8 DOiDSl USES "BURRS" TO SUM LAWYERS Warrant Charging Street Super intendent With Contempt of - Court 'Arouses His Wrath. Alex Donaldson, city superintend ent of streets, is peeved, In fact he informed a sympathetic audience of departmental heads and feminine attaches in the city hall ; Saturday: ,"If thirr wirr noot a boonch of ladies prisint I'd be aboot Jetting ryou know how conslderrrrble mad I would be If it werrre noot the week r.f cti cYxi-rrr. 'n iverrry one. Kurrrposed to be rrright glad. "I nae ginna teel yerrr thu name of I he Joodge,"r' else he be ferrr hae 'in' me jooged," eald Donaldson. J DEPUTIES PUZZLED Alex was summoned as a defense wit ness in a circuit court suit ? last week. He so persistently clamored to be re lieved, sojie "cud be aboot therr mindin of the c-ity'e stlirrrreets,-' both court and sittorney excuHtd him. 1 ' '' Ileturning in the evening to his office in the cUy hall, after a strenutus day. Donaldson was greeted by two deputy sheriffs armed with a bench warrant charging him with contempt of court Fortunately for the deputies, - Alex .de veioped such a collection of burrs in his throat they knew not whether the irate street superintendent was compliment ing them for the honor of their most welcome presence or was delivering a sort of beatherbloom benediction upon the circuit judge. - i FEW MORE Bl'KRS j Upon his arrival before the circuit Judge, the situation was explained and Donaldson was vindicated by the court " with due apology. .:, To, his sympathetic bearers In the city hall Alex soothihgly(?) confided; "Ye know yl' sils, 'tis noo season ferrr losing yi' timpef rr ; soo I cannae Ixpress misiF, but lit me say thlss If thefrr city had a trrrrainload if therr stoof therr heads if lawyerrrs is composed if, twad build therr harrrdest pavmint the spiclflcatrrrshuns If the ingemeerrr's deparrrtment oood iverrr aarrsk fer. An' ferrr joodges, wefl, I canna ixpress mtssir I dinna' wish to epind me Chrrrlstmas in the joog." j City Treasury Holds $1,892,338, Says Repoi of Adams ; ' j The balance in the city's general fund Us S433.086.69, with a total balance in 'jia, treasury for all funds on Decemler 1 of. 1.892,338.60, according to the re port of City Treasurer Adams, filed with ;hi city auditor. The report follow3V Halance gfnpml tundj f 483,080.09 W ter fund H2,5B.3t rtonded Indebtedness interest fund; 174,583.25 360.00 7,110.00 4,48mo J 80.00 3t.99I).24 3, ..'42.40 "8.543.92 UUO.OO ltonded indebtednew int. fund Chue National bank ....... Jlarri.-Forbes & Co. Vbemiral National bank Hanoier National bank ...... luiproTcmrnt bond ninking tnnd. lmtiroremrnt bond interest , fund. National -Park bank Improvement bond interest I.innton water ImproTrment bond ainkinc fund. St. Johns Sinkins fund - .............. l'iayeroundi and parks HlH.-ril bridge KiU-nsion bond snkinf fund . . . I-.xtension bond interest fund . . . The Auditorium fund J185.00 314.464.41 29. 148.80 18.942.28 680.05 29.52 1.952.94 10,249.09 91.21 20,360.38 18.467.22 132,542.87 33,362.98 709.80 282,940.25 ' 1,090.15 134.527.52 586.39 257.00 1,728:97 3.87 1,000.00 177.80 4,398.70 37,911.77 65,650.8$ 13,857.05 7.883.44 6.193.30 Imp. bond sinking fund, St. Johns: Imp. bond ainkinc Jund, Linnton Munieipal sewer construction funi lire dept. construction fund . . . . J'ark and bhrd. construction fund 1'cdemption fund j Elimination of grade crowing....; AVator bond sinking fund l'aving fnnd .......... Assessment collection fund Krnadwav bridge fund . . Kill posting badge fund llonded iudebtedneas sinking fund 'iie emergency tasnrl Mt. Hood Ry. 1 & r. Ca per manent repair fund ImiA-oTement bond sinking and in terest tuna -. ......... srk and playirounda Municipal pa Ting rotary fund htreet tmproTement fund ... Hewer fund . .v......... . . ht.rcet extension fund ...... IStreet and sewer Interest fund Total . v. 892,338.60 .. Included in the treasurer's report is the Item of 17,6D3;S2 deposited in New Yotk banks. i Church School! to Render -Carols at Unitarian Services The pastor of the Church of Ouf ratner ( Unitarian), Rev. William G. Kliot Jr.. will speak at the Sunday morn ing service on "Immanttel."i The church school Will attend the service in a hodv. entering with the singing of a carol as a processional. I Before this service . the church school will sing carols and enjoy .the presenta tion of lantern views'of the Madonnas , and the Holy Family. The Christmas party for the church school, with Christ mas tree and Santa Clausj-wili be at 2 o'clock Monday aftemoon.i The annual meeting of the First Uni tarian society of Portland! will be held t the church (in the old chapel) on Tuesday evening, January pi. Mail Pouches! Are ' Stolen From Station . At Milton Thursday Walia Walla. Wash., Dec. 25 fTT f Pouches containing registered and first class mail were, taken from the ,. station of the O.-W. R. & N. railroad at Milton. Ore., some lime Thursday night, according to a report received here to day. - The pouches contained inbound .and outbound mail from the offices at Milton and Freewater, the Value of which cannot be learned until after the losses are checked up by a postof fice inspector who is reported en route to the offices from Portland. Harry Greb Winner Over Jeff Smith Pittsburg, Pa., Dec. 25. (V. P.) Har ry Greb, middleweight, outfought Jeff Smith In their 10-round boot here today. At no time was Smith dangerous. Greb appeared able to hit Smith at will. BEST BECOMES ASSISTANT U. S. ATTORNEY JAN, 1 r . ,-, , . - " ; ' v , IS m W f? h .: L" ii r saw; l j j v I EikMHIwattMM Tlionuis 11. .Maguire " January 1. 1921, Thomas H. Maguire will assume the position of assistant United States district attorney, to inl ! the vacancy caused by, the resignation of Charles W. Reames. His appointment was announced during the past week .by United States Attorney Lester W., Hum phreys.,' ;Iteames resigned to enter pri vate law practice with his brother at Medford. Maguire has resigned "his po sition as deputy under Walter H. Evans, county district attorney, to accept the federal position. " Maguire has been a resident of Port land since 1913. He spent one' year at the University of Michigan and three years at the University of Oregon,. where he graduated from law school. He passed the bar examination in October, 1916. Maguire was clerk in the . office -of Evans from Aucrust, 1913, to-June, 1916. At the later date he left with the troops for the Mexican border -where he served with Troop A, Oregon cavalry, until February, 1917. From February, 1917. until July, 1917, he served in Evans' office as clerk and special agent In July, 1917, he enlisted and saw service in the "army until No vember. 1919. He was a captain with Troop C, Oregon cavalry. 148th field ar tillery, syid with 18th field artillery. He was overseas from January, 1918, until August, 1919. - He served with the 148th field -artillery in the Champagne-Marne defensive, -and the Aisne-Marne, St. Mi hiel and Meuse-Argonne offensives, and after the conclusion of the war spent six months with the army of occupation. He f4?turned to Portland during November, 1919, and was appointed Jeputy district attorney for Multnomah county in Jan uary, 1920, which position, he will hold for one year. 9000 Legion Posts To Begin Barrage For Soldier Bonus Salem, Or., Dec. 25. Nine thousand American -Legion posts throughout the nation will be asked to lay down a bar rag of demands upon the present con gress for a speedy enactment of pay ad justment or bonus law for men serving in, the world war, according to tele graphic information received here by Adjutant. General George A. White from the national headquarters of the legion at Indianapolis. The, information was received in response to a demand on the parr, of White that, some concerted ac tion be taken in an. effort to secure the enactment of the measure into law. The barrage, it is, said,. will be aimed principally at the senate, where the American Legion's bill is being held up. .Enactment of such a law by the fed eral congress would relieve the several states from the necessity of such action, according to the adjutant general, who played an important part in the organi zation of the legion, while in the service overseas, and who assisted materially in the organization work in this country. - Alleged Slayer of Policeman, to Face Charge of Murder Aberdeen, Wash., Dec. 25. Informa tion was given out here by Chief of Po lice George Dean to the effect that Adam Sirhoff, former partner with Harry Kar gin and his bartender, Pete Ambaloff, in a soft drink parlor here, under arrest at Bellingharrl, with other Russians for al leged bootlegging, will be charged with murder in the first degree for the death of Nicolas Koleski, Aberdeen policeman, who was murdered near South Aberdeen.- Koleski's body was found Sep tember 26. The evidence on which the charge Is based was secured through confessions secured by Chief Dean, Sheriff -elect Elmer Gibson and Manager May of a Seattle detective bureau after hours of questioning. Koleski was lured to a point three miles south of Aberdeen in the woods by Ambaloff upon pretense of locating a moonshine still and was Bhot three. times while blindfolded. When Koleski, it is alleged, sat up and wrapped a handkerchief over the wounds in- his head, Sirhoff hit him over the head with the butt of a revolver and then shot him twice more. Koleski had developed evidence against Sirhoff, which caused the oplice to raid his place of business. This is considered the mo tive for the crime. Victim of Explosion Will Be Buried Here The funeral serv iqes of Eigll Johannes Christian son, who was killed in the explosion of iiicureugerai l bouth Bend Decem- rj ber 16. will be held v" at the East Side i - unaeriaaing parlors -.- I . . iuuiiuay aiternoon t 2 o'clock. The body will be interred at Rose City ceme tery. Christianson Is a. native of Nor way and is survived by his parents, still living in that coun- ti y. murine the war rhritio. with the spruce &1 vision" -J Ten Hurt in .Wreck v Pittsburg. Pa., 4 Dec 23. (U P ) Ten persons were Injured here tonight w,hen -streetcar jumped th0 tracks after brakes had failed to hold, it it believed all the injured will recover : 'ffln -hi if; ..IE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND. SUNDAY MORNTNG. LOUIS G. CLARKE IS DIRECTOR OF Elected at Meeting of Board on Friday; Addition to Directorate Strengthens Portland Company Louis G. Clarke, president of the Woodard-Clarke Drug company, was elected director of the Lumbermens Trust company at a meeting of the board Friday, acording to an an nouncement made Saturday by the bank. Clarke's. , election adds a source of strength to the directorate. which was already considered one of the most representative in the Pacific Northwest. : Other directors are: A. H. Averlll, P. S. Brumby, Charles H. Carey, E. S. Collins, James Danaher Jr.. F. I. Fuller. John A. Keating. Leslie M. Scott. C. F. Swigert and Charles F. Wright. Clarke has been a resident of Port land for 40 years and is Identified with a number of 'its large and successful en terprises, including the Oregon Life In surance company and the Pacific States Fire Insurance company. He is a di rector of- both of the organizations. Clarke Mas long been a champion of conservative business methods and re marked that Portland's spirit of con servatism now is proving that it is the wisd policy "At the "present 'time," said Clarke, "Portland is in better condition than any of the large American cities. , This is due to her conservatism and the fact that she has been built on local capital. Now her solidity is proving a magnifi cent asset and is paving the way for a wonderful growth." Lloyd Haberly, Reed Graduate, to Go to Oxford in September Lloyd Haberly, Reed college gradu- j ate of 191S, will, leave next September to Join the Reed contingent at Oxford i uUMk USISV V cr J 1 England. Iaberly, competing for the Rhodes scholar- ! ships issued by the ! national committee, ' was suc.cess- VI tul againsi a rieia which included can didates from all parts of the coun try. He is the third Reed candidate to be awarded the Rhodes scholarship in a year and a half. Frank Flint, Reed '19, is now studying at Balliol 3w V college, Oxford, the alma mater of Matthew Arnold and a score of Brit ish statesmen, and Stephenson Smith, Reed '15, recently entered Lincoln col lege, Oxford. Haberly, after receiving his degree in the department of political science at Reed, three times won the Carnegie fellowship .in international law, and at the present time he is studying at Harvard and instructing, .in interna tional law. ' At Oxford Haberly will specialize in maritime, admiralty and international law. During the war he was in training at Camp Merritt, where he was about to receive his commission when the armistice was signed. Talent Irrigation District to Issue . $30,000 of Bonds Salem, Dec. 25. The Talent irrigation district, comprising approMmately 900Q acres of irrigable land near Talent, Jackson county, bas submitted a block of $33,000 In bonds to the state irriga tion securities commission for certifica tion. The funds from the sale of these bonds will be used in the purchase of a new reservoir site. A total of $252,500 in bonds has already been certified for this district. Two fatalities are recorded in the list of 456 accidents in Oregon industries filed with the industrial accident com mission during the week ending Decem ber 23. Workmen losing their lives in industrial accidents were S. M. Thiess, miner, of Bourne, Or., and Joseph M. Fitzgerald, laborer, of Salem. School Districting Board Favored by Farmers of Benton Corvallis, Or.. Dec. 25. The Benton County Farm Bureau adopted resolu tion favoring the passage of a state law establishing a state school districting board for the purpose of arbitrarily de signating school district boundaries in order that schools may be developed which will give the children living in the country equal opportunities with those living in the cities. The membership of the bureau is in creasing and the fee was raised from 12.50 to $ per member. It is planned to extend the work of the bureau into every community in the county and to establish cooperative buying and selling agencies, to handle grain, feed and produce in large quantities. Family Reunion Held Christmas at Home Of J.. M. Garrison One of the pleasant family reunions of Christmas day was that at. the home of J. M. Garrison, 982 Hawthorne ave nue, when 13 members of the family assembled at a Christmas dinner. Be sides Mr. and Mrs. Garrison and their two daughters, Mildred and Margaret, there were present E. S. Huckaby and family, P. ?K. Garrison and family and Rev. .P. Ef Bauer and family.- - Dr.-Bauer is pastor of the Fairmount Congregational church in Seattle and by invitation will preach' $hls forenoon in- the First Congregational church of Oregon City. " He was pastor of the First , Congregational church of Salem for three years just prior to going to the Seattle church, and previous to that was pastor of the Federated church of Nome, Alaska, for two years. TRUST COMPANY Eidgefield School Orchestra Gives Its- First Concert " Ridgefield. Wash., Dec 23. The Ridge field high school orchestra of 11 pieces, the first of its kind' here, gave its first public concert during the Christmas pro gram in the high school auditorium, un der the" direction of Brand ford I. Gaukel. The members are : Dorothy Weber, pianist; Irene Weber, Gwendolen Frater, Harold Brown and Cecil Royle, violinists; Edward L. Littler Jr.. Ruel Chandlee and Ward Raamussen, cornet- yiiimimmmiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiimimmiimimiiiiiiiimmiiimiMiimm A "yOU have been getting some pretty lively values from this store. 'When we could'nt see much hope that prices of clothing would come down, we just pulled them down. Now we are giving them f another "bump." We are 1 sjsb ! FIFTH ?uiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiuiiiiiiiuiiminiuiaiiiuiiuiiuiuiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiuuijiiiiiiniiiiiii ists; Harold L. Sutton, tenor horn? Del bert Potter, alto born. Clifford Shobe,rt. trap-drum. -.- " Christmas musjc will fill Sunday eve ning at the Ridgefield Community church.: The choir has been rehearsing under the direction of Bradford L. -Gaukel. The members are : Sopranos, Mrs. Fred Fairbrother, Mrs. Clinton K. Rice, Mrs. Ralph S. Stryker. Mrs. Hans J. Bratlie, Mrs. K. A, Dearborn, Mrs. John W. Davis, Mrs. Fred Herbert; altos, Mrs. Earl M. Oliver, Mrs. N. C. Hall and Mrs. Charles E. Brice ; tenor, William F. Lamb ; bassos, Gottfried Kel ler, Chester A- Keller, Rev. George Vern McClure, Dr. Ralph S. Stryker. Edward Louis Sachtler ; pianist, Mrs. John W. Blackburn. ' great Here are some other stirring values, $60.00 and $65.00 Hart Schaffner & Marx Suits and Overcoats are now 46 OTI C7T am i moseMJian m AND ALDER DECEMBER 26, 1920. Assurance Is Given Road Fund Bill Will Get Early Action ... Eugene, Or.. : Dec. j. nciJicKiuau.o Louis .E. Bean returned Friday night from Washington, where, with Ed E. Kiddle of the highway commission and State Highway Engmeer Herbert Nunn, he presented the claims of Oregon in the matter of appropriations for state high ways. Fine diplomatic work was done by the trio in lining up members of the National Association of Highway Offi cials in favor of the Chamberlain ap rednctiom bthes HartSchaffner&Marx Suits and Overcoats at Further Reductions determined to comes to real We have taken broken lots of suits and overcoats that formerly sold up to $55 and'put them in one big group to sell at ' $32' $70.00 and $75.00 Hart Schaffner & Marx Suits arid Overcoats are now 25 Reduction on All Vassar Underwear, Suit Cases and Hand Bags, House Coats, Mufflers, Odd Pants 30 Off on All Shirts TI propriation bill, he said. Bean lejt Wash ington with the assurance from : the house committee on public highways that the Chamberlain bill would be reported out for immediate action in this house, the committee being unanimous In Its i favor. : ' -.- Bean received - a telegram Saturday . r-n..ramn M,. Arthur 8y "jf that. McArthur had received assurance from the chairman of. the house (commit tee that legislation providing for appro priations along the lines of the Cham berlain bill for a period of two years would be passed. The Seventh Day Adventist church has purchased the Hisrh Line hotelj a four story brick buildine in GranKer.;and will operate it as an Adventist academy. - lead when it i values. Since all that we can pos sibly hope to make on these clothes is good will, we are going to make all of that we can. These values ought to bring every man in town to this store. I $80.00 and $85.00 Hart Schaffner & Marx Suits and Overcoats $63 71 n n n H GASCO BUILDING Woman Routs Man; He Is Fined $25 Cottage Grove, Or., Dec 35. George Ixng of Divide was fined f 23 at Drain , Mrs. Joe Stalcup, wife of a neighbor. The quarrel is said to have been begun when Mrs,. Stalcup failed i to replace gate bars 'and was censured! by Long. After being bit, Mrs, Stalcup. who is small. Is said to have - picked , up a club and caused Long to beat a; hasty re treat. The Stalcups purchased their farm from Long and are compelled to go through. his place to reach the high way... ' I ' imiiiiimimHiMiiiiiiimimimiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiii: of are now - o