THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL; PORTLAND, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1918 Alt IXPCPgNPEXT KEVTgPAPEB I ' C S. JACKSON . . . . . PttbUabar eept Sunday afternoon ) . at The JonrMl BnO .,' Ini? Broadway and XawilaUl . aortlaad. . Oxefoa, - ' " . fcmereo si Um Peatoff to at Portland, Orwao. tmwMw tarowia u ' 1 mstter. f . 11,1 WHONE8 Mate T173; Bow. , t,U the co.Tator wuat Senartaaent ywu warn. Balldinc, Chieaaro. 1 Serrerlirttoa tenn t7 null In Own and Waeb- Install Ati.r funnwtxa ort AFTEBNOOJO ftn ar.' ... tS.OO I One month $ .80 , ' ' UTTNDAT i dm rr I2.S0 On month.....! .25 DAO.T (MOBNINO OR AFTEBKOOSf) AXD . 8CSDAT One year..,.. 7.B0 I On month ..... .65 "' ' :- . Thar to joraethlns so MiblinMly pontile In nature, i Bbi nerer kill for tbe mira, sake of kiltlnt: bat trery death fa bat on Up in the Tut weerlDS of the web of life. She has no r roc cm of detraction which, M S tarn It to tb tbr (id and look at It bat yos know to b iU truer Uht. yon do not t to be the process of construction. rhilHps BroeXs. way ' through - the - gravel down to the original mud wh'ch oozes up dismally in their wake. I J The wood trucks carry two racks o cord ; length which 1 project on either side of : them. Inasmuch - as they usually take aodkeep thet exact middle of the road, it is dif cult to pass them in safety. No doubt special police regulations will be necessary bye and bye for these monstrous vehicles which ; are as dangerous "as they are useful. ; Nobody can travel over the ' high ways at this season of the year without seeing clearly that ; the day of the dirt surface is past and gone. No dirt road stays passable under modern highway traffic. The same is Just as true of gravel A gravel road which gave excellent r service under old fashioned wagon' traffic an' which did very well for pas senger a-'tomobiles, breaks down ut tcrly under the wheels of the heavy trucks. i i . . - Broken stone well laid down, prop erly drained and thoroughly rolled, serves better. But even broken stone crumbles under - the trucks and must be expensively repaired. The public has pretty .well made up its mind that only the hard surfaced road is worth building for modern traffic. If it is well laid down on a suitable bed it lasts for years without expensive repairs. But it may as well be i-dmitled first as last that every road needs inces Bant attention. A little flaw soon grows into a big hole. What would erst a dollar to mend today' re quires twenty dollars tomorrow. like Turner did the dirty- work. i Like Kelli her, .they were and are the men most to blame for the frauds. Their cupidity and their willingness to corrupt smaller men and induce 'them for small fees to carry out the details, made them the big, though y unseen, operators n the loot of school lands ana other public domain. ' In a great many cases the little men: have been convicted and pun ished. They were made to pay penalties. They served in prisons or paid finest ' Some oL. them. did both. . .' If there are penalties and punish ments for the one, there should at least be reparation and restitution by the other. 7 BRIGHT PROSPECTS . Readers tho care for the welfare or tne common schools will not fail to notice that some large tracts of land included in' the fraudulent t i i - - - - irnnsrprs nv wn in, jnuntari BBaiirrH.K vv f l n niv, nppn lire-i " - - w . 111 rfwinir rtisjiirrrnftnu hptwfien were Pillaged have been recovered Uf the- 'British premier and the Surely this m&y be taken for an ' w president of the United States earnest mat more can d recovered seem, to have understood neither !t ,s serious defect in our sys- Mr. Wilson nor Mr. Lloyd George. lem of law if il allows the. children As one might have expected between t0 be robbed and provides no means two men i of such ability and high of pompelling restitution of the loot purpose, jthey have come agreement! on everything. It appears that all the English women who, ran for parliament were defeated. So -wer all the women who ran for seats in the United States congress. Wartimes are not favorable to the political ambitions of vvum. candidates. although war makvjSayy demands on' women's strengJ7 and intelligence. This is one ' of the oddities of the situation. It will not trouble us any more when we have put an end to wars. WHAT TO EAT T ing before 3000 manufacturers" rep- j resenting 381 lines of ' American in-; dustry involving twenty billions of invested 7 capital, ; Mr. Schwab said: jn" the years gone by, I have ert ou!y doubted many times if labor has receired IU fair share ot the pros perity of thla ereat country. We, a manufacturers, have got to open our eyes to a wider vision of the plan in the future with reference to - our workmen. We have got to devise ways and means by which capital and labor shall share equally, not in theory, but ii practice. We must not only talk about these things, bat we must do these things. . He went on to say that "we are face to face with new conditions," that the "day of autocracy in gov ernment and labor has, gone by and that this is "a day of democ racy." , The message has been heard at Oregon City. The spirit of Amer ica In a war to make democracy safe is working for democracy in industry. return soon? Where waa it when ; the armistice . was signed? ' ' ; - SOLDIER'S SISTER. 1 IBsae liflspitat 4 S to not attached to any oiriettm. - ?t Letters From the People (Communication eent to The Journal lor pub lication in thia department should be written on only one aide of tbe paper, should not exceed 800 words in ienatb and mint be aicned by tbe writer. whuee mail -addrea in full uiiut accompany tb eontribuuon. ) a at Baaouls-a-Maa. : aear N'ewfcbatee. In Northeastern Franc. i formation on - Uie other points of. toQUiry. J - The ,323d Artillery Portland. "Tc To the Editor of The Journal Where "and tn what di vision Is the IJSd field artillery? WORTH M'VET. IlBth Eiity.tWrd dlrtrioa. Ust reported at Lcmaas, 100 mues southwest of Faria.1 The 37th Engineers Portland. Dec 28. To the Editor of The Journal In what division is Com pany B, Thirty-seventh engineers? Is It 'part of the army i occupauonj Where was It when the armistice, was signed, and where is it now? . - 21 OTtlc.it. I The ThirtT-aeTenth enaineen was last re ported at Bouilly. France. No . other informa tion.! . The 316lh Engineers Portland. Dec 28. To the Editor of The Journal Where is Company C, 316th engineers? In what division is it. and where? A SOLIiJEH S SISTER. Tbe El 6th ncineers Ts in tbe Ninety-first diTwion. which is last reported at Dentersheim, Belsuun.1 " The 307th Infantry Toledo. Dec. 28. To the Editor of The Journal Is Company F. 807th in fantry. Seventy-seventh division, in the army of occupation, or has It been ordered home? i A MOTHER. (It is at Lea Vignettes. France: not in army of occupation. o other information, j to an A common thief caught with his booty can be forced to return it to LlJ a a.-- 1. UI W,wa. 1UJ Mm J W V 1 1 t, I KJ . " . ur: 001 aiso? yvi vicar as iu uic league i nations, and Lloyd George assents to every Item in his program. Mr. Wilson says, in substance, that tlie old plan I of the balance of power must give way to some sort of a league or union in which tne strength THE FORGERIES STORY of fraud published in Saturday's Journal should stir Oregon people to indignation. of the big nations shall protect the As wag the habu of.many Eastern weakness oi tae wue ones. capitalists, he came here to despoil r 'Under the balance of power plan Oregon of her school and other the little nations were used as lands. trading stock, Just as Wall Street ne needed dummy entrymen to used the railroads in the good old mate applications for purchase of times. Ttey were peddled back and school lands. He had to have dum forth, divided into fractions, put yn- mics oriie, couldn't go forward Avith der governments they hated, with- his frauds. out a thought of consulting ffie He proposed to. Turner, a people: and without a thouglit of respedla&le young lawyer of Salem, their welfare. to sign an application for him. At The only purpose was to main- first Turner refused. Kelliher pro tain two hostile alliances as nearlj posed it again the next day. Money equal ar- might be. In case one was offered. Turner at last yielded alliance grew more powerful than to the temptation. . the other, everybody became fright- The court records at Salem reveal encd and began to talk war. The bal- Kelliher's infamy and tell the story ance ff .. power inevitably means of Turner's downfall. All the facts wars without end. The league of were confessed by Turner on the nations, as Mr. Wilson plans it, witness stand at the trial in which means no more war. Kelliher was convicted of : land . , Manifestly in his vision of the frauds. league of nations he is guided by In his testimony, Turner identi the constitution and history of the fied 30 applications for purchase, of United States, which, is the only school land and said he had forged " completely successful league of- na- the signatures, .taking the names tlons ever formed on earth. from the Salem directory, but chang It must be remembered, in order ing the Initials. For these forgeries, to understand the situation.-that our Kelliher paid Turner 17 each, and original 13 colonies were independ- Kelliher then took the forged appli- ent nations, as independent of one cations, with similar forged assign- another as France "and Italy are to- ments, to the proper authorities at day. But they merged their inde- the state house and was given deeds f pendence In a federal union. Who to the desired school lands. will deny that they have been gain- r Turner confessed on the witness ers by It? stand thatin forging the names, he The Revolutionary fathers might had used many kinds of pens and have contented themselves with set- held his hand in different positions ting tip a .balance of power among to disguise his handwriting. This the states. If they had done so, testimony! is illustrative of the our history would have been little method by which thousands upon more than a tale of war after war. thousands of acres of lands were se- T What they really did was to aban- cured by the land pirates. don the balance of power Idea al- ln a great many cases, because together and establish a federal com- tne school lands so taken were in ity. Under this arrangement it I the notorious Blue mountain forest makes no difference how bir and reserve, the manipulators were al strong California becomes. She will lowed to select instead, timber Jands never in this world think of at- in other yparts of the state, which tacking Oregon. So it would be ln I were worth many times as much. Europe under an intelligent leaguer John McNary was then district at- of nations. torney at Salem, and his brother, Charles L. McNary, now United States If the story is true that Governor 1 senator, was his deputy. They be- Wlthycombe has- fired Joe Keller. 1 came aware of Kelliher's operations, it may be a sign that he means to and at thir instance, the Marion take ; advantage vof the New Year to county grand Jury Indicted Kelliher, drop all of his' evil associates. No and at the trial of the case Kelliher doubt he owes them a heavy debt! was convicted. of gratitude for political services, The grand jury that convicted but, it he has any conscience at all. 1 Kelliher is the same grand jury that he must understand how wrong it made the now famous report declar Is to pay them off at the expense I ing that the applications for 500,000 of the publio welfare. The9 govern- acres ; of - school lands in a list or's ; parting with his beloved Joe which : is submitted to ' the state may, i perhaps, be the - first faint authorities, were based on forgeries light of a new dawn; ? and fraud. : Several thousand acres of land - were returned to the state TRUCKS AND ROADS . j as a result of the prosecution of Kelliher. Many lawyers are - ooenly qjlIiAYELERS on the highways lead- j saying that the state is in position; I mg uui ot t-oruana come upon to recover all lands thus fraudu- a great many heavy .trucks now- lently taken. a-days. They' are engaged in .Though Kelliher was convicted in all sorts of business. Some of the the lower court, the supreme court biggest ' carry I gasoline and , oil to let him off on the technical rule crossroads Karaxes. : Others are. ladMi th vi th milk cans. Still jt-S-Jfers haul corroborated testimony of an ao- ' w ood to the city. Now and then a complice. The forged signatures of hiige truck : with a. long coupling names of fictitious persons on the pole i plods slowly along with a load applications and assignments are of saw logs for some mill by ; the! oorroboralive evjdence enough for a roadside..,- ' . j layman, but they were not enough . ai times ti&e mis, wnen rain and l for the highest court. frost:have softened the surface of The big beneficiaries of these for- the Toad,; tbe. wide wheels of the jgeries, fiction and fraud are ln full irucss maae aeep rurrows in Ltnej possession of the . loot They were burface. , . Sometimes they plow their Jin the background whlla lesser men as HE world has a food problem Scarcity of food in Europe em phasizes it. High prices through out the world accentuate it. There is a way to cut the cost of food in any family. It can be done by selecting those foods which cost least in proportion to the body fuel they supply. In making these selections it is necessary to maintain a balanced ra tion in order that health may be protected and Improved. Haphazard diet is destructive. It undermines health. It reduces physical resist ance and opens the way to disease. It fails to supply the body with those elements which it must have in order to properly build, and carry forward the work tbe various organs arc called upon to perform. There are five food groups from which foods are drawn for a bal anced ration. These are the foods supplying mineral Tnatter, vegetable acids and body regulative substances, such as fruits and vegetables. Second, foods supplying protein for muscle building, such as milk, cheese, eggs, meats, poultry, fish, dried peas and nuts. Third, foods supplying starcfl, such grains, meal, flour, breakfast foods, bread, crackers, macaroni, cakes, potatoes and other starchy egetabies, Fourth, foods supplying sugar, such as sugar, 1 molasses, syrups, honey, candies, jellies and dried fruits. Fffth, foods' supplying fats, such as butter, cream, 4lard, suet, salt pork and salad oils. A balanced ration must contain a proper proportion of all these foods. If a. sufficient supply of each does not enter into the diet, there is malnutrition and a low physical re sistance. -The excessive use of food from one' or more of these groups to the neglect of the remainder, may be ven more injurious. It is important to be familiar with the facts of a scientific diet. Sound bodies and better health result from application of such information. Nor is this all. The cost of living can be measurably cut by using in the diet such combinations of the foods in the five groups as, while making a balanifed ration, cost the least. That process not only lowers the family board bill, but .it goes far to automatically solve the world's food problem. A food chart has been prepared which shows at a glance the food groups essential to a balanced ration and enables the holder to accom modate diet and prices. It is, Information "Which people should seek, for nothing is more im portant to man than proper care of that human temple which houses the soul and shelters life. COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF SMALL CHANGE Looks from here as if It would be a snappy. New Tear. . m w - To repeat our favorite year-end ad monition ; Do your New Tear's flopping early. . . . For the Junkers of the world. 11 Is going to be a stilt more unlucky number wan a ever was. m w m Concerning the kaiser's Christmas din ner, it isn't so much- the question of wnere ne ate, nut wravr i j If this sort of thing is to be kept going, Mr. Beats, just please-put in a few inches of snow for the Willamette valley wheat fields. , If the ex-kaUt-r uau always been as mum as he is now. there wouldn't be any need for anybody else to be saying anything much, either. e Whenever one reads anything about a proposition to hold an election ln Ger many one wonders how persons of. such efficiency can have overlooked certain suffrage and ballot provisions in the con stitutions and statutes, of the United States of America and of the several states. When it comes to elections your German is an infant indeed. : OREGON SIDELIGHTS The problem now Is to -make the world unsafe for the Bolshevist. Colonel Clark U-Wood of the Weton Leader says. , The Vale Enterprise wants to know if there is "any reason why Malheur coun ty should not generate her own electric power." e a " lUlcy Hucker of Linn county Is out of luck. Uncle Sam tried twice to mcke him clothes blar enough for a a.foot-4 kid. and then mustered him out before his last ordered uniform, tailored In the East, reached Camp- Lewis. Riley weighs 300 pounds. Conducted by H. II. Jonas, editor of the Times, a "class in news writing and publicity" has been formed in the Beaverton high school. - -The high school correspondent of the Times writes. "We hope soon to be able to write items of interest lor the paper. It may. not be so bad as the Inde pendence Post thinks when it says: 'The war's end will greatly reduce the number of tourists westward. Next summer everybody will go to Europe who has the price to get there. The only tourists who will come west are those who are airaia to ride in a boat. Ragtag and Bobtail 1 Stories From 12 very here JOURNAL MAN AT HOME By Fred Lockley The Her in Need N the reconstruction days following ; A the return of the Second Oregon from the Philippines the response of tbe pub lic to needy heroes , was somewhat strained at times. Colonel W. C North, who was then a discharged sergeant, got one man. whom he called "Dick" be cause that wasn't his name, t jobs tn . two weeks. Then one of the comrades in arms died In a distant city and the body was shipped to Portland for bur ial. There was do money to pay for that ceremony and Sergeant North, ia desperation, got up a dance at the Armory, and, among others, Dick was sent out to see how many tickets he could sell. Me sold a good many,, but unfortunately his dipsomania came on strong and he absconded with the pro-, ceeds of his sales. "I never saw Dick un til President Wilson called for troops to. settle up with the Hun." said Colonel North. "The remarks Z -addressed to him didn't sit well on his understanding and he vanished again. I hope X won't see him for another IS years." A. D. C City and County Consolidation Portland, Dec 24. To the Editor of The Journal In a letter in The Journal of December 14 I called attention to some city and county official duplica tlons and closed the article with the question, "In case of consolidation, what officers ought to be retained and who should go?" and suggested that tax payers interested make a survey, by which, of course, I meant a complete investigation into duplications, including the engineering departments, which are many and expensive, especially when you consider the engineers connected with the Port of Portland and those connected with other instrumentalities embraced within our. county and "city governments. The people have been generous in vot ing money for docks, for dredging and improvements and probably, had there been fewer employes of certain kinds, the public would now have more money for improvements.- To find out these things , and locate the leaks should be the work of a courageous, patriotic com mittee made up of men who are not always looking for personal gatn and who without which can see no good in any public movement. It is. question able whether, without this information, consolidation work could even be intel ligently commenced. ,Much information as to the costs of government, prior to consolidation and after, can be had by calling on Auditor Funk, who has some statistics and United States investiga tions on the subject. I note what W. II. Hurlburt in a let ter of December 20 has to say, and his generous offer of help. I ain not per sonally acquainted with him. but if a few men of the same spirit will associ ate themselves and act carefully, a sane beginning Boon would be had. We ought to know, before we go too far. whether we prefer to retain a cjinntv form of eovernment in the con solidation scheme, or a city form, for certainly the least expensive ana most efficient form should be adopted, keep ing continually in mind that the new government must be representative, re- "wiiST. V vTrnment Conducted by I tbe S23d i. in tl.e Elfhtyfirst diTtton. Lt sibilltles of a government conuctea py i t w France, ou Korember 28. o The people who are agitating for the consolidation of Portland and Multnomah coynty will feel fresh courage now that' Mr. . Benson has Joined them. For a long time they have been hammering away at the problem without making much ap parent progress. With Mr. Benson for an ally the good cause may move faster. AT OREGON CITY A' ' The 110th Infantry Cottage Grove, Or., Dec. 29. To the Editor of The Journal Where was the 110th Infantry when the armis tice was signed? A relative In that regiment was reported missing in ac tion October 9. I am trying to locate the division he was in and who his com manding officer was. MRS. S. F. DAME WOOD, f The 110th reciment is in .the Twenty- eighth division, which has been added to the army of occupation. On armistice dar the li rision was at Heudicourt, 25 miles southeast of Verdun and at St. Dizier. Its commanding of ficer was Colonel t rsnk Tcgnpgins.1 The 318th Engineers 'Portland, Dec. 27. To the Editor of Tbe Journal Where was Company F, 318th engineers, on November 11? Also the engineer train? Will they be re turned soon? A SOLDIER'S FRIEND. (The 318th engineers and train of same number are in the Sixth dirision. which, on NoTember 11. was at gtonne, south of Sedan. and at St- Dizier. No information as to return date.) , Fourth Trench Mortar Battalion Portland. Dec. 28. To the Editor of The Journal ln what division is battery A. Fourth trench mortar battalion? When will it come home? A SOLDIER'S WIFE. (Thia battalion is ln 1 the Fourth division, which is part of the army -of occupation. The Twenty-third Engineers Portland. Dec. 30. To the Editor of The Journal Where was truck com pany 8, Twenty-third engineers, when the armistice was signed, and where ia it now? M. D. B. The Twenty-third engineers headquarters is at Vraincourt: other companies Scattered. The Twentieth Engineers Fort Rock, Or.. Dec. 28. To the Edi tor of The Journal In what division is the Twentieth englneets ajid Is it in the army of occupation? FATHER. r Tw.nti.if It jn vino.rv headanartera at Tmirs " other companies in about 60 places. The 323d Infantry Marshfleld. Or., Dec. 28. To the Ed itor of The Journal Where and in what division ts Company F. 323d, infantry? Will it soon return? L. B. ,r,r and hih oricedi officials .1.,"' "t7' i with an endless number ot oerjanas. L. S. IB. The Third Oregon Forest Grove, Or.. Dec 30. To the K Inauirers Attention Editor of The Journal Where is the iTk. ... of inoniTies concerning the ( Third Oregon? w..4r. of military units will be greatly expe- FATHER OF A SOLDIER. dited if tbe division (if known), aa weH as the j (The Third Oregon was used as a replace- Mfiment. ia aesignateu. iic " . uirni wnu uu ih..u.hi. mu should by all means be avoided; these are ln- gsnizations. numerable ana weir irau-i..m Th. trinr,Mntl. Infanlrv Krli th.en out. into the woras mey represent. " v.t. nn words in oreliminaries, but ask your . cifton. Or.. Dec. 28. To the Editor of questions ln the briefest lorm. as appears, .or - Tne journa In what .division is the ample, in those tnsj iouow X"Z"L FtehtMnth infantry, and is it in the And all inquirers lana. ior inai mu, ... " ''', rnntrttmtors to thU department! are urgea voii.uj u.ui,.. . (From Central Oregon Mr. Lockley brir.ga mora good storiea. On is told by a pioneer who. as a lad. saw old Jack Km Till in its prime. The other is of former Portland man who ts strug gling with a dry homestead and watting for tbe water that will make him glad be waited. J "I guess I can qualify as a pioneer, all right," said the clerk at the cigar counter of the Prlnevllle hotel. "I have lived In Oregon 63 years. My name is John E. Ross. My father. George Ross, ran a livery stable at Jacksonville, Southern Oregon, in tho early days. My father's brother was General John E. Ross. He was in the Indian wars of 1855 and 1856. and also in the Modoc war. I was born Decem ber 6, 1853. ZVa miles north of Jackson ville, about a mile from where Bill Han ley was bom, and not far from where Colonel 'Robert E. Miller of Portland first saw the light. . 'Tn my day I have done things more exciting than selling gum and candy. But times have changed. I waa drawing a man's wages when I was 12 years old I did a man's work driving cattle from Jacksonville to Linkvllle, ln Klamath county, si could ride anything on four legs In those days. When I was about 13 I got Into the racing game as a Jockey. Self and saddle weighed ln at 55 pounds. One of the first races I rode was at JacksonvUle, along about 1867 cr 1868. Jt was a 200-yard race for tlOOO a side. I won, and the owner of the horse I rode filled my pocket with gold pieces. He made a killing betting on his horse. He gave me $250. I rode racehorses for a good many years. When I got too heavy to be a jockey I became a cowboy, working around Pendleton Centervllle and Walla Walla. Then I ran a pack train. Later I drove stage. Still later I ran a livery stable. Then I became a prospector and miner. Then I tended bar. Later I ran a saloon. I can t think of any job I haven't done except to wait on table or herd sheep. Of course, I mean outdoor jobs. I never did any ladylike work, like being a bookkeeper or working in a bank ex cept a faro bank. "For years I kept thinking I would go back and live in my boyhood home Jacksonville. I remembered how, as a boy, I used to divert a little stream to flow over a corner of Young's place, where bedrock was near the surface, and then, with my jack-knife, scrape small nuggets and gold dust out of the cracks to buy powder and lead to ko deer-hunting. I remembered how rich Jackson creek and Rich gulch were. I remembered Beekman's bank and the Bedrock saloon, and old man Helm, who ran it. I remembered old Peter BriU. the Swiss photographer, and Drum & Kluggage's stable, and the one we had Ross & Burke's and how the miners and packers, with their pack horses, used to come and go between Yreka, Crescent City, Scott's Bar and I wanted to go back. use the exact dateline and address style and form that are to be se-Jn , very communica tion herein published, forgetting tne orainary form used; in social or business writing. xney will greatly oblige by so doing. ) A SOLDIER'S SISTER. First division. Yes. The Forty-Ninth Coast Artillery Union. Or.. Dec. 26. To the Fditor of The Journal In what division is the Forty-ninth coast artillery and where cupatkm. 1 was it when the armistice was signed : The Fifth Field Artillery IV v . Fifteenth Artillery Portland, Dec. 29. To the Editdr of The Journal Where, Is Company A, Fifteenth field artillery? wnen wni it come Thome? O. F. PATRICK. In the Second division; in the army of oo- tm . Uam thj Third battalion information covering armistice period. T&&SrS2Tl- .r&ro The Journalwhat Vision iTbtery A, FUth field artillery? Is it listed for early return? SOLDIER'S SISTER. Fifth division; in army ot occupation. J The Forty-Seventh C A. C. Portland, Dec 26. To the Editor of division is the Battery F, and will it be lnme soon The Fifty-Ninth Infantry Pendleton. Dec. 26. To the Editor of J The Journal In what division Is Com- pany A, Fifty-ninth infantry, and whete 7 w'hal was it when the armistice was signed? iopv-seVenth C A C snT.niRR'S mother. I? ort -sevemn a. v.. A SOLDIER'S MOTHER. In the Fourth division, which was at Lucey. so mucs aouwwaa vi " Dizier. 1 The Sixty-Ninth Coast Artillery Portland. Dec 28. In what division is Ratterv C. Sixty-ninth coast artillery. and where is tnis aivision : a r n.xrsu, SOLDIER'S WIFE. The Forty-seventh, it is reported, is likely to return soon. ' Coast artillery units are not In corporated in divisions, l To Learn of the Wounded Portland. Dec 28. To the Editor of The Journal Where sHall i write-to in FOOD OF WAR WORKERS. One of the most interesting discoveries from the food? problem of the Great War was the finding of the committees which studied the food of English munition workers. There had been much talk about the men and boys gorging themselves, and overloading their stomachs with all sorts of Indigestible trash, just because. for the first time m tneir lives, uiey 'had the price" to eat anything what ever they fancied. So the health com mittee proceeded to put it to the test. First they collected a lot of sample self chosen meals, by the simple expedient of buying dinner buckets or lunch palls with their contents at the ractory gate as the workers came in In the morning. These meals were carefully examined and estimated ln terms of calories or heat units. Then they were compared with, the results drawn from the meals a wnere IS wus unmmi .u-.. . journal wnere smut x wrueMv ui It is at Libourne. .France; not attached tolquire about, a man ln the service in any division. Sanitary Train 315 Dufur, Or., Dec, 27. To the Editor of American Red Cross. Washington. D. C."J France to see if he has been wounded? ADA DOANE. Address "Bureau of CommnntnaUons. The Journal Where was field hospital 357, sanitary train 315, when the armis tice was signed? What division is it in? Is it listed for home or to be in the-army of . occupation? .. SOLDIER'S MOTHER. TThe train ia in the Ninetieth division, which is ia the army of omipation. j The 115th Ammunition Train Portland, Dec. 28. To the Fditor of The Journal Where is the 115th ammu- The 65th Coast Artillery Portland. Dec 28. To the Editor of The Journal Do you know anything about the 65th coast artillery? We have a son in this artillery ana nave had no word from him since November 6 MRS. J. F. THOMPSON. f Announoed December -7 as assigned to early return Dome, j The 348tfiInraniry Gold Hill. Dec 28. To the Editor of NNOUNCEMEiST of an eight hour day and large bonuses for the workers : is a - 'significant happening in the affairs of the Oregon City woolen mills. The announcement was made at a dinner given by- the management to the employes the other , evening. The eight hour day takes the place of the present day of nine hours. The bonuses: hefeafter to be paid are: ' . C- ' Employes in the service " six months, t per cent; one .year in the service , 5 : per' cent; two years, 7 per cent ; three years, 18 per cent and five years 15 per cent. Even more significant, the - pres ident . of the company announced that , hereafter . the workers in each department of the , great establish ment would be permitted to have a committee which is to meet once a - month, or at other times, if de sired, with a committee represent ing the employers for 'the adjust- ment of .any , differences or, correc tion of any grievances. . ' . , . This action Is an .approach to the course . recently recommended by Charles M. Schwab, one of America's largest employers of Idbor. Speak- nitlon train. Company G, and is It to I The Journal In what division is the return soon? ETHEL CHAPPELL. machine gun company of the 848th la Tn the Fortieth division, which is at Revigny, J fantry? When wllrat come home? 80 miles southwest pt Verdun. No information 1 SOLDIER'S FATHER. as w rerurn oatcj fit ia tn the Eighty-seventh division. . No Fifth Marine Orps I other information. 1 t , Milwaukie, Or.. De. 27. To the Edi-1 The 32iih Infantry tor of The Journal Where was Company j Oswego, Dec 21. -To the Editor of M. Fifth marine corps, when, the armis-1 ni Journal Where was the 32 4th in- tice was signed and is It on Us way I fantrr. Company D, when the armistice home? A. READER. I was signed, and In what division? Who fit is part of the Second division, which la I was its commanding Of floe r and is it with the army of occupation.) I Mr: of the army of occupation? Th rRlh Infanlrv A SOLDIER'S MOTHER. . .. I f The Klahty-nrat' division was at Ssmmi Aioany; wr.r uec. Zi.-io me Miwr OI tv. Mr v.rdnn. and at U-Sur-Tille. ISO The Journal In what division ia the I nnM southeast of Paris. ot in army of 156th infantrv? Is it with the armv of cupatkm. Commanding, officer svtta ia- n(iAn? Wh... -. iemK I taatry. Colonel Oeorgw w. Moaaa. 11? A SOLDIER'S MOTHER. I The 856th is in the. Eighty-ninth division. wnicn is in tnt army occupation. Un .o- 1 T , v- rilvlalAn fnm- vember 11 the division waa at Tailly. 20 miles! .I, ' ixr'l " 7 v. .' lMsier. J pany u, is.u iuihiu. ,, nu mu The lG2dlnTantry Portland, Dec. 28. To the Editor of south of Verdun and at Br. The 3i5lh Artillery Halsey, Dec 27. To the Ed iter of The Journal Is Battery D, 345th field ar- tlUery, in an occupation division, or is I day it division when the armistice was signed? Where is It now? ' A SOLDIER S SISTER. I In the Fortr-nrst eUvtaon. On armistice at St. Ataman m nwrem, atemr Be lt on its way home? MRS. R. L. BILYEU . It W is' the Ninety-first, which is one of the Brrrona ot tne mrmy-w eocapeuoa. J The: ISUh infantry Portland. ; Dec 28. To the. Editor of The Journal Where and in what di vision is Company E, 164th infantry? was it ever la acUon' G.XJNGAAS. .(In the- Forty-first division, at St. At nan. dan, It i at the aasae place aow.j The? IlSth SuddIt .Train Kerby. Dec. 2. To the Editor f Trie Journal Where Is Company B, 116th supply tram, A. p. u. iz?. now smaate7 A 8UB8CRIBE1C rTha train ia in the forty-first diviatow. lev catad at St- Aignan and ISoyera. wear Beds a. 1 Th Thirteenth Artillery PortlandV'Dec - 28. To thev Editor of The Journal In wnat a i vision is Bat tery " E, Tnu-tesntn iieia artillery 7 Base Hospital Unit 46 Portland, VDec 28. To the Editor of j Where was it August i, and where ts it in journal is case hospital unit If now? A fathbr. the other camps. At last I did. "Talk about your tragedies. I stayed there just two hours. I was blue and homesick for weeks afterward. I wish I had never gone back. The old Jack sonville was gone. Only its ghost re mained. It was gone the same place the packers and stage-drivers had gone. Jacksonville could have been a city. That was before there was any Med- ford. The railroad offered to come through Jacksonville for 825.000. but the cupidity, Btupidlty and stubbornness of some of the leading citlsens of Jack sonville resulted in the railroad going a few miles to the east, leaving Jack sonville high and dry to dream in the sun of the splendor of her past. It makes me homesick to think of it. How did you leave t nines tn France?' m m m Before my trip to Prlnevllle I had spent two days ln Jefferson county, at f inner s hotel at Madras. I saw a rancher drive up with a thin bay team and an old farm wagon. I talked with him. I wanted to find out from some homesteader about conditions on the dry-land homesteads. He was unloading seme squashes for the hotel. "I made more money on one acre of squashes tills year than I did on all my wheat, he said. "It was a dry season, and we dry farmers have had two extra dry seasons In succession. Our heat has yielded only two to six bushels to the acre. My name Is J. Y. Crews. I have a homestead on Mud Springs flat, six miles northeast of here. For seven years I was a conductor on the Sell wood lino, Portland. I used to run on the Estacada line, and also on the Ore gon City line. I came up here nine years ago. I have Mx children. We have been hanging on by our eyebrows for several years, waiting and hoping -;and praying for the coming of wattr. If we can hang on till irrigation comes w will forget our nine lean years and will be able to raise banner crops, raised six tons of squashes on one aero this year, lou will see what we live on when I show you my load. See. here it is. Here is a mule hide. I wilt get about 83.-0 for it. The mule was old. 1 couldn't afford to buy feed for him, so I shot him. I will use his carcasj to trap coyotes. Here is a bobcat hide I will get 12 bounty for It and sell the hide for about $3. Here is a mink hide, which will bring $2.50. Here are tha hides of two female coyotes. I will get SI bounty on each of them and about $8 each for their hides. Here is a deg coyote, for which I will get 13 bounty. The hide is poor, so I can't get anything for it. When we once get the irrigation project in operation I won't have to de pend on mule hides and coyotes. I win have smiling fields of alfalfa and fat. white-faced cattle, and my wife will have a Ford In place of this team and old wagon. We have the rich land- and the sunshine. All we need Is the water." Bliorjins I do not like that BUgtiaa chap. lie gives eo much advice. He's a whole lot too fresh, and aa I've told him oore wr twice. He's always ready any time To tell you what to do. Such people always stake aae tired. 1 hale tbeaa all I iJoa'i you? Another thing about that anas - - ' That I abominate: He'll never listen to advice. Although rem give it straight. Now time and time and time Sgala I've told bias, what to do When he was going wrong. He mael I hate such folks 1 Don't you? Bomsrvilla, Journal. . I'ncle Jeff Snow Says:.v Mebby them Bolshevik fellers' in Rushy ain't so foolish and wild as they look. I read t'other day that what law yers they hadn't killed off they kSP In jail. The News in Paragraphs World Happenings Briefed tor Benefit Of Journal Readers .GENERAL . " Search of the home of Oeorre Knorr in Denver, Sunday, revealed contraband liquor valued at 14,500. Captain Charles Tates. managing agent at New Tork for the United States shipping board, has resigned. Two million dollars in currency, to pay American soldiers In Francs, left New York Monday on the transport Leviathan. As a result of -kindling firs with kero sene, Mrs. R. A. Hogg of Kingsbury. Cal., her daughter Nova, and May Saw yers, a neighbor, are dead. , In a speech at the Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences Sunday night, ex President Taft approved President Wil son's trip to Europe and his plan for a league of nations. The body of Private David Trolb. supposed to have been killed by Mexi cans, was found Sunday on tbe Mexi can side of the Rio Grande, lis had been beaten with a club. HOW TO LIVE By Dr. Woods-Hutchinson, Former Portland Physician ordered in the works canteen and cafe teria and the. weekly food bills ln typi cal households. Much to everyone's surprise and also gratification, the average result from hundreds of cass was that the diets adopted on their own initiative, just guided by their own unspoiled appetites, by, men at heavy and at light work, by women at various grades of occupation, and by boys and girls, seldom varied more than 10 or 15 per cent from the ideal amounts required ta keep them in health at their age and character of work! Which Is one of the highest tributes to the soundness of our In stincts and the good common sense of average humanity that has ever been paid. Tomorrow : (No. 2). Food of War Workers division, which is with the army of occupation. Do not know where it mvi August The 309th Supply Company v.mmivr. Wash.. Dec 28. To the Editor of The Journal Where is ad vance quartermaster depot No. 1, at which supply company 309 Is stationed, and when is it expected to return? A BlSlbn. in,. tAttti .nnr.1v train was with the Eighty- ,Jhi.Uni. at the date of tbe armistice. and the division was at Kenvie. 10 miles north east of Bordeaux. ro isionMi, turn date,l The 322d Infantry T3rti.ni. Dec 28. To the Editor of The Journal Please give me some in formation as to my brother. I ddress all his letters as rouows: r. r.. Inf, P. O. N. O. U. S. A. 791." Kindly tell tne If they are still In France or on the way home and also in what divi sion would he be. A fcRlLJJlt.K O BlOiail. rtfi. mriment U in the Eighty-first division. i... mto at Hoauai uieae. a Iran ."7" . . . .rni- 11A few milea from verann. inu i irni-tun, nXi T southeast of l-aris. No information as to return. J . The Seventeenth Artillery a .nri tw ? To the Editor of The Journal I have a boy In the I7th field rtnierv. I have not been able to find out what division or origaoe ne oeionsa to, so do not know whether he is com- insr home or win oe wnn m ; i occupation. I would appreciate inter mat Inn A uinw. (Tne 17th artillery U ra the Second divi eioi. which ia part ot the army of occupa tion. ,. ' Eighth M. G. Battalion Portland, Dec 27. To the Editor of The Journal What are the division number and present location of Cora nemr D. ElarhUt machine gun battalion ; also location previous to the signing of the armistice? A SOLDIER'S MOTHER. tit hi in the Third diviakm, which fa in the areay 'a oeewpauon. asn sacae-a . unaw. Cm armistice day this dtvieiea waa at Tannors, SS saiiea aawtk s Voroww. sad at St. inner. J The Fifty-fifth Artillery . Newberg. Or, Dee. 29. To tie. Editor of Tho Journal Where was battery A. 65th artillery, when the armistice was signed? When will It be returned home? --.' . y ' - . ' A SUBSCRIBER. The Fifty nfth artillery is after bed to the Samuel R. Thurston was the first del egate to congress after tbe establish ment of a provisional government in Oregon. He was amative of Maine and was born in 1816. After graduating from Bowdoln college he went to Iowa and thencs cams to Oregon in 1847. After his election -to congress ia 1849 fee went to Washington and served one term. On his way home he died at sea between Panama and Acapulco. His body was buried at the latter place, but a few years afterward the territorial ' legisla ture appropriated money to disinter it and bring it to Salem, where it now rests in the Odd Fellows' cemetery. part Of the army of occupation? Will U I (The Thirteenth artillery ts in the i'ourto Nineteen U duiama. Kb ether lab oamatwa. J Olden Oregon Samuel R. Thurston First to Repre sent Oregon In Congress. NORTHWEST NOTES Three hundred officers and 2500 men will leave Camp Lewis this week for their homes. Umatilla county came to the front on the Christmas Red Cross roll call with . lO.OSti membership. Philander S. Hagen. for 40 years a resident of Lebanon, died Christmas day in his eighty-first year, Salem baa placed a ban on public gatherings of every Kind, including churches, schools and theatres. John Stewart Brace, one of the best - known lumbermen in tne raciric norta west, la dead at his home in Seattle, Twenty thousand railroad ties, valued : at $17,000. were floated down the San tlani river to Lebanon the past week. , There afe 2415 persons of voting age in Idaho who can neither read nor write, or 3.1 per cent of the population. The gas schooner Delia is high and dry on the beach at Port Orford with : her cabin torn off and the bull dis mantled. Francis Blanchard. 17-year-old son of Fred Blanchard. was fatally scalded Saturday at, the sugar factory near Yakima. The Nlntleth and Ninety-second squad- ; rous of the' spruce production divisions -have left Toledo for Vancouver to be , mustered out. Richard Detrlck. a Lebanon shoe dealer who recently Invented liquid rubber oil, has refused an offer, of c $2000 for tbe patent. The first car of ground limestone from the state lime plant has reached ( Toledo. Farmers of Lincoln county have ordered six cars. Spokane will ask the Washington legislature to pass a bill permitting- , municipalities to own and operate their own telephone systems. A 10-mlll Ut, which will brlnr In ' $130,000, has been voted by the- tax- payers of Columbia . county for road building for the coming year. .; The Tulare Mining company, which recently acquired 600 seres of dolomite" near Colvllle. is now shipping its cal cined product at tbe rate of about 700 tons per month. FOREIGN Trio Poiifih rovernment has estab-. . lished a military front against the ad vancing Bolsheviki. " Through train service betweeen Paris and Brussels.' which was stopped la 1914. was resumed Sunday. , Exchanges are now going on in Paris with a view .to the assembling of the interallied conference on January 12. Sinn Felners at Cork Saturday night blew up the monument erected in honor of Cork soldiers who fought in the Boer war. James Sexton, a dock worker in St. Helens, Lancashire, defeated Rigby p, W. Swift, Unionist, for a seat in par liament.. -. The daughter of Leon Trotsky, the Russian war minister, was arrested in Warsaw Sunday, and C.000,000 marks -were found in her apartment. FUTURE FINANCIAL FOUNDATION PERHAPS your whole success in life will start from that investment , in War Savings Stamps wh ich you are going to make TO MO R- , ROW in order to help Oregon go ? over the top. War Savings Stamps may be pur chased at Uanks, Newspaper;-'- C : : : unices ana rostomce : : : . Portland yar Savings Stamp Crnrnittee' 1 J