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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 3, 1915)
THE SUNDAY OREGONIA-S", PORTL.AJTD, OCTOBER 3, 1915. DR. GOOK ARRESTED TRIBUTE PAID TO AMERICAN EXPLORER WHO WAS ARRESTED IN BURMAH ON SUSPICION OF BEING SPY. i as spy HEROES OF MARNE American Explorer's Motion i Picture Confiscated by . British Officials. France Observes Anniversary, Most Solemn and Im pressive of Many. SURVEILLANCE KEPT UP TOWN FILLS WITH WIDOWS RANGDOr Timber Bayer of Anacortes, Wash., Who Was Fellow-Prisoner, Says Authorities Prejudiced Con sul Against Him. .W FRANCISCO, Oct. 2. Dr. Fred erick A. Cook, an explorer, was ar retsed as a German spy by authorities at Rangoon, Burma, India, and his motion picture outfit confiscated, ac cording to Curtis W. Allen, an Ameri can, who told today of his own im prisonment as a spy seven times during 11 months in India. Allen returned thiH week from China. He said he went abroad last year to buy timber for the India, Burma & Malay Penin sula Timber Company, of New West minster, B. C. He said he was born at Anacortes, Wash., where his parents live. Dr. Cook, he said, was arrested about August 1, kept in the sa'me prison with him and kept under guard lor some time after his release. The authori ties confiscated Dr. Cook's outfit and developed the films taken by the ex plorer in the search for evidence against him. Dr. Cook ultimately left Rangoon for -the Interior. Credentials Regarded an Forced. Dr. Cook left San Francisco last June. Allen carried a passport signed by Secretary Bryan and credentials from his Canadian employers. These were regarded as forged, he said. "They would give me no explanation of why I was arrested." Allen said, 'other than that I 'looked like a Ger man' and 'your very clothes are of German cut. "They permitted me to see the Ameri can Consul only once, after I had been in prison two months." he said. When finally he presented his case to American Consul Morehead at Ran goon he said the authorities had so prejudiced the Consul that he had dif ficulty in convincing Mr. Morehead of his innocence. Tale of Imprisonment Told. Once preparations were made to hang him, he told. When finally he was deported to Hongkong, he said, he was taken from the vessel at Singapore and Penang and imprisoned while his vessel remained in port. At Hongkong, he said, he was held in a concentration camp for three weeks. A cablegram which he tried to send to his employers, Allen said, was held up because "there was no reason why it should go." GASTON HARVEST IS BIG YIELDS JVOT PHEXOMEXAL BUT ARK ABOVE ORD1XARV. 'W inter Grain Crops Are Running; Fine and Farmers Are Well Satisfied and Prosperous. GASTON. Or.. Oct. 2. (Special.) "Without Question this year's harvest Is the best on record for this part of the Valley. Although no phenomenal yields have been reported, the aver age is above that of former years and the farmers hereabouts are well sat isfied and prosperous. Winter grain of all kinds was fine, wheat running 30 to BO bushels an acre; Spring wheat also was good, making 25 to 30 bush els. Winter oats and barley fine, but Bpring oats lighter than expected ow ing to the two or three days of hot weather in July, which caught them at Just the critical stage. The crop is running 40 to 60 bushels an acre, but they should have made 50 to 80 bush els, considering the amount of straw on the ground. Thomas Carmichael, with a small acreage making 65 bushels to the acre, and V. S. Abraham, of the Patton Val ley district, with a showing of 80 bushels, are two of the best yields re ported. Some fine corn was grown here this vear, notably that at Clover ridge farm, owned by W. K. Newell. His field of 30 acres was well worth seeing, with the stalks 10 and 11 feet high, thick and luxuriant and heavily weighted with large, well-filled ears. His corn went to fill his two big silos. The Gaston Gardens Company, owned by ex-Governor Moore, had an excep tionally good year on their SOO-acre tract of low land, which is under water from November until Anril. With 12,000 bushels of oats, 800 bushels barley, 530 bushels buckwheat. 100 tons oat nay in their warehouse, the vear work will make a good showing on the right side of the ledger. It took 28 cars to take care of their flax crop, which was harvested by the convicts and has been shipped to Salem to b made into fiber under the direction of the Federal expert there. A finf. yield of corn was also grown on this tract and went into the silo. A flock of 350 head of sheep and 90 head of cattle from Yamhill, owned by Zim merman and Goodrich, are now pastur ing on this tract. Most of the farmers took advantage of the good weather to bale their straw, a much larger amount than usual being taken care of in this way. An especially good yield of clover seed was reported from the farm of Julius Kopplln. ABERDEEN BUDGET IS HIGH Property Owners to Piscuss Flans , for Cutting IH)n Ivy. ABERDEEN', Wash.. Oct. 2. (Spe cial.) Aberdeen property owners will meet with the City Council Monday evening to discuss the possible lower ing of the city budget, which calls for a total expenditure of $231,000 in 1916. Of this sum $17S,S71 must bo raised bv direct taxes. Last year only J9S.H9 had to be raised by a direct tax. The increased cost of city govern ment is attributed to the loss of $33. 075 In saloon licenses, the taking up of $-4,000. in outstanding warrants and the purchase and improvement of the West tollbrldge. Gardiner-Coos Bay Mall Delivered. GARDINER. Or.. Oct. 2. (Special.) Mall connections between Gardiner and Coos Bay have been resumed after be ing severed for four days on account of an accident which befell the mail carrier on September 22. The carrier, I P. Copple, while crossing the moun tains last Wednesday had the misfor tune of his horse falling upon him. se verely injuring one of his legs. With his limb crushed ha. returned to Coos Bay, bnt will not bo able to be about ror so mo time. - , ft" 4 1 ' fy - - - ; i" " -fY ' A r-V i . 5. . i - " 1 - t- ' : ' - V " v -' DR. FREDERICK A. COOK. SQUARE DEAL ASKED,1 Ohio Governor Says Business Should Have Chance. TIME IS DECLARED RIPE Plea Made for Genuine American Policy or Fair Treatment and for Laws That Will Enconr age Big Achievements. SAN FRANCISCO. Oct, 2. Frank B. Willis, Governor of Ohio, declared to day that the "time is ripe for a re newal of a real American policy with reference to our important industrial and business conditions" in an address here. "The pendulum has taken a long swing from the time when business was supreme, in a great measure, In the United States," Governor Willis said. "The age of commercial development has been succeeded by what we might term an age of busines repression. "One cannot give an unprejudiced review to our present conditions with out reaching the belief that there is justification for the cry. now going out In volume, to give business a chance to breathe and digest the heavy legisla tive meal it has been forced to swal low. "The majority of business men want to be honest and. do right, but when 48 Legislatures, Congress and the courts of our states and the Nation keep con tinually busy laying down new rules for business, it has become almost im possible for business men to know what is the law. "The time is here for the establish ment of a genuine American policy in volving fair treatment of our indus tries, laws that will encourage the business man rather than repress him, and that will encourage him in a legitimate way to even greater achieve ments than those we have made thus far." ABERDEEN TANK IS READY Xew $50,000 Concrete Reservoir Will Hold 7,250,000 Gallons. ABERDEEN', Wash.. Oct. 2. (Soe cial.) Aberdeen's new $50,000 concrete reservoir of 7.250,000 gallons capacity has been completed. It has been con STAR DEPLORES MISUSE OF SWEDISH CHARACTER Emily Greene, Who Is Appearing in Comedy Playlet at Empress, Declares Average Impersonation Is Outlandish and Ridiculous. THE Swedish character, along: with the Irish and the Hebrew, has been iikjnrAi , i -. : -.t-.-. i stage portrayal than any other," said Emily Greene, who, with her company, will appear in a comedy playlet this afternoon at the Empress Theater, en titled "A Swedish Flirtation." Miss Greene is Swedish herself and speaks concerning: the stagre character from a long experience. She says: "The average man or woman who is to 'do' a Swede effects a grrotesque makeup and devotes the time to using a dialect that is both outlandish and ridiculous: thus the character is made a bore, a thing of ridicule and contempt instead of a legitimate portrayal. I know that the Scandinavian has many opportunities for fun-making, and none realizes these possibilities better than I. What I do object to is a gross caricature rather than a characteriza tion." Miss Greene is the daughter of Cap tain Emanuel Greene, of the Royal Swedish navy, and passes a great deal of her leisure time at her old home near Stockholm. She has crossed the ocean 17 times and expects to double that record. "I get all my costumes, even to the shoes and stockings, at home." said the actress. "My Tillie Swanson,' in the sketch I do, is a girl that you might find in any one of 50 Swedish towns, and I gown her true to life." In addition to her vaudeville experi ence of a dozen or more years. Miss Greene has appeared in Swedish dia lect roles in such plays as Broad hurst's "What Happened to Jones. Marie Corelll'B "Thelma" and in "Tittle Olsen." in which she starred for some years. Miss Greene has a farm up in Min nesota, where she passes her vacations. The Red Lake Indians near Warroad, Minn., at the Lake of the Woods, are neighbors of Miss Greene when she is at home, and they have received her into their tribe as a squaw, with all the ceremonies at their command. "Sort of an international mixture, am L-aotr-' flUfiried Mlaa .Greene, nected up with the main water sys tem and a $6000 steam turbine centri fugal pump installed by which It will be filled. The pump has a capacity for pump ing 28,000 gallons a minute, or 4,000,000 every 24 hours. The new reservoir at the top meas ures 280 by 260 feet. At the bottom it Is 180 by 160 feet. It is 25 feet deep and will be filled to a depth of 20 feet, . When the new $409,000 gravity water system is completed, this res ervoir will form an important link in Aberdeen's water system. POWER PLANT MAY CLOSE Prairie City Company Faces Mort- gage Foreclosure. BAKER, Or., Oct. . 2. (Special.) Foreclosure proceedings, which have been started by Attorney Woodson L. Patterson against the Prairie City Power Company, may cause the shut down of the plant. Mr. Patterson has mailed the petition of foreclosure to be passed upon by Judge Dalton Biggs, of Grant County, who is at Canyon City. The mortgage, as originally made out to the plaintiffs, Rivalller Brothers, four years ago, was for $13,000, but because of payments made. now amounts to $8600. It is believed that the Prairie City company will take steps to adjust the matter out of court to prevent the plant shutting down. Kelso Church Building Enlarged. KELSO. Wash.. Oct. 2. (Snerlal 1 To provide better accommodations for the growing membership in the church and other departments of church work, a basement is being added to the Kelso Christian Church. Gravel and sand are already on the ground for the walls, and the men of the church are excavating for the basement. This will provide sufficient accommodations for the Sunday School and other auxiliary ue-partmenis oi me cnurcn. Gold Discovery Asserted. KELSO, Wash., Oct. 2. (SpeclaL) ""in iiaxnea uariiuii nas SUnK a DO- iwc Biiaii alongside ine racinc lgn- W : V smith 4if Kalamn nnA ,4 ! V,a has discovered gold. LaPlant says he i iniiiiB eeverai gooa-sizea iortunes in the goldtields. He formerly lived near Kalama and worked upon the highway, and says that at that time he thought the country looked good as a mining Hintrlf u V. 1 . r, ....... . .. . vj uan r,j,t..ij",;iin which he claims show a good value in Coos Bay Wants lobsters to Plant. MARSH FIELD, Or.. Oct. 2. (Spe cial.) Upon hearing that Seattle is ob taining lobsters from the Bureau of Fisheries, persons here have set on foot a plan to obtain a supply of the crustaceans for propagating in these waters. The conditions on Coos Bay are said to be ideal ror lobsters, a though other experiments on the coast have failed, so far as known. VV-, -ft. . 1 - 3 Jt-l"?'-1 ,xv J Eanllv Greene, at the Empress. Sisters, Wives, Old Mothers, Little Girls, With Few Men, Old or Very Young-, Observe Memo rial to IaJlen Heroes. BY CAROLYN WILSON. (Copyright, 1915. by the Chicago Tribune. fubiisnea oy arrangement.) PARIS. Sept. 6. Yesterday was an other anniversary, the most solemn, the most impressive of all. I was at a house party near Meaux, in a little village which marked the end of the German advance to the east of Paris. Early Sunday morning our hostess called to ask us if we would like to go to Meaux and spend the day there. "It's the anniversary of the battle of the Marne." she said, "and since none of you have ever been to Meaux, which is really one of the most beautiful old towns in France, you can see that at the same time." I don't know what the others ex pected, but for myself I thought it would be rather a lolly ride, those 10 kilometers of hilly, wooded roads in the funny old buckboard which has had to take the place of the automobile in that "zone des armees"; that we should have a food luncheon in the little res taurant off the main road, that same restaurant of which I had often heard our permissionaire officer host speak reverently, and that there would prob ably be an irksomely long service at the cathedral and that the town would presumably be beflagged a bit, and kid-1 dies in cleanest white would be walk ing solemnly around the town with their papas home on leave. WidowM and Boy Attend. It was all this, except that the serv ice at the beautiful cathedral in the heart of Meaux did not seem long. For the ride over was, as I had thought, wonderful, on a greenly gold day. I suppose the luncheon would have pleased any gourmand, but I was too occupied in watching a mother with three little boys, all in black, ordering a careful lunch which should satisfy their hunger and not make too deep inroads on her purse, to pay much at tention to mine. Near her on a chair were two wreaths, one of false flowers which should bloom brightly through the cold Winter, and across which was written. A. mon marl bienaime. The other was a smaller wreath, not perfectly round. its flowers already a little withered. for they were goldenrod, field asters and that little mauve flower which grows by rivers, all fashioned together with willing but unskillful hands, and on a piece of white ribbon in large printed letters was written, "A notre cher pere. The boys hopped up from the tame every few minutes to look at the wreath, propping up a head that drooped, straightening out a crumpled leaf, and asking again and again. "But if there are so many, mamma, how can we be sure which is papa? Blfthop Honors Blarne Heroes The town had gradually been filling with people. In the morning in the spacious church it had not seemed to me that many strangers had come to Meaux for the anniversary. At this commenjoration service in the morning, presided over oy the arcnDisnop oi Sens, the bishop of Versailles gave a stirring address on the heroes of the Marne, quoting again and again Joffre's command to die on the spot rather than retreat. In the afternoon the town seemed suddenly filled with widows weeds. Women, women, women sisters, wives, old mothers, little girls, whose flying hair and child faces always seem to suggest fluffy white dresses and flowery hats all of them in black. A few men, old or very young some sol diers back on permission going to a comrade's grave thus the procession started out. Headed by the bishop of Meaux, Mgr. Barbeau, who so bravely took charge of the town when the Germans came, the archbishop of Sens, and the bishop of Versailles, all three in their gorge ous violet robes, and followed by 3000 or 4000 people in motors, carriages, on bicycles, and on foot, the wreath-laden procession started. Past Varreddes, where in little fenced-in squares is many a British flag, past Etrepllly, Barvy, illeroy and Chambry, all the little villages wbioh were the scenes of the terrinc struggle of last Septem ber, moved the silent, reverent crowd. Bleaslnjr for Dead, Prayer for I.f vlmr. It wound like a black seam through that fecund valley, where life has al ready triumphed over death, where over the trenches of yesterday the harvest of today and tomorrow lies yellow and ripe. By dusty roadside and fragrant green pasture, or where a golden haystack threw its shadow over a group of graves the bishops in their violet robes knelt down to bless the dead and pray for the living. I wondered if to them, as to me. those plowed-in trenches, those waving fields. tnose mounded Haystacks, seemed the greater victory the faith which does not faint, courage that cannot waver, life which will not die. Centra Ha Man Keeps Shrapnel I,a1he. CE.NTRALU, Wash., Oct. 2. (Spe cial.) J. P. Symons, a Centralia foun dry owner, has received a tempting offer from the French, British and other allied nations for a lathe for turning out shrapnel. Three times the value of the lathe has been offered, as it ts said that no more can be obtained for two years, owing to advance or ders, but Mr. Symons has refused to sen. He says he understands that Western foundries are soon, to receive a big order for shrapnel and that he expects to land a part of this business. Cowlitz Budget Shows Increase. KELSO, Wash.. Oct. 2. (Special.) The proposed budget, which will be acted upon Monday by the Board nf County Commissioners at Kalama, shows an increase of 119,200 over last year. This increase is. largely due to the increase of the levy of the road and bridge fund to 4 mills and to the in crease of the levy in two of the road districts. Current expenses show a slight increase. Koseburg Pastor Feted. ROSEBUEG, Or, Oct. 2. (Special.) Kev. -William KHey Jeffrey. Jr., was the guest of honor at a. public recep tion held in the parlors of the Metho dist Episcopal Church here last night. Mr. Jeffrey was called to the church on the pretense that members of the choir wished to talk over certain mat ters with him. Mr. Jeffrey has been pastor of the Methodist Episcopal Church here for a year, and was re appointed at tho res -rOfreice. "''Dress Up" Know What You Buy Alwaj's satisfy yourself that any. suit you buy is made of all-wool fabrics. The best style and fit in the world won't pay you unless it is. The whole country knows that Hart Schaf f ner & Marx Clothes are always made of all-wool fabrics. With this fact known, you can come here and get one of these all-wool garments. Youll get the newest in colorings and fabrics the style, the fit and the service. Ask to see Varsity Fifty Five at $25 It's the craze of the universe. . Some more, some less; $20 to $35. The Varsity Six Hundred Overcoats are in a class to themselves. Priced at $16.50 to $35 Sam'l Rosenblatt & Co. Our New Location, 266 Morrison, Between Third and Fourth 0.A.G ROLL GAINS 124 Ettl'AL MHBER IS EXPECTED TO ENTER COLLEGE THIS WEEK. Resistratlon Already Is at 1383 Marl.. Thirteen Graduate Student, Give Credential. OREGON AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE, Corvallis, Oct. . (Special.) The sec ond week of college has seen 124 stu dents added to the roll of last week, bring: the total registration to 1332. At least as many more are expected to arrive this week, as the first week in October brings to an end the Summer work of many students who depend upon funds obtained during: the Sum mer vacation for their college expenses. Owing- to the pressure of work inci dental to the first weeks of college, statistics on registration are not pre pared daily in the office of the regis trar, but early in the week the reg istration was 196 in advance of the to tal on the same date last year. Large gains had been experienced in many of the schools and depart ments. The greatest increase was ex perienced by the department of pharmacy, with 58 students enrolled, making an increase of 60 per cent over last year's total. The schools of agriculture and home economics, as usuat, are attracting more students than are - the other depart ments, having enrollments of 419 and 291, marking Increases over last year's registration of 14 and 8 per cent, re spectively. The school of commerce, with 129 en rolled, experiences an increase of 27 per cent. The school of mining gains 50 per cent with a registration of 61. Engineering, forestry and music, with a sum total of 263 enrollments, prac tically maintain the figures of last year. Thirteen graduate students have de posited their credentials and represent five institutions as follows: University of Idaho, Leland Stanford University, Kansas State Agricultural College. Cambridge University. England, and O. A. C. California, Washington and Idaho have large representati6ns on the campus. HERO'S FATE IS LEARNED DEATH OR XICOLAl DUSiKA. IX 1S6; DISCOVERED BY FAMILY. Born in Roumanla Mllltar KipDnird and End Come Career Ii at Bat- tie of Cross Keys. VANCOUVER. Wash., Oct. 2. (Spe cial.) The fate of Nlcolai Dunka. i soldier of fortune, native of Yassy, Roumanla, who disappeared in 1861 from his home, has been learned by his nephew, Stephen Negoscu, of this city, through a singular circumstance. Dunka fought with Garibaldi against Austria, fought for the unity of Italy and fought to free Poland, all before 1861. One day, without saying any thing to his relatives, he walked out of his home and was never seen again by any relative. It was only during the past few weeks that Mr. Negoscu learned his uncle had come to the United States, and fought on the side of the North, being on the staff of Major-General I. C. Fremont, as an aide-de-camp with the rank of Captain of Infantry. A Roumanian Prince, who died In 1895. wrote his memoirs which have since been published and mentions soldiers who fought with him. among them being Nicola I Dunka, whom he said was afterwards killed in America. I ' '' HEAD STUFFED FROM j CATARRH OR A COLD $ j Says Cream Applied in Nostrils J Opens Air Passages Right Up. 4 ' 'I' ' . t Instant relief no waiting. Tour clogged nostrils open right up; the air passages of your head clear and you can breathe freely. No more hawking, snuffling, blowing, headache, dryness. No struggling for breath at night; your cold or catarrh disappears. Get a small bottle of Ely's Cream Balm from your druggist now. Apply a' little of this fragrant, antiseptic, healing cream in your nostrils. It penetrates through every air passage of the head, soothes the inflamed or swollen mucous membrane and relief comes Instantly. It's just fine. Don't stay stuffed-up wlU. cold pr. aut2 SXarjij. Adv, Mrs. Xegoscu. yet In Roumanla- earer to learn the fate of her brother, asked her son's co-operation. He corresponded with the United States War Department and learned that Captain Dunka was killed in the Battle of Cross Keys. June 8. 1862. General Henry P. McCain signed the letter. SUPPOSED WEALTH MYTH Aberdeen- Logger Thought Worth $35,000 Burled In Potter's Field. ABERDEEN. Wash., Oct. 2. (Spe cial.) With his supposed fortune of $35,000 still unfound and not a relative located, the boay of B. F. Casey, a log ger who dropped dead in the Aberdeen postoffice on September 10, was buried in the potters' field today. Casey had lived in a little waterfront shack here for years, and when employed in the woods made good wages and was not a liberal spender. His friends asserted at the time of his death that he was worth between $25,000 and $35,000. All search for the missing money, however, has been futile. Letters and other ef fects in his shack gave no clew to the location of any relatives. DOCTORS MEET IN IDAHO Trl-Sate Medical Association Con venes at Iiew'ston. LEW1STON, Idaho. Oct. 2. (Special.) The Trl-State Medical Association will meet here October 6, 7 and 8. and a committee of arrangements, consist ing of Dr. A. E. Carssow, chairman; Dr. A. M. FTank, secretary; Dr. L. J. Perkins and Dr. E. E. Braddock has been selected. It is expected there will be in at tendance 300 of the medical practi- Of Course, You Have Oft Been Told by Friends Go to Felix Bloch when you want to purchase a good diamond at a reasonable price. You can al ways do better there and, depend, the quality and weight are just as represented. THEY ARE RIGHT Yon will never find at this store a deviation from this policy, as the conscientious adherence to it has built for me the splendid diamond business which I have and made every customer a friend and a booster. One call will convince you it pays to buy diamonds from me. Convenient Terms Without Extra Charge. FELIX BLOCH Largest Diamond Dealer in Oregon. 283 Morrison Street. Bet. Fourth and Fifth. (High-grade Platinum work at reasonable prices.) $500 to $1000 an Acre Profits Annually in Pacific Coast berries bring growers this season $10 to $12 per bar rel and yield 100 to 150 barrels per acre. Total cost to produce and market, $2.50 to $3.00 per barrel. . Good, undeveloped Cranberry Land, without water for flooding, is selling readily this year at $250, $300, $350 per acre. Having purchased a large tract, I will dispose of my small holdings at if taken at once $150 AN ACRE These tracts consist of the finest bog soil on the Pacific Coast, with fine stream for flooding running through each tract. They lie in beautiful shape to become big producers and can be easily and economically drained, developed and cared for. Wild cran berries now growing on them. Will contract to develop. H. ASHLEY ELY Care Y. M. C. A. Building, Portland, Or. . Copyrixit nrt fW-.ffr.-i- Ir. tioners of Oregon. Washington and Idaho, and arrangements have been made for the presentation of papers by a large number of physicians on matters of importance to the medical profession. In the last too yemrs Great Britain baa hn1 a ozn r1jffTnt tTe! nf rlfl". OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIANS Members Portl-Uid Osteopathic Assn. Baker, Dr. I.IIIina, 920 Corbett Bide Phones Main 3227. A 4879. Barrett, Dr. H. Lrater, 419 Morgan Bldg. Phone Main 429. Browae, Dr. An M 831 Plttock Blfc, Phones Broadway 3609. Marshall 114. Farrlor. Dr. Jessie B 820 Selling Bids. Phones Main 43.6. A 6516. Flack. Dr. William O- 917 Broadway Bldg. Main 83i Main 945S. ialr. Dr. Gertrude 1.- 923 Corbett Bldg. Main 1833. A 470C. Giles, Dr. Mary 609 Morgan Bids. Phones Mala 6ao. A 1966. Uawland, Dr. 1. K. 916 Selling Bids Main 2213, A 2229. Keller. Dr. William G . 60S Taylor Sb faaea Main 6.4. A 3444. Lacy, Dr. H. IX, suite 301 Morgan Bids, Phones Marshall 1.88. Tabor 4278. Leonard Dr. H. K 767 Morgan Bids. Phones Main 709. A 1709. Umm, Dr. Virginia V- 612 Morgan Bldg. Phones Main 1497. Mar. 3344. alaore, Dra. V. E. nnd H. C. P 908 Sell ing Bids. Main 6101, A 2466. Mrers, Dr. Katharine S 806-7 Journal Bldg. Marshall 1276. A S03L Xorthmp. Dr. R. B 308 Morgan Bide Phones Main 349. East 1028. Pengra, Dr. C T 709-710 Selling Bids. Phones Main 3440. Main 844a. Sbepberd, Dr. B. r. 608-609 Morgan Bldg. Main 6566. East 248. A 1966. Styles, Dr. Jena 1L. Jr. 744 Clackamas St. East 7285. Walker. Dr. Eva 124 East 24th St. M. Phone East 6332.