, try r' OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, TUESDAY, JULY 5. 1904. PAGE EIGHT. DAILY EAST TEN TilBERG OSIS Bl INFECTION ANY TRANSMISSION BY HEREDITY IS DOUBTFUL. Interesting Results of Special Investi gations In Germany Disease Most Frequent and Oftener Fatal Among the Poor, Especially the Children Claimed That Great Majority of Cases Are Due to Infection. An Interesting account of his ob servatlon In several .hundred cases of tuberculosis In the Medical Uni versity Polyclinic of Jlarburg is con tributed by Dr. E. Schwartzkopf to the "Deutsche Archlv fuer Kltnt9che Jledizin (Lelpslc). Two other physicians had found that most of the eases of tuberculosis in the various houses of Jlarburg could be traced to infection. Hereditary Influence or a special predisposition to the disease could not explain why healthy persons should contract It after living in cer tain houses, nor could it account for the great frequency of tuberculosis among the children In these houses. But It was also noted how tubercu losis rages In certain families, and it remained nn open question whether heredity and predisposition might not play an important role in the develop ment of the disease in individual cases. In the hospital, closer obser vations could be made on patients and more complete information obtained concerning the history of cases than would be possible outside. From observations made In this way, the writer states that "among the women in the hospital. CI per cent of those affected with tubercu losis had unquestionably been exposed to infection, while among those who did not have tuberculosis, only 24 per cent had been exposed to infection. Almost any one may chance to take a colony of the bacilli Into his system, but the blood Is naturally resistant to disease germs, and, usually, repeated infection is necessary before a case of lung tuberculosis will develop. "The danger of contracting tuber culosis increases with the number of patients in the neighborhood, and with the duration of the exposure. A case of infection In childhood which becomes real lung tuberculosis by the thirteenth year is rarely cured, and the chance of recovery is less if re newed infection takes place. "After the age of H years, a person becomes more susceptible to the dis ease, and the susceptibility becomes -constantly greater up to the age of 40. There is no danger to the community Jrjja patients suffering with tubercu losis If proper precautions are taken in disposing of the discharges from the lungs. As for Inheritance of the disease, heredity has not the least In fluence in the origin of tuberculosis of the lungs. That depends upon In fection." Real Causes b Infection. Among the cases that came under observation, there were fewer patients whose parents had had tuberculosis than those whose parents had not been affected. The danger from tu berculosis parents does not seem to lie In an Innate tendency to develop Ihe disease, but in the great exposure to infection by living with such par ents, and, in that case, there is more danger from the mother than from the father, because she is more close ly associated with the family The question is not whether any one In the family has died of tuberculosis, but whether the patient has lived with the rest of the family. Jlany observ ers agree that from six months to a year and a half may elapse between the time of Infection and the appear ance of unmistakable symptoms of the disease, but there is a possibility that the latent period Is much longer. It cannot be said that a case of tu berculosis always results when the bacilli are taken into the body, for we know that among the poorer classes, at least almost every one over 18 years of age harbors a colony of tuberculosis bacilli. Most of the tubercular changes remain latent, ana the disease becomes manifest only in the minority of cases, but a person whose system has been infecied with tuberculosis from chlldhool, although the disease may have remained la tent. Is much more suscep-.lbl to It If exposed later in life. The very frenuent occurr:nco of lu berculosis among the children of the noorer classes was shown by post mo'' tpm examination of the patients In the hospitals. Seventeen per cent of all such examinations ior emiaren from 1 to 5 years of age showed tu berculous changes, and 33 per cent of those from 5 to U years of age, taut and half n mile vertically up ward. Long before the steamboat busi ness on the Mississippi and Its tribu taries had reached Its maximum tho forces which were to accomplish its ruin had begun to operate'. The beginning of practical railroad ing followed many years after that of steamboatlng, but when It once got well under way Its progress and development rnpldly outstrlpied those of Its older rivals. Here was a steam engine that could ..n ,vlth Its lnml nnvwhere. It did not have to follow water courses. It could climb mountains, If they were in Its way. It could serve the inland town as well as the river port Its sneed was four times or more that of the steamboat. It was not put out or commission bv the winters but served the public the vcar round. Clearly the steam boat "stood little show In Its struggle with a rival like this. For many years, from one cause and another, the boats held their own but finally the railroads got the up per hand, and their vast development in the 2a vears following the Civil War practically drove the steamboat business from the rivers. The commercial Interests of the country have always looked with re gret upon the disappearance of the steamboat. There is a deep-rooted conviction that our rivers have some value in the commercial economy of the country, as regulators of freight rates, if nothing more, and there has been a strenuous effort to maintain active navigation. There is a hope ful belief that the future will see the rivers again teeming with boats, as they do in Russia, Austria and France, but the logic of statistics is against it. fenceTWtbust LIIII -----w'i; COMING! COMING! IP , STANDARD OIL HAS BEEN OUTCLASSED IN RUSSIA. Other Great Monled Powers Exerted Themselves to Discredit the Great American Monopoly With the Rus sian Government, and It Has Never Gained a Foothold In That Country Shrewd liove Against Rockefeller. DECLINING RIVER TRAFFIC. Railroads Have Relegated Old Boats to the Rear. The best days of the Mississippi river traffice are long since past, and the scenes that once endeared that stream have apparently gone never to return. ' The best year for steamboat busi ness on Mississippi is said to have been the one Immediately before the outbreak of the Civil War, says Mr. Chaterdon In the World today. Dur ing that conflict, until the North gain ed control of the river, commercial boating below the mouth of the Ohio was broken up entirely. On the Missouri a new source of business sprang up In the early years of the war by the discovery of gold at the headwaters of that stream. Then began that most remarkable episode in the history of river navi gation, the sending of cargoes from SL Louis to the base of the Ilocky .mountains, more than 2000 miles dls- It may be interesting to know that within Russia's domain the Standard Oil Company Is meeting with some of the most serious opposition of its long life of plunder, says George Weise, in the July Success. This giant trust supplies over 90 per cent of the foreign demand for oil. It has not competed with the large oil Interests of Russia, which are con trolled by the Rothschilds and the Noble brothers, but it has never over powered them. This is due to the Russian laws regulating foreign trade interests. The Standard Oil Company controls the export price everywhere In the world except within the limits of Russian territory, where competi tion has not been stifled. Russia Is Just as rich In petroleum products as Is the United States, and but for the power of the Standard Oil Company they would be supplied to America bv Russian producers. Rus sia protects her oil industry by a 200 per cent tariff; the United States puts oil on the free list. The czar Is not responsible for this state of affairs. The power of the Rothschilds carried it Into effect. ti,.., neriito financiers nlctured to the bureaucracy the infinite horror of an American trust siowiy eaung u way into the very center of public .nnnnifinn hv HiinnK-lnir a stanle com- modlty at a fluctuating price. The Rothschilds told the Dureaucrais umi if the Standard Oil company suouiu t.orm no nnwprful in Russia as In Apierica, it would only add to the ever-uurning nres in juierum trust and rebellion in one way or an For that reason the Russian govern ment created the high tarm ana per mitted the Rothschilds and the Nobel brothers to almost monopolize the oil Industry. Tallman & Co. ask the readers of this paper who are suffering with indigestion to get a bottle of Kodol Dyspepsia Cure. If the value of this remedy as we know It, you would not suffer another day. Koaoi uyapcpsia -ure Is a thorough digestant ana ussue bullding tonic as well. It Is endorsed personally by hundreds of people a-hnm it has cured of indigestion nalnltatlon of the heart and Hinmnrh troubles generally. Kodol nvrxrR!n Cure dlcests what you eat It Is pleasant, palatable and strength enlng. The Washington 4. Columbia River Railway Special Summer Excur sion Rates to Coast Points. Beginning June IB, 1904, the W. & r. n. railway will have on sale tickets to Westport, Long Beach, Clatsop Beech. Tokeland, Ilwaco, Searlew, Tl Pni-lflV Park. Ocean Park. Nab cotta, Flavel, Gearhart and return at in nn fnr tho rniind trin. For chlldreB of half fare age, one- half the above rate. Tickets will be good returning until Cantnmhpr 30fh. For full Information call upon or address, W. ADAMS. Agent. a DIIk llnon Ton of Piles. Piles upon piles of people have the plies, and DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve cures them. There are many different kinds of plies, but If you get the gen uine original Witch Hazel Salve made by E, C. DeWltt & Co. of Chicago, a cure Is certain. H. A. TIsdale of Summorton, S, C, says: "I had pile 20 years and DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve cured me after everything else failed." boiu oy ianmau t ui, Eagles Free Street Fair and Carnival PENDLETON, OREGON July II to July 16 ON THE STREETS NO ENCLOSURE STAY AT HOME AND SEE A GOOD ONE. See the Swiss village. - See Dixieland. See the glassblowere. See the dog and monkey circus. See the laughing palace. See Esau, the Egyptian wonder. See the Electric Palace. See the statue turning to life. See the eruption of ML Pelee. See Luna Luna. See Samson, the king of reptiles. See No Name, the Malay Wonder. BIGGER AND BETTER THAN A CIRCUS. sss It 7ou ar -""u8, tee tu. complete. ACADEMY BoJ olRETCHERg BRUSHES ARTISTS' Sid BLENDERS I SKT BRUSHES PLAQUEg TCBE COLORS We make a. .,. framing PlCTUREs! siuck or irames. c. c. m Opera House Ed A Ores Bargah $5,500.00 w.ll bny l In crop, as follows' j in growing wheat; m growing ifaifa (tj about 11 f-ult tea one ana a half Btorr! good stone cellar. lid plenty of timber oa tij The crop Is Included price if bought within Two and one-half mil city. Merchants Frote Agency Despaln Bulldlnj, Telephone Black -4 1 - p 1 A. NOLI All attractions furnished by the famous Dixie Carnival Co, featuring Dana Thompson, the world's greatest high hlver, diving twice dally from his lofty tower 100 feet high, into a tank containing three feet of water. TWICE DAILY AND FREE. The Berger troupe of world renowned tumblers, equalibrists, head and hand balancers, twice dally and free. Ten big hlgh-class, moral shows. The bis Ferris wheel, big brass bands, the merry-go-round. Meet me In the Midway. This means on the street of Pendleton. No enclosure.. Absolutely free. Don't forget the date, July 11 to July 16, one week. Pcsitively the best I made. Any quantity jcral sire. Delivered to borne. Always call for 01 pla. 'Phone Mais Ut SHERWI1 WILLIAI T 1 PAI I ONLY PLACE IN Pj TON TO GET PAINTERS' MATERIA aii KINDS. E. J. MURI Court 8t College Place Health Food Wafers, fruit sticks, nut Dune. - peanuts. Despaifl & plnr jmrpoM. ' ten, n""