WORLD HAPPENINGS OF CURRENT WEEK Brief Resume Most Important Daily News Items. yvwv wpvwpv v T I' STATE NEWS X IN BRIEF. I IMMIGRANT has COMPILED FOR YOU Events of Noted People, Governments and Pacific Northwest, and Other Things Worth Knowing. Forty-eight million dollars of govern ment capital has been made available for emergency use of the farmers of the country by the debentures plan iif the agricultural credits act of 1921: ituhhl Martin A. Meyer, 44, one o the best known Jewish churchmen i the Welt, was found dead in his study early Wednesday at San Francisco supposedly a victim of a heart com plaint. A tOrBftdO swept through Webb City Mo., early Wednesday night, uproot ing largo trees and doing consider able damage. Jt was reported that one in, hi was struck by lightning and kill ed anil several persons hurt. A new and Violent eruption brokt plit Wednesday morning near the sum mil on the south side of Mount. Etna plainly visible to tho naked eye in Catania, says a Home dispatch. It is feared tho observatory had been over whelmed. Jack Kearns, manager of Jack Dempsey, has been offered a $200,000 flat guarantee with the privilege of 60 per cent of the gate receipts for the Dempsey-tilbbons fight in St. Paul if the promoters of the Shelby fight are unable to make good tholr con tract. An interesting and valuable find was made by a laborer working near the hamlet of Ognla, Italy. It con lifted Of two ancient bronze vases eon talning 300 gold coins dated 200 B. 0 Tho rarity and Intrinsic value of the find have caused its worth to bo esti mated at several million lire. improved economic conditions in tho United States during 1922 brought the suicide rato down slightly, tho Spec tutor, an Insurance publication, report td Wednesday, announcing that tht rato for tho year was 15.1 per hund red thousand of population, as com pared with a rate of 15.7 In 1921. Validity of 10 absentee votes in Lin OOln county Washington, counted for Charles K. Myers of Davenport, in the results of the special primary election Tuesday for tho republican noinlna tiou for congressman from the fifth Washington district, will lie contested by Thomas Corkcry, lie announced. Two persons were killed In Denver, Colo., early Wednesday night when an iilrplane In which they wore flying over the eastern suburbs crashed to the ground, l'ersons who assisted in extricating the bodies from the wreck ed plane Identified them as Itert Cole, well known Denver aviator, and tieorge l.yllle, his mechanic. An electrical storm which swept over the metropolitan district early Tuesday night at Dong Beach, L. I . killed llert Savoy of the stage team of Itrenan and Savoy and Jack Oossinan, also of the theatrical profession, who was with him, and caused tho death of a woman in Brooklyn and an 18 year old youth in Yonkers. Forced to descend at San Diego, Cal., Wednesday, after less than six hours In tho air, but having accomp lished the notable feat of refueling twice in midair. Captain Lowell U. Smith and Lieutenant John 11. Hlchter. army aviators, are going to start again in another effort to seize the aviation records for which their flight was intended. Hie two factious In the town of Sunnier; Wash - hopelessly and bitter ly imnieii ror the last two years over the ipiestlon of pavement dancing will new have a chance to get together Main, Judge Card. In superior court today. Issued a permanent Injunction on the Sumner officials, restraining them from permitting any further street daiues. A colossal seated statue of Minerva, carved from colored alabaster, has been discovered on tho site of Km porliim. which was a landing place on the Tiber for marble shipments in the days of republican and Imperial Home. Surrounding Kmporium were schools for marble cutters and sculptors, and there also were many Hellenls-.tle art associations. Workmen, digging the foundation for a building, came upon the statue, which is carved In tho most exquisite Hellenistic style. Its color Is said id make it unique. Heedsport. An arrangement been made by local and Astoria fishing interests whereby a fleet of about 50 trollers will operate between Reedsport and Astoria during the coming run of salmon. Halsey. About COO persons attended the sale of the W. A. Carey herd of reg Istered Jerseys, three and one-half miles southeast of Halsey, Thursday The average price paid was ?100. Othe stock and fanning implements sold well. Heedsport. The Heedsport Lumbi company will install a new log carriage and connect a new boiler during th week beginning July 4, during which time the mill will be closed down. The boiler will Increase the mill's capacity from 10,000 to 15,000 feet daily. Salem. The Irrigation securitie com mission has certified ?10,000 add! tional bonds for the purchase of water rights in the middle fork Irrigation die trict near Hood Hiver. Last January the commission certified $55,000 bonds for Irrigation work in this district Mi ill'onl. New lias been received here that A. K. Heames of Medford well known Oregon attorney, was mar ried June 27 at the home of his broth er, Clarence Heames, in Seattle to Mrs Lillian Opie, daughter of Captain and Mrs. Edward J. Lannlng of Tacoma Wash. linker. Wltn hope revived by re newed activity in the mining districts of Granite and Greenhorn, the return of a large number of early day claim locators is noted and some of them have taken off their coats to make on more effort to see just what can be developed. Medford.- Word was received here Friday at the office of Superintendent rhomson of Crater national park from the large laboring force at the park that the road through the park to tin lodge is (dear of snow and ready for travel. The Crater lake season official ly opens Sunday. Lugene. Anglers and hunters may soon be able to drive up the south fork of the McKciizic river for a distance of several miles. The forest service is surveying a road from Belknap's ranch into the wilds of the south fork coun try, where the fishing and hunting ari- said to be excellent. Salem. License fees aggregating $:', UoO.UOO have been paid on motor vehl les in the state during the current year, an amount, $(157,000 greater than eceipta from this source during the orres ponding period in 1922, which was $2, !ii.!. (Mill, was the statement madi by Sam A. Kozer, secretary of stati Saturday, Eugene. The local lodge of Elks leered $SU0 on their play, "Ten Thou sand Dollars," staged two nights at tin lleilig t ileal er here, according to an louncemeiit. of the secretary of tin lodge. The money goes to the lodge't hurl I y fund. The cast of the play was made up entirely of members of tht lodge and of (heir families. Mood River.- Lundstrom & Carlson Portland contractors, Saturday com pleted laying concrete on an approxl mate mile of new market road paving n the main west side highway Just south of the city. The new paving which will be open to traffic In i!0 days is an extension of a mile of concreti laid last year. The cost Is about $25,000. Albany, tieorge Parker and Hull Johnson escaped Sunday afternoon from the Linn county jail, where they ere being held for the murder of Sheriff W. J, Dunlap. Parker was cap- lured a few minutes after he got out. lie was Men by Sheriff Richard before had climbed over an iron fence that urrounds the rear of the jail. Johnson us still at large late Sunday. Seaside. Indignant over the enforce ment of a new city ordinance prohibit Ing parking of curs on Broadway, a principal thoroughfare of Seaside, a legation of business men waited on Mayor Williams Friday. Demand that affie officers be ordered to Ignore he ruling were made by spokesmen. who claimed the ordinance was detri mental to business and unnecessary. Salem. The Oregon loganberry ex- ha n go started its first car of fresh berrl, s to the i astern market Sundav ornlng. The slump 111 sugar prices, hili' not yet bringing prices back to fair normalcy, is expected to make lie market better for logans. as they e an acid fruit requiring much sugar. With the sugar price too high the fru gal housewife will not buy logans In nan title. Newport. The Newport -ConrsJlla highway was opened the entire dis tance between the coast and the Wil lamette valley Saturday. State High ly Engineer Cllne and Commissioner Mulone Inspect) d the work Wednesday and said that the road work on the highway would be completed in the near future and that no detours would be used after the first of the coming week. FLEET RAGES INTO PORT 9748 Foreigners Brought to American Shores. 1660 ARE ADMITTED Only 2067 of Aliens Are Permitted Land at Ellis Island First Day Restrictions Are Lifted. to Army Tanks ow Down Trees M New York. Twelve steamships, bearing 11,482 passengers, of whom more than 6000 were steerage, and 9748 immigrants, entered New York port Sunday morning in a spectacular rush to take advantage of the new immigration quota and gave Ellis is land authorities the hardest July 1 in recent years. Because of the rush, Major Henry Curran, newly appoint ed immigration commissioner on Ellis island, permitted only 20C7 of the aliens to be landed at Ellis island dur ing the day. Of these 1660 were ad mitted. A new lot was landed early Sunday night. It was the start of the new immi gration year and shortly before mid night 11 ocean liners with full steam up lay outside the harbor, ready to dash up New York bay, pass through tho narrows and cross the imaginary finish line at quarantine in the annual mmigrant race. On board four of these vessels were aliens from Greece, Asiatic countries whose quota for the month is so small as to make speed necessary to escape exclusion. The number of Greeks arriving far exceed ed the quota for that country. Three years ago, when the restric tive immigration laws first became ef fective, the boardinir division of the mmigratlon service in the harbor numbered 40 inspectors. Today be cause of appropriation cuts, Commis sioner Curran has but 30 vessel-board ing inspectors, and this force augment ed in the early hours of the rush by four inspectors from Brooklyn, examin ed the 6000 immigrants before sun down. Ten physicians from the United States health service, under command of Major J. Corput, aided in passing physically perfect aliens. The Ellis island authorities actual r belli 15,582 persons to examine. Of these, 4100 were members of crews of the 12 ships arriving that docked. 1 he ship which won the race to quarantine, the Washington, of the Iiooras (Greek) line, flying the Amer ican flag, but in the Greek trade, was not one of the four permitted to land passengers. After the 1660 were passed and ferried to waiting relatives or friends at the Battery, additional aliens were permitted to be landed at Ellis island and every one of the 1500 beds there was occupied. "The rest will bo kept on the boats on which they arrived until we are ready for them," said the commisslon- Tho first country to fill Its quota was "Other Asia," comprising Persia and several smaller Asiatic countries. rho allotment of 16 persons to this territory was covered when the Brest lent Wilson landed 16 Persians, all of horn were admitted. ARAVAN OF BABIES IS HALTED BY OFFICERS Schenectady, N. Y. Mrs. Anna iewers, who arrived here Saturday IkIU In an automobile With one of the trangest caravans ever known, 19 liildren, most of them babies, one of hem dead and two suffering from in ant maladies not yet diagnosed, was lodged Sunday night at the county 1ms house with the 16 children who urvived the trip from her Brooklyn ome without evident mishap. The wo sick children. Alfred llolim am! larold Ryan, each but two months Id, aro at Ellis hospital, where also the body of Arthur Carpel, nine montns, w no died or pueumouia rOUght on during the trip. Mrs. Siewers told prosecuting of- cials, who have not yet decided what "tiou to take in the matter, that she ft her home iu Brooklyn Friday ight. Uncle Sam's Mechanical Ele phants Stage Show for Staff College Students. Washington. Uncle Sam's herd of mechanical elephants recently showed off at the army tank school. Camp Meade, Md., in a demonstration put on for the benefit of some seventy of ficers and Instructors from the staff school at the army war college. Half a dozen of the huge, lumber ing "Mark VIII" giant tanks devel oped during the war, but too late to share in the fighting, and a whole flock of the six-ton French type which did get into action participated In the show. The demonstration is one of the series of educational exhibits for the staff college students, all of whom are experienced officers whose military in struction is being rounded out to in sure an adequate supply of general officers and men with general staff qualifications. Tear Down Trees. To Introduce the student officers to the possibilities of modern tank war fare, Col. S. D. Itockenbnch, com mandant, of the tank corps and school, sent two of his huge 40-ton "Mark VOT' monsters skirmishing through the heavy woods on either side of a narrow roadway. When the signal to advance was given, the land battle ships surged forward reslstlessly, tearing great swaths as they passed, as though twin, narrow gauge cy clones had cut parallel paths of wreck age through the woodland. Towering trees went down before them like reeds, the tanks grinding them re morselessly under the steel-shod run ners. At times each tank was knock ing over half a dozen trees at the same time, literally rooting them from the earth and lumbering forward over prostrate trunks a foot or more in diameter. The sheer power of the geared liberty engines overcame every obstacle of ditch or bank or brush or tree clump, and not an Inch to right or left from the selected course were the monsters forced to swerve. Later a miniature tank attack was delivered over the rough, sandy field that Is the playground of the school herd. Thre "Mark VHTs" led the drive, their stx-pourider guns roaring and machine guns snarling as they crept forward behind n smoke bar rage hurled from their gnns. They looked like crawling dragons, breath ing smoke and flame as they shoul dered their way over ditches and sand dunes to disappear over a ridge be yond In clouds of dust and spouts of flying debris flung up from land mines that gave a realistic battle picture. Little Fellows In Wake. Behind the big fellows came a far flung line of the little slx-tonners, spitting with machine gun and one pounder fire. A dozen or more of the two-man tanks made up this line. Colonel Roekenhneh explained to the visiting officers that what they had seen thus far were tanks developed during the war. He recalled that In the first requisition from General Pershing for tank equipment, the call had come for the elements which would make up a land fleet, the fight ing tanks with auxiliary equipment of cross country, rough-going machines to bring up the artillery nnd supplies. Since the war, he added, some prog ress toward filling that requisition had been made. At a signal the new type, the 15-ton "medium tank" of the future, charged out Into the rough field. It fairly raced over humps and hummocks at a 12-mile gait, twisting and turning like a motorboat. Behind It came a "seventy-five" gun riding n similar mechanism and plunging about the field at high speed regardless of holes or ditches. It traveled with equal speed In either direction. Behind these two came the cross-country truck for ammunition, gusollne, oil and supplies. These three, Colonel Rock enbacb said, were the beginnings of the American land fleet that would play a great role In any future war. None of them was perfected as yet, he added, but within them were the elements of a new day in battle when machines would take more of the bur den from the fighting men. Says 49,000 Lives Can Be Saved in U. S. Yearly Louisville It Is possible to reduce the number of deaths from industrial accidents at least 80 per cent; to re duce the number of deaths from auto mobile, railroad and street car acci dents by at least 00 per cent, nnd to re duce the number of deaths from acci dents in the home and in public places by at least 50 per cent. It is possible to save 49,000 of the 80,000 lives lost through accidents In the United States each year. Thrs statement was made here by C. W. Price of New York city in an ad dress in connection with the opening of Louisville's "safety week." The state ment was bused, Mr. Price said, on the experiences of New York city, Boston, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, St. Louis, Balti more, Milwaukee, Detroit and Wash ington. "A careful study of the experience of these cities," Mr. Brice said, "reveals the significant fact that there are three determining factors which are respon sible for the success of any community public safety campaign. These three factors nre: Systematic dally safety instruction in the public schools; a continuous safety poster campaign on J Horse Travels 500 Miles to Old Home Barls, Ky. William Haag, a farmer, who came here from Jefferson City, Mo., several weeks ago, has received a letter from a Jefferson City man. clearing up the mystery of a horse which disappeared from Hang's barn. The horse is ut home. The animal was purchased by Haag from a Jefferson City neighbor in whose fumily it had been for eight years. When the horse was missed Haag advertised throughout this section and offered a reward. He had lost hope of recovering the animal when the letter came from Jefferson City. The horse had traveled alone 500 miles between the Haag farm In this county and its home In Missouri The letter said the horse was thin and exhausted. the streets, and un intensive safety education campaign In the dally press." Inventor Predicts Radio Films. London. A British inventor has produced what he culls the "televi sion," an apparatus which, he claims, will transmit sounds and images sim ultaneously without the use of wires. One can see the singer at the same time one hears his voice. He pre dicts the broudcastlng of films by radio. Wins $50,000 Heart Balm. Omaha, Neb. Miss Violet Johnstone of New York city was awarded $50,000 "heart balm" In her suit against Dr. Karl Connell, her former employer, In District court here. The verdict called for the entire amount sought in the; petition. SYear01d Girl Mascot of Ship Sea Captain's Daughter Has Crossed Pacific Twice and Is Master of Geography. San Francisco, Cal. Suppose you were a little girl five years old, and you lived in a small apartment, nicely fur nished though a little crowded, with your mother and futher, and suppose that when you walked out of the front door you found yourself on the long, narrow deck of a ship, with clouds and clouds of white canvass overhead, and nothing, as far as the eye could reach, but the sea. Suppose that Instead of learning to play tug and hop scotch you learned how to box the compass and knew every line and rope and stay and sail and piece of rigging on a ship ; that In stead of entertaining yourself with doll house and playing grownup and going to kindergarten you were amused by being tuught the difference between a skys'l and a tops'l, a spanker and a Jib, a brlgantine and a bark. Suppose you were a little sailor lass, daughter of a ship captain and grand daughter of a master and owner of ships, born within sight of the sea, and never out of sight of it and most of your life upon It. If you were all these things you would be exactly like Margaret Ster ling, mascot, favorite, tyrant, pet and plaything of the ship E. It. Sterling, the largest six-masted bnrkentlne In the world. Father Is Captain. Margarets futher is Capt. It. M. Sterling, master of the big barkentlne, who is, in turn, son of Capt. E. R. Ste mils. iuuiiuiuituiiu(j owner or the ves sel and one of the unusual and pic turesque men of the sea. Here Is a Real Pair of Kings Scores Hurt in Riot. Sydney. X. S. Scores of rioters ere injured, several of them serious ly. In a ( lash Sundttv nicht with n.dir a nd soldiers near the coke ovens of the British F.mplre Steel corporation plunt. The fighting started about 1:1(1 hen soldiers, preceded by mounted police, charged tho mobs with fixed bayonets. The disorder continued in. rmltteiitly until midnight when the hostilities ceased and the soldiers and police retired. ' " "jg S- ill -H ,1 j" Margaret has been twice ncross the Pacific, and into and out of most of the ports of the South seas. She knows more about geography than the average college graduate, in short, Margaret Is a daughter of the sea. The whole family Is p remarkable and Interesting one. Captain Sterling might have stepped right out of one of Peter B. Kyne's "Cappy Ricks" stories, for every minute of his life Is full of the sort of modern sen business of which Kyne writes so interestingly. His son, Capt. Ray Sterling, would have come from one of Joseph Con rad's tales. He might have been the young master In the story called "Youth." He Is quiet, reserved, solidly built, clear-eyed, capable, thoughtful and a master seaman. His wlte, Margaret's mother, might have come out of a novel by Kath leen Norrls or by Willing McFie. She Is too pretty for any possible ship master's wife; she is a gracious hos tess, a pleasant, well read, cultured quiet voiced little Australian girl, full of fun and Jokes, an ideal mother and an unusual wife. Her romance with the silent, grave, strong young Captain Sterling Is a story by Itself. She was one of the belles of Australia before her marriage, and it is safe to assume that the captain's luck left more than one young landsman in the Antipodes forlorn and bereft. Life Full of Thrills. There have been enough adventures packed Into the lives of these people aboard the E. R. Sterling to make sev eral books. They think little of them. Margaret, the baby, is as blase as an old salt. "I'm getting perfectly tired of this life," she said, with a yawn. "I pre fer to stay ashore and I'm going to make daddy give up the ship and come with us to live In a house soon." She talks like a woman of twenty at times. But who wouldn't, If she 'had only old snllors and mother and father to learn with and from, and only saw other little people once In a blue moon, when the big barkentlne is tied up at some pier or In some dock discharging or taking on cargo. Margaret says she is going to make the captain stay ashore swn so that she can go to school and have a back yard and a sand pile and play with ttle girls of her age as much as she likes. New photograph of Knit; aiioumj Ol SOSlU l-fM .,,.! k inn All . .. K" 7 , IT"" lo nj er King Alfonso most led of modern monarch, an occasional visitor to his own country." trav- rr Angry Bull Smashes Two Red Automobiles Two automobiles belonging to Ernest and Earl Blalsdell of Wolcott, N. y., were badly dam aged when charged and butted by an enraged bull which broke dewn the fence of his pusture when he saw the offending cars. The Blalsdell brothers are twins and each painted his automobile a deep red. When farmers came to the rescue of the motorcars they were forced to retreat until pitchforks and stout clubs were obtained with which to beat the animal back into the pasture. The curs had been left parked beside the fence. .8