Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (May 3, 1921)
THE MORNING OREGOXIAX, TUESDAY, . MAY 3, 1921 HOME STARTS T HIS WEEK Partition Act Enforcement Is New Chapter. PEACE OFFER REPORTED response to repeated inquiries as to the possibility of such an appoint nient being made. "Many inquiries have come to the president relative to a contemplated nomination of a diplomatic represen tative to the Vatican." said the state ment, "and the president has thought it best to answer all of them by the public statement that no considera tion has been given to such a step, and there will be no occasion to con sider it unless congresby the enact ment of law provides for such repre sentation. "The president does ot understand r.hat any such proposal has been made to congress." FRUIT MEN GATHER Lord Mayor of Dublin Declares Waiter Forest Said Britain Would Make Concessional DUBL.IX. May 2. A new chapter in Irish history will be recorded this week with the inauguration of the r.ew home rule partition act. This will mark the end of the act of the union, under which Ireland has been governed from "Westminster for 120 j ars. The week will also witness the inauguration of Lord Talbot, the new lord lieutenant, who is the first Catholic to hold that office in recent times. Despite the importance of these de partments the Irish people appeared today to await them with the utmost Indifference. - Lord Bdmond Bernard Talbot, who -is now Viscount Fitzalan, was sworn in today as lord lieutenant and governor-general of Ireland. The cere mony, which took place in the Dublin castle, was atterfded only by high of ficials. Lord Talbot Sworn In. ' Viscount Talbot arrived here today. Two motion picture photographers and the venerable keeper of the news stand, whose privilege it has been for nearly half a century to welcome visiting royalties and the successive viceroys, were the only civilians per mitted on the station 'platform to witness his arrival. Newspaper men also were excluded from the- cere mony In Dublin castle. - Preparations to Be Hurried. Preparations for the approaching elections now will be hastened. The first election posters have been put up. exhorting the electors to vote for republican candidates. Three men posting election notices Saturday night were arrested in Blackrock. a suburb, where crown forces raided a house and seized election literature. Announcement was made today by John J. Farrell. ex-lord mayor cf Dublin, that a peace olfer was to be made to the Irish republic parliament. Vomt Derlared Authority. Mr. Karrtil said his authority was Walter Forest, member of parliament, who, on the authority ol the Irish of fice, declared that the British govern ment was prepared to grant dominion home rule in Ireland subject to Great Mritain retaining control over the army and navy, the moment Ireland indicates her will to accept. Mr. Farrell added that -Mr. Forest did not mention the exclusion of any jiortion of Ireland from the offer that the government was aid to be willing to make and also that he did not refer to financial provisions. tSEYEX KILLED l. CLASHES Toll Taken by Police and Military 1'orccs in Ireland. CORK. May 2. Seven persons were killed Sunday by the police and mem bers of the military forces in clashes , in counties Cork and Tipperary. In an ambirsh of crown forces in Kildorrey, County Cork, two Irish re publicans were killed and five others captured, two of whom were wounded. A police patrol whioh was fired on from a house in Tipperary returned the fire, killing two men. One of . them. James Maloney, is said to have been the son of P. J. Maloney, Sinn Fein member of the British house -of vommons from the south division of Tipperary. Three other fatalities occurred in minor clashes. TWO PARLIAMENTS CALLS DTE orih and South Ireland Sessions Are to Be Separate. BELFAST. May 2. It is under stood the parliament for North lie land will be summoned to assemble in Belfast the first week in June, the date to be announced in next Fri day's Dublin Gazette. The Ulster nomination date is May 13 and the polling date May 24. There will be a separate summon ing of the southern -parliament to sit in Dublin in 14 days after the assembling of the- northern parliament. SEXATE GETS ADDUEtoS COPY inorah Presents Communication From "Irish Parliament." WASHINGTON, D. C. May 2. Seti ' ator Borah, Idaho, presented Loday in the senate a copy of "an address to the American congress by the parlia ment of Ireland." Without objection Senator Borah's request that it he referred to the foreign relations com mittee and printed as a public docu ment was granted. Copies had been sent previously to all newspapers in the United States by agents of the provisional Irish government. VATICAN ENVOY UNLIKELY President Declares Appointment Is ot Contemplated. WASHINGTON, D. C. May 2. Ap pointment of an American diplomatic representative to the Vatican is not under contemplation, said a statement issued today at the White House In A LiveKShoe The snug flexibility of Ground Gripper Shoes as sures you of healthy foot ac tion. They become as nearly a part of your feet as a shoe possibly can. UIIOL'XD GHII'PI'.lt SHOE STORE Vaxainatoa M Pittoek Bids. NORMAN ROSS IS MARRIED Deatrice Puaikalani Dowselt Bride of World's Champion Swimmer. PALO ALTO. Cal.. May 2. Norman Koss, world's champion swimmer, and Miss Beatrice Puaikalani Dowsett, formerly of Honolulu, were married here today. ' After a honeymoon at Del Monte and Portland, Or., they will make their home in Chicago. Norman Ross, world's ' champion swimmer, who was married yester day to Miss Beatrice Puaikalani Dow sett, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Ross, 1331 Mallory avenue, this city. He began his career in aquatic circles at the Multnomah Amateur Athletic club under the coaching of Jack Cody. During his school days he attended Jeferson high school and Portland academy, of Portland, and Stanford university. He served in the air service in the war. For the last two years he has been swimming under the colors of the II linois Athietic club of Chicago. Conference Held With Oregon Commission. LOWER RATES WANTED BEBE DANIELS AGAIN FREE Motion Picture Actress Says She Is Cured of Speeding. Bebe Daniels, the popular screen star, is now out of jail, her sentence of ten days having been served, ac cording to the mandate of the justice cf the peace at Santa Anna, Cai. Miss Daniels Is the owner of a high powered car and her sojourn in the county bastile came from being so indiscreet as to be caught traveling at better than 52 miles an hour by the speed cop. Miss Daniels spent her -ten days" in a cell, the same as any other prisoner, nut with tne com pany of her mother, who insisted on keeping her company. Bebe does not seem the least bit worried, according to those who have seen her in her iatest picture at the Rivoli, "Ducks and Drakes," which is now playing. Adv. ALBERS DECISION HIT . AT (Cont'miPd From First Paf. Albers. Action of your department confessing judgment is meeting with strong protest from all classes. Situ ation here such that full hearing and decision of court is imperative. We are not passing on merits of Albers case, but feel that good name of your department and of federal court should be saved from severe criticism. Will you join us' in motion?" Dial Bill .Reported Favorably. WASHINGTON. May 2. The Dial bill, requiring federal judges to de vote their entire tiin.e to the duties of their offices, was reported favorab'y today by the senate judiciary committee. Gold Shipments Arrive. NEW YORK. May 2. Gold valued at nearly $3,000,000 arrived today from Europe and Latin-American countries. " Of this amount J2,40O,000 came from Fnsrland. Produce Growers and Shippers Join in Efforts to Get Better Tariff to Eastern 3larkcts. Fruit and produce growers and rhippcra held a conference with the Oregon public service commission yesterday to. collect and arrange data for presentation to Henry J. Ford, special assistant to the interstate commerce commission, who will hold a hearing at Yakima May 10 on trans continental rates on fruits and vege tables. The hearing will ,be one of a' series on the same subject, whereby west ern shippers hope to obtain favorable tariffs to the eastern market that will admit oi marketing that portion of last year's crop still held in the west, as well as this year's crop. Emergency rates were first asked that would aid in marketing fruit crops still unsold. Hailroad represen tatives met in New York April 14 and 15 to consider this request but it was thought inadvisable to put in emer gency tariff?. Lower Ratea Reqneated. ' Action by the California and Colo- iurin legislatures followed 'in which the request was made of the inter state . commerce commission that lower rates on fruit and other prod lice be allowed and that hearings be held. " The commission then directed that Special Assistant Ford come west and hearings were scheduled at Los Angeles today, San Francisco May 6, and Denver May 19. Oregon, Washington and Idaho in terests then asked for hearings, the Oregon 1 public service commission joining in the petition for an Oregon hearing. This was not granted, but hear'rigs were set at Yakima May 10 and at Boise May 14. The Oregon growers and shippers agreed to pre sent their case at the Yakima meet ing. In commenting upon the situation, Chairman Clark of the interstate com merce commission declared this was 'no time for stubborn thinking," but factst which -were stubborn things. should be considered. He said pro ducers - found themselves unable to market their crops in the eastern market because prices paid them were insufficient. Freight Ratea Held High. Freight rates were held to be high and they were high, he said, but he hinted at manipulated prices. In the comparison of wnolesale costs, he found them 172 per cent higher in 1920 than in 1913, while railroad rates for the same period increased ' but 73 per cent. Tt W9a sniH rtv rallrnarl traffic man "that the northwest apple, crop, which the emergency rate asked for was designed ta help to -market, has cleaned up during the past month to r. great extent, ' leaving perhaps 100 cars of old crop apples at Wenatchee and between 600 and 700 cars on hand in the Yakima district. At yesterday's gathering here, rep resentatives from the various fruit -.nd vegetable districts advised as to the data that will be presented at Yakima and growers, shippers and the public service commission will b tepresented. NINE BOYS SENTENCED Juvenile Gangsters Are Paroled During Good Biavlor. PROSSETi. Wash., May '.Through Kennerick parents it has become known that Judge John Truax of Prosser sentenced nine of' the gang of 20 or 30 "boy desperadoes.'' who were tried recently before him, to the Mate industrial school but sus pended sentence o condition that the boys write him monthly, attend school regularly and are guilty of no further offenses. The judge also showed how he felt about the lack of parental discipline by naming a "next friend" outside the family, to enforce his order in each case. Murray- Darling, Donald Woods, Paul McCurdy. Tom Carlson, Joe Kerchell. Phillip Hawkins. Jennings Dutcher. Howard Hembree and IvtMJ. Danford were the chief offender!. Of the original "gangsters" the least guilty were weeded out at Ken newick before being brought before Judge Truax. Of the 12. who appeared before him,' accompanied by their parents, he found three not guilty. He impressed upon the nine guilty boys that any deviation from the right path hereafter would mean ira- mediate commitment to the reform school. DUTCH KEEP NOTE SECRET Government Xot Intending to Bar American Capital, It Is Said. THE HAGUE. May 2. The Ameri can government's recent oil note to the Dutch government has not been made public here. The fact that such a note was sent became known only througH the receipt of a dispatch from New York by the Amsterdam Tele graaf. The viewpoint of the Dutch govern ment Is believed to be in favor of "open-door policies"; that it does not desire to bar American capital from the East Indies, but contends that the United States only showed interest in the participation of Americans in the Djambi oil fields when negotiations between the Dutch government and the Batavia company had reached a stage where to breaK them off would have been unfair. LABOR MAKES NEW MOVE British Strikers Propose to Keep Out Continental Coal. LONDON, May 2. With the miners' strike now in its second month, an nouncement was made today of a move by the labor interests to keep coal mined on the continent out of Great tiritain. A statement isaucu by Robert Williams, general secretary of the transport workers, said: 'The movement to prevent the British government utilizing foreign coal for bunkering purposes Is being strengthened by the co-operation of the men employed at ports where the workers are affiliated with the . -n-nrts ora' fprfprat lo'll. AllV attempt to introduce foreign coal will lead to the stoppage of work in those ports and the national union of rail- rnAn n'lll fofllKA tO handle ailV coal brought from overseas." BANK IN BOISE CLOSES Overland National Said to Be Un- - able to Liquidate' Loans. BOISE. Idaho, May 2. (Special.) The Overland National bank of Boise closed today and M. C. Wilde, na tional bank examiner. has taken "Keep Mother's Heart Singing" On Mothers' Day May 8th Remember Mother with &2run&wick Records They play on all Phonograph . Bring music into her life the year round. -Ask any Brunswick Dealer for "Little Mother o' Mine," Brunswick Record No. 13001nd other appropriate selec tions. Or Jar uMaU aaaeia Gift aafeaa for dmlivry mnjnmhmrm in lAa Unitmrnl Slmtmm urn mr War . Mmtfur,' 0aj, Mmjr (A. The Bniuwick-Bilke-Collender Ca. I Chicago charge of its affairs. Patrons of the bank were notified that it would not open pending the examination in process. Shrinkage of deposits and inability to liquidate loans was given as the, cause for the present condition of the bank. Confidence was ex pressed that the assets of the institu tion when liquidated would pay the depositors In full. The capital stock of the bank is $100,000 and the deposits announced In the 'last statement amounted to $808,561.63. BREAD PRICES ARE CUT Hood Kivcr Buker Keduccs Tnder Portland Market. HOOD RIVER. Or.. May 2. (Spe cial.) While Portland bakery con cerns, supplying the local market by motor trucks over the Columbia river highway, continue to retail their product here at 10 cents for small loaves and 15 cents for the large loaves, George Ertle, manager of a local bakery, has cut his price to a point that enables grocers to retail his product at 9 and 12 cents. Local milk dealers recently cut their price from 15 to 12' cents a quart.. , Phone your want ads to The Ore gon ian. Main 70iU. Automatic ou-na, f 0 riit' ft i Are Monday's Labors Fifty-Fifty? GN MONDAY morning the man of the house starts to his work look - ing his best. He finds his office or store in order, his basket of letters awaiting him. His wifp PTlPs'to t.Tn Via com tint Trip PVPr.nrpQPnf Vin cVof nf cnilor! clothes faces her, ready for the same back-breaking process. It is a hard task even with help. The modern woman wants to do her share of the work and saving, still keeping pace with her husband's standard; never wanting to lag behind either physically or mentally. The evening finds her tired, as she has served doubly the washing along with her other household duties. Is it fair? Modern machinery and science have developed the laundry. The trying labors of wash day can be eliminated. She might enjoy the satisfaction of having clothes carefully done by calling the laundry. A phone call is sufficient. ' v - Laundry Industry See Your Paper Next Monday for Announcement 7 of This Series m , 'w -, ..... ... , 4 No Telephone orC.O.D. Orders SipmaifWouc & fix cJ"Merdiandis of cJ Merit Only" Nothing Sent on Approval ISM Actual reproductions. Spring and Summer Wash Frocks For Your Girls 1 4 to 17 Years They Are Being Offered at a Price Not Obtainable Later $5.95 Fresh, crisp, piquantly charming wash dresses of voile or gingham, in five new styles, especially appropriate for street or school wear. Pretty checks or block patterns, or plaid ginghams or plain colon, also dainty dotted voiles. Some are made over-blouje style with sash back with in.et organdy pocket and white otgandy vestee, collar and cuffs. Others are finished with embroidered organdy veslee, peplum and sash in self colors. 'A very smart model has peg-style skirt with scallop finish around the upper part. White scalloped lawn revers and cuffs and hemstitched sash. The model of voile is in dainty dotted pattern with long waist and white organdy collars and cuffs ' and sash and touches of hand stitching and hemstitching. v.- Fourth Floor Lipman, W olfe & Co. A Most Remarkable Offering of Beautiful 36 to 40-Inch Silks At Only $2.98 a Yard Canton Crepe Charmetise Changeable Taffeta Gros de Londres Sports Tussah Changeable and Plain Satin Duchess Satin You who happen to know the regular prices of these silks "will appreciate how excellent a value every yard of any one of these fabrics is at this low price. Second Floor Lipman, Wolfe & Co. Very Special Indeed! Cotton Taffeta Petticoats At an Astonishingly Low Sum , $1.00 Made pf an exceptionally fine quality cotton taffeta in a full assortment of pretty conventional patterns. Deep flounces, some with fancy tucked designs, others with tiny accordion pleated ruffles. Elastic at waist. Black, Copenhagen, green and navy. , Fourth Floor Lipman, Wolfe cr Co. Women's 16-Button Glace Kid Gloves At a Genuine Surprise Price $4.45 Pair First quality gloves in the fashionable 1 6- button length, and at a price even lower than this quality told for several years ago. In white only. All sizes. Street Floor Lipman, Wolfe cr Co. A Sale of Mendel-Drucker Wardrobe Trunks Offering Unmatchable Values ! Two Models That Have Been Specially Reduced for the Anniversary Sale! Full-Size and Steamer Trunks At $35.00 The trunks at $35.00 are constructed of the best three-ply basswood, covered inside and out with hard vulcanized fiber. Lined with cretonne and equipped with large hat box and shoe bags. Full-Size Wardrobe Trunks At $49.50 The trunks at $49.50 are constructed of three-ply basswood and covered with vulcanized fiber. This model also has a lift top and is equipped with a large hat box and four shoe bags. Lined with cretonne. Fifth Floor Lipman, Wolfe & Co. I"" 1RUNK. MENDEL ft This Store Uses No Comparative Prices They Are Misleading and Often Untrue i T I o