The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, February 23, 1921, Page 11, Image 11

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    ,THE OREGON DAILY-JOURNAL. PORTLAND. "OREGON
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY . . 23, 122L
11
TUCKER DELIVERS
ADDRESS AFTER
BEING STOPPED
Revolution will break forth in this
country if a ban is continued on
free speech, predicted Irwin St.
John Tucker in an address delivered
at I. O. O. F. hall, 227 H xamhill
street, .late Tuesday afternoon.
An audience of perhaps 400 people paid
2S cents each to Hear Tucker's tirade.
On hour previous ' to the meeting
Tucker waa barred from entering Hl
bernia halt, where the meeting was
originally scheduled to take place. The
meeting was stopped at HIbernia by ac
tion of the board of directors of the
Ancient Order of Hibernians,
z Tucker's' address was on. "Shall Rus
sia Perish?" but the major part of his
speech was devoted to flaying present
conditions In this country. Two police
men were present at the opening of the
meeting but they soon withdrew.
CZAB.DOM FEARED
In opening his address Tucker said
that Russia seems to be getting along
all right, but that some atentionneded
"to be paid America since such czar-like
conditions were growing here. He par
ticularly referred to the attempt to sup
press his speech in Portland as remini
scent .of rsardom.
Upon the rights of free speech and
free press, the constitution was founded,
said Tucker, who declared that the con
stitution could not have - been passed
without thees provisions.
Tucker offered reestablishment of
trade with Russia as the panacea which
would right all troubles in this country.
Then turning directly to conditions la
Russia he said that it was through sup
pression and -divine power control that
the revolution started tia itussia. He
held up Lenin as the father of that
country Just as Washington was the
father of this country.
TOLD OF OLD DATS
A detailed account of Just how the
czar suppressed thought among his sub
jects was given by Tucker. He spoke
of the "Black Hundred" in Russia, who
prevented the public gatherings and
whether Inadvertently or by Intention
allowed the word American Legion to
supplant the name "Black Hundred" on
two occasions.
Upon each use of this comparison he
retracted the word. American Legion
and supplied the word "Black Hundred."
assuming an apologising air for ia mis
take. "We can get along without lawyers
and reporters, but we can't get along
without handlers of the pick and gar
bage men. We can do without news
papers, but we can't do without the man
ual laborer, he said.
Tucker offered the analogy of mice
in -a home eating bread to the useless
worker, but declared that some day
these mice were going to nibble on some
matches Just as they were dangerously
nibbling near the box of matches by
preventing free speech, and that then
the flames revolutionary flames would
destroy the house.
City Has No Funds,
So Eesidents Turn
. Out and- Clean Lot
Washington's birthday was celebrated
by the residents of the Creston. section
by cleaning up the newly leased addi
tion to the city park west of the Creston
school building on Powell Valley road.
Under the supervision of the Creston
Community club more than 200 residents,
including boys and girls from the school,
started work Tuesday morning and by
night had cleared the five acre tract of
all refuse and undergrowth. The Parent-Teacher
association of Creston
eerved dinner for the workers In the
school at noon. . ..
The tract Joins the 10-acre park site
owned by the city and had been recently
leased for park purposes for one year.
No funds from the city were available
for the clearing, so the Community club
backed a clean-up campaign to do the
work. Officers of 'the club are : C. K.'
"Carlton, president; Ir. E. C. Joes, vice
president, and Mrs. Edward "Pugh. secretary-treasurer.
Case of H. D.Hines
Will. Not Be Tried
In Jackson County
; Medford, Keta, 23. In granting the
plea of R. D. Hines, former vice-president
of the Bank of Jacksonville, for a
change of venue, and In transferring the
trial of Hines caa to Grants Pass,
Judge F. M. Calkins, in circuit court
Monday, "intimated that if similar pleas
were entered by other defendants in the
bank cases he would transfer their cases
to other counties so as not to congest
any one trial calendar with the cases.
; Hines request was based on preju
dice against him In this county because
of the bank failure. .
The grand Jury convened at Jackson
ville Meoday moraine Judge Calkins
has act aa tha first case for trial at pezt
week's term that of Lark Evans, who
was granted a retrial by the supreme
court on a charge of kidnaping and
robbing a Grants pass Jitney driver.
Child's Escape Narrow
Wheeler. Or.. Feb, 23. A Wheeler
Lumber company house, occupied by A.
G. Rosa and family, was partially de
stroyed by fire, Tuesday. A small child,
asleep In an upper room,- narrowly es
caped suffocation. Defective wiring Is
blamed. 1 '
COHEN'S ELECT10H
DY B'NAI D'RITH
IS CELEBRATED
Closing their fifty-eighth annual
convention with an evening' of pleas
ure, members of the Independent
Order of B'naJ B'rith of the fourth
district, comprising the entire coast,
reveled in a banquet and grand ball
at the Multnomah hotel Tuesday
night. The event waa one of cele
bration over the election of D. Soils
Cohen as grand president, the first
Portland man raised to that honor.
More than 100 men and women were
present. ; -
Presentation of a chest of silverware
to the retiring grand president, L. M.
Mendelsohn, was a feature of the ban
quet. The speech of presentation was
made , by Lucius L. Solomons of San
Pranctsco. Rabbi Jonah B. Wise and
Z. Soils Cohen, newly elected president,
each gave a short talk.
Other officers elected were :
First vice president; Henry FInkenstein,
Los Angeles: second vice president, Ed
gar C Levy, San Francisco; secretary,
L J. Aschhelm. San Francisco ; ..treas
urer. Joseph L. Goldsmith, San Fran
cisco. ; ' :' ::. '- i ?. :
General committee. Edmund Tauaky,
San Francisco; Abraham Jones. Oak
land; H. K. Wolff, San Francisco; R.
E. Goods tad t, San Krandsco ; L M.
Golden, San, Francisco; Milton Meyer,
San Francisco ; Leo Garfinkei, Sacra
mento. Committee on Jurisprudence, Henry
Schwarx, George Samuels, George Lip
mann, Arthur W. Jonas; Leon E. Pres
Cott. .
The next meeting wis be held in
Sacramento. Cai.
Boseburg Couple
Will Be Returned
Roseburg. Feb. 23. Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Chambers, former residents of this city,
who left here suddenly several weeks
ago, were arrested Sunday in Monroe,
L-. according to word received Mon
day. The Chambers were arrested on a
charge of stealing goods from the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Horace Wilson, which
they occupied during JLheir stay here.
It is alleged they confiscated house
hold furniture, clothes and other ar
ticles. Marshal Shambrock left Monday
for Louisiana and will bring back the
couple to face trial.
Harney Valley Work
To Cost About $30
An Acre, Is Belief
bWhs, Feb. 22. Before a meeting of
persona who live within the Harney
Valley Irrigation district, A. R. Olsen,
a member of the board of directors of
the district, said he believed that the
cost of the entire project as proposed
would not exceed a total of $30 per
acre. The district Includes approximate
ly 80,000 acres of land.
Olsen based his estimate upon the
available data. The $30 will pay. he
said, for the building of the dam proper,
a main system of canals, the supplying
of water for each 160 acres unit, and
the improving of the river channel.
Surprise and -much satisfaction was
voiced by the land owners, for the esti
mate waa considerably below the cost
of any of the "neighboring projects.
Approximately 110,000 acre feet of
water will be available for irrigation
purposes each year and the reservoir
will have a capacity of close to 150,000
acre feet of water, nnder the tentative
plans. Drillers are busy testing the soil
and ascertalnlg the depth of founda
tions at the three proposed dam sites.
Umatilla Teachers Institute
Hermlston, Feb. 23. Teachers insti
tute for the west end of Umatilla county
will be held at Stanfield, Saturday.
CAPTAIN INDICTED
fS OPIUM RUNNER
Captain Ylg-ro I Agidius, former
master of .the barkentlne Hawaii,
was. indicted by r the federal grand
Jury late Tuesday on a charger
of smuggling $15,900 worth of opium
into the .United States. Captain
Agidius waa arrested in. San' Fran
cJsco last fall following his sudden
desertion of the "ship here , and dis
appearance from Portland.
According to information In the hands
Of Assistant United States Attorney Ma
gulre. Captain Agidius brought in a
small burlap sack filled with opium and
smuggled it .ashore. He Is alleged to
have made arrangement to sell the
opium in a local apartment house. Cap
tain Agidius delivered the opium one
day. Maguire said, and was to have
called for hie money the following day,
During the interim federal narcotic of
ficers were appraised of the deal and
laid In hiding in the apartment. Captain
Agidius never appeared tor- his money.
Two days later the captain was ar
rested In San Francisco. When it be
came apparent that Agidius was going
i to fight the case, the United States at
torney's office libeled the vessel for 135.
000.' The libel was dismissed after Cap
tain Agidius deposited 12500 bond.
The grand Jury returned seven true
bins, one secret indictment and one not
true bill.
Pete Rtehen and F. 1. Cassidy, pro
prietor and clerk fn a soft drink estab
lishment In the St. Charles hotel, are
charged with violating the prohibition
law by selling intoxicating liquor. John
Win lams and Charles Phernetten face
similar charges. - . - ' : ,-
Scotti Reynolds is charged with steal
ing an automobile In Yakima and driv
ing it to Portland and David I. Lilly
with stealing touring car .In Walla
walla and driving It here.
The sereoth indictment is against John
A. Dukes, who Is charged with trans
porting Esther Babeen from Glendive,
Mont to Portland in violation of the
Mann white slave act
A not true bill waa returned in the
case of Thomas Martin, steward of the
Oriental liner. Moielegue, who was
charged with smuggling 17 cans of opi
um into the country. -
Shutdown of Bend
Mill Isr Indefinite
Bend. Feb. 23. Capacity production
by the Shevlin-Hixon company pine
mills may not be resumed here for sev
era! months, according to T. A. McCann,
local manager of the company's inter
ests, who' returned Tuesday from a trip
to the Hawaiian isianoa. tie neciareo
that the lumber market will continue
weak until other items in building costs
have Joined reduced lumber quotations
In Stimulating building. ' "
Chehalls Divorce
Chehalis. Wash., Feb. 23 Ralph la
gerson Monday filed divorce actio
sgainst Bernice Ingerson.
mem
13S
DKLICIOU3 AND KgntXSHINQ
NO game is finished right til
thirst is quenched.
THX COCA-COLA COMPANY
. Atlanta, Ga.
A gentleman while opening
sn account in this bank re
cently, said; : ' .
"It cost me 120 last year
to collect out-of-town checks."
He is now saving ten dollars
per month on the one item
alone." has the satisfaction of
doing' business with a progres
sive bank, and assisting in
building an institution that will
eventually mean a savings of
MILLIONS OF DOLLARS to
the depositors of Portland."
Why not open an account
at the "Broadway" today?
BroadwayBank
BROADWAY AND STARK
TWO of the . most homelike
hotels in Portland, located la
the heart of the shopping and thea
tre district All Oregon Electric
trains stop at the Seward Hotel,
the House of Cheer. Excellent din
ing room in connection. The Hotel
Cornelius, the House of Welcome,
s only, two short blo.ks from the
Seward. ' Our brown busses meet
II trains.
Rates 91. SO ana p
W. C. CuIberUon, Prop.
Charge Purchases Made Tomorrow Go On March Accounts Payable April 1
WE GIVE S. & H. GREEN TRADING STAMPS WITH PURCHASES AMOUNTING TO 10c OR MORE FILLED BOOKS REDEEMED IN CASH, THIRD FLOOR
Specializing in Suits
At Popular Prices
-The woman of limited purse may select her
new Spring. Suit at this store with confidence of
getting me utmost in value, style, dependability.
New Spring Suits
$42.50 $49.75
$55.00 $62.50
At the above prices we show a number of
beautiful new models in an excellent range of
materials. Serge Suits at $42.50 nd $49.75.
Checked Veloar and Trkotine Suits at $55.00
and $62.50. Gabardine Suits at $62.50.
Distinctive styles and extraordinary values.
NewSpring Coats
$25.00 $28.50
$38.50 $48.50
Coats of light weight Ve'lour trimmed with
rows, of stitching. Loose style. Priced $25.00
Velour Coats with scarf collar and the new
cape . back. Trimmed with fringe. $28.50
Sport Coats of covert cloth. Plaited back, nar
row belt, tailored collar. Priced at $38.50
Dressy Coats of Bolivia trimmed with stitch
ing and loops. Convertible collar. $48.50
Extra Values in
Silk Petticoats
-a
New Dress
! Skirts
The smartest styles we
have ever shown. Beautiful
models portraying the
latest style tendencies of
the season.
- erge Skirts
-Plaid Skirts
-Tricotine Skirts
Silk Skirts
At $5
Second Floor You'll- need one of these to wear
with your new suit! Silk Jersey and Taffeta
Petticoats in many pretty styles. Black, navy
and a large assortment of the latest shades for
Spring. Some have insets of bright JJr ff
colors in flounces. Priced at only uDUU
The Standard Store of the Northwest
it ft
oici
s
&
Kin
Entire Block MorrisonTenth, West Park and Alder Streets
Kodak Days!
CHOOSE your Kodak now and take advantage of the
bright Spring days! Our Photographic Shop Is
prepared to show you a complete line of Kodaks
and Cameras, Films, etc. Developing and printing.
Sprkg Stocks Are Filling Up Rapidly
Visit the Store Daily and View the Many New Things on Display
Spring Sale of Low Shoes
Pumps, Oxfords and Eyelet Ties in many
smart styles. Also Women's high Shoes.
Lines selling heretofore up to 16 the pair.
Lot No. 1
Laced Oxfords, Eyelet Ties and Pumps in
brown and black kid or patent leather. High,
low or medium heels. Sizes AA
to 8. Values to $12. So. Now, pr. eDO.UU
Lot No. 2
High Boots of brown or black kid, black
buckskin, patent colt Also Eyelet Ties and
Laced Oxfords with French heels. ((
Sizes 2 to 8. Values to 16 OO.UU
BASEMENT
THE BASEMENT STORE will feature-
five splendid bargains at JJ5c
forr Thursday's selling that should
command the attention' 'of every
thrifty shopper. - Note these bargains:
Men's kerchiefs 6 for
99
95c
18x18 inch Cambric Handker
chiefs with initial in corner and J4
t l- ti . mm
inch hem. These are
excellent quality. Box of
Handbags, Purses
95c
Odd lines but the values are ex
traordinary. Choice of many differ
ent styles and sizes. On QP
sale Thursday your choice t)C
Boxed Stationery 3 for
95c
Correspondence Paper and Enve
lopes to match 24 sheets and 24
envelopes to the box. Spe
daily priced at, 3 boxes for wDC
Children's Waists- 3 for
95c
Boys and Girls' Knit Waists of
good quality. Reinforced with elas
tic tape. Sizes 4, 8, 9, to QKW
and 12. Special at, 3 Waists SOU
Children's Hose 4 Pairs
95c
Quick Sale!
Crepe Waists
$3.98
Georgette Crepe and few Tub Silk
and Net Waists. Great many charming
styles in the lot and about all desir
able colors. Formerly sell- f3Q qq
ing to $6.95. Special at 3Ue70
CENTER CIRCLE, MAIN FLOOR
A Silk Hose Event of
Great Importance
Important because it brings Hosiery of
standard quality at a clear saving of 11.70
on every pair you buy. This Hosiery on
sale at the Bargain Circle, Main Floor.
$3.95 Hose
$2.25
Wayne Knit Silk Hose with fancy em
broideied clocks in many beautiful de
signs. We also include in this sale plain
Silk Hose in a good range of desirable
colors. AH sizes. Lisle soles OPC
and tops. Regular $3.95 Hose VUD
Ask for S. & H. Stamps
Greatest Tie Sale inMonths!
Hurry, Men!
You haven't seen such Neckwear values in a
long time and, our word for it, there's going
to be a full house here all day" tomorrow.
Men's $250 Ties
$1.39 :
Quality Neckwear from our own regular
stock. Every tie is correctly fashioned and will
hold its shape. Large selection of beautiful pat
terns in the most wanted colors, especially the
darker tones. All the new styles. Including the
wide-end effects. Ties selling hereto- Jf QQ
fore at t2.S0 reduced in price to
Men's 50c Hose
29c Pair
Mala FIr Cotton Hose of good
quality. Reinforced at points of OQ
wear. Assorted colors. 50c hose. iC
1 -, ,11 ! s r .
V
20cHandkerchiefs
2 for 25c
MUin Floor Famous ''Arrow" Sealpack
Handkerchiefs in full size. Our OC
regular 20c grade. Special, 2 for 0
If Mother's Boy Wants a
New Suit
n
Then mother should see to it that her boy is
brought to this store at once that he may get first
choice of these splendid garments we are
; now selling at about half their regular price.
$18 to $27 Suits
$12.35
Main Floor Smart, snappy suits, made up in blue
serge and gray or brown mixtures. And many of
them have two. pairs of pants -every mother knows
what this means in the way of servicel (PIO QC
Broken sizes 6 to 181 1S to 127 Suits vlidU
Corduroy Suits
At $9.85
Mailt Floor Suits of splendid quality dark brown
corduroy. Very latest styles, with full lined pants.
Suits that will please him and you too. QQ OP
Sizes range from 7 to 18. Priced special u00
We Give S. & H. Trading Stamps
OWK Coffee
3 lbs. $1
Lower in price but the same good
quality you have always bought I No
deliveries except with other gro- 5-
eery purchases. 35c lb., J lbs.
Royal Baking
Powder
This is the size you pay 45c for in
the regular way. ' Priced spe- OCT
rial , for Thursday selling only OOC
Tree Tea
50c
Ceylon, Java, In
dia blend. Put up in
dust-proof, cartons.
It will pay yon to
buy for present and
t--M. J
j I iuiure neeos. Keg-
I ular 60 Tree Tea.
Special, 50c pkg.
4th Floor
Floor Lamps-All Reduced!
Large Selection of Styles All Finishes
The February sale of Lamps continues to be the
most talked of event of its kind in Portland. For
, the last few days of the sale we shall feature a
sweeping ciearaway of all Floor Lamps left
Solid Mahogany
Floor Lamps
S20.00
$29.20
868.00
S10.50
Solid mahogany floor lamps regu
lar 25.00 grade now selling for
Solid mahogany ., floor lamps reg
ular 136.50 grade1 now Selling for
Solid mahogany floor lamps reg
ular 18 $.00 grade now- selling for
Mahogany finish floor lamps reg
ular 15.00 grade now selling for
Polychrome Finish
Floor Lamps
17.50 Polychrome or gold finish (TJIO fff
floor lamps priced extra special at tJ)l4i,OU
20.00 Polychrome or gold finish Q1 flfl
floor lamps priced extra special at OxUAJU
22.50 Polychrome floor lamps for $18.00
40.00 Polychrome floor lamps for $32.00
IS 7.S6 Polychrome floor lamps for $40.00
Silk Shades for Floor Lamps ,
15.00 Silk Shades priced at $11.95 f 60.00 Silk Shades priced at $48.00
27.50 Silk ShadM priced at $22.00 1 80.00 JSilk Shades priced at $64.00
40.00 Silk Shades priced at $32.00 I We give S. & H. Trading Stamps.
February Sale of Dinnerware
Great Savings!
Haviland, Syracuse and Nippon China. Odd lines
in many diXferent decorations to be closed out at
big reductions. Thousands of dollars worth of this
ware on sate at a fraction of present worth. Come
in and look over these bargains. Dept. Third Floor.
Decorated Water Tumblers 12Vfcc
SALE OF GLASSWARE Thousands of useful pieces In table glassware
specially reduced for tomorrow's selling Uv each, 15c. 25c 35c and 50c