Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (July 23, 1922)
16 THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, JULY 23, 1923 'G0RM1GK VISITS M HDIE 1LSKA Couple Motor and Dine To gether in Paris. PERFECT DAY ENJOYED Cliicagoan Avoids Downtown Re sorts and Misses Spotlight by Living in Small Hotel. , BY FLOYD GIBBONS. (Chicago Tribune Foreign News Service. Copyright, 1!22, by the Chicago Tribune.) I'ARIS, July 22. Harold P. Mc cormick of Chicago and Madame Ganna Walska motored in the cool Bois de Boulogne this evening after having dinner together in one of the rustic little restaurants among the trees. It was the end of a perfect day to all appearances. At 6 o'clock Madame Walska's magnificent motor drew up before her beautiful home in the Rue Lu- beok, which she received pending a divorce settlement with Alexander Smith Cochran, and before reporters could hurry up and interject a. few questions, the two had stepped up (liiickly into the car and were whirled away. Both were smiling happily. Mr. McCormick did not arrive in Paris until 3 o'clock this morning, owing to the late arrival of the Ma jestic at Cherbourg, but at noon he was having lunch at Madame Walska's home. fSOO.OOO Settlement Made. Dudley Field Malone, Madame Walska's lawyer, has been a guest for months at the Rue LubecE home with his wife, who formerly was Doris Stevens. The Malones hur riedly evacuated several days ago, going to a nearby hotel, leaving the field free. The divorce proceedings between Madame Walska and Mr. Cochran have been progressing so satisfac torily .through the French courts and MrS Malone has been able to spend most of his time at Monte Carlo and Deauville, but it will be several months until the decree is granted, if all goes well. The money settlement already has been made, Madame Walska being given the Paris home and almost $500,000. The house formerly was the Reuter mansion and formerly was occupied by the widow of James Gordon Ben nett. Spotlight In Avoided. Mr. McCormick has made himself almost incognito in Paris, avoiding the fashionable downtown hotels and taking refuge from the spot light in a small hotel near the Arc de Triomphe. Mr. McCormick was finally located at Madame Walska's home, but re porters could not get a glimpse at him until he came out for a motor ride. Mr. McCormick seemed pafe and less vigorous than ordinary, but this was probably due to his recent operation. Madame Walska stepped jauntily into the car. They returned before 10 o'clock, but refused to an swer the telephone. SCHOOL FLINT UNUSUAL PROPOSED NORTHEAST HIGH HAS EXCELLENT SITE. Building and Grounds Designed to Be Among Finest to Be Found In Country. A preliminary sketch of the site of the proposed Northeast high school, to be erected on property be tween Bast Thirty-third, Thirty seventh, Tillamook and Knott streets, has been prepared by Knighton & Howell, architects. This eketch provides for the main' build ing, power house, gymnasium and other units, which will be included in the building, and also gives the layout of the grounds, including lawns, walks, athletic field and ten nis courts. Work on the plans is under way and will be completed within the next few months, so that the con struction can be started. The build ing will cost $450,000. The grounds will be laid out ad joining a beautiful wooded park on undulating ground. There will be a playground, swimming pool and community houses within the park, and the whole will be circumscribed by a boulevard. The high school and grounds will be among the fin est in the country. The plan to erect the structure in a 40-acre park tract was evolved as a result of conferences between members of the city council and the school board. The building, modern in every respect, will be erected upon a ten-acre tract and the city will improve the adjoining tract for park and recreation purposes. A fringe of lots, 43 in number, on the south and west eldes of the school property, win be sold, returning probably the approximate cost of the school board purchase, $42,000. MR. WHITE GIVES BOND (Continued From First Page.) called for trial at the fall term of the district court. Both Governor Allen and Editor White will appear on the same pro gramme at the Kansas state normal school here Monday. The occasion is governor's day at the school. The chief executive was to make a speech. Today school of ficials invited Mr. White to appear and he gave his consent. His sub ject was not announced. Persons in charge of the programme said they expected both speakers to express their views on Mr. White's case. Annulment In Sought. Tile warrant for Mr. White's ar rest charges specifically thai; he "hindered,- delayed, interfered with and suspended operation" of trains on the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe railroad. "When a law or a. ruling or a legal authority affronts man's con science, just two courses are open to him, said Mr. White in a state ment issued immediately after his arrest. "He must seek its repeal in the legislature or its annulment In court. The Kansas legislature is not in session. My only other course is to seek the annulment of the order which seems to me to restrict free dom of utterance. The risk is great, but the action quicker. If, in seek ing the annulment of any order or liiw. the protesting"person holds his views on law or order, while the e'e is pending no man can question his motive. The case now is in the . courts. That Is where it belongs" Mr. White also said: , "The warrant for my arrest came today in the hands of the county attorney, and, after the usual pre liminaries, waa served. The case will be tried in the district court, and in the meantime, pending the legal settlement of the rights in the case, the objectionable placard will not be posted. "This waiting, attitude is no com promise, absolutely no acknowledg ment of the right of the state to suppress free utterance, published in a decent and orderly mariner. "And now for a word to labor and the friends of labor: "Force will win nothing, but the rights of free utterance through speech and a free press are funda mental. If those rights , are lost, labor can never hope to win. This action of the administrative officers of the government requires a test in the .courts. We are going to have the test, and while this case is pending strict observance of what the constituted authorities consider the law is the only hope for labor. The boycott will get nowhere. Governor's Course Defended. "And another thing, Kansas must realize the situation in which Gov ernor Allen is placed. He feels that the strike imperils life and prop erty. But it was not without a stress of heart and soul that he has called out the troops. He knows that might mean bloodshed, and to a man of his firre sensibilities the prospect i3 a heavy burden. In administering the law as he sees it, he has been brave and patriotic. I do not agree with him in the action by which he seems to suppress the fundamental right of free speech. My protest was en ergetic and seems the only self respecting thing for a man to do who feels as I feel. "The idea of adjudicating indus trial disputes is right. The laboring man in the end will lose if he re sorts to force. The living wage for the unskilled laborer is the basis upon which wage adjudication must rest. The Kansas court has laid down that principle. If the national labor board had adhered to the basis of(a living wage in its con troversy with the shopmen this strike would never have occurredi "But that water has gone under the bridge. The shopmen are out in a just cause, but in an ill-timed strike. The cause of labor can win only with public sentiment behind it, and to revert to brute force now would be a disastrous mistake." RUSSELL DIVORCE FAILS JIRY DISAGREES AFTER 4 HOURS OF DEBATE. Conversation of Petitioner With Brother-in-Law About Child Prevents Verdict. BY HENRY WALES. (Chicago Tribune Foreign News Service. Copyright, 1922, by the Chicago Tribune.) LONDON, July 22. After deliber ating for four hours, the. jury dis agreed on the Russell divorce case this afternoon. A new trial is not expected before ; next .year, owing to the glutted condition of the cal endar in the divorce court. Lord Buckmaster is being pressed to as sist Henry Duke in hearing cases. About 600 cases are awaiting hear ing. The jury was- reported to have split over the conversation between Juhn Hugo Russell, the petitioner, and his brother-in-law, Mr. Wel ford, who was not called to the stand by the respondent. . The peti tioner introduced a copy of a letter to Welford in which Russell as serted that he did not recall any intimacy with his wife during De cember preceding the birth of the child of which his wife declared him to be the father. The petitioner denied he was the father of the child, named a co respondent and named several risrtue affairs in which he said his wife had taken part.. During the summing up of the case by the judge, the foreman of the jury in terrupted, saying:. . "Forgive me for asking a ques tion, but I really am -concerned over not calling Mr. Welford as a wit ness." ' The judge replied that the jury should put its1 own construction on the failure of the respondent to call Welford to the witness stand. PACIFIC GETS SCIENTIST University of Washington Man to Teach Biology. C. A. Hubbard, formerly instructor of biology at University of Wash ington, has just been announced pro fessor of biology at Pacific univer sity. One or two other - instructors are to be added to the staff, 'but -have not yet been an nounced, pending approval of the board, of regents. Pacific will em phasize the physi cal education and pre - medical de partments this year in addition to liberal arts courses, according to W. C. Weir. president of the college. Mr. Hubbard is a graduate of University of Washington and a special student of Dr. Trevor Kin caid, widely known biologist. He is the author of several scientific manuscripts and 's identified with a number of scientific societies of the country, including the Ameri can Ornithologists union, Ameri can Ecological society. Society of American Mammalogists and the Pacific Northwest Bird and Mammal society. He was also formerly con nected with the United States bio logical survey. N0RTHCLIFFEVERY LOW Condition of British Publisher Held Most Critical. (Chicago Tribune Foreign News Service. Copyright. 1923, by the Chicago' Tribune.) LONDON, July 22. Lord North cliffe's condition has aroused the gravest concern of his intimate friend, Mr. Humely. ' Mr. Humely asserted that the publisher is in a most critical condition. s Members of the board of directors of the London Times who started a libel suit against Lord Northcliffe for his open statements have with drawn their action, believing he never will be able to appear in court. - , Bible School to Close. The closing exercises of the Daily Vacation Bible school, which has been conducted for the past three weeks by the Montavllla Presbyter Ian chuTch, will be held in the church tonight in place of the reg ular services. The programme has been arranged to demonstrate the practical value of the work of the school, and a number of the children will take part. The dramatization of several Bible stories and a map exercise will feature the. pro gramme. Read The Oregonian alansified ads. : Plllllftllllil It ' Aniens ide Oil EDUCATION BILL Archbishop Christie . Urges Catholics to Act. PASTORAL LETTER IS OUT Training ,in Denominational De clared Just as Good as in . Public Schools. I That recent events in Oregon have created a situation which de mands united and energetic action on the part of the 'Catholic citizens is the declaration of Archbishop Christie in a pastoral letter oppos ing the compulsory education bill, now. pending, which was given yes terday to Portland newspapers for publication. Archibishop Christie charges that the attempt to obtain the passage of the compulsory school bill is an attack on the inalienable constitu tional rights of the citizens of the-: state to religious convictions and the exercise of their consciences'. He contends that the denominational schools which the bill would de stroy are as good as the public schools from the standpoint of edu cational training and that they sup ply one additional thing religion "which no thinking man will call a defect.'.' Defense Is Urged. The letter declares that the Cath olic people had never united on questions of a purely political char acter. "Yet on the other hand," it con tinues, "when the natural and con stitutional rights of thousands, even millions, of Catholic citizens are gravely endangered, when their in alienable privilege of following the dictates of conscience is being vio lently attacked, then, in such an emergency, even purely spiritual leaders would be derelict.' in their duty did they not urge upon the Catholic people a justifiable and energetic defense." The work of the. public schools is commended and .the educators in those schools are declared to be de voted men and women. The' laws which the different states have adopted compelling children to at tend school until they reach a cer tain age are also commended in the letter State's Right Unquestioned. "On this ' subject of compulsory education let no one deny that the state has a right to insist that ail its citizens receive elementary train ing," it reads. "While the parent has rights over his children that an tecede all others and these include the right to designate the kind of school the child is to attend; yet should this same parent fail to edu cate the child the state has the right to pass and enforce laws to attain that end." ' The letter contends that the teach ers in the Catholic denominational schools are fully as devoted and fully as competent' as the instruc tors in the public schools. The Catholic denominational schools also are declared to follow the same cur riculum as far as possible and use the same textbooks as the public schools. Large Saving; Claimed. The fact that there are 6000 chil dren attending the various private schools in the city of Portland means a saving to the school dis trict, it is added. "If the average cost per child is $70 per year that means a saving to the city of $420,000 annually ; $4,200,- 000 every ten years," it says. "And! the buildings; at the rate of 40 children to a room at an estimated cost of $15,000 for each room unit, there would be an additional in vestment of $2,225,000. When tax payers are already overloaded with accumulated burdens you would think that gratitude instead of in sult would be due Catholics, Luth erans, Adventiste and others for the burden, they - are taking 'off the shoulders of their fellow-citizens. But instead of being regarded as benefactors we are treated as' though we were aliens arid enemies. It is true we do not ask gratitude, but we do demand justice." ' Heart Declared Kducated. In answering the contention that the public schools are a gymnasium for democracy where the rich and poor, the native and foreign horn all mingle in one great melting pot, the letter says that the denominational schools perform the same service and even more efficiently. "We educate the heart as well as the mind, and who needs strong moral principles more than the for eigner and his first and second gen eration children?" it says. "Who more 'than they need to know the Ten Commandments and toe taught how to keep them? In some of our sisters' schools in Portland we have 10 or 12 nationalities represented though only one language is spoken English. In what way, then, do our Catholic schools show them selves less American, ess efficient in molding a promiscuous assembly of nations into one great harmoni ous family? N Schools Are Defended. "You beloved members of the laity are the best proofs of the Americanism of our own denomina tional schools; you know that these schools are absolutely American for innumerable reasons, among which are the following: "First Their history is American, religious schools antedate the Amer ican revolution; their growth has kept pace with the growth of the country; -religious schools are not a foreign importation. "Second Their curriculum is American. Our religious schools follow the accepted American course VITAMINESand health Make no mistake, to be healthful, the body needs nourishment rich in vitandnes. The child needs them in abundance to assure growth and strength; the adult to help sustain the body-forces against disease. OF PUREST VITAMINE is the ideal body-building It is abundant in the vitamine-elements that science has found so needful for health and growth. Just a little Scott's Emulsion, three times daily after meals, would be effective. Buy a bottle and start building your strength today t . 6wtt tt Bawaa. Bloomficld. . J. J of studies from the first grade to the university. r "Third Their teachers are Amer icans. The nation has no better or truer citizens than the instructors in our denominational schools. "Fourth Their pupils are Ameri cans, or under the influence of their training, they are being rapidly changed into the refined and fin ished product. Devotion to Flag Taught. "Fifth Their Ideals are Ameri can; nowhere is love and Tespect and devotion to the flag more in sistently taught than there, as every crisis in American history has proved. - -Sixth The motto of every Cath olic school in the land is American 'For God and Country.' a fitting complement to the motto of our na tion itself, 'In. God We Trust." "And so, beloved, members of the laity, the five elements that make the public schools of America great are shared and at times excelled by the denominational schools of Ore gon and elsewhere." The letter quotes a large number of non-Catholics who expressea themselves in favor of religious edu cation. Among those quoted are: W. H. Taft. expresident and . now chief justice; the late Theodore Roosevelt, ex-Vice-President Mar shall, the late President Harper of Chicago university, Bishop W. A, Chandler, Methodist; itev. vv. Mon tague Geer, New York; Dr. Emil G. Hia-sch, Jewish rabbi of Chicago. There is but one weapon with which to oppose the designs of those who. secure the passasre of the bill and that is truth, according to the letter. Procedure Is Criticised. "Trsjs is the question that the citi zens of Oregon will be called upon to answer within the next few months," it says. "The so-called compulsory education bill now pend ing, which, would deprive citizens of the right to educate their own cnu dren in schools according to their religious beliefs and the dictates of their conscience, is aimed at the very heart of the American consti tution, for if that bill is passed every denominational, religious. parochial school in Oregon for chil dren in the first to the eighth grades will be closed after Septem ber 1, 1926. Catholics, Lutherans, Adventists, Episcopalians and others who believe that religious instruc tion should go hand-in-hand with secular education, that the heart as well as the mind must be trained, should awaken to the iniquity of this procedure. All God-fearing and liberty-loving citizens should pause and reflect maturely before com mitting themselves to so destructive and un-American a policy."' . CHANGE WILL AFFECT 8100 INSTRUMENTS OP CITY. Preparation Under Way for Six Digit Method of Operation Soon to Be Inaugurated. . The work of replacing J000 auto matic telephone instruments con nected with the C automatic office and 7100 manual telephones operat ing through East, Tabor and Wood lawn office with new style machine switching instruments has been be gun by the Pacific Telephone & Tel egraph company, according to C. E. Hickman, division commercial su perintendent. ''This is in preparation for the six digit method of operation which will be inaugurated late this faii and will result in the connecting of all -these instruments with the new Garfield office at East Twenty fourth and Stanton streets," Mr. Hickman said. "The new instruments are of the same design as the ones installed in the A automatic office district on the west side several months ago. In appearance they are similar to the manual telephone desk sets, but have a small dial on the base. The 8100 new instruments have been purchased at a total cost of $120,00W and the replacement work will af fect every teiepnone subscriber in lrvington, Rose City Park and adja cent territory. . "Subscribers having the old type automatic instruments will be the first to have their telephones re. placed with the new sets. The re placement of the 7100 manual sub scribers' sets on the east side will be started about August 1 and will take about two months to complete." Pastors Are Entertained The officers of the Multnomah county Sunday schools entertained the pastors and superintendents of the various churches of the city and county at the First Methodist church, corner of Twelfth and Tay lor streets, Friday night. A report given by Miss Parker, state Sunday school secretary, on the recent American Sunday School conven tion, was one of the features. Several speakers pointed out the progress made in Sunday school w6rk and a number of special mus ical selections were given. Thief Gets $70. Henry Poulson, who lives in an apartment at East Alder and Grand avenue, awoke yesterday morning to find a thief investigating his cloth ing, Poulson reported to the police yesterday. The thief escaped with $70, leaving behind a watch he had in his hand when caught by Poulson. Mrs. Goldstein Burned. Mrs. Monroe Goldstein, wife of the financial-secretary of the Port land lodge of Elks, is under treat ment here for serious burns which she suffered in the natatorium at Newport, Or., Sunday. Mrs. Gold stein ,- was badly scalded by live steam from a concealed pipe. Wheat Estimate Unchanged. TOPEKA, Kan.', July 22. The es timate made last month by the state board of agriculture of a 117,215,000 bushel wheat production in Kansas this year still stands good, says the July crop report issued today. - BEARING COD-UVER OIL food for a child or an adult MANDATE PROBLEM FINALLY IS SOLVED Agreement as to Palestine and Syria Reached. LEAGUE COUNCIL ACTS Confirmation Counted Triumph for Mr. Balfour; New Hope Seen for Austria. LONDON, July 22. (By the As sociated Press.) Final confirma tion was given the Palestine and Syrian mandates today by the coun cil of the league of nations. This means that the mandate system of government becomes effective throughout the world almost' im mediately. There remain for set tlement only certain minor points between France and Italy, respect ing Italian schools, immigration and economic features in Syria. The earl of Balfour, Rene Vivian! and Marquis Imperial!, respectively delegates of England, France and Italy, will make declarations on Monday regarding the future policy of their governments in the man date area. Urging the confirmation of the mandates, the earl of Balfour said today that their immediate adoption was imperatively needed in order to allay the agitation and unrest among the different racial elements in the mandate areas. He said that while custody of the holy places was of great interest and im portance to the outside world, they were of little concern to the in habitants of Palestine and Syria. M. Viviani indorsed this stand. He said that France was anxious that the mandates should be accepted im mediately. Marquis Imperial!, who contended for definition of the Vatican's rights to the holy places, yeided on this point. Balfour Scores Triumph. The action of the council marks the culmination of three years of effort and negotiation on the part of the league to institute the mandate system of the Pacific islands, cen tral Africa and Asia Minor. It is construed as a victory for Mr. Bal four and as' giving further effect to the establishment of a Jewish national home. The mandate for Mesopotamia au tomatically disappears with the cre ation by Great Britain of an inde pendent state in that country. There was no real divergence of opinion regarding the Syrian mandate, but on article 14 of the Palestine docu ment, defining the functions and powers of the commission for the custody of the holy places, there was some disagreement between France, Italy and Great Britain. This article is now revised to meet the wishes of ail the parties and the text will be announced Monday. The composition and competency of the commission wilr- be -determined by Great Britain before the next ses sion of the assembly in September. HoSye Seen for Austria. The council is encouraged by the reported willingness of the repara tions commission to suspend its claims against Austria for 20 .years It is understood that the 18 govern ments involved have consented to waive the indemnity and other de mands on Austria until the country regains her financial and economic foothold. Austria thus will be free to pledge 'her customs duties, her salt monopoly and other assets as security for loans. A statement issued by the infor mation department of the league to day said: "We are getting rather tired of hearing that Austria is on the brink of collapse. She has been on the brink of collapse every few months tor the last three years and she may live a long time in that state. The' danger is not really in financial col lapse, but political troubles. "The danger is that a government may come into power which is not prepared to spend all its time in propping up the rotten finances of Austria and which may try to cut the knot by claiming to unite with Germany. If that happens central Europe will be a melting pot. "The allies must settle among themselves some kind of policy which will enable Austria to have a government strong enough to en force economy ruthlessly. Until this is done Austria will drift nearer and nearer to bolshevik conditions and closer to union with Germany. This combination would menace the equilibrium of Europe." , The Oregonian publishes practi cally all of the want ads printed in the other three Portland papers, in addition to thousands of exclusive advertisements not printed in any other local paper. Yet at 72 He Lives to Tell Wonderful Story Hydraulic Engineer Finds Cure for Rheumatism After Suffering Agonies Many Years HOW IT HAPPENED "Eleven years agro I was in hospital for seven weeks, at a cost of over two hundred dollars. For two years I suf fered torments and winter before last I was laid up six weeks under doctor's care. Truly in Che last twelve years I have wanted to die, I was in such agony. I would say, 'good Lord take me rather than go through it again.' "But now I am a new man. I am a beter man today than I was twelve years ago. I can almost put my leg over the back of my head. 1 could do that at 30, now I am 72." Mr. Wilson, -the well-known Hydraulic Engineer, whose picture and also that of one of the big waterpower jobs of which -he had chajge appears above is only one of thousands who suffered for years, owing to the general belief in the old, fase theory, that "Uric Acid" causes rheumatism. This erroneous be lief induced him and legions of. unfortu nate men and women to take wrong treat ments. You might Just as well attempt to put out a fire with oil as to try and get rid of your rheumatism, neuritis and like oomplalnts. by taking treatment sup posed to drive Uric Acid out of your blooa and body. Many physicians now "You children must finish your dinner!" One of the first and most marked effects ofYeast Foam Tablets is to increase the appetite. MIf a growing child has no desire to eat, there is something serious the matter withhim,M says a noted specialist in the care andfeeding of chil dren. "A frequent and increasing cause of this failing or finicky appetite is lack of B vitamin." , This vitamin is found in greatest abundance in yeast; and Yeast Foam Tablets are made en tirely of pure, whole concentrated yeast Give your child Yeast Foam Tablets. Watch him improve. Note how his appetite returns; how he will grow, put on normal weight and increase his strength and endurance! ; Why many foods are deficient Many raw foods which originally contained vitamin lose this element through "preparing processes" such as milling of wheat and other grains; refining of sugar; heating foods to high temperatures; discarding of water in which food is boiled, etc The vitamin B thus lost can be quickly replaced by the addition to the diet of Yeast Foam Tablets. Build up your child If your child seems thin, under weight, delicate, irri table and always tired out, give him Yeast Foam Tablets. They are a simple, pleasant and notably effi cient corrective a food, not a medicine. Nortfiifestern Yeast Company, Chicago Makers of the famous baking yeasts, Yeast Foam and Magic Yeast 1 . . lleast FoaimTaMete ( the only pure whole yeast in convenient Jahlct form. TO WESTERN WASHINGTON AUTO CLVB MEN ADJOURN. Resolution Adopted Would Raise Maximum to 35 Miles Per 1 I Hour on Highways. TACOMA, Wash.. July 22. (Spe cial.) The legislative committee of the Automobile club of western Washing-ton, which concluded Its meetings for the present in Tacoma yesterday, adopted a resolution rec ommending the raising- of the speed limit on improved highways of the state to 35 mites an hour, among a number of resolutions proposing im portant changes In the state motor vehicle code. The most discussed questions of all. the license fee and gas tax for automobiles, .were left, however, for a referendum of the .membership to be sent out at once. Coupled with the declaration in favor of raising the speed limit to 35 miles was a provision that the state highway department should have the right to further limit speeds over described- roads where the spe cial conditions might be deemed to justify slower speeds,, but not to less than 20 miles per hour. Danger to traffic or damage to roadbeds are named as causes justifying special speed limitations. Another resolution declared that stages and trucks operating as com mon carriers should be charged a fee properly to recompense the state for the construction and main tenance of the highways used, so that the carriers would be placed a 1 know that Uric Acid never did and never will cause rheumatism; that it is a natural and necessarv constituent of the blood; that It is found in every new-born babe, anrt without it we cannot live! It took Mr. Wilson twelve years to find out this truth. He learned (how to get rid of the true cause of his rheu matism, and recover his strength from "The Inner Mysteries," a remarkable book that is now being distributed free by an authority who devoted over twenty years to the scientific study of this mal ady: And ' Mr. Wilson says: "Now I know, and I never can forget the car rier left it In my box and I came near throwing it in the fire. But something prompted me to look it over. Thank God I did." NOTE: If any reader of The Orego nian wishes the Book that reveals -these facts regarding the true cause end treatment of rheumatism tthat were over looked by many doctors' and scientists for centuries past, simply send a post card or letter to H. P. Clearwater, 210-W street, Hallowell, Maine, and it will be sent by return mail without any charge whatever. Send now. You may never get this opportunity again. If not a sufferer yourself, hand this good news to some afflicted friend. -Adv. on a more equal footing with rail roads. - . The committee recommends also that the present law referring to the placing of advertising signs along highways and requiring that they be put off the right of way be ex tended to require the signs to be placed back 300 feet from the high way. Charles Ij. Wooley Dies. TILLAMOOK, Or.. July 32. (Spe cial.) Charles L. Wooley, a promi nent resident of Tillamobk county, died at the'Boals hospital here Fri day, following an extended period of illness. Heart disease and asthma were the cause of his death. Mr. Wooley was born in Larvik, Norway, May 28, 1855, and came to this country in 1881. He remained in Chicago for a year, then moved to Astoria, where he married . Miss Martha Ellineson in 1887. Tn 1893 The Quicfe and Easy Way To Make Blackberry Jam Makes Two-Thirds More Jam From Same Amount of . Fruit, and Never Fails Uses Ripe Fruit, Takes Only One Minute's Boiling and Saves All the Flavor and Color Everyone who likes fresh black berry pie will love good blackberry Jam. Particularly when all the flavor of fresh ripe blackberries is preserved in the jam. Such black berry jam is now possible in every home. A new and never-failing: method has now been discovered with which anyone can make the best quality quickly and very economically. With the Certo Process, full-ripe black berries are UBed not unripe black berries, so necessay by the old method. The Certo Process retains all the rich flavor of this ripe fruit because it requires only one min ute's boiling- not the 30 or more minutes required by the old method. This long- boiling down destroys juice and flavor and particularly kills the real blackberry taste. With Certo, therefore, the result is a far superior fruity flavor and two thirds more jam" from the same amount of fruit, because no juice is boiled away. It also banishes all guesswork or worry, as perfect re sults are certain. v The new Certo process for making blackberry jam is very 6imple: Crush well in single layers about 2 quarts ripe berries, using wooden masher, crushing each berry and discarding all green parts. Add Juice of 1 lemon. Measure 4 level cups (2 lbs.), crushed berries, in cluding lemon juice, into large ket tle. Add Tib leveled cups (3 lbs.) sugar and mix well. Stir hard and constantly and bring to a vigorous Do you, like so many modern mothers, con stantly have to stand over your children and literally MAKE them eat? What Yeast Foam Tablets are for loss of appetito indigestion lack of energy under weight pimples, boil nervous troubles run down conditions Why this is the only yeast for children The only pore, whole yeast in easy-to-taka tablet form. They contain no drags or othr ingrediants. They do not form im nor cause belching. They aro the only pure, whole yeast suitable for children; they don't cause fermentation. Eaehlotistestedtoinsarehiffh and uniform vitamin potency. Study these extraordinary advair tagesof YeastFoamTablets. Be sure you ask for them bytheirfull name. TKey are told ky Si drif gittt the family moved to Hemlock, Or., where they have since made their home. Mr. Wooley is survived by five children, Mrs. Thomas I. Watt of Brighton and Emile, Charles C, Ltruie and Mangus R. Wooley of Til lamook. Funeral services will be held at Beaver Sunday afternoon at 2 o'clock. The Beaver Oddfellows, of which Mr. Wooley was a member, will have charge of the services. Two Held in Girl Case. Charged with serious offenses against minor girls. George Rink, 64, and Frank Zuerner, 42, were held in the county jail last night under bail of $3000 each. The men were arrested following investiga tion by the women's protective di vision. The two men live in the vicinity of Delay and Knott streets. Read The Oregonian classified ads. boll over the hottest fire. Boil hard for one full minute with continual stirring. Remove from fire and add Vt bottle (scant half cup) Certo, stirring it in well. From the time jam Is taken off fire allow to stand 5 minutes only, by the clock, before pouring. In the meantime skim, and stir occasionally to cool slightly. Then pour quickly. Makes 10 half pound glasses of jam. To anake Certo blackberry jelly, see Certo Book of Recipes. vexto is a pure irmt proouci coo tains no gelatine or preservative. It positively saves time, fruit, flavor of ripe fruit, and guesswork. It makes all kinds of jams and- jellies with fresh or canned fruit some you have never made before. It Is highly Indorsed by all cooking ex perts who have used it. Every woman who tries it recommends it to her friends and says she'll never be without it. And Certo jams and Jellies keep as well as any other made. Get a bottle of Certo and recipe book from your grocer or druggist at once. For extra free copies of Certo Book of Recipes write Pectin Sales Co., Inc., Roch- ter, N. Y. Start the new the sure, quick, economical way of making jams and Jellies. You'll never return to the old "hit-or-miss" method.