I" 1 J . " THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAU PORTXAND, SUNDAY MORNINO, MAY 28, 1911. .JL.LXJLJLJ 1 1 X 3 J- SPECULATES ME EAST ONIWSS ABOUND CIRCLE Speeches Uttered on Western Tour by Woodrow Wilson Studied Carefully by East ern Political Students. NEHALEM'S RIGHT TO WATER UPHELD State Engineer Lewis Holds That Town Has Power to Drain Stream. MARSHLANDS OE ILVVACO COUNTRY BEING DEVELOPED (PublLnri' Pr Lad Wtr.. ) W'UKhtniflon. May J7. -No 'pwing rord tlie clrrln" for miiny yar hu attracted th IntrrMt, though rathrr quirt tntwcut, imoni politicians and tatmman or nil prtl and erry ! g re. . ha that of Governor Woodrow Wilson of Naw Jry. Kvery aparrh 1 atiiitlwl. tha rport ef all tba mattings ara acannvd crful 1 It and nothing tha Jerjr man nays or . dots paaaaa without bin conaldarad - from all angle. A jraar aso Oovarnor Wllaon wn not known of politician, aoma of Uia hlfh borna knew of him aa prnldnt of ' JUntrton unlrarslty, but the moil far sighted practical pollUclana In the bunch Would have laughed to hava :' heard tha name of Woodrow Wllaon maatlonrd In connection with tha preal- tfency of the United States. When he waa elected governor of New '," Jerary even. It did oot cause much of m ripple. It waa a Democratic year anyway and aevaral Democratic govern ors were elected. When, however, he defied the power ful SmUh machine and beat It to a pulp, politician began to take notice and then when he took hold of a not ever friendly leglalatare and put through tba program he had promised when a candidate. It became a certainty that he waa a force which must be rec gnlced In all providential calculations. It's a long time before the nominating - conventions ara held, hut the impres sion is strong here in Washington that tha man who beats Wilson will be the Democratic nominee. Things may hangs, of course, but that's the way It tooks now. Wffl KacTsagh f ollow Dickinson? Tha statement that Secretary of War Dickinson resigned freely because of the . demand of private business Is accepted with reserve aa the diplomats say, In Well Informed circles. -1 There Is no doubt that Mr. Dickinson made considerable financial sacrifice to go into the cabinet, and that he will be . , much better off In private life so far as Income goes than as head of the war J department Tbere Is, however, good . wisdom In the belief that there were other causes which had much to do with his retirement. In tha first place there have, 1 understand, been grave differ ences of" opinion between tha president and tha retired war secretary as to tha - Mexican situation. Then, too. Mr. Dick inson Is one of two Democrats In tba - cabinet, the other is Secretary Mac . Veagh, and tha strong party men grow restive over the disposition of the presi dent to overlook party lines In making high appointments. Mr. Taft Is seeking . renominatlon -and these objections on tha part of Republicans who believe ; there ara Republicans good enough for sny orrica, have become rather embar rassing. It Is not Impossible that Mr. McVeagh will find his business demands Ills private attention before long. Congroasmsa Tire of Session. Congressmen are beginning; to talk bout adjournment Republicans In both branches have been hinting that a re cess during tbe hot months would not interfere with legislation at ail. while many Democrats In tha house are begin ning to believe they will be through with all they care to enaot of their leg lelative program within another month. High temperature served to stimulate In tbe minds of the representatives more Interest In summer resort matters than In tariff questions. For several days they have been considering the possibility of getting through for the summer by the first of July. Though the Democratic free list bill will probably not be passed bv the sin- ate It may not be considered at all the Democratic leaders Insist that they have demonstrated to the people that in passing that measure their intentions were good, and that it will not be nec ossary for them to Insist upon remain ing in session to await action on it by the senate. The reciprocity bill they expect the senate to pass within a month, and then all that President Taft asked of the ex traordinary session will have been dis posed of. The Story of judge Pope, wnue tne Honorable Hoke Smith, governor-elect, of Georgia, with char acteristic modesty, declined to tell the subject of his conference with Presi dent Taft recently, others have been more willing to explain the governor's confessedly mysterious mlseion. Gov ernor Smith did not care to admit that although a Democrat he had a persona interest In a certain appointment soon i.v mala by a RePuWlcan president, although the modebty of Governor Hoke prevented him from explaining (Salrm Buro of Th Jmirna) I Falem. Or.. May !7 Exerrlnlng for the first time the power given him by the recent supreme court derision, Plate Engineer John It Lewis has derided that the prior application of H Schollnveyar to eight scond-feet of water at the mouth of nobs creek, in Tillamook coun ty, Is a menace to the welfare and safety of Nflmlem and has referred the appli cation to the board of control for hear Ing. The bosrd has power to deny the sp plication If public Interest demands IJ. Nehalem set to w rk a year ago, fol lowing a disastrous fire, to bring grav ity water to the city. But Schollmeyer filed ahead of tbe city an application for water enough to drain the stream. Under a recent ruling of the Oregon su preme court In the ease of Cook Ingham vs. Lewis, the state engineer and board of control may deny SchoUmeyers ap plication notwithstanding It Is prior, as It is a menace to pubiio saxeiy in ne halem. The case of Cooklngham vs. Lewis wss tha first to be decided In the United Status on this particular point and leaves the proposition clearly defined. "Few people realise,' said State Engi neer Iewls today, "that they have an office with power to determine In cases of water right disputes where water Is moat heeded by public demand and to rule accordingly. In cases where water from a. stream is In demand for Irriga tion purposes we can prevent It from be ing held up for power purposes. "In cases of domestic need, also, this office has power to disregard prior fil ings and rule according to public demand." Ocean City of Pacific County Pins Great Hope to Cran-1 berry Industry and to Period! of Jetty Construction. (Rpedil N.pairs fen TTit Joarul.) Ilwaco. Wash.. May 17. The acouta for the army of commercial progress i are tolling that Ilwaro, the once thriv ing finding town at the mouth of the Columbia river, Is again coming Into Its own. It doas not take an unusually keen observer to descry the signs of aa awakening. It is not alone from its fishing re-1 sources that Ilwaco of the future will depend. In done proximity to the town are hundreds of acres of cranberry land being rapidly developed. Some tracts are already bearing. Thousands of dol lars Is being expended in the purchase and development of these marsh lands. which but a few years ago were held at slight commercial value. Soma of the , cltlsens of Ilwaco who formerly looked to the lordly Chinook salmon as the ALBANY CHAUTAUQUANS ORDER AN AUDITORIUM (flpcrlil Plipifrt to Tb Jonrsal.i A'lhany. Or., May J7. At a meeting of the Albany Chautauqua board yes terday the building committee was In structed to secure plsns for ths new Chautauqua auditorium In Bryant's Park. The Chautauqua board la trying to have Governor West make an ad dress on the opening day, July 7. July 14 will he temperance day and Mrs. Edith Smith Davis, a prominent east ern temperance lecturer, will speak. Dr. Calvin Wrhite of Cleveland will de liver an address during the meeting on "The Dangerous House Fly." New Land Company Is Formed. (Special Dltimtrh to The Journal.) Albany, Or., May 27. Articles incor porating the Taylor-Collins Land com pany of this city have been filed with County Clerk Marks. The Incorporators ara George Taylor, J. J. Collins and L. M. Curl. The capital stock is J20.00J In 20. shares of $1000 each. The prin cipal place of business will be In Al bany, and the present holdings of the company embrace 2000 acres of land near Eddyville, Or. PIONEER ALASKA MINER DIES IN CALIFORNIA (Doited Press Leawd Wire.) Seattle. Wash., May 27. After six years of total blindness, brought on by the glare of the Alaskan snows, Charles D. Lane, 71 years old, a Nome pioneer and a widely known coast mining man, is dead at Palo Alto, CaL Since being stricken he has had agents supervise his Alaskan mines. his deep personal Interest In the se lection of a Republican for federal of fice. So It came to pass that Governor Curry and others of .New Mexico here on statehood made one good guess, and the right one. on the Hoke-Smith call at the White House. They knew that Judge Pope, now a territorial Judge in the territory, has been for years a pro tege of the governor, and the one-right guess of Governor Curry and others was that Judge Pope was Indorsed by Governor Smith for the federal Judg shlp to be created when New Mexico is a state. The governor of Georgia, ex plained to President Taft a personal interest In the appointment of Judge Pope. It was explained that years ago Gov ernor Smith and a few other citizens of Georgia heard a lad deliver a re markable high school graduation speech. They were so attracted by the prom ise of the young lad of 17 years that they looked him up next day and of fered to put him through college. He waa poor, but proud, and would not accept the offer unless his admirers would permit him to pay back the money advanced for his education. They did not care for a return, but had to accept his stipulations. Only a few years after the lad, a graduate of col lege and the law, came to Governor Smith with the full amount that had been advanced him and with compound Interest. He simply Insisted on payment ui in ueoi, ana went on malting a name for himself In the, law. His health broke under the sfValn, and he went to New Mexico where later he waa made territorial judge. Now comes his probable appointment to the fed eral bench for life, and the president has the greater regard for the young man since hearing the Hoke Smith story, and after learning from New Mexico people the story of his record as JurlKP Pope since he became a fac- erritory. Curtains. J. Cummins they use to the heaw niM .in ,.,. ' cnarjje him with being a "blooming: ar- tuted my former diet " i it,tocrat who never drank anything but "I found that I was m once ben-fitc-d nampan and nate? foully to speak by the change, that I was soon Relieved ' l of u ord,natr5r man: Cummin Pved from the heartburn and Indigestion that 1 n T"" 1' f" . . , 'used to follow mv mMi , A! V I But tht! anclent charge is likely to I? mv back rZ mv l hal th,p. Pains 'be revived. It has been discovered y "ey affctliMiat the curtains at each window of mtJkl ?!re8, "LhiC,h US,PJ to be un-' Urt'"' ht;avr velvet draperies, tied . A. . my wll)ch was elow j witli massive silken cords, lined with .u i"ui5; num a neavy met or meatB the daintiest raw silk, and these splen ana greasy iwaa, nao, not in a moment, ; did but severely simple hangings are hu iiuuu;, na none me less surely, i testimonial to the fine taste and money been restored to normal efficiency. j recklessness of somebody. "Sow every nerve Is steady and my' '0 other offices in the senate bulld braift'and thinking faculties are quick- j lnK uavp anything approaching in eleg- ot ana more acute than for years past. ! nce these splendid hangings. They -.axier my aa styie oreakrasts I used "m "r lna' "t get their owner into to suffer during the forenoon ,roro a! Pllllcl trouble. But he really Is not feeling of weakness which hindered me I responslD1 ror them. FEED YOU SIJNE1' reed Your Brain, and It will Feed Ton Money and Fame. "Ever since boyhood I have been es pecially fond of meats, and I am con vinced I ate too rapidly, and failed to masticate my food properly. ine result was that I found myself, a rw years heo. arr ictf.H w.itu rtn of the stomach, and km, - 1 I ! lor ln the affalrs the t terfered seriously with mv t,Eit. i Cummins' Silk "At last I took the advicp r.r r,-. ! ut ln Iowa- when Albert and beean to eat nran.-v.... .' . - rst ran for governor. main source of revenue, are now begin ning to engage In the cranberry enter prise. One man owns COO acres of land adapted to the growth of this tart mor sel of food. That there Is Mg money In raising cranberries is proved by the fsct that one grower picked off slightly over an acre of ground more than 100 barrels of berries. The product sold for 19.60 a barrel, leaving handsome net profit for the grower. Hundreds of acres will soon be bearing. This means that labor I will be furnished to many persons this j from an Industry which but a few years j ago was scarcely considered seriously by most of the people of this vicinity. More thon f 1 00 an acre has been paid for raw land. Upwards of $600 and as high as 1000 sn acre has been spent in preparing the ground. The land must first be drained, dykes built, all vege. table surface removed, and a heavy layer of sand spread on before the plants may be set out. Vorth Jetty will Help Greatly. There are other reasons why Ilwaco Is beginning to feel optimistic. The con struction of the north Jetty will. It Is said, prove a boon to this section. The government may establish the headquar ters for the crew, as well as operating headquarters. In this city. Construction of the Jetty will take, it Is said, at least four years, perhaps much longer, based on the length of time required to bring the south Jetty to completion. Ilwaco expects to derive considerable revenue from this source. If the govern ment decides to dredge the old chsnnel to the north of Band Island, so much the better for Ilwaco. The docks of tho government will be built in this city anyway, whether the water or the rail route by way of Megler station on the Columbia Is utilised. Today the small steamers plying between this city, Chinook, McGowans on tbe Washington side, and Astoria and other points on the Oregon side, have difficulty ln crossing the shoals Inside of Sknd Is land at certain stages of the tide; In fact, at extreme low tide it Is Impoasi bis for craft of greater than two feet draft to get over. Jetty Will Draw Tourists. Revenue from the beach tourists who patronise the north coast resorts In the summer will be Increased when work on the Jetty Is commenced. The project will prove interesting to the resorters who ln teams and aatomoblles, will Journey oveY to Ilwaco to see the power ful derricks at work moving the heavy rock Into the cars, to be taken ont and dumped off the long trestle, which will be projected from a point near the promontory at Fort Canby. Citizens of Long Beach and environs are also working on the proposed road to connept that part of the beach with Fort Canby. An effort is being made to ave the government do part of this work. A good plank road is now m use between Ilwaco and North Head. Work of installing powerful search lights at McKensle head is progressing Tapldly. The work will be completed ln about six weeks, It Is calculated. With the completion of the proposed road, the Installation of the searchlight and the Jetty operations under way, it is expected that this section of Pa cific county, which Includes Fort Canby, North Head and McKenzle's head, will become most attractive scenic points. Activity Along- the Beach. Out at the' beach an air of business s unmistakably seen. The county bou levard which starts in at Holman sta tlon, a short distance out from Ilwaco, s progressing steadily" northward to wards the Breakers hotel. The boule vard Is solidly pecked and oiled so far as completed, making It an attractive driveway skirting the beach ln plain view of the ocean for most of the distance. Cottagers at Seavlew, Holmans, Long Beach, Tioga and the Breakers, as well as the dwellers at points further north, and reaching as far as Ocean Park, are beginning to arrive. Most of the cottages present an attractive appear ance. Liberal coats' of paint have been applied to many of the beach homes, and lawns and shade trees are looking fresh and Inviting to the throngs of city folk who will spend their vacation weeks beside the sea when the hot weather sets in. Altogether the summer season looms Invitingly to the small army of business men who wait on the summer resorters. Grocery stores are opening, hotels are preparing to receive their guests and a general air of bustle is to be felt there, Ilwaco, by reason of Its nearness to tha most thickly settled part of the re sort section, naturally derives consider able revenue each year from them. A number of Ilwaco business men have branch houses out on the beach. terlously la my work, but since I began to use Orape-Nuts food I can work till tinner time with all ease and comfort." Kama given by Postum Co.. Battle Creek, Mich. Read the little book, "Tho Koad to Rellvllle," la pkga. "There's a reason." Ktw rrad tho abovo letter? A vw om appears from time to time. fi awmaa Interest. The hangings were Inherited wltn th office suite. The offices used to belong to Senator Hale of Maine. . He was chairman of appropriations and en titled to whatever he liked. He had it, too. When the senator moved out as a sen ator, his suite went to Cummins. While it was a pretty gorgeous place for an ordinary senator. It wasn't much but a storage room for the -elegant Mr, Hare. He aid" not use It regularly, "ha v lng an office at tho capltol building. Statehouse Engineer Named. (Salfin Bnrtau of Tha Journal.) . Salem, Or., May 27. Martin G. Lang guth of Portland, has been appointed engineer of the state house and will start on a thorough overhauling of old boilers as soon as warm weather comes. George Dunsford has Been ln charge of the engines temporarily, while the per manent engineer was being appointed. Mild Liquid Cure Eczema., Skin Sufferers! Drop Greasy Salves and Nasty Medicines. 'That mild, soothing liquid, D. D. D. Prescription, stops the awful Itch with the first drops. A prescription of ac knowledged value. , Get a trial bottle at 25a It will take away the Itch right away and you will sleep soundly. We assure you person- I ally of the merits of this remedy; fori ... '- r "V ' ? ': " t ' " f -' ' . v .i i1'' ..l . - . , . . - y .vv.-" ' -;vv- lira tfa Weeft "STILETTO" STANDS FOR STEEL QUALITY TOOLS AND CUTLERY LOOK FOR THE TRADE-MARK Always Ask Your Dealer for "Stiletto" Tools and Cutlery PACIFIC HARDWARE AND STEEL CO. PORTLAND BRANCH NORTH TWENTY-SECOND AND NICOLAI STREETS The Only Exclusive Jobbing House in the Northwest CONFIDENCE IS THE BACKBONE OF ALL BUSINESS WISE The People Have Confidence in the DENTAL CO. They Fulfill Every Promise Deception Promises are easily made and just as easily broken. Any man or set of men can claim to be the best dentists in the world and promise everything, but can they deliver tjie goods? A first class dentist can secure all the work that he can possibly attend to in. any city after he is once established. Wan dering dentists are generally lacking in skill and reliability. Some of these men during their tempor$y sojourn in this city advertise prices for which it would be impossible to produce good work. Poor work is dear at any price, so is it not safer, better and more eco nomical to entrust your work to men of well known reputation? K' i v ' ---,. . .. . .... ..... .. L: WS, A. WISfi Registered 1887. Practitioners' course, American College of Dental Burgery, Chicago, 111., 189S. Ex member Oregon Dental- Examiners; Pres.' and Mgr. Wise Dental Co. There are few men today whose skill equals his ln making false teeth. . . ; - Reliability . Dr. W. A. Wise has practiced his pro fession in Portland during the past 24. years, and has held the highest dental positions within the gift of the state. He has surrounded himself with a corps of experts, each man excelling in some particular branch of tne dental profession. We have a reputation to guard jealously. Slipshod or careless work would endanger our standing in the community and tear down the good name secured after nearly a quar ter of a century of painstaking and honorable practice. Our prices, which are extremely moderate, are as low as it is possible to produce the best re sults. We leave the balance to your good judgment. , PLATES WITH FLEXIBLE SUCTION No more falling plates no sneezing plates down no more coughing or hughing them down. VERY BEST AND LATEST IN MODERN DEN-TTSTRY GOOD RUBBER PLATES, each. . . . .$5.00 BEST RED RUBBER PLATES, each. :$7.50 22k GOLD OR PORCELAIN CROWN for. ... . $5.00 22k BRIDGE TEETH, guaranteed, each ..... . $5.00 GOLD OR ENAMEL FILLINGS ; . $1.00 UP SILVER FILLINGS, each . . ... ... 50c UP PAINLESS EXTRACTING . . ..... . 50c UP Out-of-Town Patients' Work Completed in One Day When Necessary. The Meaning of a Guarantee All work is guaranteed against imperfections in material and workmanship and against all breakage due' to the tame A BRIDGE THAT CAN BE REPAIRED Without removing" from the mouth. The teeth on our bridges are made-of solid gold or porcelain interchange able facings, cemented in grooves, and can be changed at will in ease of breakage or changing conditions. This is but one of the many reasons con tributing to the recognized supremacy pf our crown and bridge work. Hie Wise oq uiiuo Office Hour 8 a. m. to 8 p. m., Sundays 9 to 1. DR. W.'WISrVa. aid Manager. Phonet A and Main 2029. Offices in Failing Building, Third and Washington Streeta v i