' l " 1 ' T jjj) - v OL. LVIII. NO. 18.31o Entered at Portland (Oregon) TrTT'T vn , Z; postoffife a s-c-ond-ciaa8 Matter. PORTLAND, OREGON, FRIDAY. AUGUST 8, 1919. PRICK F1VF ppvTc SHOPMEN'S STRIKE put uny es President Will Dear With Railroad Men Direct SENATORS OFFER SUGGESTION Idle Men Held to Have Dis obeyed Union Executives. RETURN TO WORK, DEMAND Consideration of Wage Increase, Xow Under Di.cusion, to'Bc Con tinued With Heads. "ASHIXGTO.V. A 11 pr. 7. President Wilson tonisht notified Direetor-tJen-eral Hines that he was authorized to tak up the demands of railroad shop employes for higher wages and decide them on their merits. The president said that the letter sent him by Senator Cummins, chairman of the committee on interstate commerce, "had set me free to deal as I think best with the difficult question of the wapes of certain classes of railroad em - ployes,'- but added: "The chief obstacle to a decision has been created by the men themselves. They have pone out on a strike and re pudiated the authority of their officers at the very moment when they were urging action in regard to their inter ests." M orkern Most Obey Chirfa. The president's decision was an nounced tonight from the White House in the form of a letter sent by him to Mr. Hines. The president said that "until the employes return to work and again recognize the authority of their organization, the whole matter must be at a standstill." The president's letter follows: "Aly Dear Director-General: I am Just In receipt of the letter from Senator Albert B. Cummins, chairman of the senate committee on interstate commerce, which set me free to deal as I think best with the difficult ques tion of the wags of certain classes of railway employes and I take ad vantage of the occasion to write you this letter in order that I may. both in the pullc interest and in the in terests of the railroad employes them selves, make the present situation as clear and definite as possible. "I thought it my duty to lay the question in its present pressing form before the committee of the senate, because I thought I should not act upon this oiattcr within the brief in terval of government control remaining without their acquiescence and ap proval. I-'eelw Krce to Act. "Senator Cummins' letter. which tpeaks the unanimous judgment of the committee, leaves me free and indeed imposes upon me the duty to act. "The question of the wages of rail Toad shopmen wts submitted, you will remember, to the board of railroad wages and working conditions of the railroad administration last February, but was not reported upon by the board until the 16th of July. The delay was unavoidable because the board was con tinuously engaged in dealing with sev eral wage matters affecting classes of employes t ho had not previously re ceived consideration. The board now having apprised us of this inability, at any rate for the time being, to agree upon recommendation, it js clearly our duty to proceed with the matter in the hope of disposing of it. "You sir therefore authorized to say to the rairoad shop employe. that the question of wages they have raised will be taken up and considered on its merits by the director-general in con ference with their duly accredited rep resentatives. 1 DlflD Heads RecnjEnized. "I hope that you will make it clear to the men concerned that the railroad administration cannot deal with prob lems of this sort, or with any problems affecting the men. except through the duly chosen international officers of the regularly constituted organization and their authorized committees. "Matters of so various a nature and Affecting so many men cannot be dealt with except in this way. Any action which brings the authority of the au thorized representatives of the organi zation into question or discredits it must interfere with, if not prevent, action altogether. The chief obstacle to a decision has been created by the men themselves. They have gone out on strike and repudiated the authority of their officers at the very moment when they were urging action in re gard to various interests. "You will remember that a conference between ourself and the authorized rep resentatives of the men was arranged at the instance of these representatives for July 2$ to discuss the wage ques tion and the question of a national agreement, but before this conference took place or could take place, local bodies of railway shopmen took action looking toward a strike on the first of August. Strike Block. Plans. "As a result of this action, various strikes actually took place before there was an opportunity to act in a satis factory or conclusive way with respect to the wages. In the presence of these strikes and the repudiation of the au thority of the representatives of the! organizations concerned there can be i ro consideration of the matter in con troversy. Until the enipioxes return to tCuiiviuued oa I'.e IT. Column I.) ACTORS' STRIKE SHUTS NEW YORK THEATERS ULTIMATUM OX DEMANDS FOR EXTRA PAY" REJECTED. :i I L 1 1 f r.llnH n , ....... - . ' y- u 1 Dfiorf Time for Curtains to Rise; 15, 000 Patrons Discharged. NEW YORK. Aug. 7. Thirteen of New York's "leading- theaters were closed tonight by an actors' strike. called an hour betore the curtains were to go up, by the Actors' Equity associa tion. More than 15,000 theater attendants were discharged. The strike order followed close on the heels of rejection by the Producing Managers' Protective association of an ultimatum demanding action by 7 P. M. on extra pay demands submitted sev eral days ago. These demands included recognition of-the Actors Kquity association, extra compensation for performances in ex cess of eight a week and continuation of the standard "equity" form of con tract in use since 1917. Officials of the managers' association have announced that they are "ready for a fight" and that steps have been takrn for an organization of the "legit imate" vaudeville, burlesque and moving-picture interests to combat the ef forts for unionization of stage and screen artists. BOA LOST ON BATTLESHIP Big Constrictor Captured in Panama Hides Among Ship's Stores. SAN DIEGO. Cat., Aug. 7. A boa constrictor is believed to be hiding on board one of the dreadnoughts now at anchor here today. While the fleet was visiting Panama ten days ago a party of sailors scaled Ancon mountain and found the constrictor sleeping under a tree, where he had gorged himself on a Panama goat. Eight sailors charged the snake and carried into Balboa the writhing serpent, which was reported to have been slipped aboard one of the dreadnoughts at dark just before the fleet sailed. The boa is reported to have glided off into the darkness and hidden himself among the ship's stores. No one has been able to find him. SHIP ALLOCATION BEGUN Board Authorizes Distribution to Pa cific Coast Lines. PAN FRANCISCO. Aug. 7. Authori zation to proceed with the allocation of ships for the Pacific coast, as re cently announced by the United states shipping board, was received here to fay by H. H. Ebey, assistant director of the shipping board, from John Cush ing, acting director of the board at Washington. The message said: "You are authorized to proceed with the allocation of new Pacific coast de liveries as rapidly as available to trade routes as outlined by you with a view to the establishment of continuous line service."" BIG BATTLESHIP DISABLED Propeller Shaft Broken Off Coast of Central America. WASHINGTON. Aug. 7. The battle ship Rhode Island, flagship of squad ron No. 1 of the new Pocific fleet, is be ing towed to Balboa, canal zone, with a broken propeller shaft. The battle shit) North Carolina has the disabled dreadnought in tow. Dispatches to the navy department late today said the starboard shaft of the Rhode Island broke when she was about 675 miles west of Balboa en route to San Diego to join the vanguard of the fleet. Although compartments in the afterpart of the battleship were flooded, there were no casualties. GERMAN COLLEGE CLOSES Part of Coenr d'Alenc Institution to Be Old People's Home. SPOKANE. Wash.. Aug. 7. Coeui d'Alene college. Lutheran church insti tution at Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, will not be reopened next fall, it was announced here today. It has been impossible to organize a faculty and obtain the en rollment of a student body before time for beginning the fall work, it was stated. An old people's home is to be opened in a part of the college buildings as soon as sufficient applications are re ceived. However, no applications for admittance have yet been made. FOREIGN IRON MILLS SOLD American Capital Reported Seeking European Gun Plant. GENEVA. Aug. 6. (By the Associated Press.) A statement was made here today that American steel companies. after having bought out the Doehle wercke eteel factories at Vienna and Dusseldorf. the largest in Europe, are now negotiating to acquire the famous frKoaa works, noted lor its naval gruns. If successful in this, the Americans will have virtually a monopoly of the steel works of the continent, it is said. SEATTLE RAPS ARMY BACON 35-Cenl Variety Declared to Be "All Eat' by Purchasers. SEATTLE. Aug. 7. Complaints were made to city authorities ' day by Seat tle residents that the nrmv bacon Kalno. sold here by municipal authorities is all rat.' The bacon is being sold at 35 cents a pound. Acting Mayor W. D. Lane said the purchasers could not erpect high-grade bacon at the price they are paying. WILSON PREPARES HIGH-COST VDLR -0r President to;" K .oS Con gress Today. FOOD CONTROL TO BE ASKED Extension of Lever Act to Peace Times Wanted. ' STRONGER LAWS DESIRED Xo Recommendation or Limit Upon Margin of Profit; Leaders Keep Wires Hot for Quorum. WASHINGTON, Aug. 7. President Wilson put the finishing touches on his high-cost-of-living address to con gress tonight and prepared to deilver it in person tomorrow afternoon at 4 o'clock. One possibility loomed up to threat en the president's plans. It was that the leaders might not he able to round up a quorum in the house and that some member insisting on parliamentary rule, by raising the point, might forestall the joint session of the house and senate. Representative Blanton, democrat, of Texas, served notice on Republican Leader Mondell that he, for one, would insist on a legal quorum. Republican and democratic Iea"dcrs both accordingly made the telegraph wires hot tonight with messages order ing absentees back in time for tomor row afternoon. eeded Liwi to Be Outlined. The address will be confined to lay ing before congress what measures, in the opinion of the president and of the sub-committee appointed by Attorney General Palmer, should be enacted at once to bring relief to the public from the existing high prices. All the ele ments that have helped create the con dition the country finds itself in today, in the view of these men, will be dealt with. These include, it was learned authoritatively, labor problems and strikes resulting from them, and pro duction which would be interfered with by strikes. To this extent the matter of railroad wages will be included in the address, but a solution of the entire railroad problem will not be suggested beyond the suggestion already made to con gress by the president in his letter to the chairman of the senate and house interstate commerce committees. No recommendation will be made for a licensing system of producers. No recommendation will be made for (Continued on Pace 2. Column 1.) J MORE HEROES TO WELCOME. j j . Q . t i I 1 : I . - ; I : : TAXI DRIVER'S FRIGHT SEALS ROBBERS' FATE C FROM SEAT LEAVES HIGH - AYMEX SO WAY TO ESCAPE. Police and Civilian Crowd Run Down Pair Who Drove to Store for Daring Deed at Closing Hour. Two ' highwaymen in a taxicab stopped at 7:30 o'clock last night at the store of H. Goldstein, 225 Burn side street, robed him of $65.01 and two watches, and would have made their escape had not the " taxicab driver become so frightened that he fell off his seat and ran when the robbers hSrried from the store and told him to drive on. Police and a. crowd of civilians chased the robbers. Ithmer Gillespie was captured and taken to head quarters by Patrolmen Meehan and Furin. Inspectors were still interview ing him at a late hour. Police chased the other man up a stairway, but he reached the roof of a building in the vicinity and escaped. The whole north end was excited over the holdup, which was one of the boldest attempted for months. Several reports that the robbers had been seen reached police headquarters within a few minutes, keeping inspectors on the run chasing down unfounded rumors. The men entered the store just as Mr. Goldstein was closing up or the night. He ran into the street after them, shouting for help. Police say the robbers doubtless would have es caped had not the taxicab driver de serted his machine and left them on foot. MARINERS WIN WAGE RISE Strike on Lumber Schooners in Pa cific Ports Ends. SAN FRANCISCO. Aug. 7. A strike affecting the masters and mates of 34 steam lumber schooners in this port and 42 similar craft in other raclfic coast ports was ended here today, when an agreement on a new wage scale was adopted. Under the new schedule the mates will receive Jl an hour overtime, the same rate received by sailors. The employers, it was announced, also had granted an increase in wages to the masters. The schedule, it was said, will not apply to the masters of 11 small steam schooners making short coast trips. The wages of these skippers has been set at $250, a month, while the commanders of the larger schooners are to receive $275 a month. SUGAR TRADE CURB URGED Exports at Price Under 6 Cents May Be Prohibited. HAVANA, Aug. 7. (By the Asso ciated Press.) A resolution which -would authorize the president "not to permit the exportation of sugar corre sponding to the 1919-20 crop at a price less than 6 cents per pound, free on board," was presented in the house of representatives today. No action was taken on the resolution. - I WARNING MESSAGE SENT TO RDUMANIA U. S. Demands Fair Treat ment for Hungary. FOOD SUPPLIES MAY BE CUT Hoover Halts Shipments on Way to Budapest. ROUMANIANS IN CONTROL Supreme Council at Paris Sends Xote Urging Conformity- Willi Decisions of Entente. LONDON". Aug. 7. A dispatch from Vienna by way of Copenhagen to the Exchange Telegraph company says that the United States has sent an ulti matum to Roumania demanding with drawal of the severe armistice terms presented to Hungary, on pain of a cessation of the shipment of food to Roumania. fARIS, Aug. 7. The supreme coun cil has sent a note to the Roumanian authorities .begging them to conform to the decisions of the entente and not to embarrass by previous decisions the work of the Inter-allied Investigating committee sent to Budapest. PARIS. Aug. 7. Herbert Hoover, head of the Inter-allied relief sion. has stopped all relief supplies on their way to Budapest, taking the posi- ne would be unwarranted in letting supplies reach vrunirar i,iu the Roumanians are now depriving the ticupic 01 looasturrs. Members of the American J.i. gation said tonight that there are no American troops rvpw In Budapest, and that none will be sent there i added that the only Americans in the nungarian capital are officers, and possibly a few soldiers engaged 'in re lief work. LONDON, Aug. 7. A bolshevik K- marine has been sunk in the Baltic sea.ty the British torpedo-boat de stroyers Valorous and Vancouver, ac cording to an official statement Issued by the admiralty this evening. HUNGARIAN CABINET OUSTED New Ministry Reported Established by Archduke Joseph. PARIS, Aug. 7. The peace confer ence was advised today that the Hun garian cabinet headed by Jules Peidll had been overthrown and that Arch- LEAGUE CANNOT LEAD U. S. TO WAR WOOD ARMIES WILL NEVER EM; II T ON MANDATE OF ALIEN. t Vigorous Appeal for Preparedness as .Measure of Humanity Is Made After Medal Is Received. SANTA FE. X. M.. Aug. 7. "The armies of America," declared Major. General Leonard Wood, in a speech fol lowing the conferring of a medal bv the state of New Mexico at the capitol here today, . "will never go to war at the mandate of any foreign nation, nor group of nations." General Wood urged national pre paredness as a steadfast policy, declar ing lack of it is "not humanitv. but brutality." He received loud applause when he appealed for the wiping out of "cheap little racial and social distinctions" and the perpetuation of the battlefield spirit of democracy. "Avoid Internationalism as vou would death." said General Wood in denuncia tion of bolshevlsm and allied evils. The medal was presented in recogni tion of General Wood's service in the great war. TRANS-ROCKY FLIGHT ON Captain Hoy, Canadian Aviator, Orf for Pioneer Voyage. VAXCOUVER, B. c. Aug. 7.-Captain e.. C. Hoy. Canadian army airman, left here at daybreak today in an attempt to fly across the Canadian Rocky mountains. He reached Vernon B C 225 miles from here, in three hours and six minutes. He left Vernon at 8:19 for CJrand .Forks. The flight, ir successful, will be the first ever made over the Canadian Rockies. Captain Hnv t.,, j ..".i, vjii mc time flight several days ago. but turned .,.. Wnen ne encountered unfavorable weather at Chilliwack. The flight is being made under the auspices of three newspapers, the Van- "r"' "1 LhC "y Herald and the Lethbridge Herald. Captain Hoy ex- f'c sh b- -ay of Lethbridgeyanl reach Calgary at about 8 P. M. today. 'I DID IT ALL' FALKENHAYN German General Assumes Responsi bility for War. PARIS. Aug, 7. This morning's news papers announce that Baron Kurt von Loisner. head of the German mission at Versailles, has transmitted to the supreme council a letter from General B.rich von Balkenhayn. former German chief of staff in which he claimed re sponsibility for all military acts by Germany while he was in power from he beginning of the war to the end of the battle of Verdun. ,J,e,nerf' V?,7 F,lkenh-" offers him- rrr,rvlf, al"e3 PlaCe f driller Lm- peror William. LAUNDRY WOMEN STRIKE Spokane Employes Refuse to Do Ex tra Work at Former Pay. SPOKANE, Wash.. Aug. 7. Twenty women employed by a Spokane laundry went on strike today in protest against what they declared was requirements "y additional work for the same pay as formerly. Other laundries were not affected. PORTUGAL JICKS LEADER Antonio Almeida Gets Big Majority of Voles Tor President. LISBON. Wednesriav Ac : tonio Almeida, former prerrr and 01 r- inies. was elected presi dent of Portugal today by parliament. Senor Almeida received 123 votes to 31 for other candidates. INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. TESTRRDAT'P Maximum temperature 7" deitrera; minimum. ; decrees. TODAY'S Fair: moderate westerly winds. Foreign. Distrust of Germany short-sichted policy says Maximilian Harden. Page 3 ArCpaget' JScph ia ru,cr of Hungary. National. President puts ettl-mnt of shopmen strike up to Director Hines. Page 1. Wilson puts finishing touches on his speech on high prices. Fage 1. Lodge asks senate to demand allied recogni tion of treaty reservations. Page 2. Domestic. ACtpage "1trlke cIo-e :ew fork theater.. Coast (rives lusty welcome to American ar mada. Page 4. rarifir North went. Governor Olcott may Ignore Multnomah del eRation'a petition for suffrage session. Page J. Shopmen's strike on ctst affects Seattle Tacoma, Centra ha. Page 17. Sport. Successor to Allan T. Baum as had of Coast league not yet in sight. Page 14. Programme for Ciearhaxt Beach goir play is announced. Page 14. Pacific Coast league result?: Portland 0 Seattle 1!; Los Angeles , Oakland 1; Salt Lake 4. Sacramento O; Vernon i San Francisco U. Page 14. Commercial mod Marine. Merchants Exchange association elects I, C Sanford president. Page September corn hlsher at 'hV-aeo. owlnc to trafric interruption. Page a!. Severe decline in Wall-street stovka in final hour of trading. Page J3. Longshoremen present demands for increase in wageh. Page Portland and Vicinity. Mr. Esterly resigns from city housing-code committee. Page 111. American Legion plans further campaign against alien slackers. Page 9. Charley Jnnoa. veteran boot h gffcr draws long term from his old prosecutor Paite 1. Chamber of Commerce of United States party visits Portland. Page 1. Frightened taxi driver falls from scat, caus ing robbers capture. Page 1. Fourth engineer greeted in Portland by home Toikb. Page t. Portland fails to get ahare of army surplus bacon. I'age Four more forest patrol planes reach Salem Pass 6. BUSINESS LEADERS OF NOTION GUESTS Chamber of Commerce cf U. S. Party Here. 1920 CONVENTION fS ITtD 27 Officers and Dir&ctcrs Hear Portland's Clair?.. NATIONAL ISSUES TOUCHED President H. L. Ferguson, lVrmerIy of Portland. Pleads for Sane -Marine Policy. Five hou.-s later than scheduled, dii to delays en route over the Southern Pacific railroad. 2V officers and direct ors of the Chamber of Commence of the United States were welcomed to Portland yesterday at a noonday mcrt incr In the Oresron building;. The vis itors were met at the tin ion sUaticm by a party headed by Mayor Baker and President Corbott of the Chamber of Commerce, escorted to automobiles and whisked away to the preen room of the Chamber of Commerce, where they were preeted by business men and enter tained at luncheon. The train delay dis rupted the programme of the morninjf and left no time for. the intended trips to industrial plants and the water fronJL It was at the luncheon that the in vitation to select Portland as the con vention city for the 1920 meeting of the natfonal commercial body was pre sented, and President Homer L. Fergu son delivered a stirrinp address in re sponse. Immediately after the luncheon the party was taken to the public au ditorium to inspect the building that provides every convenience for large gatherings. A slight hitch in the pro gramme occurred at this point, due to a part of the visitors having been di verted to a ceremony in one of the park blocks, but a number did join there and started out for the trip over the Co lumbia river highway that occupied the greater part of the afternoon and ter minated with dinner at the Portlajid Automobile club. President Voices Welcome. 'It is our very great pleasure to wel come to Portland the directors of the United States Chamber of Commerce," said H. L. Corbett, president of the Portland Chamber, in welcoming the guests, "and it is my regret that ow ing to the belated arrival of the train which brought you here, I must wel come you on behalf of a great many of our business ncn who were disap pointed that they did not have the op portunity to be present at this hour. But the welcome is none the less cor dial and genuine, and we want you to come again. It is fitting, however, that the invitation on behalf of the city should come from one who speaks as the official representative, and I take, pleasure in introducing Mayor Baker." It was 1:30 o'clock before the vis itors were seated in the big dining room, but notwithstanding the late ness of the hour, a representative group of business men remained for the belated luncheon and to hear the ' addresses of the occasion. "We have an ambition to have the United States Chamber meet in Port land," said Mayo Baker, plunging into the subject without wasting tixxM in formalin. Hope to Meet In lf20. "We appreciate the power of the or ganization and t-he possibilities for achievement through that power. It was our desire to show you some pt the things that we have, but we could not begin to show you all in a day. We hope that we may have the chance to devote a whole week to acquainting you with Portland in 19-0. "For one thing, we have an audi torium here where every conv enience for ample room for the committee meetin-gs ample room for the committee meetin-g for the conferences that are so impor tant a part of every such great gafher ing. We realize that the directors of this organization are men of large af fairs, and we want you to come to Port land because of everything big that yru represent. It is a privilege to say to you that Portland earnestly desires tif&t the 1920 convention come here. We cam entertain you as we have successfully received the Grand Army of the Re public, the National Kducation associ ation, and as we will in 1920 entertain the Shrine. It is our hope that you will accept Portland's invitation." Portland Advantage DetalCVU Arthur C. Callan, chairman of iffie committee in charge of the invicv5oi on behalf of Portland, spoke briefly in presenting to President Ferguson are reasons formulated in 'manuscript and compiled in a bound volume, illustra.vi wiUa photograph of local views. lis said that for the first time a Paorfle coast city makes request that the am nual meeting of the national bod? Ue held here. Claims of Portland by rVa son of its proximity to San Frarcx, to be the place of the next meetUrg of the foreign trade conference, was cd van 1. H was pointed out that majv of the delegates to one of these annual meetings are sure to be sent also to the other, as was the case last year, and that tie most successful conven tions of both have been when the liatco were arranged to enable the two meet ings to be included in the itinerary o-f a single trip. Briefly he mentioned fch geographic advRntage of location, ac- tConcludcd on Tae 7, Coiuaa