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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 16, 1920)
s THE MOKXIXG OltEGOXIAS", TTTESBAY, SOmn?ER 1C, 1920 " NIGHT SHOW HONORS WOil By FLYING FOX Grafton Long Jump Made With 20-Foot Leap. . ATTENDANCE IS LARGE Twice as Many Entries as Last Year and More Class Mark Opening of "Week's Exhibit. With twice as many entries as last year, more class to the performances, and a large attendance, the night horse show opened at the livestock pavilion in North Portland last night. It will continue each night this week as the evening feature of the Live stock exposition. The big event last night was the Grafton long Jump, won by W. E. Sanderson, president of the Portland Hunt club, on his thoroughbred hunter Flying Fox. He won from a field of 17 classy horses, including K. 1 English's great jumper Bounder, who took second place. Bounder won last year's high jump. Flying: Fox was the onlj horse to clear the boxes at 20 feet. The judges, Walter Palmer of Ottawa, 111., who has judged In 20 different horse shows this year, and Major Sven Christen sen of San Francisco, were enthusi astic at the performance of both horse and rider. N Old Glory Is Tlctor. Another interesting event was the driving of J. D. Farrell behind Old Olory to victory in the heavy harness class. There was a big field of 17 entries. Mrs. Wayne B. Keyes' Lord Nelson -ot Tacoma won second place. Winkum, owned by Miss Carolyn Flanders of Portland, took third and Whisky, driven by little Miss Doris !cCleave of Victoria, B. C won fourth. Hildare, owned by Mrs. Wayne B. Keyes of Tacoma, won first place from a field of 28 in the light harness class. Interesting events tonight will be two jumping numbers, a tandem heavy harness class and seven other numbers. . The night horse show opens at 8 o'clock. ' Ribbon Winners Announced. Following are ribbon winners on Jast night's programme: Class 1 Finest Harness Horse, Single; 18 in the Kins. Blue ribbon Hildare, Mrs. Wayne W. Keyes, Tacoma. Wash. Ked ribbon Cochette Bevel, L. IS. Eag Jlsh, Pasadena, Cel. White ribbon Silver Dare, H. S. Burn ham. Colorado Springs, Colo. Pink ribbon Alice K. Xare, Airs. Bush W. Clemens, Medford, Or. Clans 43 Draft Horse Teams. Blue ribbon Carmon and Delma Earl W. Waits, Filer. Idaho. Red Ribbon A. C. Ruby, Portland, Or. W hite ribbon A. C. Ruby, Portland, Or. Pink ribbon Detroit and Floree, E. W. Walt. Filer, Idaho. ('loss liS Ladies Three-Gal ted Saddlers, Over 15.S. Blue rrbbon Sterling Duke, Matt Sic DnuKall, Portland. Red ribbon Lois Hardy, B. L. English, Pasadena, Cal. W hite ribbon Alice K. Dare, Mrs. Buth W. Clemens, Medford, Or. Pink ribbon Lady Jane, Miss Jane Booeyman, Portland. Class 84 The Grafton Long Jump. . Blue ribbon Flying Fox, 20 feet, W. TJ. Sanderson. t Red ribbon Bounder, 19 feet, K. L. Eng lish, Pasadena. White ribbon Drift, 1 feet, B. L. Eng lish. Pasadena.' Pink rlbbon--CoppeT Queen, Walter Sproule Jr., Edmonton, Alts. Class aHeavy Hmrnens Class Single, 14.2 and Over. Blue rfhbon Old Glory. J. D. Farrell. Red ribbon Lord Nelson, Mra 'Wayne W. JCeyes. Tacoma. White slbbon Winkum, Miss C. W. Flan ders, Portland, Or. Pink ribbon' Whisky, Jas. McCleave, Vic toria, B. C. Class 57 Thoroughbreds. Ztlue rinbon Flying Fox, Mrs. W. K. Sanderson, Portland.. Or. Red ribbon Ducal Crown, Charles Pa gan. Portland, Or. White ribbon Daisy. Matt McDouga.I1, Portland, On Pink ribbon Bonnie Gal, Walter Sproule jr., Edmonton, ana. Class 20 Gentlemen's B-Caited Saddlers. Klue rl-bbon Hildare, Mrs. Wayne W. Keyes, Tacoma, Wash. Red ribbon Headmaster, K.. X,. English, Pasadena, Cal. White ribbon Joan Sawyer, George E. Plummer, Seattle, Wash. Pink ribbon Silver Da.e, H, S. Bym bam, Colorado Springs, Colo. Class 29 Green Hunter. Blue ribbon Major Dillon, Mrs. W. E. Sanderson, Portland, Or. Bed ribbon Indian Queen, James Mc Cleave, Victoria. B. C, White ribbon lona, James IMoCleave. Victoria, B. C. Pink ribbon Raatus, G. L.. A. leaner, Seattle, -Wash. Tonight's Programme. 7:40 Parade of Shorthorn and Jersey 8:00 Ladles' roadsters, single, 22 entries. 8:20 Heavy harness tanduns. 7 entries. R:3S Gentlemen's threorfiakted saddlers, 13.2 and under. 2S entries. 8:55 Four-in-hand draft horses, 4 en tries. !:30 Ladies' fire-galted saddle horse, 11 entries. V : 30 Ladles tranters, over Jumps, 22 tries. :W Combination narses, three-salted. 17 entries. 10:10 Hunting pairs, over 4 jumps, li entries. 10:SO F1t Jumping. Juvenile Hunt olub drill. BETHEL CLUB GIVES PLAY Sketcbs Helps Swell Crunch Build in); Fond. The Bethel Dramatic clnb present ed a four-act play,"A Loyal Friend." at the Little theater last night for the benefit of the building; fund of the Bethel Methodist Episcopal church. The hall was crowded and the audience appreciative. The play was presented under the direction of Mrs. A. u Fox. Rev. A R Fox wm one of the hits ef the evening as Royal Flayford, everybody'a friend." Joseph S. Barnes, made a good portrayal of Gil- bert Fanshaw, a newspaper man. Zepha Baker was splendid as the dashing young widow, and Pansy Harper made a good Mrs. Fanshaw. Calvin Jackson played the villain, Eaymon Alvarez. The musio was furnished By the Colerrid-ge-Taylor Orchestra tinder the direction of Rev.' Alphonso Fox, con ductor. Master Duncan Allen played a piano solo. Obituary. ASTORIA. Or., Kor. 15. (Special.) John C. Jones died this morning at his home In Seaside as the result of a stroke of apoplexy. Mr. Jones, who was a native of New York, 63 jearB of aso, was formerly a resident of Portland, -but has been making his home at Seaside for the last two years: Resides his widow, he leaves tut daughter, Mra Alex Oil bert Jr, of Seaside. The body was sent to Portland for interment. - The funeral of Gerald Julius Decius Jr . who was KUIed in a railroad sc lent at Caliente. Wv 'Vnvomh,,.. o cid ill be held thin Bft.ra.nn - O'oloclc frnm " - V. 1 ' . . 1 . . - " " unuic b uiiuerutHing chapel. East Seventy-nmth and Gli san streets, with interment in Rose City Park cemetery. Gerald Decius W.s thA Knn fif Mb .. .. -I . I u. ..... auu iiro. V-. t. Decius of 94 East Seventv-ninth North. He was horn -Tiil.r 91 lani at Ravenna. Neh. T4i narona - wi brothers and one sister . survive' htm. Several weeks ago the young man mem tjjtct to secure.work in railroad nsirucuon camps. At Caliente he ined a bridire sraner -j n h ; 1 .. temntlnar to hnnrj A . : .. stepped and fell under the wheels. Mrs. Antohe Peterson, a resident of LIS State for 35 VMra lioH loo, T; th day at her home in Mis't, Or. She was 6S years old. Mrs. Peterson is sur vived hv niat.r Mr.. -Mr If nl! - - -- , . 1 " - ... .'i. Jiii uy of Portland, and two brothers, John j-.ioei or jLona, Kan., and Casper Li- wen ua roniana. RATE HI. QUEUES ASKED TEXAS COMPANY MAKES HAtH OF CHINESE LVTO FILTERS. Cloth Used for Straining Soups and Similar Purposes, Says Concern in Petition. WASHINGTON, Nov.. 15. Establish ment of a carload rate on Chinese queues pressed Ipto cloth from Hous ton. Tex., to various parts of the coun try was asked of the interstate com merce commission today by the Ori ental Manufacturing company ' of Houston. Clifford Thome of Chicago, repre senting the applicants, told the com mission that the pigtails pressed into cloth were used for filtration, strain- Ling soups and similar purposes. The commission took the application un der consideration. Mr. Thome explained that prior to the war European supplies of gat and camelhair were drawn on for filter purposes, but that when this source was cut off the industry he represented turned to China, where the fall of the Manchu dynasty was followed by abolishment- of the edict directing Chinese subjects- to wear queues. The Houston company, whicrf is Joined by . the Southern Cotton Oil Crushers' association, chief users of hair-cloth filters, in the petition, has accumulated 800,00 pounds of Chinese hair, equivalent of the former pig tails of 2,400,000 Chinese, and now seeks carload rates to move It north for the consumers, 19 caTloadS' al ready having been ordered and the prospects being for 60 more to move during next year. F. B. RILEY TOUR IS ISSUE Question of Another Trip in East - Is Put Up to Committee. . Whether or not Frank Branch Riley shall be sent through the east on an other lecture tour for the Pacific northwest is a question which Mayor Baker has asked a committee of three Portland men to answer. He appointed them yesterday. They are Edward Cookingham, president of the Ladd & Tilton bank; Rabbi Jonah R. Wise of Temple Beth Israel and John Fl Daly, president of the Hibernia bank. This committee was named by the mayor at the request of representa tives of various business and civic organizations who vconsidered the question last Monday in a meeting called by W. J. Hofmann, president of the Northwest Tourist association. MAGAZINE SUIT PROPOSED Seattle Mayor Asks Advisability of ' Suing Publication. SEATTLE. Wash., Nov. 15. Spe cial.) In a letter written to the city council today Mayor Caldwell sug gests that the corporation counsel be asked as to the advisability of the city's bringing suit for libel against tne public service Magasme, a Chi cago publication. Alleged defamatory articles have been appearing in Public Service, ac cording to tha mayor, concerning Se attle s hydro-electric power plant and other enterprises. The magazine is -widely distributed In the east, ' the mayor says, and is grivinsr Seattle a black eye. Announcing Lower Prices m m SSiSS. MAYOR BAKER FUNS Executive Says Obstruction - Hampers Police Cleanup. BOMB' HURLED1 AT DINNER Law. and Order Conference Sliows Sinister Influences in Operation to Defeat Dry Enforcement. frit 1 1 4 a r, f tA m.mhra fif thfl Portland civil service board featured a "frank", address by .Mayor Baker, and caused a decided sensation at a dinner in the Hotel Benson last night. which closed aii all-day law-and-or- der conference of the Anti-Saloon league of Oregon. ' Mayor Baker held up members or the civil service board as standing in the way of his efforts to "clean up" the bureau of police and rid it of Tolicemen who, I know, are assist ing bootleggers." Mentioning no names, but saying he intended to v talk frankly, the mayor, who was scheduled to dis cuss the worth of prohibition in Port land, launched into .an expose of the bureau of police, which he said he "will 'clean up' regardless bf whom is hit." He .-; blamed the' civil service l)oard 'for failure to sustain him in his efforts. "As mayor of this city, I want you people here tonight to know what I am up against in trying to enforce the prohibition law," said he. "In the firstlace, there is the civil serv ice. If a policeman steals some thing; if he takes a bribe, if he does ' anything wrong, he has an appeal to the mayor. , If I dismiss him, he can appeal to the civil service board. And, folks, although the members of that board are my friends, and -one - of them has been since schoolmate days, they have sustained me but twice in my dismissals. Conscience Hay Be Roused. "I am going to talk everywhere I can, just like this tonight, in an ef fort to try and rouse the consciences of these members, to see if they won't help me 'clean up' the police. I am not going to stand here tonight and tell you people that I have the most honest police force in the country. I don't say they are all bad. of course, but I know absolutely that there are officers in that bureau who are as sisting bootleggers and, so help me, I'm going to break them, let the con sequences be what Uhey may. But I've got to have help and I want you people and others like you to help me." Mayor Baker was loudly cheered by the 250 guests present. His re marks followed an address by Ben W. Olcott, governor of Oregon, who told of the many benefits this state had derived from prohibition. ' Captain Frank - Ebbert, associate general counsel of the Anti-Saloon League of America' told of the na tional outlook, warning his hearers to beware of the liquor interests, who, he said, plan a "come back." - Jail Bootleggers, I Demand. Bootleggers musijbe jailed if stat utes are to accomplish their object, was the declaration of men high in the offices of county, state and na tion, who were on the programme. Among those who urged such' ac tion on the part of judges of the city, district and state, as .'well as the fed eral courts, were G. Johnson Smith, federal prohibition direotor for Ore gon; Walter H. Evans, district attor ney for Multnomah county, including Portland; E. A. Baker attorney ' for the Anti-Saloon league of Oregon, and W. J. Herwig, its superintendent. Bootleggers appear to .have some sort of mysterious, subterranean as sociation of interests which at critical times comes to their succor, accord ing to Mr. Smith, who, answering a question, said that he had no doubt of this arrangement. . Special Legislation Planned. Superintendent Herwig announced that, at the present time, the Anti Saloon league of Oregon is Intending to prepare proposed amendments and co-ordinating acts, taking the best clauses from the Volstead enforcing act and the Oregon law, and that the legislature will be asked to enact the-se into law at the coming seaslon. After that, he' said, it is the plan of on Goodyear. Tires Official announcement is hereby made to the public of a new price schedule on Goodyear "Tires and Tubes effective November 15, 1920, detailed information concerning which is now being furnished all Goodyear Service Station Dealers. ...' . lEmbodying a higher level of quality and a larger capacity for service than ever before, Goodyear Tires at these new prices offer unequaled value in economical and satisfactory performance. Tour nearest Goodyear Service Station Dealer is "now able to supply you with Goodyear Tires and Tubes v at these lower prices, and thus afford you, through a quality product -and the service with which he backs it, the utmost in return for your investment. See htm today. The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Comparry dm- fhe organization to hold. If possible, a law and order conference in every county, or in groups of counties, for the purpose of stimulating interest in prohibition enforcement and to get the people: to back "their-officials strongly. - r The question of providing funds with which district attorneys and sheriffs may make investigations was brought up by Superintendent Her wig and it is probable some amend ments to the present laws, on that subject may be sought. -- Captain Frank Ebbert of Washing ton, D. C, associate general counsel for the Anti-Saloon league of Amer ica, spoke during the morning ses sion, declaring that the liquor question,- far from being dead, is very much alive and that friends of prohi bition must realize that a systematic effort Is to be made at the right time to weaken the Volstead-act. F. W. Snyder, in charge jof the law and order department of the Anti Saloon league of Oregon, spoke on ways in whit th "public may as sist the officers in enforcement work. RIVALS UNFAIR TO STATE Competinj Shipping District? Adopt Discriminatory Tactics. While Oregon products are being sold on a big scale in'South-Amerlcan markets and particularly in the re public of Peru, the state of Oregon is little known in the southern markets, due.- to discriminatory tactics em ployed by competing shipping dis tricts, according to Nicholas Pier angel, widely traveled foreign com merce writer, speaking before the Foreign Commerce club at the Cham ber of Commerce last night. George M. Cornwall, editor of the Timberman, gave an address on the timber situation. Statistics' were given to show that while the total lumber x production of the United States haf been steadily deolining the last few years. Pacific coast produc tion has been' holding its own and has even gained in an appreciable de gree. - New members elected to member ship in the Foreign Commerce club last night included F. W. Vogler, president of the Northwest Auto corn pan jk D. H. Bates of Marsh & Mc Lennan; Major W. W. WllBon of the Export and Shipping Journal; R. H. Brown of the Federal Box & Lumber company, and James W. ' Crichton, district agent, Un'ted States shipping board. . NEW LIBRARIAN EXPECTED Announcement of Appointment Likely to Be : JIade Soon. . The names of six or seven persons available for the post" of librarian were presented to the trustees of the Portland Library association by W. L. Brewstef last night at a special meet ing of the board in the Yeon building. Definite action will be taken soon to fill the place of Zulema Kostomlat sky, present librarian, who will leave Mr. Brewster returned Sundajr1 night from an extensive trip in which he studied the library methods of about 15 different cities and inter viewed a number of men and women regarding possible appointment. He made a detailed report to the board last night on the qualifications of various possible candidates.. - Amateur Athletic Union Convenes. NEW ORLEANS, Nov. ' 15. The an nual convention of the Amateur Ath letic, union opened Sunday with 60 delegates in attendance. The first of ficial work was the awarding of the 1021 national track and field cham pionship 'to Los Angeles. MAKES FORDS START EASY New Device Does Away With Bother of Spinning Motor Over and Over in Cold Weather. A -new Gas Generator, which heats the manifold, vaporizes th: gas and makes instant ignition possible, has been invented by the Bear Manufac turing Co., 108 Bear building. Rock Island, Illinois. This simple and in expensive device does away with hot water make-shifts, etc., and gives you a "ready to start" motor in the coldest weather. It also saves 60 gallon on gasoline because with it you can use the cheapest gasoline all winter. If you want to ty this great trouble and money saver, send them 12.50 and they will send you one of these remarkable devices postpaid under guarantee 01 satisfaction or money back. Write them today. Dealers wanted. Adv. 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