PORTL.4NP, ORECOX. Fntere.1 at rortland. Oregon. PoatoClee as Seeont-Olaaa Matter. tSaparrlptloa Katee rnrarlaMT In Advance iBT MAIU) Ta!I. Fouday Included, one year ..$ JJ Ia:iy. un4ay Included. ' monthe. .... 4-3 IllT. !uoday Included, three montna... 2.- Iaily. Sunday Included, ona mntli. . . . . Ial!y. without Sunday, oca year Inlly. without Sunday, etx montha --I Tally. without Sunday, three montha.-. I'al.y. without Sunday, ona month- - Weekly, ona yaar ..- Sunday, one yar. ................. 6unday and ft ftklj. ona yar (BT CARRIER.) rat!y. Sunday Included, ona year Xatly. bundir Included, ona month How to Kenxlt tend roatolllca money acder. axpreaa order or personal cheek on yaur local bank. Stampi. coin or currency are at tha eender-e nak. tilra poatortlca addreoe In fall, tnrludlns county and atate. Poataca Rate 1 to 14 paaee. 1 cent: 1 to 2a pae.ee, 3 renta; 30 to pairee, rente; 40 to pasea. 4 eenta. Foreign poataca Qonhlt rate. Eaetera Hooloeee OnVea Verra A Conk Jin New Torn. Brunswick buUdlns. CUl rt(o. Sieger building. PORTLAND. MONDAT. AOXV S. 111. Cl'GCENHElM OBESeION. It la probable that the readers of Colliers' Weekly and of the league of yellow Journals that have followed its load hold the opinion that in the can cellation of the Cunningham coal claims In Alaska a great victory has been won over a voracious and un principled trust. The ominous word "Guggenheim" has been megaphoned at the public so often in the attacks on ex-Secretary Balllnger and on the men who have sought to develop Alaska that belief undoubtedly has gained a strong foothold that the thirty-three reputable and enterpris ing citizens who had filings in the Cunningham group were in secret league with the Guggenheim money power from the very date of their original entries; that these men, who axe of prominence and recognized in tegrity in their own community, were the dummies of Guggenheim, were supplied with the funds of Gugaen Tleim and were ready to retire from the field and leave all to Guggenheim at the bidding of Guggenheim, when ever it came. it ought now to be of Interest to those ohaessed by the 'bogy of Gug genheim io know Just how much the Uuggenheims had to do with the can cellation 4)f the Cunningham claims. The statement that the Gdggenhelm operations In Aluska or the attempt of the Guggenheim syndicate In 1907 to gain an Interest in the Cunningham claims ha no direct legal bearing on the final outcome of the Investigation, we venture to say is Irrefutable. In the text of the decision in the Cun ningham case, which is now at hand, the Guggenheim factor receives but casual mention. The Cunningham group of claims were first entered upon In 1903. yet in Commissioner Dennett's review of the evidence we find no reference to Guggenheim ne gotiations until 1907 It Is the Com missioner's assumption, and it Is one of the charges against the claimants, that "prior to location" they entered lnto an agreement to combine the claims for the Joint use and benefit of alL In the decision the Guggen heim negotiations, which took place after final certificates were issued to the claimants, and what was said and done In the attempt to deal with Gug genheim are used only for building up the construction that a previous agree ment had been entered Into from which the Guggenheim proposition was a departure. Says the decision with reference to the first Guggen heim conference In May. 1907: So derided waa tha oppoettlon to a de parture from tha original plan and alvlnr coetrl of tha property to the Guccenhetma that the propoeltlon wae withdrawn and tha Ouacenh-tma were notified that tha mem bers would not deal with them at that time. Referring- to a later conference held by a committee of claimants with Gug genheim representatives In Salt Lake, the decision says: Tha proposition made to the Gusftenhelma waa at utter variance from tha terms of the lareement under which three men aeoctated IhemeelTee and no wonder that many ot them proteeted against It. On another pace of the decision it Is slated that "tue contract entered Into between the committee repre senting the members of the associa tion was not satisfactory to a large majority of the members and many of them upon learning the terms of the .contract withdrew their deeds from Wakefield." (Deeds had pre viously been deposited with W. J. C. Wakefield, an attorney for Cinch & Campbell of Spokane.) Aside from simply forming a basis or the assumption that an association of claimants had been organized for mutual benefit prior to location, the Guggenheim transaction was used by Agents Glavis and Love to obsess the miruU of the claimants, as it has been used to obsess the mind of the public. liy raising the Guggenheim bogy Glavl and Love were enabled to Induce numerous claimants to sign affidavits dictated by Glavls so adroit ly that they could be construed.' not as an admission that the Guggcnhelms had anything to do with the locations, but as an acknowledgment that an as sociation or agreement existed for an other purpose. It was the Guggenheim bogy that caused Cunningham to submit his journal to Glavls and Love. Prom this Journal terrrut have been ex tracted which to the lay mind have a meaning different from the strictly legal interpretation, and these terms or expressions have been given a strictly legal construction In arriving at the final decision. And yet Cun r.lngham was not a lawyer. This is testimony given on cross examination by Mr. Love and taken from the record In the case: Q. And your purpoae there was to ohseaa lila iCnnnlr.gham el mind with tha Idea that tha Ouggenhelm transaction waa the bttga feoo whlcn had to be explained and stood as the obstacle In tha way of their passage? A. Tea. Special Agent Glavis In testifying why reference to the Guggenheim matter was left out of some of the affidavits he prepared for claimants to sign, testified: Wa did not. onreelvea. lay any stress wa were satisfied tnat when that agreement waa entered Into ther had a perfect right to do It. and that Information, wouid not In any way tend to cancel tha clatma aa wa figured It out. While, as Mr. Glavis admits, the Guggenheim negotiations had no legal bearing In themselves- on the case, they offered the one effective means that cotId be used to accomplish the purpose of those who seized It whether that purpose was primarily to discredit the President, hound Sec retary Ealllnger out of office, or Plnchotlze Alaska. It was used to Inflame public sentiment. It as em ployed In "obsessing" the mind of the claimants so. that they could be trapped Into unguarded and unin tended statements. It mattered not that the claimants thereafter swore positively that there had never been an agreement or conspiracy. Public sentiment, particularly In the East, van "ohsesjed" with the Guggenheim bugaboo, so any ambiguous turn that could be Riven the Glavls affidavits was employed In preference to posi tive sworn statements to the contrary In order that tho public wrath might he appeased. In the interest of a Kreat and criminally neglecte"d coun- try and In behalf of the progress and prosperity of the Pacific Coast, it is to be hoped the Guggenheim bogy man thus slain Is now very dead. REC.ILMNO THE HCPREM15 BENCH. There Is a son of James A. Garfield who Is president of Williams College, the alma mater of his father. He.has iews on public questions that he Is able to express clearly and forcefully Addressing the graduating class of Williams College, President Harry Garfield said: if our T-eriaJature moves too slowly, wa prod It with tha Inltatlve: If It pursueg a course contrsry to axpectatlon we curb It with the referendum. In our impatience wa recall executive and even propose to vio late the sanrtuary of Justice and drag judges from tha bench because, daring to consider and to know, they render deci sions contrary to popular feeing. If a Legislature moves too slowly, it ought to be prodded with something: If it disappoints public expectation, the people have a right to make them selves heard. Tet not even the most ardent spon sor of the Initiative has proposed that the people take In their own handa the Initiative of a bill for Canadian reciprocity." or the wool tariff, or a general tariff bill, about which Con gress moves too slowly; nor for a ref erendum on anything Congress has done, for Congress has never been ac cused of moving too fast. A National Initiative and a Na tional referendum Is the logical and necessary sequel of a state Initiative and a state referendum. A recall for a Judge of the United States Supreme Court or for the entire bench would be a dignified and impressive specta cle for all the nations. TRCST3 BECOME PIIIUASTIlROriC. The lumber trust and the paper trust have engaged In a work of pure philanthropy. Love of the American farmer has moved them to take up his cause and fight reciprocity on his behalf at their own expense. Their literary bureau, built up at great ex pense through years of war on tariff revision and tried In many a hard fought battle with the Ways and Means Committee, has been placed at the farmers' service In a war on President Taft, reciprocity and the plain truth. It matters not to these trusts that the facts. If all told, are against them. They select the half of the facts which, with the right twist, will help their cause and ignore the other half. They select their statistics with great care and suppress all which are not suited to their purpose. They are experts with statistics, made so by long years of practice In making; figures He. though their knowledge of farming Is negligible. What they have la de rived from a firm of lobbyists and from N. J. Bachelder, whose plowing Is done In congressional committee rooms and whose harvesting Is at bank tellers' windows. The trusts wish the farmer to be lieve that reciprocity will reduce the price of grain. To prove this they say that since reciprocity agitation began, the price of wheat has fallen. They wish the reader to infer that reciproc ity was the cause; the cause really was the large surplus of last year's crop carried over. The price of bar ley, which is subject to the same del eterious effects from reciprocity agi tation as wheat and Is put on the free list by the Canadian agreement, perversely advanced, while that of wheat fell, but this fact did not suit the purpose of the trusts and they cast It aside as Immaterial and irrelevant. They have worked themselves Into high Indignation over the wrongs of the American cow and American hen. These Industrious animals are to be put entirely out of business by the devastating competition of their Ca nadian sisters when reciprocity enters. The truth Is that In the whole of 1910 Canada produced 4. 000. 000 pounds, or less than half a pound apiece for the whole population of the 1-nited States. The latest figures for the United States available are those for 1900. when the total was 1.491. 912.602 pounds, or thirty-three times as much. The great American cow Is warned to be afraid of the Canadian pigmy. The disproportion In the pro duction of eggs la equally great. A large part of the money derived by the manufacturers from protec tion Is spent In circulating this kind of fiction, which Is now being circu lated, in order to deceive the people into continuing the protection they have and accepting more of it. AX EARLY OlTrTT OF CIVILIZATION. Tho Sunday edition of the Boise Statesman of June 25 prints a picture of Old Port Boise, Idaho, a rambling adobe structure with a central watch tower and low, heavily stanchioned windows and doors, that was made by the Governor in 1849 and was re produced and enlarged by the States man. In a sketch accompanying the pic ture, written by Rev. James Bowen Kunsten. Bishop of Idaho. It is noted that this historic fort was built In ls33 for a trading post by the Hud son Bay Company, but more for stor age of furs and as a rendezvous for their trappers in Winter than for pro tection from the Indians or for a mili tary post as It might, in case of need, become. The very name Port BoUe causes the memory bells of the dim years of a pust century to ring faintly out with Increasing volume and pathos, as the history of this old trading post, that was set In a solemn wilderness. Is re called and the fact that Its exact site Is not now easy to locate la brought 'out. This much, however, la noted: Port Boise was located Just north of the Junction of the Boise River with the Snake and almost opposite the mouth of the Owyhee River In Ore gon. The Boise River has In recent years cut out a channel making the spot where the' old abutments rose an Island of some sixty-five acres. Say Bishop Kunsten: A beautiful and plctureso.ua spot wag thla ancient and memorable atta of Old Fort Ho tee. What atranga scenes occurred hare, trappers coming In from their Ions and weary Journers. Indiana gathering In great n ambers with their pella and noreea for trade, emigrants on the old Oregon trail emerging tired of the dual and waarlneaa of their long trip finding a few days ot rest and recreation before they passed on to make their homa on the Western Coast. No one thought in thoea days of settling la 1 Idaho, which seemed to tha great company of emigrants a vast and perhaps unredeem able dcaert. Now we are standing on thla ppot. once so busy with Ufa and motion, but at present silent except for our own volcea and tha sound of tha watera rolling on to wards the great aea. The place was well known to those who passed over the Oregon trail in the years .between 1846 and 1854. Though still far from the Mecca of their dreams, the coming upon or close to a place in the vast sage brush wilderness that had a name, and, in deed, a location upon the indistinct map of the "Great American Desert," gave cheer to the weary, dust-begrimed travelers who had for months toiled slowly and painfully across the. .(treat wastes. . Fort Boise was a verita ble outpost of civilization, and to pass without even seeing It, on the south side of the Snake River, presaged the end of the Journey if all went well before the snows of Winter blotted out the trail and made further travel by the primitive means at hand possible. Successive freshets In the Snake River have practically obliterated the site of the main part of the old fort, but the past, as a dream, hovers over the entire locality. As a spur to flag ging memory and as a contribution to history. Bishop J"unsten's narra tion of his recent visit to the old fort Is worthy of note, while his sugges tion that others make a pilgrimage to this spot, and' that an effort be at once made to erect a simple but per manent monument to mark the gen eral locality of "Old Fort Boise" Is worthy of consideration. The great State of Idaho in which this outpost of civilization lies would do well to make suitable provision for this purpose. WHERE DISCIPLINE IS NEEDED. Incompetence and cowardice marked the conduct of the crew ot the steamer Spokane. The only people on board the vessel who kept their heads when she struck tfle rock appear to have been the passengers. Sailors and stokers, crazy with fear. Jumped Into a boat already loaded with women and almost swamped It and It was the passengers who righted It. No effort was made by the crew to awaken the sleeping passengers and volunteers performed this duty and insisted that all wear life-belts. The lives of ail except two were saved In spite of, not because of. the conduct of the officers and crew. With discipline and cool courage, all could have been landed safely, for the ship was afloat for forty minutes after she struck. A captain who knew his business andJiad con trol of his crew could have had all his passengers awakened, dressed, provid ed with lifebelts and assembled on deck. He could have had men as signed to each boat to see that women and children had precedence In land ing. sAll could have been away before the ship sank. As It was, only the coolness of the passengers averted a catastrophe rival ing; those which befell the Valencia, the Chehalls. and many other steamers on the Puget Sound and Alaska routes, which the memory would be taxed to recall. There must be a lack of care by the inspectors on Puget Sound, or such officers would not be licensed. There must be a lack of discipline among the crews, or the officers could control them. There may occasionally be some ex cuse for a steamer striking a rock and going to pieces, but there Is no ex cuse for the captain and crew going to pieces when they most need to keep their heads. It Is time somebody was severely punished for one of these shameful Incidents, Just as a warning to the others. Officials who have to dispense Justice to men to whose care hundreds of lives are consigned should be very sparing with mercy. A MOVE IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION. The Oregon Association for High way Improvement has done well to Join the Oregon Development League and the State Grange In the good roads movement. Scattering effort in road building Is largely wasted energy. It savors too much of the old familiar and practically useless method of working the roads by "warning tax payers out" to work for a stated time, according to the tax paid by each upon the proeprty abutting: under the direc tion of men chosen at random by the County Court. According to this method there was one day's work levied for poll-tax and one for each thousand dollar's worth of assessable property owned by each taxpayer of the district, as di rected by the supervisor who called the men out to work the roads. By this meana of working the roads some mudhoies were filled "with earth or gravel If the latter was handy, some ditching was done with a plow on either side of a swampy piece of road, some brush laid ' across the deepest mudhoies and topped with loose earth and In the very worst places new cord uroy replaced that which had been worn to splinters or buried beyond ressurectlon during the Wlnter.'Need less to say the worst roads possible followed this system of road building. A number of the older settlers or residents of Portland may recall hav ing passed over the road between For est Grove and Portland in the stage that carried passengers and mail be tween those two points in the '70s. This road waa the main thoroughfare by which the epople of Tualatin Plains and beyond reached Portland. It was "worked" sedulously every Summer according to the old system, but so clumsily and with such utter lack of comprehension of the first principles of road building that the same old mudhoies were encountered year after year; the muddy, denuded fir branches that had been freshly buried therein during the road-working season of the past Summer, bent and threw mud and water under the pressure of the wheels of the lurching, swaying stage or farmer's wagon over passengers, driver and pitifully toiling team and it was only after from six to eight and even ten hours of this truly primitive "Joyriding" that the Journey of twenty-five miles was completed. Of course, all of this Is of the past. The stretch of public road between Forest Grove and this city was not worse In the Winter and early Spring months than were the roads of many other sections of the state over which traffic was as heavy. Reference is here made to it to show the folly and waste fulness of unintelligent road build ing. Concentrated effort intelligent ly planned; consecutive effort ener getically carried to the completion of the mlieago undertaken; suitable ma terial and money enough to carry the work forward without scrimping or waste, these are the essential elements In building good roads, whether In the Willamette Valley or elsewhere. And. again, it may be said that the co-operation of organizations In the state that are Interested in the good roads move ment Is wise and promises the best re sults. In -conclusion it may be said that every man in this state who can afford to own an automobile can well afford to take, as suggested, an annual mem bership of 110 in the federated organ izations of the state for the promotion of good roads. orrORTCNITV TO INVESTIGATE. If Mr. Kitching. whose letter Is given space In The Oregonlan today, would rely more on plain facts and plain statements, and less on inferences, he might In time change his views on the subject of vaccination. The Orego nlan did not imply that all those who are opposed to vaccination are fools. If It believes anybody is a fool and desires to say so, it will not say it by Inference. Nor does The Oregonlan indorse ab solute reliance on drugs for the cure of all Ills. Fasting, dieting, fresh air, sunshine, exercise, cleanliness will often cure or prevent ailments against which drugs are little more than pow erless. Nor does it assert that vac cination Is an absolute preventive against virulent smallpox, or that a person who has once had smallpox is forever Immune from attacks by the disease. Yet reports of unquestion able authenticity proclaim beyond cavil that successful vaccination in a great majority of cases either renders a person immune or minimizes the severity of the attack. If Mr. Kitching or other antl-vac-cinatlonlsts desire evidence so near home that they can Investigate Its verity, they are recommended to peruse the Bulletin of the Oregon State Board of Health, Volume 4. No. 4, page 1. This bulletin recounts an outbreak of virulent smallpox which was car died to Sllverton by a family that had been touring Mexico. There were nine cases and four deaths. None of the four who died had been vaccinated. All who recovered, except one, had been vaccinated. In 1903 there was an outbreak of a virulent type in Crook County. Of the persons who contracted the disease seventeen had been vaccinated, ana these seventeen recovered. Of the twelve who had never been vaccinated nine died. If everybody lived at life of perfect habits, very likely germ diseases would ultimately disappear from the face of the earth. But so long as everybody does not. or will not. It is necessary to fortify people against epidemics that may, as in the Sllverton case, te trace able to the "unsanitary condition" and "low level of intelligence" of the peo ple of another nation. Will the day ever tome when a Se attle Mayor will not have the voice of the recall dinning in his ears? No body seems willing to admit nowadays that a decision decides. Elective offi cials are recalled, lawyers appeal, ask rehearlngs and new trials, convicts ask pardons and governors parole them, baseball umpires are "roasted" and mobbed. It Is about time we got back to the good old days when a criminal convicted took his medicine, a litigant beaten paid like a man, and a ball player called out stayed out. It used to be considered unmanly to "squeal" on a decision. A naval coal land reserve is the lat est scheme for dealing with the "agi tation over the inroads of private en terprise on the big coal fields of Alaska." "Inroads of private enter prise" Is a new name for the develop ment of the resources of the country. There was a time when men who opened up a new country were called argonauts, pioneers, pathfinders, con querors of the West, the vanguard of civilization. Now their deeds are de scribed disparagingly as "the inroads of private enterprise." T.o irniiAfte'a fleht on reciprocity has checked the inflation of his Presiden tial boom. It was inflating rapidly when he was fighting for a lower tariff against Aldrich. The inflation has ceased and the deflation has begun slrur he has been fighting against a icwee tariff and against Taft. It is true that the people have short mem ories, but La Follette has overesti mated their shortness. Let us hope that, with her last earthquake. California Is finally shaken down Into place and will "stay put." In view of the fact that every now and then, when they get up In the morning, the Callfornlans find they must buy new crockery before they can have breakfast, the Callfor nlans have been wonderfully patient. By pleading guilty, the teller of a Cleveland National bank, who embez zled $960,000, received sentence of seven years In the Leavenworth prison. A common horsethlef would get more. The old boys who had to be content with a few bunches of firecrackers half a century ago can contribute to the sanity of the day tomorrow by artistic prevarication. In naming the delegation from "Ore gon to the meeting of the American Prison Association, Governor West was altogether too modest. Mrs. McGreevy, the amazon of the baseball ground, enters the ranks of heroines with Queen Boadicea, Joan of Arc and Barbara Frletchie. Another Columbia River log-raft has gone to pieces, to make fuel for the beachcombers and trouble for the mariner. When the Governor of Missouri visits the Governor of Oregon, he will be shown how to temper Justice with mercy. A Hood River hog eats money and chews tobacco, but he positively will not endanger his digestive organs with a pipe. Marrying a centenarian is the latest amusement among the women of Ev erett, with divorce as a variation. The features in the portrait of the father of the Merrill quadruplets show resignation to the inevitable. The train robber is 'as hard to catch In the wilds of Pennsylvania as in the valleys of Oregon. Who will first explode a lawless bomb tomorrow morning? Perhaps, in time, the ground hog may be trained to foretell earthquakes. The rains cracked a few cherries, but filled thousands of granaries. Gleanings of the Day Hawaiian suger planters will invest about 11.000,000 in a sugar mill .at San Carlos. Occidental Negros,' Philip pine Islands, with 20 miles of railroad and an ocean wharf. . Free trade between the United States andthe Philippines has caused an im mense increase in the imports of American cement Into the islands and has caused the Hong Kong cement plant, which has hitherto controlled the trade in the Orient, to pass a divi dend. American logging engines cannot compete with the elephant in the for ests of Burma. The cutting of a large number of trees in any one place is not permitted and the moving of log ging engines through ' the heavy, swampy Jungle would be expensive. The Philippines will oon be ahead of the United States in postal service. Within six months the islands will have complete parcels-post and money order arrangements with all countries and colonies in the Far Bast. The number of vessels passing the Suez Canal in 1910 wa 4533, with a tonnage of 23.054.901, as compared with 4239 vessels, with a tonnage of 21,500,847. in 1909. The earnings ot the canal in 1910 were $25,174,254, as com pared with $23,284,037 in 1909 and $20, 926,070 In 1908. Motors for liquid fuel . are coming Into general use In Germany, not only for automobiles, motorcvcles and auto trucks but for factory engines, nflnes and for all purposes on the farm. New Zealand's preferential 'tariff of 20 per cent against countries oilier than Great Britain and her colonies has taken practically the whole paper trade away from the United States and given it to Canada. American plows won the first prize at the Siamese Exhibition of Agricul ture and Commerce and large orders for them are expected to be given. Vice - Consul - General Hansen says women and children were able to plow with thera. He does not say whether the men looked on and applauded. Until ' recently neither the principal city on the Atlantic nor the principal city on the Paclflo Coast had direct communication with main lines of rail road. Both were reached by ferry. New York has changed this since the completion of the Pennsylvania Rail road tunnels and terminals. To a new city such an obstacle would be a hopeless handicap. Senator Works, of California, has in troduced a bill to limit the number of saloons in the District of Columbia, which is described by the Army and Navy Magazine as "a mean, slimy, slip pery way of bringing about prohlbl tlon." He would reduce the number from 500 to 100, allow saloons only on business streets and not within three blocks of an alley used for rest dence purposes. Theodore P. Shonts has ascended to the pinnacle of fame. He first attract ed notice as a successful railroad builder, then as a railroad president As head of the Panama Canal Com mission he came before the eyes of the Nation and of the financiers, who gave him a better railroad presidency and induced him to desert the canal. The talents of his daughters won the admiration of the late King Edward, which brought him before the eyes of Europe and secured one of his daugh ters a French Duke for a husband. The climax to all this fame is his wife's suit for separation after he hae been accused of alienating the affections of a distiller's wife. The secret of Governor Deneen's success is out. He has a voice so at tractive that Hines' telephone girl re membered the honeyed words he spoke over the wire, though she forgot all other phone conversations heard in 10 years. California's progress in 1910 is re viewed in the annual report of the California Development Board, which has a tasteful cover bearing a colored map of the state. This shows San Francisco as the "Exposition City, 1915." Population, products of all kinds, banking business, exports and Imports, real estate transactions, taxa tion are. discussed in the greatest statistical detail with illustrations. The appendix includes articles on the cli mate irrigation, educational facilities, and ."The Call to the Immigrant," and a large map of the state. Those who are alarmed over the prospective exhaustion of the fuel sup ply in the coal mines, forest and oil wells of the United States can comfort themselves with the thought that there are 12.888,000,000 tons of peat in reserve in the bogs. Sir Almroth Wright, an Irish phy sician, has begun a campaign against every modern idea of hygienic cleanli ness and he has found a follower in George Bernard Shaw, who revels in eccentricity. At a recent meeting, Shaw proclaimed his objection to wash ing all over, though he takes cold baths as a stimulant. As an argument for abatement of the smoke nuisance, he is won by escape from necessity of bathing. If it were possible that Shaw's ideas could win, the bathtub trust would break, but the doctors and druggists would win what it lost. The Wisconsin Senate has hurt the tender sensibilities of United States Senator Stephenson by refusing a sub scription of $25,000 for state parks, and by refusing to name a park after him. It is coming to a pretty pass when a rich man cannot use his money to per petuate his name. What is the poor man to do with his money? This re form wave is destroying the main in ducements to get rich. Vice-President Sherman will go down in history as the presiding officer of the Senate who has decided more tied questions than any official In his line. He broke the record last session, when on three successive roll calls his vote was the deciding factor, the principal measure being the mail subsidy bill. Students of statesmanship then racked their memories to recall when a Vice President previously had been called upon to exercise his particular vote casting prerogative on an important question. VACCINATION AND l:SE OF DRUGS. Writer Classifies Them Together and Condemns Both. PORTLAND, July 1. (To the Edi tor.) I want to make a few remarks on the editorial entitled "Efficiency of Vaccinations." I realize that the weight of so-called "authority" is with The Oregonian, since he quotes Govern men statistics and few people have the temerity to doubt these, especially since the majority of the readers of The Oregonlan are as rock-ribbed as it is and haven't the least bit of use for "cranks" and "visionaries." However, I must take exception to the inference that all those who are opposed to vaccination are fools. If The Oregonian doesn't know it. I would like to inform it that there is a very considerable number of people who have evolved away from drug super stitions, of which vaccination, inocula-. tlon, etc., are but logical sequences. Do drugs cure disease? If so why should any one die from any of the-so-called "common" diseases? Does vaccination really prevent smallpox? Or does the cleaning up of the filth that caused It stop the spread of it? If a person's vital resistance Is strong will he not throw off the germs not only of small pox, but of tuberculosis or any other so-called germ disease? The Oregonlan has so long enunci ated its beliefs with so much assurance that one must assume that it has in vestigated all of the questions it dis poses of and its dictum must of neces sity be correct. I beg to submit the following quotation from the June is sue of the American Journal of Clinical Medicine: "Many a physician is thoroughly dis gusted with drug medication. So is the public It Is not necessary to expati ate. Stripped of their mystery. Judged by the standards of modern times, the old drugs are trash." And again let me quote from the same authority: "Diphtheria is a dis ease of houses. It clings to those where the hygenic conditions are especially bad, and no precautions will avail to prevent ' it in such localities.. It de mands that the premises be put in an absolutely hygeinlc condition, and if this were done the disease would be come extinct." Very good. I submit that smallpox is also a filth disease, finding its origin and doing its greatest damage in lo calities where sanitary conditions are bad and the general level of intelli gence low. The term filth does not apply simply to outside conditions. I mean internal filth as well as external. Individuals whose intestinal canal is a mass of decaying filth are the ones who contract not only smallpox but fevers as well. Now I contend that it is better to clean up. Inside and out. stop the manufacture of the bugs, than to inoculate the people with a differ ent kind, but no less deadly, filth. Just a word in regard to the Gov ernment statistics. It is quite signifi cant that these are always taken from some distant point where it would be almost impossible to question them. Figures do not lie. but liars are always figuring. The Oregonian quotes the Government Marine Hospital service with the same unction that the Christian quotes his Bible. Let me ask if The Oregonian recalls the matter of the quarantine of the whole State of Cali fornia some 10 year3 ago by this same agency?' Old superstitions die hard, and the old line M. D.s don't propose to let their gTaft get away from them if possible. If the people don't wake up they will find themselves bound hand and foot with a National Health Bu reau. That word bureau reminds me ot Russia. CHARLES E. KITCHING. 7111 E. Foster, Portland. CRIMINAL ENERGIES NEED VENT Writer Would Give Murderers Life of Hard Enbor In Eleu ot Nooae. PORTLAND. June 30. (To the Edi torsIt has not been many years since old England had the death pen alty for a score or more crimes, even theft among these. But since science's strides toward popular enlightenment and the upsetting of old, dogmatic re ligious notions of "fire and brimstone, punishment and placing in its stead the fact that both heaven and , hell must be here and now and of our own mak ing, we have awakened from a long, lethargic sleep of ignorance and super stition to a realization that man has a spark of Divinity, and that even in the murderer there lies dormant the brotherly love motive. Therefore, we as Jurors cannot sit in Judgment upon an erring man, knowing It means an other crime legal taking of life and pronounce that man guilty when there Is the slightest shade of innocence in his behalf. No. the time is near at hand when we will take all that crime, which is only "misguided energy," and through compassion and severe discipline guide it Into channels of usefulness. Governor Oswald West is right In motive and he will be the pivotal point of a great reform of our penal institu tions, which today are bent upon keep, lng the erring one on the "torture rack" of no outlet for his great pent up energies and at the day of "free dom" (?) branding him with the scarlet letter. What the public mind demands Is less crime, and we will not sit in Judgment of one to send him to death. The murderer must have a vent for his passionate energy. A "life of hard labor" under proper surveillance would make him a better man, a producer, and help the general mental atmos phere of the Nation and hasten broth erhood. Crime engenders and begets crime. Compassion and wise guidance make of us all useful men and women. A JUROR. Judite, Not Criminal. M'MINNVILLE. Or., July 1. (To the Editor.) On page 3 of The Oregonlan of July 1, a news item dated at Sheri dan savs that the circuit court at aic Minnville had Imposed a fine of $200 on William D. Easter and L. VI Hoptieia. T am not a criminal nor has anyone by my name ever been convicted of a crime, so I thererore Kinaiy asK mat the error in the item be corrected. The conviction referred to was in the Justice Court over which I preside and I imDOsed a fine of $200 and a Jail sentence on one William D. Easter and also on John D. Belt, of W illamlna, which is quite another matter from be ing convicted of being a bootlegger my self. The Initials given in the name -are my brother's, but they were evidently meant for me, as I am the only Hopfield who had any part in the case. This appears to be a huge joke to some of my friends, but I fall to see the point. L. S. HOPFIELD. Salesman Stlrfcn to for "Lovely." Cherryvale (Kan.) Journal. A young woman In Cherryvale asked the polite salesman if he had good cheese. "We have some lovely cheese," was the smiling answer. "You should not say lovely cheese." she corrected. "Why not? It Is," he declared. "Be cause" with a boarding-school dignity "lovely should be used to qualify only something that is alive." "Well," he said, "I'll stick to lovely." Paris to Have Duellists' Banquet. London Echo. A banquet Is being arranged in Paris in honor of the 250 duels in which M. Rouzler Dorcleres has had a share, either as principal or as second. M. Dorcleres. who is a Paris journalist, has made dueling a speciality. No one will be admitted to the banquet who has not crossed swords with him, or who has not employed him as a second. Advertising Talks Br William C. Freemai E. P. Jones, of Bristol. Tenn.. at a recent annual meeting of the National Association of Hosiery Manufacturers, held in Philadelphia, said: -Trademark Good which are adver tised are selling well, wbile those man ufactured and sold through general trade are not." "It looks," he continued, "as if man ufacturers who hoped to establish and retain trade would have to specialize, brand their product and advertise it." Mr. Jones is right. This is the age of specialization. People want to know what they are buying. They want what they buy to be stamped O. K. by an O. K. manufac turer who is willing to back up what he manufactures. The people want fixed prices, too rea-sonable prices, of course, but they want to feel that they can bank on both the article and the stability of Its price. The only way a manufacturer will be able to build and hold a business is to produce a reliable article, advertise it as such, and do the advertising In the community where dealers are either handling or can be Induced to handle his producta. The consumer is naturally the one to appeal to with advertising, and the shortest route to satisfactory results is advertising in the cities and small towns and villages where the home newspapers are carefully read by the people naming the dealer in the ad vertisement in that people will know where to buy the article advertised. Why the circuitous route? Why not get right down to bnalneaa In the first place? Advertise to the consumer throufrh the nevrspaper and get his or her trade without much fuss about It. (To be continued.) Country Town Sayings by Ed Howe (Copyright. 1011, by George Matthew Adams.) You no doubt have tried many "rem edies." Ever find one that was a rem edy? I longed for a certain thing 20 years. Finally I got it; as good as I had dreamed of. and better. Was I satis fied? No: I at once began looking for something else. If I knew a man who loves his en emy, I should despise him. That's ask ing too much. You hear of such things, but I don't believe there ever was a girl who mar ried a man she disliked, to please her parents. Any man who believes that In a few years people will travel everywhere in airships, is generally regarded a Pro gressive. A rebel can always justify rebellion. There are two classes of people newspaper reporters are compelled to deal with: people who have really in teresting items, and have a stubborn ambition to keep them out of the paper, and people who have uninteresting items, and who are determined to have them printed. A country town man who is at the seashore refuses to go bathing In the ocean, saying It looks too much Ilka a lot of people using the same tub. Every man who does political work, does it with the hope of securing a job for which the people will pay extrava gant wages. , Ever remark how cash customers are admired? You can save money, and at the same time be popular by be ing a cash customer. No man's credit is as good as his money. Half a Century Ago From The Oregonlan July 3, 1861. A comet, of whose name we are at present Ignorant, made its appearance on the Northwestern horizon on Sunday night. From the appearance of its rays its course 13 evidently northwest. . The committee of Clackamas County have selected the grounds for the state fair. They are about a mile north of Oregon City and on the north bank ot the Clackamas. They are said to be beautiful grounds, possessing all the advantages of shade, water and con venience to the city desired. Yesterday Messrs. King and Knott, with the aid of some convicts, by means of a large capstan, removed several large snags from the river which hart been for a long time a great annoyance to vessels and steamers. A Walla Walla correspondent of the Christian Advocate states that a party of California miners from Washoe had arrived at that place. They came by the way of the City of Rocks, Fort Hall and the emigrant road down the Snake River. When near the place of massa cre last vear they had a fight with In dians, killing four, which they sa-y they "stacked up dry." The Fasting Cure. PORTLAND, July 1. (To the Edi tor.) Of the many good things that one reads on the editorial page of The Oregonian, the article on "The Fasting Cure" that appeared Friday, June 30, was one that many readers were glad to see. Wo feel sure the publishing of this will call forth the profound thanks of hundreds of its readers, if they will but express them selves. There are many people in this 19th century who believe that Nature's laws should be respected when it comes to the care of the human body, as well as In matters of less Importance, and who fully realize that fasting and scientific feeding are as valuable to a man as they are to his high-bred horse, and know that these are some of the most potent agencies employed In cure and prevention of disease. In tact, it is one of God's implied commands that Dr. Gassier and many others who wish to claim his proitilses seem to have overlooked. There are several organizations in Portland that have been trying for some time to disseminate just such principles. Their 'flourishing growth shows that people are outgrowing medical superstition and looking to the true source of help. Dr. Gassier foresees that "happy day" when the medical profession will dictate, etc. The answer following this statement expresses the sentiment not only of the lay mind but also of many of our noted physicians, whose visions are perhaps a little clearer than Dr. Gassler's and who foresee that the sane principles advocated by Upton Sinclair and others along this line will govern the health of this Nation. Then it will indeed be a "happy day." IDA B. HUMPHREY. 383 East Forty-fifth street, North.