Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, August 28, 1922, Page PAGE EIGHT, Image 8

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    I
"De,
2
RUSSIA TO TAKE
HAND IF FRANCE
Moscow, Aug. 28. (By Asso
ciated Press.) Russia baa al
ready reduced ber fighting forces
to 800,000 men and Is always
ready to enter any disarmament
conference which gl-ves 'guaran
tees of success. She does not an
ticipate any immediate interven
tion, but considers that an attack
is always possible and it Is doubt
ful if sbe could remain passive in
the event tbat France invaded the
Ruhr region and enlisted Poland
in a renewal of the conflict with
Germany.
Leon Trotzky, soviet minister
tt war, made these assertions in
an Interview in which he submit
ted to a cross fire of questions
from 15 foreign correspondents
regarding soviet Russia's internal
problems.
M. Trotzky declared that the
soviet government prefers the
human method of exiling its op
ponents in Russia rather than
crushing them but added tbat -the
political freedom of party organ
ization will be restored In Russia
only when the power of capital Is
broken.
Regarding the American ad
ministration relief, the ambassa
dor said that be considered it not
only a humanitarian organization
but also an "Instrument" through
which America coud be informed
of Russian condltons. He added:
"I am tranquil regarding the re
suits of their investigations."
Trotzky's Jaw hardened when
the Associated Press correspond
ent asked if the government had
any Intention of restoring the lib
erty of politltcal organizations to
Russian parties other than tht
soviet.
"When capitalism Is dead," was
bis answer.
iS STEP NEARER
Chicago, Aug. 28. (By Asso
ciated I'resft) Uhureh union and
the possibility of all Christendom
recognizing one creed appear to be
a step nearer than they have been
for many centuries according to a
report of the commission on the
World Conference on Faith and Or
der which will be submitted to the
general convention of the Episco
pal church In Portland, Ore. next
month.
Tho report announces there will
be a meeting in Washington, D. C,
in May, 192. of delegates from
nearly a hundred denominations,
from a score of countries, to dis
cuss the possibilities of Christian
union. This will be a reconvention
of the body which met in Geneva
in 1920, Of tils gathering the re
port says "deep differences were
mo infested but all were convinced
that great progress can be made."
At the Washington conference all
tho denominations present at Gene
va are expected, including Angeli-
can, Baptist, Congregational, Csek
Armenian, Disciples, Eastern Ortho
dox Friends, Lutheran, Methodist,
Presbyterian and Reformed
churches.
Polk Farm Traded.
Dallas, Or., Aug. 28. Rich Rei
tnann, the real estate and Insur
ance man of Dallas, bas closed a
deal whereby A. R. Morton has
traded 100 acres of land with lin
nrovements, located about three
miles northwest of Dallas to Mrs.
Victoria Bell for 200 acres of
grain land near Rockland, Idaho.
The transaction was carried
through this week.
I VOTERS FAVOR CANBY
UNION SCHOOL PLANS
Canby, Or:, Aug. 28. The Can-
by union high school district con-
: eolldatlon was carried Saturday
night by the vole in Marks Pratrle.
: The last ballots to be cast were In
, this district and by a vote of 31 to
SI6 the tie wBicb bad existed since
llast Monday was broken.
.. The entire vote on the district
.consolidation was 461 yea to 253
Ono. The vote as far as the Indi
vidual districts was concerned
stood six for the consolidation,
jjflve against and one tied.
The vote In Mundorf may
vhange from a ote against the
.."OtieoHiiatlon to a tie with the of
ficial canvass, but the change is
,aot vital to the success of the pro
ject. ii Districts favoring the consolida
fion were: Marks Prairie. New
t 3ra, Union Hall. Canby, Barlow
end Highland. Those opposed or
lied were Ninety-one, Bm".
)ak Lawn and Mundorf.
Perhaps the fact that it's hard
) keep a good man down has some
ling (o do with the fart that the
jngue of Nations remains in the
jireground.
1 "Rich man shot when he returns
(t'jeh a rare thing to see
me of 'em at homo that be must
ne been mistaken for a prowler.
8Th California woman who i trr-
g to buy a husband after two ex-i
"Menken in niHtr;mnnr mny be ex
id on the ground of ignorance.
WANTS SHARE OF $40,000,000 REAM ESTATE
; ..... n-
Mrs. Frank M. Downer; Jr., (formerly Miss Lenora Ream, beautiful
niece of the lata Norman B. Ream,
a (100,000 share of bis $40,000,000 estate. When bis younger
brother, John, found himself in
took the two younger boys and
care of Mrs. Heddlee, in Osceola.
a hand in an accident on the C, B. ft Q. railroad, in which Ream
was one of the principal stockholders. That suit was settled for
$2,000 with the understanding,
care of her for the rest of her life
Ream died two years after her marriage to Downer, and the pro
visions of the will were said to
Downer left her. '
CHRISTY MATHEWSON WINS HIS FIGHT
Si
, 4-
After a prolonged stay at.Saranac, in the Adirondacks, where he
has been fighting tuberculosis contracted while a Captain In the
Chemical Warfare Section of the U. S. Army in France, Christy
Mathewson, Idol of millions of baseball fans, has sufficiently recovered
to motor down to his old home at Factoryville, Pa. He Is shown shak
ing bands with hla father. After a short tay he will return to the
mountains until his sickness has been thoroughly routed .
GENTLE OFFERED POSITION
IN MONTANA UNIVERSITY
Monmouth, Or., Aug. 28. Pro
fessor Thomas H. Gentle, director
of the Oregon normal training
schools, hag been offered the di
rectorship of teacher training in
the teachers' college of the Uni
versity of Montana, It became
known today. The position pays
a salary of $3300, $1000 more
than Mr. Gentle receives In his
present position. Mr. Gentle states
tbat the offer, which came from
the president of the university,
was entirely unsolicited and came
as a complete surprise. The posi
tion Is considered one of the best
of its kind and bas been held by
prominent educators, including
Professor Bagley of Columbia uni-
veristy.
Mr. Gentle said he was consid
ering the offer, Both myself and
family are Intensely In love with
Oregon," he added, ''and this in a
measure overcomes the lure of the
greater salary and larger oppor
tunity."
Mr. Gentle has held his present
position eleven years. Previous to
coming to Oregon he held a simi
lar position In Wisconsin for 13
years. '
Dr. J. A. Donaghue:
VETERINARIAN
Office and Residence
545 Ferry Street. Phone 1360
Salem, Oregon ' .? "
has entered suit in Chicago for
financial difficulties Norman Ream
Lenora to raise. She was placed in
"When she was nineteen she lost
she alleges, that Ream would take
and provide for her in his will.
have been so disappointing that
-
STEAMER REPORTED ASHORE
Port Angeles, Wash., Aug. 28.
The coast guard cutter Sno
homish left here at 4:30 this
morning to proceed to the assist
ance of the steamer Nika, reported
ashore on Woddah island. The
N'lka was en route from Esqui
mautl, B. C, to San Francisco.
CIRCUS COOK SOUSED HERE
Saturday night was Saturday
night for R. R. McAdams, a circus
cook, and he ended up in the Sa
lem city Jail on a charge of being
intoxicated. Later, however, the
officers' hearts softened, and Mc
Adams waa allowed his freedom on
$5 ball. He was cited to appear
In the police court today.
Few incidents of moment fol
lowed the circus' visit to Salem.
M. Ritchie of route 8 driving his
car south on Summer street at
Center, collided with a circus
wagon on which, he said, there
was no light. There was slight
damage to the automobile.
While milking cows at his farm
John Caaaven sustained a stroke of
paralysis which terminated fatally.
He was 71 year old and was a farm
er near Tangent.
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON
SENATORS TAKE
FAST GAME FROM
One of the best games of the
seation was banded out to the fans
yesterday afternoon when the
Salem Senators trounced the Port
land Railway Clerks by the score
of 3 to 2, which evens things up
between the two teams. Last
Sunday the Clerks copped the bon
ers in a ten-inning game. Neith
er team nor its manager is satis
fled with the way things stand
now and It was decided to make a
five-game series to settle the dis
pute as to which Is the stronger
team. Next Sunday and Monday
were selected to tie the dates of
the continuation of the struggle.
Then If It is still a tie the fifth
game will be arranged.
The Clerks started off to a one
run lead In the third wjrfen they
scored off three well bunched bits,
bringing In Drake. Sage, Salem
twlrler, evened things up in bis
half of the same chapter by step
ping up to the plate and smashing
the first ball offered to him over
the right field fence.
Salem took the lead in the next
Inning when Proctor scored off
pass to first and Gill's hit and
steal to second. He again-circled
the bases in the sixth off his hit
a sacrifice by S. Gill and a hit by
L. Gill. Portland tallied one in
the Beventh off a pair of errors
and a sacrifice.
Both Sage and Drake heaved
fine game, Sage allowing six hits
and Drake handing out 9 sate
clouts.
One of the largest crowds of the
season turned out to witness the
game. Both teams were on their
toes and few errors occurred to
give either nine an advantage.
The score:
Senators.'
A.B. R. H. P.O. A
Reinhart, rf 3 0 0 3 0
Girod, Sb 4
Bishop, lb 3
Hauser, c 4
Proctor, ss 3
h. Gill If 4
2
6
13
1
0
0.
2
0
S. Gill 2b 3
Schakman, cf 4
Sage p 3
Totals .....31 3 9 27 1
Clerks.
A.B. R. H. P.O. A.
Noyer, rf 3 0 2 0 0
King, cf 4 0 2 0 0
Stiger, lb 4 0 1 10 0
Hempy, If 4 0 0 0 0
F. LeMear, ss 4 0 0 1 0
Sherrett, 2 b 3 0 0 3 7
Stanley. 3b 3 0 0 0 1
C. LaMear, c 3 0 0 10 1
Drake, p 3 110 1
Totals .....31 2 6 24 10
Summary Home runs. Sage;
struckout, by Drake 8, by Sage 12;
first base on balls, off Drake 2.
off Sage 0; struck by pitcher,
Noyer, Bishop.
OF EARTH LIFE
New York, Aug. 28. (By Asso
ciated Press.) Proof of the pale
ontologist's pet theory that Asia
was the "mother of continents"
and the cradle of life on this globe
carrying with it great promise
of the discovery in the wastes ot
the Gobi desert of the long-sought
"missing-link" in the evolution
of mankind has been found by
the Third Asiatic Expedition led
by Roy Chapman Andrews for the
American Museum of Natural His
tory, Henry Fairfield Osborn, the
Museum's director, announced to
day. The "proof", to the uninitiate,
would appear to be just a heap of
fossilized bones, dug up by a band
ot curious men In the frozen
wastelands of Mongolia. But to
the mind trained in groping back
through hundreds of thousands of
years for history of the days when
man was not, these fossilized re
mains of dinosaurs and other pre
historic beasts and reptiles furnish
a conclusion simple and inevitable
as "two times two."
Wanted
Old Newspapers
and Magazines.
Must be tied in
Bundles
We pay highest
market price
CAPITAL
JUNK CO.
215 Center Street
Thone 398
RAILWAY CLERKS
ASIA CRADLE
News Brevities
Cork. Eamon DeValera Is con
valeting from wounds. In a house
ear Bandon, according to au
tnentlc information.
Chicago.-. S. Peabody, one of
the country's largest coal opera
tors, died after a stroke jwhlle
horseback riding.
Cleveland. W. G. Lee. ores'.
dent of the Brotherhood of Rail
way Trainmen, announces mem
bers of the organization who
walked out on the Chicago & Al
ton at Roodbouse are in danger
of having their charters revokea
unless they return to work and
remain there until proper strike
action is taken.
Chicago. Four men were held
by the police in connection with
the wrecking of a New York Cen
tral exDress train at Gary, Ind.,
last week, causing the death of
the engineer and fireman, accord
incr to a copyrighted story in the
Chicago Herald and Examiner.
New York. Investigation of
tn Association of Railway Ex
ecutives by the United States sen-
tn as directly responsible for the
failure to end the railroad shop
men's strike, watt suggested in a
teleeram of the central strike com
mittee for the metropolitan dis
trict, to Albert Cummins, chair
man of the interstate commerce
committee ot the senate.
Bloomington, 111. The skull of
Miss Edna Skinner, school teach
er, who, it was first believed,
died in the explosion ot a gasoline
stove, at the home of a relative in
Greeley, Colo., bas been fractured,
local authorities said, after ex
humation of the young woman's
body at LeRoy, 111. Albert Lowe,
her brother-in-law, is held at
Greeley, Colo., on a murder
charge.
OF
T
Grenoble, France, Aug. 28.
(By Associated Press.) A new
plan for a "world association ot
states" to link together the league
of nations, the Pan-American
Union and those governments
which are members of neither, was
submitted today to the Institute of
International Law at Its meeting
here by Professor Alejandre Al
varez of Chile.
The plan was presented In the
form of a report drafted by Pro
fessor Alvarez for the 27th com
mission of the institute, which ap
proved it at an executive session
held In Paris from July 31 to Au
gust 3.
The new association would be
super-imposed upon the present
league and Pan-American Union
and would seek to encourage re
gional and continental groups
rather than attempt to replace
them entirely. It is designed to
meet the American objections to
the league of nations with the pri
mary purpose of co-ordinating the
states of the world not establish
ing a super-state.
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SWEDEN VOTES AGAINST
PROHIBITION PROPOSAL
Stockholm, Aug. 28. (By As
sociated Press.) The "drys" seem
to have lost the day in the Swed
ish prohibition plebiscite, accord
ing to the latest provisional re
turns available. The figures is
sued this morning are 772,747 fbr
and 846,536 against. '
VETERINARIANS IN SESSION
St. Louis, Mo., Aug. 28. The
annual convention of the Ameri
can Veterinary : Medical associa
tion, together with the annual
sessions of the bureau of animal
Industry was opened here today.
Matters pertaining to the care of
farm animals were .on the pro
gram of discussions for today.
Harding Back on Job.
Washington, Aug. 28. Presi
dent Harding and the party of of
ficials who accompanied him on a
week-end cruise down the Poto
mac returned to the capital early
today, the presidential yacht May
flower docking at the navy yard
shortly before 8 o'clock. The
president went direct to the
White House from the yacht.
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