THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND. SUNDAY MORNING, JULY 4,' 1S20. n EDITORS WILL TOUR COLUMBIA PROJECT COMING .WEEK-ID Oregon and Washington Editorial Writers Are to Be Guests of ; the Columbia Project Boosters. Publisher and editors of daily ! newspapers in Oregon and Washing ton will tour the 2.000,000 "acres of. the Columbia Irrigation1 project and Yakima valley by automobile next Thursday, Friday and Saturday. - They go at the invitation of the Port land Chamber of Commerce, the Seattle Chamber of Commerce, the Tacoma Commercial club and 'the Spokane Chamber of Commerce. The Northwest 1 executive committee Is composed of Frank McCanalesa for Tacoma. Whitney lu Boise for Portland, K. F. Blaine for Seattle, and N. W. Durham for Spo kane. George W. Dodds of Spokane is chairman of the tour committee. .- Thursday will be spent in an auto tour from Spokane to Newport and re turn, viewtwg the site of the intake at Albany falls, the route of -the main canal and the Spokane valley. The party will e gruests of -the Newport Commercial Jfclub for lunch and of the Spokane Chamber of Commerce for dinner. Char tered sleepers on the Great Northern railroad will carry the editor to Qulncy the same evening; WILL SEE PROJECT As guests of the Qulncy Commercial club, on Friday, they will go on Friday across the main body of the Columbia basin project, -95 miles through the sage brush, but having placed before them the s evidence that sagebrush will retreat be fore water and industry and some- of the most productive farms of the United States will be established. The automobiles for the day's run Vill be furnished Jhy the commercial clubs of Ephrata. Soap Lake and Qulncy. The Othello Commercial club- will be host at dinner . and .afterwards a. 17-mile ride by autombllerwiU take the party to Cun ningham, where a special car on the Northern Pacific railroad will proceed to Pasco for the night. Saturday morning will be spent in Pasco, inspecting the lower end of the , Columbia basin project A private -car will leave Pasco at 11:25 a. m. for Pros ser. where the Commercial club will .have a picnic lunch ready when the car V arrives at 1 o'clock. , ". , ' TO VISIT YAKIMA At 2 o'clock Saturday afternoon auto mobiles furnished by the Prosser and Yakima Commercial clubs vWlll leave Prosser for Yakima, v In the Yakima valley will be found the ' transformation which , water can bring about when applied to the land. ' Bountiful crops and comfortable farm homes, on what was once desert, will show what can be done. In a letter announcing .the tour. Chair man Dodds avers ; There Is no need to mention to you the crisis which this country is facing Hi food 'supplies and the necessity for Increased food production. .We have In the four " northwestern states. something 1 like 10,000.000 -acres of Irrigable land which, when placed under water, will add bounteously to our food supplies. In the basin of the Colombia river one project alone will ; reclaim more than 1.750,000 acres. of as fine soil as is to be tfound in the world and In an un,equaled climate for agriculture. PROJECT IS PRACTICABLE -: The Columbia basin project Is wholly practicable. The state of Washington is spending $100,000 on a preliminary sur vey and the. .reports of the commission ' Jn charge 'will be ready In a short time. "We can say In advance thatthie report will show this project feasible. ' i "The Southwest, under the leadership of Ijos Angeles, has organized the South western league of states for the recla mation of the Colorado basin with its initial project of 1,500,000 acre. Un less the Northwest bands together in a similar league the tide of Immigration iwlleet in toward California, Arizona and- Texas. ; With this situation con- . fronting us and the national crisis de tnanding Increased food supplies, the . commercial organizations of Portland. .Seattle, . Tacoma' and" Spokane have United for the organisation of a Nortn- : western .league to brlrij about the recla mation of our arid lands. ' ', "In September we will hold in Seattle a Northwest Irrigation congress of na tional importances Preliminary to this 'Congress, so that editors of daily papers jot the Northwestern states may fully : .under stand our plans, these four com mercial organizations will conduct this .excursion over the project Traffic Violators . . Assessed Total of $300 Fines in Court . , ,Tfafflc v,olators were fined close to .1300 and given Jail sentences totalling uj oy Municipal judge Rossman . Saturday morning. Roy A.- Newby drove, his machine while intoxicated at Albina and Alns worth avenues Friday afternoon at a high rate of speed, until . apprehendel by Sergeant Crane, tie was fined 100 and given a jail sentence of 0 days. Fifty days of the sentence were buj pended. J. Williamson raced his car on Fri day between 40 and 50 miles an hour. - He paid a fine of 23 and waa sentenced to serve two days in JaiL Other traffic violators who were fined include: - , v S. W. Kapi'schka, speeding $3: H. A. Weller. speeding $10 ; C. C, Dahlin. speeding 15; R. R. Peeler, speeding I7.C0: P. J. Costas, speeding 1T; V rence Smith, speeding $20; N. II. HalL - ipeedlng $20: C. C. Hansen, speeding 110: J. C, Russell, speeding $10 1 G. W. Royer. speeding $25 : Fred Brazeau, Heeding $5: T'. Junke, glaring light, lot K. a Olson, glaring light. $5 ; A. Sinner, glaring lights $5, ' ? ? ?. II $125 cash and $25 per month will buy a Ford delivery car. It's in good mechanical shape and has good tirjfs all around. Northwest Auto Co. Aldet at 18th BEAVER CREEK SCHOOL . . TO HAVE HIGH FLAGPOLE r'.t -'-I yyy V k I: Abo v ta se of tree and top section which will bo used by f Beater Creek school as mast from wliich to fly Old Glory. The dedication will be held I Monday. HIGHEST! FLAGPOLE IN WORLD TO BE DEDICATED TODAY Beaver Creek School in Wash ington County Getting Ready Monster Tree 232 Feet Tall. Beaver Creek school, the newest educational Institutions in Oregon, will have the tallest flag pole in the world in itp front yard. - y Beaver Creek is located in school dis- ; trict 49, -Washington county. The build ing is now being completed at a point be tween Scofield and Vernonia, almost in the heart of the great forests remaining in northern Washington county. John Peterson, "high climber," em ployed in the Standard Box company's camp near Scofield, climbed : the huge tree, took off the top, barked it all the way down and called the Job finished in seven and one-half hours. r Before being cut off, the tree was 851 feet high. ;The pole now stands 32 feet high. It Is four, feet In diameter at the base. The pole will be painted as soon as it. has dried sufficiently, the top will be capped with a copper ball, a block and halliards will be - slung, and the flag lifted for the first time today. Pupils of th school will be in charge of the ceremony. j Noted Speakers on Program of 0. A. ,C. Summer Session Oregon Agricultural College, Cervallls, July 3. Several noted speakers are on the summer session : program for this week. Dr. Caroline Hedger, Chicago, medical director of the Elisabeth Mc Cormack memorial fund for the improve ment of the phjsiea; condition of chil dren and formerly director of infant wel fare for the Chicago board of health, is giving a scries of lectures. ' - Dr. John A. l.omax. professor of Kiig lltsh t the University of Texas, who was awarded a $1000 fellowship at Harvard university to enable hint to collect liter, uture of the plains,' will give bis "Cow , 6y tJallads" and "Negro Spirituals July ft and 8. j . . , - -. COROiJER'S JOB E STRANGE DUTIES j1 v'"r--""' ". :saaSBSBSHBBasBSBSBSBBSBSBBBaBMBWSBft'-:'r'4 '. Recent Statistics From Multno mah .County Coroner's Office Show Many Duties of Official. . Does anybody! want the job of coroner? V , Don't all speak at once. A glance at the primary ballot might Indicate that other public positions appeal to a larger class of people. The cor oner is one, the public servants who has wLat is often called i a "thankless job." Multnomah county has three men in the coroner's office. They" are Coroner Karl C. Smith. ChleT Deputy Leo Ooetsch and Deputy Robert A. Calkins. The coroner la the man who performs the tasks which most people would shun. When a person drops dead on -the street. Is killed In an accident, commits, suicide or meets death in some other unusual way, the coroner is the man who must reach the scene an quickly as possible and remove the body It matters not to the coroner whether the man is of high or low estate, he takes the .body to the county morgue 'as quickly as possible and sets out to find relatives. ' . j . ' MTJ8T BREAK SAD SEWS f I j ' One of his unpleasant tasks is to break the sad news to the nearest rela tives. "I generally tell them right out that X am rrom the coroner's office and that some member ot their family is dead and have it over with as quickly as possible, said Goetsch. "It Is better for them and for me." -. - Occasionally a dead man is found along the railroad track or in some north end lodging house, with no identification papers. Goetsch then has the long and tedious task of finding the nearest rela tive. Sometimes it is impossible to locate friends or relatives, so the body la cre mated at the expense of the county., INTEREST IK CAMPAIGN ? - The coroner hasj taken exceptional in terest .in the accident prevention cam paign, conducted by The Journal and has endeavored through the powers vested in him to bring careless drivers to Jus tice. In every automobile accident where Coroner Smith believes negligence or carelessness was shown an. inquest has been held.-- , I :.i ' . ;': The coroner . is also severe in his criticism of men I who .rent canoes to children and others not experienced in the art of rowing. . He has assisted the harbor patrol officials in rigid enforce ment of the city Ordinance covering the renting of eanoes and, has also asked boathouse men to inform canoeists on the rules ot navigation in the river. -The coroner found that many people could not tell the difference at night between a passenger boat or towboat. By having the harbor : rules posted many people have been saved from death by becom ing entangled in the tow line between a steamer and a raft of logs. EXE VA TORS AID MATCHES Inexperienced elevator e operators are another class the: coroner has consider able trouble -with. ! He believes that those who are allowed to operate passenger elevators Should be well trained and be of a quiet, unexcitable temperment. Matches left within' the reach of chil dren and burning candles often bring an unwelcomed call to the coroner. . s TABLE GIVES FIGURES i 5 Following Is a table showing ' the suicides, murders and accidental sudden deaths which have been handled by the coroner during the past five years : SuleldM 1915 1917 1918 1919 Br traTin ; 1 : O Br cutting ! 3 2 Ry sbootinc 19 20 By Imps (windows) '1 1 o s O 6 11 1 '4 13 13 4ft It 20 41 7 ' 3 2 21 4 3 3 1 i 1 2 O O O 4 2 O - 3 1 4 18 5 6 2 20 73 18 ' 8 28 1 3 1 1 42 V 3 1 :': S ' 1 4 . .. 4 3 1 2 : 3 O i o i o ' 2 11 1 8 7 -i 42 10 21 33 10 By nansmz 7 , By drowmns II i 6 By pouua - - . . . . 3l 23 ToUl . . . -. . . i 0 58 110 1 Accident ! 2l 17 . Murders ....... rrown)n Industrial . . . . . Streetcar ...... Railroad ...... 80 9 a 18 : 4 4 13 S 1U 5 calling ....... Automobiles Barned ........ 8 O O O 1 . 3 0 O O 1 1 1 o 6 165 19 Poisoning ...... Baffocauon ..... O 3 S : 2 O O 0 0 1 1 A O 1 Gunshot Strangulation . . . Anmyxiatioa . . . 1 0 o -o o o o n 0 1 Elevator ....... Self-defence -. . . . Falling tree . .. Airplane ....... m aeon ........ Momhine . . Cocaine ....... Motorcycle . . : . . Alcoh-il Sudden deaths by natural causes. ,129 130 ,19 19 190 . If , 23 9 Tuberculosis ... Total 1288 ' 230 801 3SS . 826 Grand total .4348 . 304 '350 3t8 '410 Reed Qrad'uates in Line for Positions In Numerous Lines Practically every 1920. graduate of Keed college has a position in sight for next year or plans laid for further study. Calista Eliot, graduate assistant In the i-ieea college or rice, has made public the fact that Reed graduates have been contracted for teaching Jobs, for posi tions as physical directors, for office and business positions and for miscel laneous work such as surveying, report ing and shipbuilding. -. j Graduates who .win teach in Oregon schools next year are Hazel Browne of Portland. Dorrls Padgham , Brown of Portland, Vivian Patterson of Merrill. Lucille Skene Oodskeson of Portland and Franklin Forrester. Marjorie Ful ton of Alhambra, Cal., will teach in a lioa Angeles high school. Arthur House of Hood River has accepted a 13000 po sition as advance acent for a lyocum circuit and Herbert Huff and Elbert Charman, other graduates who special ised in economics, will be connected with local business concerns. V? s r Jessie Laird, who majored in biology and bacteriology, will be laboratory as sistant for a Portland physician, . and Carl Wilson, who plana to become a doc tor, has been accepted for graduate study at Johns Hopkins university. Other stu dents planning to go higher in the edu cational world are Helen Pierce Doro thy Poor and Isabelle train, who will be-" in New Tork next year t ' Harvey Bagleson. who Will study at Harvard ; Oeorge Henny, who holds a $750 fellow ship at the California Institute of Tech nology; Herbert Swott, who will study law at Harvard. Robert Osborn Is, now maklnif survey of Oregon's tuberculo sis patients for the state board. ; , : Young plants thrive better, according t v a French botanist. , if fed drops of ater almost continuously than if w lired copiously at intervals. . i MBODES MM Credentials From High Schools Are Presented Early Oregon Agricultural College, Coiwallis, July - 3. High school credentials - re ceived at the registrar's Office are mora than ' 120 per cent in- excess of ihnu vhlnk riarl rmm - in u n to the same time- last year. While this is said by the registrar to indicate a healthy interest in school . work next year, it Anm mat mean necessarllv. that the in crease will -be: 120 per cent. High school students have been urged to get their credentials in as eariy as possiDia. Many ' inquiries have been received nrrrlinr roaming - accommodations. But 50 vacancies are left in the dormi tory for men,; which has a' capacity of CUV. , E Lots of "Eats" and Friendship Makes Affair Held on Farm Near Corvaiiis Happy One. " . The 'fourteenth annual meeting of tha Henkle association " Was held June 24 at the far raceme of Mrs. Melison "Wyatt, near Corvaiiis,. Or. About 10 members assembled with full lunch baskets. After luncheon s musical program was rendered and a splendid address waa mad by Rev. Jv P. Clyde. Members -.annually come from dis-. tant places to be present on this occa sion. This year Mrs. Mary Ann Hoover and daughter Ella of Bedford. Iowa," at tended Although Mrs. Hoover is 87 years of age j she is more 'active than many of those far younger. She is the oldest living member of the Abraham Henkle branch. Other members attending were as fol lows: :'; , ! Mr. and Mrs. Roy M. Henkle, Elna and Willis Henkle, Tillamook, Or. Mrs. Zelma Carey, Enumclaw, Wash. Mr. and Mrs. Orr Henkle, Raymond, Wash. . - Mrs. Mageie Hunter, Newport, Or. I Mr. and Mrs, Frank Davis. Wilbur Iavis, Harlan. Or. - . . Mr., and Mrs. H. J. Elliott, Wanda and Intone Elliott,; Per ryd ale. Or. Mrs. Orpha i Griffiths, Nettle and Ray Griffiths. Barbara and Frances Grlf flths,Alta Griffiths. McMinnville, Or. Miss Hasel i Henkle, Mrs. CetUe Bow ersox, Moro, Or. Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Henkle, Miss Mamie Henkle. Herman Henkle, Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Thomas. Mrs. Mary Ann Davis, Philomath, Or. Claire'Henkle, John Day, Or. Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Mason. Opal and George Mason, Springfield. Or. . Mrs. Alice Bell, Daniel .Webster, Al bany, Or. f ... . - - i -. Mrs. Sarah E. Nelson. Mr. and Mrs. George Henkle, Mr. and (Mrs. W. H. Walker, Mrs.; O. D. Butler. Independ ence, Orv I Mr. and Mrs. Lee Henkte. Mlas Mil dred Newton. Mrs. George W. Cooper, Altha Cooper, Mrs. E. J. Wells. Wllraa Wells, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Bell, Mrs. Belle Philips. Mrs. Anna Bethers. Mr. and Mrs. M, F. Wood, La belle and Oleta Wood, Delpha and Thella Wood, Mrs. John E. Wyatt, J. Ernest Wyatt. Mrs. Clyde Hayes,; Weldon Hayes, Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Wyatt, Frances and Mildred Wyatt, Norman Wyatt; Mr. and Mrs. George W. Davis, Charles Davis, Mr. and Mrs. W. K. Wyatt, Gilbert and Eari Wyatt, Lucile Wyatt, Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Junkin. Gladys and Evelyn Junkin. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Nash, Harold Nash. Mr. and Mrs. O. Li. Frlnk. Milton and Mae Frlnk. Rosella and Orlo Frlnk, Cor vaHis and vicinity. , I Present by invitation were Rev. J. P. Clyde and Miss Elizabeth Clyde. I The historian reported 13 .births, nine marriages" and two deaths during the past year. ' Also that the revised! list of those serving in the great war totaled 38. ' - -y ; a ' i yy ... . ...... l '.; t . Rome Appoints Two Bishops in Brooklyn : . . '- ; " ' 1 " '". - i ' '. . (By Vnite.1 Ne tlome, July 8. The Rev. Thomas Mulloy was appointed a titular bishop, and Bishop Lorca "was appointed auxil iary biehop of Brooklyn. j ,. Victor Heinze Of Chicago Coming to Portland j Professional pianists, I ad vanced music students land. music teachers will be given an unusual opportunity this summer to coach with the foremost teacher ef p i a n o playing in Chicago and one of, the best in the country, f ; Victor Hei rr z e, said by Leschetizky. to be a "peda gogical wonder," is to spend the summer in- Poftland, and because of -many urgent re quests will conduct a Matter School of Piano Playing be ginning July G'.j - Prof. Heinze studied many yearj ago with Leschetizky when the great master was at the zenith ofhis powers, and was at that time a com panion pupil - with Paderew skL He has used the meth ods there grained with many incomparable additions of his own. HisH pupils have j ap oeared as soloists -vith the lead i n g-orchestras of i this Country aad Europe,' and are noted for ; the strength ' and beauty of their tb h c, their faultless technic and remark able interpretation. 1 for ipformatlon- call Wood!ai ae5 or al(ires -Mrs. 8 -T. Bxli-M", 5 Woodcfth Av, or L. Carrol! Day. 18 Thirteen-h SL.'phone Broal. ay 2oai. or Victor t'nze. cart Sherman. Clay t Co, Pr'.fci-id. MONSTER FAMILY REUNION NJOYED CARELESSNESS IS BLAME ' OF AUTO CRASHES More Jhan 250 Accidents Could Have1 Been Avoided, Says Capt. Lewis in His Report to Chief. - Carelessness caused 607 of 1018 automobile . accidents in Portland during: pane. Accidents In which au tomobiles ' struck -other automobiles numbered 188. One hundred forty six pedestrians were knocked down and injured by automobiles. Collis ions of 'automobiles with street cars occurred in lot instances. These ! are salient facts taken from the monthly report of the traf fio bu reau , submitted Saturday morning by Captain Lewis to Chief of Pollce Jenk ins.' ..." "i .t .:. OSE DKATH 131 MUX On a basis of 250.090 people, one per son in every 420 has been injured In auto accidents during the . past six months, i " -i But one death waa recorded during June. J. H. Rankin, age 60. a pedes trian, was killed the latter part of, the month at Fourteenth and Taylor streets, when two racing- automobiles collide-l. One of j the cars in Swerving after the impact struck "Rankin as he crossed the intersection inside the safety zonei Captain Lewis points Out that the re cent Shrine convention and Rose Fes tival were responsible for the increase of close to 100 accidents over ; t previous rrohthsJ Strange drivers, , unfamiliar with Portland streets and traffic rules, large numbers of automobiles and enor mous crowds aused the list of minor accidents to mount, during the conven tion period. CAUSES OF MISHAPS ' Over 250 accidents should have been entirely avoided, according '.to Lewis. Failure to give right of way caused 201 accidents. Defective ' brakes were re sponsible for IS emashups; driving on the left side of the : street caused 12 ; passing at an intersection caused S and jay-walking 20. All these could have been easily avoided, says Lewis. ; .By coincidence 14 pedestrians were struck by automobiles the same num ber as the total injuries for the month. Five hundred and twenty people were arrested.- Fines collected in 1 municipal court amounted to ' $353 1( from traffic S.-& H. Green Trading Stamps D FOR MOST The "Likly- luggage isJhe most popular and, the best made, most satisfactory line that can be pur chased. This is the first time that 'these articles have ever been sold formless than regular prices. -Avail yourself of this EXTRAORDINARY opportunity to save money on your luggage for the vaca tion trip or future travel. ; ; : - ... . .- The Outing Oxf ord Bag Sizes 18 and 20 inches. Han-sewed frame. Outside leather Smooths grain cowhide. , $30.00 Bag special $23.50 $35.50 Bag special $29.50 $55 Bag. 18-iii. Vacuum Cleaners 1 Grill Stoves Immerson Heaters ALL THIS WEEK :.-.-'. ' . :j' a Factory Demonstrator will gladly shotf the ADVAN TAGES of these Labor-Saving Devices. Word'AmencaBominFrance Name Printed ' Millions will ning . "America1 on this dduble holiday.. Comparatively few know the i origin ' of the name. Its history and 'its symbolism are de scribed : In a .communication i to yie National Geographic society by John tt. Flnley. as follows: ! ' . Amriea,-a , name that was flrst heard on the planet, or at any rate first put on a prlnted'page, according to the best authorities, in the village of St. Die. among the Vosges mountains. -in the east of France.; often .called the bap tismal font of America) "On a pilgrimage to this valley of the Vosges some years ago, I found stilt standing the cloisters where the schol ars had lived who wrote The introduc tion to . Ptolemy's 1 Cosmography, . the book In which it was suggested that the name 'America' be given to the newly discovered fourth continent, and who prepared the now famous map on which the emerging continent was identified. There, too, I found the site of the .old printing- shop, and the house Itself in which the printer, Jean Basin, had lived. .a "At the beginning of the war the Germans had occupied it, and, in 1017, their guns looked down upon it from the "blue line of the Vosges.' The cloist ers, close under the mountains, I found in a . recent and second pilgrimage had not been damaged, but there were many houses that had been destroyed by shell or by wanton fire, though' Jean Basin's was still standing. - f " "But ? the printer who- a few years ago reproduced in facsimile the famous book, had had both legs Shot ofr-while crossing the bridge one day between the two parts of the village. 'Alas 1' he said, when he learned that he must die, 'alas I I shall hot be the first to carry flowers to Btrassburg for f he had dreamed of the day when Straasburg, where rests one of the original copies of thiat famous book, again would be within French borders. - ; "It ia a significant fact that while violators. Motorcycle ' policemen under Lieutenant Ervln arrested 465 of the total number, i Fines from these arrests aggregated 81985. : Leave for Inspection Of Bull Run Reserve For the first inspection trip within the Bull Run water reserve, City Com WOODARD. CLARKE & CO. Woodlark Building Alder at West Park 'LiMy'B&fe audi Kits At Greatly Reduced ' Prices Never Offered Before on .These Goods The "Advance" Kit Bag English style. Heavy soft hand;boarded cowhide. ' Sewed-on corners, finest tan, ribbed, serge lining,, 20-inch.. I . , I' Regular Price $60.00 Special Sale Price $50.00 , ' . ; " i lo-m. Keguiar rnce u.uu u-in. iveguiar rncr Special Price $32.00 Special Price $35.00 The "Britisher,? Kit Bag English square, end style with all around straps. Extra Jarge and roomy. . ' . 1 1 j $75.00 Bag Special $60.00 24-inch, Black. $43.00 Bag special $32.00 ) 1 f tea ch sale price $45.00 fi irnnc First in St. Die this name 'America' was suggested in a geographical treatise in . wliich the earth was considered the center of the universe, there waa at the moment of the first printing of the name a Polish scholar, . Kopernik Copernicus), who was developing a new system of astron omy, a new cosmography, whose sub stitution for the Ptolemaic, geocentric, anthropocentrlo creed of- the universe was to be the 'capital event of mddern thought.' 'And so it was that while 'America' was baptised Into the Ptolemalo cosmos. Its inhabitants, after the aborigines, dwelt from the first in a Cofiernican universe, wanderers in an infinity of space, .with a 'shuddering sense of phys ical immensity.' - - "To be sure, there was no vlsfble change. "But a change in man's con scious relationship to the physical uni verse came, and It is Inconceivable .that It did not affect in its coming his whole life upon the earth. v - '.'Europe conid - not readily forget the geography of Its infancy and childhood, but America began from its God-fearing settlement with an astronomy of in finite distances, with a cosmography in which It was itself but Infinitesimal, wWth a gedgraphy partaking of the sky as well as t,he sea and land. KO THEdBY TO ABA! DO If "As there was no feudal system of society for America to unlearn, begin ning as it did with the 'compact . and 'constitution, so there was no physical theory or the universe for it to abandon. It was democratic and Co pern lean from its first national consciousness. ."With this Copernlcan consciousness ot the universe, America should be the least provincial of the continents, for Asia and Africa, as well as Kurope, still remember the old cosmography , and In some darker regions still cling to it. "And as the New -World continent should be the least provincial, so should those from whom the United States has aoDrODrlated the name 'Americans' be the most strongly "unlverse-mlnded' of all the inhabitants of this continent. missioner J. M. Mann " left, .Saturday morning for Bull Run lake and will not be back until Monday, evening. Mann was accompanied by L. . Kafref, su perintendent of Ihe water, bureau. The trail in from Truman's ranger station. from whence the commissioner begins his biking,, was only opened in the last two, weeks. A Crew has been working Ing to a Moscow wireless message re st 'the lake 'for several weeks and thejeeived here. "The Polish.; retreat alno summer's work . in the reserve is now continues In the Mozyr region," the well under way.; wlreiess said. . $50 Bag, 18-inch, black . . $42.00 $47" Bag, i8-inch. brown. $42.00 $36 Bag, 18-inch, black . .$29.50 ' Photographic Department Fresii Film Percolators . Toasters Warming Pads I Let us i make your Enlargements. Select a choice hegative -our Php tographic, artists will produce that steel bide tone that cultivates an artist's pride hi'our best photograplrs. ; , Roll Films Developed Free Six Hour Service SHRIilE TELEPHONE " EXCHANGE .MAKES' NUMBER FAMOUS ... i. in ir i i - , : Broadway 6000 Known All Over Country Information Bureau and Exchange Are Praised. . ' Much ' favorable comment ia be ng received by the Shrine conven tion committee from all parts of the country In regard to the Shrine telephone exchange and information service given during the Portland convention. During the convention all officers. Visiting delegations and parked trulns were connected through a private ex change with the telephone number Broadway 6000. A force of special tele phone operators and Information workers-was employed through the week and succeeded hi obtaining. splendid results. The telephone exchange handled on sn average of 860 calls an hour for six days and the information bureau handled more than 15.0(0 calls in three days. The telephon number Is probably one of the best known in the country. The women who gave their time to the Shrine switchboard were: Mrs. . Cora Haley, Mrs. Myrtle Shlpton, Mrs. Reu lah Shlpton. Annette Claypool. Zella ToU kerts, Mrs.. P F. Coffey, Mrs. Helea Townsend, Miss Bunny Enrlght. Mrs. Gladys PattlBon, Mrs. Porter, and Mrs. McKenzle, Mrs. Coffey being the chief In charge, , - . The information bureau was organised with L. R. Bailey of the better business bureau as chief. They supplied informa tion to ISO Etatlhs and most of the men never saw a parade or heard a band play. The men on the Job were O. L. Shea, II. C. Rutqulst. Dorsey Smith, Bert Short, Sldt Vincent R. K. Buker, Charles Freeburg, Archie Hosner and Wllraot. Red Attack on Poles At Rovno Continues London, July S (IT. P.) The Bolshe vik attack on the Poles in the Rovno region is continuing to progress, accord- S. & H. Green Trading Stamps For Your Vacation Trip Just . a step to the right from our Al der, street entrance. Our Photo Depart ment is well forti fied" with selected merchandise and ex perienced p ho to salesmen. r