Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, September 12, 1919, Image 1

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VOL. L.YTII 0 1S4." Entered st Portland (Orffo")
lj' yj- J 0, l.J P(v.,m,., S.cnnd-Class Matter.
PORTLAND. OREGON, FRIDAY, SEPTE3IIJER - 12, 1919.
28 PAGES
' PRICE FIVE CENTS.
TROOPS IN CLASH
27 SAILORS DROWNED
OFF FOUNDERED SHIP
WILSON jOH PACT
TOiY UNREST
GERMANS SEE" HOPE "
FOR SEPARATE PEACE
SENATE STAGE SET
FOR TREATY FIGHT
PRINTERS AT TACOMA
END SIX-DAY STRIKE
EDITOR GETS REAL
CORYDOX'S- SURVIVORS 2 DAYS
WITHOUT FOOD. -
EX-MINISTER OF STATE LIKES
SENATOR LODGE'S STAND.
MEN RETURN TO WORK UNDER
OLD WAGE SCALE.
WT
BOSTON MOB
THR II AT PANAMA
Death List Reaches Five
in Reign of Riot.
SIX REGIMENTS MOBILIZED
Nearly 6000 Men Ready to Act
in Defense of Law.
ARMY AND NAVY AID ASKED
Governor in Charge of Situation;
Labor Leaders Oppose General
Strike to Aid Police.
BOSTO.V, Sept. H. Henry Groat. 10
years old, was shot and instantly killed
and Graxon McWilllams and another
Irian were wounded tonight when state
guardsmen' broke up a dice game in the
Jamaica plain section.
This brines to five the death list re
sulting from the reign of lawlessness
begun when the greater part of the po
lice force deserted their posts Tuesday
night. The wounded number about 20.
Three men were killed in the rioting
of last night.
Mil la Sailor Uniform Shot.
Raymond Bayers, who wore a sailor's
unirorm. dropped dead today with a
bullet in the neck when he tried to
scape from soldiers who broke up
dice game on Boston Common.
Leo Emery, a member of the state
guard on duty in the Roxbury section,
was beaten by a crowd of toughs and
removed unconscious to a hospital.
Throughout the city the state guard
did patrol duty over reg-ular beats, di
rected traffic and kept crowds moving,
They carried guns with fixed bayonets.
In addition, the volunteer police made
up of private citizens continued to ren
der service.
The six regiments of state guards,
totaling between 5000 and 6000 men,
now are mobilised.
With six regiments of stats guards
under arms the governor has mobilised
all the forces at his command. He
took over by proclamation this after
noon complete control of the situation
General Strike Opposed.
After a two-hour discussion with
labor leaders of the possibility of a
general strike in support of the police.
Mayor Peters this afternoon said that
"every one present expressed a de
sire to avert a general strike."
It was learned that the labor leaders
proposed that if the police affiliation
with the American Federation of Labor
was recognized the federation would
bind itself never to call on the police
union for sympathetic, strike action.
A request that regular' array troops
be prepared to respond to a call for
emergency duty here was wired to
Secretary of War Baker by Governor
Coolidge today. The governor pre
viously had made a similar request of
the secretary of the navy.
.Vine Reach Florida Port; Captain
Lost Boat With 45 Aboard
Is Picked Cp.
MIAMI, Fla., Sept. 11. Twenty-seven
members of the crew of the Ward line
steamer Corydon lost their lives when
the vessel foundered In the Bahama
channel In the hurricane which passed
over Florida Tuesday. Nine survivors
clinging to a lifeboat drifted to shore
at Cape Florida this morning.
Captain C. O. Christiansen and a num
ber of the seamen went down with the
ship. The Corydon survivors drifted
for two, days without food or water and
were in a pitiable condition.
A wireless message early this morn
ing said 45 persons were adrift In
small boats between Fowey Rock light
house and Cape Florida about IS miles
from Miami. All were reported "in
distress, and without food or water.
It was presumed they were members
of crews of shifts that went down dur
ing the hurricane that swept this sec
tion early yesterday. Boats have left
here to bring them in. "
"ONE BIG UNION" OPPOSED
United Mine Workers Back Their
President Against I. W. W.
CLEVELAND. Sept. 11. The conven
tion of the United Mine Workers of
America went on record today against
the "one big union," I. W. W. and
kindred movements, indorsing President
Lewis' sharp condemnation of these
radical tendencies.
A committee recommendation ap
proving the action of President Lewis
in revoking the charter of the western
Canadian miners for Joining the "one
RAIN HOLDS UP, TOURISTS
Bad Roads Tie Up South-Bound Mo-
torlsts at Eugene.
EUGENE. Or.. Sept. 11. (Special.)
Between 15 and 20 parties of automo
bile tourists bound south are marooned
in Eugene because of the hard rain
storm this morning. After two days of
warm sunshine the rain began to fall
again at 4:30 A. M. today and continued
to pour down until nearly noon. It
was the hardest rain of the summer,
.92 of an Inch being recorded for the
day.
Tourists on the way to California
have found that some of the detours
around construction just south of Eu
gene are impassable and after reach
ing them returned here.
jna Audiences Told
Delay Is Perilous.
RADICALISM IS CONDEMNED
Orderly Agitation to Right
Wrongs Commended. -
WAR TASK BUT HALF-DONE
Sacrifices in Vain Without League,
Billings and Helena Folks Hear;
Police Strike Held Crime.
PERSHING TO BE HONORED
House "Passes Bill to Receive A. E. F.
Chief September 18.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 11. The house
passed a special resolution late today
setting 2 P. M September 18, as the
time for the joint session of congress
to receive General Pershing. A sword
of honor will be presented.
OYSTER BAT. N. T.. Sept. 11. Gen
eral Pershing paid a brief visit to Mrs.
Theodore Roosevelt at Sagamore Hill
this morning. He expressed his deep
sympathy with Mrs. Roosevelt, not only
in the loss or her husband, but in that
el her son, Quentln. during the war.
UNION IS TO HAVE HOTEL
Hostelry to Cost $75,000 Is An
nounced by Pioneers.
UNION. Or.'. Sept. 11. (Special. ) A
first-class hotel to cost $75,000 is to be
constructed here on" what is known
as the old Lewis place, now owned by
Steve Hutchinson, according to an
nouncement by M. S. Levy, who has
been in charge of the project.
Prominent pioneer families, Interest
ed in the development of Union and vi
cinity, have made the bulldi.ng of this
much-needed Improvement possible.
They financed the proposition as a mat
ter of pride in the community and faith
in its future.
HUJM U-BOAT COMING HERE
Surrendered Diver to Visit In Port
land October 1 to 4.
The pride of the German navy.
genuine Hun U-boat, will be a Port
land visitor for four days, October
to 4, according to advices received yes
terday by Mayor Baker from the San
Diego naval yard.
The U-boat which has been assigned
to visit Portland is the U-88, command
ed by Lieutenant-Commander J. L. Keel
son, U. S. N. It Is of the one-gun, ten
HELENA. Mont. Sept. 11. In two ad
dresses in Montana today. President
Wilson asked that the peace treaty be
ratified without delay so that the spirit
of universal unrest spreading from Rus
sia may be quieted.
With the statement that he had been
told the west was permeated by "what
is called radicalism." the president de
clared the only way to keep men from
agitating against grievances was to
remove the grievances. As long as
"things are wrong," he said, he did not
Intend to ask that men stop agitating,
begging only that they use orderly
methods because otherwise the result
would be chaos.
He bade godspeed to the men who are
trying to correct wrongs, but added
that radicalism meant "cutting up by
the roots," a process that would be
rendered unnecessary if "noxious
growths" were removed. '
Police Strike Condemned.
Mr. Wilson also referred to contro
versies resulting from police strikes
in the east, and said the strike of the
policemen of a great city, "leaving that
city at the mercy of thugs, is a crime
against civilization."
The text of the president's reference
to the police follows:
"I want to say this, that a strike of
the policemen of a great city, leaving
that city at i.he mercy of an army of
thugs, is a crime against civilization
In my judgment the obligation of
policeman is as sacred and direct as the
obligation of a soldier. He is a public
servant, not a private employe, and the
whole honor and safety of the com
munity is in bis hands. He has no
right to prefer any private advantage
to the public safety. I hope that that
lesson will be burned in so that It will
never again be forgotten, because the
pride of America is, that It can exercise
self control."
Helena Theater Filled.
The president's first address was de
livered in Billings before noon and to
night he spoke, here to a crowd that
filled the Helena theater. Addresses are
to be made tomorrow in Coeur d'Alene,
Idaho, and Spokane, Wash.
When the president was introduced
Fight on Treaty Hailed as Dawn of
Xew Day, With Opinion ot
America Changed.
BY CYRIL BROWN.
(Copyright by the New York World. Pub
lished by Arrangement.)
BERLIN, Sept. 11. (Special Cable.)
"All humanity, Germany particularly,
is tensely awaiting the decision of the
Amerioan senate on the peace treaty,"
ex-Minister of State Von Scheller Stein-
wartz said today.' With many other
Germans he is beginning to entertain
real hope of a separate peace with
America.
. "Apparently, Senator Lodge Is the
soul of the opposition," he said. "The
senator is no German hater. He hates
all non-Americans equally, and he is
absolutely a just man of almost Quak
er-like moral strength. When he and
other important senators fight the
peace treaty their course means that
the treaty displeased them because in
the excessive enslavement of Germany
for which America would be forever
co-responsible, they see grave danger
of future complications.
"That course is thus to be hailed like
the morning red of a new dawn. There
is promise of a still better realization
of conditions in the prospect that Amer
ica in all seriousness may express the
wish for a separate peace with the
central powers.
"We Germans can only wish that the
action of the senate 'may reflect a
mighty change in opinion that has been
misguided and that the American peo
ple may come to favor the conclusion
of a separate peace. If that shall not
result all threat of revision of the
peace terms must die.
'At all events, the senate can educate
the public toward a league of nations
based on the strength and purity of the
original project for a league, such as
will be capable of inaugurating a new
and happy epoch in history."
Minority Report Received
Urges Acceptance.
REPUBLICANS CLAIM VICTORY
Lodge Asks Forces to Stick
Until Battle Ends.
CHANGE DECLARED COSTLY
Loss of Concessions Obtained From
Foe in Dictated Peace Feared
by Administration Men.
Morning Newspaper to Appear Today
for First Time Since Ticup
Began Last Friday.
TACOMA, Sept. 11. At 9:45 tonight,
aftera meeting last most of the day,
the news printers who have been on
strike for six- days returned to work,
going back on the old scale and under
the old conditions. A morning paper
will be published for the first time to
morrow since last Friday.
The printers demanded a wage scale
of J9.25 and $10. This the publishers
flatly refused to pay.
Work was resumed under the old
scale of $7 a. day.
The strike action, which was in vio
lation of the orders of the Interna
tional Typographical union, was fol
lowed by the dispatch of 40 printers
from Chicago to break the strike.
(Concluded on Page 10, Column 2.)
CABIN GIVES UP LIQUORS
450 Quarts of Liquor and Beer
Seized; Owner Arrested.
NORTH BEND, Or., Sept. 11. (Spe
cial.) More than 400 quarts of beer and
50 quart bottles of whisky were seized
at Lakeside today following the arrest
of Morris Anderson, a resident of this
city, on a charge of bootlegging. The
liquor was discovered in a small cabin
on Anderson's ranch on North lake. The
whisky was packed in the cases in
which it had been shipped and the beer,
which was alleged to be of home man
ufacture but possessed of a vigorous
"kick," was found In kegs and bottles.
The arrest of Anderson and the seiz
ure of the liquor are the culmination of
a number of drunken disturbances .in
the vicinity of Lakeside recently, in
which several men were badly beaten.
G. A. R. PICKS ATLANTIC CITY
Veterans at Columbus Select Place
of 192 0 Encampment.
COLUMBUS, O., Sept. 11. Atlantic
City today was selected for the 1920
annual encampment of the Grand Army
of the Republic.
The organization is holding its annual
encampment here.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 11. With sub
mission of the foreign relations com
mittee minority report, the peace
treaty, with its covenant for a league
of nations, was made ready today for
the ratification battle to be waged
about it in the senate.
By general agreement this will not
begin until Monday. Meanwhile, re
publicans, claiming enough votes to
prevent ratification without reserva
tions, were urged by Chairman Lodge
of the foreign relations committee to
stay on the job until final disposition
is made of the treaty, weeks hence,
perhaps.
With as little formality as that at
tending the presentation yesterday of War Department Makes Chief
the majority report Senator Hitchcock. General in Regular Army
leader of the administration forces, to- I &
day submitted the minority report WASHINGTON. Sept.. 11. Somebody
ROUMANIAN CABINET FALLS
Jonescn Said to Be Reorganizing;
Serbia Delays Signing Peace.
VIENNA, Sept. 10. (By the Associ
ated Press.) The Gratiano cabinet in
Roumanla has fallen, according to un
official reports which reached Vienna
from Bucharest today. Take Jonescu
Is said to be forming a new govern
PARIS', Sept. 11. The Serbian dele
gation here advised the peace confer
ence today that -because of the fall of
the government in Belgrade It was un
able, as yet, to obtain instructions con
cerning the signing of the Austrian
treaty.
Major Patton Encounters
Unexpected Things.
"ORANGE CRUSH" PROVES EVIL
Scribe Finds Self Sick, Near
Penniless, Stranded.
SEA FUNERAL IS VISI0NED
PERSHING'S TITLE WRONG
signed by all democratic members of I made a mistake In General Pershing'
the committee except Senator Shields
of Tennessee who stood for reserva
tions to the league covenant.
' AH Modification Opposed.
Without attempting specifically to
answer majority charges against cer
tain - provisions of the treaty
brought back from Paris by President
Wilson, the minority urged speedy
adoption without modification or in
precisely the form laid before the sen
ate two months ago.
Rejection or change, the report de MASKED MEN KILL MINERS
i-ixigu, mean i juaa uj lius uuuuirj O.I
new commission, tnairman iiann, oi
the military committee, told the house
today, which might cost the general
some of the pay and allowances car
rled with the new title.
While congress made him a "general
of the armies of the United States,
the war department made him a "gen
eral in the regular army."
The- experts are looking for a way
to unwind the tangle.
all concessions obtained from the ene
my by a dictated peace, including Ger
many's acknowledgement of responsi
bility for the war. Denial was made of
Chairman Lodge's statement that the
peace conference still was .in session
for consideration of textual amend
ments, the report declaring that Ger
many, once having signed the treaty.
might not be disposed to sign it again
Senator Lodge had before him for
approval of the "strong" reservation
ists, it was said, proposed substitutes
of the "mild" reservation group of re
publicans.
Galleries Applaud Hard ins,
Two Make Escape After Shooting
Four and Wounding Fifth.
TELLURIDE. Colo.. Sept. 11. Four
miners were shot and killed and a fifth
wounded in the Tom Boy mine, near
here, early today by two unidentified
masked men, who escaped.
Four men and a woman were ar
rested.
Rains Damage Prune Crop.
After the minority report had been
presented Senator Harding, republican
member of the foreign relations com
mittee, spoke, at length against the
treaty and its league covenant, declar
lng he would vote for
(Concluded on rage 3, column 2.)
summer, was adopted with only one
dissenting vote. It was stated that 95
per cent of the seceders were now back
in the miners' organization.
big union," organized at Winnipeg this 1 torpedo type and carried a crew of 30
men.
The boat was surrendered to the al
lies at Harwich November 27, 1918.
CHICAGO TIEUP IS OVER
Building Resumed With Carpenters'
Strike Declared Off.
CHICAGO, Sept 11. After seven
weeks of tieup by a strike of carpen
ters and a lockout of allied trades, Chi
cago's building industry will be re
sumed tomorrow and be In full swing
by Monday, according to strike leaders.
The carpenters are to resume work at
924 cents an hour until May. 1920,
when they will be placed on the same
wage basis existing for other skilled
trades. t
UTAH LANDST0 BE OPENED
More Than 100,000 Acres In Kane
County Available October 15.
SALT LAKE CITT. Utah., Sept 11.
More than 100.000 acres of choice land
lying within the boundaries of Kane
county. Utah, will be thrown open to
entry in the local United States land
office October IS.
Announcement to this effect was
made by the register of the United
States land office here today.
-MARINES LAND IN HONDURAS
Americans lo Protect Foreigners
Daring Reign of Disorder.
WASHINGTON. Sept. 11. Departure
of President Bertrand of Honduras
from Tegucigalpa was followed by loot
ing and rioting in various parts of the
republic
A snail force of American marines
was landed from the cruiser Cleveland
at Puerto Cortex to protect foreigners.
FURS SELL FOR. $2,750,000
International Exchange Opens Auc
tion at St. Louis.
ST. LOUIS, Sept. 11. More than II.
TiO.000 of furs were sold at the first
session of the annual fall auction at
the international fur exchange here
yesterday.
Many buyers from the west were
present.
FIUME RIOTING REPORTED
Allies Said to Have Pried Italians
and Jugo-SIavs Apart.
LONDON, Sept. 11. Unconfirmed rr
ports received In responsible quarters
here tell of serious rioting in Flume
between Italian and Jugo-Slav troops.
The allies were compelled to inter
vene. The rioting Is continuing, it was
added.
FLOUR MINIMUM IS $9.50
Grain Corporation Reports 235,145
Barrels Purchased.
NEW YORK, Sept. 11. The United
States grain corporation announced to
night that its purchases of wheat flour
for the week ending September 9
mounted to 235,145 barrels. .
Prices ranged from 19.50 to $10.25.
UNCLE SAM LIKES UNIONS, BUT NOT THIS KIND.
i- u - .
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t . I l lid 2amV m WfTi MiDXW - III. I
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SALEM, Or., Sept. 11. (Special.)
Resumption this morning of the heavy
rains which have prevailed throughout
the Willamette valley during the past
two weeks is said to have had a detri
mental effect on prunes, and in soma
orchards the loss will be considerable.
Reports reaching Salem indicate that
the prunes are cracking, rendering
amendments, them unfit for marketing as rirst-ciass
fruit. Picking of prunes was to have
started In many Marion county or
chards this week, but because of the
rains the work probably will be de
layed.
'INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS
The Weather.
YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature. 60
degrees; minimum, a aegrees.
TODAY'S Showers; moderate southwesterly
winds.
Foreign.
Britain finds new Hejaz kingdom boome
rang. Page 5.
Trouble In Mexico laid to American and
British plotters. Page 3.
Hoqulam editor has real adventures at Pan
ama. Page l.
Japan watching united States senate on
Shantung situation. . page .:.
National.
Stage sot In senate for fight on peace treaty.
Page 1.
Working Woman of World plan reform.
Page 7.
Domestic.
President tells Montanans treaty ratifica
tion is needed to allay unrest. Page 1.
Death list in Boston riots reaches five.
Page 1.
Twenty-seven sailors drowned off vessel
which foundered In hurricane, page 1.
Forest-patrol airplane does 60 miles an hour
against 60-mlle gale, page l.
Polndexter favors national political cam
paign before ratltlcauon ot peace treaty.
Page 2.
President addresses great audience at
Billings. Page 3.
Pacific Northwest.
Freight haul cost on O. W. R. & N. analyzed.
Page s.
Seattle gas problem up to company, say
strikers. Page 4.
County commissioners of Washington open
annual session, rage
Sports.
Oregon-California ,field trials at Lebanon
attract eastern sportsmen. Page 18.
Dem Gay of Reno, Nev., signs contract to
manage Willie Meehan. Paga 18.
Pacific Coast league results: Portland 1.
Vernon 4; Sacramento 4. Seattle 1; San
Francisco 7, Salt Lake 4; Oakland 4-10,
Los Angeles. 0-4. Page 18. '
New York girl swimmers set fast pace for
competitors. Page 19.
Commerce and Marine.
All coarse grains are declining In local mar
ket. Page 27.
September corn drops seven cents at Chi
cago. Page 27.
Stock market recovers from violent break
at opening. Page 2.
Channel to be widened at mouth of Wil
lamette. Page 2tf.
Portland 'and Vicinity.
German relief plan here hit by Legion.
Page 17.
Banker-aviator of Linnton killed at Texaa
flying field. Page 21.
Portland Boon to be without contagion hos
pital. Page 17.
Portland flour mill workers strike. Page 22.
Women admit folly of trying to remove fair
price committeemen. Page 14.
Ordinance for encasing of foodstuffs re
jected. Page 14.
Adventures Come Thick and Fast
and Tale Reads Like Movie Scen
ario but Every Word Is True,
BT MAJOR H. W. PATTOX.
Major H. W. Tatton. editor of the Ho
qulam. Wash., Washlngtonlan, left Grays
Harbor two months ago on board the motor-
ship Mount Shasta for a voyage to England
via the Panama canal. Major Patton Is a
writer with a penchant for getting his ma
terial as a passenger on vessels of various
slow-going types. His work along thla Una
is familiar to readers of The Oregonian.
On the present trip he ran Into real ad
venture, and the story thereof Is set dowa
hereunder. Major Patton Is now en route
homeward.
TANAMA CITY. Republic de Panama,
Aug. 23. Sixty-four years old and
never on a sick bed in a hospital be
fore. Well, everything comes to us
once in this funny life and I am rather
glad it happened in an interesting and
spectacular way Instead of by reason
of some fever-infected mosquito stick
ing his bill into my humble carcass.
The worst of it is that a portion of
my affliction, which affects my left
ankle, may last for the remainder of
my existence. One doctor says it is
tropical rheumatism, another pro
nounced it neuritis, still another par
tial paralysis. But the fourth and
wisest guy said it was caused by a
dose of cocaine which was slipped into
cooling drink I took. At any rate
the old man will never bother anybody
at dances aain.
But here is how It happened and
while It reads something like a movia
scenario, it is every word true, let my
friends laugh as they may: One even
ing in Panama City, outside the canal
zone, 1 met a couple ot pleasant gen
tlemen (?) who offered to show mo
iome adjacent places of great interest
which would furnish splendid copy. Wa
got into an auto, after we had drunK
some orange crush, as It Is caned.
and the next tl'ing I knew I whs in
bed at a roadhou.se about 15 miles
fronj the city. The landlord, who
claimed to be a Hollander, but who
looked mightily like a Gorman to me,
said he found me at his door two niKhts
before and had put me to bed and U mo
everything he could for me.
liven Falae Teeth Hune.
I had a raging fever and my head
was as useless as a dIoh: of wood. I
examined my clothes and loui.d I had
been cleaned in a ma3ti;riy manner.
Even my false teeth hid lisappcared.
But some travelers checks remained,
because they could not be usad without
my signature.
1 managed to get to town and learned
that my good ship, the Mount Shasta.
had sailed for London, taking, as 1
supposed, all my baggage, clothes and
other effects, including the greater
part of my money, which I had judi
ciously left aboard. I was certainly in
some fix; sick, with a suit of dirty
white clothes, little money, no friends
nd marooned. Likewise I was vir-
ually "out of my head" and my ankle
was perfectly numb, but not painful.
I stayed that night and the next day
at a hotel and the roliowing nignt,
venturing out, met the skipper of the
Fort Seward, a shipping board vessel.
leaving for Southampton, Lngland, the
next morning at 5 o'clock. He said
e would beat the Mount Shasta in by
couple of weeks and I replied that
d like to go with him and be stand
ing on the dock in London when the
Shasta pulled in. The skipper was
ery nice, but he said it was impos-
ible to take anybody aboard without
permission of the shipping board. He
could not ship me in the crew, as there
j would be no officer around before he
sailed. He said he would be glad to
have me go through the canal to Cris
tobal, where he was to take coal, and
if I was found on board when the ves
sel got to sea it would be no fault of
his.
Great ('nance Appears.
A stowaway! Something I'd always
wanted to be! I caught the idea and
determined to piay the role, knowing
I'd get my effects when I met the
Mount Shasta in England.
I was on board at 5 o'clock the next
morning and we made the trip through
the canal In 12 hours. "Chips," the car
penter, and the steward had a hiding
place all fixed for me so I could get
out of Cristobal unobserved. The cap
tain, of course, did not know I was
aboard.
The trip through the canal would
have been- most interesting to a sana
and well man, but in my feverish con
dition it seemed the longest day I ever
spent. However, I remained on deck
and every detail of the canal is indeli
bly impressed upon my brain.
My leg grew steadijy worse .and so
did my fever, and when we tied up at
a coal barge at Cristobal I felt that I
had to see a doctor. The captain went
ashore in a launch and I found that
orders had been given that none of the
crew should go ashore. I climbed pain-
Cost-plus spruce production snown to be i flll,v down otlto th, barsre and was
costly. Page . I . , , . ! j .
County officers to draft bill for uniform sioppeu s P
system of accounting. Page .'5. I (Concluded on Paj; 11, Columu 1.)