8 THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, THURSDAY EVENING, APRIL 16, 1914. THE JOURNAL '.. AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER . C. S. JACKKON . . Pqblthr BtilJtii1 rrmrr ntu Issrvet Sunday an Jf Sfsry Sooda faoririns at Ths Jmrvl Bnllrt- lng, BwrtwiT and YasibIM .. PrMnd. Of. Entered at tbs poatofriea at Porttaitd. Or., fur i. traaamlaakiB tbroogti ths mall second elas matter. , 1JCI.1CPIIONK8 Mala 717; Boom, A-et5i. AJ ; departments reached bf tns nninbsrs. Tail , tb operator srhaf ' depsftmeet " IMKION ADVBHTI8INO KPR8KNX.TIV Benjamin kcntnnr Co.. Wnmo I2S Fifth A.. Ntw :cri isis raopU'a Vesr Hlrta-.. rnlraa-a. Subscription terma by msll sc trass Id tbs fJaitsd Sfatas or Maxleo: ( DAILT ' " On ear. ...... 13.90: ( Ooo month 9 .60 . SUNDAY 'Om fsar...... . 12.60 I On aMntl.. ....! -28 , , DAILT AND US DAT. Oss rr........tT B0 I Oos month $ M No evil propensity of the human heart is bo .powerful that It may not be subdued by discipline. Seneca. -68 8EXMXG THE FLEET. THERE Is a limit to human pa ' tlence. Faithfully, gently and ' with great forbearance, the president has pursued' his policy of trying to solve the Mex ican problem with the Implements of peace. , With sympathy and fore thought for the welfare of the Mexican nation, with a deep solici tude for the boys in blue around American firesides, and 1 with a broad vision of the moral effect of a peaceful solution of the" Mexican situation upon the world, he has adhered steadfastly to his exalted purpose, regardless of the sneers, the clamor and the attacks' of those who disagreed. There ould be no more splen did exemplification of Just gov ernment In a free land. There could be no purer application of the best traditions of this country and Its origin. There could be no broader invocation of the truer spirit of the great republic,' and no "more ideal display of what should be the attitude of a great peaceful commonwealth toward .weaker nations and less fortunate peoples. But there is a limit to forbear auce. That Is why the fleet is on its way to Tamplco. UNFIT SIXTY-EIGHT undesirable aliens . were shipped from New York 'the Other i day by the United . 'States Immigration Service to the land of their birth. They were of all races and all creeds, old men and women without friends or relatives to care for them, diseased, crippled, defective persons, white slavers and their victims, a truly mournful lot. . In their march to the place of deportation they, staggered along with bundles, bags and packages in .their hands and on their heads or stooping shoulders. In the rear of the procession was a woman with two little children, hollow eyed and gaunt, who walked slowly along without murmur. It was a pathetic spectacle. The sun shone brightly and as it was reflected from countless windows, it repre sented derisively to the unfit ones the fortune ambition had promised lh the land of opportunity, the for tune that was not to be theirs. Gone was that spirit of expect ancy when they first saw the statue of liberty enlightening the world and In Its stead was the spirit of resignation and despair. They were unfit and had been rejected. It is ono of the scenes of pathos " that should not be so often pre sented. Their frequent occurrence Is one of the almost daily recitals ' in the newspapers. There should he an investigation at the point of departure so that the unfortunates would be spared the long Journey across the sea, only to learn on ar rival In the promised land that the gates of the great " Republic Are closed against them. . Continuation of the present in " human system, a system largely -due to the steamship' companies, is a crime against mankind. CHEER VP i VERY cloud has a silver Hn lng. This la an old proverb. old because it is a true one Those who are downcast under the dark cloud of taxation need only look to the east and see the rainbow of promise placed in , ,th sky by the candidates for office at the coming election. It heralds the near approach of " the ' nifl- - lenlum when there shall be no .taxes. All commissions and use less offices shall be abolished. The poor shall stand on the same foot ing with the rich before the law There shall be a great solicitude , for the farmer and .the laborer ; Monopoly shall be wiped out of existence, restraint of trade be ban- ished and dollars grow on goose 1 "berry bushes.- There will be no favoritism, no nepotism, and no 'ancient maiden will ever again sigh in vain for a responsive bachelor. and a thatched cottage. The rights ' of every honest citizen shall be "protected. Utopia will be no Idle ! dream but a realized fact. There Will be good roads everywhere , There will be economy in expense , retrenchment and reform. . Whatever candidate. . Republican Democrat or Progressive, is elect ed the taxpayer will have nothing ' to fear. For have they all sot '.. promised these things? ' ; "Yea, I will reduce ypur taxes. I will make the payment thereof easy. - .If that sufficeth not I. will v abolish taxes altogether.. I will -sacrifice mx own- private interests that I may be of some service to my fellow." Verily, the slogan of the candi date hath an alluring sound. .. His platform makes most pleasant read ing and Inspires a hope of straw berry shortcake and melons on the vine.. THE START CASE AGAIN T HE notorious Start vice case was an issue in the Oregon supreme court again this week. A man was convicted by a jury in Portland of attempt at a statu tory offense with a four-year-old girl. Evidence was introduced at the trial showing that he had com mitted the same offense with an other four-year-oM child. The testimony as to the second child was offered as corroborative of the first - charge. . The lower court was reversed by the supreme court, and it is probable that the defendant will escape punishment altogether. One of the grounds of the reversal was that the lower court erred -in ad mitting testimony as to the second child. Another ground was that the court erred in permitting cross examination of the defendant on matter not? .brought out in the di rect examination. The higner court is headed wrong in the decisions it is ren dering in these vice cases. Justice Charles L. McNary, member of the present court, dissents strongly from the view of his colleagues. The higher court, it will be re membered, employed the principle In the case of Dr. Start, who was convicted by a Jury in Portland, of, an infamous offense growing out of a nauseous vice scandar re specting men and boys. Start was, in effect, freed by the higher court on the ground that the tes timony .of Van Hulin, who swore that Start was guiky of a similar offense with him, could not be used as corroborative. The ruling was such that it became impossible to punish any of the men involved in the scandal. The inline resulted in a reversal in the McAllister case, after the defendant had been found guilty by a jury in a Portland court. In the latter case Justice Mc Nary wrote a dissenting opinion, In which he was supported by Jus tices McBride and Eakin. In the dissenting opinion, Justice McNary said: Unless the principles laid down in the Start case are overruled by the court, they will remain a fruitful source of embarrassment. It is not sound policy or good morals for the majority theory to prevail. It is a lamentable condi tion -when a jury, familiar with all the . testimony, cohvicts in these vice cases, only to meet with a re versal on technical grounds , in the higher courtf;l1 Everybody TtnowsJ Dr. Start was guilty. But be es caped punishment. Everybody knows McAllister was guilty. But he escaped punishment. The jury in the case of the two little girls unanimously agreed that the defendant was guilty. But the case is reversed, and, because of the attitude of the majority of the justices in the higher court, there is little prospect that he will ever be punished. , REPAIRING THE HEART A GAIN the marvel of surgery. Before 200 European, Can adian and American Surgeons at the Congress of the Amer ican Surgical Association in New York a few days since. Dr. Alexis Carrel, experimentative surgeon of the Rockefeller Institute demon strated how it is possible to per form delicate operations on the heart by holding the circulation In check for the space of two or three minutes. A dozen or more of these operations have been per formed on animals at the institute with only two fatal results. The circulation is arrested , by clamping the pedicle of the heart by means of large Doyen forceps, the edges . of which are covered with xubber,. When,, the technique of the operation is further per fected it is the Intention, to oper ate on human beings. It is not impossible that in a short time surgeons will be able to cauter lze the lesions of the valves of the heart and repair them easily as an automobile tire repaired. LUMBER EDUCATION i . . . A NEW departure in the lum ber industry is the estab lishment .by the Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration, In cooperation with the Harvard Forestry School, of a two years course in the manu facturing and marketing of lumber Rising labor costs, couple'd with decreasing labor efficiency, higher prices for supplies and machln ery have brought the industry, to a crisis. The whole manufacturing and marketing end of lumbering is in great need of scientific study, Manufacturing costs must be re duced to compensate for increasing labor, expense and this means the rearranging of plants for the greatest economy of operation, the substitution of cheap mechanical handling' for hand labor wherever possible and the exclusion of all material that will not pay a profit. The lumber industry of the United States is a heavy sufferer from general condition's. Trans portation counts heavily in the dis tribution of lumber to consumers It costs more, for instance, to shiD a thousand feet of lumber to Salt L?k'e City from Portland than to manufacture It. In fact. It costs as much to ship it to Salt Lake as to Shanghai. - . v There is the added handicap of ncreaslng use in other building materials. Notwithstanding the huge increase in1 population, "the use of lumber in the United States has only increased ' 1 2 per cent In 10 years. The- use of cement in the same period has increased 240 per cent. The American manufac ture of cement arose to a high wa ter mark of 93,000,000 barrels in 1913. ; :. : THE MONDELLS I N THE : house' yesterday, . Con gressman Mondell- charged that President Wilson is sending the fleet to Tampico to save Stand ard Oil And Cowdray syndicate oil tanks from being destroyed. The insinuation is pusillanimous. It is of kind with remarks by Con gressman Humphrey and some others. Fitly enough, the house": listened to the charges of Mondell in si lence. The language was too con temptible to evenbring forth re ply. Democrats, Republicans and Progressives in the body doubtless looked upon the charge as coming from a partisan ass. The house of representatives should be above peanut horseplay. The things done there concern 100,000,000 'people. The tfrpad thought and the Im pelling motive in the proceedings should be the republic, not a party. No president has been guided by a keener desire to serve his countrymen faithfully than Presi dent Wilson. His whole course in Mexico has proven his earnest de sire to 6ave American boys in blue rather than to save the property of syndicates and alien exploiters of Mexican resources. The para mount policy throughout his ad ministration has been the placing of the man first and becoming con cerned with . the dollar afterwards. If President Wilson had been running this government in the in terest of Standard Oil and the mln lng syndicates, he would have sent an army Into Mexico months and months ago. The great cry for armed intervention was the clamor of those in this country who want American boys to go down there for slaughter in order to raise the value of American-owned mines or the price of American-owned Mex ican bonds. Woodrow Wilson is far above and beyond the pusillanimous chat ter of the Mondells. Woodrow Wilson is one of the great human ists of the world. NEW FOOD LAW I NCLUDED In the legislation passed by the recent New York legislature was a measure cre ating a state department of foods and markets. The bill pro vldes for the appointment of a commissioner to serve six years at a yearly salary of $6000. Among the powers given to this commissioner are: To Investigate the cost of food production; recom mend reforms; assist in the or ganization of. cooperative societies; obtain ,- more direct business rela tions; establish public markets and supervise grading, packing, handling and storage of all food stuffs within the state. Establishment of auction mar kets where produce is to be sold by licensed auctioneers is also pro vided for. A daily bulletin con taining ruling quotations in both public and auction markets, lists of available produce and sales of domestic and foreign foodstuffs will be published. x In addition to its other dut'es the department of foods and mar kets shall investigate delays in transportation and shall cause to be initiated proceedings to prevent restraint of trade or unlawful com binations to yx prices. THE LATE ELECTIONS D ETAILS brought by eastern newspapers from the New Jersey and other special elections, show a crushing defeat by the people of the pro gram of repealing free tolls. The case in New Jersey is -pro nounced. O'Byrne, the-Democratic candidate, was warmly indorsed by the president, and was aided in his campaign by Democrats pf national reputation. He was beaten"by a Republican who made the tariff and opposition to the free tolls repeal bill his campaign issues. The "Washington Post says: "O'Byrne did his best to evade i;he canal tolls issue.' But, he was smoked out before election day, and he 'then announced that he favored the repeal policy. The Post says: "From the moment of the Democratic nominee's declara tion against free tolls, he was marked for defeat." . Meanwhile, the election in the: Twelfth Massachusetts district pre-' sented an exactly opposite result. There, the Democratic candidate favored free tolls and opposed, the repeal bill, and ' lie was easily elected. v There was no reversal of Democratic supremacy in his district as there was in Jhe New Jersey district. . The defeat of the repeal .Demo crat in New Jersey and the elec tion of the anti-repeal Democrat In Massachusetts, followed .on the heela of. the 'great triumph ; of Os car Underwood in Alabama. The principal campaign made by Mr. Underwood for election was the great fight he made in the house against the repea bill, a fight that was in Its i most f heated moments when the Alabama election was held, and the result was promotion from the lower, house to the sen ate of the United States. - There is no way to misunder stand these events. Nobody will ever be. able' to , convince - the American people that an act grant ing free- tolls to-" American coast wise ships passed py the American congress and1 signed by an Ameri can president in 1912, should be repealed now merely because Great Britain has '- requested . that certain terms of the treaty be submitted to arbitration. " ' s It Is Idle for men to believe they can" dam. up the flow of American ism in . the American people. It can no ' more . be stopped by argu ments than the tide of the ocean can be controlled. The voice of John Hay, who ; acted for the United Statesin framing the treaty, will be' the ; Yolce of the "American people. He said: . ; . : j Tie whole theory- of the treaty . is that the canal is to be an American canaL The enormous cost of con structing it is . .to be borne by . the United States alone. When con structed, it win be exclusively the property of the United States, and is to be managed, controlled and defended by it. Letters From the People (Commiuiicitlan, un publication In this, department abould be writ tea 5 only one aide or the paper, abould not exceed 800 worda In 4engUi and mnat -be ac companied by the name and addreaa of the sende. If the writer doea not deelra to hare the name published, he abould ao aute.) "Discussion to the rreatest of all reform It rationalizes everything It tonches. It robs principles of aU false sanctity and throws them back on their reasonableness. If they have no reasonableness, it ruthlessly crushes them out of existence and sets up its own conclusions in their stead." Woodrow Wilson, The Union Avenue Approach. Portland, -April 15. To the Editor of The Journal A recently published' in terview from George M. Hyland, speak ing for certain large landed Interests on the Peninsula, and referring to the decision locating upon Union avenue the approach to the interstate bridge calls for a specific reply. It is re markable for its candor In openly sug gesting that an appropriation of 1 1,260,000, voted for the bridge and its approach, is legitimate spoil to be used in exploiting an alleged railroad and developing local Interests In Clarke county and the Peninsula. The tax payers are entitled to know the actual facts underlying all that Is being done to Introduce issues that ar entirely foreign. r Union avenue has made her whole fight In the open, and has nut her whole case upon the table for pul uioici-"u". ncr inenas asKea lor a provision In, the bridge act providing that the people should vote on the matter of the approach. Had It been allowed there would have been not ' a shadow of doubt as to the result. A demand is. now being made for a re consideration of the commissioners decision. It is a demand that will be fought to the bitter end," through every court, and by every known -instrumentality of the law If insisted upon, for it has no merit, and It cannot hope to succeed except by Imperiling the construction of the bridge. "Six engineers" have been found who say an approach by way of Union avenue will cost "$100,000 more than one by way of Derby .street." No doubt of it. There is never any lack of pro fessional "experts" who are always ready to submit "estimates' to dis credit successful bidders. Mr. Har rington's figures were to have been "riddled" at the commissioners' meet. ing last week, while he was away In Kansas City, but Mr. Howard was there to. answer every objection In de tail and the "riddling" process was in definitely deferred. Mr. Modjeskl was quoted in the earlier campaign as fa voring a fatton avenue approach be cause It was "better and cheaper than one by way of Union avenue, but h specifically denied the charge, and ex- pressed it as his Judgment that the Union avenue " approach would be cheaper. He declared -he Drenarnd specifications for Patton aventie only uecause -requested to do SO. Harrine- ton and. Modjeskl are two bridge build, ers of national reputation whose opin ion of the Union avenue approach Is certainly as good as that of several less, experienced ' experts." The Portland Railway, Light - 6 Power company is being used " as I convenient "goat ,'V with which to dis tract attention from the real Issue, We are told , 1t owns an exclusive right of way ver the Union avenu an- proacK" and that "It is easy to see that by connecting the Oreeron id. proach with Union avenue the Portland. xiau way, j-igni & ir'ower company will be 1 a position to enloy the exclnsiv us of the bridge." The facts are that the approach recommended runs al most wnouy west , of that railway's right of way. and there Is not an ih- leiiigem man in ALuitnomah county who does not know that In this day and age of the world no bridge or roadway over this route can be monopolized by any railway company. Who is deceived by suggestions of this Ulnar Multnomah and Clarke coun ties are in aDsoiute control of the question of franchises over the bridga and its approaches and can bring any railway to terms. If Mr. Hyland's mass meetings are called to secure ab solutely fair treatment for all rail ways and are not Intended simply to boost some favored railroad and to raise the price of lots In some favored section ne may count on the enthusi astlc support of every man on Union avenue. ' ' . What is to be thought of th follow ing flat suggestion that we use the taxpayers' money as a railroad sub sidy? "Interurban lines can connect with the Union avenue approach by Duiiaing a viaduct or their own, but it would cost $100,000 and in these days of diminishing railway earnings that sum Is hard to get." Therefore the bridge fund is legitimate Plunder. What kind of a railroad Is It that can't build its own approach, but is going to cover the whole country with a whole network of suburban lines? Is it a paper railway seeking a franchise to speculate upon? Again we are tohi "there is grave danger of barring the Clarke county interburban traffic from Portland altogether." How? Who but the people of Clarke and Multnomah cc unties can keep Clarke county lines off the bridge, and who will .submit to such a thing as that? The existing railway company ' is in Just as much danger of being barred as any other. Is any Intelligent citizen of Clarke county deceived by all this absurd and Irrelevant talk about a monopoly of railway , service? And ': hew many laborers down In the .stockyards dis trict will have any money left with which to buy Clarke, county propertx after they have been loaded up with ch town lots or the real estate corpora tions on the Peninsula? This pre tended bait Is nothing but a bar hook. From the very beginning there have been evidences of mysterious influences at work Indicating that the bridge was to be used If possible to exploit private enterprises. J.nuustriai and real es tate enterprises own several thousand A FEW SMILES Sylvia, supple and slender, and Aunt Belle, bulky and benign, had returned ! irom a shopping tour. Jacn naa oeen trying to buy a ready ' made salt. n. When j t h e y t re tained home Sylvia was asked what, suc cess each bad in her efforts to be: fitted. fWell," said Sylvia, !'I got?-along pretty well, but Aunt Belle Is getting, so fat that about all she can get ready made IS an umbrella. j-Touth's ' Companion. It says here: ' "One of the idols most fevered by i the Coreans ' is the! figure of a- womar seated, - resting : her chin in her hand.' ' said Mrs. Cbatterley, reading f ro. m - the newspaper. - : i , " . "Which proves that the Coreans. 'are about . the wisest na tion on earth. suggested ber husband. how's that, Joshua?" "Well, said Mr. 'Chatterley, with dis tinct emphasis, "simply, because they make a deity of: a woman who has sense enough to give her chin a rest.'" The. colonel of i a certain regiment, who was very strict with his young officers, was continually: Inspecting meir rooms to see if everything was tidy. One day j he inspected the room of an officer , who was noted .for ihis wit. He had near ly finished his I In spection when I he noticed a cobweb in one of the corners and thought to himself: "Now I have got him." i "What does this mean?" asked the colonel. The young officer coolly replied: "We always "keen one in case a man cuts his finger." acres on the peninsula. They have a perfect right to work for an approach over their lands if it Is consistent with tne interest of the taxpayers who are building it, but not -otherwise. Their keen interest is natural and their In fluence is powerful. Who influenced Mr. Modjeskl to 1 prepare i the Patton avenue plans? What influences se cured an endorsement of a western approach by a vote of 28 out of 30 from the Vancouver Comercial club, which has a membership of 300. We are not impugning motives, but was all of this done in the Interest of tne great pody of the taxpayers whoso money Is building1 the bridge? We are told that the taxpayers of; Clarke and Multnomah counties are to hold two mass meetings in the interest of re consideration, is this a spontaneous movement, or is 4t being engineered? Clarke county's 'commissioners have shown a disposition to deal fairly and squarely In conceding the right of Oregon's commissioners to locate their own approach. How many intellisrent and fair minded taxpayers of Clarke county will permit anyone to exploit them In any "mass meeting" In an attempt to dictate to the taxpayers of aiuiinoman county how ! they shall spend their money for their own ap proach for which they alone have to pay? Hew many Multnomah county taxpayers, outside of those having in terests In the immediate neighbor hood of Derby street, are asking for a "mass meeting?" Where in this mass meeting" to be held? Who are the taxpayers of i Portland,! and whers ao tney. live? Where is Portland! What about the 240.000 neonle on both the east and west sides whom a Derby street approach would compel to travel an extra distance, on every round trip to Vancouver, of, from over one. mile to nearly two miles? This extra travel is of itself an enormous tax, which would more .than counterbalance the saving of $100,000 by adopting the Derby street route if that ridiculous pretense were true. : i No one has dared to dispute Mr. Harrington's table of distances. They show that for anyone on. the west side making , round trip to Vancouver over the Broadway bridge the distance would be a mile and 308 feet farther going by way of Derby street, than by way of Union avenue, and one mile and 1584 feet farther if going over the Harriman bridge, and one mile and 4184 feet farther If going by way of the three south bridges. The tens of thousands coming from Clarke county would be subjected to the same extra travel, and all of the east side liv ing ast of- union avenue, and they constitute 80 jer. cent of; the east side, would have one mile and 4184 feet of unnecessary travel forced upon them by the Derby street route. This mean 8 that 240,000 of the people of Portland must travel at least one mile. ana tne majority of them nearly two miles farther, going by way of Derby street man would be necessary in going by way of Union avenue. And what for7 To boom proDertv. and to assist a projected railroad down on the peninsula, and to accommoiata less than. 15 per cent of the people of Multnomah county, whose money .s building the approach. Mr. Hyland In giving 6820 feet as the excess distance by way of Union avenue over the Derby street route de liberately Includes 3000 feet between Bryant street and Columbia boulevard on account of which he knows not a cent is to be paid out of the bridge fund as the- improvement of this por tion of Union avenue is a charge against the property owners. Why does he conceal the fact that having thus reached the end of the Derby street approach at Argyle street he Is one mile and a quarter farther west and three quarters of a mils far ther north than he la at TThinn vsm,a kna "Bryant streets? No plainer proposition was ever be fore presented to the taxpayers o Multnomah county and no decision was ever rendered by the commission, ers more clearly In the interest of th taxpayer and more thoroughly justi fied by every consideration Of justice and fair play. Very truly yours, BRUCE C. CURRY. The Ragtime Muse , In Praise of Toil., Let others loaf ; I do not wish To waste my time in catching fish!. Be mine, the rows of. corn to till. To hoe the broad potato hill. To liv a dream of sweet romance A-setting out the cabbage plants 1 I would not idly roam the Wood, ,Or whip the trout stream, if I .could! I love to rive the sodden log To make a fence Against the hog. And with an adze chop off a toe That fills me with delight, you know! What Joy it is to milk the cow.' ; To stroke her bland and foolish brow. To scrape the mud from off the horse That for Its deeds knows no remorse. And to. apply the golden rule By kicking not the genial mule! I love to hunt the turky hen ' That would escape all human ken. To nail, I think, is simply great! A leather hinge upon the gate! -Yes. in thes joys I find delight When fancy takes a giddy flight PERTINENT COMMENT v -i SHALL CHANGE . y-'--:-r ' 'Wanted ! ihnnt in AAA women In; Multnomah county to reg- later. 1 ' - - Won't-workers are Idle in spring and summer, as well as in winter, from choice. : j L Occasionally Huerta doea or ' sav sometning tnat indicates that he la atl least partially civilized. That rain-for-seven - Sundays-after-Easter is Just as silly as the six-weeks-winter- after - the - groundhosr-sees-his. hador- 1 , . , ? People who depended n the weather bureau prediction for Easter Sunday were more disappointed than those who did not. ' . . - 1 . How it? does bother the -Portland morning newspaper to see wool selling rapidly at much higher price than ob tained under a high tariff! Some newly dry towns In Illinois have discharged their police forces and other salaried officials. They may dis cover that they can get along Just as well without , them, v, A man .with 16 wives has been sen tenced to prison for 10 years. .Won't he be 16 times more lonesome than the average prisoner? Or maybe he will feel a sense of great relief. The auditorium architect apparently thought it incumbent on him to pro vide plans for a far more elaborate and expensive auditorium than was stipulated. As for the $250,000 or $300,000 additional cost what's that to a New York architect? DIAGNOSING WITH PATIENTS 1500 YEARS OLD From the Journal of the American Medical Association. This is an age of specialism. Some doctors limit -their practice to babies, some to old persons, some to a single class of disease. 1 Only recently has any doctor attempted to specialize on the diseases of mummies. ' In the work a large number of recently' discovered mummies in Egypt, the conditions of custom and climate which have pre served the mummies of old Egypt make it possible to compare the defects produced by disease with the mani festations; of diseases of the present day. Such investigations have already unfolded many facts of interest in respect to the existence aof disease in bygone , times, and have contributed Important facts to the history of medi cine. . The perfect preservation of many of the bodies which have become avail able in Egypt Is remarkable. The peculiarities of real mummies are widely known. Coptic bodies which have recently been examined by Ruffer belong to a somewhat different class. They came from Antlnoe In Upper Egypt; and dated from the fifth to sixth century. They were therefore from about 1400 to 1600 years old. They had undergone no artificial fproc ess except that, at one time, they had been covered with salt. The real pre servative had been the dry Egyptian sand in which they had originally been burled enclosed In wooden coffins. Never haying been disturbed by the embalmer, the-organs were all in posi tion, and the bodies contained no resin, gum or any materials such as mud, sand, rags, etc., generally used in old Egypt for packing the body after re moval of the organs. In our environ ment.' where special precautions are necessary "to preserve the body from decay, It Is surprising to hear Of micro scopic sections from these bodies made 1600 years after death show the minute structures of glands in a remarkably SAVINGS AND LOAN By John M. Osklson. A perfectly simple idea is behind the savings and loan association. It is this: A, B and C get a number of their neighbors to cooperate in the saving of, regular monthly sums of money; and a committee from among them undertake to put these monthly saved Bums to work bo that they will earn a decent Income. By preference, the money collected is loaned to those in the association who can use it to ad vantage. The expense of, running the association is kept down to the very least limit most of the work is done by unpaid committees which change frequently. Properly managed and supervised by the banking department of the state, these associations make around 6 per cent on the savings of their members, and do it without imperilling - the money. They are strictly cooperative all profits belong to the members. So the savings and loan association is a fine neighborhood Institution, a sane encourager of thrift. - Pointed Paragraphs Silence Is golden, yet some people won't shut up! Cats and candidates love to roost on the fence. : - A homely girl can say that pretty things are useless, and mean It. The more the big fellows want the less we little-chaps seem to get There is no demand for gold bricks, yet they always find a market. The morning after Is an occasion many a man would be glad to dlsre member. A man doesn't worry because he isn't clever, provided he knows that he's good looking. Now a Scientist comes forward with the theory that red hair keeps a wom an's temper hot. Old stuff! A woman's new hat brings more lsfaction to her milliner than to her own husband. You can't always tell. Occasionally the toughest boy in the neighborhood grows up and becomes a minister. It would surprise, the late lamented If he could hear his widow telling her second husband what a noble, kind, and generous man the first was. Canning the Wild West. From the Nebraska State Journal. Col. W. F. Cody has never performed a more important service for the gov ernment than in the supervision of making a large collection of films pie turipg the early history of the western plains. He: has been engage since his wild west show, closed In Denver In making moving pictures of battle scenes and historical incidents in various parts of the plains and the Rocky mountain region. In this work he has been provided with an abun dance of help and has been able there fore to reproduce with Indians, sol diers and cowboys the most stirring "It", AND NEWS IN BRIEF OREGON SIDELIGHTS The Rusty Hinge Glee club, with a membership of IS, has bee.n organized within the Medford Commercial club, as an auxiliary of which great result are expected. ' Union county's fair has been dated for September 22 to 24 inclusive. J. A. Russell has been reelected presi dent of the association and Albert Hunter temporary secretary. Josephine county's commissioners have taken steps toward consolidating the offices of county fruit inspector and farm expert, and providing a fund sufficient to obtain the entire services of such official. General satisfaction, it Is reported In the Klamath Falls Herald, has fol lowed official denial of a rumor that the school board had in contemplation a contract clause forbidding teachers in the public schools to attend dances. Gresham Outlook: The First State bank sold last week to J. M. Conklin the bank fixtures with which It opened the first bank in Multnomah cofcnty outside the city of Portland, nearly a decade ago. Mr. Conklin will use these fixtures in a bank which he Is organ izing at Maupin, Or. The following changes and additions have been made affecting the Rose burg high school staff: F. B. Hamlin, principal of the Benson school, elected city superintendent to succeed J. W. Groves, who had held that position three years; Lloyd Marquam, of Al bany, elected principal of the hifrh school: F. C, Fitapatrick. elected prin cipal of the Benson school. Ira F. Hat field has been re-elected principal of the Rose school. fine state of preservation, or to learn that the lobes of the brain and some of the convolutions were recognizable and that the fibers and valves of the heart could be made out. Ruffer points out the occurrence of tubercular disease of the spine among ancient Copts as one more proof that the disease has existed from the re- j motest times and is independent of Climate. It has been found in bodies buried close to the Mediterranean shores, in bodies from Upper Egypt and Nubia, and even in a skeleton buried in the tropics at Merawi, one of the hottest and dryest places in the world. Judging from twb cases of en larged spleen which were found in Coptic bodies, Ruffer ventures the sug gestion that these people suffered from malaria. Pyorrhea appears to be as old as the human race. Evidence of such, disease has been found In prehistoric skulls and in the specimens from al most all nationalities. Ruffer has found nothing to suggest that the Copts knew anything about dentistry. The long recognized bad state of the teeth of ancient Egyptians Is again emphasized In the Coptic bodies. Al most every skull has some serious den tal defect. It is suggested that this may. perhaps be accounted for by the fact that very li,le car of the teeth appears to have been taken. The thick Incrustations of tartar are sufficient evidence that the Copts did not clean their teeth at all. In many peoples and animals the absence of the tooth brush is compensated for by the fact that the food is hard, fibrous and raw, requiring a good deal of chewing, which mechanically cleans the teeth. In ancient Coptic times this does not appear to have been the cas. Ruffer concludes that the Copts of Antlnoe lived chiefly on cooked soft . food, chewed without effort. Decay fcf the teeth was extremely common and was possibly due to the nature of the food consumed. GROWTH IN NEW YORK In his last report the superintendent of banks of New York state .says of the savings and loan associations: "For years effort has been made so to perfect the system under which such associations have been organized and developed in this state as to place the movement on a broad and- perma nent foundation, to afford all the peo ple of the state an ideal system of saving, and, at the same time to enable the associations to make loans upon real estate security upon such terms as would encourage home building." For the first time in 16 years the number of associations Increased dur ing the year, and the year's increase in their resources was satisfactory. Evidently, then. New York state has arrived at the point in handling the savings and loan association where people are willing to go Into them more than ever before. Here is your chance to help along the development of a good idea in your community! As a first step, find out from the super intendent of banks at Albany, N. Y., how the savings and loan associations of that stats are run and regulated. events of past years In their correct historical setting. Colonel Cody has now taken the complete films to Wash ington for delivery to the government. After being" shown to a select company of people in one of the theaters, they will be filed In the archives of the war and interior departments for the benefit of posterity. The moving pic ture firms would pay handsomely for these films, but they are not for sals. They constitute an accurate record of the development of the west, and es pecially of the advance of the Indian from his savage state to his present near approacn to citizenship. Goethals Now Governor. From the Los Angeles Express. On the first day of April. Colonel George W. Goethals, chief builder of the Panama canal, became governor of the canal zone. Characteristic of the man was his request that he be permitted quietly and without osten tation to take up at once the duties of the office. The people of the canal zone woufd gladly have grasped the opportunity to show Goethals especial honor on this occasion They would have eager, ly expressed their appreciation and made It a tribute long to be remem bered. His associates would gladly have led in doing th man honor. Instead of assuming office amid the huzzas which would have been musis to one more susceptible of personal adulation, this resoluts engineer and plain-soldier citizen simply proceeded to the work before him as an assign ment to duty. Such a man Is rare enough to be re freshing. It is men of the Goethals mold who make history. Calm, un perturbed, resolute, modest aAd ca pable. Colonel Goethals, in his fine In tegrity and high sense of civic duty Is a conspicuous example of the very best type of American citizenship. Goethals has proven to the nation and to the world that a masterful and resourceful man can, if the politicians are kept from interfering, carry to completion "a vast public project with as great economy and efficiency as private enterprise could accomplish It All honor to the modest, capable, pa triotic citizen-soldier Colonel George W. Goethals. . ' ; IN EARLIER DAYS by ed Ixckley. Mrs. John K. Waite, of Portland, has lived in Oregon since 1849. Her father was the first school teacher at Milwaukie, and she herself was one of Oregon's early teachers.' "My maiden name was Ella Camp- , bell." said Mrs. Waite. "In 1846 Will and Sam, my brothers, cam out to Oregon to spy out the land. Bams health was not good, sa he spent the winter with Dr. and Mrs. Whitman at their , mission. When thev wersi killed the next fall by the Indians, Sara felt o uam, s ii n naa lost his own km folks. My brothers urae back to our home at Chester, Mass., next spring; that is, they started in the spring of 1847. but it was October before they arrived. "We planned to come to Oregon the next year. But father thought ths long, hard trip across the plains would be too much for mother, so he decided to go by water. By the time we were ready to start news tame of the dis covery of gold in California, and there was such' a. rush from all over the east that the boats raised their price of tickets. So father concluded we had Deuer come overland after all. We spent the fall and winter of 1848 pre paiSng for the Journey, having wagons built for the purpose. "My father. Hector Campbell, was 66 years old when we started, and mother was the same age. Wo shipped all our household goods around the Horn, and took only our bedding, provisions and some Indian trading goods with u. From our home in Chester we went to Weston, N. y., by train and from there we took the stage to the Ohio river. We went down the Ohio by boat and on to St. Louis, and from there we went up the Missouri to t?t. Joe. We bought our supplle and oxen at St. Joe and went on to what is now Omaha, where we found hund reds of other camped, waiting to make up an emigrant train. "As both my brothers had been across the plains, they took charge of tiie party. Wedld not Join with the larger train, but invited a few con genial families to come with us. As I look back at It now, it seemed as if the whole world was moving. As far as you could s-e there wcrn camp fire and In the morning in all directions you could ste the canvHs covers of the prairie schooners, while at night the camp fires were reflected from hund reds of tents. The experiences of those days are gone forever and the generation of to&ay can know nothing about thf-m: hut those who hv, nm over the deep 'worn emigrant trail and have stopped their wagons to let counties thousands of buffalo paa by. who have eaten antelope meat and buffalo hump cooked over sagebrush t'lres or over a fire of buffalo chips, will never forget it. "We if pent the Fourth of July on Bear river. We had been joined "by a considerable party from Nashville, Tenn., people who were on their way to the California gold mines. One of their party killed an antelope. We furnished the milk, and getting some snow from a snow bank nearby, w had a regular 'feast, including roast antelope and ice cream. "We started with some milk cows, but before we got through our oxen died, so we had to hitch our cows to the wagon. Some of the emigrants, particularly those for California, started with more provisions than they needed. When they lost a span of oxen they would have to lighten their load. I have seen sacks of beans and stacks of baoon put by the side f the road and left there. We started out with plenty of dried fruit, bacon, flour, corn meal, rice, tea, coffee and a keg of syrup. The trip across the plains brought out the best and the worst in the people going across. The worry sometimes made men who seemed kind at home, become cruel and overbearing. ."My father took up a donation land claim near Milwaukie. My sister mar ried Alfred dueling. Ho had driven the wagon for his father with the famous traveling nursery that furnished -the first grafted fruit trees to the Willam ette valley. When we settled at Mil waukte in the winter of 1840, It was larger than Portland. Lot Whitcomb, the town proprietor, named it for the town he came from In the cast. Opium Traffic Dies Hard- -From the Vancouver World. A remarkable development of the opium question is reported from Shang hai, as a result of the decision- of the British government that, ul though no more opium is to be exported from India to China, nothing oaa oe done to alleviate the evils caused b the accu mulation of stocks at S.nngbai and other treaty ports. It Is jeclared that what Is now happening Is that ths traf-' fio in opium, rigorously Suppressed in Cliina itself. Is being carried on In the British and other foreign conces sions at Hankow, Foochow and else where, amj. more particularly under the protection of the Shanghai municipal council, on which the majority of mem bers are British. "Whilst the municipal council has reluctantly tolerated the slow extinc tion of the opium Sens," writes the National Review (Shanghai), "it now stands idly by and watches the number of shops for the retail- sale of 'foreign muck' increasing enormously. ' In the fashionable district of Shanghai, the Foochow road and its purlieus, new 'foreign muck' signs are going up every day, and within a furlong of the muni cipal council buildings there are dozens of places where opium may be bought retail for consumption off the prem- lises; the hotels also are reported to be doing a thriving business by letting rooms to confirmed smokers from the country, most of them wealthy people who have come to Shanghai simply and solefy to enjoy the vicious luxury of smoking opium in places where they will not be disturbed by the visits of the Chinese government opium Inspec tors. ' f "Within the past few days we have heard of wealthy men. with magnifi cent houaes la the large cities of ths interior, coming to Shanghai Simply in order that they may smoke opium. Ths result Is that rents are going up, and all concerned hotelkeepers. retailers and wholesale merchants and impor ters are doing a roaring trade. The columns of the Chinese dally papers are new full of scores of advertise ments of retail opium dealers, nest names being added every day.. The Sunday Journal The Great Home Newspaper. consists of .. . Five news sections replete with 'Illustrated feature).; Illustrated magazine of quality. Woman's section of rare merit, Pictorial news supplement. Superb comic section. . -'- 5 Cents the Copy A.,...