January 30, 1920 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 1920
THE MASON COUNTY JOURNAL
II --' ......... PAGE THRE
NOTED SCIENTIST ARRIVES FOR U. S. TOUR
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Sir Oliver Lodge, the English scientist who has startled t
. wo.Id with ills splrltuallstle feats since havlng lost a son In the World
ar, is now in America for a lecture tour. He is shown i}ere with
his wife upon arrival at New York.
JAPS WANT TROOPS TO STAY
Protection of Railroad and Garrison
Held to Be Neceszary.
Tokio.--The dispatch of Japanese
reinforcements to Siberia was unavoid-
ably necessary to assist the Czechs
and guard the extensive railways, Pre-
mier Hara declared in replying to in-
terpellations in the lower house of'the
diet. It also was necessary as a means
of assuring the safety of the Japanese
garrison, he asserted.
There was no reason to withdraw
the Japanese troops, added tbe pre-
mier, simply because the Americans
were being withdrawn, the position of
the Japanese and Chinese in the far
east being far different from that of
the United States or Great Britain.
klso, he potnted out, the future moves
of the bolsheviki in Siberia could not
be forecast.
TOWER'S
FISH BRAND
WATERPROOF
CLOTHING
Monuments
Call and see our large stock
or write for prices. We
erect Monuments anywhere.
PUGET SOUND MARBLR
& GRANITE CO,
2006 First Ave., Seattle, Wn.
(Established 1874)
TACOMA GUN STORE
Tacoma, Wash.
Largest stock of Hunters and
Trappers Supplies in the North-
west. Especial attention to
mail orders,
Send one cent stamp for
catalogue
3-12
I I
EX-SHIPPING BOARD
HEAD IS ARRESTED
Captain J. F. Blain Is Charged
With Acceptance of Secret
Commissions.
Seattle, Wash.--Captain John F.
Blain, former north Pacific district
manager of the emergency fleet cor-
poration, was arrested here following
hie indictment by a federal grand Jury
On charges of having accepted secret
commissions while head of the ship-
ping board in this section. He was re-
leased under $10,000 cash bail.
While the indictment of Captain
Blain is the first definite action in
the probe of alleged frauds in the
Pacific coast shipbuilding programme,'
it will be followed shbrtly by others
involving emergency fleet corporation
officials and individuals in the north-
wet, acording to Waiter C. Foster,
special agent of the department of
Jtmtice, who is in charge of the in-
estigation.
It ie charged in the true bills that
Captain Blain divided his commissions
from the Steward Davit & Equipment
company with Frank Tregoning, who
turned Captain Blain's share over to
Mra. C. H. Boyer, who is Captain
Blain's mother-in-law. These secret
commissions, federal agents aszert,
were later given to the shipping board
officer.
Tregoning, accompaded by an ac-
countant from the department of Jus-
tice, appeared before the grand Jury,
Tregoning being called as a govern-
ment witness,
85 RADICALS ARE INDICTED
Mro. Rose Pastor Stokes i# One of
Those Accused.
Ch4oao.--lndictments against 85
members of the communist party of
America were eeturned by a special
vmd Jury iuvtigatl radical aotlv-
iti in Illinois.
Prominent among those indicted are
Mrs. Rose Pastor Stokes, who iz said
to be a member of the national execu-
tive committee of the organization and
an active organizer, and Nicholas
H(mrwlch of New York, said to be
editor of Novy Mlr, the newspaper
which employed Trotzky before he re-
tu.rned to Russia.
Indictments returned by the grand
Jury number 123. The Jury will now
turn its attention to evidence against
members of the I. W. W.
Martens Saya Reds Can Fight World.
S H E LT O N INDEPENDENT
Auto Stages
ii iii
Leave Shelton- Leave Olympia
7:30 a.m. 8:00 a. m.
10:30 a.m. 11:00 a. m.
2:00 p.m. 1:30 p. m.
4:45 p.m. 5:30 p. n
Shelton to Old Kamilche.. .50
Shelton to Snider's Prairie .75
Shelton to Olympia ...... $1.00
Olympia to Sniders Prairie .50
Olympia to Old Kamilche. .75
Olympia to Shelton ..... 1.00
Leaves Olympia from Braeger's
Place, opposite Bus Statiqn
OSCAR AHL
. AND
FRED THOMPSON
Washington. Russian Soviet or-
ganizations have become "strong
enough to fight the world," Ludwig
C. A. K. Martens, soviet agent to the
united States, told a senate lnvesti-
gting committee. Because of this,
he said, the soviets hve ceased to
urge international revolution to sup-
port them.
Reds Reportsd in Persia and India.
London.--A wireless message from
Warsaw gives a bolshevik rumor that
red cavalry has entered Persia and
India.
J8'olshevlk Forces Lose In Siberia
London.Irkutsk has fallen to the
Siberian social revolutionaries while
revolts have spread throughout the en-
tire country, virtually overwhelming
the all.Rtmsian anti-Bolshevik govern-
met, a 'lien Tsin dispatch says.
Poles Prepare to Fight.
Copenhagen.--The Polish cabinet
LEGAL EXPERTS TO 'IDUTCH REFUSE TO /
French to Prepare an Ex. / Paris.--The demand of the entent
tensive Survey of /PiO:'::r;otl,::trl::,ij:.Y):::::oPo to
the Case. /ntRny, that he nlay be trh:: "for a
/
' /supreme offense against Inttrnational
Paris Th re)l to the refusal of| morality and the sanctity of the trea-
• .-- 1 Y " / ties " has been refused by Holland.
the Dutch overnmcnt to coml)ly wlthl .' ..........
"" (hmtnd' ef th allies for tile sur | in a uote (t(H1vere{1 to Lno [orctgn
tee , ,i "| office by the l)utch nltnister, Holland
render of former I mporor \\;illiam
• " " | lakes Ills ground that the Dutch gee-
was the first subject discussed at thai -is ]tot a ari to th )a e
• ' / eminent • P Y ; - ; "
Initial meeting of the council of the r n
' ' | treaty, which condenmed \\; lllta!
ambassadors created to carry on tim
' ' / lh)henzollern, and that it caunot recog-
unfimshed reutme work of the su
• ' "] nizc as an, International duty the neces-
preme council of the peace conference[ stay to associate Itself with "this act
which disbanded last week. of high tntc, rnational .:policy of the
It was decided that the French legal powers."
experts available should go into all
the aspects of the case and prepare
the reply, which probably will be sub-
mitted for approval of the council ear-
ly next week.
The council was presided over by
Premier Mlllerand, Hugh C. Wallace,
the Amoric/m ambassador, was pres-
ent wit the other members of the
body.
The council received a letter from
Stanisiaus Patek, Polish minister of
foreign affairs, calling attention to the
possibility of a strong aggressive
,movement by the Bolsheviki against
Polish territory and recommending
that a plan be adopted for defensive
neasures. The letter asked that the
question be called to the attention of
Marshall Foch.
COMMUNIST PARTY
HELD REVOLUTIONARY
Washlngton.--The communist party
of America was held by Secretary Wil-
son of the labor department to be "a
revolutionary party" within the mean-
ing of the statutes providing for de-
portation of aliens who affiliate with
such organizations. In the specific
case of Englebert Preis, an Austrian
arrested in recent raids, execution of
a deportation warrant was ordered by
Mr. Wilson, paving the way for depor-
tation of a large number of aliens now
in custody against whom similar
charges have beau brought.
The ruling was made in a formal
opinion in which documents relating
to the communist party are discussed,
and in conclusion the secretary said:
"The only conclusion is that the
communist party of America is an or-
ganization that believes in, teaches
and advocates the overthrow by force
or violence of the govermnent of the
United States."
RUSSIANS ATTACK YANKS
Two Amerlca 8lain In Clelh With
Semenoff's Me.
Washlngton.--Two Amerioan sol-
diers were killed all oe severely
wounded in the clash with a Russian
detachment of General Semenofrs
forces on January 10, user Posolsaka-
ya, while five Russians were killed
one wounded and fifty-five captured,
Including one general and six other
officers.
In reporting the clash to the war de-
partment, Major General Graves, com-
manding the American expedition in
Siberia, said the Russians, in an ar-
mored car, made an unprovoked at-
tack on the Americans, who were in a
similar car. The Russian attmck was
repulsed and the Americans then cap-
tured the car and its occupants.
General Graves said he believed the
incident could be peacefully adjusted
with General Semenoff "who could not
have been responsible."
No Change in Reservations.
Washlngton.No change in the res.
creations affecting article 1 of the
league of nations covenant or the
Monroe doctrine provision, pf the peace
treaty will be acceptable to the re-
publicans, Senator Lodge lnform'ed
Senator HItchcock and other members
of the informal democratic committee
which had been conferring with Sena-
tor Lodge's committee in an effort to
reach a compromise on the treaty.
Senate Refuses to Censure Sims.
Washington.--The senate rejected,
33 to 30, an effort by Senator Walsh
Mont., to call up his resolution propos-
Ing to censure Rear Admiral William
S. Sims for disclosure of Information
of a "confidential character" in con-
It declares also that the constituent
laws of the kingdom and the tradition
of the country, always a ground for
refuge for the vanquished in interna-
tional conflicts, will not permit the
overnment to defer to the wishes of
:he entente by withdrawing frrom the
former emperor the benefit of its laws
and tradition.
BRIEF GENERAL NEWS
The California state board of health
announced that there was approxi-
mately 10,000 cases of influenza in
the state,
It is reported that Admiral Kolchak,
former head of the Omsk government
in Russia, is a prisoner of the revolu-
tionists at Irkutak.
Consolidation of the New York Sun
and New York Herald, under thee
name of "The New York Sun and
Herald," has been announced•
At a special called meeting of the
National Lutheran council steps were
taken to call a world conference of
Lutherans in America in 1920.
Former Emperor William of Ger-
many, it ts reported, was not surprised
by the formal refusal of the Dutch
governn/ent to comply with the allied
demand for his surrender.
President Wilson is said to be plan-
ning to leave Washington for South-
ern California for a prolonged rest and
change of climate by order of his
physician.
The Brotherhood of Railroad. Train-
men, which has a membership of about
200,000, will ask the railroad admin-
istration for a definite answer to its
demand for a general wage increase
of about 40 per cent.
senate passed and zent to the I
The
house a bill authorizing the shipping I
board to adjust the claims of wooden I
shipbuilders growing out of the can* I
cellatlon of contracts. The board has /
estimated that the measure will af-
fect about $15,000,000 in claims.
"Some Men Don't Know It Yet"
the Good Judge
says
• o I
Thzs class of tobacc
gives a man a lot more k,b'-5'N i
' satisfaction than he . { :
ever gets out of ordino /
" ar y t obacco. //N k'
Smaller chew--the good '. I
taste lasts and lasts, y
You don't need a fresh [ \\;'
chew so often. Any man \\; I
who uses the Real To- g.= \\;
bacco Chew will tell I' ___/ '.,
you that. J ili,
Put Up In Two Styles J";:'
RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tobacco
W-B CUT is a long fine-cut tobacco
En/omr m, o.d .o..,.. ( 1Get ItheGenuine 11 I
u., c,.o., la.nAvorff000000
Jl .l,e,. IftheyTire, ftch, i a[
ro C,,V7 J@ 3mart or Bum, if Sore,
L-,..¢'-(jC Irri*ated, Inflamed or
IOVR LYL5 Granulated, useMurine
Often. Soolhee. ielresl, elli,j Safe for
Infant or Adult At all Druggists. Write for
'ree £ye Boot, H=d zp lldV
t
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SHELTON-OLYMPIA
Hail Stage Line
L. M. STEWART, Prop.
, Daffy Schedules
Leave Shelton
8:30 a.m. 3:00 p. m.
11:30 a.m. 4:45 p. m.
Waiting Room and information about all con-
nections at Johnsoi's Garage.
Leave Olympia
7:00 a.m. 3:00 p. m.
11:30 a.m. 6:30 p. m.
Headquarters at Central Bus Station
Waiting Room and Lady Attendant. Phone 22.
BUY NOW WHILE DELIVERIES ARE POSSIBLE
Buy your Ford car now while deliveries are possible. There is only
a limited, specified number of Ford cars allotted to this territory. You will
be wise to buy one now while we can get cars to deliver. A signed order
with us is your protection.
Even our small allotment of Ford cars is not shipped us until we
have )onafide orders for them. This is because the demand for Ford cars
all over the country is greater than the supply Or production. So don't
depend on spring deliveT.
,Only so many Ford cars will be shipped into this territory; only so
many will be able to get Ford cars. If you would be forehanded and plan
ahead, you will have us deliver you a Ford car as soon as possible. Then
you will have it to use whenever you want it.
The Ford is an all year utility--in your home or business. Its ser-
viceability, its ease of operation, its low cost of maintenance has made it
such. It will serve you the year around. Spring and summer, autmnn and
winter, it is your servant; always ready to do your bidding.
WALLACE JOHNSON MOTOR COMPANY
Insist on Genuine Ford Pas
nectton with his appearance before the
Headquarters: Shelton, Hotel has signed a mobilization order, ye sub-committee investigating naval dee- @ $
Shelton. Olympia, Knox Garage a Warsaw report oration awards. The vote was on - 1
strict party lines, m ;
I i o'JA wAN.A WA
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