VOL,. I.IX. 0. 18.103. PORTLAND, OREGON, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1919. PRICE FIVE CENTS. FEDERAL COI FREIGHT EMBARGO TO SEATTLE ANNOUNCED FOOD AXD EXPORT SHIPMENTS rXDER PERMIT EXCEPTED. STRIKE'S BACKBONE FOREIGNERS CHARGED WITH CAUSING STRIFE REPRESENTATIVE JOHNSON AD " VOCATES DEPORTATION. DOCTORS OF CIVIC ILLS FILL SEATTLE MR.PIEZ STANDS PAT, REFUSING ARBITRATION NO DISPOSITION MTOWN TO TREAT WITH STRIKERS. STRIKE CONFEREES .WILE ID AGREE BROKEN TACOMA 111 SEATTLE LOOMS i. Mayor Ole Hanson to Nul lify General Strike. ULTIMATUM IS ISSUED Controversy Between City Of ficials and Labor Leaders Comes to End. STRIKERS HOLD CONFERENCE Protection, Food, Water and Other Commodities Guar? i anteed People of City. ET BEN HUR LAMPMAN. SEATTLE, Wash., Feb. 7. (Spe cial.) Controversy on the part of civic officials with the leaders of the general strike, called in'sympathy with the strike protest of the shipworkers against the Macy award and heralded as the first thrust of the "revolution," came to an end today. "The city of Seattle shall not be prostrate," declared Mayor Hanson in his ultimatum to the executive com mittee of the strike. "I hereby notify you that unless the sympathy strike is called off by 8 o'clock Saturday morning," runs the official notification given by the Mayor, "I will take advantage of the assistance and protection offered this city by the National Government and operate all essential enterprises." Mayor Is Commended. Seattle believes that its chief execu tive has-the grit and will to carry his promise to fruition. Hundreds of citi zens called at the City Hall this after noon, when the ultimatum became cur rent, and signed statements expressing approval of Mayor Hanson's "Ameri can attitude." As they left the hall cars of the municipal railway passed them on Fourth avenue laden with passengers, and the advo:ates of law and order cheered repeatedly. Enmeshed in an admitted attempt at Soviet control of the municipality, Seattle will see the issue put to the test tomorrow, when the city authorities vow that they will resume transporta tion facilities, reopen public eating houses and take every measure es sential to the uninterrupted continU' ance of business. Protection Is Guaranteed. Acting upon the ultimatum, the strikers' executive commits 2 met late this afternoon with a citizens' com mittee in the executive offic at the City Hall and later adjourned to La bor Temple. The nature of any action that they may take is nov indicated, but city authorities sU.e positively that, regardless of an adverse attitude on the part of the strike committee, the strike will be to all purposes nulli fied tomorrow morning. In a proclamation to the people of the city Mayor Hanson, guarantees ab solute and complete protection and calls upon them to go about their daily work. If necessary he promises that every soldier m the Ncrtl. -st will be called out to protect life, business- and property. Business Not at Standstill. "The anarchists in this community shall not rule its affairs," reads this proclamation, "ine time nas come for the people of Seattle to show their Americanism. Go about your daily duties without fear. We will see to it that you have food, transportation, light, gas and all necessities." Business is not by any means at a standstill, but it is hampered as ef fectually as though it wore a ball and chain. With transportation facilities excepting the municipal line, tied up by the general strike, with many in dustries closed and with not more than six places to turn to for r. sandwich the city is stagnant save for the un wholesome stirrings of the most rad ical labor demonstration ever mani fest in America. No Disorder Recorded. Thus far there has been no disorder, though the municipal car line began operation early today. The threat' of machine guns and loaded rifles, the presence of Government troops in the city and the unmistakable intention of the city authorities to halt at no measure that will preserve order give pause to the most radical of the radi i-.a)5. such as Leon Green, extremist in the Electricians' Union, is held to be. Jt is in the Electricians' Union that rJuncluded ou l'age 5, Column 3. Consignee Must Satisfy Car Service Representative of Ability to T7n ' load Goods Promptly. An embargo was placed on freight for Seattle yesterday, excepting: food stuff, either In carload or lesa than carload consignments. Export freight. moved under permits, expressly la ex cepted from the embargo. The only ex ceptions that can be made are where the consignee satisfies the car service representative at Seattle of his ability to unload cars promptly on arrival. J. C. Roth is in charge of the car service office at Seattle. He formerly was in charge of the office here. Foodstuff included in less than car load freight in hands of th railroads is being segregated and sent on to des tination at Seattle, but all other freight Is being held, pending the time when it can be. promptly handled on arrival. Carload freight also is being side tracked and plae.ed.-on holding tracks to avoid further congestion of termin als at Seattle. The embargo does not apply to Ta- coma and reports indicate that there is no interference with dispatch of un loading freight at that point. ABERDEEN JCALKERS LOSE Men. Ordered by International to Re turn to Work. TACOMA. Feb. 7. A special dispatch from Aberdeen says: 'Union officials here who, "for obvi ous reasons," they said, aid not warn their names mentioned, are authority for the statement today that the ship yard calkers in the Grays Harbor yards who have been on strike re ceived an order from their interna tional, last night telling them to either return to work at tonce or the car penters who are not on strike and who are governed by the same international will be granted permission to do ship calking. 'The calkers will hold a meeting to night, it is announced, and this re ported order will undoubtedly be dis cussed and acted upon. 'The reported order from the inter national places the calkers in a. com plex light, as before the strike they were getting $8.50 a day "while the Macy award allows them but $7.52." POLIGE ACT AS "NEWIES" One Seattle Newspaper Makes Its Appearance on Streets. SEATTLE, Feb. 7. The Seattle Star made its appearance on the streets to day. Most of the front page was taken up by Mayor Hanson's proclamations. While the papers were being passed out at the newspaper office police held back crowds for a block around the bujlding. Police also rode on the paper delivery trucks. East night Mayor Hanson promised the newspapers all the soldiers and police needed if they would only pub lish. Mounted police obtained bundles of the newspapers anc. rode through the crowd scattering them. Scores of armed soldiers and police stood guard on all sides of the newspaper office. STRIKERS ASK REVOCATION Metal Trades Council Committee Asks Mayor to Alter Ultimatum. SEATTLE, Feb. 7. A sub-committee of the conference committee of the Seattle Metal Trades Council today called at the City Hall to -ask Mayor Hanson to revoke his threat to put the city -under the control of the Federal Government if the strike is not over tomorrow morning at 8 o'clock. The committee called at the Mayor's office shortly after 1 o'clock this aft ernoon. Strike leaders, it was said at the La bor Temple today, considered permit ting several or me large downtown cafeterias to open. The strike "soup kitchens" have been so heavily taxed by crowds thut not every one can be served. REDS REPORTED IN FLIGHT Coining of Troops Said to Have v Frightened Leaders. TACOMA. Feb. 7. Reports from well-informed union leaders among the so-called conservatives have it that "Paddy" Morris and a half dozen other of the most active members of the ele ment promoting the general strike in Tacoma fled in automobiles from Ta coma last night when it became known that troops from Camp Lewis had ar rived in Tacoma. Further impetus was added to the flight of the men, it was reported this morning, when it was discovered that some of the most prominent and noisy "Reds" in Tacoma are plain clothes men in the employ of the Secret Service Department. PROTECTION IS PROMISED Commander of Troops in Tacoma Announces Purpose. TACOMA, Feb.. 7. "We are here for the protection of property and person and the suppression of all disorder. We do not intend to take any arbitrary ac tion, except in case of the gravest emergency. Any plant -which wants to reopen will be entitled to and receive protection, both as to its property and its employees." In the above declaration. Brigadier General Watson, in command of the United States trocps in Tacoma and vi cinity, this morning outlined the mili tary policy to be pursued by men un der his command. Return to Work Hastened by Arrival of Troops, STREETCARS OPERATE ,i)AY Ballot at Shipyards- dicates Walkout Opposed. MOVE LAID TO TRICKERY Barbers, Butchers Again in Shops and Newsboys Sell Papers Un der Guard of Police. TACOMA, Wash., Feb. 7. (Special.) With silent soldiers looking on, the backbone of the strike is broken in Tacoma tonight. Streetcars on the trac tion and municipal lines will be oper ated . tomorrow. Barbers are back in their shops. Butchers are cutting meat at their blocks. Service of electricity, waterand gas is unimpaired. . The crest of the wave of sentiment is past and but little agitation is being shown. The inconvenience of having no streetcars was the sole disagreeable feature of the strike. Soldiers from Camp Lewis, with rifles, bayonets, hand grenades and ma chine guns, under command of Brigadier-General Frank B. Watson, were stationed at the Armory. They cooked their meals in the street, while thou sands looked on. A spirit of friendli ness was shown the soldiers by the civilians. m Strike Laid to Trickery. Delegates from the Streetcarmen's Union, who met with Louis H. Bean, manager of the Tacoma Railway & Power Company, declared that they had been induced by trickery to strike. They said that they had understood yesterday that the word caipe from their international union, through F. D. Hoover, of Vancouver, B. C., ordering the walkout. - Mr. Hoover, who is in ternational vice-president of the car men, said he came to keep the men on the job. The men said they were angered at the strike vote in the Central Labor Council, which showed 4 ISO in favor of the strike and 1605 against. In this vote 2037 boilermakers voted in the affirmative and 1 against. The vote for a general strike was taken after the boilermakers, and the metal trades unions, had left the shipyards. The striking ironworkers thus cast half the ballots for the general paralysis of business, while unions not directly af fected by the Macy wage scale were against the walkout. Many norkrra Lratc City. Joseph II. Lyons, labor leader, was hard hit by the shipyard strike, for with the decreased demand for trans portation on the tide flats Commission cr Harrison immediately reduced the force of employes on the line. Mr. Lyons had been on the payroll as su perintendent of transportation at $200 a month. He was dropped at once, together with Chief Inspector Gillman (Concluded, on Pace 4. Column 1.) Government Officials Declared to Have Taken 'o Action Against Aliens on Pacific Coast. WASHINGTON'. Feb. 7. Representa tive Johnson, Of Washington, in a speech in the House today, declared that strikes in the Pacific Northwest were due to foreigners, who should be de ported, but against whopi no action was taken by Government officials. Metal workers ' there, he said, threat- ended general strikes in the metal in dustries throughout the country as a sympathetic movement. "These great strikes," Representative Johnson said, "were . preceded by a se ries of riots on Sundays, and after one of these authorities in Seattle arrested 13, the leaders whose names were a great array of Slovinskys aiyl names of that sort. Out of the 13 there were two Americans, cf whom one said lt wished he were not an American. The other 11- were aliens and more than half of, the 11 were Russians. I am informed that the Commis sioner of Immigration at Seattle, repre senting the immigration service in that part of the country, stated he would take steps to deport these men. If our Government officials will proceed under the laws enacted by Congress and de port those aliens who come here un dertaking to tell how to run our Gov ernment and our affairs, we will have less trouble from these strikes. I was astonished to read the names and what they had to say about the United States and to learn that no steps were proposed to be taken to deport them." BAKER SNOWFALL HEAVY Mountain Blanket Four Feet Deep; Aid Given to Farmers. BAKER, Or., Feb. 7. (Special.) Baker is now enjoying the heaviest snowfall of the year, varying in depth from six inches in the city to more than four feet in the mountains. The miners in this section have been apprehensive that there would be Insufficient snow in the hills to furnish the desired amount of water in the Spring. A Sufficient supply of water is now assured the farmers and miners. FE.lTl'RKS OF ORKCOV I.KGIS LATinB YESTERDAY. , s Senate, Bill to provide free schooling in state's educational institutions introduced in Senate. Salary bill for Multnomah County deputies passes in Senate without opposition. Adjourns' until Monday. Houne. Passes bill making minimum wage of $75 month for teachers. Passes bill doing away with minimum sentence law. Big $10,000,000 road bond bill introduced by Roads and High ways Commission. Representative Kubli accuses State Lime Board of law vlola tion and demands investigation. Kills Scheubel bill increasing license fees for domestic corpo rations. Kills department of agriculture consolidation measure, which, members concede, virtually kills all consolidation for session. Adjourns until Monday. CAN'T HE SEE THEY ARE BUSY? Many Strike Remedies Of fered to Citizens. PROPAGANDA DRIVE IS HEAVY Streets Flooded With Dodgers Exhorting Men to Keep Nerve. WILD RUMORS CIRCULATED Dynamite Outrages and Reports of Shooting Prove Untrue When Fi nally Investigated by Officers. SEATTLE, Wash., Feb. 7. (Special.) Today could be called propaganda Friday in Seattle. The city is flooded with bulletins, dodgers and newspapers by the strikers, the citizenry opposed to the strike and many who have sug gestions for ending it. A special edition of an afternooon newspaper was run off under police guard, Jn which Mayor Hanson's proc lamation was printed. The streets down town were well filled when the paper appeared. There seemed, to be no hesi tancy on the part of sympathizers of either side in expressing their views of the Mayor's edict upon reading it. There was an almost audible shout of approbation and. on the other hand, many threw the paper on the sidewalk and trampled on It. Mayor's Nerve Admired. "T always knew he had nerve," was heard In more than one group of men from men who hoped that the Mayor would step in with an ultimatum to the strikers, but who began to believe that he would not. "We'll show him," was the commonest expression to be heard among the strikers. There was a noticeable slackening of spirit among many of the strikers to day. Whilo the crowd remained as dense as Jt had ever been about the Labor Temple, the exchange of confi dences of Btrikera gathered In knots on the street indicated a lack of confi dence on the part of many. To meet a possible letting up in the morale of the strikers the Central Labor Council to day issued another official strike bul letin in which the strikers are con gratulated on the way the strike is going. Maay llodgers Iaaued. "Sit tight; don't crowd; pay no at tention to senseless rumors of riot or destruction of property; keep sweet." the bulletin urges. In another part: "You are doing fine. boys. Keep order. Don't lose your temper and victory will be ours." More thn a dozen different dodgers are being circulated by citizens who believe they have found a solution to the difficulty. Some propose the tak ing over of the shipyards by the city government, by the laborers them selves, by the Mayor, and operated on a co-operative basis. Others propose that the shipyard owners dismantlo their plants and remove them from Seattle (Concluded on Puff 7. Column .Y Tacoma Workers, in Reply to Mov j sage. Ask Copy of Agreement. Step Toward Settlement Scon. WASHINGTON. Frh. 7. Shipping Board Officials indicated tnrlv fliat h- solutely no change in the policy of re fusing to arbitrate the controversy with shipyard strikers at Seattle would be made. It was said, however, that the progress of the general strike there was being closely watched and that Chairman Hurley, of the Shipping Board, who will arrive' in New York Monday, had been fully informed of the situation and the steps taken. Director-Generat Pies announced when the shipyard strike at Seattle first began that it would be the policy of the board to "let the job stand" in those yards where men went on strike for higher wages. This policy has been fully reported to Chairm All TTlirli v atirl he is expected to approve it upon his a i rival. TACOMA. Wash.. Feb. 7. Tho first direct communication from the striking shipyard workers of Tacoma to the emergency f leet Corporation against whose wage scale they are protesting, was sent tonight by wire in the form of an answer to the message sent the Central Labor Council Wednesday night by Charles Piez, director-general of the corporation. The telegram is regarded as a first step toward strike settlement in that it ca'lls attention to the lack of any assurance that a just settlement would be reached, should the men return to work pending a conference. The tele gram says In part: "We would request a copy of the agreement you mention by which we are bound, as we have never been con sulted in the matter. All we have is a copy of a memorandum signed by some of our International presidents a".dvto wnlcn we have never agreed." .u inr in your telegram to issue of a daily paper. Few of an our men are reading tho daily paper at this time and no statement published inrough the press can be taken as offi cial. Your full pace ad had the effect of losing what faith we had left in the public press. "You mention our going hack to work during a conference. If we had somo positive assurance that we were going to have a just settlement, this might be possible, but as yet this has not been offered." TACOMA BARBERS ON JOB Hardware Stores Have 'T.un on Tacks'' and Autos Siifrer. TACOMA. Wash.. I-'e!.. 7 The bar bers in Tacoma went back to tluir chairs today. lcl;verics and transpor tation between Tacoma and Camp Lewis were doubly assured when the teamsters and chatifeurs decided to stick on the job In defiance of the Cen tral Labor Council. All other trades plied busily this morning and Tacoma appealed a nor mal city but pr the interruption of streetcar service. Hardware ttorcs experienced a "run on tacks" yesterday afternoon, the re sult of which was a hundred or more punctured automobile tires. LANTERNS ARE INSTALLED Seattle and Tacoma Harbor Stations, Prepare for Disturbance. JM.T. 1 1 L,!.. J-cl. 7. Sixty candle- , . I ii.-v. mmn U3 na nccn installed In , ttiiu i acoma li a r nor . light stations by order of Robert War. J rack, lighthouse superintendent, so that opeiation of the stations will be as . sured. if the electric nower of sientti. I 111. wavav.I ....! . n- and Tacoma is lost during the strike disturbances in both cities. INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. TESTE ft DAY'S Maximum temperature. 46 n"Kr-i; minimum, decrees. TODAY'S Rain; southeaster. y winds. M rike. Seattle strikers morale wants, rage 1. Mr. Pica firm In rcfusine strike arbitration. Pace 1. Forelg-ners held responsible for Seattle strike Page 1. Strikers meakentnjr at Seattle. Paj 1. Backbone of strike broken in Tacoma Page I. Seattle Mayor Ipsura ultimatum to strikers, threatenina- Federal control of city. Pa are X. Freight embargo to Seattle announced. Pajtr 1. I. W. W. advocate strike In Portland. P.ijo 4. Lejrlttlatare. Houm members prefer to rhaope own re construction commission. F'ajte fi. Road bond measure reaches House desk. Pac ti. ' Consolidation plan doomed to defeat. Paso 7. Washington I-ecUlature may ereate labor trouble fund for cmercenry ue. Phc . Korrlsrn. Amrrlrans heavily bombarded by Bolshevik!. Pace 2. Ebcrt warn 5 r"Wfrs not to push Germany too far. Pms 3. Progress reported in league of nations project. Pace 2. Union orders undon strikers to return to4 Domestic. Butte lets out firemen and policemen. Pace -i- 8ikH. Eddie Tferr sends Salt Lake baseball Hock upward. Pa qe K'. James John defeats Hill. 'J; to 1?. Pace 12. Commercial and Marine. Flrrt sale of Portland stored wool at Gov ernment auction. Pajro P.. Oats higher t Chkago on buying by spec ulators. Page 1H- Wall-trect trading restricted and prices lower. Pace Municipal pier No. 1 practically ready for buine?- Page IS. Portland and Vicinity. We.it her report, data a nd forecat t. Fac 1 r. Welcome assured troop from OreRon. I'm to IS. Land Products Show and county f;iir mergvi advocated. Pajtc Manv positions are found for unemployed. Pae 14. Mayor's Threat to Call Troops Yet Unheeded. TIME LIMIT SET T 8 A. M. Strikers' Committee Not to Re port to Workers Until. 9 o'clock Today. SCHOOLS TO OPEN MONDAY City Electricians Return to Work Following Mandate of International Chief. SEATTLE, -Vah., Feb. 7. After nearly three hours' discussion between -Mayor Ole Hansor., J. W. Spanker, a banker, and Rev. M. A. Matthews an ! a special committee of the general strike conference committee it was an nounced late tonijrht that the con ferees had failed to reach an agree ment in regard to calling off the sym pathetic strike atr 8 o'clock Saturday morning. The strikers' committee, it was said, offered to recommend that the sym pathetic strike of 00,000 workers te called off if the Mayor's committee would apree that a committee of busi ness men would be formed to present the demands of the 25,000 striking metal trades workers for higher wapres to the proper Shipping Board authori ties and urge that they be granted. Good Tailh Showing L'rged. Th Mayor's committee took ths stand that the shipyard workers were under a contract with the Government and nothing could be done until tho men showed good faith by returning to work. Tonight's conference followed ono this morning after Mayor Hanson is sued an ultimatum that unless tho sympathetic strike was called off at S o'clock Saturday morning be would operate all essential 'industries with the aid of nearly 1000 regular Arm.' soldiers sent here from Camp Lewis last night. With his. ultimatum thri Mayor issued a proclamation urging all citizens to resume their normal business activities and promising ample protection wherever a-kcd for. The conference between the Mayor, Mr. Spangler, Rev. Mr. Matthews and the strikers' special committee re sulted after the Mayor earlier in the day had issued an ultimatum demand ing that the sympathetic strike of o0,- 000 Union mcn, called Thursdav to support demands of 25.000 striking metal trades workers of the shipyards for higher wages, be called off at 8 A. M. tomorrow or he would operate all essential ind stries with assistance of Federal troops. Committee to Report. The Mayor's ultimatum said S o'clock. Tonight, after the conference, it was announced that the strikers committee would not report back to the general strike until 0 o'clock Sat urday. Whether the Mayor would carry out his plan at the hour he set or wait until the labor conference an nounced its answer to his ultimatum was the point on which all interest centered. At 8 o'clock Saturd. y morning, how ever, it was known tonight, several wholesale firms will begin deliveries to their retail customers, relying on the Mayor's promise. Ample protec tion has been assured them for operating trucks. Soup Kitchens Opened. The general strike conference com mittee today issued an "official strike bulletin" printed in the plant of the union labor newspaper. Eighteen "soup kitchens" operated by this committee to feed strikers and others dependent upon public eating places today were increased to 21. Yesterday, according to the labor bulletin, some 20.000 per sons were fed at these kitchens. To day, however, patronage at some was very small and at others more than could be handled. Fasteboard plates were supplied to fill a lack of that urticle yesterday. The menu remained the same beef stew, bread and coffee. Tbi Post-IntcIIigencer, a irtcrning rew-spaper, appeared tonight with a fonr-pagf! edition minus advertise ments and containing only brief Asso ciated Press dispatches and strike Concluled "a Tagj 4. Column a. I