VOL. LIX. NO. 18,1 G2. PORTLAND, OREGON, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1919. PRICE FIVE CENTS. LOC,in?ITELJTACOffl IDLE, WITH SPECIAL SESSION OF HUNGER STALKS ON 1500 SAN FRANCISCO MACHINISTS STRIKE FEDERAL TROOPS ARRIVE III SEATTLE LEGISLATURE LIKELY U I I I I I I UJ -- 1 RADICALS AT HELM TRAIL OF STRIKERS SO STRIKE IMMIXEXT AMONG RECOXSTIirCTIOX MEASURES to SO-CALLED "OfTSlDE SnOPS' AFFECTED BY WALKOUT. PORTLAND WORKERS. BE VOTED CPOX IX JOE. SEATTLE DAZED AS STRIKE GRIPS CITY "This Is Bolshevism "Cit izens Grimly Mutter. ALL 1NDUSTHY PARALYZED Armed Troops and Police With Machine Guns Ready to Curb Any Disorder, PUBLIC BEGINS TO CHAFE Anger Grows That Seattle Chosen for Staging of In itial U. S. 'Red Revolt Is Armed Tropps Ready to Quell Bolshevik Spirit. Majority, Forcer' 0 Strike by Minority, Vo;. v Complaint. Metal Trades Council In session Considers Seattle Situation and Effect Here. Developments in the Seattle strike situation are said not to have influ enced members of Portland labor or ganizations as yet, though the subject TMnilClUnQ IDC promised to be made part of the pro- IlllUOAllUO AriL ceedings of the Portland Metal Trades Council and the Portland Central Labor Council, which were in session at a late hour last night. The opinion expressed among union men is that there will not be a sym pathetic strike here unless the situa tion at Seattle produces conditions ac cepted as unfair to labor bodies to a degree that might prompt affiliated organizations to act in harmony. With reference to the scale paid In local shipyards, there is a disposition among Portland workers to abide by the existing schedule until the date of its expiration, March 31, and that is to be thoroughly threshed out at the an nual convention of the Pacific Coast District Metal Trades Council, which opens its session here February 17. Co-operation on the part of outside unions with those at Seattle and Ta- coma can only be assured, it is declared. after the matter is voted on by the in dividuals of the organizations, so can not be peremptorily ordered by any one official. Ff4?lESS BULLYING METHODS NOTED Streetcar Men Charge That ThCT Walked Out Through Threats. Longshoremen Stay at Posts. BY BEN HUH LAMPMAX. SEATTLE, Wash., Feb. 6. (Spe cial.) This is a city struck between the ees. It is dazed by the complete business paralysis of the general strike. Though still smiling a little at its troubles, Seattle is beginning to mut ter, for it feels that it has been un- fairly chosen as the testing ground for radicalist ideals. "This is Bolshevism," say its citi zens. Called out in sympathy- strike with the striking shipworkers, who protest the wage award of the- Macy Board and who have long since been swal lowed up in the larger immediate events of industrial disorder, prac tically every craft in Seattle has laid down its tools. All Industries. Cease. - At 10 o'clock this morning the cen- eral gtiike went into effect. All traf fic, save that of business and pleasure cars, ceased at that hour. All eating houses, with very few exceptions, closed their doors. Industrially the city became somnolent at the tick of the second. While all save the most radical ele ment of the strikers protest that Seat tle is not undergoing an initial experi ment in Soviet power, after the fash ion of Russia, public sentiment is al most unanimous in hotly declaring that the city has been chosen, with the shipyard strike as a pretext, for the staging of the "revolution." Machine Guns Are Ready. At the doors of the police station machine guns are mounted. Across the street lounge hundreds of scowling strikers just waiting. A single street car plies on the municipal line on Fourth avenue. In three or four places it disnlays large signs, "U. S. Mail." It is heavily guarded by soldiers with1 loaded rifles. More than 1000 extra police have been sworn in at the in stance of Mayor Hanson, who has de clared that the city is ready for any emergency and that its officers have instructions to shoot to kill if rioting or destruction of property starts. The executive committee of the gen eral strike has promised that there shall be no disorder. "The strike will be peaceful and effective," is their manifesto. But with approximately 65,000 strikers from the various crafts out on strike, it is held to be certt-la that there is a large element potent for any sort of disorder. Municipal Line Is Idle. An attempt to operate a streetcar on the municipal line this afternoon drew at least 5000 strikers to the City Hall, from which the start was to be made. The crowd was silent and un demonstrative, but the attempt was abandoned. Police graduall. dispersed the gathering. Mayor Hanson has de clared that the municipal line shall operate. Barricaded trucks, heaped high with sandbags, have been equipped with machine eruiis by the police and are ready ai'anMnstant to move to any part of the cit.y where disorder may break out. Practically every business house and industry in the city is guarded by its own special police, sworn in for that duty. City Kept Lighted. For tonight at least the strikers are thwarted in their design to n.ake of Seattle a city of darkness until the strike shall pass. Both private and municipal power plants are under operation with volunteer workers, as signed to duty by Mayor Hanson. When the Electrical Work.rs' Union struck it was announced that no light T A COMA, "Wash., Feb. 6. (Special.) Men with the spirit of the Russian Bolshevikl are in the saddle in Tacoma tonight. Four companies of infantrymen and io companies of machine gunners With full aulnmnt nf rifloa and feanri MPLIIMlji LAUDS KUUStVtLT renades are cordoned about Govern ment property. Brigadier-General Wat- English Poet Likens American to Bunyan's "Greatheart. (Copyright, 1019. by the New Tork "World. fuoilstiea by Arrangement.) LONDON. Feb. 6. (Special Cable.) The Daily Telegraph announces that it will publish Saturday a new poem by Rudyard Kipling, dealing with the memory of Colonel Roosevelt. The poem bears the title "Greatheart," and the author prefaces it with a pregnant sentence from "Pilgrim's Progress." i ne interpreter then called for a man-servant of his, one Greatheart.' In four-line stanzas of ballad meas ure, says the Telegraph, Kipling pays noble tribute to this Greatheart of the modern world, this son of "plain faith in plain dealing," expressing with the vigor and eloquence entirely in his own the admiration and even affection in which so many Englishmen held the memory of the great American. son is in command. Thousands are being fed in a hap hazard fashion in community restau rants designated by the strike leaders. And all because 4164 men decreed that a general strike should be called in sym pathy with the shipbuilders who could not agree with the Government. Metal Trades In Control. That was the number in 35 unions who voted for a general strike against 1605 opposed. This vote of 6769 repre sented a total membership in all unions affiliated with Central Labor Council of 22.500. The Metal Trades Council has 16,000 members and has a prepon derance of votes in the Central Labor body, thus overwhelming every other craft. Hardly had the gong struck today than the cooks, waiters and butchers rolled up their aprons and quit their jobs. The barbers likewise laid aside their tools. Three hours later the streetcar men drove their cars to the barns under sanction, some of them said, of J. Hoover, district representa tive of their irternatl jiial organization, who came front Vancouver, B. C. Many other streetcar men openly charged that they had been bullied into walking out. Longshoremen on Job. The longshoremen refused to abro gate their agreement with their em ployers and continued on the job be cause they had fought for the prin ciple of the closed shop and eight-hour day for years, and do not Intend to cast aside the fruits of their struggle, they say. Although Tacoma theaters are oper ated by union help, the places of amusement are unfair in the eyes o the Central Council because the musl clans, stage hands and picture oper ators refused to join the walkout. As soon as the cooks and waiters walked out their committee told the manae-erf nf thn Hiffrant nl,M. that - a m mi a s -n I s I I w f I . . .. . u ...... MtnU b bLAT ttl lb MLLtU they would run the houses. The res. taurant proprietors must pay 10 SEVEN DIE IN SEATTLE FIRE Causes Tokyo and Russell Logins Are Destroyed. 5ISATT1E, Feb. 6. Seven persons were burned to death in a fire which destroyed the Tokyo house, a lodging house in the lower part of Seattle, early today. Over 12 were reported missing and 14 injured as a result of the fire. The dead, missing and injured were lodgers at the. house and were asleep when the fire started. The flames, it was believed, cut them off from the exits. About 50 other lodgers escaped down the stairways and through an adjoining lodging-house. The Russell house, which adjoined the Tokyo house, was also destroyed by the fire. Both were old buildings, each containing 100 rooms or more, Commission of Fifteen Members Will Prepare Programme to-Fur-nlsh Employment. STATE CAPITOL. Salem. Or., Feb. 6. (Special) A special session of the Legislature will be called by the Gov ernor about May, when there will be referred to the people at a special election, to be held in June, such re construction measures as a commis sion of 15 members may prepare. This decision was made by the Gov ernor and a delegation from Port land tonight. The plan is contingent on the evolv ing of a practical programme to give employment through big development or building work, irrespective of the amount of bonding necessary for financing and if conditions in the coun try are not improved. This plan was agreed on as most expeditious, the Governor urging haste Jay Upton, president of the Oregon irrigation Congress, will suggest to the reconstruction committee of the Legislature tomorrow that the recon struction commission proposed under the bill of Representative Sheldon be created under a joint resolution, and to be appointed immediately to probe reconstruction problems from now until the end of the session. He then proposes, that the Governor call a special session of the Legislature to start its work Immediately after the session is through late this month and remain in session for 10 days at the tail end of this session, instead of calling a special session late in the Spring or early in the Summer. He states that he believes the special ses slon called at that time would be too late. HELENA MAN IS CONVICTED Former Saloon Proprietor Found Guilty of Sedition. HELENA, Mont., Feb. 6. John Milch, former ealoonman, was found guilty of sedition by a jury in the District Court this afternoon and punishment was left to the court. He will be sen tenced on Monday. - Milch is the seventh man of a group of that number arrested for sedition here last Spring, each one of whom has been tried and convicted. He is the last one of the number to be tried. 11 NATIONS REPRESENTED s. Idle, Foodless Men Begin to Grumble Menacingly. FEW RESTAURANTS OPENED Strikers' Soup Kitchens Fail to Serve Meals. WAR VETERANS ON GUARD Mayor Hanson Gets Expert Machine- gun Operators to Man Weapons in Case of Outbreak. and England Send Delegates to Labor Confe,rence. BERNE, Wednesday. Feb. 6. The in ternatlonal trades union conference opened here tonight with 41 delegates, representing 11 countries in attend ance. Delegates were present from the United States and England. The conference took up discussion of international labor legislation in con junction with the Socialist conference now being held here. German Who Shot Down Quentin Roosevelt Dead. BURLINGTON, Vt., Feb. 6. Christian Donhauser, the German aviator who shot down Lieutenant Quentin Roose velt over the German lines on the Western front, was killed January 13 last, according to word which came to day from Ben Braker, who was sta tioned at a. flying field in Germany and who claims to have witnessed the death of the German. He says that the latter's plane be came uncontrollable and plunged to the ground. pe cent of their receipts to the strike fund and the employes must pay 2 per cent. (Concluded on Pane 4. Column 1. HAVANA WITHOUT PAPERS Strike of Employes in Mechanical Departments Continues. HAVANA. Feb. 6. The strike of the employes of the mechanical depart ments of the newspapers continues, and no newspapers were published today. ' A committee of five, representing the 37 unions which conducted the last gen eral strike, will call on President Men ocal today to request him to find a solution for the strike. SEATTLE. Wash., Feb. 6. (Special.) That a certain amount of disorgan ization or unpreparedness exists in the strikers' ranks is indicated tonight by grumbling of hungry men who are de pendent on the soup kitchens of the unions for their meals. Having practically forced every res taurant in the city to close its doors by calling out waiters and cooks, the strikers have in a measure "caught a tartar." There is no place for them to eat. Their own kitchens had not de livered a meal up to 6 o'clock this even ing and those armchair lunchrooms whose proprietors had the temerity to open up today and remain open are taboo on the union's fair list. Many such places are open this even ing and many union men and union sympathizers are grouped about the front on the sidewalk. Uniformed po lice stationed in front on the sidewalk prevent a demonstration of any kind, even Jeering at those who go inside. And in the meantime the strikers stub bornly refuse to go inside themselves to eat. Getting something to eat in downtown Seattle tonight is a bard matter. Those eating-houses that are open admit only as many as can be accommodated at the tables, and in front of each are many awaiting their turn to enter. The food supplies are ample, but the help in preparing them Is scarce, and aa a result only short order dishes are being served. a If there must be trouble. Chief War ren believes, aa General Pershing, that the fittest men possible to obtain must be on hand, consequently his machine gun crews are formed of men who have seen service In France with machine-gun battalions or in the aerial service. The machine-guns are manned by three eight-hour shifts of soldier-policemen, each 'one of which Is in command of a former machine gun Lieutenant or Captain. On one shift Is a Lieutenant who was an ace with the American aviation corps, who has seven German planes to his credit. a Wild rumors are even more common than strikers tonight. Throughout the day city officials, newspaper offices, police headquarters and every avail able source of information has been plied by persons who have Just heard of some catastrophe ranging from mur der td the dynamiting of the city's water or electric plants. Such rumors have come from every section of the ffonclurted on Pin 2. Column 1, . Between 2500 and 3000 Men Hated - as Helpers Leave I'o.-ts in Oak land and Alameda Yards. SAN FRANCISCO. Feb. S. More than 1500 machinists employed In S5 so called "outside shops" went on strike here today as a result of a controversy with their employers involving the Macy basic wage scale, retroactive pay and Saturday half holidays. The walkout does not affect ship yards. The California Metal Trades Associ ation asserts it is willing to pay the Macy award wage scale of $6.40 per day and also to pay retroactive wages dating from last October. The workers. claim they are entitled to the Increase in wages, retroactive pay and Saturday half holidays. Ac cording to the employers the demand for a half Saturday work day is In vio lation of an agreement entered into by the men with their employers. Between 2500 and 3000 men rated as "helpers" to other crafts struck in the Oakland and Alameda shipyards today for the right to be classed as Journey men mechanics and to secure an in crease of from J4.64 to $6.40 a day. The Oakland boilermakers have de clared a "holiday" tomorrow to vote on a strike for a flat wage of Jl an hour. Executives of the Pacific District Council of Boilermakers, embracing twelve unions along the coast, an nounced today that eight of the unions had voted a strike on February 10, or thereafter, for a Jl-an-hour wage. OAKLAND. Cal., Feb. 6. Four crafts of the Oakland Boilermakers' Union struck this morning, demanding full mechanics' pay. While only 2500 men walked out, the strike, if it continues, will tie up the East Bay section shipyards completely In the next two days, there being only enough work on hand to keep the yards running that time. The men on strike comprise the plate hangers, signal men hook tenders, drillers, reamers, burn ers, welders and sharpeners. ifty-five Thousand Men Join in Walkout. WORKERS INSIST ON BEER Newark Building Trades Men Con demn Prohibition. NEWARK. N. J., Feb. 6. A "no beer, no work," slogan was announced today by representatives of 30.000 building trades workers, who condemed nation wide prohibition and voted to ask the Essex Trades Council, comprising many thousand union men iu Newark and vi cinity, to start a movement for a strike throughout the state July 1. when the temporary war-time prohibition la becomes effective. The delegates favored manufacture and sale of light wines and beer. SAYS HE TO HIMSELF. SPEAKERSHIP SOUGHT BY 3 Representative Fcss Enters Race Against Mann and Gillette. WASHINGTON, Feb. 6. Representa tive Fess, of Ohio, chairman of the I Republican congressional campaign committee, announced today that he I would be a candidate for speaker of I the House in the next Congress. The other announced candidates are Representative Mann, of Illinois, the Republican leader, and Representative Gillette, of Massachusetts. (Concluded on Pass 5, Column 1). FEATURES IX OREGON LEGIS LATURE YESTERDAY. Senate. Huston's bill limiting powers of Public Service Commission de feated. Passes bill to give MuAtnomah. County exclusive control over Portland Armory. House. Passes workmen's compensa tion bill, including amendments sought by employers, employes and commission. Representative Kubll attacks Lime Board and bill providing that lime may be sold outside of the state. Kills bill giving soldiers and sailors preference on public works and exempting property of diers and sailors from taxatio Resolution introduced by Clat sop and Washington delegations to refer all salary measures to the people. The same move was defeated in the Senate. rks T 10I- ! n. PADEREWSKI IS ELECTED PolUh Socialists Secure but 15 Per Cent of Votes. PARIS. Feb. . The elections In Po land for members of the constituen assembly resulted in the list headed by Premier Paderewskl and M. Dmow ski obtaining 60 per cent of the total votes. The Polish Socialist party go 15 per cent and the remainder went to Jewish candidates, according to a tele gram from the Polish official new agency to the Polish committee c Paris. Of 435.000 eligible voters, 320.000 voted. Women voted In great numbers. Consul to Be Honored. Luncheon and recentlon to T 33ui-t- I mura. Japanese-Consul, will be tendered J by the Portland Chamber of Commerce. I Friday, February 14. The committee j having in charge arrangements for the I event is composed of Frank L. Shull. I R. B. Wilcox. C. E. Dant, A. J. Bale. I A. C. Callan and Y. Nakiya. STREETCAR SERVICE HALTS Newspapers Suspend and Other Lines of Industry Are Badly Crippled. LIGHT PLANT IS IN OPERATION Mayor Warns That Any Man Attempting to Take Con trol of City Will Be Shot. GENERAL STRIKE SITUATION SUMMARIZED. General strike opens in Seattle with 63.000 men out. Thousands of men strike at Ta coma. Industries of both cities par alyzed. Armed troops aid police to guard property in both Puget Sound cities. Government proffers military help if railed for by Governor Lister. Radicals hall strike as opening of Bolshevik revolution in United States. Thousands In Seattle and Ta coma go hungry when restau rants close and communal kitch ens fail to open. Mayor Hanson. of Seattle, threatens to "shoot on sight" first persons attempting to make trouble. Newspapers in Seattle, except Seattle Star, suspend publication, and wild rumors circulate. Seattle municipal light plant In operation, despite strike. Few disorders yet reported. INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. TESTERDAT'S Maximum temperature, 42 degrees; minimum, o7 degrees. TODAY'S Kaln: fresh to brisk south to west winds. Fifteen hundred machinists walk out In San Francisco. Page 1. Hunger stalks on trail of Seattle strlKers. Paia 1. Seattle dased as strike clutches city. Pag? 1. Strike not Imminent In Portland. Page 1. Troops marrh Into Seattle to protect prop erty If necessary. Page 1. Governor Lister assured of protection by Government. Pare 4. Leglsta tares. Special session of Oregon Legislature, to be h-ld In May. rase 1. Efforts to nullify public utilities art fall. Face 6. Blll In Washington Legislature m-ould punish allon strike agitators. Page 7. Pacific Coat States launch drive for mer chant marine. Page 6. Foreign. txmdon railway strike settled. Page 2. Society of nations plan progresses. Page 3. Rainbow unit quartered In former scene of splendor. Page 12. Rare musical comedy written amid din of battle. Page 18. Members of first German national assembly meet at Weimar. Page 3. Germany would have allies believe her bank rupt. Page 15. ra4lonaL War revenue bill formally presented In House. Page 2. Security League defended by Elihu Root- PXI 15. Sport. Contracts to Portland baseball players to be mailed this week. Page 14. Camp Lewis basketball title contest ached uled for tonight. Page 14. Commercial and Marine. Grain dealers recommend plan for handling next wheat crop. Page 21. Corn market affected by unverified Argen centlne reports. Pag 21. Metal stocks weak features of Wall street trading. Page 21. New boat service from Portland to San Iego announced. Page SO. Portland and Vicinity. Work priority for soldiers asked. Page ".- Naval guns work In big drive told by Port land boy. Page 0. Labor shortage In 00 days predicted. Page 8. Emery Olmstead elected bank president. Page 12. Weatbar report, data and forecast. Paga 2L SEATTLE, Feb. 6. A portion of the troop unit sent here from Camp Lewis has arrived, Mayor Ole Hanson announced tonight. Brigadier-General John L. Hayden, commander of the troops, would make no statement re garding the movement. The troops will be used, according to Mayor Hanson, in co-operating with the municipal authorities in keeping order and protecting property that might possibly be endangered by the general strike of Seattle union mem bers, who, numbering about o0,000. walked out at 10 A. M. today to aid 25,000 shipyard workers who struck recently for higher pay. Mayor Ole Hanson announced to night that Seattle would continue to be supplied with light and gas during the strike. The Mayor urged the newspapers to resume publication and the closed stores to open. He rromised ample police and troop protection if neces sary. "Don't let a few radical union lead ers move all our industries from their natural channels," he declared. Streetcars at Standstill. Streetcars were not operated today after 10 o'clock, when the conductors and motormen took their cars to the barns. Residents of the outlying sec tions tonight used many and varied forms of vehicles to reach their homes. Horses and buggies appeared on the streets and old, decrepid automobiles were brought from retirement. Municipal streetcars will be oper ated on the city lines as soon as Chief of Police J. F. Warren can provide one and possibly two truckloads of police to go out with every car, Su perintendent Murphine, of the munici pal line announced tonight. Seattle was lighted by electricity early tonight, the firemen and en gineers at the municipal light plant having refused to strike. Police Ready for Emergency. Only one Seattle newspaper ap peared on the streets today and re ports said it was printed in Tacoma. The newspapers were tied up by the strike of the stereotypers, truck driv ers and newsboys. Seattle police said tonight they were ready for any emergency. Mayor Hanson expected to increase the force during the strike by about 1000 men, many of them returned sol diers. A big truck carrying a machine gun and with sandbags built up around its edges stood at the police station. Three former Army Lieuten- v a-iclude d on Fag i. Column i.) I