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About Grants Pass daily courier. (Grants Pass, Or.) 1919-1931 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 2, 1920)
grants jJnss Daily VOL. XL, No. Li GRANTM PARE, JOSEPHINE COUNTY, OREGON. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2, ItPJO. OOX WIL14NG TO ACCEPT ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ REHEKVAT1ONB TO TREATY ♦ Pittsburg, Kans., Oct. 2.— ♦ Governor Cox told an audience ♦ that It ho is elected ho would ♦ "sit down with tho senate and ♦ discuss the treaty and agree up ♦ on any reservations that would ♦ clarify or reassure the treaty." ♦ WHOLE M MBKR XU0O- CLEVELAND<TN<TfES PENNANT BY DEFEA1 ING DETROIT ♦ I ♦ ♦ Detroit, Oct. 2.—<By defeat ♦ ♦ ing Detroit today the Cleveland ♦ I ♦ Indians won the pennant of the ♦ ♦ American league. The score ♦ ♦ was: Cleveland 10, Detroit 1. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦•♦♦♦♦♦a ♦ ♦ ff I ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦e FORMER UNITED STATES HEN- ATOM Dii» AT DAI/fON EAKIA THIS MORNING SATISFACTION IS L DMTRK*r ATTORNEY aMM'PM STREET <»NFI,KTH REPORTED INVESTIGATION OT 1WJ0 IN PETROGRAD WITH HEV- GAMEH KRAL DEATHS IB URGED I COORDINATION PUBLICAN NOMINEE COMMON GOOD BROOKLYN PLAYERS EXONERATED HelinertliM'li Returns to Portland Af ter Invrwtigatlon of Project—Will I US urn larter Although He Was No* Orator, Emi- No Sw»|Hrt<»n Ro>ts on Players of War Minister Bald to Have Been ■ravr Was Attained—Never Made Brooklyn Nationals After I'robe Hurt—<’ourt Martiallng of General Galveston, Oct. 2.—Fire broke out a lUsd hpwtl in Senate Is < \>n>|»le<r«l f Budenni Also Rumored in the south end of pier 41 this Ralph Schneeloch, financier of the morning. A general alarm was given Granta 1‘eaa Irrigation district, who almost immediately and 250 national Dalton, Maas., Oct. 3. W Mur spent the week In the city looking New York, Oct. 2.—District Attor Copenhagen, Oct. 2.—Reports ot a guardsmen were rushed to the ray Crane, former United States sen over the progress of developments In ney Ijewls announced today that the strike movement spreading rapidly soene. The fire was first noticed ator and'for many yearn a power In tho construction of the project, left Investigation by hie office failed to throughout Russia resulting In ser when a.i explosion blew out the win- With Mr. disclose any plan to "fix" the 1930 ious disturbances, were received by dows and doors. It was reported to the republican party, died early to last night for Portland day Ills end came quietly after four Shattuck, of the Shattuck construc World Series. He oxonerated all the National Tidende from Helsingfors. have started by spontaneous combus tion company, Mr. Schnenloch made members ol the Brooklyn Nationals It said travelers from Russia confirm tion in sisal. days of sleep An outstanding characteristic of a thorough study of the building of from all suspicions. The fire was still spreading at a recent report of Petrograd street Winthrop Murray Crane, former gov th« project, and made many recom , z - conflicts in which several soviet com- noon. Five tugs are aiding the fire ernor of Massachusetts and for two mendatlons that will hasten the work Buicks Are Mold— : missloners were killed by a mob. fighters. terms a United State* senator Low and reduce coot, latter Mr. Schnee- Joplin A Eldon, the contractors Persistent rumors that War Minister that state, was the fact that he at loch will return when plans for the1 for the grading of a large stretch ot Trotsky had been wounded and that Tn n$ni/ nSHTH tained eminence tn public llfo with hastening of the completion of the the Pacific highway north from this General Budennl, the noted cavalry I out being an orator. Although ha construction work will be made, the I city, are the latest purchasers of leader, was being courtmartlaled, are I “IU\ IU I “11!» ! nil I I served eight years in the senate It amount of the further bond Inope to Buick automobiles. They purchased ,|BO being circulated mass A111rn ■ n.mi ■ At a ____ was said of him that he never made complete it to be determined upon two new touring cars through the C. j meeting tn Petrograd a resolution what really could be called a 'speech' | A. Swope company. (Continued on page 4) demanding peace with the rest of the In that body. The successor of Sen world was reported unanimously, ator Hoar, whose wit and eloquence Senior* Entertain School— adopted. L rang through tho halls of congress, The senior class of the local high ------------------- The National Park to Park High- Crane's chief claim to distinction school last night entertained the oth- Si PER SEAPLANES WILL BE way association caravan arrived in was that of silent leadership and of ADDED TO AMERICAN NAVY .... u u , jer classes of the school with a re the city on schedule today, and J the a party mediator ception. Entertainment was given in New York. Oct. 2 —Super-sea-1 20 vl81tore were guests of the Cham |the shape of two short one act plays, THIRTY OKLAHOMA MEN parts being taken by members of the planes with a cruising radius of suf-!b«r of Commerce at luncheon spread ARRERTED AH PROFITEERS flcient area to enable them to cross b>' tbe Iadte’ in the assembly room, Kansas City. Oct. 2.—Governor senior class A piano solo was given the Pacific ocean are under construe- Included in the caravan were Gus Oklahoma City, Oct. 2.—Thirty by Miss Hortense Hough. The affair Cox came back Into Missouri from Oklahoma City merchants and res was a get-together party for :he new tlon. They will probably be ready HolB1M °f Denver, president of the taurant proprietors were arrested on Oklahoma on the last lap of his west-1 high school students. Refreshments for the navy next spring it was an- Park to Park Highway asoclation; nounced by the manufacturers of air Deavitt, of Montana, its treas- federal warrants charging them with ern tour, Ho spoke at Joplin this ¡ were served. I craft assoiatlon today urer; °- VanWyck. of Washington, profiteering In violation of the Lever morning, arriving here late thia af ternoon Ife will leave for l^remont, ___ __ D. C., representing Stephen T. Ma act. Ohio, tonight, after addressing a POLÌ» are prepared to ther, national park superintendent; St EMIT 1XHM RR TO TERMS x’ \V\I. AVIATOR DROWNED meeting here. D. J. Nee, San Francisco, represent Mill Give It.Mvdinff—> ing the California Auto association; The flrst attraction to be offered Riga, Oct. 2. Polish delegates to Chicago, Oct. 2.—Lieutenant Sid Mrs. S. M. Leviston, of San Francis Now York. Oct. 2.— William G. the peace conference were prepared under the nuapleea of tho High school ney Pedott, of Chicago, was drowned co; Mr. and Mrs. Sands, Oklahoma; will be held In tho High School aud McAdoo will start on his western today to submit the Polish answer when his naval airplane plunged into Mr. and Mrs. Shawver, Shoshone. itorium next Wednesday evening. tour tor tho democratic candidates to the Russian peace terms. I.ake Michigan today. Wyo.; M. W. Lusk, Cleveland, and R. Octol>er 6, at s o'clock, nt which about October 13. Secretary of La M. Davis. Denver, of the White com time William lx>e Greenllef will give bor Wilson will begin his tour of the pany of Cleveland: O. L. Lucier, of his Interpretation of "The Merchant west on October 8. Senator Shep- i the International film service, official of Venice". Thia will prove a rare I pard, of Texas, J. Bruce Kremer, of photographer of the caravan; Major treat to all people of the city and the I Montana and Homer Cummings, are and Mrs. Pershing, New York; Harry- auditorium should he crowded. also to tour the west. i ou Page Eight) uAUli COX COMPLETES TOÜR BY KB- FOR UAUli PAP V "OHEFOR ALLANO ALLF West Jefferson. Ohio, Oct. 2.—Ad vocating an agricultural and indus trial policy to coordinate American resources for the common good. Sen ator Harding In addressing a repub lican rally declared that "one tor all and all for one” must be the motto of Individual eifort U the nation is to achieve its full potentialities. FARMER-LABOR BANKS AM PLANNED FOR WASHINGTON Spokane, Oct. 2.—Plana for the or ganization of 36 cooperative ''Farm er-Labor” banka in Washington and Idaho, including a parent bank and clearing house in this city with a capitalization of $1,000,000 was an nounced by Barney Donaldson, chair man of the newly created “Farmer- Labor Service Bureau”. < London. Oct. 2.—What is describ ed as a "final appeal” to MacSwiney to accept food was made by the doc tor of Brixton prison, according to a bulletin. The mayor was told that he was sinking fast, He refused nourishment however. He is on the 51st day of his hunger strike. Mr. and Mrs A. W. Moon, of Hilt, are spending a few days in the city visiting with friends. They are stop ping at the Josephine. ____ JAPAN BELIEVES UNITED STATES AND « ENGLAND PLAN ID RESTRAIN POLICY 1 Honolulu, Oct. 2.—A leper for 25 Thirty nights of lectures«in his years, but now discharged by ihe I "canvass tabernacle" Is promised to United States public health service in Grants Pass by Evangelist Leonard charge of-the Kallhi Leprosy Invest!-• E. Campbell, beginning Sunday even-: gallon here without an apparent Ing, October 8. The tent has been trace of the disease in her body, is j put up at the corner of Seventh and Berlin, Oct. 2.—Revelations made permitted to send letters home, Ditt the record of Mrs. Rosaline Blaidsell E streets. Song service will be held by William Iflttman concerning the man reported. They told him they of Honolulu, given to the Associated each evening at 7:45 o’clock, and the > Tokio, Oct. 2.—A belief prevail- ■ land's lead? Americans want to be fate of 70 families of German work were Inhospitably received by the, Press tn what Is believed to be the lecture • - wilt begin at 8 o’clock. ing in Japan that the United States • the first in everything. Will they be ing men and 120 German industrial Russian "comrades" who branded first interview of its kind ever pub Evangelist Campbell, boy lecturer and England may join hands in re • content to take the second place in workers, who migrated from Ger them as intruders who had "come to lished. and composer. will be the speaker, straining Japan in her Far Eastern i the solution of world problems?" He many to soviet Russia in tho hope take the bread out of their months” Refined chaulmoogra oil, prepared Mr. Campbell comes to Grants Pass policy has been the basis of much doubts it. saying: “To think that of finding a socialist Utopia, have and they also came into conflict with by Dr. LA. L. Dean and his condreres as a Rlbllcal scholar, especially along comment in the press, America will follow the lead of Eng stirred up a heated debate in the In their hosts over the conditions under of the University ot Hawaii, and ad the lines of prophecies, and in his Japan's brilliant writer, Iichiro land as a younger brother dutifully dependent socialist party of which which they were to work. ministered by Dr. J. T. McDonald, di series of lectures, he says he will give Tokutoml. the editor of the military obeying orders in the solution of the Dittman is leader. He is also a mem The upshot was that the German rector ot the investigation station, prominence to the great world events organ, the Kokuntin, wrote a special world problems and will be the ber of the reichstag. The Freiheit, I rainbow chase re refused to work and Dr. F. E. Troter, president ot the politically, socially, financially, re article on American-English relations unique supporter of England is the the party's organ has been made a demanded that they should be per- territorial board of health and their ligiously and industrially. in which he called the United States observation of a blind man." battleground ever since Dittman re mltted to return to Germany. associates as credited by the public With Mr. Campbell is Oliver H. the “enfant terrible" of the world. Mr. Tokutoml describes the Amer turned from Russia where he went “Conditions in Russia are alto- health officials with having arrested Shrewsbury, who will soon sail for Mr. Tokutoml regards the prospect icans in this way: “In a word the as one of the four delegates sent by get her different from what they were ___ the disease in three years, five, the Orient. Mr. Shrewsburry will of cooperation between England and . American is a rustic person who does the Independent socialists vo the The not know anything about the world. represented to us in Germany,” the months and seven days of treatment. have charge of the musical program America with some anxiety. world’s communist congress, the emigrants told Dittman and the oth Today Mrs. Blaisdell is living at of these lectures. Mrs. J. L. John world will be obliged to agree with He enjoys globe trotting and Europe third Internationale at Moscow. The er members of the German delega her home here going in and out son will preside at the piano and what they agree, he observe., but he is his pleasure ground where he Issue fought in tho columns of the tion, comprising Crlsplen, Daeumig among her friends and taking up the Mrs. W. W. Walker will assist in consoles himself with the thought dumps his money. But on all occa Freiheit is whether German radicals. ' and Stocker. Thu latter two were ¡threads of a busy life which were cut these lectures as vocalist. that much cooperation is unlikely sions he carries his own country in in view of Dittman's revelations, ' ardent champions of a union between when the malady forced her "with c* his travelling bag. Subject of the lecture tomorrow owing to American suspicions of Consequently shall pool their interests with the evening will be “The Crash of Em England and lack of world know-1 aside from satisfying his own desires the Independent socialist party and out the camp". Moscow regime. Her manner is cheerful, almost pires,” dealing with the World War ledge. for pleasure he does not enlighten the soviets. Most of the Germans who migrated vivacious; her mental energy unus in the light of ancient prophecies ofj After summing up his conclusions himself very much by his observa “ We were promised a small factory with formerly members of tho Inde ually keen; her movements quick the Bible, and Mr. Campbell says he as to the position of England as ar- tions of the world. pendent socialist party and others which we were to operato ourselves,” and decisive as those of a person In will give an array of evidence from biter of the world, Mr. Tokutoml In short, Mr. Tokutoml observes, the men stated. “We wore assured were communists. Dittman found tho perfect health; and the akin of her ¡diplomats, statesmen, historians and says: the war has Americanized the world of comfortable dwellings and told the 70 German families waiting In hand, as the Associated Press rep 'travelers concerning the cause of the com- rather than influenced America. Mr. “But there comes En __ „ gland _____ ’s ____ Petrograd for transfer to some in that there was plenty of food, None resentative took it in parting,* is conflict and its outcome. The sub petltor, whom England at least in her Wilson’s advocacy of the democrati of these things were true." dustrial section of Inner Russia. Tho soft and smooth as a baby's. ject for Monday evening will be heart of hearts fears as a formidable* zation of the world was In his opin As a result of their •■mutiny," Industrial workers were In Kolnmnn, Only one apparent • 11 eflect of the “Blasting at the Rock of Ages. All power. America may be called an ion an illustration of how the Amer near Moscow. Dittman reported that they declared, they were promptly disease remains in the occasional seats will be free. exposition of the world’s different I ican tries to measure the world with the German emigrants were outspok stlgmntlzed ns counter revolutlon- twitching of one eye. There the lep- races. But the mainstay of the Am the rule he applies to his own coun nrles by tho local bolshcvlst commis en in their denounclatlon of the Rus rosy bacilli destroyed a nerve before <>n Fishing Trip— erican people is the Anglo-Saxons. try. The American considers that it sian Immigration agents operating in sar. the treatment took effect. J. N. Johnston and Clarence Mes England and America are brother is his mission to force Americaniza Germany who had talked them Into Dittman tried to comfort his de Mrs. Blaisdell is a full blooded senger. senger, of Deer creek, are spending nations with the Atlantic between tion upon other nations. selling their homos and going to Rus jected fellow countrymen after llst- Hawaiian, last of a long line of the week end at Oallce In the hope them. The destiny of the world Is sia. They strongly urged that steps ening t.o their protests, by advising ‘priesteaes of the fkime” ’in the old, that they can head off a few of the now entrusted to these brother na- AGREEMENT REACHED BY be taken to head off any other Ger- them to "live down their first saM Hawaiian temple worship, Before, big fellows before they get to Grants tions. ITALIAN M ASTERS AND HEX man workers who might be on ♦ hnlr impressions." she entered the Kallhl Institute for ’ Pass, the "If they should cooperate in __ Pass. Over a week ago Mr. Johnson i wav to Russia. Daeumfg admitted that he could, treatment she organized the Daugh landed a steelhead that weighed over work of solving the problems of the Most of the men, Dittman aald, readily understand "why a German ters and Sons of Hawaiian Warriors, 10 pounds and he now fishes below world, however unreasonable the re- Milan, Oct. 2.—An agreement on wore penniless, and declared there la unable to ent this Russian bread one of the strongest of Hawaiian so town to get any one that may come suits of such solution maV be, the all the questions remaining unset was no other country so expensive which looks like peat,” but he ad cieties in the Islands. She speaks along that promises to be larger, world will be obliged to agree, • » tled between masters and men grow to live la as the Russia of today. vised the erstwhile cnmmimist on engllsh fluently, also Hawaiian and he is afraid that if he lets him get thinks Mr. Tokutoml. But he asks: ing out of the metal workers move They were cut off from communica thuslaets to resign themselves to tile her information on world aflalrs is to town some one else may beat his “Is America willing to act the role ment. was reached today attar three tion with the outside world and not inevitable. far above the average. of younger brother and follow Eng- hours of discussion. record. V