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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 29, 1922)
4 K THE- OREGON SUNDAY". JOURNAL., PORTLAND SUNDAY . MORNING, JANUARY 3. 1S22. I Be aai-a. he aaaf UraL tma ate MkM Ss yea nH hew Uw ee et Tbe Jaw-Mi fceildine. Broadway and I kill WMi Fortlaad. Orvrna. kalerad at Ue IMaUrifte at Pertsuad. OnseeL fa wan sins tlmsss tba swua as aaooad flXU'HONfc aUia Aetometie 40-41. All (VprtMitit mrM by theee waw-bef. STT 1 ) SAL AIlVKBTlHlsa BEPBEAENTA- . T1VI Imliala Kealaor Caw, Bruannck - niwiia. 124 glfta ifnw, Kev leas' Manor enurting, CKIcfx VA iriO COAST kEPRJuSK.HTATIVK W. B Baraaerr Co., TumI r knUdios, Ss Free. ' rtaee; Title Isaa-ance bwtldina. Ua roat-lnUUIatae-r baildina. kittk rteht Rig ORCGOX lOCMiL rawma tie to faier ilwtlu eoer which H ebtetinaabte. It alaa will sot print say ty that la any way etoralatat raedins aat- r tar ar ual eeaaet readily to . tiiTtrtWna. srBscmirnoN bates By farrier. ('It and Coentry, . Inn t Ann :kiUT On ...... J I Oaa wBih. . 4 UAXil I BUKDAY One week. 1 I Oaa weak. I .01 -e mmlk . ., . ,41 I . f MAUAtr, BATES FATABf.B tT ADTAKCB 14U,I U m wf; . ....40 Mix Baa-he. ... 4J4 Dall.T fWlteeal Suadi-I fna yar...,.,44.ert B'S BMMltlia .... 1.S3 Three fsnrttht... 1.T4 Uaa awfith . , . , , wrrxLt ttCrery weinaeaay? Owe year. .... .41.0 Blf -aalha TWe lata apply eery FARM AND TOWN B HAVE had an agricultural conference. It passed many resoiutions. AS U1W wumurw w wy . Robert Harris Uvea near Casper, Wyo. He has been fat the sheep bnsi- nees II years and Is s competent rancher, says William Allen Whit in Judge. - - ; . Last fan Harris took 2( carloads of sheep to Kanwut city witn i sheep in each car. Alter payinr the freight and selling: the sneep on ue market ha had 11 cents left tor each sheep. The sheep market was not "off the day of the smle.v.Fre!fbf rates naa not been suddenly increased. The transaction was a usual transaction. It Is a common occurrence in every part of the United States where sheep are crown. And what is true of the sheep business Is true of the cattle business. In hundreds of Instances ranchmen in the Northwest who had an abun dance of rood alfalfa hay priced at but S3 a ton were compelled by their debts and the demands of their creditors to drive their stock to a dull market and take what buyers were willing to pay for it. The hay at so low a price could have been profitably fed to the stock, But the calls for liquidation were so insistent that the cattle and sheep had to be sacrificed for whatever they would bring, leaving the ranchman with his unsalable hay on his hands. So pinched has been the situation of newspapers brought- people In closer touch, spread : ideas of liberty ' and progress and ' opened the way . tor more liberal and more equitable gov ernments. ' . ' ' " r . , ' -V Those who decry the automobile because of its so-called drain en in comes, are blind to the broader, per spective : that it spreads out before mankind. It is worth, all it costs and a thousand times more. As cheaper cars are more and more made and go more and more into the hands of people, human . happiness and the forms of Individual enjoyment are enormously heightened. -f 1 Travel from place to place is tre- WHYi NOIXTRY r- CHRISTIANITY? ; Mankind In Peril of a Reversion That wm compel a Beginning AH Over .Again If CooperaUva Helpfulness . . Kot Soon Undertaken Maa Could Pass This - Ordeal, as He - .. r-ieo Often Has. But Why , Should He I Time Now te ': .. ; Move Onward and Keep Moving Ever After - a : . The Way Pointed Out. - COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF. SMALL CHANGE;. Ito youngster who called It the Com munity Hop Cheat had it about right. e thrOQXh Sounds Tom Wataon thinks he Senator Glass remarks. sible. Poison gas . Is making its greatest demonstrations just now h some con- gresa tonal debates.-- - Trrtna; to get all the traffio wQl bear has caused more than one business en terprise to be short and sweet. the- Waaaiacbm HiU The leaders of Europe, with the pos sible ! exception of M. Polncare. have largely come to the mint af nnijTtn. mendously increased, and travel Is atoe the interdependence of naUons and I instruments. But it's terribly costly. great numan leveler, a mighty I prominent leature m . j I or the European tendenew la m n agency ior uie gpreaa oi aemacracy. i (. j- ,K- ,, . - , - . ZZ, T . , . . . ' I ude of the so-called succession states When Napoleon could Journey but a I the nations of the old Austrian em few miles an hour in hla military I Pire toward each other. Thev.ar Re operations and when communicaUon stiting treaUes of . friendly lnter- waa bv ata eoach or messenger. I "'"-r" wwn-oarners. sonen Muir MtRwyiiriMi One good way to outwit the noise- making neighbors is to Install similar Even' the penitentiary win be too rood shelter for the peddler of narcotics if he ever gets his dirty digits into your Dome. If the merchant eouldnt make his customers believe his goods were the beet ' available he wouidn t be in bus! Pvan . in A l .v. i... i. a Vrwn .aa m.hmn Yivm nntiflo.d their frditorat crowned heads exercised ' soverels-n I linnii. ... . I ness long. vuw u.u j um. . i m mauik oi. Lraaa annrninan i & to come and take over their herds or XIOCKS, ana tne creditors nave rone powers in nearly au tne woria, I a unemployment, people are beginning I There may not be much to -this faith . . . ... . m il. i Jt a t An I Tti loot tfiino. Iii'IIi,' vnrM tn Anl realise Xbat tfaia COUnt T-V i nrt rit I mm talk, hut it'l odd how ill AM rmn Tara Banlat. . . X3( Oaa Btth. . , , . .It ' SUN DAT -lOnli) Oaa far $1.0 KH bkmUm. . . . . l.TS Taraa SMetlM... 1-00 WETKI.T AKD BUNDAX Oaa r' in debt,' When you talk in town about the troubles of the farmer and stock- la Om Wait. Baua ta Eaatra salnU twiihM as amra- te. Maka mitttaaeaa by Itoaay OnUr Ei rn Ordrr ay Unix. If yaer paOoffica M w a anat-Mlw a(taa. 1 ar S-arat (tana win fm awiit Hk all faaiHtaarM panbla to Tba Jaaiaal 1-mbUabias Ceapaay. racUaad. Oweaa. man you are always met with the dogmatic remark, 'Oh, those things are! opening up more ways for the in- roverned bv the law of supply and demand." But listen: . The law of creased Happiness or mankind. supply and demand, as you call it, is in the hands of those who deal in the products that come off the farm. They run the law of supply and demand. They manage the law of supply and demand-and -regulate the law of supply and demand. They operate the law of supply and demand every day and many times- a day, ilejred star all ta.fta.ir r -.v.- 1 1I V he's A Trine- " wow.r sysiem.. -.xne purpose of the great the civilization of the world and in conference at Genoa, called for March SIDELIGHTS Keirhbers eoght to get together for something e asides tunerelsi Hhersaaa Coaaty Observer. . Steel be tin tea Is reoorted as derrtsetft. but according to the papers, the bust e ass ec steeling u very acuve.amKy bun ard.s ' Ifs safe to bet that Newberry won't vote with the farm bloc Toe otoe tors occupy seats that cost lees ata ualsey Enterprise. . In the state of Washington the sub marine is betag used to smuggle boose. No wonder there la an effort to limit the construction of submarines. Molalla Pioneer. - ' In the matter of foodstuffs America Is still playing the role of the world's great storehouse. There seems to be little Indication that we shall reHnquleh that role la the near future. Medford Ciartoa a . a Tha notable Mrs. Stakes nlUfoTtv pleads for $19.000 alimony per annum from her millionaire husband ss sary for family support. And yet there ere several damee extant who could man- axe to set along fairly well on half this - amount. Oregon City Banner- Courier. A STRANGE REFUSAL A YOUNG man, a former prize fighter, went over to Harvard oy me supreme council before the Cannes -meeting broke up, is to devise practical methods for the rehahiHtstlon or Europe, starting with the implied premise mat -Europe, nay. the whole I world, is a unit, that recovery and ele- auon must oe the lot of all, if it is to oe m ice or any. xne Nation and Athenaeum (London). MORE OR LESS PERSONAL - Random Observations About Town " The Oregon Country hens la naf rm 1st 4ba demand once a year. He goes on producing until the - marketing time comes, hopeful- that all wilt be well. In consequence, Robert Harris, cora- Salemites visiting In the Rose City in clude F. E. Shaw, R. A. Larson, Mrs. D. J. Fry Jr.. Miss Mary Tockey. W. Tucker, Leona Wledman. Mrs. P. X. Al brlch. Mrs. H. B. Thlelson, Miss Ellen B. Thlelseh. J. E. Thlelsen, R. Bonier And the ranchman turns his products over to this law of supply and 1 university to go to schooL He want- j for December 24. has a searching article For some time before he had gained 5S : " with- the quo- " petent ranchman of Wyoming, netted 11 cents a head for Jhis sheep after wide reputation in the Southwest as I likewise perish." The first paragraph of paying the freight. . ' a boxer. He was a professional, lie 1 the article is quoted from an aocount . .vi. . Ko ......ti. i.. i i I made his living- that wav. He saved!0' recent observer In Central Eurone VUlUgl. WUfc V UD. JLAOUW V.t 4 W t . , j , . ' j" r uiucoo luuubujr ia reviveu oy will be short. And the big figures between the ranchman and the con sumer will proclaim the fact to the world. And prices will go up, and the city consumer will pay the fiddler. And the big figures between the Con sumer and the ranchman will reap big profits, leaving a puny share to the producer. That is the way the system works and that is why the big dealers tell off their wealth by millions and the ranchman tells his at 11 cents net for a sheep. take him through college. Dr. and Mrs. F. R. Davis are up from Rainier and are at the Benson. a a a Charles Hall and W. S. Wells of Coos Bay are guests of the Benson. some great internationally cooperative I P. w Herren of Ashland is a guest of his Muscle Shoals proposals and his snubbing of financiers, has refused to wear a little green cap. The dif ference is, however, that the big money combines are not away with the dousing. The "farmers bloc" was told that it should wear a little green cap, be cause it proposed a change to a saner governmental policy, towards a great American industry. All the power of the administration was hurled against it in the effort to make it put on the objectionable headgear. But it stood its ground and a great movement is rallying around it. . The little green cap is symbol of customs that were, and typical of those who dispute the formulas of CELDOJi is a newspaper story as change. If the printing press had delightful as that of the 313 sal- nlv.r invented and Luther. ed the town in question became an oasis of renewed prosperity in a des ert of hard times. Every community needs similar getting practical planning. The farmer out in the country must be included in any plan. SERMON IN A SENTENCE Bat whe ba smui bia rhildran. the work af suae beads, is the audat af hla. thay hall aascttty Buy aw. aad waetify tba Holy Una af Jaeab. and shall far the Gad af braaL Tbay alas that arrad in pirit aball eosie to snderauaduic. and tsar that sisnaafvd iball laara eocu-ute, Isuafe 3 53,2. He was a student while he fought. I measure. Concerning the possibility of i the Imperial. He took every means at his command I such i a revolution, the Nation and to learn. He went to schools and he AmeBaUm says: B. M. Collins of Grants Pass is a guest studied by himself. , Tr " , 1 of the Imperial. But when he went to Cambridge whether this mwiiiitinn u .r.-t r, I E. J. Arms of North Bend is transact- in search of his education the fact j we confess to feeling appalled at the I business in Portland. that he nad been a prlzerignter came I "'C'D "5, morai weakness w & Burlelrh of Enterprise 1 to light. He told the college au- tuT Z . u7 ir . , ... 4 ... . . I imply. Man. having everything he wanU thoriUes of his past life without re- to make him happy love. pity, energy. serve, lie said tnat ne naa con-1 tne sciences and the arts, a subduable eluded his fistic career, that he hadeartl, nd sublime religion having jt j vl struggled through his childhood and ac- " quired the gift for social union, would now wanted to go to scnooi to m be m 1 pitiful poltroon to iet its difficul ties baffle him now. Grant that, for the moment, war, his great enemy, has embruted him again. But it has not per manently changed his moral nature or checked his mental acquisitiveness. It And Harvard J is will that seems wanting, a moral pur pose aaequaie to apply tne reports or guest of the Imperial. E. O. Wright cf La Grande is Istered at the Imperial. H. F. Head rick of Hood River Portland business visitor. reg is a FOR TOMORROW himself for work in the higher walks of life. But the fact that he had been a prizefighter became public News papers told the story. authorities, claiming that the young man's reputation as a fighter would injure the standing of the school, de nied him admittance to the institu tion, at least temporarily. The young man has decided to do what studying he can in public li braries and otherwhere in the hope Wycliffe, Huss and the American colonists had consented to wear little green caps with the same humility! that college freshmen do. liberty might stil be a myth and free insti tutions a long deferred dream. "vaged Polish children carried in Fri day's Journal. They are Polish war orphans and ' were driven into Siberia when the Russian army cracked. They had seen their parents torn from them and killed in cold blood. They had . starved In war-ton, villages and fled from advancing arm lea Though but to 14 years of age, they had been tossed on oceans and been set down in a strange land. They were picked up by the Na tional Tolish Committee of America and brought to this country. They have been In America 15 months un der the kindly care of their Polish ' countrymen. When they arrived in America Ihe train that carried them was lugging the biggest cargo of I COON after Christmas the small rpHERE is a fundamental of Chris tlan teaching which, whether the churches realize it or not, has be come part .of the language of busi ness. It will be found, paraphrased, "in the motto of an international busi ness organization, "Service, Not Self." Probably the appeals broad - rV, . , , , I that he may later be enrolled in the , , , J paTV Cambridge college. 7 v L T , : t " y in America is an American to be rAI1hr Vina 4 es twtVksrvlaSA fw wataa 1 biH " w"Hr oAncsttinn ir. n ATnurlnin in. A. S. Essen of The Dalles is a guest of the Imperial. a a W. J. Mlshler of Grants Pass Is guest of the Portland. v a OREGON . . The state eosveaUosi X the ratarnal Order of Eagles will be hid ta Eugene " June and 7. The iaterwbaa Aetaear eoeapaay eC Medford baa discontinued its twrvloe between that dty sad JackaoevUla. The Olds terry crossing ef the Snake river, south ef Huatlngton. has beea closed to Uafoe because of ice in the river. Stamp sales ef the Sus-aae MateTfioe durtec the year 121 were irfillM. or spproxlmalely S per oest more than in 129. Albert Logas, a HermUrton. CmsXUla county, boy. has bees elected prestdeet or the sophomore oass at Willamette university. , " ' An epidemic of scarlet fever is raging 1 In south Benton county In the settle- ' meat between Alpine and Ulenbreoa- 4 Two deaths have resulted. Dr. J. a Van WlnkK brother ef At torney General Van Winkle, has been appointed eouarilman at Jeffersost to . succeed O. O. Kptey. who resigned to enter the ministry. After being lost for nearly years, s bounty land grant of 19 acres was filed for record Thursday ta the county clerk's office st Salem, It was Issued to Peter White in MZ. Numerous shipments of beef have been made lately from Lake county. The hi cheat price reported is rents, which waa received by Porter brothers of AJ turas for an extra fine lot. The Tillamook county court has de- Mr. and Mra C ti Washburne of Eu gene Are taking In the sights of Port land, particularly the sights ef the auto I tided to rail for bids for the building of show. a a Mr. and Mrs. C 8. Hudson, with Miss Doris and D. Hudson, of Bend, are at the Benson, Richard Fairbanks. R. E. Roth and John Whltaker of Eugene are guests of the Portland. Mr. and Mra K. T. vallis are spending a metro polls. Among the Interested visitors at the auto show are Mr, Sweet and lira. L T. Ntckltn of Eugene- Miss Minnie Beaver of Ashland visiting friends In Portland. road from Kalis creek lo Netarta, which wiu form part of the Tillamook, Bayocean and Netarta loop. The boiler of the Three Rivera cheese factory st Hebo. in Tillamook county. exploded Wednesday afternoon, btowtnc . off portions of the roof and causing other damage amounting to 100. With more lands Just offered for set- . tlement under the soldiers' bonus Isw," the offerings now total 14.000 acres, ac- - ooraing to itooert jl case, secretary ec the land committee of the Asset-tcaa Liegion, - v A ride of more then a mile behisl a runaway team which" pinrurad across and Mra Mahloa S!IlhI??irJL,?e? eoced this week by the -year-otd daugh ter of Mr. aad Mrs. J. Coles of Albany, and the UtUe girl escaped unharV Simpson eSjCor-l few days la the W. S. Lev ens of Baker Is here to si- tend the meeting of the sheriffs and peace officers of the state. a L. O. Burrts and Floyd Bolorooe ef I Salem are registered st the Benson. a a C M. Huddleson of Wasco is here businesa a a a Mra W. H. Martin ef NashvfD spending a few days in Portland. tian fundamental referred to. It will be found In the better kind of automobile advertising, and even in the claims made as to the wear ability of certain well woven hosiery It will be found In the addresses of United States Attorney Humphreys business men before business con- says the illicit narcotic vendor is the ventions and in all conversations "lowest creature that crawls upon which touch upon the principles of the face of the earth.' Offenders good business. who may be subjected to the federal It is the Golden Rule, "Do unto attorneys prosecution may from this others as ye would that they should statement get a hint of the kind of ao unto you," as heard from the stitution because he has been a prize fighter? Are only those born in high man's intelligence to his individual and social welfare. The war has brought home to him certain definite moral in formation. It has taught him. for ex ample, that while there are wicked men and women everywhere, there is no such thing as the wicked nation, and that having made a treaty on that basis, he will have to undo or to modify it. It is a warning to him'- that economic and political transactions designed to hurt his neighbors are, apt to hurt him. too. All such reports fits religion had always made to him. But then, religion Is not an actual and living thing to Christian Europe, as it is to Mohammedan or Hindu Asia and Africa. The mere day- OBSERVATIONS AND IMPRESSIONS OF THE JOURNAL MAN By Kred Lockiey position to be afforded the facilities by-day observance of the central Chris- reception awaiting them. TRAIN OFF THE TRACK -f hflv of a Pnrtlanil home mot daddy at the door with tears and a complaint,' The toy train which was one of the offerings of Santa Claus refused heartache it ever held. Pinched cheeks, eyes dumb with fear and suf fering, rags and tatters, bloodless lips, gave all who saw them a cu rious lump In the throat. They are now on the Atlantic on to stay on the track. It would run the last lap of their Jaunt around the only a little way, then hop to the world, speeding back to Poland.' As carpet, where the tiny engine would pulpit, is echoed by the terser Amer icanism, "Do as you would be done by" But the thought is there. It has sent the ignoble caveat emptor let the buyer beware scuttling to the shades of stealthy transactions. It has given business and the advertis ing of business its finest theme and highest standard. of learning? Can it be that a young; man who has, either from circum stance or choice, moved in the lower circles of ' life, is to be forever con demned to that level? The spirit of America is that of dem ocracy and equal opportunity for all. The spirit of the great Nazarene was to help the unfortunate. Can it he that American colleges or even one American college is to abandon the teachings of Christ and the spirit of America, lest its reputation be dimmed? What would taint Har- tion precept, which is the Golden Rule, would suffice to stop war, famine, plague and most social diseases, and to raise the whole western world to an unimaginable condition of happiness. beauty and wealth. Yet man, in the re curring hour of his greater trials, dis regards the monitor within and rushes unheeding to his ruin,. "How, then, avoid these crises of our society? Here are we, English, Irish, French, Germans, Russians and Amer icans, shipwrecked together and. liable to perish. The doctrine of self-subsistence will save none of us ; for what happens to Vienna tomorrow may hap pen to Paris or London the week or year vard's reputation more than its re-1 after. The more military or the more fiisal to help this young man lift him self to higher walks? THE GOOD OF THE CHEST rTa - e J T e s aa xue uumcu lime is even gecung TVTOT Ions- aro a woman was struck spend its energy with spinning wheels upside down. Daddy quickly repaired the trou ble. The circular track was laid in sections, which had parted. There had been nothing for the little train were singing, scuffling and pushing to do but run off the track. each other in the full exuberance of 1 The farmer, the manufacturer, the childhood sport. They were example I worker, the merchant, the banker they took the train from Chicago Thursday the 313 war orphans were a beautiful sight to see. Red cheeks, bright eyes and vigorous bodies told a story of plenty to eat. warm cloth ing and wholesome living. They to be a part of international rela tionshipa Like David it confronts the Goliath of international politics and international organization for war. Like David it possesses the power of pure intent which makes the strength of one the strength of ten." Churches, even those that are trying to interpret their teachings K TV1 -i-l-v down bv an an torn oh lie on one of the roads leading from Portland. Just before she died she regained consciousness. True to her mother heart, she gasped, "Please see that my my babies, don't go hungry." These were her last words. Half a dozen little folk were in the home orphaned by the tragedy. A man uncommonly fall ef seod worts telTa Mr. Loeklcy the atory ef his baay hla. wbicbbai been aa exeaadinsly uacfnl ona, Ua has wortad tor the nJ ration of the soula af awn aad for tha conaarTsnoa ef their bodi aa waO. Sad bia mm hare tor aome tittle time baa fol lowlnc hist, although ha haa act y berea so much as to think of raatias from au sumcb. . Ira Landrith was a recent guest of the Benson. It is easier to tell what he has not done than what be has done, for the list of his accomplishments is a long one. He Is Urge physically and mentally. He is college professor, edi tor, lecturer, fly fisherman and trav eler. . He has a sense of humor, tells a stonr well. Is very human and Is In tensely In earnest. He Is president of the Intercollegiate Prohibition associa tion and national lecturer of the World League Against Alcoholism, ss well aa being field editor of the Christian En deavor World and extension secretary of the T. P. S. C. E. I aat next to him at luncheon at the annuel meeting of the Y. M. C. A. last Thursday and later I spent a couple of hours with htm In his room at his hotel. In answer to my questions he said : e "My father's people originally hailed from Cornwall. My father's father waa born In Virginia. My father, Marun Luther Landrith. was born in Illinois. My mother, whose maiden name Mary M. Groves, Is of Scotch-Irish an cestry and was born In Illinois. My par' ents went to Texas in 1S52 and met and were married there. . Texas, like Ore- berland Presbyterian. I soon was given charge of the publishing of the books. the advertising and the circulation, and became editor and general manager. I stayed with this work 14 years. primitive stocks might indeed, survive a general crash of civilization. But man does not always want to be living the centuries over again. The trouble is that the imminent peril of society re mains unexplored and almost ungues sed by it. While man fears what is really not fearful at all the loss of comfort or I gon, in those days was on the frontier. the spread of the doctrine of equality- he does not dread the most horrible thing; that could happen to him. namely, the loss of all sense of unity of the hu man race. "Why, then, not try Christianity? As a mystery we suppose that men wul never again agree on it But as a doc trine of life there is nothing intellectu- My father, had 120 acres of black land, on which we raised com and cotton aa well as long-horned cattle. When was 10 I drove a span of mulea plow. Ing and doing other farm work, and from the time I was 11 until I waa 17 I did a full hand's work on our ranch. Oh, yes: I got some time to play, for I was a healthy, average, normal boy, learned to scrap and swim and to tote in the light of modern conditions, do of life snatched from starvation, des- and the consumer are sections of the no rio now great a noia tnat and sickness, and the staggering cli- done ua And we have only to trans- tituUon and misery and restored, by circular economic track, on which simple line, informally repeated, has max of disaster, had cast a black muU:thf doctrines of common sense the Intervention of Polish people, to the train of progress runa Just now Pn the life of today, " they did dow. "isarmlment "e revLlonTf treaty" health and happlnesa the sections are out of connection. knw the churches would find a But after the first newspaper ac- the withdrawal of the occupations, the And the story went on to say that When prosperity in consequence neTr encouragement to build on and counts no one ever heard any more relief of the famine, the opening of "Poland needs these children." And runs off the track the accident Is a opportunity to capitalize. about the pathetic little family. The usi the j pooling of credits the for- PiVAnMM CkT a"1efiffa THA tin inn nr inA ftnl n so It does. Every naUon needs its called hard times. children were not found begging for dered sUte and the establishment and children, needs to rescue them from! Yet the country has more money THE AUTOMOBILE SHOW I something to eat, nor did the father endowment of the League of Nations. allv simnler. We have onlv to translate It into the practice of doing to others I an old-fashioned double-barreled musxle aa we would that thev should do to ua. 1 loading shotgun with which from the It was a home where unemployment forgiving the Injuries that they have I time I was eight or nine years old I did execution with the prairie chioaena, quails and wild turkeys that were so numerous In Texas m the early oaya a a a "When I was a little shaver I walked twO miles to the village school at Mil ford, two miles from our farm. When It was bad weather I rode a pony, some times having to leave it half a mile from the school house and hoof It the feel it necessary to go out and hold and in a twelvemonth or so Europe will I fields, aa the roads were almost bottom- LAST night brought to an end one somebody up at the point of a gun J14 eT?'ra, 0J knowledge ct neT less and would mire a rig or, for that of the finest automobile shows in order to provide for their" wants. h "d I T ndTikTmo'boyl yja me our n&nu, money given ia not this pretty good doctrine for I raised in Texas, I figured I could ride last year to tne community Chest, the coming Genoa conference? Indeed, J anything with four lega in the hands of a trained toiler " ; not tne doctrine nnoenying tne was 1? I landed a job as destitution and wretchedness, needs I than for a long time and interest to nourish, strengthen, conserve and I rates on money are dropping. train them for robust life and whole-1 On the farms and in warehouses seme living, needs them as leaven are great stores of food and fruit, ever held in Portland. In the future citizenship. . I due to bountiful crops. I Never were there so many beauti Governments exist for the people. I More construction is needed than I ful models, never such an exhibition .w . ....I. a.. v. I a- M.w v wi a ii.. o-t i. ,m.n.i,.nuui nti kn. .. .... iuiK of the Genoa conference 7 The I 'rvVhen I tr v, , nv I "' " , I - . Valted states hesitates whether or not 1 teacher st $40 a month, which sum was and tne cnuuren 01 looay are tneiwnen norma, wonts were aeierreaiyou passea irom one io snower ot on too paniry eneives, itiei in tne I to take -part in the Genoa conference ; I increased later. I made all I saved and , people of tomorrow, Rob the chll- In order to meet war's emergency. J the graceful vehicles, you wondered I basement and paid the rent- The what would be its decision If reached j saved all I made, for I wanted to go to trn v Ik, kuouirlH of haslth anit I Railroads need ties and mm nn I whit elhcp aditlUnna nf hMnrr. ltrr. nli1r phlldntn vera ermlnnaA tn, I through the guidance of the Views QUOt-1 mllw. At the end of two Tears I tannine, starve them In childhood I brideea and renalra of everw Vlnd I nrv. nower aneed and convenience school, and the father W nUtm.l.i. if Tech?d through the guidance oflj over J1000 In bank, so I went to and neglect mem in me oays wnen i xne nation naa a snortage or a mil-1 are to oe aaaea m tne swut and i introduced to wnat naa been a they need guiding hands for charac-1 lion homea School, business and I constant process of perfecting motor stranger a job. publlo buildings are needed in pro- car transit. But last year's Community Chest portion. We do not yet know even the ap- contributions did much more than ' On the other, hand.' farmers are proximate effect the automobile is lift the shadow from one smitten tcr building, and you fill the genera tion In which your own children are to live with Ills, troubles, ' problems ahl heartaches! Take good ear of the children, and you take car of tomorrow I Christianity? J Cumberland university, where I put In Many- may say, of course, "Europe is 1 four strenuous years absorbing knowl- shipwrecked, but it is ridiculous to sug-1 i secured my B. 8. degree that gest teat we are in tne same boat." rer-1 year and my LL. B. the following year, haps ; out it is no longer a matter or i That was In 18S9 dispute that we are anectea by Europe s 4' The Community Chest is merely a means to an end. Its object is the relief of need at the least cost in the least time with the greatest benefit to the needy. condition. And, for our own sake, is the civilisation and culture the art. the science, the policies, the literature, the social development of Europe worth M1nvT Writ la Ir alwrava nmaun babies, and it sheltered 843 mis- to ask. in-matters of this sort: "Whet Railroads plead poverty. More) than I century brought on political revolu-1 guided girls. It brought comfort to I do we get out of it? If we look at It I 4.000.000 men are looking for work. Uon. 1258 helnless old folk and assisted from a Christian standpoint, what1 dlf- xerence ooes it- maxe wneroer or not. we flattened nut with prices that do not I to have on our civilization. The de- pay the cost of production. Manu-J velopment of the telegraph and the facturers have trouble to get orders steam engine and its attendant uses enough to maintain operating forces. I in the early part of the nineteenth home. The i money was translated into help for 4898 families; it aided 5896 jobless men; it cared for 1584 "When I was ti and in college I was converted and joined the church. planned to follow law as my life work. I went to Hillsboro and hung out my shingle. As a matter of fact, I went into a law firm, the firm name being Reavla Young Landrith. We handled land, loan and law matters and I made good money, but I was not satisfied, so get anything out of It, whether or not I ..., .i,. t A Kuhrfiu ant he. we are anectea oy tne saipwreca i came the assistant editor of the Cum. WASHINGTON Lumber concerns is Pacific county and WUlapa Harbor are now nearly ! Is full operation and more than H90 -men are emptored. Hunters working ia the rabies district Di Central Waabingtea accounted for 174 eoyoteo aad lb bobcats during t)a cember. although weather ooodiOoaa were unfavorable. -The report of the tight and water de partment of Taooma aVt that the city made a net profit of 4t4.tWX.4t dor. ing 121 on Us light aad power beau ness alone. Despondent because ef the lea hla eyesight last rummer, John B. Oreen committed suicide at Teatma last Men day by baagtng btmaalf Frank R. Carpeoter. 11, was etaoead at Spokane Wednesday to two years et McNeil Island for vielaUng the Masta white sieve art. Carpenter admitted that be has three wives undlvorord. Mrs. A. A. King, wife of the eaahler ef the Fanners and Merchants' feeeK of Walla Walls, died suddenly Wedrwe- at at "While st college I met Harriet C I ?7. '5 r;'. wmarrtel "m oauterGraclN;: TTs. Sffl ZZLl specially constructed tabernacle cleat a last Sunday with tfct iwiw awma Dr. K. J. Bulstn ef PorUaad had charge et the meetlnga Freak Barber, a 14-year-old ttpoeane youth, has coaf net I to hertnr rtokeff six awtomobllee from Rpokaae, KlUyard and laberty Lke saea. The boy Is ta son of Clifford ttarber. a Greet Northers engineer. The annual Bneeting of the North Pa clfVo Fair assort at Ion end that et the North PadfVj Radar assortatioa mill be held ta Book ana Fetwwary X aajd . at which time dates for the fairs will be sn noil need. The Seattle city treasurer has sn aauamd aa aeofnulatlan ef tUia.bOS 11 cash fund to meet the various Iteene ef Indebtedness ef the Seattle, enanlclrel" street railway system falling due be tween now and March 1. A. H. Johnson. Wane Wvna county aaanaanr haa announoed that depwtlee this year must attend a aped a I ejehool at hla office prior is taking the field March 1. in order snore tntrUlget-Uy l handle saw mint matters, Carl C. Hoffman, formerly manager Of the Merchants' WhoU sale Grocery company of Heat tie. baa bees arrested tn Weehawken. N. J, on a charge of misappropriating- (20.000 at Keattle. Ef. fort will be made to esirsoiie nita. IDAHO The state of Idaho has eeorpted the provisions of the Kbepperd-To ner ma ternity and Infancy bill. Republicans of Idaho wis; have tts delegates st their state con vtouon this year, and the Democrats 110. Is a graduate of Chicago university. took special work along the Uses of so cial service and at present ia the girls work director of the Fourth Presbyte rian church at Chicago, whose pastor Is John Timothy Stone. My son, Ira De Witt Landrith. died when he was eight ears old, of diphtheria. a e e "My work ss editor of the Cumber land Presbyterian at Nashville caused me to take up the fight for civto right eousnesa and with others we formed the Tennessee Anti-Saloon league and I waa ppointed chairman of the committee of 100 to clean up civic conditions in Nash ville. It was this fight that proved the opening skirmish In the successful bat tle to banish the saloon from Tennessee. a "Along about US! I resigned ss edi tor of the Cumberland Presbyterian to become the first reneral secretary of the Religious Educational association and I became secretary and publicity direc tor of the work of the Church union. I was moderator of the Cumberland Pree byterian church when that denomina tion Joined the Presbyterian church. e e "I am for more Christianity and lees churchtanlly. The T. M. C"A. has been one of the most effective means of breaking down the old -time feeling of hostility among the various churchea Intense sectarianism does not lead to tolerance or charity. We are realising more and more that we are all bound for the same heaven. Aeeordinr tn Robert O. Jonea T V 1 A .... A V. TUiMfMl I . . - . . ,W. I.. a? .nliimtMl college for girls at Nashville in l0i I owned in Idaho ts estimated at Ote.frtaV It had an enrollment of-leO. Kle-ren I " years later, when I resigned, we had over 000 students, representing SO statue. In lilt I waa a member of the frrylng squadron working for national consti tutional prohibition. I visited every state capital and I think almost every city of H 00.000 or more population. In 230 days I spoke In 235 different cities, so you can see we managed to keep fairly busy. The next year. In my absence from Sixty-one and a half per cent ef the total tatt payments for Latah eomsty for mi were paid by December li, collec tions being M4IAtZ. Cbsrles Brebner. formerly editor et the St. Maries Cexette-Record, has re ceived notice of his appointment as postmaster at St. Maries. Residents of Oroflno have given 111 and farmers In the vicinity U sacks et wheat and 21 sacks of beans to the starving children ef Armenia, . , Thirty persons were arrested ta J. the convention, I was Dominated for vice I tace and other points la' Svoebone coca- . THE LITTLE GREEK CAP Letters From the People l Cam pita Bobs ant to I do not release my client and go after the other fellows. I will see to It that you never get a cent." 1 aecided to leave it to the court, By means ot mo tions and demurrers and the usual tao- I tics for delaying process of Justice the On of the American Legion reports It likewise so changed many of the in the nursing of 40,432 sick people states that half the men enlisted for Industrial processes that production who could not afford skilled care. World war duty now lack employ- became group production instead of And these are only the beginnings ment. This, if true, means that I individual production. It led the way I of the rood done by the money that 3,000.000 ex-service men have been! to the formation of corporations tot went into the Community Chest, It unwillingly enlisted In the army ofldo the things on a huge scale that j relieved want and it helped build UPrER cUss-Men at the'Unlverslty I the Jobless. ' , --'. I had been done on a smaller scale 1 character. It salvaged humanity ef .Washington recently toldl Why not -put the sections ef the 1 by individuals and partnerships. I adrift and it enlarged opportunity ,i freshmen that they would throw I economio circle together and start f The telegraph Tfrought with it the 1 for the repressed. them into Lake -Washington or do I the train of progress running again?! Intensified daily newspaper and Its! Somebody's mother and some- something 1 els equally uncom fort-1 A story is told of a middle west-1 narrative of every Important occur-1 body's dad. somebody's brother and able. If they did not wear little green I eraer who got down to brass tacks! rence throughout the world, told in somebody's sister, somebody's' boy j Baffled Litigant Tells of Endless Post-1 within 'a reasonable time. The company ca pa 1 . ' J I with the idea of getting the banker, I the afternoon of the day that It hap-1 and somebody's baby, over and over I ' ponemeni. ana fmu ues 1 tad ample assets to pay our claim in There Is a similarity between little the contractor, and srenriM needine-1 n- The steam ' nrln And the I av-atn tnrmA that mrmnthv on' ran. I rwuuw, .jan. tn tne aitor ot I case of a favorabis decision, we still reen caps and what Wall street J construction work together again, perfectins; processes that followed erosity still keep warmth and kindli- J tion to one of the many lncidenu of the I attorney paeadedfor a decistonot some stands .for. ' Stupidity, precedent, I He found where buildings needed to I brought with them the doing by. ma-1 ness expressive in Portland.' P ilaw's delay in this county. . About two I kind. Our reaueats were answered by rules and an unwillingness or fear be built. He found bankers willing chines on a colossal scale of things! The Community Chest campaign -rirjIEO'L bI?wcl,5'- mct,41 ta nothing but an unbroken silence. Twelve president of the United States on the Prohibition ticket. - I am, in poUUcs, a dry Democrat and I have always been Independent in pontics. No, I am not a straight Democrat, because I rind that I cant be a straight man and a straight Democrat all the time. I don't see how a man can be a straight Republican aad a straight man without being a moral acrobat, and If you will show tn such a man, I will be on hand to see him per form. Did you ever notice that politi cal parties ar like ponds they have to be drained every ones ia a while to get rid of the wiggletails. e a e "Political Independence ot the woman voter 1 the hope of American Ufa Women want clean conditions in which to raise their children. They are for better schools, better civto condltiona They are against the saloons and nar cotics and other harmful social condl tiona Tea I am strong for Christian Endeavor, -the T. M. C. A. and other such organisations, for the thoughtful Christian young men and women want a cleaner and a better world, a world freed from war and vice." ty Wednesday by state aad federal pre nibltioa eniorcemeat orocera ' The stats bureau ef animal tndastrv has Issinil an order reraovtng the ejumr- antme from the wantty or soar. The quarantine was established December 11 on aocount or aa outoreas or ratnee among, the livestock ia the district. - j Uncle Jtii Snow Says 1 'When a man- gits so prom meat ll 1' dty that be can be sued for alimony and 1 his wife git It, he s mighty nigh to beta' 1 on the road to fame aad proa parity. 1 Mostly, these here alimony allowanoea the courts makes goes t tha lawyer fer the lady, or they doe't git very far. Any ordinary citizen can poll stakes eat fen-It to report with bis alimosy. Or where- be bangs tus hat regtar. it ne I as property of value the wife's lawyer gits their haul on the alimony, arter which the grass wMoer tomes la fer what's left, and It takes a purty good a ted pile fer the said grass wtdder to find sny scraps fer herself that's left, The Common Touch Tha Jseraal f-a pebnratios la thla ecpartaaest ehoald be written est only waa aide' af the paper, asoald aat es mm aoe tail tm bwtft. eee Mat aa in by tha writ--, wheat saul addnwe ia ran sua lease wss prevented for nearly 12 months .tmxuioa.1 Ifrcm going to trial. It was at last heard In the circuit court dnriiur Dc TiUl UAWS DlulAY ember. l2fL We honed for a decision to upset traditions, enable both the I to finance construction. He Induced raps and the street to exist. contractors, and workers to make One In a while a: freshman re- concessions consistent with the times, fuses to wear a cap. lie la thrown He obtained similar concessions from Into the Uk. v Henry Ford, with material dealers,' . When work start- ,?. I . .. . Iclrcuit court for Multnomah county. I months after the trial In September utat. men naa nuneruj , uone witn 1 ior tsss as tne center ot attention in 1 ,:nnn !fv, nrorwMrttion wmwt. 1 1 .x- ., tneir nanus on a. very smau saue, 1 roruaoa uus weu laraunes rwe caw tna aeunrea. ' The only question I cy. We are still waiting for e decision The nower t6 do and the swifter! opportunity to the many who are! w which one of two com pan lea ought from the Judge. -- means ot communicaUon and wider! glad to have their names linked with , ,h. .ct ,.,TTiZ. norl, , , r! JTif u . , , . , i . . a i Iment 01 the action the attorney for one I so much delay In the decision of cases , cyi m , vi wiv. ui.uuu uu , ms . mo . uuuij vi ... - i . . s, ' v im aeieiMuu said -to me,-"ii you i tried in our circuit court. It must be that our Judges are overworked. Can- rot something be done to help them out? Would it not be a good Idea to withhold their salaries until cases which have been tried and taken under consid eration within 0 days are decided? I Have I not heard a whisper that there Is now some such statate in the Orecoo code? Do these Judge realise that ia withholding decisions for months snd years they are allowing innocent cred itors to be robbed without as much re course ss a citisen has la resisting burglar or a aotdap man? We oaa aboot I tha burglar or the holdup man. If we get an opportunity, but we can't shoot our opponent In a ianrsult. And as to 1 the Judges, tt is not to be thought of. This case is only em ef many. What are the newspspera. the leaders ef pub lic opinion la the community, and what ar the citizens in general, going to do I aoout such a situation as this? v- - R.- L Oravee. I w aa 4 a-a Be tee wwe as arty wwe That I Mat east at atacM aa Aad at taw tdasa ef -Hi I ii Te saaatae 11 all aad tsww sewals Had tar eyw est eete te etas aa hie that I Cea ww taw ekftd-wa at taws? pavy. Ctwl mmlw mm taw saia I V. let arar sear tea etunia wwnta Uary say weald wet lei a tee wo a tee twaile At trHrwJ erran ef the Iwsft sad bead. Per be toe rrawd te stay tse rnrttd tae wttEe. Aad a-M S sets aa saww as see- I weald a eaea to tat aawa a Uwwaa. ' Or fraud ay 1 i aawa a n inn stip. '.tWi I wa dwwa ta shay as an at. . Aad awwar fnaad mm ia er mmwr saaa . atoa. ,' .--.. - .- , ' ' ed ewt that t ear Oe bm tale aaj-Lb j ,-Aad aw tse taas waeoS erary aswiaa. ,'44awriMi'ltapwv-4tWwark ' eaaie aarnea aad the aawate tauaa. 4 - 'r I "l Its riiaiii- ns -r-r4-!.