s ; THE OREGON . DAILY JOURNAL, P ORTLAND, MONDAY, JUNE 16, 1919. AM 1XDEPEXDEXT IfEWSPAPER C. 8. JACKSON.. .Publisher luelished rrr day, afternoon and -.narninc . (except Bunday afternoon), at Tb Journal Baildins. Broadway and . Yamhill atrejt. ' Portland, Oregon. . .. Entered at the- Postoffies at Portland. reon. j ior transmission. tbroucB. the mails aa second TEIFHOXE--Main' 717:'Homew A-051. All drpartmanta -reached br then Bnmbera. - 'Tell the operator what department Ton want. KORfclON ADVEHTISlNa HEI'BESENTA'riVE - -iJamin KteUwr Co., Branewiea IJnirains, sifts avenue. New Tors; 00 Mailers Building. Chicago " fcuhscriptJon terms by matt, or to any addrcaa in the United H fates or Mexico: ' DAILY (MOKWINO OR A FTEBSOOI) 'Co year. . .15.01) Om month t .BO ' 8CNTMT On rser. ....2.60 1 On month $ -23 DAILT (HOBNDIO OR AFTERNOON) AND SUNDAY Ona year..;. .$7.50 Ona month f .65 Whwn you are so devoted to doing what ' la right that you press atraight on to that and disregard what men are earing about - you, there is the triumph of moral courage. , Phillips Brooks. GERMAN PROPAGANDA AGAIN D T-PEAT of the peace treaty through attack upon the league is the chief hope of Germany. , . - Thfi -German' government Is ' known to be regularly making its appropriation for propaganda, just as : J Germany did before the war and dur tlng. the war. Germany's best card J is through use of that propaganda J In the United Slates, to strengthen J opposition to the league." ' . German propaganda, 'on which mil- :.. lions were spent as we know from t court trials, blew up American mu- - miiuti wii lis ill . unit; vi. jnar. t nab s propaganda wa,s brought-to bear upon members of congress who were In duced to vote to forbid Americans .from traveling on ships carrying munitions of war. " Germaq'propaganda did not appear exclusively as a German activity. "TheAvork was done through societies of one kind and another. It was done in the name of pacifism and under ; other disguises, but it was made-in- Germany and paid for by Germany. - . German propaganda got us into the war. v After spending millions In spreading it broadcast through- out America, the German govern ment " thought the work had secured the desired results. - The German gov ernment was led to believe that Ger man propaganda and German influ ence in America had raised up a sufficient anti-war. sentiment and a sufficient pro-German, sentiment to prevent congress from declaring war. Germany's game through propa- ganda. cost us tens of thousands of dead American boys, cost us tens of thousands of .American boys crippled for:, life, and cost us billior.s . of . money. Willi the German government spending money now in propaganda J In ' the United States to defeat the peace treaty through the fight on the league, .Germany is refusing to . sfgn the treaty. She is encouraged in that refusal by the results of her .propaganda work against the league. H Is a cunning game. It fs mislead ing many Americans, just as German propaganda misled many Americans before and during the war. ,It Is the same old meddlesome in lerference by Germany in American ' domestic, affairs. It is the same old '. "meddlesome Interference . by ..Germany in the domestic" Affairs of all nations. In this fight against the league American citizens are con fronted with the same sinister influ , -ence and the same old ' game that Germany played with its result of j timing us finally into a terrible con flict., to pay the cost' of which, we . shall have to bend our backs to taxes 'and bonds for a generation. J Th game is perfectly apparent Th'e German propagandists -are sup plementing the work of the Amer ican senators who are opposing the . league for partisan and other 'rea i sons. News' dispatches from Paris a few days ago showed how Ger v: many Is encouraged now not to sign while ' a ' month ago she was " ready to sign ; and reluctantly accept her - fate. If the peace' treaty is defeated ' In the American senate now, Germany ill gain addefl tifhe In " which to squirm j'out of lhf terms which the now united, allies have fixed as the iust payment she ; must . make for bringing, on the war. " 1 Delay. . postponement, controversies "at, Paris; disputes and 'differences in America that - . is what Germany ' wants,' and that Is . why Germany is - spending money to fan American controversies into - flame. ' ' Tire one and. only- way to meet this cunning German game is to be' now as -wo ' were ; In war, a united people,- de- iermined to secure In peace? the fruits of victory won in war. f The game 'of. the' propagandists Is . to flood American senators with, pro tests against the League of Nations. The thing for 100 per cent .Americans toi-do.1 is to meet; the -propagandists at their own game and f lood Amer ican senators, with letters urging ap- proval of ' the -peace, treaty, as it " stands. - " ; The issue , is . this : Is ! Germany to run J the domestic affairs- of .this country, or are the American people to run their Own affairs in their own way without- meddlesome interfer ence by paid propagandists from abroad? ' '. i ' ' -' s." 5 The German government still mikes appropriations for propaganda vork and is using much, of the money in propaganda throughout the United States in the hope of beating the peace treaty through the ftght on the League of Nations. We face the same old game that-got us Into the war. If Germany can defeat the treaty by creating controversy and confusion in America, she can gain more time and perhaps rob the allies of the fruits of victory. There is just as much need now to be 100 per cent Ameri can as 4urfng the war. We are com batting the same enemy government and that government is up to its old gahie of trying to divide America. .SHIP BY TRUCK "S' IUP by truck." That was the slogan on each machine in a motor truck parade in Portland Saturday. As you watched it, the show im pressed you with the thought that the men behind truck production and distribution are convinced as to the great service the new transportation vehicle is to render. Their confi dence in the efficiency of their ma chines stared at you from each pass ing truck In the slogan "Siiip by truck." A highly 'Changed condition is un doubtedly to come from this inven tion. It is to be an evolution In transportation. Local traffic will more and more be handled by this chc"ap and highly convenient device. It will be the farmer's method of transporting is heavy products to railroad station and steamboat land ing, if not to the market place itself. Confined ,to no fixed routes, bound to no track of steel, free to function wherever -there is a good road, the power truck Is one of the forerun ners of a. new and marvelous age. Sign the treaty, or face an allied drive on Berlin, is the latest an nouncement from Paris as to the at titude of the allies' conference. The armistice was granted Germany on certain conditions, and her refusal to sign is a refusal to abide by the terms of the armistice. If there can be no agreement through diplomatic negotiations, the inexorable alterna tive of war is to fight the issue to a finish on the field. Next Saturday is reported as the day for military advance in case the Germans refuse to sign. KILLING THE KILLER CAPITAL punishment, which was restored in the state of Wash ington by the recent session of 'if liri3lfitiirf is Tint 4a K. rtf purbed in its administration by the referendum, which was threatened by those opposed to the death penalty but failed for insufficient signatures to the petitions. It is a question provocative ofL. un ending deb.ate and discussion. Those who believe in lopping off heads lhave it in their blood. Argument will not change their convictions. Those who oppose it are as deeply rooted in their beliefs. It is, natural that this should be so since the taking of human life, or not taking it, is the prize for' which the de baters contend. The main argument always ad vanced in support of 'capital punish ment is that it is a preventative of murder. It can be justified, if at ail, on that ground alone. It will 'be interesting to note, after a sufficient lapse of time, whether the return of Washington to the -old order will bear out that contention. The state punished Us murderers, . such-of them as were convicted, for a long, long time, by killing them. It has had a spell when it incarcerated them for life. Now it has reverted to the old system. After the hangman has op erated for a time .the statistician can get his pencil out and tell us whether killing the killer stops the killing or doesn't. It is common knowledge that most of the airplane accidents result from spectacular maneuvers by airmen. It is highly probable" that the. ble tragedy in Portland would have been averted had the pilot adhered more rigidly to the rules of safety. BUT ONE ANSWER . WAS it, or not, significant that the Seattle and Chicago dele gates to the national conven tion of ihe American Federation of Labor cast their votes against the resolutions to express disapproval of wartime prohibition and to advocate the exemption of beer from the na-' tional prohibition amendment, on which propositions they were out voted by more than six to one? Chicago was never noted for Its dryness. Its nearest approach was found in the limitations upon manu facture enforced by the wartime pro hibition act. j Seattle has been dry, theoretically, as most seaports are supposed 'to be, with prohibition within an wetness Just beyond. But in spite of the partiality of the re strictions imposed upon liquor, 'the representatives of labor in those two cities contend that the improved con ditions growing out, of the lessened consumption? pf intoxicants bound them to the support of prohibition. It is that fact which is driving John Barleycorn farther and farther into oblivion. The mass of mankind without liquor has been given a sober and sobering glimpse of the mass or mankind : with liquor. It teaches its own lesson, and there is but one answer , to the problem. , ' The news comes that, the German government is doing propaganda work in America for German purposes, Just as was done before and during the war. That government is spending money lavishly to have the peace treaty defeated I in the American sen ate through the, fight on the League of Nations. The object is plain: De lays and? disputes all "work to the advantage6 of Germany. .Through dis putes among the allies, such as the fight of American senators on the league, Germany gains, time and stands a chance of robbing the allies of the fruits of victory. It is the same old German game. A FAMOUS COMMUNITY A BUSINESS of 12.600,000 was done by . the Puyallup cooperative berry growers last y$a. They began business as a co operative organization in 1902," and canned berries at a cost of 12800; which they could not sell. It took them two years to pay off the first season's deficit. W. A. Paulhamus was one ofthc members. As the whole Northwest knows, he . became presiding genius of the organization, and. in conjunc tion with the board of directors com posed of berry growers, is its di recting head. The system at Puyallup was re cently explained to tue writer by Mr. Paulhamus. Information about it is of value to those who hope for more scientific marketing. The association has already sold f386,000 of canned berries for delivery out of the 1919 crop. Besides the berries grown at Puyallup, straw berries, raspberries and loganberries are heavily drawn from Oregon. Seven carloads of strawberries ywere im ported this season from Sacramento, California. There was never such a demani as now. Everybody has been expecting prices to. decline and the pantries and warehouses are all empty. Prohibition, is a further cause of demand. Berry juices are requireu for soft drinks. Every first class hotel, in Mr. Paulhamus' view, will soon have a soft drink bar in its lobby. There are 1800 berry growers in the Puyallup association. The berry farms range in size from one fourth of an acre to 17 acres. Most of the growers have cows and poultry. The chickens run In the berry tracts, con sume pests and fertilize the soil. The territory covered by the grow ers is seven miles long and two wide, and is the most densely populated area of its kind in the United States. There is a commissary department which furnishes supplies, bought in huge quantities at low cost, to the member groweVs. The distribution is, through two cooperative stores, and the manner in which these stores are financed is unusual. Thus, if 'a member grower has $50 or $100 or $500 for which he has no immediate require ment, the association uses it at his pleasure and pays him eight per cent interest. He can draw all or pat of it at any time. The association thus becomes his banker. , While his money -so earns money, there is another source of profit from its use. The low cos at which gro ceries and usual supplies are bought by the association, and the low ex pense of overhead and the non-profit from 'conduct of the stpres, yields members a saving of 12 per cent on their purchases, as proven through long experience. This 12 per cent added to the eight per cent which the surplus money of member grow ers draws, gives a profit of 20 per cent. 5 ... . Until last year, the association oper ated without revolving fund or capi tal of. any kind other than their berry plants and canning plants. Then, for a proposed extension of operations, a fund of 52700 was cre ated. The canning plant at Sumner has a capacity of 26 tons of red raspber ries per day. The association ships 100 to 150 carloads of fresh berries each year. The value of berries sb shipped last year was $596,000. f One Oregon canning establishment paid an excess profits tax - last year of $38,000. That sum went to the government, and of course repre sented part of the sum between what this privately, operated concern paid growers and what it got : as profit from the canned products In the Puyallup cooperative system, there is no such margin the growers get all the profit ; The association, through its man agement, sells the output throughout the East on established brands at the best prices, and" the individual grow ers have prorated to ., -thera ' the amounts to- which' they are respec tively entitled, i There is ; no , profit for anybody but themselves, no ex cess profits to a private "individual,- no excess profils to be paid the gov ernment. The association has been in exis tence 17 years. Aside from a few Scandinavians, and fewer Italians, all the growers in the ; association are native Americans. WHEN THE SIIRINERS COME IT IS doubtful if many Portland people have definite idea of what is going to happen to Portland; a year from now when the national convention of the Shrine meets. ' As a starter, it means that an army of visitors from all the nooks of the nation, equal. to a fourth or a fifth the population of Portland will -de scend upon us expecting enter tiln- ment and ' accommodations. It will be some little 'task to tuck . many thousands of extra people away for the night, ' to feed - them and to .'en tertain them; r iOf course it will, be done, easily and with more pleasure to the strangers within our gates than accorded ! by any city at any prior convention time, ,lut the size of the i merrymaking avalanche gives a glimpse .of the "task that is ahead of the city. Then hee are some other facts : There will be some seventy-five bands imported to make music for the time'. There will be fifty thousand or more uniformed and march ins: men. ' on woot, on horses, on camels and, may be, on elephants. W. Freeland Ken drick, the Imperial potentate, will bring- more than one thousand men with him from Philadelphia. There will be 150 pieces in his band and 300 foot and 100 mounted patrols. Five thousand rooms have already been reserved and are under contract. It will be a great time. Those who attended the Elks national con vention here in 1912 are still talking about it. Portland still holds the lodge record for lavish and pleasura ble entertainment. Next yaar it will hang up a trophy In the inner, shrine on a record for other cities to equal. ALL REMEMBER THE OLD OREGON Spared. Oblivion, to Which Naval Nomenclature Dooms Other Ships. From the" Philadelphia Evening Ledger. American warship nomenclature has something of the nature of an endless chair While the states endure and so long as1 navfies are needed government vessels commemorating these common wealths will plow the Beas-. The system is somewhat confusing, for the lands man will doubtless often fail to differ entiate between the old and new Ten nessee or the first, second or thlird In diana. On the other hand, there is a certain imaginative appeal In this prin ciple of succession. Vitality in the name itself is preserved even though great fighting ships eventually go to the scrap heap. It is in that direction that the historic, Indiana. Massachusetts and Iowa, veterans of the Spanish war, are now headed. To League Island, where they are now .stationed, has come, the order that they surrender names they so gallantly assisted to make -glorious. Hereafter they will be designated, re spectively, as "Coast Battleships No. 1, No. 2 and No. 4." ; More formidable fighters will carry on the succession, and bids will soon be opened for the wonderful dreadnaughts entitled to bear these state names. . Presumably they will surpass in strength the newest Ten nessee, now the most powerful battle ship in the world. It is significant that the old Oregon is to undergo no path etic second christening, signaling her decrepitude. As a matter of fact, she is a trifle more antiquated than the Iowa, once "Bob" Evans' -pride, but even the official zeal in passing on the state names to" newcomers is halted fn this instance. Though placed out of com mission, the Oregon will still be the Oregon. Short : as the public memory is, it remains undlmmed concerning the dramatic cruise of Captain Clark's sturdy battleship between the early part of March and the beginning of June, 1898. When she left Puget sound it was evident that war with Spain was near. Long before she reached her destination the conflict broke out. and the Oregon raced if 13 knots an hour can be called racing-down the long Pacific coast of the continent, through the Straits of Magellan, up past Argentina and Brazil and steamed into Key West in ample time to be made useful for the great naval victory of July, in which Cervera's fleet was destroyed. Had the Panama canal existed in those days there would have been very little pressure on her engines. But Soutl America had to be all but circumnavigated by the Oregon. The feat and her prowess in the San tiago battle have ricihly entitled the veteran vessel to keep her name as long as she floats. I . A similar privilege was accorded the old Kearsarge, which in the days of her youth so decisively defeated the Alabama, wiliest of all raiders not even excepting the Emden toward the close of the Cvil. war. The original Kearsarge was eventually wrecked at sea. Not until after she had vanished in the ocean grave did a naval new comer succeed to her honorable name. The keel nt the present Kearsarge, which now ranks as a p re-dread naught, was laid down in 1896. That vessel is con spicuous as the only battleship in the American navy which is not named after a state. Perhaps when Dewey's Olym pia, which proved exceedingly useful to Admiral Niblack in the Mediterranean during the great war, has ended her days, a superb new Olympia may vio late tradition and at the same time glorify the fact. As iris now, the name ruling is strikingly rigid. No other navy in the world is so systematic a chrls tener as is our own. It is debatable whether or not this rigidity is entirely a good thing. True, we achieve some variety in baptizing torpedoboats and destroyers after our sea heroes, bat in picturesqueness of warship nomencla ture there is no question that Britain is highly successful. There is an un mistakable salty flavor about War spite, Inflexible and Undaunted as naval names. Occasionally, this penchant for adjectives begets amusing oddity. The Inconstant, one of -he British light cruisers, is certainly strangely named. Another ship is with piquant politeness dubbed the Attentive. The classical names contribute their quota of color to King George's navy. Somehow they seem "shippy." Melpomene and Mino taur have a ringing nautical sounds We have used mythology ourselves with our naval colliers. The mysteriously ill-fated Cyclops was an instance. m m . On the whole, it may be noted that personalities play a. much larger part in the warship names of the foreign nations-than In our own naval lists. En gland has ' honored Lord Nelson and Collingswood, and France Jean Bart, Admiral Aube and Dupetit Thouars, the latter the founder of her Polynesian Island empire. But the haphazard sys tem which prevails' in France, as in Britain, has resulted in some remark able departures from the traditional Gallic sense of the. fitness of things. That the mild and philosophizing Ernest Kenan, provides a name for an armored cruiser is a fact that hardly seems in accordance with the proprieties, and it is equally queer to have a battleship named after an ".Encyclopedist," as Is the Diderot. A Italy , has done the right and inevitable thing with her euper dread naught Chrlstoforo Colombo, but an instance of ""mixed motivation was surely Instanced in the Dante Allghieri, which great J; name . u suggests nothing whatever in 'i sea lore.". Nearly all the German: and Austrian .naval names had a pompous imperial quality. The" Al manacb de Gxlha Is really a Wretched inspiration for ship nomenclature. What marine 1 achievements could, for ex ample, be expected of the Erzherzog Max, which was one Austria's, or of the Friedrich ier Gross, now Ignomin iously anchors in Sea pa Flow. It may ; be objected. : of course, that Tennessee and Arkansas are hardly nautical names, but considered as con forming to the scheme whereby it is probable that all the sovereign compo nents of the taion will be honored in the federal navy, there Is warranty In the policy. To the sentimentalist, the only . painful feature ; Is the fact that splendid ships that have seen their best days must surrender naStes to which, they have added luster to spick-and-span newcomers, which have not yet made history. It would have seemed specially cold-blooded to have num bered the Oregon. She is indeed fully deserving of retaining her original name with her uaextlnguishable laurels. Letters From the People t Communications tent to The Journal for publication in this department should b written on only one aid of the paper, should not exceed 40O words in length, and most bo sifned by the writer, whose mail addreaa in full must accom pany the contribution. .. - Flocks and Herds In Coos County North Bend. June 10. To the Editor of The Journal I would like to express my opinion on what was printed in your paper June S. referring to the herd law. I wish to say that Coos county is not a stock country. Land is too valuable for cattle or sheep to run. Coos county is naturally a dairy country, one of the greatest In Oregon, and dairymen can not afford to have neighbors' cattle and sheep running in the pasture with their milch cows. There is no fence outside of a woven wire fence that wilt -keep out sheep, and if any man is to put up such a fence it should be the man who wants to run sheep, nbt the man that does not want sheep. As for sheep run ning through the Umber and rough land, sheep will not do well in timber land in Coos county. There are too many stray dogs. A sheep raiser would have to corral his sheep and take good care of them, and if he bad to climb these hills and mountains over rocks- and through brush to get his sheep home every eve ning it would b a very expensive, busi ness. The majority.of sheepmen In this vicinity will turn their sheep out on the road and not care whom they bother, and of course the sheep will go to the first open piece of ground they find, re gardless of fences, and if the owner of tlM ground complains the sheep owner will tell him to put up better fences that they don't have to take care of their sheep. The roads hereabout are cov ered with sheep, no matter which way you may go,-though if any man has a right to the pasture on the road it should be the man who owns the land on either side and not a man that lives on a hill side, in a 10x10 cabin and with a quarter-acre corral for hi3 sheep at night and a milch cow to keep him in milk and has lived on the ranch 25 or 30 years and if he lives there that much longer will have to move off or else the brush will run him off. . He does nothing,- but look after his sheep and sees that they have plenty of feed, no matter wnere they get U. This state of affairs is one reason the herd law is In Coos county today. An other reason for the herd ' law is that the tillable .land in Coos county Is too high priced to raise even hay for dairy cows.' The most scientific and most suc cessful dairymen are buying a good deal of their hay, which Is shipped in. ,i The year before this herd law was vot ed in it was a hard winter and hundreds of cattle starved to death while the snow was on the ground. I think the herd law is the most successful thing in Coos county. As for saying there will not be much stock raised in Coos countys that is wrong : for if a man has to fence in his piece he is going to get busy and clear and seed his land. as . every successful farmer does.. T. II. G. Mr. Coe Replies to a Critic Portland, June 7. To the Editor of The Journal The person - signing four initials, "M. L. . H.," who takes ex ception to my remarks on Christian teaching as to what goes to make up true marriage , obligations, makes a number of effective points, but they are altogether irrelevant. . The simple quotations I gave from holy writ stand like eternal bronze. They have not been and cannot be refuted. Their plain, evi dent, direct meaning cannot be hidden by an avalanche of words that really deal with some other subject. It is -surprising that "M. L. T. H." thinks woman is placed In an undignified posi tion, by the teaching of one. whom she' calls Paul. I presume she means St. Paul. I fail to comprehend her evident feeling in the matter. It seems to me full of the spirit of latent rebellion, even against God himself. Now, the chief virtue of human beings is to be humbly obedient to higher authority, the highest of all being God. After that comes those who are authorized and competent Infallibly to ' interpret His ho'ly word. Such have made of marriage a sacra ment and laid d6wn the law as to the governance of the family. Hence, the divorce evil and broken homes can be prevented only by recognizing those just authorities and subordinations which God long ago prescribed and which the church for centuries has been teaching. Time will prove that those teachings are sound. The arrogant "social" innovations of present day se cular paganism with its lax marriage and divorce laws, will bear its' own bit ter fruit of destruction.- Strange that the modern world cannot take to heart the lesson of ancient Home, when all authority gradually disappeared and in novation and novelty was the rule. The beginning of the evil was the disap pearance of authority in the home. God's laws are immutable. Their Infrac tion brines the same penalty to human society today as in the days of the Caesars. To save ourselves let us re turn to the old. moorings. Let us love and trust each othem, in humbleness of spirit, while worshipping God in purity and faith. If we but do this, our mod ern problems, so-called, will vanish as a mist. LOUI3 COE. A Rebuke Portland, June 12. To the Editor of The Journal I was glad to see the state in The Journal by the Canadian Vet erans association branding as false Mr. Hazen's articles in the Portland Tele gram on the lack? of unity in the Brit ish empire. I have talked with many Canadian soldiers and they are all generous- in praise of English troops. One young Canadian veteran remarked to me that he was tired of people In the states always trying to make little of the fighting qualities of .British troops, and the only thing he Jlamed the British for was that they praised everyone but themselves, when, at the same time they fought against fearful odds from the beginning of the war.; I can't under stand the Telegram's printing these ar ticles, as ft -is plain to everyone that Mr. Hazes is very much prejudiced against the British, and now is the time to bury our "ancient grudge" and. to at least give thanks to England if but for helping .win the war.; - - NATIVE BOTt. Missouri's Centennial. . , from the New York E renins Post- Missouri is' planning a suitable eele bration - of her one hundredth birthday ss-ar state. She was admitted to' the t-nion on August 21, 1821, after a bitter fight over slavery, but her constitution jj COMMENT AND SMALL CHANGE We wouldn't mind "hopping of f pro viding that we could keep one foot on the ground. v .- ' -.- , l '. e-, -. More than over this year are we hop ing that-the department at Washington will succeed in making it a safe and sans Fourth of July. . " Jay E. House arises to remark that if the bald-headed men - would vote to gether they could elect the president- A shining example of the unity of action, as it were. .. Now the paragraphers are saying that it wasn't necessary for Sergeant Alvln Tork. the greatest individual hero of the war. to marry in order to prove his exceptionel bravery. Maybe yqu re not receiving that long expected lettfci because your corres pondent la waiting for July 1 when the first class postage rate is scheduled t drop a cent. ' ' . - -Judging from the manner In which society reporters reiterate the "quiet wedding" stuff, one might be led to be lieve that unless a "quiet wedding' were specified it ' would follow that it was a loud and boisterous affair. OBSERVATIONS AND IMPRESSIONS OF THE JOURNAL .MAN By Fred ' 'From a letter written him by his friend. Major Hotchkiss from' overseas, Mr. Lockley quotes for th purpose- of presenting the edu cational actiTitiea of officers and men still on tha other side aa they "carry on" in unlTersi ties of . Enaiand and France and in establish ments created ont of hand to answer their par ticular requirements. J . When I last saw Clarence n..-Hotch-klss of Portland he was a captain in command of the camp at Winchester, England. By today's mall I received a letter from Jiim and learned that he is now a major. He is n the Tenth provisional regiment. A. - E. F. U., A. P. O. 909 Beaunne, France. In hie let ter Major Hotchkiss writes: t "When you were my guest I was com mander of the American camp in Eng land. Now I am a student at the A. E. F. university in France. Announce ment was made that two officers and 27. enlisted men could be sent from Eng land to the army university in France. I was so fortunate as to be one of the officers chosen. I wanted to be -one of the pioneers of the army university, as I had been with the Amerrcan pioneers in France, our division, the Forty-first, being a part of the first 100,000 to ar rive overseas. The students, began ar riving at Beaunne en" March IT. Y.ou will be interested In knowing the courses chosen by the' soldiers.' There were ad mitted 1331 to the coure in agriculture, 269 art, 3195 business. l&Vteachfng,'16?4 engineering, 235 journalism. 219 law, 2687 letters, 407 medicine,, 1391 science and 253 music Of the 13,114 men apply ing for the various courses 11.837 were accepted. The others were advised to take up other work. "You will realfze with what regret I left .that company in England. I had been in command of it nearly two years. I felt toward my boys as a father feels toward his own family. As you- know, companies E, F and G were under orders to return, and by now they have un doubtedly reached home. a You will be interested In knowing that I found many Oregon men in the university. We formed an Oregon club. The following a;e members: Ed C. Lap ping, Astoria ; Benjamin F. Caro, Rose-' burg; Sergeant Major William W. Gei ger, Portland ; Second Lieutenant Thomas N. Burns, Rainier; Wilfred A. Gartley, Portland: "Sergeant Major Kenneth P. Morrison, 571 Elm street, Portland; S. G. Marks. Aurora; Floyd Hi Keith, Astoria; Sergeant Ralph H. Roach, Weatherby; Ernest A. Kuch, The Dalles : Douglas Phillips.' Salem ; Charles M. Stump, 703 Hoyt street, Port land ; Corpoaal C. B. Flannagan, Marsh field ; First Lieutenant E. T. Stretcher, Flavel avenue, Portland; Major C. R. Hotchkiss. Portland; Captain Lv A. 'Mil ner, Portland ; Sergeant "V. A. Thomas, Portland ; Captain J. A. Grant. . Port land ; Second Lieutenant E. A- Robins, Portland; Sergeant Royal A, Fultz, Portland. ' I "Our university has an exceptionally strong faculty. Dr. John Erskine heads the department of education. Colonel Ira L Reeves is president of the univer sity and commander of the troops. -The course closes June 7. , We do not know whether we shall be ordered to the Unit ed States at that time or not. but like good soldiers we are cheerfully waiting whatever the orders will be. "This is certainly one of the show places otthe A. E. F. General ;Pershlng reviewed the troops here and addressed the students. . We were also visited by the military affairs committee of the house of representatives, . and on two different occasions Secretary Baker has visited us. 1 "To give you an idea how thorough our college courses are, I will tell you what the boys in engineering, industries and trades take. They are required to study plain surveying, topographical surveying, field astronomy, highway en-j gineering, railroad engineering, mechan ism of machinery, hydraulics, sanitary; was adopted on June 12, 1820, and the centenary will be reckoned from that date. Pierre Laclede, Daniel Boone and Lewis and Clark will be among the famous men to be remembered. There has been disagreement among historians as to who had the honor of first setting foof upon the soil of Missouri. Some stand for Hernando de Soto, some for Pere Marquette, but Missouri will honor them all impartially. Since St. Charles was the early capital of the state, one of the expositions will be held there. Among -other pioneer Institutions fea tured will be the St. Louis university established in 1829 by the state charter, though it bad been conducting a mission school for years before that. A melan choly interest will hang about the first distillery, founded by Auguste Chouteau, a descendant of Laclede, and the first brewery, founded in 1810. That pro hibition had no standing in those days is shown by the fact that Chouteau re ceived a concession, from the then Spanish governors to stimulate his ' en terprise. - Shopkeeplng ' Tuature ; From tha Katrnuh Y.) TfllaaeV i. - About the French shopkeepers we are (.ready to believe the very worst that can be pieced together from the "experi ences", of any home-coming soldier, but for the reason that the shopkeepers are shopkeepers and not because they are French. Of course, they have over charged the American soldier ; their habit has ever - been . to overcharge everyone who could be overcharged. An indignant parent, remonstrated wjth us the other day ; Can, - yes.- but wouldn't you think, JreTHed, wouldn't you think that, even ' shopkeepers would not have taken advantage of men come to fight their battles,? men who understood neither the : language, the currency not the trading methods? And we replied that we might have thought so, but on our last trip west t, a - town near a cantonment we found soldier committees had been . appointed to determine what stores charged . fair . prices and ' what charged unfair, prices, and the lists of these were published in the daily news paper of the camp.. ' No, efcfce the day NEWS IN BRIEF - OREGON SIDELIGHTS Malheur county has a sinking fund, and of this fund $1350 is invested in bonds of the Victory loan. ,. 7 'V-. a--- i - - i: -. "Hoodvt TU ver." . asserts the News, "showed the right spirit when it voted for the- Roosevelt highway. And now it will. be up to the coast people to visit us- and render - thanks when the road is completed." a ; ... .,- .z ' A splendid "three ring" program at Vale is promised for the Fourth of July by, the committee in charge. A sol diers' ' reunion is to be a principal fea ture. As elsewhere, the . determination to break Independence day rewords is avowed on behalf of the Malheur me tropolis. , . . . -Woodburn furnishes the man ' that made Diogenes famous. The Independ ent says of him : "B. K, Hall was given the contract to raise Young street bridge for $10. F.verybody else thought It would cost from $25 to $40. Hall hired M. L. Hendricks Monday and the two old stiffs' did it in two hours and a half, raising one end 12 inches and the othet eight inches and placing caps under neath. Hall says It would have taken a gang of others three days to do the work.- He says he is fisv gr after." Lockley engineering, irrigation, contracts and specifications,-concrete designing, steel designing, foundations, and to learn aU about stresses and other kindred sub jects." - . '- ' ' i I have not space to give all the in teresting information furnished m lv Major Hotchkiss. but here fs a brief summary of what the army university is doing. More than 150,000 soldiers have enrolled for vocational and other training in the post schools of the A. E. F. Approximately 23,000 are taking university courses in French and Eng lish universities, and In the A. E. F. university In Burgundy. About 7500 of the soldiers, -who are university men, have entered French universities, and about 2000 are entering English uni versities. The work taken up in the French universities will be in letters, science, "law and medicine. A battalion of engineers and three regiments or- negro stevedores converted the extensive hospital buildings at Beaunne f late class rooms and barracks for the university. Approximately 1000 acres of land near-by is used for labora tory, work by the agricultural and horti cultural department. Reveille is at 7 o'clock; military drill from 8 to 9 o'clock. ana irom ociock until late in the ar ternoon the time is taken up with school work. . Three hundred of the students have. already been appointed to West Point They are taking special courses in military instruction. One of the pe cullar features of the work Is that in many cases a buck private has charge of the classes and tells majors and cap tains and other commanding officers where to bead in. Most of the instruct ors have university degrees. The dl .rector of the college of letters is Major William H. .Parker, formerly professor of political economy at the University of Cincinnati, The director of the col lege of law is Captain Warren A. Sea vey. W. Hi Lough is In charge of the business, course. He was formerly con nected with the New York University School of Commerce. Captain Carl V. Burger has charge of the class in paint ing, and Major Harry F. Cunningham has charge of the industrial and com merclaV side of the art department. Wandering through the university one will find classes in .English, mathe matics,' philosophy, psychology, history, civics, - sociology, biology, chemistry, all of the ; modern languages, sculpture. commercial art, architecture, engineer ing, city planning and housing, sani tation, ventilation, vocational courses, Journalism, dental, work and theology One ,of the first things done by the university was the placing of an initial order through the Y. M. C. A., for $2,000,000 worth of text books. Brig adier General Robert E. Rees, who was in charge of militarizing colleges and universities of the United States last year, is organizing the educational ac tivities of the A. .E. F. in Franee. It - seems rather . strange, when you think of it, to see one of our-boys who wient to France to learn to throw bombs at the Huns, to bury his bayonet in the vitals of some German, peacefully pursuing his Studies in floriculture or dairy husbandry or learning what to feed hens to make them lay. Here Is a lad wearing the Croix de Guerre who is studying the fertilization of soli, learn ing about forage aTid fiber crops, study ing rural sociology, cooperating in coun try life and rural organization. Captain Hotchkiss sent me a sheet on which student has marked a selective course he is taking. ' Here is what this particu lar student Is taking up-: American for eign relations, current history, argu mentation, sociology, psychology, news paper editing, special articles, evidence, industrial and commercial geography. Whild the boys are keeping the watch on the Rhine, it is a fine thing that they can prepare themselves to come back well equipped to "carry or' in civil life. Abraham gave one of them 400 shekels of silver for the field of Ephron traders everywhere have distinguished between transient customers and those who are in-clrcustance to become permanent pv trons. Shopkeeplnjr nature is not French nature . any mors than It la American nature ; it is simply shopkeep ing nature. , . ;. "-'.: dlden Oregon Singular Provision Made by Pioneers for-Financing the Government- . The fathers of Oregon were sensitive on the subject of taxation. At the cele brated Champdeg meeting It was de cided that jbo law levying a tax should be passed. To ' finance the provisional government the legislative committee on ways and means in 1843 -adopted the following : W, the subscribers, pledge ourselves t pay annually to the treas urer of Oregon Territory the sums af fixed to our respective names, provided, that In all cases each individual sub scriber may at any time withdraw his name from such subscription upon pay ing up all arrearages and notifying the treasurer of the colony of such desire to withdraw." ' Curious Bits of Information Ct v For the-Curious Cleaned ? From ' Caziosje Flaoee 'Little Margaret tells her family's ex perience in raising incubator chicks. One night after some eggs had been in the Incubator for two weeks and Margaret was helping to turn them she dropped one eggyupon another and crushed th shell. ' Her father ' pasted ' a piece of pper tape over the shell. But her mother was certain it would not hatch, that the shock would kill the "peep." As It Jakes eggs' three weeks to hatch, you can im agine Margaret's surprise when, a week later, the chick that was pasted came out looking just as fine as the others. Margaret thought that remarkable, and so will the rest of us. Ragtag and Bobtail Stories from Everywhere Of His Malice Aforrthouohl SOME doughboys were sitting around the camp fire swapping experiences, says the Loa Anrflcs Tlmcn. K,-h in tarn recounted some hair-raising . acci dent in which hSfchad figured. Finally it came the turn of a chap who had traveled all over the world. They wait ed breathlessly for his varn but h de claredhe had nothing to tell. "Haven't you ever had an accident?" they chorused in amazement. "Acciaenii no." -"Never bad anything happen to you?" "Oh. a rattler bit me once." "Don't you call that an accident?" "Hell, no, the thing bit me on purpose." A Super-.Mercenary The ex-crown prince I If I were he Would I set rich' Well, rather I . I'd buy a case and then with (lea . I would exhibit father. f - .'- -Washington Elar. I'nrle ieff Snow Says: Down in New Mexlnn on flmo far- back Ma's ashamed to - own she was old enough to be there, a Injun medicine man woricea nisseir into a terrible sweat to keep back a earthquake, with a dance rOUnd t fin nA Fhlirbln1 In .11 mnt of trash. The weather was mighty good fer earthq takes and sure enough one come a-nppin- along that afternoon. And them Membres River Injuns tuck after that medicinn man unit if h k.Hn'i of got to Silver City first and been pro- mciea Dy u. 8. troops they'd sure of skinned him alive, or somethln.' These U. & senators flghtin" the league of Nations and slch things makes me think of that there Injun medicine man. The News in Paragraphs World Happenings Briefed for Benefit of Journal Readers GENERAL Weedon GroRsniUh, actor, author and artist, died In London Saturday. The citjt of Butte has adopted an ordinance making It mandatory to keu all dogs within enclosures or chained. -The $2,000,000 bond Issue to' establish the Bank of North Dakota Is declared legal by the North Dakota supreme court. George B. Grigsby. Democrat, has been elected delegate to congress from Alaska to succeed Charles A. Sulser, .who died recently. The Germans destroyed or carried Out C:,.irr"nc'' Printing machinery valued at $100,000,000, which must be replaced chiefly from" the United .States. "An official report announces that 755 German planes and 71 balloons had been destroyed, while the American losses were 307 planes and 43 balloons. A prees dispatch from Amsterdam says the former German emperor -and the former crown prince will return to Germany as soon as the peace . treaty is signed. Senators Poindexter of Washington and Borah of Idaho will leave Wash ington shortly on a speaking tour of the nation in opposition to the League of Nations. Lieutenants W. McR. Beck and W. A. Bevsn, In a DeHavllsnd airplane, made the flight from Portland to Sacramento Katurduv in A hnura ini) Ik mlnut.y ( actual running time. President Carransa of Mexico an nounces that he will not be a candidate foC. reelection and under no conditions will he continue In office after the expi ration of his present term. Ralph Albert Blakelock, noted painter, who was released from the state hospital for the insane at Middletown, N. In September, 1916. after spending 17 years In the institution, has been re turned to the asylum. ' - ' NORTHWEST NOTES "Ib i ne jittie city or washougad Is lav ing two -miles of hard surface pavement. Among macy other Interesting fea tures, Hood River will have a log-rolling contest on July 4, J. V. Tallman. well known business man. is the hew president of the Pen- Out of 60 students In ths pharmacy depcrtment of the University of Wash ington this year 30 are women, A f majority of the labor unions of Spokane have voted - favorably on the erection of a $100,000- labor temple. To replace the old building recently burned, the school district of Empire, 'n vwo luu ill, t KB ui rii . i nun i m i . i . A copper strike In the Hercules mine northeast of Baker was made a few days a (to. The lode can be traced a dis tance of 20 miles. Edward J. Marshall, born 1n Portland 45 years ago. a veteran of the Spanlfth Amerlcan war. died in Oregon City Saturday morning. Dr. J. M. Waugli of Tfood River, re cently returned from France, nun Junt received news of his promotion from a major to a lieutenant colonel. Violet Pasch Ormsby.'a cow owned by the University of Idaho, recentlv made a 7 day record of 27 M, pounds of butter out of 693 pounds of milk. Gold mining is becoming a big asset In Curry county, particularly on Sixes river, where several companies are. de veloping extensive hydraulic Drooertles. Charles Clark. Montesano high school boy. who suffered a fractured skull in an automobile accident near Sutsou, died without having regained conscious ness. The old Clstnon mill nlant at Aatnrla which has been closed down for thren years, has been purchased by Clem W. Rodgers and will immediately resume operations. In great demand over the stats and sev eral members of the 1919 class have recently accepted positions in . various high schools. nuunion di v. u i it inr 1 1 11 n i vr r.i i v m r m Ths wheat crob Af Wmhlnrtan ihl year will be more than twice the size of last year's crop, according to the re. port of the Spokane office of the bureau of crop estimates, , In an order ale-nod Yiv Ihe nnhHn service commission the O.-W. Tt, A. N. company is allowed to discontinue its iuesuay special livestock train from Eastern Oregon points. The bodv of Emil Llndholm ftt Afc.r. dean. Wash., who had been troll Ins- nff the mouth of ths Columbia, was found , naiuiu, riigni lira.! v.oiuin u in neacluV He had been missing since May 25. , Tom LassUer. agent In Centralis for the Seattle Union-Record, was kid naped Saturday, carried to Rocheater in an automobile, where he was let out svnu warned not to return to centralis. Fred Dawson, arr Albany - drugrglst. won $140 In prizes at the convention of Rexall druggists In Spokane. He cap tured first place In two con teats for the best talk on different phases of ad vertising. . .Churches Are Helping In National Thrift Campaign ( Stories f arhteeement In the aecam'ila tlon of Wsr SsTtnts Stsmpe, sent to The Journal and accepted for publication, will be awarded a Thrift Stamp. , . The churches are one of the most L jmpvnani oi'ine units or national cope which i have pledged actlvt participation in th national thrift campaign. Besides, fraternal and so cial organisations, scores of national associations are keeping the benefits of thrift before their membership through the columns of their publi cations and through the organiza tion of thrift clubs and Having Stamps societies in plants and of fices. ... : . Many churches also have organ ised thrift clubs among their congre gations and have established earn.' cles for the sale of Thrift and Hav ings Stamps to facilitate the prac tice of thrift , Thrift Rrampa and 1919 War Kals FUtwilw now on sale at usual agencies. .