Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, August 02, 1921, Page 6, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE MORNING , OREGOXIAN, TUESDAY, AUGUST 2, 1921
510,000 BOND ISSUE
PROPOSED TO LEGION
Portland Clubrooms Said to
Face Closing.
REFINANCING IS SOUGHT
Flan Is to Sell Papr Only to Mem
bers Final Vote Is to Co
Taken September 5.
Proposal of a $10,000 bond issue to
retire debts incurred by Portland post
No. 1 of the American Legion in the
furnishing of clubrooms and to pay
running- expenses for the remainder
of 1921 was broached at a well-attended
meeting of the organization
last night. The matter will come up
for a final vote at the September &
meeting.
"The people of Portland and Ore
gon voted a $30,000,000 bond issue to
give the ex-service men a bonus and
ve shall not rail on them for another
Jollar:" announced Henry Boyd, post
cemmanrtor, in explanation of the pro
posal. "These bonds, if we decide to
issue them, will be sold to American
Legion men only. If Legionnaires
themselves are not interested enough
to assume the burden of continuing
the club rooms w certainly do not
intend to ask for help from the gen
eral public.
Clubrooms Face Closing.
"Should the bond Idea be -voted
down next month it will mean the
ciosing of the clubrooms. Whatever
we decide to do the present adminis
tration of the post is a unit in de
claring that the long-suffering public
will not be called on to help us
finance our own activities. We will
give no more entertainments or
shows except on a strict business
basis of merit."
The motion embodying the idea
was made by Walter Uleason and
called for the issuance of bonds in
$5, $10 and $20 denominations, carry
ing interest of 6 per cent and running
for Ave years. Though there was
considerable discussion of the propo
sition last night the voting was post
rcned until September, in conform
ance with the bylaws of the post.
which compel a matter of policy to
lay on the table a month.
Debt Reduced to fSOOO.
The debt of $15,000, incurred by the
jost In the furnishing and mainte
nance of its new clubrooms at Sixth
and Ankeny streets, was assumed by
the present post officers on January
1. This amount has been reduced to
$8000, asserted Boyd.
To run the clubrooms to January 1
1922. $1175 will be needed, it was said
The remainder of any money ralsafi
would go to paying off obligations.'
Announcement was made of the
resignation of Jay Coffey as execu
tlve secretary of the post, effective
yesterday. He is to take up extensive
medical training, neglected during his
Ltsrion work of the past six months.
But one paid employe will be on the
Leerion staff from now on, Irvin
Kafka, business manager of the post
rVo Recommendations Made.
Portland post is recommending no
men for positions as attorneys or ap
praisers in Multnomah county under
the state bonus law, but has
application blanks for such positions
for distribution. The post will urge
that only Legion men be selected for
the positions,- but will not back, indi
vidual pleas.
Politics almost ripped the lid from
the meeting last night at its incep
tion, but simmered into inaction. J. W.
Morris started things by proposing
that the post take action expressing
resentment of the" "double-crossing"
of the American Legion by Senators
Stanfield and McNary in their vote
on the adjusted compensation meas
ure recommitment.
He included in his motion the pro
posal that the post "give notice that
we are laying plans to replace both
of them at the next election." Morris
added that he had voted for both the
senators.
Clarence R. Hotchkiss. republican
war-horse, leaped to the rescue by
felling the Legionnaires that they
would do more harm than good in
making personal threats against the
senators, assuring the post members
that urgent political .considerations
were behind the vote of the senators
end that their hearts were with the
ex-service men.
When the matter came to a vote
the ballot was overwhelming against
mixing in politics.
marrying Hatfield two '
her first husband was j
man's wife,
weeks after
killed.
24 Persona Indicted.
Hatfield and 23 other Matewan cit
izens, including Chambers, were in
dicted for the killing of the detec
tives. The charges against several
of them were dismissed and the rest.
including both Hatfield and Cham
bers, the youngest of the'defendants.
were acquitted after a trial lasting
several weeks.
Lively, testifying for the state, ad
mitted he had been sent to Matewan
by the detective agency to spy upon
the miners. He had opened a store
and had gradually won his way into
the confidence of the labor leaders,
he claimed. After the trial he dis
appeared and had not been heard of
again in connection, with the dis
turbances which have agitated Mingo
county since that time until today.
Hatfield Made Constable.
After the trial. Hatfield was made
constable of Matewan and Chambers
was his special policeman. In spite
of Governor Morgan's martial law
proclamation, therefore, both men
were entitled to carry arms. A few
weeks ago he appeared before the
senate committee investigating con
ditions in the Mingo county region.
C. Frank Keeney, president of the
miners' district organization, tonight
issued a statement condemning state
officials and coal miners for the tac
tics they have resorted to in an at
tempt to crush unionism.
Governor Morgan also issued a
statement saying he had ordered
Prosecuting Attorney Counts of Mac
dowell county to make a complete in
vestigation of today's shooting.
FIVE ARE REPORTED HELD
Deputy Sheriffs Are Taken in Con
nection With Fray.
BLUEF1ELD, W. Va Aug. 1. Re
ports from Welch tonight were to the
effect that five men, including C. K.
Lively, have been held in connection
with the shooting of Sid Hatfield and
Ed Chambers.
The others held are H. H. Lucas,
deputy sheriff of Mercer county;
Herbert Day, William Salter and Bus
ter Pence, deputy sheriffs of McDow
ell county. Lively also is a McDowell
county deputy sheriff. Accounts of
the shooting differ, according to advices.
LABOR HEADS INSTALLED
Officers of Local Central Body In
due ted for Present Term.
The Installation of the officers
elected at the last regular meeting
occupied the entire session of the
Central Labor council last night. J.
F. Haughey of the Motion-Picture
Operators' union acted as installing
officer.
Following are the officers: Presi
dent, D. E. Nickerson of Carpenters'
local No. 226; vice-president, George
McDonald of the Electrical Workers'
local No. AS', reading clerk, Vera Ep
ling of Telephone Operators' local No.
44A; conductor. L. J. Doern of Street
car Men's local 757; warden, George
C. Ross of Retail Clerks' local No.
1257.
W. E. Kimsey, secretary-treasurer
of the council, a member of the
Typographical union No. 58, .was not
Installed, as he is at present on the
way to Quebec to attend the annual
convention of the International Typo
graphical union as a representative of
Multnomah local.
The trustees who were Installed are
as follows: Gus Anderson, Streetcar
Men's' local No. 757; T. J. Morrow,
Engineers' union No. 87, and. Phillip
Quinlan, Meatcutters' union No. 143.
STATE GETS NO SAY
i r.i i iiiui
ii.
LHUU
EXCHANGES
Legislature's Action Is
by Decision.
Hit
NATIONAL OFFICE ACTS
TON'GMAN SHOT TO DEATH
(Continued From First Page.)
SEATTLE FERRY FAILURE
Kins County Commissioners Would
Lease Its Fleet.
SEATTLE. Wash., Aug. 1. (Spe-1
cial.) Operation of a ferry system
by the county here is not a success.
Declaring a purpose to save the
county $1000 a day or more now lost
on the ferry service, the King county
commissioners today adopted resolu
tions calling for bids for the lease
of the fleet of 13 vessels now operated
&y the county for a ten-year period.
The resolutions provide that fares
shall be the same as the county
now charges, including commutation
tickets, and that the same schedule
of service be maintained.
Decision to lease the ferries for
private operation was reached after
perusal of records showing the ferry
system had lost $333,000 in 1920, and
about $1000 a day the first four
months of 1921.
NOTED GUNMAN IS DEAD
(Continued From First Page.)
witnessed the shooting dispersed in
all directions.
Two revolvers were found on Hat
field, one of which contained empty
shells. Chambers had one gun, oi
which some of the shells had been
fired.
Hatfield Is Well Known.
Even before the Matewan battle,
Hatfield, although only 28, was well
known In the Mingo county mine dis
trict. As a member of the famous
Hatfield family, which had fought its
feud with the McCoys in that neigh
borhood, he was well known to the
entire community and related to not
a few.
He had worked In the mines since
boyhood, but then decided to try his
band at local politics. He was elected
chief of police of Matewan, his birth
place, with Mayor Testerman. On
May 19, last year, he and the mayor
yere part of the group that met the
.party of Baldwin-Felts detectives
that had Just finished evicting union
employes of the Stone Mountain Coal
company from their homes.
In the battle that followed seven
of the detectives and three of the
townsfolk, including Mayor Tester
man, were killed. Today's tragedy
made Hatfield's wife a widow for the
second time within little more than
a year, for she was formerly Tester-
were about to pass one another one
of them, firing from the hip, sent
three bullets point blank into the
other, who was Lee Wong. The as
sailant then threw his pistol into
the street and darted away on
Everett street. Wong was found to
have two bullets in his back and one
in the shoulder. He was first treated
at the city emergency hospital, and
later sent to St. Vincent's hospital,
where a major operation was being
performed in an effort to save his
life. His recovery was said to be
doubtful.
The Jail elevator had barely landed
Wong in the emergency hospital when
a Chinese rushed into the lobby of
headquarters and called to Sergeant
Schad to investigate a murder in the
gaming rooms in rear of the On Wo
Tung company, Chinese druggists.
Lung was found lying in a pool of
blood on the floor beside his table.
Indications were that he had been
dead for some time, and it was said
by the Chinese who gave the police
their information that the shooting
occurred about 6:30 as he was eating
dinner. Although Lung was known to
police, and was a familiar figure in
old Chinatown, not a Chinese could be
found who would admit knowing him.
The manager of the "club" in which
his body was found, did admit that he
had seen the murdered man in life,
but maintained that he knew neither
his name, occupation, age nor tong
affiliation.
Police believe that he knew no more
about Lung than David knew about
Jonathan, but they were powerless to
licit information from those they
questioned.
There had been no struggle in the
murder chamber, a dirty, greasy.
8melling-to-the-sky place in which
were half a dozen high tables covered
with oil cloth and a score of stools.
The "atmosphere" of the place was de
cidedly oriental, despite the Indirect
lighting system, the regulator clock.
the electric fan, the coffee percolator
and other occidental fixtures. The at
mosphere. In fact, was so oriental that
the white men were compelled to
make frequent trips to the street for
a breath of fresh air. Cockroaches
herded over the floor In droves; rats
nested -in drawers; a cat was too fat
and lazy to catch the rats; the kitchen
was smelly and greasy and the tiny
bedrooms which lined a balcony which
surrounded the. gaming tables were
like large coffins without any provi
sion for ventilation.
Apparently Lung was working at
his gambling table when the assassin,
through the protection of the crowd.
fired pointblank Into his breast. In
the confusion which must have fol
lowed he escaped. Police failed to
find the pistol, but one bullet was
picked up from the floor. Lung was
shot once in the left Bide and twice
in the right.
A special detail of police under di
rection of Sergeant Oelsner was im
mediately assigned to the street in an
effort to prevent further outbreaks.
In co-operation with District Attor
ney Evans and his men, city detec
tives began searching for known tong
leaders in an effort to duplicate the
feat of authorities in May, 1917, whan
thy were taken to the county jil
and induced to sign a peace pact
which was faithfully kept until last
night. Wholesale arrests are ex
pected and it was said that the charge
would be that of vagrancy.
There was no surprise at the out
break last night as both the Portland
police and peacefully-inclined tong
leaders were engaged in an effort to
prevent possible trouble "wmuii it was
thought might arise from the slaying
of a Chinese in Marysville, Cal., last
Saturday night, over theft of a slive
gir:. Gong Woo, leader of the Kuey
Sings in the 1917 tong war, was said
to have appealed to District Attorney
Evans for protection y;aterday afternoon.
Commissioner Declares That Xo
Division of Responsibility Is
Possible 'Under Law.
SALEM. Or.. Aug. 1. (Special.)
The effect of a resolution and memo
rial introduced by L, E. Bean, speaker
of the house of representatives, and
adopted by the last legislature pro
viding for an investigation and urg
ing the secretary of the interior at
Washington to hold up all applica
tions for exchange of privately owned
timber lands for Oregon & California
grant lands of equal value pending
approval by the state of Oregon, was
knocked into a cocked hat through
receipt of a letter at the executive
offices here today irom William Spry,
commissioner of the general land of
fice. "The federal act of May 31, 1918."
said commissioner Spry's letter to
Governor Olcott, "places upon the sec
retary of the interior the responsi
bility that exchanges made there
under shall be of approximate equal
value and shall also be advantageous
to the government in that its timber
holdings shall be consolidated thereby.
Responsibility Not Divided.
xnis responsibility, placed upon
him by the present act of congress,
is one that he should and must ac
cept, and which he cannot divide with
the state, even should he des're to do
so. Nor is any reason seen for the
amendment of the present law so as
to make an exchange of these lands
of the United States dependent upon
the approval by the state of Oregon.
"The regulations governing ex
changes of land under the act of May
31, 1918, afford ample protection to
the interests of the government. Under
these regulations, applications filed,
are given a preliminary examination
in the general land office, and only
In the general land offioe, and only
in the event that. they are found to
offer some apparent advantage to
ward the consolidation of govern
ment owned timber, are they sub
mitted to the secretary of the interior
for his tentative approval for the pur
pose of ordering field examination.
Procedure Is Outlined.
"Following such tentative approval,
a demand is made upon the applicant
for the deposit of a sum sufficient to
derray the expenses incidental to a
very complete examination, by small
est legal subdivisions of both the land
and timber involved in the applica
tion. The regulations require that the
special agent In charge, shall, as the
result of said examination, submit a
comprehensive report as will enable
this office to determine whether the
proposed exchange is advantageous to
the government as to the consolida
tion of its timber lands. Also whether
the timber is of approximate equal
value.
"Nothing whatever has been
brought out. In any way reflecting on
the work of the employes of this of
fice, on such exchanges as have been
favorably reported upon by the spe
cial agent in chargfe. It is believed
that a careful carrying out of the
regulations in the future as in the
past, will prevent any Just criticism
as to the action taken by this office
on exchange applications under said
act.'
Noah's voyaging circus or the epi
sode of George Washington, the
hatchet and the cherry tree. For
more than 30 years the simple rural
drama has held the stages . or this
country, and its message is as dra
matic today as ever. Griffith has
taken this drama of New England life,
and with his genius and the" wider
scope of the motion picture made it
a spectacle long to be remembered.
The film version of "Way Down
East" Is an elaborate production, a
spectacular pageant of human faults
and virtues, and yet it tells an inspir
ing story, based on a theme of telling
simplicity and enthralling sincerity.
The well-loved characters .of the
old favorite are all there. The pa
thetic appealing figure of Anna Moore,
Lennox Sanderson, villain to the end;
David Bartlett. clean-cut hero; the
gruff squire, the eccentric professor
with his passion for chasing butter
flies, HI Holler with his pranks and
funmaking. Rube Whipple, "the con
stable." and the rest.
Griffith blends personalities and
human emotions with the deft and
artistic skill that the Persian rug
maker uses to gather bright threads
into a perfect design. Let a lover de
scribe his fiance, or a circus press
agent voice the prowess of his show,
gather adjectives together and apply
them to "Way Down East," and the
result will not be far off as a just
cescription. It is the fulfillment of
every director's dream, "the greatest
ever screened."
The climax of the picture is the
breaking of a huge ice jam, with
Anna Moore floating on a frozen
block to certain death in roaring
rapids. To visualize the "punch in
this scene, consider the crack of one
Babe Ruth's bat as it sends a baseball
to parts unknown, or the Impact of a
glove on the good right hand of Jack
Dempsey as it meets the chin of
championship aspirant, add Sousa's
band playing "Stars and Stripes For
ever" as the marines march by, and
you have an idea of the thrill of
Anna's adventures in the rushing Ice.
John Barrymore has declared that
the work of Lillian Gish as Anna
Moore was the "most superlatively
exquisite and poignantly enchaining
thing" he had ever seen. As his sis
ter Ethel" once remarked, "That's all
there is. there isn't any more."
All members of the cast deserve
unstinted praise for great perform
ances in their respective roles. Rich
ard Barthelraess. a Juvenile who can
really act, is David Bartlett, Lowell
Sherman is Lennox Sanderson, Kate
Bruce is Mother Bartlett and Mrs.
Morgan Belmont. New York society
leader, adds distinction in an impor
tant part.
Policy Is Discussed.
"Owing to your intimate knowledge
ot the timber situation, it seems
hardly necessary to state that all
timber corporations, whether operat
ing or merely holding, endeavor to
acquire or consolidate their timber
holdings into as compact a loggin
unit as they are able to do. From
the record of sales of the timber on
the revested Oregon and California
railroad grant lands, classified as
timber lands, it is very evident, that
because of the limited market at the
present time for this timber, the gov
vernment is necessarily placed in a
position, exactly similar to that of a
holding corporation, consequently the
best interests of the government re
quire that these timber holdings shall
be blocked into as compact logging
units as possible.
April 5 Order Cited.
"The order of April 5, 1921, sus
pending action on such exchanges.
having served its purpose, is hereby
revoked and the pending applications
will be taken up for appropriate ac
tion."
At the time Speaker Bean offered
his memorial to the legislature he in
timated that the state was being de
frauded out of valuable timber land1)
and severaV spirited public hearings
were held before it was finally ap
proved. These hearings were attended
by many timber-land owners.
The resolution, successfully fath
ered by Mr. Bean, carried an appro
priation of $10,000 with which to con
duct an investigation of applications
submitted to the government for ex
change of lands, and to provide for the
payment of cruises of the lands of
fered in exchange for the grant lands
under the direction of the state for
ester. The government later resented the
intimations contained in the Bean me
morial, whereupon Mr. Bean went to
Washington and carried on a private
investigation with a view of substan
tiating his suspicions.
FLEET PROGRAMME MADE
ACTIVITIES OP PACIFIC WAR
SHIPS OUTLIXED.
Sea Fighters to Mobilize at San
Francisco Next Month and
Proceed to San Diego.
WASHINGTON, D. C. Aug. 1. A
programme covering the activities of
the newly organized Pacific fleet from
September 1 to the end of the current
year was announced today by the
navy department.
Mobilizing next month at San
Francisco, the fleet will proceed to
San Diego for tactical exercises.
which probably will consume six
weeks. ,
A division comprising the Okla
homa, Nevada and Arizona and pos
sibly the Pennsylvania, will then pro
ceed to Puget sound for docking and
overhauling, returning to San- Pedro
about December 1. On this trip the
division will hold "full power" tests.
Battle division eight, comprising
the New Mexico, Tennessee, Idaho,
Mississippi and possibly the Mary
land, will follow a similar programme
but will not leave San Pedro until
November 21, when the division is to
sail tor.San Francisco. It will re
main there until November 28. when
it will go to Puget sound, returning
tc San Francisco December 19.
Destroyer squadrons will be based
at San Diego, the submarines and the
Pacific train at San Pedro, the mine
fcrces at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, and
the air force at San' Diego.
Elderly Woman Anto Victim.
Mrs. M. A. Marshall, an elderly
woman who is visiting here from
Great Falls. Mont., is in St. Vin
cent's hospital with a broken arm and
an injury to her left eye as the result
of an automobile accident last night
In which the machine of H. G. Terrell,
725 Mississippi avenue, collided with
that driven by her daughter, Mrs. F.
E. Keenan of Great Falls. Mont. Ter
rell was arrested by Patrolman Bab
cock, who said that he skidded 43
feet before the crash. He was placed
In jail on a charge of reckless driving,
with bail at $250.
Farm Loan Bill Aided.
WASHINGTON. D. C, Aug. 1. The
house rules committee reported out
today an amendment to the house
manual to pave the way for a vote on
the senate bill authorizing the farm
loan bank system to pay 5 per cent
instead of 5 per cent interest on its
bonds tomorrow or next day.
1
irirr 7n w i r
ave vreiviaae uur
Prices Too Low?
Frankly, we'd be afraid to offer Mason tires at our
recent new low prices, if the public hadn't learned
long ago that the name Mason on a tire means de
pendability, value, service.
Of course there will always be those few who cannot
understand how quality can be enhanced in spite of
surprisingly low prices.
Keen buyers know, however, that our good name is
beyond price. If you, too, seek fullest tire value for
your money, order Mason Cords today.
NEW LOW PRICES
HEAVY DUTY CORDS MAX! - MILE
S1ZB 1 PRICB I SIZE I PRICE SIZE f PRICE
30x3M $24.30 34x4K $49J0 30x3 '$12.90
32x3M 32.95 35x4M 50.95 30x3 13.50
32x4 41.75 36x4 52.10 JUNIOR CORD
33x4 42.05 33x5 59.75 30x3K 20.60
34x4 1 43.20 35x5 6L75 32x3M 29.60
32x4K 47.10 37x5 1 64.55 32x4 3JM
33x4 K 48.35 Tub Pri aio Reduced 33x4 38.15
All Tires and Tubes Plus Government War Tax 34x4 39 45
SOLID TRUCK TIRES H. D. Solid, Cushion Solid, Regular Solid, and
Pneumatic Cord Truck Tires and Tubes also lower than pre-war prices.
MASON CORDS
.g.j -;-rp f-T- ';
Pilte IS
M
El
M
THE MASON TIRE & RUBBER CO., 82 N. Broadway, Portland, Oregon.
THE MASON TIRE & RUBBER COMPANY, KENT. OHld
SOVIET SPLIT IS DENIED
TBOTZKY AND L.EXIXE IX AC
CORD, SAYS SEXATOK.
Reports of Illness of Bolshevik
Minister of War Declared to
Have Been False.
Missionary-Educator Dead.
VANCOUVER, B. C, All. 1. Miss
Elizabeth Alsorn. principal of Co
lumbian college. New Westminster,'
B. C, and noted educationalist, died
here today. She was a missionary to
Japan for 20 years.
Fruit Express In Collision.
FRDSNO, Cal., Aug. 1. One man
was seriously injured when a Santa
Fe fruit express train crashed with a
switch engine within the city limits
here today.
"Way Down East at Heilig
BY DON SKENE.
AVID WARK GRIFFITH, screen
wizard, wove a magic spell over
an audience that filled the Heilig the
aier from orchestra pit to the loftiest
perches of the balcony last night at
a triumphant opening- showing of
"Way Down East."
With - this truly splendid picture,
Griffith silences any challengers who
dispute his right to the throne of the
motion picture world.- Griffith, who
stirred the United States with his
"Birth of a Nation," the man who in
vented the "close-up" and a dozen
devices that revolutionized motion
pictures and made the silent drama a
worthy candidate for a place among
tne aris, nas outdone nimseif in "Way
Down East." .
The story of "Way Down East" is
almost as familiar to hosts of Amer
lean theater-goers as the tale of
Doctors Recommend
Con-Opto fsr the Eyes
Physicians and eye specialists pre
scribe Bon-Opto as a safe home remeds
in the treatment of eye troubles and tc
strengthen eyesight, Sold under monej
refund guarantee by all druggists.
Ttead The Oregonian classified ads.
RIGA. Aug. 1. (By the Associated
Press.) Reports that Leon 'Trotzky,
belshevik minister of war. is 111 and
that there has been a split between
Nikolai Lentne and Trotzky were de
nied today by Senator France of
Maryland, who left Riga tonight for
Berlin.
Senator France said he found
Trotzky working in accord with Le-
nine.
The senator Informed the corre
spondent that he was leaving tonight
to carry on a fight for Russo-Amer-
ican relations and the extension of
credit to Russia, and that his views
had not been changed.
He still thought that the third In
ternationale could not harm America
and that assistance for Russia would
relieve the conditions which caused
revolution. He estimated that the
credit necessary for Russia's lmmedi
ate needs would amount to $2,000,000.
000. which he thought should be in
the form of an outright loan to the
Russian government, instead of an
advance on concessions.
Two American business men who
saw the senator today wanted infor-
mation about the prospects of trade
guarantees. One of them said he was
tiying to collect on a $4. 000,000 order
given by Ludwig C. A. K. Martens,
ex-so-called "soviet ambassador" at
New York, and the other was trying
to untangle difficulties connected with
a J6. 000.000 contract for railway sup-
1 plies made by Professor G. V. Lomon-
osoff. ex-head of the Russian rail
way mission to the United States, but
never carried out.
While In Moscow Senator France
failed to receive several telegrams
and at least one registered letter for
warded there.
Mrs. Marguerite E. Harrison of
Baltimore left Riga tonight, with
Senator France.
Norwegian church Sunday. Harry J.
Ponder, another ex-soldier who met
death in France, was burled at La
Center Sunday with the legion post
of that town In charge. He was the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry J. Pon
der. He was 25 years of age at the
time of his death and was attached
to the 361st infantry, 91st division.
of Portland to convey to the pope the
decennial report of the condition of
the archdiocese of Oregon, has per
formed his mission at Rome and is
now on his way home. Friends in
Albany have received word from hira
that he had returned to France and
would sail for America soon.
Albany Rector Leaves Rome.
ALBANY, Or.. Aug. 1. (Special.)
Monsignor Arthur Lane, rector of the
Albany parish of the Roman Catholic
church, who went to Rome as the
representative of Archbishop Christie
Many Divorcees Remarry.
VANCOUVER, Wash.. Aug. 1.
(Special.) Almost one-fourth of tha
women married in Clarke county dur
ing the past year were divorcees and
approximately 30 were widows, ac
cording to statistics in the county
auditor's office.
Two Soldiers Are.Buried.
VANCOUVER. Wash., Aug. 1.
(Special.) Funeral services for Mar
tin V. Charleston, killed in France,
were held under the auspices of the
American Legion at the Brush Prairie
Perfect Fitting Clothes
Don't "Just Happen"
YOU often see men whose clothes fit
them particularly well, resulting in
that neat, snappy business-like appear
ance admired by everyone.
That perfect fit isn't a matter of luck;
it's' good tailoring Norman Bros, tailor
ing.
LET US SERVE YOU
Norman Bros.
Tailors to Men and Women
101-104 Heisiibi Floor,
KOtlTHWESTERJf BANK BLDG.
See
With
Through My Perfect
Fitting; Glasses
Perfect test.
Perfect adjustment.
Perfect size and shape.
Perfect satisfaction.
Genuine Kryptok
lenses and Shur-on
mountings.
Completely finished in
my own laboratory.
Dr. WHEAT
EYESIGHT
SPECIALIST
Suite 207 Morgan Bid.
Second Floor
Conservattv
Cust0d4ar
IS
Conservative
Custodian
Clhats
No matter how satis
factory your income,
you are not getting
ahead unless a material
portion is set aside as
a reserve. Open a Hi
bernia savings account.
MTrtacitAl. kc.cxvtW
HTBERffllSftBAlIK
Facts About
CANADA
Those interested in Canada's farm
and industrial opportunities are
cordially invited to come and se
cure first-hand information. On
Thursday and Friday, August 4
and 5 at the Seward Hotel, Port
land, Mr. W. F. Anderson will
tell you the facts about Canada.
T3 p You are -welcome
r IaIjIj and vin not pub
yourself under obligation by hear
ing this talk.
Canadian National Railways
Industrial and Resources Dept.
Dewltt Foster.
Supt.
Martinet e Bide
Chicago, 111.
W. I. Anderson,
Agent
902 Second Art,
Seattle. Wash.
Phone your want ads to The Ore
conian. Main 7070, Automatic 560-95.
. CHALUPA SAYS
IT IS A
Portland Woman Enjoys the
Best of Ildalth Since
Taking: Tanlac.
"It's no wonder that people every
where are praising- Tanlac. for It
certainly Is a blessing to suffering
humanity." said Mrs. Marie Chalupa.
1188 Bybee avenue, Portland. Or., re
cently. "It was fully five years ago that
I began to suffer with rheumatism
and 1 just dread to think of what I
have been through since then. The
rheumatism spread all over my body
from my shoulders on through my
back ami down into my legs and
ankles. At times I could hardly walk,
and then again I couldn't bend over
and all In all I just suffered agony
and felt sometimes that I would go
distracted from the pain. My appe
tite left me and I got so I didn't want
to eat a thing. I lost weight and
became so weak and run down I was
almost a complete wreck.
"Seeing Tanlac so highly recom
mended for troubles like mine 1 be
gan taking It and the first thing It
did was to give me an appetite. And
I remember well how happy I fell
when the rheumatism began to dis
appear. It wasn't long then until I
felt perfectly well and didn't have
an ache or pain. 1 sleep soundly
every night now, have gained in
weight and am enjoying the best of
health. I give this statement gladly
in the hope that others .may profit
by my experience."
Tanlac Is sold in Portland by the
Owl Drug Co. Adv.
Same Old Story lint m Good One.
Mrs. Mahala Burns, Savanna, Mo..
relates an experience, the like of
which has happened in almost every
neighborhood .in this country, and
has been told and related by thou
sands of others, as follows: "I used
a bottle of Chamberlain's Colic and
Diarrhoea Remedy about nine years
ago and it cured me of flux (dysen
tery). I had another attack of the
same complaint three or four years
ago and a few doses of this remedy
cured me. I have recommended It to
dozens of people since 1 first used It
and shall continue to do so, for I
know it is a quiet and positive cure
for bowel trouble!." Adv.
Read The Oresonian classified ads.