Image provided by: Sherman County Historical Museum; Moro, OR
About Sherman County observer. (Moro, Sherman County, Or.) 1897-1931 | View Entire Issue (April 17, 1925)
HUNT KB Price Five Cents Sherman County, Oregon, Friday, April, 17,1925 MEXICO AND CANADA LEAD IN IMMIGRATION Attorney-at-Law AMBASSADOR SCHURMAN Influx of Foreigners Decreased 78.3 Per Cent Since Ally 1,1924. Government Is Defeated in the French Senate By Ballot of 156 to 134. Office Phone Main 93 Moro Oregon New Yorki — During the first six months of operation of the new Immi gration law, Mexico and Canada pro vided by far the greater part of the total net immigration to the United States and these countrips now are the chief sources of the foreign labor supply for the United States, the na tional industrial conference board an Attorney-at-Law nounend. The board had made an analysis of Immigration from July L Practice in All the C quti « 1924, w m the new law became of- fectIve/ Dtil January 1, 1925. .of Oregon During the same period, there was Phone * Main 541 “an enormous rate of return of im- BANK OF MORO BUILDING -migrants,’’ from the United States to Europe. A total of 79,741 aliens ar- Moro . . . Oregon rived from the eastern hemisphere and 59,118 returned. At the same time 88,948 aliens came tn from the western hemisphere—principally Can ada and Mexico— and only 6898 re turned. The net permanent increase in the ii ‘ DENTIST * ¡I population of the United States /Cl * ► through immigration during the first six months of the new law was 104,- United Stale« Dental Exam- । ’ iner for this district. < * 875, compared with 483,719 for the corresponding months of 1923, ^de crease of 78.3 per cent. Of this net immigration, 22,825 came from the Office at •astern hemisphere — meaning prin cipally Europe-^and 82,050 came from MORO, OREGON ths western hemisphere. IRA R PETERSON ; Dr J. R. Morgan ;> CAVALRY PROTECTS Dr. M» F» Froyd Physician and Surgeon Office and Residence Hotel Moro Dr W. N. Morse Physician and Surgeon Main 182 WASCO - OREGON I Damascus, Syria.—Algerian cavalry galloping through the streets of Dam ascus' with drawn swords and eight armored cars maneuvering with the troops are credited with having saved Lord Balfour from the hostile mob of 6000 people which attempted to attack hie hoteL Two were killed and many Injured before the disturbance was quelled. The mob almost succeeded in reach- i»g-Abe when» thf veteran Ur It ish stat m man was staying. The demonstrations against Lord Balfour are due to his work in the establishment of a national Jewish home in Palestine. He is the author of the Balfour declaration by which Great Britain announced support to the Zionist movement. Lord Balfour went to Palestine recently to partici pate in the opening ceremonies of the new Jewish university on Mount Beopus. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCXXXK COLD Dr. Penn C. Crum SUMMER EXPECTED Aide to the Naval Hydrographer Pre dicta Unusual Chill. Washington, D. C.—Unless scientific signs fail, says Lieutenant-Commander Optometrist George E. Brandt, aide to the naval Spec ¡list in the examining of hydrographer, this summer will be a eyes and fitting of glasses. cold one, and the summer of 1926 even Lens grinding shop in colder. * connection. A study of solar radiation and ocean Upstairs across from the temperatures has convinced him that neft year “summerlees” 1816 may be Edw. C. Pease Co. store duplicated. Room 10, Vogt Bldg. v Lieutenant-Commander Brandt The Dalles, Ore. points out that cyclonic disturbances are the unknown quantity in the weather equation, and that while the present outlook is for a decided tem perature drop, actual conditions at the time may be far different because of ■u factors that are now known. He be lieves, however, that ocean tempera tures greatly influence the weather, Eyesight Specialists and that the 1925-6-7 weather already Manufacturing Opticians has been largely determined by the Eyes Examined Glasses Fitted heat of the sun that was stored up Exclusively Optical in the ocean during 1922 3-4, when Complete Lens Manufacturing solar radiation was below normal. Plant in Connection ' OREGON THE DALLES Coolidge May. Slash Boards. 15-16 Vogt Block. Washington, D. C.—More than 40 ■ W >H "I 1 I 1- ! 4 M- M H i d i W 1 1 independent commissions and govern ment boards have come under the focus of President Coolidge’s economy program with a view to their aboli JAMES STEWART tion or reduction. Some of these in dependent establishments draw rather SHERMAN COUNTY heavily on the treasury for salaries, STOCK AND BRAND y among them the employes' compensa tion commission, which requires about INSPECTOR V >150,000 annually. Moro - • Oregon De Larhue Optical Co. ? DEPUTIES: L. Schadewitx, Kent * ‘ Oregon; Dr. Jot. Stender«, Moro, ’ » Ore.; W. H. Meyer, Wsaco, Ore. STOCK & WHEAT A RANCHES < FOR SALE / „■u F. T. HURLBURT Condon Oregon Lewiston Sanctions Big Project. Lewiston, Idaho.—With one council man voting in the negative, the Lewis ton city council accepted the pro posal of the Clearwater Timber com pany and the Inland Light A Power company to install a dam in the Clear water river here, developing 13,000 horse-power and to erect a mill to cut 200,000,000 feet annually. Arsenic May Hava Caused 5 Deaths. * Gary, Ind.—Finding enough arsenic to kill scores of persons, in the home of Mrs. Anna Cunningham, an at tractive widow of 50, authorities de cided to exhume the bodies of the woman’s husband and four children,' all of whom died suddenly at Intervals during the past six days. . HERRIirf RESIGNS ON.ADVERSE VOTE Paris.—After an adverse vote in th« senate on bid financial program. Prem ier Herriot fesigned. Announcement of his resignation came almost Imme diately after the vote of confidence had shown him defeated by 156 to 132. The premier ,and his cabinet walked out of the chamber and there was not •sea oo mudb aa the formality «1 a cabinet meeting before a decision to quit was reached. 1 v Denial of a vote of confidence came in the senate after houra of. debate on Jacob G. Schurman, , minister to . the government’s financial policy. China, who has boon named ambass The government had been wavering ador to Germany by President Cool for days because of the disclosures of idge. inflation and government borrowing and the final push was given when Poincare carried the senate with him after a bitter duel with Herriot over his government's record. This was the third time in French parliamentary history that a govern- ment has been overthrown by the Washington, D. C.—The adminisfrar senate. a tlon planned for a vigorous defense in The debate had the senate in such the supreme court against the attack a state of effervescence as is seldom by the senate upon the president’s seen among the staid and stable sen power to remove from office his own ators. or bis predecessors’ appointees. Premier Herriot in his reply again The president's case was presented mentioned France’s foreign debts as by Solicitor-General Beck, who pre weighing heavily upon the country’s pared a new brief to oppose that of foreign policy and at times actually Senator Pepper of Pennsylvania, for hampering her negotiators. the senate, which contends that con gress has full power over all govern ment offices except those created by the constitution. The controversy between the execu tive and legislative branches of tbs government will be fought out on the Berlin.—The nomination of Field basis of a case arising from the re-' inoval of Frank 8. Myers as postmaster Marshal Von Hindenburg for the Ger of Portland, Or., in 1920 by President man presidency -continues the subject Wilson. Myers, who sued for back of heated educational polemics in the pay, appealed to the supreme court Berlin and provincial press. The or on the ground that his removal . gana of the united right parties, which Illegal because the senate was not ad ha.e chosen, the war idol as their po vised of the action until a successor lUical chaix^top, are supporting their nominee vigorously in the'face of crit was appointed. / . The senate intervened In Xfae case icism by liberal organs, which are rs- with the assertion that congress can producing raeeiU «Latemeats of. con impose the conditions under which, the seryative journals opposing the nom president may remove from office per ination of Von Hindenburg. News sons whose appointments must be sub papers supporting the candidacy of Dr. mitted to the senate for confirmation. Wilhelm Marx, ex-chancellor, nominee As expressed tn a brief filed by Sena of the Weimar coalition, also are giv tor Pepper, It holds that in creating ing prominence to comment from the an office, congress can fix the tenure United States and from London. The and determine how the appointment field marshal's campaign managers are\ shall be made and how Incumbents displaying abundant optimism in re gard to his prospects of polling the may be removed. highest individual vote in the*elections of April 26. BRIEF GENERAL NEWS Their campaigning effort will be Treasury department officials ex- concerned chiefly with locating the pressed concern over the growing de- 12,000,000 eligible 'voters who were mand for dollar bills, which has taxed stay-at-homes during the elections to the reichstag December 7 and in the printing facilities. IDx-Senator Sterling of South Dakota preliminary voting for a president on was selected as field secretary of the March 29. commission which will plan the 200th anniversary of Washington’s birthday. AWARD IS DECLARED FINAL Dr. Herman Paasche, former privy councellor and vice president of the President Coolidge Replies to Peru’s German reichstag, died in Detroit fol Protest on Decision. lowing a sudden attack of pneumonia, Washington, D. C.—President Cool while on a lecture tour In the United idge informed the Peruvian govern States. ment that he was constraim;d to re More than >1,500,000 for the per gard his award as arbitrator In the manent rehabilitation of the tornado- Tacna-Arica dispute between Peru and swept area in the middle west has Chile as “final and without appeal." been received by the American Red The communication pointed out that cross through its chapters over the this action agreed with the terms of country. submission as signed by the two gov Six officers yrere ordered court- ernments and also with the general martialed by Secretary Wilbur in con principles of international law. nection with the arrival at Hampton With reference to the request for Roads February 24 of the naval trans American fore es to supervise the port Beaufort from the West Indies plebiscite, the president points out that with liquor aboard. under the terms of the agreement al -President Coolidge appointed Fred ready signed by Peru, the Chilean ad erick C. Hicks, ex-member of con ministration of the disputed territory gress from Port Washington, L. L, shall not be disturbed. to be alien property custodian, suc The finality of the president’s ac ceeding Colonel Thomas W. Miller, tlon Is further stressed by a state who resigned recently. ment that he regards It as unneces sary to afford Chile an opportunity Washington University Crew Wins. to present views in relation to the Oakland, Cal.—The University of Peruvian memorial to which his com Washington rowing crew defeated the munication is a reply. University of California varsity here in the annual three-mile race. The Oregon Herds In Good Shape. northerners led the entire distance Salem. Or.—A survey by the United and crossed the line almost 10 lengths States department of agriculture show ahead of the Bears. By the victory, ,ed that in all excepting six coun the Huskies will represent the coast ties in Oregon there Is less than 1 in the Poughkeepsie regatta. per cent of tuberculosis affecting Vve‘ stock, according to a statement Is U. 8. Per Capita Circulation >4199. sued here by Dr. W. H. Lytle, state Washington, D. C. — Every man veterinarian. woman and child in the United States would have |41.99 If the total of Kid McCoy is Now in Prison. >4,776,167,000 in circulation April 1 San Quentin, Cal.—“Kid McCoy,” were divided, the treasury announced. once dapper beau brummel of the Figures show a slight decline of prize ring, known to few by his real money in circulation over March 1, name, Norman Selby, Is now con when the figure was >4,807,000,000. vict No. 40,716. The ex-fighter must and from April 1, 1924, >4,812,000,000. serve an indetenninate term for man slaughter, as a result of the death in Winter Wheat Crop Is Short. - Loe Angeles of Mrs. Theresa Mors. Washington, D. C.—X winter wheat crop About 116,000,000 bushels smaller Bellingham 8aw Mill Burns. than that produced last year is in Bellingham, Wash.-—Fire of ui^e- dicated for this year try the condi termined origin caused damage esti tion of the crop on April I. The de mated at between >250,000 and >300,- | partment of agriculture forecast the I 000 at the plant of the Puget Sound , crop at 475,255,000 bushels In its / prit Haw Mills A Shingle company in report } j South ^Ulnghaai, t Who is Going “Over The Top Only 12 Days Left! TO MAKE YOUR STANDING in Walt's Profit Sharing Campaign CLOSING APRIL 30th ARE YOU GOING TO BE ONE OF THE WINNERS OF THE F. S. MYERS CASE IN SUPREME COURT Fifty Valuable Prizes? PRESS HEATED OVER GERMAN CANDIDATE ? i RUNABOUT : First ’ Prize Month of March Make the purchase of that Standing LOOK THEM Prize OVER ! Points Number 9 ............ 3............... .... 4 . . . 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