Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, September 23, 1919, Page 3, Image 3

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    3
WILSON FOE SEEKS
HEW JERSEY OFFICE
HER TITLED, WAR-HERO HUSBAND, BANKRUPT, COMMITTED
SUICIDE.
JAPAN WILL NEVER
"IS
ROGERS STATES
I
YIELD, SAYS HARDEN
I
Mugent After Governorship on
Wet Platform.
FEDERAL CROWD OPPOSED
Democratic Contest Interesting
Sidelight on Strength of 'Presi
dent in Home Bailiwick.
TRENTON', Sept. 22. (Special.)
The political friends of President
Wilson in New Jersey are anxiously
watching the progress of the primary
flcVi xi-hloK will KA H.cMad In tii
state Tuesday. The prize is the nomi
nation for the governorship. On the
democratic side there is a spectacular
contest, with no issue except an argu
ment as to which is the wettest of
three contenders. All three have been
promising to do their utmost to upset
prohibition if given the opportunity.
rune nomination, 01 course, is me
first step to such an opportunity.
One of the democratic candidates is
James II. Nugent, for many years pre
vious to the advent of Mr. Wilson in
New Jersey politics, the democratic
political boss. Before Wilson ap
peared on the scene Nugent picked
the delegates to national conventions,
named the candidates for all im
portant offices and when either house
of the legislature happened to be
democratic, decreed what laws should
pass and what should not pass. Nu
gent, along with former United States
Senator James Smith Jr. named
Wilson himself for the governorship.
They offered him the nomination on
a. silver platter, so to speak, without
strings or conditions of any kind.
Wilson had not even been inaugurat
ed before they quarreled with him.
That fight attracted the attention of
the nation and started Wilson on the
road to Washington.
Obscurity Period Ends.
Nugent faded Into obscurity for a
period. The whirligig of time makes
him today, however, the most talked
of political figure in his own and ad
joining states, because he has at
tacked prohibition with a directness
and a vehemence that has caused all
the limelight to be turned on him.
Will he take steps to enforce the
law after constitutional prohibition
goes into effect? Not he. Not till he
has fought to the last ditch and even
if that fight is lost he will see that
the definition of an intoxicating
drink is no narrow one. New Jersey
will never be dry in the sense that
some states have been under state
law, if Nugent is elected governor.
So he tells the voters. Nugent is an
aggressive character, a lawyer of
standing and the fight he has made
has gained him the support of thou
sands of wets.
AYUffon Men Oppose Nugent.
Nugent has the opposition of old
Wilson men because they think that
if he becomes governor they will be
completely ignored if not actually
shown the door. Nearly all the fed
eral officeholders who are Wilson ap
pointees, are out against Nugent
though no word or hint has come
publicly irom vasningion 10 1x10.1
cate that the president himself has
any preferences among the candi
dates. Local Wilson leaders claim,
however, that the president's pre-oo-
cupation with the league of nations
has alone prevented him irom snow
ing that he still stands against Nu
gent. At any rate, the situation ii
an interesting turn of political his
torv.
Nueent's chief opponent is Edward
I. Edwards, former state controller,
president of a large bank in Jersey
City. Edwards, too, is against prohl
bition. but he does not make the dem
onstration against it that Nugent
stages nightly. Edwards" chief asset
is the support of the Hudson county
democratic machine, which can, if it
is in smooth running order, turn out
a plurality of 15,000 or more for its
favorite candidate in the primaries
and make it 30.000 election day if it
has the rignt set of issues. Hudson
in some yeais is the only pprt of the
state to turn out a tangible demo
cratic majority.
The third candidate is Frank J. Mc
Dermit, a lawyer, who has been a can
dldate for nomination to every im
portant office vacant in the last 10 or
12 years. The fight is between Nugent
and Edwards.
Dry Forces Cat Figure.
The Anti-Saloon league figures in
the republican fight. That organiza
tion has thrown its support to Gov
ernor Runyon, a "dry" who succeeded
to the governorship by virtue of his
being president of the senate when
former Governor Edge went to the
United States senate Runyon is
crusader who will make New Jersey
as dry as a desert if he is the nex
J governor and make life miserable,
too, for any violators of the law. State
Controller Newton A. K. Bugbee i3
one of Runyon's opponents and he has
the machine. It would.be a straight
out fight between the Anti-Saloon
league and the machine but for the
aspirations of Mayor Thomas L. Ray
mond of Newark, who thinks he ough
to be the republican nominee.
Itaymond Is Wet.
Raymond occupies the same position
in the republican primaries as Nuen
does in the democratic As mayor o
Newark, before the establishment o
commission government there, he per
mitted the saloons to do business o
Sunday unmolested, tn tact, he wa
elected on a platform that promise
"liberality," which means in Jersey
ese, an open Sunday. Raymond, as a
candidate for nomination for governor
would ordinarily get all the wet re
publican vote, but the adherence of
the republican machine to Bugbee,
who is passively wet. will keep some
of that vote away from him. A fourth
republican candidate. Warren C. King,
is playing a lone .hand.
In New Jersey no nominations can
be made after the primaries. The
Anti-Saloon league is taking no
chances on the outcome and has filed
a petition for an independent nominee
as a kind of insurance against a
possible wet victory in the republican
fight. The petition will be withdrawn
if Runyon wins the republican nomi
nation, however. In any case booze
will figure large in November, how
ever. ITALY APPEALS FOR AID
(Continued From First Page.)
repay me with ingratitude. In fact,
I am preparing an appeal to President
Wilson. King George and the people
of France.
"My men here are ready to die for
our cause, while I. will not leave Fi
ume either alive or dead. I have i
ready cahosen in a fine cemetery, dark
with cypresses, a small hill looking
toward the sea, covered with laurel.
where I wish to be buried."
Blockade Held Illegal.
"I do not believe the allies will do
anything against me," Captain d'An
nunzio continued, ' as I will do noth-
:-: ' ' iffl"1 '
1 si "J , ' '
5
Lady DoDTille la the widow of Sir Jimm
lcnvlllr, who committed suicide
KnKland, apolonrlKlnsc to the clan for his death there, lie was In serious
financial difficulties followinjr bankruptcy proceedlnsjs. He was com
mander of II. M. S. Barbadoes when It sank two German destroyers early
In the war. He was married In 1012 and leaves two daughters, besides
his widow.
ng against them. I consider the
blockade, however, contrary to the
rights of man, no one having the
right to attempt to starve the 30.000
nhabitants of Flume simply because
they wish to remain Italians forever.
"No conflict is possible with the
Italian troops, as I do not believe
there is a' single soldier who would
fire against my men."
PARIS, Sept. 22. Troops under Ga-
briele d'Annunzio, the insurgent Ital
ian commander at Fiume, have begun
extending their zone of occupation
nto Jugo-Slav territory, according to
the Jugo-Slav delegation In Pans.
They penetrated seven miles into
Jugo-Slavia on Saturday, occupying
the heights at Pismak, dominating
the surrounding country.
The Jugo-Slavs did not clash with
the D'Annunzio forces executing this
movement, the delegation stated.
LONDON, Sept. 22. American navy
headquarters here, wheh is In direct
communication with Adriatic ports,
has no confirmation of the report
from Rome last night that American
marines have been landed at Bucchart,
near Fiume. Naval authorities here
are not inclined to credit the report
so far as known, there being no rea
son for the United States to inter
fere. The fact that an American ship is
ln;the harbor of Fiume of no sig
nificance, in the opinion'wo naval .of
ficials. . '
PARIS, Sept. 22. There were indi
cations today that the supreme coun
cil might agree upon a settlement of
the Dalmatian question on the basis
of a formula making Fiume Italian
but neutral that is. not allowing
Italy to keep troops there and inter
nationalizing the docks and railways,
thus safeguarding the Jugo-Slav and
central European interests.
This plan was submitted to Presi
dent Wilson on September 17 and is
awaiting his decision.
Nations Walt on Wilson.
France and Great Britain have ap
proved the plan and the Jugo-Slavs
are reported to be favorable to it,
although awaiting the American de
cision before giving their reply.
The Italian forces are maintaining
the blockade of Fiume now in effect.
it is learned the allied navies merely-
standing by as observers.
ROME, Saturday. Sept. 20. (By the
Associated Press.) From conversa
tions which several senators and dep
uties have had with Premier Nittl
and Foreign Minister Tittoni, it eeems
that two plans wfcre submitted to
President Wilson concerning Fiume,
both of them indorsed by France and
England.
According to one, Fiume would be
given to Italy, but its hinterland, to
gether with eastern Istria, would be
given by Italy to Jugo-Slavia.
The second plan would make Fiume
an absolutely independent city and
the hinterland, together with eastern
Istria would become an independent
state ruled by an international com
mission or by the league of nations.
International Port Proposed. -
In either case the port of Fiume
would be internationalized.
The cost of the necessaries of life
in Fiume would give some idea of
the food situation in the blockaded
city. Flour is bringing 80 cents a
pound and sugar $2. Oil is $6 a pint
and lard fat $9 a pound.
General Robilant, chief of the Ital
ian forces maintaining order along
the line of demarkation fixed by the
armistice, has been replaced by Gen
eral Badoglio, chief of staff to Gen
eral Diaz, and second in command of
the Italian armies.
General Robilant was unpopular.
having been a member of the inter-
Uied military commission which
asked the withdrawal of Italian
troops from Fiume, the substitution
of the civil guard of Fiume by Mal
tese policemen and dissolution of the
national council at Fii:e.
It was these proposals, it is said.
which caused Gabriele d'Annunzio to
seize Fiume, thus preventing the pro
gramme from being carried out-
TRENCHES ENCIRCLE FIUME
Food, However, Slips Through
Blockade to D'Annunzio's Men.
GENEVA, Sept. 22. (By the Asso
ciated Press.) Dispatches from Aus
trian and Serbian sources say that
Italian regulars under General Badog
lio have constructed a continuous
line of trenches around Fluma, while'
D'Annunzio's forces have built de
fenses a few hundred yards inside
the circle.
The soldiers of the two sides are
fraternizing and officers from the
two camps dine together.
It is averred that trainloads of fooa
have been allowed to pass the block
ade line into the city by sympathetic
officers.
Germany Asks Big Credit.
BUENOS AIRES. Argentine. Sept.
21. The government has been asked
to grant a credit of $100,000,000 gold
to Germany in order to facilitate
purchase of raw material in
Una.
Argen-
7'r A
is J , - ;a
' f t -Si JSkSl ( i t
Photo from Underwood & Underwood, N. T.
H. Donville, son of the lnte Admiial
In the United Service dab. LoDdoa
PUTER IS FINED SI ill
ASSOCIATES HAVE TO PAY $2 5 0
TO $300 EACH.
Famous Land Fraud Operator and
lour Others Admit Guilt in
San Francisco Court.
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 22. A fine
of $1500 was Imposed on S. A. 1 .
Puter, $500 each on H. D. and W. A.
Puter and J. L. Van Wormer and $250
on A. L. Baker by United States Dis
trict Judge M. T. Dooling here today
following their pleas of guilty to gov
ernment indictments charging them
with misuse of the mails in connec
tion with alleged government and
railroad land frauds in Oregon.
W. L. Murray of Portland, Or., an
other defendant, forfeited his bail of
$2000 when the case was callk.1 for
trial and now is a fugitive from
Justice.
Dismissal of charges against Alan
McEwen and Franklin P. Bull was
on motion of the district attorney's
office, which held evidence against
them insufficient. Complete exoner
ation of each was ordered by the
court.
GALLERIES HISS SENATE
(Continued rom First Page.)
nant. Senator Reed departed widely
from his prepared speech, and it was
while he was talking bluntly that the
spectators voiced approval with hands
and feet. This was particularly the
case after he had declared that advo
cates of the league described it one
minute as a prizefighter strong
enough to whip anything under the
world's canvas, and next as a. man
with paralyzed arms.
The principal part of the speech
was an argument against the league
covenant with a bitter assault on
the clause giving Great Britain six
votes in the league as for one for the
United States. President Wilson was
sharply and severely attacked by Sen
ator lleen, who declared he had coun
sailed with kings to transfer to them
the sovereignty Washington had won
with the sword.
Johnson Back Today.
It was 6 o'clock when Senator Reed
concluded his address and the original
plan to proceed with formal reading
of the treaty was abandoned.
There was some uncertainty as to
how far the reading might proceed
tomorrow, as it was intimated that
Senator Johnson of California, who
will return to his seat then, after his
speaking tour, might ask that the
senate turn back in the covenant to
articie 3 and take up his amendment
which would equalize the British
and American voting power in the
league. In that event the senate
would face about a week's discussion
Several senators, however, plan to
make set speeches, and it was said to
night that there probably would be
replies tomorrow to Senator Reed.
Senators Lodge and Hitchcock said
they were ready to go on with the
reading if nobody was ready to speak
and if Senator Johnson did not wish
to call up his amendment, a vo.te on
whicn will be regarded as the firs
real test of strength. Meanwhile the
"mild" reservationists continued thei
informal conferences without dis
closing how they would line up as a
group on the amendment.
Senator Thomas, democrat, Colo
rado. put into the record today
letter to the democratic committee o
his state saying he could not vote fo
ratification of the treaty in its pres
ent form.
TREATY IS CONSTITUTIONAL
P.ict With England and France Is
Upheld by Senate Advisers.
WASHINGTON. Sept 22. By unani
mous vote of the six members present.
the senate judiciary committee decid
ed today that the proposed treaty
guaranteeing immediate assistance o
tills country to trance in the event o
an unprovoked attack by German
was constitutional. Twelve members
were absent and their votes were no
cast.
Under the working rules of th
committee, six members constitute
a quorum. The vote was on a resolu
tion by Senator Walsh, democrat,
Montana, calling for the committee
opinion as to the constitutionality of
the treaty. A sub-committee recently
decided that the pact would be const!
tutional.
.Portland "ot Affected.
The strike in the eastern steel mills
will have no immediate effect in
Portland unless it spreads to other
metal trades. Managers of all the
steel shipbuilding plants in the Port
land district reported yesterday that
j they have plenty of steel on hand to
tinien tneir present contracts.
Promise of Surrender
of
Shantung Scouted.
NIPPON'S STAKE BIG ONE
Wonderful Opportunity Seen in
Orient for Nations Willing to
Give I'p Antiquated Systems.
BT MAXIMILIAN HARDEN.
(Copyrtg-ht by the New York World. Pub
lished by Arrangement.)
BERLIN. SeDt. 23. At least three
times every week we now read. news
paper dispatches reporting that Amer
ica is on the verge of war. Mostly It
is the war against Mexico; often it is
against Japan; once it was also the
two-front war against both.
And, nearly always, friendly com
mentaries are tacked on to these re
ports, such as: "Even a blind man
ought to be able to see the real rea
son for America's armaments;" or,
"There you see what all the talk
amounts to about the league of na
tions, and the last war, which no
other war must follow."
These sorry agitators do not even
soar to the cheap witticism that pac
ifism ends where the Pacific begins.
In all this harvest of dispatches 1
found not one grain of grlndable corn.
Peace Appears Insecure.
Suddenly, however, I became fright
ened, for I read that reputable Ameri
can politicians had written to the
president of the United States that il
Japan remained in possession of Shan
tung, war would be unavoidable. If
this report speaks true, then would
every mortgage on the peace of the
ew world be insecure. t or voiun-
arily Japan will not give up her
bases in Shantung.
Years ago the Russian minister
president. Count Witte, told me how
nsistently old LI Hung Chang naa
warned against bringing Russia into
conflict with Japan by Russia press-
nc forward to the south coast ot
China, which Jaoan regards as Its
omain of the future. When Li rep
resented the Manchu emperor at the
oronation of Nikolai Alexandrovltscn,
e conlured Count Wltte almost ten-
erly only to build the railroad as far
as Vladivostok, wnose tsireicn ui
racks he wanted to shorten by 600
ilometers through the concession
for the line Nertschinsk-Tsitslkar-Vladivostok.
but not to lay a single
rail to the south.
"Warning Is Repeated.
With a sigh he then, in April. 1896.
nder pressure of the foreign minis
ter. Prince Lobanoff (who at tne same
lme concluded a treaty over the ln-
ependence of Corea with Japan s
missarv to the coronation. Marshal
Yamagata), painted his name under
the convention which gave Port Ar
thur and the Klaochow Bay to the
Russians as naval bases, and repeated
his warning before he departed.
LI Hung Chang, who In our time
was the wisest statesman of the far
east (when he visited the old Bis
marck in Friedrichsruh, the deeply
snow-covered peaks of two worlds re
garded each other), knew the empiri
f the rising sun better than any one
lse not born there. Only his tired
yes laughed when any one said Ja
pan would not repeal ine nusiaur
which the Island empire of the west
Britain) made when It attempted
with force of arms to invade the con-
inent and appropriate a French prov-
nce. This tnickiy venea laugmer oi
he Iris seemed to ask whether the
European speaker imagined he could
understand the brain ot an eastern
Asiatic, differing totally from his, and
particularly a brain of Nippon.
Old Prophecy Knlfllled.
The prophecy of the yellow aged
one was fulfilled. Over Corea, where
a Russian court clique of speculators
sought profit, one might have come to
understanding; because Kussur
pressed ahead to the Liao pejiinsula.
war resultea.
And after Russia's flag was squeezed
out of the Yellow sea and Port Arthur
became Japanese the mistrust still
remained wide awake in Toklo
against every power that might lay
hand on the Chinese south coast.
Corea, Liaotung, Sakhalin, all that
could not wipe out the wish to be
stronger than anyone else in Shan
tung too
During the world war, in April,
1916, Germany made the attempt to
conclude a separate peace with Ja
pan. The German minister In Stock
holm, Baron Lucius, whom Herr
Stinnes, the shrewdest and keenest
captain of industry In Germany, as
sisted, succeeded in having a meeting
with the Japanese minister. Uchida,
who told the Germans, however, that
Japan did not need a quick conclusion
of peace and could. Just as .itue as
Russia, think of separating llsellirora
the Allies.
Premium Offered Japan.
In a second conversation Lucius of
fered him a premium. If Japan would
mediate peace Germany would yield
up all occupied territory In China to
Japan and would demand compensa
tion only for the railroads ana lor
German private property. In the
background an offer of alliance ap
peared to shimmer. In the right but
all too late realization that the Ger
man possession of Shantung (whose
acquisition Tirplts had recommended)
hindered the friendship witn japan,
the German government let the hope
be expressed that after such a con
clusion of peace the German-Japanese
relations would be much more Inti
mate than before. Beside the pre
mium .stood, as was to be expected
frcai the old imperial Germany, the
threat. If Toklo declined to act as
mediator another government would
assume the role and Japan would be
cheated out of Its profits.
Uchida said that since he did not
You Need Not
Suffer From Catarrh
But You Must Drive It Out of
Your Blood to Get Rid of
It Permanently.
Tou have probably been in the habit
of applying external treatments, try
ing to cure your Catarrh. You have
used sprays, washes and lotions and
possibly been temporarily relieved.
But after a short time you had an
other attack and wondered why. You
must realize that catarrh Is an infec
tion of the blood, and to get perma
nent relief the catarrh Infection must
be driven out of the blood. The quick
er you come to understand this, the
quicker you will get It out of your
system. C S. S., which has been in
Couldn't Eat Meat or Bread for
Two Years Gains 18
Pounds Taking Tanlac.
''No one could see the wonderful
change that has taken place In me
during the past few weeks and doubt
Tanlac being a grand medicine." said
Mrs Louise Rogers, who resides at
4017 Brooklyn avenue, Los Angeles, In
an Interview recently. Mrs. Rogers
lived for six- years in Wenatchee,
Wash., and her many friends there
as well as those in California, will be
glad to learn of her complete re
covery. "I have been in perfectly wretched
health for the last four years," she
continued, "and had become almost a
nervous and physical wreck. I suf
fered from nervous Indigestion, liver
trouble and disordered kidneys, and
I don't believe I had a well day tn all
those four years. I had Indigestion
in Its worst form and every time I
ate anything I would bloat up with
gas until 1 was miserable. For over
two years I did not eat any bread,
milk or meat, and had to live on the
very lightest of foods. I fell off 20
pounds tn weight and suffered eo
with pain and nervousness that sleep
was almost Impossible for me. I was
under treatment for eighteen months
but kept getting worse in place of
better until I Just became so discour
aged and despondent that I lost near
ly all hope. of ever getting any better.
It was then that I was persuaded by
a lady from Vancouver, B. C, to try
Tanlac and got my first bottle. Well
I have never seen or heard of any
thing like It. Honestly, in three days
after I began taking it I noticed a
change for the better. I am now on
my fifth, bottle of Tanlac and have
actually gained eighteen pounds. The
medicine has Just renewed my whole
life and built me up until I am like a
different person. I am eating three
good meals a day now and am never
troubled a particle with gss or any
other signs of indigestion. My nerves
are perfectly calm and now I sleep all
night long like a child. In fact, my
health seems to be Just perfect and
I am just so thankful for what Tanlac
has done for me that I want to tell
everybody about it."
Tanlac is sold in Portland by the
Owl Drug Co. Adv.
have the plenary powers for. negoti
ating he could only report to his gov
ernment. The Japanese government
In turn let the German offer be placed
before Minister Sasonoff through Its
Petrograd minister. Marquis Motono.
Sasonoff answered that he could only
listen to German peace conditions If
they were at the same time made
known to the allies. Two months
later Sasonoff signed the secret treaty
handed to him by Motono, and whose
point was directed against the United
States.
"Third Power" Considered.
It was meant to supplement Iswol-
ski's treaties of 1907 and 1910 and the
treaty of July 8. 1912; and. for the
eventuality that "a third power hos
tile to either Russia or Japan should
seek the political mastery over
China," it pledged the contracting
parties to confidential deliberations
as to defensive possibilities.
If it came to a declaration of war
of the "third power" against either
Japan or Russia, then the partner
was pledged to give assistance with
his army and navy; prerequisite for
such assistance was that the allies
of the attacked party had given as
surances of armed help to an extent
corresponding with the earnestness
of the nascent conflict.
The treaty was to run for five
years, to July 1, 1921. and remain
"deepest secret." Had Japan pro
voked a declaration of war by Amer
ica, then would Russia, and at least
one great western power have been
pledged to help Japan. On the edge
of this abyss we walked and sus
pected not the danger.
The world war went on. and the
allies had the urgent wish that
China, too, should declare war on
Germany. Motono, who meanwhile
had become minister,, answered the
Russian Ambassador Krupenski that
he, too, harbored this wish, but that
he must await the most favorable
moment for Influencing Peking.
When this moment would come the
minister's next sentences hinted at.
China's Waverlns; Kxplalned.
If China declared war, it would,
perhaps, also be admitted to the
peace conference; and for this case
Japan must be certain that all the
allies would, with full emphasis,
champion Japan's rights to Shantung
and the occupied territories in the
south sea. Without this certainty.
Japanese public opinion would not
approve It If the Japanese govern
ment drew China too Into the war.
Krupenski's impression was that
without the firm promise to Japan
of Shantung and the Islands north of
the equator, China's entry into the
war cannot be countsd on. Official
ly. China's wavering is explained by
the Indecision of its president and
with the need of securing for Itself
advantages In the matter of customs
tarrlff and Boxer Indemnity, which
then are also guaranteed.
But all recognizable symptoms and
indications speak for the belief tha
at that time. In the time before
China's declaration of war and Amer
ica's armament, the allied powers in
secret agreements had recognized
Japan as heir to the German right
and privileges in Shantung and the
south sea. Still, in March had Mo
tono urged and pressed Krupenski to
a rapid settlement of this "utmost
important" matter; then in June he
could say to parliament that despite
the new principle of "peace without
annexation" Japan had nothing to
fear about Tsingtau and the islands,
nor in revolutionary Russia could
either the people or the duma. and
least of all, the government, be se
duced into a separate peace with
Germany. The supplying of armi
and ammunition, the plan to create
on Chinese soil a great arsenal and
armory are means for the Japanese
to secure to themselves the power
over China's military forces.
Special Position" Oemaaded.
These means appear necessary to
constant use for over fifty years,
will attack the catarrhal poisons,
cleanse and strengthen the blood, so
it will carry vigor and health to the
mucous membranes on Its Journeys
through your body, and nature will
soon restore you to health, you will
be relieved of the droppings of mucus
In your throat, sores in nostrils, bad
breath, hawking and spitting.
All reputable druggists carry S. S. S.
in stock and we recommend you to
give it a trial at once.
The chief medical adviser of the
Company will carefully answer all let
ters on the subject. There Is no charge
for the medical advice. Address Swift
Specific Company. 251 Swift Labora-
lory, Atlanta, Ga. Adv.
BoMb
FIFTH AND
MORRISON
Minister Motono. He has demanded
the recognition of a "special position"
of Japan in China, and said, according
to the Lansing-Ishll agreement, that
thereby would not only be made an
end to German intrigues seeking to
sow new enmity between the United
States and Japan, but at the same
time prove to the Chinese that they
need place no hones on an Americo
Japanese controversy.
The reality of these opposing Inter
ests Krupenski nevertheless foresaw;
Japan, so he wrote to Petrograd in
October 1917. demands at bottom the
control over China's international re
lations, and will permit no other
power to take a single step in China
without its permission. When he ex
pressed the opinion that the concepts
"special position" and "special Inter
ests" would perhaps be Interpreted
differently at Washington than In
Tokio, Japan Intimated that In such
a case Japan would have stronger
means of power for backing up its
interpretation than would the United
States.
And when the executive committee
of the Russian workers and soldiers
Soviets demanded the return of all
That Satisfied Feeling
When one has tasted
of the Hazehvood's
Green Apple Pie
It's the delicious flavor of choice apples
and the flakiest of golden brown crust
that makes this pie your favorite des
sert. Served with whipped cream or a mold
of ice cream, it is oh! so good.
x
3S8 Washington
X)obt O Co.
sHats
ADobbs Hat is recog
nized airywhere by that
elusive, arresting" qxiality
we call distinction. It adapts
itself to the individuality
of the wearer.
Exclusive Representative
MEN'S W EAR
colonies to Germany as one for the
main points of the future peace
treaty, the answer came from all par.
ties and press provinces of Japan:
Ne-er will e give back Shantung
and the Islands."
Capitalists Are Considered.
So perceptible, as in the secret re
ports made public by the bolshev'kl.
too. Is Japan's wish to be on a good
footing with the Russia of Miliukoff
and Kerenski. too: every report that
the Petrograd government has given
Americans concessions in Siberia and
Sakhalin makes Japanese public
opinion so nervous that Russophllism
is endangered and oven the diplomat
ically cautious Motono brusquely says
to Russia's ambassador that for par
ticipation In the mines In the coast
province and on Sakhalin, if foreign
ers are at all considered, only Japan
ese capitalists are to be taken In.
Is it to be aaduateJ that aftsr these
events of lbs past ysara Nippaa wi.l
voluntarily withdraw from Its brajt
works In Ch'na? And if despite all
secret agreements, sufficient means
of pressure were applicable, sore spots
on the skin and bitterness in the soul
would remain behind. Imperialistic
and expansive Russia Is no more: and
Hazelwood Special
CHOCOLATES
can now be purchased from enter
prising dealers in nearly every
town in Oregon. If your favorite
does not already have them, send
the name to us and we will write
him.
127 Broadway
Fifth Avtnut . tiff ybrk
CORBETT
BUILDING
Japan has. naturally, declined to fur
nish troops to Kolchak for lta restora
tion.
Why Do French Women
Always Look Young?
In France mothers and daughters
look like sisters. How are the women
there able to retain their youthful
looks until long past middle age? Is it
becaiwe they are much given to tha
use of mercolixed wax? This wax pos
sesses a remarkable absorbent prop
erty which quickly removes the fine
particles of cuticle which are con
stantly drying and which are the im
mediate cause of an old-looking com
plexion. Thus the livelier, healthier,
ounger skin beneath is given a
chance to breathe and to show itseJf.
Try this treatment yourself. Most
likely it will not require two weeks
to make your complexion as clear,
soft and beautiful as a young girl's.
Just one ounce of mercolixed wax (all
American druggists have It) usually
dai tbe work. The wax is put on
nigbta like cold cream and washed
off moraiags. Adv.
Nervous Women
Woman suffering from
nervousness and sick bead
ache, low spirits, lassitude
and loss of appetite will find
renewed strength and better
health by using Munyon's
Paw Paw Pills. They are
natural aid to the stomach.
liver, bowels and blood and will give
you that help which you need. Gentle
and positive in action and no disagree,
able aftereffects. All druggists, 30c
Munyon's
Paw Paw Pills
BLISS
NATIVE
HERB
TABLETS
Rcirnlzed s the only vtandard hrb
remedy; h. been rcllevins sufferers
: rom
Disordered Stomach
nillouanen. Conitlnstlon. Impure Blood.
KneummiMn, nu mrMiuura. a great
Kidney and Liver Rerrulator
I-ttfik for the money-back guarantee In
every Dnx. in, icnuini. fc-very tab
let stamped with thl trade mark. --
put up In two sizes, Mc.
snd
11. uu.
Sold by lesdlnr drarrlsts and i-.
KK.nt eervwhere. Made by Alonxo o
Winn Co.. Vhlnston. I), c.
For Burning Eczema
Greasy salves and ointments should
not be applied if good clear skin is
wanted. From any druggist for 35c, or
$1 .00 for large sire, get a bottle of Zerao.
When applied as directed it effectively
removes eczema, quickly stops itching,
and heals skin troubles, also sores,
burns, wounds and chafing. It pene
trates, cleanses and soothes. Zemo is
a clean, dependable and inexpensive,
antiseptic liquid. Try it. as we believe
nothing you have ever used is as eflec
Uve and satisfying.
Tne E. W. Rose Ce, Cleveland. Qt