WORLD HAPPENINGS t STATE NEWS t flF RIIRRFNT M L,lgU UI UwllllLH I llbil.ll Brief Resume Most Important Daily News Items. COMPILED FOR YOU Events of Noted People, Governments and l'acific Northwest, and Other Things Worth Knowing. Judge J. D, Harvey in district court in Houston, Texas, Saturday granted 212 divorces in 245 minutes. C. Lee French, formerly auditor and recorder of Power county, Idaho, was sentenced to serve from one to ten years in the Idaho penitentiary Satur day in the district court at American Kalis, on a charge of embezzlement. The French army of occupation in the Ruhr is to be reinforced by an other fifteen or twenty thousand men, says lit Matin. It has been decided, the newspaper asserts, to proceed to a still more complete exploitation of the occupied territory. A tornado struck llio south part of McLean, Texas, Monday afternoon, and destroyed eight homes. No lives were lost and no injuries were report ed. Several farm houses and barns were destroyed. A heavy hail storm followed. Considerable livestock was killed. The army transport Merrltt sailed for San Frn ncisoo Wednesday with 540 Itussian refugees who came to Manila four months ago from Vladivostok. Admiral Stark, their leader, and 50 others will remain in the islands to try to Hell the 11 ships that brought the Russians. A legal battle is in prospect In the Kansas courts and possibly In the United States courts to test the Kan sas criminal syndicalism law and to set aside an injunction granted by .ludgo AyerH of Duller county, Kan sas, enjoining the I. V. W. from con spiring to stop work In the wheat and oil fields. An apparent euro for cancer, con sisting of a solution of colloidal lead, w hich Is an enemy of diseased tissues, lias been discovered by Professor Dlair Hell of Liverpool University. Dr. L. B. Houghey of Concord, Kan., who re turned Tuesday after studying surgery abroad for several years, made this announcement. Medford. Water was turned in Fri day to the new concrete 2,000,000-gal-lon capacity new reservoir of the Med ford city water works department, which cost $3000 and is situated be side the old reservoir. liillsboro. Steps to organize a union high school in Hillsboro, result ing from action taken by the chamber of commerce several months ago, when a committee was appointed to investi gate the matter, give promise of suc cess. Salem. Five special trains will carry the Oregon National Guard to camps of field instruction the last half of June, according to detailed sched ules for the movement issued recently by George A. White, adjutant-general of the state. RAIL VALUATIONS UNDER SCRUTINY Conference Is Formed to Pro tect Public Interest. Belize at Last Has Rev 300 PERSONS GATHER "Progressive Bloc" and Labor Take Part Advocates of Government Ownership Also Join. William J. Dryan was defeated and the evolutionists scored a victory Tuesday when the general assembly of tho Presbyterian church of the Uni ted Stati's of America In Indianapolis defeated the commoner's resolution to bar schools permitting the teaching of the evolutionary hypothesis from uso of church funds. President Harding of the United States anil President Obregon of Mex ico may signify the resumption of cor dial relations between the two na tions by clasping hands across the border at Douglas and Agua Prleta. A campaign to that end was launched recently by the chambers of com merce of the two towns. Firmer Premier Clemenceau has refused a senatorshlp which would have been his for the asking. Repre sentatives of tho different parties of fered to make him their common choice as successor to tho late Sena tor LerOUX in the "Tiger's" birthplace, tho region of La Vendee, where he still retains a seaside residence. A gift of $200,000 to the College of I'ligct Sound horn M is, i harle I 1 1 Jones was announced Tuesday after noon at the ground breaking exercises on the site of the new college campus. Mis Jones announced that the money will bo used for a college building in memory of her husband, a prominent lumberman, who died a few mouths ugo. Some statisticians assert that either the steel ludustry or the automobile Indusry Is the largest enterprise in Salem. Fake advertisers and inooehers will find hard sledding in putting over their schemes in this city. This was announced last Fri day night after the members league had voted to affiliate witli the Port land Ad club. Newberg, The local cannery, oper ated by the Oregon Canning company, commenced last week putting up gooseberries and will start on straw berries next week. Officials of the company state that they will put up 0 per cent more fruit this year than last. Salem President Harding probably v, ill embark from Portland on his trip lo Alaska as originally announced, and will return by way of Seattle. This was Indicated in a telegram received here Saturday by Senator C. L. Mc Xaiy, who is spending the summer in Salem. Pendleton. Luke Minthorn, aged 70, a Cayuso Indian of the Umatilla reser vation, who has been an active leader in Indian affairs for many years, died suddenly Friday at his home. He is survived by his widow, Mary, and his sou Albert, who is the sole heir to the large aetata, Salem. Whether ('. K. Spence, re cently appointed state, market agent under a new law enacted at the last Session of the legislature, will retire as master of the Oregon state grange, will be determined at the annual meet ing of the grange to be held in New port next, month. ITinevlllo. - A picnic for Oddfellows of all central Oregon and to which the general public will be invited is the plan of Oehoco lodge No. 40, Oddfel lows. This picnic will be held at the picnic mounds on the Ochoco highway at the mouth of Canyon creek on June 17. The Mitchell band lias been en- gaged for the occasion. Salem Tho attorney-general Satur day tiled a demurrer to the complaint in the ease brought by S. R. Dtefen dorf of Portland to restrain the secre tary of state and the state treasurer from Issuing a certificate remitting to the idly of Astoria taxes assessed against the municipality for 1023 un der a law enacted at the last session of the legislature. Salem.- -Following the appointment of Wade Mnlone of Corvallls as a member of tho state highway com mission to succeed Robert A. Dooth of Eugene, speculation has been rife here as to who will be elected state highway engineer. This office car ries a salary of $0000 a year and the appointment of tho engineer Is In the hands of the highway commission. The Dalles Indictment were re turned by the grand Jury In session here Saturday against 26 men, most of whom are believed to be residents of WaaOO and Sherman counties, on charges of rioting and fishing unlaw fully. '1 he riot charges resulted from an alleged altercation between the 26 mimed and Deputy District Game Warden lladle at a fishway on the Deschutes river May 11. Itend. V new lake lias made Its ap pearance. The lake lias no name, but it is the largest In the Deschutes na tional Ion st. Damming the Deschutes 'her at Crane Prairie to accumulate storage waters tor reclamation of the north canal lands and the Powell Hutte project has brought the lake In to existence, and in the last few days the I tilted States, but other inve tt Us area ! is spread to mere than that gators declare that the greatest single of (Wall lake, according to H. L. business in this country today, legltl- Plumb, forest supervisor. mate and otherwise, is liquor. In the i number of men engaged and the dally amount of turnover In cash, It stands ! at the top of all American Industries.! Approximately 1,250.000 pounds wool was sold Saturday to George Salem. Through the uso of a form letter in which corporations operating iu Oregon have been urged to remit promptly their llconse fees for next of year, the receipts of the state cor poration department have increased i olhy, representing the American j rapidly during the past few weeks. Woolen Mills, by J. K. Clinton, wool and are far In excess of tho receipts grower of Boise, Idaho. The sale during u similar period in 1922. On represents tho largest Individual sale Ma :'!. 1922, the receipts of the state ever made In the state of Idaho. The price paid for this wool Is understood to have been 43 cents a pound, at which figure tho price would be iOJT.-000. corporation department aggregated ItSt, while on May 23, of this your, the receipts were $2356.50. Friday the receipts of the office totaled $2900, as against t 100 a j ear ago. Chicago. Railroad labor leaders, representatives of the "progressive bloc" in congress, members of various agricultural organizations and propon ents of government ownership of the railroads, meeting here Friday, organ ized the "conference on railroad valu ation" for the announced purpose of promoting and protecting "public in terests in the valuation o railroad property." Approximately 300 invited delegates from all parts of the country, meeting in executive session following a two- hour public gathering in the morning, named Robert M. La Follette, senator, of Wisconsin (republican), permanent chairman of the conference, and W. T. Logan, democratic representative of South Carolina, secretary. The meeting was the outgrowth, Senator La Follette said, at the pub lic session, of a conference "of the progressive leaders in the halls of con gress. I lie purpose of the confer ence, ho said, was: '1 To promote and protect public interest in the valuation of railroad property now being made by the in terstate commerce commission, par ticularly for tho purpose of prevent ing excessive appraisal of tho prop erties which will result in unreason- ible charges for transportation. "2 To take steps, through the In terstate commerce commission and the courts and elsewhere to require the commission to act in strict ac cordance with the provisions of the interstate commerce act In determin ing tho valuation of the railroads. '3 To organise, maintain and sup port such proceedings as may be nec essary to accomplish the foregoing aims. Among the delegates are three Uni ted States senators, three governors, 1 1 congressmen, representatives of railroads or utility commissions of tour states, personal representatives of tho governors of four additional states, leaders of virtually all railroad labor organizations affiliated with the 'big four" brotherhoods and the Amer ican Federation of Labor, sponsors of the Plumb Plan league, and spokes men of various associations interest ed in transportation. Set Down Amidst Warring Re publics of Central America It Has Remained Peaceful. Turkey Now Haremless. t'hlcago Turkey is now haremless. Neither are there any sheiks, because It Is all Turkish men can do to get along with one wife. So says Dr. l'uad Bey, member of the Turkish na tionalist assembly and former minister of health and public works of Turkey, who arrived here Saturday. Dr. Hey denied news dispatches that Sultan Mohammed VI abandoned his harem of 67 beauties when ho abdicat ed some months ago. "The only girls the suttain left be hind," he said, with a smile, "were sonants, housemaids and cooks. There were 15 or 20 of these, not 67." Washington, D. C. Belize, which of ficially is British Honduras, has a rev olution, according to press dispatches. To those who know Belize this is like the report of a volcanic eruption In New York or a blizzard in Deatli Val ley. A bulletin from the Washington, D. C, headquarters of the National Geographic society tells why. "Set down in the midst of a group of republics in which revolutions have been at least not infrequent for the century of their existence," says the bulletin, "Belize's bid to fame has been that it was 100 per cent revolu tionless. Although it is one of the least known and most neglected patches of the British empire, still British law and order hovered over it, and it lias been to a certain extent, like the Dutch West Indian colony of Curacao, an asy lum for alien leaders who were more revolutionary than successful. "The country's 4o,000 inhabitants in clude probably less than 1,000 whites. The remainder of the population is made up of negroes and mulattos and Spanish Indians, the latter living chief ly In the back country. But in the capital, Belizo, throughout the whole coast country, and wherever, govern mental machinery has been set up, the atmosphere, whether it be made up of business, government, or sport, is un mistakably British. "Few concessions have been made to the climate. The two and three-story houses that line the main residence street of Belize are of accepted British architecture. Geographic Names Tell Story. "Geographic names tell of the sud den transition from t lie lands of Span ish culture to this little patch of the Spanish Mnin that has been Anglicized. One leaves Puerto Cortez, Honduras, or Puerto Barrios, Guatemala, to sail a few miles farther on past the Cox comb mountains, All Pines, and Stnm creek. Inlnnd are Middlesex and Orange Walk. Belize is one of the few exceptions, and even that is said to be a corruption of the surname of an early Scotch settler, Wnllis. "British Honduras, a trifle larger than Massachusetts or New Jersey, is wedged in between the Mexican states of the Yucatan peninsula on the north and Guatemala on the west and south, while Honduras, Nicaragua, Salvador, and Costa Rica are nearby. "The mahogany industry Is Justly commemorated on the flag of British Honduras by the representation there of the tools of the trade. Mahogany lured early settlers to Belize; put money in their purses; furnished some thing for them and their backer, Great Britain, to fight the Spaniards about; and has ben chiefly responsible for the land's main Industry, lumbering. "British Honduras came under the British flag largely through the well known 'squatters' rights,' grown to in ternational stature. Spain claimed the entire 'Main,' or mainland, from the time of the earliest explorers. But she was Interested Chiefly in gold nnd silver; mere trees seemed beneath no tice. So British and other adventur ers who cut timber on the eastern const of Yucatan, the present British Honduras, and the mosquito country, farther south, were not molested at first. "When the settlers were seen to be making a good thing of their mnhog nny trade, the Spanish changed their policy nnd began harassing them. A series of wars and treaties between Spain and (Jreat Britain followed. In 1708 the Spanish made a supreme ef fort to drive what they r nsl dored the 'squatters' out of Belize. But t lie set tlers, with a cannon mounted on rafts nnd flat-boats, had the best of the Strategic situation and won a sig- Husband Never Took Bath in 12 Years Kansas City. Because, she avers in her petition, her hus band did not take a bath in their twelve years of married life, slept until 4 o'clock every after noon, then arose, bought a nickel's worth of candy and a six-cent novel, and went hack to bed, Mrs. Louisa Van Kanegom, is suing her husband, Carl Van Kanegom, for divorce. She said she gathered sticks in the park to keep the home tires burning. WILL WED AN EARL 0- The youthful carl of Northesk and Miss Jessica Brown (above), formerly of the Zlegfeld FollleS, have admitted (hey are practically engaged and that the wedding may take place soon. Miss Brown, who bus just returned from London to America, is a native of Buffalo. Qer dance, who is only twenty-one years old, Is an Officer In the Coldstream Guards and he suc ceeded in 1021 to his title and the $7jO,000 estate his father left oration, going to America for their higher education, tend on their return to look to America for their Intellec tual leadership. nal victory. From that time the Brit ish claim to the territory rested on conquest as well as settlement. Keeps American Jaws Busy. "Belize, like the other countries along the east side of Central Amer ica, has a low-lying region along the coast with highlands fan her inland. Its dense tropical forests have discour aged agriculture. Growth Is so rapid that It Is a task of the utmost dlfli culty to keep trails open. Most travel Is along rivers, nnd little Is known of the Interior away from the streams. The one important exception Is the southern region tapped by the only railroad, along which thousands of acres of banana plantations have been established to supply a part of the market in the United Slates. Down the rivers millions of dollars' worth Builds Oft WrOnET Lot. of mahogany and logwood have been floated during the life of the colony. In late years tens of thousands of bales of chicle, the raw material of chewing-gum, have joined the stream, to he shipped north to keep busy the restless jaws of America. "For this outflow to America there is an inflow not wholly confined to money and goods. Some British lead ers complain that the colony Is be coming 'Americanized.' Newspapers and magazines from the United Slates far outnumber those from England. American Agents gain much business in competition with the more leisurely methods of the British; and a number of representatives of the younger gen- Owners Exchange Land Osslning, N. Y. A blunder by work men who built her house on the wrong lot resulted in an exchange of real estate between Mrs. A. E. Kling and Adrian Yanderbilt, it was learned here. Mrs. Kling engaged 11 contractor to build a house on a lot she had bought. Instead they started to build it on the Vanderbilt lot which adjoins it. Work on the Kling home was well under way before the error was dis covered. Mr. Vanderbilt volunteered in exchange lois and the work on Mrs. Kling's new home was ullowed to proceed. Tourists Keep Out f Germany Passport, Police and Housing Regulations Are Source of Much Complaint. Berlin. Foreign tourists, especially those from North and South America, are so wearied and annoyed by the passport, police and housing regula tions In Germany that only the most resolute are remaining in the German cities. The Influx of outsiders is so slight that the German press, backed by complaining hotelkeepers. merchants, restaurantkeepcrs and theater man agers, is criticizing the central gov ernment for the difficulties it has placed in the way of obtaining pass port vises, nnd the municipal govern ment for its heavy tax on foreigners and the exacting police regulations. Costs $4 a Day. The simplest sort of single room In a Berlin hotel of the second class now costs the equivalent of $4 a day. This comes about through the SO per cent tax which the city of Berlin imposes on the room charges to foreigners. The result of this Is hotels are Genuine Americans, All of Them Chicago Debt Five Million. Chicago. Mayor William 10. Dover shocked and astounded 200 of the city's leading business men Saturday night with tho frank statement that the municipal government might cease to function because of lack of money. "Instead of the $1,000,000 general ly reported to have been In the city treasury when I took office, a care ful investigation has revealed an ac tual deficit of 15.000.000," the nuyor told them. "Unless you men come to my assistance the city administration will slacken gether." and stop alto- em-im- Stage Drivers Strike. Kedding, Cal. Stage drivers ployed by tho Southern Pacific puny to transfer train passeugcrs be tween Kedding and Pollock as the re sult of a tunnel fire recently went M strike here Saturday. The company called for volunteer drivers and ob tained a sufficient force to continue the work of transferring passengers. The drivers were said to have asked for increased wages and better work ing conditions. practically empty and hotel r en are facing bankruptcy. Tourist agencies tin longer refer visitors to hotels, but send them to boarding-houses. In Hamburg and Bremen there Is as much complaint about overcharges in hotels as then, is in Berlin. During the recent I.lepzig fair American buy ers were charged such extortionate rales that ninny of them left In dis gust without making any purchnses. The troubles, of foreigners begin when they attempt to get vises to en ter Germany. For time only per sons with documents proving they are turning tor business reasons were granted permission. Students and tourists who desired to visit Germany were curtly refused. Complaints Pour In. Complaints poured in from Ameri cans in London, Paris, Home nnd ienna w ho bad come to Europe with the intention of visiting Germany, but who had failed to got vises In New XOrtt before leaving. There apparently has been some re laxation in the vise policy. Business men now realize that by requiring for eigners to limit their stay In German cities, and by preventing others from entering, the financial sltuuthm has 1 n worse than ever. Prices on practically nit . i tared articles in Germany were up to I the world level, so there was no rea son to keep visitors out on the ground that they would protireer If admitted. Hie uncertainty about the status of foreigners in Germany, coupled with ! the difficulties of crossing ihe Rhlne land because of the train service in terruptions incidental to the French I Occupation, has been widely heralded in western Europe, rrance and Italy have used it to advantage in their efforts to attract and retain Visitors as long as possible. Nevertheless the cities still collect their high taxes on foreigners, nnd hotels and shops continue to charge foreigners more than they do Ger man one hotelkaeper defended the practice on the ground that the Ger mans must Increase rates because their hotels are nearly empty. Game Warden Kills 118 Rattlesnakes in Den Yakima. Vasl,.-v. R rjuniU)t!i ' eputy game warden, accompanied by las son, recently killed 118 rattlesnakes m a den on Cowiohe creek, about twenty miles from here. The killings were accomnliahad with ... iik. .m. w,f a.. . . ... . ' ' 1 ' I . ' . 1 1,11,-9 e. Jr.. Is an ardent horseback rider, following ln the foots,'., ' . . """"llni'i"' gave out, when grandfather. Ufl to right: Que.. tin, Cornelius, Theodore. Jr ana k w,,h ,lubs- The vu lo Iour in length. Ileal American cluldren are the sons and daughter of Assistant v,,,,r,.,ri. ti,i vow MmiI - - rri ,, . .. . . wm . tretar ...r.c,,. i.n-j ulc ionci or outdi Theodore fn moils . -- "lutwua, iiieouore, jr., und VI L II V V,