Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, June 21, 1921, Page 6, Image 6

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THE MORXIXG ORESOXIAX, TUESDAY, JUNE 21, 1021
fiREECE 15 ASKED
y to
MEDIATE
m
Arbitration of Dispute With
; .Turkey Suggested.
THREE BIG POWERS ACT
Italy, France and Great Britain
'.Also Ask Commissioners for
. Beport on Fpper Silesia.
PARIS. June 20. (By .the Associ
ated Press.) Great Britain, France
and Italy have again appealed to
Greece to postpone her offensive and
accept their mediation, in an ertort
to forestall war in Asia Minor. This
was the outcome of a conference be
tween Premier Briand and Lord Cur
son, British foreign secretary, which
ended Sunday with the dispatch of a
note to King Constantine asking an
immediate reply as to whether Greece
would let the allies settle the Turk
ish Question.
If the answer Is favorable It Is
probable Greece will be asked to
state her peace terms, and the Turk
ish nationalists Will then be ap-
Droached.
M. Briand and Lord Curzon decided
to ask the high commissioners of
Upper Silesia for a unanimous report
on the disposition of the territory;
failing this, experts will be sent to
make equitable distribution, and
measures will be taken against the
Poles and Germans, if either or both
refuse to accept the allied decisions.
The British plan in the near east
Involves withdrawal of the GreeK
forces from Smyrna and restoration
of Turkish sovereignty over this ter
ritory, international police forces to
guarantee protection of the minor
ities. - - -
The ministers decided that no set
tlement as to Thrace could be deter
mined until the Turks and Greeks
agree to mediation.
MINISTER 'OW IX SMTRXA
lreek Official Thought Discussing
Allied Proposals With King.
SMTRN'A. June 20. (By the Asso
ciated Press.) Georges Baltadji, for
eign minister in the Greek cabinet,
arrived unexpectedly Saturday. The
impression prevailed that he came to
discuss with King Constantine new
allied proposals relative to a settle
ment of the near-east question. Be
lief was expressed that fresh offers of
mediation by the allies might post
pone the Greek offensive.
A letter received from an American
living in Marash. near the frontier be
tween Cilicia. and Syria, said that
town is the center of a nationalist
mobilization. Thirty thousand na
tionalist troops have arrived and 20.
000 are said to be well eqaapped with
uniforms furnished by Italians. The
letter added there are indications the
nationalists may attack Adana, a city
held by the French.
Up to the present King Constantine
has not visited Smyrna.
start are Fort McMurray on the Atha-
basca and Peace river landing, and
most of those who make the trip will,
go oy water, uid timers of the nortn
say it will be' impossible to cross
Great Slave lake because of ice before
the latter part of June. A steamer
is scheduled to leave Fort McMurray
June 15. Its voyage will end at the
portage between Smith's landing and
Fort Smith. Another boat is due to
leave Fort Smith June 24, but depar
ture is not guaranteed. This will
carry the advance guard of the stam
pede to the oil country.
Those who start from Peace river
or Fort McMurray will meet at Fort
Smith and the remainder of the jour-
ney to Fort Norman will be down
Slave river, across Great Slave lake
and Into the Mackenzie. This route
has been followed from earliest times
by the fur brigades of the Hudson's
Bay company, now closing out its
lands in the fertile prairie provinces
to farm settlers, and Fort Chrpewyan
one of the ohief north-country clear
ing houses of the company still stands
where Slave river pours from Lake
Athabasca.
The fare to the oil fields from Fort
McMurray, it is announced, will be
$300. This includes sleeping berth,
meals and 150 pounds of baggage.
Twelve cents a pound will be charged
for freight.
Under the most favorable weather
conditions, the first boatload of pros
pectors is not expected to reach the
Mackenzie river fields before th first
of July.
AMERICA'S WASTE
m nnr nnrn nnn nnn
UlNutWW
Every Municipality Urged
Eliminate Fire Hazards.
to
SEME TO SHOW ROSES
SPECIAL- FEATURES PLAXXED
FOR ANNUAL FAIR. '
Record-Breaking Xumber of En
tries Expected on University
of Washington Campus.
RED. PERIL SERIOUS ONE
Co-operation by Local Organiza
tions of Citizens to Reduce An
nual Ash Heap Held Way.
REDS TO FURNISH MUNITION'S
Soviet Ships to Carry Supplies to
Turkish Nationalists.
LONDOX, June 20. A dispatch to
the Exchange Telegraph from Con
stantinople, dated June 18. declared
an agreement has been reached be
tween the Angora and Moscow gov
ernments for transportation of mu
nitions for the Turkish nationalists
from Novo Rossisk. south Russia,
across the Black sea to Turkish ports.
The supplies are to go on ships fly
ing thJ soviet Russian flags.
Intervention Held Welcome.
LONDON, June 20. An offer of the
Anglo-American intervention would
be welcome by the best opinion in
Greece to avoid unnecessary blood
shed In the forthcoming offensive, the
Smyrna correspondent of the London
Times has authoritative grounds to
believe.
SEATTLE, Wash., June 20. (Spe
cial.) With the announcement of th
list of Judges Saturday, all plans fo
Seattle's annual rose show, to be hld
next Wednesday and Thursday in
the Forestry building. University of
Washington campus, are complete,
Last year's record number of entries,
IS 80, is expected to be bettered this
year and in addition members of th
Rose society are looking forward to
a large number of entries from. out
side cities.
Judges will be R. 3. Gamwell, Bel
llngham; W. E. Sherbrooks. Seattle
Dr. S. S. Sulliger, Kent; Jesse A,
Curry. Portland: Frank A. Gillette,
Hoquiam; J. J. Bonnell, Seattle, and
J. A. Hayes. Tacoma. Professor I. W
Goodner and J. S. Ruppe will serve
as judges in classes in which they
have no entries. -
There will be many special features
for this years show. Among them
will be another elaborate exhibit of
polled plants by the. park board and
a class for taoie displays, in tnis
latter class Mrs. J. S. Ruppe, who has
won two former sweepstaKes prizes
at annual shows, will compete with
Mrs. W. B. Martin and Mrs. H. A.
Gardner. Mrs. Martin, Mrs. Gardner
and Mrs. A. A. Phinney and H.
Collier, president of the Seattle Rose
society, all are owners of between
300 and 400 rose bushes each.
Visitors at the show will Include
a large Portland delegation.
26 HURT IX BATTLE BETWEEN
TROOPS AND RIOTERS.
Three Veterans Also Are Shot
Dead in Disorders Over
Week-End in Erin.
DUBLIN, June 20. A count of the
casualties resulting from the ambush
of crown forces here Saturday night
showed that one officer, five soldiers
and ten civilians were wounded.
The attack was carried out by bomb
throwing and rifle fire from windows
and roofs, the objective being a mili
tary lorry. Troops and police auxil
iaries were rushed to the scene and
when the fight had ended they sur
rounded the district and searched
houses and pedestrians.
An ex-soldier was shot dead at
Drumcondra, a suburb of Dublin,
while two other ex-soldiers were shot
dead near Birr, King's county, Satur
day night.
BELFAST. June 10. The troops
were further strengthened Sunday by
two batteries of artillery and a de
tachment of military cyclists.
ZION REGULATES DRESS
City Fathers of Religious Town
Overlook Important Fact.
ZION, 111. The city fathers of the
city of Zion evidently overlooked the
fact that dresses would nave a ten
dency to shorten at both ends. They
covered the tops with an ordinance,
but neglected the bottoms.
W. Hurd Slendinen, mayor of Zion
has had his attention called to this
palpable neglect on the part of the
civic powers. He was thunderstruck
when he saw how weak the ordinance
was and how helpless the law was to
act in cases where women had pa
raded in short skirts.
The present ordinance Imposes I
fine to as high as $200 or from five
days to six months in the city bastile
for appearing in public In "peekaboo"
or mosquito-net stockings, in sleeves
that do not come down to the middle
of the forearm or in blouses that
"expose or partially expose the neck
and shoulders a greater distance than
a third part from the neck to the tip
of the shoulders." The wearing of
such attire is deemed "immodest, vul
gar, Indecent and suggestive of low
and vicious morals, tending to de
bauch Innocence and purity and de
grade the best interests of society.
But the lengths of the skirts are not
mentioned.
ROMAN BOASTER WINNER
American Visitor Finds His Match
' In Italian Cab Driver.
ROME. They are telling a story In
the Roman cafes of how an American
visitor to Rome came off second best
In a boasting contest with a Roman
cab driver.
The American undertook to see
Rome in a day and used the cab
driver as a guide. The American was
driven to all the great Roman monu
ments and took great interest in the
buildings, always asking how long
each took to build.
At St. Peter's the cab driver con
fessed that it took SO years to com
plete that structure. The American
did not think that that was. such a
great feat, for he was certain such a
building could be built In America
in two years. Other large churches,
like St. John Lateran, the visitor said,
could be built in a year or even six
months.
Finally, they were passing the new
massive buildingl occupying several
city blocks containing the Italian law
courts.
"What's that," inquired the Amer
ican. "I don't know,' retorted the driver.
"It wasn't there last night."
SAN FRANCISCO, Cal. Co-opera-
tion by local organizations of citi
sens to eliminate fire hazards in
every municipality was urged as the
only effective way of reducing our
enormous national waste, in an ad
dress by Franklin H. .Wentworth of
Boston at the convention of the Na
tional Association of Credit Men here.
Taking as his subject "The Red
Peril," Mr. Wentworth, who is -secre
tary of the National Fire Protection
association, said in part:
we have already burned $112,000,-
000 of created resources in the first
four months of this year. This leaves
us but $138,000,000 for the remaining
eight months to make up out annual
ash heap of a quarter of a billion
dollars, and there is little doubt that
American carelessness will accom
plish this shameful objective.
"There are optimists in America
who state that we are reducing the
fire waste, because this average fig
ure of $250,000,000 now represents in
flated values. There Is little com
fort In that academic reflection. The
present housing situation is too des
perate for us to be so complacent
over it.
Every Fire Crime Against People.
'"The mayor of a western city of
zu.000 people told me recently that if
one of its stores should burn the
owner would be done for. There Is
not a vacant shed or shack in the
city to hold a new lint of goods. The
shortage . of dwellings is equally
acute. A burned-out family has to
leave town. Every fire in every other
city of the country Is bringing It so
much nearer to a similar situation.
Every fire in a dwelling or apartment-house
intensified an intolerable
congestion or turns people into the
streets. '
"Every fire today Is a crime against
the whole people; a crime for which
we should not withhold punishment.
Every community today, for its own
preservation, should bring swift legal
reprisals against the person who has
a preventable fire.
Personal Liability French Idea.
"In Europe a man who has a fire Is
looked upon as a public offender. In
America he is looked upon as an un
fortunate. People still imagine tha
the underwriters pay the loss; that
they pay $250,000,000 a year out of
their surplus and capital stock and
remain solvent. The fire waste touches
the pocket of every man, woman and
child in the nation. Every stock of
goods is insured, the Insurance I
added to the cost of the goods, and
when we buy a hat, or a shoe, or
coat, we pay this insurance cbncealej
In the price of the goods.
The attorneys-general of half i
dozen states have given it as the!
official opinion that under the
American common law a man whose
negl'gence causes a fire is liable for
fire damage to his neighbor's house
but nobody thinks of bringing suit.
The habit of mind that the insurance
company pays the loss is too strong,
But in the personal liability Idea of
the French resides a companion
thought that Is permeating the Amerl
car. brain the Idea of Imposing i
charge for the use of the fire de
partment upon the man who disre
gards a fire-prevention order.
States Recognise Principle.
Fire departments are not main
tained to protect a man from the re
sults of his negligence, and when he
calls upon the city in any such case
he should be made to pay for the
service.
'Considering the American psy
chology, an amazing success has been
achieved in the last few years In
gaining the recognition of this prin
ciple. Already it has been written
nto the charter of the city of Greater
New York, the state law of Pennsyl
vania and the city ordinances of
Cleveland and Cincinnati, O.; Portland,
Or.; Billings. Mont.; Austin, Tex., and
Newark, N. J.
'But with all this progress on rec
ord the fire losses in America in 1920
were $331,000.000 eight million more
than for the average year.
There are men and women In every
city willing to assist in this object if
someone will take the Initiative and
tell them how they can help.
The downtown, high-valire por
tions of all cities can gradually be
made proof against conflagration by
quiet, effective work.
Hawaiian plantations. In 1920 there
were 2521. Japanese on plantation
numbered 32.771 In 1908. At the end
of last year there were 17.906. Chinese
have declined from 7200 in 1898 to
1712 In 1920. There were 457 Rus
sians in 1910 and 16 In 1920. There
were 1810 Spanish in 1914 and 246 in
1920. The Filipino total grew from
2269 in 1910 to 11,269 in 1920, the
only national class of labor that h
registered an increase. But, officials
point out, the supply from the Philip
pines is limited, since labor short
age existe there, as well as In Hawaii.
The labor leakage from the plan
tation goes in three direction; some
return to their home lands, others
pass on to the mainland and still
others go into other lines of activity
in the territory. The motive actuat
ing them all is the same to get away
from the hard labor of the fields as
soon e possible.
Ten million dollars and more, ac
cording to official statistics, has been
spent by the industries of Hawaii in
importing labor during the past two
decades, and today those industries
are under a heavier handicap of
labor shortage than ever before In
their history.
The Chinese exclusion act and the
gentlemen's agreement with Japan
have shut off both those countries.
but despite this frequent recommenda
tions have been made that congress
take into consideration Hawaii's
peculiar isolated position and let
down the bars.
Now a fresh attempt along this
line ie being made.
OF
I
OLD-TIME PROSPECTORS OUT
FIT FOR LOXG JOURXEY.
ASIATIC LABOR NEEDED
WHITE MAX WILD NOT WORK
IN TROPICAL FIELDS.
BREEDERS PLAN TRIPS
Cuernscy Club Outlines Pro
gramme for Cattle Inspection.
ASTORIA. Or., June 20. (Special.)
Final arrangements have been
made by the Clatsop Guernsey club
for entertaining the Guernsey breed
ers of the northwest, who will be in
Clatsop county and the lower Co
lumbia river district June 22. 23 and
24. The party will leave Portland by
automobile at 9:30, June 22. The vis
itors will be the guests of the Astoria
chamber of commerce at a salmon
bake that night.
The second day will be spent In
touring Clatsop county.
The third day will be spent In Pa
cific county. Wash.
'AAINBOWS END HUNTED
Pot or Gold Expected to Be Found
in Fort Norman Oil Fields.
EDMONTON, Alta. When the pros
pectors, who expect to find the rain
bow's end in the Fort Norman oil
fields on the Meckenzie river, will be
able to set out on their great ad
venture Is a problem the weather will
determine.
The two northers bases for the
GOMEZ' FUNERAL HELD
Cuban Chief Executive Attends
Service of ex-President.
HAVANA. June 20. General .Jose
Miguel Gomez, ex-president of Cuba,
was buried Sunday with ceremonies
attended by a great popular demon
stration. President Zayas was the nation's
chief mourner, and followed close
behind the automobile carrying tha
widow and her four children and the
artillery caisson on which the bronze
casket containing the body was borns
to the marble mausoleum in Colon
cemetery.
Twenty Years' of Endeavor to Amer.
icanize Plantations of Hawaii
Prove to Be in Vain.
Pasture Land Burned Over.
OAKLAND. Cal., June 20. Fourteen
hundred acres of pasture land be
tween Brentwood and Antibch was
burned over Sunday. The blaze was
fought ' by a volunteer force of 800
persons and the loss is estimated at
about $10,000.
Steamer Service for San Francisco.
' Steamer "Rose City" will leave
Portland Ainsworth Dock 10 A. M.,
Wednesday. June 22. For reserva
tions call City Ticket Office, Main
S530. Adv.
Read The Oregonian classified ads.
HONOLULU, T. H. After 20 years
of vain endeavor to Americanize, or,
at least, "Caucasianlze," the planta
tion fields of Hawaii, the territorial
mission now in Washington seeking
the consent of congress to the Im
portation of Asiatic labor in limited
numbers and under stipulated, re
strictions has returned to the earlier
declarations of former Governor
George R. Carter In his reports to
the interior department in 1904 to
1907 that the white man will not
work in tropical fields.
Official facts and figures are In
Lpossession of the commission to show
that Americans, Portuguese, fepanlsn,
Russians and Germans all have been
tried and all have failed as steady
sources of agricultural labor supply.
Today, according to Governor C. J.
McCarthy, Albert Horner, territorial
sugar expert, and others in a posi
tion to know conditions, the territory
is facing the gravest labor crisis in
Its hietory.
In 1900 the production of sugar
for the territory was 289,544 tons,
with 36,040 laborers to handle the
crop. In 1920 the production was
556,871 tons, and last December thert
were 38,348 laborers at work on the
plantations. Sugar cane acreage has
Increased tremendously, labor has not
kept pace and now, with the excep
tion of a small flow from the Philip
pine islands, themselves in a like
predicament, there is no source from
which to draw for harvest hands for
Hawaii's great pineapple and sugar
plantations.
Portuguese have proved the "most
stable of all, but even they have
shown rapid decline. In 1910 there
were 3906 Portuguese at worlf in
Many Believe Wealth Awaits Those
Who May Discover Gulch
Wherein Peace River Flowed.
EDMONTON. Alta. Search . for a
lost river a river of gold will be
undertaken this year by several pros
soectors. Including old-timers from
the Yukon and Alaska, who are now
hero outfitting for the long journey
into the north country. This lost
river bed, where the Peace river once
flowed, Is somewhere In the big bend
of the Peace, bisected by a line drawn
from Fort St. John to the mouth of
the Battle river.
Some years ago an Indian brought
Into Fort St. John a fair-sized gold
nugget which, accordtog to the tale
told by old-timers of the north, he
discovered In a stream In the coun
try to the northeast of the post.
Soon after this an old trapper, a
white man, who made Fort St. John
his headquarters, came into the fort
with a quantity of coarse gold which
he had washed from some stream in
a similar direction to that from which
the Indian hailed.
He never-visited his trap lines after
this, living on the fat of the land in
carefree Idleness at the post. He
often disappeared, whenever his sup
plies of necessaries ran low and
would be away for a few days, al
ways returning with a fresh supply
of gold.
This ' aged trapper lived In this
manner for a number of years. He
died, as many trappers and north
country men have, on the trail. His
body was found frozen. With him
went his secret, he never having told
to anyone the location of his find.
The books of the Hudson's Bay com
pany still contain a large credit ac
count in the name of the old trapper.
Northmen, who tell the story of the
mystic El Dorado north of Peace, de
clare that the gold was only avail
able after a heavy fall of snow, with
which the old fellow apparently
washed his mineral. From an analy
sis of the circumstances generally, it
is thoughtthat the place from which
the gold was taken was some old
river bed where the Peace once
flowed, but whether the story is cor
rect or not remains to be proved.
Prospectors, however, are putting
up good money to test the truth of
the theory that the precious metal
does exist somewhere to the north of
Clear Hills In large quantities.
AMERIGAI. RELIEF
PRAISED I AUSTRIA
President of Republic Ex
presses Appreciation.
LOVE OF NATION ASSURED
Doctrines of Violent Revolution
and Political Chaos Have Little
Chance in New Democracy.
VIENNA Herr Halnisch. president
of the Austrian republic, has issued a
statement on the second anniversary
oi tne American relief admlnistra
tion's child-feeding operations, hieh
ly praising the results attained by the
Hoover organization made possible
by the generosity of the American
people in contributing $29,000,000 dur
ing the European relief council drive.
Tes-dent Halnisch emphasizes that
the child-feeding programme not only
saved tens of thousands of boys and
gins irom starvation, as well as
building up generally the health of
tne Children, but that the country's
rinanciai condition has been strength
enea Dy the. gift. The statement
follows:
'Inasmuch as within the next few
oays the American relief adminlstra
tion s European children' fund for
Austria will have conmleted the sec
ond year of Its operations, this seems
a fitting time to voice the profound
gratitude felt by the Austrian govern
ment and the Austrian people to the
people of America for their great and
eirective action of generosity and
brotherhood. America may feel cer
tain or our most genuine appreciation
and may be sure that the children
will not forget, that the coming gen
eration win jove America second only
to tneir own nation.
People Happy and Contested.
Coming just at a time when we
needed it the most, with our country
exhausted and prostrate after the
greatest war In history and. continu
ng during the time of our greatest
rouble and need, the American re
lief work has been powerful for good
n many ways in Austria. The feed-
ng of our children has made our
people .more happy and contented.
It has made them more steadfast
STATE GUNS OPEH SHOOT
WEATHER HANDICAPS NINTH
ANNUAL EVENT. AT, ASTORIA-.
First Day's Contests Limited
Special Events; Contests Will
Last Three Days.
to
ASTORIA. Or.. June 20. (Special.)
With 50 expert trap shooters from
various sections of the northwest
present, the ninth annual tourna
ment of the Oregon State Sportsmen's
association was opened here Sunday
morning. It Is under the direction
of Charles Dockendorf, and will con
tinue today and Tuesday. Weather
conditions were unfavorable, with a
thick mist and Intermittent showers
ef fine drizzling rain that handicapped
the shooters.
The first event of the morning was
the 100 registered bird contest at 16
yards. It resulted in a tie between
Frank Etta and O. N. Ford, both of
Portland. They broke 99 targets
each. This tie will be shot off,
either today or Tuesday. The sec
ona event was the 25-blrd handi
cap contest for the cup offered by the
Astoria chamber of commerce. it
was won by R. G. Lacey of Wells, Or.,
with 25 straight hits. Dr. Seeley of
Portland broke 24. This cup Is to be
contested for at each successive tour.
nament and must be won twice by the
same shooter before becoming perma
nent property.
The final event of the day was at
double tareets. the winner being J. W
Seavey of Portland, who made 43 hits
out of a possible 50. Abner Blair an-o
O. N. Ford, both of Portland, tied for
second place with 41 hits each.
BIG TAX DRIVE ORDERED
Government Expects to Collect
Millions in July.
WASHINGTON. D. C. June 20.-
Millions of dollars in delinquent taxes
and penalties will be collected, the in
ternal revenue bureau estimated. In a
nation-wide tax drive ordered to be
gin in July by Commissioner Blair.
Flying squadrons are to visit every
large city.
Special attention, Mr. Blair said,
will be directed to the collection of
the excise tax on sales by manufac
turers, the transportation tax, the so
called luxury tax, and taxes on jew
elry, toilet articles, proprietary medi
cines, soft drinks and amusements.
Coolldges Reach Home.
NORTHAMPTON, Mass., June 20.
Vice-President and Mrs. Coolidge ar
rived at their home Sunday from
Niles. O., where the vice-president
delivered an address at the Hard-ing-McKinley
exercises The vice
president said that the administra
tion is working hard to restore the
prosperity of the country, and is de
liberating especially on how best to
help the farmers of the west and
the manufacturing and commercial
interests of the east.
and enduring. The American feed
ing of our children which has saved
them from damaging undernourish
ment and meant more food, for our
adults, has had a tendency to stabilize
ur nation politically. Under such
conditions the doctrines, of violent
revolution and political chaos have
had little chance In our country.
Austria's finances have been great
ly strengthened by America's great
gift. About 6,000.000.000 kronen in
food and clothing will have been given
through the American relief adminis
tration's European children's fund by
September 1, 1921, the provisional date
for stopping operations. To this must
be added 2.000,000,000 kronen more,
given through food-drafts. If Aus
tria had had to purchase abroad, at
enormous prices, about 8.000.000.000
kronen worth of food and clothing to
keep our children from being under
fed and underclothed, that would have
meant a greater currency inflation, a
greater depreciation of our money and
far greater difficulty in bringing
alabut that financial recovery and sta
bility which is our hope and our pur
pose. Because of America's action
the outlook for our national finance is
much better than it would possibly
have been otherwise.
Education Kept Up.
"History proves that one of the
principal elements in a great and suc
cessful nation Is a people physically
well and strong. Mental strength and
capacity cannot exist coincident with
serious and widespread physical weak
ness in a nation; assurance of health
and strength for our coming gener
ation (and thereby for succeeding
generations), to which the American
relief has contributed so splendidly,
means for Austria a greater and more
successful nation.
'Education is a vital necessity in
the upbuilding of any nation. But
proper education Is Impossible with
children who are underfed. Our school
teachers generally are witness to the
fact that our children are doing bet
ter In their school work because of
being better fed. Further than this,
the feeding of older students, of pro
fessors and other Intellectuals means
a great help toward keeping func
tioning now and hereafter the means
of education. For this also we have
to thank America.
"The American relief administra
tion has ministered to those who
have needed its help without regard
to race, creed or politics. In its feed
ing stations the children of all
classes, the rich and the poor, of all
creeds and beliefs, have been treated
with the same impartial benevolence.
This impartiality on the part of the
Americans and this Intimate ming
ling on the part of our own people,
have had a tendency to teach our
people tolerance, brotherhood.-democ-racyand
co-operation, lessons which
will be of enduring value to us.
Standard of Living Kept Up.
, "The American relief administra
tion's work has taught us how to or
ganize such work ourselves as long
as and whenever such need exists.
The Austrian state will continue op-
On the motor road from Seattle to Ta
coma and the East, the motorist passes
through many points of unusual scenic
interest.
Lake Keechelus is one of these. It is
over six miles, in length, having the ap
pearance of a great river, and is situated
at an elevation of 3,000 feet in the very
heart of the Cascade range.
Motorists will find this region a most
enchanting country dotted with beauti
ful lakes and mountains and huge fir,
spruce and cedartrees measuring in some
instances six to eight feet in diameter.
And all along the route the motorist can
get Red Crown Gasoline the all-refinery
motor fuel that insures ready starting,
rapid acceleration and more power.
Look for the Red Crown sign.
STANDARD OIL COMPANY
(California)
asoune
oj" Quality
l Ule Keechelus 1A
W in tht heart - ' i pJ
the bean JglAflll
of the Casmdes3& 1 1
Snj On the motor road from Seattle to Ta- NUfcpfVfl
coma and the East, the motorist passes VaV iV'y
hsl through many points of unusual scenic -b i
eratlng the school kitchens after the
Amer'can operations stop. We have
been given a new insight into effec
tive methods.
"The standard of living for our en
tire population has been kept up by
the vast quantity of food brought In
from America for the children, be
cause that great quantity has been
added to the total food supply of the
country. The huge amount of Amer
ican food has had a tendency, to keep
down the prices which must be paid
for food beyond the amount rationed
by the government, thus benefiting
financially every family in the coun
try. Because of the American meals
served to our children at midday,
many mothers, freed from the neces
sity of preparing a midday meal, have
been enabled to work and add to the
Income of the household, the families
thereby being able to live more com
fortably. "Thus, in many ways. America's
great and generous aid to Austria
has been not only a present service
of humanity but a gift of enduring
and substantial value for generations
to come."
Princeton President Speaker.
PRINCETON. N. J., June 20
America cannot afford to purchase
freedom from International obliga
tion by paying the price of a loas
I of international power and leader
ship, Dr. John Grier Hibbe
dent of Princeton univers
the graduating claes Sunday In h
baocHlanreate sermon
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiniiiiiiiii
PAINS IN
SIDE AND BACK
Caused by Woman's Ills and
Cured by Lydia ELPinkham's
uy prt" d Vegetable Compound
(intend Grippem poaseaa every
qnallty of jgood ahoen and. In
addition, protect hraltky feet
and relieve tortured feet.
GROUND GRtPPER
5 SHOE STORE,
381 ',4 Washington St.
nillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllT
Home-made ice cream
can anything be
more delicious?
Easy to make with '
Carnation Milk
Four cups Carnation Milk, 1 Yi
cups sugar, I cup water, I Yl a
blespoonfuls vanilla. Carnation
Milk is always ideal for making
ice creams of any sort, because of
its purity and richness. Eggs are
not needed. For a plain vanilla
ice cream, mix the sugar and a
cup of the Carnation Milk together
and let come to a simmering point;
cook for five minutes in this man
ner; remove from fire; when cool,
add remainder of the milk and wa
ter, and the vanilla. Freeze. This
will make about a quart and a
half.
Send for Carnation Cook Book containing
1 00 practical tested recipe. Carnation Milk
Products Co., 622 Railway Exchange BIdg.,
Portland.
This summer, try
making more froz
en desserts at
home. They are
so delightful for
Tvarm weather eat
ing, and so much
more pleasant to
mae than cooking
hot dishes.
"From Contented Com"
111!
Restores Original Color to
Gray Hair
Co-Lo restores the natural
color, life and luster to gray
and faded hair in a manner
nature approves a scientific
process perfected by Prof. John
H. Austin of Chicago, over 40
years a hair and scalp specialist.
Secrets of Co-Lo Success
Co-Lo is a wonderful liquid. Clear,
odorless, greaseless. Without lead
or sulphur. Without sediment. Will
not wash or rub off. Will not Injure
hair or scalp. Pleasing and simple
to apply. Cannot be detected like
ordinary hair tints and dyes. Will
cot cause the hair to split or break off.
Co-Lo Hair Restorer for every nat
ural shade of hair AC, for black and
dark shades of brown; A 7, for Jet
black hair, A8, for medium brown
hades; A3, for light brorn drab and
auburn shades.
r Sd by all Owl Drue Stores
INGROWN TOE NAIL.
How to Toughen Skin so Nail
Turns Out Itself
a. few drops of "Outgro- upon to
kin surrounding tha ingrowing Ball
reduces Inflammation and pain and
ao toughens the tender, sensitive skin
underneath the toe nail, that It caa
not penetrate th flesh, and the nail
turns naturally outward almost ever
eight
"Outrro" Is a harmless anuseptU
manufactured for chiropodists. How
ever, anyone caa buy from the drug
tore a tiny bottle containing dirso-
uons. Adv.
I.!M1.IJIHI J.l KfH
- i r I
L-..rf,.j.A i iianil
Grafton, Pa. "I was troubled with
inflammation and pains in my aides
and back. After
doctoringwith dif
ferent doctors and
not retting relief,
lhadalmofctpiven
up hopes when my
sister told me of
Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable
Compound, and
knowing that she
had really been
helped by it, I
purchased it, I
was unable to do my work at that
time, but after taking several bottles
of the Vegetable Compound I can
now do anything about the house or
farm that a woman should do. I have
a four months old baby that is the
healthiest and biggest baby for his
age that I have ever seen, and I give
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound all the praise for my health. "
Mrs. Blair L. Fisher, R.D.1,Box 37,
Grafton, Pa.
Working earlv and late lifting.
carrying, and the heaviest of house
hold duties is it any wonder that it
results in backaches and kindred ills.
But every woman who suffers as Mrs.
Fisher did should profit by her expe
rience and give Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound a fair trial
SLOW
DEATH
Aches, pains, nervousness, dim
ruity in urinating, often mean
serious disorders. The world's
itandaro remedy for kidney, liver.
bladder and uric acid troubles-
COLD MEDAL
Jrlr.ff oalck relief and often ward efl
deadly oiseasaa. Koowa as the oational
anted oi HoiUna tor more than 200
tnnrtk AH druggist o three ncaa.
jseh Am Ibe uu ComI Model ym evenr Sea
UK. aaaaot ac itnitDUoa
Nothing Like Experience.
One truth learned by actual experi
ence does more good than ten expe
riences one hears about. Tell a man
that Chamberlain's Colic and Diar
rrhoea Remedy will cure pain In the
stomach and he will most likely for
get It before the end of the day. Let
him have a severe attack of that dis
ease, feel that he Is about to die, use
this remedy and learn from his own
experience how quickly It gives re
lief and he will remember it all the
reat of his life. Adv, .
'Beauty Contented
Toe art slwayt confident
that your beutv h been
developed to the hichut
of lis poMiMlidn alter
tiling Couraud's Oriental
Cream. 1
5c for Trial Six