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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (June 27, 1920)
p.., tv.'l-.-.,;:, isr.: . ; - ----- - :- - '' 7 n TIIE SUNDAY OREGON IAN, PORTLAND, JUNE 27, 1920 A I GRAY'S TODAY! AND ALU WEEK PLANKS HE WITS Wets to Be Put on Record by Rollcall, Says Speaker. 1 Forty, Fifty and. I BRYAN NHS Sixty I Chesterfield Suits and Overcoats 1 Value Givins in the Extreme MOVE TAKEN FOR TREATY AnU-Profitccrins IMank That Will Result, In Jailing or Offenders t Will Be Demanded. ? 'j :1 V i. 1 . CnMmd Prem First Pje.) low every ma.11 to be heard. The sur est -way to create dissension and hard feeling, he said. Is to prevent a man from having: his say. In this part of his speech he gave decidedly the im-i prcsFion of being urbane, tolerant, and eager to do hi part toward har trony. He told of the time he was on the platform committee 01 trie fcsji Louis convention c-f 1904, when there was the greatest diversity of view and when the committee sat for 16 hours continuously in Intellectual strain such as he had never endured before. But, he said, at the end of it was a platform that was reported unanimously and adopted unanimous ly. Very distinctively he gave the Idea that If complete freedom of dis cussion were allowed. If no one was squelched or elbowedi out. there could perfectly well be harmony here. Place Wanted Admittedly. Then he turned closer to his subject. He said he ,had lust this morning been made a member of the commit tee on resolutions, which writes the platform. Here again he said he vio lated no confidences in telling the au dience that he had not been placed on this important committee against his will. He said, quite frankly, that on this committee he would have some cause very close to his heart and having said this, he swung into his theme with old-time fervor. He again repeated his statement that the surest way to have harmony is to let everybody have his say, "and," he said, "if there is anybody who wants to put a wet plank in the democratic platform, 1 want him to be heard. Not only do I want him to be heard, but I want him to have a chance to put his plank before the convention. Not only do I want the convention to pass on it, but I shall '' demand a rollcall. If there are any delegates in this convention who want to voto in favor of a wet plank, I want their position written down in llack and white, so that I caTi tell every one of their people back home exactly what they did. If there is to bo any wet plank in this platform, it is not going to be written in eecret places and adopted by furtive means. The name of the author of it and the name of every man who votes for it must be known to all the world. Women's Vote Considered. "I propose to let the members of my party know whether any bunch of brewers can tie their hands. There are 26,800,000 women who are going to vote in this election for the first time, and I propose to let them know whether they can vote for their ideals through the democratic party or whether it is the purpose of the dem ocratic party to deliver them to the brewers. "I propose to make my party stand right on this question, or else let the brewers take the party over; but I propose to make them take it over openly, not secretly." Then, having made it clear that he would resist any efforts of the wet3 to get a plank into the platform, he passed on and took the other position, about which all the party managers have been worrying. He made it clear that he would not be content merely to defeat a wet plank; he made it most emphatic that he would insist upon the party adopting an affirmative dry plank. He scored the failure of the republican party to adopt an affirmative plank' and of its total silence on the prohibition question. -Lodge's Speech Scored. He jeered at the failure of Senator Lodge's keynote speech in Chicago to allude to prohibition. He glowed with indignation that anybody should take the position that prohibition is still an open question after the supreme court of the United States has passed on it favorably. He left no doubt of not merely his Intention but his burning determination to make the party go on record for or against an affirmative plank Indorsing pro hibition and said ha "proposed to chow the world whether the democrat ic party Is an Institution which can ask for the -votes of 26,000,000 decent Others may try to steal our thunder, but don't be fooled or-bamboozled, because while they may try to imitate, they won't give the value. No store, upstairs or down, will give as much in good clothes for the money as Gray's. Just look in our window and see what you can get for Forty, fifty and sixty. Compare Gray's Compare Gray's Compare . Gray's i PATHE NEWS POLLARD COMPANY Suits and Overcoats With Those Sold by Other Stores for $50 Suits and Overcoats With Those Sold by Other Stores for $70 Suits and Overcoats With Those Sold by Other Stores for $70 to $75 Our Clothes Values Bring the Business 366 Washington at West Park should be no sham battle on it be tween the two parties. He said it was a disgrace that the league of na tions should be made a party issue to be fought over for four months while the world waits. He said that the world is tired of war and the one thing to cling to is the determination that the recent war shall be the last one. As he said this h-i received from the audience a dem onstration of approval. IN FALLS FROM WINDOW dated with J. B. Mane and Roy White, arrested Friday, and the three are said to have taken silverware valued at $100 from Mrs. Hilton's apartment. Harrow, according to the inspectors, said that he acted as lookout while the other two robbed the apartment. He will be charged with larceny from a dwelling. vv. S. Reese, laborer, 26, was ar rested at First and Madison streets yesterday afternoon by a squad of in spectors and was charged with lar ceny from a dwelling. CAVE MAN STYLE ALLEGED Woman: Charges Member of Sailors' TTnlon With Assault. Jack Rosen, member of the sailors' union and alleged cava man wooer. Two Men Held for Investigation by I is charged with assault, according to warrant issued in the ' municipal POUCK DEOIiARE F. E. SIMP- SOX WAS BRC.K. Of rice r Following Book keeper's. Death. court yesterday and sworn to by Miss Lillian Fellows, 377 Vancouver ave nue. Miss Fellows charges that when she refused to marry Rosen Friday night he beat her over the head and otherwise mistreated her. She fled to another apartment to escape him. sue saia. V. E. Simnson. 50. employed as a bookkeeper in the wholesale hay and grain establishment of his brother, fi. W. Simnson. 341 East Washington street, died early yesterday morning a a th. rostnit nf a. fall from the second story of the St. Francis, 34 North SCHUYLEMAN1 CASE IS UP Eighth etreeW He died shortly aft- 1-E.IYIHMiOHO C Id UT er wards in the police emergency hoa- I nital. I Simpson, according to the police, I was intoxicated at the time of the (Cc-ntlrrUBd From First Far.) doormat to a aaloon." J accident. Two men, Krlst Strand and From prohibition he passed to the! I- H. Hunter, had taken him to his other planks. Ho said the democrats room must adopt an anti-profiteering planlc. . streets from Fourth and Burnslde mmedlately preceding the ac- Here again he jeered at the repub licans. He said that the republican platform wasn't entirely silent on profiteering a it was on prohibition. He said the republican platform does contain an anti-profiteering plank, "but," he said, "it is the shortest plank In the platform. It contains It words, and not one of the 1$ words means anything whatever." Real Plank Wanted.' The reason, he said. Is that nearly all tha profiteer were in .the- repub lican convention; or, if they were not in the republican convention, they were In the gallery or in the Black stone hotel. What few profiteers were not at the republican convention are out here now, "and." he said. "I propose that this democratic conven tion shall adopt a profiteering plank which will write Into the republican party every profiteer there Is." The reason, he said. Is that "I propose that ' all the'se profiteers shall go to prison and I want them to go to prison as republicans and not as democrats." In talking about his profiteering plank, Bryan was less vehement and more . humorous than In the fiery earnestness of his discussion of the prohibition plank. Also, in talking of the labor plank he dropped into a note of unexcited discussion, the point he made was that the labor plank should treat the I employer and! employe- exactly alike, but should aim primarily at the benefit of the third party to the case, the public. Specifically he said that the way to prevent strikes Is exactly the came aa the means proposed for preventing war by the peace- treaty. Compulsion Is Opposed. He said it should not be compulsory for either party of a strike to ac?pt the findings of a court, but he said it should be compulsory on all parties to the case not to strike until there had been six months of investigation and after the investigation tnree more montha for the public to ac quaint itself with the rights and wrongs of the case. The moral force of this process, be said, Is all that is seeded. When Bryan came to the league of nations he again reached the same heights of vehemence as when he poke of prohibition. The point he emphasized in connection with the league of. nations plank is that there proper reply that others of the dele gatlon who have sought to slap the people in the race by deposing him were no less Wilson fanatics than he a few months ago. He Intimates that. the latter fact being true, some of jthe other members of the delegation and act for the government and the modern cradle of I American liberty. Some of the bosses! obviously are shocked at the heart less manner in which the steam roller has been run over the Wilson enthusiasts from Oregon, but they feel that the convention cannot upset the verdict of the state's delegation, the issue being one to be referred back to the voters of Oregon in some way under the great referendum system first established In that state. Mr. Schuyleman expects to Jose before the credentials committee, but he be lieves that the democrats of Oregon wui iino some metnod or holding a 1 solemn referendum on the outrage, commuito in mo name or conserva tism, for that is what the action of the Oregon state central committee is I called. To Mr. Schuyleman was de nied a seat by the council of 13, ad-1 mittedly because he was regarded as I a "torpedo." Meanwhile Mr. Schuyle man is waiting around, seeking through some outside channels to ob tain a seat for himself and his loyal wife, who stands by him in his fight, confident that right as she sees it and as her husband sees it will in the end triumph over might. ARGENTINA LEGION FORMS. Ely Spencer Post Organized Bnenos Aires. ' i r. abvm i ri u ssasTi i i k ' inu car it r. v rv i - e-n. a is is ia 1 1 t i u si it -if r w f i tit fKivm A I n k I k Mr m i Of V N AT 1:30 P.M. BY T CECIL TE AGUE V ( 3kc X ON THE WURLITZER y Js f Vv JatC I Blue Danube waltz Straute fyt fiJ- I Songs that John McCormack loves to sing: " r ' " ; I jg) ' f Tumbled-down Shack in AtbJone ANOTHER EXCEPTIONAL TODAY cident and had attempted to put nim 1 Bnould be exaraiea to determine their to Ded. They reported that while their! backs were turned he went to the window and accidentally plunged out. Strand and Hunter were taken to the police station for investigation fol lowing the accident. The body will be sent to Albany, Or., where Simpson formerly lived, for interment. Deputy Coroner Goetsch announced there would be no Jnquest, as tlj death was accidental. competency to sit voters of Oregon. Mr. Schuyleman appreciates that he Is up against a badly bossed con vention and that probably he cannot win. but he declines to let the bosses override the will of 10,000 legal voters in Oregon without telling the world all about it. He has made a good im pression on others, outside the Oregon delegation, to whom he has told his troubles. He has impressed the out siders generally as a sincere man of , . unnrpTrn 1L"a convictions ana not susceptiDie POLICE EXTRA ARRESTED to the will of any of the big bosses wno dominate una convention. BUENOS AIRES. The recently or ganized Buenos Aires post of the American Legion will bo known as "Spencer Ely post.". Spencer Ely was the first American residing in Ar gentina to volunteer to serve his country in Franca and the first to fall of the Argentine contingent. On his arrival in France, Ely Joined the 165th regiment (the old fighting 69th of New York) and was killed at Chateau Thierry. After having been wounded in action he was carried to a dressing station, from which he re fused to be removed until more se riously wounded comrades had been taken to the rear. Before his turn came the dressing station was blown up by a German shell. Ely was a native of Flushing, New York and a descendant ot General Schuyler of the American revolution. His family resided in Buenos Aires for about 12 years. Samaritan hospital yesterday after noon following an extended illness. DeooratloM to Be Protected. : Chief of Police Jenkins Issued an order yesterday that anyone caught re moving decorations placed in th e city for Ehrlne week without author ity to do so should bo arrested. Some of tha decorations have been sold to Shrlnera of Milwaukee, and Aloha temple of Honolulu is In the market for part of the special drapings, it was announced. Clyde E. Harrow Said to Have Con fessed Implication- in Theft. Clyde E. Harrow, a special police man during the last week, was ar rested yesterday by Inspectors uor- dor and Wright at Third and Wash ington streets and according to the in spectors has confessed to having been implicated in the burglary of the apartment of Mrs. M. L. Hilton in the Marvin apartments last Monday night. Harrow is said to have been asso- The surprise to the outsiders ap pears to be that such a case should arise from Oregon, the birthplace in the United States of genuine popular A STARTLING PIANO OFFER Miss Iaura Peterson Dead. Miss Laura Peterson, 33, of 49 East Fifty-second street, died at the Good DANCING TAUGHT All dances taught la 8 three - hour lessoni. Ladles $3. sentlemen $5, at Da Honey's beautiful a o a d m y, 23d and Wasblncton. Begin ner' classes start Mon day and Thursday evs., anv&nced classes Tues day eve.. 8 to 11:30. Plenty of deslrabls partners and prac tice. No embarrassment. Learn trom professional dancers In a rsal sc .ooL AH tha Istest steps taught. Open all summer. Fh6ns Main 78oO. Frlvats lsatona all hours. Call at ones. offer most interesting possibilities to the buyer, for the reason that Aronson's prices are uni formly the lowest. The stones, too, are in such large variety that every wish, whether modest or luxurious, may be gratified. Visit at Aronson's and See His Diamonds! Plain and Diamond-Set Wedding Rings ARONSON'S Washington at Broadway Lli,.--.' - "- r, i ,- . - A Genuine J. & C. Fischer Piano (That has had very little use " for 325 The tone is what yon would expect to find in a J. & C. Fischer Piano, and the case is a beautiful late style plain case. You need not feel that you are buying- a used piano in this instrument, besides you can rest assured that you are saving a great deal of money. The small amount of use this piano has had cer tainly does not depreciate its value to the extent the low price would indicate. To avoid disappointment, you should' act at once, as -there are a great many people in Portland and icinity looking for just such an offer as this. Terms if desired. BUSH & LANE PIANO CO. BUSH & LANE BLDG. 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If your dealer can't supply you, tend 30 cent for sample tube, any flavor. Fruit Valley Corporation, Rochester, N. Y. ; Distributors to Wholesale Trade, Oregon, H. J. MARTIX.' 600 Bar rial de Street. Portland, Or. 32 GLASSES 30 CENTS f I t I