y - -. THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, MONDAY EVENING, MAY 11, 1914. ! r THE JOURNAL An fKDgyr.NDKXT newspaper C. . JACKSON PaMbHWT Published eer-r aranlng (except Sunday) and ; rj Bandar mornlnc nt Tbe Journal Build ing. Broadway and Yamhill t.. Portland. Or. Kotered at U postofftt at I'ortland, Or., for vtraastniialon through tbe malls ts second ' elaas matter. TfcLKI'HONES Main 7173; Hoire, A-4051. Ail depcrtaenu reaehed by Ui'" ambera. Tail 'the operator what department you wapt. ICKKKiN ADVERTISING BKI'UESKNTATIVK .Benjamin a Kantnor Co.. Bruotwlck Bids., 82S.riftb Ae., New York; 1218 Peoples , fcas Bids.. Chicago. -flobecrlptlon terms by mall or to any ad Irw In tbe Doited Btatea or Mexico: - ' DAILY One year.' 15.00 One month t -CO icxwr , One year $2.50 I One uAnth I .23 , , DAILY AND SUNDAY One rear.. $7.80 One month t -5 -ta Any man In any walk of life, who puts Jealousy, hate and fear behind him. ran make himself distinguished. Elbert Hubbard. TRUE I'ATIUOTISM A NATION is pacing it tribute of respect today to seventeen American lives that went out the other day at Vera Cruz. At the Bropklyn navy yard a grateful government through its chief executive is voicing its meed Of praise. While the loss of tht-se seventeen- Jives is deplorable they , will not have died in vain if out of their death shall come a new order in Mexico. "Ha has .come back home, asleep, "With 'the flag above his face; With the atarry fold to keep Guard abdVe his resting place; And beneath blue summer skies. Where he dreams below the sod. But a single rosebud lies Now betwer-n his heart and God?" It Is pertinent to recall the Just rebuke administered by L. W. Summerlin, a brother of one of these heroes, Randolph Summer lin, to those who are trying to manufacture sentiment against the national administration in its Mex ican policy. $hen the names of those who fell when the American flag was planted at Vera Crus were received In New York, the Hearst yndicate sent its correspondent at Willacooche, Georgia, tho follow ing Instructions: Please Interview Summerlin' fath er on uselessness of sacrifice. If United States Is now to accept medi ation. Does he, not think It out rageous to have to send boys to be killed and then government decide fighting is wrong? To this Insulting request Mr. Hearst received the answer of a loyal and honorable American as follows: I beg to say my brother, Randolph Rummerlln. was killed at Vera Cruz In defense of the country's honor. We favor President Wilson and the Democratic administration, and Ran dolph has four brothers and a farther who are ready and willing to make the sacrifice If railed upon. What a striking, contrast be tween this patriotic southern fam ily and the Hearsts, the Otises and their sympathizers who would force the nation into a war. One knows only loyalty, to duty and jealous regard for national honor, the other knows only political spite and selfish property interest. . DISEASE IN MEXICO T IS a truism that in war, dis Iease kills more than bullets. The possibility of a conflict in Mexico leads to a survey of the disease dangers which will confront American soldiers in that country and the present condition of pre paredness of the army medical ' service. In the past fifteen years this strvlce has been practically reor ganized and there has been great Increase of scientific knowledge of disease and Its prevention. Ex perience has been gained in Cuba, the Philippines and in China so that the army today possesses a corps of specialists trained in camp sanitation. For these rea sons it may be reasonably fore casted that mortality from disease will be materially lessened. Discussing this subject the Jour nal" of the , American Medical As sociation says, aside from the or dinary diseases which might pre vail among any body of two or thre hundred thousand men. there are certain diseases to which sol diers In camp and field are partic ularly exposed. These are especially, smallpox, typhoid fever and dysentery. Small pox may be disregarded, as any troops sent Into Mexico will be Immune from this disease through vaccination. The appalling experi ence of tho Spanish-American war when there were 20,000 cases of typhoid In the army in six months can never be forgotten. Anti-typhoid Inoculation has been subject to rigorous tests on a large scale In the army during the past two years with the result that In 1913 out of &0.000 men at home and aDroaa there was only a single case of typhoid among the inocu lated. It Is believed that the army surgeon has now a weapon against typhoid that will make the next war unique In this regard. . The dysenteries can be divided , Into those due to bacterial In vasion and those caused by pto malaes Jn food. While the water and ,food of the soldiersi will be . mors carefully guarded than ever -' before, a certain amount of intes tinal disorder will be inevitable. It can be . safely predicted that there will be no repetition of the embalmed beef scandal of 189. Of the diseases peculiar to trop ical and seml-clyillzed countries. . yellow fever, malaria, bubonic plague, cholera and -. typhus must be considered. Malaria. -ajid sk AFTER A DOSE OF B ECAUSE given a dose of Its own the baby act. It whimpers and sobs because The Journal print ed the criminal record of the gunman It- hired to also shoot Dr. Smith in the back. After forty years of cruel and merciless lampooning and cartoon ing of every public man who has not done its bidding, it professes that its sensitive feelings have been shocked. It tries to play the sympathy dodge. It expresses great sorrow that Mr. McMannus' criminal record was exposed by The Journal. YVhat about the -attack Mr. McManus made on Dr. Smith? What about McManus' false interview with which Mayor Matlock promptly repudiated? What about McManus denial that Dr. Smith, as mayor, attacked the Pendleton gamblers, when McManus himself pleaded guilty to gambling under Dr. Smith's administration, and was fined for it? McManus printed in the Oregonian a false statement as to the ex cellent record of Dr. Smith, as mayor. The Journal printed a true , vn t v. ui . mviuauuBi m Laitcu ixuui iud iiai- , nai docket or Umatilla county, and the Oregonian admits that the record is correct. Including the fact that McManus bought a revol ver, followed Bob Estes Into the rear of a saloon and shot him in the back. ' McManus was not the Oregonian's regular correspondent in Pen dleton. It didn't use its regular correspondent, because It wanted a dirty job done, and in McManus it found a willing tool, who served hi mantar and o-nt hla wao-a , What is the soectacle when the whimpers at the exposure of its hiring McManus to attack Dr. Smith? It is a pretty newspaper to begin to cry because the criminal record of its Mr. McManus was printed in The Journal. It revels in such things, only it directs Its malignancy at deoent men. It hounded poor old John H. Mitchell into his grave. He died a pauper, almost forsaken and alone, a fact that proved that his long service inthe senate could not have been crooked. His last days on earth, when he was broken and deserted, were embittered by the merciless onslaughts of thv Oregonian, which now sobs because Mr. McManus' criminal recorfflias appeared in print. In pure meanness and cruelty, the hounding of Jonathan Bourne by the Oregonian is one of the tragedies of Oregon. Bourne was a good senator. But everything that he ever did in the senate was nonrepresented and the man calumniated. Instead of helping to hold up his hands for the good of the state, the Oregonian derided and obstructed. It sought to destroy hie prestige in the senate by its attacks here, a course that militated so far as the Oregonian's influence went, to destroy Oregon's prestige at Washington. Why traduce, lampoon and villify Bourne, and then sob over McManus? There has seldom been a more vicious assault upon a public man than the Oregonian's persecution of Harry Lane when he was mayor of Portland, a course that it now pursues In his senatorship. It ob structed his policies as mayor, backed up the council In Its opposi tion, and did all it could to tie his hands in the fight he made to resist the encroachments of the corporations upon the people of Port land. It commended nothing but condemned everything. It assailed Dr. Lane for the very thing for which it now assails Dr. Smith, to wit, the opposition of each to an open town. There never has been a more cruel and brutal vllllficatlon of a man than by the Oregonian's abuse of Governor West- There is not an impartial man in this state who does not believe In the perfect good faith and earnest desire of Oswald West to do all he can for the good of Oregon. There is not an impartial man or woman in the state but believes Governor West Is honest, faithful and tre mendously energetic in the discharge of the duties of his high office. But what has been the attitude of the Oregonian toward him from the day he was inaugurated to the present? Where have its sensitive feelings and great sympathy been as to West? For more than three years, it has steadily vilified, persecuted, misrepresented and hounded him. As an assassin of a good name, the Oregonian's attitude toward West has been that of a highway man. It has converted the liberty of the Dress into the errKRMt license. , In vicious cartoons and him almost daily throughout his ciTnr.lv "UaA Ir." VS J J ,m,Vii ii. iu ui uiiu, uuu lUBieaa oi trying to nelp his admin istration, it has. hindered, handicapped and misrepresented It. Wyhy theJe sobs or $he Oregonian about its McManus, in the face of its devilish attacks' and outrages on Governor West? For forty years, the Oregonian has been a newspaper thug Throughout his term as governor and ever since he was elected senator,- Chamberlain has been belled and bedeviled by the Oregonian As governor, Chamberlain did splendid service for the people, and as senator he has secured passage of excellent legislation for' Ore gon, the Alaska railroad bill included. All the time, he has been clubbed, and bullied, and browbeaten and sandbagged by the Ore gonian. It has never tried to add to his Influence in the senate as any decent newspaper would do. Its recent personal attacks on Commissioner Will Daly are an other instance of its brutal policy. It has misrepresented him im pugned his motives and assailed his best efforts for Portland.' It has done all it could to obstruct his work and destroy his policies It cartooned him, ridiculed him and bedeviled him. These are but a few in the long list of the good names It has tried to assassinate. It never sees good in anybody whom it can not control. It is a butcher of reputations. Its unfairness and injustice to men. except its own McManuses, is common talk in Ore gon. Its persecution and hounding of men without reason or excuse is of daily remark in this town. It has no sense of proportions re lations or morals. Its assaults on Dr. Smith hav hn Jr, be unqualifiedly false. Its cartooninar and lamnr,r.ninr n i, v been wanton, cruel, and infamous, t. 0.1. cauubc, uecaube ur. .smitn is a hlghmlnded clean and honorable citizen whose only offense is that he seeks the Demo menf0 nomination for Sovernor n a platform of rigid law enforce A human life and a good name are of about ommi v,7 men would rather be shot In the DUgned their nurnoaea Horl 9hn pugnea. tneir purposes lied about munity murdered. Yet for forty years, the Oregonian has been butchering eoorl I Z?yLTZheenb0nnAiug d6Cent CU,EenB into their 1 graves and has been cruelly, mercilessly and recklessly persecutine honorable men. regardless of the tears it made flow In thfr fcJlt -..n ...10 fsiici n launcu luuuvuoi What a spectacle when such pers Decause me criminal record of its McManus and lta hlrtno- e hav no desir to sting anyone. Pro McManus to lie about Dr. Smith were exDosed nr. nR 01 j ilbitlonists and the Prohibition party which the people of Oregon were low fever can be controlled by eradicating the breeding places of mosquitoes. This can be done easily where the men remain in fixed, habitations but for men in the field American ingenuity must devise new methods. The exter mination of rats will eliminate bubonic plague. Personal cleanli ness and purity of the water and milk supplies will go far towards the prevention of cholera. Regarding typhus fever it is a peculiar coincidence that the work of Ricketts by which he demon strated, at the loss of his own life, that the body louse is the Carrier of this disease, was done at Mexico City, where he carried on his Investigations among the lower class Mexicans. This dis ease, which in past centuries has caused enormous loss of life, can easily be prevented by avoiding dirty dwellings and contact with dirty people. A FLAGRANT PRACTICE T HE Heppner Gazette says: A Finnish girl, scarcely able to speak or understand a word of English, arrived in Heppner saiuraay ana made known with much difficulty that she had been sent out from a Portland employment agency to take a position as chamber maid In a hotel here. Aa none at j tho Jjgala had sent in tor such . an ITS OWN MEDICINE medicine, the Oregonian plays Mayor Matlock about Dr. Smith j I Oreeonlan nlavs th hahv and i villlfying editorials, It has assailed term of office, and what for It , . . . . . . and what is far worse, without back than have th.r mM.. TV Vk t 7 , T motlves 'm- and their standing In the com- I women and children. a paper with such t fully entitled. exposure to emDlOVe tha foe. . Plain graft M tkTZ oe one oi Ployment agenta. wh had taken poor eirl'H nniiti ,n ln'3 Poor girl's anniw , , her out to make the beVt T Ti . "... 1 r Jt " wcoi8 increaiDie that an tablished agency would be eniltv!when rotten? Bread is the staff of or a practice so vicious. Yet there are constantly recurring statements to the effect that such things tttmaHy none. There could scarcely be a more sinister act than the sendine of this girl hundreds of miles at large farct tAh'SSo is a ftnurTtn expense to herself, among strange . Maine." Six of Maine's ex-governors people who could not Speak hr tnat know more about it than he does language nor she theirs, leaving t6J u dIere"y- "The law has been hor rn ftr,A . Ke . ' i of: Immeasurable value In reducing the her to find as best she could, on nqUor traffic, and has corresponding arrival, that there was no employ- j ly increased the wealth of the state ment for her. I fey increasing the sobriety of the peo- . I' the girl has friends who know or tne facts, can they not com- municate with The Journal? With authentic details in hand respect ing any such cases this newspaper can help right the wrongs of those who are victimised. NORDICA T HE voice of the singer is atlllfld forvr h,.t rlw, Hn f uoj luaguBiic pertioaouuy ana the echo of her notes Will linger long in the memory of mil - Uons. She sained the musical hon- ore of two continents but never forgot - or was ashamed that she was an American woman. Lillian Nordica was an institu tion,' one of the few famous sing ers who was as well known to the non-musical as to the musical. The critic might stop to dis course of the quality of her tones or the nature of her art but the ordinary listener did not pause to analyze. He was content .to sit and be borne on her chariot of melody into the land of dreams. She was one of the first Ameri can singers to receive recognition in the old world, but was never weaned from the land of her birth. She was deeply interested in the development of music In the United States and at one time cher- icueu x project to establish an American Bayreuth, but unhappily her ambitious plan never matured. She has left this to those who are to take her place. (Communications aeot to Tbe Journal for pobiicatlun in thia itmarim.nt -hn,,i k. uu yuij uoe siae or tne paper, should nor exceed 300 words In length and most be ac companied by the name and address of tbe sender. If the writer does not deslra to have the name published, be should no state.) "Discussion Is the greatest of an reform ers. It rationalises everything it touches. It robs principles of all false ssnetlty and throws them back on their reasons blenes. If they have no reasonableness. It ruthlessly crushes them out of existence ad aetr up lta own conclusions in their stead." Woodrow Wilson. Who Is Esterly? Portland, May 9. To the Kditor of The Journal H. M. Esterly is candi date for the office of Democratic na tional committeeman. He Is a lawyer an honest one; president of the Juvenile Improvement association, founded by the late Judge Frazer; was special prosecutor for the juvenile court; worked with a sincere heart for the Oregon system; is on the execu tive committees of the Oregon Civic league and of the Oregon Municipal association; believes in the plain neO' pie and the right of children to be born into a happier world; is a Democrat, not only in name but by blood, and is one of the few who understand that no man can be a true Democrat and not support the Democratic president. His slogan, "I'm for Wilson," means more than all the campaign thunder put together. "President Wilson Is the first president who has clearly seen the evil of a divided executive and legislature. He has sought to give us responsible government the president and his party In control of congress working as one. Our system, because of our written constitution, does not give us that unity and cohesion be tween executive and ' legislative en joyed by the English republic and by France. Sometimes we have a presi dent and a congress of opposite par ties, the congressional majority with magnificent patriotism trying to put the executive in a hole. Sometimes we have a president and a congres sional majority nominally of the same party, but each member of congress playing his own poor little local fid dle, and destroying the president's ca pacity to respond to the will of the whole people. Wilson Is the first man m the president's chair to point out mn evu aim 10 seen a remeay. tie asks a loyal party support that he may give the people a responsible govern ment. It is not personal to Wilson. It Is a great national epoch. If we can es tablish - it, we have gone a long way toward a government so responsible to the people that it will redeem Its pledges on all vital Issues. . It is the most Important thought in this cam paign, and no matter how he labels himself, no candidate for any office ought to receive . the votes of Demo crats unless he sow fearlessly and loyally proclaims "I'm for Wilson." C. E. S. WOOD. Challenges Liquor Apologists Newport, Or., May 7. To the Editor of Tie Journal Ella M. Finney claims by the able assistance of a Portland writer to bave "captured the Bible." If true, she surely got a treasure, and ought to be happy. "I have already taken the judges, and am going for the doctors," she says. With all these, and a hop farm, what more? Does she want the earth? But away along down In her com munication she seems to be a little more rational. She says: "Q. A. Cobb, candidate for the Democratic nomination, and George C. Brownell, candidate for the Republican, stand for prohibition." That's good. They are to be honored for having the nerve and the manhood to do it. But again, she says: "Why don't they get into the Prohibition party, then?" Now that question is quite rational and Hg,lt t0 th polnt- Why don they? But, that Is their buslnes However, it is only a matter of tin, when they and all other good peon Why don't s. time when they and all other good people Vl set there- Mrs- Flnley letter" A, Llnscott makes us all laugh, "Tha Tonibltionists remind me of a nest of hornets. They all try to are the true friends of humanity everywhere. The liquor traffic is ha I inanity's greatest enemy. We intend to sting it to death. 1 "Prohibitionists say liquo is un mid i Is made is maae or tne game Kind or articles ! tnat we eat-" sy Wr- Linscott. True. iA sound potato Is wholesome, healthy es-fand nutritious, but who would eat ! t r- xt f- I ucLicid num uie reopie it i that liquor 1. made of but iow wou d i 14 do made from this same material wrJSJTA-'aA prepared There is no end of the proof that Wquor is unwholesome and that the trarnc is disgraceful and criminal. j ?y!2T JrF&5?mbrr'' i e. w DURkFE. Hawley's Record as to Labor. Roseburg, Or., May 9. To the Edl tor of The Journal On May 4 wired the secretary of the American Federation of Labor at Washington. D. C, for information in regard to Mr. Hawley s record, and especially ln regard to popular election of United States senators. I have today re- ( t-clvc? l"IB TOra "n rma lnM " - corroooraies me record given in my j open letter to the compilers of Mr. Hawley's Information in the voters' i pamphlet- Accompanying this infor- ,e w lclier' Tucn "Washington D, C, May 4, 1914. A FEW SMILES It la the duty of everyone to make at least one person happy during the week,' said & Sunday school teacher. "Now. have you done so, Johnny?" "Yes," said Johnny, promptly. "That's right. What did you dor "I went to see my aunt, and she was happy when I went home. First Company Promoter Darned in sult, I call it! Second Ditto What's wrong? First Company Pro moter See what the old 'scoundrel did! Carefully counted each of his fingers after I shook hands with him! "My dear," remarked Jones, who had Just finished reading a book on "The Wonders of Nature," "this really Is a remarkable work. Na ture la marvellous! Stupendous! When I read a work like this it makes me think how puerile, how in significant la man." "Huh!" sniffed his better half. "A wom an doesn't have to wade through 400 page to find out the same thing." Judge. "If you don't mind. ir," said the new convict, address ing the warden. "I should like to be put at my own trade." "That might be a good Idea," said the warden; "what may your trade be?" "I'm an aviator," said the new arrival. Mr. S. W. Starmer, Roseburg, Or. Dear Sir: RepTylng to your telegram of May 2, I inoSbse herein the record of the , Oregon delegation on measures of Interest to labor that have come to a record vote. Tou will find Mr. Hawleys record Included therein. "You will note that out of 22 op portunities to vote he voted efght times favorably, five times, unfavor ably, eight times he Is recorded aa not voting,' and once he Is recorded as answering present. "You will particularly note that Representative Hawley is recorded aa 'not voting on the occasion when the initiative, referendum and recall was voted upon for the constitution of Ari zona, on May 23, 1911, and on May 13, 1912, when the popular election of United States senators amendment to the constitution was before the house, he Is again recorded as 'not voting.' Fraternally yours. FRANK MORRISON. "Secretary A. F. of L.." Yours truly, S. W. STARMER. The News From Colorado. Hood River, Or., May 8. To the Editor of The Journal I am a reader of the Portland papers. I consider The Journal by far the best of them all: It prints all the news. I was talking to a man at Odell yesterday about the "slaughter of innocents" ln Colorado. He looked at me ln amaze ment. He had never heard of the kill ing of women and babies and piling them up and burning them with coal oil. Yet he Is Intelligent and reads the Portland papers. I informed him that be bad been reading the wrong papers, that The Journal was the only paper I had seen that presented both sides of the question, with a strong leaning to the side of right against might, the side of the down trodden class that is being opposed on all sides by big business assisted by a lot of lick spittle papers whose chief stock in trade consists in lying cartoons cal culated to reflect on an administration that has done more to break the back of combined capital than any that has occupied that position for many years, I did not vote for Mr. Wilson, bu lots of mighty good men did, and since he was elected to be our president I propose to be loyal to him. Ever since I can remember every president upon takinsr his seat was informed that he must adjust his administration to the requirements) of the great combines. but Mr. Wilson boldly informed the great combines that they would be re quired to adjust their business to his administration, hence the kick. The question is, which side are you 011 Mr". Wilson Is badly handicapped,. witli two wars on his bands, and the people are getting wise as to the cause. Again, which aids are you on is the question, Concluding, allow me, to offer a word of advice to the poor down trodden class. Let them read the papers that are ln sympathy with their cause, be loyal to the government, and vote fo their own class. JOHN B. POLK. Mexico and Water Rights. Portland, May 9. To the Editor of The Journal Pancho Villa Is the true leader. Had he listened to Carranza 60,000 constitutionalists would be fighting us today. But Villa said "No Americans are our friends. I believe Wilson honest. We can trust him Villa was thefirst to see that to take up arms against the United States would lose all the cause had gained. Must the United States go to war with Mexico for southern Texas selfishness? In our treaty over the boundary Hoe Mexico got the best of us ln the waters for Irrigation. Texas is determined to annex northern Mexico for these same waters. Un less we keep a large force on the frontier there will be trouble. Who is this for? A few speculators who wan the water. Hold Vera Cruz and take out all refugees who demand axlt. aive Villa a chance to get ln ammunition. In three months the war will be over and Mexico at peace. Send ln Instructors to give the peons enlightenment. Our forefathers caused the trouble for Texas. When the boundary line waa surveyed they paid no attention to the water rights. Why should they? Th best of whiskey was only 17 cents per gallon. Their sons have found the value of water. If Texans cross the border and tlr up Villa, then all Mexico will unite, and the United States will have to put a half million men into the field, at the cost of mil Hons of dollars, and the same for pen Blone, of which the Civil war is an ex ample, and all this besides the sacrl fice of life. EXPERIENCED. Laboring Man Indorses Brown, Portland, May 9. To the Editor o The Journal As a laboring man I wish to say a few words in behalf of the candidacy of Ueorge M. Brown for at torney general. I have known Mr, Brown for many yearn and am familiar with his early struggles as well as his career as a public official. He has al ways been in sympathy with the la boring man. because "he has gone over the same road himself. Born on a farm near Roseburg, he earned his bread by the sweat of his brow, and by hard and earnest toll - has reached the position he occupies today During the It years that he has hehlju my duty as a laborln-rxnan to In PERTINENT COMMENT SMALL CHANGE One of the easiest things on earth is prophecy. p v Murderer Huerta wins no victories. Lucky marines, in Vera Cruz: they can go to a bull fight every Sunday. e Most preachers dodge all around tbe real reason people don't go to church. Villa must have a pretty good pen cil wielder to write his announcements. Since all the candidates are equally strong for great improvements and no taxes, what's the difference? Two White House weddings within a few months. One more chance, gen tlemen. e Hello. Washington weather man. Where's our "know?" Wheat crop in the Paclflo north west 10,000,000 bushels more than ever before. Hurrah for the Democratic administration. e e TJo until November the Oregonian will daily insist that the country has gone to the devil. The rumor that Dr. C. J. Smith was paying the Oregonian is not so tnotlgh if legitimate it would be to his advantage to do so. Be natlent: the time will arrive when this huUaballoo about the Interstate bridge approach will also be over. e Why. the very lambs are bleating merrily and skipping joyfully this spring over free wool. m 9 Man Is 91 years old. In good health and vigorous and haDDV. drinks heavilv of Bull Run water. That's the right. reguiar, frequent, drink, young man. GEN. WOOD TO WATCH THE BORDER By Herbert Corey. 1 It's a queer thing, this army game. Now and then one hears an army of ficer crying earnestly for rotation in office. And then the officer gets the rotation and cries louder than ever. Thus 10 years ago one heard protests of this sort: "It's a shame that Leonard Wood has been made chief of staff. Why, he's nothing but a doctor."' And now Wood is no longer chief of staff, but has been gazetted ln com mand of the army on the Mexican border. And the very same people who once sobbed at the thought of a mere pill roller bossing a beautifully orna mented military force now deprecate the mistake that has been made. "You'll notice," they say. "that they're Btill keeping Wood in Wash ington even if he wasn't good enough far chief of staff." Most of which, on both sides, Is non sense, vv ood became major general and chief of staff because he was pre eminently the best man in the army. Most of the army will admit that now. The administration prefers another man aa chief of staff or wants Wood on the border and the change is ef fected. Wherever he may be. Wood will be doing a day's work. And ln a service that is crammed with plctur esque figures. Wood stands out like a city hall in a park. , To begin with, he never was a mere pill-roller, as the men .who used to be his detractors before they got bet ter acquainted with him used to say. The formula of his make-up has run something after this fashion: Fighting man, 70 per cent; politician, 28 per cent; society man. 9 Per cent; medi cal man, a trace. He is six feet something tall, with the shoulders of a piano mover and the waist of a tango dancer. He has the thick, beak-like nose of the man of force, and a pair of odd knobs over the eyebrows, which old fash ioned phrenologists used to say were Indications of great powers of ob servation. Also, he was born without the capacity for getting tired. H1b father was a New England country doctor, who returned home invalided from the Civil war. Naturally, that made the son want to be a soloier. He passed an examination for mil itary surgeon brilliantly ln 1885, and then jumped at a chance to go west as a contract surgeon with the army at $100 a month. He joined General Lawton's command when that soldier waa just getting ready to run down Geronimo.and his Apaches. "What the hell do you want out here?" Lawton asked. "I hope to be transferred to the line," said Wood. "I want to be a fighting man." During that campaign Wood actual ly "walked down" Apache warriors through their own hills. One day h tramped 25 miles to a wounded sol dier, rode 73 miles with a message and then marched 34 miles with the troops. "That night," said Lawton, "he wanted to play pinochle." Lawton paid him the highest com pliment in his power for his services in that first campaign. For 10 years Wood staid out there, chasing bad Indians and physicking soldiers. He made a good reputation aa a doctor. HOW WILL YOU LEND TO THE FARMER? By John M. Osklson. Some sort of new banking arrange ment in the interest of the American farmer will be written into the law before long. Loans will be made easier for hjm to get, and the interest rate will be lowered on his loans. Yoit who make and control the sur plus money of the country will have to supply the funds for the borrowing farmer. It Is up to you, before con gress passes some form of legislation, to express to your congressman your opinion of the best form of legislation. Roughly, there are three theories concerning the establishment of credit at a low cost for the farmer. The first is for tho farmers, through cooperative organizations to lend to each other. The second (contained ln a deflnte bill known as the Bathr'ck-Norris bill) is that the government Itself ought to lend money directly to the farmers at 4 per cent Interest, payable semi-annually, no loan to be more than $2000; loans to run fo. not less than 10 years; at the end of five years one fifth of the loan to become due. and one fifth each year thereafter. While tbe farm er is to pay 4 per cent the government is to raise the money to lend the farmer by selling ZM per cent bonds. Theory number three is that the gov ernment ought to sanction the estab- the office of district attorney in south ern Oregon he has never failed to give the toiler a square deal. He ha en forced the laws with Justice to the weak and the atrong, the poor and the irlch, regardless of class or creed. While he has prosecuted crime relentlessly, he has always done so with a spirit of mercy and has tempered the wind to the shorn lamb. , He has pursued a course of conduct while in office which w'as ln strict conformity with his oath of office and has . never been identified with any grasping interests inimical to the in terests of the people at. large. I feel AND NEWS IN BRIEF OREGON SIDELIGHTS Work on Sherwood's new postofftce building has commenewl It will be f brick, one story high and cost ' . . J The council of Amity has passed the ordinance granting a franchise to J. . ..mil 13 iu yui in a aysiem or niti wuriss. Hood River's council has decreed a semi-monthly payroll for city em- viujreu. anu tnai tne nnance commit tee, instead of the council as a whole. 1 may o. K. tbe thing and be done with 11. Fair warning, lBsued by the Banks Herald: "The politicians are all pass lner un Hnnki th,a. itav. regarding u as of little or "no lmuort- 1 ante. But just wait. Not many more will hs nnii tr,iVr H,rrr. "'"S give Banks people the glad hand. Klamath Falls Northwestern: Word has reached this city that war talk l8 all the go among the young Indians on the Klamath reservation. It in fttntPri trxat (inmnif ... V... t.1 . . 100 young reds who are anxious T to I take up arms for the 8tars and Stripes and go to war against the alfflcuYty mustered without ! Among the objects of the "Tllla- moon County y Boosters Band are these: "For the future buslnes. and social development of the whole of Tillamook county; to disseminate such information as will advance the best intPFACt nf thin nnnntir' tV.A n I . . "- v.y--J, mo I ment or our musical knowledge and ! to the end that our future may be made more pleasant and profitable." Musicians of Tillamook, Wheeler. Bay City, Cloverdale and Nehalem are In cluded in the personnel. A San Fran cisco fair tour is on the program. but he also became known as a thor oughly good fellow and a good soldier. He was transferred to the White House as the attending surgeon under President McKinley. and there bemt. very chummy with Theodore Roose velt, assistant secretary of the navy. Roosevelt used to like to take good fellows out on long, ardent tramps, and walk them into a state of physical decay. Every one thought Jthat funny ex cept the decayed one. When he took Wood out, that Apache-walking thor oughbred cams in on the chin strap, with the assistant secretary flogging himself desperalely ln the effort to keep up. They boxed and wrestled and argued loudly together. So that when the Spanish war broke out and Roosevelt determined to get into It he made Wood a partner ln that ambi tion. "You can have a colonel's commis sion," said Secretary Alger to him. "Give it to Wood," said Roosevelt. "He knows how to organize and yHjulp a regiment, I don't Wood's service in Cuba will be re - membered by most. He cleaned the yellow fever out and reorganized the municipal government of Havana and ultimately became governor general or Cuba. He made enemies lots of them. He has retained a great many of them. But such an Impartial Judge of delivering the goods as Lord Cro - mer was quoted as regretting that he, could not have such an administrator to Bucceed him in Egypt. Business men appreciated Wood. too. He had an offer of $40,000 a year cash, with prospects of more, if he would leavu the service. Instead, he went to Ma nila, and there first licked the hostlleB and then pacified them. The men of the army who hast been fighting out in the Philippine swamps at first wer sullen. "lies a blue mass specialist," they called him. "A White House pet. What does he know about war?" They found out. Wood got up , X . 7.f th.T or.hli F Z. y,. 1 rther lived on less, and dM it more eerfully. He was uniformly bu:- ea far cheerfully, cessiu. oc-ue v ". '""":.'" for his tasks One visitor to -his office, cessful. because he prepared himself . S Z V- w th i7onk- of the room were ' covered with , books. over and over. They have helped me a lot." 60 that when Wood was made chief nt the fiehtlne force the army nad learned to respect him. Not all of th Pui .... - -"' ".""J' j orders, and expects them to be obeyed. He is admittedly arbitrary, "tocr-tlc and "v. V" th two presidents Jumped Wm over the hSad o,frt "eve? f'orL've But he, promoted ever be forgiven. But the , very men who dislike him admit his 1 complete efficiency. His career ? haa I been a meteoric one. bait little of his I success has been due to luck. Most of j It can be attributed to natural qualifl-; catlons and tbe friends he has made, i . . , . . lishment; of banks whose principal business shall be the handling of long- time loans to farmers. The bill which is being prepared by Senator Fletcher is an example of this type or proposed 1 legislation. , Senator Fletcher studied farm loans t abroad. As a result he thinks that ! the federal banks handling the long time loans to farmers ought to be allowed to run with a capitalization as low as $10,000; the loans ought to run for 35 years; the money ought to be raised by selling to Investors (you, my thrifty brethren and sisters) tax exempt debentures. Senator Fletcher thinks th farmer ought not to pay more than 1 per cent above the rate at which the de benture bond is sold to the Investor; under the Fletcher plan the- bank of $10,000 capital could sell $160,000 of debenture bonds. Obviously, under the third plan, the buyer of debenture bonds, would want to know how the appraisement of property which lay behind the whole output of a bank's bonds was made. Proper government inspection is a necessary element of the plan. As for the second plan, are you ready to buy government 3 per cent, bonds secured by farm mortgages up to 60 per cent of the farm's value? form those of my fellow toilers who are not acquainted with George M. Brown that he is. In my opinion, the logical candidate for the office of at torney general and that they will make no mistake in casting their ballots in his favor. I am not a paid politician and this may not be a letter composed of the purest of the King's English, but the above few lines represent my sentiments. SAM STARMER. Two Illinois Inventors have patented a trip which attracts Insects within it by a lighted lamp so that they come into contact with electrically ehaxged wires and are killed. IN EARLIER DAYS by Fred Lockley. J. L. Johnson, of this city, a pioneer of 1851, in speaking of the character of thoe who came to Oregon ln tbe early days said: "Though they came from Illinois, Missouri and the other middle western states, most of them originally cams from Kentucky, Tennessee. Virginia, and the Carolina. I waa born No vember IS, 1830, in Illinois, but my father came from North Carolina, where he waa born In 1802, while my mother was born in Kentucky in 1106. "I was 21 years old when my parents decided to come to Oregon. There, were 12 ,n our family, five boys, five girls aid my mother and father. On April i. e "Urted from Kt, Joe. Mo. Ifvjt hadn't been for the herds of buf tejj"" the plains our flour and bacon em dried apples would have played out before we got to Oregon. Yes, they killed lots of antelope and buf- fal' but 1 diAn'1 kiU 1 m band at hunting or ffcJhlng; I am more of a student. I bave always had lo work hard hut wnen j nave any tlm, to myself my recreation la reading. not KU1,nS animals -or catching fish When we cot to Oregon we settled - at a place called Bell Passl, located on our homestead. No. it didn't make a town, though they used to think it ' would. It was four miles from Hub- K a- ,1 11 - ' " "" ummn. I was married at Bell Pass), December 26. 1856, to May Vloletta Kennedy, by Rev. J. Hines. I bad JtiBt come back from the Indian war. The volunteers were pretty popular with the girls, while the young fellows wlw bad re fused to enlist were heavily bandl- ' capped. j "In the spring of 1856 I enllsUd In ayiain r rancm xviarion noil a com pany, which was raised around Oervals and Bell Passl. We went to The Dalles and from there Into the Klickitat coun try and thence to Walla Walla. Two of our men were killed and several were wounded. Our company shortly after being organised went to Olympla to guard the mall route between Van couver and Puget sound. Later ad ditional volunteers were called for and I enlisted. 1 enlisted in Portland and we were quartered for a while in East Portland. "When Lieutenant Colonel William Craig sent word from Lapwal that the friendly Nez Pearce were in danger of being killed by the hostile Indians and that they were without ammunition ana rooa, captain uorr s company went as an escort to a pack train with sup plies to Walla Walla. The Oregon volunteers were disbanded during the Bummer of. 1856. "After my marriage I went buck to farming near Our old homestead near . the present town of Woodburn. ln 1862 we moved east of the mountain, settling in the Grand Ronde valley. I raised vegetables, which I hauled to ; the mines at Auburn near the present J city of Baker. I also hauled garden 1 truck to the mines in the Mormon basin. I got big prices I uned to ' come back with a pretty heavy bag f j gold dust from my trips, as the minern j were hungry for green things as well j as for butter and egsa " 1 . $4.54 Against 9-1(1.. From th- Journal of l he American Medical Association. Cottage cheese Is sold at- most of the grocery stores in Rochester. Af ter the cream has been or para ted In fact, after the fat has been taken out of the milk the curd remaining Js called cottage cheese, whicil Is the same as casein. Cottage cheese '. not only very palatable, but it ha a certain heat -producing value a a food. It Is most Inexpensive. One of the funniest stunts that has been pulled off In this country has beer th h!h r advertising, with beautiful drawings and a crackerjatk a f a f or mtfait ,w,, . ..i,... whichever you ' like to call' It, that sells for $1.90 a bottle. The price of ffjod pn a iitv Mti n Produces 382 calories of energy for $, Common cnM-e c0t 16iynt, food and a tonic, but the extreme advance in price over common cheese and milk and eggs Is making the pub- ; ITX ?" ill :,.. ., .,'"" "".'r of Johns Hopkins university states. Tpr.eAaM T tr T - . L . . lays "Cow's milk contains 3. per 4 f ",n7.;o. JaW with 7o. U absurd to think that thi.P casein art" prer,pltat)on from tft- mk h reat'r nutrltlv. value than It ha. in , , condition." " T t Hard Coal and Millions. From the Philadelphia Record. Some one has estimated, after a ser- lee of scientific experlmenta, that it took nature about s, 000,000 years to produce anthracite. Curiously enough. , that seems to be just about the length of time that will be required, at the j present rate of progress, to force ths j K,a(51nK railway and other carriers to , rMuC0 thelr charges on this same coaL 1 Anthracite Just naturally runs into millions. The Ragtime Muse Primitive Instinct, Every year about this 'time People think they want to move, Marry, fish, or write ln ryhme . What I wonder, does this prove? 'Tin a primal overhang. Instinct of an earlier day, When the cave man fought of sang; Loved or freely moved away. Yes, he did as he saw fit What he pleased and also when, Brue he was, of meager wit. Quite unlike lo modern men! . Our emotions we restrain. Meekly do as we are bid; We are tempted but refrain We don't yield as cave men dldl Now we have our houses, books. Engines, aches and telephones. Microbes, airships, booze and cooks Listen to our Joyous groans! Ab. the Cave man, had not these, Ab had. no steam heated flat; He had but himself to please Poor wretch! Only think of that! 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 , '4