THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, .MONDAY, . MARCH, 27, 1916. THE JOURNAL. ' AN IN DEPENDENT NEWSPAPER. . . JACKSON Publisher Fubllahed every day. afternoon, end morning except Sands v afternoon), et Tb Journal Unlldinr, Broadway and zarohlU st Poet. land. Or. . , , - Catered at the postoff Ice t Portland. Or., fee transmission through the mail as second class Batter. XfcUEPHONESMsta 7173: Borne, A-ftOM. AH departments reached by these numbers. Tell -ttw operator .lrliat department yog waat. ' KOBKIGN' AD KHTISUNO BEPI1ESENTATIVB Benjamin 4c Kestsor Co.. Brunswick Bide;.. 82ft Ftrtk Are- New lock; 1218 People' ':.aa EWf Chicago. j Subscription term hy mall or to any sdV erese la tb t'nitnl State or Mexico: DAILY (HOEMKO OR AFTERNOON) Oo-t year 13.00 One mouth.,.... .60 . . SUNDAY. , - Cm year. ....... t210 I One month...... .23 PAILT OI0BNIN6 OS AFTKENOON) AND SUNDAY One year... 17 .SO One month t M America ask nothing for herself bat what he baa a right u ak for humanity Itself. WOODBOW WILSOX. Millions for defense, but not a cent for tribute CHARLES C. PINCKJSKY. Statesman, yet friend to truth! of soul sineere, la action faithful, and In honor clear; Who broke no promise, served bo prlTata end. Wle gained no title, and who lost no friend; Cnnoblcd by himself, by all approved And praised, unenvled by tbe Muse, he lovad. Pope. NOTHING TO SAY! , AN THE 17th day of February, U Chairman Ferris oT the pub lic lands committee of the ; house at Washington, wired I Governor Withycombe of Oregon I notifying him that disposition of tbe grant lands in Oregon was to be the subject of hearing and in viting him to make representations or suggestions as to the wishes of the state in legislation about to be framed. That was 39 days ago; but up to this time nothing has been heard by the committee from the governor of Oregon. On the great subject of saving 40 per cent of the grant lands for the irreducible school fund of this state, the governor has had noth ing to say. On the great subject of saving 40 per cent of the grant lands for building roads in the grant land counties, the governor has had nothing to say. , On the great subject of saving any part of the grant lands for ; Oregon public Interests of any kind, the governor has had noth ing to say. As governor of the state. Dr. Withycombe was naturally looked to by the Ferris committee as the .custodian and representative of the public lands of the state and, there fore very fcroperly.the authority to apply to for a statement of how Oregon could best be served in the pending grant land legislation. ' Few men would occupy the gov ernor's office under such circum stances without having decided and wide open convictions as to the disposition of these lands. But Governor Withycombe has had nothing to say. . The Oregon grant lands are worth, at the lowest estimate, $44, 000,000. On the terms of the Chamberlain bill, they would cre ate an irreducible school fund in Oregon, fully four times the amount of the present fund. Instead of the present beggarly six millions, it would give Oregon a splendid public school endow ment of approximately $25,000,000. It would not only be a great per petual and irreducible school fund with which to educate the children of Oregon down through the gen erations, but it would be a great Irreducible rural credits fund from which to lend money on long time at low interest for 'the improve ment of farms. " Though the securing of this great' fund; for Oregon has been trem bling in the balances for weeks at Washington, and though the news- papers have daily Informed him that the cause might be lost, the committee hearings ! have closed, and Governor Withycombe has had nothing to say. 5 Some of them taking their places at 3 o'clock in, the afternoon, sev eral dozen people lined up with camp stools and lunches awaiting the chance to get gallery seats and standing room f or( j the opening performance of the opera. There must be Borne love of art in Port land. - STILL SOBBING an HERB Is still sobbing in the I senate over passage through I ' that body of the armorplate bin. ,; -, . And no wonder. 4 The' Bethlehem Steel company made a profit, of scarcely 112 per cent on Its com mon stock in 1915. s; - It Is hard times when an armor plate works ' can from- its ' earnings double Its capital in a year and have only 12 per cent in addition. During the period, its business was so bad that Its stock rose from $16 a share to only $600 a share. -With the corporation thus strng ' gling along to. make ; ends meet It was, Indeed, a shock to Penrose, Oliver, Lodge and others standpat brigadiers- to have an ungrateful government propose to go Into the business of making armorplate - In a government-owned and operated plant These , loyal American patriots, shaking their clenched fists at President Wilson for what ther call "his weak and impotent for- elgn policy," felt keenly the sor trows of the corporation and held It to be no 'surrender of American i rights for the Bethlehem Steel com ; pany to sell armorplate to Russia at lower prices than they sell it to the United States. No wonder they sob.- What right has a meddlesome Americanpres Ideht to interfere with the colossal profits a powerful group of mil- ilionaires is making out of the peo ple of the United States in extor tionate charges for armorplate? Oregon should thunder at Wash ington until all members of her congressional delegation get inline for a $25,000,000 fund for the school children of this state. THE CRITICIZED CHAMBER THERE Is much undeserved criticism of the Portland I Chamber of Commerce. The body has made mis takes. It made the original blun der of permitting parts of it:, or-j ganization to pass entirely under; control of special interests. Some of these interests are, aggressive and unscrupulous. Whenever pos sible, they use the great name and prestige of the organization for private and personal purposes. This has done more than all else to bring criticism upon the Chambea, In the coming reorganization, this is a condition that should be avoided. No bureau or department should have the privilege of taking action that permits the public to understand it to be the action of the Chamber. To do otherwise is to prepare the way for a continuation of accusations and charges against the Chamber that will lessen the prestige, embarrass the endeavors and hamper the work of the body. There is a lot of Oregon outside of Portland. There is a lot of Port land outride of a few powerful and private interests. A great Chamber of Commerce of 4000 members, devoted to the whole region, is a bold conception. It is a magnificent vision, Jit la a broad thought. It Is an organiza tion of forces that, properly ap plied, is almost without limit in its power to accomplish. Many men In the Portland Chamber have this vision. Their view Is that the body should function for all Ore gon and all that great region, of which Portland is the center. Their thought is that to build the country round about is to build Portland. Many of these men are giving their time and their money in a way that squares with this view. They are soldiers in a splendid army of .progress and prosperity. Their service is a conspicuous serv ice to this region and its people, and it ought to have the com mendation it abundantly merits. The Chamber should be a great harmonizing and co-ordinat i n g body. Its greatestusefulness lies in the peace and harmonious action that it can bring about In state and community forces to the end that a,ll may work together in united action. By the exercise of that kind of power the Chamber can be of the highest usefulness. Ther are hundreds of men in the body, who are guided in their con duct by that view. Yet, how that kind of service is prevented by the power of bureaus and departments to act independ ently is evidenced by the Interven tion of a small committee in the recent hearing in Portland as to lumber rates. The hearing was an Issue be tween Portland mills and Willam ette valley mills. It was a local fight. It was a contest in which the Chamber had no interest. But this Bmall committee in tervened. It was a useless and wasted effort; for the Interstate commission does not base its ac tion o n ' committee resolutions, That body will act, not on a com mittee's expression, but upon the facts brought out Jy testimony. And now the newspapers of western Oregon from Portland to the California line are full of de nunciations of the Portland Cham' ber of Commerce. They charge Portland with being a hog. They are full of rancour and bitterness. .The injury to Portland Interests is very great It Is done under the name'of the Portland Chamber of Commerce. But it wasn't the work of the Portland Chamber of Commerce at all. That body, in its coming re organization, should protect itself against use of its prestige and name by small committees and one-sided action. One understands how that Chi cago minister can preach by wire less; but he can't take up the col lection that way. MINISTERS' PENSIONS. HE Episcopal church in the United States has 4420 men . in Its active service. Their" average nay is $1200 a year which Includes- an estimate tor house rent where there is a oar sonage. More than TOO Episcopal ministers receive less than $1000 a year. Many of this unfortunate class are old men who have been In the work a long time. Their pay Has diminished, rather than J creased,; jWlth -age, : and now they face the double problem f retire ment and penury. Such Is their reward for devoting themselves to mankind, Instead "of their" . own pockets. ' - ; "... These Items are gleaned from "Church Pension Progress," a little paper published In Wall Street but with a purpose quite alien to that locality. It seeks to promote a pen sion fund ,,-for retired: ministers, "and that only.',' The purpose is noble. Ministers give the public a kind of service which most people agree is Indispensable. They work hard and, as a rule, are miserably underpaid. They are expected to have a good education, dress well, associate with well-to-do families and radiate Cheerfulness wherever they go. And they must do it all on a salary "which a competent artisan would scorn. All our professional classes are poorly paid. There are big re wards for the exceptionally suc cessful or the few who have power ful interests back of them. But the average man must toil Incessantly to earn a bare living. He can' not lay by much for a rainy day. This Is just as true of doctors and law yers as of ministers, though for other reasons. The legal and medical profes sions are overcrowded. The minis try is not. Lawyers and doctors depend upon general public favor for their living. Ministers -must appeal to a single congregation, and congregations, we regret to say, are usually stingy. Their religion stops just short of their bank accounts. There should be a generous pen sion fund for ministers in every denomination. Most of them have made a' beginning of this good work, but none have carried It as far as they should. The laborer in the Lord's vineyard is still worthy of his hire, as he was in the Savior's day, but he seldom gets it The name of the new army diri gible is D-N, 1. It looks strikingly like the word used by a long-suffering man when his mother-in-law's trunk arrives. A CASE IN POINT JUST before the revolutionary war broke out a young, un married man named Martin sKalliak Joined a miUtla com pany. At a little tavern where the militiamen made their headquarters there was a feeble-minded servant girl, by whom Martin became the father of a' feeble-minded son. Of this son's descendants six genera tions have now been bora, number ing in all 480 persons. A diligent social student has traced out their family history from beginning to end so that the reader may see the whole of it The Kalliak strain, beginning with the feeble-minded girl at the tavern, presents us with 143 feeble minded persons, 36 illegitimate children, 24 confirmed alcoholics, 3 epileptics, 82 deaths in. Infancy, 3 major criminals, and 8 keepers of immoral houses. This is pretty well for the consequences of a sin gle sinful act. We call it sinful, not only because it broke the moral law, but because It broke the law of eugenics, too. When the war was over, Martin Kalliak repented of his evil ways and married a woman of good sense and normal habits. From this union there are again many descendants, but they are all well behaved, respectable 'people, no Idiots or criminals among them, no alcoholics and no epileptics. It is fair, therefore, to ascribe the undesirable qualities of Martin's first line of offspring to the defects of the girl at the tavern. The lesson is that like produces like in human kind as it does in all other living creatures, """ii we wish to rid the world of the idiot, the epileptic, the congenital alco holic, we must see to It that strains carrying those traits do not per petuate themselves. This is the sum total of the eugenic doctrine But we must also see to it that no new non-eugenic strains are begun For it would do little good to eradicate the old as long as new ones were constantly appearing. one or tne principal causes oi all this is poverty. Feeble-minded ness, alcoholism, criminality and the rest of the heritable ills of men almost always originate in poverty, The idiot, girl at the tavern prob ably had a half-starved mother. who was constantly overworked. The solicitude of Seattle for the mouth of the Columbia river is an example of supreme altruism. GRANGES AND FORESTS, nNE still hears occasionally from ' old-fashioned people M, who never correct their mis - takes, the false reports which were formerly widely current about the forest service. The forest serv ice was hostile to homesteaders, - It "bottled up" the timber and other resources of the forest land. Tt thought of nothing- but idle the ories, scorning practical develop ment And so on through a long list of complaints, not ono of which had much foundation. The'exceilent conduct of the fed eral forest service has silenced most of these querulous grumblings but, as we have said, one still hears them now and then from per sons who do not know better. The state grange has a committee on forestry, which has prepared an interesting report It may- be read in the recently published proceed ings of the grange meeting at Til lamook..:-- The r report - speaks out honestly ;about ' the forest servic. There is no evidence In 'lit of the Ignorant prejudice which: clings to old : error . and turns away , from new truth. . " ; . " The grange . committee .reminds as that we no longer have ""forest reserves." "They have been changed by congress Into "national forests" and the change goes deeper than the mere name. The spirit of the service - has become more liberal and helpful 'to settlers and the general public;- The report gives specimen's of the national : : forest helpfulness to homesteaders. "Any one can get timber for his own use free of costs from the national for ests," and he can buy it for com mercial use' as "cheaply as from private owners." - c - "The national forests," continues this valuable report "are open at all times to all our people for camping, hunting, grazing, mining, logging, beekeeping, summer ho tels," and a thousand other legiti mate purposes. This does not look much like, "bottling up" our nat ural resources. To an unprejudiced eye it looks a good deal more like opening and developing them. The grange report conveys no new In formation, but It presents some that is old in an attractive form and offers it to people who ought to read it. NOTHING THE MATTER WITH PORTLAND A trlnitr of excellent nredocta ere re lented la toda.r'a Installment, No. 80. of Tbe Journal's "Nothini tbe Matter With Port land" srtictea. Adaptation, lnTention and perception of opportunity united In tbe foundations -of a solid and prosperous Port land enterprise with which there is nothlna- Khktever tbe matter. I- xuu own an auto and its tires are worn out we can tell you If that old razor strop has lost its usefulness, we know where you can obtain a new one guaranteed to have no superior on earth. If your horse's neck Is subject to gall, we can point you to the place where is mado gall-cure horse collars. And if there's anything else you want to know, speak out and we'll try to accommodate you. W. II. McMonies & Co. began mak ing harness and horse collars in Portland about the time they were digging the trench for the waters of the Willamette river to flow in. He continued in the business until sev eral years after the beginning of the reign of the automobile, when he abandoned the harness end of his vocation. Instead of declaring war on the "horseless wagon" brigade, however, the gentleman courted Us favor and declared his willingness to help the game along. StT he laid him down on his rumination sofa and be gan to think. After winding up his brain wheels a few times he evolved a scheme which hs has put in opera tion, and today he is half-soling auto tires, making the old ones almost as good as the new, or something like that ' WHAT MR. M'MONIES SATS. He says: "Have them double- treaded, or half-soled, by our new method. Get from 2060 to 4000 more miles of service Out of them. We are saving others 60 per cent of their tire expenses, why not youT It Is fust as unnecessary, just as extrava gant, to throw away tread worn tires as It Is to throw away your shoes because the original soles are worn thin. Have your tires double treaded before they go to pieces. Two old tires are used lit making one double tread tire. The carcass, or Inside, tire must be free from rim cuts, and have good side walls. From the tread we remove all rubber and re inforce weak places. The outside tire must have rubber on the surface. Blowouts or surface ctfts can be re paired. From this tire we cut the beads, taper the sides, cement and sew to the carcass, Joining them per manently Into one big, strong, puncture-proof tire. This is en Insurance against blowouts. There is the strength of two old tires in one 'new method' double-treaded tire. Should you have no old tires, or only one, we can furnish either inside, outside or dou ble-treaded tires." Then be proceeds to quote prices which range from S2.25 to $8 when customer furnishes both tires j $2.75 to $10.50 when customed furnishes tire for tread: $3 to $11 when cu tomer furnishes tire for carcass, and $4.50 to $15 when he (McMonies) fur-4 nlshes both tires. CONTINUES COLLAR MAKING. "We have had to add a lot of new machinery for this tire business," Mr. McMonies says, "and now we are equipped and have one of the most up-to-date enterprises of this kind in the country. And it is ..wonderful what this machinery and accompany ing tools - can accomplish. Human genius must have been greatly taxed in their invention. But they prolong the life of an original investment by almost half, and now that rubber has gone sailing to the clouds, this new occupation will be a great relief to many an owner of a car. """T "We continue, however, the making of horse collars the gall-cure brand which we claim are not only per fection in construction but a boon "to the horse. Instead of stuffing them With long, hard straw, as It comes from the field, we have machines to Chop or w6or It up into a soft, pliable mass, so that the collar imme diately adjusts Itself to the shape of the animal's neck. , There are. col lars stiff as a log, and these wear upon the high -places of the ajhouldef, soon creating a sore and Ultimately an ulcer. Our brand never is 'guilty' of this offense, and 1 Imagine If the horse could talk he would thank his master for his consideration in pro viding, his beasts of burden 1 with so comfortable a collar In. which to dis charge his duties.. We have a factory capacity of 10 to 15 dozen collars a day, .and sell them all along , the coast from San Diego to the Rocky mountains. We sell to 'dealers In . many places, hive a number of traveling men handling them as, a aids line, and two of our own . force " constantly a the -road. We - . : . i', - - employ SO men' in this department J and they are always busy-i" MAKES RAZOR STROPS ALSO. ; , When J. Canby Morgan was a boy, he migrated from Portland to - New York, not realizing; what a foolian trick that was. During his pilgrim age to manhood he was engared In various pursuits, among them learn ing the trade of rasor strop manu facturing, and he did his work so well that in time be was elected pres ident of the Nev-a-hone razor strop corporation.. He stretched Its arms from ocean to ocean and soon It was theTr adverlit? UM wetted. " so formidable an opponent of another concern at It VInrt that h "othT Talking about finish fights, what concern or us ama mat tn otner are the ryim ia tne cp t,e- one bought It and Mr. Morgan was tween calendared thermometer? without" employment Then came a C0unty.8 'JX also u ,mpty yearning for another sight of his Looks like utilization of JailB is com "Old Willamette Home," and he en- j",,.0 b on9 of Olson's big prob gaged a temporary abode in a Pull-1 , ... ' t man. After "Visiting among relatives ' A"p1IiB5, candidates might Just as rival In . Portland, he happened to meet his "old college chum". In ths person of W. H. McMonies. In the course of their little visit the Idea of a razor strop factory in Portland Popped Into Mr. McMonies head. For getting details of how it happened, suffice it to say that the factory is in operation, four sersons are em- - w. .w- its existence It has a clientele j stretching out from Los Angeles to ' Helena and Butte, Mont., and to Den ver In the Rockies. . IT'S A BIG BUSINESS. ' On first thought one is liable to look upon a razor strop factory as a small kind of an occupation. It isn't. It's a big one. It never will be any thing else, for the reason that every day boys are becoming men and ex changing the downy lip for the be whlskered chin. This is an anxious period In their lives, too. About 89 per cent of the youth of our sex want to appear as men, and are anxious to assist nature in the growth of a beard. If there were a mustache fer tilizer or a whisker grower on the market, they'd mortgage their pay check to make a first installment payment on an ounce, and the record or every maie oirtn is tne recora or eral questions asked of counsel, ap a candidate for a razor stropor two peared to be particularly interested or three. There is, therefore, an end less demand for this factory produc tion, and it never will cease so long as males are being born. "We are making 100 kinds of strops," Mr. Morgan says, "from the inexpensive 50 per cent grade o those which sell at $2.60 and $3. I know this business thoroughly, and that our goods must be the equal of any or our enterprise would fail. Our leather is specially tanned, these ma chines you see are the latest con structed end my two chief helpers have served years In the work. Our strops are not outclassed In the world. They are as good as made, and we have put a price upon them which will exclude eastern .made strops from this territory when pres ent stocks are disposed of." - So here we have even Portland made razor strops, and every young man in town and in the Oregon coun try ought to register a vow he never will buy an eastern made razor strop, no matter how olly-tongued the sales man. Letters From the People Commanioatlons tent to Tbe Journal for publication In this department should be writ ten on only one side of the paper, should not exceed 800 words In length and mnat be ac companied t)f tbe name and address of the sender. If tbe writer does not desire to have tbe name published, he should so state. '"Discussion is tbe area teat of all reformers. It rationalizes everything it touches. It robs principles of all false sanctity and throws them back on their reasonableness. If they hare no reasonableness, it ruthlessly crushes them out of existence and sets up its own conclusions in their stead." Woodrow Wilson. Birth Control and Capitalism, ""Portland,-Or.T March 26.--To the Edi tor of The Journal We live in an age that is uncovering evils, and we gasp. It is said birth control is a menace to militarism and capitalism. Unprotected families suffer in the midst of our civilization. They live and die on the starving line in this broad land. The children of large families of the working man become the soldiers in times of war and in times of peace the slaves of a strong industrialism. The children of the poor are exploited by the big capitalists. M. A. BUCKLEY. A Correction. Portland, Or., March 24. To the Edi tor of The Journal Permit me to cor rect a misstatement appearing in The Journal of February 22 regarding school inspection In Portland by wom en physicians. The first women physicians to act In this capacity were Dr. Edna D. Timms who was killed in October, 1910, and who inspected Ladd school and myself. My particular charge was the health of Creston school. We served without pay from 1907 to 1908. JESSIE M. M'GAVIN, M. D. A Rebounding Criticism. Bend, Or March 23. To the Editor of The Journal The Oregonlan's lat est' lambasting of Josephus Daniels in the Issue of yesterday is a wonder, but when you consider the caliber of country editors, what can one expect? Just Imagine what the result would be if the poor "boob" that sits in the swivel chair in the brick building on Sixth street were given the oppor tunity. He is a country editor. Can't you boost a "dollar day" or something like that to keep him busy? He might do some good, but certainly he can't do any harm in a thing of that kind. Ia his attack on Mr. Dan iels be states that the navy is short 60,000 men on a war basis. Have the happenings of the last three years anything to do with that shortage? JWhy was not such condition taken Ware of while the Democratic party was out and the "Grand Old Party" was in power? Such an outbreak serves to show how Impotent a country editor Is to Judge conditions from an office chair. The truth of the matter Is that the conditions produced by those whom "ye- ancient scribe", of Sixth street worships - are such that the "dear peepul," of whom so much is expected, have no- respect for anything or any one that wears a uniform. , . t L. W. CLINE. Self Control Enjoined. ' Portland, March 24. To the Editor of. The Journal Birth control Is the next . hobby In the world's program. If X could think of a devil, I would surely hold him responsible for such PERTINENT COMMENT SMALL CHANGE Why not get in atyls this atyls ween oy registering! News from up that way Indicates that Pendleton is planning a great rail road roundup. e e Southern Pacific's largely increased earnings is another prosperity fact nete at home. a If suarar ken &tlnar tin in nrl r interested in the plow as in the politi cal pot. - A man with the blues complains that people continue to talk about civiliza tion as though it were a fact Instead of a remote idea. Speaking of Mexicans, count in Jose Pereyra. Carranza consul at Columbus, N. M., who died trying to save Ameri can women from Villa bandits. Great Britain has put a ban -on im- i portatlon of soap, classing it a luxury, It.B proDably aiffiCUit to convince the small boy over there that war has no compensations, THE OREGON WATER CODE DEFENDED Washington, March 27. (WASH INGTON BUREAU OF THE JOUR NAL) The attack' on the Oregon water code before the United States supreme court, as developed in the argument of the case of the Pacific Livestock company against the state water board, rests upon the contention that the board performs judicial as well as administrative functions, and may deprive appropriators of water of 'w. " " Attorney General Brown, Water Commissioner Cochran and Will R. King, representing the water board, denied this, and pointed out various provisions of the Oregon law authoriz ing Judicial review of the board's find ings. A RJtnrtAt .TumHi, In in the provision of law that makes the findings of the board prima facia correct In court. Cochran explained that this is necessary for the purpose of establishing a conclusive finding where the parties in Interest do not pursue the matter in court. He de clared it does not extend further than a dilemma. But the woman Is the head nowadays, and sympathizes with her own unfortunate sisters who have so many babies. The woman needs control and power over her own body, and that she will have from her hus band, providing he practices self-control, for which there is no substitute. There is certainly no place where "Blessed are the pure in heart," ap plies, if It is not to purity of thought and action in the relation the sexes lbear to each other. A chaste life is j Inspired by a true knowledge of the purposes and uses of sex, and tho Inward desire to so live as to bring forth best results for society in gen eral, and one's self in the end. Thou ands are wrecked yearly on the rocks of Ignorance or slothful disregard of results. Others Indulge the mere ani mallammof mere nature. They burn up the goodness and purity and strength of both soul and body, and are left at last with the ashes of their dead best selves. Sexual Instinct is not Impure, un less perverted from the natural work assigned to it in the plan of life. But it becomes bestially low when it does fall, because there is so great a dis tance from its lofty purpose.' That which falls farthest falls heaviest and deepest. Chastity will purify the marriage relation, as it will elevate civilization if given full play. Then will come the happy era of happy people under standing their true positions toward each other. II. W. KOCH. Brighten Convicts Lives. San Quentln, Cal., March 19. To the Editor of The Journal Do you remember the convict? A letter may break that strain, that ruinous strain. Someone remembers; someone cares: someone really wants him to be worthy of freedom. His heart changes; it is worth while to seek out his better nature and to try to live I by it, perhaps to win back his place In the world, because someone cares. Write to him! Do you know of any- one locked in a penitentiary who, to the best of your knowledge and belief never received a letter from you or a friend? Send him such a letter, and it wouldn't hurt to put in a hand kerchief, or a few stamps to show good faith just to prove that it is not a case of Jolly. The growing movement for prison reform should find quick recognition in kind hearted Portland people, where Christianity is practical. Write a letter to the man who Is buried, but not dead. This article only asks that there be given to these fallen a help ful word of encouragement and sym pathy. These men have slipped In the bewildering path of life; they are sick and weak of soul and heart, sometimes of understanding, and they are al ready punished, being Imprisoned. Tour right word, personally addressed, may arouse an Impulse In him to re pentance. It will cost you no more than an occasional hour of writing and a postage stamp. Imagine a convict. Think of him alone, with morbid retrospections that torture. How can he keep from hat ing, from despairing from growing desperate under the feeling that he has been put aside, cursed of God and man. Once more I say, write to him. This letter Is from one who has had the bitter experience, sufferedS un justly. JACK DAILY. Discusses Rotwl Maintenance. Marcola, Or.. March 19. To the Editor of The Journal I agree with N. Blair of BuelL Or., in regard to first getting a good broad foundation of rock, in road building before apply the top dressing of fine gravel or crushed rock. But In the outlying dis tricts we often find places where it is Impossible to find any gravel suitable for finishing a road, while here ia our district our county commissioners seem reluctant to let a county rock crusher go to one of these outlying districts, even though it Is standing ide and each district in the county paying its percentage of the running expense. We - also pay our percentage of the bridge tax. but for 10 years we have been trying to get a bridge across MIU "creek and get lots of promises but no : bridge, and a great deal of the time in winter the ford is not safe to cross. : 1 say this to show that it Is not all the road supervisor's fault If we have poor roads. Our trouble with the supervisor here in Lane county is that they usually change for a new man every, year and It always takes the new supervisor about all his AND NEWS IN BRIEF OREGON SIDELIGHTS The county court of Tillamook coun ty has ordered, that all offenders sen tenced to Jail terms shall be put to work on the county roads. "The Albert pasture east of the Church street bridge," is nominated by the Salem Statesman "as a fine site for summer playgrounds." -Several -residences planned, public hitching sheds to be built and more cement walks than In any previous year, are items on Estacada's improve ment program for 1916. . "The biggest Main street crowd, out side of a special event day in years, last Saturday, proves," says the Baker Herald, "what good, weather and re turning prosperity vdll do lor a city and its business." J The Lostine .Reporter, which was burned out two years ago, lives again, with Howard w. Stout t as publisher and editor. In his salutatory he says: "Believing that Lostine la on the eve of a prosperous future we decided to come back and affiliate ourselves with the movement of building up this fa vored section." e The Newberg Enterprise, In noting a recent newspaper change, says: "L. E, Howard has sold the Yamhill Record to K. W. VanWormer, who has been connected with the paper for some time. The new proprietor's salutatory is a model. He does not use a lot of type in telling what he proposes to do with the paper but contents himself with: 'By their works ye shall know them. " to throw upon the claimant the neces sity of producing evidence to the con trary, thus enabling the board to go ahead with its work, and compared this provision with like provisions in the Interstate Commerce act. King, contended that the provision concerning the taking of testimony by the water board is akin to the fa miliar proceeding of appointing a court referee. Attorney General Brown's argument was largely directed toward showing the public policy involved, and the neoessity of adjudicating, water rights before development can be had. Re ferrlng to the prima facie evidence clause, he compared it with the in dictment returned by a grand jury where the defendant is not repre sented by counsel. This caused Chief Justice White to interject: "I thought that in the case of an In dictment the defendant is presumed to be Innocent." Brown hastened to explain that he meant his illustration to apply only to the question of securing bail for the defendant, in which situation the de fendant will not be heard to attack the indictment first year to learn just what he ought to do and how to do it. And again I have seen supervisors using the road grader for a drag, which does not look good to me. And the idea of, using two teams and two men to run a road drag does not look good to me. Surely one man ought to be able to drive two teams. And again I havo known them to drag an otherwise good road full of cobbler rock and Just leave them for the traveling public to ride over. Last fall our county commis sioners agreed to get the people to vote and choose the man they wanted ap pointed as supervisors in the several district, but before the time ca.m t rt rote they drew a line between the real property Holder and the poor man, giv ing th power ail to the few holders and refusing the poor man the right to vote, although he can pay taxes. This seems to me to be unjust THOMAS A, DICKINSON. Thomas Carlyle on War. What, speaking in quite Unofficial language. Is the net purport and up shot of war? To my own knowledge, for example, there, dwell and toil in the British village of Dumdrudge us ually some 600 souls. From these, by certain "natural enemies" of the French, there are successively se lected, during the French war, say so aoio Doaied men. Dumdrudge, at her own expense, has suckled and nursed them; she has, not without dif ficulty and sorrow, fed them up to manhood, and even trained them to crafts, so that one can weave, another build, another hammer, and the weak est can stiid under 30 stone avoirdu pois. Nevertheless, amid much weep ing and swearing, they are selected; all dressed in red; and shipped away at the public charges, some 2000 miles, or say only to the south of Spain, and fed there till wanted. And flow to that same spot, in the south of Spain, are 30 similar French artisans, from a French Dumdrudge, in like manner wending; till at length, after infinite effort, the two parties come into actual Juxtaposition; and 30 stands fronting 80, each with gun In his hand. Straightway the word "Fire!" Is given; and they blow the souls out of one another; and in place of 60 brisk, useful craftsmen the world has 60 dead carcasses, which it must,! oury, and anew sned tears ror. Had these men any quarrel? Busy as tho devil is, not the smallest! They lived far enough apart; were the en tlrest strangers; nay, In so wide a un iverse, there was evon, unconsciously, by commerce, some mutual helpful ness between them How, then? Sim pleton! Their governors had fallen out; and, instead of shooting one another, had the cunning to make these poor blockheads shoot. Oregon's Bid for Tourists. From , Bradstreet's. "See America first" used to be a plea of patriotio citizens when Europe was ready for American visitors. To day Europe is virtually closed, and be cause of this fact numerous boards of trade In excellently situated cities of the United States are praising tbe natural and scenic attributes of their communities. Portland, Or., is one such city, and the Chamber of Com merce there is circulating literature dealing with the attractions of Ore gon. Merited word-painting is per xnissble when attempting to describe the natural beauties of Oregon, with Its unsurpassed towering peaks, fertile valleys and picturesque seashore. There Is the Columbia river, the second larg est river on the Pacific coast, and a rapid stream that traverses a moun tainous region of remarkable charm. By means of the Columbia river high way, extending 210 miles from the Pacific ocean eastward, the river's scenery Is easily accswsible. Oregon ians are proud of their hospitable spirit, their snowcapped mountain range in the interior, the Rood River section. Crater lake and the Klamath ccuntry. The people are bidding a cor dial welcome to all who seek to spend a. pleasant vacation amid attractive scenes, and in order tb lure the tour ist the leadtag city is making profit able use of the phrase, "For You a Rose 4n Portland Grows." And What Do You Think? From tbe Milwaukee Journal. Wonder what the man really thinks who tells you a story you heard In the nursery as a recent personal exper ience of his own. TKPnce Ger FtSy T i AMPMA Kl ijP COURSKthere' hasn't been time to get an answer to my letter to the Honorable Champ, Clark speaker of the House of Rep resentatives at Washington, D. C - concerning his remark thai rW lumbla river salmon king of all food fish is. almost as good as Missouri river catfish. f But ol' Missouri is represented in Portland. J And the mud-nosing catfish has ft defender. JAnd he or she has written me a letter. In which the catfish is lifted from the mud. and so pedestal. to speak set upon a U And this champion of the channel cat aristocrat among catfish doesn't go so far as to propose a national -catfish day. like we have every year for the lordly Balmon. fBut I do. JAnd after that is done we'll let the nation decide which is finer Columbia river salmon. ' or Missouri river catfish. JAnd I propose that Speaker Clark and I be paired. and not voting. because wed Just kill each oth er's votes. f But here's the letter: J "Mr. Rex Lamp man with The Oregon Journal Portland Oregon. "Dear Rex: I notice in the Once Over of March 24 a criticism of Champ Clark's preference for Mis souri river catfish. "over Columbia river salmon. J"And of course I don't know. "but that little criticism would seem to indicate that you have never . partaken of the savorjs cat (real fish). . i "else there had been none of this heated condemnation of the Honorable Champ's preference. f'Now I must admit that the catfish does make his home In the mud as accused. ' but when ifr comes to richness of flavor "he's there with the goods. "Not too fishy not too flat-i Ours the noble channel cat. Tf "Pardon the burst of song. J "And of course Rex I don't know your previous history. "or your birthplace. "but it's a safe bet It wasn't Missouri. "or you'd appreciate more the merits of her products. ff "And by the way Rex this 'foamy waters' 'golden glow of sun set' stuff makes mighty good read ing. "as poetical prose. J"But when it comes to eating it - in fish it can't be did. "And you can't blame Champ now can you? -for getting the facta. "Instead of the scenery. "when he ate the salmon. f'And Rex all this little spiel is written because 1 like you and your Once Over. J"And because Ihate to see you so misguided and J "LISTEN Rex I'm very anxious that you soften your opinion of ' Missouri and her products such as, J fish and apples and statesmen and things. "I. Protest." V xafe's Xaxlzdte Variety. When you see a beautiful maid sailing along the street with bead in the air, seeing noth ing and hearing less, it's a safe bat she 1 wandering what sort of a sensation she Is creating, and if sLe really knew it's another ssfe bet she'd com down out of th chraiis. Condon Globe. c B. K. Snyder, who 11cb on s ranch out on the side at Cbefaaleia mountain, has been bav in,; all kinds of "boss" troubles of lats. Ftrat tbe old faithful bncksklu tbut be had driven to town for the psst 2S jenri laid down and died, and a few days later yoaug thrse-year-old went by tbe same route. This left him only one and some days sgo wbsn going Into tbe stable with a bncket of feed bo stubbed his toe snd fell st the heels of the. animal, and ia the sudden fright lr kicked bira, nearly breaking bis arm. Nawberg Graphic When you leave the room don't slam the door just tsar It down, for 'twill show bet ter breeding of tbe two. Some people "cloa' the door at though they were leaving tbe d d place forever. Silver Lake Leader. If Ed. Nash matures his plans he will prob ably want to hlr two or three promising young men to herd skunks. Mr. Nanh lives on tbe old Bess place near Prairie City and while here this week saia mat ne was mnca interested la skunks and It is bis intention t raise them on his farm for the market. TV, do well, according to Kaeb. In the ntrpe end of tbe John Day valley. This winter Boy Aze baa trapped more man a aunarvq dollars' worth of tie furs. The furs are worth from $3 up. Mr. Nasb has written to W. L. fin ley of the game commisnlon for Informs tkm regarding skunks snd If he receives no discouragement from those wuo hare been Is hui.u. ta wilt emhark in the snUrnris of skunk culture. The Eagle surtests that If any of Mr. Nash's neighbors desire to re taliate they might ruiance a siauanur anumw A groe factory ia UlS mom vjcuuij. yon wty ssgie. Stories q Flnda Sermons in Squirrels, HARRY I B HER WOOD, the new British consul in Port- -land, was in con-, versatlon with a: rellglo u s 1 y in clined friend. "Where do -you worship on 8un day,?" lnqu 1 r a d the friend. "Oh, on Port land Heights," re sponded the consul with excellent British Intona tion. The friend in vain tried to remem ber if there was a church on Portland Heights. "Perhaps you mean Willamette Heights?" he questioned finally. "NO, no,, no." repeated Mr. Sherwood. "I go to church on Portland Heights, in the woods, you know. I watch th squirrels. I'd much rather look at a squirrel than a parson." Spurned, B'gosh. A DEMURS' little maiden served a demure little luncheon, a mer chant's luncheon, be it known, sold on -Broadway street for 25 cents, to Claude McColloch and Dr. Eior neaiuna. ins jjuncheon was remarkably good and the service all that could Be aesirea; so on finishing each slipped a little coin under his plate. They had reached the cashier's counter when a timid but de termined voice hailed them. "You forgot these," she said. Jing ling their two dime tips. The tipperr looked in astonishment at the fire la . ber eye and the little red spots en her checks, "Those are for you, they cried, In chorus, "No, thank you, sirs," she answered Icily, "I don't care to be under any ob ligations." '