Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, January 10, 1922, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    OREGON STATE LIBRARY
i o mi
ClROUfcATION
THK WEATHER
OREGON: Tonight and Wed
nesday fair; gentle variable winds.
'er,on of S)em, 100. 4261;
'"'''unty. 4T'1"' polk
Hr,"n,f 1920, H.181-
c"u" "if Audit Bureau of Clrou
"tirA&ed Press Fnll
L222U
LOCAL: Trace rainfall; norther,
ly winds; part cloudy; max. 62,
min 36; river 4.3 feet and falling.
OTjgTII YEAR-NO. 8
SALEM, OREGON, TUESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1922
TyoTmr mwA rnrxmna on trains and news
STANDS FIVE CENTS
mm-, jmm
i
(L aBi taiM(Diuirael .
PAT
r
n
4 .
MM
yy in lp too
! i
...
I U--r.""tfrMWW .i
frill ii
(ELECTED
s, tfalera and Fol-
' lowers Leave Cham-
iw As Vote Is Being
Taken On i.eaaer ; ;
Mlln, Jan. 10. (By Associ
j Press.) After electing Ar-
'ur GriffltU president and nam
S i cabinet to assist him, the
?M1 Eire"111 adjourned late to
il, until February 14 to permit
ki new government to proceed
Lith carrying out the provisions
L ,h. Anrio-Irish treaty.
inw boltins the session" this
Lrning with his followers in pro-
!ist against the nomination or.
I, r.ffith for the president, Eamon
kr.ipm returned to the after-
lioon session with a promise of
Itflp lor Griffith as president of
I lie Dai!, but not as head of an
other government.
The speedy formation or. a pro
tkimal eovernment for Ireland
s urged upon me uuu ourauu
Ij Michael Collins shortly after
the opening of today's session.
The Dail resumed its sittings at
11 JO o'clock with the reading by
Stoker John MacNeill of a cable
mmue from Cardinal Gasparrl
on behalf of Pope Benedict, saying
his holiness rejoiced . with, the
Irish people at the agreement that
had been reached and sent his
is to them after they had
passed through their long period
of sorrows faithful to the Catho
lic church.
Collins Nominates.
Another message read was from
the Irish labor party asking the
Dail lo receive a deputation for
conference regarding the economic
and Industrial situation.
Michael Collins then rose and
raid the Dail must organize imme
diately in some form today to nre
vent a state of anarchy. The Dail
must make the treaty a success
he declared. He referred to the
difficulties thfl tipw pnvArumftiit
would meet and ureed harmoniouB
cooperation to surmount.
"Unless Wft nhnv wa arc Iina
tile," he said, "England will have
ra excuse tor continuing in Ire
land," i':..:
Oreanization Vital.
Collins moved thnt Arthur fii-If.
flU be appointed president of the
win, , , 1
The Irish nation had no cap
"In, continued r?ninn nm.
eeeded to tell thp nn (Li i, k.j
Reived a letter from the proprie-
i me uoric Examiner, saying
""Management of that newspa
Wr had been h,u tut. i .
, - - u, ting iuuiuiui
w 2o clock and compelled to pub
yiociamation. '.
Wilms- fluid 1 L
'u "black and tan methods,'
ever employed them.
DeValera Walks Out.
Eamon DeVaio.o ,
wa Ik out while the vote was
"'ng taken i .. ... .
mmt. i".ei against ine
I r'Grlt. Speaker
fith". vm tbe motion for Grif
My chosen.
fl","!1, tt0ved the appointment
9-Year-Old Boy
Attempts Suicide
When Pet Dog Dies
Chicago, Jan. 10. Nine-year-old
Russell Mueller is in a
hospital with a self-inflicted
bullet wound in his right thigh.
He shot himself after his pet
Boston terrier "Peggy" died
yesterday. "I want to die too,"
Russell sobbed to his mother,
Mrs. Marie Grover. Doctors say
Russell will be crippled for life.
n
iffe tase .
Opens; Ramp
Takes Stand
Jf"nued on Page Seven.)
Examination of witnesses in the
$9900 damage suit of M. S. Ramp,
his wife and son, Robert Malcolm
Ramp, fcgainst B. G, Osborne, the
Oregon Rubber company and Ken
neth Ross, all involved in the au
tomobile accident which occurred
on the Pacific highway near
Brooks and from which Mrs. Beu
lah Westley, a passenger in the
Ramp car, and George Samuelson,
employee of the state hospital and
riding in the Osborne car, died
from injuries received, began this
morning In the circuit court be
fore Jurge Percy Kelly, with Roy
Shields and Walter Winslow rep
resenting the plaintiffs and Walt
er Keyes the defendants.
Did Not See Car.
Ramp, himself was on the stand
this morning testifying that he
did not see the Osborne .car ap
proach or strike him, and that his
machine by the force of the impact
was thrown 49 feet from the spot
where the two cars came together
at the intersection of the Brooks-
Mt. Angel road and Pacific high
way; The Osborne car, the wit
ness said, was 114 feet from the
same point in an easterly direc
tion. '
v The witness was asked to ex
hibit his injuries to the jury after
testifying that he had received a
cut lip, a fractured jaw bone and
injuries about the stomach.
Contributory negligence on the,
part of Ramp is the defense of the
attorney for Osborne and the other
defendants, who cross-examined
Ramp this morning in an endeavor
to establish the fact that there
wag nothing to prevent him see
ing the approach of Osborne. Ramp
however, stated that he was
watching a car coming from an
opposite direction, north from
Portland, and that he had no
warning of the approach of the de
fendant.
The plaintiffs allege that Os
borne was in the employ of the
Oregon Rubber company selling
tires at the time the accident hap
pened and the, therefore, holding
the concern liable in the suit. The
Oregon Rubber company, however,
alleges that Osborne wag dis
charged just previous to July 2
Kenneth Ross, the third defend
ant In the suit, is charged with
being the owner of the car driven
by Osborne, but denies the allega
tion, affirming that he had sold
the car to Osborne. "
The jury selected yesterday to
hear the case Is composed of Ole
Humphrey, G. W. Hirons, J. N.
Gooding, R. S. Budlong, Albert
Seitzinger, John Smith, David
Jaeobson, Oscar Hoven, Henry
jTade, C. T. Hoover, Irvln E. Put
nam, A. H. Fearsey.
Prominent Men Will
Serve As Jurors In
Justice Court Here
fcll naaie! 01 several Prominent
hr f6" appear on 'he 1922
wSh the Salem iU8tlce court
Umon.l" drawa yesterday af
o by Judge G. E. Cnruh as-
2r YP-ElPunertn Karl
, .two freeholders.
wearily the list would have
h ja"Wn 00 tDe rst Monday
ttt m 7 but' thlB year, the
Mnday was a holiday, and,
Pmeil until yesterday,
tic lonVh,0'kn erveonjus
te 3nrles durlnS the com
ife as follows: .
w AUwi8' Wm- Hamilton,
A1ert Tn' Wm- Everett
Bernard!, R. p. Boise,
F. G. Bowersox, H. W. Bross, F,
M. Brown, Clifford Brown, Lee
Canfield, Russell Catlin, R. M.
Hofer, J. Frank Hughes, Carle
Abrams. G. G. Brown. Geo. R.
Cernik, Frank Meyers, W. W,
Moore, Tom Cronise, Fred Lam
port, William Fleming, Claude
Belle, John Kirk, F. P. Smith, L.
H. Suter, H. P. Chase, A. M
Clough, Walter A. Denton, W. C
Dyer, Dan J. Fry, Jr., L. S. Geer,
P. W. Gelser, W. P. George, L.
W. Gleason, P. M. Gregory, A. A
Gueffroy, A. M. Hansen, Paul
Hansen, 6. J. Hofma, John Broad
well, Cass Gibson, W. F. Prime,
L. C. Gosser, F. E. Shafer, Chaa.
S. Weller, Wiley Zinn, Paul Haus
er, Chaa. J. Koon.
DRUGEV1L
DECLARED
REALKNOT
Problem One .Demand
ing Immediate Action
State Officers Agree
In Session Here
Oregon's narcotic problem Is a
most serious one and demands im
mediate attention.
Thus far members of the state
board of health and state board
of pharmacy asembled here today
on invitation of Governor Olcott
to consider ways and means lor
meeting the drug problem are
agreed. As to the proper solu
tion of the problem, however,
members of the two boards are
divided into almost v as many
channels as there are members on
the two boards.
Report Is Dead
A report on the narcotic evil
in Oregon prepared by Dr. Fred
erick A. Strieker, secretary of the
state board of health, and Frank
Ward, secretary of the, state
board of pharmacy, at the re
quest of Governor Olcott and sub
mitted at today's meeting divides
the state's narcotic problem into
three classes: Peddlers, curable
addicts and incurable addicts.
As a solution of the "peddler
problem the report suggests more
active police service, long prison
sentences and large fines.
Curable addicts, the report
recommends, should be committed
for a period of at least 18 months
to an institution for treatment.
Such an Institution, the report
points out, is absolutely essential
to successful solution of the drug
evil, but it should hot be a costly
undertaking because If properly
handled it should be made self
supporting.
1.500 Addicts, Estimate
For the incurable drug addict,
the report recommends a source
of supply of drugs under strict
supervision where the addict can
receive his necessary supply at
cost. .
A survey of the situation in
this state, the report points out,
shows that there are approxl
mately 1350 drug addicts in Port
land with probably an additional
150 addicts outside of Portland.
Drug addicts, it is pointed out,
favor the slum districts of large
cities and railroad centers. While
complete cures are held to be en
tirely possible, relapses ' are fre
quent because of an Inherent de
fect of character in the average
drug addict.
While it is agreed that the
state must move in solving the
problem, the report points out that
the problem is an national one
and an international one. The
English government must be per
suaded to suppress the wholesale
production of opium in the Brit
ish possessions , and in inter
national agreement must be
reached to prohibit the importa
tion of the drug except for med
icinal purposes.
Eouck Starts Debate
Dr. George Houck of Roseburg,
a memberof the state hoard of
health, found himself in a hope
less minority when he started the
day's discussion with the state
ment that all drug addicts are"
mentally deficient. Any treat
ment which failed to take into
consideration this phase of the
problem is doomed to failure, he
declared. While a large percent
age of addicts are curable many
are doomed to become permament
state charges he declared.
Both Dr. F. M. Brooks and Dr.
C. J. Smith of Portland, mem
bers of the board of health, took
issue with Dr. Houck's statement
relative to the mental deficiency
of drug addicts. Many of the na
tion's most brilliant men and wo
men have been drug users, accord
ing to Dr. Brooks while Dr.
Smith' insisted that the use of
narcotics did not necessarily
stamp a person as insane or even
feeble minded.
Drug addicts are not Institu
tional cases, ' according to Dr.
Smith, who opposed any move for
a state appropriation for an In
stitution for the care of drug cas
es. In the opinion of Dr. Smith
drug addicts should be registered
and their names supplied to every
legitimate source of supply as
well as to every peace oincer in
the state for their guidance In
handling each Individual case as
Newberry
Assailed
By Borah
Washington, Jan. 10. The sen
ate seat held by' Truman H. New
berry should be declared vacant,
Senator Borah, republican, Idaho,
declared today In the senate, on
the ground that the Michigan
election in 1918 "being tainted
with corruption and controlled
through the use of money, is
void."
A movement to recommit the
Newberry election case to the sen
ate privileges and elections com
mittee developed late today while
debate was under way. Those be
hind the, movement, it was said,
desired to have Senator Newberry
examined by the elections commit
tee. , -
Work of State
Among Injured
Men Discussed
Reconstruction work among
men who have sacrmcea mem-
selves on the altar of labor and
are entitled to state compensa
tion from the industrial accident
commission, was reviewed by Dr.
Fred Thompson, member of the
commission before the Kiwanis
club this noon in the Commercial
club auditorium.
According to Di. Thompson a
certain award is made to men
who have been injured, payable
$25 a month with the additional
feature of being aMe to take up
vocational training if the injury
prevents - them from following
their previous occupation. Forty
six men are now learning new
trades while 49 have already com
pleted their course and are Inde
pendent in their new line of
work. -
Dr. Thompson stated that about
90 patients are treated daily by
the departments ': of electric
therapeutics of the commission
the advantages of this treatment
being that it lessons the time of
convalencence, ana also cuts down
the number of permanent disabil
ity cases.
In regard to the law the doctor
stated that Oregon was the first
state to put into practice the
problem of reconstruction and
rehabilitation of men who were
injured in working and believed
that it was the best law of any In
the country due to the fact that
under it the commission has not
performed Its duty until every
man who has been prevented
from performing his previous
work is provided with some other
useful occupation.
(Gontinued on Page Five.)
Farm Bureaus to
Be Advocated By
.Visiting Speaker
With a view to organizing a
number of county farm bureaus,
Colonel Aird of Washington coun
ty will speak in Silverton Friday
night, It was announced today by
T. E. McCroskey, manager of the
Salem Commercial clutt. Colonel
Aird will make several talks in
various parts of Marion county
and may later appear in Salem.
He hopes eventually to line up
the bureaus with the county com
munity federation, Mr. McCroBkey
said.
That the move may lead event
ually to the procuring of a coun
ty agricultural agent, was the be
lief expressed here today. The
funds for the support of an agri
cultural agent's office come from
the county, the state and the fed
eral government.
DOCTAX
STATUTE
? UPHELD
Supreme Court Sus
.tains Judge Bingham
In Case , Instituted
by Hofer
" The constitutionality of the dog
tax law enacted by the state legis
lature of 1919 is upheld in an
opinion written by Justice Rand
and, handed down by the supreme
court this morning affirming the
decree of Judge Bingham of the
Marion county circuit coutr In the
case M E. Hofer vs. John Carson,
district attorney, and other offi
cials of Marion county,
i Hofer, as the owner of a dog,
sought to enjoin officials of Mar
ion county from collecting the li
cense fee fixed by the state law
at $1 annually for male dogs or
spayed bitches, and $2 annually
for female dogs. Hofer in his
complaint asserted that his dog
was already regularly assessed
and taxed as personal property
and that he had paid this tax and
that under the act of 1919, under
attack, he would be compelled to
pay an additional sum as license
fee which in reality is not a li
cense fee but a tax levied Wholly
for the purpose of raising a reve
nue to create and maintain a "dog
fund."
State Powers Sunreme.
In upholding the validity of the
act Justice Rand points out that
"the keeping of dogs is under the
absolute control of the legislature
and that right may be conditioned
upon the payment of a license,
that the license imposed by the
state law was created "as an ex
ercise of the police power" of the
legislature "as distinguished from
the taxing power."
i Colonel Hofer, Salem business
man, who has '. been conducting
the fight against the dog tax law.
declared this morning that he was
not yet through with hia fight, in
timating that he would carry his
case to the next legislature for a
repeal of the act of 1919.
Other opinions handed down by
the court this morning were:
Myrtle Point Mill & Lumber
company vs. O. H. Clarke, appel
lant; appeal from Coos county;
controversy over sale of stock
Opinion by Chief Justice Burnett;
Judge John S. Coke affirmed.
Arthur N. Smith vs. Germanla
Fire Insurance company of New
York; appeal from Yamhill coun
ty; suit to recover fire insurance.
Opinion by Justice Brown; Judge
H. H. Belt reversed.
City of Portland vs. Paul C.
Yates, appellant; petition for re
hearing denied, objections to costs
sustained in opinion by Justice
Bean.
State of Oregon vs. C. E. Doo-
ley, appellant; appeal from Union
county; appeal from conviction
for larceny of automobile. Opin
ion; by Justice Rand; Judge J. W.
Knowles affirmed.
State of Oregon vs. T. J. Keelan,
jointly indicted with C. E. Doo-
ley appellant; apepal from con
viction for larceny of automobile.
Opinion by Justice McCourt;
Judge J. W. Knowles reversed and
case remanded.
In the matter of Failing will
contest motion for intervention on
behalf of the home denied.
George A. Gilmore of Eugene
admitted to the bar on probation
on certificate from North Dakota.
Harry O. Strom of Portland and
Edward R. Harvey of JEortland
permanently admitted to Oregon
ba?.
Train and School
Bus Collide; Four
Children Killed
Vanwert, Ohio, Jan. 10.
Four children were killed and
17 others were injured shortly
before 9 o'clock this morning
when a school bus was hit by
Pennsylvania fast freight 3
miles east of here.
There were 33 children In
the bus which was en route to
the township school. :
The driver of the motor bus
did not see the approaching
train on aoount of the heavy
fog, it was said.
C. I. Lewis Is
To Represent
State At Meet
Washington, Jan. 10. Names
of 43 additional delegates to the
National Agricultural confer
ences were announced today by
Secretary Wallace, bringing the
total number of acceptances to
date to ninety.
Tbe list of delegates issued to?
day Included the names of Gov
ernor Carey of Wyoming; Gover
nor Parker of Louisiana; Eugene
Meyer Jr., director of the war
finance corporation; A. C. Miller,
member of the federal reserve
board and Judge Robert W. Bing
ham of Lexington, Ky., repre
senting the Burley Tobacco Grow
ers association.
Others given In today's list in
clude Dwight Heard, Phoenix,
Aria., stdekman, and president
Pima Cottongrowera associatfon
Thomas F. Hunt, Berkeley, Cal.,
dean California College of Agri
culture; B. H. Rawl, San Fran
cisco, central creameries; W. J.
Jamieson, Laveta, Colo., general
farmers;, C. J. Osborn, Omaha,
president Farmers Union of Ne
braska; Praeger Miller, Roswell,
N. M., cattleman; C. I. Lewis,
Salem, Oregon, assistant general
manager Oregon Cooperative
Fruit Growers association; L, J.
Wortham, Fort Worth, Texas,
agricultural leader.
HENRY YEARY DIE
FROM UNPROVOKED
BLOWS UPON HEAD
F. F. Gerber, Trusty, Suddenly Grows Violent
and Beats Attendant With Shovel; Had
t Been Considered Harmless Since Commit
ment Twelve Years Ago
Henry Yeary, 55, of Canby, an attendant at the state
hospital for the insane, was almost Instantly killed by F. F.
Gerber, a patient at the hospital, in an unprovoked attack at
nine o'clock this morning. :
Yeary, who has been an attendant at the hospital since
October 1, was directing the work of a crew of patients on the
hospital laWn near the main building when he was suddenly
attacked by Gerber who struck him on the top of the head
and the base of the skull with a shovel, fracturing his head
and killing him almost instantly.
Yeary was attacked from behind and had no chance to
defend himself from the assault of the. patient.
Gerber was committed to the state hospital from Mult
nomah county on April 5, 1910, and has been a trusty at the
institution for several years. He was always regarded as
harmless and hospital authorities are unable to account for
his attack upon Yeary. He has neither relatives nor friends
so far as the records at the hospital show.
Yeary is survived by a daughter, Miss Edna, who is also
an attendant at the hospftal.
Unfilled Orders
of Steel Increase
New York, Jan'. 10. The
monthly tonnage report of the
United States Steel Corporation
made public today showed 4,268
414 tons of unfilled orders on band
December 81." This'is an Increase
from November's unfilled orders
which totalled 4,250,542 tons.
Suit to Dissolve
Tile Trust Filed
Columbus, Ohio, Jan. 10. An
action seeking to dissolve the so-
called "tile trust" otherwise
known as "the tile manufactur
ers' credit association" was filed
in the district court here today
by District Attorney J. R. Clark
of direction of Attorney General
Daugherty.
Pioneer Woman
of Polk County
Called By Death
Monmouth, Or., Jan. 10. Mrs.
Sarah Mulkey, a resident of this
city since 1873, died at her home
here Sunday evening. Mrs. Mul
key had been in feeble health for
many years and death came as a
result of the Infirmities of old age.
Sarah Malone was born in Jan
uary 5, 1838, in Belmont county,
Ohio. She was married in 1855 to
David Martin and crossed the
plains to Oregon In 1871. They
.nbved to Monmouth soon after,
where Mr. Martin died.
She was married to Monroe
Mulkey in 1897 and survived him
by ten years. Mrs. Mulkey had no
near relet'tiVes. I (X half-nepheiw
lives in (jaiuornia auu a niece in
Iowa. There are four step-children
L. D. Mulkey of MoMinnville, Dr.
S. A. Mulkey of Portland, Melvln
Mulkey of California and Mrs.
Nora Sickafoose of Newberg.
Mrs. Mulkey joined the Chris
tian church at early age and lived
a faithful member to the end.
The funeral will be held at tbe
Christian church at 2 p. m. today.
Man Charged With
, Speeding Pays $10
1 , V
Russell B. Eyerley, 2820 Reser
voir street, pleaded guilty to a
charge of speeding when he was
arraigned before Police Judge
Earl Race this morning and paid
a f ine of T1Q.
Eyerley was arrested yesterday
afternoon on South Commercial
street by Miller Hayden, traffic officer.
Three Killed In
Tunnel Explosion
Grdveland, Cal., Jan. 10. Three
men were killed by the explosion
of a blast in a tunnel of the
Hetch Hetchy project in the Sier
ra mountains near here, where
reservoirs for a Ban Francisco
municipal water supply are under
J construetk.
Salem Pedants Brave;
Mouse Can 't Scare 'Em;
Only 1 Mounts Table
' : 1
Governor Asks
New Jersey Dry
Law Be Killed
Mace Re-arrested
for Passing Bad
Check; Now Jailed
Andrew Mace undoubtedly has
his troubles. It was only a short
while after Andrew had been fined
(10 and sentenced to serve five
dayg in- the city Jail for assault
and battery yesterday afternoon,
that be was again arrested by the
police on a bad check charge.
Andrew, who had been In trou
ble with the police on previous
occasions, was still In Jail today,
asserting whenever the opportun
ity offered, his innocence.
Andrew was arrested Sunday
night after a fight which took
place between him and W. S. Pat
terson. The "short story writing"
charge, on which h was Jailed
yesterday afternoon, grew out of a
complaint from the Ladd ft Bush
bank on which be was said to have
passed a worthless check.
It the law of averages might re
ceive as fair a test among public
school teachers as in other lines
of endeavor, then American wqn
en are not mi frightened by mice
as our cartoonists would insist. It
follows that" only one woman out
of nine, it the law of averages
holds, will attempt to apply her
Mazama training to a nearby table
upon the appearance of a mouse.
Yesterday noon nine Instructors
of tbe Grant school were eating
lunch in one Of the school rooms.
The pedagogues were conversing
on subjects intellectual endeav
oring, as teachers are wont to do,
to gather a little brain food along
with the rest.
And then a little mouse, attract
ed by tbe aroma of palatable food,
made the mistake of entering the
room unannounced. Apparently
he understood it was his error be
fore the first petticoat but that
is another story.
Of course there were shrieks.
No body of school teachers would
deliberately disillusion a public
which fondly believes that all
women are thrown in a paroxysm
of fear upon the advent of a
mouse. And so, when the small
ball of gray made his quiet en
trance and subsequently endeav
ored frantically to escape, there
was a nlsturDance oi a miiui ;
taclysmic nature. The teachers
did all that might be expected of
them.
There were nine of the teachers,
quiet and sedate. Entered, just a
single mouse, then there were
eight.
For one of the instructors Just
one climbed upon a table and
gave the mouse the right-of-way.
The other eight essayed to make
life miserable, and of short dura
tion, for the mouse.
Enterfng whole-heartedly Into
the spirit of the chase, the teach
ers made "short work of it. In a
comparatively few seconds the
mouse was Imprisoned in a shoe
box which later was turned over
to the school's Janitor. An eight-to-one
vote had told the world
that women are an intrepid lot.
And the little mouse? He sac
rificed his life on the altar of
pedantic prowess, but not before
he had helped to make the unbe
lievers understand that Kipling
was right when he made a pass to
the effect that the female is some
what more deadly than her male
contemporary.
The First Farm Loan associa
tion of Eugene has mors least asd
more than twice as many borrow
ers as any other association in the
state. It has 275 borrowers and
(686,300 loaned.
Trenton, N. J., Jan. 10. Repeal
of the VanNess prohibition en
forcement act of New Jersey,
which he characterized as "an in
strument of oppi-mmTon" and suo
stitution of a less drastic act pro
viding Jury trials for all alleged
violators, was urged by Governor
Edwards In his second annual mes
sage to the New Jersey legislature
today.
"The belief that the surest pro
tection against Judicial and other
forms of oppression and tyranny
lies In the right of trial by Jury,"
said the message, "is so well set- -tied
in the minds of our people
that attempts to encroach upon or
destroy that privilege can have
but one effect, namely to breed
suspicion of the motives of legisla
tors and contempt for law." '
The governor also suggested
adoption of a resolution calling on
congress to prohibit hearing by I
federal judges of cases decided bjr'
the "state utility board.
German Delegates
Arrive In Pans
Paris, Jan. 10. (By Associated
Press.) The German delegation
which is to discuss the German
reparations questions with the al
lied supreme council arrived in
Paris from Berlin today.
The delegation, comprising 16
members, headed by Dr. Walter
Rathenau, found an invitation
from the supreme council to pro
ceed to Cannes awaiting them at
their hotel.
Four Wounded
In Saloon Raid
Belfast, Jan. 10. Four men
raided a saloon last night and
seriously wounded a tenant. One
of the raiders were captured.
Two bartenders employed in an
other saloon were seriously shot
while walking on the street.
Miller Senpnsly 111.
St. Paul, Minn., Jan. 10. Clar
ence B. Miller, secretary of the re
publican national committee and
former congressman from Duluth,
who was operated on for append!-,
citls, mora than a week ago, was.
reported -by attending surgeons as
being in a "very critical condi
tion" today.