G THE SUNDAY OREGONIAX, PORTLAND, JULY 4, 1020 REPARATION SHARES VIRTUALLY SETTLED Allied Premiers Discuss Pay ments by Germany. league, where It was stated that practically every resident of the dis trict had signed a petition to the county court requesting a macadam I substitute for pavement on the bonded road. It was reported at the meeting that the petitioners had affixed their signatures upon information that Commissioner W. F. Harris had stated the district must take a macadam road or nothing-. Mr. Harris has denied making any such state ment. The farmers of Clarkcs, at Friday night's meeting, adopted the follow ; Ick resolution: "Resolved, that we request the county court to take the grades made I by Engineer Rands around the Buck- "IT - . I ner "hill and the hill around Grif- GERMANS TO GO TO SPA,?" Richard Griffith, road boss of the district. K. Berger presided at the meeting and W. I. Clark was secre tary. People In every section of the county are displeased over the possi bility of putting down a macadam substitute and may go into the courts tJ prevent the construction of such road. YANKS CLUB ORGANIZED SEATTLE TETERAXS START PO LITICAL AFFILIATION. Tentative Arrangement for Division Among Allies Is Reached at Conference. (By the Associates Press! BRt'tiSKLiS, July 8. An agreement las virtually been reached by the al lied premiers In conference here with regard to the division of German reparations on the basis of 52 per cent to France, 22 per cent to Great Brit ain, 10 per cent to Italy, 8 per cent to Belgium and 6 per cent to Serbia, it was stated here today. The remaining 3 per cent will be divided among the other allies, including Roumania, Por tugal and Japan. Italy also will re ceive certain economic and financial advantages. This tentative settlement was de clared to have been arrived at in a conference of the French, British, Italian and Belgian delegates. Word was received today that the German delegation to the Spa confer ence would cross the frontier at 1 o'clock Sunday afternoon, reaching Spa at 3 P. M. PARIS, July 3. The Matin in dis cussing the Brussels conference of the allied council, declared the allies still adhere to the plan adopted at the Boulogne conference by which Ger many would te called upon to pay 3.000.000.000 marks in gold and an nuities to be determined later. Under this plan Germany would receive im mediate aid that would assist in her rehabilitation. Agreement has been reached by the supreme council as to the text of a note concerning tho execution of the Versailles treaty which will be pre sented to the German delegation at Spa. This note was said to insist that Germany enact'a law abolishing com pulsory military service and that her army be reduced to 100.000 men. In addition, a stipulation was made, ac cording to the report, that the strength of this force be so scattered that it cannot in the future be utilized as the framework of an important army. DRIVER DIES OF INJURIES ROBERT KENNEDY FAILS TO RLLV AFTER OPERATION'. IS L POLISH GOVERNMENT MAY BE TAKEN OVER. Extreme Measures Declared Ncces' bary to Check. Bolshevik! Ad vance la Ukraine WARSAW, July 8. Control of the Polish government may be placed in . the hands of a national council of defense under the terms of proposals considered by a council of war and extraordinary session of the diet to night. Extreme measures are deemed necessary to meet the critical eitua tion caused by the bolshevik advance in Ukraine. It is proposed that immediate mili tary action be taken to check the bolshevik!. During tonight's meeting Father Okone, a peasant member, offered resolution providing for immediate peace negotiations. The perturbation in Polish and al lied quarters over the military situa tion of Poland, as shown in the dis patches from Warsaw and Brussels, seems amply warranted by the re ports of the progress the bolshevik! have made in the past fortnight against the Polish and Ukranian ar mies. While the Polish front eeems to have held fairly well in the north along the Bereslna, it has been pushed well back in Polisia, to th west of Kiev, while further south the bolshevik forces appear to be car rylng out a turning movement on a large scale and threatening the rear of the northerly line. It was even reported through news paper dispatches to London last night that the bolshevlkl had captured Lemberg, in Galicia. PAVED ROM) IS DEMANDED CL.UIKES 'PEOPLE SAT THBT WERE DECEIVED Machine Said to Have Been Going 5 3 Miles an Hour "When Street Car Is Struck. Robert E. Kennedy, 468 East Broad way, who suffered a fracture of the skull when the automobile which he was driving collided with a one-man Irvington street car at East Fifteenth and Fremont streets late Friday, died yesterday afternoon at the St. Vin cent's hospital. His death occurred following an operation which wae performed In the effort to save his life. The body -was turned over to ' Deputy Coroner Goetsch, who announced that there would be no inquest. Mr. Goetsch said that an examina tion oil witnesses to the accident had established clearly that Kennedy's death was due to his own recklesa driving. Witnesses declared that the automobile was going 55 miles an hour when it struck the street car. Other occupants of the automobile were reported yesterday to have not suffered serious injury as a result of the collision. The two sisters of Kennedy, Nan Kennedy, 20, and Florence Kennedy, 13, were bruised and cut from flying glass but were not otherwise injured. Earl Clayton. 451 East Webster street, received a cut over one eye and E. H. Lambert of Marysville, Cal., a cut face. Clayton and the girle are still at the hospital. Movement First to Be Slate-Vide and Later May be Extended to . Be National In Scope. SEATTLE, Wash., July 3. .(Spe cial.) Because the constitution of the American Legion forbids participation of . its posts in politics, 150 Seattle war veterans today organized the Yanks club, a non-partisan associa tion open only to former service men and women and designed to unite the soldier vote in the interests of good government. It was announced that the movement, will be statewide and later an effort may be made to make it national in scope. Captain George M. B rarer, presi dent and publisher of the Grenade, a local service men's paper, who was elected president of the- club, issued a statement immediately after the meeting in which he explained the purposes of the organization. Under lt3 constitution the club will not be able to indorse any slate but U will consider individual candidates and pass on their qualifications. No preference will be given to can didates simply because they are for mer soldiers, sailors or marines, the statement said. "We feci that there is a serious danger not only to the service- but also to the community,"" the state ment declares, "from the attitude ex pressed by some that the sole qualifi cation for public office in the future is to be military service. Candidates, no matter what their status- during the war may- have been, may look to this organization for absolute fair ness and justice In this regard." 11 -TON MIXER HAULED Police Charge Truck Manager With Damaging Pavement. C. P. McCarty, 226 Ash street, man ager of the Pioneer Auto Truck com pany,' was placed under arrest yes terday afternoon by Captain Lewis, head of the traffic bureau, after a driver, under Mccarty's orders, had hauled an 11-ton concrete mixer a distance of about ten blocks down Union avenue over city pavement, damaging the pavement considerably. The driver, James L. Borden, 2612 East Thirty-fifth street, was held by the police as a witness. The ordinance permits a load of five tons to be hauled on the pavement. Mccarty said he was not familiar with the exact provisions of the or dinance and thought that with the use of a trailer a heavier load was permitted. ODDFELLOWS FILL POSTS Installation at Oregon City Attend ed by Grand Master. OREGON CITY, Or., July 3. (Spe cial.) A. H. Johnson, grand master, of Portland, paid the local Oddfel lows an official visit Thursday night. After the address of Mr. Johnson, C. Schuebel. district deputy grand master, installed the following offi cers for Oregon City Lodge No. 3: Wayne E. Kayser, noble grand; W. B. Schuebel, vice grand; L. H. Feas- ter, right supporter; J. H. Hadley, warden; J. O. Blodgett, conductor; J. T. Rau, inner guard; O. A. Troel outer guard; James Shannon, right supporter noble grand; F. E. Albright, left supporter noble grand; Charles Hannaford, right supporter vice grand; F. M. Curry, left supporter vice grand; J. L. vvaldron, right scene supporter; E, W. Scott, left scene supporter; J. L. Hadley, chap lain. Professor Seligman to Speak. Members of the various civic clubs of Portland will have an opportunity on Friday, July 16, to hear an address by Edwin R. A. Seligman of Columbia university, Nov York. Mr. Seligman will bo the principal speaker at luncheon at the crystal room of the Benson hotel under the auspices of the oity club and the Portland press club. Mr. Seligman, who is head of the economics deDartment of Colum bia university, is an author and speaker ol International note upon financial and taxation matters, and has written a number of books which serve as textbooks for the economics departments of a number of universl tie3. Threats Made to Petition Court to Enjoin Use of Macadam In District. OREGON CITY, Or., July 3. (Spe cial.) Residents of Clarkes, at a road meeting held Friday night, reversed their former attitude relative to the character of the construction of the highway to be built with funds de . rived from the sale of bonds. The meeting was the direct result of the disclosures made in Oregon City Monday at a session of the Clackamas county development I. W. W. Attorney Files Demurrers George F. Vanderveer, counsel for the local I. W. W. accused of crimina syndicalism, returned to Portland from Chicago yesterday, and filed de murrers to five Indictments pending. Urging insufficiency of facts and vagueness. The indictments included two against Ernest Lehto and one each against Joe Clark, Henry Lam ereaux and Fred Stuart, all I. W. W, Mystery of Missing Vest Solved at Last. Mrs. L. ftline. Who Purehaiied Gar ment for Fancy Dress Ball. Re turns It to Soldier Who Made It. jr j jfz ; . I i tj, I -. t' if I I Y What to Do About Today's Clothing Prices Buy These Long Wearing Kirschbaum Clothes w HEN clothing prices are higher than usual, just so much more care is needed in buying. Choose garments that will give most wear per dollar of cost. To do this the fabrics must be all wool 100 per cent; London shrunk and absolutely fast in color. They must be soundly tailored and hand-sewn at every point of strain. Their in ner structure must be of the best materials, carefully put together. All these requirements are fully met in our new Kirsch baum models. Priced fairly and justly at $40 to $65. Phegley & Cavender Cor. Fourth and Alder Sts. Make This Vacation Your Happiest One by being thoroughly prepared with the items that will add to your comfort and pleasure. Visit our store vacationers' headquarters. BRITISH TO STAND PAT LLOYD GEORGE SATS COMMON SENSE WILL PREVAIL. the premises of nationalists were so serious that owners had to remove their families. At dinner hour today a crowd of mill workers, principally women, at tacked the house of a nationalist. He was saved with difficulty and con veyed for safety to an adjacent police barracks. The house was partially wrecked. Grave fears are entertained regarding the peace of the. city. Chariots worked on the principle of the taximeter were used in China in the fourth century. LADIES SILK HANDBAGS In black, blue, gray, brown, with metal and silk covered frames; at less k. WAUNA BOX PAPER 50 sheets paper, 50 envelopes, 50. In white, gray, buff, pink, brown. SOUVENIRS New Highway Book, hand colored $2.50 Highway Book with de scription ...$1.00 Picturesque Oregon ... Portland, Oregon ...... 1150 Folders, Post Cards; etc., etc. PHOTO BILL SAYS: "Let us finish what your Ko dak began this 4th and 5th." VACATION AND SUMMER READING Good Fiction Many Junes Archibald Marshall.. .$2.00 Mr. Wu Louise Jordon Miln. .$1.75 The Voice of the Pack Edison Marshall... . .$1.73 The Great Desire Alexander Black..... $1.73 The Foolish Lovers St. John E. Irvind $2.00 The Shepherd of the Sea Henry Leveriage....$1.75 Mary Marie Eleanor H. Porter.. . .$1.00 Leading Books Other Than Fiction Cardinal Mercier's Own Story By His Eminence.... $1.00 Memories and Kecord Lord Fisher, 2 vols... $8.0 Theodore Roosevelt, "100 Per Cent American" William Roscoe Thayer.. $1 Talks "With T. R., From the Diary of John L. Leary Jr., priced $3.50 Fishing Tackle and Kits Dixie Carroll $2.73 Sunshine Sketches Stephen Leacock ....$1.25 The Inside Story of the Peace Conference Edward J. Dillon $2.50 The Casual Laborer Carlton H. Parker. . .$2.00 Gill The J. K. Gill Company Booknrllera, $tntloncrs, s-j. uiiice uuumrri. ' THIRD AND ALDER STS. MiiiE mystery of the missing vest is L A solved. An ex-service man made the vest of cast-off leather gloves while lying- wounded in a hospital in France. He was proud of it and refused $50 for it, but loaned the garment to a Red Cross exhibit at Meier & Frank's. M. L. Kline saw the colorful vest In the. window and bought It for a fancy drees ball. The clerks in the store discovered that the vest wasn't for sale after the wounded soldier returned for it. Who had it? "A man who wore glasses. " was all that anyone at the store knew. Then Kline heard about the appeal for the return of the vest. Now the soldier has his vest accain and Kline has the $12 he paid for it and everyone Is happy. Irish Bill Before House of Com mons Only One English Will Agree To. Copyright. 1920. The Press Publishinr Co. (The New York World.) (Special Cable Dispatch to The World.) LONDON, July. 3. Speaking on the home rule bill in the house of com mons tonight. Premier Lloyd George said he did not despair of the Irish situation. He believed that when the Irish people realized that America was not going to give them support In their demands for a republic, and thie was a very important factor, the practical common sense of the Irish people would recover control. The bill before the house of com mons was the pest home rule Din, he said, the British people would agree to at present. ine wnoie speech was delivered In a weary. despondent way and aroused no en thusiasm among the coalition members. According to a dispatch to the Daily News from Belfast, this has been a wild week-end In Belfast. Several public houses and spirit ' grocery premises were wrecked and looted late last night and early today. The police, when they endeavored to pro tect the premises of nationalist trad ers, were severely stoned. Attacks on Crossings Are Authorized. SALEM. Or., July 3. (Special.) The Oregon public service commis sion. In an ord-er Issued today, author ized the construction of two overhead crossings and a grade crossing on the line of the Oregon-VV ashington Rail road & Navigation company, near Heppner Junction and Mcssner, in Gilliam and Morrow counties. The cost of constructing and maintaining the structures shall be borne by the applicant, according to the order. Widow Sues for "Damages. For the death of Charles F. Whit comb, gateman on the Hawthorne bridge, July 13, 1918, when a street car ran into the gate, knocking down and killing the gate tender, damages of $20,000 are sought from the Port land Railway, Light & Power com pany by Mrs. Mary Whitcomb, widow. in a suit filed in the circuit court yes terday. Will H. Bennett to Go to Session. SALEM. Or., July 3. (Special.) Will H. -Bennett, state superintendent of banks, will go to Seattle Tuesday t'o attend the annual convention of the National Association of State Bank supervisors. The convention will last four days with bankers in attendance from many sections of the northwest- Physician Is Employed. SALEM, Or., July 3. (Special.) Dr. Phillip R. Newmyer, a resident of the Chemawa section of Marion county, today was employed by the state board of control as assistant physician at the state tuberculosis hospital. He will receive a salary of $150 monthly and found. iJiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiui Glorious Diamonds in Generous Array You will find at this store a wondrous assem blage of diamonds from -which to choose. You will find, too, that our prices are lowest. There's a reason: we have the ability to underbuy and we DO underbuy. We have the ability to undersell and we DO undersell! - Diamonds From $10 to $2500 JEWELERS- It is a curious fact that grains ripen earlier in Norway than In the south of -Europe, an advantage due to the long days and short nights of the summer in the north. -.7 3 OB' J jrr..-tv.,-i y.r.'j.. -.s:'v.,J DICESTiON WORTH HAVING Good digestion is not appreciated until you lose it. Then you cannot afford to experiment on remedies. Strong medicines are hard on weak stomachs. To be able to eat what you want and to diigest it is a priceless blessing. If you have lost it do not be deceived by the claims of predigested foods and stomach tonics, so-called. There is no tonic for the stomach that is not a tonic for evry Other part of the body. As the blood goes every where, an Improvement in its condi tion quickly results in strengthening weak organs. Rich, red' blood is abso lutely necessary to digestion. If your stomach Is weak and you are troubled with gas, sour risings in the throat, a feeling of pressure about the heart and palpitation, try the tonic treat ment with Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. So many dyspeptics have been helped by this simple treatment that every sufferer . from stomach trouble should try it. The Dr. Williams Medicine Co. Schenectady, N. T.. has issued a book let "What to Eat and How to Eat," that should be In every home. It gives just the information that you want regarding your diet. The company will mail Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, postpaid, at sixty cents per box or your own druggist can supply you. Adv. riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiir- The Joy of Owning a genuine Oriental Rug YOU will know an ever-increasing sat isfaction of possession that lies large ly in those moments when you sit alone with an Oriental rug and try to rebuild in your mind the Arabian Nights surroundings under which that woven marvel grew. Oriental Rujrs stored for tho Summer: Cleaned and repaired. You know that the deft f ingrers wove into that intricate pattern some tale of human emotion. You are soothed by the mystic charm of, its delightful coloring. Your feet press comfortably upon the long soft pile. Those who have not been initiated into the mystery and atmosphere of the Oriental Rug are doubly welcome here to study and to enjoy these weavings from the east. CAkTOZIAN BROS'lnc- ESTABLISHED I9O0 Pittock ploc - Jhrtland . v r "x-u. m i t'.- rv xsi mi i i r k- urn IM Y M W m tesssM .-vfemim mffltemm tmmvims? mm : nm f P W i t m m- smssSi wm. teB isaBsy ..iteass: baK mssh, wl few? 0m? svsmm?' i ' VW I t'i are strange things done in the midnight sun Wvxv. If l r f f jfSfesi - By the men who moil for gold; VVVxM U 1 1(( I K The Arctic trails have their secret tales WCVVWIIMW That would make your blood run cold " VNXNkVXVv ; And so for you we've placed on view U Ww?; Jack London's truthful tale xXiVsMj' PATHE Of Alaskan life and its human strife; xVNt NEWS We know you'll come don't fail! VxAVSvN . I -CONCERT -i -J-XA JV"VSy" ' . Foet and Peasant Overture SaVnVteaen " - V Vv( ' r- La eeda ("a" Romance of Sunny Spain) . S A Tl"'P ThroU8;h lhe stales Arr- by c- Tfiague direction.-. UENSENSis HERBERt-