L- .. 1 tr- I ASSOCIATED S GRA.NTH BAHH, JOHEBHI.NK (XJL'NTY, OIUCGON PRFXH HERVICE. » TH4 ItMDAY, DECEMBER SM, 1IT2I WHOI>: NUMBER IM«». --------------L-L------------------------------ ILS S NATIONS FOR AID IN REBUILDING EUROPE POST FOR YEAR ♦ AVashlngton, De»-. 22.— (A. ♦ ♦ P.l The bill appropriating ♦ ♦ 820,000,1)00 for the purchase of ♦ ♦ grain for Russian famine re­ ♦ ♦ lief, was finally passed today ♦ 4 and now go»-« to the president. ♦ ♦ 44444444444444 4 ♦ e : CHILDREN lll'ItN WHEN FIRE DI HTItoVS THEIR HOME FAMOI H JOURNALIST DEAD AF­ ELECTION OF OFFICER* HELD TER ATTACK OF ILLNESS AT AT MEETING AT (NM'RTHOl'NE FLORIDA HOTEL l.AHT NIGHT P.l — Centralia, flee. 22.— (A. Ruth Dawson, aged 3, and Donald Dnweon. ag<*»l 2, were burned I to death when fir« de«troyeo«t of the Amer- i»«n legion will bn bradnd for th« coming year by Gladwin Smith. who was elected laal night at the regular annual election M the courthouse Mr. Smith take« the place of James Linm who baa been port commander for the paal year. After the »»lection of officer«, the meeting was adjourn­ ed to the Chamber of Commerce MRS. C. W. BUBERLY room« where a fee»l bad been pro­ vided. Other officer« elected last night were: Ole Hansen, vice commander; Ji. W. Coutant, adjutant; Robert Harris, finance olflc-r: K. M. Wine- •milt. er, E J. BIIHck, Everett Bradford, Ixiyal Heath. Report« of various committees were ntad»» and other buslnea« wan trail «acted Anyone p«««lng the ChamJier Commerce room« nilgtit have won­ dered st the conversation going on inside when the "vet«" were having their smoker "I »st >r lay.'* “come on, Phoebe." "a pair of boxcars." and «ueb pbraaes could be heard from the center of a couple of group«. The eat« committee had pro­ vided great gobs of cider and dough­ Hon. Mrs. C. W. Oubarly, daughter nut« and later brought on coffee and of th« lata Lord Nunburnholm*, and sandwiches. Smokes were furnish­ thrlc* married, ha« opened an antique «hop In Soho square, London. ed by th« l-ogtun. lamdon, Dec. 22.—I A. P.l — The Allied Supreme Council, at a meeting «oon to be held al Cann««, wilt l>e asked by inter­ ested powers to appoint a com­ mission Io elaborut« a compre­ hensive schunie fur the rehabl- tatlon of Central Europe and Russia. This was de»'lded at conferences of the French and <»resentatlve is In abeyance. Paris, Dec. 22.—(A. P.l — American Ambh««ador Harvey, at Ixmdon, ha« been invited to attend a meeting of the supreme council at Cannes January 4th. <>. A. <'. Girl« to Tour— Jacksonville, Fla., Dec. 22.— (A. The Madrigal club, composed of P.l Henry Watterson, famous Jour­ members of the O. A. C. girls glee nalist, former owner and publisher | club, will tour southern Oregon dur­ of the lxtulsvllle, Ky„ Courier-Jour­ ing the spring vacation. They will nal. died at a local hotel here thl« give a concert here tinder the aus­ morning, He*rt failure, superin­ pices of the high school on March duced by congestion of th»» lungs was 122. There are 24 girls In the or­ I the cause of death. ganization. Chorus and solo selec­ lie was born In Washington, D. C„ tions will l>e given, as well a» a solo dance. The girls will also give con­ on February 16, 1840. certs In Medford and Ashland. Mis« Ills service as a public official was , Marion Sabin, of this city, is mana- confined to c fractional term in con- , ger of the glee club. | green. He accepted a seat there in 11876-77 at the wishes of Samuel J. ; Tilden, with whom he was closely al­ lied. Mr. Watterson refused re-nom- luatlon for the full term. Frequent­ ly urged to run for high office he al­ ways refused, maintaining! Attorney («onerai Hays Prier«» T«o High ami Start« Proli" "I «hall stay where I am. Office I PROPOSALS ACCEPTED BY FRANGE AND ITALY Washington. Dee. 22.—(A. P.l—France and Italy have formally accepted the American proposals on the limitation of capital ah I pH at a meeting of the delegates of the five major power*. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ PREDICTION MADE THAT MEAS. I RE WILL BE KILLED IN THE SENATE CLARA BKAHIN MAY BE .ABLE TO THROW HOME LIGHT OX MURDER Albanv, Dec. 22.—(A. P.l—The actual trial of Pete Beebe was i>art- ' • d today. The prusecution announc­ ed that Dr. Griffith, of the state hos- pilal would «xamine Beebe and tejti- Body of Ferdinand Hochbrunn Found Senators Io Be Given Time to Be­ ' fy regarding his sanity. Yesterday in Home—Woman Had come Familiar With Bill—Dennis Lived at Same Place Resolution Is PanMnl UPTON WOULD DELAY ACTION REAL ESTATE DEALER SLAIN Luncheon on TmvMlay— The Chamber of Commerce lunch­ Salem. Dec. 22.— (A. P.l —The eon will be held on Tuesday next house Joint resolution number three,, week instead of Monday which is a propo«lng a constitutional amend­ holiday. K. Hammerbacher, F. 8. ment creating the Oregon 1925 expo-J Ireland and O. A. Colby are on the sition commission and providing a luncheon committee. A speaker is gasoline tax to raise 83.000.000,1 being arranged for a good luncheon passed the house late last night by, program will be given. 45 affirmative and 14 negative votes.! Speaker Bean made a plea for an MISS MADELINE STARHILL Income tax and predicted the gaso­ line tax bill would be killed in th? senate. Salem. Ore., Dec. 22.—(A. P.) — When Moser moved that the senate consider in a committee of the whole this morning the exposition measures passed by the house last night, Vpton on a point of ortjer caused a delay. He asked for 24 hours, or at least four or five, for members to become familiar with the measure. The senate passed the Dennis reso lution requiring an audit of all state accounts, passed Vinton's bill re garding inheritance taxes^ and the Hindman bill regarding the filling of terms of office when vacancies oc­ cur. The senate sustained the gov­ ernor’s veto of last session of the bill providing Saturday as a half holiday for <»>unty offices. ' Is not for me. Beginning in slavery Washington, Dec. 22.—(A. P.) — ¡to end with poverty it is odious to Declaring that price« are too high In my sense of freedom." many localltien and that retailers are From 1875 to 1892 however he sat uneouHClou liable. Attorney General I at all national conventions of the Deugberty today ordered a natlon- democratic party as a delegate-at- | wide investigation of retail prices of large from Kentucky. He presided food. fuel, shoe« and clothing in an over the convention that nominated effort to put retail price« on a pro­ jTllden in 1876 and was chairman of' per level. the platform committee In those of 1880 and 1888. "I came out of the war like many Salem. Ore., Dec. 22.— (A. P.) — of the young fellows of the South, The highway commission was sum- a very picked bird, indeed. In order i moned before the senate roads com­ to escape humiliation of borrowing from a Northern uncle, whose poll- ’*>>rrg<»n'« order of Antaerty O|M-n- mittee this afternoon to tell the ef- > feet of the exposition gasoline tax on tics I did not' approve. I went with Doors to :too the highway program. The house my watch to an ‘uncle’ who had no' Mexico City. Dec. 22.—(A. P.)— as a committee of the whole ap­ politic« at all and got 850 on it. Along with two blanket-mates. who «ore than 300 prisoners were set proved the measure, placing highway were as poor as myself, I started, or at liberty in one month aa the result traffic under the control of the pub­ ..... — • - «w .1 — 4 zl A— rather revived, publication of an old ot President Obregon's recent de­ lic service commission. suspended newspaper at Nashville, cm * granting amnesty to all viola- Nothlng could wlthstan»! the energy ‘ora l**e law complying with cer- and ardor which we three threw into tein stipulations. — ■ - the enterprise. amnesty ile»'ree was the preai- We were working for bread and had to have It. When dent’e gift to unfortunates on the Erttlowmcnta Will Enable Many Wor­ thy Student« at University we began there were nine daily pa.‘occasion of the republic’s centennial, tlm celebration of Independence. The romantic early-day history of house was the first one of the pros­ pers struggling for a footing In San Francisco, Dec. 32.—(A. P.) I a country la eluelve. and without the pectors to wash out a pan of the dirt, little Tennessee capital. At the end —Endowments of the University of effort of interested partie« 1« I oat the creek was named after him Alt- I of the year there were but two. and the I California to foster the memory of before we know It. There are many house creek. The gold was rather of these ours had two thirds of James Monroe McDonald, a Califor- interesting details connected with coarse, and a great many nugget« business. After two years I was j nia pioneer, were presented recently the discovery and mining of gold In were found, ono of them In partlcu- called to Ixnilsvllle to take an edl-l torial position on the old Louisville sow» of the Josephine county, and Geo. H. Par­ lar being valued at 31200. Revolution by his wife. Mrs. Mary J. L. McDon- aid. The four endowments of |500 ker han assembled much Interesting Start Quest in West •The two brothers mined in that Journal, the paper of George D. each are the largest ever establish­ data In thia connection.- Recently In locality Hticcossfully for several Prentice. Six months later Walter ed at the state university. getting the facts regarding the nam­ years, Philip finally died and was N. Haldeman, who owned the Courier Ix>« Angele«. Dec. 22.— (A. P.) Mr McDonald, better known as the [ ln .the that Bompwhere a)on|t ing of Althouae creek, Mr. Parker burled there, and John Joined his Jolne.1 with me in combining wrote to C. H. Stewart, of Albany, brother Samuel, at incidentally Pacific coast there is located the “Captain^ McDonald was identified Albany, and Journal and Courier. and receive»! the following letter re­ passed the remainder of his days at this led to the purchase of the old | forgotten grave of some veteran of with many western projects, among garding the Althouae brothers, with this place. Ho married a Mrs. N. H. Louisville Democrat, this publication ,^ Amerk.an Kevi)|ulis Angeles road across the Sierra Nevada moun­ whom Mr. Stewart had been about all.” qualnted: ¡chapter, has announced its members tains and the construction of the ing no children. “Thia la In answer to your letter The consolidation of the three pa-'soon will begin a search for such a first telegraph lines both in Califor­ "('apt. Althousn. who has recontly of yesterday In relation to the All- been appointed governor of the pers was the first of the great new«-; grave, and it has appeal to similar nia and the Pacific Northwest. He house brothers, with whom I W«R Island of Guam, and is now visiting paper combinations. It resulted in organizations and the public to Join was the first to discover the use of the glass Insulator in the construc­ well acquainted. ■ the qudat. In Albany, Is a son of Wm. Althouse, the first appearance of the Courier- In tion of telephone and telegraph line« “In the aprlng of 184 9 Philip anil the only one of the four 'brothers Journal. November 8. 1868. According to a statement issued He died in 1907. John Althouae. the former being 21 who did not remove from Illinois to In his early years he superintend­ by the society, white men began to The scholarships are to be known years old and the latter 19, started this coast." arrive in the country now made up ed the detail of every department, ~ McDonald from Illinois for the jfold fields of Adding further details to the in­ and for more than 30 years "put the of the Pacific Coast states shortly as the James Monroe I* California. There were ten men In teresting story, Sheriff George W. paper to press" every night. after 1800. The society believe«, scholarships and will be awarded to senior male students for 1 physics, the party, and they had four wagons. Lewis says that while Placer mining the statement said, that among those engi- They crossed the plains safely, nnil on Althouse rrwk at Browntown the who made their way across the plains chemistry, mining and civil neering respectively. when they arrived in the Sacramen­ mining operations formed a gravel or camo by ship around Cape Horn, to Valley the party broke up. The I bar on a tributary of Althouse creek, I wore possibly some who had seen DAIL ADJOURNS TO JAN. .3 Althouae brothers finally concluded and when the high water came the service In the Revolution, and whose AFTER DISCUSSING TREATY to visit their brother Samuel who current of the creek was changed Find Themselves 1'nnhlc to Collect grave« are located somewhere in the Dublin. Dec. 22.—(A. P.)—The had crossed the plains in 1847, and enough to cut Into one bank of the Pacific Coast states today. Dail El roan n was still debating the Rents or Evict Tennants located at Albany, Oregon, eo they creek and expose the bones of two treaty when it adjourned to January aold their team for «ufflclent money mon who had been buried at that PORTLAND MARKETS 3rd. Pgrls, Dec. 22.—(A. P.l—Paris to pay their way by ateamer to Port­ place. Jesse Randall, an old plo- land. Arriving there, they footed it neer who had been mining on Alt- landlords say they are the most Choice steers............... 86.50 0 87.00 up the valley to Albany, where they house for many years, told them that abused persons in the world. They Choice dairy calve«....88.50 © 89 00 worked for some time at any thing ono was the skeleton of Philip Alt­ agreed to this unanimously at a hum 'Hogs, prime light..... 88.50 © 88.75 they could find to do. house. Tho bones wore placed in a ■ueetlng held recently. Best Valley l»ambs 88.00 © 88.50 They reported they are unable to East Mountain Iatmbe 88.50 "In the spring of 1851 the two box and reburied further up on the © 89.04 Interstate Commerce Commission De­ nies Henry's Request young men went out to Southern bank. • collect rents from more than 20,000 Eggs, buying price . 44o ÿ 45c Oregon and commenced prospecting Sheriff I«ewls says the nugget men­ tennants or to evict these unprofit­ Eggs, selling price............. 4 8c Ì 60c Washington, Dec. 22.—(A. P.l — for gold. Tn company with three tioned In tho letter was found by able occupants. Eggs, selling candled ........ 46e Ï 50c All this is the fault of recent legis­ Eggs, white henneries ...... 52c Î 54c The Interstate commerce commission other men they took the flnit wagon Wm. Saunders, who had been very today refused permission to Henry from the Rogue River valley Into unsncceeaful as a miner, and when lation, say the landlords, giving ten­ Butter, extra cubes...... 41c © Ford to cut coal rates 20 per cent pay­ Butter ......................................... the Illinois river country. hff found tho niiggot ho nearly went ants who *ere immune from along the line of his railroad, the "In the fall of 18'62 the two broth­ crazy. Saunders was afterward ment of rent during the war the right Wheat ....................... 81.04 © Detroit, Toledo * Ironton, on the to find other quarters before vacat­ ers with a few other* discovered gold county assessor for two terms. About 1900 Jacob Kllpple found ing. The landlords say that when on a creek flowing Into the east fork Portland. Ore., Dec. 22.—(A. P.l ground that It would discriminate of the Illinois river, not far from a nugget on Boulder creek, Just they try to sell their propertie«, no —Cattle .steady; hogs 25c higher; against other mining territory, the Sucker creek. These diggings proved across tho divide from Althouse blds are forthcoming because of the sheep, 25c lower; eggs, firm; butter, coal product of which is sold in —•—This nugget weighed >560, existing situation. cities along the Ford railroad. to be very rich, and as Philip »Alt-' 1 creek. steady. SCHOLARSHIPS HONOR PIONEER Seattle. Dec. 22.—(A. ' P.l—A i coastwide search was begun today for Clara E. Bkarin, a former tele­ phone operator, in a hope that she might be able to throw light on the slaying of Ferdinand Hochbrunn. a wealthy retired real estate dealer, whose body was found in his home yesterday. He was shot through the head two months ago. The girl has resided in the Hochbrunn home for several months and told other resi­ dents that he had gone to Portland on business. PUBLISHED IX MOSCOW THEATRICAL JOURNAL IS Moscow, Dee. St.— (A. P.)—The first non-government paper to ap­ pear in Moscow was a theatrical Jour­ nal. It contained many advertise­ ments. the first which the bolshevik government has permitted. Several weeklies are now appearing which are not issued by the government. Advertisements pay a tax of about 8.000 rubles per agate line to the gov­ ernment. YUCATANELECTSRADICALLEADER New Governor Was Chose* Without Opposition by Socialists Merida, Yucatan. Dec. 22—(A .P.) —Felipe Carrillo, leader of the rad­ ical movement in this state, has been elected governor by an over­ whelming majority. His election on the Socialist ticket was so assured that the Partido liberal Constltu- tlonalsta party, the dominate group in Mexico, declined to nominate a candidate. For the past two years Carrillo has Miss Madeline Starhill, who was ad­ dominated the state of Yucatan and judged the moot beautiful girl in Phil­ has represented it as deputy in the adelphia. the Quaker City. national congress. SEEN GRAVES OF SOLDIERS 0f76 Honolulu, T. H., Dec. 22—(A. P.) again for Fanning Island. A week —The schooner Sailor Boy. once later the wind died and the Sailor considered one of the fastest sail- Boy was becalmed, reaching the la­ ing ships in the Pacific, ended her goon on the outskirts of Fanning long career of mishaps here when Island July 21. A ten-knot current all that remained of the once trim carried her high upon the beach. vessel, now a coal barge, was brok­ where she rested for 13 days, Each en up in 'Honolulu Harbor, a victim midnight the clock struck 13 times. of the evil potency of Friday and the number "13.” . The log of the Sailor Boy, built in to START AUTO Oregon in 1883, contained a record FACTORY IM GERMAMY of more misadventures than usually befall a craft, and In all of them Detroit, Dec. 22.—(I. N. S.) — The Friday or the number "18" played a part I Ford Motor Company is planning to On Friday. December 13, 1910, start a factory In Germany for the the Sailor Boy set sail from San manufacture of automobiles for the Francisco for the South Seas, In di­ German, 'Russian and other Eastern rect defiance of superstition. On European fields, it Is reported hero December 30 her troubles began. In usually reliable circles. Charles E. Sorenson is now in Lon- Her clock struck 13 bells. An hour1 tbe don and will leave for Germany later heavy seas carried away..... ............ in starboard fore rigging and sail« and a few day8 to mal