VOL. LX-NO. 19,031 Entrd at Portland Orfon Poitoffire as Second-Clan Matter. PORTLAND, OREGON, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1921 PRICE FIVE CENTS NUTIONAL CRISIS FACED BY JUPMI GRASS VALLEY FIRE JIITflP SUBMARINE TO GET NEW DRIVING POWER LATEST ENGINE COMBINATION OF GAS AND ELECTRICITY. DIVIDING OF LOOT LEADS TO ARREST CARCASS BEEF BACK TO PRE-WAR PRICE GLORY INSTDCKEXH BUS THREE BUSINESS BUILDINGS ATTENTION OF CITIZEN IS AVERAGE! AT WHOLESALE IS ON MALM STREET BURN. ATTRACTED BY PAIR. SHOWN IN REVIEW. I-DOWN HARDING IS HOPE I ARMS MEETING THOUSANDS ANDKLL2WDHEN V K V Political and Economic Conditions Acute. HELP IS FRANKLY DESIRED Estrangement From Ameri' can People Realized. WAR HELD UNTHINKABLE Nipponese Enter Arnu Conference Willi Relations With America, England and China Strained. WASHINGTON, D. C, Nov. 6. (By the Associated Press.) Japan enters the week of the opening of the arma ment conference with a critical politi cal situation at home, with a national economic situation that is causing her leaders apprehension and with her re lations with foreign powers, particu larly the United States, Great Britain and China viewed by her foreign of fice as at least open to improvement. Many of the ablest Japanese are either in Washington or in the United States engaged in helping their coun try find its true place In the world. Workers Increase Demands. The situation la attributed by re sponsible Japanese to the fact that In her rapid absorption of western civil ization, Japan has not realised the Inevitable effect of that civilisation on her own countrymen, who have awakened to a spirit of liberalism and are demanding more from the state. Developed Into an Industrial nation from an agricultural one, Japan, more and more dependent on . ber Industrial -workers, is finding them almost Insatiable in their de mands and recalcitrant at a time when the cost of living is higher than In any other country and when the country's manufactured products are wltb difficulty finding a world mar ket In competition with those of other countries whare labor is cheaper, where thrift Is a habit and where the workmen's efficiency is greater. Estrangement la Realised. The industrial situation Is believed to be a cause of the unrest. In foreign political relattons the Japanese, as a whole, are dissatisfied with the trend of affairs between their country and the United States. Everybody seems to realize the vague estrangement that has developed since the Russo-Japanese war, when the Japanese felt they enjoyed the sym pathy and approval of the American people. Ons great cause of that estrange ment, Japanese explain. Is the fact that It was the United States that constantly protested as Japan made political moves in connection with her expansion In the far east. The effect of this was to produce on Japanese minds the impressslon that America was becoming Jealous of Japan's swift ascendancy and wa8 attempting to check it. This Idea Is frequently voiced In the press- of Japan, where politicians assert their country has done no more than other nations. C'o-oueratlon Frankly Desired. There is reason to believe that the coming of so many representative Japanese to the United State repre sents, for one thing, a sincere effort to get In touch with the west because Japan, associated with the Occident f:r scarcely more than half a cen tury, has come to the realisation that her knowledge of the Occident and all that it stands for, is Insufficient. She Is, it Is understood, ready to submit her case frankly to the representa tives of the powers assembled at Washington. The Toklo correspon dent of the Associated Press has been assured by responsible spokesmen that however much war talk may be Indulged in by sensationalism Japa nese, the real Japan knows the urgency of removing any feeling of estrangement and of returning to the tluys of friendly co-operation. Mar Meld I'nthlnkahle. Business leaders, while en route to Washington, said: "War with the United States is un thinkable for us. For one thing, our lack of natural resources would make It Impossible." Others frunkly referred to the ab surd ambitions of Japanese chauvin ists and said they were insular that they judged all world problems from the standpoint of Japan alone. The leaders insisted that the motto of Japan was that expressed recently in Tokio by Viscount Maklno, min ister of the imperial household, when Crown Prince Hlrohlto returned from Europe, that the recognition of the international Interdependence of Japan must be her guiding principle, and that Japan, Isolated and alone, could not prosper. The third matter of concern to Japan is understood to be the failure of British statesmen to agree on a renewal of the alliance or military pact with Japan. Covenant To Prevail. Irrespective of the question as to what powers or power the alliance was directed against, the agreement was deemed of great moral strength to Japan because It made her an ally of the great white power. The old lCu&eiudl iw fas 3. C'g.uisa -i Defective Wiring Believed to Have Caused Blaze In Town South of The Dalles. THE DALLES.. Or., Nov. (. (Spe cial.) Fire, believed to have been started by defective electrical con nections early this morning de stroyed three of the main business buildings In Grass Valley, a Sherman county town south of The Dalles, with an estimated loss In excess of $150,000. The Citizens bank, a store owned by M. B. O'Brien and a mer- cantlle store, all three of which stood together on the main business street, were destroyed, according to infor mation from Moro, a neighboring town. All telephone connections with Grass Valley were severed by the b'aie and only indirect information was available here. According to messages from Moro, the three buildings. Including stocks and fixtures, were a total loss. The fire was said to have started about 2:30 in the morning. In the O'Brien store, from where it rpread to the other buildings. Grass Valley has its own electrical system, which was put out of commission by the blase. A good share of the population fought the flames, which were under control by daybreak. No injuries were re ported. BOND INVESTORS WARNED Care In Buying Foreign, Securities In Depreciated Currency Advised. WASHINGTON, D. C, Nov. ' . American investors were warned to night by the commerce department -to exercise care in purchasing foreign bonds payable In depreciated currency In the expectation of realising enor mous profits when exchange values return to normal. Certain concerns, the department said, are offering for sale national, municipal and Industrial issues, expressed in depreciated cur rency which represents only a small fraction of their normal exchange value. This, the department added, applies to the currencies of Germany, Austria, Poland, Czecho-Slovakia, Kou mania. Jugo-Slavla and Hungary. In some cases, the department said, prices at which these securities are offered are unduly high. CRISIS IN INDIA-PREDICTED 1,000,000 Declared Recruited for Independence" iTrive. WASHINGTON, D. C. Nov. 6. A crisis in India within six weeks was predicted today by S. N. Ghox, direc tor of the commies-Ion to promote self-government In India, who ex plained developments were expected to ''mark the end of the year for which Mahatma Gandhi asked' In which to try the non-cooperative plan." In preparation for the proclamation of independence which will be Is sued next month, he said volunteers have been enrolled until "more than 1,000,000, nearly half of them sea soned soldiers, have beei recruited. RUSSIANS TO LOSE RIGHTS Clitzenshlp to Be Denied Emigrants Who Have No Passports. MOSCOW Nov. 6 The Russian soviet council of commissars yester day announced that all Russians who have been abroad for five years will lose their citizenship unless they ob tain passports before March 1, 1922. Russians who voluntarily served In armies against the soviet government or participated in counter-revolutionary activities, also will be deprived of citizenship, but they may apply for restoration of citizenship any time up to next March. WINSL0W AYER APPOINTED Portlander Regional Director for National Job Conference. WASHINGTON, D. C. Nov. 6. Se lection of 14 regional directors under the national employment conference's emergency relief programme was an nounced tonight by Secretary Hoover. The directors will act as liaison of ficers between committees. Those se lected include: Mortimer Fleischhacker, San Fran cisco; Wlnslow B. Ayer, Portland, Or., and James S. Gibson, Seattle. 16 BURNED TO DEATH Firing of Budapest Soldier Bar racks Laid to Vengeance. BUDAPEST. Xov. 5. Sixteen sol diers were burned to death when the Badevsky barracks, where loyal gov ernment troops are stationed, was de- I stroyed. The blaze la the climax of I the operations of unknown incen diaries who have set fire to three mills and four factories. The public believes that the setting fire to the barracks was vengeance I for the activities of those opposed to I ex-King Charles. SAVINGS DEPOSITS GAIN "Unanticipated Conditions" Re vealed by 600 Banks. WASHINGTON. D. C. Not. t. Re turns from more than 600 mutual I savings banks for the year ended I June 30. "reveal unanticipated condi tions," according to a statement ls- sued tonight by Comptroller Crls slnger. "Notwithstanding the unfavorable conditions." he said, "these savings Institutions gained both in number of depositors and volume, of deposits," Mrs. Luella Wright and Mrs. C. H. Spencer Hit. ONE DRIVER MAKES ESCAPE Fatalities Occur. While Vic tims Walk Beside Road. INQUIRY WILL BE MADE Police Search for Person Who Drove Truck Which Struck Mrs, Spencer and' Then Fled. Mrs. Luella E. Wright, 61, wife of Fred W. Wright. 740 Kearpey street, was killed Instantly last night near Tigard when she and Mr. Wright were struck by aii automobile as they walked by the edge of'the pavement. Less than two hours afterward Mrs. Charles H. Spencer of Linnton, who was struck under similar circum stances while walking beside the Linnton road pavement at o'clock Saturday night, died at the Good Samaritan hospital, leaving seven small children motherless. The driver of the machine that killed Mrs. Wright was S. T. White, Lafayette farmer. Mr. White fol lowed the body to Portland and did everything possible under the cir cumstances, while the driver who struck Mrs. Spencer ran away and has not yet been Identified. Couple Knocked Down. Mr. Wright said last night that three automobiles, traveling toward Portland, approached them as they walked toward Tigard, Mrs. Wright on the gravel beside the pavement, while he walked on the pavement. Mr. White approached from the rear with dimmed lights, and when he turned out to pass the three ma chines he knocked Mr, and Mrs Wright down. The body was brought to the chapel of Miller & Tracey by one of the motorists. Mr. Wright, who is ac count inspector for the Spokane, Portland & Seattle railway, was but slightly Injured and accompanied the body of his wife. The coroner at Hillsboro announced last night that he would be in Port land at 10 o'clock this morning to conduct an investigation of the ac cident Driver Makes Escape, Mrs. Spencer died at 10:45 last night of her injuries. Mrs. Spencer, In company with her eldest daughter. Carrie, was walk ing toward her home in Linnton along the gravel strip beside paving on the Linnton road when the ma chine, thought to be a light truck, struck her and dragged her for sev eral feet. The machine was entirely (Concluded on Page 3. Column 2.) . .......................... .................................................. I WE'LL SAY THIS HIRED MAN IS OUT OF LUCK. ! jggg ir hay ooyou "wmk TtVE. j ' "NT ' VotVTWrVtNl. TO "THE. ff 'I' 1 ! ?AtFC INTCv NATIONAL I . j i j JW L WE. STOCK ErWTlON- g . J x'Wcf -vwe. eovjMTv AH' , -7rj ! j t , -i i i t i r ""rvS " 1 i i r - Mw I, I rrrTrr mm n. n u . - w j. a .Xf-r sis 1 n f I v 4. J . CS- 1 -JiVi. I ,-fJ' V- . 11111 I T fc.S.S.S.S.SJt.S.S . .. M....W... ... . . . - ... .- .....-. - j. ..- I Cruising Radius of 10,000 Miles Said to Be Possibility as . Result of Device. WASHINGTON, D. C, Nov. . A new type of submarine motive plant. comprising a combination of gas and electric propulsion, will be Installed In the three -American submarines of the V type, two of which have Just been laid down at the Portsmouth, N. H., navy yard. Naval engineers are said to be watching construction with Interest because of their expec tation of Improved operation of sub mersible warcraft to result. A cruising radius of 10,000 miles is said to be a possibility. The submarines are to be 2025-ton boats, 300 feet long and equipped with electric engines of 6500 horsepower. They are designed for a surface speed of 21 knots, and a submerged speed of from, nine to ten knots. The two main engines, set well astern, of 2050 horsepower each, are of the six-cylinder type, and are connected with two motor generators driving two pro pellers. Two engines of the same type of 1000 horsepower each, are located forward and are connected with the generators, which through two rear electric motors will drive the Submarine at an economical sur face cruising speed of 11 knots. By combining the two plants a maximum of 6500 horsepower will be obtained. When under water the submarine will be driven by the aft motors from batteries and no gas engines will be run. Features of the gas engines Include use of the aft motor generators. The 12 engines for the three submarines are si-. id to have cost 13.000,0)10. It Is estimated by expert that these vessels can operate for a month away from their bases or tenders. These estimates indicate that the subma rines will be able, as designed, to ac company naval fleets on long cruises. The crew will include four officers and about 50 men, an increase of 20. When completed In 1923, the subma rine will be armed with one five-inch gun, set in a "wet" mount forward of the conning tower. The gun is de signed to remain In the water when submerged, and can be turned almost In a complete circle or elevated as an anti-aircraft weapon. Machine guns will be mounted on the conning tower bridge. Forward will be four torpedo tubes and aft two others, all of the 21-inch Bize. Storage space is planned for 16 torpedoes. W. J. COYLE PAYS $25 FINE Lieutenant-Governor Auks- Reci procity In Penalties for Speeding. ST. HELENS, Or., Nov. . (Spe cial.) William S. Coyle, lieutenant governor, of Washington, who was arrested on a charge of speeding through St. Helens at 50 miles an hour when on his way to witness the Oregon Agricultural college-Washington football game, sent his check for $25 to Recorder J. B. Godfrey to cover the' fine Imposed. The Washington official stated tha,t only recently an Oregon official was arrested In Washington for going 50 miles an hour, but he was fined only $13.50, and added that he thought there should "be something like re ciprocity in handing out fines." ' mm m i . Both Flee, But One Is Captured After Chase and Police Begin Looking for Other. Joe Dale, reputed burglar, was cap tured yesterday morning because of his anxiety to compel his pal to "split" the proceeds of their most re cent burglary. He was lodged In the county jail on a burglary charge, while police and deputy sheriffs be gan searching, for his fleet-footed partner. Dale's capture was effected by a private citizen, R. D. Jones, whose suspicion was attracted by seeing Dale and his pal standing on the side walk In front of 215 West Park street, dividing between them a handful of silver. . Acting on the "hunch" that the two men were crooks, Jones com manded them to surrender. Instead, the men broke and ran in opposite direct'ons. Jones followed Dale and after a hard chase for several blocks, captured the suspect near Broadway and Stark street. Following the capture, Jones, who lives at 215 West Park street, learned that the apartment of B. F. Tanner, at the same address had been robbed during the morning. Tanner, accord ing to the police, had obtained a fleeting glimpse of two prowlers who broke Into his apartment. At the county jail. Tanner posi tively ldent'fied Dale as one of the intruders who entered the Tanner apartment and escaped with $26. A search of Dale's clothing re sulted In the' discovery of $13 just half of the amount stolen from Mr., Tanner. Dale refused to give the cfflcers any Information concerning his partner. 5 HURT IN PLANE CRASH Women Are Found Unconscious In Wreckage of Machine. OMAHA, Neb., Nov. . Five per sons, four of them women, were in jured late today when the Bluebird, a five-passenger airplane, crashed and was demolished In the air congress field. The accident happened while sev eral thousand visitors to the air field were watching planes carrying pas sengers. The Bluebird had just taken off and was about 60 feet In the air when the motor went dead. The plane went Into a tail spin. Pilot Bowen said later, before he could make a landing. Two of the women were unconscious when spectators reached the demolished plane. BOY HUNTER SHOOTS SELF Joseph Girard, 15, of Cathlamct Sustained Badly Mangled Arm. ASTORIA, Or.. Nov: . (Special.) Joseph Girard Jr., the 15-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Girard of Cathlamet, accidentally shot himself this morning while hunting ducks on Puget island and was brought to the hospital here this afternoon. The charge of shot struck him In the - left arm, which was badly mangled but may be saved. Delegates Find President Ready With Sympathy. UNDERSTANDING IS SHOWN Chief Executive Realizes As pirations of Nations. ENVOYS MET WITH TACT British and Japanese Learn With Surprise That Consideration Is Felt for Them. BY ROBERT SMALL. (Copyright. by The Oresonian.) "WASHINGTON, D. C, Nov. 6. (Spe cial.) With the first session of the conference there Is coming to Wash ington a stronger realization than ever that despite the world promi nence of the delegates who will ac tually compose the conference, the outstanding figure In all the delib erations will be none other than the man wh-) called the nations together Warren G. Harding. ' For It' is agreed that success or failure of the rOnference' depe ids al most wholly upon what the United States is able or willing to do, and President Harding must have i the final say In this. It virtually is ad mitted In advance that the other na tions are not in a position to accept the first frank proposals the United Stales will place before them, pro posals based upon the free and Inde pendent position of this country. So the conference, before It Is many days aid, will resolve itself into the ques tion of how far the United States can accommodate its views to those of the more entangled powers. Old Ideas Retained. It Is useless to deny that France, Great Britain,- Italy and Japan are coming to Washington with Ideas based upon the doctrines of the old diplomacy. The- delegates and at taches talk in the terms of alliances. Yet the wiser statesmen from the old world and from the orient must know how determinedly the United States Is opposed to alliances. President Harding had taken pains to make that point' clear long before Ambas sador Harvey spoke Thursday at Liv erpool. The older nations are' Interested, therefore. In the formula the United States, through Secretary Hughes and his associates, will suggest to the conference. What commitments can the presi dent make in the name of the United States that will be satisfactory to the other powers and serve as a substi tute for their faith In the alliance? Limitation of armaments can come only through some -orm of agree ment, treaty or covenant, covering a guarantee of the necessary interna tional adjustments that will make heavy armaments no longer essen tial to certain national aims and as plrations. It Is for the United States to devise the means of attaining an International end by new interna tiorral methods. The week lias been marked by the glamor of arriving delegates and at taches. But the tumult and the shout ing have not dimmed the fact that the hope of the conference sits calmly in the White House, confident In his own optimistic mind that there Is suf ficient of good in the world to make this new move for humanity a success. Already, as a result of the contact with President Harding and with the clearer atmosphere of Washington, where old world Intrigues are un known, some of the skepticism brought by the arriving delegates and the members of their suites is begin ning to melt' away. This skepticism had been but ill-concealed behind' the painfully polite statements given out by the distinguished visitors. Being couched in the most, punc tilious diplomatic language, these statements were more or less mean ingless. But the skepticism has been nothing to wonder at. Europe has been witnessing a perfect parade of conferences ever since the treaty of Versailles was signed, and most of them have been fruitless, But this is the first great political conference of the nations to be held in the new world "and there is hope that It may mark the beginning of a new order. Sympathy Is Fannd. . The foreign envoys now in Wash ington have found with eminent sat isfaction that President Harding un derstands any sympathises with most of their views. They are bringing to Washington nothing that is new to him; nothing that he had not consid ered before he determined to call the conference on the limitation of arm aments and to widen Its scope to in clude all of the delicate problems of the Pacific and the far east. Presi dent Harding move about always In an atmosphere of conciliation, and It is this spirit that leads to further hope for conference success. The British envoys have learned, possibly with something akin to amazement, that President Harding does not look with disfavor upon maintenance of a big fleet by Great Britain the biggest fleet in the world for that matter. The president feels iCcnciudcd on fago 3, Colunua 1.) J Cost In ll4 Approximates 12 Cents, W End of Last Month 11 H to 13 Cents. CHICAGO, Nov. I. The average wholesale price of carcass beef Is back to the level prevailing In 1914, ac cording to figures made publlo today in a review of the meat and livestock situation during Ootober, Issued by the Institute of American Meat Pack ers. The average wholesale price of car cass beef in 1914 approximated II cents, the report said, while at the end of October, 1921. it was between 11 V and li cents. Some grada, how ever, are selling higher, while others are selling lower.'lt was stated. A normal volume of production has been maintained In the packing In dustry for the first nine months of 1921 as compared with the first nine months of 1913, said the statement. The total of all kinds of federal Inspected meat animals for the first nine months of 1921 is given at 47. 184,934 while for the same period In 1913 the number was, 41.323.010. Government figures showing stocks of meat In cold storage Indicate thero was no heavy surplus left on hand as a result of the volume of production, the report says. CORN CALLED CHEAP FUEL Grain at 32 Cents Dcelured Equul to $16 Coul. WASHINGTON, D. C, Nov. . Corn at 32 cents a bushel Ib equal In value to coal at J16 a ton, Secretary Wallace said today, commenting on reports that some farmers were burning corn for fuel. At 29 eents a bushel, he said, corn would be equivalent to fuel coal at 10 a ton. "In districts where corn Is cheap now, the coal Is of a rather poor grade and is selling at high prices," he continued. "Under such conditions, it will pay both farmers and people In country towns to use corn InBtead of coal. Un doubtedly large quantities of corn will be burned on western farms this winter, unless prices should material ly advance." Mr. Wallace said the use of surplus grain as fuel in times of low market ability was not an uncommon occur rence In other cereal raising coun tries. H0LSTEIN BREAKS RECORD Wisconsin Pride Second Champion Butter Producer. WAUPACA, Wis.. Nov. . Wiscon sin Pride II, a purebred Holsteln Kriesian cow, owned by John.Krick son, has Just completed a yearly rec ord which gives her the world's cham pionship in the senior J-year-old class with a production of 1327.94 pounds of butter from 29,602.9 pounds of milk. The figures exceed by a consider able margin the former record held by Lady Aggie Echo Hengerveld, a California cow. SEATTLE TAXES HIGHEST San Francisco Second in List Show ing; Municipal Expenditure. NEW YORK, Nov. 6. The National Security league, in Us campaign to educate the public in the cost of gov ernment, tonight made public figures showing that of the 11 cities with, a l.Hnn hetween 300.000 and 600,- 000, Seattle, with 162.18, had the greatest per capita municipal ex penditure. San Francisco's total was 139.62. Japanese Center Opened. SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. I. Japanese Center, said to be the first exclusive ly Japanese Salvation Army borne In America, was. formally opened with dedicatory exercises by Salvation Army Commissioner Booth-Tucker of London here today. INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature, 66 deterges; minimum. 4S degree. TODAY'S Clearirs. J-'orelsn. Asin ol Pr.mler Hara believed merely to have been conspiracy tool. Fase 8. National crlal. faced by Japan. Pft 1. National. Harding Is hop. of arm. meeting-. Page 1. Break with Colonel Harvey deeply re gretted by Wilson, aay. Timulty. Page 2. United 8tates .ubmarlne. to Bet new type ot engine. Page 1. Pin money theory hurts women's pay. Pag. -. . Domentic, Wholesale carea.. beef back to pre-war price. Pag. 1. Chattanooga .ay. bulne. I. good. Page 4. Pacific Northwest. Grass Valley fire cauies 150,000 leu. Pag. 1. Sports. Ev.rett-Waahlnirtoa gam. to and argument over title. Pag. 10. r.ne'U prefers fighting to eating. Page 11. Cornell new golf champion of Wav.rl.y club. fag. aw. Football re.ulur of Saturday surprla. to fan.. Fag. 10. Commercial and Marine. Barcelona cargo of wheat leavea. Pag. 11. Portland and Virlnlty. Farm loan work to b expedited. Pag. 17. Father, ar. urged to be sons' real pals. Pag. 18. Dlvl.lon of loot lead, to arrest. Pag. 1. Thousand, glory In stock exhibit. Pag. 1. College .Xpert, gl. farm advice. Pag. 16. Phil Jdetschan tell. valu. of proposed ex position. Pag. IS. Germany declared to b. real war victor. Pag. 17. Fate of dairymen, leagu. may b. decided today. Pag. 6. Poultry exhibited at livestock show. Pag. . . , Day's Attendance Is Esti mated at 15,000. ALL CLASSES REPRESENTED Visitors Crowd Aisles at All Times; Show Praised. JUDGING IS COMMENCED Klglit Display of Horses Is to lie Begun Today; Record Crowd Expected to Bo on Hund. THE STOCK SHOW TODAY. Day. Judging begins of horses and sheep. Boys' and girls' livestock Judging teams compete. All livestock and poultry ex hibits showing. Band concerts jpid night horse show mounts in- arena. Mgbt. Draft horse parade 7:40. Night horse show opens 8 Features, water Jump, Hunt club girls', tandem drill, pony hurdle race. To Rrarh Kxpo.ltlim, Street car service direct to exposition from Salmon slreet north on Broadway, Misslssippl avenue cars. Automobiles Union-avenue route to Interstate bridge, or Denver-avenue approach route, following Mississippi -avenue cars. Attendance, figures at the Paolfla International Livestock exposition, November S to 13, leaped yesterday with crowds estimated at from 14,000 to 15.000 passing through the gates of the exposition. Hundreds of families, coming from every class and district In the city, swelled the crowds from the official attendance of 10,000 on the opening day. The Whitney boys' chorus, featur ing the new 1925 exposition boosters' song, divided honors with the blue- ribbon stock of the pavilions In fur nishing entertainment for the day. P. O. Riley, author of the new song, and L. Carroll Day assisted the boys leader with the first public presenta tion of the exposition song. All Al.les Are Crowded. The aisles of every exhibit pavilion throughout the entire show space were crowded all day long with con stantly shifting throngs. The west ern winter show of the Oregon Poul try and Pet Stock association was one of the most popular sections. Many times during the day there was scarcely room to move among exhib its, where group after group had gathered to admire wonderful, birds and rabbits. Today, with the start of the night " horse show and the first round of Judging, will really usher In the ex position. Greater crowds than have ever assembled on the North Port land site are expected between the opening of the gates at 6:30 A. M. and the closing hour late at night. Judges Start on Horses. Judges will begin on the dyde, Fere heron, Belgian and Shire horses this morning. Also the first awards will be made In the sheep division, with Judges starting on the medium wool sheep. Judging has already begun In the poultry show. Tomorrow will be governors' day and also excursion day with special trains and special delegations from points in Oregon and Washington. The programme, with the governors ap pearing at 2 P. M., is expected to draw one of the largest exposition crowds of the year. Excursions scheduled to arrive for Tuesday Include the Holsteln breeders and eastern business men, making up a party of 32 members headed by ex Governor Lowden of Illinois. A Se attle special will arrive during the day and a large delegation of Pendle ton men will come In special Pullman cars. Visitor Pralae Exhibits. Visitors and exhibitors have been lavish In their praise of the eleventh annual exposition exhibits In all .de partments. The hog and sheep divi sions are classed as the best In the west and many breeders have had their entries on the circuit since early summer, touring the west slope of the Rockies and Canada. Entries in the Jersey cattle run to smaller herds this year than last, but the number of exhibitors is greater and the animals slse up with any that have ever shown here. In the opinion of breeders and livestock experts. Grand champion Jerseys of the 1920 show are again exhibited and run ners up of lasterfr and new entries are groomed to compete with them. Spokane Funs Has Kntrlrs. The Glen Tana farm of Spokane. Jersey breeders who have been strong exhibitors for several years, have en tered 12 animals this year, including the grand champion cow of the 190 exposition. Emlnents Jimp Owl. the (Concluded on Pago 4. Column .