TIIE STJXDAT OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND. jrLT 30, 1923 KIS INDUSTRIAL - COURT UNDER FIRE Fate of Tribunal Rests With' "Voters at Primary., MANY URGE ABOLISHMENT Two Republican and Three Demo cratic Candidates for Gover- n(r Opposed to Institution. TOPEKA, Kan., July 29. (By the Associated Press.) The fate o the Kansas industrial court, which, during its life has been opposed at every turn by organized, labor, will rest with the voters of the state at the Drimary August 1. Two of the seven republican candidates for governor and all three democratic candidates have advocated the- abolishment of this court, fathered ajnd protected by Governor Allen, who Is not a candi date for re-election. Of the republican candidates, ni.Governor Stubbs of Lawrence- ville, W. Y. Morgan, Hutchinson editor; W. P. Lambertson of Fair view, Mrs. W. D. Mowry of Kansas ritv. Miss Helen Pettigrew of Kan sas City, Fred W. Knapp of SaUna and Thomas McNeal of Topeka, the luttnr two have 'voiced the senti ment that the court be done away with. The democratic candidates, Nftnderson Martin of Lawrence, Johnathan M. Davis of Bronson and Leigh Hunt of Kansas City, all have favored its abolishment.. Ex-Governor Stubbs served from 1909 to 1913 and is now a stockman and banker: Mr. Morgan is a former lieutenant-governor and publisher of the Hutchinson News; Lambert son is a farmer and for many years a member of the state legislature; Knapp is a banker and former state auditor; McNeal is editor of one of Senator Capper's farm papers; Mrs. Mowry is a welfare worker and wife of a wholesale druggist, and Miss Pettigrew an elocutionist and platform entertainer. Women Make No Campaign.. ;, Neither , of the women candidates has been making a campaign, nor has either the backing of any of the state's women's organizations. Both have Stated that they do no expect to be nominated. Governor Allen, in announcing that he would not be a candidate in the republican primary for re nomination, stated that he was re tiring to private life and was living the most humble life of any citizen in the state of Kansas. The voters will be confronted with a list of 121 names of persons seeking state office. These are aside from probably as many more seeking nominations for congress, legislature, district court judgeships and county offices. There are three complete state tickets in the field republican, democratic and socialist. The republicans have a contest slated for every nomination except "lieutenant-governor, state treasurer and state printer. The democrats have two contests, ther being three seeking gubernatorial honors, whHe four are ambitious" to run for state superintendent of public instruction. The socialists filed a full ticket with one candidate for each office, headed by - M. L. Phillips of Mc Donald for governor. Republicans Have Opposition. Five of the eight Kansas repre sentatives all of whom are repub licans and are seeking re-nomination have opposition. D. R. Laugh lin of Concordia, wealthy farmer and anti-tax crusader, is .seeking the republican nomination in the fifth district against Representative Strong; Tom Harley 'of Lawrence and Russell Dyer of Kansas City are opponents in the second district of Representative Little; State Senator Gray of Kirwin and Clerin Zumwalt of Agra are seeking the toga of Hays! B. White of the sixth. Phil Campbell, now serving his 11th term representing the third district,' which includes the Kansas coal fields, has two opponents W. H. Sproul of Sedan and J. E. Brooks, also of Sedan. In the first, Kansas' other veteran representative, Dan R. Anthony, has two rivals, Fred Voil and, well-known Topeka clothier, and W. E. Bush, populist secretary of state, 1897-189S, and union printer. The three representatives whose fences held so tight that no candi dates got through are Homer Hoch of the fourth, J. N. Tincher of the seventh and Richard E. Bird of the eighth. visualized . sound of the voice. The camera can catch footfalls or the opening and shutting of doors, even while demonstration of other ob jects is in progress. v "These fluctuations of light are registered on the films. They are the registered records and together with the pictures are developed like ordinary films. I can reproduce the voice direct from the negative.'' Anotner- test was the reproduc tion from a film nf n. man nnnnt ing. The voice spoke the words, vne, two, tnree" and so on to nine terminating with the question, "How is it?" The words came plain from the film. wViih , in Athc. demonstrations, was run tbrough tee reproducing machine and car ried by wires to an amplified tele phone. , . - . "This camera," explained the pro- lessor, is easily adapted to the ex isting types of moving picture ma chines. This I think will facili tate its use. I want to state that mis invention has progressed be yond tbVstage of experiment. The i otui Ming oi tne voice slmultane ousiy .with the moving picture -is established. Sounds can be repro duced irom negatives, fast or slow, as in moving picture machines." He explained that nature's' sounds, sucn as thunder, crash of storms, FALL OF POINCARE CABINET PREDICTED WHAT CONGRESS DID AS ITS DAY'S WORK. -' I'' .4 Senate. ' Resolution, for Investigation of interests held by senators in wool or other features of tariff legislation offered! by Caraway, democrat, Arkan sas. Tariff bill debated briefly and la'di aside until Monday, a quorum having disappeared. Federal reserve system further denounced by Heflin, democrat, .Alabama. MOVIE WILL SPEAK SOON (Continued From First Page.) engineering department. In one ip the revolutionizing camera; adjoin ing it the reproducing projector and a film-feeding machine. 'The two conspicuous parts of the camera are twin disks or magazines .which contain the film. One is loaded with the clean film, and as the machine ope'rates it is im printed with the records and wound gradually, up in .the other disk. .. In the next room is a small mega phone with wires connecting through an aperture in a door with the camera. A small mo.tor near the camera produces the electricity required. The whole machine ap pears to be photo-electric. Sound Easily Visualized. The voice or any sound is caught by the megaphone and carried by the wires to the camera. The sounds appear in the camera as a "fluctuat ing light," easily to be seen vibrat ing and fluctuating, produced by a mercury arc. The fluctuations vary with the tensity of the sounds, and ere recorded on thp film which is passing through the 'camera.' Professor Tykociner demonstrated how sound can be visualized so that the eye observes what is. being print cdvon the film. A series of demon rtrations were then made for the World. These were voice tests in the laboratory, as the only moving picture machine is stationed in a .lecture room. First A woman ringing a belK Her voice through an amplified tele phone , was heard saying, "I will ring." Then came the peal of the bell. 'Then the question, "Did you hear the bell ringing?" Then an other sound of the bell in action. The strip of film which had been put through the reproducing ma dune showed a picture of a woman ringing a bell and the cloudy strips on the border which recorded the voice. ' , " . . , The next test -was a strip of film that showed a man whistling. First came out. of the telephone the greet ing, "Hello," followed by a k,een whistle of some minutes' duration. Camera GetM Everything;. "Whistling."- said the professor, . "records an entirely different image from the sound of speech 'or sing ing. The fluctuating light is the bird notes, barking of dogs and crowing of cocks, are impressed on the film as successfully as any others. , , .... " - . "Speech)" said he, "is much harder to record than any other sound." Professor Watson, who was pres ent, said he considered speech the concise test. . ... "As speech" has been reproduced," said he, "it follows that music and sinking are more easily recorded and reproduced." Then there is the economic end to be considered. The photographed voice, speech and song can be reproduced much cheaper than the phonograph records. The voices and words of noted men, buried in phonograph records, can be filmed wit the moving picture, labeled and handed down to poster ity. A demonstration of Professor Paine striking a collection of oriental bells and Professor Knipp making a short speech of congratu lation was shown on the screen in the lecture room. The moving -picture suffered a little from obscure lights. The voice sounds were some what overcome by the noise of the picture machine. The talking moving picture field is but a part of the field to which the new camera is adapted. It can reproduce the voice, speech, action of the orator, the pulpiteer, the judge, the lecturer and the concert nger. The political speaker will find it the greatest adjunct to his campaign, as all films can be dupli cated a hundred-fold. The effec tiveness of the picture and speech can be imagined. Great Possibilities Seen. "Not the least portion of the field of endeavor for the invention is its scope in an educational way. The Chautauqua orator lecturing on the uplighting things of life can deliver his lecture once before the sound recording camera and have it de livered in 50 cities, before 50 au diences simultaneously while he is taking an evening nap on the sofa at home. "This camera would save the coun try from the winter invasions of the English writers and lecturers'. They could-say their say before the ma chine, ship their films across and in one night cover all the territory in which they spend three months buf-' feting about, cursing hot hotel rooms and sleeping cars. Then there would be the one grand clean up of the dollars. It is Aladdin-like in its resources. "A new field also fe the recording of Important telephone conversa tions in a large office with the camera and its reproducing brother as a part of the equipment. All Im portant telephone conversations can be filmed, labeled, and filed. In this day, when many great con tracts 'are made over telephone wires, the preservation of the con versation is important." ' Commercial End Problem, The inventor has given the Uni versity of Illinois an option on the promotion of the camera and he hopes that, the university will find some way to exploit it commercially. But as science is the darling of the university, it may be difficult for the university to take up the com mercial end. So far the only dem onstrations have been of short rec ords for the purpose of lesting the different conditions affecting the camera. In September Professor Tykociner will give r.n exhibition in a lecture hall lor the faculty and students. The speech and pictures then pro duced will be of incidents in and about the university. Professor A. P. Carman, who is head of the department of which Professor Tykociner is an assistant, is giving every encouragement to the inventor. Professor Carman took part in one demonstration in which he madea short speech into the camera and inspected the rec ords of his voice on the film. As it was not developed it was -not put through the reproducing machine. In The Oregonian tomorrow an articie will be published which was written by Joseph T. Tykociner, inventor ot the soun-recording camera, in which he ex plains his invention an'd its action. Reparations "Spell Defeat of French Premier. TARDIEU MAY SUCCEED! Better Understanding Essential With Lloyd George in Order to Settle German Issues. BY WILLIAM BIRD. - (Copyright, 1922, by The Oregonian.) PARIS, July 29. '(Special. Cable.) A definite expectation that the Poincare ministry will be .' over thrown soon after the chamber re turns from the slimmer vacation prevails. fhe prediction is Based upon the belief that the premier will fall to. secure a satisfactory settle ment of the reparations questions at the coming London conference. The widening of the conference to include Belgium and -Italy al ready has caused an unfavorable impression here, because At is in terpreted as indicating that the con ference will develop info a meeting of the supreme council which Poin care has insisted he never'-would" attend, .'",' , f Who will succeed Poincare as pre mier? . ',' Tardlen Mar Be Called. I asked Andre Tardieu whether he himself expected to be called and he said: "In my opinion I will be called on to form a cabinet in February." Millerand is hostile to suggestions of a Tardieu cabinet,' and in order to offset one is expected to try Bar thou or Vivianl in the hope that one of them can form a government that will lean strongly on, tje left for support. Briand did this and there is no doubt that the present drift pf French opinion is toward the left. .- Anglo-French Issue 'Vital.?- ' Tardieu is convinced Poincare and Lloyd-George are constitutionally incapable of understanding each other and that the need for a gen eral understanding between France and Britain on German policies ill-, innately win compel a ministry of which he will be the head. ' The. objections that are beine urged to Tardieu as prime minister are: s First, he is accused of reactionary tendencies and constantly is coupled by his political adversaries with the royalist group. becontt, he has stuck persistently to the letter of the treaty of Ver sailles and this has engendered the rear that he will lack the necessaTv flexibility in dealing with Lloyd George. " ' " Attitude Is Modified. During '.he last two weeks hp. has modified his stand on both.. points. ne aas let it do Known in unmis takable terms that he will not in-' 8ist On a. Strife- nnlifatiM p v,a Versailles terms now, because the treaty already oas Been so mutilated as to be ineffective and it can best be used as an inatVnmant .... u t . . u... uitivii. iv icai;u a common understanding with Great ''u ana tne united states. For' thft first time. Via aloe , .-! . j - uao aetadiieu the royalist grojip through his news- f.iJciof i-iiuH niuicating tne would nave none or their aid an furnishing cabinet members. Political ernfirts ioni9M ; moves were essential before he could expect the co-operation of even the moderate left center. Poinw'. . i ent weakness is due in a consider ate measure to his having traf ficked with the extremists of the I right. . .. , Summer orices nnai di,ah.im. mond Coal Co.. Bdwv. 3037. Adv Miss Stroud Leaves Salem. SALEM. Or., July 29. (Special. ) Miss Benta Stroud, follow-up work er for the public health clinics held recently in Salem, has completed her work in Marion county and left to day for Portland. In the absence of a public health worker here, the campaign in behalf of the physical welfare of mothers and babies will be continued by the Marion Health association, of which Mrs. John Car son is president. Poultry Specialist Arrives. CANBY, Or., July 29. (Special.) George W. Wood, of Santa Cruz, Cal. recently arriving in Oregon to conduct a series of meetings in the interest of poultrymen of the north west, will hold his first meet at Canby on Monday evening.. Mr. Wood, who is secretary of the Poul try - Producers' association of cen tral California, will conduct a meet ing here. Another will be held at Damascus Tuesday. Diamond Specialist 348 Washington Street Fried Spring Chicken or Roast Young Duck , DINNER . .00 : Served 5 to 8 P. M. r - Today we feature Fried -Spring Chicken and Roast Spring Duck, cooked to please. SWETIAND'S 269-271 Morrison St. A Pleasant Place to Dine s 4 DANCING TAUGHT ALL NEW STEPS AND POPULAR DANCES - GUARANTEED IN 8 4-HOUR LESSONS. " Ladies - $2.00 Gentlemen - - - $5.00 DOWNEY'S BEAUTIFUL ACADEMIES (Formerly DeHoney's) MURLARK HALL :3d and Washington St. Main 5527 COTILLION HALL 14th and Burnside. Bdwj, 2O0S Class Murlark Hall Tuesday Evenings. 7:300 11:30.. Cotillion Hall Friday 1 ' . Evenings, 7:30 to 11:30. L Private lessons either hall, all hours. Plenty of desirable partners. No embarrassment. f 39 For almost thirty years this establishment has made clothes for Portland's best dressed men. - W.P.Kraner&Co. Men's Tailor Est. 1&S3 C. W. STOSE GEO. E. KRAMER - SECOND FLOOR COUCH BUILDING . ifOFe E3E3E3 i!lill!lll!!llllllllllllllllll!!IIIIIIII!IliniIiriIinii!L' -pOR-TOUR convenience some of the articles mentioned here have been arranged in the front windows. VyHKTHER one piece or a heuse- ful is to be selected, you'll be better pleased if Edwards' values are investigated. THERMS to please your personal . need, whether prices are regu lar or not. Everything from rugs to cooking utensils on one account. A T THIS store everyone, including stockroont workers, have a proprietory interest in giving serv ice; the kind of service you'll like, too. riiimiiiiiiiiiimiHiimmimimmiiiiiiimmmn Handsome Pieces of Living r Room Furniture at Sharply Reduced Prices -Massive flare-arm overstuffed davenport, black and gold mercerized sateen covering; down-filled Jbose cushions and full JQQ hn web construction . v '. . VvuiuU Luxurious lounging chair exquisitely up holstered with fine velour; an odd JC piece left from a 3-piece suite at.. vHrilw Davenport and Chair to Match $179.50 Exquisite silver-tone taupe velour cover ing; full web construction and loose cushions. On these youUl save an even J100. Polychromed Suite of Three Pieces Inwest n n AUGUST SALE oT STOVES AND RANGES .AN OPPORTUNITY THAT DOES NOT PRESENT V ITSELF DAILY Si ii!l!llICSilip r mfn i jkj - pj KMBIMI im -.- . . j This Beautiful Penin sular Gas Range Set Up and , Connected Complete (Has white enamel - splashers, white door panels and white broiler and drip pans.) $532 Six-Lid Crown Steel Range Set Up With Coils ' Connected -MW'hite enamel splashers, . polished top and. plain nickel trimmings.) Not Identical, but similar to illustration. EASY TERMS, NO INTEREST, THE . SAMEVAS WHEN PAYING FULL J AND REGULAR PRICES v.. 2-Bumer Clark Jewell , ': Oil Stoves Priced Now at $12 Three-burner New Process Oil Stoves. Priced for this sale $18 85 Q $395- Davenport, fireside-back ' arm chair and gothic-back reading chair covered with fine mohair. Your decision will be "it's mine," Mahogany finished arm chairs and arm rockers with tapestry covered spring cushion seats; the kind you expect to pay 014 OC J20.00 to 22.00 for, at lOiOO Beautiful ivory wicker davenports with spring base construction and jcretonne cov ered loose cushions. These are 007 Ed knockout bargains at... Qui OU Solid Oak" Six-Foot Extension Table SIMILAR TO THE ILLUSTRATION $16.95 Solid Oak ..... Chairs Finished to match: also similar-in outline as shown in illustration; each $2.98 Two Exceptional Bedroom Suite Values TAKE ONLY THE PIECES YOU DESIRE." " ,. Exquisite Walnut and Decorated Ivory Princess vanity case. .$61.00 New bowfoot bed $44.00 Chtfferette with trays... $36.00 Elegant dresser $46.00 Triple mirror toilet table $32.00 Attractive cane bench -.$10.00 Slipper rocker ....$11.50 Polychromed Ivory and Silver-Tone Grey Full panel bed, . . . . . ,$22.50 Chiffonier with miror. ... . . .$24.30 Triple mirror toilet table, .... $23.00 Ijarge size dresser . . ... ...... .$30.15 Medium size dresser. $24.30 Solid top bench. $ 7.20 Slipper rocker ...'.....$ 8.55 THESE SUITES ARE NEW AND CHOICE TAKE NOTE OF THE GOOD FINISH WHEN INSPECTING. . Many Other Single Pieces of Bedroom Furniture at Irresistible Prices For Example: V Folding Steel Cots (Single size) -$3.9S- Coil Double-deck Springs $14.75- 50-Lb. Felted Cotton Mattresses $11.85- 0 5-Piece Decorated Ivory Breakfast Sets $27 .- O 7 Quart , Nickel - Over Copper Tea Kettles W . -V V aliies Attractive From the Drapery Section One, Two and Three Pair Lots of Scrim, Lace and Net Curtains at I2 : Price voile 37c Lace edged and i hemstitched and marquisette, per yard now. . Ithat sold regularlyvup to $1.65, now.... vtJu -Blue luster velour drapes, sateen CO flfl lined (5 ft. 6 in.), reg. $20.00, now.. POiUU 50-inch guaranteed Sunfast drapery 01 0C 'i (all popular colors), per yard OiimJ 2Sx48-lnch flat extension rods, lar 40c; now Regu- 25c Enamel Surface Pabcblin and Felt-Base Pro-Lino Now 49c Typical Edwards Values OllS AXMINSTER AND WOOL VELVET RUGS NOW PRICED AT Per Square Yard rA splendid assortment of pat terns each at a saving of 21c to 35c per yard. Bring at least approximate measurements so .yardage can be reserved for you. -$29.85- xl3 LINEN FRINGED SEAMLESS WIL TON VELVETS IN CHOICE VARIETY AT -$47.75 9x13 andx8.3xl0.6 genuine Wiltons at... 9x12 plain and bordered Chenilles (three colors).... AGood PbceTo Trad ..I $69.50 ...$55.00 0x12 JASPAY FIBERS, WOOL AND FIBERS AND STENCILED-ART . - SITREMB GRASS RUGS v -$13.85 A PROFUSION OF SMALL RAG RCGS FROM 27x54 TO 36x72 INCH SIZES AT " . $1.90 to $3.95- COLLAPSIBLE GO-CARTS WITH HOODS AND RUBBER TIRED WHEELS -$15.75 INFANTS' WHITE ENAMEL BASSINETS WITH MESH WIRE SPRINGS $6.65 RAY-VAC ELECTRIC VACUUM SWEEPERS PRICED NOW AT $32.50 . WICKER SETTEES IN BARONIAL BROWN FINISH (TWO ONLY) AT . $12.75- MAHOGANY FINISHED SMOKING STANDS WITH GLASS ASH .HOLDER $1.98- EasyTerms -No Merest1 ( 14x18 INCH PIATE MIRRORS WITH SOLID OAK FRAMES $2.45 ' 1 1 1- -'I H