THE OREGON .DAILY JOURNAL,' PORTLAND, TUESDAY, DECEMBER ' 24.' 191$ Art IXDEWEJtDlCXT KEWBUPIB V. H. JACKSON., .Pablisber fublished ivrrj day, aftrrnoon end moraine ( ept Vuoday-Afternoon), at Tb Jouroal Bolld . Ing. Hraadway and XamblU streets. Portland. . Kntenvl at the Pwtoffice at Portland, Oregon, for tranemieslot UrouCtt tba taau w second ": saauer. TJCI.Rl'HONKA Mahi lilt: Bom, A-Ofl. All departments resetted by then nakni. TH1 tli operator wbat department yon want. FOREIGN ADTKRTI8INO BEPHESENTATIT , hrnjtmin Kautaor Co., Brnnswtck Buildin. 52 S Fifth arenas. New Tort; 00 eUilen Huildlna. Chicago, tutiaeriDtkoB Una bjr mall la Oregon and Wash - tnttoa: DA ILT (UOBNINO OR ArTXHJIOOS) On rear. .. ..,$3.00 On month..,..! .00 . . ( SCNDAT . One year. .'. . .$2.90 t On month .25 VAIL.X MOBM.U ,OR AfTEBNOON) AND . StjNDAT On rear. .., . . 17.501 Ona month. . . . .$ .6-5 proposals, 1, the millions are forced to make a choice between junker ism and the red terror. Nobody knows what V& choice might be. The jarred minds' of the 'world's masses, pountlng their dead and struggling with the reconstruction of their dis abled, are a problem and a peril. STOLEN LANDS T If yo would gain mankind, tb best way la to appear to lore than; and the baat way : at appearing to lore them la to lore them Jn reality. -Jeremy Bentham. HE Jones case Indicates that Ore gon still has a remedy in the courts for - the frauds by which oiir children have been pillaged of heir heritage of school lands. . .Originally Oregon was ' treated as liberally as other states In the mat ter of school land by the - federal government. Our : public schools were provided with a 'rich : endow ment which, properly husbanded, would have grown richer year by year. Had this immense provision for the children's welfare been safe guarded Oregon" might now have had an invested, school fund as large as Minnesota's or Nebraska's. - But the children were stripped of their rights. The best lands were grabbed in many cases through sham, forest reserves. Some of the best tracts were scandalously exchanged for worthless stretches in desert and mountain regions. The children were pillaged and. forra long' time there was nobody to speak for them. The machinery should be set to work to recover this squandered her itage by legal process without delay. Everybody who cares for the wel fare of our schools and school chil dren must join in praying for some such action. - not produce It as feed prices rangea. seen,' it disintegrate . : the military "Doc had a awful cold the last time I They were selling their cows. As power of Russia and cut down 'a ,Mn Wro. - f . .v " - to hogs, what good was a selling great Italian, army like grass before VL J'Z,?? price of 18 cents the pound for pork the scythe. Then' we. saw propa- thtagr BUppose M" 100,1111 or any. when it cost 19 cents for the corn to ganda help break the German - mil- "i never saw him when he -wasn't," make the' pound, saying ' nothing of Itary power. v . ,v;. T. Peer chuckled. , Tou might find a the work involvedt : ' It Is a,, wonderful agency, ail" the TtrSoa ' of my own.- Santa Still, we think that Mr. Hoffman, more wonderful - inasmuch as it j said hastily. . "and I don't want toet misses the point. If by sadequate or- beyond the power of -man to silence into any quarrel with Tom Ryan. Ia ganization ltie small farmers 'shou.- It. t Governments which desire" to es- 'toMnyjJ,ns tn1 George Baker haan 't a, k-.:- ictrihniinir nru tha o.. - ... - ot that, he'd like-to have, do you sup- meir commoajlies iney rvvouia. tjis- ganaa wo-aia act "wondrous wisely" "Everything." T. Paer answered. cover that even at the current i.v to see to it that their i deeds ; ana I can't give him that," Santa said. of feed and labor they could still j cause are always just. upon the whole earn a profit - on their Investments- of money and labor. IRELAND'S WOES THE LUXURY TAXES T M Alnt there anything; that'd cheer him X ." , "' 1 TOorw uun auiyuiuiK nw. -some popular wave to iioai mw tn pidtare on," T. Paer anawertd. "It's a long- time till the next campaign." - - 'Tit try to frame something up." Santa promised "And .nor--Old friend, what AJOR JOHX JOSEPH 'O BIUEN'S opinionHhat'Ireland's troubIeTi ,?u. .rr Were made in the United States. "For myself.-V peaceful heart." the lit HE senate vote to retain the lux-J particularly in the far west 'of I u roan 8aW thoughtfully, "and a con ... .. a a.' 1 M. - . 1 aAHS m Ae rhftaa lAVam nfl Ifll ury taxes snows tnat pumic me cnuea states, will provoke rL w . . .... . - 1 am a AAA , iiauuiUDga a a.ua iuwn - " aw w v , awv optnion-is stm a power m me many a merry smile. .Men who know hove me. the same iand the balm oH United States. The plain peo- ireiana and the"Irish will hardlv forgiveness; for evrybody, the absence pie are quite aware mat immense ieei mat tney need go so far away t Bprrqw "1"lwt'""- . fortunes have been made 'by prof- to find the root of the commotion, p" U iteering during the war. They de- . Major O'Brien wafts to his readers Letters FrOITi the People Bire to see those fortunes bear Uieir the suggestion that the Irish are a P f- COUNTING THEIR DEAD It is time enough yet to buy War THK MUHsian acaa m ine mie war sumps to be used as Christmas re are 1,700,000, the disabled 1,400,- memrances. The Stamps will gather 000. value with the years. They will rrh. rmmtn aa.I Tt O fW (YV1 ' M XI . - . : . U II. iuo uwuiiu ucau tv .,vot,vwi cjfij mouey lor mo ixcipicui wuiis and the disabled an almost equal he or she sleeps. They inculcate number. , thrift and may be the means, even The French .dead are 1,400,000, the though oniy a Christmas remem- disab led above 1.000,000. . -ance, of laying the foundation for The British dead are 658.704, and! an independent fortune. the crippled around half a, million. Italy, lost 500,000 in dead-and died of wounds. The disabled have not been given in estimates. Under ordi nary percentages, they total several hundred thousand. These dead and disabled are a AS A CORRESPONDENT SEES IT N THIS page, a valued corres pondent discusses The r Journal's church page, published every Saturday. - ! mighty- Influence working now on L, ' "'T .' .., ... , , m. be said that so far as It has been 0 the affairs of this world. The na tions are counting tljem With the ftitv rf war crane ihtva a ima trt Maf va " I r j i waau u nuv v v I ... .t . . . , tak invpntorv f tlip rravpA and "c C"TU" 'l 7 , ? y 9 HS done in The Journal. possible to ascertain, no other news paper in America features church cripples. We have here the slaughter In the five leading nations. The 1,500, 000 butchered Armenians are not in jlhe list. The uncounted dead in Serbia are not on the ghastly roll. The people who sit around the The Journals church page treats church affairs as legitimate news. News of the church world is han dled with the same fidelity and sin cerity as telegraphflo . or any other news. It is accounted a regular and firesides from which these millions l" Part of what is going on of. dead and disabled were recruited lara asking themselves why it all came about. In the worldi It Is the habit of the" secular press the country over to -be grudging ! That Is why France gave President wi.th the thjngs the churches are Wilson, such a reception as Paris aoi"e- ' ine interest ana concern m Jhad never seen. It was a welcome a broad field are thereby overlooked. showered with smiles and tears, a In 6,vln a different kind of treat mother, with two soldier sons be- mcnt to these things, The Journal is !side her, wept as President Wilson's Pioneering in the field, and that it carriage passed. Turning to her 19 understood and appreciated, is evi boys she said she could not help denced'in the expression by the cor weeping, because "there is the man respondent on tnis page who brouorht vou back tn mi" " Twni nrptnn .noeanf WAmn U me land rraud trials or wnich a watched the nresidnt im .aahrtr bviet account Is given In The Jour- at Brest. "Look, the irreat Wilnon- nal's neW9 columns will always be he wants a peace Just to all;" said one. "God guard him " said the famous in the annals of bureau cratic connivance with corruption. other.. They were thinking of the Tne frauds vvere P8Slble because French dead. trusted servants of the government The outburst at Pari-' vv lh. conspired with the scoundrels who tearful Joy. the Dathetia -!arfnP nf Perpetrated tnem. The exposures a.Dcoole stirred with lhft hnn that ruined many a towering reputation, this statesman fmm AmAri -nh antt caused the death of a federal his advocacy of a Just peace thatlJudge from worry and overwork. would forever shield France nd the nations from the hideous thing that: has filled so many graves, from! ever coming again. The correspondents have told us1 oLihe French cabman who expressed the hope that the president would succeed in his great effort for last- just share of the war's tax burdens, meek, long suffering and somewhat ikX". . Senators who vote to lake the blunt-witted people who would not &?Vr2. tax off huge incomes and abnormal be apt to stir a finger for themselves oa man sddrese in fail mut accompany tha profits vote by implication to transm it mey w;eremot set on to do it by 1 ' ; - fi thom tn thn neaciariP nf lif. those - frirh ffni M,rh,,. r -.v.! The Journal's Lnurch Page r.4 - : 11,- ,f. kvAnii . I fomana, jjcc. si. 10 mo nuicvui wicj rami.m nui- "K i The Journal I desire to express my ap itecrs is by inescapable necessity The fact IS. as evervbodv Vnnwa i preclatlon of . your Saturday evening iransierreo to me poor, uuviousiy mat the Irishman is a fiirhter born . -JX"... L " ZTZ somebody must pay . taxes to meet He needs no insDiration from mm nin the direetorv of churches. Yours tne. governments : oDllgations. ir United States cowboys to use his M3 the only Portland paper which has the rich are exempted the burden gun. When there is no fight going tee'n"" iaii uu uie puor. on ai come He seeks one in forfrn. city but also to visitors in Portland. You It is a matter of history that ail lands, winning glory under every ca.n nVr u,ly reM ho man7 of , , t j I ik.i i reueioua worKers inrouinoui me siaie previous wars, doiu m me tuueu iu hush. read the sermon topics and service an- siaies ano oiner countries, nave oeen i 'jne friends of the British empire nouncements ,of Portland pastors. Chiefly naid for by the Droducers. will mak a arin Kir,-. .1-.. The Oregon Sunday School association 4hf i k ik iH,.a . ., . " MIC appreciates the notice which your that is by the workers. The idlers delude themselves by looking for church page has riven to its activities. wno ion not nor spin out wno are ine source, of Ireland's discontent in particularly to the cause or tne orphan arrayed nice soiomon in au nis giory tne united States. The source lia " i w..i - ii . . iu. i , I i .. . . I uATwjuu. c. nuinot.ni, uuic a suiaii jjiiri w wb umueu. very cieariy manifest In the age- General Secretary Oregon Sunday School ue country uas expected mat m: long oppression that Ireland has siif-l Association. enormous expenses or tnis war rered at home. would be paid by all the people In proportion to their financial ability. The financially weak would , contrib ute moderately. The financial giant would contribute according to bis ti tanic strength. The senate finance committee pre- T. PAER'S ADVICE TO SANTA CLAUS By Ralph Watson The 110th Infantry Dorena. Dec 19. To the Editor of The Journal In which division is the 110th infantry? Can you tell me where this division was engaged about Octo ber 9? A SUBSCRIBER. 'Tha 110th infantry ia la the Twenty-if hth dlrision. There ia no information as to it nereabouta on October l.f - The 146th Artillery Portland, Dec 20. To the Editor of "It Roemu tn m lkrn . pared a measure which would have ticaliy. as she nlus i ST ST vloated this obviously just principle, with the light of her hand-lamp glint- Th Journal Where was the 146th field Thpv nrnnnsed tn remova thn hur- inS on her curl papers. "It nwmn t I artillery, and In what division, at the rtpn from th eiant and tMp it nn me that you vld come on to bedlcIOSO of the What is the mean S!" lJif i. iL.n lnatead ' Y there In front ing of a depot brigade? v. R, M. nic iuwcii ouuuiucio "i i"c "mr. mg iirepiaee like a kid watchinr fori l Itn rtiuery u in tha Forty-nrt at- u.nniiv v,n! kn w, t Sunt, rio. vision. "OcDOt briaade" aianifiea aa oreaniza- iiaiii J u3 uub B.icu . tton for tha reception a dilution of miliUrj mrougn so smooiaiy as it mignt, i seems to me," t. Paer answered '"W""-! had tint tho con a to uninvod tha mpm. Pleasantly, "that YOU'd let m hA nn The. 1t7fh Slnnal RalUlinn bership of a few liberal-minded men. SloaTf mJe'H wljS - wa? .to do '. Onwego, Dec 19. To the Editor of ...... I 10 voasi my snins ror a mtniita nr W. i , rm The Mttle band, who had earned two." " -urni nere was company , the tiHe of people's friends, stood out against it and, for the moment, they "have defeated it. What may happen hereafex we do not presume to predict. We have with us' a vociferous COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF SMALL CHANGE . T ' , Hanr no that Kahv'a utorkiner - And those of the rest of .the family, too . - 'Ameronren" lonka a raaA deal lUca Armageddon and sounds a " good deal uka American, a ., ....v.; W.--.J. 1,;.,.. There's annthef mmIati nff thai atata, legislature coming up. Somebody's al- using me oy out oi life.,. The most popular, men tn town today are the theatre manager who are giv ing irw snows ror tne youngsters. It Is beine riamnnarrtt that vm,a tm. Hun hates to be free as badly as the rest of the world hates to be enslaved. As we UnderataiMl It. tha nmnan lJ Is not to enjoy freedom for themselves now that they have It or could 'have it, but to sham it for peace tabic purposes. Because tha Chrtntma hin tn AtaaVa from the States has been dalavnd. Kanta Claus will ba two days late up there. But possiDiy jars, santa will keep the home fires burning. The Journal at this ttma 'm-tahaa make Its annual appeal to every fond father who will essay a Santa Claus role tomorrow, that all camouflage whiskers be kept clear jof lighted gas Jets, open fireplaces and Christmas tree candles. Nqthlng- so upsets the general v uvi vi Li l in K H in aaa Man, a ii.h.i whiskers go up in a puff of smoke Just a. mi ucguuuns oi we lesiiviues. 1 . OREGON . SIDELIGHTS Varmint bounties In Grant county, it is estimated by the Canyon City Kagle, will total 12500 for 1911. a The East Oregonian beckons. Thus: "Pendleton is a great home town and, every ' step towards making it ' better equipped in this regard is a step for the material advancement of the city." a - "Irrigation projects under course) of organisation in Baker county mean a great development of thousands of acres of unproductive land and a consequent big increase of wealth," says the Demo crat. "These proposed projects should meet with every encouragement from; land owners." v . "Recently," says tha Moro Observer, "we heard E. E. Barsee say that this harvest he received S800O worth of wheat from a quarter section of 1(0 acres that- two years ago cost bim 6400. This goes to Drove that some oeoole In Sherman county can make money farming." A booster" with something to boost about is tha editor of the Vale Enter prise, who said recently: "We wonder if tha Hundreds of Partakers of Thanks givlnr dinner took notice of the fact tnat Malheur county produced many of the staple articles that appeared upon that tahlaa Awtnna. th. .i i mm , I I attention could easily be called to the turkey, honey and Delicious apples. Nothing better produced anywhere.1 v Ragtag arid Bobtail Stories From Everywhere A Hard World f MOTHER." said Helen (quoted In Tl the Ladles Home Journal), "whan Z grow up, will 1 have a husband like, papaf. "Yes. I suppose so." answered the mother. - v - "Mother." said Helen after a pausa, "when 1-grow up, if I don't marry, wlll I be an old maid like Aunt Gertrude?" "Why. yes, X suppose so." repeated the mother. "But what queer questions for a little girl to ask.". "Mother." after another pause, "this la a very hard world', for us women, Isn't It?" ' ' JOURNAL MAN AT HOME By Fred Lockley V mft I J - m. "da ahaa j . . , ,, iiiiiu Hem wgnai corps, wnen me ar- vk aneaa and toast 'em." Af a on. ! n- i . . mtvmymt a. a. - -rr m,m Bifillcu 1 T, aa 1 1 111 1CUUU eLl . "he turned toward the Btair- the time? A SOLDIER'S SISTER, way,, but dont you dare wake me up The 117th aicnal battalion is ia tha Porty- When you come to bed." - aecond (Rainbow) dirision. At the aisninc of f A-h-h-h !" T. Paer Siffhed as Vi rnut: "u ,WM MaUoncelJe about 10 stretched hla enir- I S""""1" ian. ana KOI iner. ana aw avca.9 uub, Lf WMTIl i nl I SI nri w-urnnn Via a Miwtainai I embers and wiggled his toes In content- Th. vinth it.)ro ment. "thev'a iRt nna.tm. t ,- l The Mnth Infantry grouD of men who shriek day and think of when I was a bov' and" fan Portland, Dec 20. To the Editor off night-against persons who. in their to f"in dreamily into the flickering J!rtuWVh! head'uar , . . , .. .,. coals. Iters company, Mnth, infantry, during dialect, "foment class hatred." We D .... the last fighting: also, when the arm- should like tor hear the opinion of .xcTtedtT rkmhiia- 5ma k ,m?? istice was signed? Where is the com .hlt efp upon . r.,e bill who, itJ'SZ aTTa.W JSPSFSiJ. exempts the rich from War taxes scattered coals, "what the tarnation do a .part of the Third army, or army of occa- and heaps everything on the poor, f"" Z c-.tterm- the fire all over J . , . lne aa,a 1QIanlry "T rnlrm 1 mmmmt .1. . . - 1 . . - . . . trPf!" nr allav it? VTiih iahA ht- v. TT 'w v'. newcomer Doomed. i-oruana. uec zi. To the Ed tor of tred or ayiay It? nicri Jstfhe bet- shaking the soot off his furs, "like you The Journal-I have a son who after ter means Of mollirymg. class resent- didnt expect me to come around this arriving in France, was transferred to ment ' and suspicion, wrong backed Jr'al" a Company K, 322d infantry. What dl- by the strong arm, or justice- and .,1asnatTlritIn'P fJ,your' T' Paer lsl01 would' ha be in. and where was . . ... - - - asked. "I had a awful time e-ettin' Ma he when the armsltice was aiarned? r.eraea orr to bed- Guess she thought I MRS. I. C, 1 was tryin' to sneak out on her." I l In tha Eiehty-flnt dirUion. On analntica fair dealing? Vnil atron (rat .. .1 .,. m I data it waa at Sommedieoz. a few milea aonth- have not quit. The work of some "J0'"',01 asked ?? tl , ,m - - . ?aUy' yu dWn't have a, good - FARM PROFITS T nf them mav nnt miH fna . nminla nKl'' . "w "-i v. w.-i.v nearx, ia give you up as a bad egg." years., now can we auit? How can I Tve give 'em up." T. Paer anawrn we ignore the government's appeal J efnsively. "You ain't got a Tom and to us to buy War ctamps? "IZfS0"!' grinned; "I'm afraid to tote- any of that stuff for fear the state police'U pinch me." Tou'd never think it from your nose, A LEAFLET A SOLDIER in the American ex- PERSONAL MENTION . Enlisted Men Cared For Thirty-four soldiers and sailors who could not find hotel accommodations in the city Monday night were picked up by the Red Cross canteen, under the men hm me. ine ground- To his polite remonstrance she" reticular specimen was "They must the war'8 over" Sant "wered. "Have .UT'.t X XrtkZ S- ?iC,d:t"Yl8' " deS I?k "ke a good TSr fools imagine "h"t V1 "SSL "iiMSTSl ;Juf,le.dead that the na" deal t0 char8- But what else can sucfiMt would affect us." The C.fm.- T..P..,.,n P. Mr. andMrs. ( I HE other evening as it araw dark In the occasiqnal drizzle a gentleman stepped in the Yam hill street market to buy half la pint of cream. The charming Young woman vhn snM i( tn him Inr- Deace. Thev hava fnlrt r tha L j ...... - -w w - . " -..v, -ii- i v ail i.tiii r pn I si rnr ir wninh vma station master who said Wilson's to ' 40 cents a pint -for cream, and : " "ci uu proiec- rather thin cream at that. tion jot" men use me. ine ground lings all meaning T, I Ma. am,.. AtM Vnaluw,18 , yu "Pcct with bran at $40 a ton .The world was never In such aland alfalfa hav t ih. a nl mood. These dead are gone, but the We used to get alfalfa for fiO or m millions want the living, now and to' a ton. Naturally -milk and cream1 come, made safe. Never have so were cheaper then." vXSa? Ju8t S- Th tleman sadly thought, been stirred by the same emptied his lean purse to pay for yearning been appealing for the the cream and a loaf of-bread and same del Iverahce-the . hope of or- wended his pensive w "SvirtL SSu"19 Wr,d 8gain8t & fatUrC Te young woman ho sold the iwl.. i . u iu - Ceam meant to lodge a "protest in ' na?18 thCreJ3 a-Bol8hvikl. his mind against being sUgmatized Deluded creatures .know that the as a profiteer. So far ashTcoSd world has been wrong, else all these see she made out her case, dead and disabled would not have She had no choice except t go out -been .on the blood rolls. Sinister of the cream business V get enoh leaders are among them taking rK for It to pay expenses' There u a K vintage of their ; Ignorance, leading genera! mLonceE fn fhe c me, 'tSt lnd fdc8trucllve about the profits the farmers have : paths. Spurred on by the agony been making during the war No .and death, thebuteherv !nrt th. ..vi 1..1.8. . 6 ,ar'. ft0 : uuuuk we 01s gram, cauie, wool ana blood, the poor , dupes are led and cotton; producers have bee-n doiSg . misled, deceived and deranged, cha- quite comfortably but we are S n r: the small, diversifyiSfSmeV . JU i.Cr. rUKe jonn Hoffman w-io resides r on ca ; and elsewhere, who Insist that his hundred cre homestead near the sett ements in this war ahii h U ... :uiesaa neH . j . . . : -" r"" vicnoa, isconsm. Tne coun- fl In(ipf!n1t inii nnrnAsMao. aui ..... wu(i .w iry surrounaing nis place is one of . ways before, that nothing can ; be the most beautiful, on earth The doneto prevent world Avide . laugh- land Is fertile. The Chicago market : ter, feed the flames of Bolshevism, is not far away. raei ineir Prussian oocirmes make re- John Hoffman ought to be V pros- " " i'bikcuis. jucy porous ana nappy man. . Yet he tola help drive the mad millions into a Chicago Tribune reporter that he , tempestuous . programs and .destruc- would take $10 for all the profit he ."v- vw.. - v ; ..v.-tf.: ..-.;...: mare iasi season from his - farm " .. ' . - - in i 1 vue me reporter was talking with miaaie grouna, orrering a plan vto LUoflman several neighbors, simllarl v save natJons from recurring rolls of faituated, dropped in. Every one of iaaf atlrl lloaKl tA l Ika IS- A lea ... .. v, -anu, ,9 ,lllUu siay mem toia the same story as Hoff against Bolshevism. It will be awful t man.. If. by rejection of the Wilson-Taft As t milk, they said . taey 'could . . . . ' t Paer naid flvlrxr tha fr rrini.i i- I uirexsuon oi iienry rtoea. at Uie union peditionary army in France sent I at!5 itlllS-S2 ?2E?? Z!?" I ttion and taken to the Multnomah. home in one of his letters a "if 1 had that blossom I could keet copy of an extraordinary leaf- an lit up just looktn' at it.1 let. We suooose thousands of his . 1 fot 11 frost bJt on the Italian comrades have done the same. It Qavapfl 1 eM Ida laya nU Keep fltted Tip with cots for the men. . ( Exploit of two Orecnn horn, brothers. da- Toted in the eerrice of the T. U. C. A., are re lated by Mr, Lockley today. Ha also acta forth, by means of s typical character, his concept of Orecon'a yotac eitiaensWp at Ha beat.) A week or 10- days ago Mrs. Clark of Portland came to see mo at The Jour nal office. "Did you see my sdn Roy while you were In France?" said Mrs. Clark. "I ate dinner with him the night before r left." I answered. "Tell me all about him." said Mr a. Clark, j; told her all about Roy and the work ha was do ing. The story of what Roy R. Clark has done and is doing is worth telling. Roy Clark graduated from the Ore gon Agricultural college and took up construction work in Oregon. The great need for men in the Y. M. C A. work in France caused him o drop his own personal Interests and go to France. He was assigned to base No. 2, of which Bordeaux is headquarters. The vital need was to provide hu.s for the throngs of soldiers who were arriving by every transport. Roy took hold of a French woodworking fa- lory with obsolete ma chinery and speeded it up., Carpenters were not to be had. so he hired French girls as carpenters. He standardized the huts, having each group of work women do one particular thing. He was able to Inspire them with his en thuslasm and the huts began flowing out to the rest camps, where they were so mucn needed. Each hut was sent out in the knockdown, ready to be assem bled. Each part- was numbered and checked as it was loaded, to prevent de' lays. When the Bordeaux plant wag running, smoothly he added the making of tables and benches and sublet the making of baseball bats to another fac tory. Order had come out of chaos and the cost of production, was cut in half. He was called to Paris to take charge.. of hut construction for the whole of France. He made plans for simpler and better, huts, which could be put up for less money. Then the shortage of lumber came up. He traveled over France and located millions of feet of standing timber in private owner ship. The French government worked with him and the timber was requisi tioned. Hut construction has ceased to be a problem in the T. M. C. A. work in France. Some years ago I was chairman of the "boys committee of the T. M. C. A. The boys' secretary was J. C. Clark, brother of Roy R. Clark. He also was a graduate of the O. A. C. Sherwood Eddy and Mr. Brockman told him he was needed in China to organise boys work among the Chinese in Shanghai and elsewhere In China. We talke it over.. He asked my advice. I said. "If Irere In your place I would go." This was six or seven years ago. To day the largest boys work In" the Y, M. a A. in the world is at Shanghai. China. Not only has J. C. Clark, an Oregon boy, impressed himself upon Shanghai, but in remote places of China his work is known and China is look ing at our country as a big and helpful brother. A few nights ago I conversed for an hour or so in Ea Grande with Mrs. A. E. Ivanhoe, county superintendent of Lonesome afammy'e big kittle a-etartn' oa Ae bearth.v Cole win' blowin' tn de ale rum tree: Tonight's prayer meetla' aa' da folk all (one. An' nobody home but de cat an' me. Firelifht flicker oa da winderpane. - Ie do' step creak, like r ha nt dona paatt Bcreecb owl bolter way down in de swamp An' I tries da do' hard tar make alia' hit's fast. - De cat. she nod an nod be da tire. An' de eparka light red oa de eblmnej-baek. Da win', bit howl an' moan -outside As rattler d boa'da oa da old co n aback I I pnta ar sweet- ater ter roes' in da coals. An I mas km smtU a ready bow good bit ewine be! Bat I'se citUn' binder lonesome, an 1 wuh day was noma: CUe nobody's fae'sh but da cat an sna. Spartsnburi Herald. I rront," Santa Claus explained. "By arracionit. it was rnM tn than, rtnn.i.f. t w as one, or tnose learreis v .ich tne "Appearances is aeainst vou." t. Pur uermans aroppea irom airplanes in j insisiea ; - x nope Mrs. unrun ain't sittln irrpat himim tn onrrunt tha mfnH. "P when you hit her house. of . our troors. The soldier wrote, vou hlveT- "STZIm0 that he saw the bundle which con- couldn't make her believe I ever touched Mo8ir are at the Multnomah en route tained this one actuallv rtron fro r that stuff." - to fseasiae wnere tney will spend Christ h n -n.,e k ' i.. 'She don't know you like I do." T. mas. Mrs. Howe owns and operates . -"o1-1 Paer responded. "What you got for the JSlhowa fruit farm at M osier ic icaiicis. . I the hovs this trln? . Tne soldiers comment on this par-1 "Most anything you want, now that Calgary. Stockman Visits W. D. Ide, a prominent stockman from Calgary, is at the Benson on his way to California, where . he will spend the winter. ' . To Spend Christinas by Sea Mrs. E. L. Howe and Miss Biles of States troops to "-'stop fighting and nun-re i.u meir ouups ana larms. "None of em know what they want," L,. C. Gllman. .Northwest director of .'way snouia woramgmen light and I T. Paer complained. "They're all afraid I railroads and former president and gen kill one -another?" the leariet in- tne otner "' eom to slip some '-... "Wika .-.sv t, --a-i.- I thing over on 'tin." s i"'1?' .'"' "r- "Well, what do you think I ought to more noticeable if the - Germans give the governor?" Santa asked. "I themselves" had stopped fighting and j Wnda have a warm spot for him be- enne hornft sooner lhah thev did., Ic. . . . . . ; . . i the same. uur meu were luuuuw m iieas ;.yt "Blamed if I know." T. Paer answered. that sort for several -reasons;'" For I scratching his head, v It seems to me 'rolt yas- a. prayer to - the United M1'8 purty hard Job this year.' Some of em," T. Paer answered, "but a purty hard Job this year." "Why?" Santa asked in surprise. Callender on Way Home M. II. Cal lender of Bremerton has on his way to Christmas with his C. H. Callender. II. B. Thornberry of Spokane, a breed- 1 1 er of fine saddle horses, is' at the Rn. snouia tnmK it wouia oe easy." i son, eral manager lof the S P. & S., spent Monday at the Multnomah. . E. I,. Murphy of Pendleton is a guest at tn new f erKins. Dr.' C. A. McCrum of Mosier is at the cause his whiskers and mine are about J Portland. . A. t. jrearson or xunoer is vlsltina at the Cornelius. Mn, and Mrs.; CW Wieder of Al one thing they felt thai" they .were l 'Sa a pretty pleasant surprise last 1a,n Elf'-TVa J.?ard j .i ..j ..vA; .! I primary day.' nnara MAfl tit rs SWSAO nt-t4 - ft J vunonvu i.. C- .,.v. u ... .r Santa aatit . W T ilMn't venture which would bring lasting have anything to do with that" good to mankind. For another thina. VI see you've joined the alitii club. they loved and trusted their- home a tTaffi government, oeneving inav us pro tiary . mn4 the ilraft ad flax nlanta with ressions or aismterestea motives i out a deficit. were sincere. So, the ii. propaganda don't thtnk it would do any good," M. A. Rickard of Corvallis ls sUvlntr at tha Imperial. F. C Stewart of Kelso Is registered at tne Oregon. - F. F. Anderson of Sacramento, CaL, la a visitor at the Carlton. , . . C. Hussy and family from Spokane are at the Benson. . A ; . Alfred -T- Prltchard of ""Seattle is a VA B aVK a OaaltaM -1 - a .ai. a a. . . .1 KUCOt, ATAt, VlItT .VttVllLUIls ' fa. !,. ,l itnnt "chaVm that " uaiu iiy , noi as ong as JOOt r- tT rr.L. , ii vi iu o.j -v.- j Keller's hangin' 'round. -'; That reminds morale. But suppose another . great war to break out. Statesmen tell us . that such a war could permit jiq neutrals to exists . All the nations must lignt i in it willingly or reluctantly; , There 1 C. II. Kappers of- Scappoose is guest at the Portland. ; '.. A. Bedford of Athena is registered at the New Perkins.- - s ' - E. M. Pueh of Albany Is vlsitlna? at il. ' .. "w , t ' I mm What forr Santa asked in surprise. 1? . t n- n.U field are arrivals at the Seward. H. E. Clanton. state fisf warden. Is me what ougnt I to. give Joe?" "Give. Joe a certificate of election," T. Paer suggested. "That'd tickle him stiff. 'Joe ain't been elected' to anything. . I know," T. Faer . repUed. rbut it ain't fair for Joe to be -governor all would be no escape for thehlk One " irL, r,".?:." at the Imperial from Bonneville. side or the other would te-WTontt. that eoea with th mh- V H.D. sterling of Rugene is a guest II. ...... n-ni,M finf tlanJ thklt';hll T. riftn't Irnna that T ....M - x I t the CarltOIU' - . . " rf" .n-ar nnnh;;, Miss Margaret Bllyew of Astoria Is or irutn. -ine men wao aougui t - - T ,1 " science. - - . . v - ( Under these conditions let us - su a visitor at the Multnomah. Dr. J. J. Pittenger of Astoria Is sUy- ing at the Cornelius. Mr. and Mrs. J. S. James of Pendleton are at the Multnomah. J. A. Link, timberman from Cherry that aide would be fighting contrary .-pussie- t. Paer sighed, "i to their good sense ' and their con- don't know what he wants unless it's another set of; twins." ... "I'm all out of twins. Santa a-rieved. nn that th- anamv hr,.,M rainl rG"JAU8llvl ?.kid" 1P- Grove, is visiting at the Seward T ; Vv.; .;,;: ir Captain and Mrs. John W. Allen of uuu iiicw uum.u.ii viuuua Y""'"- - fPse mere s I Bluings, Mont., are at the Multnomah. forth the naked truth and exhorting ""K"5 j"1' ' I j. au Undier f Beiiingham is a vis- tha men to stoD fighting for -the i .'L" tor at the Benson. - v -- I aiu. -. uiu u i mi . w sa sh t ni nsrt rv" -w-w v m . m. 'arv s . m . .- . u-h.J a-auM ho lh. ; ff . n ...... t ,V : m I ' - J-avja ; flw mra is ac tne i uhr. :..ia v.- "m suivcu yu aooot ir,- . I Portland. 3p- - - Would ' it .' Still be negligible? Ve L unlawful for medicinal pur- Mr. and Mrs, J. 13. Coyner of Cen have seen something of What prop- 7:. ,0f"LU8ea inenuully. traiia aro gtiesU at the Cornelius. ; aan rfo la armiaa. W. hav "JSZl ".. i?' ' 1 Mr, and Mrs. R.It Irwin of SUnfteld wajv. . ; auu , i'aer suggested. are at the Seward- schools of Union county. Mrs. Ivanhoe. aaaiuon io Dclng county school su perintendent. Is a member of th state text book Commission. The AtW mam.' bers of the commission are Harrison G. ria or rortiand. Alfred Schmidt of Al bany, Miss Margaret Cosper of Salem, and F. A. Tiedsren. oltv mn.Hni.nj.ni of schools at Marshfield. "Wallowa county waa cut off from Union' county In 1 1B7 " -o . , ,. ivsnnw. -i went to Joseph, In Wallowa county, that year as a teacher. with wmtam Smith, then a teacher tn Wallowa coun ty, but now an attorney at TRakar and an ex-circuit Judge, I conducted the first county institute In Wallowa coun ty. I moved to Enterprise, the countv oi wauowa county, where I taught school for 10 years. From there I moved to La Grande, where I taught for several yars. and then to Pendle ton, where I taught In the hlch school for three years. I moved back to La orande 12 years ago. - One of mv Doya. Forest, Is In the navy. He Is stationed at Samoa. My other bov Lytton, Is back from the Panama canal and ia In Klamath county. I was born in Salem, N. , J. Speaking, of Salem reminds mt of a strange exnerience 1 had a year ago last August, when the Oregon troops were guarding the rail road bridges here. I had been to Cdve with Judge Phy and his wife to look at some land. On our way' back we saw a soldier running to catch a freight train that was slowing up at Cove. Judge Phy hailed him and said, Cllmb on we are going to La Grande.' The soldier, who was a sergeant, got In the back seat with me. Turning to me, he pointed to the surrounding hills and said, -wnat a beautiful country this la. I never look at it without thinking of a verse in the Bible. I was aston ished beyond measure to have a soldier say that, so I said, "What verse V He said. The cattle on a thousand hills are His. He gave me an entirely new meaning to that verse that ia, that all we have is really 'His.' and that we are merely his stewards. I took a good iwn si uie soiairr ana RS.1U, wnen j I'ncle Jeff Snow Says: If a pig hain't got no appetite w cure him most glner'ly by ehutUn off on his food till he squeals ever' time any body walks past the pen. A doctor down to Portland told me last week th same treatment would cure lots of peo people, too ; but that it wouldn't help out the doctors, drugstores and undertakers none. - The News in Paragraphs World Happenings Briefed for Benefit Of Journal Readers GENERAL Schools and theatrea are cloaad and the wearing of masks is compulsory at Juneau. Alaska. The sugar exportation commission created last January will handle Cuba's uii uuji tor ins ana mis. Blood serum of recovered Influent patients is recommended for treatment As a celebration of his fiftieth brith. day. Governor Williams on Saturday liberated 2 SO prisoners from Oklahoma penal institutions. After being absent from home three weeks, John A. KUnger of Davenport, Iowa, returned Saturday night, ahot his wife and then committed suicide. A boom for Charles M. Schwab for president was launched at a banquet of Chicago machinists and plant su. perintendents at Chicago Sunday night. At Guernevtlle, Cal.. Sunday, Miss Lucille Armstroff, a teacher, was re suscitated after nine hours apparent drowning. Hhe was overwhelmed by a breaker while swimming and carried out NORTHWEST NOTES Sixty-four homes in Pendleton aro under, quarantine for lnfluenra. Pasco Methodists are maturing plans for a new church edifice to cost 125.000. of the disease by Dr. Eugene R. Kely of Boston. Klamath county collected $3849 dur ing the past year for sportsmen's licenses. More than 6.000,000 feet of logs are In a big Jam on the Coweeman river a sat . ... . i , - i iook at tnese rolling mils or I-astern vl vcuw. Oregon. I think. 'As the mountains are round about Jerusalem, so' is my love round about them that fear me.' We spoke of th war. He said. If America is money mad and pleasure mad. as they claim, then this war will purify us through suffering. It will spiritual ise us.' He told me his name was Paul Wallace and that he was a sergeant in Company M of Salem. He was the kind of boy a girl would instinctively trust, and a mother would feel like mothering. Do you happen to know him?" "Yes, I have known him since he was a boy," I said. "He Is a lieu tenant and was recently wounded while leading his men into battle. Salem hasn't any finer men than Paul Wal lace, nor has Oregon any higher typ of cltlxen." Go where you will, you always fine' friends or those who are friends of your friends, and the more you look up the records of our Oregon boys the more cause you have to be proud that you are a citizen of the "Volunteer State." HOW TO LIVE By Dr. Woods-Hutchinson. Former Portland Physician DUST AND FLIES Dust and utiles are two of the chief and most aggravat ing minor nuisances to both health and comfort. For centuries we simply swore and swatted, then we began to act. and now the war has taught how to get rid ior botn, just as ranama aia ox maiana land dysentery. And the most brilliant demonstration has been that of Italy. Her sanitary corps from the beginning were thoroughly awake to the dangers and unhealthfulness of dust as well as of flies and actually had tha superb audacity to attack this intolerable nui sance to an army In the field, and wipe it out. and that in a climate resembling that of our own Arizona and Southern California. They were astonishingly successful. They at first tackled the chief and most constant source of dust' in any climate, the roads. The world is ringing with the triumph of the Italian engineering in road building, mountain piercing, mine tunneling, etc, and the superb system of beautifully built and kept roads which covered the Venetian and Friulian plains to servo them as the main ar teries of the army fighting in the moun tains that bounded them on the north and east, was not the least of their achievements. They were superbly laid and graded, with a surfaco aa hard and level aa a billiard table ; In fact. I have never seen anywhere in the finest park boulevards or famous city driveways anything finer in the form of road sur faces. But they werj built chiefly of limestone, and the Incessant stream and rumble of traffic that poured over them, to say nothing of the tramp of hundreds of thousands of marching feet, would mean dust of a flour-like fineness and penetration, in clouds and clouds. Tomorrow : Dust and Flies (No. 2.) It. C. Barr of Eugene is staying at the Imperial. Mr. and Mrs. J. Cv James or Fenaie- ton are visiting at the Oregon.- L. B. Wilkins of La Grande is a guest at the Carlton. Mrs. E. F. Guthrie of Medford la a visitor at the Benson. Mr.sand Mrs. J. C. Flora or Kerry are at the Multnomah. ' - Robert C. Kinney or Astoria is a guest at tho Portland. A. H. Roberta of Bridal Veil Is staying at the New Perkins. Mr.:. and Mrs. R. B. Wickham f Grants Pass aro registered at the Cor nelius. ' . Dan H. Welch of Astoria is staying at tho Seward. - C. C Mulkey and v family of Mon- Olden Oregon Early Marriages Promoted by tho Do nation Land Claim Act. Marriage at an early age was frequent in the early days. It was" not unusual for a gtsl of 12 to become a bride, and one Instance Is recorded where tho pa rents of a girl of 10 consented to her marriage with a man 10 years her senior. Tho chief reason for this early entrance into tho marriage state nay bo attributed tn part to the fact that congress bad passed a donation land act in 1850. by tho terms of which every man and his wife were permitted- to file on CIO acres. In those extremely youthful marriages an agreement was entered Into whereby the young bride remained with her parents until sha had reached 4 maturity, t.s mouth are visiting at the Now Perkins. F. D. Burrough of tho western branch of the railroad administration at Se attle is a guest at tho Benson. Jess S. Heard and ITarrw TChaala tw.0.n',,ton boys, are in a base hos pital In France. The Washington county court Is re grading tho Beaverton"" highway from Ulllsboro to Bertha. Black Butte tn Lane county, where tho quicksilver mines are located, has not had a case of influenza. Request for the esUbllahment of a star route between South Bend) and Willape harbor has been refused.: Miss Jeanette Downey of Tacoma is "ow In Germany. She. Is attached to Mobile hospital unit No. . , Captain James Gibson of Tacoma is in charge of one of th government's largest naval bases in France. Lieutenant Curtis Gilbert son of Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Gilbert of Yakima, haa been promoted to a captaincy In Franca. M T. Baker of Pilot Rock has re ceived word that his son. Claud, was severely wounded in France during Oc tober. The Lebanon home guard has under construction a memorial board in honor of Lebanon boys who have seen service in France. Recent deaths from Influence at Cot rv Mrs. A. C. Cox. Mrs. Bert Freak, Mrs. Grant Brown and Mrs. John Simpson Mrs. A. K. Psrriah of Centralla has received word that her son. Herbert, is recovering from wounds received on the day the armistice was signed. The Harris Trust A Havings bank of Chicago has purcbaaed $20,000 five per cent water bonds of the city of Pendle ton at par and accrued interest. Robert L. Henry was killed and Our Beverley Mardls is reported missing in France. Both boys were from McMlnn ville and members of the old Third Ore gon. Double-tracking of the O-W. R. aV 7s. system over the Blue mountains is un der construction.' That portion of the road between Pamela and Meachara is completed. FOREIGN . General John J. Pershing made his first visit to the Rhineland Sunday. Both the former German emperor and empress are seriously ill at their castle In Holland. - More than 2000 graves of American soldiers will be .decorated on Christmas dsy by the American committee for de vastated France. , The army In France Is arranging for President and Mrs. Wilson a Christmas tree as a surprise, and also a gorgeous collection of German souvenirs. ' Merry Chris tm as" Cheer If you intend demonstrating this sentiment in Cash why not go a step farther and let it be In .War (Savings Stamps which will GROW as Christmases COME and Christmases GO. ' - Buy them at Banks, Newspaper Offices and the Postoffice. Portland War Savings Stamp Committee. at aawts. ' -" . Var gaainaa ataana may ke .ornusa. tne PeeUtTlae.