UKANTN PAHN. JlJHEl’HfNE COU N TT, ORKGON.
loi,. XI.. N». Kl.
BROOKLYN TEAM NABS
SECOND SERIES GAME
HARDING STARTS
ACTUIE mb
s*mator leste* Home Tlii- Mortilo«
ou Nvvlng Into Mltltllfurttl——Ne»-
eroi Trip* l’Iiinn**!
Grimes Puzzles Cleveland With Spitball; Brooklyn Bunches
Marlon. Oct. S
With his deoar
.
Hits; Both Teams Now Have One Game Each
'tore today for the mlddlewest, H«li-
(ator Harding begin- his -p«•••• h-mak-
to Credit; Bagby is Relieved
Ing swing that will keep him on a
ftbbel» Field. Brooklyn. Oct «
ll.irlelaxh Grime« filled a tin* «»«• ot
whitewash on the barks of th# < I»*«-
land Indiana and the Brooklyn Na
t loti a walked off the field with a
th re« to nothing victory In the aec
ond game of th« world Herl»«. Pitcher
(Irtataa* «pitbell tied the back» of
tho Clevelander« In knot«. while
Brooklyn*« bluing «an timely, the
National leaguer« aettinn their hit«
In rlu«ler» when hila meant run»
Brooklyn evened the »eriee today.
each club having won a name aider*
lUghy pitched for Cleveland up to
WHOLE NI MBER UM8-
WKDNE n DA 1. OCTOilEK «, 11*20.
tour almoKt continuously until late
October HI» present trip Is through
the seventh when I'hle went Into the Indiana. Illinois. Iowa. Nebraska,
box. The lineup was »« follows
I Missouri and Oklahoma and return
Cleveland; Jamison, If.. Wambe- here Monday 1<ate Tuesday he will
gtus, Zb ; Burns balled for Wamb« leave for a trip through Tennessee.
Kentucky. Indiana. Illinois and Mis
gaaa In Hth. IMuaate. lb.; »imaker. souri, and then after three days of
cf.; Smith. rf ; Gardiner, 3b.; W j rest will go east.
Johnson, lb.. Sewell, «».; O’Neill. <■.;
Bagby p ; I’hle, p . Graney batted
ior Hugby In 7th; Niinsmaker batted
for t'hle In 9th
Brooklyn Olson, sa . J John «ton,
3b.; Griffith, rf ; Wheat, If.; Myers,
rf : Konetehy. 1b; Kllduff. 2b.; Mil
ler. c.; Grim««, p.
BACCARAT TABLFS IN
FRANCE ARE* POPULAR
I'rotu Attacking Crowd
ixmdon. Oct fl .Pussyfoot John-
WAICNINGN NEVI’ BIT NOT TO
sotl, lhe American temperance work
OPERATE I NTII. PRK E OF
er, narrowly escaped from an anury
PRODI IT .WVAJMTO*
French General Weygand Takes Commaid of Wraigel’s
Anti Bolsheviki Army Operating in Sooth Rusia;
Ukranian Commander Joins With Russians
crowd which Interrupted his meeting
last nivht at Reading, Berkshire,
and tried to break through the lock
Pari*. Oct. 3.—Wann« and Mos
ed doors of the hall to reach him, ac
cording to a dispatch to the Evening cow diipatche« announce that the
New
The - rowd threw bomb« of armisti e between soviet Russia and
Poland had lieen signed.
evil
«melting
chemicals.
Bu-lneos I I omm I In One < <>111 munit y
GUARDS PLACED WHO PLANTS
A h a ItewuU of Threat*—Store I«
Burned to (,r«uu<l
Atlanta. Ga . Oct 6 —The destruc
tion of several cotton gins and bus
iness houses in the cotton belt after
annotmous threats had been received
by operators and business men warn
ing them to cease activities whilst ni
ton 1« selling at what many farmer«
termed, prices below the cost of pro
duction. has resulted in the placing
of armed guards around several gins
and the closing of business in at least
one community. The burning of a
second gin in the Stamford. Texas,
territory within two days wag report
ed last night. The general mercan
tile e»tabli«hment of Taylor and Bar-
net! at Hanceville. Alabama, was des
troyed yesterday after the proprietors
Ignored orders to close the business
until cotton sell« at 41 cents a pound
ACTION STARTED FOR
DIVORCE ANNULMENT
the preliminary peace treaty will be
signed October S according to a Po
lish official statemeut. which adds
that Lithuanian troops «re fighting
Copenhagen, Oct. 6.— French Gen alongside the bolshevik troop«.
eral Weygand ha» left for South Rus
sia to take supreme command of Gen
I^Midon. Oct. 6 --General Makno.
eral Wrangel'a troop», say* the Tl- tbe I’kranian commander who has
dende.
been operating under General WraB-
gel. tbe anti-bolshevik leader, baa
Riga, Oct. «.—The armistice be joined the bolshevik! opposing Wr«n-
tween soviet Russia and Poland and gel, says a Moscow wireless
Reno. Nev., Oct. 3.—Motien of at
I their governments in making silver
torneys representing Mary Pickford
purchases.
to quash a suit brought by the state ;
Mr. Shirraa ascribed th* fluctua
'America Find.’ To them It sound«
of Nevada, through L. B Fowler, at- .
Pari«, Oct fl .Millions of francs
tions in the price of silver in the last
like the words that used to come were won und lost across the bx rt
lorney general, to annul her divorce,
few years to a decline tn production
from aero»» the llhine ’Deutsch
from Owen Moore will be heard Oc-'
rat table» and the roulette wheels In
and a great demand for coinag* ow
land uber alii«»’ not with the same
tober 9 at tbe county court at Mln-|
ing to the war. Asia, he said, had
aggressiven»-«». but with something a frenzy of gambling for stake«
den, Nev., where the divorce was
enjoyed prosperity by exporting it«
hitherto unknown in Frauce during
of the »am« selfishness.”
granted March 2. 1920. The suit al
Ixvndon. Oct. 6.— The ;imes are
so attacks Miss Pickford’s later mar-| propitious for improving .‘he curren product« during the war and India
th« season which 1» drawing to a
Sludent«* Are I’ledgcd—
rlage to Douglas Fairbanks.
Ml»« cy systems of those silver countries and China had taken payment by im
close at Deauville
Now York, Oct. « The »loitan
Word front the University of Ore
Pickford.
Moore
and
Fairbanks
are not possessing the gold standard, as porting precious metals, notably sil
Foreigner» have been conspicuous
ver.
*• K morte a First” I» unpopular among gon bring» the news that -Mi»» Huth
motion picture stars.
serts Findlay Shirr*«, director of sta
European* who deem It an expre»- Glesler has been pledged to the PI I In keeping the croupier« busy passing
The suit asks annulment chiefly on: tistics in India. In a paper which has
»Ion of »elflahneaa, according to the Beta Phi sorority. I»unaid Kearns, a stakes over the green carpets. Mr.
the ground that the principals were been issued by the league of nations Return*: From l’i>rtl*nd—
not residents of Nevada when the in connection with the International
F. 3 Bramwell, president of the
Bev. Chari«« 3 Mm farland. general freshman at the university this year, ! Vagllano, a Greek «hip owner, ac-
ha« been pledged to the licit» T»u 'cordiftu to J/Avenir, won 3.sou.uno
divorce was granted Defense attor finacial conference held at Brussels Chamber of Commerce, returned thi«
sncralary of the federal council of the
M.
Michel
Is
registered
at
the
Delta fraternity. Grant» Pas» I«
neys. it was announced recently, will this month.
morning from Portland where he at
1 franc« at baccarat In a sitting of Western from Minneapolis.
Church»» of Christ In America who
well represented at the university
claim that the state of. Nevada has
tended the meetings of the represen
han Just returned from a aerie» of
I
three
hour»
and
a
half
at
Deauville
Mr
3hirras
declares
that
the
ad
Mrs. C. R Bennett returned to no right to sue in the case and has
thia year, the attendance there lining
tatives of ports and waterways. As
religious conference» in Switzerland
vantages
of
the
adoption
of
the
gold
Redding
this
morning
after
a
visit
at
(recently.
On
the
other
hand,
an
Am
larger than ever before from thia
given Attorney General Fowler no
Grants Pass 1« interested in thia sub
and a »peaking tour of Western Eu city. Wlllamtle University bus five
standard
as
a
system
of
currency
erican, whom lhe new»pa;>er» refer Selma with Mrs W. L. Tuttle
authority to use the state's name in
ject inasmuch a* eom- dl.y tho out
ropean el t lee
■indents from Grants Pass while the to as the "1N»ba«co King" Is said to
Mrs. O. R Haye» 1«. spending the the matter. Claim also will tie made have been incontestably proved in the let of Southern Dr*5os product« will
'•■For an America« to be in Eu O. A C has the majority of college
case
of
India,
especially
between
the
.Tndonbtedly be threugX Crescent
have dropped 1.500.000 franc» be day In Medford attending to business that the decree ».as obtained under years 1898 and J917.
rope at thia time I» humiliating and
eludente attending from here
a Nevada law that does not require
City. Mr. Bramwell is verJ3 optimis
tween midnight and daybreak one matters
sometime« almoat
disheartening,
The statistician ffioiats out that an
George Morton, of Detroit, Is reg residence if both parties are present
tic over tbe outlook for a highway
night during the past week
add Or Macfarlond ”! found thé Examination Ortotter SB—
agreement between governments re
istered
at
the
Western
hotel
for
a
few
at
the
hearing
and
at
the
granting
of
to Crescent City in the near future,
"Oh.
pshaw,
It
only
means
a
little
The t'nlted States civil service
people there oonfuaed. They do not
garding
the
purchase
«nd
sale
of
sil
the decree.
• I
know what to make of America’» commission announces that a file over 3100,000,”’ he is reported to days.
ver might lead to a steadying of the this being one of Grants I’ m «’ great
Mis« Pickford, whose name ap
est needs.
Mr. and Mrs. H. W Parmelee, of
present aloofno»». It «eem» to them clerk,examination (not first grade have told a consoling piker.
market and prevent speculation.
Rut the most extraordinary player Waldo, were local visitors yesterday, 1 pear« in the court records as Gladys "During the war.” he says, "when
• itch a »harp contra»! to our attitude clerical examination, a» previously
M. Moore, “known as Gladys M. Fair- ,
during the war. I found the people advertised) will be held in this city of them all is a young Cuban. a sugar registerisg at the Josephine.
the allied governments purchased sil Many Taxes Paid—
of Europe Industrious!» working at on October 23. Vacancies In the po grower of Havana, who 1» said to
Roy Plalsted Is a local visitor for banks," will be represented by Gavin ver jointly, competition wag to a con
With yesterday the last day to pay
the problem* of reconstruction. While sition of file clerk, In the federal have won about 5,000.tiou francs af a few days, having come over yester McNab, Sau Francisco and Judge P. siderable extent, ss far as tbe gov
taxes
before a ivenalty was charged,
A.
MeCarrnon.
Nevada
attorney.
their economic need« are great, one classified
service, salaries from ter losing 3.500.000 In August. day from Brookings.
ernments were concerned, restricted many people paid up their second in
of their greatest need» at lhe proa- 31000 to 31200 per annum, and fu "Whether winning or losing his face
Mies Jane M. Pengergast returned
and the benefits of concerted action stallment. In all, over 375,000 was
ent time la that of moral »tipport.
ture vacancies requiring similar qual never give« him away to his oppon to Portland Iasi Hight after a visit
were clear.”
taken in yesterday, the office force
"The American nation and lhe ifications. at this or higher or lower ents and his 111.inner of dealing re at Crescent Pity for several weeks.
He
re-ailed
’
hat
an
American
com
being kept busy taking in the money.
American people, on tho whole have salaries, will be filled from thin ex- mid» one of a cat gently stretching
Mr»> George Pratt Is expected to
mission on in’ernational exchange in During the whole year there has
not as yet Buffered Irretrievably In amination. For Information and ap out Its paw.” a French theatrical
arrive today from Silverton to vtsft
1903 had pointed out that a steady been 3250,000 paid in to the sheriff’s
the estimation« of European»,” con plication blank. Form 1371, apply to manager Just returning from Deau for several weeks in the city with rel
demand on the part of the govern office. Of this but $30 was gold, two
tinued Dr. Matfarland "They still the local secretary, hoard of civil ser ville told Journalists.
ments for the silver which they ac 35 gold pieces and one 320 piece be
atives.
believe In tie and look to us for help. vice examiners, at the postoffice, this
tually needed from year to year ing handed in. An interest rate of
Mrs. Mary Dagnr. of Holland. Kan
Hut thoughtful Europeans are dis city, or to tho secretary. 11th I’. S
would tend to steady its price. He 1 per cent per month will be charg
sas. stopped off here yesterday to'
turbed about one phraaa which fre civil service district. 303 poetoffice
Washington. OcV 5 The Ameri also recalled that a Mexican commis ed now on all delinquent taxes. On
visit points of interest. She is reg
quently reach*« aero»« the seas— building, Seattle, Wash.
can Red Cross appropriateti 3590.000 sion had suggested that the Bank of November 5 a flat penalty of 5 per
istered at the Josephine.
Mr. and Mrs. George Whoiv stop for thè relief of tatuine sufterers in England and Bank of France act for cent is added.
ped at the Oxford last night while on thè Pekltig, China, district.
their way home to Portland after an
I
lr ■
automobile trip south.
Corvallis. (let. 6 G. l-ansiqgl Carl Winetrout went to Glendale Slutttuck Go«* South—
Mr. and Mrs. E. 3. Shattuck left
I Hurd, the well known Oregon news-i this morning to do a little advertis
ing for the Peerless Clothing- com this afternoon for San Francisco af
papermau ha» bought a third Inter
ter several weeks In fhe city. Mr.
est ip the Corvallis Gazette-Times. pany's sale.
Mrs. J. O. Phelps arrived this Shattuck came here to Inspect the
Posen, Poland, Oct. H
An official
An American artillery officer who This is the interest formerly owned morning from her home at Santa
work being done by his company on
of the French military mission In had spent a year in Russia and had by Charles L. Hprlnger who retires Ana, Cal., and will visit here with
the local irrigation project. While
New York. Oct. S. -Continued per ties but the persecution was not mit
Poland has told the Associated Press been under fire at the Polish front to take a long rest,
her sisters, Mrs. J. D. Fry and Mrs. here he Tiiet Mr. Schneeloch, who is secution of Jews, with bloodshed and igated. he charged.
N. R. Moofe, news editor and C. E.
correspondent that the Polish army told lhe correspondent he had seen
Edus Pollock.
financing the project by taking the cruelty, in Poland and Hungary is
"Immediately after the first vic
would havu been conquered hy thy the «Poles “plant their artillery In the Ingalls, editor, exchange Interest and
Mrs. George Relcher returned to district bonds, and the gentlemen reported
by Morris Rothenberg, tories all Jewish soldiers were driven
bolshevik armies of ‘Ruasia If the most ridiculous places, on th« ex positions. Hurd will be business Glendale thia morning after spending, conferred ns to further developments.
hairman of the executive committee from the various fronts,” Mr. Roth
French had not supported the Pole«. posed sides of hills and right in the manager.
several weeks in the Good Samaritan
of the Provisional American Jewish enberg asserted, "their ammunltlo*
This notwithstanding th* fact that open, when they could have readily
JAMES SLOAN
congress who returned here recent was taken away, their uniforms re
CHANCELLl R FEHL .UBACH hospital In this city. She U much!
the Pole» heal back the'Russian drive concealed It and made it effective.”
improved.
ly from the Jewish World Relief con moved and they were put under
on Warsaw.
A neutral aviator who had flown
John L. Fertig Is expected to ar
ference in Carlsbad
Mr. Rothen guard as though they were offend
The French official based his state over the front several times when
rive today from laiJuanta. Colo . fur
berg
declares
that
attacks
on Jews ers. The Polish soldiers began to
ment upon hl« belief that the Russian "bnttlea” were said to be In progress
a visit with his brother, Jerome T.
in Poland have ceased at no time regard the Jewish soldiers as crim
army was »ttperlor to the Polish army «aid whal he saw of the fighting was
Fertig, engineer for the local irriga
since the armistice. He says that inals. Every time the Pole« took a
as an effective fighting machine, with "two armies keeping about three
tion project. Mr. Fertig is mechan
while anti-Sometic ex. esses in Poland city they killed Jews who came tbeir
the exception of tho German-trained hours apart, the Poles retreating
ical engineer for the Santa Fe rail
were mitigated by the protest meet way, and numbers of old Jews were
troops of Posen. The Frenchman when the Russians advanced, and the
road. He will spend a week here.
ings held in America, "assaults up shot without trial. Tbe officers in
salt| he believed the Ru«»lat| organi ItuHslan« tupnlug wliqq lhe Poles
on persons and properties in a small charge afterward said that they had
sation ha» beep, at)d still 1». under turned and advanced." He said this
FOURTH VICTIM OF THE.
er degree continued throughout Po killed bolsheviks. This was a lie. In
estimated and because of this ten "schedule «ometlme» got disarranged
ROBINETTE FIRE DIES;
land.”
order to cover these outrages the
dency to belittle the Russian armies and there was a collision between op
"Gradually these assaults assumed minister of war issued an announce
the menace to Poland’s existence, If posing detachments," but he had not
Boise. Ida., Oct. t>
P. E. Parson»
larger proportions." said Mr. Rothen ment that a large number of armed
not to all Western Europe, remains witnessed any of these clashes.
died last night, making the fourth
berg. "until v ithin the last few Jewish bolsheviks were found in
Imminent an<^ real-
A number qf Pq||«h otllosrs with
victim of the Robinette hotel fire
months Jews have found it unsafe to many cities This information waa
The 'official said some Russian whom tha correspondent talked said
walk in the streets. Conditions came fed only to the Pole« and was not
unite were poorly equipped but it they were forced to admit the French
to such a state that the Jewish depu mentioned in the dispatches for the
wai not true the army was ”a bare saved the day but the weakness of
ties In the Polish parliament appeal outside world because it waa appar
foot rabble.” He was convinced the their officers was explained by the
ed to the minister of war and Minis ent that these statements could not
majority of the Ru«»lan divisions fact that In former years Poles had
ter President Wltos, who promised be substantiated.”
w.«re "well-organized units of good- not been permitted tq holt, commis
that they would tala steps to »top
Mr. Rothenberg charges that the
flg||tlng mep, much bptter officered sions In lhe army, either In Runwlan.
these outrages but nothing was minister of war and Minister Presi
than the Poles.” The Poles had 25, tierman, or Austrian-Poland, and
done.”
dent Witos refused to see Jewish
000 officer« but only 3,000 of them that the tlmo had been too short to
Jame« Sloan, known a« "Simmy" tc
Mr Rothenberg said that during delegations who called upon them to
ever went to the front although they develop a staff of highly trained of-
-ee pr»«ld;nt»—Roo»«v»lt, Taft
d ' the advance of the soviet armies on
Kansas City Oct. 3 - Senator
complain about antl-Semetlc out
were sorely needed there, he said. fleerg.
Reed of Missouri, in h telegram late 1 l«on—will again broom- a familiar Warsaw the Jews r< .idily enlisted In rages
"The spirit of the Jews in
jure thi« fall to people who welcome
There was evidence that certain Po
toda,’ 1 > Sonntor Spencer, a * lied ureaidentlal nominee«. Jimmy will be the Polish armies, but that they were ‘Poland is being utterly crushed by
lito companies had fought without
Mr. and Mrs. A, W. Newell arrived
that President Wilson In an address senator Harding's bodyguard through j attacked and persecuted by the Poles these terrible events «nd they feel
officer«, he asserted, and that during this morning from California and
at the pence conference made h ut the oampalgn, having rorlrjc
and were given the "most filthy and they cannot much longer bear up nn-
the retreat these were without com will spend the winter at their home
statement pledging aid to Rumnnln . otn the United State« «eeict «ervte» menial work to perform." The Jews leas these terrible excessee are «top
th th|a city.
mander«.
accept tha post.
complained to the military authori- ped." he added
aud Serbia.
*
"AMERICA FIRST” NOT
LIKED BY EUROPEANS
SHIRRAS SAYS GOLD
REO CROSS GIVES TO
CHINESE SUFFERERS
HURD BOYS INTEREST
IN CORVALLIS PAPER
REED HOLDS WILSON
PLEDGED U.S.SUPPORT