Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (April 20, 1920)
THE 3IOKXIXG ' OnEGOXIXX. .TUESDAY, APRIL. 20, 1920 TURK SEEMS LIKELY -TO STAY IN EUROPE yyyy) Allies, Without U. S. Aid, Can not Effect Ouster. COUNCIL MEETS IN ITALY I'rcsidcnt Is to Be Fully Informed as to Why His Contentions Cannot Be Accepted. TTTivAiM32BFaa?fBBtMBBin8fti&asaKVTmBX.rftiiii ii i' TrrmHinH'iTri-Tiirn iiifiiiitiiiniititiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiuiuuiJiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiH "Speaking of Washing Machines" ' " 4 j 1 ' i ' s SAN ItEMO. April 19. (By the As sociated Press.) The inter-allied su preme council began its formal ses sions today in the Villa Devauchau, on the hills to the northwest of the main town. ' In considering the Turkish treaty, the council decided to reply to Presi dent Wilson's note, giving him full explanations as to why it could not accept the points he made in this connection. The allies' reply in thus supplying full information is taken here to in dicate their general attitude toward the United States in treating the unsettled liuropean problems. The Turkish treaty was approved by the council today in the general form in which it was drawn. Changes were made in two points. It a de cided to request Turkish plenipoten tiaries to present themselves 'n Lon don May 10 to receive the treaty. Turk Treaty linpoed Of. Uhabib Kenali, aged 23, a member of the Turkish armistice commission, is here, but for what purpose is not known. The draft of the reply to President Wilson will be submitted to the coun cil tomorrow. This afternoon the council con cluded consideration of the Turkish treaty. While the Tyrkish question was on the programme for first consideration by the conference today, it develops that there already has been discussion over the question of enforcing the execution of the treaty of peace with Germany. Premiers Millerand, Nitti and Lloyd (ieorge. after their meeting with For eign Minister Scialola of Italy; Philippe Herthelot, political director of the .French foreign off fee; l.arl Cu,rzon. British foreign minister, and numerous secretaries yesterday at the Villa Iievauclmu, met again late in the afternoon at Premier Nitti's hotel. lreure on l.ermnny I rjvpd, Ttiey were agreed without a mo- menfs discussion that Germany shoulf- be told in the most positive manner that she must observe the treaty. , Premier Lloyd George suggested economic pressure, depriving Ger many of food, raw materials and in tercourse with the allied countries should she continue negligent. Pre mier Millerand is described as having said that such pressure, without the use of naval or military aid. would in effect be no pressure at all. The only warning that would be respected. the only pressure that would be ef fective, he asserted, would be force the application of such force as the military and naval advisers might deem sufficient. Premier Lloyd George, it is said resisted this conclusion. Premier Nitti inclined toward the British prime minister's view, and the matter rests there for the present. KVICTIOX HELD IMPOSSIBLE Kviction of Turk, It Is Said, Hangs on U. S. Responsibility. WASHINGTON, April 19. The a lied reply to President Wilson's Turk ish note Is expected by diplomatic of ficials to point out that without ac ceptance by the United States of re sponsibility for part of the burden of the solution of the Turkish question, the allies have found it impossible to adopt his suggestion that the Turks be driven from Europe. The allies hold, it was said, that the eviction of the sultan was impossible without assumption by some power. preferably the United States, of the obligation for the protection of Con stantinople anfl contiguous Turkish territory. For economic and political reasons, officials said, choice of an other power than the United States was preel tided ..nd since the United States has refused the proffered man .date, no other solution than to leave the Turk in Constantinople under al lied control was possible. Representations that the south eastern boundaries of Bulgaria were definitely delimited by the Bulgarian peace treaty, signed by under-Secre-tary of State Polk last year In Paris, it is known, lias been made to the state department, in connection with President Wilson's suggestion that part of eastern Thrace, now Turkish territory, "should become part of Bul garia." This suggestion, it is believed, will be answered by a referee to the Bulgarian treaty. It was discovered last week that the state department does not possess an official draft of the Bulgarian treaty signed by Mr. Polk. The council of the league of nations has agreed informally, according to information reaching Washington, that it cannot assume the mandate for Armenia, as was suggested by the council of premiers in Paris. Import ance is attached by officials to the decision since an almost essential pre liminary to a discussion of Turkish readjustments by the San Reno con ference will be a definition of the conference's attitude toward Armenia. The. fact that it does not control military forces and other machinery necessary to the administration of a state is understood to have been the basic reason for the decision of the premiers. The council will suggest, however, officials here believe, that Armenia should be placed in the cate gory of new states to be controlled Indirectly by the league such as former German colonies and that some neutral state be designated as mandatory. ASPIRIN FOR COLDS Name "Bayer" is on Genuine Aspirin say Bayer Insist on "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" Jn a "Bayer package," containing proper directions for Colds, Pain. Headache, Neuralgia, Lumbago, and Rheumatism. Name "Bayer" means genuine Aspirin prescribed by physi cians for nineteen years. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost few cents. Aspirin is trade mark of Bayer Manu facture of Monoacetic-acideater of paiicj-ucadu. said a prominent Portland woman, "it's a trite thing to say, but it does pay to buy the best." "My husband and I looked at nearly all the advertised machines, and we chose the - 4 - H MMEK Electric Washer "First of all, we liked the 'rock-a-bye' motion of the tub, with nothing inside to lift out and nothing to wear the clothes. I was astonished to find I could wash a tubful in 10 minutes. "Then 'I' liked the copper tub, because I didn't want to bother with the care of wood' or zinc. I wanted my machine to last a long time." - "My husband is an engineer, and he said the construction is better and more simple than any machine we saw, and we know the Apex is absolutely dependable because it has been in use for 12 years, and is no experiment." Your Neighbor Doubtless Has an Apex Ask Her! . "Buy Electrical Goods at an Electrical Store" J. C. ENGLISH CO. UPSTAIRS AT 148 FIFTH ST, BET. MORRISON AND ALDER PHONE: MAIN 143 IIIHIUIIIIIIIUnilllllllllllllllMllllllllllinUlllllllllllMnillllllllllllMWMIIIIIIIIMIIIIII NURSE UP FOR LABGEHY TKAI.VEDATTEX'DAXT CHAKGlilJ WITH PILFERING. . Mrs. lcarl Kowan Alleged to Have Hcmovcd Articles From Patient's Home. Mrs. Pearl Rowan, a trained nurse, was arrested yesterday by Police In spector Mallett on a charge of rob bing a patient afflicted with sleeping sickness. She was held under $25 bail for appearance in municipal court today. M rs. Rowan had been 'employed for a week at the home of Mrs. L. A. Pat terson, 463 East Ninth street North. Mrs. Patterson has been seriously ili with sleeping sickness for more than two weeks. After the advent of Mrs. Kowan into the home as a nurse, members of the family alleged they missed various article's about the home, including wearing apparel. A search warrant was procured yes terday and a search of Mrs. Rowan's trunk revealed four pairs of gloves which members of the Patterson fam ily identified as belonging to Mrs. Patterson. Mrs. Rowan asserts the gloves are' her own. A complaint charging the nurse with larceny was filed in municipal court with Mrs. J. Q, Jamison, a sis ter of Mrs. Patterson, as complaining witness. Mrs. Rowan has been in Portland for about three weeks, having come Here from Los Angeles. She has a boy about 14 years old. ing $9. 000.000 for miscellaneous gov ernment services, the principal one being $7,000,000 additional for caring for war-disabled soldiers and sailors by the war risk insurance bureau. BILL ALLOWS INDIAN SUIT Klamulli Tribe Alleges Money and Land Not Received. ORBGONIAN NEWS BUREAU, Washington. April ly. Representa tive Sinnott's bill authorizing the Klamath tribe of Indians in Oregon to sue the federal government in the court of claims for allesed losses in lands and tribal funds was passed by the" house today. The Indians con tend that the boundary commission which fixed the boundaries of the reservation in 1896 deprived them of 4000 acres which belonged to them. They also alleged that they have due them approximately J100.000 un der their treaty which has never been paid. ' Mrs. I). tli. Iiooney 111. SALEM. Or., April 19. (Special.) Mrs. D. H. Looney, wife of one of the candidates for representative from Marion county, is reported as serious ly ill at her home near Jefferson. Mrs. Looney has resided in Marion county for many years and is well known throughout southern and western Oregon. CONTROL COSTS BILLION if'ontinued From First Pag?.) the railroads, the loss of interest to the government on appropriations made for the operation of the roads, it must be remembered that the gov ernment will have an Investment in railroad securities arising from fed eral control of J862.000.000. Many of these loans were made to weaker roads to prevent receivership during federal control. Some .Is Total Wm. "No one will contend that the gov- ernment will realize the furll amount invested. If all the securities owned by the government.- including its in vestment in liberty and victory bonds, were sold on 'he market for cash, it is quite probable that the loss to the government in these transactions alone would total more than 1250,000,000 on a total invest ment of more than $966,000,000, : in cluding the investment in inland waterways. "Assuming that the railroad securi ties owned by the government would shrink $250,000,000 by the present conversion thereof into cash, the to tal loss to the government charge able to federal control and operation of railroads amounts to $1,375,000,000, leaving out of consideration any question of under-maintenance." Besides the . fund for the railroad administration, the" committee rec ommended appropriations aggregat- Incendiary Fire Suspected. SALEM, Or.. April 19. (Special.) A. C. Barber, state insurance com missioner, received a telegram from the sheriff of Morrow county today urging that H. H. Pomeroy, special ( investigator ior the state lire mar shal's office, be sent to Hardman to probe an alleged incendiary fire which occurred there last week. Mr. Pomeroy is in Port Is nd as a witness before the grand jury and probably win leave there tonight for eastern Oregon. Commissioners Take More Time. VANCOUVER, "Wash., April 19. (Special.) The decision of the Clarke county commissioners as to draining or not draining Vancouver lake was to have been announced today, but It was not. The commissioners find that the problem is a bigger one than they first thought, and will take more time to consider it. The attorneys submit ted their cases without argument. The exact date when the decision will be given has not yet been decided. Recognition of Workers Vrfted. SALEM, Or., Anril 19. (Special.) C. H. Gram, state labor commissioner, in an address at the Salem business men's luncheon today, declared It was up to employers of the natioa -to meet their employes on the level, become- more intimately acquainted with t'i ft A A A A A ll li IA1 A A I A . A A -A A A A A A A A A A . A I K ' A ' a! M A A A A A A A i, A A A A I A A ' il . - ,.- ? . v ": '- :. - . -.. - - i y. - - ;.',.: --'3 , : '" -:J j -- , . , .. . YTiiniinii nniiir inf ir t n urMn mim - - i l Flonzaley Quartet Hear the Flonzaley Quartet in Portland on April 21 Then hear their Victor Records Extraordinary interest attaches to the concert of these great artists because of the double opportunity it affords the music loving public. . It is a privilege in itself to hear these artists, and added importance is given to the event in that it enables you to compare their exquisite interpretations with their Victor Rec ords. ' Attend this concert and note the qualities that distinguish ' their renditions. Then go to any Victor dealer's and hear the Victor Records by the same artists. Note how faithfully thejr interpretations are portrayed on the Victrola. It is because of this absolute fidelity that the Flonzaley Quartet makes Victor Records; that the greatest artists of all the world are Victor artists. - - Victrolas in "great variety of styles from $25 to $1500. New Victor Records demonstrated at all dealers on the 1st of each month. VlCt lTolsi im ' HIS MAJJJ VOICE" J NjjS, proclaim first qua,vy and dennfm rf H products of the jfS victo. TALro MAOsvEoa CAMDOkftL H Machine C'zs. Talking" Camd en New Jersey 1 i c Vi IA, li R LAi A A A A A Al a! them and if necessary call them by ftreir given names, if the .labor jinrest now sweeping over the country is to be curbed. OWNE NAME IN EVERY PAIR r Lighter in weight than "Doette" but with the same marvelous texture FILOSETTE MADE IN U.S. A. the single fabric glove will delight you. Most eco nomical of Spring GLOVES .FOR MEN, WOMEN & CHILDREN Ul Gov. Calvin Coolidge Sqys: HYJU'E have had many attempts at - ' ' regulation of industrial activity by law. Some of it has proceeded on the theory that if those who enjoyed material prosperity used it for wrong purposes, such prosper ity should be limited or abolished. That is as sound as it would be to abolish writing to prevent forgery. ' 5 There are powerful paragraphs like this on every page of Governor Coolidge's book, "Have Faith in Massachusetts" If you like a man who has clean - cut convictions and the courage to utter them with vigor and power, you will like this book. It is sound ' Americanism from a really great American. At all book-stores or sent for St. SO by the publishers Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston LETTER FROM MRS. BRUCE Tells Remarkable Story of Sickness and Recovery. Brooksburg, Ind. "When I was a Tounc girl I clerked in my father's iff store and lifted heavy boxes which caused din placement and I Ruffered greatly. I was married at the age of 18 and went to a doctor about my trouble and he said if I had a child I wo u 1 d be all right. After three rears twins came to us and I did fret all right but three rears later a baby boy came and I was troubled again. I could scarcely do any worfc-at all and suffered for four years. A neighbor 'told me about Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-' pound and I took it for a year at . more. Now I have a baby girl -and do not have any female trouble. Ydu can do anvthing you like with bv letter to help others." Mrs. J. L Bbite, R. F. D. 3, Brooksburg. Ind. The makers of' Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound have thousands of such letters as that above they tell the truth, else they could not have been obtained for love or money. This medicine is no stranper it has stood the test for more than forty years. If there are anv complications you do not understand write to Lvdia K. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confidential) Lynn, Mass This Is Better Than Laxatives On NR Tablet Each Night For A W Will Correct Your Constipation and Mako Constant Dosing Unneces sary. Try It, Foor dircstion and assimilation mean a poorly nourished body and low vitality. 1'oor elimination me:ns riopjred bowels, fermentation, putri faction and the formation of poiponom frases which are absorbed by tho blood ar.d carried through tho body. The result is weakness, headaches, dizziness, coated tongue, Inactive liver, b. lions .attacks, loss of enerfjy, nerv ousness, poor appetite, impoverished blood, sallow completion, pimples, skin disease, and often times evious Ill ness. Ordinary laxatives, purgres and ca thartics salts, oils, calomel and the like may relieve for a few hours, but real, lasting benefit can only como througrh use of medicine that tonea Tip and strengthens the digestive as well as tho eiiminative organs. Get a. 23c box of Nature a Remedy (XR Tablets) and take one tablet each nisht lor a week. Relief v.iil fniinr j the very first dose, but a few days j will elapse before you feel and realize i the fullest benefit. "hen you get I straightened out and feel just riirht I again you need not take medicine every day an occasional NT! Tablet j will then keep your system in good 1 - condition and you will always feel I your best. Remember, keeping well is easier ana cheaper than getting- well Nature's Remedy (XR Tablets! are sold, guaranteed and recommended by your druccist. W V 5 W "3 T! & I ITT tl lli"1l!'MI'S 1)ci- urve 1 eneee (, Are JJel tel. r (Trar u;a-a it. .-iterei THE SIGN OF PERFECT SERVICE Watch fpr Tlie Comet Id i ! :) i) Thorouerhly experle need rA Optometrists for the examina- 1ft tion and adjustments, skilled XV workmen to couotruct the lenses a concentrated serv- b ice that suaranlees depend- V abe liiiis at reasonable prices. Complete len f irlndlnn Factory on tlie I'remiaes SAVE YOUR EYES iHOMPSON 9 r Ef?-TABLETS - '4 OPTICAL INSTITUTE EYESiuur si-ici.vi.isrs. Moat Mml. (-, Portland's Iircrc-t, em. Beat !tUipot, Optical iCMlliabiuent. Exhausted Codies TIRED NERVES Relieved Absolutely by Cadomene Tablets M - lO-ll COIlIi BIT llLIJt. KIKTI1 AU MORltlSO.V Since IttttS. (Tj t r & Grow Your Hair FREE RECIPE The Keal, Satisfying Tonic, bold by All UruLi-ls. Adv Aftet heme almo.t totally bald a Sei York busings nian crew hair and e' has a proline prowth at ae of hii ir hich he wil. send the (ennine rerine frrr on rroiirst to any mrTi or woman wl:o iristu-s to ueTecme .:ndri!fv r caic neT hai: cro-vtli. Or tcjT:ii; .. of the prep arntiuo. Ko'cllo wiM be madrd win reciV'C if vou end 10 ctv. stamps c" mWer. Hii adlres3 la Jena U. B:itiJi bT UOl, iitatioa V, Kew York. Ji. X.