Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, April 27, 1922, Page 5, Image 5

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    THE MORNING OREGONIAN, THURSDAY, APRIL 27, 1922
DUBffli BELFAST
REPORTED I BREAK
Rupture of London Agree
ment Is Threatened.
day with reassembling- of the confer
ence between the free state and
republican leaders, adjourned from
la&t Thursday.
Of special interest as bearing- on
the mooted question of the compara
tive military strength of the opposing
factions was a statement issued by
General O'lHiffy. chief of staff of the
reerular Irish republican army. He-
declared that 75 per cent of the men
remained loyal to general headquar
ters. The conference continued into the
afternoon, when It waa adjourned
until Saturday.
JOINT RAIL INQUIRY FAILS
Provisional Head Declares Clause
Providing for Investigation of
Outrages Is" Violated.
BELFAST, April 26. (By the Asso
ciated Press.) A breach between the
Dublin and the Belfast governments,
which Ulster political quarters declare
may also entail a rupture of the Lon
don agreement, is indicated by
statement issued by the provisional
government in Dublin this afternoon,
announcing that it is unable to co
operate with the Belfast government
in an Inquiry into the Irish railways.
The seriousness of the general
situation between the- two govern
ments is indicated by a telegram
from Michael Collins, head of the pro
visional government, to Sir James
Craig", the Ulster premier.
"All here are agreed it is impossible
to make any further progress until
the vital clauses of the London agree
ment are fulfilled by you," said Col
lira" telegram dated April 22. "They
consider your, attitude as most unsat
isfactory and entirely out of accord
with the letter and spirit of tne
agreement and your failure to agree
to investigation of cases under
clause V is most unreasonable.
(Clause V of the London agreement
of March 80 provided for establish
ment of a committee In Belfast with
equal numbers of Catholics and Prot
estants, to hear and Investigate com
plaints of intimidation, outrages.
etc.).
Co-operation Held Useless.
The statement issued in Dublin by
the provincial government today
reads:
"It was originally intended that the
commission of inquiry into the Irish
railways should be joint, as between
the provisional government and the
Belfast parliament, but owing to the
state of affairs in Belfast and the
failure of the Belfast parliament to
carry out its agreement and under
taking, the provincial government has
decided it is quite useless to endeavor
to act in co-operation with it
Consequently the commission of
inquiry into the railways has been
directed to open its public proceed
ings in Dublin Tuesday next.
Sir James Craig's reply to Michael
Collins' telegram of April 22, made
public today, asserts that there had
been no co-operation on the part of
the provisional government, which
had not even appointed its nominees
on the advisory committee called by
the London agreement.
Boycott Not Withdrawn.
The Ulster premier also complained
that the provisional government had
not withdrawn the boycott of Ulster
and that hundreds of thousands of
pounds' worth of Belfast goods had
been destroyed in southern Ireland.
He declared the Irish republican army
was still committing grave outrages
in Ulster and he asserted in genera
that there had been bad faith on the
part of the provisional government.
The London agreement alluded to
is the one reached at the conference
of March 30, participated in by Brit
ish cabinet members, Michael Collins
and Arthur Griffith, for south Ire
land, and Sir James Craig and the
Marquis of Londonderry for northern
Ireland. By this agreement, the two
Irish governments undertook to co
operate with a view to the restora
tion of peaceful conditions in the
unsettled areas in Ireland. The
agreement included the institution of
new legal methods to settle differ
ences between the Catholic and
Protestant interests in Ulster, the
cessation of Irish republican army
activities in the northern counties
and other conciliatory measures.
A Belfast dispatch Tuesday night
reported serious differences between
the two governments over the ap
pointment of a joint commission for
Irish railway affairs, the provisional
government having nominated its men
independently of the northern govern
ment. It was stated that word had
been received from Labor Minister
McGrath of the southern cabinet that
it could not agree to the joint com-misis-ion
plan in view of unsatisfactory
replies from Ulster to communica
tions regarding the London pact, in
dicating in the view of the southern
author'tles that Ulster did not intend
to honor the agreement.
PEACE PARLEY IS RESUMED
ACTING COM3IAXDAJTT SLAIN
Member of Third Cork Brigade of
Irish Army Taken by Surprise.
LONDON, April 26. (By the Asso
ciated Press.) Acting Commandant
Michael S. O'Neill of the third Cork
brigade of the Irish republican army,
was shot and killed near Bandon,
county Cork, today, the Central News
reports.
Commandant O'Neill was accom
panying other officers and officials
to a farmhouse some distance from
the town and was fired at pointblank
without warning. A member of the
farmer's family was arrested.
r" H-LIEBES g COTWJ
EDITORS' SOCIETY ELECTS
NEW NATIONAL ORGANIZATION
CHOOSES OFFICERS.
Object of Association Is to Help
in Solution of Country-Wide
Newspaper Problems.
NEW YORK, April 26. At the first
meeting of the board of directors of
tie newly farmed American Society ot
Newspaper Editors held here today
officers for the organization were
elected.
Caspar S. Tost, editor of the Siu
Louis Globe Democrat, was elected
president. Other officers are: Frank
I. Cobb of the New York "World, first
vice-president; E. B. Piper of The
Oregonian, Portland, Or second
vice-president; Eric C. Hopwood of
the Plain Dealer, secretary, and E. S.
Beck of the Chicago Tribune, tre s-
urer. The purpose of the new society
is to assist editors in a solution- of
country wide editorial problems. To
carry out .this plan for co-ordination
regional directors were also elected.
They are: James T. Williams of the
Boston Transcript, representing the
northeastern division; Herbert B.
Swope of the New York World, repre
senting the eastern division; Major
John S. Cohen of the Atlanta Journal,
representing the. southern division; E.
S Bross of the Indianapolis Star, rep
resenting the central division; George
Bailey of the Houston Post, repre
senting the southwestern division; H.
E. Newbranch of the Omaha World-
Herald, representing the western di
vision, and C. S. Stanton of the San
Francisco Examiner, representing the
Pacific coast division.
NEWS SERVICE ELECTS
Frank B. Noyes Again Is Elected
Head of Associated Press.
NEW YORK, April 26. The board
of directors of The Associated Press
today re-elected officers and execur
tive committee members as follows:
President Frank B. Noyes, Wash
ington Star.
First vice-president Herbert F.
Gunnison, Brooklyn Eagle.
Second vice-president Stuart H.
Perry, Adrian, Mich., Telegram.
Secretary and counsellor Melville
E. Stone. -
Assistant secretary and general
manager Frederick Roy Martin.
Treasurer J. R. Youatt.
Executive committee Charles Hop
kins Clark. Hartford Courant:
Charles A. Rook, Pittsburg Dispatch;
W. L. McLean, Philadelphia Bulletin;
Frank B. Noyes, Washington Star;.
Adoiph S. Ochs, New York Times;
John R. Rathom, Providence Journal,
and Victor F. Lawson, Chicago Daily
News.
Furs and individual style shops. Broadway at Morrison
Today:
MORE SPRING HATS
re-grouped for our
hurried clearance!
9.50
14.50
2450
are the sale prip cs and many of these hats
were formerly marked double their present
prices!
.
There's every desirable color and black
There's every accepted size and shape
There's every material known to smart
makers!
All charge purchases payable in June
No hats exchanged, sent c. o. d.
nor on approval daring this' sale '
Established 1864
CO-ED WRITER PLAYS HOBO
Chief Reports 75 Per Cent of Men
Loyal to Regular Army.
DUBLIN, April 26. (By the Asso
ciated Press.) Efforts to obtain peace
in southern Ireland were renewed to-
PRESCRIPTION
filling that your
physician can recom
mend is the sort you
get at Nau's always.
Care in
Following
Directions
ST'-
Missouri Girl Starts to New York
to Get Journalistic Atmosphere.
CHICAGO, April 26. Trim and ath
letic, attired in a soldier uniform," and
declaring she was beating her way
to New York, where she expected to
find more journalistic atmosphere,, a
20-year-old University of Missouri co
ed, detained here by the police today,
said she was the daughter of Dr. Ben
Reitman, writer and sociological
worker for the Chicago health de
partment. The girl first gave her
name as Helen Reit.
"If the faculty ever hears of this,
I'm a goner," she said.
The girl was taken Into custody
last night by Special Patrolman Man
ning, when he suspected that a girl
was masked by the khaki outfit. With
her was Walter Coville of Chicago,
a cousin, who was attempting to dis
suade the girl from continuing- her
hobo trip, he said.
Helen frankly admitted giving a
wrong name, but the rest of her story
she told freely. She said she was a
junior in the journalism school at
Missouri, that she wanted to get to
New York, and, lacking funds, de
cided to beat her way.
ABANDONED WIFE . AIDED
Clarke County to Pay Transporta-
tion of Young Woman South,
VANCOUVER, Wash., .April -26.
(Special.) Mrs. Jeanne TJaldwell,
about 19 years old, will be sent .to
Los Angeles to join her husband at
the expense of Clarke county. Mrs.
Caldwell was abandoned by her hus
band in Yakima. A warrant for his
arrest was issued By the Yakima
county authorities, but nothing came
of it. Mrs. Caldwell then came to
Vancouver and through the officials
here and the chief of police of Los
Angeles her husband was located. He
said that he was willing to take care
of his wife, but that- he had no money
with which to pay her transportation.
The county commissioners then
agreed to pay her way. .
Mrs. Caldwell has a baby, nine
months old, living In the Waverly
home in Portland.
Jvl " """ ?" -
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mtnii imliiif T ') l- iff" i ,-r.n A i4i..m,,a - rrt, in ' t,M,,-,.n
"A -J j: J " j j 1 t - j
-n. uicm -aucu, cvcmiit-gowneo auaience rose aimosT
as one and begged and shouted atthe characters." jvyzvfcrf
'SI I'm
III'-. fe4r-wV.fll
'-lit -ife- M
Iff!- tSt - i f jf
men
esa
would you choose
for your
itchem ?
D W
n
PABCOLIN QUALITY
durability and wear and tear
resistance has been proved
beyond the shadow of a doubt
by four gruelling testa. On
Fifth Avenue, New York, in
Los Angeles and twic la
Portland (at Broadway and
Washington and at Fifth and
Alder Sta, March 20, 1922),
trips of regular stock Pab
colin were placed ia the
street, allowed to remain
there all day under the
traffic
Do you, Mrs. Housewife, like the symmetrically arranged small blue and
gray squares as a design for your floor covering? Or would you prefer a
more elaborate design in, perhaps, a brown and tan combination? Maybe
you would like creams and buffs?
SPfeCIAL OFFER TO OREGONIAN READERS
Pabcolin, the artistic, durable floor covering,' is made in fourteen handsome pat
terns. Pabcolin is traffic-tested (read the paragraphs to the right) , factory-tested,
hometested a superior product of quality manufactured on the Pacific Coast.
Up to and including April 29, .1922, we are authorizing Pabcolin dealers to give
20 off of regular Pabcolin prices to Oregonian readers.
Clip this advertisement as a reminder to see your dealer at once, to examine this
waterproof, easy to clan, inexpensive printed floor covering. Act before April 29
to secure this special 20 reduction on Pabcolin yard goods.
Pabcolin Rugs made in handsome patterns
have the same high quality as the yard goods.
TRAFFIC TESTEI Auto
mobiles, trucks and heavy
horse-drawn vehicles passed
over these pieces throughout
the days of the tests. In New
York it rained hard! In Loa
Angeles the sun was hot; in
' Portland, you know 'how it
rained during March. All
tests were highly successful.
In each test after the day's
trial in the street the Pab
colin pieces were taken up,
washed with cold water and
the condition of the pieces
observed. One cut in the
New York test, caused by the
knife-edge of a broken skid
chain, three small holes
caused by horses' hoofs
striking the pieces directly
over small holes in the pave
ment in Portland these were
the only cuts, cracks, stains
or blemishes found. Every
piece was in perfect condi
tion, ready to give a life
time of service in any home.
QUALITY COUNTS This
Pacific Coast made product
has met the four most gruel
ling tests to which a floor
covering has ever been sub
jected. Remember, Pabcolin
is traffic-tested, factory-tested,
home-tested. Examine
this quality product, it offers
you such floor covering sat
isfaction as you have never
known.
1 WM I.
PABCO L
ypaoDUCTi X
Roofings
Felts
Building Papers
Waterproofing
- Materials
Wall-Board
Floor Covering
Industrial Paints
Box Board
Paper Boxes
Fiber Containers ,
J
Me artistic durable libos Qovering
The Paraffine Companies, Inc.
527 Henry Building;, Portland. . Phone Broadway 2766
Manufacturers of
Malthoid and Ruberoid Roofing,
Pabco Paints and Varnishes
The Pabcolin used in the above illustration was taken from our
regular stock. We show the complete line, consisting -of 14
beautiful patterns all pretty color combinations, both in room
size Rugs and yard goods. Pabcolin Enamel Paint surface is
waterproof, sanitary, -easy to clean and inexpensive. On sale,
20 per cent off at-
, Gadsby
ons
4
Morrison Street at Second
Gadsby Se I Is It fo r L ess
i - e ra
V. V and ALDER, STS.
. J l . J ' V SI I 1 liS fi J f . J 1
SELLING BU1LD1NO
fcl 102.0!