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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 3, 1910)
r THE MORNING OREGOXIAX. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1910. 8 iiipii nnnnni p Tn lbH DbnUULD IU DO BUTTLE TODAY f.Vashington and Lincoln Will Settle Interscholastic Championship. FOOTBALL RIVALRY KEEN I Both Teams Are In Pink of Condi tion and Fast, Hard Game Is Kxprrtrd. Deplt ogg7 Condition of Field. Pronounced In fit condition for the ?attl of their careers through dint of much bard work and consistent practlc- r.. tlia Washlnrtnn Hlrh School and Uncoin Hljh School football teams, con tenders for tha championship of tlia ln- Trrscholaatlr T.eaccie. are ready to take :h field thia afternoon at Recreation Park, desplt tha heavy rain of yester- 4r. To r'a the hoys Just the right f!nlh- Irw touches. Coaches Lynch ami Karl cave their teams llht slcnal practu-e and some drilling In puntlrc. forward nnliif and formations aiMtrist these piays last nlKht. ?otwit-.tnrwin a heavy ball and soesr field, the teams expeet the u.xj tf the forward pass to net them yanias-e. Loral! the same Is creatine; more In- I trest than any ramt played tn the city this year. It being the tuple of conversa tion amuns? all the students of the pre paratory -hnojs of the vlty. Parents of the pupils, slso. are tnklrs: Interest In the same. The rivalry between uncoi end Washington Is greater than betsree any schoola or colleges of the state. Both Coaches Confident. Naturally, both eoarhea think thel teame will win. Coach Karl, of Wh' lngton. believes thst because his hoy have a shade In experience and a shad tn weight over the Uncolnltes they rrnuid win. Displaying confidence In the team's ability, adherents of Wash lngton are offering slight odds on the game. Py the time for the gsme to be g'.n. It la thought the odds will be to I and 3 to 3 with Lincoln oo the short tnd. Washington beat Lincoln In their reg- alar annual game. & to 0. However, sine that game. Unculn has Improved wonder fully snd has hopes of turning the tables this time. Iast year Washington bea luneoln. tn fact, during the lust several years Washington has been winning from Lincoln In every branch of athletics, ex eept basketball. A victory for Lincoln ss grand finale to such a hard season I the highest ambition of Lincoln players and students. Anson Cornell, the doughty little quar terhack for Washington, who has held undisputed supremacy In that position for four years, will play hts Lutt game In a high school suit today. ills fertile brain has been busily engaged In plan nine his attack on the Lincoln team today and he promises some surprises. Several other players will wind up their high school football careers In the game today. JCootcrs Are Itrady. Edmr Piper. Jr.. yell leader of Lin coin High School, has boon earnestly a work for the past week drilling his root ers. The gsme will be a .battle as well between the rooters of Washington and Lincoln. The Lincoln High School band 111 furnish music for the rooters. Referee Warner, coach of the I'niver sltr of Oregon, will call the tenms to gether promptly at 2:3. Referee Warner will be supports by ti. M. Kali-weather. t the I'mvrrsity of Illinois; Rill Hunt of Cornell, and II. J. Boyd, as subordinate metals. Fifteen-minute quarters will be plsyed. The lineup of the teams snd their weights follow: Llarola. at the Arlon Hall promise a rare treat for the followers of soccer footbal "Scotty." otherwise George J. Cam eron. has promised the committee arrangements thst he will contribute to the entertainment by either slngin a song or dancing; the "Heeland rung. Kor those who dance, the bag-pipes wl be used for accompaniment. Imita tions of Harry Lauder, the renowned Scotch comedian, will be given. Ar rangements, are being made to accora modate several hundred people. Interest In the benefit football gam Sunday afternopn for Horace Drake, of the Nationals. Is running high, man tickets having been sold. The gam will be one of the best of the- yea the Nationals are playing the all-stars. a team composed of members of th other three teams tn the league. Th game will be played at Kccreatlo Park. Twenty-fourth and Vaugh streets. HAWAIIAN' WOMEN TO SWIM Surf-Hiding Stunts Biff Feature at Grarliart Park Affair. Arthur Cavil!, swimming Instructor of the Multnomah Amateur Athletic Club, leaves tomorrow for Gearhart Park to complete the flr.al arrangements for the big swim of the women members of the annex of the club, to be held at that place on Sunday. December II. Already 25 swlmmrs have entered the competition and will leave Portland on a special train Saturday morning. December 10. Thirty male members of the club will ceompany the i-arty to the seaside. Cme of the features of the programme will be the surf-riding stunts contributed bv two Hawaiian women swimmers, who Name, Fcattlon. Tn. center Tu'rra. rictit cuarx 0'.N;tl. Irrt guard.......... lr. rictit ta.k;..... 'rtr. l.ft ta.-k.le. ........ Tjvratjr. right n J. . rvisa. J.n mJ Isen. auartwrbaek - . Pmtt-rso. rlfhl hr.'f W Trine, irf: half. ..... J. Day. fullback vVaahlngtea. N.ma. reettton. H r.nl.I I.l.t-n. uhi itiard f. l.'t mirtl 'i.rt.-rtjr it'ayt.i. right te-kl rosier. Ifl la.-kl v.im. r!t end acn te.'t end rne't. quarterbat-k s-sona. ruhi r-a.t -an. 1. ft ha f .uMf taon. tui.bara fculMllretea. T Inroin WelsM. !.-. !.-. la ...... I tej , 1 1 , 1M ...... !.-. ..... , t Uil Welsht 1M 1 liS I ! I IIS I 'W. ...... 1.1 1 .". iii lis J' ronvoa l-rsr tUlev .. Y-u-ig . 'Miiiba I Waahmcton- . .I IJ. n.j, VJ.-I . n .. 1 ! J a. k..n ..Hi TMrling ...... . l- -mlla ........ ! ll-lham ...... ....IT . .. . i: .... h: ... . ....l.J .. .. 1.1 .... li l.MtHlt llHlI.L MIASO.V OX Company B and Columbia Teams Will Play Tonight at Armory. Indoor baseball at the Armory la now n In full aaing and Company B and 1 'olumbla Hardware Company will play 'onlarM. ?eveial games have been relayed tn the Indoor league and alth one r two exceptions have been clnly con tested. A great mar.y players of base ball on the real diamond are placing the Indoor game to keep tn condliiot, f. nest year's play. In the big drill hall at tha Armory, the games are played on a diamond Just one-half the regulation beaebait sise. Notwltatand'ng th large ball, small bat. small field and poor light, th games are fast, good ft--. ling and bit ting being th rule. Naturally, hitting and tuna are more frequent thin In the outdoor game and a score of 12 or la is regarded ss a good gme. because the members of the Columbia Hardware Company team are mostly former members of the Company C and K teams, great rivalry evtsts between that team and Company R. The same ness of the Columbia players aas dem onstrated last Sunday when after o--ni 14 runs behind th.y pl.-aed up. making five runs In the final Inning, and brought the score up to 14 to 1L The Columbia lads ar good batters. The players are: -r.mpanv B. Columbia MM .nnel ....-' Sn.l-r e ............ f .. . "Mn t.nk"erd .......1. g. nron.-k fhr ....-It St........... HrTIor W l .............. 1 H. ...... .... Hnn rnmt-aa ........... .2 h ............. . T.-1U Lfr:n n ....... ... t!tirrM v,,ur ............ t. S. ......... Ant1rv-Tt Ralkjea H r -Velaoa ARR.IXIjE SCOTOI PROGRAMME Portland I "not hall Association Will Give "Smoker Tonight. Having rehearsed Scotch dialect and P'-otch dances, members of the Port land Football Association, who will svppear la Lb annual amoksx tonight j Aasoa Cornell. Waahiaalaa Figla aehool (laartf-rbark, W ko l:ads Ilia II lab School hi reer This Afteraooa Koolball Csv. I Da. 4 havo volunteered to display the stuntf whk-h made Wlkikl bcacn, near Honolu lu. IL I- famous. The aa lmming races, diving and fancy aquatic stunts a III take place In th big tank at Gearhart Park. NELSON CHANGES PLAN BAT TO MEET SECO.VI-BATEnS AND THK.V THY WOLGAST. Ex-CIutinplon to Quit if He Kali. I.an stilt to Be Settled, Then Comes Conditioning. SAN' FRANCISCO. Dec. 2. (Special.) Rattling Nelson has arranged a somewhat different progr&mm for himself than he had mapped out Just after his defeat at the hands of Owen Moran. At that time the Dane wag "strong" for a bout with Wolgast, conceding there was a possibility that lie might hav to take on a return engagement with the Kngllshman. This week lias given Nelson plenty of time for reflec tion, and now he proposes some elim ination bouts just to prove to himself and the public that lie Is as good as ever. The second and third-raters are to be given a chance, according to Nelson, and If he can't beat thein, he will be ready to cry "iults" for good. If his plana work according to schedule. Nelson will leave tomorrow afternoon for the Last, via los An geles. He wants to stop in Los An geles, and after that spend a week at his ranch In New Mexico. From O-Rar he will hasten on to Chicago, where he has some business matters and a law suit with the La Salle Hotel to demand his attention. After ail these affairs settled, he declares that he will build himself up and one mora b ready to euter the ling. Although the writer still believes that Nelson should retire from the ring, his present plsn Is a far more sen sible one than for him to continue to demacd the Impossible s match at once with Ad Wolgast. The suit mat the Battler mentions In Chicago Is against th hotel on th ground that It refused to take him In a paying guest. The case has been dragging along for some months, but Nelson says he Is determined to hav It settled and has Instructed his attor ney to hav It set for trial at once. WRIGHT IS VICTOR IfJ BILLIARD MATCH Duniway No Match for San Francisco Expert Score. Is 1200 to 488. HIGH RUN OF NIGHT IS 76 Visiting; Player la Wizard With Cue) and Three Blanks in Row Alone Prevent Setting Nw Pa cific Coast Record. By playing great billiards and exe cuting some marvelous masse shots at critical periods In the last of his three night's tourney with w. C. Punlway of Portland. H. A. ("Chick") Wright, of San FTancisco, concluded his third string of 400 points at the Waldorf Bil liard parlors and won out by the total score of 1200 to 4SR. Duniway was suffering from a cold, and this undoubtedly marred his work. for he fell down greatly In his playing and succeeded In scoring ojt 10? points In SO Innings, while Wright ran out 21 Innings. The breaks also seemingly went against the Portland man. though Wright frequently started ripples of ap plause by executing an especially dif ficult shot In opening a long run. The San Francisco expert opened the night's play by making a run of 41. finishing off hie) uncompleted run of the previous night. In making this run he carefully nursed the balls In dexterous anner. and as he completed shot after shot the big crowd craned their necks tn eagerness to watch each move of the ex-champion. . Wright ecorld an average of It 1-21 for his last string, which betters hlsi average of 13 2-11 made on the previous night. and demonstrates that he Is one of the cleverest billlardlsts In the West. High Run Is 7 6. His high I tin last night was T, which does not equal his runs of 83 on the open- ng night, and 79 on Thursday night, but t was one of the most wns&tional runs of the series, for he was compelled to execute more difficult sliots In this run than on any other occasion. Masse shots were executed as neatly and cleverly as though such were merely a pastime, and In putting hrough bank shots the San Francisco man also proved adept. Wright scored hree blanks In a row at his thirteenth. fourteenth and fifteenth innings, and had It not been for this slight set back, his average last night would tmvc set a high mark In billiards on ha Coast. In the thirteenth inning he mlscued, as had Duniway a few Innings previously. His aero In the fourteenth frame was a miss by a nar row margin of a bank shot, and a similar failure brought him nothing In he fifteenth. However, In the sixt eenth Inning he made up for the three misses by scoring a run of 51, and on his next attempt ran up SS more points. In addition to the two runs men- loned and his high run of the last game, Wright ran 21. 28, 58, l and 18, and completed his string of 1200 points with an uncompleted run of S points. Fancy Shou Shown After Game. The visrt of "Chick" Wright has stimu lated Interest In billiards to a marked degree, and at the conclusion of last night's play he gave exhibitions of his kill In maneuvering the Ivories. Me per formed all the feats shown by the fa mous trio of bllllardUts who appeared at the Orpheum this year and duplicated many of the shots shown by Willie Hoppe when that billiard star was in Portland a short time ago. Duniway had the worst luck of any night during the tournament, for he was able to score only 107 points In the 20 Innings he played last night, and this gave him his lowest average of the series, S 7-20. The scores by innings last night were as follows: Wright 41. 8, 0. 1, 21, 6. 26. 68. 4. 0. 70, 16, 0. 0. 0, SI, 65. 9, 6, 18. uncompleted). Total 4tX Grand tota 200. Duniway 10, 3. 4, 1, 1. 0. 1. 2. 7 3. 25. 1. 8. 7. 22, 6, 2, 0, 0. Total 107. Grand total 4SS. some of the schools In th conference. and this was one reason the confer ence scheduled for tomorrow In Walla Walla fell through. A meeting In Spokane had already been planned and Idaho and Washing ton. It is understood. Insisted upon thia conference. It Is probable, from Information re celved at the local college, that every member of the Pacific Northwest Con ference will have a quintet In th basketball league this Winter. Man agers of the sport In these institutions are anxious to get the conference as soon as possible, so that the schedule may be fixed up. POLISH WRESTLER IS WIXNER Jenkins and Klndral Vleld to Dead' Iy Half-Nelson. NEW YORK, Dec. 2. Zybyszsko, the Polish wrestler. In the International wrestling match here tonight, threw Tom Jenkins and Andrew Klndral in 20 minutes 18 seconds. Klndral yield ed to a half Nelson and arm lock in 10 minutes 38 seconds; Jenkins lasted 15 minutes 40 seconds, and w-ent down under a half Nelson and crotch hold. In the seml-prellminartes. George Rotchner, American lightweight cham pion, threw Gus Larsen, of Sweden, and Tom Roles, of Wales, in 16 min utes, with 4 minutes of his guarantee to spare. George. Nlflote, the Olympic cham pion and now Instructor of wrestling at Columbia University, tusseled for 30 minutes with Will Bingham, light weight champion of England, without being able to obtain a fall. YOKEL- THROWS O'COXN'ELIi Multnomah Club Wrestler Is Dc fonted In Match at Salt Lake. SALT- LAKE CITY. Dec. 1 Tha wrestling match here tonight between Yokel of Salt Lake and Eddie O'Con nell, of the Multnomah Athletic Club, of Portland, for the welterweight cham pionship, was won by Yokel. , He took the first fall after a .terrific struggle In an hour and 32 minutes with a far Nelson. The second was com' paratively easy. Yokel using a far Nel son and hammerlock and throwing O'Connell In five and one-half minutes. Hunt Clnb Meets Tonight. The annual meeting of the Portland Hunt Club will be held at the offices of Dr. William L. Wood, In the Ore- gonian Building, tonight at 8 o'clock It Is rumored that an opposition ticket to the regular nominees will be placed in the field. CITY'S JUVENILES INVITED 'City of Boys" Will Be Shown on Moving Picture Screen. The People's Amusement Company has extended an invitation to the rep resentatives of the civic and charit able organizations. Judge Gatens and the officers of the Juvenile Court, pro. bation officers of the city, the manage ment of the Boys and Girls Aid So ciety, N. H. Looney, of the State Reform School, and every school teacher in the city to be present Wednesday afternoon at any hour from noon to 6 o clock to witness the first production in this city of a reel of pictures entitled The City of Boys," on the lines of the City of Boys as founded at Charlevoix, Mich., by Judge Willis Brown, and at whose dedication Governor Harmon, of Ohio, delivered an address. Tha Star Theater management will welcome the boys and girls to the Star Theater on Wednesday, Thursday, Fri day or Saturday, the four days this pic ture has been seemed in Portland, but a special boys' and girls' day has been snnounced for Saturday. December 10. The doors of the Star Theater will be opened on that particular day at 11 o'clock In the morning, and special ex ercises will be inaugurated for the benefit of the boys and girls, and a lecturer will be employed to explain the pictures. Later an effort will be made to get the various civic societies of Portland to co-operate for the purpose of mak ing a thorough and complete appeal to the public-spirited citizens of Port land for funds to establish a similar Institution in Oregon. of IVpfeat of Star Actor Surprise OAKLAND. Dec. 1 Showery weather prevailed at Lmeryville today, but the rack was not seriously affected. Th defeat of ttr Actor In th feature vent ram as a surprise. H failed to ftmah lcs;de t.'i" money. lgin won from Captain Burnett by a st'se. Svhllllog. Just arrive,! here, roo Tim Judge to k-tory. lieei!ts: 'iv and half furtotice Tim Jodaa won. Tar ray second, i'rwetollle third . tlm 07 VI. Futurltr fflum-Q-tallrr Street wen. Mlas v Mcor.il. Hanorella Irilrd: time. 1:0 J-.. tia f ur.or.g. irtncenc won. Prudant second. CotaLury third: t.me. 1:13 1-1. Vile anil thi-e'.st.enf he K:tn won. Captain buraett second. atoJaaey third; Una, Mile Tonr Pauat wnn. Cabin second. Do- va:ra third; time. 1-41M. furl.intt .-nlckr wen. Harry Stanhope e-.n-1. Kal th'rrf : rime. 1:14. Mayhem Charge Brought. Peter Blrvonen. a Ftnnlah enoemsker at J7 North Nineteenth street, wss ar rested by Policeman Kllngd last night on a warrant swern to by JIllo Mnkk harglng him with mayhem. Hlrvonen la held In default of -S0 ball. Makl. the complainant, alleges that th shoemaker ttempted to bit his nos off during a sht the two hnd at Nineteenth and Thunnaa streets Tuesday night. HOPPE STILL- IS CHAMPION New Yorker Defeats George Slosson in 1000-Point Billiard Match NEW YORK, Dec 2. Willie Hoppe. this city, who holds the world s hampionshlp at 18.1 and 18.2 balk line billiards, defeated George Slosson to- Ight In a 1000-polnt match, by a score f 1000 to 471. Hoppe went out In 45 Innings with an average of 22 10-45, retaining the championship. Slosson scored only 207 In the first block of 500 last night, and only 24 tonight, ' while the young champion ran out by winning the match. Hoppe Ins a side bet of J 500. Notwithstanding his victory, Hoppe Id not play up to his form of last Ight. when he made a new record average of 33 5-15. For the entire match this dwindled to 22 10-45. so that Ives' record of 31.25 made 14 years aa-o for 1000 points still stands. With the exception of a brilliant cluster of 81 In his 23d. and a new 48 In his 26th Inning. Hopp played mediocre bll Hards until the 89th Inning. Then he netted 110 caroms, th highest run In the match. MAIX OREGON'S 1911 CAPTAIN Member of Varsity Football Squad Choose Star 'Player. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, Eugene, Dec 1. (Special.) The "O" men of the varsity football squad met Informally tonight and chose William Main, of San Francisco, to captain the 1911 eleven. Main Is a junior and Is reg latered In the engineering department. He is a prominent member of the S'gma Nu fraternity. While at Lick High School. In hli home city, he made the all-academio football team three successive seasons and In his senior year was captain of the championship team of California. Since coming North "Rill" has starred at tackle and fullback and was this sesaon chosen on several All-North west selections. BASKETBALL MEETING OKF Washington and Oregon enable to Get Men to Conference. WALLA WALLA. Dec. 2. (Special.) Owing to the Inability of the Wash ington and Oregon State Universities to get representatives nere lor in proposed basketball conference her to morrow, that meeting has been post poned and will probably not be held for two weeks. It Is more then likely that It will be held In Spokane or Port land. Jseutral ground. Is insisted upon. ty , TRACT SOLD FOR $60,000 Cash Is Paid and 80-Acre Tract Will Be Subdivided. Sixty thousand dollars cash was paid yesterday for an 80-acre tract on the Barnes Road, within the three and a half mile circle, by C. C. Rushing, a banker of Walnut Springs, Texas. The property was bought from J. C. Kuratli and E. G. Kuratli and the transfer was negotiated by the National Realty & Trust Company. Mr. Rushing announced last night that he would prepare plans Immediate ly for subdividing the property and selling It for tiulldlng sites. The situa tion is considered attractive. It will be touched by the new Mount Calvary line of the united Hallways. "I have visited Seattle and other cities in the Northwest the past few weeks and find that Portland Is far ahead of them all," said Mr. Rushing. "Portland has a great 'future and It appears to me that th city Is Just on the ave of a remarkable growth. The city has a great country behind It. I believe Portland offers more attrac tive Investment offerings than any city n the coast. THE PURE FOOD LAW A MAGNIFICENT VICTORY CHINA PROHIBITS OPIUM Transportation Unlawful After July; Planting From December. FEKIN. Dec 2. As a result of th extraordinary agitation in recent months by Chinese anti-opium societies, the Imperial Senat today almost unanimously passed a resolution look ing to th extermination of the drug. The inter-provincial transportation of opium will be abolished In the sixth moon (July, 1911) of th coming year. and the planting of the seed and smok Ing will be prohibited In the twelfth moon (January, 1912). The Foreign Board is also enjoined in the resolution to seek the abroga tion of the opium treaty with Great Britain and to prevent further lmporta lion 'from India. "-Haramersly on Roundup. Deputy United States Marshal Ham- mersly Is enroute to Klamath Fails and other Southern Oregon points upon his semi-annual roundup of Government prisoners who will be called before th Federal grand Jury for Investigation. Hammersly Is expected to bring in about a dosen whisky-selling Indians and whit men, also George Duffy and Mike Rea gan, counterfeiters who operated In a Association Football Saturday, December 3, at 3 o'clock, Catholic T. M. C. Grounds. OCEANIC S VS. CRICKETE&3 j Ccpts, Ladies-Free, .. . Nerer was such a law more needed than in this country, nor more welcome than to us, who have suffered enormously from the fraudulent imitation of popular labels. This law, some years ago, would have saved us hundreds of thousands of dollars. Yet, to our amazement, a law designed to protect honest manufacturers no less than the public, was immediately made the pretext for an attack upon our world-wide and previously imimpeached reputation. After a costly contest, lasting four years, we have gained a signal and complete victory : in doing which, we have also shown that the law is the just measure it wasTtitended to be. . We have not, as the public has been led to believe, obstructed the pure food law nor opposed the views of the government. We have simply resisted a mere Bureau's usurpation of authority, and its novel and preposterous theories, submission to which would have driven us out of the American market. The story is almost incredible, and difficult to tell briefly ; yet, in justice to ourselves, and to the patrons who have remained so splendidly loyal to us, we must outline the fyts. For generations, the one universally recognized impurity of Whisky has been fusel oil, which we have always removed by distillation. The Bureau referred to, as late as 1904, insisted that to be "good for con sumption" Whisky must have practically no fusel oil Kentucky "Straight Whisky," when new, is rank with fusel oil, but the makers always assured consum ers that this noxious impurity was transformed by age into delightful ethers, etc. A few years ago it was found that age makes no change in the fusel oil except to remove its vile odor. The Kentucky distillers, knowing well the aversion to fusel oil, were in desperate straits; so they boldly declared that real Whisky new or old, must containall the fusel oil, and denounced all refined whisky as a base imitation. And the Bureau backed them up. . This is no pleasantry, but sober fact Canadian Club Whisky was condemned, solely because it con tains practically no fusel oil. Some months ago, President Taft, after a searching investigation by the Solicitor-General, overruled the Bureau completely. Now the Attorney-General has decided that the pure food law does not require our label to be changed by a single letter. , . At the World's Columbian Exposition in 1893, Dr. H. W. Wiley, then, as now, Chief of the Bureau referred to, reported Canadian Club to be "pure and fully up to the examination required," and, by authority of Congress, it received an award for "Fine aroma, very pleasant taste, thorough maturity, 'purity and ab sence of alien matter," which expresses every excellence any whisky can possess. Canadian Club is the same now as then. ' If any consumers really want fusel oil in their whisky, they should use Kentucky "Straight Whisky:" Canadian Club will not suit them. All who desire that the pure food law shall be rationally administered, and not as the weapon of any one man, should send for our History of this remarkable" case. Please name this paper. Hiram Walker & Sons. Limited.' WalkervlUe. Ontario, Canada. clumsy manner In Klamath County and were picked up by police officers. FENCE BUILDER ENJOINED Government Insists Obstruction of Public Range Must Cease. Remaining obdurate after being con victed of fencing Government lands In the criminal division of the United States Court, William Jones, the Mal- eur County ranchman, was yesterday served with an injunction against longer maintaining the line of obstruction: Jones has denied that the fence is a public nuisance, but alleges that it serves a great public good In saving cat tle owners from losses. The ranchman claims that the country Is infested with the deadly poisonous weed, known as larkspur, and which cattle seem to pre fer at certain seasons of the year. Jones says that the fence was put up to keep grazing animals away from the deadly weed. He endeavored to secure permission to maintain the fence, but was unsuccessful. . Jones will now be compelled either to remove the fence within the next few days, or face con tempt charges in the Federal Court. Pulitzer's Repairs Completed. Equipped with a new pump, galley range, extra sails and having had planks caulked aft where slight leaks were foundthe Port of Portland pilot schoon er Joseph Pulitzer left the drydock ht St. Johns vvesterday afternoon, headed for Astoria. She will immediately re sume her station off the Columbia, which has been looked after since sh came In by the tug Wallula. . 1 1 i s fiZXt' I iWS S riJ?l - Mr ai-WSS-tftA i'.i . :i .. av m ji trs ,f.c.- rSyar .1 ifcs i fir i PS '.VOP ".( v ? y The Cigarette of - Royalty 15 for 10 2 pkga 25 Unit t' Made in Caira Egypt, and New York Great December Sale Wines, Whiskies, Liquors WUI l.l.;u.sPiWW'S..j':-S'J;M-W,- JeWj.JlJJ.l- il...iJiu.lii.ii VINEYARD BCEXE IX CALIFORNIA ALL OUR CALIFORNIA WINES AT HALF PRICE This includes all of our famous California Wines, sold success fully by us for the last five years. Port, Sherry, Muscatel, Angelica, Clarets, Burgundy and Zinfandel at SOc Per Gallon and Upwards Fine Whiskies, $2.00 and Up Per Gallon We carry a complete line of bottled in bond whiskies, as well as all imported goods. Having our own Automobile Delivery Service we will deliver all orders received before 6 P. M. the same day. Mail orders receive prompt attention. .Write for price list. BRUNN CO. Corner First and Alder Sts. Telephone, Main 2958; Main 4057; A 2958 Wholesale and Retail Oregon Distributers for the Celebrated Rainier Pale Beer.