Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, October 30, 1922, Page 5, Image 5

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    THE MORNING ORECONIAX, MONDAY, OCTOBER SO, 1922
5
MFfiflHI 110
OF ICII HUM
J. F. Byrd, Formerly of
Salem, in New York.
STOCK IS UP FOR SALE
Flan lii to Carry Passengers and
Freight Across Continent
in Dirigibles.
dressing room adjoining a dry goods
store where she was employed. The
manager of the store is Fred L.
Kirch ner. He came in.
Ardor ran all over the place.
Kirehnef clasped her in his arms.
Miss Ingles testified, and kissed her
fully 20 minutes. His violent kisses
were responihle for three tooth
marks that stayed on her lips several
aays. Miss Ingles was so distraught
by the event that she was compelled
to spend a recuperative day in bed.
Kirchner testified that for three
years previous to August 22, the day
of the alleged protested embrace, he
had kissd the unresisting Miss In
gles on the lip, forehead and the
back of her neck without a single
"don't."
Edward L. Dwight. attorney, for
Kirchner, tokl Judge Heston the
girl had agreed to settle the com
plaint out of court for a considera
tion of $2000, $100 a minute. All
Kirchner ever offered as a settle
ment was $500, the attorney said.
Court adjourned until Monday.
ElSffER'S ROLE B!S
NEW YORK, Oct. 19. (Special.)
From magnificently furnished of
fices occupying the entire eleventh
floor of No. 251 Fourth avenue, en
thusiastic stock salesmen, recruited
through the medium of want ads
in the daily papers, have been
emerging in the past few weeks,
armed with glowing prospectuses
and well fortified with "facts and
figures," to dr-- the attention of
the investing: public to the moat
Stupendous aircraft enterprise yet
announced in America.
These salesmen, working on a
12 per cent commission, are mak
ing a determined "campaign" skill
fully directed by the manager of
the enterprise, to sell the stock of
the Aircraft Construction Transpor
tation Corporation of Delaware, cap
italized at $100,000,000.
The backbone of the selling argu
ments placed in the hands of the
salesmen and later of the investor
is the- assurance that this com
pany, sometime in the future, when
it sells enough stock, will build and
operate three monster airships, each
300 feet longer than the longest
.eppelln of record, to operate a
passenger, mall and express carry
ing service between New York and
Chicago.
Nfw Patents Claimed.
The attractively arranged pros
pectus, which sets forth all of the
details of the company's aspirations,
also states:
"Our patent situation is most un
usual, and with patents on hand and
patents pending we believe we ought
to control the aircraft situation in
America."
Below the lithograph Is a table
giving the dimensions and earning
capacity of the Aurora and her
planned-for sister ships. They are
as follows:
Length, 1000 feet; diameter, 107
feet; helium gas capacity, 5,600,000
cubic feet; engines, six 600 horse
power; speed, 80 miles an hour;
cruising radius, 30,000 miles; dura
tion flight, three weeks; gross lift,
200,000 pounds: useful load, 100.000
pounds; passengers, 300 per trip;
mail-and express, 25,000 pounds; trip,
10 hours; fare to Chicago, $75.
The Aurora and her sisters will
cost, it is stated, $7,425,000 apiece;
the hangars, repair shops, etc.,
$4,325,000, and equipment at landing
fields and terminals, $250,000, mak
ing a total equipment cost of $12,
000,000.
By operating the $12,000,000 equip
ment described above, the company,
again quo'ing its official prospectus,
estimates that its annual gross earn
ings will be $17,350,000 on the basi
of 600 trips a year with 300 pas
sengers a trip, plus the revenues
from mail, parcel posts and "fast
express."
Expense to Be 95,015,100.
The operating expenses are fig
ured at $5,015,100, of which the
largest single amount is $2,375,000
for "depreciation."
Samuel C. Morehouse, New Haven
lawyer, is president of the Aircraft
Construction Transportation com
pany, and was president of-the Con
necticut Aircraft corporation, now
a subsidiary company. The Con
necticut Aircraft corporation has
been in existence nine years and has
built during that time 186 airships
and balloons for the navy and army.
The Aircraft Construction company,
which bought the other company, is
still conducting this business in a
factory on Chapel street in New
Haven.
The offices of the Aircraft Syndi
cate, Inc., when visited toy a reporter
were scantily populated. J. P. Byrd,
president of the selling corporation.
occupiea tne president s office, con
taining mahogany furniture and
rugs, very soothing to tread upon.
The walls were adorned with pic
tures of flying boats. Fresh flow
ers filled the vases on the desks.
Mr. Byrd explained that the elabo
rate offices which his concern occu
pied were' more or less an accident.
They had been occupied by the Fed-,
era.1 Adding Machine company,
which had moved to another floor in
the same building. "Some of the
furniture and rugs are mine, but
most of them belong to the previ
ous tenant. I have a monthly lease
on these offices," he concluded.
Asked for a biographical sketch
of himself, Mr. Byrd said:
"I have been an actor and a the
atrical man. I played with Nat
Goodwin when I was a young man.
I then bought and sold theaters in
Salem, Or. I started one of the first
moving picture theaters in this
country the Fay theater on Lin
coln avenue, in Chicago. I have bee
a traveling man for about 25 years.
When a young man I sold candy. I
was the first to make salt water
taffy at the seaside. When 19 years
old I had a concession at Atlantic
City on the board walk. Before
selling this stock, in which I have
the greatest faith, I had offices at
No. 2 East Forty-second street.
While not actually engaged in the
brokerage business, I applied for a
brokerage license. I live in Hack
ensack, in fact, am a property holder
there and a great friend of the
mayor."
DUTIES DECLARED THAT OF
SECRETARY TO SOCIETY.
Optimist Said to Assign Moral
istic Mission Pessimist Some
times Doubts Truth.
FRANKLIN, Ind.. Oct. 29. The at
titude of the modern newspaper is
that of a secretary to society, or a
historian, and it assumes no more
responsibility, George C. Baslian, as
sistant Sunday editor of the Chicago
Tribune, said in an address to In
diana college and high school stu
dents here last night.
Giving a demonstration of what
he termed news arithmetic Mr. Bas
lian said:
"One ordinary, man plus one ordi
nary life equals zero in news.
"One ordinary man plus one ex
traordinary adventure equals news.
"One ordinary man plus one extra
ordinary achievement equals news.
"fine chorus girl plus one bank
cashier minus $100,000 equals news.
"One man plus one auto, plus one
gun, plus one quart, equals news."
The optimist mistakenly assigns
to the modern newspaper a moral
istic mission while the pessimist
makes the mistake of regarding the
newspaper as untruthful and super
ficial. The real newspaper, he said,
records news events impartially and
without favor in its news columns,
reserving comment for its editorial
columns or signed articles.
The newspaper, he observed, does
not create events, but merely chron
icles them and the ideal reporter
is the fair impartial observer. The
newspaper, he said, spreads a com
plete record of today's problems, vic
tories and defeats before man, that
he may, if he will, pass judgment on
himself and determine to be a little
better tomorrow.
SILVER FISHRUN HEAVY
Cannery Finds Demand Slack and
Supply Largest in Years.
HOQUIAM. Wash., Oct. 29. (Spe
cial.) Grays Harbor fishermen
and cannerymen are facing a
strange and unprecedented .. situa
tion, according to Gus Strand, can
nery operator. At the time of the
usual end of the silver run the fish
are entering the harbor in greater
numbers than he has seen in 15
years, he declares, and are crowd
ing out the chums which have be
gun to run in heavy schools. The
silvers present an unusual problem
for the canners, since there is al
most no market for them canned
and little market for them fresh.
Owing to the fact that the fish
are also running now in great
numbers in Alaskan - waters and
along the Oregon coast the harbor
run suffers, since the Alaska fish
are considered of a better quality.
AUTHOR DESCRIBES
DDY-SOUL SCHEMI
Physiology of Reproduction
Is Studied.
SENSATION IS EXPECTED
RAILROAD WORK ASSURED
Idaho Central Expected to Be
Completed Within Year.
TWIN FALLS. Idaho, Oct. 29.
(Special.) Assurance that the Idaho
Central railroad will be completed
within a year by the Western Pa
c'fic was given a group of promi
nent southern Idaho men Friday by
Conrad Wolfle, president of the
Idaho Central, during a meeting
held here to further plans for the
line's construction. The total cost
of the road is expected not to ex
ceed $1,600,000 and the grade will
not be more than 2 per cent.
,-The Western Pacific will not ask
one cent of the bonus raised by
Twin Falls citizens to help in the
construction," Mr. Wolfle said. "The
road is being rapidly surveyed, andT
construction operations will be car
ried on within a very short time."
MUTE KISS FOSE
ASSA.CL.T AXE BATTERY, AS
SERTS MISS OF 25.
Right or Wrong of Protracted
Embrace Put lp to Judge
In Michigan Court.
(By Chicaeo Tribune Leased Wiro
DETROIT, Mich., Oct. 29. While
a minute hug may be a moral delight
and a sterilized elixir, is a 20-min-ute
embrace to, be construed as as
sault and battery, or merely an en
ergetic tribute to the wooed?
Bessie Ingles, a recipient of the
extended caress, put the delicate
problem up to Judge Heston in court
Saturday.
She tacitly took sides with the
Pennsylvania censors, who, measur
ing right and wrong by yardage,
have ruled that any film kiss last
ing more than 10 feet is out of
bounds and gets the disciplinary
ehears. She's for that, Indeed.
Miss Ingles, who is 25 years of
age, was fixing her hair in the
YOUTH'S BODY IDENTIFIED
Michael J. Schutzman, Not Sher
man, Was Young Man Drowned.
PASCO, Wash., Oct. 29. (Special.)
Through information furnished
by Dr. and Mrs. C. Martin Carlson
of Tacoma, Wash., it has been
learned that the young man who
lost his life, October 7, when a row
boat capsized in Priest Rapids, and
whose body was recovered last
week at Timmerman's ferry, wasj
not Michael J. Sherman but Michael
J. Schutzman of Brooklyn.
Mrs. Carlson, who identified the
body, said that since coming west
Schutzman has been known under
the name of Sherman.. Mrs. Carl
son was acquainted with the young
man and his family.
SUPREME COURT TO SIT
1 7 Cases Are on Docket for Ses
sion That Opens Today.
PENDLETON, Or., Oct. 29. (Spe
cial.) The Oregon supreme court
will convene in Pendleton session
here tomorrow with 17 cases on the
docket. Several are important.
The one attracting most attention is
tie case of the Northern Pacific
et al., appellants, vs. the John Day
irrigation company et al., respond
ents. The most sensational case is that
of George B. Carmichael vs. Mabel
E. Carmichael, in which the appel
lant is asking for a decree of
divorce. At present he has two
legal wives and is suing for divorce
from iiis first wife.
Conan Doyle Declares Critics Will
Have Strong Case Against
New Textbook.
Our American Adventure, by Sir Arthur
Conan Doyle.
(Copyright by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle,
for the United States and Great
Britain. Released by 'orth American
Newspaper Alliance.)
ARTICLE VI (Continued).
The manuscript has to do with
the physiology of reproduction and
tne connection Between soui ana
body at the time of birth. There are
numerous and complex illustrations,
and it is impossible to doubt, pre
suming that the work is by Bacon.
that he had a micros-cope and a good
one. Cells and even nuclei are
shown, and the whole relation ot
ovum and Fallopian tube3 is cor
rectly set forth. If his occult
knowledge is as accurate as his an
atomy, the old Friar knew a good J
oeai, out the text is disfigured by a
good deal of license so far as Pro
fessor Newbold has been able to
translate, it. The book should make
a sensation when it appear, thougTt
I can understand that the critics
will have a strong case.
Talking of curious manuscripts, 1
spent at morning in Mr. Morgan's
famous library in New York and had
an interview with the famous finan
cier, a tall, ruddy comDlcxioned
man, less melancholy than most mil
lionaires whom I have met. He was
just off to meet the British delega
tion and try to settle up the affairs
of poor, distracted Europe. Miss
Green, his' learned and pleasant
liDrarian. showed us round. I was
particularly anxious "to see the old
manuscript upon which Mr. Bu
chanan had founded his claim that
he had discovered a version of the
Scriptures older than any known,
and possibly dating from the first
century. His published story was
that while he was examining a
twelfth century Gospel he perceived
writing underneath the text, and
found upon closer examination that
the parchment had been used before
and that he had come upon this re
markable old version of the Scrip
tures. Only Correction Understood.
If the parchment which I saw was
the same as that of Mr. Buchanan,
and the librarian assured me that it
wa so, I must confess that my eyes
or my Imagination are duller than
his, for I could make out nothing
save an occasional correction by the
scribe superimposed upon his own
erased writing. It would, indeed,
be a glorious thing if we could real
ly come upon a set of Gospels of the
first or even of the second century,
for they would give us a pure text
and avoid those pernicious addi
tions and falsifications which were
brought about before Jerome col
lected the Vulgate into one volume.
We have had to drink ever since
from a tainted stream, and we need
to get some spot nearer the springs
and before the poison was intro
duced. I have Just been reading Mrs. As-
quith's remarks upon the American
papers, and especially upon the
greater intelligence shown in the
reporting than in the editing. The
same thing lias struck me many
times. The editors seem to place
the intelligence of the public very
low and to imagine that they can
not, be attracted save by vulgar,
screaming headlines. It has been
quite a Pleasure very often to. talk
to the reporters, and next day 1
have often seen the result of the
talk in a dignified, rational inter
view disfigured by such caption as
"Do Spooks Marry?" or "High Jinks
in the Beyond," utterly out of keep
ing with the report and evidently
introduced by the man in the of
fice who had not been in contact
with me at all.
The American papers have a
strange way, also, of endeavoring to
compress the whole meaning of
some item into a few words of head
line, which, as often as not, are
slamg. Thus you will read, "Patrol
man Smith Shcots Up Con Man Hop
kins and Recovers Wad," or "Mud
Hens Toss Off a Double Header"
(this is baseball), or "Senator Smith
Hands the Dope to the Committee."
All Not Sensational.
All papers are not sensational.
however, nor can we afford to
preach much in the matter. There
are some American journals, such as
the Boston Transcript, which could
match the Scotsman for demure
sobriety, and would announce the
Day of Judgment in small type. The
American press is a live thing and
deals strenuously with living1 issues
I cou.ld not conceive of any
American organ behaving as the
London Times has done with regard
to spiritualism. Right or wrong, it
is notorious that English thoue-ht
has been intensely exercised upon
this subject for the last five or six
years, yet the only references which
I have ever seen to it in this great
paper, whioh is supposed to mirror
the doings of the nation, is one
bsurdly inaccurate report of a
speech of mine, and one. leader in
which the writer said that he would
embrace spiritualism when he was
shown that he could get more win
ners in a hcrse race than in a nor
mal fashion. I don't'know whether
he judges the truth of Christianity
in a similar fashion. But an intel
ligent boycott of this sort would be
unthinkable in the broad-minded
American Journals a fact which
may well condone many quaint head
lines, clownish and undignified as
they often are.
(To Be Continued.)
De Molny Chapter Organized.
HOQUIAM, Wash., Oct. 9.' (Spe
cial.) Scottish Rite chapter of
Grays Harbor sponsored last night
the organization of a chapter of
DeMolay for sons of Masons and
other boys of good character. Fol
lowing, the business session, which
at which Alex Poison was toaBt
master and Superintendent of
Schools Crumpacker, Rev. J. W.
Beard. Rev. George G. Ware and
John Nelson gave short talks.
included election of officers Order
of Eastern Star served a banqueU Small and W. F. McLaughlin. The
BIG CAKE GIVEN G. A. R.
Civil War Veterans Eulogized at
Banquet at Albany.
ALBANY, Or.. Oct. 29. (Special.)
One hundred and fifty members
of MePherson post, Grand Army of
the Republic, women and friends
were seated at a banquet given yes
terday in the local armory by the
civil war veterans. A large cake,
baked by Mrs. J. Q. Rodgers, bear
ing the inscription, "G. A. R. 1861
to 1865," was presented to the mem
bers of the post.
After the banquet a programme
was given, presided over by Dr.
Joseph Myers, commander. Rev.
Harry E. Tucker, Rev. J. C. Spencer
and W. L. Jackson eulogized the
deeds of the veterans in short talks.
Comrades nfaking addresses were
E. F. Sox. Edward Washburn, W. P.
KZZ-
IS
the
Compulsory
Ed
ucation
constitutional:
These lawyers have given their opinion that the
proposed Educational Bill is not constitutional:
Albany, Oregon
C. E. Sax
Astoria. Oregon
Frank Spittle
Athena, Oregon
E. C. Prestbye
Homer I. Watts
Baker, Oregon
W. H. Packwood
Burns, Oregon
H. V. Schmalz
Canyon City, Oregon
Geo. H. Cattariach
Otis Patterson
Condon, Oregon
T.A.Weinke
Corvallis, Oregon
E. D. Horgan
O. Middlekauff
Dallas, Oregon
R. S. Kreason
E. K. Piasecki
Enterprise, Oregon
J. A. Burleigh
D. W. Sheahan
Eugene, Oregon
- x Louis E. Bean
L.L.Ray
Donald Young
Freewater, Oregon
G. PI. Bishop '
Grants Pass, Oregon
O. S. Blanchard
J.W. Colvig
George H. Durham
C. E. Rusk
Heppner,. Oregon
Samuel E. Notson
Jos. J. Nys.
Hood River, Oregon
John Baker
A. J. Derby
La Grande, Oregon
R. J. Green
Jno. S. Hogin
Lakeview, Oregon
J. D. Venator
H. T. Welch
Medford, Oregon
G. M. Roberts
Lincoln McCormack
Milton, Oregon
S. D. Peterson
McMinnville, Orego n
B. A. Kliks
.We M. Ramsey
Oregon City, Oregon
" Paul C. Fischer
Jos. E. Hedges
Pendleton, Oregon
Stephen A. Lowell
Will M. Peterson
J. H. Raley
Philomath, Oregon
C. W. Davis
Portland, Oregon
H. B. Adams
W. P. Adams
Fred A. Allehoff
Abraham Asher
Elisha A. Baker
P. J. Bannon
E. Benson
Alexander Bernstein
S. J. Bischoff
Sol. Bloom
Wm. L. Brewster
Fred W. Bronn
Joseph K. Carson, Jr.
A. J. Christopherson
' Arthur M. Churchill
D. Solis Cohen
Bartlett Cole
P. P. Dabney
Richard Deich
Frederick M. DeNeffe
Alfred P. Dobson
A. S. Dresser
Arthur C. Emmons
H. M. Esterly
Palmer L. Fales
A. F. Flegel
Maurice W. Seitz
Austin F. Flegel, Jr.
Kenneth F. Frazer
Portland, Oregon
Tom Garland
R. L. Glisan
Benj. B. Goodman
C. S. Goldberg
Arthur A. Goldsmith
Henry S. Gray
, - Thomas G. Green
F. E. Grigsby
Frederick Gronnert
Geo. B. Guthrie
John H. Hall '
John P. Hannon.
Ernest W. Hardy
Charles A: Hart
Thomas A.. Hayes
E. E. Heckbert
Karl Herbring
John M. Hickson
H. W. Hogue
Joseph Van Hoomissen
Harry G. Hoy
James B. Kerr
Otto J. Kraemer .
Robert Krims
C. Henri Labbe
Jos. A. Lagerfeld ,
F. B. Layman
John A. Lee
A. D. Leedy
John F. Logan
W. F. Magill
Dan J. Malarkey
C. A. Marsch
Q. L. Matthews
William O. McCarthy
Herbert S. McCutchan
Lawrence McNary
J. H. Middleton
Richard W. Montague
F. W. Mulkey
; , M. G. Munly
Robt. N. Munly
Chester G. Murphy
John C. Murphy
F. L. Nagel
O. A. Neal j
Roscoe C. Nelson
H. B. Nicholas '
D. A. Norton
Conrad P. Olson
Robert J. O'Neil
Martin L. Pipes
Arthur D. Piatt
Harrison G. Piatt
Portland, Oregon
Merrill A. Reed ,
John F. Reilly
Ridgway & Johnson
Frank Branch Riley
Erwin J. Rowe
E. B. Seabroock
Maurice W. Seitz
Waldemar Seton
Chester A. Sheppard
John C. Shillock
Edward J. Shinners
N. D. Simon
I sham N. Smith
Newton C. Smith
Estes Snedecor
James P. Stapleton
John H. Stevenson
Albert A. Tanner
Sidney Teiser
Henry M. Tomlinson
Robert Treat Piatt
Hall S. Lusk
Veazie & Veazie
R. K. Walton
Thomas H. Ward
John T. Whalley
C. L. Whealdon
Wm. A. Williams
James G. Wilson
Johnston Wilson
A. B. Winfree
Erskine' Wood
George N. Woodley
Oglesby Young
Prineville, Oregon
M. W. Skipworth
Roseberg, Oregon
Chas. F. Hopkins
Salem, Oregon
B. W. Macy
Seaside, Oregon
William Miller
Tillamook City, Oregon
Webster Holmes
Tillamook, Oregon
Robert H. McGrath
Wasco, Oregon
: C. M. Huddle'ston
Vote 315 x NO oil
School Monopoly
the
Called on the ballot Compulsory Education Bill.
.This advertisement is paid for by the above attorneys,
lie CLEWS FOUND
SHRIEKS IS WOODS' AWAKEN
SLEEPING YOUNG WOMAN.
hiBtory of the local post was re
viewed from its organization with
five members in 1873 to the present
time. Representatives of the relief
corps were here from Corvallis.
Authorities Believe Mrs. Hazel
Burns Was Victim of High
waymen in Robbery Plot.
CLEVELAND, O., Oct. 29 (By the
Associated Press.) Prosecutor. Os
trander and deputy sheriffs of Lake
county tonight announced they
were going to question a young
woman living near the woods where
the mutilated body of Mrs. Hazel
Burns was found late Wednesday,
buried in a shallow grave, regard
ing a report that the woman had
heard screams from ' the direction
of the woods early Wednesday
morning. A neighbor who gave the
information to the sheriff said the
girl had told of being awakened by
shrieks of terror.
Cleveland detectives at the same
time announced they had begun a
search for the diary of Mrs. Burns,
reported to contain passages which
would give a clew to the motive of
the crime. Lake county authorities
also were searching the scene of
the murder for a shovel and gun
which are thought to have been
used in the murder.
Search also is being made by Lake
county authorities for $2700 which
Burns claims he hid in his Cleve
land home and which was not found
in a search by authorities, and for
diamonds which Mrs. Burns was
said to have worn. Authorities now
inclined to the belief that possibly
Mrs. Burns might have had the
money and diamonds in her posses
sion Wednesday and may have been
the victim of highwaymen.
CRIME CRUSADE ASKEJJ
Manitoba Asks Washington to
Wipe Out Boundary Raiders.
WINNIPEG, Oct. 29. Manitoba
has recommended that the dominion
government ask the United States
department of Justic to wage war
against bootleggers and criminals
said to be maklns their headquar
ters in Minot, N. D.
Blame for a large number of bank
robberies- in Manitoba and Sas
katchewan in the last two months
is laid against this band.
MINOT, N. D., Oct. 29. Charac
terizing news dispatches from Win
nipeg to the effect that an interna
tional gang of crooks is headquar
tering in Minot and preying upon
Canadian banks as a "space writer's
dream," Police Chief Byrne today
emphatically denied that such a con
dition exists.
,
Parents, Teachers to Convene.
CENTRALIA. Wash., Oct. 29.
(Special.) Afternoon and evening
addresses by Mrs. Victor Malstrom
of Tacoma, state president of parent-teacher
associations, will be
features of the programme for a
convention to be held in Winlock on
November 3. The evening pro
gramme will be especially arranged
to interest fathers. Mrs. W. . R.
Coffman of this city is president of
the county organization.
ALLIED PLEA REJECTED
AMERICA REFUSES TO SIT AT
LAUSANNE PARLEY.
U. S. Aid in Settling .Problems
Arising With Turkey Re
fused in Statement.
WASHINGTON, D. C, Oct. 29.
Another request that the ,United
States actively participate with the
allied governments in the settlement
"of European difficulties,' this time
involving the establishment of peace
between Turkey and the allies, and
the status of the Dardanelles and
Bosphorus straits, was received Sat
urday by the Washington govern
ment., i
Its formal presentation by Sir
Auckland Geddes, the British am
bassador; Count de Chambrun, act
ing for France in the absence of
Ambassador Jusserand and Charge
Rossi who appeared for Senator
Ricci, Italian ambassador, was fol
lowed by an authoritative statement
from the state department that this
government yesterday had instructed
Rely ca Cuticura
To Clear Away
Skin Troubles
Am, tn .Jmau ntahwrnt te fvrtH Tlcmn fcn nav.
'dor, Sc. SampUa of Cticr, Dpv X, Llfiidts, Etu.
its ambassadors in London, Paris
and Rome Nto inform those govern
ments that it could not officially
participate in the near east confer
ence at Lausanne, Switzerland.
Mexico Levies on Tourists.
CALEXICO, Cal., Oct. 29. Twenty
five dollars in goto or no crossing
of the international line by Ameri
cans except on brief visits, wa-s the
requirement of the Mexican govern
ment made effective at Mexicali to
day. At the same time American
immigration officers began de
manding border passports from un-
FT" When
feel
like
dancing
Go to
YE OREGON GRILLE
BARRELS AND
CASKS
And All Kinds of Cooperage at
Finke Bros. Cooperage Works
254 Front St Welt End Raw.
thorne Br idee. Mnin 8143.
known Mexicans seeking to cross
into California.
The Oregonian is the medium
through which many people supply
their wants by using its classified
columns. Telephone Main 7070.
BUILD UP YOUR
VIGOR FOR WINTER
IN the fall your blood is thin and your
vitality low. That's why you suffer
from coughs and colds, and feel all
run down and dragged out.
Gude's Pepto-Mangan will enrich
your blood, tone you up, and give you
the res sting power to ward off illness.
Begin to- take it now; it may save you
sickness and suffering laterTn.
Physicians have recommended and
prescribed Gude's for over 30 year3.
Your druggist has it liquid cr tab
lets, as you prefer.
Gude's
pepto-angan
Tonic and Blood Enricher
, Weak Throat
Cold after col coach after cough! No naMclne
Uk Am t Chart Pectoral for thai eowlitlgn.
A hoKwhold remedy for 80 nan.
Gtabattltodaii. I.CAucrCo- Latctfljtail.
Tiu don of AYER S PllXS whea row cold
mm