Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1891-194?, June 01, 1917, Page PAGE 4, Image 4

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    OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE. FRIDAY. JUNF. I. 1917.
Paok 4
OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE
e. k.
PublUhtd I very friity.
BROOIC, liiXor n4 Publisher.
Eater4 tt Oroa City, Orvioit. I'cxtofflre m.-ob4 clau metier.
ufeeeriM ion Ritte:
Oee yeer l, tJ
ti Booth
Trial Hubanrlntlon. Two Uonthi
Hubariibara will find lha data of einlrmtlon itampad en thrlr peper fol
(lag ibalr nn. K Ittt payment I not credited, kindly notify u. and
tka inetter will receive our attention.
Ad'arttilng lUie on application.
SUPPORT HOOVER
Porter Emerson Browne, of the Vigilantes, says:
What makes I lerbert Clark I ioovrr a popular leader is the
adventurous quality which he can give to the humdrum bus
iness of feeding the world. It isn't only because he fed Bel
gium, but the way he did it that appeals; the way he stood
off the Germans, persuaded the pope, dodged the English.
picked up ships in unlikely ports, loaded them under the nose
of bureaucratic prohibitions, went over, around and through
the biggest war that was ever waged without once falling foul
of it. This is what appeals, the genuine American manner,
the peculiar possession of the American people.
It is perhaps because he shows signs of becoming a great
popular leader that opposition has developed in certain quar
ters.
And what bureaucrat could be blamed for quaking a little
before the swift forward rush of this young world adventurer?
Hoover facing the Boxer rebellion, holding himself the rank
of Mandarin, Hoover in South Africa. Hoover handling a
whole Russian province with as much ease as the average
man runs a farm, Hoover in Belgium any one of these pic
tures is enough to make the everlasting reputation of an av
erage man. No wonder the people feel him the representative
of their own urgent need to express the genius of Democracy
in the medium in which we as a people commonly work.
Hoover is the man who more than any other redeems us
from the common misapprehension as a people incurably ma
terial. All the old ideals make it necessary to express national
virtue in military terms, but here is a man who can put great
ness inlo the buying of a shopload of wheat, into corn and
onions and potatoes.
In appointing him Mr. Wilson has again demonstrated how
closely he is in touch with the instinctive choice of the people.
Most of the work of this war has got to be done in just such
crude materials as wheat and onions and potatoes ; most of its
victories must be won by harvesters and planters, by shipping
clerks and manufacturers of canned goods and breakfast foods.
The man who can make campaigns of that kind worth while
to the men who fight them is the man for America.
Hoover is such a man.
And Hoover is the man whom certain sinister forces in
congress and the nation are trying to push aside.
Are the American people going to let them do it?
the payment of the indemnity of the Franco -Prussian war, wil
be at German expense. Yet the ixrlrtcle and the parallr
offer a lesson to America, the latest ol Uerimtny Iocs in
arms. German progress is always calculated iim the ruin
of a rival. It may be a financial ruin, such as the Man o
Blood and Iron mediated for France in 1871 ; it may be phy
sical ruin, such as von I lindenburg now fancies himself to be
wreaking; it may be commercial ruin, such as German poll
ticians have long had in mind for England and the United
States. But it it always ruin of some sort; and it is to avert
... ' r l .1. . -. .
Hint peril from ourselves that we are now in the war. 1 his
lesson has been apjvirent to Republican statesmen since Aug
ust, 1914. The administration affected to think that hysteria
and neurotics could account for the agitation which Colone
Roosevelt then began. What the administration thinks now
is not to be said for the administration remains silent in the
hope that the country will forget much that has passed since
the war began. But the country will remember, and from
day to day the country will be reminded of the foresight of
Roosevelt and the other Republicans who tried to awake the
country from the lethargy produced by the "kept up out of
war soothing syrup. In the back of her head Germany plot
ted ruin for us in 1914, even as she is now dealing out ruin for
France.
LIBERTY BONDS PATRIOTIC AND SAFE
The patriotic nature of an investment in the Liberty Loan
Bonds of 1917 is something that all Americans will consider.
The fact that in purchasing such a bond the investor is lend
ing his money to his government to his country to prose
cute a great war, gives the investment a dignity that the ordin
1 T1 1 . t I
ary investment does not possess. 1 he uses to which the mo
ney is to be put, the noble purposes to which it is to be devoted,
all are things which appeal more or less to the American heart.
But let no one be led by these considerations to look on buy
ing a Liberty Loan Bond as a piece of benevolence or merely
a contribution to a worthy cause. The Liberty Loan Bond
is as good an investment as an American citizen can well
make. The rate of interest it bears may seem small, but when
its absolute safety is considered and the fact that it is non-taxable,
and the further fact that it is to be immune from any
taxes which may later on be levied by reason of this war, and
still another fact that in case the United States government
should later during this war have to borrow more money an4
pay a higher rate of interest, that the holders of these bonds
can secure bonds bearing that higher rate when all these
things are considered, an investment in Liberty Bonds pos
sesses advantages that no other investment in the world pos
sesses. There is another point which wise and thoughtful people
will give due consideration to and that is an investment in
Liberty Loan Bonds is an investment in the defense and pres
ervation of all their other property and all they hold dear the
preservation of their liberties. We would be in danger, if all
our citizens refused to lend their money to the government,
of losing all that we have our property, our liberties, and our
national honor. It has come to this, and we must fight for
these things, and to wage war in this day and time requires
not only men and arms but great sums of money.
Subscribers to Liberty Loan Bonds are charter members
of a society to maintain American honor and to maintain dem
ocrary here and in other parts of the world. Honor and inter
est, patriotism and business judgment all argue the wisdom of
an investment in Liberty Loan Bonds.
CONSTITUTIONAL REPEAL, BY IMPLICATION
Ballot title number 306 on June 4 demands a constitution
establishing definite and consistent plan of government; a
constitution that means what its language implies, and when
amended that the amended constitution shall still mean what
it says. Such is the sum total of this much criticised amend
ment.
Ihe opposition to this amendment insists on the right to
change the constitution but they rebell against the rule that
when the plan is changed the language should also be changed
to conform with the new plan. They insist on adding to the
constitution, but they refuse to take out of the constitution
the parts which they repeal, and they urge as the sacred right
of the people, to always tell what they wish to add, but never
explain what they repeal and destroy. ,
With their pretense of progressiveness, and their tender
regard for the rights of the people, all their sympathy is ex
hausted in one direction and that is, that it is none of the peo
ple s business how much or what parts of the constitution is
rendered ineffective or misleading. There is no basis for their
asertion that the initiative, the referendum, the recall, or city
home rule amendments could not be passed under this amend-
mnt, because those measures simply added new power to the
constitution and did not repeal by implication: neither is this
amendment designed to prevent future amendments to the
constitution, but it is designed to let the people know just
what is being done in the way of repealing parts of the con
stitution, and is intended to preserve that instrument in such
condition that it will not deceive the people by statng things
which were, but have ceased to be. If this amendment wins
the people will not be mislead to violate the constitution and
be called into court to be told that they are led by a dead hand,
which has been lifeless for years. Read the negative argu
ment of these cultured objectors to the amendment, and find
their solicitude about "the dead," while they defend the plan
of keeping the constitution filled with repealed mummies
which they persist in preserving, knowing they deceive and
mislead the people.
Fifty Years Ago
THE DAY OF RECKONING
In 1871 Bismarck imposed a startling indemnity upon van
quished France, believing that it would be a generation before
it could be paid and that in the meantime French development
would be thwarted by the burden of debt. In an incredibly
short time, however, the thrifty French had wiped out the
debt and had resumed their preparation against the "revanche"
for the rape of Alsace and Lorraine. Today von Hindenburg
is trying the same game from another angle. He is deliber
ately devastating northern France in his retreat from one fa
bled "line" to another in the hope that the recreation of the
ruin he had wrought will this time surely stifle French devel
opment. He will fail as utterly as Bismarck did in the calcula
tions of a generation gone. The rebuilding of France, unlike
LOOKING TOWARD PEACE
There is reason for encouragment in the many evidences
of an aroused interest in the tariff question. Some newspa
pers and individuals who were disposed a few months ago to
deplore discussion of this question are now commenting upon
the importance of preparing for peace to the extent, at least,
of placing once more on the statute books a tariff law drawn
upon protective principles. Such a law could do no harm and
would very likely do much good. The American people are
paying heavy taxes anyway, and even if they paid all the
import duties, which is not at all probable, they would be no
worse off. On the other hand, if we had a protective tariff
law in force when the war ends, we would be safe against un
expected competition in trade.
When the war began, Germany transformed her dyestuffs
factories into munitions factories. She can just as readily
change them back to dye factories. And she will. It will take
months to draw and enact a tariff law. If that work shall be
left until the war has ended and until the Democratic leaders
can carry out their announced intention of ascertaining what
conditions will then exist, there will be ample time for Ger
many to dump immense quantities of dyes into our markets
to the ruin of the dye industry we have begun to establish
here.
The same thing will be true of other industries in which
Germany has been a strong competitor in our markets in the
past. Enactment of a protective tariff law now is the only
safe policy for the United States to pursue. Many people are
awakening to that fact, and it is well for the country that they
are.
(JARDKN MAKERS
orn:m:n imuks
BY PAPER MILL
A cardan mntn (or employe of
lha 'run Wlllemnlle I'eper company
h been arraniffil and Hica an
tiounrrd fur lha brl alnlrr vegnla
bin, lha bet polelne and the beet
rrn quantity of potato raWod tin
trail of lha company' ground near
lha HuiiifI at luxd In Waal I. Inn.
Tnle acre of land haa been ml
tide for lha gardnti and lha land
a III lia given out In amtloll 10 by
WO feet. Al lha and of lha leaann,
almul lha flrat of November or I Mr em
ber, lha prlie will da awarded a fol
loat:
Cla A - For be garden or winter
vegetable: flrl rUi, 1:5; eei'mid
rlia. :0; third rli, 15; fourth
prlie, t).
t'l II - For lha large! rrtip of po
tato: Klrat prlie, J!S; sevond prim,
lis.
(la V - For lha targe! average
quantity of potatoes rlnd on Ihn
patch per aUri yard of ground:
Flral prlia. $15; enennd prlie, f IS.
Why a New Penitentiary?
Iy Frank lcy, Chief I'llmui AccouiiUiil.
Taken from th Oregon Enterprise,
May ?, 1H67.
Stltct School Wr ur ple.ntc.l to
Mute Hint Ml Jole llcvnre ,i n l Mint
Flora llney huw upcue.1 a ! i t
hiHi' M the 1'ni t l-t i Imp h. M l
Vore In a gr.Klu.it.- of the Portland
Ac.dcmy and Kemalc a.'iulii.iry. und
conic highly rivoumirtnli'd iy Profc
or tlntc
Indian War In Montana-Our worm
fear haw been rcallnd In rcg.ird to
Montana. A terrible Indian ar I
now raging In that territory. Thu
per from Hum ur. 1111. -d with uc
count of murdering nud c.ilp!i.g Our
frleudu In Idaho und WuahliiKtnn ler
rltory will do cll to nolo the fm t thu!
I In- illitx.ttUf.'t-iton niuoiiK tlio Indium
I fearfully extending ilardk
Worth A PriieJ. II. St hratn. the
anddlo nnd harm-it mukcr of till til),
h lurgcly completed two pair of
rt'lna from olio It !!. tha loncM ol
whli h incn.tiiri'd Iwi'lvH ftt-t In li'iintli.
Sin h a hit I rarely turn. Tlu hltlo
u drcNittl ut tlio Mllwaukltt lannrry
Clackami County Bible Aiioclatlon
On Monday ru'iiliK lant n tnrrtlng
wit held In tin' tlly at tho M. K.
Iiunli. nud nn uamx lalloii u nliovo
nuiiit'd ormmlzi'd with the following
olfkfrit. J. Mjfri. iirfldi-tit; William
Harlow, It tprritlilfnt . J. M, Harntl,
arrretury; S. 1). rranrt'H, IrraMiirrr;
Mi't-ulUo roinmlttfo, II. U Krl'y. l
" l.iiT.v, J. Milne, Jeplliii May. K. I.
Kelly, together with t ho treamirer und
eeret nry.
Tim appeal lit Ihn poopln of Oregon
for lha I'leillon of new pllnoll litllld
Ing h mi aelflidi or iiiiiiiolloui4lile
purptuia behind It. II doa mil proemd
from pemoiial pride or aallnfat llmi on
thu pari of any ieroti mi lila own
i'ouiiI. The iiirii-i-r of the prlnoli ran
fill their plate and do their work In
a pi rfuiii lory though lawful manner
n giirdli' of Ihn rhnrat ler . of the
lllll.lll!. i-ell or other rolivelllelire
Highly per rent or more of lha prl
oner now hern will bn away from hern
befora any part of a new prlmin ran bn
liillll, lieiit n It I apparent thai neither
primmer nor nlfleer I thinking of l!ie
ilirei I efti'i t In lilmi.elf or the npproul
or rejection by the people of Ihn pro
oanl nhmlttcd by Ihn legla'alure for
a new penitent lury.
There urn plenty nf other rcanolin
jhiwetcr. that uliould Influence Ihn In
formed mind In coimlilerullng the prop
oalllon, and there la no iiiliul o well
Informed III the preinlae n nun thai
hat lift II In cutilai t Willi cilHtlng roll
tliilon and Mudylng the eldi u a
tin ) urn and n they oiikIiI to be. Thai
I why prUoncr nnd oiriclul nre In
full Mi-ford III rot oiiullni; und allow,
lilt! In Ihn public the lieceaally for tl
new inilliliiig A few of the prominent
renaon may lia not I:
Oanyer from Fir.
Hie liillilln, and office are no
win-re fireproof and a laitatloii (mm
lire would menu not only the toaa of
liulliltiiK hut of nil the a!u.ilile r -
ortli of Ihe luMltiit'nn, lm Imllng the
Icral itiH'umi'iilft nulhurl'liig the rctrii
Hon of Ihe prlanm ra. Worm than ull
Hi l. nil. HiM a fire incur In the main
ndmlulatmtlon department, Ihe lle
of all the Inuiaten would le eiiihuiK
end und many would he neceaaarlly
a u rlflccd. ait wllli it M v rapid aprcud i I
flume, the men would lm trapped In
their celln mill If not actually burned
would be auffiKiited. Thern la an much
of wood In fltmr. celling, partition.
tiilrwnya. etc., that with any great
start, a fire would be practltully Irre
!atllile.
Inaacurlty of Structure
The main walla are oer 15 year
old. Hrlck unit mortar have deteri
orated, lime lived their ulloled time
und are n con. .t. in; t. u.tatlon lo men
to iIIk (heir way out. In fact. Ihe
wall nre no udetiuate protection a'
ull. The limber throughout thu build
ing lire nffected by dry rot ; they nr.
decayed und wnrtlilci.it throughout, be
liiK effective only a breeding and hid
ing plate for inacct. vermin nnd ill a
eaao cerm. The underground cellar
In which vegetable und other aup
pile are kept am hotbed of polaonuu
atmoaphcrn which pcrineute the en
tire living quarter of the Inmate.
Tin; electric lighting und telephone
i Htt in throughout Ihn entire Inatltu
tloii I faulty In arrangement und roil
Htriittlon. Iloth urn unreliable and
out of order It great thai of the llinu
und cull for n-p.ilrn all of the time.
Thl condition cannot he helped n lit II
new- building lire erected In which
the wiring Hystem can he ncleiitlfleully
'J
arntiigetl Thl I a mailer of ery
aerlou I'oiialdcralliiu
Htalth Comlantly Menaced.
'Ihn building were t oiialrin led
when teulllatloil wu little thought of
III building of uny Und. and In pi nl
leiitlarle or Julia, tml lit all Thern
I no adiiuula Iiunli for Ihe etlt of
foul air or lh lugreaa of fn ah air, Thn
latter I admitted Ihioiigh window
and rein he thn iell nt roat a wide
corridor, but Hide I ' circulation
through Ihn t ella, and In order to haa
iiffleltiit air lo In tl ro mUlctim, thn
corridor, cell mid puaaagn wa am
an nipoaed during told lilcliH lo be
atiaolutcly duiiKcroii lo health and
liiiiny poor vlcllma hatn contracted
illaeaae thai hum made their lite
lulnerahln. Thl I true of guar. la a
well a prlaonera, aniiie of the ainuiM
eat, liculthlcat tuuployea being unable
lo ciinlliiue in night rlinpi'l guard
inure than a few month
Entire Cell 8ytm Wrong.
Thn lnaliln cell )alelu, whlili e
lata here, I loliilllli'd by nil modern
niithorllle lo ho wrong Tim till
r It 1 1 1 1 I bn directly etpmntl lo pure
out aide air mid face on nil Inaltle pa
ngn way. Whcli burred nnd Incited
cell are uai'il there ahoilld bn hut one
innn In a cell, mi arrangement unt pa
albln hern at preaeiil. The moral reu
on for aegregatloll I obtloua.
For IruMlea. the ntuff, barred cell
at IiIkIiI I iiiirenmiialile, iiiiuei eaanrr
and ii n lite Thn innn who work out
diMir n'l day, without guard, lining hi
duly freely, doe lint ileaervn lo be
locked up ull night without tentlln
Hon or ufflt lent air. lairgn open
rntini containing all or elcht alngle
In it niul fronting on a punaugn way
for gunrda la far pieferablti mill that
I one of tho plana of thn prnitiaed
atructure
Dollar va. Humanity.
For what I Ihn HuO.nOii luieatmeiit
deiiimidiMlT l-trat, for luntcilal afetv
and for Improvement dictated by ordi
nary bualnna innlhotl; aecmiil, for thn
phyalcal health of the liiinulea, unfor
tiiiiute who through arloua cauae
liavn been connl-nnd lo Ihe at.lt e cum
for certain period; und third unl
mnat linpnrtaiit. for the moral health
of thean people, an that they may be
returned to aoclety In Ihe beat pimalhlo
condition to take pint e of uncfultiea
In their reapectlvn walk of life.
I not an Itiveaiment for the better
ment of men-an Inveatnieiil In humuii
Riiiila worth while? There will pml
nbly nlwiiy bo loinii derelict upon
(lie dca. of life who will require the
cr.rp of thn atate for the better aaf. ty
of Biiclety, hut there I no -.nni renaoll
why rven thoan ahoulit not bn treated
nnd houaetl a human being, or that
their phyalcnl nnd moral atrmturea
ahoilld bn deliberately unit peralleiit.
ly expoaed and enilailKered,
If thn Oregon peopln ilealrn to have
offender reformed mid brought hack
to iiaefulnea they mnat provldii mean i
und Buroriindliig fniiiluclve to (hut
end, llarluirlc treiitmeiit Ihih been
rondemncd mid dlacardid. All other
feature nlllcd to It mnat be iiIho pIIiiiI-Hilled.
Kepre,e,a..vc of the Hnw.ey Pu.p DONATION LAND
Taper company the ( rown Willam
ette Ihmt company und tho Oregon fl ATT TC Tl L T 1
tv Maniifactiir ni! comtian v. nt u
meetliiB In the Commercliil club room J( 0 IV 05 YEARS
r i iuti eveoillK lirrnogeu leiuaiivu
plans for a "Mlllinen' Juhlloo" tu ho
held nt (i'nd.ttoni! I'nrk, July 4.
The 1 Jubilee" will take tho form of
n picnic to bn held from 7 o'clock on
thn ninniliiir of tho Fourth until 9
o'clock tit night. MiiiIc will bo fur-
nlhhod by tho Oregon City Hoys' band,
for both tho concert lo bo given tintl
for (lancing.
CotnnilttepH appointed rdny night,
to complete iirraiiKomontH, follow:
Dunclim, Milton Price, KurncHt Miihh,
Jr, Mr. Hanimerln; bull guinea, Joe
liolllo, Fred Metznor, II, HcnnlnnHon:
mioaker, II. T. THchlrgl, II. Ilcnnlni;
flnn sind Joe Holllo; vaudeville, J.
Itenmes, E, Chapman, I!. I.. Ilnrvcy.
DENMARK COMMANDEERS GRAIN
The United States Consul General at Copenhagen reports
that the Minister of the Interior has issued an order to the
government's agents to take possession of all supplies of rye
and wheat now in Denmark. Every person engaged in the
growing of wheat or rye will be allowed to retain 1 35 pounds
of grain for private use. The maximum price to be allowed
each holder of wheat will be $1.83 a bushel; of rye, about
$1.50. Henceforth, if rye or wheat go to Germany from
Denmark it will constitute an act to which the Danish govern
ment is a party and for which that government must stand
responsible. An agreement has been reached between the
allies and the United States by which neutral European coun
tries may receive from this country foodstuffs, etc., sufficient
only for their own consumption. The practice of supplying
Germany with goods purchased from us is to be stopped. '
YOUNG SLACKERS
BY SCORE CROSS
MEXICAN LINE
LAREDO, Tex., May 30. Fedoral of
ficials hero today (IIhcIohoJ the fuct
that from 15 to 20 young Americans
with llttlo baggago but carrying plon
ty of monoy, are croflning Into Moxl
co dully, oHtonnlbly to mine, prospect
for oil or pursue othor ocpupatlons for
which thoy are apparently not tralnod.
It Is believed by officials that they are
leaving the United States to avoid con
scription. Most of the young men are from the
eastern slates, some being from points
as fur east as Maine and Now Hump-shire.
CONVICTS GIVE
LARGE SUMS FOR
LIBERTY BONDS
WASHINGTON, May 30. Prisoners
at the Maryland penitentiary have
bought $2150 worth of Liberty loan
bonds with savings from their small
wage allowances. One man serving
a long term spent $250 of the $278 to
his credit.
A former West Virginia train robber
put all but a few dollars of bis savings
into bonds.
Mr. und Mr. J. J. Cooke, who liuvo
been nt KiiKcnn, where they attended
the convention of tho I. O. O- K. and
Itebekah lodge, have returned to Ore
gon City, While at Kugeno Mr, und
Mr. Cooke visited with Mr. und Mr.
Frunk McAllliitor. iiIho with C. V
Walker, uncle of Mr. Cooke. Mr. Walk
or I olio of thu curliest of Oregon pio
neers, and Htlll retain TOO acre of
land, In a donation la ml claim secured
In 1X51! when ho urrlved from Missouri
This is one of the most valuable
pieces of fun n land In Limn county
nnd Is stocked with over 100 head of
cuttle, busliles a largo number of vulu
nldo horses. CIoho to this Is nnolhor
furm owned by Mr. Walker consisting
of HiO ncres, moHt of this being planted
to fruit trees. Although Mr. ' Walker
has reached his 87th birthday anniver
sary, he manages his furm und still
enjoys horseback riding, and says that
ho fools many years younger than he
really Is. Ills large barn Is still lilted
with hay, thin lining produced on tills
furm, and strange to say thoro Is one
portion of hay In this barn that has
remained In tho sumo place, for .'10
ye:irs. Mr. Walker dcllghls In show
ing thlB to his vixitors at his furm, and
ns thoro Is always a l.ii'co supply on
hnnd, It hus never been so that this
liny that was placed there !I0 yearH
ugo has to he used for thn stock. Manv
Improvements that huve boon miiile in
this barn, are thn handiwork of this
old pioneer. Mr. Walker has ever?
thing up-to-date on his farm, oven own
ing nn automobile, nnd snys that he
believes In enjoying life while he can
IN ILLUSTRATED IK
Graphically describing the unsani
tary conditions oxlstlng In tho Oregon
stnto ponltontlnry, L. 0. McDonald, for
more thun four years an Inmuto of the
Institution, hold nn audlonce spell
bound nt tho high school auditorium
Tuesday night, nnd urged his honrers
to cast tholr votos in favor of tho ap
propriation for ft new ponltontlary. Tho
question will bo on tho ballot at tho
special election In Juno.
Mr. McDonald Illustrated his talk
with picture of the ponltontlnry, show
ing tho obsolete buildings that wore
constructed In 1871. Ho told of tho
dnriKors from flro at the Institution,
and said that tho chancos wore right
for tho death of ovory lnmnto of tho
colls should a fire break out at night,
when tho men were locked up with
slnglo padlocks.
Illustrations of the shops, kitchon,
dining room, chnpol, roll houses, und
hospital wore glvon by McDonald, who
whb Introduced by E. E. Jlrodio, A mom
bor of tho survey board ppolnted last
Novombor by tho governor to mako an
Investigation of tho ponltontlnry.
SEATTLE MAN IS HELD
PORTLANDER TRY8 FOR RECORD
ALAMEDA, Cal., May 30. Norman
Ross, formerly of Portland, Oregon,
champion swlmmor, today hopes to
lower Ted Burns' time of C6 4-5 sec
onds by the 75 backstroke when he
swims at Neptune beach. Time also
will be taken at the 60-yard mark, Ross
also having hopes of lowering Duke
Kahanamoku's record for that distance.
WASHINGTON, May 30. A list of
all known American prisoners of war
lm Germany made public today by tho
state department contains the names
of 71 men, all of whom wero taken
from morchnnt ships captured by
German war yeBsols. The list Inclmlos
the following names and add rosso:
At Dulmen: Easter, Ijwis, 22
Itounoko streot, Soattlo Wash.; Phil
lips, Paul, Mrs. M. Phillips, 151 South
Fulro.iks avonue, Pasadena, Cal.; Saw
yer, John, Mrs. J. Sawyer, 305 Semin
ary street, Dubuque, la.'