THT7 uTrkTj'VTvn rvRT-rinvTAV. tttttrstiat. JAXTTART SO. 1913 I In CHIEF AND HEALTH OFFICIALS SCORED Chairman of Sanitation Com mittee Points to "Filthy" Places in City. REBUKE MEETS EXCUSES Additional Incinerator Admitted Needed but Authorities Censured for lax Enforcement of Law. Ross Island FaTored. rrvDrxos of ravttatiox com- M1TTKE. Additional Incinerator declared a necessity. Hobs Iiland favored as alte for Incinerator. Mayor Rushlight's other plana In connection with Ron Ialand In dorsed. CJUef of Police criticised for con dition of streets and parks. Chlpf of Police. Slover and the TTouith Offlr were subjected to severe grilling at the hands of J. N. Teal, chairman of the sani tation committee yesterday when It met at the City Hall. The committee found an additional Incinerator abso lutely necessary and favored the site on Ross Island, as proposed In Mayor RuBhllghts scheme, which also flvri commendation. Certain streets were reported to be In a filthy condition and this gave rise to a series of excuses and retorts aur- 1ns; the early part of the meeting;. "We want more men in the sanl turr denartment." said the Mayor. -That would not prevent people sweeping their refuse and pouring; vile stuff onto the streets," saia Mr. jriu. "It's no use for us to arrest men, when the Municipal Court won't con vict." said Chief Slover. "At least you can bring- them up and show them that you mean to do your nsj-t of the business, said Mr. Teal. "We need an Incinerator badly," re- clled- the Mayor. "We admit that, but the Incinerator has nothing to do with the prevention of dirt accumulating on tne streets, Mr. Teal shot back. "Wo have not enough men to collect It." again replied the Mayor. "There should be no need of men to collect anything. If it Is prevented there will be nothing to collect, an swered Mr. Teal. Stark. Street Cited. Finally Mr. Teal remarked: "Gen tlemen. I am trying to explain to you our findings without having to come right out and say what we mean. It should be evident." . The chairman opened hie remarks by making mention of an accumulation of filth at the foot of Stark street, under the dock, "a state of things too filthy to describe and which must be seen to be believed; a state of things which made me 111. which made Mr. Carroll 111. and which caused Dr. Giesy to doctor himself." Dr. Glesy bore him out. "It is unjustifiable, unhealthy- and not right for such conditions to exist, continued Mr. Teal, "and they could be stopped within a month If people knew that action would be taken. We have signs forbidding this dumping of refuse into the streets, but tney are looked on as a Joke. "All we can do." ejaculated Chief Slover, "is to make another sweep as was done once before and get of ferula era up into the court, but I never saw anyone fined that I know of, for tney make a monkey of us in the courts." " Suggestion Made to Chief. The necessity for receptacles into which orange peel, peanut husks and such litter might be thrown was ad mitted on all hands, but their use as an emptying place for cuspidors out of shops was strongly objected to. Mayor Rushlight said that much of the difficulty was due to lack of men and utensils, such as he had. recom mended among his suggested reforms, which had not been heeded. "We need more sanitary inspectors, trained along such lines. We have but one to cover an area of 52 square miles." "But the matter Is under our very eyes. There is no need for another man, simply for that reason," retorted Mr. Teal. "We all admit that an additional In cinerator is necessary, and at once," continued the chairman. "There are many other things necessary, too, but there are certain things we can correct, and our time should not be taken up with them when it ought to be devoted to looking Into these larger problems, such as the sewers." "A new plumbing ordinance is need ed," Interposed Mayor Rushlight, "but when I proposed it, people thought that I. being a plumber, was trying to fix things for the trade." "The fact ofthe matter Is. these peo ple are maintaining nuisances and they must be stopped. We. have laws enough." said Mr. Teal. Three Officials Commended. Three officials received high commen dation from the committee Captain Speler, the harbormaster, D. E. Otis, who has charge of the incinerator, which the committee considered the cleanest place In Portland, and Alex Donaldson. superintendent of the atreet-cleanlng department. Additional ground is found necessary for dumping purposes at the present Incinerator, and the committee declares that the only question in connection with an additional incinerator is the selection of a site. After it was admitted on all sides that the city must have sites to take care of municipal work; must have storage places, prison room and such other buildings. Mr. Teal said he fa vored the Ross Island project. "I favored It before. I think that through the wording of the proposal It was much misunderstood, and I think the city ought to own it." Dr. Glesy favored It, and Dr. Storey, for the Health Board, said he consid ered it inevitable, and that the board had given It strong support. MAN HAS NARROW ESCAPE Victim Dragged a Block Vnder Streetcar Walks Away. Dragged more than a block between two streetcars, W. K. Kuhn, a youth, was able to walk to a physician's of fice when the car was finally stopped and Jacked up so that he could be ex tracted, and Patrolman Huntington, who was present, reported that he was not seriously hurt. Witnesses of the accident said It was a most remarkable escape from death. The young man, apparently, was try ing to catch the first car at Thirty Seventh street and Hawthorne avenue yesterday and missed his grasp, fall ing in front of the trailer. Projecting parts of the car kept him from the wheels and he was dragged in a sitting posture. It was some seconds before his plight was observed and the car, which was proceeding at a good rate of speed, could be brought to a stop. Then it was found that he was Jammed under the car In such a manner that it was necessary to raise it up before he could be taken out. It was found that his clothes had been torn nearly off and he had suffered numerous abrasions, but did not appear to be hurt otherwise. RICHARD PRICE IS BURIED Native of Pacific Coast for 50 Years Saw Service In Civil War. The funeral services of Richard Price, a pioneer, who died Tuesday, a his home, 318 East Thirty-ninth street. was held yesterday from Holman chapeL and the services were concluded at the Portland Crematorium. He was born In Montgomeryshire. Wales, De cember 24. 183S. and landed in New York July 7. 1856. When the war broke out he enlisted In Company G, Thirtv-Third Regiment Ohio Volun teers. under Colonel O. T. Tanner, service three months. In 1863 he crossed the continent to Stockton, Cal., by way of Nicaragua, where he engaged In mining. Moving s i . - v .' ti- ' i .gw w.- ). w i li i iiWMrti1rfsnriii-'iTiiiiilftii'iirtiit ir renin ilrtlifti la The Late Richard Price. to Oregon, he resided In Oregon City and furnished rock for the foundation of the Oregon City Woolen Mills. He returned to California, but alter short stay there returned to Portland. He bought 45 acres on Hawthorne ave nue and East Thirty-ninth street, and the trail which he cut to his place De came Hawthorne avenue. He was married to Miss Eunice Jane Quimby, daughter of . U Quimby, Dloneer of 1847. The following children survive: Alary Price, Richard W. Price and Margaret Bollam. He was a member of Orient Lodge. No. 17. Oddfellows, and Sumner Post, No. 12, Grand Army of the Republic, which assisted at the lu neral. BOND ELECTION SATURDAY School Clerk Trys to Arouse Inter est of City Taxpayers. School Clerk Thomas is trying to arouse the Interest of the taxpayers in the school bond special election feat- urdays. afternoon at the School Clerk's office in the Tilford building, -renin and Morrison streets, when taxpayers only will be called upon to vote on tne proposed issue of $1,000,000 bonds, the money to be used in building a high school In the southeast part of the citv. a new trades school, a new Couch school and various other improvements and for acquiring more ground. The 32.315 eligible voters have not made an effort to attend special school elections in the past, and this may be due to their not being acquainted with the location of the voing booths. Only 192 DeoDle voted at a special bond election In 1911. At present there is a bond Issue against the school dis trict amounting to J860.000. Should the bill Introduced by Kep resentative Conrad P. Olson, of Mult nomah County, pass at this legisla ture, the voting of school bonds will be done only at the regular school elections. The present law provides for only one voting place. CLEAN-UP WARNING GIVEN Oregon City Council . Committee to Enforce Sanitary Rules. -x? r-nrt-NT PITV Or .Tun 20 fSne cial.) The committee on health and police of the City Council, of which Councilman Albright is chairman, to day warned the residents of the city that their yards must be cleaned. Mr. iiHi-ii-hr Kniri that most of the vards inspected were in good condition but several were not. ne livery aiaoie wners also were warned to keep their itnhlAn clean. "The committee," said Mr. Albright, intends that Oregon city snail De one of the cleanest cities In the state. It u an nH,. matter for nroperty-owners to keep their yards clean and tney must do so. Those who fall to need (no- will be orosecuted to the fullest extent or tne w. AD WRITER'S LICENSE SEEN Lecturer Says Advertising Being Lifted to Higher Dignity. Licensed advertising experts were predicted by M. Mosessohn in an ad dress before the Portland Ad Club at the weekly luncheon at the Multnomah Club yesterday. Advertising is being lirted to tne dignity of an art or of one of the high er professions," he said, "and I believe the time is soon to pass wuen adver tising work will be intrusted to any body, regardless of training. I be lieve that In a few years the advertis ing men of the state can secure the passage of a bill which will place a license upon the ad writer." Frank McCrillis gave a talk upon the work of the Inner Circle of the Ad Club. Announcement was made that. beginning Monday night,, the meetings of the Inner Circle will be held at the Commercial Club. StereoDticon views were shown. Il lustrating modern methods of adver tising, and M. Mosessohn supplied an Impromptu lecture. The Ad Club an nounced its policy to support strongly the proposed revision of the fake ad vertising bilL Minister Is 111. -Information has been received by Rev. Robert N. McLean, of the Ana bel Presbyterian Church, that his father. Rev. Robert McLean, formerly Grants Pass and Portland, was ill in San Francisco with blood poisoning. Mr. McLean resigned his pastorate of the Grants Pass Presbyterian- Church to accept appointment as superintend ent of the work In New Mexico, and while on the train slightly Injured his hand, which at the time gave no trouble, but developed Into blood poisoning. "FAINTING GIRL" IS OUT MOTHEB IS SERVIXG SENTENCE FOR SHOPLIFTING. Prospective Wife of Male Companion Will Be Advised of His Es capade in Portland. Despite a showing made in Municipal Court that Goldle Armon, "the faint' lng girl." Is a shoplifter with past per. formances in Aberdeen, Wash., and in Wisconsin, that her mother is now serving a sentence In Aberdeen for the same offense and that the girl when causrht here was living with a man to whom she was not married, she was allowed to go free because she has two children in Aberdeen. In agreeing to this arrangement Judge Tazwell sug gested that the children might be bet ter off without their motner, out nnai ly consented. to let her go with a sus pended sentence or one year on a lar ceny charge, to which she pleaded a-ullty. The girl was caught last Saturday In a department store, after she had stolen a number of articles. Tracing her movements, the police came upon Ross Haight. who was consorting with her, though he admitted that he was to be marrrled In a few days to a girl in Aberdeen. He was held on a stat utory charge. From the time of her arrest the girl suffered or affected a continuous ae ries of fainting fits, the last one oc curring yesterday morning in the pris oners' box. Telegraphlo inquiry brought the In formation from Aberdeen that the girl had paid a fine of 8200 there for shop lifting, getting clemency out of con sideration for her children, while her mother, Mrs. C. Fournier, and her hus band's step-mother, Mrs. M. J. Armon, were sentenced for 60 days. The Aber deen authorities said that they had made Inquiries in Wisconsin and found a similar record there. In consideration of the necessity of detaining the woman if a prosecution was attempted, Haight was dismissed on motion of the District Attorney, but officials here will see that the girl whom he contemplates marrying is no tified of his conduct. JAIL RUNNERJS TRICKED Detectives Play Joke on Member of Le--al Profession. Methods of jail-running lawyers were exposed in a ludicrous manner at the City Jail yesterday, when three detectives conspired to let one of the fraternity overhear a conversation re garding the amount of money In the possession of a mythical prisoner. Detectives Hyde. Vaughn ana swennes were talking together when they saw the attorney close behind them, and, with a ' wink, the subject was shifted to a discussion of the wealth of one Mike Ram. "We ought to have It held as evi dence," suggested Vaughn. "If any of these lawyers hear he s got S74 we ll have a fight on." "Pshaw." said Swennes. "No one will know It." "You can't tell," said Hyde. "Some of those fellows have ways of finding out." ' By this time the lawyer was gone. A moment later he stood at the counter. asking Patrolman Thatcher If Mike Ram was on the docket. Thatcher as sured him that there was no prisoner by that name. Well, I may have the name wrong, said the lawyer, "but he's the fellow that's got $74." Even this Information did not serve. and after a few more inquiries the lawyer awoke to the fact that he had been hoaxed. Judge Gatens court Judgment of $2000 against H. C. and Mary L. Burns, of McMJnnville, Or., her parents-ln- law. as compensation for - the aliena tlon of the affections of Hollls Burns, her husband. She sued for 110,000. Mrs- Burns charged that because of religious differences, and for other reas ons. she had never succeeded in find lng favor with her husband's father and mother and Insisted that they had done everything in their power to make her married life unhappy. She said that they had offered her 500 if she would not fight a divorce suit. The defendants denied every charge. EUGENE BOOSTERS BUSY "Radiators" Is Suggested as Xamc for Organization. EUGENE. Or, Jan. 29. (Special.) Urging that Eugene adopt some iorm of annual festival to advertise the city and its activities, and that there be or ganized a booster organization to pro mote this festival. D. E. Yoran, a for mer president of the Commercial Club, at the club's meeting Monday, sug gested., that such an organization might well be called the "Radiators,' following The Oregonlan's sug gestlon of last October that Eugene Is the "City of Radiation." Mr. Yoram pointed out the benefit that the "Ro sarians" are in promoting the name of Portland, and as a result a committee of five was at once authorized to work out details for the further considera tion of the club. The club also adopted resolutions pledging its support to the plan of Major Mclndoe for the maintenance of a six-foot channel in the Willamette from Eugene to Portland, and pledging the support of the club to the proposl tlon to have half the cost of the lm provement assessed to the counties bordering on the river. Resumption of the monthly club din ners was ordered, with added social features. COAST CITIES MAY ACT Plans to Keep Pacific Highway on West Side of Cascades Urged. ALBANY. Or., Jan. 29. (Special.) A meeting of representatives of the commercial clubs of all of the cities of Western Oregon probably will be held soon to develop plans for retain lng the route of the Pacific Highway in Western Oregon. The Medford Commercial Club took the initiative in calling this meeting. which is deemed necessary in view of rumors that officers of the 1'aclnc Highway Association are considering changing the route of the highway from Western Oregon to Eastern Ore gon. A letter from the Medford Com merclal Club regarding the matter was considered by the Albany Commercial Club and the Albany club indorsed the project and agreed to send delegates to the meeting. It was also suggested that because of Albany's central loca- tlon and transportation facilities it might? be advisable to hold the meet ing here and in response to the direc tion of the club. Manager Stewart sent letter to the Medford Commercial Club yesterday saylny that Albany would entertain the meeting if de sired. BANDON BOOSTERS ASPIRE Special Coos County Building 1915 Eair Is Proposed. at SHUN BACHELORS, ADVICE Woman Who Has Tried Two Says They Are Failures After 35. KANSAS CITY, Jan. 29. A bachelor is the embodiment of selfishness and lacks Initiative and nerve when comes to dealing with a woman, 1b the declaration made here today by a di vorcee in a statement issued through the divorce proctor. A man who has not married by. the time he is 36 years old is unfit for matrimony by his own confession. Pass him up. 'Bachelors have had to bear the brunt of humor of all ages, and I want to be recorded as saying they are Joke. A bad husband is better than good bachelor, because some bad husbands see the error of their ways and change. I married a bachelor with blue eyes and then - tried one with black eyea. They were In the same class. The) were just bachelors that is all. OLD SURVEY IS CORRECTED Error of 1885 Made Right by Ernest P. Rands, of Portland. KLAMATH FALLS, Or., Jan. 29. (Special.) An erroneous survey by party of Government engineers in 1885, which left nearly 400 acres of unsur veyed land at Coon Point, on Upper Klamath Lake, has Just been corrected by Ernest P. Rands, of Portland, a Government surveyor. Rands has just returned from Coon Point, where for two weeks he ran lines with the snow four feet deep and the thermometer ten degrees below zero at times. When the survey was made, in 1885, the engineers. Instead of following the meander line, cut across a ridge 200 feet above the level of the lake. The tracts left unsurveyed were settled upon by two homesteaders and the sur vey was made by the Government in order to allow them to file on the land, on which they have heretofore been squatting. In addition to the work at Coon Point. Rands also made a survey of Buck Island, a hitherto unsurveyed tract in Upper Klamath Lake. This Is being homesteaded- by P. K. Hamilton. COTTAGE GROVE MAN DIES W. V. DeWalrf. Mercliant, Is Bnried Under Masonic lodge Auspices. COTTAGE GROVE, Or.. Jan. 29. (Special.) W. V. De Wald, senior mem ber of the firm of De Wald & Son, was uried here Sunday under the auspices of the Masonic lodge, of which he had been a member nearly' a half century. Rev. J. T. Moore officiated. Death oc curred Saturday, following a paralytic stroke a few days oeiore. Mr. De Wald was a native of Ten nessee, being born In i34. He was married In 1859, the wife dying two years ago. The surviving children are: C. C, Miss Tulen E. and Miss Sherman Shortrldge, of this city; L. H.. of Canyonvllle; w. M. and J. D of South Dakota. WIFE IS AWARDED $2000 Parents of Husband Sued for Alien ation of Affections. Margaret Burns yesterday secured BANDON, Or., Jan." 29. (Special.) At a meeting of the Commercial Club held Friday night a committee of five was named to be known as the 1915 exposition committee. This committee is to confer with other commercial clubs of Coos County to the end that this county have a special building erected at the Panama Exposition for Coos County exhibits. It was also moved that an architect or the City Engineer prepare and sub mit plans for a distinctive building. A resolution was carried unanimous ly indorsing the bill presented by Sen ator Joseph, of Portland, for an appro priation by the state of 8500,000 for the purpose of providing for an Oregon oxhibit and building. DAILY METEOROLOGIAL REPORT. PORTLAND. Jan. 29. Maximum tern perftture, 40 degrees; minimum, 34 degrees. Klver reading, e a. al., o.o itni; cnansu i" int ?4 hnurs. .0 foot fall. Total rainfall (3 P. M. to 5 P. M.).' none; total Bince September 1, 1912, 24.57 inches; normal since Septem ber 1, 25.42 inches; deficiency since Sep tember 1. 1912, .35 inch. Total sunsnine, none; possible. 9 hours and 33 minutes. Barometer (reduced to sea level) at 5 P. M., 30.45 Inches. ' THE WEATHER. K 5 Wind E S 2 c g , . STATION s ,j o c. wo " 2 0 i : : 5a:: State of Weathtr Baker - Boise Boston Calgary Chicago Denver Des Moines Duluth Eureka ... ....... Galveston ...... Helena Jacksonville .. .. Kansas City .... Laurter Los Angolea . . .. Marshfleld Medford Montreal New Orleans . . . New Tork North Head North Yakima . . Phoenix Pocatello . v Portland Hose bury . ....... Sacramento . St. Louis St. Paul Salt Lake San Francisco . . Spokane T acorn a Tatoosh Island . Walla Walla ... 2S'0.00 2SI T. au' t. 36O.00 40 '0.02 4'B Cloudy 6 MV Cloudy 14iSE Rain 6 NE Pt. cloudy 12 SW Clear iwlo'.oOjSuiW cioudy 6-1 0.00 6'SW Clear 14-0. 001 4.N Cloudy 48 0.00 41 NE Clear 62'0.00 8-SE Clear 420. 02 4rW Snow 640.O0,- 4 SW Clear 60 0.00114 SW Clear S;0.00 4'S Clear 04 O.00 4:SW Clear 60 0.00 4'NW Clear 36 0.02' 4'NW Cloudy S 0.06llO!NE iSnow 62 O.00I 4 NE Clear 40i0.03ilS;NE Cloudy 4410.00) 'N-W 'Cloudy 351:0. OO 4!SE Clear 70 0.00J 4'W Clear 86 0.00! 4 SW Cloudy 40 0. 001 4E Cloudy 4S0.00 4,N Clear 640.00 6'N Clear 5H0.K 12 S Clear 4210.06 0 E Snow 42 0.00 4iSE Clear 640.00 6jW Clear iCloudy , 2S O.OOi 4!NWi 400.02 4 W i 44;0.12 4'SE: Cloudy 42 0. OOf 4SW Cloudy WEATHER CONDITIONS. a lAT-ra hlirh pressure area overlies the North Pacific States, and a large but shal low low pressure area Is central over the middle Missouri Valley. Light rain has fallen In the Sound country, and preclplta ttnn morl v uTiow. has occurred In nearly all the northern states east of the Rocky Mountains. It Is much warmer In the Up per Mississippi Valley and the Lake Region and decidedly colder In the Canadian North, west and In Montana. The concitions are iavoraDio xor mir weather in this district Thursday, with lower temperatures In Southeastern Idaho. . FORECASTS. Portland and vlnclnlty Fair; easterly winds. , Oregon ana waamngron r air; eawteny winds. ..... Idaho Fair; comer in ue soutneast por tion. REMOVAL NOTICE. On and after Saturday, February 1st. the Southern Pacific city ticket office will be located at 80 Sixth street, cor ner of Oak. Telephone Marshall 400, Home A 6121. FARRELL RETURNS SOON o.-w. R. & N. HEAD TO DIRECT PROGRAMME HERE. Absorption of Oregon Eastern Railroad Among Most Important Changes Xow Arranged. J. D. Farrell, president of the O. W. E.. & N. Company, is expected to return within a few days from New Tork, where he has been attending the meetlnes of the Union Facitio ana Southern Pacific directors, incident to the dissolution of those companies. Mr. Farrell will be empowered to carry out the immediate programme for the development of the property under his Jurisdiction in accoraance with the plans completed at the New York conference. Among the most important changes already arranged, as a result oi iu Suoreme Court's decision, are the absorption by the O.-W. R. & N. Com' nanv of the Oreeon & Eastern Kali' road, which Is the company having charge of the construction work west ward from Vale, and of the Ban Fran- Cisco & Portland Steamship Company, operating the steamers Bear. Beaver and Hose City between this city ana San FranciBCO. These two changes alone will bring much additional authority to tne gen eral offices of the 0.-W. B. & N. Com pany, as the steamship offices will be moved from San Francisco to Port land and the Oregon & Eastern offices from Salt Lake City to Portland. All the money required for purchase of materials and supplies in connection with the construction work across the state hereafter will be spent in .Fort land instead of Salt Lake City. It Is understood that George W. Boschke, chief engineer of the O.-W. B. & N. Company, will have charge of the con structlon work. Whether the O.-W. B, & N. Com rjanv Is to lose its identity and be- come a part of the Union Pacific is a step that evidently Is under considera tion In New York, but It may not be carried out until after some or tne other details In connection with the unmerging are attended to. HOPE GIVEN HIES T F. O. KXAPP EXPIAIXS SITUA TION IX ItJMBER EMBARGO, Entire Pacific Coast to Awaken and Lift Boycott, Is Prediction of Portland Envoy. An awakening of interest and in fluence among business men and or- franizations of the entire Pacific Coast, which will result in the lifting of the boycott against finished lumber from tho Northwest in San Francisco, is pre dicted by F. C. Knapp, ex-president of the Portland Chamber of commerce as a seauonce to the Btand taken by the directors of the San Francisco Cham ber Monday, in which they denounced the boycott as unjust and Instructed tho proper officers of the Chamber to take steps toward the removal of the boycott Mr. Knapp returned yesterday from attending the annual meeting of the Associated Chambers of Commerce o the Pacific Coast "While the mere resolution of the directors of the Chamber of Commerce of San Francisco will not raise the boycott against the finished .lumber of the Northwest," he said, "it will have a powerful moral influence in that di rection. Moreover, if the last clause of the resolution, which orders that the officers be instructed to take such steps as will tend to the removal of the restrictions against the Northwest lumber, is carried out, as I believe it will be, this will have Btill more weight 'Further investigation of the San Francisco boycott will be taken up at the meeting of the West Coast Lumber Manufacturers Association, which will be held in Tacoma Friday, and I look to see this also have material results. It has been rumored that certain North' west lumber concerns, for reasons best known to themselves, have encouraged conditions which would tend to a con tinuance of the boycott. If this is the case, It -will be threshed, out m the meeting in Tacoma and will, I believe, result in a settlement that will have important bearing upon the problem of lifting the boycott 'Both the action In San Francisco and the action which I believe will be taken in Tacoma will have important results and will help in bringing to a focus public opinion in such a way that the conditions under which it has been possible for the boycott to exist can not long persist. As to restriction against Northwest lumber in the Panama-Pacific Exposl tlon, Mr. Knapp announced that action of the exposition commission lias made It possible for all structures in the ex position, including the California buildings, to secure material under system of open bidding, which places Northwest lumber on an equal footing witn any otner. Ontario Editor Gets Parole. VALE, Or, Jan. 29. (Speclal.)John E. Roberts, the Ontario editor who was recently found guilty of embez zlement of funds of the Ontario Demo crat, was today granted a parole by Judge Biggs. Roberts was required to give a bond of 11000 and to report to the Sheriff of Malheur County every 80 days for a period of three years. The motion for a new trial was refused. GARBAGE TRUST DEFEATED City of Seattle Will Collect and Bnrn Its Own Trash Hereafter. SEATTLE, Wash., Jan. 29. (Special.) Victorious In the deciding clash with the garbage trust, the City of Seat tle will take over the collection and destruction of garbage and waste mat ter next Saturday under the direction of Health Commissioner Crlchton. Al though the team owners declined to sell their wagons without the teams, the city will begin its service with 60 wagons and teams, 30 wagons owned by the' city and the remainder rented. If this number is not sufficient the street department will be caled upon for equipment Garbage cans must be placed In convenient places as the col lectors will not descend into base ments or climb stairs. Small receiving hoppers will be placed about the city, into which wagon collectors will dump and from these hoppers the waste will be transferred by motor trucks to In cinerators. The single-can system will be used, that is, waste of every kind from old mattresses to kitchen refuse will be destroyed without separation. Seattle was the first American city to begin garbage collection by automobile. The city will have five huge motors In use by Saturday. Echo Resident Laid to Rest. ECHO, Or., Jan. 29. (Special.) The death of Mrs. Ann Sheridan occurred yesterday at the home of her son, Peter Sheridan, on Butter Creek. She was one of the early settlers of Umatilla County, having come here In 1877, from the East Mrs. Sheridan was born in County Donegal, Ireland, in November, 1841. When a young woman she came to America and made her home at Sum mit Hill, Penn., where she met and married James Sheridan. In 1877 they came to Oregon. and settled on Butter Creek, which has been their home since. Fourteen years ago Mr. Sheridan diea. Mrs. Sheridan leaves one son, Peter Sheridan, of this place; two step-children, Thomas Sheridan, of Alberta, and Mrs. Mary Enzeroth. of Walla Walla, and a niece. Mrs. F. W. Andrews, of Echo. The funeral services were beia here today at 1:30 P. M. at the Roman Catholic Church. EDUCATIONAL BILL PASSES Senate Substitutes Page Measure for That Voted on by House. WASHINGTON. Jan. 29. The Page vocational educational bill, authorizing a maximum appropriation of more than 814,000,000 for agricultural and trade educational work, was adopted today by the Senate, as a substitute for the Lever-Smith bill which has passed the House. A fight extending over many days. In which both sides of the Senate had been dlveded ended when a motion by Senator Page to substitute his orig inal bill for the Lever bill was carried by a vote of 81 to SO. The measure that passed the Senate will go to the House and ultimately into a conference committee. The orig inal House bill appropriated the maxi mum sum of approximately 13,500,000 for the establishment of extension de partments In ithe state agricultural colleges through which Instruction in home economies would be carried into the homes of the farmers. The Page bill would establish courses of Instruc tion In trades and Industries, home economics and agriculture in the vari ous public schools of secondary grade, provide for state agricultural schools, testing and plant-breeding stations, the education of teachers and general extension. C. E. IN MAN DIES ON TRAIN Vancouver Man After Visiting Sick Father Succumbs. VANCOUVER, Wash.. Jan. 29. (Spe cial.) While returning from a visit to his father, who is ill at a hospital at Tacoma, Clarence E. Inman, 26 years old, of Vancouver, died on a Great Northern train, from unlearned cause. His body was discovered lifeless by Conductor Vogel, at Ritchfleld. Coroner Limber, of Clark county, will hold an lnauest tomorrow. Mr. Inman is well known In Van. eouver and was employed by the Miller O-rocerv Comnany. He leaves a wile 'and two children. Some of his friends inclined to the belief that he grieved himself to death over his father s ill ness, i HUMOR ITCHED ; Sores More of a Rash. Soon Formed a Crust. Children Cross-and Fret ful. Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment Cured Them All. RayiMaford, Monk "All my babies bad hnmors or sores on the head, somettmes forming a scale. The sores were in the be ginning more of a nsh. but soon farmed a crust, worse on some of them than on others. It Itched and Darned, for the children were eros and fretful, scratching often, making it worse and kind of Inflamed. Some of the children did not hare much hair when the sores appeared, bat those that did lost It all. -I uaed and but they seemed to make the sores worn. I washed their heads- with warm water wtta a soft cloth, using CuOcara Soap. After drying I robbed their beads all over as gently aa possible with Cutieura Ornament, washing their beads only once a day, but ustng the Ointment two or three times a day. It aerer took longer than two weeks for the worst ease, but generally only a week for the Cutioura Soap and Ointment to care them." (Signed) Mra. Helen Huffman. June 11. 1912. ' Although the Ooticrn Soap and Oint ment are most successful in the treatment of affections of the sain, scalp, hair and hands, they are also most valuable for every day tan in toe toilet, bath and nursery, be came they promote and maintain the heaita of the skin and hair from infancy to age. Cuticura Soap (3ScJ and Catteura Ointment (50c) are sold w'u; where. Liberal sample of each mailed free, with 33-p. 8km Book. Ad dress port-card "Cuticura. Dept. T. Boston." WMon who shave and shampoo with Ou ' Ucura Soap wffl find it best for skin and scalp. Bridge Workman Falls. VANCOUVER. Wash., Jan. 29. (Spe cial.) C. F. Browning, 30 years old, when working on a bridge for the Northwestern Electric Company, net.r White Salmon, fell, breaking a leg and severely spraining his other ankle. He was brought to St Joseph's Hospital here. GET RID OF PIMPLES, QUICK Stuart's Calcium Wafers Are Won der Workers in Every Variety of Skin Troubles. Many people have been heard to say that they used creams and lotions for years without effect yet after five or six days of Stuart's Calcium Waters their complexions were perfectly clear, 'Stuart's Calcium Wafers Are Simply Grand to Remove Plmplea and All Skin Eruptions." It's easy to understand why.. Creams and lotions only get at the surface, while Stuart s Calcium Wafers go right into the blood and instead of a slug gish deposit in the skin the impurities that cause skin diseases are destroyed in the perspiration that is exhaled through the pores in the form of invis ible vapor. You'll never have a good complexion without pure blood, but you positively will have a fine, beauti ful complexion If you use Stuart's Cal cium Wafers. They contain no poisonous drug of any kind, are perfectly harmless ana can be taken with absolute freedom, and they work almost like magic. Cal cium Sulphide, their principal ingredi ent, is the greatest blood-cleanser known to science. No matter how bad your skin may be. Stuart's Calcium Wafers will quickly work wonders with It. It's good-bye to blackheads, pimples, acne, boils, rash, eczema and a dirty "filled-up" com plexion. You can get a box of Stuart's Calcium Wafers at any drug store at 50 cents a box, and you will be posi tively delighted with their wonderful effect. 'CASCARETS" BEST BOIL CLEANSER Headache, Sour Stomach, Bilious ness and Bad Taste Gone by Morning. Furred Tongue, Bad Taste, Indiges tion, Sallow Skin and Miserable Head aches come from a torpid liver and clogged bowels, which cause your stomach to become filled with undl Kested food, which sours and ferments like garbage in a swill barrel. That's the first step to untold misery Indi gestion, foul gases, bad breath, yellow skin, mental fears, everything that Is horrible and nauseating. , A Cascaret tonight will give your constipated bowels a ' thorough cleansing and straighten you out by morning. They work while you sleep a 10-cent box from your druggist will keep you feei ng good for months. Millions of men and woman take a Cascaret now and then to keep their stomach, liver and bowels regulated, and never know a miserable moment. Don't forget the children their little insldes need a good, gentle cleansing, too. WHO WANTS A GOOD PLAYER? In order to get rid of every Pianola In our establishment, we're giving them away In order selected. Simply agree to purchase of us each month at least four music rolls for a year. AH are In A-l condition Just as good aa new. Can be attached to any piano. If you haven't a piano, secure one now at the tremen dously reduced January Clearance Sale Prices, and secure one of these fine Cabinet Pianolas free. Act quickly. Twenty-eight more were selected yes terday. Eilers Music House, the Na tion's Largest, in the Eilers Building, Seventh and Alder streets. r 1 DR. W. A. WISH. Prompt service. Highest-grade skill. Your work finished In one day If neces sary. Twenty-six years In Portland. PLATES WITH FLEXIBLE SUCTION. The Very Best and Latest In Modern Dentistry. No More Falling Plates. PERFECT BRIDGES with interchange able facings, the most perfect and practical bridge that has ever been de vised. A triumph of modern dentistry. READ OVR PRICESl Good Rubber Plates, each M.00 The Best Red Robber Plates, earh..T.SU 2-'-karat Gold or Porcelain Crown..S3.00 22-karat Bridge Teetli, guaranteed. each tSJSO Gold or Enamel Fillings, each S1.U0 Silver Fillings, each 0o WE GIVE A 15-YEAH GUARANTEE Wise Dental Co. Phones Main 2039, A 2029. FAILING BLDC THIRD AND WASH, San Francisco $6, $10, $12, $15. Los Angeles $11.35, $21.50, $23.50, $26.50. Meals and Berth Free. 8. S. Beaver sails 4 P. M. Friday, January 31 PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP CO. Honolulu, Japan, China. Manila. Around the World Tours. Reduced Bates to Honelnla. t85 one way. snu rouau 11 ip " ... steamihlps Manchuria, Monxolla, Korea, Siberia. Panama Line See the Canal Low Excur sion Jtt.lB IUI J1 - America and New York; sailing every tea days. m.. WranclMa ft Portland 8. S. Co. Office 152 8d st. Main 26D5. A 26M. Simple Way to Darken Gray Hair Yon Can Prepare a Mixture at Home That Does It Nicely. If every person knew what a simple matter it is to darken their gray hair ,ht aie-n nf Advancing years would be a rarity. The ordinary dye or stain is not at all satisfactory ana is easuy oe .. luvinir the hair sticky, rubs off or colors the scalp, but this simple recipe, which you can make up at noms iuti. rat nvercomes all these ob jections and Is certain to give splendid satisfaction. TO 7 ozs. or water aa one small box of Barbo Compound, 1 os. of bay rum and oz. of glycerine. This makes a mixture that gradually dark- . v. a h.i, n. hoard to a rich, glossy brown, removes dandruff and other Ills of the scalp ana promoiea me gruwin of the hair. Apply once a week and . ... 1 .fl.l.ntltf llarV.TIMl UNA wnen t is i. i. once every two weeks. Be sure your druggist doesn't give you a substitute for Barbo Compound. If he Is out of it, he should order it for you from his wholesaler. You will find If you try this excellent formula that there is nothing1 that can take its place. THE MARKET PLACE In this column Tho Oregonlan will carry the cards of suburban residents who can supply Portland peopls with vegetables, fruits, butter, eggs, poul try etc., which can ba shipped in promptly and economically by parcel post. This offers the suburban resident an - opportunity to find good customers, and the city family the chance to buy at fair prices choice, fresh farm prod ucts. This list will be printed on Mondays aDd Thursday of each week. Cards Will cost tua each Insertion, i