TITE SUNDAY OREGONIAN. PORTLAND, NOVEMBER 20. 1021 TASK JUST TO-LIVE Ifj SOVIET RUSSIA Some People of Gentle Birth Survive Experiment. FOOD, NOT MONEY, NEED After Several Years of Censored Silence Letters Are Now Being Received Telling of Struggle. RIGA RIGA. Latvia. (By the As sociated Press.) After several years of censored silence, letters are now coming out of Russia from American, English and Russian people of gentle birth who remained and survived the great experiment In human lives In communistic Russia. These tell In an Impressive way what the mere task of keeping alive has meant to these persons accustomed, before the revo lution, to lives of luxury. Here Is an extract from a letter written by an American woman, 83 years old, from Petrograd: "In three years, I have not heard from any of my friends, the dearest I have in the world. They must be greatly astonished at my having so far survived all these horrors, at my years, when thousands of younger people are dally dying of starvation and untold hardships. "It was most kind and thoughtful of you to send that money; I only hope it may arrive. For of course, al though I work seven to eight hours a day (official translation work, com paratively well paid), the economic conditions are so monstrous that It Is Impossible to earn anywhere near enough for the very barest necessi ties of life. No wonder when butter and sugar are 25,000 rubles a pound. Food Needed More Than Money. "Theref6re. what I need more even than money is food, the plainest arti cles of food. These three years I and my faithful companion, for many years my maid, but for whom I should certainly not be living today, have subsisted on black rye bread arid water porridge and gruels, drinking our so-called 'tea' and 'coffee' (sorry surrogates) without milk and sugar, with black bread, well salted. We have forgotten what wheat bread is like, and as for eggs, I should Jike to see one before I die. "Now the assistance I would crave of you Is simply this: From time to time send me food. We have not seen meat for three years, and for pity's sake send sweetB, and sweets, and J most especially candy and chocolates. Do not laugh at me. Just Imagine, three years without sugar or any thing sweet. The longing for sweets at times becomes absolutely morbid. "One thing more, and an essential one: send two or three candles. We are given electricity only for a couple of hours. Kerosene or "candles are not to be had any more for any amount of money, so we have no means of striking a light during the dark hours of night, which Is not only extremely uncomfortable, but may on occasion be a real danger." Women Anxious to Leave. Here Is an extract from another letter, this from a young woman to whom an American In the Baltic Btates sent a package of food: "I wish you would write and advise me what and now we could do to get away from here. To condemn Mamma to starvation, here, would be a crime. We must think of some way out, but I simply get lost when I try. "To get away, many girls have mar ried foreigners, and thus become for eign subjects, when they can freely leave the country, but I haven't con sidered that. The doctors advise me to go. They prescribe good food, but I can only smile at them In reply." A letter written in faltering Eng lish by a Russian girl to the same American recalls the Joy which the American workers in Russia spread everywhere. Here are extracts, spell ing and all, as she wrote. 'You know till the first visit to us of . . . (Some Americans) . . . in our house were not heard laughter nor lively conversations. With them it was if the spring came to our house. In the beginning it was strange, but from that time the grave's stillness of our house had gone and we returned to life. Cer tainly for you it is difficult to under stand us . . . but in our life with you went away ell happiness and light." Deer-Meat Owner Fined. ROSEBURG. Or.. Nov. 19.-(Spe-cial.) C. C. Voytcllo. resident of the DUlard vicinity, entered a plea of guilty when arraigned today on a charge of unlawful possession of ven ison, and paid a fine of J50. DAILY BIETEOROLOGICAL REPORT. PORTLAND. Nov. 19. Maximum tem perature, M degrees; minimum, 84. River reading at 8 A. M . 2.8 feet; chanie in lRnt 24 hours, 0.2 foot fall. Total rain fall (5 P. M. to 6 P. M ). 1.80 Inches: total rainfall since September 1. 1021. 7.68 Inches; normal rainfall since September 1, 1921, 9.03 Inches: deficiency of rainfall since September 1, 1921, 1.9ft Inches. -Sunrise, 7:17 A. M. ; sunset, :8 P. M. ; total sunshine, none; possible sunshine, 0 hours and 10 minutes. Moonriae, 10:14 P. M., Sunday: moonset, 11:40 A. M., Sunday. Harometer (reduced to sea level) 6 P. M., i'tt.SS Inches. Relative humidity: 5 A. M., 14 per cent; noon, 90 'per cent; 6 P. M.. M'l per cent. THE) WEATHER. Wind 45 STinONS. Weatbat. linker ..... Poise Boston Calnarr .... Chicago .... I'enver l)cs Moines. . K u re k a .... Gaivcrton ... Itelena .... JunQaut . . .. Kunsan Cly. l.os An?ilea. Murshfleld .. Mrdford Minneapolis at, 0 88 0 2-12 H Cloudy Rain Clear Clear .441. . SB 1J0 00 14SW 10 0 .001 3B 1 (SO 80 0 w N Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy iCIoudy Clear ou , 01)1, S0. SO 0 aw 00I18I.V 0() ..INW, Snow . .,'3n o .001. .1.... 0UI..ISW ool. .!w 42!12ISW 001. . NW I'll 4010. 4fl! 70 0 441 52.0. 33) 48 0 ltll 18 0 ooi n,o. 88 to;o 42l M'l. 30 AS 0 28! 800. 3:1 Ml. Clear Clear Cloudy Cloudy oo;io:JvViClear New Orleans 4'I0 N rt. cloudy Clear Rain. CleaT Nesr York. North Head Phoenix ... Pocatelto .. Portland ... Posebui-s; .. Sacramento l.ouls. . .San Itlerro. K. Francis' Sfcltle . . S.tkut .. Spokane 00 oi S 401. ,NW ool . .IV 00 20 SV 3!)'li) SW 00I12S 001.. INW 10! . . N OO10 NW Cloudy Katn 441 84 0 Cloudy .111 0 Clear 30 8 Cloudy Clear Clear Cloudy Cloudy' I'll : 8t. 0. BV0 00 . . W S4 0. 48,.. N . . 3tl 0 001.. .... 18 0. . .1 34 0 . 30 Sii 0. ;. . .i2s o. 00!. . !NB Taconia Tatoosh aldcsf (ISIfliNKIRain 1 H 82, U ICIoudy Wallu Wallu. 'Wnnhinson . Winnipeg ... r. kina 22! 22 0 I 021 70 0 12!. JS iSnow 'Cloudy Iciear '!Snow 001. .'s 1-141 -2 0. on'K'iS I 18! 20 0.721. .IF. tA. ,M. today, day. -x. H. report of preceding FORECAST3. Portland and vicinity Rain; Incntalnt f."tithorly wIliIm. Vuahtnfrton Rln west.' rain or snow en.-'t pertn-n: warmer; slrons southeasterly Cales rn the coast. Orgon Rain; strung southerly gales on the coast. Y. w. c. a: girls establish handy shop TO SOLVE PROBLEM OF UNEMPLOYMENT Opportunity Is Presented Young Women Out of Work to Earn Money in Dignified Way and Without Recourse to Charity Products for Christmas. ; 'v. 'H a5V V - V . :':.' A - SS 1$ 7 THE FOUR INDUSTRIAL CLl'BS OF TURE OF TOTS INSTEAD of resorting to charity and other methods adopted by civic organizations and welfare bodies to combat unemployment and alleviate its distress, the members of the four industrial clubs of the local Young Women's Christian association have taken the problem into their own hands and solved It In their own way. Realizing that the one thing an un employed person wants most is mon ey, what Is called the "Handy Shop" has been opened on the sixth floor of the Y. W. C. A. building, giving unemployed girls an opportunity to earn money in a dignified way and without recourse to charity. Eligible to work In this shop are SOUTHWESTERN OREGON IRON DEPOSIT DEVELOPMENT IS ON Large Bodies of Ore and Building of Highway to Oregon Caves Make Resources in Waldo District Practical. , BY A. E. KELLOGG. GOLD HILL, Or., Nov. 19. (Special.) At present considerable impor tance attaches to the iron deposits of southwestern Oregon. Whether Ore gon can profitably produce Iron and steel from local ores and develop an extensive industry is the question with the Oregon foundries. It was during the war period that the north west emelters set out to uncover local Iron deposits. This was due principally to the scarcity of shipping and ex orbitant transportation rates from abroad. After the war these operators found that to make their industries practical it meant a fundamental and scientific production of local ore. Iron ore is known In the Gold Hill, Lower Applegate and Waldo districts in this region. The Gold Hill ore is a magnetite pyroxenlte; that of Waldo a magnetite occurring in ser pentine; while that of Applegate is a qnartzite, having a cement of hema tite with some magnetite. The Gold Hill deposits are practical, due to their proximity to shipping, while the Ap plegate deposits are not practical, due to the lack of transportation. The large bodies of ore and the building of the highway to the Oregon caves, which passes within a mile of these deposits, make the Waldo deposits practical. Ore Discovered In 1870. The history of the Gold Hill deposits dates back to the year 1870. when the locators, two practical iron miners from Wales before the days of rail road in this region, hauled by wagon several tons of ore from these de posits to Sacramento, Cal.. and from this point shipped it to Swansea. Wales, for a smelter test. . The re port on this shipment Is not available, but it is said to demonstrate fully a high-grade magnetite iron ore. In the early '80s, Just after the rail road was completed through this val ley, two iron experts. Burgess and Pomeroy, who were construction en gineers of this railroad, acquired the property. They made extensive de velopment in the mine and shipments t the Oswego, Or., smelter. On account of the low price of ore and the high transportation charges they abandoned the project. However, before closing down they refused the sum of $50,000 for their holdings. Soon after both partners died and the prop erty fell Into the hands of a multi tude of heirs, litigation followed and after many years the property was acquired by the Garfield Iron & Coal company, which has since kept the mine in idleness. The old works in the mine are inaccessible and observa tions can be taken only from the surface. These deposits are located at an elevation of from 1850 to 2250 feet within 1H miles north of Gold Hill, and within three-fourths of a mile from the main line of the Southern Pacific railway, with Rogue river be tween. The ferruginous material is found in bunches or lenses in Pale osolo sediments which include some limestone and abundant arglllite. The sediments are cut by a dike of "gran ite" as indicated by surface float on top of the ridge at an elevation of about 000 feet. The sedimentary rocks strike north. 20 degrees east, and dip about 70-80 degrees east. The ferruginous material Includes limonite, hematite and magnetite. Deposits Are Masnlve. The ore in the- Waldo deposits has some of thed.'tingulshing features of both red al brown hematite. The deposits are very massive and remark ably regular in character and quality throughout 'l exposures. It has a bright metallic luster, where freshly broken, running into a steel-gray color apd assuming. a red tint in thin fragments. The ore strongly resembles that produced at Whitehaven and Ulverstone in northwest England, where the masses are described as "splendid." 15. 30 and 60 feet in thick ness. The limestone and ochre are here in great quantity. Thess deposits are situated on the 'ith slope of Buclc mountain, Jose prin . county. Or. This slope extends J.wn to Cave creek and at thlr near est paint these deposits are not to exce-i oa j mile north of the en trince to the great limestone caverns. A i Ail i i .4 V- THE Y. W. C. A. HAVE OPENED A "HANDY SHOP" FOR THE MANUFAC BY GIRLS TEMPORARILY OUT OF only the girls whom the employment bureaus have not for the time being been able to place, and they are allot ted work and sufficient earnings to cope with whatever particular emer gency they are facing. Some are al lowed to earn 7 5 cents a day if they have other help and those without outside assistance are allowed from f 1.50 to $2 and more a day. When the shop was first opened only two girls at a time were allowed to work, but this has now been in creased to six, as the demand for their products has been raised to that number. The girls are allowed to work until a Job is available for them and then new girls take their places. The products are mostly toys for known as the "artie Halls of Ore-I gon." The mountains are the Siskiyou, or as designated by the United States geological department, the "Klamath group of mountains." According to C. B. Watson, this group belongs to a very early geological epoch and con stituted an Island in the ocean long before the Cascade range, on the east, came above the surface. This was an island when the larger part of the American continent was under the sea Heavy Ochre Deposits Found. This mass of iron occupies, approxi mately, a space one and one-quarter or one and one-half miles in length, and, as near as can be ascertained by surface Indications, one-halT to three quarters of a mile in breadth, and from a conservative estimate, 600 feet in thickness. Granite dikec bound It on the east and west, but within the field of these croppings no other character of rock in place is found. Float limestone is plentiful on the surface and heavy cliffs of marble cap the top of the mountain 1000 feet above the Iron. Below the marble and above the Iron is a heavy deposit of ochre strong ly charged with iron, . which makes an excellent yellow pigment. No test of this ochre for silver is available, but its presence is likely. The erosion is more marked on the south slopes than on the north. Here a complete erosion and disappearance of limestone in place has occurred, while at the top and on the north slope the mar ble remains and is heavy. The limestone formation through metamorphism has in considerable part become marble of a good quality and is in the great caves and caverns a mile away and on the opposite side of the canyon. Reasonable specula tion will suggest that in remote periods this great mass of iron was forming in caverns on the slope where It is bedded, and it is now FOUR OF THE MARINES WHO GUARD UNCLE SAM'S Eleven Tines from Sua Dlrffo have ibis snows a ufiicssicsi proiecimn; n irurs carrjina; rtgisierra nan. From now on a detachment of 11 marines will sruard the central pontofflce, other stations where they ara needed and all mail trucks carrying consignments of registered mall in Portland. This Is in pursuance to the action taken by tho government recently to put a stop to mail robber'es by providing heavily-armed guards for all postoffices and mail trains. On Friday night tl marines arrived in Portland, with Sergeant C. J Lesson in charge, and reported to Post master Jones for duty. Ten of the detachment will be distributed In various other cities and 11 will remain In Portland. The primary purpose of the guard is to protect registered malls. Men will be detailed to ride on trucks carrying this class from station to station and to ths trains. They will also mount guard at the main postoffice aiiu several other stations in town. One marine also mount guard in the lobby of the main building during the day. Postma'ster Jones said more men would be detailed to Portland if they were needed, as the government Intends to make the mail guard complete and efficient. Ths detachment of 11 men will bs tried out first, however, and if it proves adequate, no further requests will be made. lift f-4 I , -i ; if s t k'V" V .f-w J. t: A V. if. '.. - 4Tfr a,, i x EMPLOYMENT. children, appropriate for Christmas buying, such as Bedtyme Buddies, Bungalow Babies, Huck Finn treasure bags and other novelties. All these are originals, designed within the shop. - The Meier & Frank Co. has donated a sales space on their glove counter to the shop and this has been put into operation. The demand for the toys has grown so that the organization expects to provide work for at least 20 girls until Christmas time. The four industrial clubs subscribed $125 capital from their treasuries, in cluding a contribution from Mrs. C. J. Smith. Otherwise the plan has been entirely self-supporting and Tree from charity. forming in the great cavern a mile away. Leaving the marble cliffs on the top of Buck mountain and proceeding down the south slope, one notices the thinning out of the lime, until, at a descent of about 1000 feet, the angle of declination changes abrupt ly and the ochreous deposits appear. This ochre can be traced from the ran te Ke " lne aV ? , ne . kTIHIIIIH fllKf 71 I n H WRr .1 11 M I IIP 1 11 W rh( h, .h. . nA ,,., ,nrin the ochre the slope flattens, forming a bench gently declining for several hundred yards, where a knuckle is formed by another sharp drop in the surface angle. Everywhere along this knuckle the iron crops above tbe surface and also at points on the bench above. 81ope Heavily Forested. Below this knuckle the surface flattens somewhat and at its lower edge another line of iron croppings appears, continuing for a distance below. In all this space from the top of the ochre capping to a short distance below the lower cropping of iron no other character of rock in place is found; it is all iron with con siderable limestone-float littering the surface. Except occasional . brush patches of small area, this mountain slope is heavily forested with yellow fir. sugar pine, cedar and madrona; on the whole, for the purpose of mining, operations, the timber is plen tiful and suitable. Analysis shows this ore to contain 75 per cent metallic iron. These lands are in the United States forest re serve. Attempts have been made in the past few years by many com panies and Individuals to acquire mineral rights by location, especially during the war period, with a view of acquiring eventually a mineral patent, but as a rule these claims are abandoned. The government this sea son let a contract for the construc tion of a modern highway from the Grants Pass-Crescent City coast high way to those wonderful caves, which, next to Crater lake, are southern Oregon's greatest natural wonders. This highway will be completed for the 1922 tourist traffic to the caves. Heretofore these caverns have been accessible only to footmen and pack accessible highways. "i '5 ft arrived in Portland on trovernmrnt orders to sroard aealnat mall robberies. BONUS TEST BRIEF FILED COUKT HAS NO JURISDICTION, SAY REPORTERS. Attorneys for State Commission Contend That People's decision at Polls Sufficient. SALEM, Or., Nov. 19. (Special.) Respondent's brief In the friendly suit brought by Thomas Henry Boyd, commander of Portland post. Ameri can Legion, to test the validity of the so-called bonus law enacted at the last session of the legislature and put into operation by a vote of the people at a subsequent election, was tiled in the supreme court here today. The brief was prepared by Attorney-General I. H. Van Winkle and his assistant, Willis Moore, on behalf of the state bonus loan commission. The most Important argument ad vanced by the attorneys for the bo r.us commission is the contention that the people have provided that the power to decide whether or not an amendment has been adopted shall be exercised by the governor. As a tesult. respondent's brief contends t:iat the courts ate excluded from ex ercising any Jurisdiction In the mat ter. In the brief filed by the plaintiff and appellant it was contended that the constitutional amendment was not properly entered on the Journal. Respondents, in their brief, allege that the amendment was entered on the journal in such a way that it could be identified, and that this is suffi cient to establish its validity. The suit to test the validity of the bonus and loan act originated In the Multnomah county circuit court. The defendants, including the members of the world war veterans' state aid commission, demurred to the com plaint and such demurrer was upheld by Judge Stapleton. Appeal on the cemurrer then was taken to the su preme court. It was necessary to test the validity cf the law In order that bonds to pro Vide money for putting the act into actual operation would be accepted by dealers The first installment of these bonds, aggregating $10,000,000, are scheduled to be sold November SO. Arguments in the case will be heard Ly the supreme court Tuesday after noon and it is likely that at least a week will be necessary to prepare the opinion. ABERDEEN MS Oil WETS 11 ARE ARRESTED IN WEEK BY DRV AGEXTS. 30-Gallon Cache of Moonshine and Big Still Are Seized Officers In Raids. by ABERDEEN. Wash., Nov. 19. (Spe cial.) Seizure of a 30-gallon cache of moonshine, confiscation of a large still, conviction of John MIsetrlch and Charles Dahlstrom on liquor charges and Fred Cook for possession of a still, four arrests on liquor possession charges, seven for alleged violation of the city anti-dumping ordinance, and one on a manufacturing charge, com bined to make the past week one of the most effective in the fight on the liquor traffic In Aberdeen. What was believed to be one of the principal supply caches of moonshine for Aberdeen bootleggers was found yesterday by R. J. Schmidt, on special duty in connection with the anti ltquor campaign, and Officer Fournier, In a small brick building on an alley between F and G streets, and River and Hume. Roland Randolph was ar rested as he was leaving the place and was charged with possession when a quart of moonshine was found on him. Search of the building disclosed six five-gallon kegsVf liquor. Mr. and Mrs. J. O. Sandvlg were arrested on possession charges when officers raided their place at 106 West Hume street and found a small quan tity of liquor. Dahlstrom was found guilty in su perior court at Montesano last night. The preceding afternoon John Miset rich was convicted on a liquor charge carrying a minimum sentence of one year. Four arrests were made Thursday afternoon by Aberdeen police. Ernest Snider was arrested on a possession charge. He has a similar case pend ing. Dan Kelly, John Gammuson, D. J. Jones, Tom Turner, A. C. Anderson and Dave Fenton were held under a clause of a city ordinance prohibiting operators of soft drink parlors from dumping any sort of liquid upon ap pearance of officers. Official in Ireland Resigns. LONDON, Nov. 19. Hugh T. Barrie, head'of the department of agriculture tnd technical education in Ireland, has sent his resignation to ths pre mier. This step was taken on ths ground that he disapproves of the government's Irish policy. MAIL IN PORTLAND. CARSON DOUGLAS BEEBE HAS LIVED TWO YEARS IN WONDER Restoration of Sight as War Draft Expedient Opens Up Strange World to Man Accused of Double Murder. BT CHARLES ALEXANDER. ALBANY, Or., Nov. 19. (Special.) Two years ago, after his first adventure In the world of clanging railroad trains, busy streets and hurrying humanity, Carson Doug las Beebe returned to the little farm home of his parents near Lebanon. His left eye was bandaged. He was in darkness. He felt his way about house and farmyard, sensing the presence of parents and walls and doors and gates only by means of the peculiar seventh sense of the blind. That was not strange to "I'ete" Beebe. For 16 years he had been blind. The eyesight he had enjoyed as a young boy had left no tangible visions in his mind. The great strangeness of the world did not come to him until weeks later, when the bandage was removed from the left eye, the operation for cataract per formed upon the right eye and its consequent term of recovery having expired. With the flood of light pouring Into his eyes for the first time, Beebe suddenly found himself a Btranger in a strange and marvelous world. In his own words, he could only stare and gawk In amazement at what he saw about him. Now, after the flight of two rich years, during which the world has never lost Its sweet Ineffable wonder" for him, Beebe is held in the Linn county Jail at Albany charged with the murder of an old man, John Painter, 65, and his 18-year-old son, William I'ainter. At the time of their violent death they were Beebe's em ployers. Father and son were found in a scooped-out grave on their own farm. The aged man had been shot three times, the youth once, by a .38 caliber revolver. A .38 revolver and a 32.30 single-shot rifle, the latter blood-smeared (with sheep blood, Beebe declares), were found hidden on the farm. And this is the fateful paradox of Pete Beebe's life: The restoration of his sight, brought about at the sug gestion of a war draft board, .which was to have made his senses complete and opened his way to a life of Joy and labor, has brought him Instead to the court of men accused of a frightful premeditated double murder. Had he remained blind the delights of vision never would have been his, he would not have been in the em ploy of the Painters, and doubtless would not now stand jn danger of the hangman's noose. Beebe thinks he is 25 years old. He is of medium height, strongly muscled and pillar-built. His hair is brown, his new br.ard heavy. About his face is an openness almost a boyishness. It is the face of a man, yet it does not meet another man's face with the sureness and power of experience. In reality, Beebe has lived only two years. When his sight came, after the two trips to the surgeons in Eugene, Pete's world suddenly turned to chaos. Nothing was as he had imagined it during his years of darkness. "Were your parents Mrange?" I asked. "Were you surprised to find them in their real form, their forms of flesh?" "I didn't know them," he said. "I never knew they were like that." He had lived in another world. Through questioning Inquisitive boy hood, through the stirring develop ment of young manhood, his mind had been unable to grasp the complexity of the world about him, or Jo under stand the sum of human relationa the fine shades of forbidden and un forbidden. He was a mental hermit. And even when the scalpel gave to him his sight, his was more an atti tude of wonder than of understand ing. Even then he could not under TWENTY years upon the sea. In cluding three trips around the world In the old days of the clipper ship, topped with a score or more years as a wrecker, plying up and down the Pacific coast wherever ea disaster called for ono of his hazardous profession, have not pre vented Captain J. H. Roberts, local shipping man, from pursuing a hobby since he came to anchor in Portland. Perhaps it was the one thing for which his heart has been pining since as a mere lad he left his home in England for a life upon the sea. At any rate his spare moments now are taken up with a little country place near the Powell Valley road beyond Kelly butte. Captain Roberts says he does it partly to keep in shape, for he cannot tone his body down to eight hours in an office chair. But his friends say that the growing fruit trees and the little summer home among the fir trees on Laurel avenue are as dear to his heart as the reminiscences of the old sea-going days. For the last three years Captain Roberts has put in all his extra time clearing the little tract, building his summer home and planting a small orchard. The aroma of balsam fir re places the tang of the salt air and crosscut saw handles make Just as heavy callouses as ships' lines ever did. This year he harvested 'his first cherries and pears from his young trees. In designing his summer home, Captain Roberts kept close to sea faring standards. A tall flagpole. with colors flying whenever he is there, marks the spot. He has built two garages among the fir trees and on top of one there is a roof garden, screened in summer with potted plants and flowers, where he and Mrs. Roberts have their sleeping quarters. The only means of access Is a ship's ladder, let down in daytime and hoisted each night to keep out prowlers. Other appointments are altogether in keeplnsr with the best ship's standards of the old days. During the 30 years Captain Roberts has called Portland his home he has followed the wrecking business for a large share of the time. Among his best-known exploits was the, feat of moving the Columbia river light ship from the beach where she had grounded one and one-half miles overland to a deep bay where she was launched again. The work was done in 1900 and hundreds of Port land folk made excursions down the river to witness its progress. BODY IS FOUND ON BEACH Man Drowned Near Astoria Identi fied on Copulis, Wash., Beach. ABERDEEN. Wash., Nov. 19 (Spe cial.) The body found on the beach south of Copalls November 15 lias been Identified as that of George W. Hlckel of Hillsboro, Or. The identifi cation was made over long-distance telephone late last night by conver sation between Coroner O. V. Austin of Aberdeen and Hillsboro authorities. Hlckel, with a man named Joe Cor rlgan, drove off an open drawbridge into the bay south of Afitoria October 11 and both were drowned, lilckel B C stand the written or printed word. He had no chance to learn to read. He has not yet left behind the dream-world of the blind. Even tiow, he says, he stares at everything Driving a wagon along a country road and seeing a rabbit or pheasant dart before the horses, he declares he can only stare at It In wonder. Trees and sky and earth these he has known familiarly during, his two full years among them on the ranches near Lebanon where he worked. He says he likes them. "When I get out of this," he earn estly declared, "I'll go back to the country. I'll never live anywhere else. There's nothing in the city for any man." .Particularly Beebe loves stock. Cows and horses he understands, and he asserts with pride he has never had a team run away with him. Ho finds them beautiful. Human companion ship he believes he can forego; but the companionship of livestock he must have. Also, he must always have a boss over him. He can live alone and happily at his farm work providing someone directs him about it. The business of growing grain and stock Is still too wonderful and complicated tor him to do It alone. As to a wife who might supervise his dream-farm, he admits he knows nothing whatever of women. Pete says he has never fired a rifle. He knows little of death. Telling of his shepherd dog which was killed b'y a speeding car. he showed indig nation at the motorists who ran it down, but no grief at Its death. "You were sorry when it died?" he was asked. "What is dead Is dead," he replied, unanswerably. "It was dead that's all. I draRced it into a field off the road end left it." To see other boys kill pheasants with shotguns was to him only a matter of curiosity he said. He watched them and marveled, but did not feel the thrill of the chase surg ing in his blood. He did fire a shot gun at band-tailed pigeons, after they had ruined li acres of grain. After sfveral days and many shots, he thinks he killed in all about 12 pigeons. These were cooked and eaten. And even In that adventure he says he knew no desire to kill. Sight of the shot-riddled pigeons, their graceful bodies broken ajid bleeding, was only a matter of curi osity. Shooting a shotgun at them was merely a strange new experience. Local comment has variously de scribed Beebe as childish, subnormal, even half-witted. In an intelligence test he naturally would be found dif ferent from the average man. Back on a lonely hill farm he grew up, one might say. In a black mental prison. Miflure. strong-bodied, quick with the powers of a man, he suddenly for the first time came upon the brilliant, desirable world. He was like a man coming out of darkness into the blinding day. The sweeping strength and depth of his desires is a thing he will be unable to put into words when he stands at bar December 6. He admits loving the beautiful chest nut team of the Painters, which he fays was promised him for wages. He does not denying burying the bodies of the as he claims suicides, and driving the team away. He sits beside the fat wood stove In the county Jail and peers through the bars at the blue pavement and the Presbyterian church across Fifth street, with its Christ in stained glass in a window. When an electric train passes, he turns quickly and watches. Since his sifrht came, the world has Deen vast and strange. To Pete Beebe, strangest of all Is this the bars that hold him In Jail and the things that the law has done and may do to him. was emDloved hr ths P A Pai.r.nn Automobiles-for-Hire company, HIlls- Doro. caras or which company were found in his pockets. Arrangements are being made to send the body to Hillsboro. 8053 PUPILSJN SCHOOL Cluckunias County Superintendent Announces Enrollment. OREGON CITY. Or., Nov. 19. (Spe cial.) First total figures on tho Clackamas county school registration were announced today by the county superintendent. The total was 8053, an increase of 71 over last year. Two small districts were not included In the report, as their registration blanks had to be sent back for cor rection. The figures were for the first month of school, but were completed late bcemuse many schools did not open the first week In October. The figures showed a decrease in the number of girls attending school, but an increase in the number of boys. DAILY CITY STATISTICS Vancouver Marrlsse Licenses. SIMPSON - MANWKII.KR MHrlon R. !mpKon. legiil, of Porilnnd and iLoulus Manwllr. I'-tfl. of Portland. MaeARTHCK-St.OOUM Donald A. Mac Arthur, 2. of Portland anil E'llth 22, Hlnfum, HI. of Portland. SPLinsunuHlwAKTHUR Albfrt C. Spilrtt.botl, 24, of Portland and Mlas iiessis MarArthur, of Portland. M.M1TH-HOPKINH Elson Smith. 23, of Spokane, WaMh., and Zoo Kiila Hopkins. 1U. of Portland . MTANTO.N'-WY.VN Merwln Stanton. II of Portland and Ethel Wynn. 11), of Port land. Mirths. FA R A It To Mr. and Mrs. Nd Farah. Mxty-sovenih aircut. November 13, a son. FEBRAXTI To Mr. and Mrs. J. Kor ranti, tis2 Kast Persltlns. November I'i, a duusntr r. TEE XV To Mr. and Mrs. Dave Teeny, 481- Sixty-sixth btreet, Nuvembvr 7, a son. PITToXE To Mr. and Mrn. J. Plltona. 1)81 Kasi Clinton. November lu. a dauKtt ter. CIAPPANO To Mr. and Mrs. M. Clap pano, Union avenue, November 11, a duiiKhter. KAISER To Mr. and Mrs. William P. Kaifctr. Cs3 E. Salmon, November S, a son. RUTH To Mr and Mm. C. A. Roth. .5 East Korty-thlrd, Novrniber 15. a son. L,A BOUNTY To Mr. and Mrs. U J. t.a Houniy. 700 East &raiu, Xovambvr 1-. a pon. fcl.MIS To Mr. and Mrs. William Slmli. 8l;t West Park, November 3-. a son. HAMMONU To Mr. and Mrs. E B. Hammond, 1113 liybe November 11, son. DACHTELBERG To Mr. and Mrs. L. Dachteiberg-, JS! Caruthers, November U. t daughtciE. MAHCANTONIA To Mr. and Mra. J. Marcantonla, 4! East bcvenltonth; No. veir.ber H, a aon. RYAN To Mr. and Mra P. Ryan, 400 Rhon. November 13, a daughter. ROTH To Mr and Mra P. E. Roth, -714 lrummond, November 14. a son SPENCER To Mr. and Mra (J. B. Spencer, io Tenth, Novenber 7, a daugh ter. WESDLINO To Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Wendling. Zi2 East forty-fourth North. .November 7, a son. OSliOKNK To Mr. ano Mra S. Osborne. 163 East Yamhill, November S, a aon. UWhN To Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Owen. 212 North Ivanhoe, November 10, a aon. MA PLUS To Mr. and Mrs. S. P. Maples, 481 West Park, November 13, a son. HAWKS To Mr. and Mra E. Hawea. 214 Second, November 14, a aon. SUMNUK To Mr. and Mra. L. Sumner, fclitf East Twenty-t jurth, November li, a son. BURNETT To Mr. a'.d Mrs. R. C. Bur tett, 7115 Forty-second avenue, November 10. a son. WK.NTZEL To Mr. and Mrs. F. A, Wentzel, 41 Ease Seventy-eighth, Novem ber 13. a daughter. AlacAKTUUit lo Ur. and lira D. Use- I Arthur. 2W Norto Twentieth, November 10, Hun. CLARK- To Mr. n! Mrs W. K. C.srk. (V.M M.intirnmt.rv dr:ve. November li. ' d A uc liter HI.OHMKNTHOL To Mr. ml tr. .11. lllonmenthol, 414 liroutlwsy, November a. daucntr. JUNKS To Mr. sod Mrs. TV. M. HH, C84 Kant Twenty-thud North, November 8, s son. HALL To Mr nnd Mrs W. M. flail, 71M1 KrfMi Korty-elc lit li Nurth, November a (inuKhtrr. MUNSJN To Mr and Mn F. O. Mun- ron, 11S7 Last Fourteenth North, Nuveni- I er 3. a sen. ItnmiiiiE l'erniit.. IIEN'DnlCK.-KN C. lH.IIX Itepalr (t ratte anil torei, ,VMI Wa-hlniMou ftrtet, between LowiimIhI'1 and sixteenth; builder. Lot ens m "v ; t ' t;L'ri KKK'K.-KN Kreet rosul.-m-e. 470 t;a!-l Klftv-ft'velit h street between Tlut.tip- ron ana 1 il.ann.oK ; i tnier tame, s.t.,uu; lot bUiek i:t. Syr, ".rat a.lilitL'n W. M. I'M lilO'.NSioUK i CU. Krect residence. Mti Skiuniore fctreet. bctwe. , knt Twenty-ti: i It and Kast 'I wentv -six! li ; builder same; M.itKI; lot 11, block 3b, Ala meda I'ark. W. M. I'M UnKNSTOCK & CC. v.rrct resilience. 1M- r.iml Jhirtletn street North, between Skidnmri anil 1'reerolt; tutlMer atne; 4:UO; lo. 13, biork 44. Atameilii. J. A. HKAJ) l'ri'-t rt'Ml.lenre, i iJ l'.a Fifteenth street North, between rremotit and lti'Hch; btillder tume; $;;.j0; lot 13, uloeK n. mxotl I'. nee. A. RUI.L.MAN Krect residence. ?! Kant Seventeenth Mreet. between K.acli ami Kailltik': buililc- ame; Suiiu; lot 11, block 0 Uixon place. WILLIAM tiTtlKBK Repair residence, fail I'owell Valley road, between Hut- third and KlCly-lourlli streets; builder satine; lloot). Jiiimiit'HC llti.vs Gns Ht'iitor. HOQriAM. Wash., Nov. 19. (Spe cial.) The lloiulam Gas company to day. sold to Captain I. Shizel of Kuhc, Japan, the largest gas heater of a cer tain make that it had In stock. Tito Japanese said he would use it in his home, natural mis bcln? available nearby. Illuminating bus of the arti ficial kind has not yet made its ap pearance In Japan to mj extent per mitting Its use In homes, Captain Shlzei Fain. RATES FGR CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING In order to mrn the more than one-time rnte tlvrrllnjt must run In consecutive sUaura, On ttm 12o per linn Two times (arh tnup . . . . 1 lo pir ltn Three Hm n (each iMMie) . . .lo per lln Beven time (enrh Uutf.. Uc per lint On to six moutha per month $2.30 per lln Six to twflv. month, per "nionth 12.23 pr linn The above rntr apply to nil htudb.ga with tbe luUuwing ruftUlunil Httrntlona Wanted Each lncrt.ou 0a per Una Help Wanted Notice .ot and lound hiM-clul Notice 1'eT.Mmul l iiiieml Nntlre l'ru,H.i.9 Invited Meet inn oi.ce One time r .. l.c per lino Two tunes (each mih) . .10 per line Three time (-ach imme) ... Kio per line eveu times (cacti iaauu) . . .12c por line On moutn i per Uue NEW TODAY Km to l'er Llitet I'nMy Buny One time lVo 2o Two times (per Ihmi)... IAo H'o Three times (per lHsue),. Ho Heven times (pur Uu,. IHu lTo Out month. Uully nntl feunuay. . . .$3.uU Count five words to the line. No ud taken fur lens tlmn two lines. Ails run huiidu) s uulj churned at onr-ttme rnte. Advertisements (eieept Personals and "Mluuilou Vnnt !" will ! taken over the telephone If the utl verUixrr Is snhacriher of either phone. 1 lie trgonUii will reeelte ropy by mall provided anf fiffent reitiiitunce fur definite mimher of ifebues Is -itt. A koowlcdKiueut will be forwurdctl promptly. AdtertUcmentn ore taken fur The Dsiiy OreKoniun until 7:.iO 1. M.; for The SunUur Oregouuin uutil t 1'. Si. baturduj. OREGON HUMANE SOCIETY InvpKtlgatcs nil casM of a I 1 e ff p t cruelty to animals. Offires, room 150 courthouae. Phone Main 37i from 8 A. M. to f P. M. The society has full charx of tho city pound at its home, Columbia bou levard. Phone any time. Wixnllawn 764. Dogs for salo. Horse ambuhirieu for sick or doubled horses. Small animals painlessly electrocuted wIuto necessnry ami Ktruy animals raroil for. All dead animals, cows, nores, etc., picked up. TOO T.ATR TO rr.ASSIKY. KINK BUY KUlt I'll YMCIA N . 2'J rooms of fine furniture in koo1. clnae-ln west Hi tie locution, beautiful house and crnum!: this would iiiskf fino off. co ami rut trie-urn flml tho hou now iift.s owner of f urn I ture $ KiU ,"T nm. Hnd en n br bo uk lit riRht. for further information ne K. K. KfclUl. KKAI.TOR. 301 Ynmhlll. M:trfhn!l EMM. WANTJil An Al Janitor and wife for lu,rC tilKli-rlfisa n jmrtmnt hou.c ; mut bo exp-ri;ne.'l elevator jnun; utri to Apai tmtnl houHt work ; K"d plumber and Rem ral iimehun It ; ftrood w k h to Al man; wifn mu.sl help; only thorough, reliable, experienced and luTiesL p.ii'MP wanted : references result ed. AL ii(ts. oroKfTinii. b'OH SA IiK Strictly modern 6-room bun galow, 2 lots, coiner, all pktveil, fun Ka raite: rurnace. nreniaco, cement dun- mi nt, tra a, Dutch k lichen, near ear and school; in, "it) cumIi, balance aiy term. So!. AN KXCKLLKN T opportunity to Kt in the fuel bunitiesF ; yard equipment, 2 trucks, wood Paw and ,'l."-l cords of stock; ,VVHI cash, t'iill nt 3KI :. Harrison it.. or phon K. 7-M) for appointment. l-'OK HKNT 1 -room furnished apartment. Including heat. JlKht and hot water; walking difttaiu ; adults; references ex changed. 4;n ii. nth yt. t I ( tit .sA i.l-;, lv u n i , .Vrnoiu iiiud- rn bunKHlow. with or without furnltur. Inquire 130 K. 3Uh Pt. .Must eell tills Wee ( liOl'SK wanted, unf urn in lied, suitable for hoiLsekeupiUff rooms or apartments. I.lka to deal with owner. Broadway I'-IL eve n i n k. V A NT K l3 IU-fiiied U for cooking and hounewnrk: '2 adults, no washing; 4J. M.-llwood Ml. WANTKD J-ilnu by private party ou H. O, homes, rRhh value tor.oii; no commission. .VtH K. Sfark. A. t '. A ri ?... SA !.: K.-k.hi. red Hoist, in bull. A. KKR-er, l'urtlaud. Or., route 4. box 13 or 8, t'lu.n Woo.ll.iwn 4i INKi'HM ATM N wauled. U here Is John K muse r. tailor, located now ? i 5 1". Oreunti ftt n. F( lit It hT i ne, ', -l oom nielli-Mi li'iu.-ifl, $.!.-.. C.ill Monday, r 1 05 4Jd avn. S, li.. Ml. Si-.f rir .MA UI'.IKI) m.n w 1 1 a family would lik-i work of any kind, c.i pa hN unci w (ill n ; fTprrncOts.. The iv M n In :s'M:. n pt , 7. K A 1'KIt I K WKI i t-li.i. ictrl call M A M iii 1 1- tl ii. per and tliop Monday ready fur work. H.--1. 's 41m H e t ti 1 1 i nn a ve A N T h. U -To buy roni Id n.t; kw Jn-h. s made to order. Kast lTlo. fi.'.l K.nt Ynmhlll. LOST, strafd or r.!.i;i-n, 1 nrm.K'' 1'ernian cat from H.'in (iniliam i vk , snsutirs to nmiie of I'-tllv .tiii d'w-ird fOK .AI.K Wood lit Him !,ivf with hot water c-e!; (,'uud us new; a snap, i'houu Tabor 7M.17. l-'OK SAI.K $7MI worth T Hock In J .rm't f'ebydrattnK plant for $'.) with accrued lAIt'l l.Y f ui niHlif.l oiii apartment, low and clean, wi'h or without natnp; clone In. Kst iHt'. K North. LoST- l'ow'iiUwii, J-'riday, lstli, 1. M.. a bunch of keys. lidwy. l:ujl or Hdwy. L'OKO. 8-HuuM nice niodurn hou for kh le. west side, close In, by owner to private party, nrffi the monev. 1 1 "Ml MarsbnH. MY IHUI 1M l Mli-; lourlUK tor S.tlr ; hpot- llKbt, bumier, wire wheel; will consider Ford roup". rM :.!! S-lt" M lower Wrilnms rv, Hat. 27 ar lln ; (Kiinrf H. yor.vo CuW and c.t: ir salt. (,:ail Auto. LA KC. V. motlern 5- room unluni i shed flat. yj. Alnerta. near JflfiTMin hiirh. 21 no ELd .KU'S contract; will UUcouiu per cent. AL 2-7, i'renonlan. GOOD lot to trado lor lltlt truck, hor 4S GIH1. to at.Htst with houwework and chil dren. Marshall K.'Sfl WANTKJJ Driver for grocery delivery truck. Call Sundnv. Main WANT woman ti todnv. Tfbnr rn: cure for invalid. Call FuR SALE most new. d'.ejl H;ilck liKht tourijic, Call Main fl; 11 . apt. S'lJ, FOH KENT Modern .".-ruoiu bungalow for adults only, 101 llaltey.