I i, VOL. LiVIII. NO. 18,313 Entered at Portland (Oregon) POTfTT A Yn iWf Tf- r v is --- T-k-r-r-.cs-- . , , , , - . Pwtnie ai Swond!Mi Matter. J. Ult J. A- U, UK1jO, WED ESr(t0 -a. C GUST 6, 1919., PRICE FIVE CEXTS SHOPMEN'S STRIKE ROBBERS MARCH MEN SIX MORE PLIES TO AID IN PATROL WOMAN'0 j30.000 T FALL OF SEAPLANE ' I AT OrtM rwrnn tath HIGH PRICES CUT TO FIELD OF DEATH STOREKEEPER AND EX-SOLDIER STRANGLED WITH OWN" BELTS. BALM liTSECOND SUIT FIRST CASE DISMISSED BECAUSE -PLAINTIFF MARRIED . EXTENDS TO COAST DEMANDS OF LABOR Y RADIO ELECTRICIAN VICTIM OF AIR ACCIDENT. uuu nlug huh .u HIGHWA BUILDING Great Northern Terminals , Are Hit by Walkout. EVERETT, -SPOKANE MEN QUIT Bad-Order Cars Already Begin to Clutter Yards. UNION CHIEFS DENY MOVE Railroads in AH Paris of Nation Affected by Action of Em ployes Who Seek Rise. ,-Thopie,s 's t r I k e spaxs J EMIBK COMI.VK.XT. ' ' ' & VL Keret. w her t . so out. ' e 500 workers One thousand men vote strike at Spokane. Montana railroad centers are already idle. Ten thousand shopmen will strike today on south Atlantic seaboard. Fifteen thousand railroaders idle in middle west. New York city lines vote to strike today. 3000 going out. Union leaders condemn move, saying: strike not authorized. O.-W. R. & S. feels first force of strike at Walla Walla. CHICAGO, Aug. 5. Further spread of the strike of railway shopmen, espe cially in the middle west and towards the Paoitic coast, where about 15,0u0 workers went out today, according to union reports, with a strike of 10.000 men on the Norfolk & Western line-set for tomorrow, marked the fifth day of the walkout. The strike has been declared illegal by railway executives, who have made that charge to the local bureau of the department of justice. The barrier was let down today for boilermakers to join the other strikers, according to L. M. Hawver, president of the Chicago district council of the Federated Railway Shopmen's Union, which called the strike last Friday. He announced a telegram from E. C. Chase, the boilermakers' representative on the national agreement committee now ne gotiating with the railroad administra tion in Washington, that conditions "do not warrant holding men any longer." Strikers Admit Diobrdienre. While railroad yards in the Chicago district have become congested with broken-down cars as a result of the strike, union officials declare all rail road service will be more seriously af -fectM in a few days. They admit the strike was called in defiance of the grand lodge officers of ' the unions involved, but say that it was in compliance with the wishes of the rank and file of the federation. The also refuse to take a strike vote JfcTiiTUst 24, as ordered by the grand lodge officers, and assert that the rail administration must treat with them and grant their demands for S3 cents an hour for mechanics and 60 cents for helpers. Spokane la Included. All railroad shopmen employed in Spokane and at nearby points will strike at 10 o'clock tomorrow morning, it was said tonight by union leaders. The men look a strike vote today, and although no formal announcement was made as to the sentiment revealed, it was said by union members that the vote for a strike was practically unani mous. Union leaders were undecided tonight whether to make public the vote cast. About 500 men struck today at the Great Northern railway shops at Hill yard, near here. They were locomo tive shopmen. The car shopmen did not strike, pending the vote. Thoucand .Urn to Qait. Tt was said by union officials about lt'OO men would walk out tomorrow. They said the membership was in thor ough sympathy with the national strike of shopmen for increased wages and would stay out until the demands were met. About bOO shop employes of the Great Northern railroiid went on strike at E erett. Wash., today for an increase in wage. Skilled men ask an increase from 6S to S5 cents an hour, helpers and laborers ask an increase from 45 and 4ft cents, respectively, to 60 cents. The strike reached the O.-W. R. & N.' company lines tonight when the shop force of 15 at Walla Walla voted to walk out tomorrow morning. BILLINGS, Mont., Aug. 5. The entire crew in the local railroad shops quit work at 11 o'clock this morning in re eponre to orders from union officials in St. Faul. The strike affects machin ists and boilermakers and their helpers and apprentices. The walkout will have no immediate effect upon the rail road service, according to officials of tiie companies. HELENA. Mont.. Aug. 5. Machinists, boilermakers, steamf itters, car repair ers, blacksmiths and their helpers, em ployed in the Northern Pacific shops here, walked out this morning follow tCoociuded oa Page 3, Column o.J HarTesters Find- Dog Guarding Bodies Footprints Indicate Deed Was Work of Two. BRAWLET. Cal.. Aug. 5. With their own belts drawn in a tight knot around their necks, the bodies of William Bailey, a storekeeper of Rockwood, a settlement near here, and James C. Mc Ilhany,. a returned soldier, were found it. a field about one mile north of Bailey's store today. Men who entered the field to haul away grain found Bailey's little black dog guarding the bodies. Sheriff Charles-W. Applestill imme diately took charge of the case. Inves tigation revealed that Bailey's store had been robbed. Neighboring farmers declared both men were alive and in the store at 9 o'clock last night. Officers believe that two men en tered the store, robbed it and marched Bailey and Mcllhany to the point where the bodies were found and there choked them to death. Four sets of f ootprints were found entering the field and two sets leading away. ADRIATIC OFFER EXPECTED Fiume for Italy, With Free Fort Controlled by League Proposed. BT WILLIAM COOK. (Copyright by the New York World. Pub lished by arrangement.) PARIS, Aug. 5.' (Special Cable.) Rumors are again current here that the disputes over Italian aspirations on the Adriatic are on the point of being- set tled. It is saii that Premier Tittonl will bring back with him from London a settlement which will be favored by the signatories of the London pact, which would make Fiume Italian, while a free port there would be controlled by the society of nations. By this arrangement Italy would make important concessions to Dal matian Italian interests in Asia Minor would still be subordinated to Ameri ca's decision. At the headquarters of the United States peace mission nothing is known of the reported settlement, which, in any case, will have to go to President Wilson for final approval. SWEEK TO GET U. S. POST , Nomination for Register of Land Of fice Is Announced. WASHINGTON. Aur. 5. President Wilson today nominated Alexander Swcek of Portland, Or., to be .agister of the land office at that city. Alexander Sweek. former state chair man of the democratic party in Oregon. and a former municipal judge of Port land, has been nominated by President Wilson as register of the United States land office in Portland, according to word received from Washington yes terday. The nomination will have to be confirmed by the senate. Judge Sweek was proposed for ap pointment of minister to Siam several years ago, but at the time old political opponents of the judge interfered and gained the ear of President Wilson. CLAM HOUSES $750 PEARL Albany Collector Discovers Valuable Jewel in Bivalve. ALBANY, Or., Aug. 5. (Special.) A pearl, probably worth $750, was found grown to the interior of one of the lids of a large Uno clam, picked up by J. G. Crawford Sunday, in Bryant's park. Mr. Crawford found the clam in the willow bushes about 200 yards from the point of junction between the Cala poota and Willamette rivers. The Uno clam measures 12 milli meters in length 4 'A millimeters in width and the pearl was 3 millimeters long. 2 millimeters wide and Vz milli meter high. GIRL, 15, FIGHTS WITH LION Idaho Child Is Found Unconscious ATter Desperate Struggle. HAILET, Idaho. Aug. 5. Letha Bur rell. 15. while herding cattle on the outskirts of town today, was mauled by a mountain lion, and after a strug gle in which she tried to choke it. she was found unconscious, her arms, back and chest badly lacerated. The lion, which Jumped upon her back while she was in a sitting posture, tore her clothing into shreds. Citizens at once organized to hunt the lion, which has been seen near the town for a month. The girl will recover. BAKER'S PLAN APPROVED Spokane Backs l"p Portland's Execu tive in -Conference Plan. SPOKANE. Aug. 5. Co-operation in a plan proposed by Mayor George L. Baker of Portland, Or., for a confer ence of mayors and other officials of northwestern cities to consider means of cambating the high cost of living was voted today by the city council. Mayor C. M. Fassett was directed to reply to a telegram he had received from Mayor Baker and promise Spo kane's support of the proposal. THIEVES WITH AUTO STALL Alarm Clock Calls Patrolman to Rescue Machine. SEATTLE. Wash.. Aug. 5. Two young automobile thieves early today found themselves stalled with a stolen machine directly in front of the home of Patrolman Howard Kent, just as Kent's alarm clock was calling him. The explosions and eputterings of the stalled car led the officer to invest! gate. The two were arretted. Additions for Forest Serv ice Announced. ! ARRIVAL IS EXPECTED SOON Eight Machines Will Be in Com mission Shortly. TWO BASES ARE PLANNED Craft to Operate From Salem and Roseburg and Cover Most of West Oregon Timber Area. SALEM, Or., Aug. 5. (Special.) Six army planes to be used in the Oregon forest fire patrol service will report to Major Albert Smith, in Salem, with in the next 48 hours, according to a telegram received here today by Lieu tenant Kiel, from Major Crissy, in command of the air service at Mather Field. Cal. Lieutenant Kiel has charge of the patrol planes now stationed here awaiting operation instructions from Colonel Arnold, aerial offioer for the western department with headefuarters at San Francisco. With eight planes in commission, state and federal forestry officials plan to maintain daily service through out southern and western Oregon. Two bases will be established, one of which will be at Salem and the other at Rose burg, provided the latter city fur nishes a suitable landing field. Two Planes to Leave Dally. Two planes will leave Salem each morning, one operating over the tim bered a pea east and west of the South ern Pacific railroad as far north as Portland and the other south as far as Eugene. A similar service will be maintained out of Koseburg. one of the planes cov ering a route as far north as Eugene and the other as far south as Medford. At both Salem and Itoseburg two planes will be held in reserve and the rviators will alternate every other day in squads of four. Although the per manent routes to be covered will not be completed until the arrival of th additional planes from California, it is said to be Forester Elliott's opinion that practically all of the forest area of central and western Oregon will be. included in the daily patrol. Trial Trip, i-nccessf ul. The trial trips, extending as far south as Eugene and north to Port land, have proved successful, according to Mr. Elliott, and he believes that the fire menace will be greatly reduced through the operation of these ma chines. Unoffiical word received from Rose- Concluded on Page 3, Column 4.) I I . . i I ; JL.......J..a...x...a... Supreme Court Jurist Scores De fendant for Xot 'Lying Like Gentleman" During Trial. -i OLTMPIA, Wash., Aug. 5. (Special.) After signing dismissal of one breach of promise suit, Dora C. Dundy today recovered a supreme court judgment for $30,000 against B. L. Dickinson, wealthy rancher of Columbia county. The second suit was instituted after Mrs. Bundy had procured a divorce from Fred Bundy, promise of marriage after which time being the basis of the heavy Judgment against Mr. Dick inson. In the first suit she could not have recovered, it Is admitted, because of legal incapacity to sue as another man's wife. On renewal of relations subsequent to the first suit, she scores one of the heaviest breach of promise awards ever allowed in the state, pay ment of which is secured by an appeal bond for $50,000 filed by Mr. Dickinson in the supreme court. In referring to Mr. Dickinson's testi mony, in which he denied that love was a factor in their intimacy. Chief Jus tice A. R. Holcomb remarks as "sur prising effrontery" the defendant's failure to be "gentlemanly mendacious or discreetly silent where a woman's reputation was at stake." The verdict of $30,000 is not consid ered excessive in view of Mr. Dick inson's admitted wealth of $90,000, of which one-third is estimated as fair value of what the woman could have expected as her right had the mar riage promise been kept. According to the evidence submitted Mrs. Bundy was employed as cook in 1915 on a ranch owned by Mr. Dick inson's son. The father became ac quainted with her there. She procured a divorce and sued the elder Dickinson the first time in 1916, and the follow ing year embarked upon the second suit that netted' $30,000. NC-4 NOT TO COME WEST Seaplane Fonnd Cnsuited to Make Transcontinental Trip. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU, Wash ington, Aug. 5. The Pacific coast need not expect a visit from the NC-4, which made the recent successful trip across the ocean, the navy department said to day after considering many requests from the west that the famous seaplane make a transcontinental trip. The department said that the NC-4, being, a seaplane, cannot venture far from water routes and that it is, there fore, impracticable to try to convert it use to that of a prairie schooner. CHORUS GIRLS MAY STRIKE Demands for xtra Pay and Closed Shop Made to Alanagcrs. CHICAGO, Aug. 5. A strike of actors and chorus girls, members of the Actors' Equity association, is threat ened for tomorrow. Tliey are demanding extra pay for Sunday performances, pay for re hearsals and that the managers employ only members of the association. A strike would affect the majority of the downtown theaters. AS IF HE DIDN'T HAVE ENOUGH TO LOOK AFTER ALREADY! Private Rail Ownership Is Held Best for Public. REDUCED RATES ARE WANTED Government Operation Is De clared Least Efficient. STRIKING SHOPMEN FIRM Ballots Sent to 500,000 Workmen. Problem to Be Taken Before Congress Today. WASHINGTON', Aug. S The railroad problem, which is engrossing the at tention of both the executive and legis lative branches of the government, will be brought " before congress tomorrow with the appearance before the house interstate commerce committee of rep resentatives of the railroad brother hoods and of organized labor in gen eral In support of their plan for tri partite control of the railways. Meanwhile threats of hundreds of thousands of railroad employes to go on strike to force higher wages to meet the high cost of living were re iterated. From many parts of the coun try today came reports that striking shopnfen refused to return to work, despite the fact ,that their action was denounced as illegal by the executive council of the six shop crafts. Strike Ballots Sent Out. Strike ballots were mailed from the American Federation of Labor for tak ing an official vote as to whether the 500,000 shopmen shall walk out to ob tain their demands and express their disapproval of President Wilson's refer ence of the railroad wage question to congress. Demands are being made also by 650,000clerks. freight handlers and station employes. Director Hines was to have discussed their problems today with J. J. Forrester, grand pres ident of the union, but other business interfered and the conference will be held tomorrow. ' Business men of the country as repre sented in the chamber of commerce of the United States favor private owner ship of the railroads. Private Ownership Favored. Based oh a referendum of the -chamber's 670,000 members, this announce ment was made tonight following pub lication of the demands of organized labor for elimination of private capital from railroad ownership and operation. Announcement of the vote of 99 per cent of the business men against gov ernment ownership was accompanied by the following explanation of the reasons actuating the decision: "1. Under government ownership the f Con tin ud on r ge 3. Colu m n 1 . " i 1 i Lieutenant O. P. Kilmer, Pilot, and Newspaper Photographer Not Much Hurt. SAX DIEGO. Cal., Aug. 5. Re'turning from a flight to the Pacific fleet, a sea plane, piloted by Lieutenant O. P. Kil mer of the North Island naval air station, crashed in San Diego harbor tonight. S. E. Deveas. radio electrician, was killed. Lieutenant Kilmer and Wil lis C. Baker, San Diego newspaper pho tographer, who had been taking pic tures of the fleet, escaped with slight injuries. EUROPE FACES COAL CRISIS Peace Conference Asked to Take Ac tion to Avert Fuel Disaster. PARIS. Aug. 5. (By the Associated Press.) Shipping and fuel representa tives of France, Belgium and Iialy con ferred with Herbert C. Hoover, head of the international relief organization, today and decided to urge the supreme council of the peace conference to ap point an European coal commission to co-ordinate distribution of European coal in an effort to avert what threat ens to be a disaster. Mr. Hoover has said that Europe's coal production was 35 per cent below normal and the United States could not offer relief be cause of the shortage of shipping. Mr. Hoover declined to accept the permanent direction, of the proposed European coal commission, saying he believed the problem to be strictly European. FLIERS CIRCLING NATION Four Big Planes Leave San Fran cisco for East. SAN? FRANCISCO. Aug. 5. The four De Haviland airplanes of the air re cruiting service, which arrived here last Tuesday, departed at 2:20 P. M. today to complete their circuit of the country. They started from Ellington field, Texas. The aviators expected to make the next stop at Sacramento. They will leave then for Salt Lake City and will fly eventually to Kansas City, where the remainder of the itinerary will be mapped out. The route wjll lead through Chicago, Cleveland, Washing ton and New York. The airplanes are being piloted by Lieutenants Clifford C. Nutt. who is in charge of the squadron: Edward W. Killgore, Charles V. Rugh and Erik H. N'elson. AUSTRIA TO REPLY TODAY Delegation Announces Observations Will Be Completed on Time. PARIS, Aug. S. (By the Associated Press.) The Austrian delegation for mally notified the peace conference to day that it would submit its complete observations on the treaty te the con ference at 6 o'clock tomorrow night, the last day allowed for their reply. Dr. Karl Renner. Austrian chancellor, and head of the peace delegation, will leave for Vienna tomorrow night, he said, returning about August 12. The peace conference probably will take about eight days to consider the Austrian suggestions. It was said to be likely that Austria then would re ceive about five days within which to make a final reply as to whether or not she will sign the treaty. HOQUIAM MAYOR IS "COP" City Executive Catches Man Putting l"p I. W. V. Posters. HOQUIAM. Wash.. Aug. 5. (Special.) Mayor Ralph L. Philbrick played the role of policeman last night when he arrested S. P. Dunlap on a charge of pasting I. W. W. posters in windows about the city. The posters warned workingmen against wage-slavery, one reading: "Workers, the more you produce, the less you get. Join the I. W. W. and take it all." INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature. 7 degrees; minimum, u7 degrees. TODAY'S Fair and warmer, except coast: gentle westerly winds. Foreign. Rumanian.' attitude toward Hungary wor ries American peace delegates. Page 3. Diplomatic break between Argentina and Great Britain threatened. Page 2. Natlorml. United States airplane, feed flames la France. Page 2. Domestic. Robbrn lead two victims from looted store to field of murder, mile distant. Pass 1. Shopmen's strike reaches coast; roads of nation badly hit. Page 1. . ports. Speedboat regatta Is set for Sunday. Page 15. Football to thrive with war tax off. Page 14. Coionel rcuppert of New York Yankees dis putes Ban Johnson' explanation of May.' suspension. Page 15. Pacific Coast league results: fan Francisco .1. Vernon 4; Sait Lake 4. Sacramento 1; Los Angelea IT, Oakland 2. Page 14. Pacific Northwest. Six more army planes coming to patrol Oregon forests. Page 1. But 43 legislator, so far ask for .Fecial session at Salem. Page 7. , Woman win. $30,000 heart balm in .econd suit on same case. Page 1. Commercial and Marine. Mixed wheat differentials for new crop are announced. Page 21. Corn prices tumble again In Chicago market Page 21. Prompt recovery In stock value, in Wall .treet. Page 21. Officer, and director, of Willamette Iron Work become sole owners. Page 22. Portland and Vicinity. Police judge hears sad story of two drug addicts. Page 11. w Oregon druggists and retail merchant, in session. Page 16. 9 City and county authorities join to tight traffic in drug. Page 9. City will sell army bacon at 34'. cent a pound. Page J 6. Influx of buyers nets new record in Port laud, i'a.e 10. Commission to Put Brake on Construction. BOTTOM OF PURSE IN SIGHT Two Counties Suggest Narrow. Roads to Save Money. $3,500,000 MAY BE. LOST Funds Perhaps Must Be Taken Out of $10,000,000 Bonds to Meet Federal Appropriation. HIGH COST OF LIVING AND HIGHWAY S. Commission fears curtailment of construction due to increasing costs. Government projects must be reconsidered and some eliminated. Two counties propose stretch ing their money by building roads narrower than standard of state. Bids to pave eight miles south of Corvallis not opened; old road to be used as matter of economy. Commission may postpone grad ing Hayts hill on Grants Pass Crescent City road until spring. Shortage of money causes com mission to postpone locating high way through Tillamook. Unless Bean-Barrett bonds can be issued to match federal aid the commission must set aside $3,500 000 from $10,000,000 bond is sue for matching, thus interfer ing with completion of main trunk roads. Advancing wages and materials are increasing the costs of road construc tion so rapidly that the brakes will be applied to the road-building pro gramme. It is costing more than the original estimates and this will neces sitate curtailment. The slowing down process will affect not only the state work but the government co-operative projects, some of which will have to be revised and others abandoned. At the same time the state highway commission is in sight of the bottom of the purse. Funds are rapidly becom ing exhausted. Miles of road projects are now dependent on the opinion of the attorney-general. If the attorney general opines that the Bean-Barrett bill enables bonds to be sold to meet the federal appropriations for Oregon the road programme can be carried for ward, with due consideration for mounting costs, but if the attorney general's opinion is otherwise it is im- ' mediately necessary for the state high way commission to set aside $3,600,000 rr meet this governmental assistance. Unless the government money is matched, dollar for dollar, by the state, the federal aid will be withheld from Oregon. Road LeglalRtion Wanted. Such was the situation which devel oped at yesterday's meeting of the state highway commission. Immedi ately after the adjournment several members of the legislature, who at tended the session, declared that if a special session is called they will un dertake to do some road legislation which will be calculated to straighten out a few kinks in the matter of the road problem. Possibly of greatest concern to the commission is 'the matter of meeting the government appropriation. Com missioner W. L. Thompson declared the people of the state would never for give the commission if this federal money was lost. The Bean-Barrett bill was passed to match federal money, but since its enactment the govern ment has allotted a much larger sum . than that in sight when thtt bill was passed by the legislature. The theory of the commission and of legislators at yesterday's meeting is that the Bean Barrett bill is sufficiently elastic to match any amount of money the gov ernment may set aside for Oregon. For many months the commission htrs hoped for an opinion from Attorney General Brown. Provision Needed Soon. The time is now approaching When the commission must make pro"visicm for matching the government. Dtbe to the delay on the part of the attorney- ' general, the only safe policy, it 4s argued, is to set aside 13,500,000 out of the road bond issue. This meajts the withdrawing from the regular starte road programme of just that sum, and consequently the curtailment of a con siderable part of the programme, vir tually one-third of the work which the $10,000,000 bonds were expected tt cover. With this status confronting tlcn, the commissioners are determiaed to relegate to the future all but the main roads and the co-operative projects. Acting on this theory they indefinitely postponed making a selection between the ocean' route andthe Foley-Miami route in Tillamook county, explaining to the delegation from that county that inasmuch as there is a shortage of -money with which to help build the road, it would inconvenience no one to defer making the location. In the same spirit of tuning the suit to fitjjS (Continued oa Page 2, Column L