THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND,; SUNDAY MORNING, KQVSI.ISER 0, 1013. minir roirr mill IM'MIL OUII WILL ' DETERTilNE LEGALITY REM - Gty-ter T-ake -Measures io ln sure.. Validity ' of -Possible , Issues i at uommg tlection. With thifual yesterdy of County Clerk J. H Coffey to transfer to the -lty authorities th county fegistratlon list used At the election last Tuesday. City. Attorney Iga Roche Will, according , to program, 'ask for writ of mandamus ' tomorrow ompeIlln; the county to turn over the list to the city, for use at the election on city; propositions scheduled for December. si Dependent upfcn the action of the cir cult court the question will' be taken before the supreme court of the state tor final adjudication. All Is part of .tin amicable, arrangement between tho city and -county authorities to insure the absolute validity of the 1275,000 worth of bonds and the 10-year bonding proposition involving $45,000,000 to be voted on .at th city election, r,. The city authorities desire to remove 'every, shcidow of doubt from the pro posed band issue. A decree from the supreme court fixing the registration at the forthcoming election will fix at the Urn a the validity of the bonds. -. , jBoit Win Settle Doubt. ' t ."The wital questions In the matter," 'said District Attorney W. 11 Evans yes terday, , first, if the 191) registra tion used at the election last Tuesday was good: when made, is it good now? Second, should the city . use : the regis tration, lists of 11 J or If UT Third,, is no registration necessary at all? These are facta the city and county authorities want threshed out and settled. It in believed that the course followed will expedite matters to a quick solution of the problem, and guarantee the bonds." Mr. J-ans stated that as far as he could ludgo, the question of registration a applied to the recent interstate bridge bond election was different from the on confronting the city. , ; It 1 possible, too, that the legal ac tion' t be taken by the city author ities la order; to determine the valid ity of, the old and new registration lists aa applied to the forthcoming munic ipal election, may result la the elim ination of registration requirements en tirely , Or again, it may result In a constitutional amendment legalising the : regtattmtlon formality , " ' ; oia raw th Toia. ' Aoaordlng to an opinion handed down In tfc case of Eugene D. White against the - commissioners of Multnomah county In 18J8, "under the constitution of this state, every law which requires previous registration as a prerequisite to th right to vote Is ipso facto void." Th constitution as amended ' now naaa): . . , ' , ; "in an elections not otherwise nro. vided for by this constitution, every ciuxen ei ui uniiea state, of the age of II years and upwards, who shall have resided in the state daring the six months Immediately preceding such election;, and every person of foreign birth of the age of II years and up wards, who shall have resided in this state during the six month lmmedi. ately preceding such election, conform. ably to th law of th United States. on th subject of .naturalisation, shall oe enutiea to vote at ail elections u thorlaed by law" i. : Th question her arise whether th put has th right to impose registra tion restriction on th electorate, when th constitution states specifically that an persons unaer certain condition as Aown above shall b entitled to vote. '. ' 1 Totinf X Vstd Might, " ' Th opinion wa further voloed ia' th raa of Whit, against commissioner that The right to vot is a vested right in praesentl to be exercised In futuro n a fixed day, and law requiring previ ous registration In order to exercise the right on the day do not merely prescribe 'v rule of procedure, but impose an ad ditional substantive requirement - v, v , If a court decision should sustain this folding of former year no registration would be necessary for the city election scheduled for .December 8. N matter what the outcome of th suit to b brought by the city against th county, a decision of th supreme court pro viding th ways and means of registra tion . for the election will assure th validity of th bond to be voted upon. In om way th situation 1 analo gous to that brought up previous to the eleotlon Just held authorising th issuance of interstate bridge bond. Voter of the city are scheduled to vote t thi election on measures authoris ing the issuing of 1275,000 bonds and a bonding act which in 10 year will involve ome $45,000,000. t. The city authorities do not wish to take any chance on invalidating the bond Issue and will take the means outlined to secure a court decision aa to whether th old registration lists, new registration nets as provided for LISTS In Chapter 823 of the IBIS statutes, or ,i tio registration whatsoever, shall apply ; ; at this election. ; , . v .' . The election law of 1918 provides .that It shall be the duty of every eleo . v tor In the tte to register prior to the regular general election in 1914." If thi statute Is held to apply to the city election, an election could not possibly r j b held at the present time, as only .,; about 8000 voters have registered up to th present dates. The city know- Ing definitely, however, that this rul .i in; would apply to the election, could -call upon the voters of the city to reg i; V lster before the day of the election. Another Angle to Tangle. ,-,:; ';.- Another contingency confronts the i city In that by law the voting pre ;HJ clnot of the county, must be reappor ,', tlbned in December. As provided by chapter 288 of the 1913 session laws, "it shall be the duty of the county court In the several counties of the state, at the regular December term jtpreoedlng the general election, to set V, forth end ; establish election precinct within ; the county. : "Said court may set off and estab lish within auch county as many elec tion 'precinct a may be deemed necessary or conyenlent, and they shall be designated by numbers or names; provided, that no election precinct ahull contain more than 300 electors, ; nearly a may be ascertained by the court, and .ball particularly bound the n)6i.',J,;'iiv:;v '( - ' According to . County Clerk J B Coffey thi reconstruction of election precincts must be made by the first Monduy In December, which, of course. In a measure, nullifies the registration list based "tn th '"old apportionment At the present time Multnomah county has 191 precincts, many with aa high 00 voters. Under th new appor , tionment th county will hav nearly 400 precinct. . ; ' : X.ral QuMtloag AtHXvmmna. Many JnteresUng legal question are brought up by the action of the city authorities in throwing th decision of th matta Vj court, lt-i the T fofaTime Since, .1508-the Cardinal Defeats Berkeley Players; Better Team Wins. San Francisco, ; Nov. 8. By defeat ing the University of California team. IS to 8 in today's Rugby, football con test on Stanford field, Ueland Stanford Jr. university .gets back into th win ning- class for th first , time since 3908. ' The Cardinal team won, and won on it merits, but the winners certainly knew they had been in a fight. There is no question that the better team won. Stanford's backs played the best game they have shown this sea. on. California, on the other hand did not play up to expectations.;? There were times, especially In the first half. when ' th Blue and Gold backs did not appear to be able to do anything right, and It was only after their-opponent had scored enough point to make the situation desperate that the California backs settled down to play the game ma it should be played. whatever shade there was in the scrum work belonged to Stanford. The Cardinal pack not only hooked the ball better and oftener than California for wards, but they dribbled better and. followed up closer. The extremely fast pace set in the early part of the ..second half told more- on th Stanford men ' than on California; Maybe because they were oftener on . the attack, the Cardinals looked to be j leg-weary and short of wind th last few. minutes - of the game. V;.,;-;' ' :; ' PIONEER WHO AIDED THE WHITMAN COLLEGE By a compromise between attorney for Hollon Parker, who ia past 80 years of age, .and Receiver Hill of the Walla Walla Flro Insurance company at Walla Walla, Thursday, the suit against Par ker's big farming estate is dismissed and Whitman college immediately re ceives, an endowment-of $50,000 to be used for a school of economics. Hollon Parker, one of the best-known pioneer of Eastern Washington, has re sided for the past sight year in Port land, at 103 Seventeenth street He la almost bedfast Although in a big rooming-house he lives entirely alone in a room segregated from the rest of the house. In his room he is surrounded by an excellent library and a collection of the dally, file of local papers, and with these he passes his time. He came to Portland eight year ago to visit th Lewi and Clark exposition, and hi health became ao bad that he was never able to return ' to hi, home of nearly (0 year. . - . " The Walla Walla estate, consisting of nearly 2000 acre of farm land in one tract, several smaller aections and con siderable town property, is valued at nearly $400,000, and he is said to have much other property In different places In the northwest When the proceed ings were first started against him by Receiver Hill, it was thought that he would lose all, but by, the compromise effected Thursday ' it i now believed that th major portion of thi fortune 1 aaved.-- : Baker Leave $15,000 Estate. Alfred A. Baker, who died at hi home, 147 East Twenty-eighth street, on November 1, Jeft an estate valued at 116,000 . in Multnomah county and Clark county Washington, according to th petition for letter of adminis tration filed by his widow, Laura L. Baker. Mr. Baker asked that William B. Keeler be appointed administrator. Four children and Mrs, Baker are the heirs. custom In Initiative elections to com pare th signatures of the petitioners on the election petition with their sig nature on th registration lists, obvi ously to prevent fraud. If the court should declare registration requirements Illegal, then no comparison could be mad of signatures in petitions and there would be no restriction on re peating at elections. A local option election contested In 1105 bears an analogy. The court said at that time: "It will be noted that the act require petitioners for a local option election to be 'registered voters.' The phrase 'legal voters' is also used in that section, but it i evident! yt cm ployed a a synonym of the term 'reg istered voters,' and to avoid a" repeti tion thereof. It will bo re membered that the county clerk is di rected to compare with' their handwrit ing the signatures as they appear on the registration books and blanks in his office. "Consulting these clauses In pari materia, it is manifest that no elector or legal voter is a competent petitioner for a local option election unless his signature appears on the registration books of the election then pending, or if no election be pending, then his signa ture must appear on the registration books or blanks of the previous election. "The privilege of signing a petition to lntltlate a local option election Is not a right of franchise in which all electors enumerated In the organic law (Section 2, Article II, Constitution of Oregon) can participate." A like opinion was handed down In the case of Woodward agalnat Barbur (Ore gno E8, page 70) by Judr Moore. He said in part "A provision fh the Initia tive and referendum ordinance cf the City of Portland reanlrin th atv auditor to accept for filing' any Initia tive or rererendum petition subject to the verification of the sugnature and voting qualification of the signers by referenc to th registration books, in the office of th county clerk, la an un warranted restriction to registered voter to exercise Initiative power given by section 1. article IV of the constitu tion and section 2, artiol XI. Such registration necessarily tend to prevent fraud in securina netltiona hat in- a,, opinion the qualification of registration im an unwarranted restriction of th right to exercise initiative power, guar- """w wi constitution to legal voters," ,i 'i:'1 ''i'v- The question her Involved fcaa parallel to a certain extent in the pro posed' city election, if the legality of registration la considered a thi forth coming election was called by exercise of the initiative power, : Action on the part of the city will be taken by City Attorney La Roche, assisted by Assistant City Attorney La tourett. County ; Clerk i Coffer la ; act. lng under the advice of District At tor. ney Walter H. Evans. . Mr. Coffey for mally refused to turn over- the regls- wmuon nst yesterday -.afternoon. -Mr. La Rochek will In all. probability aak "r writ of mandamu tomorrow to compel Coffey to turn th list over to iue city, .upon a, decision .being given in the circuit court an nnneal will tut made, to th auprem court of the tt. STANFORD TO oe CALIFORNIA ANNUAL RUGBY GAME OPPRESSION OF JEWS MAY , FOLLOW TH E BEI LIS TRIAL :f:. l .1' I ) P 1 4 . If M A . ' J s,'-.'C fl it W-;: v bt'f-Wr-'i'H ll Mendel Beillis, at right, By Carl H. ' von Wiegand. . iBr tn InteruatlouHl New aernre.l i Berlin, Nov. 8, -Perhaps no trial since the Dreyfus c-uso In Paris has created such general interest in Germany as that of the Jew, Mondel Bellis, in Kleff on the ridiculous charge of ritual mur der. The very fact that It takes ths mind back to the day of the middle ages, has caused thousands of people of other faiths, and no faiths at all. In Germany to evince the keenest interest In the .daily newspaper reports from Kleff of a trial that seems as much out of place in the new century as .would be the "witch trials' at Salem, Mass., two centuries ago. - It is not generally known that the Beills trial Is the fifth "ritual murder" case charged against the 'sews in the last 25 years. Invariably these charges have been the climax to a wave of anti Semitism, or were brought to rekindle the fires of hatred against the Jews when persecutions were on the wane. The first time In the last half century that there was staged in a tribunal of Justice the legendary medieval supersti tion that Jews drew the blood of Chris tian children with which to knead the dough Cf the passover cakes at Easter time, occurred in 1882. It came at the Hotel Multnomah HEADQUARTERS FOR COMMERCIAL TRAVELERS AND TOURISTS Very best Sample-rooms, best Service in the NEW YEAR'S EVE ANNOUNCEMENT Table reservations are now being made. . ' THANKSGIVING ANNOUNCEMENT Table d'Hote Dinner $1.50, with White or Red Wine. , . Engage tables. THE ARCADIAN GARDEN New programme November 10th. ; 1 ALLISON AND TRUCCO In their celebraed Staircase Waltz, Whirlwind Texas .....Tommy and, Tango dances. : .,; . SIGNOR .BRAVO . r J The. Wonderful Tenor. ' , " ' THE FOUR MASQUERIA SISTERS , MARIE THERESA. ',, - ' 't '" .. i..'; - Spanish .Dancer..? .. - rv v;" HOTEL MULTNOMAH ORCHESTRA - - HERMAN S. HELLER, Director. : : J - V THE ABOVE PROGRAMME ? . ': Duripg j Lunch, Djnrier ; and after , the Theatres ; also r - Sunday during Uinner rM:SUNDY:VVNNOUNCEMENTj V i ' 1 : Table d'Hote Dinner 6 until 8 P. M. ; :: . EIGHTEENTH GRAND CONCERT ; ;Givenr by -"Augmented Hotel Orchestra, this Sunday v- 3 -. Evening, :30 until. 10 P. M., in the Lobby of Hotel. ;. -Herman S. ; Heller;', Director, Vocal ? Selections 1 by if :f5,;.H;C-B0WERS;,Manager. ; Kttgffi&ti LOUIS PREYNOLDS, Asst Mgr; :-; V;, being escorted to court, height of an anti-Jewish wave in Hun gary, when a : young girt Esther Soli mossy, wa literally, butchered at Tlsza Eszlar. It was charged'" to the Jews a a ritual murder," aa If -they.had merely sought for. another opportunity to. draw down upon their head still greater ra cial and religious hatred and persecu tions. . , - Previous "Ritual Murders." ' When the anti-Semitlo wave wa at high tide in Germany in 1891 and again in 1900, a boy at Xantan and one at Konitx were murdered, jews were charged with "ritual ' murder." -8hortly after the "Christian Socialists,0 a Cath olic organization, not identical with th Social Democrats, spread from Vienna to Bohemia and stirred VP a bitter anti Jewish movement, two peasant . maid were murdered. The bodies .were terri bly mutilated. The cry of a "Jewish ritual murder" was immediately raised, and Leopold Hilener, a half wltted Jew ish cripple, whom either of the two girl could have handled with one hand, was charged with s the crime. The charge, naturally, wre brought by XJhriatian." After 10 years of more or less contin uous "pogroms," endless . persecutions and indescribable horrors in Russia that seem incredible in the twentieth cen Very best' Cuisirie, City of Portland Very and 10:30 to 13 F. M. pm'" Ti7'V)y:-'';'i;Ci'i',i'. tury, Mendel Beills, a Jewish brickyard foreman. Is charged with "ritual mur der," when the bitter racial and relig ious anti-Jewish -wave is waning from .exhaustion In- the; land Of,, the Great 'Whit Caar. , 'Uy.v-;-'':.;tw "V : i In th Tissa-Esxlar case, the prosecu tion' sol evidence was th testimony of an 11-year-old' boy". He said ha peeked through .the keyhole of a door and aw the nude body of the girl ' lying on the altar in th synagogue. Th "head of th community, aald th boy, with , th rabbi by his side, stood In front of the altar. "Around it were a number of high arm and blessed th viitinv vWhll th other'. wr singing ; a - psalm, '-the "sohachter.f ,ior Jewish.. butcher of - the communityv;'iepped' forward, deftly, cut off th head or tne gin ana csuguo blood in e vesseL the boy said. ' " V-'-' In the Polna "ritual murder" ca in Bohemia,' It wa lmposslbl to mak It appear that the half wltted cripple Hil ner, waa the official repreenttiv of th Jewleh communitie.;, fld that h had killed th two girl ; wndeV direc tion or instigation of the rebbU The theory wa then advanced that ther is a ''secret cult,' or. aoclety; among th Jews, which require blood of Chritlsn children for their rite. . This belief UH prevail very gener ally among the' ignorant population of Austria. Hungary, . Foiana.. ussiu. nu even part . .of Germany, Antl-Jwih agitator, particularly in Russia, hav always availed rthemelve of thii b llf and feellnev.to fan th flam of hatred ' and Dereecutlon .against ; the "It 1 tlm to put to an end thi ;ro tesqu belief and Charg - against th Jews, which la a unwormy o me v- I lllxatloni and culture of today alt wouia oe to irjr .wuviice, Nathan, one " of the v, leading.. Jewish nlillanttirnnlsta In 'Berlin. ' ( According to reports receive m lin there is consiaerawe exoau oi Jew from Kleff, Odessa, and Waraw toward Germany. -i It J rarea tn,w BeiU trial will b mad th incentive for another era of Jwlh persecution In Russia. v'r-'i.T'': v'-v :i PENNSYLVANIA BEATEN i BY DARTMOUTH BOYS PhiiadMnhis. Pa... Nov. ,. In on of the mot bitterly fought groe of the season,' the Dartmouth eleven defeated the University ,. of " Pennsylvania en Franklin field thi afternoon by a core I v - w ... , r . ' . . It was the heaviest scoring game or th vear bv the big teams. uartmoutn scored . five and the Quakers three touchdowns. ::' '. '; v- That ther was so much soorlna; is directly attributable to the use of ooen football by both team For the , first five minutes of the opening period the Quakers outplayed the big Green team, but after scoring their first touchdown th Red and Blue team seemed to lose ita snap and speed and Dartmouth, aided largely by a series of brilliantly executed forward passes,- completely . outplayed the Quakers and scored twic. At th be ginning . of the ' second period the Quaker seemed to come suddenly . to life and by ome perfectly i executed long, forward passe added two touch down. : r V Arrested on IrwanltT jCharge. ' John Grant a lodger at the Eastern lodging house at 200 Couch street, was arrested " yesterday., ; on an . insanity charge, in which he la accused of an noying Mrs. Alio Blssonnett, 971 East Twenty-ninth street north. '''''' ''' "'' XYOvW' ' 1 THE ;t - BUY . ' i&h vv... -BEST, ' y'f "'; ' ' ' .' ) ; ; 111 '. ' ' ! . . ' 1 " 1 1 ; r' ; OUR NEW STOVE DEPARTMENT ' ON THE SECOND FLOOR IS - ONE OF THE tiESTEQUlPPEp'ljr:; AND BEST LIGHTED SALESROOMS ( Ui THE' CITY, "MAKING IT AN.; : :v IDEAL PLACE FOR - THE" ljV$ w 2$$ EXAMINATION AND SELECTION i pF A STOVE OR RANGE. w HERE TOU WILL FIND : AND VARIED ASSORTMENT OP k BRIDGE BEACH & CO.S HEATING;, ; ; . ..STOVES AND RANGES TO ' fi CHOOSE.FROM-STOVES THAT i r HAVE ACTIONAL REPUTATION; & FOR LONG LIFE AND SUPERIOR , 1 1 FINISH, AT PRICES THAT ARE &iM m NO HIGHER THAN IS USUALLY PAID FOR- STOVES THATS ARE ?f UNKNOWN TO THE PROSPECTIVE v PURCHASER.' .,.'','",, ...'; -V' H ;iA; VISIT TO X)UR SALESROOM ?' WILL CONFIRM OUR STATEMENT. ; . Wr.t,if'f..j.i.''J;i'i:; 0 RONEYMANi HARDWARE COjS fotrth at alder OFFICIAL COUNT Complete Figures' Show Prp "pbrtionate Vote on'Tties-" . ...day's -Measures. - " " 1 1 f ' v . . ' ' , ; 1 " Pendleton Or Novl J.The terllia. atlon bill was defeated. In . Umatilla county, tbaoutlylngr, precinct'' return ing: a tlg. majority agalnat ifv AH other measure carried . ; though." jthe County Attorney bill had a narrow es cape. .Following la the offlciar count: University repair t und,f yea,, 134 J; no, 882; university building fundyes. 1286; no,. 83; terlllsation, ye., .-1017; : ho, 1157; county: attorney, : ye,M987; no, 1066; workingmen'a compensation, . yes 1471 f no, 698. . . . , , t ' ' Grant County. : Canyon City, Or Nov. . 8. Off icjal return in Grant county give: h Repair luna, ye. , 827; no, 426; building fund, ye. 286; no, 484; sterilisation, yes. 278; no. 8H; county attorney, yes, 4T8; no sor. compensation, yea, 463: no; 110, ' Town of Monument went dry, 80 to ' Lake County. ' w Lakevlew, OrM Nov. 8.--The official count in Lake county give university repair fund,' yes, 263; no, 125; unlver sity building appropriation, yes, 218; no, 138; aterllUation act, yea, 180; no. 198; county attorney bill, yes, 30$; no, 69; , workmen's compensation act. yes, 151; no, 127. : Three preoincts failed to bold. an election. -''ftri.K;- Jackson' County. 'H): Medford, Ou Nov. 8.The official vote of Jackson county complete ia a follow: 'i University- of Oregon funds, yea, 2011;. no. 871; University of Oregon appropriation, yes, 1161; no, 930; ter- Uiaatlon, ye. 1864: no. 1441: county attorney act, yes, 1?40; no, 986; com pensation, yes, S029; no, 772. - ,.' . Lincoln Oonnt jr. ' ' Toledo, .. Or., Nov. ; 8, The complete official oount for Lincoln county give university repair fund, - yes, 477; no, 684; university building appropriation, yea, 448; no,. 698; sterllixation, yes, 373; no, 688; county attorney, yea, 621; no, 497; workmen' compensation, yes, 768, no, SIS.' . ' i . V NORTHWESTERN BEATEN ' BY CHICAGO TEAM t Chicago. Nov. I Chicago added an other victory to the string thi after noon, defeating Northwestern 14 to 0 in - Evanston. Five minutea after play started, Captain Morgren,. of th Ma roons, went over the line for a touch down on a even-yard buck. The second cor by th Maroon wa mad on a fluke in th second .quarter when Des jardlen recovered the ball when High tower fumbled and ran unmolested 30 yards to the Purple goal. Northwest ern put up a desperate defense, forcing Coach Stagg to keep all his regulars in the game, until the opening of the final half. The Maroon goal never wa In danger. . .;v;;.--v.;' :':;: V HEATING :0 'i'i'Tf A LARGE I - ,1. J,... ,,!,.. it :IIPIrezn6rvg S0h,ERS mar .ami OF BY Matter ls Put Up 'to-County on'Plani r V ; ' ' ". . A recommendation that th county conimlssfoner set aside $25,000 in the ' budget for 1914 to pay for the instal lation of the Somera' Unity System of realty valuation in , the county eases.' sor's office wa passed by the advisory: budget board on recommendation of As sessor Beed. J. N. Teal and Carl . S. VALUATIOn urn ADVISORY BOARD veuy,. or in Doara, poin , nearujy . pt . i;. question discussed waa th amount nee-' essary, to be set aside. .'. f This action, on the part of th advls-' ory board will put the matter up to the county '. commissioner . for a decision' ' and a Commissioner Holman expressed r, the Intention to consider carefully th -'i recommendation of the board, It 1 con-' ' sldered probable that he will back the ; movement ' , " , . " The Jomer system is based on th electlin of a unit strip of land on foot vflde and 100 feet deep In the center of each lace of a city block. ' ' The vaftie of each of these strip U determined by the community - opinion... and with this as a basis the Value of each lot on the face .of the block with the strip under consideration ia deter- :.; mined by the application of mathema tical table. ' Scientific method are alao provided for determining building values. "'", ,,f::,5'i- ' An itxnitrt la to mint tn " Pnrflnnil tem and show It practical working and i valu& Assessor Reed has mad, ar- . . ra'tagementa with th Manufacturer1 Ap-' , praisal compnay of Cleveland,. Ohio, for ; the presence , of the ' representative. Public addressee befor various civic or- .- ganlzatlons ' ar now . ' being ' arranged. V The expert will be in Portland at least The' ayatem wa first tried In St ' ' Paul and haa , since ' spread - rapidly. r. Among the cities now using the mathod . ar Columbua and Cleveland, Ohio, De u : Moines, Iowa; Denver. Colo; Galveston i and Houston, Texas; Bt Paul, Minn., an '.. , Philadelphia in part'. ... . . . MICHIGAN TRIUMPHS : v EASILY OVER CORNELL , ;:fii, i i r , -.v'..,'.p..i,.,s:fyA:.'1 . Ithaca, N.-- Tr Nov. 8 Michigan triumphed over 1 Cornell this afternoon by th ecor of 17 to 0 and th Wolver- , tne won a well earned victory. They outplayed Cornell in most every depart ment of the game and defeated i the Ithacana on their merits. The Wolver ines scored their first touchdown in the ' ,' first period, catching. Cornell off her. guard and sent .Craig .over the line on. a "delayed pas and sending shiver '.7?; down th spine of the biggest crowd that has witnessed a football gam here , thi season. Michigan acored their touchdown on a serie of rushes from a kickoff." taking the-ball from their SO-, , yard Una straight down th field. Cor- ' nell then started and fought Into Michi- ' gan territory and twice in the second period Barrett tried for a field , goal , from th 20 and 40 yard line. .-. BRIDGE BEACH & CO.'S STAVES AND RANGES -: riAMreTif ivn tnr At GAS RANGES '.;. Ilk' tJ-S-.Kvr'b '7 "PITTSBURG" AND "BUNGALOW" WATER HEATERS V U AM at; viS'lS'l:;,'; QUICK MEAL AND PERFECTION OIL STOVES ix -!''-; ;.:C,-' PERFECTION OIL; HEATERS ANDIRONS.: FIRE SETS SPARK GUARDS AND till p::f. '.H 'A fit-