Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 15, 1922)
1 " t a. ., a aiMV.1,,,, .'r.5i' be aBewfel ..4 mm " Ki kn ttaaa aa ate f-aauahaa vary MUif aad goada . aondac f 'v? .baitdinc. Bread aa sad laav jaararad at ta. MtofOn at ParUana. ,r' i ' ty'r IiJ.pilONS-llui 1t.. latoaa.ua .ee-iL" Zl .Z-TT1 aaatoaf Co.. Braamk Rnrio co as tkir- ile.ntativk w. a. .fciurr Co.. r.iitoT balldiu a., rraa. e-ai Title bwira kaiidmc. Lot tiia oaxoo jotnuratT r ri the rial eaiartimiaala. t aim rlert UWIMh a win aat krht ... walea Jt ana "fV say Irauiita nadiaa aaat. ,rj JlarrWr, Citr ami IVmnU-f. Oaa Mk. .... .! I Oaa . weak...,..! .01 . avaU..,. f I MilUiU. JUTBJ I fraTABT.E ft ADTANCX rO-e year .V... ..S.ee I Tarae aaa Oaa avmth..... ,H . SUM DAT Only) . Oaa rear S.M tBaataa..... 1.7 Thras aoalaa... 1.M WIin.T AMD SUNDAY - I WttlMMU Saaaarl SMalaa.... . at 7h avmUa.. l.T Otai avwrh.. .( wrr.nl w W iaii1i ) eaa aar... li M Su i aaaatha .... '.SO Oaa year IS.MH Tbea mlae apol aaj, (a Uw Waal . . "".- gartara Batata tarnahaa aa Mntuaaaat ft Kmt Order. El- wsar e U rear aoatcfffae fa ant Taa Joanal . Pmkjuk.. r.... 'nZiri.T Maravr. ha arnm af taa Mna i. for MR. HATS' SAULRT fTlia world -looks rood to Will lMIjn, postmaste rnerl and Chsirmsjj of ths j.tiooal Republican ommltts avforsttms A rnaraJlMlmo pf ths movinf picturs Industry He lt( to have a sal ary of :tll.OQ0r V Tear. $12. 500 a month, fills' a wk or 1410.15 a d7' U u lry xactly double That paid by tha Atasrlcan people to the president ct tha United States. Thns. It was a fortunate day. that of - the drawn battle between Mr. Hays and his rival. wbeiw ,Bome( years ago. the national Republican committee adjourned without maklnc a choice "of a national chairman, only to meet later and name Mr. Hays. Mi Hays' title is to be director general of the national association j f tha motion picture Industry. His contract, at 1 150.009 annually, runs lor three years. - lot association embraces In it membership all the motion picture producers in tha United States. The New York World, which originally announced the tender of the position i to Mr. Hays, says. "He faces a monu mental task la rorganlzation of the producers for fully co-ordinated team work to meet the battles he and they .certainly face, especially In the area of practical politics." Censorship of f the screen Is described as one of tneea battles which the new general, tsslmo la expected to meet with all the -sagacity and keenness of vision inai ne displayed as head of the eTrt Republican organisation. - Another reason, however., for his selection Is that Mr. Hays Is known to the leaders of the Industry as one f tha best Informed persons In the country In all the factors of the screen Industry. Of course Mr. Hays, la anything he can do for the motion picture ln- dostry In usual ways, la scarcely worth 1 110.000 a year. It can only j, be In unusual things that he can make himself worth so princely a retainer. : Mr. Hays la 41 years old. arrived. He has ' TUB HILLS FALL OUT JIM HILL thought he wsa building an. empire. (The world told him so. tout he never dreamed of creat. lg a group of feudal baronies. Yet bis family seems to think ha did. i War has broken out among the Jelrs of tha great empire bunder, fhere Is even a tendency to describe the situation in the vocabulary of tho recent world strife. "Ranks of Wiled Hill heirs break In estate Bail,- U the diction Of One haarl. Ine. - The altercation arises incident to he recent death of Mrs. Jam, y Inn. , . The management of the Hill JroDerUeaavers In the balance be- ween James w. Hill f New York. )he eldest son. and, Louis W. Hill. Khoee Identification with tha Great portnem la familiar to Oregon reople. The balance of nower. however, Jests, or seems to rest, with Walter UIL a younger. son. He has re moved the orflca of the Iim Live stock corporation from Montana to Tork. apparenUy to be closer to the scene of action. But. aggrieved fy, the failure of tha "silled heirs" to elect him a director of tha North western Trust company, ha la said to ave transferred L his ., fealty from fames N. to LoulaWV ' A ripple of uncertainty runs an the way down the Una of lmi Interests. CREDIT FOR FARMERS VITAL rUB flaclal losses and grava credit problems of the farmer in a general way are now known to all. It took tha people In the cities ?m "m to appreclau that the farmer was being "deOated- heyond the safety point, but now tt is erenorally recognized that prices on farm products must be brought up, or what the farmer has to buy brought Jown, before any substantial prosperity wffl be restored to the country at But how many understand the-farm imnLf. vt . If. ha U profitably to eonUnue production while the necessary processes of readjustment of prices and transportation costs move their slow course, the man on the land must have money for seed, for plowing and. where mTVJr..r - . . " '""w ,v er 016 necessary things to eati and wear may be grown while the country labors through the storm of. post-war readjust- 1!! K T 'JTam' noraUon was revived and a credit ot more than a billion dollars provided for help to the farmer. , 5 The country banks could not lend to the farmers for current needs, the cuy banks could not fend to the country banks for this purpose, for- both ZZl?Z?lr oV,oand' tkotft the War Finance corporation "I , . - ACCOram8 " n sa a practical measure. : L LiCty tt War kni V. . T .7. An corporation any, at least so it la nM n i " ,,. , . " " " .Tw-l T rVanml Uln tO Um th Bjlla SkdkAlJ W1 tK. -v. Z Z ' fright to borrow from the War . , . now oorrowmg by the banks, and they are ir? Wlthvmre redl thJ they car. to i. ti tVt. r v ,en dODe 80 far b' th0 WarTFinanco corporation Is to take off the hands of banks and orinu Uni., . aecured by product, of the field, range and tT?Z give rinewai ZriZV::V:l: " Um.? WU1 enaw But this does not mmt tha nmM. tK. ia. . . - " r. riiere is ne to get the money to put In and make this resfoVtf w, r.t0T ff "Prinr tabl- t0 "I. eSu"ttroughe 2 L iSr: rd lrrlKate th6 "M of hay that will ,VL n? U Wa to t the credit demands of this year that the War Ftoanc. corporation was created, as weU as to easeS obligation, already incurred, but which could not be readily met. and , ," .7 " ,v7 , K' ine to function in this important field. Indeed, it is said that but little relief has been given the Northwest In any respect, that meritorious applications for help on past dueeep and catUe paper have been turned down for this or that reason that really should not enter into the matter Ponai reason to dth ? aPISr.ent 70M bad M th Problem is. what Set minions of sheep and cattle loans made In 1920. and im which cannot now be paid because the market will not JusW pTv- IZZ T:?' 18 tb1 proble . bw to keep'thTr " r,r : "re , a7 o Wto,har tmlU and berries. fZ hP" f,r fl?anClal and denend on av nr m .v - uuvutu. Surely ther la at a mst whan Tr;.:w!"c"Te DnsiDe to avoid. down in the country. " Those interest, are large. But. for tunately for the public interest, the work ' of construction was done by me man who has retired from the empire or- his achievement His neirs can do little more than fur -a vauaeviue snow. It . would have been far more important to the people of the nation had any one or tnem inherited his father's brain power rather than his prop erty. On the other hand. It was doubt less fortunate that George Washing ton left no heirs. Think how the great name might have been soot- ted with squabbles during all these years! The Mary Jenkins scholarship, es tablished by Hopkln and A. E. Jen- kins In memory of their late mother. gives maintenance during the fresh man year at either the state univers ity or Oregon Agricultural college to one January graduate from Jeffer son High. It Is a fitting tribute to a noble mother and a commendable example of desire for the diffusion ox nigner education. The world needs, as never before, men and women trained to think straight THE OLT OREGON TRAIL QNE of the main state highways to be completed this year is the Old Oregon trail, over which the first settlers ot Oregon came. The stOT of the Old Oregon trail did not end when the dyipg embers of the cam pf ire of the last Immi grant grew cold and turned to ashes to be scattered by the suction of the wind from the first railroad train across the American continent This was only the prologue, the rebirth as It were. The full definition of the Old Ore gon trail would Include not only that road over which our fathers and mothers came but also the highway development which has since been carried on by sons and daughters. Though old In its memories of the sound of the tramp of weary and tender feet of creaking ox yoke and linchpin, of wooden axle, of lonely night vigil in light of star, of the laughter ot youth and the prayer of age. of hope ending either in frui tion or despair, of loves and Uvea that passed, the Old Oregon trail live, on in youth, its body ever en larging in keeping with the growth of the commonwealths founded by those who first set forth to traverse 1U toilsome length from the banks of tha Missouri, whero had converged the southern and northern channels of American migration to the west ward. From a single line of communica tion, tha Old Oregon trail has grown Into a network of highways whose total mileage in Oregon alone now approximate. 41,000 miles. A road made without tha expendi ture of a dollar for construction.' nn surveyed by engineer. It sole main tenance being the clearing out of rocka and trees which fell into it when they, could " not , be detoured around, has developed Into Intricate state systems. . on which many mil lions of public money have been ex pended already and on which many mora million, are to follow in future years. The deeply , rutted ox path and treacherous ford have Vanished, but tn their places have come the broad grade with its hard surface and graceful curves and the bridge of steel or concrete. . The genesis of the Old Oregon trail was In that prehistoric path trod by mammal to water hole, by the In-i dian in pursuit ot food or in his! THE mf and shearJnjTo accomplish auoai; m short, tq keep him on the reports, however, this plan has failed, Flnanca corporation has been urlable cannot lend to the farmer indlvldu . .... ... lw many 01 nun ana the necessary armer lons could not be set up In m oanxs are slow to avail themselves of Finance corporation on farmers' paper old obUgatlona to bo worked v. i- . . . " vrcgun, ine,wasnmgton or crPJon has almost wholly failed . De no mortage to this season's crop Indeed, the life of the whole country recovery in the comXy TaS i. ' .m d "" m b' warring and bartering with neigh- uunng TJlDe. T At- - - ' uiw aawn or recorded days vn m tne footsteps of the Indian the explorer across the "Shining" mountains in search of the fabled Northwest passage. On his heels trod the hunter, tha trader and, in pursuit of the beaver, the trapper whose depending travols marked the trail which in later days was to point the way for wagon, stagecoach ana railroad train. mi - - Auen succeeded the mlsslonarr. carrying the story of the cross and the book of which the Indian had faintly heard. Next came the colon iser and. finally, the settler urged on by that mysterious impulse which has ever called the race to which we oeiong to follow the sun in his west em flight. These were the first builders of the Old Oregon trail, consecrating it with toil and privation, with suffer- in. ana wun death. A perambulator rolled slowly to ward the flashing, heedless automo biles of a busy boulevard. In It all unconscious of danger, was a sleep ing baby. But officers who captured the cab said the baby might have been as well off had they let the automobiles bring a quick end. The mother was sprawled on a bench, ueaa arunx rrom imbibing moon shine. HEROES OF PEACE r A LITTLE French schooner with six men aboard nosed her way out of the port of New York last week to cross the Atlantic. She was a frail craft unfit for battle with the giant combers that race the seas in a storm. Hardly had the weakling vanished from sight of the Statue of Liberty when a tremendous hurricane arose. The little craft fought for., its" life, but the pounding, pounding, pound ing of the vicious, seas rendered the battle vain. The six men that made up the cr,ew prepared - for the ; death- that was in immediate sight "Ripped to the heart the ship was slowly Bat tling for the final plunge to her grave beneath the waves. , With her the crew were prepared to go. : As r though a messenger from Heaven, another craft loomed out of tho mist It was larger and stronger ana in its. crew were . brava men. The captain called for volunteers to risk their lives in an effort to rescue the men on the sinking craft Every member of the crew responded. ; Soon tho six men who had given up all hope saw a lifeboat lowered from the side of the rescue ship. But, they said, no lifeboat ould live In such a sea. It put off. it was dashed from sight it came to view on the top of a wave, and again and again it disappeared. After a tre mendous conflict with the mad aeas the boat finally drew alongside the dopmed vessel. Tho crew was taken off and tha lifeboat began the return trip on tha treacherous waves. But a dog had been left behind. Again the lifeboat returned to the aide of the schooner that soon was to be no more, Tho dog was rescued and. for hours that seemed days, the Jlttle boat manned by brave men. fought for life against the giant seas. When the survivors and their- hausted rescuers were pulled aboard the big ship a beautiful chapter in a tragic story had been written. A deed j of valor that belongs to the romanca or the sea had been re corded. And a scene of the virtn. In the human: breast was bronghfto OREGON SUNDAY, ' JOURNAL' PORTLAND,' SUNDAY MORNING, public- attention at ar' time when there, j. ao touch of which human kind can be leas proud. - A farmer butchered an unusually choice calf, but beforo.ho took it to the' dealer in town yielded to "the temptation to retain the liver. For keeping the small part the dealer paid him 8 cents a pound instead of 9. But when the veal cutlet, from the calf appeared on the block their value had been miraculously re stored and then multiplied by three. A PRINCESS ON PAROLE pRINCESS ZITA. who was empress of Austria-Hungary, is for the present merely a worried woman at the bedside of a sick child. Though Bourbon by birth and Hapsburg by marriage, she is exile by fortune of war and, for a time, paroled prisoner by grace of the allied council of am bassadors. She has passed from the fictitious distinctions of royalty into the honorable indistinguishableness of common motherhood. She could leave Madeira, her place of exile, f of Switzerland, where her child lay sick, only by permission of captors. To such a pass has proud and ancient royalty come. Zita's status-is practically that of a paroled prisoner. However, she Is not at large under word of honor entirely. She Is guarded with every consideration, of course, but still guarded closely guarded, a news dispatch says, by secret service agente, to prevent her from com municating with agents of Hungarian monarchists. The allied powers re member the two attempts of her husband to re impose himself upon subjects who had cast him off and out and that at the second attempt she was present and participating, following a season of - planning and plotting. Princess Zita's father. Duke Rob ert of Parma, was deprived of his duchy when, In 1860, united Italy took It over. He spent the rest of his long life in a palace near Vienna, where he remained a monarch in everything save realm and subjects. He was father of 19 children. Zita was reckoned the brainiest of the brood. She was reared in the choic est tradition of the Bourbons. Be sides, nature gave her energy, initia tive, vision, such at It was, and great ambition. In all these, as between herself and Karl, her husband, she was by far the better man of the two. In the crowd of stirring events that are expected to generate a new future for the world, Karl and Zita to their banishment have been but ume followed about Dispatches nave scarcely accounted for the sep aration of the family, which has oc casioned Zita's present journey. Doubtless the family circle will in due time be reunited at the place ot exile. With that event the Haps ourg spectre practically will cease ror all time Its stalkings In Europe Meanwhile, If one must be de- mronea ana banished, one- need covet no more delightful place of exile than Madeira. This rugged but beautiful Island lies 360 miles from the African coast In the latitude of Charleston, South Carolina. Its clt mate is at all seasons mild and de "o"""!. i' iuiai raagniucence is a chief characteristic. Small as the Island is, its largely mountainous structure affords scenery of actual grandeur. Its people are decently governed, not as a colony but as an Integral part politically, of Portugal. They are amiable and Industrious, unexcelled as gardeners, have a pas sion almost a mania for sym metry in horticulture and In architec ture, and bear positive hatred toward all outwardly visible dirt and dis order. Madeira is also a world famous health resort, and has in dustries that mean rich profits for those in control; hence wealth. fashion and culture at the island's capital are not lacking. Add to this a luxurious establishment befitting an ex-monarch and maintained at captors' expense, and one may say these deposed royalties are doing quite as well as could be expected. At nmchai, Madeira's principal city, Karl and Zita arrived Novem ber 19 last on board the British . mu. xsia . mey recall a certain other political exile who, long before them, had been carried over those same seas? It was on August 23, 1815, that Napoleon, aboard H. M. S. Northumberland, looked upon Madeira, the last land ha waa to see before sighting fateful St Helena. No such fair haven as Madeira might be bis. for Napoleon tn ruin was mote feared than all the monarchs and ex-monarchs ag gregated, that live today.' There is irony in any comparison of them with him, as there is -in any comparison of the little ripple of democracy in 1816: with the heaving billow that rolls the world: around in 1922. ' And, in the meantime, Kari is either a monarch or he is not If not many hard-headed people will ask: Why is he maintained almost In regal state at the expense, ulti mately, of people who toll? Why not inject him into the mass of other mere commoners, to toil, to produce, to be useful? The answer is that while monarchy is still a peril where it is not a sham t unfor tunately has not yet or not quite, become a joke - a scream such as Cervantes made chivalry to be.s Chivalry had Its merits, its nobili ties even; but its coup de grace was STeat laugh. Possibly just pos sibly at one time half -savage man needed royalty's hard uses, like "the fear o helV to quote Burns, as "the hangman's whip to hand the wretch in order." -But that is doubtfuL At all events, ho is even now overdue that new Cervantes who shall open "a new era as he laugh, royalty's last futile vestiges from the face of the suffering earth.' - - THE WILSON FOUNDATION Now Being Created Is Not for the Purpose of Glorifying a Name That Does Now and Will Continue More and Mora to Outshine Glori- ' fiction It Is That Those Con tributing May Thus Share in . and Forward - Farther a -Great Man's Geat Work. By Bertha Slater Smith " ,Thf 'unda now being collected under the designation of the Wood row Wilson Foundation are an expression of ap preciation by Americans for one of their own countrysjen. whose life is a virtual sacrifice to the cause of humanity. This memorial la to be not only a tribute to greatness and goodness, but an agency in the advancement of peaceful civiliza tion. mm The man to be thus honored is an American, representative in the truest and best sense. Of Puritan extraction. Wood row Wilson has the physical mould and aspect of bU progenitors and the spiritual endowment most typical of TtZ? Ver0 iHnt conscience. Reared in the South, he possesses the Keen instincts and courteous demeanor or a Southern gentleman. He has the culture of the East fortified by a thor ough schooling jn the traditions and 2 I S. our democratic institution. . V,.. ter"er' he u t ot the West in boldness of action and in initiative Above all. this man trinf scendenUy American in his idealism. Woodrow Wilson is dominated bya master thought; all that he is. abso- CrisH r U rS. to a great Christian ideaL The indwelling of this thought this Ideal, accounts for the high reaching feath which enabled him to lift up a despairing world : this accounts ror ths resisting power that withstood Persistent and merciless opposition ; this hL ?.'w'n the forbearancer the pa Uence. with which he silently awaits his inevitable vindication. The Wilson Foundation should not for ffl2me1nt.be considered as an enterprise ?iStT ?. project n illustrious name tnto i the future. Greatness needs no such nViCe- Rither- tho Pl ffVr, us an opportunity to accompany this ffreat name upon its long Journey trough the varying scene, aid circum stance, of succeeding yeara It would Va US f. Privnee f continuing be yond our little day a companionship of endeavor that has been ennobling to us here, and would provide a gracious feaX&rlZ to the farces ' V1?6 the esteem, the gratitude, the af.f0n i? 8Un ln us h" and now! tn ' jnaking that esteem, that grati- tributa? affectlon' truly InmiorUl Letters From the People EMPLOYERS CENSURED Tho" T? EmpIy Married Women. PoSE1U,,dinf Men Are 1 Need Portland. Jan. 1L To the Editor of The Journal nnHnv .v. . - lln eabl9 station regarding the question of unemployment and how beat t "vUl "Us condition. A numberVf worthy solutions have been proposed and .i?ted' but thera 18 Phase of this existing condition which la sadly rele gated to the background. A great deal or unemployment could be taken care of by the employers themselves If they had anything Suit a "coat-sleeve" interest In matters surrounding them and Jn the community and they believed in fair puy as they profess on the outside. . 71,f.re f numbr" of capable, honest, intelligent men who have families to support and educate right in our midst whose places are filled by married women. These women have husbands, either employed or ln business for them selves, and are earning more than suf ficient to support them and what fam ilies, if any. they have. These unem ployed men have the experience and training to perform the duties even bet ter than the women and are willing to accept the positions, but for some reason they are either refused the position or are dismissed and women employed In their stead. I personally know of such conditions where all of the married women have husbands employed and ln business, some of them professionally, and this same employer hypocritically endeavoring to assume a position ol standing as a business man in his com munity and wondering why all men are not mgn examples of success. It Is high time that the public officials who have the burden of this condition upon them make a complete survey of uus poase ana see whether or not oeiier state or an airs cannot be at tained. The patronizing public, wher ever these conditions exist. I believe. Is wnouy jusunea in absolutely withdraw mg patronage and support from such institutions, no matter what line of business they follow. There is no blame to be placed upon the women, but there surely is upon the employer. He is very anxious to get your business or patronage and solicits you with a very fine outside appearance, but should you approach him for a position and have all the requisite qualities, a large number of times he will pass you up and Install some married woman. -1 believe In giving the supporting man a chance In being more altruistic living ana letting live. . Art Ford. FOR FINANCING FAIR A Believer In the Project Would Include Four State, and Alaska. "Eugene, Jan. t.t-To the Editor of The Journal Portland Is the trade center of a large part of four states and Alaska, and.' this trade district alone should finance the exposition. " It is not right to try to tax the state of Oregon for an exposition for the entire Northwest. Let those of us who want an exposition and have faith in it, organise an exposition corporation and make a survey of Port land's entire trade . radius, making an approximate estimate of the amount of money that can be raised, then incor porate to suit tha funds. We must have faith ln our own country. The people admire a good sport, while they laugh at a coward. We can have a rood ex position on the private money we can raise, ana preserve tne good will and everlasting respect of the entire coun try. A smaller exposition with good wOl is far better than a Iamr on A with dissatisfaction. There wiU be plenty of money -available. The four state, will each harvest three crops before the ex position closes. The lumber business promises to be good so that laboring people will have plenty of nmwT for seeing the exposition. Let the governor of each state appoint a commissioner, let an extra one be named for Portland, and the thing is on the war. y.n. person, think the state would be Injured uy increasing taxes: ret thev want .n exposition and would support liberally - vivtrcrif urzanizea private effort. ' " ueorge Kelvin Miller. FIERCE COMPETITORS 1 LT. S. flyers aet world's ramrrf durance. Headline. Plucking the laurel wreath from .the. browvuf the golfer's was aWCIla, ' JANUARY COMMENT AND .SMALL CHANGE '.; ' faJIfL0 I -m ateruattonal af i seem to come from the infant na Uooe. which 1. as It should beT fciIblLmB.who wrot ''Newberry to be la campaign- in a headline didn t realise hew really small Newberry a - - ' Absolute contentment may not be tha best thing for the pocketbook? but itt amarveloas tonic thVtear?1 Jlnd a . TeuowDaugherty who seta aside at will tBoet august decisions of our highest . . nVpte orfAetdrSf LTo laiou oVwaTJoo .pPatT .ITreturneS r-Hr?lfnn " " government's faT ?iU1tr..0eJ," t h" to be classic so f "J we re concerned ; It will have "class- no matter how it looka trylnir ordeal to get out of bed these super-chilled moral nr.. bu t iTs marvelous how fast one can move after beoroom.1 int f -al!lay7iWCn..5pl momB We of the whiu??l.K?uraerer to serve five years for hi? SfortT "t0te M 25 Jear a a a A prominent Japanese Is said to have declared that English wiU S theTdomU r2.,!!Bya.f ln Japan " day. But about that Ume. many people fear Jan- SSforSui U th ZZUt & MORE OR LESS PERSONAL Random Observations About Town Zero weather wnnv4al a T5 1, w . wa tw S a. X7MCr UJ William PoUman, banker and stock grower. Conditions are getting better with stockmen, he adda Tollman thinks the Portland fair would be a good thin, but he does not think the state should be taxed at large to pay for it. "If they can finance it withost a tax,- he said. I am Tor it." L D. W. Bass, mine host of the Hotel 'J" SeatUe. who came to Salem the other day to attend a reunion given by his old school days friend. Hal Patton. returned to the Sound Saturday. . T- a oley of Bend, who was in Port land a few days on business, has re turned to his Central Oregon home In optimistic mood. State Forester F. A. Elliott was ln Portland Friday conferring with forest service officials over various Umber matters. pflst,e"1 t the Multnomah are D. C. KdSve!ffeM aDd er W- Uoe " Albert E. White and J. H VhI. . adlng citizens of Junction cSwerS transacang business in Portland sTtur! " .,w"f,r0M ot Coos B7 is a guest of the Multnomah. town visitor- 0f. C0JU"me U ut a arham of Klamath Falls to rer ltered at the Imperial. TLti J- PaImer of Jordan Valley in vtPorSan-d. " s county. U vhrittng m Portland for a ftw txr ' ' a a a W. B. Dennis of Carlton is In town. OBSERVATIONS AND IMPRESSIONS OF THE JOURNAL MAN By Fred TBa noble Bad Man li by mrmt r. - If."" to eck a joke, jat beaLTha innocent enjormeat is itut tha atma aTaor itii to thrSa blarinfthS,.PU bor SfWeT at r,-. met mm nrst at Chemawa some years ago. Fince UmLf crossed at various times, as ha la a v work among the Indiana He has an unusual sense of humor. He was J JL ftly about the orlKtn ofthe various races. He said: K??n5.iaa,..hve 'erend that In - wiuirung uia ureat Chief havlnr made the woriri -h.k .Jt ' "T"? . mo rnouaiaia Bft 1 nd other anlmala tiut he was not t i.ni . . . . ia.!- H7madr.b,g"overaana "1V, j nu"1 woman out of earth and ont than. u. .i covered the Toven wltnTot After iZi "crapea away the hot coals r them out" He had left them in too long. They were black as a oofJ : so he shook hi. head and said. 1 W call negroes.' Thence 1? aD5 vter and stirred mS,BP.and fiione1 o molded the mixture into the forms of a man and JndStL" PUtJ'ra lnto oven them. For fear they would burn he took them out too soon. He shook his head and aM -r. rZT. -e VaT SVavLAa A 1 1S wf are only haU baked.' he said; I wUl r people. Nov I will take extra care and turn out some per fect people.- so he made a new man ana a .new woman from the earth and put them Into the oven andTtch until be aaw tv . 4 . took them out They 'TJ "1U TO coior. . He nodded with satto- faction and aaJ1 -rv- ztItt I will call thTm IndHna- J th.0 ?fklnr f 016 ndUn taking up UIO Whltai man'a m . aid : -The whit ram t.... 1- rZTi ns to lay asld- t h. ,,"7; " . ' ' t"0' wl,d the blanket iucy say inat until we do so W',ar r11d' Indiana We have laid aside our fura w v.... t. j .... "w uuuisu our naked bodies, we have ceased to paint out face.; but when I look about me I see your young women wearing the UW "lde- ro" lr ooe "',: "; mT warpamt. they have lowered their rtrrarna mt fk. . . the old-time naked Indian of the plains, and I can not see. if we were wild In- OULtaS WfaaMt Wi WAM Val -vie, asammeru eaVmi WOTt ! fura. - feather, and war paint why your wild womer- tUn ar8 t In Sooklnar mm a naa - . . 1 ue X hapDened on an . not going to amy whether thto article re. .TVnLZT K. 7L"- "t1 "oermity at Eagene.- at Oragoa Agricultural col. MaTTto U.?lTtTmitT or California. ISSJSI K pUe to an three.- The arucle to written by Uttl. Horn, an Indian at the Umatilla , agency! to Young Eagfe: and gives the tmcreamiona NEWS IN BRIEF : -li. S1DEUGHTS - RiLSST" JV blew to the SLijaP?y- 004 belp the Vaioa. - Jioarrtmsa Mirrer. , a... "EJtatosie water by 112V to a slogan Of thdrainag association. A lot of topers ara strong for that SHUton,-. Shermaa CmO&mr. -oww PjirJeof an opumlat is the farmer taiSLiJUL?nUra- say the country K-irt- wh" J his hkdaa and buys a pair of shoes Weston Leader. ttZlT! f! toward Germany lif".1 be draked that she to a promia- s0.0" eot keep baold mark, and her promise. ' a a a " nTrb?rn l" 001 n'T wiore people, fi" the promtoe of getting a whole 5wnship of people from North Dakota. The advance ajrenu have made the av "ingemenu and rone back after the set tiers. Aurora Observer. a a the Interstate commerce com- rai2LJ.W!7 fretht nl on his trV? try It agaSJllbaty a Too much Christmas celebration to the only excuse we hiYr to offer for the short squib this week. W. had thiVpy sure rijouKh. but our orflca dvvil moi hold of some of that hot stuff thai makes the cat spit In the bulldogs face t do all the work ourseltl Drewsey Pioneer Stm. a Frwmnt . A m v. I i c,ircnia are seen ror additional capital needed in business. It would be forthcoming if there were not municipal securiUea A constitutional amendment prohibiting the issuance of such bondi would go far to cur tha evil. Harney County Newa Thera l AftA naM l a a . - K .a, w soul, in j onn I4LJ siUon. H. i, Ira F. Boyea, who to mak- whii? .Pertal hot' hU nqriers while . he aearchln. the Willamette I.h.ir.T1e dalrjr cow- He atoo has Soff .t0 flnnc the fair, but he has MeuSaiJ detlU of 11 to Phil a a tlW10" .V11 U om '"O" t Baker that section has not had Its normal oun,t fthto winter, report. WE. Meacham. There have been a few . 'hen the thermometar fell to sero. This has assisted In the accumu lation of next summer's Ice supply. Fred E. Kramer of Spokane Is at the Multnomah. He to accompanied by J. W Ballet. Carl W. Art and James Wto all of the Tru-Blu Biscuit company, who are in Portland for a conference. a a a . ,plnDo of the Port of Astoria to m Portland en route to San Francisco to attend the coast conference regarding the establishment of a shipping Una. The bold Big-nature of P. J. Stadel man. mayor of The Dalles, ornamented the Multnomah register Friday. Among out-of-town visitors are B T Hart of Timber and Victor Retman of lone. a Mr. and Mra H. Crowe II of Gats xanle are visiting In Portland, combin ing business with pleasure, - W. T. Phy. proprietor of Hot Lake, ln Union county, to transacting business In Portland. a a . Charles Gottlieb has come up from Medford for a few days' visit. W. A. Johnson of Molalla paid Port land a visit Friday. .a Frank. C Hesse, an Astoria lawyer, to registered at toe Juultnotnah Lockiey f fu olood about our college cus toms. It reads In part as follow.: I hi,.YeiJ,ht otJ'ou m"'r UnM- since T 10 thto stranKe piac. but Ll" nfued tha t I have uZiyr ,bn ble to collect my wlta JJLl the peace snd cnTof fort ofl btoniet! M th T annrvMa . . about t Ma trier anxious to hear brUi'.v.rr tribe For rrr,- Ki:r .".v"" l.rlu or tne earth h .V r,w.r:.,.ot tne art of these uueiui na But whai la 5nBSow tte?-h- thenol v,; ""'".i uis place to the theUaVi!l! v ""ui apeu nere, tou know Hr.,-. .v.." leamer. But wh., .t, " wwm restnetton on Wnat the inn.w. mw . . . . Z&Z H? S- 5.Uowedwe.r lna7t 1 hi;'- VIZTV?"1- At times nner.,?2rir''.n "U. garment ofmcS: -V BUlllUIUT. .The Great Spirit show r.-... t LSwL5hr? .t? the squaw, wb. . . . uiV urwa 1 ne great four a " -a-wwwi. V U1CW UDCUrDM CfefftaWaw SfTr-to go from onVtrS " , " nnen 11 is not and they J0? marches, they wrap thai legs In hot panta. When it to cold thev "(t to keep warm a aifraid nm-Dy 001 beUv ) : they seThow ii.tber can wear on their lega There native tribes here. They worship the In. t-stlne. of the silk worm. And DflTmall ter how cold the day, the squaws asem T satisfied 1 they htTl S In onr trlha it 1. - .. 'or theTrav. woo-SnTcarry ofi ner power to ensnare the youn. buck il wo,f hraelt 'lth the spinnlnrof mis worm, dares the wrath of the evil ft that live ln the fo and rain by trying to show the whiteness of her skin, and plans a deliberate campaign to ea ittue idoi. itudiied a "rr SSe IdolW' hV" coUctlonV7f ,v " .iui muincoaj eriorta. t.,?uw" f ther themaelve. into or- ir-. purpoaaj it is to trap areat nnmrart Af vmm. . - SOUaWS Wh ara I- '.vIT? J-' -V " . . " ' wm vntaniaauon. t2 HL t"'- ery much superior ikl iii I . rau 01 envy oy iSfLJ?1? bca thos, members of w U Vvr1- Pe t , v. '-. ua mrarrau bbq ia make ma w miitu.. VZ. 7 . Thee, organizations are called sorart 5STvK? t'u.mn- 'r all. for " f "-.a aaimv. 1 naven t Deea able to find Out waat.it la . 1 . " " - can see, there to bo famine, nor any -r- a" vi a jumi utere are 25"? preparation for war. Bat ne I mv br.f r.c:: .- J,v."'. rr ?f feathera. But I shall notTitnci . -J" " "w wm porpoaw ot the dance I. Tit...r" " tfl aocowst of It when I return. May tha" amok nr tia curt ever the head, ef your paroa. and n iuL Tm v. i iaaa a -hade, bont Ions; together ta the Happ? Hon ting Ground. ?r The Oregon Coantry ORBCOX ,."r IS additional Bnaa are raaadod or irtr muowi Axipnton who tlv-o Mm, -ttarsc J7 "or" informal daarlna- unnir U- iSTJXl OUl l Wutu uairir OrejoJlled at Albany Wadoalay. T1e school cenaaj. rec-ttlr taken at Lebanoei -hows there are 74a TCTwi Jl. withla the distrtrtMotV than ?eera orolled la tho Lebanos , .Vllooto. " o.er peohlhitJnr trucks wetgbtng more than iio pounds from traaiVwa the aayton-Mehama VaUry MTw.. mJJTV Growrr-- rooratlra aa oclauon has adranord protw rahrs 'rtTn ""t to : emu a praxt. TuJlaa prunesLlnCrm """ to lv-.e The flrst annual canners -rhoot the only roorso of Its kind mr offered ta the Northwest wUl start at Oreo Ar ricnltural rall-c January J. mn4 Uaia unui February 14. Mora than. 1000 membrra of the rhris llan Vdeavor society are eipwt-d t attend the Mate convention of the orraa. iration. which will be held la iSaiera February 1 to 1. Ia Crande to probably the only city in 1 slate that has a municipal band Budget provisions made for It last fall nave become operative and Andrew oney baa been appointed leader. The first ImportaUou of dairy cattle ili?. . lh,r?un.fr in ""eral moniaa rved n Midland Tha radar from tba I0.J. TIK.JJLjly-. Thr era two car al'nmenVCh tairy cow. U, the ver Lakev has rea med to accept th paa. St.ih" churchPat Burna. n Tn... "" catuoru Uauldl. and la catepoUoT Three hundred thouaand dollars of iNane county's road bond a were ooid Thursday at l 1 1-J cent, tha people Uv! ln sJonr the different roads tobe !m iftJrV;VJ PO-ted m the bank the 12000 difference to bring the bonds 10 par. 1 Farmer Af fl K. . .. in 1 . . Short distance southeaat of Salem, hare 'Fr"K' to devote approximately Sue acre .Lth''.I;,,.to, x growing. This acT? - iuwuuw m me ptadras now being acquired by the WlUamela Valley Flax Growers' aaaociaUon. WASHINGTON U'a" ,hfL" n Pr-aidont of the Oray. Harbor branch of the American aum vi uiauteera. Th Fkamokawa Farmer- Craaunery octoUon. a cooperaUve concern which naa been doing buaineaa for 27 years, made 245,700 pounds of butter ta MIL A rfn t. rw. . . 1 a- . . . ...... j " . ura rtaBnuiBTOa state department of Industrie, and labor IlTi 1 lhtr x t beneficiaries receivtng monthly cotapeaaauoa aaarda. , w '""t cloawd til par- miU for new oonatruoUooa or tmprovo- the building tnspsctor at Walla Walla, Qtarlaa J r.lll. 4- a .l ... . at Aberdeaol. awaiung trial 00 a caaiaa of ahooUng at chooiboy. who arTaad tn Pl at saaa aa .a.nHaA k. 1 a - 1. at hto hoW T uirom lJM0y!!-ofvrtjaL ,oeI end lumber yarda have ba piaoed ta tho etra-hasardous claas by order of tho . "I1?". department of labor and industriaa. RadocOoo In aalaries to 'a pre-war "d. ellmlnauon of two office, ta rMfaflBfaa ff . aa aa.a. II . . uorrnior Mart iZi it? eonomr have been made In the laat two weeks at the .lata custodial school at Medical Lake. twooiai Rtrm lAvrfttvl . kvaw - a. Iflf ntTld" . sxriculUiraJ councU were I at af a ai TTM aa aaaaJV a. a aa a a o.roatn at a Joint meetlnr of - -- -- - county commercial organiaaUon and the flina ami aa t at m a. Progress on the Faaco-Kenoewttk Dridaa niinn. th. tw . . - - --, .ww ai.vnuia auaw wont began has been remarkably swift Ap proximately 100 pile, have barn driven and 1.000.000 feel of lun.btrTaM. Tfc. structure, when completed, will cost Charles O. Wiseman of Walla Walla, an ex-servlc man. has received the ap pointment of ruard on the mail traina between Wall Walla and I'ltra 11, Will a-iiar.4 f K. , . ... . - ... . . .. -i-sra mi iwo Ci I i ea and Jmra IK. .r . . . . otticem. w un posv . . aril v. . ,VQ flSCTUU. nar of Walla w.n. " . . . Dava RrMffnar . Tuesday morning in the lavatory of tho . . . vj Mil ! i-aaro. Ltaath w" to an attack of heart trouble California! " Wy 10 lA-Ld. The Washington atats supreme court "a reveraed tha King- county superior ' court, which (-ran led a temporary In junction reatraininir Seattle and Kinf county tCloato from Interfering with the operation of a plan to distribute northwest nrtaliu-ta I. . . awwivu pmmirw IDAHO The Boise Chamber of Commerce niaua am amounlint to f20.0ML and Ita U-lebtednaa. to Uu. .2??riVlbo ,L"U roasur-r reports 1:10.200 J m tha public school fund available, for apportionment to the coun ties of th. state. Official, of the Boise forest are busy working out plan, for carrying on es tenstv. rang, appraisal work the com ing summer, which will be of value ta graalara. . Average monthly earning, of the Idaho state treaaurer'a office for ltll were approximately W700. Total amowat or busmea. tranaarted by the depart ment reached the IU.000.O00 figure. Disabled war veterans In Idaho who are receiving government pnr 1 1 lira will not be taxed ln the Income returns which must be mad. before March li, according to Information glvaa out fer tho Internal revenue off ace. The Richfield Public Bervtee company, which claim, to have been losing money avure uw. naa nuae appucavuoa vua imwK uuuuaj T-nmniiaa.i m for at Dietrich. I Uncle Jeff Snow Says With a feller In tha t? a ...... that don't hardly dast to talk about h?wl h was aaacted. soma folks might kinder wonder bow we manage to git' along and ataer clear of goln' pardner. with Bolabevick Rooahy. but the United States eonatitntlflai la .ku . ... . . . along through the sand drifts like a old-time emigrant wagon comin down the Columbv river road in a art. StOrm. It RUT h. a laa4t. .Im Wm It git. there Jlst the same, .pile of this pertlckler brand of beU'n' high water. The Foolish Heart Evelyn Well. In San Franci-co CaU TWn fatOa. aarrat rwaa Whareia l aaea mj ati'an taaav , sd vaary broken. Oarfe. tar , That streak acatoat ua rackf rwa. IW I haaa ariad Jar hw af fiad . T51!?? e-maa aad naa. Bfa aaa M Aaa I aa - - . Thra air 1 aaak mr InalaO raaai aad as sm ta aad caw Ua eat Aad tkaaa wWa'taok C-4 ra, WOl aad waaWraaata la. daaaja Waa. .ad aa feat eartet naa a ai Cad that the n. taa look fnaa Alaa, taay kaaw sot what tar, 1 I had so Me'llkUBV? Taa taal hath laaad am iiad