1'OKTLAND, OKI2GON, FItlDAY, OVK3115EK 29, 1918. PRICE FIVE CENTS. VOL. LVIII. XO. 18,102. I 01 MOQNEY ESCAPES GALLOWS Death Sentence Is Com muted by Governor. LIFE IMPRISONMENT DECREED Executive Is Influenced . President's Appeal. by CONVICT HELD NO MARTYR Condemned Man DecTared to Be "o True Friend of Labor; . Case Decided on Its Merits. ! ACRAKTTNTO, CaL. Nov. 2 S. The sen tence of Thomas J. Mooney. condemned to be hanged Decemer 13 In connection with the deaths of ten persons from a bomb explosion in San Francisco on Preparedness day, July 22. 1918. was commuted by Governor W. D. Stephens today to imprisonment for life. In giving the announcement of the Governor's decision to the Associated Press his private secretary. Martin Madsen. said the commutation was gned early this evening, but that fur ther than the written statement there would be no comment. The statement reviews the case fully and quotes in their entirety the two messages from President Wilson, in which the action now taken by the Governor waa suggested. The commu tation, says the Governor, reduces the case to the status of that of Warren K. Billings. Moo Bey Held Martyr. -I refuse to recognise this case as in any fashion representing a clash be tween capital and labor." he adds, and l.e characterizes as absurd the propa ganda that would make Mooney ap pear as a martyr to the cause of lib erty. In support of this statement he quotes a letter from Alexander Berk man outlining the plan afterward adopted for the Mooney campaign. He denies that Mooney is a true friend of labor and characterises his previous record as such that it does not enlist faith tn him among law-abiding citl sens. but says in conclusion that this particular case has been decided upon Its merits. GOTerae-r Slakes Statement. Governor Stephens, in commuting the sentence of Thomas J. Mooney to life Imprisonment, gave out this statement: "On July 22, 191$. 10 persons men, women and children were killed and about SO others wounded in a bomb ex plosion during a Preparedness Day parade In the city of San Francisco. The parade was a patriotic manifestation into which the people of the city had entered with much spirit and loyal im pulse. Manifestly, because of the oc casion chosen, hostility to the Nation's "uefense measures must have had a part In actuating the perpetration of so hor rible a deed. ' "It is not unreasonable to assume that a sympathy or even a definite re lationship existed between those mur derers and the propaganda and violence then being engaged in throughout the country by agents of the German gov ernment. The case, as presented to the California courts, was that of mur der, without further evidence of motive than the impossible tenets of an archists, whose sympathies for the German cause in the war are well known. Their wild pacifist theories fitted into the widespread activities of the Kaiser's agents in this country. "A number of persons of pronounced anarchistic tendencies were arrested shortly after the explosion, and of these Warren K. Billings was convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment and Thomas J. Mooney found guilty and sentenced to be hanged. avenue, ot appeal to in. ; eourts remained open to Mooney. and j he waa availing himself thereof, I deemed it improper for executive au thority to Interfere. Although the con- stitutlon of California clothes the Gov- j ernor witu power 10 exercise clemency "y "ra" -". " rortant. so far as practicable, not to iniruae imo iq; criminal case uniit the Judicial branch has finally disposed of it. Only recently has final action been taken by the United States ! Supreme Court and the case of th people vs. Thomas J. Mooney placed squarely before me. President's Appeal Cited. In considering the Mooney case, I have had be fore, me the urgent appeal of the President of the United States that I grant commutation. "Originally in January of this year, I received a letter from the President asking if it would not be possible to postpone the execution of Mooney until he could be tried upon one of the other Indictments against him. "Inasmuch as an appeal already had been taken to the Supreme Court of California, which appeal Itself acted as a stay of the execution, there was at that time no occasion for action on my part. I take it that the President was not correctly Informed as to the status of the case." Exeewtrre A gala Appeals. Tn March I received a telegram from the President urging that I com mute Mooneyes sentence. It waa as follows: " The White House. Washington. D. C 12:0 P. M-. March 27. 1918. " "Governor Wm. D. Stephens, Sacra men to. CaL "With very great respect. I take the (Concluded oa Pa- i. Column 1). TURKEY DINNER EATEN HALF MILE UP. IN AIR FIRST AERIAL BAXQCET IX HIS TORY IS SCCESS. Xine Fliers Celebrate Thanksgiving 2800 Feet Above New V. S. Mail Service Field. ELIZABETH, N. J, Nov. 2S. The first aerial banquet in history was h.irt mdar on an airplane 2800 feet above the new flying field of the United States air mail service, mark ing 'the Inauguration of the field the terminus of the aerial mail service between New York, Philadelphia and Washington. A few minutes after the mall plane, n rhrr of Pilot Max Miller, left the field, at 12:10 this afternoon, a big Hanley-Page machine rose under con trol of CaDtain E. B. Waller, of the Roval Flyinr Force and during flight of 22 miles above the grounds a real Thanksgiving dinner waa served to nine persons. I Amour the guests were Captain Ben Jamln B. Llpsner, superintendent of the air mall service, and Allan K. Haw.ey. Augustus Post and other officials of the Aero Club of America. Speaking oi the Dronosed Nation-wide extension of the mail service. Captain Llpsner said: We will have machines which win carry a ton and a half of mail and the day's of freight and parcel post by air plane are coming." wilson ha;ledas leader Medal for "Most Distinguished Service" Awarded. WASHINGTON, Not. 2S. Officials of the Independent Order of B'nal B'rith presented to President Wilson today the gold medal awarded him by the so ciety last October as the man who ren dered the most distinguished service to humanity during the past year. Adolph Krause. of Chicago, president of the society,' read a formal salutation, hailing the President as champion of permanent peace, the leader in the fight against militarism, cruelty and misery, and expressing the belief that the people of the United States are "fortunate in having at this time as their leader a man whose words carry weight, not only with the allies, but even with the defeated nations." ARTIST COMPLETES MODEL Tacoma Sailor Gets Furlough to Work for Victory Monument. TACOMA, Wash.. Nov. 28. (Special.) Allan Clark, young Tacoraa artist, new with the United States Naval Re serve, has completed a model for a victory monument to be erected in Ta coma. Be was given a furlough to do the work, t Clark gained National rec ognition for his plaster casts of Ruth St. Denis, which he made at Denlshawn. m Southern California. He modeled a bust also of Brigadier-General Henry A. Greene, formerly In command of the 91st Division at Camp Lewis. Alonso Victor Lewis also has com pleted a model for the monument. The base of the memorial will bear the names of all Pierce County men in service. NEW YORKERS GET DINNER Thanksgiving Day Strike Is Averted at Eleventh Hour. NEW YORK. Nov. 28. After a parade today of hotel and restaurant workers, followed by a mass meeting, it was an nounced by the chiefs of tbelr organiza tion leading a fight for higher wages that the restaurant owners had yielded their demands, thus averting a Thanks giving day strike fixed for the night dinner hour. The strike of the waiters at hotels, which has been in effect for several days, would be continued, the leaders said. LAWYER STARTS FURORE Claude Bell, of Missouri, Sets Up as Constitution Authority. MONTGOMERY. Mo., Nov. 29. The victory meeting at the Courthouse to ris v almost ended in a furore when Ciaude EeU a iawyer. declared it un- ....., lon.i tor President Wilson to make the peace trip, and that as soon as the President started on the mission the courts should mandamus Vice- prtMmt Marshall to accept the Presl ,jenCy There were 1500 persons attending tho mtetlDg and raore t,an half Ieft when Bell made the statement. BOLSHEVIK TROOPS ACTIVE Several Towns Kf ported Taken In Esthonla Province. HELSING FORS, Finland, Nov. 28. Reports from the Baltic province of Esthonla Wednesday said that Russian Bolshevik troops on Tuesday captured Pskov, ISO miles southwest of Petro grad. The fate of the volunteer North ern army was unknown. It was also reported that Dunaburg, 110 miles southeast of. Riga, had been taken by the Bolshevik forces and that Narva, 81 miles southwest of Petrograd, was being bombarded. ' U. S. INSURANCE PRAISED Soldiers Advised to Keep Federal Policies After Return Home, SALEM, Or.. Nov. 27. (Special.) Sol diers are advised to retain their Gov ernment insurance policies and not al low them to lapse, in a statement issued by Insurance Commissioner Harvey Wells. "My advice," said Mr. Wells, "is that Government insurance be continued for the reason that many of the boys will come back more or less physically im paired and will find it Impossible to obtain insurance in regular companies.1 TO BE TO THREE U. S. Peace Envoys Will Be Named Shortly. LANSING EXPECTED TO LEAD Others Probably Henry White and Colonel E. M. House. PRESIDENT NOT DELEGATE Executive Goes Merely to Take Part in Preliminary Meetings of Allies' Representatives. WASHINGTON". Nov. 28. The impres sion Is growing among those who have talked with President Wilson about the peace conference that the American del egation will be" limited to three mem bers, and speculation of the personnel has about narrowed down to three names: Robert Lansing, Secretary of State. Henry White, Ambassador to France and to Italy under the McKinley Admin istration. Colonel E. M. House. . There has been no announcement and there may be none before the Presi dent addresses Congress next week, but it was said tonight that White House callers had been given to understand that these men would be the American envoys. President Not Delegate. It also was Indicated very definitely that reports of the President having de cided to sit at the peace table himself as a delegate were untrue. He goes to take part In the great preliminary meetings of the heads of the associated governments and to see the formal con ferences under way, but not to serve as a delegate. In addition to the accredited dele gates, there will be a large party, in cluding, besides the military, naval. diplomatic and economic experts, other specialists in the multitudinous ques tions to be dealt with, Among them will be men of high rank,' prepared to par ticipate in discussions that will take place outside of the formal conference and in position below only the accred ited delegates, who, it is assumed, will take ambassadorial rank. All Arrangements Completed, The exact time of the President's sailing for Europe apparently still is unknown to anyone except the Presi dent himself. He is expected to leave the day after he addresses the new see- (Concluded on Page Column 3.) DELGAT1 LUTED ......... .... ......... I IT CANT GET AWAY! , " i xvvn it T I i.UMA...X. . . X. . . A. . .-'A. . . SA.-.i. . .A.A . .-.-MA. - - Daily Casualty Report. WASHINGTON, Nov. 28. Total cas - uaities reported today are 2168, of which 536 were killed in action, 220 died of wounds, 10 of accidents, 6 in airplane wrecks, 326 died of disease, 07 are wounded severely, 224 degree undetermined, 177 slightly and 562 are missing in action. A list of Marine Corps casualties, in which are several names of Northwest men, is on page 11. Following la the tabulated summary of Army casualties: Deaths Reported Today. Total. Killed in action ........17,775 536 18.311 Lost at sea . .'. 36 .... S96 Died of wounds 6.978 220 7.108 Died of disease 8.7X2 326 . 9.1 0.S Uiai of accident 1.562 16 1.578 Total deaths 35.493 1008 30.591 Wounded 46.204 508 46.712 Missing and prisoners. .10.029 6U2 10.591 Total casualties 91.726 2168 93,894 " The complete list, except those out side of Oregon, Washington and Idaho who -are wounded slightly or in an un determined degree, follows: OREGON. Killed In action Grub be, Lee, Vamhlll. Or. Bruce. H. H.. Enterprise. Or. Swart. I. M., Newbtrg, Or. Walch. William. Gresham, Or. Johansen, N. H., Junction, City, Or. Kothermel. Wilson H Astoria, Or. Anderson. John, Rainier, Or. Velziat. B. fC RoMbur. Or. Vales. Rudolph. Cleveland, O. vied or mwue Schall, John F. (Cpl.), Eugene, Or. Misfianr in action Conner, William M.. Portland. Or. Doollttle, Clifford Krnest, Portland. Or. WASHINGTON. Killed In action Nei-on, Richard (Sgt.), Seattle, Wash. Miller, Wesley Wm. (Set.). Harrington, nun. Larson, Carl A. (Corp.). Issaouah. Wash. Koplitz, . William ill. (Corp.), Snohomish, wun. - Harlow, A. E.. Satsop, Wash. Graham. T. J.. Pomeroy. "Wash. Gaedecks, E. A., Seattle, Wash. , Twerdale, B. J.. Bow, Wash. X Porter, G. M., Yakima, Wash. Krlppner. W. H.. Seattle, Wash. Becker. Henry, Ruff, Wash. Bare. William K., Somas, Wash. Theobald, E. T Colville, Wash. Swank, C. E., Seattle, Wash. Died of wounds Cohen. David H. (Lieut,), Spokane. Barbee, Irving H., Anacortes, Wash. Portogalo, Thomas, Seattle. Died of aeidrnt Johnson, -Arvid C, Custer,. Wash. Missing in action - Cass, Elmer H. Sgt.). Sultan, Wash. Chounos, George. Chattle, Wash. Barstrom, Carl M., Spokune, Wash. Dougherty. William H., Dondulac, Wash. Lassila, Monroe, Deer Park, Wash. Rickard, Artie At.. Oakdale, Wash. Riser, Lloyd W., Puyallup, Wash. Olson, Andrew, Puyallup, Wash. Cross, Fulton 6., Jordan Valley, Wash. Carr, David R., Kamllche. Wash. Clark, Earl P., Castle Rock, Wash. IDAHO. Killed in action Gardner, John W. (Sgt.). Teuton, Idaho. Williams, G rover D. (Corp.), Arco, Idaho. Erensen, C. M. W., Malad, Idaho. Walsh. H. M.. Three Creek, Idaho. Bergendorff. J. F., Idaho falls, Idaho. " Died of wounds Paulson, Tuce A.. Wallace, Idaho. Missing in action Lockmao, Paul J., Nampa. Idaho. ALABAMA. Killed In action Webb, Ernest P. (Sgt.), Scottsboro, Ala. Tucker, Anderson (Corp.), Otachie, Butller, ' R. J., Hlghtowen Ala. Aaron, Bart L., Arley, Ala. McCray, Judge, Louisville, Ala. , . Died of wound Allison, Oral, New Market, Ala, Smith. Walker, Danville, Ala. Died of disease Young, Alfred C. (Sgt.), Linden, Ala. Harden, William J., Hacoda, Ala. Wounded everel Jernlgan. William H., Wallace, Ala, Robinson, John. Mable, Ala. Missing in action Hollis. John C, Hamilton, Ala. Hendricks, Bernett, Oneneta, Ala. Partrick. 6im E.. Buhl. Ala. Gooch, Chester L., Jackson, Ala. Coates. Lester L.. Grovevllle, Ala. (Continued on Page 7, Column 1.) ALLIES TO DEMAND GERMAN EX KAISER Counter-Revolt Declared in Full Swing in Berlin. HUN GENERALS ARE IN PLOT Austria Will Try ex-Emperor, Bechtoid and Czernin. FAMINE IS NEAR AT HAND Six Thousand People Stand 'In Line Daily for Soup Made From Rotten Cabbages. LOft'DOX, Nov. 28. The entente allies have decided to demand that Holland sdrrender the former Emperor of Ger. many to justice, according to the Daily Express. LONDON, Nov. 28. At a Berlin meet ing of the Soldiers' and Workmen's Council, Herr Barth, secretary for so cial policy in the Ebert Ministry, de clared that a counter revolution was In full swing, according to a Copen hagen dispatch to the Exchange Tele graph Company. Several Generals have issued counter revolutionary proclamations and have attempted to dissolve the Soldiers' and Workmen's Councils. Oast Eberhard, la Demand. Herr Barth said that the chief Vmy command had been ordered to come to Berlin, and that the dismissal of Gen eral Eberhard had been demanded, owing to the arrest of members of the soldiers' and workmen's councils on the western front. No reply had been received, Herr Barth continued, but if the order is disregarded, the chief of the army command will be arrested, LONDON, Nov. 28. The Vienna gov ernment intends to bring to trial all persons responsible for the war. In eluding Count Berchtold, Austro-Hun- garian Foreign Minister when the war broke out, and Count Csernin, Foreign Minister at a later period, according to an Exchange Telegraph- dispatch from Copenhagen today. War Cannes to Be Probed. Former Emperor Charles, the Aus trian Grand Dukes and a "number of Generals are also tb be tried, according to these advices. BERLIN, Nov. 27. (By the Assoclat ed Press.) The German-Austrian Na tional Council is negotiating with the Hungarian and Czech governments for the purpose of securing their co-operation in the publication of diplomatic (Concluded on Page 3. Column 1.) TASTE OF WILD WEST IS GIVEN NEW YORK IMPROMPTU BEAR HUNT IS STAGED Kf CENTRAL PARK. Zoo Keeper Drops Dead; Patrolmen and Soldier Bitten and Automo bile Collides With Bruin. NEW TORK, Nov. 28. An impromptu bear hunt in Central Park was the most thrilling event of Thanksgiving day in New York. In the excitement of the chase an assistant keeper of the Zoo dropped dead of heart disease, a pa trolman lost a chunk of flesh through a bite in his right calf, and a soldier's left thumb was bitten off while he was pursuing bruin up a tree. There Is reason to believe the bear would have escaped had it not got in the path of an automobile. It was swaggering across a road in the direc tion of the topmost tree in the park when the motor collided with it. The car was considerably damaged and the cub's spirit was broken. Bruin had only strength enough left to' reach the top of a small tree, the eighth it bad climbed since the chaee had started, and there it wae lassoed by a mounted policeman and dragged back to the cage in the zoo from which it had fled. The cub was the mascot of the 22d United States Infantry until it became too boisterous for the barracks. MISS CARNEGIE TO MARRY Engagement to Son of Late Rail road Man Announced. NEW YORK, Nov. 28. The engage ment of Miss iJargaret Carnegie, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Carnegie, to Roswell Miller, of this city, was announced tonight. Mr. Miller Is a son of the late Ros well Miller, of New York and Chicago, widely known railroad man who at various times served as president, gen eral manager and chairman of the board of directors of the Chicago, Mil waukee & St. Paul Railroad Company. Recently he has been in the United States submarine chaser service. BRITAIN'S LOSSES MILLION Killed, Wounded and Missing Men Make Mighty Total. LONDON, Wednesday, Nov. 27. (British Wireless Service.) It is offi cially announced that during the war the forces of Great Britain actually lost nearly 1,000,000 men killed or dead through various causes. Recently it was said that the British losses totaled 658,704, but this number did not, take into consideration men who were reported . missing, who ac tually lost . their lives, but of whom there is no trace, nor did it account for men who died at the front from sick- ness. GREEK PREMIER TO WAIT Projected Visit to America to See President Postponed. NEW YORK, Nov. 28. The projected visit of Eliptherios Venizelos, Premier of Greece, to this country, has been postponed "in view of the imminent arrival of President Wilson in Europe," said a cablegram received here today by the American Hellenic Liberal As sociation. The message signed by the Premier was sent from London, where he has recently been advising with allied statesmen regarding Balkan questions. BRITONS ON HUN FRONTIER Advance Guards in Possession of Surrendered Guns. LONDON, Nov. 28. Advance guards of British troops have reached the Bel gian-German frontier in the region be tween Bebo and Stavelot, and are in possession of more than 14 surrendered German guns, according to an official communication issued tonight. NDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature, 44 degrees; minimum. 'J degrees. TODAY'S Cloudy, southwesterly winds. - War. Casualty list. Page 1. Foreign. Allies will demand that Holland give UP Kaiser. Page 1. yam burg Huns confer with Slav reds. Page 3. America's allies pay tribute to Tanks over seas. Page 18. Ex-Crown Prince is still considered danger ous intriguer. Page 2. Chile and Peru still quarreling. Page 10. Allied blockade of Germany to continue. Page 3. National. United States peace delegation probably will be limited to three members. Page 1. East to save Oregon fruit juice Industry. Page 5. Domestic American soldiers get harsh treatment In Hun prison .camxts. Page 2. First aerial banquet In nistory is pronounced success. Page 1. New York gets taste of Wild West. Page 1. Mooney's death sentence commuted to life imprisonment. Page 1. Poles seek inquiry Into conditions abroad. Page 14. Pacific Northwest. Governor appeals to Wilson for reinstate ment of ship construction. Page 6. Sports. Pitt trounces Penn State in 28-to-6 game. Page 17. Idultnomah Club takes hard game from Aggies. Page ltt. Marines defeat Camp Lewis. Page 16. Stanford no match for . California men. Page 17. Portland and Vicinity. Portland worships and feasts. also. Page 1. Wooden ships have proved success, says Captain Bulger. Page 21. Lumber situation regarded as critical. Page 21. Flaws in Ferris type react on all wooden shipbuilding. Page 21. -Portland School Board to pass on 1019 budget today. Page 15. Citizens hope to welcome Third Oregon boys as unit. Page 13. City gives thanks for reign of peace. Page 8. Labor not satisfied with commutation of Mooney's sentence. Page 4. Weather report, data and forecast. Page 18, CITIZENS WORSHIP Hi FEAST Whale of a Thanksgiving, Lampman Calls It. PEOPLE PAUSE FROM LIBOR Churches Give Thanks in Union Meeting or Singly. UNFORTUNATES ARE DINED Old Man Thanksgiving, Interviewed, Tells Us What Is in Our Hearts, as Divined by Himself. BY BEN HTJR LAMPMAN. Everyone in Portland In all the wide United States, for that matter agrees that when those stern old psalm-singing pioneers, the Pilgrims, laid the spiritual masonry of Thanksgiving thry started something that will go Joyfully echoing down the corridors of time for a thousand years or so to come. With this conviction comfortably stowed away, but agreeably conscious of its presen'ce, Portland met Thanks giving at the threshold yesterday .with greetings that may well be termed gladsome, and ushered the presence into the Inner circle, a cushioned chair wait ing by radiator on fireplace and the tantalus of bronzing turkey and merry mince tiptoeing from the general direc tion of the kitchen. Interviewed by a great many thou sand citizens right after the dinner hour which the local room will tell you is the most sagacious time to tackle the prospect Thanksgiving in Portland yesterday authorized the ensuing Inter view. The genial old Puritan was munching raisins at the moment, and, though he scattered seeds regardless, none ventured to interrupt. Thanksgiving Discourses Thanly. "I have always, ever since the 'stern and, rockbound coast' days, been gifted with not a little psychic Insight,'" said Thanksgiving. "Thus I perceive what is in the hearts of men, rather than the superficialities which reside aloft And the former is by no means the least in importance, I assure you. "May I nt say to borrow one of Woodrow's pet phrases may I not say that I grip and hold fast this festal season a sentiment of gratitude that swells with every pulsebeat. It is phe nomenal. It is almost beyond compre hension. In nigh to three centuries of experience I have encountered no gen eral jubilation that holds a candle to it. "Prosperity? An ephemeral. Plenty? A wisp that' is blown helter-skelter by the winds of circumstance. No, neither of these, though they have blessed you in abundance, and it is but fitting that you should be appreciative and devout ly grateful. "Permit me to tell you," begged the good old fellow, tossing aside the raisin stem, "just what is in your hearts. You have seen, as I have, a vision of the -foam before the troopships home ward bound. You have correct me If I am 'amiss beheld America no longer the girl on the dollar bright-eyed, high-hearted and resolute, come strid ing out of the chaos of conflict, with freedom's torch undimmed!" "Enough," Quoth Thanksgiving. At this juncture Thanksgiving waved his interviewers aside, contending that he never was much of a talker, any how, and that a great many remarks had been attributed to him without authority. It was astonishing, he de clared, how one may be misinterpreted year after year by thoughtless and slovenly chroniclers. "At any rate," he concluded, "I have said enough. When I get to talking along this line, I prove myself to bo one of the most indefatigable old fans that Freedom has. Sometimes I fear that I grow garrulous, not to say hyperbolical," he sighed. Portland churches and Portland homes observed Thanksgiving yester day with a depth of feeling that has no previous parallel. Each of the scores of churches heard sermons that dwelt upon the debt America owes for guidance through surpassing strife and difficulty to the safe haven of triumphant peace. ITnlon Services Are Held. In numerous instances, for the greater glory of the day, union services were held, with half a dozen or more congregations joined in mutual thanks giving At each of these the songs that were lifted were not all gospel hymns, for certain songs have been sanctified through battle and sacrifice, and of right maintained the prominence that was accorded them. There were intermissions at all the aters, when soloists stepped forth and sang those sa-me songs, and when the huge Thanksgiving audiences joined In the singing. Known as the "universal sing," the airs of American patriotism rang yesterday in till the theaters of America, from the "nickel movie" a rare bird nowadays to the "high brow" drama. There's Turkey Left Over. ' And, while dwelling on rare birds, let It be noted that Portland in general rather pointedly declined either tom turkey or his consort at the prevailing pre-Thanksgiving prices. There was a sentiment, resolutely backed, that the festival fowl roosted rather high at 60 cents per pound, snd many a home (Concluded oa Page 8, Column 3.)