V la TTIE MOKMXG OREGOMA MONDAY, OCTOBER . 1922 CITY OF' LDKGVIEW LEAPS INTO BEING Population of 20,000 Is Ex pected Within Year. STREET GRADING BEGUN ft. A. Tong. on Visit to Portland, .Discusses Gyrations of the Long-Bell Company. T.ongview is springing into being. Nut quite so rapidly, perhaps, aB though one had the genie's lamp to hasten matters, - 'but nevertheless w'th extraordinary expedition. And within the year, according to R. A. Long of the L,ong-BeIl Lumber com pany, a city of 20,000 souls will stand by the Columbia river where now a flat expanse of dike-protected lowland. Mr. .Long, whose company has long operated in. the southern field, and whose determination to enter the northwestern industry was one of the most momentous announcements of . recent years, passed Saturday and Sunday in Portland, returning late yesterday to Kelso, personally lo supervise the planning of the uity already under construction a mile west of the Cowlitz river town, Streets Bring; Mrqded. "Things are moving along very well." eaid Mr. Long, smiling his quiet satisfaction. "We are grading the. streets of Lonjgview now and are commencing to 'build the resi dences. Soon we- will start the six story fireproof hotel, As to rail coimections with the main line, we have not yet decided whether we ourselves will span the short dis tance required or will accept the offer of the roads to build In. That is an Immaterial point. "Between now and the close of the year we will be working approxi mately 1000 men, and by the time we are ready to begin manufactur ing lumber our family will number from 3500 to 4000 employes. They will becorne actual residents of the town as fast as we can prepare homes for them. And, as we are hoping that they will be mostly mar ried men, you simply multiply that number iby three and one-half to ar rive at our probable industrial pop ulation. It will be about 14,000 the number of employes and their families alone a most conservative figure. Large Increase Expected "Those who have had experience In building industrial cities tell us that we may very reasonably expect an increase of 5-0 per cent from other sources as the city will at tract business and industrial enter prises apart from ours. Say SO, 00-0 residents when we are in full swing. "The location of the future city is ideal, with a large amount of level valley land available. Diking and draining have improved the territory until gardening will not only be feasible but attractive, in suring a consistent and increased production. "We" believe that . our town offers a very alluring propo sition to prospective residents and enterprises. t Logging; Is Different. "As to the mill itself, we are new in the western country. Your large logging operations are greatly dif ' lerent from those of the south. With that in mind our men are scouring about for pointers, and we are endeavoring to make ourselves btlieve that we know very little about it until we have the view point and experience of those who do. We are hopeful to begin the construction of the mill within 60 diiys. It will have a capacity of 000.000,000 feet a year, though, of course, mills don't always attain their estimates. "We have the assurance that a large number of people will come in whenever we are ready, but until we are ready we are seeking to avoid the influx. When the time comes Longview will be big enough lor all. Big Advertising i'liiunrd. "The national advertising policy of the company which it pursued in respect to its southern product will be followed here. The company has simt a large amount of money in national advertising. Every board passing through its mills has been stamped at one end with the name Long-Bell.' Through the medium of the Saturday Kvening Post and other national periodicals, the name o our firm and its product has. we believe, been made fairly familiar to millions of people. "A word about our organization? Well, it is ours. We belong to it. We have believed in the policy of training our own employes. Vir tually every man now occupying an important place with the company began his career with us in a very minor position. That makes for a strong organization. Our policy is that we have the material available, and consequently our men are al vays looking forward. A good deal like a regiment it is when the fel low in the front line falls someone steps forward and the ranks close up." FOSSIL CHAPTER VISITED Oi'Hiid Matron of Kaslern Star ol Stale Makes Call. KSIL. Or.. Oct. 1. (Special.) tiaries castner, worthy grand ot uruer ot Eastern Star oi made her official visit to chapter Friday evenina:. An il session was seld in the in. when many of tile mem et Mrs. Castner and received llion in the work. Condon chapter members file guests of the Fossil e-har. I;he evening. Rowing the routine work tile enjoyed a sociai hour and poachers to Mold Institute. ELSO, Wash., Oct. 1. (Special. 1 ounty Superintendent Gardner Cowiita county is busy with eparations for the annual countv n.stitute. which will be heid in the high school at Kiilama October 16 to 18. Among the instructors will be D. B. Waldo, president of Bel liuphani normal school: J. H. Lyon director of music at Taconui. unH V. H. Hoppe. Bellingham normal. Lane I'lans Breakwater. El'OBXE, Or.. Oct. 1. (Special.) The l.ane county bridge department is makinar plans to drive piling for a breakwater to protect th-i county bridge across Salmon creek at Oak ridge and to prevent the creek from cutting a new channel through the new state hatchery grounds ?iearby. The state game commission is ex pected to bear a portion of the expense. NEW BILLS AT Orpheum. BY LEONE CASS BAKB.. " ... THERE are three kinds of vaude ville folk, those who think out acts for themselves, those who have others write acts for them and those who do imitations. A -book could be written on the subject of imi tators, who, having no initiative or originality of their own. copy the acts of more successful artists. The vaudeville stage is full, of nobodies who put on Scotch pants an imi tate Harry Lauder, stealing one of Harry's songs to do It with, or who put on a wig and a Jargon and Imi tate he " magnificent Bernhardt. They speak out of the side of their faces and are Eddie Foy, or steal one of Georgie White's dances and are Georgie. Sometimes I wonder what the hoi polloi of - imitators, that great band of little brothers and sisters of copyists, would do if George Cohan, or Dave Warf leld or Ethel Barrymore were to die. On second thought. I see, they'd go right on giving ".imitations' and pre face it, "Ladies and gentlemen, with your kind permission I- will now give you my Impression of the late George M. Cohan, or the late Mr. Warfield," as the. cast . might , be. You can't stop 'em. . All of w;hich is a preamble to the remark that the, original Weaver brothers are at the orpheum. rney have been-imitated as much as the late George Primrose. . This last year an act was here which " had deliberately lifted the idea of this act, and every once in a. while some entertainer hauls out a saw. and imitates the Weavers. Nine times out of ten, however, he forgets to give credit for his idea. It's the idea in this-Weaver act that counts, that and the faithfulness with which the two Arkansaw Travelers adhere to types. . Regular small-town rubes they are, one -in galluses -and con gress slippers and the other '"all Slicked up in greased boots and a new. hickory- shirt. . ' Friendly and amiable they are, and stop .to play real melodies on saws, old banjoes. a har rake and a bellows with sweet tunes wedged in between. The audi ence liked the Weaver boys, and. now that we've seen the originals we can see -how bad some of the imitators were. Harry Watson Jr. stages an epi sode at the telephone booth, which convulses the audience. The com edy la a slice from the lives of all of us who ever put a nickel in a slot and begged central to give us a number. Watson is a brilliant comedian with a delightful gift of pantomime which does half his talking for him. ..' Later after the melee at the telephone he travesties a ringside battle, -burlesquing the moods and manners of pugilist who put on exhibition bouts. The com edy here is new and abundant, and every minute is a whirlwind of fun. Mr. Watson carries several-assist-ants. and his act stands out for Its novelty and entertainment. A snow-white.- woolly- pup named Hector, who leaves the stage, where his master is putting him and his brothers and sisters through, their tricks, and wanders ail around the balcony and downstairs and in the boxes and talks 4o his master, is one of the real Joys on the bill. Heck is a smart pup. Dick Timber is a violinist whose music provides an interlude of seri ousness. He appears with an inter esting girl. Corinne. who dances prettily. t Babcock is a capital dancer and does a series of falls and tumbling with various acrobatic maneuvers which amaze and interest constantly. He is a likeable chap and Is a keen comedian. His partner Dolly is a Gaby Deslys as to clothes and shrugs and ideas with her eyes and ankles, and Babcock cleverly real izes on her eccentricities. : - The audience certainly liked Babcock and Dolly. - Vincent O'Donnell, billed as the miniature McCormack, sings in a sweet high tenor a . repertoire of new songs. Adelaide Herrmann, widow of the famous Herrmann the Great, offers a series of mystery problems, capped by a spectacular illusion- in which birds and beasts and a beautious lady all walk out of an aprvently empty Noah's ark. This bill ends on Tuesday Ight. .... Dance Hall Closed. KLAMATH FALLS, Or.. Oct. 1. (Special.) The Olene dance hail, a resort near. here which has been the acene of many arrests for drunken ness during- Saturday night dances recently, was closed yesterday by Charles Adams, the proprietor, on request of Sheriff Low.. The sheriff said he had been unable to control violations of the liquor law at the Saturday night gatherings. Adams had done his best to keep the .dance hall orderly, but he found he was powerless. He voluntarily agreed to close. ' . - "V f!- 0 5 f 0 1 - s'w' i R A. I.ons:, chairman of the beard - fr the Long-Bell Lumber com any. .-. THE THEATERS 1 Hippodrome. THE interest divides between Otis Mitchell, a clever, likeable young man who plays the banjo, and Con roy, a capital dancer, who appears in a terpsichorean novelty with the two prtty .Noel sisters, on the new bill at the Hippodrome. The Noel sisters are youthful and well - trained dancers. They depart rom the ordi nary in steps and dance with th abandon and happiness of those who reaiiy love to dance. Their costumes are fresh and smart. Conroy, their partner, is an alert, graceful step per, and the three put on a delight ful miniature danoe revue. Special scenery provides further interest in the Conroy and Noel sis ters act. crtis Mitchell hae an act on the order of that other favorite in Port land. Joe Roberts, the banlo honnrt Otis plays any tun and every tune on rus banjo, tells a lot of new and diverting stories. . He was the big riot on the bill. . ' Dixon and Freeman have a de lightful act. One is a girl who served overseas as an. entertainer and whose staging in camps has re ceived much, commendation. She has a oig aramatic soprano and a charm ling personality. Her partner adds comeoy m tils sule-e as an ebonlzed minstrel man. The Australian Delos are a clever pair. m girl has a grace-ful, beau tiful body and with her partner ap pears In an acrobatic specialty wuiuu uimia ana delights. ' Jiamuton Douglas of Seattle, whose wife has aooe&ren in v, vllle acts In Portland with various Kraupi. or ner pupils. Is dancing in her footsteps and appears this week wnn tnree girl dancers in an act emoracmg modern dances. The featured event In the act is a clever terpsichorean achievement danced up and down a stairway. The picture of the bill is a big 'J -canea uay and Devilish - may. mil mil cnangee -. - Lyric. TT BATING and Flood, managers Xi. of the Lyric musical comedy company, announced last night that the new home of the Lyric would be In the Baker theater at Eleventh and Morrison streets, where the company, completely reorganized, will open for a full fall season of musical comedy attractions next Sunday. The change from the iyric theater to the Baker comes as the result of condemnation by the fire marshal last June of the Lyric playhouse. For a time It was feared that neither the Lyric nor the Baker would open this, season and- that Portland would be entirely without its stock company shows. In announcing the change the two managers said their entire Lyric company had been reorganized, with many new players on the new bills and many of the old favorites still remaining. "We ' have sought to make the show belter than ever," said Mr. Keating, "and are doing everything we can to accomplish this purpose. Everything about the new enterprise is new but the name, and I am confident that the coming- season will be far better than any the Lyric has ever had. "AH of the principals will be new to Lyric theater patrons. This fea ture alone should lend . much Inter est 10 me forthcoming season, as It marks a distinct change In our for mer policy of presenting many of the same personnel from year to year. 'We also intend to continue the special feature nights of the Lyric, and one of theoc win .k w ' . regular Friday night chorus girl contest In the Rosebud chorus. On Tuesday evenings the country store feature will be introduced.." The Lyric has been operated in various downtown playhouses and has grown steadily In patronage. Lnder the auspices of the Lyric management many amateurs have been started on the road to fame among them being Marjorie Ram Wh t?Ce Gardn" and Frances ... """""cement was made tin k 8t ProducUons wh,ch ro1thbeeBPaUkern LyHC Lonjrvlew Construction Began. KELSO. Wash., rint i c i v The West Lake Construction com pany or st. Louis, which has the contract for construction of the Long-Bell Lumber company's mam moth hotel hlllMlno- a. t . Just west of West Kelso, is prepar- .""i worn upon tne founda tion, which must be put to a great denth in nrder t , . : . - , a. sale foundation for the six-story struc- 520 Enroll at Normal School. MONMOUTH, Or.. Oct. 1 (Spe- Clal.l OretrAn Vrrml -.. u i . . - "viiwi upeuea its fall term with a registration of siuoents, tne largest enrollment for a regular term in the history of the school. The classrooms would not hold students scheduled in the various courses until a number of additional nerfnri. wa . But one member has been added to tne racuity since the enrollment was 240 students. Bankers Defer Pleading. KLAMATH FALLS, Or., Oct. 1. (Special.) J. W. Siemans and John Siemans Jr.. who were arraigned In the circut court yesterday to answer nine grand Jury Indictments charg ing defalcations totaling $27, 560. 20 from the First State Savings bank while president and cashier, re spectively, of the now defunct Insti tution, asked the statutory time of three weeks to enter pleas, which was granted. jj Pl J when she developed a reputation for the exterior beauty of her homes. The craze has spread in all directions and back again . to its source. Many people have wondered how it all happened and why Portland was the inspiration of this enthusiasm for ex terior beauty that has swept over the coun try. The reason is simple ,A 1nrfj.l ...ill Ro ' r"w published in this Wednesday. : M-wKriiifiiiy S OF GOO DISCUSSED Real Power Proclaimed by Rev. Mr. Eliot. TURKISH CASE IS CITED True Religion Is In Effort to Get One's Self- Fully in Line With God. Says Speaker. Taking as his text, "Come down from the cross" (Matthew xxvli:40), William G. Eliot Jr., pastor of the Church of Our-Father (Unitarian), preached yesterday at his morning service on the subject. "The Appar ent Impotency and the Real Power of God." " 'Come down ' from the cross' were the words of triumphing mockers when Jesus was crucified," said Rev. Mr. Eliot. "In a different spirit even the friends of Jesus may have wondered why he could not save himself. Something like the same dread argument may have swept over Jesus' mind when he cried, "My God. my God, why hast thou forsaken me!' Victim Was Real. "The force of the words vanishes if we Import any unreality Into the historic and epoch-making episode. The cross was a real cross of wood, not of gold and Jewels, and probably not tall and majestically uplifted as in the classic paintings; the victim was a real human being, not a miraculous or mythical pretense of humanity: the suffering was real and was not merely physical; the de feat, and the dispair and the tragedy were real. And It is only when in some measure we enter into the realities of the crucifixion that we can see how typical the experience was for all unmerited and seemingly helpless suffering. Whether we are enemies or friends of Jesus, we. too, wonder why God permits Turkish massacres in Armenia; we, too, won der why he permits a heavy motor truck to grind a happy little child to death. Why such apparent impo tency of the divine whether the divine over all, the 'Father-; or the divine In the human, the 'Son'! Answer Is Samrht." "If we cannot boast a completely satisfying answer, may we not at least come near a true statement of faith when we turn from some of our reasoned abstractions to the 'Father,' without whom not a spar row falleth to the ground,' to the Father who has worked hitherto and who inspires all truly creative work in his children to the God whom we may trust and who would entrust us? "True religion Is not In the ef fort to maneuver a partial deity to our side but in the effort to get ourselves fully In line with the Im partial and true God of all the uni verse. The term 'God' Is not synony mous with 'victory,' or 'success', or the survival of the fittest,' or 'good luck' D e 1 1 y Is not adequately named In such terms as "the aggre gate of all the forces In the uni verse.' or "nature," or 'the all,' or the universe,' or 'the infinite,' or the absolute.' Spirit Sever Conquered, ' " 'God is a spirit' a spirit wholly true, good, beautiful; a spirit, often defeated, never conquered; the sacred and eternal love that binds man to man and earth to heaven, and broods over all souls wherever they may be. "It has always been a false and pagan christology that defies Jesus We are faithful to the best and truest thought concerning Jesus from ancient days until now only when we see in Jesus not the deifi cation of a human being, but rather the embodiment, in a genuinely hu man being, of the divine love and purpose, the divine reason and meaning; or,' in more theological terminology, the 'Incarnation of the divine logas'. "That divine purpose can utter Itself In human history only through human beings and only in ways that are consonant with that pur pose. The divine purpose by itself cannot saw wood, cannot bake bread; much less make two plus two equal five or speak a falsehood, or do anything contrary to that pur pose; or break physical law or skip moral processes or 'come down from the cross.' Hnman Values Transformed. "But those who try faithfully in however humble a degree to prac tice the divine purpose find them selves more and more able with Jesus to transform all human values; they can with Jesus break bread and give thanks on the very night they are betrayed: they can believe that good is the final goal of ill for all who attempt no evasions and dare no disobediences, and give their minds to find, their hearts to love and their wills to practice the presence of God." XKAR EAST CASE DIAGXOSED Greed Ruling Passion in Turkish Difficulty, Says Minister. "To give the straits and the Eu ropean territory baok to the barbar ous Turk is not only a disgrace, but a menace to civilization." declared Dr. W. T. McElveen of the First Congregational church In his ser mon last night. "It Is as If you re- Portland Started Something space ffr r-tHflncocK STiJJ i warded a thief by commending him for his rascality and returned to him I the loot he stole. It is like apologis ing to a murderer for his arrest and , returning to him the bloody imple ment with which he committed his crime. Turkey was an ally of Ger many and Germany was defeated. "The Turk is running true to form. He murders, tortures, burns, loots and rapea Gladstone called htm the unspeakable Turk.' Others have de scribed him as 'the unreformable Turk.' He glories In Intrigues and in atrocities. So man has such deep seated prejudices and hatreds. The 'street name' for a Christian of any nationality in Asiatic Turkey Is giacour.' which means 'unclean.' The Mohammedan will not eat bread the dough of which was mixed or baked by a Christian. "The Turk is suave, courteous, but cruel. He is the cleverest of diplo mats. Be is a past grand master in the arts cf deceit. He can make and break more promises than any man living. Though never a good mer chant or .tradesman, he Is exceed ingly shrewd. "He selected 'the psychological moment- for this uprising. France and reat Britain have been on the edge of a rupture for more than two years. The entente scarcely exists today. To France. , Germany is a menace. To England. Germany is a market. France would like to see Germany carved up Into several in dependent states. England is intent on helping Germany to economic stability. England planned to make Greece her agent In administering the affairs in Constantinople. But the now-demoted Constantine was a weakling In whom his army had no confidence. France, that had become as Imperialistic and as greedy as Germany was. wants commercial concessions, trade routes and mar kets in the near east. "Kemal Pasha offers her these and other fine commercial pickings, and promises to safeguard the Turk ish bonds the French people bought, and France, to gatn the 30 pieces of silver, may betray mankind. Great Britain, the Turkish diplomats know, has a semi-rebellion in India under Ghandl on hand and has Just par tially settled affairs in Egypt and is anxious to avoid a holy war In which millions of ber Moslem colo nists might engage. Turkish states men, knowing well Italy's cupidity and her historical attitude of being bought by the highest bidder, has ind-icsrted that there is some loot for her if she keeps sufficiently neutral. "What Franca and Italy ought to remember is that Turkey will not keep her pledges." CURE FOR SIX PROCLAIMED Acceptance of Christ's Principles Cited by Pastor. "The Proof of the Pudding Is the Tasting" was the subject chosen for his morning sermon yesterday by Rev. George H. Bennett, pastor of the Patton Methodtsf church. "The proverb is homely but truth ful," he said. "It applies not only to the culinary art, but to all other arts and religion as well. Christ met the great problems and crises of his day. Wherever his principles and precepts are put into practice, whether In personal conduct,, busi ness relation, home life or national affaire, the menace of sin and in justice Is reduced and overcome. "Suetonius, Tacitus and Josephus mentioned the expectation of his coming entertained by the Hindus, Persians, Greeks and Romans. One hundred and. fifty allusions to him by the Hebrew prophets were clearly fulfilled In Christ. However, the ancient world, and many per sons today! failed to understand the personality of the coming redeemer wno would purify laws, reconcile race hatreds, overthrow tyrants, comfort the afflicted and bring a new era to the world. They looked for bloody conquest, while his con quests were to be the bloodless. 'A bruised reed would he not break.' "His kingdom is not political but is a kingdom of conscience In which the fatherland of God and brother hood of men. the regeneration of evil men.' the supremacy of love and righteousness, are outstanding factors. It i a spiritual kingdom of human and divine fellowship, of peace and progress, which should embrace all political powers, all material human endeavor, and all races and languages. Christ rules the universal kingdom of conscience and the soul, to redeem men from sin, the universal menace." COXSTAN'TIXOPLE IS TOPIC .Minister Incorporates Informa tion in Talk Gained by Visit. Rev. Thomas J. Villers. . pastor of the First Baptist church, preached last' night on "Constantinople." incorporating information, gained when he visited there before the world war. Excerpts from his mes sage follow: "Constantinople is the city of love and war, of history and romance, of fact and' fancy, of faith and fable, of tradition and tragedy. It stands at the meeting piace of two seas, and Joins together two continents. On the Asiatic side of tne Bosphorus is Scutari, almost entirely Turkleh. On the European side is Stamboul. the old city, which is separated by the Golden Horn from t?alata and Pera. whose population is largely Christian. "Constantinople is the city of de graded womanhood, of perverted' treasure, of irreligious religion and of inhuman butchery. "In the ceiling'over the great altar In Santa Sophia can be dimly seen BERGER PORTRAITS are nationally known October Special U D70 REDUCTION on group studies of two or more BERGER Blue Mouse Building Broadway 4544 This Is Special Notice About the Coat Sale directed to all women and misses who have not yet bought theii new coals for fall and winter and tell ing them that the great annual October sale of 500 new coats from a famous maker begins todav at 9:1 5 A. M., offering such qualities, varieties and values as even Meier & Frank's did tj? j not believe it possible to offer for Meier & Frank's: Fashion Salons. Fourth AH Wool Overcoat; FOR MEN AND YOUNG MEN Saving If there is a man who has any doubt as to whether there is such a thing as a genuinely good overcoat to be had at $20 any more, we want him to come in and let us prove it. As well as the fellow who knows that there is, because Meier & Frank's says it's so. Sizes 34 to .40 in the a colossal figure of the Christ. It was covered with plaster when this sacred edifice was converted Into a 0.., ! ha. ejrten away mosque. im v....w , some of the foul daubing, and the face which" was marred more than that of any man is becoming visible again and is look'ng down once more on the people who assemble there. May the time swiftly hasten when the Christ for whom Justinian built this beautiful temple shall re claim it as his own. and the cross shall supplant the crescent every where in the city of Constantine.- Phone your want ads to The Oresronian. Main "070. fGILBERTSSt Ptrrtl&ml piano n-i-neft hM t.Miirht me how tn rive yon th tnn. pi ano m ti rf action your money Don't Feel Embarrassed because you have no piano, when you entertain. Use the easy payment plan and get a Gilbert guaranteed instru ment. Copper Bass Strings Solid Brass Hardware Veneered Case Real Ivory Keys Pianos That Make Friends Prices That Please No Salesmen No Autos No Regrets Out of the High-Rent District Just North of Washington Gilbert Service Satisfies WOOSTER'S Great Variety of General Merchandise 488-494 Washington St. Open Evenings X i piANOS 1 1 f S-A-L-E 820 You $10.00 and Mi, m Meier Frank's: Third Floor. (Mall Orders Flllrd ) THe Quality Storb mrw or Portland. Oregon liA The Satisfaction of progressive service results not only from a saving in dollars and cents, but beyond that there is a sense of satisfac tion in patronizing your city's progres sive bank. Especially when it excels in liquidity, having Two-Thirds of Its Deposits in Cash ' and Bonds Such liquidity is an assurance of conservauve management. And when that management ' supplies progressive service, it produces a most satisfactory banking condition. 4 Interest on savings accounts nd time deposits J Interest on special accnurrte subject to check (minimum balance 5o0) No charge for collection of out-of-town checks No service charge for checking accounts OPEN ALL, DAT SATURDAYS Until S o'clock Saving Depotitt made on or before next Thursday will draw interest from Octo ber 1st. iL-'CJjTrntMlTtl Store Closed Today ; observance of Jewish Holiday i whrtsjour Floor. More SSI Am ft. 4V (3 4 mm Sale ;I!s3i; -J: hrvtpr i