Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About The Boardman mirror. (Boardman, Or.) 1921-1925 | View Entire Issue (June 29, 1923)
WORLD HAPPENINGS OF CURRENT WEEK Brief Resume Most Important Daily News Items. HARDING UPHOLDS DRY LAW Big Audience Responds Lustily When Chief States Policy. COMPILED FOR YOU Events of Noted People, Governments and Pacific Northwest, and Other Things Worth Knowing. A. 13. Williams, Battle Creek manu facturer, running on the republican ticket, was elected to congress from the third Michigan district in Tues day's special election. The hottest day in Now York so far this year brought death to five per sons in greater New York and caus ed mure than a score of prostrations, most of them on the lower east side. Bight cruisers, four river gunboats ami three cruiser submarines will com prise the building program which the navy department will present to the budget bureau and to congress at the coming session. Pluralities of J. A. O. Preus, gover nor, and Magnus Johnson, republican and farm labor nominees for United Stales senator from Minnesota as a result of Monday's primary, continued to Increase as belated returns came in. , Two deaths were reported Wrednes day as a result of the heat wave which struck Chicago Tuesday, although slight relief was found late Wednes day afternoon in a shower which last ed but a few minutes. The tempera ture reached 111 degrees. An earthquake lasting 48 seconds oi l urred at Anchorage, Alaska, at ll!:4,r Tuesday afternoon. The motion was rotatory. Advices stated that the volcanic region on the Alaskan peninsula, where extensive disturb ances occurred lust winter, is quiet. Senator Read of Missouri, address ing u luncheon in Ban Francisco Wed nesday, scored what he termed the growing tendency toward control of business and home by government bur cuus and commissions composed of "lame ducks, ward heelers and politi cal tramps." Henry Ford may decide to become a candidate for the presidency of the United States. The Detroit automobile manufacturer In an interview in Dos ton, MaSB., declared that he had never stated, us was written in the news papers last Sunday, that he would not be a candidate for president. Fire cost the lives of three children al llomodiile, Idaho at an early hour Monday and mother love, expressing itself In a futile attempt to save the children from the flames, added Mrs. Honuto I'beruaga to the victims. Mrs. I'beruaga died from bums sustained when attempting to save her children Captain ltoald Amundsen, the ex plorer, who recently abandoned his proposed flight across the North l'ole by airplane, Is returning to the 1'niled States on the schooner Holmes, ac cording to a dispatch from Nome, Aluska, to the Aflenposteli in Chrlstiauia. The dispatch said Amund sen's airplane was damaged in a trial flight. Ellis Island officials have admitted the charge In the Itrltish houso of commons that as many as 150 persons of different races and color were housed In the same sleeping quarters, but said that this was unavoidable. It was pointed out that to keep races separately classified it would be nec essary to have a "gigantic honey comb" of u building. A million and a half pounds of wool, representing a pool of clips from the district about Boise, Idaho, has been placed iu storago in Portland by W. Scott Anderson of Boise. The ship ment was made by the same interests which lust year disposed of a 1.000. 000 pound pool at auction In Portland, and Indicates that favorable market conditions here, together with facllt llc for storage, warrant the uso of the Portland market In future. PNSldent Harding has disposed of his control of the stock of (he Hard lug Publishing company, publisher of the Marlon Star, to Bonis 11. Brush and Itoy 1). Moore. The sale, how ever, did not constitute a complete sev erance of Mr. Harding's connection with the newspaper, whose editor he has been for so many years, it was announced at the White House that lit) would retain some stock In the company ami would continue to he associated with the Star In an edi torial capacitv . Denver. President Harding, speak ing here Monday, definitely placed himself, his administration and his political fortunes on the side of those opposed to modification of the na tional dry laws. The chief executive furthermore served notice in his address, deliv ered in the municipal auditorium, that so long as he remained in the White House the prohibition and other laws would not be permitted to become a "by-word" even should the burden of enforcement be increasingly passed on to the federal government by the states. lie did not mention specifically the recent action of New York in repeal ing its enforcement code but in a por tion of bis address, generally con strued as referring lo New York, he predicted that "the new nullification 's .... will discover that they have perpetrated what is likely to prove one of the historic blunders in political management. "I am convinced that they are small and a greatiy mistaken minority who believe the 18th amendment will v. r In.' repealed," said the president in taking li is stand on the prohibition enforcement issue. "Details of enforcement policy doubtless will be changed as cxper fence dictates. Further, I am convinc ed that whatever changes may be made will represent the sincere pur pose of effective enforcement, rather than moderation of the general policy. Mr. Harding, in announcing his determination and his views, appear ed to do so with more emphasis than iu any of the previous addresses of his western trip, except possibly his St Louis speech on the world court, and the audience, which filled to capacity I he auditorium seating 12,000, seemed to respond more enthusiastically than ajiy he has yet addressed. The first mention of the 18th amend ment and the Volstead act brought forth cheers and applause was fre quent during thi remainder of the address, which was on the subject of "haw Enforcement." The most vig orous applause came when he declared that, there could "be no issue in this land paramount to that of enforce ment of law." Reiteration by the president of his advocacy of American membership in the permanent court of international Justice in closing his address likewise was cheered. Governor Sweet, a democrat, who welcomed the presidential party, pre viously bad been applauded when lit declared for the world court and com mended Mr. Harding for putting tin question "above partisan considers lions." RADIO TO SERVE PRODUCERS HERE Government Promises Up-to-Minute Market. U.S. Is Leadi: 0 anuractunin) POTATO COUNTY QUEEN M PAPERS TO GET NEWS Passage by Congress of McNary Bill Makes Possible Extension of Work in Northwest. Austrian Schools Idle. Vienna. Many school teachers in Austria went on a folded arms strike Monday. "Children, (hero will be no classes today or tomorrow either un less wo get a living wage," they told their delighted pupils. "You can study or read your wild west books, but you must remain quiet in your seats." All state employes In Austria, par ularly railway men, were supposed to start a passive resistance for wage Increases. Ship Fast Breaking Up. Halifax. N. S. Passengers aboard the ltoyal Mail steamship Carauuet. which went uground on a reef 12 miles north of Bermuda, have been taken off the ship by tugs, it wus an nounced at the company's offices Mon day night. Mali also was removed and no cas ualties w ere reported. The vessel was fast breaking up, It was said. Two Slain In Auto Duel. Bos Angeles, Cal. Two reputed automobile thieves were killed and a polli e sei i ".nit probabh wounded fa tally iu an exchange of shots which took place in a rapidly moving auto mobile near the central police station late Monday. In the midst of the battle the car ran wild and crashed Into the police station, wrecking the machine. Great Platform Fall. Dnllns. Tex. Freighted with hun dreds of men, women and children seeking to crowd their way through the gates to attend an open air Per- fromatice at Clye Park theater Mon day night, a wooden platform over a ditch to the gateway collapsed, throw ing possibly 100 people into the ditch. Tacoma. Mrs. Melissa l.ucy Janes of Burton, who passed her 101th birth day August 5 last year, won the honor of queen of the ashen Maury Island annual strawberry festival to be held at Ell iS BOM June IS, when the votes for the contestants were counted. Grandma" Jsyoas. one of a field of five, all the rost of whom are of high school age, received 11,610 votes, while her nearest competitor was 7000 votes behind. Washington, D. C. Complete in formation on the prices of livestcok, fruits and vegetables, and on the movement of these products of the farm to the markets, are to be sup plied to the newspapers of Oregon, Washington and Idaho from a head quarters office at Portland, opening July 1. A leased wire service is to be ex tended from Denver to San Francisco by that date, which will complete the circuit from Washington. From San Francisco all information received will be relayed to the Portland office by the navy's highpower radio station. The Portland office will distribute news in marketgrams to be sent out five days each week to the newspapers of the three Pacific northwest states. U. B. Ringer, who had charge of the Portland office during the war, will he in charge of the collection and distribution of all information relat ing to the livestock industry. He will not only distribute throughout the northwest states the information re ceived by telegraph and radio relative to livestock prices in the great mar kets of the middle west, such as Chi cago and Kansas City, but it will be his duty to assemble all important facts regarding livestock on the farms of the Pacific northwest to be com municated to eastern points. By August 1 the department of agri culture hopes to be able to station a man at Portland, in charge of market and crop information on fruits and vegetables. This man will co-operate with the office already in operation at Spokane which, according to de partment' officials, has been perform ing the most efficient service, both is regards general crop estimates and as to gathering information on the apple industry. The marketgrams to be issued from the Portland office to newspapers five times a week will in each issue give i complete review of crop and market conditions for the preceding seven days, both locally and in other sec tions of the country. It is believed that later it will be possible to station a man at the Port land office to perforin the same in formation service for the dairying in- lustry that is to be given to livestock, mam and 1 nut and vegetable growers. Statistician Says This Country's Economic Position Has Never Been Paralleled. Did you know that the United States now leads the world as a manufacturing nation? Dog Bites Ex-Justice. Youngstown, O. A report received it police headquarters Sunday that lohu . Clarke, former justice of t ho upreme court of the United States, had been badly bitten by a mad dog caused a flurry of excitement until it was learned that a stray dog for which Mr. Clarke was caring had attacked him, tearing his clothing but not break ing the skin. It is believed the dog was affected ' the heat, but was not mad. Po e killed the animal. New York. The United States is the foremost manufacturing nation today, according to E. M. .Miller, stat istician of the National Bank of Commerce. Supporting lids statement It is pointed out that the international pconomic position of the country has not heretofore been paralleled in the history of the world. The leading dace as a producer of raw materials would not of Itself suf fice to give the United States the In ternational position which It now oc cupies, however. It has won that place by reason of the fact that it Is not only the foremost producer of raw materials but has been for some dec ades the foremcst manufacturing na tion. "The United States took first place In the Iron and steel Industry about 1S00; now Its annual product is in ex cess of the combined output of the United Kingdom, Germany, France and Belgium," says Mr. .Miller. "It be came the foremost consumer of rnw cotton in the closing years of the Nine teenth century, taking the leadership from the United Kingdom, which had theretofore been the largest user. "Until the World war the United Kingdom wus definitely the leader In the woolen and worsted Industries of the world. During the war period American raw wool consumption and production of fabrics expanded rap Idly, and it Is probable that there Is not now any material difference In the capacity of the Industries of the two countries from the standpoint of wool consumption. The United States now uses one-third of the world's cotton, one-fourth of the commercial supply of wool, about three-fifths of all cop per mined and iron ore produced, two thirds of the annual raw silk crop en tering into commerce, and from two thirds to four-fifths of 'the raw rubber grown. Depends Upon Domestic Demand. "Outwardly the conditions surround ing the development of Industry In the United States do not annenr to differ greatly from the influ ences which have conditioned the de velopment of manufactures in Europe, Fundamental differences nevertheless exist. Evidence of them is found In the fact that in the main American manufacturers produce for domestic demand, while European Industries are dependent on their export business. "This difference In the relative im portance of export trade of the manu facturing industries of the United States and of Europe has existed al most from the beginning of the devel opment of the factory system In Its present sense. In Europe modem In dustry was superimposed upon coun tries already fairly mature. Fields had lon been tilled. Coal was new as a source or power, nut metal mines slderable Importance In its effect both on the consuming power of the Euro pean market and on methods of pro duction Is that before the coming of modern industry, centuries had al ready stabilized social customs, strati fied society mid fixed the habits of life of the people. Several Factors Involved. "It is thus clear that the I'nited States has attalued to its dominant position as a manufacturing nation as a result of the combination of four factors : "1. The rich natural resources of the coi.ntry have not only furnished the materials lor manufacture, but their development has resulted In an average purchasing power in excess of that of any other country excepting those British dominions similarly placed. "2. T alior has been so f till v emnlnved In the development of natural re sources that it has been necessary to attain to a maximum economy In Its use. "3. The combination of these two factors has stimulated Invention and has made possible and profitable the development of large-scale production I by labor-saving methods. "4. The development of these meth ods in turn has Increased the purchas ing power of the average man by means of high per capitn production and apital accumulation." M f ;s ran .Miss Ethel Thompson of Boulton, Mo., is now known as "Miss Aroos took," having won the contest to de termine the most beautiful girl in Aroostook county, the Maine district so famous for its potatoes. Jap War Bureau Wants Girls. Tokj o. For the first time in Its his tory the war department la engaging women. It is asking for applications from girls from fifteen to twenty-five years of age to learn draughtsmanship. Two Dogs Each to Ee Indians' Allowance Washington. Indians at the Fort Berthold agency in North Dakota have decided to get along on two dugs each, thus solving a problem which has worried the Indian bureau for years. The Indians themselves, at a recent council, solved the question by voting the abolition of surplus canines, as well as placing a $1 tax on each dog within the limits agreed on. Country in of Welf Work City Dwellers, Because of Near ness, Guard Against Evils, Says an Authority. Washington. In each small com munity there Is the village fool, the ne'er-do-well and the bad boy, and, as thev are accepted along with other unpleasant conditions, it appears to be nobody's business to look after them, according to a speaker In a re cent address to a state conference of child-welfare workers under the direc tion of the children's bureau of the Department of Babor. He stated that the city is the more sensitive organ ism, and explained tills by saying that people living close together looked after evils that threatened the peace" and safety of all. So be advised those to whom he talked to telf the country towns, no matter how familiar many of the residents are with bad inllu ences, that It was their duty to make every effort to eradicate the cause of misfortunes and bodily and mental ills In the young to the end that all might had been exploited for hundreds of ' be benefited. Minnesota Has Storms. Breckenridge. Minn. Two tornadoes hit this vicinity Sunday, causing heavy damage. Tho first, at noon, came from the southwest, tearing off the roofs of the gymnasium at the United States In dian IChOOl and several houses. The second passed over this city, but reports are that the towns of Dwlght and Abercromble, N. D., and Wilberton, Minn., were partly destroy ed. years. In England and in many parts of the Continent supplies of timber were becoming insufficient for the needs of the people. "After tho Introduction of power spinning and weaving machinery, the use of coal as fuel, with the conse quent development of numberless mechanical devices to do the work which heretofore had been done by human hands. It was possible for a time for the European countries to depend primarily upon their own nat ural resourofs and their own markets, hut this condition did not long pre vail. Another circumstance of cou- In commenting on the speech the bureau stated that It had found thnt the speaker had spoken the truth and that In many rural communities the people thought they had done their full duty to the relief of the poor when they gave out orders for small weekly supplies of groceries or placed the beipleaa poor in the coiyity poorhouse. Constructive aid, the bureau said, was often successful In bettering bad con ditions and in placing the mentally and physically unfit on n plane where they ceased to be a public worry and a public burden. Attention was called to the fact that Montenegro Honors American Woman Coal Report Rushed. Washington, D. C. The coal coin- mission is rushing to completion its report on wages, profits and costs in uithracite mining so its findings may o brought to bear in a labor situation of increasing intensity now arising in the Industry. Miners' wage contracts xplre Augst SI and a strike is threat ned unless negotiations for replace ment are successful. Manitoba Votes Liquor. Winnipeg Manitoba voted in favor of government sale of liquor at Fri day's elections by a majority of 30,- 66, returns from all but 100 rural districts showed Sundav. The vote in the missing districts will not material- affect the result. There was a wet majority of K 1SS iu Winnipeg and 4578 elsewhere. Count Jovan Plum representative of King Michael the First, conferring ? order ' of 'Z grand officer of King Daniel I upon Miss Curt I" M ,. f i , r principal of the Castle school Mr girls at Tarrytown .in Hudson. TJS? whs conferred on Ml li.,n r., ).... i " ' "" order .......... . ,., t-iiimeni serv ees rendered to n.- of education and as a mark of appreciation for her ' suffering population of Montenegro" Miss Mason was sffto & Queen Dowager Milena. This was the flrs, time in five hund ,rs C country s history that u woman or foreigner was so honored. in a number of states county welfare boards have been created and' their officers appointed, and that the results have been encouraging. Mention Is made of the delicate treatment de manded in removing defects in chil dren because the work "involves n much more delicate process of adjust ment than the worst bone fracture. The treatment of the juvenile delin quent is a field which requires real professional skill." The state University of Minnesota, ns well as a number of other states, the report says, has provided training schools for rural welfare workers, both through summer Institutes and through regular courses of several years. Nothing is said about the fact that this comparatively new field opens n way for congenial and steady em ployment to many thousands of per sons having an nptltude for It, but some allusion appears to be made to it by this statement by the bureau: "Perhaps we get an idea of what tins new career involves if we recall for a moment the great number of needs which nre filled by modern work for children by the activities, for Instance, which are carried on in a typical large city; by health centers, clinics and hospitals, vocational and placement bureaus, luvenile courts and probation officers, child-study bu reaus In the schools nnd courts, or ganizations aiding in enforcement of protective laws, family aid societies and mothers' pension boards, home finding bodies, training schools for blind and deaf nnd abnormal children. If we compare the great variety of this work with the limited provisions In the country, we shall realize more fully what a task is faced by the new county officers doing pioneer work." How Task Should Be Handled. In explaining how the welfare work er should set about his task in a rural 1 miiity the bureau says: l or needy family, for example, with the complications of child delin quency and handicap which occur so often, be (the welfare worker) secures ' rgency aid from a church society in Bed Cross chapter or from county Binds. He enables the father to get on bis feet financially by bringing him Into touch with an agricultural ngent, who advises as to farming methods and who Interests the troublesome boy In n corn i,r stock-raising club. Mean- While be arranges for a friendly doctor ; to examine a small crippled girl who baa never been able to attend school, and while she S Waits admittance to an orthopedic hospital he finds trans portation so that she can go to school. He calls In the county nurse to advise 'be mother as to cure and diet for her other children, probably undernour ished If there Is no public health ' nrse, be hrings the county to see the need for one. "The welfare man or welfnre lady !t may b soon becomes a well-known figure on the country roads. But be nn, ,t I,., everywhere at once and in the absence of the city's organized re " he must largely develop rem edies and treatment for his cases of dependency, delinquency and neglect by arousing neighborly spirit where It ruuy have been larkln Tho. DnM. contagious from Ids own wet'. Is .muuusiie-i conviction that the whole community benefits or suffers accord ng to the welfare of Its children and lt individual families."