THEj OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, FRIDAY, ' APRIL 14,. 191B. : r - THE JOURNAL AN : IXDEPHiJitPgN'T NBWgPAPKR. r .. 8. JACKSON .Publish i'ubUsbed nr day. afternoon do mornuj Buiidinc. woaawar ou - land. Or. - - -- ' ' '' ' - k.led at 1M poatoffJcs at fortlMd. O tranwoMBD .tbraaxH U miJ aa acon4 rlats oattr. ' - " -- ' ' -: . . VtLKf HUNK Mta T17S; Bom. A-6081.AU dt'partmests reaebtrt By these nnmbers. Teu Uf opera tnr whst dqurtmtiit yon want. KJMKia-VAUVKItTISi.NO BICfBliliKNXATIVS BfOjamlD K-aotaor Co., " Brnnwlc BWi t r 225 J-Jftk A- iw.. Xorkj , 1218 People's " ' BMf- Chicago. ,: Subscription terms by mail or to any eifc , dress in tit Baited State or Mexico: t DAILY (UdHMNO OB AfTEBNOON)-' j.Ouar..i......3.00 On month...... $ JM h, MJSDAY. . . -One yesr. ...... .62.50 On month. ..;..$ -S3 DAILY (M0BN1NO OB AFTkUtHOOJi) AXD ' ,- . - SDN DA X. ,, - - .On' yr. ..... ..$750 " On month. .... -t .3 America arts notbing tor nersetf no wna --the oat a rtgbt to aik for bamsnlty Itself. WOUDUOW WllAON. v Mtniona for dlfonse. but ' opt cent trltut OHAK'.RS C. PTKCWVET The Power tbat has wade and pre . serTed us a nation! V. S. KEY. THE GERMAN XOTE T HE Jagow note is a denial tbat a Gorman submarine sank the Sussex. Unfortunately, there are admissions tbat a Ger- y-man submarine sank a vessel at he spot and about the time the 'Sussex was torpedoed. .There Is a . statement from France that thes Arew of this submarine has been !. -captured, and that members of it J. have admitted the sinking of, the l Sussex. -: The Jagow note Is disappointing it not unsatisfactory. The pledges .' made by Germany during the sub tin arine controversy have been so '-often disregarded in the renewal l.-ef submarine operations that the 4; United States has almost reached the limit of patience and forbear ,'vance that has been wisely and s generously bestowed. Ji 1 There must be good faith on ' both sides if the two countries are " ,to remain in friendly relations. Without that good faith the main tatoing of Count von Bernstorff in Washington and Mr. Girard in Ber lin . is. a barren privilege. Future developments In the situ ation will j be watched with .pro found; interest, for the two govern ments seem very near the parting .of the ways. ' rf . - Next "Tuesday' Is the. last day for 5 ! "registering. Is your" name written there? HIS NAME H ARPER'S WEEKLY prints a theological editorial this week in which it has occasion fre quently to mention the Sa vior. - It always gives him the name "Christ," which is proper enough and even scriptural. He is called thus two or three times in the gospels, which are our sole authority. But for one time that the title "Christ" is used in th-3 gospels the name "Jesus" is used at least twenty times. Matthew says that the angel taid Joseph his wife, Mary should bring forth a son and "thou shalt call his namo Jesus." Luke says that tue angel told Mary herself she should bring forth a son, "and shalt call his name Jesus." The Intent of the angelic messenger is as clear as anything can be. The Bible Is quoted and reverenced a great deal more than it is obeyed. But it would seem as if in such ' a' .plain and simple matter as the Savior's name we might do as the heavenly authorities commanded ua. What Jefferson said in the Dec- laration of Independence was, "Wo nold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal." .' The expression was correctly ": ' . quoted in the text at the head of ,the editorial column In The Jour '.; nal yesterday. A BLESSED CONVERSION R' OOSEVELT'S virulent attacks upon President Wilson al ways' contain some reference to his -duty to Belgium "ig- nobly shirked." The valiant Colo i nel. thinks that the president is a -r coward and traitor for not plung ing .the country Into war with Ger many;?1n behalf of Belgium. He f thinks bo now, but 'twas not al- :4 ways thus. In the fall of 1914, on Septem i ber 23, the Colonel wrote In The k Outlook, "We have not tho small- i est responsibility for what has be- fallen'? Belgium. That was very soon after the invasion began while . j tho impression of Its horrors was f; fresh v upon the Colonet's mind. His conversion to the . opposite view occurred some time between that date and October 8, when he con s' tradicted his former words in the New York Times.; Since then his ,. criticism of Mr. Wilson has grown l -more and .more rabid. ..: , .Of 'course every word ot It hits - the Colonel himself squarely In the i, face up to the foment of, his won a derf ul . conversion. Before . that - glorious event "- we had "not" the 1 smallest responsibility" for. what 2 had happened- to Belgium. After -s it -are "were cowards and renegades ' for -not f-olng: to ' war to -protect A HEART-TO-HEART G AN The Journal have a brief not Portland? :: The Interstate commission be permanently grouped ' with purposes. -That policy would mean distance' and -the over-mountain haol Pnrln nrl and. thA Interior nrndnefirn freight rates ;that greater distance and over-mountain haul require. Portlanders and the interior think. they ought always to submit to this ,.,,,,- ; : ,. .- - injustice? - .. --i - ; : - "With these facts as a starting point, do we all understand the dif- ficulties we must encoanter in delivering ourselves from this unjust situation? Has it occurred to all of the Interstate commission when ita us in any effort to get Portland out of the 'Puget Sound rate group? Do . we : all realize that all the big railroads with all ; their great power will be against ua Just as they have apparently always been against us? : - : V - , . ' ; Do we all grasp the facTthat Puget Sound with all Its prestige and power and'? Influence-' will.-be !n' the thick of the lpgbt to prevent Port land from getting the rates to which a downhill baul and, shorter dis tance entitle her?; .4 V . . . . With ; all these -powerful influences arrayed In opposition, 1b it not plain that . the struggle will b titanic and the -outcome a matter of much doubt in spite of the unanswerable - arguments which Portland can produce, in behalf of her contention? ' ' Mindful of air this; and looking the situation , squarely in the face, are we not all forced to quietly admit that the time has come for Port land to resort to her final and most, powerful asset? The Columbia river is that asset, - This is .the way to use It: The Columbia 'river is that asset.' ' ' Design river boats best suited to upper river navigation. Let them be in. effectiveness the ybest that engineering skill can produce. Make them so, modern that , they vwill provide eery economy in operation. - Get in touch' with every shipping point along the upper fiver. Ar range for efficient wavehouee3, and wharves with adequate appliances for quick and cheap handling of cargo. Get roads improved from the interior' to river points. Organize the whole country into a working army for a reduction of rates to the point that distance and water level haul direct they should be. ' If necessary, let the movement become a municipal enterprise. The city and county have financed more costly enterprises that meant far less in public benefits. Is it not worth while for the city to back to a reasonable extent a program that will break down the unjust freight rate system on which Portland pays an unwarranted tribute of hundreds of thousands of dollars a year, a system that experience has demon strated is building up ilval cities at the expense of Portland and th-3 interiorcountry ? It is .worth the while of ev-ry Portlander, if'he is not familiar with the situation, to investigate It. It is worth the while of every Port- lander to give sober consideration it is a time m which this city races grave issues, and every resident of the city owes it to himself, to his own business and to his future to become fully informed. . . . If the plan herein proposed were once put Into operation, Portland, by her own power and her own initiative would take herself forever out of a humiliating and costly position in which she is paying freight rates best suited to thef desires and progress of Puget Sound cities and least suited to the . rogress and prosperity of Portland. her. Speaking of swift transitions and chameleon-like changes, who can surpass the Colonel in those accomplishments? The Colonel's opinion that we had no responsibility to Belgium was spoken when he was as calm aa he ever is and comparatively sane. His mind-was not In a fer ment of ambition. He had not yet definitely laid his plans to super sede Mr. Wilson in the White House,- His conversion matured at about the same moment as his resolvq to be bur nex,t president. Mr. "Wilson miist.; be attacked for somethings Why not take up Bel gium? The consideration that he must contradict, himself to tio' so did not weigh with the Colonel. Self-contradiction never does. He lets the dead past bury its dead.' The New Republic, which hasJ been taking the Colonel's side against Mr. Wilson, comes out with handsome apology for its blun der. It says Mr. Roosevelt was as guilty of "shirking" as the presi dent was. He was also guilty of deliberate falsehood, but that is a trifle with the Colonel. Mr. Teel, of Echo, who has reg istered as a Whig, has no rival for the headship of his party. His only peril is that, hearing of his undis puted supremacy, the colonel may come along and butt in on his peaceful realm- THE CLASS WAR T HE fight against Mr. Brandela is a class fight. It L; aristoc racy making war upon Ameri can democracy. Brandeis stands for the common good and the rights of the common man. Taft, Lowell, Root and the rest who oppose him, stand for rights of a privileged few: The privileged few in this case, as in most cases, defend their Iniquitous advantages over the many by unblushing false hoods. - Taft's animosity to Brandeis goes back to the time when Brandeis exposed him in. the Balllnger busi ness. Root is a? corporation lawyer who has all his life served his pay masters without scruple in dark and devious ways. Their outcry against Brandeis is the yelp of a privileged class which has long fattened on wrong. His tory demonstrates that in such cases privileged classes have al ways been merciless and unscrupu lous. They stick at nothing to gain their ends. If they cannot destroy their enemy by open fighting they never hesitate to employ calumny and treachery. The death of Mrs. Chadwick, widow of former Secretary of State and former Governor Chadwick of Oregon . awakens memories in the minds of many oldtlme Oregonlana She performed well her part 'in the headship of a family that holds, the high esteem of a very wide circle of friends. A PECULIAR LAND HE recent statement of Chan cellor -yon Bethman Hollweg in the German reichstag that after the war "there must be a new Belgium is interpreted to mean that provision must be made for the development of the Flemish portion lof the kingdom, which isot Teutonic "origin. . In its dualism of races, languages and physical features .Belgium pre sents an Interesting study. It Is much the : same today as when it TALK heart - to - heart talk with the people , - 1 has intimated that Portland Is to Puget Sound ports for rate-making that, notwithstanding the - greater to Puget Sound from, the Interior, mil at nermanentlv dat "the hieher . us that we have first to convince: own intimation' is that Jt is against to the program here suggested. was invaded by the Romans. In the south are the Walloons or French speaking people. In the north the Flemings or -Dutch speak ing folk of Teutonic stock. A census by language shows that the Flemish speaking Inhabi tants are somewhat in a majority but that the educated class speaks both languages. The laws are is sued in bilingual form. Nearly .all the cities, towns and rivers have two names, as Mechlin and Malines, Mons and Bergen, Mass and Meuse, the former being Flemish, the lat ter Walloon. - There is a curious -allocation of i the two peoples. The Flemings of German descent are at the west. close neighbors of France, while the Walloons, descendants of the oauis, are next to Germany. This juxtaposition of races has given l. r . . ... uniu w cuminon interests wnicn have attracted stronger than racial prejudice , has repelled. Despite the difference in blood and lan guage, despite despots and dema gogues, social unity has been pre served. The dualism of the people ex tends to the soil and geology . of tne country. One-half of the coun try is mineral, the other half agri cultural. It is equally divided be- tween Ceres and Vulcan. The ' Walloons as a rnlA wnrt i to foundry and th.e Flemings on the farm. It is these factbrs of location and vocation, this balancing of forces that has ever worked for Belgian nationality. The proposal of Mr. Wilcox for an ..Alaska steamship line to be publicly financed is a sonnd pro posal. ' Its unanimous approval, by the directors of the Chamber of Commerce Is a manifestation of In telligence. Portland can at last begin to look forward to a perma nent Alaska line-and an enlarged Dusiness activity. A FORWARD STEP T HE Rivers and Harbors bill appropriates $360,000 for the Columbia and Willamette be low Vancouver and Portland. Some of the money will be used in removing a shoal between. Van couver and the mouth of the Wil lamette. It means an ultimate ship channel and deep sea naviga tion to Vancouver. It Is the beginning of a program that The Journal has often sug gested. Vancouver as a deep-sea port at once Identifies new inter est with the Columbia river. The congressional : delegation from thTSr: state of Washington can no longer be devoted entirely to Puget Sound, More of that state, so far as area Is concerned, is 'to become inter ested ; In Columbia river shipping more than in Puget Sound ship ping. . ' ; . ":' Vaneouvef"is now a part of the Portland customs district. Its growth and, increase of-Influence means neif forces for ; the great fight that has to be made -for jus tice for the Columbia country. When.- Vancouver, with the ?terri-i tory it can bring under tho zone of its'; Influence . calls upon mem bers 4f. the Washington congres sional delegation for support of Columbia river projects the latter will have to listen.- ; . .Meanwhile sthe deep-sea' channel to Vancouver has become a federal project. It is one step forward in Columbia improvements' -.It is un answerable argument -for retention of the military post ai Vancouver. The retention and - enlargement of that institution can now be fully defended. K v ' NOTHING THE MATTER WITH PORTLAND ' Again fa presented an "exclnsiTe" . Csry. set orders from abroad, erne establishment " me omy one or its kind west 01 cuicago. No. 107 of the "Nothing tb Matter With Portund- rte. ia cicuted to onTjnce that 'S&hSSSj "8erted tt H' ERE we go again with another 'exclusive Portland enterprise only industry of Itm kind west of Chicago and the biggest corpora tions and biggest mercantile houses of the city are its patrons, declar ing, "Its products are the best we ever have used." At least sucH a letter had been received from a trans continental railroad company Just be fore The Journal man dropped into the Columbia Carbon Faper Manufac turing .company's place over at East Broadway and Thirty-third street, owned and. operated by F. E. Thomp son. ( The presence of this factory was a surprise to the newspaper man, as his first Intimation of its .existence was acquired by reading the sign on the building while passing that way in Quest of another place. And he found, too, that its guide was a sort of "an old college chum," he having been manager of a millionaire's es tate, back in Michigan, where . "we two" formerly were decorated with tha degree of the "Apple blossom" and hopped the "Hop of the Wolver ine!" TALK ABOUT WAIt PRICES! Ever see a carbon paper factory in operation? No? It s worth a visft, j out in oraer to penetrate its inwara recesses." one has to present creden- ! tials from the commander of the ; ,, . i ! It's a secret process, this paving ; the delicate fiber of delicately pro- portioned nanet in the aniline crea- Kions of the kaiser, currledv with the runt-nara carmauoa wax oi oouin! America. The finest grades of this . paper are likewise made within the i Washington that the business of run domain of the emperor, but an excel- nin?.a government is not altogether a lent imitation is turned out in Lee. Massachusetts. Fact is. It's about as ' eood as the genuine. As to the fine j German article, it cannot be obtained, and the domestic has risen ln price 30 per cent, up to 65 cents x a pound. The aerial ascent, however, has been made by the German carbon paper colorings, which have aviated from 65 to 75 cents a pound, to $25 a pound, and well nigh ' impossible to obtain even at this price! How is that for war prices getting pp on their hind legs? HOW IS CARBON MADE? If the reader wants to know how carbon paper is made, the answer will be, "Ask Thompson,?" And he won't tell. But having been admitted to the sanctum sanctorum of . the factory. It was discovered that pots were boiling on a furnace, and going It to beat the band!j Steam was up like that of a fat man at the end of a foot race. There were three or four of tbem. It was discovered that no two were doing businens with colors at all alike. The aroma was different from that '. of a hair oil factory. There wasn't the slightest similarity, and this is not said in disparagement of the hair oil enterprise. Then there was a press hard by. It had somewhat ' the ap pearance of a member of the tribe from which the old, reliable Wash- ington hand press originated, but a I RPfon and minutw lnsDection dis-! . . sage, turning a wheel which in turn turned another, therefore, the press bed traveled back and forth like a sentinel keeping an eye out for Pancho Villa. There was a canvas carrier beneath the paper unwinding from a roll a la Oregon Journal, only it was a midget roll so different from those in The Journal press room. There was being -spread upon that paper, automatically, a v coating of color as thin aa butter on a cafeteria sandwlch--almost. IT LOOKED REAL NICE. The color looked nice and Inviting. It was as tempting as the lips of a timid milkmaid, but a thousand times more deceptive! - ''Just one touch!" After that It is necessary to visit the lavatory and engage In a scrubbing contest. A bar of soap and a quarter section of a work day will do the business- and one is ready, to never again! Nay, nay. Miss Henrietta! No more fool ing - with newly born carbon paper! One Is plenty! And so the secret is out. ' - Following the foregoing - instruc tions carefully one ought to turn ofat a very acceptable grade of unaccept able carbon paper which would geCtt the maker Into all the trouble he would need. Jt was good to see Mr. Thompson at. work. His shirt was riot as white i as .the -Beautuui t snow," yet. in very j sood conditlon for making: carbon1anl later accepted by the senate. The paper. This fact is freely acknowl edged. PRAISED EVERYWHERE, And he makes heaps of it, too; There are thiSe people at It and they turn It out ln loads. It was four years ago that Mr. Thompson . con ceived the idea of engaging in the manufacture or this product. Like many others .who have ' grown big from small beginnings, . he -is expand ing rapidly, and fast as bis paper be comes known It is extending its , HsJ of. friends. Abundant 'testimony of this fact Is on file in hia. office, and It comes not only from the big people of .Portland, but from cities in Wash ington and all parts of Oregon. There la appreciation of its merit in a letter from Denver placing a second -'order. The - writer declares, We' do not un derstand ywhy we cannot buy aa good carbon paper In Denver as that yOu make. - It must,-berths climate that make's ' the ' difference." ' But It ' isn't the atmosphere. This has nothing to do with it. Portland people flourish , on the ., "buy-away- j from-home habit,", and Mr. Thompson , is determined to make them buy bis home-made carbon paper by reason of Its being. "The Best Carbon Paper, on Earth." -.- . He says the big factories in the east, thousands of miles away, may produce a poor quality of carbon pa per, pocket an "unearned increment," and the trick will Ire forgotten, but f he turned out one poor batch it would ruin his .business. There are so aany eastern carbon paper fac tories that the sufferer soon would forget the one which was guilty of the graft, but were he once to de ceive a customer the offense never would be forgotten. On this coast there would da but one to charge the deception to. , . This is one reason why' the best carbon paper In the country is made in Portland. A big reason Is tbat Thompson is honest by nature. An important one is that he is building up a business, and its cor ner stone is a square deal. And his heart and soul are in it! Letters From the People Commanlcatlona sent to Tb Journal fox nnLlication In this department should be writ ten on only one side of the paper, should not exceed 300 words in length and moat be ac companied by the name and addraaa ot the sender. If the writer does not deslra to bare the name published, be snouia so ttata. j 'Discussion is the greatest of all reformers. It rationalizes everything It touches, it robs nrinciDlea of all false sanctity and throws them back on their reasonableness, if they have no reasonableness, it ruthlessly erosbea them out of existence and sets np Us own conclusions in their stead." wooarow witfon.. Brains and the PubUc Service. Portland Acrll 12. To the Editor c The Journal It is said that an editor writing editorials will write at least one good once a. year. Undoubt- dlir Th Jlmirnnl ciHtnr hit his annual zenitn ln tne editorial proclaiming that the army and the tariff .are not political Issues, That is the idea that the average conjeTessrnan. If we could go a bit farther and impress the gentlemen at be galned to the people The voters should be instructed in the business of voting for masters of business rather tcan masters of politics. In Washing ton the idea prevails that tte appoint ment of our postmasters is a reward for fealty. Perhaps, some day a news paper will be freakish enough to de clare that most postmasters are over paid for their services and that inex perienced postmasters ought to serve an apprenticeship before taking the reins of handling and dispatching our mail. President Wilson rose above the ma jority of his party, recently when he said that the theory of tariff was a bit of buncombe that politicians had crammed down the throats of the voters for generations. That sentence perhaps stirred wrath in, the so'uthern states, where political principles are handed down from father to son with out amendments or substitutions. Col onel Roosevelt started something sim ilar several years ago when he was in charge of the civil service bureau. Efficiency in public life is a new Idea. Any reader of the Congressional Record is appalled at the crass ignor ance of many of our lawmakers on constitutional' law and fundamental business principles. It would not .be unfair to subject our congressmen to some of the qualifications in lawmak ing that private business demands of its skilled workman. The best brains in the country should rule. It is a question of whether the country's best brains is In the political field. J. B. COTTINOHAM. Republican "Harmony. Portland, April 12. To the Editor of The Journal The attempt that is being made by the politicians to heal the great schism in the ranks of the Republican party by sending broad- cast raise news or narmony nas been so. bungled of late as to cause all good Democrats rejoicing. The appointment of Senator Harding of Ohio as tempo rary chairman of the Republican con vention, is ample evidence that the schism in the Republican ranks will not be healed. Harding is the close friend of "Fire Alarm" Fo raker, for mer senator from Ohio and henchman of Boles Penrose and other "old guarders." Dispatches from Washington inti mate harmony between Root, Penrose and Roosevelt, but the harmony theory will be exploded at the convention pro per. The followers of Colonel Roose velt are as heroic as they were four years ago, but the old guard-is not heroic Indications of the muddled condition of Republican politics are shown when the Oregonian is forced to come to bat with Justice Hughes, a man who la not even a candidate, a politician or of presidential timber. The Oregonian, like many rock-bed sheets behind the Republican party, is practically forced to pick some sort of a bedfellow. Their desperate condition is shown when they begin to pick strangers In politics. O tempore! O mores! E. J. WILLIAMSON. Wilson to the Rescue. -From the Pittsburg Leader. The conference between President Wilson and a number of senators gives an outlook upon the ultimate fate of the Shields waterpower bill tbat ought be heartening to the public. Thai Shields bill has passed the senate, but a substitute for it has been drafted for introduction ln the house, which, if the conference is as "productive as the information about it warrants by clear inference, will be passed by the house Myers bill, drafted to represent the views - of conservationists ln congress and the president, is said to contain the provisions for the protection of natural national resources that have been the vital features of other con servation measures. Some senators have said they think the president's bill gives the govern ment too much arbitrary power, but in a situation-like" this and under the terms of future possibilities, it is bet ter to choose' the doubt of too much governmental authority than too little. Better to give the government all the power, even if Jt is arbitrary, than to place the same power in the hands of a predatory waterpower trust, or any other trust. "If we make any mistake about authorizing excess of arbitrary action, -it is better to err on the side of governmental discretion. - . i. The Myers bill, which now ' seems likely to replace the detestable Shields measure, provides for no governmental revenue f rota the leases of waterpower sites to private enterprise, but it con tains about all the other lease features of earlier bills for conservatlotrrwith PERTINENT COMMENT SMALL CHANGE Speaking of hat in the ring, wait until Easter and you can't count 'op. Perhaps Villa has adopted Colonel Watterson's slogan, "On to the canal." Recent resrlstratlon ftrar iha that when it comes to a nlnch. women are more dependable than men. Henrr A Wise Wood, who aav the Japanese fleet could bluff Uncle Sam, evidently is more Wood than Wise. Haerft It occurred to the fichtlnar nations that their hunger could be ap peased by making the dogs of war into nourisning sausages 7 Temperance lecturers should note the fact that after being on the water wagon a, year King George is able to turn J500.00O over to the government- It is significant that Louis Mann. who once starred in "The Man Who Stood Still." denounces the movie the atre as "the house of non-intellectuals." New Tork's "400" i raising a fund for EuroDe's nobility. That's right. for just plain American people can't get tneir minas on tne wiaows ana orphans and maimed soldiers. Nearly 150,000 people saw the eight oieninr big-league games ln the east. so if 20.000 see the Beavers play their first game in Portland we will be somewhat above the big league ave rage. ... That Klamath Falls man who lost his purse containing 1300 on an Atlanta jitney and after 11 hours found it on the machine's running board oan hard ly be convinced there Is no such thing as iuck. SCHOOL FUND PROBLEMS IN TWO STATES Washington. April 14. (WASHING TON BUREAU OF THE JOURNAL.) Having in years past frittered away the lands granted to it by the federal government for school purposes, the state of Nevada is making a supreme effort at the present session of con gress to obtain- 7.000,000 acres more of the public lands, pleading the needs of Its schools, from 'the five-pupil school house on the plains to the state uni versity. Nevada promises to be .good here after it congress will grant the land. Senator Pittman s bill, as passed by the senate, provides for sale by the state in tracts of 40 to 640 acres to the highest bidder at not less than J1.25 an acre, the proceeds to go Into a special fund, which is to be invested in bonds or farm mortgages, SO per cent for the common schools and 20 per cent for the state university. Nevada, like other western states, received sections 16 and 36Jar school purposes in early days. This aggre gated 2.723,647 acres, but by another act- the state was permitted to select 2,000,000 acres of lieu land wherever it chose. As a result, 2,000.000 acres of the best land in the state were se- i lected, worth much more than the orig inal grant of sections 16 and 32. Then this land, the richest in the state, was sold off for $1.25 an acre, or tnai transaction Senator Pittman says: "T regret that the history of that grant is the same as the history of a great many grants in the west. The value of the land was not realised oy the state and it was sold undoubtedly for much less than It was worth. That occurred in all the western states, I believe, and it was more or less ex cusable when we look back upon it, because it was at a time when there were enormous quantities of public land in all the states, and It was more a question oftllsposlng of them than a question of getting the money." Mr, Pittman says he believes Nevada has reformed, and he Is willing in any event to have congress throw safe guards around any future grant so something like fair value may be ob tained. He Insists that his state has not obtained a fair share of the publio lands within its borders as compared Hwith other western states, and that the grant of the 7,000,000 acres proposed will only even up the equation. Also, contends the Nevada senator. the conditions are exceptional, because the state is exceptionally arid and its publio lands, mostly without hope of ever obtaining a water supply, are of small value "compared - with other states. All of the good lands in the valleys were sold off by the state at $1.25 an acre long ago. Today, there are 65,000.000 acres of land open to entry in Nevada, out or a total of 70,000,000 acres in the state. Less than 3,000,000 acres are actually comprised ln farms, either improved or unimproved. The total taxable area is 3,970,000 acres, the assessed value of property, on a basis of 70 per cent full value, is 9152,000,000, the state tax rate is 60 cents on $100, and the com bined state, county and school tax, on average farm lands, runs $2 on $100. The theory of the Pittman bill la that land granted now can be sold to advantage, principally as pasture land to owners of adjacent land who have a water suppljf and would be glad to add from 40 to 640 acres to their pres ent holdings. the full approval of the genuine friends of conservation. The secretary of war is to have sole authority to grant privi leges for the use of waterpower sites and the various state commisiiions are to be empowered to fix rates. The ex clusion of combinations is aimed at in a provision that no one purchaser may obtain more than-0 pef cent of the total output of a single company, and no sale or delivery o ' power to a dis tributing company shall be permitted without the consent of tha secretary of war. Whether all these, and possi bly other features that may be in troduced aa amendments, will be as satisfactory to the country as the ab solute control Of all the natural nation al resources by the government may ba a question that will linger stirringly in the minds of advanced conservation- lBprlvate enterprise, always has a way ,-with the aid of Capable lawyers of defeating the objects of retrl'?tlv,,?if islation once it gets its hands tmJ upon the object desired. The Leader believes it would be better for the gov ernment to develop these waterpower resources and k-jep close control and use ofthem rathen than te allow such enormous national value to pass into the hands of greedy combinations even temporarily under apparently safe terms. ' A Boston Story Via London. From the Pall Mall Gazette. Robert, the four-year-old son of a scientific man. bad lived in the coun v mftt of his Short life. One day a f caller, fishing to make friends with the little lenow, ns aim va mum and asked. "Are there any fairies in your woods here, Robert? n "NO,' responded Robert promptly; "but there are plenty of edible fungi." Decalogue ot Advertising. From tha. Editor and Publisher, ; Summthg in a few lines alj interest ing address by Dr, Frank Crane before the Dallas, Texas, Ad club, his prin cipal points might be called the 10 commandments of advertising, as, fol lows: L All advertising should be clear. ! It ought to state just .what your busH AND NEWS IN BRIEF , OREGON SIDELIGHTS That Baker tn hi le schools had last month the largest enrollment in their history is, to the Herald, further proof mat. .turner popui&uon is growing. A census taken bv 43 high school students under tile supervision of the principal. Professor R, G. White, shows Bend has a population of 3305, with a few residents yet to be enrolled. "Salem, the loaranberrv center of the world," says the Statesman, "Is planning to put out ten times as much loganberry juloe ln 1816 as went out last year. That will mean tralnloads of it. This industry is getting to the front by leaps and bounds." The Budget announces that Astoria Is "stepping lively these days With an nouncements coming fast of the erec tion of irew shipyards, sawmills, new buildings, better street, and additional shipping in the harbor. Everything coms to him who waits." Pertinent good roads observation In Pendleton East Oregonian: "The use of the auto and the Improvement of roads is practically making interurban elec tric lines obsolete. When roads per mit, verv familv in the country may have a rapid transit of its own with a schedule to please tne xamuy. Never was outlook brighter. In the view oc tne ai ear or a bun, wnicn says: "Never has a spring promised more for Medford and the Rogue river val ley than this spring of 116 a bumper crop, beet sugar factory, railroad to the coast, box factory, lumber mill and irrigation. May the fickle Jade keep a lew or tnem mis time. Almost every conceivable argument that could be validly advanced to sup port Oregon's claim for an Increased share of the millions that are to come from the sale of timber on Oregon and California land grant landa was placed before the house committee on public lands in the concluding hours' of con sideration given to the problem of this grant. Congressman Slnnott pointed out that development has been retarded to an extent that cannot be calulated. He urged that the grant was mad4 for the benefit of the people of Oregon, as shown by its tSrnis, and because the railroad has perversely defeated the original terms, the government should not now take away the benefits to which Oregon is entitled. He sketched the history of the state and told what the pioneers have wrought, through struggles of adversity. He declared the government has not been a loser, for when the railroad was built, the government sold Us even-numbered sections for $2.60 an acre, instead of $1.25. The railroad was not built from the grant, he assertedV but from the brawn and energy of Oregon, which paid in heavy freight rates what the railroad cost. He told of the condition of the state school fund, of the -plans for a school of forestry, and the use made of the school fund, practically for rural credits. He pleaded that Ore gon is entitled to the full 40-40 pro visions of the original Chamberlain bill, not as a matter of charity, but ot Justice. All of these arguments, elaborated and reviewed from many sides, failed to alter the determination of the ma jority of the committee that Oregon must be content with 60 per cent. Even on the division of that 60 per cent the committee was not willing to glv equally to the state for schools and to the counties for roads, as Repre sentatives Sinnott and McArthur, speaking for Oregon, urged. Thirty for the counties, 20 for the state, was the proportion fixed, conforming to the theory that congress owes . first con sideration to the counties, and that the state, as such. Is .not entitled to ask nearly so much. - The floor of the house becomes the next scene of action. With the com mittee behind it, friends of the bill believe It will pass, but not without opposition. Congressman Hawleys attitude in promising to present his "side of the case," a theory rejected by the com mittee, is one disquieting feature. Haw lev says that since the committee has taken another theory he is in favor of getting all he can for Oregon under it, but the fact that he represents the district containing most of the land and has another theory to present la not helpful. Then many eastern con gressmen become thoughtful when told that 60 per cent of the proceeds are to go to Oregon. Volstead of Minnesota, once a member of the public lands com mittee, is quoted aa saying that the proposal to give so much to Oregon IS "outrageous." Ultimately, it is hoped that Oregon can do better than 60 per cent. In the senate, with Senator Chamberlain's in fluence and the larger proportionate western representation, it Is thought that the 40-40 plan may be retained la the bill and the measure (sentr- into a conference committee, wjiere the Chances will at least be equal of as signing a larger share to the Oregon school fund. ness Is, and where It is, giving your precise address. , "2. Advertising should be reckoned as a part of your business. It- is as necessary as the sign over your door. ."3. It should be regular and con stant. People trade with the firm whose name is familiar to them. The newspaper ought to be your partner. "4. The newspaper, going dally Into the hands of the people, is the best medium for advertising. , "6. Advertising should be attractive. The most attractive thing you can put in it Is something that appeals to the self-interest of the readers. "6. Be brief. Don't try to erowd all the reading matter possible into the pace you pay for, so as to get your money's worth. "7. Be human. Make your adver tlsements as alive and warm as you can. Don't be too cold ana precise. "$. .Tell the truth. When custom ers come to your store do a little more for them than you said you would ln your announcement. - "9. It Is the duty of all honest con cerns fo advertise. That Is the best way to crowa out lasers. "10. Advertising Is necessary to all forms of business which appeal to the nubile. "The newspaper is the street that runs through the minds of the com munity; your nameplate ought "to be on that street." . Loan to Oneself. From the Oklahoman. Testimony and evidence in the case against Senator Lorimer, who was also v banker,- tend to show that he loaned money to himself. This' revelation Is a valuable one. 1$ teaches many useful lessons. Now that we know such a consummation is possible we shall find t the economic problem wonderruily simpuriad. In future when any of us need dollar . or. ten-thousand dollars there win be "no necessity of "penning" a friend or of waiting, hat in handV to consult with our banker. .We'll simp ly extend ourselves the accommodation of a loan. Wonderfully simple! BUnrUs- won- derfull TKPnce Guer WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE Ambrosia ApartmentsPoets ad ditionParadise. .- , JDear Bill: rve always wanted to write you a letter. but I didn't know where to ad dress It. .... J You knowBill you had all kinds - of friends when you were here on earth. ' and some of your best pals may have gone to Seattle. or whatever the name of the place Is that takes .the place of Seattle on the other side of Jordan. V J And in the first place Jfwant to tell you that I don't take any stock in this highbrow notion that this fellow Bacon wrote your stuff. J He was too busy playing- politics f I get the right dope. and politicians aa you know i never do anything. f J They just talk about what should ! be done. - v : - ! and what they're gong to' do. ; and what they think the people j want.. . J IF And they say anything no matter what If they think the people wllr-f ' its ii snu vuie lur mem. i j For Instance there's prepared- ncBa and patriotism and- j but you know about politicians i ', Bill. - . i . . j . . . . i . . f oecause mey were just mi ssms ln your time as they are now and always will be. -r -t J And I don't think Bacon or any other candidate for the legislature could have written one of your plays. ny more than Charley ' Berg could have written one of A. G. i Clark's speeches. j . ; r Ed Werlein could have written ! One j)t C. W. Barxee's letters. J J But what I, really wanted to say . was that there are some boys and ! girls out at Reed college who are I Interested In your work. ; peciaily now that you've been 1 dead 300 years. t st And they've rigged , up a stage; as near as they can from all they can learn like the stage in your Old Globe theatre ln London. .;' JAnd they've had a card writer make the scenery. : which Is very simple ' $ Just a little sign saying "Woods",' or "Palace or wherever it is that they want to be. jAnd the audience Is supposed to use its imagination. which may be quite a strain .. t ss It's something audiences hate to do. r. , :v. and It's the real reason I guess : that musical comedy is so popular. JBut anyway Bill they're going " to do "Twelfth Night" out at Reed college as they think it wn-f,i,.i:-in the original package. . f fj And I'm going. ' JAnd I want you to be there. ' , Jit ought to be easy for you to get there. -' if the spiritists are right about It. JAnd by the way Bill while you're in town drop over to the Or- ! pheum and see Stella Mayhew. because she's so funny; and-- J LISTEN BUI real comedians j m. l tj juni w to vii iii, .i., m . r rmrm A n r m a r A luat mm nlttri fftil in I politics as they were in your -time. i - . r The Sunday FIRST IN News The facilities of three tele graphic news associations sup ply complete and accurate news reports from outside fields. Special correspondents in many of the leading cities of the , country and in the cities and towns of the Paclfio North west cover their respective fields. - fc A competent local starf reports the happenings of the day at home. FeatUreS- SpecUl attention is paid te woman's Interests in The Sun day Journal and Section Four Is largely devoted to matters, of special concern to her, in cluding illustrated articles on fashions and dress, health and beauty suggestions, needle work designs, ete. Many other features of general interest are included. Fiction , An extra section of short stories by the best known writers is published in most attractive fashion. Photographs pictorial presentation of news events and personalities at home and abroad abounds In " The Sunday Journal. The service of two of the leading news photograph agencies in " the country Is at its command -exclusively In Portland com plementing Its ow'n photo graphic department Fun The Sunday Journal comic sec tlon lsj.he best the market af fords. . . The Sunday Journal. F!VKCBNTS THB COPT EVERYWHERE. , . " Next 'Suniieiy v ; ?. THR BIGGEST TTVB CSNTfV .WORTH IN TYPE. Journal