TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1920. THE OKKUON . DA1UY JUUKNALr, FUKTl-ANtV UKblUUN. A II EQUALITY RESOLUTION NOT URGED BY JAPAN Geneva, Nov. 30. (I. N. 8.) Vis count KlkuJIro Ishii, head of the Japanese delegation at the : League of Nations meeting, today announced that Japan will not press the resolu tion for racial equality at the present session of the league assembly. ' ' Plenary sessions were resumed by the assembly this morning, but only routine matters were scheduled for considera tion. , '. J), committee report providing for an nual meetings of the assembly on 'the first Monday of September was adopted. 'The Scandinavian amendment to democratize the covenant of the league as referred to the committee and there will not be a report on It until next year. Awning Repair Man Is Hurt in Tumfile ., George Beler, 27. 103 Garfield street, fell from a ladder in front of the Peo ples theatre Monday afternoon. He was treated at the emergency hospital and later taken to St Vincents hospital, it is thought that he has a slight con cussion of the brain. Beier was repair ing an awning when he slipped from the ladder on which he was working. Sterling, Col., Bank Fails; It Is First in The State for Years Sterling. Colo., Nov. 30. (I.1 N. R The Farmers' National bank of this city failed to open its doors Monday. Neither the bank examiner nor officials of the institution would make a statement of the bank's condition, but It waa said that the institution's reserve Is so low that it is unable to meet its drafts nd other obligations. .Large crowds gathered around the bank building, but no demonstration was staged. It is the first bank failure In Colorado In many years. GORDONS LECTION E IS DULY RECORDED Salem; Nov. 30. Acting Governor Vinton Monday signed the " certifi cate of election giving to Herbert Gordon of Portland a seat in the lower house of the Oregon legisla ture as a. duly elected member of the Multnomah county delegation A protest against this action had been filed by Paul Dormltzer. Portland attor ney, who declared that Cordon had been disqualified for the office through the fact that , he was a candidate for two offices at the same election. Replying to the protest. Governor Olcott informed Dormltzer that his protest would have to be taken directly to the legislature. TV0 BOYS DEAD, ONE MAY DIE AS RESULT OF CRASH The Eugene Chamber of Commerce is In the midst of a campaign to raise a fund of $45,000 with a view to building up the payrolls of the city and securing 100 per cent more population. McMinnville, Or., Nov. 30. Two boys are dead, faint hope Is held for a third and a fourth .la injured but Is expected to live, all victims of a coliaion between an automobile and a train from Whiteson In McMinn ville Monday. Herbert Trent died at 10 o'clock Mon day night: Tom Kirby, who was driv ing, was instantly killed. Van Kuren LawBon regained consciousness Tues day morning and physicians hold out slight hope that he may recover. Edwin Kirby is expected to live. - Trent was the son of ,William Trent, highway contractor ; the Kirby boys, sons of Dan Kirby of Bellevue, and Law son is the son of George W. Lawson, a farmer. . The . train motorman was Richard Bland, who escaped In train wreck at Bertha station. ' The place of the acci dent is the same crossing where Mr. and Mrs. Smith was killed two years ago. The view is obstructed ; by a house on each side of the track. Unit Mild Havana cigar: 13$-: HART CIGAR CO. Portland Distributor 05-307 Pin St. 25 Off Jewelry Sale Everything in my store in cluded except a few contract goods. Many Articles 50 Off WEDNESDAY SPECIAL 8-piece French Ivory Mani cure Sets in roll ' iM Set H.H. VINES, Jeweler N. E. Cor. 3rd and Wash ington Streets Opposite Ladd Tlltoa Bank r WHo Speaks with Authority about Underwear WHEN the business man buys anything, he usually knows pretty well who stands back of the thing he is buyiag. Why not an authoritative standard in underwear? Why the waste of time the feeling of insecurity the neces sity for picking his kind of un derwear out of a mixture of odd lots and brands and qualities? He knows what he wants foil size, full length, the right weight for the season of the year. Authenticated as to quality, make and finish The same today as a year ago with the certainty of getting the same grade again any time he wants itv The merchant who means to give him this high type of un derwear service can do it even more easily than he can stock up his mixed brands He can order direct from the mills "Allen A," that celebrated Cooper's -Bennington Spring Needle Underwear, with its thirty years of established reputation. Uniform quality dependable value. For men for boys. Each garment in the future will bear the additional mark, "Allen A" the Maker's pledge of responsibility to you. "Allen," the name of the Makers; and "A" the standard mark of first and finest grade The Allen A Company Kenosha Wisconsin Pacific Coast Service Station 57 Sansome St., San Francisco The Maker's Mark of Identification on Black Cat Hosiery and Cooper's-Bennington Underwear t HEABST'S MAGAZINE A LIBERAL EDUCATION i Man Who Threatened'' the World "Five million dollars for the active principal of alcohol," offered Arnbush, embittered brewer, resolving, Samson like, to drag down the reformers with him. With the secret of the essence of intoxication in his hands, he would impose his will on this crank-ridden country. With this havoc -wreaking secret, he would sow the hopes of prohibition with dismal failure. But, with the formula in his hand, his personal victory immense and final, why did Arnbush suddenly decide to destroy his $5,000,000 secret and let the world work out its own salvation? Finish this most surprising story of prohibition The Man Who Threatened the World by Melville Davisson Post in Hearst's for December Do Your Children Go to Church? By William G. Shepherd Your father and grandfather believed in re ligion and prayer. But today we are not a church-going nation. Only one in vrry three of us are nominal worshippers of the God of the Jews and Gentiles. A century or half a century from now will the United States be classed among the nations that believe in God? In Hearsts for December Home Wreckers of Humanity By G. K. Chesterton Is the paternalism of government and society gradually destroying our families? Can a free man have any property, privacy and leisure? Are the nursery and home being set up out side the household ? In Hearsts for December An Uncle from Australia By Roland Pertwee Handsome Harry By W. W. Jacobs A Peach hy Any Other Name By Bruno Leasing Who WiU Whitewash the Fences? By Walt Mason Our World of Well Fed Rabbits; ByH.G. Wells Is it true, as H. G. Wells says, that the great average of humanity is scarcely more capable of apprehending and consciously serving the future generations than a world of well fed rabbits ? Is the mass of common men incur ably shallow, and belligerent? Read article II in. 'The Future of Mankind" series. In Hearsts for December The little Red Foot By Robert W. Chambers "I watched with amazement while the little Indian Sorceress painteH'in red a tiny human foot above her breast " Robert W. Chambers writing again one of the good old fashioned Romances that made him famous. In Hearsts for December All About Satan the Waster By G. Bernard' Shaw The Man in D 27 Another Dolf Story Oil on the Troubled Mosquito Science of the Month i And Twelve Other Big Features In Hearsts for December ( J ERE is a magazine for every man and 1 woman who appreciates the best in pop ular art and literature who prefers things bright without being trivial and really worth while without being dull. If you are ever bored by other magazines try Hearst's; if you like good magazines and want a still better one ask your newsdealer today for DEC. ISSUE u Ma&azme with a Mission JUST OUT UHIAN -NEWS AGEfif 45 North Fifth Street, Portland, Oregon Wholesale Distributors for Oregon Copjrriffct, mo, The AQta A Coapiay