TIIE 3IORNIXG OREGONIAN, SATTXRDAT.' XOVE3II5ER 13, 101 fi. JITNEYS AGAIN STIR SESSION OF COUNCIL WAR BABY AND WAR ORPHAN, WHO WILL BE ADOPTED BY WAR ORPHAN HERE PORTLAND COUPLE. Joan Fraser, Aged 2, Is to Be Adopted by Mother's Chum. 13 Fin JU Denunciations and Personali ties Fail to Change Atti tude on Service. MR. DALY HAS NEW PLAN Repeal Ordinance Is Withdrawn and Drafting of Franchise Resigned to Please .H Parties Con cerned Is Promised. Another Jitney demonstration in the City Council chamber yesterday failed to cause the Council to change its po sition In regard to the jitney franchise ordinance. They still are prohibited from operating. In the face of a general demonstra tion participated in by jitney drivers, "both union and non-union, and their friends, in which denunciations, per sonalities and blinded charges were hurled back and forth, the four mem bers of the Council Mayor Albee and Commissioners Bigelow, Baker and Dieck who have voted to allow the Jitneys to operate only when tliey com ply with the Council's regulations, atood firm. They refused to change their position so as to let the jitneys operate while the test caee is being put through the courts. Commissioner Daly announced at the meeting Oat he believes there is a chance of the Council and the Jitneys Betting together on a franchise that will be agreeable to both lntejests. For that reason he withdrew his ordinance introduced 10 days ago providing for a repeal of his ordinance passed July H, which resulted in tae Jitneys being put out of business Thursday. He says ho will prepare a proposed Jitney fran chise of his own. Union Ifend Denounces Driver. When the Jitney demonstration wafl at its height President A. A. Thielke. of the Jitney Drivers' Union, ordered a Jitney driver who was making a wild speech to sit down. "There is no ex cuse for talk like that." said Mr. Thielke. "I wish this Council to under stand that this demonstration was not staged by the men in our organization. I have control of them and they are making no talks, but I cannot control men such as the one now talking." Commissioner Daly then made a speech in which he explained his stand. 'I don't think a demonstration such as this helps matters any. Tou don't ac complish anything by appealing to prejudices. Personally I have been ac cused of having deceived you in this Jitney matter. I wish to say that I have not, for I still believe that the members of this Council are honorable and honest men and that they will en tertain any reasonable suggestions. I will endeavor therefore to prepare a franchise harmonizing the views of fie Council members." "Let the Jitneys operate until the thing is settled," said Mrs. A. W. Nich olson. "I make a motion to that effect." aid Commissioner Daly. Motion t Seconded. The motion received no second and therefore died, the rest of the Council . holding that t'.ie Jitneys have had four rrjonths in which to consider, legisla tion and that .their present plight is their own fault because of their fail ure to act. "There is no second to the motion," Mayor Albee announced. "Who has tjie right to second the motion." asked some one in the cowd. "Any one," said Mayor Albee. "Well, I second the motion," sang out a woman. "I mean that any one in the Council may second it." said the Mayor, and there was a round of laughter. "Personally," said Commissioner Dleck, "I believe there is a chance for us to get together if the Jitneys are willing to be reasonable." Mr. Thielke announced that Munici pal jirage janggutn naa expressed a desire to appear before -the Council in behalf of the Jitneys and would be on Hand later. Why should we hear Judge Langguth?" asked Mayor Albee He wants to tell you we are law- abiding citizens." "We know that," re plied the Mayor. "I don't think we ought to hear Judge Langguth," said Commissioner Dieck. "I think this Council has f.ie situation well in hand and that the Municipal Judge can shed no light on the subject." The Council adjourned a few min utes later, before Judge Langguth ap peared on the scene. Women Address Council. Mrs. A. W. Nicholson was one of Ob speakers. She said the Jitneys should be allowed to operate while the test case is going through the courts. Sarah Wilder made a speech in which slie said the Council was all wrong in the stand on the jitney proposition, as well as many of the other things done in recent years. Including the selection of the public Auditorium .ite. "Ths members of this Council shouM act on things without regard for their own personal interests," said she. F. L. McGuire said the public should tie allowed to choose its form of trans portation. "From where I live," he said, "I can come into town in a Jitney in 15 minutes, while it takes three-quarters of an hour to get to town on the streetcar." It was at this point that a Jitney driver in the Council gallery began to rave, and Mr. Thielke told him to shut up and explained to tlie Council that the Jitney Drivers' Union was not re sponsible for such talks. Following the meeting there was a rush of the crowd toward individual members of the Council. Commission er Baker was surrounded by a large crowd and a bitter argument ensued. Another crowd headed by Mrs. Jose phine Sharp, who has been particularly active in behalf of the jitneys, rushed up to Commissioner Bigelow and be gan denouncing his stand. "See here," retorted Mr. Bigelow, "I am doing what I honestly think is right, and your threats are not going to rorce me to change my stand." Others surrounded Mayor Albee and Commissioner Dieck and advanced all kinds of statements. Arguments con tinued, until the crowd gradually thinned down and ultimately disappeared. If'S' ' ' - 1 1 I it- ' IV - 4 1 - W -- 31 JL 'SI, ' ? ' "-z f II If'" z 'W " ' rH.;; II ir-s,;: v i J- - j, J f V r " $? 1 L. f I eocJ-" So cf? d J JOAJT FRASER, SOOS TO CHANGE NAME TO JOAN ROCHET. JITNEYS WILL RUN Drivers to Establish Them selves as Taxis Today. POLICE ACTION NOT KNOWN attended the funeral in a body. Some of the members of the eastern Star also were present. Interment was in Lone Fir Ceme tery. Dr. Dyott had charge of the serv ices at the grave- Pall bearers were: Drs. W. .P. Dick inson, H. C. Miller, C. E. Stolte, A. W. Chance and W. A. Cumming and Henry E. Dosch. CAR SHORTAGE SHUTS MILL Coast Range Lumber Company Mable Behind In Orders. at FATHER KILLED IN BATTLE Child Makes Trip Across In Hands of Strangers, bnt Is Met on Tier Arrival In New Vork by New Mother, Mrs. George Rochet. Little Joan Traser, war orphan, spent her second birthday yesterday with her rorster parents-to-De, Mr. ana Mrs George L. Rochet, 1043 G&ntenbeln ave nue. Joan arrived here Wednesday from London, and will make Portland her permanent home. Unusual are the conditions surround lng the projected adoption of Joan by Mr. and Mrs. Rochet. . A number of years ago Mrs. Rocnet and Mrs. Fraser were chums In London, England. That was before either was married. When the European war broke out Mr. Fraser Joined the Welsh. Fusiliers. He almost immediately went to the front, and at the battle of Mons he re ceived wounds from which he died. Joan was born after the death of her father, and Mrs. Fraser was left alone with her infant child. At the birth of the child, Mrs. Rochet, then unmarried, acted as godmother. Last Spring the mother died, and the child was left alone. Before the death of the mother, Mrs. Rochet met Mr. Rochet in London, while Mr. Rochet was waiting to go to the front with his regiment, the Sixth Gloucester. In January, 1916, they wer married, and Joan was assured of a happy home. Mr. Rochet obtained his -discharge from the Sixth Gloucester before he saw any fighting, and he returned to the United States. Mrs. Rochet had preceded him. Joan traveled from London to New York in the care of strangers, and from New York to Portland. Mr. Rochet ac companied her. The two stopped for a few weeks en route. The child will he adopted Immediately by Mr. and Mr... Rochet. Mrs. Rochet has an Interesting col lection of brass buttons taken from the uniforms of many British soldiers who have been in actual fighting. There are 160 buttons in the collection, and many of them show marks of bullets. At the present Mr. and Mrs. Rochet are living with Mr. Rochet's mother, Mrs. Anna E. Grivelll, 1043 Gantenbeln avenue. 'MASONIC- CASE IS ON FRANK MOTTER WAIVES HEAHIXG) HELD TO GRAND 1CIIY. City Attorney LaRoche Says Plan Will Mean More Trouble for Op erators Who Will Bo Violat ing Rules for Taxicabs. The Jitneys will establish themselves today as taxicabs and for hire eturs and attempt to operate over their old routes, having been defeated to date in their fight for permission to operate. The plan has been worked out by the Jitney Drivers' Union and will be put into working order today. Two-thirds of the jitneys already have the required license and the others are getting them as fast as possible. Fifteen of them took out licenses yesterday. The plan is to evade the anti-Jitney ordinance through a technicality in the for-hire license ordinance. Under this the driver is required to post a notice of his rates of fare for service into cer tain zones of the city. The jitneys plan to operate anywhere in the city at regular for-hire prices, but to special ize in service over certain streets for a B-cent fare. By this the driver will post a sign indicating that his rate will be 5 cents on Hawthorne avenue to Fiftieth street, for example. While having made no formal ruling In the Droposition. City Attorney La Roche said last night that the practice probably will get the jitneys into more trouble because they will be operating as Jitneys under such a plan. "There is a wide difference between a ror-nlre car ana a juney or mgwr "bus." said Mr. LaRoche. "In the case of the for hire car his license provides that he shall offer his car for hire to the public and that the patron shall say where the driver snail go. wnen the driver tells the passenger where his car is going he becomes a Jitney driver. There is nothing, however, to prevent the jitneys under their for hire license selling their services to any part of the city as requestedy their patrons, but to confine their service to one particular street or zone places them in the Jitney class." Just what action the police will taxe Is not known, but it is probable a writ ten opinion will be asked from City At torney LaRoche before any action is taken. DR.CARDWELL IS BURIED HUNDREDS OF FRIENDS GATHER TO HONOR MEMORY. MR. RALSTON GETS WRIT Release From Contempt of Court Sentence Is Being Sought. Habeas corpus proceedings to get Edward Ralston, committed to the County Jail by Circuit Judge McGinn October 2 for contempt of court in failing to pay his divorced wife ali mony of $150, out of confinement were begun yesterday, and a writ was issued by Circuit Judge Davis, returnable next Tuesday morning. Ralston was committed to Jail shortly after he had said that the man who said he had been running about with other women was a liar. Judge Mc Ginn had made that remark, and Ral etoo took exoeptlon to it la court.- The plant of the Coast Range Lum ber Company, at Mable, Or., on the Southern Pacific, was forced to close down a few days ago on account of the car shortage. The mill employs nearly 100 men. Meanwhile, however, occasional cars are being received on the company's siding and are being loaded by a small force of men retained for that purpose. The warehouses and loading platforms at the mill are stacked high with lum ber. It will be impossible to operate again, said T. J. Seufert. the manager, yesterday, until the present surplus is cleared away. The company has enough orders to keep It busy indefinitely and ia handi capped in its operations only by Its inability to get cars. When the submarine telephone cable was laid to Nantucket recently a bot tle containing papers giving a de scription of the event was thrown over board from the steamer Robert dow ry, which had carried the wires. E. E. Stackfaoase, Also Accused of Ob taining; Money Under False Pre tenses. Ia Before Court. Frank Motter. master of Robert Bruce Lodge, No. 47, Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite Free Masonry, in the Amerlca'n Masonic Federation, who is held on a charge of obtaining money under false pretenses, waived prelim inary examination before Municipal Judge Langguth yesterday and was held to answer to the grand Jury. E. E. Stackhouse, secretary In the same or ganization, also was held to answer following an examination. Both men are out on $300 ball each. C. H. Borquist, 47 East Twenty-fourth street North, on whose complaint the two men were arrested, testified be fore Judge Langguth that he and his brother were induced to Join Mr. Mot ter's organization on representations made by the latter that It was the only "real" Masonic organization. He said he was thereby Induced to pay the sec retary of the organization $20 as ini tiation fees. A receipt, which he re ceived and which bore the names of Mr. Motter and Mr. Stackhouse, was exhibited. Since his arrest Mr. Motter Issued a Pioneer Dentist and Horticulturist Remembered. With Many Set Pieces and Floral Offerings. Several hundred friends gathered at the Edward Holman Company chapel yesterday afternoon to pay the last measure of respect to the memory of the late Dr. James R. Cardwell, pio neer dentist and horticulturist. who died at his residence, 186 Bancfort street, Wednesday noon, at the age of 86 years. The funeral services, which were held at 2 o'clock, were in charge of Dr. T. L. Eliot and Dr. Luther R. Dyott, each of whom referred to the long and useful career of Dr. Cardwell, and of the part he had played as a benefactor to humanity and the state. The chapel was made a mass of flowers by the large number of set pieces and floral offerings given by friends of Dr. Cardwell. Many of these were the gift of organizations with which he had been connected. Among the organizations giving flor al offerings were: Portland Lodge, Ancient Free and Accepted Masons, the Scottish Rite Masons, State Board of Horticulture, Portland dentists, board of directors of the Florence Crittenton Home. In all there were probably 100 floral pieces. A largo number of Portland dentists S Let us get back to common, i sense natural food i A CENTURY ago a wealthy faddist in old London invited his friends to a "white dinner." Nothing but the old- Z time whole-grain bread had ever been used before, but Z a Hungarian miller solved the problem by removing from the dark-colored flour everything but the white starchy parts .so that the bread too, at the dinner, might be white. The idea of white foods became a fad and tie craze spread all over the world. Dr. Jackson's 2 !oark Meal is a return to the old-time, common-sense, natural diet, The almost universal use of white foods ia founded upon a FAD. The daily growing popu larity of Roman Meal is founded upon NATURE. Roman Meal is a well balanced combination of whole berries of wheat (30), whole berries of rye (35), wheat bran (10), and flaxseed (25). The flax has been rendered absolutely tasteless and odorless by electricity; it is the most nourishing seed known. Roman Meal prevents indigestion. It relieves constipation, or we will return' your money. There are many Roman Meal recipes printed on the package but you can use all or any of your own favorite recipes by mixing 1-3 white flour with 2-3 Roman MeaL Roman Meal restores the lost balance, to the white flour. It makes pancakes so digestible that the most delicate person will relish them, also waffles, muffins, fruit rocks, gingerbread, brown bread, steam pudding. You just ought to see how the kiddies and grown ups relish Roman Meal porridge with its delicious nut-like flavor. Roman Meal porridge MUST never be stirred, except while mixing meal and water. Roman Meal prevents indigestion. It is porous and remains porous if yon do not stir while cooking. The digestive juices reach every particle quickly. Digestion is thus both rapid and thorough. The bran in Roman Meal gives the muscles of their digestive system its natural work to do and thus relieves constipation. The flaxseed also aids in this and prevents the bran from causing catarrh of the bowel. Ask your doctor. At all grocers.. Porridde Bread pancakes. Gems Fruit Rocks Cookies. sff CrX All Kinds of Baked Products Komarv Meal Co.. Tacoma (Washington) and Toronto (Canada) At All Grocers. The Easy Way to Health. : Roman Meal Bread Baked in Portland only by the ' : Log Cabin Baking Co. : go the prices on the foods we rely upon daily for nourishment There is no advance in the price of Ghirardelli's Ground Chocolate a most nourishing and sustaining food today, more than ever, the running mate of real economy. A table spoonful, a cent's worth, makes a cup of delicious Gkfrardelli Is GrowndCli ocolate Siac 1S52 D. GHIRARDELLI CO. G7ifrartfeI7l'$ Crown J Choeotatm nme In U lb.. I lb. and 3 lb. SuFraaci . statement announcing; his Intention of resifsnlnir from the lodge. He said he Joined the organization originally un der the Impression that he waa embrac ing "genuine" Masonry. Mr. Motter Is a Portland attorney and has been reading clerk of the State Senate for a number of sessions. Mr. Stackhouse In a contractor. Indians Attend Moscow Court. MOSCOW. Idaho. Nov. 17. (Special.) The Federal Court is sitting here this week nf prohnhly will remain In session over Into next week. Judge Frank S. Dietrich, together with J. 1 McClear. United States District Attor ney; John Smead, assistant United States Attorney: T. B. Martin, marshal, and V. D. Mclteynolds. clerk, are here from Boise In attendance. Many liquor cases from the reservations have brought many Indians to town. Centralis Elk Is Burled. CENTRAL1A, Wash.. Nov. 17. (Spe cial.) The funeral of Troy Kahler. a prominent younr Centrsllnn who died "Wednesday, was held from the Metho- dist Kpiscopal Church. The local Elks attended the funeral in a body, and had charge of the services at the ceme tery. Th. pallbearers were County Treasurer John R.iught, Floyd Bress ler. Joe Cole. A. K. Althauser. J. IX. Wonderly and John Slack, and the hon orary pallbearers were K. W. Daubney, C. A. Berlin. Harry Troth, Dr. O. 11. Nelson, W. II. lngraham and S. It. Jackson. Spain profluee more than three-quarters of the vT'd'a iupp?y of ol!v oil. 'Tke Power behind the 'Focer-ne Knows "Simon Pure" costs more be cause made entirely from pure leaf fat best of all fats. Worth more because it goes a third farther than ordinary lard. Onm of A rmoar 'm (mt trfadf FUJM LEA? Use "Simon Pure" in cakes and pastry and for deep fat trying. Does not smoke ntiftl If roorhpc a tpmnor'itnro fnliTT IfVP higher than that needed for successful cooking'. This means a kitchen free from smoke. Sold in pails only 5 sizes. ARMOURCOMPANV Charles II. Pommer. -lr.. ISth and Flanders il-. l'ortlaod. Or. l'huos Main "Simon Part." likm fit other Armour Ijattity Prodatit. im pumronfmmd bAnr.xvr' Gnmi Lnhvi. Lmmh eW. tkm I imm mm otcoijnrf-c (r' rwrc f,M.a