THE 3IOKXIXG OREGONIAN, TUESDAY, JULY lO, 11)17. XARiFA J. FAUG'S WILL IS SURPRISE Bulk of $600,000 Estate Is Bequeathed to Thomas N. Strong and C. L. Mead. OLD FRIENDS REMEMBERED Minor Bequests to Charitable In stitutions and of Personal Char acter Amount to $30,000. i Inheritance Tax Heavy. To those who looked after her per sonal comfort and general welfare during the twilight of her life was given the bulk of the $600,000 estate of Mrs. Xarifa J. Faling. deceased, ac cording to the terms of the will, which was filed yesterday for probate in the office of County Clerk Beveridge. After the disposal of something like $30,000 In minor bequests. Mrs. Faling left the remainder of her estate to Thomas N. Etrong. pioneer Portland attorney, and C. L. Mead, Portland realtor and. in surance man. It is stated in the will that the two chief beneficiaries, Mr. Strong and Mr. Mead, are long-time friends of the de ceased. For more than 40 years Thom as Strong and his father. William Strong, had been the legal advisers of Mrs. Faling and had counselled her erenerally in business as well as legal xnatters. Mr. Mend Was I.Ifce a Son. Mr. Mead, it was stated, had been a inend of Mrs. Faling for the past 20 years and during the past five years especially had looked after her every want. It was he who had arranged for her securing comfortable apart ments on Washington street, where she had lived as a girl, and in general was always solicitous for her personal com fort. To William E. Metzger, clerk at the Imperial Hotel, was given a bequest of $3000 because of his many kind nesses to Mrs. Faling during the past few ears, while a bequest of $3000 was made to Carl Schieck. a son-in-law. This estate Is the first large Port land estate to be filed for probate since the enactment Of the recent amended state and Federal inheritance tax laws, and, according to John F. Logan, attorney for the estate, a total of about $25,000 will have to be paid in state and Federal inheritance taxes durin the present year. The estate will be taxed more than ordinarily because the bulk of the fortune was not left to relatives. Real Value of Estate 9600,000. Although the petition for the pro bate of the estate sets forth that it is valued at $451,000. it was stated that the real value would amount to at least $600,000. The property alone is Valued at $215,000, this valuation being determined by the assessed valuation, whereas the actual value is said to be more than $300,000. To circumvent any possible contest which might be made against the will. Mrs. Faling stipulated that the sum of $1 each is bequeathed to all who might claim relationship or a part of the es tate. Thus far but one man has claimed a relationship to Mrs. Faling. He is Tyler Smith, of Sheridan, Or., who ar rived in Portland immediately after Mrs. Faling's death last week and said that he was a first cousin. Mrs. Faling left approximately $160,- 000 in cash on deposit in a Portland bank and further left notes and mort pages valued at $75,000. according to the petition for the probate of the will. Minor Bequests Made. In addition to Mr. Metzger and Mr. Schieck, bequests of $3000 each were made as follows: Beavcrton Children's Home, St. Ag lies Baby Home, Children's Home at Corbett and Gaines streets. Visiting Nurses' Association. Mann Old People's Home. Catherine Becker and Etna B. Chattm. The will further provided a bequest of $10,000 to Cornelius Barrett, whom she termed her "so-called brother. with the stipulation that the money should revert to the estate in the event of his death before her own. Mr. Bar rett died March 9. last. In making this bequest she stated that it was made in lieu of court proceedings, which or dered her to pay for her brother's care In a hospital. The two chief beneficiaries, Mr. Strong and Mr. Mead, are named as Joint executors to serve without bonds, and they were so appointed in an order signed yesterday by County Judge Tazwell, following the signing of an order admitting the will to probate. John F. Logan and (?. Henri Labbe are attorneys for the estate. ROAD NEARJ3AND0N PAVED Rook Is Being Taken From Govern ment Quarry at Tupper Rock. MARSHFIELD, Or., July 9. (Spe cial.) The first hard road section to be started In the Coos County good roads system Is being constructed at Bandon, and the expectation is the money available will provide for the first four miles out of Bandon towards Curry Couny. The material Is rock from the Gov ernment quarry at Tupper Rock, a basaltic material, which has been used on the Government jetty work for a number of years. The present work is being financed from a special tax fund, and will relieve the good roads fund, which amounts to only $46,000. The bond issue work is being prosecuted by Bjorquist and Hagquist, who are mak ing a number of heavy cuts and Btraightening the highway. PISGAH HOME NEEDS HELP Plea Made for Assistance, In Taking Care of Crops. Out at Pisgah Home labor is greatly needed for helping with the crops. Mrs. Hattie B. Lawrence, who is in charge of the home, is making an appeal for women to donate their services to the cause The men from the home are nearly all out on other work and the crops will go to waste if they are not soon cared for. If any man, woman or boy has any time to spare. Mrs. Lawrence will ap preciate their assistance. They will receive no remuneration, but their board will be furnished free. PART IN PL0T IS DENIED John F. Oralg Says Ho Will Be Ac- i quitted on Hearing. M LOS ANGELES, CaL, July 9. (Spe slaL John. F. Cralr, pioneer ship. builder of Southern California, who was one of the persons among the 139 in dicted by the Federal grand Jury in San Francisco in connection with alleged German-Hindu plots, said he was con fident that his case would be immedi ately dismissed on a hearing. He said that the only way his name became connected with the case was through the sale of the steamer Maverick to the Maverick Steamship Company, of Los Angeles. Mr. Craig purchased the ves sel from the Standard Oil Company, overhauled it and sold it to the Maver ick Company. He said that he had explained the transaction to the grand jury a month ago. Mr. Craig also said that he did not know the intention of the company to which he sold the vessel, which was later commanded by Captain Fred Job son, one-time commander in the Ger man navy, and now a fugitive from justice in the United States. DR. DUNIWAY IS GALLED COLORADO COLLEGE TAKES ITS PRESIDENT FROM WYOMING. Well-Known Educator Is Fourth Son of Late Abigail Scott Dnninar He Will Accept Offered Position. Dr. Clyde A. Duniway, president of Wyoming University, received notifica tion yesterday while in Portland to at tend the National Education Associa tion convention that he has been elect ed unanimously to .the presidency of Colorado College, of Colorado Springs. The board of trustees of the collage made their decision in the matter Fri day. Dr. Duniway announced last nlht that he had accepted and will go to his new charge as soon as possible. ur. Duniway is an Oregon man, the fourth son of the late Abigail Scott Duniway, and has figured prominently in educational affairs in the West for the past 30 years. He graduated from Cornell in 1892 and took his doctor's degree from Har vard in 1897. For 11 years he held the chair of English and American history at Stanford University and then went to the University of Montana, where he held the presidency for four years. lve years ago he was called to Laramie to the presidency of the Uni versity of Wyoming, which position he leaves to take the presidency of Colo rado. He holds honorary doctor's degree from two universities in Colorado, the Denver University and the University of Colorado. While attending the N. E. A. con vention he is a guest at the homes of his brothers in Portland. BOOTLEGGER IS CAUGHT JAMES COX, OF BAKER, BROIGHT BACK IX OWN AUTO. Wife Also Arrested and Ellin Hotel Cloned Donald Geddes Paid $2000, Expecting; Marriage. BAKER, Or., July 0. (Special.) In the same automobile he used In his escape from the officers Saturday night, James Cox was brought from Welser, Idaho, where he was captured yesterday. Sheriff R. , P. Anderson brought the man back, and Cox has begun serving: the 37 days of his last sentence for bootlegging: while wait ing a grand Jury hearing on a subse quent charge of having liquor in his possession. His wife was also held on a charge of selling liquor. The Elks Hotel, of which Mrs. Cox was proprietress, was attached and vacated by the Sheriff this afternoon. The attachment was executed in view of a suit for ?2000, filed today by Don ald Geddes against Mr. and Airs. Cox. Geddes says Mrs. Cox represented to him that she was not married and that she would marry him for $2000. He alleges he gave her the money, but that she took it away with her with out fulfilling her part or the con tract. She was, he avers, married to Cox at the time. Cox's automobile was also attached. CLOSED CAR SURPLUS 290 Southern Pacific Manager Takes Exception to Shortage Reports. SALEM, Or.. July 9. (Special.) The Southern Pacific has Justfiled a report with the Public Service Commission that the road has a showing of 101 per cent as to its car orders for lumber mills, being 1 per cent over the orders outstanding. General Manager Dyer, in a letter to the Commission, takes exception to the manner in which car shortage reports are given to the press. He states that the company estimates the number of cars according to the empties in transit or otherwise being handled by the com pany in the state, while the Commis sion estimates that when there are un filled orders there is a shortage, whether the cars are in the state or not. Reports on the Southern Pacific to day showed that company to be short 173 open cars and with a surplus of 290 closed cars. N. E. A. REUNION TOMORROW Outdoor Gathering to Be Held In Washington Park. The largest out-of-doors affair given for the National Education Association delegates will -be held tomorrow from 2 o'clock to 8 o'clock at Washington Park. Citizens of Portland will provide the guests with special cars, making the round trip from the Auditorium around Council Crest to Washington Park, where the Nation's grand reunion will take place. There will be hostesses from every state, from Alaska and from the Is lands to greet the guests and to make the afternoon merry. Guides will be on all cars to explain points of interest and a happy afternoon is promised delegates. Spscial cars will also run on Washington street from 2 o'clock until 7. AIR FLEET IN LONG FLIGHT Twenty-Two Airplanes From Chi cago Arrive at Rantoul, 111. RANTOUL. 111., July 9. Twenty-two Army airplanes landed safely here to day after flying from their base at Ashburn Field, near Chicago, in the longest squadron flight ever made by a united States Army air fleet. Twen ty-tnree airplanes started, but one aviator became lost in a fog and was forced to land at St. Joseph, Mich. By tomorrow Chanute Kield, the ob jective of the flight, will see at least 40 airplanes in the hands, of student aviators, and word has been received that 43 machines are expected soon. The Original jTffisgQ Turkish Blend ...rmiiiinrMiiiii.m. " rSFf Pit,.. - -: ..gS.;tef v, :r j;;;;!!;;!;!;;;;;;!;;;!;!::;;;!;;;;;;:!!:;:;;;:! TURKISH paBgi;;;ii;; ::::1iS:4:i::::ffi::::4::::::::::fi:;:::"' .V.i : :': tt:::::3 blend pl::::::::2E::: :::::::i:::5::: :Ej: Is :::::-::E:EE:::::EE::::EE:E:S:: M ff iff ? : H i .,x : i : qe : : : : 3 Came ron & Cam e ron Co. :::::::: it ::::: :::x:::::3i:it ::g-xn: J iI -trH t - Richmond, va. r.5?j BE 1 FILM BOXER IS HERE Ray Lincoln Visits Portland With Famous George Walsh. COLUMBIA HIGHWAY SEEN diet ENefr Is Meeting Success In King In South and Leo Houck Also Is Getting Along Fine, Says Visitor. Rut Lincoln, the aggressive Los An geles middleweight, is in town looking over the Rose City. Lincoln is the as sistant property man for George Walsh, the famous ox film company star, who is a Portland visitor. He also serves as Walsh's trainer and keeps the athletic movie star in trim so that he can provide the film fans with his feats of athletic daring and daredevil Btunts. Lincoln has met all the good middle- weights around Ios Angeles and South ern California, and has a bout on at Vernon the latter part of this month. When in Los Angeles he works beside Chet Neff, Len Powers and Leo Houck, all of whom are well known in Port land, having boxed here many times at the Rose City Club. Chet Neff is boxing right along In the South and has met with great suc cess in the moving picture game, be sides winning most of his bouts. Neff and Lincoln will make a trip to Seattle in a few months, where each will box. and then try to land matches in Van couver. Leo Houck is also getting along fine. according to Ray, and is on his way to Seattle for a visit with his folks. While in the Sound City Houck will take on a few local boys. Len Powers is a cameraman and has retired from the ring for good, having settled down to the married life and a good Job. Al McNiel, another Portland boy who is in Los Angeles, is with the Keystone Comedy Company and has not done any ring work during the past year. He probably will not re-enter the game. Lincoln. will start for Los Angeles to day with Walsh and his company, which Includes Paul Powers, the well- known film director; Sena Owen, the beautiful Fox Film actress, and Fred Burns, exponent of the Wild West. The whole party has been taking part In scenes on the steamer Great North ern for a coming release of George Walsh s on the r ox programme. Walsh is quite some boxer himself., It has been suggested that Walsh and Douglas Fairbanks meet for the mid dleweight championship of the moving picture world. It would be a good bout and should draw a big house, and the public should not be surprised to here of boxing promoters bidding for the match in the near future. rs 'i nin an .sn-nsiini i m i i n i . f tii.-siiii.i.i "fomn m',r win VlukoJ From the Golden Gate to the Statue of Liberty Fatima Fatima is the original of all Turkish blend cigarettes;" and, besides that, it is the biggest-selling 15c cigarette THIRD OREGON UNIT ORDERED ON DUTY OUTSIDE OF STATE Engineers Arrive at Camp and Will Begin Target Practice Soon Officers of Guard Face Examination in Near Future. BT WILL G. MAC RAE. i WITH THE THIRD REGIMENT, OREGON INFANTRY. July 9. (Special.) Thanks to matrons and maids of Oregon City, the regi mental hospital medical fund Is between $400 and $500 richer today. And that is not all the ardent women of the city are hard at work and will endeav or to increase the fund several hundred dollars more. This hospital fund Is one that Is spent for the sick and wounded that are receiving treatment in the regi mental hospital. It is the treasure store from which the little luxuries fed to the sick are obtained, and is always most carefully guarded. The money, which was raised by Mrs. William R. Logus, wife of Captain Logus, regimental adjutant, and the women who aided, was the result of the band concert and dance which was held Saturday night at Oregon City. The sum of $400 is already in hand and was turned over to Colonel John L. May. There is more to be collected. Colonel Dentler Pralaes Soldiers. Colonel C. E. Dentler, In charge of the First District of the Sixteenth Divi sion, delivered a soldier talk to the officers and men who left today for duty somewhere outside of the state. Colonel Dentlera talk was the best ever listened to by the men of the Third Oregon. It was a soldier's talk, one of world-wide experience as an Army officer and keen observer, to soldiers that are ' In the making. Colonel Dentler spoke in glowing terms in appreciation of the American sol dier, and he declared, without equivo cation, that the American soldier, taken by and large, as a fighting man, once he became familiar with what was ex pected of him. did what soldiers of other nations did, and did that some thing better and more thoroughly. The American soldier is in a class by himself," said Colonel Dentler. "He is a superior fighting man,- better educated and has greater initiative, therefore he makes a formidable foe. ! Tou men have been reading about what the soldiers of the Allies have been do ing on the battle fields of Europe. Just be soldiers yourself, and you, when you reach Europe, will find yourselves doing the same thing. What is best, you will be doing this same thing bet ter." 'Engineers Arrive at Camp. Colonel Dentler's faith in the ability of the American soldier, is not of a man who quoted what some one else had said, but he spoke of the American soldier and his "ability, from first hand knowledge. It came from his long ex perience in the line of duty and watch ing the American soldier on foreign battle fields. It was a talk with the true soldier punch in It, and one that won't be forgotten soon by those who had the good fortune to hear it. Three hundred and thirty-one stu dent engineers, under the command of Major Edmund L. Daley and Captain : i n I 7 n 1 1 11 Ml iUHHhUtI Douglas Gillette, United States En gineer Corps, with full field equipment, arrived in camp shortly before noon today. The engineer officers consist of ma jors, captains and lieutenants and among the 331 members of the class are engineers of National reputation and experience. Many of them, in respond ing to the call for army engineers, left positions and projects in civil life that meant the sacrifice of princely incomes. Yet there never was thrown together a set of men that displayed more keen interest in what is before them. Although the engineer corps has only recently arrived at Vancouver Bar racks from the Presidio, and to all of them much Is new and strange, yet they fell to and established camp as If they had been at the soldier game 11 their lives. One of the student engineers is a former graduate of Cor vallls. and was a student when Colonel Dentler was instructor there. They will begin target practice early this week. Officers Face Examination. It Is easy to see that officers and soldiers ore Just children grown up. Just now there are a number of offi cers who are facing, not without some little dread, an examination. Colonel Vernon A. Caldwell. 44th Infantry; Captain Francis R. Endleott, 14th In fantry, and Captain Edward W. Stew art, of the Third Oregon, are to be the examiners. A peculiar feature of the examination is this: Captain Stew art Is himself a provisional officer and he and Captain Briney and Lieutenant Kettle are to come up soon for exam ination. Lieutenant-Colonel Allan E Smith, chief medical inspector for this division, and Major M. B. Marcellus are to be the examining board for tha doc tors, xnoso wno are due lor examina tion are: Lieutenant-Colonel Carle Abrams. on detached duty; Major Will iam F. Dougherty, Major William S. Gilbert (chaplain). Captain Henry O. Miller, Captain James R. Neer, Captain James J. Crossley, Captain William R. Logus and Captain Edward J. Elvers. Major Marcellus. Captain Fred W. West and Captain Henry O. Miller have been appointed on the board to make an examination into the shooting of First Sergeant Morton, or Company L. Corporal Leon J. Elder, Company L, has been ordered for duty with the re crultlng company. Corporal Arvid V. Peterson, Company M. has been appointed sergeant. Everything indicates that, the stay of the Third Oregon Is limited. Prelim inary steps for the movement to Palo Alto have already been taken. Twelve Army combat wagons and 48 head of mules and harness, property of the Supply Company, Captain Henry Hockenyos commanding, have left camp and under a special detail are on their way to the California canton ment. Phone your want ads to The Ore gonian. Main 7070, A 6095, this country knows anything about. Fatimas please so many men, they'll please your taste, too. aMu-a. Cultivate Cool Comfort In B. V. D. Underwear WHETHER you dig away at the ground or at your business or trade, B.V. D. helps you forget it's hot. In our own modernly equipped Cotton Mills at Lexington, N.C., the fabric from -which these Loose Fitting B. V. D. Under garments are made, is produced in a scientific manner from selected cotton to insure durability in wash and wear. In our own B. V. D. Factories the garments are skilfully cut, strongly stitched, accurately finished to fit and be cool and comfortable all day long. MADE FOR THE If it hasn't this Red mm BEST RETAIL TRADE B. V. D. ClMed Crotch Unloa Suits. (Pat. U. S. A). SI. 00 the Suit. B.V.D. Coat Cot Underabim and Knee Lenctlfc Drawers, 50c. the Garment. The B.V. D. Company, FLEISCHNER, Wholesale Distributors B. V. D. UNDERWEAR fees Eiiilillij It ten I3.V.D. N.Y. '.Til aV.O- Company 3 MAYER & CO. J