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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (June 27, 1917)
THE MORNING OREGONIAN, WTDXESDAY,- JUNE 2T, 1917. 14 MILLION SURPLUS DAUGHTER OF LATE PRESIDENT, WHO IS ENGAGED TO "WED. OTHER GRAFTS AT BUTTE GO ON STRIKE Double S. & H. Stamps Today and Tomorrow ON ALL CASH PURCHASES First Floor and Basement GIVEN RED GROSS -y.y i 'The "Wood-Lark" Fountain Ta!nty Hot Luncheons. 11 to 2. Ices. Hot Chocolate and Malted Milk. to . Organization Begins at Once to Extend Aid and Plans '-.." Wide Activities. First Aid Kits For the home.. farm, factory, store, office, traveler, tourist and camper, I C 3.v- to l a These Kits are complete, convenient life-savers. Second Floor. - RED CROSS TEXT BOOK OX FIKST AID SSe An illustrated manual of Instruction by Lt.-Col. Chas. Lynch, Medical Corps, U.S.A. COTTOX. UAITZE, BANDAGES. BELTS Operators Admit Works Prob ably Will Close if Black smiths Walk Out. Uardas Bath Tablets For the toilet, bath and nursery. Cn, Sparkling, fragrant, effervescent, 25c 3U0 PENDLETON LEADS WEST FIRM STAND MAINTAINED t p- HP! FT 1 -If' ml i ; M Oregon Town . Subscribes . Xearly Ten Times Its Apportionment. Marshf ield ,ALso Is Xcar - Top Allies Get Help. WASHINGTON, June 26. The Na tion's contributions to the Red Cross In response to the call for a $100,000. 000 fund were estimated at $114,000,000 tonight by Henry P. Davison, chairman of the Red Cross war council. "This figure assumes," eatd Mr. Davi son, "that stockholders in companies which have declared special dividends amounting to some $20,000,000 will turn their dividends over to the Red Cross." The policy of the Red Cross in ex pending1 this big sum, Mr. Davison said In a statement thanking the millions of contributors, will be to "conduct all our work with the utmost publicity, and to take the public as completely as possible into our confidence." Primarily, the fund will be devoted to needs of American soldiers and sail ors and secondarily to relief work among the allies. Local Chapters May Keep Part. Mr. Davison's statement follows: "Local chapters of the Red Cross are entitled to retain for their own work 25 per cent of the total amount col lected, but it is very evident that the National Red Cross will have a gen erous fund with which to begin its tre mendous tasks. "The result which has been achieved Is indeed gratifying. Never before in the history of the world has such a fund for the relief of human suffering been raised by voluntary subscription in so brief a period. . "This result was made possible by surprisingly generous contributions in many communities. The most inspir ing, indeed the most extraordinary, feature of the campaign has been the number of contributors, as well as their wide geographical distribution. Many millions of our people, representing every part of the country, have given and worked to induce others to give. Spirit Shown Gratifying "Nothing which has happened before Fhows so clearly as this campaign that the great heart of the American people is in this struggle with determination that our own men shall be cared for; that everything that can be done shall be done to hearten and to aid the suf fering peoples among our allies, in deed, that nothing shall be left undone to win this war. "No time will be lost by the Red Cross in its efforts to accomplish re sults with the large resources with which it has now been supplied. Some of the plans which are being developed and which we hope promptly to carry into execution are the following: "First, we shall provide, as we may be called upon by the Army and Navy, for the care and safety of our soldiers and sailors wherever they may be. "We shall provide funds whereby the American Red Cross Commission anay take over administration of American relief work in France. Major irayson H. P. Murphy, head of the French commission, has been appointed by General Pershing a member of his staff and the Red Cross has appropriat ed, at Major Murphy's cabled request, $1,000,000 to take care of immediate needs. Relief Extended to Allies. "We have cabled each of the allied governments seeking authority to in stall American Red Cross dispensaries in each of their independent seaport cities a measure of relief urgently needed. "We shall send to Russia a commis sion of some 20 experts, under the lead ership of Dr. Frank Billings, of Chi cago, to study the needs and the best means of aiding the Russian people. "The Commission will be equipped with materials. Instruments and facili ties for extending immediate relief in urgent cases and the Red -Cross will meanwhile organize to render large and effective aid along the battleline and elsewhere in Russia where there is acute distress. We shall send a simi lar commission to make a survey and likewise equipped with supplies and in struments to extend immediate relief to the people of Koumanla. "The war council of the Red Cross is deeply sensitive of ita very grave obli teration to administer with the wisdom and foresight which can be mustered into service the very large sum of mon ey intrusted to it. rionn to lie Made Known. "Our policies and plans will be made known as they are developed. It will le our purpose to conduct all our work with the utmost publicity and to take Dr. Ferdinand King:, New York, Physician and Medical Author Says : . EVERY WOMAN EVERY MOTHER EVERY DAUGHTER NEEDS IRON AT TIMES To Put Strength Into Her Nerves and Color Into Her Cheeks. There can he no beauti ful, heal thy, rosy - cheeked women with out iron. The trouble in the past has been that when women need ed iron they K e n e r a 1 ly i JT meTaiiicn. Ll ueVtf,he. CVlM J stomach and "i ,'lld far more harm than stood. Today doctors pre scribe organic iron Nuxated Iron. This riarticular form of iron is easily assimi ated. does not blacken nor injure the teeth nor upset the stomach. It will increase the strength and endurance of weak, nervous. Irritable, careworn, hasr . card-looking women 100 per cent in two weeks time in mal y Instances. L have used it in my own practice with most surprising results. Ferdinand Kins, ' !SOTE: JilXATED IROV recommend ed above by Dr. Ferdinand Kins; can be ,thtained from any good druiriciMt wtta an abnolnte a-narantee of nurcu or money refunded. It to dinpenaed in tfcla etty by The Unl lima; Co. and aU cooa druggists. ' 3aL " Z T1 m ' - . 7 " - -Vvi l V - Copyright Underwood MISS MARION CLETGLAa " Underwood. the public as completely as possible into our confidence. The Red Cross belongs to the people and the war council wants the public to understand the seriousnss with which It regards the trust which has been committed to it." Oversubscription of the $100,000,000 originally sought was accomplished largely in the final roundup yesterday when nearly $20,000,000 in new sub scriptions was obtained. A score of cities will extend the campaign period through the week. More-than 1000 of the larger citie raised more than, their- allotments. Among the states which exceeded their quotas were Oregon. Colorado, Wyo ming, Utah and Idaho. All sections of tha country passed the goals, with the possible exception of the South. Pemdleton Leads Went. San Francisco today reported over subscription of its $1,000,000 apportion ment, "in recognition of the aid given by the National Red Cross to a stricken city in 1906." The town of Pendleton, Or., leads the West in its subscription to the Red Cross, which was 9 times its ap portionment of $5000. Pendleton has population of 4460. Marshfield, with 2980 inhabitants, exceeded by six times its apportionment of the same amount. There are . five honor cities in Idaho. PRETTY GIRt TO WED Youngest Daughter of Late Grover Cleveland Is Won. NEW YORKER IS FIANCE Young Woman Is Student in College for Teachers at Columbia Uni versity IIusband-to-Be 'Vet eran of Ambulance Corps. NEW YORK, June 21. (Special.) Miss Marion Cleveland, pretty, young est daughter of the late President Cleveland, Is engaged to marry Will- In Washington Olympia exceeded Its lam Stanley Dell, of New York City. goal of $5000 five times and .Hoquiam I The announcement was made by Mrs. has four times - the same amount. Th.. i tj,., r- r,mi -if-., EUen.-bur? is twice over its $10,000 ap-' " . . , " propriation and the state claims ix Grover Cleveland. The date of the other honor cities. wedding has not been set. .Miss Cleveland made her debut in society in 1914. For the past two years she has been a student in Teachers' college, Columbia University. Mrs. Preston's elder daughter, Esther Cleveland, is engaged in relief work, in Paris, for soldiers blinded in battle. Mr. Dell only recently returned from service abroad with the American Am bulance in France. ANTI-DRAFT BILLS FOUND No-Conscriptlon league Resumes Campaign in Portland. -The No-Conscription League, with offices at 20 East One Hundred ana Twentv-fifth street. New York, is mak ing another campaign in Portland. Re ports to the police last nignt saia tnai manv handbills urging resistance to conscription had been distributed last Sunday. One of the handbills, wnicn was icii in the mailbox at the Hibernian Hall, 304 Russell street, was turned over to Patrolman Lillia by the members or the lodge. The bill says that the mem bers of the league are international ists, anti-militariats and opposea to wars waged by capitalist governments. The members profess themselves ready to fight in a cause approved by their own Judgment, but announce that they will not enlist merely because tney are so ordered. Open resistance to con scription is advocated, and the league promises support to persons who resist. MESSAGE FOUND ON RIVER Note Says "Writer Fears War Trenches of Europe. A hat was picked up on the Willam ette River just bolow the Inman-Poul-sen " mill yesterday morning. Care fully tucked in the band of the hat was a note addressed to City Grappler Hugh Brady, of the Harbor Patrol, reading: "Laving in fear of the trenches in Europe, am going to beat the Kaiser to it and end it all. When my body is found by Grappler Brady he will fin in my after portside pocket $65 in gold. Kindly donate this to the Red CrosB. Help for the living, hope for the dead." The letter was signed Jimmie Hope and dated early morning, June 26. Whether the hat was thrown Into the river by xome person with a. crude sense of humor or really belonged to a man who had become crazed by the European war is not known. SOLDIERS TO HEAR MUSIC Concert to Be Given for Third Ore gon Xext Friday Xight. Under the direction of Emil Enna, a complimentary concert to the officers and soldiers of the Scond Battalion of the Third Oregon Infantry will be giv en at tiie Forestry building Friday night at 8 o'clock. This . is the first event of its kind in the city. The pro gramme follows: "Arrival of the Bojaders" Olalvorson, "Serenade" tSlbellusl. Ur. Emit Eona; "On the Koad to Mandalay" (Speaks). "My Own I'nited Htates" Stange). Joho Claire Mon teith. Miac E!na Anderson, accompanist:. "Norwegian Dances" tGriejr), "Etude de Concert" Slndlng-1. Dr. Kmil Knna: "Fiddle and 1" (Goode), Miss Adel Barnickel, violin obliirato. Walter Baron: "r"aprice Viennols" (Krelsler, "Serenade" fDrigo), Walter Ba con, Mrs. Bernlce Warren, accompanist; "The Star-Spangled .Banner" (Francis Scott Key. Miss Adel Barnickel; singing of pa triotic songs. Federal Mediator Is Told New Union Controlled by I. W. XV. More Miners Resume Work, but Output Not Increased. BUTTE. Mont, June 26. All boiler makers and machinists employed by the lour largest mining companies and one mill In the Butte district were called out today by their unions, who charged that the electrical work was being done by non-union men. At some of the mines the blacksmiths also quit. The companies affected by the strike -order are the Anaconda Copper Mining Company, the -East Butte Copper Min ing Company, the Elm-Crlu Mining Company, the Timber Butte Milling Company and the Butte & Superior Mining Company. . The strike order was Issued in ac cordance with the strike called by the electricians' union on the Montana Pow er Company. The electricians, at the time they atruck, demanded that tha Metal Mine Workers' Union's request for higher wages and improved .work ing conditions be granted and that the Montana Power Company grant "the electricians their demands for higher wages. Mine May Close. The walkout today'was precipitated by the boilermakers, machinists and blacksmiths employed at the Black Rock mines, called the largest zinc pro ducer in the world and a property of the Butte & Superior Minlpas Company. I quitting when it waa alietred that tha J electrical non-union work waa being aone mere, soon aiterwaras tne Metal Trades Council, of which the black smiths, boilermakers ant", machinists are a. part, ordered the three crafts from the mines. Some men quit at noon and others when the day shift ended. It is expected that many of the three crafts will report for work tomorrow. Tha- blacksmiths, who mt tonight to vote on the strllse, comprise one of the important crafts in the mines because the tool sharpeners are in the black smiths' unicn. It waa said officially by one of the biggest employers that the blacksmiths are almost as impor tant as the engineers who do the hoist ing, and that if either one of the crafts walk out generally the mines must close. Employers Are Firm. At least six officials of international unions are coming to Butte., it waa said, to help their locals, W. H. Rodgers, Commissioner of Con ciliation of the Federal Department of Labor, held his first conference today with the employers. All mining com panies of the district were represented and tha employers' position was stat ed. Mr. Rodgers was informed that the" Metal Mine Workers' Union would un der no circumstances be recognized, because, the employers stated, it is con trolled by the I. W. W. The union's officials denied' the J.. W. W. were in control of it. The mines continued operations with slightly increased forces of miners, but their production remains at 10 per cent of the normal of 17,000 tons. Vk. LJ. IJQP' Miolena Liquid Face Powder Keeps the skin smooth and eoft l r)C OOc 3 for... $la3 LISTERATED ANTISEPTIC TOOTH POWDEll For purifying and sweetening the breatn. naraening ine gums, cleansing and or. I preserving the teeth. Z.V- S for .. Cucumber and Elder Flower - Cream Delightfully effective in ease of sun burn, tan and all roughness and irritation of the akin. Tube 2Se 4-ounce jar noe s-ounce Jar 75 RIVERS' DROP SLIGHTLY HIGHER TEMPERATURES GIVE NO CAUSE ' FOR WORRY. Weather Bureau Expects Shifts In Temperature to Equalise Stave 4ft Water Here. Wenatchee reported a slight sain of two-tent ha of a foot In the stage of the Columbia yesterday, but other points showed a decline, and while temperatures were above normal throusrh the inland district yesterday and will probably continue today. Weather Bureau officials are not con cerned and expect the river to con tinue to fall here until Saturday, re maining stationary then and risiner Sunday, if there is much surplus water added. The rise at Wenatchee bids fair to be offset by the Snake River. By the time snow now being1 melted has .an influence on the stage of the Willam ette, it is reasoned, a shift of weather may be experienced, so there will not be enough to cause a material change. Official readings yesterday were as follows: CAMP IS LAST CHANCE Next Batch of Officers to Be Chosen From Men in Service.' SAN FRANCISCO, June 26.-"-The sec ond Reserve Officers' training camp, to start at the Presidio here, August 27, will provide the last opportunity for men not in military service or for those who may be drafted In the future to become officers, according to an nouncement of the War Department to day. . Training camps now in progress throughout the country will provide sufficient line officers, for the first increment of 500,009 and a reserve. Line officers for tha second increment of 600,000 will be chosen from men who attend the second series of train ing camps, and by promotion of men from the regular Army, National Guard and drafted forces. Applications for the second camp must be filed before Jury 15. fl 5 o wo -2. ':r? 'I 5 Stations. m - s p f l R Wenatchee -10 40 2 0.2 Kamiah LT 1 n.2 Lewiston T2 14. A tl.x Umatilla 2r 'J -J 1 0.4 Thw Italics 40 38.2 0.2 Eune 10 4.; . 0.1 Albany 20 D.2 0.2 -alem ; 2i 4.7 0.3 Oregon City 12 5.2 o.:l Portland lri 23.1 0.2 Scandinavians to I'ionic. There will be a Scandinavian picnic at Rice road, near A. V. Hall's home. Vancouver, next Friday, June 29. all day. A good programme will be ren dered. Several ministers will be pres ent and take part. Everybody cordially invited to take part. VANCOUVER. Wash.. June 26. (Spe cial.) The Columbia River Is falling but slowly and at 8 P. M. today was 23.7 feet. It was 23.8 at 8 A. M. As the river has fallen only slightly inland its fall here will be almost impercep tible for a few days. LEG IS BROKEN BY FALL Mrs. Malarkcy lies Half Hour Be fore Assistance Comes. Mrs. Dan J. Malarkey sustained two fractures of the right -leg yesterday, when she slipped and fell while malt ing garden .at her home on Kill Crest Drive. One fracture was Just below the knee, while the other waa in an ankle bone. Mrs. Malarkey lay In pain for more than a half hour before help could summoned to assist her into the se A physician was called at once, as was her husband, who was engaged In the trial of a case in the Circuit Court. The attending physician stated last evening that, while the fractures were serious, he expects Mrs. Malarkey to be confined to her bed for about six weeks. She is being cared for at her home. be t Foils Albany Judge Fines Seattle Bor. ALBANY, Or., June 2. CSpecial.) Tha first cases brought here under the new law ' preventing minora from smoking cigarettes were filed yester day against two transient lads, giving their names as B. M. Way and C. M. Weaver.. They pleaded guilty and Jus tice Swan fined each $4. Having rto money, the boys were placed In the T ELIMINATING everything that could be called waste, including music and flowers, in order to avoid raising prices in the Grille and Pompelan Res taurant, we must hereafter depend for your patronage Bolely upon the at-,, tractions contained in "very best mate rials, cooking and service that money will buy, at the same low prices as formerly." Manager, Cutaneous Emollient A most excellent application for the I skin and complexion. 33c X for. VI Princess Vanishing Cream 2 -ounce Jar noe 4-ounce jar 7.c s -ounce Jar stjto 1-pound jar $lJSO Wheel Chairs c;i j . r . i c it ft. Sy--J Toilet Accessories Egyptian Complexion ft" Lotion 31 Imperial Violet Talcum Powder, bo- Xflrt rated 15ci S for only HJ0 Valiants Bath Salts, assorted M or odors 60c Z for fliw Valiants' Toilet Water, 7Ci assorted odors, 25c, sue, IOC ?7 !:; 4. fN. j '-i, yr-Z?7) - '.,- f?' yy '" (p a JJj . J When you ask for A1'1B1." at our store you'll be given the ORIGINAL, and (.EMI.MJ BAVR PROBICT. DENTOX Tha ideal Dentifrice antiseptic, as tringent, aromatio Price !ti w-sr PEERLESS ALMOND CREAM A soothing cream for tha-skin, chapped hands, tan, sunburn and irrltatca surfaces. fiCi Priced at ssc, 60c and OJli IMPERIAL TOOTH PASTE A scientific dentifrice carefully prepared from the best materials 25ci 3 for 65c S0e Javn Ris Powder tAe 50c Lablache Face Powder 3e 60c Pebeco ...:ie 2oc Colgate's Tooth Paste .......ZOo 50c Daggett Sc Ramsdell Cold Cream 4.te 50a Cameline 40e 50o Robertine j .39c MS m a t N tl 0 ALBANOL A pure, neutral Mineral Oil, of particularly high grade, tasteless and without sulphur compounds. A most effective internal lubri cant for persistent constipation. Full pint bottles soc Six pints for 92.50 Ji nr jTREtTAJ' ytST BUBX MAB3HAL1. 4-TQO-MOME A617T Always S. & H." SUmpi First Three Floors. County Jail -to serve two days each. The boys asserted they had purchased the cigarettes la Seattle. having "hoboed" their way from that city the past few days. Experiment Station Site Sought. NORTH TAKIMA. Wash.. June 26. The committee appointed by the pres ident of the State College to select a site for the state irrigation experi ment station conferred here today with representatives of several Yakima towns seeking the station. The com mittee will spend tomorrow and Thurs day looking over the valley as far as Kennewick. Written proposals will be asked before a selection is announced. Proposed Tariff Suspended. SALT LAKR CITY. June 27. The State Public Utilities Commission issued- an- order today that the proposed tariff for an increase of 15 per cent in freight rates scheduled to be effective July 1 should be suspended until August 1. Germans Cnder Heavy Guard. FORT OGLETHORPE. Ga.. June 2. Twenty-two German civilians who had been interned in the Eastern cities, most all of them ex-New York business men, were committed to the war prison here yesterday. They arrived under heavy guard from Washington. 15-Cent Bread Loaf Soon Due. NORTH YAKIMA. Wash'., June 26. That the country soon will see the 15 cent bread loaf, and that even after the-war there will be no return to the 5-cent loaf, was declared by President W. P. Matthei. of the Master Bakers of the Pacific Northwest, who began their fourth annual convention here today. - The convention continues through two days, and closes tomorrow night with a banquet. A proposal for organization of a Washington State Bakers' Association will be voted on tomorrow.. Body of Drowned Fisherman Found. ASTORIA. Or.. June 26. (Special.) The body of L. M. Meyers, a fisherman, who was drowned near Hammond on June 1, was recovered during the night and brought here today. The man waa about 50 years of age, and lost his life by the anchor catching in his clothing as he was throwing It overboard. Read The Oregonlan classified ads. nl5 LJs L-ii Jia mLj ' V 2JrMf ty Oldsmobile Cutaway Chassis Will be on exhibition until June 30.. See for yourself why our Government bought V-Type, 8-Cylinder Oldsmobiles ' . to be used for military work. . .... Quality Durability Design Construction Proper Balance Riding Qualities Light Weight and Perfect Control. These are the reasons the Oldsmobile is the popular car today. J a. VW!iAW f Don't miss an opportunity to see this wonderful chassis of modern automobile construction. Come when you can any time between breakfast and bedtime. 2. JL 11 111 -6. J H Jill HlM j, yjl0 Broadway at Couch OF OREGON Phone Broadway 1640