WORLD
III
EMPLOYMENT GOES DOWN
$ STATE NEWS
IN BRIEF.
SCHOOL DAYS
Wages Increase In X omparlaon Made
BRITAIN'S COAL PITS
Hi
I
IE
14 Principal Industries.
Ill
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Brief Resume Most Important
Daily News Items.
COMPILED FOR YOU
Evrnti of Noted People, Government
and Pacific Northwest, and Other
Thing Worth Knowing.
The bolshevik communique ot Tues
day says that fighting is active on all
fronts. Both sides are attacking, with
varying success.
Three prisoners were shot and a
guard was badly beaten in a riot at
the Maryland penitentiary Tuesday.
None of the wounded was dangerously
injured. A Bquad ot policemen sub
dued the malcontents.
More than 100 houses, most ot them
occupied by negroes, were destroyed
Wednesday in a blaze which started
In the negro section of Fine Bluff,
Ark. Nearly S00 people were made
homeless. A fund for their relief is
being raised.
The Deer Trail, Colo., State bank
and the First National bank were en
tered by robbers some time Tuesday
night and several thousand dollars in
cash and securities were taken. Of
ficials believe the loss may mount as
high as 175,000.
- A campaign to combat unrest and
discontent among farming elements of
the country was being put under way
Wednesday by the Grain Dealers' Na
tional association through its legisla
tive department. The association Is
in annual convention in Minneapolis.
The states of New York and New
Jersey joined hands and broke ground
Tuesday for a vehicular tunnel be
neath the Hudson riv,er which will be
the biggest subaqueous structure In
the world. The $28,000,000 project
was launched while thousands ot citi
zens cheered.
Signs of the approaching collapse
of bolshevism in Russia are seen by
state department officials in the crum
bling of soviet authority on the Polish
front and the rapidly augmenting
strength of anti-bolshevik forces in
the southeastern part of Europe under
General WrangeL
The Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul
railroad has been paid a sum, under
stood to be $30,000,000, in full com
promise settlement with the United
States railroad administration for the
period it was operated under federal
control. It is the first of the major
lines to reach such settlement
While arrests were being made dur
ing the military raids in Drumcondra,
a suburb of Dublin, two officers were
shot dead, one non-commissioned of
ficer was wounded and one civilian
was killed and another wounded, ac
cording to an official report of the
affair made public Tuesday.
Acting under orders of John M. Con
sidlne, prohibition enforcement offi
cer, of San Francisco, George Poult-
ney, internal revenue officer, Wednes
day carried out a series of raids in
the outskirts of Sacramento. Thir
teen arrests were made and illicit
liquors valued at $20,000 confiscated.
The supreme court refused Tuesday
to reconsider its decision of last June
7 sustaining validity of the prohibition
amendment and provisions of the en
forcement act. The rehearing had
been asked in petitions by Christian
Feigenspan, a brewer of Newark, N.
J., and George C. Dempsey, a whole
sale liquor dealer of Boston, Mass.
The French cabinet Tuesday adopt
ed a programme to reduce the cost of
living in France. Departmental coun
cils of consumers' are to be established
with a central council in Paris. The
use of fish is to be encouraged and
many fish markets will be opened,
while the exportation of dairy prod
ucts and cheese will be prohibited.
Approximately 6300 acres of home
stead and desert land in the Eureka
and Sacramento land districts of Cali
fornia will be opened to entry Decem
ber 3, the interior department an'
nounces. The land is classed as non
agricultural, mountain grazing land
and entry will be reserved to ex-serv
ice men for 60 days after the opening,
as provided by law.
Failure of the" fuse attached to four
quarts of dynamite confined in a gal
lon syrup glass jar to burn saved the
plant of the North Bend, Or., Sunday
Morning Bee from destruction and the
life of Us owner, Frank B. Cameron,
whose tome 1b in the building. The
bomb was placed In the basement of
the Bee office some time Sunday
night. Editor Cameron found It next
morning.
Washington, D. C Ten of the 14
principal industries In the United
States showed a decrease in employ
ment during the month ot September
as compared with August, according to
statistics made public Tuesday by the
labor department. Nine ot the 14
showed a decrease last September as
compared with September, 1919.
Whole the volume of employment
in these Industries has been steadily
decreasing, the amount of payroll in
10 ot the 14 shows an increase during
last September over the same month
last year. During September of this
year as compared with August, the
same number showed a decrease In
payroll as in volume of employment
The Industries chosen for the com
parlson are iron and steel, automo
biles, car building and repairing, cot
ton manufacturing, cotton finishing,
hosiery and underwear, woolen, silk,
men's clothing, leather, boots and
shoes, paper making, cigars and bi
tuminous coal mining.
Decrease In volume of employment
during September was shown In auto
mobile, 4.5 per cent; car building and
repairing, 4.3 per cent; cotton manu
facturing, .9 per cent; cotton finishing,
6.4 per cent; hosiery and underwear,
.7 per cent; Bilk, 6.9 per cent; men's
clothing, 6.8 per cent; leather, 7.6 per
cent; boots and shoes, 14.4 per cent
paper making 1.1 per cent
On the increase in volume of em
ployment, woolen with 37.9 per cent
is the heaviest. The amount of In
crease of payroll In the woolen In
dustry during September wis 32.6 per
cent.
In comparative statistics for Sep
tember, 1920 over 1919, our building
and repairing is shown as increasing
the volume of employment but 29.1
per cent, but the increase in amount
of payroll was 62.2 per cent; paper
making showed an increase of em
ployment of 8.7 per cent, but Increase
in payroll of 37 per cent and coal
mining a decrease of 61 per cent in
employment with an increase in pay
roll of 30.4 per cent.
10-CENT COFFEE
YIELDS BIG PROFIT
Boston. Restaurant keepers who
were called on by United States At
torney Daniel J. Gallagher at an open
hearing Monday to "explain away if
possible the conviction in the mind
of the public that you are gouging
them In the prices charged for food,"
said they could not reduce prices at
this time. As a consequence the fed
eral attorney announced that he In
tended "to find some way to give per
sons charging excessive prices a
chance to satisfy a court and jury on
their charges."
Ham sandwiches that cost 6.29 cents
and sold for 30 cents, a profit of 399
per cent; rolls which showed a profit
of 300 per cent, and pie, costing 46 to
48 cents, which sold for $1.40, figured
in the Items which the attorney made
the subject of questions.
Other items which he thought re
quired an explanation included alleged
profits running to 1900 per cent on
vegetables, sale of corn at 40 cents an
ear, coffee at 10 cents a cup and pie
at 20 cents a cut.
Movie Treasury Looted.
Kansas utty, Mo A masked man
entered the oflce of a downtown mo
tion picture theater Monday while the
manager was counting the Sunday's
receipts, forced him, at the point of a
revolver, to hold up his hands and ob
tained $1000.
As he was leaving another theat
rical official entered. He was forced
to part with a ring valued at $1200,
$150 in cash and two cashier's checks
totaling $17,500.
Deserter Gets 15 Years.
Washington, D. C President Wil
son has confirmed the sentence of
dismissal from service and 15 years'
imprisonment at hard labor imposed
by courtmartial upon John C. Gotten-
kiene, second lieutenant, of the 6th
field artillery. He was convicted of
deserting his command at Neuhausel,
Germany, In June, 1919, after em
bezzling $36,051 of military funds.
Alaska Tax Law Stands.
San Francisco. A rehearing of its
recent decision upholding the right of
the territorial government of Alaska
to impose a poll tax on the crews of
ships visiting fishing waters within Its
confines was denied by the United
States circuit court of appeals here.
Reds Recapture Minsk..,
London. The bolshevik! have re-
occupied Minsk, which, according to
their official communique issued Mon
day, the Poles have abandoned. The
bolshevik troops, under pressure, how
ever, are retiring to new positions in
the Slutsk-Polesla regions.
Employes Guarding Mines Only
Men Not on Strike:
GLOOM GRIPS EMPIRE
Decision of Railway and Transport
Workers to Join in Sympathetic
To Jit Known Soon.
London. The British coal industry
Monday was at a standstill. After
mouths ot negotiations between the
miners and the government, lu which
netlher side was willing to concede the
crucial points, the pits aro closed and
Great Britain seemingly Is facing days
ot industrial chaos, uucqualed even
during the world. war.
Except for the pump men and other
employes who are to keep the mines
free from water and otherwlso In good
condition tor a resumption ot work
when the strike Is ended, all the mines
were idle Monday.
Sunday, however, In the view ot a
large portion ot the populace, was not
a good day on which to form concise
judgment ot the potentialities of the
strike.
A feeling ot pessimism prevails not
withstanding the fact that Premier
Lloyd George has stated that every
thing will be done to keep the great
Industries of the country going. To
morrow probably will show whether
the railway men and the transport
workers the other two wings of la
bor's triple alliance are to join the
miners.
Outside of some unofficial conversa
tions between the various labor lead
ers, thero has been no noteworthy de
velopment in the minors' strike. Ev
erywhere there Is talk of possibility of
mediation, but up to late this evening
no steps had been taken.
With the exception ot the food min
istry, which presented a scene of ac
tivity, recalling the times of the rail
road strike last year, all official de
partments were quiet.
One effect' of the strike will be, It Is
expected, to bring the industrial crisis
Into greater prominence than the Irish
question, when parliament reassembles
Tuesday, There is much speculation
whether, In the event of the railroad
men or transport workers deciding on
simultaneous strikes, thereby precip
itating a still graver industrial crisis,
the government would decide to appeal
to the country by a general election to
Indorse the course taken by It.
2 RADICAL PARTIES
FORMED IN GERMANY
Halle, Germany. Two distinct revo
lutionary parties, one pledged to the
dictatorship of the proletariat, through
an alliance with the Third Internation
ale, the other working toward "prole
tarian comradeship" in opposition to
Moscow, have developed out of the
wreck of the Independent socialists.
The left majority under the leader
ship of Daumig, Adolph Hoffman and
Otto Bass, the young leader of Ithine
Iand labor, conferred Monday on the
question of ' executing an agreement
with Moscow for a world revolution
and directed the district leaders to
prepare for a strike. The minority,
under the joint presidency of George
Ledebour and Herr Crlspien, In a
separate convention, laid plans to com
municate with the revolutionary forces
in all countries opposed to Moscow and
prepare an organized campaign against
bolshevlst methods.
MacSwIney Passes 66th Day.
London. Terence MasSwlney, lord
mayor of Cork, passed the 66th day of
his hunger strike in Brixton prison
fairly well, said Sunday night's bul
letin of the Irish Self Determination
league. He slept part of the day. His
physical condition, adds the bulletin,
"Is one of ever increasing weakness,
but his mind Is clearer, keener and
more active than ever. He con
versed for quite a time with rela
tives." Monkey Bite Looks Bad.
Athens. King Alexander, critically
111 from monkey bite inflicted recent
ly, suffered two hours of the most
dangerous crisis Sunday night. The
cabinet met at midnight and decided
to summon the late parliament to
elect a regent. Throughout Friday
the king's condition remained 'sta
tionary. His temperature fluctuated,
reaching 104.9 degrees, and he was
restless.
John Day. Dr. W. II. Lytl. state
veterinarian, reports that the livestock
of the John Day section I free of dia
ease and In the best ot condition for
wintering.
Grants Pass. Fishermen are com
ing Into Grants Pass from many points
In order to get some ot the steelhead
fishing which is now at Its prime.
Large catches aro being mudo dully
with flies and spinners, some ot the
steelhoad being especially large this
year.
Eugene. Over 1000 cattle graied in
the Cuscado national forest In tho vi
cinity of Oakridga during the past
summer and tall, according to II, K,
Vincent, assistant supervisor ot that
forest, who has just returned from an
Inspection trip, looking after grating
contracts.
Fulrvlew. Julius l.uscber won fifth
place at the state fair In stock club
work with his pure bred calf. In the
club stock Judging contest at the Mult
nomnh county fair tho Falrvlcw team
won second place. The members are
John Flemmlng, Julius I.uschor and
Fay Ilullt.
Forest Grove. The farmers In this
vicinity are much discouraged over
their prune crops this yenr. Owing to
the heavy rainfall and lack ot help,
a 50 per ceut loss Is estimated, but It
there should bo a change In tho weath
er it Is probable that 25 per ceut of
the standing crop could be saved.
Hood Itlver. II. II. Weber, whoso
ranch place is nenr Odell, exhibited
a record freak potato vino on which
tho tubers have formed like tomatoes
on top ot the ground. The potatoes
have formed at Joints of the vine.
Local ranchers say they have never
seen potatoes grow In such fashion
before.
FuIIb City. The whistle of the Falls
City Lumber and Logging company's
big mill blew for the first time In six
weeks, and a crew of 150 men resumed
their work. The shut down was oc
casioned by the car shortage. Since
cars are not yet very plentiful, tho
mill will run only four days a week
for the present
Ashland. Talent, Ore., voted $100,-
000 bonds to build a reservoir on Emi
grant creek, east ot Ashland and the
east side ditch which will complete the
irrigation system In that district. The
vote was 71 to 3. As soon as the bonds
are sold construction work will begin.
This new ditch will water 8500 acres
In the Talent district.
Stanfleld. The first carload of ap
ples was shipped out the first of the
week and from now on tho shipping
will be from one to two carloads a day.
The crop Is not quite coming up to
expectations, nor will It be as good as
estimated. The hall storm that passed
over some parts ot this district did
considerable damage to the fruit.
Portland. The British Btoamers
Memphis and Hellbronu, carrying full
cargoes, respectively, of flour and
wheat, departed for tho United King
dom Friday morning, the Memphis at
6 o'clock and the Hellbronn at 9. The
two big frelghtors have aboard about
9000 tons of cereals apiece, and the
two cargoes are worth close to $2,000,-
000.
Salem. The application of Fort
Klamath Meadows company of Fort
Klamath covering the appropriation of
116 second feet of the waters of Four
Mile creek, Seven-Mile creek and Ann
creek, tributaries of Upper Klamath
lake, for the Irrigation of 9318 acres
of land has been approved by Percy
A. Cupper, state englneor, according to
announcement made here recently.
Salem. Douglas county Is the only
prune-growing district In the state
that has not reported losses ot this
year's crop ranging from 25 to 65 per
cent, according to statistics on file In
the local offices of the Oregon Grow
ers' Co-operative association. In other
sections of Oregon and Clalrke county,
Wash., from 40 to 75 per cent of the
prune crop was destroyed by the heavy
rains.
Salem. Following the curtailment
of loans by the federal reserve banks,
hundreds of applications from prospec
tive borrowers of state school funds
have been received at thq office of G,
Brown, clerk of the Btate land
board, during the last two weeks. A
report prepared by Mr. Brown today
showed that the application for loans
now on hand exceeded by more than
$150,000 the available Bchool funds in
the hands of the state treasurer.
Bend. Hundreds of thousands of
acres of lodge pole and Jack pine In
central Oregon, valueless for timber,
may become an Important Industrial
resource. Experiments conducted un
der the direction of John Steld of
Bend and Dr. U. C. Coe of Portland
have demonstrated that a good grade
of commercially valuable paper can he
manufactured from the pine and local
business men aro endeavoring to In
terest capital In the establishment of
a pulp mill here.
p I if.. f 1 M
mMMUi 1
Rann-dom Reels
B7 HOWARD L RANN
NAMING Till: Il.UJY
NAMING the Imby Is a delicate op
eration which rcnulre mure tnei
and Unease limit discussing war w ith a
total stmnser. When a linliv la born
Into the home It is carefully Weighed
by the proud father, who ulway
throws In a couple of pound fur good
measure, after which the enllre family
will begin to hunt nround fur a name
tluit will satisfy everybody mull the
baby gets big enough to realise
what bus been attached to It.
Under our tirosent mode of invent-
ment the bnby Is not consulted nbout
Its name, but is obliged to accent any
combination ot letters which will keep-
mi olil maid aunt in good humor.
Sometimes the baby Is named utter nu
ancestor who was an advocate of sim
plified Kwlllng, and is thus given a
short, Jerky cognomen which follow It
down to old age. Then a No It Is quite
popular to hunt through the Bible for
the correct spelling of Jereboiim, mid
nfler this Is determined the child I
riveted to It and compelled to go
W Must It
B 0 Toa
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OS St IT
SmiTh
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NM..
I KIWI
PtAtSol ZCHOA, ec'U I
i(. mi giut
toMT IN "M
UOUlTiON'
Under Our Present Form of Govern
ment the Baby Is Not Consulted.
through llfo explaining to curious
friends that lie Was not old enough to
prevent It.
One of Hie greatest pleasures In llfo
Is to he presented with a set of twin
and then try to locate n pair of lung,
meter names for them. Nearly all
twins nre given names Hint sound us
much alike us possible, (bus making It
nn easy mutter lo tell them iipnrt nfler
they have been Identified by tho pa
rents. If the baby Is n boy, the mother al
ways Insists upon miming It after the
father, which Is a splendid nrrnngo
ment, as In lifter life the fullier Is able
to linndle about foiirllflhs of the son's
mail and get a good, clear Idea of the
modern lovo letter when It bus the
proper cnrbureior adjustment. In the
case of a girl baby It Is nlwnys better
to pick out a name I hat has been worn
for several years by Some rich relative
who is looking for a good place to
leave a farm covered Willi ripening al
falfa nnd red pigs,
It l a trying task to namo a bnby
when It Is the seventeenth member of
the family. Some people use (he tele
phone directory, while others enn be
seen feverishly scanning the society
columns In the effort to find some
name Vlilch bus not been tried on any
of the other children, Benjamin Frank
lin was the seventeenth child, but he
survived his name and grew to be a
great, good man, which tenches us to
forgive our parents for what we re
ceived. (Copyright.)
O
Cutting Him Short.
"Senator Snorlsworlhy makes a good
speech at a corner stone laying, but he
lacks terminal facilities."
"I've provided Vin," said the master,
of ceremonies.
"How's thill?"
"When I give a signal, previously
agreed upon, the band will strike up
The Stnr-Spnngled Banner.'" Bir
mingham Age-Herald,
efil I
1 I
LastNight's Dreams
-What They Mean
DIFFERENT SORTS OF TREES.
WE HAVE spoken of trees In gen.
era I an the mystics Interpret
Ihelr significance; now as lo the vari
ous sorts of trees that grow In I'renm
land. Nearly nil kinds are of good
omen, bill It Is Just n well to exercise
a Utile cure In planting your visionary
arboretum. The belief In tree
ninein In itreiinn I found In every
country, and their Interpretation gen
frnlly follows an obvious rule, being
such as would he suggested by see
ing the tree In the life of t lie tvuklng
world, Thus, an nnk tree teen In a
dream Is a sign of Nourishing prosper
ity and a long life; a bale ainl hearty
old age. biok at nn oak In your wak
ing moments and see If It does no) sug
gest Just that.
This Interpretation of dream-oak
holds true In every country In the
world where oaks grow, as far as Is
known, except Hwlinerlnud. There,
strange to say, to ilream of nn oak I
accounted by the ftwliter as a winn
ing that, from no fnult of tils umi, ant)
for some trilling cause, grout trouble
nrn to rnme upon hi in.
The elder, which In some of It vs..
rlelles Is n tree, Is nil excellent omen,
but the flr tree Is n better one, The lat
ter tree Is a sign of comfort, wealth
and station, while the nldcr genu
Aldus -Is a tree of evil o n. Natur
ally Hie cypress and Hie yew are of
unfavorable slgnlllnime. The lime,
or linden, predicts that you III soon
tnko a long sen voyage. The maple I
a sign of success nod happy mar
riage lo the lover, ns Is also the palm
tree, which foretells, moreover, ftniin
rial Mini to men, end children lo
wives. And for a good nil-round tree
to dream of there Is none belter than
the elm unless It lie the flr.
So far the two schools of scientific
dream Investigatorsthe psychic and
the physical have not paid much at
tenilon to drenm-trees, but a their
fight Is still on, they probably will,
(Copyriht.)
O
oWok
L.
Thore Is sn emanation from the heart
In genuine hospitality, which cannot U
di-xrllii.il, hut la Immediately frit, and
pun the stranger at one at Ilia euse.
Washington Irving.
Seitonabl Dlihea.
Those who nre fond of peppers will
enjoy this dish :
Stuff Rice, Onions In Green Pepper.
Cut a slice from the slem or pointed
end of the poppers, whichever will
furnish tho best receptacle for filling.
I'our boiling sailed wnler over Hie
peppers, cover nnd let cook three or
four mlniiles, Itemove nnd set Into a
"serving dish suitable for the oven.
For six pepper prepare one and one
half cupfuls of crenm snuco, half a
cupful of rice cooked tender, and three
onions boiled tender. Cut Hie onion
In bits and mix wIMi nbout one-third
of tho white Kiiuco. Kill the pepper
wllh nltornnto layers of Iho creamed
onions nnd the rice. Cover each wllh
buttered cracker crumbs antl place In
the oven until brown. Turn the real
of Hie crenm snuce around the peppers
and serve at once.
Cottage Cheese Sandwiches.
Spread whole wheat bread with but
ter, (hen wllh a layer of seasoned cot-".
tnge cheese and a lettuce lelif dipped
In salad dressing.
Walnut Pie.
Prepare nn ordinary cuslnrd pie nnu
Just before putting Into the oven
sprinkle over tho lop one-half cupful
of black walnut meats, finely minced.
Bnke as usual,
(13, 1920, Waiters Newepaper Union.)
Kb