THE'. MORNING OREGONIAN. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 25, 1020 CLARA SMITH HOLDS TALES EXAGGERATED Woman Accused of Murder Criticises Press Unit. CONFERENCE IS HELD Ulegcd Slayer of Jake L. Hamon Meets Her Lawyers In Fort Worth Behind Closed Doors. FORT WORTH. Tex., Dec. 24. (By e Associated Press ) Denial that . us had signed any statement what .er since she left Ardmore except -jr letters to her attorneys. And char-iterizing- or purported Interviews by i press association as "highly col ed. exaggerated and in many ices inaccurate." were made by :s. Clara Smith Hamon, charged . :th the murder, of Jake L. Hamon, ' , a statement given to the corre . ondent of The Associated Press ioard her train shortly before her rival late today. The statement was handed to the rreapondent, who had accompanied ir party from El Paso, by one of ?r attorneys, W. P. McLean Jr., of .As city, with the following com- .ent: "This statement was signed by rs. Hamon in the presence of nine witnesses. Including ber attorneys. I uarantee the genuiness of the signa ire." Sheriff Garrett of Ardmore, Okla., here he is to take Mrs. Hamon to ice trial, and his party left the train t Benbrook, 10 miles west of here, lortly after 5 o'clock this afternoon ad proceeded to Fort Worth In au- imobiles that were awaiting them, hey drove immediately to the law ."fices of McLean, Scott & McLean, . here a conference with Mrs. Hamon as held behind closed doors. Mr. McLean said their client would main in Fort Worth with friends itil she was "neuded in Ardmore." Christian association, today Issued a statement replying to the charge of the Vatican that the organization "corrupts the faith of youth." "We have a number of Roman Cath olic members hi almost every Y. M. C. A. branch in the dominion and in some cases, as in Quebec, the number amounts to a considerable portion of the membership, but these members are as free to use only the facilities of the institution they wish to. "The relicrinus nrommme of the association is entirely optional and I is not thrust upon those -who for any reason do not wish to avail them selves of it. It is Quite true that the foundation of the Y. M. C. A. is what is known as the Evengelical Chris tian basis, but there is nothing In our programme aiming at proseyting any who come into the nembership and who hold different 'religious views." LET EUROPEANS S , FARMERS EBERT'S PAY . DOUBLED GERMAN" PRESIDENT NOW GETS $2800 EACH YEAR. Head of Government Unable to Sleet Hig-h Cost of Living and Entertain Ambassadors. WIILT SORROW REGRETTED '. lara Smith Says Life Will Be Dc- ; voted to Atonement. r BIG SPRINGS, Texas. Dec. 23. ; Delayed.) (By the Associated Press.) , Consecration of her future energies t a atoning to her family "for the ; 1VI IUW BUC 11, OUU UQ' ' .ermination never again to waste J another hour of her life, were avowed late today by Clara Smith, en route' to Ardmore, Okla.. to answer a charge cf murder in connection with the death of Jake is. Hamon. In an interview with the corres pondent of the Associated Press last ing nearly an hour, -she spoke earnestly on religion' philosophy, psychic research, art, fancy work and most earnestly of ail her impressions of Mexico, where she stayed three weeks' before giving herself up to the custody of Sheriff Buck Garrett of Ardmore, in Juarez Wednesday night. She sedulously avoided dis cussing the charge against her and mentioned Hamon's name only once when she referred to her opposition to his retiring from active life. The interview which took place aboard the train on which she is traveling, was the first granted by her since her surrender. "I have just been reading some of the many letters I have received from my dear friends," she began. "I wanted to tell you of the wonderful friends I had in Chihuahua City. They were deeply religious, though not orthodox. They mothered and fathered me as if I were a child. They brought me flowers' and even toys. When I sought to thank them tbey protested that there was only one benefactor and whatever they did was done by Him through them as friends. It was a great spiritual lesson for me. "As I told them before I left, before I entered Mexico I hated Mexicans but I left in loving them, although I saw much of the beautiful religion I could not adopt for myself. They believe in spirits. Although I do not Bay that" my belief is wrong, I know that I need my own level-headed religion for I have one of my own I am too much afraid of myself to Jet myself dabble in the occult. "When I get back to Mexico and I intend to go there again to rest- I shall teach my friends something of ventilation, cleanliness and hy giene." When asked whether she ever expected to resume her secretarial career she replied: "I have no plans; I know only that I shall devote myself to making amends to my family for the suffer ing I have brought on them. I shall never again waste even an hour of precious time left me. I do not be lieve people should ever retire from active work. I have always opposed any suggestion, that Mr. Hamon should retire." Her face still slightly drawn from the strain of her recent experiences took a new glow of animation as she leaned forward and added: "I believe that every one must grow even during old age. When people con t grow, it is their fault." BOXD IS BEIXG CIRCULATED Four of Five Wealthy Men Report ed to nave Signed Already. ARDMORE, Okla., Dec. 24. Fred E. T acker, ex-state's attorney and local real estate dealer, today began circu lating a bond to provide bail for Clara Smith Hamon when she appears here to face a charge of murder in con nection, with the death of Jake L. Hamon. - Mr. Tucker said that about 45 sig natures had been already affixed, four or five of which represent com bined wealth of five or six million dollars. He was circulating the bond in her behalf and in behalf of her friends, it was said. It was denied .that any woman signatures were on the bond. (Copyright by the Nw York World. Pub lished by Arrangement.) BERLIN, Dec. 24. (Special Wire less Dispatch.) Without even threatening a strike, President .Ebert is getting 100 per cent raise, not in his salary, but in his allowance for expenses. President Ebert s annual salary is 100.000 marks, or $1400 It today's rate of exchange. In addition, he has been getting the same amount for so-called "representation" that is, for entertainment and other ex penses incidental to his office. Obviously, the president cannot en tertain the diplomatic corps very lav ishly on such an allowance. In fact, the chief of his personal cabinet, Geheimrat Meltzer, made it known that Herr Ebert had to dig into his modest salary to help to defray strict ly presidential expenses. Only the independent socialists and the com munists grudge the president the modest rise. The communists are sneering: "Fritz Ebert has it almost as soft as the Hohenzollerns, who are 'starVr ing' abroad!" Other interesting rises for Christmas include an increase of salary averag ing 100 per cent which the Prussian assembly' has voted for Prussia's Catholic archbishops and bishops. The highest paid, the archbishops of Cologne and Bresiau, have been en joying a salary of a few cents more than $500 a year, at the present rate of exchange. This salary has been raised to $1000, but it goes into effect on April 1 next. Some people are un kind enough to recall that is All Fools' day The eight bishops of Prus sia draw about $340 annually. They will be paid $300, always provided the value of the mark does not slip further. It is interesting to note as a study in relativity that .because of the en forced closing of his restaurant and American bar Herr Adlon has been losing 100,000 marks daily, which is equal to the annual salary of the president of the German republic and more than the salary of three Prus sian archbishops. Credit Extension Urged Bureau Federation. by CHIEF SUBMITS PROPOSAL Plan Provides for Handling of Se curities of Other Nations by War Finance Corporation. CULT LEfiDEfl ACCUSED WARRAXT ISSUED FOR HEAD OF FREE LOVE CHURCH. H!UIOX ESTATE I-S $47 7,460 . Two Life Insurance Policies of $200,000 Each Listed. KANSAS CITY, Dec. 24. An inven " tory of the estate left in Missouri by the late Jake L. Hamon of Ardmore. Okla., filed in probate court today by Henry C. Page, public administra tor, gave the total property holdings In this state as $477,46$. The inventory showed two life In surance policies with a St. Louis com pany. for $200,000 and. listed capital stock in a Kansas City bank valued at $la6.19a. and credit with a local brokerage firm of $121,271. Y.M.C.A. ANSWERS VATICAN Religious Programme of Associa tion Declared Entirely Optional. TORONTO, Ont., Dec. 24. Charles W. Bishop, general secretary of the national council of the Toung Men's Flagrant Immorality Is Charged and Children of Followers Are Said to Go Hungry. DENVER. Dec. 24. Hamilton Os borne, chief of police of Denver, to day asked District Attorney Foley to file charges against Joshua Sykes. known as "Jehovah," head of the cult called the "Tabernacle of David, which is alleged to have 600 followers in Denver. Sykes is known in San r rancisco. The police chief's charges alleged flagrant immorality and said chil dren of church followers were hungry and ate from garbage cans on the way to school. The doctrine of Sykes, alleged to be taught to his congregation, as re lated in the written charges of the police chief, is that the minister for bids marriage find that he has left his wife to take up another woman, named in the police charges. Armstrong charges that "Jehovah" is an exponent of free love and al leges his teachings are a "menace to the morals of the city of Denver." SAN FRANCISetT Deo. 24. Joshua Sykes was sentenced in San Francisco on January 23, 1919, to 18 months Imprisonment in the federal pen' tentiary at McNeil's Island, Wash ington, for conspiracy to obstruct the draft law, but was released pending appeal. Sykes was pastor of tho "Church of the Living God" in Berke ley, Cal., and several of his followers were convicted with him. OAKLAND, Cal Dec. 24. Joshua Sykes was head of a religious organi zation in Berkeley until a crowd of citizens of that city, incensed at re ports of his teachings and because he tore" down an American flag, burned his tent and threw him into the huge baptismal font which was a permanent feature of his tabernacle. The Berkeley police had complaints from husbands who blamed Sykes and his teachings for breaking up their homes. After defying all efforts to make him move from Berkeley, Sykes announced that he had a "vision- that the city was to be destroyed and advised his followers to follow :him to Denver. WASHINGTON, Dec. 24. Opening of the markets of Russia, Germany and other foreign countries to American farm products through the handling of securities of those nations by the war finance corporation was sug gested by J. R. Howard, president of the American farm bureau federa tion, today to the senate agriculture and banking committees. Mr. Howard's plan as outlined to the committees in Joint session would provide 'for the extension of credits by having such securities as foreign countries might be able to give for the purchase of American farm prod ucts handled by thewar finance cor poration, either through selling them to-American investors or by issuing debentures based on such securities. Mr. Howard emphasized that his plan did not involve putting the treas ury behind such credits. In the case of Germany, the farm bureau federation president sug gested, that the American credit be made a first lien on all the resources and income of that country by taking priority over the claims of the allies for reparations. Such a step, he said, would be possible under the Versailles treaty and the only thing necessary would be to obtain the consent of the allied governments to the making of. such credit a priority over repara tions. The federal reserve board, through Governor Harding. suggested to Chairman McLean of the banking com mittee introduction and consideration of a bill authorizing federal land banks to make direct loans to the public for. agricultural purposes and authorizing the secretary of the treas ury to deposit funds with or purchase the debentures of these banks. Such a measure, the board said, would prove more effective for the purpose of making additional credit available than a bill permitting the treasury head to deposit earnings of the fed eral reserve banks as a special depos it to cover extension of such credits. A bill of the latter nature has been introduced by Senator' Hitchcock, democrat of Nebraska. W. W. Brauer, New York, who claims. to represent the German gov ernment with authority to secure a loan of a billion dollars for the pur pose of buying American farm prod ucts, was present in the committee room, but did not appear as a witness. No date was set for another hearing by either committee, hut members said that additional hearings might be held after theholidays. , SUTHERLAND IS SLATED (Continued From First Pa?e.) BILL WOULD AID SEAMEN Senator Johnson Introduces Meas- l nre for Help. WASHINGTON, Dec. 24. Compen sation for injured seamen and their dependents is proposed in a bill in troduced Thursday by Senator John son, republican of California. In' event of total disability, a sailor would' be allowed for life a weekly compensa tion equal to 66 2-3 per cent of his earnings, and for temporary disability he would receive a like amount until able to resume work. In. case of death, the beneficiaries would receive premiums ranging from 35 per cent for the widow, 25 per cent for a single chilu and 15 per cent for each additional child, the rates being based on the earnings of the deceased at the time he 'was injured. Klamath to Have Xew Park. KLAMATH FALLS, Or., Dec. 24. MSpecial.) Purchase of eight acres on the west snore or Lake Ewauna, for a park site, was announced by the city park board. The price was $11,- 500. The board plans to beg'n Im provement of the site next spring. S. & H. green Holman Fuel Co. Adv. stamps ror cash. Main 353. 560-21. Edlefsen's wish you Merry Xnias. Adv. training and natural bent, are good lawyers, often yield to the temptation of the quicker short cut to a compe tence offered by clients who want things that can be accomplished through personal acquaintance at Washington rather than the Blow profits and greater drudgery of prac ticing law in the true sense. Sutherland Real Lawyer. Senator Sutherland could ,not do this even if the temptation of a quickly earned competence presented itself to him. He is so truly a lawyer In the old-fashioned sense and his mind has so long moved In the groove that he could hardly get out of it if he would. Furthermore, he is tem peramentally one of those men whose sense of taste would always prevent them from trading successfully upon personal relations. Moreover, the persons who have been familiar with Senator Suther land's career from its beginning in the mountain villages of Utah know that the ambition which has always pulled him is not a fortune, and not even a competence, but eminence in the law. This last he has. I have been told by one who overheard the words that Elihu Root once spoke of Senator Sutherland as one of the three greatest lawyers in America. That is a position a man gets only through loving the law as a science and making It his mistress. , Corporations Seek Services. Great corporations come to Senator Sutherland.. Without any great tur moil of conscience, but simply as the expression of the natural law that governs his mind, he takes their cases only so far as those cases present thorough problems of law. To the degree that the clarifying processes of his mind are valuable he serves his client, and doubtless Is adequately paid for the service. I know, however, that occasionally these corporation clients feel a little disappointed. Their disappointment is due not to any lack of Senator Sutherland's knowledge of the law, nor to any defect in diligence on his part The disappointment is due to the difference between what somo corpo ration clients expect from an ex-sen ator in the way of personal persua siveness with judges or with the heads of departments and what Sen ator Sutherland as a lawyer is will ing to give and has it in his nature to give. Some Clients Disappointed. Even clients who do not expect from the lawyers they retain any thing even faintly improper may sometimes have a sense of disap pointment in failing to get from Sen ator - Sutherland that heartiness of advocacy, that partisan and exclus ive devotion to his client's side of the case that lawyers of a different temperament can give. Senator Sutherland's mind is more intent on the abstract law in the case than on the persons involved, and his major purpose is that the legal problems Involved shall be brought out to a true conclusion. Snnator Sutherland will show ero tlon and glow with warmth and en thusiasm over the successful appli cation of a legal principle to a dif ficult set of circumstances rather than over any personal victory or advantage- to himself, or -to his clients. - In gossip about appointments Sen ator Sutherland is mentioned in con nection with two cabinet offices and one other position. He is frequently suggested as sec-: retary of the Interior, because he knows the west and more particular ly because he is familiar through long personal experience with the conservation of the nation's mineral lands, forest and grazing lands. 7 He is even' more frequently men tioned for attorney-general. That mention rests on the sound basis of the probity and ability which he would brine to the highest purely legal office in the executive branch of the government. . . ' , Place on Bench Possible. The third suggestion is that Sena tor Sutherland may not be In the cabinet, but'will'be appointed to one of the four'vacancles in the supreme court that are sure to occur during Senator Harding's administration. All the friends of Senator Sutherland who know his career and the bent of his mind are confident that this last would be his personal; choice. A man who has known him since he first began practice - before a justice of- peace in little mining vil lages in the Rocky mountains ex pressed the belief that, consciously or unconsciously or both. Senator Suther land has always been drawn by that goal which Is attained by scholarship and thoroughness in the law rather than by great finanical success. During the present week there has been more jor less organized urging that "even-- if Senator Sutherland is later to go on the supreme bench he should first be made attorney-general at the outset of the new administra tion. The theory behind this urging is that this appointment would give the office of attorney-general the color of character and legal ability thai ought always to be maintained for it; that such .an appointment would be quickly appreciated by the public and would be a most valuable addi tion to the momentum of favorable recognition for the outset-of the new president's administration. So far as comparisons can be made, the attorney-general is that one of the cabinet members in whom char acter and unimpeachable reputation are most important. Office One of MoBtJOifflcult. He has to do with the enforcement of the law, with advising congress as to the constitutionality of pro posed statutes and with the appoint ment of federal judges. Every attorney-general is constantly under as sault for favor, leniency In enforcing the law, . for pardons, for compro mises; also the attorney-general pos sesses a power which there is always a temptation to use for political in timidation. He is, of. all . the cabinet appointments, that one who ought to be most free from subjection to polit ical presu re, and from the suspicion of a political motive or any motive other than that of pure justice and clear reason. senator Sutherland is British, b birth. . When he was a few months old he was brought to Utah. His father was a m'ning man who later, by virtue of his qualities of helpful ness toward hio neighbors and com mon sense, came to be accepted in the irregular way of frontier com munities, as the law-giver of the lit tle towns where his occupation took him. ' .. Frontier Practice Is First. Senator Sutherland himself was trained in the law at the University of Michigan, and began his practice in these same frontier communities, where law was accepted and obeyed, not because U was printed in the books, but because it' appealed to the common sense and instinct for jus tice and for the right of the strong men who made up those communities. In those courts 'a ' lawyer could not win his cases'.merely by quoting legal maxims he had to go further and convince the rough common sense of the community that these maxims are merely the ancient crystallizations of fundamental Justice uin human rela tions. It is noteworthy that a number of the best lawyers in the senate have come up from' this kind of training democrats like Senator Walsh. of Man tana and Senator Thomas of Utah, and republicans like Borah of Idaho, as well as Sutherland. Later in his career Senator Sutherland became a leading lawyer of Salt Lake City, and as such was counsel for the Union Pa cific and the Oregon Short Line. He participated in writing the constitu tion! and the fundamental laws of his state at the time it was admitted to the union; still later he served a term in congress and came to the senate in 1905. Code Is Prepared. The high spots of his career in the senate were the laborious work of a committee, ofjvhich he was the head, which reviewed, condensed and brought up to date and codified the entire body of civil and criminal stat utes passed by the national -government since its beginning. Almost any lawyer would admit that, other things being equal, this colossal work alone would make a unique fitness for the office of attorney-general. SenatorSutherland was also chair man of the committee that-wrote the federal workmen s compensation law which has been a model for half the states of the union. Finally, in a way probably not less important, the help Senator-Sutherland gaveto Senator La nollette in the passing of the Sea men's act was one of the high spots In his career in the senate. The passage of the Seamen's act was one of the greatest victories of recent years for humanitarian principles of human freedom as against the convenience of prpperty interests. ' Tendency Is Conservative. Senator Sutherland had always been thought of as belonging to the conservative rather than the progres sive wing of the republican party, and when he was quick to see the application of fundamental principles of Anglo-Saxon law to the circum stances presented by the Seamen's act, the enlistment of his advocacy made friends for the act amour con servatives who had confidence in him and who pould not otherwise have won. 1 It is probably because 'of this In cident that the Seamen's union iii now one of Senator Sutherland's .clients. Probably it accounts for the fact that among the men you occasionally meet in tne anteroom of Senator Suther land's law offices is. that venerable mariner, Andrew Furuseth, one of the unique of his generation, who went to sea before he went to school, came of leadership of his guild by, virtue of his natural gifts, learned to read after he was 30 and is today one of the most interesting commentators of tne pnnosopny or History that it is profitable to hear. Senator Sutherland's acquaintance with Senator Harding began when the former was a veteran in the senate and the latter a novice. From 1915 until 1917 both were members of a little friendly group of 12, who al ways had the same lunch table in the senate restaurant. Last summer Senator Sutherland spent a good deal of time at Marion and probably he was as close as any other man to Senator Harding's decision in the field of principle and do lev. 1 But it is the permanent Qualities of Senator Sutherland's mind rather than the accident of his acquaintance ' that has given rise to the speculation about Senator Sutherland as attorney-general or as a justice of the su preme court. ONCE FAMOUS STAR DEAD Retired Actress, Known World Over, Passes Away in Pasadena. PASADENA, ' CaL, Dec: 24. Mrs. Sophia Monson, once an actress of world fame, died at her home here today. 78 years'old. Mrs. Monson was the last surviving member of .the original cast at the Norwegian "National theater, estab lished in 182 by Ole Bull. She was lifelong friend of Ibsen, and was said to have been the first octress In America to play "Nora" in "A Doll's House." Mrs. Monson formerly lived in San Francisco. She left one son. Dr. Fred erick Monson, explorer. BRITISHERS 1 FAR E S AR 1 Message Received From Cope Polar -Expedition. PARTY LEAVES FA LK LANDS All on Board Ship Reported In Good Health Voyage Held Most Remarkable One. LONDON, Dec. 24. John L. Cppe, commander of the British imperial Antarctic expedition, has sent the fol lowing message from Port Stanley, capital of the Falkland islands: "Sailing from here December 20 with full equipment and dogs. Hope to land at Graham's December 25. All the party well. Expect to hear from us In 18 months. Good-bye." - Commander Cope, with four com panions, purposes spending 18 months in surveying and charting the west ern shores of Weddell sea and in sci entific work in the Antarctic The party will live in tents and huts and will depend for fresh meat on seals and penguins. - ' EXPLORER'S COURAGE PROVED Commander Cope's Reputation for Bravery Established. NEW YORK, Dec. 24. Jules Verne, by the wildest stretch of his imagina tion, never conceived of an adventure in the realm of fiction more thrilling than that undertaken by the British imperial Antarctic expedition headed by Commander, John Lachlan Cope, who, with five ships and their crews, started in September, 1920, on a five year quest to solve the riddle' of the great unknown South Polar sea Cope's reputation for daring and bravery, was established when, as surgeon and biologist of the Sir Er nest Shackleton expedition, he and eight of his comrades In misfortune, all hope of rescue abandoned, Hyed for two years in a little hut estab lished by the intfepid Scott, amid the icy wastes of Ross island. They were marooned when the Aurora, the Maw son expedition ship of 1916, was driven away from them during a bliz zard. Their final rescue constituted one of the most Interesting chapters in polar explorations. The expedition, backed by $750,000, has for its purpose the circumnaviga tion of the Antarctic continent, a dash to the South Pole, the explora tion of more than 1200 miles of ter ritory never before trod by civilized man, the discovery of new whale fishing- o-rnunds. the studv of weather conditions and the extent of South Polar mineral deposits, especially of manganese, coal, granite, marble and rubies. Confmander Cope declared before sailing that for six months of the year the climate of the northern area of the Antarctic is no more rig orous than that of Alaska or Siberia. Cope's ship, the Thor I, left Eng land on September 28, 1920, and from Norfolk, Va., where the commander stepped aboard her, on the following October 26. The Thor I on the way to her base stopped at Montevideo and then , went to Deception islands, in the Falklands, where motion pic tures were made of whales disporting themselves at sea and being har pooned for their ambergris and bone and oil. Late in October, 1920, a sec ond ship left Cardiff, Wales, for the Falkland islands. Three whalers of 7000 tons each and one whale catcher il of 200 tons also accompanied the ex plorers from their base. The' personnel of the expedition in cluded also N. a. Leater, navigator; TOiomas W. Bagshowe, -geologist; Captain George H. Wilkins, chief of the scientific staff, who accompanied the Stefansson expedition in the same capacity, and 120 men. An airplane called the Kangaroo and so con structed that It can land on the ice by means-of skids, was to be em ployed in the dash to the South Pole. The goal was expected to'be reached in a flight of from 20 to 30 hours in stead of a tortuous journey of many months on sledges.- The 1 night was to be undertaken in Summer and was not to be a non-stop journey. The Kangaroo carried, besides five men, fuel, a sledge, cameras and food for one month and this weight was expected to handicap the fliers in crossing a mountain range with peaks 11,000 feet high which rise as natural -obstacles to the pole. The start was to be made from the great -Hce barrier at the Bay of Whales. The total weight of the plane, occupai and equipment was 12,600 pounds and it was to be driven- at an average speed of 93 miles an hour. The party was to Include, besides Commander Cope, Mr. Lester, as navigator; George H. Wilkins Jr., photographer and surveyor; Thomas W. Bagshowe, geologist, and one other man. The airplane was also to carry 30 dogs, Canadian "huskies." Several other planes and an extensive wireless sys tem, by means of which it was hoped to keep in touch with civilization at all times, were to be held in reserve. Commander Cope, before starting south, said that while the Thor I was circumnavigating the lower part of the continent, her sister ship, sailing from Cape Ann, would go around the Bay of Whales and the upper part of the continent, completing the circle. The other planes, meanwhile, were to be utilized on shore. They have a cruising radius of 1000 mils, but the first year were to be sent out only 250 miles for the establishment of new . , o'-j h fnilowlne year sent out-an additional 250 miles. The Thor was scheduled, according to Commander Cope's plans, to return to New Zealand In 1926. at about the same time that her sister ship re turned to South America. "Previous Antarctic explorations have been adventures," said Com mander Cope. "This one Is a scien tific and commercial proposition, me Kior-t of our enternriBH 10 - v. fh mineral wealth with which we are sure the South Polar regions abound." In addition to tne minerals previously mentioned, he said that Antarctica was rich in gold, silver, copper and lead in the chain of mountains that rise like gigantic sentinels guarding the secret of its vast and icy polar fields. City of Montesano Sued. ABERDEEN, Wash., Dec. 24. (Spe cial.) To compel issuance of war rants In payment for a fire engine delivered last month, the American La France Fire Engine company yes terday instituted suit against the city of Montesano. Mayor Cheney, who has refused to issue the warrants, says payment for the engine would put the city in debt beyond the 1 per cent of assessed 'valuation limit allowed by law. . Vancouver Plant Extends. VAvroUVER. Wash.. Dec. 24. rsnaMai .1 The Vancouver Woolen mills at Main and Second streets, is making alterations on tne kotiu floor of the plant to install a shirt making department. The cloth will be woven by the company in its mills in thn northwest and shipped here. It Is expected that the machinery will be in place by February 1. About 25 more operators will be employed. Tonth, 18, and Girl, 15, TVed. VANCOUVER. Wash., Dec 24. (Special.) Elery A- Cummins, 18 years old, of Newberg, Or., and Miss Juanita Underwood, i years or age, of La Grande, were married here to day. The boy Is a son of W. F. Cum mins of Newberg, and the girl Is a daughter of Mrs. Bella Underwood of La Grande. Wash. Both were pres ent and gave their consent to the marriage. To every home in this city, this great home furnishing store wishes a bright and merry Christmas and a joyous and prosperous New Year! "Peace on Earth, Good Will Toward Men" is the spirit of the day and we enter the New Year with this principle guiding our business policy. . 'San Francisco. Dear Eleanor: .Today we toured the city- on the street ears. San Francisco has all kinds of patterns rad aires la street ears. Here is a little cable car, the only kind that can climb certain hills and not tret oat O 0 of breath. We stood outside on Its platform and Q watched the city sink below us as we climbed up - a very. steep hill. It was really very Intcrestlnffl Bates' at Hotel Whit comb from S2.00. .4M : outxlde rooms. Write for folder containing map city. . H. VAX HOKNK, Mir. - Hotel Whitcomb Civtt Center " , . , SAN FRANCISCO .