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About Dayton tribune. (Dayton, Oregon) 1912-2006 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 1, 1925)
MLB HAPPENIN6S OF CURRENT WEEK Brief Resume Most Important Daily News Items. COMPILED FOR YOU Events oUNoted People. Governments HITS AT CHICAGO WHEAT PIT Jardine Demands Immediate Reform of Board of Trade. Washington, D. C.—Failure on the part of the Chicago board of trade to take immediate steps toward the adop- tion of proposed reforms will lead to action with a view to the suspension or revocation of its designation as a contract market. Secretary of Agricul ture Jardine warned Monday. "Recognizing that the wild fluctua tions in the quotations of May wheat were, in the opinion of the department, due to manipulation. I cannot escape the conclustion that it is imperative for the board of trade without delay to set up the administrative machin ery to prevent recurrence of such a condition." said Secretary Jardine. “A failure on the part of the board to take these steps immediately will leave to me. under the terms of my plain obligations, no alternative than to inaugurate action looking to the suspension or revocation of the desig nation of the Chicago board of trade as a contract market. In these cir cumstances time is the essence.” Secretary Jardine characterised as of far-reaching importance recom mendations made to the president and board of directors of the Chicago board of trade by a so-called members' pro gram committee. These recommenda tions. if put into effect, will, he be lieves. go a long way toward reflect ing a true supply and demand situa tion on the Chicago market. Secretary Jardine considers of particular importance the recommend ation to set up a committee of busi ness conduct. The regular members of this committee during the period of their incumbency would pledge themselves not to speculate for their personal account. Another recommendation of far- reaching importance, in the opinion of Secretary Jardine, is the one giving the board of directors power to limit daily fluctuations in the market prices of grain during emergency periods such as occurred early this year. SHIPPING BOARD BREAK IMMINENT Palmer’s Position Now Held Precarious. STATE NEWS (N BRIEF SCHOOL DAUS The Belvedere hotel ut Huker Sumpter, built In the old boom days of half a century ago. was destroyed by fire between 11 and 13 o'clock Satur day night. The origin of tho fire wm not learned. Salem Members of the state board of control have completed tho task of signing highway bonds In the amount of $2,000,000, which were issued re cently to redeem other bonds of equal amount bearing a higher ruto of In Commissioner Haney Refuses to Budge terest. COOLIDGE CONCERNED Salem—High school students who refuse to sign a pledge that they will Things Worth Knowing. not join or take part in any secret society within the schools here will be suspended or expelled, according to Washington. D. C — Shipping board announcement made by school authori Mrs. Lucy Linder of Spokane was nominated for representative from the affairs have reached a critical point, ties Friday. fourth legislative district at a repub with the question of whether Leigh Myrtle Point Pilot Smith's leg was lican county convention Saturday. C. Palmer will be retained as presi- broken and Don McCullough, his pas- H. D. Hibbs and Thomas Hennessey dent of the fleet corporation the Issue. senger, was Injured when Smith's so-called 10-for-l rail merger promot The longexistlng disagreements be plane made a forced landing at the ers, were convicted of grand larceny Coos and Curry fair grounds Saturday tween Mr. Palmer and a majority of in the Los Angeles superior court Fri night. A shortage of gasolnie necessi the board have developed to the de tated the landing. day night. gree that President Coolidge has taken The United States battle fleet came Culp Creek—Fire of unknown origin a hand in the situation and indications destroyed the home of William Ern- home Saturday after one of the great est cruises in the peace time history are that a solution of the problem shaw. near here, at noon Saturday. of America's navy, a five-month ex Mrs. Ernshaw was alone with her chil will be attempted shortly. cursion across the Pacific to Australia. dren at the time and in an effort to The board, which has had numer It is announced that the German ous disagreements among its own save her baby she was badly burned government will accept the American members, has found itself continual and the child may die. reservations in connection with the By DOUGLAS MALLOCH ly at odds with Mr. Palmer on pol Klamath Falls—Another posse out senate approval of the treaty of com icies of administration. These have fitted and provided by the Klamath ------ - ...... .......................... merce and amity between tho two involved terms for sale of ships and county court left here Saturday for। U~'~ TN SITTE of opeechea. songs and lines, the number of ships which Huckleberry mountain In a final ef countries. should be kept in operation, and the fort to find some trace of Martin , Philip K. Ahern, for 30 years north I have seen many men content. relative merits of expanding opera Owensby, Merrill rancher, who has west chief of the Pinkerton national Red flags are waved, and red-hot tions at the expense of economy. been missing for the past nine days. I detective agency, died at his home in words In the background has stood an ap Seattle Saturday after a month’s ill Salem—Lute Savage, guard at tho ■ Are hurled agulnst the battlement parent feeling of some commissioners ness. Ahern once served on the Chi Oregon penitentiary, who was shot (if wealth entrenched, und kings uro that in delegating powers to the fleet cursed— cago police force. and «eriously wounded when Tom• corporation, the board had in effect Yet kings there have been from tho The vote of Methodists both north Murray. Ellsworth Kelly and James first, abdicated functions conferred upon it Wlllos made their sensational escape and south, on amalgamation of the And wealth there will be. I opine by law. northern and southern conferences of from the Institution August 12, Is ro Ixmg after words of yours or mine. Indicating his direct Interest, Mr. ported to be in a precarious condition the Methodist Episcopal church Sat Coolidge summoned Commissioners in a local hospital. urday stands 12,000 for amalgamation Yet I have seen some happiness; Plummer and Hill to the White Hpuse. And. strange to say, not always on and 952 against. Salem Dedicution of the new Elks' The throne, nor always In the press Previously he had discussed the sit While lacking official verification SHIPPING BOARD DEAF uation with Chairman O'Connor of the temple here has been set for Novethber That swept ahead when throne« were at the White House, reports persist TO COOLIDGE'S PLEAS board. On his behalf it was later stat- 7. according to officials of the order. , gone. that Dwight F. Davis of Missouri, act ed that the chief executive had reach- Judge Lawrence T. Harris of Eugene Yes. even those who hate employed. Washington, D. C. — Conciliatory ef ing secretary of war, shortly will suc ed no conclusions but was concerned will give the principal address. Lodge And what they hated thus destroyed. And far ahead their banners bore. ceed John W. Weeks of Massachusetts forts of President Colldge to bring the in the admiinstration of the $350,000,- men from Oregon, Washington and Seemed little happier than before. shipping board and President Palmer 000 government property for which the Idaho will attend the ceremonies. Tho as the head of the department. board is trustee and wished to aid in temple cost approximately $175,000. of the emergency fleet corporation to A check up Sunday night showed So hute and envy are not nil, four persons killed and 35 Injured in some understanding under which the the solution of the board’s difficulties. Portland—One of the upside-down' I said, whatever dug'« above. At the same time, it was stated for pipes that has done so much to spread The very man wl " makes to fall, a wreck on the Atlantic Coast line fleet head would retain his office Mr. Coolidge that there was consider the fame of Vice-President Dawes ar-1 Would you be I ippy, you must love. six miles from Thomasville, Ga., Sun seemed to have failed Monday. day afternoon when two passenger Admiinstration senators. Including able doubt whether the boapd could rived In Portland Saturday, a gift from Hate la the pans!' n of an hour, trains met head on one mile east of Edge of New Jersey, McKinley of Ill be directed at all in the administra General Dawes and a memento of his But happiness Is like a flow'r. That love must plant, end love must a flag station called Newark. inois and Curtis of Kansas, stepped tion of its affairs on the ground that recent visit here. John M. Scott, 'tend. it was an independent bureau under assistant passenger traffic manager of into the breach Monday to declare in Three coal miners were killed and And share Its fragrance with a the jurisdiction of neither the execu friend. a fourth probably fatally burned Sat favor of the shipping board’s abolition, tive nor legislative branches of the the Southern Pacific, was the re cipient. urday in a gas explosion in mine No. but this had previously been hinted government. 7 of the Consolidated Coal company as part of the administration program, Salem — Following organization of Yew, I have seen some men content, the Oregon Linen Mills, Inc., here Frl-1 And they but little were concerned near Herrin, Ill., The bodies of the so it fell on deaf ears so far as Pal $350,000,000 TAX CUT With kings, how others' fortunes went, dead miners were recovered late in mer’s foes on the board were concern day, the selection of a site for the | What others hud or others earned. PROPOSED BY SMOOT ed. They declared that none of the plant has been placed In the hands of The secret of our happineM the day after they had been entombed proposals made since their opposition Washington, D. C.—After declaring experts. The corporation has capital1 la not a secret hard to guess: several hours. to the fleet president reached a crisis that the aggregate of tax reduction stock of $640,000 and will manufacture For happiness, I find, succeed« Rev. Albert G. Kuhn, pastor of the last week had changed their attitude should be limited to $350,000,000 Sen only high-class linens. T. B. Kay, Not greater wealth, but simpler Bethany Presbyterian church, Omaha, in the least. needs. ator Smoot, republican, Utah, chair state treasurer, is president of the Saturday was sued by another min (<D> !•••. MrCIvr« Newspaper Oyndloate.) The board is unanimous in its man of the senate finance committee, company. ister of the same denomination, Rev. recommendation to the budget bureau ---------O-------- in a statement Saturday pledged his Richard R. Stier of Sayreville, N. J., that Palmer’s salary be cut from $25,- Eugene.—A carload of 16,000 pounds support specifically to tax cuts which, who seeks to recover $4350, of which 000 to $18,000 a year and that his of pyrotol obtained from the govern according to unofficial estimates, he alleges he was defrauded In a real seven executive assistants now draw ment for blasting purposes has ar-' would represent a total' of more than estate transaction by the Omaha pas ing $18,000 a year be reduced to three, rived at Junction City and is being $640,000,000. distributed among 49 farmers of that1 tor. with salaries fixed at $15,000 a year. Senator Smoot did not include any Pasadena society was agog over the The quarrel between Palmer and the estimates as to the loss of revenue section, according to O. E. Fletcher, arrest Saturday of Robert A. Winthrop board seems to have reached the point resulting from the different proposals county agent. A carload of the ex on advices from Bend, Or., charging where even an order from the White in his scheme, which was prepared for plosive arrived in Eugene a short time I EDWARD BURNE-JONES him with grand larceny agd obtaining House directing, that they settle their publication in the Nation's Business, ago and has been distributed. money under false pretenses. Win differences amicably seems likely to the organ of the chamber of commerce Harrisburg—This city and country throp had posed as a young million be Ignored and action contrary to of the United States. Unofficial esti claimed quite an array of prizes at XK7HEN Sir Edwnrd Burne-Jones aire since he came here some time President Coolidge’s wishes is expect mates would make it appear that if all the county fair at Albany the past * * was a growing boy nt school he ago and was engaged to be married ed. the Smoot proposals were incorporât- [ week. The city's exhibit won second I read the “Morte d'Arthur” and "Modern Painters'’ and these two books made in less than two weeks to one of the ed in the new revenue bill taxes would place among the towns of the county.1 on Impressloon on film that lusted all wealthiest society girls of the city. Movie Outfit Poisoned. be reduced by almost double the Charles Kizer, Oxford sheep breed I bls life. er, east of town, was there witli his [ Everyone Is familiar with the paint Divorces were denied both Frank D. Houston, Tex.—Forty-two members amount. Proposals favored by Senator Smoot, [ usual flock ami .won champion ewe ings, "Tho Golden Stairs,” "The Mer Scott, Michigan representative, and of a motion picture company, headed ciful Knight” and "Love Among the Edna James Scott, his wife, in a de by Richard Dix and Thomas Ralston, together with unofficial estimates ob- and firsts in every entry but two. Ruins,” all being widely reproduced. cision handed down Saturday by Cir were victims of ptomaine poisoning talned from other sources as to their Hood River — With apple harveat He had an unusual manner of paint cuit Judge Frank D. Emerick at Al Monday on the Bassett Blakely ranch [effect on revenues, are as follows: well under way, orchardlsta have cut ing, very pictorial ami romantic, ideal pena, Mich., Representative Scott 40 miles from Houston. Ambulances Reduction in surtaxes to a maximum i their pre harvest estimates of tonnage istic, as artists would say. 27» th charged cruelty and misconduct, al and automobiles were dispatched to ' of of not not mom more than than 25 per cent, or. more than 25 per cent. As early as He was born August 28, 1888, near ai __ _________ i_ * — ___ _________ _ Tt.______ ___ nriiforohlv 9D nr»r rant 11 ilA AnD Ailfl leging that his wife had been "indis- the ranch to bring them to Houston preferably 20 per cent, $100,000,000. Monday the Hood River traffic asso Birmingham, England. From the time Reduction in normal tax rates now ciation reported to officials of the Pa he was a baby, mythology and classic cret” in her relations with other men. hospitals. Richard Dix, star of the Mrs. Scott charged her husband gam play being produced, was in Houston ranging from 2 to 6 per cent to from cific Fruit express that the crop here tales interested him. At college lie bled for high stakes and drank. and did not eat lunch at the ranch. 1 to 5 per cent, $100,000,000. this year would reach 2600 cars. Later adopted Rossetti as Ills master, Absolute repeal of estate taxes, this estimated was cut to 2000 cars, though he had not met that famous Six women were made slightly ill. Mrs. Otto Shaler, whose marriage to man. He knew little of draughtsman $100,000,000. approximately 50 per cent of tho ton ship, but his wealth of pictorial de June Shaler was annulled last Feh Repeal of automobile excise taxes. Seventeen Planes Finish Leg. nage of 1924. tail made up for that. A trip to Italy, ruary in San Francisco, Cal., ls a Chicago.—Seventeen airplanes en- $125,000,000. in company with Ruskin, did much to Marshfield — Searching parties have Repeal of admlssion taxes, $30,000,- stickler for obeying court orders. At tered in the first commercial airplane failed to find Charles Smith of Brook develop him. the time of the annulment he was reliability contest arrived here Mon- 000. His first "Love Among the Ruins" ings, who disappeared 12 days ago of corporation Reduction earnings wimuui iiunnup ordered to divide the vuuiuiuuii/ community piup- prop- 'id)' day without, mishap num from uruuii Detroit vu on was a watercolor, which was utterly while picking berries In company with destroyed by a cleaner who thought It erty equally. Saturday Mrs. Staler the first hop of a tour of the middle ta* from 12% per cent t0 10 per cent’ a friend. The men became separated wns an oil. So Burne-Jones worked $185,000,000. came into court and announced that west for the Edsel Ford trophy. Grand total, not Including other ex- and the friend returned alone. It is it out again, this time In the more in the division Shake had sawed their cise taxes which Senator Smoot says thought Smith may have died some 1 lasting medium of oil paints. Hillsboro—The Washington county! grand piano in two and had removed Of his own work, he said: "I mean, should be repealed, but to which he where in the woods, as he was not. one of her pictures from a frame, giv- grand jury returned 46 true bills of of strong constitution and had been' by a picture, a beautiful romantic not refer specifically, $640,000,- does ing her the picture and keeping the Indictment in its report'Friday. There known to have sinking spells. Several dream of something that never wns 000. were 14 not true bills returned. frame himself. searches have been made^Or the miss and never will be. In n light better than any light ever shown, In a land A failure of several' of the helium ing man. Two Hurt as Home Burns. Patching Concrete. no one can define or remember, only gas cells in the airship Shenandoah Roseburg—Plans for a city produce' desire—and the forms divinely beau- Orchards, Wash.—M. M. Farley and When repairing damaged or cracked before she began to break up was other artist curried out Gilson suffered painful UCBUIHJCU rilUUJ to w the ai«*v»a - work, ---- r keep . the . place to be • Fred a ........... ... ...... .... S' -------- burns ------- In market, operated by the farmers of, flful.” No described Friday naval ^x#»a court v t concrete ideals more nearly than he. of inquiry by James H. Collier, chief patched thoroughly wet for several a f|r6( starting from the explosion of the county, are being considered aa a He lived to be quite nn old mini, rigger who had supervision over the (hours before working on it, ami * kerof)cnfi )amp whlch tieBtroye<l the part of the Homo and Land Products' dying In Exeter, in 1808. One of his show being held this week. C. J. cells. Collier's testimony was in sharp roughen it with a hammer or chisel । last paintings was “Arthur In Ava contrast to that of a dozen other sur-, if it is smooth. Also be sure that you FarleY homG here Saturday "‘Kht. rhe Hurd, market specialist of the Oregon lon." Agricultural college extension depart vivors, all of whom declared that they use the same proportions of sand, lamp exploded in Farley's hands and (© by Georg« Matthew Adama.) saw no signs that any of the cells had gravel and cement as in the original (the entire lower floor immediately be- ment, was one of tho speakers on the Though n portable scaffold of rnnny failed under the enormous pressure mixture, so that the new work will carqe a mass of flames. Gilson, trap- program In connection with the land to which they were put when the'expand and contract the same as the ped on the second floor, leaped through show, and he stressed the value of uses can be moved on wheel« by one man, it Is held rigid when extended craft reached the extreme altitude of old concrete. Otherwise the patch will the flames to safety. Mrs. Farley and such a market In Increasing local con by two lags that replace one of the sumption of home products. [crack.—Popular Science Monthly. [the two children escaped uninjured. 6065 feet. wheel«. and Pacific North west, and Other ai a From Stand Taken on Board Policy. THE SECRET OF HAPPINESS OUR Last Name IS IT VANE? Ills name Is said to be the aame ns Fane, or nt least the two names hud the same derivation. They are said to have come from the Welsh per sonal name Fane, meaning slender. A family of tho name Fane or Vane were ancestors of the earls of Westmore land, and thia Vane or Fane family in said to have been descended from a Welshman named Howel ap Vane, of Monmouthshire, who lived and died be fore the time of William the Conqueror. The most Ihtereating p*r»on of the name Vane In thia country’s history was Hlr Henry Vane, governor of Massachusetts, tn llKPJ and 1037. He wus born In Hedlow, Kent. Englund, In 1012, so that he must have been gov ernor when only about twenty-four. Ills father wa« Sir Henry Vane, con troller of the household of Charles I of England. Sir Henry, the son. was a well educated man, having studied nt Oxford and later having traveled ex- tenslvaly. He was sent to Vienna In 1001 with the English ambassador ami later In Geneva he became a Puritan. Returning to England he found him self out of sympathy with the religious beliefs of the court party and accord ingly came to the new world to find religious freedom. He at once became prominent In af fairs and then became governor. Soon he attached himself to the faction headed by Mra. Ann Hutchins and came Into clash with the authorities, especially with Governor Winthrop, who succeeded Vano in office. He re turned to England In IMO, where be became a member of parliament. The fees of Ids office amounted to thirty thousand pounds a year. This Vane regarded ns excessive so he returned the amount to parliament. He was eventually executed t»y his political op ponents on a charge of treason. WALKER—An officer of the forest In old England who patrolled the forest on foot, walking, was called a wnlker. The name sometimes comes from tills, sometimes from a word Weuleere. An glo-Saxon for n fuller. <© by McClure Newevaper Ryndlcate ) ----------- O----------- HE YOUNG LADY I ACROSS THE WAY a the hunk on the way homo today and get her father a new checkbook ns she overheard him any ho was n little short of ready money. ((3 by McClure N«w>pap«r Hyndlcat«.) It lirui tlon 1010 ------- O--------- Is asserted by a Norwegian nnt- selentlst that a Norse expedl- vlalted the Pacific Northwest in A. D.