TTTE SUNDAY ORTGONTAX, FOTtTL'ANI), DECEMBER 18, 1921 m it -( n YORK LACKS GOOD WILL SPIRIT Suitor Following Woman on J Street Arrested. TOMBS FINISH ROMANCE Object of Man's Affections Say9 He J'J Has Been After Her for 21 Months. n f i BY JESSIE HENDERSON. ... Conyrlirht. lW.il. by Th Oreiconlan.) '.NEW YORK. Pec. 17. (Special.) tVrhaps tne peace on earth has reached thin town. But the pood Will toward men Idea Is conspicuously lacking. It one may jnde by the police records of the past seven day. t- Actually you can be put in jail for fccinic In love. It happened to Harry Anderson. For two years Harry has been enamored of Miss Bessie Gutnlk. a,- stenographer. Bessie couldn't see it, so Harry adopted a "silent court ship" plan. He did not talk to her. but he walked with her. tri the past 24 months there was faith- 1 f)l Harry trailing: behind her. When jtessle got Kood and tired of this rhe told a policeman about it. Both the policeman and magistrate said they did not think Anderson was an ordi nary "masher" and they felt eorry for aim. But Bessie intimated she had SCopped feeling; sorry over a year a(ro anil so Anderson and his lacerated HtTtirt were remanded to the Tombs. ,.. Threat 'Wins Girl. .Jt its dangerous, too, to go "a marrying" without a wedding; rinj?. "Kou get arrested for that, too. Ed ward Stafford of the Bronx was an impetuous suitor, his courtship gain ing In ardor according; to his fiancee -until It culminated in threats to ahoot the young; lady unless ehe be came his bride immediately. ;Thus urgsd. Miss Anna Arctander hyly consented and the happy pair vent to the marriage license bureau ior the preliminary bout. Here, how ever, it came to Miss Arctander's at tention that her betrothed had neg lected to provide a wedding ring. She 6ad him arrested, pouring forth to the Biagistrate her tale of the threats to hoot. It only proves once more that 1 woman doesn't mind being brow beaten, but darned if ehe will stand lor neglect. I 'And you can get arrested for mak ing toast. Of course, it depends where jfou make it. The man who fell afoul the law and his wife this week for making toast happened to be making tt in the home of the other woman. !' Mnnhrrs Are Arrested. j :Two other sad cases illustrate how great a scarcity of good will toward man there is at the moment. Five ouths. ranging in age from 20 to 24, lungulshed all one night in Jail just or trying to spread a little joy In a world which, as everyone knows. Is all 500 scantily supplied with that. The lily thing they did was to slow their Atud along the Broadway curb where tliree young women were walking and Invite them for a ride. And when the fomen appeared diffident, the only Jther thing the youths did was to Dinji out of the car, take them by the arm and repeat" the invitation a trifle pore insistently. Why should anyone resent a kindly lit like this, performed by five en terprising young men toward perfect Atrangers. just for the sake of "jeu e vivre," or is it esprit de corps? Of !eurse the youths had not noticed the jisbands of the young women, who ad been walking a little distance in ce rear. Life is like that. . I Striped Pajamas in Jail. J'There was Michael Quinlin, too. Michael of the pink-striped pajamas. Irs. Quinlin informed the police her tttisband had struck her with a lamp shade and she was annoyed to the ex iqnt of wanting something done about IA When the patrolman entered the fiuinlin home for the purpose of com plying with her request, he stopped dazedly on the threshold with the im ttrgHion that the lamp shade exploded and a conflagration was on. Then he 4W it was merely Michael's pajamas, pink striped. Micheal liked those pa jamas. Indeed, he declined to change Item. So in pink-striped raiment Ml- f had marched away to a cell which at nce became the brightest spot the kray old polled station had seen for inany a moon. j; ' PLOTTERS' TRIAL FARCE 1 (Continued Krom First Pae.) yrltx as a model republican and guar- tiian of the constitution. 1 . With such testimony as started, it i easy for anybody to imagine the lono adopted by the high politicians Jtjid miliary nabobs who also are in he list of witnesses. ; The German minister of justice Vhargre of the prosecutions is a social Uemocrat, ex-professor in Kiel uni--crsity, an intimate friend of many of iho. communists now in Jail for poli tical offenses and reputed to be a Introng radical. Yet the Kapplsts on trial for treason are treated like ;rand selgnures. They are not under ptrrest and they live at the most lux urious hotels. 1 1 Gratitude la Expressed. .'.When the presiding Justice ad Rresses them he begins: "May I ask ii, question?" and then realizing how J-fdiculous it sounds says: "Excuse roe, and recommences. At least ten Jlmes a day he gives participants in "admiral." "Mr. Mlnieter," "Your Ex cellency" where court procedure re quires that they be named simply "the accused" or "the witnesses." Everybody present at the trial seems thoroughly convinced that the defendants and particularly their absent accomplices are noblemen de serving the fatherland's undying gratitude, though admitting that they acted perhaps a bit rashly. There is a childish belief among the reaction aries that the spectacle of this trial can change the popular verdict and make martyred heroes of the Kap pists. Discussion la Warm. This week in thousands of papers there has been a warm discussion of .the historical syllabus written at Amerongen by Wilhelm II, assisted by a history professor and Just pub lished. There is nothing new in it and the alleged facts have been re futed hundreds of times. But it is put forth to the German people as a new revelation, to nourish a belief that the glorious peace-loving kaiser was treacherously attacked and forced Into war. "Historical kaiser films" are shown everywhere for the same end. Mostly they are given in the public schools to lead the German youth to hold fast the "symbols of the imperial crown and the red, white and black flag." Films showing "the -abominations of the Versailles treaty" are exhibited under the official patronage. Treachery Is Chanced. "I'nconquered in the Field" and Lnconquered on the Sea" are the ti tles of two popular Christmas books. Three years after the most terrible defeat in history, millions of Ger mans are convinced that the army was unbeaten, but was lured into an armistice by treachery and deceDtion. and that the navy was deprived of a decisive victory by the cowardice of the British fleet. These millions are supnortiner Lu- dendorff, Kapp and company today as yesterday, untroubled by the Leip sic trial or Us possible verdict. The sentiments of these short-sighted monarchists are a far greater danger man all tne "hidden arms" that are so much talked about. In fact, there Is no danger whatever In any mon archist attack against the state un less they can persuade others to fol low them. Our neighbor nations who hold that this is a bad sign should ponder how long they can keep Germany expiat ing the sins of deposed rulers and barred out of the reconstruction of the world. DAIL LIKELY TO RATIFY (Contlnned From First Pate.) ng belief that Mr. Lloyd George will resort to a general election early in the year. Irishmen themselves, according to Dublin reports, are Irritated at the delay, and want the matter settled, if only because of the uncertainty, which Is detrimental to Christmas trade. FIGIITIXG FIERCE IN BELFAST Tram Car Crew Is Attacked and Kescued by Police. BELFAST. Dec, 17. (By the Asso ciated Press.) Fierce firing broke out in the Newtownwards road sec tion and East Belfast today. The firing was so intense that tram car service was suspended. Lewis guns were used against the rioters by the crown forces. An employe of the tram service was shot dead and at least six persona are known to have been wounded. In the Ballymacarrott district two persons were shot, William Proudfit, 59 years old, being wounded in the abdomen and his son In the leg. An other young man was attacked by a crowd and badly beaten. A victim In another part of the city was John Devanney, 50, who was shot in the chest and severely wounded. Tomorrow Is the anniversary of the closing of the gates of Derry (Ixn-dond-erry) in 1688, when was begun the famous siege by the forces of James II, which is commemorated In Ulster by the burning In effigy of the "traitor governor." This celebration, it is feared, will accentuate the heated feeling. The 9 o'clock curfew will be en forced in the affected zone beginning tonight, it was announced today. The afternoon's incidents included an attack on a tram car crew whom the police rescued. Edward Hrennan, of the Sinn Fein area, was shot and killed. Another man, William Thomp son, was wounded by a sniper., The pussengers in the tram car riot zone were compelled to lie on the bottoms of the cars. ANCIENT CANOE IS FOUND 1 Hawuiinn Craft Thought to Be al Least 150 Years Old. HONOLULU, T. H., Dec. 6 (Spe cial.) On the little Island of Lanai, one of the smallest in the Hawaiian group, Kenneth P. Emory, assistant ethnologist or Bishop museum, dis covered a Hawaiian canoe that must be at least 160 years old. It was In good preservation and it is the first Hawaiian canoe found that did not contain nails. It was held together with wooden spikes. Emory declares that Lanai is rich In rock writing and that he Is now seeking the ciphei to the numerous pictorial group which he has found in the lava sur faces on the island. "The figures are mostly human," he said, "with some humans mounted or horses. There are also animal fig ures which are not easy to identify There are bird men with beaks oi their heads, having human bodies Hands and fingers are seldom drawr but wherever fingers are drawn onlj' three are shown." at-" como trom Gifts That Last" Into the heart of everyone who receives gifts of jewelry flashes the thought: "Where was it purchased?" For, the world over, a reliable house from which a gift is selected places upon it the seal of quality and value. In Portland the stamp of A. & C Feld enheimer on the gift box is the assurance of character, dependability and distinc tiveness. The Diamond Is the Peer of Gifts Those who contemplate selecting dia monds for Christmas will find here a large offering of carefully selected stones of unusual cutting and brilliancy. Gems, Watches, Jewelry, Silverware, Novelties, Clocks, Glassware, Leather Goods Prices have been reduced in all depart ments to the present market levels. Vd.VMfJi ,t V 111 v : ii 1 n Yon may order by mail and be assured of receiving reliable service and prompt attention. AikQ Jewelers - Silversmiths -Opticians ESTABLISHED 1666 Washington St. atPabk Poptland.Ore. TO GET FURTHER LOANS AUTHORIZED BY FEDERAL BANK. Spokane Branch Is to Place Up to Million Dollars Monthly In North western States. THE OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU, Washington, L C, Dec. IT. Arrange ments have been completed by the federal farm loan bank to release money for farm land loans In the twelfth district througn the Spokane farm loan bank, at the rate of $1. 000.000 a month. It is understood that this money will be allotted equally between Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Montana. D. O. O'Shea, president of the Spo kane farm loan bank, has been here in conference with the federal furm loan bank, and was authorized to proceed with loans monthly up to the limit named. The Spokane institu tion, it is said, has been besieged by applicants who misunderstand the functions of the farm loan banks. These rural credit banks, it is ex plained, have no authority as agri cultural relief Institutions, but were created to make loans on farm lands at a lower rate of Interest than could be obtained from banks and private loan concerns. To some extent farm ers have complained that the farm loan banks have failed to respond to appeals for agricultural relief, which properly should have been addressed to the war finance corporation Montana Claims Staked. SHELBY, Mont., Dec. 17. Scores of gold claims have been staked In the West Sweetgrass hills recently, ac cording to reports received here. The area in which the claims have been filed is known as the Toole gold field. Prospectors have come from Conrad and Great Falls. Mont., and from the Canadian side of the border. The first claim was discovered by John Bradley, a rancher. Iloquiam Major's Brother Hurt. HOQUIAM. Wash., Dec. 17. (Spe cial.) While at work on a lumber pile at the Hoquiam Lumber & Shingle milll this morning, Thomas Jacka. brother of Mayor Jacka, tripped and fell 20 feet to tne ground, sustaining a fractured skuu and fractured right arm. He was rushed to a Hoquiam hospital. His condition was serious tonight. Jacka is a tallyman and has been a resident of the city for 20 vears. He nas a wife and two children. t'reneluiian Heads Allied Veterans, PARIS, Dec. 17. (By the Associated Press.) C. W. Bertrand. a deputy, to day was re-elected president of the Interallied veterans at the second an nual congress here. Lieutenant Colonel Cabot Ward, vice-commander of the Paris post of the American Legion, was re-elected first vice pres id ent. ?Cartozian Bros. An Oriental Rug, T is a Gift of Gifts $0 Wood doesn't equal Southport coai Bdwy. 70. Adv. Phone your want ads to The Ore- gon'an. Main 7n?n Automatic 5S0-95. Jfaottl The Mallory announces a concert and recep tion Christmas Night. A special dinner will be served from 6 to 8. Early reservations are requested. In accordance with our old time custom, Christmas carols will be sung in the morning. A refined Horn Hotel with Quit rnujvuai Dlnlnir Service. BnlMln Modftrn &nd Fire FROM OUR MAGNIFICENT collection of Oriental piece individual rug Tang ing in size from 2 feel 6 inche by 3 feet 6 inches to 3 feet 6 inches by 7 feet 2 inches. IVhUe flie Tugs of ih'u special cofleo llori last the prices itnll he as foUois: lOMosnls $35 to $60 10 Small Dozars . . .$35 to $60 10 Ivans $35 to $60 10 Belouchistans , , .$35 to $60 10 Hamadans $35 to $60 10 Chinese Rugrs , . -$35 to $60 I t 1 At the Temple of Oriented Rugs Cartozian BROS.Inc- 1.- l nr l . 71 w i ESTABLISHED I90e m 1 IS I I T7iTs speciaf grouping ni7! make it possible for mart's people to experience the eru joymerA of rece'vinf a. beautiful Oriental Rug for Christmas. NECKWEAR Cut-Sr.k Ties $1.05 Three for $3 Cut-Silk Ties $1.85 Three for $5 Knit Silk Ties $135 Three for $4 -a fine. Gift for a Man AMONG the really fine gifts, Bath Robes. House Coats and Lounging Robes are in highest favor. Men appre ciate the ease and solid comfort that they provide. My exhibit of these garments is unfailing in hs wealth of fabric, color and pattern. If you've a man to buy for, you can give him no better or more appreciated gift than one of these. Bath Robes, special, $9.85 House Coats, $7.50 to $25 Silk Lounging Robes, $25 to $45 Oregon City Blanket Robes, $15 to $18 Silk and Fiber MUFFLERS $2.50 to $15 $5 Mocha Gloves $3.95 Fine Silk Shirts, special, $6.95 Silk Stripe Madras Shirts for $1.95, $2.95 Buy Gifts for Men in a Man's Store BEN SELLING Leading Clothier Morrison Street at Fourth Fine Silk Hosiery 75c to $3 All the best colors are in my assortments. Silk Underwear HOSIERY and GLOVES A DELICATE, intimate gift I hit Step-m Envtlope Chemtie No. 44012. No tnapt nor buttons. Each tide is slashed from hip to htet and daintily hemstitched. EyERY girl and woman liket the boyish trimness of these Knickers (No. 2410). And they're double thickness in back, inhere the "wear comes, which meant they last twice as long. LO Is THERE a nicer,timelier gift than thest Sports Btoomert No. 246 jf Held firmly and gracefully in place by the deep fitted cuff, they leare you fret and unhampered by heavy, bulky underthingj, yet snugly, cosily warm. - .1 , ..... -- -.-J-.j-V-r- Li . .J 1- - THE VEST (No.Sh) W r on It f,rnr iW i lemnb srtd trmttiKhtd ikryt-nlk ihamUtr arapl -winch m't tUp down. A M) jif cPrattical, beautiful Gifts NO MORE puckering of brows and biting of pencils fretting over Christmas lists! Whether she's twenty or forty makes no differ' ence shell want Vanity Fair glove'silk under wear, hosiery and gloves in her Christmas stocking. They're practical, yet beautiful gifts, each with a glove-silk loveliness all its own. VANITY FAIR SILK MILLS READING, PA. i GEr'VanityJair when you shop todays tAablUhti. Silk Underwear i