THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MUKNINU, AUGUST 22. 1SZ0. LEPER COLONY IN RoundjUp Prizes Increased Best of Talent Is Exnected MAZAMAS SCALING Mt. BAKER'S STEEPS LWMBER JOURNALIST TO ADDRESS ROTARY iimi ie 10 10 MAZAMAS CLIMB BAKER WITHOUT MED I nlin BY PORTLAND G R L Miss Cora E. Jagger Writes En tertainingly of Place Where Dread Disease Is Treated. By Cora E. Jagger - IMlM Cora E. Jateer is Portland sirL h- Ins for mini jrear. been employed in the city ettorner'a office, bh 4rft the city' acmee to Si tc th Orient." - While In the Hawiian In nde ahe was in tha forernment eerce Sine writing tha following ahc baa entered the employ of private corporation and expecta to riait Japan, China end other . far eaatern eountriea before returning to the United State. fa be reached alaupopa, Jane 20, 1920.) We reached Kalaupapa, Hawaiian Islands, where Is located the United ' States station for the study of lep rosy, during the night,' and the pas eengers were sent ashore the next ' morning about 5 o'clock- Mr. Morris, rr lrknii nt f Via fraf starlnrt- who had been notified by letter or my coming, was late. My pass was ex mined by the superintendent of the lener settlement. Mr. McVeigh, who appeared on the landing. ' To my Inquiry as to whether Mr. Mor ris had come for me, he replied iri' the negative and asked me to wait in his machine, which occupied a place in the area of perhaps 100 feet square reserved for vehicles while unloading and receiv ing supplies for the settlement, the light' house or the federal station, which com prise all of the interests in this dis trict. On my right was the Visitors' house, or the place where the relatives of lepers are accommodated while stay' lng the week which they are allowed to spend annually at Kalaupapa visiting the- patients. The privilege is rather limited, however, as such visitors are not permitted to leave this h6use to walk about the streets, and can only see their relatives at a distance of 10 or 15 feet, meanwhile restrained from closer con tact by some kind of wall or fence. I sat in the tonneau of the. machine among a lot of money bags, for it was pay day at the settlement. It seems that . the capable patients take care of the more helpless and are paid for their services by the territory.. ., . Jin m. 11 r ijvni.7 I saw very little of the lepers upon this visit, which lasted a week, so the two cases which I encountered at this period comprise the greater part of my observation of the diseased. One woman, who wore a "bored" ex pressionto describe it mildly and a Ifoloku (Mother Hubbard wrapper, we would call It) crossed the road in front of the machine. A few fingers were missing; from her hands and I found it easy to account for their absence (I be lieve Dr. Goodhue, the resident terri torial physician, amputates diseased digits now) ; then a man crossed, look ing much the same, except that his feet were likewise affected. I was not able to count the missing members in this instance, as he wore shoes, but I felt reasonably sure that a shortage existed, i The superintendent called to a leper, who was the storekeeper, asking - him to ' telephone to the Baldwin home (a home for leper boys which is situated within a few hundred yards of the fed eral station. In charge of four or five Franciscan brothers) to request that a man go to the station to inform Mr. Morris of my arrival. Presently word came back that a leper had been Bent to the gate, but not being permitted to enter, had been unable to deliver the message. TISITS FEDEUAL STATIOX Then Mr." McVeigh decided To send me to the station with the lighthouse keeper, who had ' come for ' the week's subsistence supplies.' He explained that he would drive me there himself, except that he couldn't leave the landing while the settlement's supplies were being un--rtrl and none of his "clean men" were available for driving the car. By "clean men" he meant .kokuas, -who are the husbands, fathers, brothers or other rel atives of- lepers, who have asked and obtained the privilege of going Into re tirement with their -loved ones. - I much preferred the Ford truck Of the federal employe. He took the longer route to the station, a distance of miles, crossing a rocky point where the scen .ery was most inspiring but the wind ter- -1 - Str' i: -'V hnmmI( l 'r A - v a J r Jii 1 v - a $&edS&$M Above -L . .Photos by- E.- C Sammons, -Mount. Baker from bivouac camp, looking toward the mountain irom ine nonn siae, snowing raritiana Slazima glaciers. ; Center The last lap of the Mount Baker cDmb. Ahead Is a perpcndlcalar cornice of Ice In which steps were -cut by which the Mazamas made the ascent. , Below -Headed toward Coleman peak, named after the man who made the first ascent In 1868. i ? rific j Th station is situated on a cliff a couple ofhundred feet high. At that altitude l one may see miles out to sea, not' less than . 60, ' I believe, which under the sunlight appears ; very, ' very blue. To the tight as you face the Bea is' a little gateway formed by-a big rock i which is .shaped like a haystack, appar ently about 100 feet from the coast line ; then nearer is a calm little bay. "To the left is a rocky shore against which the waves are dashed into an irridescent spray; back of you are cliffs 2600 feet high, mostly covered with verdure. These cllfs meet from the south and I The "Lang Range" Is Different See the 11 Points in Range Construction Stovt ftps t Corner fast Burned rrem Top Larf e Warmlal Goaet -. Cociini-SurltM Entire Tep Urolltfcsd Can ea mtttm rrytnt e aaaal ' . . m . r .. :- ITT: -I iii 'i S i VLj; 1 T ,m , ""J - Ja,- I net Cake Soaker I 'w I ti ' ' . " ' Beadle T I SJ "-d ef Ames i i a Saaitary : f i . V4 "t taiUUjt Iron . J fJ T? 'The Lang Hot Blast I Unsurpassed" BURNS COAL. WOOD OR GAS . Call or Write for Catalogs for Factory Prices F. G. LANG MFG. CO. Factory Brawh, 111 Fosrtb. Streets Xear TamalH 7 FOttTIA2fD,, OHEGOJT ' ' ' west, forming an angle wherein a water fall occurs in rainy weather. t , t; i LEPERS ABE STJSFICIOrS " i This station,-, which was provided for by; an -act of congress In 19 05, $100,000 oeuig appropriated for buildings and equipment was completed and ready to receive pauents la December. 1909. How ever, ; certain patients from the settle ment, who were invited to Come to tine hospitaL for treatment, which: would be largely experimental of course, as no standard , remedy had been) adopted at that time, refused to come. jThe Hawai iarrs, of which this settlement is largely composed, are a superstitious race. They firmly believe in the Incurability of their malady, objected to being experimented upon,' and for years, after the establish ment of the settlement (1866) refused the aid of haole (white physiciana,' A couple of i territorial physicians . had gained a foothold among them e'er this, but the ."federal doctors'! as the officers of this station were-called, were re ceived with suspicion which J they never overcame Hi MOiOKai. ' Mr. McVeigh, who Is ah Irishman and nas ine native proclivity for storytelling gives as a reason for the failure of the work of the station, that jno one could be found who - would stay on this isolated peninsula (comprising -the ! settlement and, federal station), neither the direc tors seat by the surgeon general, the as sistant surgeons, nurses, laboratory boys or labor of other classes. As he expresses lt" 3the officers no sooner arrived than they began looking about for a sampan to take them across to Maui- (another island of he Hawaiian group, having ports at whijeh all the steamers; stop) whence they could proceed to Honolulu. While thi statement, is undoubtedly exagger ated, there may be a measure of truth in It. as the first director, Walter R. Brinckerhoff, sought, as early as 1908. a means of conducting experiments : at Kalihl, Honolulu, at the terHtorial re ceiving station, where' under the. terri torial law, , newly apprehended lepers may remain at least six; months before being sent to the settlement at Molokai. The reason given for the establishment of the Kalihi branch of the station was that leprosy might be investigated , in the Incipient stages. In response to this requirement of the director, the station was provided with a couple of buildings, a laboratory and a library, by the terri tory and here in subsequent years, moat of .i the. work of the station was car ried on.::-'jv -v. :;V -v ,.; i -u.-? r BBDtCKEBHOFr FBAHED j DISEASE There is one more faci In rmtoitnn with Walter ; R. Brinckerhoff whior. r would mention. . . i 4: :, . :t It Is a. well known fact In! TTnnnini that this officer waa mortal! v srv.iH n contracting the disease with ; which h had elected to work: much conjecture arose among his friends and co-workers as to -why he had accepted the appoint ment tendered him in 190C. which vimmk sitated proximity to It. jTerritorial of ficials who- frequented the; receiving sta tion and. the settlement at Molokai say that he wore rubber gloves constantly at ills worm, tnougn oroinaniy they are worn only , at operations 'by physicians. Upon one occasion, he. la said to have deferred shaking hands with a Francis can sister at Molokai, who served as nurse in the home for leper-girls 'there. until he had drawn on his gloves ; also The antiseptic potencies are attributable that he made examinations with his nostrils plugged with . cotton, fearing that it might be contracted through in halation (this is one of the principal sites of the initial lesions of leprosy) ; labor atory boys who were then: in the service of the station say. that the appearance of a mosquito in. the room would Cause a cessation of his work, that of a bacter iologist, until the insect was killed, thus obviating the possibility: of mosquito transmission. Though l he had ' stated upon his arrival in Honolulu from the pathological laboratory.; medical depart ment. Harvard university, being then quite young, that he ; expected to devote his life to the studyi of leprosy, he re signed in April, 1910, and returned to the mainland. A few years later he committed suicide, so the statement is made that he contracted the disease which led to self-destruction. Some peo ple in Honolulu even claim to have ab solute knowledge that the 'disease had manifested itself, though it appears that this is only an inference. TRANSMISSION IS MYSTERY Leprosy remains a; mystery so far as its transmission is concerned. The pre' vailing popular opinion is that it is con tracted through inoculation. However there has been but one , experiment of this kind upon a human being that of a condemned criminal in the territory in 1885, who was given; the choice of sub mitting to this operation i or death by. the usual method. He chose the former, and apparently developed leprosy within a few months. It was -later shown that it might have been derived from another source, as the disease had appeared twice - among his . immediate - relatives With whom he had ; been closely asso ciated. Attempts to : inoculate animals have failed, hence the theory that it is a human disease. It is generally be lieved by Investigators that the bacillus enters either through; the mouth, being taken into the digestive tract, or by inoc- cuiation, by means of lesions in the skin. Succeeding Brinckerhoff -were Direc tors . Currie, McCoy and I Clegg, I who worked principally at) the Kalihi labora tory. All were apparently! able, sincere workers with previous experience as leprologists. but their) efforts showed no decisive results. f Drs. Currie and Clegg had served In the U. S. P.; H- S. In the Philippines. ; Both , are now dead result of influenza and-; nephritis, re spectively. ; X S J;v- .;. j . '.! . ' i NUMEROUS BULLETINS ISSUED T During these years, ' as well -as during the period of Brinckerhoff s direction. numerous bulletins issued from the sta tion being published by the U. S. P. IL S. under the title "Studies, Upon Lep rosy," Purlng 1910. i .Surgeon Carrie's time the records show that the Molokai hospital had a few patients, though only for' a short period. Other than that,, no use has been made of these buildings. excepting the laboratory wherein speci mens from patients at the settlement were occasionally examined, - There are 10 buildings in the Molokai station a hospital , with a long, mos quito-proof promenade on the makai (leeward) side, which extends likewise pasf? the machine shop, laundry, labora tory, administration building. Since 1917, when the Jwar brought about the demand for surgeons, the lab oratory at Kalihi has been abandoned as well, apparently from a lack of U. S. P. H. men with proper qualifications. It was during this period of inactivity of the station that Dr. A. Jj. Dean, presi den of the .College of Hawaii, and i chemist by profession, directed his at tention to the matter of finding a spe cific for leprosy. i - The present director Of the station, a resident physician, was placed in charge in this emergency in Seotember. 1918. or before the Close of the war. His prin cipal duties are those of an attending physician to Kalihi hospital or the ter ritorial receiving station, which' at pres ent involves the administration of the products of chaolmoogra oil prepared by Dr. Dean in the college laboratory,-ap parently so successful; in the treatment of leprosy. . . - - 4 ' , t GREATER SUCCESS j NOTED As a result of the- gratuitous service of Dr. Dean this station is announcing a greater-degree of success fhan has been achieved elsewhere in the treatment ! of leprosy the discharge 1 of : 78 cases dur ing, the past two or three years. - with no recurrence of the symptoms of the malady.. -j ii- Chaulmoogra oil Is expressed from the nuts of trees Indigenous to India, nota bly Burma and Assam, of several closely related ' varieties, the best known being Taraxtogenos kurzil. and has ' been known for many years to be beneficial' for leprosy. However, it was so nause ating as to render it Impracticable for oral use, except in a few rare cases wherein : its efficiency ; was sufficiently demonstrated to sustain the belief that a i cure might be effected If - a means could be devised for ; administration in sufficient' quantities. Two mainland investigators. Walker and Sweeney of the Hooper Founda tion, Sah Francisco, have likewise dem onstrated that chaulmoogra oil contains bactericidal substances that are - about 100; times more active than is phenol SINGLE MISHAP Two 100 Per Cent Ascents Scored i by Club; 46 of 76 Persons Go to Snowfields on Summit. Cloudless, grouchless and mishap less, with two 100 per cent climbs. was the record of the Mazama an nual outing , held at Mount Baker this summer, with a total attendance of 76 persons, 48 of whom climbed Mount Baker: itself. i Everybody was happy, said Presi dent EL C. Sammons. "from the very first evening, when we had an intro duction and i each one was ( given his nickname. That' started things out and there .. never l was a more congenial crowd on an outing . before.. .- . i The outing was somewhat; more ardu ous - than the' customary Masama va cation. It was said. There; were more climbs and more stiff hikes and less of camnfire festivities, because every one was so tired when evening came. Yet they had time for a . tea, a mock wedding, an initiation and other forms of entertainment. - i The Mazamas have been given credit for the major part of the exploration of Mount Baker. - It was practically a virgin country - In 1906. when the -club made Its first . trip, ' but now It has been pretty thoroughly explored by them. : - .. t ! i ALL REACH TOP , 1 The remarkable thing about the trip,' said President Sammons, "was the fact that the club made two 100 per cent climbs. This has never been known be fore in the history of the club. Twenty nersons started for Mount ; Shuksoa. a three day trip en which we had bivouac camos two nights, and all 20 reached the top.' Shukson is a real mountain with a rock pinnae'e on top something like Jefferson. ajThls was the fourth ascent ever made of Shukson, the first being made by the Mazamas in 1906. ''We also made the strenuous trip to Baker and brought everybody back with' out aceident. It was an eight hour trip from Baker back to bivouac camp. The north side of the mountain is honey combed with crevasses and seracs to circumvent wrucn it is necessary to go many miles out of one's way. The trip Is full of hidden dangers on every hand. but the fact that we had good leaders enabled us to make the climb without ac cident. The party was divided : into groups of eight, each group being roped together. The last part of the climb was up almost perpendicular cornices of ice. 1 -WOMEN IN GROUP 1 ; Twelve women made the Mount Baker ascent, being the largest number - that has ever made the climb at one time. Those who stayed behind 1 gained the appreciation of the climbers with sev eral gallons of hot clam chowder, hot biscuits and Jelly and huckleberry pie an inch thick, which they Berved upon the return of the climbers to camp. The girls gathered the berries, and the cull nery operations were conducted by Martha Nlllson, assisted by Selma Flo dine, Mrs. Christine N. Morgan,' Alice Hutchinson, Cinlta TJuman, Bessie Day. Marguerite Colpltta and Bertha Hunter. BOUQUETS AS REWARDS In ' recognition of their services the girls were presented with huse bouquets of ; mountain flowers, the presentation speech being made . by Professor P, A. Thaxter. . . . Mount Baker Is different; from any other mountain in having an almost per fectly flat summit. The snow field has been surveyed and found to be 35 acres In i extent, and : upon this the Belling ham Commercial Club Is anticipating landing airplanes within the near future. Cop Escaped Death, , -. But Must Pay! Price " Washington, Aug. 21. (I.! N. S.) Mounted Police Officer Everett Grimes of the Chevy Chase district, will not have to make up from his own pocket the full value of the horse which was struck by lightning and killed while he was riding it on his regular beat. The authorities ruled that notwithstanding the horse was killed in "the performance of duty. Crimes would have to make good the ldss,' but citizens of Chevy Chase who know Grimes and (ike him, made up a purse to defray the ; cost of another horse. So far S80 has been raised. Pend ing selection of a new mount, ; Grimes is riding a thoroughbred mount donated for the occasion .by a well known horse fancier of the, neighborhood. ..Grimes was stunned by the lightning bolt which struck the horse, but. was not seriously injured. : "'-m :-:; J, '-' ' . " ; -'- '!. - j': (l 'A ill r rl; ,fVrl J. : C. (Jack) TMonne , The principal speaker at the - weekly luncheon of the Rotary club at the Ben son hotel Tuesday will be J. C. ("Jack") Dionne of Houston, Texas, editor and publisher of the Gulf Coast Dumber man and one of the prominent Rotarlana of the South. T " ! " i Dionne. with his family, ; now is on a tour of the Pacific Northwest. He is noted not only as an. authority on the lumber situation in all parts of the country, but as an. Inimitable story -teller and gifted public speaker. ' Wednesday noon, at the Chamber of Commerce, he will address a Joint meeting of lumber and shingle i manufacturers . and - wholesalers. King of England j And Tank Actress . To Vie as Magnets By Nina Bancroft j United Newa Staff Correspondent. I London, Aug. , 21. The ultra-smart sdt will follow 'King George to the Scottish mOors for hunting and the royal house party at Balmoral castle during the com ing week. . - . And as the "next best thing" another throng will follow Peggy O'Neill, the piquant American starring in . "Paddy," who was selected to judge the 'fashion able Richmond : regatta, the last water fete of the season. . i , . .. . . ' , . ; j . . Number of brilliant weddings marked the social life of .London during the past week, one of the most notable being that of Maurice Hely Hutchison, son of Sir Walter Hutchinson and Miss. Melita Keppel, daughter of Sir Colin.- The wed ding was attended by a brilliant gather ing of British nobility. The young cou ple left for America aboard the Baltic, and will make thir home' in New York. to' e Mrs. ueorge Jay uould is now visiting her daughter. Lady Xtectes. She will leave for France next week. I it: . 1. a number or Americans will be pres ented at the court of St. James upon the occasion of the next - drawing-room,, it is learned. They include Mr. Edwin Able and Miss Morgan, who is now the guest of Lieutenant Colonel Day, former military attache of the British embassy In Washington. e . e .... ' - " ! Robert Goelet and Mrs. Goelet are ex pected in London during the coming week from harls. Mrs. Martha Hyde is now the guest of Lady Guernsey, "but win soon leave for Venice. Amory Car hart and Mrs. Carhart of New York have arrived from the ; continent, and Miss Margaret Morton of Philadelphia, has arrived from Madrid. I C J. H. Tolley, amateur golf cham pion, R. H. Wethered. Oxford caotaiiil and Lord Charles Hope, left for Amer lea on the Olympic .to compete ift the amateur golf, matches at Roslyn. . Pendleton. Aug. LSI. Priifa In ah and merchandise that will exceed :n value $10,000 are offered by the Round Up association tor winners in the world's championship events at the 1920 Round up. September 23. - 24 and ; 25 .' This year's prize list has been made larger In nearly every event than lists of pre vious years, and the best talent in the United States Is expected to compere. .Not alone have 1 purses In the main events been swelled, but lesser events such as the Indian . races, are made more lucrative. The steer roping con test leads the field, with $1200 in cash, while the two relay races carry tinoo each. Several sliver trimmed Pendleton saddles and other 4 costly merchandise, together with the world's championship titles, go with these and other eventa CALF BO PIS G BANKED Calf roping, a new event tried last year, will not be on; this year's pregranu The old stagecoach! race will be made better than ever, the association plans, and a new and novel opening feature is in - the making. . A new president, Henry W. Colftns. (will , make his bow to the Round-Up public, -succeeding the late . Sheriff Til Taylor, ' who was for years president. .':. Two carloads of young. Longhorn steers from 'old Mexico will be used In the bulldogglng and steer roping con tests this year. Two score of bucking horses, some of them ' just off - Western Canada and Montana ranges, will com pete against bronk riders for the bucking championship of the) world.- '-. ' Narclsse McKay. one of the . bes known Indian bucking horse riders, died last , week on the Bannock reservation near Pocatello, it was learned here. An old injury, to McKay's skull, sustained while riding at the Shrine convention at Seattle several years . ago, caused his death. . " j : , - " CAJfUTT IS EXPECTED . Yakima Canutt. the only 'man who ever won 'the championship ati the Round-Up more ; than oncer is expected to be with the contestants again. Char ley Parsons, who has the fastest relay horses in the country, is in Detroit and -I -".!.- " ' -will come west for the shows in this section next month. He is almost cer tain to be here. ; Officials already are asking for all available rooms in the city and will maintain, as before, a carefully organ ised bureau .for furnishing accommoda tions. The gasoline situation Is also being looked . sfter and any motor U who comes to Pendleton Is guaranteed a tank; full of gas on which to start home. : ' ' - ; : "Advance requests for reserved grand stand and box seats have been in excess of any year in history-. Parties from San Kranclsco. " Spokane ' and Seattle, special trains from Astoria and Portland and an auto caravan from Portland are among the certainties. Individual re Quests for seats have come from nearly all the Eastern states, and California ' Is especially well represented. LIST OP PRIZES I The official prize list for the 1920 Round-Up is as follows : vMt3u;"5:vr5:l575. 18: ."ch. Uo-di: L. Ci.,!.e-ir,1 ,nlliB race Piint $105. Each day S8&. dirtiled- 20. 10, $3 5oo:rJoo,r'wi,ur,w ,ioo- ,, f" bulldogsing Puree $550. dlrliied $300. siu, 1 siuo. Cowlray; tn.iinj race Ptirn, 105; Each day tSS, dlvidnl 20. 10, $5. - . t'ow;iirl buikim context Kihlhition rijea tet aperial prize by fire PuwgirU Jaity. $9o"1,0VOn5-tU;"Pur" 300' dtTid'd 1B0, $4oo""$,,,!uUir"ruts ti200' dirtJi $600; Marerick race Priae f 10 daily. Indian race tlrouclihrri) Puree $160." Each day S50, dirided $25. 15, 10. ;irl pony rec Vnn 103. fcech day $85. dirided 20. $10. $3.. Tony enpreae race Purae $500. divided $230. $150, $100. Ktasecoach race Puree $180. Each day $80. dirided $40 and $20. Cowgirl relay race Pure $1000. divided. $600. $300. $200. - Indian war bonnet race Pnrae $150. Each day $50. dirided $25.- $15. $10. Cowboy'a bucking conteet Puras $750, di vided $450. $200, $100. Quick change race Pane $15 daily, dirided $10 and $5. :Wild bore race Pun $225 ami iackr U -Each day $T5 and lackpot. diridedtO, $3"-. $10 and percentage ot jackpot. testified. His chief 'pleasure, she said, was In doing things! to embarrass her before her friends. I . - Thunder God Sounds Taps for Veterans Lynchburg, Va., Aug. 21. (L N. S.) The god of thundej .played taps for two white-haired Confederate veterans in an old country home near Lyncli burg. George T. Smith,, 70, and Johl C. Houston. 75, were talking over the old days iwhen they marched with Lt e as twilight came down .over the sur rounding i hills. Suddenly a violent storm arose. Bugles of thunder broke the evening peace. Mr. Houston died an hour later. Mr. Smith passed on late that' evening. They answered the call of the storm bugler. rhysiclans declared It was the shock of the storm that killed them. iwiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiM:. -atiMinr Ills Manners Poop Kalamazoo, Mich., Aug. 21. (I. N. S.)! After Mrs. Hazel Bush testified her husband's table manners were bad ini the extreme, a divorce was granted tof her by Judge George Welmer. Although he worked in a garage, he would not clean up before " coming to the table. even when she had company, Mrs. Bush Mr. Business Man i 1 - Are you satisfied . with your banking connections? Is your business receiving all the consideration to which' it is Entitled? ' " If your acpount is at the "Broadway" the funds that should be available for your business are not absorbed by the more pressing demands of "Big Business," or tied up in "Frozen Loans." More than! two-thirds of the assets -of this Bank are highly liquid.. r m ; - Think whit that means during these unusual times, not, only as St matter of security, but as a guarantee ot our ability tb meet the legitimate commercial require ments of ouij depositors: i I 1 You are invited to place your account with this grow progressive bank. mg, "A Bank for Everybody I tlilllllll!liillM T : 1 to the " fatty acids of the chaulmoogric series, ; chaulmoogric and : hydnocapic acida. and possibly lower isomers of the series. : The bactericidal action is spe cific i" for the acid-fast group of bac teria, to which the causative organism of leprosy belongs, the products being inactive against . all other microorgan lama studied. (The above for the scientific persona others "may skip). ; VISITS. FATHER UUTT0X There Is "'one more Incident 1 1 would mention in connection with my visit. Accompanied ;by Mr. Morris, (whom permitted to open all the gates, I called upon ? Father Dutton at the ; Baldwin home for leper boys. Naturally lesions were apparent about the faces and ears of some - of these cases. - However, we merely passed through the yard and of fice, after which we were ushered by the father into his little home, as he calls it. tiny building not entered by the pa tients.'. Here the father sorted out some pictures, mostly of himself and scenes about the Baldwin home, and gave them to me.. Then two of Father Damien, one his last picture a death bed scene. This, as you can imagine, is terrible, but I accepted it, realizing that it had a sa cred significance to him, representing one 'who had died a martyrs death. Father - Damien, as you probably know, was a French priest, who spent about 15 years in the settlement. contracUng the disease in about eight years. i Father Dutton is 77 years old and has been in the setUement 34 years., In the course of our conversation I asked him if he -didn't expect to r visit the home folks, extracts from whose letters he had been reading and he answered, "No, indeed I came to see it through. I am doing penance for the sins of my youth." However, you can hardly appreciate what a penance it Is unless 'you : have been in a similar environment, sur rounded by a loathsome disease.' Father Dutton ' was Ira B. Dutton, but at a certain period of his religious life he was given the Bible name of Joseph.. He served in the Civil war as lieutenant tn the - Thirteenth Wisconsin volunteer Infantry. sdop. Ski Three essentials of good dentistry, without which greatness is impossible. "Wisdom consists of knowing WHAT to do; Skill in knowing HOW to do it and Honesty in DOING IT." - . I have found during all these years that it pays " to rive people better service than they really, ex pect and fharge them less than they expect to pay. I i " ''''"NX- t - V V ' ' I I Promises will get you friends, but non-performance will turn them into enemies. Come to Me for the .iTeetSu No matter who you areor where you live, I can satisfy you and save you money. I publish a price list ana livej up to it. All our patients and their friends say, ''What beautiful dental work! And so very; reasonable.' Examination . and Estimate of Work Cheerfully ! I Given FREE : 22k Gold Crowns. ... From $5.00 22k Gold Bridge ... . From $5.00 Painless Extraction ... . . . .$1.00 We Give a 15-Year Written Guarantee OPEN EVENINGS Lady Attendants Fine ; Electro Sixth and Washington Sts., Portland, Or. aV ar -ai wm. H r Plates From $10.00 and Up Dr. E. G. Ausplund, Mgr. 'ITS