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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 14, 1919)
k'OL. L.VIII. NO. 18.IMM) Enl'rl ' Portland. (Orcfon) FoMofflee as Scond-:iass Matter. PORTLAND, OREGON, FRIDAY, NOVK3IBER 14, 191i). PRICE FIVE CENTS LABOR PAPER OF SEATTLE SEIZED Government Makes Raid on Union Record. REDS' PROSECUTION IN DEADLY EARNEST GOVERNMENT TO CLEAN CP I'XLAWFIL PUBLICATIONS. W. W. OFFICIAL TEXAS AND OKLAHOMA ROW OVER OIL LANDS RECEIVERS FROM TWO STATES GROW" BELLIGEUEXT. "PUSSYFOOT" RIDDEN ON -BAIL IN LONDON AMERICAN PROHIBITIONIST IS ROUGHLY HANDLED. COAL MINERS AMD OPERATORS MEET SEATTLE SHIP SAVES 611 OFF INDIA COAST TREATY ADOPTED BRITISH STEAMER TOTAL LOSS. ALL HANDS RESCUED. SWEEPING BETRAYS GUNMEN PROVISO EDITOR IS UNDER ARREST Violation of Espionage Act Charged in Warrants. BAIL IS FIXED AT $5000 Paper Permitted to Resume Pub lication After Documents Are Obtained. SEATTLf;, Nov. 13. Deputy United States Marshals today seized the of fice of the Seattle Union Record, a daily newspaper owned by the Seattle central labor council, and arrested E. B. Ault, the editor, and C. P. List man and Frank S. Rust, prominent labor men, on the paper's board of directors. Tonight federal officers, after tak ing papers and records from the Rec ord office, allowed the paper to re Hume publication. United States District Attorney R. C. Saunders said the seizure was made as a move in a campaign to wipe out radicalism in the Pacific northwest. The complaint charged th-j three con doned Tuesday's Industrial Workers of the World attack at Centralia upon former American soldiers. Criminal I.tbrl Charged. The three men were released on 5000 bail apiece. Ault was rearrested Immediately and charged with crim inal libel. The libel complaint said his editorials defamed the four dead Centralia men. He was released on $1000 bail on the second charge. The officers, when they entered the Record office, found Ault in his shirt sleeves, at work. They served the warrant and asked Ault to close the shop and send his employes away. "All right," he said. "You came to put us out of business?" Presses in the basement stopped and linotype machines shut down. A press telegraph wire was allowed to continue to operate, but one of the Record's staff was stopped when he attempted to file on the wire a bul letin telling of the seizure. Printing Plant Seized. Miss Anna Louise Strong, special writer on the Record, was forbidden to carry away a sheet of paper she declared was her personal property. Ault declared he alone was responsi ble for the editorials. The Record, which employs about 60 people, is owned by a stock com pany. The Seattle Central Labor coun cil owns most of the stock. The paper, long a weekly, entered the daily field over a year ago. Officers today seized the Equity Printing company's plant, which prints an alleged radical paper known as the International Weekly. A war rant was issued for the arrest of W. C. Smith, the editor, but early tonight be was not arrested. The Record, editorially, yesterday eaid the rioting at Centralia was the "result of a long series of illegal" acts by the dead former soldiers themselves. Deputy United States marshals, after they took possession of the Record plant, ordered employes of the paper to unload a truckload of copies of the mail edition, which was just about to leave the office. Order la Obeyed. "The United States, government is taking charge here," Deputy Marshal E. R. Tobey told Ault as he entered the office to serve the warrants. "We have search warrants and you will clear the office, editorial rooms and press rooms of all employes as quickly as possible. The plant is now in the lands of the government, and the gov ernment is now the editor of the Record." Ault read the warrant and immedi ately began carrying out the orcers of the deputy marshal. He turned to bis employes and said: "The government has jvst closed our paper. Tou will all leave the olfice as soon as you can get ready." During Seattle's general strike last February it was charged by city of ficials that the Equity plant printed most of the alleged inflammatory posters and handbills distributed about the city. Ole Hanson, then mayor, closed the plant for a time. SPOKANE. Wash., Nov. 13. Eighty nine alleged members of the In dustrial Workers of the World were arrested in a police raid shortly be fore noon today in a hall here said to have been an I. W. W. meeting place. Police officers said aliens among the prisoners probably would be turned over to federal authorities for deportation and that others would be charged with criminal syndicalism. Fifty-six of those taken into custody are held in jail on open charges. All carried L W. W. cards, admitted mem bership or bore literature distributed by the reds. Among them was Sam . Crane, forme' attorney, regarded as one of the radical leaders in eastern W ashington and northern Idaho, who ate tonight had been unable to fur- ish $1500 bonds. I. W. W. literature, said by the po lice to have been distributed from the place said to have been run by the l-'innish Social club, had been removed Concluded on Page , Column l. Seattle Federal Attorney Directed to Start Criminal Proceedings Against Violators; TACOMA, Wash., Nov. 13. Prefac ing his issuance of instructions for the seizure of the Union Record at Seattle today, Robert C. Saunders of Seattle, United States attorney for western' Washington, here in con nection with I. W. W. arrests, di vulged the attitude of the govern ment toward the I. W. W. and the radical element of the nortnwest: "The government is in deadly earn est now. This must be understood by every one. I have taken the mat ter up with the authorities at Wash ington and my superiors are back of me. That is all that is necedsary. This is shown by the telegram re ceived from Attorney - General A. Mitchell Palmer, who say's: " 'With reference to telegram this date as to file publication in Seattle, Union Record. If publication vio lates any provision of amended es pionage act institute criminal prose cution.' "I think the Union Record from the statements contained in its issue of Wednesday night and for months past is open to prosecution. This is just the beginning. "People last night and this morn ing have been calling me up and wanting to know what we are going to do about the Union Record and publications of like nature. We'l, we are going by every legal means to have a cleaning out of such publica tions. There is no room for them in this country. In this work I know that we have the unqualified support of every patriotic American in this country. As I said, the government is In deadly earnest and thi-s will be shown before long to tho'ie who would tear down our government." Federal Investigators today were engaged in going over the various I. W. W. publications. On utterances these contain complaints will be based against the members of the order, it was announced. PRISON COLEGE TO START Correspondence Courses Offered Penitentiary Inmates. WASHINGTON STATE COLLEGE, Pullman, Nov. 13. (Special.) Under the direction of F. F. Nalder, head of the bureau of extension of the State college, plans have been laid o give the inmates of the state penitentiary at Walla Walla free instruction by correspondence. It is expected that over BOO prisoners will take the courses and will : supplement the regular night school ,vork now be ing given at the reformatory. The courses will consist chiefly of agricultural and applied science sub jects. It was stated that any pris oner, upon being discharged, may ap ply the work completed towards a de gree in the State college. TIMBER LANDS ARE SOLD loiva Company Acquires Tract Val ued at $1,300,000. ASTORIA, Or., Nov. 13. (Special.) A deal entailing a consideration of tl, 300, 000 was closed today when the Blodgett company of Grand Rapids, Mich., sold 9530 acres of timber lands In the Knappa and Blind slough dis tricts to the Crossett Timber com pany of Davenport, la. The property is said, to embrace an exceptionally fine body of fir timber and the sale is one of the largest timber deals that has been consum mated here in several months. It is understood the new owner will log the tract for its mill at Wauna. 40,000 BODIES ASKED FOR War Department to Grant Requests for Soldiers' Return. WASHINGTON, Nov. 13. The war department has received 40,000 re quests from relatives for return of the bodies of soldier dead in France, Colonel E. W. Anderson of Richmond, Va., told the house foreign affairs committee today. Representative Flood, Virginia, ranking democratic committeeman, said there had been a "turn-about" in the policy of the war department and that bodies would be returned as soon as arrangements could be made with the French gov ernment. M00NEY WORKER NAMED Paul Scliarrenberg Chosen on Cal ifornia Retrial Committee. SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 13. Notifi cation that he had been appointed by the American Federation of Labor on a committee of five California labor leaders to ask Governor Stephens to use his influence toward securing a new trial for Thomas J. Mooney was received by Paul Schar renberg, secretary of .lie California State Federation of Labor, here to day. COAL FIELD REDS SOUGHT West Virginia Governor Says Fed eral Agents Are en Route. CHARLESTON W. Va.. Nov. 13. Agents of the department of justice I are en route to the coal mining dis- ' tricts of northern West Virginia, Governor Cornwell announced to- i night, following advices from Wash- It will be the purpose to "clean 2 out radical centers." and round up ' t 1. W. W. and Russian agitators, aa J saia- BrithSmith Identifies 4 Centralia Radicals. SUSPECTS BURY COMRADE Funeral Is Held at Point of Guardsmen's Rifles. RED'S GRAVE UNMARKED Three Men Believed to Have Es caped Following Shooting Are Arrested at Morton. CENTRALIA. Wash.. Nov. 13. (By the Associated Press.) Officials here tonight were endeavoring to clear up and check their findings regarding the activities of each of the two score Industrial Workers of the World ar rested here after members of thelf organization fired upon former Amer ican soldiers marching in an Armis- ! tice day parade here Tuesday. The death li3t of former soldiers remained at four tonight. The federal, state, county and city officials -here investigating the case were assisted in their work today, when one of the prisoners, Britt Smith, said to be secretary of the Centralia I. W. W. local, turned state's evidence and pointed out, for Prosecuting Attorney Herman Allen, four men. whom he said were in the room from which some of the shots were fired Tuasday. Four Pointed Out. All four of them carried guns just before the parade. Smith said, and he "guessed they did some shooting." Smith told Allen that he himself was not armed and fired no shots. Smith' was taken from his cell In the city jail ihere to the county Jail at Chehalis today to identify the men. He did bo, Allen said, without at tempting to force any clemency prom ises from the officers. At first it was reported Smith said he would talk If ofticers would promise that he re ceived no more than a life- sentence. The four named by Smith were Mike Sheehan, James Mclnerney, Roy Beck er and a man Faulkner. Smith also identified the man who was lynched Tuesday night as Wesley Everett, I. W W. Organizer, who was also in the room where the shots were fired. Charges of first-degree murder are to be filed against the men against whom the authorities have direct evi dence, it was announced today. Charges of conspiracy probably will be filed against the other prisoners. Four Industrial Workers of the World were taken from jail here to day long enough to bury Everett, when local undertakers declared flat ly that they would not touch the body. Grave I. Unmarked. The body was taken from the jail floor and placed in a plain wooden box, which was loaded into a moving van. Accompanied by a squad of 17 armed national guardsmen, the four went, to the pauper section of the local cemetery with the body, dug a grave, dropped the box in and cov ered it up. There were no prayers and no serv ices of any nature when the body was (Concluded on Page 4, Column 3.) Deputy Sheriffs Refused Possession by Lone Star Authorities; Judge Intimates Reprisals. AUSTIN. Tex.. Nov: 13. The ex tended dispute between Texas and Oklahoma over the right to claim val uable oil properties lying along the Red river in Wichita county assumed a new phase today when, according to information coming to John W. Hornsby of Austin, the Texas receiver for the land, an Oklahoma sheriff and 12 deputies appeared on the, property and demanded possession. Guards placed upon the land by Mr. Hornsby refused to comply and, ac cording to the message, the Oklahoma officers withdrew to report to Judge Cham Jones of Cotton county, Okla homa, who was appointed an Okla homa receiver for the properties. Receiver Hornsby has telegraphed Judge C. C. Calhoun, who is at Georgetown, Tex., for instructions, and the Texas attorney-general's of fice has asked Judge Jones if he in tends to Use force in attempting to obtain possession of the land. Accord ing to Mr. Hornsby, Governor William P. Hobby of Texas has agreed to use the state police in enforcing any or ders of Judge Calhoun, If necessary. Reports coming to Austin . quote Judge Jones as having said that he will take possession of the property "if it takes every man in Oklahoma." MONARCHY IS FORESEEN Czecho-Slovak Minister Says Haps burg Will Rule Hungary. PRAGUE. Nov. 12. (French Wire less Service.) The establishment of a Hapsburg monarchy in Hungary is inevitable. In the opinion of Dr. Eduard Benes. Czecho-Slovak min ister of foreign affairs. Therefore he considered It his duty to insist that the decisions of the peace conference should be final and that the present Czecho-Slovak fron tiers should not be changed. MOTHERS BACK GOVERNOR Sacramento Body Urges Washing ton Executive to Act. SACRAMENTO, Nov. 13. The local chapter of the California War Moth ers, a state-wide organization, has sent a telegram to Governor Hart of Washington, which said In part: "We wis.h to express our unKSlnoua approval of anything you may do to forever prevent a repetition of Tiles day's horror at Centralia." GOLDMAN CASE RUSHED Submission of Agitator's Defense Within Week Is Demanded. NEW YORK. Nov. 13. Charges that cpunsel for Emma Goldman was de laying deliberately deportation pro ceedings against her were made to day by Byron H. Uhl, assistant com missioner of Immigration. He wrote Harry Weinberger, ber lawyer, giving him one week to sub mit his case. ANTI-DRY DECREE FILED Rhode Island Injunction Against Prohibition Is Operative. PROVIDENCE, R. I., Nov. 13. A decree making operative the injunc tion against the enforcement of war time prohibition granted yesterday by Federal Judge Arthur L. Brown was entered late today in the United States district court. SAFETY Students Drag Speaker From Plat form. Beat Him and Parade Two Miles In Streets. LONDON, Nov. 13. William E. Johnson, an American prohibition worker, and Anti-Saloon league or ganizer, familiarly known here and elsewhere as "Pussyfoot," was dragged from a platform from which he was speaking today, severely beaten and' paraded on a plank through two miles of crowded west end streets. His assailants for . the most part were medical students and against them at times he put up a strenuous fight, receiving a badly damaged eye and other injuries, so that finally, owing to his weakened physical con dition, he was obliged to submit to the indignity. The occasion of the attack was a meeting in Essex hall at which a de bate had been arranged under the auspices of the Overseas club and Patriotic league between Mr. Johnson- and R. Mitchell Banks, a lawyer, on "The How and the Why of Ameri can Prohibition." The chairman of the meeting was F. A. McKenzie. He, too. was seized by the crowd, but was soon released. The meeting had no sooner opened than there was an uproar, due to the activities of a few young men, who Immediately engaged in heckling, both prohibitionists and anti-prohibitionists pleading for order. Outside, a great crowd of students had gathered and after Mr. Johnson began to spealc hundreds of them broke down the Iron gates of the en trance to the hall, brushed aside the police, charged down the aisles and seized Johnson and McKenzie. These two they pelted with bags of flour. They hoisted them into a wagon and proceeded to King's college, nearby, where both were invited to state their case for prohibition to the students, but were not allowed to proceed be cause of the howls. As the procession passed through the streets with banners adorned with black cats. pictures of beer steins and other decorations, there were frequent cries of "We've got pussyfoot," but Londoners, accustomed to students' marches recently, did not really believe that it was Johnson and the march did not cause much ex citement. Some of the prohibition campaign ers, mostly Americans, declared to the Associated Press that they did not believe the police mae'e a sincer ffortto break ' up the crowds -and contended that they could have rescued Mr. Johnson much sooner if they had desired. 64-YEAR-OLD DEED FILED Clackamas County Land Involved Is Farmed by Cliine.se. OREGON CITT, Or., Nov. 13. (Spe cial.) A deed 64 years old was filed for record here today in which Fred erick W. Geer and wife. Mary .Ann Geer, transferred to John L. Hughes 200 acres of land in this county. The land described in the deed is in the Wilsonville district and is known as a splendid farm. It is part of the holdings of the Clackamas Hop Farm company and is now being farmed by Chinese. ' It is said that the place has been sold to the orientals. That por tion of this county was then in Yam hill county and onJanuary 12, 1S56, the deed was filed for record in the Yamhill county recorder's office. The striking thing about the deed, which is yellow with .age. Is the ink So legible is-the writing that it looks as though it were written only re cently. The wording of the form of conveyance is quaint. FIRST! I Conference at National Capital Opens Today. NEW WAGE AGREEMENT AIM All Parties to Convention Hopeful of Outcome. DR. GARFIELD TO ATTEND Serious Conditions Still Reported in Many Coal Districts; Alien Radicals Are Active. DAY'S DEVKI.OPMFATS CO.ll mik strike: tONTROVEIISI. Workers in Illinois district denounce Judge Anderson and threaten to stand pat. Coal miners expect demonstra tions of pood faith on part of government, says John L. Lewis. Arrangements completed for conference of miners and oper ators at capital today. Hoisting engineers and pump men abandon mines In Illinois district. North Dakota governor an nounces miners promise to re turn to work. Radicals threaten to make se rious trouble in West Virginia coal- fields. WASHINGTON. Nov. 13. Coal miners and operators from the na tion's bituminous fields will enter into negotiations here tomorrow for a new wage agreement with the ques tion ot the time of termination of the Washington wage agreement of 1918 apparently as the chief stumbling block. Both miners and operators were hopeful as to the outcome and ex pressed the belief that the question of when the Washington agreement terminated could be disposed of through mutual agreement along with the demands of the miners for a 60 per cent increase in pay and shorter hours. Announcement by the executive committee of the operators of the central, competitive field, in a formal statement tonight, that the Washing ti n agreement is one of the matters "to be determined by the conference," was taken generally to mean that the operators do not intend to stand pat on their contention that present con tracts remain in effect during the "period of the war." or until March 31, 1920, in case a satisfactory settle ment is made with the miners on that and other points. "Trap" Drclarrd SlKktrd. The statement disclosed that the message from Thomas T. Brewster, president of the coal operators' asso ciation, in the central competitive fields, inviting the miners to a con ference to "negotiate a contract to be in force upon the termination of the contract now In effect," was an attempt to "entrap the miners into a trcit acknowledgment" of the bind ing force of the contracts, and pointed out that the text of the agreement was almost identical with that of (Cmicludfcd on Page 5. Column 1.) t Shipping: Board Craft Answers Wireless Call; 140 Women and Children Anion; Passengers. SEATTLE. Wash.. Nov. 13. (Spe cial.) Trapped in the wreck of the British steamship t'azilka. ashore on the rocky coast of Nicobar island. India, 611 men, women and children were rescued from imminent peril without the loss of a single life, by Captain Omar J. Humphrey, master of the shipping board steamship West Modus of Seattle. First news of the wreck of the Fa zllka and the rescue of all aboard, including 140 women and children, was received by wireless and cable from the orient this morning:. Bound from Penang to Madras, the Fazllka crashed a.shore. impaling her bottom on the jagped rocks that fringe Nicobar island. Bay of Bengal, late In October. Realizing his vessel was doomed and that every hour increased the danger of the great number of men, women and children aboard, the mas ter of the Fazilka immediately cent out the wireless call of distress. The message was picked up by the West Modus, steaming from the Sue canal for Singapore, and Captain Humphrey, diverting the course of his vessel, speeded to the rescue. De tails of the plan followed by Captain Humphrey in saving the hundreds of passengers have not been received, but the removal of such a number from a wrecked ship would rank un der almost any circumstances as one of the notable feats of the sea. The Fasilka is a total loss. Captain Humphrey carried the wreck victims to Penan g, where he landed them last Thursday amid the commendations of shipping circles. The Fazilka was owned by the Brit ish India Steam Navigation Co., Ltd., which operated her in the India pas senger service. She was a steel ves sel of 4152 gross tons, 366 feet long, 48.2 feet wide and 26.5 feet deep, built In lS'.'O by the Doxford yards in Sun derland, Eng. UNION MAY HELP MANAGE Lloyd Oeorge Offers Rallwaj men Part in Directorship. LONDON, Nov. 14. Premier Lloyd George has offered the railway men's union membership in committee man agement of the roads, with railroad directors and government officials, according to a statement by J. H. Thomas, general secretary of the union of railway men. Mr. Thomas announced that the government also has made a definite offer of new machinery to deal with wages of railway men and settlement of disputes. Both offers were maue at a conference of the premier with a delegation from the national union of railway men Thursday. The plan will be submitted to the executive of the union today for decision. BULGARIAN ENVOY ON WAY Signing of Peace Treaty at Paris Is Kxpectcd Today. PARIS. Nov. 13. The peace con ference has received information that the Bulgarian government has de cided to sign the peace treaty. The Bulgarian premier, M. Stambu lisky, who left Sofia for Paris yes terday, is expected to sign the treaty tomorrow. INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. YESTKRDAV'S Maximum temperature. 4S degrees; minimum, ;ii degrees. TOD A 'S - Kain; model ate easterly inds. Foreign. American prohibitionist roughly handled by London crown, Page 1. National. House decides for loans tu railways. Page 2. Jokers cast out of peace treaty plana, face Mexico buys arms abroad to meet inter vention. Page 4. Coal miners and operators in conference at capital. Page 1. Senate reservation qualifying obligations under Article Id is adopted. Page 1. National grangers frown on alliance with i& Jor. Page 5. Domestic. Texas and Oklahoma in sharp dispute over oil lands. Page 1. Pacific Northwest. Reds being held in jail at Vancouver. Page 9. Secretary of I. W. V. local points out four Centralia gunmen. Page 1. Palmer sends word to prosecute Seattle reds. Page 1. Seattle ship saves 611 in India coast wreck. Page 1. Governor Olcot. urges prompt action on part of state ofllcials. Page H. Seattle labor council publication seized by federal officials. Page 1. Two carloads of military supplies for Ore gon national guard received. Page 0. CommerciaJ and 31 a line. Livestock leaves ranges in good condition Page Wall street securities advance with fall in call money rates. Page Chicago grain strengthened by Wall street recovery. Page 3. James H. Pol hem us chosen manager tor Port of Portland. Page 18. Sport. Strowbrldge returns to U. of O. football team for game with Aggies. Page IM. Quarterback Keardcn may not play with Aggies against L of O. Page It. Jefferson high defeats Columbia at foot ball, 13 to 0. Page lo. Anderson's rise meteoric. Page 17. Portland and Vicinity. Majority in two-mill tax election !!714. Page 11. Plane fb drop key to livestock show. Page 14. General Liggett here is admirer of Ameri can soldier. Page 10. Central Labor council elects radical as president. Page 8. Western conference proposed to get $75. 0O0.0O0 for lorest roads. Page 13. Kelly Butte jail to be used for overflow from county jail. Page 7. Mr. Buchtel charges phone officials with failure to give full information. Pase tf. Eamonn De Va'.era. Iritu rationalist leader, arrives in Portland, Pass 6. Senate Limits Application of Article 10. DEMOCRATS LOSE HARD FIGHT Reservation Is Regarded by Wilson as Pact Death Blow. CLOTURE VOTE AT HAND Clamping Down Further Debate lo De Decided Tomorrow; Repub lican Petition Accepted. WASHIXGTOX, Nov. 13. Squarely joining1 the issue with rvesident Wll- : son, the senate adopted today a reser vation qualifying- the obligations of the United States under article 10 of the league of nations covenant. A solid republican lineup, rein forced by four democratic votes, put the reservation across exactly as it came from the foreign relations com 'mittee and in virtually the language which the president declared on hiir western tour would cut the heart out of the covenant and mean the re jection of the treaty. The vote by which the reservation won was 4S to 33. The fight for reservations having thus been carried to a climax, the republicans presented for future action a cloture proposal designed to bring final action on the question of ratification within a week. A less sweeping measure, proposing limita tion on the reservation debate only, had been put in by the democrats earlier in the day but rejected when the republicans voted to sustain a point of order 'against it. Cloture Vote Saturday. A vote on the Question of clamping down a cloture on debate will come Saturday morning, and the republican leaders say It will depend entirely on the democrats whether the move rallies the necessary two-thirds to make cloture effective. The demo cratic leaders were not ready tonight to say how they would vote, being fearful that agreement to so sweep ing a pragramme might imperil their chances to obtain action on a ratification resolution of their own. The article 10 reservation as adopted by the senate follows: "The United States assumes no obli gations to preserve the territorial in tegrity or political Independence of any other country or to interfere with controversies between nations whether members of the league or not under the provisions of article 10, or to employ the military or naval forces of the United States under any article of the treaty for any purpose, unless in any particular case the congress, which under the constitution has the sole power to declare war or authorise the employ ment of the military or naval forces of the United States, shall by act or joint resolution so provide." Laoguaef Little Changed. In only two particulars does this language diMer from the proposed reservation which the president de clared at Cheyenne, Vyo he would be obliged to regard as a rejection. j As read by Mr. Wilson, the phrase, l "under the provisions of article 10, j occurred at a different place, and the , final word, "provide," was changed tu j "declare." I The rollcall on adoption of the res j ervation follows: For adoption: Republicans Ball. Borah. 1 Brundegee. Calder. Capper, Coit. Cum- nifns. Curtis, Dillingham, Kdge, Eikins ! Kail, Fernald, France, Frellnghuysen, j Grouna, Hale. Harding, Johnson (Cal.), I Kenyon. Keyes, La FoIIette. Lenroot. Lodge. McCumber. McLean, McNary, Moses, .New , j Norrls, Page. Penrose, Phipps, Poindexter, J Sherman. Smoot, Spencer. Sterling, Suih ! erland. Townsend, Warren and Watson. J Total, 4J. Democrats Gore. Reed, Smith Ga. i. and VYaish (Mass.). Total. 4. Total for, 4ti. Against adoption ; Democrats Asiiurs'., j Beckham, Dial. Fletcher, Gay, Gerry, Hr : ri&, Harrison, Henderson, Hitchcock. John (boh tS. . D.. Jones (N. M.. Kendrick, J Krby, McKellar, Myers. Nugent, Overman, ! Owen, Pheian, Pitt man, Kainsdell. Itob- inson, Sheppard, Smith (Md.j, Smith S. C). Stanley, Thomas, Trammel!. Lnder ! wood, Walsh (Mont), Wiliiams and Wol : cott. Total. 3. ' Total axralnst. 13. Sixteen senators not voting were paired as follows: For adoption Jones (Wash.), Krtlogg. ' Knox. McCormick, Nelson, Newberry and i Wadsworth, republicans, and Shields, dem- ocrat. i A gainst Bank head. Chamberlain, Cul . berson. King. Pomerene, Simmons. Swan ! son and Smith (Arlz., democrats. I One vacancy in Virginia. ( Administration Fight Stubborn. ; The administration forces fought j stubbornly to obtain modification of the committee measure, but the unit ed republican organization remained adamant. Finally forced to yield, Democratic Leader Hitchcock put into the senate hopper a set of five res ; ervations on which he will ask for a vote later as a substitute for the com I mittee programme. The reservations ! cover withdrawal, the Monroe doc ! trine, article 10. domestic questions 1 and voting equality in the league. A sharp parliamentary battle was precipitated by the democratic clo ture propotal, which had been drafted at a morning conference of democrats, to replace the one drawn up yesttr jtConcluded ou Pago 2. Column 1.) I05.5v -