THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, DECEMBER 28. 1919. Steamers Taxed by People Who Desire to Get Home. Prospects for Trip Around World (iron Dim. and Numerous Obsta cles Confront Prospective Trav eler Photographs Called For. EVERY LITTLE STORY HAS A HAPPY ENDING WITH BRIGGS "that GotLfteST Ffec7oC BY EDITH E. LANTOK. WESTMORELAND, Nov. 2 9. After all, I fear the world will not be my picture book this spring. The steamers seem to be booked up with worthy people who want to go home. The authorities will not allow any woman to land in Egypt just now, and although I am willing to present six of my photographs, as requested, to China, Japan and the United States of America, they seem strangely un willing to welcome me to their shores at present. 1 want to get home, too, but people insist on pointing out that my nearest way home to the Pacific coast is via the Atlantic and across the American continent, not via the far east. Apparently people are waiting in queues to take trips around the world. As the climate in the east is all wrong from May to December it seems as if our tour will start in Decem ber, 1920, instead of in March. Smile Passport, Perhaps. I selected such meek nurse photo graphs for the passport people that I felt sure they would want me to start their way at once. In those pictures I look capable of brighten ing and bettering any place! I showed one once to a patient of mine (one of the famous "Black Watch High landers") and asked him if I really looked as good as that. "Well, yes, nurse (dubiously), you do sometimes. Not when you smile, though." Long pause for consider ation, then, emphatically: "I like you better when you're smiling, nurse." Perhaps China, Japan and the TJ. S. A. might have liked me better smiling, too, to say nothing of the British authorities. I may have to smile my way around the world yet. What miles and miles of smiles it will require It seemed like a fairy tale, too good to be true, when my friend invited me to be her guest on such a jour ney. Now I'm afraid I may die or something before I can cash it in. But, as I quite look forward to giving my insignificant opinion of the far east to Portland I will try to keep healthy. Perfect Lady Role Hard. At present, as compared to the hard ships of hospital life, I am wallow ing in luxury; but many doctors con sider hardships more healthy. Being a perfect lady all the time gets a bit on one's nerves. Sometimes I have a mad desire to dab my knife in the mustard just like we did at the muni tion works just to see whether the parlor maid would faint. She has al ways lived in the very best of fam ilies, so is very sensitive to shock We never rejoiced in any mustard spoons or salt spoons at Gretna. I always promised to give the staff canteen a set for a Christmas pres ent, but before then the war stopped. If she did faint I suppose it would be up to me to revive her, so I might as well refrain. A funny thing happened to me at a perfectly good tea party the other day. A piece of well-iced chocolate cake stuck to the roof of my mouth, just as it was my turn to talky-talky and I was struck dumb. Diplomat Proves Helpful. Everybody looked astonished as it was the first time on record. A dip lomat present filled in the horrid pause by a helpful remark. When I get a chance I shall tell him what really happened to me and he will roar. He is usually equal to the occasion. When in pre-war days he was sta tioned in Berlin the Kaiser used to lead him aside at state dinners and say : "Be sure you speak well of me to the English." He always replied: "That, sir, is for the ambassador." So we evidently keep ambassadors to do our lying for us. Mrs. Humphrey Ward's aunt lives here. She is a wonderful old lady of 86. Two or three years ago her right arm and hand became helpless. Nothing daunted, she immediately learned to write with her left hand and now manages all her own corre spondence, unaided. Her father was the famous Dr. Arnold, of Rugby. Wilson Visits Recalled. WoodroW Wilson was a frequent visitor to these parts before he be came president of the United States. A faithful friend of his is an old roadmender with one arm, who used to have many a chat with him when he was rambling about the country roads. The mean temperature here is 48 degrees Fahrenheit. The temperature ) is not as mean as the weather. The annual rainfall averages 76 inches. To me it seems to rain several inches every day; but I must be mistaken or the annual rainfall could never be so small. So we will conclude that the fine days happen when I am some where else. We do get glimpses of the sun be tween showers, just enough to make us long for more. It is no climate for good clothes, which is lucky, as I haven't any. One might as well live in an aquarium. Seven times as much rain falls here as in London. Crystal chains of raindrops con stantly dangle on our windows sashes. On the roads the colored leaves crushed into the mud look like dabs of paint on an artist's palatte and the hills covered with patches of red-brown bracken look as if they had been left out in the rain and gone rusty. Snovf Don't l.iist Lont;. The snow 1 wrote about last week vanished like a flash. Before my letter was mailed it had completely disappeared. The beds of the rivers here are very different from those about Minehead. The cold slate, green and blue color effect of Westmoreland, is a great contrast to the warm reefs of Devon and Somerset. The deepest water Is so clear and sparkling that the stones at the bottom seem barely covered. Now. in November, there is an all- embracing chill in the air which clutches your ankles and grips you at the wrists. One's nose, at least, is as red as the soil of Devon. This town is intersected with queer little alleys and cuts, no doubt the original streets of olden times. One of them boasts the name of "Rattle Gate." The houses on these "street lets" each has a mounting block of elate, much worn by continual use in the days of long ago when the wife rode to market on horseback, mounted on a pillion behind her husband. Nowadays we do the six miles journey to the railway station in a huge yellow motor char-a-banc, which skids alarmingly on slippery days, and has earned itself the name of "The Yellow Peril." I have just had a letter of thanks from my naval friend in Riga. The thanks for the books and magazines are really due to Portland. His flo tilla had been doing a good deal of bombarding, but when he wrote he was safe at home in drydock he Adds despairingly: "The state of the ship almost breaks my heart; it is. VtSiT AND 15 OKJPRPAfteO. fB IT HAPP6N5 of course, impossible to keep it any thing approaching clean with half the hands on leave and dockyard mateys running wild. making a beastly mess and generally doing as little work an possible." He also says: "Things look very bad for the anti- (LOOK HsnDV-iSnT ) AMD I WANT YOU TO 1 " un , ,,-c Y This 6Mv-EL.oPe Av Gaze uPom This , J MAOD-I SiE S PERF6CT PEAR- I PECECK-LY HERE. A. MAM 1 I got- it foh ' DalTnG AcrSSX. Out in Minnesota "S eLZfiV. (TEDDY BEAR &yfyL OUD A COPOR S AREN'T TH6SE ( "This DAPLIN& VEST ''M EUVtLoPe - A ( KMICKGRS Too SW6"T )' GoT FOR STELLA, TEPOY BaR - FOR ANYTHING ?" . ISN'T it Too Core KNlCKCRS AND A ( They re for . i - -T vest An. RoueD V minnie J7i (Vest7) S "To orJ-- JtT W " ' . s ANXIOUS DAYS AT HAND FOR GRASPING FOR THE LAST STRAW. las m mm r " i I jl lisi Trie deST ReGUtATlSD PftwitieS bolshevists again now. if only they would make a combined effort some thing might be done." He did not tell me whether he was going back to the Baltic or not. I saw a funny story that Lady As tor told at one of her election meet ings, about a snub she got from an American sailor. She was being ques tioned about police arrests in th streets and replied: "Let me tell you something that happened to me. I saw a young Amer ican sailor looking at the outside of the house of commons. I said to him 'Would you like to go in?" He replied 'You are the sort of woman my mother told me to avoid. ' We shall probably know tonight whether she was elected or not. She r.,.S Entire Satisfaction. Pittsburg Chronicle-Telegraph. Mrs. Euphemia Johnson was attend THE LINE AT THE TICKET WINDOW IS ALREADY SEVERAL BLOCKS LONG. VMEN YOU VUAKt OP OKie ANMFUL vo-i MOHNiNff RCAHZ.ING TOO of alcohol, iw Your Radiator (AUTo) LCTS Get Doww To Business - AR.C RUNNING LOWJ OIU FUNDS -AS HAVE ONLY &GO,000,000 IK) j tTj.i aMi - i wi- nuj i V CCONOMIl i il 1 1 II -SICK AT HEAST YOU ' - And AFTER G ivjinjG IT 55' oeNX for the Garage a few torms- .-5- .Y" V a D.b RANii MAN AND HE GETS JSHV' iUP fionj, AEKH AN T t A Gr R R KAND Susy with Soi.e eTmcR t BSEr! AnB -GLOR-R-RloWi AnD hot VAJATCR L ; FEeUN' ? 1 i- 'II -- "" l-T now There's aA Mt SAYS H ) - . .. -I HtRE ) GOOD I AND I GOTTA LINE HPv'o A pACKAtit C H60T-ir- I'V kJ (. ANOTHfiR SUAftT- I'voRYoU SR- f$y I ' S3h L- WsCAace MP " ' SQc) ed by a confidential colored friend of her own sex when the railway com pany called her in to effect a cash set tlement for the death of her husband, killed on his honeymoon. Mrs. John son had clouded her features with a heavy veil up to the time the corpo ration attorney had mentioned the SOME FOLKS, OPINES DARLING -And You cam hardly Cat Any Breakfast for vjorryimg ABOUT CRACKED CrLliNDeS amp Busted radiators oh Mam 1 I . . - - 1 . J... v 1 IT'S A VERY m J . Th.n VA.E 1 --- !ZVX7-WSB .y..-r T. wr. rs-r- 111" 1:11 ' - Z Lhl i A W 'zM f ( Ui IflflI r,"l I .. - - i M, I J t S '1.1 V s 1 . bv.vvKww.vwwaaau MiV' ' --III T y L 8ond lisue J 1 yy -T 11 JJ mtfTT- TTT.V- .. It! b vyJfD. . sum, but when he produced the bills she threw back her badge of mourn ing and gazed eagerly on the bundle that flashed green and yellow. In thick streaks. The lawyer withdrew after the signing of the release, and the two were left alone. "Euphemla." said the companion, "I LOOKS AS THOUGH THE FAMILY "REUNION WOULD-; HAVE TO BE POSTPONED-' A.J D wh6h .Yocl J6 3S OUT AND Try To vwoRK The AttLP dTARTeR Tmb MoToR POElM'T. ByCGE- '"Yen?- vajelcYoo Just whi-sper im HIS EAR THAT JlM IS HERE WITH That PACKA6EI suppose you'll be gettin married again, now that you're so rich?" Euphemia paused with a thick thumb half way to her mouth for moisture and reflection. "Ef Ah do," she observed, before resuming the counting of the roll, "It'll be soma pusson workin' on -de same railroad." i