I 12 THE SUNDAY OHEfiOXIAX,' PORTLAND, MARCH 0. 1910. PORTLAWD DUTTDGET SIIPJ IIJERS HERE !TJ 1 M2D Northwest Temples Manifest Loyalty to Al Kader. UNITED FRONT PRESENTED Convention Committee Selected and Pledges Made to Aid In the En. . " teitalnment of Visitors. Plirlnedom of the northwest mani fested its loyalty to Portland when nobles and potentates from five temples met in this city to form an associa lion that shall have the sole aim of presenting a united front to Shriners asking that they hold their 120 Im perial council at Portland. Portland Shriners showed they were right worthy of the Shrine trust when at a great meeting at the municipal auditorium, attended by practically all Portland Shriners they began to whip together last night the beginning of a big fund to provide ffor the necessary exploitation. From early in the morning when the wearers of the red fez began to arrive they manifested but one eentiment: Portland for 1920." "Was it unanimous? It was dis tinctly and decidedly eo. Convention Committee Selected. At a meeting at noon at the Imperial hotel, at which the northwest delegates took part, there was brought into being the Pacific northwest nhrine convention committee for 1920. Noble Ivan L. Hy land of Nile temple, Seattle, Was elected chairman of that committee and Iark Woodruff of Al Kader, Portland, sec retary. "Knowing the rare spirit of hospi tality which exists in Portland and her magnificent capabilities for enter taining. -we not only indorse the invi tation, but we pledge the nobility of the northwest to supplement, aid and as-s?i;-t Al Kader temple In making the 19-0 session of the imperial council one of the most enjoyable ever held any where," ran the text of the- resolution adopted in support of the Invitation which Al Kader temple will present at the forthcoming session of the council at Indianapolis urging that the imperial ilivan and council accept the hospitality of Portland iu 1920. Xorthwent I" United. Tho northwest is to act as a unit. To that end there will be an executive committee of 12 members to have active charge of the work of the northwest association. Chairman Ilyland then appointed the following committee: George W. Stapleton, Al Kader Tem ple; Charles A. Welsh, Gizah Temple; George T. Collins, Hillah Temple; II. A. Pierce, El Katif Temple; lillis Lewis Uarrett'on, Afifl Temple; Henry K. Cun ningham, Algeria Temple: John C Wat rous, Nile Temple; Charles S. Hender son, Bagdad Temple; William Thomp son, Marlam Temple; Kdward Smith, El Korah Temple; W. F. W. Lent, for the temple at Calgary; Arthur Chap man, for the temple at Winnipeg; K. A. Gardner, for the temple at Regina. George W. Stapleton will be chairman of a "transportation committee to se cure train service to Indianapolis and conduct a gigantic excursion. A steering committee to take charge of the campaign at Indianapolis was then appointed by Chairman Hyland as follows: Charles A. Welsh. Victoria: Hal Hutchinson. Portland. William Davis. Portland; Bishop Keator, Tacoma: Past Potentate Shaw, Spokane. ILLUSTRIOUS NOBLES AND POTENTATES OF SHRINE IN NORTHWEST COME TO PORTLAND WITH SOLE AIM OF BACKING CAMPAIGN, "PORTLAND FOR 1920" SHRINE IMPERIAL COUNCIL. Klt v 1 HORNETTO GEASE1H STIN6 PrBLISIU3R FOOD GUILTV CRIMINAL LIBEL.. James Fullerton Sentenced to One Year's Imprisonment, WTilch Is Communtcd to One Month. EUGENE, Or., March 8. James Ful lerton, publisher of the Oregon Hornet, who was Thursday declared guilty of criminal libel against the board of regents. President P. L. Campbell, the faculty and student body of the Uni versity of Oregon, was sentenced to serve one year in the county jail by Circuit Judge G. F. Sklpworth this morning, after a motion for a new trial had been refused. Fullerton, however, will serve only one month of his term. Judge Skip worth in passing sentence said that on account of Fullerton's advanced age and apparent ill health, he would have to serve only one month in the county jail and that the remaining 11 months would bo commuted during good be havior. Following a warning by the judge that he must make no more derogatory remarks against the university in his paper, the Oregon Hornet, Fullerton an nounced that the Hornet is to cease publication. - . ; ' w - ii VETEMH RETURNS HOME WILLIAM JONES FIGHTS AVITII MARINES AT BELLEU WOOD. few V A - - , V X V, ' Above lert to rlgbt Ivn I. Hylaad. Srattlei Cnptaln John Rex TkiinMii Seattlej C, A. Wei ah, Siew Vtmln ater. II. C" i D. K. Mekenste. Sew Weat mlntlrr, B. C. A. K. Ilnmlll. Seattlr) John C. Watroaa, Seattle, and P. J. O'llara. Seattle. Ilelow Ivan I Hy land. rhilrmnn Pacific orthweat Shrine committee for 1 90. nreak, when we were replaced by fresh companies." Since belnar gassed, Jones has spent most of his time in hospitals and cas ual camps. He was but recently re turned to this country. Portland Tonng Mat! Battle for 14 Days Against Hans and Then Is Put Out by Gas. William Jones, one of the marines who helped to stem the Hun tide at Belleau wood last June, has returned to Portland, where he has been de tailed to recruiting duty at the office in the Panama building. Young Jones, ! who resides at 49 Webster street, was His Hearing Restored. The invisible antiseptic ear drum In vented by Mr. A. O. Leonard which is in reality a miniature megaphone, fit ting inside the ear and entirely out of sight, is restoring tho hearing of liter ally hundreds of people in New York City. Mr. Leonard invented this re markable drum to relieve himself of deafness and head noises, and it does this so successfully that no one could tell that he is a deaf man. A request for information addressed to A. O. Leonard, 70 Fifth ave., suite 113, New York City, will be given a prompt re ply. Adv. a. rvHiirr i-iiirnia wis inii. W. J. Hofmann, potentate of AJ Passed, lat ..une after standing up Kader, Portland, was then instructed by Chairman Hyland to visit the Cali fornia temple of the Shrine as therep resentative of the northwest committee, enlisting their aid for the "1920 council for Portland" move. The official delegates to the north west conference included: C. A. Welsh, past potentate Gizah temple, Victoria, B. C; Ellis Lewis Garretson, imperial ohief rabban Afifi temple, Tacoma, Wash.; H. A. Pierce, potentate El Katif temple, Spokane; Ivan L. Hyland. Nile temple, Seattle, and George W. Staple ton. Al Kader. Portland. The conference convened in Port land at the invitation of Supreme Po tentate Hofmann of Al Kader, Port land. Potentate Pierce, who in non-Shrine circles is city editor of the Spokane Chronicle, presented the delegates with a special edition of the El Katif Chronicle, telling all about the im mense fund Portland raised last night, a feature of journalistic enterprise which amazed the delegates. "The El Katif Chronicle is the onlj paper which dares to tell the truth about' members of the Shrine," re marked Potentate Pierce. "The El Katif Chronicle -will support. editorially and otherwise, the Portland 1920 campaign, and no Shriner will dare oppose the E4 Katif Chronicle." ( Lewis to Erect New Bridge. CHEHALIS, Wash., March 8. (Spe cial.) Lewis county is to erect a fine new steel bridgs across the Chehalis river at Adna, six miles west of this city. For years an old wooden struc ture has etood at that point, on the National Park (soon to be Ocean Beach) highway. A 220-foot span will replace it, the new site being down stream a short distance from the old bridge. On April 7 bids will be opened. Sugar Beet Acreage Hopes High. YAKIMA, Wash., March S. (Special.) Between 6000 and 7000 acres of sugar beets have been signed up with the Utah-Idaho Sugar company in the Hunnyside and Toppenish districts. This is about half the amount that will be required to insure completion and oper ation of the factories the company has commenced constructing at these places. The prospects for obtaining the full acreage required are said to be good. Vukima Office to Be Continued. YAKIMA, Wash., March S. (Special.) W. F. Calvert, manager of the federal employment office here, has received from Lawrence Wood of Seattle, state director of the service, assurance that the Yakima office will be continued indefinitely. almost constantly against German at tacks for two weeks. Enlisting at the Portland office a month after the United States entered the world war, the young marine trained successively at Mare Island and Quantico. landing in France in Febru ary, 1918. After a short . period of training he was sent into the trenches in the Verdun sector, where he spent two months before being transferred to the vicinity of Belleau wood. "The Germans might have broken through our lines almost any time after the firstjfew days of the fight at Bel leau wood," said Mr. Jones. "One morn ing we found ourselves in the front line trenches after the French had fil tered back through us during the night. We never budged from those trenches, though the Germans gave us every thing they had. "I was gassed on the 14th day of fighting. Of our original company of 250, only nine were left. One morn ing, when replacement troops failed to arrive promptly, four men held the company trenches. The Germans had started their gas attack before mid night it was mustard gas, the kind that burns. I held out until nfter day- Berno Committees Busy. BERNE, Switzerland, March 8. The international conference of league of nations societies, in session here, spent today In committee work and will con tinue this procedure tomorrow. The next plenary session will be held on Monday. Mail Again Goes to Egypt. PARIS, March 8. Regular mail serv ice from France to Greece, Turkey, t.gypt and 4yria has been re-estab lished. Two mails for these destlna tions, the first since the armistice, left Marseilles yesterdftv. BERLIN REVOLT . QUELLED GOVERNMENT IN CON TROD AND PROTECTING WORKMEN. Large Number of Spartacana Taken Prisoner In Fighting Will Bo Sentenced to Death. BASEL. March 8. Government troops have suppressed the armed revolt at Berlin, according to a dispatch from that city and are now protecting work' LONDON, March 8. A great number of fapartacans i were taken prisoner in the fighting in the center of Berlin Friday and will be sentenced to deatlu according to an Exchange Telegraph dispatch from Copenhagen. AMSTERDAM, March 8. The major ity socialists have withdrawn from the strike committee in Berlin, accordlnr to a telegram filed there Friday after noon. The majority socialists held a meeting and decided to end the strike Immediately and call on tho workers to resist terrorism. MINE SHUT-DOWN PLANNED ACTION TO STABILIZE: COAL IN. DUSTBY PllOPOSED. Cessation of Mining Throughout the Country for Few AVeeks DJeld to Bo Advisable. HA2KLTON, pa., March 8 At a meeting of the executive board of the United Mine Workers of America for this district it was announced today that anthracite delegates will seek an absolute shut-down of coal mines throughout the nation for a few weeks in an effort to stabilize the industry The anthracite delegates will present this recommendation to tho national policy committee of the United Mine Workers at its meeting in Indianapolis March 18. INDIANAPOLIS. March 8 General suspension of coal mining throughout the country for a few weeks, to sta bilize the industry, was not regarded as probable at headquarters of the United Mine Workers of America here this afternoon, a representative of the national officers said. He asserted that no suggestion that such a course be followed had been made to officials or considered at headquarters, but it was possible that some' recommendation of the kind might be made at the meet ing of the national policy committee here March ) a. i.iVEZSES-- ASTEUR1ZBD MILK 1 1 i i . i r 'i. it- x 1 1 1 1 i Do you like to know that every bottle of milk you buy will have the rich flavor that comes only from the finest of pastures and the best of feed and water? Do you want the cream that won the Gold Medal at the National Dairy Show at Columbus, Ohio, October, 1918, awarded the highest score at the show 97.6? Clover Hill Certified Milk Fernwood Pasteurized Milk Fernwood Pasteurized Cream Fernwood Pure Raw Milk Safe, clean milk, bottled on the farm from healthy cows." Fernwood Cottage Cheese, made fresh daily; mixed with a liberal portion of rich cream. . i: . Butter, Eggs, Cheese mv Fernwood Dairy wWCn 15 Union Ave- East W61 B 2724 II. A. D. Fisher May Bo Ambassador. LONDON', March 7. H. A. U. Fisher, minister of education, probably will be appointed British ambassador to Wash ington, according to the Nation. Herbert Albert Ilurens Fisher was born in London in 1865. He was a Lowell lecturer at Harvard university in 1909. In 1915 he was appointed a member of tho government committee on German outrages. He was given the portfolio of the ministry of educa tion January, 1919. In I'remler Lloyd George's cabinet. claL) The lumber of the Badger Mill company at Tenino, which recently failed. Is being sold by T. F. Mentser to satisfy the claims of workmen, who have received 50 per cent of the amounts due them for wages. A me chanic's lien has been placed on the Plant to protect the workmen in rawe the sale of lumber does not raise the required amount. Kathryn Browne Decker, who ap peared In "The Beloved Vagabond"" an J other pictures, died in Colombo, Ceylon, recently. She was on a professional tour of the orient. - Hood River Man. Visits Home. HOOD RIVER, Or.. March 8. (Spe cial.) Harry Dobson, son of Joe Dob son, local resident, who, with six other members of the C3d regiment, infantry. Is en route to Fort Seward, Alaska, to be mustered out, has been here several days visiting friends and relatives. Lumber Sold for Creditors. CENTRAL! V Wash.. March R. (Sn. f In San Francisco STEUflBT Geary Street, just off Union Square From SioSO a - Day Breakras.SOu Lunch taOi; ilinnur Hi. 0(1 Sundani; tJreawag. Jfbu Utnner$1.2ii Munlcpa'i ear line direct to door. Motor tbttmccU principai trains and sUameia. Portland and the North west's finest hostelry. Rates $2 and up Splendid grill and fa cilities for entertaining private parties. Portland, Oregon aT 3ih mix. Mill I'll' A convenient, enjoyattle home for the Seattle vis itor. Location excep tion ally convenient to trans portation and to wholesale and shopping districts. Refined social entertainment evenings,; one of Pacific Coast's xamous caxes. 2foiv Showing Authentic Spring Modes and Fashions Hanan Shoes THE BEST ON EARTH for tAen and "Women We arc now offering an unlim ited latitude of the real indi vidual "Hanan" designs which meet the requirements of men and women who are particular in the selection of their foot wear for every occasion. New York's Latest Tailored "Spats" White, Fawn, Taupe and Brown Broadcloth also Black Satin. PORTLAND'S SMARTEST SHOE HOUSE OUT-OF-TOWN ORDERS GIVEN PROMPT ATTENTION WViJt& Corner Fourth and JMorrison t - - A 'I1 A.v t 1 l it. " t . 1 IR. K. r,.AlPUAD,MGH. My l'r-f 1V la Limited to lllak- . lass natlatry Oaly at I'rlcra Kveryone Cmm Afford. Paying the Fiddler Nature Has No Law of Limitations; if You Cheated Youth, You Must Pay Old Age. A wise man would not light a candle in the day time, but giddy youth does it every day. Not content with its feeble glare, he even lights BOTH ENDS and barters hiB future that his present may be a "gay white way." Sometime in life there must be bacrifice and deprivation if you have much in youth, you may lack more in old age. Wasted money, wasted opportunities, wasted lives,' line the paths of pleasure The straight and narrow path widens and becomes smoother the longer it is traveled, and there's an easy chair at the end of the journey. If every man and woman had deprived themselves of a few luxuries in youth, and SAVED THE MONEY it would not have taken long to oversubscribe all four liberty loan3. If people today would cease paying for such questionable luxuries as "social prestige," "imaginary reputation" and "red tape," medical, legal and dental fees would come down to where ordinary people could reach them. "For the last 15 years I have demonstrated that it is not necessary to charge exhorbitant fees in order tof give the people the very best there is in dentistry." I have proven that a dentist may be competent, honest and a gen tleman and not sacrifice either by advertising. If people prefer to pay heavy premiums for the privilege of having their exclusive dentists, that is their own business; but never forget for a moment that "the fiddler" may call for his pay when it is least convenient for you to settle. , Paying for something YOU DON'T GET is neither just .to your self nor your fellowman. i MY VORK IS GUAMNTEED ABSOLUTELY FOR 15 YEARS Open Nights WK II V. THK K i.i:im;i .. Miii.irv am i:i't:iiii;(i;. Electro Painless Dentists IN THE TWO-STORY BUILDING Corner Sixth and Washington Sts, Portland, Or.