Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, April 21, 1919, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE MORXIXG OKEGON'IAN. ' MONDAY-' APRIL, 21, 1919.
SOLUTION OF FIUME
QUESTION HISS
Outlook Causes Distinct Pes
simism in Italy.
CLAIMS TO BE REITERATED
Order Withdrawing All American
Troops From Italian Terri
tory Reported. .
BT HERBERT BAYARD SWOPE.
ICmTruhl b th Nw Tork World. Pub-
liril br Arrn(re:nent.)
PARIS. Auril 20. (Special wireless.)
No solution has yet been found by
the bis; four on the Fiume question,
despite the urgency of Premier Orlando
who U to return to Italy to maice a
pronouncement before the chamber.
Il is anticipated that his statement
will be a reiteration of the Italian
claims to Flume and Ialmatla. which
Huron Sonnino, before the big four,
has rigidly maintained at the maxi
mum. The outlook causes distinct pessi
mism, for although Premiers Clemenceau
and Lloyd ;eonce are understood to
have sympathised with President Wil
son's firm stand on the question of
principle, their hands are tied by the
arret treaties which he holds were
abrogated by the "14 points."
Yimki 1m Withdraw, la Report.
The feeling in Italy Is reported to
be running very high, and It is credibly
reported that Oeneral Treat, the Amer
ican commander, has issued an order
directing the withdrawal of all Amer
ican troops from Italian territory be
fore May 1. while the Red Cross and
other war workers remaining after that
date, must remove their uniforms.
Various constructions are put upon
this order, but it Is surmised that it
really means that In view of the in
ternal conditions of the country, it
is undesirable to hare any foreign
troops there.
In some quarters an effort Is made
to indicate that the tense situation
over the Italian claims has been re
lated and that a compromise is pos
sible. But this view finds no accept
ance In Italian quarters, it being point
ed out that, the presence of Foreign
-Minister Sonnino in the conference of
the supreme council Indicated that
Italy's position is assuming strength
rather than weakening, as Sonnino has,
been from the outset the champion of
Italy's demands.
Italy Relies 1. S. Sapaart.
However, there is still a belief that
Italy cannot afford, in any sense, to
refuse a reasonable compromise. This
view even makes allowance for her in
ternal situation, or the hopes that have
been encooraged among her people, for
it is pointed out that her withdrawal
from the conference would mean that
American support would be cut oft
and on that support Italy must rely
chiefly for her reconstruction.
The earliest date now named for
handing the peace treaty to the Ger
nians Is May Zt. and it Is understood
that the first work of the envoys m ill
be to have talks with the big four.
preparing the way for the plenary con
ferences. Another session on the ar
rangementa for the Versailles meeting
was held yesterday afternoon at the
t-ml D'Orsay. when It was decided to
tjike precautions to keep the treaty
m-t ret until it is presented to the
Germans.
FIRST WOMAN REPRESENTATIVE SAILS TO ATTEND WOMEN'S
PERMANENT PEACE SESSION.
.' - vr-- -
FOGH ASKS HON FORMULAE
6 F.I RETS OF GASES SHOCLD BE
MRHEXPF.REP, HE SAYS.
American at Paris Interpose That
Germany Trade Secrets Would
lie Kevcaletl.
BT JAMES M. TVOHT.
COpTrllbt by the N-w Tork World. Pub
lbthrd by Arrangement. )
PARIS. April :. (Special Wireless.)
An interesting situation has arisen
respecting the formula for the man
ufacture of German poison cases,
which, at the last meeting of the coun
ril of ten. Marshal Koch proposed that
the Germans should be compelled to
liand over.
It is understood that American Sec
retary of State Iuising took position
Chat to reveal these formulas would
The for the Germans to make a present
of their dye industry secrets to the
allies.
In the course of the discussion Min-lt.-r
A. J. Balfour rather supported
Marshal Foch. but President Wilson
intervened on the other side, contend
ing that the allies and America had
manufactured deadlier gas and of their
a n. and that as all use of poison gas
had been prohibited in the future.
thr-e formulas were not needed.
I'llimately the matter was referred
Tnack for Marshal Foch to bring for
ward evidence showing grounds on
which these formulas are absolutely
rtecessary to the allied and associated
j;overnments.
The p ace conference has Just made
a belated discovery of the existence of
certain German territory In the Arctic
Kit W tlhelm land necessitating
an additional clause to the peace treaty
injuring that Germany renounca all
claims to this territory In favor of the
yllied and associated governments.
There is no rush for a mandatory over
tl'-is particular land.
INVALID WIFEJUES MAJOR
Mxii'C Wants 2 5 a Month and
Judsr Thinks Amount Rraonable.
I.ns A.VGELKS. If a man until re
cently could draw S?o a month as a
tnajur In the United States army, the
fact that he Is now working for til a
rrk n a stock clerk Is no reason why
be rhould not pay an Invalid wife
a month fc-r her rapport, according to
a ru'.ins of Judge Crail in fallure-to-r-rovide
proceedings instituted by Mrs.
Cror.-tan Mettler against her husband.
la)or 1- G. Mettler. The present case
ms dismissed because of faulty pro
cdure by the district attorney's office
and announcement made that a new
complaint would be drawn Immediately.
"if the ma.tor couidn't save a little
e-tit of a majors salary." said Judge
( nil "it might be well for the county
t give him a Job at 115) a day and
t-ach him tn be a littl more provident.
If seem to me that he has spent a good
deal of the money he haa earned on a
blonde
Metiler has been out of the army
s ure January and said that he was
I vine ith h:s mother and making a
home for hts small son. He states that
a Mrs. Corwlna Audry Haggenpaugh
vtas a boarder at the home and paid
a small amount weekly for her board.
Est?
x r
4
i Ji
S
"$7-K
t.
s
'V '
' I lndermood a f I'
I O-nderwoodMY
JEAXETTE RA"KIX.
Miss Jeanette Rankin, who has the distinction of having been the first woman
elected to congress, sailed last week on board the 8. S. Xoordam to attend the
meeting of the international committee of women for permanent peace, to be
held in Switzerland some time in May. Miss Rankin is chairman of the commit
tee. The session will be attended by women from all over the world. Others
who will follow Miss Rankin to represent the United States will be Airs. Louis
Pott, Mits Jane Addams and Mrs. John J. White.
Obituary.
The total damage In the north of
France, including buildings, agricul
ture, furniture and public works, is es
timated at t4.5v-Vooo.SOO francs, or
about llJ.?,s.?,.'?'J.
Mrs. Marie Tappendorff, whose death
occurred at Good Samaritan hospital
Saturday, was the oldest daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. C. 1. Calkins of Sherwood.
Mr. Calkins Is cashier of the Sherwood
bank.
Mrs. Tappendorff. who was only
13 years old, was a member of the East
ern Star and an active leader in the
social life of the community.
Besides her husbarut, T. J. Tappen
dorff, she Is survived by her father
and motner. two sisters. Bessie and
Zenith Calkins, and two rniall broth
ers. Ralph and Dale Calkins. Inter
ment will be made la Sherwood ceme
tery today.
FOREST GROVE. Or- April 20.
(Special.) Mrs. Alice SI. Darling,
widow of the late James Darling, one
of the oldest women in Forest Grove,
died here Saturday, aged li. She
was born In Oswego county, ftewlork,
In 1S32. and with her parents went to
Ohio. She was married to James Darl
ing in IS 56. A son died a few years
ago. Three aaugniers living are ueiie
Darling, Mrs. innirred Aidricn and
Dee Darling, all of this city. She left
two grandchildren and two great
grandchildren. The family came to
Forest Grove in 1903. Mr. Darling died
in 1911. A sister, Mrs. Mary Austin of
this place, also survives.
m m m
CENTRALIA. Wash, April 10. (Spe
cial.! Memorial services were heid in
Wlnlock Friday afternoon for the late
Hattie Is be II, wife of O. L. Isbell, pub
lisher of the Wlnlock News.
CHEHALia Wash, April 20. (Spe
cial.) The funeral of J. S. Anderson,
one of the respected citizens of the big
bottom country, and formerly a resi
dent of Chehalls for years, was held
vesterday. Rev. T. Davis Acheson of
the Presbyterian church officiated. In
terment was In the I. O. O. F. cemetery.
Mr. Anderson was 9 years of age. In
he early 90s he and George Robinson
of Chehalls engaged extensively in the
logging and contracting business, when
that kind of work was done with
horses, ljiter Mr. Anderson moved to
eastern Lewis county, where ne had
a farm near Cora. He leaves a widow
and four children. One son. Hobart. is
in Germany with the American army
of occupation. Howard and Harold and
a sister. C'oia. reside at the family
home at Cora.
as
FCGENK. Or, April 20. especial.)
R. j. Watson died at his home at Jasper
Saturday at the age of 7 J years. He
retired Friday evening in apparent good
health and the next morning his daugh
ter found him dead in bed. Heart trou
ble is believed to have been the cause
cf death Mr. Watson was a former
resident of Roseburg, where he spent
a great part of his life. He leaves two
.laughters. Mrs. E. L. Westrope and Mrs.
W. A. Rychard of Jasper. He was a
brother of Mrs. A. M. Crawford, wife
cf the former attorney-general of the
state, and leaves another sister. Mrs.
Kate Floyd of Los Angeles, and two
brothers. Louis and Charles 1. of Roseburg;.
capo, Spokane and other cities. A Jap
anese woman was among their number.
To be of service to his fellowmen was
the desire of Wilbur members, he said.
"Religion Interprets properly the
helpful relationship man sustains to
his fellowman. This Is the relation
ship Christ meant to his disciples." said
Dr. Short. There were prayers for the
owners of the hotel and for the hotel
guests. The service closed with the
singing of America.
During the services casual lobby
loungers looked in, paused, were sur
prised, but remained to pray.
CHURCH HELD IN HOTEL
Continued Krorn Flrrt race.)
preacher." remarked a traveling man.
The eervlcese were mainly musical.
There wasapplause for most of the
numbers, on one occasion Dr. Short
Joining with the applaudera. Dr. Short
stood on the meizanlne and spoke
briefly, telling of the desire of Wilbur
to have, members in every Important
city In America.
That day. he said, members hsd been
admitted who lived in Portland, Chi-
iSSISN FBfO PUN BOILS
RECEXT MOVE DESCRIBED
"ANOTHER PRIXKIPOS."
AS
Dr. Frldtjof Xansen Encounters Dif
ficulty in Getting In Touch
With Nicolal Lenine.
PARIS. April 20. (By the Associated
Press.) Dr. Fridtjof Xansen. head of
the commission to feed Russia, is hav
ing difficulty in getting In ouch with
Nikolai Lenine, Russian bolshevik pre
mier, concernlns the revictualling of
Russia on condition that the bolshevlkl
cease hostilities. The wireless services
of the entente countries apparently are
not available, and a messenger will be
rent to Norway to communicate Dr.
Nansen's message to Moscow. Conse
quently Lenine s reply probably will not
be available for several days.
The French press is showing a hostile
attitude toward the revictualling plan.
One newspaper describes it as "anoth
er Prinklpos," and several charge that
it is an attempt by Americans to in
gratiate themselves to obtain conces
sions, and. sco it the suggestion of
humane, rather than political, motives.
Although the American peace delega
tion has repeatedly stated that William
C Bullitt and Lincoln Steffens were not
empowered to negotiate with the bol
shevik! when they recently visited Rus
sia, the fact that they were accompan
ied by Captain W. W. Pettlt. of the
United States army, lent such official
coloring to the party that both the
French and English newspapers are in
clined to regard the delegation as offi
cial and credit the revictualling- plan
to its report.
BOO WORKERS STRIKE
AT LEADVILLE MINES
Walkout Result of Order for
Cut in Wages.
$3.50 IS HELD INADEQUATE
ODerators Declare) Reduction AVas
Necessary Because of Depres
sion in Price of Metal.
LEADVILLE, Colo., April 20. Be
tween 600 and 700 miners, engineers
and pumpmen, employed in the big
mines of the Leadville district, struck
today following refusal of mine opera
tors to rescind their action ordering .a
cut of $1 a day n wages.
There is no picketing and the city Is
quiet.
The miners are not members of any
International uni6n.
The strike followed a mass meeting
last Monday night at which the miners
refused to accept a wage reduction
from 14.50 a day to 13.50 a day. Efforts
by Governor Oliver H. Shoup to get the
men to agree to a wage of J3.75 a day
failed.
Several Mlnea Affected.
The principal mines affected are the
Iron-Silver, the Yak, the Mikado, the
Greenback, the Downtown group and a
number of leases at Yak.
Some Mlnea Not Affected.
The Ibex and Garbutt properties, near
the city, are not yet affected. The
wage cut at these mines was 50 cents
a day, because the miners must pay
their transportation to the properties
each day. - Three hundred -men are em
ployed! at the Ibex and Garbutt lodes.
Pumps in the Downtown properties
were working, manned by volunteers,
but jt was reported that the Mikado
had pulled its equipment and that it
was feared tbe'overflow would seriously
affect the Downtown properties.
Fifteen or 20 small leases, generally
employing only a few men, are not af
fected. No cut in wages at these prop
erties was made.
The miners maintain they cannot live
on a wage of $3.50 a day. The oper
ators assert that the cut In wages is
necessary because of the depression in
the price of metal. .
Two Smelters Operating.
Two smelters, the Arkansas Valley
plant of the American Smelting & Re
fining company, and the Western Zinc
Oxide company plant are still in oper
ation. The zinc plant which employs
about 100 men, has sufficient ore to
continue running for about a month,
and the reserves at the Arkansas Val
ley smelter would keep a few furnaces
in blast for about the same time. Ces
sation of operations at the latter plant
would affect about 600 men.
All of the mine managers have stated
that there will be no attempt to operate
their properties with outside labor.
During the past week there has been
a marked exodus of single men from
the district.
tics, and ProfesoBr W. L Schlichter.
Colonel Edwards said that the army
today no longer could bo called a pro
fession, because It embraced the ne
cesisty of many professions, and that
experts in the various phases of these
professions were as necessary to the
army as to any other calling.
National extension of the plan to be
carried out at Columbus, it was pointed
out by several university officials, will
prevent a repetition of conditions-prevailing
when America entered the world
war, and the boasting predictions of
Germans, particularly of Dr. Dernberg,
the kaiser's former emissary and one
time colonial secretary, that America
could not train officers capable of
commanding men in sufficient numbers
to wage war successfully, - would no
longer be Justified.
But the military and the university
authorities emphasize .the fact that
military instruction is being co-ordinated
with the regular academic work
of the university. The general scheme
now being developed makes it possible
for the student to co-ordinate the work
that normally he is taking in college
and professional school to fit himself
for the profession which he is to pur
sue after graduation with those features
of the military courses which are most
akin to what the student intends to
make his life work. Courses in heavy
artillery will fit In logically with the
problems of a man whi is preparing
himself to be a civil engineer. Train
ing for the signal corps and the air
service is allied closely to that required
by electrical engineers. -.
Men who are to become chemists may,
by taking military courses, familiarize
themselves with the work of the chem
ical warfare service. It is even hoped
that the law school will offer enough
military law to those who may take it
to afford the army, in case of necessity,
a Buply of trained judge advocates.
Colonel Edwards is outlining a course
of military lectures, to be given every
Thursday afternoon at Columbia. Many
well-known military men will be in
vited to speak on military topics. Ma
lor-General Thomas H. Barry, com
manding general of the department of
the east, and Captain Archie Kooseveit
are among those who will make ao
dresse soon. Later It is hoped General
Leonard Wood will address the stu
dents
MANY OFFICERS NEEDED
MERCHANT MARIXE SCHOOL
CLASSES OPEX.
Recruitlnj Service of Shipping Board
Makes Appeal to Men to '
Enter Work.
Ill TfiilS IS PLANNED
COLVMBIA IXIVERSITY IS TO
BUILD CP SYSTEM.
Movement May Be Extended
Other Colleges to Provide
Skilled Officers.
to
NEW YORK. Through an arrange
ment with the United States govern
ment, Columibia university immedi
ately will begin building a system by
which students will be trained for war
during peace times. It is the beginning
of a movement which the war depart
ment may extend to other colleges and
universities for the purpose of creat
ing a great body of trained officers
available at once in the event of war.
Columbia will utilize the resources of
the university engineering department
and will add speciial training and
equipment, to be . supplemented by
work in camps.
Included in the pharapnernaiia
which soon Is to be sent to Morningside
Heights is a battery of 6-inch guns of
the latest model, in addition to var
ious types of trench mortors, anti-air
craft guns, range finding instruments
and plotting boards. Complete infantry
equipment will be available at an early
date.
Following a conference of Columbia
officials and members of the general
staff detailed by xhe war department.
it was announced yesterday that many
of the details of the project have been
decided upon and that the opening of
the fall Jerm will find a complete sys
tem of training for officers in three
branches of service.
The conference was participated in
by Lieutenant-Colonel George L. Van
Dusen of the signal corps; Major Ed
ward P. Noyes of the office of the chief
of heavy artillery; Major B. A. Tolbert
of the war department's committee on
special training, and G. B. Pegram, dean
of the engineering department; Herbert
E. Hawkes, dean of Columbia college;
I .Iftiitanant-Colonel Allan R Edwards.
yrofesosr of military science and tac- have a free nana
SAN FRANCISMO More merchant
marine ofifcers are needed tbday than
during the war in order properly to
man the several hundred ships that
will slide down the ways and be placed
lo commission during the next few
months. New classes are opening in
the United States shipping board's free
navigation school here, and its free
school in marine engineering at Berke
ley, Cal., and the recruiting service of
the shipping board has made an appeal
to men to enter into the work.
"It is important that we anticipate
this need" said C. W. Saunders, chief
of section five of the shipping board,
with headquarters at 120 Market Btreet,
"and prepare to supply the men, as
the proper operation of our merchant
fleet is just as necessary now, if not
more so, if we look to the future of
this nation's welfare, of which the new
merchant marine is a vital part, as it
was during- the war when every ship
meant a battle won.
"What the shipping board really neas
now are men who see in the merchant
service all it's vast possibilities, and
who join not only for the fine purpose
of helping this country establish her
prestige as a maritime power, but be
cause they know by proper effort in
this service they can gain for them
selves a profitable vocation. Each of
these hundreds of ships will need eight
licensed officers, four on deck and four
in the engine department."
Applicants with two years' sea serv
ice and physically sound will be ad
mitted to the new navigation class at
once, after the approval of their appli
cations by the local inspectors of
steamboats. The average length of
the course, if attended during the day,
is from four to six weeks.
Men of a certain amount of mechan
ical or engineering experience, not
necessarily at sea, are qualified for the
four weeks' day course in marine en
gineering, subject to the approval of
their applications by the steamboat in
spectors. Graduates requiring additional sea
service before being qualified for their
examination for licenses will be sent
out by the sea serviec bureau as reserve
ofifcers for eight weeks at 90 a month.
Graduates of the navigation school
passing their examinations before the
steamboat inspectors will be licensed
as third mates and higher, acocrding
to the amount of experience they have
had. Similarly graduates in the ma
rine engineering branch passing the
steamboat inspectors will receive li
censes as third assistant engineers and
higher. '
Pastry Restrictions Removed.,
tjatjtr War-time restrictions on the
making of pastry have beenremoved
and American soldiers here are enjoy
ing numerous delicacies of -the French
cuisine. At one of the restaurants fre
quented by Americans the French cook
produced several lemon pies, but the
supply was soon exhausted.
Before the embargo on pastry was
lifted, the American soldiers had to ob
tain flour from the army commissary,
and then find a French woman to make
it into pastry. Now the French cooks
Why Dentistry is Costly
"Co-operation Reduces Cost" '
Chapter III.
The cost of dentistry is high be
cause dentists work separately.
There are nearly as many dental es
tablishments as there are dentists.
The expense of maintaining: an establisb
- ment is less when we work together. Much
money is wasted, at present, in passing from
Ue hands of the patient to those ot the dentist.
It
i - , 3'
E. R. PARKER
(Painless Parker)
benefits neither the eiver nor the receiver.
What becomes of it? It is lost on overhead
charges that can be cut down if dentistsworked
in groups.
Bv workiner toeether thev could save Quite
a deal of expenses on house rents, fitting up laboratories, fur
nishing sitting-rooms, and hiring nurses.
Chemicals and scientific instruments necessary for work
- could be purchased more economically.
Dentists ought to learn a lesson from weavers, shopkeep
ers, teachers.
In old times weavers worked singly; each had his own
loom and workshop. They didn't produce much cloth. They
could supply with difficulty the needs of only their own vil
lage or town. Their production increased when hand-loom
factories were established. It was the first step towards prog
ress. What wonderful improvements followed!
Emporiums and department stores can practice certain
economies that small stores and shops can't
Teachers can do better work at some great university than
teaching privately.
Factories.shops.schools and academies all have the same)
lesson for us.
Co-operation reduces cost.
I have spent twenty-five years in developing:
a system to enable dentists to co-operate. I
have succeeded in reducing the cost of den
tistry without impairing its efficiency.
Under the E. R. Parker System
standard work in dentistry is ac
complished at most reasonable
rates.
Painless Parker Dentist
326 WASHINGTON ST, COR- SIXTH
PEASANTS' amies CONE
WORLD MTJST FEED 500,000 FOR
18 MOXTHS.
Relief Work In Hunger-Stricken
Territory Along Peninsula
Hampered by Ice.
ARCHANGEL. (Correspondence of
the Associated Press.) High prices
and no work have exhausted the sav
ings of the, peasants and, according to
advices reaching the American ana
other allied food committees in Arch
angel, the world will have to feed and
clothe the half million people who live
to return to Archangel, unable to pen
etrate the ice fields.
Balkans Get Much U. S. Food.
WASHINGTON, April 20. Through
its commissions the American Red
Cross is distributing 25,000,000 pounds
of food, clothing, soap and medical sup
plies among the destitute inhabitants
of the Balkan countries, a cable re
ceived today at headquarters from Ath
ens says.
CASTOR I A
For Infants and Children
In Use For Oyer 30 Years
Always bears
the
Signature of
NORTHWEST
HEADQUARTERS
SAN FRANC'SCO
Berlin Clerks Win Strike.
LONDON, April 20. A dispatch to the
Exchange Telegraph says the Berlin
department store employes have won
their strike and the trouble is now
ended. The dispatch adds that Soviets
are now controllying employment.
Florida's orange crop for 1918 is es
timated at 5.265,000 boxes, or much
behind the allied lines in north Russia! more than the crop of 1917 and much,
for at least 18 months. 'less than that of 1916.
Six months ago almost every peasant i -
family in this district had its hoard of
DaaKnotes. w mie in me uuico
pie were, in many instances, starving.
the peasants had money niaaen unoer
mattresses, in socks and buried in the
ground and hidden away from possible
red guard raiders were supplies of
grain and other foodstuffs.
In August frost Kiliea most oi ine
meager acreage of grain that was sown
last year in this territory, which is
mostly forest. The secret food hoards
were eaten months ago. Lumber mills
and other concerns which usually gave
employment have been shut down, and
the peasant, with no source ot revenue,
has been digging every day into his
money savings to Buy tne looa tnat
came in from abroad wnen me ames
landed. There is no prospect of north
Russia feeding herself until the next
harvest and even this is made ex
tremely difficult by the shortage of
seed grain.
The allied rood committees in Arcn-
angel are seeking a way to help this
population. The conditions that prevail
n this territory among a population oi
half a million are believed to prevail
to an equal or worse extent throughout
central Russia, under bolshevik control.
The American Red Cross has ceased
civilian relief on a large scale in the
Archangel district, since this work is
to be taken over by the Hoover federal
organization, whose representatives, at
this date, have not arrived.
The Archangel Viestnik, commenting
on the situation, says: "If the northern
region, desires to be able to subsist on
ts own supplies, the necessary seed
grains must be received not later than
in. four months. If they are not re
ceived in that time the population is
either condemned to starvation or they
will depend entirely upon the allies."
Relief work among the peasants In
the hunger-stricken territory along
the Murmansk peninsula and on the
Arctic Pechora at this time of the
year is greatly hampered by the ice.
An. ice breaker with about 700 tons of
flour, sent to the Pechora district, had
BELLEVUE HOTEL
Rooms With Bath
$2 Per Day Upward
Under management of
AL LUNDBORG
(Formerly Manager of Hotel
Benson, Portland, Oregon)
BOY, 14, IN3BIG BATTLES
Veteran of Fighting in France Re
turns to Ohio Home.
' WEST WELLSTON, Ohio. A veteran
of the European war and not yet 15.
Tht is the status of Corporal Car
rlnpton Campbell, who has arrived at
hts Jackson county home here after
10 months of active nervlce with the
American doughboys in France. Not
until May 15 will he be 15.
Despite his youth. Corporal Camp
bell presents the appearance of a man
of military afte. He is 5 feet 9 inches
tall and weighs 163 pounds. He wan
working- in Ironton last April when he
enlisted. He participated in the battles
of the Argonne. St. Mfhiel and the
Mfusc. He was K"ed twice.
Corporal Campbell declares that his
af?e was never questioned and that he
parsed for 19 and 20 all the time. Cor
poral Campbell served in the first gas
reg-iment, the only one in the army
trained to shoot gas.
Dry slabwooa ana inside wood, green
stamps, for cash. Hot mac Fui Co.
ttaia 353. A, 4353, Adv.
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9 1 1
They Gave Their All Forever
You Lend a Little for Awhile
The Victory Liberty Loan
opens for subscription today.
Will you meet this final test?
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PORTLAND,
THE most active dollar in
the world is the local pay
roll dollar. It never lies idle
in the bank. Like the man
on the payroll, it is always
working doing something
for somebody.
It is the most democratic
dollar it 6erves the common
people, not the rich and it .
sustains all kinds of business
and professional life in the
community. Don't let it
leave Oregon. Keep it here by
USING LOCAL FR0DUCTS
Home Industry I-ffue of Oregon