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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 11, 1922)
Tils OREGON -DAILY; -JOURNAL.. PORTtAND. OREGON. WEDNESDAY. OdOBER i 11, cvjtz. COIME VILL DRAFT BILLS TO CONTROL TRAFFIC After discussing for two- days the - problem aftecttns life and property through the constantly Increasing use 6 automobile highways, the motor ve- " hide administrative and, enforcement officers of the Northwest state before adjournmnt at the Multnomah hotel ' Tuewlay appointed a -committee con- ' aisting- of representatives from each state to draw-up .uniform legislation affecting motor vehicle travel. , i The committee Is made up of L. P. MeArdle, director of the department of efficiency, of Washington; Fred J. Dibble, director of licenses, Washing ton ; Robert O. Jones, secretary of state. Idaho i "H. E. Crockett, secretary ' of state, Utah : Charles J. Chenu. chief of the division of motor chicles. Cali fornia, and 8am Koier. secretary of suite, Oregon. TO OUT LISE PROGRAM The committee held a preliminary meeting Tuesday night and will, dur ing the next few weeks, outline a lesis- . Iative program, based upon the uniform motor vehicle traffic law deeds. The conference brought out every ogle of motor vehicles regulation in the different states. Speakers included ! judges, state and city traffic officers, : secretaries of state, automobile club presidents and others connected with the automobile industry. It was largely an expression of ex periences and. opinions which the inr tention of the conference was to crys tallize into some unified plan for bet ter regulation of traffic and protec tion of highways. The' htavy truck that wears out the highways cam up for considerable dis cussion, but the danger to life through careless driving was given even greater importance in the program. It was the consensus of opinion that the public should be educated to a greater respect of traffic laws and re- ' gard them aa measures fr their own protection. ; Greater appreciation of their responsi bility in averting casualties of the road was urged upon magistrates Tues- . day by (J. K. Unruh of Salem, justice of the peace. . Carelessness of Smoker. Cause of Heavy Fire Loss f Smokers who forget to extinguish the last spark of pipe, cigar or cigarette are responsible for fire loss aggre gating 25,000 a day In the Tjnited States, declared J. A. Shlvely of San Francisco before the Rotary olub at the Benson, hotel Tuesday afternoon. 'I have no 'reform of smoking to propose,' he said, "but I hold that . the man who "is careless wlthv the sparks should be denied the privilege," 'Shively declared. Motion pictures graphically showed the quality of work which won the Ince cup for the Portland fire' bureau. John Todd and other Rotarians from Vancouver invited .the attendance of Portland "at the prune festival. Byard Johnson of the fire bureau sang. Members cf the club were asked by ballot to express attitude toward the proposed - 1921! . exposition. The vote was: Yes, 99 i No, 78. One voted for a fair in 1930. Wild Turkeys Still Wild After Being Raised in Captivity For the first time In the history of Oregon, wild turkeys raised . in cap tivity actually have gone wild upon release, ' reported Gene M. Simpson of the Cor vail is game farm, in a letter received Tuesday by Captain A. K. Burghduff, state game warden. Simpson reported that 12 years ago he received some wild Virginia tur keys and that a pair escaped a few years later. Nothing was heard of the fugitives until recently when rest dents living about three miles from the game farm reported seeing a large band of the wild turkeys. Investiga tion substantiated the reports. All attempts mad by the state in former years to release wild turkeys have failed because the birds continued to be tame. Burghduff announced that the. wild turkeys would be protected at all limes. Joseph: His, 93, of Whitman, Killed by Train Neat Colfax ' i ; is f . Colfax Wash.. Oct. 11. iosepn Ells, 93 one of Whitman county's early pioneers, was killed while Walking on the O-VT. R. tc K.; tracks j about one mile west 'of Colfax yesterday, when he was struck by train No. 7 from Port land. Ells had spent the night' with Mr. and lira. Henry Oberson at Crest, at the top of the hlM, and was walking to town. . He- was deaf and did not hear the warning of the approaching train. He had lived In Whitman county, 4 5 years and still owned the farm on 'which' he settled '.four' miles east of town when he came here. His wife died 10 years ago, tie Is survived by three sons, one daughter. 31 grand children and one great grandchild. His chcildren are Frank E. Ella and Mrs. Ruth Metier of Huxley, Alberta; Ar thur Elis of Spokane and O. K. ills, living near Colfax. 4 iillSist Organize Lumber Mill at Medford Medford. Oct. 11 The Talent l.um- ber company was- organized in Medford Tuesday to operite a sawmill at Tal ent with daily capacity of 30.000 feet t.eorge J. Colli.. a president, with William T. Normile. Porter J. Neff. Ralph U. Bardwell. Edic WOM. Ir, J. J. Kmmens and K. I. Brown are the direct oral , The Dalles, -Oct. .11. Officials here Tuesday made j public an- affidavit which was submitted to the- Wasco county grand Jury last week, and which places an entirely new angle on the Columbia river highway accident in which Edwin M. Hill of pufur was killed. Hill ' was fatally Injured and four other members of his family were seriously injured when their automo bile, which Hill was driving on the morning of August 27, was shoved over the edge of an embankment by a pass ing car. Frank A Gilchrest and A. Stanley Pullin of Pasadena, Cal., were arrested, but subsequently proved an alibi and were released. Mrs. Clifford O. Holland of Portland was the author Of the affidavit. The O-W. R. & N. itracks approaching The Dalles from the; west closely parallel the highway and Mrs. Holland claimed that she saw from her seat in the day coach of train No. 18, the Oregon Washington Limited, a large dust- c ope red touring car, top up. In pass ing another smaller cur on the high way, brush it from the road. The larger car sped on after the ac cident, she attested. "I saw the smaller car at an angle toppling off the grade to the right as soon as the larger oar moved on. so I could again see 6Kiall, one," the af fidavit stated. "I called out at the time of seeing the accident, told others of what I saw nd reported the accfT dent to Thomas Boyd, the train con ductor, after we left The Dalles." Train No. 18 arrived in The Dalles that day at 11 :2.. Records are said to show, and other withnesses placed the time of the Hill accident at ap proximately 11:35 to 11:40. The time data corroborates iweil, but there is nothing else to substantiate Mrs. Holland's- report. It is said slender clues thus presented are being worked upon by local county officials in the hope of tracing the owner of the larger car WATKIHS TALKS TO CARRIERS LETTER "Elton Watklns opened his speaking campaign for congress Monday night before the National Letter Carriers as sociation In Pythian halL Watklns will speak every night and every noon from now until election. He speaks tonight at St. Johns,' In his speech last evening he advocated that the pension law pertaining to the X. IX C. A. members be changed from the age basis as it now is to .pae of service ; should "investigate : the Immigrants at the source instead of waiting until they landed here; that the immigrants further, that no reduction in the wages of ; the employes f the government should be, permitted that they were not betnsald enoughs at lb present time. He argued fur strict tmmigTm- prerent the riff oountry. He ad- tion laws so as to raff coming to this vbtated that the percentage of lroirl grants coming to this country be based upon thOM . of like have become naturalised Instead of the total number in this country : that we should be apportioned to the "various seaports instead of letting aB of them come through New York city. He ad vocated a national bonus for ex-service men, first, teeause it Is right, and second, because- it would be a good policy. - , J 1 He pointed out that the railroads had received over $600,003,000 and the "war contractors over $300,000,000. He! also pointed out that congress bad seen fit to take care of the-profiteers that had been convicted and fined for profiteer ing'. He read a aw passed by con gress directing the secretary of the treasury to refund any such person and corporation that - had bee re quired to pay a fine for profiteering such sums so paid. " f ryism. Oriental ' land! Li&Q JjfV-TV Wv rB"Bssssai mm opposed Newber ownership.l child labor and the penditOT ship aabeidy bill. He pointed out aow the government proposed to turn (over 13,008.000,000 worth of ships, to private owners for I200.000.e00. and in? addition, to loan tH niin-hiun f 1SSOO0.O00 to recondi tion the shins and also to give a sub sidy approximately, of $750,000,000 in 10 years. He also condemned the act iu mb i iln nrlt nravtss ' an v ae coanting to congress or to the presi-f dent of the profits (made by said ship ping trust. 4 Patrolmen Named To Fill Vacancies . i 1 . . Baker. Oct. ll-ato Gale. George Thomas. R. p. H so hurst and Arthur Thrasher nave beenl appointed by chief Walter Palmer to fill the vacancies on the police fores cajised oy. the abrupt resignation of five emcers eaturaay night following chaff ges against Frank littlefleld. another 1 officer. BORAH DEMANDS POLITICAL REVOLT THROUGH BALLOT Boise. ' Idaho; Oct. , 1L In' a keynote speech at the Idaho campaign delivered at Meridian, near Boise. Monday night. Senator Borah demanded . "a political revolution conducted at the -ballot boxes."' and declared that the "fight for fiscal- relief is a fight for- the American home.' He, laid down the following relief program : - "Add noth Ing to our present burden, cut- all government to . absolute, essentials, bring home every American, soldier in Europe, reduce the; army . to 100,000, There are a do sen Good Reasons for SAVING 1 1T X ;'. ' t. r if bull never make any headway until you save and save regularly. Even as the most! successful busi ness enterprises ate the best organ ized and managed, jso the individual who uses forethought and system in the handling of his financial, affairs is tlie one most likely to make satis factory progress. The Uulfty man will surely get ahead. Try the Savings Account Method. See what it will do lor you or more opens a, savings account in this bank differ. Steps From Truck, Struck by Auto; Hurts Prove Fatal Forest Grove, Oct. 11. Emmett Hoover, age iS, died at the local, hos pital late Monday night from Injuries sustained earlier in the evening when he was run - into by an automobile driven by a man from McMinnvUIe. The accident occured just out of Dilley. Hoover had caught a ride on a truck to his home on the outskirts, where he lived with his widowed mother, Mrs. Sarah Hoover. He got off the truck from behind and when he stepped out to cross the road the automobile caught him. His leg and. his hip were broken and it is thought that death resulted from shocU. Besides his mother he is survived by a sister, Mrs. Al Leach and brother Guy Hoover. His brother Newion was killed two years ago in the train wreck near Dosch. Funeral services were held here this afternoon. Missing Garage Owner Is Located Walla Walla. : Wash., Oct. 11. M. !d Harrah, garage owner of Ingleside. Or., near the state line six miles south of here, who disappeared' from his home on September 15, has been lo cated in San Francisco, according to a telegram received at the sheriffs office here. Harrah left home in his automobile truck, ostensibly for the fair at Walla Walla. When "he did not return that night his family became alarnied. The information received at the sheriffs office gave no reason for his disappearance. As a special eeav.nlence the avlags Department Is eses Saturday evenings S to S e'efcse Oldest in the Northwest Washlngio at Third collect interest on the national debt, restore the excess - profits tax! law, give complete publicity to Income tag payments, establish a rural credit sys tem based on agricultural not com mercial interests. , ; --H Speaking of the primary system which is the big political issue in the J toano campaign, he saw: runder the convention system two per cent of the people control as a 100 per cent politi cal power." the convention system Is Just as autocratic as the Russian government." Senator ' Borah praised the primary system and the .women voters of Pennsylvania for "overturn ing the corrupt Penrose- machine and sending; -to-the.-senate, such men Pepper and Reed and to the governor-: ship such; a man as Plnchot." -5 - ; : Of the Idaho Republican platform h j said ;i"Ihave read and reread it If j you can find a single constructive" note j In that platform. I would like to see Itj j If th convention is worth its salt let f It put something in the platform' that ! will offer some hope tot the people of Idaho." - s Asked which ; of the., three parties could right present. wrongs. Borah an swered: I hope the Republican party. MID ,WATCH WJEUGHTS WINDOWSc WE iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiu I mm gj i PIM GREEN STAMPS THURSDAY! 1 DOUBLE GREEN STAMPS FRIDAY SATURDAY I' B TV. Everybody likes good candy RjSSiai Princess Prisctlla Autocrat Frtrits and Nuts ' Rasarian Chocolates Axe GOOD Candies 'OSAJUAM State Takes Over .Bank at Ephrata Wenatchee. Wash.. Oct. 11. The state banking department Monday took over" the Grant' County bank at Eph rata and it will be closed until ar rangements can ijje made for either re opening it- or liquidating its business A run was started on the bank Satur day which resulted in the action jof the state banking department. The Grant County bank is reported by the Banker directory blue book as having a paid up capital of $15,000, surplus of $3500, and deposits of $200,000 on July 1. 1922. candies are made only by ZusscU & gilbert Ca PORTLAND. OREGON 3 Negligence Causes Death of Driver The Dalles. Oct. 11. The coroner's Jury here Tuesday returned a, verdict holding that Claude Deroche, who was "killed, when , an automobile he was driving ran eiff Uie TDufur road Sunday night, met his death through his own carelessness. ; tteroche Is said to have been driving without lights over' the road, which is steep and crooked. The body is being held here pending the receipt of word from relatives. I UMBRELLAS Ladies' New Silk Umbrellas AH the latest styles of handles clubs, crooks, etc. also a full range of colors, i PRICED SPECIAL LADIES SILK UMBRELLAS One lot In assorted colors and ban- PRICE dies, they EiPLOSIOX INJURIES MIMSTER Walla Walla. Wash.. Oct. lLThe second accident of he huntinr season occured near Waltsbnrg Monday when a. shot exploded In the; hands of Rev, R. Lee Bussabarger. pastor of the Walts burg Central Christian church. Bessa barger's left hand was partially blown off by tbe exploeion. Physicians did not find, if necessary to amputate the all values, while aat, at. 1 2 ' 1. DRUGGISTS Alder Street at West Parkl Holiday greeting Cards Our superb line of samples of Engraved Holiday Greetings is now being shown. Place your order early and secure J choice of selection. , Likly Traveling Bags Made of genuine cowhide; 18-inch size in bUck only; regutarl8. .$15.00 912. So Traveling; Bags ..... .$10.00 Ladies' Handbags j One lot of Ladlesf Hand Bags, regular price 22; n6w, special. ... $14.50 See Our New Assortment of Ladies' French Beaded Hand Bags Leather Collar Boxes Men's Leather Collar Boxes, values to S4.50; now, special $2.00 FREE ? M. ie case 01 iraimonvf Soap, with each pur chase of Palmolive Soan of 6 cakes for 49c CANDY DAY Mazda Lamps Prepare , row for the many long winter evenings, - Plenty .of I right lights make home more cheerful 10, tS, 25 40 and So-watt, ea. 35c Box of 5 for . , ...... - .$1.75 White Mazdas,: $0 watts. . ... .55c Daylight blues 73 watts. ... ; .75c Daylight blue, too watts. .Vi .95c i Downstairs. SPECIALS Vogan's Chocolate - covered l ip. rox Cherries, Lang's Chocolates, special Jordan's Almonds, srecial . Imported Riley's lb. only 50c l-Ib. box; e e UsS0C 1-lb. box; .....50c Toffey, per ...... 39c Wizard Polish For cleaning, polishing and renewing furniture, pianos, floors an.dj woodwork. 25 c Wizard Polish . . .'. . . 19c 50c Wizard Polish.. 43c t.OO Witard Polish . 89c 1.75 Wird Polish.'.. $1.45 Wizard Paste A thoroughly scientific wax for floors! autos, linoleum and leather, j 85c Wizard Paste. ... . . -75c 4 5 if Wizard Paste . . 'A ... 37c Milks land Foods Dextri Maltdse, t lb...i.-72c S lbs .-,.$2.98 Mellin's Foqd ........ -65c. Eagle Brand . . . . .tT.25c Dennos Food 45c 85c $3 Horlick's Malted Milk Triced at...... 45c 85c $3.00 Eskay's Pood. . -80c $2J5 Borden's Malted Milk priced t... -. .45c. 85c $3.00 IFjIRE PREVENTION Place a Pjiene Fire Extinguisher in your b4me, office, garage, fac tory aiidrj guto. Priced 1 quart Will. . . . . ... . .$1.75 SOAP SALE I Cucumber - Almond Crtiia 5 Beauty Soap 10c 3 for 25c Lemon -Cocoa Hard Water 5 Soap 10c 3 for. 25c 5 Orange Juice Complexion Soap 10c 3 for; 25 Lemon Juice Soap- lOc '' for . - .25c E We take Canadian money at f all face value in mak ing change. ; RUBBER; GOODS Hot Wter Bottles.' . . 89c Fountain Syringes.-. $1.19 Metal Water Bottles.. 98c Rubber Gloves. ... ...29c Bathing Caps. . . . i. . .10c Robber Baby Pants. . 19c FOR WET WEATHER- Entire Stock on Sale at 1-3 'to 1-2 Off Thoutand of Pairs on Tables PEOAIL f RUBBERS FOR LESS! 59c 59c Chlldren'a Rmbbera, ylQ sizes 4 to 10K. pair, v WC Misses' Rubbers, in sizes 11 to 2, pair. . . Ladies Rubbers, low or high nee la, la all sizes, tzO the pair .... PeC LadJea'Toe Rubbers Youths' heavy sole Rubbers, sixes 11 to 2, 7Q the pair I e70 Men's Rubbers, sixes Xo lYi, the pair 79c 111 al ' I f i O M te Girls' School SHOES Karrow, aieej. , sat or wl4e toes la B 1 a e k er Brown Calfikia Sheee CH to 8.....S2.9S J1H to .9 t ..S2.98 Boys' Army SHOES Stroae brown ramkia, heavy eole sole. Mea's sizes, te It. -3.75 Slaes I in I at S2.79 Rises 2V to Sises 11 to 13i at .182.48 ATTENTION ! Ladies ' with small feet. ! Ad vance sbowing; of 200 pairs of Boyd-Weih samples in all the newest 1 col ors, patterns and combina tions. Satins suedes, kids and calfskins. Values from $7 to $12 to bo sold at Vi , Sises up to 42. price and less. go quick. win '-5.1 Como early as these Parent Flapper Pumps, $2.98 With Wide Mrap ana - Low Heels $2.98 Black aa Browa kid calf oxfords sad t names wlta . Cabaa. Frcaek or . low keels. Net all slset la eaek style, bat all sises - la the let. Extra seelaL ! Ladies' Felt ; Slippers, all colors,' all sizes. K Boys' All-Leather Shoes C.ooS, stroae- leather sole aad appers. ; Black calfkla Brass Hhoes aad brown or black solid Scout Shoes foe it try day wear. Mea's aad- jour seri sises to is, - " . 82.48 2V4 to 8. 81.981 Little boys sises sp to iy a otuj Young Men's Shoes Oxfords -" VALTJES TO VIM Black, brown, taa an nsbofrssy is any last, tae aew oses as wen as the mere eoaerra- tlre lasts. - Worn shoes la : veals aad ehreate, sIbsU ..er doable sole. j EXTRA SPECIAL v. It Aw Vi. . -X! $3.75 Hla-k Cats come with baekles or plain. Lit tle bey ' sises; a te ISVfc at - $2.98 1 to 1. SS.48 Bis; I . Beys'. tVk to Msa's LW Teaals Oxford, for g-ynt wear, all sizes.. -.1, .... Rb UKMUfcU SKI WEKA VV.lhH ' JHGTOH AKO AlBEit OS 4TM ' OPPOSITE CIBCLE THEATKE a ....... s See Our Advertisement, Page 3 ; .iiiiiuiiiiiiiinnimiiiiiiiTiiiniiiiinnniiniiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiikiiiiiiim nana.