VOL. IVTII. NO. 18,130. PORTLAND. OREGON, FRIDAY, JANUARY 24, 1919. PRICE FIVE CENTS. RUSSIA'S DESTINY STILL IS DUBIOUS EX-EMPEROR KEEPS HIS BUCKSAW GOING WOODPILES MELT AWAY IN CAS TLE YARD. TEN MILLION ROAD BOND ISSUE SURE GALE HURLS POWER SCK :er on rocks HUNGARYMENACED WITH DEEPER RUIN BUTTER PRICE DROPS 10 CENTS PER POUND NfSOUALLY RIVER FLOODS MILLTQWN JAN iKRITHEItS WRECKED AR GRAYS HARBOR. BJJE8T t Rl MERY NOW A I I - ABLE AT 5 CENTS. vs. Reds Real Problem for Peace-Makers. CONFERENCE STILL IN DOUBT Anti-Bolsheviki Leaders Paris Are Indignant. in ALLIED PROJECT OPPOSED Many L'iii illing to "Sit at Table With Assassins"; Work or Con gress Is Proceeding. PARIS, Jan. -'3. (By the Associated Press.) Whether the effort of the great powers to tranquilize Russia, was to succeed or fail was still in the bal ance tonight. No reply had come from the Bolshe- v;k:, and as the wireless message em bodying the proposal of the associated powers was not send until - o'clock this morning, some' days may intervene before anything definite is known. Jh the meantime prominent anti Bolshevik leaders in Paris are not clear on their course, and the first reports that they were favorable to the plan have been followed by statements by such leaders as Sergius Sazonoff that they would not sit at the table with Inn Vigorous Protest Made. The semi-official Temps also asserts that the supreme council's proposal "permits traitors who withdrew Russia from the war and turned the entire Jerman strength against France to be received on the same footing as the faithful." The American and British delegates feel, however, that the proposal was the only course open. Information reaching the allies indi- ates that the Bolsheviki have a power ful army. In which discipline is being enforced. In view of this Information one of the Premiers pointed out today that the Bolsheviki could only be com baltcd by a large number of allied troops, which would have to be on the spot immediately, whereas none of the governments could ask people already wearied by war to undertake another large military expedition. Conference Work Ontlincd. The council of the great powers to day definitely set forth four main sub jects to be presented at the full con- lerence on Saturday. First, interna tional labor legislation: second, respon sibility and punishments for the war; third, indemnities; fourth, internation alization of ports, waterways and rail w a y s. 4 The subjects are not to be discussed in detail, but will be immediately re ferred to committees for study and re port. The American membeer of these committees were selected at an ex pended conferenc betwen Prsident Wil son and the American delegates this afternoon. The Americans' plans on the first question are already well advanced. While there is no definite informa tion on the second point, relative to responsibility and punishment for the war, the sentiment in American quar ters inclines to a negative attitude, with some suggestions that those re sponsible who have fled from Germany should be returned for Germany to deal with. Indemnities Grave Problem. Third subject, indemnities, will not be presented in the conference with the amounts claimed by each government, burt a committee will be charged witli the task of assembling these amounts and also of determining the probable maximum the enemy powers are able to pay. The meeting tomorrow will have add ed importance in bringing together the supreme war counci, with Preside t Wilson, the Premiers and Foreign Ministers, reinforced by Marshal Foch, Field Marshal Haig, General Pershing and General Diaz and the full member ship of the war council of Versailles. The subject for consideration is not Russia, or Poland, as was supposed but the status of the present military occupation of Germany, on which the council desires information from the military leaders. In some allied quar ters it had been suggested that the American strength in the occupied re gions should be relatively larger than that of the other forces, as the Euro pean allies have gone through longer tjervlce. This view is not shared in American quarters, where it is main- tained that the relative American strength is fully up to requirements. The presence of the military leaders tomorrow is expeted to bring a fairly full understanding on this subject. CHINA PRESll GRIEVANCE Terms of 1915 Treaty With Japan Held Fnsatislactor y. WASHINGTON. Jan. 23. (By the Associated Press.) Revision of the Chino-Japanese treaties of 1915, signed after the presentation by Japan of her 21 demands, will be asked at the peace conference by the Chinese delegation. according to an official statement is sued here tonight by the China Agency. "The Chinese people," said the state ment, "assert that the Chino-Japanese treaties of 1915 are in principle as much a war settlement demanding re- Concluded on Page "2, Column ::.) Exile I: Making Good, Enjoys His Work and Has Little Time for Talk, Report Says. AMERONGEN, Jan. 22. (By the Asso ciated Press.) Sawing wood continues to be a favorite occupation of the former German Emperor, who spends several hours each morning and after noon within the castle grounds working hard, while eeveral men servants re spectfully hand him logs and then pile the short sticks in heaps for use later in the furnaces of the castle. The shortage of coal In Holland compels the burning of wood, plenti- ' ful supplies of which are obtainable from the surrounding estate. William Hohenzollern works so well that he is able to furnish the entire consumption of the castle fires. The former Emperor rarely speaks to his attendants while at work. The two moats which encircle the castle are covered with ice sufficiently thick to bear skaters. The villagers, however, have been given to under stand that the accustomed permission to skate in the moats cannot be af forded while the former Emperor Is in the castle. There are various reports in circula tion concerning the alleged Intention of the former German Empress to re turn to Potsdam. The former Empress, it is said, has no intention of leaving her husband in Holland. For several weeks nothing has been heard from the former German Crown Prince, who remains virtually alone at his home on the island of Wierengen. Severa. more members of the for mer Emperor's suite arc about to leave for Germany, where, as state servants, they must place themselves at the dis posal of the government or forfeit their right to pensions. Lieutenant-General von Estorff, whose wife is an Ameri can, will continue to devote himself to the former Emperor. The General has resigned his rank in the Germa:; army. GOLDENDALE SEES MIRAGE Mount Hood Reproduced in Cloud Formation. GOLDENDALE. Jan. 23. (Special.) Citizens of Goldendale and the Klicki tat Valley obtained a view of an un usual sight Tuesday morning, when a mirage snow-capped mountain, an ex act replica of Mount Hood, loomed up in the Klickitat Valley west of Gold endale. The atmospheric phenomena was caused by dense clouds of snow white fog arising slowly through the air from the surface of a mill-pond in the Spring Creek country. The cloud-mountain was visible in an intact form for about 30 minutes, and then broke up and floated away. MINERS RETURN TO WORK Coal Controller Agrees to Give -0 Minute- for Meals. LONDON, Jan. 23. The strike of the 147.000 Yorkshire coal miner? who quit work today when the owners refused to meet their demands was settled late to day by the coal controller, who agreed to concede the 20 minutes "dead time" for meals while the mines are under government control. Serious strikes and threats of more serious ones in England over disputes which ordinarily would be considered unimportant have led to the belief that the demands are made to revolutionize the whole condition of labor employ ment BAKER TO RAISE FUNDS Memorial to Be Erected in Honor of Soldier Dead. BAKER, Or., Jan. 23. (Special.) Business and professional men of Baker last night laid the foundation for an organization to erect a suitable me morial in lionor of the soldier dead of Baker County. Committees were formed and active work will begin soon in Baker County to obtain funds. It is proposed to erect the monument on the Courthouse square, other meetings will be held as the campaign progresses. 38 I. W. W. START TERMS Men Convicted of Conspiracy Taken to Leavenworth. SACRAMENTO, Jan. 23. Thirty eight Industrial Workers of the World and others are today en route to Leavenworth, Kan., from Sacramento, to commence serving prison terms of from one to 10 years, being convicted in the Federal Court here of conspir acy to obstruct the Government's war programme. LONE YANKEE IN GERMANY American Soldier Too 111 to Be Re moved From Stuttgart. BERLIN. Jan. 23. (By the Associat ed Press.) Of the American soldiers taken prisoner by the Germans on the Western front only a single one now remains in Germany, the Associated Press correspondent has learned. He is at Stuttgart, too ill to be re moved at present. MRS. FITZSIMMONS WEDS Widow of Former Champion Pu gilist Becomes Merchant's Wife. CHICAGO. Jan. 23. Mrs. Fitzsim mons. widow of the one-time cham pion heavyweight pugilist. Bob Fitz simmons. was married yesterday to Phillip Reiner, a shoe merchant here. Political Issues of Oregon Legislators Delay Action. TWENTY BILLS ARE PRESENTED Highway Problems Uppermost in Minds of Lawmakers. ATTORNEY-GENERAL TO AID Ideas of State Highway Commission to Be Embodied in Measure Now Being Drawn. FEATl'RES IN OREGON LEGIS LATURE YESTERDAY. House. Resolutions introduced by Rep resentatives Kubli and Smith, of Multnomah: One to ask Congress to permit Oregon shipyards, to take con tracts on foreign account; the other to open a sweeping legisla tive investigation of why the Government is blocking the ship building programme. Sportsmen's war started when Representative Childs introduced a bill to prohibit duck baiting. Senate. Introduction by Senator Pierce of a resolution demanding com plete investigation of dairying conditions leading up to a 10 per cent tax on oleomargarine. Judiciary committee introduced substitute bill for two others to withdraw state aid from Indus trial Accident Commission. Multnomah delegation indorsed move to increase Circuit Judges' salary from $4000 to $5000 a year. SALEM. Or.. Jan. 23. (Special.) There will be a bond issue for about $10,000,000 and a good road law en acted by the Legislature, after the side issues and political campaign material of certain members have been disposed of. This is the sum total of what can be predicted on road legislation for the 1919 session. Twenty road bills already have been Introduced in the House or Senate. Some of these have real merit, some are unnecessary, as they are covered by (Concluded on Page 6. Column 1.) ! I J t J1 Sailors Are Missing, hut Cap tain and Eight of Crew Manage to Reach Land Safely. HOQUIAM. Wash.. Jan. 23. (Spe cial.) The five-masted British auxil iary powered schooner Janet Carruthers was driven- ashore four miles north of Westport. at the Grays Harbor en trance, here today, after being rendered helpless by a furious southeast gale which is sweeping this section of the Coast. Six sailors who attempted to reach shore early today in a small boat were missing tonight. They are believed to have been lost, as the boat was found on the beach at daylight, seven miles from where the Carruthers came ashore. Captain Carney and the eight re maining members of the Carruthers' crew reached the shore safely in one of the schooner's lifeboats, despite the 50-mile gale, which turned the seas Into veritable mountains of breaking surf. The Carruthers now lies hard aground in the breakers. Captain Carney re ported that the vessel had 14 feet of water in her engine-room, and It Is be lieved here that with the present heavy seas hammering her and breaking over the vessel she will be quickly pounded to pieces. The Carruthers was loaded with 400. 000 feet of lumber, taken on at Tacoma. and was bound for Portland, where her cargo was to have been completed prior to her departure for Japan. The schooner is owned by P. Griffin & Co. and has a deadweight tonnage of 2500. The vessel was working under charter to Balfour-Guthrie & Co. The Carruthers' plight was first no ticed by residents along the coast at daylight when the craft, then unidenti fied, was seen enveloped In the break ers north of the north Jetty at the en trance to Grays Harbor. She was fly ing signals of distress. Life savers at Westport were at once notified and they hastened to the scene. Throughout last night the wind blew with terrific velocity, at times reaching 70 miles an hour. At daybreak the gale had moderated to 50 miles an hour, but the seas were running very high with little sign of an early abatement of the storm. The present storm is declared to be the worst in years. All telegraph and telephone lines to the beach from this city are down and the highway is flooded, making vehicle traffic impos sible. The Huraptulips Rlve- has over flowed its banks and mue traffic by vehicle Impossible. Captain Carney and his men with the llfesavtng crew are searching the shore 12 miles from here tonight in an effort to locate the bodies of the missing men. Others Protest Wire Control. WASHINGTON, Ian. 23. Protests against continued Government control of telegraphs and telephones were pre sented to the House postoffice commit tee today by the Vermont. Montana and New Mexico Public Service Commis sions. HANDLE IT WITH GLOVES. People Chafe Under Cha otic Karolyi Misrule. SERBIANS SEIZE PROVINCE All Magyars Ordered From Ba nat in Two Weeks. BOLSHEVISTS HOLD ARMY Alies Said to Be Sending Demands of Vnfriendly Tone. Which Get No Recognition From Red. BY BEATRICE BASKERVTLLE. (Copyright. 1919. by the New York World. Published by Arrangement. ) VIENNA. Jan 23. (Special Cable.) Signs have appeared that the Hun garian government has entirely lost the" confidence of the country. Attacks on Its chaotic administration are heard on all sides, and the press, which was lavish In praise of Premier and Pro visional President Karolyi two months ago, is now filled with abuse of him and his ministers. Effects of misrule have become In creasingly manifest In the last few days, showing that the government de serves some part of the blame now heaped upon it. Plundering has become common In the interior, and the dis solution of the army has exposed the frontier to the ravages of foes. Magyar Ordrrrt Oat. Reports from the Banat. brought by the Serbian press, say the Serbian gov ernment, following a council in Temes var. has ordered all Magyar residents of the Banat to leave there within two weeks. State employes, railway men and postal officials are not excepted In this order. When made effective, the order will take the administration of that district entirely away from the Hungarians. From Marlath and Ereaienopel alone 10,000 Magyars must emigrate. This measure intensifies alarm in Budapest, for it means not only the influx of an army o f homeless and unemployed, but it clearly Indicates also the loss of the Banat district, comprising the richest wheat lands in Hungary or In Southern Europe. Ml Classes Are Arouiiprf. Business men. peasants, intellectual and officials are thoroughly aroused and are hastily forming new parties, all of them proclaiming "A strong gov crnment or Hungary's complete ruin. Malcontents are saying that the "onrludd on Pag 2, Column t.) Markets Generally Reported to Be! Slumping as Result or In creased Production. The creamery men are doing their best to cut down the cost of living. This morning they will reduce the price of butter 6 cents a pound, which, with the decline earlier In the week, will make a total of 9 cents from the high price of the season, which prevailed last week. The retail price of the best grades of butter In Portland stores will be So cents a pound this morning. Last week It was 75 cents. Consumers will now be able to buy a pound of butter and a dosen eggs for $1.25, whereas they have been paying about 11.80 during the Winter months. Butter prices are slumping in other markets as well as Portland, as pro duction everywhere is gaining fast- KAROLYI ISSUES WARNING Actions Since Armistice Said to Help Mittel Enropa Project. BUDAPEST. Jan. 22. Count Karolyi. Premier of Hungary, declared today that maintenance of the territorial In tegrity of Hungary Is essential to a European peace. "France and England." the Count ' lougnt to prevent the realization of Mittel Europa. but ir they continue to act as they have been doing since the armistice, are going toward the re constitution of this Mittel Europa." Count Karolvi declared it w - a mis take to take territory from Hungary as It was before the war and give it to new states "fnr .. n , r " " ' .1.1 '... V 11. W t 11 give these peoples autonomy which will intm emicai entitles similar to ine owns cantons. BLOCKADE KILLS 500,000 Germany Announces Deaths Caused by Food Situation. BERLIN. Wednesday, Jan. 22. (By the Associated Press.) it is an nounced officially by the German gov eminent that statistics of mortality due to the blockade" from the Au tumn of 1916 until the end of 1918 shows more than 500.000 deaths were caused by malnutrition or under-nutri tion. CEMETERY ABROAD URGED Proposal Is Made to Buy Land in France for Soldier Dead. WASHINGTON. Jan. 23. Permanent burial In France of American soldiers killed during the war. was urged In the House today by Representative Fess o Ohio, who introduced a bill providing for the establishment of an American Field of Honor Association to obtain and beautify an estate in that country for the graves. MILLIONAIRE'S SON DIES Marry S. Darkness III Only Few Days With Influenza. NEW TORK. Jan. 23. Harry Harkness. only son of the lato Lamon V. Harkness, Standard Oil millionaire. died of influenza at his home here to night. He had been ill only a few days. Mr. Harkness was greatly interested In sperts and was the owner of the Sheepshead Bay Speedway TORPEDO-BOAT IS SUNK Craft Hits Mine Off Tunis Coast. 18 Men Missing. PARIS. Jan. 23. The French torpedo boat No. 355 has struck a mine and sunk off the coast of Tunis. Eighteen men of the crew are missing. Torpedo-boat No. 325 was launched In 1906. The vessel was 122 feet long and had a speed of 26 knots an hour. MALM0UD PASHA ARRESTED General Held Responsible for Mas sacre of Armenians. PARIS. Jan. 23. (Havas.) General Kyamil Malmoud Pasha, who is said to be responsible for the massacre of Greeks and Armenians, has been ar rested, according to a report received here from Constantinople. INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS Tbe ttcalhrr. TEfTERDArs Maximum temperature. 4S degrees; minimum, 30 decrees. TODAY'S Rain; southerly winds. orelgn. Ex-Kalser's bucksaw keeps cast! furnace supplied. Pas 1. National. Huse loss ahown In railroad earnings under Xj. s. operation. Pare 3. Passage of European relief bill today ex pected. Page 4. Packer Swift commends work of Pood Ad mlnlairator. Page 4. Pacific Northwest. Niaoually River floods mill town of Ifc Kesna. Pag 1. Legislatures. Road bond issue for Slo.ono.OOO regarded as certainty in Oregon. Page 1. Legislature seeks to save shipbuilding ln- r. Page . Appropriations, vetoed by Governor, passed at Olympla. Page T. Commercial and Marine. Six-cent decline in local butter market. Paso 21. Anti-duck baiting hill Introduced In Housa to cause fight- Page 14. Ten-round boxing measure Introduced In Ore gon Legislature. Page 14. rortland and Ictwlty. City creamery men announce cut in butter prices. Page 1. Employers to atudy labor problem. Page 12. D. A. Hatfield guilty of deed forgery. Pace II- Houses Surrounded by Six Feet of Water. SITUATION REGARDED SERIOUS Pacific Highway Concrete Bridge Threatened. RAIL TRAFFIC IS BLOCKED Northern Pacific Ilopes to Get Train to Olympla to Bring Away Leg islators Over Sunday. n Riot morm sw kbp! oi mm picinc north w mm t. Olympla Torrent pours through town of McKenna. Wash. Millmen marooned. Portland Lightning and heavy downpour. Railroad lines to Puget Sound are blocked with land slides. Willamette overflows low er docks. Tillamook Railroad traffic is suspended. Oregon witnesses third thunder storm in January since 1873. Tacoma-Seattle No communi cation with each other. Eugene Lightning strikes. Wind blows. Damage not great. Astoria Worst over. Freshets do much damage and highway blocked. Rainfall S.3 Inches In 40 hours. Oregon City Mills forced to close. OLTMPIA. Wash., Jan. 23. (Special. Latest reports from McKenna, a mill town of several hundred people on the Milwaukee line in Southwest Pierce County, are that the Nisqually River is pouring an overflow torrent through the town and the houses are surrounded by from four to six feet of water. The McKenna Lumber Company mill, one of the largest In the state, shui down and the employes are marooned in groups in the club and other build ings. While the situation was reported as extremely serious, officials of the com pany believed the town would hold onto its foundations unless the river con tinued to rise. More rain has fallen and a slight rise noted, but it is be lieved that if flooded areas hold out tonight the worst danger period will be passed. No loss of life is reported in this district, but it is believed cer tain that the total property damage will be hea ) . resrrelr BrMge la Denser. With 100 soldiers from Camp Lewis piling In sandbags and brush, and dynamite crews blasting out drift as it accumulates against the piers, the ncu concrete bridge on the Pacific Highway near Nisqually Station is with standing the worst flood ever known in the Nisqually River. High water mark stood at nearly 22 feet, with a current running that snapped full-grown fir trees like matches when they lodged across the piers. Highway traffic has been retarded all day and has been stopped tonight on account of back wash cutting into the gravel approaches. The test of the new roadway will come with high tide in the neighbor ing bay tonight when the flood cur rent will be raised several feet. High way authorities arc satisfied that th; river will stand the flood without damage unless a log Jam is hurled against it from above. Itail Traffic Uloeked. Rail traffic has been blocked In all directions today, but the Northern Pa cific expects to get a train through to Tacoma tonight, which will prevent the Legislature from being marooned over Sunday. Urays Harbor traffic is badly demoralised, according to reports avail able here. A special train of 4' ' discharged sol diers from Cam.i Lewis to California was held here most of the day in mak ing an attempt to run to Portland via Gate City. Chehalls River bottom lands below Kochesler arc under water, and ranch ers on the I'pper Skookumchuck are cut off. Bucoda, on the main line be tween Portland and Tacoma, is re ported flooded. LINES TO SOUND I 1 1 I VP Willamette River Rises More Than Two Feet in 21 Hours. With railroads, telephone and tele graph companies already struggling under difficulties to maintain service, weather forecasts for today promise no cessation of the storm, which already has caused numerous landslides and is raising the Willamette River at a rate that threatens to flood the lower piers of warehouses on the waterfront. Probably the worst trouble has been experienced on the railroad lines to Puget Sound, on which transportation Is completely tied up by landslides be tween Centralla, Wash., and Tacoma, Wash. Several small slides have oc curred ttfis side of Centralla, which will add to the delay In opening tbe line to traffic. No trains were expected .l'-mi-ludt.4 uu Page 18, Column L)