Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, September 22, 1920, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE MORXIXG OHEGOXIAX, "WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1!20
JENSEN IS ARRESTED
FIGHTING CHARGE
Film Theater Proprietor and
Photographer Held.
CROWDS BLOCK TRAFFIC
county engineer's office. It was stated
the necessary work will require about
SO days.
Re-routing of cars, necessitated by
the action of the engineering: depart
ment, was arranged by the Portland
Railway. Light & Power company.
Car will run as follows:
Sunnyside and Mount Tabor lines
will transfer passengers at the east
approach of the bridge, oi both east
bound and westbound trips. The
change necessitates a walk of about
one block.
The Montavilla line Is routed over
the Burnside bridge. On westbound
trips the cars will cross the bridge to
Third street, south on Third to Alder,
east on Alder to Second street, north
on Second to Burnside. On outbound
Attack Said to Have Occurred
Vpoa Attempt to Obtain Pic
ture Xear Liberty.
C. S. Jensen, senior member of the
firm of Jensen & Von Herberg, mov
ing picture theater proprietors, was
arrested last night on ' a charge- of
being disorderly by fighting. Harold
Jones, a photographer, also was ar
rested on the same charge.
The fight took place In front of
the Liberty theater, where Jones was
alleged! to have been trying to take
a picture of Mr. Jensen.
According to Jones, Jensen jumped
from his automobile and struck at
the camera. Jones guarded the cam
era with his hand and suffered a cut
across the knuckles.
Jensen Loses First Round.
The pair then mixed in popular
rough-and-tumble style. Mr. Jensen
lost the first round by decision of the
spectators. He was bleeding from a
blow on the mouth, while his oppo
nent, who had suffered some' hard
knocks, did not lose any blood.
At this juncture the bystanders In
terfered. Patrolman Simpkins, who
recently was suspended from the po
lice bureau for 20 days, separated the
combatants. - -
Patrolman Meehan was called.
He took both men into custody and
led them to police headquarters.
Mr. Jensen registered under the
name of Claud Smith. He was re
leased without bail. Jones gave his
own name, and also got loose with
out giving up any of his money. The
case is scheduled for trial in the mu
nicipal court today.
ttnirrtl Is I.ld to Strike.
The quarrel is said' to be a develop
ment of the strike trouble at the
Jensen & Von Herberg theaters.
Jones, who is a member of the firm
of Woodruff & Jones, photographers,
declined to tell why he wanted Mr.
Jensen's picture. He was said, how
ever, to have been engaged to get
the pictures for the strikers, who
wanted to publish, them in their own
literature.
The fight attracted a large crowd.
Two plate noiders were picked up
across the street from the scene of
the combat.
Traffic along Broadway was tied
up for several minutes before the
throngs attracted to the seene were
finally dispersed.
PEACE PARLEY IS ENDED
POLISH-LITHUANIAN XECOTIA
TIONS BROKEX OFF.
Prospect for Agreement Between
Poland and Soviet Russia Also
Far From Encouraging.
WARSAW, Sept. 21. The peace ne
gotiations between Lithuania and So
land have been broken off and the
Polish delegation has left Kalwarya
and Is returning to Warsaw.
RIGA, Sept. 20. (By the Associated
Press.) The prospects did not appear
bright today for a speedy peace be
tween Poland and soviet Russia re
sulting from the conference to be
opened tomorrow. The indicated re
fusal of soviet Russia to disarm, as
the Poles are expected to demand
seems likely to be the chief stum
bling-block.
The bolshevik delegation, it Is fore
cast, will Insist that Poland must dis
arm with the exception of a small
defensive force. The bolshevlki, how
ever, Insist that they are at war with
tieneral Wrangel, France and the
United States, which makes it imper
ative, they declare, that they main
tain a war footing.
The presence of the American tor
pedo boat destroyer Broome In the
Riga harbor caused the soviet dele
gates to make soma inquiries from
toe juetvian government.
The soviet representatives aug
gested thaU the peace treaty with
Lctvia forbade the use of territorial
waters by ships of countries fight
ing soviet Russia, but as no war ac
tually has been declared between the
United States and soviet Russia the
Letvian officials explained that the
American ships in the Baltic had
been offered the hospitality of Let
vlan ports, as also bad British war
ships.
WOMAN RAPS HIGH COSTS
Government at Fault, Says Socialist
Candidate for Senate.
SACRAMENTO, Sept. 21. The gov
ernment haa at its command enougb
resources at the present time to tak
riective steps to reduce the cost o
living, Mrs. Elvina Beals of Berkeley,
socialist candidate for United States
senator, said in a keynote address at
her party convention hers today.
She urged the recognition of Irish
independence and more self-government
for Egypt and India.
"Government action to lower the
cost of living should be taken to pro
tect those who have passed the work
ing age and whose income is elimi
nated and also the laboring people,
whose advances in wages have not
been conmmensurate with Increases
in the cost of living," Mrs. Beals said.
SCOTTI SINGS ROLE OP
SCAHI'IA I! TOSCA .
SEPTEMBER 30.
SRAEL MUST BEAR
RABBI
Yom Kippur Services Are
Held at Beth Israel.
JONAH B. WISE SPEAKS
t " t !
1
A ntonin Scottl.
Antonla Scotti, the noted
baritone, will sing the role of
"Scarpia" in the opera "Tosca"
Thursday night, September 30,
the opening performance of the
Scotti Grand Opera perform
ances at. the Heilig. This or
ganization is touring the Pa
cific northwest under the man
agement of Steers & Coman and
the Elwyn concert bureau.
Not the least of the many
extraordinary things that make
the Scotti Grand Opera company
the greatest organization that
has ever toured America, is the
elaborate scenic and electrical
equipment carried. The Scotti
company brings more than ade
quate electrical equipment, and
scenery that has never before
been seen outside of the Metro
politan opera house is carried
on the tour.
trips the cars will proceed east across
the bridge to east Tentn ana journ
side, thence south on Tenth to Ank
eny and there resume their regular
route.
Brooklyn avenue line is routed the
same as Sunnyside and Mount Tabor,
on the east side. They will not cross
the river, but make a switch back at
east Water and Morrison streets.
On BILL IS SNAPPY
OFFERING CLOSES WITH 3.1ATI.
NEE TODAY.
Programme, as Whole, One of Best
That Has Ever Been Pre
sented Here.
The Orpheum's all-comedy and nov
elty show will close its Portland en
gagement with the matinee today. So
far this show has proved to be one of
the snappiest and best drawing cards
of the early season as packed houses
have been the rule since the opqpung
show Sunday.
"Bits and Pieces." a satire on six
theatrical successes of New York, is
the headline attraction. The stars of
this act are Jack Patton and Loretta
Marks, both favorably known in thea-
terdom for successes they have won in
vaudeville and musical comedy. They
are assisted by a company of pretty
girls and the entire act is staged wltn
gusto. "Breakfast in Bed," "Scandal,"
"Tea for Three," "My Lady friends."
"Chu Chin Chow" and "Maytime" are
among the pieces travestied.
Other acts of the show are "A Mod
ern Simon Legree," a business life
sketch offered by Jack MacBryde and
Marion A. Day, who is recalled as the
heroine in "Cranberries," an Orpheum
sketch that made a big hit here; Dan
Stanley and Al Birnes, dancers, who
"stop the show" regularly with their
burlesque on Ruth St. Denis; Keal
Abel, a negro-dialect comedian, who
wins many laughs; Bob Carleton, au
hor of the song "J a-Da," and Julia
Ballew in an entertaining song and
dance skit; the Briants with their nov
elty "The Dream of the Moving Man,"
which is so popular it holds everyone
at the close of the show, and Lawton,
a merry juggler.
Ceremonies W ill Be Continued' To
ft
day and Tonight in Port
land Synagogue.
Tragedy, bringing a purifying grief
that causes Israel to consider the
ideals which have been its burden
and its honor down through the ages
is the underlying thought of the Day
of Atonement, according to Dr. Jonah
B. Wise, rabbi of Temple Beth Israel,
which last night held, holiday serv
ices. The Yom Kippur services will
be continued today and tonight in
Beth Israel temple and other syna
gogues of the city.
Dr. Wise pleaded for a better un
derstanding of Judaism by the Jew.
He declared the Jewish religion to
be one that interprets and under
stands the Jewish people and one
that should be studied from sub
jective rather than objective phases.
Tragedy of Israel Cited.
"The tragedy of Israel." said Dr.
Wise, "is comparable to the parable
told in Isaiah about the vineyard
owner who planted vines of merit '
and reaped wild fruit which gave
forth bitter wine. Israel assembles
year after year looking for justice
and finding oppression, looking for
righteousness and finding hate.
"Tonight Israel faces the tragedy
which Macbeth faced when, after
slaying his king and master, he
heard a prayer said over the dead
body and found that he could not say
'amen'; that the word stuck in his
throat.
"How many of us here tonight can
look back on the Ideals of our fathers
and say, 'amen'? I see before me
men and women who have grown in
honor and in riches, but I also see
before me many who cannot speak
the simple thesis of our religion.
Each one absolves himself but he
cannot sink on his knees in prayer
without realizing the tragedy of
Judea and its ideals for waich our
fathers gave their lives. .
Judaism Is Disenssed.
- "Judaism is an appreciation and un
derstanding of the Jew. Your religion
understands you and doesn't demand
that you understand it. It cannot
be solved as can a mathematical prob
lem. Strangely enough, it stands dumb
before ts critics, who try to analyze
its theories, because the critics are
deaf. It contains the passion, the
ideals, the spirit of the Jew. The only
surcease which we may know is to
stand erect, wipe the blood from our
brow and recognize this tragedy,
which is our Inheritance. Help may
come only through knowledge of
Judaism and the sacred land.
"I would that we could again intone
our prayers in Hebrew as a beacon
light to those In darkness. Through
Judaism alone can,-we transmute the
base metal of today into gold, the
jewel which God has chosen, the pe
culiar treasure which God has made
Israel. ; :' ;
"Our grief today ' is not physical.
It comes not from sorrow or bereave
ment or loss. It is heart-rending and
soul-purifying, and overwhelming re
gret for the nobler contact that made
us before God. and man a chosen and
a holy people.
"Go .in repentance and self-contempt,
each man for himself, resolv
ing he shall know when spoken to -n
the language of Israel for which our
people have been willing to die for
centuries, praying for recognition of
the faitn or tiod and love of man.
When we learn that our religion in
terprets and knows us, we will be
able to mutter in our throats 'amen.'"
but warranted by the facts. For the1
first time in our lives the demo
cratic administration taught us what
repression and suppression were. This
administration not only curtailed the
constitutional privileges of citizens
at home, but endeavored to drive us
into perilous paths abroad. Free
speech has been threatened, not in t
the interest of patriotism, but for ex
isting power. A free press has been
endangered.
"A rigid censorship diluted the
news, and facts, to 'which all were
entitled were, forbidden publication,
while government propaganda colored
and often distorted the information
permitted to come to the people.
These assault insensibly bred in
tolerance, the ancient foe of freedom.
The necessary restrictions of wartime
have been inexcusably prolonged in
peace and . our government has
strayed far from those fundamental
principles upon which, for more than
a century and a quarter, the republic
has so securely rested."
Senator Johnson quoted Senator
Harding as having said on August
28, "the league is impotent as a pre
centive of wars," and that the
"original league mistakenly con
ceived and unreasonably insisted upon
has undoubtedly passed beyond the
possibility of restoration."
On Saturday last, he said, "Senator
Harding again stated the issue: 'The
constitution or the covenant that is
the paramount issue. The two are
irreconcilable. We cannot be gov
erned from both Geneva and Wash
ington. We cannot follow our present
chief magistrate -without forsaking
the father of our country
Senator Johnson concluded by say
ing the issue "arouses not only our
greatest enthusiasm, but our loftiest
patriotism," and declaring the "re
publican party marches to victory, in
this campaign, under the banner of
Americanism."
11 5 'HH
WIT
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Announcing
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That the women of Portland may obtain
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CLUB EVADES POLITICS
Live Wires at Oregon City Decide
Xot to Indorse Ticket.
OREGON CITY. Or., Sept. 21.
(Special.) Live wires of the com
mercial club declined today to give
their endorsement to a ticket for
entry in the city election of Novem
ber 2, on the ground that the club
should stay out of politics and that
the submission of a ticket should go
hand in hand with a new charter pro
viding for a commission form of gov
ernment, with a business manager for
the city.
Mr. Eby, now a member of the
council and whose petition for mayor
is in circulation, concurred in a
recommendation of Schuebel and Dr.
L. A. Morris that the city needs a
new system of government, in order
to centralize responsibility and to in
sure better business methods.
The Henderson report was finally
laid on the table until next Tuesday
and a joint committee was appointed
to take up the matter of drafting a
new city charter in line with the
ideas expressed.
Council Pigeonholes Ordinance.
SALEM, Or., Sept. 21. (Special.)
Because of the probability of new
motor vehicle laws being enacted at
the next session of the legislature in
January the city council last night
voted down the latest trafiic ordi
nance prepared by the city attorney
regulating the parking of trucks in
the business district. The council also
decided not to initiate a bill for the
purchase by the city of the tourist
camping ground, following the report
from a committee that $10,000 had
been demanded ifor the tract.
W. W. Krack Sues for Divorce.
OREGON CITY, Or., Sept. 21. (Spe
cial.) Walter W. Krack. a pay teller
of the Northwestern National bank of
Portland, filed suit for .divorce here
Tuesday against Ella Krack on the
grounds of cruel and inhuman treat-
What This Service Offers .
Quality that will meet with your every expectation as
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ment. Plaintiff alleged that his wife
was continually nagging and refused
to live with him and make a home.
Apple Growers' Exchange Urged.
Don Kran Cisco, who haa handled the
advertising campaign for products of
the California, fruitgrowers' exchange,
Is a Portland! visitor, and after a tour
of the Pacific northwest he is of the
opinion that the apple growers of the
districts may find it advantageous to
combine in a co-operative marketing
association, as well as a benefit to
the consumers. Mr. Francisco is pres
ident of the Los Angeles advertising
club, and will be the speaker today at
the luncheon of the Portland Ad club.
W. B. Kirkpatrick Dies.
Telegraphic advices to George H.
Thomas of Portland yesterday an
nounced the death in Topeka, Kan.,
of W. B. Kirkpatrick, former presi
dent of the Knights and Ladies of
Security. Mr. Kirkpatrick was well
known among about 5000 members of
that organization in Oregon. He was
succeeded as national president of the
ordr by his pon four years ago.
OIL OFFERED FOR EXPORT
Americans Reported Making Pe
troleum Deal AVith Soviets.
LONDON. Sept. 21. (Special Cable.)
An American corporation in Con
stantinople i3 on the point of conclud
ing an agreement with the soviet rep
resentatives in Novorossiysk, the ex
port center of petroleum in northern
Caucasia, for a large quantity of oil,
according to a dispatch to the Daily
Telegraph.
It is said that the bolshevik
agent has promised to deliver 10,
000 tons as the first delivery and
SCHOOL FROWNS ON AUTO
etnaem urmng own Cars on
Campus oSt In Favor at California.
BERKELEY, Cal.. Sept. 2L The
University of California student who
maintains an automobile "for his or
her own nse will not be looked upon
with favor hereafter, declares a re
cent editorial in the student daily, the
Californlan.
President Barrows has issued
statement condemning the custom and
appealing for standards of greater
simplicity, especially in dress.
MORRISON BRIDGE CLOSET)
Foot Car Lines Rerouted Tivt.il Kc-
Mirri."Mi Ftrfet bridge was closed I
Phone your want ads to The Orego-
man. Main yoyo. Automatic 6S0-95.
JOHNSON BACKS HARDING
8EXATOR ' .MAKES HIS FIRST
SPEECH OP CAMPAIGN.
iMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllUL:
Apparently Nothing' Can Prevent
Overwhelming Republican Vic---
- tory, Is Declaration..
SACRAMENTO, Cal., Sept. 21. Sen
ator Hiram W. Johnson of California
in his first speech in behalf of the
republican national ticket indorsed
the attitude of Senator -Warren G.
Harding, nominee for the presidency,
on the league of nations here today.
-"Mr. Harding, happily for himself
and for America, has scrapped the
league," Senator Johnson said. Sena
tor Johnson has been one of the most
bitter and unbending foes of the
league in the United States senate.
The speech, first of several Sena
tor Johnson is scheduled to. make in
California for the national campaign,
was made to the republican state
convention at its opening session. It
began with congratulations "upon the
outlook for republican success." and
an attack upon the present democratic
administration.
, "So wide is the dissatisfaction with
the present administration," he- said,
"so great the hostility to many of the
acts of the president and so acute
the justifiable fear of the meta
morphosis of our foreign policy, that
apparently nothing can prevent over
whelming republican success in the
November election.
"The indictment brought against
Mr. Wilson's government is severe,
If someone told you
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