THE NEXT Energetic Officer Selected , to Succeed Major General J. frank lin Bell as the Head of the Gen eral Staff, United States Army. By WALTON WILLIAMS. AJOR GENERAL LEONARD WOOD, who will-next April relinquish the oost of eom- 111 mirl i Tl o- nfHrtai nt tha Aa- partment of the east to become chief jof the general staff of the United States army in the piace of Major Gen jeral J. Franklin Bell, is only forty-nine years of age, and his rise in the army 'bas been one of the most remarkable In its history. He entered the medical (corps as an assistant surgeon on Jan. fc, :18S6, and has been promoted by leaps and bounds. General Wood's designation by Sec-" retary of War Diokiuson for the most Important administrative command In the gift of the war department did not occasion any surprise .among army (Officers in Washington the other day. It can also be stated on the authority of'-oue of the army's best Known of ficers that the appointment is one that jwill be approved by most of the rank and file. : Several years ago this state ment would have befln impossible, but today, with his Cuban and Philippine Teeords and his record at Governors island ; behind him, even General (Wood's critics admit his ability, en jergy and capacity for work. His ac itlve career as a soldier may properly be) -said to have begun when he be came the colonel of the now famous rough riders at the outset of the Spanish-American war, the lieutenant colo- 5f M vf - f t i 1 rt"K. t - . - f,- mm. . m V--:.:.-:-;.:.-,-:-:--::-:c;--it-.-irjCK- . i m CCPYKICXT. 11V Wc'm'M.K.Y MAJOR GENERAL LEONARD Iiel being Theodore Roosevelt, then and now dne of General Wood's most intimate friends. , Sample of His Originality. General Wood, who was born' on' Oct. 9, I860, " in Winchester, N: H., attended in his boyhood a school in Middleboro, Mass., and a Middleboro man told some time ago the following story of the direct and original mind that the boy had: : "I remember one 'day in school iWood was called up in the grammar lesson. The teacher said: -'. " 'Leonard, give me a sentence, and well see if we can change it to the Imperative mood.' . "'The horse draws the cart,'; said ILeonard. ' ' " 'Very good. The horse draws the art Now change the sentence to a neat imperative.' . ; - i " 'Get upl' said young Wood." Attention was called to Wood before he had been in the army six months. His first service was in the campaign against the hostile Indians in Arizona and New Slexlco. He voluntarily car ried dispatches through' a' region in fested with hostile Indians, making a journey of seventy miles in one night and walking thirty miles - the next day. 'For his action In this campaign lie was awarded a medal of honor in 1898. Wood was in that running fight -from start to finish and was commend ed for "courage, energy and loyai sup port"' by General Lawton as "the .only officer" who had been with him through the ' whole campaign." At one time during, that expedition Wood was, temporarily - In command of all 'the infantry,, and t another time- he Exercised a similar command, over' ILawton's scouts.. , :- . . . - " ! '. 1 After serving at various army posts rom July, 18S9, to September, 1895ft General Wood was ordered to Wash flngton for duty as attending surgeon to the army officers serving In Wash ington. -'It was during this period that lie became acquainted with Colonel ttoosevelt ; -.-. .. ," : v Served In the Cuban' War. General Wood was one of the physi cians to President McKinley and Sec , retary of War Alger. When the Span- CHIEF OF STUFF First Colonel of the Rough Riders and Military Governor of Cuba, Where He Was Known as "the Man With the, Lion's -Stride." isb. war broke out Colonel Roosevelt, who had a high regard for General Wood's ability as a soldier, obtained President McKinleyte consent for the organization of the First United States volunteer cavalry, which became known as the rough riders. At Colo nel Roosevelt's request General Wood was appointed colonel of the regiment. After organizing and equipping the rough riders at San Antonio, Tex., the regiment went Jo the front and served through the whole Cuban cam paign. On July 8, 1898, General Wood was made a brigadier general of volunteers and assumed command of the Second brigade, cavalry division of the Fifth army corps, which participated in the battles of Las Guasimas and San Juan. When the Spanish forces, at Santiago surrendered in July, 1898, General Wood was appointed military governor of that city, and on Oct. 7, 1898, he was assigned to the command of the department of Santiago, serving also' as civil governor of the province of Santiago. On July 1, 1899, the two eastern provinces of Cuba, Santiago and Puerto Principe, were consolidated and placed under General Wood's com mand. From Dec. 20, 1899, to May 20, 1902, when the American troops left Cuba, General Wood served as mili tary governor. ,' In February, 1901, President McKin ley appointed General Wood a briga- art 1 WOOD AND HIS WIFE. dier general in the regular army on the completion of his services as governor. The nomination .was opposed by sev eral influential senators on the ground ; that General Woods' highest rank in the regular army had been that of a captain in the medical corps. ' After a long fight, however, the nomination was confirmed. Famous For His long Stride. From Aug. 6, 1903, to April 12; 1906, he commanded the department of Min danao and was civil governor of Moro province in the Philippines. He com manded the Philippines division .from Feb. 1, 1906, to Feb. 20, 1908. ' General Wood, who has commanded the de partment of the east at Governors is land, 'New York, since Nov. 10, 1908, is married and has three children. ' : V: ' When Leonard Wood was a student at Harvard his name was Intimately connected, with college athletics of all sorts, but principally with running and walking. Big, rawboned and lithe,' he resembled in his poses an Indian un trammeled by civilization or civiliza tion's clothes.; The free and easy swing of; his gait in those -early formation days at college has never left him. Out on the plains in the nineties, when his military yearning led him to forsake his -official duties those of ,an ,army surgeon for the dangers and fascina tion of a. volunteer scout, the tireless energy won by athletic training stood him in good stead.- The young army doctor even at that early period of his career became famous for his long and powerful stride. . This fame' followed him" to San Juan, and when la after days he added leaves to his wreath of glory by reclaiming Santiago from its degradation and filth he became known to the wondering Cubans as '.'the man with the lion's ; stride." General Wood's ordinary; stride Is forty inches two Inches longer than the regulation step and it is said that he can cover more ground in a day. than any other man In the army. " . Oyster Cure For Dyspepsia. - According 1 to a London authority, some English physicians are ordering patients to eat oysters that have been well soaked in sea water as a cure-for dyspepsia and tuberculosis. . l . 1 I A - ... ' k 't I 4f . -II 1 I'T . JI . -7 . LIBRARY OF. BANKING. Valuable Volumes to. Be Published by the Monetary Commission. Information of unique value to the financial world and to alt students of economics regarding-the monetary and banking systems of all the civilized nations, Including the United States, will be made available during the com ing year through a score-or, more -of volumes prepared by the leading- aur thoritiesin America,' England and Eu rope, to be published under the aus pices f the national monetary "com mission. It will constitute a library of banking without parallel in the litera ture of any country and will supply what is at present practically an abso lute lack of information in the EriHsh language regarding the development during recent years of the financial systems of the world. ' The commission as soon as practica ble will print limited editions of the various volumes and hopes that con gress will authorize their general pub lication and distribution and will pro vide for their sale at moderate prices through the superintendent of docu ments. The commission urgently ex presses the hope that bankers, business men and financial students of every sort will take advantage of the oppor tunity thus offered to study the con ditions and experiences of other coun tries as well as our own and will co operate with the commission" in devis ing a banking system more worthy, of America's position In the world and better adapted for the successful utili-s zation of her great resources. ... STUDENT THEATER FOR YALE. Receipts From Dramatic Association's Tour Will Go to Fundr Yale university is to have a fully equipped theater, to be used for per formances given by the students and by, professional "companies esDeciallv Invited to .appear before the univer- ! Tl i . i oilj. ; i njuis irum ine perrormances Of Din Boucicanlt'a nmoilT' "T Assurance," which will be given by the Yale Dramatic association at the Waldorf-Astoria hotel, in New Tork. on Monday and Tuesday, Jari.3 and 4, will De devoted to the, theater fund. The sum raised already amounts to $8,500. It is expected that nart of th receipts from annual tours of the Yale liiee, Banjo and Mandolin clubs will be paid into the fund. . Preliminary plans for Yale's theater are for a structure seating 1,400 peo ple, with comnletelv eauinnerl stasre. club and library rooms for the Dra matic association, musical clubs and the Yale orchestra. - Here the two pro ductions of English plays each year and those of Freneh, Spanish and Ger man plays will be given. . ; . . It has been suggested that Yale name its theater after; William Dunlap, New York's ; famous early dramatist and manager and founder of the new Yale Academy of Design. MONUMENT LAKE BOUNDARIES International Commission to Mark Line ; From Duluth to St. Lawrence. Scores of great monuments are to be erected along -the United States and Canadian shores of the exeat, lnkea from Duluth to the St. Lawrence as boundary marks. This has -been de cided upon by the international wa terways commission. The present boundary lines between the United States and JCanada are an intangible thing and in manv nlaces quite unsettled. The plan which has peen outlined, by the international wa terways commission and Is' now being worked out contemplates .locating at every point where the" boundary line makes an angle two monuments - di rectly opposite each other on the two shores of the lakes. ' .. . The ;' exact : number of monuments which will be necessary will not be known until the ' boundary line has been definitely agreed upon and ap proved by the British government and tne reaerai authorities at Washington. It. is said, however, that there may be at least fifty. Designs for the monu ments iiave not yet, been thought out, but it is probable that they will be metal shafts of great height. .. Great. Trade In- Ratskins. - ; One of the American; diplomats re ports that a great business is springing up at .Calcutta in securing and prepar ing the skins of brown rats, whch are used for book bindings, gloves and purses. , Already the trade is said to amount to $250,000 a year Jim Congressman. : .. When Jim was 'lected congressman four vears nnt T vntxroA - My cup o' joy was brimmln' full, an' I w uz mieaiy proua. "My. Jim '11 make hla mark," I said.- "The world will know his name. He'll rise above the common run an" win uncommon fame. ; . His voice 'Will ring throughout the land, -r .: his Words Allr4Hfv An" then I sat t" wait fer him t' catch the . -. : speaKers eye. I bragged about my Jim a lot, my Jim In Washington. . f "He'll show 'em how," I -told my friends," ' "this country should be run. ' 1 Jes' wait untU he makes a speech an" ,!'s then you'll all admit -.- That when it comes to wisdom my. boy Jim is full of It." Ah' so: we waited. Weeks-an' weeks ian . .. months atf months went by, An' Jim down there a-tryin' hard t catch .: Ihe speaker's eye. Jim's back in Washington again,, in ' eon . I gress makin' laws, .' Plumb sure that this term he will get a chance t" plead his- cause. ' He's -got on -some committees, an' some big men know he's there. The New. York papers quoted him about some trust affair; - , ; Anr ma an' I -are prayln' now that we a won't have to die . . More Jim's reckoned big enough t' get the speaker's eye. ' : Detroit Free Prest. BIGGEST OF ALL OCEAN LINERS. Gigantic Ships to Join the At lantic Fleet. EACH CARRYING 5,000 PEOPLE Olympic and Titanic Will Be 860 Feetj Long, Seventy Feet Longer Than Any Ship Afloat To Have All the Splen dors of a Great Hotel and a Big Salt Water Swimming Bath. . Near the end of 1 year 1911 there will cross the Atlantic ocean the great est steamship that ever drove ast Sandy Hook on its way H New York a vessel that exceeds by seventy feet the length of the giant Cunarders, the Lusitania and Mauretania. When these great vessels came out many of those who looked at the majestic sisters felt sure that in these two the last word in marine construction had been reached. But the Olympic, now under con struction at Belfast, Ireland, for the White Star line, exceeds these two in. size by almost as great a margin as the Lusitania and Mauretania exceed the older Lucania and Campania. The newer Cunarders are 790 feet in length. The length of the White Star giantess is ,860 feet The Cunarders have a beam of 88 feet; that of the Olympic is 92 feet . In displacement the new vessel- exceeds the older ones by 3,000 tons. She will not be endowed with the high speed of the ocean grey hounds. . ' Titanic, a sister vessel to the Olym pic, is also under construction at Bel fast, but " the work upon this other vessel is not as far advanced as it is on th Olympic. Each ship will have accommodations for 5,000 pas sengers -and 'for a crew of 600. Each vessel will have nine steel decks, and od the upper of these there will be a spacious entrance hall, dining saloons, smoking rooms, libraries, wo-' men's parlors or drawing rooms, grill, lounge rooms and restaurants as well as "a main saloon . about ninety feet wide. v f Skating' Rink on Upper Deck. . ; One of the upper decks is to be com pletely inclosed to serve as a ballroom or skating " rink. Instead ; of canvas partitions or awnings' to keep out the wind and rain the-whole will be in closed with glass . windows similar to those hi railway carriages. ; By day this spacious apartment may" bemused as :a; sun parlor or promenade,' and it will be large enough- to enable several ' hundred passengers to move , about with ease and comfort In . addition to extended, suits of rooms complete flats will be available, thus making it possible to cross the Atlantic In the- enjoyment ' of all the privacy of one's own home. Ocean going flats will comprise .bedrooms, sitting rooms, private bathrooms and even a private library, all en suite. Cabins with, private shower baths at tached, a great salt water swimming bath large enough to permit of diting and a well equipped gymnasium are to be among the features which will be introduced. ' 'Veranda Cafe on Board. ; The main dining saloon will be fur nished to 'seat GOO persons at once;, and should a guest tire of this grand Chamber he can wander from one cafe to, another each day have his meals in a different apartment .The veranda: cafe will also be a leading feature of these ships. ,It will be placed on one of the upper decks far astern, fully fifty feet above the sea level, and as it will be constructed with exposed rafters-intwined with., vines and creeping, plants and have latticed sides, it will make the Illusion of a cafe at the sea side almost perfect . 1 ; . i Precautions Against. Danger. . ; Each . steamer will be, divided Into upward, of thirty steel compartments separated , by heavy s bulkheads. An automatic device on the bridge will control all. these heavy , steel door's, making it possible for a single hand to close, them all In almost an instant in case of danger.- Each of these doors will be electrically connected with a chart on the bridge, where each door will be represented by a small electric light and when one of these doors closes the light will burn red, but while it remains open the disk will be quite dark. The officer on the bridge, will thus be able to see at a glance whether or not all the compartments have, been closed. ' Yet another set of safety devices will guard against fire in any portion of the vessel. A series of thermostats will be scattered throughout the great framework, so arranged aa to indicate a rise in the temperature above a cer tain point Should the temperature reach the-danger point the fact will be immediately ' communicated to the officer on the bridge by the ringing of an electric- bell, while an electric light on a great chart on the wall will buni red. ' ;-:' ,;,'" ' ,.:, The vessels will be of the triple crew type-; and are designed - for a speed of 21 knots an hour. . Each ship will have three propellers, and, like the big Cunarders, will carry four funnels and two'.'Steel pole ' ventilator 'masts. They . will also be , fitted with ' wireless Installations and searchlights, as well as the now - inevitable daily bulletin newspaper.' ., . The Olympic will be launched next September. The Titanic will go over board a few months later. m vavance Subscriptiim IILY OR -TIMES Residents of this city and county, who have friends and relatives in the East or any where at a distance, could not please the ti more than by keeping them : constantly, in formed about the doings in this favored portion of Oregon, and there is no better way of doing this than the regular visits of a bright, newsy paper like the Gazette-Times, , ; Atthis joyous, season, when all the stores are offeririg excep tional bargains to gift-hunters, the Gazette-Times has decided to join in the u niversal .custom and give the fciggest kind of an inducement to everybody who would like to make somebody else happy with a present that will last throughout 1910. This Special Offer : 7s Only dr New Daily Gazette-Times, One YearL . . Daily Gazette-Times; Six Months Weekly Gazette-Times, One Year-! All subscriptions on this Holiday Offer must begin with New Year's'and be paid forin advance. Fill out the blank below and mail or leave it at the Business of f ice of the Gazette-Tiniest Special Hew Year Gift Offer 1909 CORVALLIS GAZETTE-TIMES : ! N Send the Daily Weekly Gazette-Times to the fol lowing address for . . months. $ in payment for same. r Name ' - Street---....- . . : " (' ; PostbtEce . ;, .... v.; . . State ;. liJ - ' : Sub. Sent in by Mark an "X" in front of Daily or Weekly to designate w which edition is wanted. ' - . - DO IT NOW! : ;.'( l& vV' '.'-l.'. one that will be aD- preciated by every recipi ent is a to the WEEKLY ws: $3.00 1.50 1.00 a.-atTrtV'i.;-;,