VOL. L.VIII. XO. 18,4(JO En'fr?, Zort'f!!a 0"Bon T3nBtnfflc' aa S"cond-f las Matter. PORTLAND OREGON, SATURDAY, JANUARY 24, 1920 PRICE FIVE CENTS PflPTullll I P Rl fillll EARTHQUAKE SHAKES UrlNHIBd. T. DLnllll puGET S0UND cmES THREE MEN ACCUSED OF 4 CITY HOLD-UPS DASH TO SOUTH POLE TO BE TRIED IN AIR E OPEN FLAME HEATER IGNITES WOMAN'S ROBE! DUTCH WONT GIVE UP EX-EMPEROR IN SHIP FRAUD NET CHICAGO INDICTED SUFFERS SETBACK BRICK WALLS CRACKEU AND TWO REPORTED TO HAVE I MADE COXFESSIOXS. DR. COPE TO START 5 TEARS' ANTARCTIC TOCR, IN" JUSE. SIRS. PliTKR A. KIKES MAY .VOT ' Sl'RVIVE INJURIES. "WrXDOWS BROKEX. COMPROMISE MOv Ex-Shipping Board Head Arrested in Seattle. . BAIL IS FIXED AT $10,000 Acceptance of Secret Com missions Is Charged. FIFTY COUNTS INCLUDED former Aortli Pacific District .Man ager of Kmerg-ency l'Jeet Cor poration Under Fire. SEATTLE, Wash, Jan. 2Z. Captain John V. Blain, former north Pacific district manager of the emergency fleet corporation, was arrested late today following his indictment by a federal grand jury on charges of hav ing accepted secret commissions while head of the shipping board in this section. He was later released tinder $10,000 cash bail, to appear for arraignment In federal court Monday. While the indictment of Captain Blain is the first definite action in the probe of alleged frauds in the Pacific coast shipbuilding programme, it will be followed shortly by others Involving emergency fleet corporation officials -and individuals in the north west, according to "Walter C Foster, special agent of the department of Justice, who is in charge of the in vestigation. Cases of other officials will be presented to the grand jury when it reconvenes Tuesday, it was announced. Two Indictments Returned. 1 Two indictments were returned against Captain Blain. One indict ment, which contains 50 counts, charges that while district manager of the emergency fleet corporation between August, 1917, and April, 1919, he was also agent for the Steward Davit & Kquipment corporation and was directly interested in the profits of the firm through sales of mate rials to equip shipping board vessels built in Washington and Oregon. The Indictment further charges that he received secret commissions amount ing to $17,750 arising from contracts between the government and the Steward company. The second indict ment covers the same charged. Captain Blain has been prominent in shipping circles on both the Atlan tic and Pacific coasts. At one time he was inspector of hulls and boilers in Boston, Mass. On the Pacific coast he was master of the steamship Penn sylvania, chief officer of the Great Northern liner Minnesota and later assistant general manager of the Pa cific Coast Steamship company and manager of the International Steve dor ins company. Good Record Made. While Captain Blain was district manager here the yards under his control delivered to the shipping board one-third of all the steel ships turned over to the board in the United States, according to local records. For a time Captain Blain was director of the wood yards in Oregon and Washin ton. Today's indictments come as the cli max of a series of investigations con gressmen and government agents have been making of Pacific coast shipyards since 1918. One of the shipping board s agents, F. A. Dowsey, formerly a New York customs officer, was found dead last summer in the building in which the Seattle offices of the shipping board are located. Rumors that he had been murdered were stilled when a coro ner's jury found that he died of nat ural causes. Honse Makes Probe. A house of representatives invest! gating committee was here last sum mer going over the yards and the shipyard accounts. Representative Joseoh Walsh, Massachusetts, was chairman. When the committee re turned to Washington it was an nounced.that their findings had been turned over to the department of justice. Early last fall, W. C. Foster, agent of the department of justice, came here to check shipbuilding accounts of Oregon and Washington yards. few days ago he was joined here by Bert Sohlesinger, San Francisco at tornev, who had been named special assistant attorney-general to prob alleged shipyard frauds. CAPTAIN BLAIX KSOflTi HERE Indicted Man Formerly Managed Oregon Drydock Company. Captain John F. Blain is widely known in Portland maritime circle and made his home here for man years. He was manager for a num ber of years of the Oregon Drydock company, a concern affiliated with the Willamette Iron & Steel work and operating a small drydock near the plant of that company. Captain Biain left here when entered the United States steamboat Inspection service and was" stationed at Boston. He subsequently returned to the Pacific coast as assistant gen eral manager of the Pacific Coast teamshlp company at Seattle, but left the service of that company be fore it was converted into the Pacific Steamship company, Admiral line. His next business affiliation was (.Concluded ou Page Column Z.) Seattle, Rcllingham and Vancou ver, B. C, Rocked Degrees or Intensity Are Varied. BELL1XGHAJI, Wash., Jan. 23. An earthquake shock which cracked a number of brick walls in this vicinity was felt here shortly after 11 o'clock tonight. At Anacortes, Wash., near here, windows in a number of houses were broken by the force of the tem blor and brick walls were cracked, according to reports reaching here. The quake was felt in varying de grees of intensity in a number of towns in the northwestern section of Washington, it was reported. SEATTLE, Wash., Jan. 23. Three distinct earthquake shocks were felt here at 11;08 o'clock tonight. So far no material damage has been reported. VANCOUVER, B. C, Jan. 23. One of the most severe earthquake shocks that has ever visited this vicinity shook the city shortly after 11 o'clock this evening. Excited people rushed out of buildings, but up to the pres ent no damage has been reported, beyond some telephones being put out of commission. Victoria reported feeling the same shock almost at the moment it oc curred here, and a little later reports came from Nanaimo that the shock had been felt there. Some Vancouver people thought there had been an explosion in Nanaimo. HOOVER CLUBS BARRED Julius F. Barnes Announces. Boost er Bodies Are Xot Sanctioned. NEW YORK, Jan. 23. Julius F. Barnes, president of the United States grain corporation, who intimated in a speech two weeks ago that Herbert Hoover, ex-food administrator, might be "drafted" for the presidency, an nounced in a statement today that "there is no authority or sanction for any organization work in the form of Hoover clubs or any other similar or ganized effort." "There is not a dollar of campaign funds nor a dollar authorized to be spent," he added. The situation is exactly as when I spoke two weeks ago. He will not permit his friends to organize sentiment . in his behalf and personally I do not believe he will permit himself to become a can didate unless there is unmistakable evidence of spontaneous and popular demand for him." ' 400,000 TO TAKE SERUM American Red, Cross Combats Smallpox at Dvinsk. RIGA, Jan. 23. (By the Associated Press.) The largest single vaccina tion task ever undertaken in Europe s being started by the American Red Cross in the neighborhood of Dvinsk. More than 400,000 vaccinations are to be performed in an effort to prevent the spread of smallpox, which has broken out in bad form in the prov ince of Latgalia. Unless localized, it feared the disease will spread northward throughout the Baltic states and southward throughout Poland. Vaccine for 400,000 persons shipped from the American Red Cross head quarters in Paris is being distributed. Dvinsk was captured from the bol shevik! three weeks ago by the Poles and Letts. SLAYER'S PLEA IS VAIN Dismissal of 19 Murder Charges Denied Dynimate Case Convict. LOS ANGELES, Cal.. Jan. 23. Thomas Lee Wooiwine. district attor ney, toaay announced receipt or a letter from David Kaplan, convicted in 1916 of murder in connection with the dynamiting of the Los Angeles Times, October 1, 1910, and now serv ing a sentence of 10 years in San Quentin, in which Kaplan asks dis missal of 19 murder charges etill standing against him. Wooiwine immediately replied, re fusing the request and telling Kaplan that he had received light punishment for participation in a conspiracy which was "the forerunner of the present attempted campaign of terror." EXPORTS SHOW DECLINE Imports Into IT. S. Also Register Loss Over Xovember. WASHINGTON, Jan. 23. December exports decreased in value $60,000, 000 from the $741,000,000 recorded for November, while imports dropped to $381, 000,000, a decrease of $44,000, 000, the commerce department re ported today. The excess of exports over imports for the entire year 1919 reached $4, 017,000,000, a high record. Exports totaled $7,921,000,000 with imports amounting to $3,904,000,000, compared with 1918- exports of $6,149,000,000 and imports of $3,031,000,000. SMOKING BAN PROPOSED South Carolina Act Would Apply to Public Eating Places. COLUMBIA, S. C, Jan. 23. Smoking in eating places would be prohibited under a bill passed to second reading by the state senate. Restaurant and hotel keepers would be required to display "no smoking" signs and enforce the rule under pen alty. - . , Effort to Overthrow Gov ernment Charged. ALL BELONG TO COMMUNISTS Mrs. Rose Pastor Stokes Is One, of Those Accused.' PORTLAND MAN ON BAIL Harry M. Wicks, Said to Have Been Member of National Commit tee, Is Xumcd. CHICAGO. Jan. 23. Indictments against 85 members of the communist party of America were returned today by a special grand jury inveetlgatinB mriiral activities in Illinois before Judge Robert E. Crowe of the crim inal court. The 85 were named in one general conspiracy indictment charging them with advocating the overthrow of the government by violence and all but three were named in separate lnaicv ments charging violation of the new iato edition law. Bonds were fixed at J5000 on each charge. Prominent among those indicted are Mrs Tfnso Pastor stokes, WOO is oo..u . . . u to be a member of the national exec utive committee of the organization and an active organizer, ana wicnoias Hourwich of New York, said to do oditni- of Now Mir, the newspaper which employed Trotzky bef-e h returned to Russia. , Others indicted were Isaac L. Fer guson, Chicago, alleged chief counsel for tha communist party; lu ' . Ruthenburg of Cleveland and Louis C. Fraina of New York, reportea to oc ditor-in-chief of all communist party propaganaa, wno i u ;..- -Mexico. Alexander Stoklitsky, now saia to Jl tin ir "f be in Mexico tjny. ana . xx.w Wicks, Portland, Or., also were in dicted. They are said to be memDers of the national executive eommittee. indictments returned by the grand jury to date number 123. Last Wednes day 38 members oi me coniiuu.""". labor party were indicted. The grand jury will now turn its attention to evidence against members of the I. W. W., and is expected to conclude its work next week. SPOKANE, Jan. 23. Harry M. Wicks was convicted of criminal syn dicalism here last spring after he had been active in the affairs of alleged rfii-a.1 organizations. Titer he was indicted by a federal irrand jury for alleged violat'on of the Mann white elave act in bringing Mrs. Erma Lamb, whom he declared was his secretary, here from Portland, Or. He was at liberty on bail under this indictment, and was last heard from in Chicago, according to his attorney here who said Wicks had resigned from the national executive committee of the communist party some time ago. . POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y., Jan. 23. A man alleged to be John Reed, also known as Harrison Ellerson, wanted in Chicago under an indictment for an (Concluded on Page 2. Column 2.) "IF l . . . . . . . . . . . ,. . . ....... ,-- .--- .- ! ..............A Robbery of Fashion Garage, Nau's Drug Store, Filling station, Phar macy Admitted, Say Police. At least four holdups in Portland since the first of the year, in which an aggregate of about $1000 in loot was secured, are charged acainst Charles Langdale, Robert Hall 'and Russell Higginbotham, three men who were arrested yesterday afternoon by city detectives under the leadership or Lieutenant of Detectives John Goltz. In confessions which the men are said to have marie in rmiain r t- tectives Circle and Lieutenant Goltz, Langdale and Hall admitted the hold up of the Fashion garage on January 1. that of Frank Nau's drugstore on January 7, a Standard Oil filling sta tion at Thirteenth and Burnside streets on January 13 and the robbery i ine aoo Mill pharmacy on January 16. In their COnfRKinnn i V, a ..... n said to botham. have implicated Higgin- Charges of assault and robbery, be ing armed with a dangerous weapon, were placed, against Langdale and wi .! nignt and Higginbotham was neia on an open charge "for invest! gation." detectives last night expressed the ueuer mat several other recent hold ups in ine city would bo against the three men. charged The arrest of the trio w the suit of an investigation made yester- "ij oy .uetectives La Salle. Tacka berry, Leonard, Hellyer. Philios. How ell and Morak under the leadership of Lieutenant Goltz. Langdale was UD " Nineteenth and Wash T, alreets- Hal1 at Fourth and Washington streets and Higginbotham i ientn and Morrison streets. During the course of the investiga c.v,.. jtoieraay afternoon the wives of i-ngdale and Hall and the ..call OI .Higginbotham were taken to the police station and questioned. The girls wept copiously under the ex amination given them, relative to the movements of the three men, by Cap. tain Circle and Lieutenant Goltz Jewelry Is Recovered. In the arrest of the three men the detectives recovered three watches and four toilet sets. The watches had not been identified last night al though in the four jobs to which the men confessed a total or five watches was taken. Detectives were unable to account for the toilet sets, inasmuch as at none of the four robberies was the loss of toilet sets mentioned. This is one basis for their belief that more jobs may be charged against the three men as 'the result of further investi gation. The loot, which the robbers are de clared to have secured from the four jobs they are said to have admitted included, according to reports made at the police station. $70 obtained at ine .rasnion garage, 198 obtained the Frank Nau drug store, $130 at the filling station at Thirteenth and Burnside streets and $35 at the Nob Hill pharmacy. In addition two dia mond rings valued at $500 were taken from the Nob Hill pharmacy and a total of four watches at the same place. One watch was taken by the holdup men at the Frank Nau rob bery. The first of the series of robberies charged to the three men was that of the Fashion garage, at Tenth and Taylor streets, which was" heid up at 10:40 P. M. on the night of January 1. Three men participated in this hold up in which the cash register was rifled of $70. R. Morrison, night clerk at the garage, was in . the place at the time of the hold-up. The Frank Nau drugstore was held (Concluded on Page 3, Column 1.) YOU WANT TO KNOW WHO'S BOSS Airplane, Weighing 12,600 Pounds With Load and Crew, to Land . on Ice With Skids. LONDON, Jan. 23. (By the Associ ated Press.) Dr. John L. Cope, com mander of the British Imperial Ant arctic expedition which will leave England on the steamer Terranova next June for a five years' tour of exploration in the Antarctic, says an attempt will be made to dash to the south pole bv airplane. Today he told the Associated Press how he hoped to accomplish this pretentious undertaking. "The plane we are taking with us said Dr. Cope, "is being specially con structed and will be so designed that it can land on the ice by means of skids. Three men will make the dash for the pole from the top of the great ice barrier at the Bay of Whales. "From the starting point it will b a continuous climb, since the plane wiil have to cross a mountain range with peaks 11.000 feet high. The pilot will be Captain G. H. Wilkins, who participated in the flight between England and Australia. "The plane will be fitted with a patent sledge attachment which wijl be used to carry provisions and equip ment if anything happens to prevent the Journey being continued in the air. With a full load and crew the airplane will weigh 12,600 pounds. Its speed will average 93 miles an hour. "If the weather is favorable I In tend to commence the flight for the pole next Christmas day. The jour ney will have to be made in two stages, since we could not hope to cross the highest peaks with a full load. Hence, at the foot of the peaks. in latitude 84 degrees south, we will land on the ice and establish a depot of spare fuel and provisions and far as possible lighten the machine. "Having searched for the tent left by Amundsen and the flags which he and Captain Scott deposited there, we will commence the return journey Both on the flight to the pole and back I shall follow the tracks Amund- sent followed afoot, because the winds there are more reliable than those prevailing over the route used by Scott. "During the flight we will be in touch by wireless with our base and a searching party will be sent ou afoot to find us if we should be out of touch more than two days. "With the aid of tho airplane 1 am certain we shall be able to penetrate farther into the interior and reach spots which could be' reached on foo only with the utmost difficulty and great danger. "The time I spent marooned on Ross island after the Aurora (the Mawson expedition ship of 1916) was driven away in the blizzard gave me every opportunity for studying weather con ditions. In the little hut establishe by Scott on. that lonely island amid the ice I and my comrades in mis fortune lived for two years with all hope of rescue abandoned. We kept records regarding the weather an continued our research work, hopin that even though we perished, future explorers would find data that would benefit them. Those records con vincedi me of the practicability of aviation in the Antarctic during the summer. During the expedition an attempt will be made to circumnavi gate the Antarctic and three mem bers of the party, including myself, will spend a whole winter on the great ice barrier, a thing never be fore attempted, for the purpose of studying weather conditions. "When we return our data will be public property." AROUND HERE, START SOMETHING." Republicans Protest Fur ther Reservations: ULTIMATUM IS GIVEN LODGE Sherman, Illinois, Threatens to Join Third Party. CONCERN IS EXPRESSED Ex-President Taft Urges Compro mise on Change to Article 10, De claring Covenant Safeguarded. WASHINGTON, Jan. 23. Protest by large group of influential republi can senators against turther compro mises on reservations to the peace treaty today gave the compromise ne gotiations a severe setback and, sen ators declared, involved future soli darity of the republican party not only in the senate but in the nation. Light republican senators, headed by Senators Johnson, California, and Borah. Idaho, and claiming to repre sent other senators, called Republican Leader Lodge into conference and de livered what was declared to be an ul timatum against proposed compro mises of the informal bi-partisan com mittees or senate lrnriir Some of the senators in the con. ference with Senator Lodge declared that the reception of the nrnte.t would affect the republican leadership ana unity in the senate, while one. Senator Sherman of Illinois, stated after the conference that v. u leave the republican party and join a third party if the republicans sup port emasculated" reserve in Situation ln (onfuwd. The conference with Senator Lodge, which lasted nearly three hours, pre- l scheduled session of the bi-partisan committee. This commit tee will meet again ' tomorrow, but with the situation thr6wn into confu sion by todays developments. Demo crats interested in the compromise ne gotiations tonight expressed concern over the turn of events at the re sultant possibility of success. The movement of protest against compromising the Lodge reservations was almost coincident with a visit to the senate by former President Taft, who consulted with several "mild reservation" republicans, in eluding Senators McCumber of North Dakota. McNary of Oregon, Kellogg of Minnesota and Colt of Rhode Island. Mr. Taft urged compromise strongly and declared that a compro mise on the Lodge reservation to arti cle 10 of the league of nations coven ant would not 'kill" the treaty, be cause, he asserted, other provisions would make for world peace and cause resort rarely to article 10. Both Partiea Blamed. Another offset of the opposition to compromise was a speech in the sen ate by Senator Ashurst. democrat. Arizona, In favor of immediate rati fication. Mr. Ashurst charged both republicans and democrats with de- lavlnir ratification bv nlavine- rjar - tisan politics "while the world waits . . . (Concluded on Page 4. Column 1.) Fire Consumes Night Dress and Burns Hair From Head Full Hospitals Delay Treatment. Mrs. Peter A. Kikes, 33, was severe- j ly burned about the back and shoul ders and her hair burned from her head at 9 o'clock yesterday morning when her night robe caught fire from an open-flame gas heater at her home, 731 Union avenue North. She was taken to the Portland sanitarium where Dr. H. Dammasch pro nounced her recovery doubtful. Mrs. Kikes was prevented from be ing burnea to death by the ready action of John Gilson. 22, who rooms at the Kikes residence. The woman had run outside, the flames leaping over her body, when Mr. Gilson eeiv.ed a blanket and throwing it around her succeeded in putting out the fire. Mrs. Kikes was dressing one of her three little children at the time of the accident. She leaned over to arrange something about the child's dress when her robe swept into the flame of the heater and the fire Immediately swept up her back to her hair. Miss Kikes is the wife of Peter A. Kikes, who is employed in a res tjiurant at 155 North Sixth street, as a waiter. Owing to the crowded condition of the Portland hospitals and the im possibility of securing accommoda tions it was an hour and a half be fore Dr. Dammasch finally was able to make arrangements to have the suffering woman cared for at the Portland sanitarium. "I spent an hour and a half tele phoning the Good Samaritan hospital, St. Vincent's hospital, the Emanuel hospital and other hospitals and was finally compelled to send her clear out to the Portland sanitarium," said Dr. Dammasch. "The incident is an object lesson in the need for greater hospital fa cilities in Portland." The several months' old baby of Mr. and Mrs. Frank E. Smith, 327 East Nineteenth street north, was slightly burned as the result of a fire which started in the Smith resi dence from an overheated stove yes terday, doing about $1200 damage to the residence and furnishings. The crying of the baby, which had been sleeping in the living room, led to the discovery of the fire. The baby's burns were not considered serious. MILK MEN TO MEET HERE Dealers and Inspectors to Hold Combined Tliree-Day Convention. EVERETT, Wash., Jan. 23. The combined convention of the Pacific Milk Dealers association and the Pa cific Northwest Association of Milk and Dairy Inspectors will be held February 3. 4 and 5 in Portland. L Davies, president of the Inspectors' association, announced today. Dairymen and inspectors from the Pacific coast states and British Co lumbia will participate in the three days' programme. INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature, o.8 degrees: minimum. -T degrees. TODAY'S Fair, easterly winds. Foreign. Airplane dasi to south pole to be tried. Pago 1. 1 Holland refuse to give up ex-kaiser. Page 1. I National. ! , . ,. , r . ' South Americans have finance plan. Page 8. I Reserve banks rapped by state banks. Page j Hoover boom solo Washington topic. T rage a. ise move suffers setback. Page 1. Ioinetir. nsFlor award not recommended ty na' decoration? board, declares Chairman Knight. Page 2. witnesses at congressional investigation say that raiders were part of Carranza army. Page 2. Antl-sedlti'on bill fight splits party lines in house. Pas' iu. Eighty-five radicals Indicted In Chicago. Pago 1. Pacific Northwest. Poindexter coming to west to put more "jazz Into Ills campaign in nome state. Page 4. Captain Blain, former district manager for shinning boara, arrestea in seame. Page 1. L, H. Compton to be new prison warden. Page 7. Eight measures to be referred to voters In May. rago . Ex-soldier slain by former friend at Ray mond. TV ash. Page 4. Snorts. Tommv Gibbons asks bout with winner at Milwaukie next Wednesday. Page 12. Frank LeRoy Chance's efforts to purchase Cubs aired. Page "Hack" Miller, Oaks' reliable batsman, is signed again. Page 12. Mrs. Francis Cowells Schroth to swim at New York. Page 12. Commercial and Marine. New government plan of flour buying fa vored by millers. Page 19. Losses in Chicago corn prices are regained. Page 19. Fears of stock-selling movement are not realized. Page 1. Public dock commission rejects bids on bonds. Page 14. Portland and Vicinity. Diplomas awarded at eight Portland schools to approximately 345 graduates. Page 6. Louis E. Bean appeals for co-operation in aiding fish and game development. Page 3. Dr. Suzzallo pleads for new leadership in national life. Page 6. Woman badly burned when heater ignites night robe. Page 1. Confession of four Portland hold-ups reported. Page I. Bed on floor in two-room habitat with parents-in-law wins divorce lor woman. Page 10. Thirty influenza cases break out near St. Helens. Page 13. Zoning vote to be taken in chamber. Page 20. One-way traffic debated in council. Page 11. lu.:i.o fire rakas duwnuiwa building, me 13- Note Says Holland Is Not Bound by Treaty. HONOR HELD TO BE AT STAKE Nation Cannot Betray Confi dence, Says Reply. DEMAND IS REHEARSED Contention Is Advanced That Queen Has Aot Same Interest That Actuates Powers. PARIS, Jan. 23. The demand of the entente powers that Holland deliver up to them former. Emporor William of Germany, that he may be tried "for a supreme offense atrainst interna tional morality and the sanctity of the treaties," has been refused by Holland. In a note delivered this afternoon to the foreign office by the Dutch minister, Holland takes the ground that the Dutch governniont is not a party to tho peace treaty, which con demned William Hohenzollern. and that it cannot recognize as an inter national duty the necessity to asso ciate itsolf with "this act of high in ternational policy of the powers." It declares also t hat the constituent laws of the kingdom and the tradition of the country, always a ground for refuge for the vanquished in interna tional conflicts, will not permit the government to defer to the wishes of the entente by withdraw ing from the former emperor the benefit of its laws and tradition. The declaration is made that the people of The Nether lands cannot betray the faith of those who have confided themselves to Hol land's free institutions. The Dutch minister delivered Hol land's reply to the allied demand for extradition of the former German em. peror to the foreign office at 5:30 P. M. .Note la Recounted. Following is the reply of The Netherlands government to the en tente: By verbal note, dated January 15. 1920. given to the envoy of the queen at Paris, the powers, referring to article 227 of the treaty of Versailles, demand that the government of Hol land give into their hands William of Hohenzollern. former emperor of Ger many, so that he may be tried. "Supporting this demand they observe that if the former emperor had'remained in Germany the German government would, under the terms of article 22 of the treaty of peace, have been obliged to deliver him. "In citing as premeditated viola tions of international treaties, as well as a systematic disregard of the most sacred rules of the rights of man. a number of acts 'committed during the war by German authority, the powers place the responsibility, at least morally, upon the former emperor. "They express the opinion that Hol land would not fulfill her Interna tional duty if she refused to associate herself with them within the limit or her ability to pursue or at least not to impede, the punishment of crimes committed. Holland Held Not Boand. "They emphasize the special char acter of their demands, which con template not a judicial accusation but an act of high international policy, and they make an appeal to Holland's respect of law and love of Justice not to cover with her moral authority vio lation by Germany of the essential principles of the solidarity of the na tions. "The queen has the" honor to ob serve, first, that obligations which, for Germany, could have resulted from article 228 of the treaty of peace, cannot serve to determine the duty of Holland, which is not a party to the treaty. "The government of the queen, moved by imprescriptible reasons, cannot view the question raised by the demands of the powers except from the point of view of Its own duty. It was absolutely unconnected with the origin of the war and has maintained, and not without diffi culty, its neutrality to the end. It finds itself, then, face to face with facts of '-lie war in a position differ ent from that of the powers. "It rejects with energy all suspi cion of wishing to cover with its sov ereign right and its moral authority violations of the essential principles of the solidarity of nations: but it cannot recognize an international duty to associate itself with this act of high international policy of the powers. "If, in the future, there should be instituted by the society of nations an international jurisdiction compe tent to- judge in case of war deeds qualified as crimes and submitted to its jurisdiction by statute antedating the acts committed, it would be fit for Holland to associate herself with the new regime. Honor Held Involved. "The government of the queen can not admit in the present case any other duty than that imposed upon it by the laws of the kingdom and national tradition. "Now, neither the constituent laws of the kingdom, which are based upon .ICuuduued ua Page 2, Column S: