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About Albany daily democrat. (Albany, Or.) 1888-192? | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1915)
U. ol 0 Eatebliahed In 18C5 Baal Advertising Medium la Una County ALBANY DAILY DEMOCRAT THE WEATHER Showara tonight, and Saturday fair, VOL. XXVIII ALBANY. LINN COUNTY, OREO ON, FRIDAY, MAY 21, 1915. No. 13 STATE BANKERS I Annual Session ot Group Two Met in Lebanon With Inter- esfing Program. LEBANON BANKERS ARE HOSTS AT LUNCHEON Linn, Marion, Benton, Polk and Lincoln County Banks Rep resented in Group. The annual meeting of Group Two of Ihe Oregon Stale Bankers Asso ciation it In esion-in Lebanon to day. 'About thirty delegate from Linn. Lincoln. Marlon and Benton counties arrived in the city tliit morn ing and were met by local member of the banking fraternity, who con vryed the viaitora to the Strawberry city In automobiles. The officer of ihia group are: M. S. Woodcock, chairman. Firsl National Hunk, Corvalli; Joicph 11. Albert, vice-chairman. Capital Nation al Hank. Salem; J. C.lrvin. aecretary. l-irat Saving Bank, Albany; W. G. Vaall. treawrer, Dallaa City Bank. Dalla. Executive committee: Alfred C. ?hmitt. First National Bank. Al bany; Eugene llayter. Dallaa Nation al Hank. Dallaa; Ashael Bu.h. Ladd and Bu.h. Salem; M. S. Woodcock. First National Bank, Corvallis: J. C. Irvine, Firal Saving Bank. Albany. The meeting waa opened by prayer by Rev. W. A. Klkina. pastor of the Christian church, of Lcbauon: The audress of wtliome was derived, b. the Hon. Dennia Cormier, mayor ol Lebanon, and wai responded to by Hon. W. I. Elmore, of Brownsville, who repreaenled Linn county in the last ic-sion of the fcnialntttre. The real of the morning wai iaken up with the rending of the minulcs of the bt semi-annual meeting. ln rcporta of officcrt and committees, and the transaction of general busi ness. At noon the delegates were gueti of the Lebanon bankcra at luncheon in the Lebanon hotel, and at 1 : the meeting' convened again and liatcned to an interesting address by E. G. Crawford, of Ihe Lumberman' Na tional Bank, of l'ortland. on the nb-Jec-t. Tli Evolution of Bank Cred its." "Recent Change in Our Bank ing Lawt." waa the aubjeel of Geo. It. Tracey. Jr., tale bank examiner. M." S. Woodcock, of Corvalli. pokc on the l)iect "Should National Bank Be Granted Trut Company Power?" Following thi wa a gen eral discussion of the ubjcct of the apeaker. In which moil of the dele gate took part, he election of offi cer for the next year and the ap pointment of committee. The banker of the Male have divid ed the territory into even group, each of which hold session emi annually. and tte convention i held once each year. At the group meeting matter of local Importance are dlsciuscd, uggettion made, and change in hanking law conidcred. There are 28 town and 42 bank rep reented In Group Two. The tnte convention thi year will he held next week. May 27-29 In San Francico in conjunction, with the California Banker' atiocialion. The banker of five Pacific lope tate will be repreenled. The Miet Mahle and Zoe Traik came down from Lyon last evening to pend the week end in thi city with friend. Lieut, and Mr. llensey. of the O A. C, are pendlnt the dav at the home of Mr. and Mr. Geo. Hnefln-h Xtr. V N Bench, of Snokane. went to Portland thi morning after vllt In thi city, . Tho. T. Hanson,' of Marcola, ar rived here from th Odd Fellow' convention at Newport yesterday, and thi morning went to Jeffcrion . for a visit before returning home. J, P. Kerth went to Dnlln on hnsl- nes this morning. . 300,000 MEN LOCKED IN GREAT BATTLE Russians Claim They Have Germans in Trap Facing Annihilation,. (By United Pre Association) I'rtrograd, May 21. Three hun dred thousand men are locked in a great battle north of Jaroslau, which may decide the lale of Prieinysl. In the (ace of a terrible artillery fire, the left wing of the rutro-German army forced a crossing of the Lubacx ovka river near Kadava. Enormous losses were suffered by the enemy in the advance which proved lo Je but a temporary advantage, Strong coun ter attack by the Russian forces hurled the Austirans and Germans back across the river, where now it is declared they (ace annihilation or capture. The Fight in Flanders. (By United Press Association) Pari, .May 21. Rain which pre vailed for two day in northern France, and Homier ceased. Heavy fighting ha again broken out around Ypres, and Arrat, Attack of the German along the Ytcr canal were renewed with Ihe greatest despera tion. Braving a heavy fire the ma chine gun of the German drove the allied Iroops from advance positions in North Ypre yesterday; but the war office declares a strong counter attack of the French drove the enemy out and won new ground. o Jerome Smith came in from hi place- near Berlin thi morning. Aaron Morris, who live neat Sweet Home wa an Albany visitor today. WORLD'S MACCABEES IN NATIONAL CONVENTION MONDAY Oregon 1o Be Represented at New York Meeting By Mrs. Florence Chambers. Every World' Maccabce in the United Stale and Canada is interest ed in Ihe great convention which is bring held in New York City at the Waldorf-Astoria on May 24. This convention is held in Ihe interests of the first Woman' association of the ountry, with local branches through out the United Stale end Candaa. The stale of Oregon is represented by the state commander, Mrs. Minnie W. Aydclotle, of Oakland, California, and Mr. Florence Chambers, of Port-' land, a delegate. At thi convention Ihe election of supreme officer will take place and many iinporsunt measures will be pre sented. Such a fine record ha been made (or the past term, extending from 191 1-1914 inclusive, that every state convention ha endorsed the plans an dadministration. Mis Bin M. West, the founder of the associa tion, has an excellent report to pre sent. The net gain from May 1, 191)9 to May I, 1915, ha amounted to over 40,1X10 benefit member, which indi cate the prosperous condition of the association, and the net gain for 1915 lo dale ia 5,000 benefit members. During the last four year, the in terest earnings on bond investments amounted to $1,0587575, and the as sets on hand in protect contract reached nearly eight and a half mil lion dollnr. Over twelve million dollars was paid out in death and dis ability benefits, every draft for which was personally signed by Mi West. This order i not connected in any way with the Ladies of the Modern Maccabees. , Local officer and member are elated over the progress of their work, and when their representative return, a full report will be given by them of the feature of thi progressive meeting. The nucces which thi so ciety ha attained is attributed to the harmony and cooperation existing in the individual organization of which there are nearly 3,000. Educational campaign are being constantly car rlcd on whereby each worker may be come efficient and through thi ctftel ency each department wilt be enabled to work to the beat advantage for the association. Thi promises to be the most Important convention ever rec orded in the creditable hlr.tory of this association, and Is the beginning of a still greater benefit order for women in ihe United State and Canada. SENATOR LANE 10 BE AT SALESDAY Says He Will Take Pleasure In Meeting With Our People ' on Big Monthy Event. WILL SPEAK ON OUR NATURAL WATERWAYS Arrangements Being Made For the Biggect Salesday Event . Yet on May 29. With Senator Harry Lane a the tpeaker at the monthly salesdsy on Saturday of next week there wilt be no question a to the crowd and the success of the day. Senator Lane thi morning notified the committee that he will be here, when be will speak on our natural waterway The day previous he will speak at the Strawberry fair at Lebanon on ob servations of a U. S. senstor. The subject assigned the senator on ac count of the part he has uken in the promotion of our waterway interest both on the Columbia and the Wlv lamette. is one of particular intere! at thi time. Thi late day from present indica tions will be the best one yet, a spe cial effort being made to secure not only a large offering of animals and goods for the auction event, but, as well a big crowd to enjoy the pro gram, which will have other features, among other probably the singing of the new state song. In Oregon, by the original quartet, Messr. Ir vine, Powell, Peter and Palmer. ' Klopstock. the French horse buyer, after . sevcraLlhostiand- animal, ha been asked to be here on that day. Already a number have reported that they will have animal and arti cle for the sale. The people of Linn and Benton should make arrangement to be here in force. U. S. and Germany. ' ( By United Press Association) Washington. May 21. The presi dent and hi cabinet considered confi dential rcporta from Ambassador G rard regarding Amcrica'a note. It is understood the reports of the Ambas sador are comparatively optimistic in showing that Germany desire to meet Ihe United Statca more thao half way. SAILOR WHITE. HEAVY WEIGHT IS IN TOWN There 4 a man in (Albany today who ha (ought Jess Willard, champion oil the world, Sailor While. He is a heavyweight pugilist who ha been in several prominent engagements. His fight with Willard wa a couple of year ago before he became very fam ous. Willard won. White, a big fel low, well put up, wa a caller at the office, and reported that he was here ready to give an exhibition if arrange ment can be made. Some of hi en counter, among the many which he reported, were draw with Frank Mo- ran, Gunboat Smith, Al Reach and Battling Jim Johnson, a decision in hi favor from Arthur Pulkey and loss to Al Palzer. With him ia a boxing companion, Cal Griffin. 'mui I U - vt WITH THE v - . 1 BIG SELLS FLOTO CIRCUS IS IN TOWN TODAY A Large Crowd Here to See the Ever-Welcome Per lormance. Arriving early thi morijng the Sells-Kioto circa wa greeted by the small boy, likewise the big boy, and the small girl and the big girl. In fact people who want to see the whole circus go out early in the morning and see the tents put up and the elephants drink. It ia then that the small boy gets a job carrying water and poles and other things, and, for awhile owns the show, an event he never forgets even to his dying day. Then he goes in and has the time of his life, long, anticipated Then (be parade came, with the long crowd along the streets, with wide open eyes, seeing things, wa gon after . wagon, band after band. clown, rider, and the alway present calliope, at the end, a matchless in strument for noise. The circus parade worth going miles to see. This one was led by a crowd of Albany College students, with toy ballons. and waa one of the test seen here. At every place the circus ha been since coming through northern Cal ifornia there ha been rain, bin good crowd nevertheless. There wa a (patter of rain today, and the crowd wa here, a big one. At 2 o'clock the big tent began filling, ont in the field where so many shows have been given, with prospects of a good per formance, which is the record of the Sells-Floto. - r Tonight there will be another good crowd. Sells-Floto is the property of some newspaper men, a well-managed con cern, with whom it is a pleasure to deal, i BONrai HORSE NEURIT : INJURES JOHN MUSE Frightened By Another Horse It Races Wildly Down Street to River. A runaway that, started on Broad albin street between Second and Third streets, had a close call from resulting seriously to John lAlthouse, aged 85. Ibis morning. J. W. Gro- shong waa leading a horse down the street when it became frightened and reared up, coming down with its front feet on the wheel of a light bug gy, demolishing the wheel. This let the rear end of the buggy down on one side and ' frightened the horse which started towards the river. It ttssed the Linn Abstract office just a Mr. Alihouse was stepping on tne sidewalk, one of the wheel passing over hi foot and throwing him to the pavement. He waa taken home in an nut ., hut the injury waa found not to be serious. As the frightened horse tore down the street Ihe buggy hit another, rig and upset it, and finally stopped in front of the livery stable in the Bus sard building. The driver of the bug gy and the man leading the offend ing horse were both thrown : the pavement, but no one was hurt. Miss A. Saxancr and Miss Martha Saxaner went to Sale nrthis morning. Miss Mary Gregory went to Dever on the morning electric. Mr. and Mra. W. G. Abraham and children came down from Halsey to attend the circus. :. 4 :- SELLS-FLOTO CIROUS TODAY MOUNT LASSEN IS E Belching Forth River of Mud California Peak Causing Trouble. FARMS COVERED FOUR TO SIX FEET DEEP One Farmer Lost All His Build ings atjd All His Stock But One Horse. Redding. Calif.. May 21. Mount Lassen, the California volcano, ia sending fort ha veritable river of mud which is burying farms along Hat Creek from four to six feet deep. People are fleeing from their homes to find safety in the hills. Warnings reached here at midnight from the forest rangers. W. G. Hal) failed to receive warning in time and his house and barns were swept away. He re ports that members of the family es caped in their night, clothes. Hall said every head of stock wa killed ex cepting one horse. DEATH OF J. R. STEWART AT HIS HOME IN ALBANY J. R. Stewart died last night at his home on East Fourt street, at the age of 75 years. He had not been will for some time. A few weeks ago he was stricken- with heart trouble and had a fall, from the elfecla of which he did not recover. His death sras probably from heart trouble. John Robert Stewart was born at Payon, Adams county. III., Nov. 18. 1839. and wis married to Susan Jane McCarty Nov. 2, 1865. fie is sur vived by a wife and the following chil dren: Mr. Beech G. Hall, of Albany: Mrs. R. W. Newland. of Eugene: Mr. W. D. Carman, of Portland; E. E. Stewart, of Seio: Mrs. C C. McCor mick, of La Grande: Lee and Clarence Stewart, of Arlington. Wash., and Mrs. R. D. Whipple, of Tracy. Calif., and a sister. Mrs. A. J. Cooper, of In dependence. ' Funeral notice will be given later AGED WOMAN KILLED NEAR SALEM BY SHASTA LIMITED Mrs. Letitia Evans, one of the most prominent women in Marion county was killed last night when she was struck by the Shasta Limited train at Brooks. Mrs. Evans, who wa 62 years old. was walking down the track to the home of her daughter. Mrs. J. W. Fruit, when the rapidly moving train hit her. She is survived by her husband and four children. Dr'. J. C. Evans, assist ant physician at the insane asylum at Salem; L. F. Evans, of Lostine; H. C. Evans, of Salem, and Mrs. J. W. Fruit, of Brook. She is a daughter of the late John Savage, one of Ore gon'a most prominent pioneers, and a sister of George O. Savage, a New port merchant. a f Jr ' xJ ROOSEVELT WON OUT IN FAMOUS SUIT The Judge Ordered the Costs to Be Paid By Both Parties. (By United Press Association) Syracuse, N. Y, May 21. The jury in the Roosevelt-Barnes trial return ed a verdict in favor of CoL Roose velt, but recommended that the costs of the case be divided between the plaintiff and defendant. The fore man announced that the verdict was unanimous but when the jury was polled it was found that one juryman voted in favor of Barnes. The judge declared the verdict illegal and sent the jury back for further delibera tion. Syracuse. May 21. At 2:45 this af ternoon the jury in the Roosevelt Barnes trial bad not returned their verdict. Justice Andrews announced that the jury would not be discharged until ten o'clock tomorrow if there is no verdict before. The jury this morning reported it had reached a verdict in favor of Roosevelt and rec omended that the costs of the case be divided between the plaintiff, defend ant, but a poll of the jury ahowed one member favored Barnes. Declaring the recommendations illegal, tbc jury waa again sent back for further de liberation by Justice Andrews, o Taken Many Prisoners. Berlin, May 21. General Von Mac kensen's army has taken 140.000 Rus sian prisoners in his sweep through Galicia since May first, the war of fice announced. S. S. WORKER IN THE COUNTRY DISTRICTS REPORT One Place Without Preacher For Ten Years orS. S. For 17 Years. G. W. Rohrbough, missionary of the American Sunday School Union, tells of a Sunday school which be has just -started in this county in a community which has not had Sun day school privileges for 17 years, and no preaching for 10 years.; Sev eral young people now grown, have never seen a Sunday school, and not more than four or five out of the 35 pupil enrolled in the day school were reached by any Sunday school. Mr. Rohrbough says that 40 people came together at the first meeting and organized one of the most prom ising neighborhood Sunday schools in the county. That the attendance has increased with every . meeting, and that almose everyone in the dis trict seems willing to help in some way to make the new school a center for the general uplift of the commun ity. - On last Sunday the attendance was so large that it waa found necessary for one of the classes to withdraw from the school room into the open air during the class study period. The superintendent is a Linn conn ty teacher, a gifted leader whose heart is in his work, and he is a townsman. He is giving up his own Sunday morning consciences nna (Christian work in the city in order to reach so important a, work in the country where the sower" and the reaper have always secured the larger results in return for the amount of labor giv en. Gordon C. Griffin, of Lebanon is superintendent of this Sunday school and will travel not less than 16 miles each Sunday in order to do the work. Through the work of the American Sunday school Union in this) section. increased attention ha been drawn to the great need of laymen, as well as others, to reach out from the cities and the town for the purpose of strengthening and piloting definite Bible study in rural districts. Mr. Rohrbough says there are more than 90 school districts in Linn coun ty out of a total of atout 130, which are without religious services. "Masterly sermons, and literary Cems," he says, "are not what is needed, but rr.thcr tliftt which every consecrated layman can give; namely 'a clear, warm, heart to heart talk and a personal testimony becked up by an littmbte, faithful Christian life." ITALY-AUSTRIA III WAR'S fallX-UP Austria Taking a Hand By In terning All Italians In That Country. TALY STOPS GREEK SHIP WITH RICE Everything But Formal Declar ation Has Been Done For Italy's Entrance. (By United Press Association) Venice. May 21. Austria today be gan interning 'all Italian malea of military age. Fifty thousand boys and men between seventeen and sixty in Barbariga, Dingnam, and Mar- nc were piaicu auroau iraiu lur concentratidn camps established in Carolina and Croatia, according to advices received. Leading Italians in Pola were arrested, and others ter- roized by Austrian mob. - v.ni.. u. ?i t.si:, ,., : 7 r lr a, i m p i -i r ri : ' a cargo of twenty thousand tons of rice cunaigucu id uennuny. Rome, May 21. It is reported a council will he held tonight. Rome, May 21.--An ultimatum may be sent to Austria by the Italian gov ernment before night. After a brief morning session the cabinet recessed until late this afternoon when another meeting will be held. The senate met this -afternoon to ratify the action of the chamber of deputies in approving ' the government's war program. ' It is understood the ministry will take a decisive- action after the senate has adjourned. Prince von Buelow, and Baron Macchio, the German and Aus trian ambassadors had not left Rome early this afternoon. At the embas sies it is stated that neither foresaw any diplomatic incident "likely to in volve an immediate rupture." At taches expressed the I.ope that Italy would not begin hostilities without giving Austria opportunity to make fresh overture!. LESLIE H. SHARP SPECIALLY ; HONORED AT STANFORD Word has been received here this week that Leslie H. Sharp, former science teacher in the high school, and son of Dr. Sharp of the college, has been awarded his degree of M. A. for one year of post graduate work in Stanford University. He has also been honored by being elected to membership in the Iota chapter of Phi Lambda , Upsilon, a national chemical fraternity to which only up per classmen of superior scholarship are eligible. He was also elected a member of Phi Beta Kappa, a Greek teller society that exists for the pur pose of honoring; leading students in colleges and universities. It is an association of broadly cultured men and women with whom it i: indeed an honor to be associated. Mr. Sharp ia now with the Stanford geological survey part at Satina, California. NOT ALBANY BUT LINN AND BENTON COUNTIES Albany has now become the owner of the Brownsville cannery. A few month's ago the Brownsville glove factory was moved to that city. While we admire Albany pluck, we would prefer that she start new industries, rather than move established indus tries from other Linn county towns. Scio may expect to lose her con densery and the Linn county fair next, if the greed ol the county aeat continues. Scio Tribune. Don't get excited. The plant will remain at Brownsville, where the canning will be done. The Grower' association I a Linn and North Ben ton county concern, which own tha plant, no i nioauy. ...