Qi aSSV"0 TITEiNT EKFKibt,, tKiDAxDECEMBR 29. 1922. I. 1 HIGHWAY BODY ViLL CONSIDER RELIEF WORK Willamette News Provided the governor-elect and the legislature guarantee their action will be legalized, the state highway commission -will take up on December 29 the building of the Columbia high way through the burned area of As toria. This and the approach, to the city will amount to about $250,000. It now depends on Astoria whether it can obtain from Walter M. Pierce, governor-elect, and a majority ol the! legislators, promises to sanction the Willamette Bends greetings and congratulations to Queen Harriet and her maid of honor. Willamette and West Linn were loyal to their candi date Miss Vena Barnes, and she is to be congratulated on the splendid run she made- On Wednesday evening of last week a basket social and a dance was giv en in the West Linn Inn annex and the sum of $70 was raised which was contributed to the campaign to elect Vena Barnes queen of the dedication services on December 28 when the new bridge connecting West Linn and Oregon City will be formally opened to vehicle traffic After the baskets finnrea t hn finmrnlnvinn "WitTimi sal WPro nnntionfill riff to thA TilerhABf- nfI- pecial law covering this matter, the ders an informal dance was given. As I UI lr leuuJ " uregon i.ity on tounaay. ging camp rturned to his home in Willamette last Saturday. Miss Harriet Snidow, -a senior at the Oregon . Agricultural College ar rived in Willamette Saturday to spend the Christmas holidays at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. G- L. Sni dow. The Rev. Dr. Leach or Salem, who is district superintendent of the Eastern Conference, preachd a very interesting sermon at the Methodist church in Willamette on Sunday morning. Among those from Willamette, who shopped in Portland on Saturday were Mrs. Dibblee, Elsie Fellows, Mrs. Mc Lean, Mrs. H. Leisman and . Mary Leisman. " Mrs. H. W. Greaves and daughter. Lydia Gertrude, visited at the home RETAILERS' Trade Is Subject of Thoro Investigation; BUSINESS Of All Classification Is Now Declared to Be INCREASING. By Robert E. Smith- commissions cannot proceed. To ex- a social affair it was much enjoyed pedite the work of reconstruction in Astoria and give" it a paved thorough fare through the devastated area, the commission has agreed- to hold and adjourned meeting December 29. This gives two weeks for Astoria to act. In the opinion of the highway com mission, the paved way in the burn ed district should be 80 feet in width. The route selected is Commercial street. Pursuant to a petition from Astorr ia representatives, the commission sent Herbert iNunn, state highway en gineer, to Astoria to study the situ ation and make a- report. The re port shows that the highway in the burned district is 2150 feet. To build retaining walls of concrete and pave this will cost about $175,000. The commission is prepared to undertake this, if authority is guaranteed, and to finish the grade and pave the high- and all united in giving their very best wishes to Miss Barnes. Mrs. H. W. Greaves spent Monday shopping in anticipation of the Christ mas holidays: A new Edison phonograph was pur chased last week by Florence Fro mong. The machine is one of the new models and is being much en joyed by the Fromong family. Mrs. George Batdorf was an Albany visitor from Thursday until Sunday of last week visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Batdorf. I Mr. and Mrs. Albert Aaamson were the guests of relatives in Portland last Wednesday evening when they attended the circus given by the Shriners at the public auditorium. Helen wallis was ill and out of school on Monday and Tuesday of last week. Miss Wallis is a senior at the way at the east approach to the city, j Union High school. This will cost approximately $70,0001 If it should be desired to carry the highway work from the east approach, through the destroyed section and around to Young's bay, the undertak ' ing would involve, roughly, $500,000. The commission favors completing the east approach and building the highway, 80 feet in width, through the burned area, as the immediate step. Having announced its willing ness to proceed, if the proper assur-j ances are given, the commission now 1 marks time for a fortnight. Under the present law the commis sion is inhibited from building and paving a highway through a town of more than 2500 population, nig is the main, stumbling block whiob must be removed by the legislator and Mr. Pierce. i Under the resolution of A W. Nor- blad in the senate in 1921, the com- mission was directed to make a re port at the 1923 session as to the feasibility and approximate cost of building a bridge across the Columbia river as near the mouth as practica ble. This report is now in process of compilation. The government will in sist on such a structure being 150 feet above the water, and no draw allowed. On the lower river such a bridge would cost about $4,000,000 and there is no money in sight for such an undertaking. Work on The Dalles-California high- lay, in Deschutes county, from a n ranch. to .raunna crees, was or dered nreDared for advertising. Tb'.s t section has been held up almost two years by the possibility of the Ben ham falls reservoir becoming a real ity. As there is now no immediate prospect of this project being built, the commission yesterday decided to go ahead with the construction of the highway. . The grading and rocking will be advertised for the January or February meeting. Replying to the petition of Baker people for changing the location of the Old Oregon Trail so that it will not bs in the way of the North Pow-j der irrigation reservoir, the commis sion announced that the change in the road will be made at the cost of the state when the project is ready to pro ceed. The estimated cost for the change is about $25,000. Engineers were directed to prepare as a federal aid project the Tygh val ley section of The Dalles-California highway. This is about 12 miles in length. An additional location was also made for the Sherman . highway from Grass Valley to the school house near Criterion. N FEDERAL BOOZE RAID WASHINGTON, Dec. 21 Swooping down upon. a fashionable apartment ioP. street here today, police and government agents arrested two young men whom they accuse of being boot leggers to a considerable section of Washington's social and official set. Twenty-five . "gallons of alcohol which was being manufactured into synthetic gin in the apartment and an "address book" containing names cl some members of congress and prominent Wa&hingtonians were among the seisures. The men arrested were "booked at police headquarters as Raymond Gray, 28, a broker, and Ronal Hendley Irvin, 28, an engineer. Within a short time after their arrest a number of Wash ington attorneys were endeavoring to secure their release. The police declined to. make public the names of the "client list," but among them, the police declared, were a number of congressmen, officials of the government and socially promi nent persons. Occupants of the apartment house, aroused by the arrests, assisted the g.) ornment agent3 to carry out -he u.'r. Inr of littles in the apa t -. t When the arrests' were made 15 bot tles had been filled with the gin and properly labelled. Other bottles were in process of being filled. One of the government agents is said to have appeared at the apart- j nient house in the guise of a customer. I Gray and Irvin were later released after each gave $1500 bqnd. Oregon City Couple Get License to Wed A marriage license was issued Thursday to Harris T. Duit and Eliz abeth Jennicks, both of this city. George Elligsen has been ill for the past week suffering with an attack of appendicitis. Dr. Silverman is the attending physician. Mrs. John Wilkens of Willamette, who underwent an operation about ten days ago for appendicitis, under went another surgical operation last Wednesday for the removal of gall stones. She is gaining strength slow ly. Mrs. Amy Bersie and sons purchas ed a Columbia graphanola last week which they are enjoying immensely. George Batdorf was ill last week and confined to his room. As the result of an explosion of a coal oil stove the Trut residence was burned to the ground on Thurs day evening. The house , was a six room structure located on acreage near town. Frank Truit, who is at tending school tried to start the fire before the arrival of his father. Only a dresser and a trunk were saved al though the fire department responded to the call. Mrs. Truit was expected home for the Christmas holidays. Although snow fell and the day might have been called dismal a so cial time was enjoyed at the home of Mrs. Wesley Milliken on 'Four teenth street on Thursday when friends gathered at her home about eleven o'clock with well laden baskets and at twelve o'clock a pot luck din ner wag served. In the afternoon Christmas gifts were exchanged be tween those present and the children present were given favors from a large Christmas tree. Those present were Mrs. Ida Peter, Mrs. H. Leisman, Mrs. Niel Whitney and son, Allen, Mrs. John Rauch and son, Lynn, Mrs. Robert Toung and daughter, Lillian, Mrs. Albert Buckles and daughter, Betty, Mrs. Harold White, Mrs. John Casey and daughter, Mary Jane, Mrs. John Ream, Jr., and son, Kenneth, Mrs. Frank Shipley, Mrs. Ewald Leis man and children, Richard, Marshall and Lorraine, Mrs. Joe Schauble and daughter, Dorothy, Mrs. Denton and son, Riley, and Mrs. Milliken and chil dren. Mrs. E. A. Leighton has been very ill at her home in Willamette suffer ing from the effects of-a carbuncle. Dr. Silverman, local physician, is in attendance. Miss Vena Barnes spent Saturday of last week shopping in Portland and in the evening attended the theater. Charles Gale of Portland purchased the property owned by Mr. Overton on Main street between Thirteenth and Fourteenth streets in the business dis trict of Willamette. Mr Gale is Mrs. Peery's father. Willamette was represented in Portland on Monday when Mr. Peery. local druggist, made a business trip to the city. Wayne, the small son of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Larsen, who has been very in at the family home on. railroad avenue is improving slowly. wiabel Larsen spent Saturday of last week shopping in Portland. An out of town visitor at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Bert Barnes was Ken neth Austin of Albany, who was a guest of Terry Barnes from Thursday until Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Overton and family moved Monday from -their- property on main stret, which they recently sold to Mr. Gale of Portland, into the M. R. Snidow residence on Fourteenth street. An Oak Grove visitor at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Josiah Martin on Sun day was George Martin, son of Mr. Martin. . Alice Beardsley has been suffering with a large boil on her upper lip and was out of school the first of the' week. The men of the Fraternal Brother hood lodge entertained the ladies of the lodge last Tuesday evening. Mov ing pictures were shown, after which a dance was given. In spite of the cold a good crowd attended and all enjoyed the social evening. At the Parent-Teachers' meeting, which was held last Friday afternoon in the school house it was decided that the association would furnish hot soup 'and cocoa to the Willamette school children this winter. An elec tric stove has been installed in the basement and each day two members of the Parent-Teachers association will make the hot soup and serve the children at the noon hour. Mrs. M. J. Brown is president of . the association which has accomplished much good in Willamette. Sunday visitors at the home of Mrs. S. E. Adcock were Mr. and Mrs. John Gerber and Joseph Gerber and son, Francis and Oris of Portland. Clara Bartholomew fell on the slip pery pavement last week and sprain ed her left wrist The injury has been very painful but Miss Barthol emew has kept on with her work. She is employed in the Price Bros, depart ment store of Oregon City. Dale Skinner returned last .week from St. Helens where he has been employed as a civil engineer. Owing to the bad weather Mr. Skinner will not return to St. Helens for a few weeks. Josiah Martin, who has been ser iously HI at his home is much improv ed in health. Miss Harriet Snidow and her moth er, Mrs. G. L. Snidow were the guests of the latter"s mother, Mrs. Roman, at her home in Mt .Pleasant on Sunday. Mrs. Roy Bartholomew ha9 been 111 at her home on Eleventh street for several days. Mrs. Montgomery Is much improved in health and. Monday spent the day shopping .In Portland The Misses Ruth Miller and Jessie Babcock of Willamette accompanied by the Misses Mildred and Bertha McKillican of Bolton enjoyed" a hike and coasting on Sunday. Eunice Carlson and her brother, Marion Carlson were Portland visit ors on Sunday at the home of relatives. President Lumbermen's Trust pany, Portland, Oregon Com- FIRST JAIL BREAK IS SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 21. Wil liam J. Huff, 25, held ia the civy Jail on seven charges of burglary, es caped early today in the first jail break in the history of the institution. Huff pried the bars of his jail cell door, scaled a vent pipe to the roof and broke through a skylight to reach the outside. How he descended-the six stories to the street is a mystery. Huff, an ex-convict having once been sentenced to San Quentin for life from Stockton on a robbery charge and later paroled, is known to the police as a desperate 'gunman. He was arrested November 26 at a local rooming house with Clarence H. Mur ray on a tip from Eureka. Murray was shot in the struggle which, fol lowed when officers attempted to arrest the two men. Four burglary charges were pre ferred against Huff locally and bond was fixed at $40,000. Two burglary charges are pending in Portland, Or., one in Eureka, Cal., and two in Oak land against the man. The opening in his cell door through which he escaped was but 6 by 10 inches. How he secured the bar with which he pried the cell grating is un known. ; Because of the difficulty he would have encountered in descending the sheer walls of the city prison, belief was expressed by Lieutenant James Boland of the city prison that he may be hidden within the institution watching an opportunity to make his break for the outside. A search of the prison is being made. In an effort to gauge actual local business conditions, our bank this week made a fairly thorough can vass of business men of Portland. Men in many lines of business, including hardware, groceries, shoes, books and stationery, jewelry, implements, auto mobiles and department stores were interviewed, as were also railroad and street railway officials, managers of the electric light and gas companies, and a number of leading bankers. The general conclusion drawn from their reports is that business Is very satis factory. Almost every line reported an Increase- over the business of last year, and almost all are looking for ward to at least the beginning of 1923 with hope, if not with entire confidence. President thinks that suspension of railroad operation through strikes should be prevented through estab lishment In Washington of a "tribun al to which railway labor and mana gers may appear respecting questions of wages and working conditions." In the adpudication of such difficulties the Railroad Labor Board is handi capped by the fact that, it represents three intrests, the roads, the work ers and the public. A body, which exclusively represents the public would better serve general interest In me settlement or such problems. That R.E. Butler, of th Butter Poultrv the public interest should be para- J farms, of Jennings Lodge, and a mem mount and controlling in the settle- ber of the Portland police department. Clackamas County Is Attaining Record For Poultry Farms i i - -- . Eastern poultry fanciers appreciat ing the fact that some of the highest class birds of the United States are being produced in Oregon, are now turning their attention to securing some of the best from Clackamas county. ment of strikes the President implies in this paragraph: "Since the government assumes to safeguard his (the worker's) interests while employed in an essential public service, the security, of society itself demands his retirement from the ser vice shall not be so timed and related has just received an order together with a check for $675 for a pen of his birds from ; the Smith Standard Incubator company, of Cleveland,. O. This is considered one of the largest cash orders from the western states. The telegram asked for two cocker els at $100 each, four yearling hens as to effect the destruction of that J at $50 each and 11 hens at $25 each. ADMINISTRATION POLICY in nim mm nil nfrnn .IV I II I I PIL.I I D V IJllUI i.i i ii mm m r ryr f service, He defended the Administration' foreign policy, saying the "Unlited States is insistent on American rights wherever they may be questioned and denies no rights of others in the as sertion of her own." He pointed out that the United States has furnished the world in the v four-power pact a new plan for avoiding war. He sug gested that the United States should help rehabilitate foreign currency systems and facilitate commerce which "does not drag us to the verv The head of a targe department hovels cf those we seek to life up"; store reported the holiday trade as opening up very well indeed.. Ha said that his business throughout the store had shown a nice gain over that of last year. A prominent jeweler reported that if his sales continued to hold up through December as they had start ed, he would do 100 per cent more business this month than be did in December of last year. Business all around with him has been the best during the year just closing that it has been for many a year A large book and stationery firm reported about a fifteen per cent in crease in its this year's business over that of last year. The wholesale end of this business is better than it has been for two years past, due to the replenishment of, lowered stocks. Col lections are fair. , A wholesale grocer said that he had and he thinks that immigration re strictions should be augmented by requiring foreign registration of aliens. The Pan-American Conference It is the hope of the President and Mr. Hughes that limitation of arma ment, both on land and sea, will form one of the Important topics of dis cussion at the Pan-American confer ence which Is to be held in Chile next March. Some of the nations have ex pressed themselves as desiring to know the nature of the proposed limi tation before accepting this as . an item on the agenda- in' the case of the Washington conference, a ratio was figured from the status quo which would leave the relative strengths of the American, Japanese and Brit ish fleets practically the same. The fact that twenty-one nations will be represented at the Chilean confer- had a very good fall trade Indeed, but ence will complicate matters consid- that it had slackened as it always does at this season of the year. Hardware dealers are finding their trade very good indeed for this time of year. In fact, one dealer said that compared with previous years his firm is doing an excellent business and he finds prospects bright for the first six months of nextyear. The manager of a large shoe store finds business going along in a very satisfactory manner, though buying is still being done on a small scale. He is anticipating a good increase in TTotViv Qtir-ta fivl the siirin2 trad. 'hut there still seems ttlllCr OIIOOLo VJJXI erably, and the task of formulating a plan acceptable to all twenty-one, be tween soma of whom are the keenest of jealousies and rivalries, will be a formidable one. The ultimate end aimed at Is the creation of an effect ive Pan-American League with a Pan- American Court, and besides there is keen necessity of standardization in numerous commercial matters. Ef forts toward co-operation, too, are to be fostered and encouraged. WHAT TO PUT IN THE LUNCH The eternal question for the mother who has to do up her school-children's dinner is what to put in the lunch basket. The department of Agricul ture makes these suggestions: 1. Sandwiches with sliced tender meat for filling, baked apple, cookies, or a few lumps of sugar. 2. Slices of meat or bean loaf, sandwiches, stewed fruit, small frost ed cakes. 3. Crisp rolls, hollowed out .and filled with chopped meat or fish, moistened and seasoned or mixed with salad dressing, orange, apple, a mixture of sliced fruits or berries, cake. 4. Lettuce or celery sandwiches, cup custard, jelly sandwiches. 5. Cottage cheese sandwiches, or a pot of cream cheese with bread and butter sandwiches, peanut sand wiches, fruit, cake. 6. Hard boiled eggs, rolls, celery or radishes, brown sugar or maple sugar sandwiches. 7. Bottle of milk, thin corn bread and butter, dates, apple. 8. Raisin or nut bread with butter, cheese, orange, maple sugar. 9. Baked bean and lettuce sand wiches, apple sauce, sweet chocolate. to be a tendency to hold back, he says, to see what is going to happen. The eastern market shows a tendency to advance prices. In the implement line, business is exceedingly dull. It is always quiet at this season, but the financial con dition of the farmers this year makes the buying of implements almost im possible. Automobiles are having a seasonal spell of quiet just now, bat throughout the year the business has been excellent. In the packing plants, business has shown an increase over that of last year. Cattle prices to the farmers are just about the same as last "year, but hogs are 25 per cent higher and sheep and lambs are from 25 to 30 per cent higher. The outlook for the farmers seems to be more hopeful than it was a year ago, The street railway company shows an increase in traffic over last year. and its business has been uniformly good. All the public utility compan- J ies report business as,excellent. Many new installations have been and are still being made, and former consum ers are increasing their consumption steadily. The railroads, ' too. both from freight and passenger ends, report that the year has been uniformly good, in spite of harassment by strikes, and Rather Than See Her Become, a Flapper SOUTH BEND, Ind., Dec. 22. John R. Wyman today shot his 15-year-old daughter Ellen, rather than see her become a full-fledged flapper. The bullet, piercing the girl's left breast, missed her heart toy a fraction of an inch, surgeons found. Wyman had intercepted a . letter written by Ellen to a boy friend, in which she told of her love for the cabarets, to which she had been intro duced by a married couple living in the same apartment. His efforts to break up the friendship between his daughter and Mrs. Irene Brown, wife of one of his fellow employes at the Studebaker plant, is said to have led to the shooting. "wait until Helen is a year or so older, before you take her tq cabarets with you," Wyman had pleaded with Mrs. Brown, in the presence of his daughter. The girl, however, refused to heed his plea. I'd rather leave home," his daugh ter threatened, Wyman told the au thorities after surrendering. I tried to frighten her into staying This order was for Barred Rocks Butler recently received $400 on an order for Barred Rocks to be sent to the Eastern State 'Poultry farm in Ohio. Butler started, in poultry at Jen nings Lodge gix years ago. As busi ness Increased it was . necessary to enlarge the big poultry house which is now 240 feet long and 24 feet wide, having . two stories. The basement Is used as an incubator room, where there are some of the largest and best equipped machines for hatching pur poses. Last year there were hatched at this place 80,000 baby chicks. The previous year there were 60,000 baby chicks hatched. .During the coming season Butler expects to market at least 100,000 baby chicks from this poultry farm and a farm owned by a poultryman at 82nd street and 74th avenue, Portland, in charge of C. K. Fossum. It requires 27,500 eggs to set all the incubators at one time at these farms, which one would estimate 2280 dozen .eggs or 3375 pounds of eggs. During the hatching season an average of 3000 baby chicks are taken off every other day, and there are about 12 people employed on the two farms to perform the work. In the natural course of incubation 10 per cent of all eggs set are in fertile, which can only be determined after the egg3 have been in the ma- china for about seven days. Accord ing to this rule, there are over 2700 eggs handled out of the incubators every seventh day of each incubation period of three weeks, Or in other words, as there are four incubation periods or hatches during the season, the Butler farm candles out and dis card as worthless about 10,800 eggs each' season BIG DOPE DEN RAIDED IN HEART OF 'VILLAGE' VEAL CROQUETTES Mince a coffee cup of cold veal In a chopping bowl, adding a little cold hame and two or three slices of onion, a pinch of mace, powdered parsley and pepper, some salt. Let a -pint of milk or cream come to the boiling point, then add a. tablespoon of cold butter, then the above mix ture. - Beat up two eggs ana mix with a teaspoonful of corn-starch or flour, and add to the rest; cook it all about ten minutes, stirring with care. Re move from the fire, and spread it on a platter, roll It into balls, when cool ed flatten each; dip them in egg and bread crumbs, and fry in a wire bas ket, dipped in hot lard. by drawing a gun. She rushed at me that the present flow of travel to the- and the revolver was discharged. South is heavier than it was at this In his cell tonight Wyman was di3- time last year tracted when told that his daughter NEW YORK, Dec. 21. Drug raid ers, following the "poppy path," in vaded the heart of Greenwich village today, arresting five men after a des perate battle In a dark room. The alleged opium den is within the very shadow of the Judson Memorial church. The detectives were led in person by fDeputy Police Commis sioner Carlton Simon, head of the nar cotic squad. Smashing glass drew hundreds of "persons to the scene from nearby tea rooms and dancing places frequented by the habitues of Greenwich village. According to the police, two com plete opium layouts and two kits of burglar tools were seized. A woman became hysterical when she was struck on the head by a missile hurled down the airshaft by one-of the pris oners. The prisoners gave the names of; Anthony Larocco, John Russo, Michael Privinvini, Peter Radini and Alfred Wales. Two days aS Dr. Simon received an anonymous letter, saying that fashionably dressed women were "fre quenting an opium den in Greenwich village." The letter gave the address and said that the women drove up in motor cars which waited for them. LEBANON, Or., Dec. 23.- i nor-elect Pierce went on re' J fore the state convention of t-T ers' union last njght, as ra establishment of a state V agency and the creation c J1 state office that of sa', agent. I This and other points ir-fi'1 address, he said, will forn-.l for his message to the lef January 8. He also will urge, in the assessment laws to pi elusion of approximately S2.CCI property at present untaxed ia V ment rolls throughout the stateW. Severapce Tax Advocated j A severance tax on timber and erals taken from federal lands. " graduated income tax, increase of th. gasoline tax to 3 or 4 cents per g ion, and increased license fees foi expensive automobiles were amonj recommendations, he said, he won make. As a means of decreasing expenfl he said he favored holding the sta&N higher educational institutions to the j limits of the millage tax provided f - their maintenance, which he would r? tain, as well as that for element f schools. - Retention of the mark1 J levy he also favors. ' "JT The governor-elect is behip present highway program, ino '.Jl the completion of the Roosevelt way, he said, and favors a paid fJ highway commission. Repeal .2"L. law exempting from taxation notes vX cured by land mortgages is to bf sought, he said. f Exclusion of Asiatics, as propostf by ,the American Legion, from hold' land in any form in Oregon was giv-l approval. The proposed "truth in fa1 1 ric" law also was commended. Farmers Problem Talked f Mr. Pierce was enthusiastic!. I greeted by the delegates and otb.-' comprising the audience of 700. It'. applause ensued as he outlined r 1 prospective program as governor. ', spoke as one "dirt farmer" to anoO -W and dealt at length on tha probUj of the Harm. j Herbert Egbert of The Dalles re elected president of the 'union for ensuing year. E. J. Rentel of . J was chosen vice president, antr'T G. B- Jones of Monmouth, and treasurer. The followir'-.f elected to the executive cov W. W. Harrah of Pendleto J Whalat of Cambridge, Idaht 4L. Shumway of Linnton, S. V. jac '. Springfield and F. E. Ingalls o t It was decided to hold J convention at Eugene. STEAMED LEG OF MUTTON Labor headquarters stated that the unemployment situation is much bet ter than it was a year ago, although of course at this time of year there is bound to be some unemployment. The Salvation Army reported about the same volume of calls for charity as that of last" year. Although conditions are far from stable, the banks reported business as very satisfactory Just at present. The President's Message ' President Harding's second annual message to Congress delivered last week deals with urgent domestic prob lems in the frankest and most prac tical way. The President doubtless feels a certain challenge from the wordy Congress bloc and his message is courageously concrete and is not glazed with hard, slippery political generalties. He recommends that fur ther relief be given agriculture by pro viding additional credit machinery through the Federal Farm Loan Bu reau, so that the farmer may not only borrow on his land but also on his products and thus draw up on equal terms with producers in other indus tries. Special provision Is urged for livestock credits. So far as economic opportunities ara concerned, the farmer has always been discriminated against, and such provisions would af ford' him some measure of relief. In addition to abnormally low prices, the farmer has had to face the bur den of largely increased railroad rates. The President thinks that ag riculture is entitled to lower rates, to.be made up to the carrierse by a readjustment of other tariffs, since agricultural products are the least able of all to bear the higher rates. This, however, is only the begin ning of the transportation problem, and the President thinks that the gov ernment must point the way to their solution. The coordination of rail rates and rail wages ought" to be con- lay at the point of death. He had given her a string of pearls and bob bed curls as a Christmas present in an endeavor to win her away from the associates who, he believed, threat ened her moral ruin. The letter written by Ellen to Ir ving Burdess,' her boy friend in Peoria, I1L, enumerated gifts she had received from men she had met. Mrs. Wyman, the girl's mother, criticised her divorced husband for "curbing Ellen's romantic longings." "He didn't understand her," . she said. "He wanted her to continue her studies at school, when she wanted to work. Sometimes I think he is losing his mind." Ellen is his adopted daughter, ac cording to Mrs. Wyman. JUDGE BEAN REFUSES ' NEW LIGHTNER TRIAL FIFTY-THREE ARRESTa tl -t SAN FRANCISCO, Cal-, Dec. 22.- Fifty-three persons were arrested iu less than an hour after midnight, : i when the police department started en forcing the Wright act by raiding five- , 4 places in the downtown district. Only . one of those arrested was charged, i with violating the Wright act. The i others were booked on charges fit visiting disorderly places. Three women were among those arrested. ' The Wright law was laid down to if all San Francisco police . lieutenant' yesterday by Chief D. J. 0'BrIe,3 Prohibition Director S. F. Rutter for California announced that tlte police ' J here would be given a free hand in V bringing about a fuller enforcement of ' the dry law and that his men would .."A be withdrawn from the local field. Chief of Police O'Brien warned his officers that private homes are in violate and that a man's hotel room is his home and cannot be entered without a search warrant, but re minded that a club cannot be consid ered as a home. PORTLAND, Dec. 26. Federal Judge Bean this morning, after listen ing to arguments of Attorney Charles Garland, overruled the motions he presented asking for a new trial in the narcoticst prosecution of Dave Lightner and also asking for an arrest of judgment in the conspiracy con viction, on both of which he was found guilty. On the second trial, that of the conspiracy charge, Lightner has been sentenced to eighteen months at McNeiL attorney Garland main tained that the first trial was irregu lar in that the jury was released be fore it finally turned in a verdict of guilty on one of the counts. Judge ' Taoa will nrAnnn nPft onn t dnrp t nm n t- ' row on the first conviction. Christmas Payroll of 820,000 Is Stolen By Masked Bandits j Holiday Season in Ireland Is Violent (until nicely browned:1 the water that Joe Paulin, who has been in the St I remains in the bottom of the steamer Vincent hospital in Portland . suffer-! may be used for soup. Serve with ing from injuries received in a log- currant jelly. Wash and put the leg in a steamer an dcook it until tender, then place well with flour and set in a hot oven' fided to the same body instead of to two isolated bodies, as is now the case. The functions 'of the Railroad Labor Board really belong to the In- PITTSBURGH, Pa., Dec. 23- Four masked bandits today held up an au tomobile bearing Ross Dennis, pay master for the Pittsburgh Coal com pany, and three guards, shot and fa tally injured Dennis and escaped with $20,000 in cash which was the Christ mas payroll being taken to the miners at Beading, 20 miles from iiere. The bandits escaped. Dennis was rushed to a Pittsburgh hospital in a dying condition. He died shortly afterward. terstate Commerce Commission. The DON'T CRY There, little girl, don't cry, They have lengthened your skirts, know; . But' don't you fret. You're a long way yet, From the girls of the long ago. They have added an Inch or two, But there, little girl, don't cry. For a frisky breeze Still shows your knees. As the race of men go by. DUBLIN, Dec. 23. The holiday sea son in Ireland was ushered in today with a terrific wave of violence. The city has" been In panic for nearly 24 hours with bomb throwing and re volver fusillades. Free State government offjees and outposts were attacked time after time throughout the night. The at tacking Republican irregulars adopted the tactics of North American Indian fighters, firing from cover and then taking flight." Large forces of Free State troops were on patrol duty, but the attacks were so scattered that the Free Staters had difficulty in coping with the irregulars. The civilian population was thrown into terror. j Tha violence extended from Dublin ' to Cork. Eight civilians in Cork were j wounded ' when a bomb was thrown at a military lorry. FREEDOM OF STRAITS ' HOLDS UP CONFERENCE - -w LAUSANNE, Dec. 22 The imprj) sion that settlement of the problei -. jfc the Turkish Straits was not p;,J gressing as rapidly as anticipated came general today as the result -- statement issued by the Turkish di' gation. V This made it clear that Turkey's i ceptance of the proposal to appoii: i5 an international commission of coi . trol depended upon acceptance by twj allies of certain conditions demand'-j by the Turks- The modifications of the original project for control of the straits asked by the Turks include an understand ing that the international commission shall have no jurisdiction over the so-called "zones of demilitarization" in the region of the straits. The Turks furthermore have de manded a pact by which the allies in dividually and collectively guarantee that the safety and neutrality of Tur key will not be jeopardized and that there be no aggression against Constantinople. MOSLEMS MASSACRED ' UPON ISLAND OF CRETE LONDON, Dec. 22. A massacre ot Moslems has broken out upon the Greek island of Crete and many have been slain, according to a Central News dispatch from Athens today, quoting reports received in- that city from Anatolia. . Famine conditions prevail in Crete as a result of the tremendous influx of refuges from Asia Minor. Many farms owned by Moslems with all their stocks are said .to have been seized by Greeks. The Italian consul in Crete has in terven&d in an effort to establish or der. , V.