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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 27, 1921)
eat up fully 75 per cent of the log crop. On the west branch of the Penob scot. which In the old days yielded 50,000,000 feet or more of long logs, scarcely a stick was cut last winter for sawmills, practically the entire out put, 134,000,000 feet being In four-foot lengths, for the Great Northern Paper company. It Is the same story every where—the pulp mills monopolizing In Bangor for whisky, motor rides and the log cut, and as long as this de other eujoyments, or lost In gambling. mand continues lumber cannot be any Bottom Fell Out thing like as cheap as it once was, Then, In the early fall of 1920, the whatever the cost of labor. bottom began to fall out. Peeled pulp wood fell from $31 a cord to $21, and rough from $23 to $13, while, SAPPHO REINCARNATED I with an overstock on hand every where, cutting operations were cur tailed one-half. Woods wages went down with a bang but the bottom was not reached. This summer the decline has continued and woods wages are down to $1.75 a day. In some sections as low as $1.50, with board, while pulpwood sawyers working by the cord are getting Instead of $2.75 to $3.50 a cord, $1.75 and occasionally $2, and paying thplr own board at the rate of 75 cents to $1 a dny. Even at these prices there are thousands Idle. Spruce lumber, which at one time In 1919 reached $03 and $05 per 1,000 feet, is now quoted nt $45 to $49 for dimensions and $30 to $43 for randoms, and the only thing that prevents a further slump Is the de mand of the pulp mills, which now Woodsmen’s Pay No --- Longer High «----------- Reaction in Maine From W ar Boom Sends Lumber Prices Down Toward Normal. TWO MEN FOR EVERY JOB Hom« Builder« W ill Rejoice, but Pulp Mill« Garner Most of the Output— Employers Now Can Get Their Pick of Men. Bangor.—The day of fabulous wages for woodsmen is past, and Instead of Jobs hunting men—men of any kind at almost any price—the hunting Is now done.by the men, for there are at least two of them to one Job. Every day now, the sidewalks of lower Ex change and Washington streets are thronged with woodsmen, waiting for something to turn up, and the employ ment agents are having their pick of the men at prices not more than half those paid a year ago. In olden times the best of native woodsmen were glad when November came around and a long winter faced them, to get $10 to $25 a month to go Into the woods, walking most of the 50 to 100 miles from Bangor to the scene of operations with their bags on their backs, and satisfied with a bunk In a log house and a diet com posed chiefly of pork and beans. They went to work at the first streak of dawn and kept nt It as long as they could see a tree. ■ : Check Signed U. R. Acrook Goes Through Banks Loveland, Colo.—Some crook with a sense of humor succeed- ed In passing a check for $250 on an Akron (O.) rubber firm that was written on a counter check of the First National bank ! here. It was signed U. It. Wages Were Low. ;; Acrook and indorsed by several In that dny the price of spruce banks before It got back here, stumpage (the right to cut) was $1.25 and It was discovered there was to $2 per thousand feet and a very lib no such account in the local eral scale at that. The men who drove ! bank. the logs down the boom got $1.75 to $2.50 a day, and they were experts, every one. The rafters at Bungor, the overhaulers, the sawmill men and everybody else who touched the log or the lumber worked long hours at low wages—the sawmill men from dawn to dusk for $30 a month and board. Vessels carried the lumber from Bangor to Boston for as little us $1.25 per thousand feet, seldom more than $1.75; to Long Island ports for 50 cents more and to New York for $2.25 to $2.75. Ignorance of Care of Furnace Re On this basis of cost of production estimating the price of the logs In sponsible for Much Waste, boom at $0 to $9 per thousand feet Says Bulletin. for hemlock and $10 to $13 for spruce, luml>er was so cheap that al most anyone could alTord to build a bouse and mechanics In Bungor and the towns along the river Improved the opportunity of cheap lumber and cheap land to get homos for them Average House Owner BumeToo Much selves. Today everything Is very different Coal, Principally Because He Does Not Know How to Regulate There had been a gradual Increase be Hie Heater. fore the wnr of stumpage rates, wages and other costs, and lumber was costly Washington.—The average house enough when the wnr cuine on, largely through the advent of the pulp mills, owner burns too much coal, principally which from small beginnings In the because lip does not know how to eighties Increased their field and scope regulnte Ids heater, say engineers of of operations until In 1915 they owned the United States Department of Agri most of the desirable timber lands culture In Farmers’ Bulletin 1194, and were eating up rather more than “Operating a Home Heating Plant,” half of the 800,000,000 feet of spruce published by the department. Many rural homes are now provided with cut In the state. Then the war set things faster furnaces, and the publication was pre than ever. Wages were first to go sky pared as a guide to their efficient ward, owing to the difficulty of getting operation, particularly In getting the most lient out of the fuet and In mak help. Men who could not speak a word ing the home ns healthful ns possible. The satisfactory and efficient beat of English and were almost too lazy to move got $3 a day and hoard for ing of homes, according to the bulletin, cutting four-loot pulp wood, or $2.75 requires: That the chimney flue be of to $3 a cord when working by the proper size and In the proper place, piece and paying their own board, at that the proper heating equipment be the rate of 75 cents to $1 a day. Installed correctly; that the plant be Some of these pieceworkers made as understood thoroughly and operated so much as $180 to $200 a month, a few that It gives the most heat from the even more. Most of this wus spent fuel consumed; that the house be con ! ;; ;; ¡; I Feverish activity today features the reconstruction of the battle-wrecked parts of Flanders. This photograph shows the builders working among the ruins of Ypres, and was taken by an American Ited Cross official, who was accompanying the American Legion delegation on Its tour of France and Belgium. Czar’s Officers Form Red Army This girl, Juanita Cllvette of New York, Is certain that she Is the re incarnation of Sappho. At The age of six she climbed on her mother's knee Trotzky Tells How Great Soviet and said: “Mamma, I have found Military Force of 5,000,OCX) myself. Who, or what, was Sappho?" Men Was Organized. Since then she has written thousands of lyrics and painted many charming canvases. She Is now only fourteen years old. Her father, who keeps a curio shop, has been an actor, ma gician, newspaper man and artist. “I am as old as time,” snys Juanita. First Created aa Several Armies, Each Supported by Small W ar Council “I have been since the beginning. Which Wielded the Power of Once I was Sappho. I am again Sap pho reincarnate.” Life and Death, VEIL OF SECRECY IS RAISED U. S. Tells How to --- Save «----------- on Fuel SEALING CRACKS SAVES HEA1 Belgians Busily Rebuilding the City of Ypres structed so that the heat Is held In; that the air be kept m oist; and that enough fresh air be admitted either continuously or from time to time to avoid the discomfort or unhenlthful conditions due to accumulation of car bonic acid gas. In selecting fuel, the bulletin suggests that different kinds and sizes of coal be tried out. 8hould Be Properly Installed. WON BEAUTY PRIZE the Austrian army during the war had passed over into our ranks. We had stationed them on the Volga. Stirred up by Savinov and the revolutionary socialists they rebelled and occupied Kazan, Slmbrisk and Samara. n Directed Attack on Simirsk. “Toukhatchevsky, a former czarlst officer, converted to Bolshevism when he was a prisoner In Germany, direct ed our first army against Simirsk; Vatsetls, a Lett, who was our first generalllssimo, lead the fifth against Kazan. They were poor armies, hav ing from 6,000 to 8,000 bayonets each. “We mobilized the communists first, then six classes in the Volga govern ment. The order w a s: ‘Victory or death.* The peasants came in crowds to fight against the whites, but they lacked confidence in their own forces. “I was Installed In a train pro tected with sand bags and defended by n cannon and machine guns. An other train followed carrying 300 cav alry, an airplane, a garage car for five automobiles, wireless, printing ma chines ; In fact, a little military city. “At the beginning Savinkov, Kap- pel and Foruunatov were so sure of success that they had already an nounced IL They surrounded us with 1,000 men. We dug trenches and un derwent a siege and finally repulsed them. “In order to profit from our ad vantage I risked a dangerous coup with the aid of Raskolnikov, a young officer of the Bolshevik marine who Is now representing us In Afghanistan. “Raskolnikov had brought from Cronstadt by the canals four old tor pedo boat destroyers. We both aimed to annihilate the enemy fleet which was composed of armor-plated barks carrying cannons, laying broadside off Kazan. A turn of a river around a hill separated us. At one o’clock In the morning we entered the narrow channel with the first destroyer and were lucky enough to set fire to an oil tank In one of the barks. “Our other destroyers could not Join us and It Is still a mystery to me how we were able to escape. Prob ably the fire prevented the scared en emy from seeing us. We returned without difficulty with only our rudder broken. Paris.—The curtain of secrecy be hind which the Russian Reds organ ized the great soviet army of five million men which enabled the mili tary directors of communism to beat off or defeat all exterior and Inte rior enemies during the past three years, except drought and famine, la lifted by Trotzky, according to the Paris organ of Communism, “L’Hu- manite,” which newspaper prints an Interview with the military director for Russia. Trotzky gives credit for organiza tion to the old officers of the czarlst regime who turned reds. The soviet army was created as several armies, and each supported a small war coun cil, which wielded the power of life or death. The defeat of the “White” army In the Volga region In 1918 af forded sufficient enthusiasm to build the greater armies. Trotzky so y s: “The army was Instituted in prin ciple by a decree signed January 15, 1918, by Lenin and his war and naval commissaries, Dybenko and Podovls- ky. I was then negotiating the Brest- Lltovsk peace trenty with Germany as minister of foreign affairs, and It was In March that I began my duties. “There was nothing left of the old army then; men had gone home, the materials lay scattered everywhere, abandoned where the trains happened to stop. The local soviets, barely or ganized, telegraphed me ‘We have ten cannon. . . . We have an avi ation park. . . . Ten soldiers. . . . Five sailors. . . .* Everything was In a muddle. “My bureau was at Smolny. Teople came from all comers of the country: ‘Give us shoes I Don’t you need a colonel?' they asked. It was exact ly like the description made by IJs- Gain Confidence. sagaray of the war ministry under “The effect was enormous. At dawn, the French commune. It wus not easy after a short battle, the whites evac- to establish order. I had no compe tence and thought first of accepting the aid of foreign missions who hop«! to bring us back Into the European war. Eventually, however, a comrade of the party, Bontch-Brouevltch, brought his brother, a czarlst general, to me. I asked him to construct a general staff after putting him under the watch of two communists. He filled his office perfectly. Here Is Mme. Marchal, who was voted the most beautiful woman In the flower fete at Aix les Bains, France. She was awarded a prize of 15,000 francs. uated Kazan. The following day, Toukhatchevsky took Simirsk. Oui army then finally gained confidence. Since then It has known only success. “Then the true work of organization began. Our partial mobilizations. In all, were insufficient. We began to mobilize regularly by classes. The number of objectors diminished. Bill boards, meetings, satirical plays, tri bunals—all means of recruiting were used. We recalled the former czarlst officers. The French revolution had used barely half of the 15,000 officers of the king, but out of our million we used hundreds of thousands. It la true that some of them became trait ors. Our 11th Division of Nlgnl-Nov- gorod, for example, our pride, was inassnered in the spring of 1919, dur ing the rebellion of the Cossacks of Krasnov, because of the concentrated treason of the chiefs. We arrested the families of the officers and held them as hostages. “We created commlssalres of the army. But the soviet congress ranked them only after the generals in chief. We have placed them in all the divi sions, brigades, regiments, and have added in each company ‘political guides’ to sustain their decrees. In each army, two commlssalres and the commandant formed the war counclL Though they were responsible for all treason, their decrees Were Inviolable, and possessed absolute power of Ufa and death over all.” The best and highest-priced heater improperly Installed may give less sat isfaction than the poorest and cheap est put In correctly, snys the bulletin. For this renson a man known to under stand his business should Install the plant. In selecting the furnace, consult owners of homes who have had ex perience In operating furnaces of dif ferent types. Practically all heating plnnts have four dampers. A draft damper in the door of the ash pit Is opened to admit air through the fire, which causes it to burn rapidly. A check damper lo cated In the smoke pipe Is opened to admit cold air into the flue, thus Inter fering with the draft and retarding the burning of fuel In the heater. The damper located In the feed door Is used for the same purpose. Through It cold air Is admitted directly over the fire, and If opened wide. It acts as a check. When regulated properly. It admits Just sufficient air to supplement that ad mitted through the draft damper and causes more perfect combustion of the fuel. The smoke pipe damper Is lo cated between the fumnee and the check draft, and can be used to control the draft above the fuel In windy weather or at night. Ashes should not be permitted to ac cumulate In the ash pit, as this retards the draft and the hent causes the grate bars to become warped and bent. As a rule It Is not necessary to shake down the ashes more than once or twice a day. except In very cold weather, and Raleee Cries of T reason. shaking should be stopped as soon as “With his help we began to clear live sparks begin to fall Into the ash np the situation. But do you see the pit. , Sealing Cracks Saves Heat. effect? A czarlst general? People be It Is economy to seal the cracks gan to cry 'treason' and refuse to obey about doors and windows with weather me. The central committee, fortu strips, and where the weather Is un nately, understood me and aided me. usually cold, storm sash Is recom In order to establish discipline we In mended. With a wind velocity of flicted rigorous punishments. “All sorts of men offered themselves fifteen miles an hour a crack of three- thirty-seconds of an Inch, which Is to me: Brigands and port brigands. much less than the average for doors One man. who came with a little troop, and windows, permits the passage of had hla pocket full of gold and watch about one and one-half cubic feet of es. He was shot. There were also air a minute for every linear foot. An spies and secret agents. Army by-1 ordinary double sash window (thirty- glene had to be revolutionized. “Everywhere Interesting problems six Inches wide and seventy-two Inches high) would thus admit thirty ruble came to light. When a colony had feet of air a minute. In a room ten been established, a local federal In feet wide by twenty feet long having stinct mixed with It, with the result two windows of this kind, there would that we would have an army of the be required approximately 80 per cent town of Tver or of Vladimir. The more heat units to hent It properly general disgust of militarism every-' than If the entrance of the air was where hindered all co-operation. “Finally In May the essential part controlled and a complete change al of the apparatus was put on Its feet: ’ lowed once every hour. In addition to maintaining a proper seven regions had been constructed temperature, the moisture present tn with their governmental subdivisions, the air Is a great factor In heating their cantons and volosts. “I did not dare to begin with com- I homes. The water pan In the furnace should always he kept filled, and other pulaory military service; voluntary . means provided for the evaporation of service sufficed. We then had about > water tn the living room. Not only are 200.000 men. mostly former soldiers, I A new distinction la claimed by Congressman Arthur M. Free of Califor rooms In which the air has a high per and members of the Jeunesses com- | Thia building, the Japanese embassy in Washington, will be a busy nia. who la serving hit first term In the house, that of having two seta of centage of moisture more economically muntsts. The Caecho-Slovaklan af place during the conference on limitation of armaments and Far Eastern twins, in addition to another son..- The photograph shows him with hta five heated, hut living conditions are more fair, however, came to our aid. questions. The Japanese delegation will number about two hundred, and children. "You remember that adventure? many of the party will be accommodated tn one of the large hotels. healthful Congressman Free’s Proud Boast Japanese Embassy in Washington 1 I