TIIE SUNDAY OREGONIAX, PORTLAND, APRIL 11, 1920 17. POLITICS AGAIN IN' STATE OF ERUPTION New Candidates Appear and Interest Develops. FILING PERIOD NEAR END Los cn'gelcs Man Coming to Boost for Hoover Talks at Wood Club Lunch Announced.. Political fever became virulent yes terday and eruptions of candidates took place in .many parts of the state From Coos Bay came word that Charles Hall of Marshfield has chucked his hat into the ring to de feat Ira C. Smith for the state sen atorial nomination for Coos and Curry counties. Senator Smith has held the position for several years, but there has been dissatisfaction for some time and pressure was brought on Mr. Hall to enter the lists. EX. P. Mahaffey of Bend, who ia in the banking business, arrived In Port land and simultaneously with his ad vent spread a report that he probably will jump Into the primaries in an ef fort to capture the republican nomi nation which Jay Upton of Prineville wants. Mr. Upton was in town on his way back from Salem, where he filed with the secretary of state. Both Mr. Upton and Mr. Mahaffey are well known in the central Oregon country, and if Mahaffey goes into the race it will develop a hot contest. Also comes a. rumor from Eastern . Oregon that Bruce Dennis will be a candidate for the state senate for the seat occupied by Walter M. Pierce. Some Flurry Noted Here. Locally there was a flurry among prospective legislators. Hve aspir ants appeared, four of them filing. Those who filed for the house are Franklin F. Korell. Harvey Wells, Alma D. Katz and C. C. Hlndman. Thursday is the final day for filing and by that time it is expected that among others who will file for the bouse are Dr. E. C. McFarland, Dr. C. C. Moore, William L. Finley. Thomas Edwards, Frank J. Lonergan, Captain Hosford, John B. Coffey, Barge Leonard, Dow Walker, A. K. Downs and John C. McCue. CJus C. Moser, who for eight years has been a member of the senate. announced yesterday that he would file his declaration as a candidate for nomination for state senator. Mr. Moser was president of the senate during one session and has been chairman of the judiciary committee. Reports yesterday were to the effect that Robert S. Farrell will once more be a candidate for the senate, and F. C. Howell, who served during the 1919 session and the 1930 special ses sion. James B. Abbott, Hamilton Cor bett and I. N. Day are others expected to enter the contest. New Candidates Appear. If the legislative ticket was dor mant until recently. It Is now making up for lost time and each day new candidates appear. There will be a bountiful supply from which the electors can make their selections. There will be at least two dozen aspirants for the house and a. dozen or 15 for the senate, at the present rot rtf filing TViprw mA ftvA Mil ators to nominate and 12 representa tives and one Joint representative. There will be about three aspirants for each nomination. Ralph C. Ely, an engineer of Los Angeles and former food administra tor of New Mexico, will arrive in Portland tonight. Mr. Ely is making a tour of the western states under the auspices of the Hoover national republican committee. Tuesday noon Mr. Ely will speak before a luncheon of the Hoover republican club of Ore gon at the Portland hotel. Tuesday night he will speak at a mass meeting to be held at the Central Library under the auspices of the-Hoover Re publican club of Oregon. His topio will be "Why Herbert Hoover Should Receive the Republican Nomination for President." Wednesday noon he will address a luncheon at Hillsboro, at which time a Hoover republican club will be organized. Wednesday night he will address a mass meet ing at Oregon City, when another Hoover club will be organized. Ha will leave Wednesday night for Se attle and later will campaign for two days In Idaho and two days In Mon tana. Three candidates for public office will give ten-minute talks at the weekly luncheon of the Leonard Wood Republican club in the Oregon Grill Tuesday noon. James F. Alex ander, candidate for district judge; Stanley Myers, candidate for district attorney, and Thomas A. Sweeney, candidate for congress, will be the three to tell why they expect to be elected. Music will be furnished. IclaL) News ' was received today of ! the sudden death at Long Beach, Cal., of Mrs. Thomas Tracey, formerly Miss ; this city, who succumbed to an ope ration. Her wedding took place last Sunday. Mrs. Tracey, who is survived by her moyier, Mrs. Ella Ahern, and a sister. Miss Helen Otis, Is a niece of Mrs. A. D. Moe and Mrs. Laura Clapp of Hood River. ALB ANT, Or., April 10. (Special.) The funeral of William C. Johnson, who died Thursday afternoon at the home of his brother, .James Johnson, in Benton county, three miles north west of Albany, was held today at the James Johnson home. Rev. Henry Albers of this city conducted the service and interment took place, at the North Palestine cemetery. Mr. Johnson, who was 6? years of age, was a native of Marlon county and had spent most of his life in the Willamette valley. He is survived by the following brothers and sis ters: Thomas A. Johnson of Port land, James Johnson and Paul John son, both residing near Albany, Mrs. Rachel Lafore of Turner, Mrs. Jane Coffey of Salem and Mrs. Myra Bara ger of Roseburg. e KELSO, Wash.. April 10. (Special.) Calvin S. Barlow of Tacoma, who was born a few miles west of Kelso In 1856, passed away at his home in Tacoma the first of this week. Mr. Barlow was a son of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Barlow, pioneers of the Cowlitz valley. He has resided in Tacoma nearly all his life, having re moved there In 1879. One sister, who lives in Vancouver, Wash., is the only surviving member of the pioneer Barlow family, his brother, Benjamin Barlow, having passed away, last October here. Funeral services were held and interment made at Tacoma. CENTRALIA, Wash.. April 10. (Special.)--The death of J. L. Nolan, a prominent resident of Vader. oc curred there Monday. The funeral was held Wednesday under the auspices of the Masonic lodge, of which the deceased was a member. Mr. Nolan had been a resident of Vader for the past ten years. His Lwife and six children survive. Farmer't Wife Proves to Be "Good Samaritan." Automobllbit Findn Rural Owners of Cars Have more Sympathy Than Those Who Still Drive "Dobbin" DlMcovery Resnlts la Reward for Vancouver Woman. ? VANCOUVER, Wash.. April 10. Special.) Farmers owning cars have much more sympathy with auto mobilists than those who don't. At least this was evidenced Thursday on the Camas-Vancouver road. A work man in a small machine had no chains. and when he attempted to climb over a steep, slippery hill slid Into a ditch at one side and could not get out. He went to the nearest farmhouse. where he stated his case to the farm er's wife, who haughtily replied, "You automobillsts think you are the whole thing. Get out the best way you can." Nor would she even for money permit the use of the team on the place. He went to the next house, and the woman said her husband was away, but that the team was in the barn and that he could use the horses. He did and pulled the machine back on the road and returned the horses to their stalls.. Then he went to the house and asked the woman how much he owed her. She would not accept pay and added that" she and her husband owned a machine and that they them selves sometimes got stuck, so she sympathized with others in trouble. The man thanked her. Today he was passing the farm and presented the woman with a beautiful enlarged photograph of General Pershing, taken when he was at Vancouver bar racks January 18. She had had a son in France and was delighted with the gift. CARDS OF THANKS. To the many lovinsr friends and kind neighbors whose sympathy and kindness was expressed in many ways to us during tne long illness ana death of our little daughter Harriet we wish to extend our heartfelt thanks and gratitude. MR. AND MRS. L. E. BILL Adv. AND FAMILY. We wish to express our sincere gratitude to our many friends and neighbors for their kindness and sym pathy shown us during our recent be reavement, tne aeatn or our mother. MR. AND MRS. J. A. HAMILTON. MR. AND MRS. P. STENN1CK AND FAMILY. Adv, We wish to extend thanks to the mariv friends of our mother and sis ter, the late Anna S. Webster, for their many kindnesses during her ill ness and their, sympathy during our last hour of need. MR. AND MRS. T. H. WEBSTER. Adv. MR. W. F. McGILVRAY. English clergymen are forming a trade union to get better pay and working conditions. 0 I Coming! ! 1 This advance notice is given so that men can lay out their plans to be here without fail Next Thursday, April 15 when we shall launch what we consider will prove in every way The West's Greatest Shirt Sale Next Wednesday evening's' and Thursday morning's papers will give details. It will pay to read them. The Store for Men, Main Floor.- Tne QjuALrrr Stcrb or- Portland - .. - -- RATE EXPERT WILL EDWARD M. COtJSIX OUT . FOR SERVICE COMMISSTOX. Vioxtg Experience In Traffic Prob lems Qualifies Candidate for Place, He Believes. Edward M. Cousin, freight rate ad juster and traffic expert, announced yesterday that he will be a candidate for the - republican nomination for .V, ! R A S t... ...... - ; (Special.) Grays Harbor democrats have issued a county-wide call for a mass convention to be held In Aber deen April 24, in the council cham ber at the city hall. At this mass meeting 31 delegates will be selected to the state convention which will be held at Spokane May 17, which in turn will pick 14 delegates and 14 alternates to the-national convention. County campaign plans also will be discussed at the meeting here. CHURCH TO RIVAL MOVIES Films to Be Used to Teach Lesson and Draw Crowd From Theaters. THE DALLES, Or.. April 10. (Spe dial.) The Methodist church of this city tomorrow night at the regular service hour will compete with the theaters for support of the public. A motion, picture machine will be in full operation and two films will be shown. Between the films a 20' minute sermon will be sandwiched. The effort constitutes an innova tion in church circles of eastern Ore gon. Back of it all Is the belief of Rev. W. H. H. Forsyth that the motion picture is a clarifying and emphasizing agency not to be scorned He proposed to turn the motion pic ture appeal for good to account. The films to be shown at the church will all be of an uplifting nature and most of them will .depict a religious story. Edward M. Cansln, who seeks nomination for public service commissioner. FIOXEER OK PORTLAND DUOS S4TIHDAV. MAN VALUED AT $10,000 3Irs. X. V. Hanson Sues Husband's Parents for Alienation. SEATTLE, Wash., April 10. (Spe clal.) Mae Cross Hanson, accusing her husband's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Borthal Norwood Hanson, of alien ating their son from her, opened a $10,000 suit for alienation of affec tions in superior court Saturday. Nor wood Virgil Hanson. 20, Is the hus band. They were married June 18. 1918, and lived happily until Septem ber, Mrs. Hanson testified. "His parents found that my parents and myself did not have as much money as they and couldn't move in their social plane, so they started to estrange my husband from me," ehe charged. "My 'husband and I were living in Michigan when his parents came from Canada, persuaded him to leave me, and took him t-o New Hampshire. He did not come back." Obituary.' Mrs. f. M. Shannon, one of the best known women of Gilliam county, died March '22 at her home near Condon. ir. onannon, wnose maiden name was Ella Nora Myers, was born June 17, 1864, in Woodson county, Kansas. She was married to F. M. Shannon on May-1. 1882, and they came to Ulinam county, Oregon. Eight chll dren were born to this union, five girls and three boys, all of whom sur vlve her, and all being residents of this vicinity. They are: Mrs. Oscar Maley. Mrs. It. W. Hanneraan. Mrs. j: M. Wehrli, Misses Gertrude and Pearl Shannon and Lee, Henry and Walter Shannon. Funeral services were held at the Congregational church Wednesday aftej-noon. Kev. Dr. Nellor deliver Ing an impressive sermon. A quartet sang and floral offerings, were pro fuse and beautiful. One of the larg est funeral processions ever seen here .followed the body to Its last renting place in Mount. Moriah cemetery. - V " - X i "' Sv l A "v. " .sr ''is- riM S v I - if i l 1 IIOPD RIYiir., Cr. April XO. CSjie, James .11. Munk. James H. Munk, one of the pioneers of Portland, died yes terday at his home, 423 Union avenue north.' He was born in London, "England, in 1844 and left home at the age of 13 on a sailing vessel which brought him to San Francisco. In 1861 he came to Portland, where he learned his trade as a boiler maker with Governor Gibbs at the old Willamette Iron works , and was employed for over 25 years by the O.-W. R, 4 N. He was a member of the old Albtna city council; helped or ganize the first volunteer fire . companies of Albina and East Portland, and. was active In Masonry. He was .married in 1869 to Theresa Goodman of Sacramento,. Cal. He ia survived by his widow and three chil dren, Mrs. Jennie E. Hayes, Mrs. Annie T. Woodruff and John C. Munk. Funeral services will be held tomorrow at 2 o'clock from the.McEntee & Ellcr chapel. In terment vriU be la Rivervlew cemetery. : public service commissioner for the district west of the Cascades, to suc ceed Fred L. Buchtel. Mr. Cousin has been a resident of Portland for several years and during this time he has been connected with hearings before the interstate commerce com mission and for two years he was public utility expert for the city of Portland, working in conjunction with the city attorney's office. He took an active part in the rate hear ings of the telephone and street-car companies ana retirea to nis private Interests before these cases had been concluded. "Guarantees real public service" will be Mr. Cousin's campaign slogan and in his statement filed with the secretary of state he declares: "I will, during my term of office. be governed always by the paramount interest and rights of the public. If privately owned utility seeks the advantages and privileges of a pub licly owned utility, I believe the pri vately owned utility should submit to a complete pumic control ana regu lation of its operations including se curities and expenditures. "I shall not dodge responsibility. My aim shall be to invest the office with a real public service character, making it a refuge for the oppressed. at the same time promoting wise con structive policies so necessary for the development of the resources of the state and the comfort of the people." Legion Elects Twin Falls Man. TWIN FALLS, Idaho, April 10.- (Speclal.) Let Bracken of Twin Falls yesterday was chosen state com mander of the American Legion at the final meeting of the state conven tion which took place here April 7, 8 and 9. Laverne Collier of Pocatello and W. A. Worthwlne of Boise were defeated for the office. Kellogg was chosen for the 1921 convention city, and Twin Falls the state headquar ters for the coming year. Veterans Plan Banquet. The 14th annual banquet of Scout Young Camp, No. 2, united Span ish War Veterans, will be held at the Benson hotel tomorrow night at 7:30 o'clock. It will be the anniversary of the signing of the A 30 FOOT CHANNEL TO THE SEA Portland's Waterway to . Ocean Commerce THE PORTS OF PORTLAND AND ASTORIA NOW POSSESS THE DEEP EST HARBOR ENTRANCE ON THE PACIFIC COAST. American engi neering . has completely overcome the unsatisfactory channel conditions formerly existing at the entrance to these harbors. The Columbia river barso. widely, advertised by rival ports has been overcome by the con struction of two great rock Jetties. TpHESE GREAT WALLS, respectively seven and one-half and two and one 'half miles in length, constructed by the 'federal government at a cost exceeding 316.000,000, confine the discharge of the Columbia river, and thus create a harbor entrance of forty-two feet mean water depth. Natural scouring of the river bottom, increased by the Jetty construction, is con stantly producing a . greater depth, with the result that a fifty-foot low water' entrance may be expected within five or six years. rpHB APPROACH AND VICINITY OF THE ENTRANCE CHANNEL are .shpwn by a detailed coast survey chart-to be free 'from sunken rocks, or other hidden obstructions. Their absence, connected with the uniform slope of the ocean bed, creates a very accessible entrance, permitting vessels to stand close in when seeking to enter the river. Less fog exists at the mouth of. the Columbia river than at any other port entrance on the Pacific coast. Fog statistics for the past ten years show an average yearly fog of 'but' 695 hours at the entrance to the Columbia river, whereas San Francisco. averages 1591 hours and Puget sound 1306 hours. FROM .PORTLAND TO THE SEA there exists a channel with minimum depth of thirty feet mean lower low water. This channel represents . the, Jruita of permanent dike construction and dredging completed some years ago. The dredged portions of the channel have a minimum width . of .300 .feet, and.UR Xo .600 feet where cuts are located in the bend of the river and where other conditions -require a wider channel. Great stretches . of deeper water between cuts afford frequent and adequate anchorage places where vessels may swing with the tide, without interference to navigation. THE FOLLOWING TABLE shows channelconditions of the Oregon ports equal the great inland ports of the United States: Miles (Channel Dimensions) . . from Depth Depth 'Pdr't Location ' -open sea Width L. W. H.W. New Orleans' Mississippi River 106 300 30 31 Philadelphia . Delaware River 105 500 30 36 Galveston Galveston Bay 6 600 30 31 U ASTORIA Columbia River 14 300 31 3&M PORTLAND Columbia River '. 112 300 30 32 THE ABOVE CHANNEL DESCRIPTION AND FAVOR ABLE COMPARISON of Oregon ports with the great inland ports of America, proves great shipments can be attracted, and one of the greatest off-shore trades in the United States developed. i'-"j THENOTHERNNATOLBAhJK AiMll reW - . "For a Greater Oregon tfWffli rz -"L.toC- ii us . rrrr- r-'T-tTn LUrn hmhi rnn,nq-3 - s3-- i ir i la.vyicitwr treaty with Spain. Among the speak- ers will be Mayor Baker,. Colonel Carle Abrams. Major Clarence' R. Hotchklss, Major W. C. Gilbert, chap lain, and Past Commander . Elmer R. Lundburg. Democrats to Meet April 24. ABERDEEN, Wash., April 10. Pay for themselves in a short time in saving of time, fuel and non-shrinkage of foods. Send for Recipe Booklet. From $23.50 Up Pressure Cooker Sales Co. With Li" Ran- Co, 19T Fourth, Crawford Six Substantial Luxurious Service s Sample cars now on display at Hawthorne avenue (East Side) and East Eighth street. . ' Eilers Auto Sales Corporation Kis ca.nn.oi liaiPTpeiru: with- "Broadway Service Is the kind of up-to-date Bank- ing Service you will appreciate. 11 Phone Broadwaj 3422 Broadway and SUrk I Because they never deflate when punctured T matters not if a nail tears through a casing and pierces a Bonner Inner Tube while you are on a pleasure cruise. You probably will not know that vou have sustained a puncture. You will not have to stop and change tires, soil clothes, and rob yourself of the joy of the trip because the Bonner 1 ube will maintain tne same air pressure, puncture or no punc ture! Sounds phenomenal, doesn t ltr Filled With Air Only No Filler No Gum Compound The scientific self sealing principle of the Bonner is the secret of it alL Bonner Tubes are thickest where other tubes are thinnest. The cross section shows the crescent-shaped . tread two-and-one-half times thicker than the ordinary good tube. This portion, in which is embedded a strip of non-stretchable fabric, is so constructed as to be constantly under compression. When punctured it grips the nail tightly and prevents air ' leakage. If the nail is withdrawn,, the rubber, under compression, "squeezes itself together, com pletely sealing the hole. Bonner Tubes Mean Uninterrupted Mileage BOKflSER TUBES MEjtlf VTV INTKRR V PTED MILEAGE RED CAP GARAGE 40 STARK STREET PORTLAND, OREGON Broadway 3Mt. Phone or Wrtt L. S. HXTGHCS, Care Rrd Caa Grne, 40 Stark, FOR EXCEPTIONAL DEALER PROPOSITION I Non-ztretchable I i, jjiaj . Thickened Tread Sectlcn If (oldnnd When punctured compressed section squeezes itself together, sealing puncture