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About Grants Pass daily courier. (Grants Pass, Or.) 1919-1931 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 5, 1924)
W HOLE NUMBER I I I COOLIDGE PLEDGES SELF TO SERVICE OF COUNTRY PRESIDENT RECEIVES DAVIS CONGRATULATION ! • ♦ WashingtOB. Nov. 5.— (A.P.) I * -—“Permit me to congratulate I * you,” John W. Davis telegraph ♦ ed President Coolidge today, ' ♦ on your sweeping victory and to ♦ express the hope that your ad ♦ ministration may. by Ils suc ♦ cess. inure to the w dtare of the ♦ 4 country.” The president sent this re 4 Salem, Nov. 5. Driving Totrt Hol ply: "Please accept my thanks-* lman's automobile which was parked for your message and my ap 4 at the curb while the owner was vis preciation of the patriotic senti 4 iting his step-father, Warden A. M. ments you express.” Dalrymple, William Crosby, a con ♦ New York. Nbv. 5.—(A. P.) ♦ penitentiary ♦ -John W. Davis, in a public New York. Nov. 5. (A. P.L- ’Re lug. refused to Interfere with the po vict, escaped from the shortly after 4 o'clock Tuesday at- ♦ statement issued today, accept ♦ turns from the states continued to lice commissioner whose duty It was ed the outcome of the election ♦ roll In today, and served only to to humlle th« trouble. His position ternoon. Croaby was received "without any vain regret or bit ♦ swell the Ude upon which Coolidge was that he refused to compromis«* tentiary from Multnomah county on ♦ terness," and said it was his ♦ is riding to un apparent und over the authority of th« law. All th« night of the 9th, the dis November 29, 1921, to serve 25 ♦ honest hope that "the adminis ♦ whelming victory. Congr«»o«lonBj years for assault and robbery while ♦ tration of President Coolidge ♦ contests were alow aud are still In orders proceeded. Early on the morn armed with a dangerous weapon. ♦ may prove to be successful aud ♦ ing of th« loth, the police commis- ‘ sufficient to »how whether Coolldg«* During the temporary governorship ♦ ♦ beneficial to the country." will have u real working majority «loner uppeuled for state troops Of Roy llltner. Crosby's sentence was Coolidge ordered the troops to re- 1 ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ 4 ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦*♦ The r<«puJ>llcnn« hud made a net gnln reduced to six years. of 12 in the house and apparently port at once, declured martial law land Issued a proclamation taking three or four in tho senate. li. ul The eiecoral vote stands' Coolidge over command of the police, 'tlm.itely brought order out of chaos Artxona 3. California 13. Colora It has been claimed that .Mayor do 8. Connecticut 7. Deleware 3. “5~T 1 1 c O Idaho 4. Illinois 29. Indiana ft. Peters of Boston, alarmed by the de o I 0 "o •5 -1 •» -t 0 » » 0 1 0 3 0 Iowa 13. Kansas 10. Kentucky 13, lay of the governor, ordered out th«» 3 □ 5 s S 3 3 'troop« himself under an ancient law Maine 6. Maryland 8, MasaachuMdts ao 0 » S b X* X CC re s 18. Michigan 15. Minnesota 12. Mis never before used, and that the gov 75 75 •7 s *0 W 0 0 as 4 i 0 a souri 18, Montana 4, Nebraska 8. ernor followetl his lead later. Th«' REPUBLICAN X 1 i 1 1 s i 1/4 New Hampshire 4. New Jersey 14. Democratic national commit!««* spon z z z z z z z N«w York. 45. Ohio 24. Oregon 5. sored this statement in the cainpuign p p ' 9 0 p p p p Pennsylvania 38, Rhode Island 5. just ended and offered 31000 re VI 1 -J oe 1 OS w - M 1 South Dakota 6. Utah 4. Vermont 4, ward to any one disproving the state ment. It »'ui denied by Coolidge's For President lai Elrctoi Washington^ 8. Wy a . West west Virginia virginia s. « y- 1 S6 1 11 83 84 105 4 3 ! 19 212 <0 Coolidge aud Dawes. Rep. friend« and associate« of the stride oming 3; to A, 371. 33 441 31 24 27 25 33 59 28 Davis and Bryan. Dem. days. 24 63 60 69 It 39 27 41 24 12, Arkansas 9. Io« Follette and Wheeler. Ind Davie—Al ablkm ~ Th« upshot of the strike was that 0: V Johns and Reynolds. Soc Florida 8, Georgia 14. Txnilslana 10, Coolidge was established in the pub For V. H. Senator— Mississippi 10, New 'Mexico 3. North 6 8 17 12 221 26 28 15 11 lic mind as the apostle of law and 32 F. E. Coulter. Prog. Carolina 12. Oklahoma 10. Fouth 199 72 91 104 120 65 156 204, 76 33 Chas. L. McNary. Rep order. Thousands of congratulatory 26 41 38 39 42 29 27 64 24 Carolina 9. Tennessee 12. Texas 20. 34 Milton A. Miller. Dem. messages were «ent him. Including r 2 1 0 0 2 2 8 4 3 35 K. Robinson. Soc. Virginia 12; total, 139. on«» from President Wilson. For Represent at Ivi laiFollette—Winronvin 13. 12 33[ 28 33 161 16 1*4 21 14 The elections followed shortly Hutler, Ind. 36 “ " “ “ W. J. Doubtful Nevada 3. North Dako thereafter and Coolidge wns reelected 37 33 42 66 58 30 31* 84 27 37 Il L. Clark, Dem ta 5; total 8. Hawley. Rep. 38 w. c. governor by an enormous majority 39 I'pton A. I'pton. Soc. and inaugurated on January 9. 1920. For Secretary of State Washington. Nov. 5—(V. P.) — Meanwhile, tho presidential bee 40 L. J. Francis. Soc. Calvin Coolidge of Vermont became was buxxlng. not with Coolidge, but 41 Walter L. Hembree, Dem. twenty-ninth president of the United with his ever-present friend, Stearns. 42 Sam A. Koter. Rep. Stutes through th« death of his Stearns and a little organisation la For Slide Treasurer— 43 Thoa. B. Kay. Rep..... predecessor und was nominated in bored hard to stir up sentiment I 45 Jefferson Myers. Dem. Ills own right by the Cleveland con- throughout New England for Cool- For J uki Ice Supreme Court— vention. 46 Harry H. Belt, llep. idg«* an<i went to the 1920 conven 47 O. P. Coshow. Dein. His accession to the presidency was tion with n bloc of votes that totale«! 48 Percy R. Kelly. Ind. the capstone of a long life of public 29 on the first ballot, and reached For Attorney General— aervlce, that includes th<* steps of h high point of 32 on the seeonil. 49 W. P. Adams. Prog. I city eooncller, clerk of courts, mayor, The Harding landslide, however, 50 Oscar Furuset. Dem state representative, state senator, wiped out the only chance Coolidge 51 I. H. Van Winkle. Rep. For Dairy anti F«»o«l Commission«' president of the state senate, lieuten had—in a dealock—befor«* he got any 52 J. D. Mickle, Rep-Dem...... ant governor anti vice-president. further, but he secured second place. For Public Service Commission«' All these offices except the lust 53 Newton McCoy. Dem.-Prog. At 9 p. m.. th«» night after Hard were held by him In bls adopted town ing was named. Wallac«* MacCamant. 54 Edward Ostrander. Rep. . For S«'iii«lor, Till District— of Northampton and in his adopted of Oregon, placed Calvin Coolidge in 55 A. C. Hough. Dem.- stnto of Massachusetts. To him nomination. A stamp«'de enmted and 56 Janies T. Logan. Ind. Massachusetts is home, hut his heart Coolidge was given the place. He IT Edward W. Miller. Rep. ... still turns tot ho ihillu of Vermont was officially notified at Northamp- For Representativ«*. 7th District— 58 Theo. P. Cramer, Jr., Rep.. when1 he lived as h boy. ton. July 27. Geo. Werti Calvin Coolidge, significantly to the rum- Coolidge's contribution For District Attorney— enough to those who read things in paign was a tour of the border states. 59 Geo. H. Jackson. Rep. terms of omens, was born on the He spoke in Maryland. Virginia. Ken 60 W. T. Miller Dem. For County Commissioner— Fourth of July morning. 1872, in the tucky, Tennessee und North Carolina. 130123 61 Earnest Loughridge. Dem. tiny mounluln hamlet of Plymouth, Republican victories in Maryland and 62 J. L. Stanbrough. Rep. Vermont. For Sheriff— (Continued on Pago Three.) Behind hla cradle stretched gen 63 W. M. Hayes. Dem. 64 E. H. Lister. Rep erations of a Puritan inheritance on For County Clerk one side and Protestant Irlsfli on the 65 F. L. Coon. Rep.-Dem. other. The Coolldgea trace their de For County Treasurer— scent In the United Stntes from ii 66 Lincoln Savage, Rep.-Dem. family of Coolidges who settled in W. G. I le Studie« Lami Settlement For County Asseaaor— 67 D. O. Hayes, Rep -Dem Watertown, Muss., in 1630, though t '«■•««lit ions at Grunts Pass For County School Superintendent the lino I h not clear between them 68 Alice M. Bacon, Rep.-Deni.. and John Coolidge, who. settled Ply W. G. Ide. who has charge of the For County Surveyor— mouth in 1780. Im migrat Ion and land settlement 69 Tom R. Pearce. Rep.-Dem. For County Coroner— Ilin mother, Victoria Josephine work for the state chamber of cont- 70 L. II. Hull. Ren-Dem. Moor, aprung from that sturdy Irish merce. is In the city today, having AMENDMENTS stock which did much to transform arrived from Portland this morning, Literacy Amendment— the wildernesses of Vermont, New Mr. Ide Is en route to eouthern Call- Yes ...................... Hampshire and Maine to fertile fields fornia. whore the state chamber con No . I sc mid Wi'lfut'i in the late 1600's and early 1700’s. templates the opening of an informa I 01 ' 1 28 Yes ...................... Titus, the heritage of Calvin Cool tion bureau to meet the many in idge wan Eugliah-Iriah. The house quiries for facts concerning Oregon. Bonus Amendment— 1 105 120 72 62 7 3 45 90 127| 44 hold Into which he was born was of The state chamber, says Mr. Ide, 30 4 Yes ....... .................... 9 5 106 6 2’ 73 54 43| 831120 49 305 No .. .. .... ......... the purest New England type, notable receives many hundreds of letters 1 1 I Olcomurgut'iu«'— for its frugality, Its God-fearing de from southern California, and he an 306 Yes 64 6 1 49 61 54 34| 65 104 89 votion to principles of conduct and ticipates a heavy movement of peo 1 70 175 111 107 117 76 1271176 22 307 No ....................... religion, sheltered, back in Hint ple from that district to Oregon, and INITIATIVE PETITION ■ I Neuropath Bill— mountain nook, from the relaxation particularly to southern Oregon. Ho 308 Yes . 56 60 271 32 3 8 30| 441 65Ì IS that tainted the same heritage of Is here to get all possible informa I 309 No................ ................... 134 119 721 66 9 2 4711051133 55 families in the more populous Massa tion concerning Josephine county, Í i i 1 Workmen's «'ompuls. Compensatio! and particularly the lands of the chusetts lowlnnds. 310 Yes 4 3 62 4 6 41 53 37 37 80I 36 166 1 49 9 3 93 9 4 57|131 160 56 311 N<» ............... The Boston force at the time was Granta Paas Irrigation district, that Income Tax Re|M*al— under n special commission, depend are available for UBe in the work in 42 100 132! 22 .3,12 Yes....................... 141 106 60 57 ent on the governor s office. Their California. A large proportion of the 313 No ................ 47 72 52| 61 49 32! 4SI 761 57 head was a special police commis Inquiries concern this district, Mr. REFERRED BY COUNTY «'Ol iti 1 County Fair Giouml Tax— sioner responsible to the governor. Ide stales, this district already get 11 1 75 44 5 4 47 35 57 119 41 600 Yes ................ Coolidge, though in town, with the ting a major portion of the newcom 501 No 105 124 92| 95 107 66|106|131| 47 situation hourly growing more menc- ers to the atute. Congressional Contests Slow But Republicans Have Gain ol 12—Also Appear to Have Three to Four Senate Gain Today 3 V * ♦ ♦ today, ♦ ♦ "It doesn’t ‘‘to make an adequate ♦ expression concerning the presi dency. No other honor equals ♦ it, and no other responsibility '1 1 I 1 1 i i I -• -I e o. •s* ■1 X — E ; t : > T. 0 5 — 2. s □* « 2 < n • i i . i s * ' — a. 5 ag ST ■ •X S s ? —. — X = 1 1 o o X” ; Q a. 2 ' □ , : 1 h 1 s 0 “W Q — 0 •— 9 2 e ■N •5 =r M jr : 1 26 94 49 6 17 25 13 65 22 V V 53 29 15 14 18! 28 1 0 58; 27 23. 22 Il 1!» C V 38 35 14 44, 4 31 14 5 1 3I 11 19 49 10 29 27 0 1 Ut 0 2 71 12 11 68 40' 53 21 24 38 2 2 < 6 32 27 130 10 28 Ü 4 IS 11 7 48’ 85: 35 26 33 20 2 2| 0 6 11 8' 11' io! 10' 13 10 231 50| i»i 19 21 36 3 4 39 ♦ ♦ ♦ PREHIDENT WINS DECISIVELY OVER OTHER CANDIDATES IN STATE 18 50 30 1 4 17 5 2 8 15 42 9 19' 22 0 0 24 32 39 0 13 27 401 4| « 6 12 0 38 42 35 28 19 41 0, u 41 2 7t 54 9 35 1; 1 17 2 13 10| 131 5 23 3 91 1S| 34 10 11 7« 31 0 9 21 36 30 1356 1253 I 93 1153 17 8 6 636 1896 1144 152 2376 2376 2392 2392 I 2227'2227 ( 113j2376 2376 88 2216 709 19 5071 ' I 54|1472l 651 43: 821; 20 1 1 191105 19 63 38 35 61 51 24 31 30 121 10 63 5 4 30 77 3 7 61 79 2 2 42 ?1 62 45! 38 46 16 49 25! A 1 'I 1 11 101 16 32' 52! 32 10 13 i i 36! 33. 31 46 3 4 45 1 j «2 29 2.3 41 13 20 81 73 3 5 42 34 79 23 17' 311 27 341 60 31 58 14 19 59 X 1 27 31 4 5 40 17 15 88 7 6 41 44 34 69 10| 31 1 1 18| 38| 371 181 1 1 13! 59' 1 1 4! 14 39 4Í 8 21| 1 t 41 I 46 51 !5 23 1 1 29 6 20 4? 15,251 1 1 51 13 34 3Î 11 27 47| 13 27| 6 34 38 66 1372 49 1229 16 21 4 3 33 72 18 93 1380 27 1546 10 17 28 2 17 30| 15| 47 c ? 692 46 1414 522 32 41 341 13 1 2 21 3«| 2! 39 5 4 56 945 4 8 1633 688 18 38 31 1108 5 6 1107 17 18 21| 22 30 45 29 10 21 .31 7 20 1 19 13 45| 71 6 4c 6 36 4 7 15 32| 24 4 28 J , 26 7l 8 44! 12 6« Portland. Ore.. Nov. 5.—(A. P.) — Oregon went decisively for President Coolidge. McNary had a big lead for senator. Hawley, in the fl ret district. Sinnott in the second and Crumpacker in the third were elect ed to congress. Thoa. 'B. Kay had a big lead for state treasurer over JaCferson Myers. Koxer was reelect ed secretary of state and Van Winkle attorney general. Belt was elected as supreme court justice. There is a close race between Coshow and Kelly for the second judgeship, The income tax was repealed and the oleomargarine law defeated. Onp thousand and' eix precincts gave Coolidge 80.700. Davis 37,376 and baFolIette 35,92'5; McNary 93,- 997 and Miller 3'5,999. One thous and ninety nine precincts gave Kay 86,39'1, and Myers 52.Ml. Eight hundred and ninteen gave Belt 74.- 727, Coshow 50,554 and Kelly 45,- 337. 143 26 9 11 7 Income Tax Rcpeahtl—Oleo Bill De. f«'ate«>— Hawley Returned From Tills Dial riet to <'ongress Portland. Ore., Nov. 5.—(A. P.) —As complete returns were tabu lated today President Coolidge’s lead in Oregon was increased. The election al M. E. Crutupacker, republican. as representative front the third congressional district was apparently assured when 311 com ■s plete precincts out of 467 in the dis trict were tabulated. Criimpaeker had 29,852, Elton Watkins, demo- cratiifcincumbent 22,>50. This gives Oregon a solid republican delegation in congress. Representative W. C. Hawley, of the first district, and N. J. Sinnott, of the second district, ; —L——- having safe leads. Oregon voters.apparently defeated 1654 814 600 the income tax law which was adopt 840 ed by popular vote two years ago. IP WftnretarMs from «8» complete pre-* cinctv tabulated the vote stood: for 318 repeal 71,560. against repeal 49.- 1855 1134 721 421. The people by referendum re 47 jected a state law 'banning oleomar garine. 914 precincts showing 78,- 384 616 to 40,160 for killing the bill. 786 A compulsory workmen’s compen sation law proposed by initiative was rejected 69.991 to 35,435. Measures approved were for re 2292 quiring a literacy test for voters, a bill for licensing naturopaths, a con 1641 314 stitutional amendment providing a 1327 state bonus for women who served in 1512 204 the war department during the 1308! World War and an amendment pro viding for public thoroughfares for products of farms, mines and for eMs. 1706 1OS1 In the close race for supreme court judgewhip. O. P. Coshow forged 1923 1923 ahead of Perry 'R. Kelly, on reftirns I from 819 complete precincts.« 10571 1426 1630 ! I ♦ STATE G. 0. P. TICKET CARRIES STATE CHAMBER AGENT HERE 1 ♦ ♦ « ItAMEIt ANI» HAYES AllE GIVEN approaches it. When conferred 4 MAJORITIES IN HAI ES ♦ by the overwhelming choice of ♦ FOK OFFICE the American people and the vote ♦ ♦ of the electoral college, these ♦ ♦ are made all the greater. I can ♦ only express my simple thanks ♦ to all those who have contribut ♦ ♦ ed to this result and plainly ac 4 All Stale und National Republican ♦ knowledge it has been brought ♦ < Iff ices Are Kill« I—Tie Vote ♦ to pass through the work of a ♦ ♦ divine providence, of which I 4 in City for Councilman ♦ am but one instrument. Such ♦ ♦ powers as I have I dedicate to 4 In two bitterly contested elections. ♦ the service of all .my country 4 4 Theo. P. Cramer was elected to re- ♦ and all my countrymen.” ♦ *♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ 4 (Continued on Page Three) » s z I Washington, Nov. 5.— (A.P.) seem possible to ♦ me,” President Coolidge said in ♦ a statement to newspapermen ♦ _J 166 1 42 looo 74 I6031 603 Hartley Wins Race For Governor— School Bill Is Defeated Seattle. Nov. 5.—(A. P.)—Re turns compiled today increased Coolidge’s majority, the total being 100,766 against 64,850 for loiFol- lette and 18,159 for Davis. Hartley has a good lead over Hill for govern or. The outstanding feature Is tho defeat of all initiative and referen dum measures. Including the echool bill, the 40-mill tax and the Bone bill.