. V. x - u.; r' ' .'.-. ' '. -"- i. OREGON GUARDSMEN ALREADY uw&lr -JFtrJX :s''sA. - ' " las' IM IPS? ' "S WA,. 1 ; Third Battalion Members Drink Spda Pop and Attend Exer cises; GettingSunburned By 'Cnrimral A. K. Houston. lompinf M. TTilrrl Oregon Infgnlrr The (Treat Amprli-an Indpn(Inc-p dy wait celebrated by the 326 men In th Third battalion, enramped st Kan Ysfdro. on the Mexican border. lv washing: soiled hosiery and cleaning rlflea. One clean rifle and two clean feet are necessary for every aoldier In the army, and without them he is worthless. The Mexicans In San Ysldro did not appear to be so particu lar about their feet, and many visitors thronged the camp to be photographed In the company street or grouped about the . machine guns. Firecrackers ati.l Bona water bottles popped, and almost the same old-fashioned picnic smell of home prevailed. I,emonade was served at noon mess in the company kitchens, and the ladles who visited camp gave the boys strips of bunting and flags. In place of the spread eagle oration, the major made a short speech, ID which he said there would be no drill nd the men might come and go aa they pleaned until "retreat" In the eve 'nlng. The applause was sudden and prolonged. Exercises Are Held. The American colony of San Ysidro held exercises In the city library, to which the soldiers were Invited. The library is of the bungalow type, with a huge fireplace In the center. The roof la of shingles and the sides of the building are of canvas. One wing Is used for dancing, and the soldiers and the senloritas tripped a few two-steps while the older people clattered through a Virginia reel. The formal program was opened by atnglng "America," In which all Joined. One Philippe Ruiz read the Declaration of Independence, and Miss Amarllla Hernandez sang "Columbia, the Gem of . the Ocean." In a good soprano voice. All In all, we Americans felt quite fra ternal after the afternoon program was over. Jn the evening a triple quartet from Company M, in charge of Sergeant R. ,C. Wygant, troubadoured through the 'town and aang In front ofboth busi ness houses. At the store they were given soda pop, but at the postofflce they were not so fortunate. Xt Waa Seal Knslo. The warblers secured a guitar from a Mexican garlic grower and a moutti harp from the postal clerk, and filed tip to the library, where the elite of San Ysldro dug Its toes Into the cracks Of the floor while "Sweet Adallne" was rendered and "My Hula Hula Love" waa offered. The repertoire waa catchy and varied, and Included "When the Boll Is Called Up Yonder,'1 as well "as "How Dry I Am." The pipes of the warblers were final ly plugged with cake, ice cream and fried chicken. The boys were told they might also have some frijoles, but they only received 'beans. The members of the Company M glee Ingera were: Sergeants Wygant and Max Alford, Corporals A. Carson, Joe McAllister and Carl Gabrlelson, and Privates Barth, Zlnn, Vincent, J. Car son, M. McOilchrlst, Gllmore and Mauer. - The unmusical members of the bat- talion remained in camp and took part in an extensive program of Mexican athletics. In which there were many atar performera. Sanborn Zs the Sale. The boys are soaking up experiences with the sunburn, and when they re turn to Oregon they will be able to as sist their admirers in making heroes - out of all border veterans. The Fourth of July coming so soon after our arrival here had a slight ten dency to make some of the boys home sick at times, but most of them re- . Ileved the pressure In their chests by writing a long letter to "her." In gen eral, however, the boya are undergoing a great change, and, stripped of. all home influences and protection, tney are learning self-reliance and discipline, which will make better men of good boys. Some may fall, to be sure, but the rank and file of the organized mil- itla company Is far above that of the regular army In Intelligence and ln- .. dustry. That there Is no fear of death or ' thought of the end, though the guns of tba Mexican fortress at Tijuana frown on our camp from the 2000 yard range. Is shown by the fact that the boys sleep soundly from tapa to reveille. Safety Tlrst Zdaa, ' A report waa circulated about camn , today that the Mexican fortress was Quipped with two new 10 Inch guns and six -machine guns, and that we . might expect a momentary attack in eaae ,war . was finally - declared. As 7 ).?Hf, ."A 3 frJsW .'r. Ijjiwiwwr; a'" ;r. 3Kr ' - 1 rfv & Hid v iTA ' U-'-?""fV r- ""SZSS i 7 Jilt World Abounds in Newspapers Published Under the Most Unusual Circumstances British Columbia Indians Revel in the Kamloops Wawa; Most Northerly Public Print Is in Nord Kap, Norway. From the Philadelphia Public Ledger. One of the queerest newspapers In the world Is the Kamloops Wawa. a Journal printed in shorthand by a. tribe of Indians who live In the interior of British Columbia, It was established through the efforts of a French mis sionary, Le Jeune by name, who came to the Fraser river district of British Columbia some years ago. He found the natives superstitious, ignorant and unable to write their language. He soon learned the Indian vocabulary, and then began to write it by means of shorthand signs which represented all the sounds the Indians use in pro nouncing the words. Le Jeune first explained his system to an intelligent Indian lad who lived In the central village. The boy took to it intuitively. In a few months he had thoroughly learned the art of writ ing his language in shorthand, and began to teach his friends. The new "talk language" created widespread In terest, and the Indians, young and old, were soon engaged in practicing this strange method of communication. After about 600 had mastered the system, varioua parts of the Bible were translated by the missionary, and finally the Kamloops Wawa was started. JTewa of Chinook Indians. The papsr was printed on a mimeo graph for the first year, but after that Le Jeune succeeded In having type made, and it is now printed on a press in the nearest city. It has 16 pages, and contains all the news of the tribe and of the church that the missionary has built up In the main village. Over 2000 Indians have learned to read. It Is said that a very interesting sight Is presented when one looks into a wigwam, where the women still use stone implements to prepare their clcthing of deerskin, and beholds the family grouped about eagerly reading the latest number of the Kamloops Wawa. Just as the "heighth of edltoralism" may refer to the publication of the news on top of Mount Washington, so the "lowest paper in the United States" may have no connection with "yel low" Journalism. Burdlck has given some curloue information in regard to the press In the Colorado desert. His experience dates back some years; pos sibly today the paper he mentions may have descended to even greater depths. Two papers were published beneath the level of the sea. The Submarine was first to be issued, "the lowest down of any paper in the world." Another publication was begun at a still lower result, we are to be moved west about three miles along: the border, out of range of the fort's big guns. Natur ally, the boys gave the report a second thought when they realized that we were armed only with rifles. Small , firecrackers have been pop ping all day. but as It grew dark to night some giant firecrackers or bombs were set off in American Tiajuana, THE OREGON -it x' depth, and the Submarine, to hold Its record, was obliged to move. It an nounced its change of locality in the following words: We have dropped from 22 feet below sea-level to 76 feet below. The low rumbling noise heard yesterday was caused by the office and the press taking- the drop. The Submarine was an eight page weekly, printed on blue-tinted paper. Its humorous department was edited by "McGinty," the gentleman who went down to the bottom of the sea. One column waa headed "Undertow." While Mr. Burdick was in the vi cinity, a paper was In progress of being established In a town 125 feet below sea-level. Either the Submarine was forced to give up its prestige or else it was fated to make another move toward the center of the earth. In Buenos Aires the life of an aditor, according to reports, is similarly at tractive. Down there one newspaper office includes a ballroom and an in firmary, where a doctor gives advice gratuitously to the who staff. Fur thermore ,the editors gather in com fortable rooms, seat themselves in armchairs or recline .in divans and smoke long, black cigars; between puffs sipping Iced lemonade! A One-Kan Task In a remote but busy village of the Canadian northwest there was pub lished some years ago a weekly news paper in the handwriting of its pro prietor, editor, reporter, advertising agent and general utility man, the five combined. This man adorned his lively four page sheet with caricatures rudely copied from the comic papers of the United Sta'es and England, and decor ated his horse and stock advertise ments with rough cuts. This weekly appeared In purple Ink from a gelatine reproducing machine, and its editorials and local news were so clearly pre sented that the little journal attained quite an Influence in the territories and was quoted by all the newspapers of western Canada. . A newspaper produced by the same process was the Mashonaland Herald and Zambesi Times, conducted by a Briton in the wilds of Africa and sup ported by subscriptions and ads from miners and traders. It is thought that the most northerly of newspapers is, or was. the Nord Kap, emanating weekly from Hammer fest, in Norway, from the little turf roofed house of one Johannsen. The Nord Kap was, at last accounts, reg ularly printed from news received from a ship that touched at Hammerfeet once in eight days. about a mile from camp, which roared like artillery. "What's that?" asked a recruit, as he peeped from his blankets. -well," his "bunkie" answered, "if it's a firecracker, it's harmless, and :t It's the guns from the fort, they're m (..In ..- 4 k.t.k - Tl . J . 'Aoviws U9. tuu uvui iviicu over una went to sleep like "soldiers In the army." . 4,,::?;.i:.:?i v :; id SUNDAY JOURNAL," PORTLAND . SUNDAY ; MORNING; i ' i , V '' I'wv? ,.V , v- ,J ttx ' "yrrf V , 6?,. l-s:i St" , lfwL'V 1 1 One of the most frequent as well as important duties is to search Mexicans crossing carrying con cealed arms or communications to friends in this country.. 2 When on an expedition food ' is brought up by army transports protected by machine, guns and armed guards. This is a sample of the country where the Oregon men are located. 8 The boys when on expeditions away from base camp are fed from these kitchens. These are new. 4 Mexican bandits are not partial as to the character of what they steal and after a band is captured gathering up and segregating the loot is in order. 6 One of a few armored cars which have been sent to the border for use by guardsmen. 6--Even if there should be no hostilities the Oregon men are likely to have occa sional brushes with bandits, and after each one it will be surprising if the national champion shooters do not now and'' then furnish work for the ambulance corps. Big Auto Suffers Most in a Collision Kaelar AntomobUa Weighing 4600 Pounds Put Oat of Business by Car 'Welfhlaf 1000 Pounds. Pretty Prairie, Kan., July 8. When a racing automobile, weighing 4600 pounds, driven by L. J. Dopps. collided with a small car weighing only 1000 pounds, the large car was demolished.' while the small one waa not damaged to any great extent. Dopps and two other occupants of the racer were seriously injured. Pony Saves Life Of a Little Boy Pet Attacks Vicious Bull WBica Had Knocked Down and Injured tne Lad While Af tar Cattle. Fairfield, Neb., July 8. A pet pony ridden by Aubry Craft, son of Albert Craft living north of this place, is believed to have saved the boy's life while he lay unconscious, after an at tack by a vicious bull. When the boy failed to return after having gone for BEGIN TO V . rt l II r i'-" flr" W.''v,'.v.,.'a',O,0! wAA ... " A, Jt-. " jt:e :'t..'V K X 'ZGaAW jv 7 x'f sja sa : : : , ft "A X A H-"'x XV A CTO-(ngMrCTaaJ.w. the cattle, a search was started. He waa found lying In the '-pasture. Sis face badly torn. He was unconscious. Nearby was his pony. The tracks in the dirt showed the little animal had raced round and round tbe-nncon-fi bi.uus ooy. Keeping away ine duii inai attacked him. Later, when driven near the bull, the pony attempted to at tack the animal. Possum Destroys Big Lot of Liquor Joplln, Mo., July 8. A man named Bussell, who runs a saloon in South Main' street, has a possum, which, he says, he wouldn't take a cent less than $160 for. He asserts that an inventory proved that $160 was the value of bot tles of booze which the possum de stroyed one afternoon when he ran amuck In the saloon. The possum still lives In the saloon, but he Is chained at a safe distance from the stock. Friends of Bussell fig ured out the possum must have came from-Lincoln, Neb.; Kansas or some place like that They named him "Sam" when they got him. but after he showed his abhorrence of John Barley corn they renamed him "Bill." :JULY r 9 1916. SEE REAL BORDER LIFE -. 0 1 ,--x 3 ;-UviCwlc.: . -.:C 4 . . ... Stops Trigger With, His Thumb in Fight Policeman Xaa Battl With Kan Who Zs Suspected of Being Danaaated; Stranger Arrested. Chicago, July 8. A man was walk ing south In Clark street, near Har rison street, swinging a revolver. Mounted Policeman Harry Lesson was told about him and Jumped off Ms horse and seized him. "I couldn't see the revolver," he. says, "but when I grabbed him I felt the muzzle of it pressed against my stomach.' I tried to knock It away. My right thumb carught back of the trigger. I struck the fellow with my left band and I felt him pulling at the trigger. "Each time the top of it came back and dug Into my thumb. The pain was excruciating and the blood shot our-in streams. . But I knew what It meant if my thumb got out and I used all my strength to hold It there." Just when Lesson believed be could no longer endure the pain the .patrol wagon happened to pass and , other policemen went to hia assistance. The prisoner Is believed - demented. . - )' ",i.'-t -"i. - ' ' v v'- ,- ,jMUL f' "2 .1'S ' - - ' ! ' its A .j r - wh$ TV )M?f V . S? i i ;, v.-.-,- . .,.: . w--V a- " 3 I. fit" ir. p tw' y ti 1 -p-'-i ; y t t iviwiuifcriiftiavait5si ? s i ! . ' - , - ' Humorous Thoughts Fill Mind of Man In Trench Despite Hail of Shot and Shell Soldier Chats Merrily About Deadly Missives Which Drop Around Him; Sends Descriptive Letters to Little Niece in England. (From "Somewhere in France" a soldier has been sending letters to his little niece In England which The Spec tator has been printing. They are so unusual, have such a spirit of blithe some galty, such sn appreciation of the illusions of childhood and, withal, they are so good a picture of some phases of trench life that one of them Is repro duced here.) My dear Muffle: I am sending, ad dressed to Auntie Maggie, my watch, which she might have put to rights for me and return It, so that I may not in future do more than my own share of work through not knowing the time. Of course. I am very prone to do that! Well, as I was saying, talking of guns and shells, perhaps you think a gun is a steel cylinder that fires a shell, and a shell is an iron cylinder full of explosive which occasionally bursts (but more often not, except when you're being strafed.) That's just where you are wrong, because a gun is a dragon in capitals, it nas to be fed on shells and oil. But no sooner do they give it a shell to eat than they "tickles hup 'is h Innards." so that the shell won't He on his stom ach, and . the dragon vomits out the shell or spits it out so very hard that It files away for miles and miles. And the dragon is very fierce, he Is kept so hungry; so, when he spits out the shell, he roars, and the bigger the dragon, and the larger the shell, the louder he roars; and when be roars the houses shake and the earth quakes, and If you are very near you have to open your mouth or you get your eardrums injured. Of course, these gun-dragons grow and grow. Some of , them that were quite tiny machine guns when the war started are now hoary-headed old 16-inchers. Some of them are very short and alout, and spit the shell high into the air, and these are called how Users, but, I don't know" how-lt-sls. There are ever so many new little baby dragons being born every day in Eng land and Scotland and sent out here to roar and fret. Some of them Just rum ble and grumble, and the; little ones they just bicker. There is a gun-dragon that throws out his shells at aeroplanes, and he Is called Archibald, because his name 'isn't Willie, I suppose. Well, t these here guns Is like serplnts, so they be. They won't eat npthlnk unless so be as it is livin.' So they feeds 'eim on live shells. There are two kinds of shells they eat; shrapnel shells and high-ex plosive shells. The former, when they burts, send out a shower of iron bul lets besides the" fragments of the shell case. The latter would blvw up any thing even a tire with a Hole In it. Well, aa I aald, these shells are alive. That is to say. Just as a whelk shell contains a whelk, and an oyster shell Is the noma of an oyster, aftd the mus sel resides in a mussel shall, and the limpet 1n a limpet shell, and the her a4tt crab In anybody's elae'a shell wot don't belong to hlsself, but ' lot he 'ave pinched w'en the tenaatvand occupier 'aa been out a-airln' of 'isself Just so Isay does the shell the gun fires con tain a tenant, the genl of the explosive. Of course, the genl Isn't very hnppy at being hurled through space for so. m$jy miles where he isn't wanting to v go;' and he Is very anxious to get out and wreak his vengeance on mankind because they have locked him Into his house by fixing a nose-cap on It. Tou would get dlxzy yourself if you went ever so many hundreds of miles a min ute through the air. whirling round all the time. Bo, if he is a strong geml, he gets so hot and angry that ha bursts out of his house when the shell hits the ground, and he shrieks and , -roars as he gets free, and he lashes ; out and throws the pieces of his house all about, and hurts people. Sometimes the men who have locked blm In his house arrange the nose-cap so that It , will let him out Just before the shell reaches the. ground, and the same thine " happens as before! Funny you didn't . know that yourself, Isn't It? I thought you and Teddy were rather authorities ' on dragons and faerie. Anyhow, you : know it now, don't you? Tour affec tionate UNCLE JOHN. -Love to Teddy and Jean, too, and to : the grown-ups. Radium Is Security For $250,000 Loan Chloago. July 8. Three tubes of radium were given aa collateral for $260,000 on four-year mortgage notes. The loan , was negotiated by tn Continental and Commercial Trust and Savings bank and the Physicians Raf dlum association of Chicago. Its purpose Is to furnish for charitable purposes the use of radium in medi cal treatment. a Calcium's Value ; In Tuberculosis As a tonic and remedial agent in the treatment of tuberculoMs, this element Is being studied by scientists and phy sicians everywhere. J Kor more than two decades users mt ' Eckman'f Alterative have teated US ; efficacy In such cases, for calcium chlorld u one of the chief constituents' -of this preparation, which has produced beneficial results In thousand, of in-: stances. And in this form It is so combined as to be easily assimilated- If you are thus afflicted, a trial may f prove this to be Just what Is needed to assist nature In bringing abost a return to normal health. It Is safe to take, because Ifcon; tains no poisonous or hablt-torming -drugs of any sort. --' f, f ' ' Sold by The Owl Drug Co. and d. ' to druggists. . . ' . ", '' ' JSckmaa Xaboralory, Uladslpsia. . v .V- -. . t . ' i . 4 ,