MEMORIAL WILL BE DEDICATED FEB. 11 Spanish War Veterans? Gov- ernor, Mayor, rostmasier. Commissioner Take Part. 'MERRICK THE MAN,' DANA pedal XnvltBtloaa to th Dedication Ceremoniea Are Extended to All Con tributors to the rounteJn TnnA. Hundreiia who knew and loved Charles ii. Merrick during- his Ufe in 1-ortland will attend the ceremonies incident to the dedication of the mon ument erected to his memory at Sandy boulevard and Kast Fifty-seventh street. The dedication will occur next Thursday. February 22, at 2 p. rn., on the grounds of the Rose City Park club. rine Military Salute. Scout. Young camp. Spanish War Veterans, of which Mr. Merrick was a member, will fire a military salute jlctuhh the fountain and sound "taps" ...the conclusion of the program. Al--trt G. Clark, chairman of the Mer .Ick Memorial association, will pre side. Governor James Withycombe will represent the state. Mayor Albee and Commissioner George L. Baker will receive the fountain on behalf of the city. Postmaster Frank 8. Myers will give an appreciation of Mr, Mer rick, who was postmaster of Portland at the time of his death. As a close personal friend, Marshall N. Dana will speak on "Merrick the Man." Miss Dae-mar Inez Kelly, well known Port land soloist, and Charles McNeill will sing. Charles B. Merrick was one of the most useful men in community affairs who ever lived In Portland. He worked his way through the Detroit College of Law, after graduating from the west branch high school of that city, lie was connected with the firm of Metzger Bros., which brought the first automobile to the city that Is now the world's center of automobile manufac ture. X nils ted In aaohiffan. When war with Spain was declared he enlisted with the Thirty-third .Michigan volunteers, and saw service in Cuba, where he was in skirmishes at Hun Juan hill and Santiago.' He I'ontraced fever, and, after returning . to the United States, was ill for many - months in a Detroit hospital. - Upon his recovery , he traveled through the west for the United States Graphite company, of Saginaw. Thus he visited Portland, became enamored of the city and determined to make his home here. One of his first pieces of work in Portland was the reorganiza tion of the Portland Retail Grocers' association and increasing of its mem bership from a handful to 300. Large ly through his personal efforts the grocers' association secured such gen erally beneficial enactments as the Oregon peddlers' law, the pure food lawMie garnishment law and the fake - advertising law. Be Educated Merchants. He organized the Oregon Retail Merchants' association, and arranged forJt annual sessions in the principal cttLeaicf the state. One of his aims wak"tho education of the merchants to greater business efficiency. To put the credits of the grocers on a firmer basis, he founded the Portland Retail ers' Reporting comipany, which saved hundreds of thousands of dollars lu collections and practically put the pro fessional dead beat out of business. An institution in which he took great pride was the Oregon Retail Mer chants' magazine, which was the me dium of trade communication. He was forceful, but never arbitrary, in his demands and policies in the organ isation of the Greater Portland Plana MERRICK 1T1 Brtwer Hat III ll H. 'I. I 1.5 .Quality, ma in- If I'Ji 7fl 11 im iff 1 mm- . mammm fc,M--'aaaaaSaaBaaaaaaaiBSaBfcaJ 1 C. B. MERRICK MEMORIAL 1' . , . " JIMiM i 1 IL'.i-X II ii L f.- a f rx I ft'' .VlnJuJiiiMii'' ' " f t&Sss&s,. The late Charles B. Thursday. association, and was elected its first president. He was known as the 'Father of the Portland Ad Club." As a member of the Rose City Park club, he was instrumental in obtaining the site and largely so in the building of the clubhouse. Was Postmaster of Portland. On the recommendation of Jonathan Bourne Jr.. when he was United States senator, Mr. Merrick was made post master of Portland. When death over took him in 1912, at Klamath Falls, he was on a trip in the Interests of tho retail merchants of the state, and N. A. Perry, president of the Merchants' association, was with him. In November, 1913, a number of his friends organized the Charles B. Mer rick Memorial association, electing A. O. Clark president, Arnold Keller sec retary, J. C. Mann, Marshall N. Dana and John Malley directors. Others who participated in the organization were George Hockenyos and Dan Kel laher, then officers of the. Retail Gro cers' association. Contributed to Memorial. Among the contributors to the foun tain fund listed are the Portland Ad club. Rose City Park club, Oregon Re tall Merchants' association. Greater Portland Plans association, Oregon Journal, Oregonian. Telegram, Jon athan Bourne Jr., T. B. Wilcox, H. J. Blaesing, A. W. Prescott, II. F. Ritt mann, John Heusner, O'Shea Bros., N. A. Perry, Mt. Hood tent, No. 71, Mac cabees, Portland council, 678, Knights of Columbus and Division No. 1, An cient Order of 'Hibernians, and Wood men of the World. To each of these mm?) vi are em THE; OREGON SUN Merrick and memorial fountain to . be dedicated (Photo by Oregon Commercial Studio.) organisations and Individuals a special invitation to attend the fountain dedi- cation Thursday afternoon has been sent by Mr. Clark, and also to the Portland Chamber of Commerce. The fountain is the work of H. J. Blae-Mng. Lax Moral Training Fills State Prisons Sacramento, Cal., Feb. 17. (P. N. S.) That the growth of population at California's two state .prisons is dm to increasing laxity In mental and moral training and discipline in the home is one of the statements in the biennial report of the state board of prison directors Just filed with the governor. The report points out there is a dis position among parents to place pleas ure above duty and to put much of the responsibility of parenthood on the state. It declares that if moral train ing of children is lacking In the home it naturally follows that these children will not give proper attention to the rules of organized society when they grow up. A New Detention Scheme. Washington, Feb. 17. (U. P.) On the theory that a prisoner with no gal luses , cannot run rapidly, Germans have put Into effect a system of cut ting all the buttons from prisoners clothes, according to confidential war department reports. EN, the e new spring clothes are com- ing in now ! America's fore most clothes mak ers have contrib uted their best product to this ex hibit. The best weaves the most artistic combinations of tint and color are shown here in these ready-for-service clothes. Modestly priced, and my personal guar anty of lasting satisfac tion with every garment. You are invited to come and see; every model for every age is on display. $20 to $35 New Manhattan Shirts $2 to $5. 4UVTa Morrison atKnirtkc- DAY ; JOURNAL, PORTLA RETU SOLDIERS TO RECEIVE FARMS TO CULTIVATE One Thousand 160-Acre Tracts With Building to Be Presented to as Many Vets THE PLAN IS INDICATIVE Scheme Xa ZsdlcatlTe of What Can Be Son Bjr Way of Placing Them Zn Useful Occupation. Montreal. Feb. 17. What is to In come of the soldiers after the Euro pean war? From Canada comes the first word of a permanent constructive plan. Lord Shaughnessy, president oT the Canadian Pacific Railway company, bids the ex-soldler go "back to the land." Ho offers a practical scheme for putting them on farms. He offers to take care of 1000 veteranc and in so doing indicates a policy that could well suit the govern ment. Farms for Soldiers. Lord Shaughnessy is giving 1000 I ready made farms to returning sold- iers. Bach farm comprises 160 acres. J and each is to be part of a smart I colony known as a Returned Veteran Colony. The number of farms form ing a colony uid the locations of the various colonies will depend upon tne agricultural possibilities of the land in various designated sections. Sev eral colonies will be located in Alberta. As a result of the completion of the Bassano irrigation system, the largest of its kind in the western hemisphere, 3,000,000 acres of farm lands have been made available for settlers. So that his vast area offers unlimited possibilities. Many of tly ready made farms" will be in shape for occu pation next spring as work upon them has started and is well under way. Tracts Will Be Equipped. Under the plan a soldier settler will be given a comfortable house of four or five rooms, a well all dug with a pump installed, wire fences stretched and in place and land ready for cul tivation. The veteran settler will probably find some of his land sown to wheat, oats and barley when he : arrives. In short, the settler will find the pioneering work all done. He steps into a farm that is ready to bring in a living. All that is required of the settler is hard work. It is up to him to keep his farm going. This plan represents the expendi ture of $3,500,000 for preparations alone. It means the building of 1000 houses and 1000 barns, 1300 miles of fences, digging 1000 wells and getting some 50,000 acres of land under cul tivation. It is estimated that 20,000, 000 feet of lumber will be required for the buildings. One thousand farms, of course, can not go far among the many thou sands of returning soldiers. They are not expected to go far. The great value of the project lies in the fact that it is a 'constructive program. It points a way. It forcibly brings home to the government a sense of respon sibility. The example is so practicable and of such manifest sincerity that it is sure to be followed upon a vaster scale by other parts of the British empire. Public Interest Is Declared Paramount Chamber of Comxneros of ths TTnltea States Places This Factor Abore All Others in Ballroad Controversies. Washington, February 17. The an nual report of the board of directors of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States submitted et the fifth annual meeting here recently showed that the individual membership of the organization has now been brought up to the limit of 6000 and there is a waiting list for this membership of 300. The chamber now speaks for more than 300,000 firms, corporations and business men, and at present has af filiated with it upwards of 800 na tional. International, and local com mercial organizations. The result of the national chamber's railroad referendum Just closed showed that the Chamber of Commerce of the United States not only recognized the interest of the public as paramount In railroad differences, but urges that it should be paramount by making the ! representatives of the public the ma jority on any board of conciliation or arbitration. This proposition was over whelmingly indorsed and also that the national chamber believes the opera tion of railways should not be Inter rupted by railroads or employes until after investigation. Two western men, J. E. Chilberg of ""'v aim a. l. r3uri g 01 an .Fran cisco, are the Pacific coast representa tives on the board of directors. A resolution was passed placing the chamber on record as expressing its opposition to tne literacv test in the immigration bill which has Just been vetoed by President Wilson, express ing the commendation of the chamber for the president's action, and the hope of the chamber that congress will eliminate this feature of the im migration bill. Captain Robert Dol lar of San Francisco urged the cham ber to give its support to the new shipping board. ,Th chamber, voicing the sentiment o. the business men of every state in the Lnion, expressed to the president o- the United States the profound ap preciation of the gravity of the in ternational difficulties which now con front the nation and solemnly pledged the business men to stand as one be- "'" lne president "in patriotic pur- tj -imirer me eventuality a J-,E-JP"b(rg of Settle. Wash., and A I. Esberg of San Francisco (re elected). v Sick Mother Seeks News of Daughter Mrs. Rose Skrehot. 607 Broad street, Johnstown, Pa, is anxious to hear from her, daughter, who was fa the vi cinity of Portland over a year ago. on her way north, and who was making her way by selling newspapers in tba various towns Sfee was traveling on horseback and camping wherever night overtook. her. Any information will be greatly appwiated by her mother, who is very sick. Previous inquiries brought re sponses from, parties in Washington that the missing girl had been ob. served on her way to Idaho.; She had been "roughina: it for her health, tt was understood. It is surmised that she was proceeding on her way east. - ND - i SUNDAY-MORNING, - HAS PLAN TO HELP CANADIAN VETERANS 1L T JXru Shaughnessy, president the Canadian Pacific. of 11 A. M. to P. M. You doubt her. You accuse her. You pity her. The V " i; : 11 r Tic 1.,-. .i FEBRUARY V 18 1917." STANFORD STUDENTS E F Marion Kyle of Portland Among Young Men Who Have Volunteered, Tbe crompanytac merage has rurhKl Tbe Journal by mall from New York from Marlon Ky, aoa of Ur. Oorge A. Kjle of M.1 East Tlitrty-aeventh Hr-t. who. with a party of otber Kf aaford rattenta, ia en routo to Krance to enter tse servtc of tbe American An balanre. By Marion. Kyle. New York. Feb. 10. (By Mail.) If being an ambulance driver Is as diffi cult a task as getting to Europe, we will have our hands full. Complications in intei national affairs have delayed our departure but. today we leam that we are to sail tomorrow on The Espagne for Bordeaux. We have a fine crowd of fellows in our company and the leaders of the American ambulance have made it plain to us all the seriousness of our under taking. The Friends of France, the sc-i ciety that is sending us. has selected as a motto that, we are to wear on the sleeves of our uniforms: "For Human ity and the Humanities." Their plans I will not terminate with the war as they BOUND FOR RAN ORAMBUIANCEWORK 3f " v-n, -"A L S t S, f -i I . Most Gorgeously Gowned Woman in the World In a Wonder-Play Dealing With Life's Problems By Richard HIS WIFE'S RELATIONS . Comedy. GIANTS OF AMERICAN FOREST Educational Scenic Taken in Northern California and Southern Oregon. BROADWAY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Special Concert Afternoon and Evening. expect to participate in the rehabilita tion of, that country. When we arrive at tne rroni we are to be known as "The Stanford Lnlt of the American Ambulance Section Sanltalre," and each member will be assigned a number. Each driver will be entrusted with an automobile and equipment worth approximately $1,000. There are now about 200 American students Engaged In this service in France and by spring it Is expected that there will be 300. During our stay in New York we were put up at the Harvard club and we had the pleasure of meeting Her bert Hoover, a former Stanford man who spent his earlier days in Oregon, who now is chairman of the commis sion for Belgian relief. He told us that If the subsequent turns In international events completely checked the commis sion's activities the actual work would be entrusted' to Holland and the work of raising . funds in America would continue. " A corps of students from the Uni versity of Chicago accompany us. and another Harvard detachment expects to follow shortly. We are due at Bordeaux February 20 and expect, to be sent to the front a week later. Fortune Comes From Unexpected Source Martinez. Cal.. Feb. 17. (U. P.) After living with their aunt, Mrs. An nie Southall, of Pittsburg. 83 years old, for nearly 60 years, and believing all that time she was only in moderate cir cumstances. Mrs. Martha Wood, 69 years old. a-nd Mrs. Margaret Hamilton. 61 years old, of this city, have Just been notified that she died and left them 1 43.000 in cash. en9 Harding Davis JTi i iL j Federal i Oocilfbf o;0 Churches oi Uhnst ; Issues General Call ; The call has been issued "by"'- J the Federal Council sf th Churches of Christ in 'America to all the churches of Christ in-"i-m America and to all Christian ; people to observe Sunday, Feb-.: ruary 18. as a national day of ; prayer, to make united inter-;; . cession to God that His spirit" . may guide and sustain the pre-' ldent of the United States and direct the Meps of onr repre- J 1 sentatives In the congress 1 of the United States, in all ths : T momentous decisions of this sol- emn hour In the life of the n . tlon; praying for all the peoples - engaged In war, and also that v our own hearts may. b free from all bitterness and wrath,-. and that the nations may be brouaht into the realization of lasting peace. It is requested J that the Christian people of , Portland and the state of Ore- gon shall Join with the millions v " of Christians throughout tba United States In observance of this day of prayer. . ' r STEINWAY ssss $338 Just ths Piano for Tow aartmn HAROLD S. GILBERT Tka aaliabl riaae BarcaaaV 384 TS ST HTM. Piano. J1",?! Tiaaet Beginnins Today You condemn her. You hate her. You love her. 7 n PATHE NEWS Latest News Events. IIAli(i i ill ait l! Jn in. ' SI 4