will be be rewarded with ah ambassadorship? Will he be come sssiatant secretary of state when the Hon. Francis B. Loom Is is pro moted 1 These are questions tnst anouid be answered, snd ths president has no right to hide In the wilds of Texaa while such matters are pending. ' ' John Barrett w the lsngusge or one of our. esteemed eonUtnporaiies, has "few Beers snd no equals." Ha has worked esrly and 1st for tha glory of tha administration. In tha handling of delicate diplomatic situations be In un rivaled Mis industry of voice and pea Is unflagging. His pulchritude Is un questioned. He has earned the admira tion of ths administration, and needs it, gratituds.',- '-'.. - "-' - . " In tha ' distribution pf diplomatic nlums immediately -aftet March 4. Mr. Barrett was cruelly overlooked." Butl that la the . way with, ths American people they work a good thing ta death. He stuck manfully to his post and saw ,k niuma a-o to tha others. There must be something good in store, however, for the miniater to rename, ins aorainia tratlon must realise that however p'g-lx-tfut the- oeotle msy be. they ' get mhiiJ ta the noint at laat They will rise as One man, If required, ta demand tha proper dlspoesl or tne ion. jonn Barrett - He must not be permitted to return to privets nrs, 11 na wa ever thera If nothing better offers, let him rnvlnr commission -among- the South American republics, charged with . 11 HMttftAMlM. A tne aiiinuuwwii , , - rood oDDort unity Is open in this Una for an . energetic, capable' man, with per suasive tongue and winning personality, snd tha Hon.. John Barrett would fUl the bill. With, the. proper lumumi rra m.i.tmi. -there la no reason why Mr. Barrett, should not pave She way for the establishment of protectorates over most of' ths feeble - South Amerlcsn countries, thus putting a and to revolu tions and adding immniij foreign nctivltleo of the United States. , Anrii s The day was clear and coot ths wlifd from ths northwsst so that ws traveled slowly.'- After breakfssting at ths second Mandan village we passed the Mahaha, at the mouth of Knife river, a handsome Stream about t yards wlda Bsyond this wa reached the island which Captain Clerk had visited on ths lOttt of October. This Island has tlmbef as well as ths lowlands on ths north, but Its dis tance from the water naa preveniea our Timmnlnf '' there during the winter. From ths head of thla Island we msde IH miles, ta a point of wood on ths north, passing a high bluff on the sdtath, and having coma about 14 miles. - In the course of ths day one Of our boats filled and was near sinking; we, how ever, saved her witn ths loss of a little biscuit and powdsr. ( . .. '." v 1 1, ;'J7;jT w mat's v maxd o 'qt (By Agnes Lee In London Msgailne.) Oh, the lads call me false now. But what's a maid to dot For blue, gray and brown eyts are true, '. true, true! ; .. . r: ' v : -Oh, tha lads mind them well, now, that . every winter day. At broom and at spindle. I preach jn tha grsy. . OH,, ths lada gossip low, now. that When '"' th spring flaw down -f My heart sang a, new song v the song of ths brown. -' , ,' .'. ; Let ths lada whisper on, now. for aoy '. one may.-sea . - r Where Leva plants his colors . the blue r shines for ma --'., . , Oh, I'd best be an old maldl For what's a maid to do -When blue. ' grsy and - truer true, true? brows eyes are V ' ' ' v-J ; ' : . -;-'. Wkat AJbut Hon.7 John Barrett? )m,mmm,m. .1 '. .I. ,. , ... ' . i ljcwis ana Clark '. r. - - nVasaaBSSieeweasw. Littcri Frcn tli" ...... Tie gJfcaUfattaaa ef sarMs. . Portland. April . To the Editor of . The Journal Replying to Dr. Walton's talk as reported in The Journal of the -tth, we should like to eay that we think a few comments on it at this time would hot be out of piece. Ths fsct of , ths saloon man's, activity In politics is . sst forth In a wsy as to try to encour age Christiana and church members to take more Interest la politics and sea to -electing more men - such ss Sheriff Word.. iThls Is all very good, but why stop there T -If It is a Chistlan'a duty 1 to register and vote tt Is his duty to uphold-a party whltb stands for prlncl-'s pies worthy of one professing ths Chris- ' ttan faith. V The two great, political, powers of today each stand for certain ' principles mors or less right and more or less wrong, but they both stand as ' a unit an the question that there Is no ' right In and is wrong altogether from ' a Christian standpoint via, the saloon . question. A political party standing for. a principle that Christ would not sano-, tlon in ths least Is a party altogether unit for a Chrlatlan to belong to or sup port. We cannot for -one moment -. Imagine Christ, whom- they, pretend to . be followers of, supporting or sanction- , Ing tha workings of a party directly re- sponsible for. m. existence of, tha aa- . loon.. -. ... ,v ..i'...- v. t.'.',. .- , Now it Dr. Walton wants his hearers " to engage in a political warfare against1 tha saloon. , why. doea ha sot ahow-tnam -the facta of the case aa. they are? Everybody knows that ths so-called ; Christians (church members) - ara re sponsible for. the existence Of 'the es looo. If they hsd preachsrs-who had., ths backbone ta stand up - before ths , churches and denounce sin In their ; polltlca, which is responsible for tha ss- loon, aa they denounce tha sin of the saloon, it would not be Jong before there-' would be a decided chsngb In the polltl- . cal attitude of .. tha churches. . er the ChUfthpopulariry" of "the preacher T who . naa noiy boidneee to aaeert nimseir. - -' Ton. gentle reader, and I are firmly -convinced - that the latter would be tha ' effect It would ' have" and that aald 1 preachers would be out looking for un other job." Now, a word about Sheriff Word. There Is no doubt thst he Is' a good man, and all indications are that he la but ha has not the opportunity to -show to the world how good hs would be under fewer restriction - If he had his wsy ho might wipe .vice off the map.. Who knows?-; Maybe he would.,, but hs was put into office by a political , party which upholds vice of the most, degrading nature, the liquor .Uafflc and tne evus mat always' iouow n. ano ne is without power to act beyond the re strict lone1 of ths lsws :. made by his , party..' Let the Christ la a and church ' member stand together ss a unit and -support a political party which as Chris tlana they would . not be ashamed of. and ons which Christ whom they pre-': tend to be followers of, would sanction. ' 't S ;' ; W A. SLlNOERLAND. . ;. , 'J V.v C ;. Tha Mrslsler Beoltat ' ' "Portland. Or.. April . To the Editor -ot The Journal The Journal in com-'. meant Ing upon the' small nees of the audl- .noa-to hear ths violinist Krelsler, hit-' ths nail on tha head when It asked the two questioner First as to whether the ; Empire . is ths plao - for big musical -events, and. - aecond, whether Portland had yet - learned, of . Krelsler's great-nesa- The lover , of musts haa learned -that 'he muat not take for gospel all that ths press agents say,- and I speak -' of my awn knowledge when I .say thst the great European musical centers do not' yet recognise Krelsler ss being a' great violinist.. It may be that In the future Ithey may; but ho haa not yet . arrived a that distinction.- - 1 . . In- ths-.famlly ot the writer there are two musical enthusiasts. - They have heard ell the greatest singers af the ' world . who have - occupied ths boards ' for ths - last 1 years, here snd ln Europe; slso ths greatest pianists and violinists. r Theyr felt, however, thst there wss poor management somewhere which would bring Krelsler to a thea tre given up mostly to cheap perform ances and whoss seats are proverbially .uncomfortable. Then, on- the top of ' that to charge from II to a minimum of 11 iwss Courting failure. Ths rouulo lovers of my family expect to psy 11.10 to li lt to hear tha greatest performers an plsna.nrvloUn.3ut- ths performer must be Of acknowledged-greatness and-ths- performance muat b given - In a ;, place whoso surroundings snd equip ments are eqrtal to the occasion; - ' " T "writs this nTetter bscausa I, don't , want tha Krelsler experience ' to lesd people to say thst Portland people do not appreciate good thing; they do. bat they have their choee -as ta - - where ; they wUl take the" good things, if the performance had been given In thr Co lumbia thestre. and tha prices had been graded from 41 down, there1 would.' In my Judgment have been a large house. and the event would have been more of a financial success than it waa : I be- : lie ve there were a good bisny other people in Portland who felt Just; ss the ' musio lovers in my fsmlly did. - - :'..- ii' '.V , OBSERVER. f j'.'v'v'i-''"" wiatferaa Xoga. ; v;V.!''J'' " - '" Portland, Or., April I To ths Editor -of The Journal In all the coast cities . from Lbs Angeles to Victoria In none have I noticed ths nulsanoa of men crowding on to rear platforms of street ears so bad and aggravating as It Is In Portland. Conductors don't soem to have any Influence or authority to com- i peL the "platform hog" brother to the "end seat hog" to go inside th car;' and bold on to a strap or take a seat, 'f any are vacant It'a a positive nuisance' for a lady to foros her way through the . platform crowd when she wants to got-, off or on a car. Then there Is the baby . carriage, all very welt , in Its wsy, but In aVerybody's way on ths platform of a streetcar. If baby carriages must be, taken up by street ears, why not havs - . hooks on ths rear of ths oar to hang them on, or, better atlll, decline to take , them at all t If earn are overcrowded now on ordinary fine days, what will ; they be like after tha fair openaT- , , y,,; sastern ladt.v'. t'V"'-'-'Want tha Sajaa,? ..-C';;'. r 147 Third Street' Portland, Or., April I To th Editor of The Journal This " itth day of March, 15, ths forty-ninth .;' snnivarsary of the whits settlers' mas- ; eecre at the Cascades by tha Indians.. , and tha stats of Oregon hss railed snd neglected $0 psy the veteTsna of tho tndlaa war tha amounts granted to them by tha legislature ef 1168. If the wld- owe and orphans and assignees of the veterans, desire to recover the money.,' due them from the state and wlU assign -their claims to me on or before tha litu day of May next I will Incorporate tlielr claims with my own, and on that data bring ault In- the United States court, for their recovery. , .,... . JAMBS MTONALD, . . fi " . Indian War Veteran. ;';:..; sWf-saJaew:'... , ' From the . New York Mail. Marshal Oysma aays tho Kunatase re gna soldlera And this ia a delicate as' well as soldierly way ef ssytng that the jap are considerably finer. .V-V ; ... ' 'nj .1' f -' : -v.