Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1919)
THE OrXCON DAILY JOURNAL, .PORTLAND, TUESDAY, OCTOBEH- 21. 1919. FIVE CHARGED 1H VIOLATING SECURITY ACT TO FACE TRIAL Court BonJj Fixed for Alleged Bootleggers Arrested. R- v , DetrjJne4 to end hdonshipnf United States revenue officer! Monday charred 1 five alleged bootleggers" with violation of tiia national security act. Conviction tinder' this law mean a $1000 fins with - oftlon of :-ar rear' Jell sentence la ad- - dition. vy" X--' '. V";:-' 'X V The national security act. passed No- Vember 21. J91I, provides tbat.no grain, fruit or other foodstuff be ued in the ' making of liquor. , rteleaaed under 11000 bonds and await t Ing trial are Larasette Ylncenjo, 8. and M F. Plenovl, wealthy , Fdrtland Italians arrested laat week after 1400 gallons of . wine was found on their farm, and An tonto Borrl, who win waa seised at v. 415 Ivon street. Frank -O. Dangelo, ar rested Saturday at 1011 Flftjr.ftrst street southeast, in Jail, unable to furnish bond. , ' .. t K. P. McDonald,' a carpenter, Saturday waa taken into custody and charged with manufacturing and selling stills. It U alleged that he mad "till at East - Eighth and Belmont streets and that last , April he sold ona to Morris Galbreatb, , now In Jail for manufacturing moon- shine. McDonald Is one of the few men arrested so far for making stills. Charles E. Bass, whom federal officers say was Galbreath's selling partner, la also under arrest. Galbreath was ar rested last week at Bonlta station, where a complete still waa found. It la Bald Baas worked in a local fruit bouse and .' provided, the materials to make tha moonshine. Then he peddled t In Portland. Mass and Prayer for Wilson's Recovery Is Offered; by Greeks Portland Greeks, represented ' in tha congregation of the Greek Trinity church, of which George J. Borbys is president, held special prayer services on Sunday for President Wilson. The following message was sent to Mrs. Wilson at Washington by the congre gation : "The Greek Trinity church of Port land held special service today express ing Its high .esteem and regards for our beloved president, Woodrow Wilson. Mass was read by Father V. Karahalea for our presidents speedy recovery." A CLEAR IP Ruddy Cheeks SparklingEyes - Most Women Can Have V m 1 Say Dr. Edwards, a WeH-Known Ohio Physician DrTAI.Edwardi for 17 years treated, cores of women ft liver and bowel ail rnents. Duriia these years he gave to his patients a prescription made ofci few well-known vegetable ingredients 'mixed with olive oil, naming them Dr. Edward Ol'va Tablets. You will know them by their olive color. These tablets are wonder-workers on the liver and bowels, which cause a ' ' normal action, carrying off the wasta : tnd poisonous matter in one's system. If you have a pale face, sallow look; " , dull eyes, pimples, coated tongue, head- aches, a listless, no-good feeling, all out or&orts, inactive bowels, you take one , of Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets nightly . for a time and note the pleasing results. Thousands of women" and men take Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets tha suc cessful substitute for calomelnow and then just to keep them fit. 10c and 25c -- . . AdT. Mother Imows MisiiiS will heal it She has been through it so many tirnes before that she neverhesitatea now. ,Whe anyone In the family" comes to her with a spot of eczema or an itching rash, she gets out tha jar of Resinol Ointment and gives prompt relict And a few applica tions seldom fail t clear away the irritation completely. - Itwiaet (Mntnmt U an eaealleat healing VeMinr. toOi tor term, acalda, cats and tb bre Hide aorta. Sole by all drufrista, hw Mmvle tr, writ to Dwt 4Ut, -Jlttiiwl, Baliimaca, Hi. V Mml Stm? i wzm m ... s ,. ; ; COIQNETI E, M, HOUSE ARRIVING FROM FRANCE : y 1 1 y,V.; " '"C " ""AA r- ' '.: -A- : ki :s; . '.fit - I V ; 'Ah 4 t ? - " " - Ik i ifti w i ii i nil v t irr " rtinT -", t f ir 'f rtr mf -Til highway between- these two points be cause of the fact that the contract eaUa for the road being- closed t travel dur ing" tha daytime while the contractor ara worung on it , ;tvci w" two mllea pf road is heavy. ;L, King Alberts Talk , Before House Oct. 28 "Waahlogton. Oct. tLI. N. &-Klnc Alhert f 8If lum wt ak an address from; the floor of the hous October 2S, the day after his scheduled arrival here,, If the plans of tha house do not go stray. j . Roosevelt Drive FrWay ' Pendleton. Oct Tt. Friday wilt be de voted to tha raising of Pendleton s quota for the Roosevelt memorial fund, with! M persona spHcftlng. One doUar Is all that Will he asked ot eaen sup seriber here. David .Nelson la in charge in Pendleton, and has set the city quota at ISfoO, The dty and county are as lgne Haggard and careworn, Colonel E. M. House, delegate to the peace confer ence and personal adviser of President Wilson, returned to this coun try from .France aboard the steamship Northern Pacific. The photo graph shows Colonel House being assisted from the, steamship oa his arrival in New York. Colonel House has been In poor health ever sinee an attack of la grippe in Paris some time ago. Mrs. Nelson Starts Fight to Get Money Denied Her in Will Pendleton. Oct. SI. A petition to re ject in probate court the will of the late Jackson Kelson of Athena was filed Mon day by Mrs. Jane Nelson, his widow. She alleges that when the will waa made, September 10, Nelson was incompetent and prejudiced, due t the fact that she lad recently started action for divorce. Nelson was 83 years old at the time of his death and left an estate estimated at $53,000. The contest ever the will Is being waged in probate court 'this week, with David Taylor, Mrs. Nelson's brother, the target of her motion.' Install Looms In' Mill .nillnn - W. 91 Vw Imnu which' will Increase the output of Pendleton In dian robes JO per cent have been in stalled by the Pendleton Woolen mills here, and will begin operation shortly. Tan aaauionai persona wuj oe, em ployed, Return to Boyhood Home Pendleton, Oct. 21. E. L. Smith, re tired farmer and. Implement dealer, left Sunday evening for a visit to his Old home in Tennessee, which he has not visited for 96 years. He was accom panied by hia brother, M, D. Smith, and brothertn-law, J. aV.NorvelV heth 'of Helix. All are pioneers of Umatilla county. , - Oregon-California Land to Be Thrown Open Next Spring Washington, Oct 81. (WASHING TON BUREAU OF THE3 JOURNAL i Unopened land of the Oregon ft Cali fo'nla grant classified as agricultural will he, thrown open earlv next spring, according to plana made by the gen eral land office. Commissioner Clay Tallman had orig inally Intended to arrange an opening this fall. Delays interposed, aad upon his return from a far western trip a short time ago, )t was decided that as the season is so far advanced, postpone ment until next spring la the best course. . i - "I desire to give ample opportunity to all applicants in advance of the open ing,", said Tallman, "and the purpose can best be accomplished by opening the lands next spring. Full Inform tion aa to lands will be prepared for the use of prospective applicants. "Time will also be given in the mean time for possible legislation by con gress to provide preference rights for soldiers and Bailors. That question haa been diseuseed. and if eengreaa desires to grant preference, time will ber af forded for congress to act in that direc tion. ' - , iMose Durkheimer Is , Dead at Baker Home Baker. Or. Oct. 2U-Mose turkheimer, aged J years,' for o year a prominent merchant of Tralrle City, died at hia home .Sunday.. aftaraenraW'. acute blood poiaoBinav7 according f word re ceived in Baker, Mr, - Durkheimer was an Elk and " thlrty-second degree Maon. He le survived by hia widow and by s, brother, Julius Durk heimer of Wadhams ft Co., Portland. He went to Grant county from his birth place, Portland, where he had been, em ployed as a primer, n will be forwarded to Portland for burial. SupremeiCourt Finds For Matilda Goarin Washington, Oct it (W A8HIN3 TON BUREAU OF THB JOURNAL) The supreme "Court Monday declined to order tha lower courts to review a Judg ment for Matilda. M.-Ooartn, in Vault brought by Milton A. "Miller as oolleotor of Internal rsvenue U voting $4800 Jn. eome tax on tha. 2tothchU4 butldlnff In Portland.. The effect is a dismissal of the suit. , K - . ' C Empty Cars Coming For Oregon Lumber Washington. Oct, . rWASHlNG TON BUREAU OF THE JOURNAL.)--The railroad administration assured s .rn TT&wlev Monday that cars for lumber are being moved into Oregon la a number expected to produce a material Improvement shortly.' Hawley had received urgent messages from lum bermen, including A. C Dixon of Eu gene. A.-W, Hudson of North Bend and F, Vt Donaldson, secretary of the Wil lamette Valley Lumbermen's aseeciatiea. The public land, oil, gas. Phosphates and coal leasing bill, recently passed by the senate, haa been ordered reported favorably ,by the house public landa committee. California iTTe. Girls Want to Know Names Of Perfect Freshmen Berkeley, Cel., Oct. 81.U. P.) Girls of the University' of. California are giv ing the freshmen the "once over" today in an attempt to ascertain which ones are ' physically perfect. " The girts are disgruntled by the action of Professor Kleeberger, director of the men's gymnasium. ' First the professor aroused their Interest by announcing 31 of th men of the new class were physi cally perfect. The girls by . committee MR. JACK Cowrlfht. !. t Iaui tiMMU Featera geniee By Swinnerton War to Be Waged "On Grasshoppers In Grant County .John Day. Oct 21. -Everett Horn of thu United States biological survey office has been in John Day organizing the stockmen of this vicinity, ror a war on grasshoppers In the early spring during the hatching- period. During the past summer the grasshoppers were ao thick In Grant county that forage waa dam aged to the - extent of many thousand dollars, the worst scourge of this kind ever experiepced in this part of the coun try. Road Crossing Protested John Day, Oct 21. Residents of John Day and. Canyon City are protesting the action ef the county court in awarding a contract for the , Improvement of the irsWy Am e TfM..f d em" 111 SjSaUT wVtfsV R. iCffn. easft the City e4 CMcaiew - "Frtmw nfewi eseerieeee witk Nam-' ted Iron I feel it Is. Mck e faluable blood aad bedyMM. Mt reersio tkai it eeebe waed to every beaeiiaS etcuul-ia IMuntrv. Nysatcd I rati heiae iwaifeflth.rt-womefi end etfowgef. stei4 t Stifctkm eusrsnteed of npocyl Young Elopers of Medf ord Are Home Seeking Armistice Medford, Oct 21. Accompanied by Mrs. A. W. Walker; the two young couples wtjo eloped In an auto from Medford' and went te California a week ago Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Clark Walker and Mr- and Mrs. Glenn 'Allen,- arrived in the city Sunday night from Chico, CaL They returned by auto, i Mrs, Walker, mother of Clark . Walker, went to Chico last Friday to perguads the newly weds . to;, return ; home. The brides, nee Josephine Miller and Grace Martin, each 15 years old. were high school girls. Each of the husbands ta U years lold. Walker and ' Mias Martin were married at Red Bluff. Cel., and Allan and Miss Miller at Anderson. Cat. The newtywada.are making peach with inetr parent. . Wilson Didn't Sign . ButBilllsNow Law . , ..vv w mwuws v b,v Big mm .wtuiiH CtlfJ 10-day limit Monday made law the bill a Biw nna mam - iwrvyriauna: t,uuv,uuv ior xne com pletion of Alaskan raliroada,:i; Jt la the first legislative -measure to become law .i i ioimci u .m. result ot me preai dent's illness. ..-.- v , 1..- y' "' X. l 5TACE 7Z. ' .. "'"A "TAfiK. ' -TTI t 1 1 1 WM GITSOME FAIR ONaTOlX, s 4. ACCCr-miS- AND 50,OtI Y Tr Captain Donaldson : r Second in Air Derty r ifew York, Oct.' iU C3? w.)r-Captaln 3. O. Donaldson, piloting a single seater & E-6 airplane, arrived ; at, Roosevelt field, Mlneola, at 10:10 a. re. Mondey.He waa the second aviator to complete the endurance flight from Mlneola to an Francisco and return. Lieutenant B. W. Maynard having arrived here Saturday afternoon, - asked him' to publish the names, but he refused. 1 . . Kleeberger said war training resulted In arrival of more physioally perfect men at the campus. ' KRAZY KAT SSrlZZir. .By Herriman - - . ( IXjps A OwfhMG) "". T- vw toft,: .fit ?r 'SMd& Way. ttosrotA mlTnwX -NlfiJ 1 - " ii. JERRY ON THE JOB (CoprrisbV iSD b' UUn laUaeal fMUue Berflse, Inc.) Simple Solutions Are ? Best t 4MD VWk m WEOQ VMATTA MXTTER. - 1 SXVW? S V" , SAW T 7 ,cjry mm Vfe Ap I'Spi . l fi US BOYS tCoPTrisbt, 191S. by International Tntara aniaa Isaj Tlifif'ft riTnf rn'no- F.vrn Vnn P'rin'f Ruv fiSlfclAlD 015R" etlfLEO. U1T LtPT ftp BUV THEM FOR MS. friBV ARC 0 rVg THEM MASTS R, SKIWJY. " W III! FATHER SEND3 ME FltiS TELEGRAM3 L4 pay, eur savs He 15 too eusyTo ROM- TO MB PERSON ALV.Y. THOfOOEft. t W1W HB WERB Hgirg t ' I V HliWOKS . I A "l-a !. a k aa. a . - m m a- a gU.. IT AlNr'CHfU'MA, BUT ftY fiOUY, GlUMe ALL THtS STDfP AND THEN VI IRE O ATAI TO rACKJgg. j arait ai acii t - GOSH WHrXT A LOTirV COIN VAN Illl '1 v i,.fa 1 ' 1' 'J V 1 . . I V 1. fcv ; . ,1 'ill .s-'''". . HON AND DEARIE CCepyrleht. W. latereattwal ata Strrioe, loo.) Hon Shows He V Brave and Gets Decorated for It I TQVQ&MTkMtisLicW' !' J acT5 rrflCiE-euT I trsp those soya FKofll I T w . r OAtFTt 1- -:f:MM 'UP ; I :