Image provided by: Josephine Community Library Foundation; Grants Pass, OR
About Grants Pass daily courier. (Grants Pass, Or.) 1919-1931 | View Entire Issue (March 31, 1921)
tante pass Dai In Courier A HW MTATED I'llEHH SERVICE G It AN TH FAHR. JOSEPHINE (JUUNTY. OREGON. THURSDAY, MARCH 31, 1»2I PEACE SOUGHT BÏ FATAL TO FIVE Pits Being Ibrndoo««! Tixlay—<oal for Export Will Be Rationed by (government Cardinal Istgu«« Appro*.« Invi on Plan« of Ibgclnnlng Na'gotiulioii« AAl'h Brutali Charles Declares Military Dictatorship io Parts of Coun Belfast. Mar 31 -(A P > Car Isvndon. Mar 31.— (A. Pi—Coal FREEDOM GIVEN TO CARL NEUF try; Republicans Confident; Troops Massed to Pre- , miners began leaving their pits in «linai la.gue, primate of Ireland, was' AND FRANZ ZIMMER BY FOR Interviewed Tuesday by Blr William | various districts today following the (XH EIGN OFFICB vent Return of Deposed Emperor Goulding. u prominent rsllroail mani ¡union's decision to call a strike at and three other southern Irish union-, midnight, because of the failure to 1st* with the object of opening peace settle the miners' wage demands. The negotiation* between tho Irish re Vienna. Mar 31. (A. P.i -Fur Vienna. Mar 31.—(A P)—Re- government will rigidly ration coal publican parliament and the British' ther report* are that 106,660 men publicans here exhultantly de lare for export gov eminent from the a rat Hungarian garrisons > that the visit of Charles to Budapest: have rallied to Genoral lx bar's col : and the fiasco attending bi* attempt, or*. Anxiety is expressed whether i to regain |w»er has dashed any. (Hvilliuv* Putir Voliryn Into Interior Pair < aplured While Trying to Get the government could bold the south i chance for the restoration of a mon-1 Aft«» Explosion—isiup' Visile Grover Ik-rgdoll, United Heater From Window ern troop* in line Confirmation was i areby, either in Hungary or Aus Draft Evader ' received that martial law has been tria Monarchists reluctantly admit' declared In west Hungary by Charlss' that restoration seem* impossible i supporter* (A. Pt Cork, Mar 31 Washington, Mar 31.—(A. P.)— — tern police are missing «nd five are Vlenna. Mar. 31.—(A. P.f— The The war department announced that Vienna. Mar 31. (A P.)—Re Weiner Journal report* that 30,060 Iwllevrd to have been killed as a re To the first 50 corn growers who Carl Neuf and Franz Zimmer, the two Playing to a large crowd iu the ports received here by various news Jugo Slav troops have been massed will sign up. the Grants Paes and Americans imprisoned in Germany suit of an attack on the police bar racks at Boss Carbery, County Cork, opera house last night, the Univer papers say that ex-Emperor Charlee in Vaar-Asdin, Croatia, with the in Josephine Bank will give enough se for their attempt to kidnap Grover ■Ity of Oregon orchestra won a place has proclaimed a miliary dictator tention of marching on SJteinmanger lect Yellow Dent seed corn to plant C Bergdoll, the .American draft early today The front wall <»! the barracks was In the hearts of all music lover* who ship at Stelnainanger and that Gen and preventing the restoration of the one acre A sample of the corn is evader, were released at noon today. blown In by the explosion at 2 o'clock hoard the concert » The classical eral Jallur was said to be ready at Hapeburgs on the throne of Austria. now on display at tha county agent's The release was ordered by the Ber and bomba were thrown Into the In numbers were particularly pleasing the head of 15,000 troops to march office and is the best seed com of lin foreign office, Brigadir General terior while heavy rifle fire was to the audience while the «neons*, on 'Budapest and by force, if necra- this variety that can be secured. Allen commander at Coblenze it waa Vienna. Mar 31.—(’A. P.>—-It i* Each grower signing will be request maintained on the building by civil consisting of popular *el» lions, were sary. restore Charlee to the throne stated. The sentences were remitted officially reported that Admiral Hor- ed to give special care to the^acre ians The police held the barracks none th« les* enthusiastically re- Ixindon. Mar 31. —(A P l The thy, the ¡Hungarian regent, ba* re planted to this com and to exhibit "pending their good behavior." The until the room In which they were cel ved men will probably reach Coblenz to Exchange Telegraph dispatch from signed, but the report is not con both a 10 ear and 106 ear exhibit at concentrate«! took fire Some ra Mis* .Alberta Potter, in her skill morrow. caped by an upper window fully played vloliu solos, completely Pari* says it is reported that a ma firmed It la also reported that ex- at Josephine county seed show this jority of the Hungarian troops have Emperor Charles i* on his way to coming fall. captured the audience She display ed talent that I* generally found only rallied to the standard of ex-Emper- Budapest from the frontier and that This offer will be of great interest with professional musician* of a high or Charles, who will march on Bu the army, adhering to his cause, is to all boosters of good seed com. and moving. order Tho voice of ’ Frank Jue. dapest the coming seed show promises to be Chinese lyric tenor, was so full of one of the most extensive of the state tone and feeling in the Hinging of | with very keen competition. The Mother Machrwe" t that he was ¡offer is open to men. boys and girls, forced to re|«>at the aumtier I but is limited to one representative .After the concert devotees of Ter to a farm Separate prizes will be I Tokio. 4I*r 31 — (A. P.l—'Reports Prosser. Wash . Mar 31. Up plscore spent an evening dancing to given to each class of men, boys and from the United States of alleged ward* of 506 Indiana are expected music furnished by the leading jaxz girls The K. M. C. N^ill loving cup mistreatment in Japan purporting to Owing to to assumble here In May and «»main.artist* of tits orchestra will again be up as the sweep stakes come from returned travelers from well Into June to avail th*n*eB*^ of the heavy demand upon vitality by Honolulu. T H . Mar. 31.—'A. P.l lx» Angele«. Cal., Mar. 31.—(A. prize for all classes and varieties and the Orient have caused Mr. C. Ino- their undent salmon fishing rights the concert, the mush Ian* were un Two pieces of legislation, one ai- P. t—Development of cJoeer indus the first step toward securing this mats of the Japanese Tourist bu- at Prosser Falls, on the Yakima able to play as long as they wished. ready on the statute books of the trial and commercial relations be- cup is to plant the best seed on the reau to issue a denial at *uch river This privilege, orginally grant territory and the other on its way tween Chile and the Pacific coast of market, says the county agent charges ed the Indians by trusty agreement through the legislature, promise to the United States, with their similar ‘ z Mr. Inomata's statement is con- II' AND ( EREMONA M ARK with Governor Stevens about tie bring the Japanese question to i a geographical and trade problems is1 tained in a letter written to San III III Al. OF CARDIN AL TODAY head in Hawaii. The first is the law the reason for the visit to California year* ago was restored to them by Will Arrange Exhibit— Francisco for the purpose of letting tho last AA'ashlngton state legislature passel late in 1920 regulating for- l of Richard Barrow« special commie Frank South will leave tomorrow over the veto of Governor lanils F elgn language schools and the i sec- I *ioner for Chile to the United States, night for Portland where he will have would-be travelers know that con- trary to stories circulated in the Baltimore. Mar 31 (A P. > — ond Is the bill to regulate the for- I he said here. Hart charge of the Josephine county ex United States in some quarters, With all the splendor of a ceremony Jack Tolles, Carlisle graduate, for Commissioner Barrows, who came hibit of ores at the International Min elgn la ng rage pres*. mer footbull star and business man centuries old. Cardinal Gibbon* was On the language school law tho de to the United State* to solidify com- ing Exposition which is to be held travel in this country is an safe as it is now here making preliminary ar buried today, Archbishop John Bo- partment of public instruction, back ! mercial relations betwen the two there next month. Mr. South states ever was In explaining the letter Mr Ino- rangements for shat the Indians zano, apostolic delegato at Washing- ed by the attorney general, has re- 1 countries, pointed out that the com- that he has already shipped 1500 ho|H« will be a rtword catch Th«* ton, celebrated the pontificia! re- fused to alter its position, despite mercial and industrial problem* of pounds of low grade ore to Portland mata said that if such reports con- Archblshop Glennon, strong representations made by Chi 'Chile are practically identical with and that a large amount of high tinued in the United States it would salmon, as they come up the river qulme mass to spawn are caught hv the Indtuns of St Uxvuia. delivered the funeral nosuke A'ada. consul-general ot J a li ¡those of California. Oregon and j grade ore la being brought in daily. mean a serious injury to tourist trade, not only to the travel in Japan who use tha common gaff hook oration an. and the trading Japanese profes I AA’ashington. This will be sent later by express. but to the entire Orient, for the rea method Much skill Is required to "Chile bears the same relation sional and business men of Hono son that Japan has in the past been gaff salmon and the task requires with South i.Lmenca that those three lulu. one of the chief attractions to those much patience •a as the fisherman must Arree« «M for Drunk<«n«»w»— The law provides that teachers in states do to the United States." he «almon Being ( aught— wait until the fish nukw a Jump for Henry Breizelll was »rested yea-j foreign language schools, which are i said "AVe face the same ocean; we A few chinook salmon are being contemplating Oriental tours. tho falls and then thrust his gaff terday at Selma on a charge of, limited to one hour's instruction i have behind us similar high moun caught now by local fishermen There “We feel that Japan is being mis The fish the Indluns bag art* careful drunkeness on a public highway. He daily for six days of the week, shall tain ranges. Our trade problems are are not many being taken and no represented in America," the state ly dried, salted down and preserved was brought to the city and lodged in pass examinations for permanent I practically the same as those of your extra large ones have yet been hook ment says in part. "This empha for future use. the county jail It was expected that ( certificates at the end of the first Pacific coast, and 1 am here to study ed. | Fishermen are looking for a sizes the importance, not to say ne Salmon will start running up the his h«*aring would come up this af and second years of the act's opera the methods you are using to develop good year, on account of the fact cessity. of more Americans coming tion, in the meantime teaching on your own industries and to expand! that nets are not to be placed tn the to Japan Japan should not be judg (Continued on Pave 2> ternoon before Judge Holman — temporary certificates. The Japan your foreign trade for the benefit I mouth until late in May. This will ed by utterances, spoken or printed, ese held out for certificates which : which this study (will be to my gov- i give some of the early ones a chance of projudice or self-intersted peo nn ITi III Ifl A il A I M 1/ would permit their teachers to give | eminent. to get through the first few miles ple. The truth of these utterance« "We have the same problem of before commercial fishing season should not be blindly accepted, but instructions for five years after pass ing their examinations with the aid shipping that affects you, and we commences. (Continued on Page 2» hope, in time, to see more of our own of interpreters, if necessary. Interpreters will bo permitted for products afloat under our own flag. the examination for the one-year AA'e have the same potentiality in temporary license, says the depart- water power from the Andes that you ment of public Instruction, but for have from the high Sierras and we 31. ( A. P. I Washington. Mar. fore, almost wholly from the Irish the permanent certificate examina hope, just as you do. to develop this Moral responsibility for tho present republican or Sinn Fein viewpoint or, tion the teachers must stand on their water power to furnish the motive disorders In Ireland Is plnccd upon "front sources not unsympathetic to] own linguistic legs, and those legs power to turn the wheels of our in tho British government by the I com- the application of the principle of: dustries. Just as you are facing this must be American. mission of tho committee of One self-determination to Ireland." Thej problem, we realize that on the de- On the heels of this ultimatum Hundred investigating the Irish Ulster Unionist viewpoint and that of Pago Pago. American Samoa. IMar. prove too much of a temptation tor came the bill requiring the foreign velopment of power depends our in- question in a 30,000-woril report I the British authorities in Ireland, the 31.— (A. P.)—LA new code of laws the natives. language press to file translations dustrial future. made public today and covering the report says, were not represented: It i* the custom of the Samoan*, "Behind us lie the resources of the based on American statutes has de of all articles, not bona fide adver- examination of witnesses at pii bile among the witnesses. South American continent just as be- veloped in American Samoa from the I and was then, that when any offense tisements, with the territorial au- hearings hold by the commission In The report points out that the thorities. This measure originated hind you lie the resources of the disturbances of last year which cul is complained of and the offender not Washington last November, Decern - Irish as a result of their resort to United States, and my mission here is minated tn the suicide of the gover known, for the native pastor, or na with the American Ixgton ber and «January arms in 1783. 1798, 1S03, 1848 and to arrange for the purchase by Chil nor. Commander Warren J. Terhune. tive magistrate, to compel each per •Such a law would put this paper Declaring that the Commission 1867, have won from the British par- The revised laws, drawn by Cap son in the village to declare hl* or ean firms of American exports, and was ' under tho disadvantage of liament the abolition of penal laws out of business, and. I believe, every also that Chilean nitrates and other tain Waldo Evans, the new governor, her innocence by oath upon the l other Japanese paper In the islands," lacking tho official British sido of against Roman Catholics, disestab products may be sold within the. and Judge A. M. Noble, and submit Bible. tho case" except as it was gathered lishment of the Irish church, liberal .said Yasutaro Soga. editor of the United States to furnish the values ted to the native chief*, mark an in On one occasion some church I Nlppu J1JI of Honolulu, the most in from documents pre. -nted to It. the land laws and. finally, the Irish teresting change from the early laws money was stolen from the box of a by which we must expect to pay for report declares that “the Imperial home rule act which was passed by fluential Japanese daily in Hawaii. provided for the Samoans. Samoan pastor, where it had been American Imports In Chile. "It Is very radical." he added, "and British army In Ireland has been tho house of lords and commons and When in 1900 the first secretary Placed for safe-keeping. The native guilty of proved excesses, not Incom signed by the king In 1914 "'At the we could not stand the extra ex- of native affairs. Judge Gurr, asked pastor immediately went from house pense." parable in degree and kind with behest of the British torles, under the native rulers of the Samoan vil-i to house with a Bible, swearing in SCHMIDT CONFESSES KIIJ.ING those alleged by the Bryce report on Sir Edward Carson," tlie report says., OF TWO SEATTLE POLICEMEN lages to submit laws to him for re every inmate, but everyone declared Belgium lAtroeltlos. to have b«»en "the act was suspended for the du- Tl RKISH CAVALRY PURSUING commendation to the first governor, innocence. He. however, forgot to T1VI) CREEK DIVISIONS commltteed by the Imperial German ration of the war and was later ren- Walla Walla. Wash . Mar. 31 — (A. he received from various villages a take the oath himself, and the theft army." Tho Bryce commission. It Is derod void by a superseding nct P.)—John Schmidt, who will early copy of the ten commandments of remained a mystery. Constantinople. Mar. 31.—(A. P.) pointed out, was similarly handicap which partitioned Ireland." Some years afterward, the pastor tomorrow be hanged for the murder the Bible. This accompanied with The Turkish cavalry Is pursuing ped The commission In referring to of the two Seattle policemen, sent the suggestion that penalties for became seriously 111 and his rela Thirty-eight witnesses of alleged tho Ulster rebellion of 1914 whl.h. ’wo Greek divisions near Eski-Shehr. for a priest and confessed his sins. their violation should consist of a tives were called together. Having nt-oc’t’oy Inc’ndtftg 1W iv «... It says, wns stnrted by tho torles to says an \ntola report. fine In the shape of a hog and a bar made ertain that they were all In He expressed his repentance erlcan and two English citizens tos- fl :ht home rule, charged that Carson rel of beef. a forgiving mood, he then confessed porti , and m arkets <ii»e .».inie U<e commission. The and other lenders who hnd imported These recommendations were not t^nt he was the enlnrlt Under the rem«" nn (Clmifi that I’« ro-iort I* arms from Germany nml hn«l sot upi --------- - Mr. nnd Mrs. T. M. Stott. Miss adopted In whn,r> for s"ch penalties Pi—vu, -fmin fetf they ex irr*" I” -• ’to of (’■> -tr-ro •« hoar i provisional government In Belfast I Portland. Mar. 31.— (A. P.)—Cat- Lulu Benedict and Mrs. C. D. Firs would have resulted In every offense could n<-f b t forgive him Thcre- nil s'rfo« T' o lc< n'l ” ’ wore forgiven nnd promoted to high j tie and hogs, weak; sheep, steady; ire spending the dnv In Medford vls- vav'ng t’’e wi>- for a fea«t In the vn- 'i-'on it w->s astonishing how ranld .»ggs. unsettled; butter, sternly. Filing with friends. tho report S *vr i -i ’ ' ** v f* >"■’ om In tho British government. 'a»e. This rffUsls de ided. wo «Id •s bls recoveryl RIFLE FIRE YELLOW DENT SEED