J'tlCl'I 'i 'IIP PRICE FIVE CENTS XOVE3IBER TRACKS -CLEARED, CONGRESS ADJOURNS; LEGISLATIVE GALL NOT A PERFECT LADY CHINA'S INTEGRITY STEAMSHIP CURACAO ANTI-MEDICAL BEER h IS BATTERED IN GAl ENACTMENT IS LAW i HARDING SIGNS BILLS IN NORTHWESTERN CO-EDS CONFESS PECCADILLOS AGAIN'ST DECORUM. THANKFUL ARE WE FOB MAMY THINGS BOOM FREED BY WIND Wr BRIDGE AXD B'HEELT ' v-.' o - PRESIDENT SIGNS BILL THAT STOPS PROHIBITION LEAK. MANY APPOINTMENTS LEFT TO DIE IX LAST HOCKS. SET FOR DEC. 10 Governor Will Summon Special Session. ACTION ON FAIR IS SLATED Measure Referring Exposition to Voters Is Purpose. WORK TO BE OUTLINED Mr. Olcott to Issue Announcement Soon; Programme to Include Truck, Stage Regulations. SALEM, Or., Nov. 23 (Special.) The Oregon state legislature will con vene In special session In Salem, Mon day, December 19. This was an nounced by Governor Olcott here to day. "The people of the greatest county In Oregon, a county representing at least one-third of the population, one third of the assessable property and which' pays one-third of the entire tax of the state, has voted by an overwhelming majority In favor of the state bearing a share of the bur den of expense of an Oregon Interna tional exposition in 1925," said the governor In his call for the extraor dinary legislative session. "For a long time I have had it in mind that in event the people of Mult nomah county gave an affirmative majority to the proposal that, as a matter of Justice, equity and right, a special session should be called In order that the machinery could be created to allow the people of the state at large to express their opinion on the subject. Formal Call to Be Issued. "The regular call for the session will be issued within a short time, in order' to give the legislators ample opportunity to arrange their affairs at home for a brief absence at the capital. In the call I will outline those things which I believe the leg islature should consider and the scope of the matters to which I believe It should confine itself." The primary purpose of the special session.-as indicated In the governor's call, is to consider the adoption of a measure referring to the voters of Oregon the question of authorizing a tax levy sufficient to raise J3.OOO.000 for the support of the exposition. The voters of Portland by a four to one vote last Saturday authorized a tax of $2,000,000 to be paid by the taxpayers of that city. An additional 11,000,000 will be raised by popular subscription. It Is proposed to sub mit the exposition tax measure t the voters of the state at the primary aleotion to be held next May. Flve-Doy Session Expected. In calling the' special session of the legislature for December 19 friends of Governor Olcott said he apparently had not forgotten the extra session of the lawmakers held In Salem In January, 1920. On that occasion he urged the legislature to confine Its wor to considering rati flcatlon of th wa)man's suffrage amendment to the federal constitu tion, amendments to the workman's compensation act and a few less Im portant matters. Little or bo attention was paid to the. appeal, however, and before the session had ended an avalanche of bills had fallen upon both houses. The session lasted six days, and many of the bills approved during the lltb hour rush later were vetoed by the executive. Because of the Christmas holiday which falls upon December 25, local legislators said tonight that the session called by Governor Olcott probably would not last longer than five days. Although Governor Olcott has given no Intimation as to what recommenda tions will he Included in his formal message to the legislature. It was pre dicted tonight that it will Include a suggestion tending toward the con 1 servation of the state highways. This legislation. If adopted by the legis lature, probably will provide for state Jurisdiction of automobile stage lines mid amendments to the present stat utes regulating the loads that may be curried on trucks. (Stage Rrn-ulatlon Slated. Ueifjislators for many months have observed the necessity for the strict regulation of motor stage lines and reducing the loads cayled on trucks. It Is likely, according to reports cur rent here, that a bin will be Intro duced at the special session providing that the operation of all automobile stage lines shall be placed under the Jurisdiction of the public service com mission. Provision also will be made In the bill, it was said, for a definite operating schedule of these stage and the maintenance of waiting rooms for passengers at terminals. Ade quate -protection for passengers through the posting of bonds by the stage line operators also will be made a condition In receiving a, permit from the state. There also will be submitted to the consideration of the special session. It vii predicted, a request for ap proximately $10,000,000 additional highway money. This tax would have to receive sanction of the voters through a constitutional amendment referred to the people at a regular or special election. Advocates of this , .tCeuoludea 04 fmt 3, Colusa , Dormitory Residents Fall Down on Questionnaire About Kissing, Smoking and Drinking. CHICAGO, Nov. 23. (Special.) Not one girl In Wlllard hall, the main dormitory of the Northwestern uni versity, is a perfect lady. A moral questionnaire was recently sent Into the dormitory. The ten questions were: 1. Have you ever cheated? 2. Have you ever been kissed? 3. Hae you ever smoked? 4. Did you ever consciously tell a lie? 6. Have you ever used intoxicating liquors? t. Have you ever danced Improp erly? 7. Have you ever worn improper clothes? 8. Did you ever have a"crush"? 9. Were you ever on a "petting party"? 10. Have you ever done anything you would conceal from your parents? Most of the girls had four or five "yeses' after some of the questions. One girl had to write "yes" after eight of the questions, according to Miss Mary Day, a writer for the Daily Northwestern, who compiled statis tics from the questionnaires today. And no girl In the hall was able to write "no"-ten times. The most ladylike return contained only one "yes." It came fron: a co-ed who had never, been kissed, never told a conscious lie, never drank liquor, nor smoked, nor danced Improperly. Her one confessed sin was the first on the list. She had cheated. The "20-per-cent girl" who put an, affirmative answer after eight of the questions made "no" her answer to the tenth question. She had nothing to conceal from her parents, she said. The statistician would not say which of the remaining nine "sins" the wickedest co-ed denied. The average for the hall was 60 per cent. Miss Day found, which means that the average co-ed con fessed to four of the misdemeanors named in the questionnaires. The returns were not analysed, however, and it was impossible to judge which of the peccadillos Is most popular on the campus. Publication of- the statistics caused consternation. TURKEYS ARRIVE LATE Some Downtown Shopkeepers Prof iteer by Deniandlng 55 Cents. The local supply of Thanksgiving turkeys waa increased yesterday by the arrival of several delayed ship ments, but other lots coming from eastern Oregon and Idaho will not be in until today or tomorrow. . The total supply was not sufficient to fill shipping orders and provide for Portland retailers' wants. There were not many turkevs on th Yamhill public market and these were sold early In the day at 45 cents, the price fixed by the market master. In the large retail stores the price was the same as on Tuesday, 60 cents, but some of the smaller downtown shop keepers could not resist 'the tempta tion to profiteer and demanded E5 cent of their customers. GARDNER IS INDICTED Jury to Determine Outlaw's Sanity at Time of Mail Robberies. PHOENIX. Aris., Nov. 2J. Two in dictments, one containing four counts, charging Roy Gardner, escaped con victed mall robber, of attempts to rob the United States mails at Maricopa, Ariz., November 8, and at 'Phoenix, November 15, were returned by the grand Jury in the United States dis trict court here late today. Gardner pleaded not guilty to both indict ments. Immediately after Gardner entered his plea to the first indictment, his attorney, Carl A. Davis, asked and received permission to ftle a written motion in which Gardner asked the court to have a Jury determine his sanity at the time of the alleged of fenses. LIQUOR PROFITS $541,606 British Columbia to Divide Half of Earnings Among Municipalities. VICTORIA, B. C. Nov. 23. The government of British Columbia made a net profit of $541,606 on liquor sales during the first three and one-half months of operation under the pro vincial liquor sales board from June 16 to September 30, according to a balance sheet filed in the legislature today by J. W. de B. Farris, attorney general. This amount does not in clude $121,000 received from sales of permits to purchase liquor. Half the total profits of the board are to be divided among municipali ties of the province on the basis of school population. FALLING TREE KILLS BOY Roof of Home Smashed and Mother of Victim Is Hurt. HIIXSBORO. Or., Nov. 23. (Spe cial.) Frank Atwood, 16, was killed Monday night by a tree which crashed through the roof of the family home near Buxton. His mother. Mrs. George Atwood, was injured severely by the tree, but was expected to recover. The mother and two boys were alone in the house at the timeof the accident. Mrs. Atwood is a widow, her husband having been killed by a logging locomotive near Scotleld Oc tober J.0. G0AL0FHUGHES American Aim Again to Make Nation Sovereign. JAPAN IS INCLINED TO YIELD Issue Chief Remaining Busi ness of Arms Conference. FIGHT ON MORAL BASIS Secretary of State Seeking Restora tion of Powers Lost by Ag gressions of Others. BY MARK SULLIVAN. (Copyright. 1S1. by the New York Evening Post Inc. Published by Arrangement.) WASHINGTON, D. C Nov. 23. (Special.) I don't know to what ex tent the average American reader wants to go into the details Involved in a discussion of what this country's arms conference delegates are trying to do about China. A good many things are of high Importance within the conference room which, I suspect, the ordinary busy American in Port lard or Indianapolis or. Des Moines or Kansas City cannot possibly give the time to learn about. I doubt If the reader who depends upon these articles for following the woik of the conference can take the time necessary to know about the Liao-Tung lease, for example, or Wei-Hal-Wei. Probably the average reader knows abount Shantung, because that figured so largely In the league of nations debate, but there are a score of other points involved In the con sideration of the Chinese question which it is not practicable to try to make clear to the wide American pub lic - High Spots Pointed Oat. It is about these very points that most of the pulling and hauling with in the conference room revolves. The diplomats know these points in their minutest details. Our state depart ment knows them and the governing classes and the Important commercial classes of Great Britain and Japan and France know them even better. But for the purposes of the average American reader It Is probably best to attempt to point out no more than certain high spots. First of all, China wants the right to rearrange her tariffs. It will sur prise an American accustomed to see congress fix our tariff duties to learn that in China the tariffs are levied not really by China but by foreign governments. When Great Britain two or three generations ago "opened up" China to foreign trade, in the so-called opium war, she forced upon China a treaty which fixea the rate of duties that China couid levy - on foreign (Concluded od Pace 3. Column 1.) THE WHOLE WORLD CAN CELEBRATE THANKSGIVING THIS TIME. i . J e ,t)ul,, ... . s s. . .. s.s.t-S s . . .. s s.is s . . sJl Spar A .-'orcniast Shatters Super's,. aire of Craft as Vessel Rolls, With her bridge gone entirely and her wheelhouse battered as if by a naval bombardment., the Admiral line steamer Curacao docked In the slip at municipal terminal No. 1 yester day afternoon with passengers and freight from San Francisco, Eureka and Coos Bay. The gale which swept the coast Monday night caught the Curacao off Yaquina head In what Captain A. D. Tebbetts, master of the vessel, pronounced the most violent storm he had seen on the Pacific In many years. The Curacao, riding light, was weathering the blow. Captain Teb betts said, when the heave of the mountainous seas tore loose the ca bles holding the heavy "Jumbo" boom rigid against the foremast . With each roll of the vessel thereafter the heavy steel boom scraped first the stays holding the starboard cargo boom and then those holding the port, until, before the first minor damage could be repaired, the crutch holding the port boom was ripped bodily from the deck. The long boom, with the heavy steel crutch at its end, swung with the pitch of the vessel an 3 crashed against the port bridge, wrecking the structure. Then it repeated the performance on the other side of the vessel. While sea men struggled amid waving mas of blocks and rigging, the heavy boom crashed again and again against the sides of. the wheelhouse, breaking in the wall and sending broken glass flying about the deck. Captain Tebbetts and Russell P. Oates, second officer, were on the bridge when the boom broke loose, and narrowly escaped death by dodg ing Into the wheelhouse, where Cap tain Tebbetts directed the work of the searr.en amid a shower of broken glass.. Mat Johnson, chief officer, averted a panic by quieting the pas sengers, who came rushing to the deck expecting to find the vessel sinking. "The men risked their lives to save others when ' they tackled that fly ing boom,"" said Captain Tebbetts, "and they upheld the best traditions of the sea. It seems almost a miracle that no one was hurt." The . wireless aerial was carried away in the fracas, and the Curacao's chief operator rose to the occasion by rigging up emergency antennae by means of which communication was maintaii-ed. From 12:15 o'clock Tuesday morn ing until noon of that day the Cura cao was hove to in a howling gale that Captain Tebbetts estimated at from 70 to 80 miles an hour, and then continued on her way to Port land. It was expected last night that repairs would be completed in time to permit the ship to depart on sched ule tomorrow afternoon. Wild Bull Last of Herd. HONOLULU, T. H., Nov. 23. (Spe cial.) Over on the island of Kauai. In the swamps of a high mountain plateau, is the last remnant of the, big band of wild cattle that used to inhabit the island. "Bipi" is the name of the old bull at which it is said every hunter has taken a shot. But "Bipl" always has escaped. Monster Steel Gap in Volstead Act Revealed by . Attorney-General Palmer In Opinion Is Closed. WASHINGTON. D. C, Nov. 23. The anti-medical beer bill was signed to day by President Harding. Signature of the bill on which congressional action was completed last Friday au tomatically closed the gap in the na tion's prohibition laws revealed Jast March by Attorney-General Palmer In an opinion that there was nothing in the Volstead act to preclude the prescription of beer as medicine. Treasury regulations making pre scription of beer possible were issued last month, but only about half a dozen brewers have obtained permits to manufacture beer for medicinal purposes. -The bill signed today, in addition to outlawing medical beer, provides that not more than one-fourth gallon of vinous liquor or vinous or spirit uous liquors, separately or In the aggregate, containing more than one half pint of alcohol, may 'be pre scribed in ten days; that physicians shall be limited to 100 prescriptions for such liquor In 90 days unless extraordinary reason is presented; that Importation of spirituous or vinous liquor Is prohibited until the amount on hand shall not be sufficient to supply the current need for non beverage uses; that private resi dences may not be searched without a search warrant, and that the courts of Hawaii and the Virgin islands are given Jurisdiction to enforce the national prohibition act. Passage of the anil-beer bill ''marks a new step forward in the enforcement of prohibition," Commis sioner Haynes said tonight. The act, he said, strengthens the prohibition forces in dealing with the alleged medicinal preparations sold on the open market and used for beverage purposes, and limits activities of the "few persons" who were Issuing pre scriptions for liquor to people not actually requiring it. "No embarrassment In the enforce ment of prohibition." he said, "Is an tlcipated from the provision Imposing penal liability upon officers search ing dwellings without warrants and searching other property without war rants maliciously and without reason able cause. The officers are given fair warning that they must not search dwellings without warrant and no attempts to do so will be made No substantial decrease In the activ ities of prohibition officers is antici pated as the result of the new act" Hearings on proposed amendments on existing regulations governing the exportation of intoxicating liquor will be held here next Tuesday. The pro posed amendments, it was explained today at prohibition headquarters, are designed to tighten up on shipments of liquor and alcohol across the Ca nadian border in line with the "gen tlemen's agreement" recently ratified by Canadian and American officials NEW YORK. Nov. 23. Belief that the anti-beer bill could be attacked as unconstitutional was expressed to night by W. H. Hirst, general coun sel for New York brewers. One ground for attack, he asserted was that the law discriminated (Concluded on Past 2. Column 4.) TRAINS RELEASED Cessation in Storm Con ditions General. DANGER NOW FROM FRESHET Reports of Moderation in Temperature Bring Fear. HIGHWAY STILL MENACED Attempts to Plow Out Blockades at Corbett Fail Another Trial to Be Made Today. STORM DEVELOPMENTS YE9 j. TEHDAT, Stalled trains on Spokane, Portland & Seattle railroad .re leased. Moderation of .temperature causes danger of freshet at Lyle and Cooks. Columbia highway still men aced. Sheep and cattle at Scio drown. 'Heavy damage to roads In Lincoln county Reported. A general cessation in storm condi tions that enabled the Spokane, Fort land & Seattle railroad to break loose all Its stalled trains on the North Bank road and free the passengers from train No, 102 on the Oregon Trunk line in central Oregon yester day forecast the opening of direct railroad communications today be tween Portland and the east by way of the North Bank route. The snow plow dispatched from Vancouver over the North Bank Mon day morning broke loose train No. 3 and local No. 6, which had been stalled near Cooks since Saturday night. The passengers from No. 3 and a few local passengers from the other train were transferred to the rescue steamer Port of Portland at Stevenson yester day afternoon and brought to Port land last night. The trains proceeded to Portland under their own steam on trackage menaced by slides. Rotary Plows Working. Rotary snow plows were working from both the east and west toward Lyle, a short distance above Cooks, where the detoured Onion Pacific train No. 11 has been snowbound since Saturday night. The release of No. 11 will mean freedom for the last of the passenger trains on North Bank, and the rescue of all passengers from snowbound trains, in Oregon and Washington. W. F. Turner, president of the Spo kane. Portland & Seattle lines, an nounced last night that his company's engines would take the Union Pacific train In tow as soon as it is reached by the snow plows , and rush it to Portland for Thanksgiving If possi ble. The stalled engines are without coal and could not proceed without assistance. Train Scheduled Today. The first outbound passenger train to be dispatched over the North Bank since the storm will leave Portland this morning at 7:35 o'clock, accord ing to announcement last night. The train will be a local, with no sched uled destination. It will proceed as far as possible and It is thought that it will reach Cooks. With the freeing of its trackage, the Spokane, Portland & Seattle es tablished direct telegraph connections to Spokane. A freshet now is feared by General Manager Davidson in the Washington country. Reports from Lyle and Cooks yesterday said the temperature had moderated to 60 de grees and may result in a sudden break-up of the snow and ice jam. A freshet would tie up traffic for sev eral days, it is feared. Snowbound Train Reached. Word was received lata yesterday afternoon that Oregon Trunk line train No. 102, which has been snow bound at mile post 68, near North Junction in the central t)regon coun try since Saturday night, had been I cached by a rescue train from Bend and all passengers transferred back to Bend. President Turner said that a ro tary snow plow working out from Pasco crossed the Columbia at Fall bridge last night and that it will pro ceed up the Oregon Trunk today. It Is probable that it will clear the tracks to the stalled train "near North Junction, thus opening up the Trunk line from its junction to Bend. Employes Without Sleep. Some of the 'employes of the Spo kane, Portland & Seattle have not slept since Sunday in carrying out re lief work to the passengers of stalled trains In the snow area. "In all my railroad experience I have never seen such devotion to outy." said President Turner. "Every passenger waa cared for by the train men and the men refused to rest until the last stalled train was released." Conditions have continued to Im prove In Portland, with progress be ing made in the restoration of both light and telephone service in the residence districts. On the Columbia highway, however, conditions re- ivgaolutlod ea U Culuwo. SJt Tax and Maternity Measures Gain Presidential Approval and Senate Has Wrangle. WASHINGTON. D. C Nov. ?J. The first and special session of the 7th congress ended late today after Presi dent Harding had visited the capitol and signed measures enacted in the closing hours. The house was the first to close up shop, adjourning sine die at 4:01, and at 4:37 o'clock the senate quit. Chief among the measures signed by Mr. Harding were the tax revision and maternity bills. After finally dis posing of the tax bill the senate turned to clean up some 600-odd presi dential nominations. But nearly half of the number were left to die under the law. Most of these were minor postmastershlp appointments. It was understood attempts to put through the last-minute nominations had been blocked largely through charges of several senators that an effort was being made to "railroad" appoint ments. Meanwhile the house was waiting announcement that the president had signed the tax and maternity bills and had no other commuications, and, when so Informed, adjourned. The senate finished its executive business and plunged into controversy over the resolution by Senator King, democrat, Utah, calling for an investigation of the activities of interests favoring an embargo on imports of dyes and chem icals, but could not hold a quorum and adjourned. Frequent reference was made In the closing debates to the length of the session, which began April 11. some saying that the work had caused ir ritability and lack of co-operation among members. Congress will con vene In regular session December 5. CLEW TO GOLD FOUND Freight Back of Specie Tanks on Liner Sonoma Moved Away. SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 23. Police and federal officials Investigating the disappearance of 1125,000 In gold from the specie tanks of the liner Sonoma, discovered today that between Hono lulu and San Francisco a quantity of freight back of the tanks, blocking the only passage to them except one leading past the crew's quarters, had been moved. The money, in English sovereigns, was contained in five steel chests, consigned from the Commonwealth of Australia to the International Bank ing corporation. - OREGON GETS $23,000 War Finance Corporation Makes 56 Advances for, Livestock. WASHINGTON. D. C. Nov. 23. Fifty-six advances for agricultural and livestock financing, aggregating 32,073,000, were approved today by the War Finance corporation. Wyoming got $436,000; Oregon $23. 000 and Montana $232,000. FIVE-CENT FARE ORDERED Reduction In Street Car Charges Fixed In Chicago. CHICAGO. Nov. 23. The Illinois commerce commission tonight issued an order reducing street-car fares in Chicago from to 6 cents, effective Friday. The order is not effective after July 1, 1922. although the commission reserves the right to continue the order after that date. INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. YESTERDAY'S Highest temperature, 62 degrees; lowest, 41; cloudy. TODAY'S Rain, southerly wind. Disarmament Conference. Flht for army is won. says xlsnd. Pace 2. French challenge Chinese delegates. Page 2. America fighting for China's sovereignty. Page 1. Foreign. Germans protest order closing factories. Page 5. National. Congress adjourns and Harding signs bills. Page 1. President signs tax measure during closing hours of congress. Page ft. Preparedness Issue made hauls for attacks on Wilson, Says Tumulty. Page 6. President signs antl-medlcal beer bill. Pass 1. Domestic. Medical expert Is witness for Arbuekle. Page 8. University co-eds admit peccadillos. Page 1. Christian Science directors upheld. Page 6. Sports. Pacific Northwest. Special session of legislature to meet De cember is. i-s.se i. Army runs through Its last practice. Page 15. Winged M and Oregon In scrappy mood fo game toaay. re n. Prink Catllson and possibly 8plke Leslie out of Oregon lineup, r.io i. Commercial and Marine. Extension of life of emergency tariff tends to advance wool prices, rage iv. Befrlge-ator steamer arrives to load ap ples. Page 18. All wheat markets advance, but prices here still above export basis. Page 19. Chicago wheat strengthened by forelga buying. Page 10. Heavy trading In liberty bonds at highest prices of year. Page IS. Portland and Vicinity. Dan Casey to hang for killing James H. Phillips. Page 10. Portland Is thankful today and for reasons too numerous (or listing. Page 1. City holds (2.000.000 or 13.000,000 In de linquent liens. Page 22. Local music week to open Sunday. Page 11. Advertising lures tourists west Page 11. Boom freed In rile shatters brldgeworks of steamer Curacao. Pag 1. Students return on beiated trains. Pag 18. Southern Pacific cuts rates east .Page 23. giprm-bouiKi trains are released, i. Reasons Too Numerous for Listing Here.. , GRATITUDE REALLY GROWING Real Messages in Some Vera cious Interviews. j QUIET DAY HERE ASSURED Portland People for Most Tart M il! Be Found at Home or in City's Many Churches. BY BEN IIUR LAMPMAS. Speaking of being; thankful, on this morning; of Thanksgiving;, It is the fact thatVhankful folk are often sin gularly Inane and trite in their' ap praisal of those things (bey have to be thankful for. Throughout this e'ty and thousands of others, from Flym outh Rock to Tillamook Head, the church bells will ring and the kitchen fires be kindled and turkeys will bs stuffed and pies baked, and folk will come home to their firesides In trib ute to the day. And thlsi beyond doubt, signifies that Thanksgiving Is abroad and that as a people we are, indeed, vaguely but sincerely grate ful. Yet If you were to ask the Indi vidual whence springs the fullness of heart he would tell you, In the terms of that terse old generality: "We have much to be thankful for." Wherefore the Thanksgiving spirit undertook to Interview certain citl lens of more or less prominence, anil to make due report of those tremen dous trifles that occasion gratitude, and to publish them for tha realities they are. On such a mission this morning, if you could have perceived It, the presence of Thanksgiving greatly favored the late Governor Bradford, albeit neither austere not unctuous, but blithe and grinning. Borne Thoughts) Unfettered. Though names have been' sup ' pressed, for reasons of policy, the veridical statements that never were made appear herewith, to-wlt: First Tromlnent Citizen As I shaved this morning I estimated the profits of the past yesr. They havs been most satisfactory, showlrg definite and permanent Increase In volume. If at first thought I gavs thanks for this happy circumstance, candor compels me to admit that I am still mora thankful for the frendshlp of my employes. The boys actually seem to like me. Second Prominent Cltlren I have not shaved, and don't intend to. By daylight Ml be In no, not church In a duck blind on Sauvles island. Tha birds ought to fly low today, and I shall be correspondingly pleased. But the thought that will comfort me most, out there In the rain, is that something Impelled me not to fore close that mortgage. The sledding has been tough for some of the little fel lows. Kid Is Getting Well. Third Prominent Citizen I said to my wife last night, "Well, my dear, we'll build that house you've wanted and take that trip. Fine business." Naturally we're thankful for being able to build a bigger house and a finer one than anyone on the street. Yet I find the satisfaction to be little enough. You want to know what I really am thankful for? Have It your own way. I'm thankful that the kid Is getting well. Down by the Troutdale bridge, where the sleet shattered and stripped the willows, there was at the time of tho silver thaw a homeless man, sheltered beneath four uprights and a roof of rusty tin. The river brought him driftwood from Bull Run and beyond, and an apple can bubbled over his gusty fire. "Take it from me." he said, "I'm thankful that storm waa no worse. Once in Dakota t seen It snow for five days, and those boob farmers had to dig their way into the barn. If you're asking mo what I'm thankful for. I'll tell the world I'm thankful for having four bits." Gratitude lias Grown. Neglecting to Interrogate those who have much to be thankful for, in a material sense, but have some how missed the target. Thanksgiving brings to many Portland people a sense of gratitude that has grown with the year. It is this apprecia tion of the holiday that will seek out neglected homes this morVng, and stuff hampers with royal food, and remember the men In Jail, and the less fortunate wherever they may be; that will banquet the news boys at the Multnomah, and run a thousand gentle and well-bethought errands of nelghborllness. A, fine old-fashioned holiday quiet -will envelop Portland with its stores closed, and its schools vacant, and Its offices and publlo buildings de serted. Save for the duck-hunter and the football crowds, if you want to locate a Portland resident you'll have to seek him at home with tho folks or In the churches nearly all of which have announced special services, with Thanksgiving sermons and music, and In nearly every in stance community services are belns; 4