6 THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SATURDAY, MAY 6, 1916. Ti'rr lM t DM A 1 ' WM moro than two to one, Wher l Hfc- JvJLJ lINrL- jever tried, commission government ' '' f'c am independent newspaper, i is preferred by the people be- jackhon pnhitohr i cause under that form they know Published day. .(tnooa .nd morning ectly what Is going- on In their (rant Bunds- afternoon), at Tli Journal Building, Broadway and Van-lull U i-orr una, or. Katered at tin poetofflce at Cortland, or., for . , tfanamlsalon toroagb tha mill at second elaee matter. XJCL.KPHONKB Main 7173: Home, A-OOl. All ..department reached by these nnmbera. Tell lb, operator what department yu want. POKB1UN ADVKKTIS1NU KKl' KKMCNTATI VB ttenjamln Kant nor Co.. Brrokwlck Bldg.. 22 fifth e.. New -ork. Ul People's U Bldg., -Chit-ago. ' .-tobaarlptlon term by mall or to a or ad dreee In the Coiled 8tutr or Meilco: , DAILY (MOIIN'lNU OR AFTERNOON) On year $.VHO Ona mouth t .SO Sfj'N DAY". Ona year 1.50 One nwnth S .25 DAILI (MOBNINU OR AFTERNOON). AND j ' hunuak 1 Ona year. 7. One month 1 - America aaks nothing 'or herarlf but what ha baa a right to auk for humanity Ueelf. WOODBOW WILSON. Millions for defense, but not a cent 'or tribute. rnuir.Ks c. fmntknev. Peace la rarely denied to the peace ful. Schiller. THE GERMAN NOTE ' HE German government has KDB ,ou m,UJBf"u the demands of President i Wilson. To German naval commanders hate been Issued the following or ders: Tn n.m .il ii i a Ti i f n tlia norfll I ftrineiDles of visit. earh and di-struc- tlon of merchant vessels recognized .by International law, such vessels, DOin wimin ana wiinout w.e area c - dared to be a naval war rone, fhaU ndt be sunk without warning, wRS- ent saving human lives, unless tha i ships attempt to escape or offer re-1 iatance. lBaBaB-a-l-alV3i'e X ,;' V i M" A l- .w - 1 f K..t- what v These are the orders for which I of the white man. will always l!s- America has contended. It is a ten to Scott. And Scott can al complete recognition of the princi-' ways convince them, though he pie asserted at Washington. i carries the marks of several bullets, . f 111 A l I il . . . . . , . , , joupien wiin mis announcement, i from Berlin, the German govern- ment In Its note requests the American government to bring Great Britain to an acknowledge- -ment of the freedom of the seas. Th note Bays: r T V. nr j lMt floubt that the United Htatea will !l!!redn""1.!;ai..VhV"rAU8, rulaa of international Uw universally i raoocnlred before the war as are , Li lnJn ?tl T't '7 'i fOvammant or the United States to tha; Brltlah (overnment December 2C. XI 14." and November 5 1935. i 'Having first acceded to the ment Pay- Dories, he came hon Amerlcan demands by issuing or- "t,y by vh,s Powers ln that fleld flerg to her naval commanders not ia motner was a eat 8rand" tO sink merchantmen without - warning and not until after guar-1 Uttteelng safety to human life, the Oerman government expresses con-! fldence that . the United States wi'l 'demand equally strict observance Of the International law by Great Britain. -r The note then says: ' Should the steps taken by the gov ernment of the United States not at tain the nhlipt 4t e-lwea a Vm. ... K laws of humanity followed by aU ; T f T HEN the present ad ministra ballicerent nations the German gov-, A tlon reduced the tariff on mment would then be faclnsr a new I W wool thn flnrltmnslera nf situation ln which it must ren-e to! Itself complete Hberly of deolaion. . " " 7 , made the most depressing prophe-,- II .must bo borne in mind that cleg. wool was their theme and tne German government was obliged woeful was their lay. Fleeces were to consider the public sentiment ; to become a drug on the market, of the German people. Masses of sheep were going down to nothing u-riuaus naa to De reckonea with In the reply to the. United States. Even had the German govern ment been disposed to concede all th American demands without reservation, it is entlroly probable ti. ,,j - . . ' , tnat It would not nave dared to 4V. i . . . . fh. .ffl nSn thCarBe f fearKf il.if4st.on L f J V,6 thaVhe fnl m k a UKtUa- uL . ''comPlet "berty ?i2toK?" the German public Necessarily, the controversy will remain with more or less acute- ness to the end of the war. It cannot end. Behind it are the lAwf ? J aQ unprec" herd brethren will unite to prevent S'tlZlt UDparalle,ed Buch an appalling calamity . WS 1 filial 1 y; , J' 11 would be interesting to dis- P wltVne Britl9h Uover what Senator Warren of Wy- J!Si!i? ;nn?.r 8ld and theg thlnk8 ln hi3 Becret heart SSf l. I f ! , the,,0tv.hef-!of the tarl" law as " taJs. He .irSiJfJ 8hot and shell that political consistency, but what does Sit AnHo? T1hope he really think about It? Senator that America with her almost ; Warren proudly calls himself the boon.dless interests can utterly free J greatest shepherd since Abraham heme f rom constantly arising . The rise in tyhe price of h a implications is hoping the im- wool mn8t nave br0Ught him in Im pOBBlbie. niense profits. Does he want to go L"!! 18 r Way t0 d B0' the back to Schedule K with its Washington government will see i hungry pickings for the sh eepmen? in the German reply no cause for!He may say he does. Breas. oi re.auons uur errort sv worm irom a rur- -w.-io.yu -i tu ttl ,,. uiooa- 7 ' """""""" to reasonably meet the demands of Washington wil have great weight with the' American government i, '" The note may be disappointing. But after this note, what? There j Is a great deal which America t should vision in the possibilities 1 that she can present as a peace- maker when the antagonists are exhausted. As the one great neu tral ln that tremendous hour, may we not hope that America shall have bo shaped her course that she can" lead the spent nations Into a realized world disarmament? Baker's vota against abandon ment , of commission government city government, In these moments of stress over the German reply, It Is comfort ingly recalled that the Colonel said that, In "the event of war, my four sons will go, and one, per haps both, my sons-in-law. I my self will go." - GENERAL HIGH SCOTT T HE successful outcome of the negotiations between Mexican War Minister Obregon and General Hugh Scott again di- rects attention to the great powers . . . the American negotiator. General Scott has been bo suc cessful In negotiating for the gov ernment with the American Indi ans that he has come to be known ias the "Indian Medicine Man." He Ih a master of the Indian sign j language which he uses with great effect. Once he trailed a band of hostile Crows 500 miles in midwinter. When he finally overhauled them, the Crows prepared to fight. Scott insisted on talking to them first, ard they surrendered. It was Scott who managed the bloodthirsty old warrior, Geronimo, when he was finally captured. Almost more than the power of the military arm of his govern ment, Scott's powers of parley and persuasion contributed to pacifi cation of the Moros on the island of Jolo, Philippine Islands. When there wero prospects of revolt, gcoU had a faaMt Qf ca,Ung lQ thQ Moro chiefs to talk the matter over. On one occasion he took the Sultan of Sulu to Manila and to impress him with the powers of American civilisation, showed him the bones of the Malay ruler's own nana from an X-Ray picture. Scott's management of this 6avage chieftain, notably his visit to Amer- j dif, th th , j event to make Malayan peace Cer tain. Even an angry Indian, sur- i charged with a hereditary hatred ana cicatrirea siasnes on nis Doay as consequences of times he has had to fight when the redskins j wouldn't talk, in earlier days. The Apaches, whom he more than ! once conquered through his pecul- liar form of diplomacy, have a word 1,1m n.l,I.V. -..I.-. wm not )e " Tue Moros of the Philippines, formally elected him ratner or an tne Moros, so great was their admiration. It is not too much to say that , ., . . . . , General Scott is one of the best diplomats that ever drew govern- daughter of Benjamin Franklin, an(. "UEh ?c0.t therefore a dl u"ua"- m Knt. u.p.o- mat of the American Revolution With nine of the 13 tpana now in place on the Interstate bridge, Portland and Vancouver will soon be on closer jerms than ever. A DISAPPOINTMENT. nr. ,1 Mho, ototQa or less. The assault on Schedule K was to be the beginning and end of national ruin. But things have not turned out nl lomnlt- n V. ,. , . . as they apprehended. The other , .. u.j luuu yiuiie yuuuK ewes were iBOld at Weiser, Idaho, for the neat a llttle ciphering to come to $12 ! a ead- And the current price for wool lg 32 cent3 a p0undP wlth a of more. This looks An Idaho flockmaster is said to have remarked the other day that j Bheep would go up to twenty : dollars a head If Wilnnn Khnnlil ho j The next move on the board in the tariff game is an expert com- mission which will take the hide ous om monster out of politics. If ! the bill passes not more than half the commissioners will belong to the same political party. This may be reasonably expected to Insure sensible consideration of the tariff schedule. A fair and upright com mission would not overlook facts such as'we have been stating and it would be hard to make its mem bers believe that Schedule K has any Just claims upon the country. it is reported that the fluid wnicn is to convert water into 'gasoline and cost only Ii cents a gallon Is green ln color. If stock of the company for manufacture of the stuff appears on the mar- ket. It wlllo donbtless recall the green goods fousiness. BANKS AND RURAL CREDITS THE Eastern Oregon bankers at Baker City Indorsed a national rural credits system. They oppose a state Bystom. Now that the Hollls rural credits bill has , passed the United States senate, all of the Eastern Oregon bankers can aid the passage of the bill through the house. . What better work could the bankers do than to throw their political Influence in favor of a national rural credits system? What class would benefit more than the country banker if the farmers were cheaply financed? Who would benefit more by fight ing in favor of a progressive piece of legislation? Let the bankers write to their congressmen. We have the Mexican crisis, the German crisis, the price-of-gasoline crisis and the high-shoe crisis. But what crisis is as acute as when there is a tie in the ninth inning with a man on third and nobody out? QASOLINE THE east ln Its extremity has been urgently seeking a sub stitute for gasoline and now it has found one. The whole Atlantic coast sighs wiith relief. It is hilarious ov?r its approaching emancipation from the tyranny of Standard Oil. Gasoline prices in that remote region are naturally higher than they are here in Ore gon, near the heart of civilization. We are getting the precious fluid for nineteen or twenty cents a gallon. Our unhappy countrymen in the east are held up for BO cents with a prospect of worse to come. The new substitute for gasoline Is 6aid to be "a mysterious green fluid." A few drops of It poured into a pail of water turn It into an explosive fuel for engines. The process of turning water Into gaso line has long been familiar both to dealers and users, but not quite is this pleasant way. The user has not as a rule fdnnd that his fuel was improved by the process, but this new discovery sails under less piratical colors. It comes as a friend, not a foe, to the unhappy automobilist. The reader has probably marked that the magic fluid which trans muter water into gasoline, or some thing better. Is "green" and his suspicions at once spring into ac tivity. We are all painfully ac quainted with "green goods schemes." Nor are they limited to the manipulation of the "long green." The field is very broad. Not many years ago a certain Keeley Invented a motor which was to generate enormous power from pure cold water Just as It flowed from the bubbling spring. Tons of good human faith and millions of money were sunk lu the Keeley motor before the truth came out. The green fluid which is to re place gasoline and dethrone old Standard Oil has been bought out by Hiram Maxim for $2,000,000, if all tales are true. Mr. Maxim is a canny creature, not easily fooled. But the men who put their money Into the Keeley motor were canny, too, and yet they were fooled. If stock ln the new wonder should suddenly appear on the street for sale we advise read ers to make sure that It will wash before investing. A Maryland man reached for his whiskey in the dark and got hold of his hair tonic. Rather than take any more chances of tho kind, he Intends hereafter to let his bald head Eh lire on and on and on. SELLING AIR THE laity understand pretty well what the word "land" signi fies ln lawyers' .dialect. It means not. oniy sine suriace of the ground but the depths down as far as the center of the earth and the air above up to the sky. Land thus defined might be divided into horizontal strata but It never has been up to a very recent date. The only way of dividing it was by surveys of the surface. The areas thus determined were sup posed to extend up and down ac cording to the rule we have men tioned. But there is no reason ln the nature of things why land should not be horizontally stratified by deeds of conveyance. An owner may legally sell his property down ten feet Into the ground, or fifty feet, and reserve the rest of the distance to the center of the earth for himself. Or he may sell ten feet of air or fourteen feet, if he likes, and keep the rest that in tervenes between him and the sky. A case which ortlfles these con clusions of ours has lately been decided by a South Carolina court. We get our account of It from the West -Publishing Company's Docket. A man in Bennettsrllle, South Car olina, owned a corner lot. He had no use for the surface of the lot or for the Boil and minerals be neath It, but ln the air above it he desired to erect a hotel. So he sold the land for fourteen feet up ward and reserved to. himself the rest of the air as far as the eky. In this atmospheric site he built his hotel. An unfortunate lapse In the account makes the architec ture a little obscure, but we may assume that the structure was sup ported by a balloon, No sooner waa Ms enterprise under way than the Inevitable law suit developed. An attorney was found who contended that a man could not sell a part of his air. He must sell all of It or none. But j the court thought otherwise. It ! held that the conveyance was valid. I of ths Portland plant, among other This raises Interesting speculations. , things said: Of course anybody who breathes i "Few realize ths strides which air to which he has not a deed is have been made in the past thirty a trespasser. As soon as inven- years in the development and produc tion has progressed a little we may tlon of vegetable fats, expect to 6ee the air fenced in and ; "Cocoanuts have been grown jy. proper rents exacted for its use. the natives of tropical regions from This notion of free air has always time Immemorial, the oil being used appeared disturbingly socialistic. NOTHING THE MATTER WITH PORTLAND A notable Industry, already Initiated in Portland hut anon 10 he gr.atly expanded, la dtarrlbcd in detail In N". l'JS) of The JournaVa "Xothlug the Matt.-r With Portland" se'ien. Mnfh wnhorne commerce, as well as oon tli ental traffic, ia pr-dlrated of It. Tlie rub j( ined article cimvejn Information regarding a resource and an Industry of which little ll popularly known with accuracy. I WITHIN a month, or possibly ! sooner, the wheels of ths big ! Kaola products factory. Twen-! tieth and Roosevelt streets, will be i turning, and soon thereafter Portland j will be shipping cocoanut butter, kaola, cocosine and kollne in all di rections, away to the big trade cen ters of the east and to the British possessions to northward. From this factory ln Portland will radiate a stream of commercial trans actions reaching out to the Orient East Indies, Oceanic Archipelago, our Philippine Islands to the tropical countries generally ln one direction, and to millions of homes ln our own land and that of our British neigh bors ln another. There will be here a business mag net which will draw to It the ships of the ocean, laden with ths freight of the tropics, and they will depart again burdened with the manufactures of this city, ln the shape of the out put of our sawmills or timbers of our forests. COPRA IX GREAT QUANTITIES. It will require 600 tons of copra a month to keep It in operation, and probably 400 tons of this will be marketed ln states east of the Rockies and ln Canada. These 600 tons must come from beyond the seas, as cocoa nuts are not grown in this country save ln limited quantities ln Florlda, and this will necessitate at least a ship per month to feed this one In dustry. If we had a dozen or twenty such the Oriental shipping problems of Portland would be effectually solved. And best Informed manu facturers say they could be obtained if only Portland capital would com bine, and this could be done without drawing very severely upon the re sources of any single person or firm. In this case men of means have come together. They have united their in terests in a business which will pay them handsomely in dividends, again ln the influences the enterprise will have upon the prosperity of Portland, and every citizen will benefit from his share ln that prosperity. FINE BUILDING COMPLETED. The Kaola company, C. A. Palnton manager, has Just completed a fine two story building, and Its equipment will be Installed within a few days. The cost has been ln round numbers, $40,000, and it Is all Portland money. For this small Investment this Im portant adjunct to the city's many industries has been secured. Looking ; at It from a business standpoint, had j the enterprise been financed by the city Itself It would have proved a profitable place in which to Invest that much of the public funds, be cause it will be a most substantial unit in the commerce of the munici pality. But with a commendable spirit of unity Individuals supplied the means, thereby establishing a manufactory which, once full swing, will be doing It gets ln a business of $100,000 a month, and will have opened ths gats to ths exportation of millions of feet of ths forest pro-1 ducts of the stats. Ths structure which will house ths plant Is 104x127 feet in size, and with adjoining buildings, will cover ground 171x213 feet. Ths ground floor of ths new building Is of solid concrete, - with great pits necessary for ths operation of the machinery and the handling or the copra. An incline leads to the iearn and give to the world the se second floor, where ths copra will be ! cret 0f their good health, beauty of received, and lt has a storage capac-1 their women and strength of their lty of probably 1000 tons. The ma-! mena people of non-meat eaters, terial will descend from this floor to These efforts gava to us the pure the factory, and will be automatically ! oll the essential life giving fats of handled until lt 'comes forth the fin- ths cocoanut, with nothing taken ished product. i away or added, and It is working a STARTED 11 TEARS AGO. mighty revolution in the culinary de- Ths manufacture of kaola ln Port- partments of thoss homes acquainted land was begun 11 years ago, but ln I with its merits and tha elimination a most limited way. Vp to this time ; of all waste effected by its use. no copra has come to this city, the j Portland concern buying Its oil ln San Francisco, and it may be said as ' a side remark, that the greater share i of ths profits of the business re malned in the Golden state. This was of course, to be expected, but the condition was never satisfactory to the management. Mr. Palnton looked forward to ths time when his enterprise would not be required to play second fiddle to anyone, and through his enterprise and faith ln ths business his ambitions will soon bear fruit. San Francisco, however, never did more than extract ths oil from the cocoanut. Cocoanut butter is made ln Chicago, Philadelphia and New York, but Portland is ths only place ln North America manufacturing kaola. cocoslns and kollne and butter too. WHAT IS KAOLA? Copra is ths meat of tha cocoanut and kaola the oil of ths nut refined and so treated as to render lt purs and palatable for cooking purposes. When picked from the tree the1 cocoanut ; Is halved with knives by the natives and heavv left ln ths sun to dry a -v. . , . . . By ths shrinking of ths meat lt is separated from the shell. This Is then shipped to the United States and elaswhere as ths , commercial product of ths cocoanut grpves, and by the processes of thejth-.t i am interested tn a legislative factories converted into edibles, la- j bricants, medical Ingredients, etc. In n article recently published In the Western Confectioner Mr. Palnton, J for all domestic needs, both as edible fat as well as an illuminating and lubricating substance. Ths world's production, some BO years ago, amounted to a few thousand tons, but tne increase had been so rapid tnat ln 1910 the estimated amount had! . . tj ,v, . been 4a0,000 tons. Prior to the Amer- j im n neeti 1 1 rn ths a. nnrt a t r-n Tmm 1 Manila was some 6000 to 10,000 tons a year. This has increased until in 1912 there were 166,000 tons exported. and it is likely the amount is now aa much as 200,000 tons. The extent of production appears to be limitless, as there are countless millions of acres of sandy beach lard ln that and other countries not fit for any other use than the growth of cocoa nut trees; and since the consumption of cocoanut oils Is becoming unlver- i sal, vast additional groves are being i planted to supply this demand. "Chemically cocoanut oil Is analyzed practically as butterfat, being built of seven glycerldes, while butterfat Is built up of nine. The only glycerldes found ln butterfat that are not con tained in cocoanut oil are "acetic" and "butyric," these two constituting the butter flavor, therefore the only difference between the two fats, prac tically speaking, is that these vari ous glycerldes differ ln propor tions. Cocoanut oil, when prop erly refined, has long keeping quali ties, and foods prepared by its use keep sweet Indefinitely. As an il lustration, salted peanuts were not known on the market commercially until cocoanut oil was used ln their preparation, as when they are fried in some fats thy soon become rancid i and strong ana in a few weeks ara not fit to eat The flash burning point of cocoanut oil la soma 660 de grees, and la the highest of all edi ble fats that are in universal con si mption. This makes It a very perfect medium for deep frying, as substances cooked in it are imme diately seared over and do not ab sorb the fat. USED IN CONFECTIONETtT. "Another use to which cocoanut but ter 1b being put is lij ths manufac ture of sugar wafers and sandwich cookies. We are all fond of nuts, but few people realize that this fond ness Is caused from the fat that they contain. Nuts snd candy, or nuts or raisins, have always been toothsoms morsels, but few realize that this toojhsomenesa is caused by the blend ing" of t'e sweets snd fats. This is exemplified in sugar wafers. The lit tle filling or Icing between the wa fers Is composed wholly of powdered sugar and cocoanut butter, and is mads ln ths same general way that Icing for cake Is mads with butter and sugar. The best grades of candy are made of sugar, glucose and nuts. Tha baker uses flour, sugar or mo lasses and fats. It obtains, there fore that the richer or more tooth- soma the fat ths better the finished article. Striving always for better- ment of their products thaea manu facturers have taken very rapidly to the use of cocoanut butters, and it is estimated that ln theae Industries 1000 tons a month ars being con- sumed. And this consumption Is only is omy lg that rnlsned ln its Infancy, the reason beln the cocoanut butter is being furn them In a sweet, flavorless shape, at ! lowing them to use any flavor "they desire In the making of all manner of rich candles and cookies" j After ths Spanish war our leaders awolcs to the fact that this is a I worid power f ths first class. Among itM pe0pls as futurs citizens wars ths ' rth of the tronics a healthv. clean cut. straight limbed people, living an ldls life and cared for by Dams Na- ture, who catered to their wants with a lavish hand. Hers was a new field for food specialists to study and Letters From the People i Commnnleafloni aent to Tha Journal for : n-KHo-rlnn In this rtunartment ahmilri wrlt- ten on ooly ona aid of tba paper, aboald not "d "f .tll,"Lt ,h- comranied by tlie name aoa aoaresa or tba . aender. If the writer does sot deaire to haa tue name publtabea. be auouia ao aula. j "Dlseoaalon la tha greateat ot all reformer. It rationallsea eTerytUing It toucbei. It robs principle of all falae unctlty and throwa tbem back on tbelr reaaoDableneaa. If tbej bar no reafconableneaa. it rutbleaalr eruabea them oot of existence and acta up Its own conclusions in their stead." Woodrow Wllaoa. A Statement by Mr. McCusker. Portland. May 4. To ths Editor of ! The Journal. In your lssus of May ' 8 you havs an article entitled "Inner ' Circle Runs Against Snag," in which ; your reporter took occasion to say I that ths so-called "secret circle," j meaning the Oregonlan, entered Into j an arrangement with me as secretary ! of the Employers' association of Ore gon to prepare petitions containing the names of 12 candidates for the legis lature, etc. I taks no exception to your atate ment that I may be Interested in a legislative ticket, but I havs never seen ths petitions referred to, nor was i I interested ln their circulation and I was ,not even ln the clty when they i were Deing circuiaieu, nor ao i iiiidk . ar.vone would credit me with playing i SUch fool politics. There axe several' candidates reported to be on said peti- tions whom I can assure you will not rscelvs my vots or support I t'ir. thia m ttn. PERTINENT COMMENT SMALL CHANGE Being under martial law must make Ireland think of old times. If the voters do their duty at ths primaries, a lot of certificate of nom ination won't be called for. Vancouver's candidate for Roue Fes tival queen seems to be doing her beM to show Oregon girls how to run. A cleanup campaign, like tho per sonal bath, is more effective when Its purpose Is to keep clean, rather than to get clean. A cranberry famine in predicted, but why worry about it until sugar de cides to become a possibility with the average family? Senator Cummwie announces he Is coming to Oregon, but on no "pink tea" affair. If he wants anything stronger ne would better bring it along. Report of better fishing in Oregon Ftreams, coming at the time of a vic tory by the Beavers, make a man wish he could be in two places at the same time. It might be a good thing to send Admiral Peary and Dr. Cook to dis cover Villa that is, provided thay would agree not to start a "Torth Pole controversy in Mexico. Baker voters, 8u9 to 367. decided to stick by the commission form of city government. However, a more than two-to-one defeat will not keep oppo nents of commission E-overnment from I Insisting that the ceople don't know what they want. JOURNAL 6 The Circuit Did you ever look upon Mt. Hood j from some eminence in Portland and wonder what lay just to the other side of the noble peak? In two days you may completely circuit Mt. Hood, varying train and automobile riding with 25 miles on horseback. You will be brought Into closer in timacy with the great mountain of Oregon than you ever deemed possible. Leave Portland on the O-W. K. & N. in time to connect with the morn ing train up through Hood River val ley from Hood River to Parkdale. Go from Parkdale over to Homer Rogers' Mount Hood Lodge . nd have lunch while the saddle horses are be ing got ready. It is always best to let Mr. Rogers know ln advance you are coming, so there will be no ques tion of transportation from the train or of horses ln readiness for the ride. If you like, snd can, there Is fully as much or more delight Just ln shouldering your pack sack and hik ing the full length of the trail. By the time you have ended the first lap of the Journey it will have been Justified. Tou will have passed through th gorge of the Columbia paralleling the Columbia river high way. (By the middle of summer the highway Itself should be open through to Hood River, making possible aji auto ride all ths, way to Mount Hood lodge.) It Is aJwaya a delight to ride up through Hood River valley. The fa mous orchards Btretch away and up toward the high slopes. It will pres ently seem that, north and south, the valley has two white walls, Mt. Adams on the north and Mt. Hood on the south. The elevation at the point of start ing, horseback or afoot, Is about 3000 feet. The trail leads for a few miles through t.ie light volcanic soil, which becomes dusty on small provocation. Ths way will then lead through the -.otinnai fnrest It will reach eleva- j tlon8 approximating 6000 feet. It will wind clrcultnusly Into such a deep ! canyon as that of Sand creek, and It will Slops geniiy inruusu uio nn"i aisles of evergreen forest. While there la yet daylight. you ticket and, while The Journal may not openly Indorse this ticket, neverthe less it will approve of it, for the very good reason that same will consist of reputable business men, not one of whom will give as a reason for desir ing to ba elected that he wants the "experience" and "advertising" that an election would give him. The troubls with business today Is that we have elected Inexperienced and incompetent men to office vho are aiiu uivuii'tii ....... w - - - - - - I securing experience and advertising at the exrense of the business Interests th tate and lt )s time'to call a halt on that kind of legislation Under our bystem of government, no one is compelled to vote for the men suggested by anyone; therefore, no un due advantage is taken of any candi date by such selection unless you might say that he was deprived of a certain amount of publicity. It is not our de sire to reflect upon ths honesty or Integrity of any man whom we cannot indorse. I take lt that your reporter at tempted to prejudice the public against that ml-ht r J i V A m V SD- p.val by" 8tatln that I represented . tne Employers association. This as- ' sociation is composed or U0 reputaoie business firms ln this city : iJ many others in outside towns, representing nearly every business Interest in the state. The said firms have oh their payrolls from 25 to several thousand employes each. In addition to this there are various other organizations and associations affiliated with the Employers' association organisations of both employers and employes. Does The Journal Intimate that these busi ness interests are not entitled to repre sentation in the legislature, sn.l that they should elt idly by and be rep resented by men whose only aim Is advertising and experience? The business men havs at last be come aware of the fact that It Is due to their Indifference in politics that bad laws have been enacted and in competent men placed In office and, being fully awake, Mr. Business Man is going to vote and will have some say as to who will represent him in of fice. We appreciate the value of a good newspaper. Therefore, the paper- have received our support, but it does not follow that wa cannot exist without the aid of any paper. We do not ask any favors from the papers, but as citizens who go to make up ths business interests of Portland, and the state, w do expect and de mand fair treatment from tha papers. Ths papers are, or should be, as much interested In' the succesa of our Indus tries as we are, because their own success depends upon our ability to support them. Just as our euce'esa de pends upon tha ability of tha ublic to support us. Therefore, we are, or should bs, mutually Interested ln se lecting the very best men possible to make laws for us. THOS. M'CUSKER, Foraker and His Friend. Portland, Or., May 2. To the Edi tor of The Journal. Nearly a column Is taken ln Tuesday's issue of the Oregonlan to laud the political memory of "Firealarm" Foraker. Possibly the name and the views of Mr. Foraker sound sweet to the OTegonlan. Possi bly lie wag & great statesman ln his day and a great Republican of ths re actionary type. Not all Republicans think mo, bow- AND NEWS IN BRIEF OKKGO.V SIDULIGIITS Having noted the passing through Medford of three i'reiKht trains load ed with lumber, tho Sun remarks: "The Incongruity of the shipments was In tensified by the fact that millions of feet of uncut timber is standing idle and rotting within 10 miles of tho ; track." ' Bird note in Burns News: "Whlla to older settlers it was not an un common sight, to others it was quite a novelty to observe a couple of wan swimming and feeding for sevenil days within the city limits on u. pond caused by the overflow of the river , last week." I Musical treats with noel accpasortrs are foreshadowed along the coast. The l'ort Orlord Tribune says a brus hand is to be organized at Powers, wheiv they claim they have 17 ic -oinphuli 1 musicians to ttart with. Coining from , a lumberinsr town, the band in upoae 1 to have uniforms that will hai muniz.! with its surroundings th regulation logger's outfit of blue shirt, high noty shoes and sawed off overalls. "When a letter mailed in Now York city at 2 o'clock on Wednesday after noon reaches us here in Cucju.ile at ii o'clock on the following Monday Bft ernoon. ln four hours more than live days, we begin to feel," says tho C qullle fcientinel, "that this Is no lunger the most Isolated section of the toun tiy, as it has been for so long. We are now at least .4 hours nerer th rest of tlie country than we have been in the past." JOURNEYS of Mount Hood will come Kuddenly out of the trees upon what may seem to you a care fully tended koI f course. Tho gruss will be vividly green upon rolling con tours. You will have reaohod Elk Meadows, the most perfect cajnplng grounds ever designed by nature. You will Ruddei.ly remember. Where is Mt. Hood? Then you will look up. The giant peak will be just abovo you, graying ln ths 'twilight that comes early to the ea-st side. Make your bed on the firm ground among the trees that reaoh heaven ward like tall columns ln tha temple of the Almighty and seem to bear upon theJr higli tips the stars like twinkling candles - No need of an alarm clock fnr morn ing. The fun will rouse you. No need of wash basin for your ablutions. The basin will be a pocket worn by one of the courvilens crystal utreams, the water always changing. No need of stimulant. The sun will flash upon the towering mountain peak, and paint red Its face where the snow and ice liav broken away, while tha snow fields will flash ln dazzling white. If you love tlie open places, this is the ideal You may climb to the tip of Rog-srs Spur and have a more Intimate view of the mountain and the surrounding ranges, while 2000 feet below you a gleaming ribbon will show the course of the east fork of Hood River and the glacier whence It draws Its cur rent. The rest of the ride by horscba-It will carry you to Government camp on the south slopes of Mt. Hood, where auto stase service will carry you boCK n some four hours to Port land. Or, if you will It no, yru may return over the trail and go back to the city by train. This Is one of the moat magnificent trlrs offered out of Portland and tha time may profitably be extended Into a week or even more. The trail follows approximately tho route of the rnad that sometime la to bs built around the east bnse of Mt. Hood, forming a connecting link be tween the Columbia river. Hood River and Mt. Hood highways. The distance Is about 200 miles. ever. Wltnesss, for Instance, Fora ker"s overwhelming defeat in the Ohio primary of 1914 for United States sen ator. - X Republican won, but It was not Foraker. It happened to be Hard ing. Foraker occupies the same atatus toward Republicanism that Joe Bailey occupies toward Democracy. But you don t see any Democratic newspaper lauding Mr. Bailey. He may register as a Democrat, but good Democrats will not vote for him. And good Re publicans will not vote for Foraker. The reason Foraker in out of poll tics is because he was ahown up as a watchdog of big business interests. He was the leHder of the Lorlmer Penroso crowd that worked band ln glove with John D. Archbold of tha Standard Oil company. Foraker sounds the grand old party call. Its tocsin thrills tha ears of the Oregonlan. Foraker damns the non partisan ballot and the Independent voter. Foraker. like the Oregonlan, cannot understand the non-partisan voter and why the Independent vote of today is the real power instead of the party vote. Doubtless the Oregon lan will never understand this phase of politics. Foraker has bepn replaced by live men who understand the new national ism. E. J. WILLIAMSON. . Plays ami Sectionalism. Portland May 4. To the Editor of The Journal In a communication to The Journal of May 8, T. M. Kellogg characterises "The Birth of a Na tion" as a "gigantic fake, a traveaty on historic facts." This may all be so. Not having been present during the reconstruction period. I am not upon my own authority prepared to re fute any of the rather severe charges which Mr. Kellogg heaps upon the film; but I derive considerable amuse ment from the reading of this, from the pen of Mr. Kellogg: "It is hard to understand now at this late day there should be those who thus delight ln seeking to regenerate tha 111 feel ing that once existed between sections, for the money there might be ln lt. ' About two, weeka ago at a local the atre. "Uncle 'Tom's Cabin" waa shown. A careful scrutiny of Mr. Kellogg' let ter falls to reveal any complaint against the exhibition of "Uncle Tom's Cabin," although It is well known that the scenes portrayed therein are no more representative of conditions In the south before the war than the scenes ln "The Birth of s Nation" are representative of conditions there after the war. If, Indeed, as much so. It is Just as difficult for me to "under stand how at this late date there should be those who thua delight ln seeking to regenerate the ill feeling that once existed between sections'' bv exhibiting "Uncle Tom's Cabin." which is notorious as one of the contributory causes of the Civil war, as it is for Mr. Kellogg to appreciate "The Birth of a Nation." However, lt appears to make a difference whose ox is gored. M. W. MALONE. The Ohio Coclety. Vancouver, Wash., May 8 To the Editor of The Journal. Please furnish through the columns of The Journal the address of the Ohio society ln Oregon. C. A. B. The president of ths Ohio ootety Is Mr. Robert Tucker, who has offices ln the "Wilcox building, Portland ! TKPnce Qser rTKS IS THK DAY-jthat th. Old A timers rallying to the call ot (ieorge H. Himes take their lunch baskets and KO up to Chsmpoag. And there thry celebrate Foun ders day. which commeniornts the ble event May 21843- wi.m the set tlers of Oregon-a f.-w than a nunnrm or them --decided to American rather than l:ritl.sh. bs And It see.ns to me (hat this) anniversary particularly tliu ona proves how Important it Ih that a few men and women taka a stand! a decided stand on any question. 1! Because If th pioneers at Ohampoeg 7S years ago last Tues day hadn't voted as they did Ore gon might now be British territory. V Ami our boys might now be dying ln Flajider.s. - -or coming f.iot" or with a way. home (trma with "trench er legs shot an they are coming horns to Can ada. r There were only people lit t'hanipoeg. handful of r And their decision was vital 1 the welfare of millions to coma. V And when the vote, came ths de cision rested on one man. 11 One man determined the big Issue. I,' And nil 1 want to say about this before I go down to the Taylor street dock to take tho boat for t'hampoeg -- Ih that perhaps- very few of US refllize the importance of one man's taking a stand. And perhaps w are ail too much inclined from day to day to say "What's the use?'' or that we know whatever It Is. but that we don't can do about it. T Surely we don't think we are supposed But we can Lake It's wrong sea -and to What ws I don't stand for a what we think is riht and trust to th futur tlfy us. to Jus- I There's a good rhyme by a man who would have been laureate of England they nay if he hadn't sung too freely of freedom. f And It's refrain goes Ilka this: "While three men bold together the kingdoms are less by three." And sometimes It la necessary for one man one lonely man aoornsd and laughed at to stand alone. And then after a long time If he waa right the world will find It out. and will build a monument to him. But I. must ba going now ts Chain poeg. where there'll be a lot of Jolly old folks who will lelt-m.li manner of amazing stories. about the days when Oregon was young. TAndJudKe li'Arcy of Ralem will tell Ex-Governor Geer that ha has Improved on his sturies sines ths year before. V And Governor Geer will aajr sura his stones Improve with age. V, And there'll be a lot of fun and a lot to oat. T And I'm supposed to writs a story about It. And I'm going to try but TJ LISTEN If thero'H nothing In the paper t o m o r r o w about tho , C'hampoeg meeting It will be, becauaa ! soma of those pioneer women gavs me ona piece too many of lemon pis. which Is a weaknasa of mlns. Grandfather. My (rranilfatlipr'a 11f waa a ataaoB of toll. IllC rHjlut''fi padM'd nlk hnliilN; Pill h DllKHed Dinnj ag-tinlra hark n tha eoll, 'HihI modern-day prm'il- deniHnda. Grandfather acriitibod nlili ixi.v graudmother'a aoa p II rulibed a hlg lump en lila aplnej I But I Ijht tr nae thin liquefied dope ! 'Jliat'a emitted a dnip at a tliue. hlj grand fa tber dried on m grand ntotbar'a towel: It waa ujtly and eourae In lis wsare Cat If you'd hand dim rrapa paper, I knew be d scowl. And wlje bla faee nn hla alee-! My trrtndfather at at hit grandmother's lx rd 'Twu a tabla d'hote, tlmt, wllb a Tim! TNs a la curie liulne". tiv. Ideas tbs dear lrd Would spell starTatlon to him. llf g-randmotbar knitted my grandfather's boa. and be'd wear tbe same pair for an age. The way that my silk ones wear out at tba toea Aroaaea my slnuiherlng raa-e! Oi" Dobbin pulled grandpa wltb many a load. Tbougb many a nag has been apryer. But Qramp tierer lay on tils hack In tha road. Kepalrlug a puncture-proof tlra. HARRY M. SIUNCEtt. Uncle Jeff Bnow Say": Beems like an awful waste of mighty good men fur Knglsnd to be hooting Irish leaders when they could Juat as well be conscripted. Ru ral credit, the kind that carries 11 per cent, has busted many a farmer. No Chicken. DON M. TAYLOR of Railroad Row tells this story: "HhA ubs abwolutely the prettiest ) piece of femininity that had ever dark ened the door of our office and Ed 1 Phelps was the first man to reach ths counter. I " 'Please tell me,' murmured this 1 divintiv 'what it would cost to send a live chicken to New York.' " 'It would cost you ' commenced our hero; but he got no further. "'Sir'."- exclaimed tle lady as aha swept haughtily out of the office, 'I didn't come here to be Insulted.' And poor Ed Is still wondering how he got in bad." How Ofton Is tho Biter Bitten t HOW OFT ds the biter bitten! A few nights ago Jay Stevens, ths safety first crank, fire prevention radical and 20-hour-day fire mar shal, went out Into the Alberta district to investigate a false alarm. Bearching for the cul prits he turned on the full blaze of the headlights on his machine and then came a doughty duo Of auto cops. They stopped the fire marshal and with eloquent unklndneas da scribed their opinion of one who thus' would violate the dazzling headlight otdinance. Stevens In the same breath aomltted he was wrong and told wny. but his mollyfylng words made no symptom of dent ln the pugnacity of the policemen. Then they turned on disdainful heel, went back to their machine and turned on the full blaze of their own head lights. Indignantly Stevens hurried after.; "I've a notion to arrest you," hs xi ploded. adding Interest to their recent eloquence. " , -'i. What then did the officers answer 1 It Is said they spent the remainder of their watch trying: to think of something adeo.uste. . . , ,- . - - , . , - . v - , , , v . r , . ..... . . . - - t . .1 . "i.