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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (April 23, 1916)
1.1 REED ELECTS f, PORTLAND PASTOR, WHO WILL TAKE CHARGE OF AGRICULTURAL SCHOOL AT GRESHAM, AND SOME OF HIS YOUNG FRIENDS. No" "Iarger-sized,, Tires are made Council of Students Will Be i Chosen by College. -than .G00DMCH Mack-ireads HIGH POWER IS WIELDED TIIE -SUNDAY ORE GO NT AN. PORTXAICD, APRIL 23, 1916. AAY9 - ' ' ' Vs l - - fp- v . i? i Iff FK 11 l 'r-v ; : ,K v J sr- - - . i , -s W .y ' l i 't ' Decisions Given in All 3Iafters and Rarely Are Interfered With by Faculty Even if They A"re Not Liked. Students of Reed College will hold their annual election ot student au thorities on May 9. The principle even of the election n-ill be the choice of representatives to the etudent council, a governmental body having legisla tive, administrative and judicial powers over all student activities. Aa the powers of the student council are bo much greater than those of gov ernmental student organizations in most other colleges and universities, the coming election i:j creating great interest at Keed. The faculty and ad ministration at Reed rarely take any tlirect action on student affairs. Kven dismissing students from the college is left to the students council If the faculty has any desire to influ t nce the decisions of the student coon cil it may recommend certain measures to ic but rarely does the faculty inter fere with the final decisions of th i-ouncil, even if the decisions are at variance with their own. Six Seniors In Council. Each year the Htudent council nom inates 12 students from the junior class as candidates for the six offices vacated by graduating seniors and four sopho mores to run for the two Junior ad Tlsory member offices. These nomina tions are equally divided among the men and women and the student voters are only allowed to vote for the candi dates of their own sex. This insures an equal representation of men and women on the council. The man receiving the highest num ber of votes is elected president of the council and the student body. The candidates which the council has chosen for election as regular members are Edgar Bennett. Ambrose Brownell, Klmer Carlson. Sigmund Grondahl, Alvin Shagren. Charles I.arrabee, Clara Kliot, Arline Johnson. Esther Kelly, Naomi Jlichef. Josephine Saunders and Mar- caret Walton. The names proposed for advisory members are Milton Bozorth, Ray Lapham, Harriet Forest and Louise Huntley. - Students May dominate, y Tf the students are dissatisfied with the nominations of the student council, they have the privilege of nominating any other student by a petition signed by 2 per cent of the student body. Senior week will be celebrated by the Reed College graduating class this year, beginning with Founders' day on June 1. The whole student body will Join with the seniors in paying honor to the momory of those who founded the college. On Sunday, June 4, the baccalaureate sermon will be delivered by Dr. Edward Octavius Sission, Idaho Commissioner of Education and former professor of education at Reed College, in the col lege chapel. Tuesday, Jane 6, will be senior class day. Many elaborate ceremonies are planned, one of which will be the cele bration of the Tcrminalla by the Clas sical Club. This will be a revival of the ancient Roman festival in honor of Terminus, the god of boundaries. Commencement will be held on June 7 and will be followed by two lunch eons, one for the alumnae and-one for the seniors, and a senior ball in the evening. The committee in charge of the plans for senior week includes Virginia Mc Kentie, Hanita Frledenthal, Ruth Dick inson, Helmuth Krause, Adele Brault, Eisie Calkins. Francis Kennlcott, Clar ence Young, Edgar Piper and Archibald Clark. FARMER JOHN GAMBLES TWO MK.K WHO nVS GAME PAV KACII TO CITY THEAStRV. Clarke County Granger Dlaplays s Knowledge of Cardinal I'rinclplea f Annie Not Understood. The two were so intent upon the game, and the prospect from Clarke County, that the officers loomed over thi- table before they saw them. "Here's your check," they craftily Fai'l to John Anderson. tossing a 5-r-ent trade token across the oilcloth. The man from Clarke County laid 'own liis cards. He saw the officers merely as casual spectators. He picked up the trade check, and waggled his vivid red beard. "I dunno what that's fer," lie an swered innocently, and the attempt to disguise the poker game as a "playing; for the treats" affair was foiled. John Anderson was in haste to re turn to his Clarke County acres when lie hitched into the witness chair, and told the Municipal Court about the poker game. He Consulted a huge timepiece, frequently. Two -dollars was the price of a stack ot chips in a game which he didn't understand. Still, with $200 to expend, lie did not see why a fellow shouldn't win. "Did they lot you take a pot?" in quired City Attorney Stadter. At the reply the courtroom con cluded that the Clarke County granger had mastered the cardinal principle of the game he doesn't understand. "If they had, I'd have cashed my chips and quit the game," taid John Anderson. The men who played with Anderson, John J. Durham and Jacob Lewis, were each fined $0 by Municipal Judge l.angguth. WOMEN TO HEAR BISHOP Jtt. lifv. W. T. Sumner Will Discuss "City and Its. Innocents." "The City and Its Innocents" will be Bishop Walter T. Sumner's topic at a meetinar especially for women at the, Hippodrome Theater Friday, April 28, at 3:30 P. M. The meeting will be tinder the aus pices of the Portland Parent-Teacher Association and the Oregon Social Hy giene Society. Mrs. Alva Lee Stephens, president of the Portland Council of the Parent-Teacher Associations, will preside. Delegations from out-of-town com munities are expected to attend. ' - 4, OR. COSBY HONORED Portland Pastor Elected Head of Graham College. BOYS' SCHOOL FILLS NEED Xew Institution to Afford Agricul tural Training for Juniors Who Are Handicapped in Life, but Want Education. : Dr. Jame D. Corby, who bo success fully has served aa pastor of the Uni versalist Church at East Twenty- fourth street and Broadway, has been appointed president of the new Junior Agricultural College at Gresham. Dr. Corbv has been interested in the Boy Scout movement and has been a leader in various enterprises for the education and betterment of children. rfi T i A iv.ljiiiltiiMl fifhnnl In a Ni j i r Liinui ..l.. .... w. . a. i ai 1 ... .'...4.. .fir- Yn..ct private DU&ruiuB j . of limited means. The managers ask the parents or friend, to pay as mucn a3 they are able toward the support and tuition of the boy. But, through the generosity of friends, a limited number of scholarships, free or par tially free, are available for boy a who cannot otherwise meet the expense. This enables persons to pick out some worthy lad and by giving him a schol arship in the school at Gresham insure his receiving training tinder the best auspices. Dr. Corby will study each boy's qualifications and train him as thoroughly as possible for the work for which he is best fitted. Agriculture will form the basis of the school course. This will be corre lated with studies of the grammar school grades and industrial training. Music, art and literature will be so taught as to awaken-in the students a love for ali that is best. The school Is non-sectarian, but pupils will have spiritual instruction as well as train- ng for hand and brain, trhus securing the well-rounded, efficient boy. Speaking of the plans for the work, a prominent educator said yesterday: hen men have had the care of a boy with no mother to help them, they have been puzzled where to have the help they need to bring up the youth aright. It is to meet cases like these and to afford that large number of boys between 10 and 16 who need a lift over the hard places the chance to become efficient and learn good citi zenship that the Junior Agricultural School has been established. Often a mother who must go out o work and knows her boy is on the street, exposed to all its contagions, wants a place where she can have him under good influences, carefully trained. There has been no place available at moderate cost. 'The -acceptance by Dr. James D. Corby of the presidency of. the new Junior Agricultural School at Grasham marks the inception of a unique edu cational plant which will meet a cry ing need." member of the cabbage family. But the broccoli only within recent years has found its place in the marketing sun. C. W. Kruse, a rancher near Oswego, who has won the sobriquet, "Cauli flower King," has given to broccoli or v inter cauliflower the supreme test. This test was the "silver thaw" last Winter. The specimens of broccoli a dozen fine-shaped heads brought to Portland yesterday demonstrate his be lief. Broccoli, like cabbage, is set out from plants; but, unlike cabbage, it is planted in late Summer in August. It grows above ground through the Win ter and comes into mature usefulness about this time of the Spring. Protect ed by hardy leaf husks, it survives snows, winds, rains, frost and all the wintry elements. The test has been made on about 100 acres, seven and a half miles south of Portland, on the farm owned by T. G. Rees. Mr. Rees is enthusiastic over the result and says, with the already highly developed market and the unmet demands, "Winter cauliflower or broccoli should become a popular Oregon prod uct and a profitable one. Toledo Man Home From East. Charles H. Gardner, of Toledo, Or., passed through Portland Thursday on his return home from Dixon, I1L. where he accompanied the body of his sister-in-law. Miss Amelia McComsey, who died In Toledo, Or., following a stroko fjl paralysis. ' BROCCOLI SURVIVES THAW Market for Hardy Product Is Be lie cd to Be Unlimited. A patrician species of the lowly, plebe ian cabbage promises to achieve a cer tain fame and distinction in Oregon. It is what is commonly called Winter cau- iflower, yet more exactly termed broc- oli. .The Portland district of Oregon s becoming a center for its produc tion, and a world market has recently been opened up. The regular cauliflow er of Oregon has long been widely known, and Chicago and New York epi cures have dined on (his aristocratic I VF.ILKI) LADIES OK CHANT- EU ItEALM TO G1VK BALL, 1 1 I if 4 Miss Helen llolden. The members of Betsy Ross Council. No. 1, Veiled Ladies of the Enchanted Realm, will enter tain at an informal ball and card party on April 23 at Masonic Temple. The guard of the cm press and the guard of the mon arch will drill. The Grotto band will provide the music The com mittee on arrangements Is Mrs. W. H. Bewley, Mrs. H. F. Mc Grath and Miss Helen llolden. MRS. L CHAMPION HERE COLORADO WOMAN, fHOMIVEST 1ST Ll'DLOW WAR IS TO SPEAK, t As Head of Many Clubs She Was One to Interview President Wilson, Also John D. Rockefeller, Jr. Mrs. Loo Champion, of Denver, a champion of the poor and down-trodden, if one may pun a name, is a vis itor in Portland as guest of Mrs. Clara S. B. Grelst, Of 346 Kast Forty-fsixth street South. Mrs. Champion is president of the League of Justice of Denver. She is also Interested in various philanthropic organizations and clubs. She wa present in Colorado at the time of the disturbances at Ludlow. In behalf of the miners and their widows she interviewed President Wilson and John D. Rockefeller, Jr. Next Tuesday night Mrs. Champion will speak in the Library and will give some unusual side-lights on strikes and their handling. In discussing her work, which claims much of her time, Mrs. Champion aid in an interview: "The detective system In tho mining countries is obnoxious. I am not in any sense an anarchist, but I stand for better conditions. John D., Jr.. would bo all right if he were not Sur rounded by a shell of parasites, for tho light he has he is well meaning, but it is hard for him to get away from the parasites. "He said he came to Colorado to prevent a recurrence of such a catas trophe as I witnessed? It wasn't the fault of the regular militia but of men pressed into the service." Mrs. Champion does not think women arc made of any different clay from the men, when it comes to politics, and she declares that they are liable to be Influenced In politics the same as men are. However she is a firm be liever in equal suffrage. But she does not favor the "knock- down-and-drag-out" manner of get ting the ballot. The gentler, more politic methods will gain women the vote in the East, she thinks. The mil itant suffragette is not the kind that wins, Mrs. Champion declares. 1 B v ssstmssiissass y''i ' "J jit ! - - is f in v : S if lif "V f: ?' f-tLgX II I'll H I II I ' SIZE for Size "and Type for Type," Gotdrwh Tireg are as large as the largest put out by any Maker, and WILL BE SO MAINTAINED. This means larger than corresponding Sizes and Type3 of many other Tires for which even higher prices are asked. It means, ' too the most generously .made - FABRIC Tires on the Market, at any price. Manufactured by the largest Rubber Factory in Amer ica,with a 47 year Experience in Rubber-working, and a record for DEPENDABILITY which makes the above statements worthy of prompt acceptance. Made from the new "Barefoot Rubbery" which gives its maximum Traction with minimum jrictign9 with resilience, liveliness and long-life to Tires. ' TRICED on that" "Fair-List" basis initiated Jan? p 1st, 1915, by the B. F. Goodrich Co. which saved A more than $25,000,000 last year to Tire-Users, through its propaganda against Padded Price-Lists. Priced so reasonably low that Competitors, whose prod ucts are not comparable, claim superiority on the mere strength of their Higher Prices (and the Larger Profits they demand from the Tire-User and Dealer). Goodrich Prices are based on what it costs the largest andv longest experienced, Rubber Factory to manufacture Tires, as ONE of the 269 lines of Goodrich Rubber Goods for which it buys Crude Rubber, and over which its Over head Expenses are divided. Good Business Men should know, from"" this why Goodrich "Barefoot" Tires can be (as they are) the best Tires on the Market AT ANY PRICE, though quoted at the moderate "Fair-List" figures frankly and openly pub lished below. Local Address Broadway at Burnside THE B. F. GOODRICH RUBBER CO. Akron, Ohio ....Ford Slzas. 30x3 30x3J 32x3. 33x4 34x4 ..Safety Tread. 36x4 "Fair-list".. 37x6.. , 38xBK f $10.40 t $13.40 ..$15.45 ..$22.00 ...$22.40 ..$31.60 ... $37.33 ..$50.60 NOTICE. "No Concern in America msde, or sold, during if fatet ficl year, nearly 60 many Motor-Car Tires as did The B. F. Goodrich Co. "Our published Challenge, still unanswered, prorae this." "BAREFOOT" MEAT MUST BE INSPECTED Witli Opening of East Sitlo Booth Law Is Made Effective. With tho ' opening tomorrow of a central meat inspection booth on Municipal Dock No. 2, at the foot of h.ast Washington street. the City Health Bureau Is gompr to clamp the lid on all Kast Side markets, requiring them to sell only inspected meats. The booth will care for inspection of all meat consigned to Kast Side commission houses. With this and the present booth at Montavilla the Kast Side supply will be well covered. The restriction against uninspected meat on the West Side will be established within a few days, or as soon as a central West Side inspection booth can be established. LUKE DILLARD GUILTY STAYTON, OR., MAT. JITSiElf DRIVER HERE, SEMUXCKD SOON. Marie Florence llodsrs Chief Witness In Delinquency Can and Others Are Vet to Be Tried. Luke Dillard. first to be tried of the six men indicted by the grand jury on March 14 for their relations with 16-year-old girls, was found guilty by a Jury In the court' of Circuit Judge Morrow in a verdict returned at 2:12 o'clock yesterday morning. He was ac cused of contributing to the delin quency of Marie Florence Hodgpsj who was tho chief- witness agralnst him. Sentence will be pronounced on Dfl lard next Wednesday. The penalty for the crime of which he was convicted reaches the maximum with a year in the County Jail and a fine of $1000. Dillard is a jitney driver, 42 years Old, and has a wife and two children living near Stayton Oy The girl tes tified that he accosted her by name on Hawthorne avenue. January 18, took her for a ride in his machine, to a the ater, and to a hotel. Dillard denied speaking first to the girl, but said hej was attracted by her dejected appear ance and that as he approached her, she poured out a tale of woe that led him to help her get some clothing and shelter for the night. X statement made by Dillard before Deputy District Attorney Robison and a stenographer was repudiated when he took the wit ness stand on Friday. The jury was drawn Friday morn ing, and heard the case, with brief in termissions for meals, until after 11 o'clock at night. Instead of retiring and resuming deliberations the next day, the Jurors stayed with the case and determined on their verdict three hours later. Some of the Jurors ac cepted the beds povided for them at the Courthouse, and others went home at that time. Deputy District Attorneys Hindman and Robison conducted the prosecutions Louis Benfield, a fireman, aged 35; Hugo Heise, a fireman, aged 27; Edward Hillyer, a hotel clerk, aged 25; Robert Wright, a bellboy, aged 22, and Arthur Dunn, a salesman, aged 20. are tho other men indicted. Wright and Hillyer may never come to trial as the chief witness against them, 16-year-old Marie Townsend, has been spirited from the state by her mother. 213 Cases on Coos Connty Docket. MARSHFIELD, Or., April 22. (Spe cial.) There are 263 cases on the court docket for the Coos County April term which opens tomorrow, and it is be- PARKED CARS OBJECTED TO Property Owners Urge City to Force Jitneys to Slove. Troperty owners and proprietors of stores and other business places on Sixth street, between Washington and Stark streets, are again up in arms against the parking of jitneys and livery cars in rront or their places. A petition signed by 10 property own ers and business people was received by City Auditor :garbur yesterday. The petitioners demand immediate action. MENS There's a Reason Your own judgment will tell you that there must be some reason ior. hundreds and hundreds of men coming; here to buy every season. They don't come because of the elevator ride,' nor because of the swell windows or "fine fixtures in this store. They come because I have done for them what I can do for you. . I Can Save You ' SS to $10 . .... . T A oa ca DO aa nn nn nn nn qo oonn nr rr rr oooarrrrrrrr oo oorr rr rrrr ooor.r-r rrrrrr oo nr rrrr rrrr oorrrrrrrrrr lieved the hearings cannot be concluded within three weeks. Circuit Judge James Hamilton, of Douglas County, will preside at the opening of the term and will continue, it is expected for one and probably two weeks. An adjournment is expected before the docket is cleared, to some date in June. Judge Coke, wlio is disqualified in a number of the most important cases, goes to Lincoln County to hold court commencing May 2. Notwithstanding tho laet that la Mas sachusetts the women outnumber the mn by in Hull therfl are W2 more men than women, in a population of slightly more than JOOO. Facts About Teeth And Dentistry! : i ' V. e ? ' ' I ,."""-," ; f - k . - i i t DR. E. O. ACSPIC.VD, Mr. "Life Is Not an Uphill Propo sition for the Fellorv on the Level!" DENTISTRY: I mean modern twentieth century Painless Dentistry of to day, has robbed the pro fession of its terrors. Which only a few years back was the principal reason why people did not have their teeth attended to. Take the Elevator Ride and See the $20.00 Men's SUITS $14.75 ALL READY TO WEAR $25.00 Men's SUITS JIMMY DUNN, The Clothier 315-16-17 Oregonian BIdg. , - ELEVATOR TO 3d FLOOR 3", We Are Absolutely the Very Best in Dentistry PAINLESS SCIENTIFIC LOW PRICED If yoa have two or more teeth In either Jaw I ran, by my Im proved Method, replaoe all your lout teeth and make them aba olately as lifelike aa onr natural ones were. Alao In Rure them to last. M Dentists come and frt but the Electro Painless will alwv.fs be with you Open Nights Flesh Colored Plates SlO.Of) SFF MF Ordinary Rubber Plate . . . . S5.00 t't! m, " . . Porcelain Crowns S3.50 PERSONALLY Gold Fillings,, from ... S1.00 : 22k Gold Crowns. . . S5 & S3.50 15-Year Written 22k Gold Bridge S5 & S3. 50 Guarantee Painless Extraction 50 We Have the Knowledge, Ability and Experience Electro. Painless Dentists In the Two-Story Building Corner of Sixth and Washington Sts., Portland, Or.