WORLD HAPPENINGS OF CURREHJ VEEK Brief Resume Most Important , Daily News Items. COMPILED FOR iYOU Events of Noted People, Government and Pacific Northwest, and Otber Things WortlSKnowlng . King Albert and Queen Elizabeth of Belgium went to England by airplane Sunday. They landed at Farnborough in Kent, flying from Brussels In 3 hours and 67 minutes. Five robbers Monday held up the store rooms of a former Kansas City saloon keeper and drove away with two truckloads of whisky. The liquor was valued at $20,000. Milwaukee bread pripes were raised Monday by 180 bakers, members of the Master Bakers' association. Small loaves cost 11 cents, large loaves 16 cents and Tolls 18 cents. Two constables of the Timoleamue (Cork, Ireland) police station were Bhot dead on patrol duty Monday by men in ambush. At Bandon Sergeant Flynn was shot dead and another con stable wounded. Captain Lowell H. Smith broke the world's altitude record for an airplane carrying a pilot and three passengers Monday when he, ascended 17,100 feet at El Centro, Cal. The plane was in the air two hours and 40 minutes. Only about 861,000 acres of winter wheat will be harvested in Colorado this year, compared with 1,064,000 affres last year, according to estimates of the Colorado co-operative crop re porting service, announced this week. John Buchanan, 34, a farmer living at the home of his brother near Albion, Neb., Friday shot and killed Mrs. Grace Chapman, mother-in-law of his brother, and then killed himself. The killing of Mrs. Chapman was without known provocation. Governor Marcus Holcomb, of Con necticut, replying to the request made by the "flying squadron" of suffragists representing the 48 states, again has declined to call a special session of the Connecticut legislature to act on the woman suffrage amendment. A vote by Thursday or Friday on the resolution to end the status of war with Germany and Austria Is the aim of senate leaders In arranging to call up the resolution. Republicans plan to keep It continually before the Benate until the vote Is reached. President Wilson reviewed the sea son's opening circus parade Monday from the east portico of the whlto house. Seated in a chair, he laughed at the antics of the clowns and several times removed his cap in acknowledg ement of the greetings by the circus folks. Net Income of the Chicago, Milwau kee & St. Paul railroad in 1919 to- tuled $7,643,045, equivalent to $6.57 a share on the preferred stock, accord' Ing to the annual report, made public Monday. This compared with Income of $6,241,509, or $5.36 on preferred stock in 1918. Fred II. Derfus, assistant chief pro bation officer of the juvenile court, Cincinnati, Saturday sent back to his parents in Bay City, Mich., a 15-year old boy who was taken into custody on a charge of attempting to steal an elephant. The boy's parents are prom inent Bay City citizens and the offi cers refused to divulge his name. Madge Anna Sawyer, 21, Seattle, Wash., a bride of two months, Mon day shot and killed her husband, Howard I. Siiwyor, a mechanical en gineer, on their cruising motorboat moored in Lake Union, here. Mrs. Sawyer told the police she and her husband had been quarreling. She shot nieroly to frighten him, she said Federal Investigators have deter mined that the Utah-Idaho Sugar com pany with headquarters in Salt Lake City, by selling BUgar at 22.75 cents a pound wholesale, to which price it was raised May 1 from 13 cents, are reallz Ing a net profit of $14.15 a hundred pound sack, United States District At torney Isaac Blair Evans announced. Winter wheat production this year was forecast Saturday at 484.647,000 bushels by the department of agrleul ture, which based Its estimates on con ditions prevailing May 1. The crop Bhowed a slight Improvement from April 1, the forecast of production be ing 1,030,000 bushels larger than ei tlmated a month ago. Compared with last year's crop, the prospective wheat crop has been reduced 33.8 per cent STATE NEWS: r IN BRIEF. J Medford. The Russ mill in this city has been taken over by the Monarch Seed and Feed company, Leo J. Misch- ke, president from Ralph W. Elden of Central Point who has operated it for the last two years. Cove. French Bros., dealers in thorough-bred sheep, and their mother, Mrs. Adelaide McKennon, of Clarks- vllle, Ark., completed the sale of their 680-aore farm, one mile out of Cove, Saturday to Steward McAnish and Bona, J. S. and L. B. Salem. Mrs. May Gordon reported to the police Friday night the theft of 4000 loganberry tips. Mrs. Gordon had cut the tips for market. Sheriff Needham sent out a warning advising ail persons who are accosted by ven dors of loganberry tips to notify his office. Salem. Due to the fact that only one squadron of airplanes will be as signed to the Pacific coast for forest fire patrol work during the summer of 1920, and that this patrol will be con fined to California, F. A. Elliott, state foreBter, has started arranging his field forces for the coming season. Salem. Because the state highway department is alleged to have in fringed upon paving patents of Warren Brothers in disregard of a legal opin ion submitted by Attorney-General Brown the state now faces the pos sibility of having to pay tothe cor poration approximately $240,000 in royalties. Baker. After a three days' visit in Baker, during which time they have inspected dairies which are furnishing milk to the city grocery stores, meat markets, restaurants and grills, F. M, Phillips and W. B. Duncan, deputies of the Oregon dairy and food com mission, report that they have found conditions in this district "fair." Salem. Because the city of Salem apparently has shown no disposition to pay outstanding warrants dating back as far as 1914, and in some in stances has not paid the interest on these obligations local bankers have notified the council that they do not take kindly to the idea of advancing money for street Improvements dur ing the present year. Tillamook. The measure for higher education and elementary schools and the 4 per cent road amendment were unanimously indorsed Tuesday night at a business meeting and banquet in the Tillamook hotel of the Tillamook County Business Men's association. which was largely attended by mer chants an ddealers from all over the county. Heppner. State Engineer Percy Cupper was in Heppner last Friday evening attending a meeting of the board of directors of the John Day irrigation district. A number of prob lems were discussed with Mr. Cupper, and it is believed the preliminary work will soon make possible financing the district for sufficient Junds to carry on the first development work. Salem. Sunday, May 16, has been designated as educational day In a proclamation issued by J. A. Churchill, state superintendent of public instruc tion. Ministers throughout the state will be asked to arrange special edu cational programs or to devote one of their sermons to an explanation of the educational measures to be voted on at the special election on May 21, Hood River. All embargoes against movement of freight are lifted and the Apple Growers' association Is rushing shipment of apples in an effort to clean up the 80 carloads remaining here. While the fruit, of Newtown va riety and in good condition, will keep for an indefinite time, the agency wishes to complete the deal and be ready for the strawberry harvest, which will begin the latter part of this month. Safim. Oregon will not get any captured German field guns or other confiscated war equipment until con gress passes an act providing for the distribution of this class of material, according to a telegram received at the executive office from P. C. Harris of the adjutant-general's office at Washington. One bill is now before congress, however which, if passed, will allow Oregon a number of guns of 77 caliber and above. Arrangements have been completed for Increasing the size of the Tumalo fish hatchery near Bend, and buildlnc brooding ponds and dikes, as the re sult of a trip made by Wardens Burgh duff and Clanton and Gama Commis sioner Gill over the week end. The party also visited Twin lakes, south of Bend, to investigate conditions pre venting steelhead and' eastern brook trout planted there from spawning, The lakes have no spawning grounds, so it will be necessary to continue planting and stocking them by artifi cial propagation. Steelheads planted several years ago now weigh from five to ten pounds. 8 HURT IN TRAIN WRECK Electric Cars Hit Head-On Near Bertha Station. TWO CHILDREN DEAD Front Coach, Lifted Into Air, Sweeps Along Floor of Other, Pinning and Crushing Victims Portland. Eight persons, three of them women and two of them little children, were killed and 38 other per sons were injured Sunday .when two fast-moving Southern Pacific red elec tric trains met head-on near Bertha station, just outside the city limits of Portland. Four of the injured were so seriously hurt that they may die. The failure of an engineer-motor- man, long in the service of the com pany, to obey orders, was the cause of the wreck. This engineer, Silas K, Willetts, of train 124, Inbound from Hillsboro to Portland, died in his cab as the two trains crashed. His train, No. 124, ran past Bertha station, where it was under orders to pass train 107, the McMinnville pas senger, outbound from Portland.' It did not stop at Bertha at all, but proceeded at high speed down about half a mile of straight track beyond that station toward Portland. At the end of this tangent of straight track the track starts to swing in a curve around a high bank. This was' the point where the two trains met head-on. Train 107 from Portland, with three cars, was just rounding this curve. The inbound train, with two cars, had just reached it. They met at high speed, each engineer having time only to throw on the emergency air before they crashed. Evidently each train had been hidden from the engineer of the other until they were within 200 or 300 feet of each oter on the single track. ine wrecic occurred at i:ss a. m, The forward coach of the fast-going train 124 from Hillsboro bored into and through the vestibule of the forward car of train 107, lifted It slightly and shoved It partly off the track. But the lifted end of this front car of the out bound train from Portland sheared through the forward car of train 124, crushed the vestibule and continued on for about a quarter car-length Into the coach. , It was here that all the deaths oc curred. .There were many people, In cluding women and children, seated near the front of the Inbound Hillsboro car. The heavy steel bumper of the other car, lifted as it was, slid along the floor of their car, plowed into them and crushed them. For the most part they died there as they sat, poor, man gled, twisted remnants of human be ings. This car in which they died was a passenger coach. Usually on the red electric trains of the Southern Pacific the Bmoker and. baggage car Is at the head of the train. This was the case with train 107. But on train 124, composed of only two cars, this order was reversed. The day coach, with many women and chil dren aboard it, was first and the smok er lttBt. Those killed In Sunday's collision near Portland were: Mrs. Chas. A. Crooks, Hillsdale, Or. Frederick J. Peebler, 304 Ross street, Portland, an engineer who was off duty. Mrs. C. R. Arundell, Dosch station, Or. Robert Arundell, 4, Dosch station, Or. Fleufot Dosch Josselyn, 7, Dosch sta tion, Or. Silas K. Willetts, engineer ot in bound train, 868 East Kelly street, Portland. Newton Hoover, Beaverton, Or. Ina L. Hatch, Hillsdale, Or. Ten Held for Mall Fraud. Kansas City, Mo. William H. Woods, a resident of Chicago, was in dicted Jointly with nine other per sons by a federal grand jury here Saturday on 36 counts,, charging use ot the malls to defraud In selling land. Nearly 2000 persons in Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa and Michigan, according to District Attorney Wil son, nave been victimized for an amount totaling approximately $200, 000. Poles Win Way to Kiev. Warsaw. Polish cavalry entered the city of Kiev Saturday morning on the heels ot the retreating bolshevlki. The Infantry kept up its advance towards Kiev, cavalry detachments keeping contact with the Infantry. 9. laCowPlncher Copyright by Hirper A Brothers CHAPTER X. Continued. 16 Elden swung on his heel and paced the length ot the office in quick, sharp strides. When be returned to where Miss Wardln stood, wrapped about In her misery, his fists were clenched and the veins stood out on the back of his hands. "Scoundrel!" he muttered. "Scoun drel 1 And I have been tied to him. I have let him bind me ; I have let him set the standards. " Well, now I know him." There was a menace In his last words that frightened even Gladys Wardln, well though she knew the menace was not to her, but ranged in her defense. 'Here," he said, taking some bills from his pocket. "You must tell him you can't go tell him you won't go; you must return his money. I will lend you what you need. Don't be afraid. I will go with you" "But I can't take your money, either, Mr. Elden," she protested. "I can't stay here any longer. I will have no job and I can't pay you back. You see I can't take it, even from you. What a fool I wasl For a few clothes" "You will continue to work for me," he said. She shook her head. "No, I can't. I can't. I can't work anywhere near him." , "Yon won't need to. The firm of Conward & Elden will be dissolved at once. I have always felt that there was something false In Conward- something that wouldn't stand test Now I know." There was a sound of a key in the street door, and Conward entered. CHAPTER XI. Conward paused as he entered the room. He had evidently not expectea to find Elden there, but after a mo ment of hesitation he nodded cordially to his partner. ' "Almost ready, Miss Wardln?" he asked, cheerily. "Our train goes In He took his watch from his pocket and consulted It. Dave's eyes were fixed on the girt He wondered whether, in this testing moment, she would fight for herself or lean weakly on him as her protector. Her answer reassured him. "It makes no difference when It goes, Mr. Conward. I'm not going on It." Her voice trembled nervously, but there was no weakness In it. The money which Dave had given her was still crumpled in her hand. She ad vanced to where Conward stood vague ly trying to sense the situation, and held the bills before him. "Here Is your money, Mr. Conward," she said. Why, what dotes this mean?" 'Here Is your money. Will yon take It, please?" No, I won't take It until you ex plain" She opened her fingers and the bills fell to the floor. "All right," she said. Conward's eyes had shifted to Dave. "You are at the bottom of this, Elden," he said. "What does it mean?" "It means, Conward,'! Dave an swered, and there was steel In his voice "It means that after all these years I have discovered what a cur you are just In time to balk you, at least in this instance." Conward flushed, but he maintained an attitude of composure. "You've been drinking, Dave," he said. "I meant no harm to Miss Wardln." "Don't make me call you a liar as well as a cur." The word cut through Conward's mask of composure. "Now by God 1 I won't take that from any man!" he shouted, and with a swing of his arms threw his coat over his shoulders. Dave made no motion, and Conward slowly brought bis coat back to posi tion. "I was right," said Dave, calmly. "I knew yon wouldn't fight. You think more of your skin than you do of your honor. Well It's better worth protec tion." "If this girl were not here" Con ward protested. "I will not fight " "Oh, I will leave," said Miss Wardln with alacrity. "And I hope he soaks you well,"-' she shot back, as the door closed behind her. But by this time Conward had as sumed a superior attitude. "Dave,1 he said, "I won't fight over a quarrel of this kind. But remember, there are some things In which no man allows another to Interfere. Least ot all such a man as you. There are ways of get ting back, and I'll get back." "Why 'such a man as me? I know I haven't been much of a moralist in business matters I've been in the wrong company for that but I draw the line" "Oh, you're fine stuff, all right. What would your friend Miss Hardy think if I told her all I know?" "Yon know nothing that could affect Miss Hardy's opinion." "Its too bad your memory Is so poor," Conward sneered. "Why were your lights off that night I passed your car? Oh, I guess you remember 1 What will Miss Hardy think ot that?" For a moment Dave was unable to follow Conward's thought. Then his mind reached back to that night he drove Into the country with Bert Mor rison, when on the brow of a hill he switched off his lights that they might better admire the majesty, of the heavens. That Conward should place an evil interpretation upon that inci dent was a thing so monstrous, so al together" beyond argument, that Dave fell back upon the basic human meth od reserved for such occasions. His fist leaped forward, and Conward crumpled up before It. ' Conward lay stunned for a few min utes, then, with returning conscious ness, he tried to sit up. Dave helped him to a chair. Blood flowed down his face, and as he began to realize what had occurred it was joined with- tears of pain, rage, humiliation. "You got that one on me, Elden," he said, after a while. "But It was a coward's blow. You hit me when I wasn't looking. Very well. Two can play at that game. I'll hit when you're not looking . . . where you don't ex pect It . . .where you can't hit back. I know the stake you're playing for, and I'm going to spoil It." He turned his swollen, bloody face to Dave's, and hatred stood up in his eyes as he ut tered the threat. "I'll hit you, Dave," he repeated, "where you cun't hit back." "Thanks for the warning," said El den. "So Irene Hardy Is to be the stake. All right, I'll sit In. And I'll win."- "You'll think you've won," returned Conward, leeringly, "and then you'll find out that you didn't. I'll present her to you, Dave, like that." He lifted a burnt match from an ash-tray and held It before him. Dave's impulse was to seize the thick, flabby throat in his hands and choke it lifeless. With a resolute ef fort he turned to the telephone and lifted the receiver. "Send a car and a doctor to Conward & Elden's office," he said when he had got the desired number. "Mr. Con ward has been hurt fell against a "Ever Contemplate Marriage?" Said Miss Morrison, With Disconcerting Frankness. desk, or something. Nothing serious, but may need a stitch or two." Then, turning to Conward: "It will depend on you whether this affair gets to the public on you and Miss Wardln. Make your own explanations. And as soon as you are able to be about our partnership will be dissolved." Conward was ready enough to adopt Dave's suggestion that their quarrel should not come to the notice of the public, and Gladys Wardln, apparent ly, kept her own counsel In the mat ter. In a time when firms were going out of business without even the for mality' of Tin assignment, and others were being absorbed by their competi tors, the dissolution of the Conward & Elden establishment occasioned no more than passing notice. The ex planation, "for business reasons," given to the newspapers, seemed suffi cient. Irene Hardy found herself In a po sition of increasing delicacy. Since the day of their conversation In the tea room Dave had been constant in his attentions, but, true to his ultimatum, had uttered no word that could in any way be construed to be more or less than platonlc. She had now no doubt that she felt for Dave that attachment without which ceremonies are without nvall and with which ceremonies are but ceremonies. And yet she shrank from surrender. . . . And she knew that some day she must surrender. The situation was complicated by conditions which Involved her mother and Conward. It was apparent that Conward's friendship for Mrs. Hardy did not react to Dave's advantage. Conward was careful to drop no word In Irene's hearing that could be taken as a direct reflection upon Dave, but she was conscious of an influence, a magnetism, it almost seemed, the whole tendency of which was to pull her away from Elden. Mrs. Hardy had invested practically all her little fortune In her house. The small sum which had been saved from that unfortunate investment had been eaten up in the cost of furnishing and maintaining the home. Doctor Hardy, In addition to his good name, hnd left his daughter some few thousand dol lars of life insurance, and this was the capital which was now supplying fly Robert J. C. Stead Author ot "Kitchener and Other Poems" Illustrations bf IRWIN MYERS their daily needs. It, too, would soon be exhausted, and Irene was confront ed with the serious business of finding a means of livelihood for herself and her mother. She discussed her problem with Bert Morrison, with whom she had formed a considerable friendship. She won dered whether she might be able to get a position on one of the newspa pers. "Don't think of it," said Bert "If you want to keep a sane, sweet out look on humanity, don't examine It too closely. That's what we have to do In the newspaper game, and that's why we're all cynics. Keep out of it." "But I must earn a living," Irene protested. "Ever contemplate marriage?" said Miss Morrison, with disconcerting frankness. The color rose In Irene's cheeks, but she knew that her friend was discuss ing a serious matter seriously. "Why, yes," she admitted, "I have contem plated it; In fact, I am contemplating it. That's one of the reasons I want to start earning my living. When I marry I want to marry as a matter of choice not because It's the only way out." "Now you're talking," said Bert. "And most of us girls who marry as a matter of choice don't marry. I've only known one man from whom a proposal would set me thinking. And he'll never propose to me not now. Not since Miss Hardy came West." "Oh," said Irene, slowly, "I'm I'm so sorry I" "It's all right," said Bert, looking out of the window. "Just another ot life's little bumps. We get used to them in time. But you want a job. Let me see; you draw, don't you?" "Just for a pastime. I can't earn a living that way." "I'm not so sure. Perhaps not with art in the abstract. You must commer cialize it. If you, on the one hand, can make a picture of the Rockies, which you -can't sell, and, on the other, can make a picture of a pair of shoes, whlclj you can sell, which, as a woman of good sense, in need of the simoleons are you going to do? You're going to draw the shoes and the pay-check. Now I think I can gef you started that way, on catalogue work and ad cuts. Try your pencil on something any thing at all and bring down a few samples." So Irene's little studio-room began to take on a practical purpose. It was work which called for form and pro portion rather than color, and In these Irene excelled. She soon found her self with as much as she could do, in addition to the duties of the house hold, as maids were luxuries which could no longer be afforded and her mother seemed unable to realize that they were net still living in the afflu ence of Doctor Hardy's income. Tc Irene, therefore, fell the work of th house, as well as its support. But her success in earning a llvlna did not seem in the sllghtest degree to clear the way for marriage. Sh could not ask Dave to assume th support of her mother; particularly in view of Mrs. Hardy's behavloi toward him, she could not ask that. She sometimes wondered If Conward For a long while she refused to com plete the thought, but at length, why not? Why shouldn't Conward marry her mother? And what other purpose, could he have In his continuous visits to their home? Mrs. Hardy, although no longer young, had by no means surrendered all the attractions of her sex, and Conward was sllnping by the period where a young girl would be his natural mate. If they should marry Irene was no plotter, but It did seem that such a match would clear the way for all concerned. She was surprised, when she turned it over in her mind, to realize that Con ward had won for himself such a place in her regard that she could contem plate such a consummation as very much to be desired. Subconsciously, rather than- from specific motive, she assumed, a still more friendly attitude toward him. (TO BE CONTINUED.) Meaning of "Selah." The word Selah, which occurs so frequently in the Psalms, Is usually be lieved to be a direction to the mu sicians who chanted the Psalms in the temple. Mattheson, the great musical critic, wrote a book on the subject, In which, after rejecting a number of theories, he enme to the conclusion that It Is equivalent to the modern "da capo," and Is a direction that the air or Bong is to be repeated from the com mencement to the part where the word is placed. Bananas. The banana is a perennial herba ceous plant, growing from year to year from an underground root stock with a stem or stalk from 10 to 15 feet high above the ground. The plant has drooping leaves, but no branches like fruit trees ot the north countries. Euch stalk produces one large cluster of fruit After fruiting, the stalk is cut down to the surface of the ground and grows up again from the rook