The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, November 30, 1920, Page 6, Image 6

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    6
THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND. OREGON
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30. 1920.
CITY COMMITTEE
IS APPOINTED Id
UNITE TERMINALS
Unification of all railway passen
ger and freight terminal facilities In
the city will be thoroughly "investi
gated by a committee authorized
Monday afternoon by the city coun
cil. Resolution calling for appoint
ment of the committee was intro
duced by Mayor Baker.
This committee will be given full time
to make a complete investigation and is
expected to evolve a plan for a union
passenger station and freight terminal
and to lay the plans before the council.
H, B. Van Duster, president of the
Chamber of Commerce :, O. Laurgaard,
city engineer; G. B. Hegardt, engineer
of the dock commission, and presidents
of all civic bodies will serve as members
of the committee.
THREATENS CANCELLATION
"It railway officials do not show a
disposition to provide the public with
adequate conveniences, then I think this
council has a legal way of compelling
them to do so through cancellation of
their franchises, said Commissioner
Barbur.
The committee which has been named
an authorized representative of the city
will meet In the office of Mayor Baker
at 4 o'clock Thursday afternoon to com
' plete organisation and outline a plan of
action.
In the meantime negotiations to gain
- a contract for operation of Great North
ern and S., P. A S. trains into the Union
station are being carried on through
Ralph . Budd, president of the Great
Northern at fit, Paul. If any agreement
ran be reached between the Hill and
Harrlman railway interests it will be
through conference between Budd and
Carl Grsy of the Union Pacific, it was
Intimated by local officials today.
TERMINAL COMPANY PROTESTS -While
the .present members of the
i union station terminal company the
Union Pacific, Southern Pacific and
Northern Pacific express dissatisfac
tion with congested conditions at the
union station and have asked the re
moval of Great Northern trains, Wil
liam; F. Turner, president of the S., P.
'fc S-, calls attention to the Revere test
the terminal underwent during the
Shrine convention. He believes the Great
Northern could not only continue oper
ation into -the terminal, but that S.. P.
& S., and Oregon Klectrio trains could
. use it.
If agreement cannot be reached by
the officials the matter will in all prob-
- ability be laid before the interstate com
merce commission on the basis of pro
visions of the. transportation act of 1920
which the Hill linea believe should force
the terminal company to permit them
: usage of the union terminal.
Prisoners Break
'Parole; Must Go
Back to Prison
Pacific Northwest
Newspapers Form
. New Association
111 IN DOUGLAS
Seattle. Nov. SO. The Pacific North
west Newspaper association was formed
here yesterday at a meeting of publishers
of more than a score of -newspapers and
their representatives. orneers were
elected as follows: J. F. Young, Spo
kane. ni-Mident: A. Q. ttixby. Seattle,
Vice president: J. K. Heslet, Butte, treas
urer; Macdonald Potta. Portland, and
Frank I. Sefrlt, Belllngham. directors.
The member papers are : Times, Post
Intelligencer, Star, Seattle; Morning
nr.nniin. flnrnn Journal. Telegram.
News, Portland ; Ledger, News, Tribune,
Times, Tacoma ; . Bpoaesman-iteview,
Chronicle. Press, Spokane; Statesman,
Capital News. Boise ; World. Wentechee ;
urM American-Reveille. Belllngham ;
Herald, Everett ; Republic, Herald, Yak
ima; Mlssoulan, Missoula; etanaara,
Anaconda: Miner, Butte; Province,
World. Vancouver. B. C. The list of
member papers will be increased later.
mouishep
Fl
Although mountain sheep have
been declared extinct In Western
Oregon for many years, a heard of
from 17 to 20 of these animals has
been discovered In southwestern
Douglas county by W. H. Dirrett of
Albany. The discovery was made
less than two weeks ago.
Dirrett has had 2 years' experience
with .big game in the United Staffs and
Alaska. He served as guide for Colonel
Roosevelt on his hunting trips in Mon
tana. He is thoroughly familiar with
mountain sheep and their, traits and has
written of his discovery to the state fish
and game commission.
Dirrett, accompanied by J. E. Green
man of Albany, recently spent several
days In the Cow Creek canyon district
He- says that when first sighted, the
sheep were In scattered herds of four
to six, about 10 miles north of West
Fork in Cow Creek canyon, on the
right side of the river and about two
miles above the' Southern Paelfic rail
road tracks. Dirrett says that the sheep
were moving south and east about half
a mile a day andS that, he does not be
lieve the anlmajs! to be migratory- He
says there are tWo old Tarns in the herd.
Captain A. E. Burghduff, state game
warden, is making a thorough Investiga
tion of the report as it has been gen
erally understood for many years that
the only herd of mountain sheep is in
Wallowa county.
Western Kentucky
Crude Oil Drops
Oil City, Pa., Nov. 30.-r(I. N. S.)
The price of Western Kentucky crude oil
has been reduced 25- cents a barrel. The
new quotation is $4,
FAULTY
BRAKES
BLAMED FOR IADS
AUTO ACCIDENTS
'"' "Faulty brakes or the faulty ap
plication of brakes, are at the bot
tom of the majority of automobile
accidents," declared E. E. Goehler
of Benson Polytechnic school, speak
ing before 300 automobile drivers
and owners at Library hall Monday
night in the first of a series of' 12
free lectures being conducted for au
tomobile operators by the National
Safety council. .
'If drivers of automobiles would give
their brakes half as much attention
as they do their spark plugs and ignition
there would be little chance of accidents
resulting from lack of control."
Goehler emphasised the need of lubri
cation in the care of brakes, declaring
that' the reason many brakes do not func
tion properly is because owners hesitate
to "get out and ' get under" their ma
chines to see that all brake parts are in
place and that each part has its meed
of oil or grease. Calling attention to
the Importance of even the smallest-part,
a cotter pin, used In brake cons traction.
Goehler said that owners should inspect
these highly Important parts of their
automobiles at regular Intervals, over
hauling thoroughly every two months,
greasing every SO days,, and Inspecting
at least once each week. No driver
should take his car from ' its place of
storage and start on a trip, whether of
long or short duration, without first
seeing what distance it requires to bring
the car to a complete stop and ascer
taining whether or not the brakes are
equalized.
Salem, Nov. 30. When Lee Collage,
colored, completes his 275 days in the
..... -. . j i . ... 1. 1 t v .......
ivjuunoman county jmi, io wiuua no was j
recently sentenced by Judge Rossman J
of the Portland municipal court, upon
conviction on a charge of theft, he will
be returned to the state prison here to
serve out te unexpired term af a sen
tence from iffhlch he had been released
on parole. ,
Lester' Buther, another colored parole
violator, who pleaded guilty before Judge
RusKTV.an to a theft charge, must also
servn out the unexpired time of his
maximum sentence to, the state peni-
tentiary. Both paroles were revoked by
Governor Vinton. Monday. Undr a re
cent ruling of the governor's office and
the state parole board, violation of a
parole by the committment of a crime
of this character, subjects the offender
to the service of his maximum sentence.
Dr. J. Stanley Dies
At, Rochester, Wn.,
Leaves 3 Survivors
Centralis. Wash.. Nov. 20. Dr. J. B.
Stanley, pioneer resident of Rochester
and secretary of the Southwest Wash
Ington Pioneers' association, died at
Rochester, Monday. He had been trav
fling for a Portland concern during the
past year but formerly was manager of
the Rochester exchang-a of the Peoples'
Co-operative Telephone company.
Ills wife, a son and two daughters
survive.
Mrs. Emma H. Buxton, wife of Judge
J. R. Buxton, aged about 65, died Mon
day. She had lived in Centralist for 29
years and had made Lewis county her
"home since 1839. Besides hec husband
she Is survived by a daughter. Mrs. F.
K. Dorrls, wife of Rev.- F. E. Dorris of
Portland.
ID) d?w
Prober nutrition
durmg childhood
developes sturdy
menondwomen.
Since i-bj
EAGLE BRAND
Condensed Milk
J. L. Foote Named
Land Board Counsel
,: Salem, Nov. 30. At a meeting of the.
state land board here Monday, J. L.
Foote of St Helens was named attorney
for the board in Columbia county, to suc
ceed O. A. Gore, resigned. C. s. Marsh
of Metolius was named attorney for"
Jefferson county to succeed N. A. Bur
dick, resigned. - ;
If
m
Keeps the little
Mies Comfortable
and Happy
Don't neglect the little one's
chafed skin or the patches of rash,
for children are bound to scratch,
and these minor troubles may
result in stubborn sores. Resinol
Ointment is widely recommended
by doctors and nurses because it
soothes and heals, and cannot
barm the tender skin.
KtsinotSoafi is uUal for Ik bath.
All druggists! Resinol Soap and Ointment.
'I re;, t .... j , , , , , j.
i
Great Western Savings and Loan asso
ciation for which they are applying for
articles of incorporation. O. G. Arnesen
will be manager of the new company.
Re was cashier for many years of the
First State bank of Benford. N. D.
Butchers in Denver
Slash Pork Prices
Denver, Colo., Nov. 30. (L N. S.)
Heavy slashing in retail prices of pork
products was announced in Denver to
day. Pork loins dropped from 45 cents
to 30 cents a pound and bacon was cut
from 63 cents to 43 cents.
BOA
J
ORS WILL
ii
DISCOSSPROBLEMS
Many of the leading educators
have been slated to appear on the
program of the citizens regional
conference on education for Oregon
and Washington, to be held Satur
day at the Multnomah hotel.
J. A. Churchill, state school superln-
Its old plantation flavor has made
it America's favorite
Spokane Gets Loan Firm
Spokane, Wash., Nov. 30. A group of
Spokane men have put 335,000 into the
OLD-time sugar cane molasses I
Two Louisiana boys, re
membering the wonderful flavor
of home-made molasses down on
the old plantation, decided to re
store this bygone delicacy. They
put up a molasses the first taste
of which carries you back to child
hood joys.
Today it is the most popular
molasses in America. Get a can
of Brer Rabbit. Either the light
molasses (gold label for table
use as well as cooking) or the dark
molasses (green label a stronger
cooking flavor).
Molasses Pie
V4 cue Brer Rabbit
leases (gold label)
1H cup acaided milk
3 cut
teaspoon cuutamoa
teaspoon aalt
J4 teaspoon nutmeg
3 tablespoons sugar
Bmt gg and yolk ml
two, muShtfyf pour ever
i ham tudded .milk; Utt
coairiii tlj. Add Bio-
pioas? eooi.
1
mm to wiMi pastry; pour
in tiling. Bmko till kxufm
oooiHoat cJsan. Romoro
from ovn. cover with
wnmringuo tnmdm from r
mmininjk whit, tmmfn
mtiM mad oosnninsd with
augur. Brown in m mod
rate even.
Brer RabMt Molasses
Rich with tkm flvor tf tk trnfmr com
" i ' 2N
GIVE your children all
the Intf oK;n
they can eat. They will need
no.jirging-the very sight of
the Log Cabin containers
makes them hungry. At
your grocer's in three sizes.
Lock or the Log Cabin Con
11 L
Exclusive
Columbia Designs
tendent of Oregon, and Josephine C
Preston, superintendent of Washington,
will tell of recent progress in education,
nd proposed legislation.
uuier speakers Invited, together with
their topics, are: P. I Campbell, presi
dent of the University of Oregon, and
Henry Suszallo. president of the Uni
versity of Washington, on "The Needs of
Higher Education in the Two States" : Su
perintendent D. A. Grout, on "The Needs
of the City Schools' : F. B. Cooper, su
perintendent of Seattle schools, the same
subject; President John C- Ackerman.
Oregon State Normal school at Mon
mouth, and President Noah". Show al
ter of the State Normal school at Che
ney, Wash., on "The Preparation of
Teachers and an Adequate Supply of
Adequately Prepared Teachers for All
the Schools-; President fnest O. Hol
land. State college. of Washington. "The
Needs ' of Elementary and Secondary
Education as Seenvby a College Presi
dent" ; J. R. Moore, secretary board of
education, Eugene, "Sources of Revenue
for Sctfools.' 1
P. P. Claxton, commissioner of educa
tion, will speak at a mass meeting at
Lincoln high school at night-
The conference is one of 12 being held
throughout the country.
Henry J. Haleja patrolman, was seriously-wounded
and Mrs. Clara Hansom,
aged 60. uss shot in the foot, by two
outlaws who opened fire on the police
man when he attempted to stop them in
Seattle. . .
13,000 Jobless in ...
Washington State
Spokane. Nov. 29. (I. N. S.) Ten
Uionsand Western and 3000 Eastern
Washington men are unemployed, ssys
a report on state labor conditions issued
today by W. C Carpenter, federal labor
director. Twenty-five-hundred are un
employed here. Heads of employment
bureaus here meet weekly with Car
center to relieve the situation.
The wall from cotton and wheat
farmers reminds us that price reduc
tion, like the tariff. Is a local Issue.
The Streamline Cabinets
of Columbia Graionolas
place them in a class by
themselves. They are all in
perfect accord with modern
artistic furniture design.
Their beauty is the outward
sigh of their inward excel
lence. The following exclusive
features place Columbia
Grafonolas beyond the
bounds of competition:
Tone Leaves that give
you complete and accurate
control over tone volume.
Scientifically Correct
Acoustic Designs which in
sure that the Grafonola will
always give you reproductions
of exacdythe music the artists
themselves produced on the
original wrjxin thcColumbia
laboratories.
And
The Only Non Set Autt
mafic Stop. Operates on any.
record, long or short. Never
stops before it should. Al
ways stops at the very end.
Nothing to move or set or
measure. Just start the
Grafonola, and it plays and
stops itself.
Ask the nearest Columbia dealer for a denv
oaslralioa of the rstop that needs no setting
Standard Models up to $500
Period Designs up to $2100
(a
mi
COLUMBIA GRAPHOPH,ONB COMPANY.
if
New York
I JQiliEBllQIiiEElS
I! 1 Its performance is so regular ' II
that the merchant has the satis- I
faction of knowing what his
delivery will cost him month t.
after month.
ii The haulage cost is ltnnsually tow.
Covey Motor Car Co.
Washing-ton at Twenty-First J
Are You Concerned in Your
Te
Telephone service is now universally recognized as a necessity in business
and social life. In your own business every day a hundred details are disposed
of by telephone which would require weeks of time and cost you many times
over your present expense if they had to await the slow and arttiquated
methods of a few years ago. In your home the convenience and adaptability7
of telephone service make the day's duties easy, which, if the telephone were
absent, would prove to be a slow and cumbersome task. In other words,-the
telephone is indispensable in your office and your home, '
This being true, you are concerned in whether or not the Company which
furnishes your service can continue and improve and extend that service.
You are interested in whether or not money can be obtained to maintain and
build up the system which is trying to keep pace with Oregon growth
2nd progress.
" ' s V- ' '
Neither the telephone company nor any other public service company can
go ahead if its revenues are not sufficient to maintain and operate its property
and pay a fair earning on the money necessary to extend its business to meet
the public demand. ,
You are interested It is your service.
The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Co.