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About Grants Pass daily courier. (Grants Pass, Or.) 1919-1931 | View Entire Issue (May 26, 1921)
University of Ore. Library runts JJass Oailn Courier 1NM4M1ATED I'REHH HERVICE VOL. XI., No. HAT GIUNTH PA h H. JfMKI'HINK (XU’NTY. ORBGON, WtfOU-: MMBEK S2HA- THIRHDAY, .MAY -M. 1021. IliiklHtnd llild < mi Forgery <1»arg>- \\ tail«- l'olfo-c l»rag ladle I nlon for Body of Woman Dinner at Executive Mannion Is the Scene of Dtacua«lon National Buslnewi Seattle, May 26.—<A P ) Mrs M ANY GRANTS PASH EIGHTH WHITE l-OI’l LVTION IN« REABFJ4 Washington, May 26.—(A. P.)— ^ m .ANY INJURED WHEN GUANTI Kate E Mahoney, a wealthy Seattle (.IODI: SII DI M s (.UN PASH AND MEDFORD BIS The administration’s policy of pro DMA 17 PM « I M M M*G I woman, who has been miming since* HONORS SAME PERIOD OVERTURNS moting exportaxion as a means to- / April, when she left on a trip with] ward restoration of norma) business Mahoney, her husband, James E was discussed at the White House wrote him from Cube after their dinner last night, attended by Sec separation, Mahoney's counsel said today retaries Mellon and Hoover, J. P. Mahoney la held on a forgery Morgan, Paul Warburg and other charge In connection with an alleged | Colley Gray, Brother of Mrs. T. Ç. Far-mwing Econonilal l»«>lng Mm It fraudulent ordor granting him ac <lty Junior lligli I’romotew larg«-*t t'i-nou» Figure« I»« u < m I Today Show prominent financiers Booth. Loses Life la Accident oa Hind T»»w<h«-r Croirai Powwa Notable Ito reane in All Foreign Clam in the History of City cess \o Mrs Mahoney's safe deposit Peoples Except Japanese and Gain Power for HI iiim -II Highway Yewterday Institution box Th« t»ollce are dragging latke« Union for a trunk which they think contains the woman's body B> iM»iurrin THOMPSON Washington, May 28.— (A. P.) — ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦»♦• a ♦ Thu names ot 98 eighth grade pu ♦ i Written for th« I N H » The Dead pils in the schools ot Josephln«-' A notable decrease In the foreign ♦ Vienna. May 26- -II. N. B ) HIGHWAY 4XIMMIKSIOX OPENS Colley Gray, of Fort Klam ♦ I county who have sue« ewfully poase<l population of Oregon, except the ♦ ath. brother of Mrs T. C. Booth ♦ —«Herr Hugo Stlnn««. the Germun llllm FOR Itoti» (XtNHTRKTION ] the state eighth grade examinations, Japanese, is shown In census figures ♦ of this city. coal king, has turned up In Cm trai ] were announced today by Alice M which were Issued here today. Of ♦ Europe He him acquired a rontroi- ♦ Bacon, county school superlntend«*nt.I the total population of 783,389, the] The Injured 4» Portland. May 26 (A P. I Th«- whites comprised 769,146, Indians, ♦ •ng Internet in th«« Alplnen and Moli Mrs. Clyde Harper, of Grants ♦ Ot this number 52 were accepted Leipsic, May 26.—(A. P.J—Ser tan Iron «works In Styria, ati d it is highway commission today opened . from Grants Paas. Dtst. No. 7, the 4.590; Japanese, 4,151; Chinese. geant Heyne, the first German to be Pass, two broken ribs. ♦ blds for about 100 miles of road rumored that this Is the beginning Adjutant Sidney Cook, Salva- ♦ largest number to be promoted to 3,090, negroes, 214 4. and all others, tried on charges arising from the war ♦ of an attempt to corner the whole work of various kinds and numerous < high school from the Junior high In 268. ♦ Army worker of Portland, brok ♦ 1 was sentenced today to ten months iron Industry of this part of the bridges The awards will be made the history ot that school. The coun-; The Chinese have decreased 58 per | imprisonment for mistreating British ♦ en hand and minor bruises. ♦ world, and that ntuti thia la not th« late today. Tomorrow blds will be ty schools, outside ot Grants Pass.« cent In the last decade. During the f soldiers at the prison camp at Herne. ♦ Major Tinney, of Medford, ♦ limit of bls ambitions, for he Is seek- opened for $1,000,000 worth of good promoted 46 pupils. same period the white population has Westphalia ♦ dislocated shoulder. ♦ Ina also to acquire an Intereat In In roads bonds Cecil Jennings, driver, of ♦ Below are the name« ot those pro-; Increased 17.4 per cent. The Jap ♦ Medford, cracked rib, stunned. ♦ fluential newspaper» In Vienna and nioted. In the list from Granta Pass anese increased 21 4 per cent and the Budapest. Nevertheleea. he Is keep ♦ Marshall Hooper, of Klam -4» the names marked with an asterisk negroes 4 3.7 per cent ing bls movements very quiet, he la' ath Falls, sprained back and ♦ oeing three ot pupils who (»assed with represented by dlacreet agents, anil ♦ head bruises. ♦ honors FOI It BRITISH BATTALION'S hla action« have attracted very little ♦ MOVE INTO UPPER SILESIA Grant« Pass. Dist. No. 7 — Gather-' attention One dead and five injured was the In« Carrel*. Gertrude Chapin*. Her- Ever alnce the flrat conference l»e- toll of an auto crash when the Med |riot Clapp*. Grace Collins, Helen Ed Iwean Germany and the ollies at K| m J ( A. P.1—(Four! London. May 28. ford stage. 3 minutes overdue, struck wards«. Bernice Everton*, Louise Htlnnea hue b««en considered the battalions of British troops on the a cow on the highway three miles Everton. Bertha Ford. Patricia Portland, May 26 -«(A. P.) A Mephlstophol«« uf the German eltua-] Rhine today began to advance on Redwood City, Cal , May 28.—(A. south of this city at 6 o’clock last Ron. It la a role for which nature rise of three tenths of a foot tn the Gale*. Bertha Glgler*. Flora Gil- Upper Silesia to reinforce the allied P.)—Captain Eddie Rickenbacker. evening and overturned, pinning the ha> fittingly cast him. giving hint a Snake river, which has l»e«<n dropping lott*, Edna Griffin*. Marie Har-I troops there. the American ace. left here at 8.32 passengers underneath the iyeavy beck*. Martha Porter*. Vernons «luring th« i»ast few days, and a con bent nose, a fiercely black moustache a. m. on a flight whl-ih he hopes will body. and sharp. Insolent little eyes Ho is tinued rise In tho Columbia were Snively, Marie Campbell, Edith Ayer, l That any of the occupants of the £100.00.000 DEFICIENCY' take him to Washington. D. C., to Sybia Brickell*. Effie De Grasse,] th« flood developments today A con Indeed the personification ot lnso-, bus escaped was due to the ; «ecu liar BILL PASSI» HOUSE morrow night. lence He knows coal and Irou from ; tinued slow rise In the Willamette Dorothy !>odge. Ruth Newman*. Et- position in which the car landed. Af- the ground up. When he Inhorited was forecast, with a stag«* Sunday of fle Patton*. Cora Randle*. Virginia , ter striking the animal, the machine Rengstorff. Appalonia Sauer, Mary reading was 22, 22.8 feet Today ’ s Washington. May 28.—(A. P.) — hla father's estate and mines, at the Reno, Nevada, May 26^—(A. P.) — proceeded several feet before the Jane Sibley. Ada Swoape, Freda Tut-; a rise of .3 feet, A dredge is at The house passed the $100,000,000 age of 19, ho was working ae a pit ] Ricken backer passed over Reno today heavy rear swung around and off the boy. and. although ho was a mere1 work strengthening the threatened tie. Ruby Varner*. Katherine Wise ] deficiency bill today, carrying »200,- at 11:15 a. m. pavement, the front wheel catching youngster when he became the Ger dike at Woodland, The St. Helens man. Elizabeth Wood, Hazel Wheel-1 000 for prohibition enforcement un a concrete culvert, flipping the body er. Dorothy Zimmerman*, Wendell Js closed owing creosoting company 1. The bill now goes to Ul July tile man coal king, with his ships the onto the banks of a two foot drainage «Grout, Milton Green. Wade Harmon. senate. Hugo Stinne« the Elizabeth St Innes to the higti water at St Helens. ditch, running at right angles to the Malcolm Hillis, Howard Knapp., and the whole Stlnneo family In the roadway. The two ditch banks sup Richard lavton, Philip Mark, George farthest i>orts of tho world, he has, Portland. May 26.—(A. P.J — WETLAND MARKETS ported the rear of the machine, i Walcott, I«ouis Wyrick, Sidney cou rage from th«» beginning displayed Prospects of a rorioua flood in the I keeping Its weight from the passen Young*, John Eads. William Eads, an<l Initiative, daring and sagacity Columbia Is considerably lessened Choice Steers.............. 17.50 0 »7.75 gers who fell into the ditch bed. With these characteristics, combined today by cool weather In the water I John Hendren. Jam«*s Hoxie. Jesse Hogs, prime light.. »9.00 © »9.25 Five of the pasengers escaped with hard work and with ruthless1 shed area, said Observer Wells. A Rtgel, Albert Smith*. laurence Prime Lambs .............. »7.00 @ »7.50 without serious injury The two profiteering during the war. he has r«i»ort from Woodland this afternoon Schmidt*. James Price, Kenneth Eggs, buying price.......... 16c & 18c Increased Ills fortune many-fold. ’ ' said that officials declared the dike, Tom pk Ina. University of Oregon, Eugene. May children of Mrs. Harper were in the Butter ................................................25c Dist. No. 2—Petry Sowell. 26 —(A. P.)—Helen Uster. Lula bus at the time of the crash but were As a [Hilltlclan his rise has been ' to be In no danger and discredited not bruised. August Brauns, of Port very recent. He pnrvhasiHl a number the alarming reports A dredge and - Dist. No. 3—Murphy Young, Lou ta Portland. May 26.—< A. P.)—Cat Garrett, Remoh Tryer and Corlyss of ne««rs|»a|>ers during the war. but; «ernpors are at work M. Mauer, Blanche Virginia Parmen ] tle. »low. Hogs, 25c lower; sheep Courtney, representing the "Toka,” land. sustained a lacerated forehead. hla chief gains wore made at the last the annual publication of the Grants Jo Ray and W. Gilbert, both of Dist. No. 5—«Blanche Elizabeth slow; eggs and butter, steady elections, when the Deutsche Volk- Pass high school, were delegates at Grants Pass, were without serious Daws. Charles Frederick Daws, ! apart«*1. of which he Is chief spirit.« AA ilf«.nl Allen in Portland. the first annual convention of high injury. Charles Bouaetnau, Merideth Blun-I I probably t.o odier n an In dell, Paul Robinson, Willard Love Accident Unavoidable made great stride« Many propio1 There H school editors held ax the school of In the estimation of car occupants, think him tho most dangerous poli-| the state who like»« the Rogue river lace. journalism at the university Friday tlcian in Germany, but. as a matter, more than Wilford Allen of Grants morning. May 20th. Helen Uster was the accident seemed unavoidable. Dist. No. 6—Marjorie Smith. of fact, ho Is one of the few realists 1 P iuis . who Is registered at the Mult elected secretary-treasurer tor next Testimony shows that the machine Dtet. No. 8—Hasel Carl, Violet M. In the Gorman situation, because he.I nomah Mr. Allen is a 100 per cent Loesch, Inez M. latngtwalt. 1 year. She had a place on the pro- was proceeding at a rate of 27 miles more than anyone else, reallz«« that «•Portaman when It con.es to a ,earo- | gram, giving a talk "Getting Sub per hour. As the hill near the Ament Dtet. No. 13—Vesta Hibbert. there Is no hoi»e tn i»olltical pan-l1'1* ° *'o: >‘i«rs Mr. Allen Dist. No. 15—Harold Reed. scriptions for an Annual." Lula Gar dam w as ixissed a cow was seen to be areas, that Germany's problem la n “ d'*'1 -••d ;,b a,nK •>< .tllity Dist. No. 20—Arthur LaVerne rett was made a member of the regte- feeding in the ditch to the right of purely and simply an «w-onomlc one j ' ’ fown dc'.ri «iihermen a', the Jess. Marvin Kermit Barrack. the highway, facing away from the bejtration committee. Memorial day srvices are to The allies know him as the biller- ' ®f it-»*' •, contending that Forty-two delegates were present, road. Just before the car came op Dist. No. 23 Edward Richard Mc- conducted on May 30th, by the local tho commercial Interenta were Jrop- eet fighter in Germany 1 Neverthe- ,"" An posite the animal, a dog, apparently poets of the G. A R. and W. ’R. C. representing 20 high schools. lees, unlike some Germans, ho knows j »rdlzlng the reputation of the stream the property of a small girl who was Oregon high school press association Dtst. No. 24 — Alma oLuise Sickles, with oxercisee in the Rivoli theater . ..... Vi. when he Is beaten In one field and as a sportsman's nieces. Mr Allen Stuart Earle Donohue, Raoul Del building at Sixth and E streets. was formed; a constitution adopted; walking beside the pavement on the has been an ardent ohampion of the Monte Seybold, Lynn Joliffe, True when is the moment to turn his Rev. L. Myron Boozer will deliver officers and committees elected for left, dashed from behind the brush plan to closo the Rogue river to all Protzman, Edward Kerlinger. forts elsewhere. He knows, for the Memorial day address. latter the coming year; and an annual straight at the cow's head. but anglers for a period of y«*ars, but- Dist. No. 25—Viola Turner. stance, that his Iron works in The cow swung abruptly around, the Post and Corps will march to the meeting date at the school of jour at the recent .session of the legisla Ruhr district are theratened Dist. No. 27—«Lillie Weiderkeher. j Sixth street bridge and scatter flow- nalism set for each year at the time directly in the path of the machine, ture the Rogue troubles were amlc-| French occuimtlon and that what Is Maurice Lee. Franklin Billie ------ Stew-ers on the waters of the Rogue in of meeting of the high school debate which was keeping to the right of far more important, Germany hai)|ably adjusted The sport fish of the ard, Arthur Fred Espy. the highway. Rather than to strike I memory of the unknown dead. The league. loot its chief sources of Iron orP Rogue la the steelhead and when an Dist. No. 28—Donald Nixon Neil- order of the program will be as fol High school annuals, magazines, the animal a slanting blow and be home [ angler catches one he la regarded Eighty per cent of Germany's j son. news notes and newspapers are the sent spinning sideways, and rather lows: production of iron ore was lost when wl,b envy and awe. There are men Dist. No. 29 —Alberta Biegtrntan. By Commander Geo. C. Metcalf, four classes of high school publica than to swing to the left and strike Germany lost Alsace Uirraine. But i around Granta Pass who have used« Dist. No 30 Anna Henrickson. Attention Poet. tions entitled to representation. the child, the driver applied the her ,----------- palmiest day« "ortil of tackle and bait and have I Dist. this Is not all. 1 In ------ No. 32—Althea Smith, Wil- Reading of General Orders by the Every person and -publication accept brakes and headed the machine to Germany was importing 51 per cent, tried all parts of the river, and have He Nickerson. ing membership in the association, strike the cow squarely. adjutant of the «G. A. R. of her iron ore, partly from French yet to land their steelhead.—«Port Dist. No. 39—Bonnie Tollard, This was perhaps the safest course Reading of General Orders by the subscribed to the following princi Lorraine, partly from Simin, Sweden. land Oregonian. ples of journalistic ethics: Ruth Harmon, Doris Lowden. and might have been successful in secretary of the W. R. C. Algiers and Morocco. Now the 1. I believe in clean journalism. Dtet. No. 4 8—Boyd Carr. avoiding much of the damage, but Prayer by chaplin. French ore 1« not available—al 2. I will put nothing into print as the heavy body, mounted as it was oa Dist. No. 55—IJta Elaine Lud- Commander's address to post and though Stinne« at Grat, realizing how a writer or editor that I would not a light Dodge chassis, while it pushed wick, Venita Corliss. Saluting of the dead. dependent the German Iron Industry] Dist. N-o. 56—Duvld E. Shaffer. the body of the animal several feet, Commander's address of welcome say as a gentleman. was upon France, tried to seek a 3. I will publish nothing anony was forced to the right by the crown I Harold Shaffer. and saluting of the flag. basis for cooperation. Ore from Dtet No. 57—Blanche I. Fick, Song, "Star Spangled Banner," led mously to which I would tie ashamed of the rosa until the front wheel» Spain and Sweden cannot be import to sign my name. Kenneth M. Anderson, Merle C. Grtf- by James Lium. struck and broke upon the solid cul- ed because of the geduction In the fin. 4. Realizing .that Journalism is vert. Lincoln's address at Gettysburg. German merchant marine There powerful. I shall devote extreme The next eighth grade examina- The cow was killed instant Solo by James Lium. fore only one field is loft for Stln- Hoylake. May 28.—(A. P i- The will be held on June 9, and 10 and A dil res« by Rev. L. Myron Boozer. care to my writing and editing. Re the force of the impact. The nes to exploit- the resources of the United States »an forced out of the will be for those who were not suf- Song. "America," and benediction. alizing that the printed word cannot chine, hurdling the body an 4 drop continent. BrMInh amateur golf championship at iciently prepared for the earlier test The W. fR. C. holds a short service be recalled or unsaid. I shall watch ped. Inverted, on the drainage ditch Stlnnes is also negotiating for an the end of the sixth round today On June 8, 9, «10 and 'll, teacher's for the unknown dead at the railroad aarefully to prevent the printing of which bounds the property of E R. Interest in the fields In Slovakia and when Frederick J. Wright, of Boston, examinations are to be held tn the park, after which flowers will be car anything unclean, anything untrue, Crouch. Hungary. In Ix»mor and Szepes (Slo the sole survivor of the American courthouse, the schedule to be an- ried to the waters of the Rogue river or anything harmful to the good Help Brought at Once vakia) and In Borosod (Hungary) entrants, was defeated by Bernard nounced later. Occupants at a car traveling be. In honor and memory of the marine name of any person, or the reputa tion of my school. there are largo areas which are not Dnrwln in a sensational finish. hind the bus stopped at once to aid dead exploited. The ore here Is of an In the injured. Colley Gray and Cecil Clara »Brown and Phyllis Miller, Members of the Post and Corps ferior quality, but it compares very Hoylake, iMay 28.—(A. P.)—Allan both of Chicago, who stopped at the will meet at the courthouse at 1 Jennings, the driver, were caught favorably with that of the much- Graham and W. I. Hunter will com Josephine hotel last night, today con o'clock for the march to the theater Alice Bacon, county school,super under the body as it struck the ditch coveted I«orralne fields. The far- pete tomorrow in the finals tor the tinued their way south. The girls Citizens, young people and school intendent, visited the schools at bank, and Mr. Gray died of his in British amateur goW championship are riding bicycle». ohtldren are expected to be present. Grave Creek and Iceland yesterday. «teattawt GERM AN POLITICAL "D tlth SPI It IT" IH I MIIIM. I I Nllill. El ROPE NOT FOR COAST-TO-COAST REV. BOOZER WILL