PRICE FIVE CENTS VOL. LXI SO. 19,280 PORTLAND, OREGON, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1923 Entered at Portland (Oreg-on) Poatoffice wa Second-claya Matter. BULLDOG HOLDS FORT CHIEF TURNS 'WOMAN' BISHOP DEFENDS FAIRBANKS POPULACE IN WAR ON CARIBOU READING CURSES WETS ID DRYS LTD BATTLE TODAY FOSSIL SHARK TOOTH FOUND NEAR ALBANY WEST'S BEAUTIES CAPTURE CHICAGO Last Lap of Trip to Atlan v. tic City Begun. IN BATTLE FOR AUTO POLICEMEN, OWNER AND BIG CROWD AT BAY ONE HOUR. AND CATCHES KISSER "LADY" PROTESTS WALLOPS MASHER ON JAW. FLAPPER WILD GAME ABOUT TO MAKE " JUXGLE OF TOWN. RELIC DECLARED TO BE MILLIONS OF TEARS OLD. ED MODERN FOES II V V Big Votejs Expected in Wisconsin Primary. WOMEN MAY DECIDE ISSUE Interest Is Centered in Re publican Party. TWO SLATES OFFERED Real, Party Ticket Is Headed y by William A. Ganfield as Candidate for Senator. (By Chicago Tribune Leased Wire.) MILWAUKEE, Wis., Sept. 4. Fair weather and a tremendous vote are on the cards for Wisconsin's great primary tomorrow. With the reg istration up around the 165,000 ' mark, a new mark will probably be established 'for heavy balloting of an off-year election. If the race la -close the women may decide the pri mary and bie: plans have been made to bring out the maximum women's I vote. Interest centers in the repub lican party because it is in the re publican party that the real fighting will take place. The majority party represents two complete tickets, the "real republi can" ticket, headed by the origina tor of the "praying colonels," William A. Ganfield, candidate for senator, and William J. Morgan, candidate for governor, and the "radical" slate headed by Robert M. Lafollette, can didate for senator, and John J. Blaine, candidate for governor. It is a straight-away race for all places except the governorship, which is a three-cornered contest between Morgan, Blaine and A. C. McHenry. McHenry is a wet candidate and his vote will go far to determine the full strength of sentiment favor able to beer and wines. LaFollette and Blaine have played for wet votes but It appears that the so called liberals will swing . toward McHenry, as he Is the only candidate who has taken a positive stand for beer and wines. Lafollette and Blaine have remained mum on that subject. Mrs. Jessie Jack Hooper, democratic candidate for United States senator, has no opposition in Ser party. Socialists have no con tests. VPETS AND DRYS SCAN VOTE . V Keturns to Be Eagerly Watched by Rival Factions. MILWAUKEE, Sept. 4. (By the Associated Press.) Returns of to morrow's primary election in Wis consin will be eagerly scanned by "wet" and "dry" organizations of the state, since candidates repre senting these forces are seeking nominations for legislative offices. The anti-saloon league has made St Vigorous campaign for candidates pledged to carry on its work, while an organization opposed to the pro hTbltion amendment would prefer to Bee candidates nominated whn would favor an amendment to the Volstead act permitting light wines and beer. The Wisconsin anti-saloon league is advocating the nomination of W. A. Ganfield for United States senator over Senator R. M. La Fol lette, and indorsement of Attorney General William J. Morgan over Governor John J. Blaine for the gubernatorial honors. While the platform of Senator La Follette and Governor Blaine made no mention of prohibition, these candidates are receiving the support of the association opposed to prohibition. XEW YORK INTEREST LOW Restoration of State Convention Detracts From Primary. By Chicago Tribune Leased Wire.) NEW YORK, Sept. 4. State pri mary day, two weeks from tomor row, will have little local Interest this year due to the restoration of the state convention. Even the local fights are- few and far between, compared to previous years. For a time it was thought the fight between William Randolph Hearst and former Governor Alfred E. Smith for the democratic nomina tion for governor would result in primary fights for the delegates. But the Hearst plans did not ma terialize. The result is there are primary contests for Hearst dele gates in only two counties in the etate Erie and Albany. Even in Erie the fight on the surface is for Louis FiVhrmann, ex-mayor. It is an attempt on the part of William J. Connors to overthrow the demo cratic leadership-of William E. Fitz patrick. TEXAS CONVENTION TODAY En Klux Plans to Contest Plan of Democratic Committee. SAN ANTONIO. Sept. 4. The pro gramme of the democratic state committee will be contested by sup porters of the Ku Klux Klan when the state convention opens tomor (Concluded an Fag 3, Column 4.) I Scientist Makes Interesting Dis covery Where Road-Builders Cut Across Hill. ALBANY, Or., Sept. 4. (Special.) The tooth of a prehistoric shark has been found In Linn county on Knox Butte, four miles east of Al bany, by W. D. Porter, who is in vestigating fossil remains in this vicinity. The ancient relic was dis covered on the southwestern slope of the butte in Miocene strata that were exposed where road - builder, have made a cut across the face of the hill. The shark tooth has been classi fied by J. J. Crawford, Albany scien tist,,. &3 belonging to a specimen of lamina elegans. The rock in which it was embedded1 when classified gives an idea of the age of the tooth. The Miocene period is de scribed by geologists as being in the time of the Cenozoic, or mammalian era and tertiary age, many million years ago when the present Wll lamette valley was not in existence and a sea covered this part of the globe. Research work on Peterson butte and Haight butte has been carried on by Mr. Porter. Both of these show evidence, he states, of the glacial period when ice swept over them. Professor O. P. Hay of the Na tional museum at Washington, D. C, has requested additional photo graphs of mammoth, mastodon and other fossil teeth owned and mainr tained here in the notable collection of Mr. Crawford. BANDITS GET RING, $120 Cigar Store Held Up Victim Gives Chase; Gun Won't Work. T. R. Terez, proprietor of a ci gar store and confectionery at HO Russell street, was held up late last night by two bandits, one of whom flashed a revolver in Terez' face while the other looted the till of the cah register of $120. A ring was also snatched from off a finger of Terez hand. After admonishing Terez to stay where he was and keep quiet, they left. Rather than do as he was ordered, Terez seized an old revolver and started In pur suit. On reaching the street he tried to fire the weapon, but it re fused to function and the bandits escaped in peace. So quietly had the holdup been staged that Terez' partner, who was in a back room, was unaware of what had transpired. JAPANESE PARK OPPOSED Proposed Lease on San Pedro Harbor to Be Combatted. LOS ANGELES, Cal., Sept. 4. A proposed lease of 10 acres at White Point, near Fort MacArthur, on San Pedro harbor, to Japanese for 33 years as a pleasure park, will be halted by injunction, if possible, according to announcement today by Thomas Lee Woolwine, district attorney. Efforts to prevent completion of the lease through appeals to the war and state departments at Wash ington and to Senator Shortridge have also been made, according to the Los Angeles Times. JAPAN'S- TROOPS LEAVE Military Evacuation in Siberia Is Started by Nipponese. VLADIVOSTOK, Sept. 5. (By the Associated Press.) Japanese mili tary evacuation of Siberia started yesterday. The transport Kuma moto took the first contingent of troops to Japan. The second trans port was scheduled to sail today. Movement of troops from Siberja will be .in four phases, evacuating the country zones, according previous announcements of the Jap anese war ministry. BOXER STRIKES AND DIES Sudden Death of Fighter Laid to Over-Exertion. EASTON, Pa., Sept. 4. Five minutes after he knocked . down Elmer Cross, his sparring partner, in' a training bout today, Louis Barrese, a boxer, dropped dead. Over-exertion was given as the cause' of his death, but Cross was held by the police pending a coroner's verdict. LEGION MEN HONOR DEAD Wreaths Laid on 450 Graves in Cemetery Near London. LONDON, Sept. 4. (By the Asso ciated Press.) The delegation of American Legion members now touring England held memorial services in BYookwood cemetery near London today. Wreaths were laid on the graves of 450 American victims of the war burled here. NEW MEXICO GETS JOLT Two Distinct Earth Shocks Re ported; No Damage Done. LAS VEGAS. N. M.. Sent. 4.Twa distinct earth shocks were felt here this, afternoon. The first shock was severe pnmiph to rattle doors and windows. No damage was reported. FETING LASTS FOR 24 HOURS Smoky City Turns Spotlight on Pretty Girls. ONE IS ASKED TO WED Miss San Francisco Tells Suitor He Has No Chance; Name of Man Is Withheld. (By-Chicago Tribune leased Wire.) CHICAGO, Sept. 4. After a hectic 24 hours of feteing and photograph ing in Chicago the four Pacific coast beauties, Miss Tanssia Zara of San Francisco, Miss Katherirte Grant of Los Angeles, Miss Virginia Edwards of Portland and Miss Evelyn Atkinson of Seattle started tonight on the last lap of their long journey to Atlantic City. They were Joined by Miss Georgia Hale, as Miss Chicago, and the beauty queens from Denver and Kansas City who arrived Just in time to catch the special carrying the party from Chicago to Atlantic City. The spotlight, literally and fig uratively speaking, was turned upon the pretty western visitors during their Chicago sojourn. At the Marigold gardens, where the girls were guests of honor at a dinner party Sunday night, the orchestra burst into the strains of "California I Love You" as Miss San Francisco entered and the spot light was turned upon her winsome person. Visitors Are Introduced. Several thousand people clapped and cheered her and her pretty rivals, who shared in the tribute arranged especially for her. Again today at the terrace gardens the pretty visitors from the coast were introduced to a Chicago audience and were received with great applause. The girls and their chaperons will reach Atlantic City tomorrow after noon. An elaborate programme of welcome has been arranged in their honor by Mayor Bader of Atlantic City. The pageant in wbich all will contest for the honor of becoming Miss America will open September 6 and continue i for three days. Miss San Francisco Wooed. Miss San Francisco received her first proposal of marriage at the. close of her long journey from San Francisco to Chicago. Won by her dark Carmen-like Spanish beauty, one lovelorn admirer among her fellow' passengers remained over in Chicago to offer his heart and hand to the astonished beauty. Miss Zara was said to have informed him that his suit was hopeless. "It is really not a matter for dis- (te WHZ-! OUGUYAwf V -CN SE A AUTOMOBILE. JllrV A j a! - school! frwi, ) ' - V - ; ' Canine In Possession of Machine Monnts Guard on Front Seat and Wages Vicious War. A determined bulldog battled for nearly an hour yesterday against a couple of policemen, an irate auto mobile owner, and a crowd of pedestrians who Joined in the ex citement. ' . The dog a vicious appearing canine took possession of an au tomobile belonging to Fred G. Miller while it was parked near Fourth and Morrison streets. The dog ap parently thought the car belonged to its master, for when Mr. Miller went to get his machine the dog declined to give up possession. Mr. Miller, withthe assistance of a group of pedestrians, tried for some time to coax the dog from the front seat of the machine, but their efforts were futile. Then they called for police, and the arrival of motorcycle patrolmen 'only served to increase the excitement. It was not until one of the patrol men went into a nearby store and procured a long pole, and thus clubbed the dog out of the car, that Mr. Miller regained possession. After it was all over the bulldog ambled up the street as though nothing had happened. BOYS MAKE GOOD TIME Youngsters Cover 1S Miles in Two Hours 5 0 Minutes. Six boys of the young men's division of the Y. M. C. A. made good time yesterday when they hiked 13 miles from Wahtum lake in two hours and 50 minutes. Each carried a 20-pound pack. The boys were Bellvin Vincent, Earle Rodgers, Alton Dahlin, Joe Misovetz, Marvel Williams and Clarence Lidberg. Others of the 16 who made the hike to the lake and back wera John Stark, Arthur Haulman, Ver non Morris, Floyd Meeker, Harold Allensworth, Harry Junor, Lewis Payne, Mark Gill, Frank Webster and Amos Esteban. $25,000 PRIZE DECREED Annual Award to Be Made by Chemical Society.' PITTSBURG, Sept. 4. Announce ment was made at the opening meeting of the council' of the American Chemical society here late today that a prize of $25,000 will be given every year to the American who makes the most rotable contribution to chemical science. The award will become operative next year. AMMONIA DRAFT FATAL Brother of Walt Mason, Poet, Succumbs at Pendleton. PENDLETON, Or., Sept. 4. (Spe cial.) Fred Mason, brother of Walt Mason, the renowned verse maker, died early today from the effects of a drink of ammonia taken by mis take. He was a dyer at the Pen dleton woolen mills. His widow and a large family survive. Funeral arrangements have not yet been made. THE MARTYR. Soldier Who Accosted Girls Takes Officer for Flapper and Gets Real Jolt. ; " v - , By Chicago Tribune Leased Wire.) HIGHLAND FALLS, N. Y., Sept. 4." Chief of Police Chrlstoff of High land Falla is not 1n thajhablt of wearing women's clothing, but he decided it was the only way to catch an elusive soldier flirt with cave man tactics who had been the sub ject of many complaints made by girls and women of this little sum mer resort , near West Point. The women declared that some man In uniform repeatedly followed them when they were alone and seized, hugged and kissed them, dashing away when they screamed 'for aid. In silk shirtwaist, sport skirt and silk stockings, with high-heeled shoes and a veil covering his manly features. Chief Christoff tripped alone about the shadiest lanes in Hig-hland Falls yesterday. , Present ly he was grabbed about the waist by a burly arm clad in khaki, and hot kisses were pressed upon his veiled and reluctant Hps. The chief at first protested in. ladylike voice that, he was a mar ried woman, but this only aggra vated the soldier's affection. Then the chief hauled off and walloped the masher on the jaw, laying low the hugger and kisser, who proved to be Corporal Albert Hoff of West Point,- a regular-army man. It was the greatest surprise in Hoff's soldier career when he found he had picked Chief Christoff for a flapper. Today Judge Nelson held Hoff in $1000 bail on .the double charge of disorderly conduct and annoying women. The military au thorities will deal with Hoff later. The chief got back into his own uni form as soon as he had locked up the kissing corporal. RUMOR STARTLES BERLIN Report Current That ex-Crown Prince Is Dead. (Copyright, 122, by the New York Times.) (By Chicago Tribune Leaded Wire.) BERLIN, Sept. 4. (Special Cable.) Report ran like wild-fire through nationalistic circles here late to night that the former crown prince had died in Holland. . If the report be true it will not make any material difference. There would be genuine sorrow among the "hard-boiled" monarch ists, but among the practical re actionaries there would be a great feeling of relief that the problem of a future monarchy in Germany had been simplified, since no com mon sense monarchist in Germany considers either the ex-kaiser or the ex-crown prince as a possible candi date for a new empire. LONG FLIGHT IS BEGUN Army Aviator Leaves. Neptune, Fla., for San Diego, Cal. JACKSONVILLE, Fla., Sept. 4. Lieutenant James H. Doolittle, army aviator, hopped off from the beach at Neptune at 10:03 o'clock tonight for a flight by airplane to San Diego, Cal., which he hopes to reach in time for dinner tomorrow night. He planned only one stop at Kelly field, San Antonio, Tex., for fuel. Patriarch, of Episcopal Church Greets West. RT. REV. MR. TUTTLE HERE Prelate Says Soldier Dead Assure Better World. PROHIBITION IS UPHELD Sunday Movies, Golf and Baseball Approved With Warning Not to Make Religion Repellent. BISHOP TUTTI-E'S VIEWS ON FLAPPERS AND OTHER MODERN FEATURES. "The young women of today do not differ greatly from those of 60 years ago. Give them your hand, give them your heart and pray God to bless them." ' "Go to the graves of the brave, honored dead and learn that the world constantly grows better." "Prohibition has worked great good, and the sense and sanity of the American peo ple can be depended upon to adjust what loss of personal libertv it has entailed." "Sunday movies, golf, base ball? Why not, if their devotees have first discharged their religious obligations? Do not let us make religion re pellent." "My message to the people of the United States? I take it from Shakespeare: 'Let all the ends thou aim'st at be thy -country's, thy God's and truth's, then if thou fall'st, O Cromwell, thou fall'st a blessed martyr.' " Right Rev. Daniel Sylvester Tuttle, bishop of Missouri and pre siding bishop of the Protestant Episcopal church, arrived In Port land last night to attend sessions of the 47th triennial convention of his church. Bishop Tuttle got here at 8:15 o'clock from Bellingham, Wash., where he had stopped for a few days en route from his summer home in Wequotonslng, Mich., to visit rela tives. He gave out a message of Christian harmony and extended greetings to the- west, wherein he labored 65 years ago as a mission ary bishop. At the union station to welcome Bishop Tuttle were more than 200 people, headed by leaders of the .local executive committee on con vention arrangements. These in cluded the Rt. Rev. Walter T. Sumner, honorary president; Dean Vincent, general chairman, and John W. Lethaby, executive secre tary. Scores of the interested churchmen crowded forward and enjoyed the privilege of shaking hands with Bishop Tuttle. Sister Accompanies Bishop. ""Accompanying Bishop Tuttle were his sister, Mrs. Sarah K. White, and his chaplain, the Rev. Frederick Gratiot. They were driven to the Multnomah hotel, where rooms had been reserved for them by the Port land churchmen, whose guests they will be. There was no formal wel come at the hotel. After the bishop had greeted a number of friends and delegates he retired to his room for the night. The venerated presiding bishop, octogenarian and with snowy white beard and hair, is still about as' spry as a man half his age. His shoulders droop a bit under the weight of years' but his eye is keen and the grip of his hand firm. Hi. one infirmity is a growing deafness. In appearance and action he imme diately calls to mind that other patriarch of olden days in western mountains and plains Ezra Meeker. Stage Coach Arrival Recalled. He said last night it was between 30 and 35 yearssince he had been in Portland. On that other visit he came by stage coach over the Blue mountains, he said. Bishop Tuttle's statement on his arrival was as follows: "Great' good comes to our church from its general convention, be cause or the companionship and co operation and brotherliness that the meeting engenders and pro motes. Statutes for the regulation and restriction of government of the church are not the all in all of importance. Of greater value is the spirit of allowance making and of fair play in which men of dif ferent views and of different schools of thought meet each other and talk and work' together. The sweet savor j of that spirit will have its pervasive influence and we need not fear disintegrations of the prayer book or fracturings of Chris tian harmony. "We need not expect that a gen eral convention will right all wrongs or work signal reformations in the affairs of the world; but we (Concluded -on Face 3. Column 1.) Men, Women and Children, In Autos and Horse-Drawn Ve hicles, Shoot Animals. FAIRBANKS, Alaska, Sept. 4. Though the population of Fairbanks is greater now than previously in 14 years, every hotel being full and residences too few, hardly anybody was in town today. All except the force of the daily paper and those too young or too old were out hunt ing caribou, rabbits, geese and bear, which threaten to reclaim the town as if it were a jungle. Evelyn Houcke, assistant post master, hunting grouse in her auto mobile, was peeved by a caribou that stood in her way. To string the caribou she fired at it with her .22-caliber rifle. This maddened the caribou and he charged. With only one cartridge remaining in her little rifle the assistant postmaster hit him in a vital spot and he fell dead against her car. Two hundred automobiles and all the horse-drawn vehicles in town carried hunters and huntresses. And the movie men were out shooting caribou. Even two Chechaco pro fessors of the new agricultural col lege of Alaska, which is to open September 12, got a caribou apiece. School children killed several each. George Edward Lewis and Cap tain A. E. Lathrop, the movie mag nate of Alaska, went out with a truck and automobiles to film the caribou herds. Peter Steel, govern ment- photographer at Anchorage and Dick Thome were present with their movie camera. But every time the experts got close somebody let go with, blunderbuss and the caribou moved too fast ' for the movies. Old timers say that the invasion of the wild is caused by the weather, All the first part of the summer it rained and the last of August came a blizzard, ruining crops in the Tanana valley. THEODORE BELL KILLED Well-Known California Politician Dies in Auto Crash. SAN RAFAEL. Cal., Sept. 4 Theodore A. Bell, prominent San Francisco attorney and a widely- known California politician, was killed in an automobile' accident near here tonight. Mr. Bell, it was learned, had been spending the day at the Lagunltas Rod and Gun club in the hills north of the town of Ross. The accident happened while Lucio Mintzer, San Francisco broker, and Bell's host, was bringing Bell to Ross to catch a train for the city. Coming down a mountain road Mr. Mintzer turned his car out to let an approaching automobile pass and went over a high embankment. TRESTLE FIRE REPORTED Mile Span Between Fort Smith and Dallas Is Ablaze. FORT SMITH, Ark., Sept. 4. Ac cording to reports received here by St. Louis & San Francisco railway officials, one of the largest trestles on the Central division, near Bengal, Okla., between Fort Smith and Dallas, 51 miles south of this city was on fire tonight. The trestle, of wood, is a mile in length. INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperatu 68 degrees; minimum. 50 decree.. TODAY'S Probably shower.; wind. mostly southerly. Foreign. United States protests to league of na tions against British seizure of phos phate in Pacific. .Page 4. National. Tariff on wool full of dynamite. Fane 2 Justice Clarke of U. S. supreme court sends resignation to president. Pxg e . Federal agents check on lubor speech-.. Page a Domestic. West's beauties capture Chicago. Page I Police chief dresses like woman and catches kissing soldier. Page 1. 46 entombed miners believed alive and signaling rescuers. Page ft. Miss Hudnut stays home to help Valen tino. Page 3. Wets and dry battle in Wisconsin today. Page 1. Fairbanks populace In war on caribou. Pago 1. Sound pictures solve old secret, rage 3. Northwest. Prehistoric shark tooth found ner Al bany. Page 1, Sports. St. Louis takes double bill from Cleve land. Page 15. Youngsters of Eastmoreland win inter club match. Page 14. Pacific coast league results: At San Francisco 4-1. Portland 2-4; at Sac ramento 1-S. Vernon 3-6; at Oakland 3-2, Salt Lake 0-8; at Lo. Angeles 3-a. Seattle 1-0. Page 13. Amateur play sensational In spite of water-logged coarse. Page 14. Joe Lynch make. Pal Moore klsa canvas. Page 14. Classic trapshoot Is an event of Septem ber. Page 16. American league has big opportunity to win world s series. .Page 10. Commercial and Marine. National bank resources .how large In crease. Page 23. Portland cargoes show great Inorease during eight-month period of 1922. Page 18. Portland and Vicinity. Episcopalians may hear no more curse. read on foes. Page 1. Murder leaves family of prohibition agent destitute. Pa-ge 7. Bulldog keeps possession of auto In vicious battle lasting an hour. Page 1. Portland schools open today. Page 9. Hall expected to run for governor as In dependent. Page ll. Right Rev. Daniel Sylvester Tuttle, pa triarch of Episcopal church, arrive, for general convention. Page 1. Labor day draws throng from city. Page 17. Sellwood bridge at ferry revived. Page 17. One-way traffic to be considered. Paga 17. Weather report, data and forecast. Page 23. - Changes in Episcopal Psalter Outlined. SOME MAY BE DROPPED Leaving Others to Ministers' Discretion Proposed. ONE TASK IS SENSITIVE Revisions Concerning1 Office of Holy Communion and Mar riage Also Undertaken. PHK.COSVKXTIO BVF.XT" fiCHEDll.KD FOR TODtV. 8 A. M. to 8 T. M. Regis tration house of bishops and house of deputies, basement auditorium. 10 A. M. to P. M Regis tration of delegates to wom en's auxiliary hall "A," audi torium. 10 A. M. Executive eHlon house of hixhops. the audi torium. 2 P. M. Meeting of the dep uties from the synod of the eighth province, business ses sion, at St. Stephen's Pro Cathedral. 3 to- 5 P. M. Registration of delegates to conference of Church School Service league and school of methods, lobby of the auditorium. 4 P. M. Preparatory quiet hour service for women's aux iliary members. St. David's church. The Rt. Rev. Arthur Seldon Lloyd, bishop of New York, In charge. J 6 p. M. pinner for dele- gates to the eighth provincial t synod at Seward hotel. t:6 P. M. Final rehearsal I of combined vested choir, au- ditorlum. Tomorrow. 4 First sessions of the con- J vention will he held. If members of the -ommlslon on prayer book revision have their views accepted. Episcopalians will no longer have reaa to them from the psalter scriptural passages that are imprecatory in nature that call for dire vengeance or a curse upon enemies of the righteous. This was indicated yesterday in statements, made by Dr. Charles 1. Slattery. rector of Grace church. New tork. Dr. Slattery knows very thoroughly the nature of the pro posed prayer hook revisions, his Im portance on the commission belnn indicated by the fact that he hm been selected to present its rep rt to the house of deputies. rilbr statement Made. Dr. Slattery gave an extremely pithy statement of the purpose and aim of prayer book revision as un dertaken by the commission. "The whole attempt of the com mission." he said, "is that of bring ing the prayer book Into accord with the best truth and reality w know." Not in all cases of psalter re vision will the psalmist's plrai for punishment for adversaries ho eliminated. In some instance, the objectionable portions are merely to be set off by spaces so they may he omitted "at the discretion of the minister." Typical Venn t'Ued. Typical verses of the p&alte which the revisionists think may well be neglected In the present day and age are such as these: "Let their eyes be blinded, thai they fee not; and ever bow down their backs." "Pour out thine indignation upon them" and "let them fall from one wickedness to another." "The most sensitive revisions un dertaken," said Dr. Slattery. "are those concerned with the offjee or holy communion. Here are Includ ed the ten commandments which we are accused of 'blue penciling.' and the marriage ceremony In which changes are recommended. I think most everyone understands the rea sons for .suggesting omission of the obey' and 'I thee endow with ail my worldly goods.' It Is sugcesttd also that the word 'lawful' as In tht expression 'lawful wedded wife" h changed. What the laws of differ ent states regard as lawful In this connection is not always regarded as lawful by the church. Correction Also W anted. "From the psalter we would have- omitted every Imprecatory erpre.i slon as out of keeping with our more advanced religious views of today. There are certain mistrans lations that we wish corrected als". "In the prayers and collects, par ticularly In prayers for the lck. It is felt that a more advanced attftud may be taken. This view may be Illustrated in connection with pravar for recovery of the sick. It Is pro posed to cut off everything af'er the 'or else." The objectionable x (Cenoludcdvon Paga 6, Column 1.)