• f Subscription, $1.50 the Year. LOCAL HAPPfNINGS LENTS STATION, PORTLAND, OREGON, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1923 MOUTH MOUNT TABOR REMER, VOIR PARK AND VICINITY Anxious parents and friends of Ellis Lake, Lawrence Tuttle, Ralph Holmes and Nowell Dixon, Franklin high school students, who hiked to Wahtum lake, were greatly relieved when the boys returned safe and sound late Thursday evening, Feb­ ruary 1. The boys found the trail going in, Friends of Miaa Velma Shepherd party to the children of the Sunday are expecting her to disclose a secret school last Saturday. About W chll- in fair condition, with the exception dren participated. Th«* afternoon was of a washed out bridge, as far as the some of these days. spent in games and readings. A deli­ Seven-mile shelter cabins. They spent A son was born to Mr. and Mrs. cious luncheon was served by older the night there, hitting the trail early F. L Bailey, of 3803 Sixty-sixth members. next morning. Progress was some­ st rev t, on January 30. Mr. McKay, of Sixty-ninth street, what retarded on nearing Perspira­ Master Billy Boon and Miss Urdine has sold his place and expects to tion point, where they encountered Berry were hoot and hostess at a build a modern home on Sixty-sev­ two feet of snow. From here the Valentine party Wednesday. snow gradually became deeper,, and enth street, near Division. Flora Ann Montgomery died at the the four boys, each with a 40-pound Through the united efforts of Mr. Pisgah Home last Monday. She was pack, found that their troubles had Currey, of the Rose Growers* asso ­ a pioneer of 1MM and was 73 years begun. They took note of the wonder ciation, and Mr. Kirkpatrick, of the old. public school board, the Junior Rose of the deep woods in winter; on one Rev. Bruce Evans is holding evan- occasion when they were observing club has been organized. gvlistic meetings nt the Tremont the beauty of the white silent land­ Skiing and coasting were in full United Brethren church every eve­ scape, Dixon deftly pointed out three sway Wednesday. .Men and women ning. deer, on a cannon slope. Late that left their work to mingle with their evening four very tired, wet, hungry The baby daughter of Mr. and Mrs. sons and daughters. boys tumbled into a dry comfortable Frank Sharp, of 4837 Sixtieth street, Moadamrs Shepherd, Lake and cabin on the bank of Wahtum lake. has been very IN, but ia much im­ Gray on going down Sixty-seventh The meal they had hastily prepared proved. street, near Division, found them­ that night was “the best one they Mrs. Eva laiwrence left Friday, selves floundering In a snow drift ever, etc,” so Holmes says. February 9, for Loo Angeles after a and were rescued by Mr. Leach, the Next morning, when the boya had visit with her son, Nelson, of 4910 druggist, who waa kind enough to crawled out of their blankets, and Sixtieth street. give them a lift in his automobile. straightened out stiffened muscles Mrs. Ada Jolley and Mrs. Ward Mrs. C. W. Gray attended a lunch­ sufficient to get to the door, they Swope were speakers at the W. C. eon on Thursday given by an old found a snow storm raging. It T. U. institute held at the Hope Pres­ schoolmate, Mrs. J. H. Keeley, of snowed for four days, keeping them byterian church Thursday. Gideon street. indoors. Beside the usual diversions The Welfare club* of the Millard- The united ladies’ aid society mat of a shut-in camp life, they made Avenue Presbyterian church will snowshoes, and Wednesday at the home of Mrs. themselves some hold a free dinner for the church Ixiuis Smith, Division street. ladies were delighted to find on the night and congregation Tuesday evening. present worked on house lin-n to be of the fourth day a bright clear sky. The boys left camp at 6 o’clock next Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Adama, of presented at the Easter sales. M. Thirty-sixth avenue will entertain Thomas, the president, read letters ,.;.ing on their skiis, making good friends who made a trip to Larch from the near east relief headquart­ time for the first few miles. The mountain on Labor day, at their ers, imploring help for the starving sun was melting the snow crust. home next week. Armenians. This question was post­ Lake had the job of breaking trail. Robert Valroue, who recently was poned to the next meeting, which In some places it was entirely lost. operated on for cancer, ia much im­ will be at the church the second He almost lost himself when, on making the ascent to Perspiration proved and has been removed to hia Wednesday in March. Point, he stumbled and fell 20 feet home on the corner of Fortieth ave­ At luncheon a large cake, covered into a snow drift. Here Holmes made nue and Fifty-fourth street. with pink candles, came as a sur­ good use of hia muscular training, Artie Willis, 74, died at her home, prise to Mrs. Seanor, in honor of when he rescued his companion. They 7104 Eighty-third street, on Febru­ her 24th marriage anniversary. A had a time reaching the point, ary 12. She ia survived by her hus­ siliver tea will be held at the church band, Frank James Willis, and by a on Friday, March 17, the decoration stumbling, panting, sliding, but gain­ ing slowly. brother in San Francisco. and program to be in keeping with Skiis Become Nuisance Rev. Owen T. Day, pastor of the St. Patrick's day. The ladies’ aid of the Third United 1 Emma May Howard, of 223 Fiftieth Brethren church met at Mrs. Louis 1 street died February 8 at the age Smith’s, on Division street, Wednes­ of 70. day, February 14. The men’s gospel team will have BL James Episcopal chapel at the Anabel Presbyterian church on Seventy-second street and Thirty­ February 25. seventh avenue, gsve the annual The skiia had become a nuisance Arlrta Baptist church, has been as­ There will be a collection, proceeds sisting in evangelistic meetings being going to supply needed silverware ao they discarded them and flound­ ered the remaining distance to Seven- held in the Community church of for the dining room. Monmouth during the past week, Boy Scouts, troop 21, attended last mi le camp by moonlight A half- eon, W. W. Vaughn, of thia city. Sunday morning services at Third I frozen, exhausted quartet of boys went supperleas to bed and spent a A marriage license has been United Brethren church. sleepless night, dreaming of home issued to Jess B. Sambrano of 6415 and mother. Lake spent moat of the Eighty-sixth street and Marie E. NEW BOOKS AT night applying crude remedies to React of 596 East Sixty-fifth street ARLETA LIBRARY his frozen foot Next morning they North. Hornaday, William T.—“The Minds drank a cup of coffee, the last of The Parent-Teacher association of their provisions and started on down Kellogg school is heading up a and Manners of Wild Animals." This the trail. Tuttle was determined to ia a book of personal observations movement to have the boys' and have some more breakfast, so he girls’ clubs of this destrict partici­ regarding mental traita and tem­ made a slingshot, loaded with a peraments of wild animals. It ia en ­ pate in the coming celebration in chunk of ice, and carried it in readi- honor of the opening of Foster Road. tertainingly written and full of in­ new. He did not have long to wait; formation not generally known. In place of the usual quarterly Rollins, Philip Ashton—“The Cow­ over the ridge a large black object Sunday school convention in district boy.” His characteristics, his equip­ appeared and paused. Tuttle let go No. 9, Mount Scott, a teachei train­ ment and hia part in the development the slingshot. Immediately the object ing class will he held at the Kern of the west. disappeared. The boys rushed up Park Christian church beginning Conkling, Hilda—“Shoes of the and found Linn Forest, one of a Sunday afternoon and continuing on Wind.” New and delightful verse by rescuing party sent out by the school, every evening until Saturday. the author of “Poems by a Little rubbing a huge bump on the back of The women's society of the Arleta Girl.” These poems are the dreams his head. The rest of the party soon Baptist church will hold a Washlng- of a sensitive and brilliant child, as joined them. At the Highway the rescued and ton meeting Wednesday, February delicate and colorful as the flowers, rescuers met a detail from battery 21, at 1:45 o'clock, at the home of butterflies and the ocean spray from A of the National Guards, who also Mrs. Campbell, of 7238 Whitman which they are woven. Gregory,, Lady —“Three Wonder had been sent out in search of them. avenue. A program will be given (The moving of our plant and the Plays.” and refreshments will be served. Vanden Bergh, Iaonard J.—“On weather caused us to leave this story Mrs. loema E. Vaughn died at her out of last week's issue.—Editor). the Trail of the Pigmies.” former home, 4147 Sixty-sixth street, Thia is on account of Anthro- February 12. She was 91 years old TROUBLE COMES TO pological explorations in Central MORE and has been a resident of Portland BRENDLY FAMILY Africa. for the past 14 years. Her husband, Fiction In addition to having the father of Captain W. Vaughn, was killed in Young, I Francia Brett—“The Black the famity in bed as the result of a October, 1862, in one of the battles Diamond." horse stepping on his foot and a of the civil war. She is survived by a Day, Holman—“Joan of Arc of the daughter injured as the result of The Kern Park Christian church North Woods.” being run over when she fell while will join with the other Christian Morley, Christopher—“Where the skating, more misfortune was added churches of the city on Sunday in Blue Begins.” to the lot of J. Brendly and family the observance of the anniversary of De La Mare—"Memories of a of 6809 Fifty-first avenue, when the assasination of Dr, A. L. Shelton Midget.” ' Mrs. Brendly was taken suddenly ill on the Tibetan border. The occasion Orcxy, Baroness—“Nicolette." on Tuesday. She was taken to the will be commemorated at the Sunday Abdullah, Achmed—“Alien Souls." Portland Sanitarium where she nar­ school hour and at the morning Fuller, Margaret—“One World at rowly escaped an operation. Her re­ church service talks will be given by Time.” covery was dispared of for a time, the pastor and several laymen. Dr. Douglas, O. — “Ann and Her but she is much better now. Shelton’s favorite hymn, “Tn the Mother." Sweet By and Bye," will be rendered Locke, William J.—"Tala of O1ÆON-FOY RECITAL AT by the chorus choir. An anniversary Triona.” ANABEL offering for the building and fur­ nishing of a hospital on the Tibetan WHICH SHALL WE DO? A musical program in the form It ia hoped border will be given. of a joint recital of Mrs. Fred Olson, churches throughout the that in the Quotes the Informant for Feb­ vocalist, and Miss Nettie Foy, pianist, country the offering will amount to ruary: will be held at the Anabel Presby­ 1100,000. The salesman should not cut down terian church on the evening of Mrs. W. S. Thompson’s pupils nor limit his calls, for contacts with March 7. Miss Foy was at one-time invite you to their recital, Ënter- the trade stimulate action, and if a student in Germany. In addition to tainment in the Lenta Baptist church nothing more ia gained, it 1s a vocal and piano numbers there also on February 23, at 8 o’clock. There source of knowledge of general trade will be a violinist. Further announce­ will be readings, class songs and conditions and should work to his ments will be made later. other vocal selections in addition to advantage.—William H. Holden. Concentrate on fewer customers, George Bodman, who ia working the piano numbers which will give “spice” to the program. Mr, and make fewer calls and make them on the Bull Run pipeline and who ia seldom able to return home, spent Mrs. Thompson will sing. No ad­ better.—Typothetae Bulletin. the week end with his family. Which shall we do? mission charge. Governor Sends Special Mes sage Asking Legislature to Expedite Measures. VOL. XXI, No. 7 no Interest io be collected for a period I law violators. of six years. Tbe sum of »250.000 Is The senate refused to go on record i to be appropriated tor the purpose. as favoring the release from federal Tbe Kuehn house bill prohibiting the prisons of persons convicted of viola changing of registration of party af­ tlons of the espionage act because oi filiations within 30 days preceding pri­ expressions of opinion construed tc mary elections passed thy senate. have been disloyal to the United States Tbe Cary ice cream bill, which pro­ In response to Ike request of Gover voked such a storm of protest from the nor Pierce, made in bis special mes sage to the legislature, resolutions wen Ice cream manufacturers upon its In­ Introduced In the house authorising troduction in th« house, was passed the governor to call a conference oi by tbe senate by a unanlmuos vote. governors of Washington, Idaho, Mon The Mil increases the butterfat and tana and California to consider th« solids content of ice cream. imposition of taxes on natural re Tbe senate passed house bill No. 77, sources, and the appointment of a com designed to aid in tbe enforcement ot mission of five to Investigate Irrlgatlot the prohibition laws of the stale. problems. Th« bill requires the registration of Miscellany By Autolyena When a man’s heart is in his busi­ ness, his thoughts are inclined to shape themselves along the lines of his business. When an artist looks at a face he analyses its possibili­ ties from the point of view of paint. A doctor classifies his acquaints cos according to their apparent physical disorders. A newspaperman dissects his friends in the hope of alighting upon some hidden experience which might bq turned into a story. These traits are “vocational diseases.” The best example of this kind of voca­ tional disease which I have seen for some time appears in the American Legion Weekly. It follows: Salem. — Following precedent, the legislature started on the final week ot the 40-day session with the usual jam of monished business It seems to be a habit of legislatures to put off final at-tlon on Important measures until the closing days. all distilling appurtenances with the Governor Pierce took occasion In ■ proper state and federal officials and special message delivered to both “The corresponding secretary of a makes the presence of a still, worm, bouses to call attention to the tact large business concern had been in­ mash or any of tha other equipment vited to dinner. The host asked him that after being tn aesalon for 34 days or ingredients Incident to the distilla­ to say grace, and although it was a practically none of the legislation tion or brewing of liquors prims facie n«-w experience for the secretary he recommended In hla Inaugural address was not to be found wanting. He evidence that the owner or occupant had been passed began: 'Dear Lord—We thank Thee of the premises is the owner of the The particular legislation that the For many years there was a dispo­ I for all Thy favors of recent date. tabooed paraphernalia. executive urged the legislature to ex­ sition to think of Washington as a Permit us to express our heartfelt Representative Keeney's bill, which good man, but not a great one. This gratitude. We trust that we may pedite Included the Income tax bill, was intended to place a tax on literary, view prevailed even tn this country continue to merit your confidence and the consolidation measure, the series that we shall receive many more benevolent, charitable and scientific to a very considerable extent But it _____ of taxation bills, several bills increas­ ; blessings from you in the future. Institutions when operated for com­ Is no longer held by those who are I —Amen? ” ing the tax on foreign corporations. pensation, waa killed by th* senate best informed, for Washington's great­ Irrigation measures and a bill creating through Indefinite postponement. ness is now everywhere acknowledged. The news of the latest large earth- a state market agent impossi­ nuake, which mercifully struck be- Senator Dennis’ bill which provides It would be difficult—perhaps ps tmpossi- When rhe house and senate recon­ that taxes levied in 1923 and 1»24 shall ble—to point to a more completely low the ocean, tended to show the vened Monday msrnlng all the major be 10 per cent lower than the tax col­ rounded character. «" ‘ ____ how _ „ _ greatly ____ ______ John Flake has world once more it ia measures remained to be considered lected In 192» passed the senate with shown that be was a great military indebted to the Catholic clergy (and The Income tax general tax revision, only President Upton voting against commander. Of the fine quality of particularly to the much-maligned QI ____ _______________________ _____ Washington's statesmanship there can ! Jesuits. for its scientific knowledge, consolidation of state departments, ap­ IL It applies to all tax levying bodies be no question? He was a patriot with- .th? America would propriation bills, fish bills and trrign- and excepts only money raised to pay out even the suspicion of a taint of ; J" b‘J tion and road legislation were un­ principal or interest on bonded In­ jingoism. He thought erf his country - of the qnake which disturbed the settled re / as no something arutre re 1 re cv to r.a cvczswi mrtsxiir • w* ■ . • —— debtedness heretofore contracted or to not be bragged about, ' r-» Pacific and swept the Hawaiian The measures wl which have passed pay salaries fixed by law. but to be served. | group came from the Jesuit observa­ both houses are mostly 1_ unimportant The law of service was. one may al­ tory at Georgetown university. This Education for Crippled Children. and of no great internet to the state The house, by unanimous vote, most say, the fundamental law of the observatory gave the news to the at large. During the first five weeks passed a senate bill providing for tbe life of Washington. He never sought entire press of the world. The news 205 bills were introduced in the senate educating of crippled children. Pro­ office, and never deaired It. One can was followed by confirmatory and not Imagine him suggesting—or con­ supplementary intelligence from the and 249 in the house, a total of 554 vision la made in this measure for the senting to—legislation In order to win Jesuit observatories in many other measures. Sixty-five Mlle received the setting aside in every district in which votes. The first President's moral cities. The bigots who slander the approval of both hoaxes; 15 senate one or more crippled children are en­ courage was perhaps his most striking Church are too ignorant to under­ measures and 30 from the bouse. rolled of a'“crippled children’s educa­ trait. He resisted every effort on the stand that scientific service of this sort means something. i Compremine Income Tax Bill Appears. tional fund,“ in proportion to the num­ part of politicians and people alike to A compromise Inaome tax bill has ber of such children la th* district force the nation into war with Eng­ A Bible institute missionary back been introduced tn the house- The out ot the general funds of tbe district land on the side of revolutionary from Abyssinia says that when he France. One may faintly imagine called on King Ras Rafari, servants measure provides tar a graduated rate This fund is to be employed to provide what be would have said In response brought in tea and cakes instead of on personal incomee and a flat rate for visiting teachers to be paid tor on to a suggestion that he could win champagne. The king explained that on business and corporation Incomes. the basis ot hourly teaching votes by going to war, and would lose 1 he did not want to “tempt big Amer- By the bare margin ot one vote. Rep­ them by staying out. Not often has ' ican to drink when his country had The exemptions ere similar to those provided in the federal income tax resentative Woodward's eight hour there been a more accurate character­ forbidden it.” This incident should law and the tax on personal Incomes day law for tbo lumber Industry was ization of a man than Lowell’s of remove for all time the impression that the Abyssinians are deficient in will range from one to tan per oent, passed by the house. .The bllL as Washington, “Where the lot lurks that a sense off humor. while the corporate and baslnees tax amended, provide« that the penalties gives life's foremost place,** Washing­ for violation shall not be effective un- ' ton knew: will be tour per cent.’ ALL-COLOR PHOTOPLAY A feature of this bill Is the exemp­ til similar laws are enacted by Wash­ Tst Duty's leaden casket holds tt still. BIG STEP IN FILM ART And but two ways ars offered to our will. tion granted to owners of real prop­ ington and Idaho. Toil with rare triumph, ease with safe The house of representatives decided erty. Nothing since the early experi­ di*CT*ce. cinematography, Both the Individual and the busi­ against free text books for elementary Tbo problem still for us and all of hu­ mental days of man race. when the motion picture was still ness schedule carries a right of deduc­ school children in Oregon when it He chose. as men chooee, where most regarded as unworthy of serious con­ tion covering all taxes paid other than voted to accept the majority report ot dancer showed. sideration, has attracted so much Inheritance taxes, income taxes of the the committee on education and in­ Nor ever faltered 'death the load interested attention as the making of Of petty cares, that gall great hearts the definitely postponed Representative the first feature picture play in state and taxes assessed fur local ben­ most. But kept right on the strenuous uphill colors, “The Glorious Adventure,” an efits of a kind tending to increase the Woodward’s free text book bill. road. allied producers and distributors cor­ Initiative Safeguarded. value of the property assessed. 8tron< to the end. above complaint or poration release, coming to the Blue The house voted to safeguard the It is also provided, however, that boast: Mouse theater next Saturday. further deduction of "the fair rental initiative from frauds when it passed The popular tempest oa his rock-mailed When J. Stuart Blackton an­ coast nounced that his first British pro­ value ot all real estate owned” by the the Kuehn bill with 38 ayea against Wasted Its wind-born« spray; duction would be photographed in The noisy marvel of a day; taxpayer may be mads from the gross 20 noes and Gordon and Kay absent Tbe bill as passed requires petitions Hla soul sate still In Its unstormed abode color by a special Prisma process, earning*. provided that such deduc­ specially developed for his use, there tion doe« not exceed « per cent of to be filed with county clerks and Washington was the master of him­ was general scepticism expressed as local registrars and provides that coun ­ self. In subjection only to hla con­ to the probable outcome of such an the assessed value of the property. The same deduction runs to the busi­ ty clerks shall publish notices advising science. The English historian says experiment. Although previous Prizma efforts ness schedule as well as to the indi­ the people ot the counties just where that “no nobler figure ever stood in the forefront of a nation's life.” in color photography had marked a petitions are available for signature. vidual. Mrs. Simmons’ bill to make jury Thackeray's tributes to him are fa­ striking advance on former endeavors New Consolidation Bill. in this direction, they had been ap­ duty compulsory upon women and re­ miliar. All who have studied the char­ plied only to scenics and such other A new consolidation bill was in­ acter and work of this great man move from the law the right now ex­ subjects as called for only slow troduced In the senate Saturday, bear­ agree that there was in him nothing rapiid movement in color had proved isting of claiming exemption, passed ing the names of 17 senators as joint of the self-seeker, nothing even of am­ unsuccessfuL And the processes of the house, the vote being 24 ayes and bition—except In that noble sense In authors, or enough senators to pass hand-treating film in color had never 25 noee. which all good men are ambttious. been found pleasing or satisfactory it. This bill Is said to have been The bill not only removes the ex­ Much he undoubtedly owed to the char­ in any way. tentatively approved by the governor, emption, but require« that one-half of acter with which he was born, and to So it was natural that much in- and if be really wants it the house the jury panel in Multnomah county his Inheritance, but much he also owed terest should have been felt by will undoubtedly pass the measure. must be women, and one-fourth of to discipline. He had schooled him­ everyone watching the progress of Tbe new senate bill provides for a such panel in the balance of the coun­ self to generosity In victory, patience screen art,, and the results of the state welfare eammiaaioner, state In defeat, and In that fineness of soul great experiments in the production ties. commissioner of agriculture, state cor­ which safeguarded him against the of “The Glorious Adventure” were Against the advice of the state high­ blandishments of power. His was that eagerly awaited. Many believed suc­ poration and Insurance commissioner, way commission, the house passed cess to be impossible; not a few pre­ each to receive 14000 a year. - long-breathed valor and undaunted dicted failure. But the succcesss of Graham's bill authorising the refund­ Offices of state Industrial accident will. this first application of color in ing of road bonds and use of the money Which, like his own. the day's disaster photography to a screen play has commission. Inspectors of child labor, on primary market roads. Graham's dona. been even beyond the hopes of Mr. board of conciliation, commissioner of plan is to tdsue each year for market Could, safe tn manhood, suffer and be Blackton and the Prizma scientist still. labor sn