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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (July 19, 1920)
TIIE MORNING OREG OXI AN, MONDAY. JULY 19, 1920 DOZEN WARS GROW OUT OF TIM TREATY Entie Levant Is Rent by Bloody Conflicts. band In two programmes, which roved the best yet given. Miss Irene Allerman made another hit. as she had done last week, in her solo work. The Portland girl is mak ing a distinct impression with her audiences, and is proving an added attraction to Mr. Campbells, band. Manager Cordray has announced that on next Thursday at 9 o'clock he band will put on the musical comp ition, "The Death of Custer" r "The Battle of the Little . Big Horn." The park illumination and setting will be in keeping with In dian life, to give coloring to the music The concerts will continue each evening this week and Sunday after- OLD HATREDS REVIEWED Turks, Arabs, British, French, G necks, Slav Keds All Engaged In Torrible Struggle. CONSTANTINOPLE, July 18. (By the Associated Press.) The predic tion of disinterested statesmen that the proposed treaty with Turkey ap portioning the choicest parts of the Turkish empire among the various European powers would Balkanize the entire Levant seemingly has been realized. "War exists today from, the Black sea to the Dead sea. the Turks and Arabs being engaged In fighting with the British. French and Greeks In almost countless places. Palestine. Syria, Cilicia. Anatolia and Thrace are in religious ferment The Mohammedans are massacrejng or deporting Greeks and Armenians. The Christians are retaliating wher ever they are strong enough to do so. The Russian bolsheviki are taking a hand through their contact in the Caucusus with the Tartars, connect ing the Asiatic struggle with thein battle front from the Baltic to the Black sea, and stirring the Moslem world to greater resistance by prom islng additional contact with soviet Russia through Rumania and Bui garla. The bolsheviki declare they will subjugate these latter countries as soon- as they have attended to ro land and thwart possible domination of Turkey by Great Britain through eupport of Grecian territorial aspira tions. Hatreds of centuries are being dis played in their most hideous forms. Religious and race prejudices and in ternal battles for commercial ad vantages in territory and for fuel oil appear In the swirl of which Constan tinople is the center. It is said Russians here hope for absolute control of Constantinople in the event of Poland s defeat. The indications are that Dama Ferid Pasha, the grand vizier, who is de cidedly Anglophile, will organize new government and sis'- the treaty to check a further Greek advance into Asia Minor. But Mustapha Kemal Pasha and his regular troops and bandit associates are still to be dealt with. CONSTANTINOPLE. July 17. (B the Associated Press) The British and Greeks are preparing to clear the Scutari peninsula of all nationalists and establish a line from Ismid to Chlleh on the Black sea, which will control the bandit raids against Bos phorus towns and check communica tlons bet ween Angora and Constan tinople through the Scutari peninsula mountains. The British forces' head quarters will be Ismid. The Greek patriarch reports that Fouladjik, a Greek village, with population of 2000, was virtually wiped out by Turkish nationalists July 15. The Greeks were shut up inside the church, which was set on fire. The patriarch reports that there are only 150 Greeks alive in the village. British destroyers have ruined Riva. a nationalist stronghold on the Black sea near the entrance to the" Bos- phorus, and are carrying out spas modic bombardments elsewhere. E TO MOVE NORTH IMMIGRATION COMMITTEE TO GO TO TACOMA. Japanese Situation Investigators Also Will Stop in Seattle After Leaving California. SAN FRAXCISCO. Cal., July 18. The house immigration and naturali zation committee investigating the Japanese situation on the Pacific coast will hold hearings this week in Tacoma arm Seattle. Wash., following the completion of the inquiry in Cali fornia, it was announced today by Representative Albert Johnson, com mittee chairman. " The committee has been divided into three sub-committees "to accomplish even a portion of the work Immedi ately on hand," Chairman Johnson said. The entire committee will re convene here and leave California for the north Thursday night. California districts to be visited by the commit tee-prior to its departure include Los Angeles, San Diego and other south ern Califbrnia points; Auburn, Loomis, Penryn, Fresno, Livingston, Turlock and adjacent territory. The testimony and exhibits already collected will be carefully re-checked before being put into permanent form for submission to congress. Chairman STORM OF 1880 RECALLED FIRST PRESBYTER! AX CHURCH LOST ITS STEEPLE. Damage to Same Church in Satur day's Storm Calls Forth Reminiscences. FULL SLATE FAVORED BY PROHIBITIONISTS Delegates Gather in Lincoln, Net?., for Convention. EYES ON BRYAN, SUNDAY Dry Leaders Will Watch Congress, to Keep Enforcement of Law From Becoming Farce. the compartment would never have been discovered, the troopers say. To the edges of the panel, hich was of wood, had been nailed moulding, and it was no unlike others in the rocm. The push button was in the center of the room where the rug was least walked upon. Residents of the exclusive neigh borhood were aroused by shouts and the sound of breaking glass when the troopers broke down the -front door. In an elaborately furnished room on the f'rst floor of the handsome two story dwelling, the t.oopers say, they surprised a dozen men who, they al lege, were playing cards and roulette. When the troopers appeared seven of the players escaped through a rear door. The five who remained were placed under arrest as common gamblers. ! 12,003 VISIT COLUMBIA PORTLAND TOTS AXD PARENTS EN JOY SUXDAY AT BEACH. LINCOLN, Neb., July 18. Delegates to the prohibition national conven tion which begins here "Wednesday next, began arriving today. The early arrival are chiefly from the east and central states. They were making no predictions on the out come of the convention, preferring to await the arrival of leaders before indulging in forecasts. Among the few who are here the sentiment is strongly for the nomination of a na tional ticket, but none of those men tioned as possible head of the ticket appeared to have a dominating lead. W. G. Calderwood of Minnesota, vice-chairman of the national com mittee, who has been in Lincoln sev eral days, has expressed a preference for a ticket headed by William J. B.fyan or President, with William A. ("Billy") Sunday as vice-president. Mr. Calderwood, however, takes ex ceptions to a statement credited to Mr. Bryan that enforcement of the prohibition law rests more with con gress than with the president. Congres to Be Watched. "It 13 true," said Mr. Calderwood. ( "that we should not go to sleep at the Johnson said, and a sub-committee congressional switch, but the nresi will return tor California with the dent can, as the present president has appoint wet enforcement officers who win mane me law ridiculous nnrf transcript of testimony for this pur pose. The committee will not attempt to make a study of border immigration problems in California, Arizona.. New Mexico and Texas at this time, he said. An independent investigation of border questions will be made and a special sub-committee of the house mmigration and naturalization com mittee will be sent west for this pur pose in November. AIR PLAN HALT REFUSED MILLER AXD WILL NEGOTIATE WITH BERLIN' CABINET. Claims of Poland to Indemnities From Hungary, Austria, Bulga ria Are Ranked Last. SPA, July 18. At the moment of signing the protocols the Germans refused to sign that relating to the prohibition of the manufacture of air ships by Germany. Under the treaty the German aeronautic material would have been handed over by April 10 and further manufacture was prohibited during the next six months while the international com mission divided or destroyed the sur rendered material. - Premier Millerand says the matter will be regulated directly with Berlin through diplomatic representations. PARIS, July 18. Premier Millerand receiving the correspondents on his return to Paris last night, expressed satisfaction at the results at Spa. The conference, he said. seems to me to mark the first stage In the execution of the treaty. indemnities received by the allies from Austria, Hungary and Bulgaria will be divided Into two equal por tions, according to advices received from Spa. The first half will be dis tributed to the various nations in the same proportions as were decided upon in apportioning German repara tions. Of the second half. Italy will receive 30 per cent and the rest will be divided between Serbia, Roumania and Greece. The claims of Poland will be decided later. When the spire of the First Presby terian church was damaged by light ning during the heavy electrical storm which swept over Portland early Sat urday morning it recalled to the minds of old-time residents of Portland an accident to the spire of the same church back in 1880. It was early on the afternoon of January 9, 1SS0, that the most vio lent wind storm in the history of the northwest struck Portland and did damage estimated at many thousands of dollars. At that time the First Presbyterian church stood at the northwest corner of Third and Wash ington streets, and during the height of the storm the spire was lifted bod ily from the building and hurled into the front yard of a residence nearby. Other buildings were either blown down or badly damaged as the storm continued throughout the afternoon. 'I recall the Incident clearly," said Eugene Protzman, a pioneer resident of Portland, yesterday. "I was stand ing in a doorway directly across the street and saw the spire lifted from the building and hurled to the ground. The iron roof of another building al most adjoining the church also was blown off." DMring the wind storm of 1880 there was hardly a building in the business district which escaped dam age of some sort. Pioneer residents say they have never seen anything like it before or since in Portland or the northwest. BERLIN, July 18. Indignant pro test against the action of the German delegates in agreeing to the allied terms relative to coal deliveries in the Spa conference is voiced in manifesto published here by the league of independent, trade unions representing 1,000,000 workers. bring it into such disrepute that even tne arys will be disgusted. A verv prominent citizen told me that in the wet portions of Nebraska the law was larce. The same man called atten tion to what the whole nation knows that the same thing has occurred in other wet centers with like re sults." Mr. Calderwood said "prior to the national conventions of the two ma jor parties, he did not believe the nomination of a national ticket ad visable, but since the republican and democratic parties have ignored the wet and dry issues in their platforms" he had changed his mind and was now strongly in favor of not only nomi nating a ticket, but of making a vig orous campaign. He believed that was the sentiment of a large major ity of the delegates. i 400 Delegates Expected. National Chairman Hinshaw is due to arrive Tuesday. The California delegation and those from the far western states are expected Monday night or Tuesday morning. Present expectations are that the convention will be made up of about 400 dele gates with an equal number of vis iters. Dr. Clinton N. Howard, chairman of the National Reform association, men tioned in connection with the presl dential nomination, made three ad diesse today, taking for his subject, Missing Planks of the Political Par ties." J. A. Murray, chairman of the Nebraska prohibition committee, is quoted as saying Dr. Howard will re ceive the support of the Nebraska delegation for the presidential nom ination. Vice-Chairman Calderwood spoke at a church mass meeting today on "How the Committeee of 48 Met the Call." Crowds See Bathing Girls Filmed for a New Comedy, Which Is Becoming Weekly Feature. Approximately 12,000 persons vis ited Columbia, beach amusement park yesterday. The beach was crowded from early in the day until dusk, hundreds of children wading and hundreds of adults taking the oppor tunity for a dip In the cool Columbia. The bathing girls with the Colum bia Film company, which is produc ing a comedy at the park with the boardwalks and the eandy stretch of beach as the settings, attracted con siderable attention.. About 40 young women appeared in the various roles. The taking of moving pictures is becoming one of the big attractions at Columbia beach where the cast almost every Sunday is "shot" in some unusual comedy scene. The boardwalk was thronged all day long, the amusement concessions and the dancing attracting young and old alike. The warm weather, however, made the bathing and the water sports the most popular events of the day. The hydroplane was kept busy from the time it arrived until it left after dusk. One of the big events during the week will be the band concert to be given next Wednesday night by the Multnomah Guard band. V BULLETIN ON RUBBER PER1MEXTS ISSUE. BUTTON REVEALS SECRET TROOPERS ACCIDENTALLY FIND GAMBLER'S PANEL. Cards and Poker Chips Disclosed When Officers Step on Right Spot Under Rng. Man Faints While Taking Bath. Allan Oakes, 20, fainted last night while taking a bath at 44V4 Union avenue and was still unconscious at Good Samaritan hospital at an early hour today. Physicians were unable they found card3 and poker chips. to diagnose his case. ' Had not the button been trod upon JEW YORK, July 18. (Special.) After they had assisted Aeil H. Van Dewater. acting counsel for the Nas sau County association,' raid on al leged gambling house, elaborately furnished, on Broadway, Hewlett Long Island, and had arrested five men shortly before dawn today, state troopers, in searching a room on the second floor, stepped on a push button under a rug, causing a secret panel in the wall to open, revealing a com partment three feet wide and four feet, long in wr.'ch the troopers say SOLDIERS' BODIES ARRIVE Funeral of Explosion Victims to Be Held Today at Marshfield. MARSH FIELD, Or., July 18. (Spe cial.) The bodies of Corporals E. G Scoit and Clyde DIndinger, killed by the explosion of a cannon at Camp Lewis, were brought here this after noon. In charge of Captain Ben S. Fisher and an escort of eight men from the Second company coast ar- niicry. The funeral of Corporal DIndinger will te neld at 10:30 Monday in the Coos Bay undertaking chapel and that of Corporal Scott in the Methodist Church at 1 o'clock in the afternoon. Trivate Peterson, who was wounded in the face when the cannon exploded, was sent home as a member of ttie e&cort. EX- Manchester College of Technology- Uses Sulphurated Hydrogen and Sulphur Dioxide Gases. WASHINGTON, July 18. (Special.) Experiments conducted by the Manchester (England) College of Technology have led to the discovery of an important process for vulcaniz ing which Is expected to have far- reaching effects on tLa rubber manu facturing industry. An official report states that in the new vulcanizing process two gases are used sulphurated hydrogen and sulphur dioxide .which react on each other to produce water and free sul phur. It has been found that when crude rubber, either in solid form or in so lution, is treated with these gases the sulphur produced vulcanizes the rubber. If the sulphur is mixed with waste material, such as sawdust leather scraps or even paper and the mixture vulcanized the result will serve a variety of useful purposes. The report states that the im portance of the discovery lay In the fact that it makes cold vulcanizing possible, the present method being to heat rubber and sulphur to a tern perature of 138 degrees Centigrade, and it has been difficult to get a com binatlon of rubber with raw materials which would stand such a high tern perature. One claim is that the discovery will make possible the manufacture of one-piece boots without stitching, and that its use will extend to the manu facture of linoleum floorings, artifi cial leather upholstery and wall paper. and probably affect the production of rubber tires. 1 ik" (jliiiii i IsMm mm npHE famous real Burley Cigarette. And what made it famous in three short years? The delicious and very unusual taste of toasted Burley tobacco not raw tobacco a new creation in ciga rette manufacture. It's toasted there's a 6tory of success in two words. Until you've smoked Lucky Strikes you cannot appreciate the delicious flavor of toasted Burley. TT'S toasted for your pipe." The origi nal Lucky Strike formula that pipe smokers have known and loved for years. Lucky Strike pipe tobacco is the finest toasted Kentucky Burley tobacco not raw tobacco; and like the cigarette, it's toasted to seal in the flavor. The flavor is held and every bit of bite taken out by toasting. You must try it, soon! Both are made of the finest tobacco toasted not raw tobacco. O Jp Guaranteed, ly t-which means that if you don't like LUCKY STRIKE youcan get your money back from the dealer each 10 years old. The lads were dressed in blue overalls, and some of them were without hats. They got away while playing in the yard. Seven Frazer Home Boys Escape Seven small boys escaped from the Frazer home last night. They were Scical Broclar. Martin Fitzgerald Franz Dennis, Kenneth Stuart and I A papyrus on geometry dated 1100 Asa Vaughn, each 13 years old, and I B. C. has been preserved from ancient Raymond Cherney and Lloyd Dennis. Egypt. N' THOUSANDS HEAR MUSIC Campbell's American Concert Band Gives Two Programmes. Two band concerts at the Oaks Amusement park yesterday were en-J Joyed by thousands who went to the popular family resort on the river to hear Campbell's American concert iMaid wk Clover I ICE CREAM Just Before the Demi-tasse Comes that which makes you want to hurry through' your dinner to get it MAID O'' CLOVER ICE CREAM the "Cream of Creams." Irresistibly good, from first to last bit each dish an invitation for more. Made as good as expert skill, pure ingredients and . ideal surroundings will permit. Recommended by discriminating users for all occasions; nothing nicer between shopping tasks; delightful after motoring, golfing and tennis. In all grood flavors; dish, brick or bulk; at all good dealers. Mutual Creameru Company OT to the fleetest of foot, but to the driest of throat goes the first de lightful sip of Clicquot Club Ginger Ale. But every kiddie shall have a glass if mother will thoughtfully keep a bottle or two on ice. How the children love Clicquot! There's a snap and zest in the bubbling, spark ling golden liquid that makes them want to drink the whole bottle. Let them there's nothing harmful in Clicquot; only pure spring water, juice of lemon and lime, clean cane sugar, and mild Jamaica ginger that prevents the too sudden chill of an ice-cold drink. Buy Clicquot by thm cmnm from your grocmr or drug gimt, Mnd alvraya harm sit your homm a daily drink ing habit that is aiwraym aafm and good for littim mud mdultm bothi THB CLICQUOT CLUB COMPANY MM Jlif V Millia.Maae, J - far a Summer Time Is Victrola Time Do not fail to take a VICTROLA with you into the mountains, to the seashore, or on that auto camping trip. Enjoy the holiday pleasure that only music can bring. The popular airs of this summer and the songs that never grow old will be among the happiest memories of your vacation. There are two portable Victrolas, specially serviceable for vacation entertainment, at 25 and $35. "We have others up to $1500. Convenient payment terms on any Victrola. ShermanJMay 8c Sixth and Morrison Streets -F PjlS (Opposite Postoffice) TSjN-fjf