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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (June 28, 1919)
THE MORNING OREGOXIA!, SATURDAY, JUNE 53, 1D19. E, THE DEANS OF THE PEACE CONFERENCE. J ST ' . -i-F-ZZTZ , ; II "THE STORE THAT UNDERSELLS BECAUSE IT SELLS FOR CASH" Here's Another Great Corset Sale for Saturday! R. and G., Lady Ruth, Merito and Rengo Belt :(OrSilS and Sample Models at 359 (HI 1920 ARMY BILL i Force of 325,000 Officers and fSen Agreed On. SOME APPROPRIATIONS CUT iluae Committee Vote to Keport Out Prohibition Knforccmcnt Measure In One Bill. WASHINGTON. June 27. Senate and house conferees on the army appropria tion bill lute today reached an agree ment to fix the average size of the 120 army at 325.000 officers and men' This total is 75.000 less than that pro posed by the senate and 25,000 more than the strength authorized original ly by the house. Ths agreement means that for the lust nine months of the year ending June 30. 1S20. the army will b corn pored of 225.000 officers and men. made ne.-esaary by the surplus above 325.000 during the next three months. Ii announcing that 325.000 was the future agreed upon. Chairman Wads worth of the senate military committee uid M was the lowest number that coi Id be named and still keep the array within the limits prescribed by the na tional defense act. which required the maintenance of an army of 225.000. An- ) other meeting will be held tomorrow ' at which the appropriations for avia- tion. ordnance and other remaining items will be considered. Mse Redartloaa Made. Efforts of the house conferees to re- duce increased senate appropriations in I part were successful, the senate appro ; priation of S15.000.000 for barracks and iiuarters being cut In half, while that J of Jl.500.000 for the signal corps was reduced to 13.250.00". The senate ap ' propriation of 3430.000 for the military Intelligence branch, was reduced to stoo.ooo. A senate amendment fixing the sal ary of C. W. Hare, director of sales and '. In charge of disposing of surplus war I material, at (12.000 a year was accept ! ed by the bouse managers. I WASHINGTON. June 27. After adopt t ing amendments increasing approprla- ' tions for administration or tne war risn insurance act from 164.000.000 to 3123, noo.000. the senate spent several hours t today discussing the proposed decrease J in appropriations lor the federal trade commission. ' Cassslsaloaer'a Allewaaee Cat. Senator Norris. republican, of Ne i braska. said the commission had earned J tlie enmity of the meat packers -and i other powerful business interests which would like to destroy It. while Senator I'oroerene. democrat of Ohio, declared ' the commission needed the Increased funds because of its new work in pro- T rooting export trade. After prolonged debate, the senate ' voted to reduce the appropriation for the commission to $300,000. The senate restored the house ap- j propriation of 12,500.000 for the Inter- slate commerce commission physical valuation of railroads. J WASHINGTON. June 27. The house , Judiciary committee today -voted 17 to l 2 to report out all prohibition enforce J nient legislation In one general bill. , with the war-time enforcement measure set down as part one. The three sections of the enforce ment bill are: War-time enforcement, effective upon Its approval, constitutional prohibition enforcement and regulation of the manufacture of Industrial alcohol. Iarts two and three will become effec tive January 1. when the country will go dry by constitutional amendment. WASHINGTON. June 27. Final ap proval was given by congress today to repeal of the daylight saving law In the adoption of the conference report on the annual agricultural appropria tion bill to which the repeal measure is attached. The bill contains an amendment pro viding for the labeling as well at the Inspecting of horse meat. WASHINGTON. June 27. Secretary ' Wilson is asked in a resolution adopted today by the house to report the activi ties of officials and employes of the labor department in connection with the case of Thomas J. Mooney, con victed In California, In connection with ttoe preparedness day bomb explosions. Mr. Wilson Is said by his friends not ' to be opposed to sending the Informa tion to the house. Representative Blanton, democrat, Texas, who introduced the resolution, charged, that John B." Densmone, now director of the federal employment - service, spent two months on the case, "trying to put a dictagraph in the dis trict attorney's office to help turn the dynamiters, loose." SAN FRANCISCO. June 27 John B. Densmore. director of employment, sent to San Francisco last year by William H. Wilson, eecretary of labor, turned in a report to Jlr. Wilson, dated No vember 1. in which revelations of alleged irregularities in the prosecu tion of many cases, criminal and civil, ' were made. Present and former publio officials were mentioned in the long stenog raphic report, much of which consisted of alleged conversations obtained by dictaphones. KECESS PLAX NOT APPROVED Congress to Remain in Session Tntil President's Return. WASHINGTON. June 27. Proposals that congress recess for ten days, begin ning early next month after the annual supply measures have been passed, have been made by some democratic sena tors, but thus far republican leaders nave refused to agree, holding that vtew of the early return of President wrusou and his desire to address the enat It would be unwise for the sen ate to suspend its work in the lmmedi ate future. It is urderstood, however. that they agree to three-day recesses for a snort period pending consider ation of the peace treaty. Keelejr Demurrer Filed. SALEM. Or.. June 27. (Special.) As sistant Attorney-General Benjamin has filed In the circuit court a demurrer to the mandamus proceedings brought by Leroy Keeley, a Portland attorney who is seeking to compel Mrs. Laura ib bern to return to the state $4000. which was paid to her by ttve industrial acci dent commission as a result of the death of her husband. Arguments on the case are not expected for several weeks. S. s H. green stamps for cash, llolman Fuel Co, Main 353. A 33S3. Block wood, short slabwood; Rock Springs and Utah coal; sawdust Adv. NL'RATA TEA. "A perfect blend. Ceylon-lndian-Java teas. Closset 4k L'evera, Portland. Adv. Read The Oregonlan classified ads. I - . j, f J Is "v; I lis ,M ! A i Undenroodt. Y MR. LLOYD GEORGE IHIUHT) AD GEORGES CI.EME.CEAU (LEFT), THE TWO DEANS OF THE PEACE COX . FEREXCE, TOGETHER WITH OUR OWN PRESIDENT. . IN ENVOYS 'ARE ON HAND TREATY PROBABLY WILL SIGNED OX SATURDAY. BE President Wilson Prepares to Sail for United States on Sunday If Peace Is Made. f rontlnned From First Par.) plated. President Wilson plans to leave for Brest immediately afterward, catl ing for the United States at noon Sun day. The council of four has granted Po land permission to use General Halter's army or any of Its other troops in re storing quiet in eastern Galicta and driving outlawa from the country. WASHINGTON, June 27. PresldentJ Wilson advised the senate today through the state department that he was considering sending another com mission to Poland to investigate re ports of Jewish massacres. He said a decision would be reported after he had conferred at Paris with Hugh Gibson, American minister to Poland. GERMAN" REVOLT IS FAILURE Treachery to Allies Revealed by Jealous Members of Plot. BERLIN. Thursday. June 2S. (By the Associated Press.) The German gov ernment, headed by Phlltpp Scheide mann, had planned to refuse to sign the peace treaty and to permit the allied troops to march into Germany as far as the Kibe, where it would be at tacked by strong German forces, the Danzig correspondent of the Tageblatt declares in a dispatch describing the details of a secret plan to create a separate state in northeastern Ger many. The plan failed because of jealousies and differences of opinion between the government and the army leaders, the correspondent says. (A report from Geneva Thursday night said Herr Scheldemann had ar rived In Switzerland after crossing the frontier on foot.) The last proposal made by the con spirators planning to oppose the allies, it Is said, was to ask Poland to com bine with eastern Germany in the for mation of an independent republic The offer, it Is declared, was refused by the Poles, who asked why it had not Deen offered ten years ago. HTJX OFFICERS MAKE APPEAL Dutch Government Asked to Save ex-Kaiser From "Disgrace." rOBLEN'Z. Thursday. June 26. (By the Associated Press.) The following advertisement Is appearing In news papers in various parts of unoccupied Germany, being a part of the cam paign that Is going on throughout the country under the auspices of the officers' alliance : "We have telegraphed the Holland government as follows: ' 'TIm German officers alliance, nuea with gratitude for the hospitality af- - m mmK ir Cosmetics only hide skin trouble R c Whether it is serious affection like eczema, or just a pimply, rough and un attractive complexion, yoa can usually rely on Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap to set it ripht, promptly, easily and at little cost. Resinol Ointment stops tick itt instantly. The daily use of Resinol Soap for the toilet is sufficient too keep most com plexions dear, fresh and glowing. forded the German kaiser by Holland, in the name of millions of Ger mans requests the government of The Netherlands to refuse to deliver the Kaiser to the entente. We cannot now defend our former war lord with our bodies, but we expect the mag nanimity of the Dutch to spare us this final and most humiliating disgrace.'" No papers appearing in the Ameri can occupied area have been permitted to print the advertisement, which is addressed: "To All Germans." LANSING TO REPLACE CHIEF Plans for Continuation of Confer ences on Peace Are Made. PARIS. June 27. The work of the peace conference will not be interrupted by the signing of the treaty with Ger many, although Pnesldent Wilson will leave Paris tomorrow night and Premier Lloyd George will return to London Sunday. Foreign Secretary Balfour and Sec retary of State Lansing will replace the British minister and President Wilson in the work yet to be done. The peace treaty with Austria probably will be taken up Monday. EX-PRINCE IS STILLHELD Reported Escape of Former Kaiser's Heir Proves False. THE HAGUE. June 27. Frederick William Hohenzollern, the former Ger man crown prince, whose escape from Holland to Germany had been reported, was stfll at his residence on the Island of Wieringen in the Zuyder Zee this morning, it was officially announced here this afternoon. The fact that the former crown prince was still at Wieringen was disclosed by an official Investigation made by the Dutch minister of the interior. Thursday's report of the escape of the former crown prince from his in ternment in Holland, It appears from the available advices, came from British official sources in Paris. The accuracy of the news apparently was accepted without question in peace conferenoe circles. PACKERS OFFER TO HELP Willing to Help Government in Selling Meats. CHICAGO, 111.. June 27. J. Ogden Armour, president of Armour & Co., stated today that the packers had of fered to place their selling facilities at the disposal of the government at actual cost to dispose of the war de partment's surplus meats. The low bids that were rejected by Director of Sales Hare yesterday were not the result of an effort by the pack ers to take undue profits,, he said. San Francisco Orders Closing. SAN FRANCISCO. June' 27. Orders that the sale of liquor must stop at 12 otlock Monday night and that all places where liquor is sold must be closed and vacated one hour thereafter, were Is sued by Chief of Police D. A. White here today. ' it liVW!,!! If, ves fj avw VtiA Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap contain nothing that could in jarc or irritat the " iVrcsi'skin even ofa tiny baby. They clear away pimples, redness and roorhness, stop dan druff, and form a most valuable household treatment f or sores, chaf in cats, barns, etc. Soid by Zf druggists. ft01.CH ASKS SPEEDY I SUPERIOR FORCES CONFRONT ALL-RUSSIAN ARMIES. General Zukauskas Expels Bolshe - vikl Troops From Greater Part of Lithuania. OMSK, Siberia, June 27. (By the As sociated Press.) Whatever support the allies may intend giving the Kolchak government must come quickly if de cisive results are to be achieved before winter in the campaign against bol shevik forces. The armies of the all Russian government now have plenty of man-power but are confronted by forces greatly superior in -equipment. according to government circles. The foreign office still is awaiting in formation as to what plans the allies may have for rendering aid. On the Ufa front the retirement of the Siberian forces has been virtually stopped. Occasional offenses are re ported with good success. The enemy, however, made a strong drive in the di rection of Krasno-Ufimsk, in an effort to isolate the northern section. This re sulted in a slight retirement along the front. PARIS, June 25. General Zukauskas, with a Lithuanian army of 25,000, has expelled the bolshevik forces from the greater part of Lithuania and is com mencing an offensive against the bol skeviki near Dvinsk and Czarascy, ac cording to a dispatch from Captain Howell Forman of the American Baltic relief administration to Herbert Hoover. HELSINGFORS, Finland, June 25. (French Wireless Service.) The new constitution adopted today by the Diet provides that the first president Bhall be elected by the Diet. His term of of fice will be six years. HAMBY GOES IN SOLITARY Murderer Extradited From Tacoina Awaits Electric Chair. NEW YORK, June 27. Gordon Faw cett Hamby is in solitary confinement in a cell In "murderers' row" at Sing Sing state prison at Ossining-, N. Y., Records RED SEAL, RECORDS S7S43fO Sole Mio (My Sunshine) I Enrico Caruso 7423. 2 (In a Persian Garden Ah. Moon (of My Delight Mccormack Berceuse (Lullaby) Alma Gluck 74532 IDinorah (Shadow Sone) I -...Galll - Curd 74389 I "Caprice Poetic" I ' Alfred Cortot LAUDER RECORD. 70123 fWhen I Was Twenty-One Harry Lauder The Laddies Who Fought and Won Harry Lauder DANCE RECORDS Mickey Joseph C. Smith Trio Kisses Joseph C. Smith Trio I'll Say She Does Fox-Trot.. All - Star Trio You're Some Pretty Doll Fox. - Trot. . .. . All - Star Trio Canary Medley Fox-Trot ...Joseph C. Smith's Orchestra The Royal Vagabond Medley Fox-Trot. . ..Joseph C. Smith's Orchestra Estudiantina Waltz Pletro Wedding of the Winds Walts '. -..Pietro 18533 18527 18541 17S65 POPULAR SO.VGS That Tumble -Down Shack In Athlone Sterling Trio Smile and the World Smiles With You Lewis James Wait and See. Henry Burr Tears of Love Charles Hart I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles.. Charles Hart-Elliott Shaw By the Campfire-.Peerless Quartet I Know What It Means to Be Lonesome Henry Burr Don't Cry. Frenchy; Don't Cry ...Charles Hart - Elliott Shaw 18545 18544 18540 18538 VICTROLAS RECORDS PIASfOS CFJoebosPmoC- 14 Sixth, Bet. Alder ui Morrison. CHENEY PHONOGRAPHS. ()Victor Just in'by Express A Splendid Lot of The Fashionable Marabou Capes At Popular Prices $7.98to$19.50 (IT All the new and popular styles and shapes are in cluded in this splendid show ing. ' They come ' in black, taupe, brown, mole, natural, etc. The low price at which we are offering them at this sale should prompt early selection. Saturday Sale Drug Sundries Special Sale Palm Olive Products Palm Olive Soap ..lO Palm Olive Face Cream, tube for ......23 Palm Olice Cold Cream, tube for 23 Palm Olive Cold Cream, Jars for 47 Palm Olive Face Cream, jar for 47c Palm Olive Lip Rouse... 23 5 RARS IVORY SOAP FOR 25. Limit 5 bars to each customer. None delivered except with other goodf.. ITKNU POLISH for cleaning and polishing all sorts of wood work, furniture, pianos, hardwood floors, automobiles, etc. Saturday speeial, bottle 20. 40. SO Store Ojens at 8:30 A.M. Saturday at 9 A.M. The tonight awaiting death in the electric chair some time during tne weeK oi July 28, as the penalty for shooting and i, ; 1 1 ; rutwIH r1 I'.'jl navln? teller of the Kast Brooklyn Savings bank, dur ing tne sensational aayiigni. uoiuup ui that institution last December. Him by'a "pal" in that robbery is at large. June 28, 1919 TAXATION LABOR BUSINESS Land Settlement Reclamation GOOD ROADS Port Development Maritime Commerce RAILROADS Agricultural Development ' Public Vtilitie Water Power TIMBER Public Expenditure STATISTICS Manufacturing FINANCE State Government LEGISLATION County and Municipal Affairs PUBLIC SCHOOLS o o SMILES Character Sketchet Sidelights Political Cottip . "The Oregos Voter, a magazine printed weekly in Portland, Oregon, and devoted to the advancement of every miter, al in terest that tends to promote the general welfare of the tate." Ortgon Supreme Court. liQQQQiiQuuiyyiiiiiitiiiiiuyiiijiiiiiiiiiiiuiiu (f Values in high-grade Corsets' that will astound you. Included ..P'are fashionable models., for slight, medium and stout figures. In brocades, fancies, fine coutils, satins, etc. Both front and back lace styles and all sizes from 19 to 36. (flit's a sweep-clean sale of all broken lines and sample models in the above well-known and reliable makes. Come ! Select From the Entire : ' Assortment Saturday at S3. 59 Pr. Children s Voile and Gingham Dresses In Sizes 12 and 14 at $1.19 (IA closing-out of broken lines. Included are several different styles. Come early for first choice. Women's White Gabardine Dress Skirts Saturday at $1.98 (W A splendid style in plain lines that will launder nicely. Comes " in all sizes up to 30 waistline. Palm Olive Rouge 47 Palm Olive Shampoo. .. .47 Palmole Face Powder. ..23 Palm Olive Face Powder..47 Cleopatra Divine Face-Powder for 95 Palm Olive Toilet Water. 5 Palm Olive Shaving Cream for .: 33 Palm Olive Talcum 23 Most in Value The' Best in Quality and the man condemned to die has re fused to disclose his identity. Alienists who examined Hamby at the state supreme court in Brooklyn today, declared the youthful criminal to be "mentally and legally sane." His attorney offered to prepare an appeal for a new trial, but Hamby gave no in- 10 cents rawtt i Magazine of Citizenship For Busy Men and Women MEATY INFORMATION SNAPPY COMMENT FEARLESS ANALYSIS LESS THAN ONE-FIFTH REGISTERED VOTERS ADOPT CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS How the Oregon System of Popular Govern ment Now Works in Practice Complete Record Since 1904 Set Forth, with Graphic Comparisons 3-9 BRIEF RESUME OF OREGON VOTING 3 TABULAR RECORD, with Percentage of Registered Vote Cast on Each Measure, 1904 to 1919, with Percentage by Which Each was Put into State Constitution and Statutes : OFF ICIAL RETURNS, June 3 Election With Graphic Comparisons, by Counties. . . 32 HOW COUNTIES CAVORTED Pointed Comments, County by County 1 REGISTRATION AND VOTES CAST Graphic Comparison, by Counties 12 COUNTY ROAD BONDS Official Returns 7 5 WOMEN IN POLITICS PARTY PREFERENCES Graphic Comparison for Oregon 15 SEX AND PARTY STATISTICS By Counties A Tabulation 14 STATE PRESS COMMENTS Whacking the Senate 34 On Labor Federation ." 34 On Minimum Wage, with Discussion 38 Mexican Question 5 LIVE STOCK IN OREGON..... 39 DinnyShea Jerry Owen Dean Collins textbook The Orecon Voter it adopted by univeriitiet, colleger, high chool, teach ers' institutes, summer schoo.s and economic ( study clubs as a Supplementary Textbook in Civil Government and Public Affairs. Women's Nubuck Shoes and Oxfords $4.50 Pair (TTLate styles, with military heels and Goodyear welt soles. All sizes and (JJ A (Trt widths. Sale price IVetJU Women's White Pumps $2.50 Pair d A brand new line of worn f en's white pumps, regula tion or with straps. Tbey come with low and high heels and in all sizes. QO fZfi This sale at D.tU Store Closes at 5:30 P.M. Saturday at 6 P.M. dications that he would not consider as final, the verdict given by a jury yes terday, that he was guilty of murder in the first degree. Phone your want ads to The Orego nian. Phone Main 7070, A n5. Weekly, $2.00 a year