Image provided by: Josephine Community Library Foundation; Grants Pass, OR
About Grants Pass daily courier. (Grants Pass, Or.) 1919-1931 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1920)
u,otOre. UnlteT*1’ 01 r^S THE CLIMATE TELLING THE WORLD (X)ME AND ENJOY IT” x— GRANTS FARM, JOSEPHINE COUNTY, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, JAM ARY 21. Unia IS SENTENCE WHOLE Ml.MHEH 2874. ARE VETOED BY Bellet ed Tlint Troo|H* Fran Japan May Follow l<ea<l of the Ameri cans nml Be Brought Out I Washington, Jan. 21. Official OVER (I,<MH) PERSOXH IIX WITH Toklo advices indicate that the Jap- DISEASE IN < lilt AGO AMINE the ann»c government will follow IS TODAY’S REPORT «Ampin of th« United Rtate« and withdraw her military forces from It I m 'believed a large ma HI be ria jority of th« Japanese are averse to entering single handed into such a AVravictiou Was Upon Indict nient Al- last enterprise, as the Invasion of lift y New ( a»o Are Reported Hour Wight thousand American» ly and Demand fs Made for 1300 legiag the Frnudulcnt Transfer <>f ffthnrin Nurse» to Care for Suffering lllinoi» Valley (tiróme Mine und 30,060 Japanese troops. In addi tion to the Czecho-Hlovaks, now re main In Siberia. Chicago, 111., Jan. 21.—Over 6,000 It. J. Rowen, who was convicted persons are ill with influenza here by a Jury In the circuit court last today. The disease is reported to week upon an Indictment charging be appearing throughout the middle forgery, will have to serve In the wait. Pneumonia la also appearing state penitentiary for three years, in epidemic form and causing a larg er number of deaths proportionately unless the plea of the defense for than influenza. During the last 24 a now trial Is granted and Rowen'» hours new influenaa cases have been fate with another jury should be dif reported at the rate of 50 per hour. ferent. Judge ('alklns thia morning Another car load of good» for the Fifteen hundred nurse« are needed pronounced the sentence upon Row municipal store 1« expected to arrive immediately. There were 36 deaths en, giving him one year more than from Portland either Saturday or tn Chicago during the last 24 hours. Monday morning to replenish the the minimum for the *■ rime upon stock of surplus government sup which he was convicted, the law fix plies. Mr. Tingley wire« from Port ing the penalty at from two to 20 land that the Itacou to be »hipped at this tint« will be tn tins, that receiv years. ed In the previous shipment having Upon the plea of Rowen't attorney been sides wrap|>ed In paper. No the court allowed th« defendant 30 tice ha» not yet come of the good» to duy» in which to perfect his argu com« tn the new shipment, but as CHIEF-OF-STATE Firat Trial Following the Itoundup of Itadicals After the (entrali» Shooting 4 Tacoma, Jan. 21.—'William Ran oixxrrr's ax stops .MASS OF WAR SECRETARY ENDORSES dall, an alleged I. W. W. was found ARMY REORGANIZATION BILL LEGISLATION FROM GETTING guilty of seditious conspiracy in *ON THE STATUTE IM NIKS WITH THIS EXCEPTION connec tion with circulating litera ture. This is the first trial follow ing the I. W. W. roundup after the ! Centralia shooting. About 50 will ’ be tried. ML ROAD BILIS AMONG KILLED Law Restricting the Publication of Newspapers Printed in Foreign Ijuiguage Is Approved 14»t TALKS TO DELEGATES Washington, Jan. 21. -Secretary I Salem, Jan. 21.—Governor Olcott of War Baker endorsed the army vetoed 16 bills today, besides the 16 reorganization bill, drafted . . by •* the I ' ______ _ ___ ______ Washington, Jan. ____ 21.—‘ _ A descrip- he vetoed yesterday. Most cases senate subcommittee, which provider Hon the accomplishment, ___ __ of ____________ ,________, of the were emergency measures. The gov for compulsory military training and , international high commission lo ernor said he saw no necessity for _____ ___ __i commission th« formation of one big army to be ward promoting trade relations them as no emergency exists. The divided into citizens' reserve, regu- among th« countries of the Americas straight party bill and many road iars and national guard. Raker op- »as given to the Pan-American fin bills were vetoed yesterday, includ posed the provisions making General ancia! conference today by John ing those for roads in Benton, Jack- Pershing chief of stafT. and said it Bgrsett Moore, vice-chair.nan of the son. Coos. Klamath, Clatsop and would virtually abolish the war de -ommission, which was created by Douglas counties. partment while Pershing was on the the first Pan-American financial con- The bills vetoed today included actfre list. lertnce held in Washington in 1915. house bill 51, by Gallagher, relating "Substantial ameliorations of to irrigation districts; senate bill 7, ! methods of customs administration Ly Multnomah county delegation, Dave been secured in various, quae changing conduct of kindergartens; lets," said Mr. iMoore. "Regulations senate Mil 5. by Strayer, amending I erinitting the simultaneous loading the law by creating a board of exam- and unloading of cargoes, and the ii.ers; senate bill 30, by roads and ad.anee preparation of cargoes, ha e highway committe. reducing the i-rought about in numerous coun maintenance cost counties are to pay ir:« s. for state highways, from 50 to 20 mi-nt for the new irla). and should fsr as possible It will replenish those "Progress has been made with the per cent; house bill 66, by roads and Tenchow Fu, Shantung, China. Amsterdam, Jan. 31. — Holland is not tho apj*eal be granted, the sen Hues that were sold out. The orig slowly but surely losing the one Jan. 21.- .Bands of kidnappers re adoption of a uniform statistical highways committee. Increasing high tone« of the court will then become inal shipment contained about 86.- characteristic of its landscape made cently have caused much alarm in , i lassitication of merchandise. Six way revolving fund from thirty to 500 worth of supplies, and all are' ¡countries have already taken favor- seventy-five thousand dollars; house effective. Hoven In the meantime this district. Operating in group« of jl,,, j famous In art and known to every »old except about 11.000 worth. 1« at liberty U|>oti the original bond gov-rnment Is now placing on sale , scho°ll,o>' th® •‘>uat- fat- lazy look- from 30 to .50 they have carried away |abJe action, and two more are under- bill 59. by Gallagher, fixing open of 8500. lent the court will this af about 2.000,000 pairs of surplus ing windmills that for centuries have and held for ransom wealthy Chi ¡stood to be on the point of so doing. season on game birds and ja< ksnipe, "Every effort has been made to and senate bill 34. by Moser, relat stood out all over the country’s flat nese for whose release they have ob- I ternoon consider the <|uc»ti<>n of the shoe ', and If these are obtainable In advance uniform legislation in re ing to attachments. The governor In surface. tained as much as (50.000 in some inaufflclenc) of the bond. sn<l the dis Portland, It is expected that some gard to bills of exchange, checks, many cases stated the measures The«« quaint structures are grad cases. trict attorney having appealed for a of them will be »ent to the municipal bills of lading, and warehouse re- should be considered at the regular Ten citizens were kidnapped in ually giving way to highly practical larger figure in the security asked store. but ugly steam and electric plants. October. Promises to pay ransoms eeipts. session of the legislature, not a spe for th« guarantee of the defendant'« "We seem to be rapidly approach cial session, therefore vetoed them. Dutch technical men say the wind have been exacted by torture. Troops appearance at the end of the 30 day». have tried to capture the bandits but ing the time when, so tar as concerns mill is doomed. Among the bills approved by Ol Bowen was convicted of forger) In Now and then, a large group of have failed. It is believed the kid-' bills of exchange, there will, -in ef cott was that which makes it unlaw connection with the making of a feet, be only two systems in use in ful to publish any newspaper them is replaced •by one electric nai>!>en« come from Dalny, crossing in any deed purporting to transfer u chrome the Western Hemisphere, based re- language other than English the gulf of Pechili in boats in which course of each plant, and, in the unless mining «property in the llllnol» val It spectively. on The 'Hague rules of the same newspaper contains literal year a number are destroyed by they escaped with their captives. ley, it being alleged, and proved to 1912 and the United States negoti translation of the articles. fir*—-presenting a spectacular 'blaze I the satisfaction of the Jury, that able instruments act of 1916. with the big burning wings wheeling : Rowen was instrumental In the mak "The commission has also been Shanghai. Jan. 21.— While Atneri- around like fiery arms. They arc I ing of the purported fraudulent deed i glad to observe a growing interest in 29.000 PASSPORTS VISED The district attorney thia after cans have beeff'buying British pound never reconstructed. BY (OXSUL AT JUAREZ the adoption of uniform legislation The existing type of Dutch wind noon brought up the question of the sterling In New York for 13.70 or ! on the subject of warehouse receipts, auffii iency of the bond for the liber leas. Americans here have been pay mill was invented about the yera Juarez, Mex., Jan. 21.—During as -well as on that of conditional ty of Mr. Rowen. and the judge stat ing lion In (American gold for 7b 1400. The great disadvantage of I 1919. 29,000 passports, both Ameri- sales." ed that it would be allowed to stand Mexican dollars which are in current the windmill, of course, is l(s abso Mr. Moore suggested that coun can and Mexican, were vised at the lute dependent on weather condi at the 1500 us originally fixed. Un use here. tries of the southern group which office of E. A. Dow. American consul tions. For this reason, they are be Portland. Jan. 21. The circuit der the new law, a person sentenced Thia unprecedented advance in the had ratified a treaty for the inter here. This figure represents an in- to the state penitentiary is subject tute of exchange in Shanghai has ing replaced, when possible, by mo court upheld the validity of the national protection of trademarks be crease of 60 per cent over that of dern machinery. state dog license law providing that to parole when he has served a quar I een due to the acute rise In the 1918. The past year was one of the The Dutch windmill, however sheriffs must shoot unleashed dogs permitted to register trademarks at ter of the maximum time for which price of silver. Probably no country busiest in the history of the consttl- to be not wearing the state license in ad the international bureau -in Havana I much it may look in pictures he was sentenced. This would make in. the world hap been more sharply a toy. Is far from that. It is a dition to city licenses where neces pending the establishment cf a bu ate. according to Mr. Dow. (Rowen subject, to parole at the end effected by this enhanced value of sturdv structure as big as a good sary. Walter B. Honeyman brough reau at Rio Janeiro, which awaits of nine months. silver than has China. size house, and the machinery insidi uit as a test of the law. The 1919 ' ratification of the treaty bv a suffi- In conaeiiuence of the contused | cient number of coftntries of the is extremely powerful. legislature passed the law. state of exchange, the foreign trade southern group. Na- orally, a g. oat many >f them through this city, China's principal Progress had been made toward rem on. lit the mri’l’-’r becomes less -ommercial center, became more or Here for Hay — Kewtersons facilitating operations of commercial year i>> year. au«i. so far as can be less disorganized, Exporters ceased ascertained, the < recti« n of .» ncw Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Kesterson ar- travelers, he said, by a treaty which to look for new business and confined one is seldom undertaken. rived this afternoon from Seattle and substitutes a single national fee in their activities wholly to filling old will be here for a day. then continu place of local taxes on travelers. contract« from the terms of which Vancouver. B. C.. Jan. 21.—Hun ing their journey to Ix>ng Beach, This convention has been signed and I the) would have been glad to escape, I ratified by five countries and signeil dreds of English families of the mid Cal., for the remainder of the winter. Josephine county is going to have Shanghai bankers held frequent Mr. and Mrs. Kesterson were mar by three more while seven others dle class will emigrate to Canada and such good road» that the whole conferences day and night in an ef- especially British Columbia within ried at Everett, Wash., on January are ready to sign. world will stand up on Its hind legs fort to determine what might be done A treaty for the establishment of the next few years, and a large in 9. the bride, formerly Mrs. Rose and take notice. to »tiibillze the exchange rates. For Tompkins, residing at Kirkland, an international gold clearance fund flux may be expected before the end This story was spread about Port- one day all but one of the leading Wash. They were accompanied by to assure the safety of deposited of this year, in the opinion of James land last evening by James T. Chin- banks In the city declined to issue Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Kesterson, whom gold, avoid its shipment and stabil Findlay, former mayor of Vancouver, lx>s Angeles. Cal., Jan. 21. Jazz nock, an attorney from the city of drafts in connection with export ship they joined In Portland, and who ize exchange has been signed by two who recently returned after four climate. Chinnock was called to Sa-'ments to America. These exporter» music is not a nuisance, according countries and approved in principle years war work abroad. arc returning to Ivan. Ore. lem to attend to professional matters who buy their goods in .China for to a decision by Judge Lewis it. by eight others. Englishmen who formerly main before the supreme court, so he »liver and »ell them »broad for gold Works, in the 'Tx>s Angeles county Agreements for the arbitration of tained a high standard of living on thought he’d take a flier to the me- Hiiffered most severely. They were superior court. commercial disputes have been made pre-war incomes, now find those in The city of Pasadena had brought tropolls to see how the polire are obliged to restrict operations or raise between the United States chamber comes insufficient for their needs, prices wherever the good» were »old. suit against a social club, whose capturing burglars. of commerce and the national cham and are turning their eyes toward On the other hand importer» who neighbors complained its “Jazz music Lawyer Chinnock says road work bers of commerce of Uruguay. Ecua Canada as a land of broader oppor be buy their goods In America and are Jarred on their nerves." 1» getting lined up and it will t* dor. Panama and Guatemala. Other tunities. Mr. Findlay asserted. These Judge Works said: "Once Jazz dollars pushed with vigor at the first peep of oaid for them in Mexican agreements are being negotiated. conditions apply especially to the music might have been construed as spring. The road right up to the big have prospered. middle class, made up mainly of bus One of the difficulties arising from a nuisance. It is no longer so con mouth of Josephine caves will be San Francisco. Cal.. Jan. 21.— (•HAND JURA' TO PROBE FRAI I» iness and professional men, he said. completed tills year, according to all the exchange situation Is that much strued. If the music disturbed the I the dope that can be gathered this of the business here is done under residents of the neighborhood. I am Four special trains leaving Chicago Seattle. Wash.. Jan. 21.—The fed Pershing Thiirwlay night— give January 29 are to bring to San Fran early In the season. But It will be terms arranged several years ago sorry, but this court cannot The latest is the announcement cisco delegates to the annual conven eral grand jury has convened and is only ten feet wide, which Is causing when an American dollar was worth them relief." tion of the Western Fruit Jobbers expected to consider the alleged fioni Portland that General Pershing Grants Pass folks to wonder why. ¡two Mexican dollars or more. Conse- association at America. »More than shipyard frauds in Oregon. Washing end his party will be in their special ITALIANS OUT OX STRIKE Business is moving nicely in the fluently foreign workers here have ton and California. Bert Schlesin car attached to train No. 15, leaving Trieste, Jan. 21.—The strike of 5,000 persons are expected here. barrister's home city. Signs point ! suffered. ger, of San Francisco, assistant at- Portland tomorrow forenoon. Under The business session of the con members of the railroad unions here, Tho bankers con -luded that , one that 1926 will lie a humdinger Chln- nnek Is n guest at Hotel Oregon and solution of the problem would he to authorised by a vote of the men last vention will begin February 8. the tornev general, is here and it is be- this arrangement he will pass became effective this two days previous being devoted to lieved that he will go before the through Grants Pass at 10:19 to will leave tonight for (he climatic Increase the price of China's pro Saturday, grand jury. morrow evening. amusements and sight seeing. ducts throughout the world. morning. south.—Portland Telegram. THE HOLLAND WINDMILL WEALTHY CHINESE ARE