THE OREGOll DAJLY ; 'JOUKNAI PORTLAND, FRIDAYS MAY 5, 1916. - HE JOURNAL . . PoblMicv I urtied wr dir. efterngpii and monrtn ipt tinrfar afternoon), at Tbe Journal i lid Int. liroadway and xaanlll UH PorU nod, or. . , itI at tk aoatofflca at Portland. Or., for irananiaaina Uiroagb tM malla aa aaeood laaa anatlar. LKPHMNKS -Main T173; Horn. A -8061. All -yirtmrat rearbad by thaae nombarn. TcU ti otwratar what dprtnint yon want. KKIUN AOVEUTIHINO KKfREHNTATI VU ' laailn Ksalaot Co., Bmnwlck BWl, ..ft 1ftb At.. Vtw york. UK People's i . ldg., Chicago. Hiibacrtpttaa term by mall or to any ad 1 wa la the t'nltad State or Milo: PAILT (M0HNIN0 OB AJTERNOON) i7ta........3.00 One Booth......! .60 f .. . . SCNOAT. , ia yeaf... 92-60 I One month.. ,..'$ .29 AH.X M0amO OR AFTERNOON) AND 1 HONDA V r. y ar. .... ... .I7.fl0 I Ono month 1 Anorlra aaka nothing for beraelf bat what ha baa a right to aak for homnoltj Itaeir. 1 WOODHOW WILSON. Million for detenu, bat not a eent tor .Mhata. - OHAKLt.H C. PINOKNRY. Clrenmatanrca I I maka circumstance I A LINE TO YAKIMA i WELL defined demand for clOser railroad connections 'with the Yakima territory has appeared in Portland as i resu.lt of the excursion of local business men to that region last veek.. ( The . visit brought home to the Portlanders the fact that of all the business originating in that sec tion, running into the millions of dollars, Portland gets practically none. ' - Lack of railroad connec tions Is the declared cause. On ac count of the round about routing to this :ity, the distance to Port land Is 300 tulles, against 200 to Puget Sound. Yet, by the build-lag-of about 50 miles of road, the Portland distance could be re duced to 150 miles, f Tha connecting link in the North Bank system would, if built, open up a- very productive country. The , people ia every locality visited by : tilt . excursionists were clamorous j for direct rail connections with Portland. They want both to sell and buy of Portland, without hav. lng to ship via Puget Sound with the consequent loss of time and freight charges. ' The railroad system is bo dis- ' posed that the Yakima country is i practically driven to Puget Sound. Their trade is well corralled by the geography of the railroad lines.' l-The problem is for Portland to indues the Great Northern andjeisco and rescued a Bhipmate who Northern Pacific to' build the ; had fallen that distance into the needed stretch of line. It is as-1 eumed that the roads will hesitate to make the outlay on merely sen-j umemai reasons. .5 It will be' necessary to convince i the roads that it is to their interest ! to do it. ' It should require but little argu ,'ment to do this. Real railroad 'men know that their standing with ;a community defends largely upon tne service rendered. No railroad can well afford to debar such a City as Portland from such a terri tory -as the Yakima region. No railroad can afford to force a 3 00 mile haul on Portland in order to reach Yakima when a short stretch , of road can reduce that haul to! less than 150 miles. Refusal to make the connection can have no other effect than to arouse resent ment, when once the issue has come under agitation. The. North Bank and Harriman companies built parallel lines up the Deschutes at very great out lay. .After such an expenditure, it Is not unreasonable for Portland and North Yakima to ask for direct connections. , ' Calling upon the New "York sen ators to support the Chamberlain plan for giving 40 per cent of the Oregon grant lands to Oregon Schools, the New Ydtk state society of - Portland has thrown its influ- What better advertisement of Ore ence against the plan of giving 40 gon than a twenty-five-million-dol- percent of the grant land money to reclamation in other states. If m iv . i j tha ; results of similar action by J other state societies is an indica ; tlon, the Oregon schools will prob- ably - secure two more friends in the senate in consequence of the ; NeTRr.York society's action. IV; MINISTERS' PAY THE General Conference of the Methodist church at Roches- ter Is making a praiseworthy .- effort to increase the salaries of its ministers. Either the min ister Is a useful. character In the modern world or he is not. If he ; Is of no use he should be urged to seek some other occupation. If ; he Is truly useful he should receive j pay enough to support him de t cently. j The Methodist church has paid iout more than $53,000,000 in sal '' aries to Its ministers . in the last three years, which Is almost J18, 000.000 a year. But this does not mean that preaching has been an opulent vocation. Far from it. Eighteen-millions dollars yearly is a large sum but there are many hands to receive it and .when It Is divided iavrnong ; them the dole to each Js "Jilttfully small. . There is clamor for better pas- Uoral leadership,, especially In rural ch grebes. The conference says . "we cannot expct t tbe ' pastors . with their miserably small salaries to provide the leadership required." The country minister is asked to provide expert advice for rural or ganization. He is criticised if he does not furnish his neighborhood a lofty, example la culture, manners and refinement. He is despised if he does not think, act and dress like a man of means. .Andhe is paid a salary that a longshoreman would scorn. Consistency is a jewel which church members should learn to prize more highly. Fifty thousand dollars is really not enough to compensate for the great and irreparable damage the Anti-Saloon League has done "Pat." As salve with which to heal the gaping wounds opened in Pat's in nocent soul, the league ought to be made to pay him about a bil lion dollars. An example ought to be made of those who ruthlessly rob our Pat of his halo. ROBERT LA FOLLETTE S' URPRISE has been expressed that Senator La Follette"B name will not appear on the ballot in the Oregon primaries as candidate for president. Ore gon is a progressive state and in many respects has led the way for others to follow. Senator La Fol lette for years has been one of the great leaders of real progressive thought in the United States, and history will regard him as one of the great constructive statesmen of the age. Logically.be is the first choice of many thousands of the Repub licans of the state for president. In 1912 he received Jn the primaries nearly 23,000 votes against about 28.000 for Roosevelt and about 18,000 for Taft. The four years of his public service since by a man who is always steadfastly true to the people can only have added to popular .belief In his fidelity. Of course he has opponents. So has every public man who stands for anything. But, In the case of La Follette they are enemies more of what he stands for than of the man personally. Unhappily, it sometimes appears as though the friends of the prin ciples and policies of which he is the exponent are asleep. They are, at least, not always alert. If they had been, the name of Senator La Follette would have been on the Republican ballot with a very great probability that he would have been the popular choice. No Republican in public life more nearly reflects the aspirations and purposes of the Republican masses. those masses who, by the million, believe in equal opportunity, free ballot, honest government, well emiowed schools and America first ' Among the heroes of war there is none more brave than the sailor who, as a hero of peace, Jumped 100 feet into the sea at San Fran tempestuous surf. His name was Clancy, and he Is a "broth of a bye" with a title clear 4o a hero medal A WARNING D EATH from burns is the fate that has come to Mrs. Jane McKinley, who passed away In St. Vincent's hospital last night. She was using half a teacupful cf gasoline in cleaning gloves Though it is an extremely danger oub process, thousands of house wives have the habit. What hap pened in this case, is liable to oc cur in any""instance in which gaso line is used for any purpose. From the beginning of the fire prevention campaign, Portland fire men have given constant warnings of this and other perils. They have carried the news into every house hold and sounded the alarm through the public press. Thex mournful accident of yes terday Is one more impressive proof that gasoline is a treacherous and dangerous thing. We have spent much money ln advertising Oregon abroad. We recently Eent the color pictures of the Columbia highway through the east as an ' advertising venture. lar school fund built up from six millions by grant land money? A ECONOMIC PROBLEM VJ HE authorities." savs a news report, "are agreed that Mexico's problem is more economic than mili tary." We areglad to learn that the authorities are so sensible. Mexico is overrun by bandits be cause the people are starving. They are starving because for several years they have not been permitted to grow food enough to eat. Diaz Is praised by many because he kept the peace in Mexico, but his acts were the true cause of the troubles that have followed upon his downfall. He deprived the peo pie of their land, granted the natural resources of the country to foreigners and his so-called edu cational reforms were mere Illu sions. In substance they amounted to nothing. If Diaz had been a real statesman Instead or a sham he would have labored to prepare his countrymen for liberty. What ne actually did was to fasten slavery upon them. The factional strife that followed upon his downfall was the most natural thing in the world. Its consequences are also natural. We find the same state of af- fairs In Franc after ter Hundred I Tears war with England and, in I Germany after the dreadful Thirty Years war. "Hunger and unem-j needed revision of Oregon erlml ployment," says the dispatch, nal code? Able speakers will 'cause the lawlessness that pre- vails." Hanger and Idleness al- ways cause lawlessness. In this respect Mexico is like ievery other country. Starving people are ways riotous. t I It It is true that ! the United States government has promised j economic aid to Mexico) the news Is j welcome. Mexico can be redeemed from her miseries, but not by I soldiers. Not by more bloodshed and more plunder. But by giving the hungry population work where- by they may feed themselves. Al million dollars invested in a revi- val of Mexican industries will do I more for permanent peace than half a billion spent upon military expeditions. In a well in which revenue of ficers had emptied contraband whiskey, three Georgians were drowned. "Oh. death: where is thy Stine?" was the remark Of One 1 i I vi mo iMiucia. THE JEFFERSON STATUE ' 7 A STATUE of Thomas Jeffer son is an appropriate decora tion for the Jefferson High SCHOOL DUIUUUHS ttl. IUO a All- U kllV VtA flf M I oi me stairway uj wuivu mo m- dents enter the building, it will re- mind them as they come ana go i of the. virtues and achievements of a great man. mere is no stimulus to noo.e i ym aan w . . , . ,- . cousiaui mcuiui, . vvucu c great men's deeds we inspire them to do great deeds themselves. Lives of great men all remind us We can make our lives sublime. And departing leave behind us Footprints on the Bands or time. Thomas Jefferson stood for one Of two contrasted American doc- trines. Hamilton stood for the other. It is obsolete to say that Jefferson stood for a weak central p-nvprnmpnt and Hamilton for a .... I Strong one. That is a superficial RtntAirifint nf thp.ir difference. Jef- ferson believed that the govern- these gardens more Than 6000 tour ment existed for the citizen. Ham- ists journeyed. One photograph shows ilton believed that the citizen ex- isted for the government. Jeffer- son's theory has had but feeble and evanescent appucauoi m a ;r. offoirc Hamilton's has prevailed almost" unbrokenly from the beginning It has led to fetish worship of the written constitution. ' It has subordinated all pTOgresS to the ranrire of verbal iuEsIery Through Caprice OI veiUdl juesieu. imua6u ..r ... i , its influence human rights have been made less important than 6trict adherence Terence to an ancient text which means one thing to one set Of judges and something else to andther set. Hamilton's theory makes the government a play upon words and the people the puppets of dead formulas. Jefferson taught that it was the business of the government to serve the people. His most famous say- ing was that "the best government is- the one that governs least, but he never said that the .best government is the one that serves the least. Centuries ahead of his contemporaries, he perceived that "governing, in trie oia time sense of exploiting, military display and a? s V. a: J na. a1 4rv A a r nnna y I iiguiiiiB, was uiCU I and that in tne long run govern ment wouia mean noimng m i ana notmng less tuau me uuueu effort of the 'people to promote their common welfare. Hamilton is a dying symbol, Jefferson one of perennial vitality. "In Defense of Redheads" was the subject of a recent lecture. But It must have been wasted effort A t rhnH xr wlin line ovor hnrl tronhlft - umB Wlin a ICUUrauou wumau ivuuim that she needs no defense. i I,. RUNNING AMUCK NEWS dispatch from Wash- A ington yesterday said; I Congressman Hawley of Ore- gon, author or a bill that was turned down, has shotted his' runs for an assault upon the Cham- upon tne nam- i berlain-Ferris bill. He will expound "... I the theory that congress lacks power to do more than order the sale of the lands by the railroad company. The attorney general of thie United States and many lawyers on the public lands committee do not agree with him. Why does Congressman Hawley run amuck? Why does he disre- gard. the letters, petitions, tele- grams and appeals that have poured in from the people off Oregon? Sinnott is working hard for the bill. Hawley's whale attitude is destructive. He 1st playing into the hands of the eastern reclama- tionists who want fthe grant land money spent outside of Oregon, and playing into the hands of the railroad by making the railroad's contention his contention. He is wholly out of harmony vr-i r H tha nrfohAn st ,Ui n 1 -.a I iOUCO l iuo poupie ui Oregon and by that token is fur nishing an example of one of the weaknesses of representative gov ernment. It will not be long until the fight will open in the senate com- mlttPA nvor oraTit linil lao-lalatltn Then the Oregon schools will need all the friends they can get. AT REED COLLEGE I NTELLIGENT people will take lively interest In the Oregon State Cqpf erence iof Social Agen- cies. It meets, at Reed College from May 12 to May 14, and thejnsed In market gardening or consumed topics to be discussed are Of fun-1 In the home or hotel, and, like their dament&l Importance. The quesl tlon how society should deal with its "unfit" will be investigated from many Sides; 1 Should we follow the example of enlightened Europe . and estab- lish health insurance?. Should we ' proceed promptly with the aamy handle these subjects. Every mo- ment of the conference will be in teresting and instructive. Particularly important will be al-lthe two exhibits. The one of child:! welfare, the other a Reed College exhibit of municipal and social wel fare. Reed College has been re- markably active in the study of social questions. Both professors and students have participated. The exhibit will , give an Idea or what they have accomplished. The con Terence is public. Its deliberations and discussions should challenge wide public in- terest. NOTHING THE MATTER WITH PORTLAND Back to thlncs Edenle the reader of The Journal are lnrlted. for a day. Ona of the KHHlra or the garden allarea the mam formed, multicolored and altogether beaateona dahlia la the tnni In Nn 12. of tha "Nothln the Matter With Portland" artlclaa. Port- land a dahlia apeclaliati rank high aa to both excellence of colturea and Tolume of trana I actloue. ND the largest dahlia, farm west of the Mississippi is one of Port- land's glories! There are five acres of these beauties! Tlloro r tha ,r Thp .B fiQm. nf thA BVT1An. L?, buIba ,n the - . n . n .,., . . t k , , aiiM m.chj D A. will llUO reat orlglna, colJection the Gm broth ers oWners of the farm have oHgi. nated some 30 varieties of their own. And their bulbs are in demand in every state in the Union. There Is not one from which their mailing list will npt show a considerable number of customers. It would be a pleasure to name and describe each variety of these popular flowering plants, but let the reader Imagine a solid five acres of them some of the blossoms eight and 10 inches in diameter! Tt will h a I sight that will live in the memory for a lone-, lonir tlm T.t t!jroii is at present iuu a weeK, but a crowd of hundreds present at one time. THE birth OF the industry. "' uiu uui, uromers, were4Vborn n he land now occupied by their seed and dahlia farm, the ',7 '? :. . V i: , , ucoi j-cain ui uicir rouin fa . '"" gardening, and they were sue- cessful in this vocation. In their g of He- tn conceived "L . Z V i 1, I U1LC" uccu uisappgmiea m ose bought from dealers In the east, " wou'd l .1' were not the ones received, and this occasioned grievous delays in remedy ing the mistake. So, six years ago thv nhanrinna market erarrl atiI n tr n. f . . hftV. . PVntpA , th.lr thno and enenries t0 the propa&ation of the most extensive farnily of dahlIa8 tQ be found anywnere west of the Mississippi river, and they firmly believe there Is no greater variety anywhere in America. Dahlias have been grown by the brothers for more than bU years, but for this time they have been specializing on this flower, and are now confident that their assortment and perfection of hlnnm unrivalled In thin rnnntrv. Thm Is probably no color not repre- sented in their hues. This season they will have the greatest variety yet produced, and when, next fall. they &re ln he,ght of 'thelr 8plen; irill be one which aor. uie aiiraciiuii win ue one which i will draw still greater thousands to i the farm, located three blocks east of the Mount Hood depot. The Gill brothers say that the past season was the first their farm showed a dollar of net profit, fts entire income naa Deen put d&ck into improvements arid experiments in the betterment of their dahlias and other flowers and improvements in their seeds. One of their own creations of .1916 is named Ephraim Gill, in honor 0f thelr father. It is claimed by the brothers to be the best novelty they .... . . have yet mtroaucea. its Dioom last year was nine Inches ln diameter, and lt won tnt aweepstakes among all ..,,. xTot,r.1 nn,, daMis hown at the National Dahlia show, which Vas held in Portland. Its bulbs sell at $3 each. Others, how- ever, sell at from 15 cents to $1.50 apiece. VEGETABLE seeds grown. ratftIftBniA fiW, that thA rm is now propagating a great variety of perennial flowers beautiful crea tions which require little care and no annual planting. They have a great number of these, as well as roses of all kinds, pansles and fruit and nut trees. The dahlia and other flowers cover a space or approximately it acres, and the brothers have 66 other acres a ,, T.Hoei. MmTiru artichokes. aspara gus, beans (an varieties), beets or every description, cabbage, carrbts, cauliflower, chicory, clery, sweet corn, field corn and popcorn, cucum bers, kale, leek, kohlrabi, horseradish. garlic, egg plant, all varieties of let- tuce, musk melons and watermelons, onion8' f",n,ps' fa"!e.y' pe"r v-.-. squash, tomatoes, turnips, rutabagas. caraway, dill, early variety df sugar a!cn. suitable to this climate; tobacco. likewise; and, m fact, everything of J an edible character. The gentlemen I cover the whole range of such aa is dahlia bulbs, have the Union for their J market. I "The day win come." R W. Gill said to The Journal representative. J"whea western Oregon, will be the seed growing center of this eontt nent.. it has been demonstrated that tw climate is ideal for the produc- tlon of tha beat seeds known. It is better than' the east, for the reason L we --do not have the scorching sun to contend with, and excels the south because we are not afflicted with the I same temperature and added drouths. have here seeds grown in several of the eastern states. We sent for these that we might compare them with our own. Look at them. While ours are plump and round, they are shrivelled and seemingly dried up. There is no comparison between them. Ours were grown where the days sel dom are excessively warm and the nights always cool; these, beneath the burning skies of the southern and eastern states. Ours are completely developed, while those from the east appear as if cut off before maturity. And those grown la Oregon will en dure greater hardships, for the very reason of their complete development and perfect health. It is with seeds as with human beings. The person born and reared amid healthy envi ronment will be more robust than that one born and reared in the ma larial atmosphere of some parts of the south or the fever-breeding cli mate of other regions. And as a matter of fact, once the seeds farm is established and its reputation for honesty and fair' dealings earned, it will be found more profitable to grow seeds than to raise grain or vegeta- j ble crops for the markets. It is our hope that this fact may be realized by many others than ourselves, to the end that western Oregon may profit by its ability to produce the best seeds in the world and at no greater cost than in less favored re gions. As for ourselves, we abso lutely guarantee every eeed we Bell. RAPIDLT EXPANDING. "It has cost us a great deal of la bor and considerable money to get to the place we now find ourselves In, but we are certain the toil and money expended will now be well rewarded. Our business has doubled each year. Last season our gross receipts were In round numbers $15,000 and we ex- Hunt f f Bt 1 ,AF AAA ' ' 1 una. uur I this number of employes is not car ried through the year. There are times when the 15 now at work are reduced tp two or three. We work ourselves, however, aa diligently as any men on the farm." There is an acre and a quarter in cabbage, 15 acres in peas. 25 acres jp corn and 15 acres in beans, all erowin Ior seea Ptoses, and this j a tn on v concern In th ctata n. i J - Voduclng a full Tine of gagea in proaucing a run line or vegetable seeds. Its dahlia industry .... .-fj ' bulbs and last season it shifted SO"-I -i:"'DS'. . ""f!" ouye tnrougnout tne unites States and Canada. Orders wero also recelved from Europe, but 0" aCCUnt f condltions were filled. So great has been the demand this year that nearly all available bulbs have been shipped. Those on hand at present are held for planting. ANOTHER FINE DAHLIA GARDEN. E. H. White and B. R. Amend, president and secretaryreasurer of the Willamette Dahlia & Floral com pany, 1194 Willamette boulevard, two blocks west of the St. Johns car line at Jessup street, are likewise special ists ln dahlias. They have an lm- mense assortment hundreds of varie ties collected from all parts of the world, and, ln conjunction with other growers on a smaller scale, are mak ing Portland famous for the develop ment of this favorite flower. The (Energies of these gentlemen are de voted almost entirely to dahlia pro- auction, and it is declared that no- where else in the world has greater Perfectlon been attained in this par- ticular line. This corporation has bulbs, and its 1916 catalogue fully describes the different varieties It we worth sending for and better, 1 . v, -Ti i - , - cf the multitudinous varieties of the dahlia family. This company, too, is paying special attention to the devel- opment orVperennials, with a success that is marvelous. Last year they were so swamped with orders as to consume their stock of bulbs before i r .or.n hnt thi. - ---""--"" ii klioai -anlli FMnho V1 xt Y ci A I Ant until i '"e v the demand has ceased. In summing up lt may be appropri ately remarked that the Willamette Dahlia and Floral company is in no wise a small institution because it has not as much space in this de partment today as its merits might seem to warrant. It is a robust, lively, big concern. It is doing a mighty healthy business, and is spar- ari(J had a iaw passed saying the far ing no expense in the attainment of I ther destruction of the greenbacks its declared object, "the development UA 1 f "' and production of the best in dahlias, guaranteed always to be true to name." Their catalogue shows many other flowers which they are propa gating, but dahlias are their spe cialty. Letters From the People Communication sent to Tb Journal for publication Id tills department abould be writ tea on only one side of tb paper, ahooli not exceed 300 words in lengtb and ant be e eompanied by tbe name and address of tba mh, lt tha writer Aaem not dealra to hava I tiia name published, be abotfla a state "Diacuaslon is tba greatest of aU reformers. It rationalises errtblng It tooebea. It robe principle of all falae sanctity and throwa tbem back on tbeir reaaonablenras. If tbey bate no rcaaonablaceaa, it rntbleaaly ernabea tbem out of exiatenca and ret up its own conclusion ln their ataad." Woodrow Wllnon. Uncle Sam's Paper Money. Imbler, Or., April 30. To the Ed itor of The Journal In an editorial In The Journal of April 21, und-r the caption "Paper Money," you ray the fractional paper currency issued dur ing the war was and 10 cent' notes. They were issued In denominations up to 60 cents. You say they were fiat money. So is all money. Gold Is not money any more than iron, until made so by the fiat of the law. ; You say ft was not convenient car rency. It was the most convenient PERTINENT COMMENT.AND NEWS IN BRIEF SMALL CHANGE Boosting for the Beavers these days is more a duty than a privilege. Portland's ice war is the sort of conflict the harassed consumer wel comes. a a Of course the preparedness advocate has arranged to see Hood Kiver valley m appie mossom time, Perhaps that border conference will give Villa's name one more chance in the headlines betore having it carved in marble. Although doctors declare New York's water supply is polluted, mor tality is decreasing, and they don't understand it. That 10 per cent wage increase to employes of the Hawley paper mill at Oregon City will assist many wives in solving the sugar problem. Britain's parliament holds secret sessions, and some mere man suggests that as the reason why parliament is so slow in welcoming women members. President Wilson polled 591 straw votes to Roosveit's 660 at Harvard university, a fairly good showing for a Princeton man at the Colonel's alma mater. When Czar Nicholas and King George can exchange felicitations, it would appear that the pessimist over here must have something the matter with his liver. A St. Paul pastor advises girls to select husbands-as they do umbrellas. Possibly the girls have been doing it, thus accounting lor so many uis carded husbands. JOURNAL 5-TilIamook Bay Let the exhilaration of mountain scenery be varied with a seacoast Journay. Let's go down to Tillamook bay. " It makes a very good week-end trip by train (Southern Pacific-P. B, & N.), and is considered fairly good for automobiles by he middle of sum mer. You get no sensation of "going down to Tillamook" when you first start. Your train climbs a gentle up grade until you leave Forest Grove, when the scene abruptly changes, the grade be comes steeper, the surroundings moun tainous. You are climbing over tha Coast range of mountains. a It is a good hard pull to Summit Then you begin going down much more rapidly than you climbed. You will look from the window down into the narrow canyon and see other tracks there. "Another railroad," you think. But presently you look up from the tracks you saw a few minutes previ ously and realize that your train has looped the loop and in spiTe of the doublings and twlstings is still keep ing its westward direction. The route leads by the Salmonberry MR. KNOX ON SLIPPERY GROUND From the New York World. If former Secretary of State Knox nation he hould say so boldly and not b indirection, as in his attack upon Resident Wilsons Mexican policy. v, thnt th nr.wnl ad ministration inherited the Mexican aituation from President Taft and j himself he is counting strongly vpon j public forgetf ulness. It Is no exag- representing" Ve' in Theti lti jienry ujiin ssrs. Taft and exico as am bassador, had not actively participated in the conspiracy for the overthrow of President Madero, whfch ended In the murder of that magistrate, there would have been no such Mexican "situation"' as now confronts us. To make out his case In favor of the rd handed dictator Huerta, Mr. Knox complacently assumes the legit imacy of everything that happened in the ghastly days of February, 1913, when he and Mr., Taft were still in office. It is true that Madero and Vice President Suarez "resigned," but f they did so with pistols at their heads It is true that Foreign Minister Las curian succeeded Madero automati cally. In accordance with the constitu currency we ever had. You could put it Into a letter. You say they lacked much !n the way of cleanliness. Is the national bank paper currency clean money? You say these dirty shinplascers did r.ot circulate very long. They circu lated until the Republican pariy called them in and burned them on-J put the ashes into bonds and bought , silver bullion to issue fractional cur I rency to take their place. Ve are i v,;v, tnw. o fr,- th i national bank currency. Nobody called them dirty shinplasters dunn war but copperneaus. i-ou say government credit kept lt in circulation. Very true, and the I credit of this great nation would keep j billions in circulation. Why shouldn't I the government, use its credit? The big banks lend their credit, n e nave learned that it, is the quantitative theory of money we are Interested ln, not the Intrinsic value of the ma terial that carries the fiat of the law. I-"was our government legal tender paper money that put down the re bellion and gave, the people of the north the best times this country ever saw. Then, after the trouble was over, the Republican party commenced call ing ln this paper money, the best this country ever had, and burned It. The people were not ln favor of thi d'rty work. Then it was that the Green back party sprang into existence. The money power got scared, thought the j 'hJLkeTS weri comlne into D0Wer, got them yet and we have paid no Interest on bonds to take their place. The Republican party under the Mc Kinley administration established the gold standard, and the hardest times this country ever saw followed. Farm ers worked for years for 0 cents a day and we never had tramps until the gold standard was established. Now contrast the reign of the legal tender greenback and that of the gold standard A. F. WTLSON. Clarke County Republicans. "Vancouver, Wash., May 1. To the Editor of The Journal In reading the published report of the Republican con vention held here April 29 and of the harmony which prevailed in their coun cil, the reader might be misled, without further light thrown upon it from other sources. It was a meeting of standp'at Repub licans of the Taft school, who met on purpose to pat one another on the back and have harmony, and to have that harmony become current news. They did exactly what-every one of them wanted to do. .60 far as Clarke county is concerned they fairly represented the party condition. The brilliant get-together "coup" con sisted in placing Donald MacMaster's name as an alternate delegate to the Yakima convention. He was the Only one spoken of at all who has not al ways been ln harmony with the Taft element of the party, which, ts the OREGON SIDELIGHTS The Toldo Leader will henceforth b published by F. N. Hayden alone. Robert K. Collins having retired from the partnership. The postorfiie of Medford will next Sunday be moved into Its new quar ters in the federal building Just com pleted there. , A big, fine 32-i-nch bell, the gift of Mrs. J. A. Brown to the Baptist church at Silver Ijake, has been placed in position in tha church steeple. Eugene's old cltv hall and bell tower, old landmarks, will soon dixappear. the mayor having arranged wit' wreckers to demolish the structures and clear and level the ground on ' which they stand. m w Fruit experts of the Rogue river valley, the Medford Sun snys, are wag ering among themselves that the fruit crop ior tne year win total an tne wav from 1500 to 2000 cars, the largest In the history of the fruit Industry in that section. a An effective though guileful device for getting out a rousing Commercial club attendance was practiced recently at Paisley. A sign conspicuously din played and stating that the proposi tion of bonding the town for ro,ono was to be decided at tha meeting had the desired effect. Discussions of tim question were numerous and many heated arguments occurred during thj day. The result was Just what was de sired. Everyone was on hand prompt ly, and the Press says ail appreciated the Joke, which will probably have a lasting effect. JOURNEYS and Neah-kah-nie and Nehalem rivers, whence marvelous stories of fishermen's luck are brought. Gradually the larger stream broadens. There are still the riffles suggestive of the mountain torrent, but there are also long, placid stretches with row boats moored to the banks. Then comes the estuary called Ne halem bay. Across the water is Ne-ah-kah-nle mountain, one of the most picturesque spots on the Oregon coast. There are a number of attractive bathing beaches Brighton, Manhat tan, Ocean Lake, Garibaldi after which come Bay City and Tillamook. The word "Tillamook" is Indian for "many waters." Five rivers flow into the bay the Tillamook, Kllcbes. Miami, Wilson and Trask. All are noted trout fishing streams, while Tillamook bay is itself a favorite spot for salmon trolling. The automobile route leads in a southwesterly direction from Portland by way of Rex, Tigard, Newberg, Day ton, McMlnnville, Wlllamina, then west to Dolph and northwest to Tilla mook and other bay pointB, .the dist ance about 112 miles. tion, but he held the place only 15 I minutes, Just long enough to commls- I slon a minister of the interior, the tyrant standing at his elbow, who then by the letter of law became act ing president, with Mr. Knox's am bassador pleading urgently by tele graph "for his instant recognition. It. is also true that to bring about this result and establish Huerta in his usurped office, thousands of people. Including many Americans, were killed or wounded in the streets of the cap ital, an orgy which terminated at length in the secret assassination of Madero and Suarez, with not a word of protest or even inquiry from Wash ington. Henry Lane Wilson kept Secretary Ktiox fully informed of the progress of this tragedy ln despatches which re veal almost Incredible sympathy with every stage of the proceedings. In Mexico the representative of the Uited ' States was noisy in his par tisanship. In Washington there was the silence of complete indifference or of light hearted acquiescence. There may be men ln the United States who have the right to criticise the presi dent's Mexican policy, hut Philander C. Knox is not one of them. Mark llanna element brought up to date, It Is cold potatoes offered to an un desirable citizen from the rich man's table. If Mac warms them over and eats them, then we all eat them and get together, harmony prevails, and we have got together. The real facts are different. The conservative Republicans are not with I the G. O. F. and never will be. The conservative Republican will vote for j Wilson, and Wilson can carry this state against any man whom the G. O. P. can j put up. The Republicans who left the party four years ago find the same 1 thing that drove them out of the ; party, prevailing yet. "Why shouM we go back? Wrhat have we to go back to?" they ask. In 191! the popular vote ln Wash ington was as follows: Roosevelt, 13'). 000; Wilson, 82,000; Taft, 44,000. It is not reasonable to expect that 135,000 voters who were steam rollered out of the party can be soft soaped back Into It, or that cold potatoes, or an alter nate delegateshlp to a standpat con vention will satisfy the ambition of a j patriot. To make the compliment what 11 ! really is, an Insult, the convention I should have required MacMaster to 1 speak and roll over before they gave ! him the cold grub. j It Is likely that conservative Repub licans who stood aloof from the ready made convention will vote for Wilson 1 to succeed himself. THOMAS IIARLAN'. Views of an Adopted Son. Portland, May 1. To the Editor of The Journal I am an adopted son, by which I mean that the American na tion gave me the right to be a natural ised citizen of these grand United States, 50 years ago, and 1 cannot help , expressing my opinion, as a neutral, i when I read John Redmood's letter in ' Saturday's Journal. John Redmond Is J the "grand' man" of the home rule j cause and his expressions are the lan guage of a man true to the principles of cltlzenshlD. He Is faithful to the ("mother country and true to his own ! people, We have an inalienable right to give of our means to alleviate the suffer ings of the homeless and wounded and 1 dying, and to pray for the angel of peace to change the hearts of the war- i ring nations. But further, we must keep our,hands off, as neutrals." We must give our all, if need be, and even against our own home land. If this nation is threatened, for that we have sworn to do when asking this government to take us to be the sons f America. That is citlzertshlp. That U neutrality. That la loyalty. V A. OSBORNE YATES. ' Uprooting the Foundations. From the Boston Transcript. Now the school board of Louisiana is expurgating Mother Goose, which has been found to contain vile slanders against the farmers. When a reform once gets well under way It Is hard ly likely to end with the Bible and Shakespeare. . ; TKQnce Ger ., .'rm Af.ler '""rtins the koHum last Tuesday nlarrtt 1 wan deeplv impressed with Hkenet between you and the Immortal Klin, who, you will romemlif r. "tlld nothing ' with immense jiH-res L. U (1. 2d. THE ABOVK Notk whirh ram yesterday 1 rutiicr cryplia-t6 nie at least In its moaning. JFor Instance rtorn tt mean that I do nothing successful 1 v That Is that I'm sm-i rsaful in nothing I do? 51 Or does It mean that I do noth- - lng and do H very well? "jAnd I'm going to give mysplf the., benefit of the doubt. which is so much easier than de ciding against yourself. J And you feel so much better whe you have assured youraelfthat you're all right. even if you have to smother a few doubts. "J But to do nothing and do It SUO cessfully may moan to try to do a great dei-i. JAnd that ccerns to lie the principal 4 aim of the civilized wurld. f "JAnd in the end they do nothing.! no matter how many battleships they build. or how many men they kill. ir how many children starve. J But there's another way to do nothing. ' and do It successfully. JAnd that is 10 do nothing but live. and be content. fl However only xuvages do that. -such poor benighted heathen as Kim. who don't know how nciesisnry it Is to have' more than you need "JAnd simple-minded Kim didn't' know that to be very successful you must get a great deal more than you need. even if to make this possible It Is neoesnary for a great many to have less than they heed. JAnd It isn't posHtble that Kim and other heathen and suvugeN are right. and that the world id wrong. "J For the world Vun't be crazy. because to be crazy you must be in tLre minority. JAnd the great majority Of the people in the world seem to want things -they don't need. things like power. and culture. and places in the sun. (as though the sun doesn't shine where they are standing.) "JAnd so f.ir as I'm concerned I don't know what to do -about It. fT And so like '. W. Rarzee and 3. Hennes.sy Murphy I write a piece for the paper. "JAnd I have a feeling just as I did last Friday that I'm getting pretty cJose to the ad for The Sunday Jour nal. J But I hope there's a little spac left. -because I want to thank lj. L G. me 2d whoever she 1 for writing the note because "JLISTKN L. L. O I had nothing to say today absolutely nothing and you gave a chance to any It. Story Section of The Sunday Journal is finding increased favor each week. The Fiction Magazine is a novel departure that ap peals to the lover of short stories. The Stories for Next Sunday Include : TUB HIGHER ABDICATION. By O. Henry. Curley Is a philosophical chap and is in the habit of taking things as they turn up. Things do turn up, as you will see by reading this story, which is one of the nest of the many offered by this great writer, WM ATDEYE MEAN WATERLOO? By Lucius J. Withers. A baseball story that gets away from the stereotyped ninth inning crisis, and gives the reader an entirely new angle of a baeeball player's life. THE FOOU By William Se vens McNutt. The new gtil at the cigar comer make a hit with the returned Alaskan miner, who offer her his heart on th strensth of his money. He is prompt ly turned down, hut later there la another side to the tale. SWEETHEART PRIMEVAL. By Edgar Rie Burroughs. Another installment of that great story of prehistoric love. Ion't miss lt! The Sunday Journal Five cents where. the copy every- Next Sunday