TTTE MORNIXG OTIEGONIAX. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 8. 1920 OREGON RAILROADS . HELD IfJ FINE SHAPE quiry Is being made of our mamers by hp publie concerning such so-calltd dances, therefore, be it resolved, that the Ameri can National Association of Masters of Dancing, in session at their western con vention in Portland, Or., decry the appli cation of such names to any dances or movements for use in baJIroom dancing and do denounce the use of animal name (or dances art all times. .The masters of dancing yesterday also voted to name Portland as the convention city of 1921 tn face of the opposition offered by Salt Lake City. The convention, which , also carries with it a normal school of dancing, will be held, starting during the mid dle of August. It is planned to be open four weeks In the 1921 con vention. President Fentdn Bott. Mose Chris tensen, Senor Stefano Mascagno and others gave brief talks. The conven tion closes today. The normal school ..I nil nil mi iim nil im iiii 'iiii iiir ini 1111 mm mi ini int iiii mi fin 11.1 1111 PSSSSSSSSSMBsnMMBWySSSVSSSSYHHMHi Southern Pacific Officials Make Inspection. PRESIDENT SPROULE HERE remains open another week. Vice-President Shoup Also Renews Acquaintances Branches Also Declared Excellent. SERVICE LEAGUE TO MEET The Oregon lines of the Southern Pacific are in a very satisfactory con dition, according to the report of the high officials ff the company, who have been making inspection trips over the Tillamook branch, west side lines and properties of the system on both sides of and across the Wil lamette valley for several daxs and spent yesterday In Portland inspect ing terminals and calling at Portland general offices of the company. Julius Kruttschnitt. chairman of the board, expressed his satisfaction with the favorable business condi tions in Oregon. He declared that the property has been found in Just as excellent condition on the branches as on the main line and that with in creasing equipment under construc tion it is the expectation of the man agement to take care of traffic effi ciently. Personal Call Are Made. The officials made a number of personal calls during the' day, in company with John M. Scott, general passenger agent of the Oregon lines, to renew old acquaintances and meet shippers and business men. President Sproule and Vice-President Shoup called at the Chamber of Commerce. "While as a railroad official I am not Interested In shipping develop ment, it is a big question of import ance to the country," said President Sproule. "Ships are competitors of the railroads in transportation, but a broad policy should be pursued by the government in sales of the ships to the American people, for the pri vate ownership of the vessels is the correct method, in my opinion, to bring about the establishment of a strong merchant marine. It is my conviction that the government should sell the vessels under contract by whtch the difference In cost as the price of tonnage declines might be absorbed by the government. Plan la Declared Logical. "It is good business and logical that this should be done. If the govern' ment holds the ships at prices so high that the operators cannot buy them, the prices will eventually have to be reduced in order to dispose of them: so why should the buyers not be given protection? The purchaser who pays 150 a ton for ships and finds within a few months that he must compete with vessels costing half or two-thirds as much would be at a decided disadvantage. "The nation must have a great mer chant marine, ample to meet possible contingencies of the future. While we hope there may be no future wars, it must be realized that if war comes this country should have for its pro tection a merchant marine strong enough to serve the navy in carrying supplies and fuel. It Is therefore es sential that a broad policy be adopted and permanently established by the government. Old Friends Greet Snoop. ' Paul Shoup, vice-president of the Southern Pacific company, who was formerly assistant general freight ..(tent of the Harriman system lines at Portland, was greeted by many old friends. He became president of the Paclfio Electric company, operating : the electric lines covering the terri- . njiy uiuuiiiry 10 jjos jvngeies witn a network of suburban lines and was located there for several years. j-iunne rne war n.rind ta wan transferred to San Francisco as the executive official of the comnanv In charge of the corporate interests. He was highly complimentary of the . growth and business development in Portland during the time in which he had no opportunity to keep in touch with affairs in this city. The special train bearing the offi cial party departed for San. Francisco last nighty . MACSWINEY IS FEVERISH OFFICERS CALLED TO GOTHAM SEPTEMBER 17. Mayor Baker Sets Meeting Date at Request of Organization's Executive Secretary. Placement of the Portland Service league on a firm basis, through the appointment of necessary orficers, will be made at' a meeting to be held In the public auditorium September 17. All colonels, majors, majors ad jutants and captains will be urged to attend. The plan of the organization meet ing was made by Mayor Baker fol lowing receipt of a letter from Henry W. Kent, executive secretary of the organization, who several days ago wrote to the mayor and outlined the plans of the organization and re quested aid from the city's chief ex ecutive. In this letter Mr. Kent informed the mayor that the purpose of the league in general was to assist the mayor and city commissioners, as well as all civic organizations, to make Portland a bigger, better, busier and more beautiful city. The specific purpose which the league . hopes to accomplish immediately is to aid the Portland Rose society in expanding and making Portland the greatest rose center of the world. The second specific objective, ac cording to Mr. Kent,, is to have the league function so that through It any oltizen can plan for Portland's betterment and have such a plan con sidered by groups of citizens in all walk of life and obtain the active co-operation of such citizens in the event of approval of any such plans. y ROGUE ARRESTED EX-MUXICIPAL JUDGE IS HELD OX LIQUOR CHARGE. Mrs. Hoguc, Proprietor of Xor-1 tonla, Complains of Party With Other Women. Harry Hoguc, formerly municipal judge, was arrested last night In his office in the Sherlock building, and held In the city Jail on a technical charge of violating the prohibition law. Patrolman Simpkins, who made the arrest, said he found Judge Hogue with another man and two women in the: office; where a quart bottle of moonshine whisky, three - quarters I empty, stood on a table. The arrest was made by request of 1 Mrs. Hogue, owner of the Nortonla I hotel. Mrs. Hogue went to police headquarters and demanded that the police raid the office. The four persons In the office were taken to police headquarters, where! all underwent a rigid cross-examina tion. Mrs. Hogue Bat in the captain's office while the questioning went on in another room. She left after it was! decided to lock up Judge Hogue on a charge of having liquor In his pos session, lne two woman and the other man were released. Judge Hogue was a personal friend of most of the policemen at head-1 quarters, and many expressed svm- patny ror his predicament. Captain Inskeep decided that the prisoner'. who, he said, had been drinking, must be kept In "jail until morning. The case is scheduled for trial in the municipal court today. POLICEMAN WINS BY K. 0. Harold Shields Orders Reserves, hut Simpkins Is Enough.-" Harold M. Shields, 26, was arrested last night near the Multnomah club and charged with being drunk and disorderly after a fiirht in which Pa. iora flavor s rlends Say He Can- trolinan Simpkins dislocated his iinumi. ine man s wire naa complained J LLOYD GEORGE'S SUGGESTION XOT THOUGHT PRACTICAL. not Give Guarantee for Ces sation of Murders. LONDON, Sept. 7. (By the As that he had beaten and choked her. Shields had left his home at 167 fatout street when the policeman ar rived. The patrolman gave chase and I overtook the prisoner. 'Are you alone?" Shields is al of0Corkenad0rdrr'Cr Mf1cSwi" leged to' have demanded rLri. tratne-r'8t "f I"? The Policeman replied 1 lth!-L.?.J Z?. " !S-.5?r,Xto,n ial1' but says Shields told hi. that he was , .......... i , , uuc lu ins I have to send . fnr heln t n t-lr V. I , prolonged hunger strike, was. un- tn ShirM: I. h' changed. ... '..i. 'j .r . . , . , .1 num ncu iim policeman. in remier Lloyd George's sucerest on r; v. , .i j , 5?Lr VnJttt Jt I Macbwny or utes before Simpkins finally knocked other hunger strikers, conditional m,iu ri .nv, ,i-u. n,,ri.faUarnftenf th cB"Vl0" " to the jaw. The policeman's dislocated murders! of policemen in Ireland. t,.,mh ,j., k . . a. a. . 1 . ... 1 " 0 UlV-Vl WJ CS UUV.IU1 in r nhI " To the emergency hospital. . - ... - - K'vouiiig aiij i i (t. . ileal issue ror the breaking of the aeaaiocK Between the government and dissident Irishmen. Lord Mayor Mac owiney s iricnus declare tnat it v.i.uiii l.c uupossiDie xor Macswiney to give such a guarantee. Art OBrien. president of the Gaelic league in ljondon, says no author native communication has been re ceived from the premier by any rel ate j,ora Mayor MacSwincy or anyone entitled to speak in his be- nau. ES 211 ASTERS DECRY ' AXIMAL X AMES FOR DANCE STEPS. CHILD IS HELD' MURDERER Boy of 1 0 Y ears Is Accused of Kill ing Playmate, Aged 11. MODESTO, CaL. Sept. 7. Gerald de Witte, 10 years old, is a prisoner in the Stanislaus county jail here .to night, charged with murder in con nection with the shooting and death of Louis Cooper Jr.. an 11-year-old playmate, near Turlock, where both resided. County officials said Gerald, con fessed that he shot and killed Louis Cooper, following a melon fight in which four boys engaged on the D Witte ranch. The boys had been throwing melons at each other, It was said, and after one hit Gerald de Witte he went to his home and pro cured a shotgun with which he shot Tortland Is 1921 Convention Cltv.young CoPr- .Normal School Will Be Con. j.j- . . vte rTOm unHKini Alcohol dueled for 4 Weeks. I BALTiMuius, Kept. 7. Four civil ian employes of Edgewood arsenal. Shades of animal dances last niffhtlnear here, are dead and four more shrank behind coffee cups at a ban- I desperately ill as a result Of drink quet tendered visitlne delee-atest r,fing some form of poisonous alcohol. the American National Associating nf Military authorities said they did Masters of Dancing, held in the Ben-not know whether the men brought son hotel. The rat-sten. th ui I .neir liquor in wnn mem, or drank Hurno or wio aiconui Biorea at the post for military purposes. The latter, they admitted, had been ren dered deadly to deter soldiers from stealing and drinking It. walk and the cat-clutch were con demned unsparingly. Here is the tenor of -a resolution adopted at the banquet, which was part of the closing programme of the dancing convention: "Wh-ereas, considerable uu!ieUy has been given certain movements fceins; used on the rlage under the name of the "eat step" and tho "camel walk," and whereas, ia- F.xtra! Orpheum show tonight.-Adv. F.xtra! Orpheum show tonight--Adv. Kxtiia! Orpheum show tonight.-Adv. Kxtra! Orpheum show tonight.-Adv. What ui th -a e ciotnter who oes the right thing? OU hear a lot about profiteer ing in clothing Wherever it exists it can't be condemned too severely Something ought to be said, however, qy the merchants who have been taking only a fair profit; mer chants who have tried to help their custom ers meet high costs There are many such merchants They are meeting the situation fairly and squarely with nothing but good quality because they know it is economy When they could n't get enough fine goods, they turned down sales rather than sell "cheap" stuff They cut their margins of profit in order to help relieve the strain of high prices They say to their customers, "Come back and get your money if you aren't satisfied" JVc believe that the merchants who sell our clothes are doing everything they can to reduce costs for you We think you ought to know it Hart SchafFner & Marx Rm Mi mi hu m mi mi mi mi ii un umui un un un uu mi im nu mi ili iim imiiu mi mi im mi m. tui im iim uninipinnn 51 POLES PROTEST ATTACK .VOTE SE.VT LEAGUE OF XA iTIOVS SEEKS PROMPT ACTIOX. Collusion With Bolshevlkl Charged by Polish Government In Com plaint J-'iled. PARIS, Sept. 7. Th6 Polish note to the league of nations asking it to mediate in the Polish-Lithuanian con troversy says that while the Polish armies were retreating before the Russian soviet forces, the Lithuanian government' concluded an agreement with the soviet government at Mos cow authorising the soviet army to make use of Lithuanian territory for its passage and the establishment Of a military base. Thia. the note points out. Was a breach of neutrality. The note continues: "Later when the Polish armies were forced to withdraw from eth nographic Polish territory as award ed Poland by the supreme counc De cember 8, 1919, Lithuanian troops oc cupied th evacuated territory and oemmitted excesses toward the popu lations remaining faithful tbk Poland. When the bolshevik invasion was repulsed the Polish army reoccupied Suwalki and the Lithuanian govern ment sent a note to the Polish gov ernment declaring it did not recog nize the frontier, as fixed bv the su preme council, and asking the Poles to retire behind the line Of Grajevo Augustowo. "The Polish trops . hare tried throughout to avoid shedding blood, but on September 2 a detachment of Polish cavalry occupying Selny was attacked by Lithuanian troops and forced to evacuate the town. The Lithuanian army then occupied Su walki, and advanced upon Augustowo without declaring war. It was ascer tained the bolshevik! troops co operated with th Lithuanians "The Polish government was thus faced with open and direct aggres sion from Lithuania. There is no doubt possible that the armies of Lithuania are allied with the red army, and that the Lithuanian gov ernment has become the ally of the soviet government. "Owing to the fraternal relations which during several centuries have existed between the Polish and Lithuanian peoples the Polish gov ernment would have recourse to force of arms only with great re luctance. "The Polish government has taken all measures to prevent any contact between its troops and Lithuanian forces. It will avoid battle as long as the strategical situation permits. "Owing to the danger to Poland created by the concentration of bol shevik troops, which is now in prog ress, the Polish government shall Consider itself entirely free to proceed with necessary military operations to free Polish territory. "The Polish government submits the above facts to tha league of na tions and requests the league to use all the means at its disposal In order to prevent the Lithuanian govern ment from continuing to co-operate with the Soviets and a-ause Lithuania to abandon its strange enterprise, thus preventing the Polish nation from being under the painful neces sity of waging war against a sister nation." Marian Lewthwalte Is Dead. OREGOM CITY, Or., Sept. 7. (Spe cial.) Miss Marian Lewthwalte of this city died at St. Vincent's hospital last night after an Illness of a year. Miss Lewthwalte is survived by her sister, Mrs. Effie Johnson of Olad stone; two brothers, Clifford Lew thwalte of Powell River, B. C, and Alex Lewthwalte of Portland, man ager of tha. Crowrt-Willaruette Papef company. Two Civilians Killed Xear Belfast. BELFAST. Sept. 7. A military lorry containing an armed escort broke down today hear Ballytnaykera, County Cork, and was attacked by a large body of civilians. The escort drove off the assailants, two of whfirti were killed and three wounded. 13 C -2 for 25$ AGoodGdar By Every Test KpplyYouts The Hart . I IKS' ( ., r Portland Uitt'r'o. a3