THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, OREGON. I.IONDAY, SEPTEMIIZrt 11. 102. TE1AM0R IS DECLARED SCARCE DURING AUGUST There is scarcity of woman labor Ip Portland, according to figures shown by the August report of the ' jjublic employment bureau. This sets i forth. In a report filed with the city i council today by Arthur W. Jones, , director of the eureau. that during , the mouth there were 927 places avail f able for women, while - but 330 were ' reported placed in positions; t- In the men's division the help i wanted totaled 2879 positions, and the men referred to positions numbered ,-2930. The largest number, 1331. was or common - labor. Next followed alesmen, 252 ; then cement and con ret work, 157, and painters and alsominers, 107. Garden ' and lawn -work provided 162 Jobs, and the other work covered a wide range. In the woman's division- there were placed 13 chambermaids. 136 domes tics, 3 clerks, 74 day workers, 101 in Junnc tne montn iui ex-service men were included in the placements. i BASBUR TO RECOMMEND PERMITS FOR APARTMENTS -Favorable recommendations will be j made by Commissioner Barbur at jvnnnaaya council session on ine ap plications for permits to erect stx apartment houses. They include the ppllcatlon of W. P. Hoffman for a two story building on East 14th street I between Hancock and Tillamook Streets ; F. W. Peterson for a concrete ! building- of 48 apartments at the southeast corner of 26th and Upshur Streets ; C. Guy Wakefield for an "Apartment building on Broadway be I tween East Eighth and Ninth streets, t where he proposes to make an addition to a two story residence and combine I the whole into quarters for eight farn I Mies ; L. D. Walker for a frame flat f for four families at a location on Kast ( 13th street, between East Ash and Kast Ankeny streets, and T. B. Turner for a Class 6 brick apartment house or ,15 families on Kast 17th street be iween Schuyler street and East Broad- ay. petition , of Charles- sad 'Anna. Back strom for the vacation of the west 10 feet of John street, in Backstroms ad dition, from the' south line of lot A, Grimes addition, to lot , Backstroms addition. The city council has revoked the per mit granted Aueuet 21. 1918, for Foley's dairy at 2228 Willamette boulevard, and he is given until 'September 25 to find a new location and remove all barns and sheds used for the housing of do mestic animals, r CLEMENCEAU PLANS U. S. SPttKiNG TOUR (Con tinned Proa Pace One) O REDRAFT ELKS PLANS TO PROVIDE FIRE ESCAPE Through some inadvertence, the city uilding bureau has allowed the plans Or the- Elks temple, now under con traction at 11th and Alder streets, to 'eceive its O. K. without provision hav- g been made for fire escapes on the wo street frontages. Immediately re- rafting of plans to provide for these ill b-required by H. E. Plummer, 1 -chief buildine insnector. The oversight is explained by Plum- j r jner as naving occurrea tnrougn one i Examiner having checked a portion of I the plans and who then left the : city ' employer and when another plan ex- k aminer took up the work it was takes or granted that his predecessor had necked up on fire escapes. ing the war too late and quitting too early." - Clemenceau makes plain he does not agree with Kipling, but believes the United States shouid resume its war partnership with Great Britain and France for the purpose of put ting world peace on a stable founda tion. FEARS 3f ATIOSAI COIXAPSE Clemenceau' s decision to emerge from retirement and go on his personal mission to America, was made as a re sult of recent European developments which made a collapse of some nation and possible resumption of hostilities over the question ul reparations seem Imminent. Until -recently he has reit erated to his friends the statement that he had abandoned world politics forever. "America w.nts .ny opinion and I'll give it" Clemenceau declared, in an in terview given the Petit Parisian. "I don't need documents. I don't intend to make a triumphal Journey, but a useful journey. I am going to make four speeches, that's all. I am going as a member of a mission and won't accept invitations to banquets and receptions. I'll speak in my own name. America wants my views and I'll give them. "I will speak with regard to the war, demonstrating that if the allies had remained in peace time as they were in war time the world would not be poverty stricken and facing endless difficulties. TO GIVE FACTS "I'll speak much about America and little about England. What I've got to say rilsay simp.y because America is a country of simple, straight facts. I'll say it in a gentlemanly way be cause the Americans are our great friends. "Nobody is speaking for France, but now is the time to speak, to tell Ameri cans they are wrong that we are not militarists and imperialists. The French people deserve the enthusiastic confiaence of their friends, the free people of America. "Kipling is wrong, too. I like Kip ling, he is a great writer whom the war struck, hard, but his diatribe seems to me unjust. Of course. I'll speak about the treaty. Ii is necessary to say clearly thatj the treaty deprives Germany of every pretext for revenge. If we had wants i to make an imperial ist peace, if we had had in the Cham ber certain deputies such, as Germany had between 1870 and MM, It would have been different." : Senate Passes Bill For Improvement of Harbors in Oregon Washington, Sept, 11. (WASHING TON BUREAU OF THE JOURNAL.) New project river and harbor bill was passed by the senate today. As it is a house bill, amended by addition of fur ther ' items. in the senate, Jt will next go to the conference committee. Ore gon projects carried in the house bill and agreed to without amendment by the senate, are : Columbia and lower Willamette to insure dependable 30-foot channel at all seasons. - Coos Bay harbor and Isthmus slough, including new jetty. Small projects on Clatskanie river and Willamette slough. Oregon projects contained only in the senate bill, which were added in com mittee by McNary's effort, and which will be in some doubt until the con ferees have completed their work, are : Umpqua river bar and entrance to Siuslaw river, from Acme to the en trance. The bill makes no appropriations but authorizes new projects aggregating J37.0O0.000 when completed. Senator King of Utah, who recently threatened filibuster to defeat the bill, was absent today. Second Girl's Body Found in Missouri River; Father Held Kansas City, Mo., Sept. 11. (I. N. S.) The body of a young girl, a hole crushed in the back of her head, was found floating in the Missouri river at Napoleon, 13 miles from here, today. She was about 11 years old. It was the second girl's body found in the river in the last week. The mutilated body of a girl, about 14, was found last Monday in the river near Kansas City. Immediately after the finding of the second body, the police put Tony Nello, 47 years old, under arrest at Kansas City, Kan., through a severe grilling. His two daughters, Ellen and Floren tine Nello, 11 and 12 years old, re spectively, have been missing since a week ago last Friday, according to in formation in the hands of the police. INJUNCTION FIGHT FORMALLY OPENE IN RAILROAD CAS Chicago. Sept. 11. (U. P.) Federa Judge James H. Wilkerson today de cllned to grant immediately the pleas of attorneys for the striking shopme that the temporary injunction against the strikers be dismissed. The coup ordered Attorney General Dawghert to go ahead with his arguments u holding his request that the injunctio be made permanent. The court did not refuse to consider the argument of Donald R. Richberg for strikers to dismiss the motion tcf.i make the injunction permanent. "I will take this question under ad visement and in the . meantime the government will proceed," Judge Wilkerson ruled. EVIDENCE PRESENTED Atorney General Daugherty and his special assistants then presented & mountain of documentary evidence in an effort to bear out charges that widespread sabotage has occurred in ' the course of the strike. A ruling on the government's mo tion to make the injunction permanent is expected today as the temporary re straining order expired with the hear ing. Assistant Attorney General Easterlih read a list of 30 closely written type written pages giving a list of killings sabotage and violence which he de clared was the result of the "conspir acy" of the strikers. "The confidence of the court has been betrayed by the chief law enforcing officer of the nation." Richberg de clared, inysupport of his motion for dig missal of the injunction case. "The court has been Imposed upon tp the extent that it has granted this in junction upon misrepresentation of thje facts. EARLY HEARING ASKED "We should at leaSt be entitled t;o an early hearing." ! Blackburn Esterline, assistant to At torney General Daugherty. who was in the courtroom, then made his state ment to the court asking that the in junction be made permanent. He told of the steps which had been taken to serve notice on the shopmen's officials of issuance of the writ. Besldes Richberg, representing the shop crafts, attorneys were in the court room in the interests of the Big Four brotherhoods. They announced, how ever, they would take no active part th conduct of the case. Brotherhood attorneys included Frank L. Mulholland, Thomas Steven son and Oscar Thorns, all of Cleveland. DISSOLUTION ASKED Following Ester lin, arguments for dissolution of the injunction were started by Richberg. ...... The attorney for the unions birterly attacked the attorney general for his statement favoring the open shop. . "It is not the business of the attor ney general to aid the open shop fight," Richberg said. Pointing out what he claimed was misrepresentation of facts to the court in obtaining the injunction, the union .attorney declared : "The workers are under no legal' ob ligation to obey the decisions of the United States railroad labor board, as the attorney general has attempted to claim before the court. POLICY MEET ADJOURNS The policy committee of the shop crafts union met at the Masonic tem ple at 11:43 and adjourned at 11:47 until 1 p. m. No action was taken at the meeting and it was understood-that the recess was taken pending the out come of the federal court arguments. Attorney General Daugherty said he would not subpena any of the shop craft officials while the peace meet ings were in progress. He also an nounced he would not submit to any modification of the injunction. CITY. HALL BRIEFS Houghtaling & Dougan have filed an ppllcation with the city council ask- ng for a permit to erect a four story nd basement concrete apartment use with 45 apartments at the south- est corner of 16th and Montgomery treets. It will go before the council ext Wednesday. An ordinance will be passed by the ity council at its next session author- sing the purchase of parts for an auto - driven fire apparatus in the open mar- et. . ' . J J The city engineer will be Instructed f "py the city council at its session next r Wednesday to make a written report on the proposed widening of Brazes 1 Street, from East 69th street to a point . 100 feet west of 60th street. The board of appeal on the building t ,ode recommends to the city council r that it do not require meters on f .sprinkling systems placed in buildings as a fire safeguard, but asks that a k Publio hearing be given- on this sub Jeet. 4 1 October 4 is the date set for a public hearing before the city council on the Are You One of i the BIG or Small 95? Only 8 out of every 100 men get there the other 95 fall -behind. You bow have the opportunity to join the BIG t class, but it means long nights of hard study. Those other 95 were content to drift along. Don't let your self fall into that class. Clip the coupon below and let us start you on the way to Success. TIAK OFF COUPON AND MAIL Of w liMtttutsfof Tehil, u fimt v. m. e. a. Bits. Partialis, Oressn. Ptaate mi4 me full InforateUo aksut the cauro or tubjeet I have narftes. ' COURSES Oatlaea Prep. Elementary School for Mm - -r IuOmm School , ootkeooliis . " Sowero"to OIra4 iMtaaas Admin. Sostooor4its Eleotrteol t Cfvtl ; ; Automotive CloetHcat terese Bauer VutenUrtne Tractors Roele Totosroohy NlfM Castoeorina Trades l Mochaiilcol DraftlBfl OREGON -INSTITUTE of TECHNOLOGY 4U Floor V. BL O. A. Id. . PerUeneV Orates. . We Tell It With VALUES A Thousand New Fall Garments expressed to us from our New York office within the past week give evidence thatthe art of designing- "Sweet Sixteen" garments is an art that expresses Beauty in exquisite lines. -. Woman's Figure Assumes New Graces and an Inevitable Smartness in Such Bewitching Models at NOTHING IN THE CREATIVE WORK OF DESIGNERS is more entrancing to the feminine mind and eye than the marvelous developments in style wrought by these artists in this Fall's "Sweet Sixteen" models. MAN-TAILORED SUITS Strictly man-tailored even to the hand-made button holes. (J-! Silk-lined Velours, Serges D AO CONEY COATS Very fine grade with stayed seams, and lull silk lined. An extra value $35 New York San Francisco Seattle Los Angeles 145-147 BROADWAY MARRIAGE LICENSES Vancouver, Wash.. Sept. 11. The fol lowing marriage licenses were issued here Saturday : Paul R. Wise, 28, Sa lem, 'and Sibyl Smith, 23, Vancouver, Wash.; William Shclettenhart. 29, Or egon City, and Florence Rector, 21, Hubbard, Or. ; Charlee E. Garlick, 35, and Louise Spradllng, 38, Portland ; Lee Welch, 36, and Beatrice Harrison, 28, Portland ; Carl G. Wafdespel, 22, and Luella Young, 18, Salem, Dr. ; Ray A. Schwarze, 26, and Florence Stod dard, 18, Salem, Or. ; William R. Clark, 65, and Cora B. Washburn, 56. Oregon City ; Monte W. Guild, 23, and Mary M. Smith, 24, Portland ; B. W. Kress. 28, and Eva M. Poff. 22, Portland ; Cal vin C. IJix, 60, Buffalo, N. Y., and Ella Morse. 52, Seattle ; Gordon E. Tower,' 45, and Florence E. Hawk, 41. Salem. Or. ; Henry E. Edwards, legal. Canton, X. Y., and Hattle Moak, legal, Oregon City. WOSEJf PRISONERS Negro women sentenced to more than one year in federal court will henceforth be sent to the Correction Farm at Warrenville. Ohio, according to Major Clarence Hotchkiss, United States marshal. White women will be sent to the institution at Shakopee, Minn., as before. Alleged Plot to 'Buy Protection Of Police Is Bared . With the resignation today of a re porter employed for a number of years by a morning paper, full details of a plot to furnish police protection to a syndicate of disorderly houses were made public ! The reporter and a polica court at- oorney are accused of attempting to Bridal ;VeilMill Eesumes Operation; 150 Men Employed The mill of tit Bridal Veil Timber company, near Bridal Veil Falls, re sumed operations this 'morning;, after being closed down for about a year. The mill has a daily capacity of about 100,000 feet, and 150 men. are employed at the plant and in the company's log ging operations on Larch mountain, .bribe Inspector Kiingensmith. the J The mill at Bridal Veil Falls and a chief a assistant, for the purpose of preventing the police from raiding the disorderly houses. According to the story totld today at police headquar ters, the attorney, whose practice is made up largely of eases involving J Buca disorderly nouses, receives, fluou with which to obtain protection for his clientts. It was reported he divided this money evenly with the newspaper man and that he later offered Klingen smith $250 for his influence in -preventing the disorderly houses from be ing disturbed. KUngensmith reported the affair to his superior officers, wHo informed the employers of the reporter. District Attorney Stanley Myers stated today he had received no official notice of this alleged plot, out that he would Immediately arrange a confer ence with Chief Jenkins. "If my Investigation develops suffi cient evidence, I will present the entire matter to the grand jury at once," said Myers. Clark, KendallOo. Employ Or Close Carlos C: Close, for the past two years secretary and treasurer of Clark, Kendall & Co., Inc.. was elected vice president of the company at a meeting of the board of directors last week, ac cording to announcement i today by Harry C. Kendall, president of the concern. Prior to his connection with Clark, Kendall &. Co.." Close was for several years secretary of the Lumber mens Trust company. He; will retain the office of secretary of. the Clark, Kendall & Co. As vice president he succeeds Walter M. Kendall, resigned. large area of standing timber along Gordon creek were acquired recently by the Bridal Veil Timber company from the Bridal -Veil Lumbering com pany. The new corporation is capitalized at 50G.OQp, and is headed by W. B. Dubois of Vancouver, Wash. The new -company has timber enough, in Its holdings to keep the mill In operation about 10 years, it was stated. FIRE DOES J DAMAGE Fire thought to have beea caused by a carelessly dropped match broke out on the third floor of the Lang & Co. plant at First and Ankeny streets this mornirtg, damaging .labels and empty cartons valued at about $50. 3 Bridge Projects Are Presented to CountyCommission Three committees with separate pro posals for bridges across -the Willa mette river appeared before the county commissioners today. H E. Sellwood and Kenneth Brown of the Sellwood board of trade spoke in favor of a $450,000 bond issue for a bridge near Beacon street to replace the Sellwood ferry. . A committee from the St Johns Chamber of Commerce urged the plac ing of a high bridge from Fessenden street on the east side to Germantown Btreet and St Helens road. The bridge would cost $2,000,000. The Burnslde Btreet association pre sented a formal petition asking for a bond issue of $3,000,000 to replace the Burnslde bridge. The Commissioners have expressed themselves as favoring the building of a new Burnslde bridge and the Beacon street bridge. They are now consid ering the necessary steps to have mea sures for a bond issue to cover these two projects placed pn the November ballot CERTIFICATION OF PETITION IN BLANK FOKMITTED CHINESE IS ACCrSED Arrested by federal agents, while smoking opium, Moy Ham, Chinese merchant of Portland, is out on $1000 hond and will "have" his hearing before Commissioner Frazer next Friday. Salem, Sept, 1L That as a notary public he certified to names on inia tlve petitions of which he had no per sonal knowledge and also to names of persons whom he did not even see, was the voluntary testimony here today of Paul Turner of Portland. Turner w-as a witness- in a suit to' enjoin Secretary of State Koser from placing the interest rate amendment on the November ballot. Initiative petitions, he asserted, are r frequently certified to by notaries In ' blank form before signatures of voters are secured. , . "Do you mean to say that you never ' saw the signatures that you put' your: name and - seal on blank pieces of paper?" asked Circuit Judge Kelly. - . .. ,"Yesk.Jrurner admllted. "However. I . had - an understanding with Green that I would be allowed to check over the names. I never got the chance.". Prior to . this revelation Turner had testified as to his acquaintanceship" with the persons he had certified as registered voters. In one group of 38 names, he admitted, there was only one person whom he believed he knew personally. Turner admitted that most of the signatures secured by him had been secured from persons met by -chance on the streets of Portland, al though insisting that he had put the customary questions to them regarding their status as legal voters and had received satisfactory answers thereto before accepting the signatures. W. H. Carter, also a : Portland no-' tary public, testified that his : :ac quaintanceshlp" with most of the sign ers on petitions circulated by him had been .made at the time their signa tures had been solicited on the streets of Portland. Other notaries here to testify are Caroline Hermann, -B. L. Carter, Otto Newman, Charles Loratl and L. Maud Stiles. The complaint attacking the right of the proposed amendment to a place on the ballot alleges that more than 8000 of the signatures on. the initiative petition werer irregular and not prop erly certified, to. ttfiii..ii , r ,,.11 Jni-,liii . in ii i i.'ii'.L.-.L .J No Cost A 1 0-Day Test is Free The coupon -will bring to any home a tea-day test of Pepsodcnt, That test will be a revela tion. It will show yon the way to new beamy, new safety to results that all people desire. If ail the cospoa now. W Daintv People For careful people A new way to brush teeth This is for people who want prettier teeth, cleaner, safer teeth. It has brought those results to millions, the world over. It is fast displacing old and ineffective methods. Dentists everywhere are urg ing its adoption. In some fifty nations careful people use this method now. Find out what it means to yon and yours. There are few things more im portant. The war on film Dental science is conducting a world wide war on film. 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