The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, April 14, 1920, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    . i
4
FRED LOGKLEY IS
CANDIDA
FOR
STATE SECRETARY
, ' Fro d Loekl y, well known
throughout th state as a newspaper
man, filed his declaration of candi
dacy for nomination and election as
secretary of state on, the Republican
ticket, at Salem this morning.
- In fUlnC his announcement Mr. Lock
ley states that:
"If nominated and elected I will con
duct the business of the state 'with the
same I care and diligence as though it
were my own business. The knowledge
gained by frequent trips to every county
f in the, state investigating Oregon's farm,
livestock, irrigation, waterpower, timber,
with !my Investigations of the develop
ment; of our ports, shipping facilities,
'. roads, schools and colleges will prove
helpful in solving the problems arising
through the growth and development of
-our state. I will to the best of try
ability be true to the trust ' reposed in
me," ; . .
Mri Lockley was born In Kansas,
March 18, 171. He attended public
school at Walla Walla, Butte, Mont.,
and Albany, N.--,Xi. high school at
' Arkansas City, Kan., r the Oregon Agri
cultural college, and graduated -with
normal degree from Willamette unlver-
r sity in 1896 while working In the Salem
' postof flee.
Mrj Lockley's field ' of endeavor has
been a wide one. He started, as a boy,
on a farm near Walja Walla : carried a
newspaper route in Butte, Mont ; was
; the printers' devil On his father's paper
In Kansas, worked after school and dur
ing the summer vacations in newspaper
. . i . t . i , M
- uiiiwi ana on iirmi in BDnnr vmiict.
Polk I county. He ' worked as a com-
positor and pressman on . the Capital
Journal at Salem, as field editor of Pa
cific f Homestead, letter carrier at Sa
lem, assistant topographer United States
geological survey, beach mining at
Nome, Alaska, in 1900; circulation man
ager East Oregonian at Pendleton, was
- assistant editor, advertising manager,
manager and general manager of the
Pacific Monthly of Portland for four
- year. He has been a writer for newi-
papers and magazines, has done overseas
worlci with the Y. M. C. A., installing
dugout canteens and doing work in the
trenches with the Thirty-third division ;
. was a volunteer publicity man for the
food conservation for Oregon and asso
ciate) state director in the War Savings
Stamp drives. "
Mr, Lockley has never held office. He
has traveled In every county of the
state many times during the past 25
years'. "I have become familiar with
the needs of the state so that I can act
on the state boards with a knowledge of
tatei conditions," he says. "I took hold
of the Pacific Monthly when It was
losing an average of $5000 a month, ran
It for four years without loss, paid 100
cents on very dollar of Indebtedness
and sold trto ths Sunset when the dl-
rectors decided to dispose of the mapa
sine.! I will use the same care, dili
gence arid effort to conduct- the business
of the state as though it were my own
'business If I am elected, for I will have
,no political debt to pay nor grudges to
gratify."
B. 8LEEMAN 18 CANDIDATE
FOR SEAT IN LOWER HOUSE
Wth the slogan "Port Development"
'uahis campaign watchword, B. W. Slee-
mani has entered as a candidate for
'nomination and election to the house of
representatives from Multnomah' county
on the Republican ticket.
Slteman, who has been prominently
'.Identified with the district council of
carpenters for some time and whose
.candidacy has been Indorsed by the
Central Labor council, has been a resP
dent of Portland for the last 11 years.
In his declaration of ranilMapv h nut.
llneS his platform as follows:
"If nominated and elected, I will dur
ing my term of office support any
proper measures tending to the fuller
development of port facilities; will fa
vor! the use of Oregon materials in all
.public work where possible.
"Favor all necessary extensions In
- urj educational facilities with proper
'remuneration for teachers.
"favor decent treatment for our re
turned soldiers.
"Favor the formation of a properly
constituted commission on industrial
relations to the end that the danger and
loss attached to industrial strife may
be minimized.
; "I believe in and will favor all meas
ures making for economy that are con
sistent with good business and prog
ress." v 6
!
MARIOX HAS KEEN RACE
FOR LEGISLATIVE SEAT
. Salem, April H.-With eight candidates
worn! Si sit eme Bits
Just Filed at State Insurance Department:
Sh
o w
i-J Before You Sign
Other Company Obtain
Hoae Office, , Portland,
I NEWSPAPER MAN SEEKS
REPUBLICAN NOMINATION
w M
Fred Lockley
already filed and more to come, the race
for) Marion county's five seats In the
lower house of the stats legislature
promises to be most interesting, . al
though, based on present indications,
victory In the primaries will be equiva
lent to election, inasmuch as not a sin
gle Democratic aspirant for legislative
honors has as yet appeared in this
county.
Considerable seat was added to the
contest in this district Tuesday morning
when Thomas B. Kay, former state treas- J
urer. filed as a candidate for the Repub
lican nomination for state representative.
Kay, who has had several years' ex
perience In the legislature, is regarded
as ! a safe bet, although he must count
on sharing his support with five other
Salem men whose names are on the list.
Ivan O. Martin and George W. Weeks,
both of Salem and both of the last legis
lative session, formally entered their
names in the lists for reelection Tuesday.
Both are Republicans.
The other five candidates in the race
to j date are T. L. Davidson, Zadoc J.
Rises and J. O. Perry of Salem, Henry
Zorn of Donald and David H. Looney of
Jefferson.
Other candidates filing with the sec
retary of state's office Tuesday for a
place on the primary ballot were.
Charles L. Brown. Portland, Republi
can, for public service commissioner,
western district.
J. H. Crane, Ardenwald station. Repub
lican, for state representative from the
seventeenth district. 1
C. J. Edwards, Tillamook. Republican,
Tor state senator from the twenty-fourth
district.
Lee M. Travis, Eugene, Democrat, for
delegate to the Democratic national con
vention from the first congressional dis
trict. L. p. Brown, Dallas. Democrat, for
state, representative from Pork county.
E. C. McFarlajid, Portland, Republican,
for state representative from Multnomah
county.
L. M. Lepper, Portland, Republican,
for state senator, from Multnomah
county. !
J. M. Batchlder, Lakeview, Repub
lican, for circuit judge of the fourteenth
Judicial district, comprising Lake county.
W. H. Waterfcury, Republican, for dis
trict attorney for Lincoln county.
George J. Cameron, Portland, Republi
can, for delegate to the Republican na
tional convention from the state at large.
PETITION REQUESTS M'ADOO'S
NAME Qji OREGON BALLOT
;Salem, Or.,VApril 14. A petition
containing rrfpre than 1300 signa
tures and requesting that the name
of William (jbbs McAdoo of New
Ybrk be pladad on the Democratic
primary balkt as a candidate for
nomination f'pr president of the
Unite I States,' was filed with the sec
retary of stshe here Tuesday after
noon by Newjpn McCoy of Portland.
McAdoo is tB first Democratic presi
dential candldje to file in the Oregon
primaries.
Nominating petitions were also filed
Tuesday a f terton by Harvey G. Stark
weather of Portland as a candidate for
the Democrat; nomination for United
States senatdVand by Mrs. Alexander
Thompson of Portland, as a candidate
for the Democratic nomination for rep
resentative incongresa from the third
district. ifc.
Colonel tyavls to Seek Toga
Boise. Idaho,': April 14. Colonel E. G.
Lavis. Boise 'jtttorney and former op
ponent of D. iff- Davis for the Republi
can nomination for governor of Idaho,
senatorial arerijsi within the next week.
1-
2-
QjLpP.jfc in 1919
$6p 70,000.00 new
O?g0nlife in 1919 wrote $1,511,452 more
orgnary business than its nearest competitor.!
(1'&0nljje in 1919 made the greatest Dre-
miim income gain in Oregon ol any life insur
ance company. . -
4-
Orcgonlifc since
gain in premium income and insurance in force
in Oregon than any
5-
OrCgOnTifC on Dec.
business in force, making a greater net gain in
uregon tor 1919 in ordinary business than the
entire written business of nearest competitor. !
an Application for Life
Your Limit in
Or.
f A. I Mills, PresvV C S. Samuel,
Insura
MRS. THOMPSONS
BONNET IS IN RING
Democratic congressional politics,
so far aS the third district of Mult
nomah county is concerned, took a
decidedly upward Jump in dramatic
interest Tuesday afternoon when
Mrs. Alexander Thompson shied her
Easter toque into the political ring.
With the slogan "Jail for profiteers.
Ratification of Versailles treaty as rec
ommended by President Wilson" as her
rallying ' cry, (Mra Thompson has en
tered the arena against her sister can
didate. Dr. Esther Lovejoy, who has
been the sole and only candidate for
several weeks.
CONTEST BETWEEN WOMEN
Dr. Lovejoy, who may or may not
have "had a hunoh" about the impend
ing Thompson candidacy, stated a few
days ago, when she filed her formal
declaration, that she would not return
from New York, where she now is,
prior to the primary election, providing
h "wan luioDDoud" in the contest. By
converse reasoning, it would therefore!
appear that Dr. Lovejoy win return m
view of the Thompson contest against
her and that a real feminine battle will
be staged with the Democratic nomina
tion as the prize.
Mrs. Thompson, In her declaration of
candidacy, outlines her platform of prin
ciple as follows: ,
WILL UPHOLD PRESIDENT
"If nominated and elected, I will dur
ing my term of office work for the bill
indorsed by the American Legion for
the relief of our returned soldiers and
sailors; prosecution of profiteers with
jail sentences ; freedom of speech and
of the press ; a national department of
education with a secretary in the presi
dent's cabinet; upbuild the commerce
of Portland ; work "for the improvement
of rivers and harbors and development
of Oregon's resources; oppose compul
sory military training; favor a square
deal for labor with a Just and equitable
distribution of the nation's production ;
Indorse the stand of President Wilson
on the Versailles treaty, which I be
lieve if ratified will make for world
peace.'
REAL MAN'S MAN
(Con tinned from Fi One)
at the head of this nation, a man trained
in the school of moden thinking, one who
has a broad vision to see not only the
problems of the 48 states of this nation
but of the whole world as well."
Ely then traced Hoover's life and
training, his work throughout the world
and his knowledge of the world at large,
his work in Europe during the war, and
his work as food administrator here.
"No one man could know all of the
things needed to be done, or. how to do
them." Ely said in discussing Hoover's
handling of the food administration.
"But," he argued, "Hoover knew where
to get the men who knew and how to
mould them into a great organization.
He is an organizer, an executive, an ad
ministrator, a business man. He knew
the minds of the American people bet
ter than other men, and because he knew
his own people he was able to do the
work he did.
"It Is such a man that America needs
now, and in the immediate years ahead
of us, to lead the nation through the pe
riod of readjustment, for it Is a period
more difficult of handling than that
which preceded, or that which contin
ued during our participation in the
war."
Today Ely started for Salem by hy
droplane to file the Hoover petition
vlth the secretary of state, but weather
conditions forced a last-minute change
of plan. Tonight he was scheduled to
speak at Oregon City. He leaves to
nicht for Seattle. Spokane and Tacoma.
from which latter place he wifl continue
on into Idaho and other Pacific states,
returning to California for the closing
days of the primary campaign.
SWEENEY SAYS HE STANDS Otf
ROOSEVELT'S 1912 PLATFORM
Contending that' the whole basis plat
form upon which a candidate for con
gress should stand Is epitomized in the
sentence "He should be honest" Thomas
Sweeney, candidate for the Republican
nomination for the third district, out
lined his platform before the luncheon of
the Leonard Wood clui at noon Tues
day.
Mr. Sweeney argued -that the "plat
form upon which Roosevelt made his
race In 1912 is the platform of the
Republican party today" and he said
that it was his pleasure to be with
again leads the state with
business.
1906 has made a greater
other company.
31. 1919. had $20,462,695
Insurance in Any
HOOVER
TERMED
nee Company;
&l'CCEiSFt"l-C05SEBVA:rirE MOGHESSITE '
Ca."MgrI ' K. H. Strong, Asst-Mgei
Roosevelt then, - and Ijf be "were -llying
he would be with ; him now. . -'
"I stand for Americanism without
compromise,' be said. - "I believe ; In
an individual nation. If elected to the
office I seek I will fight for the actual
rights of man. I believe and stand for
honesty In business and I am ready to
fight for big business and make little
business big, but It must all be honest
business. I believe that human rights
are more sacred than property rights
and that both shpuld be protected by
honest laws enforced by honest men."
J. F. Alexander, candidate for Judge
of the district court, also spoke during
the luncheon.
MEMORY OF JEFFERSON IS , ; . '
HONORED BY JACKSON CLtJB
Memory of Thomas Jefferson was
revived and honored last, night by the
Jackson club at its dinner, given in
honor of the great Democratic leader at
the Hotel Benson.
Richard W. Montague spoke to the
subject.- "Thomas Jefferson," while
Frederick V. Holman spoke on "Jef
ferson's Theory of Government." In
addition to these two, major addresses
and short speeches were made by candi
dates for eleotion as delegates to the
Democratic national convention to be
held at San Francisco.
Elton Watkins, president of the Jack
son club, called the gathering to or
der and then turned the gavel over to
Bert Haney, who served as chairman of
the evening.
BAKER JUDGE WHO WAS
RECALLED TO RUN AGAIN
Baker, April' 14. J. B. Messick, for
mer county judge of Baker county, who
was recalled in 1917, has filed his peti
tion as a candidate for nomination on
the Democratic ticket for that office.
He will be opposed in the primaries
by Judge William Duby, who was
seated in office at the time of the
recall.
Henry Loennig has filed his petition
as candidate for the . Democratic nom
ination to the office of county com
missioner. Ira Hoffman, present county
surveyor, has filed his petition as can
didate for the Republican nomination
for reelection. Larry Reeves, formerly
candidate for both state and county
offices on the Socialist ticket, has an
nounced that he will file his petition
as candidate for nomination on the
Republican ticket to the office of
sheriff.
WOMEN INDORSE MEMBERS OF
SEX FOR VARIOUS OFFICES
At a meeting of women voters called
by Mrs. M. L. T. Hidden at the Central
library Monday afternoon, the follow
ing women candidates for office were
indorsed :
Mrs. Alice McNaught, Mrs. M. L. T.
Hidden, Mrs. Harriet Hendee and Miss
Celia Gavin of The Dalles, as delegates
to the national Democratic convention ;
Mrs. Millie Trumbull, Mrs. Alexander
Thompson, Miss Viola Ortschild. Mrs.
Mary Mallett and Mrs. A. C. Newlll for
the legislature; Miss Jessie McGregor
for county school superintendent- A
committee of seven was appointed to
canvass ths city for candidates for
school board membership.'
Jones Boosters Organize
Baker, April 14. An 'organization of
Baker Republicans, with a number of
prominent Democrats in accord, has
been formed to boost for the nomina
tion of Owen F. Jones, candidate oppos
ing Congressman N. J. Sinnott in the
primaries. The club includes practically
all of the Republican business men of
the city.
Cameron Files for Delegate
Judge George J. Cameron of Port
land has filed his petition for delegate-at-large
to the Republican national con
vention at Chicago. Cameron, who
formerly served as district attorney of
Multnomah county and municipal judge,
was high man in the race for delegate-at-large
to the Chicago convention in
1916.
ILLINOIS DELEGATION
TO CHICAGO SPLIT
(Continued from Pte One)
named by the state G. O. P. convention,
to be held at Springfield, May 10. They
probably will abide by the preferential
vote and Indorse Lowden.
Another powerful factor enters Into
the situation, however, in the sweeping
victory registered by Mayor Thompson
and his city hall machine in Chicago.
The Thompson candidates for ward
committeemen won in all but one of the
35 wards of the city a landslide. It Is
declared, that will insure Mayor Thomp
son the control of G. O. P. political ma
chinery in the state and his reelection
as Republican national committeeman.
The returns indicating the mayor's
victory were scarcely in before a re
port was freely circulated by his sup
porters that Thompson would be the
Republican "dark horse" candidate for
the presidency, and that the delegates
brought under his control through his
Chicago cleanup would swing for him
at the Republican convention.
TAFTS REFUSAL TO RUN
CLEARS AIR FOR G. O. P.
The reauest of former President Taft.
wired to the secretary of state, that he
be not considered or filed as a presi
dential candidate In the primary elec
tion. and the acceptance of that verdict
bv C W. Ackerson. has clarified the
presidential atmosphere of Oregon. Nor
has the circumstance been without Its
pleasing aspects to the managers of
other and active candidates, with the
possible exception of those representing
Senator Johnson and senator oinaex
ter.
To the latter two the impending ap
pearance of Taft's name on the ballot
was of cheering Import, for his candi
dacy, as politicians saw it. would hurt
them less and the others more.
With the League of Nations as an
open issue, with Johnson and Poindexter
standing so firmly in opposition to it,
and with Judge Taft as one of the moat
energetic and powerful champions that
covenant has within the "country, the
Taft candidacy would have broken into
the Wood, Lowden .and Hoover ranks
to a much greater extent than into those
of Johnson and Poindexter. Conse
quently there is a feeling of relief about
the Wood. Lowden and Hoover head'
quarters, while Sanfield Macdanakd over
at the Johnson wigwam and J. C Heros-
man, the Poindexter pilot, are not so
happy.
The primary election alignment seems
definitely fixed with the close of- the
Taft incident and it is safe to believe
that there will be no eleventh hour can
didacies springing upon the ' Republican
ballot between now and Friday night,
when the time for filing will have ex
pired. In that event the Republican
voters of ths state will have five candi
dates from whom to pick their prefer
ence. Hoover, Johnson. Lowden, Potn
dexter and Wood.
. Among the . Democratic ' hosts things
are up in the air preeidentially speak
lng. There are two McAdoo petitions
being , guarded trr cold storage, oae in
the saxe or ueorge iovevoy in the Pit
took block, the other In that of New
ton McCoy ia the Oregonian building.
Whether el the of - them will be file
i seems to be s, jayatecg.: Lpvejor ia noa-
committal a.hout Mm fiitu m,,m vtti
McCoy says that he "is nor ready toJ
a woi just, yet. 1
McAdoo has asked that bia name be
kept off the ballot, 'taking the position
that the Oregon delegation I should be
sent to San Francisco unpledged, to tio
what it thought best as circumstances
might dictate whan the big show' got
under way down at the Golden date.
Unless either Lovejoy or MoCoy ft.
both, disregard the McAdoo injunction;
which seems Uncertain, or some other
candidate makes an eleventh hour filing,
which has not been Intimated, the Dem
ocratic presidential ballot win be blank.
That contingency raises a very inter
esting question, namely whether the few
hundred votes, or less, which undoubt
edly will be written in at the Democratic
primaries, will not bind
at San Francisco Just as securely as
though it had been sent to California
bending under the weight of many thou
sand ballots?
When the official ballot ma a it
will have a space left in which Demo
crats may write the name of their pre
ferred candidate for the presidential
nomination. What the blank space may
yield, and whether the delegation will be
bound to eat of ths fruit, is causing
some of the nrosn-MHiv HImiiIm n tv
convention to do some tall thinking. If
ii oe rryan, ior instance, some of them
would consider themselves bound. But
if it be Edwards "not bv a
Is the verdict.
"It would seem." says one who stip
ulates that he ia
there ought to be a line beyond which
men oi common sense could be expected
to exercise their discretion." But where
that line lies no one will harrl in.
dicial opinion.
WOOD STILL IS LEADING IN
G. O. P. RACE FOR PRESIDENCY
By Harold D. Jacobs
New York, April 14. (U. P.) Despite
Governor Frifck O. Lowden's victory in
the Illinois primary. Major General
Leonard Wood apparently continued to
lead today In the race for the Republi
can presidential nomination.
Assuming that 35 of Illinois' delegates
will vote for Lowden, 14 for Wood and
one for Senator Hiram Johnson, the
standing on instructed delegates today
would be :
Wood. 61 : LOY3en. 47 : .Tnhnwin 11
Eight additional delegates will be
cnosen in xiunoia at me state conven
tion later.
vm. . I I. l"- 1 Ul
unpledged delegates figuring that Kan
sas- zu wouia go to wooa and Wiscon
sin's 26 to Johnson after the early bal
lots for Governor Henrv 4 lion nnA fix
ator Robert La Follette, respectively
the standing would be :
Wood, 137 ; Lowden, 106 ; Nicholas
Murray Butler of New York, 88; John
son, 67 ; Judge J. C. Pritchard of North
Carolina. 22.
To political observers the real surprise
of the Illinois Republican -primary was
the large number of "written in" bal
lots for Johnson. The only names printed
on the ballots were those of Lowden and
Wood, but Incomplete returns showed
that Johnson, who had made no cam
paign in Illinois, had polled about 40.000.
JOHNSON DENIES SUPPORT IS
FROM REDS AND PACIFISTS
Lincoln, Neb., April 14. (V. P.)
Senator Hiram Johnson, here on ' a
speaking campaign to secure votes at
the ISiebraska preferential primaries next
week, declared today in an interview
that he believes the people ' are behind
him. Explaining his campaign wss be
ing waged in the interests of American
ism alone, be said :
"The charge that my support comes
from the Bolsheviki, Reds, pacifists and
pro-Germans is rank, rotten nonsense,
brought forward to explain the result
in Michigan. It Is the howling of the
disappointed and disgruntled politicians.
who counted on money and politics to
carry that great state. They can't
understand anything in politics but pol
iticians and coin. They had all these.
in Michigan I had only the people. I
suppose that if I should carry Nebraska
the same story would go out from here
The story that hold your
undivided attention from
start to finish. Many pro
claim Lionel Barrymore,
the star, the greatest screen
actor of the day. You have
until Friday midnight to
see "The Copperhead."
ALSO A
LARRY
S E M O N
COMEDY
-"THE
FLY
COP
as. to the character of ray support,
while if Wood wins it will be the declar
ation of a high, patriotio purpose." vj
' Special Train Planned
Boise, . Idaho. April 14. Republican
delegates to the Couer d'Alene 'conven
tion on April 28 will travel to their
mecca on a special train. The trip will
constitute a 24-hour Informal caucus.
Candidates for office and leading Re
publicans generally will also make the
trip.
SUPPLY IN VALLEY
(Continued from Fia One)
Strike clouds began clearing away In
two sections of Portland's railroad sky
this morning with ,the result that three
crews were working for the Southern
Pacific as against two Tuesday and
three crews were working for the S., P.
& S., as against none the previous day.
Although no improvement was found
this morning at the North bank yards
nor at the Alblna terminal, these yards
had been in better shape than the two
which showed Improvement.
This morning's report shows that 20
crews are at work in the various term
inal yards, an Improvement of three
crewsr or nine men over Monday's re
port. At the North Bank yards of the S., P.
& S.. the 100 per cent strike, which had
been effective since Friday, was broken
for the first time Monday afternoon
when three crewe of Brotherhood of
Railroad Trainmen officials and re
turning strikers were put to work. These
three crews were available again today;
one for the first and two for the second
trick.
ULTIMATUM TO STRIKERS
Issuance of a flat ultimatum to ths
striking switchmen of the S., P. ft S. was
made this morning by L. C. Gilman,
president of the road. In a notice posted
STRIKE CUTS FOOD
1 shy& 3&
FASCINATING 'RADIANT
ALICE JOYCE
IN THE
SPECTACULAR DRURY LANE MELODRAMA
"THE SPORTING DUCHESS"
"the COPPERHEiSir
j e ii or
VferggSrj '
COLUMBIA ORCHESTRA
Knowles, Director Orchestra Matinee 2:30
Matinee 25c Evenings 35c and 50c
(war tax included)
in the North 3ank yards Gilman gives
the strikers until neon Thursday to re
turn to their work, under penalty of
forfeiture of their seniority rights."
A similar ultimatum was Issued by the
Southern Pacific and betr.me effective
Saturday afternoon at 4 o'clock. The 8.
P. ' is now taking on new employes or
returning switchmen as new employes.
It is reported that a similar ulti
matum will ba issueu by the O-W. R, A
N. within the ttext 24 hours.
W. J. Babe, deputy national vice presi
dent for the Brotherhood of Rrllway
Trainmen, who Is handling the local situ
ation for the anions involved In the .re
bellion, had no-report to make this morn
ing but predicted action from the
brotherhoods by Thursday it local con
ditions do not take a rapid change for
the fetter. ;
Strikers still 'claimed an unwavering
front this morning with 292 out of a
r.ormal 342 switchmen employed in the
local yards off duty. This allows a dif
ference of nine men between the claims
of the strikers' and the claims of the
railroads, in favor of the latter.
SENIORITY FORFEITED
Thirty-two strikers, formerly em
ployed on the Southern Pacific, appeared
before A. T. Mercier, superintendent of
the railroad Tuesday asking the official
whether they would be permitted to re
tire to work with their. old seniority
rating. The rtfen were dismissed with
the information that the only way they
could return tc the S. P., would be as
new employes.
At the regular meeting of the strikers
Tuesday evening, a unanimous vote was
tkken to the effect that all men involved
in the walkout wouia remain away from
work even if th(,)lr demands were granted
until every employe now off duty was
reinstated to hi.i former rating,
ARMY BEEF, AVAILABLE IF
STRIKE HITS FOOD SUPPLY
Salem, April, 14. Cooperation of the
.war department In relieving any food
shortage which; might result from the
present rallroa strike Is offered in a tel
egram received" by Governor Oloott this
morning from E. C. Morse, director of
sales in charge? of army supplies. '
florae calls (ttention to the fact that
large stocks of canned roast beef are In
ONLY A FEW DAYS
MORE AND THE BIG
RACING FEATURE
WILL BE GONE FOR
EVER f
YOU HAVE UNTIL
FRIDAY MIDNIGHT
Z3i
i
storage in Portland - . for " distribution a
through any sales agency which the gov
ernor might designate in the event the
situation demanded the use of these
stocks. It is suggested that In the event
any section of the state should desire te
make use of this offer the stocks could
be transported by motor truck.;
Would Punish for
Wrong News Tips
Albany. N. X April 14. (I. N. 8 )
The Belts bill making It a-misde
meanor for anyone to wilfully furnish
false Information to a newspaper, passed
the assembly this afternoon, 102 to If.'.
Price $42.50
Sold a Very Eaty Tsras
-0j tmt?j& a
that's what thousands of happy
housewives are saying
fun with a
it's
Eledric
Cleaner
No long weary days of sweeping
and cleaning; no tiresome strain
ing and striving to reach out-of-way
comers; no dust-laden at mosphere,
just attach the cord
to any baseboard receptacle or
Edison Mazda lamp socket,
press the button and the THOR
DOES THE WORK!
Come m and let ut show you this
unsurpassed labor saver
"Buy Electric Good From
PeopU Who Know"
sfflnrttcesr mcmc ca
PHONB MAIN 1011
THOMPSOH'S
Desp-Carve Limi
are Better
(Trademark Rfitf4)
THE SIGN OF
PERFECT SERVICE
KRYPT0KS
made bpr us cost no more
than Kryptoks made by
other opticians, but the
Kryptoks supplied by us
f are ocuer, ceing iinisnea
S on specially , made ma-
a chines and in the finest,
f most completely equippea
ft retail optical lactory in
W Portland.
A Besides, -we do all the
Q work under one roof,
Q your eyes to thq accurate
G fitting of the ' finished
glasses.- - f
4k Cemolata Lane CrinAlnm
V Factory ea the PramUa
(H SAVE YOUR EYES
THOMPSONS
VJ OPTICAL INSTITUTE n
Portland' LarffMt, Moit Mod- V?
(3 rn, Bast Equipped CS
X clu.iv. Optical W
ffk EaublULmant. K-
lmt .AA A ABpn mw mm I .I
(A FIFTH AND MORRISON
0
SINCE 1908
Guaranteed
AU '4neH 'atStV S
thfta-lumf baton. , 14
8, conUcnua M, at Da
Bmwjt'i MMtifat aa4atay,
2S4 aa4i Waahtnrtnn, B.
fiBMrt' khtm (Urt Mab
tlajr n4 Thotwlar a., 4
TancM Bit lira Tnaada
t la ll'.S. i Plnl of i dwirmbU nrtun
aad piaetiea. 1 N ambarraanMat. Iani
fraai pmaanoaai Otnaan; la a- rati aeaael
FboM Kaia 7ft. Mtata btoall aew.
OlFPtMNT I MOM OTHER S0HOOLS
Cw
rflilliil iff ii iiTitarff
Si
Dancing