The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current, April 11, 1920, Section One, Page 23, Image 23

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    THE SUNDAY OREGONIAX. PORTLAND, APRIL 11, 102O
23.
COMMUNITY GLASSES
GIVE ATHLETIC SHOW
Culture Are Shown.
Rhine until living conditions improve
in Coblenx. it wu announced recently
in a war department cable from
j Washington. Coblenx 1b one of the
most crowded cities of Europe, being
headquarters of the inter -allied
Rhineland high commission in addi
1 tion to the seat of command of the
15.000 United States troops stationed
I in the bridgehead area.
It is estimated that there are 3"p
Ptlf rianrOC anrl Phvciral I Proximately 200 American officers
rUlK UHIlf,e6 dna rnySICaiwUh thelr wtves in Coblenz, many
I officers having also brought over
their children and servants. In nu
merous cases an American family and
a German family are quartered in the
same house or apartment, using the
same kitchen. There is scarcely a
German family in Cobleni which has
not one or more allied soldiers or
members of the Rhineland commis
sion billeted in their home.
LARGE CROWD ATTENDS
Exhibition in Auditorial Partic
ipated In by Pupils and Moth
ers Children Make Hit.
STRIKERS IN FIIIE WIN
National Council Grants Every De
mand ATter "Mad Poet"
Advises Concessions.
TRIEST, April 10. The general
strike at Flume has been settled.
Work was resumed Friday morning.
The national council granted all the
demands of the strikers, Gabriele
d'Annunslo interceded on behalf of
the strikers and advised this action
be taken.
- i
FIUME, April 10. The strike lead
ers asserted that they were in
sistent on having Gabriele d'An
nunzio leave Kiume. They said that
if they were unsuccessful locally, the
strike would spread to Triest and then
to Milan and threaten Italy.
The workers demanded normal food
rations which they said were impos
sible because of the partial blockade.
1 1 . . e ... v u x-; I mere is no cuiuiiiuiiiji.iuii mi i " '
followers of Bacchus, the Mne . , . , . , , . . . . , .
today, the last train carrying away
many persons who did not desire to
face the threatened uprisings.
The national council, which is under
the thumb of D'Annunsio. is now be
set by the dilemma of ousting the poet
by obeying the strikers or of obeying
D'Annunzio and continuing the ration
ing of the strikers.
While the employes of the local
newspapers have joined in the general
strike, even the poet's own organs
have failed to publish. D'Annunsio
now is faced with a disagreement
among the troops over monarchist
and republican feuds.
This coupled with the attitude of
the working groups, places him in the
most serious situation since his oc
cupation of Flume.
A gymnasium exhibition reflective
of the excellent training in athletics
and folk dances and general educa
tional physical culture among pupils
In the grade schools, and In the com
munity houses, was given Friday
night at the public auditorium before
a-capacity audience. The first half of
the exhibition consisted of 12 spe
cialties, participated In by 68S pu
pils, and the last half of the enter
tainment was in the nature of an
aesthetic dance, arranged and di
rected by Alta Eastham Travis, in
which several dozen talented little
girls depicted in pantomime a pic
turesque legend In a woodland set
time. In this dance arrangement Bessie
Carr in an interpretation dance as
the Gpddess of the Flame, Althea
Dwycr as the Spirit of Life, and a
group of woe little maids as wood
nymphs, attracted especial attention
for their graces and natural methods.
Other dance specinlties embraced
a solo by Carolyn Whitney as Pan,
six
Muses, a trio of vestal virgins, and
Diana interpretation by Mrs. Travis.
In the entry, which preceded the pro
gramme, the entire assemblage of
classes was grouped attractively on
the stage, the smaller children, some
of whom were only 3 years old, seated
on mats at the front of the stage and
at the back of the stage the women's
classes, comprised of mothers and
other adult women in the school dis
tricts who take personal activity in
gymnasium work.
ursery Rhyme Clamber Ciivenl"
Thirty - five little boy and girl
kindergarteners from thu Sellwood
and Peninsula schools gave a nursery
rhyme number, with one wee maid
as "Mother Goose." This was fol
lowed by 73 junior girls from the
Sellwood and Peninsula schools in a
series of diverting games. Under
direction of Miss Jewell Tozier. a
group of 70 women from the Clinton
Kelly, Mount Tabur, Kerns and Sun
nyslde community schools gave a very
finished and graceful wand drill.
Heavy apparatus was used in an ex
cellent demonstration in pyramid and
mat exercises by 42 lads from Penin
sula, and the games later by 20 junior
boys from Sellwood and Peninsula
were another goad number.
Under the direction of Mrs. Travis,
- a scries of American country dances
was offered attractively by 8 women
from the community classes at Glen-
haven. Couch, Highland, Eliot and
Franklin high. Another noteworthy
community class number was ar
ranged by Miss Edna Metcalf in the
form of a free-hand drill, and par
ticipated in by 80 women from Sell
wood. Arleta. Richmond, Vernon and
Peninsula. The intermediate and high
school girls, numbering 70, demon
strated grace and agility with ap
paratus, and the horse jumping by 52
junior boys from Sellwood and Penin
sula proved interesting.
Dumb nell Drill Shown.
Under direction of Miss Edna Agler,
a group of 65 women of the Wood
stock, Montavilla and St. Johns, com
hunlty houses gave a notable exhi
bition In dumb bell drill. A march
by nearly 100 women from Washing
ton, Peninsula one and two, was one
of the most effective and enthusi
astically applauded offerings In the
series. The exhibition was under the
auspices of the bureau of parks, and
directed by W. 11. Knapp and the
following assistants:
Jow el Tozier, l'eninsula'community house,
Clinton Kelly; Mrs. Aita Travis, Peninsula
community house. Highland; dna Metealf,
Kellwuotl enmmiiuity house, Washington
hi(?h: Kdiiii. .i;ler. Sellwood community
house. Mount Tabor; Kultcrt Oesell. Pen
insula community house: feMwiird ilaniia,
Sellwood rominunily house; Airs. V. H.
Khmpp. Vernon. Arleta and Wichmond;
D o r ii I li y Klliott. Wonlsloek , hlmma
Thompson. I'ellinsulH: Mrs. I. Ceniro,
Kt-,nh ' in hiKh: Madeline Steffen, Couch;
Coal W'plnier. St. Johns: Von Sella Smith,
MontavlllR- school; Esther Weinstoek,
Kerns sehool; Ilt-ssfc Dulln, Sunnyside
aehool; Klsie Peterson, tileuhaven school;
lAura Pnyton. Kllot sehool.
WALKOUT
QUKST
SETTLED AT RE
OF D'AXMXZIO.
KANSAS COAL CHIEF
IS SENT TO JAIL
Miner
Leader Confined Until
He Will Testify.
H0WAT FIRM IN REFUSAL
Testimony Before Court of Indus
trial Relations Musi Be Given
Before Men Are Released.
one-armed captive who Is alleged to
have fought desperately. The pris
oner was Barney Armstrong, arrested j
at Second and Couch streets by Pa
trolmen Taylor and Miller on a
charge of drunkenness.
Patrolmen Riley and Nelson, in
charge of the patrol wagon, had just
started to jail when the prisoner,
according to their story, made a dash
for liberty. Riley signaled for the
auto to stop, and struggled with
Armstrong until Nelson came to his
aid.
Together they threw the prisoner
on the floor of the auto and snapped
a handcuff on one wrist. They pulled
Armstrong's other arm to the proper
position and said they had just
snapped tne second cuii in posi
tion and thought they had the
captive secure when he dealt
them a series of blows with
the gloved stump of his right hand,
which had been cut off at the wrist.
Finding that the handcuffs would not
work. Patrolman Riley sat on the
prisoner's chest until they reached
the police station.
I , 1 TTintirffr nf tf5tialttt fr
i " ' c I
18ft AIMJAL
IS. M. J. BARNARD DIES
PITTSBURG, Kan., April 10. Alex
ander Howat. president of the Kan
sas coal miners, was sentenced to jail
for contempt of court by Judge An
drew J. Curran of the Crawford coun
ty district court Friday. '
The judge sentenced Howat and
three associate union officials to the
county jail until such time as they
will testify before the Kansas court
of industrial relations.
Under the order of Judge Curran.
Howat and the other officials'wlll b
taken to the county Jail at Girard im
mediately. Four mines of the district were idle
Friday morning an account .of the
Howat hearing, it was announced at
the headquarters of the operators.
Howat Makes Staleaaent.
Howat. shortly after he reached his
office, made this statement:
"Our position is unchanged. "We
stand where we stood. We refuse to
testify before this court because wa
do not recognize the court. It is an
institution founded to enslave the
working man."
Howat was found guilty of con
tempt for refusing to obey an order
of Judge Curran issued Tuesday that
he appear with four other officers of
the United Mine Workers of America
of the Kansas district and testify in
the investigation of the coal mining
industry now being conducted by the
Kansas court of industrial relations
here. In addition to Howat, Judge
Curran also found August Dorchy.
vice-president: Thomas Harvey, sec
retary-treasurer. . and Robert f OBter,
district auditor, guilty and gave them
the same sentence he gave Howat.
Induxtrlal I,itw Atlsrkfd.
Counsel for the miners in an amend
ed answer filed this morning made
numerous attacks on the Kansas in
dustrial court law. alleging that it
violated not only the Kansas bill of
rights and constitution, but that it
violated" the federal constitution.
An undersheriff started with Howat
and the other officials to the county
jail at Girard at 12:30 o'clock.
WOMAN,
9.
SUCCUMBS IN
DOWNTOWN CAFKTliRIA.
Wife of Clerk in Ludd & Tilton
Bank Succumbs to Apoplexy.
Kelutlves Identify Body.
Mrs. Aiattie J. Barnard, 59, wife of
Charles J. Barnard, a clerk in the
Ladd & Tilton bank, died of apoplexy
at 5:10 P. M. Friday in a cafeteria
at 145 Third street. The body was
not identified until Mr. Barnard tele
phoned the police notification of his
wife's absence. The police recognized
the description or Mrs. Barnard as
that of the dead woman, and relatives
later identified the body positively.
Mrs. Barnard entered the restaurant
and asked if she might sit down as
she was ill. One of the employes
went after a glass of water, but she
had lost consciousness before the
drink arrived. An interne from the
emergency hospital was called, and
he pronounced her dead. The body
was taken to the morgue.
Mrs. Barnard was born In Illinois.
She had been a resident of Portland
for 15 years. She is survived by her
widower, one daughter, Mrs. Laura
10. Sprause, 4936 Seventy-third street
southeast. and four step-children.
Funeral arrangements have not been
completed. Her home was at 7106
Fifty-first avenue southeast.
UNREST CAUSE IS ARGUED
rtOTAIUANS HEAR, BOTH LA
BOR ANI CAPITAL VIEWS.
IRISH OUTRAGES GO ON
VIO
,KXCK REPORTED IN MANY
PARTS Of ISLAND.
Barracks Burued Down, Three Con
stables Shot and Mail Van
Held Up and Robbed.
LONDON. April 10. Further out
rages In different parts of Ireland
Here reported Friday. A vacated po
lice barracks at Blaekroy, outside the
Limerick boundary, was burned down.
Four men arrested under the defense
ot tne realm act were taken to Cork.
At Nemagh. Tipperary, a report
says three constables were shot while
riding bicycles from Hearcross to
Newport.
It is said that one of the constables
n as killed, another fatally injured
and the third badly wounded.
A mail van froml'avan to Arva was
held up and more than 11,000 repre
senting old age pension money stolen.
The I'rotestant cathedral at Ross
Carbery was entered and the statue of
the late Lord Carbery, valued at $1000,
,was damaged beyond repair.
CASH BONUS IS. OPPOSED
Idaho Legion Tables Resolution
Asking Legislation.
TWIN FALLS, Idaho, April 10. The
Idaho department of the American
Legion definitely placed itself on
record aa opposed to a cash bonus
when the state convention in session
here tabled a resolution calling for
the passing of a bonus bill by the
next legislature. The convention fav
ored the extension of preferential
rights to service men and the Carey
act reclamation law.
Kellogg was selected a the next
meeting place. Leo F. Bracken of
Twin Falls was named commander,
while M. F. Albert ot Paytte, who
lost both legs in France, was selected
as adjutant. The state headquarters
will bo in Twin Falls. The conven
tion adjourned tonight.
GIRARD. Kan.. April 10. Whatever
the next move of officers of district
14, United Mine Workers of America,
may be, it will be directed toward
forcing Governor Henry J. Allen to
"make good on his Industrial court
law he has talked so much about, or
to fail," Alexander Howat, president
of the district, said late last night in
the Crawford county Jail.
Appeal Not Vet Decided.
"1 do not know whether we shall
appeal this case to the supreme
court." Howat said. "That is a matter
in which we will be guided by our at
torney. "There Is another way to bring this
thing to a showdown. That other way
is a strike of the miners of the dis
trict. "The workers of Kansas are, not
going to submit to this law. It isn't
law; it's an outrage."
Howat, in a statement to the press,
said, in part:
"This industrial-court law is in
tended to enslave the working class
of this state and to destroy organized
labor and Is intended to put the mine
workers and other classes of labor
back where they were years ago be
fore we had an organisation.
Labor Rights Asserted.
"The mine workers of district No.
14 were compelled to strike for four
years in order to compel the coal op
erators in this state to recognize our
right to belong to a labor organiza
tion. "I am determined that the mine
workers of this district shall never
submit to this form of slavery which
is provided for in the court of indus
trial relations. We have committed
no crime of any kind. We are put in
jail merely because we refuse to tell
three corporation lawyers something
about mining business in this state.
"We expect to remain In jail indef
initely from present indications."
Selfishness to Blame, Declares Mr.
Grirnth Nelson Pike Dis
cusses Employes' Side.
"The strongest of all the feelings
of human nature is the underlying
cause of the present-day spirit of un
rest," said Franklin T. Griffith of the
Portland Railway. Light & Power
company Friday night, addressing a
meeting of the Rotary club at the
Multnomah hotel. "It is selfishness,"
he said, "which has helped produce
ideas in direct opposition to all
American ideals. The man who says
that he has not a fair hance along
with other men is laboring under a
delusion that effort is not the po'tent
factor in individual success and that
eventually those who have can in
some way be compelled to give to
those who have not.
'"In reality, as long as any man!
thinks that anything can be acquired
without effort it will be impossible
for him to advance. What we need
is a broader basis of understanding:
a code of morals that will apply
equally to both stdes, and a realiza
tion that after all 'honesty is the
best policy.1 "
Nelson Pike, representing the em
ployes' side of the subject, appealed
for a different viewpoint in the re
lation between capital and labor.
"The employer," he said, "may often
refer to this spirit of unrest as Imag
inary. But. supposing It is. Its effect
is nevertheless the same and must be
dealt with in some, way sooner or
later." The subject was later thrown
open for general discussion and Will
iam Ball spoke of covetousness as
humanity's besetting sin. Walter
Jenkins spoke briefly on the Idea of
community service and led the club
in a number of songs. '
hi
Misses', Children's and BIG GIRLS'
Shoes and all kinds of spring Pumps and
Oxfords.
OF
BOYS Scouts', fishing. Outing and
Dress Shoes very reasonable.
eMaitole IFoottwesiir
We have been serving the people of Portland for 18 years in our line, and they appreciate our
good shoes and up-to-date styles, at moderate prices.
Nobody can sell shoes with less profit than we do. Low rent and small overhead expense enables
us to keep prices at the lowest notch, on shoes which will wear and hold their shape.
Here are some real shoes at special prices. Look at our windows and judge for yourself. You
know values.
one Entire window of pumps and oxfords
One-eye Southern Tie, in
brown or black, hand
turned covered heel. Reg
ular $12.50, special price
$9.85
MEN'S TAN CRESCO calf,
English, two full soles,
blucher cut, FREAK toe.
Regular
$17.00.
Special. ,
' yv ' w
BETSY Colonial One of
the very newest things.
Brown or black. Regular
$12.50, special
$9.85
$11.70
One EYE spark tie, hand turned sole, covered
heel, high arch, close fitting ankle; long,
slender last. Regular $13.50.
Special Price
MEN'S TAN ARISTO KID
Shoes, blucher, single sole.
Regular
$14.00.
Special. .
$11.70
MRS. LILLIAN COHEX SCD
DE.NU', LOSES MIND.
SUGAR PRICE IS REFUSED
PKKSIDKXT M EN' OCA L ASSKRTS
MARKKT TOO CX' STEADY.
Portland Visitor In San Francisco
Shrieks of Horrors Seen
Willie in France.
SAN FRANCISCO, Cal.. April 10.
(Special.) Horrors she said she had
witnessed ir- the war zone were
shrieked by Mrs. Lillian Cohen, 25,
who registered at the Sommerton ho
tel in Geary street two days ago from
Portland, Or., and who went violently
insane in her apartments Friday aft
ernoon. Attendants at the hotel fought
for more than half an hour to over
come her before the police were called.
She was taken to the detention hospi
tal for observation and the Portland
police have been asked to locate her
relatives.
Two days ago Mrs. Cohen, who
dressed stylishly, came to the Som
merton. She gave no explanation of
her presence in this city other than
to say that she was here on a visit
from Portland. According to Bert
Townsend, manager, Mrs. Cohen did
not attract unusual attention until
today, when her screams were heard
from the apartment on the fourth
floor. Attendants rushed Into the
r.oom and found the woman tearing
her clothings and screaming about
sights she had witnessed In France.
Jewels valued at more than 13000
were found o nMrs. Cohen when
searched at the hospital.
E: A. GENESTE ACQUITTED
Jury Absolves ex-Porlland Man
of Robbery Charge.
BISUI,1XG-HAM, -Wash.. April in.
(Special.) Klmon A. Oeneste of Fri
day Harbor, Wash., formerly of Port
land, was acquitted here last night by
& Jury In federal court of the charge
j of robbing the United Stages cua
i toms office at Friday Harbor, October
! 2ti, last. The jury was out one hour.
The case had been on trial here since
Tuesday.
The governments case was con
ducted by Kobert C. Saunders, dis
trict attorney. Clarence Ij. Iteames
of Portland, formerly special district
attorney, was counsel for the defendant.
HOPS GO UP FOUR CENTS
All Records Broken in Market at
Santa Rosa, Cal.
SANTA ROSA. Cal., April 9. (Spe-.
eiai.) The local hop market jumped
cents Friday morning and broke all
records for this locality when George
A. Proctor, well-known local dealer,
purchased a quantity, of bales at 75
cents a pound, the highest price ever
paid for futures in the history of the
local market.
Growers here are holding stocks
Tory firmly, as they believe further
advances are aure to come.
Senator McNary Uets Reply to Ca
blegram Sent Willi View of
Halting Profiteering.
WASHINGTON. April 10. Because
of the uncertain conditions in the
Cuban sugar Industry, it would not be
possible to fix a price for the crop.
President Menocal said in a cable
gram yesterday to Senator McNary,
republican of Oregon.
Senator McNury cabled the presi
dent .several days ago that Cuban raw
sugar was bringing a hundred
pounds in New York and that, in view
of the prices charged consumers here,
he feared "much profiteering is being
done at the expense of the Cuban pro
ducers and the American consomers,"
The president of Cuba said the April
price for Cuban sugar was $13.84 a
hundred pounds and that the market
was unsteady.
GERMANS BUILD AIRSHIPS
Huge Machines Tried Successfully
Over Lake Constance.
GENEVA. April 10. (By the Asso
ciated Press.) The Germans are
working feverishly to construct giant
commercial and passenger airships
and airplanes, according to a report
from Romar.shorn. The first trials
of two monster machines were suc
cessfully held Thursday above Lake
Constance.
The airship Nordstern. surpassing
tne .eppeun noneusee in size, ca
pacity and power, flew for a half
hour around the lake with a crew of
seven men. At the same time a new
giant hydroairplane, whose motors
totaled 1000 horsepower, made aerial
trips with 21 passengers.
The Germans are concealing the re
sult of the trials.
MEN'S BROGUE OXFORD, TAN,
wing tip, 1VVU lull soles, semi-
Lnrrhsh. Regu
lar ?14.50.
Special
' lull ouics, ocuii-
$12.35
$9.85
MEN'S TAN OR MAHOGANY
calf, BUI LT-1N-ARCII, combination
lasts, medium
toe. Reg-ular
$14.00. Special
$11.65
flit ' "
MEN'S TAN LOTUS Side Eng
lish, heavy sin-rtW tj f
gle sole. Regular Tra J J 1 I
$10.00. Special..' M w
MEN'S TAN MAHOGANY calf, blucher,
medium toe, half double
sole. Regular $11.00.
Special
$8.70
M i;-- v. i
MEN'S two full soles, mahogany calf, brass eyelets and hooks,
semi-English and other lasts; regular $15.50. On fiQ Of?
sale for a few days 'only at tDI.Ot)
MEN'S black shoes, single soles, all GOODYEAR WELTS,
VICI KID or GUNMETAL; $10.00 and $12.00 val- &n qr
ues. On sale for a few days only at.' DV)OtJ
:i
REPAIRING WHY PAY MORE?
THE BEST SOLES FOR OREGON
PANCO FIBER HALF SOLES
Absolutely guaranteed to wear longer
than the best leather anrj are waterproof.
Men's $1.35; Ladies', $1.1 0; sewed on.
LADIES'
Best Oak Vi Soles $1.25
Rubber Heels 30
Leather Heels, fixed 3o
MEN'S
Best Oak 1s Soles $1.50
Rubber Heels 3o
Best Boys' i Soles $1.25
149-131 Fourth Street
Ithoe CO.
HOES
Next to Honeyman1 Hdw. Co.
I. w. rays DEAD
OIKLCTOK Of PORTLAND BANK
DIKS IX SAX FRANCISCO.
C0BLENZ JS CROWDED
American Offecrs to Be Kefuscd
Company of Wives.
AMERICAN HEADQUARTERS, Co
Bleni, Germany. No more American
et'ficcrn ure to be permitted to bring;
their wives from America to the
PRINCE TO SEE CANAL
Knglish Heir to Visit British West
Indies on Return.
OTTAWA, April 10. The prince of
Wales, "now on his way to Australia,
will return to England, via Panama,
in order to visit the chief British
islands of the West Indies, Lieutenant-Colonel
E W. M. Griggr, his mili
tary secretary, informed the Cana
dian tress last night.
The prince. Lieutenant - Colonel
uris- said, regretted that he wan un
able to visit Canada on his return
journey this year, but said "he means
to visit Canada again at the first opportunity."
SHIPPING SHARE PROMISED
mously in agreement that It is im
possible to accept different manda
tories for various parts of the Arab
territory.
Apparently they are inclined to
Great Britain as the only possible
tsingre mandatory in case the United
States declines to participate in near
eastern affairs.
Czeciio Troop Move to Starl.
VANCOUVER, B. 'C, April 10. The
movement of Czecho-Slovak troops
throush Vancouver from Vladivostok
will begin the first week in May with
the arrival of the steamer , Ixion, a
London dispatch received yesterday
says.
TWO PARTIES CO-OPERATE
Xortli Dakota Voters Devise Plan
Against Xon-Partisans.
FARGO, N. X., April lo'. A special
committee of the North Dakota In-'
dependent Voters' association meeting
here Thursday night with committees
of republicans and democrats formu
lated a plan of action for opposing
the Non-Partisan league at the pri
mary election June 30.
and democratic state conventions be'of ladinS show freight charges on the
held on the same day in the same city
for the forming of party tickets and
that both parties merge on candidates
lor me legislature. - inai action as
to the date and other details will be
taken later.
Gary Sajs Steel Subsidiaries Will
Bar Discrimination.
WASHINGTON. April 10. Assur
ances that hereafter there will be no
ground for complaint against United
States Steel corporation subsidiaries,
that American vessels were being dis
criminated against in shipment from
the Pacific coast, were given the
shipping board Friday by Judge Gary
of the steel corporation.
Chairman Benson of the board re
cently asked the officers of the Steel
Products company and the Illinois
Steel company if those concerns were
discriminating against American ves
sels on the Pacific coast because of
the requirement that - through bills
POLICEMEN IN QUANDARY
Haudcurring- Order Baffles When
Prisoner Has Only One Arm.
Recent orders to the police to the
effect that all unruly prisoners should
be handcuffed on the journey to jail
last night placed the patrolmen in a
quandary regarding the disposal of a
water.
NEWBERRY PROBE LOOMS
Senate Elections Committee De
cides on Investigation.
WASHINGTON. April 10. The sen
ate elections committee has ordered
a full and immediate investigation of
the Ford-Newberry election by the
sub-committee of which Senator
Watson, republican, Indiana, is chair
man. The sub-committee will be appoint
ed for the purpose of recounting the
ballots cast in Michigan for both
candidates.
Career of Prominent California
Banker Kn.dcd by Shock Caused
by His Son's Illness.
SAN FRANCISCO. April 10. I. W.
Hellman. president of the Wells-Fargo-Nevada
National bank, direct
or of the United States National
bank of I'ortlnnd. Or., and one of the
most prominent bankers in Califor
nia, died here Friday at the Adler
sanitarium, where his son, I. W. Hell
man Jr.. president of the Union
Trust' company, is critically ill.
Hellman suffered a collapse follow
ing the taking of his son to the sani
tarium and failed to rally.
Isatas W. Hellman was- born Octo
ber 3. 1843. in Keckendorf. Bavaria,
and was educated In the public schools
of Germany and the College of Mark-
breit, Bavaria. He camo to the United
States in 1859, his first employment
being that of a clerk in a Ios An
geles dryood store. At the time of
his death he was president or ine
Farmers' & Merchants National Dana
in Los Angeles, which had evolved
from the banking firm of Hellman.
Temple & Co. He moved to San rran
clsco In 19U1 and reorganized the old
Nevada National bank, the Institution
later becoming the Wells-Fargo-e-vada
National bank.
Hellman was one of the founders
of the Congregation B'nal . B'rlth in
L,os Angeles and was a prominent
figure in Jewish charities.
FRENCH IDEA QUESTIONED
Arabs Declared Apparently In
clined to British Mandatory.
DAMASCUS, via Constantinople.
April 7. tBy the Associated Press.)
Reports emanating from certain
French officials to the effect that the
itah, ira anxious to effect an under
standing with France and arrange for
a French mandate seemingly are not
borne out bv statements of Prince
Feisal. the recently-appointed king,
GIRL BURGLAR ESCAPES
Several Homes Pillaged, but Cul
prit Xot Yet Caught.
A girl burglar has pillaged several
homes in the neighborhood of 234
East Thirty-seventh street, accord
ing to a report to the police Friday
night by Mrs. G. S. I'enn. who lives
at that address. Mrs. Penn said the
girl entered her home Friday and
stole J- from a purse, making her es
cape as Mrs. I'enn entered' the house
from the garden.
Daylight burglars also have broken
into a house at 5616 Eighty-sixth ave
nue southeast on several occasions
recently, according to a report Friday
night. The residents asked the police
to keep watch on the house.
ADRIATIC PACT DENIED
Serbia Says No Aifreement Reached
on Port Assignment.
PARIS. April 10. Denial is made by
the Serbian legation here of the state
ment that an agreement has been
reached on the Adriatic Question.
A Geneva dispatch on April 8 gave
a telegram from Trieste as author
ity for the statement that the Italo-
Jugo-Slav commission which had been
in consultation regarding an Adriatic
settlement had reached an agreement
under which Italy was the obtain
sovereignty over Flume.
TRAINING PROBE URGED
Legion Committee Asks Further
Investigation by Congress.
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind.. April 10. Rec
ommendation that the congressional
investigation of the federal board for
vocational education now in progress
In Washington be continued and ti-
i i lenuca were inaut: nuy uj a epccidi
utirf other officials of the newly-ere-1 committee of the American Legion
ated Syrian kingdom, who are unaol- Among the members of the commit
tee is Lemuel Bollea of Seattle. Wash.,
national adjutant.
"The prime object of this commit
tee Is not criticism, but" constructive
performance." said Mr. Holies. "Offi
cial figures reveal that mora than
209.000 applications have been made
to the hoard by former service men
who have been disabled. In addition; :
there are about 18,000 seriously
wounded or afflicted men still In has-
pitals. We estimate the total of mert "
who will require vocational re-edu"'
cation to fit them anew for gainful -occupations
in life to be about 120,-"
oon."
A SURE CURE
"When a widower begins to wonder whether she will think h
is too old for her he ceases to complain about his lumbago."
But the man who gets up in the morning all out of sorts
with lame back, stiff limbs, a dull "achy" head, better look out for
himself maybe his kidneys are to blame.
Swollen hands, ankles, feet are due to a dropsical condition,
often caused by disordered kidneys. Naturally when the kidneys
are deranged the blood is filled with poisonous waste matter, which
settles in the feet, ankles and wrists; or under the eyes in bag-like"
formations. v?
As a remedy for those easily recognized symptoms of inflam
mation caused by uric acid as scalding urine, backache and fre"
quent urination, as well as sediment in the urinei, or if uric acid
in the blood has caused rheumatism, lumbago, sciatica, gout, it is
simply wonderful how quickly An-u-ric acts; the pains and stiff-.
ness rapidly disappear, for Anuric (anti-uric-acid) is many times"
more potent than lithia and often eliminates uric acid as hot water
melts sugar.
Anuric is a recent scientific discovery by Doctor Pierce of
the Invalids' Hotel in Buffalo, N. Y. Send ten cents there tor
trial package of Anuric.
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