14 THE OHEGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, MAY 15, 1S2I. JONES IS NOT YET GLUED Incumbent Must Take Chances in New Test, Under Harding Rul ing, It Now Develops. The Portland postmastershlp has been thrown wide open again by the announcement of Postmaster General Will Hays, made to Senator Stanfleld, .that a new competitive examination. held under the terms of the new Hardin? executive order, would be held in Portland and that John M. Jones would be required to take the examination and to take his chances alone with ail other competing' can didates. Jones, whose chance for confirmation has not been wholly certain, is by this decision of the postmaster general put in a still more Indefinite situation, for, under the .Harding order, he-not only must be one of the three highest in the ordeal, but after that must stand the acid test of presidential approval against the other two competitors, since the" new plan contemplates the recom mendation, not of the candidate passing 4hm highest examination but most ac ceptable to the president out of the three highest. s 8ITUATIOX ALTERED - Under the terms and practice of the 'Wilson executive order, where the can didate winning the highest grade in, the test was recommended . for appointment as a matter of coarse, Jones had not so much to fear. He won the high rating, and the consequent nomination, and the two senators in. the face Of that were not inclined to interfere or listen to objections filed against him. , - But the new order changes things In that It not only throw's Jones into the lists again, but It opens! the way for a grist of candidates to come in who would not compete for a fag end Wilson nomination, but who might be willing to take their chances in the first days ef the Harding administration. Then there are A. K. Lincoln, superintendent of station F ; Fred Holm, president of the letter carriers' association, and prob ably, other veterans of the local postal service who will very, probably like to take a try at the new examinations when they are held. The fact is, st steadily rising surge of political opposition has been setting in against Jones' confirmation " for some time back. Protests against his admin istration and - the approval of his nomi nation by the " senate were laid before Senator McNary when he was- in Port- tests were lodged with Senator Stan tield. HEADWAY IS SLOW ' But neither 'set made much head way because of the fact that Jones had won his nomination under the Wilson order and as a result of competitive ex amination, against which the senators did not relUii niovlng. Hut more than anything else, prob ably, was the fact that Senator McNary insisted that the Portland postmaster- - ship was. under the usual rule, the political meat of Senator Stanfleld, the resident senator, and that outside dele' ; gation interference should come, if at all, from Congressman McArthur, also a resident nf Portland Thin nut Jnnu ta a position .of added strength so far as Stanfleld and McArthur were con a ed because of the fact that his offi cuJ xorrunes have, been and are being actively and , strenuously advanced by Ferdinand EL Reed, under whose mana gerial wing Jones seems to have fallen. Reed poses as. and subterreane waaiy is. the potent and confidential po litical suggester of both the senator and the congressman. REED GETTING CLOSE Reed seems to have a very close and intimate hold on the Stanfield -ear as well as to be the chief and personal dis tributor of congressional garden seeds ior the third district. Now, however, the Jones-Reed, con nection may prove to be a two-edeed sword under the new order of things. a long as Jones was the only man officially in the game, and was backed by Stanfield, he stood ace hlghu , But when he becomes one of three after the new examination it will leave the door open for someone to slip in and whisper unpleasant things into the ear of the postmaster general, and things whis pered'lnto that ear are readily audible in' the executive office at the White House. There are some men. prominent in oustness, professional and in political circles In Portland, who are not vrrv fond of on friendly to Reed. They don't like his political ways and look askance at the apparent attachment which has sprung- up between him and the post- master. - -They will . doubtedly make their ideas known. In that particular if in no other, at the proper time and to the proper parties in Washington when the time, comes to jick one out of ihn candidates for the Portland postoffice jod. -iney may not be strong enough effectively to dilute the force of the Stanfield-McArthur support.. But. be that as the future may determine, it is a situation which does not put the Jones candidacy in a particularly complacent position, while, on the other hand, it does increase the public interest in the ultimate determination of the case. H t eumatism, Sciatic Nerve Trouble or Foot Trouble A very large percentage or so called rheumatism and sciatic nerve trouble is simply toot trouble. Some of the small bones of the feet have been forced out of position, either by accidents or through bad fitting shoes, causing nerve pressure, hence pain in feet, legs and upper parts of body. : My system of correcting foot trou bles is sure, simple and inexpensive. Comfort Shoes for men and ladles. Arch Builders, Straight leasts. Bun ion Shoes. GET NEW FEET Note New Location ROBT. FISHER Foot Specialist Foot Comfort Store 152 FOURTH STREET JCST NORTH OF MORBISOIT FIRMLY TO OS MSTERSWP PORTLAND T.JMLI I III r ; ID5!' if lil'l The special car of delegates to the foreign trade convention from the Columbia river district was greeted by a photographer' upon arrival in Cleveland the day before the first session of the .National Foreign Trade convention. May 4 to 7. On the car platform, left to right Mrs. Ralph E. Williams, Walter H. Brown, assistant cashier of Northwestern National bank; Frank Ira White, manager of foreign trade depart ment of Chamber of Commerce; Mrs. J. M. Anderson, J. M. Anderson, of the Astoria Chamber qf Com merce, and Ralph E. Williams. Belov H. I. Hadson, traffic manager of port and dock commissions, at left; A. I. Deak, manager of foreign trade department of Xadd & Til ton bank. In middle, and Chris tian Petersen, manager of 'foreign trade department of the United slates National bank, at right. Some of the members of the party continued their trips eastward after the convention and others went to attend other conventions before returning borne. Frank Ira White, manager of the foreign trade de . partment of the chamber, will return to Portland Monday, according to advice received Friday, t CHATS WITH THE BISHOPS j "Napoleon said that morale was more Important daring a war than men, money and munitions," said Bishop E. L. Waldorf of Wichita, Saturday at the laymen's luncheon at the First Methodist church. , 'I regard the morale of the laymen equally important to the church. The, layman ought to be patriotic, progres sive, enlightened on the movements of his church and .the world ; a praying man, a student ! of the Bible, a soul winner, and should have a world Vision." i The bishop was presented with a five-pound box of candy and a bou quet of flowers in honor of his birth day, which he celebrated Saturday. The same presents were also ready for Bishop Theodore S. Henderson of De troit, who also had a birthday Satur day, but he slipped out the door while no one was watching htm, so the rest of the board enjoyed h is gift.. "Anv - iiart " of the church ' that is living on its memories and anniver saries is in a. pretty bad way," said Bishop William F. McDowell of Wash ington, D. C The church ; Is now con cerned with getting hold of the West while- it: is young, for out of the West must corns . the , future leaders for the East" ' .1 Speaking . of political happenings in Washington, the bishops said: "What happens in congress is determined by what happens here. The public away from the capital affect the public at the capital. , A low state of patriotism here means a low state of patriotism there." - . - : : - " ! In his address to the Methodist young people Friday night at Centenary-Wilbur Methodist church; Bishop Adna W. Leon ard, world president of the Epworth league, described life as having four gates, which he termed tne norm, south, east and west, i - The spiritual side of life, he said. Is represented by the east gate, as religions have been born in the East. The south gate represents the sunny or social side of life, and the north gate the stormy and sometimes . : disappointing side. Through the west gate, he said, lies the land of opportunity. . : , i ; ; The bishon urged the young people to live a four square life." and not allow themselves to become one sided. i Although one lot the oldest in point of years. Bishop Joseph C. Hartzell. a retired bishop residing at Cincinnati, is one of the youngest when he is in the center of a group of his colleagues. In spite of -his advanced age the bishop expressed the desire of climbing Mount Hood before he; leaves the city, as be did in 1892. Bishop Hartzell was retired after 20 years of faithful service for the 'church in Africa. He did. the work which is now handled fey three bishops. He established missions in North Africa, among the Mohaniraeds of Morocco, in Tripoli, Central Africa, Belgian Congo, British East Africa, Portugese East Africa, ' Liberia ', and Angora. Bishop Hartzell was appointed to the African field immediately upon his election, as the board considered that his 26. years' experience as a : pastor in the Southern states had given him knowledge that would be valuable in Africa. The hospitality shown the board of bishops by Portland Methodists has not been equalled anywhere in America, said Bishop Luther B. Wilson of New York. He also declared that the reception given Thursday night to be greater than anything he tiad ever attended along hat line. Bishop Wilson, who is secre BISHOP RECALLS - ' : - - I - ' OF (Continued From Page Om) standard of character and conduct Is the second article in the creed of a genuine Church of Pentecost. . In every life there is both a throne and a cross. There are two contestants for the throne the. per sonal pronoun and the personal Christ. Christ must be on one or the other. If Christ is on ' the . throne, the personal pronoun is on the cross. If the personal paonoun is on the throne, then. Chris tianity goes again on the cross to be crucified afresh in Portland. From the throne the whole life of a man or a city is ruled. 1 On Pentecost, the birth day of the Christian church, Christ was definitely put on the throne to the lives of the early leaders and members of the first Church of Pentecost. The contest between the personal pronoun and the personal Christ is the perpetual contest of every Individual ; and every social group in 1921 as' it was in the first century. The church in which there are no genuine conversions is not a BIRTH CHURCH FOREIGN TRADERS IN EAST . ' LJT- q tary of the board, said the . bishops were exceptionally well pleased with the way in which they are being entertained. ; .(.;'. ':.-'.' Bishop Edwin H. Hughes of Boston, who also is a member of the . board of education of the denomination, reports that, all Methodist schools are full this year and that prospects are bright for a capacity registration next fall. ' The bishop is very much interested in the campaigns to raise funds for Willam ette and Puget Sound universities. Bishop Hughes is a brother to the late Bishop Matthew Simpson Hughes of the Portland area. Before being raised to the episcopacy, he was president of De Pauw university at Green Castle, Ind. Bishop Homer G Stunts of Omaha is high in his praise of the work the Ameri can government has done in the Philip pine islands. "Our government has done more constructive work In the last 20 years than any other white government did there for 50 years." When Bishop Stunts went" to the Philippines as super intendent of missions and pastor of the First church at Manila, he found men and women criminals, insane and others ail crovlled into the same jails, t with no privacy being offered for the women. Five evangelical churches got together on a reform program, he satd, and caused a reform in jail conditions, the erection of schools for the blind, proper care for the insane, and seclusion of all lepers on an island. The government- has since passed many other laws, he said, which are sweeping away the old Spanish cus toms. Bishop Stunts remained in the Philippines for five , years until his health failed. For almost a year after returning to America he was in a criti cal condition. This was the second physical break down the bishop had. his first being in 1895 in India, after he served the church there for eight years. The bishop , also had four years' experience since his elec tion to the episcopacy as presiding bishop of the South American work. All told. Bishop Stunts has had 22 years' experience in foreign work, eight of which were in India, five in the Philip pine islands, four in South America and the remainder in America as secretary of the various foreign mission boards. The "coming continent" is South Amer ica, asserts Bishop Thomas B. Neely of Philadelphia, who is now retired, but who presided over the South American inter ests of the church for four years. " The bishop said North America enter tains a false Impression of South Amer ica, just as the East does of the Pa cific coast, j The great cities of South America are as modern as our cities, he said, and in some of the larger cities far signtea business men have torn down several , miles of buildings to enable the construction of a wide thoroughfare through the heart of the city. Bishop Neely said that South America would probably always use the Spanish language in all parts except Brazil which would remain Portugese. Bishon Neely founded the Methodist ' work at Panama, and in , Bolivia, and also es tablished several schools during his quadrennium. He was the first resident bishop of South America. : With the United States limiting immi gration the bishop predicts that South America will be the great country for immigrants, as so much of the country is sparsely settled. i Since his retirement. Bishop Neely has been devoting much of his time to writing. He is the author of 20 books on Methodism and several others along other lines. Before his election Bishop Neely was editor of the Sunday school literature of the denomination. ; Church of Pentecost, no matter what may be its professed . creed, nor what may be the type of its ritual, nor what may be the character of its ecclesiastical policy. Genuine conversion will never be out of date as long as Christ is neces sary to redeem" the world. Conversion is not only desirable, - It is the corner stone on which a real church of Pente cost la built. Conversion from the dom ination of one's own will to the domina tion of the will of God by the power of an uniquely divine and powerful present Christ, is the deepest need of the Church of Pentecost in 1921 throughout the en tire world. FELLOWSHIP GOD Continuance in the fellowship of God and God's people is the third article in the creed of the Church of Pentecost. The only crosses In the life of man are made when the will of man crosses the will of God. These two wills must par allel each other Or there is no, peace. : Isolation from God means the destruc tion of man. Fellowship with God is es tablished through conversion to the will of God as the program of the daily life. Such fellowship is established and main tained by the signing and keeping of the Christian contract. - Several years - ago I made a Christian contract for a group of Latin-American university students in America, This group represented Mexico, Porto Rico, Argentine republic. SStssfiSfes Brazil. Chili and other Latin-American countries. This contract contains the gist and genius , of i the creed of the Church of Pentecost ilt has been trans lated into Spanish by Latin-American student leaders, and in one year more than 600 Latin-American students in North America signed the contract. Here is the contract: "For aervice among my fellow men I accept , Jesus Christ as my personal Savior and Lord, and , adopt his program as the program of my life. To this end I will study the Bible as my guide, and by care and obedience seek to know and to do the will of God." By the making and keeping of this con tract these Latin-American" students justified their membership in the Church of Pentecost. i - ALL BELOJS0 TO GOD Consecration of personality and. pos sessions is the fourth article in the creed of the Church of Pentecost. No member of the Church of Pentecost -owns his farm; that farm belongs to God. No member of the Church of Pentecost owns his factory ; that factory belongs to God. No member of the Church of Pentecost owns his store ; that store belongs to God. Ho member of the Church of Pen tecost; owns his stocks and bonds ; those stocks and bonds belong to God. No member of the Church of Pentecost owns his family; members of that family cir cle belong to God. J No member of the Church of Pentecost belongs to himself; he belongs to God. Property is not sacred. Personality r alone is sacred. Only, when our personality and our pos sessions are acknowledged to belong to God, do we belong to the Church of Pentecost. We hold our property in sacred trust for God to 'administer it to the building of the kingdom of Jesus Christ in Portland and Salem and the Northwest. We hold our powers of intellect in trust for God to be used to promote the kingdom of Christ in Ore gon. We hold our social influence in trust for God to be Invested for the conquest of Christ in the Northwest and everywhere else where God 'is at work. ALL I2T TRUST FOB GOD We hold our commercial and indus trial relations in trust for God to con duct our efforts between Sundays so that God's will may be done more com pletely in the industrial and commercial life of the world. We hold our family in trust for God and must put them at the disposal of God for the doing of the work of God anywhere In the world and for any service which God may desire of them. No parent who withholds consent for any son or daughter to give them selves to the special : service for Chris tianity anywhere in the world can claim membership in the real church of Pente cost.' After 20 years of experience in interviewing the young people of Amer ica in - colleges and universities, during which time 'it has been my privilege to converse personally and privately with more than 15,000 college men and women concerning their life work, I record my conviction that more young men and young women are prevented from giving their lives to special Christian service, such as the work of the ministry, home and foreign missionary work, deaconess work and allied forms of special Chris tian service, because of the indifference and opposition of their parents than all other causes combined. America needs a revival which shall bring ail professed followers of Christianity into vital mem bership in the church of - Pentecost, and a daily practice of the four articles of the creed of the church of Pentecost, which creed abides forever. It' is only through the power of Pentecost that the cross of Christ will become the effective agency for the redemption of the world. Mrs. Rebecca Ann Cooper, Oregon! pioneer of 1853 and resident of Llnnj county for 68 years, died recently at Albany. . . , p6C w t MILLER , Maitcilil .:.;;c;!ri I MILLER & TRACEY Main 2691 Independent Funeral Directors Aut, 578-85 Washington at EHa St, Bet. Twentieth and Twenty-first SU, West Side EXPERTS EXPRESS OPINION WRITING IS THAT OF JOHNSON Portland Authorities on Hand writing Take Stand for De fense in Libel Damage Suit Vancouver, Wash., May 14. J, A. Wesco, Portland handwriting expert, was the first witness called for the defense ' today - In the Johnson libel suit against Perry Hilton, on trial in the superior court here. Wesco identified photographs which be had taken of i ex-Sheriff Johnson's handwritinft and will be called to. the stand later to explain why he deduced that . Johnson wrote the letter ' alleged to have been sent by Jiim to Fred B. Ccle, warning him of a liquor raid on his pool halL " i .- i Edward T. Ludowlcl, teacher of pen manship : at the Behake-Walker Busi ness college in Portland, testinea that he had carefully studied Johnson's handwriting , and nad concluded that the ex-sheriff had written the letter. Henry Crass, attorney for - Johnson, rested his case shortly after the morn ing session, and Judge R. II. Back made the opening address for the de fense. ' . . i v . . The case is not expected to go to tie iurv before Tuesday night, as 22 witnesses will be called by the defense. The case is a : record-breaker m the number of exhibits entered, i according to Clerk John Schaefer. To i prove or disprove that the letter was written by Johnson. 83 exhibits have been en tered. 30 by tMe plaintiff and S3 by the defense. '.' ? -' -: -'. , MARKHAM DEFINES HIS PHILOSOPHY OFJJFE ( Continued From rare One) Rnnki u (t mini? through i some re ligious ' forms? I maintain that it is neither. My interpretation oi xne true .i.itn.i li-fj. 4 m . that Itfo nf unselfish IhUOi. ...-".J " " service to others. Just in so far as we fail to live lives of service, we ran short of the glory that God intended should be ours. UP TO MA3f : ! 1 "We ' make our : Heaven when and where we will. If we were all actuated by the spirit of unselfish service. Heaven would be ours here and now. At the request of the league president. Mrs. Calvin B. Cady, Mr. Markham gave a group of exquisite quatrains,- including these lines, which brought forth a burst of appreciative applause: He drew a circle and shot me out Heretic, rebel a thing to flout But lore and I had the wit to win. We drew a circle and took him in. : BEADS FAMOUS POEM I He r then read a poem depicting life as he saw it from the back of his fa vorite donkey, while riding the hills on his mother's ranch in California. For closing, he gave a truly inspired inter Dretation of Ms immortal IThe Man With the Hoe." prefacing the reading with nhilosophical .observations, on the real, underlying thought, that actuated the wrltine of the poem in which he elo quently defended "the man" whose in ability to rise Is traceaoie not to him self or to God, but to" other men who live in idleness and luxury by the sweat of his brow. Then came the thrilling reading of the great poem whose message; is so much a message of today that it seems it must just have been penned, i SEES HIGHWAY ' i ' Before , and after the reading Mr. Markham w surrounded by admirers for each of whom he haa , a special cordial and - happy word, enjoying a cup of tea between greetings, for he had lust returned from a drive over the Columbia ' river highway, the guest of Mrs. D. P. Thompson, Who i knew his mother as a girl in Oregon ; City and was able to tell him many interesting anecdotes concerning her. - ! Others in the party were Mrs. Joseph N. Teal, Miss Margaret Monroe . and Mr. and Mrs. John Gill. Luncheon was served at Crown Point chalet- Last night the poet addressed a large Invitational meeting at Lincoln high school, speaking on the subject : "Read ings From My Own Poems, W itn Uiinis of Gravity and Gayety." TBIBUTE TO MABKHAM Splendid tribute was paid to Edwin Markham, native son of Oregon, and to his divine art of poesy, when a great audience at the Lincoln high school Sat urday night sat enthralled after be had reached the climax of his program, and demanded more. - I Markham responded with some per sonal words of his deep appreciation of the spirit exhibited, saying that he felt it was a tribute to the power or poetry rather than to himself. Preliminary to Markham's speaking J. K. Gill presided and there were ad dresses of welcome by Mayor Baker and Dr. T. L. Eliot, and the reading by. Miss Anne Shannon Monroe of a poem on Markham written -by Miss Hazel Hall, a Portland poet, whom Markham visited Saturday. A ! 1 After expressing his great pleasure in his present visit to Oregon, ( which he left when a child of 5. Markham dis cussed poetry in its general terms, de claring it is the greatest truth In the world. . Thel real poet .Is a seer," said the The matchless qualities of our high-class equipment appeal to those who want the : appointments : to be correct and dignified, i TRACEY speaker. "What the scientist discovers by experiment the poet sees and feels and puts Into words. "All of the arts are trying to reveal to us the deeper and the more wonder ful side of things. - And religion is the art of life--the attempt of man to con form his life to the beauty of holiness, of justice and ' of mercy . and compassion for his fellow man." Then, as Markham proceeded to give excerpts from his poems, he said: "Now I"must pluck the feathers -out of the tail of my judgment and stick them into the wings of my imagination, and read some of my poems,': , .- The selections Included "Child of My Heart," a poem about Markham's -son. Virgil, i when he: was 4 years of age. various quatrains, and the Wall Street Pit, in which he set, forth the maxim that when one falls from high ideals "the great punishment is not that some thing happens to us- but happens in us." IiUfCOIilff "POE3f APPLAUDED High applause was given to ihls read ing of "his, poem on ' Lincoln, whorn he declared, "has become to us the great American Ideal. We cannot bonor him too much and the best way we can honor him in reality is to embody his virtues in our own lives. .-'I - i "The poem declared : "Here was a man 'to hold against the world ; a man to match the mountains- and the sea, with "the strong resolve to send the keen ax through the root of wrong. "They say the poet is born." said Markham. after giving wide selections from his Work. "Well, I say that every one else is born to a certain klna or work they can do better ' than anyone else, if they would do it. See what you do with your chance in the chamber of days.' j - "MAS WITH THE HOE" . Appropos of this, Markham read poems of hope and inspiration to high endeavor; and in one of these declared: "So soul can be forever banned. eternaUj tmntt. . i "Whoever falls from God's right hand is caught up in Him lelt." ) The climax was reached with" Mark ham's rendition of "The Man With a Hoe." He declared that drudgery is undivine but that labor is beautiful and has a touch of the divine as the whole universe- is based on service. ! - "A. complete life consists ot three thinsrs." said Markham: "Bread, beauty and brotherhood. The whole aim of our evolution, of our divine religion," is to bring roan in closer tIationship. All things, made by God have some perfec tion in them, but this man in his ignor ance and his pitiful power is a menace to the world." ; -r i " It; . Boy Injured "by Baseball Roseburg, May 14. Clyde Ihibell, 16- year-old' son of Mr. and Mrs. Milton Dubell of Canyonville, appears to have suffered no ill effects from being hit on the head by a baseball and rendered unconscious for more than eight hours. The boy was playing on the infield and the batter on the opposing team knocked a high fly to the outfield. The out fielder relayed the ball to Dubell and, although .the force of the ball was some what spent, it slipped through his fin gers and struck him near .the cheek bone. . THE GREATEST Shoe I EVER INVENTED 'or Men for- Women- : AT LAST " A new shoe that is absolutely correct for the foot, whether normal or ab normal and at the same time Good Looking Built with a ' high arch construction, low' heel, and just wide enough at the toe to be comfortable and joomy for every toe to have its proper spread,' a shoe that is good! looking and neat in every appearance. We carry "SOCKET-FIT" shoes and ox fords for men and women In either black or brown kid and in sizes that assure a perfect fit. s . Cheerfully Demonstrated ' "Socket-Fit" Dept. i T. E. Cumirigs ! Foot Specialist In Charge; Mezzanine Floor ( FOURTH AT MOERISOX , Hail Orders Filled 8 object to Retsrn . i ARRANGED Buy now and save money. . These prices are; lower than pre-war. MAIL ORDERS SHIPPED DURAND CYCLE COMPANY "The Big Store," 62 Broadway. Near Ankeny High Schools Seek College Faculty Men as Speakers '.e Oregon Agricultural College! Corvallis, May 14. College faculty men are much in demand as high school commencement speakers, 43 engagements having been made to date. Requests for speakers are coming in daily. ; V - f The schedule for college speakers for next week is as follows: J. F. Brum baugh, professor of psychology. Board man, lone and Lexington ; Dr. Sherman Davis, chemistry department. Myrtle Point and North Bend ; L. B. Baldwin, assistant professor of political science, Vale ; J. B. Horner, professor of history. Banks; E. T. Reed, college editor, Rai nier E..D Ressler, dean of vocational education, Milwaukffc ; M, Elwood Smith. dean '. of service ? departments. Grants Pass and Merlin, and Dr. G. R, Varney. instructor in public speaking, Dufur and Moro. : . Professor Brumbaugh, will give the commencement address at The Dalles. June 10, and Professor Reed at Bend. June 3. ;'--. CoL Harris Welnstock. state market director "of California, has been invited to speak at the O. A. C. Farmers' week on cooperative marketing Officers Are Named By W. TJ. Fraternities Willamette University. Salem. May 14. Election of officers in two of the fra ternities - on, "the campus resulted in choice of Ramon Dimick of Aurora as head of Sigma Tau, and Noble Moodhe or Spokane of the Alpha Psi Delta. Other officers elected by Alpha Psi Delta were Howard George of We- na tehee. Wash., vice president ; Fred Patton of Forest Grove, secretary, and Elmer Strevey of Spokane, manager. Verne D. Baiit was elected manager of the Sigma Tau fraternity. - Grown Right Into tine Tailoring Business W er ner Petter son JTailor to Men - -313 Washington St. at 6th 2d Floor . IS S IC'i ; ' . When cooking or baking , the gas burns " under a solid polished top, heating the : .water at the same time, same as "a wood fire. Nothing else like it. Have it dem onstrated. .From $84.00 up. F..S.LangMfg.Go. 191 Fourth, Near Yamhill livery uiiiig lvcuuccirif c ixc uic First to Cut Compare Our Prices BICYCLES $60.00 Jefferson $50.00 $50.00 Jefferson $39.50 f5S.OO Oaytonia $47.50 955.00 Jefferson $45.00 S 42.50 Fairy $32.50 , 37.50 Fairy $31.50 TIRES 95.00 Vltalto - $4.00 95.00 Goodrich $3.45 91-00 Firestone $2.75 9&.00 Federal Racer $3.50 93.75 Federal 500 , $2.50 SAME DAY Cattle King's Estate Inheritance Tar Paid . i : - Carson City. Nev.. May 14. The treasury of the state of Nevada - was enriched by $7Q.2l today when Attorney General Fowler returned from San Krai cisco with checks representing the prin cipal and interest of an inheritance tax paid by attorneys of the estate of Henry Miller, " former cattle king of -Nevada. The matter of payment of the tax has been in litigation since 1916. FAVORITE SELECTIONS JUST ARRIVED MI06 A Perfect Day. By Evan Williams 89092 Angel's Serenade ....... .By Gluck and Zimbalist 74161 Ave Maria.. ...By Jascha Heifeta 74420 Carry Me Back to Old Vlrginny ......... By Gluck and Zimbalist 87614 Old Folks at Home. . ; ........By Gluck and Zimbalist ICome Back to Erin . By McKee Trl Alice Where Art Thou? By McKee Trio J Whispering Hope" .. By Kline and Baker j Abide With Me. (. ........... .By Kline and Baker G.r.JomisonPiAKoCo, 149 SIXTH ST., BIT. MORRISON and ALDER That is why you always get good value here, even when it is hard to obtain, good goods. My long experience in handling woolens, cutting and making clothes, in sures my customers of .getting big values for the money. , Today we have on hand the best materials and beautifully designed patterns, and make them to your measure at a price to suit the most careful buyer. Located in the heart of the city and always pleased to show you goods. Write for samples if you cannot come in. If you want your, clothes pressed and cared for, end them to us. We do careful work. HOT WATER Without Cost In the Lang Combination Gas, Coal and Wood Range AILE SUNDRIES 92.75 Chains ... 91.00 H. 6. Stems ...... S1.95 80c 92.00 Pedals 1.75 ... i 91.60 Locks ..... 9U5 Locks 95.00 Paddles .... 93 Electric Lamps 75c Tool Bags 75c Frame Pumps .... S1.05 ...95c 33.65 S2.55 .... 60c ...45c RECEIVED (V) VICTOR Si: Records