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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 20, 1920)
10 DORIS M CLEAVE Ml OF HORSE SHOW Riding; into the hearts of her au dience, Mies Doris Oxley McCleave of Victoria, B. C, was acclaimed the queen of the horse show Friday night by popular accord. ' - Her appearance in the arena mounted ' on horses from her father's stables was ,the signal for enthusiastic applause. She proved herself again a splendid horse woman in all the events she took part in. Competing against older and more ex perienced riders, in years, this little 15-year-old grirl captured two first and. two . third priies. tio matter whether it was harness, ordinary saddle work or jump ing. Miss McClearve showed thorough un derstanding of horses and kept perfect control over the animals she rode. Indian Maid, one of the horses she rode in the free for all Jumping, took first place, the marks being judged on performance only. Taking all the hur dles clean and making the jump in and out or tne pig-rn, a jump most, siurses balked at. Miss McCleave brought the spectators to their feet n a burBt of ap plause. Miss McCleave took first place in "light weight hunters and Jumpers class, riding Indian Princess. She was awarded third In the runabout class and free-for-ail Jumping. In the latter class she rode two horses. Indian Maid taking the biue ribbon and Victoria taking third. Despite her ability to ride larger horse, Miss McCleave prefers to ride and drive a small Shetland. She has been riding since-she was' six years old and this la her second appearance At the stock show, her . first being last year. Early Completion Of Columbia Span At Pasco Indorsed ' . Walla Walla, Wash., Now. 19. Dele gates to the Washington district of the Vellowstone Trail association, at the an nual meeting Of. that association here Friday, unanimously indorsed the move . for early completion of a bridge across the Columbia river at Pasco and Kenne wick. It was also decided that Seattle is to remain the Western terminus' of the trait. Spokane was chosen as the pi ace for the 1921 meeting of the association. The delegates were enthusiastically "" Behind a movement to close up the Tnat ter of financing the Columbia river bridge witnin the next lew weens ana 10 get this matter in shape for presentation to the next session of the state legisla ture with the expectation that ' it will - have the effect of determining the pav ing of the Inland Empire highway as the first trans-state highway from Spo kane to the Sound. The building of the bridge under the present plan is to be clone by a stock company, capitalized at $500,000 by contributors from Yakima. Ren ton. . Franklin and Walla Walla ountles. Under this. Dlan it is tar be Operated as a toll bridge until the state can take it over. 'The state highway commission has already approved the plans for the bridge -and the necessary steps for Its construction, as soon as the remainder of the stock has" ht-.en sub scribed for, have been taken. "Many Students to . Spend Thanksgiving Week-End at Home ; University of Oregon. Eugene. Nov. 20. About two-thirds of the students in the University of Oregon plan to go home Thanksgiving week end. Most of those who remain will be from distant points in Eastern Oregon. A number of campus parties are planned for the vacation days, but for the most part study will be the program for those who will be on the campus. Vacation starts Wednesday at noon and lasts Until Monday. J. C. Gavin and William Durham both sophomores in the university, were appointed corporals in Company D of the university R. O. T. C. Thursday, according- to Major-Batrd. Sergeant Leo Vaughn, recently of Company A, Thirty second infantry, Vancouver barracks, re ported lor duty Thursday and will assist with the military training at the Uni versity of Oregon post. .The Women's Educational club enter tained 40 women students as guests at tea Monday afternoon. Mrs. Wheeler and Mrs. Edith Pattee presided over the lea service. Wool Men of Oregon Seek High Tariff Higher tariff on an Oregon product Is me aim or the Oregon Wool Growers lassoclation which met Friday at the Im- ,perial hotel. A committee consisting of r G. Warner, publisher -of the Wool Grower ; Victor Johnson, C. H. Green, W. B. Berett and R. A. Ward was ap pointed by the president of the association,- Jay H. Dobbin, to prepare a declar ation of the situation and appeal to con gress for legislation to check the in roads now being made by Australian and South American wool on the market. Oldest Teacher in U.S., Aged 89 Dies - Attleboro, Mass., Nov. 19 (I. N. S.) Miss Elisabeth Carpenter Blandlng, be lieved to be the oldest school teacher In the United States, is dead at her home 1 today, aged 89. She started teaching school at the age of 16 am) taught for 7u consecutive years. '33,000 Ukrainians Marooned in City Warsaw. Nov. 19. (I. N. S.) Thlrty- three . .thousand .Ukrainian emigrants, . who desire to go to the United States, are marooned in Kishinev, says the ewspaper "Der Moment." ; Lawyer Is Held for Stabbing Reporter Atlanta, Gal. Nov. 20 L N. S.) W. T. Meyers, lawyer, Is today under in dictment charged ,witt) stabbing Morris Markey, a : .newspaper reporter, and r pointing " pistol at another reporter When they appeared in his office ask ing him to join the Red Crosss. ' MED QUEEN Burial Grounds at . Big Eddy Surrender More Unique Belies The Dalles, Nov. 20. -Work of exca vating in the supposed Indian graves at Big Eddy, on the government's Celllo canal reservation, has concluded yester day. Hundreds of articles have been found since the excavation was started on a systematic scale by the state highway commission at the request of tbe Oregon historical society. v This work has been going on for the past ten daya These are being stacked in the highway com mission's office in the Wasco county courthouse, and the place looks like a museum. All of it is to be shipped to Portland in a few days., . Scores of interesting things have been unearthed this week, including- a num ber of stone war clubs and bowls more intricately carved than any located here tofore. Laborers employed in the work have dug crlsc-cross ditches about six feet deep for a distance of 200 feet, and hardly a square - yard of the ground. supposed to harbor the graves, remains intact. . , STATE CONCLUDES EV Bend, Nov. 19. The state rested its case in circuit court here this aft ernoon against A. J. Weston, charged with the. murder of Robert Krug of Sisters, alleged to have been com mitted on the night of March 24, 1819. T. J. Sanders, the last state witness. declared tat he had seen Weston in Jail on the day of the arrest, and had been informed by the prisoner that he intended to plead self defense. District Attorney A. J. Moore took the stand this afternoon in behalf, of the defendant, his father-in-law. Moore read from shorthand notes the testimony of Charles Hindman, deceased, given at the Inquest held over Krug's body. This tended to show that Krug was aged and infirm, subject to spells of unconscious ness, that his bed was of highly lnflam able material and that Krug used a kerosene lamp, usually kept on a stand near his bed. Mrs. Moore, daughter of the defendant. Moore's half-sister, Laura Stilllon of Troutdale, James Fink of Fort Rock, and Mrs. Myra Helm, sister fit Mrs. Weston, were called to impeach Hhe testimony of George Stlllwell and Joe Wilson, the state's star witnesses, -who had previ ously said that Weston had admitted the crime in confessions to them. All agreed that Weston was not In the habit of wearing a vest, this being stated in im peachment, of the testimony of Wilson given this morning in his declaration that he had found in Weston's vest shortly after the tragedy, a note made payable to Krug and signed by W. H. ) FuHertop. William Coombs,' former husband of Mrs. Weston, the last witness of the afternoon, told of the interior arrange ment of the Krug cabin. In order to speed up the trial, the first night session of court started at 7:30 o'clock this evening. Salmon Canneries May Have to Close . Vancouver, B. C Nov. 20 (I. N. S.) H. O. Bell Irving, leading packer here, said the - market for . pinks and chums Is so congested that British Columbia packers may have to nhut down on, canning these varieties of salmon, 'while Alaska canneries, which can pinks and chums only, may have to close down altogether for the sea son as the only practical solution. For the last three years the Alaska pro duction has been vastly in excess of preceding years, with the European market closed to shipments 'from this coast. 1 AN ANCIENT SERMON Concerning Modern Days By Dr. JAMES E. TALMAGE Of the Council of the Twelve, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Salt Lake City, Utah. v f ' Sole: For free copies of other articles of this series, sead reqmest to aatnor. ' . I Mankind today presents a spectacle of unprecedented actlvlity, progression and achievement in material thiings, coupled with apathy on the part of some, and acrimonious dissension among many, respecting matters religious and spiritual. . Worldly affairs engross the attention of men, and few there are who hear, above the rattle .and roar of earthly turmoil, the Voice of warnllng and commandment calling the race to repentance, while yet there is time. Stop J Look! Listen -i True, there are churches and so-called religious societies unnumbered ; and of , these many are of worthy motive and commendable service. Never before has organised benevolence been practiced on so Broad a scale no with greater efficiency ; and rone who thus serve the interests of their needy fellows shall fall of reward. Good deeds shall not go unnoticed because they were wrought without the auspices of sect or church. - Nevertheless, more 1s required for salvation than charity or benevolence, more than even a conscientious iobserv afids of the moral code alone. Salvation of the soul is conditioned upon compliance with the laws and ordinance of the Gospel of Jesss Christ, within which, charity, benevolence and personal morality are included. Toe fundamental principles and ordinances are: (1) Faith In the Lord Jesus Christ as the Son of God and the Redeemer of mankind, (2) Genuine and whole-souled repentance. (3) Baptism by im mersion in water by authority of the Holy Priesthood. U) Reception of the Holy Ghost by the authorised laying on of hands. Many are the doctrines, dogmas, precepts and theories of men, whereby salvation is promised on other terms ; and theological systems, evolved from human learning, are substituted for the plain and simple means prescribed by the Christ. ' Man's unwisdom denies the existence of a living, personal God, and flouts the personality of Satan, the arch-deceiver. , Here follows part of a forceful sermon, 'preached by a Hebrew prophet nearly six centuries before Christ was born. It relates to this current time : "For it shall come to pass In that day, that the churches which are buUt up, and not unto the Lord, when the one shall say unto the other. Behold, L I am ths Lord s ; and the others shall say. L I am the Lord's, and thus shall every one say that hath built up churches, and not unto the Lord. i "And they shall contend one with another ; and their prieists shall contend one with another, asd tney shall teach with their learning, and deny the Holy Ghost, which glveth stteranee. A they deny the power of God, the Holr One of Israeli aa they say ate the people, Hearkea nnto as, aad hear ye oar precept; for behold there Is ao God today, for the Lord aad the Redeemer hath dose his work, aad he hath tire hit power si to men. "Behold, hearken ye unto my precept: if they shall say. There is a miracle wrought, by the hand of the Lord, believe it not; for this day he is not a God of miracles : he hath done his work. . . . i f "And there shall also be many which shall say, Eat. drink, and be! merry ; nevertheless, fear God, he wilr Justify in committing a little sin : yea. He a little, take the advantage of one' because of his words, dig a pit for thy neighbor ; here is no harm in this. "And do all these things, for tomorrow we die ; and If it so be that we are guilty, God will beat us with a feV stripes, and at last we shall be saved In tbe kingdom of God. , , VS,lnlwiB.e' an!.thS learned, and the rich, that are puffed up in the pride of their hearts, and all those who preach false doctrines, and all those who commit whoredoms, and pervert the right way of the Lord : woe. woej woo be unto them, saith the Lord God Almighty, for they shali 1 De thrusf dow to fnIfS-J?"Kk,mfm '-h aevtt mut shakeand they which belong to It muet needs be stirred up unto repentance, or the devil will grasp them with hla ew.ri"Unhchaln they be stirred up to anger, and perish. f P. .V.at thaS aay "haU ,ne "fe in the hearts of the children of men. and stir them up io anger against that which is good. j - they wiHvAnHL i?"iCUVi and ,Ul1 ihem wy " carnal security, that ihirJi. lA1! wu in Zion; yea. Zion prospereth, all Is well; aad that iJ tlVi1'th,i,',rv,OBis i"" them away earefslly down, to hell. Ann h- .T.k id' .oth.cJ be flattereth away end lleth them there is no helL oVrtth 1t.,U2ithnI ,am BO V' , none: and thus he whls ttlre li w dJuycf . J"8 w'l chains, from whence the"rS5rS? nt.!J,mK",iL!i,kSn' ?n2 Pepta of men, and denieth 4w2T . iCKl' ana tB "lft of the Holy Ghost. ; ... . T v. shsllhearke" SltftJ PuMtf We. trust man, or maketh flesh his! arm, or fsf iVnt.th Precepts of men, save their precepts shall be given by fSS &Ztug tiho"-" B of Mormon. $ NepS U). f 7 TltirHTPIrfI.fi.B,2 f. Morntoa aad other psrhUeatloas, lacladlar ""The JJfiri -. .m' J!5,eh o prises 1M of these articles apply to Vorth- westera States Mission, 81f Emt Madlsoa St, Portland, Orel f 126 DEAD. INJURED 538 IN 2 YEARS AT I. P. Salem. Nor. 20. A. total jof 12t people have lost their lives and 538 others have been injured In fria.de crossing accidents on the line of thjr Southern -Pacific In the period from January 1, 1918. to ' September 1. 1920,; according to statistics com piled by the road, a copy of; which has reached the public service com mission here. . . I The I statistics, which also she w that 1616 automobiles were aimagedj or de- stroyed in crossing accidents period, are embodied in a lette: In this which is being sent to all automobile jowners. reported to the company by trainmen as parties to near accidents at grade cross ings on the Southern Pacific lines. The data show that out of 83 J ac cidents resulting from automobiles run ning onto the track In front of on rushing trains, 115 people have been killed and 130 injured; 430 automobiles have run into the side of moving trains, resulting in eight deaths and 143 injuries; 175 automobllehave stalled on the track In attempting to beat the train to the crossing, costing one life and 21 in juries; 32 automobiles have skidded In to moving trains, with Injuries to 11 persons ; 94 automobiles have run Into crossing gates, with a toll of 18 in juries ;' 10 automobiles have run Into crossing flagmen, with one d?ad and nine injured ; 42 accidents, classed as miscellaneous, have cost one life and nine injuries. Pioneer of Wasco County Drops Dead The Dalles', Nov. 20. Alfred P. Fer guson, one of the earliest pioneers of Wasco county, dropped dead at his home in the eight mile district, south of Tbe Dalles, early Friday morning.. Ferguson had been ill, and was overtaken by death as he stepped from his bed. He? had re sided' in Wasco county more than ,60 years, and was one of the first members of the local Masonic lodge. ! Funeral services will be held Saturday afternoon. Judge Seeks Jury To Cut Board Bill The Dalles, Nov. 20. Rather j than let eight prisoners remain in the county jail and run up a board bill for the county of $500 Circuit Judge Fred Wilson Fri day ordered the empaneling of a grand jury for special sessions. The regular grand jury does net meet again until February, and county officials declare expense of keepings the prisoners . three months longer would amount to at least $500. The grand Jury will meet Novem ber 2 & Among1 the - accused awaiting hearing are the six cowboys Who are charged with robbing an Indian on the Warm Springs reservation last week. Lad Is Badly Hurt When Hit 'by Aato i , j Leo Doyie. aged S. son of L. M. Doyle, 88 Knott street, was struck and danger ously injured late Friday afternoon at Williams avenue and Stanton street by an automobile driven by-John J, Whitley of Estacada. He was taken to Emanuel hospital. Whitley was arrested by Traffic Patrolman Harry Stanton when he reported the accident! at police head quarters. Whitley told the officer .that the boy was playing ball and jumped In front of the automobile. i Saints. CROSSINGS OF I" : AGAIN THE JOURNAL 'OFFERS ' y h I);; , One Half Pound Packages :M MU-EAY-A- tea i. FREE With Sunday Journal "Dime a Line" "Want" Ads bn Thursday and Friday of Next Week at an Bring in your "Want" ads for THE SUNDAY JOURNAL Next Thursday or Friday and get a package of this de- licious Tea FREE The only conditions are that your want ad must be paid for at time of insertion, it must run Sunday, November 28, and it must be brought in Thursday -or Friday of next week. No matter how small your "Want" ad you get a package of this delicious. tea. free.-Only one!, package given to each person, Rate for Journal "Wane Ads, Including a Present of One Package of This Fine Tea to tach Advertiser Who Pays Cash FREDERIC C. FORBES DRUG CO. Grand Ave. "and East Morrison NIATTHIEU'S DRUG. STORE , Russell and Williams1 Ave. rnrgmimiiiiinm.iiiHJimunn Ml r COME EARLY! BE HERE THURSDAY MORNING! YOU CAN BUY YOUR JOURNAL "DIME A LINE" WANT AD AT THE FOLLOWING Jdiirnal"Want"A , and ztt the presents' the same as if you came to .The Journal business office. Here is a truly delicious blend of Ceylon-lndia-Jova teas that speate true tea economy. Retail Value 35c FREE With Sunday Journal "WANT- ADS Next Thursday , and Friday ' &ys) (im& s& ffets Owl Drug Store . Broadwayand Washington Street a1 7 NET KILLENGSWORTH DRUG CO. KUIingsworth and Mississippi ST. JOHNS PHARMACY St.. Johns