The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, November 12, 1922, Page 21, Image 21

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    4
METER LOSS
UKEXFECTED JDLl
PIERCE'S LEAD IS
. SOME OF THE MEN WHO WILL CQNip6SE ;THE LOUVER HOUSE AT SALEM IJST NEW LEGISLATURE
TD HIS FOLLOW
in
Kb
I
' KEARLY COMPLETE
nn onzGc:: u:;day- journal. fotlakd, Sunday ziqz2;v;g i;ove:.:e:::i 12, 1022.
UUi f ULr 1 1 III I - V I ImV
?Maioritr;for Sinnott.iV, 7071;
'" Practically - Complete Count
: ! bo 'Measures Now Available.
-Complete 5 returns 'froro 27 ' counties
; and practically complete returns from
the remaining '; nine 1va "Waller . M.
Pierce a i majority of 33.752 , ever. Ben
W. Olcott for governor. . ,
The- vote ; stands pierce, , 132,005 ;
"Olcott, 98,253.' III the nine incomplete
"counties only, inr precinct
, missing. - . ,.
1 , For conrrtwmtn la the Second dis
trict, the majority of Slnnott over
Graham is 7071, the -vote being Sin
Xiott. 32.383 Graham, 15,112. . i
r.iTae majority aarainst the exposition
jneasure 7723,
' compulsory education measure
-has a lead of 12.294. : k :
; i'l The vote on the two measures fol
lows: . ' i , . ;'
i Exposition -Tea. SI, 426 ; 'no, $9,259
Compulsory education Tes. 109,49$ ;
nO. 97.204.
-For other offices' and measures the
..'vote was as follows :
v t Treasurer Hoff, 146,853 j TouVelle,'
M.I43. ' " . -v
i. Superintendent public? tnetrocHor-
L Churchill. 131.7: George-$9,474.
. i Labor eommissloner-rGrarn.. 19,623 ;
Hansen. -64,886. ,- s .
, i Public service , commissionerCamp-
. Tbell. 106.275; Ericksen, 42.895; Kerri-
tsn," 3S44. .. j i. r
l unn county antnonxation xea. is.
(30; no, 48,603. ;.
f' Lirm and Benton county 'Autnorixa
4ion Tea, 77.006; no, 45,950.
m- Single tax Yes, 36.115:. no, 132.349.
4 Income tax Yes, 48.720 ; w 106.130.
The- vote by counties on . the , arev.
Tr.rnorsbip , and n , the two measures
i' OOTEKNOBSHIP T
Jwar
Bantoa ...
- Clackamaa
-Clatsop' .
Cofcuabm
""Coos ....
1 CiMk ...
Carry
' Dtichnt
Dool,,T,
i GUliana -.
Oraat
-
4 sj w- s
4 Hood Ww . . j jrf . 1.012
.eksoet ' . . .,.-.", . .... 1- 8. 804
Jeffanoa i. . . . . . 1 c S4S '
yimrtS ?2,04S
l.Bl
2e-
4.461,-:
20 v
1.D4S J
2.483 '
480 -.
478
1,2
2.483 ,
.846.
723 .
' 247 .
j- Lane . f V '.'.
inoi
Mottov
r Mali
Polk
d TUUmook
fc. Union . . . .
f- WaUows . .
Wuco . . .
:3 'Wubiastoa
fe Whetar . .
P TimhUl . .
80
4.2 04.'
It
2.888 v
,81S
............ ' eas -
88,224
rf., ' i: 2,944-
r..T 687:
1.885
3.807
073
9.440
Here.
-2,lf
2.228
7.114
2.988-
1.887
.2.843
883
888
li6S
'4.287
808
.782
. 864
916
4.5 84
. 856
1.836
7
18.678
627
8.048
1.14
- 8.807
738
43.813
,668
887
2.226
.4.608
8.14S
i.s
3.095
8.769
804
4.048
8.353 182,005.
:' Totals .............
- lBeomolio. - '
Fterar' majority. 38.762. -K-
, (MUPDLOtT EDUCATION?
i If : V v - If v : f . v
I , : -N i r . , s. s ,
I t - ' 1 .I..M.- -4 i ..- it .VL hLl--i.- . i -i ' ,i. ..... 1 ... , - n "
- Tkemas B. Xr I K. MeX&ko , Uoyd T. ReyaoMs otto 1.' Wllsoa Bea F Keeaey H. C. Tfaeeler . y IK S. Beats v ' , Beaaett ; -F. PWe Taeo P. Craraet Jr. Joaa H. Carkia - B-!r
atarloa - MsVioa Marios , , Marloa ; Ijuio " . ' ..v, Ia . Soasias .Coos r Xoot-Carry , Josepalaa - Jarssoa Hooa larer .
r II -. i-P" - - ?! j irtiPSn r -Ti I - j ! 1 r?r- n tf" :
Ll IL. 1 1: i Lt l-LO;DLJ UU L;JL IU I
yr;' "i r 1' r r-rr i 1 1 1 r , N 1 1 - " 1 'p-v r: x T rpr "j-t- i p-r i
ymyh m mm V-&f&&$Vt kjmmlv V ' i vr - fcT; t4" - I J .
m HElJ'L c Li YMl' w LiiJ
. ' 'TV.atAn n. -Rardlek . R. -R. TtradbnT-r CD
CUatsOp , t J ? A Creek Deseaater. Creek - Sesekstes - :
::.. 'i Jefra Klam.Lake Icffs'a- Klam.-Lake
Jaas JWIttott
Alfred J. Sssltk
Idorrvw-Vsiatllla
I I" Mana
, .,VaiUUa
8.- A. ' Miller'
; VatatlUa
Ckas A. Hauler
UaioaWaUewa
A. R. Hunter
l,aloa
SaaH iK;ai5iiis.iB!y
H i. Carsaer y
Cll'h-Sher .Wheefer
' BoUle W. Vatoa
Tillamook
'"Fred J. Meladl
Claekaeaas -Multa'k
raoR'saEciN
IN: UWIATILIA HITS
Bakor
Boafeoa
Claek
.a Clatsop
4 V .
. jr.
vonuaow
......a...
;?
v(f Crook . . ..v.
"4 Curry :-r" ... . . . . . ..
rMaehatas
.Donsiaa
- -i Ojllis.lsl r te f
i Gnat
4Hsny
1 Hood BlTST
'Jackm .............
? Jaffanoa
JotM-phina ............
1 Klamath
Laka
' "Lana
' IJneoln ..............
IJnn
;.i Malhaar .............
Varion
Morrow ..i. ..........
' 'Multnomah ........... 41.536
: Poik ................. 2,144
'4 Bharman ...... 466
Tillamook ............ 1910
rmatUls ............. "3,:
T'nion. ............... 3(877' :
J Wallotra ....... ...... ' 877
4 Waaoo ....... 1.543 ,
r Waabinctoa ........... 3,888
; Wbcaler ............. 275
TamniU ..............3.386 V
Taa
2.345
8.354
6,103
3. 14
335
; -'- 3sa
1.180
3,404
- 833
404
254
630
3.287
- 809 ,
2.378
- 624
816
6.856
498
4.201
760
6,407
802
We.1 !
2,105
2.290
4.723
, 3.41
t404
a.?8
846
13
1373
2.638
505
894
306
1.135
8.499
316
868
862
1.007
3.105
528
. 2.883
1.530
7.584
644
33,285
1.910
586
618
8.203
2,887
16
2.167
3.747
487
.766
Totals ....... 108,493
IncosiplaU. , -r - - .
"i Raker . . .Va...
. Banten ..............
: Clackamas . . . . . ......
. Clatsop 4 ........ -rf..
. Columbia ......i
-Coos ...s ....
1V Crook ; ........
Curry ...............
i Daaelmtas .............
vJIotislas .............
' 'tliUlaim
' ' v: Grant
;''f Hood Biror ..........
JacksoB-- ........ . .
' Jaffaraoa ............
Joaapbtos ...-.
- Klamath .............
: Jtr Lake : ..
t: Laae ,.....
.,Lneoh; . . ;
"r Marioa ..............
4 Morrow ........
Mttlmomab. ...........
f Poik
f Khermaa ........... ..
I Tillamook . . . . .
, . . ..
... ...
UmattlU
- Wailoam
t. .......
Tas. '
so
'l,s38
4.426
3,941
1.294
1.141
298
214
736
1,703
io
330
150
701
1.613
384
-r714
865
284
8.1
425
1,056
476
3.876
,348
40.055
1,121
: 22
465
1.S28
84
468
1.28
Wuhimtia ....... 'J.BXt
H'hiv!T v . . . J . . ..4 .. 188
Tamhul-
2.816
t704
i - .
'' Wo.
2.444
- Tt.626
4,27
1.890
1.169
2.631
446
280
1.267
2.678
760
733
. 266
741
2,647
382
88
1.314
726
4.164
370
4.445
1.184
7,844
885
26.657
2,359
606
" 1.648
1 2,670
I.2H
l.eiv
1.827
242
603
2.478
Totals ............. 81.426
Ineomplate. ' -.
8.26
;Boys Predominate .
" In Birtn bmaemic
S ESyria, Ohio. JOV. H. rpiaeraic
If births has hit tha hamlet of Hen
itrletts, tn the western part of -lioram
'rotiTitv- Citlsens are alarmed. 'All the
i r.rt h are bovs. In one-day record
"breaker Claude CnffrRobtrt "Wyler
;f and Albert Swera, a4i Mlhbora, be-
. came "papaa.
-i GIKTAII ZLZUTS aiUlDVaa
Genraia, Nov. U. Tha city of Gar-
riti .elected, the foHowlnr ofOeiaa
" Mayor. O. J. Metsaa s A- Tm Jardln and
:F. iT. Catsforth. councilman : F,vA.
" MaWoM. treasurer, and A. M, Byrd,
recorder, r - .' .
y y SOUTH BEX ELECTS
Soatli Bend. "Wash Not. 11. A hot
i local contest resulted as followa; C A,
1OouIter. wiayori John .V Stone. , OJto
Dirt Farmer Was Thought.. to
Have No Chance Against Law
yer in - Race for State Senator
y.
y
eouncilmen F. R. Wrlarht, treasurer:
9 Herman Murray, attorney, nnd C. H.
r'Mtlla, clrk. Coulter. ... Oyda. HaD.
'tT.Mt ..J r:'- l.nn.K..t.'
Pendleton. Nov.11 The roneral elec
tion has oome and krone,-but the re
sults still furnish. topics for lively
conversation " and speculation on the
part of Pendleton and Umatilla c6unty
residents. It waa the moat keenly
fouaht campaign ever known In this
oonnrr- and will" nOtOOn be foraot-
ten, i especially By. rastutaer pouucians
who rave Walter M. nerce no cnanca
to ba elected. ' '$
Bat even these have found balm In
the election of the Democratic candi
date for covatrnor. They have discov
ered, now that tha campalgrn la over,
that in spite of themaelyes they have
elected an Eastern Oreg-oa man to the
hiahest office i at tha command of the
commonwealth. . Even those , who op
posed the La Grande fanner agree that
certainly no evil can coma ,to the , dis
trict; from the fact that one of its real
dents is at tha helm of th state, - The
fact that Walter M. Pierce la an Kaat
ern Ore Ron man. conversant With many
of the same problems which confront
'Eastern . Oregon . farmers and wheat
(TO were, was almost forrotten In the
ranks of the opposition d urine tha cam-
palsm daya.-'"- "
COES AS JOLT " ' ' ' '" ,
. One result Is, stiU sUcldn- m. the
craw of many -voters and that is the
lection of ECenrr Taylor, venerable
patriarch and dirt farmer-, to 4he state-
senate from Umatilla and Union coun
ties. Taylor, a rerular Weatarn John
Burroughs, wajred n quiet . campalgrn
against his Republican opponent.- Colon
R-. Kberhard of .La Grand. - True, his
cards went out. with gusto, but In his
piatfrom could ba feund no plank re
ferring to religious or racial prejudice.
Taylor "declared himself frankly In fa
vor of lower taxes, and then onit. 1
: No one seemed apeclally enthuai-
RBtic over Henry Taylor. In a county
proverbially Republican thewarhorses
of that party figured a .victory for
the La Grande lawyer was easy. Even
when Kepuhlicans- began to glad them
selves lagging behind in some races
they expected Henry to be beaten.
But the votes kept piling up for him
.and before the night was over it was
suddenly discovered that 'Henry Tay-
lor Z waa " leadlngr EbOrhard. Then
everyone got on the band wagon and
hooped it up for tha patriarch of
Umatilla county. , " ; 'J "";
BROUGHT GOOD WTLL . "
A partial surprise was he defeat of
the inJtistlve bill to allow taa county
of Multnomah to tax Itself to help
meet the expenses of the proposed ex.
position in 1927, When the exposition
special canae into town the Portland
boosters found . that . there was . a de
cided undercurrent of - resentment
against tha Rosa City for what the
local people considered : an attempt to
foist a city tax upon the atata; But
when they left, ft appeared as if they
took with; them tha good will of the
whole county. . ? ,
Much of the prejudice seemed to
have been dispelled and, Mayor Baker's
appearance in cowboy garb at Happy
Canyon, tha night show of tha Round,
tin, went over, big. And yet the coun
ty returned an adverse vote on tha fair
bill., .r .5 4, ivX;j;.;.;;:
TOPICS FOB. FtEXSIBB
- r vx . uranani .. or. osjew
against Representative . N. : J. 1 Sinnott
was . another surprise. . Binnott ran
ahead of Graham but the vote waa not
large. His vote Illustrated nicely the
strength, of the orange ticket, because
comparatively ; few Umatilla county
residents aad ' aver heard of Graham
before the election Though many of
them . voted for him' ha was defeated
and unless he pP back "into the po
Utical Jiualigbt; they ; probably sever
Will. . ' 1 ' . rr i ' :' T - . " 1 ' v -.
The atmosphere, baa cleared 'noma
here. If there were any guns toted to
tha polls . they have een , put back.
Pendleton has settled oa for a long,
TWO DOZEN MEMBERS OF NEW STATE SENATE
rwsffs B-iiiii.iiiiiii . 1 1 is iITTTT
- ;i? ii is 1 1
w--- vA - y y v i ' sy . vi , 4
Vj ' -rf 4 ; f vz J
I -1 4 l M-Jx ll ; '-L,,J
' Sam H. Browa Sam M. Garland Jack Madgladxy - . B.L. E44T : 2f. W. Berdoa (D ::.k. J. C. Smith
" Marion--.. -X-iaa . - Ijaaa - ... '-'-.Douglas Jackson - . . Josepklae v
SjPW-"w.Af:.?f.xv :pfww MMMHiHManaMk, yy.gLWt--w. w.qiy,.jtoffwi. Q"'rijpaiaj ' i 'i '' r yT ' ..HBjRannAT'i v.' ... g. .' yi a, a a mi.Lji i n j, i . L . j . . .
; ' ' , , r . , ? 1 1 -4
.; ...:.:i.i''i.f.: -.'-... '" " . ,: ' -i , S ( i , s
b v . 1L lkjLJJl-lZj
Charles HaU - . A. J. Johssoa. Peter ZInimenaaa -, ,F. J.Toose .' Bobert S. Farrn . fias C Moser
Coos-Carry ' . Bentoa-Poik T TaathUl . .Clackamas . , Maltaomah Maltaomah
wwwa gwpayyw.1 --:.,aap.ajart-...n.iiil ,ag.v..Tiy.v:?-y s -....,.., ' ' . .,, , ... ."n..., , '
yA r . i: -rs' t : U-i"r
1 l pf '"Jf - " -
George 'W. Joseph ' 3B31t.'H."Blepner Hasry 1 -Corb "tT. J." H. Clark-Kra, vT. 8. Klnaey John B. Klekelsea
m aitaaiaab . . : sTaltnosaak . . Maltaomak Clarkasias Malts'h ,. . ClatiOD 1 Hood River
- . . ... . . ... .. ...... T . T, I . .
111 " ' myr .g II Mill III I I I fW" , i"V'-i
O " - - , 3 " , ' - " s i s if4'' '
MSz2LlJll; - Li... I' ' I y-w
Jay H. TJptoa
Crook - Besehates.
Jsffc'a .KlaaiLaka
O. B. Robertsea H. J. Taylor B)
BlUlaBt.Sher.Whelr Horrow.tmatllla
Roy W. Bltaer : Charles W. EITls w. H. Strayer ,B)
Faatllla 1 .Graat-Hax Malhax Baker .
r- II
' Sii r. nil
; I C. J- B4wr4 i ' '?
' $ .- THlajaoek v- J"
cold winter bot- though, Jt hibernates
peacefully the- general election of No
vember 7 will net ba the least among
the subjects around 'the fireplace dur
ing tha long winter, evenings, i
Aberdeen Will Vote .:
, On Port Bondlssiie
" - 1 ' aaaiasaampaaa. j .- -J- ' - .
Aberdeen, WaalL, Nov. 1L Voters
of this c3ty on December 1 wiH-be
asked to cast ballots In favor f bond
issues for 2258,609 - tor add itlonal port
Improvements, 3100.000' for Ipurchasa of
a site and - a building for . a; Junior
high , school f and a special levy ' of
$16,000 to build a school in'East Ab
erdeen.1 A port commissioner to succeed
J. A. Vanca of M alone, whoa terra
will soon expire., and a. member of the
board of education, are to be elected.
S:;-.-V-i,'- 1 :L' ." '""'"' .
Th health record of the . pupHa of
tha Washington- state ' school for the
blind at Vancouver is said to exee-ed
that of any similar achool in -( tha
United States. - : "
Qbck Strikes Fifteen Times
8 , at It It It it H . H t
Friend Halts Its Mad Career
Pendleton. - Nov. ' 11. Although It
sometimes hesitates In ..tta dotage; a.nd
recently it struck IS times, the old town
clock' In the belfry of the Umatilla
county courthouse Is good for 200 years
raore of service if the townspeople "will
only atop peppering Jta face with shot
in quest of the pigeons that rest on its
hands, accordlne to William WUXen
son. pioneer jeweler, who - installed the
Umepleee 35 yeara. .ago. !, .
. Time ;waa. ha aays. when the Jteavy
machinery with Its 1100 poond weights
ticked- with., the -accuracy of av Swiss
chronometer, "but thent days is gone
forever. For. many years Wilkenson
has, kept' the timepiece in repair at "his
own expense and be has cured - Its
every ill since 1882. If the dock were
to be installed today he declares - it
would cost 300Q, or $1000 more than
It -did In;: those days. s.. r v
- when the - clock counted 15 times
Wilkensoa allowed as how he wasi "dis
gusted," &t nevertheless it was he who
climbed up the creaking stairs to the
little square ; tower and , adjusted its
innards again.- .. - -- .
Eugene: .Sends Two
To S.:B.:O.PvHearing
--Eugene. 'Nov.' , 1LW." W.. : Calkins,
president of the United. States National
bank- has been chosen by the board of
f directors of tha Eugene Chamber of
Commerce to represent the chamber
at tha Interstate commerce commission
hearing on tha onmergar of tha South
ern and Central - Pacific railways 1 in
Washington. IV-CL, "November 2L- He
win also represent the Wlllametta Val
ley Lumbermea'a - association." The
chamber and the lumbermen's associa
tion are both against the unmerger.
- . ' - " v - .
Mother Is injured;.
- But Baby Escapes
. Eugene. Nov.
Moore suffered
1L Mrs. -Harold - A.
i 'broken " collar : bone"
when the machine in which shte was
riding was struck by another at the
corner of Seventh snd Olive" streets
Friday night- Heri 4-m9nths-o!d -son
slipped from v her arms and waa -not
Injured. Both were in the rear seat;
Her brother-in-law. J. Benly . Stam of
Moler, was driving. Percy Rossman
t Waitervttia r, piloted tha, other ma
chine. -. - i . :v;S;ii; v
Forests cover about -32 -'.per-cent 'of
Caechoslovakia. soma 12,600,000 acres.
The National Capital
-
As- an 0tyer, . y ...
Sees League of Nations .
WASHINGTON, Nov. 11. (WASH
INGTON BUREAU OF - THE
JOURNADFrom an American journ-
allstof wide axperience, a captain in the
World war, and an observer at aacn oi
three meetings of the assembly of the
League of Nations, as well as the arms
conference In Washington haa come
an estimate of the League of Nations,
given for the information of tits menas
in. this country, including officials .-of
the stat -department....,;, , ".. :
Tha writer is Arthur Sweetaer, whose
renorts of tha VersaUlea conference and
epochal meetings since in woria auairs
will be- remembered by many. The out
standing feature of the recent third
meeting of the assembly, he says, was
tha league's accession of strength, and
confidence. ' -r - s---3.;' V ' f
"Observers showed remarkable una
nimity." he writes. . "In the viewpoint
that this year's meeting bad much mora
body and vitality than its predecessors
and that the league now stands ready
to accept far greater; responsibilities
than have syet been placed upon it.
"Fortunately, the league could afford
to wait. Aa a permanent organisation.
It had the great advantage of not hav
ing to make - its full entry into world
affairs at one time or in one' meeting.
Its development could tro hand in hand
with the desires of the state that com
pose It. Necessity required the league
to build flrmly; not hysterically. . -
. Mr. Sweetser describes- the first meet
ing of the assembly as cautious, doubt
ful Just how to proceed and where.
Then came - the ' second . . assembly.
stronger.- but still cautious, because of
the Washington conference soon to
meet and the vague discussion of a new
association of nations .which for a time
pervaded the Harding administration.
The third assembly, meeting Last Sep
tember, had officially before it a some
what routine agenda, and there waa
sbme apprehension about it. , He , a
scribes the result: -
"The world waa obviously In a mo
ment of . crisis. ,' The allied supreme
council had not bean able to handle the
difficulties. - The United States had
given up its promise i of leadership.
Only the league with itarsense or permanency-
and its scientific approach
seemed to remain. "
"Three factors combined to affect the
minds of the delegates ; at -Geneva.
First, the gobd Impression of the work
already done ; ' second, - the conviction
among; many-that the, world's ills can
only be cured by a new xnetnod ; third,
the Increasing, desperation, of some,
representing countries which had here
tofore found it impoesible to make' their
voices beard -in the Closed councils of
the European group system. - ..
rFrom these factors came realization
of the value of Joint , world action
through :. ; rrmanent. : acientific ' and
impartial organization, and " a ; conse
quent willingness to discuss matters
through the league. As a result.- eub-
Jects were discussed which, could- not
have been brought np ona year earUerj
reparations,' lnter-allied debts, rehabil
itation of Austria, the war In the Near
East.- - : ::-; .: . . :
"The actual degree -f success In
these discussions varied widely- in the
different cases.- But it is not the de
gree of success which is of first Impor
tance. It is the mere fact of discussing
itself. ?: It Is that, fact which illumines
the 'great advance. It ebows that the
league, having ; tested and proved Its
ability, is now movinirrout Tiponr a
broader ? platform. It demonstrates
that the psychological ground work has
been so strengthened that it Is only a
matter of time before the league be
comes the accepted method of meeting
general International problems."
Ching b ( .' - ' "
On Gasrv Registers !.'.
TVTASHINGTON, Nov. 11.- (WASH
W XJfGTON BUREAU - OF THE
JOURNAL) Ona line in the new tariff
law reads : - - - " - -
-Cash registers snd parts thereof 23
per cent ta-vatarem.-Ponf
line in the first vmrt of con
tributions to the Republican national
campaign fund read : ' ., -. -
"Robert Patterson, Dayton.O.rlSPO.'
F.iB. Patterson," Dayton," 0 36"875.'
;Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Caraell. Ewtyton.'
ri2 38ao." ' -
Dorothy Patterson, Jndab,' Iayton.
$6876." . -:. sT:-. " ' . .
' The four line last quoted comprise
names of members of the well known
Patterson family of Payton, of cash
register fame. Their contributions to
tal 324,550. Only 3450 under the com
bined frifts 'of John D. Rockefeller and
John IX Rockefeller fjr.f. 'It- may be
added that this is the; first time a. duty
was ever piacea on casn regiaters.
The; National Cash Register company
of JDayton Is av monopoly! according to
the testimony ,of Republican members
of the senate. Thle Is the Patterson
cdncern... Senator Townsend of-Mich
igan, who favored tha duty, aaid ; -
"It has a monopoly' ct the - market.
and naa had for some tune." . ' ,
The monopoly, the N.-C Rj, as It :1s
popularly known : in the payton coun
try, did not ask for the duty. It waa
even pretended that the dutjr would not
ba to the advantage of N. C. R., but
was In the interest of Independent man
uiacturers, who were said to be threat
eaed with competition by a factory to
be constructed in . Germany- by ; the
trust. , , ;-v .-,.' j t -. - i -
On that noint Senator Walsh of Mas
sachusetts presented, a letter, from N.
C. R, in which it waa stated that the
factory in Germany is being: built to
take care of sales in Germany and to
Compete in Germany with a German
factory at Bielefeld, which la the only
cash register factory' In the world out
side of the United statea.1 The Dayton
officials said;, they -had n Intention of
competing'WUh themselves or watnjtne
independents in the United States, 1 -
- However that may be, .the threat of
German competition sounded somewhat
far-fetched in ; view of te history of
the Industry In 0 yearaf the trust haa
manufactured about 2.000 000 cash reg.
isters, and about 100 . mlachines have
been Imported from Germany., In 1918
this country exnorted 31,87 4,ooa wortn
in . 1919 83.863,000 ! worth i and 1 Jn 1920
36.790.000 worth.!' f K ::t "v '' -: '
M There are three small independent
manufacturera in thia- country, and
thev are not very serious competitors.
They build smalt machines, which come
into competition with only one type of
the N. C. Rproducts. Seyenty-five per
cent of the output of -th6 N. C R. ia
made up of the kind usea oy .aepan
mnt stores and large ; business -con
cerns, with no foreign competition, ;and
apparently no domestic compethMoit.of
moment... f ? - ; '--f - ; .
? The house passed the tariff bill with
out a tariff on eash registers. Evident
ly "Uncle Joe"' Fordney.j chief of the
bouse tariff anakera, was iabsenttrnlnd
ed. for one of; the small independent
companies haa Its factory In hfe home
town. Saginaw. Mich. irJkt -CPf?Bnt-
t.iva of that comnany caafte on to Wash
ington, the- eonate put on the 2 per
cent, and the . sage -.-ex tssaginaw- as
sisted In putting it throuea In the final
report;--: . - . ' --
Judf lnsr Jbv the campaign contribn
tio list fron XWiyton, -the Pattersons
were not offended by, the 25 per cent
The -theoretical defense made for this
dutn waa in behalf of the anewpenaenta.
based on the evidenceof one-witness
frftin forlHW. '"'i ' '".'-!.".
, a '
Federal Reports ' . -On
Wool iScouringf
TTTASHINGTON. " Nov. U. WASH
VV TXOTOM . BUREAU " OF THE
JOURNAL) -The department of com
merce, in a report ox me canu J-Mcouring-
eatablishmenta in 1921, Tinde
the number decreased to 24. as compared
with 33 in 1919. the last year, for com
parison, and that the value of the prod
ucts haa decreased by 60 per cent.
t ofvthe 24 establishments ,12. are In
Massachusetts 3 each, in rift noia And
Pennsylvania, A in . California and
aarh inyOreaont.' New Mexico. New Jer
sev and New York. The receipts . for
mrv.ririnr wool n a coininiwion basis
amcunted to $4,102,000 lnfl921. t
. A report of the tariff .commission- on
the effect t the emergency tariff on
wool says that it appears to-have as
sisted. In. relieving acute ?depres1on in
the ' indestry,. largely because it im
proved the strained crsdit ajtuation and
caused tha mills to draw on the domes
tic ecpply.. ' - ki 'j " - t "
"Almost all dutiable -wools Imported
after May. 1921." says theireport went
into bonded warehouses in .anticipation
of a lower duty In the permanent tariff
bllL Wool prices held firbi during the
summer of. 1921; with a strong tendency
upKard toward the ctosej of the year
Wool.' for example, that sold in Boston
m Jane for 60 cents a pound was worth
1 82 cents a year later. Furthermore, the
spread between - Ixndon and . Koeton
prices -, increased, after - the American
surplus had been somewhat reduced be
hind the tariff wall." .
' Effects " ef the- emergency . tariff en
many ether1 . farm products, such, as
"Progressives Won," is Diirs
Way of Describing Yiatorv;
Pledged -to Join'.Farm BIcc.
Spokane. Wash., Nov. 11. Washing
ton Republicans are overcome by the
defeat of Senator Miles Poindexter, for
12 years a members of the upper house
In congress. They are dated and an
gry and belligerent. It never occurred
to them that Senator" pomaexter couia
lose. . - - " -. " ..
C G. Dill, successful aspirant for the
senatorial seat, smiles and says he was
elected by the people.
It was "a" fight between the , rear- '
tionaries and the progressives and the
progressives won," Is the way he puts
it. v My i victory is incidental to tne
winning fight made by the progres
sivea." . ,. ' , -'." ;- i:-.' v -v ; -
In defeating Senator Poindexter Ir.l
came back" in poUUca. He was de
feated In.-1918 because of hl vote
a grain st war. Throughout the cam
paign- the Republicans; held his war'
record up to- view, but in the end he
won his seat in the senate indirectly
through his refusal to vote for Presi- -dent
-Wilson's -war Proclamation.
LIAS'S TO IXDEPKNBESTS '
He had been elected to congress In
1914. In 1916 he campaigned his dis
trict.? promising to: vote against war
unless an invasion or America oy a
foreiim oowr made war necessary.
And he was re-elected by a huge ma
jority. When the proclamation declar
ing war "was presented Dill spoke
against It. nd latetvoted against it.
ln.lSla.tna liepuoiicans oeieaieu nun
by a small Vote, and In the senatorial
campaign his speeches against war and
his vote -were nubushed Uirougnout tne
state, but le met the attack with the
sloran, -"Dill kept ' MS - word wiui tne
people" Througttout tne state, ana in .
ail of his soeeches he explained how
he had chosen to stand by his pledge to
vote against war. - He hammered on
the slogan constanuy ana won.wttn u
The new senator prefers to oe Known
as a progressive.- He was elected Joint
ly by organised labor and the.Eemo
crata and independent Republicans and
he appears1 to feel more loyal toward
the Independent vote than to tne uem- .
pcratlo organisation, largely for the
reason that the Democratic national (
committee declined to extend him aid .;
because It did not believe that ne naa
a'.- ghost' of a chance to win. -
CALLEB BORAH TYPE ' .' .
The - Democratlo state leaders, "", too.
played him for a loser and did little
to farther his cause. They agreed that
he would put up a hard-fight, but none i
of them or, at the best, few or tnem.
believed he could ef eat senator fom
dester .and ho - received - no campaign :
contributions, aside from $1500 donated j
by-4he. railroad brotherhoods and 3160 I
turned over to hia cause by lukewarm
Democrats. He and a few personal
friends financed the campaign.
Dill's enemiea aay he is a radical.
Hla friends aver that that Is not true.
He Is more of the Borah type. He is
pledged to vote for the repeal of the
Esch-Cummins . law ana tne aoouuon
of the railroad board and he haa an-
nouneed that, he i will demand- the re-
opening of the Newberry case. To the
farmers ' he said in his campaign
speeches that he would Join the senate
farm bloc. '
WOJT HOME VOTE ...'"''
His enemies fear his attitude toward
capital. . He wants a federal Income
tax law whichvwill eat the base away "
from, large private fortunes. Z.i
The new. senator la 86 years old and
unmarried. For two years he did news
paper work after coming to Spokane in
1909. Then he taught for a couple of
yeara In " the Spokae high school.
From teaching he graduated into law
and In 1913 and 1914- he served as
private secretary to - Governor Lister
of Washington. . -" ! ! '
Senator Poindexter lives in Spokane.
Because of the fact that both candi
dates for the senate made their home
in the same city local interest reached
a fcigh pitch. Poindexter had served
the Fifth coBfirressional district in con
gress ; so had DHL Both wanted to
carry the district and Spokane county,
pill nosed Poindexter out.' He carried :
Spokane county by 20 00 plurality and.
with it, all other counties in the district
except onei which he. lost, by 200 votes. .
'-:- " '. ' 1 ..,--, ,, . . '
vO EXTRA-ISSUE ' VOTED
Washington i State College, Pullman,
Nov. ,-lL. The Associated Students
voted unanimously for a thrice a week '
Evergreen, college paper, effective De- -cember
1, la Place of the present twice
a week. Clayton V. Bernhard, New
port, editor, will attend the annual
fall - meeting of the Pacific Intercol- .
legiate Press s association, and Milton
Endslow, Spokane, will attend the con
vention of the student presidents at ,
Berkeley, November 24 and 25. .y'
corn, cattle, beef and veal, are Said to
be "uncertain,", and the tariff on wheat
Is declared tot -have . affected Only ,ihe
trade tn northern spring wheat In the
upper Mississippi valley.- Peculiar ef
fects on prices were noted in various,
commodities, ."and few conclusions can
safely be drawn as to a permanent tar
iff from the emergency act."
The first car of, navy beans ever
shipped from Rupert left the local
yards Monday, destined for Omaha.
The product brought to the grower
64.25 per hundred. . r- -- - . -
WANTED!
ij,- ' ZZf'fi :V ',-.'-L-j"-'.-"--ir''- '
:10 EX"Service.
A special sciiolarship has re
centry been provided for Ex-.
Service-' men ' enteringr the
"Autoinotive - school, '-whereby
one-half of their tuition fees
will'b paid.' This offer is
limited to ten men and is an
exceptional opportunity.
Call 4th' Floor Y. M. C A. or
phone Main 8700 for details.
OREGON
INSTITUTE of
TECHNOLOGY
' tT., M. C- A. Bldg. ;
Sixth aad Tajlor