6a Weather I TJV 5 ""'JW Tf Douglm, V ' I . j'ffiiS : - y - , ' TODAY'S NEWS TODAY Con.orid.lIon of Th. Evening New. 4 ' " . ' ,B1p.nd.nt N.w.p.p.r, Publl.h.d fo 7 , '.. . : ; ' Th RoMbur Revlew DO U Cj U U INI r.-T ih. ..t mt.r..t. of th. p.oPi. . vol. xxvii no. 190 of. roseburg review ROSEBURG, OREGON, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1926. , :! vol. xvn no. 202 of the evening news THANKSGIVING T L Birds for Distance Shipment to Be Received Tomorrow. THURSDAY BIG DAY Competition Among Buy ers Is Expected to Stim ulate Prices Crop Is Heavy. v The Thanksgiving turkey mar ket opens tomorrow, although Thursday and Friday are expected to be' the big days. Birds for .dis; tant shipment are coming ill' to morrow, where contracis have previously been made, but the bulk of the open buying is to be done Thursday. ' While the . county has a larger . crop o turkeys thali has marked the industry in the past few years, yet the Thanksgiving receipts are not expected to be overly heavy. Many of the larger growers have stated that they do not intend to kill their birds until : the holiday season. Penning the : birds up, frightening them while sorting out the best ones, handling them and exciting them serves to throw them "off their feed' growers say, and it takes considerable time to get them back to the place where they begin to take on weight again. By leaving them undisturbed they will be considerably heavier by the Christmas and New Year sea sous and the difference in weight will bring a greater profit provid ing the price does not lower.- I - Many", of the smaller i grower's, however, will kill all of the, birds that they havo ready for market, lather than feed them until the holidays at the, present high cost of feed. . . .' . , Great care is. being exercised in recent years in the grading of tur keys, as growers , are coming to, realize the benefits ; of cm etui se lection ,in obtaining, the top mar ket prices; This is .particularly truo this year, , when .because, of the price being paid , buyers ..will doubtless grade. close to the line. 7 Price indications are that, grow ers will be .paid between 4- and 4a cents, or perhaps better.- The Tex as market is strong, and with pros pects of light receipts the price will doubtless be 'maintained. Buy ers are now offering 42 cents and there are rumors of 43 cents being orrered. With receipts light, and buyers trying to cover orders, , the price is apt to advance. , ' There is greater competition this year than is usual. Several new buyers have entered the field, par ticularly at Oakland, where activi ties are centering. There ire some new buyers in Roseburg also, ned ing an aspect of uncertainty to the market. . Portland Market (Associated Press Leased .Wire.) PORTLAND. Ore., Nov. 16. With' Thanksgiving "just a little more thin a week off predicitions of tho price that will rule for the holiday are heard on every side. Some are bullish. Others are con servative with 40 cents as the general top, the most popular idea. One thing Is generally admitted. There is a fairly good turkey crop in the producing sections enntribu-tai-y to the Portland market. It may not be a bumper crop but growers concede that there is little likeli hood of a shortage. Quality is excellent with the flocks well conditioned. This may (Continued on page 6.) URKEYMARKET OPEN ID Advent of Commercialism Dispels 4 Bohemian Air of Greenwich Village (Associate,! Tress Leased wire.) to the Bronx, up-state and Into Con NEW YORK, Nov. 16. The roar I r.ectlcut they've gone, and more of the riveler and the clack of the-j recently still one groui more av wreckers' hammers today drowns thentically "struggling" than most out the voice of New York's fam- others, investigation shows have ous and otvasionaliy notorious lin-enwich Village. Fourteen story apartment houses, springing up in the very heart of Hie one time picturesque and foreign-smelling neighborhood, have not only shut out glimpses of the poetic moon, but have boosted rents beyond tho reach of any struggling artist. , A new type of resident has set tled in the district persons with incomes above $15,000 a year, who can afford to pay for being on the frinee of Bohemia. The "Bohemi ans" who made he section color ful and desirable, and thus. In- mrecuy. expensive, fjve scattereo ,renillnnK artists In the neighbor to the four winds. O . hood and lhat ne i8 "leaving soon." Across the river to Brooklyn A jump fra.ni $75 a month rent to Heights, over Ihe Spuyten Duyvll $200, he exiSiilued, is why. Indian Prince Unlike Marie, Dodging Fuss (Associated Tress Leased Wire. bALiT LAKE CITY, Utah, Nov. 10. Arriving in Salt Lake City yesterday, "Mr. T. Raje", registered at a local hotel and identified him self as he Maharajah of lndore, Central India. . wiuiam Kwert, representing a national travel, bureau, who is the spokesman for the Indian prince, admitted the identity of the Ma harajah, who has been traveline incognito since his arrival in New York same three weeks ago. Through Ewert. the maharaiah said "I wanted to see America, not as Queen Marie is seeing it, but quietly, unobserved. I wanted to study conditions unhindered and that is why I preferred my incog nito of T. Raje'". Arrival In Salt Lake City yester day of the former maharajah of lndore was the first indication that the prince even contemplated n trip to America. Following upon his abdication of the throne in fa var of his eldest sou, last Febru ary, he was reported to have gone Into exile In Europe 1 Ills abdica tion followed a ccando' Involving Hie nmnlei of a merchant friend of h!i fr.vtrite dancer, M:,ntaz E?e- guitur Begjuni, and the l-.utl!ntiu.i of the latter. . DFHOUSE PARTY Murderer Also Shoots and Wounds Three Others . About to Enjoy ' ' Card Game. (Associated Press Leased Wire.) SCOTLAND, S. ,D., Nov. ', 16. Two persons were, shot 10 death and-three others were wounded at the, John. Grosa farm .near .hero' !(. ptSht by a,' mysterious, assasiljj wnp iireu inrougn.a .window, with a1 shotgun.., The dead are .Robert zwiqfel, JS, and Mrs., John, Grosz,. 50, wife of the owner qf the farm. 'The wounded, are. Clarence Zwlefel, 15,., brother of " Robert:. Emmanuel, Grosz, , 25, . and , .Mrs. Solomon Grosz, 30. Soy,eralvother, occupants , of ,tl:e , room ,. pijeaped the blast '. ,of lead that ... swept 'through the window - just , as the party prepared to. sit dawn, to ,'a tiuue ui cuius.. , , , Clarence Zwlefel and Emmanuel Grosz dashed from ; the huildbg, Grosz ran through a cornfiel with rue assassin pursuing nun . or a quarter, of a mile, . firing ns he ran, according to .the account of the affair received here., ZwlefeJ escaped to his.4i.ome. , . The first victims were in the summer kitchen of the Grosz farm from the main house. There Robert from the ma, nhouse,! There Robert Zwiefel was killed as the, slayer poked his weapon through a small window and fired several shots. Attracted by the , flrlug, Mrs. Grosz ran from the main building and received a, charge of lead that killed her. - FEATHERWEIGHT CROWN RESTS ON DICK FINNEGAN (Audctated I'reta Leant Wire.) BOSTON, Nov. 16 Dick (Honey boy) Finnegan, who laat night .von a decision over Chick Suggs, New Bedford negro,, in a ten round scrap, .is the world's featherweight champion, in tho view of the Mas sachusetts boxing commission. ' The commission authorized the promoters to announce the fight as a battle for the crown relin quished by Kid Kaplan of Meriden, Conn. Finnegan won seven of the ten rounds. begun to colonize along with the Russians, Polos and Jews on New York's east side. Under the influence of Harry Kemp, the "box car poet," a num ber of writers, radicals and art stu dents, packed their tooth brushes and trekked recently to Avenue B. Today; however, Kemp Is back in what remains of the "village," a resident of MacDougal street and a figure of the be-decorated tourist show places. The east side, he says Is too "dirty" for him. s Plllnil. sculntor. a resident for the last ten years of MacDougal's I alley, says he is one of the Iast;ican meraiure ana geometry now OREGON SCHOOL n n 11 k s CHOSEN BY STATE BOARD Members Not Unit on All Texts, But Meeting Is Devoid of Spats. ONE THIRD CHANGED Studies in Four Subjects Not Affected by the Periodic Snakeup in the List. SALEM, Ore., Nov. 16. With the exception of the text books In agriculture, music, American liter ature and geometry, changes will be made, beginning with tho next school year, in one-third of the books used In Oregon public schools. Tht3 was the result of tho state text book commission's deliberations here yesterday. .. . The board was not a uult on everything voted on, but the ex pected acrimony failed to develop. .The' arithmetic, history, literature and algebra texts , uroused . some spirited discussion, but only on the arithmetic texts did the com mission line up along factional lines. Chairman Milton A. Miller and Miss Winifred Winard of Port land and Professor l' L. Kent of Oregon Agricultural College voted as a majority aguinst George Hug of Salem and A. C. Hampton of Astoria, when books 1 , and 2 of arithmetical .essentials, published by Lyono and Caruahnn, were adopted. Book No. 1 will retail at 70 cents and its exchange price is 65 cents while No. 2 is 77 cents re tail and 72 cents exchange. . Row, Peterson and company"Was -awarded tho contract to 'furnish book.No. i) which retails 'at 'TS cents 'and has an exchange 'pricd'df'73 centsv-'The Vote oh) the ! latter ras 'irnanlmous. ' In the selection' dfJ tile first (two Hiig antl Hamptorf were divided -In their' choice though neither agreed ' with the other three. ' ' '''.' 1 - Books Adopted. ; c Oilier' books -adopted were: 7 Uisfory-i-fifth grade, "Hero .Tales troin' History," by (he John Cj Win ston company', retnil price SO cents, exeluirige'prico 83' cents, ' '-) ' " . V iSpelllng-i-'McOalls -speller). No, 1, ii-otall pi-ice 48 cents, 1 exchange. price 44 cents;' M'eCullB' speller, No.; 2, retail price 48 cents, exchange price 44 cents: Laldlaw Urotneru, publishers. ' ' - ' ' ' t High school texts selected were: 1: Algebra first course, in Algebra, retail price $1.20, exchange . price $1.10; intermediate ulgebrrt, retail price ?120; 'exchanV'o price 51.10. Allyn and Bacbn, publishers, i Bookkeeping-LTwentIeth Century Bookkeeping and Accounting Text, stock No. 2, one year text, retail price . $1.32,' exchange price $1.19; stock. No. 1, IS year, retail price $1.48, exchange price $1.33; stock No. 44, half year text, retail price 60 cents, exchange price 64 cents; stock No. 101, F, half year text; retail price 40 cents, exchange price 36 cents. Southwestern Publish ing company. The section of laboratory mater ial to accompany this course was made optional with the school heads. . - , ' ,. Commercial geography. Robin sons' , conimerciar geograpny, Dy ltand, McNally company, retail price $2. English composition Murray and Wiles first book in English, retail price $1.10, exchange price 31.04; Hitchcock high school Eng lish book, retail price $1.56, ex change price $1.44. Henry Holt and company, publishers. - English literature Literature and Life, book 4, retail price $2.40. Scott, Freeman and company, pub lishers. German Meisnest, elementary German, by the McMillan company, retail price $1.48, exchange price $1.36; Marchen and Erzaniungen, bv D, C. Heath and company, adopt ed at list price for supplementary use. Junior high schools commercial arithmetic Sutton .and Lennes brief business arithmetic revised, retail price $1.20, exchange price $1.10; Sutton R. Lennes Business Arithmetic revised, retail price $1. 40, exchange price $1.29. . Selection of the wo editions of Sutton and Lennes Business Arith metics were made to accommodate either schools which offer either the full year or the half year course. " . Household economy Wellman, Food planning Preparation, retail price $1.40, exchange price $1.29. A Girls Problems in Home Econ - omics." (Trilling-Williams.) ret' 'price $1.28, exchange price $1.17. Texts in literature, music, Amer- usea were reauupieu who lime op position. No text was adopted for general (Continued on page 6.) Sister Saw Mrs. Mills on Pastor's Knee, Kissing Him, But Relations of the Pair Were "Quite Proper" (Associated Press Leased Wire.) SOMERVILLE, N. J., Nov. 16. That she saw her sister, Mrs. Elea nor R. Mills, kiss the Rev. Edward V. Hall In 1918, but was assured by Mrs. Mills that relations be tween tbem were "quite proper," was the testimony of Mrs. Marie M. Lee of Peterson, N. J., in the Hall-Mills trial here today. Mrs; Mills' insistence that there was "nothing wrong" was repeated in 1921, Mrs. Lee said, but udded that in April of tho following year, her sister told her in the presouce of James Mills, her husband, that sho was going away with Mr. Hall. The Incident of the kiss was de scribed by Mrs. Lee as taking place while she was making her home with her sister in New Bruns wick. Entering the house quietly,, she saw the couple kiss as Mi's. Mills sat on the minister's knee, she said. Mrs. Lee also declared that James Mills was assured by his wife that she would not do any thing to disgrace I113 name, but that when she was ready to go away with the minister she would tell him. -Jim Mills sat forward In his chair during the early part ot his sister-in-law'a testimony and snilbd as she said that her sister in tolling of her affection for the minister. said Mr. Hall was "her intellectual equal." Tho witness was question- Yearly Salary to Be $8000 Less 1 han Sum Paid to . Suzzallo; Election . Occurs Monday. , (Associated l'ress Loaned Wlro.) SJ3ATTLE, 'Wash,; Nov. l6.-": Paill H 'Johns 'of Tacomn; 'their secretary,1 "announced 'today r that tliel liegenls of . the University' of Washington will Monday elect 'Da vid Thomson its ' president. His salary is to he $10,000 a year:- Thomson, dean of tho coIIceg of Liberal Arts, lms been acting head of the university since five regentB appoirited by Governor 'Hartley suspended 1 Henry 'Suzzallo October 1. Suzzallo: has a contract as pres ident ;of -the 'university nt $18,000 ft; year Tunning to 9 tine '30," 1027. i suzzallo 1 lives in the1 president's mansion. on the campus. The Johns announcement said that Thomson would not Immediately occupy that home. Fred C. Ayer, .president of edu cation, is under consideration as successor to Thomson, in, the arts deanship.- He is also to be dean ot the faculty, a post as assistant to the president. - . . - Ayer has a leave of absence to visit the 1 university of Texas, where ho was offered a position on the faculty. He-has not de: parted ou 'this leave. , October. 13, a mass meeting here started a campaign to recall Hart ley. This still is in progress, with 97,676 signatures of registered vot ers requires to call a special elec tion. . 111 tills election,, the people would decide whether the governor shall retain his office or be suc ceeded by W. Lon Johnson of CoU ville, lieutenant governor. A. H. B. Jordan of Everett, pres ident of the regents, accused Suz zallo of undue . activity in state politics and permitting discord to arise in the faculty. -a- SHERIFF-ELECT DF PHirAPn niCC VI DAI THON TO BE PRESIDENT UFISIGTON OF HEMORRHAGES' tion improved steadily ! until July - 118. Dr. H. S. Jessup, who was ne (Associated Press Leased Wire.) i gotiating with Moore to purchase CHICAGO, Nov. 16 Patrick' J a hopsital Moore established at Carr, sheriff elect of Cook county, Se1ulm- also ""ended Mrs. Moore. who was hurried to a hospital on election night after leading the Democratic ticket in Chicago, died today. Two blood transfusions were made yesterday in an attempt to I save his life, ebbing away from internal hemorrhages. OHIO STATE GETS HARVARD'S PLACE ON TIGER PROGRAM (Associated Press Leased Wire.) PRINCETON, N. J.. Nov. 16. Ohio State Is to have Harvard's place on Princeton's football sche dule next year. The announcement came at the sume time as news that the Prince-! Inn student council had accepted i Harvard's invitation to a confer-1 ence to consider the difficulties he-: ween the two universities that re suited In suspension of athletic contact last week. When the news was given out Princeton students .were dancing ln;10, glee about a bon fire sjjiat sent leaping flames a hundred feet above the campus In celebration of conquests Harvitd an, Yale. ed as to a possible Inference that Mills was not the Intellectual equal of his wife, but she said this leu ture was not brought out. Her sis ter, said the witness, described Hall as "her ideal of a mau." Mrs. Lee said that several yenr3 before the death of Mrs. Mills and the rector, she saw Hall place his hand over that of her slscer, as Mrs. Mills was operating a motion Picture machine at a social gather ing at the New Brunswick church with which both were connected. Opening of todny's session was delayed to permit Alexander Imp son, Bpeclul prosecutor, to question out of court members of St. Mary's guild of New Brunswick to learn what they might know of the af fair between Rev. Hall and Mrs. Mills, choir singer in his church. Women of the minister's church constituted the membership of the guild. Joseph A. Falrot, former deputy police commissioner 'of New York, who identified finger prints on a calling card as those of Willie Stevens, also was interviewed by the prosecutor during tho delay. This gave rise to a rumor that Faurot had discovered finger prints on the blade ot d razor which which Simpson ' introduced; last week during the questioning ot medicnl experts as to the gash In Mrs. Mill;' neckj. ACCUSED DOCTOR FORECAST WIFE'S 1 ' tATlf JlLEfiED Prosecutor in; Moore Case . Also Introduces Name' ., of Defendant In Divorce Suit. ; -;- (Assootsted Press. Lossed Wire.) "'PORT.' ANGELES, Wash,; N6v. 18. vn. Prosecutors; of Dr., Paul D. Moorei of Sequlm,; Was., and Nash ville, Tonn., on a charge of killing his wife by poison, in, presenting charges at-the opening of the sec ond day of his trial; here today, dq clured they had witnesses to show that Moore predicted the day and manner of his wife's death. , .. ,Tho state asserted , that Mrs. Moore, died, ot - convulsions - from tablets prepureu by the defendant. I The: prosecution told .the; Jury that It would present evidence ;of friendship between tho physicians and Charlotte Kendall of .Sequlm, beginning n year before the death and resumed three days after the funeral. Dr. Moore Is being tried under an amended -complaint charging that he poisoned his wife, .Toll n M. Wilson,' prosecutor of Clallam county, pointed out in his opening address to the jury. The original complaint charged that Mrs. Moore was given a dead ly drug, one capsule a day from July 20.' The amended complaint alleges that death was caused by capsule, taken by the wife July 19. ; Mrs. Charlotte Kendall, whose acquaintance with the physician was cited by Wilson before the jury, Is the wife of Carrol C. Kendall, a cheese maker, two miles from Sequlm, Wash, where the Moores lived six years Mrs. Kendall filed suit for di vorce In Seattle, King County, Au gust 4th. This has not come to trial. Mrs. Moore was under the care from July 4 of Dr. William T. Tay lor of Port Angeles, a state sena- fir.plnr T-T rpliirpfl nn tho atnrwl today that a few days after that he operated on her for gall bladder. 11, tnlil tho inrv Ihnt hor onmll. Poison Alleged Given Affidavits filed by tho prosecu tion when a charge of first degree murder was placed agafnat Moore September 4, alleged that Moore had been in the habit of making up his own prescriptions In the drug store of J. E. Drayton a druggist at Sequim. Drayton mlssea once the bottle containing the poison to which the state attributes the death. And once he found this bot tle unexpectedly- empty. The affidavits declared that Moore left 26 tablets at the bed side, and that one a day was ad ministered. Jessup deposed that he picked up a tablet and tastd it. He swore that it seemed peculiar to him and that Drayton analyzed it and found that it contained the poison Wlon told the Jury he would produce a "multitude of witnesses" to show that Mrs. Kendall and Moore were often seen together in the year before Mrs. Moore died. Wilson aBsertethat even after 1 , 1. . . , ...... nn. .-niMiie uegan 10 inipiove juiy her husband predicted that she would die July 20. John F. Dore of Seattle, counsel for Moore, said the defense admit- ted that the defendant and Mrs. CITY TO FORCE THE PAVING OF HARVARD AVE. Seldom Used Section of ' Charter Invoked to Improve Street. PETITION IS HEARD Road District West of Town Asks Cooperation of City in Surfacing ,-"'' ' Roadway, ; . Steps to force the pavement ot Harvard avenue, i between the north end of Corey avenue and the city limits In West Roseburg In compliance with the request ot the road districts west of town, were taken up by the city council last night. For several years there has been a. desire to have this short' strip ot road .paved, but the council was : unable to make any progress in that direction. It Is now planned, however, to Invoke the . section of ; the 'charter which gives-the council the right to In itiate an .improvement deemed to be necessary. - : 1 ' ' , Several times some of the . resi dents have petitioned for the pav ing, but as A. J. Bellows owns one-half of the property abut ting on the street and has op posed the Improvement) the prop osition has always been blocked. The road is rough, forcing the city to expend considerable money each yoar keeping It In condition for travel, and even then there Is always a great deal' ot complaint. On November G the road district west of town held a meeting and voted a special itax.. to. extend' the paving west of tho , city, , and at the-same time, nuked the. city's, pp-. operation In golting. Harvard ave nue paved, The city council unani mously agreed that there should be no. further delay In the matter nnd Instructed tliu city engineer td prepare plans ,nnd specifica tions. .. , . , '. .,- , ., '. t ' , . 'The charter provides that whore the council deems an improvement necessary , that , It can .proceed through the . tegulur channels, and unless two-thirds of the property owners of the; street make a re monstrance the. Btreot can be pav ed. Mr. Bellows owns one-half of the property, but, as all of the, resi dents on the other side of, the streot except one or two have pre viously signed petitions for paving, it Is believed that there will not be a sufficient number to effectively remonstrate. ;. Water Causes Complaint, J. E. Rexroad appeared before the council and complained about water which has been drained off Second, Avenue onto his property. Ho stated that the drain across the street Is not carrying oft the water and that a ditch dug by the city street force is permitting the wuter to run on his land. The streot committee promised to make an investigation Immediately. Residents of Cobb street appear ed with a protest against the sale of a lot In which they thought was a cross street near the ex treme south end of the city. Sev eral years ago the first addition to Walte's addition was laid out and plats filed with the city by W. L. Cobb. This tract Included the land a block Bouth of Rice street, but from that point on to the city lim its the land was not platted. Re cently this latter tract was plat ted and an attempt made to secure tho city's approval, but becauso strip of land had been left at the ends of the street to prevent the streets from being cut through the city refused to accept the plat. Propory owners state that they were Informed that there would be a cross street running east and west, parallel with Rico street and a block farther south. Some of them bought lots with the under standing that they would have cor ner lots. Mr. Cobb, they claim, has now sold a lot In what they thought was to be the cross street and they asked the city what steps they could take. As the plat has never been accepted by the city the resi dents were informed that the coun cil has no authority in the matter and that their only recourse Is againHt the owners of the land to enjoin them from blocking what Is claimed as a street. The city recorder was Instructed to procure licenses for the city's autos. The report or tho canvass of the city vote at the general election was read and the recorder Instruct ed to notify the successful candi dates. An ordinance levying the city tax for the ensuing year was placed on final reading and passed. Kendall were friendly, but would deny that their relations included anything wrong. Ode In House : T ri UivWsity ot (Associated Press Leased Wfre.) . WASHINGTON, Nov. 10. As a tribute to the speaker under whom he served for many years, William Taylor Page, clerk of the house', has penned a free verse "Parliameutary Ode" to the me morar of "Uncle Joe" Cannon. It follows: . "Here the gavel fell. "The time of the gentleman from lllnols has expired. . . "The prevldUB. question Is order ed. "Debate Is exhausted. "The subject Is closed to amend ment. ; 1 1 , . "Point of order cannot be made nor reserved. . "The speaker has left tho chair and gone. Into the committee of the whole. "Where the point of no quorum' Is never raised. "Where the great majority rules, and , . "From whonce no adverse report ever1 comes; "Where no dilatory motions are entertained, no ' "Filibustering practice ' "Where minorities claim no rights "Wher rulos are superfluous, de corum Is preserved,, and . . I . ' "Where' policies . Is ujjourned." Reason Given by 'Catholic ; Church for Decree in ' , Behalf of Consuelo . ! ; ' : Vanderbilt. , , . .. 1 , "' ' ' ' i .71 . , S .7 (ABBoehtetl Press .Leased Wire.) , -V " LONDON; Nov. IB. The love of Consuelo Vnnderbllt fof a young American lien ' sn married ' the Duke of Marlborough 31 years ago is among tne latest revelations as to the cause of tHe annulment by the Catholic 'church - of her mar riage to the Duke. ' A dispatch to the Dally Mall from Rome sayB that a part of the evi dence presented to,, the ' diocesan court1 consisted of letters to her from 'a young American whom she would have married had her moth er not 'prevailed against her. ;: ' ' " Her 'mother, ' then Mrs. W. K. Vnnderbllt, Is , now Mrs. O. H. P'. Belmont. ' ' ' f -' ' - That' the mother's "commands, threats and importunities" Induced the 17 year old heiress to abandon her American sweetheart for "a splendid marriage" is said unof ficially to have been confirmed be fore tho Catholic diocesean court at Southwark, which granted the annulment. ' It is said that the confirmation was given to the court by Mrs, Belmont and other witnesses. Of ficial secrecy In thlB rospect, how ever. Is still being maintained by the church authorities whose de cision to annul the marriage was upheld by the holy rota tribunal In uome. The latest version of the genesis of the proceeding attributes them to CoiiBuelo s wish to regularize her marriage with Colonel Jacques Balsan, a French Catholic, in the eyes of the Catholic church by hav ing the ceremony performed In ac cordance with Roman rites. This would hnve been Impossible while she retained the position of a di vorce. Since her marriage to Marlborough has been nullified, Consuelo's remarriage to her French husband has been feasible, but It Is not known whether a new ceremony tins been solemnized. The question of the Duke's alleg ed desire to enter . the Roman church has not been answered officially. Catholic authorities say positively that he has not been accepted as a communicant, but they decline to confirm or deny a statement that he has applied for admission to the church. AMERICAN GIRL'S 1MARRIAGETQ DUKE FORCED. IS CLI1 Spiritualism Only Prop Left for Fundamentalism, Stefansson Avers (Associated Press Leased Wire.) SPOKANE, Nov. 16. Speaking as a student of theology, Vilhjal mar Stefansson, noted Arctic ex plorer, declared In a newspaper In- tervjew here last night, his belief thal "tho fundamentalist churches of the world must surely adopt spiritualism if they would continue to exist." Mr. Stolansson took a course In Harvard theological semlnarv after his graduation, from Harvard Uni versity. , , . n what he declared was his first public expression of views concern ing spiritualism and roliglon, he spoke of his friendship for Sir Co- nan Doyle and his association with the British author during his visit to this country, wben he accom panied him to many seances. It seems to me that wholly IP"EST DRIVE OreeV 1BI: - aiAiilllsb 11,11 AUSPICIOUSLY Thirteen Teams Out City's Business Dis k trict Today. iri CARDS GIVEN OUT) Each Contributor - Given) . Window Card to Show j That He Has Done His Bit. .,." The Community Chest drive be gnu this morning In earnest, Undeit -the leadership ot H. C. "Clay'1 Darby who Is just boiling ove( with enthusiasm and pep, thirteen teams, two men to each team, just) an full of pep and go as their leader, are out with the intention' -of doing their bltijuat as soon' asi possible. ' These ' men are 'all Biv -ing their time gratis to the chest) and before starting to work eachj made his, own contribution to the; Chest ; I I i '.i : -t - I j ) ( ' s The . teams are as follows: O. C, Baker and Chas. McElhinny, J. M Judd and' J. Hi Slnniger,. HV Li French and John Farrlngton, .John! Runyan : and' V. T) Jaokson, 'Leon McCUntock aid K. ;Oulnd, J. W Wflght and W. H.'Sleg, W, H. Get retsen and. B, Zigler, C. W. Clark: and A. B. Crawford, O, C. Baker and J. E. Pickens, W. S:. Hamilton; and W. F. Chapman, A. A. Wilder and- W A. Ott, Qt W. Young' anoV O. M. Berrle, L. L.,Bell and .' Carl Neal. . 7. , ' . . ! The headquarters- 5 of the' driver will be at the Chamber of Com-, merce. -Any individual '-contrlra tlons or those gotten by workers) may be left either there or. with H. 0' 'Darby at McKean, Darby cV Baldwin store. ' ..- 1 - I ... The window cards' being ' given' ' to subscribers this year are prac ' tlcally the same as those of lnstl ; year except that the color and dates are different. This year's" cards are blue. Each business man ' subscribing is given two of tHeBO cards, one for his home and one' for Ilia' place of business. Each em ploye subscribing Is also given ono to take to his' or her home, When ' the solicitors are' working in the ' residence district they will pass up all homes displaying the Com munity Chest -card iu the window ' or door. ' The Chest committee furnishes this card for another reason, how ever. It shows all who may at-' tempt to solicit for funds other than from the Community Chest that the party displaying the card has already given his quota for the yoar and that that subscriber Is cooperating with the Chest at least to the extent that he wishes all parties investigated before be ing pnid any money. Summed; uj, these cardB show professional- so licitors, some of whom may have just cause and others who may nbt have, that Roseburg Is a business town, progressive and awake and indicates to these solicitors that they must show Just why thoy should receive any money and then through the Community Chest unless It be denominational or private enterprise. Roseburg's progross In the Com munity Chest methods has already attracted the attention of outside cities. Inquiries regarding the workings of the Chest have been received and replied to from the Lion's Club at Eugene, Baker, Til lamook nnd Port Angeles, Wash. Victor P. Moses, county Judge ot Benton county, accompanied by Mrs. Moses, were visitors in Rose burg list night. Judee Mobrb Ik .:. president of the County Judges' As sociation and is making arrange ments ior me convention to he held In Portland December 20 to 21 apart from the objective truth of the spiritualistic beliefs, the spirit ualists are bound to be on the win ning side of the religious develop- 'ment of tlle tlme becauso the ro- llglous Issue has shifted." ha on 1,1 "The live Issue no longer is wheth er there is a heaven or a hell for the soul to go to, but rather wheth er man has a soul, at all. Unless either the churches or science can prove that a man has a soul, you can't stlrdii much Interest In heav en, hell or a 9te after death." To do this Mr. Stefansson said Sir Arthur had believed during hl American visit, "that the . old churches would have to turn In llie spiritualists as the defenders of the cltsdel of their faith the belief of the existence of a soul that, llvnii after death." . I