' ;.. . .12 THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND THURSDAY, AVKiu A5 , PtDBrEXDEST KjEWSPAPEtt C 8. MCK80N...,,.; PnbtMwT (Be eelra. be cnfieent, b cheerful and do BtQ other w Too won 14 be them do unto too FubllahM erery wrr-k day and Sunday morning, at Tha Journal Bntldma, Broadway and Xam hill atrest, Portland. OraaoB. Catered at the poatofflce at Portland, Orel on, for tranamlatloB through the mail aa second '- elaaa matter: TJSLKFHON Eft Main T17S. Automatic B0-61. All department reached by theee number. rOHEKiN ADVEBTISINQ BEPRESKXTATIVE v Benjamin Kent nor Co.. Brunwick Building, I nrtb arena. New York; 900 Mailer Building. Chicaio. ; , . aiJBSClUPTIOH RATES - ' - By carrier, city and country. a DAILY AND SUNDAY On weak, ,,..( .18 1 Ona month . .06 DAILY SUNDAY Om week......! .10 I On week t .05 One 'month 45 I BT MAIL ALU. RATES PAT A BMC I ADVANCE DAILY AND BUN DA I One year....... 18.00 8U month. ... . 4.25 Three month. .. 82. 2K One month 76 Br?NDAY (Only) One rear 18.00 Six month. .... 1.70 Tbrt month. . . 1.00 r : daily (Without Sunday) Ona year.. U...6 8.00 Big monthi.. v. , 8 25 Three monthi. .. 1.75 Om month ...... .60 WEEKLY , (Every Wednesday) One year..,....! 1.00 Six month. , . . . .60 I Tha rate apply only is tha Wt. Hates to Eaatern fxrliuU furnished on ajJplica. Hon. Make remittance by Money Order, Expreas Order, r Draft If your pontofflce U not- a alone Order Offio. 1 or 2 -cent lUnn will b accepted. Make all remittance payable to The Journal. Portland, Oregon. WEEKLY AND SUNDAY One year 18.50 He that aaplrea to be head of a party will find it more difficult to pleaae hi frtenda than to perplex hi foea. Col ton. THE WINNER A NEW way of doinff things has 27 dawned upon us."' This is a statement In an article by P. A. DoutY in volume i, number of the Employes Bulletin, published by the Multnomah Lumber & Box . . n . , . i ,J Company. Mr. uouty is uie pressiueiii, ' of the company and of several afflli ted enterprises. The company has established a department of industrial ' relations with former Chief of Police v Johnson as its head, and the Em nloyea' Bulletin is published by that department. Mr. Douty says: The purpose of our newly created in dustrial department is to form our em cloves and ourselves Into a modern bust - new organization that will, by the co -operative spirit. Jointly increase our ef 1 flclency to the benefit or an, ana m aa ditlon thereto, provide modern working conditions and conveniences. -.From this, we learn that in this large Institution a progressive head Jiitniminnil t Vl a It la UTAfih I ' h 1 1 O 1119 UviCI JllIllT.u biiait m "V, fci. t.,..v. to consider the human element as well as the material element in the plant ' A bureau is created and maintained 5 to promote mutual understanding be- ; . tween employer and employes. These steps are "looked upon, not only as good business for the employes, but : as good business for the employers. And this is what is meant in Mr. Douty's article by his statement that 'a ne'w way of doing things has y dawned upon us." And he goes on to - A comparison teaches us that in the c,0ck" "J7 past, cooperation between employer and " employe has not been had to Its fullest extent. The average industry has neg " lected many features that encouraged uch cooperation. Exactly so. Once the shop was - small and the employer knew person ". ally;, the half dozen to a dozen men who were his working force. In the - personal contact they knew and'under ; stood one another. The worker, as a result of that understanding, was con- WHEN LEAGUERS-COME No. 3 Tim story of the rise of the Non-partisan league in North' Dakota reads like a romance. Taking advantage of a widesoread dissatisfaction with marketing condi tions, A. C Townley of Beach, North Dakota, a farjner with unusual qualities of leadership, conceived the idea of tha Non-partisan league. It was to be a farmers' organization through which political control of the state could be secured. He convinced the farmers that in no other way couia wey relief from the economic conditions under which they chafed. Beginning In a small way in the outlying districts he gathered support to his cause. As his plans and legislative program became more wiaeiy known an avalanche of membershiD and money rallied to his support. So secretly was the organization work carried on that even the small town merchants did not know of the activities of the league leaders until tne state was practically organized. When these country merchants became alarmed bankers and business men in the larger cities scoffed at their fears. Conservative farmers who considered the rlan revolutionary and the legis lative program socialistic, hesitated for a time, but as former apathy of the business men toward the farmers' problems had convinced them of tne futility of hoping for their cooperation they reluctantly joined the league and their votes and influence followed their membership and money. Then came the primaries. In spite of one of the worst blizzards Nortn Dakota ever experienced the farmers turned out and nominated a selected list of candidates pledged to the 'league program. At the general election a league legislature, governor, secretary of state, state auditor and justices of the supreme court were elected. Because half the senate held over rrom tne previous election the league did not control that body and few of the league bills were rjassed. But the strength of the league had been demonstrated. Business interests were aroused from their apathy. For tne nrsi time they sensed the strength and determination of the farmers, and for the first lime thev. and even the league leaders, sensed the great dissatisfaction .if wiik wnpiitn nnii salaried dp on if? toward middlemen, who. in an effort to exact large profits, use a two edged sword which cuts the producer and consumer alike. The business Interests then offered to cooperate with the farmers for state owned elevators and flour mills which would afford relief from the control of the grain industry exercised by Minneapolis and Duliith grain syndicates. They agreed to join hands with the farmer and consumer m eliminating middlemen who were making too great a profit, but they were too late. League owned state and county newspapers branded these tardy oners of assistance as insincere and camouflage. League organizers preached tne doctrine of class rule and class hatred. It was a revolution of producers and consumers, and the flame of passion which swept over the state consumed the business and interests of local mercantile establishments as well as the Interests of the great nonresident grain companies. Farmers forsook merchants who had carried them for years and traded with the league cooperative stores. Farmers who hesitated to support tne league were ostracised, neighbors refused to help thrash their grain or even lend a hand in time of need. Fortheir own protection doubting farmers were compelled to Join the league, contribute funds to its support and patronize its stores. Dissatisfaction with marketing conditions exists In Oregon. Thus the low price of cattle at the Portland stockyards has not been reflected in the cost of retail meat. In 60 days the Non-partisan league begins its active canvass of this state. Would it not bo well for Oregon business Interests to profit from the experi ence of North Dakota business men? later in the spring. It : adds two months to; the period of feeding and adds enormously to the cost of pro duction, ijlt comes at the, moment when the price of the beef output is falling rapidly. It follows the wartime appeal of the government to stockmen to in crease production and the response of the stockmen in borrowing money with which to extend their operations. It Is attended by a further fact that is embarrassing to- many stockmen: Money lenders, frightened by the fall ing prices of beef, are calling upon stockmen "for payment of the money which the latter borrowed to extend their operations at the time the gov ernment appealed for a larger meat output with which tq feed the armies and the people. A meeting of stockmen of the vicin ity is to be held at Paisley, April 4 to consider the situation; Letters From the People f Communication sent to The Journal for publication in thin department ihould be written on only ono fide of the paper, ehould not exceed 800 word in length and must be i-ned by the writer whoae mail address in full must accom piny the contribution.) fort day and night, that we are war ranted in regarding them one ana aux with highly serious attention. They are part and parcel, too, or a prooiem nation-wide. Is it another of life's little Ironies that one of the pet eco nomic ideas -with which we started our IndeDendent housekeeping should in come a notorious example of arrested development' Of a11 earthly Place". might have been predicted with most confidence that here the principle of taxation would grow to full maturity. Yet mentally it has hardly got beyond This lnrtr la in arjDreciauon or Assessor Reed's papers the last two Sundays on "Taxation Problems, ana to express the hope that they will be widsiv read and well considered. In a way, it is like following the course. 01 a true story, whereof we are author and publisher both ; wherein we figure as the characters, make and record the incidents and keep continuing them In our ntrt an interesting serial, with sequel but no ending. C. S. R. newly caught rainbows lie gleaming before enamored eyes and within call of a yearning hunger, which is the surer way of transforming them Into a delicacy for which Jupiter would have ignored his ambrosia and Venus turned from her dew of honey? . To delicately establish an intimacy between the gleaming jewels of the stream and the meal of ground corn is the accepted practice of a thou sand streams. To build a tiny and smokeless fire with a diameter slight ly less than the frying pan has ap proval beyond cavil. But shall the trout be placed in hot fat tried from bacon, the strips of bacon reposing on the upper sides of the trout as they turn to golden brown? Or shall they first be tenderly deposited in a pan where flakes of sweet butter bubble and add zest to appetite by a pungent savor that belongs with the aroma of the firs and the dashings of the nearby stream? The time has come for confession. Decision of the controversy is beyond the purview of a swivel chair. Take us to both pans full. things had happened? It would have been a Question merely of when and wher.e the child was to be buried. There are thousands of parents in Portland who are criminally negligent of their children. The victory gardeners who are disappointed that the city council declined to net the clock an hour ahead should not be discouraged. It is even more profitable to hoe the. beans and spuds in the morning than in the evening. Then the soir is mulched and ready to benefit, and not burn, under the heat of the sun. Who ever : grew a garden by the A PROPER CHOICE THE faculty of the University of 1 A modest grange on the Pacific voted a declaration of independence against overpriced suits, hats and shoes by agreeing to dress plainly. If farmers with their incomes and their direct call on raw materials can thus humble their vanity it ought not to be difficult for women and business men to follow the ad vice of Mayor Moore of Philadel phia and reduce the cost of living by "casting aside society and vanity and custom for a time and becom ing regular men and regular women." THE MONEY SCANDAL, CHAJ Of HARGLNG that Senator Borah knew large sums of money spent by eerned. about making the Oregon Medical school Is to be congratulated upon Us selection of Dr Richard B. Dillehunt as its preference for the deanship of the school, made vacant by the death of Dr. K. A. J. Mackenzie. The ratification of this choice, which rests with the board of business re8ents of the university, seems as- aiifiM.wl ' surea. , But industries grew. The personnel lne Present emineni sianaing oi uie In the nlant numbered 100 or 1000 university oi uregon weaicai scuoui . .... I im -1 1 1 Kd r lnci inrr mnnnmdnr In tVlA "men. Misunderstandings crept in. " .a.uo Uivuu...w.w , v.. Employers waxed rich. Thev fonrot lale Ur- Mackenzie ana direction or me their workers. There was mnrp. con- tuc development of the Institution , eern. -In the office about the shop along the broad lines laid down by the machines than about the welfare of1" aean W111 resi in capaDie nanus, the; human machines. Then came ror throtign nis association witn ur. . organization on both sides to fight Mackenzie as assistant dean, Dr. Dllle- tach 'other.- After that Strikes ftnd nunt naa ampie opportunity to Decome lockouts were Invented, and the prod- full" acquainted with the progress uct of It all is industrial warfare on a scale never dreamed of in earlier days. Here is a fundamental : The Wall street for Roosevelt in 1912 the Oregonian questions the Borah motive in alleging that similar large sums are being spent now by Wall street in the Interest of other presidential candidates. It is not difficult to agree with the Oregonian as to Borah. He Is the man who said he wouldn't vote for the League of Nations if it were presented by "the Savior of the world." That sentiment at this time, after the bloodiest and costliest war in history, with all mankind in mourning and the peoples counting their dead, startles any one into questioning the conscience of the man who expressed it. BJUt is the Oregonian right In its insistence that the candidate "who has and spends the greatest sum has, as a rule, the best chance?" Borah does not think so. That is why he is declaiming so loudly against the al leged Wood and Lowden expenditures. It is at least not true when the facts are found out the people do not want the presidency bought. Besides, if a candidate Is $f true presidential stature, he runs on some thing else than money. outlined Dr. Dillehunt is a young 'man of marked ability in his chosen line, an able administrator, and has a person ployer who takes his workers Into his aUtv' essential to the success of such confidence, who becomes of them and an undertaking a part, of them, who keeps them satis fied by ample pay and who thereby awakens their Interest In and concern for the welfare and success of the enterprise, is going to be the winner, agency, number The saloon has been driven out of America. Why not banish ths pistol next? It is an even deadlier Its victims in America 8000 to 10,000 annually, V 'Easter gowns will be modest this ur homicide record is a national 'mr.ff roarfn An announenmant Th I scandal the reference to cut in price or the ecut of the gown? CRIMINAL. NEGLIGENCE THE ANNUAL DISPUTE DETWEEN Twelfth and Thirteenth U streets on Taylor, and about the i - X TOT ' until the world war threw middle or tne block, a child of eight I . IN things entirely out of kilter was r thereabouts strolled diagonally , there ever a question about the rela- across the street, pushing a go-cart live market standing of butter and mountea on roner skates, sucn as tne bacon. The former outranked the children use in coasting latter with all the social divergence It was about the time business peo- whieh distinguishes the colonel from Pie "were en route homeward fn the i the private. evening, and fully half a dozen auto- Ye now that local disciples of mobiles sped along the street while Isaac .Walton are returning to streams the child was en route across. that.aceomplish the miracle os trans- What If the view .of ' a driver had forming the earded wool of noisy oas-J been temporarily obscured by another cades into spools deep and green.fl car? a most difficult dispute lias been e gendered by : the roving Impulse ? 6f the season. ' When out oh the stream and the VANCOUVER LAKE'S BEST VALUE Portland, March 30. To the Editor of The Journal A plan is being vigor ously promoted to drain Vancou ver lake and other low lands adjoining the Columbia river near Vancouver. Wash. As one of the owners of prop erty abutting on Vancouver lake, I wish to enter my most earnest protest against this scheme. The project ts neither feasi bie nor practicable. It proposes a use of the lake bed which Is of secondary im portance. It proposes rthe drainage of S0O0 or more acres at a probable cost of $75 an acre, when', the agricultural lands thus reclaimed would be of far less value than the utilization of Van couver lake for port purposes. Vancou ver lake bears to Vancouver and the pert interests of this district, including Portland, the same potential relation that Lake Washington bears to Seattle. The port development which the future will witness points Inevitably to the util ization of Vancouver lake as a turning E.nd anchorage basin for ships: with slips, piers, industries and trackage along Its shores. . The prospect tnat the interstate com merce commission may adopt the recom nendation of its chief examiner and order a lower fate between Vancouver and Portland and the zone lying to the south of Snake river renders it Impera tive that Vancouver be not divested of any natural opportunity for preparation for the business that would of a certain ty flow in this direction following such a decision. Standing at the head of deep sea navigation, and even more ad vantageously related to the interior by water grade than is Portland, Van couver must not fail In readiness for the assumption of extensive port duties. It will only be necessary to connect Van couver lake with the Columbia river by means of a short artificial canal in order realize upon its importance as a port asset. Those who are promoting the drain age scheme argue that it will benefit the dairying and agricultural Interests near by. Permit me to call attention to the fact that the most vigorous opposition to the promotion of this scheme arises from the active dairymen and farmers around the shores of Vancouver lake. I cannot escape the conviction that the project is essentially speculative in char acter and of Intended benefit to interests more selfish than public spirited. In order to persuade me to join in with this scheme Inducements have been of fered to me which are beyond what pru dent business Judgment would commend, and these offers have gone much further to awaken my distrust than my cupidity. I also desire to call attention to the fact, although It Is proposed to build a dike which would repel the flood waters of the Columbia, thereby permit ting farming and dairying to proceed without Interruption from Inundation, that the subsoil is so porous that many of the lakes of the vicinity rise and fall with the Columbia, although a quar ter of a mile distant. I am afraid that dikes, pumps and other drainage meth ods would prove entirely Inadequate. Consideration should also be given to the possibility that the damming of the Li ke river might result In Its shoaling, thereby destroying Its usefulness in navi gation. Before any definite steps are taken toward the draining of Vancou ver lake, exhaustive tests and investi gations should at least be carried on; and then, if actual construction Is de termined as feasible, practicable and In the highest interest, the project should be deferred until it Is possible to secure labor, material and equipment at less ccst than the present prohibitive high rntes. But I believe the potential value of Vancouver lake for manufacturing and shipnlna; should attract the develop ment energies of all who are interested as property owners In the district under consideration and that the drainage scheme should abe laid aside. Alma D. Katz. INDORSING MAJOR WELCH Troutdale, March 22. To the Editor of The Journal I note with pleasure the candidacy of Major Hiram U. Welch for county assessor. I had the honor of being a buck private in the First regiment F. A. R. D., of which organisa tion Maior Welch was commanding of ficer, and I take this opportunity to state that he was a just and courteous officer, loved and respected by all of the men and officers of the regtment. He was the friend of the man in trouble. vnd as judge advocate helped more than one man to get a light sen tence. He could be approached at all times and had given orders that all men be treated as American citizens. I would like to see all of the ex-service men get behind the major and boost him in on high. Edward C. WllBon. COMMENT AMD NEWS IN BRIEF j ti ? 'i - ! SMALL CHANGE Aprn fool! J a This is not Oregon weather we have been having thlsawek.s There's a strike lit Copenhagen. Won der It it will affect he "snuff" market? Boys who have been playing baseball on the corner lots find snowballing al most as much to their liking. Turkey is breaking into the front page news as much these days as it is ex pected to do along ih November. There's no telling! how long this cold snap will last, but there's still the same vast satisfaction in knowing that it can't last forever. Even before we get summer time quo tations on ice, the dealers are warning that the j)rlc of coal is to be advanced to new high levels. ' As regularly as the news that the fruit crop of Southern Oregon ts threatened by unseasonable weather, comes the news that the Middle Wett Is threatened by a labor famine. This vear the Mid dle West gets In wttji its '"copy" a little pit anead of bouthern Oregon. SIDELIGHTS Motor truck transfKrtation is making nini, mnn than ever, the Democrat declares, the great distributing center of I a large Interior country, which improve ment of roads will greatly augment. Umatilla county, the Pendleton East Oree-nninn naserts. started the rest Of Oregon's counties thinking when Its school directors adopted the $1200 mini mum salary ror leacners ami pi.ovi them on the 12-monfih basis. m "Rain, falling copiously, Is a blessing." observes the Medford Mail Tribunes Smudge Pot- man. "but It does not. aa some would love to, believe, eradicate all need for all time, s of Irrigation. There Is a chance for response to prayer In March, but none in August" The suburban horn commends Itself to The Dalles Chronicle, with Its small acreage, its convenience and advantages. So in the future, the Chronicle believes, we are "likely to seeithe roads radiating from The Dalles llrted ty pretty bun galows and the fields surrounding dotted with vegetable gardens and patches of hay for the cbw, while over to one side of the plot we mayiglimpse a flock of chickens, a pig and Herhaps a calf frisk lng on its tether." v The Oregon Country f ' NcrUiwtat Happening m Brief Form (of tbe Juy ltaader v; OllEGbN MORE OR LESS PERSONAL 1- Randpm Observations About JTown TO CURB "WILDCATTERS. Portland. March 22. To the Editor of The Journal. Wildcat oil and mining stocks are being sold in Portland every day. Haven't we a blue sky law that will reach such promoters? While Attorney-General Brown is investigating the state treasurer's office, wouldn't it b a good idea to give the corporation commissioner's office a brief inspection? Such an Inspection wouM do no harm, and possibly would result in a great deil of good. We hear so much , about ais bonest deals in stocks, etc., that I think the people are entitled to an Impartial and open investigation, and such a plan vajuld certainly be welcome to the corporation commissioner. J. A. Wilson. Another Evans la growing up with the i extended trip th rough Eastern states and United States navy and some day te California. For the iime being the sen hotel lobbies of Portland may be edi- ator is a guest at ie Imperial hotel, fied by the sight of; a second "Fighting but expects shortly Jto have his feet Bob" in the person iof the present Cap- ! toasting at the horr$ fireside ' at Eu tain Waldo Evans, J commander of the . gene. i United States battleship Wyomfng, one ... of the largest men--war afloat. Cap-j w L, Hughson. president of the auto tain Evans is In Portland visiting h s mobUe diBtrlbut company that bears mother Mrs. Mary ;A. Evans of Hart- hj8 na , f ford. Kan., who is i here as the house guest of Mrs. A. J. Taylor and Miss Anna L. Taylor, 262 Park street Cap tain Evans' ship is .'attached to the Pa cific fleet, and is stationed at Bremer ton, Wash. i Kirkland Cutter, j architect who de-1 signed the Davenport hotel at Spokane ( I ana ouier nosieines, inciuaing inose in , rortIand and Tulsa. Okla.. is a guest at trlacler national parK. was a r-omana : thfi Portland hotel. Kerr is Identified visitor on luesaay nignt. suiter came down from Spokane; to meet his mother. Mrs. Caroline Cutfjer. who has been 1 Francisco. Hughson, together with S. S. Werner of San Francisco, is here to in spect the local branch of the company nnd. incidentally, to look In on the con- , Terence of Ford agents with Ford com- pany officials. Alexander H. Kerr, whose business i Charles Severson of Toledo ' has brought In a dressed Duroc hog that ? weighed 613 pounds. ''1 :. r v:' -! Alleging that her husband would not wprk. Kdlth K. Allen of The Dalles has !egun divorce proceedings. r r Cow testing, which flourished for'sev- -eral years in Coos county, has been re- " Juvenated by County Agent Karr. ti C. O. Port wood of Fossil has been p- . Pointed treasurer of Wheeler' county to succeed A. B. Lamb, deceased. ', "V A campaign har been inaugurated Vt; Baker to raise $30,000 tor the" support Of ' the Young Men" liristian Association. Mrs. Loretta S. Yeager. a pioneer reel- dent of Hoppner, has died rrom injuries received a few weeks ago In an auto mobile accident. A conference will be held at SaJem. April 6, by t lie publle service commis sion and the city council of Portland, relative to street car fares. v A sunrise Easter service will be held at Albany in the open air. if the weather will permit, under ttie auspices of the Young Peoples Christian Endeavor. The run of herring In Yaquina bay IS so great that fishermen are fishing only two or three days a week. The herring are frozen and are to be used later for halibut bait. A big steam crane weighing about tons which fell from the irrstle of the--St. -Helens Dock & Terminal convpawy, has boon lifted from the mud and eent . to Portland forrepalrs. A California firm h:is placed an order with A. H. Finnegan of Clackamas county for all tho strawberry plants he enn supply this season. He expects to ship half a million plants. A movement lias been started In Clack amas county to consolidate the school districts of Canby, Lone Eider, Mun-" dorff. Union Hill, Barlow and Marks Prairie into a union district. -"The Newport Commercial club has ap pointed a committee to confer with tne United States Spruce Production oor poratloii' relative to the leasing for a term of 20 years, 'the railroad between Newport and Otter llock. A two day community school will be conducted April 2 and 3 for residents of that section of Linn county west of Halsey and north of Harrislurg. The TRUCE IN WASHINGTON From the PhUadelphla Public Ledaer. Colby is secretary of state. There is no reason why he should not have been made secretary of state five weeks ago. There may be some question about Mr. Colby's talents, but there Is none about his Integrity. Thousands of Americans have been inconvenienced by the va cancy in the state department But the senate, victorious . now and breathing hard, had the satisfaction that comes to it when it puts some new difficulty In Mr. Wilson's path. The high cost of a political feud Jn a presidential year can make the high cost of living seem like a very small thing indeed ! and social Interests are divided between ' course will embrace the study of soils and drainage and livestock. spending the winder; in California. with milling and glass manufacturing properties. G. F. Comstock of San Francisco is E. Penn. general agent here for registered "Just a few lines from J. D. assenger department of the Cana- ! Ia.rvey of Comstock. Or on the Oregon Comstock Is a flag sta- E. (Via naaaana-sei s!o n TXoif, pqIIu-s-v Vi o o rat'iimAri tn ! otei register. uibaa .a i . ,y atuq ,v-- - ki. an a e Wa V i Knnm a V Hj-i j 1 atter an absence or three weeks, which j agricultural section of Douglas county, he spent In touring through the cast j ever the company's lines, with a party Seattle contributes a few well known cf Canadian Pacific officials. "I had a j cHlzens to the population of the Mult- wcnderful time." Is the sum of the In-1 noman nole' again. Among inem ar formation vouchsafed bv Penn. i Judge Jeremiah Neterer of the United Ford automobile aerents from all Darts , f Oreiron in fact from the entire terri- I manager or me tjnmax L,ocomotive com- - anii-aynuicansm law. tory served by the Portland branch of ; pany. and J. W. Dutton. district guard j Bjfjg have been called for by the Cen the company, are In the city today for ! marshal for the United States shipping j tralia school board for the new Llncofn conference with-the advertising man-1 board. Judge iseterer is nere to neip scnooi, ior wnicn oonoi w Federal Judee wolverton to decide uoon uu.vuu kuch , the merits of the Oregon bilingual pub lishing law. THE PLIGHT OF STOCKMEN STATING some of the grievances of Oregon stockmen, W. B- Snider, former sheriff of Lake couMy and now a leading stockman at Paisley, Central Oregon, says. It is quite true that the producer is at the mercy of the packer and a parental government, which, together, are forcing the cattlemen out of busi ness. By government I mean the for est service which, by its rules and regu lations, is making it impossible for cattlemen to operate in this county with any degree of satisfaction. In further explanation of why stock men are being forced out of business. Mr. Snider says: This year we asked for a permit to graze 200 head of cattle on the forest reserve, and were denied the privilege on the following grounds : First, we are a partnership ; second, because we own stock in excess of the protective limit which, in this district, is ISO head of cattle or 1000 head of sheep. Our ranches are surrounded by forest reserves and we are unable to turn our cattle out on the adjacent open govern ment range as they would drift into the reserve and we would be guilty of tres pass and subject to heavy fines. If we should dissolve partnership we would be entlUed to 150 head each on the reserve. Thus tl.e government forces a stock , owner who has ranch property capable of winter feeding- 700 head of cattle to operate at a loea in order to gain a right on its forest. A regulation that is discouraging to stockmen ts that prohibiting cattle from being turned on the range be fore May 1. It means that stock must be kept on the ranches and off gov What, If, frightened by the proximity of one car', the youngster had Jumped into the path of another? -. . What if any one of a dozen possible - ernrnent land practically two months BACK TO THE SOIL Portland, March 29. To the Editor of The Journal Much has been written about the housing problem, but as yet no solution has been found. Eventu ally, in my opinion. It will come to this : The people of small means, the renter, and the man unable to buy a home in the city, will be crowded out some where, no one knows where. Rents are on the increase, and hundreds of people are "house chasers," only to be con fronted with the state ment : "We want to sell ; the property Is not for rent" House buildlne is not s-eneral. on ac count of the almost prohibitive price of lumber, hardware, labor and plumbing, and the demand for houses is increas ing every day. It has become a social peril. The housing famine has spread from the large cities to the small vll lages, where conditions are similar. What can be done to relieve? Where will the worklngman who does not own his own home go? How are we to care for the immigration pouring in upon us from the East and Middle West? Some of the newcomers will be able to buy others will not . I believe small acreage will help to solve the problem, though not fully One does not need a mansion on a small acreage tract, but much of the high cost of living can - be met by a garden, berries and a cow and chickens by the man of moderate means. : The acreage idea is being talked by hundreds of people nowadays. Not only are labor ers, clerks and other workers thinking about the acre tract, and the modest little shack to meet present needs, but many a well-to-do business man also has the "bug." The demand for subur ban acreage is growing steadily, and by late spring much of it will be utilized by homeseekers. There is a big profit now in blackberries and loganberries, as well as good varieties of strawberries, and the addition , of the cow, to say nothing of the poultry, should appeal to us. It is the time when "back to the farm'' is a popular slogan. We need more producers, more small farmers, .more acreage independents. Never was a time, more auspicious. , , A House Hunter. ONLY A THOUGHT From the Employe' Bulletin. Before the accident Think. And then, .without a doubt. There will not be an accident For you to think about. Curious Bits of Information Fpr the Curious Gleaned From Curious Places Many of the most fertile valleys and plains in the world appear to' be the bottoms of ancient lakes laid dry, an exit having been opened by some con vulsion of nature, in some instances by more gradual operations, ior tne waters that were previously enclosed by im penetrable barriers. Most of the great rivers were formerly successions of lakes, like the St. Lawrence river in North America. The level spaces be tween the Allegheny mountains and other parallel chains appear to have been inland lakes, until the rivers which descend from these heights formed for themselves exits. The Euxlne and Cas pian seas, as well as Lake Aral and several others, are the remains of an extensive sea, which covered the great part of the north of Asia, according to the belief of Peter Simon Pallas, the German naturalist. It has been conjec tured that the opening of the Bosphorus was the occasion of the draining of this ocean in the midst of Europe and Asia, the memory of this disruption of the two continents being preserved In the traditions of Greece. ager of the Ford company, and other officials. E. L. McKern and Charles Kirk of Albany, W. A. Gates and A. R. "Vvillits of Medford, George A. Wilhelm of Junction City and A. Wilhelm Jr. of Corvallis are among those here for the conference. They are stopping at the Imperial. Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Gleeson and their three daughters arrived Wednesday at the Multnomah hotel from Spokane. Gleeson has " had charge of the Oregon Moline Plow company branch at Spo kane, but hasTeen transferred to Port land as manager of Che local plant. The official "welcome to; our city" was ex tended to Gleeson and the folks at the Multnomah. a. A. Whlsnant of Bend is a newspaper pencil pusher so thoroughly that he spurns the pen and signs his name to the Benson hotel register witn a pencil stub. Whlsnant is editor of the Bend Press. R. A. Booth Is almost home after an Olden Oreg-on General Fremont's Right to Title of "Pathfinder" Examined. The sobriquet of "Pathfinder" be stowed on General Fremont was often ridiculed by the pioneers of Oregon. Senator Nesmith in an address orfce said : "It is true that in the year 1843 Fremont, then a lieutenant In the en glneer corps, did cross the plains and brought his party to The Dalles in the rear of our emigration. His outfit con tained all the conveniences and luxuries that a government appropriation could procure, while he "roughed it in a cov ered carriage surrounded by servants paid from the public purse. He returned to the States and was rewarded with a presidential nomination as 'the Path finder.' The path he found was that made by hardy frontiersmen, who pre ceded him to the Pacific and who stood by their rifles and held the country against hostile Indians and British threats without government aid or recog nition until 1849, when the first govern ment troops came to our relief." Uncle Jeff Snow Says: Tag days is all right, but when we hear up at the Corners of a tag day comin' In Portland we steer clear of sroln' to town that day. Most of these charities they chase you. up fer with a tag could better be looked after by taxin' the whole state. Why should feller that lives here buy all the tags and the Wirehowzers and Lux & Millers and big property owners that don't live here have no tags to ouy; i Know feller that lives in Los Angeles that tags the people of Portland fer i4U,ouo year rents for his ramshackle corner and he hain't been In Portland three times in 40 year. Thesa charities that's real useful had orter git on the tax rolls. TAXATION PROBLEMS Portland, March 30. To the Editor of The. Journal Pu axles of local taxation, all kinds, surround us and? get under our skin bo intimately disturbing corn- states district court for Washington : D. M. Miller, vice president and general WASHINGTON Pavinsr of the Bradv-Ktma road will he started April 1. The stretch to be paved is five miles in length. Owing to an Increased supply of cream the price of best butter at Seattle has dropped to 63 cents a pound. Contracts for two new fireproof hos pitals in the Inland Kmplre have been let to a firm of Walla Walla architect!. Peach trees in the vicinity of Walla Walla are showing signs of life, but It. is stli; a question whether they can bear, fruit. A Jury In the Walla Walla superior court has held that mere membershtp In the I. W. W. is a violation or. tne. California has contributed her quota of guests to the Multnomah, also. There are C. C. Gilberts, office manager for the Goodyear Tire company, at Los An geles ; H. P. Blanchard, secretary of the Firemen's Fund Insurance company, San Francisco, and Mr. and Mrs. E. Stephenson of San Francisco, where the former is a glass manufacturer. D. H. Bodine. for many yearssherlft of Linn county and for mtfny other years, actively Identified with the af fairs of the Albany State bank, inter est in which he has sold, was a guest Tuesday at the Perkins from Albany. i Joe L. Wilkins, former proprietor of the Palace hotel at Heppner, Or., and now manager of Shlpard's Hot Springs at Carson, Wash., is registered at the Multnomah hotel with Mrs. Wilkins and their daughter. IMPRESSIONS AND OBSERVATIONS OF THE JOURNAL MAN By Fred Lockley s Read here the story of the man wno made . country declared war he enlisted, and the Oreton hen famou. and H .till in tn . aood j djed of pneunionla whie ln service. Last toward the production of 300 eggs a year or thereabout In a nucceeding aketrh Mr. Loekley will tell how a layman, ao to apeak, ha made good in the eaz bnsinesa at Cornllw. Inspired by result obtained by tea experts of the trte- fon Agricultural college). James Dryden, In : charge of the de partment of poultry ' husbandry at Ore ron Agricultural college. Is one of Ore gon's most useful citizens. He has made i Oregon famous along the line of increas- j lng egg production. 'What he has done has meant millions of Increased revenue to Oregon poultrymea. He has converted what used to be a sideline into an es tablished, profitable and self-respecting Industry. We have heard a good deal about what James Dryden has accomplished, but very little about James Dryden himself. I found him willing to talk about his hens, but averse te talking about him self. In answer to questions about his boyhood and ancestry, he said : "I was bornCln Ontario, February 27. 1863. My father, wjio was a farmer, came from his birthplace, Roxburyshire, Scotland, to Canada In the early '30s. My mother's maiden name was Mary Swan. There were 10 in our family, and although I am the. "youngest boy, but one of our family is dead. "I am not a college graduate. I went to Gait Collegiate Institute, as a boy. I came to the United States at 25, coming directly to Utah Agricultural college, at Logan, Utah, ln 183,. the year it was organised. At first I served as secre tary to President Sanborn, who had come from New Hampshire. "My work Included keeping records for experimental work. About two years later I was put in charge of poultry In vestigation. Ours was one of the first, If not the first, poultry departments or ganized. Our first bulletin was on the relative values of laying hens of dif ferent ages. My conclusions were so dif ferent from the commonly accepted theories that the bulletin aroused great discussion. I stated that the hen's frrst year was her most profitable year. I discussed methods of breeding and se- year, after charging off all labor costs, feed, depreciation and all other expenses, the poultry department of the state hos '"pital showed a net profit of over f 11.000. Also our hens there broke the world's record. There were 14 that laid over i00 eggs in a year : one laid 330. We ! Advices from the state fisheries de partment sav that over 60.000 Eastern brook trout are now ready to be shipped to the Grays Harbor "district. Fruit growers In the Kennewlck dls trie are Just beginning the first spray of the season, while the peach crop was killed last December, no other dam- age is apparent. r According to the plan of distribution , adopted by the United States war de partment. Walla Walla county will re ceive a large "number of captured Qer man war trophies. To provide accommodations Jot the nurses at Sacred Heart hospital, Spo kane, the .hospital board is considering plans for the erection of a nurses' home at an expense of J 150,000. The Wenatehee Commercial club has Invited representatives from all . the north Central Washington counties to Join an automobile excursion down the Columbia river March 31. The constitutionality of the Seattle charter amendment, giving discharged soldiers and sailors the preference in . civil service appointments, has heen sus tained by Superior Judge Frater. Summonses have been Issued from the superior court at Yakima for about 230 ranchers takfng water from Cowlche creek, citing them to make a showing May 31 of their claims to water supply. After being out the greater part Of two nights and a day the lury in the case of A. C. Shoemaker, tried at Pasco or; the charge of criminals syndicalism, reported a disagreement ana was die-charged. IDAHO The automobile camp grounds at Lew-" Iston will soon be completed and ready for tourists. Idaho has in reserve from 'the lvli 7 he.ve mated all of these hens with our ! wheat crop 2,618,700 bushels, or 14 per Huu-egg roosters and win bring back to the college, for hatching, half of their eggs. "A flock of ordinary country hens will average- about 100 eggs a year. They will eat as much as the 300-egg hens. With good breeding that Is. breeding for vigor, with good environment and good care you can Increase the yield of the country flock, but of course, by cent or the total crop. . - 44 The demand for laborers In the Mos cow section la unusually heavy and high wages are being offered. "... ' ' The boat Service' to points - m the Snake river above Lewlston as far as . Pittsburg landing has started again with, a large tonnage of supplies for eheep-n men. .avv,- k Tvi m nrii.i 1 npHii 111 unmiiuii. hkhu ?fi took her own life by shooting her-' ' selection you can develop, as we have re, wUh er huHbond because breakfast ; cveiopea nere, a strain oi egg producers." Professor Dryden took out the card of Lady McDuff, and said, "Here is the first hen, mo far as known, that ever laid more than 300 eggs in one year. She produced 303. Here are some recent r cords. We have nine 300-egg hens. Here Is one that laid 09. This one laid 208. Here is the official score card of A27. The first year she laid 240 eggs. the second year 222, third 202, fourth 165. ; fifth 168, sixth 139. severfth 61. She died shortly after the beginning of the eighth year, having laid but one egg that year. Her official total was 1188 eggs, though as a matter of fact she laid over 1200, ! ac she laid a few eggs outside of the ' nest, which could not be officially re-' corded. Descendents of A27 are making records all over the United States. We named her A27 because she was with us i when we started the poultry department. The next year's hens were numbered B. ; the third year's C, and so on. This year's hens are under J. A27 and A60 lived to see their great-great-grandchll- ! dren winning records. They died last year. Every Leghorn we have on the farm "is f related to A27. i "We used to talk about the day of the 200-egg hen. ' Here Is he record of one pen of 60 whose averagjsfor the year was ill ana a fraction. ; nere is tne was not reauy on uiuo. . t if Professor A. R. Combs; head of the agriculture department of the Xewlstor ' 1 Via. realtniad fa a wmnt ? , t. nn0lr,n txt (illTlttf IMnl frt Afl-Ar ihe populous counties of Iowa.; The Boise council will ask for an Im mediate annulment of the order ef the public utilities commission approving two contracts between the city and the Idaho Power company relating to light ing equipment. To the Nullifiers By Tlrzah Lamond Ton eannot hape to rtem the tide that' riling; Tour puny effort only erre to how That Bight to Might. And we are realizing i . The difference between a friend and foe. Ton hare not heard the people' lamentation; Tour erery thought ha been for self alone. Now we'll not listen to your explanation. But judge you by the work you left undone. Too do not heed the erie of atarrins children Their moan of bitter aacuiah tooch no heart Of yt; you eeek-to brand na all aa eowarda. Unwilling, or afraid, to do our part Toe ahall not serre again, who would betray n; We will not troat ym with the maetfcr plan. Tou have not read the stca that a ia , the hearena . "Behold! Behold the Brotherhood of mas! Wolf Creek. Mare 10. lection by which the 4 period of possible averaee for a pen of 87 Barred Rocki laying could be prolonged and I showed j 203 egg a year, and one of them tald by Increasing the productivity during 1 jog. Here is the card tot E24t a grand- the first year that Ithe production of . daughter of A27. She Jald 302 eggs last eggs would be increased during the sub- year. He,-e is a typical card. This hen. cequent years ana now me penoa 01 longevity could be greatly extended. Tills doctrine was so revolutionary that It aroused considerable acrimonious criticism. I came to- Oregon Agricul tural college 12 years ago. "I married Miss Alice KJlm. a teacher whoi came from Pennsylvania, while I was at Utah Agricultural college. We have three sons, Robert, Winfield and Horace. Winfield served during the war in France. "Here are some records from the Ore gon state hospital that are rather illum inating. They have there 4000 Oregon, the strain developed here. In the past the raising of poultry at the Oregon state hospital was net profitable, s Dr. S Finer asked tia to send one of oiir ex pert to take charge, i I sent a graduate. from our poultry nusDanary department. P.533, laid 2&8 eggs her first year and 224 the seconds She started on Novem ber 19 and laid 'nine eggs that month. In December sh laid 22, January 24, February 23, March 27, April 2, May 28, June 26, July 31, August 14, Septem ber. 30, October 23, and 12 up to Novem ber 18, which completed her year. f "Yes. it's a lot of satisfaction to have had the opportunity to do ' something worth while, and I feel that what we have accomplished here has been worfh while, not only to Oregon but ,to the poultry raisers of the entire United States, for it has helped put the poultry industry on a stable basis. There has teen plenty of hard work, but a lot of pleasure, too. ' I have taken a good deal o Joy in the writing of my text book, "Poultry Breeding and Management, as well as in preparing 15 bulletins which xrom our pvuiirj imounui m wmhw ... ..k- -- .-.. . He did rerrrarkable Work.- Whn our nave been distributed rather widely ."-j The Journal Takes Pleasure In Aiding Seekers of Outdoor Recreation Time is coming when the spring call will come from the open road. There are awaiting you a thousand sylvan spots, a thousand witching views, a thousand dashing torrents, a thousand titanic masterpieces of nature. tThls is not an enumera tion ; it is an estimate which Is far below the facts.) You will find a charm In the violets that nod their modest heads Just within the fringe of the forest. Vou will find exhilar ation In the swift flight over paved roads and in the slower and more arduous progress over picturesque byways when the latter have - be come 'passable. , , . Doubtless. It will occur to t you that it is a blessing to have the Un proved roads. The Journal agrees with you, and for years It lias sys temattcally, earnestly, and with, ob vious result, urged a broad program; of highway Improvement - - Doubtless, too. it will occur to you that a center of information "about road conditions would prove of high value to motorists. In that view, also. The Journal agrees with, you. It is constantly obtaining Informa tion about the condition of the roads. Read the good roads section of The Sunday Journal from week to week, and . you will keep posted osr road conditions better than frorrasany other source of Information In the North west. If you are In a hurry', call The Journal's Information bureau, or road department by telephone, and your queries will be cheerfully an swered. To obtain all this informa tion and keep it tip te date are Jour nal accomplishments ; to furnish the information, a phase of public service. 1 . - - - i -