VOL. LIX. XO. 18,165. POHTLAXP, OREGON, TUESDAY, FEBRUAKY 11, 1919. PRICE FIVE CENTS. COAST BOILERMAKERS IALL INDUSTRIES IN LABOR MISLED,. SAYS MAYOR OF SEATTLE ROAD PAVING TOPIC AT NOISY SESSION GENERAL STRIKE OF BUILDERS IS CALLED 54 ED AGITATORS COLLARED BY D. S. MAY CONVENE HERE BUTTE SHACKLED OF SEME SESSIOX OF DISTRICT XO. 4i W ALKOUT ORDERED TODAY AF FECTS 250,000 MEN. I I HT MAYOR Sympathy Strike Will End at Noon Today. SHIFWOHKERS REMAIN OUT Ole Hanson Receives Tele gram From Boyhood Friend in Union Grove, Wis. ' MESSAGES DELUGE OFFICE Seattle Business Men and Federal Officers Commend Determined Stand. BY HUH LAJirJUN. SEATTLE, Wash., Feb. 10. (Spe cial.) Two big moments came to Ole Hanson, American mayor, at his desk in the city hall today. One was the word that the radicalisms of Seattle organ r.ed labor had been worsted by the conservatives anc that the gen eral sympathy strike, tottering for two days past, was in debris. The other was a message from the boys he used to play with, back in the little Wis consin town of his birth. At 1 o'clock this afternoon the gen eral strike committee voted to termi nate the sympathy strike at noon to morrow, and called upon those unions which already have returned and are at work to lay down their tools until that time in order to demonstrate the solidarity of labor. Few are answer ing the appeal, which is counted to be the last ruse to save some remnant of Booming victory for the leaders. The end of the sympathy strike does not affect the earlier individual strike of the 25,000 shipworkers, who struck in protest against the Macy award. These will remain out until some def inite adjustment is reached, it is an nounced. As for the sympathy strike, Mayor Hanson maintains that it never was genuine, so far as its commanding spirits were concerned, and that they seized upon it as the pretext for re bellion and the disruption of govern ment and industry Mayor Is Congratulated. "A few unnaturalized aliens dreamed that they could overthrow the govern ment and bring abqut in Seritle the same conditions that prevailed in Rus sia, but conservative organized labor refused to follow their leadership as soon as its members saw what the movement meant," said Clarence L. Keames, special assistant United States attorney-general. A delegation of business men called upon Mayor Hanson this afternoon. "We are the King County Admiration irty," they told him, as all shook) iTT.is. It was a busy moment at the executive office, and they turned to go. The mayor halted them at the door. "Wait a bit," he said. "Now, there's just one thing you fellows want to lemember, and that is not to take ad- vantage of this in changing any of the economic conditions or wages that pre vailed before the strike." "Of course not, mayor," agreed the delegation. Telegrams Pour In. Among the stack of yellow tele grams that clutter the desk of Seat tle's scrapping executive are not a few that bear names familiar to fame. All are laudatory of the stand he took and the fight he waged. But that message which Myor Ole Hanson read, again and again with a smile of reminiscence on his lips and in his eyes took the wire at Union Grove, Wis., where he was born about 45 years ago. "Union Grove is proud of her son and fellow citizen," read the mayor. "Don't budge an inch. American lib erties are at stake. Hit hard and let that scrofulous crew understand that we live in the good old United States and not in bolsheviki-ruled Russia." It was signed "Floyd Coling and others." The lean visage of the reader radi ated with a very human and appre ciative grin. He pressed the call but ton for a stenographer and tilted his cigar like a seige gun. Ole Hanson was back in Union Grove, Wis., pud dling round some chub-haunted creek or following the brindle home from the cowslip pasture. "Floyd Coling," mused the man who iCuucluiied oil iJjge o, Columu 1.) NEXT WEEK POSSIBLE. C Xcws of Collapse of Sympathetic Strike In Seattle Received Quietly in Portland. Only one ripple appeared on the sur face of labor circles yesterday in Port land, that being a report from San Francisco that there was to be a ses sion of District No. 4 4 of the coast boilermakers, which proved erroneous and, say men identified with the or ganization here, there has not even been a call for a district meeting. "As I am a delegate to district No. 44, I know there has been no arrangements for a meeting,- said Archie Allison, business agent for the boilermakers' union. "It may be there will be euch a session next weeic curing the con vention of the Pacific Coast District Metal Trades Council, as the delegates in district No. 44 also are delegates to the metal trades council." News of the sympathetic strike at Seattle being called off was received quietly here. Men who have been identified with organized labor for years expressed themselves before as dubious regarding the effectiveness of such sympathetic movements and they Fay the return to work was a natural consequence of ill - advised action, though they are in sympathy with their colleagues of the Seattle ship yards in endeavoring to bring their troubles to the attention of the Emer gency Fleet Corporation. LAND RECLAMATION URGED Senator Borah Wants 550,000,000 Expended in West. WASHINGTON, Feb. 10. Senator Borah of Idaho gave notice in the senate today that he would seek to have the rules set aside in order to add to the rivers and harbors bill when it is called up an amendment appro priating J50.000.000 for the resumption of work on reclamation projects in western states, suspended during the war. Under the amendment men dis charged from the military and naval crvice would be given preference in employment in such work. CALL FOR WOMEN LESSENS Demand for Female Help Drops Since Signing of Armistice. WASHINGTON, Feb. 10. Reports to the federal employment service show that request from employers for female help have decreased 48 per cent since the signing of the armistice, while registrations by women for em ployment have decreased only 12 per cent.. In this connection the service said it estimated that approximately 11,000, 000 women in the country were depend ent on their earnings and that they must be kept permanently employed. U. S. STEAMER IN DISTRESS Calls for Help From Communipav Picked Vp. HALIFAX. N. S., Feb. 10. Calls for help from the American tank steamer Communipaw were picked up here to day. The message gave the vessel's position as 'latitude 38:18 north, longi tude 55:15 west, but did not explain the nature of her trouble. The American coast guard steamer Tallapoosa was dispatched to he as sistance. The Communipa-- sailed from New York February 2 for Genoa. YANKS TO EAT HOOD FRUIT Government Buys 15,000 Boxes of Apples for Overseas Army. .HOOD RIVER, Or., Feb 10. (Spe-ci-1.) Overseasxsoldiers are to eat Ore gon apples. H. F. Davidson, who is in New Tork, today notified the Hood River Fruit company that he sold 15, 000 boxes of the concern's extra fancy and fancy Newtowns to the govern ment. The fruit, according to the telegram, will be rushed across for the army of occupation In France and Ger.many. RECRUITING IN NAVY HEAVY Portland Leads Western Cities With Total of 2 8 In Week. WASHINGTON, Feb. 10. Enlistments in the navy during the week ending February 6 totalled 1637, the highest weekly figure since voluntary enlist ments were resumed early in Decem ber. New York was first among the cities with 205, and In the west Portland. Or., stood first with 28. IRISH URGE SHORT WEEK Increase of 150 Per Cent in Wages Is Recommended. DUBLIN. Feb. 10. The all-Ireland labor conference, held here on Satur day, adopted a programme calling for a 44-hour week and an, Increase of 150 per cent in wages over pre-war rates with a minimum, of 50 shillings per week. VISCOUNT GREY IS BLIND Eye Trouble of Years Ends In Total Loss of Sight. LONDON, Feb. 10. The aye trouble with which Viscount Frey, former Brit ish secretary of state for foreign af fairs, has been afflicted for years has culminated in total blindness, says the Daily Mail today. 12,000 Men Idle as R'it of Strike. CITY UNDER MlfiARY RULE Discharged Soldiers Found Do ing Picket Duty. UNIFORM ORDERED DONNED Men Willing to Work Deterred by Fear of Radical Element Xo Demands Presented. BUTTE, Mont., Feb. 19. Approxi mately 12,000 men are Idle in Butte to night and the city is virtually under the control of the military, due to the strike of members of the Butte Metal Miners' union (independent) and of the Metal Mine Workers' Industrial union No. 800 of the Industrial Workers of the World. Miners who are said not to favor the strike failed to go to work this morn ing, due, it was said, to fear of violence. It also, was asserted that many of those heretofore against the strike had decided to Join the strikers this morn ing. The men are striking against the recent reduction in wages of Jl a day and for abolishment of the "rustling" card system in Vogue here. Carnti Are Threatened. Besides the miners affected close to 100 streetcar operatives were compelled to keep their cars in the barns today through fear- of alleged intimidation. The carmen left their cars at the barns this morning when strikers' committees surrounded tho barns and, according to the military authorities, threatened violence if the cars were run. Only those possessing automobiles rode to day. The street carmen's union late today voted to defer Action on a request that they walk out in sympathy with the miners. The request to walk out was made. Jn an unsigned circular. : Kewiln With Strikers. - Late today several hundred newsboys collected around the office of an even ing paper anil attempted to prevent the carrier delivery and sale of the papers. A squad of soldiers dispersed the boys, but not before they had seized a bundle of papers from one carrier and de stroyed them. The papers were de livered to subscribers later, but street sales were virtually prohibited by the action of the boys, note of whom ap peared more than 12 years of age. Mines Cioielj Guarded. Two companies of the 44th United States infantry (regulars), under com mand of Major A. M. Jones, guarded the approaches to the mines from early this morning and known strike pickets were prohibited from gaining access to the mines, while gangs of pickets which had been formed in a semi-military manner were dispersed. Discharged soldiers who still wore the uniform and who associated with those attempting to do picket duty were singled out and ordered to remove (Concluded on Page 4, Column 3.) J CMON HOME! CITY'S EXECUTIVE EXPRESSES GOOD WILL FOR. UNIONISTS. V Strike Said to Have Been Brought About When "Americans Were Under Terrorists' Influence. SEATTLE, Wash., Feb. 10. (Special.) In a statement issued late this after noon Mayor Hanson expressed no sur prise that the general sympathy strike has come to an end, nor any feeling save that of good will for the members of organized labor, who he declares were misled. "The attempted reheliion is over," said Mayor Hanson. "The misled union men . and -women are going back to work. They struck while under the influence of men who believed fright fulness - would terrorize Seattle. We have no quarrel with them. We are all for them. .We believe in the rights of its workers. Pcrsorfally, I have al ways stood for the rights of labor. Every enemy I have in Seattle was made fighting their battles. "I fought this battle for the decent labor of the country. They struck- this city prostrate for no fault of its own. The shipyard workers' strike does not and cannot enter into this controversy. That is a strike between the shipyard workers and the United States. Seat tle could not, if it would, grant their demands. The leaders believed that with the city helpless, the industries and enterprises of Seattle would one by one be turned over to the soldiers', sailors' and workmen's council. "They were mistaken. Thank God, Seattle is American through and through and not ignorant Russia. "Without a single United States sol dier on our force, without a shot being fired we policed the city, controlled it every bour of the day and ran our industries." STORM BLOWS OFF COAST Warnings Placed From Eureka South Steamer Lale to PorC. SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 10. A wind storm starting off the Oregon coast swept the state today and storm warn ings were placed along the coast from Eureka south. The steamer Congress from Seattle arrived today, 15 hours late. FEATURES OF THE OREGON LEGISLATURE YESTERDAY. Senate. Salary bill npponen' win in senate. Senate favors capital punish ment. Bill to abolish Multnomah county judge passes both houses, making him circuit judge. Hone, Passes bill of Multnomah dele gation raising salaries of circuit judges of that county from 14000 to $5000 a year. Passes bill suspending state aid to industrial accident com mission until June 30, 1921. Kills effort to place school clerk of Portland school district on elective basis and decrease his ' salary. Passes Gordon measure giving ports power to bond up to 5 per cent of assessed valuation. Passes Lewis bill giving power to Portland to improve peninsu lar section. Senate Committee Re sents Talk by Mr. Dimick. DOMINATION MOVE IS CHARGED Clash Develops in Dispute Over Hard-Surfacing. $10,000,000 WORK OUTLINED Amendment by Senator Rimer to Permit Use of Xon-Patented Pavement Wins Approval. STATE CAPITOL, Salem, Or., Feb. 10. (Special.) After a stormy session today, the senate roads committee agreed to start wrangling over the patented pavement bills Wednesday afternoon at 2 o"clock. rounding the table with his fist. Chairman Orton could not maintain order, for Senator Dimick talked loudly and violently and Senators Norblad, Handley and Hurley resented what they termed Mr. Dlm ick's attempt to "run the committee" of which he is not even a member. Meanwhile, in the house, the 10.000, 000 bond bill was being studied by the members. A number of features con nected with the measure are of im portance to all citizens of the state. An outline of the bond bill Is set forth. 7,500.000 for Trunk Roads. Of the total bond issue, 7, 500.000 Is particularly designated for certain primary trunk roads. When this money is exhausted, Oregon will have 713 miles of hard-surfaced pavement dis tributed thus: Astoria to The Dalles, 19S miles; rortland to the California line, 354 miles; Portland to Junction City on fhe west side. 112 miles; Hills boro loop. 49 miles. This does not take into account five miles paved in Uma tilla county nor 12.5 miles to be laid this year in Coos county. The forego ing gives an idea of what will be done fr the Pacific and Columbia river highways. Out of the bond issue $3,500,000 is set aside for other roads. This sum will be swelled by the receipts from gaso line tax, millage and surplus license money, so that the state highway com mission will have a comfortable bank account with which to improve the "other roads." These "other roads" are in the system already adopted and they penetrate most of the counties. Out of the $2,500,000 and such other sums, the commission intends building highways to the coast. Included are the roads from Roseburg out to Coos Bay; from Eugene part way to Flor ence; from Corvallis to Toledo and from McMinnville to Tillamook: the coastal road first unit from Seaside, via Elk creek and Cannon Beach to Nehalem. Improvement Programme Made. In the interior, the plan designs im provement of the central Oregon high way, which is from Klamath Falls to Bend and from Bend to The Dalles; another projected road is from Ontario to Burns and thence to Bend. In the Concluded on Page 2. Column 1.) Action of Union Heads of Construc ' tion Trades Is Expected to Be Nation-Wide. NEW TORK. Feb. 10. Union heads of basic building construction trades today called a general strike,' which, beginning tomorrow, will affect all con tracts throughout the country held by members of the Building Trades Em ployers' association, according to an nouncement here tonight by William J. Hutcheson, president of the United Brotherhood of Camenters and Join ers of America. Hutcheson said the action was taken in an attempt to iorce the carpenters' demands for $1 a duy increase in wages. He said tne strike order would affect masons, plasterers, brick layers, hoisting engineers, elevator constructors, soft-stone cutters, tile layers, marble setters and carpenters. The walkout of these workmen, he added, will automatically throw out of work all other workmen employed on operations of members of the employ ers' association. The number of men affected by the order, he said, is about 250.000, or one fourth of all union building trades workmen in the country. Sympathetic strikes, he predicted, will ultimately bring the number of strikers to 300,000. COOS OFFICIALS ASSAILED Recall of County Judge and Com missioner Is Advocated. MARSHFIELD, Or., Feb. 10. (Spe cial.) At a meeting of the Coos County Taxpayers' league, held today in Marsh fleld, it was decided to secure recall petitions against County Judge James Watson and Commissioner Archie Philip of North Bend. The league also went on record asking the court to provide a special accountant to expert the road funds and expenses of the past few years, with a view to submitting the findings to the next grand jury ses sion. No nominations were made to replace Judge Watson and Commissioner Phil ip, and this is to be provided for by the report of the nominating committee, which will submit a recommendation at a meeting to be held next week. BIG FLOUR MILL TO RISE Contract for $500,000 Structure Is Awarded at Astoria. ASTORIA, Or., Feb. 10. Contracts were signed today between the Port of Astoria and the Astoria Flouring Mills company for the erection of a 3000 barrel flour mill at port docks in this city. Construction is to begin at once. The flour mill is to be the largest In the state. The present mill here has a daily capacity of 1000 barrels. The daily capacity of the new mill is to be 3000 barrels. The structure will cost about J500, 000. Six million bushels will be re quired lo keep the mill in operation throughout the year. The mill will be built adjacent to the elevator and million-bushel grain storage bins recently constructed by Astoria. INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. 1 TESTE RD AT S Maximum temperature. 50 degrees; minimum. 4li degrees. TODAY'S Rain; fresh gusty southerly wind. Strikes. Ffghtlnjr mayor of Seattle ts victor. Pace 1. Butte under milHary rule and 12,000 men idle. Pave 1. General strike of buildinc trades workmen called. Pace 1. Seattle labor misled, says Mayor Hanson. Page 1. Mayor Hanson 'says union labor must clean house. Page 4. Metal trades heads explain strike to Gen eral Morrison. Pace 4. Tacoma strikers resume work. Pace 5. Boilermakers roil longshoremen. Page 5. War. Official casualty list. Page 1. jForela-a. President to Issu invitation to nations to Join peace league. Page 2. Lenin looks for revolt to spread to America. PaKe - Supreme economic council formed. Pasre 7. National. Suffragists lose In senate for ack of one vote. Page 3. . Greater navy programme Is combated in the house. Page o. Dqmestlc. United States arrests A4 alien agitators for deportation. Page 1. Legislatures. Road paving- topic of stormy session by senate committee. Page 1. Salary increase bill defeated in senate. Page 6. Anti-alien bill fought by strong; lobby at Olympla. Page 6. Idaho school union bill gets knockout In legislature. Pace 7. Sports. Pittsburg holds Clifford Lee for 1919 team. Page 14. McClusky still retains lead in billiard tourna ment. Pago 15. Jack Dempsey signs articles for bout with Willard. Page 14. Commercial and Marine. New-crop flour will be cheaper despite fixed wheat price- Page 21. Chicago corn advances with export demand. page Steel stock gains In face of tonnace decrease. pace Ji. Dock commission Is opposed to consolidation with Port commission. Page 20. 1 Portland and Vicinity. Coast boilermakers meetinc fails to mate rialize. Puge 1. Judge Tazwell Indorses court of domestic relations. Page 22. Seattle mayor lauded by Chamber of Com merce lorum. Page lti. People to welcome troops home with songs. Page 13. Tax collections on opening; day record. Pace 11. Relatives of returning soldiers ask railroads to suspend rule. Page 12. Police hunt three murder suspects.. Pace 12. New criminal syndicalism act found to be Inadequate. Page 10. Mr. Tatt to arrive in Portland Sunday. Pace 20. Bricadier-General Mclndoe dies in Pari a .Pago 16. "Weather report, data and forecast. Pago 20. Trainload From Northwest Sent East for Deporting. SEATTLE BOLSHEVIKI TAKEN Majority of Seized Persons Are Radical Aliens. RUSSIA TO BE DESTINATION Government Agents Get Evidence? Ajrainst Foreigners and Quickly Put End to Operations. CHICAGO. Feb. 10. Fifty-four mem bers of the Industrial Workers of the World passed through Chicago last night in a special train under a heavy Kuard o" their way to an Atlantic port, where it is said they will bo deported at once by the immigration authorities. Forty of the prisoners came direct from Seattle, where they took part in fomenting the general strike. Three leaders of the Seattle strike, one of the Spokane agitators, an I. ". W. leader from Denver and five alien convicts arrested in Chicago were among the prisoners. Mont of Prisoners Aliens. The majority of the men were alien labor agitators picked up by officer of the United States immigration serv ice during a year of secret campaign ing in industrial centers of the Pacific coast. A. D. 1. Jackson, chief of the Seattle office of the immigration serv ice, was in charse of the party. "The proceeding against United Siates enemies of this type is simple." an official with tho train said. "Juft two hours before the Seattle strike was called we gathered 40 agitators into the cars with everything cleared away be tween them and the middle of the At lantic ocean. For more than a. year the Immigration service ha been working quietly in all industrial centers check ing up on the strange aliens who have appeared, anil gathered evidence against 1. W. W. leaders and trouble makers who call themselves bolsheviki. ' Quirk Action Obtained. "When evidence was compiled against this particular crowd each case was brought to a federal hearing and all court findings sent to Washington, where they were reviewed by Secretary of Labor Wilson. Tho secretary has the power to order this type of prisoner de ported or released and so far thero has been little trouble in getting ;utck ac tio n.-' The majority of the prisoners will be sent back to Russian provinces. They are principally Norwegians, Swedes and Finns, according to guards on the train. The only atten.. t at a mob delivery of the prisoners was frustrated by the foresight of the federal officials. Be fore the train reached Butte. Mont.. officers were warned that the I. W. leaders in that city and Helena learned ol the deportation and were massing to deliver their comrades. The two cars then attached to a regular train were cut off at a junction and set into another train which made a wide detour, missing both Butte and Helena. One Woman in Party. Several hundred men gathered at the railroad station in Butte when the orig inal train reached that point, accord ing to reports which reached tl j offi cials. They were allowed to search the train and when they found the prison ers were not on board left without any trouble. Only one of the prisoners made seri ous objection when told of the intention of the government to deport him. He swore out a writ of habeas corpus against deportation which was quashed by a federal court at Spokane. One woman, the wife of a Finnish agitator arretted in Spokane, was in the party. The five prisoners taken into the party here are alien convicts who were sentenced to deportation some time ago. The trainload of I. W. W. from Se attle that picked up five convicts in Chicago for deportation to the country of their origin is only the first of a series of trainloads that will carry un desirable citizens to coast ports, whence they will be deported, accord ing to H. R, Land is, inspector in charge of immigration here. Under a congressional act of 1917, every alien convicted of a crime which called for more than one year impris onment must be deported to his native land. AGITATORS ARE A HARD LOT Anarchists to Re Reported Found 'Armed When About to Start East. SEATTLE. Wash.. Fb. 10. The 40 anarchists and alien labor agitators sent from here last week by the immi gration authorities were persons who had been picked up throughout the state in raids during the past year, according to Immigration service offi cials here. Their departure last Thurs day was a coincidence not connected with the general strike called for that day, as they had been held under de portation warrants, and the requisite authority to send them to Ellis island did not arrive until then. One woman was in the party. "The departure of the anarchists originally was set for January 27," said Federal Immigration Commissioner vC'uucluUed on Pa 3. Column 3- H: 107.2