Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 1, 1921)
13 TUESDAY, . NOVEMBER 1; 1821. -THE : OREGON DAILY - JOURNAL, PORTLAND, OREGON BOTH DEMOCRATS ANDG.0.PJIF0G By 'Jlomaa; Hspgoed ralveral Carrie EditarUl TjprrwooaiUat. Washlfton. , Nov ltn;. pe meetlnc . t the Democratic national eommlttM at St. Louli tolir much mor li In volved tnasal contest between the ad .nerente of Mr. McAdoo and the adher ttXt of Governor Cox. That . line of cleavage la the casiet to express, but It- la by no means sufficient to describe te contest. t : Mfi McAdoo, In addition to h la ex ecutive rltta, U a farseeina- olrUcian. Ma has triad to make bis mora vehement followers realise that tha only thlnr , for the -national, commutes fb- consider la effectiveness of organisation. With the party all shot to plecea at tba last . election and with no clear Issue on the horizon., the political i issues cannot yet bo defined. . .-. - Nor eaaany rues be made about the standard bearer for 124. It ia true . that tha mora liberal force in tha turtr tend to center; around McAdoo and that the cOBservatlva Democratic leaden permanently look on Underwood as their favorite, but it ia also true that .any man you talk with will aa- that all the eigne, today" favor agaric hone as tha Democratic candidate three years irom now., . - , - What Usee- can fairly! he called party-Issue today? Take foreign af fain, for '. Instance. . We staved br i crushing i majority, out of the League of . Nations and.' out, i of ' the Versailles treaty. Whether we did wisely or -not , ia a aead issue. Nobody but a blind man would aay there la any more send ment for our undertaking those obllga ' tions than there was last November. .;,. On. tha other hand tha Republicans are in a quandary. They are afraid ef the public opinion they have aroused. They co into the conference of Novum . bar with froe eye on tha economic facta , and tha other eya on a public they have . iaugnt to rear any arrangements what- . ever with jSurope. i I - The other day I was talking: with one of the senate lrreconci tables. "Tou won .a great victory." I said. "Can yon or ganise it T Dj you know what you want? The United States has cornered most of tba gold in the world. You don't want , imports. : What do you want Europe to pay ue In, to meet her debts?" This man was frank with me. He ad mitted that If It were not for tear of he public, the senate would take an open minded and fresh view of the best way of gettlnjr out of the world's economic . taaxle. He admitted that the debt to , us are worthless and probably worse ' than worthless ; precisely like the money owed by Germany to France and Eng- land. J. ' But he .aid the public had swung so much further than eyen some of the Ir reconcilable leaders Intended to have " them co that these economic matters. the1 most real matters to consider, can not be taken tip frankly and without fear. ', Tha scares worked up to destroy Wilson, bow confront Ills, con tiuerora. TABIFS JfEXBLT MEAHIWSLE8S Tariffs , ha vei become : prettf- ; nearly ."'meaningless, foreign trade being what It la. Tha farm era', b loo succeeded In gat- : tlrrH BA.cartft oV jaaralnet 'Canadian wheat.- It did. not affect .the-price of wheat In this country a, oenL But Can ada la now carrying en a campaign to put a tariff on Our product, to get even -with us. Tba tariff Issue will probably favor the Democrat in lMVbut prob . abtyaleo nobody will take much taterest ' In it. Taxation Is tha other outstanding 4 Issue. Then also tha Republioena are , up a .tree. They start to make a tax program oa the principle that it is . hopeless to grade taxation according to ability to pay, and then they become alarmed at that confession. - Bodies. of Overseas HeroesBroughtHere En Koutelto Homes Bodies of seven soldiers who died over '' arai rfna ti avrlva In Portland. Wedneediy morning, and Will be con signed ur various points in ine worcn wt ajvnrdlns tn word received from the war department, None of the bodies Is of a Portland boy, Tha names an as ; follows ; ,1 Albert W. Rosen, private. Company TV Tw.ntl.th mrlnuira Castle Rock. Wash.; Joe Zurfluh, private. Company IL Thirty-ninth Infantry. fn trails. Wash.: Martin Hartley private. Com . but M ' 2liat Infantry Grand Ronde. Or. ; John A. Leng, second lieutenant, M.aAnii.rt.ra NimninY. SSlst infantry. OrangevlUe, Ida, ; Allen Q. Brattstrom, Company I, Twenty-sixtn inianiry. sse MUtmiriiia E. afuKzv nrlvate. Com pany C 105th Infantry. Spokane ; lon ' ard. AugusUna Hitter.! corporal. Eigh teenth company, Fifth Marines, Tacoma, eai"aaUaaal rtaJBSBaaaaaaaWaBaBasssasaBsssaBBaaaa-- Church Raises Fund , F9r New Building Medford. Kov. X. Tha First Baptist church of Medford, which recently de cided to' carry on a' campaign to raise funds for building a new church struc ture. Sunday evening announced that the - fund to that date amounted to more than 120,000. More than. io,oof subscribed by members of the church during the fu-et week of the campaign! , Tha new building ia to cost approximately $40,000 1 and will be modern In aU respects: Oregon Memorial v mgnway . xteceives Committee Vote McUiseville. Nov. L The oommlttac appointed by the Oregon Memorial High way association to recommend a, name for tha paved hlghwaya west of the Willamette recommended that tha road from - Portland by way of Kewben; and thence eouth to Eugene on the west side of the Willamette river be designated as the West Side Pacific highway and that tha road now commonly known as the Tualatin highway, from . Portland throiia-h TTiltahAra tn Vf rMinnvilla and from McMlnnvllle via Newberg to Port land, be designated as tha Oregon Me morial highway, . , The resolution was signed by the fol lowing commlttea: W. T. Vinton, R. J. Moore, W. B. Dennis, O. & Wright. & B. Vincent, raul Abraham, a. u. uaies. ; .1. I 'i ; S aJ w .rw'iA'j f tit XT fT. ".O, 00D1BSUG Mm E mm Aberdeen, Wash- Nov. 1. Flood waters, which for several days have cov ered the tracks of the Northern Pacific railway, near Tulips, have ' gone down anouf h to allow crews to commence fill ing numerous minor washouts and per-1 mlt resumption of passenger service, to Mocllps today, according to word received by railroad officials here. The peak of high water haa been passed In all parts of the country and reports are coming ia from various sources that all flooded aceas an being freed from water. , In tarics Qulnault the heavy rains of last Friday - following three days of steady downpour caused a rise of 17 feet, while the Olympic highway, at Tu ps and Newton, was tinder four feet of aier. Ait rivers mouiary to unys arbor rose from three to six feet and the level of tha upper Humptulipa- waa said to be the highest in the last 20 years. ,- - Considerable damage to cottages along tha margin . of Lake Qulnault resulted from , the 'unprecedented rise. Damage! was caused to ranches along the valley I about Qulnault. For a time the water In the lake rose at the rate of a foot an hour. The clubhouse of the Hoquiam Bod & dun club waa floated ff of its! foundations and in several, cottages the water rose to a height of four feet. ...I I. n e i Plat Zigzag Creek Sites for Summer One hundred new summer homesites have been surveyed along Zlgsag river and Camp creek by the United States forest service this fall, according to Forest Examiner A. O. Jackson.' who has had charge of the work. . Tha Camp creek lots, Jackson states, an as ettrac- tl-re and beautiful aa those of Bull creak. which be haa regarded aa nearly ideal for summer homea, An tha lots an I fairly close to the Mount Hood loop road. For the Camp creek colony, a road will have to be cut through soma small iod re- pole- pine timber. Mother watches with quiet approval as the chil dren pour out the thick creamy Alpine Milk on their cereal. Alpine Milk is good enough for the finest kids in the world. The Milk of the West is the Milk that is Best t 11 M aT Dyed Her-Tan Skirt to Make " ' - - .t Child a Dress pnecon MILK OIKfc DIES AT HOFTABDS CoWallls. Nov. 1. Edna. Plchette, 6 y ear-old daughter of Mr. and Mra. J. B. richetta. died Sunday afternoon at the Seavey nopyarda; when the parents wen employed. ' Funeral services, wen aeld Monday in Grand Jlonde , 8 A9DT pairs hV E8C APKS : Sandy. Nov, 1. Joel JarU returning from a trip to Medford. Friday evening, waa run into by da auto and his Ford went ovar a bluff, falling- 0 feet. Jarl Jumped and escaped Injury. ' tJLCb. package of "Diamond Oyea" coo tains' dlrectlob so- elm pie . thatv any woman can dye or tint fadad, shabby skirts, dresses, waists, coata, sweaters, stockings, hangings, draperies, ; every, thins like new.-' .Boy "Diamond Dyes" no other kind then perfect bom dye ing: Is guaranteed even if you have never dyed before.' -Ten your druggist whether the material you swish to dye Is wool ; or silk, or whether It la linen, cotton, or mixed goods. : Diamond Dyes never strak,vepot, fade or run. " DiamoE(H)yes RUGSi-ORIENTAL RUGS We are offcrinf for a short time only, Tientsin Rugs N made to our order atnhe factories in China ; best quality . all Chinese designs rare opportunity to secure a - genuine oriental rug at bargain prices; come early and'- get first choice., - ' ' v " . . 335 AnkeViy, Bet, Eighth imd Broadway - - LW, tt S so great m . J&JW A wild r POSITIVELY UNTIL FRIDAY OEY! AT PQPIIIM PRICES that audiences everywhere have cheered with enthusiasm. so WQnderful that hundreds of P.ortland people have al ready seen it two and three times. r , v - .- . ' ' '' .' ' ' -!'".. v. ' ' -.'-.. ''..' r ' " ' , ' ' ' . I . ! .-' ''" : the rescue of the unconsciou& 'Anna irom the broken ice right on the edge oi the falls seems surely a miracle. - . . BaV i aa 1 Vk r:V " 1 c'MP "oi)) READ THESE COMMENTS FROM NEW YORK PAPERS: The patrons shrieked and roared. They had witnessed the most sensational photoplay climax that ever roused a cata ract of emotions. Enough to raise the hair on a man's head and raise the man cwt of his eat"- Herald. "One cannot enumerate the multitude of virtues in the film. One should really see the picture. It is unique and a great thnig.',---American. . ' " :-'-.;!-- .!' -4-' , -.i "' , "Most amaxing spectacle ever seen on land or sea or moving picture screen. Brought the audience to its feet in spontane ous shout of appreciation. .. . '. Much rural comedy.' - . W01 he cheered from coast to coast and in many different tonnea nd accents across the water." Globe. "The audience received a thrill the like of which haa ' not been felt since the Clansmen rode over the hills in The Birth of a Nation. To describe the acting of Lillian Gish would be to open" these columns to all the superlatives in, the language.: i . Pandemonium broke loose. The theater resounded to cheers, whistles and yells of delight. A series of pictures that might well hang on any wall." -Evening Mail. . " .- ' " ' -- - --- :. " "i When the stupendous ice scenes were shown the theater rocked with applause. Never in our five years experience with motion pictures have we seen such a- demonstration. It isv difficult to write without dealing almost' entirely in 'super lative." Tribune. - . ", Special Music by the Big Peoples Orchestra Under Direction of Prof. BRltZ . Shows Commence 11 A. M-, 1, 3; S, 7, 9 P. M. Prices: cnrxTX s r. ATTEB S L Ada!t"!'!!!es IVaaes. . 70s aad SI t Candraa always tSe ' All price are iaelaatvo af I V5t5ii iTinfe mm V&jm0m - m$$$m Wmmm iBfoteif 19 . - so ' ii " '. m r if . A.-