J) PAGE TOT THE INDEPENDENCE ENTERPRISE, INDEPENDENCE, OREGON. 'OHT PA(T" HAPPY YANKS RETURN FROM WAR WITH WOUNDS MERCHANT SHIPS TO CARRY CADETS MISS ELIZABETH WALK: 1 y VXXXXXVX XXXXXXv XX, f x x , " - Xx. MM V it x X X X s A ixX X XXX WN xx1 "X X Xx I XX XXXXX U v vx X XX X 11 X XXXX v x xgxxxX if I xxxxx I -ft 1 V N x X xx s-S -N N x xv X x x f xx V t - XX 1, A x-, XXV- 4 k X v - if Xx t xy x x ,.tx x x xN XX x x X 1 jl X ' vW vt -4 X'X x S X i 3 Xxi. X x x tl is r J tVx,x . i x"v ! 1 x Ml i x S. f I J ,XS - A V I x xf tfvt 4 id Vi x v , i own s A x-J " tx x V - jf f , . j Xy vxs , )t 5 Wrwtem Ntwfl'iijwr I tnotiSt Training System of Shipping Board to Be Extended to Large Vessels. STUDY FOX HIGHER PIACES Young Men Will Learn the Road to the Quarter Deck and Counting Room High Class of Sea men Wanted, 2 DAD AND 3 SONS FIGHT U lJ UNDER GEN. PERSHING 'J - r: Ma-xa. Min t In N'iiry , m)iih! nt tho clu-fMiifi boys tht roturnotl to their own cumirv nft. r nv.tny iniiiitlis mi tin- other nii'o nre wn In tins .liutiniph mi die iIpck of.tne sixtn returning troop ti-.-uisiiort. Keprosontiitlvcs from nil parts of (his country were among tho returning fighters that limded at Hoboken, and they were not downhearted beeiuise of ttiolr wounds. ' .'.:. .... Porto Rico Was Great Help in Winning War Great Work of People of Island Revealed for First Time. fiECOi-D IS AMAZING CUE Achievements in Raising Army, Help ing Red Cross and Boosting Lib erty Loans Are Recounted Faced Big Handicap in . Earthquake. .' , Sad Juan, Porto Rico. What the : people of Porto Rico have done in the '; jwar will gain for them the friendship, ' jlove and gratitude of the entire popu ! ilation of the United States. The war activities of this patriotic island have jbeen so effective. that one cannot help ! but become amazed at all that has i been accomplished. ji That thousands of people here have done everything within their power, to v save and give, in an effort to help win this war is .the simple truth, and they 'I . can well feel proud of their record. ; iTo every single appeal made in behalf , (of the war Porto Rico has responded f gallantly. Ten million dollars has -.', been Invested in the four Liberty .loans. The spirit of the people was :j iwell demonstrated "in the fourth Lib V erty loan drive, when the island ex- i I .ceeded her quota of $4,000,000 by al f most $800,000 despite the disaster caused by the earthquake, which cost I ' Porto Rico millions of dollars. This ; calamity occurred during the ' drive. ( 'The beautiful cities of Mayagues and : Aguadilla were virtually destroyed, but they exceeded their quota, i. The Ked Cross has spread its light , to every nook and corner of 1'orto Rico. The Porto Riean chapter of the .1 American Red Cross has undertaken ; every branch of work conducted in the ':). . States. The great 'work which the ! v chapter is now doing in the matter of " ; home service has been developed since I , the call of the men of Porto Rico to Camp Los Casus. Home Service Work. l! There are fully organized active branches of the society in every rnu ;, nicipality. Through these brnnrhp ',. ,he ,nost devoted and patriotic service u ; is being given to the work of the Red Cross by-the people of the entire is land. This is especially true in ron- 5 flection with the home sen-ice work, .;,! which means the bringing of help and i comfort and giving material menus 0f support to the wives, children and oth er dependents of the men who have ! joined the army. There are fiu active and patriotic committees of home service. ...c nra vross is doing a great work ' in 'ooking after n. n(,,!(;y Ullll cof,ti. j tute families of the soldiers at Camp U Las (-'usas. During August the chap ter cared for 2,058 families of soldiers During September .1,010 families were '. , cared for. The recVnt eartliquako.'; :; u'lded greatly to the relief work. In. the second war fund drive, which vas carried on throughout the island ill flm inirif lie r.f Tr.... .-i -r... j - yiL iuu,v aiiu iune, i;ijs, , ' the people made donations in excess ' ' of .$100,000. 1 1 Mr. Hack Jones, a coffee planter and also speak for the patriotism of these people?" Much Food Saved. The people have invested their money freely In Liberty bonds ami War Savings stamps. The saving of food has been so efficiently preached and has been so well organized by the food commission that vast quantities of food have been saved. Another example of the wonderful patriotism of the people was demon strated in the work of Mr. Antonio Arbona, a coffee planter living near Ciales. The coffee planters of Porto Rico have suffered greatly on account of there being no market for their coffee In the states. On account of the war their foreign market was cut off. There are 150,000 people in Porto Rico dependent upon the coffee in dustry for a livelihood and the coffee condition has caused the people much suffering. Mr. Arbona, a man more than sixty years old, covered two bar rios on horseback and succeeded in selling to the small coffee planters more than ?16,00O of Liberty bonds in the fourth campaign, mosf of these being J50 and $100 bonds. In all things pertaining to war work the Spanish merchants throughout the island have co-operated to the fullest extent. Liberty bonds they have bought liberally and they have given freely to the Red Cross. I have never come In contact with a class of busi ness men who give more freely than these, or more cheerfully, either.' When the Red Cross was seeking a new nome 4o business men Span iards, Porto Ricans and Americans donated $11,000, this money- being raised In a few hours, thus enabling the Red Cross to have quarters in one building. The Four-Minute Men. The "Four-Minute Men" of Porto Rico did a great work in speeding the winning or the war. All of the prin cipal centers of population were thor oughly covered and thousands of peo ple were reached through the speak ers of this organization. Among them were some of the most representative men of the country. During food conservation week a campaign was conducted by public school teachers in every .town and barrio. The number of public meet ings held during that week exceeded 2,000. Both urban and rural teach ers made a house-to-house canvass to explain the meaning of the pledge cams anu to secure signatures. The great parade organized during this week whs one of the most important UAID TIIOtirniiaiiTrnu 55 si limn i univcu vvni 1 1 D I I EXPERIENCES IN WAR w if St North Adams. Mass. SulTer J ing from shell shock, his hair uirueu Miinv wjiue lllifl so great j ly altered hi appearance that his S( friends failed to recognize him. g Peter MacPhail returned hoiinj j5 after two years and one month's j 5(, service as gunner In the Itoviil ?5 I Field artillery of the British j army, inning Ms service Mae g Phail took part in many battles. f( particularly notable ones being Vpres, ('umbra! and Combles. 5; He is thirty-seven years old. ITALY'S STRONG MAN ff -ins this to say of the peepUi. In his 3 f l''"Ue vidllity: "We were asked for V ', 98,400 In the third Liberty loan. Small r j ; merchants and day laborers made a ' canvass of the little town and the ?, "..iv, Mae laoei-ers In this region get I . Jibont 60 cents a day, yet these good 1 V, - nennlp ' o,i,. , i ,- , . .. ....,. .c w raise is,uuy, , or fj i I t0 per cent more than their quota If ! J vou could but see the cliffs they 'limbed and the dangerous trails thev -ii ..-u, nlieie u misstep means a :- i;irop of 1,000 feet or more, in their f vork of solicitation on behalf of Uncle am it wotHd make you wish that 4, VashlngtoiJ could know the full meas- ire of theii, devotion. Does not ihi mayor of the little town of Villalbn nmw, nlw, J"" " v-5'- I 1 - Pt " VCW& 1 if " pd which had ever taken place. Thou sands participated. Every public school teacher marched, as well as the pupils. The gospel of food economy. In creased food production, improved methods of cultivation and the neces sity of planting a greater variety of home-products, has been preached to every corner of the island. The schools have been instrumental In the establishment of 20,003 home gardens, thereby assisting I'orto Rico to solve the food problem. .' The children here are deserving of mucbpraise for what they lmve done, and the example they set led others on to greater efforts. . They are all members of the Red Cross. A few of them were able to secure from their parents the money needed for their contribution, but the majority made up their minds that they would' earn this money themselves. All over the Island children organized festivals to get funds needed for membership fees. In .Fajado and Itio I'ledras, n total of 1,850 school children enrolled as Junior Red Cross members and earned every cent that they contrib uted. Thousands of dollars have been raised by these children. They have participated in all civic parades organized for this purpose. Delicacies Sent Abroad. Last year 40 tons of guava jelly and 2,000,000 cigarettes were sent to the boys in France. Thousands of women In I'orto Hico, from San Juan, the capital, through out the entire island, Including' the towns of the hills, have devoted their time and given their money and serv ices to all things needed for the war. All social activities were carried on solely for the benefit of war work. In many sections of I'orto Rico wom en took the place of the men in the fields. I'orto Rico contributed freely and generously of her man power and tin very best of her youth entered the training camps. Just after tho pas sage of the selective draft law I'orto Rico registered her young men to the number of 108,000. The Porto Rico regiment was the lirst In the nation to be at its lull war strength. Six Hundred and fifty volunteers were ac cepted for duty to guard the Panama canal. When General Townsliend took up the work of recruiting, many ol the men who lived far back in the hills walked as much as 25 miles to enlist. Washington. Apprentices and cadet oillccrs will be placed on nil large ves sels (if the American merchant marine, to be (rained for higher places, much the siime us sailor boys were trained to become officers and shipping mer chants In the early days of American seagoing, according to plan to be put Into execution at once by the rnlted States shipping board. Tho basis of this plan Is a system of Individual training on shipboard for American yoiiih capable of rising through Instruction to a shipping ca reer, the ultimate goal of which Is, the position of shipmaster, steamship ftgent or manager, or trade representa tive at home or abroad In the great program of commercial expansion by sea by which the country Is to keep busy its vast merchant licet. The plan has been devised ns pn ex tension of the wartime' system of training conducted by the hoard, through which large numbers of Amer ican bids were given brief Intensive schooling on training ships, before be ing sent to sea. For Commercial Service. This finished product Is expected to mature In the form of able scam!! of a high type, petty oflicers, dock and engine-room officers all Americans as well ns a needed supply or young men experienced In sen-going ami cargo-handling, who can he further trained In steamship otlices and export ing and Importing business .houses, with u view to Inter commercial serv ice connected with shipping. It was this system of training that enabled early merchants of Salem and Boston to outstrip all rivals la foreign trade, and make themselves and their communities rich. i In thus extending its present train ing service which continues as here tofore under the direction of Henry Howard of Boston the shipping hoiiril has the benefit of experience In train ing cadets at sea gained by its new director of eMminns, John H. Ron seter of San' FruficiW Mr. Rosseter has deckled Ideas on the training of young American for seafaring and for steamship opera tion. ,IIe has tried out many of these Ideas in 'a practical way through his management of the Pacific Mall Steam ship 'company, one of the largest ship ping Interests operating from the American West coast to the Orient, South Seas and South America. At the conclusion of a recent Con ference at Washington of shipping board officials Interested In develop ing the training plans of the board un der peace conditions, Mr. Uosseter expressed his views on the subject at length. Later he embodied them In the following Interview: High Class of Seaman Wanted. "Shipping men are agreed that if at tainment of our new and enlarging in terest in foreign commerce is to be se cured, we must certainly have a very high class of American merchant non men ; the same kind we have so ad mirably developed for our navy. "We all know of the higher social standard that naturally prevails In this country; and, personally, I would say that I would not only accept the present standards, but I am disposed to go a step further, because that Is the tendency; and If we are to get good men and train them to be good seamen and then , good officers, we must see that they are placed under such environment as will naturally evolve into a condition of their being cj Nil lieu, Mums, Sinn HI .-Neary , f ,1' llilj I, Ki ll u lilixil llllVl HOIIS t t! -" ........... , J ii i'ii members of tb neral ' Per $ shing's foi t In France, wax j' (V himself In Pordiliig'.) command v' I.. .. t ..I- -I....I..,. ,' ,j Oil III!,! I'UIIO- Ul ,'lll.l'!lll tl.ll Mil. j,y ev the Indian rniiiin!s,-iis. IVrshlm; 1 $ was then second lieutenant of a ' ty cavalry troop and NVnry was u ,4' tjj sergeant. J, , a ' s 5 "o a j is a 'o o V' ,'' ;4 t. -'- J-' 4 it ! , r i" good foreign representatives In com mercial and Industrial linen, and agents on the spiffs of the slenliixhtp lines at Inline and In foreign purls. "1 regard the recruiting service of the shipping board ns something that Is to produce for the laeivniitile inn rine of he Fulled Suites a substantial I.vpe of men of the foiimen'H class that will be officers later on, meli who call go abroad and learn the husliie.ss ami enrry the Aiaiilcnn Interests with them. "I want to make seagoing Iti-d an attractive as I possibly can. I want tu attract to it the beys who coiiii from colleges, and who know bow to swim mid play baseball. 1 want to iniilic condlllons aboard dilp stK hjIljat they will feel It Is the best destiny they can find. '"' ' "The men we want to attract' to1 Ida sen, 1 reel, tire llie men such 'rM we remember ourselves In our school Zfayi nice, .clean boys, who bad good homes, and who were leaving home amid the old family discussion us to whether they would be hankcri, Insur ance men. retail merchant, or what 'not. I want to add to that list the very Important and very alluring oc cupation of the pursuit of the sea. "When we ask American boys to come aboard ship, we certainly must all recognize that we have got to ns- Mire mom oi quit,- a iiltteriiit condi tion than has existed In foreign com merce during the past thirty years; I might say, unhappily exlsteij." A."- jeir 1 th.' ... . I Uie of I lie huiiil-.uiH'Nt !t tnntes of thbt wll.ter's (iie tul si Washington. cerdttig to the ivldeiice ubnillte.r! l-oiiil liegolllitcil with Mrs, t'iilh-4 for the (llsmnntlemciit of the Iimik, ita ter It hud been condeiiiiied by a t,i, lug Inspector. Airs, (illleiuttd d.t that null .mi urraiigement had !'' made itnd charged that Mi-Leini (ho house.' The court coiiiliui,.. i use to give the principals fin tg i unit y to adjust th imitler biil thcuiselveli. BRITISH GIRLS ARE TRAIN Food Mlnlttry Prepare Young Wof Employees for Commercial Career. THEFT OF HOUSE CHARGED Contractor I Brought Into Court Ac cused of the Larceny of a Dwell ing House. Medford, Mass. Churged with the larceny of a dwelling bouse, Clarence McLean, a building wrecker, has been brought Into court by Mrs. Mary J. Glllulatid, owner of the property. Ac- London.- Hundreds of girls ployed at the ministry of food n-; trillion clearing house ttrc recehin, structlons during working hur commercial career. The .!. county council has taken charge their education nud each girl Is tlv one mid a quarter hours every d.i cept Saturday for Instruction a study. : Classes lire held three times u d The girl are from sixteen to eight ' years old, Jv There are classes In booCkecpi J, French and shorthand, and tiie gi1' lire also given the choice of recrcntl clusse In elocution und winging. i i SHELL SHOCK HITS YANKEES LIGHTLY Few Hundreds Only Are Suffering From War's Strange Malady. MANY RESTORED BY PEACE All Victims Will Be Completely Re covered in a Year, Says Surgeon General's Office Less Than 1,000 Cases to Be Treated. Washington. Fear that the nation will have a big problem on Its hands in the care of holdiers suffering from shell shock Is utterly without foun dation, declared Col. Peace Bailey of the surgeon general's olllce. Amidifv- ing the statement before the senate military committee that hundreds of victims of the strange disease actually recovered at. the signing of the armis tice, Colonel Bailey expressed the opinion that so far as present knowl edge of the malady Indicates, prnetl- SHOES FOR THE DESTITUTE BELGIANS Premier Orlando, who Diluted t. Italian ship of state during the great trap war. SHE GETS MARRIAGE LICENSE South Dakota Bride-td-Be Buys Docu ment, Pays $1 for It, Then Hunts Up the Judge. Mitchell, S. D.-Cupld and woman suffrage have apparently . flormed a corporation here, Miss Marie Cipper, twenty-two years old. strode Into the offices of the clerk of courts of Davi son county one morning recently and planked a dollar on the desk to pay for the first man-luce license ih i.u ever been bought in this county by a woman. After stie the license she went out and found the municipal judge. While obtaining (he license Miss Gippei- explained that her husband-to-be was "too busy to get the license." The apparent object of the purchase was Inscribed on the clerk's record as y royer, also of Mitchell m m lfc 14. i ' ''"'rVWr V 'V4J 6 S w.l-rn Nw.p,ip.r nnluST. -V .-.v 1 The girl In tin i-ii,,!,,-..,,,,, ,,s s,.i n 1( of shoes donated by p, iP , n ,,. j . A' L,,"elt ' an enormous pile of Belgium. The shoe-, " .S"." M fVr e destitute people distributing center of thousands of tons of el, ,,;,.' whlch ' the ully all vicilms of shell shock slmu , be completely recovered within n je the great majority In u much sle'irti time. L Less Than Thousand Case. ! , Jtejiorts received here are (hat liter are now less than u thousand ru of shell shock to be treated, thanks t' the Improved methods by which t It United Slates army combated the ii' Diction. Preparation hud been mini to take cure of 2,500 enses, sent to tin Hide by March 1, but.tdnce hoMllltm ceased word from Franco shows then are only ,'joo cases there requlria v treatment In this country. There nr. probably about the sumo number ei route home. ) it is accepted, here that the drop Ii the expected number of sufferers due directly to the news of (iermimyV surrender. The otilv exnhinnilim f.r this is the removal from the sufferer of apprehension that they woult' again be subjected to an ordeal that' acting on the minds, actually twisted, their bodies out of shape. Serious as have been the ravages a '. Hhell shock among the troops, said.' Colonel Ralley, described by Surgeoi., ieiieral Ireland ns one of the counft Iry's leading psychlatrisis,' the Uutei! Mates forces have not suffered to tin extent those of the oilier allies bae I his is due largely to the fact that ! 1'er cent of (he cases developing ha if ' been cured in the Held hospitals by I he prompt treatment provided. -t Given Special Treatment. T Tho more seriously airiicted arc brought to this country and sent to I I'lattshurg, N. Y., where there Is a special hospital of 1,,'iOO beds. Within.'' slu ti'ue alter admittance most patients avow they are' regaining their: IWIfltml j Ill ( ... I '-"million, iiiki niter olisci'Mi- . lion Indicates that this U so, they are', n-moved to u casual deliH-hmeut lit Ihe , hospital for brief additional observa-',,. lam. When it is evident they hae ' recovered they are sent to camps near,, ilmir homos to be mustered out. The rapidity with which cases are j l'lng cleared through I'lattshurg con-'' vmces Colonel Ihiiley that there will" I"-' few permanently disabled by the! license. This is in marked contriist to tho situation in England where Here are 20,000 shell shock victims on the pension rolls. ' Colonel Bailey revealed that, con- liary to the generiil belief, shell shock does not necessarily come from heavy tannonnding. Proof of tills Is found ) In the fact that from 10 to 12 per cent f of tho casualties in the Chateau ThI- I wry fighting were shell sliock, most of t these men having been exposed only