THE SUNDAY. OREGOXIAN, PORTLAND, SEPTEMBER 11, 1921 ma J AUNTS POPULAR CAPITAL Invitation Considered Seal of . White House Favor. 10-DAY TRIP IS PLANNED addition be bound himself to provide wearlne aDDarel for each child. This would seem a fair sized job for a man on $25 a week salary. Mr. Halpern admits he Is living at No: 159 Rodnev street. Brooklyn, with a woman whom he describes as "Toy common-law wife," and he doesn't deny his former wife'c statement that he has five chllcren by his common law" wife. At Mr. Halpern's esti mate of Income, he has $15 a weea with which to support a wife and five children and provide shoes and clothing for two other children. Mrs. Halpern swears her husband Is a Jobber and wholesale dealer In silks and woolens at No. Ill Eldridge street, as J. D. Halpern Co., Inc., that he receives at least $390 a week from this concern, and in addition possesses an equity of at .least $75,000 in real estate. DIIPCC AlUft U AT PI FW5 . , . - ., ,, .11 uiiwt. nil" i in i wa-aiw President and Party VTlll 6 top in I ; :-- Atlantic City , for Brie I Body of Woman Reported to Have Visit With Friends. . BT BETTY BAXTER. WASHINGTON,' D. C, Sept. 10. '(Special.) Again the Mayflower, the presidential yacht. Is unaer . .These little White House yachting parties have become quite famous in Washington. An invitation to make one of the Jolly little nan aozen i lected almost weekly by the president -. Wfm VavAintr fnf ft rrulse On the Potomac or out to sea has come to be the seal upon one s intimacy who the White House and administration. Only those whom the president de lights to honor, whether politically or socially, are Invited. 'In the Roosevelt administration one heard and saw much written of the so-called "tennis cabinet." . Probably in future histories of the present ad ministration the. "Mayflower cabinet" will be almost as famous. ' This time the president and Mrs. Harding are planning a ten days' ab sence from the city. leaving this Sat urday afternoon, they will be on their way for a voyage which will keep them at sea several days. , ' Step Is Planned- The White House party plans to break the trip with a brief stay in Atlantic City, where they will be the quests of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Upham of Chicago. Mrs. Upham is recuperat ing from a rather severe operation following a serious tuac& ui .jjcu; A stop-off at Atlantic City- was ln i,iriori in hj nlitii of the last yacht ing party of the White House, but a tiff "nor'easier Diowing on iua Moat nf Vav JursAV Interfered. The return of the Mayflower to Washington Tuesday marked the end of a nlnuint little house nartV at the White House.. Miss Daisy Harding left almost Immediately upon reacn inr tha rftv for her home in Marion. and Mr. and Mrs. E. Scobey left later Ja the day lor Ban Antonio, mra. nmnr&a. Van 1Tlt AmttfnA with MrS. Harding andi was Joined at the White House by ber husDana, now tne edi tor of the Harding paper at Marion. xne visitors were tne euesxs at hnna rtarfv At thn theater Wednefi. day night Others Invited to attend the performance as the guests of the president and Mrs. Harding were Louis Brush and Mr. McNichols, both tu yiiariou. . Snmmer Ends Socially. Washington society divided its In terest last week between the Lafay- ette-Marne-day celebration and the wedding of Miss Waldo Latham and Dr. Randolph Unsworth Tuesday. The last was of interest not only because of the popularity of the bride, but because it foreshadowed the opening of the social season. Throughout the Bummer Washington brides-elect have chosen to be married, with only one or two exceptions, out of town. Miss Latham's selection of Washington as the scene of her wedding ceremony was the first Indication that the summer, socially, is over. The ceremony was performed at I historic old St. John a church, known as the church of the presidents, the scene of so many famous and fash ionable weddings in Washington. Dr. and Mrs. Unsworth will spend a month or so in New England and will then go to New Orleans to make their I Aome. - Celebration Is Important. :.The Lafayette-Marne-day celebra tion would have been an event of importance even In the midst of a Kay social season and, coming as it did, it helped redeem the social calen dar for the week. The day's celebra- I tion was closed with a dinner, party at the Chevy Chase club in'onor of the members of the Lafayette-Marne- day committee from New York. It was at this dinner that a bit of unexpected spice was lent by a "run- in", between two of the-guests of honor. General Pershing and Samuel Uompers, president of the American Federation of Labor. The general had not been scheduled to speak, but something Mr. Gompers said concern ing labor's share in winning the war aroused his ire and he rose and an swered the labor leader ia a fiery I cpeecn. - Following the general's remarks, Prince de Beam, charge d'affaires of I the French embassy, poured oil on the troubled waters with a graceful speech of appreciation of America's part in the war. BrasU Day Quiet. 'Wednesday was the anniversary ot the independence of Brazil, an event usually celebrated magnificently at the Brazilian embassy at Washington. This year, - however, the day was narked only by the Brazilian flags that draped the embassy building. The ambassador, Senor de Alencar, was not In the city for the day and his absence spoiled any plans for cele brating the anniversary. E IBirSB.ri CLAIMS TO SUPPORT , ( K LVE OX 15 WEEK. tBnt Wife, Suing for Divorce. Tells 1 Judge Different Story; Conrt u - Has Task Before It. l NEW YORK, Kept. 10. (Special.) u JacoD JJ. Halpern is doing all he admits doing on the salary he admits receiving, he could be hired by some public-spirited publication to write a series on how to raise a large family on a small salary. j If he Is doing all his former wife ays he Is doing with the salary he says he Is getting, he is a six-cylinder ShioacUI wizard hitting on all six. If, however, he is doing what he says he is doing, or what his former wife says he Is doing, on the salary she says he is getting, this story loses znuch or us punch. . Determination of which of the three hypotheses are true regarding (Mr. Halpern s financial operations is srolng to- occupy a considerable part of Supreme Court Justice Lyden's time before he decides whether Mrs. Halpern is entitled to a modification Of her divorce decree, obtained in October, 1919. When .Mrs. Halpern sued for dl Torce. they entered Into a stipulation ty which be agreed tor pay $10 a week for the support of their two daugh ter until they were II years old. In Been Seen Going Over Xiagara. NIAGARA FALLS, N. Y Sept 10. A wman's hat and a black leather purse were found on a bench on the state reservation following a report made to the reservation police that a body had been seen to pass over the brink of the American falls last night. The purse and hat, according to inscriptions written on a memo randum inside, were the property of Miss Beatrice Orr of Cleveland, O. In addition to the memorandum the purse contained an order of deporta tion from Canada, showing that Miss Orr had been deported from Athel stan. Quebec, because she did not have the necessary cash deposit re quired of all persons entering the dominion. ' - i KK CRISIS SEEN T Berlin - Munich Controversy Rapidly Nears Climax. OPEN BREAK PROBABLE APPEAL PLEA DECLINED San Francisco Gangster's Request for RehearlBg tJnhaerd. SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 10. The state supreme court declined today to hear the appeal of Edmond (Spud) Murphy, pugilist, from his conviction and sentence of from one to SO years for attacking Misa Jessie Montgom ery of - Reno, Nev., in company with a number of other men, in a house here on the early morning of last Thanksgiving day. Murphy is in San wuentln prison. Plan Drawn TTp for Applies- tlon of Economic Boycott Against Bavaria. BY ARNO DOSCH FLETJROT. (Copyright by the New Tork World, Pub lished by Arrangement.) BERLIN, Sept 10. (Special) With the socialists threatening to take action against the Kahr government of Bavaria because of Its reactionary tendencies and protection of the Ger man monarchists and the Munich cabinet stiffening its resistance against the Berlin central govern ment the Berlin-Munich controversy over the Issue of state sovereignty is fast reaching a climax. The whole German press agrees that the most dangerous inner polltl- .cal crisis since the foundation of the republic now faces Germany. In spite of the assurances given to mi in high political circles this morning that the whole controversy would be peaceful ly settled around the green table, within a day or two an open break between the Munich and central gov ernments is highly probable. Conference Series Held. In a series of conferences between the majority socialists and lndepen dent socialist leaders, a plan has been drawn up for the application of an economic boycott against Bavaria unless the measures proposed by the central government are carried out by the Munich cabinet. George Gradnauer, minister of the Interior, has asked the Kahr cabinet to suppress the Augsburger Abend- zeitung, one of the newspapers which has been most vigorously assailing the republican government and pro moting the monarchist plotting. Premier Refuses t Obey. Premier Kahr hot only refused to obey in this instance, but has per mitted the Miesbacher Anzeiger. which was suppressed at the demand of the Berlin government, to reappear under the title of the Miesbacher Ttgeblatt. Minister Gradnauer also suggested that a demonstration in favor of the republic be permitted at Coburg and that it be protected against the re actionaries by the government police, threats of monarchists Interference having been received. The mayor of Coburg granted permission for the demonstration, but the commander of the troops In the town forbade it and when the demonstrators appeared the police disbanded them w.th hand grenades, severely injuring 20 per sons, y These incidents have brought the whole controversy to a crisis. ' SUB EXPLOSION KILLS . 3 ACCmKVT HAPTEN'S OX DIVER FAMOUS DtRJXG WAR. Deutschland Is Being Dismantled When Tremendous Ooncus- I sion Takes Place. LIVERPOOL, Sept 10. (By the As soo'ated Press.) A tremendous ex plosion on the former German sub marine Deutschland at Birkenhead, across the "Mersey from Liverpool, killed three men and injured three others today. It is possible that many ethers perished. The submarine was being dis mantled at the time of the explosion, which occurred In the engine room from an unknown cause. The Deutschland was one of the subma rines surrendered by the Germans under the terms of the peace treaty. NEW LONDON, Conn., Sept. 10. Among the exploits of the former German submarine Deutschland was the crossing of the Atlantic ocean to the Delaware capes and Baltimore and a second trans-Atlantic trip in which the craft arrived here Novem ber 1, 1916. The submarine attempt ed to leave for Germany November 17 and was in collision with the tug T. A. Scott in this harbor, sinking it and causing the drowning of five men. The first organisation of the TJ. S. engineer corps was in West Point in 1802, and consisted of not more than 20 officers and men. W'to;you . iHltl llNsSS?!! aTe ,n'eres'e m f'me muicd instruments' 8e announce tith j jfj I j jijp III pleasurable pride the opening of Vie Bush 6r Lane Piano Co. j ' ll II I Our stock is one of the most complete In the city, consisting of II mill MM I I 111 M 11 V""y bC8t mak'3 f a" klnd etrins and band Instruments, I I I II I H Holton Band Instruments, Orpheum Banjos, I ! I few1 ll'l'll ' Ludwig and Leedy Drums, Violins, Guitars lilllllllll A'!1''!! and Ukuleles at AH Prices , I! I iCfviN We also carry a complete line of strings and accessories for all lJt'l ' I I . tmF : musical instruments. . II jjj 'pyJV' Hl "The House of Harmony" ItSSfy I W-1 l l Bash 4 Lane BuUdlng Broadway at Alder 1 1 J," j fbr Holtoa Band Im t This is nob ons of the'BlG FOUR bat is the first of FIFTY-TWO Libatu super productions co De presented. 4.C cms cneacre aunng cue connug suiyun - Patronize Those Displaying This Emblem arid You Will Receive Proper Work The following . are qualified: FRANKS , Cleaners' and Dyers McKINLEY Geaners and Dyers MODEL Geaners and Dyers MULTNOMAH Geaners and Dyers PANTORIUM Geaners and Dyers ' PHEASANT Geaners and Dyers WARDROBE Cleaners and Dyers ' ALLYN'S Geaners and Dyers BELL-PARIS Cleaners and Dyers BROADWAY v Geaners and Dyers CASCADE Geaners and Dyers ENKE'S CITY ' Geaners and Dyers ECONOMY Geaners and Dyers National Association Dyers and Cleaners CORONA, the prri- now tvuewnicr. 150.00. ineludinc . handaomecam. Other Bakes for sale or rent t lowest phoes. B. W. PKASB CO, lis luxta ainu. Blue Bird Dance TONIGHT BILLY WEBB'S ORCHESTRA" Morrison Dock, 8:30 40 - fiisiiiiiaiA s ''Y&&?,:A hit m I fi'S J I 1 Ik t ' ' ..-.- - 7 ! fp ( A f - f TODAY at 12:30 The Concert Programme Chacons ..Durand Calvary ...Rodney The Liberty presents "A Bit . of Atmosphere". .. .Arranged Spanish Dances Moskowski Lutspiel, Overture.... Kela Bela Silhouette Novelties, a Musical Oddity Arranged KEATESandOUR GIANT ORGAN' 1 1 t ! i a tNtiMi. l I 5l An r h MK-Ui-H, To Our Lady Patrons: Owing to the unprecedented favor accorded Miss Talmadge yesterday we earnestly request your attendance at the matinee' performances so that YOU may avoid standing in line during the evening. THE MANAGEMENT. De Luxe Performance Include "A Bit of Atmosphere" With Robert Davis, Tenor Silhouette Novelties Weekly Scenic E rates and Our Mighty Organ Interpreting the Programme j