14 THE MORXIXG OBEGOMAX, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1915. NORTH! GAm WEST HAS 2 ES ON SATURDAY Washington to Tackle Berke ley Again and Whitman Will Face Dietz. OREGON AND AGGIES PRIME ilorleke Klcven to Alterant to Hold Score Below 27-0 Mark Mult- noniHli to Meet Olympics in San Francisco Sunday. BV ROSCOE FAWCBTT. Only two games of much import to the Northwest will feature Saturday's football schedule on the west shank C the Sierras. At Seattle the University of Wash ington will entertain the University of California athletes, whom they trimmed 72-0 last week at Berkeley. At Walla Walla the Whitman col-l'-prians, coached by Vincent Borleske vill attempt to hold Washington State v-uuege 10 a score lower than 27-0. Sunday, at San Francisco, the Mult- rioma Amateur Athletic Club eleven of I'ortland will cross bata in the padded arena to mix the metaphors with the .;jmpic ciud team of the Bay metropo lis. Oregon and the Orpenn Ainrii Wit bt resting up preparatory to. their an nual struggle for the state champion ship, and Idaho -will be doing likewise in preparation for the big- test with wnnman on Turkey day. Idaho has lost every game this sea son by a big margin, and for this rea son the Whitman matinee at Moscow ought to furnish quite an Incentive to jtaaemacher s proteges. So far as the others are concerned. Washington should again wallop Cali fornia anywhere from t0 points up ward; Washington State should have little difficulty in piling up in excess ni zu. points on Whitman, and on the following day Multnomah Cluh looks easily the favorite against the all-stars sarnerea Dy the winged O for the ex position seance. Washington State's test with Whit man will be watched with some gusto ..ecuuse. mis win give the first com parative line on the strength of Wash ington and Washington State. The Oregon Aggies defeated Whit man 31-7: Oregon defeated the Mis sionaries 21-0. and Washington turned the trick 27-0. Washington State has defeated both Oregon colleges and should at least equal Washington's score of 27-0. thus tending to cor roborate the opinions of many that J"-ietz' eleven could trim Washington this Fall were these two rivals to meet. On Thanksgiving day Washington State is scheduled to do battle with 5onzaga College at Spokane, and this will give the dopesters another game for comparisons. Washington hum bled the Catholics 21-7 about three weeks ago. When Oregon and the Oregon Aggies pet together one week from Saturday at Eugene, the teams will be closely matched in beef. Oregon may have a pound or two on the Aggies, but not enough to worry anybody. Hugo Bezdek will send an eleven averaging approximately 17 7 pounds against his ancient opponent, and the Aggies' aggregate will measure about 175 or 176 pounds, not including tiu.s Jtofer. If the former captain is started at end which seems unlikely the Aggies will balance the beam about on a pur with the lemon-yellow. From present indications Laythe and Smyth will open the game at the tackle jobs for the Aggies, with Hofer in re serve. Holer opened last week againstl Idaho. Coach Stewart is slightly puz-1 zled about Captain Billie. He has one hunch which says to place Billie at his old end berth, and yet he thinks he needs the veterans in the backfield. Billie was started at end against the Michigan Aggies, but went back to the backfield when All worth was in jured. Bill Ifietz is not the only Carlisle "Indian who is making' good as a grid iron coach. Albert Exendine has a first-class team at Georgetown this season, and there is Jim Thorpe, who is assistant coach at Indiana. Just after Thorpe got on the job the lioosiers braced and tied Washington and L.ee, 7-7. Tom Phevlin. the great Yale end. is Tmck on the Yale campus again, and the fans are watching his second at tempt to work a miracle with the Klis. Can he do what he did in 1P10. when he took the Minnesota shift to Yale and heat rrinceton, 5-3. and held Harvard to a 0-0 tie with Wendell Ham Corbett and a lot of other man hammering: stars in the Harvard line up." When he was at college Shevlin was one of the wildest birds outside the xoo. His father was a wealthy timber man at Minneapolis, and Tom is said to have spent more money during his Yale days than any student that ever trod the campus. He bought every thing autos, flowers, taxicabs. clothes jewelry, dinners and their liquid ac companiments there wasn't anything that papa's purse was too shallow to purchase. Tom was quite a bragger. too. in those days. Xot in an offensive way but in a big. burly, swashbuckling inshion Tom used to like to talk about himself. "Nobody ever made a run around my end while I was in college," ia one statement attributed to him And we believe it. Shevlin was on three of Camp's all-American teams. He missed out during his sophomore year Among other . bits of braggadocio, Shevlin, on one occasion, placed a bet of $1000 -that he would be taken into "Skull and Bones." a Yale secret so ciety. But Bones heard of it and the college hasn't stopped talking of his turndown yet. Despite this bitter dis appointment. Shevlin turned up next Fall as captain and was us loval as ever before. WHITMAN HAS LITTI.K HOPE Team's Sole . Kndcavor AV111 Be to Hold Pullman to Low Score. WHITMAN" COLLEGE, Walla Walla. Wash.. Nov. 10. t Special. 1 Though the Whitman College football team Is not counting on winning from Washington State this year, or on even as close a score as last year. 7 to 6. the men are working with the sole purpose of mak ing the would-be champions earn every score. The team has had two weeks' rest since the last game, and all of the men ire in good condition except Cram, who was hurt in the Oregon game. Pullman is reported to have lost some of her best men in the Montana game, but in view of the stories issued by Coach rietz earlier in the season. Coach Borleske. of the Whitman squad. is KOlnK prepared to meet the same ag gregation which heat Idaho 41 to 0. The team will hold its last practice tomorrow, leaving at night far Pullman. BIG COLLECTION OF INDIAN RELICS AND MINERALS GIVEN TO SCHOOL Dr. Dav Raff ety, Pioneer, Explains Uses of Strangely Shaped Implements Formal Ceremony of Gift Will Be Held in Few Weeks Curios Are Gathered During 30 Years of Effort. - ,, '"V 'zlj&S vjur. - iff JS $-- . w-. V V I " - I . " n - v v vX, , . -v ! -"- " - - ' , , , . TT a ?-Wf to , g-;t ---'4 , '- -,a I I 1 . DR. DAV RAFFETY, a pioneer physician, has presented to the Brooklyn School his fine collec tion of Indian relics and minerals. These hae been placed in cabinets in the assembly hall labeled and described so that 'students may tell what they represent. Includod in the collection of Indian curios are implements for the prepara tion of i'ood, paints, medicines, gam t'iS sanies and war clubs, besides about 5000 different specimens of rock formations. Principal. T. J. Gary re gards the coll jtion of great value and in the course of a few weeks Dr. Kaf fety will formally turn over the col lection tr. the school district in a lec ture to bo delivered in the Washington High School. It was expected to do this in the assembly hall of the Brook lyn School, but the edict has gone forth that the assembly hall cannot be used for public gatherings, and hence the Washington High School was selected. Value of Collection Praised. O. M. Ilummar, member of the Board of Kducation, said that the collection is one of great value and he desired all students of Portland to see it, and will arrange for this gathering, when Dr. Dave Kaffety. the collector of the specimens, will tell about the history of the relics. The collection represents the work of more than 30 years. Dr. Raff ety came to Oreson as a pioneer and at once started g-athering Indian curios and mineral specimens ot every sort. With him it became a passion. The Indian relics were gathered in and about Port land and in the Willamette Valley, and in this work he was assisted by Indian John Casino, a well-known friend of the whites, ho died near Troutuale a few years ago. The relics were gathered near Ore gon City. Sauvie's Island, at the Cas cades, along the . Sandy River and Clackamas itiver. These rude imple ments, stored away in the assembly hall of the Brooklyn School, have a great value, and tell the story of the habits of the original inhabitants be fore the coming of the white man. Professor Thomas Condon, former state geologist, and other geologists regarded the collection of great value, and spent hours examining the relics when they were depesited at the old Raffety store on East Oak street. VeMfU Contained in Collection. In the cabinets are many mortars and pestles. Dr. Raffety having obtained a complete collection of both, ranging from the larger ones used for grind -ing food to the smaller ones used for making paint and medicines from herbs. One cf the mortars is oblong in form and has the head of a turtle clearly defined, with the arms and ribs along the sies. There are about 30 mortars in the collection made of com mon basnlt. some of tufa and trachyte. Dr. Raffety says that he secured his finest mortar by the fact that he was a sprinter. O. B. Johnson, a rival col lector and a friend, told him and Dr. Raffety that a beautiful mortar could be found at '.he foot of a certain oak tree on East Morrison street. Dr. Raf fety reached the tree first and got the mortar. Among the pestles is one made of jasper 01 extreme hardness and beauty This specimen 4s eight inches Inns- hr four across the base. The material is extremely hurd and it is not easy to understand how the Indians could have lashioned the implement. One of the pestles has the head of a seal and an other the head of a bear. One nestle. H inches long, has the form of - a salmon. Dr. Raffety in speaking of the col lection, said: 1 hese stone implements are like the eaves 01 a 000.-. As we turn them over and look at them they seem to in. dicate their uses. They belonged to in autio.ii race 01 people, who niaue I J,."' x 1 1 Mortar I'nearthed . Near Oregon lliy. 2 Rouen BItH of Machinery and AYeaponn and Crude but Eb- Krnved Statuary of Multnomah 1 uiani. . 3 Indian Stone Hammer Heads, Punishment Devlcea and Uam bllne Balln. Beluit Dr. Dav Raffety, the Donor. , and used them in making their living and .in offensive and defensive, and some of them are of great age. "More than' 100 years ago Lewis and Clark in their descent of the Columbia River" found many different tribes of Indians, ibout 20,000, each subsisting on such game as the country produced, in addition to the yearly run of salmon taken in the Columbia River and its tributaries. Stone Implements Commonly Found. "It was noticeable that stone imple ments were more commonly found be low the Cascades than in the Upper Columbia region. Both eides of the river at the upper and lower Cascades. The Dalles. Sauvies Island and Willam ette Falls are noted places. Different kinds of rock material used in forming these stone implements would indicate that " tribes from many parts of the Pacific -Coast "migrated to and from these fisheries; and from the broken implements found strewn broad cast on the surface would indicate that there was continual strife and war fare over the mastery of the fisheries. "The early pioneers found the In dians had a Pacific Highway consisting of from 15 to 25 deeply-trodden paths, side by side, worn by the different tribes in journeying with their ponies, dogs, drags and papooses to and from these' fisheries, extending the full length of the Coast from California to Washington and the Upper Columbia region. These paths did not go straight over oui louowea me easy grades around the hills that could be ridden in a lope or trot in traveling them. "It was common in the early '-JOs and '50s to find in a pioneer dooryard. uiuuoiii in ana mrown down, many fine stone implements to be carried off by any curio hunter or scientist that wanted tnem. Those that were plowed up look more ancient than the dark greasy ones found on the surface, and me ouned ones always were more per fect. "This was on account of the secre tiveness r.nd selfishness of the Indian If the mortar or pestle was too large to be carried on a journey, or if he di-i not intend to return he would break me pestle and punch a hole in the bot tom of the mortar, rendering it useles" and leave it. otherwise he would bury it for future wants on his return. "Below the Oregon City Falls on the Willamette where the banks are gradually undermined by high water, and are falling away into the river's edse, may be found even today arrow points and stone workings from the ancient graveartl. "Sauvies Island was- another ren dezvous or place where they held their big potlatches and conventional dances. Here the early pioneers found many places strewn with skulls and bones of the Indians. together with great quantities of stone implements. "Captain Clark on visiting the Mult nomah tribe was informed by an old Indian who brourht -forward an Indian woman, whose face was covered with smallpox pits, that some 30 or 40 years ueiore a disease had been contracted that killed them off by the thousands, almost depopulating the tribe of Mult nomah. Hence it is to bs inferred that more Indians died by pestilence than by warfare. , "The location of this island at the junction of the two rivers, with its many lakes filled with wapatoes, the greatest numDer of -waterfowls and other game in abundance, made it an asylum of reluge for all tribes and ex plorers. "A large Indian god carved out of basaltic ttone, weighing somewhere near a ton, was found on Oak Island and rema'ned until some 40 veara an. when an ignorant tenant, not knowing or caring about the value, needed some stone to build a chimney, broke it to pieces, thereby destroying one of the largest and grandest pieces of stone work that Oregon ever produced. The Indian? worshiped it, imploring it for rain or cry weatner, lor food or jour- nejing to tn, nappy Hunting grounds. Each Has Separate Use. "Each and every stone implement or carving has its use. The mortors and pestles lor grinding corn and edible roots were frequently ornamented with heads of birds and animals. The sink ers for ancnorlng salmon nets. The stone chisel for pelting skins used in clothing:, sleeping beds, wigwams, etc. The rock hammers for breaking bark. bark holds fire longer and more heat by blowing it up. The stone knives (obsidian volcanic glass) for skinning game. The stone targets for arrow practice. Spears and arrow points are used in procuring game. "The bad doctor that fails to cure his patient they tie to a tree and jab his eyes out without disfiguring the facial expres3i3n. "The stone bludgeon for fighting to be carefully concealed under his blanket. "Gambling balls are all sizes.- The large stone ball weighs 99 pounds. The game played was by pitting two large skilled athletes belonging to opposite trmes in roiling these stone balls into ground iiOles. The side gaining the greatest number of holes won, thereby carrying off every possible movable outfit belonging: to the losing tribe, consisting of ponies, dogs, wigwams, skins, and even the clothing on their backs. In great glee, while the losers would go off mad", tired, and hungry. "Indian John or John Casinov, de scribed the game in his own way as follows: - "Nanitch kla-hop copa illalie mit-lite Ict-yokwa Nanitch kla-hop copa illahee yahwa. Hi u Siwashes Hi u cuitin Hi u skins hi u ictas mitlite yokwa. Hi u Siwashe Hi u cuitin Hi u skins Hi u ictas initi yawah. Spose you comtux hyas Kkookum klosh-si wash, wake mesachie yokwa. Spose you comtux inati yahwa hyas skookum hyas klosh siwash wake mesahchie. Hyas skookum Tillicum mamook okok stone let kla hop copa illahe mitlite vokwa. Hi u Siwash he he he Yahwahe. Hi u Sl washes hyas sullox hyas tilmah hyas 1 olo ankutty . clatawah clatawah." Mr. E. Phil. Merrill, the well-known au tomobile lecturer, , will be in Portland to day, November 11th, and will deliver an address at our salesroom, 21st and Wash ington streets at 2:30 and 8:15 in the even ing. As the most eminent authorities in the engineering world are almost unanimous in the opinion that the eight-cylinder "V" type marks the ultimate in motor car en gines, all who are interested in the prog ress of automobile construction should find the talk well worth hearing. In connection with the explanation of the principles of the "V" type motor, Mr. Merrill uses a stripped cut-open chassis, which is arranged with electric lights and glass plates in such a manner that all of the working parts of the car may be seen in operation. Visitors will not be importuned, and we hope that every automobile owner in Port land will hear at least one of these lectures. You are cordially invited to be present. . Washington at Twenty-First Street PARISH RECEPTION SET RBV. THOMAS JBXKIXS TO BE WEL COMED TO ST. DAVID'S. BiKhop Sumner Will Institute New Rector on November SI, After Heturn From Eugene. As a welcome to the new rector. Rev. V. Thomas Jenkins, and in honor of Bishop Sumner. St. David's parish will hold a large reception tonight in St. David's parish house. East Twelfth and Belmont streets. Members of the ves try and their wives will assist in the receiving line with Bishop Sumner and Rev. Mr. Jenkins and Mrs. Jenkins. The institution of Mr. Jenkins has been set for November 21. when the bishop will be back from Eugene. He leaves for the college town on Saturday and will conduct conferences there and give several addresses. Bishop Sum ner will preside at the vesper services at the university on Sunday. On Mon day he will speak for the Young Men's Christian Association . of Eugene and on Tuesday for the Young Women's Christian Association. He will be a guest at the faculty luncheon, and will be entertained by many of .the fra ternities and sororities... He will give the address at the rally for the game. Each afternoon of next week the bishop will be in his office on the campus. The institution of the Rev. Thomas J. Williams as rector of St. Paul's, Oregon City, will take place on Sun day, November 28. The Rev. Mr. Will iams formerly was located in Oakland, Cal. PLANTS SHORT OF MEN Joel Ii. Isaacs Reports Furniture Factories "Working Overtime. ' Joel L. Isaacs, vice-president of the Milwaukee Chair Company, Milwaukee. Wis., was a. business visitor in Port land yesterday, accompanied by Paul P. Kennedy, of Seattle, his Northwest ern representative. -"Our factories are running overtime. said Mr. - Isaacs, "and we can't get enough men to do the work. No, it isn t due to war orders, either, for they don't use very many office chairs in the trenches, and office chairs are our specialties. The present run of busi ness, which is common throughout the East, is caused by the natural expan sion of trade throughout the country." . Mr. Isaacs will visit some .of the local furniture manufactories. Kelso Foresees Mine Development. KELSO, Wash.. Nov. 10. Special.) Renewed activity by the Cascadia Min ing & Development Company in the Green River and St. Helens mining dis tricts Is forecast by the increase of the capital stock of this concern from $1,500,000 to $6,000,000. The county has just completed a survey of a road up Green River for this companv. which they agree to build. They also have been planning extensive plant con struction at their mine. 15 miles : up Green River, and their increase in capi tal stock would indicate that some im provements are contemplated. Silver ton Names I'atrolman. SILVERTOK. Or.. Nov. 10. (Special.) At a special meeting of the Council held last night it was decided to ap point a night patrolman at a salary of $60 per month. B. S. McGinnis will re ceive the appointment. There are seven trade unionists In cacn Thousand Inhabitants In Finland. S. S. S. Greatest Blood Remedy Gives Results When Others Fail Nature's Remedy for Blood Troubles. The purifying and curative proper ties of Nature's great remedy have made "S. S., S. for the Blood" a house hold saying. Thousands today enjoying- perfect health owe their recovery from blood or skin diseases to this universally used blood purifier. S. S. S. Is made entirely from roots, herbs and barks, which' possess cleansing and healing ingredients. Tou cannot be well when your' blood is impure: you lack strength . and energy, natural with health; your complexion becomes pale' and sallow; your vitality is weak ened. When waste or refuse matter, which Nature intends shall be thrown off, ia left in the system. It i absorbed into the blood and boils, pimples, rashes, blotches and other eruptions of the skin appear. S. 8. goes into the circulation and remove every particle of blood taini or poison of every character. All skin diseases and eruptions pass away, and the smooth, clear skin, glowing with health,' shows that the body is being nourished by rich, pure blood. Rheu matism. Catarrh, Scrofula, Contaglou; Blood Poison, all are deep-seated blood disorders, and for their treatment nothing; equals S. S. S. Get S. S. S. at any drug store. If yonrs is a neculiai case write s. S. S. Co, Atlanta. Ga. 1 Crowded with flavor 2 Velvety body NO GRIT 3 Gromble-proof 4 Sterling purity 5 From a day- light factory 6 Untouched by bands Gum 5 The7-pomt gum PEPPCRMIMT-IN RED WRAPPER CINNAMON - IN BLUE WRAPPER Mmmi afrienely m ';Sm 1 'challenge to . . MmlmUmM your memory: H r M ! i"smri li a time when the H Ge'l Arthur JMMIjm wasn't a favorite m I on the Coast! iff ffiW ''iPil Gold Medal Award Ml 1 Panama-Pacific it Lr If Hh i Gen1 II 'lliiwii 1 CIGAR, -clf&s if (rSfWS 1 Also a 3 for quarter size gfe MfL,, iM,, miiiiinijro - Smoked tef" ; jl ' I .. .. - M. A. Gmwat A Cow Ic Pirtrihotor. 4