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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (March 2, 1922)
10 THE OREGON DAILY .JOURNAL; PORTLAND OREGON THURSDAY,- MARCH IV "I ! a I ana nave two uerman marx lert oiinung-. uoouas, uaacwg. tcune. has F, 1 At i which ha received tn exchange I writinc and f un. ADDarently It didn't si I tor th equivalent of an - AnSerlcan 1 occur to anyone to ask if she knows a . . . . ... s j - . at TvrrpixtirNT xiwirArx". 1 1X9 oXU. Apparently u isn't expense i now to cook lor wasn dishes. c. 8. jacxun i 'M,! that would keen an American out I EI.. I ii tf I mi alUalfat ..4 i'tmu, oUwrs a m Mi4 ba thra Aosnts yoe. ) of German?, .rf'iiAxt tiTf weekday and Sonde I aoorotns - Ts Jsaroal SuUrtfn-. BnMir im i ur rwrtfcind, Otcv. , 4wM at UX atonc roruttM. nsj I fc trsnamMae Iswash the Mute so seeo xi.lTl.i'Ho.SB Mai. Tit. AatnaasUS MO-ftl. IN ORDER TO KILL HIM venture, because she found in It Jtho charm and value of helpfulness to people. -Her work and her example wHl Ions' ho. remembered by thou sands and will remain a noble monu ment to her uSemory, . , ; 4 UERrtlOtTBLES i I SAtiartaaeaia Mjhd B TIVB B)aaaln Ktar C. JkrunawljJ , MUafc 12 rtfth imm, W torsi SOS ' FIT .ifllTtoiit RSPRtSOTAtlVE W. B. 1 turn TIM Imnn seiMins. Las AHUsa; ,: r-wt- rntH1cr fcalWtjwf, BeaUl, titg OIJ.WON JOLKXAJL MrtTN Um fishl M nJ4 sefrrtanns ernf which It smb sJe " kctxbk It alas wul sot print any eopt that ia an itmltM n-odinc uttir ar that - aannnt eaailUa- ta nnvtilM aa utmrnni. ALgCalrTlOM XATM . ,. By Vmmnr. CKf nt Coaauy. ' V4U.T .1U BL."LAI Um Bth.. ...$ . la ua OfM week. ...... I .Of 'lOn vert.....,! .!! 1 IAILT , "Os Mk $ .1ft . r .. aal at maul ai l satk rATAftue nt advascb LI AIL T AU BIHUAI 'Oae ftt,r......M OOlThiM siiieth...tltS DAtT.T 4.21 fWHAaal Sondavl fMt m. M AO V't aoatlx K2t L TtM atonUM. . . 1.71 iOm Hfih. .... .0 f WETKT.T l.n n Si Maatk . TSm Mlaa i1t onlr 4n IIm Want, Bill 14 &irw pnow I vraMmi .o SlIKDAT ' Oal Thn .71 ... t-Tt BOB IA. . . 1. is.ee oo "C'ORTT ONE days ' ol abstinence from food by Harrey, Church, SUB la 'near-10 and alone la the I boy murderer at Chicago, has caused world.. ' ' " ' ; ! ! I him to sink into a coma from which She . was too 111. for the lime to it Is' Impossible to awaken him. He work. Great beads of perspiration, is being forcibly fed in order that he due fo her pain, stood out on her I may be kept alive to go to the gal- forehead. Besides," he could V find lows: Friday, -strapped to an invalid no work to do arhen welt,!:.-ehalf. i; The 'hanging,, alienists eay. She stairered late the news rooms 1 will . be merely -an official cere- of The Journal office. '1 don't knowjmocy. ashe slayer will not know wny l came nere, sne expiamea i mat ne is oemg put o aeauu when asked. "I guess X was despf-1 Possibly It is necessary la carry out ate and 1 didn't know where togo.M every form of law. The hanging of lief room rent was due that 4ay. If icials are without authority to set She had not a penny to her name. la law aside, and In its majesty" the Hers wa a ease of a wanderer on! state of IUlnols decrees hanging as the face of the earth; , ,. -k.i 1 the "punishment for the Very ; brutal She told her pitiful story! to. a crime of which young Church was member of the big Journal family. I convicted. It Is, in fact, essential for It was a tale of the submerged to I law and authority in all forms to be have moved a heart of stone. She fully and universally respected. - was a friendless and hopeless soul But the sensibilities ot the average in the last extremity of paln,l aick- human atom are -shocked at the ness, starvation' and poverty. It thought of hanging, even a brutal caused a wonder of how' many like murderer who is in effect already so WETKT.Y AND siixnAi .Ii,-- m.V b' roln through the tor- I nr death by starvation that he will ..( X.ailr. , 'I I &n VnAw that Via I Imlnf MtMlUTAd. . i.t. . J I ti Vt. 1 ". Uk nitun br Umr Orbr, Eipmil TM puouc weuare our?a wi ine very uwugni inv uw tmu- cr4.f r iumft if vt otl exiled to The Journal Office, and inflicted ; Dunlshment of - starving ?2lu7vii r,mttuloM MrThi to tS kindly attendants conveyed; her himself to 4eath to avoid the gallows i Ufwnmi Cwy, ncmm a, Qt ) gentiy to her room, where a doctor is a warning to-all of the horror that was summoned ana everything aone t must .ne in tne mina oi ine con- to provide for her needs and make! demised as "he looks forward to the her comfortable. i I day Of the rope, the drop and the If you saw ' and knew this case I end. as It was this would be your thought: I It lis even more shocking to be If there ever was a cause that re- told that the authorities are rorciDiy fleeted the. spirit of the Man who I feeding young Church to keep him walked in 3alilee, it is the jChest alive, in order that he may , be which the community has been try I hanged. Bince he will not know that lnr so hard and so vainly to fill In I he is beta hanged, since the act ot THE OREGON FARM BUREAU'S , FUTURE A Leader Predicts a Vastly Beneficial Career for "This Organisation , Advancing- the BustAees of Farm , ing Througrh tJndeTstniirsr and Resultant - Cooperation Ad-'-' -mtta the Way Leads Through 1. IHfficulUea But ' Foresees '! I- EJventual Triumph. . By R B. Holbrtok rmldest.Cdm&Ms Oenatr IM Bttma. Lincoln Introduced his now famous hcuu aiviaed" sneech as foUows : ' "If we could know where we are and whith er we are tending, we could better judge what to do and now to do it Any mtei llgent Bnrvey of the Farm Bureau and Its future possibilities calls for a definite statement of where the farmers are tn the - present Industrial : organisatton ot rciatv and . of what their tendency la. we are UTinsia an ase oz economic unrest and uncertainty. This Is s doe Letters From the People t Com Bros feat! cm knit to Th Jeonal To pabucaUoa in tin drpAitacat tkj b vtHtea e tmlj ea Mte ot Um pkpar, th M aot ! S00 wart tn fcacth and most b atntd by tb rrttw, wtoM mil ia. tsU mm metam- um coitnbaUoi. J -. , , JOBLESSNESS Capitalistic and Labor Combinations . Bring Fatal pressure, . Asserted. - : Portland, Feb. 27. To the Editor of The Journal la an edUoriaV in The Sunday Journal ot February 2f. headed -SUll More Jobtessf I readt "Onot the great troubles with America today Is a lack ot buying power." Obviously thia trouble is not because et lack of money ' in America, If Mr. Ferd spoke truly when he remarked about the cold stored up Is Washington. ' If money is4 pienUfuu the power to buy must exist. but probably - the - trouble Is lack of courage r-willingness to spend it if the stocking, the stove or the eate de posit box hoards It, a feeling of unrest or fear must prevait When a highly respected United States senator hoards over half a million cash In a sat deposit box, can we blame a poor worker tor hiding a Stocking 'with a few dollars In it? out or the - great - mass of wage- earners there Is a fair percentage' of tnpse who nave ability to carry-on a COMMENT AND N EWS IN BRIEF; 1 J The Oregon Country SMALL CHAWG8 If Oeef Is a rldiiur master he's'nrob- ably uawd to being called "O, alrr , Wlah thta ru Wlnt-haltr. tbk - ar tist, would come 'out this way for a spell. -. . - . v .l w As far as we hava -been able tn deter mine from the papers there are .none but ouriy- negroes. . f ----- - That gladsome season when father la privileged to pay for mother's new bon net is almost upon ua , ,r s- ; i : An attemnt to lanch nrohlbltion oat of existence seems to be misplaoed : we can't see anything funny Init - . ? - Frank Branch Riley baa captured Chicago. But we hope he doesn't bring It home as one of the trophies ot con- . . - , :-s'- The book agent -who called at our house) the other -day got a good idea or tba appear an o of aa "ice fall" without gomg nsar tne Columbia river highway. -. If the royal wedding ceremony lasted 4i minutes we may properly surmiso that the groom knows full - well the agony of shaking knees and chattering teem. . .... . . . SIDELIGHTS Karthewt llnnwilim . StM fmm tat the We agree with the ministry that lass la immoral. Otherwise It would not bo - OREGON r FolWcs is tralet In Linn eountv. Only one candidal, Li. M. Curl, for the stats Sena tO baa flA a fnnnll .-innn. Some, seonle are buying automobiles 1 meat fnr ai1ftfana. It'a retting too I - rw . '- - . . ' . dMgerous to bV a xan.Vobur cartTS; d "ioneCalaada; nwrtwfp. , were nnea 1100 aacb In tuatlea mnrt at r.-.-. u-- r-.v--"' -.r;-; - I Pendleton. -'. - k tti Rmiu waek has come and 1 . . - . - w.--v..t tml Weston has Biased a baa m rln A cWin g7lm MUsraction In deducting P" br etoslng ,t eehool ahuttlr UienTwheo making out an income tax .Vi,!iJ? prohibiting pufc- return.-liedford Mau-TTioune. -i . 1 "7" " " ; V A Harvard professor says that Wash- Weston mountain are now selUng at ISO Ington was red-headed. And considering his record for getting things done, he mustalso have bad freckW-Eugene Re4- ., V ' ' In the justice, court at Wfctia Walla a moonshiner came up for sentence and waa fined (150. In addition to which the ludM .consigned him to the county laU , for a 1 -.An.hinin? a small or moderate fine wiU not deter a lawbreaker, but a lail sentence will do the work. Pendle ton East Oregonian. per ton. Last fall the stock brought from M0 to 4i. - . . , , , This year Umatilla county plans to build exactly 89 miles of market roads. -This la two miles less .than was eoa- straeted-ia mi. - . , . . , JSX earloada of Lane county ooa. roughly valued at from IT 000 to pvOo of two months. That judge I each, wore shipped from Eugene to tor ect antidote for bootlegging I eijn markeU last week. , Portland. TO RESTORE PALESTINE TF THE Jews are to restore Pales- JL title, sava Dr. Bok0low.the tasls must be agriculture. For centuries the Jews have been nomads 'of the j .till very crude ? hanging him only makes a horrible tragedy all the more horrible, since nothing but the ceremonial of the law will be carried out by the execu tion,' the thought in many a mind will t, To what extent is our civili sation refined and to what extent rsroy to our intelligence andjpartly to ,maU lawMnmodlty business of our Ignorances We seem to knows that J .b.i-..- t tn .i, vi romethtog is wrong.- Weuare confessedly j profit under our present social system Ignorant of just what to do and :; how I m,v f,. .v.. s. to doOt in correcting wrong.- Thta l tkM wy til the glamour. Labor dio- uuo i ur .ur 1 tates to him how he shaU run his bus!-; ture generally. ... - i- Inese. oroult If he is will lnr to onerate i on littlft amallAe nrnrlt than a Iirn Now. lust where does the farmer fit mfuvyn nA iwyunu hia .,..,.. into thie economic cycle? What jpart grows, he does not get far before tlte. has he played, what part Is he playing? targe concern, like labor, dictates' to He has been a generous producer. H him bow he shall run his business' or bai, toiled ear and late through all things will be fixed so that he gets no seasons in the hope of accumulating his profit - at alt Consequently there is little share of the world's wealth by In- nothing left but to quit and seek a job creasing hW production. Through length with Big Business ; that leaves the other of years he has been urged to produce, fellow, who has less ability, jobless, and to produce more abundantly.;!-He If. a present-day tendency seems to has been led to believe that his one hope reveal, we have killed Individual initi- of getting ahead is by continued and In- auve and energy and have substituted creased production. For this reason he cooperative combinations . with fixed has fed and clothed thm.mw uv luxury, prices, and unionism, as the social sys Whlle others Idled, he toiled. He built tent for all our troubles, to be a success me roatu oTer wuca tucj uiuic. jic i i rp.ar aotnn Tt win h.. nnnw. furnished the-weajthy the capital which j forward as on the day of Pentecost and thev eiDlolted.1 He nald without protest I a Mtivart .u . hA.,.tn- j -j. the price asked for what he had to: buy are sold and parted to all men as every ana acceprea wun equai grace wnaiever man has need. Then sound the death the traffic would bear In the way of a knell of that Ananias or Sapphira found pricafor what he had to selL He m- guilty of deception and holding back of ceptejl the last economic squeeze after riches. Get the BIbl and read about .wdv..w -". " - " iw mica BLory, a ii say. XsewlidM to praed tbtt ho kts kantst to aach. WMmb hi aaabto that b km B cities. ; There are millions in Europe who. through successive generations, have, not 'known what it is to have la home. They have been traders.; An, eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth! It was the doctrine of the jungle. But is it a true guide for a modern state to the point of pur- 8ENATOR3 WITI COLIC Agrarian pursuits they have almost fposely keeping alive a boy, who prob dlscarded. . i . ably never had a chance. In order to Butj repeats the. leader of 'the kill him? back to Palestine movement, anarchy : is defeated by agriculture. Soil pro- j why does not the street cleaning THE" irreconcilables are quibbling I duction does not breed Bolshevism. 1 hureau keep the department Of pub- r over a reservation which declares In spite of Its hardships, contentment I uc works supplied with information i United States under the four-power I city. Art. literature, culture, religion, repair? Why can there "hot be co nna source in tne; sou. . oweration through reports by tne Thus, believe these tollowers after street cleaners- aa to where hgles exist? The publlo works aepart- 'treaty not authorised by the consti- Itutlon. t It is much ado about nothing. No I the star of a great ideal, when Pales- 1 specif io I action Is provided for inl tine Is restored the restoration of 'the treaty, other. than that the four! the soil will be assayed and the pa nations Involved shall communicate Itlent Jilllng of the soil. So pictur with each other and determine "the I esquely depicted in Biblical times, X most efficient measures to be taken I will begin again. . jointly Or separately" to resist ag-1 But the agriculture that will pro gression. - That binds no government I tect the attempt to establish a world ,to ction other 'than such as that I center of Judaism is not more valu 1 government1 Itself shall determine able, to Jews than to Gentiles. MORE OR LESS PERSONAL Random. Observations About Town " dSrnest L. Hardenbergh. mCnicipal"1 paving plant Argued It . Should Be Kept on Repair Work, Not New Construction. Portland,. Feb. J5. To the Editor of The Journal I note with interest your editorial In The Journal of February works ment is entitled to this information, and Is without Inspectors to keep city streets under survey. . upon. Wherever agriculture is the basic in- t . It a president wanted to, he would dustry a sure foundation exists for .not dare take action not warranted wealth and advancement in the re- by the I constitution of the United finements of civilization. As agricul Stetes. If he did, he would be sub- ture fails, either tor lack of just !Joct te impeachment. That would consideration or because ot the move- be one inexorable alternative that Invent toward the cities which is al ; would keep him within constitutional I way a sequence of unhappy condi- ounda tions on the farm, then those tares of clvilliatlon, discontent and radical ism, spring up. . ' 'l Let the preaching in 'behalf of I agriculture apply not only to Pales tine but to America. ; IT8 NEW INVENTION 1 Nor would any president take - tctlon under the four-power treaty ) snless jbacked by the overwhelming sentiment ot the American people. And the American people would be 'irery slow to approve action of an i unconstitutional or extraordinary 1 character. They -would not -approve ! any art of war unless there wasjrpHE announcement from Oregon ' smple jand undoubted cause. I -"-Agricultural college that Nor; would a president enter upon cheaper and more practical method iny International enterprise that of removing stumps has been de ' might t lead to war without some vised possesses the utmost interest. understanding with the senate. Hoi The largest bodies , of unused. ; would have to depend upon that naturally productive land near; Port- uwuj w uiviiii ntr mivugu wuaii wuu aro iuo iuggcu-ou axcao. he would be authorised te carry on In Oregon and Washington are it war. lfe would have to depend! probably 4,0(10,000 acres from which supon the senate for the grants of the cream the first growth forest - money! with which to fight. , In the J has been skimmed by logging Opera . face of already szlsting cOoaUtutlonal I uona Lands have been left worth ? provisions, tt is Itfantlle tor senators less tor any practical purpose while 1 to seek to load, the treaty down with I uncleared. Clearing proves so costly. their Whims and their distempers difficult; and tedious that companies and their 'colic. embarked tn the business have paid " The! moral strength ot the treaty costs ranging from $150' to $100 an 'la Its best effect The fear by na tions of what the United Btatee might ..do in 1 case of aggressions , against territory Included In the treaty Is 'the greatest of all deterrent influ ences tn preventing ouch aggression!. To saddle the treaty with - reserve-. acre. Even Ole with his grub nook has made little headway M As a non sequence the state Is gradually; being repossessed Of some of these; acres through non-payment of taxes. Where stumps have been, blasted out the result looks like a shell-torn A LOCAL MYSTERT oxerhead, wastage and profits. Such has been bis position In the past, and such is it today. Bo much for where we are; now, whither are, we tending? e - ' To answer this question Involves an explanation of the past and why the tendency has not developed sooner. . ."".Srr ,11 JZrrZrAU in regard to -Waste of Public Monev" ad roads. They have been shut off JJLJ S1? ?a. 11 '2 from close touch with their city neigh- Jf tt S lAn.M.i I repair that the criticism is In order, bat groups, and in a measure have been kept J2S?E wh'?mcn In ignorance of the doings of the Inner j" L?2 f. 5?,., i .i- rm i wn I An . asphalt pavement is repaired with posiUon or power, nor have they realized SS"?., .f-S"4,11 their importance in the social structure. fS,.! if. M 'or tte They have been busy conquering r and SS? 5?!? S!!t .,thftt Ter n,i.M. tatn Ptch-Is a rough placa Tou can look FtTaT olcmed form ta T7ruTtSe"a i L " abundant harvests, and they have been var,lant wnld it rTt Jim th.t concerned with building homes and Ifi?1," Sff "i'J Beem,t thif?ont ki.i.i.i ai, i anA " ts time could be welt spent on schools and churches -nafl . roads and ntAlT work alon to tetenUon ?i6 ( l hnrnA ot t"ts. has three plants, two IT. 5 naM!S?S?art of !O0 rards each and one of 2000 yards, time economised and organised effort ... A.-.tMA . .v.. ? f Plei Sf"ntJI?r" 5iri! state code dees, hot permit a municipality v.Hl:00 ia! t0 nt- into manufacturing buslaesi brought back to the old home lessons ..i -j-u mmj..i. - j.T2 mo '-"jour thrifty 1500-yard plant according of a new day for himself. , 1 to the newspaper renort of December 2. 1911.' Hid 197.773 snnni-A vnrHo nf nlr Aftd What Is this Vision? Not Of OpU-WAt-V. and In adriiHnn 141 077 lence and ease and idleness and luxury,! yards nt lwv. wnrlc anil 95 Rn3 winar. but or lair piay ana lair prions ana yards of "outside work."- or within J0.09S I A M. Barnes ia a survivor or an era opportunity to place his huainNsa on the I aquare yards as much new work as re-1 that will soon be gone, and gone forever Mr. and Mrs. E. T. Barnes of Salem are -guests ot the Seward. Mr. Barnes started his business career in - Salem more than SO years .ago In the store of his father, J. Q. Barnes, who had a S, 10 and IS cent store. This store, with a stock: not to exceed $500 lh value, grew till,, It did a business of , many thousands of dollars -'a mohth. Mr. Barnea Is now a stockholder In tha -paper and pulp mill at Salem" and Is one of Salem's most useful and - substantial citizens.. . Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Moss and Mrs. H. T. Brownrig of Seaside are registered at the Seward. r - ' W. R. Taylor and R. W. Sinclair of Pendleton are guests of the Imperial. I4. K. Thompson and A. H. Davis of Prairie City are hers on busineaa. - C H. Howell of Wasco Is a guest of the imperial. . J. C Thompson is here from Medford. .' Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Daniels of Med ford are here on business. - B. 8. Jerard of Pendleton is here on business. . - Mrs.. J. Porter of Cottage Orove visiting her daughter in Portland. Frank IL Shepherd of CorvaLUs Is here on business. . Rv B. McEwen and Mr. and Mrs. Tom Caton ot Athena are visiting In- Port land. - D. O. Clanton ot Bonneville Is here on business. . Rev. F. Keogy of Sllverton Is a Port land bussjess visitor. , - - R. H. Mills ot Salem IS here on busi ness. T70RTUNATEL,T Samuel C. Lan--T caster's reputation as an engineer is not In the keeping of the Mult nomah county commission. The re buffs he has recently suffered at the deserved. If there ls one man whose l JZZ. l,?'"1,'," ?. T. T?"ra 0's C Ia Proebstel, former Instructor ec chemistry In the School ot Technology of Portland, has just returnee irom visiting his family at Redding. Cat, and will leave for his mining property in the Ketchikan district on March 14. Mrs. E. D. Cuslck left yesterday for her home in Albany. . She has been vl sit- ins- her Bister. Mrs. E. W. Langdon. now of Portland but formerly of Albany. Qt A. Nyqulst and Mrs. Oscar Wlrk- hala. both of Astoria, are Portland visiters. - Mr. and Mra C H. Williams ot The Dallas are guests of the Seward. WWW S. N. Smith ot Salem Is a guest ef the Portland. W. K. TaHant ot Astoria v As at the Portland. , W. O. Christiansen of Haines is m Portland to buy some blooded cattle. www M. J. Thompson of Creswell Is a busi ness visitor In Portland. V. O. SlnnreU of GaribaldL In T11U- mook county. Is registered at the Seward. S. B. Redley ot Astoria is stopping at the Seward. www J. Klldeer of The Dalles Is here on buslnesa Walter M. Tway and A. M. Sturtavant of Albany are Portland business vlsltora George M. Stokes of Salem Is here on business. C. E. and J. S. McCready of Corvallls are business visitors In the metropolis. E. E. Groves 'of Independence Is a guest of the Seward. A. B. Hughes ot Astoria Is In Fort land on business. Wheat Is tauoted around tt 10 la the Weston market, with no transactions ' reported. The few growers who held their crops are still hanging on. ' Harry Becker. J. C Becker. WWfam ; Smith and Lewis Zishone were each fined $50, end coats at Coquille for hav ing deer meat In their possession. . - Shipments of apples from Hood River the past week reached only t cars. Total shipments to date reach tTlt ears. About 100 cars remain la the valley. Carrying l.loO.OOO feet et broker each from . the Hammond - snill, the ateam acboonars Bant lam and Flavei sailed from Astoria Saturday tor San Pedro. A reduction of ID per cent In the wage scale of union painters is -Pendleton was effected in an agreement reached. Saturday. The new rate la $0 cents aa hour. David T. tWalgamet of BrewnsvOle has received word that his father. L Walramot of Indenendettoa. . Iowa, has just celebrated the 100th anniversary of his birth. Just after returning from town, where he had walked for his mail. P. M. Smith, a farmer residing near Staafield, died suddenly while sitting la a ehair read ing a paper. According to W. O. Allen ef Salem, raresident of the Northwest Caaners as sociation. -Oregon pecked more fruit ta 1921 wan ever oeiore m lis saaxory. w spite of the difficult financial conditions canners were called upon to face. Announcement Is made tram Wash ington. D. C-, that a eemseUtlv eraro- mauon win be beta u uregon uurior the purpose ot flUlnr the existing va cancy in the posto fries at Oiadstone. The omoe pays a salary ot yiwuw m fwr. OBSERVATIONS AND IMPRESSIONS OF THE JOURNAL MAN By Fred Lockley WASHTXOTON Cebtralla's municipally owned Itrht riant mads a net profit last year of tlU- ; ti.65. Gross earnings were t74,142.t. BL R. Ebonites of Adas, already owner " ot one of Lewis county's most promising herls of registered Holstein catUe, ta milking a cow that gives II pounds ot . r t a cay. Construction of a ommtrnlty hall ta the Oakvlewr district adtolnlng Centra lta was begun Monday. Labor and ma terial nsve oeen aonaxea oy reaiueoM ot the district. Four automobllea and as many tracks were destroyed In a fire tn the McCs lum-Donahos nnn at TakUma caused by a lighted cigarette. The damage is estimated at $7000. ... - Joseph Jacobs of Seattle has been ap pointed consulting engineer on plans for . the greater Wenatcbee and Qulncy proj ect, which Involves the Irrigation of l&O, 000 acres of land. - rr Adolph Fried lei n. pioneer manager at Spokane for M. Seller at Co, died sud denly 6a tare ay. stricken with bean dis ease. He was to years old and had lived in Spokane II years. '.. Mr. Anna Hamburg, 40. was barned f rj th r(imcr is Mr. toekler I Ins : but lie finally want down and didn't I to death at her farm near Graham Sat- sobWt today. This excediiiiy militant Boata-l rt, , They never found hU body : so he urday while burning brush. Her clothes . nor UUt lwasma. sna 10 tnis arays. , , ,, ... M tKj .m-.. 1 were enureiy irarow .uro w ww. in HMura ua noruiiia I -w i n . .iim u m iuin urr ... - pqrauer of lortua in westcm sna oomro iumi K, hem KeitflS buuit thrillins tale at the dreadful dsys of tb Ciril wu. My brother Isaac, who was in the Eighty-third Illinois volunteers, lost a! leg at Fort Do nelson, while Nathai who was in the same regiment, was wounded three times. spirit la attuned to the grandeur I eatna plane as that of other Industries. I nair and all eaual to 89 miles of is-fnot 1 1 soent an afternoon with him while he nrititviie witrAw i i-i a ia Area n iz i Ti tw in aju-n rnrnrniiniTV a BrntAiiasvJ nsaawn iMtaJa a,i.i. eia - s nMin tni auwutfatiw ii a ft a n ruMm hiehwav It is this man who Dlanned v"temati iMam ot work to promote dayg of capacKy operation, if this news- vlsitmg hia. daughter at The Dalles ahdl "M LJ0- L LenSlSSt Dignway n u tuu niau wuu piojiucv 1 ,t .,n,Ma nwm.nnt ivpt.m 1 7! r ,1 r-.. j i. . I - " iiti4h alwho .mi a member of toe Twenty- and located it. With him the build- pt etTkSJ anloK tag of the great road waa a labor satisfactory living conditions; tha hlgh-l t85.4SJ square Tards of repair work Death valley and within the Arctic I nated January 81, 1M4. He waa home Bmw,yB"a m " T . ' 7 e laeais in nome ana community : tuei that snouia have been aone only her shoe soles being left. The Seattle city council has voted down the 6 cent carfare ordinance, but the people at the coming election will express themselves on the E rick son plan, which would provide a $ cent fare. - Operations were resumed this week at the Cascade mill at Yakima. Orders ar In calling for operation the entire sea son on a double shift basis. -necessitating In storm 1921? circle ; In Montana and Mexico ; In South 1 on ruriougn ana someone snoi nun in dsck xrom amDu&a. ugnaiusiu of love and Inspiration. After the November the boys and girls ot the county. He is i at all? Or would it he nertinont tn I trnm wnnnii observation. Dawson and I didn't bother much with arresting neo- country as solicitous for the pro-1 rxaertaking to cooperate, runy reaiiaingi base, on your ' editorial, a query as to I Deadwood, Tombstone and Tucson, Aider i pie- for murder In those days, aiy .nn Kio-iiwav aa a mnfhr I that "cooperaUonB is not something that J whether or not there is not plenty of I Gulch and Virginia City, Butte and brother and. I appointed ourselves a 0 -m-W. . ft m .! mk mm mm fjfr im a icuuiuo laiciriw ui ma uu4iis jja, ii bo, iw tne pnaui couia raw America ana i trippw v. " - i ana waller BteDDina. is, a piumoer, " I huainess and rural life on the Dart ofllrant hna, ituTiuit Ami. anv n.l r9 1 .minh. n tha mlnlnr ortuntriea I were so disturbed In tha South that wa I fi,. AmmA smuli in a mam ml LanvaBicr tame uuujius i4U!h wis Seattle which they occupied as bachelor quarters. A gas neater was going zuu blast. lZ ikIi rTf wrtiw nhpr can be wrltten aown VxeA rle to -PJr worhIn the city this year to keep j Boise - Basin he knew them all when committee to actas Judge. Jury and fir- New city wateiworks, Inclndlng a tor the well-being of her child. Other foUdw It mHst M ntt-a In the heart the plant DUBy doing nothing else? they were in their glory.- He has seen muAd. W burBld Sam's murderer weU Pbt of supplying the town for engineers, oinciaiiy oougatea, passea iris not an understanding among a num-i i). ri. Huehnon. 177 .Mirnv unarm mdm and ra. dui 1 a. .v. a v.i i w - 1 . . ..... - .a I " . IBS vuubh r-aaw -- - AAA tata W WUa UOl a W S3 IVUilU asAAAAsi by, but ho inspected the viaducts of people wno agree in tneir minos ; , ---. a m, 1 1 to act in concert, but rather .an earnest sections of the city, is the plan deter- ImM, 77 vaara vouns not 01a. tua tm tti. mi-i,. -a wui in m 1 : . .w -v5.-.. . . seven : djt iignc - saj uncie mno, i a reoent meeungv , bonds WHAT PIPE AND WATER? I . , clear and nlerdng: he reads without wi mcticuioua car. ws Ueterminauon of a group oil people to QvesUong Relating to Oak Grove-Jen- glaseea He can draw a bead on a moose "1"" fT " J;. th: - n "7; Zi Zu ZTf t. ti (wa t!Vhl. orbasqulcklyanda.a suiu tc - ,: - r- i Jennings XiOdge, aiarch l. To the Edi-i as ne oouia w v. v. I through his wrist. It was deflected by bridges and endangering hot Only the anc 01 "? vr&yt wvoiveo, tcP 0 Tn- jwrnaW would like an an- his hair has turned to silver. . .. llh Knna art I r-arrm nnt a- tha alhow. rSatw-. ff7 ir;r.; ? columns of The Journal to can -""--;- rzzr, Not far from where the batUe wai AASJ blVM.a ia-iu vv.a Aaa-r -wvij -mmmmm ai. fAlIritsHfiw 4l1SaATf MftCl I Sinn. Willi IDUVBl SB, IMA KVIUlfsau, uav v . - , a. . . a. . neath. operate with those who absolutely agree r'Vh"at" TJ," "f" ' ar. to used many a man half his aEe, when it comes ps; on was a oig bu n.Be wa. Mr. Lancaster's pictures of condt-U.ith him, but we must learn to-cooper- JavJ 000 Oak Grove-Jnnlntt to walking over rough d broken oun- belnff ud as a hosp ItaL My .UncJVs tions as he found them should have -xZlZZ I1 wter ystcra? Are we assured try. - I agree wltn us. A concerted ana - ear-1 ,, 1.' . an,nl wife was wounded. In the house, nursing the A bunch of cavalrymen, who . dissolved any doubt ad to the neces-1 nest effort made lointly by a body ot flT.,,Sr r.rt". J "It.rl -n,a. a t.h and where was 1 1 had got hold of some liquor passed the rrJ"", .rT." S'Vir 4 Awila know. If has been pi slty of . immediate action. ' But response to his appeals and warn ings , the county commission as a whole yielded grudging action. Had it not been for his activity and pub licity resultant it may be doubted if; the commission would have acted at all. :h .. As the man who knew most about the highway's structure, Mr. Lan caster offered to clear the Imperiled common Interest with an implied agree ment that all. shall abide by the result of the common effort and earnestly Sup port if that Is cooperation. ' '' ' - Ch "J;. He sees In Cooperative marketing a Chance' to get a fair share ot the prod ucts of his toil; in legislation an oppor tunity to protect his own interests i and proved bornr he saidin answer W my ques- I house and, though it had the -hospital (to my satisfaction) that if wooden pipes Uon. "I live at Anchorage,. Alaska, ana are used it will be only a matter of at I was born at - Spottsylvanla court few years before they would have to be House. ' Virginia. October 1$. 1144. - My re Placed, which means money thrown If r Kathan Barnea was born at away. . A Taxpayer in the-District, i Fredericksburg. . My mother's maiden lloottirf et one ot those wast set! tn pro-l name was Mary A. Mahary. I was one motinc the nnterpriae la qnertioe elicits toe fol-j aia-ht children, seven of whom were Ssa-riasrt? Twtl boys.! I was next to the youngest. My his own industries; and la education the I k,t oe two prototUoa, naraely: (1) BhaU older brothers were uvmg nonn oiine ....ih, r,.- ..n.ht.uf .inn Kla Ineorpotsle as a water diatrtetr (2). 8haU Mason and Dixon line when the Civil thrss Bomiiww tor water ennmJsnonen be elect-! iv-v nt K'thn named i after SB.A ;iiVA wiB ' a . ht.j .ikH. nmiiM, tv r.h. I rather. Ana isaao eniistea in wie a.ign.y- a 1 1 rrza opportunity for enlightenment along hisl chosen line. He asks only justice ana ne I proposes to move conservatively but res- j The 'tions to bind presidents hand and J battlefield ot the World war j li Is foot would be to rob the pact of its J difficult i to keep the subsoil, from most powerful Influence. ' I forming a new surface and leveling ;' .What Is more, the haggling and I is almost as expensive as getting rid quibbling and hairsplitting and of root and stumps. jockeying and pettifogging by the I . The anethod which results from senate Ukos away, the confidence of years ot experimentation on the 'part signatory powers tn what America ef the agricultural college utilises . could be depended upon to do Inl the principle. Of the stove, the chim- . carrying eut the terms ot the agree- ney reversed and direct contact of menu and, to that extent, under- fire with, the stump until 'necessary mines the work et the Washington thermal 'Intensity hat been obtained ', conference. It has a similar effect and the Are can be closed up and 'upon other nations by giving them (allowed to burn both tha crown and ,tha Impression that the United I the roots near the surface. ; statea is hesitating, distrustful and not at all to be depended upon. In measures, looking to the , peace - of the world. 1UI juiuau nviii luaua li UTVVS' A recommendation-In Its favor Is that a man can put in either full time, or part time, dependent upon his own situation. He can make a business ot clearing tha land,: or he ; aary, after si long pxperience, to dip j can work during the winter; when the swings of their house of lorda I the cropping of cultivated land Is The present ambitions of the senate I finished. -to exercise powers that, under the I ' A demonstration Ot the method jCOastitution, rest on the president of lis to Occur neat Corbett on the Co- the United States, may ulUmatety lumbla River highway, March II, and make It advisable to put that body tha agricultural college i ehdeavbr where It belongs. . ; : Ing to attract the interest and at- ' 1 1 '" 1 1 ' 1 1 " ' tMma mt Portland hnsiBaaa man. I On h way home front fiwhxer-l go Important subject shOuld'have lAnd, the land of his nativity, which I both. he bad visited After 10 years ab sehce, Arnold Keller ot Oregon I A Brooklyn young Woman has been found it possible to Urkvel first J awarded the informal title t being class . across Germany, via Berlin,! the best all-around girl in tha city. stay three days tn hotel and three She graduated at the head of her daye la private families, boy A suit ef class and her other accompiish . woolen clothes and & pair ot-shoes meats Jlnclude riding, nwln&'swim- M.Ata a .not art A artttivnf timfit nlnl.W Invonl thla nuL Th Farm I nnn of tha - tenritar aa dermin tha tmmA- i tkta-di TllhlOia volunteer Infantry. to himself He made A similar offer Bureau is tne champion or tnis program. SZZZZt .rttS.M. I eniurtea m me lwemy-miui ow to nimself.ne mwe a muar orxer apologies for the past, offers l 7 lf1 " .JL'lT!0.1!' fantrV. My brother Samuel was In the in respect to tne clearance me n() wthi of sister ofganlaatIona,jand oTuia Tennessee infantry, entire roadway. On Wednesday he I admits that it will make mistakes, as for U pnnnm at ubikaJns ta pnoA new) while Brother David and myself were in nue Finn Virginia.' When you come, to ara miffed hv the hlirhwa.at - b its marcn ia lorwaro. wui never SSnLj-U Tih 7-' think of It. that l a rather strange - ... J , . . l iook uaca except aa ine Barreyor kjuxo .h. BrDnitia wAa fraction of the costticipaied by t &et hl, hearings for f ixlng the SS b watee the county commission, ; v advance line. It is orgamzed'upon sound iswisa.t In has given a-KAaa a-anlna eraa the foo.fflnntnsr and 1 mii . n ...i:.. . . ..MM..tMiilAf TH Tftnrnnli JTrnnn- nf nnr rnnsiaa the chief Impulse ot the highway, groups to support IU cause, f it aims to men suggest we have beer and put a tax whiM mjr father's two . " . . , , ,- . . ira r,rmin a luiiM Kikiuiu i fNa on it to nay the soldiers benua 'This and EUaha. were In tne conteaerate That ho Ould planjand direct con- .dcerSark armyl- x I was a sergeantat II and X atruction of the great causeway but IZT,., . n: .,,. S because they would set both the bonus drilled young boys, with the downy fast Is not .accounted able to plan andlsure a profitable cost of production sale.and their beer. ThU would, rmke to their cheeks, and whIU haired men. flag on and waa under the flag of truce. they fired a volley through the. win dows. Three of the wounded . Federal soldiers, two wounded Confederates, my aunt and a neighbor of hers who was also acting as nurse were killed and several were wounded. One of Uncle David's negroes called "Nigger Ben- ran out to where the fighting was going On. located my uncle; who was saving his arm dressed; and told him hisSwite had just been killed. , Bea told him he thought the drunken soldiers who bad fired ths volley through the windows were Michigan cavalry. My ancle offered to make repair of the dam- every humanly conceived laatitatton ; ha .2 - . . . . . . I -Rat It march la forward. It will never : odteiaed. r . . . i .v. . i tn asenee et ta election on aui iook oacK except aa ms awnyw looaoi, the 4ooaitli looks to the use oalr sf back to get hie bearings for fixing the I hull Baa water. No Uwr aauro Is bsias eoe-i tt A .-n nA lin. a AT-trW nlM-ttnn allllll1 I ailll 111 1 - n. 1 tevery Instance, the commission JJnPl BONUa BEER "aNd" "bOOTLEGOERS j riven short shrift to an engineer ptlndnsearia theEditorl thing, that three of my .brothers were wearing blue uniforms, and fighting te the beet, of their acuity againsi me threej of ,n who wore the gray. My mother's two brothers, Bam and John Mahary, were in the . Northern army. make repair, damaged parts of It is one of the mysteries : or Mult nomah county public administration. GHACEi MILDRJED AM09 Stars and Stripe look brighter to then. . .... a w a suggest a better way tnan puuing a ! im aiuuaa Tf- la .Fft.iU TXb-I nwirei mw swuauv VV-W w, irayui VI uw- ers that challenge equality anywhere toutor??. J11'! tha. mnr ,!l.lnrtrv tm Mma iuiuiuns w caaw roni oocaaaw we Down South they all get Into the game. Tou j Yankees never licked - us you starved us out. ' . ' . - i ;- - .. . t - "Way, up north, near the Arctlo circle. I have two flagpoles in xront or my Do you notice how peculiar my eye-. brow Is? Put your finger up on my forehead and you will find where a Minie ball plowed a furrow and gave my eyebrow that funny twist, l was shot through the groin at the battle ot -the Wilderness. I was also wounded at Spottsylvaniar-shot through the right shoulder. . . ' . ... . a, . - T served under "Jeb" Stuart, one of the most brilliant and dashing cavalry commanders of the Civil war. - To ward the last of -the war I waa with Mosby. and what we used 1e do to the tee school build ing; and to allow aa additional levy ef 10 mills, presented to the patrons of th N aches school district Saturday,. carried almost unanimously. , . . IDAHO 5 ' . Nes Perce county commissioners -esW . tared- Into contracts laat week for 100.- . 000 worth of road work, to begin imme diately. - - Delinquent fixes In Boise county amount to-tl,7Jl.9J, while the county, owes shout 10&,000 la oputandlng war i ra. 'x :; . - : - More than $115,000 was paid out Sat--' urday by the state treasurer's office for general fuad warrants outstanding " against the state. - C L, (Farmer) Smith, agriculturist for the O-W. R. A N. system, is mak ing a tour ot Idaho la th Interest of " dairying and hog raising. . , .Mra W. F. Fisher, mother of George H. FiEher. chairman of the Idaho state industrial accident board, died last Twee day at Rlhgy, aged II years. - John E Coder, recently killed tn aoB af XL H. Recognition by the federal government of the headquarters company of th 41st division. Idaho National Ouara, has beea received at the office ef the state adju tant general. The company Is Sieiioaed at American' Falls. a crack shot. He broke away from the enowsllde neajv Mpuntalnhorr Idaho. a The yoimgman watf 'year Vll B V - WW SBhA VB BSB TaT W as SVAVW' located tne aucnigan cavairy company and ambushed and killed 13 of them that afternoon. . SbmeTolitical Reflections hoa all-absorbing purpose is to make lt mf T,2lfSf tentoir one fUes the Stars and Stripes, I NoTtaVnerm was plenty. Some of PhU the nag ot my country, ana oo tne otner i Sheridan's men captured, eight of Our B RIlXLiOT, . womanly, p botUe. of liquor i llZ 7n . 7 rZrt ti'm ria. f Th- t JrTt S ' eo J"- of our , .and gentle to the last degree ,?rrA e wt baa. o-Kam. 411 w T tAns9h4 tfkWt skVuf ftl I in m a - - - - 1 .ana gcniu w ui lesi aegrce, attractive Ot all. With such leadership tiKana flag I fought foe and Was wer ruerrillas and not regular Uaa-l a Miss Graca Mildred Amos ot Port- Urd with progressive farmer, everyway That Cfeorat. SSa- . . . , a . . .A.rtl IL A LAS' A IMK ir UAtLA SB - ' ' J . w bs . BAaB. W3 I , I OVItMt land laid down her earthly endeatOrs fMam- "!".r - .rr1-01. I Manty of money to pay men to fly ml fl" iwas given me by sua Boims or leuied to retaliate, On the night of . - - . . - ur mum ww iwwmt m iw .u &atiu a i . . ... . . . . .. . . . i du.m W, sstUas e AcBae ts ens far wmt ears: . Wtwrijl ssk aarr a trass ebs avats te taw Be waesss a Qhsste. sad wstot fa --'' J e wt ttte s casitsr fsr sara.' IrY baa ' TW ws'B wars. J fa lasl sssf Ssss warn St km - WO ssat sag the Mo, a w tsjpt eksaa as; Ba we iMosa, aed ww saA ia Tee e woekskf waa BeOA awe eigta Vsw'w VsArVslAd is watt tar half ef ska aad he est &- sVSBBavtfs) (Mf sfftsff saSBamal! yesterday. -In' private work, she was a partner in the X H. Amos company, manu facturers" agents,: In ' publle en deavor. nho was a member of the national executive commlttee of the Prohibition party, a member of the state; executive committee of that ar te-register big TesuiU for tbafarnws father served with and Cor the publlo In general, . . . i -A .ia- vl. a J- A n.w ha I me tmder Ceneral J. E. B.. Stuart.' - She t k tK. .- .Ua ta. Maa.nl i. I men that Ut in France aad faced bullets l Is a niece ot the wife of Woodrow Wil- arHat Muddle tha f.rma- ha laarnad I SAd pOiSOA gas, f ; J" .. : E. A. LittSCOtt. : I Son. tf,a 1 ii i -tt nnnfiai atlna m.t?m MktM I ' - - -- '1 TL i ..1 " i i .T. J.OAWECTS TO MATBUI4?K AND MAI l ; vrethar Jim. who waa tn the Ka tnA wwk . , Tha ani itM a.l " Portland, Fob, 24. -TO the Editor Of I Twenty-aixth Iowa, was killed in action. I vi. aa AniA ptnds upon the prosperity ot th farm, I tr Z.TZ '" " i M.reauytwasn t xuiea; n was mnr- aang Stooghten . and vry officer we and when the nrbaa. populations leara J that 1 t-.!0i,t LSJ ??-US!i ! ffinfield rifles had been Issued I boU of. They aeat us an anof rtclai March g, 1113. w entered. th Union camp at Fairfax Court House. Va, cap tured General Edwin H. Stooghtew. ear j rted him away with us, and kept hint a . prisoner for several weeks. Mosby sent word to General Custer that It any this a general cooperative effort for. the Unde Jeff Snow. Says 1 nnixaUon, secretary Ot the Portland: good ot all will be possible. Slowly but Civic league and a member of the 1 m1 coming to such a vision ot m- 1-e it . ' ' . tuiuiaa. rr. a-. - , Becauso of her talents and her work her passing will be keenly re gretted in the national" Prohibition organization. The prohibition work era In the state field are plunged Into deep mourning.! .With her, life was A beauUfcLad Ing the insipid article concerning the matrimonial aspirations ef one Oser of somewhere : In Switzerland? I cannot underataad why such stuff must con tinually be stuck: on the front page to offend the eye of on looking for new. Neither can-1 conceive bow anyone out side tha immediate families of the parties concerned can have the slightest Inter est uth doings Of Mathilda McCnrmictt ; and the man Oser. For the love of Mike, j to tne lowa Troops in mgni Berom. i xplmjiatlon that th hanging of our Their commanding offioer wa so drunk ( wu a mistake and there would be j Lots of fellers can eatoot the' Cag when they come Into lodge that tjrofv teerejd. dodeed their Income taxe and rot outer the draft. It keens 'eat clear 1 rlna- off. What ia hades does the cublic ! down1, these Iowa, troops. ot trouble to saloot it "Tfoper and to ear who. When or how the girl marries t men with Jim. reported that , Jim had J living with the colored population, so I make patriotic speeches, too. " 1 J.' J.MrAr.U.-r Ibeen ounaea three times, bu ;ept go- struck out Aioot ror the west." next 'morning he dldnt know - whether he was afoot or on horseback."' He dared them to . charg a strongly held Confederate position and Just before making th charge he ordered them: to fix , bayonets. They charged all right but they had no bayonets ; so, of course, they ftocldnt fix them. . Our men mowed On of the no more of it ; so we released Stoughton, "After' the breakup. Mosbys men and the rest of the Southern army scattered, W had no money and no grub; it was a' case of every man for himself. My family had all been whet to pieces and I didn't want to go back and settle down to the routine ef competing for. a aad wans Md aad aAettar was that week . was eoeav ' .. Sew aU2ns f kSa wksts Scfstw Chsrs vara , 8wtww'waata a taatBs, sad b0 aV r , ... Hf. WQana sswat en a fee eaw w flaws: rr-ae as wa nhh ess wwa ia we earal ' . - . We waaW A-saABTa, AAd V set V. ' MawXJl"tAat awl ef a sAi ase wass- s tfoa. ... Or as Saw star tsanfc aad tai atari WAV (Sot that, w aspaia tress the hasd wt astkial, ' Set ww waaU , aad ws sat fa.'. jatataawas sad aspp. waB fad sad Wa wci Kow BinfiwAt Sf afcOdrea sw-fcwariy a a waas4 saaa, sua we soa a. ataaswbCa we ksar UAt: . Tt wat tVartioa tiwav war Uaws, doe. -V wuwd a" lisi a. we srr Hi wV4t sea -W sii. ws wsatsd e aasaes aad wa aara s 4 fa,