THE JOURNAL AH INDKPKNDEMT HEWSPAPfB. 8. JACKSON . . Publisher 1'BbllabcO ery evening c-ot SaiMls-l r Sunday moroln nt The J"?'"?1 ""12 lug. Brronlw.r snd VsmhIM P"-!""- Kotsrsd at th postorflce at PortUs. W.. ft trspcmluloa lbroo(b tba Mile ta eia matter, IXLfcl'HoNKM Mala T17S: Home, A061-,.!! departments mrM br "" J,u . oiwutor what ttirtffint n wire. OKL)UN AUVKBT18I.NO KKPBBSKSTATIVF. 823 Fifth A... Naw Sork; 1218 People a Chi Bin.. Cblmcn. Subacrlptkra term, by mnll or to aay draaa In th United State or Mexico: nifr.v " Ooa year $9.00 t Ona swots SUNDAY Om year.. $2.60 I Ooa montu t 2S DAILY AND 8T7NDAT. Os raar.....'. ..fT.60 I Oaa month 5?" "45 Never did any soul do good but It cam, readier to do the tame again, with more enjoy ment. Never waa love, or grati tude, or bounty practiced but with increasing Joy, which made the practicer still more In love with the fair act. Shaftesbury. THE MEXICAN CRISIS trv RESIDENT WILSON will not Lf rush headlong into a Mexican r war. He is a man of peace. His fctatemanship is the statemanship of humanism. He has no thirst for the thunder of artillery or-ht for the letting of blood. V The country ought not to stam pede the government into hostili ties. A quiet patience by the peo ple will permit a calm dispassion ate outcome to the present emerg ency. Washington will not back down, will yield no point of honor will surrender nothing to Huerta. A way will be found to avert the desperate consequence of armed conflict, if the president be left unembarrassed by the clamor of the excited. Except for the fact that Huerta 1h a desperado, there Is little chance for actual hostilities. If the rebels would fall into Huerta'B trap and Join him in defying the United States, there would be a greater possibility of conflict. If Villa and Carranza would accept Huerta's cause against the United States as their cause and Join In his defy, actual warfare could scarcely be averted. Hut such choice by the rebels seems Impossible. If they have the Intelligence and foresight with which they are credited, they will see in the present status a splen did advantage for their cause. The blockade of Mexican ports will give them enormous advantage in their advance on the Mexican capital. It will shut off Huerta's source of supplies and confine him as to subsistence within the narrow lim its of the territory over which he 6as control.. With his seacoast closed 'and the railroads in the north' In the hands of the rebels, his means of maintaining an army and a war will be vastly reduced. It is wholly probable that the rebels will look upon the Washing ton government In its present mood more as an ally than as a foe. If so, the problem is far less dif ficult of solution. It can easily unravel without bugle calls and bayonets. On the side of continued peace, Is the fact that this is not a war making administration. The pres ident Is not a war lord. The gov ernment fs a government whose -guiding aspiration Is peace on earth, good will to men. A FREE WATERFRONT IfTfiW YORK CITY has millions ll of dollars invested In public I 1 docks. The nation's metro polls occupies its' commanding position largely because of accom modations to shipping which have already been provided. And yet the people of New York are not natisfied. At a recent meeting of the Mer chant's Association a letter, was re reived from Mayor Mitchel in which he expressed sympathy with plans for increasing public dock facil Hies. The merchants are stirred by the prospect of increased wa ter commerce on account of the early opening of the Panama Can al. Mayor Mitchel outlined a gen eral program which includes the creation of a port "development ad vlsory committee. Certain proj ects already outlinea are to be pushed without waiting for the preparation of larger plans. New York business men know the necessity of adequate terminal facilities not controlled by the rail roads. The further development of that port depends In large meas ure upon public docks. They are essential If waterways are to serve 'their full usefulness as regulators Of rates for and accommodations to freight traffic. New York's necessities are no greater than are Portland's. If thlscity Is to assume its proper position as a freight and passenger distributing center, full use of the waterways must be made. That cannot be accomplished unless there are adequate public dock fa cllitles. It Is to further this program for the general good that an initiative measure restoring to the people 'their former title to the foreshore of navigable streams has been pro posed. That bill commands the support of every voter who wishes . to" see Oregon's waterways made the carriers of an increasing com merce. If the nation's metropolis sees the necessity of keeping its water front open to the public, the people of Portland and of Oregon face an even greater necessity. A DESPERADO'S STBATEGEM. H UERTA'S withdrawal from his original agreement to salute the flag as reparation for a series of outrages Is the act of a desperado. It Is accentuation of his charac ter. It is harmonious with his assassination of Madero and his overthrow of constitutional govern ment in Mexico. Probably, he hopes that the threatening attitude of the United States may cement all factions In Mexico, and give him support for a leadership that is now denied him.- With such power as he has fast slipping away, with Villa grad ually and certainly cutting his way towards Mexico City, and with the unstable governmental fabric which he has reared on bayonets, artil lery and assassination about to fall in ruins around him, Huerta, is un doubtedly ready to play any des perate game that may seem to of fer respite or escape from a sit uation that cannot much longer I endure. He knows that the end Is not far away if he is to rely alone on the few shattered regiments and depleted resources at his com mand. He sees doom slowly 'set tling down over his rulership, un less some desperate expedient can shift the gloomy environments and upset the forces of destruction that are gradually gathering around his dictatorship. It is both possible and likely that his program of refusing to make rep aration is a wild and reckless ex pedient made with a hope of draw ing all Mexicans under his leader ship for a further lease of power. The audacious game he has played since he first gained notice at the Mexican capital is scarcely less dar ing than is his present defiance of the power and purpose of the United States. It is a last and frantic hope. It is a buccaneer's play for time and change. It is a reckless ad venturer's desperate subterfuge to checkmate oncoming doom. It is a gambler's strategem to stay for few brief days the knell of an advancing fate. THE HOUSING PROBLEM A COMMITTEE of the Chicago I Woman's Club made a survey.) of a block of tenements. Peo- pie .were found In cellars and basements that were unfit for hab- itation. Leaking roofs, lack of prop-j er toilet facilities, dirty halls; In sanitary kitchen sinks and walls needing kalsominlng were common. The committee reported: It seems to us wasteful and lneffl- cient to spend large sums for the tuber-I ulosls institute, the children's welfare' aiiavi8umg-nure a associations free dispensaries, when scarcely a be- sinning has been made at the root of the evils requiring these remedial agen ies adequate housing. The Chicago women have put the matter In its true light. Not only i Chicago, but other cities, including Portland, are spending big annual; appropriations through publje and ; on January 1, or $922.90 on De private charity to offset the effects cember 1 last. Last month the of bad housing. These expenditures t American wholesale price level de- are necessary, dux tney couia DQjcnnej eight tenths of one per cent. CUt down and the people made i Tn En srlanrl th RVPraen lv1 nf much happier by going to the root , of the evil. There is no reason in justice or; morals why owners of property ; iast month on the following artl should be allowed to make it a!cies: Dressed beef, butter, cof source of revenue when it is unfit j fee. sugar, peas, potatoes, hemp, ior naonauon. r roperiy ngnts are 1 not comparable with human rights, i and there is no right of property . wmcn permits a man 10 maintain j aisease-Dreeuing Duilding ana : thus throw the burden of repairing j the results of his selfishness upon the community at large There aie inhabited buildings in Portland in which no person should be allowed to live. They are a prin cipal reason why the calls upon charity are bo insistent and fre quent. THE WHITE SLUE LAW- T hr mitri fitt. f.ii of appeals for the Seventh cir cuit has construed the Mann white slave law. In the case of Jack Johnson, negro' pugilist, the court held that twos groups of counts in the indictment on which the negro was . convicted must be separated. - These' groups are "sale of womanhood", and "immoral pur poses" charges, the court holding that there was not sufficient evl-i dence to convict on the commer cial charge. The case was sent back to. the trial court for resen tence on the immorality allega tions and possible retrial . on the other set of charges. This decision is important, for It is the ruling of an appellate court on an Issue concerning which federal judges have differed. United States district judges have held both for and against the necessity of proving pecuniary gain to secure conviction under the law. In the negro's case the appellate court denies the contention that the Mann act Is applicable only to cases involving the actual "sale of womanhood." The court says; Nothing remainsbut-lo ay tSat the present act obviously is concerned with the Interstate transportation of persons. How far and with what gov ernmental purposes the. undoubted power shall be exercised must be de termined by the legislative, not the Judicial department jof the govern ment. . This ruling should go a long way in fixing the law's scope and purpose. The United States has decided that the transportation of i persona , is commerce, and ; that commerce may be regulated or pro hibited.'' . " ' ----4 There has been strenuous effort to . secure an interpretation of the law which would limit It to com mercial traffic in women. If this decision stands, men who deal ' in woman's virtue for the gratifica tion .of their own selves will be criminals, as ' they , should ; be, under It. I SPOKANE'S WAY. HIS , week, Spokane is raising a fund of $96,000 annually, to be used In forwarding com munity projects for the bene fit of the city. R. I. Rutter, a Spokane citizen, said of the plan in' Saturday's Journal: ' It's the safest kind of a bet that the money will be subscribed, and quickly. W need the money for our annual ap ple show, for advertising purposes, to attract tourist travel, more Industries, and many other things," which the vari ous committees of the Chamber of Commerce have "Under consideration. By the 1910 census, Spokane had a population of 104,402, about half ' the population of Portland. An Mr PiitTr savs them la tin rinnht that thi fiinH uHll i-afeart I and quickly.. Spokane does things that way. It is a city of live wires. It does things because every body goes to the. firing line in community projects. That is why Spokane, an inland city, far away from the assets that usually make cities, has had a splendid growth and a busy career. Its men have made it Spokane doesnt wait for a few wealthy men to put up all the money for public endeavors. Every body goes to the front. They buy membership in the Chamber of Commerce. at $25 for membership. Not only it, each citizen expected to become a member, but every one, from? bankers down, spends one day of this week in soliciting new members in the body. The plan places the burden on so many shoulders that it is not felt at all. In addition, membership in the chamber, arouses civic spirit and makes the organization effect ive, representative and strong, says Mr. Rutter. It is a splendid program. It is the same community spirit in an. other form which The Journal has urged in the Alaska steamship line. If Portlanders make the line every body's line, it -will not fail. And what a promise the develop- ment of Alaska holds out to- Port- land, if, by steamship connections, she makes ready to take advantage of it THE COST OF LIVING B RADSTREET'S announces a downward trend in the cost of living. " Statistics of whole sale prices show an average decline in the price level of 5.1 ner cent from December 1 to Anril 1 Trl. ' SUres compiled by this com- rnercial agency take account of the average price for a unit amount of each of 96 articles. On Anril 1. $.375 g2 would have bought as much as $883.20 on March 1, or $886.19 on February 1. or J888.67 commodity prices fell in about the samn nronortion Wholesale prices came down cotton sheeting, pig iron, steel beams, lead, tin, anthracite, coke, brick, nails, rubber and tobacco. Bradstreet's says that retail prices &rfi feeliner th effect, of th rlown- ward trend, and if the movement holds the consumer will shortly get the benefit. The figures are reassuring. While only a portion of the 96 articles included in Bradstreet's list are In daily use by all the peo ple, a drop in wholesale prices which in four months' time per mits $875.62 to do the work of $922.90 must have an Influence i on retaU Prices. Tbere is ac- cumulating evidence that the cost of living has reached' top figures. DOG RACING IN ALASKA J OHN JOHNSON, with his team of Siberian wolves, won Alas ka's classic dog-team race last Thursday. Johnson's time was seven hours slower than In 1910, but his Warn covered 412 miles over the snow trail from Nome to Candle and return in 81 hours and three minutes. It was a wonder ful test of endurance and pluck. The All-Alaska sweepstakes is perhaps the most remarkable race in the calendar of sport. It is a test of both man and dog. The latter, sensing hia responsibility as the snowbound north's most de pendable means of transportation for mail and supplies, shows tire less willingness to do his best. The man must . husband his dog's strength, must show extraordinary skill in caring for his animals; he must be as intelligently careful of his dog as he is of himself. It Is a i ace suited, only for red blooded men, for once out upon Alaska's snowy wastes the man is placed upon his own resources. He has no friend nearby to as sist In the event of falling, no per son to -cheer him on should he falter. . . . . -. . The contest just '. concluded vis ualizes Alaska's great need. 'Trans portation Is the problem which is to be solved: - The dog team will be supplanted by the railroad Alaska, may lose a spectacular sporting event but the north will gain opportunity for development. When dog racing becomes history, there will be a new Alaska with hopes in the fulfillment. BOOKS BY PARCEL POST R' ECENTLY the postmaster gen- neral issued an order admit ting books to the parcel post. Packages of over eight ounces have all advantages of the mer chandise classification. The Virginia state library wag order in extending its circulation of books. The short trial lias been a success, the librarian stating that extension of . the parcel post rate to books has already had a con siderable effect in Increasing the use of the Virginia state library by people in the interior of the 6tate. The librarian of the St. Louis public library announced that he was prepared to circulate books through the mail, and before noon of the first day he began receiving applications. . The American Library Associa- 10 yi""i"S Buueiue ui lltt- uuuai dimensions uy wuicu uurar ies of the country, working to- gether and with the assistance of the postoffice, may increase their usefulness. The secretary of the association is impressed with the idea, and he cites the experiences of Virginia and St. Louis as evi dence that it is practical. This is a new field for the parcel post. It has demonstrated its use fulness 'in carrying things we eat and wear. Now it Is to take a commanding position as an efficient agency in educating us. " " Letters Frbm the People (Communications sent to The Journal for publication In this department should bfl writ ten on only one side of the paper, should not exceed 300 words In length ami must be ac companied by the name and address of the sender. If the writer does not deslr to hare the name published, he should so state.) "Discussion is the greatest of all reform ers. It rationalizes everything it touches. It robs principles of all false sanctity and throws them back on their reasonableness. If they have no reasonableness. It ruthlessly crushes them out of existence and sets up Its own conclusions in their stead." Woodrow Wilson. Bids Church Not to Interfere. Bandon, Or., April 16. Rev. C." I. Harris in The Journal remarks that persons committing crimes are not religious. It is also believed that I preachers are religious 'fend true fol lowers of Christ, yet some of the most outrageous crimes ever commit ted on the face of the earth have b en committed by preachers. Were these ; caused by drink? I think not. Ihey say, Don t condemn us all jusi uecause some aia tnose awiui crimes." Mr. Harris also said saloons i are enemies of the "church. Did you ever "hear of a saloon man, or one that I drinks, criticising the church? Why, j no. .Take Care Of your affairs. and 1 they will conduct their own. They pay enormous license, so their busi ness can't be contrary to law. Take care of your own lambs, that they go uui Ksviy. n most cases men go wrong because they are desperately cynicism, and obviously it is always a lonely and so wretchedly poor, and j tiresome task to treat him seriously. fv.fi1 8 aead bU,t, the dreary road But " Is perhaps not too much to say. of hard work, small pay and no that Shaw and hia nk have done more , A .and aft.er awhile they be- . to produce the abnormal-Sex cOnscious- indlfffreJlt to hfir f,ate' Yoe'ness of this age than ail other forces people must have their pleasure.- It i .,n !;..., mv.ia is meir right, nut religion Is taking j vnf. T; T1S aSK "?L.?lve U and ' urU and open about their vices; and MViuV aChrlst did" (meaning ; whatever may be thought about th-biUOn- .yo)Ld2 We wU1 a1' coarseness of the times of Henry t f It- to arlnk Just as they Fieidin- Dean Swift, there was no u " nio uja. At the present time the churches about what they had to say. To put ! hc sentiment that Is back of that par maenyn0i?ferenT0,tem.erf arra,tSh ! " .f 2 i "-lar .... rnu v . . . . " trVrV wrnniv nr. rhrt., " ' i ,uose up tne saloons, and that means I taxnaterf win iv.L f.lSnJ? ? ' taxpayers will have to make it ud. As it is, we can't get money enough to run tne cities, and the taxpayers say taxes are too high. So vote against prohibition. Vote as your grand fathers and fathers did years ago. We had no confusion in those days. Oregon will stay wet. as it should. F. J. ENGELKE. To Solve Mexican Problem. Oregon City, Or., April 18. To tha Editor of the Journal Can you con ceive of any way by which this United States, through its present adminis tration, can delegate to the Oregonian iuu plenary powers to .settle our Mex ican muddle in particular, and to gen erally supervise our affairs with other nations? We know this is a hard nut to crack but what else is there to do? Constantly we are informed in Ore gonian editorials that the Wilson- Bryaji policies are spineless and all to tne baa. waen the Oregonian con demns, who may question the motive or wisdom of this oracle? It will scarcely answer to impute smug hypocrisy or rankling disap pointment at having become a party has-been in place of former autooratie power as representative of the G. O. P alas! now dead. Nay, nay! Pure and noble patriot ism an olTnnet o-AlilrA r 1 ft....! i n -. '.,. of mH nrnmnt nn of and prompt. Can you doubt It? We repeat, how soon can ,the Ore gonian be put In charge of our foreign affairs? .P. OLDRICH. De fends the Hop Industry. Dayton, Or.. April 20. To the Editor Of the Journal I have beerr fnllnwlns the letters of Mrs. Ella M. Finney, who is defending the hop situation What would our beautiful Oregon.- really do with prohibition? Ills temperance We all want. We must raise ouriboys and girls as much as possible to learn tem perance. If prohibition gets In, what is Oregon going to do with all its fruits? We have apples, pears, prunes and all kinds of small fruits. There Is not a berry nor a tree fruit that cannot be converted into an intoxi cant, and from these anybody can get as drunk as they like without resort ing to whisky and beer. I am a wom an and have seen all this. Why knock the hop business any moretban the rest of what Oregon grows? Oregon itself uses but a very small ajnount of hops grown here anyhow. So why not pack up prohibition and seal it up and bury it, and teach temperance, for that won't kill all the industries f Oregon. SUBSCRIBER. Cheap Wit and VnmoralitJ' From the Philadelphia Public Ledger. A London cable dispatch gave the gist of a i talk that George Bernard Shaw delivered on Friday before the i I " ," vT ZZ iU Fabian society. He said that child that if he were a woman his fee for A FEW SMILES Every one in the hotel smoking room, with one exception, had been holding; forth on Ms own personal bravery and pres ence of mind. Every body, with the same exception, had re counted at least one hair-raising- episode In which ho figured as the embodiment of cool courage. At last the silent exception was asked if be had ever had cause to exert his presence of mind. - ' "Only once," he replied, yawning. "I had dropped into a circus to pass away a couple of hours. It was a bright little show, and the performing elephants were particularly wonder ful. 'Suddenly there was a. shriek from the women. The biggest elephant had escaped from his keeper and was making for the most crowded part of the tent where I happened to be sit tipg, by the way. There was a stam pede of frightened people. The shrieks of women and children filled the air, strong men fainted, and the pande monium reigned supreme." The silent one's listeners gasped. "But I am proud to say. continued that gentleman, "that I kept my head, and in consequence, escaped unhurt." "What on earth did you do?" some one asked. . ' "I? Oh, I ju6t kept on running be hind the elephant!" "Here, waiter," said, the rude man in the cafe, "Ten the orchestra to play 'Carmen' while I eat this beef steak." "Yes, sir. May I inquire why?" "I want to hear the Toreador song. I feel like a bull fighter." "There Is a young couple in our apartment house," he remarked, "that my wife and myself took quite a fancy to. They used to come in occa sionally and we got very fond of them." "Quite so." "I used to sit and think of how I'd like td do something fT handsome for them i if I ever got rich. You how a fellow will dream know about those things. Kver sit and spe- ulate on what you'd do for your friends if you . ever got hold of any money?" "Oh, yes!" "Well, I'm quite a hand for dream ing that way. For one thing I was go ing to give this young couple a fine Dartv. Thev are both musical and this waa tn vo an iwnt nt enmo ma erni- i tude, I figured I'd have Caruso to sing j and Pederewski to accompany him. . Some class there, eh?' "Yes, 'indeed!" "I used to dream by the hour of thq big party I was going to give this young couple if I ever got rich. But they dished the whole scheme." "How about that?" "Gave a big party and 4eft us out ne t Tnrtir. becoming a mother would be $10,000, and that a woman ought resolutely to r,fH. tn hiva chiMrn nnlma nh. waa paid for so doing. This may be bright repartee, yet somehow most sane folk will miss it for the simple reason that it is not funny. Mr. Shaw often over- w-v- hi. ,v,fmcintv t.1o w'hatever may be said about the inctrlinii n rid narvcrt mi mnrhirln(iu , uvaiu. v into bacivco w e t-aucu their good old En81!sh names. And ' coming down nearer to our own times v. t - mi i -..v. n his sarcasm and satire, raying if he were a. woman his fee for becoming a mother would be $10,000? The very fact that Mr. Shaw feels so secure about himself that he deems it profitable to pass ridicule upon motherhood a.id that he Is unable to grasp the deepest Joys that are denied to man is an indication in Itself of the peculiar and unwholesome mental at mosphere that for the present has fallen upon us. Oregon Logs and Their Lesson. From the Christian Science Monitor. A steamer specially chartered for the purpose, we are told, will carry 48 great Oregon logs from Coos Bay to San Francisco. They are toa be used as the principal pillars In the Oregon building of the Panama-Pacific exposition. Kach log will repre sent a state of the American union. and each of the states will be Invited to supply a state flag or emblem and , a copper or a crass piate to pear a suitable Inscription of the dedication. Each log will also bear another plate giving the name of the donor and tell ing of the locality In Oregon where it waa cut. The dimensions of these tim- i bers are not given, but it will suffice that their transportation by water has been a difficult problem. Vessels gen erally engaged in carrying lumber were found to lack equipment for their nanaung. rience tne necessity of a 1 specially chartered steamer. The Oregon bajlding at the Panama- Pacific exposition will, of course, be attractive. These great pillars of themselves are certain to arrest at tention. It is to be hoped that they may Impress, the visitors with the lesson they are designed to convey.. A short time ago an Oregon contem- j porary was disposejj to be boastful be cause tne state had begun to ship lumber In large quantities to the east. No doubt the Panama exposition will contribute toward increasing general knowledge of Oregon's forest re sources, and no doubt the lumber, trade of Oregon will increase in consequence in the years following the great fair. : But if the thousands who shall gaze upon the Oregon building In 1915 are at all familiar with the destruction of the forests in the old northwest, and with the lorest destruction that Is now going on In the south, they will ' as the exhibit of 1915 may Influence rather sorrow than rejoice over the ad- j It. should be impressed by the big Ore vertisement given by the great pillars i gon logs with the fact that conserva to Oregon's wealth In timber. Unless ' tion and hot destruction spells devel- all conditions change, -they cannet fall to see Oregon's big log trees will soon have gone the way of the trees that once did, but do not now, cover vast areas of the nearer - west. . The . lesson the big logs of Oregon should teach is that the conditions ought to be changed, that there should not be repeated in Oregon the shame less destruction of forests that marked lumbering days in other states. The United States government is now teaching how timber growths may'ne harvested from-year to : year - without impairing, but rather to the benfit of, PERTINENT COMMENT SMALL CHANGE As usual, both sides quota the Bible. Most campaign money expended is wasted. t I "Wool going up" which doesn't spell Y-u-r-n." ' touched It joff. . Hello. Huertai see the big smoke moving down in yur' direction? The primary political race is on; a few will run" well, many slowly. As to Mexico, the country will back up whatever President Wilson does. - Another ! tuberculosis cure- May It be better than those heretofore her alded. A duty yet unperformed of some 83.- ouu jviuunoman 'county men ana women. After the big river is sufficiently improved, railroad feeders will be a necessity, i . t . . What fine, great preachers the coun try would have If everybody went to cnurcn regularly. Too many people fail to obey the scriptural ; injunction. "Become not weary in well-doing." Yet' there will be editors and others who will still carp at Wilson s "spine less aiexican policy." Next to: baseball, the movement of the fleets toward Mexico is the topic or 'absorbing interest." Huerta is said to .be. quite a joker. but he will discover that Uncle Sam's naval demonstration is no Joke. AS HOTEL MEN VIEW PROHIBITION ;From Hotel Life. Just at the moment, in circles at tho national capltol, as elsewhere, intense interest centers in Just what action will, result from the report of the judi ciary committee on the proposed amendment to the constitution of the United States, forever forbidding the manufacture and sale of Intoxicating liquors in this country. An idea of the purpose of this reso lution is contained in section 1, read ing: "The sale, manufacture for sale, transportation for sale, Importation for sale and exportation for sale of intox icating liquors for beverage purposes in the United States and all territory subject to thje Jurisdiction thereof, are forever prohibited." In the second section of the resolu tion congress is givent power to pro vide "for the manufacture, sale and im portation and transportation of intox iratlnr liminrn for sacramental. Dhar maceutlcal,. medicinal, mechanical or scientific purposes, or for use in the arts." Necessary legislation to en force the provisions of this section of the article is provided for in the reso lution. An erroneous impression has crept into the public mind that the measure, if put squarely up to congress, follow ing its passage out by the committee to that body of solons, would provide for Immediate national prohibition. In fact the resolution merely provides for the submission of the proposed amend ment to the various states of the union. Ratification by the required number of states would sound the signal of nation wide prohibition, and under no other circumstances. Then, and then only, would, or could the constitution be amended in accordance with favor able action on the resolution. The position taken by Hotel Life has always been, and will continue to be, that you can never eradicate the sale of liauor as long as people exist who persist in buying and drinking it If it is wrong to use alcoholic liquor, this paper has always Maintained that the best remedy to rid the country of its manufacture and sale is to educate the public to its non-use. Any law framed in opposition to this belief is rfaftlna than fhfl rrnh- in our 4JUUI1 1 1 J luuaj " c nave a kkj--' mopolitan population They come from all parts of the globe. They seek lib- I . . . . , .i. flag that offers them freedom. Per- haps a majority of these people do j believe that it is no more harmful to drink alcoholic beverages than others 1 to drink tea or coffee. Most of them. perhaps, have learned the lesson that It is well known where one man's nose ends and the other man's nose begins. Advocates of prohibition are bring lng to bear great pressure in an effort to force from the Judiciary committee its solemn pledge to report- the pro posed resolution out to congress. This has resulted in, many of the senators and congressmen sealing their II pa in the matter of committing themselvei on the resolution. The fact that this proposed amend ment to the constitution, which. If nassed would seriously affect the HOW TO JUDGE By John M. Oskison. A young man came to me the other day with a copy of a current magazine in his hand and said: Ts this man's advice about testing railroad bonds sound? I'm going to buy some, and I want to look them up." He then pointed to these words: "To know whether the bonds of a railroad are good, take 'Poor's Man ual.' 'Mundy's Earning Power of Rail roads,' the Manual of Statictlcs,' or any publication which reports the in come account, 'and see what relation the fixed charges and taxes bear to the net Income, which is the Income over all running expenses." Not only is this a good rule for Judging the safety of railroad bonda (so I told the Investor), but it is a good test: of all sorts of corporation bonds. For the bond you buy is only a piece of a corporation's debt; some time the 'corporation has borrowed certain sums of money which it has agreed to repay at certain times and on certain conditions; you are one of the creditors the tax levying bodle3 are other .creditors. . First of all, the corporation must earn enough to pay taxes, otherwise the forests. Public opinion. In so far opment. The Irony of Fate. (From Llppincott's. At the Authors' club In New Tork a number of -members were swapping stories, when one told a tale, during the course- of which he more than once used the terms "the Irony of fate." , "That expression," remarked one of his listeners, "may well have fitted the emergency of your story, but I have a better one. Once, In. San Francisco, when I was nearly down and out, I re i ' AND NEWS IN BRIEF OKLGO.N SIDELIGHTS A Methodist church, free of debt. was dedicated at Ruckles, JDouKiaa county, on Sunday, April It. Th. Rom, T?!vr ' Artui views with alarm the presence of mustard and ad monishes all whose premises are in fested that eternal pulling is the priee of eradication. "The carrvine of the good roads bonds," says the Salem Statesman.' "will do more for Marlon county than a dozen new railroads; it will be the biggest thing that ever nappenea 10 this county." The "oaint up" movement Is at work in Astoria. "The movement," Bays the Astorian, "Is apparently the most sys tematic and comprenensive oi any so far launched, its chief value being that it alms at permanent reform ana continued effort." Presbyterians and the two Methodist denominations at Bandon have com bined in building anabernacle in which to continue the union revival services cow in progress under the leadership of Pastor Thomas of the Methodist Episcopal church South, of Coquille. Canyon City Eagle: A meeting has been called for May 1 at Hamilton to discuss the division of the county. The difficulty Will be in defining the lines. Some advocate a straight division east and west along a township line, and this will meet with better favor than a division along a watershed. The McMinnville Register has dropped its Tuesday edition and has gone back to a straight weekly, speak ing of which its neighbor, the Newberg Graphic, says: "It shows good business sense, according to our way of think ing; we have never been able to figure out where the profit comes in for a semi-weekly local paper." hotel and allied business Interests of the country, might possibly be re ported out by the Judiciary committee to the nation's law making body is one that should suggest to the hotel fra ternity of the country the Intense gravity of the situation, and the ne cessity for prompt and decisive ac tion looking toward active preparation to effectively meet the exigencies of the occasion. Hotel Life believes in the principle of meeting the situation at the thres hold of the enemy. It believes that you can always stand the surprise of a profit better than you canJ stand the surprise of a loss. Senator Sheppard of Texas and Representative Hobson, an opponent of . Democratic House Leader Underwood, as is well known, are insistent that the resolution be placed before congress, and they will force the issue, if they can. Whether or not the measure would be defeated at the hands of congress is a matter of serious conjecture. The general trend of events through out the country in the past few months is said to have given great encourage ment to the prohibitionists. It is charged that this feeling of encourage ment is largely due to inactivity on the part of the hotel men of the coun- trv who falsely imagine who ralseiy imagine memseiveM secure in their strongholds, while the advocates back or tne resolution nave been working over time in their efforts to carry men yomi vj uw tuu v completion of the ends that inspired the original dictation of the resolution. It is time that the hotel men of the country took some concerted, concrete action through their respective asso ciations, looking to the defeat of this measure. They have a outy to per form In this matter. They 'come In oersonal contact with the larger por tion of the traveling public the real thinkers of the country. Their estab lishments are either the temporary or permanent homes of an inestimable number of persons throughout the land. It is sanely declared that excessive paternalism at the instance of the law makers cannot but result' in individ ualistic reaction in its most virulent form. Admitting that It is the duty of the lawmaker to protect the citizen, we cannot quite agree with the "re former" that the personal privilege of the upright citizen should be exploited. That is carrying paternalism to the extreme limit. Invasion of sacred home rights and curtailment of per sonal' liberty is always bound to meet with resentment. Hotel Life has always advocated that temperance will never be enforced by man made laws. Unless it is the statute of making a man believe that lie does not . need what he knows he wants, and what ia necessary for his physical welfare and comfort, any ef fort to the contrary is bound to fail. Wherever this policy has been pursued rank failure staiks prominently in the way. This paper believes in regulating what you cannot control. Hotel- men of the country should know, heed and unite to defeat any at tempt on the part of any legislative body to obstruct their legitimate right to conduct any legitimate business in a business way. SAFETY OF A BOND T, ,f the state would sell It out. must earn the Interest charges on the money it Dorroweu tne interest -u the bond fti hold must be met regu- larly, or else the corporation will be sold by the bondholders. It must con tinue to show earnings which will be large enough to pay off Its borrowed money when due or justify it in re newing its obligations. Second, the corporation should earn enough above all running expenses to pay dividends on the money which was actually used by the owners of its eterk In establishing and pushing tho business, for if the stockholders have no prospect of getting returns on their investment they are not likely t feel very greatly concerned over the fate of the bondholders. If you find, in a corporation's re port of Income, that 90 cents of every dollar earned must be paid out In taxes and bond interest, you had bes pass, on to consider some other corpora-1 tlon's bonds. , ASK yoursen mis iiorauou wnou DUying a OOIIU. M It lO l" uiiiwriuun represented by this bond is dis - charged? If the answer is yes, buy; If j no, don't buy. celved a money order from home . in the sum of $40, and the only man who couli Identify me was one to Whom I owed $38." liis-gUsh Prudence. ' From Punch. Mrs. Brfggs So there's not going to be a postal strike after all, Mrs. John son. ' -Mrs. Johnson (remembering th coal strike) Well, you never can tall but what It may come at any moment; so I shall lay in a good stock of stamps now. ' - - ' To lighten the labor of housewives, a swinging stool has been . invented that may be fastened to a kitchen sink support. IN EARLIER DAYS By Fred Lockley. he pioneers, didn't have much m,iiey,.,J.Ut tny-nl lt of devotion and willingness., to put their shoulder wheel." said Rev. C. II. Mat-. . toon, who for more than 60 years has ..aw BaPut minister in Oregon. About All they hud when they got here were the clothes they stood In . and a gaunt and jaded yoke of oxen. ' They, had plenty of land, more than- plenty, but no mmnv I aidn t get nor did we exoect much in the way of payment Tor our work. Lit- tie as the pioneer Baptists had, they were willing to contribute their pro duce, their labor and their energy to ward advancing the cause of education"" and religion. "School was started In the Baptist ' church at Oregon City shortly after its completion in 1819. Rev. Iieseklau Johnson started a school in tho church building and put his niece in as teach--er. Late in 1849 Rev. Ezra Fisher, a T" Baptist minister, became teacher. It was decided to start a Baptist college. " Dr. John McLoughlin had contributed- a lot for the church and he now gave Bouna ior a tfaptist college. By 185S Kev. Mr. Fisher &nd Rev. Mr. John son had pledges of about S1000, pay able In lumber, labor, supplies and money. They put up a three story building 34 by 60 feet and laid the nucleus for a Baptist college In Ore- ' gon. Rev. Ezra Fisher, Rev. Hese- " ' kiah Johnson, J. R. Robb and Joseph Jeffries bought 600 acres of land near Oregon City for $5000. They donated to the college a tract 940 by 2640 feet -and divided the rest of the claim among themselves. After teaching for two years, Rev. Mr. Fisher was suc ceeded by Rev. OeorKe C. Chandler and -J. S. Read. Mr. Read was soon suc- ceeoea by J. D. Post. "It was planned to train -yourtg men to become Baptist ministers. After " hard struggle the college was com- pelled to suspend. In January, 1856. a charter was secured for the Oregon City university, which succeeded to therproperty and rights of the Oregon City college. The university was un able to carry on the work, the school building fell Into decay and was finally . torn down and the grounds sold. "In 1855 a school was started at Mc Minnville by Rev. John McBride. Rev. S. C. Adams, William Dawson and W. T. Newny. all of whom were members of the Christian church. M. C. Adams, whose son. L. K. Adams, now lives in Tortland, finding It Impossible .to carry on the school, offered it to the Baptists in 1S56 if they would convert the school into a Baptist college. In addition to the school they offered 3H acres of land as an Inducement and their proposition was accepted. "In the winter of 185S and 1857 a tL frame building 30 by 80 feet, costing .'. 13600, was put up. In 1858 a charter was secured. Henry Warren, who was secretary of the board of trustees, came to us and said: 'We cannot assume responsibility for this school. We will furnish the building, but we cannot -guarantee you any salary. If you want to take hold of it and make It go, all right. Whatever you make is -yours, whatever you lose is your loss.' We accepted his proposition. ' Rev. ft. C. Chandler, John D. Post and myself j were the first faculty. Professor Pont taught the languages, with the dead ! and live ones. I taught mathematics 'ana natural science, while Rev. Chan- dler taught mental and moral plUl osophy, Kngllsh literature and the arts.-- "By New Year we had 176 pupils enrolled. I traveled all over the val ley, securing over $11,000 in pledges on ' scholarships and nearly a thousand dollars on the general subscrrp'rion. Professor Post and myself both,-' re signed and in I860 Rev. Sir. Chandler also resigned. "Tn Xprll, 18B1, the trustees turned the school over to me. 1 offered to run It or five years. In August, 1862, Rev. Mr. Chandler and myself leased, the school for five years. In Mnrch, ' 186!, I resigned and shortly there after Rev. Mr. Chandler also resigned. "Professor J. W. Johnson, later the first president of the state unjyersity, took over the work t this timfc, with the help of John Hall and Mrs. S. K. Morse. By the winter of 1864- he had 120 students. In March, 1863. the trus tees leased the school for five year's to Professor J. W. Johnson at $200 a year, the rent to be paid not in cash, but In Improvements. Two of my pu-- plls later became distinguished In Ore gon's political life one was Governor Woods, the other Congressman Mc Bride." The Ragtime Muse April. April, .i.v. Irish through and through. Here's my caubeen off to you! Look you! now my head Is bare, Prop your tears upon my hair. Weep your fill upon me, then Warm me with your sun again. Here's my heart! O! make its strings Populous with linnets' wings. 8o your holy birds are there Not a hs'porth do I care; Mute witb sorrow, wild wltfh glee, So they make their home in me. Aorll. , D-ad, forgotten days Tremble in your dim blue haze; ! All the glories of the race Klloker on your mobile face. j (;Hmnfr In your golden lipht; Martyrs, nanctiliej by pain, Murmur In your silver ram. All your smiles and all your tears Voicing now our hopes and fears, April. Irish through and through. Here's my caubeen off to you! Pointed Paragraphs Gentlemen are necessarily conceited because a gentleman never forgets himself. The more you talk to a man about himself the more intelligent he thinks you are. . Ton are wrong. Cordelia. Earth quakes assuredly were not Invented by Quakers. meum,, married man dislikes vlU p,op,e who trjr to mak, Mm feel at horrie ItMinl tn TU. i From the Louisville Courter-JournsJ.-: There will always be special privi leges. Some fellows can get a kiss where others cah't The Sunday Journal ;i Th Great ' Home Newspaper, ; consist Of Five news sections replete with Illustrated features. Illustrated magazine of quality. Woman's; section of rare merit. Pictorial news supplement. Superb comic section. 5 Cents the Copy g