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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (April 22, 1919)
nix: . orjzcoir daily journal, Portland, Tuesday, appjl zz, idio. ;T. IfiiiiiS B CHANGES HAtJDS Concern Will OpenUnder Mew ' Directors After Being Closed ''a for' Several , Months. . r , Carl Detering, formerly aaelatant cub' ler of the Northwestern National bank, and a group of associate, beaded by T. S. Doernbecher of the Poernbeeher Man ufacturing company. hav purchased the assets of the First Truat Savinra bank of St Johns, and the concern will pen tor business Wednesday mornlna-. -The rank waa closed some months a"o by Will JL Bennett, state superintendent of bankaT All liabilities of lh old Institu tion will be liquidated under personal guarantee of Mr, Doernbecher. The bank has been reorganized, with a capital of 150,000. Jar. ornbeher la president and Mr. Detering- cashier. New directors elected at a meeting- of the stockholders Monday were-John Becher, .J. V. Burt, Fred W. German, Fred A. Bal- . in and Nr. Detering-. " Temporary quarter will be maintained 'in the building- at 1302 South Fessenden street, 6t, Johns, but as soon as arrange ments can be completed a new building; will be erected for the bank by Henry and j: W. Bickner on Jersey street near Philadelphia street. St Johns, The new structure will be located adjacent to the moving: picture th&atre In the business center of the city. ' - Prior to the consolidation of the Mer chant National bank with the North western National, Carl Detering- was as- - slstant cashier of that concern, being- in charge of the collection department. He has been a resident of Portland for sev eral years, and la well known in business and banking circles. ? - Grave of American Aviator Is Located t- Paris, April tl(l. . S.) -The grave , of Lieutenant Victor Chapman, th first American killed in the French, air serv ice, in th early days of the war, has been located at Haumont. north of Ver dun, according to information received today from lieutenant Zinn In Berlin. When he was shot down Chapman waa carrying- personal mail intended for Lieutenant Balsy. who was. Hi. The Germans found th letters and decided that Chapman was Bajzy .and burled him under that name. Chapman was 5 on of th organisers of the JbaFayett escsdrlll. ;- . Seattle Boilermakers Want Six-Hour Day Seattl. Apr-22. (U. P.) Seattle jboller makers will agitate for a six hour day In th shipyards, if resolutions passed at a meeting held Sunday by ocal 104 are carried into action. To -proposed agreement worked out by jaeiai iraoee neiegates witn snipbuUders : recently at . Washing-ton, . D. C., was (turned down at the meeting, ' P' - . J'jgf. 1 i tirvV T That's the refreshing part of it you can drink Ghirar delli's Ground Chocolate day in and day outand never tire of it. For this delicious food-beverage never cloys the appetite or loses its zest ful appeal. Rich in nutriment high in f bod Value Ghirardelli's Ground Chocolate has es tablished a standard all its own as a strength-giving food-product Drink it every for health and economy ! phirardelli's Ground Chocolate , ' is never, sold in bulk, but in cansjf. Look for the. label, .' when you buy; At your grocer's ' in H lb., i lb. and 3 lb. cans. . E. Ghirardelli Co. "5 : ......J- .Sanrr Til m 1 ' , t I m i . I, m- Indians of Klamath -KeservationTetition; ; For Grovernment Aid . Klamath Falls, April 23--Th Indians of 1 Klamath reservation, at their reg-u-Jar tribal council at th agency, pre sided over by Seldon Kirk, decided to re-jueat x&at loan at. 1550.000, secured by th Umber interests of the Indians or.! th reservation, be granted by the department at Washington for "indus trial support and uplift work" of th tribe. It this amount Is secured. tb Indians ' propose to : us $50,000 In the construction of new highways oh th Klamath reservation. ! Th Indians also want a, new hospital on the reservation, containing- modern equipment and appliances. They took official action against th construction by th Calif ornia-Oregon Power com pany of the dam contemplated across th head of Link river, which they fear will Uxk up the water In Upper Kla math lake to such an xtent as to- inter fere with the proper draiaag and recla mation of reservation lands .near Modoc Point, about 36 miles' north of here.; rrt.A mumn InilArui! ta th fullest ex tent , th policies of : the' Tw .- supertn- tenden. oi tne reservauoa, (Tir West, who came her about six months ae to relieve J,, M. Johnson. West Is a great favorite with his wards already. Jo Ball Chart . Hood and Clay ton Kirk constituted the committee se lected to make the annual trip to Wash ington, P. C, In company with Superin tendent West to visit the Indian bureau and Oregon's congressional delegation In the interest pf their needs and wishes. Libel Against Ship Dismissea in Court ' United States District Judge Bean Men day dismissed th $50,000 libel suit brought agamst th steamer Fort Sill by Blanch Wbbera. wife of Adolf Dib bern, killed while working- on board th boat when It was under construction at the Grant Smith-Porter . Ship company. Judge Bean held that as th government owned the vessel, no attachment could be made. The motion to dismiss th libel was argued last. Monday by As sistant United States Attorney Gold stein. Farm Loan Board j Again Is Attacked Washington, April U. P.)A new fight on the federal ' Xarm loan board appears to be developing. . Mem bers of tb- board reported Monday they hi '. received "samples" of "propaganda" seeking" withdrawal of tax - exemption privileges for bonds of the farm Joan system. The fight against tb board promises to come to a climax with th reconvening- ot congresaT. i Sulzer Bo4r Going East Seattle, April 82. (I. N. a) The body of Delegate-elect Charles A. Sulxer, who did April 12 while en route from Sulrer. Alaska, to Ketchikan, arrtvd here on the steamship Northwestern, and left for the east at 1 o'clock Sunday night on the Milwaukee road. , j , i I -- RUSS REVOLT MAY END RULE OF REDS Revoltcrs Against Bolshevik Rule Are Sentenced to Death; Disorders Spread. Wsshmgton.; Apr ipiV. P.) Dis orders in . retrogTad eaosM by work ma dissstlenod with, th Bolshevik resin hav caused Heath entences to b Imposed on n large number of strik ers, state department advices Monday stated. , : . . A dispatch from th Russian frontier said resolutions were passed Friday by th Petrograd workmen's organl sail on In Petrograd demanding- reestablishment Of the constituent assembly, th freedom of th press and th rignt of private ownership of properties. - ; !; Bolshevik leaders. have found It neces sary to recall troops to Fesegrad to suppress disorders by workmen. - J MAWYv HXECtmOJTS OKDEBED i On April tt ZInoveff. nead ; of th northern commune, at Petrograd. ordered the execution of a large number of strik ing: workmen of th PutiSotf Iron works and other factories.: Despit a material increase in i! wages since February 1, there is reported to be considernbl sa botage by workmen. Peasant uprisings, the dispatch de clares, continue In CBmbirUc and Olonets province. Preparations already are being made for a possible retreat of th ninth Bolabevlk army on the Finnish frontier. Pontoon bridges are being built across tb Neva. 10 kilometers above Petro grad, and will reach some miles south east of Petrograd. SEED KESKBTS IS WW A decree has been Issued .requiring all former country managers to return to their properties to direct and Instruct th peasantry. This, It was said, was mad necessary by bad agrlcnKnr con ditions. The aeed reserve of tb north ern provinces is low and there to n. seri ous shortage of livestock. , , An epidemio of th foot and month disease, which has broken rat in Petro grad, ha claimed many victims, It was stated. There has been a heavy death list for three months, accompanied by a falling off of 60 per cent in the number Of workmen In operating factories. Thar are but three trains running daily on the Kaian railway. Five hundred million rubles hav been set aside for foreign propaganda by Bol shevik leaders, it was stated. It-was be lieved this will be sent through the Bal tic territory and Into Finland through Ike Ladoga, when navigation opens. Troop Withdrawal Is Not Confirmed Washington, s April" 22 (IT. P.) Re ports that General Treat, commanding American forces in Italy," had ordered all Tanks to leave the country by May 1 were unconfirmed at- th state and war departments here Monday. The action, if taken, it Is believed, would be merely as a precaution to prevent any possfbl trouble should Italian feeling break out if Flume is refused Italy by the peace conference. Order Is Eestored In City of Vienna Berne. April 22. (U. P.) Reports from Vienna late- Sunday declared officially that' order had been restored In that city. General Segre was said to have "accepted the apologies' ot th radical demonstrators. For a few hours Friday the city was reported to hav been In control of the soldiers and work men's council, which refused to recog nize either the' Socialistic government or the Balshe viatic taction. News Staff Fired For Forming Union San ;Franclsco, April 22. (TJ. P.) Posted in. th rooms ot .the Newspaper men's club here today is a telegram from Salt Cake City-urging th club to see to it that no'-newepapermen from the bay district take positions in Salt Lake. The telegram la signed by "Writers of the Tribune Staff." It declared the Salt Lake Tribune had discharged its rep ortorial' staff in a body when It learned they had organized a union. Old Miner Wounded By; Exploding .Bifle Roseburg, April 22. Joe Campbell, aged 60, fori 30 years a Coffee Creek miner, was severely wounded in the face Sunday by th explosion of a rifle In the hands ot a. 16-year-eJd 3offe Creek boy. The gun was overloaded with high explosive powder. A section ot the barrel struck Campbell below th ye and entered the roof of his mouth. He will probably recover. Every Soldier Must Get Job First Thing Cincinnati, April 22. (U. P.) "A Job for every soldier. That la what we must have," was the first thing Carter Glass, secretary of . th treasury, said when he arrived here today to campaign,: tor the victory loan.. "This Is not the time to demobilise money raising forces, said Glass. "Thousands of boys are stlU in France. Oerraany; and Russia. They must b brought home." . HOV TO SAVE ON SHOES "Out of curiosity I tried a'pair of Neclin Soles," writes W. P. Macartney of St. jlxuiv "and today1, niter five months of hard service 1 fail to notice any real signs of "wear on them. - ' . This statement points the way to real economy in shoes. What your shoes cost, by the year.,depKlst largely on how the soles wear and Neaun boles do wear a very lone time. Moreover, they are exceedingly comfortable and TOterproof--entincally made tobe exactly what soles should ; be and so worn now by millions. They are available everywhere on new shoes and for re-Hng. They are made by The Goodyear Tire & Rub ber Company, Akron, Ohio, who also make Wingfoot Heels, guaranteed ; to outwear any, other heels. French . jailor ; To iFnnch ;XJoWsv ; In Harney Goiinty f " - - $ f ;' ; Bend, April 2Z Aftier thre years' service in th French' fiavy, Pierr For geron.iaged 17ryeari.iarrived In Bend Monday en route to Burns, where he In tends to realize bis life ambition of be coming av oowpuncher. Teung Forgeren is a Parisian by birth. The French sailor, on the signing of the armistice, secured three'years' leave of absence and headed for Burns, where he will present letters of . introduction to several of : the leading Harney county stockmen. His progress across the coun try was slow becanae of his Ignorance of th English language, but he la new abl to understand an ordinary conver sation, and to express himself In quaint, hesitating English. - : Jt Toonar Forgeren has never don any riding, but declares that he will not be satisfied until he finds out whether or not the Eastern Oregon broncho i" any mere difficult to cling to than th decks of a speedy submarine chaser. t he does not Uk the range, h will cut abort bis leave and return to the navy. "Free Speech. Demanded '; Spokane, April 22. (XT. P.) Radical speakers, denied the privilege of airing their views on the streets by order of city officials, after a hall they had been using was closed to them, Monday ' in vaded the city council chamber and de manded the "right of free speech" be granted. ... -r " M Ml BRIEFS ARE: FILED IN OPPOSITION TO STAND OF 0LC01T W. H. Holmes, Attorney in Chad wick Case, and Ralph E i v Moody Join Attack. ' v.. Salem, April t2.WTwo rnor brief wer filed Monday in th supreme court in-5 opposition to Attorney General Brown's contention that Ben W. Olcott ia governor in fact and may resign his off ie as secretary of state, without for feiting the offlc of. governor, r - On - waa fUed by Attorney W. H. Holmes and another by Attorney Ralph K. Moody, both of Portland. Holmes was attorney for Earhart In th case of Chadwick vs. Earhart, in which the Ore gon supreme court held that . Chadwick, who had succeeded to the' governorship through a vacancy in that office, was entitled to draw a salary as governor after he ceased to be secretary of state. Holmes; says that , if the , Chadwick case is correct, there is no . question about Olcott being governor in fact.' but he insists that the supreme court was wrong when it rendered its decision in the Chadwick case and It should now reverse that decision. ; " 4' ' "Chadwick waa never governor of the state of Oregon except by Judicial flat," : m mm a. UUPSmiRS CL0TH1EBS not . Attorney Moody taken th earn, posi tion. ? He argues that Olcott is not gov ernor tni "any: sense of th word and Is not entitled to the salary or governor, but is entitled only to th salary of sec retary of stata. ' "As a matter of fact," he say, Sielther the circuit nor supreme court in the Chad wiclccas had any Jurisdiction whatever of the subject matter and both courts acted wholly without Jurisdiction." He also argues that in mandamus pro ceedings, such as brought by . Governor Olcott against Stat Treasurer Hoff. th court cannot try the right or tltl to th office. He insists that th petition for a writ of. mandamus should b dis missed. , - ; Monday was the last day for filing briefs as amicus curia in response to the invitation of Chief Juatlc McBride. European Notables ; To Visit America Paris. April 22. The king and queen of Belgium, the Prince of Wales,' Pre mier i LJoyd George and several , other distinguished, statesmen of th allied nations may visit th United States within ' the-ext six or eight months, especially if tb first meeting ot : th League of Nations is held in Washing ton next October, as is now planned. Sentenced to death' s one of those responsible for Armenian massacres. Kernel Bey.' governor of Diarbekr. has been publicly hanged in Stamboul in the presence of - the military governor of Constantinople.- XT he argues. -Tb' constitution did Flowery Freshness and Spring Smartness. It's the kind of a Suit that makes you glad yow're alive. Spring is here. You fellows who play tennis, gQ canoe ing and love the outdoor sports, save money on your clothes and buy a new tennis racquet . or new canoe paddle.or anything else "you need in the bigoutdoors. ' You Can Save $1 0 or More Largest Clothiers : Northwest Seattle Store Arcade Building ALTERATIONS FREE Open Saturday li :fi:V(WA fci v . 1 I : i iv i 4 v. - - ammMmm9Uam a -. i M Live Wire Kills .. Discharged Yank ; : Who' Took Banter Eugene, April 22.i-'0'. P.) -Thornton Umphrey, discharged soldier, was in stantly killed Sunday night when h cam in contact with high voltage wire whil trying 'to-walk the girders of th bridge between this city and - Spring field. - - v His body has not yet been recovered from th river, 1 into i which it was plunged from the bridge. . Aooordlng to details availabl Umph rey dared - a companion to walk-th girder. Th .dar was refused and he attempted to do- the feat himself. His shoulder struck the live wire and he was instantly electrocuted. He is th son ot John Umphrey, who Uvea about seven miles west of Sugen. - - " "Victory -Loan Ship Sails San Francisco, April 22. (U. pi) Th Victory loan ; ship Marblehead ; galled Monday -tor Kew York. Allied colors fly from bow to stern and a Victory Loan pennant has been hoisted to its mast head. . The ship will reach New York via th Panama. . canal th day the Victory Joan is ; fully subscribed. ! Its hlstorio voyas-. will register by.IU speed the; daily ; subscriptions for;, the loan. v . - " . - - " Mayor Hanson Soon to Begin ,Tonr SeatUe. April 22. (L N. 8.) At the request of the United States treasury department, and with the voluntary con sent of th city council. Mayor Ql Han son will leave SeatUe on April 25 on a FAHEY - BROCKM AN fWm The SUIT that breaks away from the old war time somberness and gives you the feeling of on i Eadh Garment k Finest Materials in SPRING SUITS and OVER COATS $ 1 5 - $20 - $2B :-H 3 By taking the elevator you can save$t0;00;6n account of f ' LOW UPSTAIRS RENT NO CREDIT LOSSES SUPREME BUYING POWER LOW PERCENTAGE- OF PROFIT Entire Second Floor of RALEIGH bldg. in ' FIT GUARANTEED Evening .Until 8 o'CIock OTP yxm m Euyatqrsave ioea coast-to-coast speaking tour on behalf of th Victory liberty loan campaign, i i ;:. r- -1 It is too much trouble to write an nd every day Cor all the papers in-- Portland, so as to be fair I am going to start in just this war - - - .1 am going to write ads for the OREGON IAN the whole ' month of February March is going to be dedicated" to the JOURNAL - ,- April turned over to the TELEGRAM May devoted' to the NEWS- In this way readers of the above papers - during that particular paper's nutty month" - - will bajre the pleasure of . reading a NUT HOUSE AD : every day. Yours for $5,400,000,00 Slip. Sixth and Washington Sts. . Entrance Opp. Sunset Theatre'