- 4 1 THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, THURSDAY, JANUARY 13, 1916. THE JOURNAL : AM INDFPEX DENT NSWBPAPIB C M. JACKSON. . Pa bl laser ' t-WiUMmt eaery da, altar Wais an asoreiBS teseepl taiwif - aJterauueo, at las ioormal buiWuf. tttuadway asa aanalU stav. atari. ; laud. Oe. y JkiU al ISa puatelllce at furtlaii. It., tat ttanaiDWaiua isxeaga ui assiie a) - eiaea aiatter. UUCUUAia-Mala 117; BotDa. S-4MM. A4 Separtoiesui reached by tbeee aamben. 1U "t " ta -tfwraUir wiiei KturtBi'of ynq w-sat. : SUA lifts in. Nes iocs. Uia Paou' ' ' hi hMt , ibleago " - aabscrlptloa term bj mall ar t any a- . Areas la lb Unit ad Stain or Itasieat . as gear... 19.00 I Ona stoats $ -K CIU12 ;; year $2.30 One month S .28 P7 ee ST. BO t On snnfirs . . America aak nothing for ber celi but what she has a right to Uk for humanity Itself. ; WOOD ROW WILSON. Down all the stretch of hell to its laat gulf There Is no shape more terri ble than this Mora tongues with censure of tho world's blind greed More filled with signs and portents for the soul More fraught with menace to .the universe. Edwin M.irkham. THE MEXICAN OUTRAGE 'HERE Bhould be, and doubt less will be, vigorous action in bringing to justice the Mexican bandits guilty of the murder of 16 Americans. Meanwhile, why did Potter Pal mer, absentee owner of a rich mine In Mexico, let his hunger for gain harry these Americans Into a dis- traded country to operate his mine befcre a safe order had been es tablished ? Why play tho lives of men against the perils of a demoralized -people for profits of which this wealthy Chlcagoan Is in no imme diate need? Why, In the face of repeated warnings from Washington did he Insist upon operating this mine in Mexican territory under conditions ; that tend to drag the United States : Jtto war with the distracted repub- 5 lie? .i" For the loss of these American s lives, there is universal regret and aympathy. Their murderers should ; be brought to summary justice. !But, in fixing the responsibility for the outrage, there must ba taken into account tho multi-mil-ltonaire who demanded profi's j from his mine in Mexico, and re 'Cused to wait for those profits 5intll a time hen his employes I. could enter Mexico In safety. A postponement of operations to a later date would have answered a'l bis purposes just as well and would ' h .vo spared the lives of the men : yiho have been slain. In this outrage and In the cir fVmstances that put these Ameri can lives In jeopardy, there is ex ; planation of the violent demands "Jfof th . United States to make war ; upon Mexico. . ' The American owners of Mexi can mines want an American array sent into Mexico to guarantee them r. revenue and profits from their . properties. vi A Chicago Skye terrier mistak ing the fur on her shoe top for a rat, bit a young woman in the ankle. Until he is better Informed On the fashions, that uncivilized canine should be kept tied up. THE SMITH HILL Il WANT to keep tho project alive and to do whatever can be dono . toward actu- any Fecunus money tor a, of;. Idaho regarding a bill he has - Introduced setting aside $50,000 tor a survey of the upper Columbia and Snake rivers with a view to -.their canalization. J';It'l3 a project that ought to be sept "live. Every congressman from Orpgon and vorv can r, ; from Oregon ought to help keep it ' 'alive. Every congressman and . Tery senator from Idaho and from ' Washington, and from Montana . . ought to help keep it alive. New and unexpected depths of l the channel in the Columbia en ; trance rereal new possibilities for commerce on that great waterway. . The natural barrier there la going i to disappear before the government v work and the river become accessi . Tote to any ship that floats, no mat- ter how large. It-Is evidence' to ---Congress that money spent on the Columbia is yielding results even beyond the dreams of the most op : timitic engineers. , Congressman : Smith's bill for canalization of the upper river and tributaries is a great preparedness treasure. It ispreparedness for a , broader civilization nd for homes ' . for a race "of thrifty, people. It la " preparedness for the coming of an ..empire; - :,. .' ',' . Canalization proposes utilization of the hydro-electriS, energy- ' that the flow of the ifrer can create. Possibilities from that source In making homes for men and in cre ating profitable employment for them are boundless. What greater function baa modern, government than . to aid In bringing resourced Into a use that affords work and abiding place for surplus popula tion. Canalization proposes at the same time to bring arid lands under productivity for providing land for the landless, it means that along with these great activi ties for creating products, naviga bility will be provided for trans porting products. It is enllghtenei and scientific endeavor for govern ment to thus develop national re sources for human uses. It is vision and it is constructive pur pose for the Smith bill for a be ginning on canalization of the waterway to be adopted, and the people of the Columbia basin from Astoria to the British Columbia border should demand that their senators and congressmen do every thing possible to advance the measure. Perkins has gone home from the Progressive committee meeting at Chicago in the fuU belief that he aa arranged to get the boys out o! the trenches by Christmas. MK. PERKINS PLAN M R. PERKINS, acting field marshal of the Progressives, has performed. The meet ing at Chicago Is over, and Mr. Perkins hasf left for home. The convention is to meet on the same day that the Republican convention convenes, and Mr. Per kins 6ays it is up to the Republi cans as to whether or not there is to be fusion on "the same standard bearer and the same principles." The "certain great principle" for which Mr. Perkins is contending is the desire to beat Woodrow Wil son.' On that point fusion between the Republican leaders and Mr. Perkins will be easy. It may not be bo easv with a great many avowed. Wilson Republicans and Wilson Progressives who believe Mr. Wilson stands for "certain great principles," like peace and -broad social justice, that are of inestimable value to this country. As to fusing on the 6tandar1 bearer, the task of the leaders will not be easy. Mr. Perkins, for in stance, is for the Colonel. Rut there Is Mr. Taft. who is old fash ioned enough to think that a party ought to have principles in defeat as well as In victory, and that in having principles it ought not to sell out. Consequently, he is op posed to letting Mr. Perkins and the Colonel either frame the next Republican platform or name the next Republican candidate for pres ident,. Thousands of other Repub licans, like Mr. Taft, place princi ples first and do not think the principles ought to be changed and the candidate he named by the leaders who left the party and re duced it to a remnant in 1912. It Is generous of Mr. Perkins to so schedule his convention thr.t he can be on the ground in per son to cover the Republican con vention with a haio. It is more than generous of him to extend his good offices In helping that party select a man of destiny for its standard bearer. It i3 kind of him to confer on that party a can didate under whose nomination lib erty may not crumble and govern ment sink Into despotism. Of course, it would be pleasing to Mr. Perkins and pleasing to the Colonel to be able to write the Progressive platform and write the Republican platform, and name the Progressive candidate and name the Republican candidate. There are people who like to bo "it." If guests at a weddnig, they want to be the bride, and if at a funeral, they would, barring cer tain complications, desire to be the corpse. It is a beautiful vision to think of the harmony that the Republi cans can enter into by acceding to the terms of the two great leaders who recently wrecked their party. Because the public has already surrendered ownership in a great many water power sites is no rea son why it should give up' those it still owns. They should be leased under the terms of the Fer ris bill. A LITTLE HISTORY MARK TWAIN'S knowledge of theiast and present an the Mississippi was personal and Intimate, so tliat the ac counts of river men and events scattered "through his books are fundamental sources for the his torian. Mark Twain noticed a curi ous fact about the Father of Waters. Before the days of im provement, he BayB, when the chan nel was irregular and beset witn snags and sawyers and when noth ing had been done to fortify the tanks against freshets, the great river was the scene of a busy navi gation. From St. Paul to New Or leans the stream bore a numerous fleet of steamers carrying on a profitable traffic. With the days of improvements such as levees, lighthouses and a rectified channel the navigation has disappeared. The Mississippi is now a solitude and has been for many, many years. Nor do tho government's efforts to revive the eld time business thus far . lead to anything encouraging. It Is ex pected that thT Panama canal will do something substantial to stimu late traffic on the internal waters of the West, bat Jnst how much Is a question. The first blow to river traffic came from the railroads which car ried freight and passengers under conditions with which the steam boats .could not Immediately com pete. With the development of the country and the improvement of the river thlB difficulty would have passed away but for another and worse one which was added to it. The railroad companies, with ad mirable astuteness, got possession of the old boat landings frbm St. Paul to New Orleans and thus stifled competition. The river business is never likely to regain its old importance until tho bank are made public property so that boats are free to land and handle traffic. Americans have been improvi dent in. squandering their riparian possessions as well as the shore3 of the ocean. The banks of navi gable rivers, within city limits, and the seashore everywhere Should ! be the inalienable property of the 6tate, nation or city. Our Doctor Coe would save the Moose from extinction. Let us nominate a candidate, says be, and( pay no attention to the old parties. A NEW TRIUMPH ANEW YORK newspaper man advertised for "one or two small rooms with the privi leges of cooking himself." Household science has advanced to a high state of perfection. It has scored many triumphs and o"one much to satisfy the longing! of masculine gastronomy. But it i has remained for the New York newspaper man to add to Its 'tri umphs the hitherto unrecorded feat of "cooking himself." Newspaper men have been known to become "soaked." In the vicis situdes and eventuations of time, they have occasionally been "stewed." In the tumultuous and multitu dinous pursuit of their dally rou tine, newspaper men are frequent ly "roasted" by an Indignant citi zen. For lapses and shortcomings in the course of their duty, they are not infrequently "grilled." And Irate women with fancied slights in the society column have becom ingly "panned" them. But the New Yorker Is a land mark and a milestone both as a newspaper man and an expert in domestic science in his proposal to "cook himself." President Wilson says he will ask the people for counsel and ap pTTiaaal as to his preparedness plan. II,e evidences a fairly clear concep tion as to what i? the true source of povrcr In the United States. ODIOUS COMPARISONS M RS. JOSEPHINE CORLISS PRESTON views with tifiable complacency ' th contrast between the Wash- inprton and Oregon school funds. Washington's school fund yield a i revenue of $10 annually for each pupil in the tate. Oregon's fund yields but $1.80. We take these figures in the main from Mrs. Preston's address before the meet ing of school officers and boards at the Lincoln schoolhouse. Since she is state superintendent of edu cation iT Washington her statistics are apt to be reliable. Mrs. Preston must appreciate the opportunities which come to her state from the possession of an ample school fund. The $11, 000,000 to which it now amounts, is but a beginning, for the state has large areas of valuable school land which have not yet been soli. They increase In value yearly and the children get the benefit of K. In Oregon there is a different story to tell. The school land3 originally' turned over to the state by the federal government were ruthlessly plundered. Instead of benefiting the children their pro ceeds benefited favored interests. Compliant legislatures and shady land boards saw to It that the school fund got hardly a penny in the dollar of the real value of these lands. Washington stands with Minne sota and Nebraska in the magni tude of its school fund. What can these states not do for their child ren with the magnificent educa tional endowments which they pos sess? Minnesota's productive school fund must foot'xjp $200,000,000 today with immense sums yet to be realized. Oregon's thriftless husbandry of the children's prop erty is irretrievable. The milk is spilt and there is but poor conso lation In crying over it. But by great and unexpected good fortune the state now has an- opportunity to" bring the school j fund up to something like ade-1 quate proportions. The iallroad ! grant lands recently wrested from corporate greed will. If the state gets title to them and sells them profitably, redeem the shameful past. What better use coul " be made of these land than to dedi cate their proceeds to the school fund He Is no friend to the Btate or Its children who, whatevei ostensible reason plausible excuse, opposes this of the railroad grant lands. for or use If the moving picture producers are looking for real scenery they could do no better than to come to ("Oregon. Once more the state supreme court has declared that the Work mens' Compensation Act Is constitutional. NOTHING THE MATTER WITH PORTLAND In a letter to tU publisher of The Journal. Mr. K. L.. Tamnpaoo. manager of tba Port land Woolen liilia has eipreseed hi a apprecia tion of Tlie Journal'! serlea of articles on the successful Industrie of Portland. To text of Mr. Tbompaon'a lodoraenmit fullowa: We ail need encouragement and kind word a, as meat you and to offer inch encouragement a I can for the promotion work 7m are doing In upbuilding tt.e enterprises of th state. Your srtlrieo on tlie sntJrct, 'What la the Matter Wltb Portland.' ars certatuly Interesting. I bsTe reed almost eTery one of Ihi-m with a great deal of pleasure. Socb construct ire pub licity work Is of greet benefit to tne city. Ws all need nroursPtncnt and kind word, sa the atrnfrKles have ben many, although tbera seems nirw a ciiance for better bualneaa, and by corerstion. effort and faith In our city, we will not ooly encourage Uiie that are here to go on with the deTelnpment work, btit will rmninge nutltiers to Inref-t Uir money In Oregun and her enterprise." The Jiwriutl Inriies Its readers to erpresg their flews on the bulues artlclea apiiearlng In this col'iii.n. -Ml mast bare been aided to a b'tter understanding of wtiat lire Portland men are doing, and of what the city and etate offer. Their ststetnents wlU redound to the common gnud. Meanw-hlle, let none fell to jK-ndr the his tory of that pioneer establishment whlrh Is the nuhject of the article for the day No. 16. And l't atl follow Ita enthunlaiitic manager as he dilates nnon the rower estieclallT tbe sea power which mut be Portland a when Port land men rue to Portland a potentialities. J PORTLAND has the largest whole fale dry- roods and furnishing poods house west of the Missouri river. Not from the Missouri river westward to Portlund only, but in all the region westward from the Missouri to the western boundary o the United States and to the south ern boundary of California. There Is a meanlna; to this, for If there were a more favorable loca tion and a better city from which to operate, Portland would Tint be the home of Fleiechner. Mayer & Co., nT the distributing depot for the vai-t amount of merchandise sold from Its shelves to the merchants of the Pa cific coast. And this big firm oreratbg a larre factory In which la made a full line of shirts, overalls and mechanics" clothlns;, known as the Mt. Hood brand, as well as th University brand of mackinaw coats and balmacaan overcoate. ESTABLISHED 50 TEAR9 AGO. What foresight must have been possessed by those who founded the ML HckjJ clothing factory half a century ago! How tl.cy must have peered into the future, for at that time there were likely timber slashings where the business district Is today, and no doubt some towering; fir trees around the public library location. There wasn't so much a a "hoss" car then, and oxen were the motive pow.T for considerable of the over land transportation. Jackrabbits and rrous abounded In the vicinity of the baseball grounds. and coyotes could be found loitering; ".round the district now known as Fulton Park. That faith, however, which Induced the investment of real money In tho Mt. Hood factory was not misplaced. It was a small affair, of course nothing; to com-pare with the present Institution at 133 Couch street, wtife 200 persons are employed where more than 175 women, In a bright, cheerful. Jus-Hveli ventilated, well heated bulldlnj work with as many sewing machines, I operated by electricity, and make at least doublo the pay their elsters re- I .. I . - in t V. . t chrtna ctt tha eAat- ern cities. The payroll of these workers aggre gates, In round numbers, $100,000 a year, and this money goes to make Uvea brighter, homes more comfor table and to bring cheer and happi ness and sunshine and Joy Into exis tences that without these eamingsJ would likely be filled with gloom and surrounded with want and misery. And this $100,000 helps to make Portland a better city, a richer city, a more desirable habitation for others than merely those who receive the salaries. One hundred such factories would distribute 110.000,000 to employes an nually, and there Is plenty of room In Portland for that many more than we have today. Not 100 more work lngmen's clothing factories, but those employing the native products of Or egon Its Iron ore, its marble. Us granite, its timber and hat pro duced by Its soil. MADE IN OREGON MATERIAL USED. Here is a factory that uses made-in-Oregon material. The garments It turns out are of the homespun kind, only the thread and buttons bo lng Imported, and the latter, at least, could be manufactured In Portland as well as anywhere. The Mt. Hood people are sticklers for home produc tion Their own factory teaches them the Importance of spending their money at home. They thoroughly be lieve In th doctrine. It is continu ally In their minds, nd they practice wliat they preach. "We have more than passing pride in the consciousness that our garments represent home production," said Na than Strauss, member of the firm ijf Flclschner, Mayer & Co. "We buy rothlng abroad which can be ha.l from the factories of our state, and v.e find that It pays In at least two way. First, U keeps Oregon monev in Oregon, some of which Is bounl ' to return to ua through some channel I or other, and, second, Oregon manu facturers have pride In the quality of their products. We get a better class of material than la commonly found upon the market, and this makes a satisfied customer, and a satisfied customer Is an unforgetful friend. If we had no pride In our home city and no one has greater adoration for Portland If only for selfish reasons, we would buy thooe Oregon fabric to be made Info cloth ing In our factories, and for the rea son stated, for if w-e do not build up our city and state with our own capital we cannot expect strange money to do It for us." COVER A LARGE TERRITORY. No matter where one travels In this north west or In Alaska or the western British possessions, he wlU see men and youths wea ring MX Hood factory product. They are de tected by their attractive patterns, belonging to the Scotch plaid famllv, so to speak, and by the originality ol their cut. In. rainy regions they turn the wet, and in cold protect the body from Its severity. "We cover Oregon, Washington. Idaho, California, Montana, Utali, Alaska and the Hawaiian Islands," Mr. Strauss explained In speaking of the market for his factory's products. "It is a broad territory constantly in creasing In population, and we an keeping pace with it. We have be?n doing a remarkably good buslneis throughout all those so-called hard times. W have not been affected by the "pinch" to any appreciable ex tent, and this gives encouragemint .o the opinion that we are nearlng the end of the business depression which has overshadowed the entire country for going on two years, and from which the Pacific coast has suffered, but In no greater proportion than th ? eastern states. Oregon, I believe, has passed through the cloud, and we are out in the sunshine again." NEED OF WATER TRANSPORTA TION. Mr. Strauss is chairman of the trade and commerce bureau of the Chamber of Commerce, which Is reaching out after steamship lines, and he la optimistic as to this situ ation. "We need better steamship service between Portland! and the Oriental markets and Alaskan points, and Into the Interior," he declares, "and it looks to me as if our object in this direction Is nearlng attainment. De tails are not, however, as yet availa ble or at least can not be made pub lic but I believe Portland will soon achieve her object and we will have direct communication with the over seas markets and with Alaska, as we ought to have had many years ago. "We must now hsVe a generil awakening of the people to this prime necessity In the business advancement of Portland. It will not be to de pend upon the few, merely because these are fortunately richer than tho rest of us. We must all pull to gether we must forget self, abandon self ishness we must get into the harness and pull! We must get to work. GREAT THINGS IN STORE. "Efforts have 1 etofore been made In the matter of securing additional sUatnshlp service on the ocean. Mis takes have been mnde and some money has been lost. This has caused some people to become timid. It ought not to have this effect. The mistakes of the past, though liberally paid 'for, uhould serve as a guide to the future, and -we ought to roll up our sleeves and go at It again wltn greater energy than ever. For a fact it will not do for us to rest contented with the present conditions, howevjr cheering they may be and prosperous we are. There Is more to be had. There Is much more to be had. There art great things In store for this city, and they ar ours if we will but reach out and pick the fruit. We can reach It If we will. We should go after It with a goad, if necessary. Some men require goad ing. They need a shock of some energy to wake them up. Their am bition is drowning in dread tf los-f. Herein is their mistake. We have built up a great business here be cause we have been fearless and forco ful. We saw Oregon In Its bud and knew It must some day put forth a magnificent flower. It did, and we picked It. It is ourg now. portland'j bud will bloom If the stalk is nour ished. Fertilised with a dollar now It will soon hand back five. P.:it nothing will comC Lack If nothing i3 put out. Our business men are un dorstandng this. Tifey are seeing the light. Our Chamber of Commerce 1 brushing the cobwebs away. It is blazing a pathway In some men s wilderness. It Is burnishing up some men's understanding. It Is leading them out Into a broad place. To the right they see prosperity awaiting their companionship. To the left they perceive the beckoning finger of op1 portunlty. Behind them Is the dim. dismal past, and before the golden pathway of expanded happiness. "Therefore I look to the future with extreme satisfaction. I can se; our factories multiplying. I can see their products transported to the In land Empire by river and rail; by water to all oriental seaports and to our own eastern coast via the Panama canal to unlimited markets. I cui red Portland a hive of Industry, be cause its natural resources are being; cultivated and its opportunities Im proved and a great field surrounds it." Letters From the People ((romanlratlon ent to TTie Journal for publication la till department aboald be writ tea on only one side of (be paper, should uot exceed words lu lengib and muat be ac cooipauled by tlie oauia and addreae of tha tiWr. If the writer dim pot dralrs to base the urn mm published, be should ao alats.i r "Mamtslon la the greatest of all reformers It ratloiia liars errrytbiug It tnuehes. It rotta principle of all fslae aauctlty and tbrows tbetn Lack on tbeir reaaooat-ieneas. If they bare no reaaonableiM-as, It rutiilessij cruafies tbiD out of existence sod sets up ita owd cvDcluskoa la tbeir atcad. " Woodrosr Wlleoo. Pheasant Plaraage. Kstacada. Or., Jan. 10. To the Kdl tor of The Journal I have the plum age of a China pheasant, which I want to wear on my hat. The pheasant was killed in the open season last fall. I can prove who killed it, and I pre pared the plumage myself. Can I law fully wear it, to Portland where? or any- The law provides only that chins pheasant plumage may not be made a matter of merchandise. The hunter, however, can give the plunsage away, and this owner may give it away again, and so on indefinitely. Any owner can, of course, lawfully wear it, but no one is permitted to sell It. 1 Ue of Trade School founds. Portland. Jan. 7. To the Editor ot Th Journal la addition to what I h&ve written In regard to teaching trades in the public schools, and in PERTINENT-COMMENT SMALL CHANGE Wonder whether congress Intends to worry or worry with the i resident? The Columbia river bar having moved put to sea, the obvious thing now Is for Columbia river commerce to follow It. . Of course nobody is repaired to use a model in writing next, weeks let ter. The important tta-Jng la that everybody write. -as The Russians are still; struggling with Czartoryslc and Cie Howttx. but Americans gave them up long ago as linguistic lu4ossibllltles. - The murder of Americans In Mexico stirs some people's Ire to -the point of wanting somebody else 'o go down there aud inflict adequate punishment. s Rear Admiral Fullam complains that four out of five Americas can't sing t lie national air, and beimight have said that the one who can jught to tak music lesBoiis. v s Indications are that wb n the time comes for a world's chamt lonejilp -contest the Pan-American league will have a team of sluggers to represent the three Americas 1 A Stockton Judge Is wondering wheth er a parrots words can be admitted an evidence In a divorce", suit. Why not? Parrot talk Is at thj foundation of many divorce actions. Professor Iewls says Ifpld growth of Oregon's loganberry Ji ce industry depends upon keeping th product up to the Oregon slaruLird. It's advice that means m.llions in th packets of manufacturers. t THE WORLD'S From the Bulletin of the PAn-American Union. Where is the deepest iilne In the worl.i? That Is a questlt n very few people In this country can answer cor rectly. Even most mb.-fng experts would probably make a wiong guess unless they had made rather exhaus tive Inquiries anent the subject for It is located In a section ol the world whero you would least exject to find it. In the forests which cover the hills that cluster about the mouth of the mine wild monkeys are chattering and Jumping about from limb to limb of the graceful palms which afford them food as well as shelter, Jhlle among the brlght-hued flowers requisite or chids display their beaut;'. Birds of rare plumage flit in and ol t among the shadows and the gorgeous red-blue-yellow macaws add tlnlr raucous voices to the medley of sounds, while splendid butterflies wave their large wings of Irrldescent blue ad green and gold to enhance the rlot4 of color In these tropic realms. Tropic realms? Verily, for the deep est mine gold or of any other metal is located in Brazil. It is near a place bearing the euphonious najno of Villa Nova de Lima, In the state of Minas Geraes, about 330 miles rth of Rio tie Janeiro. It has been t orked, more or less systematically, fo something over 0 years, and yet t W of us In the United States have er heard of the pla.ee. much less of tha Jnlne, which is known as the Morro Vlho and Is owned and operated by -an English company. Ijfisi yenr two young professors of geolopy, benjamin Le Ro Miller, of Ix-hlgh university, and Josh T. Slnge wald Jr , of Johns Hopklnay struck out for foreign parts and winded their way even Into the hidden-recesses of South America with the v ew of find ing out something In regard to the mineral resources of the Western hem isphere. They In vestlgate) almost all of the known mining districts Of the southern continent and brought back with them a vast store of -information rtlatlve to the mineral wealth of the various countries visited, iand It was in l;rail that they found Ahis unusual uml lu some respects unrivalled gold mine The Morrd' Velho mins U located in the poid belt of Brazil, whre the Por tuguese were first lnducjd to settle by the discovery of the yllow metal. The first gold was dlscovtxed In 1699 n. ar the present clty of 'uro Preto. Tho gold was coated with ylack sub connection with your srtrtles on the cost of supplies, I call nttention to the following figures fr the year 1 0 1 4 -1 ? I r, : Cooking instruction salaried.! 21.99POS Cooking H'.hool supplies..-. 3,631.02 Manual training instruction salaries f. 62.B3.44 Manual trxinmg supplies . 11.3-'9.6i Stwlns school instruction salaries 41.413.20 Sewing school supplies..... 3.145.34 Total for these three iterniH44.261.S2 This la apportioned aa f4ows: $70.- 248.71 for the glrla and 4,013.11 for the boys. This splits it fairly 4 fen on sex lines, but perhaps the eqi'tMy would not be ko apparent on an economical division. " But assuming that the 'tity Is gel ting value received for r money ex pended on cooking, sewini, plumbing, electric work, carpentry, etc., all of which have to do with the most com mon walks of life, then what valid argument is there against having an instructor to teach thobe' desiring it how to properly write short stories for magazines, or scenarios for moving pictures, or how to becom a profes sional photographer, or builders' ex change secretary, or, in connection with our "safety first" courne.i teach al't.o a first aid course In medicine and sur gery. May there not be, to tP boy or girl medically inclined, as mu':h or more value in knowing the therapeutic value of catnip, as in learning, the thera peutics of s potato? May there not tc a greater return to the boy who has a natural aptitude for 'takUng the old clock apart to see what makes the u-i ...i- c, In teachlne hlfh tha rudi ments of surgery? Why notaa teacher to te.Vh banking front the banker's standpoint Instead of the depositor'e? Why n-t a teacher to teach, in a clean, practical way, how to lit one's self for public office. Low to get the public position and bow to hold It? If the city has $150,000 to put inu practical things for our bo$s and glrl-i, wl.y not employ some rtally wortn while men and women to .'teach thern some of these really worth while things? If the moving picture J people can employ the very best talent in ail lines in all the world to .make a 10 cent moving picture film tT amuse the ptopie, why would It be s preposter ous to make it an object !"or some of this talent to impress upo adolescent .... Ik. Mint.,., 1 . M - mentalities some wt ; - sons experience and training have brought to them? A puouc scuooyi Chautauqua course of lectsires by th world's best men ana women in mi practical lmes why not? ' This $144,261.82 is quite m bunch of money, and if spent elsewhere than In the public schools would require a very careful checking up-of ths re sults of its expenditure bfrfore filing away the report. O. G. HCOHSON. "Through the Tele'icope.' Castlerock, Wash., Jan' 10. To the Editor of The Journal In a re cent issue of Tb Journal t read with. AND NEWS IN BRIEF lVrs OREGON SIDELIG Baker Elks have decided to remodel their club quarters and work will be gin soon. a a The making and laying of 11 miles of cement pipe this year, the Herald is glad to state, will give work to many men at Baker. Docal labor and sup piles from the vicinity are to be given the preference. a a Reorganization of the Pendleton Com. merciai association along mors sub stantial lines Is proposed, and the cem horsnlp committee has been Instructed t present some definite plan at the f' cbruary meeting. Thli committee, the tast Oregonlan says, has seriously, dlacusaed the feaaib ilty of acquiring a permanent home for the club. Appetizing description. In the Moro Observer, oi the rabbit hunters' feast spread recently by the Moro Rod and, Gun club: "The lunch, consisting of oyster cocktails, cider, coffee, cheese and ham sandwiches, apples, etc., was put up by Joe Hendrlx and his effi cient corps of waiters. The coffee was exceptionally good and the cheese and ham hard to beau" a In the Interest of civic loveliness the Forest Grove News-Times tiles this pretest: "Another of the 'artlstiu' sign boards has been erected on Pac.fic avenue. Just off Main, for the Joy and edification of the people of Forest Grove. Thus Is the stamp or 'art' being Imprinted on our brow, and wltlitn a short time the body material of beau tiful Forest Groe will be not unlike a man with artistic soul who Is suf fering with a malignant case of spot ted fever." DEEPEST MINE stance and hence was called "ouro preto" black gold. The city which they founded was long called Villa Rlcs de Ouro Preto the Rich City of Black Gold a name which was some what cumbersome even for the Portu guese, so they finally shortened It to Just Ouro Preto, the name by which it la known today. Once upon a time it was about the most Important city In Brazil, gold working surrounding It and the valuable metal being obtained from the gravel of almost every stream In the region. Not only the stream gravels yielded gold, but many gold bearing quartz veins were worked. Just when the Morro Velho mine was first opened Is not known, but it was being operated toward the close of the eighteenth century, and con siderable work had been done when the present company obtained control of it In 1S34. The ore body consists of a great vein of unusual persistence and regularity that dips Into the earth at an angle of about 4 5 degrees. It may be likened to a gigantic knife blade, held vertically and thrust Into the earth at this ancle with the point still lower than the present deerest work ings. And it is these workings that make the mine remarkable. The combined depths of the connected slkafts give s total of ifc2 4 feet. In other words, here Is a gold mine that is being worked at a depth of more than a mile below tHe surface of the earth. Now be it remembered ti.at the rock tem peratures Increase as the earth's crust is penetrated, in some regions the in crease being as much as one degree Fahrenheit for each 50 to 60 feet in crease in depth. At this rate the temperature at the bottom of this mine would be over 100 per cent higher than at the surface, and fried ham and eggs might be pre pared for the miners without any other heating apparatus than the loose rocks lying about. Incidentally the miners would be going through the frying pro cess too. Fortunately, however. In this mine the rate of Increase of tempera ture Is only 1 degrees for every 100 to 120 feet, giving the rocks a tempera ture. Is only 1 degree for every 100 to cooled air down into the mine by means of fans the temperature Is lowered to a little less than 100 degrees. Even at that It Is rather snug, and the miners usually wear only shoes, donning trous ers when company Is expected. Still, the mine has produced a total of about $55,000,000 worth of gold, and la being worked now at a profit of somethiig over (700,000 annually. much Interest yonr editorial article under the caption, "Througli the Tele scope." While I admit your Ideas are In accord with our leading astronomers and philosophers. pleae permit me to call your attention to some seeming inconsistencies, or errors. You Kay: "In the moon the tele scope reveals the future state of Our earth, while Mars proves to be a planet more or lesa In a terrestial con dition." Let me a.'k: If the earth, svelitusily, la to be like the moon, barren and llfeleaa, why not Mara, or any other planet? In my opinion, all will be barren and lifeless eventually, but not like the moon nor from the same causes that make the moon barren. Again, you say: "On account of its enormous bulk the sun has not yet advanced so far in Its evolution as have the other members of the solar system. Il la still in a gaseoua con dition." Now If the sun Is In a gaseous con dition, surrounded by such heat and flame. It seems to me It would nat urally Ignite the gas and almost In stantly transform the whole man Into heat and light and distribute It through space. I do not doubt that the sun is aur rounded by the heat and flame you mention. But the fact that it does not explode Is conclusive evidence, to me. that It Is not gas. hut a solid body, the oldest member of our solar sys tem, whose motion, imparted to the solar ether, carries the planets around It In their respective order, each planet Imparting simi;ar motion, carrying Ita moons (If any), around It. I am of opinion, also, that without Jthe union of atoms there could be I nothing but atoms; and if atoms unite. aggregations ui munn v uivwi whi ets. planets) may and do unite. It Is, probably, the way they grow and pos siMy become suns themselves event ually. J E- THOMPSON. An Appreciation. Portland, Or., Jan. 10. To the Editor of Th Journal I hav. been waiting sometime for someone better qualified to take up the pen and give The Jour nal full credit for Its unbiased, free and fearless course in publishing s pa per In the Interest of all the people, regardless of creeds, cliques, clans or political wires. I know of no other paper on. the Pacific coast at this time doing this. The Journal, seemingly slow aometimes, to some people. In leaking up an opinion, when it Is made up puonsnes it to the world and lets the chips fly where they will, always having good reason for and proof of Its position, when wsnted, and does not hav to apologize for that position afterwards, nor get on two or three sides of the same question. In as many weeks or months, an some other papera I know of do. In my opinion the straightforward, levelheaded, right thinking people, regardless of party, will stand by The Journal la this course. And I am not a Democrat either strictly speaking. c J. Jarzjunr. Tt,e0nce Over - ar tj.x lampiian THE BEAUTIFUL SNOW whlci laid Its velvet blanket upon us Just when we were getting rfatfy tl writs letters back east telling- aboul our climate has very little to d with this story. which la similar to other torlea J If Job hadn't had bolls for In stance we would never have heard Of Mm and his hard luck story. J And this story la about Adeltna il. Alvord whose mother is a mar velous cook. and who teaches dramatle art it the Ellera building. where a lot of other things llkt singing and the violin and th piano and Dew thought ars als t-ught. so that in the hallways--some-times It sounds like Congress and the Symphony orchestra were Lot I In session. and both In violent disorder. J And the other day Adeline call as up Vella Winner of The Journal. and asked her to have a atudli luncheon with her. 1 And Veils had visions of frle4 chicken and salt rising bread sn4 home crown salad and strawberrj preserves und chocolate cake. and things like those. U And she said sure she d com. J And she went yesterday. with her mouth all fixed. TAnd when she came in Ade!ln smiled sadly. and said "I've got nothing foi you. J And Vella asked why. J And Adellna said she started owl all right Id the morning. with the lurtkheon In a basket. and her husband breaking trail. And they went to take a car sJ Sixtieth and Hawthorne. aj And aa she went to get on ei handed the basket to the conduoton and told him to be careful be. causa her dinner was In it, J And he said "Do you mean U say kind lady that there's some thing to eat In this basket?" ar And Adeline said there was. J And the conductor told her how he and the motorman had been work ing for hours in the show to gel t-e car running. without anything to eat J And Adeline was so sorry foi them. and she said they could eat It. ejAnd they did. and gave her back the basket. J And of course If It hadn't anows4 this never would have happened. 5 And Adeline 1st Veils, look In tht basket. J And they went across the street and had a Swiss cheese sandwlcl and a chocolate malted mllk-e-apleci for 40 cents and then J LISTEN They went outside and ste a nice clean snowball for dessert. Somebody Tnunp This One. Sir: Despite recent aventa we aren't yet convinced that "The Battle Cry ol Peace" la the blast of a Jitney horn. D. T. Melancholy m&yme Which, YerUs Seems to Arrive Mo TImo: Le grippe has corns and wet our nose. Our joint all ache from tip to toea Unto the Doc we teil our woes. Until the cold snap goes And like the girls of Holy Writ Who lacked the oil and had to git. Of booze we have not e'en a bit And It anows, snows, snowsl Jess So. The I'rrf cct Grooch. Sir: Bill Hanley told me on tlm4 that he knew an Indian In early- dayl who was named Young-Man-Who-Fromed-at-Hlmself. How could ha do it, I ask, unless he was well ac quainted with himself? C. L. Tree Tip to the O. O. 9, The Progressives, t!e paperg say, sre holding out the olive branch. . I ook again. It msy conceal the Big Htlrk. Howrver. The eold anap moves L D. to write this kollum and make a suggestion. Hs says he doesn't m!s Ms eold bottle nearly so much as he thought he would. "A hot bottle Is a pretty good aub itltute these nights," he Bays. s It Isn't such a change, after alL He has fired the fire-water bottla, a And filled the hot-water bottle. Send Your Bills to General 1iit. WHEN the rifle team of the Ore gon National Ousfd was on Its way to Florida to participate In the guardsmen's national shoot, several weeks ago, George A. White, adjutant general of. the O. N. O., and Dr. M. B. Marcellua, major In the hospital divi sion, had an argument as to the sblMty of the local rifle shots. "I think that If they make better than tenth place they'll be doing well." said Dr. Marcellus. "I'll bet you that they take better than tenth place," said General Whits. With some misgivings, each bet the other a dollar. After the sHoot was finished. White received a message that the ' Oregon team was in the fifteenth place. He telephoned Dr. Marcellus and said. "Well, we'll have that dinner now " "What dinner?" asked Ir. Marcellus. "Don't you remember betting me a dinner on tha outcome of the national ahootr asked White "I bet you a dollar, not a dinner," Marcellus told him, "and I'll collect the next time I see you." Shortly after thla conversation an other message was received, this time officially. Instead of being fifteenth, Oregon's team was fifth. Needless to say. General White col lected ths bet Instead of paying It. He Is a very good bill collector. ' i Wonder If They Talk In Their Sleep. T" id y0u ever notice," said an aid U time reporter, V'now- many per sona walk down the street talking. to themselves? I Imagine they must lbs saying to themselves things like this: - 'By george. If I sell Blank. a S1,000 policy 1 11 take a trip to California.' Now. what in samhill can I; tell Mr. Banker when I ask him to renew that note for 90 days? 'I really believe that I look the best In that ultra-marine blue bat With the pink oetrlch plumes.' "They must be saying soBathigg Will soma on kindly arias aad 'tal "r . ;'...i:?r- K