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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (May 7, 1920)
LEAGUE DESIRES I " ' - - STAND IFORMATIONl COUNCILS By A. IS. j Johnson) United Nw Staff Correspondent. London, May 7.- It Is very likely that the League of Nations, when It meets In Rome, May 14, will demand a definite statement of the allied supreme council's j future policy. ; , Feeling between the two organizations has reached the point where the official Jew holds that it is impossible for both organ Izat Ions to flourish as at present. Opposition to the continuance of the supreme council after the Turkish and Hungarian treaties have been conclud ed is rapidly growing, both in France end in England. j ieAoce hakst power .'At present the supreme council wields executive powers, while the league ot copies- merely an ! advisory capacity. On many decisions (of the council the league has not even! been consulted. The attitude of the supreme council in implying that the, league should have accepted a mandate for Armenia in. osnsed the league officials at the time. They- held that the league was not even empowered under the covenant to ac- cspt mandates, but (rather to see that manaates were properly exercised when directed by some individual nation. Today the league secretariat departed for Borne and while there was no offi cial announcement of its intentions, offi cials privately declared that its forth coming session would be its most im portant one to date, and upon the de velopments would depend to a very large extent the future policy and status - of the organisation, i XntWILLIIfG TO LET LOOSE Meantime, it is reported that Prem iers Lloyd George (and Millerand are favorable to the creation of some per manent international conference of prime ministers. Including Russian and German as well as those of the en tente. To which proposal the West minster Gazette addresses itself edi torially as follows: "Lloyd 'George declares it is useless to wind up the supreme council unless something with will, organization and power behind It takes over the direc tion Of European international affairs, but It is plainly evident that nothing can have such powers unless the su preme council itself is willing to sur render these attributes." moot Eli onrKTiri-va The newspaper charges the prime minister with "infanticide' In his atti tude toward the League of Nation. Among1 the things to be taken up at the league meeting In Rome, tn addi tion to a mass of regular business, are the attitude of ' the supreme council toward Armenia, the question of the proposed mission . to Russia, and the official protest of the German League ' 01 nations society at the French occu pation of German ; cities following the itunr incident. The Polish problem will not be taken up at this Urn owing to Russia's con tinued antagonism to the league. ICE BREAKER ON WAY TO ARGT C TO RESCUE FUGITIVES By Earle C. Reeves London, May 7. (I. N. S.) The British Ice breaker Sviatogor Is plowing-its way today through the lee of the 'Arctici ocean some 1500 miles from the North Pole In y desperate effort to rescue 80 Rus sians, men, women and children, who for 10 weeks have been facing: death by starvation and freezing. Nothing has been heard from the party Ince late hi March, j The Russians are aboard the small bark Solvic, on which they, fled from Archangel just before the Bolshevists captured the city. Their scanty supplies soon became exhausted. The coal ran out and their food was put on famine ration basis. They wirelessed for help. Archangel caught ' their message, re layed it to Moscow and Moscow Hashed YANKEE TOURISTS STAGGER LOUDON BY NE THIRST CHAMPAG it to London. Japan's Tea Trade . , Appears Promising By' Ernest w, CUmest Special Cable to The Journal and the Chicaso '- Ifeily New. , (Copyrteht, J2, by CWcmo DfcO News Ca.) Toklo, Japan. May 7. -The tea trade in contrast with other lines, indicates a rr of i table season generally. It is ex pected that the output wiI be better than that of last year and that the prices probably wUl be from 30 to 40 per cent higher on account of the increase in wages and the increased cost of char coal and other articles necessary In the manufacture of tea. By Forbes W, Falrbzalrn London, May 7.- The tremendous Increase in the consumption of champagne, cocktails and whiskey due to the invasion of England by American tourists is making start ling' inroads Into the "wet" stocks of London's principal hotels, clubs and bars. , ; - j " With more than 20,000 Americans land. ing in London during the past month. Arteur, maitre d'hote! of the Savor, said today: PBIXK AT All HOURS "More than 2500 bottles of champagne were consumed at luncheons and din ners in our hotel last month. That is an increase of, 100 per cent in March. J scarcely need tell you that most of these "sparklers" were delivered to the tables of Americans. ' "Tour American ' millionaires. not content with, drinking during the "regu lation" hours, order champagne by the case to be delivered to their apartments. Z never saw such drlnkine in m? Ufa i is going on now."- - ; The newest cocktail dispensed at the Savoy bar, - the famous rendezvous of Americans in , London, where sooner or later all male visitors from the states meet, is called "The Swamp." It's the first thing Americans call for. and it has a mighty "kick." They say it prolongs indefinitely the rolling sen sation experienced on ocean steam ships. : RESPECTING COCKTAIL ' ' i: London bars are anxious concerning the ingredients for cocktails because .of the tremendous consumption. They 'are now experimenting4 with Scotch whis key cocktails,' which, so L they say, is passably fair, ' . . - , Commeting on the drink situation, Leonora Harris, the New York actress, who is soon to appear in London in "Our Betters," said today : . Champagne is remarkably cheap here. Just think, X sold in New York my en ure cellar siock, wnicn had been pre sented to me by admirers. I got ah average of $75 a bottle. You can buy the. same champagne here for $4 a bottle. . : . -;. Church to Present Flower Per ! Child -Rose City Park Methodist church will honor motherhood Sunday on a numeri cal basis.- One child will be rewarded by the presentation of one carnation to the mother ; two children, two carna tions. If a mother brings six human rosebuds, ail her own, she gets a bouquet ; IT she brings a dozen she gets a big ""qoi xnis unique tnoute to the "noblest woman in the world" ! will be incidental to the Mothers Day celebra tion planned by the Sunday school of that church. i . RELIGION MIXED A Danish inventor claims to have per fected a meter for correctly measuring steam heat supplied to residences from central plants. DRIVER OF DEATH MACHINE ESCAPES 'RECKLESS' CHARGE In spite of the verdict of the coro ner's jury declaring there would have been no accident at Grand and Haw thorne avenues Monday in which W. H. Blaney lost his life, had A. R. Hudnell ; been I a f competent s driver, Judge . Rossman j this morning dis missed the .reckless driving charge against Hudnell. r . ' The judge asserted that the evi dence failed to show that Hudnell was operating his car recklessly. The coroner's Jury hld that the acci dent could have been avoided by Hud nell,' after witnesses testified that he could have turned In either, direction and that the car bounced back several feet after the collision. Hudnell himself told the Jury 'that he had seen the street car hair a block away, that he was proceed lng at approximately five miles an hour and that he applied his brakes 10 feet rrora the street car. He testified 'that turning to either side to avoid the col usion "was not on his mind." He admitted that he had Just pur chased the car, that he had driven it only about three blocks, that he had not operated a car for about a year and that he had not driven on local streets to any extent In four years. He told the Jury that had he turned to either t side to avoid the street car, he "would probably ave nil someimng else. The life of W. H. Blaney. 80 years old was crushed out between the street car and automobile. He left a son and wue m years old. - WITH MONEY IN ALIENATION SOI Religious i differences, and money matters were at the bottom of the family troubles alleged by Edna V. Roberts, who- is suing Mrs. Sarah Cohen for the alleged alienation of the affections of Isaac S. Labowitch, her former husband. On the witness stand,; in Circuit Judge Stapleton'a court today, she declared Mrs.: Cohen, In attempts to prejudice thV husband against his wife,, employed i racial and religious arguments. Mrs. Roberts. Is suing for $25,000.' She said; her former husband - was completely under control of his mother' and that he sent his wife to California I for her health, and refused to live with her when she returned. Eventuallv. i ' ing on the witness stand for four hours, the case was thrown out of court. Later she sued for divorce, which was granted. mey were married in 1914,, and lived together until .1917. when the trio to California occurred. The plaintiff testi fied that Labowitch told her be was worth from 50,000 to 975.000. - ; j . - r i : " -- - . u l 1L a...j ;' C-L 1 W Wfrnwanltlmqemine ARTICLES OP INCORPORATION FILED WITH COITNTY CLERK The China-Pacific comoanv formally filed supplementary articles ( of incor poration with the county clerk today, setting forth new purposes of the cor poration, which include the buying and selling of any and all kinds of prop erty In this or foreign ' countries, and the building, buying or leasing of steamships or f other vessels and op erating them. The directors are Charles E. Dant, , .Charles S. Russell, L. . A. Lewis and M. H. Houser. Tlie Multnomah Cooperative Water association filed articles of incorpora Uon, with B. G. Skulason, Edith Kbor all, Gertrude L. Harris,- Mary A. Moore and Mabel T. Wagner , as incorporators. The purpose is to acquire or construct and operate a ' water system in por tions of, sections 16 tb 21, inclusive, and section, 29, township 1 south range 1 east of the .Willamette merid ian.. The capitalisation Is $15,000. Supplementary articles of incorpora tion were filed by the Beck Invest ment company, decreasing its capital stock from j $45,000 to $5000. The- di rectors are IS. Beck, B. .feck, J. C Beck and Julius P. Levy. Nestle's CoqulHe River Line also filed 1 articles of incorporation, with Clarence W, Doty, P. L. Bishop - and John F. - Montgomery 'as the incorpo rators, and the capital stock placed at! $20,000. i Portland Is the principal place of , business Its purpose- is to' lease, construct, own and operate rail- -ways, steamships '. and other motive' power means of transportation, - , . f The Roblnson-KeUander j isompany, filed articles showing a capitalisation of $12,000 and Portland as its princi-1 pal place of business. Its purpose is ' to conduct a general florist and nursery business. -: J " ' t -- , . ,r i , - - --. . 1 1 ' . .... " -rrz .V " , I ill I " in,, ..: 'Mtd(& T WAi H ly'f 7Imn,n,,,',,,,,,n11n,illllllllifI 5552 I , ''Ik '"ml 1 I trPr i. ""3- . fc . 1 S&Si.,. , jZ , - .. , t , EF THERE'S anytliing In the world that good healthy boys and girls and "gEown-upt" like more than a plate of Ice Cream, it is two bf 'em. MAID O'CLOVER Ice Cream is concentrated nourishment in the most pleasing form just what active bodies need to make bone and muscle, lauirhinsr eyes and lips of coral. - MAID O CLOVER meant the Utmost in Quality the purest and (freshest and most wholesome materials blended only as experts know;how. AU flavors, in bulk or in bricks at all first-class dealers. Mutual (Jreainerj Company I,. HiilllRHiaiu. Portland . m St. Ml i HUSBAND GETS DIVORCE AND WIFE CUSTODY OF CHILDREN . Circuit Judge Taswell on Thursday granted R. i W. Keith a divorce from Blanche Keith, but she was given cus tody of the children. Mrs. Keith did not appear in person, hut her deposition was presented. She is now in Kansas. s Carrie M.i Custer filed a suit for di wjree from J. P. Custer on Friday, alleg ing cruel treatment." They were mar ried in Seattle November 1$.. 191$. . Suit for divorce was filed by Lucille Laffler against Fred W. Laffler oo the Charge of cruelty.; . . v ... ROLLED OATS POWER COMPANT COXFEKSES JUDGMENT IN NELSON SUIT ,Th Portland Railway, Light & Power company Thursday confessed judgment in the sum of $3280 in the suit of Mrs. i Florence Kelson, who asked' that amount i In compensation for the death of her husband, William Nelson. He was Ini stantly killed while in the employ - of I the company and working on an electric liKht pole at Seventy-second street and Fifty-seventh avenue ; southeast on April 16. . . ' ' ' Married 80 Days, Asks Divorce Ada Rayi filed suit for, divorce from Bert Ray today, alleging desertion 60 days after marriage.. She asks to be re stored to her maiden name of Ada De- Remer. They were married in Vancou ver December 4. 1918. THE CHENEY LIKE THE SONG OF BIRDS 4 Vr- :: inn !i Mm a a . men m-m. i2s t sees Tie ele of the Cbney is clfmr, serene, mtifyin The Cheney emphijr the principles of pipe ernn and liolin construction. ; Toe result it S warm til and purity of ; tone thst Th Cheney ts sj. most sntirely free front scratch and ' surface noise. in tone, la cabinet de- . if o and fin tan. Toa mast hrsr the Chrney, Jl will piease pu- MAD IN SIX BEAUTIFUL ! MODEL G.FJohiotPiako, emin srntlT, ORTUINB TRUSS TORTURE aaa be eliminated by wearins the Holmes Boprara Boppert, W r free trial to prove its super. onty. CJetUe Netifry. Ha, Slock Thmm Electrically toasted I i j ft Vgv DESSERTS I FOR CHILDREN ARE ALWAYS A PROBLEM Delicious, wholesonje ones, which the chil dren will loe are found in Rolled Oats Ud Pancake Flour Cook Book, by Isabellej Clark Swezy. 50 This Cook Book contains differe hi ways to use Rolled Oats, in cookies and cakes, dessert; -and meat substitutes. Sent free pn! re: quest : Address our Home bffice, V West W aterway, Harbor island, Se attle., : I rv Rolled Oats are rmfde of ' fine "big Western-grown Oats elec trically toasted to a rich golden color to brin out the nut-like fla vor, so superior to ordinary Rolled -Oats. . ,i ; Try This Applo Pudding , Recipe Cut twa tart apples Into halves erosswiaa, remove eores without cut. tin throush ends and fill e-anters with suaar, s dash of cinnamon and bit of butter. Arrange m a round, buttered bakiatr 41sh, Just lartr enough to allow a JJttle room be. tween. Cut another apple as for ap. pie sauce. Mix with l cupful of cooked riSHER'8 ROLLED OATS, add S tablespwortfuls susrar forefer. ably brown), tabtespoonfuls butter and cupful rich milk. Plc this mixture ereun4 the applss. fllllnr la between them. Cover, and bake un. til halved ' apples are tender. Serve hot or celd with cream or top milk and sucar. FISHER FLOURING MILLS COMPANY SEATTLE ' vwxL . Tirnui , POUTLAND BELLINGHAZI BIT. VERNON tat f m J 1J-B ZS VUi Uv Portias, end Arch Support. - . M. HOLMES ash. St, Bat. 1th and i