Image provided by: Josephine Community Library Foundation; Grants Pass, OR
About Grants Pass daily courier. (Grants Pass, Or.) 1919-1931 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1920)
Courter I VOL. V. No. 2MI. U H Oí JC 'M IM BEK 3O6Ö. WEIGHT EVENT STAND BÏ VOTE FALL 10 POLES iio|e. for tim-riran Relief Worker» Now Hold Out—Were llreeigrsi nt A.!»« TOLL OF LIVES Constantinople. Aug 21. .Advices MOTION TO lOjOONHIOKR VOTED to tho French mission here report the DOWN ( NAM MOI HL Y WHEN capture of Tarsus In Asia Minor, on BROUGHT IIY ANTIH August 12th. by French troops and hope is now held out fur the Ameri can relief workers who have been be sieged In Adam since June 20th. Hll IHvisions of N.wirl) >|cn a< Mrr<y of Enemy Near Fortress of Brest-Litmsk t.ilon Taken U» IU».train OffKml Irwn Certifying Co < Mt»y of the Htate’s Ratification CAPTAIN REFUSES TO TALK Officers <u>d Prominent lluwrv** Mon < liargrwl With Making Eioesslve Profite <m Hogar Salt Isvke, Utah, Aug. 21.—’Indict-, NEW' YORK ATHLETE TAKES menta charging the Utah-Idaho Sugar LEAD IN PIT—DISTAN« E OF Company and Its officers, many of 11.ÍSH5 METERS «OVEREO I them prominent Salt Lake and Ogden business men, with having made ex horbitant profits in the sales of sugar were returned today by a ape-' ' - ial United States grand jury. PriKtrlo, Italy, Winner of Metre Walk—IS minute».. 14 Second lU-quired Night Wan «Year—Two .Minute» More Warning Would Have I’revesit«! 1-A y Nashville. Aug. 21. -The lower house of the Tennessee legislature to day defeated, 50 to 0, the motion to reconsider Ils action in tho ratifica tion of the woman suffrage amend ment. Sault St Marie, Aug. 21 —The Antwerp, Aug. 21.—Timlos, of lives of 29 persons and one woman Finland, won the final in the hop, Constantinople, Aug 21. Many were believed to have been lost when' San Francisco, Aug. 21.—San step and jump event in the Olympic Americans have had narrow escape« the steamer Superior City, a freight-! Francisco’s Chinatown, at one time games today with 14.5 meters. In the fighting which (British and i er, sank, 4 H miles northeast of perhaps the largest in any American P. J. McDonald, of New York, won Paris, Aug 21 Hix bolshevik di Greek troo|>e have kept up for sev White Fish Point, on Ijake Superior, or European city, continues to de the final of the 56-pound weight put vistone. consisting of from 30,000 to eral weeks with the bandits which after colliding with the steamer Wil- crease in population, according to In the Olympiad today with • put of 40.000 men are surrounded by Polish are harassing the eastern shore of the Nashville. Tenn., Aug. 21.—A t Ito L. King Four of the crew. in statements from the Chinese consul 11.265 meters forces between 8! od Ice and Brnst-Jdt-' Bosphorus. Heikos, a summer place meeting of the Tennessee house to-1 eluding the captain, Edward Sawyers. I Frigerio, of Italy, won the 3000 ovsk, aorordlng to pre»* dispatches 10 miles north of this city reached bv day io clinch the ratification of the «eresaved. The mining woman was' ate and the Chinatown police squad. Before the San Francisco fire of 1906 meter walk in 13 mlnutM, 14 1-5 sec today hourly ferry service, lias been the federal suffrage amendment was , the wife of the second engiueer. there were over 30,000 Chinese here, onds. chief center of the fights between blocked by the autto, 30 of whom «Captain Sawyers would make no bands of adherents of Buatapha Kern- left Nashville last night for Alabama j statement, except that the night was i it was estimated Today Chinatown America scored 21 points In the is credited with a population of be Olympic contests today, and Sweden | h | pB«ha. nationalist l<*ad»*r, and the to make impossible a quorum at the. clear. tween 5000 and 7000. British-Greek soldiers operating un session. 18. Total scores to date are: United Walter Richter, boatswain. is one Chinese populations of otfc£r sec States. 179: Sweden, 68; England. der the artillery protection of British, Chancellor James B Newman to of the survivors and is in a hospital w .mbIps day Issued a writ of injunction tem here seriously Injured Richter said tions of the United States also are 67; Finland. 66; Italy, 21; France, i An American oil company Is erect-1 porarily restraining Governor Ro-: the captain's alarm signal rang just decreasing according to census fig 20; South Africa, 19; Canada, 10; (ng two great steel tanks at Boikos berts and Secretary of State Stevens ' two minutes before the crash. He ures at the consulate. In 1900, they Australia 10: Denmark, 7; Norway. which came well within the line of and speakers of the Tennessee senate asserted that if it had rung two min- show, there were approximately 89,- Ebthonla and Czech-Slovakia. 3 each; Flagstaff. Ari« . Aug 21 Indians fire between the rival forces. The, and house from certifying to Secre lies earlier. there would have been 000 Chinese in America. In 1910 Holland 2; Belgium. 1. the number had decreased to about of the Hopl reservation have been steel rivetterà were com pel Id to flee tary of State Colbv of Tennessee’.” no lose of life 71,000 and in 1920 to 55,000. gathering snakes and making other for their lives and for several days ratification of the woman suffrage' preparations for months for their an bullets played a tattoo on the tanks amendment.* Many reasons have been assigned nual snake dance to be held August which were nearly as constant as the for the decrease here. The consulate Many leral authorities here regard 23 Tourists from many parts of tune of the rfvltlng machines Many the amendment as literally wrapped thinks restrictions on Chinese immi the United States have attended the Americans were In summer ramps up in legal entanglements and stat- gration have been the main cause dances in the past and agrees with officials of the police and cottages In the vicinity of Heiko» (d that It was a foregone conclusion! The date and place of the dance la the night the fighting began, but they j that the courts would have to pass squad that the ban placed on gamb not revealed until shortly before the speedtlv moved to the western shore ttnon the legality of the ratification ling in the Chinese quarter is another •vent Is to occur Tho date depends of tho Bosphorus, where It was pos-l reason. Chinese love to gamble, the Buenos Aires, Aug 21.—The Ar upon the moon which must be ¡n a slide for aererai nights to watch the MffiRH'AM HTEAMER REPORTED Berlin, Aug. 21. -All the eurrency police say. and when the ban was or gentine Federation of Labor cham certain pu?it ,>u. at the time of the flnhlia», uu the Anatolian hills by the pioned by socialist deputies, has just AFIRE ISD HEADED Kill PORT theorists in the world would be un dered many left. dance, to make It a success Riders j light of tho naval rockets and search able to give a definite, positive, an Eastern cities have called many won a victory in the lower house of of the tribe have announced they lights used 1n directing the gunnery New York. Aug. 31.-—The Ameri swer to the queetlon when an im San Francisco Chinese where they congress by securing the passage of think the tenon » 111 h« J • -•*ht Au Robert College and Con dantlnople can wooden steamer Mend ora was provement might be expected in Ger engaged in the restaurant and laun a law which prevents the government gust 23 The dance, it 1s believed, College for women, the two American reported by wireless today to be afire. many's huge paper circulation. Di dry business Chicago, < it is said, has from expelling foreigner? from the will he hold at Hotevllla', a village on | Institutions of higher learning on the She Is making for Halifax with rector Von Glasenapp of the Reichs- drawn heavily upon San Francisco . ------ country ™— —---------- without - a ---- c(>Urt hearing. the Hopl reservation 130 miles north i Bosphorus, both commanded an ex- smoke pouring from her hold bank, has told the Associated Press Oriental quarter The federation alleged in a recent pe of here . cellent view of the struggle and were correspondent. The bank statement tition to congress that the ' residence Advices have been received that ( safely out of range of the nationalist SOCIALIST PARTY INDORSES law” which has a' provision for the showed that the paper in circulation about 1.000 tourists wilt attend In bullets. INTERNATIONALE RY VOTE July 15 totalled 53,847,000,000 sic«'ESS <>F RADIO BROAIMABT deportation of undesirables, was be I I dian sgency officials will have a rep marks. This was a decline of 198,-' INDICATED BY INTERCEPTION ing unjustly employed by the federal Profeasor F. W. Kelsey, of the Uni resentative at the reservation to Is versity of Michigan, was prevented Pittaburg. Aug. 21.—Indorsement 000,000 marks as compared with the police to expel from the country la sue permits borers of foreign birth who partici by the fighting in Anatolia from of the third Internationale with cer previous week. "We shall certainly do all in San Francisco, Aug. 21.—The in pated in strikes. They were arbi- making a survey of the famous bat tain reservations by the socialist par tlefields of Caesar south of Sam- ty of the United States was announc power to prevent further undue terception by the navy radio station j trarily judged by the police to be an- l1>KTIiANI> MIKKETM at Yerba Buena Island in ^-»n Fran- archisi«. It was charged soitn Professor Kelsey has been In ed today by the executive committee flation of currency," he said, cisco bay of a message today from Turkey for many weeks Inveatigat- as an outcome of a referendum order for Germany, there are only ways and none other will avail. They the LaFayette station at Bordeaux. Portland. Aug. 21 Butter up two Ing old manuscripts and studying ed laat May Mrs. W. M. Campbell. Mrs. G. W. cents, cubes, extras. 58c. Other tnar- ruins of the Roman clvilzatlon He are expressable In two words—work France, indicated the success of the Wimer and Ebel Linkhart went to kets steady and unchanged hoped to make the trip from Sam- Mrs. E. L. Weatherby left this and thrift. Increased production will world wide radio sent broadcast Central Point this morning for a morning for Santa Rosa. Cal., where benefit both exchange and exporta from one station. short visit. she "will visit for a few weeks. Mrs. tion From that and a nation-wide Weatherby is making the trip by way return to frugal habits alone is an Improvement in the paper money sit I of Sacramento. uation expectable." Warsaw. Aug. 21. -The Poles have eaptured 15,000 soviet prisoners up to Thursday, it was announced today Belgrade. Aug 21 What the Balkans now need to prevent new .wars la a num of strong personality and charitable tendencies or n hum orous Don Quixote, according to Pre mier VeHnltch, of Jugo-Slavla Whether it Is within the compass of human Intelligence to prevent the present war tendencies tho next few weeks will show Th broader aspect of tho situation is that for Central Europe or the Balkan countries to become a groat battlefield will 1>e playing Into tho hands of tho bolshe vik! ngouts who are believed to lie working Industriously In each coun try circulating war rumors and fo menting quarrels for which there are already too many rensons. Thnt the Jugo-Slav government rertalnly doos not want wnr with nny other country tho Associated (Press Is authorized to state from a high authority. It was (minted out that tho Jugoslavs got all they could possibly ho|>e for by tho peace trea ties In territories from Hungnrla and Bulgaria and a new war might set hack the Infant nation But they are determined to have Flume. The peo ple make loud protestations that their army can master the 'Italian army. The Jugo-Hlav army, they »ay, Is regnrded by outsiders aw be ing In good ahane with 300.000 frosh troons ready. Also the word has been passed for mobilisation of the peas soun to Zlle about which one of Caesar’s best-known campaigns was Mrs. J. G. Hyatt returned to her waged, and had made all arrange home at Santa Rosa, Cal., this morn ments for motor transportation. But ing. Mrs. Hyatt has been visiting ants as soon as the harvests are in the unsettled political conditions and here with her brother, George Lewis, at the end of July. the activities of the various bands for the past six weeks. She will stop What the Jugoslavs do, it appears forced him to abandon the expedition. at Sacramento for a short time. here, will be the signal for the Hun garians to jump after Transylvania and Slovakia and later to attempt to retake tho enormously fertile Bat- chka from the Serba. Riding south from (Budapest into old Herbia the correspondent found few evidences to the eye of war pre paredness on either side of the fron tier, yet all the peasantry were re ceiving notices of mobilisation. The Hungarians now within the Serbian frontier appeared to be heartbroken that they must belon;; to a country whoso imople they rcgaTd as of a culture lower than their own. They also complain they are unable to ob- tain passports to visit their friends in New Hungary. While tho J’lgo-Slavs are said to l»e unafraid of -war, yet they realize they occupy a perilous position with respect Ifi Internationa! political dis sentions, as well as concerning what tho Bulgars and Greeks might do in case tho Jugo-Slavs made war on Italy. Not counting tho Hungarians, It la not believed in American circles here that the Ser I m and Bulgarians ■ «Ululimi will reach an understanding for com mon action. However, regarding tho (limernl Strany, coiun-sud<‘r of the Czech forces In Siberia, who was svv Rpalato Incident ft is believed If It Is shown the Italians started tbs trouble era I times wounded In buttle, photogrnphed on Ills return tn Prague, where the Jugo-fRavw wtll Insist strongly on a rousing welcome was given the m> clonal hero. He to Men riding with Prime Minister Tuner of Cxecho-Slovskla. an indemnity. Mero of the Czechs Returns to Prague The popularity of the city park, the band concerts and the bathhouse was fully demonstrated by the crowd that was present last night, Cars were parked everywhere, and con trary to rules some of them on the lawns. The river bank during the swimming contests was a solid mass of spectators, and later during the band concert the lawn surrounding the bandstand was covered with an appreciative audience. The swimming contests began at 5:30 and were hotly contested from the novice race straight through the program to the diving contests. The tub races and obstacle races gave rise to much amusement and every one entered into the spirit of the evening. The prizes, which were j well distributed, were awarded by | Dr. E. C. Macy during the progress , of the band concert. After the contests a large number of people visited the auto camp and saw the electric cookhouse and other tourist conveniences which Mrs. Geo. P. Jester explained and demonstrat ed. The band concert was up to the usual good standard and rounded out a moat enjoyable evening. George R. Lundburg. on behalf of the First National bank, formally ’resented the bandstand, constructed ny the >>uik to the city. It was grate- 'uHy aocepied by Mayor C. H. Dema- ray. One word of explanation is due Miss Muriel Howard, who won second place in the women's contest. Having won a prize in a senior contest she was automatically barred from the junior event and therefore her win of this race was set aside, and the prizes awarded to the second and third In order. The list of successful contestants is as follows: Novice race, girls under 14 who have never won a swimming race, 100 feet downstream. Elizabeth Blackburn 1st. Ella I^amphear 2nd. Novice race, boys under 14 who have never won a swimming race, 154) feet downstream. Arlie Briggs 1st. Jack Bearss, 2nd. Women's race across river, from foot of 8th street to bathhouse. Muriel Myers. 1st. Muriel Howard 2nd. Obstacle race, boys under 14. Ro bert Swope 1st. Loren Tuttle. 2nd. Obstacle race, girls under 14. Doro thy Lundburg, 1st. Flora Gillott 2nd. Men's race, from Oaks around the large float to batbouse. Claude Booth 1st. James Patterson 2nd. Tub race for boys and girls under 12 yean, 100 feet downstream. Jack Bearss 1st. Robert Swope 2nd. Canoe race, *4 mile down stream. Jeannette Moes and Gene Murphy (Coetissed on Page Hight)