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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 22, 1920)
THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, OREGON MONDAY NOVEMBER J22, 1920. BUS STEAL CHINAMAN'S SAFE. CONTAINING S16Q0 One of the moat daring robberies of recent date in Portland was re ported late Saturday night when Ding "Wing, wealthy Chinese mer chant, told the police that burglars had entered his home at 267 Salmon street and made away with a 800 pound safe containing 11600 la cash and papers of importance and value. ' The. burglars used an old touring car to cart the safe away. Th robbery is believed to have been committed about 9 o'clock in the evening, although it was not reported t the police until after midnight. ' Mrs. Harry Ding, .daughter-inlaw of Iing. Wing, discovered the robbery when she returned home late from a dance. NEIGHBORS SAW IT HI" .CO 1119 VIVIIIIIIS II UIH a trunk belonging to Mrs. Harry Ding and put the safe in the trunk. The safe was in a room in the rear of the house and it was necessary for the thieves to drag the trunk through the house and out the front door. They are believed by Inspectors Tichenor and Mallett, who investigated the robbery, to ' have en tered the front door by means of psss key. A woman who Uvea across the street from the . Wing home told the police hat she saw two men drag a trunk from the house to the side walk, place it on the running board of an old automobile and drive away. CXne of the men stood on the running board and held the trunk while the other drove the machine, she said. That was 'about 9 o'clock. She was unable to tell which direction the car went after it turned the corner at the end of the block. OFFERS 9500 REWARD "i ! The woman was unable to tell whether the men in the car were white men or Chinese. The police think the men prob ably were Chinese, although they have no definite information to support the theory. Ding Wing told Tichenor and Mallett that no white men had ever been In bis house that he knew of since he had lived there. He said that he kr.w of no Chi nese of whom he was suspicious. ; The police say that an ordinary yegg would pass up the house because of its ramshackle appearance. That the theft was committed by nomeone who was familiar with household conditions was pointed out because of the fact that the trunk belongrng to Mrs. Harry Ding was used and that Saturday night Is the only night in the week that she is regularly away from home. ' Ding Wing operates a tailor shop at Si North Third street. Sunday he of fered a 9500 reward for the arrest and conviction of the burglars who took his safe. It Contained 1800 in silver, 9.100 in gold and 1500 in currency, he told the police. i t ii. m -i t jupuur riuvius is ; Still on Job, Says IA7no i"Vi on. Tn-vtsnn ci4- More rain tonight and Tuesday Is the forecast of Edward L. Wells of the weather bureau. The wind has switched to the southwest and' will be less violent. Streams which have been swollen .from rains' and snow for the last few days are receding somewhat Maxamas who climbed Larch moun tain . Saturday night found Multnomah creek so .voluminous that considerable wading was necessary in places where In normal times the trail hugs the Stream. . . y , 1 '. . ...a CHARLES RAY Today In "AnOldFasMone'dBoy" Accompanied by the New Peoples Orchestra - x . . Coming ,. Jv . Special Thanksgiving Orchestra Concert and on Saturday ( Billie Burke in "The Frisky Mrs. Johnson" Woman Is! Injured As Trolley Pole Crashes on Auto Crashing down upon the automobile in which she -was irldtng. a pole sup porting trolley wire j at Twelfth and Gil es n streets, struck iMra V. E. Bowers of 475 Shaver " street, dangerously in juring her, according to a statement made to police Sunday night by her husband, F. E. Bowers. The injured woman was taken to St. Vincents hos pital. It is thought her skull may be fractured. Other occupants of the car were little Helen Bowers, aged I, and Mr. and Mrs. C A. Bowers. - Both C. A. Bowers and F. E. Bowers told police that the pole fell upon the car. Officials of the telephone com pany, owners of the pole, could not ex plain the accident, PAWlM STREET WILL BE RUSHED NSPRNG Paving on Thirty-ninth street, Portland's only through thorough fare from the northern to southern city boundary east of tbe Willam ette river, will be - finished early next spring, and -the plans just com pleted by the city engineer's office will be presented j to the city coun cil Wednesday for that body's finalJ indorsement. ' j Thirty-ninth street has been . paved southward to Francis avenue for some tlijje, but the last mile of paving from Francis to Woodstock has been delayed pending a change in the plans of the engineers to conform with a rrjore just and equitable assessment against the property along the final mile of paving. Council members considered a full-paved street for the gap between Francis and Woodstock would entail too heavy an assessment against ! the abutting prop erty because' of the comparative low value of the land. To meet the council's objections the engineering department compromised on an 18 foot pavement through the last mile strip, which the 'council will : authorize it the Wednes day meeting, thuaj enabling the final mile to be completed early in the spring Of 1921. Plans for a second very important street improvement! to be endorsed by the council Wednesday Is that of widen? Ing the approach to the O-W. R. & bridge over the Willamette at Third street. The sharp jcurve at the Third street entrance to the bridge has made traffic., at that point very dangerous. The new plans, which will doubtless be approved by the council for immediate action, call for widening the approach 20 feet -at Fourth street gradually in creasing the width to 60 feet at the bridge, thus eliminating the dangerous sharp turn. I Pacific Highway in Cowlitz Improved Kelso. Wash.. Nov. 22. The Pacific highway between Kelso and C&stlerock is in excellent condition, work on that portion of the road to ' Seattle having been under construction for some time with considerable graveling completed. The rains are not making -any material difference In the surface of the roadway. North from Castlerock one mile remains to be graveled. With this rough stretch eliminated the highway through Cowllta county will be practically complete ex cept for paving, the work havlBg cost the county and state more than 91,500,000, ! Stuff the - ... 1 : bird with Makes the finest kind of dressing m Adds Flavor ST :-'v: L .': fJEV CODIFICATION OF OREGON LAWS BEING DISTRIBUTED One thousand copies of the new codification of Oregon, laws, includ ing the statutes of the 1920 special session, provided for by state . ap propriation, are. being distributed to state and county officials, under di rection of Conrad P, Olson, code commissioner. Hereafter ; Olson's Oregon laws will be received in all the courts of the state as the au thorized compilation of the code and statutes in place of Lor3s Oregon laws, which has been the standard since January, 1911. The state legislature of 1919 author ized the new codification, and Olson was appointed code commissioner by Gov ernor Withycombe. He immediately be gat) the huge task. The actual work of ( compilation was completed early last spring, and since then the work has been in the hands of the printers and publishers, - the Bancroft-Whitney company of San Francisco. Olson, who was on the state supreme bench In 1918, has the honor of making the sixth .compilation of the Oregon laws. The first was made in the early '60s. Lord's Ore iron laws comprised three volumes and contained 3100 pages, with 7550 sections. Olson's Oregon laws have been compressed within two volumes, al though they contain 10,357 sections and have 4300 pages. There is approximately 37 per cent more material in the new codification than in the one Which it displaces. . In making the new Oregon code, ap proximately 30,000 sections were handled to produce the 10.357 sections contained In the work. In his preface Olson states that it .would not have been possible to have gotten out this compilation within a period of one year from the date of his appointment but for the available work of William P. Lord, son of the codifier of Lord's Oregon laws. He also acknowledges the aid of various Portland attorneys, including James R. Bain, H. A. Robertson, H. R. Dewart and Walter Critchlow, and Arthur S. Ben son, who bad charge of making the index. (Continued From Pit On) in the history of the rebellion was in full swing. Scores of leaders here and at Queens- town were arrested. Detachments of troops with fixed bay onets were searching buildings In Dub lin,' Queenstown and other cities.. MAYOR ASKS PROTECTION The lord . mayor of Dublin appealed for police protection. A squad of black and tans was sent to guard him. Panic reigned in Dublin and many other Irish cities. Railway service was suspended and the railway yards were unnaturally quiet. In many parts of Dublin where it was unusually noisy there was no sound today but the tramp of armed patrols. Pedestrians everywhere were being halted and searched by troops. In many cases, after such searching, the pedestrian would be surrounded by sol diers and hurried away. Resumption of I fighting was believed to be immi nent. Black and tan troops in Dublin were ordered confined to' their barracks to day to prevent reprisals for the mur ders there yesterday. The order was issued by Chief Secre tary Sir Hamar Greenwood after con ferences with Andrew Bonar Law and Premier Lloyd George. SENTRIES ARE POSTED The black and tans were permitted to leave their barracks only on official permits. Sentries were posted to pre vent departures. The death list in the murder raids on British officers . and the counter attacks of police totals 26. Of these. 14 were officers and police killed in their homes and in the streets. The others were civilians killed at Croke park, ; where panic was precipitated when Sinn Fein pickets opened fire on police, who returned the fire, shooting Into a big crowd watching a hockey match. It was announced officially that. 65 persons were wounded in the stam pede at Croke park. Of these 11 were seriously injured. CORK IS PANIC; BOY SHOT BY SOLDIERS IN DAYLIGHT .1 By Drsale O'Coanell ( TJiriTitral Sprrioe 8t(f Corrsapotulent) Cork, Nov. 22. 'This city Is in a state of panic, with many of the residents quitting the city and hastening into the country in fear of further reprisals by the soldiery. - .The kidnaping of a detective as he was leaving a church Sunday was quick ly followed by the shooting to death of a boy in broad daylight by soldiers in a passing lorry. - LONDON PAPER EXACTS 3 FOR 1 IN IRISH RIOTS London, Nov. 22. (I. N. R) "It is imperatively necessary for the govern ment to announce plainly that for every servant of the crown treacherously mur dered in Ireland two or even three Sinn Feiners shall be executed without trial," said the Globe today. "WS cannot ex tinguish the fires of terrorism by sprink ling rosewater upon them." .. . Better ' Inducements I For Printers Urged Chehalis. Wash.. : Nov. , 22. At a con ference of newspapermen- and printers of Lewis and Pacific counties in Che hahs recommendations adopted to be presented at the "business meeting of the Washington State Press, association . at the state university in Seattle in Janu ary, included adoption of a standard price list and -ot vocational training as a mesns of securing mors efficient help in the printing offices. Packers' Wage Case i Will Be Eeopened Chicago, Nov. 22. (U. P.) Due to the general business depression. Judge Samuel Alachuler, arbiter in the wage controversy between the packers and their employes. . today agreed to reopen the hearing into wag conditions. Judge Alschuler said that he would not per mit any prolonged hearing and his de cision is expected in about two weeka COMMONS SUSPENDED BY IRISH UPROAR Miss Bessie Irvine Dead; Services Are Held'at Corvallis Miss Bessie Irvine died at 4 a. m. Sunday at her home in Sellwood. Miss trvine had been an invalid for years and the immediate cause of Tier death was pneumonia following an attack of asthma. Funeral services will be held today at Corvallia under auspices of the Order of the Eastern Star and the body interred in Corvallis Masonic cemetery. Miss Irvine was a sister of B. F Irvine, editor of The . Journal. T Bend, Or., Nov. 22. His iron nerve broken, A. J. Weston, con victed Sunday of the murder of Rob ert H. Krug near Sisters on March 24, 1919, broke down in his cell in the county Jail here Sunday night and sobbeii- like a child. He de clared be was innocent and that he would rather step out ' of his cell into his coffin than to go to. prison for life. He has neither eaten nor slept since the verdict was brought in and looks 10 years older. Bend, Nov. 22. After an absence of more than 17 hours from the courtroom, the Jury which was charged at 11 o'clock Saturday night by Circuit Judge T. E. J. Duffy, re turned a verdict in circuit court Sunday afternoon, convicting A. J. Weston of the second degree mur der of Robert H. Krug of Sisters, on March 24, 1919. ' Weston heard ' the verdict unmoved, shaking his head slowly when County Clerk J. H. Haner read the Jury's re port. He made no comment. Allan R. Joy of Portland, attorney for the de fense, demanded a poll, which confirmed the verdict. Joy then announced that he woulu" move Monday ; for time in which to file a motion for a new trial. August Kmg, brother of Weston's victim, expressed his satisfaction with the result of the trial. Weston's daugh ter, Mrs. A. J. Moore, wife of the Des chutes county district attorney, burst out weeping as the Jury's decision was pronounced. ' Mrs. Weston was not present. She is grief stricken over her husband's con viction. Testimony produced by the state was to the effect that Weston had told two witnesses, George Stillwell and Joe Wil son, that he had gone to K rug's cabin on the night of the twenty-fourth, tor tured Krug in an endeavor to get the old man's money, killed him, and burned the house, was supported by a mass of circumstantial evidence, featuring the Hnding of a note in Weston's vest pocket, made payable by W. S. Fuller ton to KrVg. The defense centered about the attempt to prove that Weston did not possess a vest and hence to show the note story to be false, and to. estab lish the possibility of accidental death. LEAGUE ASSEMBLY 10 AiDARMENIANS (Costiausd From Pags One! soldiers will comprise the force to super vise a plebiscite to determine whether Vilna shah be Polish or Lithuanian. George H. Barnes, labor member of the British delegation in the leagua as sembly, will bring the Russian and gen eral Near Kast situations before the as sembly as the "most important question In the world, threatening a renewal of general European war," he Informed the United News. BXSSIAX PROBLEM SUPPRESS: 1 Alleging that the Russian problem has been supressed and that he had repeat edly been refused the floor, Barnes de clared he would "have plenty to say" once he got the subject before the as sembly. Barnes criticizes the league for having failed to report why it did not inter vene in the Rueso-Polish war. "Renewal of the war between Russia and Poland is now imminent," Barnes declared. "The Poles are 300 miles be yond their legitimate frontiers. Sixty, nine Russian divisions are released as a result of the defeat of Wrangel, and should the Poles and Russians resume fighting Poland will attempt to' again involve Europe in war. Poland must be made to return to her ethnographical frontiers." Barnes has the support of Lord Rob ert Cecil and FridtJ of Nansenof Nor way. Both declared that fearful con sequences would result from a contin ued policy of ignoring the Russian situ ation, and indorsed Barnes' plan of de veloping Immediate action. J Geneva, Nov. 21. An emissary of Le nin and Trotsky is said to have arrived in Geneva incognito. Unofficial German representatives had previously reached here and with the arrival of the Bol sheviki emissary the two largest powers outside of America not represented in the league have at least observers in touch 'Vllh the league sessions. Burglar Suspects ' Are Captured by Police Inspectors Police Inspectors Swennes and Schul pius captured two burglar suspects Sun day. J. B. Kelsey had reported that his best suit of clothes and other wearing apparel had keen stolen from his room in the Chamberlain hotel. Detectives crawled up two flights of stairs and discovered two men asleep. The alleged stolen clothing was found. Jack Everitt and Blinn McFarlan were arrested. . Several rings and a money belt con taining French, Belgian and German coins was also found in the' possession of the two suspects. GUILTY VERDICT IN 1L0FIS0N Department Store Gives Gay -Party . Geisha girls, mandarins, toreadors, negroes, rubes, domino s, yama-yama girls, colonial cayaliers, gay senoritas, and all the rest assembled at the second annual fancy dress ball given by Lip man, Wolfe & Co.; to its employes at the Multnomah hotel Saturday evening. Jaza music and daszling dresses were the order of the evening The costumes showed much spirit and work, for .some of them were very cleverly made up. i - PROCLAMATION OF "SCHOOL WEEK" IN OREGON IS ISSUED Salem, 0r.,NovJt2. The week of December to 11 is designated as "school week" In Oregon in a proc clamation issued by Governor Ol cott Monday. "It is the desire of those interested in education that the people use this week in such a way as will most effect ively disseminate among the people ac curate information In regard to the con ditions and needs of our schools and enhance the appreciation and value of education and create such Interest as will result in better opportunities for education as well as a larger interest in schools of 'all kinds and grades," the proclamation reads. The cooperation of the public press, the churches and other religious organi sations, women's clubs, parent-teacher associations, chambers of commerce, boards of trade, labor unions, farmers' unions and all patriotic and civic so cieties is sought in the movement.-. . "The foundation of our civilisation and of our advanced national develop ment lies largely In our schools and our educational facilities,' the governor, de clares. "I believe cooperation in this work of disseminating information as to the condition and needs of the schools will have a salutary and beneficial ef fect on the future of educational work in Oregon and throughout the nation and I trust that this subject will have the - close and careful consideration of all the people during that time.' The move is national In its scope "and is headed by P. H. Claxton, national commissioner of education. Traffic Officer, Curious, Uncovers Moonshine in Car Mike Garren and Paul Musica -were blithely driving Into the city Sunday on one of the highways. Motorcycle Policeman Drennen came along and waved a friendly salute. '"Hello, boys ; It's a fine day, isn't ltr he said, and noticing a bulky object in the rear seat, inquired if they were getting an early start on the marketers. "Looks like a pen of rabbits,' the mur mured, politely raising the corner of a gunnysack. Drennen uncovered a S-gallon keg of moonshine. He then ordered the pair to drive to Garren's home at 733 Roose velt street, where nearly 100 gallons more were discovered. Calling on some friends of Musica and Garren on the way to jail, aestill was found. So Frank Pauletic, 289 North Fourteenth street. Joined the party. "Never should a bootlegger be friendly to a man on a motorcycle." moaned Garren and Musica. Forger Lost Nerve, Or His Check Would Have Been Cashed Officials of the Citisens bank are con gratulating themselves today because W. R. Pearl, 151 Twelfth street, lost his nerve; and W. R. Pearl, because he lost his nerve, lost also $1250 Jie might have got ' if he had waited a few minutes longer. Saturday Pearl presented at the East Side bank a check drawn on the Citl sens bank for $1250, signed by Carl Thielmann. Pearl was told to wait a few minutes while the teller sent a runner to the Citlsens bank, which is in the same block. The teller merely wanted to learn it Thielmann had an account large enough to cover the check. Bus- Pearl grew suspicious. When the , runner came ' back, Pearl was gone. An investigation of the check revealed It to be a forgery, the police say. . Pearl has served a term in the penitentiary for forgery, according to the police, who are looking for PearL W. E. Van Amburgh Gives Famous Talk At W. 0. W. Temple Before a packed house at the W. O. W. temple Sunday night, W. K.Van Am burgh of Brooklyn, N. Y.. secretary treasurer of the International Bible Stu dents' association, delivered his famous address on "Millions Now Living Will Never Die and Other Millions Will Soon Be Returning." "If .Christ died for the whole world, then the whole world should receive some benefit therefrom," the speaker said. "The : world ha j not received such a blessing as yet. God promised one full opportunity to every rnin condemned through Adam ; and that time is in the future, when the Kingdom of God shall be established. Christ gave many sam ples of the great work to be done in that day, curing ail sorts of diseases, cripples, obseseed and demoniacs ; even raising spme from the dead to show how literal would be Che awakening of 'all that are in the grave.' " Near East Relief Spends 40 Millions In Aid of Stricken In the five years of its existence the Near East Relief organization has spent $41,000,000 on 111,000 orphans, 40.000 refugees and 6000 harem girls. A recent investigation by the United States gov-, eminent showed that not a cent of this money had been . misappropriated or spent extravagantly. - Thesestatemects were made by Dr. Lincoln L. Wirt, director of the United States relief expedition to the Near East, In an address before the Oregon Civic league at Hotel penson Saturday. Judge John H. Stevenson made a strong plea on behalf of the Red Cross roll call. Mrs. A. L. Obst gathered In a number of memberships. 10 Lose Lives in t Big Fire at Quebec Quebec. Nov. 22. (L N. S) At least 10 persons, mostly women and children, are dead and half a dosen others. In cluding some firemen, are dying, as a result of a conflagration which, starting last night, wiped out a large section of a French ' settlement Just outside of Quebec, causing damage estimated at more than $500,000. BRIEFS FROM JOURNAL WIRES POMOXA, CaL-(L N. S.) Mrs, N. Zerfing of Riverside was' in stantly killed and her husband prob ably fatally injured at 9 :15 o'clock this morning, when their automo bile was hit by the east-bound Sun set Limited where the Valley road crosses the Southern Pacific tracks at Puente. CHICAGO L N. S,) John Hunt Is being held by the police today for the alleged elaying of Earl Smith, manager of a baking com pany, and the probably fatal wound ing of Walter E. Myers, during a , shooting affray in two South Side, dance halls. : - SEATTLE CU. P.) - James G. Pinkham, 38, president of the Pink ham Lumber company, one time president of the Rotary club, com mitted, suicide by shooting Sunday afternbon. , WASklM GTOJT-L N. &) The United States supreme court today refused to advance to a hearing the mandamus proceedings of Charles MacArtney of Chicago to compel Secretary of State Colby to publish as aa existing law the joint resolution of congress of April 9, 1920, declaring ; the wa with Ger many at an end. : MEXICO CITT (L N. &) Pro visional President de la Huerta de nied today that Roberto V. Pes quiera, now on a special mission in the United States in connection with the proposed recognition of the Mexican provisional government. T Chicago, Nov. 22. (1. N. S.) The first tangible - results of Chicago's new "clean-up"" campaign - the raids of Saturday and Sunday which filled the city's jails with 800 gamb lers and men on the suspect lists as major crlminals-i-led to the unearth ing of what vpollce today announce as one of the biggest , gambling houses in the country. Slips of paper taken from a secret drawer in the room of Clarence Laxa mus at 4508 Grand boulevard, where roulette wheels were confiscated and 24 men many of 'them prominent In the city's social life were captured, gave a startling sketch of the large sums won and lost during an evening's play. Instances in which the "house" paid out over $10,000' were frequent, but times when the "house" won over $15,000 in an evening were far more frequent ' Many of the slips contained memo randa of the occasions when "Nick the Greek" Dondolas. who had $154,000 on his person when he was taken in the over-Sunday cleanup, won more than $3000. ' The name of "Nick the Greek" and "Weinberg" occur frequently In the list made from the slips. On one occasion Chicago's "Monte Carlo" scratched from its books $14,500 and placed it to the credit of the " "Weinberg" entry. On an other occasion $51,751 was paid to the devotees of chance. In direct contrast to the police phase of the clean-up. 14 men,, taken In Satur day's and Sunday's raids, were dis charged today in municipal court when the hearings came up. "Nick the Greek" was among those who were freed. All except Dondolas 'had given fictitious names. ' " Saints Travel This Week Hood River, Or., Nov. 22. Prepara tions are being made to greet the James John high school football team of Port land here Thanksgiving day. The vis itors are scheduled to meet the local high school squad. RAIDS CAST LIGH ON GAMBLING O N Our 25 Cut on Our Entire Stock Includes Clothes of National Reputation KUPPENHEIMER GOOD CLOTHES $65 Suits, Overcoats, Raincoats Now Clothes of assured quality. Exclusive models for men and young men. LION SPECIAL SUITS $50 Grade Now $37 Single and double -tireasted. mod- els. Tasteful shades of green and brown. Blue serges included. Everything that Men and Boys Wear Marked Down 25 Furnishing, Clothing, Shoes, Hats Exclusive Kuppenheimer House in Portland Morrison at Fourth S. & H. Stamps Given had any authority to debar Sen ator Fall of New Mexico from com ing into Mexico to see President elect Obregon. L05D03T (L N. 8.) "The liber als throughout all Greece must rec- ognize that Constantino is the law ful king f the nation." said the Veniselist newspaper Patrls. in com menting upon the Greek political situation. WA8HI!CGTOir. L N. & Manuel : Estrada Cabrera, denoaed and imprisoned president of Guate mala, nas directed a personal ap peal to President Wilson to save him from death, which, he says, is as certain as - though he faced a firing squad. WASHINGTON U. P.) Her bert Hoover within the last week has come to the front as one of the po88lbllit!es, " for the position of secretary of labor In the cabinet of President-elect Harding, political observers here believed. PUBLIX. (U. P.) One police man was killed In ambush today near Glandore, 34 miles southwest of Cork. Another black and tan trooper was seriously wounded. ETEOIT-L . N. S.) The Rev." J. O. L. Spracklin, special liquor inspector and Methodist pastor, an nounced today that he will not. preach again until after his trial next April for the kUling ot Bever ly Trumble in a raid on the Chap pel house, Sandwich, Ont STATES ATTEND U. University of Oregon, Eugene, Nov. 22. Twenty-three states of the union and 33 of thg 38 Oregon counties are represented In the home address list of the university. Issued by the registrar's office. Eight places outBide the boundaries are also represented, i Sister states on the coast send a "total of '126 stu dents, i Multnomah county has 00 students, one outside of the ; $99 registered from Portland. Lane has 71. of which num ber 318 live in Eugene. Salem Is the home of 67 of the 74 Marlon county stu dents. Five counties have between 40 and 50 each Jackson 4$. Coos 47, Yam hill 46, Clackamas 40, Douglas 40, Linn, with 39, almost makes this group, Umatilla has 3$. , The 20-30 group of counties Includes seven Wasco 29, Washington 6, Clat sop 25, Polk 25, Union 20. Baker, on the far eastern boundary, has 20. The eastern corner counties, Wallowa and Malheur, have respectively 17 and 13. . Otiaer counties, in order of number, follow: Hood River is, Klamath IS, Benton 14, Josephine 13, Deschutes 11, Columbia 10. Sherman 9, Crook , Grant 9, Tillamook I, Morrow 6, Lincoln 5, Lake 6, Gilliam 2. and Jefferson 1. Curry, Harney . and Wheeler counties are not represented. States given as the homes of students, beside those previously mentioned, are: Montana , Kansas 6, Illinois 4, Michi gan 3, Wisconsin 7, North Dakota 7, Iowa 2 and Utah 7. One comes from each of the following states: Arisona, Indiana, Maine, Minnesota, Nebraska, Nevada, New York, Oklahoma, Pennsyl vania, South Dakota and Texas. Places outside the mainland of the United States sending students are : Hawaii 3, Philippines 3, British, Colum bia 2. Alaska 1, Greece 1, New Zealand 1. Switzerland 1, Turkey L Supreme Court Recess Washington. Nov. 22. (L N. S.) The United States supreme court recessed today over Thanksgiving holiday until December 6. STUDENTS FROM 23 $48- Wedding Ceremony And Minister's Fee Discardedj by Soviet Formalities of a marriage service and the clergyman's wedding ; fee are two things which, under the soviet rule In Russia, are set aside, Recording to Paul Turner. Socialist lecturer, who spoke Sunday evening at Alteky hall on "Do mestic Relations In Russia." . In order to become officially established In the community as marriedl folk, it Is merer ly necessary to be o registered in the office of the recorder, explained Tur ner. Under the Bolshevik regime a? mandate has been issued which states. uuy. su cnuaren snouia oe care a zor by the government up to the age of jr. ine estaousnmeni ana main tenance of community kitchens to sup- nlv fond fnr th nannl 4m mnniik at,n toward -rreedom from the capitalist yoke." - HOW EASY HOW PLEASANT HOW SANITARY HOW ECONOMICAL It is to wash with a Electric Washing Machine This great number of women in the UnitedStates are us ingThor Wash ing Machines once i week, Frme Demonstration in . Your Home by' Appointment $10.00 Down, Balance Easy Payments BUT ELECTRIc! GOODH PEOM PEOPLE WBO KNOW m vaummoTOM row 500,000 ; w