TITE 3IORXIXG OREGOXIAX, TUESDAY, JANUARY 7, 1919. PORTLAND. OREGON. Enter at Portland iOron Posto?flee as "tp4-r: mail matter. 3uo-ripljoa xatea lunably In dn: Br Mall. ti:r. SuniT tnriuded. ono year ...... .I 00 Psl'y. u'laT In. !ull. ! month rat.y. Hijndar uvl'jd:'!. thrre month!.. . . - nailv. hui.l.iv in-lui1'4l. one monin.. rvttlv. wt'hout iuno. oitf yr. .. . Tlal v, without tJ4, SIX month., lull, without Fund.), on uiontlt... W-k 't. M4 ) ear. . . un-lay. ona er Sunday sad W (rkl) rtv rr-rr Ta!T. Sirdar ln-tii!1. oi ar. . ......' -5? PhDv, SumUy ln-ludf t. on' mont n. . . . .. . Pal r. Sun. lav Included, hree months. .. . Taily. l h..ut Mindjy. nn jr . r w . i ..,r..v ihrMmnnthl.... I T I . 1 1 v wiihnui liunilAf. DDf montb. Haw Iran Rnd poatofflca monjr r- 4,r ..nii nr oarknal ..-n.- on OUT local bank. "tlmr. coto or curr-n-y ara " r t nk. poaloffl- adJr.-j tl .". 'a rlLi.i'rta MUnt and Stale. a-., w i m i r . 1 c, n : 19 to p.-s. V cents: S4 to pac-. 3 rents: 6 ta lt pn. cents: ai to H eeats: 7 t. Men, cents. Forolnn pot- aae. double rate. . . rwf V-r-rre Jk Conk In Rrunai.-k 1m 1 1 1 1 1 . .New oik; Vrre Cnnklin. Mr bulMlna. t'hlcuu-: verrj Pnn. in s Preaa Dull '.in4. I'eir".. . ?,C,V." ft oil 3.;. 1 M na . in. r ' .. . .. j : San t'ranttaco representative. K- J. io.waiu jirMBFii or inr avwiateo mus". Th Associated Preae In s"lu.l-sly enti tled to tlia uc for repubticauon ot a I r ara l P4t--hr credited lo It or n t olhHt rreditad in thia paper, and aiao the ivcal ara published herein. .... All rtrhia of republication of special ola alrne herein ara ilw reserved. J-ORTLAND. TIESDAY. J.CART 7. 1919. THEODORE ROOSEVELT. The severest critics of Theodore Roosevelt will agree ihat he was one of the greatest Americans. By sheer ittrcngth of will he triumphed over bodily weakness and developed that robust physique without whkrh he could not have performed the hereu lean labors of his public life. His ajrsrremve nature combined with his to mane mm wrong and probably also prevented war. By his mediation he brought about peace between Russia and Japai, and he did much to pacify the turbulent Central American republics. He took the initiative in calling the second Hague conference, he caused arbitra tion of disputes with Britain and per suaded the blockading powers to arbi trate their Venezuelan claims, yet he is styled an advocate of war. The acclamation with which he was greeted In Kurope as a preserver of peace and as winner of the rsobel peace prize proved that he was more correctly appraised abroad than by his Ameri can critics. Probably no President stood higher in public esteem than Roosevelt at the close of his second term, but then he opened the chapter which most deeply mars his record. Estrangement hav ing brgun before he sailed for Africa, he was stirred to anger against his chosen successor and former lieuten ant. Taft. by the story of the Ballinger affair which Pinchot poured into his ears. upon during the two succeeding years until he felt the call to battle with the forces of reaction which he believed to rule the Republican party. All can understand, though many cannot de fend, the motives with which he split the Republican party and drove it to disastrous defeat. They were doubt less a compound of patriotism and egotism, such as was found In many of his acts. more cows. Thus, it Is shown that it cost only $11.86 more in a test to feed cows which produced 300 pounds of butterfat than it did to feed those which produced 400 pounds, and the cost . fop those yielding 200 pounds was only less than for those yielding 300 pounds. The difference, 118.64, between the 200-pound and the 400-pound cow would be further in tensified If labor were reckoned into the account. It takes as long to bed and feed the boarder cow and prac tically as long to milk her, and at present prices the difference of 200 pounds of butterfat' is not to bei ignored. It will not be the work of a day or a year, but better breeding will ultimately furnish the solution, of the dairy problem. Intensity of conviction i ,.-,11.0 with nil his mirht h. it He earl vM or the lifo of democracy and clviltza- when once he espoused It. He early ' ,k,.u realized that much needed mending in American public affairs and that no man can accomplish . much wttnout alivinir himself with party. His love of country was a passion and carried him Into politics at a time when poli-tii-i.ina were held in low esteem; but ANOTHER KIXD OF PROHIBITION. From our excellent contemporary, the Newberg Graphic, The Oregoniao takes this paragraph: In the long- h&rd-fouEht years for prohi bition In Oregon The Oregonlajt editorials touching; on the queatlon were on the other aide, though occasionally there appeared a He was assiduously worked i dl"cour"," no, regarding the use of the . . , . . ! -rd. Now The Oregonlan la quite a con- alatent supporter of prohibition, while It goes eo far aa to encourage the uao oi cigarette. Verily, times and peaiona and men and newspapers make some queer angles. "A foolish consistency," says .the poet, "is the hobgoblin of little minds, adored by little statesmen and phi losophers and divines." Tet it would be easy for The Oregonlan to acquit itself of the appalling charge of changing its mind on prohibition, or on tobacco and its use, if it appeared worth while. Does our unco'-guld friend at New berg recall any expression of The Oregonlan, for example, that appeared to justify any effort to prohibit by law the use of tobacco or cigarettes? The Judicial mind finds itself won dering at times what would have hap pened In Oregon if the effort to pro hibit the liquor traffic had succeeded in 1887, when it was, we believe, for the first time submitted to the people as a constitutional amendment after a rather futile trial in the long-ago days of the provisional government of But he made rich amends in the last six years of his life for any error which ho then committed. He spoke clearly and with his accustomed force for maintenance of American rights n Mexico, and, when war overwhelmed the world, he rose to the full stature of his robust Americanism. He saw that the ruthless barbarism which trampled on Belgium would stop at nothing, that the allies were fighting tion, and -that, if they should be crushed, America's turn would soon come. Without rest he, wrote and spoke for the right, and he summoned America to arm against the threat of German world-empire. He showed no mercy for hyphenated Americans, who . 1 r 1 -i m r r-D H tew a OTHii-tMi a nantralitv by his example he strove to elevate ly . Jmnrs into public service, and he 'or pacifists, who bleated of peace developed a new and higher type of there was no peace. politician. He regarded party as He would have struck when the Lusitania was sunk, and he more than any other one man aroused the Ameri can people to realization of their duty to their country and the world's free dom. He refused a new nomination for President and promoted reunion of the Republican party in the cause of Americanism against the party which boasted that it had "kept us out of war.' He proved that his was no merely vocal patriotism when he offered his services to lead a division in France, when he gave his four sons to the Army and when, on receiving news means of public service, and he did not scruple to cast it aside when he deemed it false to that ideal. But politics could not exhaust all of the abounding energy of Roosevelt's nature. All things in the world inter ested him, from international states manship to ornithology, and he craved to know all the mysteries of nature, especially of man. and to solve all the problems which they presented. As a boy he studied animal life; as a man lie studied man as the most absorbing of all studies; as a politician and aratomrn Via afllrlioH rIH Kf and. finally, nations. His quick sympathy that .n u?ntin been Uled with human nature was aroused on Jn -n ' "S.ht. he said he was "very K-hoif f .v.. i.hnn worker in P'a ""i me young man naa in New York, the drudge-wife of a. West- chance to render some service to his ern farmer, the naked negro of East fountrv and to show the stuff that was Africa or the oppressed nations of '"f f """" veo on A.l.tic Tiirkov. His in- tration In all that it did well to prose dignation was stirred by the greed of te the war. and he criticised it only the trusts, the betrayal of the people whe,n " fe" Bort- In tne supreme by their servants at the behest of the cr??is ot war h ayc no thought to bosses, the wrongs formerly perpe- c,r or,,pa"7 ' Tnw trated by the railroads, the infamies ne "",dvbMt serve h!s cunty- U ,s of child labor and the crime of race ' '"V suicide. His love of the strenuous life tbat 'n bla lat Pubc statement, issued tirrrt him to hitter denunciation of on th v death, he should th irll rirh. th loafer the morallv have sald: "There must be no sasgln inffiein ni thai ernnknl Hi. life I back in the fight for Americanism In th. Wmi nvMlM to him its creat Ko" h waa h greatest example of ...in, rr.,rre. niirf rirort him with that invincible spirit which has car ambition to stop their waste and to !"ied tn? American flag triumphantly nrnmi.1. th-ir u. for hi desire was iorwara n many a Dauie irom ix fait accompli. The thing can be done whenever a few inconsequential de tails are attended to. Not a student of flying is there that doubts it. - . So there remains to be done noth ing except go on with the building of airplanes. The hidden recesses of vast mountain chains will be visited at leisure. Oceans and deserts will be crossed whenever it seems worth while; and it 'will always be worth while to some cartographer so long as there is a township's area unmapped, What this may mean to international relationships, say, in South America, or to. development of the. interior of the continent of Africa, it requires no seer to apprehend. The explorer, the surveyor, every other avant courier of civilization and progress is provided with a prime instrument of his call ing ready "at hand. Four years have brought about a degree of perfection in the construe tion of flying machines which no one would have predicted In the beginning of the war, but they have prepared us to accept as a matter of course anything that may come. ' It is cer tain that' vast quantities of material will be required to complete the prob able programme of the immediate fu ture. This ties up a growing industry with the Pacific Northwest, which went to the rescue of the country in time of war and which can be de pended upon in this regard not to fail the airplane builders in time of peace. SELF-DETERMINATION IN PRACTICE. The emancipated people of Central and Kastern Europe are not waiting for the peace congress to decide how they shall go about the process of self determination. The diplomats at Ver sailles would doubtless prefer that they take a referendum vote to deter mine their boundaries, with allied armies to insure a free vote and a fair count, but these peoples are going about it in their traditional manner, that is, by force. Thus it is that the Czechs are occu. pying by force all of the ancient .king. dom of Bohemia, deposing German officials and installing Czechs in their places. The Poles are doing likewise. Oregon. It is hardly possible that t tne great indignation ana aiarm ot anyone now in Oregon, familiar with the Germans on one side and the public opinion and the tolerance of Ukrainians on another, while they dam Those Who Come and Go. private Indulgence then, will venture to say that it would have been prac ticable. Is it not a reasonable as sumption that, if state-wide prohibi tion had been tried and had failed. back the waves of Bolshevism on a third side. The Roumanians have ad vanced to the farthest limits of Tran sylvania despite the protests of 'the Magyars. The Jugo-Slavs contest to see all men and all nature in this broad continent at work to their high. est efficiency. His quick brain leaped to a sound conclusion while slower brains were laboring toward It, and he promptly hasteneU to put it In execution, beating down opposition and slaying with invective all who stood in his way. An opinion was no sooner formed In his mind than It was communicated to the world in speeches, h" have been his practical achieve ington to Sedan, and which, after sub duing the whole breadth of this conti nent. now bids fair to win the whole world for democracy, For twenty years the National life of the United States has revolved around Theodore Roosevelt. Whether he was in or out of office, he has usually been the central figure. Great ments, he will live In history as moral force which lifted the people up to the high level of idealism that they now occupy, and his acts as statesman will be remembered as the practical application of his Ideals. We can only measure the change which he chiefly has wrought by comparing what we now are, what we now think and the problems with which we wrestle with what we were and thought and with the problems which perplexed us before Roosevelt became a National voice and a National asset It is a veritable moral, political, social and economic transformation, and it was produced by Roosevelt and by the men who received their impulse from him. The Nation has rarely seen his equal, and has never seen his like. books, magazine articles and all the many ways ot publicity, and was f ham stoned with restless vigor. As we trace his public career, we ran almost see him grow from a local politician to a statesman of world re pute. His experience as a New York legislator, as police commissioner, as civil service commissioner, as Gover nor, were preparation for greater work, for which he showed his fitness when, as Assistant Secretary of the Navy, he ordered Dewey to Manila to destroy the Spanish fleet and thwart the ambitious designs of the Kaiser. His combativeness and his yearning to be on the scene of action put him at the head of the Rough Riders In the charge up San Juan Hill. His Impa tience of restraint in the presence of human suffering and official blunder- make the channel deep and wide. lng led him to circulate the famous It la well that the Port of Portland round robin at Santiago.- When he I Commission and the Dock Commission eaw what he deemed a wrong, his un- have taken up the question of deep- controllable impulse was to smash it. ening the Columbia River channel to and the greater the wrong the greater 35 feet, for there is good reason to his ardor, for nothing could daunt his believe that such depth will be needed courage. I by the time It is attained. It is to be hoDed that the work will be done In When fate called Roosevelt to the -Uph manner as to insure that the Presidency, these qualities had full depth mentioned will be permanent play, and the great capacity and many all the year around, as was decided at sides or tne man were revealed. He the conference with Colonel Zinn. and ruthlessly attacked corporate wrongs that the channel will be widened, for In all their varied forms. He drove lit is now only half the width of that the irrigation bill through Congress, up the Elbe to Hamburg. and committed the Nation to the I To say that we have a channel of a policy of conservation. He brought I certain depth is folly unless that is the the long controversy over the Isthmian actual minimum depth and unless it is ranai to an end. turned Congress frcm maintained at all time, not merely Nicaragua to ianama ana seizea the after the annual dredging Is com opportunity to take Panama" so pieted. Although we may deceive promptly that he was falsely, though I ourselves, we cannot deceive ship cap with some superficial show of reason, tains who navigate the channel, aud accused ut jiaviag eiajrea xne revoiu- they pass the word around among Tion. Alter trying one man arter an- their craft all over the world. If we other, he found in General Goethals hriM claim areater deDth than we trie man to aig tne canal, ana by cut- I have, some 6hiD captain would con ting the trammels which Congress had tradlct us, and the owner of his ves devised ne gave ooethals the undis-1 set would believe him in preference. puted power that was necessary. Yhen thus discredited, we should not be' believed even when we told the truth, and the channel would have to live down a bad reputation. In the near future ships from all portrmay be expected to visit Port Roosevelt's pugnacious energy formed a show of reason for his being called a militarist by those whom he con temptuously termed motlvcoddles. In tact, he accomplished more to Dre-1 land, and tt will be worth much to serve peace among nations than attytne-Prt 11 their captains carry away other man or his time, not excepting lavoraoie reports aooui me oepm anu that arch-pacifist, W. J. Bryan; but I width of the channel and the excel h refused to keep the peace at the lence of the harbor facilities. It will sacrifice of right, even thourh this b worth much more If the facts agree meant war. He was proud of ftie title w'th the statements sent abroad. We "practical Idealist" which he gave him- shall then establish a reputation for self, for he refused to ignore hard, the port and for the reliability of its unpleasant facts In pursuing his ideal I published statements which will prove of peace. His pacifist critics love to a valuable asset in obtaining ships at auote bis Phase "bir stick." but thev favorable charter rates, ana conse carefully avoid quoting the whole fluently in extending our commerce. phase. "Step softly, but carry a big stick." He advocated use of the bigl Oregon Agricultural College betrays stick only when other means of de-1 no scret in a recent statement that fending the tight had failed, but his "feed cost of poor-producing cows in known readiness to use it scared Ger- I Oregon Is but little lower than of high many out of Venezuela when he producing cows," but it does a service threatened to send Dewey and the in presenting precise figures which Atlantic fleet, He thus prevented ' ought to impress any owner of one or the day of effective control, or virtual Italy's claim to Dalmatia, and the elimination, of the liquor traffic allies navo occupied tne province in would have been long postponed? order to keep tne peace, mere ara The Newbere attitude is interesting two rival governments in Siberia and to The Oregonlan because it discloses four or five in Russia, and their boun the trend of thought with certain re- daries are fixed by the good old formers who have succeeded, or think maxim: "What we have we hold. thev have, wth prohibition. Is their -Nor are tnese emancipated nations next great cause to be prohibition ot a all modest about their claims. Each tobacco? If so, we are to behold in-1 claims the widest stretch of territory teresting times. 11 ever neia in tne days or us greatest power, tnougn tms may nave uecii iietu for only a brief period many centuries ago and may include solid blocks of alien population. Poland, for example. GOING AHEAD. The Chicago Tribune quotes approv. Ingly the following from the Emporia had extremely flexible boundaries, and Two Grant County boys, discharged from the aviation service, have arrived at the Imperial. One is M. J. Steach, of Long Creek, and the other is W. M. Davis, of Hamilton. Both boys were in the overseas service, and were sta tioned In England, in the ground sec tion of the service. Neither of the boys has any ardent yearning to go soaring through the air for the next few years, and from their personal observation they are not convinced that airplanes are fool-proof. Both Davis and Steach are enthusiastic over the Liberty mo tors, and say that these motors were used in the British machines with great success. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Churte, of Hepp ner, are at the Perkins for a few days. Mr. Churte is an old-time merchant in his section. Dr. J. F. Reddy. whose home is in Medford, whose office is in Grants Pass, and who operates in California, Is in the city on business. Dr. Reddy Is particularly interested in the chrome industry, which he says is now in a bad way, as operators have large quan tities on hand and no market. When the war ended the bottom dropped out of the market because of failure to in telligently provide for this new indus try by the Government. Harry Fox, who was born In Ger many. Is disgusted because he did not get a chance to fight the Huns in the old country after serving more than 18 months in the 27th Artillery, most of which time was consumed at Fort Stevens. The returned soldier was a mess sergeant, and in civilian-life fol lowed the occupation of cook. The 27th was three days out towards the war zone when a wireless announcd that the armistice had been signed, and the ship was ordered to put back for the United States. There was some celebration on board. With the exception of a few officers, the Oregon and Washington men of the 27th were sent to Camp Lewis, aud are now there awaiting dis charge. Sergeant Fox was discharged at Camp Eustis, Va. James F. Corbett, train dispatcher at La Grande, arrived at the Hotel Port land yesterday on his way home from California, accompanied by his son, J. W. Corbett, who has been in the serv ice at Mather Field. Another son of Mr. Corbett was lost while in the service. Gazette: Illinois, for enee. has the Jump en Kansas. At the November election the state voted a fSO.OOO.iKio bond issue for the conatruction of a state-wide system of permanent roads by an overwhelming majority. ina bonds were not to be sold or the work to begin until alter the war, which happened to end a week following the election, consequent ly. Illinois not only has the drop on Kan sas on permanent roads, but has the means, if times are bad and work la scarce, to give every returning soldier who cannot find at one time held sway from the Baltic to the Black Sea, but not for long, and it ruled over Lithuanians, Ger mans, Ruthenians and Cossacks. Po land is now reaching after the old boundaries, and is determining herself by stout blows delivered at the hum' bled boche. Does any man in his senses imagine nih.r .nmlni'mi.nl a 1 n h on a crreat nubile I 1 ' ' work, where he can be self-respecting and I up hate and ambition of centuries and provided with the common necessaries of knowing no means except force to fared. The war has somehow given the good roads movement a new impulse. The common desire to give employ ment to the returning soldier has make good their claims, would become in good faith members of a league of peace and would accept its dictates in settlement of their quarrels? Would they, as members of the league, vote snmpihlne to do with it: but buildine according to the dictates of Justice and roads, or any public work, merely to national right? Would they not rather pay wages to somebody would not be ",an" UMla "w" a sufficient reason for spending mil- oi tne league aner me iime-nonoreu Hons and It would never be done. manner of diplomacy and of American Pnr th. nairiofl of tlm war road con struction was mostly suspended. Their lno emancipated peoples nave mucn need was never so obvious. If there 10 ,earn oelore lne caa practice; tne hart hn a svstem of National hiirh- high ideal which has been set for the ways, the transportation service of the leasueI of peace. An effective means Government would not have broken "l c"uu,u"" " H,n Th. nrofitahla i.kb of well- m the hands of the great democratic made roads, in both military and eco nomic ways, was a demonstration to all of their importance and necessity, Now, the military exigency has paiscd: but the economic lesson sur vivos and the economic need remains, The Illinois bonding law is said to be modeled on the Oregon law. It was constructive and wise measure. nations, keeping the peace among them and imposing on them respect for other nations' rights to self-determina tion, not excepting the defeated Ger mans and Magyars, and only accord ing to the methods of democracy. There are said to be 60,000 cases of mental aberration that have de Other states are going ahead, some of veloped .In the Army. This is a small them on the Oregon plan. Here it is found that the revenue from automo biles exceeds estimates, and so the programme devised by the state in 1817 may be safely enlarged. percentage, not greater than in civil life, but more apparent because th solider Is under view all the time and the civilian is not. Flagging a train with torpedoes, that liquor may be unloaded in an unfre quented spot, may lose somebody job. Such doings cannot always be AVIATORS BREAKING THE TRAIL. It would be a mistake to suppose that the spruce industry recently de- icept secret. veloped wun reierence to its uearuis upon alrplan construction nas seen AnvbodVwho thinks the old world Its best days. Indeed, if we read the ls out ot gfaT 8hould stay up late signs aright, aviation is now passing -noueh to see the voune oeople leav through a period corresponding to that in the Dla houses and make another or tne automoone some twenty years .uess ago, wun tnis ouierence, mat ine au- tomODlie already nas DroKen tne tru Th-r. should he. enonirh captured of engine construction, and also that ana surrendered U-boats to distribute flying immeasurably more challenges a numDer at the principal American the imagination than traveling on the norts as exhlbits of how the Huns ground, ins psycuioEicii laaum "M fought for the freedom of the seas. point to development 01 aviation at. a. Shoe manufacturers would do well to remember that there is a limit to the brevity of short skirts, which is Imposed by the high cost of shoes as well as other considerations. It is no news that Western men are more intelligent than tnose or the East. It will be news when the East discovers the fact. rate relatively far more rapid than has marked any phase of transports tion and travel in the history of tba world. We are no longer amazed by any thing that comes to- pass in the me chanical world. Consequently we are able to appraise calmly the recent momentous incidents in airplane his tory. For example: . Within a few weeks a British Ma jor-General has flown from Cairo, Egypt, to the border of Baluchistan, to a region heretofore almost unknown and practically unmapped. Lieutenant Godoy has crossed the Andes, reaching an elevation of 19,700 feet under practical flying conditions, htch make it plain that the feat can be duplicated whenever a determined aviator sets his mind to the Job. Gianni Caproni, Italian maker of great airplanes, says that he has al ..ortu rinutriir.t.H n mnrhin. rnnnhiA of carrying thirty persons and a heavy -"ls nouse was in oroer ana ne cargo, and that he is working on an- passea as in & pmwut nm. i(. .a other which will accommodate 10 California will please head her quakes the other way. That one at Redding is too neighborly altogether. If all that Sir Arthur Pearson says about the expertness of the blind. what's the use of eyes, anyhow? Big joke at El Paso. Six hundred Mexicans have organized for peace and to send delegates to Paris. fitting close of strenuous life. You never saw anything solider than the -condition of the Portland banks as shown in the latest reports. passengers, rurnlsning tnem witn modern conveniences, including cab Ins, meals and beds. A Zeppelin factory near Berlin is hi'ildina- a plane for a trans-Atlantic voyage. An effort is to be made, per- The native and acclimated Oregonian haps as a part of German after-the- enjoys rain, but ice ls a sufferance and nr nronaeranda. to obtain for Ger- snow an aoommauon. manv the distinction of having first made the vovage. Shorter skirts tnis year win settle The Navy Department at Washing- that "two looks" rule or regulation, . i , i A J n.VIA1.AlrA. I h. " ton nas announced mat un American- 1 wuii.uc;i . built craft, equipped with Liberty mo tors 'developing 1200 horsepower, had made a flight with fifty passengers. Certainly there never were a more significant few weeks in the history Henry Ford wants a recount. Any. of navigation. Height, distance and thing to oblige. earning capacity all are involved in these reports. For we are willing to I . Tough on the woodpile, but fuel is accept . the trans-Atlantic voyage as I made to burn. Put the members in masks and let legislation proceed. W. E. Gibbons, late of the sub-chaser 303, is in the city for a rest. He is now a junior Lieutenant; before he went to war he was in the local hydrographic office. For some time he taught navi gation at Pelham Bay, and later was sent to sea in the submarine chaser, a boat 110 feet long, carrying a crew or is and with a fuel capacity for three weeks. Lieutenant Gibbons speaks highly of the sub-chaser as a sure cause of seasickness. Everyone on Doard gets seasick. During his two months of cruising he never saw a sub, although the 303 was ready to scoot arter them at a rate of 37 knots an hour. Roy N. Bishop, general manager of tne i'aiace Hotel in San Francisco, reg istered at the Benson yesterday on his way home from Spokane, where he has some mining interests. Mr. tnd Mrs. Horace Palton, of Gold Hill, are at the Imperial. Their home is in Sam's Valley, where the Rogue River Indians made their last stand. Mrs. Palton says the Indians were not forced to jump from Table Rock Into the river, as some people contend, be cause It would be a three-mile jump. Down at the Multnomah are a cou ple of old salts who are waiting for new ships to carry them out of Port land. They are Captain B. O. Killman I and Captain A. W. Ames. Captain Kill man says that Captain Ames was once steering a cargo of cattle toward Alaska when he ran his boat so far ashore that the cattle walked off ont the lana. Captain Ames likes to tell of Captain Killman being wrecked in the South Seas and how ha subsisted on cocoanuts after reaching an island via tne rait route. E. M. Blake, who has a shipyard at uakland, Cal., is at the Hotel Portland, koss finmgan. at tne Benson, yes lerday received two letters from over seas. One was from E. H. Bernegrtrer, former manager of the Benson, who is now at Brest, Fiance, and the other was from George Underwood, a former Benson employe, now with the 148th Field Artillery, who has been fighting wstn tne American rorces near Ver dun. Mr. Underwood writes that the only thing he wants now ls to get back to Portland, lie Is fed up on war. Dr. W. J. Kerr, president of the Or egon Agricultural College, was at the Imperial yesterday, conferring with Jefferson Myers, secretary of the board of regents, regarding the meeting of the board to be held January 18. ACTIVITY OF FOt'RTH ENGINEERS Letter From France Gives Brief History of Operations of Unit. OAKLAND, Cal., Jan. 3. (To the Editor.) The following extract from a letter written November 23 by Lieu tenant Meldrum M. Rinearson. 58th In fantry, but with the Fourth Engineers until August 9, and near them until the late days of the war, answers G. M. B. K.. of St. Johns: We landed at Bordeaux the 13th of May. V?e had one encounter with a submarine, a torpedo passing; between our stern and the bow of the boat in the rear. The chasers sot busy and our own boat dropped a depth bomb that lifted our stern out of the water. I do not know whether they sot the sub or not, but the last I saw the chasers disap peared over the horizon flrins with all their guns. Tho boat we were on was the ex Kaiser's ship Martha Washington. We paraded in Bordeaux and then went to Calais, where other parts of the di vision were. Our train passed through Amiens where the Boche cave us a shelling without doing any damage. At Calais we were bombed every night by raiders, but our regiment did not lose anyone. From there we went to Samur in support of the British on the Flanders front where we spent a quiet month. All of a sudden we were rushed up behind Chateau Thierry, where wo hurriedly built defenses, staying there all through June and a part of July. We did not get into the thick of the fight but suffered some from shell fire. On the night of the 14th of July we sneaked away to a little town at the point of the Solssons-Rheims salient about 1:1 miles behind the lines. The night oi the 17th we marched in the mud and rain, com ing into the lines af 8:45 A. M. At 5 we went over the top at Chezy and were In and out until on the Veale at Vllle-Sayoye. Here the engineers went out ahead of the in fantry and built bridges. Tho Oregonlan ot August 9 has an account of Major Kewcomer and Cap tain Growdon (the latter a Portland man) being cited for bravery at this time. Both officers have been pro moted since. We rested two days at Liffol-le-Grand and again started for the front, taking over a sector just to the right of Verdun at the mouth of the St. Mihiel sector, and we stayed there until the drive was finished. Then we shifted to the left of Verdun (Ar gonne front! where we Jumped off Septem ber 26, passing about a kilometer to the right of Montfaucon. On the Ourey we passed Quentin Roosevelt's grave. I am sorry G. M. B. K. failed to sign his or her name, tor I would have been glad to have mailed letters ot Interest to those whoso relatives were in tha Fourth Engineers, but not of particular Interest to the public. HELENA B. RINEARSON. 229 Forty-first street, Oakland, Cal. In Other Days. Demobilization of 65th Coast Artillery. HUBBARD, Or., Jan. 4. (To the Edi tor.) Please tell me if the 65th Coast Artillery has left France yet. If not, when will it leave? What ls its present location and where will it be demobil ized? AN ANXIOUS MOTHER. The Oregonian has numerous Inqui ries of this nature regarding the 65th, Coast Artillery. All Inquirers will please note that the 65th was assigned for early convoy on December 7, but prior to January 5 had not been listed in sailings. Readers are asked to watch the sailings and arrivals as printed In the.news columns. Under present prac tices the unit will undoubtedly be de mobilized at Fort Stevens. This is all the available information we can give Constant Reader, Portland; Subscriber, Eugene; A Subscriber, Astoria; Mrs. R., Hood River. Twenty-five Years Ago. From The Oregonlan of January 7. 1X94. The Portland Chamber of Commerce condemned the statements contained in Governor Pennoyer's Christmas le.t ter to President Cleveland as being "erroneous, misleading, injurious and not warranted nor substantiated in any manner by the facts or condition ex isting in any section of the stale, or throughout the state as a whole." Berlin. An agreement regarding the Russian treaty -sif commerce has been reached on all points but the Russian side. The difficulty now remaining ls the duration of the treaty, tussia fa vors a short and Germany demands a long period. Oregon City. Report of the local XT. S. land office for 1893 shows that 576 homestead entries were filed covering 82,417 acres. Final proof numbered 379, embracing 56,521 acres. There were also 62 homestead commutations, covering 9980 acres. Sheriff Kelly did not receive any warrant for his fees during the month of December. According to a state ment made by Judge Moreland, his revenues will be cut off entirely until he has liquidated his debt to the county. Sheriff Kelly remarked that he would be ready to settle with the county Just as soon as he could secure the final report on the delinquent tax roll. Fifty Years Ago. From The Oregonian of January T. ISfi. New York. Vigilance committees are being organized in most of the wards of the city for the purpose of bringing rogues to justice. London. It Is said that Greece will introduce the claims of the Cretans into the Paris conference, and will com mand that they he allowed to declare who shall be their rulers by pleblsci tum. Jacksonville, Or. The smallpox lo raging here. All business is suspended. There are 19 cases under treatment at the pesthouse, six of which arc anr nouneed convalescent. The West Side Railroad Company has disbursed since breaking ground last April nearly $75,000 In gold coin, be sides large sums paid in lands and bonds; has finished 130,000 cubic yards of grading, and still has a large grad ing force at work beyond the mountains. R. L. Taggart, former football star ol the Oregon Agricultural College, ar rived In town yesterday, with the rank of Ensign. He has been paymaster on one of the transports crossing between the Atlantic Coast and "oyer there, Mrs. John Withycombe, and Miss Mabel Withycombe, of Salem, are amoug the Portland Hotel arrivals. Herbert Hanlon, editor of the Pa cific Shipping Illustrated, a Seattle magazine that devotes considerable space to Portland, is at the Multnomah. The last time ne was here Mr. Hanlon brought his mother down to the Grand Army reunion. Frank Albers, of San Francisco, and George Albers, of Seattle, arrived yes terday at the Benson. They are mem bers of the Albers Bros. Milling Com pany, of this city. Ben Brown, Sheriff of Malheur County, came to the Imperial yesterday to look em over. Senator Walter M. Pierce, of La Grande, sold a car of fancy Hereford beef cattle from his Grand Ronde Val ley farm yesterday for the highest price ever paid in North Portland yards, 11 cents. This is the highest price paid for a full car. 308th Engrlners. PORTLAND, Jan. 6 (To the Editor.) (1) In what division is Company C, 308th. Regiment Engineers? (2) Where was it when the armistice was signed? (3) Where is it now? (4) What work are they doing? (1) It is in the 83d Division. (2) Lemans and Castres, France. (3) No further announcement. (4) This is a depot division and Just what the duties of its enginers are is difficult to say. Battery D, 119th Field Artillery. TILLAMOOK. Or.. Jan. 4 (To the Editor.) Please tell me in what divi sion Battery B. 119th Field Artillery, is, and If it has been ordered for home. Are Marines whose time expired during the war, but who were held until the war was over, discharged or kept in the Army of Occupation until all come home? A MOTHER. The 119th Field Artillery is In the 32d Division Army of Occupation, last reported with headquarters at Cons dorf, Luxemburg. Such Marine will probably be held only until he can be released without inconvenience if he seeks release. Field Hospital 167. LA GRANDE, Or., Jan. 4 (To the Editor.) Kindly state where these were located on November 11: (1) Field Hospital 167; Sanitary Train 117; 42d Division. (2) Where are they at present? (3) When are they slated for re turn? ' C. H. 1 and 3. The hospital and train are a part of the 42d- Division, now in Army of Occupation, with headquarters at Mersch, Luxemburg. 3. Slated to remain. Previously Answered In News Columns, PORTLAND, Jan. 6. (To the Edi tor.) Pleaee tell me whether the 146th Field Artillery, D, is still in France. If so, what pi-rt, and when will they return to the United States? MRS. A. W. PORTLAND, Jan. 6. (To the Edi tor.) Please inform me as to where Company D, 161st Infantry, is now lo cated. What division is it in and Is It listed for early return? LDIEK'S MOTHER. PORTLA:.-, Jan. J. (To the Edi tor.) Can you give me any informa tion recirdini the 91s Division, espe cially th& 364th Infantry, Mechanics? Are they being held for the Army of occupation, or will they be sent home soon? SOLDIER'S WIFE. PORTLAND. Jan. 6. (To the EdU tor.) In what division is Battery A, 147th Field Artillery, and v.-he re la It at present? ls it listed for early re turn? A. H. COTTAGE GROVE, Or., Jan. 6. (To the Editor.) Please inform me wheth er the 347th regiment of Field Artil lery of the 91st Division is slated fur early return home. A SOLDIER'S WIFE. The foregoing questions were an. swered fully in the news columns of The Oregonian on January 4. Seized Enemy Property. SIFTON, Wash., Jan. 4. (To the Ed itor.) When the property of an enemy alien is taken over by the custodian of enemy property and sold, what becomes of the proceeds? Are all or any of the owners of such property reimbursed? SUBSCRIBER. The property is held In trust for the owners and they will be reimbursed as soon as there Is no possibility that the income or proceeds can be used to the military disadvantage of this country. Air Service Mechanics. ALSEA. Or., Jan. 4. (To the Editor.) In The Oregonian several days ago Company 17, of the Air Service Me chanics, was listed for early return home. Does this Include the First Kegi- ment Motor Mechanics, of the fourth battalion? A SUBSCRIBER. Company 17 is not listed as a part of the First Regiment, M. M., A. S., evi dently belonging either to the Fourth or Fifth Regiment. Fifth Corps Artillery Park. PORTLAND, Jan. 6. (To the Editor.) Has the Fifth Corps Artillery Park, M. O. R. S., left France yet? If not, is it among the units coming soon? A SUBSCRIBER. The Fifth Corps Artillery Park was listed for convoy home on date of De cember 7. It. probably has sailed by this time, but had not appeared In lists p until Jsluuary 3. Watch arrival lists in TJhe Oregonian. ' Men Have Option. PORTLAND, Jan. 6. (To the Editor.) Are the non-commissioned officers now In the officers' training schools in France to be retained until they make their commission, or will they be mus tered out with their old regiments? MRS. M. SUKLIN. 48lh Coast Artillery. PENDLETON, Or., Jan. 5, (To the Editor.) How soon is the 48th Coast Artillery expected home? A SUBSCRIBER. PORTLAND. Jan. 6. (To the Editor.) Where is the 48th Coast Artillery, Battery E, now located. Are they list ed for early return home? CONSTANT READER. The 48th Coast Artillery was desig- uated for return on December 14. Watch sailings and arrivals in The Oregonian news columns. ll(!(h Engine-era Assigned for Convoy. PORTLAND, Jan. 6. (To the Editor.) Kindly tell me if Company A and Company D, 116th Engineers, ara listed for early return. If so, what is the date of sailing? Is Company E, 18th Railway Engineers, assigned for early return? . H. I. The 116th Engineers were assigned for convoy on December 28. Watch The Oregonian news columns for their sailing. The 18th Engineers have not been ordered home. - 145th and 140IH Field Artillery. PORTLAND. Jan. 6 (To the Editor.) Please tell me if the 145th Field Ar tillery is with the Army of Occoupa- tion, also have you any information concerning the 146th Field Artillery? READER. The 145th has been ordered home and the 146th is listed with the Army ot Occupation. The latter Is a part of tho 141st Division, now ordered home, but presumably will remain in Germany, 354th Aero Sqnndron. ORCHARDS, Wash., Jan. 5. (To the Editor.) Plaase publish whether the 354th Aero Squadron is detailed to come home or if it is in the Army of Occu pation. A SOLDIER S WIFE. It is not yet listed for return, but is not in the Army of Occupation. Company D, 37th Engineers. NORTH BEND, Or., Jan. 5. (To the Editor.) Please tell me in what divis ion the 37th Engineers, Company D, is. Are they listed for early return? A SULUli;jrl 3 WIFE. It is not in a division. Was last re ported at Souilly, France, with no inti mation as to immediate return. A non-commissioned officer in train ing has the option of being discharged with his unit or of finishing his train ing and taking a commission in the Officers' Reserve. Company F, Second Field Artillery. PORTLAND, Jan. 6.r (To the Editor.) Kindly tell me if possible where Com pany F, Second Field Artillery, ls. Sep tember 16 it was at Fort Sill, Okla. WORRIED MOTHER AND SISTER. It is a part of the Eighth Division. The Eighth landed in France about the time the armistice was signed and the artillery has been ordered home. Sovr In the 65th Coast Artillery. MORO, Or., Jan. 4. (To the Editor.) Kindly tell me if Battery C, 65th Artillery, which was stationed at Fort Stevens before going overseas, is now in the 65th Field Artillery or 65th Coast Artillery. A READER. It is in the 65th Coast Artillery, Son's Obligation to Support Mother. GALVIN, Wash., Jan. 4. (To tha Editor.) Who would be compelled by law to support a widow who has three married daughters and one married son, the daughters not having any chil dren and th3 son having six? All par ties are earning their support by day's wages. The daughters have no prop erty and sons-in-law refuse to help. The son Is able to support his mother. A SUBSCRIBER. The obligation rests upon the son. Battery C. Sixth Field Artillery. DALLAS, Or., Jan. 6. (To the Ed itor.) In what division Is Battery C. Sixth Field Artillery, which went to France at the beginning of the war? Where is it located. If not returned yet, when will It be? F. M. ROBB1N8. It is in the First Division, Army of Occupation, and not likely to be re truned for many months. Last an nounced headquarters of the division was Hayingen, Germany. . 104th Aero Squadron. ASTORIA, Or., Jan. 6. (To the Ed itor.) Please tell me in what division the 104th Aero Squadron is and where located. MRS. BLUCIIARD. Aero squadrons are not divisional units. Location of the 104th has not been given. Watch lists In The Orego nian news columns, as it has not yet been listed for return. Ordered Home, lint Has Not Sailed. ECHO. Or.. Jan. 4. (To the Editor.) Kindly state in tomorrow's Oregonian if Battery C, 4btn ttegiment, u. A. -.., has sailed and, if so, when. SOLDIER'S WIFE. It has been ordered home, but not listed in announcement of sailings. which you can follow in the regular news columns, f