R. R. D I V O R C E C A S E U P H E L D
OF CURRENT WEEK
Supreme Court Decides Southern and
Central Order as Final.
p
HARDING DEFERS
Washington, D. C. — The supreme
court Monday denied a rehearing of
the case brought by the United States
in which it directed the southern importation Barred After Oc*
Brief Resume Most Important Pacific
company to divorc e itself of
r
Daily News Items.
COMPILED
FOR
YOU
Events of Noted People, Governments
and Pacific Northwest, and Other
Things Worth Knowing.
Several men were injured and 11
were arrested in a renewal of San
Francisco's taxicab war early Monday
morning. Police reserves were called
to quell the riot.
John D. Rockefeller has the largest
assessment on personal estate in New
York city, It is shown by tax books
opened Tuesday. He must pay on
$2,000,000 personally.
Five men were killed n a landslide
at Klcho harbor, 20 miles from Ocean
Falls, B. C., according to word re
ceived Monday. The men were In a
bunk house upon which the slide de
scended.
Six persons were killed early Mon
day
night when the automobile
in
which they were riding was struck by
a Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis &
Omaha railway train at a crossing in
St. Paul.
W. E. D. Stokes, wealthy hotel man.
who lost his fight to divorce Mrs.
Helen Elwood Stokes, has asked that
the case be reopened on the ground
that he has new evidence, supporting
charges that Mrs. Stokes was unfaith
ful.
"Tim es do change,” is the unani
mous verdict of officials of the Amer
ican Electric Railway association, who
searched three months for a team of
oxen, to be used in connection with
the annual convention in Chicago,
October 2-6.
The general policy committee of the
United Mine Workers <jf America and
representatives of bituminous opera
tors from many parts of the United
States met in Cleveland Monday to
formulate a plan for negotiating fu
ture wage scales.
With an old slouch hat cocked on
the side of his head Uncle Joe Can
non started out from Washington by
automobile Tuesday for Danville, 111.,
traveling over the Old National Pike,
which his parents took 83 years ago
In emigrating westward.
Recommendation was made to the
interstate commerce commission Tues
day by one of its examiners that the
Wenatchee Southern Railroad com
pany be not allowed to carry out its
plans to build 32 miles of new track
in Washington state at a cost of $3.-
270,000.
Another October temperature rec
ord was broken Tuesday when the of
ficial thermometer touched 86 de
grees, one degree above Monday's
high mark. Government meteorolo
gists said it wns the warmest Octo
ber day In the half-century history of
the bureau.
An overwhelming sentiment favor
ing America's abandonment of her
policy of isolation from European af
fairs and the substitution of a policy
which might even involve partial can
cellatlon of the allied war debt Tues
day swept through' the convention of
the American Hankers' association In
New York.
Luxuriant hair, said to have been
grown on the bald head of a young
girt, was exhibited to a group of doc
tors attending a homeopathic clinic in
Chicago Tuesday«-,! The
beautiful
tresses were declared to have been
the result of a gland cure; endocrine
glands, taken internally and aided by
violet rays, having beei^ used.
President Harding expects to return
to the scene of his birth and boy-
hood days on his retirement from the
W h it« House. This was indicated
Tuesday when French Crow, post
master at Marion, O., and personal
friend of the president, actlhg on
behalf of the chief executive, pur
chased the old Harding homestead in
North Broomfield township. Morrow
county.
A woman from Georgia Tuesday
won the distinction of being the first
of her sex to obtain appointment to
the United States senate when Mrs
W . P. F>lton of Cartersville, long
known ns the "grand old woman of
Georgia," was named by Qovernor
Thomas
Hardwick as senator to
succeed the late Thomas K. Watson,
until the November elections, when
n successor will be chosen st the
polls. Mrs. Felton Is 87 years of age
and has been prominent in state pol
itics for nearly half a century.
ownership and control over the Central
Pacific railroad.
The court at Its last term rendered
an opinion which reversed the United
States district court for Utah and held
that the ownership and control of the
Central Pacific by the Southern Pa
cific was in violation of the Sherman
ntl trust act on the ground that the
two systems were competing under the
law.
The decision resulted in numbers
of petitions being presented to con
gress by commercial and other organ
izations, some urging and others op
posing the enforcement of the deci
sion. The refusal to -eopen the case
will result in the issuance of a man
date to the district court in Utah to
gfte effect to the decision.
A fter the decision of the court last
June a number of petitions were pre
sented to congress from commercial
and other organizations discussing the
probable effect of the decision. Some
urged and others opposed Its enforce
ment, but the supreme court, in re
fusing to reopen the case, brought the
protracted litigation to its last stages,
and a mandate will now issue under
which the United States district court
for Utah will proceed to give effect
to the decision.
Although no opinions were deliv
ered by the supreme court, it cleared
its docket of all motions for rehearing»
which had accumulated during the
summer recess and advanced for argu
ment the Pennsylvania anthracite and
the Minnesota iron tax, the New York
telephone and a number of other Im
portant cases, besides issuing orders
in oth?r cases.
Cambridge, Mass.— The large Magel
lanic cloud, a group of stars and ne
bulae visible from the southern hemi
sphere. which was believed to be some
sort of a small universe itself, proves
to be of staggering dimensions, it was
announced from the Harvard college
observatory Monday.
The first measurements of the dis
tance and size of the cloud, accom
plished by Harvard astronomers from
photographic plates made at their
Peruvian station, have established that
it is 110,000 light years from the earth
and that Its linear diameter is about
16.000 light years. A light year is six
trillion miles.
The Magellanic cloud, which re
sembles in appearance the milky way.
Is separated from that system of stars
of which our solar system is a small
part. Photometric measures of the
Magellanic stars indicate that many
are actually fur brighter than any yet
found in our solar system. Hundreds
of these stars, it is said, were found to
exceed the brightness of the sum by
10.000 times.
Arid Land Bills Aided.
Walla Walla.— Letters were mailed
Saturday to 175 chambers of com
merce and commercial clubs in the
state asking their co-operation in ob
taining favorable action by congress
upon the Smith MoNary and Columbia
river basin Investigation bills. Each
commercial club receiving a letter is
asked to write to ail merchants in
their communities, each merchant In
turn to write and send letters to five
or more eastern concerns from whom
they buy goods or whose merchandise
they handle.
These letters are to explain the
benefits to be gained by nil concern
ed if the irrigation bills are put
through and the eastern merchants
will be asked to write to their repre
sentatives and senators explaining
their interest and the interest of their
state In this legislation.
John S.
Summers, representative, who Is send
ing out the letters, said he expects
to have tiiis campaign completed by
October.
A I
STATE N E W S
IN BRIEF.
tober 14, 1922.
Gold Hill.— The re-opentng of the
Kanes Creek limestone quarry, which
has been closed since the early days
of the war. is of considerable impor
tance to Gold Hill as a limestone cen
ter.
Roseburg.— L. C. Martin, a resident
of Glendale, was killed Instantly Sun
LINES TO GET NOTICE
Enforcement o f
Government
Order
SCHOOL PAqS
C om .
v e a .if
MOT PLAIt»
TrtM OlCMS n
GRtAT SCOTT'
OKI*
0*V:
cecvçdjg f ,
fc'w e)
\
~ T»^t.
>>ji
s
I A
». - vi
r A l''f r ill ill
I COX 1
day morning when he was mistaken
for a deer while out hunting, accord
ing to a report received by Coroner
Ritter.
Bend. — Mrs. James Breedlove-,
rancher's w ife in the Powell Butte
Time for Change.
section, was badly burned about the
face, and much of her hair was sing
ed while she rescued her six small
Washington, D. C. — Foreign and children from their burning home Sat
American vessels sailing for the Uni urday night.
Postponed to Give Needed
ted States after October 14 next will
Eugene.— A ll but about 20» bales
be subject to the prohibition against of this year's hops in Lane county
the bringing of intoxicating liquors in have been sold, according to Frank
Heyer, local buyer for T. A. Livesley
to American territorial waters, it was
& Co. of Salem. The Lane county
announced Saturday night at the yield was about 6000 bales this year,
treasury department.
which is short of the average crop
Decision to defer in the case of here, said Mr. Heyer.
8 w-A * 8 >- : ry
4/tt/x -C
____ ^
these craft the enforcement o f A t
Copyrl^ht^g.^**?
Port Orford.— Considerable activity
torney-General Daugherty’s ruling with in lumber and shipping is noticeable
respect to the prohibition of the trans in this section this fall. The Moore
y iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim iim iiiiiiiim iiiitt
portation of liquor cargoes or stores Mill & Lumber company, the largest
concern now shipping from this port,
was made by President Harding. The
is moving about 100 poles and 15,000
executive, in a letter to Secretary Mel
feet of logs per day. The poles are
=
lon, said any earlier attempt at en being shipped to Japan.
W
ill
M
.
M
aupin
|
forcement in the absence of due notice
Ashland.— Hoboes to the number of I r i i m i m m ii m m i m im m i i iu im ii m m ir
and ample regulation would be "in
consistent with just dealing and have 43 are being handled daily by city and
W RITIN G IT AT HOME
a tendency to disrupt needlessly the railroad police, as many as 25 being
removed from one train. They are * BUNCH of fo u r-fo u r happy kids
ways of commerce.”
Chock full o f fun nnd pleasure,
“ This delay in enforcement does 1- deed In the city Jail over night and * *
not apply to the sale of Intoxicating dismissed after a small fine has been j All four a mighty big expense,
liquor on vessels sailing under the levied. Orders are given to hit the 1 But ev’ry one a treasure,
[ And when I want It quiet llki
American flag," the president said. highway toward the south.
So I ean do my writing.
Immediate cessation of such sales was
Hood River.— A trip to Harney coun The noise that bunch begins to make
ordered by Hr. Harding after the at
Sounds like two armies lighting.
ty for wild goose and duck hunting is
torney-general's ruling had been pre
at present a real wild goose chase, ac
sented to him.
cording to a party of hunters just One clambers over my machine;
Masters of shipping board vessels
One asks for help with "numbers”
back from the southeastern part of
One for my pencil makes demand;
were ordered Saturday by Chairman
the state. The usual haunts of the
One my tired knee encumbers.
Lasker to remove and surrender to
game birds are dry, the hunters say, “ a dozen eggs cost forty cents,
treasury officials all intoxicating li
and there is nothing to shoot at.
j What will three dozen cost?"
quors aboard such ships. The order
.
I And by the time I work It out
became effective immediately as to
. a em. August sales of gasolene in j
My thread of thought is lost.
ships in their home ports and w ill be Oregon as reported by dealers to the
made effective on those at sea and in secretary of state returned a tax to One sticky hand Is reaching out
foreign ports upon their arrival in the the state aggregating $140,373.34 and
To grasp my thinning locks,
broke all previous monthly records. D,1(* piercing voice makes loud demnnd
United States.
with building blocks.
" I f any officer or member of the Sales in August, 1921, netted the state \ *'<>r
s hrohc! please sharpen It
crew either on passenger or cargo a tax of $125,123.34, showing a gain
. _ ,
.
.
So I can write the rest— ”
ships,” the order said, "is found there for August. 1922, of approximately And then the thoUK,lts , ve Karnered In
after to possess liquor on ships he $15,000.
| A re ajj ijnocfced gaiiy west.
shall be immediately removed perman
Pendleton.— Milton and Freewater
ently from the service and his viola
in . ,.
,
,
i But when, at last, the sandman comes
will
hold their annual East End Apple
A nd a|l four m tle liea(|s,
tion of the law reported to the proper
nhow
October
26
and
27.
The
first
Are
resting on the pillows white
district attorney."
A formal notice to foreign steam day will be known as Walla Walla day I Of two soft, downy beds;
ship lines and to lines operating pri and the second as Pendleton day. The And all is quiet ’round the house
Walla Walla chamber of commerce \ Where once flie noise did ring.
vately-owned American craft of the
Is to make a tour of Umatilla county 1 *turt to write— and then can t think
application of the prohibition amend
Of a dodgasted thing !
ment and enforcement act to carriers October 26. and will be at the apple
(C o p y rig h t by W ill M. M aupin.)
show that evening.
--------O--------
entering American waters, probably
will be given early next week.
St. Helens.—The annua! Institute of
Meantime, Internal Revenue Com
the Columbia county teachers opened i
missioner Blair is having formulated
at St. Helens Wednesday and con
the necessary regulations to enforce
tinued for three days. Among the
S carlet tu fts are g ro w in g In the green
the law with respect to foreign and
state educators who delivered address like (lakes o f (Ire; the wanderers o f the
privately-owned American craft. There
p
rairie
knowr them w ell, and call that
es were T. H. Gentle of Monmouth
flow er the "p ain ted n ip ."
was no indication when these regula
normal school; Dr. C. G. Doney of
tlons would be completed.
Wlllamt'tte university, and Professors
EVERY DAY GOOD THINGS
Reed and Shepherd of the Oregon
Cjp HERE always will be in most fnm-
Agricultural college.
illes some waste br*'ad.
Not a
Eugene.— The heaviest vote in the small bit should i»e wasted for tlieie
history of Lane county Is exp«»cted to are countless ways of using it.
VJrteH BKT necTi B a T - w .
T/~ID
IDDIES SIX I
I X)
51 DIE IN FL AM ES :
8000 AR E H O M E L E S S
Cobalt, Ont.— Searching parties re
turning Saturday from outlying sec
tions of the district devastated by-
forest fires Wednesday reported that
the death list was increasing steadily,
one report stating that 51 bodies had
been found.
Estimates of property damage rang
ed from $7,000,000 to $15,000,000.
be polled at the November election, ac
cording to members of the county
clerk's force who have had charge of
registration of voters. Hundreds of
persons eligible to vote who have
never cast a ballot have registered
during the past few days in order to
vote on the compulsory school bill.
Pendleton.— Decision
to return
to
the ringing of the curfew at 9 o'clock
Toronto, Ont.— Eight thousand per
sons have been made homeless by the
fires that swept over Northern On
tario this week, according to Provin
cial Premier Drury.
He estimated the property loss at
$8,000.000.
was made by the city council Friday
night. Police will enforce the cur
few law- which compels all children
under 16 years of age to be off the
streets by the set hour. Reports of
the use of narcotics by minors and
the promiscuous sale of tobaccos to
young children was responsible for the
action.
Nut Loaf.
Take one cupful of chopped nuts,
two cupfuls of bread crumbs, one half
cupful of hot water, the same of melt
ed butter, one egg well b«-aten, one tea-
spoonful of mushroom catsup, one-half
teaspoonful of onion juice, one and
one-half teaspoonfuls o f salt and one-
fourth of a teaspoonful of tapper. Mix
the Ingredients in the order given,
form in a roll and bake in a moderate
«*ven one hour, basting occasionally
with butter. Serve hot with brown
sauce.
Som ething to
Think s i bout
By F. A . IF ALKER
F A ll-O F F
T03IOKHO\Y
O p HOSE happy-go-lucky individuals
who manifest so little Interest in
the stirring events of life, which are
buzzing like bees all around them, are
often insensible to their lamentable d«£
linquencles.
Occasionally, however, their con
sciousness flutters a moment, but,
seemingly chunging Its benumbed
mind, yawns, nods and falls asleep to
dream.
But they are going to wake up and
do something tomorrow.
They will yank the <dd world from
Its easy chair and wake its billion in
habitants with an earthquake.
Hitherto they have been shaping a
brilliant «-ourse, not quite matured yet,
or In a lit state to be presented In its
entirety to tltelr intimates, who have
wept over thtm, prayed for them, and
done their utmost to arouse them to
action.
There is. however, no declaration on
the part o f these liabituuted drones of
making undue haste.
The months und y«-nrs stretch ahead
in long rows on either side of tomor
row's path. Why fuss, fluster and
worry ?
Why should they bother themselves
while youth is so full of delightful ex
pectancies and time so ahundunt.
They nre not seeking the dull, com
mon roads in life, hut the magnificent
avenues that take direct to fame nnd
wealth In th» glare of sunlight and
amid tlie plaudits o f an admiring
world, swept suddenly off its feet by
the daring work of genius.
So the yenrs drift by, and in their
drifting there comes sometimes to
tin-se disciples of the god of futurists
a petrifying fear that makes them sick
at heart.
With an odd mixture of humility and
pride stirring in their ill-arranged
brain they are prompted to exertion.
But tliey have unconsciously lost the
skill which was theirs when life was
vibrant with power. They reach out
but tliey touch not. And now, ail o f
a sudden, a terrible realization over
whelms them.
While they were loitering, putting
off until tomorrow, their plodding as-
BO<’*®,e8 w,‘re improving their time,
Raining respect and an assured com-
Ppte*>ce for the Imre days of winter,
1,s appearance In the naked
branches o f the trees and drifts of
snow-flakes.
Tomorrow Is man's most terrible
troutile maker, luring by promis*-»
which nre seldom redeemed nnd leav
ing him ragged anil alone at the or..-s
roads, where youth nnd opfwtunit.v
*'*’ hurt«*d In the piled up heaps of
dust and Ill-spent years,
Sweet Carrots.
Cut carrots In dice and boil them
la salted water dncovered. When
( © by M cClure N ew sp ap er S yn d icate.)
they are nearly cooked, pour off a
- o — -----
quarter of a cupful o f the water and
Liquor on Ship Seized.
return to the heat.
Sprinkle with
Europe Will Need Food.
two or three tahlespoonfuis of sugar
New V
T ' i - tir»t
i Ul - i - * Y
and cook until *11 of the water is
quor aboard a United States shipping
Washington, D C. — A substantial
Salem.— The Beaver Creek Logging boiled away, stirring the carrots oc-
board vessel under the dry ruling was yearly decline in the grain crops of
made Mondav bv agents who visited 1 both France and Germany is shown in compnny. a Washington corporation. | eoaloaally ao«that they may all COOM
In contact with the sugar. When the
the freighter Winona, arrived from I estimates prepare«! by the Interna- has filed application with the Ore- carrots are quite dry add a tahle-
8m ) rn « after • \ acMating i •
•
gon state corporation department to spoonful of butter and pour over a
d city. Four cases of andecabled t.- i
a
operate in Oregon. The capital stock! tessp«.onful o f lemon Juice. Serve at
whisky were taken from the vess«>rs meat here. FYance'8 1922 wheat pro- is $1'"'.... and A. G. PetersVn « f Linn once.
hold
The ve ssel'a officers said they ductlon
Is placed at 235.380.000 ton has been named attorney in fact.
Madeira Cak£
could noi account for the liquor and bushels, a decrease of 88,090,000 from 477.87, military fund $107,372.46, and
Fut
the
y«*lks
of two eggs Into a
that It probably had been brought last year, and that of Germany at 69,- permanent highway fund $749.991 49.
mixing bowl, then with a wooden spoon
ahe.ird by refugees.
670.0410 bushels, representing a decline The only overdraft was $444,019.82 in
heat in one cupful «if sugar and one-
of 38.130,000.
the public highway fund.
half cupful of butter. Add two cupfuls
Europe Insults Grant.
„
,,
,,
¿ o f sifteil fl mr. w ith a tenspnnnful of
More Arms Shipped.
1 K
11 "
•
then one-half capful
Now Y o rk — Ulysses 9 Grant, eldest
son of the civil war general, who ar
Dekin.—It Is asserted here that addb ager of the orchards of the Mount ¡o f cream soil * grating o f nutmeg,
rived here Monday on the steamship tlonal shipments o f munitions have | A,,ams Farm company at Gilmer. ! heating all the time Last of all. fold
.
,,
, ...
— . , I ... ». t
.
.
-In the well-beaten whit«'* of the eggs,
{’'Inland, says he will never go to . _ o.o . hlng
i,ont-ral ( hang Tso I.in. V\ ash . here reports that hit conn ,«n«a, 1 ne . a _ r.und eak. tin with greased»
„
Furop- again
Mr. Grant, who ft a the Manchurian war lord, from Madl- had sblpp-d 20 cars of d Anjou and r „ , r an , r „ ur ln th„ , „ npr
Jawyer of San Diego. Cal, was ac vostok since the Japanese cabinet eight cars of Bartlett pears this sea- ! * large slice of candie«! citron on top.
companied by his wife. He said that ordered an investigation of charges son. The Gilmer orchards comprise Bake an hour and s quarter In a mod-
he believed Americans were hated in that stores of Ctecho-Slovak arms, be the largest individual holdit&s o f , erate oven, l«*wering the heat after
These Efficiency Courses.
Europe and mentioned specifically an ing guarded by the Japan«>*e. were apples and pears in the mid-Columbia \ in«*
« r u riwH.
the * r*ke is
*» wel*
risen.
“That new employee of ours doesn't
arfront which he received on a train stolen ami sold to the Chinese military Mr. Hamlin says that he will ship
seem to accomplish much."
hound from Amsterdam to Berlin.
leader.
«,
about 15 additional cars of d'Anjous j
“ No. he hasn't time, lie's too busy
t£ 1922. WMttn N»wn*(*r T afta *.\
being efficient."— Life.
ONCfIJf ROUGH
vrtiJL