THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, TUESDAY EVENING, APRIL 28. 1914. rr 0 IT THE " JOURNAL pni.ii.h.i rwr errniut (rtrvt 8aniyt and errry rnnnnjr awming ai In. Rrnartsar Hi Y a mill 11 t wr SnnH.y BKH-nlnt at Tb ,Mnrnai na- f ., iTjruanu.ur, n STB i tranomiwina through th waiis.a eond f cia mat tr. SKM f Ui 'oMrarar what apartnent fa want. ;I UKfcKJN AI'VKHTISINO BKI'HfcPKNTATI VK ,i nmdamln.ft Keatoor C. Bratiic BUg., i I 1CV rifth A.. Nw York; 121 Prop' f Waa Blli I'blcago. ; Siiburlptlou term by mail or tn any ad jdr la toe United tat or Mtxlca: j ;, DAILY V)ne rmr 1S.S0 One month .1 JO ) ' v Kt.NTJAY 7r 2.60 I One month .$ .23 ;Ona rear i-TW r " 97.30 Ona month. .$ .85 fl W.l Milfoil 'h Some temptations come to the Industrious, but all temptations com to the idle. Spurgeon. WITHOUT WAR H CEItTA accepts the proposed mediation. It may mean little to him. He agreed once to make re- . paratlon for the late series of out 'rages. But he broke his pledge. - Nothing counts with Victoriano ' jliuerta. J. But there are many signs of eet , "lleraent without war. Villa" de ranged HtiertS's' plans when he re . ;fused to be drawn into the dicta r 'tor's trap. When Villa gave out '.his address to the American peo ple Baying he would not be drawn ' into hostilities against the United , States, he became a powerful fac ' jtor for American peace and an ex traordinary Influence in forcing lllnerta into , acceptance of mediation. Villa's example has , doubtless j held the rebels in peaceful attitude "toward Americana. The rebel su-j thorlties in the state of Sonora nave given notice that Mexicans) who make hostile demonstrations against Americans will be hanged. Similar attitude at other points in .rebel territory shows that Villa's example has counted heavily in ' holding the rebels in kindly nood toward the United States. ', The effect, meanwhile, of the prompt acceptance of mediation by President Wilson has been magical ly favorable on all Latin countries. It glva the people of Central and South America confidence In the Washington government scarcely attainable otherwise. Bristling wifirirmaments, conscious of its power, and smarting under Hu erta's outrages on American clti- zens, .the great Republic promptly placed ' its interests and its policy in the' bands of. the Brazilian, Chilean and Argentina diplomats, diplomats akin in blood, language, customs and character to the Mex icans themselves. The- effect is voiced by a Brazilian newspaper wnlch .says. "the example set by the United States Is a stimulant to the mgniricent dream of universal peace." Looking backward, impartial and just people must realize the big ness of President Wilson's policy throughout this year of Huertaism. He has patiently resisted those who wanted hapless Mexico reduced by the sword. He has endured In si lence the sneerSj, and contumely of those who howled for artillery and Wood. The luckless Mexicans have never had a chance. They have had no opportunity for education. Por- . flrto Diaz gave them no public schools. The Mexican minister of ' education recently reported the people as 75 -per cent illiterate. , The things we ought tp send the Mexicans are not bullets, but. books. Our duty to them is not shot and shell, hut schools; not the thunder of cannon, but the teachers of, chil dren; not colonels and captains, but Christian civilization; not gen erals and guns, but grammars and . geographies. CRUKLTV AND VIVISECTION AriiiL,ALu.L,rniA, jury disa greed in -the case of Dr. Joshua E. Sweet of the Uni versity of Pennsylvania med ical faculty, charged with cruelty by practicing vivisection on dumb animals. . The trial assumed great Importance because of a ruling by Judge Bregy. 1 In charging the jury he said that the law takea.no cognizance of the fact that a surgical operation which causes pain to the animal is excusable, if the operation is per formed in the Interest of science, and that vivisection is, therefore, a crime in Pennsylvania. The indictment brought against Dr. Sweet did not allege that vivi section was illegal; there was a simple charge of cruelty. It is now announced, that Dr. Sweet will be reindicted and a conviction Bought under the law , as .interpreted by Judge Bregy. i; ' There is no questioning the need of law enforcement which will pre vent unnecessary cruelty by scien tists in their operations upon dumb animals, but there is question whether the prohibition should be as inclusive as Is contended for by Judge Bregy. The anti-vivisection-ists are Tight In insisting that there shall be a minimum of suf fering, but a proper regard for hu manity will not permit prohibition of experiments upon animals. - ' V Experiments on animals led to ,-the discovery of methods by which the stomach does its'. work. : The -manner of the growth of bone was .demonstrated in, a similar; way. , The ; processes of Inflammation were discovered by experiments on the wlnga of bats, and out of what was thus learned has developed the whole system of modern surgery. Before the antitoxin of diphtheria was discovered 1y animal expert Hftn frnm 40 tn A nr int t : - - , vv disease died. . Now, the death rate Is only 10 per cent. Tetanus, rabies cholera. bubonic plaguety phoid fever, meningitis and yellow fever are understood because of ex periments upon'- animals. w E HOWL about high taxes. We lament about . crime. We figuratively weep over the wastefulness of govern ment. But we don't go to the polls. We yell about the, weakness of our governmental system. We de nounce the graft,, and the grafters. We insist- that, everything is rotten in Denmark.- But. we don't even register. ' ;- , ' ' t We kkkUbout, city, government. We ululate about -county govern ment. We condemn, state govern ment. We animadvert against na tional government., But we don't register. . ' ' In faltering voice and amid a tempest of sighs, we tell the neigh bors about how our taxes have in creased. ? We then proceed to blame it- all on the officials. We pro pose a recall and Btart out with pe titions. But we don't register. We howl about the nominations. We repine over the candidates. We remonstrate against the Initiative. We censure the ' direct primary. We agree that everything is wrong and nothing right., But we don't register. We stay away from the polls. -We let some body else do the voting, and we do the scolding. 1 . Anrf ei a i-ocrleti-attsin tntala nrnvo. there are thousands of us. AFTER 371 DAYS T HE Broadway bridge was opened to the public April 22, 1913. It cost $1,586,- 921.90. In spite of its great, cost to the people, in spite of the fact that it vas opened 371 days ago, it is. but little used by vehicle traffic. Ever since the rainy season set In last Autumn, it has been a practically deserted thoroughfare, except for street cars and pedestrians. It is not -probable that there is another instance of the kind in the world in which so great a sum of public money was expended, only to be handicapped in Ub use by a street approach unfit for vehicle traffic and worse, ' by far, than many of the country roads of Multnomah county. -- From the bridge to Wheeler street the paving In held up by a remonstrance signed by the prop erty owners. Bids had already been, opened and the contract was, ready to sign when a remonstrance of 6 1 per cent of the property owners was filed and proceedings stopped January 15 last. From Vancouver street to Union avenue full arrangement's for pav ing were completed and were brought to a standstill October 22, by a program for widening the street. The plan for renewing the improvement is now under way in the highway department. All proceedings for paving "the stretch between the bridge and Wheeler street are dead while waiting for lapse of the six months to meet the charter requirement. Nothing is likely to be done unless some of the remonstrators with draw from the petition they filed at the city hall. The people of Portland are pay ing interest on the bonds and pro viding a sinking fund for retire ment of the bonds from which the Broadway bridge was built. A part of the present high taxes in clude provisions meeting the cost Of buiming the bridge. The bridge enormously Increased the value of the property of those who are now holding up the im provement of the unpaved street leading to the structure. Is it not unjust for property owners at this point to hold up the improvement? Is It not wrong for them to hold the bridge out of use to thousands for -hom that route is the short est and best way into the business district! CITIZENSHIP OF WOMEN I F AN American woman marries an alien, she forfeits her citi zenship. If an American ' man .marries an alien, he retains his citizenship. It does not affect her legal status If the woman married to an alien continues to live in the Unite'd States. . She may be an American patriot, but she cannot become an American citizen until her husband is naturalized. - A bill has been introduced in the United States senate to meet thin situation. Tt nrnvidta that nn distinction shall be made by any court in matters of naturalization on account of sex.' It declares that failure, inability or refusal - of male alien to become a citizen of the United States shall not impede his wife in becoming a citizen.. It says that no woman who Is by birth or naturalization a citizen shall forfeit her rights by reason of marriage to an alien, unless she formally renounces allegiance. There is no reason, why our laws defining citizenship should dlscrim mate against women. " These laws were an outgrowth of the'old the ory that the wife is : subordinate in ail things to h.er husband. But it is doubtful whether .there can be substantial progress" so long as women, even In the matter of cltl zenship. are denied, substantial 1 rights accorded to men. j The senate bill fa being urged by suffragists. But it should have the support of ail people who wish to see American citizenship backed by something more than medieval absurdities. , COLORADO MASSACRES P RESIDENT WILSON was just and courageous yesterday when he notified the Rocke fellers to settle the. Colorado mining' strike at. once or United States troops will be sent to end the violence. . The act places squarely before the country the important fact of who It is that is engaged in this war "With the miners. It prevents the Rockefellers from skulking piously . In the rear " while hired gunmen . and a subservient state militia shoot up the miners' and Slaughter women; and children Mr. Rockefeller's son recently testified that he would sink all his investments in : Colorado rather than yield to the demands of his employes that they be permitted to organize. He has not sunk and he does not propose to sink his investments in Colorado or any where else. . There Is, on the other hand, evidence before the presi dent that he has debauched a commonwealth , by gaining control of the Colorado, militia and filling' their regiments with professional gunmen. The desperate and murderous bat tle of Ludlow has been followed with other - and ; more barbarous scenes of violence. If such atroci ties had been reported from Mexi co, the whole United States would have been set aflame with the' hor ror of it. In some cases, whole families have been wiped out. No state in this Union has a right to .permit such massacres. Whatever may be the controversy between the Rocke- fellers and their employes, they have no right, after Importing pau per labor from Europe, to maintain a private army and prosecute a war of. subjugation and extermination over small questions of wages and conditions of service. President Wilson is right In calling unon Mr. Rockefeller to ; settle with his workers. What is i the- status of ouj civilization when a sovereign state -permits a rnan so rich that he cannot count his money to carry' on a private civil war to escape payment pf a few added cents per day to his workers? Some issues in the Colorado con flict are bigger even than those in our Mexican relations. BABIES, PIGS AND CAIiVES, T HE house of representatives has authorized the expendi ture, of $165,000 by the fed eral children's bureau during the coming fiscal year. The appro-; priauon .was made arter an un successful fight to limit it to $25,- 000, and 'the bill is now before the senate. It would seem that $165,000 a year is not too great a sum for the government to spend in saving the lives of babies. Miss Julia Lathrop, chief of the bureau, esti mates that 300,000 Infants less than one year old die annually in the United States because of Indi vidual and civic neglect. The scope of this bureau is large. It deals with the funda mentals of life, one of Its principal functions being to assist in correct ing conditions which result In in fant mortality. If, as has been stated, the Infant death rate is the most sensitive index we have of social welfare, there should be united support of a movement the object of which Is to save the babies. New Zealand has set the pace with the. lowest Infant mortality rate in the world. This was brought about mainly through the efforts of the New Zealand Society for the Health of Women and Chil dren. In one city alone the work of the society reduced the number of deaths of Infants fifty per cent in five years. " . ; " ' The people of the United States are seeing their larger problems in better prospective. Vast sums have been spent ; tp promote the health of- animals which have a commer cial value. Now there is a demand for as" much concern for babies as for pigs and calves. GOOD ROADS IN' TEXAS G OOD roads cost money, but they return the initial In vestment many times over ,in lessened cost of transporta tion and Increased value of prop erty. The people of Texas appre ciate this feet, and the good roads record of that state last year shows that Texans are ready to Invest in something that will pay big divi dends. Last year the people of Texas voted -more than $7,000,000 in bonds for the extension and im provement of " highways. Eighty six elections were held, and in 51 of them the vote was overwhelm-1 inglylln faVor of bond issues. In the remaining 35 failure of the bonds to carry was due solely to a state law requiring a majority of two thirds in favor of bonds. Southern Good Roads says that during: the last four years Texas has appropriated $24,565,400 for highway-development. : The begin ning. 5 was made in ; 1909, when $781,000 : was voted. - The next year, the total was $4,015,000; in 1911 it was $8,915,000; in 1912, $M96.000, and in 1913, $7,267, 700. These amounts were in ad- ditlon to funds ; raisea : oy general taxes, thus - representing maeDiea- ness voluntarily assumea oy ine people after having opportunity to vote directly on the question. iThe experience of Texas "is note worthy because : of the support which good roads ' bonds received in the, country districts. "It has een the rule," says Southern Good Roads, 1 "that the rural vote has been cast for better highways." When, all farmers learn, as they have learned- in Texas, that poor roads are vastly more expensive than improved highways the neces sity for extended campaigns in be half of funds will cease. Letters From the People (CommaDieatlona aant ' to Tha Journal for publication in tbla department abould ba writ ten on only one aide of tha paper.! ahould not exceed 300 words in length and must be ae companied by the name end addresa of the aender. If the writer does not dealr to Bar the same published, he ahould ao aute.) "DiBcoaaton ie the greatest of A reform era. It ratlooaiisee everything It touch pa. It robe principle of all false sanctity and thro we them back on their reaaonablenesa. It they have no reaaonablenesa. It rothleasly crashes them out of existence and seta op Its own conclusion la their stead. Woodrow Wilson. . Denunciatory. Portland, April 28. To the Editor of The Journal' I -went to church Sunday and by mere accident happened- to stroll into the one where I had the pleasure of hearing- Mrs. Booth Prib bln, of Salvation Army fame a most remarkable woman, the mother of ten children, and a mother to a, great many motherless. Bu when I kick Is when she g-tves lectures to women only, tell ing them of "the glories of mother hood." Almost all the glories of parentage are nullified when the parents cannot support their children. It is-estimated that one sixth of the people of Oregon are on the farm, and that is too many, for potatoes are worth only 40 cents a sack, and last fall apples rotted under the trees. When a man leaves the farm the ma jority do not own their jobs, hence may be discharged and blackballed, and tha majority of those who are allowed to work receive only enough pay to Keep themselves In good working trim. Now, ("therefore, I protest agaiinst these peo- pie lecturing about the glories of par entage. They should lecture, aS some do, that a baby is a shameless and of fensive thing, and that the-prdper life is to ignore the opposite sex and have plenty of troubles in this life, and that; after death they will pe in giory wtm such reprobates as Abraham, Isaac and Solomon. When we want more people here, let the -great steamship companies bring them from Europe, Ghi" Inf ' "y old place, and let us put our gold In the j banks to help out big business P. W. What the Schools Teach. Port.and, April 27. tTo the Edito of The Journal. I have read a letter by a mother complaining because she sent her children to church and school and paid taxes to keep up these Institu tions, and her children were taught temperance there. Churches are not kept up by tax payers, but by voluntary contributions, and schools teach' what is helpful to children, not something to agree with the views of their parents. At any rate, if parents do not like the kind of teaching children receive at schools, there are plenty of private schools, and these might even teach them that it is good for the young as well as the old to drink. Too bad! Either one must change his views on drinking and teaching, or send children elsewhere, for they will undoubtedly keep on teaching the things that will be helpful to children, and In advance of the teachings we had when we were young. Probably if we. had been taught the truth about alcohol in school, many people would never have "formed the habit, and it Is to be regretted that the people do not inform themselves about the truth on these questions in stead of finding fault because their children learn what science has dis covered about alcohol telng a poison, only fit for rrfedicine under some con ditions, usually applied externally. READER. Question as to Street Fencing. Portland, April 28. To the Editor of The Journal When X first came to Portland you could walk on Madison street from Tenth to Eleventh. ; About 1905 the Burrell estate threw a fence across the walk, and now I see they have fenced up the whole end of the street parallel with Tenth street. Last week I saw where the city had to pay $3600 for a strip on Mill street, be tween Sixteenth and Chapman. I would like to know If the property owners have any right to fence this street In and how much the city will have to pay when - Madison street is put through. TAXPAYER. Tbe Condition of Epirus. From the Christian Science Monitor. The great powers are steadily play ing in Epirus the same game that they have played with such disastrous ef fect in Armenia and in Thrace. In plain English, the interests of the country and its inhabitants are being sacrificed i to their selfishness. Be cause Austria-Hungary and Italy both covet the land, and yet are too afraid of one another to take possession . of it, they are determined, with the con sent of their neighbors, to permit It to remain in a condition of. practical anacchy. ; Austria-Hungary, as has been pointed out, time and time again, desires to push her frontier along the eastern Adriatic coast and so dominate that sea. Unfortunately for her, the occupant of the westerp; shore does not regard such an-aim at all favor ably. At the point where. the; heel of Italy forms -with Cape JLinguetta the neck of the bottle known as the straits of Otranto the passage is so narrow that it might, In the opinion of the government in Rome,- become a strate gical danger If the opposite shore were held by an enemy. On, the other hand, if Italy held both scores, the Adriatic would, become Its I private lake. For ' this reason, neither country will allow the other to annex any part of Albania, They have Indeed gone further than this and, . with the help of Germany and the acquiescence of the triple entente created a fictitious geographical state, composed , in the extreme north ; largely of a f Roman Catholic, in the; extreme south' mainly of a' Greek, and In the-body, ias weil as in either ; extremity, of an . over whelming : Muhammadan population. Epirus. or southern Albania, with a preponderating Greek population, de mands .annexation' to Greece, but as this would give Greece a hold on the neck of the bottle, the refusal Is firm ly made by both Rome and Vienna. But though Rome and Vienna, may refuse to pertnit. Greece J to ''rule in t Epirus, they;' have not the power to establish the Albanian rule there. The only way in which they could do this would be by a joint occupation, and a joint or a separate occupation ' neither ; . the'r fears nor their jealousies will permit. As a result, a Greek lead"'. Zographia- :.,' I A FEVV SMILES We have been . told the story of a professional magician who had re cently been makinar one night Btanris in little Ohio towns. The other night he waa in Mount Gllead and he certainly made a rreat hit there. He hadj been performing for more than an hour and his audience was in great humor. The audience. In fact, was for him to a man -when he pulled a bad boy of the town to the stage. A big lugh followed, j The magician1 brought the lad to the footlights. J"Now, my boy," he said, "I want you to tell this audience that you are sure your pockets are empty." "My pockets is empty," answered the lad, obediently.; Ue rabbit you told me to put in me coat got away!" President Howard Elliott, pleading at a dinner in New York for fairer pub lic opinion toward the New Haven lines, said: v "Public Opinion, as It lias shown itself In the past It's grow ing a little kinder now makes me think of the farm girl. "A young farm girl asked to have Saturday off in order to go and see a man hanged. Permlssipn was given her and she set out before daybreak, having twenty -miles to walk. "When she returned that evening she was In tears. , "Why, Milly. what's the matter? said her mistress. "Oh, dear!" sobbed the girl dear! The man's been reprieved 'Oh, A man was on trial, before a west ern judge for horse stealing, and when it came time for the lawyers on both sides to tell the judge what in structions t h e y wanted him to give to --the Jury in ad dition to the points covered in his own charge the : attor ney for the defense said : "I respectfully ak your honor to in struct the Jury ' that it is a funda mental principle of law In this country- that it is i better for ninety-nine guilty men to escape than for one In nocent man to be found guilty." "Yes, that is true," said the judge, "and I so. instruct the jury; but I will add that it is the opinion of the court that the ninety-nine guilty men have aread7 escaped has taken to the mountains with the Greek comitajis. To. dislodge him is impossible, to cajole him Is hopeless. and so the country is given up to ab solute anarchy, without the slightest prospect that tnls will be exchanged for anything better than a condition of persistent guerrilla warfare. Voting In Chicago. Katharine BUell in Harper's Weekly. Down iri one of the poorest, dingiest streets in the city, on the fourth floor of a rickety tenement, lives Mrs. Blazi. Mrs. Blazi is a thing almost new In the world of politics a woman boss. Mrs. Blazi is a midwife, and she knows every Italian woman in that Section of the city. She came to this country when she was young, and poor, and friendless, and she was taught her trade by Doctor Blodgett, a woman doctor of high standing.. She has brought two generations of Italian children into the world, and she is deeply beloved and entirely trusted by all the women of her race. They say she can deliver 600 votes in her ward. It is certain that she brought out 300 on registration day, and- nearly as many to the election. Some one lends her an automobile, she stops in front of a tenement, she speaks to some one in the doorway, or in one of the win dows, and in a few minutes one after another of the Italian women with shawls over their heads and babies in their arms come down to follow Mrs. Blazi, and do anything she tells them to. Some of them do not speak any English. Many of them do not know what they are doing when they voti. They do what Mrs. Blazi tells them to. Mrs. Blazi is large and beautrSul her eyes are black, her cheeks are red. and although she sits with her little grandson in her arms, she does not look over 30. She is strong and hon est, and she loves the children, but she has a little greasy, fat husband who is a low-down machine politician, and she is a .good woman and lives up to her Italian principles. She takes the 600 women to the polls and votes them for Bathhouse John because her husband tells her to. It is hoped by the next election that Doctor Blodgett and Miss Addams and other women whom Mrs. Blazi can trust will teach her better, though her husband pat the grandsons head and says, "We won't have any of these wicked re formers getting after you. They are ruining the city, these reformers. They won't even let a man spit in the street cars.'' Is that what you call a free country? Give me the old times." And then, the wicked old rascal picks up the baby and rocks placidly back and forth singing, "Heaven Is Not Far Away, When Jesus Is Near." Experiment in Handling Convicts, From the-Detroit News. Since Cole E. Blease assumed the ' office or governor of South Carolina, j in January, 1911, he has released 1900 convicts from the prisons of the state. There were 1300 in the prisons when he came to the office and today there remain but 186. The experience of the state under such apparently reckless liberation in vites the closest scrutiny not only of penologists, but of all classes of clti sens, for, according to long established theories; suchaction is sure to result in a remarkable increase of . lawless ness in the state." The' taxpayers of the state will j- be relieved of a heavy bill of costs Incurred through the main, tenance of. prisons, but according to theory this saying would be offset by a far greater! loss incurred through losses of property, peril to the lives of citizens, and a forced increase of police and 'sherif f s Officers to keep all bad men at large in some sort of control. History has furnished a. few prece dents of a purely accidental or inci dental character. The mutineers of the British ship Bounty put their captain and 19 men, who refused to Join them, adrift in an open boat in mid-Pacific and took the ship to the Friendly' is lands, wnere tney carriea ort someJ Kanaka women and afterward set up a cblony. When, discovered, many years afterward, on Pitcairn island, these men who.i in addition to being men of inferior education, mentality and mor ality, had committed a capital crime, it was found had set up a remarkably pious colony in which crime was an unknown quantity and was without a criminar code. Soon after this historic event the British government,-finding the control of : Its transported convicts a very expensive and difficult - under taking, began to liberate them upon pledging then to good behavior. ' The experiment proved a remarkable ' suc ams. Jn both these cases every man Hi lit S-: PERTINENT COMMENT SMALL CHASGB The unnoihinated will be in a large majority. ;. . . a j-, - - ".- Huerta appears to be drunk In sev eral respects. - - ' '" What have become of tie anti cigarette and anti-fly cruaades? ' -.. r . -- ---- ''We don't) want to go to war, but, by Jingo, if i we do, we have the men. we have the ships, we have the money. too. Should it be a crime publicly to urge the nomination and' election of one candidate and the defeat of an other? But if Carranza and Villa ahould win the government, it wouldn't be half an hour until another revolution broke out. .-. e Evidently some ' Republican candi dates, will have a walk over no oppo sition. Some others will have a rough and rocky rjoad to travel. Intelligen and really patriotic Mex. leans should be thankful for American intervention in that hopelessly dis- traded country. A' school 'board having left the se lection of,-fne high school teachers to the students, the teachers all resigned. an excellent example for the directors to follow. I .The government's finances are in a fine condition, says the Washington correspondent of the Oregorrian. And the terrible,! ruinous Democrats in full power, too. A negro appointee having been oon- firmed b; the senate as municipal judge Of shington, won't Vardaman and some other senators resign or start a revolution? MAYO, THE ADMIRAL WHO STARTED IT By Herbert Corey. An adver islng man would write of Rear Admiral Henry Thomas Mayo that he is 'somewhat different." t care for armchairs, for He doesn one thing, The cool shadow of a great porch in a him pain: weary land merely gives He doesn't like an office where he can be within assignment. reach of a well cushioned club and the smoking room boards of strategy. He prefers actually prefers to be well out at sea. And he is a naval officer. mind you. jAt Washington they hardly believe that such things can be. And if a steel man, or a maker of Iron wedges, or some other deaUr in hard and unemotional bric-a-brac were to write ot Mayo he would say the admiral is j100 per cent efficient." ' He doesn't talk a great deal. He doesn't talk; about himself at all. He is sandy h Ired with all the sudden ness that goes with this capillary brand and has -a heavy jaw that locks tight at times when other people would thoroughly enjoy putting on a new uni form and talking a while. His eyes are deep blue. They are also very cold blue upon Occasion. People who have looked into j those eyes have suddenly changed a previous decision to give the admiral! an argument. ' i . And if a seaman were to talk of Mayo he would say that the admiral la "a littiej bit of all right. Bp," or whatever seagoing phrase this com mendation should be converted? into. Mayo la a strict disciplinarian d$u his discipline gbes both ways. He sees to tt that the enlisted men do well' He also sees that the officers do as they would be done by. If the admiral were to smile affectionately at a sailor, that liardjH ruffian would promptly ilrop dead. J He would be a trifle more surprised IE the admiral did not at all times see that the very best possible care is" taken of his - tummy and his quarters and all the other little things that interest sailors. Mayo is the man whose refusal to watch and jwait when a detachment of his marines were arrested at Tampico set a match to the Mexican bonfire. He is in command of the fourth divi sion of the North- Atlantic fleet, and has lately been stationed off Tampico. Once before he gave the Mexicans a taste of hla quality. The federals and constitutionalists were snapshooting and yelling and stealing chickens from each other, I and In various ways hav ine a loveSv war. There ar larcrn j oil tanks around Tampico owned by Americans and other nationals. Mayo drew a line! around the property. "This." said he, "Is neutral zone. Keep off the grass." "But," said the Feds and Cons. "But " "Nevertheless," said Mayo, "do not try to get under the ropes." They didn't Then that Hlnojosa Zaragosa incident happened. . The ma rines were arrested by Hlnojosa. Zara gpsa was the commanding officer. Oth er worse affronts have been offered the American flag a few thousand worse insults during the Mexican "BLUE SKY" LAWS THE BOND MEN WANT By John M. Oskison. I have said, in this series of arti cles, that the big bond dealers of the country are against the laws passed in a number of states to regulate the sale of i securities and protect the in vestor against bad offerings. These men fought the law in Michigan, and had it declared unconstitutional; and they - fought the Iowa enactment through the courts. " In a recent bulletin of the Invest ment Bankers' Association of America, the big dealers suggested some fea tures whicb they think should be con sidered by state lawmakers when "blue sky" I legislation is undertaken. And s a practical-matter, every one Interested n reforming abuses in tne marketing Of stocks and bonds ought to help in bringing the lawmakers and the representatives of the Investment bankers together. The investment bankers think that a "blue skyj" law ought to provide for the licensing of dealers, but It ought not to require the sort of detailed re had a fair start. They found liberty In countries where all the. wealth and all the, land had not been gathered into the hands Ot a few, making them nat ural lords Over the poor and landless The incorrigible criminals were grad ually eliminated and the convict set tlers became normal citizens of Indus trious habits and with a proper respecti of the rights of their fellow men. It is only by such accidents of history that we have come to a very different attitude toward those who incur the penalties pf the law. Governor Blease's apparently reckless experiment may snea new ngni upon a matter tnat has remained in darkness from time imme morial. Justice Hard to Secure. From the Chicago- Record-Herald. The president told callers' a few days ago it . doesn't matter apropos of what, since texts are plentiful that "Justice seems to be the heardest thing in the world to secure. . A very ld complaint this. Chinese, Greek, Hebrew and - Roman philoso phers voiced it thousands of years ago. We have progressed since, but human nature remains what tt waa. and -. AND NEWS IN BRIEF OREGON alPKJUGHTS : '. mmmm .-''- - . Cmh liinlnoM mon are working? on plana looking to the Establishing- of ferry across tne WHiamene i point nearest Canby. .!- B : , l , The Burns News asserts that every thing is promising for early and ; ac tive extension of the Oregon Eastern railroad into Harney-county. - Florida cucumbers at JS cents each made ade a new price record In the Wes-1 ton market last week, and Colonol I Wood of the Leader declares they were well worth the money. - Cooa county commercial clubs have dclded to erect lointly at the San VYanclsco fair a building to be named "Coos County, Oregon, Building." The Cooa county court will put $1000 into tae xuna. - - a Beat spelling record ever made In Umatilla county Is claimed for the sixth grade in the Central school at Milton. Miss Andes, teacher, with 37 pupils taking the written test of loo words, an average grade Of 97 24-37 waa made for the room. a a Gold Hill-News: "Three miles of boulevard" is what motorists and the traveling public generally are calling tne improvea willow springs road, which extends almost from this city to Willow Springs and is said by many who have driven or motored over it to be the finest piece of roadwork in me county. Editor Young of the Sentinel testi fies that Coqullle is the first sec tion of which he has been a resident in the past forty years where more people want to buy farm lands than are offering to sell them, and he goes on to say that what is needed is "to get our logged off. lands on- the mar ket at prices that will attract colon ists.- war. But none of them was offered in the vicinity of Admiral Mayo. It would have been quite feasible ' for him to have cabled Washington that he had been seriously annoyed, and please what should he do about it. Mayo Isn't that sort Of an officer. He wasn't trained in that sort of school. No one had to tell him what to do about it. "ADoloeize.!" aald Mavo. "Salntf Everyone knows what happened after that t in mihi. thit m.v provide for the restoration of the long dropped rank ef vie admiral to the navy before this session ends. In that case it is pretty certain that Mayo will be one of the few officers honored by it. He is the youngest of his present rank in the navy, being but 67 years old, and has four more years to serve on the active list. He Js Vermonter by birth, a scientist by In clination and a fighting man upon occasion. Mayo was "discovered" bjrSecretary Daniels. Of course, the navy knows all about Mayo. But the civilian sec retaries of the navy rarely know any thing about officers of the navy who prefer to stay on their stations. Mayo has always liked to serve on the Pa. clflc coast. He never yearned for the flesh pots of Washington. When Dan- tela took charge of the navy depart ment he determined to break up that hard and fast combination ot bureau crats .which had long ruled it. They hold their positions as heads of the naval bureaus by statutory authority, and they have been hard to dislodge, I will have a cabinet," said Daniels to nimseir. I will appoint four men aa aids." He wanted officers . who had not served In Washington and who were, tnererore, free from the social, red - tapical. clubbish, scratch-my-back en tanglements that all who serve in Washington for an extended period sooner or later fail into. Mayo was at that time a captain. In command of the Mare Island navy yard. Daniels sent for him. He said he wanted to consult Mavo about the Mare Island future. The more ha looked at Mavo th better be liked him. So he took the captain on the target cruise of the Atlantlo fleet off the Virginia capes. It was on this trip that Daniels de cided be couldn't keep house without ! the silent man. He made him an aid I to personnel. But pretty soon Mayo became. rear admiral, in the routine ef service, and as he always has don he wanted to go to sea. Daniels made him commander of the squadron in I Mexican waters. , Mayo was but 16 years old when he won appointment to the Naval academy In 1872. A great deal of his service! has been in the scientific branches. He spent years in making coast surveys and served oc almost every naval post. upporiunuy nas Deen denied nim be - fore the Tampico affair to do anything mat wouia put ms name oeiore tne Puduc But ail the time he has been doing what came bis way in the way it ought to be done. And he doesn't lose any time in the doing.. porting on specific offerings which most law nave asked for. They think that the states ought to get together and work out uniform laws so that a dealer who has con- formed to the law's requirements In one state may do business in all. They believe that the tendency of the lawmakers Is too great to permit the investor to inquire closely into the business of the dealer. It Is, they say, as IX the state gave every depos itor in a bank the right to examine its affairs something that should be left to properly appointed officials. They think that the states might well copy the practice of the federal government, whose postof f ice inspec tors have done such good work i in auppresslng the get-rlch-qulck promot- Naturally, two parties are Interested in legislation of this kind buyers of securities and sellers of securities. A, state legislature ought to coniider both classes, when It proposes to make re strictive laws. tice Is still the hardest thing in the I world to secure. Why? Because Justice is not sen sationaL 3It does not flatter anybody and gets little recognition. The Just man is no hero in anybody's eyes. Jus tice is like common sense mighty un common. Generosity, charity, altruism are applauded, while Justice, is too often Its own reward. In social re form it is much easier to enlist sup port for something novel, startling, dramatic, than for a program of sim ple justice. There are rnen who have millions for all forma of charity, but not a dollar for the promotion of plain Justice, which Would do away with a good deal of e.iaruy. Tet the thoughtful wiir continue to peg away for Justice. There may be no glory in it, especially in the yellow papers, but there is satisfaction, in tellectual and moral. When you have established Justice In any sphere you have done something permanent and substantial. Just a little philosophy may enable one to take thfngs as they come, but to part with' them as they, go- that U IN EARLIER DAYS By Fred Lockley. . ; Within a short time after the dis covery "of the- rich diggings at Oro- fiuo in Idaho, Portland waa crowded With miners from California and with rough characters from all over the coast waiting for a chance to go into the newly discovered district. The sa loons, and dance halls had more busi ness than they could handle. Port. Lanu- from being a quiet and peacu- u " rew .nKiand village, suci- denly look on the aspei-ts of a, typical irontier mining camp. The busket places in town were the wharfs, wlierg ireigui was constantly being unload ed for shipment to the mines; nor wrre the ticket offices of the boat llus leas busy men were lined up Tor half a block waltina their turn to huv m. ticket to The Halles. Among the ar gonauts who were in the rush to the Orofino mines was Dr. Ci H. Rafferty a pioneer resident of tli$ East Side and one-time mayor ot ast Portland. e f nought Portlands lock present ed a scene of confusion Just before our boat pulled out," said Dr. Rafferty. out tne scene at The Dalles was ona- of confusion worse confounded. The miners wanted their outfits off the boat first so they could get away to the mines, while the gamblers thought their faro layouts and roulette wheels should have precedence. Tom, my partner, and myself, decided It was . no place for tenderfeet to mix in, as we might get them stamped on, .ao we awaited with as much patience aa possible the landing of our freight. We took our horses out a mile or so outh of town and staked them Out on a. bunch grass hill. We were held up- for three days until our freight could be unloaded, located and deliv ered .to us. 'Bu'.l-puncbers, mule-skinners, pack ers, miners and tenderfeet kept the saloon doors swinging, while the lan guage one heard on all sides was more remarkable for its expressiveness than for Its elegance. "Tom and I finally assembled ou outfit and horsea and got startad. We made our first camp on the Deschutes river about fifteen miles from The Dalles. Neither Tom nor I knew much about cooking, bill we felt aura it wasn t much of a Job. It looked easy. We camped in a and storm. Until you try it you wouldn't believe how hard i; is to cook supper over a sage brusn ampfire. with the air full of flying Ki. We finally compromised on a supper of bread and sand, bacon and sand and sand and coffee. We sure had sand with every c6ursc. It wasn't long, though, before we both becama fair cooks. ' 'As neither of us liked to wash dishes, we managed to do without themf As soon as we camped, while Tom was attending to the horses I would Btart a fire. Then I would take - the partly-filled flour sack from the tanky bag,' put in a spoonful or more of baking powder on top of the flour, pour in a little water and mix the dough till it was stiff. Then I would twist it in spiral form on a stick which I would stick In the ground near the fire. Then i would put a spoonful of coffee In each of our cups and filling them with water -I would put them at the edge of the fire. 1 would put several good slzeJ potatoes on the fire to bake and whit- ling a couple of sharpened sticks I -J would slice the bacon and hold It over the fire to dry. Meanwhile I woul 1 turti the dough as it became brown on the side next to the fire. By the I time Tom hud finished his work I had leaked potatoes, camp-bread, coffee and I bacon, and with a raw onion apiece, ( I we would sit down and . eat a supper I fit for a king and when we were I through all we had to do was to rlnne I our tin coffee cups in the stream .and 1 the" -dishes were washed, "With our blankets spread on the sand by .the fire land leaning back I against our saddles, we would watch the smoke from our corn-enkwtpipes drift upward and finally be lulled to leep by the mingled voice of the tream and the plaintive walling ot he coyotes. Next day we arrived at SThe ferryman charged $1 for each person and the came for eaVh animal. We compromised by Toth going ovur with our packs and outfits at the coft of $1, while 1 undressed and swam the horses over. I tied my clothes In a tight bundle and with my stespenders 1 tied the bundle on my head. I drove the horses Into the river and as they started across I made grab -for, my horse's tail, intending to let htm pill ' me over, i missea ms tan una took a header, going clear under, and had to swim across. In those days, whether you had corns or consumption, dandruff or dys pepsia, you . took Cook's pills. They were good for whatever ailed you. My mother had Insisted on my taking box of Cook's pills along for emergen- 1 , wtin t went unrfor th ir(M-nM waters of the John Day my box of Cook's, pills became soaked, and when i came to look at them they had run I together Into an unappetizing dough like mass. I decided I would rather have the fish take them for what ailed them than to take them myself, ao I threw them into the river. "We camped that night in a dry gulch a few miles east of ' the John Day. Next morning when Tom was folding our blankets he nearly put, hla hand on a rattlesnake that had been our bedfellow and shared the warmth of our blankets during the night. I I never could abide a rattlesnake, an1 as we bad no Cook's pills to- cure us in case we were bitten, we dropped a ten-pound rock on his head. f Next night vi camped at the site of 'what is now Echo. That used to be favorite camping place 60 years ago. We camped under the spreading bows of some cottonwood - trees. Before . cooking supper we both spent half an hour fishing In the Umatilla river. ' The fish bit well, so we bad all the trout we could eat for supper. , WV met Ferd Patterson, who jwaa also I camped Uiere. Ferd waa a type that has almost disappeared. I remember once when going 4oard the boat at Lewiston Tor Portland, Ferd had just gone on the beat. . Frank Dodge was the purser. Four "bad men came up the gangplank and when Frank asked them for- their fare, one of I them puled his gun and pointing it in Frank's face, said; This is our fare, I What are you going to do about ltr - 1 Before you could bat your eye,... Ferd j Patterson knocked the "bad man's gun up, covered him with his pistol and said: 'You fellows dig up for your tickets and be quick about ' It. . They dug up in a hurry, fo they knew ' Ferd wouldn't hesitate to cut another notch on, his gun." . The Sunday Journal The Great Home Newspaper, consists ot Five news sections replete with ' Illustrated features. Illustrated magazine of Quality.' Woman's section of rare merit,' Pictorial news supplement. Superb comic section,' -. 5 Cents the Copy l! t