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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 17, 1919)
THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, FRIDAY. OCTOPCH 17. 1913. 3do?Sbitat Strikers Take Steps WHERE DOLLHOOD CHARM REIGNS -SUPREME U I To Lift Ban From Pittsburg Meetings Pittsburg. Oct ' 17 !. K. a The first legal more of, the steel sinkers' leaders to have the baa on meetings lift ed here was mate this afternoon when bill of equity was filed, in common; pleas court asking thai Mayor E. V. tt.rwnok. Director of Public Safety C STARTING THE SHOW WITH ONE THOU SAND LAUGHS Competing for First Honors Are Many. Attractive Specimens of TOMORROW B. Prtchard. Police Superintendent B. J. Alderdlce and others be restrained from -,. MORN interfering witn gatnermgs oi .swKers. ; the Dollraakcn' Art . ING ONE SearMeliiened 1 ?WEEK BIG' AUDITORIUM CROWDED - " " rr t" t ? v -i - . - ,-m -J. ' - W t -5 -J ?r.y -v sA MEIER & FRANK S ' i v 1 1 5 i - -4 ; ; " Lv ; -; ' 0F"' - .... With Coal Famine Seattle, Oct. 17. Already In the grip 4. it i I ! ' . " i . I ! i Grownups as Well as Children ; Enjoy Looking Over Large Va , : rlety of Dolls on Exhibition, Dollsnearly 80Q of them of every size, variety. .status and agre, , are competing for first honors at the seventeenth annual doll show, now belor held 1ft the auditorium of Meier & Frank's store. i : , i'Xook . at mtt" aome seem, to ' shout big, rosy-cheeked, round eyed' chubby creatures, clothed in ' the finest of linen, hand embroidery, " baby ribbon and crochet. ' Others, ' more ' shrinking, but nonetheless ; beautiful, peep shyly from less con- i isplcuous locations. :4 Dolls were made primarily for chil dren, yet the room was crowded Thura uiay with adults who were no less ex- . (felted over the wonderful display than ,' .the youn raters tbemaeivM who stood jcllnging to, the bands of their family Iprownups. A bigger proportion of chil dren will be In attendance Saturday -; (when school dtfes not claim their atten- fion. . tf : The room Is a "bewildering mase of ' ' dolldom. When one attempts to speak pf any particularly wonderful doll, a multitude of marvelous creations comes to mind. There are the character dolls, .with faces so expressive of babyhood jchuckles and griefs, of wonder and cur-r ' lenity, that they almost seem real. ' , f There are the big, curly haired, long eyelauhed dolls with outstretched arms ; and wmnlng-smiles; there are scores of , those fetching turnip headed kewptes, of 'all sizes and complexions ; there the '; groups of dolls arranged In picturesque v poses ; there are dolls of kid, dolls of ; bisque I ' old-fashioned china dolls, rag : dolls and dons of cheese, turkey bones " mxtC all-day suckers. The latter are in the ' collection of "most original and comical dolls" which - are a whole story in themselves. There , ' Is a doll that was made in Poland and , wfclch Paderewskl brought to the Unit ed Statesvpaid one dollar duty and sold for the benefit of Polish sufferers. , Prises win be awarded Saturday, 1275 , worth, for the best doll In each of the IS , different classes. Judges are Mrs. Will iam Burgard, Mrs. Edward Cooklnghara, Miss Mae HIrsch. Mrs George W. Ms , Mt.th and Mrs. Andrew C. Brolth. ' OF (ConthuMd Froni Psc Oo) ' potent. In that they express the. fears ; of a majority of the conference, as well - as the people In the government -itself. I H said : . "There can be no permanent. Indns trlal peace that Is not based upon in- dustrial Justice. Just as internatlonaJ wrongs may accumulate to the point ...where war Is necessary to bring relief, se Industrial wrongs may make Indus- - trial conflicts preferable to the further t endurance of the - wrongs imposed." Kor- ORGANIZATION RESPONSIBILITY ASKED " - Is it sufficient that either side to an in- dustrlal controversy should b the sole i Judge of what constitutes Justice. 'The means must exist by which-all men may r know, that Justice has been secured. : . ' VvBESOIUTIOIT IS SHELVED ,'i So It Is' a fundamental Issue of Jus ; ; ties .that is up. Action on the resolu ' ' tloA proposed by Samuel Oompers. ask ,lng that the conference request the steel i. ' employers and employes to ge back to normal conditions till the issues In the " industrial conference are settled has been ' Indefinitely postponed. The conference . . A is trying In the meantime to get bar - raony In the principle of collective bar t gaining.,;:.- . t , The publte group Is much more ad r vancsd In Its discussions of what should , be the Vrlnciple of collective bargaining than is the general committee of 15. In the latter committee the employers are stoutly opposing anything but an or ganisation created by their own men arsyou utter- (. TAYLOR HOLMES J You U fee NAOd 3(3ISdfl today only. COMING TOMORROW ; . "UP IN - ALPS. PLACE" Jhe latest - : Sennet comedy! "SIX-FEET-FOUR," a dramatic knock . . : out in six bisr acta; r ' r i" One bf the exhibit coontcrs at the annual doll show at Meier A and old loins before beautiful creations that dazzle In their own shops and having no au thority outside their shops. PUBLIC GROUP SPLIT In the public group two classes of opinions prevail. Some would grant the right of watt earners to elect weir own spokesmen and duly accredit them as their representatives in dealing with employers. But the labor group served notice that they wanted the right recog nized of wage earners to associate m trade or labor unions, so as to deal with employers, and to be permitted to em ploy counsel of anybody else to repre sent them In ail negotiations. A compromise plan whereby the right of workers to "associate into any organ ization whatsoever," la being suggested, so as to aviod a direct recognition of any particular method such as the trade union, and-to Include any lawful body that the workmen may desire to set up. There U a feeling among some em ployers that It would be worth while granting to the workmen the right to form any organisation or association whatsoever, provided It also was agreed and understood that the granting of such a right requires corporate respon sibility on the part of the organisation so formed. ISSUE 03TE OF JUSTICE Employers of this type believe that it would be more economical In the long run to recognize labor unions or any other trade organisations, provided the- indlvidual workers could be held respon sible for contracts made and agreements signed by their representatives for them. That's the crux of the trouble, and while, it looks like a controversy over language or phraseology, It Is actually an issue ef Justice shall workmen have the right to associate as they please without ceorclon or influence or .Inter ference by employers, and when once they are organised and employers do recognise them, can they be held respon sible collectively for the sum total of their, individual actions? Labor will probably get its right to organize, but not without a pledge to accept respon sibility for Its organised actions. Willamette Sends Big Delegation to : T. M. 0. A. Meeting Willamette University, Salem. Oct IT, As a result of conference with the cabinet, of the university T. M. C A., called by Gale Seaman secretary of the college Y. M. C. A. work of the Pacifio coast a score of delegates are attending the conference at McMlnnville college this week end, at which the U. of O.. O. A. C Willamette university, Pacifle university, Reed college and McMlnn. ville college will bp represented. The conference opened today and will close Sunday. Among the speakers will be : Ivan Rhodes, John Rudd and dale Sea- man, all x secretaries of the coast; Professor Coleman of Reed and Profes sor Duback of Reed. Seaman also started plans for a Wll lamette delegation, to the "Student Vol unteers" convention, which is to be held at Des Moines, Iowa. Willamette will send six regular delegates. Sk i :.... . ... j.- : : x m . ..- . :::.... i rwz -. .4 " - - .Off AIRMAN'S DEATH IS BY Lieutenant Webb Killed in Fall When Engine Stops; In jured Assistant Testifies. Medford, Oct 17. The coroner's Jury In the Investigation Into the .airplane accident of October ? near Raygold, In which Lieutenant Henry W. Webb, the pilot was instantly killed, and Private J. C. McGinn, the mechanician, was In jured, Thursday found that the accident was unavoidable and that due to "some mechanical defect In the engine of the airplane, the motor stopped and. In at tempting to make a, forced landing, the plane went into a nose dive." Private McGinn, aged 19, who will be badly disfigured, for life by the outs he sustained on his head, face and hands, was able to leave the hospital and tes tify. He asserts that as soon as he Is released from the hospital here he will at once resume his army flying career. Bis testimony was to the effect that he and Webb,, en route to Medford from Eugene that- forenoon on the regular forest patrol trip, had encountered no trouble whatever and were flying along nicely in the big De HavUand about 800 feet high when, without warning, the engine stopped and. the plane began to oescena swtruy. He was standing In the cockpit at the time and braced himself for the crash. which he realised to be inevitable. At the same time, he said, Webb started to turn his head around to look at him but evidently changed his mind. The next thing he remembered was of having re gained consciousness in the hospital. It developed today that Lieutenant Webb carried a government life Insur ance policy of 110,000. Sflei Ouf4 In to 14 Dm Drturriit nfmd money if PAZO OIMTKENT fiii to curt Itchias, Blind, Bleeding or Protrad ing Pile. Stop IrriUtioo: Soothe end Hek. Ton ess set reettnl deep after the (int applies- uon. rnn QUO. AHT. GIVEN INVESTIGATION MEDFORD URY cfjii s SWEETS SALT LAKE C H O C O LA T E S Popular Hers - 6tM from , , Alaiks t AuktsUs "A- ' Frank's, at which the interest of young the eyes of little glsU. Swindling Charged Against Man Local Officers Are After -. - Working the same game successfully on two different occasions, a small man. about 85 years old, said to speak with a German accent Is alleged to have swln died two printing companies of about fSO worth of stationery, according to re ports made to Inspectors Coleman and Morskv who are hunting for the man. Explaining that he was the secretary of Father O'Brien of Monroe, the alleged swindler ordered $5 worth of stationery from the Dudley Printing company. Eleventh . and Burnside streets, and placing the package in an automobile he drove away. Later on 1 21 worth of sta tionery was obtained from the Ryder Printing company, Third and Yamhill streets, by a man who represented him self to be the secretary of Father Latle of Oswego. - Indian Accused of . Threats to Murder Because of an alleged threat to kill his wife, Nellie, an Indian and former stu dent at the Chemawa training school. Rudolph Swarowsky. SS4 Missouri ave nue, an Austrian,- who served four years In the United States marines, was bound over to the grand jury on a $2000 bafl Thursday by Judge Rossman In the municipal court Swarowaky was . art rested Tuesday night by Inspectors Co!e man and Morak after a eeroplaint had been sworn out by his wife, who alleged that she had been beaten, choked and threatened-with dangerous weapons. Frr night fishing a new flashlight to be mounted on a pole Is switched on when a fish takes the bait and begins to unwind the reel. DANCE Gives Every WEDWESDT and SATURDAY SIGHT Is URFER'S HALL KTXWATKIE AYE. AVB HAIG 8T. (Take seuwood car) - TTHIOW MUSIC 8tS O'CLOCK EVERYBODY WELCOME T travel box of Sweetfs -1 i i : - III HARTCIGAR CO.. PortJaad, Ore. - Distributors. - . . , of a coal shortage, and. with a nation wide strike of coal miners ' called for November 17 Seattle was facing s seri ous situation- today. Some coal dealers rfported they" have been unable as yet to fill September orders. . Others said they needed three times as much coal as they have' on hand to satisfy coalless customers. VICTOR RECORDS '' 80XX GOOD ; SUQGE3TI05S TOCA1 J5S51 Oems from "The Mlka- . do" Parts I and ... ' Victor tdsrht Opera. Co. S1.35 a.. mm w . t grm t a X T Why 7).. Enrico varuso 1.00 x.oo 2.00 X.OO 1.00 1.00 S72S Boat Bong ...... Geraldine Farrar 88801 TraviataDlto alia gio4. VlDO ee ...Qalll-Curcl-de Luca 45168 Our Yesterdays .. Elsie Baker .......... IirSTRUMEITTAL 15084 Spring (Orieg) Victor String Quartet 741S5 Thais Intermezzo .... ..Maud Powell 85047 Aids Fantasie (Verdi). i Police Band of Mex ico City l.OO 1.25 1.35 7027 Pelerle (Prayer) .. , Ada Sasselt 85021 Love's Dreamland Walts Victor Dance Orchestra YICTBOLAS XTTD M CO ED 8 Sixth St Bet Alder as Morriios CHENEY PH05OOBAPHS . . , . , 7 MUSIC , v ALL DAY SATURDAY : 5o So 10c -15c z f IN THE in iSHEET! J - . - - " V - -!" .-''.. 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