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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 1, 1922)
BISHOPS OF THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH WHO ARE IN PORTLAND FOR GENERAL CONVENTION SESSIONS.. His Vktrola 43 inches high is only fio; attractive terms. BISHOPS' VERDICT Unions' Side to Be Pre sented to Convention. HOUSING HIGHLYPRAISED STRIKERS TO ASK ... . -. I " 1 i )! Work of Organization Isr Com pleted by Delegates ; Plan of Congress Followed. (Ontlnuod From Firgt Page.) ' thins to do with the question of divine healing. Thomas Frank Gatlor, D. D., bishop of Tennessee, 'president of the house of bishops, who was delayed for 13 hours In Butte, Mont., by the strike, came in yesterday just before the close of the afternoon sssion. Bishop Ethelbert Talbot of Pennsylvania presided as chairman of the in . formal sessions until the arrival of Bishop Gailor. Plaa of Congress Used. In the general convention the plan of the United states congress n ussrt. ths house of bishops corre sponding to the senate, and the house of deputies to the house of reDresentatives. - Everything is in readiness for the opening of the convention, accord ing to Bishop Walter T. Sumner of Oregon, who said be haa never known preparations for any con vention to have been completed so early. , "The general convention could open in every department to morrow If necessary," he saia yes terday. "I am impressed by the fact that the bishops who have ar rived are pleas-ed wiuh arrange menu. - Bishop Lines of Newark, who will preach the opening sermon of the general convention, said he had never seen so much enthusiasm at any convention nor all arrange ments so perfectly made as here And he hag attended conventions for 38 years." Houir in Perfect Order. The House of Bishops was in per fect order for the opening session. Bishop Sumner said. "They say they never have been so comfortably housed," he declared, "and so en thusiastic was one bishop that he asked for the privilege of buying his desk and chair at the close of the convention so he could have it as a souvenir of his comfort while here." Henri Thiele Is preparing to serve $1500 lunches each noon, which is a remarkable feat and impresses one who inspects the kitchen. Exhibit space is In order and as many as 20 e more organizations are plac ing exhibits there, although they will not be in demand for a week Bishops are still arriving and more are expected today. Among those who arrived yesterday were Bishop James deWolf Perry of Rhode Island; Bishop James Craik Morris, bishop of the Panama canal zone; Bishop William T. Manning of New York; Bishop Theodore I. Reese, bishop coadjutor of southern Ohio; Bishop Boyd Vincent, bishop of southern Ohio; Harry Tunis Moore, bishop coadjutor of Dallas, Texas. More Still to Come. Among those yet to come are Bishop Charles Palmers-ton Ander son, of Chicago, Bishop William Law rence of Massachusetts and his co adjutor, Bishop Samuel G. Babcock; Bishop Henry Darlington of Har risburg, Pa.; Philip M. Rhinelander of Pennsylvania, Bishop George Coolidge Hunting of Nevada, Bishop Arthur W. Moulton of Utah and Bishop Frank Hale Touret of Idaho. A total of 110 bishops is expected for the convention. An interesting figure at the pre liminary conferences is Irving P. Johnson, bishop of Colorado, who- is particularly identified with an ef fort to revive virile preaching in the church. He made a report on this matter recently to the national council of the church. In this con nection Bishop Johnson is chairman of a nation-wide preaching commis sion and before coming west he held a conference with 40 clergy in Evergreen, Colo., on the subject. Bishop Howden Handsome. Bishop Frederick B. Howden, bishop of New Mexico, is said to be the handsomest bishop of the house. His diocese includes all New Mexico and Texas west of the Pecos river, and his special interest is in Indian work and in hospitals. He has two or three good sized hospitals, de voted especially to the treatment of tuberculosis, within his diocese. Right Rev. Edward Thomas Demby, D. D suffragan bishop of the negro race in Arkansas and the province of the southwest, is one of the three negro bishops in the Unit ed States and was one of the first to arrive. Bishop Frederick F. Reese, bishop of Georgia, is attending the prelim inary meetings. Bishop Hugh Lati mer Burleson, bishop of South Da kota, has under his charge 10,000 Sioux Indians, 5000 of whom are communicants of the church. There are about 100 churches and chapels among the Indians in his diocese, Bishop Burleson said, and about 30 Indians are in the ministry. Bishop Burleson was formerly edi torial secretary of the department of missions and has written several books, including "Conquest of the Continent," which is practically a standard textbook on the church in this country. Hev. Robert Gibson Here. Rv. Robert F. Gibson, executive secretary of the department of pub licity, is another Interesting figure. He was at one time mayor of York, Pa., and was a member of the staff of the New York Evening World. . William P. Remington, young bishop suffragan of South Dakota, is engaged' with Bishop Burleson in the work among the Indians of that diocese. He saw service as a chaplain during the war. Bishop Remington travels much by automo bile. He said that during the year has made 16,000 miles by car. A family of many bishops and other churchmen is that of Right Rev. Beverley Tucker, bishop ot southern Virginia, who is accom panied by his son. Right Rev. Henry St. George Tucker, bishop of Kyoto, Japan. The elder Bishop Tucker is accompanied by his wife and his daughter. Miss Lila Washington Tucker, both of whom are delegates to the women's auxiliary conference which will be held simultaneously with the general convention. Bishop and Mrs. Tucker have 13 children. Among them are Beverley St. George Tucker, Jr., professor in a Virginia Theological seminary; Rev. Herbert X. Tucker, rector of the Episcopal church at Boydton, Va.; Rev. Fran cis Tucker, rector of the Episcopal church at Lawrenceville, Va.; Dr. A. W. Tucker, senior surgeon at St Luke's Episcopal hospital, Shanghai, China; Ellis Tucker, professor of mathematics at St. John's Episcopal university, Shanghai. til e-x s t t. , J . -v s, "!X s - V IP r-tvt- i f v - A - ; A I I' i ' v X J r "" v I v A ? " v il that have been In effect in the g?7, : ss I n I I IT I n 1 1 1 H in nonnm r$r.fCi-. . ' 1 MM M UM lb HUWlOtU RAIL MANAGERS OPTIMISTIC j , ' ' T 5 1 ' , ' I 1 5s ' f 1 i i OFFICER SHOOTS JIM BAlvERY wagon driver TAKEN' TO HOSPITAL. Ei Read. Policeman, Says Jeff Sainbrano Broke Up Home While Boarding There. Jeff Sambrano, a Greek, and bakery wagon driver, was shot and seriously wounded shortly after noon yesterday when T. E. Read, a policeman, aged 43, whipped out his service revolver and ehot the driver just as he dismounted from his de livery truck in front of the Amer can Bakery company, 4S3 Williams avenue. Sambrano was shot in tne lower part of the abdomen. Jeal ousy is said to have prompiea Read's attempt to take the life of the Greek. . After wounding Sambrano, Patrol man Head, who was in civilian clothes, walked into the bakery and telephoned for the police. When Patrolmen Shaylor and Ragan ar rived he gave himself up. Just as he was being carried into an ambulance for removal to Good Samaritan hospital, Sambrano turned to Read and cautioned him to keep quiet. Sambrano then told the po licemen that the shooting had been an accident. At the hospital later, Sambrano j was clearing up. West of the river, told Detectives Moloney and Schul- he asserted, the road was ex- plus that he would not sign a com- ' periencing tio difficulty in moving plaint against Read. The policeman is held in the city jail o.n a tenta tive charge of assault with intent to kill. He told Detective Captain Moore Sambrano had broken up his home while a boarder there. Burlington Offers Claim That Shop Craft Strike Is Over. , OMAHA, Neb.. Aug. 31 Railroad managers of important lines operat ing west of the Missouri river took an optimistic view on the question of future fruit movement,' in com menting today on the orders of the interstate commerce commission, authorizing the carriers west of the Mississippi to give priority to food stuffs, fuel, livestock and perishable products. At the officers of the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy railroad it was said there was no indication that it would be necessary for that road to take advantage of the com mission's order. So far as the shop craft situation was concerned, the road claimed the strike for them had been over for some time and that its principal concern was to educate into first-class workmen some of the men employed to take the strikers' places. All kinds of freight was being moved by the Burlington, it was claimed, and similar expressions were forthcoming from the Union Pacific system and the Chicago & Northwestern. General Manager Dickinson of the latter road for lines west of the Missouri admitted that there had been some freight congestion east of Omaha, but maintained that it PRIORITY RiGHT GRANTED WESTERN RAILROADS GIVEN EMERGENCY POWER. Senator McXary in Delegation That Appears Before Inter state Commerce Body. Washington; d. c Aug. 3j. Railroads west of the Mississippi river were authorized today by the Interstate commerce commission to give preference and priority to the movement of foodstuffs, livestock, perishable products and fuel when ever their operating conditions be come such as to cause freight con gestion or blockade. The order declared an emergency and laid down rules for the conduct of the western lines identical with those which have been in effect on railroads east of the Mississippi for several weeks. Roads unable to transport prompt ly all freight offered, the order said, may suspend ordinary practices in providing cars for shippers and routings. The order will go into effect September 1 and will remain in effect until further orders. When the original 'emergency or ders of the commission were issued early this month, the priority and preference instructions did not af fect the west, although provision was made to allow railroads to dls--regard routing directions of ship pers and to move freight in the most direct line. Unless further orders of the com mission are issued establishing the exaot details of priority no imme diate change in the methods of han dling traffic in the west will result from the order. However, under its terms, in case any railroad, by rea son of the existing shopmen's strike or other factor becomes congested or blockaded, it will have power to declare embargoes against the re ceipts of shipments and to lay gen eral freight aside in order to push through shipments of food stuffs, perishables and fuel. The order was Issued upon, repre sentations from far western states that unless railroads were allowed power to establish priorities the movement of the fruit crops and other agricultural products might be. greatly hampered. G. H. Hecke. director of agriculture for Califor nia; Frank P. Spinning, representing the governor of Washington, and Senator McNary, republican, of Ore gon headed a Pacific coast delega tion which urgently requested the commission to extend the priority system to the west along the sams all freight business. TOURIST FUND APPROVED Honolulu Chamber of Commerce Will Expend $50,000. HONOLULU, T. H., Aug. 31. (Spe cial.) The Honolulu chamber of commerce has approved th& pro posed drive to raise py' public sub scriptions a total of J50.000 to be expended by the Hawaii tourist bu reau in mainland newspaper adver tising in an effort to attract tour ists to Hawaii. The chamber spent an hour in trying to decide whether or not it ought to sanction the publication and showing of views of the leper settlement on Molokai. Dr. F. E. Trotter explained that leprosy is a passing disease and that within lot years or so there will be no more leprosy in Hawaii, hence views of the settlement on Molokai not only will have a pictorial ap peal for their beauty, but a histori cal value as well. The matter was put over for further discussion. 15 FROM WRECK SAVED Surfvivors From Japanese Cruiser Picked Up by Yakumo. HONOLULU, T. I., Aug. 31. The Japanese cruiser Yakumo, proceed ing to the aid of the cruiser Niitaka, sunk in a storm August 26 off the coast of Kamchatka, has reported picking up 15 members of the crew, according to cable advices from Tokio received by Nippu Jiji, a Japanese language newspaper here. Captain K. Toga and others aboard were reported to have perished. " Whether the 15 survivors referred to in the foregoing are in addition to 15 reported picked up by a Jap anese d-estroyer earlier was not made clear in dispatches, although a different vessel was named, it was thought possible the survivors mentioned earlier might have .been transferred to the Yakumo. SOVIET NEGOTIATION OFF Ameriea Unwilling to Comply With Reds' Terms. WASHINGTON, D. C, Aug. 31. Negotiations of an informal nature between the American and soviet governments regarding the pro posal to send an American technical commission to survey the economic situation in Russia are regarded by government officials here as closed. , It was authoritatively declared in official quarters that this govern ment was not-willing to meet the terms fixed by the soviet authori ties, who asked for a reciprocal ex change of American and Russian investigation commissions. V A -,4 IS N, i- " , , S 1 , i-s xi lit From left, top row HiHhop Hugh Latimer JJurleMOn, liishop of South Dakota; Bishop Thomas Frank Gallor, bishop of Tennessee and chair man of the house of bishops; Rev. Robert K. Gibson, executive secre- tary of department of publicity; Bishop Frederick F.. Reese, bishop of eprs;ia. Center row, left to right Bishop Irvins; P. Johnson, bishop of Colorado; Bishop Theodora Irvins? Reese, bishop coadjutor of south ern Ohio; Bishop Frederick B. Howden, bishop of 3iew Mexico; Right Rev. Edward Thomas Demby, D. D., suffragan bishop of the colored race in Arkansas; Bishop William P. Remington, bishop suffragan of South Dakota. Below Right Rev. Beverley Tucker, bishop of southern Virginia, and his son, Right Rev. Henry St. George Tucker, bishop of Kyoto, Japan. MEXICAN DEPUTY SHOT TRAGEDY EXACTED IN CHAM BER AT CAPITAL. Shooting' Follows Dispute Ove Contested Credentials of Riv ' als for Legislative Seat. MEXICO CITY, Aug. 31. (By the Associated Press.) Tortuao Lemus, a co-op.erationist, was shot today in the green room of tile chamber of deputies, Martin Barragan, an inde pendent member, is charged with the shooting, which ..followed a dis pute over the contested credentials of the two men as deputies from the state of Michoacan. .Lemus and Barragan first clashed in the general assembly hall yes terday, sharp words being ex changed relative to the victory of Lemus when the co-operationist seated him over Barragan's contest. There are several versions of the shooting today. The tragedy oc curred in the presence of scores of deputies who were arriving for the session at the electoral commission and who -were thrown into a panic. According to a number of eye-wit- nesaes, shots were fired by both men, uemus Iirst arawing a pisioi and firing after Barragan had struck him with his fist. Barragan then answered the fire, eight shots in all being exchanged. Barragan fled after the shooting and had not been apprehended this afternoon. Farm Picnic Labor Day. : ' OREGON CITY, Or.. Aug. 31. The annual picnic of the Clackamas. county farm bureau will be held on ! Labor day at the New Era. camp-' grounds. A special programme of I speeches, recitations, music and lunch will be given. Addresses will be given by George A. Mansfield, president of the state fa-m bureau, and Professor N. H. Cornish of the department of economics at Oregon Agricultural college. Phone your want ads to The Ore gonian. AH its readers are inter ested in the classified columns. POLICE RESCUE FIVE FROM BURNIN GBUILDIJiG. Explosion Occurs Just as Officer Reports "All Well" to Headquarters. OAKLAND. Cal., Aug. 31. One of the two buildings comprising the George Cowdry sanitarium here was destroyed by fire early today fol lowing a bomb explosion. Cowdry, his wife, two nurses and a patient occupying the building were res cued by police officers. The explosion today came as the climax to a series of three incen diary fires which have broken out in the sanitarium during the past month and which resulted in the police keeping a close watch on the premises. An officer had inspected the sani tarium barely five minutes before the bomb went off and was at his call box reporting '-'all well" to headquarters when the blast oc curred. Other officers answered his call for assistance and .the two nurses, Mrs. C. S. Whiffen and Miss Edna O'Donnell, together with the one pa tient in the building. Alberta Cham berlain, all of whom were on the lower floor, were taken out with out difficulty. Mr. and Mrs. Cowdry, however, who slept on the floor above, were trapped by the flames and were taken to safety with difficulty down a ladder. Cowdry, according' to the ,off icers, told them that a patient who had re ceived treatment at his institution in 1914 and who nursed a fancied grievance, had threatened to "get" him and his wife. Nothing de veloped from the threat, however, until last month, when the first of a series of three incendiary fires was discovered and extinguished: Two othors followed and special de tails of police were set to watch the place. Cancel cries your Vktrola Hot Lips . Whiteman's Orch. One of these sad-eyed, ro mantic fox trots; together with Send Back My Honeyman also a "blues" fox trot, played by the Virginians. The two ' numbers on one record .... 75c. My Rambler Rose .Whiteman Here's a medley fox trot direct from the Ziegfeld Fo Hies; with Dancing Fool . , . Club Royal Swift, brilliant, elastic fox trot. The two numbers 75c. The new Victor records include many other great dance num bers; and among the red seal records John McCormack sings "Wonderful World of Romance." Sherman Ulav & Go Sixth and Morrison Streets PORTLAND Opposite Poafofiics SEATTLE, TACOMA, tPOK.UE. ENGLISH DAY OBSERVED Brotherhood of St. Andrew Hears Prominent Speakers. SEATTLE, Wash., Aug. SI To day was Anglican day. at the 37th annual convention of the. Brother hood of St. Andrew, international men's and boy's organization of the Protestant Episcopal church, which opened here yesterday. Addresses by laymen and clergymen of Eng- land and Canada were features of the day's programme. George Anthony King, London jarrister and president of the motherhood in England, presented English greetings this morning and told briefly of the work of the or ganization in his country. J. A. lirmingham of Vancouver, B. C, brought greetings from Canada. Other prominent clergymen and laymen were to speak at the after noon session. , Another feature of today's ses sion was the annual luncheon meet- .r. g of all war secretaries of the crotherhood a body of men who ferved with the armies and navies -t the allied forces during the world war. Mr. Birmingham, secretary of tne organization, presided. Prominent members of the clergy this afternoon granted interviews fo junior members of the brother hood studying for the ministry, ad vising them on the courses to be followed. More than 300 boys are attending the Junior department convention, held separately from the convention of the senior department. Ashland Calls Pastor. ASHLAND, Or., Aug. 31. (Spe cial.) John Leggett, a teacher for two years In the Ashley Johnson Bible Institute at Klmbrolin Heights, Tenn., has been called to fill the pulpit of .the Christian church. He is a graduate of the Eugene Bible school as well as the University of Oregon. omorrow the Last Day of our present sale offer SUIT AND EXTRA PAIR OF TROUSERS for PRICE OF SUIT ALONE The Oregonian is the medium through which many people supply their wants by using its classified columns. Telephone Main 707(K TJieOL! ThsTaite ""- 'V WaUTex'reiiiS Son Oscar M. Smith, Manager 108 Third St, Near Washington iiili!liliti!il;iliiiiiii1!lilii!'li't)!ilMii!i,i ANNOUNCING THE OPENING OF THE NEW HESSE -GAFE TODAY (FRIDAY). SEPTEMBER FIRST INSPECTION DAY COME IN AND TRY OUR DELICIOUS COFFEE FREE WE WILL OPEN FOR BUSINESS SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER SECOND HESSE CAFE COMPANY Third and Ash "WE DO ALL OUR OWN BAKING" !ilNlliliinii.llilllHilHlil!llHll!l!ilHt;iili ill 13, D HRATTH 0 S SALEM BAKING CO. Salem IX I E BREAD The Bread That PAUL O. SAMPSON Said: 'Is the only Health Bread9 ASK YOUR GROCER Baked in Our Own Ovens ' at Portland, Salem, Astoria Haynes-Foster Baking Co. PORTLAND DIXIE BAKING CO. Astoria