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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 1, 1922)
r C TOE SUXDAT OREGONIAX, PORTLAND, OCTOBER 1, 1922 IMAGINATION AND CONSCIENCE OF CHILD ARTIST ARE DEVELOPED BY MEANS OF FAIRY TALES, TAUGHT BY HER SOMEWHAT UNUSUAL PARENTS Pamela Bianco, Whose Pictures Are on Exhibition at Portland Art Museum, Has Never Attended School, Nor Has She Has Instruction in Art, but She Paints and Draws Those Things That Most Impress Her Portrait Shows Child to Be One With Large Endowment of Common Sense. 5?iwajsssis''! J ramrla Blanco. S Watercolor f 4 "Ilrd Carta' 0 OU palnttos watercolor. IN VIEW of tho reception given the drawings of Pamela Bianco when they were shown In Italy, England, New York and San Fran cisco, they should be hailed with delight in Portland while they are on display at the art museum. Pamela Bianco la a little girl, 15 years old, who has been drawing with poetry and charm since the age of 4 all the things that made an Impression on her. Her parentage Is unusual, her mother being an Englishwoman with American training, and her father an Italian, . a member of a London bookbinding firm. Mr. and Mrs. Blanco tried an experiment -TTnrr-m-nminfBMfciiirrifMiiiiiniiii ii,iiifrnHlwiiiiiiiwMliniiwiwiiw a1'1 instant M V-'fe .-:? rA ,'A ?v a oil 1 7 -, v. v..: "'"-.:! HOP INDUSTRY IN AMERICA IS DECLARED DOOMED BY CESSATION OF BEER MAKING Oregon Grower, Back From Tour of Producing Countries of Europe, Says England Has Surplus of Own Products Fields Under Contract to Make $100 to $200 an Acre. , BT LOUISE P. SHIELDS. HOP growing as an American Industry Is doomed, according to one of the large hop grow ers of Oregon who lias Just returned from a. tour of European hop pro ducing countries. 'Ninety-nine per cent of the' hops produced in this country," he says, "baa always gone to the making of beer, and. only 1 per cent to near beer, yeast and medicinal com pounds. "The 9 ?er cent finds a small de mand in this country since beer is no longer legalized as a commer cial product. The bootleggers' stock in trade is not beer, but moonshine whisky or wine. The proportion of the 99 per cent used for home brew is negligible. The average citizen will not take the time or trouble to brew beer at home, although a spe cially prepared quarter-pound pack age Is offered for this phase of the American market. "There is a limited demand In Latin-American countries and 6-0-pound compressed packages Vre prepared for pack animals to carry into the interior of Brazil and the Argentine. But Latin America has wine and mescaL Why import for eign hops for beer? England Now Haa Surptna. "England used to furnish out largest foreign market, but she now bas a surplus of home-grown hops. Her board of Control has forbidden her dealers to enter Into any con tracts with American firms this y. For any possible new con tracts she is favoring Germany rather than America because of the difference in rates of exchange and because of her Interest in Germany's earning money to pay her war debts. Germany has replanted many of the hop fields which during the war had to be utilized for food products. Belgium, too. Is planting a larger acreage to hops than before the war, and has a better chance than America to secure the English orders. "The bulk of our crop this year." he says, "is going to England on centracts written in 1920. The cur rent market price for hops Is listed a 'nominal' and ia quoted by coal a. " V .NftSMMS'! ' rime of children dancing- In garden. of flowera and frnlt. Portrait of with their family, and it met with success. Neither Pamela nor her brother has ever gone to school. The child artist is allowed to paint as she pleases and has never received art instruction. She chooses her own subjects, her own Btyles. She lives normally and is corrected for her ehildish mistakes of conduct. She is allowed no .special privileges be cause of her art. "We have taught our little girl the lessons of life largely through the medium of fairy tales, the morals of which bring home to her forcefully the effects of right and wrong," Mr. and Mrs. Bianco have said concerning their daughter. "It is wonderful to observe how this ers as 7 or 8 cents, not enough to cover the cost of production. The reason the majority of Willamette valley growers are able to gather a profitable crop is that they hold five-year contracts written when the English market was open. On the sliding scale, contracts starting at 50 or 49 cents, most of the grow ers are receiving 35 cents this year and are able to clear from $100 to 12O0 per acre. The growers who did not have contracts are leaving their hops on the vines. Orea-on Yield Heavy. "The two foes of the hop crop, the wet weather aphis and the dry weather red spider, have damaged BOF - 1 : -IL, I" . ;J J-r" W- 7 - i - , - ; l.: ii 1 S Pen and Ink flccoratlve head. Boy Friend." 7-"Dancln Mice," method of developing conscience has built up her Imagination." The artist's portrait reveals her as very English in appearance and a most practical young woman. The look in her eyes shows an uncom mon amount of plain, everyday common sense. She is apparently quite sturdy and healthy with nothing of the fragility of physique that might be expected in a youth ful genius. The look in her eyes has nothing of the faraway, retrospective atti tude. She is just a girl who, since early childhood, instead of dressing dolls, has drawn pictures of babies, animals, flowers and other things that impressed her. And she is not merely an extraordinary child, only a little of" the Oregon hops acreage this season and in most sections there is a record-breaking yield and a fine quality." The Oregon hop growers are al ready beginning to plan for new crops on the acreage now planted to hops. They consider the rich soil of their part of the valley espe cially adapted to prune orchards. Claire Irvin, president of the Farmers bank of Independence, says there will be little financial de pression in that vicinity during the period of replanting end readjust ment, since the large growers have reserve capital, and most of the small growers own land free from Z,s'.CJEL PICKJBRS VS1.G "HALF-BOX" MEASIR-E. :i WWW t ' Vw critiCB have 'said. Nearly all chil dren draw to some extent, but their work is almost always accidental and hapnazard in expression. Not so with Pamela; her work shows a studied development in style and spirit. Wide Range In Shown. Her pictures range from the smallest line sketches to large por traits and graceful friezes of chil dren in delightful poses, amid flow ers and with flowers about their ankles as they play. There are in teresting studies of hands and arms and legs, all done in quick, clean lines. The exhibit includes about 200 specimens of drawings, water colors, oil paintings and lithographs, ranging from her early work up to the time she was 14, Her work has been the subject of wonder and praise from many art ists and critics who have seen it, and a poem to a particularly lovely head, named "Mirage" has been written by Walter de la Mare. The display reveals that she does animal figures especially well and a cer tain water color group of dancing mice with a setting of green grass and bright flowers is a favorite. Many of the subjects for her drawings Pamela has chosen from round about her and include such things as her father, her brother, her friend, her father's shaving brush, eggplant, cauliflower, a par mortgages and have taken the pre caution to use diversified farming, without dependence upon any one crop. Joseph Hirschberg, president of the First National bank of Inde pendence, says: "The change of crops may come In two or three years. Who can tell? But our soil Is good for other cropsi" The largest hop yard in the world i on'the 1000-acre Horst ranch near Independence. There 1100 men, women and children are picking this season, most of them in field work, but 60 of them busy on the hop-picking machine which was in vented by the ranch's proprietor, E. Clemens Horst. Clusters of 'vines come from the field on trucks and are swung on a crane to the first of a long series of revolving wire cylinders. The dry stalks of the stripped vines are cast into a refuse box: The blossoms detached By the coarse wire whirl over bands where workers snatch out stray leaves and twigs. The fragments of vines torn off and dropped by the cylinders are picked by hand workers in an ad- MMW .fflt. fc mikmzvzm f i rot, a hen, a cow. rabbits, her cat asleep and a corner of her room. The subjects seem to show that her art longs so for expression that she does not look aboflt for something intriguing to draw, but rather must draw whatever she sees. Expert Paya Tribute. Captain It. Langton Douglas, di rector of the national gallery of Ireland, upon seeing the exhibit of Miss Blanco's work at the Leicester galleries in London, said: "A critic should pay no attention to the age of an artist. But the earliest draw ings of this girl can be judged without consideration of her age. She has an extraordinary quality of line and a natural gift for composi tion. She has a most fertile, pic torial imagination and in her technique, too, she shows great powers of invention." The exhibit, which opened Wednes day, will be here until October 15. The museum is open on week days from 9 A. M. to 5 P. M. and on Sun days from 2 to 6 P. M. Free after noons have been announced for Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, Satur day and Sunday. In connection with the display. Dr. S. C. Kohs. psychologist of the court of do mestic relations, will lecture Friday arternoon, October 6, at 4 o'clock in the museum on the subject, "The Psychology of the Child's Art." No admission fee will be charged. joining building. These pickers re ceive 75 cents instead of 60 cents a box because they have only branches instead of whole vines to strip. The blossoms separated from all for elgn substance go to the rooms of the drying house to a depth of two feet on each floor and receive the penetrating fumes of sulphur freed from arsenic. The blossoms are then trucked to the cooling room and aerated before baling and shipping. Passlnsr of Onrlng Regretted. There Is many an American fam ily that will regret the passing of the hop industry and its annual "hop picking outing. Thousands of peo. pie congregate for three or four weeks in the hop fields around In dependence and other towns in the Willamette valley and In localities of similar soil and climate in west ern Washington and in California. New York is one of the few eastern states which have extensive hop acreage. The multitude working near Independence on the Horst, the Hirschberg-McLaughlin, the Burton and the Wigrich (owned by the English firm of Wiggins & Rich ardson) regret that they may have only two or three more years for this "vacation with wages." The ranch managers provide living quarters, shacks and tents, electric light, straw for bedding, firewood and transportation from the rail road, all free, and keep a fire in community cook stove where they may prepare their meals, and allow neighboring merchants to keep sup ply booths on the grounds. The ranch owners encourage home talent entertainments and games. boxing matches and other athletic events. Joseph Hirschberg gathers the boys and girls on the last day of the nicking on the Hirschberg-Mc Laughlin ranch, and throws hand fula of nickels and dimes among them and in many ways adds to the children's happiness. The manager of the Horst ranch has arranged for a day nursery where tor a nominal price mothers may leave their children for the period they are in the rieids. Some of the ranches have radio concerts and other evening pro grammes from outside talent. This year they have closed toe dance halls on the ranches and arranged for two dance halls in the town of Independence, further removed from the highway route of automobile bootleggers, and where supervision passes to the hall management in stead of the "checkers" over each group of 50 workers. The change from working clothes to attend the town dance seems to add greater re straint to conduct. The manager of on of the large ranches says, "Almost all of our workers are American born. We used to employ large numbers of Japanese, but owing to -the senti ment against them in our state, we have gradually dropped them and now have only two of that race, a man and his wife who have been with us a long time and who are personally popular. We nse some Filipinos, since there seems to be no prejudice against them. "There are two classes of Ameri cans who do our picking, those who make it an outing and those who mae it a business. Our method of paying by the box makes a fair dis tinction between the two classes and this year's wage of 0 cents a box makes a good compensation for the earnest workers. We have one man who has picked for us seasons be yond count. He is really phenom enal In picking 20 boxes a day 10UO pounds) and earning $10 a day. "Some of the hard workers are people who find outdoor emplay ment throughout the year, begin ning with the citrus fruit of southern California in the winter and working north through the vegetable, cherry, peach, apricot, pear and early grape harvest to our hop yards and going from us to Hood River or Ashland for the ap ple crop and then back to California for the- citrus fruit. They have the wanderlust all right, but they lead a healthful outdoor life and some of them are saving their money. The ones who used to hike from one oc cupation to another come now in Ford cars. It is bard on their chil dren to be out of school while in Oregon. "In California their children are subject to the attendance officers of the county school organization who oompel them to attend if in a neigh borhood for only a few weeks, and who arrange for temporary schools and extra teachers in the localities of season occupations. "Who are the people who make this outing? Well," he chuckled, "they run the whole social gamut, from the washed out old man from a Montana mining cook house to the beautiful young daughter of a neighboring banker. Poorer People Get Work. "Many of our workers are very poor and earn their biggest wages of the year from us. When we re sumed operations after the war, and had no means of addressing our old workers, scattered to the four winds, I advertised on the movie screens of the Portland theaters which I knew to be patronized by the poorer people, and in a few weeks I had all the workers I need ed for beginning and they used some underground system of passing the word until we had our full quota. "As I started to say, many of our pickers are very poor and thrift less. Some come here absolutely strapped. Here Is an order of $8.30 for an Idaho woman to get shoes for her barefooted children, so they can help her in the fields. Some times the people who receive an ad. vance like this leave before they work it out, but usually they etay. I find I lose very little money by trusting wage earners. They are a decent lot. This year we have work ers who keep up an unusually good spirit. Last year we had the mis fortune to have a family of agita tors, street musicians from Port land, who stirred up a strike. After I dismissed them and convinced the strikers they were hurting their own Interests, I learned that this family had gone to Hood River and within a week had stirred up a strike among the apple pickers. Pickers Come in Groups. "Usually people come In family groups. The other day a woman went home for a few days and left two children in the care of a woman in a neighboring tent whom she had never seen before. She would not have left her purse with a stranger, and I wondered how she could leave her children. Occasionally a young girl comes alone. I would like to have a wise, motherly woman here to whom the girls could go for ad vice. Several days ago I had to tell some girls to leave. It was one of the hardest things I have ever had to do. I have not time to run the ranch and do welfare work too, much as I am interested In the good of my felltow men. I tried to get a man and wife from the Salvation Army, but was not successful." An old woman expressed the gen eral feeling of the hop pickers as her fingers stripped the fragran-fc blossoms from the vines into her box. "I hate to think we won't have these hop fields to. work in after a few years. I'd had a misery in my side for several years, and I just hadn't any digestion left. One of my neighbors in eastern Oregon said to me this summer, 'You'd get well. If you'd go over to Indepen dence for the hop season, like me last year.' Here I am. Digestion! I can eat anything and want plenty of It. I'm ten years younger than I was in July." in MEMORANDUM IS ISSUED BY U. S. GAME WARDEN. Co-operation In Enforcing Regu lations Is Promised to State Officials. Ia a memorandum issued to the state and county game authorities of Oregon and "Washington Ray C Steele, United States game warden, has expressed his willingness- to co operate with the tate officials in enforcing the state and federal game laws and regulations. The open season for taking migratory birds opened one-half hour before sunrise today. A brief summary of federal game laws which are likely to be vio lated was set forth as follows in the memorandum: Pursuit, hunting, capture or kllllns; mlg-ratory game birds between sunset and one-half hour before sunrise. Pursuit, hunting;, capture or killing of migratory birds from an airplane, power boat, sailboat, any boat under sail, or any floating device towed by sailboat or powerboat. Migratory birds may be taken with a gun only, fired from the shoulder, not larger than ten gauge. Shipment of more than two days' bag limit 25 per day) out of the state In any one calendar week. Migratory game birds protected at all times: Wood duck, eider duck, swan, little brown, sandhill and whooping cranes, band-tall pigeons, curlew, and all shore birds (except black-breasted and golden plover, wilmn or Jack snipe, and greater and lesser yellow legs). Migratory Insectivorous birds and migratory non game birds. such as bitterns, grebes, gulls, herons, loons, murres, puffins and terns. Dally big - 11m Its on migratory birds: Ducks, 25 in the aggregate of all kinds; geese. S: brant, 8; rails, coot and galiin ules (except sort), 25 In aggregate of all kinds; sora. 60; black-bellied and golden plovers and greater and lesser yellow legs, 15 In the aggregate of alp-kinds; Wilson snipe or jack snipe, 25. The game warden's office lias re quested all sportsmen who kill ducks which have been banded with a biological mirvey number to for ward the office the number and place where the ducks were shot. The "prestige of Oregonian Want Ads has been attained not merely by The Oregonian's large circulation, bix by the fact that all its readers are interested ia Oregonian Want-Ads. E. H. BRYANT. Editor. Contributions ot rm. end Intra, prob lems and ltma of Interest, criticism and club notes soilcltd. Send direct to 143 East Thirty-fifth strseU Portind Chess tod Checker club. Washington building; PROBLEM NO. WiW. By Zr. W. K. I. Da! ton. Seattle. A'sh. BLACK FOURTEEN PIECES. R T P-J 31311 f .. I WHITE EiviHT PIECES. White mates in two moves. White king on KH7;-queen on QB; rook on KR4 and on QBT; bihnp on K2; knight on QB'J; and tjBa pawn on QR2. Black king on QB5; queen on Q: rooks on KKtS and QKi; bishops on wB4 and QKt4; knight on QKi'2. pawns on KF;3. K Kt2. KH3. KB 5, Q4, QBS. and a knight also on KB8. PROBLEM NO. 1251. By Dr. W. R. I. palton. It Is not long since The Oregonian solvers solvedV the prise problsm contrib uted by Ben Foster, and now they are Koing to be up against the real thing In this, another "Three Mover" from Dr. L'alton. Several Seattle fans failed ut terly to get the key. The doctor guar antees It to be absolutely sound, and a i.ook prize will be given to those sending In the correct ana'. y sis. Solutions must be In by October 22. lf22. We with to include in the contest the two mover be low: BLACK TEN PIECES. iOi zIM m in i i WHITE EIGHT PIECES. White m&tca In lhr move,. White ktn- on QR; rooks on QKtS mnd QH; bl.hopa on KR2 and KB3; knimn. on QBtt and pawn on U2. Black king- on QKt4; Mrhop on QKtS; pawns on K-B6. Qi. Q5. QO, QR!. QRS. QUO, R7. PROBLEM HO. 1252. By Dr. W. R. I. Oalton. a ' -'- f ' "- .. . I n- -.. i i i t .1 I I L 1 I BLACK SEVEN PIECES. WHITE SIX PIECES. White mati In two move. Checkers. PROBLEM NO. 143. By C. P. Ovlatt, City. Lota of men and lota of play but a good one for every claaa of checker play ers. Thanka Ovlatt. Black. 2, S. 7. . 10. 11. 12. IS, 19. 21. i 1 r 1 i 1 i- i 1 Q S S 3 JpSL r-f--J White, 5, 8. 20, 22, 2. SO. 80, SI; kings. 9. 13. 28. White to play and win. PROBLEM NO. 1437. By Frank Pollard, Lo Anaelea. Cat. Black, 3, 5, 6. 7, 10, 11. 12. 14. Is. K-M-j., I--FFP '-...-" - j h -r-; i -4 O .; O ' White, 13. 1. 20. 21. 23, 2.1. 27. 30. Si Black to play and white to win- -PROBLEM NO. 1488. By Frank Pollard. Black. 8. 7. 10, 11. 28; kin. 2S. White. 17. 18. 20. 21. S2; kins, t. White to play and win. PROBLEM NO. 14S9. By Frank Pollard. Black, 1. 11. 13l klnga, . 10. 2 Whlte. 17, 22; klnna. S. 18. IS, 28. White to play and win. GAME NO. 1218. Played recently In Los Ang-elea, Cal., between Meesra. L. L. Hall and Frank Pollard; the latter handling- the black pieces. It cont.ina a v-ry fine problem; Black. 2. 12. 22. 28. White, 20 21, 23. 30. White to play and draw bt U L. Hall. See play below: 11- 15 24-r.t lu-1'8 82-2S T-ll 22- 18 7-10 23-1H 13-22 17-1S 15-22 .87-24 1S-23 2H-1D 18-14 2.V18 3- 7 27- 28-32 S- 7 8-11 Sl-27 7-10 19-15 14-18 "'J-25 9-13 - S2-27 7-1S "4- 8 US- 9 10-14 15-11 12-19 23- 22 8-14 20-23 27-23 13- 9 12- 1S 82-18 11-1S 21-17 18-1S 24- 20 1- S S- 1 23-18 20-) s-12 is- 15-18 11-8 Drawn 28-24 5-14 5-17 2- 7 10- 14 10-15 18-27 8- 3 ' M. Claua. Tacolt. Wash., one of oar prominent contributors, la off on a va cation from his work In the bank at Yucolt. tiend ua a meea of freeh deer meat- We are In receipt of many aolu tlona but withhold the aame for the next Issue. How about contributing aoma of the gamea by correaponden.ee ? GAME NO. 1219. ALLENTOWN RECORD GAME NO. 149. H. Ulakle, black plcea, and J. Carr, white. Played recently la Allentown. TitOS 28-19 11-13 19-18 23-28 2.1-10 8-11 1U-18 11-15 7- 3 8-10 27-23 12-1M 1S-11 28-So "2-17 4- 8 28-1S 23-29 S- 8 1- 8 22-17 7-11 11- 7 0-a6 17- 13 3-7 18- 7 29-2 8-11 11- 18 24-20 2-11 7- 2 28-22 25- 22 15-24 28-23 23-22 A)ll- 8 18- 23 2.1-19 9-14 2- 7 10-1S 28- 19 11-15 25-22 22-18 17- 1 7-11 82-28 S- 9 20-18 15-19 29- 2S 18-34. 22-18 15-19 IS- 8 . Whtta k!n an KT: qn.a wa QR: rook on QUI. bishop oa aK.t: pawns o a KBn and K2. Black klnf ea KS; kman'e or QKiT and QR6; pawns .a tikis, k.Ui, KBa. Kl SOLUTlONsV ProMam No. 12l Kar. B-Ri. JTt-l; f. 1'iKt, KP: a. W-B n.at. 2. ..P-Q. I Q-Kt mate. H. Oodnard. problem -No. 12,1 K. B HI, K-J: . R-yca.. K-K4; . B-H2. l..KKt; 2. K-J.h.. K-H.1: . K-ys. l...KiI; A. P.Rich.. K-KJI; a. Kt-srt. 2.. KP; a. Il-Krt mate. 2,..K-K.ts. a, R-Kll. variations. Probi.m 15,2 Kar. Kt-OT. K-04: J. U-KH3.-n P-KS or K-B or X; . Q ViKts or Kt-Hx mate. hulnttona have boaa ro.Wd from H. W. Crow, C. O. Olv.ne. H. 8. Oodd.rd. C. t Campbell. l.oa Thompson, u. M. Drake. lr. Daltoa. ilr. Kllk. Albert J. hnx.n. Frank Maue, C. P Uatea. O. J. I'antw.ll. Ii. Ixmnay, lsrs Bheph.rd and Hugh,. It. low are two fumes from the Loudon tournament. Will publlstl ae fast as apace will perron. Man, of the aolvrra ate sending; la rorrert eola tion and remarks highly eommenriatory of the class of probiema published la The Oregonian. H. 8. Ootldard. Venoouver, Wish., please look over the autbor'a aolotloa la No. 12i. GAMS NO. 122. Sicilian Tefens.. Euwe Tartahewer.rtuwe Tartahewer Holland t'krenl1 11 "Hand tkrtnta White. H.B''k. V hlt 1 P-K4 P-m!l K-rJS 2 Kt-yBS P-Qlt.1 '- P-Kt, BlHTk. CP U HI I'll' n lit lu tt Q Rrh. KK-K K-B ; Q KIJ U - K 2 Q II c h .' K It It U hi. Il J- l' !l 3-K7. h 4 Kt-BS P-K.t 22 RP pr 2a h-ks Qui -'4 ga Kt-BS -JH K-Kt! ll-Ki'i 2H K-KtS o-o j: ij-r;. h p.Kt Q-mt.-n I'-W, -' j-v a rr ao it-KU 5 P-Q4 6 Ktxl 7 B-K2 8 HKS P-BJ 10 O-O 11 PB 12 BI'xP 1.1 H-KKtS 14 P-K M4 Q.KI 1 Kxf fjiKi'u: -R 13 HsKt 1 B-DS IT K-R 18 PK,t I'xll a.i f-iu Q-Ki h S K-H4 KlxKI 3S K-Kte P-B4,f K-R4 GAME NO. 121-7. Atklna. Rubenate !n. A'klna, Bubc White. H'.ark.iWhlte. 1 P-Q4 KKt-H.tlli PKt 2 KKt-Bl P-K3 2.1 J-H4 nt"ln. irt.K. K i-gt Kt-m I'-pa c it H una F-UKlS Hit r-l.'K'4 fx HI' R-H4 B'B4-W4 V-Ki3 H'' OsH Q-Rl"'h. B-BX'b Resiane. P-QB4 P-J 21 T-WI14 4B-KtJ 5 P-K 6 Kt-BS 7 B-QS 8 BxllP P-UR4 10 O-O 11 (J-K2 1 2 Pi P 13 BUS 14 KR-Q 15 Kt-KS IS Q-K3 17 Q-KtS IS VixB M-K2122 tJ.Kt QKt-W2 211 H-K2 O.024 0.-KS PxP;2.- It-lta r-CjK11'.' Q-HI , P-H4 11 R-HS Q-R4 21 KlP PaP'.'H P. -II II Kt-KtS 3l K-R H-U H R-Kt B.y2 S2 Hft B-K 13 uKt KKl-( 11 1 K-K2 Hxlt lB KtiKti game no. i::n. Oueen'a Onmlt TwrlTnert Morrlsoa RubenstelnjMorrtsoB itubensteln da Poland itnada Poland White. Black. I While 1 P-Q4 F-U4i'.', KI-CS Block. Q II H-l R US in HI' it-Kt I'-Hit KH Il-Q '. P-Ml K-ItJ K-KtS yxuj K -Kt 4 K - It .1 1'-Kt4 R Q7rl t uilctt B-Ki.lch RxMP Kll' R-ItT.H Rx P K-R- 2 Kt-KBS KI-KK3 il h t-llj P-I14 I'-K.l 27 Ktxl 4 P-KS P-H4,2 Kt-Kt4 5 Kt-H3 KlB::.- u" ft B-j3 p-ymi so K-KT 7 -o l'xlll':il Q-K2 Hll' P-4KtlH2 1-K13 P-QS PxuP.IS H-KS 10 PlP QKI-Kli 3( y-KlJ 11 B-K2 uKt.Ut'.1.'i K-KS 12 Kt-K5 B-Kiail'i Q-KSoh 13 H-ittJ U-K2.17 RxJ 14 HR-U O-tl 11 B-K2 1" H-B3 P.-I) an R-KT 1ft H-K P-It.t 111 H-KKT 17 UUxKt UxHJl K-B3 15 KtxKt BxKt'42 K-KtS 111 RxH yiK tit-K-B2 21) lixH PxlJ4 Hxl'ch 21 IJ-,'2 P-KH4 I.-. Hx.1' 22 - P-KK't4 (J-KS4 K-KS 23 P-KR3 R-B 47 K-UK.t 24 K-Kt2 R-B2 48 RxP P-K! And the same continued with 411, It Q4, P-Kti :.'. RxP, H-Kt7i r.1. k-BS. K.-R7; S2. R-HS. K-KtH; IS. K -K 11, R Kt7; 24, R-QKtl, K-B and white re signed. The editor regrets that In copy-Ins de. acrlpllon of O. M. Drake-, problrm that te copied the prlae problem contributed ty B. Foster and publlohed It again. Mr. Drake gitie the description fur the eoltur to look over and be sure It wae rorrcl. as he waa unable to solve It. Will soon' g.lve Mr. Drake'a composition the att-n-l.oi. It deserves. Many, no doubt, will be pleased to secure the difvarain again. Have recelveil several roUrMa Tor IT 11-18 28-19 13-22 18-11 22-17 31-28 8-11 '2-1i lit-23 21-14 18-23 311-211 22-21. 11- 8 m- 4 (A) A beautiful stroke. B. W. OAMF1 NO. 1220. This la a game between the lady champion checker player of Rait Lake City with the white piecea and J. H. Mmtth. ev-cliantplon, with the black. Played June 27. 1U22. Notes by Hinith. 10- 14 10-19 8-10 13-17 22-2-1 23-ltt 24-13 11- 7 1K-2S .10-23 11- 18 3-1l 12-18 22-31 2-3'l 27- 23 18-15(0 7-11 32-27 23-21 18-20 8-12 5- 9 31-24 8U-23 31-27 13-11 11- 7 28-IU 21-17 (I-1H(B 12-111 lu-1.1 17-22 2.'.-2 22-18 II- 7 22-17 .19-13 17-13 6- 4- 8 1.1-22 2o 21 22-17 25-22 7- S 7-10 )5-H 14- 8 7- 10 8-12 22 28 24-27 17-14 29-25 S- 9 10-12 III- 8 9-8 2- 7 111-28 28-81 27-3J 14-10 18-15 28-19 12-18 8-1 8-1 1- 3 18 211 31-28 32-27 27 24 22- 18 27-18 18 11 I- S IS- It 7- 1 1 (C 14-23 2.1-22 " 14-18 24-19 1-18(L 25-22 JI-15 21-17 - 8 12- 111 U-14 H-13 11 23 1K-1.1 23- 7 8-11 15-1U 17-14 8- 2 Halt Lake Tribune game. Drawn. IBI Hugo llendnraon player 8-11 her. against M. Bpletman In tuird American Tourney. (C) The game le now Welillcal with one played between .Nelson anl Ginsberg. tl) Ginsberg played 23-2J here. lK) A man down but going for a king. The possible combination ar. numerous from now oa. tj AM E N. 1221. 11-13 IS 14 23-21 31-28 IS- 22- 18 1U-17 10-17 8-9 l- 11- 22 21-11 21-14 24-19 9- 2 23- 18 111 20 2- 8 9-18 17-21 12- 10 113-18 28-211 111- U(A 2-11 29-25 8-1U 13-17 3-14 S-ltl 9-13 B W, (A) Well known book loaa. GAME NO. 1223. K HLHO. Played at the I.oa Angelea club. J. Proulllard. black piecea, va. A. Jensen. 10-13 24-19 12-18 5- 15-19 22- 18 8-11 13-11 14-18 1-!S 15-22 27-23 5- 9 2.1-14 1 8-24 23- 18 4- 8 14- & 2'i. 24 !-! t 8- 10 23-21 7-14 14-10 2s-32 18-14 8-12 23-22 21-27 14 1 1 10- 17 3H-25 23-20 1(1- 8 32-27 21-14 8- U 3- I 3- 7 1 2J 9- 18 23-18 28-SO II- 8 27-24 23-14 11-18 I- b 7 11 3-8 JO-la 10-13 SO-25 8- S 24-20 28- 43 20-21 31-28 11-15 8-11 1- 28-llt 23-18 8- 1 20-24 29- 23 18-23 28-23 27-82 13-18 14-19 15-10 18 27 I- 8 2.1-27 23-18 9-13 32-2.1 82-28 18-23 11- 30 18-11 10-2O 8-10 27-3J aad whit won by crowning man. ate GUARD TO HAVE INSIGNIA Coot of Arms of 182(1 In fan try to B! Cliosru bjr Board. The 162d Infantry. Oregon na tional guard, will have a coat of arms, according to a new order Is sued by th. war department, antl Major James F. Drake of Portland haa been appointed chairman of th board, which will ael.ct a dealgu for the lno-ignla. Major Drake wan elected by Adjutant-General Whit, for this duty. The major iaaued a request yee terday that all Interested submit de signs to him at his office In th. Medical building;. After being; se lected by the board tha deslsjrt must, be approyed by th. war de partment. The order providing for th. coat of arms Is In line with tb. n.w plan of having coat, of arm. for all units of the regular army and the national guard. Kastcrn btar Entertains. FOSSIL, Or., Sept SO. (Special.) -Several member, of the Kosall chapter of the Kaatern Btar accept ed the Invitation extended them by f-ibe Condon chapter to be their guests Thursday evening, th. occa sion being tha official visit of th. worthy grand matron. Mrs. Charles Caatner. to th. Condon chapter. A number of members from the Arling ton chapter were present. After th. business segKion and lecture by Mrs. Caster members snd gtieawt ad journed to tha dancing room of th. New Condon hotel, where an .labor at. banquet was served. ,