THE MORNING OREGONIAN, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1919. 3, GRAVES KEEPS U. S. RIFLES FROM OMSK Vladivostok Newspaper Arti cles Roil General. as the future home of the crown princess, as her former abode Is con sidered much too' pretentious for her present circumstances. RUSSIA MAY LOSE HELP Kok-liak Government in Reply As sorts Drive Against Bolshe vism Jeopardized. OMSK. Oct. I. (By the Associated -resa.) Major-General William S. graves, commander of American forces ', In Siberia. In retaliation for alleged 'scurrilous articles published in a Vladivostok newspaper and hostile acts of Cossack chiefs in the far east. 4vas held up a shipment of 14.000 rifles which recently arrived at Vladivostok from America consigned to the all Kussian government at Omsk. Giving notice of his action by tele graph through ' Major Slaughter, his representative here. General Graves, in direct and forceful language, de clares he will personally cause the ar rest of the offending editor and the suppression of the newspaper the Golos Rodini unless the Omsk gov ernment does so. He asserts further than unless the CHARTER CHANGES URGED Spokane Voters to Pass on Several Important Proposals. SPOKANE. Wash., Oct. 2. Three charter amendments and an advisory resolution will be submitted to the voters of Spokane at the general elec tion November 4, it was decided by the city council today. The amend ments propose: Increasing the salary of the city commissioners from $3600 per annum to 15000; reducing th commissioners' surety bonds from 125.000 to $5000. and making railroads liable for the conditions of street crossings. The resolution would authorize the city council to make expenditures necessary for an investigation look na- to the purchase by the city of hydro-electric power. The resolution Is understood as proposal which may work out in the purchase by the city of the power plant of the Spokane & Inland Elec trie company, now in the hands of a receiver. PORTLniERS MEET If! FRENCH CAPITA L E. B. Lockhart Tells of Dis covery of Friends. JOSEPHINE ROAD VIEWED Grants Pass-Crescent City Route Is Approved. GRANTS PASS, Oct. !. (Special.) County Judge C. G. Gillette, in com pany with Mr. Sommers of the Call fornia highway commission and Mr, Hodgden of the Oregon state high way commission, has Just returned from a viewing trip over the proposed new route from Grants Pass to Cres cent City. The route would go via .-tivitv of the Cossack chiefs is con-I Elk creek and would, says Judge Gil jeiie. provide a rouie ki icasi vv icei lower than the present road, besides eliminating one very steep grade. Both highway engineers were well pleased with the proposed route and will recommend it. In all probability a crew of surveyors will be put on to survey the road next spring. trolled, he will recommend that Amer ica refuse to render further assist ance to Kussia. General Graves says he will retain the arms until advised as to what action the Omsk govern ment Dronoses to take. In replying, the Omsk government ays that in its view the subject con stitutes a diplomatic an J not a mill tary problem, which should be ap proached through reorganized dipio matte channels and that the govern ment therefore awaits a communica tion from the state department at Washington. It says that "not wishing to formulate any criminations, it would not enter Into an argument which might impair the lively sym pathy which it believes has been awakened in America for the cause of Admiral Kolchak.' In resDect to the holding up the shipment of rifles, astonishment is ex" pressed by the government that local troubles in the far east, which the government regards as an interna tional problem and not a purely Rus sian one, "should impel General Graves to take steps which might jeopardize a far-reaching and more vital undertaking, namely, the sup pression of bolshevism at the critical moment when Siberian troops are conducting a successful offensive." It is pointed out that General Graves' course is "peculiary aston ishing in view of the fact that the rifles were bought and paid for by the Russian government." The threatened suppression of the newspaper, it Is declared, could not be construed conceivably as a matter subject to American military Jurisdiction. Crown Princess Home Chosen. BERLIN. Sept. 12. (Correspond ence of The Associated Press.) The rovernment has selected Castle Cels MRS. ANN S. MERCER DEAD Oregon-Washington Pioneer Passes Away at Seattle. SEATTLE. Wash., t'ct. 2. (Special.) The passing of Mrs. Ann Stoven Mercer, widow of Aarvn Mercer, takes one of the oldest pioneers of Oregon and Washington. Mrs. Mercer died yesterday at her home at 8103 Eighth avenue at the age of 79. Aaron Mercer was one of the hardy pioneers that came across the conti nent by wagon train. It was in 1852 that the little band crossed the moun tains and arrived In Oregon. In 1855 Ann Stoven married Aaron Mercer in Salem, Or., the marriage being per formed by Rev. Mr. Bagley. Soon after the couple went to southern Oregon. DALLES CANTEEN CLOSES Dance at Elks Clnb Marks Close ' of Activities. THE DALLES, Or.. Oct 2. (Spe cial.) The local Red Cross officially ended its career last night as far as canteen work here is concerned, with dance at the Elks' club. A report S( the number of soldiers served and the amount of food dis pensed during the service here will be made later. Scores of ex-service men ere amons the participants. MAJOR WARRENS BUSY MAN John 'E. Carver of Baker Has Rec ord to Be Proud of, Says Oregon - Preacher-Newspaper Man. BY E. B. LOCKHART. Orecon Newspaperman .and Preacher. PARIS, Sept. 9. (Special.) I learned the past week that one of Portland's well-known business club men was in Paris. I hunted him up and had a delightful visit with Major William H. Warrens of the motor transport corps. He was, I found commissioned as captain in the quar termaster's department at Fort bam Houston. Tex., in June. 1917. He was transferred to the motor transport coma, nromoted to major and- ordered to France in command of mechanical repair unit No. 312, consisting ot mi men and 57 orcicers. fie was ra tioned at Bordeaux, in command of Reception Park No. 705, consisting of about 4000 men and on leers. Ma tor Warrens remained in that position until April, when ne was ordered to Paris for duty with the general sales agent In disposition of motor transport corps property, ah of the Portland man's operations have been either at base ports or in Paris at the Elysee Palace hotel, where the kaiser hoped to hold his victory ban quet upon his entry into .rans. Major Warrens was manager or tne Baggage & Omnibus Transfer company in Portland before the war. He also is interested in important real estate holdinzs. . He 's a member of the Arlington club, the Multnomah Ama teur Athletic club and Commercial club of Portland, and has made his home in the Rose City .for about 20 years. He is also well known in Salem. Senator McNary, George Rogers and others being acquaintances of his. Organisations' Record Good. The organizations which he has commanded leave France with a splen did record. He says there have been very few cases of courts-martial, due to a great extent to the influence of the various welfare organizations located at the camps where he has been in command. The Portland officer left last Satur day for St. Kazaire. He is. no doubt. on the Atlantic at this writing. I was glad to meet John E. Carver of Baker the other day. He has a record to be proud of. He has been In some hard fighting, has been wounded by gas burns and has had a varied experience in army life, all told. He enlisted in 1917 in the regular army and In May. 1918, landed In France. His first battles were on the Marne. July 14, 1918, when the Germans crossed under the hardest rtillery fire since the battle of Ver dun. -It was here that he got the gas. After the Marne battle he went to St Mihiel, where he helped drive the boches from the ground the Teutons had held for four years. Then ' he was at Argonne forest, where he stayed till the armistice was signed, when with his regiment he marched into Germany where he now is. He expects to be there for some 'tim yet Mr. Carver was wtftb the 18th field artillery of the "fighting 3d' division through all the fighting an he told me the other day that all the regular men of the 3d division and officers are still on the Rhine. He hopes to be in the land of apples nex spring. He Is with the 18th field artillery at Coblenz, Germany. Mn Carver previously served ten months on the Mexican .border. , .- Lieutenant Pettibone , of -Portland has been in Paris the last few days. I did not have much time to talk-with him, last week when I met him, but the young American officer appeared in fine health and spirits. He is friend of Attorney Russell Brooks of balem and is well known among th young men of Portland and the capital city. Coming across Charles Gross, private In the 4th regiment of th United States engineers, a man who has lived in Oregon since 1904, having been a resident of several Oregon cities, including Portland, Salem and McMinnvllle, I had a very enjoyable chat, recently. Mr. Gross had been in the United States navy for four years and came to France with the army in May, 1918. He had Just had a visit with another McMinnvllle man, Owen McGiH, who has charge of the X. M. C.-A. postoffice in France. Gross in formed me that he recently met an other Oregonlan. Captain Henry O. Miller, company A, S. O. S. Mr. Grgss is a member of the Christian church of McMinnvllle. On his discharge from the army he expects to attend a school of the merchant marine at Hog Island, Pa. He is now en route home. Waiting for the underground rail road last Saturday I accused a sol dier of looking very much like Henry Hanzen, a newspaper man of Port land, and found him to be First Ser geant Donald W. Fallis, of the City of Roses. His father is living on East Morrison stret, and is in the ship building business. He has lived in Portland about ten years, prior to which he lived in Grand Island. Neb. Sergeant Fallis, before enlisting in the United States army, was connect ed with the Metropolitan market and grocery on Williams avenue. He has been in France .twelve and a half months, being in the motor transport corps stationed at Bordeaux. He has traveled all over . France doing con voy work. He expects to leave for the United States at an early date. Sergeant Fallis is putting up a good fight in the "battle of Paris," and seems to be enjoying himself. He is a member of the local lodge of Wood men of the World. We had. dinner together several times and enjoyed discussions of Webfoot state affairs. Lieutenant C. O. Bunnell, of the en gineers, of Vancouver, Wash., left the other day for Serbiawith the Red Cross. Lieutenant Bunnell, read ers will remember, was reported cap tured by the Germans a couple of years ago, the report being circulated from a picture of some prisoners In Germany, one .of which bore a great resemblance to the Washingtonian. I met the lieutenant in this wise: Hear ing some officers discuss matters of army life in an interesting manner I made bold to approach them and, apologizing for the interruption, ex plained that I was interested in the remarks I had accidentally overheard, and introducing myself, asked the gentlemen where they came from, whereupon the one directing the con versation said "Washington." It was Bunnell. Since then I have met him a number of times. He is well .and content with his work. While in Paris he frequented the T. M. C. A. and gave it as his opinion that the organization has been one of the pow erful influences during and since the war to keep the American army "up to snuff." "I am a friend of the 'TV you bet." said he to me. Waiting for dinner at the "T. Gar. dens in Paris recently, I overheard the remark: "Well, that's a good state you are going back to, but were you ever in Oregon?" and I met Lieuten ant David W. Evans of Portland, found out during my conversation that Lieutenant Evans has lived in Portland for 14 years and when the United States entered the conflict en listed in the signal corps with a unit composed of employes of the Pacifi Telephone & Telegraph company. He was commissioned at Leon Springs, Texas. He came to France in June, 1918, was in the trenches from th latter part of June until October, 1918; served as signal officer with the 357th regiment, and later as brigade signal officer on the staff of Brigadier-General U. G. McAlex ander, who was formerly at Van couver barracks and Oregon Agricul tural college. ' In the St Mihiel operations Lieu tenant Evans had charge of the sig nal work during the capture of Bois de Pretre, one of the famous battle points on the western front. He was severely wounded during St Mihie operations, and after spending ten weeks in the hospital returned to the army of occupation. Lieutenan Evans wears one silver star, which indicates a citation for "meritorious service in actibn." Since the departure of the 90th division from the army of occupation, Lieutenant isvans has traveled ex tensively through Germany, Luxem- Dourg, .Belgium, r ranee ana spam, also over all the battlefields of the American expeditionary force. He is at present with a "commission in Paris and is looking forward with pleasure to the day when his services will be no longer required. Lieuten ant Evans, prior to entering the serv ice, was employed In the auditing de partment of the Pacific Telephone & Telegraph company in Portland. GERMANS WANT BIG LOAN Erzberger Says Only America Can Finance It Treaty Is Bar. BERLIN. Oct. 2. (By The Associ ated Press.) Mathias Erzberger, minister of finance, told the national assembly this afternoon the only country capable of financing a big loan was the United States and nego tiations at this source were impos sible until the treaty of peace was ratified. Herr Erzberger said the govern ment was exerting every influence in an effort to halt the downward ten dency of the mark and announced the appropriation of 3,500.000,000 marks for the purpose of keeping down food prices. , Centralia Banks Inspected. CENTRALIA, Wash., Oct 2. (Spe cial.) C. J. Shepherd, manager of the Seattle branch of the federal reserve bank, who is touring southwest Washi ngton, visited the Centralia banks esterday. Mr. Shepherd was ex tended the courtesy of attending a meeting of the directors of the Farmers & Merchants Bank. He ex pressed himself as highly gratified with the standing of this institution and urged the directors to join the federal reserve system. The board has the matter under advisement Aberdeen Mains Being Laid. ABERDEEN,' Wash., Oct. 2. (Spe cial.) Laying of the new ten-inch main to South Aberdeen . in addition to the present eight-inch main, which has become too small for the section Churchill Antiseptic Skin Soap cA splendid toilet soap that has distinctive antiseptic and hygienic properties 'which .extend its usefulness far beyond the mere cleansing of the skin. It has marked medicinal value. i -CI Sen "1 , tue Half - Pt icejSale Friday and Saturday 2 Cakes1Fofl9c (A Box of 3 Cakes for 2jc) The regular price is 19c a cake. Thou sands of Owl Drug Store customers will appreciate this chance to lay in a supply of their favorite soap at half price. IS BROADWAY AND WASHINGTON E. Struplere, Mgr. Mail Orders Given Prompt Attention of the city south of the Chehalis iver. has started. The new main will be carried on the Oregon-Washington railroad bridge on each side of the draw span and at the bottom of the river for the length of the draw. The city water department has Just re ceived a new diving apparatus which will be uped In the work. tf N. cott.a 44 traaut Crowds Are Thronging to Our Great Annual Money-Saving Event GOOBS BUY NOW AND SAVE at Cut Prices at The BROWNSVILLE WOOLEN MILL w W0.0L GUARDS THE HEALTH Men's Underwear at Cut Prices Medium, light and garments in all sizes, weights and colors. Staple at reduced prices. Blankets at Cut Prices Large assortment of beautiful patterns, colors and weaves, including the famous Indian blankets, robes and shawls. Regular prices reduced. , Men's Mackinaws at Cut Prices Fine assortment, latest colors and patterns. These are the coats to defy eold. Boys' Mackinaws at Cut Prices Just the thing to protect the schoolboy from cold. - Splendid garments, attractive colors. Men's-Women's Sweaters at Cut Prices Large variety of colors, styles and weaves. Men's Shirts at Cut Prices Light and heavy flannel shirts, in all sizes, weights and colors; splendid assortment. Boys' Underwear and Hose at Cut Prices Plentiful variety of one-piece suits to keep the boys warm in winter. Prices, always reasonable, are reduced. Auto Robes at Cut Prices Solid and substantial windproof robes. Just the thing for winter auto rides. Boys' Sweaters at Cut Prices At the reduced .prices the boy will appre ciate these wool sweaters and sweater coats. Men's Socks at Cut Prices Our assortment of men's socks, suitable for city and country wear, in farm, mill and camp, was never larger or more staple. No one can afford not to lay in a plentiful supply at our reduced prices. See Our Windows Today Our Stocks Are the Largest and Finest in Our History Brownsville Woolen Mills tOSe Where Wool Is King Mill-to-Man Clothiers Third and Morrison Streets