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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 18, 1916)
THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM. OftEOON, SATURDAY, NOV. 18, 1916. 'VI l:i t";3 !aV. . ' ia'J- jubilau'iy. su ho le taolitii Iilrjiolt froia the long ; lino of ticket-buyer. "But I wouldn't have cot them If tl.ey haiin't been ; mur-nrd Ju3t as I get to ino win-low. t .Want to go in now ?" i "All ri;lit," Peyton agreed ar-'vMi 'P7. Plrccil Is rrrM the students squatted on the tracs. At the right, forming a background fur them, (he "set" of the Greek play cut the erid Ircn in two. At the left, flowing down over Iks crimson-hung tiera of seal t from (he hot blue sky, poured an avalanche or girls bundles and raits 'tgr I " i 'j. i M :; !';! time the flags, the pennants, tha mouater bunches of chrysanthemums, all shouted the fact to him. This picture vanished. It was plain It struck Starrow that hte comuan- snd slathers of girls; girls of all ages, .' ton. wat not showing the proper d? girls of all sizes, girls of all shapes; , gree of enthusiasm. "It's too bad It blue girls and pink girls, green girls jfn't your own game," he went on. as -and yellow girls, lavender girls and ! they made their way Inio tha little brown girls, white, red. and black j- dingy, darkened theattr. "Say. I girls; girls in foamy. Bouncy, petal : wouldn't It be great to sea yourself things that were dresses; girls under j ni"klng that end-run?" huge, rainbow wreaths of flowers that "Yes, I'd like to see It," Peyton ad-'were bata; hats under huge, lu.yous ' Diitlod, unemotionally. j bubbles that were parasols. He re I He did not seem In the mood for! numbered that Lawrence, marching -lkina. but Siarrow went on unde-iby his side, had looked up and said: t-jrred. "Heaveus! You must hi a "Close a bonbons In a box." Pey- f j homesick guy Harvard football iu'ton thought them more like that mad ; tha blograph and alone in St. Louis 1 huddle 01 blossoms In bis aunt's old !on Christ mas. Did you get anything fashioned ganUn In Gloucester. Now ) M your, stocklag?" I :e mulll-colcred throng were ap- "Nothing." Peyton's indifference plauding '82, Jubilant on its twenty- was no' assumed. There was only one . fifth anniversary. Now he count hear iihinr ha wanted. Denied that, the the cheers of 'OS. 'OS. '10. following ! tu eirta of the mul counted for '82. Now he could bear Hie roar that that the biograph-operator had moved i milling. I went up from both audiem-0 and down close to the audience, and was j M's meager response seemed to sl-'slumnl when '07 marched in. He beginning to present a panoramic i Inline Starrow. They sat without talk- - could hear every sound of it; he would , view of the spectators. I tin;, watching the people coma in. ' hear that until he died. And it was; Smooth as a river the old familiar tOvar the house lay the quiet of a all over now the four most wonder-. audience flowed past biin; the cheer It 'iirlttma audience the pitiful quiet , M years a man ever spent. - iug sections crowded with hats, like j of for'orn remnants of humanity who, j The picture oL the stadium stayed ' pin-cushions studded with black I simply forget, fll up a holiday with : on the sheet only a short moment, but ! headed pins; proud fathers, prouder ' makeshift entertainment. A woman j in that time he lived over an intense j mothers, superior little brothers, ez !hr and there, sitting solitary In the! afternoon. cited little sisters; graduates, rang- i stuffy looking boxes, added touch of'- The stadium vanished from theMng from last year's crop to alumni i extra desolation. But, gradually, as screen; now the blograph had them i of thirty years; critical prep-school tha srallerr becran to whistle and cat-! at Harvard Sauufe on the day of a! boys, giggling boarding-school girls. great game the old familiar picture Madeline gins, ail i amunn&e, nearly of an old'famtliar confusion. A pro-jail Boston, and a little of all its su ceaston of trolley-cars unloaded a mob burbs. HI! of spectators, which ran like a flood' Peyton was on bis feet. through tbe mob of curious onlookers. The panorama had vanished. Into packing the square and overflowing I Its place leaped a picture of the Har into Us confluent streets. Everywhere i vard halt of the stadium. And the & GIFT. BY BIOGP&PH ogy Inez Waynes Gllmore . Constance Terry7"'Ctitaluly it was not fear of a refusal. Jn all Law rence's meteoric amorous career, Pey ton bad never known him to fail. Peyton tried to imagine himself holding off one minute after he had seen that be bad any show with Con stance Terry. Not that he had any Idea that he could complicate Law rence's suit. He had left Cambridge the moment he found himself in love with 4he girl his room-mate bad picked. Ho could 'renounce, but lie ing crowd that surged about the lev ers. , . , Followed mora pictures of. tho Har vard sections; followed many of the Yale sections, but Peyton did not sea' them. He did not even look at them. The second half was close. Peyton summoned aTl the mental strength that was in him to concentrate on tha game. And at first he thought that he was going to be successful, that his mind had adjusted itself to the situation. But, after a brief interval. i f could not stay and day by day face ! hl longing, his impatience began to ; tall ira Impatience, the place assumed tbe supirncial cheer that cornea with 1 noise. ' Peyton, swaying mentally in an ; overmastering Ac of homesickness, ; tried to get a grip on himself. The i depressed, weak kneed looking orches tra crawled from underneath the) swarmed boys selling store-cards. ;r,f(c. Ah, there would be music! j Hags, flowers, badges, miniature foot That at lat might take him out of balls, all manner of glincrack sou himself. Hut, no; bis homesickness venlrs. inundated him In another weakening . The , sputtering blograph flashed 111' 3d; for they had begun to scrape ! again. This time it was the bridge, . I'iroiigh a medley of college songs j with the same old crowd advancing i't-alr Harvard." "Boola Boola," "Tbe; at tha same old snail's pace, and fling T'nderiakor's Song." "L't the Street," i ing abroad, Peyton had no doubt, the - -"For Cod. for Country, and for Yale," j same old oks. Tho inarhlue. It ' Veritas.'' He leaned ou the arm of'setmed, was following that crowd. . bl chair, one hand over his ayes. Now the boathouse slipped Into tho whole Harvard side was rising with tho steady movement upward of a tidal-wave cresting to break. All the Hags, banners, and pennants bad cut loose to make havoc of tbe "Sky-line. On the gridiron, a half-dozen yell leaders, megaphones in hand, arms whirling, looked like mechanical toys wound up to work together. He could fairly hear the deep, "Harvard! Har vard! Harvard!" He knew' what was happening. He had seen that mag- The theater darkened. He took no, picture, now the trainiug quarters, j niflcent concerted movement many 'rallies. A cone of brilliant liaht shot and now the interior of the stadium tiroin the bxlcony straight at the l!g again. , white screen; wavered, and danced; Not amply tuU time; Ihe seats v.-eie ,'npon it. Bnt his attitude did not; almost tilled. Hut spectators were i'hange. It slabbed the ceutr ln.ajsiHl pouring ont of tho chlmnoy-like circle of light end sip I'r.itou sat up. -. There, printed ou the while rec Umlx, as if by a flash of lightning, towertJ the stadium.. Kuipty, its tiered height rose in a . loiitt, gray 'curve against the sky. A balf-oval of .the deserted field stretched out to ;iw-t Mm. It looked exactly as be iiu'l seen It one moonlit sight. In a "ilally" written about It, he remem bered he had compared it, iu b'.gh luwi m-lioolljoy K'nijlialik to the Co II- entrances. The ushers were leaping up the aislss. two slaps at a time, deflecting tbo thick streams up. down, across, into scores ct tiny currents. At the vary top a row of heads made black blobs "on the sky-line. Above stretched the aerial banners that al ways gruce a big stadium fame. This was tbe enemy's tide; banners bearing tho word "Yale," pennants displaying the letter "Y," proclaimed it. The gins, beginning to toll them selves in extra wraps, wore huge buncoes of violets. As plainly times. The team bad come on. Starrow pulled him back into his seat. - Unheeding, Peyton bent forward over tha orchestra-rail, bursting with eagerness. Would the picture over change? There they were, running toward him over the field. Afar off Ihey might have been bulfxlo. Now he could make out the "lis' on their breasts. He caught a face hero and there. - The herd spread out like a fan and fell Into the well-known formation. Helley, the easy-tnoving full-back, had stepped back for a kick. Peyton ould almost bear tha plunk of the i ball and tho thumping feet of the as 1 ends as they coursed down under the ! punt. He examined them critically. ! K'ven allowing for the exasperated tiipted of tha fci'.'.i'.r.'iuh. fce could o!"o .1.111, and t is ia-;cnTi!ort aspect or, ilia scene shirted. h"eylon jumped ' how cosily tney moven. now perieci ' V stadium as be can: uiurcbiitf in again. It was tho Harvard sitU this was their condition. In his own thsws ho could fee! again that powerful scat of the man trained to the. minute, as ho comes to the mark for his supreme effort. The Yale side was next, and the reception, equally frantic, of their team. This aeries vanished, and in its place came a prolonged close view of each of the sections. Peyton jumped again. The pictures were so near and the figures so big, it was like being in front of the seats. There was Moulton, 'M Moulton who, he thought, was In New Orleans. How the deuce did he Crest Scott! there was Wright. '05. with Doris Nason. Ha didn't even know they knew each other. There was a whole bunch of Hasty Pudding fellows. What a good lime they were having! There were the Hilton and tbe Horrowa and the Gallegherg, all talking, laughing, waving flags to each other, exchang ing chaff, examining score-cards. And, by Jove, there in the front row, big as life, happy in a holiday seriousness, were Milly and Ted Dunton, his cousins. ' He caught himself just In time. He hsd started to yell over tha footlights. Milly was getting to be an awfully pretty girl. How becoming tbosa furs were to her! She pulled a bunch of envelopes from her muff and, charac teristically, she looked them over. Ted, saucer-eyed, with the fierce con centration of a prep-boy. bad Interest for noihinj: but tbe field. Tbe team must still he practising Peyton could tell from the lack of tensity in the audience. But what in the world was Milly doing? There were letters and a package 'under her arm. Peyton suddenly understood. Milly wa3 a senior at Radcliffe. Coming down from Fay House to meet Ted at Har vard Square, she had scooped her mail off the l?tter-board. She glanced at (he letters and, his renunciation Milly's lips moved. Constance with drew her wandering, unseeing gaze from the field. The two girls talked. The picture passed. Peyton had lived through the longest five minutes of his life. Peyton threw himself Into the game with a fierce intensity. At first there uni. Curious!, jwoiinb. he did not im-! though the picture had been colored mediately Inliik cf football In cuunee-'he saw that their streamers and las lion With It. Class t!iy can- back to-jeli wore of Yale blue. j without opening them, put them back in her muff. The package evidently interested her; she looked it all over. It Introited Peyton also; there was something familiar about it. A hte. jet'blr.tlc f!;r.r.turo ihsheJ a slanting ..ecognlzed it. It was tha trademark of the St. Louis photographer who bad. recently, taken bis pictures. He himself had sent Milly that package six weeks ago. Grinning to himself, Peyton watched ber open it. Her unfeigned delight in the picture was pleasant; Peyton's spirits lightened a little. Kqualiy amusing was Ted's swift, grumpy, unseeing glance. And then it was curious it had i never occurred to him to anticipate this Constance Terry came walking down the aisle with Lawrence Graves. Peyton knew her tbe moment she appeared at the top of the picture, And so real she seemed that he shrank back in bis seat. He watched ber progress, not breathing. Down she came, growing bigger with aacb step down, down, down. She was going to sit in the front row with Milly. There was something al most dramatic about this entrance. Looking from ber height over tbe field, she seemed to bo gszing straight Into his eyes. There was something eurious about her gaze; it was as if she looked hard at something that she did not see. Peyton's devouring glanee noted that she had lost none of her. beauty; the spirited grace of her figure, thi lovely lift of a red upper lip over a red lower one, tbo long, straight eyelashes, the thick, black brows, that in anger made thunder-clouds of her gray eyes His mem ory limned all tbe colors T?iat the blo graph left out. ''Deucod pretty girl." Starrow com mented; "that one that's taking a seat :n the front rcw. N Peyton did not answer. Milly had risen. There were quick jreetings; and the party seated itself. Something Lawrence was saying gave him tha center of the stage. Con stance, not listening, turned ber at tention again to the field; agaiu. ap parently, she looked straight into Pey ton a eves. The strange expression came back into her face. Her look wes absent apathetic . a'most nn- hsppr. What could b the matter? Was. It possible that Lawrence had not pro pored yet he knew Lawrence's ways lib girls and that she was per plexed, perhaps grieving over tha omission? He wondered why Law- ten -e delayed: for there was no doubt about so completely (hat he thought him self fighting with (he Harvard eleven. Siarrow would wake him wl(h a "Say, cut it out, will you; you're pushing me into the aisle." But, after grind in him again. He churned rest- ' lessly in his chair. He studied tbe audience about him. . It must have . b mi aw somewhere along here that ha . failed to see that long run on a for ward pass tha sensational Flay of tho season by which the game was ' won. At the end it was a relief to cheer with the handful of Harvard men who sprang up from different parts of tha auditorium and, following tbe motions of the yell-leader in the blograph. shouted themselves hoarse. But. in a moment, his heart was thumpfug in a . very madness of yearning, pointed by a while. Constance's face kept coining , the angu!sh o( uncertainty. Biting his oeiween mm anu trie struggling neaPllpg 1e watche)1 ,n8 lonK line uf un. on mo Bi-iuiruu. juami'is ioi : dergraduatcs zigzagging over tho field o her glimpso of her began to absorb ; , the wake of lne band Wnen t his inteuHt in the game. He spent tbe last minutes of the first half thrashing impatiently in his seat. He groaned with impatience when he saw that the Olograph, Instead of turning back on (he spectators be tween halves, still trained itself on tbe gridiron. It was just a flashing picture of the Yale eleven trotting wearily to its quarters, circled and surrounded by trainers, coaches, rub bers, and the privileged spectators of last, the biograph began to show sec tion views of tbe dispersing audience, he gripped tha orchestra-rail bard. If it came it would be bis last view' of her until uutil-r-when? he won dered. Until, best man at their wed ding, he would watch her drive off with Lawrence. He clenched bis hands. aj Again the picture! Unmindful of the others, his burning eyes riveted IliamulvA, n n Pnnit.Hp. Tk. v.a.. the side-lines. Would It never go back; had risen, waiting for the crowd to to the stands? tnin. Milly was talking. In tbe midst Ah, there they were scattering ! Df her narrative, aha handed t cn. glimpses of the spectators, at first only quivering, waving throngs in which he could not recognize a face. Once tho band must have broken into the "Marseillaise"; for, suddenly, the whole Harvard section arose, lifting their bats three times and in perfect unison. Mechanically, true to an old training. Peyton started to rise, too. But, again, Starrow held him down. Finally, when he thouxht he could stand tbe suspense no longer, came the section-pictures; the group he stance the package that contained Peyton's picture. Without stopping, she swept the two men on in her talk. Constance pulled the picture out of its wrappings. Peyton- watched ber. And he saw In a brief moment lie saw a great deal.-- He saw tho pro nounced start that shook her at the sight of it. Ha saw the quick, fi-rtiva , glance she gavo at lier unnoliciniC companions.: Ho. saw her-turn hr back to them and, like one famished, look at it again, holding it. in, hrt ' course over one corner. Suddenly lie Jot the genuineness of his "case' longeu io seo.- iu tne niuisi ot a ' iinecneloiiii. iint,6.-orii- .'-. storm-center of howling Harvard en- to her face. He tiw her start t. tbuiasls, Constance sat, still languid, i it back into the paper, but, chilling rtill distrait. In another second. Pey-j her mind, look at It acnin. I 'us. ton was sorry that bis wish had been 'close gaze. He saw her turn it f vr granted. For Lawrence, taking ad- as If she expected some wrltinr. Ar.il vantage of the preoccupation of .the ne saw but mow more with tlto cvra rest of the party, was devoting hlm-iof the soul than of tho b.M.'y tho self to her. A jealousy, as hot as ' emotion that seemed to vitalize hrr ..amt;.f,IC0. at3d ln? h nolfd!hol. fiaure, to thine thrccgU her the little intimacies of his stiitude. ; wistful face, to mako light iu ber Lawrence questioned and cxplaiued. ' somber eyes He leaned over her to adjust, wraps j ' Sav, wliai's vour l iisU?1 Piarrow obviously in no need of adjustment. ! remonstrated aa'l'ej Ion r,ado a flying Though his suffering grew intense, I leap into an op n space which offered Peyton could not lake his eyes away. U i.wifter egress. ; Once it came over him bow strange "Oh, I say, excuso me, Starrow." it was. The tragedy of his life was Peyton exclaimed. "I've got to ct to being-played there before a theat?r(u! !a long-distance telephone." And then, of holiday riffraff, and no one s-.is-! in utter forgetfulness cf a statement necked it No one about him had an ! he bad urevkiimlv mado "f wn m eye for his little group. Not a man! thank somebody for a Christmas gift was watching the I'vo lust received." . him but onjshriekiug, jumping, cheering, flag-wav- Copyright, Tkt Frank A. Sfunsty Co Would we return If once the yatcs which close upon the pant Were opened wide lor iti, and if the dear Kcinembi'red pathway stretched before us, clear, To lead us bark to youth 'a lost land ut lust; Whereon life's April alinduws lightly cast, Ki'i'iilled (he old awcet days of cliildinh frur With nil their failed hopes nnd brought nncar The fnr-otf streams in which our skies were glassed; Did those lost dreams which nake the soul's s.id yrariiiag J'ut live once more and wait lor our returuiu);. Would wo return f Would we return If love's cm-hantmeut held (lie heart no mure And no had eonic to count the wild sweet pniu, The fond distress, the lavish tear but vain; llnd cooled the heart's hot wounds nmidst the roar Of moiiutaiu gules, or, on some nliru shore Worn out the soul s long anguish, and had luin The drnsons of despair if then Ihe tmiii Of vanished years came bark, and as of yore The snnie voice culled, and with soil eyes brpuiliu, Our lost love beckoned, through rime's gray veil amiliug. Would e reliirn.' Wonlil we return Once we hail crossed to death's unlovely lunj Anil tioil the Moomlcss ways auioug the dead, 1 .0110 and unhappy; after years had fled With twilight wiiis nlong that glimmering straud. If then an lintel came with outstretched hand i To lend us bnck, and we recalled the dread How An the tear that once for us are slicil Mny flow for others how. liko words iu sand. Our memory fades away lion oft our -Making MiKlit vex the living with the dead bean's breaking. Would we return Would we return? Koboit Hums Wilson Brazil Soon to Prepare In Thorough Style for Future Events By H. B. Robertson. ((I'nited l'reas Maff Correspondent.) Hio tie Janeiro, Oct. 2(i. (By Mail ) " Preparedness" ns a theory, is no longer open to discussion in Br.i.il. The big southern republic lias gone in for "militarism" and she lias gone in with cninu4iasm. Compulsory inilitnry service, estab lished by a lnw punned by the congress of l!i0i, -joes into effect December 1. this year, nnd if the results approach tbe predictions of the law's sponsors a million Itra.ilinu men will lie trained in nriin and mnnoeuvers within the next ten years. All able bodied men between the aires of 21 to 44 years are subieet to the call to arms nhen called thoy must join the colors or be liable to punishment as deserters. By a scheme of whort time service favors advanced to (hose who wish to escape the two years' service iu the active army, however, the creator part of Kra.il's army will lie composed of "volunteers." More than 50,(100 vol unteers enlisted for the short service between August 1 and September .'!(', this year, and it is probable that this, number will be doubled before December' 1, when ten per rent of those who did THINGS AS THEY AEE W.beu Earth's last picture is painted, and the tubes are twisted and dried, ' When the oldest colors have faded, and the youngest critic hns died. We shall rest, and faith we shall reed it lie down for an eon or two, Till (he Master of All Good Workmen shall set us'to work anew! c And those that were good ahnll be hap py; they shall Bit in a goldeu chair; They shall splash at a ten-league canvas with brushes of camel's hair: They shall find real saiuls to draw from Magdalene, Peter, and Paul; They shall work for an""age at a sitting and never be tired at all! And only the Master shall praise ns. and only the Master shall blame; And uo one shall work for money, nnd no one shnll work for fame; And each tor the joy of the working nnd each, in his separate star, shall draw the Thing as he sees It for (he God ot'Things as They Are! . Kudyard Kipling. along the same lines by volunteer" and by compulsory' service. The officers and men employed on the Lloyd Brazil eiro Steamship line which is govern ment concession,' are beiug trained Estimates Oregon's Population 834.575 Oregon s population, according to fig ures given out by State Labor Commis sioner Hoff, has grown from 672.765 in 1!10 (l S. census) to M4.515. These figures are obtained ty taking the school population taken from the report of the school census in 1910. the school enrollment, and average school attend ance for lym, and striking an average, aud placing population iu same propor tion to this a-s it showed in the 1U10 census. In some counties the school at tendance is above the school enrollment and in others it is below. So taking the average of tbree brings the figures close to the actual number- The relative proportion of school cen sus for 191(5 shows n total population of s;i.i,55S. while the relative proportion of enrollment gives the population ns 823, 421. Averaging these two with the relative 'proportion of attendance of stii,5H5 gives the general average of N!4.513. , . The population by counties follows: I". S. Census. "Population. . ouutv P-aker . ... Benton . . . Clucknimis . Clatsop . . Columbia . Coos . . not volunteer will oe drawn by lot for "beard their roswetive ships by regular I ).,10V compulsory service. The volunteer and l,nv-v officers nnd besides must lake a M :T9J, t ' draw ing b'v lot process will be repeated cruise on a battleship or train-! ft'rson . each year.' '"K ship, each year. The volunteers for :,ur''- ( "The hair of the head will be kei.t . mln of new "Briny will be di- mvui reserve enjoy the same pnvil- """''" I i .i i . . .. fi.lm naitni. inn t.v K.,... il. . 1. . I It I si II H IIIOKit 111 I I1A OVniV ftt H7M. ii . mr.-i- i VII Mllll II1C lllUoiaUi short and the chin aud under lip will Vld,a wording to their ages, those be- V, ,e "' "le arm' ii;rn,Y, -- J 1 nn Ii r Jb. shaved but not the upper lip. Whisk-,,vwn tho of 21 M Ro 'i'"1 ""?' .,he strangest feature of Bra- " - and by Uolly Its rine'ers, if 0rU ui Vf 1..o,.rate',l,c','irstli,i,of theaeti.yndits-f.,lv'vtioBof ,homPuWy WlZ k:; i length " j reserve, between ;0 aud 3" into the see-1 ",'H 111 fai't that the man who is "00? lmfr By Hal O'narety. Krom this ukase, have been stricken l "l"1 line n'1 u "serve, and between ''"fr ''"P-nsiblo for the propaganda '' ' i ('in led Press staff Corrcspondeul.) the words "but not the upper lip "!''' 1,1,11 41 in, ,he ,llir'1 i'"' L '1'8ul,oJ1 ln "o lw a enactment is 'K,,'',, ' London. .Nov. 7. (By Mail.) And il'Heuee. the British officer today nnv'nr'!'!sl'rM or the national guard. After !r- 'vu Milan, llraxil's greatest living j'" 11,11 came to pass (lint those in command uf . inav not cultivate a musiache accoiding I n,Ul .v,'nr in Ihe activearmy Ihe men Ptf"'- . 'l'. " ' "" I'oKlnnd's new army relented, saying:! t hi, own inclination or that of bisl81 r,,ire,, 10 ,ht reserve. I "'-sos being Rra'il'a greatest living "l wherefore we have made burtheiiM.me 1 wile or sweetheart. But here is where' lL volnleers are classed according j roli Olavo Hiiue is one of Brazil's , ' ' " (lie live of our vou'iger officer m that 'the rub comes in tho chin and auder' lo h",v ,luv "'i"" t0 'rve. for the two KrL'!l,,a' patriots and his campaign, was v.e require adornment of the upper lip.ilip must be shaven. Those desiring a!-v,'"I''', ""vie, for the annual nianou- j ''Sht with a double purpose his eoun-.:"'?' ,lr J.-t there le mollification of our order beard are forced to grow either D -l 1,1111 tr,,inil,K fBmP- or fr training V' defense and his country's educa- ' ' leaving to the discretion of the wearer : drear v or" niuttoii-chops. ne"i!her of !'n 'boolsNnnd in shooting clubs under 1 1'"!'- V'' r?t f KrnsilV P'pu- .i... ........ ,.c .-...;..i .i i. . . . f . "'-'"t' :,-,....:.. e . . Intioii in ilrnii. T.. ill. miliior.- -'limnomaa t tii iiiiiiit-i in i.iimi uit Linn (iu. iumi'n niiiiiii.irii. t..w...m . ih.huiiii'u ... aim iiiiuris. i lit- I ' ........ . -- - ..... ... .....,, I I't-rhnp" not iu those words but some- vhat in the I manner, the tauioua order leitmring Kritish officers to wear mu coming. me mcmoraoie unv waen the mus taohe order was modified, barber shops' '""'""If 'H stieh limes as they si j looked like recruiting offices. Youth-11? l",'!,,,,n nrra.v requirements es i the rtwo latter elassin must continue thior requirements examination, the volun- re ablel,tir t,r "rawu HMdier must be able amina-J'0 r"'' "'"i write. Thus Olavo Bilac IhcIics has been placed among Iho rHiej ful lieutenants whoso efforts of montUs' tu'u- T'os who train in Ihe third class I'i'uomtoil his own country by obtain Polk Shermsn . . Tillamook . Cmatilla . . . t mon i mon - -. . in i ne worm war. wriginaiiy paragrnpli bad prwluced nothing but a fiurv aha-'" 1 ronllH"e i leave tncir ousi- , "Ii'"'"vv ',lu ,',n,l,t" "" Vfallow-a l.if.'d of (he King's regulations read aa dow and whose usual apologetic' order' ,""!, or ori'"ratioii as they are permitted ,u'" follows: !l the barWr was: "just let the uoior!,u ,lri" " s'""l.v- holidays and out of, . 1 10 verae Braiiliau is intensly pat- ' ""T? ' ' ; ... jli,, .b.ne." dashed iu and Lptientiv ! honra- '!"'"'" be may judge from externals. JJj,"s," j awaited their turu to say: "shavv that! ',l""lre.i of colleges, schools, atlilet-! r " man takes off bis bst wheu the f ' ' a .i........i i ic clubs and other orvsniailon. nf m.-n national a nt hem is Ix-me nlavetl or suno' """" rm .....M..i... iiiiv vii. i M w Bred Corn Scarce. 1010. , lt.07l'i 10,663 29.9;'. 1 . Ki.lOU 10.50 17.959 9..'U5 2.044 19,674. 3.701 5.M7 4.059 .01l! 23.756 P.567 (i.554 4.65i :;.!. 7S.'t 5.5S7 22,6r.2 N.001 .".9.7MI 4. 'to 7 '22ii.2lil 13.4U9 4.342 6.266 20..10!! 16.191 s.:fi!4 16.3X6 21.522 2.4S4 1S.2&5 191 21.591 l.i.594 39.317 19.459 MONEY AND FAMINE ITa it ever occurred lo you that while money- can do a great many things it cannot gam for a man enduring renownf - ' S Go through the annals of history, seaa the pages of biographical diction aries, and you will find ample corroboration of this statement ' f.JlT? " . h"v bet'ome wstingly famous. But they are few, .and their fame has not come to them because thev amassed great weoltl w.?7k !L?m ,h6t t0 be a ri, h man is on o '"rest in we,Hh JiZm' Dny fl,,"-e S?"8"01"- 0ly those rich men who con bered P ' C""e 'r' h!,Ve " tUn -"X remem- sn,;nlkfn,,he,.hisf0'0ftan.y l'?",n,ry a",, a,,-v TMh- at oneo spr ng into the mind. But, with scarcely an exception, thev are not the name" of the very rich men of that land and age. " name In the days of Washington, Hamilton and Jefferson there were men who All over (he civilized yorld..hia year of grace, 1916, memorial exercises are being held in honor of .Shakespeare nd CePvnntes, who di "d Three toadied iZ':: .f1' ,hk;-d!,r9whe ,hc' U Shakeare anrCervaatri B? tl. m th,'yn Vt mone'A " of that tim" hvl new liv iMv,B,dm,hRr"de:-."re P''Vv 'oraotten as hiS lb'r ne er be for-often d ' ' Pr "-'"lbl"s" ree hundred year, ago wil .as 7:r Thp world fc terinheb;,T?otm,an,.of ?kU baVl' aU' aml)i,',C", ' "-embrred by Vo- for the year 1916 and percentage pro portions for Crook countv for Ihiii census applied to the total's. Resistra lion of voters for 1916 and other avail- aoie tosriniatCiD. data indicates Jeffe Totals are taking ndvaujage of the third cls n"w "'l'-' I" in feet to ilo it. Hej volunteer rights 'and (he training nn- 'P bis hat to his country 'a flag nndlie ; rv CnCairVAni C- (i.u..i ......I :n.. . , I'lor the instruction of officers furnished '"""ors the mcii who defend it. His ' III f- I IV I fil HI I " "r ""''j In- the minister of war to these schools reeow of the past in his country s ser- "7' " ' sUri 1.1. net spring. Late varieties have not clubs nnd organisations. j'" ' !,rol record Hud (he wars of la!"a v''able upon which to eom- nCHCrVt i.iturl. medium varieties onlv somei Other voting men re volunteering for K""'' ' history are epics of heroism and mltf PbitH.u of .Jefferson county sep- KLMLIJY " J""'! se.sl. All the cars are full of mois- ,1" 1","u1 maneuvers and training, sacrifice. , bw sehool statistirs for Crook I sUrTIIL I - .,'a, ."r, tU,,,"mo,s eamps. the two month, a year being "Progress and order" is the motto , ,ml '"-'rson eount.es were combined r,.L. i, "i" " r i l . I , i!-r,H,iJ Si'inut their eompulsorr ser- l'rln",' " S"'d on Brawl's gr.en flag. BJ ACTCTT C 1 1 C i .1 ,1 , . 1 vi'"1 h 'i'e taking the' " u'u a million ...en will be giv- IS I r I r N : her 'o w l7.. J t h i I , H"" "vacations." I '"H the military sahKe to "1-rogres, BJf III I LIV ;,rB;;' .'rofiT, i Th y"' -B active serviee'", and will be trained to do- " STOMACH. BITTFR; I JL 1 ' " " " "'--Ii the army is being Nought bv tbe f.'". its principles. I that time Brasil oonVi'fon CPUU,-V population is approximale-tS'-L'i'j' ,n",hir'1 hi" o t-'wk county and '',:-. , c "'''- total was apportioned up " o'iV4iPn ,h"t b!sis- Crook county's perceut-o'?g'-'n!:,' 'n, r,,ase ' population is based upon a ,TV,S lor,,on of ,h'' eombined totals. This combination docs not effect totals for ,...!5 the state. . 4.602) or tu. , s-. ..iiinus couiuics .Multnomah .leads with 294.2S4. Marion is second with 49,213, and Lane third with 39, 440. The percentage of increase iron. 1910 to 1916 is 19.4. while th in,,, from 1914 to 1916 is onlv 3.9 per cent Two counties in the six year period have suffered a decrease ia imputation Hood River aud Josephine. In the past (no years Hood Kiver lias suffered a de crease of 9.2 per cent. Jackson counts 2!4-.2S4!- VT fPnt' Ma,hOT percent, Wash- 17 4- 1 1 '"' 1amaui 7.4 per 4";m 5ont- Th" largest increase was in Mor ' 8 Vtil rmT fo,mt-v 'vi,u ,2-4 P" 'en(. Sher 456 rmOS s',,'0",1 wi'b an incrense of IsWI l0--l',,D, ""'l Wallnwa third with loiww i. cfn,t- 'i'xrion county hns nn 21.04.i' 39 per rfut 2;U2j! i'al'iiomah county's increase iu ,. n.-.:Uhltlon f.,r tli IO . . , . 1 1 .l.UiUI. ,-- -" 'v-.t-iir peruHl is shown ly.492'''T,,,,ls n",,t of rnmputatiou (o lie per cent. and. for the 672.765 834.515 j'o-l (1914-16) 4.7 per cent, which latter ppar- 7.036 26.4 St H.39S 12.160 5.740 39.440 6.S45 26.231 13.522 49.213 4.S92 NEW HOUSTON HOTEL Sixth and Everett streets, Port land, Ore., 4 blocks from Union Station. Cndcr new manage ment. All rooms newly deco rated. SPECIAL BATES BY WEEK OR MONTH. Rates: 50c, 75c, $1, $1.50 per aay without effecting or disturbing the fam ily unit system uponkich basis per manent anfl. substantial population ia founded. fferson county created from Crook I ,tf,u's 10 disprove or correct the air 111 a room. young men between the ages of 17 (if , in proportion to its population probably or roor Appetite. Nausea. Inaijestion. last winter at Jackson Hole Wyo l.vi' ' """.r1- " dyspepsia. Jii.nana, lever and AiUS (he Biological Survey. "Y ' , "' -, . 4 The naval reserve will be Abo th...,.r.l lt, t-lafy n"v ,n,,,r parents' or guardians ' 1 "'"K me ocsj 11 not me im-s. ------ - ' ' 1 ' ...... 1 1 01 .1 . .11 -nrciisreil American nation. reeruited 'V Journal classified ads. iJ)W FOB , SORE, SWOLLEN, TIRED rEn Cenrtbi Eucalyptus Ointmtnt ST ALL DRV'A STOatS Tuata :5c Jams 60c ently erroueous impn-ssion that seems lr,;J" l"aT rortiaud's population has tallen otf approximately 40.0IK) dur ing the past two years- This latter im pression is said to have gained credence through the reported increase in vacant houses id the city. However, if there hag been a decrease. iNeertaiuly ,)o not show , the school poulation and. if there is an increase in the number of vacant dwelling houses is might be ac counted" for in the srrowimr ten,lun,.r coneentrHte tenancy iu apartment houses ..u...,r lu.iing oti there has been m actual population must have been in the case of individuals leaving the state .u re U mor Catarrh In this section C the country ian ail oilier diseases pA together, and until the last few years was supposed to be Incurable. aFur a f rest many years doctors pronounced tt a local disease and prescrflwd local reme with .la. .by """'anl'yfaiMiiH to cure with local treatment, pronounced it Incurs VS?:i.MtK. h'''" P'uen Catarrh to be a contltutlonal dua.. and therefore n? .q-.''esuC,.n",,uUonl treatment. Hall'e nSVK.. .tur'' manufactured by F. J. talST inV . nalcur', on market. It h ha.i?rn,,,y- 11 'rX directly nn th Tw "5,d mueou surfaces of the svs:em. ?.-yu0?er, one """dred dollars for an . ..',"" .,0, cure- 8end 'or circular! snd testimonials. 0 tT tL.1 CHENET a CO.. T0lO Bol bv Druv.iat. ixA Tk HMi s Fsoiiiv Pin. for constlvatlea 0 ' -rT-.