14 , n ..... -V. ' THE OREGONTATESMAN. SAIXM, OREGON SUNDAY MORNING, : NOVEMBER 20, 1927 f , - - MaMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM . 1 ' . " i . . - i . ,. , . m r t - . . -. -x. " - . . . : r : : i IT EXHIBIT PHI - - TUB LESLIE IB Over 100 Wonderful Pictures To Be Placed On Exhibit ' x f !...." n uon uecemDer o-y - 250 Living Men Rank as "Bravest of Brave" v y- i J An art exhibit will be held at the Leslie Junior High School oh December 8 tad S under the aus pices of the . Art Department of which Mrs. I. M. Andrews la in charge. ' .;.;:..''. .::.t ;' . All of the pupils and members of the faculty of the school are entering into the work in prepara tion for this exhibit and over- 100 pictures will be placed on exhi bition. -They are belns furnished by the Colonial. Art-Company; of Uiianoma city. : The proceeds will be used to purchase pictures for this new school building, wb ich was occupied this fall for the first time. ."-, -v,"''' A abort description, of some of the 'pictures to he placed on ex hibit has been given by the Colon lal Art Company as follows: ; ;: '; B1bo Boy" The canvas of The Blue Boy Is fire "feet in height and four feet wide. - The figure of the boy Is life size. .4'; Master Jonathan: But- urn, tor ma is me ooys name, is standing in the' center of the picture and has quite a touch of swagger in his air. He has one hand on his left hip and is hold ing the folds of his cloak with it. - while the . other hangs at . full uia ssa is noming a leamerea cold day. The low clouds and the nai. lie ioos Doioiy ar-ui. asl5leak BLlee indicate this. In ad- iuousu conscious m ynwiftii dUion to the heaTy ciothIng of the & - I vs. 1 I' V ' -9e- ; n -:;.,. .. ' . 'v. 1 ; ...4 J ft. i 4 Oaty about 250 liriosr Americans may wear thie medal of honor (center) conferred for exception- al valor in war, . Most of them are bent and gray, but the World war addeVl DO younger men to the list of heroes, among them the late Lt. CoL Charts W. TVbittelsey (left), tint world War of fleer to win th medal; Serseant Stunael Woodflll (upper right)taad Sergeant Alvin York (lower right) IWVII5 GREATEST BiGi pen Controversy Over - Lately Published Biography of .:, ... Henry Ward Beecher American Gift Biiilda Shelter for Car Where World War Was Ended we are taking in him. ' A rebel- men. An interesting story Is be- Uoui Jock of hair falls orer lis ln, . . , n,m)u nf forehead, hls face is s f ramedln LKe proceeds to 8moke, prob curts , and, his costume .lsiloose. ftWy that he m6re folly en- to define bis- graceful proportions and to emphasiie his vigorous, muscular body and limbs. . He is as pretty as a girl but has a thor oughly masculine charm and. bear The big row boat is called a do ry, ' and is used by ' fishermen' rh casting their nets, and also tn hauling . them in. . The men are nrtxnarf A tn tta nnl In almnai ing. This portrait was painted as any kind of weather, but they do ft challenge to a sUtement made not suture so very far from shore oy iteynojas nai a succesrui pic- seidom to exceed two or three ture coma not he painted in blue I mne8 iones. uamsDorougn mererore iM-j,v i. Hmma. jw.aveu iaw picture, wnicn con- h.. t.-. vft khonid t. tne-rit- , ' "r " i sympatnetic interest in tne me is concerned. The blue sky is -hnnt him n fnrwt which tnmi toned down by the misty atmos- hlm to the colorful eple of the sea puere : ana ine tanascape m ! (oik for his tbernen. ; He knowg at oacagrouna neips to oreaa tne nn lformlty. The color scheme li brightened by the boy's rosy com- .), Vnnw. ,,.ntTiHon young : Americans In France t - . I J " " lGn1 Its jwnntln.. n V Viexion. -I. .r i I mflJf - Th.ra la a. .nUnitM trotlI""" " .wmm, The Blue Boy was purchased Lh .V,a ft BnlHtal added bot 60 names to th Bllant ,eveBU enry tu. nungmgxon I nndaratandlnr of the Uvea he oor-l"" :l for 4 0,000 and brought to this J trays. - - . .... I : But in the yellowing records of country, It was painted by Sir I n,iT..v0rr'anV.r hnm lnlthe war department, set down in Thomas Gainsborough, an -English I Barcelona, Spain, and still lives jcoW official ? language that f; yet pa'nter famous for his wonder-l nris-fnAi nf tht nh.lfalls to obscure th tlnirine. ful.r cool, fresh coloring and hlse.t tim?a in tha mntrnnnlltan. Ithrilline record of human Marine- power for portraying personality.! ; I "above and bevond the eall of dn- ; By "B3RKB L, AuoeUte4 Ptcm Btff Writer) V; WASHINGTON Military med als and the bright bits of ribbon that betoken them have lost their savor somewhat for the ordinary beholder in these post-war days of many decorations. i ." " ;4 .; ; ; . f ; j ' But scattered over the country are seme 250 men, most of them bent with age.' who may wear in their button holes a liny rosette of red, white and blue, or a button of bine, nudded with nhlte stars. which marks them as the .bravest of the brave the Medal of Honor men of the army. i 4 1 ; : ' No cne knows exactly how mas living men are entitled to' wear 53 to soldierly valor, i Their ranks are thinning fast now as the days rot the war between the states are sliadowed by the passing ; years. "Spiingtbno The ; Winamlll" ty" it narrates, is the long story Ttf a vsk Ia!J r o a V a a m T TT- I . On msv en1n nn srffrf- wnrir : , . " . mese neroes nave wnttenfon the - ' " I injIAl H TTtS" T rf lTTl WL ril.HLIH 21 II Li AIM. 1X1 r it may not appeal "to one.' but let Holland. uThename signi- brlghtest.: page of American hls- nevertheless one is boundo ad- fied ;' Wing water." h mis lecunicai aertemy wnen - u fiT1Tlr(VTrPit. for oar Mlnter since I r." " appears. Lord Dunsany has said: BO aH; f hi- Pictures contain ino. wo"? War- .to; taken up again and carried forward onlyn when Americans again are called to battle. There are 1,889 names on that great muster roll of the bravest, the first entry being 'set down March 2S, 1883. " -Checking and rechecking against pension : office returns has - disclosed ' 249 known survivors. A pitifully large pro portion of the older heroes have been forced to take advantage. of the-act of congress that conferred! on honor medal holder who had reached the age of 95 an - added pension of ten dollars a month.! That there are others who have not applied for this payment la not to be doubted. Before the act of 1861 which created the . congressional medal of honor no valor decoration was provided for -the American army. Certificates of merit could be giv en to enlisted men only.' Officers were debarred. In theory, dating back to the birth of the Ameri can democracy., all monarchial customs had been abolished, in eluding the conferring of orders, title or rank. v- En when the medal act was put . through j , more . than two years elapsed ... before awards were made under it. So the first entry is for, six men of the Ohio volun teer infantry Sergeants Elihu H. Mason, Twenty-second .regiment; Jacob Parrott. Thirty-third regi ment, and William Pittenger, Sec ond Tregiment; Corporal William H. Reddlck, f Thirty-third 1 regi-i ment, and Privates William Bin singer and Robert ;Baffum, Twen ty-first ' regiment. This is their citation: . . "An artist's - technical equipment 1 tnmnt nr .iriinr -1ou1r V T, V ..l ... ... 1 " w " Buutt utj iur jrauictt. iT.n't thht trns of "ThAWindmlIl? Imagination la a keyword In the Notices the wonderful sky. .a. a s a . wvb r - - - w I , yirei;ittiion wt wiegrana. nei iTw' o,Vrin,M. m1. 1.7 " .7 1W Ma Baru Ma ling In. We wonder witb all the isii fl ownSisar! !iJt&"! ARABIAN KING BUYS. MOTOR CARS "One of the 22 men (including (Continued on page 20.)- A controversy It raging over the question as to who waa the greatest ' American preacher. The following, from ; The Congrega- tlonallst. Boston, of Not. 17th, will throw seme light on this con troversy:) '" - v - (EDITOR'S NOTE: The follow lnr estimate of Henry Ward Beecher, delivered by Dr. Cordon before the -American Congrega tional Association in Boston, May 15,180 S, baa reached "The Con- j gregatlonallst" in an indirect way. It comes to us from Dr. Jo seph Fort Newton of the Memorial Chureh of " St. : Paul, Overbrook, Philadelphia, -: and Dr. Newton states that in going through some Old paperi he had come upon It It was published in a little book at the . time, but is - now out of print. I We should like to quote, though we are not at liberty to do so, the references which Dr. New ton makes in bis letter to Paxton Suffice it to say that Dr. Newton suggests our publishing this trib ute of Dr. Cordon "in order to take : the bad .taste out of i our minds annd the sadness out of our hearts at the way in : which the greatest preacher of the Sngllsh- speaklng world has been treated in Hlbben's biography. We have sougbt and received Dr. Gordon's permission to republish the arti cle. In granting this, Dr, Gordon says: '1 recall what I wrote with some interest, having carefully formed my opinion. . 1 ; heard Beecher on five, occasions, and while he carried people away be was not at all afflicted with con- celt, ' I heard him give his fa-! mous address on .'Money, and an other on 'Hard Times.' I heard Beecher address the students, and heard him fronu bis own pul pit.") - . Henry Ward - Beecher , was the greatest preacher, for the people that our order has produced. ' In my judgment he was the greatest preacher, for the people that America has . produced. He was not a theologian like Park; he was not a profound original mind like Bushnell; but in his own dis tinctive excellence be was ' im measurably beyond them. Educated in bis father's house. In - college, " and - in early associa tions in the formal doctrines and nice distinctions of New England theology, he was well fitted to dis cern in the service -of the Church the limitations of his inherited be lief. ;3n his day the material did not exist for the reconstruction of theology. Intuitions and emo tions, the witness of the great in stlncts of the soul, and the expe riences of the heart are what one finds in Beecher. one Is some times disappointed not to find In him the modern view in its integ rlty. But to condemn him for this 4 ,'- .; i Xtie nutway car an wiucm iue Armlsuce was signed (below) is now housed in a stone building presented to the people of France by Arthur IL Fleming of Pasadena, Cal, The building (above) stands on the exact spot where the truce was signed at the town of Re- thonde, between' Compeigne and Soiseona. -? ' - T ....... ? : - i lie - ... t. - . ' II i '.am. i.. i. . w".- ! J.-"). - i n ii " jj v u- : "-r - v. ' ' y- MilllMllIlP CHCII SAYS LSI! ' YQung People . of America ' Are Not Irreligious. In Spite of Some Groups . f- COMPEIGNE, France (AP) Dedicated to sheltering France memorial of . the v Armistice, ' a structure presented by an Ameri can: bouses what is perhaps the most famous railroad coach in in ternational history. The dedication of . the stone building which now contains the car; in which, the Armistice was signed on , November .. 11, 1918, was ? part' of the French celebra-J tlon of the ninth anniversary of the ending of the world war. r Arthur H. : Fleming of y: Para dena, ' Calif.; : gave France the buUdlng, and in appreciation of this and other friendly services was created ' a Chevalier -of the Legion of : Honor. By Rer. Walter W. Van Kirk Auciti ewrtUrr, Comaiscioa n Interactional Jatic nd Goodwill t lk redrt Oonnetl ( the ChorehM,) - The young people of America are not irreligious." Nor are they atheistic, despite the organlxaticj of an occasional undergraduate as-WV Eociation for alleged heretics. It'J cannot be denied that many of our young people are jaxs-rainded. That Is largely because they are keeping in step to the music played by the elders. There are, on the other .hand, vast: numbers of American youth who - are profoundly concerned With " religious verities and with the future of the Church. But It must "be a more united Church. Youth is. breaking away from the denominational narrowness of Its fathers. : Youth Is not Interested fn debating theological abstrac tions that have little If any rela tion to present-day Issues. i Why l this impatience or the younger generation with deijom- InationallsmT For one thing. young people want to see war ban ished fromMhe earth. They do not believe that -world peace can be .accomplished as long as the churcbes are at swords' points with one another. "How," youth asks, "can we expect the politicians of the world to compose their differ ences around the conference table when tbe representatives of the Church 'are either unable or on willlne to do likewise?" If men are to be kent out of the trenches. The Armistice car, taken from the church of Christ In America i where it formerly stood in the court of the ' Invalldes in Paris, now rests on the identical track It' occupied when' the truce that ended the world war was' signed at 1 Rethonde, a town near ComH pelgne. The permanent covering, which has been erected around the calls, was . offered .by 5 Fleming through the mayor of CompeigneJ when it was learned that the car and throughout the world must sign a treaty of peace that will bring to an end the shameful com petition among Christians. Youth likewise believes that.ln dustry cannot be democratised, that the conflicting Interests of the various races cannot be rec onciled, that the peril of mass Il literacy, cannot successfully be combated. -until the Church casts was deteriorating from exposure ,ff ltg divisions and in the strength TV to the weather. Fleming, a lumberman. Is a pa tron of the California Institute of of union proceeds to fashion a bet ter; world. - Furthermore, youth questions the right of any denora- Technology and - president of its jiation to carry Its sectarian stamp board Of trustees. Througn tne . the missionary field Th Time. Clara H. Fleming-fund he has con tributed more than S 6,0 00,4 4 4 to the institution. - - . HTI01L LEAGUE OF WESTERN VJHiTEHS RESULT OF WORK DONE BY I, fJDTED SALE! PUBLICS! 1 (Continued on page 20.) la Vin wtrwi n ttia artist dn1r:tJi ctcrlstlc Indlvidualllty wields its tnat omInoas moment when there own spell In genial iltoatlons. Both, ,,. Btui U is particularly In the exquisite- lng everything ; jun .before the . :." y...."? . r" 1 storm breaks.' ; That Is a moment molt nw abimy m proaucing tne m,ed :wlth, awesome feeling, nisiit 0s. w nvot TanKOASTUia ' The feathery like leaves, the I. nort time. nerhaos another mln- green duos, tne . son pink ana ute. the arms of the old wind- wh'.te blossoms in the immediate mm wilL bo creaklnjr and the qui- loreground, have each been catight -water will be seething and the by our artut and transferred in-1 rain will be falling. : tact, to his canvas. The soft, bal-l -urei can onlv hone that; when my atmosphere, painted Into the Ue moment comes the peasants subject s typical of "Springtl'no." Lm b safelr housed, that the sail A fantasy In gorgeous cokwLhilll boat will be well anchored in a j of .feeling and understandlgof jsafe haVbor, that the break-water nature, , painted wtthliat skUJSdj will be strong enough, to hold the hand.; The picture is a represen-l waves in place, xes, tne wma- tation of early spring when alll mill is a great, stern, solemn sen- nature Is rejoicing in a new crea-(tlnell making for calm and assur-i tiofi. . Ther rejoicing is; that "of ance in the midst of the whirling birds twittering to . their mates i element. that a, new home-making time has come; of the flowers , awakening to greet a new world; of leaves! bursting thetr bondage into a new freedom; of grasses bowing and t TO CARRY HAREM ON DESERT TOURS t - y ' ' , : I : : -Oft .4 WET.CA; Arabia (AP Modern 'Jacob Van Rursdael the painter of "The Windmill." was a melan- aKaIw n wnas , -wrbA etvri trYt f ' ! I rA "through the visible features of automobiles have replaced camels nature a philosophy of life In tor carrying the harem ; of the swaying to the passing breezes; J go doing he gave his own rest- Km S of Arabia on his long Jaunts or tne new responding to tne car- j lessness of his landscape. He from Mecca to iueaina anu across esses or tne rising sun. - ine iuseemrto hate only one view and tne rersian guu. trees swaying In the breeze speak J that a rather gloomy one. The! The King, who is also Sultan volumes to us. Never were the! bright, the gay. the sparkling-, the! of KaJd and king of the JledJax, ahades of color more exquisite. i animated did not appeal to him. lis very strict about his i li wives. Wiegand is a modern American i nig life. was radiant but in art he So the new harem cars of the roy artlstr living at present In New! always leaned toward the sad, the al motor caravan are tike 'glorified York C.ty. He was born in 1870. ! melancholy, : the mysterious. . He police patrol cars. No man is al- Ile studied nnder William m. Moved to nalnt the mountain soli- inwd n tn look at the roval Chare and at the Royal Academy. tude, the , silence 6 of -the deep wtTes, and the royal wives are not Wiegand an lmagina-i woods: "the ; hush of the 'raTlnLn,nnriii to lnob tnwwi inr man were broken only by tne anil roar I other than their "royal, master. oi me wswr.wumg urcr ui ivcu 9 two harem cars have noi and be allowed no gay color, windows. Shuttered lota on each light, no. blue sky to distract the Blde &nd ln the rear admit air. attention. There are no seats, only arm . The ecene.in "The windmm jre8tg for tne 24 -queens. They lei ft elmnlA einna . 9m sk rtnlnf Aft a ... ... it": are a ' ti.. ramA at h " . .. . ! r'TT'l "quai on me iioor, wires on a . ... : " ." a tnat juts mtatne qmet river Rld thA twn Rr Lonf Exroaition in 1904. thel... . . . isiaa. " tne two cars- . . . . ... . v . mku mowi a lew nppiw mu w i n1 i(im ton liaiirartan nriza in liga ana nei . - . i - -t . has been the recipient .. of manyl . ,v. -i,.,...!! ,ntM. ether medals for hla work.; v - -- niB.n'. Xl,e Boatman of Barcelona j "women are Just returning home. v...iona tha most imnortant The windmill to a degree indi- eea-port of Spain, Is the home of catea the Industry of Holland, and Verdaguer, and here be haa spent OI peoPIe. ,M Mfrhinr thm famous Roysdael s pictures bear more re- uauj mvx- . U...V.M. . VI. '.hips dock ahd depart for foreign ralnter'a. Dresden. tire and poetie painter who love" nature best when .she - fa In fuH color. He works with a free brush and an unerring hand and eye. He is very productive and his can- vases are as surprising as they are Interesting In viewpoint. - He was port.:-- -A'x; ' v In our particular subject, how ever, he has depicted three "old salts" of the sea. Three men in a large row beat. Each of them rtanlfs-tlas by - their, appearance tie factlhat they have spent prac t!:..:'.y all of their lives in the out ' cr-iocra. 5:eir ruddy complexions. ttz'.r heavy' cIotLiiS. their tyrlcal t 'i:r cars ar.3 la fact alncet ev ery c' ' racierttic reve&3 the fact ' t f :j pre v. teraas la - their ; : : i vc -r,;l -i. , . - :' 'rrr.i '' ' U 23 41 Try resemblance to bis other Dutch , , "Madona of, tbe Chair Every one loves this beautiful f ictare of .a young mother with Lcr t3by. It was painted to rep resent the child Jesus and his moth&r. The lltde boy by their side looking up at them represents St.. John. ' ; :',. ,"";' "':-A-rX : Raphael was walking out from the city of Rome one day, looking for interesting subjects to paint. (Cct!icsi-cn.pi8"18.): excellent springs on the chassis take up most of the Jolts of trav eling, sometimes as far) as 1,1 0 0 miles at a single trip. At the back of each car Is space for; one wife at a time to stand up and stretch In case she -becomes cramped in; her sitting position. - 1 1- ; : Each car is equipped: i with a tank of drinking water and the Sultanas spend their time gossip ing tn the . semt-darkns3 about whatever It is that harem ''wives talk about. Electric fans help keep the hot air of the desert moving in the cars. . Strong locks on tbe back doors deny the legal consorts the- privi lege - cf getting out and walking home If they become dissatisfied I i i i In 1928 Will Be Made a Larger and More Beautiful Publica- tion From the Press of Frank J. Bellemin of Portland, : Pablisher of the Poetry and Art Books and Brochures (Wrlten for the Sunday States? ties for five years to building up The Lariat on ' a plane of high, standards and Ideals, "for clean American literature. . It ; was a labor of love an d a volun tary ex penditure in the interest of the j-' ...l r.- j . Two big motor cars that look like police patrol wagons have been purchased by , the King of Arabia (left ) - to carry his barem when he travels over his realm- One of the cars is shown above. The wives sit on the: floor, as shown below, during their master's long desert Jaunts. ;T - ? ' .t: r": y : v :-;' whit robes conceal . all sorts of; wicked looking knives and pistols. Bringing up the real bfthe "queer, caravan are four luxurious cars for the. personal use of the king and his suite, , A steel flagstaff on each car - carries , the royal rn- nant. Outriders in white robes man the sides of each car "when the procession is passing through a city. Oil lamps are in the sheik's personal car for use if the eiectrtc Ahead and behind the - haremlllghts go out. enrs two open automobiles carry! Each, car Is of : polished alnm- 10 s-.-s.rtty shards whose. flarIzs'ii-ura,"'. because paintwork I'woull n't last a week against the blow inr sands of the desert. A near scandal was caused hen. IsIanas man by Beatrice Crawford-New- comb.) ' ' The campaign for an Interna tional League of Western Writers was started at Seattle last March, when Col. Hofer adressed a Joint meeting of the poetry cluo andii.v i.1 ivt,. - .r , verse writers and ursed a lea rue otY :i v all western clubs to promote the interests of western literary work ers. ..The plan was adopted oy tne local writers'" clubs all over the west, Col. Hofer addressing the clubs at Vancouver and meeting prominent literary workers from Victoria, Toronto and other cities in Canada and leading writers and literary organizations at Tacoma and'. Spokane, "Boise, Butte, Mis soula and Great Falls. ." - . 1 1 The movement spread to Utah and California,: with ' large meet ings . at Los . Angeles and San Francisco. A committee to call and take eharge of a Parliament of Letters to be held at Seattle, Sept. 30-Oct. 1, was formed of one representative from each of ,the writers clubs at Seattle and the convention proved a great success. The School of Letters of the Uni versity of Washington with its musical and dramatic departments actively participated, together with Seattle society, women and leaders from the School of Journalism and local newspaper workers making the first Parliament, of Letters a great success. With the famous Seattle spirit, all necessary steps were taken by the local committee, beaded by - Chairman - Pamella Pearl Jones, , ot the University School of Letters to prepare and have adopted a constitution and by-laws. Officers chosen and membership enrolled composed of western -writers, short story and play writers, essayists, and poets. The organization .. known as . the League T of Western Writers' will campaign for members in Canada, Alaska, Washington, Oregon. Cal ifornia, Idaho, Montana, Wyom ing, JUtah Colorado. New Mexico Arizona, Mexico and the Hawaiian tlce. for example, of cutting up China, India' and Japan into a large number of denominational spheres of influence, w,hlle It Is an advance over former competi tions and overlapping, is regard ed as only an unsatisfactory make- shift . by-many of the younger mu slonaries and those now preparing for missionary service.1 - What Is wanted by these more' youthful chnrchmep is a strong- united Church in the ' various countries where missionary, work Is being carried on. - At home and abroad, then, youth visualizes the need for a closer integration of the several branches of Christendom. Most of the young people who are In terested In religion have parted company with theological . hair splitters. . .. They are neither fun damentalists nor modernists. They are trying simply to be Christians and they want a Church at peace with itself. . CoL E. nofer. President League of Western Writers, ; Salem, Ore gon, Editor The Lariat. " i - as discovered . that the m. co s on each radiator we-a winged fffjure of Mercuiy, but iAe of fending objects were removed be fore they were seen fcy any of the royal., wives. ; ; r ;:v.- i ' Tub king had to d.g: down in iho rJd of his flowing robw lor artme ?60,000 to pay lor the eight cars In the caravan, but he C.inks it's worth it. Camels - are too slow. . - 'v . . . : : : All steps will be carefully tak en for this new western literary movement. . The leaders and or ganizers are soundly American and: have - no apologies to offer for encouraging the newer and younger writers on these - lines, Col. Hofer, who is a product of the new western school of writers. . It was Col. Hoferrs Idea that the Parliament of Letters inclnde the Drama League and the fiction writers as very Imnortant ele ments : of a Western Writers" League and those sections were added. ' . The gathering developed men and women of literary ability in western states like Prof. T. Earl Pardoe, of Brigham Young Uni versity, Provo, Ltah, Dean of Let ters, and Reginald Barker from Idaho.-. Mr. Barker has that old English foundation tor his writing. He has sold hundreds of stories. several books,' and Is now selling tne moving picture lights on his western stories and is the fore most writer of Idaho. The Free Lance 1 Club and other ; literary clubs of Seattle gave dinners for Mr. Barker after the convention. He is planning to move to that beautiful city, after a trip to Hol- iywooa and New York. - The re ception and afternoon tea at thelfn 3 beautiful home of Mrs. the writers of the west of his work in. .publishing single-handed The Lariat for the past five years and hla uncompromising fight for clean literature and the American stan dards and ideals of the New Eng land, school of poetry, fiction "and the drama, followed by the Argo nauts who came to the 'Pacific coast and produced clean whole some virile literature from the days i of Washington Irving and BreV Harte to Jack London, and new writers of today. V - The Lariat has been published at Salem for five years and has be come known in tbe east and west as a literary apostle of light and beauty. - It was by far the most artistic monthly dedicated to po etry and criticism in' the United States. As "volunteer workers on its staff were A. Wj Stephen of the University, of Vancouver; Ir ma Grace Blackburn, who -devel oped poetic and critical faculties riding behind the herds on the sage brush; Florence. Amalie By non, who took poetry lectures at Willamette and California Uni versities; Marl R. Hofer, of Chi cago University ' School of Dra matic Art; Emma Carbutt Richey, of Morgan Hill, Calif., who has volumes of poetry for children and edited the Children's Poetry Corner;- For it soon became known The Lariat was a cruaader against degenerate poetry for children or adults, degenerate fiction and drama, and degrading European literature generally.' : The League of Western Writers is the largest and stronppst liter ary organization In the wet nd wfTt . YAmmA not nn a T In ih a f r it .. T t sense of the word, rounded on xl principles that have included the classical writers from the days of the Fathers of the Republic. The classical and American . poetry, prose, fiction, drama and history are unsurpassed In any country tbe: world, not excepting and the Canadian Club luneheon. when there were; so many Cana dian delegates, - were- important events to writers. Mrs. Hodge U the-president of The Canadian public schools and a; native: of j Club. Iowa, has spent his life in the Col. Hofer'a selection as 'preai Paciflc northwest, lie has glvenJdeEt was voluntary and ocanl t!s time 'as 1 experience' and. chili- mous. :. It was ' a.'reccspiiica ty Lamson' the literature of Hreat Britain, nermany or, Franr" The co called new school o free poetry, degenerate novel aTifl rtrama that are aped in some arpe literary centers and univer'T cities are overflows of old wr- " decadence and not worthy the and iml- (CcT!tl?T:c-1 cn