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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1923)
THE OREGON STATESMAN. SALEM. OREGON WEDNESDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 31, 1923 There. &nd- Everywhere ere9 J I ; RDU WRESTLE 115 LOOK FOR VICTIMS Chemawa Braves Defy Col- ' lege F rosh From Any ' v where, to Mat Meet, . Ellis White, coach for thfS a ' lem Indian school Vrestllnjc team. Is looking" almost anxiously for ema team of their reasonable! clns to meet his proteges on thf j mat-" The freshmen of OAC who ' Did contracted tor a meet, f limit -ed-butr and he is confident Unit ., ilfY got i1d feet on. learning, of .-,the' prowess of. ..the '.'Chemawa .braves. 'He has hoped to get v a ; match with the Oregon freshmen, rtut has no agreemeut as yet; that 3 itey will meet nla ow n warriors. j '. "We vronld average a little j younger, and probably or a little less experience than these college t "toys." said Whitej "but we accept , 411 these' handicaps, and dare the . cess or mem to atest. it they can . win. they are welcome. But I 4.' don'V believe '- they can ever ,wln . a meet against these Indian boys, - fOlng as tby are doing right now, r Pound, for, pound we have It over these white boys, lend they know -a j, Yh would rather play around anion? themselves and not ' . risk 'a 'beatlnff by the Indians. ' 'MayDe they are afraid that be cacse we r'e oniy Iadians.V ii won't be a fair ! match. , ') Wp. they; needn't worry aboutrusj. they ' had better glue their own hair on - " good and tight." for we'd take at - least half of it.-and' maybe all. We dare the 'best of the freshmen to - take up our challenge. " It might not be fair for u to take on the i older - : several-year : ' seasoned 4 Thp FtirA Elnlnr fonnmv nftrr n vma careful survey of all conditions, to the biggest shortage of Ford products this spring ever existed. 1 : : 'And the only xsay yon can be sure of obtaining delivery of a Ford car,. truck or Fotdson tractor is to list your order, immediately, vv " ftf V .V t? 1 We are already having trouble in obtaining ! .fKp724?ni lot, several types and also urge that orders jj b s placed not) fat deliveries tsanted this spring or '-.ll.'THf'.'-: ! 1 1 l A sxicll deposit and Valley Motor Co. Phone 1995 t. ttttnf iittiiietc9itMiaitnttimiimm LOOK FOR s DEAL ON ALL 1 Cherro at 4f,i-.s, j i .v . - .-..-A--. ' " Cherro FAout I Cherro Cereals j Cherro Poultry Feeds anc? I , Cherro Stock Feeds IV" Look for Future Ad M fflisig'' Go. i wrestlers who have been winning honors for the colleges In their big college i teams; that would be to geve our young and inexperi enced boys too much the worst of it. But against freshmen, who get down somewhere within a year or two of our; experience, and , with in two ytars of our age. and to our weight, we'll guarantee to give the best of them the hardest run they , ever had for their lives." White has wrestled. , as ameteur and professional for several years, and he is a real judge of ability, as woll as a wrestler, of note for himself. He hopes some, of the universities that maintain wrest ling squads will take up his chal lenge; for he believes his boys van trim the best of them. Boston National Club Sold to New Syndicate i BOSTON, Feb. 20. (By The Associated Press) The Boston National league club was sold to day by, George Washington Grant to a syndicate headed by 'Christy Mathewson, former pitcher of the Giants. ' Associated with Mafhewson are James MacDonough and Emile Fuchs. both of New York. The price paid was not announced. Mr. Grant said ; that it was stipulated In the deal that Fred Mitchell will continue . as manager of the Braves. ; T UKIAH, Cal., Feb. 20. Fort Bragg, described by county au thorities as the "most wide open town on the north coast, was the scene of a series of week-end raids which netted 23 Wright prohibition j act violators and 16. 000 gallons of liquor. All of the defendants: pleaded guilty today and were fined a total of more than $10,000. f state that everything point B easy payments if desired. Salem 260 U. High St BIG SPECIAL t SQUIRE EDGEG i f " 1 PROVE A - I Did Voj Evf? I - Mjr i r I - ' . - . - I I - - . I 1 rrJ J i v t r - m I r rr IT T'IsRrSd Dr. Lutz. University of Cali fornia Professor, Tells of Nuptial Affairs. SAN FRANCISCO. Feb. 20. The tangled skein of the threads of romance that run through the background of Tutenkhamun, buried these thirty centuries in hfs tomb in the va'.ley of the kings of Egypt, were unfolded here today by Dr. H. F. Lutz, Egyptologist of the University of California.' ; ;( ";: - Dr. Luts produced the marriage scarab of . Amenhotep ; and Til. which rests In" a -case-in -the an thropological museum at the Af filiated colleges, a branch of the university. lie asserted it- was the oaly Amenhotep scarab Inj America, y. - . ; "Woven in Its helroglyphics is the . story of a great', love of a P.haroah of Egypt,'' said Dr. Lutz. Amenhotep was the father of Tu tenkhamun and to understand Tutenkhamun one must know the story of his father. Kihg Amen hotep ahd his love for , Til, whom he made queen of EgypU t, - Had a llarem i Til was not the mother of Tur tenkhamun. - Amenhotep! called the magnificent, had a harem like the kings before him, and Tutenk hamun was the son of one of his inferior wives. Tii was his first wife, his queen1, although she was a commoner, the daughter of a captain who probably led 'mer cenary, troops. , - s .Tutenkhamun, however, mar ried the third daughter of the son of Amenhotep and Tii. : His lifelines were thereby doubly en twined "with the fortunes : of the king,' his 7 father, who dared to marry a commoner. Perhaps it makes the relationship a little clearer to say that Tutenkhamun married the daughter of his half brother. This half brother, Am enhotep. the fourth, more often called Akhenaton. thus became the father-in-law." 1 r - ; , , Family Tree Tangled "Those who Cannot easily visit family t trees may get lost in, this" Egyptian - genealogical forest where ft was the custom for sis ter and brother to wed, but no one who has ever glowed to a romance will rind it difficult to follow th3 story of Amenhotep and Til. u '"-'j ..-;'. :' .""Amenhotep" waited until he became king and then'' married Tii and made her his first wife and no 'one could undo , the mar riage. At the time of j the "mar riage Tii was a lady in waiting at the court. ; "The fruit of this union, ac cording to Dr. Lutz, was Akena ton, -the father of Tutenkhamun's wif? and ' half-mad genius known as a heritic king, who proclaim ed one God insfead of many. He had seven daughters and the third daughter became the wife of Tu ,BOYS CONFESS TO BRUTAL i if r it lit f " Photo shows Sheriff C. U Gillette of Imperial eounty. wttb Lau rence Campbell (left and Charles Davis, who have confessed to-the murder of Leslie L. Nichols. Los Angeles Insurance ma ft. after getting a lift from blm across the burning sands of the desert wastes. '- Orig inally apprehended on a charge of stealing an automoblletti boys confessed to the murder and led the officers to the body. - . L ...... ATE There's More 1 1 1 ' i . : : .. i ' r . ' t . , 1 - ! : t572. tenkhamun, and hf succeeded to the throne through hef. . "Tutenkhamun accepted the re ligious doctrine of the one god while he was under the influ ence of Akenaton," said Dr. Lutz, "but later broke a way. from it. Was a Commoner "It was the custom of that period to have marriage scarabs made, and the one now at the University of California is - one of, the few out of all those that announced the wedding of this king to his love, Tii. He did not attempt to hide her .identity. He is too magnificent for that. Per haps he was proud of the fact that he dared to smash -convention. So he inscribed on the scarab the name of her father and mother and these names pro claimed the fact that she is .a commoner." KUGLI MEASURE E Pacific Northwest Tourist Appropriation Gets by , After Hot Debate. After a spirited but hopeless attack on the appropriation of $20,000 -annually for 4the Pacific Northwest Tourist association,, the ( house yesterday passed the bill which was - sponsored by Speaker Kubli after the 1 joint ways and means committee had failed to recommend the , request, ed appropriation. ' - The debate, which was mark-1 ed by a clash between' Speaker Kubli and Representative Keen ey. centered upon th,-necessity for continuing the work '"..of, the organization which has been ad vertising the state ,for several years past. , .- Keeney drew the fire of Kubli when he asserted that he helped he would be stricken dumb . if he ever voted for this bill and told the members "ff'you- put this over you better go home af ter dark and sneak invtbe back door." ' " "If you favor legislation which would hold back the de velopment of the state" 'said Kubli, addressing bis .remarks to Keeney, "The quicker you are struck dumb the better off the state will be." .Before the roll was called on the final passage of the bill Kub li - released all. or the 34 mem bers from their pledges which they made when they signed the bill, but none took advantage 0r this on roll call. The bill provides for $20,000 nr vnar rnntlnrpnt unnn !,thn (state of Washington and British ("Columbia getting appropriations or subscriptions of $20,000 and $10,000 per year " respectively. Of the makers of books and those who witnessed the assassin ation of President Lincoln in April 1865, there' appears, to be ne end- No one has any idea that Ford's theater had such a large seating capacity. SLAYING OF BENEFACTOR. S BY HOUSE , ) m m NY I (1 f ' - j M Than One Way of Losing Control of Your Auto 1 922 WETTEST T Hatteras, N. k Takes Hon ors for Most Rainfall; Yuma, Ariz., Driest. 4 WASHINGTON, Feb. 19. The country was not so wet, last year as it normally . is. Philadelphia was the dryest it has been in 100 years. Complications of the weather bureau show that 96 of the 175 reporting ;. stations had less rainfall than normally. Hat teras, N. C, was the wettest spot while Yuma, Arizona, was the dry est. Mobile, Ala. was a close sec ond for the wettest place' while El ' Paso, Tex., took' second posi tion as dryest. Coast Is Wet From the Mississippi Valley east ward, the amounts, of precipita tion ranged generally from about 30 Inches in the upper lake re gion to between CO and 60 inches in most of the gulf coast states, although slightly less than 30 Inches of precipitation' fell in much of Pennsylvania. Between the Mississippi .river and the Rocky Mountains, the amounts varied from slightly more than 12 inches at Havre, Mont., to about 50 inches in southeastern' Texas. Less than 10 Inches were reported in most of the southern Rocky Mountain districts and the far southwest. On the Pacific coast precipitation varied from about 60 inches in extreme northwest ern Washington to a little more than nine inches in extreme southern California, . Northern (States Deficient The outstanding features of precipitation during the year com pared with the normal were the large deficiencies in amount in the far northwest, especially in Western Washington, and also in the area from central Colorado southward. . Tacoma, Wash., re ceiver! but little more than half the normal annual rainfall, while in extreme western Texas ,and southeastern New Mexico, less than half the annual amount was received. There was a general de ficiency ; in the Central-Northern states from the western upper lake region 'westward to the Rocky Mountains, except at a few points in Montana and North Da kota. ' ; Less than the normal amount was recorded very generally Irom western Tennessee, Arkansas, and Missouri northeastward over the Ohio valley and lake region. The year was unprecedentedly dry in portions of Pennsylvania. Com pared with the normal, the amounts were unevenly distribu ted in New York and New En gland. In, the Atlantic coast states from Virginia southward and also in the Gulf states more than the normal amount of pre cipitation fell as a rule. There was more than the normal amount also . in north-central Texas, southeastern Kansas, central and western South . Dakota, extreme northwestern North Dakota, southeastern Montana, the north ern portions of Utah and Nevada, and in much of the central por tion of ' California." , Appropriation... Bills Are Passed by Senate In a brief session of the senate last night most of the appropria tion bills that have been approved by the ways and means committee' were passed. These are all house bills and the action on them last night .was final. 'Tbeey covered! bouse bills 367 to 398 inclusive with the exception of 11. B. 392. SITTO.N III SKV COACH , SEATTLE, Wash., Feb. 20. Wayne Sutton, star end at the University of Washington a de cade ago and formerly' assistant coach under Gilmour Dobie, was T tonight elected freshman football coach by the Husky board of con trol. - ' . . I. Lewis Defends Title of Heavyweight Champ ST. LOUIS, Mo., Feb. 20.- Ed "Strangler" Lewis successfully defended his world's heavyweight championship by throwing Jlmmf Londos of Greece, in two of three falls here tonight. After grappling for one hour and 47 minutes, Lewis pinned Londos' shoulders to the mat with the last of ten successive head locks for the first fall.- Londos annexed the second fall with a winglock in 13 minutes. The champion won the third and de ciding fall' with.' a hammerlock in 21 minutes. Passions, like figures, are more suggestive when half drap ed than when painted in the nude. Here is a lesson all censors should know, but that none ever learn. . ' '.--'' . FISHING TRUST IS LAMBASTED . (Continued from page 1) '. legislators from one house to the other and controls legislation. The majority on the commis sion always holds over so that the governor never has control. It has ,bome the greatest drag on just , legislation in the state and it has been so from time immemorial. We have been told here , that, the school . , interests have a powerful machine in the state,' but, it does not, as the f ish machine, rent ' hotel rooms, give them away free, and wine. I Gordoe Wc place on" sale our entire stock of Gordon high class flats not a one reserved. AH are good style all are made of good qual ity fur felt. 1 . - , Sizes 6 3-4 to 7 3-8 Black, Tan, Brown, Nutria, Pampas, etc!. dine and debauch members of the legislature." . Governor Wants It Mrs. Kinney said that in mak ing a '. minority 1 report she had bem controlled largely by the fact that the governor asked for ! this legislation and wanted it in the "consolidation bill. She said that she did not know; that he wanted to - change the personnel of the present commission. I Senator Tooze declared that Jthe Influence of the fishing trust jis telt not only in the legisla ture, hut out through the entire ,biaie ana inai u aocsn i stop ai ar.ything that will fatten' its in come.. . . i Dictator Has Power .. "The fish commission," he de clared, "has "always been under its dictator, and the czardom of Russia In the past ' would sink into - insignificance compar ed with the fish oligarchy of Oregon. From the first day of the session its lobbyists have been' in the. state house defying the governor and the legislators under the sway of that arch-dic tator. To' them an be attribut ed the muddle that consolidation legislation : Is ow in. When 1 wanted to . Xind ; reports of1 the fish commission that were sup posed to be filod in January they were not to toe found any where about the capitol, but one of the commissioners had a copy of it iu his pocket. " Condition Dangerous 1 "This jV'ohe of the most dan gerous conditions; that can - pre vail. We have talked about syn dicalism in .this .lcfc'slature,- yet down along, the Willamette, river ' 1 A CROWNING ACHIEVEMENT ALL r CHOICE entiAe stock reduced BY LOUIS RICTIAI yS WDCfD" iJO&r Control OF IT )BOlJ-r THE, SECOAtO Ot. ,pvEo it My vir AxcmI uifu ,-r eov jte- we:Jre deepening the soil that produces I. W. Wism, and tyr anny when they are allowed, to close; that river for two years to they, can get salmon eggs to take the Bonneville hatchery. It is not , right .. to take from a thousand - men their rights so that half a dozen may become rlch.' -,r - v v . The vote to substitute the . mi nority report was:. Ayes Crown, Corbett, Dennis, Dunn, Eddy; -Edwards, Ellis, Flsk. Garland,: Hall, Hare, John son, i Jo'seph," Kinney, ( Klepper, La - Follett, : Magladry, Nlckelsen, . Ritner, t Strayer, Taylor, Tooze. Zimmerman. Noes Clark, . Farrell, Moser, Robertson Smith, Staples, Up ton. . . w .. - . - GOOD CIGARETTES 1LT -wCr' i-,6CNUINS V.' I i 1 y Ms i '' it lit. V t ... 1 . , I , w