WORLD HAPPENINGS GOVERNOR WALTON OUSTED OF CURRENT WEEK Brief Resume Most Important Daily News Items. COMPILED FOR YOU Events of Noted People, Governments and Pacific Northwest, and Other Things Worth Knowing. Oklahoma Chief Found Guilty on 11 of the 10 Charges. Ex-President Wilson, addressing the third Armistice day delegation that greeted him at his home here, declar ed that the principles for which he BtOOd will triumph. Messages received in Berlin from Munich says that General Rudondorff was Bt ill on parole, but was being Strictly watched. He had been allow ed to choose his own place of residence. A jury in the ISth district court at Cleburne, Tex., Tuesday found T. W. Davis, sheriff of Somervell county, guilty of a charge of accepting a bribe ;ind fixed punishment at four years In the state penitentiary. Govern Of Pinchot of Pennsylvania has sent letters to tho governors of 2!) anthracite consuming states inviting then to B conference hero November 20 to consider a program of federal leg islation designed to reduce coal prices. President f'oolidge conferred Wed nesday with George C. Jowett, general lcnimgcr of the American Wheat Grow ers' Association, Inc., on tho question of agricultural relief. Tho talk was i onfiiied more especially to proposals lor helping the wheat farmer. An attempt is to be mado to recover from Lake Noml, near Rome, tho float ing palace of tho Emperor Tiberius, consisting of two galleys, which have In en buried in tho mud for 19 cen turies. The nro believed to contain marvels of ancient art equal to those tdund In the tomb of Tutankhamen. Por tho first time in a number of years tho threshing of gruin in the Haines valley, Oregon, was not finish ed liy November 1. This condition wua partly the result of acreago and yields and partly on neeount of tho growers' failure to obtain tho required help dur ing the harvest and threshing season. Huron Schimnolpetinlck, burgomaster of Doom, assured tho correspondent of tho Associated Press Tuesday on his word of honor that ho was not n ware of any Intention on tho part of ox-Emperor William to leave Doom. The baron added that he considered that such folly as the ex-emperor's ro turn to Germany wns unbelievable. In a ringing "reaffirmation of faith" in tho "virgin birth of Christ and the apostles' creed," the house of bishops of the Protestant Episcopal church in Dallas. Texas, Wednesday evening threw down the' gauntlet to various Churchmen in and out of the ministry who have been casting doubt upon literal interpretation of tho scriptures. Findings and recommendations of the Washington Btnto board of bar examiners, holding that William H. IV1I, attorney, of Seattle, former su perior court judge, had boon guilty of OOUdOCl involving moral turpitude and i' i onuiiondlng that his license be ro voked and that ho be disbarred, were filed recently with tho clerk of the state supreme court. Kevision of federal taxes, estimated to reduce the total assessment by 113,000.000 next year, is proposed In thi' i nigrum approved by Secretary V Una for submission to congress. K"i ommondations are made for a 25 p. i cent reduction in tho taxes on oanied Income; reduction of tho nor mul taxes on incomes from 4 per cent and N per cent to ;i per cent and t! per ceOl respectively. Germany has decided to repudiate the treaty of Versailles and not to comply with either tho reparations "clause or any ether of the clauses of til, treaty as long as the French and tlolgtans occupy the Ruhr, says a dis patch to ttie London Dally Mall from Berlin, This action was taken on th ground that the treaty of Versailles had been violated by Prance and that therefore it could not be observud by Germany. Oklahoma City, Okla. J. C. Walton, fifth governor o Oklahoma, was re moved from office Monday Sight- by unanimous vote of the state s ;nate court of impeachment, after his trial on charges of corruption In office, neglect of duty, moral turpitude and general incompetence. A formal verdict, ordering the re moval, was returned after the execu tive had been found guilty of 11 of tho 16 charges presented. The vote was '11 to 0. Six of the original 22 charges con stituting the impeachment bill were dismissed by order of the court. The court, by a standing vote, defiled a motion for a new trial, which Gov ernor Walton's counsel filed imme diately after the verdict was an nounced. The governor's removal, although not formally ordered until after a ver dict bad been returned on each charge, was made certain shortly before 4 o'clock, when the court, without a dis senting vote, found him guilty of abus ing bis pardon and parole authority. Forty-one senators, lacking only one of the total membership of the body, voted for conviction on tho clemency charge, the first to be voted upon. Senator Jack Barker, who has voted consistently in the governor's favor throughout the 1G days, of tho trial, was absent when the final roll was called. Tho articles of impeachment were filed by tho lower house of the state legislature, which less than two months ago tho executive at the height of his power had dispersed by military force. Upon the removal of Governor Wal ton, Lieutenant-Governor rrapp oe came governor of the state. Trapp has been lieutenant-governor during two tour-year administrations and lias been acting governor since October T., when the senate suspended Gover nor Walton. The vote on the pardon and parole charge, which determined the removal, followed with surprising suddenness aftar the examination of tho last wit ness. E. W. Marland, president of the Marland Refining company, had barely left the stand when W. K. Disney, chairman of the house board of managers, which conducted the prosecution, announced that the evi dence was concluded. COURT TIGHTENS BAN ON JAPANESE TRADE CONFEREES OPPOSE RAIL LAW Esch-Dummins Resolution Is Tabled by 2-1 Vote. PRESIDENT REMANED (letter Navigation Facilities and Oth er Measures for Corst Ports Are Advocated. "Tht Mate's Wstch." From the report of a shipping case "The steaiuer proceeded on her way until 7 or rather later, when a noise wan heard its of a heavy body like an anchor or a chain being dragged alon the doi k from the funnel alt. It was the mate's watch." Washington. D. C. Tho Pacific coast states won a complete victory in (he supreme court Monday in their efforts to prevent Japanese from ac quiring any control over or interest in agricultural lands. Having a week ago sustained the validity of the alien land laws under which aliens ineligible to citizenship wi re prohibited from owning or leas ing agricultural land, the court took the final step to make such legisla tion completely effective by holding lhal in the construction of such laws the intention of the states must be arsfullf considered' and that any transaction which would have the i lei t in any reasonable contingency of giving such aliens any control over Igrl CUltttral lands equivalent to owner ship and leasing must be construed as prohibited. In testing out the alien land laws el' California and Washington, attacks were directed not only through pro posed leases, as in the two cases de- iiled last week, but also through "Cropping contracts and attempts ly ineligible aliens to acquire stock in ompaiiies authorized to buy and sell agricultural lands. When confronted with a contract Which .1. J. O'Hrien proposed to make wilh J. Inouye. a Jnpanese, under which the latter was to cultivate agri- ultural land in Santa Clara county. California, anil divide crops with the owner of the land, the federal district court for northern California could find nothing in tho arrangement con trary to the alien land laws. The same court, however, when Raymond Prick proposed to sell to N. Satow stock in a corporation formed to own and deal in agricultural lands, decided that the ownership of the stock by an ineligible alien was prohibited, Roth cases were appealed to the supreme court. The Esch-Cummins railroad law, passed in 1920, Saturday failed to draw tho support of the Pacific for eign trade council, which held the final session of its threo days' conference in Portland. A resolution approving the statute and requesting tho next congress to allow it to stand, at least "until such time as it has had a fair trial," was tabled by a vote of 2 to 1. Other resolutions asking congres sional action in the solution of various trade and transportation problems were adopted unanimously as present ed by the resolutions conynittee. The only other provision which de veloped discussion was tho attack on the extension of the coastwise ship ping provisions to the Philippine is lands. No motion to eliminate this part of the report was made, though a discussion was precipitated. William Pigott of Seattle, who for the past three years has headed the council, was re-elected as president and Edward P. Kemmer of Tacoma was renamed secretary. The 1921 convention will be held in Sail Francisco, it was decided, that port having made the only organized effort to get the next meeting. The resolutions formally adopted advocate the placing of the emergency fleet corporation vessels in tho hands of private owners, under a scheme ap proved by ship operators and owners. Sale of such vessels, possible at pres ent, is approved and the contracting of the remainder with American con cerns for the operation of the others proposed, such vessels to be sold ai a stipulated prico after three years' time. During this period agents' com missions would apply to purchase and deficits, to a certain extent, be borne by the shipping board. Improvement of navigation facili ties, including hydrographic and geo detic survey extonsion, addition of UghtbOUM and buoy provisions, was advocated, charging that insufficiency of these facilities was resulting in numerous accidents. Repeal of section 28 of the merchant marine act was advocated, providing for import and export rail rates, lower than domestic rates; government ac commodations for news communica tions from foreign countries at re duced rates; removal of all federal taxes on telegrams to relieve the com mercial trade, which is responsible for 95 per cent of the telegraphic com munication; amendment of the China trade act, so as to place American business there on a parity with other foreign concerns; opposing the estab lishment of trade agreements with Russia until her condition stabilizes and assaults on American business are discontinued and restituted; and re duction of passport fees from $10 to $2.50 were among the chief actions taken. FIVE BAD GOBLINS OXCE in a garden, long, long ago, there grew a rose bush, and In those days, so the fairies sny, the rose bush had no thorn to prick lingers. And the fairies say it never would have had thorns If something had not happened which made it necessary for the protection of the little fairies that every pretty rose bush should have thorns. In this long-ago garden one night five dainty little fairies, after they had finished their work tinting the flowers, crept into the half-opened buds of five roses and went to sleep. They did not intend to sleep very long, just long enough to rest before joining their sister fairies and their Queen In the dell for a midnight frolic. Rut the little fairies were tired and they did not wake up at the magic hour when all the little magic folk are abroad. Out of their rocky doorways at the midnight hour tumbled all the gob lins, bent on mischief ns they always are, and five of them ran out of the woods Into the road, and. finding a nice smooth path made by a cart wheel, those live naughty goblins fol lowed it. The wheel path led straight to the garden, right up to the gate and when Pocket Must Not Bulge. New Orleans, La. 0. D. Jackson, federal prohibition enforcement agent for Louisiana, Saturday ordered his men to arrest any person with a sus picious bulge in their pockets or who carry a suspicious package. "Place them under arrest, take them to a police station and search them," were the Instructions. "If you find liquor upon them, prefer charges of violating the prohibition law." 1000 Aliens Face Action. Seattle. More than 1000 Japanese residing in King county will face civil and criminal proceedings as the result of the I'nlted States supreme court decision holding that "cropping" con trails with aliens are illegal, declared Deputy Prosecutor Colvln. Mr. Colvin stated that he was unable to estimate tho total number of Japanese within the state who will face eviction, but asserted that the largo Japanese farm colonies will be affected. Greek Rebels Spared. London.- instructions have been is sued to the Greek military authorities not to execute the sentences of death imposed on the leaders of the recent revolt among the provincial garrisons, according to an agency dispntch from Athens. The reprieve was said to have followed negotiations between I he government and a representative of the Venizelist party. Cholera Attacks Hogs. Chicago, 111 There Is a serious out break of hog cholera in parts of tho. corn belt. Reports received Saturday by a large grain and provision con corn here from 20 points In the west show that In the territory around 11 oi uiese points ine camera is ot a serious character. I TrT' L- x -Jr. i, K SKti I MPS "This Is the Flower Garden and the Tinting Fairies Have Been Here." the goblins reached the end of the path they tumbled into the garden. "Oh," exclaimed one little goblin, "this Is a flower garden and the tint ing fairies have been here. Let's spoil every flower that lias been colored. The Queen will be sure to see it and Scold them." To every flower they went nnd pulled off a petal nnd, of course, they eftme to the rose bush where the five little fairies were fast asleep. The goblin that had climbed the rose bush where he discovered the sleeping fairies quickly scrambled down and ran to tell his brothers. "They are fast asleep and we will hide their wands," he said. "No, let us carry them off to our home and Change the stones Into tilings we want," said another. "Yes," whispered the others; but while they were climbing the rose bush to get the wands one goblin whis pered It would be great sport to pull the rosebuds apart and let the fairies tumble out. To each rosebud went a goblin. First he took the wand from the sleep ing fairy and tucked it under one arm. Then he pulled at the rosebud, and amid the falling rose petals each little fairy fell out on the ground. The five bad goblins jumped and away they ran before the bewildered little fairies could pick themselves up or know just what had happened. Five little fairies jumped up and rubbed their sleepy eyes, but It was only a second before they discovered that their wands were gone. "It was the goblins," said one. "They must have wandered into the garden and climbed the rose bush and carried off our wands." "Look, sisters," said another little fairy ; "those bad goblins came here to do mischief. Look at the pretty flowers that were tinted. Every one lias lost a petal. "They came to destroy our work and happened to find us asleep, so they stole our wands. We must hurry to the dell and tell the Queen what has happened." When the Fairy Queen heard their story she did not scold. She smiled and said: "Wait and see what hap pens. You shall have your wands this very night, I promise you. Now run along and join in the dance with your sisters." JIow long the merrymaking of the fairies had been going on no one could tell, but long before daylight streaked the sky five unhappy looking goblins came slowly into the dell and made their way to the throne of the Queen. Under one arm each held the wand he had stolen just as he carried It a way from the rose bush. They had not been able to do anything else, for when they tried to take the wand from under their arm each goblin found he could not move it or his arm either. All of their brother gnhlins tugged and pulled at the wands, trying to help them. Rut it was of no use, the arm and wand could not be moved, so they had to come to the Fairy Queen for help. Very shamefaced did those five naughty goblins look as they ap proached the Queen ; they did not have to tell her why they had come. She gently touched each arm that held the wand nnd down fell the wand and nway scampered those five goblins so fast that their heels looked like tiny pebbles tossing up and down. They did not even thank the Queen. All they thought of wns getting away from the fairy dell nnd locking them selves in their rocky homes. Rut the roses had to be thought of, now the wands were safe, for the fairies always used them to sleep In when they were nway from home. So the Queen that very night started off In her pearl conch with Its white mice horses, visited all the rose bushes and placed thorns on every one. And now you know why the sweet roses have thorns on their stems to keep the goblins from disturbing the fairies If they happen to fnll nsleep In a rosy bed. For I am certain you will agree that once a goblin pricked his finger with a sharp thorn he would scamper away and never touch a rose bush ngnln. (. 1923, by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) PROFESSIONAL CARDS DR. ALEXANDER REID Physician and Surgeon L'JIATTLLA OREGON G. L. McLELLAN, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Fraternal Building Stanfield, Oregon DR. F. V. PRIME DENTISTRY Dental X-ray and Diagnosis HERMISTON, ORE. Dank Building Phones: Office 93. Residence 751. Newton Painless Dentists Dr. H. A. Newton, Mgr. Cor. Slain and Webb Sts. Pendleton BUSINESS CARDST Umatilla Pharmacy J W. E. Smith, Prop. Mail orders given special atten tion. Quick Service Satisfaction Quaranteed X Umatilla, Oregon i imimiiiniitmiiiniiiiHiiimtiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiii'iiiiiimnniuiitiintiiiiiiiiiiMiiiitiiiiimiiiiiir 5 MEN YOU MAY MARRY By E. R. PEYSER Has a Man Like This Proposed to You? Symptoms: Glasses. Some times honed spectacles. Always a copy of Wall Street Journal In his hand. Very quietly, very well dressed, very good appear ing, rather aristocratic. He has a sweet smile, but uses It seldom. Seems n bit weary, yet he rises for a fairly dressed woman In the surface car with a visible hatred at being seen offering his seat. He is shy. Seems to take little notice of anything going on about him. Ills brows contract a bit occasionally. Seems young for responsibility. Yet you feel he has a lot of It. IN FACT He himself Is a responsibility. Prescription for His Bride: 1T Just lOTS your home, quiet, t nnd I i i in nnd Corssks nil other things. Ipholster the easy chair often; he loves It bet ter than theater seats. Absorb This: A WALL STREET MAN IN THE OFFICE IS WORTH TWO IN THE HOME. by McClura Nwppr Syndicate.) THE RIGHT THING at the RIGHT TIME By MARY MARSHALL DUFFEE I J. L. VAUGHAN I 206 E. Court Street T I'EXDLETON, - OREGON T t Electrical Fixtures and t Supplies Electric Contracting Eat and Drink AT THE NEW FRENCH CAFE E. J. McKNEELY, Prop. Pendleton, Oregon Only the Best Foods Served X Fancy Ice Creams Furnished Rooms over Cafe ijuick Service Eunch Counter in connection with Dining room You Are Welcome Here X (Ceprrlsat. by McClur Cynolcata.) WHEN TRAVELING pON"T carry more hand luggage with you than you can con veniently dispose of. Remember that you nre only entitled to a single seat in the dny coach or a chair In the Pull man car and If you have ever so many bags and boxes they are sure to tres pass on the territory of your fellow travelers. Large luggnge should be checked on your ticket and sent to the baggage ear. Don't open windows regardless of other persons. Always consult the wishes of the others sharing your seat. Don't permit the raised shade of your window to let In blinding sun light In the eyes of a passenger be hind you. If possible provide yourself with a time-table and correct your watch be fore starting on your trip so as not to have to ask the conductor or brakeman Innumerable questions in transit. Don't leave luggage projecting so that those passing in the aisle might stumble over It. ion't put heavy lug gage In the racks. This Is dangerous, ns a sudden lurch of the train might cause It to fall, and Injure those below. These racks are Intended only for light objects. Don't disturb others by walking up and down the aisle, nnd leaving your seat for Innumerable drinks of water. The one who travels with the least commotion and who sits most quietly Is the one who feels nnd looks less fatigued after the day's trip. Don't think that just because you are off on a hhllday, everyone else Is. You msy have time to loiter, but others may be Intent on business. I, 1111. by McCtar Nawapaptr Syndlcata.) We Specialize in JOB WORK Take that next job to your Home Printer m A. 11. X. Stanfield, President, l iank Sloan, 1st Yice-Dres. M. It. Eing, 2nd Ylce-Prcs. Ralpli A. Holte, Cashier i Bank of I Stanfield Capital Stock and Surplus S37.500.00 Four Per Cent Interest Paid on Time Certifi cates of Deposit