, ' i " (- 5 : i o THE OREGON DAILY, .JOURNAL. PORTLAND, MONDA. APRIL 8, 1918. AX. DTDEPENDEMT NEWSPAPER c. a. JACKSON. Publisher t'Bbllsbed Trr dm;, afternoon and morning x I Hpi ftsaday lurnoon) at The Joarnal Butid I Inc. Broadway -and tamliiU ctteeta, IMrUood, l Oregon: , - I a-aUrad at tb poatofflca at Portland. Oregon. fa twwnuesioa tuough lb mUe as second i . elaaa matter. I . riLZtaCsm Main in; ;Hcme. a-eosi All departments reached by thaae numbers. . 'Tell the operator wliat department Ta want. y-UKJCliUN AlVKUT13INt HEfKEaKNtATIVK I Benjamin A Kentnor-Co., Brunswick Building, 2ft Klfth arenas. New York, 1218 PaopU'a as building, Chicago. ubecriptlon terms by mail, o to any address la tba United states or Mexico: ' miit itrnnvivn' nn'iFTERHOONi Dm yaar $5.00 I Ooa month,... .60 ' : SUSDAT .'f . J 6o yea $2.50 1 Una month. ...t .2S tDAILT (MORNINO OR ABTEESOON) AND f SCNDAT . . J On yar . . ...$7.50 Una month. ... .68 Xr , a Thy purpose 'inn U rqasl to the deed. Who does the beat tiia circumstance allows, does well, acta nubly; angels could do no mora. Young. undertaken a sweeping . inTestigation J would do far more to hearten the of our hallowed telegraph and; cable 1 cohorts of autocracy, than' the cap-- companies. The .' corporation pess ure of Pershing's -army. V had best,' prepare Its mind for a terrl- The great unkonwn factor of the ble 6hakng up-when the -coming dlsi war is the American. The strength closures transpire.; Judge McGinn's 0f the European nations can be very discussions' 'of'' our 'street railway closely aDDroximated. The max.'mum company and Its hangers-on in and has been ' reached. , But it Vet re out of office are mild compared with mains to be seen whether the giant what is coming. - v of the west will throw his full Happily the school board thinks force Into . the conflict or will spar the school buildings a, proper place around ineffectively, blind to the for problems of public interest and future possibility of a German vic- pubiie welfare to be discussed, and tory which will make of him the next very properly; declined to close the victim to autocracy. doors on Judge McGinn and the hun dreds of citizens ' who crowd the rooms to listen " to his addresses. THE SHIPYARD WAGERS It is not so Important that we know that we have enlisted for the full term of the war, whether for one year or ten years, as it is to make this determination known to Prussia. i urnr k n-nni. hn will way to mane me Kaiser "J v av - IM1I, tkt. I. tl V- - -l Innlc nbn. at thft action of " various shipbuilding concerns Po' bond issue. This will ax I,... K.vunnnn nftn I signify that we are in earnest and their individual capacity to produce Pf,1 f ?tsh J isJ ou of uiwuii 11, wm icpiaccu uy outer armies . and that we will fight on. T the grealtest number of wooden ships for the government in a given period of time.! It is betting, but it is bet ting in a good cause. Competition, "they say, is the -iifo of trader and so it will probably turn out to be in the business of building ships. Men are contentious animals who arc more apt to extend their ef forts when the victory of contest lies at J the1 end of their striving whether in SDort. in business or in When this fact is impressed on tho Teutonic mind the war will be short ened. Sincerity will be added to Ger man peace talk. THOSE BRONZE HORSES to proceed is due chiefly to their on of th .essentials by which each susceptibility- to local political con- o tTt ! anions. in me caseroi lraiuenuai .outht our ..tJ.. nH individuals the county court will not now defending it. Many of ua who are take action through fear of losing ifoingr to aubscrlbe to thla . areat loan politic support. Bf throwing the aSP STSSi responsibility on the State highway navt) heretofore eeemed essential to our commlssibn they find the "easy way." daily life, but that now must be fore- In doing this, however, they do not fn in order that the land of our na- make a transfer of the financial bur- TcVwe would b r den which In the end is borne by the duced to serfdom, such, to us. would County. i mean humiliation, starvation and all of The law provides that the state n oi cuw oruiamtes. i . , ' t . , 'deny one's self In order that one may highway department shall be reim- flm defend hln18elf and hU posterity bursed for all expense incurred by ; from the encroachments of autocracy, the county In which the right Of and then defend himself .from the en ,, -it vt ta nnt Ann ' croachments of poverty and want. Is at way may lie. If this is not done flm & p,.,,, paiotun, that can directly the amount is deducted from : not be questioned, and. second, a prln the county's allotment of state road ; clple of thrift that guarantees a future COMMENT AND NEWS 1 IN" BRIEF; SMALL CHANGE funds! EXPERTS TESTIFY ON POWER BILL By Carl Smith, Washington staff Cor respondent of The Journal. 'of prosperity. The purchase of Liberty bonds by the people to the extent of oversubscription will at once make us a thrifty nation by . teaching us to banish extravagance and ' waste. It la to be hoped that this Issue of Liberty bonds will be so heavily over- subscribed, and with such alacrity, that its Impress wUl aid the United States in breaking the morale of the kaiser and his serfs, as well as curbing the activ ities of the fanged adders of sedition In our country. It is up to every individual to protect Today is bond buying day. Don't forget Uie taty bonds, either. reace with honor by the Fourth of July. Dig- up at home that the boys over seas may dig in to make the Hun dig out. Whoever thousrht there was so much money In the world, to aay nothing of just Lresua i m m ' m Signs of spring : The street car heaters are turned on full blast. It doesn't seem like Monday morning any more unless some of the boys stop to tell us how much thev aceomDllshed in the garden on Sunday and bow sore their muscles are as a result. m If you don't happen to have enough money for a Liberty bond, remember that War Savings Stamps answer the same purpose as the bonds, and that the lowly little Thrift Stamp also has a great mission to perform in this war. OREGON SIDELIGHTS ; Ttnaburara ' council antlctoates ' the drive by ordering f 2200 worth of Liberty bonds, to be carried by the city as a oash asset until after the war. or so lone as the need to do so U apparent. The new home of the Clackamas Countr Banner, at the corner of Ninth street, on Alain. Oregon City, wilt be comnleted within a few davs and the installation of plant will be effected at once. Tom Jonevat of Konall baa ault" the bar ber shop, the Fossil Journal says, and roei to work on the Steiwer ranch. Tom. according to the Journal, is a good farm worker as well as a good barber and feels that he can do more to win the war on the farm than In. the shop. Baker's city commissioners have re pealed the dog muscling order that has been in effect since the recent hydro phobia scare In which a number of canines were Infected and several per sons bitten. The eDldemlo is now de clared to be ended and the danger past. Almost Sorry to Lose Hun AM having so ranch trouble In iry- tng to collect the monir. that- 1 sometimes almost wish I had my hss band back." wrote a Wisconsin weman who had been granted compensation be cause or the death of my husband. ' to "tate industrial commission. A lefthanded compliment to 4he deceased, says Capper's Weekly, but undoubtedly JOURNAL. MAN ABROAD By Fred Lockley Washington, April 8. The ad llnistra tio'n waterpower bill, now under consid eration by a SDecial house committee. gives encouragement to the investment : his democratic rights against autocratic of capital, yet secures adequate protec- : dictation. The one great bulwark that DROPPING GERMAN' IN SCHOOLS TUP' question as to whether lh': 'study of the German language "should be continued in the , i schools is being answered by the pupils themsfives. 'f A . poll of school superintendents Jot vine United Slates taken by the Literary Digest shows that German 'classes are dwindling in all parts ?f the. country. In some places the ' decrease is. 10 Der cent, in others 50 ' pep: cent and in many sections 100 ; per .'cent. ! ; A tabulation on which .the Liter ary Digest article is marie up from 't fdOOO replies received, gives the num- , ber of schools which have dropped -"'the study of German to be 149, as compared with 868 which have .not . done so. " J) v,n lni9 Oregon Is credited Avith eeVen schools, of which one has dropped the study. The same fig ures are attached to Washington. A Jlarge decrease Is in Idaho, where il2 schools out of 28 have dropped the language. In Nebraska the decrease Is 100 per cent. It is noted that In that state at a recent meeting of pastors find teachers of the German Lutheran church, resolutions were passed rec ommending the cessation of, Instruc tion In the German tonguefV all parochial schools for the duration of , - i the war.' Kansas snows a railing orr or. ap proximately 50 per cent. With' the exception of Maine, which shows a decrease of 40 per cenW the New Eng land . 6tates do not discriminate as much as- the Southern states, where the.-decline runs as high as 50 per cent. There is only a slight decrease in the large states of New York. Illi nois, Ohio, Massachusetts and those In which there are a large number of people of Teutonic origin. . '.The controlling reason for drop Dlna the "study seems to be the thought that the texts selected have b.een chosen with a vtew of spread- 2 ing German propaganda. As ex pressed by a Baltimore paper: i The German l&niruara han not hen - 2 emphasised so much because of Its Intrinsic value but rather as a part I of a persistent political propaganda ln- S tended to wean the people of this coun try away from Anglo-Saxon and Anglo Celtlo origins and ideals' and divide the - national - interest and national sym-Ipathy. Commenting on the. results of its surrey the Literary Digest says the question takes on several aspects, some of which t are of "an adminis trative nature. Only in the mlnbrity of cases is there a disposition" to .ex clude German as a cultural study of S the 'high schools and universities but as a study of the lower schools-, tech- inlcallv known as the 'lrafea, nnin - ' J Ion; Is practlcall unanimous,, that there is no place for it here.-. X CAS . substitutes , -for I . Germain tho S study , of French and Spanish 1s in Jcteasing. i 1 Oregon leads every other state in America in the per capita purchase of -War Savings Stamps. Here is 2 expectation that this state which has 2 won so many distinctions in war 5 work, may be first to pass her Wrar ' ,Savlngs tjuota. It is; a thought to stic -all -workers -to the highest en deavor. i T MAY appear strange to readers that the Greek city of Corinth should have made Nero a present of the bronze horses of St. Marks politics.! No man likes td be beaten, at Venice. The strangeness grows all seek to win. It is the law of when it is remembered that the gift life- was cme of gratitude and not of fear. The pending shipbuilding contest be- Kero is an accepted type of auto- tween the Portland and Columbia cratic cruelty. He put the best men river yards will hold an added public m Rome to death without just cause, interest.! No matter which concern He executed many an eminent citizen wins, the result will be an increased m order to piunder his estate. He number of badly needed ships for the wrapped Christian martyrs in rags use of the government. The winners and pitch and burned them on high will secure the money, but the losers Pinars to illuminate his garden. And will have the consciousness of having yet the city of Corinth liked him so done yocman service in the cause of well that it cast the famous bronze their country. It would be well if steeds and sent them to him for a all the yards, throughout the coun- present. try were to get into the game. Tne explanation is simple. Nero . But whether the bets are on or off, in Rome was one man Nero outside tne race win sun ne on. American Rome wag another. In Rome his per shipyards everywhere are betting sonality was everything. Outside, their , labor, their efforts, their skill he was the administrator of the huge and their construction against the ef- governmental machine of the empire forts and the destruction of the and hi3 personality counted for little, kaiser. If they win he loses. If they Corinth liked Nero because he gave fall down he may win. ' The Portland it a decent governor, something ex bct is but an incident .to the one big tremely rare in those times. The city bet against the imperial German gov- prospered and, after the -manner of ernmentL its submarines, its fright- poor silly manvjnH. it ascribed its tion to the public interest, according to E. T. Merrill, chief engineer of the Ignited States forest service, who had a leading part in drafting the bill and was the first witness In Its behalf. Mr. Somewhere In France A dark eyed, dark haired, bright-eyed little woman came to the counter where I deal out information, advice. New Testaments, cigarettes, French money for American bills and English notes, cash army and navy pay checks and hand out letters from-ltome. We receive countless let ters addressed, "Somewhere In France, care Y. M. C. A.," and the unending ; river of humanity flowing through our hut claims most of the mall we receive. "I am so anxious to receive a certain i of all traffic In liquors. If prohibition . letter before I sail for home," said my we can all strengthen is the Liberty loan. 11. L. WALTER. Chides Eleventh-Hour Dry Newberg. Or- April 3. To the Editor Merrill indicated that the policy agreed ' ?f, , ' J?"Ii, S.KiMoVtTto e . ,v . , isfaction to the real prohibitionist to see "P .fr1!! ?5 1 all parties now calling for the aboUshlng l ivuitui G L9 IWr TV W DUVU1U V. JS J 1 . . , m IV V- ... vxai" uuu uo " Ha good in wtr time, why not at all visitor, as she told me her name. . wcr , ueveiopea . on navigao e , Umea? why were we so long In finding I "Don't worry; he has written or will .uoiuu w m tuiuiauon wui mt iiunuo , out that beer and whiskey were an lands, la that- rentals shall not be , injury to us. as Individuals or as a charged for purposes of revenue, but nation? An article In The Journal of snouia De made nominal, to defray ad' ministration costs. ' Friday gives some light on . the subject. write." I told ber, as I looked through the letters. "Where Is home?" I in quired. "My home is in Louisiana, not far from New Orleans," she said. "I Under the bill a charge of not less than 10 cents per horsepower per an- i shouting themselves hoarse to have the and I would suggest that tnose newly , nav6 8pent the pa8t tw0 years on the bom prohibitionists (who are now c m Afrlc. where letters from home are In these days few and far between." A bit later I talked with someone who bad come out of Russia, where for five months they were to all Intents and purposes burled alive ; for during the entire live months they dldn t see a nor get a fulness and its success. ' i ,i .1 . 1 .uklkll.. j ..'". ... president proclaim iwuuuai uiviuumuuj mi,lon SZZa'Z, STii I! read the article, digest It and solemnly In f. . ! at commune with theif own consciences as fYJZ y Y "..T"; f maVv' 1 1 whether they had always been on the of policy, however, it is stated to be the rl ht slde therewas a Cei-man- intent to charge no more than a nominal ! Amerlcan alliance, fmanced by the sum. Chairman Sims expressed sur- tmu.. ...i.ti wno un imnun. prise at this, because In his view It may ! but for an that, even candldiv?i lor the newspaper from America nor be desirable to secure for the govern- I presidency were willing to dicker wlUi ' K1 word frorn the home land .i.oiii j."ii"aj revenue irom uie mu- ( the alliance In order to g it the support. ; Tnla morning a man with a strong. " jTf-i vuuiiiouica or uie iirewers aDsgcwuun. Aim gooa lace asKed me now to go to a will make, to relieve the burdens, as he : were told that the party receiving that famous 0ia chateau near here, and also expressed It. of those who are paying : support would win. Did we hear a pio-:how to reach a certain cathedral. When large sums in taxes ior tne purposes of ; test from any or tne wa party press : , j nad Dianned out for him an interesting the war, "I believe it much better to reduce rates to the consumer tha to produce revenue." said Mr. Merrill. "The un derlying purpose here is to get low rates to the consumer. I do not be lieve In charging rental for revenue, ex cept ior two purposes : .first, a nom .Not at all, tut ir my pariy iosi out. x , tour to nearby points of Interest, he blamed it on the brewers. j 8ald . rhe war has piayed havoc with We have not heard of k prohibitionist j my WOrk. I am on my way back to nay home In the Kameruns, In Africa. I have been there 24 years. My name is t askine for the brewers' vote, but we were exhorted to be regular. Prohibi tion was all right for my to-vn, bat not for the whole country. But a late repentance Is better than. none at an. I prosperity to the emperor, Just as! inal amount to pay the cost of admin- and next November we will again have istratlon ; second, It may be necessary to ! an opportunity to show our colors and go beyond that to get excess earnings ' Pve that we really believe. In doing wnicn cannot be reached in any other Jury for Multnomah county about year ago? Isn't your name Fred Lock- ley? 1 am Captain T. II. Magulre. was a deputy with Walter Evans. We talked over Collier. Hammersly. Robin son, Ryan and the rest of the boys and had a good visit. Last night Lieuten ant Sturgls of Pendleton called to see me but missed me. He left word he would call again In a few days. Four Canadian soldiers drifted In to spend a few hours between trains. made them welcome, poked the fire up for the forenoons and evenings are damp and raw, and the cold penetrates. One of them was from near Halifax ; an other from Winnipeg. I didn't learn where Shorty, the cavalryman, was from. The fourth man was from Cal gary and in the course of our talk it turned out that he was a grain buyer and had bought wheat from my one-time partner on the East Oregonlan. Bert Huffman, now a rancher at Langdon, Al berta. Two sailors were the next vis itors and they gave me a graph lo story of their experience coming over an ex perlence I am not allowed to discuss. They changed some currency Into French money, and handing me all the money they had left, they, said. "Count this, please, and take care of It for ua. We will drop In maybe today, maybe to. morrow, and maybe next week. We are going to see all there la to be seen." BELATED,. BLT- 1 0 VERNOR WITHYCOMBE, good Republicans ascribed the full din ner pall to McKinley. Nero had . Inothina: in th worlrl tn rin with thi tegfcally. at least, Is somewhat Zsp"llJ. ,of CorlnKlf' ?ut elth" late with his request that the Jfd ,Kj,nley fnr,th,n5 to do with attorney general intervene In the th f u Vnmr pail, suit of the Booth-Kelly Lumber com- Presidents and emperors seldom pany and the Hammond-Winter Lum- 5fve.,much to, do w, th the welfare of ber company against the Oregon A tne lower classes. Nero was per- Callfornia Railroad company. But sonally a bad man, while McKinley nmh.hiv it i. hoftor int. than khvpp. w" one of the best men who ever Tr-ia-on minff nfontinn thot vea, out reels pi mat sort are has been made by the two lumber concerns. " They bought" Oregon & California grant lands in the days gone by at an average price, as they irrelevant to the political estimate history makes of them. The Roman empire , was a better place to live In under Nero than it was under the set out in their complaints, of 10 first Christian emperor, Constantine, per acre. The money. has been paid not because Nero was the better man and the, large areas of valuable tim- of the two- but because the times ber involved in the transactions long were more Propitious, time since have passed into the The Corinthians saw in Nero a ruler hands of the companies. But since who ave tnem eod government, the enactment of the Chamberlain- Protected their sailors from pirates. Ferris act and its validation by the taxed them only moderately and made supreme court of the United States, few- Personal exactions except a dc the lumber 'companies have suddenly mand- of worship for his statute, discovered that they paid the rail- This they conceded willingly enough, road more than it was entitled to Readers of St., Paul's letters will re charge them for the lands they member that one god was about the bought. They have suddenly dlscov- 6ame as another to the Corinthians, ered that the terms of the land grant, So they ent nim the bronze horses under which the Oregon A California wh'ch, after all these years, have nnMrnoH rnmnanv hpiri h ianHa been , removed from Venice to Rome oniiiM thn pnmnmv in ohnr ihm 1 save them from the Huns. Mr. Merrill was questioned as to what he meant by "excess earnings." He had some trouble In defining it. Earnings could not be termed exorbitant merely because they were large, he agreed, if they were due to economical operation under rates which were reasonable and regulated. At another point he inti mated that rentals might be used to equalize differences between companies wnicn make large and small returns, I sitlon fromaIl points of view. How when because of competitive conditions ' ever enthusiastic girls and boys may be away with the traffic, or whether we aro Just now trying to mak) someone else responsible for our sJrs of omission. J. JL KOPP. Opposed to Backyard Chickens Portland, April 6. To the Editor of The Journal In The Sunday Journal I have read an article in which G. R. Smith advises poultry-raising in every back yard in Portland. Now, I am sure I am as patriotic as Mr. Smith, but I am sure he has not looked at this propo- they charge the same rates. The witness explained that it is not the purpose of the bill to Interfere with state rte juris diction any more than necessary. Intra state rates are left to state commissions, and where a company operates In two or more states, regulation would still be left with the state bodies up to the time that some conflict arises between them. a Mr. Merrill maintained the most important things to he kept in mind is to make the terms of the lease absolutely certain, and then to keep it from change for the contem plated leasing period of 50 years, unless with the consent of the lessee. Congress ought to leave no uncertainty, he said. so the. investor can be sure of what Is ahead. Charges must therefore not b readjusted during the lease except In accordance with terms laid down in the lease Itself. Thus, if the 10 cen charge is to be made 20 and 30 cents at the end of 10 and 20 years, this should be pro- iaea when the lease Is executed. but f2.50 an acre. Of course the grant was written Into the laws of the land when they made the deals with the railroad company. Of course ; the timber they bought is worth much more than $2.50 an acre. Of course they knew all these things when .they purchased it, but they are sticklers after the legality of all transactions and they want the courts to undo the overcharge and force the railroad company to give them back the excess amounts over and above $2.50 per acre paid by them in the dim and distant past. LEAD PENCILS J APAN has many and shining mer its but imitation of the . great American Bolshevist, Henry David Thoreau, is not one of them. . On the subject of lead pencil mak ing there is an irreconcilable differ ence between the Island Empire and our philosopher. When Japan learned that she could make lead pencils by the million she at once set herself to doing it. In 1914 she exported 9,000,000 of those SACRILEGE 4 t, ft transitory conveniences. Now sh is Incidentally, the success of the pPndinsr them out at the rate of ifi - lumber companies would mean a OOO.OOO per annum. " . very material loss to tne unuea Thoreau was also interested in lPart States, to the irreducible school fund pencils. He thought at one time of or me state, ana to me roaa ana port eaming nis living by making them runas oi tne iana grant counties, instead of raising beans on Walden j.ie wwwt u i.ivis mvu.yeu shore. He accordingly apprenticed the litigation, if returned to the lum- himself to the lead nenr.il trarfe. nri ber companies, would reduce by that kept at it faithfully until he had sum the amounts to be paid to the made one perfect pencil. Then he left government, me siaio ana me coun- the gnop and never mad( 8nother. ues m uiiai oeiuemeiu ui me gram Many men of many minds maJ.e tne uuu iviiuuvus,. world interesting. We must have our The United States entered its pro- Japans . and our Thoreaus, too, or test against tne contentions of the life would not be worth living. lumber companies as soon as their rO DOUBT It Is next thing to sac rllege, or perhaps a little worse, for Judge McGinn 4o say what , he "does about ."our great cor- t Pbratlons" and their hired retainers It lis certainlyi something new for 5 such truths to be uttered publicly In JJthftj ichoolhouses, whose customary aCuse-lS' to deal with the concerns of the middle ages and ancient Rome; r':lt Is perfectly proper to speak about the corruptions of Babylon and' the t tyranny of Nebuchadnezzar In the school houses,: but the instant " Judge McGinn or anybody else i-en-Jltures 'to comment ' on the tyrannies of a modern street railway, company, ." y oh, it's awful. , f ' i", The divinity -that doth hedgj!ihose immaculate institutions is receiving many a nide; shock 'these days. 11 iTho government, - for instance,; has . just complaints were filed. It got into the game before the law of the case had been argued before the court of Multnomah county. Governor WTithy combe; has directed the attorney gen eral to slip In, before the closef of tne tweutn nour ana present the con RIGHTS OF WAY 1 N His ruling that the state high way commission has authority to appoint a right of way agent, but mat tne conduct of legal pro ceedings in court Is properly a fun& tendons of the state, if it is not too ion of the attorney general. Att&rney late to point out its interest in the General Brown" has sustained the po- litigation. Attorney General Brown s'tl0n ake by the commission doubtless would have beerf in much If. county courts : would perform stronger, nositlon toad vha been .sent their duty it would be unnecessary into battle while it was being fought, Ior the. slate Mo employ a right of ratheri than afterwards. THE, KAISER IS WATCHING A' way agent. Primarily the law- re quires that counties;: acquire right bf way on roads', which are to be constructed or improved bv the state. SliOW response to the third Lib- in practice jt has been found difficult erty man wouia oe gooa news m to realize this result. Therefore pro uermany. it would encourage vision has been ' made aivina the state: authority; Ho institute prQceed- Ings in the, event I the, county refuses or neglects to .do ..so. The. indisposition of county courts the central powers to think that we were growing tired of the war and had regretted entering it. , ; Failure to 'take up the loan quickly Mr. Merrill defended the recapture clause of the bill against the doubts of some members of the committee, who feared that under It the government cannot shake the hold of the lessee when the time la up. Representative Ferris pointed out that it will apparently be come necessary to go Into court to dis possess the lessee If the government fails to agree to renewal at the end of the term. With such cumbersome ma chinery, Ferris said, the danger of giv ing what amounts to a perpetual fran chise appears. Merrill maintained this is not the case. Unless the government takes the plant itself, he asserted, a lawsuit lies at the end of the road, if i the company in possession chooses to ! sit tight" and does not make a new lease. If streams tributary to recognized nav igable streams are held to be in law navigable streams, and thus brought under regulation, the witness expressed the opinion that this should make no difference in the regulations. If the per mit is for a new plant. If the appli cant has Its main development on pri vate property, and Its transmission line or tunnel crosses government land for only a short distance the same rule will apply, but If an existing development impinges only slightly on the govern ment property, or It Is only a small do mestic plant,, the Idea In view will be to treat that Kind of development inde pendently, and free It from many ef the restrictions which would otherwise apply. The basis of recapture provided, Mr. Merrill stated. Is the actual, legiti mate oj-lginal cost of the property, plus betterments, reduced by the aJpount of unappropriated surplus, current oaiances and amortization charges, with no al lowances for increased values of land. franchise or going concern values apr for expected profits. about gathering eggs and attending to little chicks, they will not give the same attention very long to the moot impor tant part of all namely, keeping the runs and the chicken-house perfectly clean and free from lice. "Throw out all the fod you may; lousy hens will never lay." , Then there Is no room, if our neigh bors are considered, and plenty there nrA wVia Tin v a nn ftrhonl hovi and firirls. that One Of I Th.l, VxiMr iluir nncm ilmiut Into th next yard. The odor of that yard would be Impossible to escape and would ren der ftfe exceedingly disagreeable. Many a neighbor now Is losing sleep by Chan ticleer's crowing incessantly through the night, and folks-r-ln these trying times, especially cannot afford to lose their sleep, but all for several blocks, those In poor health and others weary with toll, have to suffer. As Lillian Russell says, "let us think as well of the ones at home and not make life too hard." We have parted with boys. We are working and denying ourselves many things. On a 50x100 lot, besides the house, there Is only room for a little grass for little folks to sit or play on, a few flowers, the necessary clothes line and the all-Important vegetable gar den. MRS. ANDREW TODD. Melvin Fraser. I am a Presbyterian minister. ' I have seen the natives In my district turn from their heathen gods to the living God. I have seen my people there turn from war and rapine to peace and Industry. When I left there for the United States 600 of my natives came dn the same ship to fight In the French army. I had hard work ex plaining to them why It was wrong for the native tribes to fight but right for the white men to fight. They are a very simple, direct and childish people and it is hard to show them the right eousness of fighting for peace. My peo ple are courageous fighters and they meet death cheerfully, but they think the white Two's method of fighting Is much more barbarous than their sys tem. The faith of many of my con verts has undoubtedly been undermined, for the German missionaries have told them the white man's God Is fighting for Germany, and I tell them that God will punish the Germans. I am anxious to get back to my field, but we are held up here In France Indefinitely, await ing a ship for Africa." The next person at the desk was a captain. When I had directed him to the place of which he was In search he looked at me closely and asked. "Were you the secretary of the grand Rata and Bobtail T Stories From Everywhere only A bit later an artilleryman dropped in and when I had helped him locate an address, he told me he ' was from Portland. "My name is Paul Folquet, he said. For two or three years worked for the smartest and best grain operator in the United States. Any man that catches Max Houser napping will have to get up early and then they will find that IJouser is on the job before they got up. Me has more public spirit In his little finger than some of his rivals have In their whole body. He Isn't using this war to add to his wealth." Leland Gould, who for five years was with the Pacific Telephone company at Portland, was another visitor, as was Lieutenant O. K. Patterson of Eugene. Next day X. R. Moore or Corvallls dropped In. He Is assigned to a hut In this district. We went out to dinner to gether, but most of the eats he passed up. Snails, sardine bellies, plmlento and various other delicacies found no favor In his sight, and he marveled that I could eat and enjoy them. On the whole, N. R. prefers the cooking he gets In Corvallls, to French meals. I would give quite a bit myself for a cup of home made coffee with cream and sugar and a wedge or two or three of real apple pie. It Is Just three months since I left Portland, and If I could writs all I have seen I would have a good sited book. Unfortunately I can only write the mildest and most Innocent letters, since all discussion of practically every thing of Interest Is forbidden. sincere. Do Your I ro baar the noaos ef AOtrSaa ' And of fathm U thatr )iaf ..r..th auial enr of SMKbers ! wbaa tWt aoo eoste M eemia ; Satba bkwd tt TUm Uk Hrara. ! Frosm Um haarta of eovnUaaa braraa. Baa wrack ad heaaaa end ralnad eiuaa Ami Um tbonaaadi maaatad era. - In Oiriat'a nama. On, da yevr dull. : Halp to dlira wmx'a cvna amy. ! Hlp you dollan ta taa tiaainoa i Bey a Ubrt bead today. Pullman. VTaah. Accounted For -Oh!" said Mrs. Oushly. nleaaed-wlth the luncheon, "this cheese Is heavenly." Huh, huh." assented that idiot Jen. kins. "Mads from the mllkr whey." ""aBaaaataaat Overexerted Herself In a certain provincial art gallery. says London Tit-Bits, Is a picture in titled -Saved." representing a New foundland dog standing over a . child whom It had rescued from the river. ' On market days many Mocla' from the country find their way to the picture gallery, and nearly all admire this life like painting. ; An old country woman stood rasing at tt for quite a long time. and. as she turned to go, exclaimed: "No wonder the child fainted after dragging that big dog out of the water." What They All Ssy Tha dniccbt died and faca to face With Tatar at tha entrance atood. Said Tatar : "Trr the othar place; "Tea'U doubUeaa aay U a )nat ai od." " Boatoa Tranacript. L'nele Jeff Snow Says: Down In Los Angeles the swell sas slety people supports It dog hospitals and some of 'em spends more money on a' dog than would support a big family. The babies of poor folks die so fast down there they have to extend the reserva tion for "em ever little while and can't afford to grow no grass on their graves. Some of them sasslety Los Angeles women would rather kiss a dog than a baby, and that's what's the matter with the upper clawses In America. ;We need them hospitals and doctors, and nurses fer humans. Uncle Sam orter plsen the dogs, and draft the money spent on 'em as a super-Income tax or somethln. Nothing; the Matter With Portland By IL flL Haroourt HOW TO BE HEALTHY PERSONAL MENTION Islands Contribute to Armf "The Hawaiian Islands are sharing In furnishing the great American army for democracy." said D. L. Applegat of Honolulu, a business visitor in Portland. Mr. Applegate Is registered at the Mult nomah. "We sent men to the United States last summer after registration j day In America. They are in France now." he said. ' e e e Soldier's Sacrifice Greatest Mr. and Mrs. O. P. Miller of Chi cago., who spent last winter in Califor nia, are staying at the Multnomah. They are en route home. "As much as those at home sacrifice they cannot do as much for democracy as the men on the field of battle." he saM. "I have bought Liberty' bonds. Thrift Stamps and am denying myself many luxuries, but Mrs. Miller's and my besj bet is our son who is in a field artillery battery of the American expeditionary force." a a a Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Nelson of Los Angeles are registered at the Oregon. Among arrivals at the Imperial. Is P. Kingston of Index. Wash. Mr. and Mrs. Rossi of Wallace. Idaho, are guests at the Portland. Gene Penlin of Heppner Is an ar rival at the Perkins. Daniel Smiley of Redlands, Cal., Is a guest at the Multnoruah. A. Alexander of Wilbur, Wash., Is guest at the Benson. A. B. Hanson of San Francisco Is a guest at the Oregon. R. W. Rae of Prtnevllle Is an arrival Mr. Merrill, who personally superin- at the Imperial. tended the Job of making the chief sur- 1 Stanley Glldden of New York Is stay- vey oi waterpower resources wnicn has ' ing at tne rorunn. been made, declared that the countrv Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Clark of Duluth yet knows actually mtle about Its wa- are guests at the Multnomah THE CLEAN LABORER. The dirty man Is sooner or later the sick man. It la because of this fact that the ship ping board of medical experts, headed by a Chicago physician, are trying out a patent by which when a man un dresses and enters a room for bathing his clothes may proceed over a -course of laundering and be there fresh and clean to meet him when he emerges at the other end of the bath emporium. Speeding up work on ships means keeping every laborer In the best pos sible physical condition, and. in this connection. It Is Important to keep him ,.in Cleanliness, these physicians find. depends largely upon the ease with which It may be maintained. If the faculties for taking a bath are so poor that they cause a man a great deal of time and trouble, he Is liable to neglect ki imnorta.nt measure. It Is recom mended, therefore, that every laborer, In the shipyard or anywhere else; who wishes to conserve his man power to the utmost, endeavor to surround him self with such bathing iacmues uiai keeping clean will not be an Irksome burden, but a constant temptation. The phrase "honest dirt" Is a paradox. All dirt Is dishonest, to the extent that It Is an enemy to nealtn. uirt seeuiea with millions of bacteria, scene of them harmless, but many of them capable of producing serious Illness. When a child survives In Uie midst of filth, while a clean one succumbs, people are quick to conclude that somehow the clean child was rendered delicate by his cleanliness. The Infant death rates of different classes testify, however, that the chll dren who live in a constant stats of filth suffer most, ss a class, from dis ease.. Handling food with dirty hands. putting dirty fingers Into the mouth or nostrils, are acts from which many dis eases arise. It Is difficult for a laborer to realize this, but If he saw th dirt on his hand under a microscope he would more vividly appreciate how dangerous It Is to avoid It. A clean man demands clean surround ings. When a .man's body Is clean he hates soiled clothes, unclean wash bowls or clothes, unclean eating utensils, nn clean environment of any sort. Personal cleanliness Is. therefore, the beginning of a general sanitary unllft, before which the miseries of disease take flight. Tomorrow : Those Who Ars "Shocked." See another story, "How to Live," foot of column 8, this page. terpowers. The information - is super ficial, he said, so much so thrft nobody knows whether the horsepower which may be developed from the entire coun try is 30,000,000 or 300,000,000. r Letters From the People J. E. Moore of Oakland la a guest at the Oregon. Henry Agate of New Tork is an ar rival at the Portland. Charles Hall of Coos Bay is a guest at the Benson. R. W. Sweet of Seattle is registered at the Multnomah. A. W. McKenzle, an automobile man of Seattle. Is staying at the Benson. I Communicationa aaot to Tae Journal for pub- 1 a V. KWn of Marahflolrl la a bmimt FcaUon in t&te department ebonld be written ea !B. ty,m p.rkin. , - only one aide of the paper, ehould not exceed 100 j )" . r t, ..,,,. ... v rd in lmxUi and muat be alnx-d by tba writer, j Mr- nd r"- 1 - Anderson are ar- whoee mail addnaa la foil must aocompaay the I rivals at the Perkins. cuniribuuom. i I C. I). Bartrum of Medford is a guest at the Imperial. A Plea for the Liberty Loan Portland, April 4. To -the Editor of The Journal May I not, as a reader of your good American paper, submit a few lines regarding my views of the Im pending Liberty loan? The purchase of a Liberty bond appeals to me aa being I J. H. Hanley of Bend Is registered at the Imperial. . E. A. Hamilton of Dallas is staying at the Perkins. Gladys McCourt of Albany Is a guest at ths.JJortonla. - Among registrants at the Benson are E- E. Bruc4 and daughters. Miss H. M. and Mils Elizabeth, of Omaha. xtt- and Mrs. H. R. Hudson of St Helens are registered at the Nortonla. H. p. Dickson or saiem is a guest i the Nortonla. r . Mr. and Mrs. Tea a. Stevenson- are guests at the Washington. Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Marsh of Seattle are arrivals at the Washington. Mrs. Henry Ferguson ana mn. v. o. Ferguson of uoiaenaaie. a.. guests at tne wasmngiuu. F. W. Chester of Corvallls Is a guest at the Washington. All for a Single Tree From a Bulletin of the Department of the Interior Except for two national reservations made for the conservation of curative sprtsgs. the smallest national park Is the General Grant It contains only four square miles and. was ere ted Mo protect one tree. But the General Grai.t tree Is worth a national park all to It aif It is a riant sequoia, and. next to one. is the biggest and oldest living thing In the wide worm, it is m ieet through from bark to bark, and z4 feet iie-h- It ta not far from 4000 years old. The one living thing that Is bigger and older Is. the General Sherman tree in the Sequoia National park a few miles to the east, that Is a foot and a half thicker and 1 feet higher, a The General Grant tree Is not the only sequoia in the little national park, however. It is the biggest of a fins grove of sequoia trees. The General Grant National park Is a spot of pro found beauty. It Is a wild garden of wonderful luxuriance. In which aU the great trees for which California Is fa mous attain their largest dimensions, and which Is glorious tn summer with the bloom of innumerable shrubfc and flowering plants. It Is a calm and si lent place. In which camping out Is a luxury, for It almost never rains dui tng the camping seasons Small though the park is. It has Us many visitors. Mors than 17.000 people visited It last year, 2000 mors than went there the year before. More than 2000 automobiles brought throngs Into the park to do reverence to the mighty tree. This is no show place where visitors whirl In and whirl out Most of those who come come to stay a while. There Is a public camp, where one may stay as at a hotel, and there ars hundreds of charming private camps. "We Have Just Broun to Fight From .the Sprlncfleid (Ifaaa ) BepebUcaa. With perfect lucidity William II ex plains that Germany desires peace, but thabbefore It can be attained "Ger many's enemies must recognise that Germany has been victorious." To that the only relevant answer seems that of John Paul Jones, "We have Just begun to fight" , ; When the Valentine Manufacturing company settled down In the 100 by HO two-story building at East Tenth : and Lincoln streets, John E. Cronan, presi dent John J. Valentine, vice-president and manager, and Frank I. Goliehur, secretary of the 130.000 corporation; did not possess a correct estimate of the reception the enterprise) aould receive in PorUand and the northwest ' Nor could they Imagine that In less then a year they would be shipping to New York. Chicago. St Louis. Winnipeg. Denver and several southern cities; to Tacoma and Seattle, to North Dakota. Montana, half a dozen Colorado towns outside of Denver. In carload lots to San Francisco, and In big bunches to Sac ramento, Los Angeles, snd more than a score of California's smaller cltlea and to Arizona and Texas. But this has happened, and already they find them selves crowded for room. e a a In some minds this is a toy factory: and It la. But It la far from stopping at that. It Is a "children's furniture factory." Its catalogue shows dolls' cradles, novelty wheelbarrows, pony carts, express wagons, stick horses,; nov elty stock toys, duck shooflys. horse shoofly rockers, hobby horses, go-carts. tunny little bunnies, bssslnets, with snd without hoods, pretty costumers.! re minding the children that they should hang up their garments and not deposit them on the floor, folding baby yards. children's clothes drying racks, i snd girls' snd boys' sleds. But It likewise pictures 26 styles of children's chalrr and tables. Some of these dressers srs large enough for little big folks,- and there are doll mattresses on doll springs and doll bedsteads that a three-year-old could sleep on snd have plenty of room. These are finished In various lovely colors. Dozens of mar hi nee are required, moat of them different from those of the big furniture making concerns; some' sre real novelties. This is a business In which there Is little waste, as bits left from one article can be worked Into an other. The material must be of tha best A large dry kiln Is kept full of material. "We must always carry a large stock. says President Cronan, "for the reason that when we start to make' any par ticular article we must count by thou- make a smaller number of this and like- wis of that We must be in a position, when ws receive an order for a carload ef toys, covering perhaps' 60 different articles, to fill It Instantly; or lf.it be for one only, the response must be th same. Hers Is an order from Winni peg. It covers nearly everything in our catalogue. It wUl gd at once. At this season, however, we are manufacturing for fall orders, and our sales now ars at their lowest" The output-at this seasonls about 1200 a day. In about four months It will be double. " Tomorrow: Article No. 75 of this series: The Armstrong Manufacturing Company. ' s Olden Oregon First Oregon Militia Company Out growth of a Bad Indian's Act The first Oregon militia' was formed In the fall of 1S42 and grew out of a shooting affray at Oregoa City. The provisional, government was formed In the spring of that year and George Le Breton was elected recorder. One day a Molalla Indian known as Cockstock rods Into town, bent on mischief. LeBreton attemptedito arrest him. and was fatally shot by Cockstock. Wins low Armstrong killed the Indian, and .a general fight between Indians and whites raged for a time. A meeting was called soon after wards and a company of 2i was or ganized with T. D. - Kelser as captain. The primary object was to bring to Jus tice those Indians Implicated la the LeBreton affair and to- protect property and lives of settlers.- It was styled the Oregon Rangers company, and for years did fine service for the stats. ; Charles Bennett who had served in th United States army, was elected captain to sue-' ceed Kelser and mads an extremely f. flctsnt officer. j -. . War Information ; Complete Accurate Official! Prepared by the Committee! on Public Information, and to t Be Obtained for the Most Part, Free. The toeernmeat ef the Cnltad gtatae, that the people aay kaew the troth abewt Je war aaU war eewaUona. la awutii e wriae ot pobUeatloee el tae nn btsheet rata te aU patriot. j Theae pan pb lets, in ef tbeta of: eoa dderable eotuaee. tarn be obtained. poetaa rree. bf eddxeeaiaa "Coaaanrttee oa trnbile Information. 10 Jaekaoa flaee, Waahtoa tss, l. C" Is this qpeee frets day te da fke eeMert utter of tbeae Detapbieta will be indicated, and the prteea of tboee not east free, will be ataud. Bat bm say event, sothlns Seed be arnt for rataee. They coat the riaJar Jtfee the bare price at lad, or sothlns at aft. 'National Service HandbooaT X: t ef tne 'Wsr Isforsistlea Series Tale msntisl Is as invaluable r-fareaoe work for libtartea, acheoJa. rlube sad .ether ersamaatiafU sad isdjepenaabie te the citi eUieea. v . j CeeU: lJeeeTUtlrti ef B elHe and aaUiUiy oTsiniiettona directly a ladirectlj eeaaeetd with r work. poviUnc eat bow now why every fcodirkdaai eas help. , It ewa Utas atap. am- and aeV tnatrnia. and dia gram. 244 peaae Mead lh coot wKh teaaeet for Una aejalbooa. . . :