The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current, June 06, 1920, Section One, Page 17, Image 17

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    THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, rORTLAXD, JUNE G. 1920
17.
CONGRESS
ADJOURNS
UNTIL DECEMBER pas&S
WIBIIb Wh.Wl.lll Wkll Wmany of the special -war-t
Session Closes Without Usual
Hectic Rush.
SENATE IGNORES BUDGET
Hons Cleans Up Work Early and
Recesses Twice While Waiting
Possible Senate Legislation.
oluttons. The former adopted -230
resolutions - not requiring house ac
tion and the house adopted about the
same number not needing senate ac
tion,
ter power
a "pocket
repealing
special "war-time laws
and to a number of other minor meas
ures.
The postal pay increase bill, under
which postoffiee employes will re
ceive $33,000,000 additional salary
next year and more thereafter, was
signed by President Wilson.
The president devoted practically
his entire time today to signing bills.
Measures approved included the
annual naval, sundry civil, diplo
matic, and consular and District of
Columbia appropriation bills, the in
dustrial vocational rehabilitation
measure, the bill permitting govern
ment owned radio stations to handle
private and press messages, an
amendment to the national defense
act, and the army appropriation bill.
The president signed the merchant
marine bill.
BENDER GIRL IMPROVING
"WASHINGTON, June 5. The slxty
ixth congress ended its second ses
sion today, adjourning sine die at 4
P. M. Unless a grave emergency
arises which makes necessary a spe
cial session, it will not meet again
until December 6.
The close of the session was marked
by none of the hectic rush that gen
erally attends a getaway of congress.
but there was the usual applauding
and cheering in - tho house after
Sneaker GiUetfs gavel had released
the members for the first long vaca
tion since the United States entered
the war.
The house cleaned up its work
early and twice recessed to await
possible senate action on pending
measures. The senate remained in
continuous session. As to the result
of a filibnster the bill to establish a
national budget syttm failed of pas
sage.
Mondell Praises Cosre.
Final sessions of both houses passed
without the plethora of political
speeches which had been expected
Just at the finish in the house. Rep
resentative Mondell of Wyoming, the
renublican leader, delivered an ad
dress praising congress for the work
accomplished. Representative oar
rett democrat, Tennessee, replied
that this congress had been a "humit
latlng failure."
President Wilson's criticism of con.
Kress in his telegram to the heads of
the brotherhoods passed without com
merit in either house
Practically the only action by the
house during the day was to pass the
budget bill after amending it to meet
the president's objection that it took
from the executive authority to re
move the comptroller-general and as
sistant comptroller-general.
Tlepublican leaders abandoned their
plan to call for a vote on the resolu
tion refusing President Wilson's re
quest for authority to accept a man
date over Armenia.
The exodus of senators and repre
cntatives began almost immediately
Many republicans are heading for the
Chicago convention. Most of the dem
ocrats will return home to await the
time for going to San Francisco for
their party convention there.
House in Restless Mood.
The house was in a restless-mood
throughout the day and efforts of
many members to have taken' up spe
cial bills in which they were inter
ested failed. In the last half hour the
house settled down to give close at
tention to the addresses of Repre
sentative Mondell and Representative
Garrett.
Mr. Mondell declared that this con
cress in its two sessions had made a j
saving of $2,374,460,817.
Eight appropriation bills that passed
the house in the sixty-fifth congress
but failed in the senate filibuster were
reduced $940,510,598, Mr. Mondell said,
and the estimates submitted by the
government department for the next
fiscal year were reduced by $1,433,
850, 21S.
Several laws were cited by Mr.
Mondell as "constituting a record un
equaled in American history." He in
cluded the transportation act, the
woman suffrage amendment, the mer
chant marine bill, the mineral land
leasing bill, the water power act, the
civil service retirement measure, the
Volstead prohibition enforcement law.
the extension of the war-time food
control act to punish profiteering,
the repeal of practically all war laws
and other measures.
Republicans Are Criticfated.
Referring to the republican ap
plause which followed Mr. Mondell's
speech, Mr. Garrett said the repub
lican leader had spoken to "the only
audience in the United States where
his speech could receive applause."
Turning to the republican side, Mr.
Garrett continued: "You seldom
paused in tho midst of doing nothing
cept to do something worse. '
Declaring that this congress had
en an absolute humiliating and
painful feature," Mr. Garrett said no
new tax laws except "some bunk pop
gun measures" had been passed and
that the reduction of estimates which
the republicans called savings had
been made by every congress in the
last 2o years.
The session of congress which end
ed today began December 1.
Important legislation enacted in
eluded:
The army reorganization bill pro
viding for a peace time army of
S3 , 000 officers and men, a national
guard and a reserve force.
The transportation act designed to
assist the railroads over the period
immediately following their return
to private control, last March 1.
The oil leasing bill by which thou
sands of acres of oil and ininera
lands in the west and south were
thrown open to development.
The merchant marine bill provid
ing for the ultimate sale of the vas
government-owned merchant fleet.
The Sterling anti-sedition act and
the Johnson bill providing for the
deportation and exclusion of danger
ous aliens.
The Kdge bill authorizing the for
ination of corporations to finance
American export trade.
The civil service retirement bill.
The postal pay Increase bill.
Soldier Bono Hill Killed.
Important measures which failed of
passage included:
The soldier bonus bill, which was
passed by the house last Saturday
night but which was not taken up
by the senate.
The budget bill, which President
Wilson vetoed and which the senate
failed to paas after the house bad
amended it to meet the president'
objection.
The bill to regulate and to control
the meat packing industry, the cold
storage bill, the bill to abolish the
housing corporation.
The annual rivers and harbors sup
ply measure, which was left in con
ference- Congress finally passed the
water power bill, which has .been
pending for 13 years, but it was
killed automatically with the ad
journment of congress through fail
ure of the president to sign it.
Congress also sent to the preslden
and he approved 16 supply measures,
carrying a total of $2,688,385,143. Per
manent appropriation bills of a tota
of $1,492,000,000 also were passed an
approved.
During the six montns of the see
sion just ended a total of approxi
mately 20.000 bills and resolution
were introduced. Tbe senate approved
nbnilt Sid bills And 1rint t-r.Knlnl Un
and the- house 378 bills and joint res- '
Assailant to Be Given Hearing on
Assault Charge.
Louise Bender, 17, 286 Clay street.
who received a fractured skull when
PREMIUM
SEATS AT
FOR DEMPSEY TRIAL
Throngs Demand Reserva
tions as .Case Draws Nigh.
WIFE SAYS FIGHTS FAKED
Spouse of Heavyweight to Be
Principal Witness .Against
Champion and Manager. .
SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., June 5.:
(Special.) A situation similar to that
which obtained in the Hindu con
spiracy trials today confronts United
States Marshal Holohan, as the date
approaches for the trial for draft
swear that Jack supported me, be
cause he hadn't. Jack's father com
municated with Jack, ' Jack ' wrote
me If I didn't sign the questionnaire
as he wanted, he -would kill me. I
knew how Jack had treated me before
and I was scared to death of him. I
finally signed and Jack's father mailed
the' document.
"The questionnaire was signed in
February. In March Jack sent me
$15. A princely sum. That was the
first out of the $45 transportation
money to settle debts that I had re
ceived. I finally left the Dempsey
home. "
"From Salt Lake City the Denvpseys
and Jack Kearns came to Oakland.
After the Fulton fight they stayed at
the home of Kearns' mother. Dempsey
returned to the east, and -while he
was there bought a $4500 home for
his mother.
Faver Again Sought.
"I moved to Jack's mother's homo
when he- wrote me he could send me
no money," she said. "I stayed there
a little more than a month. Jack sent
me some- money and I moved back
to a hotel. After the armistice was
signed Jack decided that I was no
longer of use to hide the fact that
he -Was a slacker, so he started to lay
plans for a divorce."
When slacker charges were first
mentioned, she says, Dernpsey tried
to win back her favor. slie refused
' and placed the letters which she gays
PRESIDENTS HEAD GRADUATING CLASSES OF EIGHT PORTLAND HIGH SCHOOLS.
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Graduation exercises for seven Portland high schools will be held in the auditoriums of the different in
stitutions the night of June 11. The Girls' Polytechnic school will have its commencement the night of June
10 in the Lincoln high school aduitorium. Principal speakers for the exercises will be: Bishop W. T. Sumner,
Jefferson; Dr. W. T. McElveen, Lincoln: Dr. E. J. Pence, Washington: District Attorney Evans, Franklin;
Miss Cornelia Marvin, state librarian, - Girls' Polytechnic school; W. F. Woodward, High School of Commerce;
B. T Irvine, James John; Richard W. Montague, Benson Polytechnic.
Jefferson high leads this year in number of students graduating, with a class of 182. Lincoln has 146.
Washington 128, Franklin 83, James John 40,, Girls Polytechnic high 35, High School of Commerce 30 and
Benson Polytechnic 25. -
clubbed over the head by an assail
ant as she lay in her bed Wednes-
ay night, was reported yesterday
show continued improvement at
t. Vincent's hospital. Hqspita.l, at
endants are now of the opinion that
the girl will recover, altnough she
s not yet out of danger.
Alvin" Benoit, 288 Clay street, wno
ls confessed to the assault on the
girl and her father, will have a hear
ing in the"municipal court on a charge
f assault with a dangerous weapon
with intent to kill, next Tuesday.
WOMAN IN AUTO IS HURT
Head Injured When Car Is Struck
by Another Machine.
Mrs. P. L. Munson, 226 East Thirty-
seventh street, was hurt about the
head yesterday when the automobile
n which she was riding was struck
by another machine at the intersec-
on of East Thirty-seventh and
Broadway.
Mr. Munson was driving the car at
the time.
W. J. Thompson, 92o East Thirty-
ninth street, reported that a man on
motorcycle ran into the rear of his
automobile while it was parked at
Eleventh and Davis streets. He said
that the man was injured, but he
failed to get his name.
In the jewel collection of ' the
duchess of Newcastle is a wonderful
coronet with a feather eight inches
ong made entirely of diamonds.
evasion of Jack Dempsey, world's
heavyweight champion, and for con
spiracy to evade the dra,ft of his
manager. Jack Kearns. So great has
been, the demand for reserved seats,
both from persons in the state and
without its borders, that Marshal Hol
ohan is considering limiting admis
sion to the trial to persons having
cards.
For the present; Marshal Holohan
states it will be a case of "first come,
first served," with seats reserved only
for members of the press.
Fake Fights Charerd.
Charges that Dempsey betrayed the
public by faking fights, notably his
battle with Jimmy Flynn in Febru
ary, 1917, are made by his divorced
wife, Maxine Dempsey, who is to be
the principal witness for the gov
ernment against her former husband.
"Jack Dempsey doesn't play square,"
said Mrs. Dempsey today. "I loved
him in spite of all his faults, but he
has beaten that love out of me.
"On December 27 Jack Kearns came
to Salt Lake, where we had gone, to
take Jack back east. Then I went to
the Dempsey home (Jack's father).
At the Dempsey home began the fight
over the questionnaire, which I finally
was compelled to sign, declaring that
I was dependent upon Dempsey, the
man I had been supporting for years.
"I told Jack's father that I would
never sign the questionnaire and
j!
For Midsummer . fT' W""''' f
Please note their colorful !vCSfc. Vl I
fabrics, their smart design, 'Siim -Wt Jwfrif 1
their fine tailoring. You "r!! gfM&gt g !
will see them in our win- . .Si? :,, xiHiM. 3
:; dows. Better still, come jgl l -
in and try on one of the , &p? Q "" '" 3
new iozo styles.
KBI
.1
mere s
There's comfort, there's long wear,
style and there's economy
in JKtrscnoaum midsummer atonies.
Priced as moderately as
possible at $25 to
Icy & Calender
COR. FOURTH AND ALDER
Ml
II
$40.
STS.
prove the slacker charges in a safe
deposit vault.
Then, she says. Frank Spellman, Bert
Gardiner and Tommy Fitzgerald took
a part in affairs and tried to persuade
her to go to Los Angeles. She refused
and went to Ogden with friends.
Finally, when, according to he
story, Spellman had threatened to ar
rest her girl friends, she went to Los
Angeles upon assurance that she
would not see Dempsey. However, she
says, she was taken to Dempsey s
home in Hollywood, where Dempsey
shed tears as he begged her to re
turn to him. She refused, but after
the Spellmans had given her money,
she signed affidavits denying that she
possessed any letters. Mrs. Spellman,
she says, posed as an agent of the
department of Justice, telling her that
this was necessary to keep the real
authorities away.
Troth Declared Told. '
When she first met Colonel C. W.
Thomas Jr., Mrs. Dempsey says, she
followed Spellman's instructions and
denied that she had the letters.
"Colonel Thomas listened to me
courteously and treated me like a
human being," she said, "but I saw a
look In his eyes and I knew that he
knew I was lying. I returned to San
Francisco with the Spellmans, and
there I spent a eleepless night. In
stead of pulling myself up I was go
Ins1 lower. I had been Jack Demp-
sey's slave, now I became a liar for
him. I decided to ask Colonel Thomas
if I dared tell the truth. He assured
me that I did and then I told. Every
word I have told the authorities
from that day has been the truth.
That I swear."
Later Maxine went with the Spell
mans and Gardiner to Tijuana, a trip
which ended in Gardiner's arrest and
Mrs. Dempsey's voluntary return to
San Francisco.
STATE PROSPERITY TOPIC
Chamber of Commerce Will Hear
Discussion- Tomorrow.
The members forum of the Port
land Chamber of Commerce will hear
the possibilities of intensive develop
ment of Oregon through the state
chamber of commerce discussed at its
meeting tomorrow noon.
The speakers are: Alfred A. Aya,
Ira L. Riggs, Rev. Oswald Taylor and
E. E. Faville.
Xew Beach Itesort Planned.
Opening of a new beach resort at
Tillamook was announced last week
following the purchase of a large
tract of ocean-front property by J. D.
MacFall and Mrs. Anna Welch of
Portland. The land lies midway be
tween Manhattan beach and Rocka-
way on the Southern Pacific line to
Tillamook. The new owners plan to
plat the property ac once and within
30 days will place lots on the market
Aberdeen Shrinera Coming.
ABERDEEN. Wash., 'June 5. (Spe
cial.) The Shriners' club of Grays
Harbor, at a meeting this week, or
ganized for the coming imperial ses
sion in Portland. June 22-24. T'-iree
sleeping cars have been engaged for
part of the nobles from this section,
two for the men and one for the
women in the party. The trains will
leave Hoquiam Monday, June 21, and
will be parked In Portlpnd.
Canton. China, has a population of
about 2,000,000, yet is so compact
that one can walk from boundary to
boundary in any direction in litt.le
more than an hour.
WO. M AX OF PIOXKKR ORB. t
GOX BIRTH IS IU U. . j
.8
Mrs. May Asrnca Fisher.
In the death of Mrs. May.
Agnes Fisher May 28 there
passed a pioneer daughter of
Oregon, as she was born in Al
bany Jarch 15, 1862. Her par
ents were Mr. and "Mrs. W. W.
Parrish, who were among the
earliest residents at Albany.
She was married to the late
Ralph W. Fisher in Sodavllle,
Or., June 1, 1S82. Two children
born to them Claud M. of Ka
lama. Wash., and Mrs. Oda
Van Horn of Portland survive.
Mrs. Fisher lived in Linn
county until 1904, when she
moved to Portland. She had
lived in this city since that
time, but died at Kalama, where .
she was visiting with the fam
ily of her son. There are three
surviving grandchildren, W. E.
Parrish of Albany is a brother
and Mrs. Etta Knights and Mrs.
Edna P. Lewis of -San Diego,
Cal.. and Mrs. Alda IVurk-e of
Alameda, Cal., are sisters.
o
VNERS say, quite simply, "We are
glad that pianos can be made so well."
Indeed, when you are seated at a Pack
ard Piano, you are intensely aware that
men in the Packard plant have not la
bored in vain.
They are master piano-makers, these
men, experienced and skilled. Their
mission is to make the finest pianos
possible, for to them pianos are the
highest expression of art.
See these Packard Pianos at our store.
In grand, upright and player models.
Several delightful styles and sizes.
Price is well within your reach. Do not
be content with a piano of less charm
than the Packard.
G. F. Johnson Piano Co.
147-149 Sixth Street, Portland
,., .-.; Pianos Victrolas Victor Records
Take It or Leave It
Have you noticed this attitude among the clerks of the different stores?
It seems to be in the air, a result of economic conditions prevailing; mer
chandise hard to get; advancing prices; customers' complaints, etc. But
you will find it different in our stores. Our employes are all interested
with us. The more customers they make and hold the more money they
make.
It Makes a Difference Try Us
Summer
Day Thirst
Quenchers
You feel the need
of a cool refresh
ing' drink as you
go about- your
day's work. Our
fountain has a
host of these.
Especially invig
orating and at a
most attractive
price is COCO
COLA at 5
tc war tax.
Baby Needs of High Merit
Horlick's Malted Milk . 45?. 85
Hospital size $2. OS
' Mellin's Food, large size TO?; doz...R8.00
Merck's Sugar Milk, 1 lb. 58?, 5 lbs... 55?
Hygeia Bottles 15?
Hygeia Nipples I5tf
Borden's Eagle Brand Milk 25?
Castoria 33?
The Most Complete Line of
Squibbs Goods Carried in the City
Spices 20c and 2S4.
Olive ". Pt- -404;
pt. 751; pt. Si ;t5.
Castor Oil. 1-os.. -lOC-Cod
L.lver Oil, pt.
Cream Tartar, V lb.,
Soda Bi-Carbonate. H
lb. 15: lb. 35.
Sodiirm Phosphate, hi
lb. 154; lb. 50C.
Kpsoiu Salts. Jt lb.
15: lb. 35.
Compound Licorice
Powder. lb. 50;
lb. 81.75.
Peroxide. lb. 2.":
lb. 40: lb. Oc
Rochello Salts, Vi lb.
:t5: lb. SI, 15.
Parafflne Oil Sl.OO.
Cold Cream, lb.
SO.
Sugar of Milk, lb. 75..
Zinc Stearate 2 ."".
Milk of Magrtiesia. Jz
lb. 25: lb. 50r.
glycerine Suppositories
35.
Tonics and Blood
Purifiers
Glide's Peptomangran SI. 12
Steam's Tonic 95c
Ovoferrin 95c
Vinol 96
Tanlac Sl.OO
Miles' Blood Purifier Sl.OO
Hood's Sarsaparilla S1.35
Ayer's Sarsaparilla SI. 35
Fellow's Hypophosphites 9Sc, S1.35
S. S. S. 95 and S1.60
Pinkham's Blood Medicine SI. 10
Hemaboloids. plain or arsenated SI. 15
Wampole's Extract Codliver Oil 90b
Gray's Glycerine Tonic S1.35
A. D. S. Sarsaparilla Compound Sl.OO
The Days
of Water
Sports
Have really come and
have brought the urgent
need of bathing caps
and hats that are prac
tical and attractive. We
carry complete lines of
Kleinert's, Miller's and
Faultless caps in prices
ranging 25? to $2.50
Bathing Cap
No.854 r
Sfouf-Liions
Drua?o
Northern Pacific Pharmacy
3d and Morrison &ts.
Irvington Pharmacy
East 15th and Broadway
Perkins Pharmacy
5th and Washington Sis.
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