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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 20, 1920)
THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, OREGON. MONDAY r .SEPTEMBER 20, . 1020; PUBLIC LIBRARY STAFF UNDERGOES : MARKED CHANGES Numerous ' chang hava taken ' ftace . la the Portland library fore duo to tht resignations and Ulnow of various members of the staff and thslr replacement by new tuiituti. Blanche Roes will mur the Unlver- , slty of Oregon, Rosella xno. the Uni versity of Washington j Margaret Cold well the Western : Reserve Library, school! Helen Pay, business college; Amanda Daugherty, PorUand library training course. COM TO DKTKOIT. , ; ' S Marie Hansen. Jiai'' gone' to the De ' troU public libra 17, Alio Rose to h Bridgeport, Conn. 7 and Elisabeth Davis to Kansas State Agricultural college library. where aha was formerly em ployed. Esther naming, formerly In charge at Lents, has resigned to help her father In business at Taklma, Waah. The following new appointments have been made : May Bergti, general as sistant. Bast Portland branch library; Mrs. Kthsl B. McOlnnla, general saalat ant, catalog department; Amelia Roble, f fret assistant, children's department ; Ruth Hayes, general aselstant. actiool department: Claire Sandall, In charge 'of sutlon's work la branch of floe; Flor ence OouJd, chlldren'agJlbrartan at St. Johns branch;, Helen McRalth, librarian . at Arleta; Florence Pettlt, general aa alatant at Alblna branch: Maud Cov t Ingtyn, librarian of Lents library; Lu clla Spalding, general assistant In cir culation department ; Luelle Allan, gen eral assistant lir periodical department CHANGES ARK MADE Dorothea Smith baa been placed In charge of both University. Park and I'enlnsula branch libraries. Mrs. Mary Veasle will have charge of the desk at Peninsula branch and Miss CarHe Jdeusadorffer. former librarian, baa been transferred to Woodstock branch library. The library la making plans for the celebration of children's book week from Xovember 15 to 20, when every day will be devoted to book talka before womcn'a club and other organisations Interested In children'! books. A big meeting will be arranged In library hall for chll fc . dren and their parent. 1 : INDEPENDENTS SWING J THEIR VOTES TO (Continued From Pas On) X and, If need -be, by military force. "I oonatder that the moral effect of Article X on predatory natlona would restrain them from war as the declara- tion of the Monroe doctrine haa done, and that the requirement of the unani mous consent by the representative! of the great power In council before league action would safeguard the United 8tatea from any perversion of the high purposes of the league Moreover, 1 believe that the lease ef the league traasceads la Its Important aay uomritlt tenet aad would Jaitlfy aad reaelre one who believe so to Ign.re ; party ties ene vera re tbis great boon for tne world ( ! tonatry." , The only reasonivT-ft glvea for not bolting is that not enough Republican senators can ba removed by the fall election to Insure t the necessary two. thirds majority for the program which ir. cox and. Mr. Tart'both want. But Senator Lodge, the Republican lesser, erfpressly promised to abide by m vruicu COX'S 8TAST) CI4JAB If Governor Cox la elected prealdent, we shall doubtless enter the league next March. If Harding Is elected, we shall not only not enter It then but probably .not during hi entire, administration for Johnson and his followers will in evitably proclaim Hardlng'a election aa a vindication, of their extreme opposi te n, and arty attempt by Harding to run counter to their demu ds would only give Johnson his opportunity to raise his hue and cry with an eye to the presi dency in H24. UnOr such circumstances will the prudent Harding Inilst or desist? If he Insiata, the uaual senatorial debate will consume more precious I me while hs world Is burning. It he desists,, the league Is lojt. , Cox Is wholeheartedly for the league, with a affiled party behind him and a "Strong platform under hu.i. Harding la straddling aad oscillating between the Taft and Johnson wings of a . split party and standing on a weak aad sarertala platform. MUST PURGE SENATE If we really want the league, we should put It In the hands of its friends, not Us enemies. . While Mr. Taffs "apology" may seem to excuse him, it Is not persuasive to the ordinary Independent, who haa never bee a Republican president of 'the United States. " Mr, TafOa argument amounts to aay l;.g that the Republican voter, ought not to elect Cox because Lodge, Penrose, Johnson, Borah, eta can and may defy the will of Co people of the United states; ther-for the people of the Unit ed States would tetter throw tip their liaada, abandon any thocght of 'fighting the obstructionists, and. Instead, eatrast tie ssxt administration t their tender eare. - . ' v f . v If w can't purge the sonata of all of them in 19v, we'll finish the Job in 1922 or 1924. But purge, them some time we can and will. REPrBLICAJTg GITE WARHtO This, brings us to the second great re-son for opp.sing. Senator Warding, namely:, ;, ( Te Cheek tke senate oligarchy." If, aa Mr. Taft aeems to think, the peo ple of the United States can't get the league because the Republican senatorial oligarchy blocks their will, then the sen ate ollc-rchy. not ' the league, la the leaua. If the aen-ifors klU the) league, they should beware lest the people kill eventually the senate. Outraged democ racy in V i reduced the house of lords tc Impotence. Br Governor Mc C it Maesachusei'a. Ce distinguished Republican authority, baa la the Sep tember Atlantic Monthly sounded a note of warning 'against tha -growing" en c.achments of .the eena. u The Republlea. Senators, or a group of them, should be rebuked' tor playing politics beyond the water's edge and over tfee graves of our soldiers In France. THE CA-IPAIGlTC-UES They ahould be rebuked for defying public opinion In the choice) of their candldaU. The people wsnfcd Hoover, but. in the Republican convention which they controlled, the senators paid no heed' to rublie sentiment, not even to the results of their own Republican prim aries, r . " , They have tried tne objection to tie league after another; for Instance that the league waa written by Smuts and put over on America by Europe ; that It was written by Wilson and put over on Eu rope by America; that U la a "super government" impairing our sovereignity and binding us hand and foot; that it is weak and powerless, a house of cards, a rope of sand; that If it were of any use It would have prevented all the Bolshevist and the other existing wars In Europe; thai England could outvote us and override us, that the league would compel us to go to war against our will ; that ' it could order our soldier boys abroad; that the league would create wars, instead of preventing; that it would crush the- hopes of Ireland and bring many other things. TJ. S. TOW HKLrUEaS Tbeie are all absolutely aad itterly tree. Most of the objections destroy each other. The league cannot be at once dangerous and harmless. England didn't "put over" the votes of her colon lea. On the contrary, England had great r.lsglvlngs abCjfit letting Canada, Austra lia. India, Eouth Africa and New Zea ls nu et these votes. -0 Moreover these votes of British colon t . could nevsr by any possibility hurt us b ause we have an absolute veto oa any mcasare eoBcernisg oarseltti. Majority vote Is not the rule of the league, but salinity. O.i the contrary, by staying, out of the league and having no voice or veto w ere at the mercy of -the other members, should they unanimously take some ac tion against our interests. . By staying out we not only permit such action aa may even Induce it, but our aloofness Is already being r gardsd aa an unfriendly attitude. We are running the risk of creating a new alignment of International reeling. The world against the united States. UHAIUMOrS, FBOTISIOir For the earn reason we are not sub ject to the "orders" of a "foreign" league. - Under the constitution of the league nothing whatever can be even recommended unless we through our rep resentatives wlah It. And any military act by the United States wilt- require In addition action by congress. The league Is not a "super government," for it has not cuthority to compel any action on its members and no power oven to levy tared for tta own support. It is rt a government but only a league, t. e., a means of cooperation of sovereign nations. The league does not prevent boundarlea being changed, but only prevents their being changed by war by external ag gression. In fact it provided much, needed machinery for changing bound aries by arbitration, and it does not interfere In internal revolutions. Soma critics objected to the first tenie,- tive draft of the league on the ground that it interfered with the Monroe doc trine. It didn't, yet to alienee criticism a specific reference to the Monroe doctrine was inserted in the final draft. CONTRADICTION SHOWS But the critics didn't want to be sat isfied. So, when . forced to drop the Monroe doctrine objection, they com plained, instead, of Article X. although, sh both Mr. Taft end Governor Cox have pointed out, Article X Is the Monroe doc trine extended to the whole world. Ar ticle X states that members "undertake to respect and preserve as against ex ternal aggreeslon. the territorial Integ rity and existing politic ' independence ef all mem; era." The Monroe doctrine meana that the United States undertakes- to respect and preserve, as agatnet Eu ropean aggression, tne territorial Inter. my ana existing political independence of American natlona In short, first they insisted we snouia put in the Monroe dlctrlne specifically, and now they ulc that we take It out In general. HARDING TO CLOSE PORCH CAMPAIGN AND GO ON ROAD carried the Infernal machine to Broad land Wan atreeta. Mrs. Kehrer explained that her man I was out of work "and may bare been in ; the Wall street district seeking a job when he lost his life. Investigators from the New Tork flre department vera reported to have found magazine - "aomewbere in the New Tork district from which ' a large amount ef high exploeivea had been mysteriously removed shortly before the Wall street beast. ; After tracing two of the shoes' on the horse that drew the bomb wagon to the shop where the horsa had been ahod the Marlon, Ohio, 8pt 20. "I would ,a0"?" '"I MP Mto"t -J9W rather break the) heart of the world anything about the man. who had the than destroy the aool of America," work dona The two fore feet of the Warren O. Harding: declared today horse had been ahod at the shop of Pin- .... . rktitit Began Kyle, in Chambers street, eev- addressing largo group of Oh v b-fof txplOBjoa. An Civil war vetefana. and a delega- employe, John Haggerty. recognised the tloo of Tennessee and Kentucky Re- shea by a private mark. He explained rjublicana here he alway a placed his mark upon punucana nere. . hU work to la.ntl u lt Wwl. Senator Harding; renewed bio at- tJfiction ahould be necessary for any tack on the League of Nations, reason. singling .out Article X. Br George fc. Holmes) Marion, Ohio, Sept. 20. (X. N.'8.) Senator""- Warren " Q. Harding will close his front porch campaign this week with tour speeches. Sunday, the Republican candidate takes the road for his first real swing of Man Uses Name of State Chemist in Cashing Bad Check Two- crepe allk klmonas an(f two silk th. ...mn.!,. n..klnr in Rililmnrii. I emDroiaereo nana Dags, wnicn were soia Wheeling and Aahland, Ky- and there- hj Sam Sun Huie, HZ Washington after It Is expected that Marion will see f. September 11. are causing him no him only intermittently. IttUe dlamay. Today the senator will address a dele- A man and woman entered the store, gallon of several hundred O. A. R. "ui told the police, and after purchaa- vcterana who atop off en route from ,n wardrobe which Northern Ohio to Indianapolis for the Vn01unted, to $120 the man wrote i a annual anckmpment. cheek and presented it to Hula Heal- . ' .Tv ... . tatlng, Huie aaked the man If the check Senator Arthur Capper of Kanaaa Is a Wfjoo4 The n Mld ,t WM and guest of the Hardlnga today. Capper preMted a caP- acciaiminr nlm to be has been "winging about the country Alb,rt g. We!l. whose name he had and haa brought the candidate a glowing ilr,ea t0 the check. t,, ear(J tli0 report on the outlook. - showed him to be state chemist atd aev- Senator Hartlng hae received a letter eral othr personages of official capac- from Michael J Halllnan of BneUon, lty and HuJe ne,iUted n0 ion-er. Mass.. with the algnatureg of 150 trade But th iimfiy unionists. Indorsing: his cause and stat- . . iw., itii. . .nv ing they will not support political candl- al, bofu .. card mad. oaiea who xavor nm out. denounced the check. Huie gave the police a description of the man and N.Y. cus BEG T OF HOUSE woman. Wells stated that some one must have used one of the cards he has been presenting frequently recently in making testa of soda water. WARNING (Con tinned From rue One) Report on Legion Reorganization to. .Be Given Monday torney's office that dynamite had been unloaded at the foot of Wall street the dav before the exoloalon. Some of It waa removed the day after the disaster. 1 3,1 The. report of the reorganisation com It waa aald. -A blasting job Is in prog- I mlttee of Portland poet No. 1. American ress near there. 'flegion, will be made at the meeting to ee vrnanvt trMvnirn i I be held tonight in the assembly ball at tl PEB80S8 StMMOHED Central library. This will be the first Twenty-two perrons, mauaing several motlng ilnce August 22. 0. S. WILL PRESS NEW CASE DESPITE SHIPYARD VICTORY Soattle, Sept .. (L N. 8.) Al- though the government lost the first of its shipyard fraud cases, the sec ond is scheduled to go on trial here tomorrow, when. In the federal court, -Phillip Morrison. Captain W. At Mag ee, former Emergency Fleet representative and the Seaborn Shipbuilding- corporation, must answer to tht charge of mlarf presentations aa to the state of completion of ves aela on which they are aald to have obtained bonuses from the govern ment. The defendants tried and acquitted of a similar charge are the Grays Har bor Motorshlp company of Aberdeen, Bruce C. Shorte, Albert Schubach. A. B. Shay. A. S. Hoonan and M. R. Ward. officials of the shipbuilding concern. and Captain Mages and A. B. Hunt, district representatives of the Emer gency Fleet corporation. The verdict exonerating Schubach. prealdent of the shipbuilding; corporation, waa directed by Judge Jeremiah Neterer. . The jury returned ita verdict after two hours and fifteen minutes delib eration. Bert Schleslnger, assistant prosecutor of San Francisco, declared in bis ar gument that he resented the charge of the defense attorneys that these fraud caees were brought aa a move on the part of the San Francisco shipping In terests to discredit Northwest shipbuild ing. He declared prosecutions, wilt not oe conunea lu oca.ii.iv. OLGOTT TO EXTEND HART NO CLEMENCY (Conthraed mb Fas One) who saw the fatal Wall street bleat. Thomas Hepry Boyd, who brought were summoned to testify before the habout: th- .s-itstion for renrranisLas- the grand Jury. Among the witnesses were : poat wlll be out of city. bb the WUbur Fu ler, superintendent of Jer report of hla committee win be read sey City trucking division ,of the JuPoht . studied. Powder company. . This will be the last public meeting Dunham Beldon a drueglat of South to held by pot. as its club Orange. N. J., whose motor 'r foomi in the Flatlron building. Siy-th parked between the offices of J. P. Aah atreeta. were evacuated by the Morgan Co. and the United States roun,clpal employment office Monday sub-treasury when the explosion oc- morning, and work of getting the rooms curreo. Ireadv for the Let-on will start Tues- Henry Wasserman of Brooklyn, an a.w a nciai mutlne of th noat k. eye-wltiiees. been called for Monday night. SeDtera- inree oi tne grana jury witnesses ik j7. in the rluhrnnma. were reporiea to nave vom. . Lnnrict At torney Edward Bwanij that they saw a vebtcra which they believed to be a uu- Pont delivery wagon in the vicinity of Broad and waa trUv,tKtvMa 11 o'clock Thursday morning and noon. One man was said to be' prepared to testify that he saw a wagton, -which he thought was a DuPont delivery wagon, between Pearl and Water- atreeta ' (near the scene of the disaster) v anmutea I Two hundrad mambara of the Onnn before the explosion. Emergency Fleet Corooratlon club gave Speaking Of the testimony produced Initial nartvatthe L.urUurt cluhi by the first session of tba. grand Jury, house on Saturday night. The club Assistant District Attorney TaUey said: wa. oranised last March and winter It would certainly appear from the ,-titti. hn h.r. in. Th. evidence that the financial district was firnt .nnual meetlner of the club haa haan Lfult of-wagons and trucks bearing red Mt for NoVember 11, after which a d.ln- twe- ,.. w w , . i ner ana dancing party win be arranged. The police are dragsinsr ISaet river atl t,n ,n ,k. he foot of Wall street on -the' thepry party . g. Mlller aIrector ef tne Bup. u.a poeia may nave ween ply anT sales department at Washlng- t1" "tTflra- " w" "lilai.nd, "i ton; W. E. Brickler. engineer, Waehlng- thtf authorities, bad no definite infor- t w. c Hunter, new director of the Iall0J UPPrlUCh ?0ry' -tern district, and Mr8. Hunter; O. L. Ule V tast wvi atu via Mi -viyji-si- i w Be ear as t-avsunn nse . t ears net faawvean-, I O P E'NI'N G DANCE Saturday Evening Christensen's Hall EtlETXITTE, 9 BAB MOKRISOW Darby's Orchestra PACtlf O rVKBY WKDWEsn-tl AN 9ATCnDAT -ITMI5GS Efficiency ' . " i and Low Cost F.IV. Baites V Company Printers First and Oak Streets Mala 11$ Auto 41. UMB E RMEN FACE CRISIS RELIEF IS ASKED FOR (fonUaaed Ttom fete One! are less productive than ratee not high enough to pay a profit above operating expense. Broadslda advertisements occupying full pages In local newapapera greeted railroad officials upon their arrival in Portland. Harry M. Adams; vice prea ident of the Union Paciflo 'r J. O. Wood- worth, vice president of the Northern Pacific: O. W. Luce, traffic manager of tne southern pacific, and M. J. Coe tell, assistant traffic manager of the Great Northern, head the railroad srroun. vne oi tne first asaeruona hv the lum ber manufacturers is that the f 1 1-1 per cent rate increase allowed by the inter ui commerce commission and apply ing-to lumber, called upon lumber man ufacturers to pay almost twice aa much more to reach the great Chicago market o is exacted of southern pine manu uBiunra : OBIGOH HANDICAPPED , . In other Worda. Douelaa fir. tha North, west product, pays SO cents a hundred pounds more to Chicago and Southern PinS Only 10 cents mora Thla maana that the freight on a thousand feet of ur is s.us more to Chicago than on - wner comparisons were ffai. The rate on fir to Minneapolis is $14 a car m01 tn-n ,n Bontbern pine. SS40 more .n??? M,lne. ,M3 nor t St Louis. 1209.15 more to Kansas City. - $111.80 more to IndlanapolitM UtZ more 'to De troit, S0 more to PitUburg and $3:7.75 more to New Tork. ' , ,t nates on Douglas 4 fir. before the in creases permitted by the interaute ceA merca commlaalon, were higher than on Southern pine to the markets used in reference, but the difference was ab sorbabls The disproportionate increases now w effect, say lumber manufactur ers, are not. . Emergeiiby Fleet . Club Gives Dance And Dinner Party " wT km Hunter, and U J. Wentworth, president sible for the bomb blaat nay hwil ,,h. . m ,M.m person or persons respon- executlve assistant to laft spent a Quiet night In hit cell at .the prison Sunday night and par took of a hearty breakfast Monday. Every 'precaution la being taken by prison authorities to prevent any un toward Incident in connection with the murderer's brief sojourn at the peni tentiary. His food is prepared at the guards' quarters and is bandied by but one man. Hart will be returned to Pendleton September 27 to appear as a witness In the trial of the other four men impli cated In the iailbreak during which Taylor was killed. He has assured of ficials that he la prepared to tell the whole truth of the plot so far as ha I knows It, as he has nothing to conceal. HART SPENDS HOUR INCTTT JAIL; WORE AN OREGON BOOT Nsil Hart was in the Portland city jail for an hour at - noon Sunday an route to Salem. Hart was accompanied by Sheriff W. R. Taylor, brother of TU Taylor, and Deputy Sherif f R. W. Sinclair. Hart waa handouffed and wore a heavy "Ore- son boot" on his right foot. With Bhertrr Tayior were aiao two i boys, Victor Are go and Henry Lass, convicted of the theft of an automobile, I sentenced to serve from one to three years in the state penitentiary. Be cause of hie resemblance to Hart. Arege was often mistaken for the convicted murderer. No demonstration was made at Pen dleton when Sheriff Taylor left with bia prisoner, ne saw. The slayer of tne late Sheriff Til Taylor was calm as he passed through! Portland on his last Journey. He ap peared a bit shaken, but bis nerve was I apparently unbroken. He was sorry that I he killed TU Taylor, but he wasn't frightened, he said. Sheriff W. K. Taylor left Portland with his prisoners at 1:45 o'clock Sun-j aay afternoon. of the Oregon division. planned other explosions In the finan- Ail fBt,1t at ,li.wh,r hut Inat narva after the Wall .street outrage and lit WornlH WATTr-mori dumped exploeivea into the Bast river. A1 AJLOO. U1U JDU W lUCblX PALMES LEAVES JC. T. A. Mitchell Palmer, United States at- torney general, who haa been Investi gating- the Wall street bomb explosion, has left New Tork. It is believed he ha gone to Btremdabunt, Pa-, hla home. He left no word regarding his probable re turn. - - Grilled for two hours at police head quarters today, Fischer stuck tenacious' Begins Service at First Presbyterian Dr. Harold Leonard Bowman officially began hla service as pastor of the First Presbyterian church Sunday, having been installed at a special service last ly to his original clalma that they were Friday night Thla waa also Dr. Bow- based solely on what he called an un-1 man's first sermon eince returning from J AMMnv - mmtM ml M.I , Ml , ...,, j su, iiKuivuiuuu, .un 1 bis vacation oi ve wcoaa. he aald. had often manifested itself Ha outlined a nollcv of dlmltv in the with him. especially with regard, to the pulpit ae distinguished' from "antlca" movements of the stock market, where, that make of vaudeville or of cheapness he Claimed he repeatedly foretold lm- and tawdrtneaa aometlmea affartad hv ywnani ups ana -aowns" witn re- nastors to popularise themselves or their VlT.r 1: . WM churches trail, ne asm leu, ana was eSDOCiainr well developed with his mother. Further outrages such as that of last Tnursaay were forecast by Fischer. Turning; to a group of reporters; Just before being taken into the otftoe of Chief Police Inspector Lahey, Fischer ! Cooperative Buying Of Paper Discussed said "My first warning was a pramonl tion. More wlll happen in the near fu ture. Unseen powers have communl oated that information through. n a." rOSESAW EltD OF WAB Loe Angeles, Sept. 20. (U. U. Co operative buying of , print paper by Southern California newspapers was to be discussed at a bualneses meeting of the Southern California Editorial .aaan. He also claimed he had accurately I M"01 Bro today. Gauple Returns to iFind Policemen on Giard for Thieves Mr. and Mrs, J. Jones of 797 Haw thorne avenue returned Sunday night from California. Sounds like a society item, but Mr. and Mrs.' Jones had no sooner- entered their home than they were greeted by Patrolmen Wagy and 8kogland of the east side station. ' Neighbors had reported that some one was prowling about the Jones home, not expecting the Joneses would return so soon. Complete October List Now on Sale ii zr. ..ii rt n r VV A IN s o Song Hits Tske Lerre) Newt, from Afawr . Derwm tU TreJ to Horns Swewt H . Freak , Hesay lkw After Tees Ce Watat Yem Waa Yaej Deaal Weaat It van and ecneacg Yem Tell 1m . Van aad Sch nek, Ok Jeait (He Ttwata Me Meu) . . Marloa Harris tie) Dssm I4e) Wponf .. . . . . Markm Karru Tel Laww to Fafl AaUap asai Wales U fca My lit issaj'e Arsas . Harry Foa ' . Harry Fe UOeiry DeBst TsJsw Away TWes Eksse Cssei By. Dkie Gssei By rn B Wkk Ym ka AsU BU, If I Wait T4U the) Eari mt too World Tkrw' tW Rye . . Mae-rical eef May. fram TJu Jtit . MAW-Haart ... . aPoT4wd-SBs e Tba BarWaot Trail . Campbell mmi Bear . Campbell aad Burr Xoea aad Carmela FoaaeDe Jeaaaa Cordcm XWs Orsveure Louis Graveure . Oscar Seagle , Oscar Seagle e e e War Sows- Qadien) . Evary-Oay oag (Indiaa) UsM-e Joait Teieae tba Ceeuwe Ussstej Joeh at a MewtsneT mt tba ScW4 Haws Psraaisrs til Stewart Oe-ke-jpoa-toa Os-keaes-toa Csi Stewart $1AX) K A-SwdS J0O A4N4 A4HI Av-X9C7 7847 11410 TStTT S 1J0O A41C0 A-Mdl $1.00 A-sota 1.00 A-29S2 11.00 JJ g2 . D ance Music la Swwsf 5ptomW-Medy Fox-trot . Paul Bieie Trio Swewt Smgar BaW Pox-trot . Paul Bieee Trio TeBMskUttisGypaw Medley Fox-tret Art Hickman's Orchettra La VSaela roa-trot A Teemf Maars F sarf la thaC.lnemtag Walts Fox-trot I r Art Hickmao'i Orchestra Art Hickman! Orcheerra Art Hickman' Orchestra ox-trot . . . Prince s Dance Orchettra liapr--MecUry One-ste Prince's Oaace Orchtitra Sflvee Water Medley Fea-trot Yerkes Hippy Six Coed-BySenaak4sMHHelWMeMVMe Fo -trot Yerkee Happy Six rVettylittUClsieisrena Medley Walu . ' Prince's Orchettra Picluasiruty BhMS--WlU . , Prince'i Orcheitra Basis Dlasnendt Foe-trot Accordion Solo . Guido Deiro 2unpalUeAcccdion5ok . . Guido Deiro Mkdalgnt Fsra Alaisa Pescriptlve Galop Prince'. Orchettra Tba BsurtBlag mt Rssss"-Ptscrythre Msrch Two-etep Columbia Bend Opera Music Ssjbsos) asal DUlaar---Moa coexr 'owvrs a ta vofat Instrumental Music Nstsi raise (rem L$ Cut Kry erf G CuoSaaatJ Symphony 1 ; Orchestra. Under the d-rectiome4EufnYssfc I X-4159 UDrsejstcU.VTTege OvartnwKeyof C " (cmnetlf $1JI0 Sympheery Orchoetra. Under he dxrectioa of ZUqren Ytaye J Hansaaarlaei Pkaptedy New 1 2. FarlL PtaaoSolo Pare Oramgar I A-$ltl rartu. naaasata retcy uralsgecj SlUtO Howarel ICoppI A-298C Howard Kpp $100 Gloria TrampeteTi A-298S Gloria Tnamfetes $lJOO OeorretteOl A-S9IT GeargstteUJ $lJ0O Itallaa Orchestral fc4eS Itsiiaa Oreevaf fLM Naoe-r Walts--Bell Solo . . . Desssty Aaai Gavotte Bell Sola Cast Wlaseej &m LCUe BUots? Harw Sweet U-s MaemOght MedUyc JlceeWReeJa-PartL Violki SoU MosUsryWJsgs asad Rewie PartlL VUEn Soio Uaarrwtaral Heart . ; . Sing sac Ma . . . . Harding Ceell-te eed Cea-kaea. eh ess be ksere at pakue seee a MaeWt yeresj CeiswMe te seres. Frse keaciate yearaeer at CeWsll Desist. - hfaw Fi n usae Colombia Racords silt, avrantay rs mry dU. ' 09909 M sVbCbv ssrf 9eV IkmiOtkmmiMOtkmt coLVMstA cnuraioriioitg coatpairr, new Tata jfl Jeanne vroraoa mi Bl-m4r4 HmdmH mplm$XO up ft 1100 Vessels Inspected By City Officials As guests of the public dock commis sion. Mayor Baker, the city council and county commissioners at noon today took luncheon in the cafeteria at St Johns municipal terminal. Immediately after the luncheon they inspected the Japanese passenger ship of the T. K. K. line. Soeyo Maru. and the Pacific, Steamship company vessels Olen, Paw- let. Waban and coaxet. foretold the end Of the war. Fischer admitted being an admirer of Emma Goldman, the deported ex. tremiet leader. He stoutly averred, however. he had no connection - with any extremist or terrorist organisations and had no direct information whatever that might have been the basis of his warnings. 'After his examination by, the police Fischer was taken to the district at torney's office for further grilling. against the protest of his brother-in-law, Robert A. Pope, who brought him to New Tork from Canada. Pope de clared Fischer was a 'Very sick man" and should oe placed -under a physi cian's care 'and be allowed to rest be fore being put to the ordeal of exam. I nations. t- Tho Tmyatery body" which has been In the morgue Since the bomb blast In Wall street last - Thursday noon, waa identified today as that of Elmer W. Kehrer, aged 21, a chauffeur, of Brooklyn. ' All the victims of the explosion have now been wentiried. i Identification of the body was made! by Mra Kehrer. 'mother of the slain I youth. She viewed tba body twice end said, she could not be mistaken. The mystery surrounding the explo sion waa. deepened by the identification of Kenrers body. ... The fact that the body remained un claimed In the- morgue for nearly four I days bad. led some of the investigators to believe that the victim may have been involved in some way, and perhaps might j have been the driver of the wagon which I The Most Liked Picture Ever. Shown in-Portland NOW PLAYING "HUMORESQUE" S PECIAL MUSIC 4 . Portland Roses -4 Afternoons and Evenings 71 I -a" V ,JL. .kV . V Graf pnolas and Records Are Sold by the Following Dealers: - Wm. Gadsbj & Sons Corner Second svnd Morrison Reed-French Piano Mfg. Co. , 435 Washington $L, Corner 12th t . -..- V. '; Vern Le -Wenger U2Vt Second Street Oregon Eilert Music House 287 Washington, Below FiftI ' - . .A Schwan Piano Co 101-103 Tenth at Washington - .- -., ' e McConnick Music Co. 429 Washington; Bet llth and 12th ,S. & D. . 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