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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 21, 1920)
THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL', PORTLAND, OREGON TUESDAY, DECEMBER .. 21, 102v. CARELESS DRIVERS DECLARED CHIEF ACCIDENT CAUSE Carelessness and inexperience on the part of automobile driver will be met by far more stringent traffic regulations being read into the ordi nance governing motor vehicles un less there is a greater decrease of accidents in Portland, declared Mu nicipal Judge d Rossman Monday night, speaking before automobile owner and operators in Library hall" in "the fourth of a series of 12 lectures being , conducted by the National Safety council. "There is usually a traffic violation at th bottom of every accident," de clared the judge, emphatically, speaking as one ho has to deal with practically every violation of this kind occurring on Portland streets. 'The fact that there are fewer street car accidents, means that the street car company has taught its motormcn that It pays to know he rules of the road and to be expertly familiar with the operation of their vehicles. - MA5T ARE AVOIDABLE "Were automobile owners as expert a vast number of apparently avoidable ac cidents now of daily occurrence would never happen." Judge Rossman said that of the eases coming' to his attention,, carelessness was responsible for the majority, with Incompetence to operate a machine as a secondary cause. - i- In the 13 months preceding December, 120, there were 19,408 arrests for vio lation of the traffic ordinance a figure greater than the combined . population of Astoria and Albany. Speeding, said the judge, is not responsible for as many accidents an, the public has been led f.o suppose. Of 72 accidents occurring last Saturday, more than a third were caused by failure to yield the right of way. ' As a proof of his contention that street cars are becoming less and less at fault In accidents, the judge said that of the 10.038 accidents during the past year, only 1000 were caused by street cars, redestrians struck by motor cars and other vehicles usually suffered in between intersections, said the judge, who gave the percentage for Portland as 90 per cent of total injuries bo sus tained. The percentage for New York is 82 per cent. . Accidents of this kind totaled 7000 this year.. - "What we need is a more careful ex aminations for drivers," declared Ross man, in conclusion, "if incompetence is a great factor' in rolling up accident lists, then we should , move to reduce that hazard by testing automobile drlvf era witn the same care exercised by street car companies in testing their mo tormen. Drug addicts and habitual users of intoxicants of any kind should abso lutely be barred from participation' In motor car operation, and if I had nay way about it they would never get a license." G. E. Spencer of the Oregon School of Technology, Illustrated his lecture, on the engine by a series of slides, showing the various types of motors and the assem bly of their several parts, as weU as salient features of magneto, muffler and manifold construction. H. H. Herdman, chairman of the local branch fthe Na tional Safety council, presided at the meeting. . i ' '- Youth Beaches for ' -Wheel; Car Tumbles In Ditch; Two Hurt Impulsiveness or fright resulted in the injury of two persons and the wreck ing of an automobile late Monday after-, noon on Canyon road, according to the police. Miss ' Helen Stackhouse. 17, 171 East Eightieth street, and Robert L. Stevens. 17, 693 Wasco street, are in the Good Samaritan hospital. Miss Stackhouse has a sprained, hip and severe bruises on her back. Stevens suffered a frac tured leg and injuries to his side. The accident occurred when Stevens grabbed the stearing wheel away from Miss B. Linebarger, 187 Stout street, when a collision with another automobile seemed inevitable. He turned the wheels with such abruptness that the car swerved from the .read and overturned in the ditch. Miss Linebarger was un injured. Although the collision was avoided, the accident which occurred was prob ably more serious than if the cai.1 had collided, according to Motorcycle Patrol man Mobley.who investlgatedthe ac cident. - - Five Men Injured ; TT1 a j m "I wnen auio jl aires ; Plunge Over Bank ' Five men from the Whitney logging camp near Bay City were injured about 1:10 o'clock this morning when brakes on a heavily loaded automobile in which they were riding failed to hold on the long grade on , Kelly street, allowing the machine to leave the road and roll over three times down a steep embank ment near Hamilton avenue. J. Skin and A. J. Anderson, driver of the machine, were badly cut and bruised about the head and body and were taken to St' Vincents hospital, where it was said this morning they would recover. William Wise, J. Car ter and S. B. McGillicuddy were cut and bruised about the head and were treated at the emergency hospital. 4 Wheels, parts of the machine' and baggage were scattered for over 200 feet along the side of the embankment. The men were ' returning to Portland after the closing of the logging camp when the accident took place. Baggage they were carrying in the machine was scattered' along the road for two blocks. CHICAGO WIFE II FINDS NEWiORI PITFALLS DEEP By Sydney B. Whipple United Nrw Stiff Corrwponrient New York, Dec. 21. Lucille Emma Brooks Is the wife of a Chicago in surance man John Walter, Brooks. Her husband belongs to that great group of citisens commonly called the respectable "middle class." leu cine is 35 years old, a good looking woman, not over dressed, not painted, not of the Broadway type. She is a woman you might tsee any Sunday, leading her children Into church. Bub you would not notice her any more than you would notice hundreds of similar women. ' But Mrs. Brooks stepped out of the middle class respectability long enough to land in the -Brightest of New York's most unsavory limelight. She is held as a material witness in the killing of Police Lieutenant . Floyd Horton, who died in a Broadway gun battle. She was the companion of three, men who waged, a pistol fight to the death from a motor car. She was herself wounded. One of her companions was killed. BISBASD GIVES COMFORT ! Her middle class, respectable husband met her for the first time since the af fray, . in the criminal courts building, j while she was on her way to the. district attorney's office. She was handcuffed j to-one of the other members tf the murder car quartette. The handcuffs hurt . her wounded arm. But -In this nightmare scene, her husband told her he would soon have . the handcuffs off. and that she would go home. Lucille plucked the aigrettes from her hat "Here," she said to John, "take these. They don't look well on a woman who is Kolng to jail." Til keep them. ' You'll wear them agjin soon, he said. Tne district attorney was more inter ested in knowing who killed Lieutenant Horton - than he was in knowing how a woman f -Lucille's type came to be associated in a holdup, an attempted robbery, a running gun fight, and a murder. But Mrs.-Brooks didn't know who killed Horton. She was dazed. It was this way : . "PALTY" IS PLA5XED Mr. Broqks was in Chicago. He had fold John Kavanagh, superintendent of the apartment house where she lived, to look after her. Kavanagh did. He sug gested a party, one of those quiet affairs where a crowd of four go out to see the siffhts.iNlcholas and Joe La reach. two friends of Kavanagh, went along; too. They knew where you could get '-it." They went to a saloon In the tender- Wife Finds Mere $150,000; Hubby Calls It Bad Luck Chicago, Iec. 21. (L N. S.) Some folks might figure themselves lucky to find 8130,000 in bonds, for which no owner has been discovered, but Carl Jagger of Gary. Ind., whose wife picked up 8150,000 worth of. treasury certificates in a Chicago taxicab last May, -is beginning to think it is bad luck. ' .. - Federal authorities declare the bonds became income when they ma tured -September 14. Hence Carl may have to pay an -. income tax. Cari did not earn the bonds ; . his wife found them. Inheritance tax due the government, $51,000. Lawyers have discovered that Carl's wife had no legal right to re move property from a common car rier. -. They threaten a writ of re plevin to restore the bonds to the taxicab company. If they get the writ, Carl says, he will be 850,000 shy because five of the bonds, worth $10,000 each, have passed from his possession. The net result is that, if all these things happen, Carl may find him self $101,000 or more in debt. loin one of those "soft drink" places where, if you are known, and some times if you're not, you can get prune iuice. doctored into something resembl ing the real stuff. They had. several drinks. , .f Then they went to a saloon in West Fifty-eighths street and had some more. Kavanagh wanted to go home-by this time, but Lucille didn't. So they went to One .Hundred Forty-seventh street, where they had some more. It was easy ' to get Kavanagh " disappeared from the party about this time, Lucille said. - SAYS SHE WA,S "DAZED" Theh coming down town it all hap pened. Joe Lareach stopped the car in which they had been cruising from sa loon to saloon, and went into an apart ment house. She says she was "pretty well dased" by this 'time. She rfemembers hearing several shots. She remembers something hitting her arm. Then, she says, everything Went black. . . It was during this time that her companions; halted in an attempted holdup of an apartment house attends ant and pursued by Lieutenant Horton, who finally leaped to the running board of their car, had unlimbered their ar tillery. Horton fell from the car mor tally wounded. As he lay in the street, dying, he pulled a slip of paper from his pocket and made a note of the num ber of thexcar. TBIO TRACED BY POLICE , The men drove to their garage, hur ried Mrs. Brooks to her apartment, tool the body of Joe Lareach, killed 'in the exchange of bullets, to his home, and tried to efface the bullet holes in ' the body of the machine. ' The police took Horton's notes. And inside of six hours, Nicholas Laresch, Kavanagh and Mrsf Brooks of Middle West respectability were behind the bars. , .... f ; "I am sure my wife had nothing to do with the shooting," said -Brooks after Lucille had told her stjry. "And 1 ant convinced of her honesty. , Every thing I have, even the shirt on my back if necessary, will be used for her de fense. I am firmly convinced that she had no previous connection with those people." , Middle class respectability can't stand the strain of New York "aoft drinks" made "out of prune juice, caramel and grain alcohol. Commission Approves Express F i r m Union Wathington, Dee. 2L (L N. S.) The interstate commerce commission" an nounced Monday afternoon that It had approved and authorised the consolida tion of the express transportation busU ness and the property devoted to that business by the Adams, Wells Fargo, American and Southern Express com panies to be merged Into the American Railway Express . company. The com mission rejected the recommendation of many state railroad commissions, who I fought the proposed merger. i 1 ' The Western Union Is Installing about 875.000 worth of new telegraph equip ment at Yakima. UNIFORMITY FOR TA C SLOGAN OF FOUR STATES ' -"Traffic uniformity for the North west" is the slogan governing the efforts of the committee composed of secretaries of state from Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Montana, ' , n it.. J i : - . . . i now in runi&uu wuriung ur maiur traffic, regulations j for four states. The work of the committee extended late into Monday : night and the greater part of today was given over to final consideration of recont- the Portland po- mendations made J by the traffic committee. 'Captain Lewis of lice department heads a committee an traffic composed of Chief Jenkins of the .Portland police department; L D. Conrad, superintendent of motive power for Washington t Lieutenant Carr of the SeattleHraf f lc bureau, and T. A. Raf fety, chief inspector; for Oregon. , This committee has recommended a system of uniform signs for state highways, the prohibition of parking on paved highways of the four states, uniform lighting laws, Identical arm signals, the limitation of the width of the load to eight feet, with lights on all loads ex tending more than three feet to the rear of the vehicle, and mirrors on all motor cars to insure clear vision to the rear. " . ' The general executive committee, com posed of the four secretaries of state, with Sam Kocer as chairman, la pass ing upon recommendations made by this traffic committee as well as making formal recommendation of other meas ures which Will be submitted to the leg islatures of the four states at coming sessions. The executive committee has definitely gone on record as favoring a uniform traffic law, more and greater reciprocal privileges between the vari ous states for the convenience of mo torists, the operators' license law as is now in effect in Oregon, the 18-year age limit law, the uniform license year law (which will probably result in a calendar year being taken as the license term, with fee amounts left to the dis cretion of each state), uniform road signs,' speed laws and rules of the road, lights on all vehicles, the Oregon gaso line tax of 1 cent a gallon- for the maintenance of good roads, and punish ment for automobile thieves with no less than a prison sentence. In the discussion of theft precaution, Secretary of State Charles T. Stewart of Montana said there was a strong leaning in his state toward the old vigilante method" of dealing with those , Who pilfer their fellows' transportation. He said that while traffic laws did not bother the state of Montana in any great measure, there being ' enough room there for plenty of elbow space, still, something should be done in his state to eliminate the man who once stole horses land now steals cars. ! y Money for Irish Sufferers ; i To give aid to the suffer., s in Freland the Ancient Order of Hibernians has started a campaign for funds, that will be inaugurated at the mass meeting to be Held in the, Hibernian hall Wednesday night The campaign is directed by a cc mittee under the direction of Dr. Andrew C. Smith and John K. Murphy. : i XMAS Therm Is Oner Safe Place to Buy' Your PIANO ' " on PHONOGRAPH STH FLOOR '"inlm If, V-T"t (W X f CHRISTMAS CONFECTIONS "t Unquestionably Wholesome! y j2 - ' JTTERE is candy that is different; incomparably superior the A i ultimate in chocolate confections; in that its superiority is due not atone to mere sweetness, but to the alluring sweetness of true and intriguing flavors. Twenty or more varieties of fluffy, delectable fondants, whose flavors surpass the imaginat ion's expectations. . Rue de la Paix Chocolates are not only palatable, but contain the niost wholesome and digestible ingredients, allowing even the children to eat them with impunity, Because of .. their purity and excellence, Rue de la Paix Chocolates ,have won their way into the hearts and homes of Americans every where. They are made by a Master Creator of Sweetmeats a Caliph of Confections, by your leave who at one time delighted, with these very confections, the palates of Kings and Queens of Europe. --These are the Sweetmeats we have prepared for your Holiday gift giving, and to be served in your own home, Christmassy fashion. Beautiful Lithographed Metal Boxes for shipping. ... .$2.00 and $3.00 Taney Cretonne designs (metaf boxes) . . ..... ..... .$2.00 and $3X0 Oriental Baskets, exceptionally lovely. .......... $3.75 to $7.50 Attractive Chinese Baskets ..$2.50 to $3.75 v Ked Satin Heart-Shaped and fancy cardboard boxes. . . .$1.00 to $10.00 . Candy to be sent to friends in Chicago, Cin- cinnati, St. Paul, New Orleans and Omaha ; should be shipped not later than Wednesday. ' Rue de la Paix Corner, Street Floor. i Everything For Cash 1t WOiXC CKP K0. ft riercnanaise -Qt orient V"y C Everything ' For Less Give Oregon City Woolen Goods for Christmas At these new, low pricesyes, the lowest in years: . A Mighty Purchase and Sale of Oregon City Woolen Mills Blankets, Indian Robes, Men's Shirts, Trousers and Bathrobes Many at far less han today's, wholesale cost Prices Astounding Due to our record ' purchase of surplus stock at tremendous priee concessions. 3 k-a.g c Savings Stupendous The maker takes the loss, we take a profit smaller than usual you take the gain. Warm Heavy Blankets J( -J-f $4.85 Fine Indian Robes $4.85 $6.85 These j blankets are more or less imperfect, but all are full size for double beds, and none have - any - defects that will interfere with their war m thror practical wear. Colors are gray and khaki. ECONOMY BASEMENT, Lipman, Wolf Sc Co. Hudson Bay All-Wool Blankets i I i I r 1 ! Men's Fine Bathrobes i i i Here are the most beau tiful Indian blankets made and also fringed auto robes, nationally adver tised and famous. Slight impcrf e ctions may be found in some, but they are hard to detect. . . i Economy, Basement, Lipraaa, Wolfe & Co. These are the famed Oregon City Blankets of virgin wool the warmest and longest wearing of blankets far less than regujar wholesale, at $9.85 , ECONOMY BASEMENT, Lipman, Wolfe .& Cv $9.85 Oregon City bathrobes are . it : .. I- noted for their beautiful Indian patterns and colors, their warmth and wearing qualites and their rich trimmings. Some of the very finest are included, at this price, very slightly imperfect and at Men's Wool Shirts $3.95 $4. 4- About One Third the' Regular Selling Price ECONOMY BASEMENT. Lipman, Wolfe & Co. Lowest prices in years for gon City shirts of Perfect Quality Vicuna, oxford and light gray, khaki and olive drab. Sizes 14 to in one or the other. - ' ECONOMY BASEMENT, Lipman, Wolfe St Co. 95.-IS ; Trousers Oregon City Trousers for work and general wear, in dark gray effects. Full cut and well made, with belt straps. KoteJ for wear at the lowest price you' have seen ECONOMY BASEMENT. Lipman. Wolf & Co. $5.95 A. 1 $8S5 5 9 O 1 t M. ' i 4sfSKN