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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1926)
-;.---! . I S?nx'-N. ' 7?r14? SECTlflN TWO Pages ! to 8 Societyr-'Editorial Classified C LEAN AND, VIGOROUS f w - r I ill OF CKSEWOBK OAC Graduate Builds Model : Village in Squalid Suburb r of Shanghai' J. C. Clark, graduate of OAC boat IS years ago, is condactlng a'nniqae experiment in Shangat.' China. Mr. Clark la an Oregon man and made a splendid record i at OAC aa a student. For. the past -tit years he has been an outstand ing American leader in China. He ibis had a great deal of influence ; among the educational, political and civic leaders. He helped to - teache the Chinese boys and young ,tnen how to play. He has been ! secretary of the boys TICA In China, the largest boys department of the YMCA anywhere in the world. 1 'i iln a late letter from him this month he described a model Ti . lage he has sponsored for the ! working men in Shanghai. He was ( instrumental in getting a number of citizens interested in buying pieces of ground in the midst of :the working men's part of the city and they built 60 brick and tile cottages suitable for one fam ily each. They have arranged for playgrounds, schools, YMCA, and ' splendid living conditions such as these men had never known be fore. f ' This model village, though not complete, is being copied by other cities. ' ? . ! Particular attention, is being paid to the health of the children. They conduct a day nursery and baby clinic in addition to the schools and play activities. They also have evening schools and classes for both men and women. , Friends of Mr. Clark in Salem are watching that experiment with a great deal of Interest. Mr. Clark was in Salem about three years ago for several days and during that time he made several ad insses about his work. JJfir. Clark's letter is in part as iollows: ' 5"You will be interested I am sure in the news' that -this associa tion has started a new enterprise tor our movement. Yesterday we laid the cornerstone of the "Y" building in what 1 belle is the first "model village" ever built by a YMCA. "We have one acre of land on which we will build 60 cottages for laborers and a "Y" building besides leaving a small play ground 50x30 feet In the center.1 The "Y" building we will call "Mott Hut" because Dr. and Mrs! Mott made it possible1 by their personal gift when they were here last January. '- if . n "The first six cottages were given by the American." Friends Service committee and Dt. Rufos Jones, the chairman of the-rcoa- mittee. was here to lay .the cor nerstone. Local organisations and friends Rave the moneys to buy the land and to build' an additional six houses. r" v "We hare Dent Mex. $20,000 fgold $1 0.000 so far on the land, "Y" hut, and twelve cottages and wll have to raised Mex. $20,000 more to build the remaining houa- . anrf nut in & deeo'well : and drainage system. - v r . "Our purpose is to demonstrate the possibility of providing decent houses with fcealthy surroundings for the laboring peopl wh4 now CoBUnn4 m.ui 5.1 . holds 57 mm. Rolo HrinnAH in Sfintember 1870, Heirs Agreed Never to Sell Antique CHIPLEY. Ga. (AP) A bale of cotton almost 67 years old. i owned here by heirs of Christo pher Columbus Jones, who in Sep tember 1870 had the bale ginned and then held It year, after year fo rthe Drtce he resolved to get for It 22 cents per-pound.! Planter Jones sold his other cot- in hut nbdnralelT held to ; his 'ffale on which he. placed a prise of $132.07V4 for its original 587 nounds. Kventually the "resolu- tion bale; became. family pet. so to speak, and its sentimental val e was such that in recent, years when. cotton soared to 45 cents Tutr nnnnd rV DO "offers were entertained. . - Ginned in the old fashioned way the cotton remains In what Is left of the original bagging and ties and its quality baa noVdeteriorat ed. Experts have graded the lint as 'No. 2" ndjrepotted that, we fibre pulls one and One-sixteenth inches V: ,Y''--:";- - The heirs lave agreed that tbe COTTON HEIRLOOM toft rtopirTT?r7T?13r-j- SALEM TO HAVE EpPPEDBllffili Many New Features and Up to Date Conveniences and Safety Devices Are Being Added in the Reconstruction and Enlargement of the Capital City's Oldest ' and Largest Bank The reconstruction and enlargement of the Ladd & Bush Bank building have reached a point where it is possible to gain some idea of the appearance the new quarters will present when finished. , The first step in the work was taking over the storeroom occupied by the Anderson Sporting Goods company, and ex tending the building, with full basement, to the alley. - ; Along the south side of this addition are now being erected the new vaults,, impregnable enclosures 19 y feet by 60 feet,1 T-sr 1 "' '! " "' "I" two stories high, constructed of MM IESIEMI, WITH OLD ITEMS Two Surviving Generals of Confederate Army Enfeebl ed, but Possess Stories ATLANTA. Ga. (AP) Infir mtritles Of age have weakened the flesh but not the mind of the last two surviving generals who held commissions in the Confederate army. Sixty-one years ago a battle worn officer rode up to the head quarters of General Kilpatrick, Union commander at Macon, Ga. A group of young Union army of ficers observed with some aston ishment the figure in grey. "Ifa Felix." exclaimed one. There was a rush toward the Con federate, with much handshaking and warm greetings. He was Gen eral Felix Huston Robertson. It was the end of the Civil war. The general having disbanded his command, had come formally to surrender, and had fallen into the hands of his former West. Point day. made" np a fund of -S180 in - ... . T . I goia xor me enemy oiiicer, wno possessed nothing but a saddlebag full of worthless Confederate money, and with, this gift sent him on his way. Shortly before this incident, in a Virginia camp r tunugn L.ee dashed by, shouting "Uncle Bobby has surrendered." A Confederate leader turned to General Mulford, whose command was next to his. 'Let's get out of here," he was. and they did. making their way to. Lynchburg, Va., where they disbanded their forces. ;The general who evaded sur render was John McCausland. Now, the two generals are spending the closing years of their live in- the retirement of their homes, with memories of the his toric past to beguile their days. General Robertson, at the age of 86, lives at Waco, Texas, and Gen eral McCatisland, 90 years old,1 on a farm near Charleston, W. Va. "A few days ago In Dallas Gen" eral Robertson was hobbling across the street when he was stopped by a traffic policeman, who told him that he would have to turn beck as the signal was against him. "Xoung fellow," said the old one, "I never surrendered to a blue nniform but once, and I've never turned back in the middle of a battle." The policeman recognized a fa miliar face, saw the Confederate veteran' button and let him pass. Occasionally General Robertson dips into the modern while when he visits his son. Judge Felix D. Robertson in Dallas. He has two daughters, Mrs. Julia Cleveland oi San Antonio and Mrs. John E. Smith of North Manchester, in- diana. xy u I IX Lite? nun ul a auiuici 9. 1S40. at Washington, tne oia capital of Texas, Robertson was appointed to West Point by Gen. Sam Houston in 1867.- He. was a classmade of Benerai Custer. He would have been grad- uated in June, 1861, but the inci dent at Fort Sumter inApril. 1861 intervened. Young Robertson. who was a friend of Jefferson Davis, resumed at once, went to Kicn- mnnd. was aDDointed a lieutenant of artillery, and assigned to Gen eral Beauregard's army. - The battle of Shrroh founa mm a captain, under Gen. Albert Sid- nev Johnson and from then on no wn in everr great name ioubdi by the Army of Tennessee.-He rose nntil ? he j became, brigadier rcneral in Wheeler's cavalry. . When wherman .marched to the ea he found a stubborn obstacle at every foot of the way. It was General Robertson- and his men. who contended every Inch of the ground. At the - battle of Peach Tree creek. General Robertson performed what then seemed a miracle. He stepped an infantry advance with artillery. , .Ha was wounded In the left arm ONE OF BEST heavily reinforced concrete, the foundation to be 42 inches deep, and the walls and ceiling 27 inch es thick. The safe deposit vault, in addition, is to be lined with quarter inch steel plates. When these vaults are completed, there will have been used In the walls, floors and ceilings, over 125 tons of structural steel. Second to None Electric signal wires, imbedded every three inches in the vault walls, floor and ceiling, intricate time locks, and other devices, will provide auxiliary safeguards, making the vaults second to none in the northwest from the stand point of strength and security. An efficient ventilating system will insure an abundanee of pure, fresh air within the vaults at all times during the day. 1 Absolute Protection The entrance to the large safe deposit vault will be protected by a huge circular door of Donsteel, the only metal known that will re sist burglarious attacks by oxy acetylene torches and drills. Around the sides of this vault will be located 2000 safe deposit -boxes for the protection of valuables and important papers. Adjoining, the vaultTwill be a number of coupon booths and rooms where patrons may take their sate deposit boxes for examination. The lower vaults will have no doom from the basement but will be entered v KtalrwuTH-f mm tfce be entered by stairwaySTrom the upper vaults. Modem Conveniences East of the vaults will be the bookkeeping department, a large space well lighted by three sky lights. In the rear of this room will be two rest rooms for .the em- Continued on pafe 4) FOB U1QUESIGHTS People Seldom Notice Jewel Work Done by Nature in Her Winter Moods Ever look to see what you could see in ice? Quite a study has been made of this handiwork of; Na ture. Few people realise the diver sity of the Icy jewel-work with which. Nature, in her Winter moods, bedecks the earth. Water in its liquid torm has a variety of aspects in ocean and dewdrop, in cloud and cataract but it. is simplicity itself compared, with the kaleidoscopic combina Hons of crystals that spring into being when the same substance is touched with the magic wand of Jack Frost. A block of clear, hard ice does not reveal to casual inspection the slightest hint of its complex struc ture. There are, however, several ways of bringing to view the in numerable starry crystals, writes C. F. Talman of the U. S. weather bureau ' in - Nature ! Magazine of Washington. One method is to rub the surface with a soft lead pencil or dust it lightly' with soot by means of a soft brush. The substance thus applied fills the slight depressions between' neigh boring crystals and discloses their- outlines. A' coating of soot can be used in a similar way to bring out the details of frost figures formed on window panes. ? V-"- Another process consists l of passing a beam of. light through a thin slab of ico -and watching the resulting image projected on a screen, or focusing a beam on a point inside the slab and watching the ice Itself at this point with a magnifying glass." In cither ' case little 'shining ' figures appear, In the shape of six-petalcd flowers Each of these represents an open space in the ice Where crystal has been melted by the heat of the beam, and retains the shape of the crystal." The space is nearly filled with water, but, as ice conttacts In melting, a tiny bubble-like vacuum is left at the center ''of? each flqwer. The spaces and their contents have some times been called "negative" or study sm ''iaifiTSS' crystals ' -,tr SAtEM," OREGON, SUTOAY M0RNING;T3tJVEMBER 21, 1926 B SHE LIKE Man often Puts the Worst Side Out, So Receives Treatment Accordingly Nobody likes a snake. It seems : to be a sort of natural inborn j hatred that goes away back to that early time in the garden when the serpent tempted Eve to eat of the fruit of the forbidden tree, and sin entered the world. God said that day there would al ways be hatred between the peo ple and the snake. And so it is. Yet some snakes are not really very bad. We might call them friends, if only they were not snakes. That is the troublt. They belong to a hated species, or kind of creation. There is the king snake for example. In the desert country, where there are so many rattlers, the king snake is a real friend. He fights the rattle snake and kills them. He will not bite a human being, unless he is corned and injured, and must fight for his life. And even then his bite is not very dangerous. .One day 1 killed a big king snake. He was a monster fellow. The largest I ever saw. I was sor ry that I killed him, and have often felt a pang of regret for it. But maybe the fact that he was a snake, and a big one at that, was my Justification for the time be ing. I did not stop to think that he might be a king. After I had killed him and stretched him ont and looked him over then I saw that he was a king, and not a rat tler. Now it would be easy to know a rattler, for even when he coils he holds his rattles up so they can be easily seen. Some men had stopped on the dester, when I drove up. The des ert road was narrow at that Point and I could not get by with their. car before me. So I got out to see what they were looking at. There it was, a great snake, coiled np and writ hin gand twisting and sticking out its long red tongue at them. I said, "Why don't you kill it?" and they said they had nothing to kill it with. Well, that was easy enough. There were mil lions of stones lying about. Only to select one about the right sise'j and hit the snake with it was re quired. It did not take long to do it. It is not difficult to kill a snake.-You have , but to strike it across the back . with a club or a stone and break its back then it cannot jump or run away, and you can bruise its head. When we hid killed him and laid him out he was really beautiful. But he was a snake, and the old hatred was there, and we could not think of letting him go. Appearances are sometimes de ceivlng. You know there are lots of people who seem to be better than they really are. Then there are other folks who appear to be worse than they really are. We call them hypocrites'.- That is a hi word." and it means one who pretends to be what he is not. Now I think the man who appears to be worse than he really is. is the most dangerous kind of a hy pocrite. He not only injures him self but Injures others. Others are influenced by him. The man who tries to show off that he is better than he' really is, injures on one but himself. His sham is so easily found ont that no one ( Continued on page 3.) Completes Log Ranger of Trails Within- Ulacier National Park GLACIER PARK. Mont. (Spe- ciaD--Foot and , horse trails through Glacier National Park are being measured this season by a unique device for the purpose of showing the actual distances 'be tween all given points. - A bicycle wheel, to which la at tached a handle and a cyclometer. is pushed ahead by a Park Ranger and covers the traits on foot, and who makes a complete log of all trails traveled by him. 1 r ( Arthur Best, permanent Park Ranger at Going-to-the-Sun camp. has just completed a log of all the trails within the territory lying between that cafp and Many Gla cier. , , " The measuring device is now to be taken out by Louis Hanson, temporary ranger at Many Gla cier; and later by II. C Hackctt. permanent ranger at the Belly River station fo rthe logging of the trails In the north-central part Uifffl THE BATTLER UNIQUE DEVICES CRASH TESTJil MEASURE TRAILS Ipl THEOBY WORK o5!i First One He Celebrated, Abused English in Char acteristic Style (Bernard Shaw, the great Eng lish (or rather Irish) author, cele brated his seventieth hirthdav a days ago. The following from Little's Living Age for the current month will be enjoyed by many Statesmen readers, as th incident and the words of Shaw have been or will 'be by milions of other readers throurhnnt th world:) Germany Greets Shaw It was to be expected that such German writers as Jakob Wasser. mann, Franz Werfel. and Emil Ludwig would wish Bernard Shaw many happy returns of the day when he reached the age of sev enty. Die Literarsiche Welt gave over its entire first page three days before this memorable anni versary to various tributes in verse and prose, of which the most remarkable was Albert Eintein's. The geeting of the great German scientist to the great Irish play wright ran as follows: "Few men in the world are suf ficiently independent to. be able to perceive the weakness and follies of their contemporaries and to re main untouched by them them selves. What few there are of this type usually soon lose the courage to work in any Intelligent direction once they have learned how stupid human "beings ' are. Only a very small number indeed can 'fascinate a whole generation with their humor and grace and hold the mirror of art up to na ture. I greet the greatest master of this art with heartfelt sympathy theman who has delighted and enlightened us all." Another German to wish Shaw manr happy returns of the day was Dr. Stresemann, minister or foreign affairs, who conveyed his greetings through Herr Sthamer, German ambassador in London. In acknowledging, the- felicitation Shaw took the opportunity to get back at his own country's govern ment for refusing to let his birth day speech be broadcasted. This is Mr. Shaw -letter': My Dear Sthamer, The public honor done me by the message of the German minis ter of foreign affairs is enhanced by its coming through your hands. It is the sort of thing that would never occur to a British foreign secretary, because, as yon well know,, we are -a barbarous nation in matters of culture. We have a genuine dread of in tellect In any form, and a convic tion that art, though highly en joyable clandestinely; is essen tially immoral. Therefore the sole notice taken on my seventieth birthday by the British government was its delib erate official ' prohibition of the broadcasting of any words spoken by me On that occasion The contrast between this atti tude and that of the German gov ernment would be a. painful one for a nation with cultural tradi tions, but our governing classes are rather proud of it. To them I owe my reputation as a dangerous ana aisrepuiaoie person; to Germany I owe my re cognition in Europe as a. thinker and dramtfc poet. What is more important, t,ur- (Continued oa par .) Stevenson Creek in Califor nia duene v cujuy iu- gineering Feat FRESNO. Cat (AP) Built in the belief that millions of del lars have been wasted in the con struction of hydro-electric dams and -: that exact data , on -the amount of stress and strain will enable engineers to avoid waste a series of tests is being made on the Stevenson Creek experiment al dam 62 miles east of Fresno The tests by the United States, bureau of standards, are- attract ing attention of engineers throughout the world. The dam, sponsored by the En glneering : Foundation 4 of New York, has been built at a cost of $109,000. It is 60 feet high. 14 feet long across the top. and 7 feet Hhick at ..the base. .Thirty feet above the. base it is only 2 feet thick and that thickness maintained to its top. v . ; The structure. In the, language of. the engineers, is a single arch, constant radius dam of ordinary Hundreds of Women Ca use Rose Schndoepham C4trl Prii fVotoa MRS Among the prominent women wflo js -iti!t i Jill!!. ; v;- -V : LsMMBBSMSSBMaWSMMi I 'j Terence on toe Cans e and Cure f War are : Mr 8.- Carrie Chapman ifett, who will, preside. at the general eessionsi; Miss Josephine bchain, secretary og the conference; Mrs. John "D. Sherman, presi dent of the General Federation of Women's dubs; Miss Belle Sherwin, president! of the National League of Women Voters,- and Miss Rose Schneidcrmann, representing the Women's Trade JUnion League. " , - ' Representatives of five million American club women are to meet Dec. 5-10. in Washington, D. C. in a great gathering to exert all their powers against wars. The gath ering officially termed "The Sec ond Conference on the Cause and Cure of War" is. to be attended by 900 delegates, representing the most influential women's organ izations in the United States. Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt will supervise the organization of the conference this year as in the one held in January, 1925, and will preside at the general sessions. The foreign debt policy of the United States and the situation in Mexico will be discussed as well as the attitude of Uncle Sam toward China, Japan, the Philippines and Latin America, which will be pre sented by speakers of each of the nationalities in question. . Among IS Texas Man Building High way on Low Lying Islands of State's Coast ARKANSAS PASS, Texas. (AP) Swashbuckling gentlemen. whose business Instincts led them far afield when Spain was In he glory, have supplied CoL Sam Robertson of Brownsville, Texas, with a romantic background for an ambitious adventure. Colonel Robertson is building an ocean driveway along the low lying islands off the coast of Tex as. These strips of land stretch for hundreds' of miles, up. the coast from. Brownsville and lie within sight of shore. , The proposed ocean driveway will be the longest in the world, and when it is completed, autoists may drive from Brownsville to Corpus Christie, Texas, over the Island beaches. Pirates of the Spanish main have cast; their glamor over . this stretch of sand. More than 400 years ago, tradition says, a fleet of galleons, , laden with the pirat ed treasures of the Montezumas, set sail from the New: World for old Spain. . - ' A tropical disturbance cast the fabled armada about; drove it out of its. course for days, and finally wrecked r the fleet on the Texas coast,, a five days march north of the Rio Grande. More than 300 4 survivors- are said to have es caped by making their war over land to the Panuco river, now the shipping, outlet' for .the Mexican oil . fields near Tampico. i This treasure Id supposed : to have, been 'buried, somewhere along the course over which- the; pleasure caravans of modern America soon - are-' to : travel. '' Oc casionally coins have been picked up In one of the sandy hills near LiSOCBH IS M H TRAIL Meet in Capital and Curelof W ars . t lMss Belle are responsible fVr the second Con- the .40 speaker on the program be Brig.- Gen. Tasker H. -. Bllsa, Norman AngeLl!, the author, and Prof. James T. Shotwell of Colum bia university. ' . According, to Mrs. Catt, the causes of war,; such as over-popn lation, economic rivalries, arma ment competition' and mass pay chology having been well 'discus sed at the former conference, the emphasis this year will be on na tional security without the exped lent of war.4 "We shall neither discuss the horrors of war no argue whether or not it is possible to abolish it." said Mrs. Catt.; "Then conference opens with the conviction that war is a relic of barbarism which should have1 been abolished years ago. we snail proceed unemo-t tion ally to a sane, scholarly treat ment of the subjecttin hand." Former Powerful Religious Colony Founded Nearly .150 Years Ago ; LEBANON, O. (AP) Only the epilogue remains to be told of the story ' of the : Shakers, once powerful religious sect. Less than a half century ago the Shakers owned and farmed thousands of acres of the best lands - in Ohio, . - as well - as rich tracts in the east. Today, all their Ohio lands are in the hands of others, . and. the Shakers have gone. . 4 .The few colonies remain ing in the East, at East Canter burg. N. H. ; Pittsf ield. Mass.. and West Albany, and Mount Le banon, N. number but a few dwindling hundreds.:. . .. x-. More than a .century and a halt ago, ' the ; adherents of "Mother Ann Lee" came . to America ; from England, and established the first colony of Shakers , in. New York state. Nearly a century and; a Quarter ago John Meacham, Issa char t Bates .and. Benjamin S. Youngs, missionaries of the new faith, came over the AUcghenieS to Lebanon. Ohio, where they set up the banner of the Shakers in the wilderness. : - ' - . a . Despite opposition, the new sect grew and ' became wealthy. The Shakers bought the beet land in the region. : They were sober, industrious, pious.-; and honest. They abolished marriage and de pended upon converts from other denominations : or ' "from; - the world to keep rip their member ship. Bat they, offered the con vert little beyond ca life of peace and quiet,' : When, a - man .and .his wife Joined the sect, all their ma terial possessions, passed Into -the hands of the church, and the con jugal ties were abolished. ; : ' , v Shakers made their life' almost SECT OF SHAKERS f - I. - - j - 1$9U9U4 ga f aft 4, nitpRICE.FIYE CENTS. SDOffiiffi! 1 t Professor Horner Gives Story ' of Woman Who Saved -v ' Life of Meacham (Cot A. B.c Meacham. TJhlted States 'peace' commissioner with the Aiodocs, was a resident of Sa lem; He was a part of the'Meach am family that- conslructed the Meacham road across the Blue mountains -in the 60's. HLa life was saved by an . Indian woman in the Modoc massacre-April 11. 1873. On ; Wednesday evening last at 7:45, Professor J. B. .Horner head of the department i of his tory of the Oregon Agricultural college, and well -.known. ; .Oregon historian, recited the story: -of this Oregon. . Pocahontas . over .. the KOAC radio tThls story was cen sored byWl-ne-ma- son, Jeff Riddle of Beatty, Oregon, and ver ified by Capt. O. C. Applegate of Klamath-Falls. : The story as giv en by Prof. . Homer over the ra dio follows: ) a . ' -. One day while Dus-Wha-lee was playing with Some other little In dian girls. In her father's canoe on Link river, the craft parted from its moorings and drifted into the turbulent.- current.-v Brlves were powerless. ' Women and children Wept.-. r, ''i i Butt with her father's paddle, Dus-wha-lee-, calmly- steered the craft past dangerous boulders un til it floated upon the quletwatera of Lake . Ewauna, - when sha went on shore - with 'her playmates. : - An aged Indian from the north having observed Dus-wha-lee's calmness and c6urage, .pressed her to. his bosom and" said: i"You are brave heart," which in Modoe is "Wl-ne-ma.' He .'led her to Chief Secnt. who . now changed her name from - Dus-wha-lee- to Wl-ne-ma., She was Informed that she - waa a descendant of " the -famed . La-la-eaa.' hence a iiodoc princess. Her father took her on many s hunting expeditions. - and twice the- two wandered together to the sacred lake ; near Mount Yainax. ' 'V - .S- A fick white man, who came to the tepee of Chief Secut one day told Wi-ne-ma interesting stories of little white girls. He described their dresses of many colors, the houses, wagons, cars and steam ships, schools, churches and cit ies, and . above all, the opportuni ties that white girls enjoy. , Thes stories made a lasting impression upon Wf-ne-ma,' who determined to live as white girls live; and her friends observed the remarkable change that came over her. . 'When Wl-ne-ma was 15 years of age she was encamped with her parents a short distance from Yreka. ' Near- the tepee was the log cabin i of Frank Blddle, -a young miner. At the tepee the two young people met for the first time. He was talland graceful in her eyes and she possessed many charms which he did not ignore. Although he - spoke as yet' only English and she Modoc, their eyes talked in a common language, say ing many things which were im mensely pleasing to JFranlc. and Wf-ne-ma.- . , One day Wl-ne-ma sang an In dian lore song for Frank, whicU he could not understand; hence . he was not responsive. Yet" whea her parents moved away, taking her with themPrank soon Visited " 0atUd niinih" iff. fll m r B FOR CIIILHriRflGE German and English Blood c . Mixed With Latin. Blood -. . During: PastYears :t SANTIAGO. Chile. (AP) A further infusion of nordlc blood Into the Chilean race will be brought about If plans now under consideration by the German col only here are developed. : w - Importation of 2000 additional German families to settle in the rich agricultural . regions of ithe South of Chile has been suggested, -The Chileans already are more or less a race apart " as German and English blood has been mtxed to. a -great extent with the Latin during, many Tears. It is not na usual to find persons bearing such family names as Hell mann, Lusd stedt. Walker, Martin, Edward? and. O'Brien. and; O'Rielly, who cannot speak English. - . ' j The German and English colon lesiafs large and their influence has had noticeable-effects. Ita army la' German trained and l& uniformed s in . typical German style. The navy, on the other hand Is "a mlnature . reproiuctloa of Crc?i firltaln's, - BFIDIG LDOD - - - - .AA-A-AA AAA A A A A A A A A 4 A A A. A A A A A. A. A. A. A. A A A A. A A A