THE 3IORXIXG OKEGOXTAJT, 3IOXDAT, JULY 4, 1921 3 AUTO CRASH VICTIM . DIES OF Rudolph Samuelson Fails . Regain Consciousness. to NFANT HAS EVEN CHANCE BIrs. Roy Westley ot St. Johns Said to Be Seriously Injured; Investigation Is Ordered. SALEM, Or.. July S. (SDecial.V Rudolph Samuelson, one of the vic tims of last night's automobile crash on the Pacific highway near Brooks, eight miles north of Salem, died in, a local hospital this morning at 5 o'clock. Mr. Samuelson was unconscious when brought to the hospital, but an Identification card in a pocket indi cated he was a resident of Portland and that he had been employed as a dalesman for Mitchell, Lewis & btaver. It was learned today, how ever, that Samuelson left Portland about three months ago and had since been engaged in driving a truck at the state hospital here. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Sam nelson, who reside at Canby, came to Salem today and took charge of the body. The young man was 22 years of age. Baby In Serlons oCndltlon. Physicians today declared E. G. shorn, representing the Hood Tire company, with headquarters in Port land, would recover. Osborn has four fractured ribs, scalp injuries and cuts of the face and body. Osborn was at the wheel of the racing roadster when it rammed the machine driven by Mal colm Ramp, a prominent rancher of the Brooks section. He was uncon scious when brought to the hospital. Mr. Ramp, physicians said, suffered a. slight fracture of the jaw, cuts of the face and body, scalp injuries and shock. Mrs. Ramp, rho was first reported to have sustained shoulder injuries, was able to leave the hospital today. Bobbie, the one-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Ramp, was still in a serious condition with an even chance of re covery. Examination of Mrs. Roy R. West ley of St. Johns, Portland, indicated that she was seriously hurt. Mrs. Westley regained conscious ness this afternoon and the attend ing physician said she probably would recover. Besides spinal in juries, bruises, cuts and scalp wounds, she suffered a dislocated hip. Her condition was still serious. Her 4-year-old daughter, Lucile, resained consciousness during the niht and was pronounced out of danger today. She was injured about the back and face. Information from the scene of the wreck today indicated that the car driven by Mr. Osburn was traveling between 60 and 75 miles an hour. The Ramp machine, which was crossing the Pacific highway, was struck squarely on the side and hurled some distance down the road. The Ramp baby was thrown clear of the wreck, while Mr. and Mrs. Ramp and Mrs. Westley and her little daughter were pinned beneath the machine. The car was almost completely wrecked. HoadMter Turns "Cartwheels. 99 The roadster, according to wit nesses, turned over several times and halted against a guy wire holding a telephone pole near the corner of the crossroads. A party of boys, camped near by, went to the assistance of the injured, and the victims were brought to Salem in a passing truck. Authorities Baid this morning that they intended to make a thorough investigation, and that it was pos sible that Osborn, driver of the road ster, would be arrested on a charge of manslaughter. . This action, how ever, will depend upon testimony at the inquest, which is to be held over the body of Samuelson. Mrs. Osborn arrived here tonight from Portland and went at once to the Salem hospital to be with her husband. ALBANY P00L IMPROVED Equipment at Swimming; Tank Xow Declared in Good Shape. ALBANY, Or., July 3. (Special.) Work was completed last night on the installation of equipment and apparatus for Albany's municipal swimming pool, and the city has a splendid swimmingt place this season as a result. Large' bath-houses have been erected, a diving tower con structed with various platforms and diving rings, two chutes arranged, one for the deep pool and one for the shallow water for the children; a log raft anchored in the deeper pool, board walks built connecting the va rious equipment and the bath-houses and other conveniences arranged. This pool was arranged for the first time last season. Because the site overflows each winter, the equip ment must be removed. PORTLAND TO BE GALA (Continued From First Page.) read by Colonel J. J. Crossley. Judge J. R. Burton will give an address which will end the programme. A strenuous effort is being made to roach Grand Army and Spanish-American war , veterans. Automobiles for the civil war veterans are being sought and a number already have been promised. Other Celebrations Set. Many other celebrations are planned in the outlying districts. Special ex ercises in accord with the day will be held at the Mount Scott playground and at St. Johns. Gresham will have a barbecue and an old-fashioned Fourth of July picnic. At Mount Scott the Boy Scouts will have a parade of their own, followed by a baseball fame, volleyball contests and track and field meet, the winners to receive prizes contributed by the merchants in the vicinity. A basket supper will follow the athletic exercises in the evening Community singing will be led by Paul Newmeyer. Another field day programme will he held at Peninsula park beginning at 1 o'clock. A number of surprise stunts have been arranged. Other events will be fat men's races, potato races, three-legged races and the reg ular distance runs, sprints and weight throwing contests. Hibernians to Hold Exercises. At Council Crest the Ancient Order of Hibernians will hold patriotic ex ercises and an athletic programme with features for women contestants in the list. The married men and single men will fight it out In a tug-of-war. the women will have a free-for-all egg race and contests for boys and girls of -different ages will be carried out. Prizes for all events have been offered by Portland merchants. The programme of sports at For estry playground. Twenty-seventh end Vaughn streets, will consist of feature acrobatic stunts by the three Frye brothers, in addition to the reg ular competitive races open to all. The Frye brothers, Lawrence. Ed and Bert, will entertain in the early after noon. Races for both boys and girls have been arranged with a number of prizes donated by merchants. Commencing promptly at 2 o'clock, the races which will consist of a 50 yard dash, a sack race, three-legged race, shoe race, obstacle race and bar rel throw will be held for both the boys and the girls. An added feature for the programme for the boys will be a greased pole climbing contest. On the girls' programme will be a bal loon relay race. GRESHAM TO BE GAY TODAY Barbecue, Horse and Motorcycle Races and Dance Featured. GRESHAM, Or., July 3. (Special.) Plans have been laid for one of the best Fourth of July celebrations ever held in Gresham. The Gresham Busi ness Men's association is preparing features, assisted by Post No. 30 of the American Legion. The celebration will be leld on the Multnomah county fair grounds. In the morning there will be a baseball game on the high school grounds between Gresham and Tagert. A barbecue will be held at noon and free coffee will be served. At 2 P. M. horse races will be held and imme diately afterward some well known motorcyclists will compete. Those who will take part in these races are Eddie Andrews, Shorty Spender, Al Mairzimer, Dean Kline and Mark McMarin. The American Legion post will have charge of the evening dance. Fireworks will be sold on the grounds. Centralia Win Celebrate. CENTRALIA, Wash., July 3. (Spe cial.) With streets and business houses decorated and all details of the programme completed, the stage is set for Centralia's Fourth of July celebration tomorrow. A record crowd of visitors is expected to be enter tained. Feaures of the programme will be an airplane exhibition by Hal Scovell and Lewis Gabel, parade, band concerts, community sing, sport events, baseball game, smoker and dance. More than J1000 will be given away in prizes during the day. Cele brations also will be held tomorrow at Onalaska, Pe Ell and Glenoma. Obituary. Scott Wallace. ALBANY, Or, July 3. (Special.) The funeral of Scott Wallace, aged 75, for many years a resident of Linn county, who died Friday at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Lena Fox in Salem, was held at the Fortmiller chapel here this afternoon. Mr. Wal lace came to Oregon In 1877 from his native state of Tennessee. He is sur vived by ten children: Henry Wallace of Albany, Grover Wallcce of Albany, Nios Wallace of Jefferson. Or.; Oscar Wallace of Trenholm, Or.; Russell Wallace of Mill City, Or.; Mrs. Serel da Knox of Salem, Mra. Hallie Wal lace of Spokane, Wash.; Mrs. Alice Walker of Raymond, Wash.; Mrs. Lena Fox of Salem and Mrs. Maysel Graff of Hood River. Mrs. M. C. Engle. Mrs. M. C. Engle, wife of Howard Engle, of 51;4 East Union avenue north, died yesterday morning at her home at 8 o'clock. Mrs. Engle was a native of Portland, having been born here in 1869, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Walters. Sne was a member of the local order of the Royal Circle and a charter mem ber of the Portland auxiliary of the Moose lodge. The body was sent to the East Side funeral chapel, at East Sixth and Alder streets. The funeral arrangements will be announced later. Betty Harkness.- CENTRALIA, Wash., July 3. (Spe cial.) Betty Harkness, aged 9, only daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. K. Harkness of Glendale, Or., died here yesterday following a two days' ill ness. The funeral was held this aft ernoon. Mr. and Mrs. Harkness, for mer residents of Centralia, came here a few weeks ago to dispose of some property. POILU NOT TO RETIRE (Continued From First Page.) lenger's corner, shook Georges' hand, and said: "You're a game fellow, Georges, and we'll be friends always." "You bet, Jack, always," the Frenchman answered. Manager Descamps said he had been tendered any number of con tracts for Georges to tour the coun try, but that their future plans de pended o certain thigs which he could not mention at this time. DEMPSEY READY FOR WILLARD Ex-Champ to Be Fought Any Time, Declares Kearns. NEW YORK. July 3. (By the Associated Press.) Jack Dempsey is ready to fight Jess Willard any time the fight can be arranged, Jack Kearns, his manager, announced to night. The champion is going west for a good vacation in a few days and after that. Kearns said, he will be ready to fight anyone who presents himself with the proper credentials. Dempsey, happy at his victory over Carpentier and showing no marks of the encounter, passed as quiet a day as his friends and fight fans would allow him. He had to give up his suite at the Belmont hotel, which he occupied with his manager and train ers, and seek a room by himself, last night, because of the press of visit ors. He was up at 7 o'clock this morning, had a hearty breakfast anf sauntered off with Mike Trant oi Chicago, to church and for early mass. Then he motored to Newark to see yesterday's fight pictures displayed. In a week or ten days Dempsey will leave for his home at Salt Lake City for a long rest. The last two years have been busy ones for the champion, it was said, with little or.no chance for relaxation, and Jack intends to have a good vacation at this time. Pay Cut $4600. YAKIMA. Wash., July 3. (Special.) Notices received here yesterday of reduction in pay of employes of the Northern Pacific and O.-W. R. & N. railroads, under the recent order of the United States railroad labor board, will make a total cut in the local pay. rolls of about $4600, it was estimated. Postmaster Hays In Conferences. SULLIVAN. Ind., July 3. Will Hays, postmaster-general, yesterday opened a series of conferences with middle western bankers explaining his plans for changes in the postal savings bank system. The western conferences follow similar meetings in the east. Deputies Seize Moonshine. YAKIMA, Wash., July 3. (Special.) Officers of the Yakima sheriffs of fice yesterday raided premises on Roosevelt avenue in this city and captured l'i gallons of moonshine, at the same- time arresting Franchi Trancaita as owner of the stuff. ADVERTISING CRAFT I Hundreds of Delegates Open Coast Convention. PORTLAND CLUBS ACTIVE Men's and Women's Organizations Make Attractive Exhibits; Bet ter Business Bureau Lauded. TACOMA. Wash., July 3. (Special.) Pacific coast advertising men and women invaded Tacoma today. Hun dreds of delegates and their women friends, representing every city from Vancouver, B. C, to San Diego, ar rived here during the day. Both the Portland Ad club and the Women's Advertising club of Portland regis tered the largest number of delegates of any two organizations in the Pa cific Coast Advertising Clubs' associa tion. LiiKewise their advertising dis plays filling many stands occudv a prominent position in the exhibit room. The convention proper opened with an inspirational meeting at the First Methodist church tonight with Presi dent Harry S. Carroll presiding. John Condon, president of the Tacoma Ad vertising club introduced Mr. Carroll. Governor Louis F. Hart welcomed the visitors in behalf of the state of wasnington. and Mayor C. M. Riddell delivered the address for the city. N. B. Coffman of Chehalis delivered the leading inspirational address of tne meeting, taking for his subject, "The Will to Improve." Portland Bnrean Landed. Captain Frank H. Schofield of the United States battleship Texas, part of the flotilla in the harbor, was present with his staff and spoke on "The Navy." Rollin C. Ayres of San Francisco lauded Portland for its better business bureau in his ad dress on "The Better Business Bu reau an Ideal Carried Into Practice." The octet of the Women's Advertis ing club of Portland was a feature of the inspirational meeting. As a special compliment to the Los Angeles delegates, which were the first to arrive in the city, S. A. Perkins of Tacoma, publisher of a number of Washington newspapers, took the delegation on his yacht for a trip about Puget sound and a beach dinner was served to them. July 4 will be occupied entirely to entertainment. The delegates will enjoy a military parade, under the auspices of the American Legion, to morrow morning. The afternoon will be given over to the championship sweepstakes at the speedway. A military spectacle in the stadium, with its seating capacity of 35,000, will be the evening attraction. Sessions Open Tomorrow. The general sessions will open Tuesday morning, followed by de partmental discussing every phase of advertising. Among the Portland speakers will be Joseph A. Davidson, manager of advertisers' service bu reau of Western Farmer, who will discuss "The Farm Market"; Wilson W. Brown, sales manager of the Vo gan Candy company, who will discuss "Successful Selling"; W. S. Kirkpat rlck, president of the Kirkpatrick Ad vertising agency, who has for his subject, "Why Banks Should Adver tise When, Where and How"; Ethel G. Peterson, Kirkpatrick agency, "Copy That Sells the Bank"; H. W. Chatten, Hicks-Chatten Engraving company, "Advantages of Direct Mail Advertising": Joseph A. Davidson, the Arcady Press, "Building Business Through Printed Salesmanship." Gor don Stewart. Vancouver, Wash., will discuss "Co-operation Given by Plant Owners" in the outdoor advertising department. Mr. Brown will speak also before the direct mail depart ment on "Building Good Will and Sales Through Direct Mail." The entertainment programme in cludes luncheons every day, special luncheons,, motor rides, theater par ties and yacht trips for women, dances for all the delegates, a boat trip to Seattle with a dance on an open pier as guests of Seattle pub lishers, and a banquet where all the trophies will be awarded. The last three days will be in Rainier national park, where a ski tournament will be part of the midsummer mow frolic offered for the delegates' en tertainment. WAR RISK CLAIMS LARGE GOVERNMENT PAYS OTJT TOTAL OP $226,486,891.34. Disbursements for Disability Aggre gate $102,677,589, and for Deaths $33,809,301. WASHINGTON, D. C, July 3. The government to date has made a total disbursement -of J226.486, 891.34 in meeting both the compension claims of ex-service men disabled by reason ot wounds, injuries or disease in curred in the world war, and the death claims of the dependents of those who made the supreme sacri fice, according to an announcement of Director Forbes of the bureau of war risk insurance. The disbursements for disability have aggregated $192, 677,589.48 and the death disburse ments $33,809,301.86. For the month of May alone the total amount disbursed by the bureau for compensation purposes was $10. 675.416, the monthly payments on disability compensation claims for that perio'd amounting to $9,145,288 and the monthly payments to the de pendents of deceased soldiers amount ing to $1,430,128. Between June 1 and June 15 the bureau mailed 221. 612 checks to cover this disbursement f ex-service men. The increase in the number of claims filed with the bureau has ex ceeded any estimate. The number of claims filed from the inception of the bureau to May, 1919, was ?09.700, while on June 1, 1921, the number on file was 631,980, showing an increase during that period of 422,280. The number of awards for death and dis ability for the first period was 41,073: the number of awards at the end of the second period was 323.415, an in crease during the second period of 282,342. For the first perod the ratio was one claim pending to every two filed. For the second period, the ratio was one claim pending to every eight claims filed. KLAN REPORTED FORMED Secret Society Said to Have Been Organized In Seattle. . SEATTLE, Wash., July 3. Forma tion, of the. Ku Klux Klan here, as CAPTURES AGOMA Lucky Strike cigarette organized in the imperial palace at Atlanta, Ga., was reported by the Se attle Post-Intelligencer last night. The newspaper said it had learned that the Klan is gatherinfg recruits in the state of Washington. The an nouncement here followed press dis patches from North Dakota yester day to the effect that the klan had been formed here to fight the non partisan league. y. W. SECRETARY IS BUSY MANY INQUIRIES MADE AT AGR I CtXTC RA It COLLEGE. Mrs. IiUla Howard at Corvallis Be gins Preparing for Next Year's Work for Students. OREGON AGRICULTURAL COL LEGE, Corvallis, June 3. (Special.) 'We help anybody who asks, in any thing they ask." said Mrs. Lula How ard, acting secretary of the college Y. "W. C. A., after naming over sev eral duties the "Y" had felt obliged to perform during the last year. "I am preparing for the work next year and will be of much more value to the students because of my year's experi ence here," she said. Letters are coming in by dozen lots, asking if one can earn one's way through college, or partly earn one's way, according to Mrs. Howard. Some of the prospective students are able to do stenographic or accounting work. Others want farm work, trac tor work, housework or restaurant jobs. 'Foreign students who come thou sands of miles want to finish college as quickly as possible, therefore they try to attend summer session," said Mrs. Howard. "These men are usu ally self-supporting and they try to get work for room and board. I have been able to place every one of them this summer. One foreign boy who wants to save some money for next winter I have placed in a job where he gets $15 a week and his board. "One duty the 'Y has been fulfill ing is that of obtaining cooks for fra ternity and sorority houses. Several women have come to Corvallis with the intention of managing boarding houses, only to find houses unavail able. Many times they have accepted jobs in the fraternal houses. 'House mothers' for the sororities have some times been obtained through the Y.' "Many of the summer-session stu dents bring lunches to the campus and have come to feel at home during the noon hour in our hut, said Mrs. Howard. "During farmers' week the hut was a regular nursery, for the farmers wives made the Y' a center of their gatherings and often left the little children asleep in rooms pro vided for that purpose." L. M Dimm, secretary of last year, has just left for the east, where he will take up other work. No secre tary has been engaged as yet for 1921-22. PLACER PLANT TO EXPAND Larger Machinery Is to Replace Equipment in Burnt River Project. BAKER, Or., July 3. (Special.) W. L. Meeker has gone to his camp in the Burnt river country near Bridge port to resume work on his placer property. He and Dr. C. O. Boyer, an associate of Portland, have equipped the property with a small plant of machinery for dry concentration of placer gold. Results from operations during the last two years have been so satisfactory that preparations are being made to replace the present ex perimental plant with larger equip ment. The property is not far from the hydraulic placers owned by George Elliott of Baker. The Bulldog placer, owned and operated by John Wyant for the last 16 years, is in the same locality. Mr. Meeker has just come from Se attle, where he has been associated with Harry McMuinn and others in the Oregon-Washington Holding cor poration, whose most recent activities include a large terminal and dock project on the Seattle harbor. JURY PRAYS ALL NIGHT Deatb Verdict Given Alleged Mur derer of Postal Clerk. DALLAS, Tex., July 3. After praying practically all night for divine guidance in arriving at a verdict in the case of Charles E. Gaines, a jury early yesterday con demned Gaines to the gallows. He was tried for murder in connection with the death of G. W. Street, reg ister cleric in a postoffice here, last January. Several of the jurors offered prayers for the salvation of the doomed man's soul, it was said. June Record Marriage Month. McMINXVILLE, Or.. July 3. (Spe cial.) June continued to be a record month for the issuance of marriage licenses from the office of County Clerk Wilson. Twenty-six obtained the permits as against 11 in May. The same months last year showed a total of 31 liceneses issued during June and 14 during May. Since the close of the war the number has gradually de creased each month until at present the permits issued are almost normal. Valera Issues Proclamation. DUBLIN". July 3. (By the Asso ciated Press.) Earaonn De Valera, the Irish republican leader, in behalf of the Dail Elreann. or Irish repub lican parliament, issued a proclama tion today stating that "on the Fourth of July the flag of the United States will receive' official honor throughout , Ireland." Sbv I of the sum- M & ;';-f1ftS5ilr"5 vWMi$: $SM ' M 7 mer months a V'l Wtii'llrwii1"'; Plz Jf demand comfort " -SrfT in the office, so fO4 &filtiliiltLm-.... iss-f -HM m Vk the well-dressed .muxiaa ?1 a jjpl man can feel at if k ease, when his coat is off provided his shirt is properly laundered. , v .4SP f Have you noticed the soft shirts with "that done-at-home look?" The surface (M J5 of the material is rough and porous because the "at-home" methods lack the .'jt Ma scientific care and processes of the modern laundry. '2P IS v. Shirts stay clean longer when laundered the modern laundry way, as the ST smooth surface which we give them dojs not gather surplus dirt or soil so easily. fl -mx' Feel satisfied you are well groomed by sending all your effects to us. In- V j0 elude your silk shirts in the bundle, too, as we have special methods for care- iM fully laundering these. ' . f We guarantee satisfaction ; all that is required on your part is to phone for us fM to call for your laundry. y m ff La undr y . W, & Industry Sm! inJni f 0 ijfe See This Paper Two Weeks From Today for Next Announcement of This Series 0 yl fi IM SCHOOL MEN ORGANIZE SCHOOLMASTERS' CLUB FORMED AT SESSION". IS Superintendents, Principals, Teach ers Discuss Means to Improve Profession In Oregon. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON. Eugene. July 3. (Special.) Superintend ents, principals and teachers from schools all over the state are in cluded in the membership of the Schoolmasters' club of the University of Oregon summer term. This club, which was organized early in the week at a banquet at the Osburn hotel, is an annual feature of the summer session and is open for all male teachers. Among the members of the club are: Prentiss Brown, superintendent. Baker; G. R. Mclntlre, principal high school. Baker; W. L. Rutherford, su perintendent. St. Helens; Roy David son, principal. Jordan Valley; C. A. Archart, superintendent, Bandon; F M. Roth, superintendent. Springfield; W. W. Patterson, principal, Halsey: John M. Miller, ward principal. Rose burg; A. C. Bouck, Carlshed, Cal.; C. E. Cady, principal, Nehalem; C. L Van Warner, principal, Newberg; A. J. Hanby, ward principal, Medford: R. E. Baker, superintendent, Coquille: R. L. Kirk, superintendent. The Dalles; Albert R. White, superintend ent. Junction City; M. S. Hamm, su perintendent, Roseburg; James Coss man. physical director, Marshfield; E. H. Hedrick, superintendent. Cen tral Point; J. O. Russell, superintend ent. Wasco; H. R. Benjamin, teacher, Umatilla; Ralph W. Tavenner. teach er. Enterprise; William Thornton, teacher. University high school, Eu gene; Herman A. Leader. University high school; Professor E. E. DeCou. mathematics. University of Oregon; President P. L. Campbell, University of Oregon; Karl W. Onthank, Univer sity of Oregon; Rev. Bruce Griffin, student pastor, Eugene; Dr. Horace A. Eaton, English, Syracuse univer sity; Superintendent H. O. Hartwell, St. .Paul: Dr. C. A. Gregory, educa tion. University of Oregon; Professor B. W.- DeBusk, education. University of Oregon; Dwight Parr. Woodburn; Otto L. Fox. O. W. Doble. C. G. Springer. James S. Gorln, H. W. Gus tin. O. D. Byers and L. Macken. The general purpose of the organi zation is to discuss means to improve the teaching profession. Two more meetings are planned, both of which will include banquets. INDIANS MAKE PROTEST Appropriation of $50,000 of Tribal Funds Is Opposed. YAKIMA, Wash., July 3. (Special.) Nealy N. Olney. secretary of the Takima Indian Commercial club, has forwarded to Charles Burke, commis- DANCIKGtaught All New Steps and Popular Dances Guar anteed In Elsrht Taree Hoar LtMoni, Ladies. $3: gentlemen. $5. De Honey's beauti ful academy. Twenty third and Washington. Beginners' class starts Tuesday and Thursday evenings this week. S to 11:30. Plenty of de sirable partners and practice; no embar rassment. We s: u a r- antee to teach you to dance, others do not. There is a reason. Learn in a real school. Phone Main 7656. Private lessons all hours. sioner of Indian affairs, Washington, D. C, a letter of protest against pro posed appropration by congress of $50,000 of Yakima Indian tribal funds to pay the expense of removing the Yakima Indian agency from Ft. Sim coe to Wapato. The appropriation of tribal money i said to be the chief cause of objec tion to the removal plan, though the Indians say . they would prefer that any expenditure of tribal funds be made for road improvement and for schools and declare that the little re maining business requiring an agency could easily be handled at Ft. Simcoe, which they favor, because of its historical- association. Lake Hotel Improved. MEDFORD, Or., July 3. (Special.) New features of Crater lake this season include a barber shop in the hotel, the serving of fresh milk and cream from the Crater Lake com pany's own herd of Jersey cows, and the keeping of saddle horBes for hire. Autos can get within two miles of the lake and the hotel management pro vides saddle horses for those persons who do not desire to walk that dis tance to the hotel on the lake rim over the snow. Industrial Fellowship Won'. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, Eugene, July 3. (Special.) Clyde Mason, 1919 graduate of the University of Oregon, has received a summer industrial fel lowship in the chemistry department at Cornell university. He will have charge of the micro-chemical work. Mason was a major student in chemis try while in the University of Oregon and for a year after his graduation he was a graduate assistant in the chemistry department here. Read The O-egonian classified ads. lipii 'One of the Northwest's Great Banks" FOREST CHIEF ON FLIGHT 2 4 0-MILE XOX-STOP FLIGHT TAKEX IX WASHINGTON. Army Planes Are Declared to Be Giving Excellent Service in Detecting Blazes. OLYMPIA. July 3. (Special.) Flying at the height of 13.000 feet, Olympic Forest Supervisor Fromme. accompanied the forest service air plane control in a 240-mile non-stop flight over the Olympic peninsula Friday in the face of one of the most chilling winds that have swept in from the straits of Juan de Fuca since winter time. Forest Supervisor Fromme had in tended to make a stop at Forks, far up to the north end of the Olympic peninsula, where it is possible to land on the Forks prairie, but when that point was reached the clouds were so dense and the wind so strong that the aviator refused to land and made the return trip to the base at Camp Lewis without a landing. The army planes are giving excel lent service in the detection of fires in the penisula and their records for speed and accuracy in reporting of fires have been a revelation and sur prise to Supervisor of Forests Fred E. Pape, of the state department here, and with the establishment of the new Finley lookout wireless station above Lake Quinault, even the smallest sign of smoke is reported to the de partment in Olympia within a few minutes after its detection. So far this season, thanks to the vigilance of the air patrol and the A Day of Independence UR forefathers a good many generations back took their stand for the national independ ence which today has made these United States so prosperous and pleasant a place to live. And yeb many people hesitate and halt at individual Independ ence because it cramps a Jiew passing desires and postpones immediate pleasures. The independence of a nation and of a people is builded on thrift; thrift is responsible for and the result of BANK ACCOUNTS. United Stales National Banlo precautions against careless campers, there have been no fires of any con sequence in the storm-stricken coun try. ot the upper Olympic peninsula, which there has been much fear. The rainy season has also been a great asset in keeping down the fires. Varsity Float Wins Prize. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON. Eugene, July 3. (Special.) A float entered by the University of Oregon in the American Legion parade held in con nection with the state convention in Lugene was awarded first honorable mention by the judges. The float de picted victory crowning representa tives of the army, navy and marine corps. The service flag of the uni versity was dr-ped over the throne of victory. A one-pound naval gun and a parapet of sandbags added a war like touch to the entry. The part played by the women of the univer sity was symbolized by a Y. W. C. A. worker in overseas uniform. Big Brother Farm to Open. ALBANY. Or.. July 3. (Special.) The Big Brother farm, which is con ducted each summer near Lebanon by Mr and Mrs. Chester A. Lyon of Portland, will receive its first boys this season next Tuesday. Thirty Portland boys will reach the farm at that time to remain for a few weeks. More boys from the city who do not have an opportunity otherwise for a vacation in the country will be re ceived at the farm later. 61 Seek Citizenship. YAKIMA, Wash.. July 3. (Special.) Sixty-one applicants for naturaliza tion will appear before the - United States district court here next Oc tober. The period for filing such ap plications expired yesterday.