Page:Oregon Historical Quarterly volume 25.djvu/81

 COLONEL HENRY ERNST DOSCH as a child, and Roswell, who was a sculptor and who was a member of the faculty of the University of Oregon, died not long ago. He was a lieutenant in the World War. Marguerite and her husband, David Campbell, who is head of the censervatory of music, with their two little girls, live with me here in the old home. "Arno you knew well when you were on the Pacific Monthly. Arno was born here in Portland, attended the Portland academy, then went to law school and read law with Williams, Wood and Linthicum. He was admitted to the bar when he was twenty years old. They tell me he made a brilliant record at the Harvard Law School, graduating there in three years. Returning to Portland he decided that he preferred to be a journalist so he went to work for Harvey Scott and was a reporter on the Ore- gonian for four years. Later he became editor of the Pacific Monthly. From here he went to San Franicsco and worked for a while on the Bulletin. Later he started a magazine there called "The East and West." From San Francisco he went to New York City. Young Pulitzer and young Page, who liked Arno, were writers, and who were his chums at Harvard, helped him secure a position writ- ing special articles for the Worlds Work. Arno was in Belgium before the Germans invaded it in 1914 and was there and all over Europe during the four years of the war. He also visited Russia, Egypt, Greece, and now is in Germany writing special articles which appear daily in the papers of the United States. "In 1866 I joined the Order of Odd Fellows and in 1888 I was elected Grand Master of Oregon."