11 BEN F. JONES RONS FOR SECRETARY JOB Lincoln Representative Will Make State-Wide Campaign. lent quality has been struck 700 feet beneath the surface on the Jay Man nin ranch, 18 miles south of here? where the Klamath Oil company has been drilling an experimental well for several months. Directors of the com pany are undecided whether to con tinue the exploration for oil or aban don the drilling operation and go to mining coal. Captain J. W. Siemens, president of the First Sate & Savings bank, head of the oil -see king corporation, says that if the coal vein Is thick enough, which further progress of te drill will determine, it is likely that the com pany will take a chance on the length and breadth of the deposit and sink a mining shaft. If the vein is too e 68-page, beautifully V vIZjIJ illustrated Corn Products Cook; Book. It really helps to solve the three-meal -a -day problem. Every house wife should have one. Write us today. Corn Products Refining Co.,P.O. Box 161, New York. shal low to warrant mining develop- PUBLIC POSITIONS HELD Aid. Given Locks Bill and Suffrage Is Cited in Announcing Candi dacy on Republican Ticket. THE MORXIXG OREGONIAN, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1919. r-e- w.MMW" -.3 t .' ; . -x- - - - : I, rta ' i i-j- . - Ben F. Jones of Newport, Or., of ficially announced himself as a can didate for the republican nomination of secretary of state yesterday. Mr. Jones, who is at present a member of the legislature as a representative of Lincoln county, plans an extensive campaign and will keep going until the eve of the primaries. Following is his statement of can didacy: "Hundreds all over Oregon have never asked, written or telegraphed me to become a candidate for the of fice of secretary of state. . 1 "However, believing in the prin ciple that if a man wants anything. the best way to get it is to go out after it. "After due consideration and without undue influence, 1 have decided to become a candidate for the office of secretary of state on the republican ticket at the coming primary election. Public PoHltions Held. I have resided in the state of Ore gon since 1870. My home is on the shores of the Pacific, in Newport, Lincoln county. Or. I have been a practicing attorney since 1897. My work for the public as county clerk, mayor of Toledo, In dependence and Newport, registrar of the United States land office of Rose- burg and four regular and three spe rial sessions of the legislature should fairly well qualify me for the duties of secretary of state. i "If defeated at the primaries, T will work . and boost for my successful opponent. 'Tours for more and better roads and a bigger and greater Oregon. "BKN F. JONES." CampaiKn to Be State-Wide7. Headquarters will be established in Portland. "It may be only a roof, but 111 have fome place for a headquarters, ex plains the candidate. "I'm not a rich man and cannot spend a lot of money making a campaign, but it is my pur pose to go into every county in the slate. There are about six months for me to travel around in and I want to see and talk to as many voters as i can. "I've given some account of my qualifications in my statement, but there are a few other things that might be wortt. saying. For example, I put through the 1907 session of the legislature the Oregon City free lock: bill. The government did not act ii time ana the appropriation lapsed, so 1 returned in 1909 and got the bil passed again, and then the govern ment matched the money of the state and the locks became free. The locks a re now owned and maintained by the government. Before this bill be came a law there was a tax of 50 cents a ton for all freight going through th& locks, and a charge of JO cents a head. The bill has saved the people of the Willamette valley thousands of dollars. Aid Given Suffrage. "My connection with the Roosevelt highway bill is fresh in the mind of the public, so there's no need of men tioning that. It was my resolution that the people adopted and Oregon is now awaiting action on the part of congress to match our bond money. "Probably a great many women vot ers do not know that in 1907 I intro duced a resolution for equal suffrage in the legislature. I fought it through the house successfully, but when the resolution reached the sen ate It received only five votes, so I can claim to be one of the early friends of the equal suffrage cause in Oregon. Although a practicing attorney, Mr. Jones was for 15 years a steamboat captain, receiving his master's license in US3. t 1 t ' N . : If W Ji X - , : I ' ' : lien F. Jonm, Lincoln re1 tatlve, nho announce! dacy for secretary of ' 1 rpreaen- a candl- t ' atate. ment they will continue with the oil exploration. KLAMATH WOMAN HELD Grand Jury Indicts Mrs. Nicholas Over Shooting of Doctor. KLAMATH FALLS, Or., Nov. 18. (Special.) Mrs. Minnie Nicholas, wife of a former mayor of this city, has been indicted by the county grand jury for assault with intent to kill as the result of the shooting of Dr. George E. Mitchell, vetetrinarian, last August. Mrs. Nicholas is at liberty on $3000 bond. It is alleged that Mrs. Nicholas. angered because Dr. Mitchell had whipped her dog, met him on the street and, after an altercation, snot him. He was seriously wounded and for weeks hovered between life and death, but is now fully recovered. RESCUERS GIVE UP HOPE Tunnelling to Reach Entombed Miners Progresses Slowly. WALLACE, Idaho Nov. 18. P. P. Grant and Emil isayko. miners caught in a cave-in in the Hunter mine at Mullan, near here, Saturday after noon, today were believed to be dead No sound from them had been heard by rescuers since Monday morning. It could not be stated, according to Charles L. Herrick, manager of the mine, when they would be reached. as tunnelling toward them is proceed ing slowly. Six years ago miners were buried near the- place of Saturday's disaster and -were rescued after 49 days' im prisonment. SHERIDAN HOPS STOLEN Thieves Carry Away 21 Bales on Motor Truck. SHERIDAN, Or., Nov. 18. (Special.) -Thieves operating in this neighbor hood entered the farm hophouse of F. K. Heider Friday night and car ried away 21 bales of the finest grade hope with a motor truck. The rob bers progressed with the load unti they reached a stretch of muddy road where they became stranded and un loaded several of the bales. The bales they took away are val ued at nearly $o00. The hophouse is close to farm real dences, and how they made their get away without the residents hearing them is puzzling. ALUMNI PLANS MEMORIAL SPOKANE DEPOSITS GAIN Tnivers-Uy of Oregon Men Who Died In Service to Be Honored. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, Eugene. Nov. IS. (Special.) A committee of alumni to act with the faculty and student body committees in arranging plans for a memorial for L niversity of Oregon men who died in the serv ice was appointed at the meeting of the alumni executive council during , homecoming week-end. Chester A. Moores of Portland was chosen chairman. Acting with hi will be Robert Kuykendall and Ralph A. Fenton of Portland , alter ins- low of Salem and Professor Fred erick S. Dunn. Dr. James Gilbert was elected permanent campus re porter to aid Miss Charlie Fenton, j alumni secretary, in gathering mate rial for old Oregon. Increase Over High Mark of Tw Months Ago Is $7,000,000. SPOKANE, Wash., Nov. 18. Ap proximately $60,000,000 was on de posit in local banks at the close of business last Saturday, it was an nounced by local clearing-house of ftcials today. This is an increase about $7,000,000 over the last previou high record of $53,000,000, reached two months ago. Receipts from wheat and apple crops are responsible lor trie nign mark, officials said.. CHILD ACTORS Court Rules Against BARRED Appearance OIL DRILERS FIND COAL Strike in Klamath-Falls Vicinity Is Being Investigated. KLAMATH FALLS, Spe,MHl. Anthracite Or.. Nov. 18.- coal of excel- In Play In Chicago. CHICAGO. Nov. 18. Under a rulin of Judee Arnold in the juvenile cour five children under 10 years old are barred from appearing in the play. Daddies." The court held that the appearance of the children was a violation of the state factory law. sunw 77 J JTS JTslZ ILwWS dm iAi TTOR cooking and baking Karo P used in millions of homes. In cooking and baking recipes use mostly Karo instead of sugar. It is sweet, of delicate flavor and brings out the natural flavor of the food. Nothing better than Karo for candy making. For successful preserving use Karo fifty-fifty with sugar or use straight Karo if preferred. Buy In Quantities Save Money "Crvsial WMie-in the Red Can , (Golden Brown-in the Blue Can, Maple flavor the new Karo inih plenty of swlbsi&nce anil a rich Maple Taste -izi the Green Can. 1 JMmli 111 I" -Sg; ' 1M ( is ' . ' ; -:ZA all r- m 7?7Tn j SSm 'Fp) SI .IV 1 Jr ls r-h Who's Who af. Statehouse. fiO. 14. SALEM, Or.. Not.- 17. (Special.) When anybody about the State house wants to know anything: about bridges they invariably ser : an au dience withC. B ypw -"gy McCullough, w h t f ftvW has charge of thli 5, lt,wv,'' 5 work for the statt highway depart-f , 4 ment. Mr. McCulloush was born in South Dakota in 1857. and after about six years moved to Iowa. He attended the public school of the latter state s and afterward en-j . j tered the mainte nance department long plunge down the mountain side and arrived safely at the bottom with their load, but the driver, Martin Foster, sustained a fractured ankle. and citizens of southwest Washington "Whispering Tom," has returned to is old haunts feeling better than he id in 1915. when he went to Van- The Dalles Daylight Hearing Set. THE DALLES, Or.. Nov. 18. (Spe cial.) Citizens of The Dalles and asco county will have a chance to express opinions regarding daylisht saving. Mark-js M. Marks, president I of the National DayllKht Saving as- . sociation and a staunch supporter of 1 the idea, is making a systematic I canvass of communities through va 1 rious chambers of 'commerce. The nr.atter will come officially before the 1 cal chamber later. t n j PIIViPLY? WELL, DON'T BE People Notice IL Drive Them Off with Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets Livestock Meetings In Cowlitz. KELSO. Wash.. Nov. 18. (Special.) -With the co-operation of County- Agent H. C. Burgess, Dr. J. W. Kalkus of the state department is conducting a series of meetings in Cowlitz county. His address, 'The Diseases of Live stock," is illustrated by stereopticon slides, and Dr. Kalkus answers questions. A pimply face will not embarrass you much longer if you get a package of Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets. The skin should begin to clear after you have taken the tablets a lew nights. Cleanse the blood, bowels and liver vith Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets, the successful substitute for calomel; there's no sickness or pain after taking them. Dr. fcdwards Ulive 1 ablets do that which calomel does, and lust as effec tively, but their action is gentle and safe- instead of severe and irritating-. No one who takes Olive Tablets is ever cursed with a "dark brown taste, a bad breath, a dull, listless, "no irood" feeling, constipation, torpid liver, bad disposition or pimply face. Olive Tablets are a purely vegetable compound mixed with olive oil; you wiil know them by their olive color Dr. Edwards spent vears among pa tients afflicted with liver and bowel complaints, and Olive Tablets are the immensely effective result. Take one or two nightly for a week. See how much better you feel and look. 10c and 25c Kelso to Improve Many Streets. KELSO. Wash.. Nov. IS. (Special.) A comprehensive street improve ment has been launched by the city- council and a hearing on the organi zation of the district will be held Tuesday, December 2. About two miles of streets will be improved with concrete sidewalks and curbs. Union Officials Indicted. CHICAGO, Nov. 18. Indictments were voted today against six officials of the Amalgamated Clothing Work ers of America, charged with having obtained large sums from clothing manufacturers by means of extortion and the levying of "fines" in the set tlement of strikes. Bcllingham Miners at Work. BELLING HAM. Wash.. Nov. 18. Practically all the striking coal min ers in this district have returned to work. Mines in the Bellingham sec tion have a capacity of 300 tons daily. and this will be increased to 500 tons within 60 daya, operators announced. of the Illinois Cen tral railroad. In fc- Mel ullouuh. this capacity he was employed al ternately in Illinois and Indiana After three years in railroad work Mr. McCuIlough took up his studies in the Iowa State college, graduating from the institution in the year 1910 with the degree of civil engineer. Immediately following his gradua tion he entered the employ of the Marsh Engineering company, consult- ng engineers and contractors of Des Moines, and continued to serve in that ' capacity until the year 1911, when he accepted a position with the state highway department of Iowa as bridge engineer and later as assist ant engineer. Leaving Iowa in the year 1916, Mr. McCuIlough came to the Pacific cosrst and accepted a position head of the civil engineering de partment of the Oregon Agricultural college. Mr. McCuIlough remained In cor- vallis until the spring of 1919. when he took a position as bridge engineer for the state highway department. He has since Eerved in the latter ca pacity. Because or the extensive road building programme now in progress in Oregon, Mr. McCuIlough has been very busy during the past summer and plans for hundreds of bridges, large and Email, have been prepared under his direction. In some instances the estimated cost of these bridges was as much as SoOO.000. Mr. McCuIlough is married and has a small son. MORE TEACHERS NEEDED Washington Educational Head Says Uneducated Become Criminals. SEATTLE, Wash., Nov. 18. More school teachers are needed, Mrs. Josephine Corliss Preston, superin tendent of public instruction of the state of Washington, declared In talk here last night. "If we don t have : lore schools and ore teachers we will have more jails and more criminals, she asserted. "It Is the uneducated child that de velopes into the criminal and pauper and it is nothing less than a matter of life and death that the children of this country must be taught. Apple Load Plunges Dovt o Hill. COTTAGE GROVE, Or., Nov. 18. (Special.) A four-horse load of ap pies being brought to the Cottage Grove cannery from Lorane went over the grade at the top of Lorane moun tain a few days ago. when the horses were frightened by an approaching motor truck. The horses took a head- 50-Year-Old Soldier Returns. CENTRALIA. Wash., Nov. 18. (SDecial.) Although more than 50 years of age and having gone through the world war, Tom W Ukinson, more familiarly known to the railroad men a- The Greatest Breakfast . says Nothing made, that beats Post TOASTIES couver, B. C, to enlist for overseas service. He declares he lost about 60 pounds in weight, but gained strength. When Buying a, Piano Good Quality Is Real Economy Most people buy a piano once in a lifetime. They start out to buy where they can "do the best" (as they think) , not where they can "get the best" (as they should). The attribute "best" to many usually means the lowest price. Now Pianos, like everything else in this world, are priced according to their intrinsic worth. They cannot be made to sell (and endure) at the prices which some unscrupulous dealers offer them. The "cheap prices" are for "cheap pianos" beware of them, because the instru ments soon give out, sound tinny, become un playable and you have to buy another new Piano. Why not buy a good piano in the first place? It will be real economy to consider quality as well as price. A Good dealer carries several grades of Pianos when measured by price. You may not be able to afford the most expensive, but you will be able to buy according to your purse the buying will be made easy by conven ient term payments and what you buy will have Quality will give service will cause you no regrets. Shermanay & Go. Sixth and Morrison Sts., Portland . (Opposite Pos toff ice) Seattle Tacoma Spokane WHY PAY MORE FOR CEYLON tea WHEN YOU CAN GET . THE BEST FOR A POUND Full Weight Cartons Only The Actual Proof is in the Actual Drinking Askyour Grocer for Tree Tea Ceyion M. J. BRANDENSTEIN & COMPANY OFFICE AND WAREHOUSE 27-29 N. FRONT STREET PORTL4NQ