1 THE OREGON DAILY . JOURNAL PORTLAND, THURSDAY EVENING, APRIL 17, 1911 THE JOURNAL AX lxr.EFKNDF.NT NEWEPAPEB U. H. JACKSON. .4. tmj Sanita? morning at Tee Journal Bui l. Braadwar and Yamhill H.. ForUana. .W Eutere t tba poatofflca it rtl'('-i for tranamisatoo tlruug& U Bialla w,n rtM Btt(r. ' ' IM.hJ'HUNBS litis T173;; Bonn, -5-All Apartment nwcbrd by Iheaa """fl?1 T.-H th ontnr whit ilonarrnient yon UKKIUS. AOVBKTISINI BKPKMKNTATIVB Ji3 Fifth etenne, Nr l'ork, UU ."""' tiaa EiiUitin. Cbl;fQ. Subacrlr-ttun Termt by mall or to nj ddr" U Ut Colud State nr Uaxlcoi . DAILt . On ya. ...... .$8.00 t On ont....... ? . . arvtllT . .", . U 1 Am Winntlt ....... S .23 na -...12.50 I upe i Y DAILY AND' SUNDAY On rear... ST-50 I 0a month.... Animals feed: man cats.? Only the m intellect and judg ment knows how to eat. Sava rlu. - V ' ' ' ' " ' " DAYLIGHT GOVM&MKST UNDER1 th new commission charter we would have, a short ballot. . ' ' : We need It. Our present gov ernment under cover begins with the confusion of a ballot on, which there ia an army of candidates. There Is always such a. motley crew of candidates that" voters are confounded. They havent thus to adequately investigate all- They take chances In voting, and often . elect an .unfit. It isn't the fault of the primary. It is the fault of the system which multiplies the elective offices and makes every election a day of con fusion and bewilderment. There are bo many candidates that the voter Is befogged and bedeviled. The complexity reduces the effi ciency of the voter, - lie goes at his task of electing officials very muca in the dark. It is government, by 'uncertainty, It- is government, of doubt. It is igovernment by chance. It is government by' mystification. i No olective machinery in which so many officials are to be chosen can guarantee selection of the best men The direct primary is the best plan yet devised, but it is , put under enormous strain by the multiplicity fot elective offices. The outcome is necessarily - the confusing and dfe tractlng order that gives us in Port land "a government abemji which we knowln6thing andabouk which we can find, out nothing.'.- , i The new commission charterpro (vides for. theIeCtIonf 'six-officials, a mayor, - four-commissioners ana nhe auditor. The terms of the com' ' mlssioners are to so alternate that the ; ballot would be still further J1, shortened. . r y It would be a system that would put every candidate. In the limelight It would fee a fit beginning of a gov- , eminent of publicity5 and responsl i bility. The .candidates would be .so 'L'few that every, voter in. Portland could easily know all of them. f Nothing would - be -in the dark. The election' itself would be wide "'onen. Nothing would be under ftover. Nothing , would be by in trigue. 7 ' .We would have daylight .elections. We would have daylight govern ment. We would have daylight. In stead of darkness, through all our public affairs. ." The new charter has many virtues.-' It has few that could exceed in results the great service It would render in. simplifying,- expediting and perfecting our elections. 1 agriculture has been as successful asjeare of the tecttr. the throat, the'; They become a constant and effect-. iii Germany. . The needs of tne eyes, to eating wpaiesomeiy, auu w,! Wmi.w iuo i'""""8"1 v farmer for obtaining credit, for pro curing farm equipment, and for dis posing of his produce on the besi terms, have been fully met. The underlying principle has not yet . been accepted. In the United States except In an experimental form. This may be stated In a few words. Mortgage loans the land owner secures from the land mort gage banks, of which the Credit Fonder In France is. the most con spicuous European example. Terms are long, ranging from twenty-years upwards, interest Is very low, and the sinking fund, by small annual payments added to the Interest, ex tinguishes the debt within the term of the loan. ' - V Money needed by the farmer for improvements on the farm, for new implements, and for increased stock, or for improved farm industries, is obtained through the cooperative Raf feisen banks '-locally, constituted by the farmers themselves, and man aged by them. Collective credit is provided through' the agency of tho bank; and distributed by It to the cooperating farmers requiring ad vances. . keeping themselves clean. The out side of the . platter , is thus kept clean to keep the inside also clem an easier task. . e SEVENTEEN THOUSAND s POLITICAL POLICEMEN ARE Portland policemen fight lng the commission charter? h They have been assured by competent authority that they . are as strongly entrenched in civil service under the proposed as under the present charter. . By reading the text of the new charter, they can discover for them selves that their positions are aa - safe or safer under the commission fcharter than they are now Their - present alleged activity I against the commission charter and fin behalf of candidates, is a flag I rant violation of civil service regu X latlons, and one that is strongly ro- J sented by many of those who re 1 slsted-4he proposed overthrown E VENTEEN thousand persons, elbowing, jostling,: Jamming and crowding one another to gain entrance to the stadium Is . the latest Portland eventuatlon as to baseball. It Is declared to have been an event without paral lel or precedent on the Pacific coast. It Is the product of the gradual evolution of baseball from the crude game 1 of, years agd,nto the fine finesse of the highly technical con test of the present. Today, it is a game of wits and ' psychology as much as of strong arms and swift legs. Real baseball was first played on Hobpken field by New York clubs in 1845. Before that, a game very similar had been played in upper Canada. '. V-: The first baseball convention was held in 1867, and in 1858, the firBt national baseball association was organized. It was in that year, and at Flushing, Long Island, that the first games were played between or ganized clubs under an authorized code of baseball rules. . The regu lation ball then was lOVi inches In circumference. The bat was of un limited length, and the delivery of the ball had to be by an under hnd pitch, . , , ' All games were played - on free grounds until 1863, when, in Brook lyn, New York, the Capitdline club charged admission which went to the proprietor, thus laying the foun datlon of future . professional ball The- first great national team was the "Red Stockings of Cincinnati," known in its time to. almost every boy in America, The members were the first -salaried players, and in their t o u r through the country swept everything before them. They played through the season of 1869 and up to June 1870 without losing a single game. . .The present league of organized ball was formed In 1875, and the rival American league In 1890. The first curved delivery by a pitcher was by Arthur Cummlngs of the E- celBior Junior nine In 1866. The receipts of the national championship series In "1912 totaled M90.833. Nothing Is more significant of the standing of the game Jn popular affection than the vast assemblage in the Portland ball park Tuesday. It Is attestation of popular favor largely due to the known fact that the game is on the square, a feat ure - that constitutes its greatest glory. . , , ,- TFTV-TJIREE S' O FAR, fifty-three candidates are in the -scramble for nomi nations fpr city office In the prlmaryi Until tonight, the privilege of filing nominations is still open, and nobody knows what the day may bring forth. But fifty-three for sure, is the number of candidates, Portlanders are asked to look over and pasB upon for office. Fifty-three, count em, ask to have their qualifications, their records and their probabilities scrutinized by every Portland voter. Fifty-three, think of 'em, are groomed and galted, are exploiting their plat forms and are clamoring for votes, with the expectation that busy peo ple will be able to go through, tho list and winnow the chaff from the grain,, sift the fits Jrom the unfits; There could be no absurdity more monumental. It Is nonsense to con tinue a Bystem that harbors such a galloping, Jielter skelter mob of can dldates. It is a crime to throw such, a strain upon election machln ery and project so crazy a task be fore voters. It isn't the fault of tho direct primary, but the fault of a charter that calls upon the people to elect officials by hordes. The scramble opens the door of opportunity to the unfits. It is in the confusion that the incompetents slip into office. The stampede of the job hunters gives the undesir able his chance to. land in public place. . It is government by random. It Is one way in which the public ser vice comes to be loaded down with inefficiency. It is one process that helps to squander the tax money. It is the' initial step in Portland's present system of government about which the Citizen knows nothing and can find out nothing. It Portland adopts the new com mission charter there will bo no more biennial city election menager les. Elections will cease to be a grand parade of the unfits. Prl raaries will jio more.be the grand march of the Incompetent. The se lection of those we are to put In charge of our public business will no longer be a wild stampede of tho office hungry, but a qulet dignified choice of a few men, all "brought about in dignified fashion. It will be government by intelli gence. '-:--r : citizen, and inspire the growing gen eratlon. This state-wide practice is due to a law fathered by ex-Repre sentative C. W. Steen. of Umatilla county when a member of the legis lature. PERTINENT COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF SMALL CUANGB AVw. tfcar ha florid a unit tftml- does throughout the Middle 'est are passing into history, it may not be too harsh to renrStfcf that-It is better; to be "broke and barefoot" In Oregon than a millionaire ph the other side of the Rockies. Two pigs under a gate are a bit more comfortable than seventeen thousand people struggling to get through a baseball" park entrance just about wide enough for a side show at a cOyntry fair. . Socrates drank hemlock; but he was. never "yanked" In -the first in ning with the visitors three runs .to the good. ' Letters From the People (Communication ml ' to Tba Jobmal for publication Id thU department abould ba writ, tea on only on aid of tba paper, abould not xcewt 8o worda ia Icncth aad mint ba a p. eompanled by tba nam sod addraaa of tba aanoer. It tba write dot not dealrt to bar tba uama publUhed, be abould o Atata.) WAR IN THE EAST STOPS I ; civil service in the special election ! last November. J Jf the policemen are going to try I to run the politics of Portland who is going to perform the usual duties of the policemen? I If the policemen are going to run 7 politics in violation of civil ser 'vice, what is the further use -of civil service? . It will be wise for the pollee to forswear politics,' and&e jolicemen It will also be prudent. !' i '. GERJL!f FARSf ' CREDITS T HE report Issued by the British Board of Agriculture, on farm loans and credits in Germany, is just published., s , ' It says that the aim of a cooper ative loan bank in practically every parish in the whole empire has been reached, "There are in Germany 17.- 000 agricultural cooperative banka with a total membership of over 1; 300,000;. n-v.- In 1910 the turnover of 14,729 af - Buch banks reached 11,27,3,344,000 -In the sixteen years, 18.95 to 1910 only nineteen , rural credit , societies became" bafikrupt, 'tY 4rM tain loans sn mortgage-at low. rate-j from a variety of special institutions lor.1 mortgage credit.; The total of such loans is now estimated ot two billion dollars. .... There is no cnuntry, Recording to ' m r, Cttli ni.'w liorrorRafclxtMl effort ft i i omoiUii iL.Ctouomic interests of PHYSICAL EDUCATION T HE physical education made obligatory in the appropriate department of the College of the City off New York is ef fecting wonderful results. ; The theory, according to the ar ticle in the American Magazine, (s that the "City does not care to ex pend Its funds in educating thOse who are not inclined to care for themselves that health Is an asset to the state." . . All students are compelled to subnet to health examinations, and to accept sucn treatment as is pre scribed. Consequently in a recent year, 1300 cases of decayed teeth, 575 cases of defective sight, 225 of enlarged tonsils, 82 of trachoma, 75 of heart disease, and others lees common, were treated. ' Directions of the physical director must be followed out, and the courses ordered are given the same credits In the ', curriculum as his tory or mathematics. Class work in the gymnasium be gins with the third .year, at- least once a week. ' Physical exercise Is combined in the course with lec tures and oral teaching. "At least once , a week a warm shower bath, followed by a dip in the great swim ming tank, is ordered; ' Every boy is required to havs learned to swim in the preparatory department be fore .entering college. Last year compulsory swims, -numbered 37, 816, but voluntary swims 99,384. Six years ago this athletic work be gan. Dr. Storey says thatnow, at the beginning of the fall term an increasing number of i students pre- f semr-thfrnBetver-w-1 1 h-Trantrarned shoulders and limbs. Bathing and washing are; now invariable sequels j ' . I . ..LI . f . , . . - to an ainieiic exercises in tne col lege. .-'v ' : ' : So it. Is coming alioufthat'tlips'l young men lake naturally; to sleep ing"" with widroppTi"-wini(wtr-rrf abundant cold bathing, j(o lakln3 T IS good news that Turkey and Bulgaria have arranged another armistice, as reported both from Sofia and Vienna. This' means that 'the new, border line from the Aegean to the Black sea proposed by the powers is acceptable to both belligerents. The boundaries of the new Al bania on the north anjl east ar ranged by the powers would leave Montenegro, as to Scutari, and Greece as to the Aegean islands, and ,the Greco-Albanlan frontier to be yet settled in conference. If Essad Pasha at Scutari has been ordered to stop fighting, aa also reported, the deduction is that Montenegro has been comforted for the failure of the great siege by some money consolation and by some territory, formerly Turklsn, towards the Albanian coast. - If the powers have done so much to arrange a settlement it Is to be hoped that they will not relax their efforts to have the new peace kept after the Turks have stopped fight ing. Disinterested friends will have plenty to do to keep Bulgaria and Greece from fighting it out for ownership of Salonika and some of. the islands. As to the indemnity the allies want from Turkey, to get anything substantial from that bankrupt na tion is. out of the question; How would it do for the allies to accept Turkish rights over Palestine In place of money. Then they could sell the Holy Land to the Jews the worM over,' who could get up a Jewish republic under guarantee of 4igrpetual neutrality by the great powers. , The Jews are rich enough to buy It without feejlng the spend ing of the .money, and Zionism would become a ruling policy of the ancient, but how renovated nation. Indian Allottee's Complaint. Warm Springs, Or., April 14. To the Editor of Th Journal. I am an Indian and a member of the Society of Amer ican Indians, a national organization. In the fall of 1911 I made a visit to this reaervatton, my birth place, I had fre quently made visits- from the 1'aklnu reservation, where I had an allotment un der the allotment act, but lately dis posed of my allotment. My tribe (the Wascos) asked me to return to my for mer tribe and home, and relinquish my tribal right at Yakima, as the rules of the Indian office designate that no Indian .can hold two tribal rights. I requested tho local authorities here to assist me obtain my tribal right on this reservation. Either the office was over pressed with office work, or a lack "of Interest to my part. The office failed to submit my request to the, Indian de partment. I therefore concluded to make the trip myself and submit the peti tion of jny. tribe personally for my in terest and theirs. The foundation of my tribal right upon this reservation Is so firmly based upon the treaty of this tribe and the United States, my father (Mark) being a participant In the treaty between the tribe and the Un ited States as chief of the Wasco tribe. Being here almost' two years I "navo noticed entanglements of allotments greatly on this reservation. Allottees are complaining to their office for adjust ment of their allotment claims, but to no avail. The only satisfaction they get is "impossibility." Some of the Indians tin ve lived on lands ulnee- the organiz ation of the reservation, and when al lotmerts were made It appears positive ly that some took lands (or allotment where their Improvements were, and continued to live on it and Improved knowing It to be theirs by rights. Lately some disputes arose among them on lands and they called on the office here for settlement. The records were looked into and It showed wrong descriptions of the land, not anywhere harmonious to their, wishes as to the selection of their claims. This set them Into confus ion. For Sid, the only hope was through their office, but, sad to their, requests. the only assurance was 'Impossible." The fly-swatting season will soon ar rive, ) Mrs. Tankhurst's three years "lasted pretty quick." a ..-.-. The chronic fans forget all care and trouble at a ball game. - . The rose bushea .are- working- night and day to do their part. ..-.; . . Most people have much more to be thankful for than they realize. a . ;-It la not only children that would b benefited by doing some- gardening. . ...-V.;- t Just over the border'seems a favorite fighting strip for the Mexican barbar ians. . All cities that tiv'aAnr.rl ih. -nm. missiou form of government have re- laiueu it. .-... ne nen is thoroughly feminine; she will go any way except the way one tries la drive her. : ' ' Alfonso of Spain may not be a great Wnav but he Is quick-witted and agile in dodging bullets. a -a ', The Democrats lira roil n Mm th tariff greatly, or are surely" going to do so, and jet there Is no panic- The D. A. R.'s can aln-sva b dprnrlpil upon to have a quarrelsome time at their national convention. ' Some "protection" may be Incidentally unavoidable, but as a principle" it Is vicious and must be abandoned. - If all waste could be eliminated. th saving, If divided all around, would make everybody comfortably ''off." . Grand opera Is one of the very fine things that can't be made to pay ex penses at least not yet, in this part of the country. . OREGON SIDELIGHTS The express company at Wallowa has MRBRYAN'S ATONE MENT . From the New York World. "Stancl-pattlsm Is" lead," said Mr. - put in a free collection and free delivery wrjan in Din speech at Des Moines. In system, to include a radius of six blocks stating the lesser fact Mr. Bryan omits from the station. the areater fact. Not nniv i- utand- . InDHI.m k... ii i , i . . A florist firm t McMInnville is drill- """"" "ul ual,"m is.ueau. lng water, in the hope of obtaining a was Mark Hanna KepubUcanism supply sufficient tq irrigate their fields fthat put the United States government uj uio urjr munuis ui sutuuiu. . parmersnip with Big Business., it The Stanfielo- Standard- say. there Is "X? VL0.1. at Stanfleld "an opening for a big gen- I ." anur-iuiociBvjr eral store with a complete stock their opportunity. In trying to escape amounting to $2S,00 to J40.000. j evils of a debased currency the country . . . ' swung to the othnr tti-,mp " Th erciwA nt Murnmv pountv Citl-1 . .. ' ,... zen. from the farms and neighboring - ."r. towns in Burns last week was so nu- V"s'Jlnfton moved to Wall street, and merous that the News found it impos- Wali street became the capital of the sible to mention all separately. United States. , The government as , '7 i' A'rnJtly and cynically administered for Robert K. Davey has been added to ,...- ,,... ... u. the personnel of the firm pyblisiunf v ''''' the Burns News. Tne ews. oy. m i .., uui auu ui-wnmu as . way, has just celebrated Its seventeenth very. If Wall street wanted leglsls birthday anniversary. . tlon, the legislation waa Enacted. It . . - I Wall atrut , i.n..l .ii.n.nH.il I,. IL Stratton of Eugene has sen,t r o . back id his old home, i'eabody. Kansas, uVci,ua. l ...... a package of Oregon, shrubbery, con- hrovernmental policies .meant dividends signed to C. O. Oiiin. Santa e agent ui ior uig Business, those policies were Peabody. , The shrubs will .be set out adopted, ' If Wall street wanted to x In the depot park there. ',.', . - plolt tt,9 rcs0urces of the country, those Sneaking of the Episcopal' church at TeaTct wefe AVL ? Sumpter in connection with a recent ' very expression stana-pa wa . visit from Bishop Paddock, the Amer-I coined by Mark Hanna to encourage the ican u is enjuj um a. m i.. . KepuDUean machine to resist tne pudiic growth and has a bright outlook for deniand ,or honCMt' tariff. revlsibn and the future. . ..in.r ; Snrh IntoroBt is beintr taken at Haines every assault udoii uublic abuses and In tree planting and omer aestheticopH public wrong. From the Dhigley act to town of prettv homes, ehady trees and to bring about the final wreck of the beautiful law n's. ' Republican party had Its origin In the , - , ' ' , . I unholy alliance . that Hanha estabJisneu It ma them ara come neoDln at 1 , .. . . . a n.-n .,..t Umatilla who. still ptBtend they think a-., ,.w. .,Hnn.hi. nrM. there Is a riot in town, wnen tne vjma- tllla Concert Band is at rehearsal; but In the death of stand-pattism,, for Mr. . the Umatilla Journal stands sponsor for Bryan Is a very fortunate man. He has them and hints that the Ve0""1,"?; lived to retrieve the mistakes of hi past. -His free-sllyer campaign drove tllla orchestra had better look to its laurels. FUTURE GREATS IN THE HOUSE - By Herbert Corey. "nTashlngton, April 17. This .being a hasty squint at soma of the new nota bles in the lower house. They're worth a little look. At least, they're worth it now. Some of them may never be worth another. Others may march on to glory. There's Stanley Bowdle from Cincin nati. There hasn't been a real humor ist in the house since Jadam Beds left. Discussion in that body has run to flatulency or inkstands. But Bow dle had rather : turn an epigram than save the party. It was Bowdle who took that Cincinnati seat away from the Hon. Nicholas Longwortb, son-in-law of an ex-president and friend of. a president. Rowdies taking was aided by Bowdle'i Jovial reference to the high shine which alone decorates Mr, Longworth's dome. "Heaven," said Mr. Bowdle, "scalped Nick. But I'll skin him." Cincinnati laughed . and held a leg while the skinning was done. Peter Goelet Gerry of Rhode Island, millionaire, son of the multl-milflonaire Elbrldge T. Gerry of New York, the husband of the former Miss Mathilda Townsend of Washington, a reigning beauty of society and a great heiress. Is worth watching. It's perfectly easy to send a few shots Into Gerry, because he Is a society man and Very rich. But he is also very able and he earnestly believes that every man ought to do his part for the government. He's a tea table reformer who gets away from tea. -Alfalfa BUI". William H. Murray Is loved and laughed at and voted for by Oklahoma for congressman at large. Murray la able, honest and Indepen dent At times he has fought the labor leaders aa earnestly as he has fought the country to Plutocracy, but his battl for progressive Democracy in im emanclDated It. To his efforts ' the country owes the nomination -of 1 Mr. Wilson for president and the errective their liberties with their squirrel rifles. 1 realization of the new policies that have) The wbola state laughed, and "The 1 taken the United States government out . Chickasaw Squirrel RIfes" . were of the hsnds of Wall street. Without promptly organized, with Alfalfa Bill William J. - Bryan we should have had as commander In chief. The insignia Woodrow -Wilson. of tha Chickasaw Rifles was a cockle . Mr. Bryan's case Is unique. There H"- ourr rampant :; . , instance in American history in .whinh iil,min atoned So brll- Perhapa -the most picturesque new- nrt aa Beneficent! for - his ZiX " -5.". ,rKp!r blunders. Pointed 'Paragraphs' most all his life at least since the close of the Citll wrar Klrkpatrick has been a hunter of moonshiners. Not even he couiu now orten ne nas been shot uniess ne fliq a few sums on his fingers. Tne borrowed umbrella Is usually. i cye were praciicauy snor out m i tnken by storm. me iaat raia ne lea, so that he is now I - a a most m na. There are fully 200 1 , Strike while tns Iron is hot If you y.w.c ui icaa in ms Doay, as a portion I work in a laundry. or me rewara, ror . being a revenue officer for Z?' years. At least three times he has been left for dead on the field, and the doctor wha over hauled him pledged their professional nonor mat he couldn't get well "Arter all," says Mr. Klrkpatrlck, with a certain grlmness. I wasn't The more people talk back the better the auctioneer likes It. Some fool people count their chickens before the egss hay been laid.. But sometimes a bore talks to 'us nearly as badly off as the other' fel- Lbout ourgelVM; that Is different low. He is a Jacksonlan Democrat. Scotch- Irish and scrappy, and wants to see a deep waterway from the great lakes to tne gun. Nine years ago Frank LindquUt was working for 9 a week, on which he When a pessimist lives well In the present .Ji-tiowla about the future. - - i Love is like seasickness it may be felt but cannot, be adequately described. : . M . VaAtnw an m41na fur a 4nVi 1 f n V supported a wife and mother. He had hard luck stories, misery loves com- yuuvaur iiaue, lie una no eauca-1 nan v . . - Inn anrf 1 IaaIiI u k . - - .- ' - -' .-. tlon, and it looked as though he had no particular chance. Now he is a very wealthy man, with business that gets JX,' ? a , gushing letter. No, Cordelia, it isn't necessary t6 use a fountain pen when you want to write a rung of the political laddea ahd he aims to cumD. Lindqulst comes What some folks need is a fool-proof the bankers and sometimes against Suppose A lived on a tract of . land. them. He wrote most of the progres op a certain quarter section, fenced and cultivated it partly before allotments and when allotments were made. A. chose, or selected, the lands be had al ready Improved, and had it alloted to htm, and stakes set In to mark his claim. B. adjoined A.'a allotment, but in the enrollment books and the de scription of their allotments B. ruvs Into A.'s premises Which he had long improved.. If b?ti .uneducated, they are surprised and do not know what to do, and cannot find out where the mistake was made. The only Information given them is ""impossibility of correction; Both A. and B. are in a. sad state. This Is in one case where A. and B. are botn uneducated persons, but In other casea where B. is an educated person, and A. not B. takes advantage of the mistake over A. and holds on to the land. Such Is the situation on this reservation. In one Instance an Industrious In dian has entirely postponed his farm work this year Just because early In the spring he found out his mother's allotment was all wrong, depriving her of about forty years' settlement on the place. The only assurance was "1m possibility." In the case of enlightened races suclr matters are not imposslW. Litigation would have been the pro cess; but as it is "poor Lo," and being ignorant, he is made more so when In formation is given him of "impossibil ity." v ; This will be my sixth trip to Wash, ington, D. C, four times as a delegate from Yakima reservation, and twice from this reservation. I Will call upon the Indian office, also the Indian slye planks of the Oklahoma constitu tion a glance at which dooument sends the average conservative Into shakes and fever and ia naturally to be classed as a progressive Of the extreme type. Murray knowa better but he likes to talk the language of the cotton pickers and cow-hands among whom he grew up. "Bill's clothes,! said a friend, "al ways look as though he had been rid ing all night in a coal car." His friends thought he had Stepped aside from bis chosen path when he bought a-new suit -ofclothes the .day he was nominated for congress. But Murray was equal to explaining. - "Some men," said he "vote for the man and some for the clothes. I've got to hav both to-be elected." Alfalfa Bill became positively Violent when the constitution was attacked In the supreme court, and wwots a letter In which ha mad vague references to certain other patriots who had defended MIcMa'Sn'dufHrt6" Vi EIventl1 Pay envelope that can t berjsehed until Michigan district. He is :the son of a h home Swedish father and a Norwegian mother ana was Dorn in Wisconsin. He was People who assert that they never So?DVn;'?l.ih!" J?! slaui- m.u,dS; to Imagine that people believe them. And occasionally we meet a married Woman who is sorry she is hot In the It isn't difficult to be an artist of the new school. Just draw a flock of blue wolves with red eyes chasing a pure white deer through a forest of purple trees, and you have made a good start. If in ad dition you can conceive an impos sible monster throttling another deer with legs twisted like Matty's curves; yon have achieved a de gree 6f artistic . delirium, tremens that wjll lead In due course to fame and fortune. ' ' A dead clanl .in a restaurant ydndow with 'a -long neck (the, clara's long neck, likewise defunct rolling sluggishly from the !sheil, is by no means "a thing of beauty and a Joy forever." After gazing there on you regard chowder with gastric suspicion. -,;' Rights association and taa Society of American Indians, of which I am a member. FRANK MEACHEM, Sec. Warm Springs Council of the So ciety of American Indians. "; - . Government Chemists .'Criticised. Portland. April 18. To tha Editor of The Journal Will you grant me space in The Journal to appeal to all chemists to use their influence In obtaining a cor rect method of analysis for the detection of lead In baking powder and potassium bitartrate? The methods in use ty the government chemists, are not correct i In a personal; ef fort fohave ft correct method adopted , I 'wrot the fpllowing letter to tho Rernseri referee board, be lieving 'that they would take eome action and thus prevent the prosecution of In nocent manufacturers, but the answer received shows a total lack of Interest In the-welfnre- of -those who have -been, and ore. suffering, from the lnefficlcney6f those In power.- - ' "Prof. Ira Remsen, president Johns Hopkins University, . Baltimore, Md. Dear Sir: .Haying made.analyais of bak lng powder; and potassium bitartrate, whfeh' the gbvernnwnt ch?mlnts claim are adulterated with lead, and, their claims having caused manufacturers to be charged With violation, of the food and drugs act, June So. 190, I decided to submit to the careful consideration of. the Remsen referee board a few facts relatlrif to the methods laid down by the association of official' agricultural method for the detection of lead In tar taric acid, as you will note, the addition of potassium cyanide, which under proper conditions will produce the same tint that would be proaucea u lena wn actually present I Understand that many manufacturer are cpargea wnn adulteration of potassium bitartrate with lead, so I appeal to tne Kemsen referee board to take some action In this matter, to protect the manufacturer, the consumer and tho science of chemistry. Your onlnion in this matter wonin ne greatly "appreciated. - Respectfully yours, U, Victoria Hampton. 'United States Department or flgncui got married. Nine dollars Isn't a big sum on which to support three people, but out of it Lindqulst managed to save 140. .. No on but he knows what stern effort that uv m, nr,v r-. h was tramping through the vllage of Mu'Vi"' ,nrrll M,ua . ' T...V-. 1 'J . tt mi emntv atom. Th Inr-atlnn I as a good one. He rented it and man- , When tn" 1 lrBt l)aby ' boy n a aged to borrow 1300 more to' add to his gn tnat the Itlothr will make plans little capital. In two years h hH before h Is out of the cradle for ..Ms cleared $5,500 on his stock of' general Inauguration as president, goods. Then he began to sell clothing I V by mall. . - v' . I Get a woman In a reminiscent mood. The newspapers of the district have I and she will tell you all about the swell opposed him, perhaps because of his I admirer she had before she met the man order business. Of the 64 papers I commonplace man who became her hus- in me district, es rought.htm bitterly. I wnq. But last year b sold 60,000 suits and overcoats, and he got almost two votes! King George of Greece. r."..?-'". (London V, .... w Tin ,, om do The murdered king of the Hellenes aWKa-Wlth th0 mldd,eman- That's his WM sur,iy one ot tht i,.t ostentatious iivuhij. I mnnnrrha avhA ve wara a nrnwn Wm kept nothing that could be. called state. nicely cleaned out and smoothly covered ltncr In Athens, or in his endless, soul over for tha reception of tha mmmi..i. I wearying pilgrimages to courts and mtn- form of government If the Yidds and I lstrlal bureaux in the Interests of the oiavs ana uagoes will get out and yell ) wonaerrui -out not aiwaya graterui peo "All - about the commissla form orl P' who had the good fortune to h government," and "All about th lrt ruled by him. He literally "traveled Jn" school Survey" yell It with all the Greece and her affairs; and if there was rings and variations, so that every vot- on8 thing more than another that kept er know what he Is voting about rw. her alive after tha war it was the king's win d no more deficits in the city's influence wun tno uussian, tne ttnmn, t grsnd opera of politics. (and the German courts and the tact Portland and Oregon are to h. with which he use4.lt During hi last gratulated on having a Journal that visit to England, eschewing all the ac- uevoies so ijtu OI It . space-to th costomea royal xorms ana ceremonies. Bvnnuai ana gossip or the day and Sol"" 'IK'a ,1K' ln siniliia, cicai-aisnieu The Journal .has a standing offer of one year's free Subscription to ! chemists, for the government chemists 1. 1 . . . . a ! n fAllr.iv. t rflncd t A nrMtll T. rof.i- any person politicians not 'barred r. V" t there U no ti-sc-of lead contained in fact, could give cards' and spade to which towers above1 Its 'fellows like a silent sentinel on the eminence to the east of the ball park. 4 ; ii ... ; rr. ; When one travels ; through any part of Oregon, the Stars- and 8trlpesflotInsf from--OHntry school houses constitute aa inppirlog sight. lure, office of consulting scientific perts. April 8, 181J. L. Victoria Hampton, nr n your communication of March 28tli 1. received, The referee board has no autnority to undertake ur.h. work as that which you suggest. The board was appointed for th purpose Xf advising the secretary of agriculture in cases in which ii asked for their advice. Yours truly, Ira Remsen. chairman referee board consulting scientific experts." If th chemists of this cosntry will unite for the purpose of correcting many of the present method of focd analysis their work will be of great and lasting benefit to all, L. VICTORIA HAMPTON. ' V The Discordant Note. Portland, Or., April W. To th Editor of The Journal Amidst all th beauty both natural and artificial, amidst all the "culture and refinement, displayed on every hand in your- fair city, there is one dlsoordant note teat is aoui sickening, to say the least. The same hyena bowl, the same wolfish-yelp nd snarl is heard in many other cities, but never before has it teemed so ut terly out of tune to the writer as It is In Portland, "All about th great scandal'' rung in all the changes of Yiddish and Dago and Slavish. The poor newsies are not- to blame. , They have caught th cry and th spirit of tha age "All that th traffic will bear.'J and th Jlttl gmr ar right up to th minute In thein profession, m 2ul. much to the great topics nf human .,n 1 eentlnnan he was. He touched all sorts ex- nit J. W. HAY MAN. of i-ubjcets; the flR" over tne nuoget slum bittrtrate; but where only am monium sulphide1, or hydrogen sulphide lnr endeavor! io counteract the forces of evil. Some of these higher ups, like la imert to determlnn th hresenr nf Thales Of Miletus. waiK gsung up )at Uad, a dark brown precipitate Is e-b-ithe sUrs and take a tumbl into the tlnel whlrh rouhl be mlstoUen ifor ditch prepared for- them In th Bars ti ed, but vhip'h .s. as Voii know, a var- room nf some groggery or elsewhere. Utile mlxlui of ihe two -higher, nil- and th elsewhere may he in th of-TriiUirs-of poianialvim 'hrpsf n)phiris.' fir . of somVery powerful business The "lisnoi-rat Ion 'ot 'of flclaf asrlcultural institution." Just now, it may b that chomlbts mike the sum error in th1 th ditch thf samevpld, canalr-J-belng of 1 SOU was especially interesting to Rtafi-A ImnoMinnafiAn. - . I him and he SOoke of It with much know- Scappoose, Or., April 14 -To th. va. I "r our ""?B ana,?nrewa":5".:B Itnr nf Th. t.,,...i T hi Jliagment OI inem. nm nnaiuou n Thf Lum,7I f I"r " "rticU Pabie of being bored; and his long m Th Journal a few days ago which reign, with its sad but glorious Close, stated that the Hebrew of Chicago i was one long trlbut to the indomitable Wnr tr',n t0 et Popl not to patience which ruled hls conduct and " .v. ! ""w 10 t impersonated Ufa. " wii vo mey think they are ...j. ni.cr nun any omer nationality? Thera is hardly a nationality !,. - not Impersonated in some form, on the stag. None of these rmneronaatinn. is true to character. The artora- a not do this to run anv r n.nni. down, but to make peopl laugh. So wny miuuiu me neDiews kick? They will lt and laugh when furris made of Others but win get mad 1 a little fun Is mad of ffiem. , . .Mo,re! lokfuS aD,.yafns are told about the Irish than about, any other race, and you do not hear th Irish kicking.-..- ... -.. Most of the theatrical managers and amusement men are Jews. So If they put th stage Je off !th stage, the rest of tis 'people ought to make them quit impersonating other, nationalities. Are the American pn!e going to sit back and let the Jews say what can be done and what cannot be done, here in the United States? I would like to hear from" others, through The Journal' columns, In re gard to this subject. . , . AN IRISH AMERICAN. Wis Close' Call. 'ffnTTneTJe;froirne-TrC I had a narrow escape yesterday noon;"' ..-.'', i . -:..,..;. , .-"I i- -How's that?" "r ',' "Four of us ate lunch together, and each of us. Insisted on jjaj lhg the check..." Welir.' , ; . ' "For a minute or two It looked as though ,i had overduiie th thing auj tha others were going to let me do it. Two Unusual Features in the. Sunday Journal Magazine : ? ,: '.gr - AFTER YOU ABE DEAD What happens? Two Amsterdam psychol ogists say you enter a gase ous state. , ' Furthermore they produce proofs' for their startling ' statement. A ROYAL ROW "" CfmroHhHat--Kifl;-d- ward are cause of stnte in Britain's rbyJ family, Tha affair makes a striking1 story. Next Sunday