VOL. XLI C 19,132 Entered at Portland (Oregon) Postoffice a. Scfon(i-clas Matter. PORTLAND, OREGON, THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 1923 PRICE FIV13 CENTS TAXPAYERS DECRY CORVALUS STUDENTS INJURED IN EXPLOSION BLAST OCCURS DIRIXG CLASS EXPERIMENT IN" CHEMISTRY. ROBBERS LOCK UP GROCERS IN ICE BOX GRAND OPERA SINGER GIRL IS MORE THAN 75,000 TO PAY INCOME TAX TIME FOR FILING RETURNS EXDED AT MIDXIGHT. WANTS HUSBAND BACW EXPENSIVE FRILLS Complaints on Higher Ed TT 11 ES N ST FOR CITY SCHOOLS HOLD CP ' MAX WAITS OX CUS TOMER AXD SELLS BUTTER. 31 A DAME MATZEXAUER ASKS CHAUFFEUR TO RETURX. GEHAR G O 1 ucation Most Severe. UMATILLA, MORROW HEARD Regent of Agricultural Col- lege Pledges Cuts. SCHOOL IS HELD TOO BIG "About $370,000 Can Be Saved by . Closing Extension Work 'Ex periment Stations Kit. BY JOHN W. KELLY. ' PENDLETON. Or., March 15. (Spe cial.) Here in Pendleton, where the tax rate 'is 37.75 mills and where 75 cent wheat will bankrupt the richest wheat county in Oregon, the tax in vestigation commission today found taxpayers prolific in suggestions as to what to do with the tax problem. As usual, on this trip in eastern Ore gon, the commission found sharp com plaint against the cost of higher ed ucation and Its ramifications. All this agitation accumulated to the point where Walter M. Pierce, member of the commission and member of the board of regents of Oregon Agricul tural college, placed himself on record. "Dear as the college is to my heart," declared Mr. Pierce to the crowd of taxpayers and officials of Umatilla and Morrow counties, as sembeled in the courthouse, "I will vote to cut every frill and fancy from the school. Every unnecessary cost must be eliminated. The situation with the taxpayers is becoming des perate. There is the cost of the schools and of roads. The gasoline tax must go to 5 cents in two years for maintenance. We'd better walk than build more roads at present. I'd rather have my land clear and stick in the mud with my mules than be owned by an insurance company in the east.' V Slash All Around Favored. Here is the way sentiment was ex pressed at the hearing: Appropria tions for county fairs can be passed up for a few years; appropriations for new buildings at the state fair should be disapproved; appropria tions should be withheld from the Northwest Tourist association ' and the Pacific International Livestock exposition. Abolish the 6 per cent tax limita tion. The legislature will have to repeal many obligations which forces a tax levy. About $370,000 can be saved by closing the extension work of the agricultural college. College Held Too Big. The agricultural college is too big for the population of the state; the college is trying to build up a school for the Pacific northwest. Ontside) students should pay a tuition at least as high as-that charged in California or Washington. If this causes a de crease in outside students', it will also reduce the cost of operating the insti tution.' - " Abolition of experiment stations on this there is a difference of opin ion among farmers and taxpayers. Roy W. Ritner, president of the state senate, suggested closing the experi ment stations unless the fees of out side students can maintain them. Cut out the bug investigations this being jroposed by Mr. Pierce. Stop the bounty on coyotes Reach the maurauders in other ways. State industrial accident board should be self-supporting, "receiving no aid from the state. Non-Taxable Securities Hit. Close the affairs of the water board in six months and dissolve the board. Stop the issuance of non-taxable securities. " Wipe out county agents, county demonstrators and county nurses. While this has been repeatedly sug gested, various county courts either champion the retention of these -people or else assert that too much pres sure is brought on the courts to re tain them. An income tax is advocated nd only one voice was raised against this method of dividing the tax bur den at today's meeting. Opinion, is not a unit as to whether the tax should be flat or graduated. A sales tax was proposed by Dr. F. W. Vincent, president of the tax payers' league, who also charged the educational field with "too much pa ternalism." with playground instruct ors and what-not. ' Notwithstanding that 32.3 per cent of the taxes of Morrow county are delinquent, Samuel E. Notson, district attorney for that dist?t, opposed an income tax, the elimination of exten sion work, county agents, demonstra tors or economy in any of the schools, high or low. He asserted that it would be better to eliminate some thing else other than the playground instructors. Mr. Notson was anchored to the idea that it isn't possible to shave down expenses anywhere; that there is no apparent way of finding reve nue save on real property. According- to Dr. I. U. Temple of Concluded on Page 3, Column 1.) Flying Glass Cuts Two Freshmen Severely, AVhile Others Suffer Minor Casualties. OREGON AGRICULTURAL COL LEGE, Corvallis, March 15. (Spe cial.) R. G. Fulton of Bend, fresh man in mechanical engineering, re ceived ' cuts on ' the face and eye, caused by flying' glass, as the result of an explosion of carbon disulphide during an experiment by a class in the chemistry laboratory today. Kenneth B.HolIingsworth of Mc Minnville was cut near the eye and received a scalp wound in addition. Others received minor scratches and cuts. Students quickly extinguished a fire which epread across the lab oratory tables. The injured' men were taken to the college health service and treated. The explosion occurred during lecture by Dr. Waiter Scott, professor of chemistry. , BONDS CACHED IN STOVE Coal Bin Yields $7 5,000 Worth of Stolen liberties. WINCHESTER, Va., March 15. The corner of a liberty bond1 protruding from the door of the stove into which he was shoveling coal led to the dis covery by R. A. Mitchell, railroad agent, of about $75,000 in bonds con cealed in the station coal bin. Some of the bonds were registered in the name of officials of the Grottoes, Va., state bank, and-part, at least, of the cache was believed to represent loot taken from that institution when it was robbed June 30, 1921. Two-thirds of the bonds recovered were registered, the remainder being railroad and industrial issues'. Mitch ell said he had been scooping up papers with the coal for several days and he was speculating today as to what may have been the intrinsic cost of the station fire during the recent cold spell. - NURSEMAID ON RAMPAGE Plate-Glass Windows Smashed With Poker Following Dismissal. Indignant at being "fired," Eliza beth Stinson, nursemaid, grabbed a poker and shattered two valuable plateglass windows in the home of P. S. Durkheimer, 850 Northrup street, according to a; complaint mad 4, to Deputy District Attorney Driscoll yesterday. A warrant was issued, charging the young woman with "ma licious and wanton injury to prop erty." Mr. Durkheimer said that Miss Stinson had been employed for about two weeks, when she developed a pro clivity for all-night absences and when asked for an explanation had told her employer that it was "none of his business!" OFFICER ARRESTS WIFE 1 Traffic Policeman Halts Woman Driver Who Cuts Corners. OAKLAND, Cal., March 15. W. H. Garratt, traffic policeman, appeared on the police court records today as the complaining witness against his wife for cutting a corner at the cross ing where he was on duty. - He halted the offending driver be- fore discovering her identity, but ar rested her anyhow and ordered her to proceed to the police station. She obeyed and deposited $10 bail out of her own purse, but failed to appear in court when her case was called today. Police Judge Tyrell said that if she failed to be on hand tomorrow her bail would be forfeited. POET'S FARMJS MARKED Catskill Mountain Place Will Be' Dedicated to John Burroughs. MONTREAL, March 15. The old farm in the Catskill mountains where as aboy John Burroughs, poet and naturalist, began his studies, will be dedicated to his memory on April 3, the anniversary of his .birth and his burial. Ormiston Roy of this city today announced completion of plans for the dedication of the naturalist's former home as a John Burroughs memorial field, set apart as a liter ary shrine for the American people. In conformity with Burroughs' wishes, the big boulder about which he used to play will stand as his only monument. RELIEF SHIP .AGROUND Western Glen, With Supplies for Russia, Hits Xear Odessa. - CONSTANTINOPLE. March 15. The American relief administration food ship Western Glen has been aground since last, night on the beach, 25 miles south of Odessa. It was re ported the vessel is not damaged. Deputy Dondooi, chief of the Italian Red Cross in southern 'Russia, in an appeal to all civilized nations to aid in feeding Russia, today paid a tribute to the rapidity with which American grain is being distributed in the fam ine regions. PIPE LINE T0CUT MELON Kansas Concern Is to Pay $3 on Each Share April 29. INDEPENDENCE, Kan., March 15. The Prairie Pipe Line company de clared a dividend of $3 a share. It will be payable April 23 on stock of record March 31. Schools May Stay Shut Another 18Days: ORDER WILL BE ENFORCED Health Officers Are to Be Supported in Campaign. PARADES VOICE PROTEST Xumber of Cases of Smallpox Less Than Last Year, hut Vigilance Is Xot to Be Relaxed. TACOMA, Wash., March 15. (Spe cial.) Unvaccinated Tacoma children may take another enforced vacation of 18 days after the present suspen sion of school is over if one small pox case exists, according to Dr. Paul A. Turner, state director of public health. Hs announced his determina tion to stand by Dr. Joseph P. Kane, Tacoma city health officer, who en forced the vaccination order' even with the guns of the anti-vaccination-ists turned, upon him. Dr. Kar.e likewise received letters signed K. K. K. warning him that if he did not relent in his fight that he would meet with disaster. He turned the letter over to the police and kept right on the job. The Ku Klux Klan, through the kleagle of this district, said that the organization was not responsible for the threat. Bankers Make Protest. While Dr. Kane and his assistants are vaccinating poor children at the city clinics, the anti-vaccinationists are holding indignation meetings. adopting resolutions and threatening court proceedings. Dr. E. J. Brown, Seattle physician, who opposes pre ventive measures against smallpox. addressed a meeting of several hun dred persons here tonight. The audi ence was made up entirely of per sons who oppose, vaccination because of religious or other scruples. They have banner carriers parading the streets . arousing opposition to the vaccination order. Smallpox has taken a toll of one death in Tacoma in the last two years, and in every month of that period the city was suffering from a smallpox epidemic, if the state board of health Vuling that five or more cases constitute an epidemic be accepted literally, according to figures obtained from the city health department records today. Cases Fewer This Tear The records show that in Novem ber of last y9ar there were 25 more cases of smallpox in Tacoma than there are today. A table showing the number of smallpox cases in (Concluded on Page 2. Column 3.) wA cokcivvY I :t J W VSv Highwaymen Get $60 and Make Escape After Warning Woman Xot to Give Alarm. While one holdup man was locking A. Horn and his son, Ernest P. Horn in the refrigerator in the rear room of their grocery store at 640 East Main street, his confederate rifled the cash register, politely greeted Mrs. M. T. Smedley, a customer, and sold her a two-pound roll of butter. The two thieves escaped in an au tomobile with cash - amounting to about $60, and the police are con fident ' they are the same men who held up and robbed F. M. Maus of $20 in his drug store at 394 Sixth Btreet on Tuesday night at about the same time. ; " Only three .persons were- in the Horn, grocery when the two hold-up men entered. - They were Mr. and Mrs. Alex Horn and Ernest P. "Horn. Both of the thieves drew revolvers and forced the three into the rear room, where one man ordered them into a large refrigerator and the other one turned his attention to the cash regis ter. Only the two Horn men could get inside the refrigerator and Mrs. Horn was allowed to remain outside ins man holding her at bay with a gun took a bank book, a check book and a bunch of keys from her apron pocket. . It was at this juncture that Mrs. Smedley . entered the store and mis took the robbers at the cash register for a friend of the Horns. She asked for a two-pound roll of butter and the man handed it to her, taking her money. Mrs. Smedley then left the store and did not know it was being robbed until the police went to ques tion her about the description of the robbers. As soon as she was outside the rob bers backed out of -the store, warning Mrs. Horn not to make any noise: When they were gone Mrs. Horn re leased her husband and son from the icebox and the police were immedi ately informed. Although motorcycle officers and detectives scoured the vicinity for an hour they could find no trace of the pair. Mrs. Smedley said the men were between the ages of 20 and 25 years, both about the same height and weight. They were about 5 feet 6 inches tall and weighed about 145 pounds. Both wore overalls, arroj shirts, short dark coats, slouch hats and one carried a heavy automatic pistol. The other used a small nickel revolver. This description tallies closely with that' of the pair who robbed F. M. Maus the previous night. Robbers just as impudent and calm also broke into the house of E. F Piatt, 534 Clifton place, early yes terday morning, it was reported last night. They jimmied a side window and went first to the pantry, where they drank two quarts of milk, one and one-half pints of cream and ate some cola cniCKen tnat was In the tee box. - Afterwards they stole "a watch valued at $160 and $5 in money. Farmers' Union Meets. SWEET HOME. Or., March 15.--(Spe-cial.) A farmers' union meeting was held Saturday at the Sweet Home high school building to transact business. The next meeting, will be held March 25. AN OPERATION OR A COURSE OF "TREATMENT? Appeal of Expectant Mother Has Little Effect, Because Spouse Declares He Is Through. SAN FRANCISCO, March 15. Margaret Matzenauer, grand opera singer, today .appealed to her hus band, Floyd Glotzbach, Del Monte chauffeur, to return to her at once because she was expecting to become a mother. Glotzbach separated from the diva some days ago because, he sa'd, life in the circles grand opera stars occupy involved living "on skim milk and applause." 'A San Francisco newspaper to morrow will -print a copy of the telegram in which the diva made, her appeal. This message was sent to a friend of Glotzbach with a request that her plea and the information- on which it was based be laid before the chauffeur husband. Glotzbach brought an automobile load of tourists from Del Monte to San Francisco early tonight and with the air 'of a business-like professional chauffeur, began "to look around for passengers for the return trip to the beach resort. - . ' He would make -no direct comment on his wife's telegram. Told of a statement attributed to his father-in-law to the effect that Glotzbach had not left of his own ac cord, the grand opera star's hus-band said: "Let them talk. "When I said I was through and back here to stay, I told my story. "The letters and the telegrams cer tainly knock that story about be"ing kicked out into ' a cocked hat. I haven't had any quarrel with anyone. "Why all the fuss, if I'd rather drive a motor for wages than to play Faust to Margarette with the old man, Mephisto. lurking in the back ground? Hasn't a man a right to earn his own living? I wasn't built for a caddy. I'm too healthy to loaf around the' lobby of a theater." JOPLIN, Mo., March 15. Shown dispatch from San Francisco in which Floyd Glotzbach. her husband, is auoted as saying he sticks to his original statement that he was through with the limelight," Mme. Margaret Matzenauer, grand opera star, tonight still maintained an at titude of regarding the situation as a "joke." She was much less talkative than last night, however, when she talked freely with newspaper men. Referring to the late dispatch from San Francisco, Madame Matzenauer said the interview "resembles a fan ciful creation of a reporter." , The language is not my hus band's," she stated. She was reminded that even if the language was not that used by Glotz bach, the fact remained that he was back on his old job of driving a sight seeing motorcar. "Well, what of that," she countered. If he wants to drive someone else's car that's his business and I haven't the slightest objection." No." she replied, when asked if a divorce had been suggested. She sent a long telegram to her lawyer in New York telling of her in terview and asking his advice. She refused to divulge what her lawyer advised. Madame Matzenauer left tonight for ( Concluded on Page 2. Column 4. Spirit-Hunter Traces Fires to Lass. ACTS DONE IN DREAM STATE Discarnate Intelligence May Have Directed Arson. SLAPS ARE DISCOUNTED One of , AVitnesscs Said to Have Been Particularly Susceptible to Strange Influences. HALIFAX, N. S., March 15. (By the Associated Press.) Mary Ellen Mac Donald, foster daughter of Mr. and Mrsi Alexander "MacDonald, was the ghost of Antigonish, Dr. Walter Franklin Prince, scientific ghost hunter, declared in a report on his in vestigation of the "haunted" MacDon ald home at Caledonia Mills, made public tonight. At least Mary Ellen set the mys terious fires which were among the chief , of the ghostly manifestations, Dr.- Prince said. He held that she was not "morally culpable," however, as she was in an "altered state of consciousness." and did not realize what she was doing. "There is the possibility, supported by a body of evidence," the report said, "that this altered state wag brought about by a discarnate intelli gence. This Is a theoretical possi bility, whereas the external facts seem certain." X Slapa No Girl's. Dr. Prince indicated that the braid ing of the cows' tails and the shifting of farm stock also probably was a re sult .of Mary Ellen's altered state of "consciousness." The slaps that Harold " Whidden, Halifax Herald reporter, and P. C. Carroll, detective, claim to have suf fered from a ghostly hand, after the MacDonalds had been frightened out of their home, however, were not traced to Mary Ellen's hand. Their experiences, said the report, "were probably of a supernormal character, which does not necessarily imply that the supernormal cause was spiritualistic. It may have been owing to a psycho-physiological cause which is perfectly natural, though im perfectly normal." Doubt C'ust on Blows. In other words. Dr. Prince implied, Whidden and Carroll might have slapped each other or might merely 1 have thought they were slapped. Dr. Prince's summary of his report follows: "My visit of six nights and five days at the house, in the vicinity of Antigonish, N. S., which has attracted so much attention, ended Alonday 1 morning. It is difficult to condense report of some 7000 words into a much briefer statement, and only the salient points can be mentioned. "Apart from the statements of Signor Marconi and other experts, I have proved that the wireless wave theory cannot be true unless the waves are endowed with intelligence,. and bu, m persona. to know just when people are in the It finally was killed. An exam house with a dislike for the upper inaUon reveaied the fact that lt had part of the room walls, with a re- . ,,,,. , . ... v . 1 been suffering from rabies, pugnance to having persons see them1. ... break into flames, and with ability I to transport cushions from one room j to anotner ana tne iie. "The fires were undoubtedly set by hurnan hands, judging by the unmis takable signs left in the house. Burn Are Not High. "The burns are never found' on the wallpaper higher than the reach of a ierson five feet tall, which is the heigiit of the girl in the family. Over the bed which fills one end of a room they are never higher than such a person kneeling could reach, and in muddy c-r snowy weather one would not stand on tihe bedi. "Other slightly higher places on the woodwork were always set on fire by pieces of cloth, which could etasily have been tossed. In a recesa over a door where a fire occurred were found the fragments of a glove, un disturbed and in the midst of them a match where it could not have been prior to the fire, nor have been placed there after its extinguishment. "The fires avoided starting before witnesses, as there was no occult reason for doing, and avoided all parts of the dining room and parlor; visible from the meeting place in the j ktichen. Liquid Found on Beam. "An odorless, inflammable liquid was found In a bottle on a beam which produced the described effects on wet paper. Other indices were found pointing to the same conclusion, namely, that a person five feet tall secretly performed the acts as oppor tunity offered. "The various witnesses were .un doubtedly honest in believing that the acts could not have been thus per formed, but my acquaintance with the errors of observation and of memory on the part of intelligent persons dealing with a large number of de tails in a matter quite new to them has often demonstrated that such testimony may be vitally in error. "But I am of the opinion that the girl was not mentally culpable. Shti U mentally -exceedingly young for iConcluded on Page 2, Colutna l.) Increase Over Xumber Who Made Out Statements Last Year Is Expected. The income tax troubles of some thing more than 75,000 citizens of the state closed last night, at midnight, which was the final time upon which an income tax statement could be filed with the collector of internal revenue without penalty. Clyde G. Huntley, collector of in ternal revenue, estimated last night that the total of returns filed would be slightly in excess of the 75,000 filed last year. He said that the total tax represented would be in the neigh borhood of $18,000,000, compared with $28,000,000 last year. The aggregate he said, would be less this year owing to exemptions and lower salaries. Approximately 10,000 tax returns were received at the office during yes terday by mall, and it was estimated that the total of receipts today of reports mailed yesterday would be even greater. At the offices in the custom house there was not the rush yesterday and last night that was anticipated, al though it was found necessary to keep open until about midnight to take care of belated ones who wished to file their returns. The number of those making returns yesterday at the office was much less than on either of the preceding two days. HAT ABLAZE AT FUNERAL Woman Candle-Bearer Seta Fire to Millinery; Panic Averted. SYRACUSE, N. Y., March 15. A woman's hat caught fire during the funeral services for Mrs. Victoria Czysz and her daughter Helen in the Sacred Heart church this morning. The accident occurred to Mrs. Mary Swiderski, one of the 150 candle bearers. Prompt action on the part of a man standing beside the candle-bearer prevented a panic among 1500 people in the chhrch. He snatched the burning hat from the woman's head and stamped out the flames but not before her hair had caught fire and she was burned about the face. Mrs. Swiderski was carrying a two-foot candle. . CUSTOMER STEALS RINGS Robber Requests Jewels, Draws . Revolver, Leaves Calmly. SPOKANE, Wash., March 15. Three diamond rings, valued at $850, were stolen this afternoon from a local jewelry store by a pseudo customer, who told the proprietor,- P. Saffron, that he wanted to see the "best he had." When the three "best" rings were produced from the safe, the visitor reached down as if to pull a handkerchief from his pocket, but withdrew a revolver instead. While crowds outside passed the store, the robber calmly tore the rings from the pasteboard cards, pocketed them, and walked out. VIENNA BEAST RUNS WILD Jackal, Suffering From Rabies, Attacks Pedestrians. VIENNA, March 15. (By the Asso ciated Press.) A full-grown jackal ran wild, through the streets in the heart of Vienna last night, terroriz ing the population. The beast pur- l nrifstrla.na rhnrrinff rierht and ftJDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. YESTERDAY'S Maxlmutrt temperature, 46 degrees; minimum, 35 degrees. TODAY'S Rain; southerly winds. Foreign. Royal troops hold all of Fordsburg. rage 7 Kamonn de Vslera lsues manifesto launch ing new Irish policy. Page 5. Earl of Derby suggested as next premier. Page 15. Girl is declared ghost of Antigonish. Page 1. National. Treaty opponents give up prolonged fight. Page 6. Bonus bill action hinges on Glllett. Page 5. Election In- Maine may be Indication of political trend. Page 6. Domestic. Georgo Jay Gould sues for share of es tate. Page 3. Arson la suspected In Chicago fire: Page 2. Police hunt chef in circus murder. Page S. Afghan princess eager to get home. Page 2. Grand opera singer wants husband back. Page 1. . Taclfle Northwest. Freshmen of Oregon Agricultural college injured in chemical explosion. Page 1. Tacoma schools to be closed until small pox Is stamped out. Page 1. Alaskan surveys planned this year. Page 8. Washington urged to seize chances. Page 9. 900 Oregon voting preolncta get counting boards. Page 15. I Dufur orchards to be reorganized. Page 8 Taxpayers decry expensive frills. Page i. Sports. Jiu-jitsu wizard to get test tonight. Page 14. Big Jim Thorpe dispels ennui of Beavers. Page 14. Commercial and iMarlne. Period of lower rates believed in sight. Page 22. Portland gains 27 steamship lines during last two years in foreign service. Page 21- Wh-at trade slack in coast market. Page 22. Chicago wheat depressed by Liverpool ca bles. Page 22. Portland and Vicinity... Harry Davia convicted of peddilng nar cotics. Page 4. Revenues of Portland Railway, Light A Power company increase. Page 13. Robbers lock up grocers in Icebox. Page t. Mere than 75.000 to pay Income tax. Page 1. Suspects vanish In Descamps case. Page 9 Weather report, data and forecast. Page 22. Motor interests distuss new law. Page 4. f 0,000,000 is asked tor city's schools. Paga 1. Urgent Building Needs of Portland Outlined. BONDS FOR $3,000,000 PLAN Tax Levy of $1,000,000 for Next 3 Years Proposed. BOARD TAKES NO ACTION Special Meeting Called for Muii day, When Committee Report Will Bo Considered. An outline of urgent building needs of Portland schools, estimated at $6,000,000, and recommendation that this amount be raised by a bond Issue of $3,000,000 and a tax levy of $1. 000,000 at each of the next three school elections, was submitted to the school board last night by U'c com mittee on education, composed of Di rectors Frank I Shull, chairman, and W. J. II. Clark. The committee also recommended the discontinuance of swimming pools, orchestra, band work, two and three-year commercial courses, and adult instruction In schools at the expense of the district at the close of the school term in June. Tht would save the district a total of $66,500 a year, according- to tho com mittee's report. !V Action Taken. No action was taken on the report by the board last night, but tho sub ject will be discussed fully and will be acted upon at a special meeting of the Bchool board at 7:30 P. M. next Monday. Immediate needs of the district, as outlined in the report, place building requirements of elementary schools at $1,500,000, high schools at $1,000,000, and equipment at $406,000. The report of Directors Shull and wniark presents full details of the dis trict's actual needs in new buildings, additional rooms and improvements, replacements and equipment. No com ment on the report was made by board members last night, but it Is understood that the recommendations are fully .approved and that a much greater amount of money for build ing purposes would be desirable, fof the district is far behind in its build ing pragramme, they say. Hecommrndatlona Are Kxplalned. The following is explanatory of the recommendations of the committee of education with respect to the most urgent building needs for the next year, as made In the report: "Northeast high school (Roosevrlt) The congested condition of the pres ent high schools and the use of nu merous portables also In considera tion of the increase in number of high school students this fHlI, niiika it neceysary to provide for another high school. The location recommend ed Is in the neighborhood of the Fern wood school and adjoining some ten acres or more owned by the city for park purposes. This location happens to be one that will best serve the dis trict that Is not now supplied and, be ing adjacent to the city park, makes It necessary to buy no more than five acres instead of 10 or 15 if iocuted at another point. .. "Benson While this iichool un doubtedly needs more than the unit No. 1 which Is herewith provided. It Is felt that the addition recommended will be all that could be expected at this time. "Kranklin This school, built fur about 900 pupils. Is now taking care of at least 300 more than was intended and an addition should undoubtedly be provided. Building; Held Disgrrous, "Girls' Polytechnic This is the old high school building on Morrison Btreet and is considered by the fire marshal the most dangerous of any of the frame buildings and should be discontinued at the earliest ponnlble date. The school district owns sev eral acres of land at East Twenty fifth and Couch streets and we rec ommend that a new building be con structed on this site, so that no new land will be required. The old build ing can be used for administration purposes and save considerable money which is being expended for rent. "Grade Schools (new buildings) Under new buildings we have placed Beaumont, Duniway, Gregory Heights and Scott. These are now all sup plied entirely with portables, and the superintendent recommends five addi tional at Beaumont, six at Duniway, six at Gregory heights and five at Scott. We do not deem It advisable to continue erecting portables, but consider each of these locations Is now entitled to a permanent building, for all of which we recommend the cottage type. "We do not believe the Ilolhuiay school should be rebuilt, but that a cottage type building should l erected on the east block and the old building be removed from the west block, which will give a playground We recommend that In the Overlln neighborhood a cottage type hullilinc of six rooms be constructed instead of placing any portables there. "Additions are recommended at thr following: "Oeorfre Now consintH of h twi- tConcluded on i'atfe 4, Column 3. ) Cil 102.2