PAGE TWO THE GREAT WHITE PLAGUE Eminent German Scientist Claims Discovery of Serum That Will Cure Dreaded Disease The world looked up in wonder and breathed a sigh of relief when it was announced some time ago that an ef fective serum, secured from the turtle, which would cure all eases of tubercu losis except those in the last stages, had been discovered by Dr. Frederick Franz Friedmann, a German scientist. Mr. Friedmann announced that he had clearly demonstrated the effectiveness of the serum in a large number of cases and that he could supply it to the world at a comparatively nominal fee. He said also that the supply of the serum was unlimited and could be furnished to every physician of the world in any quantities desired. Tele grams and cables began pouring in on Dr. Friedmann, but be has as yet re fused to give the serum out to the world. He gives as his reason the fear that it may come into the hands of improper parties and that if he an nounces its dispensation quacks and fakers will arise and announce, as they have done in many a former case, that they possess the coveted remedy. He fears the medical profession will suffer from such a result and is undecided what course to pursue. The fight against tuberculosis has been age-long. It will continue just as long as the sweatshop, the coal mine IS THERE A LIMIT? The achievements of wireless during the short time since its'discovery have furnished the most startling evidences of the advance in modern science. Un less it be the science of aviation, wire less has made the most signal success. For the first time in history Christmas greetings were sent from Mare Island at San Francisco to the United States capitol at Washington, December 25 last. The messnge was from Captain Mayo, commandant of the Mare Island Navy Tard, and was received by the giant radio station at Arlington. It conveyed the wishes of Captain ' Mayo and other officers at the navy yard to the secretary of the navy and the officers of the navy and marine corps for a "merry Christmas and a happy New Year." Skeptics the world over hooted at wireless before it was a reality. They hooted at aviation before the Wright brothers made themselves famous and established a new mode of travel by their experiments. So they hooted at .the steam railway in days past and at the telephone, telegraph, printing press and every other thing that has made the modern specialized systom of labor and promotion a possibility. And they will continue to hoot, a few of them, as long as they live. Is there a limit to the achievements of wireless t Men who have followed its success almost universally 'agree that there is not. Year after year it has passed the hopes of its promoters. Already it has paid for its discovery a thousand times over in the number of lives it has saved on the ocean. When the fated Titanic sank wireless did its work, and, had the ships that heard the message heeded the call, all might have been saved. Scarcely a week passes that some new achievement is not recorded. History repeats itself and there will be no limit to the achievements of wireless. Indeed, the most sanguine would predict the even tual linking of the earth with Mars by wireless. Certainly on this earth there is no limit. FoundsTurkishSociety With the work of the Red Cross So ciety as an incentive, Mme. Rijaat Pasha, Christian wife of a Mohamme dan representing Turkey at the British court, has founded a Turkish organiza tion very similar in purpose. During the Balkan troubles the society has been of material assistance in render ing aid to sick and wounded. and the dust-laden faetnrv- nmiin. Frimanlv. It is the child of neplmrt. iir. norance. alcoholism, but. dAenar than ' that, the seat of the trouble lies in "man's inlililnBfiUv If 17 . ! um ub.icbb .re neing invented mat carry off the dust of factories, legis- . i.Uu.Fb. uon-cr cuuui- tions in the coal mines, and it is honed the "back-to-the-farm" crv will non relieve the crowded condition of the ... - tonAmonta nf lnA Tl.., . xjuw uu- til these conditions are relieved, the great white plague will continue to ex act its toll from tbe ranks of the wage earner, whose germ-infected body ex udes the seed of further destruction. Gratifying as are the results of re- cent scientific methods of treatment of the disease, it is still significant that the death rate among consump tives is about one in eight. This im proved ratio is due to the cTAAtnr At tention to fresh air breathing, better ventilation in houses and the realiza tion on the part of weak-luntrnd Hon. pie that the night air, far from being injurious, is tbe best air to be bad at night and that cold air is not neces sarily injurious. Within a few mnnth the death rate has been reduced from one in seven to one in eight. It is hoped the discovery of an effective serum will prove indeed a reality. WILL LOWER LIVING Not everyone realizes the exact sig- nuicance of tbe Panama Canal from the standpoint of shortened distancA between Atlantic and Pacific ports. It tancs considerable time for the hnnvv freight steamors to bo from Now York to the Orogon and Washington ports arouna tne Horn, a distance of over 14,000 miles. Whon the Panama CatiaI is completed this distance will have Deon cut down to approximately 6000 miles, thus affording a saving in time ujuhb oi iour-seventns of the former time. When the vast saving in ex pense of transportation is considered, the full meaning of this trreat ventim of Uncle Sam can be realized and the public should benefit by that saving. In fact, it is freely predicted that the effect of the reduction of carrying ratos that will result from the opening up of the canal will ereatlv affect the high cost of living aguinst which there is so great an outcry all over the coun try. His Name Meant Business Too. It was just before election, and ho wandered into the headquarters of his political party in the thriving Long Island town. He was warmly welcomed by the local leader, who otahtipiI hi hand and said: "Make yourself right at home, sir. Do you know all these gentlemen This is Mr. Scales, inspector of weights and measures; and this is Mr. Oaves, our local undertaker: and this is Mr Td.v the locksmith; and this is Mr. House, the builder; and Mr. Wall, the con tracting stone mason; and Mr. Cutler, the hardware merchant. And now, sir, if you please, what may your name bet" "Who, met Why, I'm Schmell, the sKiink. farmer. Just started a place nil union t east oi nerei" What He Got for Boasting. "Father," boasted the farmer's son home from college for over the hnll days, I m the strongest man in our fnWantk fl.ia If uu..Ku kino JD1, "You don't mean to tell me!" "Yes; thev tested me with Aiftar. ' - - cnt kinds of strength-testing machines in me gymnasium, and mv mmtA ihnwa i - t hat I tn the strongest student enrolled there this vaat. . Tho niini.oi , .v.,,w., u,i,, says I m a modern Hercules.' " ' My son, I'm glad to hear the crood I news. Instead of troino- hnrlc fn nl. B B lege you can stay home here and help ma lift tl. -CM it m niuiiiagu uii. me iarm." 'Hea HaW." A locturnr xvah nnnnva Vv a m nn i I j - iu the audience who inn'mfafl nn viaiti w ...Ug uu i asking questions. Sit down, you ass!" said a second man, jumping up. - - " Sit down you, too!" cried a third n-an; "yon are both asses." "There seems to be plentv nf about tonight," put in the Wtni-or cnlmly; "but for heaven's sake let us near one at a time." "Well, you go on then," said the first man, resuming his seat. Boston Transcript. Nothing Doing. "My next immuttashun," said the vaudeville topliner, "will be an im muttashun of the Senate Committee at Washington enligtening the public on the result of its investigation of cam. paign funds." The staee was then left for twn mi. utes in total darkness. Chicago Rec- oru. Oh, Pmnea. "Are yon any vood at dateaf ' the man with the poor memory. "no," replied the man with the poor digestion, "but thanks to my boarding house experiences, I'm very well acquainted with prunes." Mrs. Cawker fsevarelv M.rU aa you accept a kiss from Mr. 8mith last nignii Marie Cawker (hesltatlngly)Tes, mamma, but it was pressed upon me. Convict Leasing System Given a Hard Jolt (Continued from page one) ...i- i : I i tl. a i -i ivjimi guuui xuo ouubu was Diva, xroiu its long period of deprivations. Crime I . ... wa increasing, for tbe crafty were quick to take advantage of conditions, The new problem of the negro stared them , tne fa(,e( ignorance, supersti t u. j . I ..:jj .: v i khiugu uuiiuu ui 11 1 a ucn uuaiuuu 11 a -1M started the erstwhile slave on a I . . .. . series or crimes and misdemeanors that threatened another great war one in B which the pent-up passions of race ha' tred would find full sway. The South was bankrupt and crime was never be fore so rampant. So when the sugges tion of a new servitude for the crim inal negro was presented, the South seized upon it and the convict-leasing system was established. The condition thus imposed upon the necrro was. in mnnv rennetA. whtm than slavery. His master was, as a rule, or tne type who represented the worst of the former sIava ownnrn. TTa lnokerl to the business end of the transaction. It was cheap labor he secured for the plantations and turpentine camps. He paid the state from $100 to $300 per year for each prisoner and the state cared little what became of him. The prisoner was taken far into the wil derness, was chained to bis fellow, made to work from fourteen to twenty hours a day and then prepare his own supper at night. Doctors were expen sive and convicts were, cheap. So it was cheaper to let the sick convict die than to secure medical assistance and save him. It was cheaper to make him sleep in his chains in a stuffy room without windows than to hire a guard to keep him from Tunning away at night. It was cheaper to make him fry his own scant piece of bacon over a smouldering log in the chill night wind than to provide a cook and a comfortable shelter. As time went on and the system was perfected, sheriffs, justices and juries became part and parcel of it. When the five-year contract was made in Gooreia in 1904. bv the terms of which hundreds of prisoners were turned over to contractors, the newspapers flared before the public eve the intellis-enca that the Btate would be the richer bv a net profit of $225,000. Vain hopel A review of the history of the system shows that in later years the state re ceived very little of the amount paid by the contractor. The county got no money until the sheriff, deputy sher iff, county solicitor, bailiff, court clerk, justice, constable and other officers naa eacn received bis share. All the political machinery stood in with the contractors, who were, in some cases, members of the legislature. And this with the knowledge that the money was nothincr less than blood mnnev ex torted at the expense of the helpless convict. Sorry fate! Out of those leased to contractors for five years many never came back. In some of the camps one out of every four per ishedkilled by the heavy toil, by the fever of the swamp or by the cruelty of heartless masters. The death rate In private camps was double that in the county gangs. And in the face of these facts, the perpetrators were shielded and saved from indictment by a machinery that knew nothing of jus- tice but to pervert it, In some of the counties of the Smith. ern states, justices could sentence men convicted of a misdemeanor to hard labor for a period not exceeding twelve months. In many of these' courts the charge was never proven ... . ' Poor, il literate, withut knowledge of the work inns of the Courts, without, th manna '- to employ counsel, the unfortunate ne .u vvuuaoi, but) uuiuriuiiate no' gro was at the mercy of the system tta . J... .iumv umi, iyu t ittj worse man denth, for, in all probability, there u i. , ., . . nuiuu us uu ena to nis sentence, oucn was the outraire of inatice cnmmittAil "wo V..U uiHinD UI JUOtlUe CUUUUIIslOU in flinso rmirfa thnf ih nfn. w11 lnti1nA : i it., j "w. e UIO DlgU OUUVO IIIO UUUi. "All hope abandon, ye who enter i . ..... here." He left the court bound for a rlnnfl hnnidn whiMi Ttonta'a TnfnmA waa narnrlioa TXTkn V:. 4.ij. j ;a.imA v . oB uj, ma employer provOKea V.tn,!, vt s - i . " duu mm rqu a uroiner con vict and both were immediatelv hauled before the justice and meted out a new twelve-month sentence. Thus the law - - ' - "' " t-wi.i vj, mug lug law was satisfied, the public protected, the contractor and the state enriched Again, planters needed help. It was a simple mattor to go out and capture a pair of burly negroes, haul them be fore the justice and register the charge of 'debt against them. What chance had the negro f The practice was com' mon amonir planters and it waa a aim, pie matter to retain the nrvlc nf th captive, for as soon as his fine had oeen worked out a new charge was brought against him, witnesses were produced to prove his guilt, the sen tence was repeated and the unfortunate negro expiated his imaginary crime to the profit of the planter. A fine of $50 waa often imposed for a trivial of fense. The planter paid the fine and carried off the offender to work it out at the rate of fifteen cents a day. Within the last few years, publie sentiment has become so bitter Auain.t the system that its abuses have been greatly reduced. .But there is still enough of evil in it to compel a whole sale pardoning of prisoners by the out going governor of Arkansas. His act will precipitate action on the part of the legislature InnVlnir ti.. abandonment of the practice. The end will doubtless justify the means, for the knell of the convict-leasing sys tem has sounded. SHERMAN ANTI-TRUST LAW IN OPERATION Supreme Court Makes Important Decision in Patten Case and Indictment Are Returned Against Heads of Railroads The recent decision of the United1 States Supreme Court, affirming the indictment in the New York Federal Court of James Fatten and his associates for cornering the cotton market in 1910, is in line with an awakened ten dency throughout the ennntrv in Yinlil responsible masters of high finance, wno carry on tneir monopolistic opera tions with impunity at the expense of their less fortunate neighbors Mr Patten and his associates will have to stand trial for violation of the Sher man anti-trust law, for the decision roferred to declares that to corner in terstate commodities, such as clothing and food, is, in effect, a restraint of trade. Chief Justice White and Jus tices Lurton and Holmes dissented from the majority opinion. The case is significant, in that it is one of a chain of events that herald the doom of the stock exchange. Dur ing the past ten years an ever-increasing cry haB gone up from the Ameri can people for relief from the condi tions arising out of our financial pol icy. A few men have amassed enor mous sums of money by the skillful operation of which on the stock at. change they are able to control the price or commodities. They do this by buying up the entire sunplv of a given commodity and withholding it irom me puDiie lor a snort time, thus giving the law of suddIv and a chance to work, with the result that me price or the commodity begins to soar. Then they unload the goods at the increased price and nocket tha plus. The consumer pavs the hill Briefly, this is the storv of Mr. Pf, ton 's manipulation. The Sherman anti trust law nas been brought to bear against him and he will have tn tor,A trial. The action of the ormrt ;n have the approval of the masses of American people and tlm niitnnmi f the trial will be watched with interest. lhe defense made the content; that a control of the supply of cotton would have a stimulating effect upon the ...aiivou j.ney claimed also that there was no intent to restrain intemtoto trade. In replying to the former con tention, Justice Vandevanter said that, while this might be true for a while,' me corner was forbidden by the act because it thwarted the llRllAl nnavo. tion of the laws of supply and demand, Quality is In the Varnish World the Murphy name is a Guarantee "Murphy Varnish Company," on the can or on the label of any Finishing Material, settles the question of Value. It means that the Varnish, Color, Stain, Enamel, Konkreto, or whatever else, is the Most Reliable Product of the kind. This Reputation has been Secured at Great Cost, through many years of persistence in the realizing of an Ideal. You needn't be at all afraid that the Murphy Standard will ever be lowered. It is worth all it has cost. This Quality Reputation must be lived up to. Any Ques tioning of it would sacrifice the Biggest Asset in the Murphy Business. CHICAGO, ILLS. The Varnish that Lasts Longest Make the Run your farm on a business basis and it will pay big dividends. Let me help you to weed out unprofitable crops and ventures to so plan your work as to make your farm more profitable. I have perfected an easy-to-keep Record Book which will show yon at a glance What your profits are on live stock and individual crops the cost of labor and miscellaneous expenses which cost is too great for what it produces acreage yields monthly and yearly gain or loss how much yon owe .nd others owe you, etc., etc. ' This Record is the Best, Easiest and Simplest ever de vised for the Grain, Truck and Fruit Farmer, Stock Breeder, Dairy and Poultry Man. It costs but little and will be worth hundreds of dollars to yon each season. withdrew the commodity from the nor mal current of trade, enhanced prices and produced practically the same evils as the suppression of competition. As to the latter argument, the court said it made no difference that there waa no allegation of a specific intent to restrain interstate trade, or ' ' the con spirators must be held to have in' tended the necessary and direct con sequences of their acts and cannot be. heard to say to the contrary." The manipulation of necessities such as clothing and foodstuffs is the mostj far-reaching and baneful of all the! stock-gambling devices. The public pays the bill in any event, but it can stand a raise in the price of steel far, better than a raise in cotton, wool or wheat. An increase of a cent a pound in the price of cotton does not bring a great burden upon the individual who buys a shirt made from this cot ton, but' when it happens in a dozen different commodities, and keeps on happening, his pocketbook very' soon feels the drain upon it. Furthermore, the matter of a cent a pound looks like a small profit to the man who makes the raise in price, but when it is con sidered that this increase is npon every pound in the country, an idea of the profit can be had. This is the princi pie of stock-gambledom and this is the thing the American people have set themselves to rectify. Most conspicuous among the railroad prosecutions of the past five years is the indictment of Charles S. Mellen, president of the New York, New Haven & Hartford, and Boston ft Maine Bail roads, and Edson J. Chamberlin, presi dent of the Grand Trunk Railway of Canada. The act of which these gen tlemen are accused is that of unlaw fully agreeing ",to prevent the con struction and completion of any of the Grand Trunk New England extensions, to prevent the operation of the Grand- Trunk steamship line" between New lork and Providence, "and to prevent the transportation of persons and prop erty in interstate and foreign com merce over said lines of railroads and steamships." Mr. A. W. Smithers, chairman of the board of directors of the Grand Trunk, is also named in the indictment. The thing that actually happened and that shows again the immense prestige Economy Murphy Varnish Company FRANKLIN MURPHY. Pre.id.mt ' Aociled with DouiaII Varniih Company. Limited, Monacal. Cnd NEWARK. Farm Pay More Money Mr. E. J. Novak, First National Bank km. nut who operates a farm in the South, wrote m.A 19th, 1912: "Some time ago I purchased n.n? ApWt er's Simplex Records and coCiTJXJT ment I have ever made.' I don't see hn- .belt 1" get along without it." ,ee how nyody an As an owner of my Simplex T?n.j me a. often as you wish about thKefuW1"'9 to Business problems which eonfrouAK ? TWr ing I will give yon the benefit of year. i i.nn,WOT solving of the Farmers' business diffTcultfe. 64 th' Write me today. You obliirate vnni i ' I will give you information thatH b' nf"0 a7' ,nd to you. 111 1,9 of much value , A. O. REICH, P.pt I, B 0hJeago held by men of wealth, was the enter ing into an agreement whereby New England was sliced up and diveded among the railroads involved, with the understanding that each company was to keep out of the field of the others and all operations and constructions under way were to be abandoned. So it happened that bridges, cuts and grades were left in a half-finished con dition. Needless to say, New England was thoroughly aroused. Providence was torn up to make a place for the tracks of the Grand Trunk, construc tion being well under way. But the railroad suddenly announced that it had withdrawn from the field and would not complete its line. Expected railroad develnnmAnt Krinfr. ATtanatv building along all lines and the in jury wrought by the sudden withdrawal of the Grand Trunk was far-reaching. The effect of the whole arrangement was a comer of traffic to the extent that competition was practically killed. Hence the indictment, which is meet ing with approval in New England, Another incident in connection with the New Haven road is the announce ment by President Mellen that the road would sell its steamship lines in 1914. The Panama act is responsible for this announcement. In this bill is a pro vision prohibiting railroads from own ing and operating coasting steamship lines unless they can justify such own ership before the Interstate Commerce Commission. Mr. Luther Conant, Jr., commissioner of corporations, in a re cent report, gives figures to show that the New Haven Railroad stands first among the several roads controlling the coast and river navigation of the coun try. The report says: "In acquiring their extensive con trol over domestic water-carriers, rail roads have had in general three pur poses: First, to eliminate the compe tition of water carriers; second, to ob tain an entrance into territory not open to their rail lines; and, third, to secure valuable feeders, mainly local lines. "In the case of the New Haven sys tem all these purposes are apparent. For some time past the New Haven system has pursued a determined policy of suppressing any effective competi tion on Long Island Sound; several, at least, of its recent acquisitions must be regarded as due to this policy." N. J. I