:THE JOURNAL AH INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER f. S. JACKBOH Pnbllaber frabllabfd avary a-ranlng (except BnnflaT) a4 ry Bandar moral n it Tb Journal BolUI- inf. Bwewar md Yamhill ats,. Krtlnt. Or. Catered it the noatofflce et Portland, Or., for , traoamlMkm ibrougb tb mails Mcosd clan matter. ' .IKLKfHON ICSMate 7J78; Boaw. J , departments tea-be4 by these npmoers. yaw ihm MMritnf what rinrtmnt T'U W, B r . ITUHICIOM ADVEUTIHINO ttKPBKMNIATIir Benjamin A Kestnor Co.. BrnMwlck Bia.. ' - aaTVlftb Are.. New Sorki 13W Feopto Oaa Bid., fblnn. . Subeerlptloa terme br mail or to aaj areas la to United -States Baxltol a ay rOaa ; aar. .Id.OO I On Djoott. .... -w On 2.K I On swwrta..... I -. DAILY AND SHNDAT. JOae faar .ftM I Oca month I -M n. tnr Ttraordl- iO - " - nary circumstances to do good actions; try to tine ordinary situations. Richter. A' J If QUESTION OF EQUITY N PASSING upon the application of Eastern railroad lor au thority to Increase freight rates fiv ner cent the Interstate Commerce Commission has a dual :duty to discharge. It must pro ject the public from extortion and 'discrimination and on the other ihand it must see that the railroads Ishall receive sufficient revenue to !pay fair dividends upon the capital Invested. The issue is to be deter mined not by the technicalities of -law but according to the principles j "-of equity. When the government Assumes the right to regulate raies "And service it also takes upon it self the burden of protecting hon st Investments. He who comes into a court of 'equity must come with clean hands nd he who seeks equity must do equity. The railroads carried on ja nation wide campaign to create a sentiment that would force the commission to grant their request for advanced rates. J Newspapers amenable to influ ence appealed to the sympathies jand fears of the public. They ;were aided and abetted with in terviews from leaders of Big Busi ness and resolutions from commer cial organizations. It was pro claimed that the Increase of rates ;was the price of prosperity. When the Interstate Commerce Commission entered upon the pending hearing, it indicated its Intention to assist the railroads in finding additional income and it pointed out that the railroads rnlght collect vast sums fairly due for services which are now per formed free for favored shippers. .These sums In the aggregate ap proximate the Increase In rates requested. In a word the commis sion uncovered - a huge system of rebates and discrimination just as oad as the old and condemned one of "secret refunds" and "rate schedule Jokersi" The commission found that the railroads are favor ing large shippers with free switch ing service to and from private hidings, ferriage, and lighterage transportation from warehouse to freight yard, saving cartage ex pense, holding loaded cars as long as ten days without charge, loading and unloading without additional cost and even making actual cash payments to shippers for loading, unloading and carting their own feoods. ... The revenues wasted in this manner of rebating reaches an enormous total. On ten cars at Chicago the cost of free service was per cent or, tne revenue derived. In June, last year, one half of all the cars received at a ?ew York Central station on Man hattan were unloaded at the car Tiers' expense. Special switching service on private sidings at Phila delphia costs the railroads from 3 to $4 a car. It is estimated that 40,000 cars a day are handled free of charge throughout the country. -. The testimony being brought .out In the hearing before the In terstate Commerce Commission Shows that the railroads are not fiolng equity and that they have not : come into court with clean hands. WHO GOVERNS THE UNITED STATES? NSWERING the Marshfield Chamber of Commerce in Its re quest to him to oppose the repeal of free tolls, Senator Lane of Oregon says: preiHont wiinr haits assured ma oerBonaily that, from his study of the question and perusal of state documents, ha, has been com pelled to conclude, much against his personal preference In the matter, that this' government Is under solemn obligation to permit English vessels to usa the canal on the same terms as our own. It is claimed by some that the senator's language means that he will vote for the' repeal MIL It does not mean as much as that. Senator Lane has always been an Independent thinker. He has never played his life role as some body's "man." It is not likely that he is going to be against free tolls now merely because President Wilson is against free tolls. Nobody has a higher respect for Woodrow Wilson than does The Journal. He is a' chief magistrate pre-eminent. He is working out many glorious reforms in this republic. He is one of the foremost statesmen of his time. It Is no disloyalty to President Wilson to differ with him on the tolls issue. This is not an era when the king can do no wrong. That was the old doctrine of divine right. A president, no matter how eminent and patriotic, is merely human. He Is not above the possibility of being mistaken. The United States is a free country because we have the right I to differ with the man at the head of the nation. If we had not I assumed the right to differ with our chief ruler in 1776, there would be no United States. If the people of the United States ever stop doing their own thinking and allow one man or a. few men to think for them, we will cease to be self governing. ' In opposing the repeal bill. The Journal is aiding President Wil son. If the United States senate defeats the repeal bill. It will save President Wilson from grefct future embarrassment. If Senator Lane can supply the voteato beat the repeal bill in the senate, he will render the president an incomparable service. The repeal of free tolls would inject into the congressional cam paign ' an issue that will tremendously handicap the Democrats. It would give the Republicans a rallying point on which to stand a most excellent chance of capturing the next House. That would at once stop the reform that Woodrow Wilson Is working out for this country. For a little while, it Is easy to explain to men, who do not know, that Great Britain's ships have equal rights in the canal with our own. That cannot be done for long. There is no way to explain that we built the canal, that we paid for it, that we must keep It up at a cost of several millions a year, and that, with all that, -it is as much Great Britain's canal as It Is ours. The masses of the American people will never accept such a contention, and it is folly to try to make them accept it. It Is not human nature for them, to accept It. There Is not a people in the world who would accept it. Nor is there a governing head In the world outside of the United States that would ask them to ac cept it. Suppose Great Britain had built the canal. Suppose the British people had spent $400,000,000 in its construction. Does anybody believe for one minute that the United States would be permitted to tell Great Britain that British ships could not be given free tolls through the canal in her own home trade, or In any other trade? Does anybody think Great Britain would for one minute tolerate any dictation from us as to what she should or should not do with her canal? Under the treaty of 1815, Great Britain is doing today exactly the thing she Is refusing to let the United States do at Panama. That treaty provides that no higher or other duties or charges shall be Imposed upon vessels of the United States In British ports than those placed in the same ports on British vessels. - But today, the port charge at Bristol, England for an American ship entering or departing is 5 6 cents per ton. For British ships in the coastwise trade It is 20 cents per ton. r At Liverpool the harbor rate is 38 cents per ton for American ships; for British coastwise ships, it Is nine cents per ton. The jauguago ui iuo u caij ui isia is eveu mruuger man me nay-t Pauncefote treaty, yet Great Britain Is favoring her coastwise ships in exactly the way that she refuses to permit the United States to fa vor our coastwise ships, through our canal. By and by, if the senate completes the repeal of free tolls begun by the house, all these things will become known to the masses of the American people.' The Republicans and the Progressives will make It very, clear to them at campaign time. President Taft has already told them that we have the right un der the treaty to free toils. He said: I am confident that the United States has the power to relieve from payment or tolls any part or our snipping that Congress deems wise. We own the can&L It Is our money that built it. Theodore Roosevelt has told them that we have the right to free tolls. He said: steamboat as security for payment of the note. ' In court, the defendant said that Ulrich told him that It would be necessary to splits the fee between the arresting officers and others who had .newspaper Influence. Ul rich says the $500 note was re quired to cover the possible cost ' of an appeal to the .supreme court. ; As a result of the trial, the defend ant was fined $100. It is such business that plays a large part in bringlpg odium upon the. bar. It throws suspicion on the courts. It casts shadows over the police. It ought to be stopped, and stopped ' forever. Judge Stev enson has done much to clean up the police court. He Is entitled to great credit for what has been achieved. He can do much now by pressing this case before some authority by which It will be prop erly dealt with. A FEW SMILES The rivalry between Seattle and Tacoma which began when the lat ter wanted to call the mountain Mount, Tacoma Instead of Rainier, is still existent. Ex-Mayor HI Gill of Seattle, who was recalled, came back. Ex-Mayor Fawcett of Ta coma, who was also recalled, is on his way to "come back," having passed the primary gate. Louis W. Hill is one railroad man who has the correct Idea about good roads. He says "good roads make easy travel, make more farmers and better farming. ine inevitable result Is better busi ness for everybody and the rail roads first of all." A Dublin gentleman was spending his vacation with some friends In the west of Ireland. As he was being driven to his desti nation he noticed a 4 bog that promised m e,wu nuwwus a p; asKea nis jarvey r there were any snipe in it. "Shnipe. is it, sor? Did ye say shnipe? Shu re. if ye went into that bog widout a gun they'd ate yez!" :! i , i PERTINENT COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF SMALL CHAXGB One day three Germans who had just come over to this country were walking along a country road. They anew only a ifew words of English apiece. One could say "We three,": the other could say j'For 60 cents," and I the other "The sooner the better." Present ly t"hey saw a jman lying by the roadside and they stopped to look' at him. "While they were standing there an officer of the law approached and ad dressing the first German Bald: "Who killed that man?" "We three," answered the first Ger man, j "What did you do it for?" the of ficer inquired of the second German. "For 50 cents,"! was the answer. "Don't you know you will be hanged for that7" was asked of the third, and he answered: "The sooner the better." Letters From the People publication In this department ahould be wrlt 2 m ,ida of tb Pper. aboald not exceed 800 worda in length and must be ac companied by the name and addreae ot the eender If the writer doea not deatre to nare the name published, he aboald so aute.) "Dlseuasion la the aMtMt rf all Mfft,m Itrationaliaea everything it tonchea. It robe princlplee of all false sanctity and tnro-we them back on their reasonableness. If they hare no reasonableness, it ruthlessly crushes them out of existence end sets up its own conclusions in their stead." Woodrow nuson. A Jarvey was driving with an Eng lish visitor on a bitterly cold day in December through the wilds of Conne- mara. They became quite sociable on the way, and the native, in a burst of confi dence, pointed out a shebeen where the "best potheen in Con naught" might be obtained. The Eng lishman, o n 1 v too giaa to get an opportunity of warm ing himself, offered refreshment. wnicn oner was: readilv accented. "Tis a very cold day In these parts. zui, oDservea tne tourist. "Tis, your xionor,- repnea Fat. He raised his glass, and the contents speedily van ished. "And there's truth in the old sayin , ho suggestively added, smack lng his lips, "wan swallow nlver made til Baby bye, here's a fly; let us swat him. you and L A selfish life, however rich or note! one may become, is a dismal, deplora ble failure. However many costly new things a candidate favors, he Is also In favor of lower taxes. No matter what cities they chose, the regional bank commissioners would have been criticised. Isn't it remarkable that even San Francisco was chosen as one of the egionai bank cities? There is yet time for candidates who cannot possibly resist the Importunate solicitations or tneir inenas. Maybe the bridge bonds will he held nconstltutlonal. but It is to be re membered that there is much less Judi cial unconstitutionality than tnere was lew years ago. T fa a Tn V. I t m. V. will make a suggestion to Wallace Mc Cain ant similar to that made by Candi date Woodrow Wilson to Colonel George Harvey. Villa seems to have taken Torreon but Huerta knows how far it is. and what sort or country, between there and Mexico City; so will continue to eat, drink and be merry. Fact Is. the people demand many fhinea that cost a srreat deal or money. Yet with legislation and admlnlstra- ion in the hands of competent, unsel fish men. no doubt taxes could be re duced much. 9 m Representative Hobson spent weeks in Alabama campaigning for the sen atorship; Representative Underwood stayed in Wasmngton attending to nis duties. Underwood won by a big ma jority. . m Rut raw wool has not for several years had the advantages of the tariff protection that the law purported to give it. It has lona; been the goat ol tariff agitation. Oregonian. But when Senator Chamberlain made the same statement, and proved it, the Orego nian sneered and jeered at him, and asserted that only the tariff prevented the total "ruin" or the wool industry in Oregon. ALWAY8 YOUNG OHN BURROUGHS, the natur alist and author, who recently celebrated his seventy-seventh birthday, said: "I never felt better in my life." Z Like Peter Pan Mr.. Burroughs has resolved never to grow old but to keep "the eternal child tarry ing" in his heart. ' - The true birthday of a man or a woman is not marked by a date but is defined by an experience. In a rare old book i it is written ".marvel not that I sktd unto you, ye must be born again." Those who grow old are those whose hearts are shriveled and small, who feed on malice and false tes timony. Like misers, their last thought at night and their first care in the morning are of self. .They seek no contact with their neighbor. Jealous and suspicious, they live alone and bemoan the ap proach of age. ' How different are the lives of those who are always young, x think we nave tne right to rree bona fide coastwise trafflo from tolls. I think that this does not interfere with the rights of any other nation, because no ships but our own can engage in coastwise traffic, so that there is no discrimination against other ships when we relieve the coastwise traffic from tolls. In 1912, the. Senate of the United States construed the treaty as giving us the right to free tolls. The House construed It the same way. Every living man who had a chief part in ratifying the treaty declares that it was understood at the time that we have the tight of free tolls. The supreme court or the united States, under the treaty of 1815, has decided the principle and on the side of free tolls. Rich ard Olney, one of the greatest living authorities on international law, the man who wrote the ringing Venezuela message, and one of the greatest Democrats of all time, declares we have the right of free tolls. Senator Lodge, the man who reported the Hay-Pauncefote treaty to the American senate for ratification, declares that It was under stood when the agreement was ratified that we had the right of free tolls. President Wilson, according to Senator Lane, recommended the repeal "much against his personal preference." In his time. President Grant said in a message to Congress: x commend an American canai on American soil for the American peopie. President Hayes said to Congress in a message: ine poncy i tnis country is a canal under American control. The unueo. states cannot consent to surrender this control to any European yvwer. ... Thomas Jefferson, one of the greatest statesmen of all time, said: That the marketing of our product will be at the mercy of any na tion wnicn uaa possessed itaeix exclusively of the means of nirnrln? them, and our politics may be Influenced by those who command our commerce. Great Britain, In commanding the repeal of free tolls on a canal built by us through our own territory at a cost of $400,000,000 Beemsron tne pomr. or controlling "our politics." Justice White, the Democratic chief Justice of the United States supreme court, said in a decision on the treaty of 1815: Neither the exemption of coastwise steam vessels from pilotage re- BumnK irum a iu.tr 01 we umna otaies nor any lawful exemption of coastwise vessels created oy state law concerns vessels In the foreign vi auc, auiu me, tiuu vj iiwiiywai uevs nm uperaxe xo produce auoruninatioa against wain Tssseis ngagsd la such trade. tiere is a long line or eminent Democratic, as well as other authority, on the side of free tolls. Along with It Is the admission vi vi it; a. v- ciiuuu uoiocii m no uuie oi protest mat, if con fined to bona fide coastwise trade, the right of the United States to free tolls is conceded. If the Democrats repeal '- free tolls, they will repudiate a iree tons pians in a national platform in which they oeciarea: Our pledges are made to be kept when In office, as well as relied upon uuiuiK tne campaign. i no utsuiwraui in iu eeuaus tu rentier resident WllSOn no higher service than by beating the repeal bill. They can render the Democratic party no more effective service than standing by the L warning of Thomas Jefferson and preventing "our politics" from be ing influenced by those who command our commerce." Domestic Relations Court. Portland, April 9. To the Editor of The Journal Referrlno: to the editor ial in The Journal of April 1 under the -caption "Menace of Divorce," it occurs to me that you may be inter ested in knowing that we are now working on a bill to be submitted to the next legislature to create a do mestic relations court, modeled after the Chicago court, carrying that desig nation. I am Informed that this court I is really branch eight of the municipal court of Chicago and has been desig nated the court of domestic relations by the newspapers. In the report of this court for the year from December 4, 1911, to No vember 80, 1912, I find this significant paragraph: "The court would fall In Uts work If It were not for the generous ana constant support of many philan thropic organizations, whose assistance has enabled the court to achieve a large measure of success." I have written to the six organiza tions mentioned specifically In this re port, for a brief history of their work In connection with this court and as soon as I receive replies shall take up the task of acquainting our own various philanthropic organizations with the ground covered by them, pre paratory to launching the work of this court successfully, upon the passage of the bill. It Is estimated that 60 per cent of the families who had separated and were brought Into this court in Chicago during the year were Induced tot rees tablish the home. This entire report Is intensely interesting and an article in the American Magazine for January by Ida M. Tarbell also indicates some thing of the work we hope to see ac complished in Oregon within the next few years. Judge Oatens. of this city, has given me all the assistance possible so far and as soon as I get the bill In shape ior criticism it will be submitted to him as well as to the judges of the other departments for, their criticism and suggestion. MRS, C WINTERS ROSS. a saloon; all without the slightest effort to learn why the demoralizing trade exists. He does not suspect that profit Is the heart and soul of the traffic In liquor. i In spite of the fact that the prohibi- xion crusaae is essentially a fake move ment, it embraces one teaching, that is In harmony with the spirit of the times the doctrlno of confiscation ap plied to property that has been stolen from the public The prohibitionist proposes to take away without com pensation the property of the distiller, the ealoon man and the hop grower by a method as effectual as pointing a gun ana commanding them to dijr up And upon what ground does he base his contentions? Simply, that the sa. loons have killed, robbed and ruined so many people that they have for felted all right to consideration by the state. It follows that every man or woman Interested directly or Indirect ly in the liquor trafflo should have his or her property confiscated. "We will follow the above line of reasoning a little further. Railroads, steel mills and factories of various kinds ar killing, robbing, maiming and ruining more men, women and children every syear than the liquor people have ever dreamed of; there fore. It follows, logically enough, that these Industrial pirates should have their property confiscated by the gov eminent; it would then bo used by the government In the Interest of the peo ple. If Henry Dubb goes to the polls and votes to deprive the saloon man, the distiller and the hop grower of prop erty without compensation, he may 1 time become capable of thinking, and vote to deprive exploiters of the peo pie's property. However, it may be. Henry, by voting to relieve the liquor Interests of their property, is thereby estopped from denying the righteous ness of the doctrine of confiscation when applied to pirates of commerce. LOWELL. M. SHOEMAKER. are on earth to serve and to help, to comfort and to uplift, to give ana to receive. 4 For them the calendar has no terror. They believe: The - glory ' born of roodnesa neuer . 1 dies: . - And Its flag Is not half masted in ; the skies. -As year is added to ;year and they become more wise and see more deeply they are less prone to censure and more inclined to a pro- They l found compassion thatwould en fold the world In comfort and peace. the arms , of AN EXTORTIONATE !FEE HATEVER may be the facts. the alleged extortion of an " exorbitant fee . from River man Amos In the Portland municipal court Bhould be probed. Amos was accused of disorderly From Ella M. Finney. Gervals, Or., April 8, To the Edi tor of - The Journal The John Day lady uses dlplojnacy, forgetting that ne who Is not with me Is against me." I am a daughter of Mrs. Duniway's republic. She has a right to remem ber me. I have not criticised her: others did until I felt sorry for her. If Methuselah still lived, he would be too smart to be a prohibitionist. "Be not drunk with wine, wherein is excess," "says Paul. Jesus was not a prohibitionist. The Jews were and are a temperate people, without the word "prohibit." How Is that? George Washington, Roosevelt, Taft, Wilson and Bryan are temperate. In Lincoln's day prohibition was not the fad. If it had been, the southern portion would be slaveholders. Prohibitionists are among our "finest hoppickers. The big. fat brewers are our commercial cous ins. I hope they will give us a high price for our hops. The Los Angeles chamber of commerce went on record against prohibition because It would cost growers 150,000,000 a year. How about our Oregon and Washington growers and their labor? These must vote wet. Human slavery, white slavery and murder 'are separate evils. For the sick and the dying, morphine is a god send.. Cocaine stops our yells at the dentist's. The misuse of these is hor rible; like liquor, they must be con trolled, but not abolished. The judges referred to were our Judges ' for enforced law and order. Counting Oregon counties and the stars on our flag, I estimate our United States Judges 2067, all fine fellows and good' Judges (of whiskey as well as law), necessarily temperate. We admired the W. C. T. U. for Its monu mental generality and temperance. The lofty looked down and the lowly looked up to It. It spurned our gen erosity when prohibition tnade.lt tot ter. A 1.360.440.000 world power can conduct ana at the Suggestion of 1 Pit Kansas and Sweden in the shade OREGON SlDELlGHTa (VnM.rahi. street Improvement at Bayocean is contemplated this season. The Tillamook Herald s correspondent says it is thought three or mure uu of pavement will be put down. Wasco county's largest tax collec tion afiTrrefi-a.ta for a single day tma IN EARLIER DAYS By Fred Lockley. "The second year 1 was at Deep Hole Springs." said Cy Mulkey, "I found a meadow 30 miles from Deep Hole and 12 miles from the main road. There was a small spring near by, and as I had more demand for hay than X could furnish, I concluded to locate this meadow and build an- year was 163.638.93, on March j other station. I called it the Granite compared with the largest day last year of 139.824.77. on March 4. ThM itM rlfl ransre west of Mc- Minnville has been reurveyed, and is being put in shape for spring target practice for UcMinnvllle's company of tne U. N. v j. tteguiar praciico wm begin -May 1. a m niirinir Msrch hut .42 of an Inch of rain fell at Medford. which is 2.86 inches below the normal, 'rnis maxes the deficiency from the first of the climatic year 10.71 inches, but a wet and cool April is in forecast. Miya Sannomoya, a young Japanese girl, was awarded the W. C. T. U. sil ver medal for the best temperance recitation given at last Friday night's contest at the Christian church in Klamath Kails. She met five competi Eugene Guard: The city owes Its neoDle entertainment as well as protec tion and administration, and every city of anv size now recoirnlzes it as an obligation to provide a number of public band concerts each week in the public parks for the people. "It la a matter of general comment, says the Pendleton East Oregonian, that Pendleton is a very wealthy farming town and proof of the fact Is furnished in the volume of our bank deposits and in the number of local automobiles. Beyond doubt this is the greatest auto center in eastern Oregon, and well-to-do farmers are the rule, not the exception, here." Coqullle Sentinel: Every piece of literature hereafter sent out by our Commercial club or in any other way to advertise this section should carry the statement that the difference be tween the average temperature-of the three winter months and the thre summer months is only 11 degrees. To those who are tired of bitter cold and zero weather, or of summer heats and torrid days, this fact will alike appeal. THE FIGHT FOR A PESTLESS WORLD From a Bulletin of the National Geographlo Society. "When we see Naples, in the seven teenth century, as helpless as a new born babe in the grip of a plague dur ing 'which 380,000 souls perished in six months; when we see Constanti nople, in 1812, with 144,000 deaths; when we see London, In the days of the great plague, with 70,000 of its popula tion carried off; when we go back to China and behold a few short years in the fourteenth century with a 'black death mortality record of 13,000,000 eouls, and to Europe, in the great scourge of 1347-1850, and see 25,000,000 people dying; when we come on down the years and see the untold millions who have died from the numerous pestilences which have Inflicted death upon mankind; then, and not till then, can we begin to appreciate what the patient man of the microscope has wrought in humanity's behalf," writes William Joseph Showalter, in an article on "Redeeming the Tropics," sent to the National Geographlo society. The writer paints a glorious picture of the future, when the tropics, freed of rav lEhing diseases, will be taking their part In the sustenance and develop ment of the world. Porto Rico, Brazil, Italy, India, the Philippines and many other tropical countries have been redeemed from their various scourges. Challenge to Mr. Li n scot t. Portland, April 9. To the Editor of The Journal As The Journal is grant ing its space to the discussion of th subject of prohibition, I would like to reply to E. A. Llnscott's letter In last Sunday's Journal. To intimate that the liquor trafflo is necessary to prosperity and the gen eral welfare of society Is an Insult to us who- don't drink, and we will retal late next November. Mr. Llnscott' illustration of the boy and the forbid den apple makes me laugh. My folks raised five boys and three girls, and there were many' prohibitions In force all the time, and we are a credit to the policy; that Is, there are no I. W. W.'s, anarchists nor parasites in the family, as there are under a "personal liberty" system. How does Mr. Lins cott explain that a panic would fol low prohibition in Oregon? Our in dustrial system needs the revolution izing that prohibition would bring about. His ' statements are based on no facts whatever. He says from a scientific viewpoint prohibition is a fanatical whim. I say that from a scientific viewpoint anything short of enforced prohibition is insanity. But what's the good of these statements unless substantiated by proof? If Mr. Llnscott believes as e says he-will be anxious, in person or by represen tative, to meet opponents in public discussion and submit proof for proof on a scale for which these columns are limited. I challenge him to public de bate, on religious and sentimental ground only, or on scientific and eco nomic grounds only. C. A. REICHEN. "How can the mind conceive of the terrible toll epidemic diseases would take today, with our world wide com merce, with our metropolitan and cos mopolitan cities, and with the constant commingling of the people of all lands, were It not for preventive measures?" continues Mr. Showalter. "For hun dreds of years man stood helpless and appalled In the face of the onset of great epidemics. He saw millions of his fellow beings visited with deaths more horrible than ever torture cham ber could Invent, but not knowing whence the affliction came or whither it went. He surmised and guessed, and finally saw a certain relation be tween dirt and disease, and gradually the elimination of dirt checked the ravages of some epidemio diseases." The writer then reviews the results of the discovery of the part taken by the mosquito in the carrying of yellow and malarial fever germs, the fleas on rats and ground squirrels In the transmission of bubonic plague; the tsetse fly in the. carrying of Bleeping sickness, and more recently the body louse as the typhus agent. The ordi nary house fly has been christened the "typhoid fly." . Typhoid vaccination and the purification of the water sup plies are described. Panama, Cuba, "The fundamental principles of the fight are expressively laid down in simple terms like these: No mos quitoes, no malaria, no yellow fever, no dengue. No fleas, no bubonic plague; no lice, no typhus; no tsetse fly, no Bleeping sickness; no ticks, no spotted fever.' Not only does sanitary science open up the .tropics for man himself, but for his domestic animals aa well. In the generations to come, there can be no doubt that with a sanitary science that is broad enough to reach both man and beast, the great plains of the highlands In the tropics Will be converted Into vast cattle ranches, where cattle can be brought to the stock cattle stage and then shipped to the temperate climates for feeding and finishing, thus adding to the world's meat supply to the extent of billions of pounds. "The discoveries that have brought about this era of control of tropical diseases have a deeper significance than would appear upon the surface. Here, indeed, lies the hone of the world's future food supply. Mean- and ray men will not harm them while, with the restrictions Imposed by disease removed, tides of Immigra tion might set Into the tropics, popu lating them with people who would cease to be a drain upon the food sup plies of the temperate zones and be come, on the contrary, contributors thereto. Tropical swamps may be drained, tropical deserts Irrigated, tropical Jungles tamed, and millions of acres of the richest land on earth added to the productive areas which feed and clothe the world. N "And what benefit these times must bring to the racel New blood In the tropics is needed. The Buns of cen turies have burned out much of the initiative, the easy methods of gaining a livelihood have taken out much of the thrift, and the lazy ways of the tropics have eliminated much of the natural love of cleanliness of the peo ple." The National Geographic society has taken a prominent part In these dis ease destroying campaigns. The micro photographs of the deadly house fly, which this organization scattered broadcast a few years ago, gave the first Impetus to the fly swatting fights that have since been waged all over the world. SELLING BONDS DIRECTLY TO THE PUBLIC Public Defender Geneste, Lawyer E. D. Ulrich was employed to take the case. Geneste and Ulrich oc cupy adjoining offices and their business cards read. "Ulrich A Geneste." Before proceeding with the case, Ulrich had been paid $250 Vote wet, every one of you, for en forced law, order and temperance. ELLA M. FINNEY. Prohibition and Socialism. Kennewick. Wash., April 8.To the Editor of The Journal The average prohibitionist is a sort of modern Don Quixote, who spurs his steed against divers windmills in the firm belief that they are giants. Therefore one 4ct 'nnf siimrlaftl to rm htm nerfnrminar In cash, had been given the de- wild gyrations and stabbing viciously fpndant's note for linn anrl n I at the liquor trarric, while he utters ienaanis note lor s&oo and a ,oud crlea t0 h,gn heaven and pro. Dill OI Bale On the defendant 8 I M11ncM awful anathemas aeainst the Clothing Expenses. Portland, Or., April 9. To the Ed itor of The Journal In Monday's Journal William H. Baker takes issue with me on the statement that $15.60 is as much as I usually expend for clothes in a year. Mr. Baker misap prehends. I used "clothes' advisedly. During the past five years I have bought four suits of clothes at a total cost' of $55, and one raincoat at $10t also about six pairs of working pants at an average cost of $2 per pair; total cost for clothing for five years, $78. My clothing now on hand is sufficient for at least another year, which is more than I had -five years ago There is a shop In Portland where you may purchase clothes, but noth ing else. They do not carry hats, shoes, suspenders, underwear or fur nishings. They keep only "clothes." WILLIAM EL WOODRUFF. - Fly Swatting No Idle Fad. Woodbifrn, Or.. April 8. To the Ed itor of The Journal I would like to say a word to the farmers who ridi cule the "fly fad" aa some call it. Yes terday in Salem I (heard a man say that the war on the fly was a fad. Just something for idle folks to talk about. By John M. Oskison. In March the Third Avenue Railway company, of New York, opened bids for $4,000,000 of 4 per cent bonds, 'ine president of the company offered the bonds directly to the public; they were" taken at a price to yield the buyers over 5 per cent; more than 50 bids ag gregating $18,872,000 were received, and the smallest allotment to a bidder (a rich brewer, who was presumably buying bonds ' to keep for an Invest ment) was a block or 140.000. Two points were made in connection with this sale; it is possible to sell di rectly to bond buyers when the cor poration putting out the bonds is well known; and It is not possible to sen directly to the ultimate investors in this way. Said the president Of the Third Ave nue company after the sale: "We got , a better price than we could have obtained from underwrit ers." ! So the sale was a success from the company's angle. But it was a fail ure insofar as it appealed to real in vestors, since all of the issue except the $40,000 went to dealers and their bidding was regulated by the price of some $15,790,000 bonds of the same Is sue, which is listed on the New York Stock Exchange. Bond men say that it will take a long time to train even the wisest investors to enter the bidding for bonds with a reasonable hope of being successful; in this case, practically all of the small bidders ignored both the market price of the bonds and also a stipulation of the public service com mission wmcn autnorizea tne com pany to issue the bonds), that the bonds were not to be sold below a cer tain figure. Opportunities like this will come up again. I Bhall be Interested to watch the development of knowledge among investors of what bonds offered In this way are really worth. Municipali ties very generally use this method of marketing, and more and more indi vidual buyers are learning to bid for municipal securities wisely. I believe it Is a logical development that the public service corporations are follow ing the lead of the cities. Investors ought to know more about public serv ice securities. Creek station. "As soon as I got through haying at Deep Hole I took my men and out fit to the new meadow to put up hay there, locating my men In the center of the tract, where they could watch for the approach of Indians. I had five men and I insisted that they aU ways go well armed, in the center of the meadow we dug a pit 14 feet square and 8 feet depp. We bankml the dirt around the pit's mouth "for additional protection, and In one corner we sunk a well and struck water. I safe from- attack. They couldn't be starved out and they had plenty of water. urn m. nati vim ermine crp camp fixed up lij rood shape I went ; back to Deep Hole. I was very anx- -ious to make a peace treaty with the -. Indians, and I told the men under 110 circumstances to shoot any Indians unless attacked. Jn other worilx, I didn't want my men to-be the aggres sors. A few days after I left one of my men was out near tjie edge of the meadow shooting jack rabbits. Sud denly he came face to face with an Indian. Both stopped, but neither raised his gun. The Indian had a Jack rabbit, which he gave to my man. After some talk, the redskin went with my man into camp. Next day the Indian came back, bringing two more Indians with him. My haying crew fixed them up a dinner, much to thelr pleasure. The third day seven Indians came, all but one of them hav ing bows and arrows. The men did not know what to do. They didn't like the looks of things very well, so one of the number waited until after dark and catne to Deep Hole station to tell ine about the matter. "I took a man from my place, and all three of us rode back to the Gran ite Creek station. The grans on one side of the meadow was high enough to iu..e our horses, and we tied them out of sight. I had en idea the In dians would come in force that day, so I had the regular crew of five men mow the grass near the fit, while I and the man I had brought with -me stayed hidden in the pit. About 8 o'clock in the morning the Indians be gan coming In aught in small parties, four or five In a bunch. There were 27 of them, most of them being armed with bowa and arrows, though a few of them had guns. "When they were about. 100 yards from the pit and were walking slowly, I and the extra man Jumped out of the pit and I walked right up to the In dians. I could see that they were dumfounded. They didn't know how many extra men were In the pit. They knew that only five men had been there the nipht before, and yet here were two extra men. How many more there were the Indians had no means of knowing. Walking up to the chief. I took his gun. Going down the line. I secured the bows and arrows of the others. The chief was afraid to make any protest, for he figured that- I would not do a thing of this kind un less we had reinforcements In the pit. "I had the man with me take th bows and arrows and throw them in. the pit. I told the Indians to remain where they were, saying to the chief: 'Have your men stay where they are 4 Oil and I will go to one side and have a talk.' He wanted two of his men to come with him. I consented to thin and I and my man, with the chief and two of his men, went about half way to the nit. where we Bat down and held a council. I told the chief that I had come into the country to stay; that I meant no harm to the Indians, and that I would prefer to live peaceably with them. He said he. was willing to live at peace with the white men. but every time a white man row an Indian he shot him. . "I told the chief to gather together all of his people and we would decide on a time to hold a council I would have as many freighters and other white men as possible meet them and we would talk the matter over.. I told him the Indians had stolen seven of my horses, which they must return. I also told him that If he came to my Btatlon at Deep Hole I would be re sponsible for the safety of himself smd the Indians. He promised to send some runners Into the mountains and bring down all of his people, including the women and children, and we' would hold a big peace talk. I put the guns and the bows and arrows which I had taken from the Indians In my wagon and had my haying crew of flv ride in the wagon. The other man and myself rode on horseback. Just behind the wagon, while the Indians followed us. "About 100 yards from Granite Creek I had the Indians stop while I sent the men in the wagon, oh to the house with the guns and bows and arrows. I then invited the cfilef with two of his men to come to the house. I gave them flour, bacon, sugar and tea and told them to camp near the water. I told them I was not going to watch them, and that if they wanted to stay they could do so. They stayed and next morning we rode in to my Deep' Hole station for a peace council.' and a dozen men, all farmers, agreed with him. They said; the papers were giving too much space to fads of all kinds. I have seen many fads since the "blue glass cure," most of them fool ish and a few vicious, notably the craze for petting prostitutes and con victs, which has resulted in making our state a Mecca for criminals from all over North America. But this fly campaign is not a fad. It is clean liness. I have been: a farmer's wife foj 30 years and have prided myaelf on selling clean butter. I have bad few flies .in the house, though there was that hateful manure pile near tho" mllk shed, and In fly time It has been the usual thing to have the milk pail brought In with a lot of flies roosting on the rim. My husband said it was no use to try to keep flies away from the stable. But last summer he removed the refuse every day. and the flies went with if. to a field a rrme away Farmets should not poke fun at the fly killer, but should clean up and give the fly no jquarter,- for this summer, and see the results. i MRS. E.1 V. READING. Pointed Paragraphs The Ragtime Muse A stylish coat on a man's back en ables him to put on a bold front. . Few men get far enough up the lad der of fame to make them dizzy. What you think you deserve and I what others think you deserve alas! : i It is said that the truth will out ! and it seems to be always out of some I people. ' 1 Women are beginning to think of ! Easter millinery. Such thinking costs money. Why does the average man think he Is the only one in a hurry when he gets mixed up in a crowd? . Our idea of a sensible man is one who has little to say about wbat he lias done, and nothing at all about wbat he's going to do. He's the Boss. L the master in my house, H Wield the sceptre, wear the crown. Each child, quiet as a mouse. Trembles when it sees me frown. Wife goes by with quiet tread, That her lord she may not fret; r.. ...-.ir.l.n murh thov rl ra ili J 1 ci "ul... -- -- But I've not made any, yet: ;. Well, of course, no crown I wear Just a figure, that, of speech, - Like the frown, I should not care ' That my words their ears' should reach. I'm the master; yes, of course. But my rights I shan't assert; It might lead to a divorce. Which my feelings much would hurt. So I let the youngsters do ' ' . Nearly anything they please... ' And my wife? Well she may, tooj Freedom with my wife agrees.. But I'm master. Just the same: ' Me the thought of power thrills. But 111 not misuse the same, For I merely pay the bills! The Sunday Journal The Great Home Newspaper, consists of t v Five news sections replete with illustrated features. ,T ' Illustrated magazine ot quality. Woman's section of rare meritl Pictorial news supplement. Superb, comic section. 5 Cents the Copy. t i