Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1891-194?, October 13, 1922, Page Page seven, Image 7

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    1 OfeC &C V Cii
PEARL BAHMER IS
UNDER ARREST H
RECTOR MURDER
they, approached the crabapple tree
under -which the bodies of Mr. Hall
and Mrs. Mills later were found, and
Hayes pointed to two figures beneath
the tree, exclaiming:
Mistake Is Seen.
"There they are. Now we'll fix
them."
I najes, sscnneiaer aeciarea, wnippea
j out a pistol and began to shoot,
j When the pair collapsed, Schneider
said, he went forward, struck a match
and then turned to Hayes, evclaiming:
"Great God, man, you've made a
mistake!"
The two then fled, according to the
statement.
15 Year-Old Girl Will Be
Held Upon Incorrigibility
CharaM Huanno f r Schneider declared he did not
v-narges , n earing or L-ase ! . w - . .
In Juvenile Court Is Open.
DEATH STORY DENIED
BY CLIFFORD HAYES
Lad Charged With Slaying Of
Preacher and Choir Leader!
To Have Hearing at Once.
was cut or who had laid the bodies out
under the tree, carefully adjusting
their clothing after they had been
slain.
He declared that neither he nor
his companion had touched the bodies
and they saw nothing of the love let
ters written by Mrs. Mills which were
found scattered about the scene.
TWO CONVICTS ARE
HUNTED BY POSSE
NEAR WILSONVILLE
Lovelace and Williams Who t
Escaped Penitentiary Are
Seen At Woodburn; Flight
To North Is Said Cut Off.
C. E. CONVENTION AT
GLADSTONE CONCLUDED
Clara Tate of Oregon City Is
Named President; Clarence
Baker Is Vice-President.
GUARDS STATIONED
ABOUT OREGON CITY
NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., Oct. 10.
Pearl Bahmer, the 15-year-old girl
who Raymond Schneider said Clifford
Hayes thought he was slaying, with
her stepfather, when according to
Schneider's story, Hayes fired four
bullets into the bodies of the 'Rev.
Edward Wheeler Hall and Mrs. Elean
or Reinhardt Mills was jailed today.
Pearl was not officially jailed in
connection with the Hall-Mills case.
The charge against her which she
calmly admitted was incorrigibil
ity. Prosecutor Strieker of Middle
sex county, who has been active in
the investigation of the Hall-Mills
case, appeared personally against
her. County Judge Daly departed j
from the rule of secrecy in juvenile j
cases and threw his court open, be
' cSuse he declared the people "have
a right to know why she is being put
B in jail."
NEW BRUNSWICK, N J., Oct. 10.
Clifford Hayes, 19, who was arrest
ed yesterday charged with the first
degree murder of the Rev. Edward
Wheeler Hall and his choir leader,
Mrs. Eleanor Reinhardt Mills, was
scheduled for arraignment in court
today. With his friend, Raymond
Schneider, 21, arrested as a material
witness Hayes spent the night in the
county jail.
Hayes wfis held incommunicado
while Schneider was subjected to an
other long questioning during the
night by detectives in an effort to
.obtain further details. Hayes has
steadfastly denied the allegation
made by Schneider that the double
slaying was a case of mjstaken
identity, the intended victims being
15 year old Pearl Bahmer and her
stepfather, Nicholas Bahmer.
Officials at the local prosecutor's
office said tha't .Schneider was not
mentally strong.
Bahmer took exceptiin to the
story Pearl told yesterday that he
was intoxicated on the night of the
murder. He declared that he was
perfectly sober and was sitting on his
porch when Pearl asked him to take
a walk with her. They stopped at a
store, he said, and had" ice cream.
.During their walk, Bahmer asserted.
Pearl complained to him of Schneid-"
ers attentions. He told her he had
bought a .45 caliber pistol and that
she need not worry, as he would pro
tect her.
Pearl said today she was sure
Clifford Hayes did not kill the minis
ter and Mrs. Mills.
"If they take me before the prose
cutor again," she said,"I'll tell a real
story."
Charlotte Mills, the 16 year old
daughter of the murdered woman
said.
"You will never make me believe
that Clifford Hayes shot my mother
and Mr. Hall. I know Ray Schneider,
and I don't think he has sense enough
to. do it."
She said she wanted to go away
from New Brunswick and make new
friends. She had has many pro
posals of marriage since her moth
er's death, she said, but sue turned
them down. "I am going to form a
man haters' club," she added.
Mrs. Raymond Schneider, when
seen at her home in South River
near here, said her husband had often
threatened her. She claimed he of
ten carried a gun.
BALLOT BOX REVOLT
ADVOCATED BY BORAH
MERIDIAN, Idaho, Oct. 10. Sena
tor William E. Borah demanded "a
political revolution conducted at
the ballot box" in the keynote Bpeech
of his Idaho campaign last night. He
told an audience of 500 people how
taxes in every community, every state
and the nation have leaped since 1915.
He declared the situation is making
bolshevists. He insisted that "figjit
for fiscal relief is a fight for the Amer
ican home," and urged upon the peo
ple the necessity of taking into their
own hands the instrumentalities of
power in politics." The senator laid
down this program of relief:
Add nothing to our present bur
den. Cut all .government to absolute es
sentials. '
Bring home every American sol
dier in Europe.
Reduce the army to 100,000 men.
Collect the interest on the national
debt.
Restore the excess profit law.
Pass a federal inheritance tasaw.
Give complete publicity of income
tax payments.
Establish a rural credit system bas
ed on agricultural interests and not
commercial interests.
Men Known to Have Robbed
House for Food; Tactics
Revealed to State Officers.
Bov of Nineteen
Said Slayer of
New Jersey Pair
NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., Oct. 9
Clifford Hayes, 18 years old,
admirer of Pearl Bahmer, who found
the bodies of the Rev. Edward
Wheeler- Hall and Mrs. Eleanor
Reinhardt Mills, choir singer, was ar
rested today and formally charged
with first degree murder for the slay
ings. Raymond Schneider, who was with
the Bahmer girl when the bodies
were found, was held as a material
witness. Prosecutors Beekman and
Strickler of Middlesex and Somerset
counties say Schneider signed a 300
word statement accusing Hayes of
the crime.
Main Was Trailed.
According to Schneider's state
ment, the double slaying was the
result of mistaken identity. He had
gone ""out with Hayes on the night
of the murders, he said, trailing a
man who accompanied the Bahmer
girl. Seeing a couple beneath a
crab apple " tree, he said. Hayes
opened fire.
Hayes when confronted with
Schneider as the latter retold his
story exclaimed:
"He lsr a liar."
According to Schneider, who ad
mits he is in love with the Bahmer
girl, he was standing on a street cor
ner with Hayes and Leo Kauffman.
' when they saw the girl pass with her
stepfather, Nicholas Bahmer. He was
jealous of the stepfather, he said and
when he told the others of his sus
picions they agreed to follow the pair.
They searched first through Buc
cluech -park where Kauffman left
them. Schneider and-Hayes then
proceeded to the nearby Phillips
farm. About 11 o'clock Schneider said
Sale of Booze Is
Prohibited Upon
American Ships
WASHINGTON, D. C. Oct. 6. All
vessels. American and foreign own
ed, are prohibited from having liquor
on board in American territorial wat
ers under an interpretation of the pro
hibition amendment and the enforce
ment act handed down today by the
department of justice. t
Moreover, the transportation or sale
of intoxicants on American craft,
wherever operated, was held to be
inhibited. ,
America territorial waters were con
strued to include those not only with
in the three-mile limit of continental
United States, but also those within
the same limit of the Phillippines, tha
Hawaiian islands, Porto Rico, the Vir
gin islands and Alaska. The law
would not apply in the Panama canal
zone, as that zone is specifically ex
empted by the statute itself.
So far as American ships are con
cerned, the sale or transportation of
liquor will cease at once, or as soon
as those vessels reach their home
ports. In the case of foreign ships the
decision will become operative as soon
as the necessary regulations can be
prepared and promulgated by the
treasury department.
William Lovelace and "Kid" Wil
liams, escapes from the Salem peni
tentiary, are believed to be in the
wooded section near Woodburn and
are somewhere in the territory be
tween Woodburn and Wilsonville and
the Southern Pacific main line and
the Willamette river, according to re
ports received last night by the Clack
amas county sheriffs office.
The men were seen Monday night
at a house on the outskirts of Wood
burn, which they entered and robbed.
Cooking utensils and food were taken.
The family was absent and the men
were recognized as they fled for the
brush.
The avenues vof escape are being
guarded. Three penitentiary guards
are stationed at Oregon City.
The plan of escape, according to the
story said to have been revealed by
a third member of the party who plan
ned to escape with them but did not
leave, was to ''lay out" in the brush
for about five days until the guards
had been called in and therf"make a
run for the north.
The .avenues to excape from the
north and south are completely guard
ed, the officials believe.
PORTLAND, Oct. 10. Posses have
surrounded William Lovelace and
"Kid" Williams, convicts who escaped
Saturday from a farm nea Salem, ac
cording to reports to the Portland po
lice today.
The fugitives are reported "at bay
in the vicinity of Wilsonville and
Butteville, in Northeastern Clacka
mas county.
Lovelace and Williams have been
seen by several farmers in that dis
trict. On Saturday they appeared at
the farm home of Robert Henry, three
miles south of JNewDerg, ana asiteu
for lodging.
Sunday night at 10 o'clock they
appeared at the home of Sam Gearin
in the same district and at midnight
they knocked at the window of a
Mr. Laten, living nearby,asking for
lodging.
Mrs. C. Gearin, mother of Sam Gear
in, today said the men had been in
hiding in that district since their es
cape and that the women were un
easy and hoped fheir capture would
be effected at once.
H. D. Aden of Wilsonville said the
convicts had been seen yesterday be
tween Wilsonville and West Wood
burn -
The eighth annual Christian Endea
vor Convention closed Its session at
Gladstone Sunday evening.
The meetings -were held in the
Christian church and were largely
attended by the members of the coun
ty, out of the eleven societies of the
county seven were represented. Miss
Clara Tate presided at the regular
business meeting the following of
ficers were elected: Miss Clara Tate,
Oregon ' City, president; Clarence
Barker, Gladstone, - vice president;
Miss Margaret Baker, Cckamas, sec
reta y and treasurer; Miss Thelma
Simms, Highland, educational; Sup
erintendent Gilbert Shearer, Spring
water, prayer meeting superintendent;
Miss Ethel Fisher, Milwaukie. mission
ary superintendent; Mrs. Myrtle
Skidmore, Highland, alumni superin
tendent; Miss Dorothy Phillips, jun
ior and intermediate superintendent;
Wayne Wright, Liberal social ' super
intendent; Paul Highmiller, Liberal,
"look-out" and Christian, Endeavor
World representative; Rev George E.
Williams, Gladstone, pastor advisor.
The devotional services were espec
ially inspiring, these were in charge
of Rev. H. G. Edgar of Oregon City,
Rev. E. C. Farnhanij of Portland, Rev.
Geo. E. Williams, of Gladstone, and
Rev. James A. Smith of Portland. The
theme of the convention was: "A Bet
ter Christian Endeavor."
Resolutions were passed thanking
the board of directors of the Gladstone
Christian church for the use of the
cfiurch and the members of church for
the hospitality extended to them dur
ing this convention.
STAINS REMOVED BY
SIMPLE METHODS
SUPREME COURT
GRANTS RETIAIL
IN ELWELL CASE
Ex-Postmaster Charged With
. Big-Fire at Jennings Lodge
To Have Second Hearing;
Opinion Given by McCort.
IRRIGATION PROJECTS IN
VALLEY ARE APPROVED
Irregularity of Rains Leads
To Use of Artificial Jtfeans
For Watering Farm Crops.
EXCEPTION IS TAKEN
TO JUDGE'S RULINGS
Campbell's Holdings Upon
Evidence In Support Of
Alleged Confession, Hit.
THE COOKING OF .VEGETABLES
Coca Cola King Is
Jilted By Financee
ATLANTA, Go., Oct. 10. Declaring
she had been insulted and humiliat
ed by charges that her character was
not unquestionable, Mrs. Onezima de
Bouchelle, young New Orleans beauty,
announced here today that her engage
ment to Asa G. Candler, aged Coca
Cola king, had been irrevocably brok
en Srid that she intended to resort to
legal weapons to defend her good
name.
In a long formal announcement
de Douchelle, who has been inacce
sible since announcement was mti
somme time ago of the engagement,
said that Candler himself had told her
he had heard reports that she had in
vited two men tovisit her at an At
lanta hotel several years ago. She
said he declined to name the persons
who gave him the information.
Lloyd George May
Be Forced To Face
General Election
The sooner tney are eaten after
they are gathered the more they .will
be relished. If they must be kept,
! keep them cool. Wash and wrap a
wet cloth about leafy ones. If vege
tables are wilted soak them in cold
water. If starchy'vegetables are peel
ed soak them to avoid discoloration.
Soak head vegetables in water 'to
which a little vinegar 4s added. This
will make the bugs come out, if there
are any hidden inside.
Put vegetables on to cook in boiling
water. Potatoes and starchy ones
should be covered with water, but
green and delicate ones should be
cooked in the least possible water as
the water dissolves the mineral salts
rrij robs them of flavor. Simmer
gently and let the water cook out. If
you want to drain it off save it for
vegetable soup.
Iveep starchy vegetables covered.
Delicate flavored vegetables are bet
ter if the lid is tilted during the
and niors are better if the lid is off
cooking. They will not be so strong,
and will be more nearly the natural
color. Strong vegetables line capuase
end onions are better if the lid is off
ana the gases are allowed to escape.
Io not sale vegetables until tney
are nearly done. The salt makes them
vield un their juices.
Drain vegetable" as soon as they
are done or they will become strong
or soggy.
Serve delicate vegetables as simply
as you can. The flavor of the vege
table is generally more enjoyable than
anything you can put on it.
How to remove stains from silks
and other materials successfully is
explained by Miss Emma Skinner
"Weld, instructor in household admin
istration at the Oregon Agricultural
colege. Most stain removers are al
kalies or acids and make holes in
linen and silk although they bleach
the stain.
"The main essential is to prevent
the ring forming during the process
of removing the stain," said Miss
Weld. "Even profession are not al
ways sure of being successful in re
moving stains and preventing rings."
Natural silks such as pongee and
china silks that are not weighted to
make them appear heavier, can be
washed in warm water with a mild
high grade .laundry soap to remove
light stains.
Pure grease stains on cloth may be
sponged off with chloroform, ether or
gasoline. A clean cloth pad should
be placed beneath the stain to absorb
the grease as it comes through.
Sponging with alcohol in a rotary mo
tion to avoid formation of rings will
remove grease stains frm kid s'ippers.
Soaking in sour milk is the best
remedy for ink stains, T,he commer
cial ink eradicator can be used suc
cessfully on wash -materials. Oxalic
acid is excellent to remove stains and
can be used on silks if greatly dilut
ed. Indai ink is almost impossible to
remove from cloth. However,, if
grease, crisco, or lard is put on white
wash cloth when the stain is fresh
and the c'-oth washed in kerosene or
in a thin soap paste, most of the
stain will come out. A bar of mild
soap, shaved and melted in a gallon
of water, makes" an excellent soap
paste.
C. A. El well, charged with the set
ting of the alleged incendiary fire
which two years ago burned the Jen
nings Lodge postoffice, will be given
another trial in Clackamas county.
The appeal from the decision In the
circuit court, was sustained by the
state supreme court yesterday In opin
ion written by Judge McCort. The
case was renanded for retrial.
The rulings of Circuit Judge J. U.
Campbell were reversed. It was un
derstood that -exception was taken to
the rulings of Judge Campbell touch
ing the amount of corroborative testi
mony necessary or allowable as evi
dence In a case where an alleged con
fession had been signed.
Elwell confessed to the arson charge
but later repudiated the confession
saying that it had been secured un
der duress, the officers influencing
him to sign by stating that they had
sufficient evidence against Mrs. El
well to convict her. Mrs. Elwell sus
tained permanent injuries in the fire.
The Elwell home was in the store in
which the postoffice was located. The
apartment was on the upper floor.
Elwell served a term of one year
in the Multnomah county jail after
conviction for a shortage in the gov
ernment postal funds ,at Jennings
Lodge. Official notice of the findings
of the supreme court have not been
received here.
In some parts of rural England,
when there are several babies to be
christened at the same time, the
mothers insist on the person per
forming on the girl babies first, as
otherwise when they grow up they
will develop beards!
Keep Food Covered
Food which is protected from dust
and from flies will keep much longer
than that which is exposed. It is the
action of the bacteria which brings
about spoilage, and they have a pois
onous refuse in the food they occupy.
If a mouse jumped into a dish of food,
we would see him in time to get him
out, or he would be' frightened at us,
and run for his life. Not so with the
germs which are far more dangeous
than he. The fly, which has just crawl
ed over your neighbor's garbage- pile,
or has walked through the dirt of
-the street, will climb all over the food
you are about to put into your mouth,
and he wi'.l not stop to wipe his feet
on your door mat but brins along
masses of germs clinging to the
hairs of his six legs.
This is not pleasant to talk about,
but the very revulsion of it makes it
the more deserving of consideration.
Though we may be due to "eat a
peck of dirt before we die." we do not
want to consume a bushel.
If housewives, who are the purchas
ers of food, 'would call the' attention
of the merchants to this matter when
they see food sitting uncovered,, it
would help all of us. It is a constant
temptation to the merchant to display
his wares where they will tempt the
During the months of July, August,
and September, one hundred and two
permits were issued by State Engineer
Percy A, Cupper, for the appropria
tion of water from the various streams
throughout the State of Oregon. The
permits cover the irrigation of 3185
acres of land, the development of 90
horsepower, and the use of water for
mining, municipal, domestic, and var
ious other purposes. The estimated
cost of construction work under the
permits is approximately $94,000.00.
During this period," permits to store
a total of 142 acre feet" of water in
five reservoirs were issued, the esti
mated cost of such reservoir being
$12,500.00.
Water Held Need.
Nearly half 61 the permits issued
during the'preceding quarter were for
the appropriation of water in the Wil
lamette Valley, and the coast section
of the State, which clearly indicates
that the farmer of this section are
awaking to the fct that owing to the
unequal distribution of the rainfall, it
is necessary to use water for irrigation
in order to produce the maximum
crops of which the land is capable.
In Clackamas County, permit has
been issued to Goldie L. Jones, of Es
tacada, covering the appropriation of
water from a Brancirof Clear Creek
for irrigation of seventy acres. Other
permits in this county are:
To W. F. Coleman, of Estacada, cov
ering the appropriation of water from
a branch of Currin Creek for irriga
tion of thirteen acres, at an estimated
cost of $200.00:
$1000 Spent
To R. B. Bush, of Oregon City, cov
ering the appropriation of water from
an unnamed stream for irrigation of
seventeen acres, at an estimated ex
penditure of $1000.00.
To M. G- Ellis, of Portland, covtring
the appropriation of water from John
son Creek for irrigation of a small
tract at a cost of $400.00.
To S. A. Bray, of Oregon City, for
the appropriation of water from Ab
ernathy Creek and tributaries for ir
rigation of 270 acres, at an estimat
ed expenditure of $1000.00.
To F. J. Beckhill, of Gresham, for
the appropriation of water from Wild
Cat Creek for operating a lumber
flume. Under this permit, the con
struction of six miles of ditch line is
contemplated.
BOY'S ARREST IN
RECTOR MURDER
SAID "SCREEN"
Connection of Man in High
Walk of Life Looms With
Discovery of New Clues;
Singer In Choir Scanned.
REMOVAL OF BASKET
FROM FARM PROBED
Story Told By Joy Rider.,. Is
Lead Followed by Police;
Bloodstained Paper Found.
PREMIER IS SCORED AT
ENGLISH LABOR MEET
NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., Oct. 11.
When the "smoke screen" of the
arrest of young Clifford Hayes,
charged with the murder of the Rev.
Edward Wheeler Hall and Mrs. Elea
nor Mills, clears away, it is believed
that the hand of suspicion will be
placed on the shoulder of one in a
walk of life higher than any ever trod,
by Hayes or the three others whose
arrest thus far have been the only
resvl of the murder investigation,
A story which was investigated to
night is to the effect that a promin
ent member of Hall's congregation,
who sings bass in the choir of the
church of St. John the Evangelist, of
which Hall was pastor and Mrs. Mills
a choir member, was at the scene of
the double murder on the Thursday
night of its commission. It is told
that the man, who is married, had
taken a young woman of the church
for ride; that they were interrupted
by the sounds of shots.
The man was so excited over the
occurrence -that he was unable to
go to his place of business next day.
He will be asked whether he was the
person who removed from the Phil
lips farm a blood-stained basket, in
which were some rags, also stained
with blood, and a copy of a New
ETrunswick paper, dated September 14,
the day the murdered paid left their
respective homes. The basket was
seen about 125 feet from where the
bodies were found, but disappeared
during the excitement of the day the
tragedy was discovered.
Lloyd George Is Given Little
Support In Crisis; Policy
In Near East Is Disliked.
Red Cross Workers
Ordered To Leave
For Near East Area
LONDON. Oct. 10. Lloyd George's
critics are giving hm, no peace in the
crisis. - -
Labor .today had joined a widespread
demand among opposition parties that
the premier resign. Resolutions call
ing for imlhediate resignation ' of the
government and election of a new par
liament were adopted by a joint coun
cil representing trades congresses and
the labor party.
The situation in the Near East fur
nishes a useful lever for evicting
Lloyd George, his enemies believe. In
dependent Liberals and Unionist "die
public, and it is only by cultivating ! hards" started the attack.
Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, presi
dent of the International Woman Suff
rage Alliance, has gone to Rome to
confer with the Italian suffragists on
preparations for the International Wo
man Suffrage Congress to be held
there next year.
Whether you believe in heridity or
not you must admit that a boy
whose parents can't work arithmetic
is handicapped at school."
an educated public opinion on tnis
subject that this dangerous practice
can be broken up. Some states have
laws against it, but they are not al
ways strictly enforced.
Fruit bought from stalls should be
scrupulously washed, with this fact
in mind. When set away in the cup
board, a dish should be turned over
the left-overs of food, or it should be
wrapped in the waxed papers which
come around bread loaves.
The keeper of a lighthouse in
Hawaii recently brought in a mass of
strange substance which he had found
floating in the water. It turned out to
be eighty pounds of ambergrs, worth
nearly $50,000. t
Miss Emma D. Partridge, secretary
of the Kansas State Bankers' Associ
ation, was selected as one of the rep
resentatives of that organization at
the annul convention of the American
Bankers' Association held recently in
New York City.
For fifteen years Miss Florence E.
Dillon, of Indianapolis, has specializ
ed in shorthand reporting of medical
conventions and has become so pro
ficient at it that her services are in
demand by medical associations in
many parts of the United States.
LONDON, Oct. II Predictions were
freely made today that Lloyd George
because of opposition to his Near East-.
ern policy, must face a general elec-
J tion on which will depend his future
m otnee as premier.
Political leaders of all shades of
opinion viewed as most significant the
(statement of th Dailv Chronirfe. in
nrftlnTi it wna nrf!if thai thrA !
would be a general election before
Christmas and possibly before par
liament convene in November.
The Chronicle is a government or
gan and ""ardent supporter of the
Georgian policies.
Indications were today that the pre
mier does not intend to quit in the face
of well organized opposition without
making a fight.
The premier has already accepted
the challenge of his enemies. He has
arranged a luncheon at his home Sat
urday at which time he will make a
speech in which he will answer his po
litical foes and defend his policies in
the Near East Mrs. Elsie Sellers, a colorist etnp:oy-
Newspapers that hold the confidence j e,j jn the Department of Agriculture at
of the fiery Welshman indicated that j Washington, has probably designed
he may resign, but only In order to more advertising posters for country
make an appeal to the country for fairs and agricultural conventions
support. . than any other person In America.
Accountancy is now an open profess
ion to women in England, and there
are about fifty women members of
the London Association of Account
ants today.
Mrs. Emma Fall Schofield, lawyer
and social worker, has been appointed
by the Governor of Massachusetts a
member of the State Industrial Acci
dent Board.
Before Straightening
After Straightening
Crosseyes Straightened Without
Operation or Pain
If your child is afflicted with this defect do not delay but bring it
in for a careful examination and advice.
I specialize in Advanced Optical Science and you get the benefit of
my experience in successfully treating over 100 of these difficult eases.
My method of relieving EYESTRAIN In children of school - age
produces good results after others fail entirely. You are assured care-,
ful conscientious service at reasonable cost.
PHONE 380 FOR APPOINTMENT
D. FREEZE
EYE SPECIALIST
207-8 Masonic Bldg. Oregon City, Ore.
The prime minister is not saying
anything. It is announced he will is
sue a statement on the Near East af
ter hearing directly from General Har
ington. Lloyd George's defenseof his
policies regarding the Turkish trouble
will be made In a public speech.
1 50 BREWRIES SAID TO
BE MAKING REAL STUFF
WASHINGTON, Oct. 11. Group
conferences - occupied delegates to
tlje annual convention of the Ameri-'
can Red Cross this morning to be
followed by a general session this
afternoon and a meeting at which
Chief Justice Taft will preside and
a number of prominent speakers will
be heard.
The Red Cross has cabled orders
to all of its nurses on duty in Viena,
Buddapest. Paris and Constantinople
to hasten to Athens for service in Near '
East relief operations.
Chairman Payne told the convention
that, while there would be. a joint ap
peal for funds for the Red Cross and
the Near East Relief, control of the
funds Is to vested generally in the
Red Cross.
The Red Cross is sending a com
mission to Greece which will have
complete charge of its activities in
that part of the world, the chairman
announced.
Scholarship Record
Made By Girls From
Clackamas ' County
WASHINGTON, Oct. 9. Prohibition
Commissioner Haines has launched an
intensive campaign against brewers
all over the country who are filling
or who are suspected of filling the
"cup that cheers" with more than one
half of one per cent.
Evidence has already been obtained
against 150 breweries said to be vio
lating the eighteenth amendment,
criminal informations and indictments
have been returned or have been re-
auested aeainst nearly 100. while in
junctions have been obtained against 1
- UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, Eu
gene. Oct 7. (Special). Florence Jag-
ger of Oregon City and Leah Wagner
of Wilsonville are active members of
Alpha Chi Omega sorority, which ac
cording to the scholarship jeport made
public by the Registrar of the University-
of Oregon last week, wins first
place among the campus organizations
for the eighth term.
Before it became a national sororie
ty, the organization was known as Sig
ma Delta Phi. It was chartered as a
local in 1913. It has captured first,
horors in scholarship in the Spring,
Winter and Fall terms of 1919-1920;
Spring and Winter terms of 1920-1921;
Spring, Winter and Fall terms of 1921
1922. Alpha Chi Omega is entitled to the
I permanent retention of-the silver lov-
in addition, 70 breweries have been I re.ntJ?d by the Portland Al-
actually seized and placed under fed
eral guards.
The Haines offensive against "beer
with a kick" comes as a result of a
recent conference in Washington par
ticipated in by state prohibition direct
ors from all over the country.
HOUSEKEEPING AS EXERCISE
"Exercises to reduce," and "reduce
to music," indeed; Tt is the music of
"Home, Sweet Home" to which most
of us will reduce, exercising our divine
right to keep house.
The stooping, bending, stretching,
turning, twisting, reaching, lifhting
stepping, climbing, and thousand and
one. inane things the Reduce Master
puts us through to music In the gym
nosium we can do- just as happily and
decidedly more profitably by sweeping
dusting, scrubbing, making beds,
walking down and putting a few shov
els of coal on the furnac. remounting
the stairs, answering the telephone,
umnae of Chi Omega sorority to the
woman's organization holding first
place in scholarship for a year.
Red Cross Praised
By President For
Work In Near East
WASHINGTON, Oct. 10. Presi
dent Harding," in a message of wel
come read at the initial session of
the national convention of the Ameri
can Red Cross, expressed his grati
fication at the steps being taken by
the organiztion in cooperation with
the Near East relief to aid refuges In
the Near East, -
The executive committee of the Red
Cross, prior to the assembling of the
convention, authorized John Barton
Payne, chairman of the organization
to take such steps and make such ap
propriations ior relief work ia the
clothes, brushing Ned's coat. sorUng tl &M83lU
the linen, washing , endmS th raising of the Near East
tt wVnI ." Y ' ;Z?r' r6;. urgency fund
" J "'h UW 14 1 tf, U11UU
bubbling with happiness!
It'a pretty hard to beat housekeep
ing for all-around healthy exercise.
Why go "around Robin Hood's Barn"
for physical development, when we
have housework, like the poor, always
with us?
Classified Ads
FOR SALE CHEAP 1 harness, i
light wagon, 1 horse buggy. Call
W. C. Green, Oregon City, 730 J.