TIIE SUXDAT OREGOXlAx. PORTLAND, FEBRUARY 12, 1922 TEX mm m ' VIEWS OF MODEL LOCOMOTIVE FOR OPERATION ON POLE ROAD A TO FIGE GRAND JURY ESTABLISHED Jl!1 1857 7 tj The Quality store wrr v S OF PORTLAND ' Mij$ Gin's' Stories Declared Justi fication for Action. Has Been This Sale From the Start and New Sensations Are Added for the Second Week S10,0C0 BAIL IS GIVEN Magistrate Considers Tales War rant Promoter Cein Bound Orer. Testimony Is Attacked. 10 1 ' rK 1 . . : $ i- ... - : - "J ' i . i . . ...... . - f i. -. i '; ALL - V- NEW TORK. Feb. 11. Ths charges Rainst Tex Rlrkard. sports pro rioter, are to be weighed by the frrand J itt tor the purpose of determinlnir wnetuer h snail be indicted. and tried. ilapintrate Simpson today ruled that the stories told r two little iriris one IS and the other 11 of relations Into which Kickard led them, were Traclous enough and serious enough to Justify him in re lerrina; the accusations to the In dicting- body. Therefore, the mag-is irate Increased Kickard's bail to 10.009. under which he will be held tinti the frrand Jury reaches a finding-, whlcli will probably be In mid- JUckar Held Grand Jory. It had bean hoped by friends of the promoter, who Is a polished, likeable man, against whose reputation noth- 1ns had previously been presented that Magistrate Simpson might throw the case out on the ground that the avoc users were of low mental caliber. Jidlo. Rack, the elder, la none too bright, and Anna Hess, the younsrer, la La class at school which is main' talned. for mentally deficient chil dren. J3rt the magistrate declared that la spite of the frtrls characters, and Jn spite of their admissions that they had lied In prerions cases, they had told stories of their alleged in ttmaclea with Kickard that had not keen shakes under cross-examination, and that he believed they were tell ing the truth In this instance. Therefore, nothing remained for him to do but hold liickarit for the errand Jary. Actios Apparently Surprise. Apparently this sctlon was a sur prise to Kickard and his attorney, Max Steuer, for they had made no provision for balL But Mitiristrate timpson permitted the promoter to remain In the custody of his counsel a few hours, snd later the bond was furnished by the National Surety company. Kickard. deeply affected by the position in which he found himself, had nothing to say as he left West Side court. Counsel for lilrkard. In the rr- ments before Magistrate Simpson, attempted to discredit testimony Btven at Its previous hearings by the K nek girl and Her friend. Anna Hess. This testimony dealt mainly with places whure the alleged assaults took place. 2 J . f ............. ..,;; rri ' : . - 41 r - - r Ase-re Rear view ef loeometlve lavestrd by Arthnr W. Arnold of I. a Pine. SBawlas; the flexibility when rails are of different height. Below Side view of same saodel. HJM HUBT BT MB cnivi:ii iifi.d ox charge of RECKLESS D1UVIXG. llrs. Helen Pelara May Have Frac tured Skull as Kesnlt of Donnloitn Collision. Mrs. Helen relara. I. wife of Henry Driara, iii H Morrison street, probably uffered a fracture of the skull early A new method of transportation. embodying In its principal features trains of cars with cushion tires upon the wheels operating upon a pole road constructed of wood, has been Invented by Arthur W. Arnold, for merly of an Francisco, and now at 1'ine. Mr. Arnold hopes to try out his invention in proposed logging operations in the La Pine district. A model locomotive of the type which Mr. Arnold proposes to con struct for hauling hia traina was ex hibited in 1'ortland at the meeting of the International Association of Railway Supervisors of Mechanics January 24. Mr. Arnold at that time gave an address in which he told of his invention and of the need which he considered that it would fill. The road, which the Invention con templates using in the solution of the transportation problem, would be composed entirely of wood and aim which the wheels of the train would run would be of wood. In order that the wood would not readily wear out the wheels of the locomotive snd cars would be equipped with cushion tires. There would also be flanges to pre vent the train from leaving the track. Mr. Arnold estimated that such a road as he contemplates could be constructed at approximately (1000 a mile. He contends that, owing to the economy of constructing the road compared with the ordinary type of railroad, or to the hard surfaced highway for the operation of trucks, his Invention will prove a cheap method of handling logs and other freight. Pole roads with cars drawn by horses are no new thing In logging operations. So far as known this is the first effort to make use of high speed power for operating cars on !ei 1- I such a road. The construction of the lar in type to an ordinary railroad I locomotive would use gasoline or with the exception that the rails upon I other power for driving purposes. LiKt night when one of a pair of auto- 1 M 0 I Tfl f) THI PflllD P T mobiles in collision skidded into her I HI I. H Mil rHJ i fl IT as she otood on the curb at Lownslale 1 1 ills Ui ill I U lil LI I UUUilUL nd Morrison streets with her hus band. The automobile of George S. Tay lor, 171 King street, proceeding west on Morrijwn street at moderate speed, .truck the side of a car driven by ;.u:s Vana, 561 East Seventeenth Ktreet. -which was going north on Uownsdale street. Witnesses told the police that the Vsna car was traveling at about 2i to ii miles an hour and that he at tempted to take the riffht-of-way from Taylor. After the Impact the Vans car skidded to the curb where and Mrs. Ielara stood, and Mrs. 1-elara fell heneath it. txhe was cut csout the head and the city emer ncy physician, after a hasty exami- ition. said that she seemed to be rioualy injured and might have a actured sku.L Motorcycle Patrolmen ForkefT and nn. after an Investigation during x Itich several wi'.nesses were exam- ed. arrested Vana cn a charge of kless driving. lie as released on i baiL ACCOUNTING TO BE TAUGHT BUSINESS MEN CITY JOBS ARE COMPLETED Council Next Wednesday to l'ass on Acceptance of Work. Fix p!eces of public work which ae been completed in various dis- t-ts of l.at Portland are to be usidered by the city council for eptance at its meeting next Vi dneaday. i hey Include: Construction of a - e r In Has.-ilo street, from Kast '"tty-fifth to Kast Sixty-third street, i egon Construction company, con :ictor: sewer in K.ist Seventh street. m Ainsworth avenue to' Magnolia et. Coast Construction eompany. Itractor: the Kast Sixty-eighth .:ei't and Sacramento street sewer 'vitfni, McMary Itrothcrs. contrac ts: fewer In Sirnpson street, from "jst Sixth to K: Ninth street, -ron Construction company, con--.c'.or: sewer in Last Mxih street. si Magnolia to -Morgan street, v o-t Construction company, con-j --.Ctor. I E. J. Berry to Give Instruction in Elementary Principles Begin nins Tuesday Night. An elementary course !n accounting for professional and business men of Portland will be given by the school of business administration of the Ore gon Institute of Technology to start next Tuesday evening on the fourth floor of the Y. M. C A. building, it was announced yesterday by Kdward L. Clark, dean of the school. K, J. Berry will be instructor. The second term of the school was Inaugurated by a series of addresses by IVrtiand men on business subjects. An Increased enrollment has been ob taned. Courses under way but still enroll ing students are: Advanced cost ac counting, 1C J. Leo; advertising. Henry K. Hayek: elementary account ing for business men, J. Berry; accounting. P. D. Kossr economics, J. A. Davidson: public speaking, W. (.;. Harrington; accounting. W. H. An derson; auditing. R. V. Kiseling; mar keting. Frank P. Tebbetts; law of property, insurance and negotiable paper. W. K. Koyal: salesmanship. F. P. Tebbetts: accounting, T.- A. Kutherford; advanced public speak ing. W. a. Harrington; certified ptib lic accountancy quix. F. L. Peach; law of contracts snd agency. T. W. j Vcni'a; law of partnerships nd cor poration. E. E. Feike; money and banking. C. R. Moore. Slate aid to ex-service men snd a limited number of scholarships which are still available have helped to in crease the enrollment in both the commerce and college preparatory school. art and books, his to natural history. It was a strange turn that led this farmer boy and later lumberman to gather the treasure of king's palaces. but stranger still that bis inspiration snouiu nave cuuie liuiu an viu uisiui j of Mexico. "AH the success I have had In col lecting," Mrr Ayer observed recently. "I owe to Prescott's History of Mexico. It was the first boufc I ever read. I came across it while fighting Indians during the civil war la- New Mexico ancT Arizona. It made me in terested in them and then in their literature, and later I began collect ing other things." . If it was Prescott's History of Mexico that put Mr. Ayer into lecting, it was a very successful b ness that kept him there. Mr. Aye business field was lumber, particular ly railroad ties. He built up a very large concern, but he-iid not let it worry him and for 26 years he and Mrs. Ayer spent four months a year in Europe traveling and collecting. Bronxes from Naples, silver and gold jewelry from northern Africa, Venetian glass, rare old laces, stuffs and lusters are among the treasures of the old world that Mr. Ayer has brought back to enrich Chicago. He also has given the Field museum one of the finest libraries on fishes In the United States, and a library on birds to match. The museum has named a hall after him. and the collection he gave the Newberry library has been named after him. To top off his collecting, Mr. Ayer has delved Into pewters and furniture. He has also endowed the museum, the institute 1 and the library. Durance men to meet i-il Expected in Portland at Con ference Thursday. Folly S'o life insurance men from .1 icctiona of Oregon and from south-r- Washington are expected in 1'ort--:.d Thursday for the second annual 3-day life insurance sales' congress t the treon association of Life derwriters to be held in the assem- ball of the Muitnomait hoteL Sessions of tne conference will ; n at A. M and will be devoted to discussion of problems of interest tr.e insurance men. Prominent life -urance men will be on tiie pro arr.tue for addresses covering iif rtnt phases of the subject of life urance. Among the speakers will John L. Snuff, president of the -tl.nal Association of Life Under writers, and Joseph L. Oreenwe.ll of :lllo. Edward Everett Ayer Noted . Collector of .Antiquities. Ka-y'l Mammies aa4 I.lteratere of American Indiana .lven Field .llasrasi of .slnral Mlntery. Phone your C nian. lUm CHICAGO.Feb.il. Brisk and kind ly eyed at SO years. Chicago's most extensive collector. Edward Everett Ayer. Is now rounding out his conquests of the past. Younser Chicago has forgotten, if It ever knew, that Mr. Ayer was first president of the JJ.000.0ui) Field mu seum of natural history on its lake front, but it gapes at the Egyptian murumlt-9 he himself bought along the Nile and the American Indian collec tion he gave the museum. It per haps does not generally know that for 12 years he has been a trustee of Its rt institute, nor that he gave the Newberry library the greatest collec tion yet made of American Indian literature. Chicago has other wealthy men who are great collectors, but none the rang cf whose Interest has been BLIND HEARINGS RESUME N'ext Conference Is Expected to Be Called Tomorrow. No meetings of the special commis sion Investigating conditions of the Oregon Institute for Employment of the Blind have been held since the taking of testimony closed last Wednesday night. Otto Hartwig. chairman of the committee, has been In Astoria since that time, in connec tion with labor troubles that have de veloped there, but he will return to day, and it is probable the commis sion will be called together in execu tive conference tomorrow. Walter S. Asher. secretary of the commission, said that it is probable a series of such conferences will have to be held before the commission's decision and report are ready to be made public. Vint ads to The Ore- TOTi). Automalio )-. I to broad. Their taste ran cbiefiy to I were associated. Cheese Factory 5fay Be Reopened. RIDGE FIELD, Wash., Feb. 11. (Special.) A meeting of dairymen of this place and the surrounding coun try was held for the purpose of con sidering the reopening of the cheese factory of the P.ldgefield Milk Prod- acts company at Kldgefield. and If satisfactory arrangements can be made It Is almost certain the plant wiil resume operations some time in March. It has been idle for several months. More than a year ago the factory was taken over and operated by the Oregon Dairymen's league now a defunct organization, with hie it a number of farmers here !' J .!!! U " Patfae, Phonographs m si ri h m ii i a - 4 JLiflLiJL J AND LESS THAN HALF Were $100 to $850 A -Now $50 to $337.50 MAKE YOUR OWN TERMS IN REASON $100 Phonograph Half Price $G? fl in This Sale DUV Modrf No. 7 Pathe phonographs in mahogany and fumed oak finishes. featuring Especially the Splendid Instruments Illustrated and Model "J" Actuelle, Was $240, Now $120 . r ANY home that has not a' good phonograph should take advantage of this opportunity which we can extend as the result of an ex traordinary purchase. The Pathe is internationally knownjfor its "jeweled music." Artistically de signed cabinets make these phonographs handsome Pathe Phonographs Play All Records pieces of furniture. It is the latest models of these standard instruments being taken out of the cases daily we offer at half price and less. We advise buying tomorrow or at least the early part of this week. Even at half price you have the privilege of making your own terms in reason. Pathe Phonographs Have No Needles to Change . v --..i: w iu..,j.-:r.i: rg mi;; 1 , . h7' . .1 fe''i r-y fr-y3 CONTINUING THE SALE OF 30,000 Pathe Records 1 rice Pathe records will play on any machine with uni versal tone arm (Victors, Columbias and Edisons require attachment). Every conceivable selec tion is here vocal, instrumental, operatic, or chestra, dance down to the very latest hits. . Buy any two Pathe records in this sale and pay only the regular price of one. Regular 75c rec ords now 2 for 75c; regular $1 records now 2 for $1, and "so on up to regular $2.50 recprds now 2 for $2.50. $120 Phonograph Halt rnce in A his bale Model No. 10 Pathe phonographs in mahogany and fumed oak finishes. i J-t m 1 I I Needle Cut Records I ! 1 1 1 if' I '. " F: HI (I i 1 i I if I U i! If re '''j I m 7 v New ...EXTRA A A j- .i i run, hi 'Ui M $72.50 eiie - (NEEDLE CUT) ras Halt P 1 1 -t These Can Be Played on Any Needle-Played Phonograph 2 for T.5c AH Double-Disc Records Regularly Priced 75c Each This is the big surprise for the second week. Actuelle needle-cut records which play on any standard phonograph (Victor, Columbia, Vocalion, etc.) without an attachment being necessary are included at half price. The 3000 records in this-sale comprise the very latest releases and are offered for the first time. Song, Dance, Instrumental, Etc. 2 Records 75c Remember these Actuelle records can be played on any machine. Every kind of selection. All double face records regu larly 75c each. 1 145 Phonograph Half Price .m cn in This Sale Model No. 12 Pathe phonographs in mahogany and "fumed oak finishes. It's You June Moon Ten Little Fingers and Ten Little Toes Dapper Dan Please Come Early " NEW February Numbers included, such as "Blue Danube Blues" "The Sheik" "Wabash Blues" and Other Recent Hits Song of Love Good-bye, Pretty Butterflies Tuck Me to Sleep in My Old Tucky Home Fancies Extra Salespeople -Meier Prank's: Sixth Floor. (Mail Orders Filled.) X.