Image provided by: Josephine Community Library Foundation; Grants Pass, OR
About Grants Pass daily courier. (Grants Pass, Or.) 1919-1931 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 18, 1919)
" IT’S THE CLIMATE • • • • WE’RE TELLING THE WORLD • • • • (X)ME AND V IT >> Umlg Ouner GRANT« PAMH, JOMCPHINB OOCNTT, OKIOOON, VOI*. X-, Xu. 52. WHOIJ-: NUMBER 2824. VERSAILLES M BETTERMENT TIEKDAY, NCR EMBER IH. 1019. TREATY LIKELY Pacific livestock Company to Pay 913S.00O for Acreage in Con troversy Former Congressman Ernest Lun deen of Minnesota Is Locked in Kefrigerator < '»r Appleton, Minn., Nov. 18. After WITHDRAWAL OF CONVENANT DIRECTOR GENERAL HINEH HAS Salem, Ore., Nov. 18.—The fa- LKADERH OF OFFOHITION FAO* | mous, long pending case of the State ■ being locked In a refrigerator car BV PICES. WII.SON W<H LD NOT (XINFERKNCE with REGIONAL THINS IX UONFEREMCE THIS I or Oregon against the Pacific Live for several hours where he had been AFFECT ACTION OF ALLiEH DIRECTORA IN < Hl< AGO AFTBHNOON placed by the sheriff and citizens of stock company reached termination I I I I Ortonville, Ernest Lundeen, former through oompromise today when the members of the State Land Board congressman of the fifth Minnesota district is lotlay on his way to Min- and representatives of the company entered into a contract wberobv the : neappolls “more determined than company pays the state $125,000 for ever to continue the fight against th« longue of nations,” he do* lared. approximately 16,000 acres of land I Auto l’urli Fwailiti.s. nn<1 Other Im Lundeen was placed In thd car when Some Feeling la Said to Prevail Dwindling Amount of Fuel on Hand in Harney county. Administration lx»« 1er Request» * provetnent* for Community Are Brings Authorities to Full IU-all- Throughout France. Italy anti A’ote on liesolution for Ratifie*, he Insisted upon speaking and was Much IM»cu"»«*l uition of Situation Great Britain released by trainmen when the train tion of Treaty arrived here. 20 miles from Ort on - ▲ vllle. ••|t's the climate" Is the official Chicago, Nov. 18.—.Further draa- Paris, Nov. 18.—-Regardless of the Washington, Nov. 18.—Initial ne- slogan of the people of the Grants Am«ri<-an government's attitude, the^ tic «tepe to conserve the steadily ' grXiations looking to compromise on Paas district. Its a slogan that was peace treaty of Versailles will be pul* I I the treaty reservations were opened In force, according to the prevalent ' dwindling supply of coal were In Incubated in the fertile Idea mill ' late today between the republican that grinds behind John Hampshire's view here following the report that, prospect today. Brought to a leader, Lodge, and Senator Hitch- classic brow, and It was given Its of President Wilson might withdraw Dublin. Nov. 18.—Many Irishmen cock, in charge of the administration . i realization of conditions should all ficial horning when It was nnanL the treaty from the United States believe the government's new Irish forces, in ___ Lodge . _ _ ’s office, ____ ; Senator inoualy adopted at the meeting of senate. Whatever happens, the feeLl1’”’ miners who struck on the first bill will give an option to northeast Hitchcock Is said to have requested th» Chamber of Commerce last night Ing in French circles is that Franceof the month continue to remain Ulster of coming into or staying out and Senator Lodge to have agreed Centralia. Wash, Nov. 18.- Posse- cannot meet the German pienlpoten- idle. Director General Hines today is | of a home rule parliament, Part of to permit a vote on a resolution to That was a rousing session of the Chamber of Commerce. The as man have given up the search for tiarlea again, and French opinion Is to (jlgcU8B the placing of a national'■lil® lndu«’nient for Ulster to come ratify the treaty without reservations “ * * by adoption - .- In ----- may ------------ be provided of but discussion of compromises on sembly hull was filled to the walls the 1. W. W. reported hiding In the that Great Britain and Italy have a iemliargo gfith regional directors. the plan first suggested by Premier textual reservations was deferred. •with business mon. professional timbered country of Hannaford val like feeling. TJoyd George under which an Irish I men. and just plain citizens when ley. The officers said they believed parliament would meet alternately Pretrident Bramwell started things the men have left the vicinity, t’n- Washington. Nov. 18.—Reserva in Belfast and Dublin. It is said tion to the peace treaty making en going by calling for the report of tll the Inquest, no official statemeni i here that Sir Edward Carson would trance of the United States into an the special committee that had tx'en will t>e given out regarding the death i vigorously oppose the plan of allow International labor conference con previously named to Investigate the of John Haney, the Tenino rancher, ing Ulster to exercise its option by tingent upon congressional action, pro|MMltlon for the establishment <rf who was shot Saturday night while It in thought a Mark Process I>ryer In the city. pursuing fugitives. voting by counties. Sir Edward is was adopted by the senate today. said to stand out for a clean cut of Th« report of the committee was ad possible that Haney was shot by the I the six northeastern counties. verse to the financing of the dryer possemen accidentally. Washington. Nov. 18.—Plans ■ lain don. Nov. 18.--The bolshevik! In question al thia time because of The problem is to give self-govern shaped up today for final vote on the Salem, Nov. 18.—Ix>uis Jensen, claims the capture of ten generals committed to the state hospital here ment to a country one-fifth of which peace treaty Thursday, under com the fact that until the Irrigation pro and over 100 other officer* at Omsk, 'T* jects are completed the production of . I at least would rather have civil war promise program which many be Grand Rapids, Mich., Nov. 18. S. according to official statement of the trrom Multnomah county. November than to abandon its present status. lieved would result in ratification. berries and vegetables would not be sufficient to maintain a dryer of a .1. Ixswell, of New York, was elected soviet government at Moscow, Koi 7, and who was severely beaten The other four-fifths of the country capacity of to tons dally. The re master of the national grange here chak'a army is being pursued in an about the head and body by William has elected a parliament whose meet easterly direction the statement says. Harris, an attendant, the night after logs in Ireland are prohibited as il port Indicated that the culls from today. legal. the apple nnd pear orchards this ■ 1 his admission to the institution, died year would have kept the dryer in Txmdon. Nov. 18.—Grecian cigar Sunday night. MAGNIFICENT HOME operation only two and one-half ettes are to be manufactured near r i Whether or not death is due to FOR GERMAN PRESIDENT days. Tjondon by an American concern. ptx injuries received at the hands of the As a sequel to the report, however,] The company has a stock of nearly A. C. Hough later In the evonlng re- $4.000.000 worth of Macedonian to Berlin. Nov. 18.—«Plans are un attendant is to be determined by an sorted a conference held wlth C. P. bacco snch as is used in the manu der way to spend 32.000.0po marks autopsy to l»e performed by Coroner Bishop, of Portland anil Salem, ami facture of "Turkish” cigarettes. Be for the purchase and equitvment of Clough. formerly of Granta Paas. Mr. Bishop cause the district in which this to Paris, Nov. 18. Several thousand a residence for future German presl-| Jensen’s face was beaten black and Is heavily Interested In the dehydrat bacco is grown is no longer govern Bellingham. Wash.. Nov. 18.—The ed by the Turks, the term “Grecian” ing plants to the north, and he pro <llsch»rg<“d American soldiers who dents, something on the line Af the blue in the assault by Harris and posed the shipment of surplus fruits remained in France to try their for White House In Washington or the he sustained severe bruises about “shop committee” plan of organiza is to be substituted for "Turkish” by from here to the northern plants till tunes are faring us must fare all Elysee In l*arls. but necessarily less the right side. Harris was found tion apparently has been tried out this organization. Sin'll time as irrigation had made pioneers. A few have lieconie reas pretentious. guilty on a charge of assault and with BucceBs in the mills of the Bloe- The Pan-German paivera are oppos possible the establishment of a plant onably weallhv. Home are "report battery in Justice Unruh's court and djlaDonovan Lumlier company here, here, when Its building would be un ing progress.” The majority, how ing the idea and one of them re assessed a fine of $35 and costs, ag- beiieved to be the first company to ever. like their fathers before them, marks sarcastically that the plan dertaken. gre gating does not entirely fit in with Erzber-i approximately $100. In try this experiment on the Pacific t The set program of the evening in the I’nttod States, are trudging was started into motion wlhen T M. on life's way. over or around ob ger’s talk about "uttermost econo the meantime he had been dismissed coast. Stolt. vice president of the Cham stacles. with their carts hitched to my.” from employment at the hosp.'ta'l. As a result of the plan, recently j ber of Commerce, gave his views up- stars that «re flying rather lower itrtt put into effect, some SOO employes on the value of tourist travel to the than they were when the young men • busln«*s men of (iranís Pass, He set out to "Americanize France." of two mills of the company now I Ix>s Angeles. Nov. 18.—A hospital traced the financial returns to nil Most of the tnen really are pio- Uave personal representation in all! • and school, to cost $150,000 where lines of Industry from the butcher, neers because they are striking out ■natters affecting the industrial rela crippled children of Ix>s Angeles, the baker and candle-stick maker, for themselves, along new lines, As tions of the plants. The plan, it was rich and poor, may be treated and and when he added up hla rows of yet there is no organization to put educated, is planned by the newly announced by the company. would organized I.os Angeles Orthopaedic figures he found where with the these men In contact with their fel- pr««ent volume of tourist travel lows for the exchange of Ideas and !>e extended to Its twelve other Foundation. --------- ' firants Puss whs profiting by some experiences. London, Nov. 18. Shortage of Dublin, Nov. 18.—Gratification in plants arid lumber cam;» as rapidly Announcement that John Brock thing like $85.000 annuallv. With •, NeaYl.v nine thousand American physicians in this country, which was, Dublin over the establishment of dl-i man of 1-os (Angeles has donated a as the men grow Into it and become the completion of the highway sys Expeditionary Force men were re rectxshlpping service with America,' sufficiently interested to adopt $90.000 property in a high class resi ,, , . , it. tem, nnd especially the building of loused here and it Is estimated tt greatlv Increased by the war, Is giv- changed , to disappointment when it dence section here as a site for the the highway to the caves, lie said fourth of these have settled down to ing women a golden opportunity to I w.a# f(>Iind that the bIverpool charges Publication of a monthly plant organ proposed institution; that Mrs. Anita thia would become a pivot point for work here, The others are visiting, enter the medical profession. Hun-|had been made on the cargo of the with the editorial direction in the Baldwin of Arcadia hah pledged $50,- travel to Crater latke, the Caves, th* sight-Mel ng or hai e gone home after dreds of demobilized war workers, first vessel to arrive here from Am-, hands of tl. employes, also is con 000 toward the cost of buildings and s'oast, and other places of interest, n discouraging look at business pros especially nurses, are taking advant ’erica. templated, the first issue to appear equipment: and that a vigorous cam with the financial returns correspon poets. age of it. ■ The Dublin importer has had to in December. paign for an additional fund of dingly augmented. Of the two thousand or ho who Before the war. few facilities were pay a charge of nearly $10 a ton for The lumber workers appear to $100.000 would be launched at once, Sam H. Baker told how to Improve lire hard after French francs, ac offered English women for training Liverpool port dues, cartage in Liv-| have seized the "shop committee” was made at a recent meeting of the auto park and to make It more cording to American business túen as physicians and furthermore they erpool and freight from Liverpool to plan with enthusiasm, Matters of members of the foundation attractive to the traveler along the hero who know most about the new encountered a prejudice on the part Dublin though the vessel came <M-j personal welfa're. safety, sanitation "The proposed Orthopaedic hos highways. The keynotes were clean ventures, several hundred found em- of all classes that wns strong enough rect to Dublin and never saw Liver- and wage classification have been pital and school will put lavs An liness nnd convenience. He urged the ploymont with large concerns, chief to daunt even the most determined pool. The explanation given by the considered by the committee. One geles in first place among cities of advertising of the bathing and swim ly American firms preparing to do That prejudice against “women doc consignors is that the matter de- workman’s claim for higher wages the world in economic and construc ming In the Rogue available to all business In the devastated regions. tors” was almost entirely swept pends upon the terms of the con-j was refused by the committee. Al tive humanftarlanlsm.” said George who stopped in the park. The own \nother /group took various small aiway by the heroic and efficient med-1 tract which, being made in the old lowances for overtime suggested by Dryer, president of the foundation. ing of a camp ground by the munici places to pm their way while study leal service performed by women form contemplated these Liverpool the committee met speedy agreemnt ''Sixty .per cent of all crippled chil pality so that permanent Improve ing. The majority of the men, it during the war. ¡charges, In future it should be I from the prill officers, and other dren respond readily to scientific ments might lie mnde he considered wns said, started to make good by Hospital schools^ of medicine from easily possible to eliminate this dif- questions of working conditions treatment and become virtually self- a necessity. capitalizing \merlcan methods. Vert whlch women students formerly were j Acuity, supporting if given the opportunity, have been settled. The discussion that followed Mr. many of them say what they consid barred are now open to them. Many The mater is. however, treated in On the workings of the plan. Pres We propose to offer them the oppor- Baker’s remarks shtrweil the grent ered defects in French lite and mnde hospitals and other health Instltu- the Dablin Nationalist press as a re ident J. If. Bloedel of the mill rom tunity.” Interest locally In the nuto enmp ready to ifurnlsh the supply, nnd, If Hons Include women on their boards vival against Ireland of the infamous pany says; Both the hospital and school will I srround. Tts vnlne to the community necessary, crqp.te the demand. “It is going to remove many of be conducted without profit. Mr. Dry of management, and public positions navigation acts of 1660 to 1671, un win detailed by Messrs. Thompson. Most of them agree that easy which used to be filled only by men der which no Irish owned ships were the difficulties that in the past have er said, the medical and surgical Collins. Parsons, Crnmer and Dem- money Is not one of the natural re are now open to women doctors as allowed to sail the seas. arisen itetween employer and em- stiff donating their services and the arny, while John Hampshire waxed sources of France but a few have well. Resident hospital posts have The principal difficulty in the way plove because of the fact that they board of education providing needed eloquent as be told Just how Im /■roved that It Is. ’A negro mnde been made available for qualified of the permanent establishment of have held aloof from each other teachers for regular grade work. portant he considered this question 125,000 francs buying and selling women physicians, enabling them to direct traffic with America Is said The elimination of outside Interfer- ■Parents who can afford to will be of providing for the rare of the army and* navy supplies al Brest. secure extremely valuable experience. by economists to be the absence of ence wlll follow, because this svs- asked to ]>ay nominal sums for treat tourist. 'He saw In the travel along His case Is vouched for by a well- Except Oxford and Cambridge, all sufficient return cargoes. Irish man tern will Inspire mutual confidence ment of their children but no charge (the ’highways a sonreí' of Income known American commercial execu the British universities have opened ufacturers are combining to meet and reduce to a minimum rancor whatsoever twill be made to those In tive. straitened circumstances. •/Contln led on page 2.) this difficulty. and antagonisms." their medical degree to women. MIT’S THE Q.IMATE," IS SLOGAN B HOME fitllfRSI jBOLSHEVIKI CAPTURES ASSAULTED PATIENT AT 10GENERALSAT0MSK STATE HOSPITAL DIES I — CRIPPLED CHILDREN WILL HAVE HOSPITAL AT SHIPPING RATE