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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 18, 1922)
2 THE MORNING OEEGOXIAX, FRIDAY, AUGUST 18, 1922 II, 71, EMS UNIVERSITY Mother of Six Studies to Re tain Youth. GRANDMOTHER, 71, "YOUNGEST STUDENT" AT FAVORS FLAPPERS. COLUMBIA HEALTH RULES ADOPTED Student of More Than Half Cen tury Ago Says Mental Alert ness Is Key to Vigor. r.w YORK. Auc 17. (Special "it 71 Mrs A. P. Crawford of Greensboro. X. C. has entered th summer session of Columbia univer sity as a student. College graduate and Vassar student more than half a. renturv aeo. and motner 01 bix Mrs. Crawford is studying in order that she mav keep mentally aier unit nri to date which, she says, is the real secret if youth. She is.Co lumhia's oldest student. - There is no need to grow old, mentally at least," said Mrs: Craw ford. -Stagnation and intolerance are one's greatest foes in keeping young. These changing times de mand new viewpoints, and the woman of today must keep herself well informed as part of her duty as a citizen." Mrs. Crawford sees nothing un usual in "going to school" at her age. explaining that she "lost her job" when her children grew up and established themselves, and in her long, busy life she has never had aa much leisure as she would like fox reading and study. Three of her five sons are teachers, another is a merchant in Winston-Salem, X. C. and the fifth is connected with the Reynolds Tobacco company in that city. Tooth Kept by Study. A grandson, R. B. Crawford, was graduated from the University of Xorth Carolina this June. Her son, I j. w". Crawford, is assistant direc tor of the summer session at Colum bia. Richard M. is-teaching at Will lam and Mary college in Virginia, and F. M. Crawford is an instructor in the high school at Girard. O. Mrs. Crawford was a teacher her self for two years after graduation from the Greensboro College for Women in 1869, and a year of study at Vassar, then just 'four years old. Marriage to a Methodist clergyman Interrupted her work and brought with it home duties and parish work, but she was always an ardent reader and kept herself young, she believes, by striving always to be intellectually awake, keeping her self in constant association with young people and safeguarding her health with judicious exercise and a few simple rules of hygiene. "There is no end to growth," she declares. energetically. Her six weeks' study here she will use. she explained, as a basis for her read ing during the winter months at home. Philosophy and literature Interest her most. Comparative lit erature and Professor Montague's course in radical, conservative and reactionary tendencies in present day morals are the subjects she is taking up here. Flapper Vot Condemned. Asked her opinion of the modern "flapper." she replied that the term was used so indiscriminately that Ehe was not sure of its meaning, but that she did not condemn the young girls of today for reaching out toward freer, broader lives. Girls of today do not study so hard as they used, she said, but have a broader and more intelligent out look than the schoolgirls of her generation. But no one has any ex cuse for narrowness and stagnation xoaay, sne declared, because knowl cage nas been made so accessible in our schools, libraries and the weaitn of periodicals in this coun try. This country is gradually making progress toward the fulfillment of its democratic ideals, Mrs. Crawford believes. Social and economic ideas undreamed of by the rank and file of men and women in her day are becoming commonplaces now, she said, she believes that a new social and industrial order is bound to come out of the struggle between capital and labor, but how soon it will come or what form it will take she does not venture to prophesy. Her physical youthfulness Mrs. Crawford attributes to a life full of . activity, plenty of outdoor exercise and obedience to the fundamental -laws of hygiene. In Greensboro she lives with her daughter, whose two little girls, 7 and 8. are "keeping up with grandmother" by good records in school. The elder, who will not he 9 until December, enters the fifth grade this fall. ' . . : YJ gwywv. witty 1 , ',''"x'"plt:'7'-''' '' SSfrS-V I I rat x'X ' ' . . "si ! . i v V .N4 ' ij-v ' r-r-t 1 FINE TRIBUTE PI . LORD 1RTHCLIFFE Funeral of Noted Publicist Marked by Simplicity. ABBEY SERVICE SOLEMN kpyr!ght by Underwood & Upderwood. MRS. A. P. CRAWFORD OF GREENSBORO, ST. C. XEW YORK, Aug. 17. Mrs. Ai IV Crawford of Greensboro. X. C, is a student at Columbia university. The . 7.1-year-old widow of a Methodist inister is taking a summer course In philosophy and literature. Mrs. Crawford is. in point of years, Columbia's oldest student, but she laughingly says herself that she is the youngest, in respect of tempera ment and mental outlook. She was a student at Vassar 60 years ago. and she says that modern college girls learn more, and learn more quickly, than the girls of her youth, although the "flapper" may not be so serious or spend so much time in study. "They absorb knowledge," she says. 216 MIXERS ARE INDICTED Reputed Clifton Mine Rioters Ac cused of Murder and Plot. WKLLSBORO. W. Va.. Aug. 17. Two hundred and sixteen men were indicted today by the Brooke county grand jury for alleged participation in the battle at the Clifton mine. Cliftonville. on the morning of July 17. Seventy-eight are charged -with first degree murder and the re mainder with conspiracy. All but 50 of the indicted men ar ' in custody. ORtGIN OF LIFE IN ASIA fOontinued From First Page.) and within a few yards of camp dis covered some bones of dinosaurs. This was the first discovery Of giant reptiles In northern Asia. The region promised to be so in- eresting that Mr. Andrews left the geologists at work and pushed on to Turin, 152 miles south of Urga, with other members of the party, to meet he caravan. He accompanied the aravan to Urga, planning to plunge deeper into the heart of Asia. But at Urga he received a letten, from he fossil-hunter-in-chief. Granger, telling of such rich discoveries that i hurried back. The dinosaurs, remains of which were discovered in great profusion, were found to belong to the upper cretaceous period the very close of the age of reptiles and to be strik ingly similar to those of the Rockies in America and those found in Eu rope. On top of the dinosaur beds were layers of mammalian fossils, belong ing to the dawn period of mammal life the eocene. Above these were fossils belonging to the lower mio- ene, or middle period, and mingled ith these were the remains of k iant mammal not found either in Jurope or ?orth America, but sim ilar to one discovered some years go in Baluchistan, southwest India, nd dubbed baluchiterium, the larg est land animal known to have ex isted. - Bones Like Those in Wyoming. Other findings included fossils of rhinoceroses, immense tortoises, large carnivorae, crocodiles and tur tles and enough others to make a Barnum weep that none such still live. These bygone animals, said Mr. Granger, bore unmistakable resem blance to those found in Wyoming, including two kinds of flesh-eating dinosaurs and a smaller running fel low called the ostrich dinosaur. There were other fossils of the dinosaur known as the iguadonts a tall, two-legged herbivorous beast which ranged from southern Eng land to the Xew Jersey coast. Describing his trip, Mr. Andrews wrote: "We reached Turin without a sin gle accident, and, as we approached the outskirts of this Mongolian town, we saw a large caravan and decided to camp. Then I suddenly JAPS QUIT VALDiVOSTOK EVACUATION" TO BE- CARRIED OUT IX FOUR STAGES. Xo Russians to Be Allowed in Restricted Areas Strict En forcement to Be Made. VLADIVOSTOK, Aug. 16. (By the Associated Press. Evacuation of Japanese troops from Vladivostok will begin August 26, it was an nounced yesterday by the Japanese commander, and the movement will be carried out in four stages. Restricted areas will be pro claimed during the evacuation process and under the Russo-Japanese agreement of April 29, 1920, no Russian forces will be allowed to enter these .areas. Drastic action will be taken against any interfer ence with the evacuation movements and infringements of the agreed restrictions. FIRE HITS' MINNESOTA (Continued From First Page.) supplies, which had been sent on ahead. Half way across Mongolia, be tween Kalgan and Urga. the atten tion of the explorers was caught by some interesting geological expos ures. and camp was made. While supper was cooking, the three geol ogists of the party Walter Gran ger. Charles P. Berkey and Fred- enck Mnrrls began prospecting, vacation KttfrrZ5 V 'acation stillness All ttfTad Mnfoed mttn tht f I rmt r n 4 y f 9o tnsttar-tf ro'vtakn Sloan' Ltotmctit alone- Vo mbbtrtt- 1 Liniment alone- Vo ntbbmg. M rmdmt it penatraf. Im. medialalr brfnr Uncling r J4f to avary aoro tnnacta. g it kills pain t WHAT CONGRESS DID AS ITS DAY'S WORK. Sennte. . . Disposed of individual amendments to tariff meas ure, refusing to lower rates on cutlery. Republican leaders continue efforts to arrange a recess, coupled with a date forsaking bonus vote, but without suc cess. Secretary Weeks' letter urging extension of dyestuffs embargo for one year made public. Illustrated tariff book is sued by republicans, thereby greatly incensing the house. Hoaae, . Bill introduced by Repre sentative ' Edmonds, repub lican, to deport aliens. Adjourned after developing absence of a quorum. days. Rising temperatures, warm and dry tomorrow and Saturday, with moderate northerly winds and low humidity, were forecast. This is the most dangerous forest fire weather, Mr. Pape said. R. I Fromme, federal super visor of the Olympic national for est, today sent word to Captain Lowell Smith at Eugene, Or., In charge of the army air patrol' forces on the Pacific coast, to hold planes in readiness to begin patrol . work over the Olympic peninsula storm zone, where conditions are again be coming dry. Emmett Henzie Is Dead. THE DALLES. Or., Aug. 17. (Special.) Two persons . were stricken with apoplexy in The Dalles today, one fatally. Emmett Henzie, 38 years old, died in the office of Dr. A. P. Ingram, a local chiro practor, where he had gone com plaining of a headache. He was a member of the Elks and Oddfellows. M. T. Wallace, a contractor from Troutdale, in The Dalles visiting a sister, was sent to the hospital . here after being stricken about noon. American Journalists Join With British Newspaper 3Ien in Last Tribute to Dead Mentor. LO.NDOX, Aug. 17. (By the As sociated Press.) Viscount North cliffe, England's foremost publicist, was laid at rest today in St. Maryle bone cemetery, in Finchley, with services of surpassing simplicity, beauty and solemnity. The funeral, ceremonies in Westminster- abbey" were devoid of all the pomp usually associated- with the last rites to the country's na tional figures. The ritual consisted of the, recital of chosen Bible verses and the Psalms, the singing of Lord North- clif fe's favorite hymn and the play ing of the "Dead March tTom saui and "Chopin's Funeral March." Military Pomp la Absent. In contrast to previous funerals of illustrious men, there was not a military, naval or other uniform visible. The vast interior of the church ' was a broad expanse of somber black. Men high in the world of state, -church, diplomacy and journalism were present. Several hundred Britis news paper men marched to the cathedral to pay silent tribute to the man who naa done so mucn to raise meir status and add to their prestige American journalists who had en joyed Northcliffe's acquaintance filled the front rows- in the cathe dral and joined with their British comrades of the "fourth estate" in offering homage. There were no honorary paiioear ers. ' Massive Coffin. Is Open. The massive open coffin, covered with a pall of silk and gold, was borne into the edifice by eight at tendants of the abbey. The funeral cortege filed past the tomb of the unknown British soldier on its way to the catafalque while the cele brant of the service repeated the stately sentences of the burial rit ual, "I am the resurrection and the life." The coffin was followed by Lord Northcliffe's widow who, bowed with emotion, was supported by Lord Rothermere and Cecil Harms worth, brothers of the journal ist. Then came relatives and close friends. - American Ambassador Present. George Harvey, American ambas sador, occupied a pew near the choir. Next to the widow the most pa thetic figure in the cathedral was Lord Northcliffe's disabled brother, Vyvyan Harmsworth, who was wheeled to the altar in an invalid's chair. Sub - Deacon Canon Carnegie's words, "We bring our years to the end like a tale that is told," and "This mortal must put on immortal ity,'.' seemed . to impart prophetic significance to the obseques. As the coffin was borne from the great edifice bells tolled a dirge, announcing : that the church had given its blessing to the dead, 'immense Crowds Uncover. Immense crowds stood fn silence reverent and uncovered, as the pro cession moved out and past the statue of Abraham Lincoln. A light but continuous rain arui sodden skies lent additional melancholy to the occasion. - King George and Queen Mary were not represented, but the prince of Wales sent General Cotter. Sir Edward Grigg attended the obsequies on behalf of Premier Lloyd George. W. E. Stephen was present on be half of Winston Spencer Churchill, secretary for the colonies. Body Buried Beside Father. Lord Northcliffe's body was buried beside that of his father. The serv ices at the grave were conducted by the bishop of Birmingham. Over the grave flowers were banked in pro fusion. One of the most prominent of the offerings came from Lord Northcliffe's mother. It was in scribed, "With everlasting love." Lady Northcliffe, through Am bassador Harvey, today sent a mes sage of grateful thanks to President Harding and Secretary Hughes for their condolences. Morelock on Emmett Butche Laurin and A. J. Reed, druggists, and Charles W a Seaside druggist, charging them with having more intoxicating liquor in their places of business than tne law permits. 1 HYLAN REFUSES TO OFFER OF BACKING FOR GOV ERNORSHIP DECXIXED. OFFER MADE TO MINERS Alberta Strikers Expected to Re turn at 20 Per Cent Pay Cut. CALGARY, Aug. 17, Coal miners of Alberta are expected to accept I an offer made' them today by the operators to go back to work at a reduction of 20 per cent in wages, but to receive any scale that may be adopted by at least 80 per cent of the operators in the United States. The offer is contained in a pro posed contract to expire March 31, HARDING PLANS MESSAGE ' (Continued From First Pag.) Action of New York Mayor Com plicates Democratic Guber natorial Situation. (By Chicago Tribune Leased Wire.) NEW YORK, Aug. 17. William Randolph Hearst and Mayor Hylan today complicated further the al ready very much mixed democratic gubernatorial situation Mr. Hearst, in a . statement to the newspapers, offering to support Hylan for gov ernor, and the mayor by declining the proffered crown. The publisher in his statement be gan an open fight on A. L. Smith and all "conservative democrats" in response to the challenge flung at him by the former governor in his letter of Tuesday to Franklin D. Roosevelt toffering to accept the nomination for governor if the Syra cuse convention tendered it to htm. The Hearst letter indirectly hints at a new state party. Hearst suggested Hylan for gov ernor and" said he would run for any office on the Hylan ticket if asked to do so by the mayor. Hylan re plied that he would not accept a state nomination "under any circumstances." HOP PICKINGT0 START Harvesting of Fuggles Is Slated to Begin Monday. SALEM, Or. Aug. 17. (Special.) Picking of fuggle hops will get under way here Monday, while the picking of clusters' should start within the next two weeks. The recent rains proved beneficial to the hops, and estimates have placed the yield at 55,000 bales. Earlier in the season it was predicted that the entire crop 'would not exceed 0,00) bales. Besides filling in the hops, the rains of last week eliminated the red spider which threatened a num ber of the larger yards in this sec tion of the state. Ex-Iowans Enjoy Picnic. . SALE XI, Or., Aug. 17. (Special.) Ex-residents of Iowa held their an nual picnic at the state fair grounds here today. The programme Included a basket dinner, election of offi cers, musical numbers and athletio sports. More than 100 persons were in attendance. Read The Oregonlan classified ads. inquiring into a possible conspiracy basis for the walkouts, but the United States district office declined to give It out. - j PARLEY GETS NOWHERE Warrants Served on Druggists. ASTORIA, Or., Aug. 17. (Special.) Warrants issued from the federal court in Portland were served today by Deputy United States Marshal Rail and Brotherhood Chiefs Wrestle With Strike. NEW YORK. Aug. 17. (By the Associated Press.) Railway -execu tives and brotherhood chiefs today wrestled with 'the problem of set tling the shopmen's strike and then adjourned until tomorrow without scoring a fall. Tomorrow, while President iiaro- ing is expected to appear oeiore congress with a message ! the rail situation, the conferees will re assemble in an effort to come to erins on the slippery question or seniority. Today was a day of conferences among brotherhood cmeis mis morning between brotherhood chiefs and rail executives this afternoon between brotherhood chiefs and shopcraft officials. At the first hearing Warren S. Stone, head of the-locomotive engi neers, was called for the ostensible purpose of framing a concrete pro- eramme to be submitted to tne executives. The brotherhood men, who made it plain that, their po sition was solely of mediators, went into the afternoon' parley without breathing a word of the proposals for a strike settlement which they were believed to have drawn up. But If the t-raln service men were silent, representatives of the strik ing shopcrafts who gathered to await the result of the conference made it plain that they did not be lieve any proposal would be made by the running trades which would include a sacrifice of their seniority rights. While representatives of the strikers would not permit them selves to be quoted, they indicated they would stand firm as ever on the proposition that they must be taken back with their seniority ranking unimpaired. A committee representing the ex ecutives, headed by T. Dewitt Cuyler, chairman of their organiza tion, lunched together and then "went to the conference chamber. where they awaited the arrival of the mediators. ' At 2 o'clock the conference was on. Two hints of what had transpired escaped. First, the executives sent for files containing decisions of the rail labor board, in which that body in rulings bearing on other strikes had directed that strikers should forfeit seniority rights. This was taken to indicate that the question of .seniority, which Tiad figured so prominently In the two efforts by President Harding to end the strike. had bobbed up again. The second hit was obtained from J. K. Krutt schnitt, chairman of the board of the Southern Pacific, who, leaving the conference shortly before it ad journed, indicated that little prog ress had been made. "Mother everybody toys it's iv ay after ten o'clock in the morning and we got to have a lot of Kellogg' a Corn Flakes or we can't go ahead and play any longer. We're all hungry momethin' fierce I" "5V pJ ahead and play any I (j-r ' M sS longer. We're all hungry W ' momethin' fiercel" 1 hXjl k f ' A-alime ' rndplqw-time cooling cn Ithiul Explosion Injures Fireman. LA GRANDE, Or., Aug. 17. (Spe cial.) Fred Crawford, a railway fireman, was scalded about the face and neck last night when flues on his locomotive exploded. He will recover. Failure of shopmen to clean the boiler, resulting in rusted flues, was assigned as the cause of the explosion. The accident hap pened on a freight train near Huron, west of here. . The engineer was not injured. Boilermaker Is Beaten. LA GRANDE. Or., Aug. 17. (Spe cial.) About midnight last night a boilermaker, employed by the O.-W. R. & N., was waylaid and badly beaten by a gang of youths. The name of the boilermaker was not learned. His injuries were not seri ous., witnesses declared that tne attackers were not strikers. Dynamiting Tracks Tried. BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Aug. 17. A third attempt to demolish the tracks of the Louisville & Nashville rail road was made today when a charge was exploded between the ties under one of the rails of the road near Grace, Ala., according to local offi cials. Two similar attempts were made yesterday, the officials added. recognized the American flag and realized that it was the caravan of the American museum expedition. It had been five weeks on the way from Kalgan and had just arrived one hour before us. Pretty fine con nection for a 700-mile journey across the plains, was it not? We went over to the great rocky outcrop and pitched our tents. The caravan fol lowed and reached our encampment one hour later. It was an inspiring sight as the 75 camels wound up from the plain with the American flag at the head. It made me realize, as nothing else had, that the third Asiatic expedition was really an ac complished fact, that all the long days and months of preparation In New York had resulted in this: it was a dream come true." N Hart Issues Requisition. OLYMPIA. Wash., Aug. 17. (Spe cial.) Governor Hart today issued a requisition upon the governor of Oregon for the return to Olympia of M. W. Hawkins, wanted in Thurston county on a charge of grand larceny. S. & R. fjreen stamps for cut. Hoiman Fuel CdV coal and Wood. Broadway 6353: 660-31. AdT. .Summer prices on coal. Phono Dia mond Coal Co.. Bdwy. J OS 7. Adv. Your Choice of Pairs Includes Fine Pants Formerly Sold at $9 . An extra pair of Pants always comes in handy. NOW is the time to get yours at this big sale. All sizes. . Many ine patterns in excellent colors. Come in at once for best selections. Samples sent to out-of-town customers Brownsville Woolen Mill Store Corner Third and Morrison 11 TOASTED FLAKES I U Ua Chocolate-coated H j ' .Turkish Nougat. O At our NEW ALL- 7 PACKAGE Candy Store in the Vista Pj Market, Fourth f II and Yamhill. ! it spreads just like butter ! I i rB- p Bon ; . iip. f m:z u a is sva n b h i i " I j Green Chile Cheese ' i i a 4 i I I FLAICES V miClOUS'MQi Hungry, little folks AND BIG FOLKS will find many palate thrills in generous helpings of Kellogg's Corn Flakes, particularly when served with the luscious fresh fruits now in season! Just cant be anything better for breakfast, for lunch, or for supper when the thermometer's away up I And such a feast for between-times "snacks" ! Summer's the time for "safety first" with" family stomachs! Every one works better, thinks better, plays better and feels a lot better with lighter food on the hot days ! And, crisp, delicious Kellogg's Corn Flakes , are everything that can be desired for health, for enjoyment, for nourishment! Help every big and little family member liberally with Kellogg's, for here is real food that is easy to digest, yet it sustains! And, you can't "overdo" on Kellogg's! Kellogg's Corn Flakes are sold in the RED and GREEN package that bears the signature of W. K. Kellogg, originator of Corn Flakes. None are genuine without it. Also maker, of KELLOGG'S KRUMBLES and KELLOGG'S BRAN, cooked and krumbled the emblem of Merit and Service in the manufacture and sale of good LUMBER LATH ' SHINGLES MOULDINGS DOORS BOXES ETC. Demand it forthor ough protection EAST SIDE MILL & LUMBER CO. Ft. Spokane Ave. Sellwood 67 OREGON DOOR CO. ITt. Spokane Ave. SeMvfood 63 EAST SIDE BOX CO. Ft. Spokane Ave. Sell wood 697 Green Chile Cheese Phone your want ads to The Ore-g-onlan. All Its readers are Inter ested in the classified columns. NX It's Healthful! It's Economical! JLexnon.O range or Lime Squash It's a most delightful drink for any occasion. Quickly and simply pre pared just add plain or charged water and serve. There are no artificial flavorings or coloring in Kia-Ora just pare fruit juices and cane sugar. An ounce of Kia - Ora makes a big, refreshing drink, and each drink costs but 4 cents. Sold in 12 and 24-ounce bottles. Gallon jugs for soda fountain use. AMERICA O-T. LTD, INC. Manufacturers, 238-240 Jackson Street, San Francisco. Read The Oregonlan classified ads.