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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 11, 1922)
c THE MORNING OREGOXIA1S, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1922 iseisispoi TO GROWING POWER Big Uprising in Germany Is Predicted. EGYPT HAS NEJV PARTY Dissension in Ranks of American if Radicals Reported at Third Internationale. ET GEORGE SELDES. (Chicago Tribune Foreipn News Servic. Copyright, 1S22. by the Chicago Tribune.) MOSCOW, Nov. 9. For three days the Russian soviet showed the com munist delegates representing1 com munism throughout the world how strong it was. After overwhelming them with parades of hundreds of thousands of troops Infantry, cav alry, tanks, artillery newly motor ized with Ohio tractors, marines, sailors and armed and unarmed workingmen's organizations, alto gether about 1,000,000 the leaders tonight at the first plenary session of the third Internationale at the Kremlin painted a picture of com munism everywhere. It was the annual review of Bol shevism throughout the world. After the delegates from a score of countries had spoken M. Zinovieff, secretary of the third Internationale, said: "I predict, owing to certain cir cumstances, that big uprisings will come in Germany within a few months. Winter will see Germany undergo a development in which communism will deeply affect the nation." American Radicals Split. In America, according to the speaker, reports from delegates showed dissension in the ranks of the radicals, with factional battles which gave communism a "hard row to hoe, but nevertheless, despite the hardships, communism has made good progress." ' England was disappointing. For two reasons which he did not ex plain M. Zinovieff asserted that , communism was judged to be stagr nant there. "The development there is very, very slow, in fact, it is the slowest of any country in the world." Only once during M. Zinovieffs report was there applause. Deplor ing the Italian situation, he sud denly produced several sheets which he declared were the "first illegal proclamations and the first illegal newspapers secretly gotten out since the facisti coup." Whereupon the audience cheered. lira Party Formed lm Egypt. Significant also were the reports on the British colonies and domin ions. It was alleged that common ism had found great success in In dia during the last year, that it was making headway in South Africa and Australia and that a new party had been formed in Egypt. The report on Japan stated: "The revolutionary workmen are united and strong and the move ment is growing stronger. The situ ation there is satisfactory." , . On the other hand the situation in Hungary was "very sad," while in France, Norway and Jugo-Slavia there was weakness on account of dissension in communist ranks, Communism's hopes, therefore, said M. Zinovieff, are in Germany. RAIL OFFICERS CHOSEN Yakima Southern Expects That Building Will Be Rushed. Active operations by the Yakima Southern railway were forecast yes terday by the election of a new vice-president and the appointment of a, chief engineer. The company, wnicn projects a ran line from Un derwood, Wash., on the Columbia river, to Yakima, is backed by Portland men, with E. E. Lytle, president and moving spirit in the enterprise. v. George T. Forsyth, formerly chief engineer of the Union Pacific in this territory, was elected vice president in charge of construc tion. Mr. Forsyth is a well-known technical man and has a consider able record of achievement to his credit. He had charge of the build ing of the present steel bridge across the Willamette here. For the past few years he has made his home in St. Paul, although he for merly was a Portland resident. Ben F. Campbell, engineer for the Port of Portland, has been ap pointed chief engineer for the Yakima Southern. It is the inten tion of Mr. Lytle and his associates to proceed at once with final lo cation of the proposed new road, this to be followed by construction work. It is expected to start actual building operations soon after the first of the year. -A REAL . Tyro-form" Gives Permanent Re lief to All Sufferers. When sleep fails to refresh as it should, when food does not digest well, when you seem to have lost your "pep," it is time to investigate the condition of your teeth to find out whether or not you have pyor rhea. Physicians agree that pyor rhea is often responsible for many bodily ills, including such serious ailments as rheumatism, kidney trouble, chronic dyspepsia and in somnia. Fully eight of ten people have pyorrhea, although . many of them are not aware of its presence. While dental surgeons and chem ists have experimented for years to discover a remedy, for , pyorrhea, only recently has any-real progress been made in combating the dis ease. A new remedy known as "Pyro-form" was perfected only a short time ago, and has already given effective results in hundreds of cases, many of which were con sidered incurable. Users of the preparation claim that it eliminates all traces of pyorrhea within a short time and, in -addition, strengthens the gums and sweetens the breath. Results have been so consistent that "Pyro-form" is now sold on a positive money-back guarantee, so that people suffering- from pyorrhea risk nothing in trying this remedy. "Pyro-form" Is for sale by all lead ing druggists. Those desiring to test the merits of the preparation may send 25c to the Pyro-form Com pany, San Bernardino, Calif., tor a liberal ample." Adv. DIAGRAM GIVES VARIOUS POINTS OF RENDEZVOUS FOR ORGANIZATIONS IN ARMISTICE-DAY PARADE. a OQD -l All units are expected to be In line by forming points for following units) marshal and staff; (3) Seventh V. Oregon; (5) Ninety-sixth division! (6) Grand Army of Republic; (7) Spanish War Veterans; (S) Canadian veterans and veterans of other allied armies; (9) World. War Veterans; (in) Army Nurse corps. Red Cross nurses and disabled veterans in automobiles; (11) Boy Scouts; (12) Daughters of American Revolution; (13) all auxiliaries; (14) uni formed auxiliary forces to the armed forces of the United States during the world war; (15) Knights of Pythias (Dokk band, patrol and drum corps); (10) Chamber of Commerce; (17) Rotary club; (18) Portland Realty board) (19) Women's Realty board. Gin WILL CELEBRATE ARMISTICE DAY PLANS ARE AXIi PREPARED. Warriors to Parade Again and Bugles Elow Roosevelt -Statue to Be Unveiled." ' (Continued From First -Pag? ) ' William F. Woodward, school direc tor, who will make a 15-minute address. Another parade and of a military character will march through the city streets to the statue in the early afternoon in which the veter ans of various wars, patriotic and fraternal organizations will partici pate. - x The parade will move from Fourteenth and Morrison etreets at 1:30 P. M., under command of Colo nel Pegram Whitworth, former bri gade commander of the 91st division in the world war, acting as grand marshal. T. Walter Gillard is in charge of the days programme and a group of military and naval men will be aides to the grand marshal as follows: Colonel Robert McCleve, Major T. W. Burnett, Major A. S. Peake, Lieutenant CommahderR. 'S). Kerr, Captain Paul Hathaway, Cap tain J. P. Schwerin, Captain Vere Paipter, Captain Cicero F. tHogan, Lieutenants Powell, Figman jfnd Anderson. Bands to March. Bands in the column will be the Seventh Infantry, from Vancouver barracks; Oregon National Guard, Knights of Columbus, Elks, Salva tion Army, Dokkies and unattached groups, A reviewing stand will be placed at Sixth and Stark streets, where a. group of military and naval men, headed by Brigadier Generar R. M. Blatchford of Vancou ver, Wash., and Admiral Henry T. Mayo, retired, and Governor Olcott and Mayor Baker will take the salute. Spanish-American war veterans have been named an honor guard and will form a hollow square about the Roosevelt 6tatue, wkh other or ganizations grouped in platoon for mation to the north. On the east and west will be Boy Scouts, facing northward. Dr. Blssett to Speak. Judge Henry E. McGinn will be chairman of the dedicatory exer cises, which are scheduled for 3 o clock. After the invocation ' by Bishop W. O. Shepard, tS United States infantry band will play "The Star-Spangled Banner,"; and.-iChair-man McGinn will read a message from President Harding dedicating the statue to the children of America. The address of the occasion will be made by &r. Clark Bissett of the University of Washington, followed by the singing of a special song written for the unveiling by -Ben Hur Lampman, music by Mrs. Ina Rae Seitz. George Wilber Reed, di rector of music at Jefferson high school, will sing, assisted fay '210 members of the girij' glee club at Jefferson high. Follows then the unveiling, the big flags hiding the bronze drop ping at the pressing of a button bj General John J. Pershing, who was invited to attend in person but found it impossible to do so. . Mr. Pier to Present Statue. Formal presentation of the statue to the city will be made by S. C Pier, city commissioner, and Mayor Baker will accept the gift on be half of Portland's people. 'Bishop Walter Taylor Sumner will pro nounce the benediction. Spanish war veterans, whether members of the local post or not, are asked to meet at the courthouse at 12:30 P. M., where they will fall in line for the parade end later for the dedication ceremonies?.,,.; . Lieutenant - Commander John A. Beckwith has asked all exnavy men to appear in the Armistice day parade in uniform of service blue and white hats. They will gather at Thirteenth and Salmon streets. Portland chapter k the American Red Cross will eerve a special luncneon to disabled ex-service men at the Oregon Ex-service Men's club, 253 West Park street. A Port land woman will meet the expense oi tnis attention. .Mayor Baker issued the following proclamation yesterday calling UDOn all good citizens to honor Armistice day: "In order that Portland may pay full honor to the anniversary of Armistice day and to the millions of men who through loyaltv to home and country, brought about this greatest event of American his tory, all industrial plants and places of business as well as all public institutions are urged to close all day Saturday, November 11, 1922. Also the Tublic is urged to display the American flag from homes and places of business and to participate in the demonstrations arranged for tne day. ..-;- "Armistice day represents the cul mination of the world's greatest struggle, the 'opening of a new era or civilization, the downfall of the world s greatest menace And the- es . WASHINGTON 'I ftLOER ' .TAYLOR D L Z. - JEFFER50K - i2t -li Z 12T 1 P. M. - Numbers on map Indicate (1) Platoon of police: (2) Grand S. infantry (4) National Guard of tablishment of America as the greatest nation among nations. No tribute is too great for the event or Tor the. American manhood that brought U about and, therefore, the people of Portland should arise with that loyalty and spirit that marked the days of the war and make this the greatest celebration of the year." V. S; WAR DEAD HONORED St. Helen's Hall Students Hold Tree Planting Ceremony, ' ' Many alumnae and parents of St. Helen's hall students were present yesterday morning at 11 o'clock at the school, when the annual Armis tice day exercises of the institution were held. Bishop "Walter j Taylor Sumner gave a prayer in commem oration of America's unreturned soldiers and presided at the annual tree-planting ceremony. This custom-has been observed each year at the school since the armistice was signed. Patriotic songs were followed by an allegorical pageant, "The Spirit of Democracy," presented by the senior class in American history. The characters were: Autocracy, Consuelo Hamer; the Spirit of De mocracy, Dorothy Haradon; America, Florence Niles; England, Catherine West; France, Margaret Spencer; Italy, Dorothy Scarbrough; Belgium, Becc Edwards; Serbia, Julia Bradley; Poland, Willetha Rltter; Prophet, Bess Allen; Messen-gsrs, Lilian Lu ders and Hazel Mary Price and Margaret Newbegin; Pages, Donna Jean Truir.bull and Elanie Strow bridge. . . The parts were" well-Taken and the national costumes, flags and patri otic songs brought home to every one present the deep significance of the occasion. Following the pageant, Edna Ellen Bell read "The Stars and Stripes in Flanders." The programme was closed by the national anthem and "My Country, Tis of Thee, sung in unison. : n rn pyi rn -.Vt--i lp Want a quick-and-cool way to V v --iff'V " "j chase thirst away? Simply take Y 1 r k' rj 2 tablespoons of GhirardeHj's V '"f'r-1 ; Chocolate Sauce home-made t t '"'t f toeachglass. Have glass half full - h i '''&& '-"" I IrT"" of shaved ice and fill with cold 1 1 frl'- IIIIttllM milk. Makes a wonderfully cool- - 1 l-t l IWOT inei satisfying drink try it! J llC j 1 , 1 fQ" Thl Choeelatt Sautt U madt this I V"Vi f'jJJ t i laS. wxr: Mix 1 cup sugar with I eup of E " VtWF S,.r !i SS1 'Sf3" ' GhirardcllT s Ground Chocolate. Add , lilViV'nh3, cupboilingwatccHteaspoonsalt, L&alH l''il31Ml and cook 10 minutes or nntil thick. W4cB ' KSSistSS When cold, add 1 teaspoon vanilla. , Store in a tightly covered jar. Thii 'Sttk-r$ PiK, ' . 0. GHIRAR.DELL1 CO. S GHIRARDELLIS C1KFI0US FOB IIS ME IT Motto, Mayor and Mathilde Keep City Upon Map. GERMAN KULTUR RULES Odors, Traffic Menace and Gaudy Flappers and Grand Dames Among Chief Attractions. BY W. P. STRANDBORG. CHICAGO. Nov. 1, (Special.) Now let's gallop around Chicago for a few minutes and see what it is like if anything. . The first things one recalls defi nitely and distinctly as a sore toe about the Windy CTty, are its three famous "Ms," its -motto, its mayor and- its Mathilde. Everybody knows about them, and they're hard to get away trom. First, there is the city's nifty motto, of German extraction. Then there is its more nifty little mayor, "Big Bill" Thompson, who has the same initials as the ex kaiser and who has been accused of having somewhat similar ideas on many subjects. Then there is little Matilda, who has been acquiring a matrimonial bug on the European plan for a year or more, and hasn't got as close to landing in the net as the ex-kaisec has. We hope Mathilde will pardon this odious comparison, but she can't expect to escape notoriety any more than William Hohenzollern can. Sauerkraut Is Everywhere. You see, most everything around Chicago 1 starts off by suggesting something German, and, honestly, you can get sauerkraut seven times a week by walking into every other door you come to. That's right! You get your first whiff of it from the west as you pass through Omaha, and from the east as you flit past Cleveland. O. Chicago seems to specialize in per fumery of various sorts. To the north, there is the aromatic incense of the Lincoln park monkey-house, and on the south side is the attar of stockyards, and in between, right in the heart of town, is the Chicago river which flows back and forth, or used to when it was thin enough to flow at all. Sort of a Hud-nut on one side and Houbigant on the other. To describe the Chicago river, we merejy will say - that it is partly quelque fleurs and partly inconnue, which means just what it says. Chicago Easy of Access. Probably no other city in the world is so easy to approach and get into as Chicago. You can enter it by any one of some 13 or 14 union or grand central stations, and these depots and the city itself were laid out with a great deal of fore thought and care., It must have been so, for the general growpin plans of depots and the downtown district suggests that the landscape gardener who- did the job got his model from the picturesque and in formal arrangements found in a Kansas" village after a cyctone has left i'ts'ialling card. 1 - And several of these depots are quaint. Indeed they look very much as if tthe' railroad companies were using thetn to pay off a bet. Prob ably back in George Washington's time the railroads took an oath that they wouldn't build any new depots in Chicago till Jesse Willard was elected president of Harvard. Any how, they haven't built any new depots and Jesse. Willard is getting pretty old. , ' Then you have three choices for getting into the middle of the pic ture. You can reach the "loop" for about 70 cents by taxioab. This Is 20 cents for the ride and SO cents fon waiting at street crossings. It is 7 cents by streetcar and about 7 minutes' hoofing it. The traffic congestion is so bad in Chicago that when a taxicab driver gets a call from a depot he goes in and eats lunch before he goes after his fare, for he is likely to get caught in a traffic swirl and find himself over in Hammond, Ind., or Racine. Wis. At once you arrive .- in Chicago and you begin to puzzle yourself about what you are going to do to kill time now that you have safely passed through all the perilous pre liminaries. For 50 miles around Chicago there are huge poster ad vertisements signed by Burgomaster Thompson which read "Spend a week in Chicago." . Information Given Cheerfully. But it doesn't tell you how to do it. Some pickle you're in. You walk up to the information desk at the hotel and say to the clerk: "I have been invited to spend a week here in Chicago. Can you tell me what's going on?" "Yep," he says, cheerful like, "Bill- Thompson has just sued the Chi cago Tribune for another $5,000,0-00 damages. Harold McCormick has got married and Mathilde i3 getting" that- way and I know where you can get some good hootch and there's a swell little crap gams coming off here tonight." We didn't know they called it an event any more when Thompson sued the Tribune, but if he could collect one German mark for every time the Tribune libeled him, he could lend the allies enough to pay their war debts and have 8,000,000 marks left for a wedding present for anybody in Doom that he wanted to send it to. Pedestrian Not Considered. The pedestrian receives absolutely no consideration whatever in the streets of Chicago. He can sink or swim, survive or perish or move out of town so far as the traffic officers are concerned. The most painful experience in the Windy city is to find a city directory and then try to find a correct name and address in it after you get the dirty, old tome. Liquor, of good and bad repute, is served and sold and drank in hun dreds of eating places and In caba rets, and it takes no display of remarkable powers of observation to get wise to what is going on. Chicago women go to greater ex tremes and show poorer taste tlian probably any other city of great isize in the country, and they seem to have the idea that the way to doll up is to imitate a farmer loading hay, smear on everything you ean make stick, and some of the gaudy ,and giddy yoqng flappers look as conspicuous as a dollar's worth of mustard in a dish of ice cream. Sosie of the grand dames visible prowling along the boulevards on dress- display only need to carry a spear and they could get a job in the fascistl army. Lebanon to Observe Day. ' LEBANON, Or., Nov. 10. (Spe cial.) Every business house in Lebanon will be closed all day to morrow. Armistice day. No celebra tion is to be held here, and the people will visit other places where some kind of entertainment will be offered. The gridiron fans in large numbers will go to Eugene to see the home-coming football gayie be tween Oregon and Washington State college in their annual Clash. i A few will follow the Lebanon high school team to Cottage Grove, where they meet the team from that city in a morning game. j Oil Suit Demurrer Allowed. SALEM. Or., Nov. 10. (Special.) Judge Bingham today allowed a de murrer of the Associated Oil com pany to the complaint of the city of Portland assailing the constitution ality of the gasoline law. The de murrer was allowed in order that the case may be appealed to the su preme court for final determination without unnecessary delay. The city of Portland started the suit to re strain the secretary of state from collect'ng the tax. Read The Oregonian classified ads. ---- d?mi it- ' v - itfeVT'l c c & k - va . Luxurious CECIL Xtale of Paris and Ne TEAGUE d L - M . at tne Wurlitzer in an Ravtshmg M joili, With MlSS Young's ffifon Wco'ScSri UOWnS ' . .. - . . tomorrow at 1:30 P. M. exquisite beauty at won- programme: Gorgeous I jerful advantage as the 1 bJ,usKa!fua.r,i?in?52 C !;-, ff . i 1 honor of Armistice Day. e" 8 I ' beautiful woman of so- I c.r.,?fJA?.n,.Kr-.tai.r 1 .j i l' i B Chu Chin Chow. .Norton Splendid Cast i ciety who loved one man I o'v..'..NSa in Paris and married an- I other in New York. COMEDY 'NEWS WEEKLY is - Direction i ii (, of Jensen and yon jjerberg isi ur m