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AUGUST 1 O LORD, THOU RT MY GOD; I will exalt thee, I will praise thy nam e; for thou ist done wonderful th in g s..............Thou hast been a strength to tl poor, a strength to the needy in his distress, a refuge from the storm , a shadow from the heat.— Isaiah 25:1, 4. A LAY SERMON “ A boy’s will is the wind’s will, and the thoughts of youth are long, long thoughts.” How long those thoughts may be only a boy can tell, and lie never would because of all things sacred those “ long” thoughts are the most unapproachable; those matters the boy keeps in the holy of holies of his heart, the abiding place of other sweet memories or fateful wounds, as the legs grow long and the arms strong, and the world throws open the door that leads to labor. In the palpitating years of the “ long” thoughts the boy lives a century; indeed, before the ’teens be passed his three score of years and ten are done and gone. For in that time he has scaled the moun­ tains, conquered the obstacles, slain his dragon, nego­ tiated his pitfalls and thrusting carelessly aside the puny clinging tentacles of stubborn facts of his own world, is king. Many an empire towers to the skies in those queer days when all things are possible; its bricks the .confi­ dence of a few years; its foundation simple faith, its cop­ ing stone the glorious riotous imagination which knows none of the sad limits of maturity. The beautiful thing is that when the foggy era en­ sues, that period when one reluctant foot drags in boy­ hood and the other taps impatiently at the door of adoles­ cence, the foundation remains. This he will not perceive until the cloud lifts again, and he finds the bricks crumb­ led and the coping stone fled to wherever imagination is born. Dreams, it seems, are a poor investment. The “ might have been” is always a thought with a twing. The grip lessens and the old picture passeth, and the man is no longer the boy. Fleetingly the vision springs up like a negative, but always a little more indistinct until with a wistful sigh the man realizes he must bend his back to the burden. Then, if the time is to be sustained, he prays to dream again, and i€ he does so is amazed to find the same old vision forming the slow and shadowy’ background of liis new edifice; the ghost lurking about the old foundation, which foundation was, and is, faith. SOMETHING OVERLOOKED They had just graduated from high school, and stood on the threshold of life. “ The school that graduated Herbert Hoover and Will Irwin is the one for me,” said one. “ The school that graduated Thomas Edison and Abraham Lincoln is the one I ’ll choose,” said the other. So one went to Stanford, and the other took the knocks of the School of Life. Today one is 1 ving in an obscure town. The other is still taking knocks and in return, is a knocker. Both overlooked the fact that it is the student, not the school, that makes success of men. THE LARGER ASPECT OF THE CELEBRATION The wholehearted cooperation of Longview citizens in preparing for the Pageant of Progress has been a mat­ ter of comment from newspapers and visitor during the past few weeks. Longview folks have a common bond in the success of their four-day celebration, and then must be no let down in enthusiasm or effort as the cli max approaches. We who are here on the ground, in the midst of the hurry and jam, the rush and confusion of preparation perhaps may lose sight of the larger objects of the cele bration, the city’s first birthday, and the opening of Th< Long-Bell Lumber Company’s mills, that made the city possible. It sometimes takes an outside viewpoint to bring home the magnitude of the wonder city of which we are a part. The Business Chronicle of the Pacific Northwest, a recognized economic and financial weekly of this sec­ tion of the country, says in part: Big things have been and still are being done in America, but there has never been anything done like Longview. Never before was an entire city ordered. Cities have appeared, and in a hurry; hut never have they come about through that utmost in consideration which takes ac­ count of future growth, and arranges beforehand the multiplicity of details which make for harmony of inter­ ests and economy of costs. Who says humanity does not advance, that things do not improve with the ages, that intelligence and will do not gain over stupidity and blind accident? Who says that America is not the possible solution of the world’s most ancient agonies and confusions? The elements that have gone into the making of Longview are symbols and indexes of the New Spirit that is fast coming over America’s constructive forces. Longview is America’s latest and most classic em­ bodiment of the wedding of will, efficiency, responsibil- te ü ttS te ASÖLANÖ ftÁtt* M M #« If w« were still on it. We em erg­ ity and authority, and perhaps of the whole world’s. ed from the tim ber into great lava Let there be more Longviews and fewer short views, > beds th a t looked fresh, the basal­ —Longview Daily News. tic lava reflected back the direct rays of the sun, until we yearned for the shade. And now we came to the snow banks, th irty feet deep in these last days of August, and began to realize what we had Philosophy, with a woman, takes the form of a con- I heard about th e intense reflection viction that her freckles are attractive. of the sun from the gleaming su r­ face. We were on th e north shoulder of “ The North Sister” A grouch is just an ordinary individual with a con­ at an altitude of perhaps eight viction that he has a monopoly of trouble. thousand feet, and had a wonder­ ful view. To the east was spread Thank goodness vests will soon be back to afford out immense expanses of the parking space for the trash that now litters pants and great sage plains with which we had' made intim ate acquaintance. coat pockets. To the west an interm inable for­ est was spread out and the can­ yon of the McKinzie could be : traced for many leagues. Still above us tow ard the higher peaks and all about us was snow and silence. To th e north we could Being a series of interesting articles dealing w ith early day I see Mt. Jefferson, and in the dim events and pioneer men and women who made history and distance to the west we knew lay build'ed for succeeding generations. i the W illam ette valley which we (By C. B. WATSON) thought we could see but would not have sworn to it. These mon­ Chapter Fourteen made it, however, w ithout a inis- stro u s snow banks were the th i’usand feet above the road. The sources of many stream s, the most A Lone W om an Our Com panion trail had been cut out in J8«2 valuable possessions of those who In Camp. for the passage of a band cf cat­ had settled in the valleys below. tle th a t were driven by Felix A smoke was seen away down the The night a lte r leaving Prlne-1 ,SC0" - an,d ° th e ™’ ' r ° ” Eugene m ountain and caused us some ' to the mines at John Day. Many speculation. Our greatest dang­ ville we camped on the bank of i of th e people ia the upper W il­ er now was th a t of not being the Deschutes river in a beauti­ lam ette valley donated work and able to find our trail when we ful juniper grove. The w ater supplies to open up this trail, should leave the snow. The d ir­ was excellent and near by was a realizing its im portance in con­ ection we recognized as the one fine patch of grass for our horses. necting eastern Oregon and. w est­ we m ust follow led tow ard the We had ju s t completed our a r­ ern Oregon. It had been prac­ McKinzie thousands of feet be­ rangem ents for supper when we tically abandoned after th e m in­ low us. By and by we had were surprised to see a buck- ing rush was over, and in many crossed the snow and again came board driven up, draw n by a span places was alm ost obliterated. We into those w onderful lava beds of small miles and driven by a traveled for many w’eary miles th a t even now are far famed. It lone woman. She stopped and over this elevated sage plain in was a continual wonder to us asked if we would object if she the sw eltering heat of an August bow th a t band of 600 cattle had camped near by. Our consent sun. Not a living th in g did w e i been m&de tQ negotiate such was heartily given and to our see, except jack rabbits and coy­ a route. . Finally we reached the inquiries she told us th a t she had otes. As evening drew on we tim ber line again, found our trail driven all the way from Salt Lake came to the edge of a m agnific­ and after a mile or so came to the alone. Her appearance and ent pine forest and to the bank bank of a small crater lake with [rankness convinced us th a t her of a beautiful m ountain stream , a m argin of grass and camped. story was true. We invited her which had been described to us Here we had some more thrills to eat with us and helped her to at Prineville as ‘ Squaw creek” . of which I will tell in my next. make up her camp for the night, Phillipps had ridden ahead and Ashand, July 29, 1924. then we all seated ourselves by said he would look out a camp. C. B. WATSON. the com fortable fire of arom atic He was out of sight when we juniper and she told us her ex­ perience. She had seen very few reached th e creek. It looked like white people on the way, but was an excellent place to camp and 8PARKH AND FLASHES » not interfered with by the In­ after some discussion, believing 8 8 8 « 8 « 8 8 8 8 8 8 dians. They sometimes came to th a t Phillips would presently ap­ her camp and always wanted to pear we unsaddled and proceded A Camper is judged by the fire know where she came from and to make camp. As he did not he builds. why she was traveling alone. The appear w ithin a reasonable time story she told to them was the we sent Oscar up the tra il to find “ The flame is m ightier than same she told us. She said her him. In a little tim e he appear­ the axe” . Put out th at spark. husband had died at Salt Lake ed in high dudgeon because we while on th eir way to The Dalles, had camped, w ithout his orders. Fire is for use, not abuse, you where she had a brother. She He had gone about a mile fu rth er be the boss. was about th irty years old and on where the trail crossed the rath er comely. She talked like creek and unsaddled to wait for One good thing about a dead a woman who had been well rais­ us. He was very drastic in his campfire, you don’t have to ex­ ed and was not w ithout culture. comments and finally aroused the plain it to the judge. She said th a t th e Indians had anger of W alrad, who resented treated her well and sometimes his attitude. The resu lt was a A cam pfire put out is w orth brought fresh venison or an te­ general row in camp; the only two in the brush, blazing beyond lope to her. They asked her many one during the whole sum m er and control. questions and expressed surprise came near being a serious tragedy. a t h er courage in traveling so We were all tired and our sup­ A pinch in time saves many a far through a wild country alone. plies were running low. Many forest, put out th a t oigarette. They asked her if she was not things which under oth er circum ­ afraid of them. She told them stances would have been consid­ A clean camp ground is a place she was not, th a t the Indians had ered trifling were magnified. We of beauty, and a joy to the heart treated her w’ell and she thought were startin g on the climb of the of a ranger. they were good people. They Cascades. Above us rose the liked to be tru sted and compli­ “Three Sisters” , dressed in im­ Forest litte r plus low hum idity mented as did their w hite breth­ maculate white, looking grand and plus one spark, equals Forest fire. ren and retu rn ed kindness for the lonely and, apparently, near at Figure it out. tru s t which she exhibited. She hand. We were ju st entering one said she got very lonesome some­ of the most imposing forests in “ H ere’s where I drown a lot times but felt th a t she was get­ the world. Our trail was dim and of trouble,” said the careful camp­ was a ting near her destination and this uncertain; the stream er, pouring plenty of w ater on his made h er happy. We all felt splendid one th a t came leaping, campfire. great sym pathy and adm iration sparkling and singing from its for h er and did all we could to source in th e suow-banks above F IR E : "A faithful servant, but make her comfortable. In the us. Our position was interesting a m ighty dangerous m aster.” morning we again invited her to and very im p ressiv e,'y et bathed eat w ith us and before we pack­ in a lonliness th a t was inexpres­ ed our miles we harnessed hers, sible. Our sentim ents were arous­ hitched them to the buck-board ed to accord with th e tu rb u len t and loaded in h er few traps. We stream hard by. As the night were sorry to see her drive off came on we seated ourselves by NEW YORK, July — Summer alone, but our ways parted there, the roaring camp-fire and rem ain­ it would seem, is th e open season we to the west and she to the ed silent as the darkness th a t for fools and the latest to enter north. She w ent away very was closing in about us. The the lists is the “a ir fool.” cheerfully and gave each one of atm osphere was one th a t suggest­ He has appeared in great num ­ us a hearty hand shake and an ed war. Only a spark was re­ bers recently at the beaches in expression of thanks for our com­ quired to sta rt a blaze. We fin­ the vicinity of M anhattan, and pany. She said it was the only ally rolled into our blankets, but bids to eclipse in fame the fool night she had not camped alone. I doubt if much sleeping was who rocks the boat, or th a t other I have often wondered if she done. A p an th er scream ed n ear­ class of fool, the love philanderer, reached The Dalles safely and if by, but little notice was given nom inated not so long since as to it. A bear came sniffing about candidate for the “ presidency of she found her brother. This is an instance th a t proves and terrorized our animals. All the Fools’ Club.” th at the Indians were not w ith­ were up in a m inute and were In fact, so pernicious have his ready to make common defense. out a genuinely hum an sentim ent. activities become he has been I have many times been treated The spell was broken, some made th e subject of a complaint generously by the Indians and words were spoken and before ly­ addressed by Acting Mayor Collins ,'ive grown to feel th a t the whites ing down again all had been a r­ to Police Commissioner E nright were generally to blame for th e oused to the senselessness of our and Rear Admiral P lunkett, com­ outrages com m itted upon them. display of 111 nature. It only re­ m andant of the Brooklyn Navy We watched this brave little quired a word to s ta rt friendly Yard. woman until she passed out of relations and bring about a com­ The direct cause of the com­ sight in the juniper woods, then mon understanding. M utual apol­ plaint was a pilot cf a navy hy­ packed, up and turned tow ard the ogies were exchanged and we re­ droplane, whose stunts at a low river, which of course we had to tired again and slept sweetly till altitude over Rockaway Beach ford. morning. We called this q u ar­ caused such a commotion among Deschutes Is Forded relsome camp and laughed about th e bathers th a t serious conse­ The river is quite an imposing it the next day. quences were narrow ly averted. Commissioner E nright has been stream a t this point. The w ater In t h e , m orning we were up is very clear and runs with a early and on our way climbing ordered to enforce to the letter strong current. The Santiam higher and higher. The m ajesty the ordinance against reckless road, of which I have spoken, of the forest all about us and the flying over beaches or congested crossed a t this ford, which re­ gentle breeze singing a soft lulla­ sections of the city. Collins was in the. aviation ser­ quires good engineering to1 be by in th e tree tops. We aroused safe. P in to ’s legs being short, many deer by the way and occas­ vice during th e w ar and knows came near being throw n from his ionally spied a grizzly. Everything whereof he speaks. feet by the strong current. We suggested the presence of much New York is so aften called finally reached the opposite game, but not a sign of human shore and, as directed, followed life outside of our little party. As upon to play host to notables th a t the road for about two miles we climbed higher we felt the It takes a visitor of more than where we turned to the left on a rarity of th e atm osphere We had I usual prominence to create any trail for the head w aters of the left the stream and th ere was no I greate furore. Therefore, the McKinzie river. This tra il led sound save as we made it. T h a t1' arrival of R ajenda Bahadur, Mah- to the top of a high table-land impressive silence so characteristic arajah of Jhind, potentate from and necessitated climbing the of high altitudes seemed to press the Punjab, ordinarily would • rim -rock” . The t r a ’l up this us on all sides w ith sensations cause no more than passing com­ Some interest, however, rim -rock was one calculated to th a t are indescribable, bu t are ment. attaches itself to th e visit of this act severely on susceptible nerves, known by every m ountaineer. On really a dangerous exploit. We and on we clam bered over a dif­ personage from th e fact th a t his hap and reachol the table-land a ficult tra il, sometimes uncertain wife, H er Highness the M aharanee If the boy is no account it may be because he has a charge account. Interesting Reminiscences By A Southern Oregon Pioneer NEWS LETTER Mut U HÍU>, August 2, iOiU The judge in dism issing tlia cal« especially are her august spouse, wears a d ia -; much wrought up over the iatent eaid he didn't blatfid the watch­ mond in her nose. possibilities in the m arriage of man. as he, himself, probably There are eleven members i n : Louis Fall, better known as ” Bat- would have shot at the dog under the M aharajah and all of them are t'in g Siki, the Singular Senegal­ sim ilar circumstances. This des­ ahy — exceedingly so — with the j ese” of pugilism, to Lillian W er­ pite the eloquent eyes, wagging exception of the three royal chil­ ner, a white woman of Memphis, tail and friendly bearing of the dren. a boy 8, and two girls, 5 Tenn. Siki contends this is his collie witness. and 3. first, venture on the sea of m atri­ It was learned th a t in India mony, but others, professing to PARENTS SAY GIRL HAD NO LOVERS to wear a diamond in the nose be in the know, tell of a wife and is .considered an attractive fa s h -, child living in Paris. YREKA, Calif., Aug. 2. — ion— as earrings are considered Friends and relatives have gath­ here. Also, th a t wearing of the I Lower M anhattan, the finan­ ered here for the funeral of Ethel precious stone in th a t m anner is cial center of the world, gener­ V etterlein, 15-year-old daughter restricted only to members of the ally is believed to be the busiest of Charles Vetterlein of Bray, higher castes. spot in the world as well. A who was found dead at her home M anhattan policeman, however, with a bullet hole through her One reason the M aharajah and ; comes forward with the statem ent head W ednesday morning. his party received such scant a t - ! that crowds gather in th at section Although an exhaustive inquiry tention on landing was due to t h e ' quicker than in any other part has been made by Coroner Felix brilliance of some of his fellow of the city. Kunz, who conducted an inquest A pigeon just learning to fly late Wednesday, no reason for passengers on the Leviathan. They included “ Our Mary” and fell in Nassau street near the the tragedy has been assigned. “ Her Doug,” back from new tri- j Equitable Building the other day. The jury's verdict was th a t she umphs on the other side. F o r ' In a few moments such a crowd came to her deatli by shooting some time after they landed Mary had gathered, according to this herself through the head with a was engaged in earnest confer­ patrolm an, th a t he had to leave rifle. ences with representatives of Un­ his post of duty and remove the When question'd yesterday, pigeon so traffic could continue. cle Sam’s Customs Service. She mother, father and sisters of the declared twelve trunks. The ex­ girl declared she had no love af­ perience moved Doug to express A Scotch collie, vallued at 3 5 ,-j fairs, but frequently came home the wish he were a vagrant. 000, appearing in his own defense , from her work brooding over Incidentally Doug explained the in court here, lost his case. A I some turn in events, the nature status of himself and his famous watchman shot and wounded the of which she never revealed. wife in society. dog when the animal ran toward Asked w hether Miss Pickford, him barking. The watchman said Boston commercial reports show in th eir social activities was he shot in self defense, believing wool m arket steadily improving known as Miss Pickford or Mrs. the dog was about to attack him. with marked price trend upward Fairbanks, he replied: But the dog’s owner thought dif­ — over 80 per cent domestic clip “ Wle’ve solved th a t question ferently and had the watchman sold. nicely. I am simply knov