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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (May 17, 1922)
"I . WEDNESDAY, MAlST 17 1922. TaiSoillJGbN & DAlLYt JOURNAL; OKTl2AiluUKliU VALEIITIIiO'MAY ; HAVE TO FACE )-Ro- Los Angeles, May t?.--TJ. Pj dolph Valentino, dashing -, moving pic ture htro, -will be so-rested for biganry if he emends one night' in Vot Angeles county with Winifred Hudnut, and designer, who became hia bride In Mexico' last Saturday, District Attorney Woolwine said today. ! Woolwihe declared that Valentino, who is known to be ki the city, roast not live with hia new wife hereu According to "Wooline, Jean pretty actress,, from whom Valentino holds an interlocutory 'decree of divorce, la Valentino's wife before the law! of thJi county until a flnat decree is granted. Valentino is believed to have brought Miss Hudnut with him when he returned from Mexico early today, but both have been lost sight of and could notj be lo cated by mirrerous agencies .seeking them... " "I have been trying t reach .Valentino. all day," said W.?X.- Gilbert,- m attor- ney. "and I still don't knOw where he is." - ! "We know Valentino is In town," said Deputy District Attorney- McClelland, and are prepared to take proper action. - Since their wedding, Valentino and - his young bride, who is the daughter of a wealthy New York perfumer, have been stopping at Palm Springs on their honeymoon; but hurried back Ito Los Angeles' upon hearing there was some question as to their union. j - Simultaneously, Douglas Gerrad, for mer director Of Valentino and lan eye witness to the Wedding, arrived i in Los Angeles and told the authentic; details of the ceremony. According to Gerrad, Valentino arrived ' in Mexican last Thursday with a- letter of introduction from the local Mexican consul! to the mayor of Mexican and that it took two days to clear up legal and technical details. - 1 1 " He said Valentino' had also received assurance from a deputy sherifif on the American side of the border that such a marriage would be legal "irt Texas or Arizona." . , naval vessels under ? provisions) of 1 the armament eonf erence treaty. . ,.;$ ?, xae- Dili prOVUMS uwsjor un vfrsion of twoor the battleship cruisers, how ' about 60 per cent : completedjbttt which will not- be allowed to tns navy under ';tbm" treaty. i into .naval airplane carriers. The cost of this conversion: is placed at 2.ftao,0OS for the- two sbipa. BritisH Government TorAsk NewVote'on Teachers' Pensions "London. May 17. Austen Chamberlain made the following announcement in commons this afternoon:." "Tfte government does not consider Its defeat in last night's vote a serious mat ter. But it will respect the wishes of its opponent and -wUl appoint a pension investigating committee, as demanded by, the- opposition."- . Chamberlain announced that the gov ernment -will present a supplementary financial estimate to meet the needs for the teachers' pension fund and that there would-be an early vote upon.it. There probably will be a general election in the event the, government Is defeated on th vote. 1 OiBinliici 1,1 t 6s; yi t it 1 4 Tuberculosis Hobo Non-UnionMines Boosting Prices of. Coal, Says Hoover t " Acting at ths request of "Dri PAa Rockey, chairman or. thei! Chamber I Commerce committee on location of vet erans' hospital in Portland, ' 5 thbrtdty councU today instructed , City Attorney Frank Grant to prepare sin amendment to the building ordinance which , pro hibits the main ten ance of tuberculosis hospital In the city. si !;;. Jn a letter to the council Dr. Rockey said it would be impossible to success fully carry on the campaign to ; have a veteran's Hospital located to Portland! sis long as the present: ordinance exists. The present 'Ordinance forbids -tilbereui' losis patients being treated in any; bs-pital- in the city. -t i, I'Uf'i ' If a veteran's hospital i ts placed i in Portland it will be necessary to have a ward for the observation sand study i of incipient tuberculosis cases. The amend ment as proposed , will allow this! r H i Little Prospect ;of. Columbia Flood Is Seen in The Dalles .The Dalles. May 17. With the .mer cury standing at S3 above yesterday afternoon at 4 o'clock, . the- Columbia river was still rising In its annual spring climb. The official stage of 16. t feet, reported at 8 o'clock in .the morning, was surpassed- at 6 o'clock last night, with a reading of nearly 17.S feet. This -is far below the corresponding high water mark of this date last yer. when the river was above 30 feet. I - , The old time river observers Here pro fess to see little cause for alarm this year from high water, declaring that the freshet's start is too late and that the dry spring weather has resulted in ab- . sorption of much water which ordinarily would go down the Columbia, j Bill for Scrapping Ships Passed; Two Are to Be Skved rWshlng4on.-Mar jil. (1? N. is.) The naval scrapping bill passed the house to day without objection-or a record vote- It authorises the f president to scrap fin A XT IS AUTHORIZED TO 4 BECOVE FU2fDS FBOM City Attorney Frank Grant was given formal authority today g by the; toity council to begin proceedings to ' recover mo (MA in nuinlclDal fends deposited with the State Bank of Portland, f jfThe h nk" refused to Day the? inoney ; itois the city, claiming that the city's deposits could- not be construed J .as , j;intpjic funds," which are ! inquired, to It b : s cured by a deposit of bonds. The;state uMrintendent. of bankstrnotif led i the city it was not necessary fori itbese funds to be ' secured i: by Si s ' deposit of Knnri '.with the icitT ' treasurer, and; the fact that the trea'sureep held. 1 bonds rinK tha deposit .did ; not make the Washington.. May 17. (I. X. S.) Only mf 'OUhHc funds." Gtant WiU be- operators of non-union coal fields arej g;n foreclosure proceedings sgal&st the h,irtv 4rtvltf) tn attend tHA Mnfpmtclll i I - . .1 ' I :, Stl'1 t h I lA calfed by the government to halt soar ing prices of coal at the mines, it was announced today by Secretary of Commerce- Hoover, who wflT4 preside. It is the' non-union, mines, Hoover said, that are showing from (0 to 100 per cent cdvafrces 'in the, price of coaL These are located .mainly', in West Vir ginia, with a few in Kentucky 'and Pennsylvania. A definite date will not be fixed for the conference untU. responses have been received from those invited. Woman Jumps From Auto; Badlyi Injured ' Bend, May 17." Jumping .out of a car going at the rate of 20 miles an hour on the Redmond road, "Mrs. J. C. Culler last night sustained -severe injuries to her head. This morntng- she recovered consciousness and is believed to be out of danger. Tom Wheeler, local express man, who was -driving the -car,' was ar rested, on a charge of drunkenness. Mrs. Culler"s husband said Wheeler was driv ing recklessly and that he and his wife jumped out fearing An accident. Wheeler denies that he was drunk and declared he had the car under control. THOMAS. TALBOT Forest Grove, May 17. Thomas Tal bot, 77, widely known early day farmer and railroader of Cornelius, died yes terday. He was formerly mayor of Cor nelius, where he settled in the early '70s. Funeral services will be held at his home at 10 okjlock tomorrow morning. IJTSPECT PBOPERTT' Commissioners Barbur.- Blgelow. Mann and Pier Tuesday inspected property in the vicinity of Front street to Sherlock avenue, where an extension of Front street is considered. The question will be considered by the city council Wed nesday. TRACKAGE PERMIT ASKED , Salem. May 17. The Southern Pacific company has filed with the public, serv ice commission an application for. per mission to construct -additional track age at Talent in Jackson county. bonds. mill! A?! TI-3T AHCOTIC BILL Resolution adopted !yK thel hite Cross society in Seattle Urging the Spas sage of the- Jones-Miller- narcotic I bill were received today i by Mayor Baker, who telegraphed Senator McNrry asking him to give every possible aid 'n' ac complishing the passage of the , bill. CHICAGO TERRORISTS THREA HURL Nul l for; murder 4ht wonnection withi ljh slay-, b .t-twojtooUfcemW last; .-wcekwff . ( -: fU Guards were, thrown. dobi we ,cmf Jail Ttoday; j (Where- Murpny4 Mauer ana a far confined, la the tear that attempt TWonlr be made by the'r ad herents to liberate them.:: ; tsjreportea that Chief : f PPe Charles Fmorrtt has been warned.: that he wi be killed If . f the labor heads 1 aie not; (released. Fitxmorris is Investigating oeatjn tnreai letters said n to t have s been received by other leaders U the fight tfi stiamp out WtW Bri tm ith bombers and gun men extended beyond th city limits for the first time when raws were ponauci ed at Kankakee, and at ChleSgo , Heights. No 'arrests resulted as far as 1 known, I Police declared today they; ari b pos llurfnn nf th names of the slayers ot Seutenant Terresce Lyons and Parrol an Thomas Clarke last . iwef k. The names were reyealed they aeciarea. m An altered donfessionj by Mrs. Margaret Miuf wifril at John MHl'er. fr ho has been identified as th. driver ol the car in which th slayers fled. -WOA3T FACES CHARGE Indictments charging murder are to be skei agalnit Mrs. Miller, her husband, 2nd the- twofmen they named, according to an annquncemenf from thn' state's Attorneys dif f ice. Mrs. Miller will be Charged as In accessory, it is said, upon her admission i tbaW she gavei aid to the fleeing ijhurderers after the slaylngs. j. In the liie whlc" was set last, a Ibuildtng neajrlng completion and contain ing 72 apartments, was Ignited. Shortly before tRe (tire broke- out seve ral men went to ail adjoining building and warned the presidents to flee. "Get out nick," one man tpld Mrs. Mary Corbett. "This building is going to burn. ThereH be an explosion in minute. To Ihell with the Landis award." ! The forcJ of men employed at the building ha left about an hoir before ithe fire started. The fire bjroke out simultaneously In several parts of the building and was well under wiy before the firemet arrived, j: The contractors erecting the building denied they I had been forewamfed. j. Hearing- on 1 a petition for sin imme dlate trial" fjor Murphy, Mader Snd Shea was continued I today by Chief Justice Kick ham Scanlon until next Monday. Meanwhile lithe three . alleged j "higher ups' in tha bomb and. gun Afar were held in their- cells in the county jail. s (CoatiaiHd Wrom. FWt Ob lng erected in Sherman j Road, Chicago's most exclusive residential section,!, is est mated at from $100,000 to I250.0OO, i GENERA I, STRIKE $S AtJtt ; i.T As officials went iint j isonfernc tf discuss details of thecampalgn to stamp out terrorism and punish' those respon sible, State's'Attorney Robert EL Crowe charged that the fire and recent murders and bombings attributed to the labor war was the work of the leaders Of the Chicago Building Trades councU, who sought to bring about a general strike here Crowe declared that the building trades council was ij disintegrating be cause of dissatisfaction of many unions with the conduct of Its . j officials, ; He declared these officials were seeking by "terrorism" to regain command i of, the mft that once characterised Chicago building construction, and , tor 'which many labor grafters are : now nnder in- dictmtr.t. , f I ' "Labor, as a whole, has no part tn u, Crowe said. "It is gang! work.? . Crowe Hkewise declared that the, heads of the terrorist gang are "Brg ,Tim" Murphy, Fred Mader, president of the Building Trades council, and Cornelius "Con" Shea. -. i ' jiH:1 LOOK LIKE BAD EGGS , Murphy is undlr isentence to, prison for robbing the United I States mails. Shea and Mader ar both ex-cenvietai-The three are now under lndlctmenj MDRGAH STAND ON - . - ---- i l-iJri-i;-M';' A ; : 4 ; f -A-- 4.- REPARATION ISSUE tbe Chicaco: "A. ii -t 'atoJ.I&W'ttofWe "Smrnml and London. May I'.TheiilWestminster GaretW claims to have been,- told by ss well known i- banker ' the ternw-whlch ; J. P. Morgan la bringing trf the interna tional commission which - js to meet in Paria soon I to . consider the i possibility rtf a loan to Germany. His firsi con dltlori is that i the allies-" reduce the total rfaim fo reparations i to Mf 1reas0nabl wmi" 50.0081,000,000 gold marks ?1.,4 qoo.000, being suggested-! The Second condition lJ that tJermany lve a- ien an her customs and collateral security like' the-railways; while the i third con dition is that she, must ! balance her biSdget and cease issuing tpaper rooneyj ! It-is ouit likely that th! represents Substantially the American financier's nroDOsals. Th writer- knows from varl out- good sources that; they would find a welcome ! In Britain and Germany, where the y are considered reasjnabl aliid nracucal, but it would be necessary fur France to renounce;- he -claim under tjie treaty of Versailles-, tor alt of Ger 1 1 1 , -It Hi mapyres3ure"T"ffer't rparations,Txor American: tnvestdrs Jttbuld, accept, only a first Seiiii -:'vatWllyf - : tt7sjldotbtfii unsther France. Iroeld consent to ( a.;teductbHX ? In tWUniemniry, but (the temptaUon mjay be strong, for the .proceeds of s loan to Germiny- would . bsi paid largely -10 Franc "fon ipsjraons.rf Fran must cboosav i. therefore, 4etwei " s,; limited amount; i-resj money trw aiio.isi iw slbllity of a larger amount In the future. Jlr.: Morgan will j spend ' a few i days In 'Lofadon ion;.Wa-wyt ;f-Tatvf, - Closing ioffiDentern dv west wasnsngton. Ms I): ',17, WASHIK3- TON IBUREAIX .OUt.Jt , JQIJRJJAti-- A delegation ;of .vesterti. .senators -and. :repreentattves.' Gynori Shoup 'of Col orado; Campbell or iArisona-ane aaanry of - Utah called 'on. Secretary Fallvlate Tniiii:M rrim t'aimrt the proDoaed abolitldn of Xhf rwrttet r reclamation' 4f Oce. JTbis its befoTjefiai bfcreUryl sj a resulthbf a istudy .ordered; by, him Jptds- termuba whether sayings would b m by i triansferrtng- 'tWefUenver establish ment 9ur' Waahinatohifl:1 i f- -f ' '.4 4 -. Senljitor -Mci?fary Vm for the delesa tlon.i. targing , the .coewence.- of Ienver to the reclamation Jftiq woraers ana qa vantages, coming from mklntaihlns Weit ern ntviqiisncre. rji - i i p , -t i Fall said he had reached no conclusion. ine ndtaidefertactib pir;.s;itrilMap :sidiqKslraUea o tficllaj araWld lrmot (twS :o j WOOL LDlrectorJSsiTls W.rWSlsasi fioaWrtesJ doubtsfi ihat7s,nyf8 rHAlTT'VrtSS ?TAtV TOTI- iRosebnrp;: "May jTT.-i-jCharles 1! ' Marshfietd iron Ux) tw straw vot ducted by h;XeWs,iRview for 10 days. . Hall recei red 36 votes. 6 Patterson 62, 0t Bean fl Le i . 5 On the Democratic ticket 1': received , TT-avotei.t Starkweather Holnves-1 and) Purdy o. f8 ir. v.tks 'a faciiet ofU mi . ivniurai Ilefir Green ITecuf Xt'at? ctrcnr,:. i lavotir-nd Ecohdmy pro v.- n;revelation. In Sealed Packets ;4 Bridg Four s Collapse; Are Dead and 13 .Others Missing 1 Marlin, Txas, May 17. (y. !".) Four persons were known to. be dead today and 13 others ire missing as the result of ! the collapse ot the Marlln-Belton bridge over ithe Brazos riveif. Onlv one! bodv has been recovered that of Mr si K. D. Mosely of Beaumont. The otherji three dead are !F EM. Stall- worth. mayor of- Marlin: Urt W. H, Allen of Marlin; 7-year-old sonl of Clay loii Briggs, Marlin. Thirteen other persons oa the bridge at the time: of the accident cannot be found Houston, Texas. May 7.-iV. P.)- More than 3300 persons are homeless in the lower Brazos river section near here. where a district .30 miles long ind eight miles wiae is under water. Back of Every ft Suit- Stands My Guarantee y, ti : AJ GUARANTEE so Hteral tHat it places everything in the customer's favor. ;The Nation's finest productions in men's . clothing enable me to recommend this Merchandise so highly. QUALITY is the reason you, too,, will agree when you see this display. , sir i .. ;; !l ii W 1 1 m $40 $45 $"501 SELLING .Morrison, at Fourth L Portland's Leading Clothier for Over Hdtf wCtntiuy X if i Mlnljyiitili P ' ' 1 " 1 IT Forest Planting Is rrogressmg; reason Late, Says Kummel ; :;j -1 i. ;..k'i.-:,i 1. F. Kummel, forest examiner In charge of planting, has returned from the Olympicj'and Rainier national forests In , Washington; -where he has been di recting the. planting projects on the Sol duc and Cispus burns. About 25 iftien are planting $00 acres on the Solduc and will finish in) about a week,; completing the area of 2000 acres contained inn the project. r On the Rainier 35 men are planting 800 acres on thei CiSpua The spring's plant ing will bring the total acreage to 1800. Planting operations are two lor three weeks later than usual this year because of the delayed -season. Klan Denounced by Pythian Eesomtion Chlco. Cai, May 17. The Ku Klux Klan and shy secret organization tend-, ing to discountenance laws of Ithe- land were deifbunced' In a resolution nassed unanimously Tuesday by the Kblghta of Pythias in tihe -first session of the fifty third -j annual convention of the grand lodge being): held here. The resolution, submitted by Judge Benjamin F. Bled soe, flays itfae institution tha,t "seeks ffie secorityp of the night for its' opera tions " and bides its countenance oenina the sheeted mask." ; , Dives ifor His Hat, ' I Logger Is Drowned Aberdeen. rWash.. May 17. R. TOU had had one: pair ruincil. Cake soap rubbing and your handsome blankets returned to' you shrunkentheir softness ness gone, j i . . i. ! Thei .-3 mtrSTZEVZS, Agent if.ifH - - - first: 4 it j matted and fleeci- old stern could not stand t methods. IWool is more sensitive than f ahv otherl fabric, and redMires more cifeful lauhderigl Even utsids frorrti ajiarsu suap or iiiaii ouap ivill make its deheatescale-1 fibres tangle and'shrink. j With Lux you .' need B-SS 1 If - :i 41.-;'T:-i-i:.t i All , ' ; Telephone .1,. . . - .! ll ; .1 -1 S- fWW. ,;:-iti Gro i i - '.1 J: Aut. 6ir-:: as : sotedileec5ias;the them in hesitate to, vash your soft; flclan- ketstat the first sighlof Hiirigirless; -t -: tlTIhe $ cream y,v sati uy ux flakeSj nnJ 'rtifiKino1 trZ sKnnlc-larm Mmat3' -the tifiyt fibre"npjti b tic -bif isoHdjJ soipv-; tpstick; tb thets ft: -.5 i- . ; i - " -l it? ;Your blankets come Lux! bath f as big and som as iwnen yoa s . M I -With tax ypu .eMVt-i'rOTW V V9WW i : . -i -i, i . -! i in. - : m vmdmwiXk r- I if... 'It:! ' mr. WUl ,i I F TilJ'i' 'r -m . Mi :t i k: ai r: i i I i . ' i WWl . HI L-iSJII - ,ira.-.-woor?-l!M rl- H-il , . -. it nsMMw-'w . i mi i ii 1 1 1 1 ii ii in i i H erJ' -'' I W c:f;li!ilMlll . - i 'r3?S : I I XT . Vte-tV. I 0 . 1 " 1 1 .' - I 1 !WWlliJLUJU-.IBMtBgJg3Big-j..MlUiJ.a J-!U;JgJH 1 I ttUJ'J J'J.!" -- !--- - , I '111 : ri: !)..:! , Vi 3 Ill L.'i ..; .:ii-td: ijif - r-l sui; ; .r'T: s c - o. i i ..... .uMak . .sssma- t w . si I . " 1 j i. tse, i- i - " - 'Hi- ' St?t 4 Rife ' - : U 1 1 - ---n PI! . - . .1 1 . il-1 i MSll ii.Si l- , ,- 1 1 I I i HKI i . r i , "3 from: their' 1: iBros. Co. f Cain store .has- Lux. Lever L1 Mass. r ;., : . I . .. i I n , i :-- ' iT5 tooelm mancturiri say 'ffFask woolens in -Xtfif. f KoT 4STAt..WefoteN; Mtui C., Makers ot hne oiaoKnt ! AKher's Knit Goods Wolum Catei Co. , Carter's Knit Goods j axgs'1 Woolesj J Smart Sports Woolens f j; M- ,"T. : - fi. Elgle, 454 a lumbei worker, was drowned Tues- arter his the har- high dive fThe body. dy when he became confused hat blew eff and dropped Into bor. (He followed it with a and sank before help arrived, wan recovered. KLAX OFFEKS BEWARD Sacramento., Cal tay 17. tl. N. S.) Sheriff tllW Jones today received a let ter purporting to" come fromi the Ku Klux Klan offering a reward! of $500 for the arrest of any one perpetrating acts of . violence under the iguise v of klansmen. IThe letter, written on klan stationery ttl aimed that an organisation opposed to I the "invisible empire." In tended to throw suspicion on jthe' klan by committing outrages here while In klan regalia..'! - . ;-rrJ-:ii ; -it Dentists, Incj .:V Wrftten Gmaraatee -Wits, AJ0 'Wort L ? rSi2iPlateJ Now $8 i l I I 1 f ski I rtiiri 1L ii 3 NTIl-i.' tlM ttK Bold Crowst sw. C3 tlK P14. Bridg sow.. J.,. tit 4 JjSxJtlr' Wen Outer r Tom can f have an - examtnatlon of tree or -any? cnarge er by calling at our. office. 'Eatirs i Csrssr f T , 'I xu vsscm jlu: "S .: , . .11 i'l - -i-- ii - LI ll . i , 1.. r " Whatniakesja Vrack'' train? The roadbed as MUUi. . . much as the bo witn vour au car on a ruuuiK eomoDue. road, i Any car' is a fetter The car with the highest -gas mileage has a ' hghcr'wa oxii Coacretsd . 1 : --'-'tII i i - - , The car with the quidtest "pick-up picks up -qmcfercd firin, oyithfig Concretej- (rj r The best rxm-skici tire holds&etfir on the gri tty : , Concrete surface 1 a -- ' !t : ; lokiser denreciaticai on Corvretai - 1 11 ' -: Motorists know these are factsr-and nxxorits, ' j upcjuuivauKcvwciuwuiiVNUsiucjwauu ; i ti-i--1- -H --T a I M "i :'' iisr:CWe waaa. Ufa jut . ii. - if :t-:.. -1 eyf National Organization to Improve and . Or I e lnt2,l Ochclr1 CitU I ' I J isMijiiatter bf retaining Ithe Oiealthof fi ybiitli anci that comes irom proper iooa ana properi ekelrcise. ' Healthl I is always buoy fint always hope ful, always opi the jump. Eat eat It v,v il. with green vegetable's and fruits that 8 the secret, of youth and 1 strength bulj bet. sure if is the whole wheat prepared in a diges- i tible f orm. Shredded Wheat Biscuit is 109 per cent kvhple wheat; made , digestible by steam-cooking, shred- j ding and baking; ' , -: : : ! - ,Vt' Li L i i " ' L i a ww J3iscuic9 wica muiror cream maice a complete, nourstung meal. jJeiioous with peaches berries, raisins, prunes. i"'?' sliced 1 bananas; and other fruits. V TRISCUIT iU Ithe Shredded .Wheat I h -cracker-ra real whole wheat toast 'eaten with butter or soft cheese; t ; 4s Padflc Coaat Shredded Wheat Co., Oakland, pal. mu - vis. l4!IMoms6n,C ft '.(.'; r 1 4 l-i:'J pt:;M for tse Big lilei sigm l.--BiliWslBT8f03rE-Ji'tr.!.-i-i'!f I r t 1 '. ;j i: , -Mm ' til; m ' -i i-. --! i - 1' j t '