TIIE MORNTXG OREGOXIAN, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1920 3 12 CONFESSION 0 RIPS VEIL OFF PLOT Testimony of Roberts Admit ted as Evidence. EXPERT PROVES CALIBER Rnlli-ls That Killed Grimm Arc 38-55, Asserts Clark, Author ity on Ballistics. ' I (Continued From First Page) " ' they pertain to Roberts himself, and i that reference to other defendants and I. W. W. comrades must be dls- ,'. regarded by the jurors in their weigh- i ing of the worth of the confessions '. -His mentality is that of a 10-year- '. old boy." asserted George Vanderveei I. W. W. counsel, arguing against the ! admission of Roberts' confession, ana for permission to call an alienist to ". testify. ; "There is no rule of reason or Iogie " which would exclude this confession ; because of the fact that insanity if I suspected." contended W. H. Abel r special counsel for the state.' ' ; In the sternly fought legal skir 11 mish. the state won its right to intro ' duce the confessions, on point of law, ' without the introduction at that time '.' by the defense of testimony seeking to show that Roberts was and Is men- ... tally incompetent. Such testimony by the ruling of the court, must be reserved for presentation wnen the '' defense has its own case in progress. Plana Are Revealed. !! In the two confessions, one supple mentary. the defendant Roberts Is auoted as revealing talk and plans ol the Centralia "wobblles" prior to : Armistice day, their resolve to arm J: themselves and resist any raid upon 2 the hall and their subsequent stra V, tcgical programme of stationing rifle men in the hall. In the Avalon hotel and other buildings on the opposite side of Tower avenue and on the dis tant summit of Seminary hill. The confession asserts that these plans were carried out. Roberts, witb Bert Bland, fellow defendant, and Ol Hanson, yet uneaptured, stationed themselves on Seminary hill and .' watched the patriotic parade marcb up Tower avenue and turn to retract its course. They were to fire when they heard shots. As the parade passed, unmolested. Bland, with an oath, is said to have wished that trouble would start. Kaeape Means Debated. The shots started, they could not determine from what building. There upon the riflemen upon the hill opened fire, runs the confession. They ' saw the uniformed marchers break and rush the hall. In the confession Roberts says that he does not know from what he saw whether the dis tant first shot was fired before or '. i after the hall was attacked. "I'll tell the truth now and what I saw," runs the statement. "It may be used against me but I cannot help ; it. I saw the soldiers run for the building when the shooting started. Of course that wouldn't clear me or ; anybody else." The riflemen on the hill, so the con ' fession reads, debated means of escape ; and biding. Bland and, Hanson were '. agreed upon making their way to ; Hanson's cabin, near the headwaters of the Hanaford river. Roberts ! . wanted all three to go to the vicinity of his home near Grand Mound, where ranchers might be appealed to for aid in hiding. He quarreled with his companions, who said they did not trust him, so the confession says, and made his way to his own home, spend ing one night in the timber. Twl days afterward he gave himself up. Ballet Strikes A a to. Three important witnesses called this afternoon by the state were A. . R. Frisbie, Centralia: Mrs. Beatrice 1 Charbonneau, Centralia, and Bert G. Clark, attorney of Seattle. That he was .the occupant of an automobile parked on Tower avenue during the parade, diagonally opposite the Avalon hotel, and that a bullet passed through the car and bedded itself in a folding seat on which a child was seated, was Frisble's open ing testimony. Ha believed the missile to have come from the direction of the Avalon and described its course as downward. How she rented a room to Commo dore Bland and John Lamb, two of tho defendants, just before noon on Armistice day, was testified to by Mrs. Charbonneau, landlady of the Arnold hotel. The men had told her that they wished to view the parade and were assigned to an upper room. The state alleges that several shots were fired from the Arnold. The de fense has announced that it will re call Mrs. Charbonneau to testify for the defendants. Bert G. Clark, lawyer, of Seattle, is an expert on firearms and rifle fire. He testified on the identification of calibers of various exhibits intro duced by the state and concerning bullet holes in buildings on Tower avenue. One of these, he said, he peered through to determine its Jecte-J to extended cross-examination 6y the defense. In the case of Clark. however, Vanderveer questioned for some time regarding trajectories, cali bers and makes of rifles, evincing a Knowledge of the subject scarcely sec ondary to that of the witness. Contention over the admissibility of Roberts' confession as evidence in troduced by the state brought about the most stubbornly waged legal bat tie of the entire case thus far, with the defense losing by the ruling of judge Wilson. At the beginning of the case the I. vv . vv. counsel had announced tnat In the instance of Loren Roberts the defense would be insanity, and that he would call an alienist to examine the prisoner and testify regarding his competency. , . Thus it was the court was re tarded two hours this morning while Ir. Arthur P. Calhoun, alienist, of Seattle, member of the American Legion . and friend and , fraternity brother of Warren O. Grimm, made the examination. It was conducted in Roberts' cell. ....... , Confession Held Invalid. With the opening of court; follow ing. the testimony of A, C. Baker, Olympia, deputy county clerk .of Thurston countycalled by the state as the stenographer who took and transcribed Roberts' statement of No vember 17 in the Thurston county sheriff's office,. Vanderveer argued for the admission at that time of the testimony of Dr. Calhoun to de termine the mental, status of the de fendant. "The state is tendering the tes Imony of the defendant taken down by a stenographer, it. is true, just as surely as though he were seated in that witness chair," asserted the defense, citing the statute prescrib ing that Insane are incompetent to be witnesses. - ""An insane person cannot be per mitted to manage his own business," aaid Vanderveer. . "Can . he be per mitted to give away his own life? "They, the state, are in this posi tion assuming' that we are right that they are offering an insane man' word, his act, as a ground to take bis life away Irom himl" The L W. W. counsel declared Rob erts' mental capacity to be that of a 10-year-old boy. As he made the statement Roberts' pale and nervous, gnawed at his finger nails and grinned at his attorney. Bert Bland, defendant, laughed and whispered a comment 'to Eugene Barnett, de fendant. LEAGUE OF NJI I 1 CUES No Representative of U. S. Present at Opening. SECRET SESSION URGED hecMSary- the American Federation of Labor, carried to Mr. Hines notice that the union officials had no further pro posals, to make and could offer noth ing in amplification of the arguments already presented. Jewell also told the director-general the employes' representatives believed that the controversy should go to the president azaiD. inasmuch as it was at the request of Mr. Wilson that the original demands had been held in abeyance. Intimation also was given that since it was the sentiment of the union men to employ all methods pos sible for an amicable settlement, they believed a review of the case by the president might provide means for further negotiations, should they be RAILROAD MEN "ARE HOPEFUL I President Believed to Be Bound to Give Relief Demanded. DETROIT, Mich.. Feb. 11. The rail road administration's decision to lay the wage" controversy before Presi dent Wilson today had been antici pated at the headquarters of the iivnnv t..K n Th. i Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way LONDO.N, Feb. 11. The council ol . . ,.,, here. tne league of nations formally opened an(J accordinff to President Allan C its meeting here at noon toaay. Ar- Parke, holds some hope of averting Arthur J. Balfour of England Pre- ' sides; French Delegate to Organize Court. thur J. Balfour, representing Great .iii,-. r mr.ra. than .inn.non mem- Britain, assumed the chair on the Ders of that union called for Febru suggestion of Leon Bourgeois, repre- ,7 ntative of France. . It wag at Presidejit Wilson's re in his speech of welcome to the ,. pi, nnin nut "that delegates Mr. Balfour said there was e ans formulated iaat August A n I if n a Klnr An t p A n a a t 1 n c Q n I were held in abeyance while the gov ernment tried to lower the cost 01 Having failed in this." he stated. the president now is bound to give us the relief we have demanded." only one blot on the meeting, and that was that there were eignt na iivim 1 ,i. . wk.. v. 1 1 1 1 j Vi "mil I living raid that it was not desirable to touch I on the absence of the United States, but he referred to it marring the symetry of the original plan of the league. M. Bourgeois, in reply, added a word of regret that the nations rep resented were only eight in number. Bourgeois to Form Court. The council entrusted M. Bourgeois with the organization of the perma- FREXCH DIRECTOR DISLIKES nent court of International justice. . provided for by article 14 of the PLAN TO ADJUST EXCHANGE. league covenant and consideration of the proposed list of international jur sts to be Invited to form a commit- France Buys Few on-.S9enuais ee, to prepare plans xor constitution 1 1 1 1 e T;uun, v., u 11 1 1 L yuuiuiica Mrs ajciii, ODESSA FALLS TO ASSAULTS OF REDS Transport With 1400 Aboard Sunk by Sheflfire. AMERICAN FLEET ARRIVES Bolshevtfcl Activities General! Triumphant in Southern Russia nd Refugees Are Leaving. LUXURY BAN HELD FUTILE source. Hole rued aa Sight. "I sighted through that hole." testi fied Clark, "just as you would through an aperture sight and the line led to an upstairs window in the Avalon hotel." Another strong bit of circumstanc was added to the 6tate'ecase when Clark wat asked to identify the cali ber of the battered bullet which killed Grimm. The witness drew out an empty 38-55 caliber cartridge case and with the flick of thumb and fin ger fitted the missile into place H testified that the death bullet was of that caliber. Vanderveer declared that the de Tense will admit that Grimm was slain by a rifle of that caliber, to which Abel retorted that this would-be but the first of many similar admissions that the tate would force. Clark's testimony thus fits with the attempted identification of a .38-53 caliber rifle found in a field near Cen tralia two weeks after the tragedy. The defense has denied all knowledge of the ownership of this weapon, or that it ever belonged to any of the defendants. It has been admitted la evidence by the court only with the' understanding that the state will complete identification. The staU contends that it was this rifle which Killed Warren O. Grimm, and that il was fired from the Avalon hotel. Cae Fitted Perfectly. The witness testified also that the bullet which killed Arthur McElfres was a .22 high-power caliber, by the same test used in the previous demon stration. "This fits perfectly," said Clark thrastln the bullet, one of the state's exhibits, into a shellcase of a .22-high-over caliber. Adjutant-General Harvev J. Moss, called by the state, testified concern ing the caliber and probable direction of a bullet which lodged in the co operative store. ' None of these witnesses was sub- Innanity, Plea of Defense. We offer to prove," said Vander veer, "by the testimony of Dr. Arthur P. Calhoun that Loren Roberts is and was on November 17 an insan person, and not competent to be a wit ness for or against himself." It is in questions of law that W. H. Abel, special counsel for the state, finds his firmest, most assured foot ing. He rose confidently to reply, citing case after case in support o his contentions, and declaring that the "insanity of Loren Roberts is as sumed by counsel for the purpose of argument." The statements made by Vanderveer, he charged, exceeded the facts related in chambers. There Is no rule of reason or logic," asserted Abel, ' that would ex elude this confession because of th fact that insanity is suspected. The question is whether you are entitled, he addressed Vanderveer, to break into the state's case, and In advance to undermine a damaging confirmation. 'I regret," he continued, "that coun sel has not looked up the law before arguing his points, because, perhaps, all the wisdom and logic In the world is not voiced by counsel." Proof la Demanded. Referring to numerous court deci slons, Mr. Abel demonstrated that where a confession is not procured by promise or duress, it may be used against the defendant. He said tha claim of insanity, as such, was itself susceptible of proof through the troduction of the confession. "There is no need of citing author! fies," interposed Vanderveer, "because I most cheerfully concede 'That the law is against you,' flashed Abel. That the cases you cite will sus tain your contentions," answered Vanderveer. "I prefer to hear the cases," re marked the court. At the opening of the afternoon ses sion Judge Wilson announced that the request of the defense to Intro duce testimony concerning Roberts' sanity was for the present refused, and that such evidence must be pro duced in proper course during the case of the defense. Vanderveer entered exceptions, which were allowed, and declared that these were based upon the conten tion that the confessions are imma terial and incompetent, and that Roberts' himself, when he made them was mentally incompetent and is to day. Before the two confessions were read. Judge Wilson instructed 'the jurors that they must consider the admissions made therein only with regard to Loren Roberts and that references to other defendants were to be wholly disregarded by the Jury, Signature Net Affixed. The confession of November 17, signed by Roberts, was read by A. C Baker, who served as stenographer. At its conclusion the state brought forward the supplementary confes sion, made in the city" jail at Cen tralia on November 24. Miss Dorothy Wise, stenographer, testified that she took the notes and transcribed them. There were present at that time the defendant's mother, Mrs. Rdn Roberts: his sister, Mrs. Clarence Axtell; C. D. Cunningham, counsel for the state: Frank P. Christensen, as slstant attorney-general and others. Before this supplementary confes sion was read, the testimony de veloped that Roberts had declined t sign it after making the statement Upon request of the defense this faci was made of record before the con fession was reac by Mr. Christensen. Both Baker, stenographer of the first confession and Miss Wise, who took down the second and supple mentary statement, testified under cross-examination that Roberts ap peared sane and not unduly nervous when the confessions were made. They remarked nothing that seemed evidence of insanity, nor did they be lieve that the defendant was making the statements other than voluntarily. Defendant Wears O. D. Shirt. Roberts had .summoned Baker to his cell on November 18, because he desired to make some changes In his statement. These interlineations were noted by the witness as he read the confession and seemed points upon which Roberts had refreshed his mem ory in an effort to be exact. Present at the utterance of this mnfpMlnn had heen C T rimntn ' ham, Centralia, Herman Allen, Che halis. J. H. Jahnke, Centralia, and Sheriff Gifford of Thurston county. While counsel argued for and against the mental incompetency of her son and while the confessions of his part in the parade attack were read, Mrs. Edna Roberts, mother ol the defendant, sat in the court room. Near her was seated Mrs. Will Faulk ner, mother of Bert Faulkner, an other defendant.. Faulkner served in the army and wears yet the olive drab shirt of the service. He sits bolt upright, a young fellow scarcely in his 20's, with his arms folded. No session of court will be held to morrow owing to the legal holiday of Lincoln's birthday. Washington's birthday, another legal holiday, falli on Sunday. This will be observed by substituting Monday, February 23, should the case, as it promises, be no', concluded at that time. Spanish ambassador to France, with certain of the duties of the league relating to transit, port, waterways and railroads; Dr. Gaston da cunha, Brazilian ambassador to France, with From America, Declares Stat istican of Ministry. PARIS, Feb. 11. An absolute ban the constitution of an international against import of luxuries rrom Ame body for dealing with health problems, ica jnt0 France would have little ef and Baron Keishiro Matsul, Japanese feet on the rate of exchange, inas minister, to France's guarantee with much aa France imported virtually reference to the Polish minority treaty. Addresses of Mr. Balfour and M. Bourgeois were interpreted into Eng lish and French. Mr. Balfour with j reference to decision to hold secret j sessions, explained: "We have con- little or no luxuries from the United States, M. Lechevalier, director of sta tietics of the ministry of commerce, declared to the Associated Press. Here are the figures; see for your self," he said. "The figures of the ministry of commerce -show that eluded that the details of our work ,.,, th firt 11 months of cannot advantageously take place In m9 lmported from America goods open assembly." He declared that, if valued at 7,381.000,000 francs, ex the workof the council waa i to be Dortine t0 tne' United States in th none enicienuy, it was aesiraoie ana - .j cnJ unnu fran .orth even necessary that the detailed dis cussions be carried on with perfect freedom. I ltimate Publicity Asnnred. Mr. Balfour said he believed th members of the council would be ready to announce the results of theit deliberations. . The nations represented at the meeting were Belgium, Brazil, Great Britain, . France, Greece, Italy, Japan and Spain. U.S.AMBASSADOR XOT PRESENT Lass than 500,000,000 francs may be termed luxuries. 'American imports, . outside of cereals, amounted to 943,000.000 francs. They included: Sugar, 252, 000.000 francs; cotton and wool, 1,236, 000,000 francs; copper, .169,000,000 francs. Automobiles are the only item which might be stopped. The total figures of imports show that France imported from America 9,243,000,000 francs in 1917 and exported. S37,uuo, 000 francs in the same year1 the fig ures always for the first 11 months showing a' decrease of exports from France to America in 1919 as against 1917." WHOLESALE FIRM FORMS State Department Will Keep in Touch With Meetings. WASHINGTON. Feb. Hi Ambassa- 'dor Davis at London wilt not be in structed to attend the meetings of the supreme .council, and the council I Announcement Made in Pendleton or tne league ot nations, it was saiu today at the state department- Many questions of interest to the United States are to be decided by the league council, but since this country has not yet become a mem ber of th,e league it will not be rep resented even informally, Because of the extensive American interests which will be affected by the work of the reparations commie of $65,000 Corporation. PENDLETON, Or., Feb. 11. (Spe cial.) Announcement-was made here today of the incorporation of a$65,OJ0 mercantile concern for Pendleton. As sociated in the new enterprise are Sylvan G. Cohn J. B. McCook and J. R. Raley of this city and the f ain Mercantile company of Boise, Idaho. The company will have the entire sion, the state department will keep .... .-v,ie th- iiseii iniormea ao to events at ijonaon. i - ... iiu t.mnl. her, Tl, company will wholesale men's fur nishings and will operate over east em Oregon, southern Idaho and south western Idaho. FEDERAL AAD STATE AID TO BE ASKED FOR HIGHWAYS. Plans Are Laid by Delegates of Three States for Opening Up Wallowa County, Oregon. LEWISTON, Idaho, Feb. 11. (Spe- ENGINE PICKS UP AUTO Farmer at Steering Wheel Carried Nearly Quarter of 'Mile. GREELET, Colo., Feb. 11. W. T. Vaneaton, a farmer driving a heavy touring car, was picked up, car and all, by an eastbound Union Pacific passenger train near Nunn, Colo., to day, and carried 1175 feet before the train could be stopped, tte receivea cial.) At the big meeting of good only slight Injuries. roads boosters from Oregon, Wash- I Vaneaton kept his seat at the eteer ington and Idaho, held at Clarkston, I ing "wheel until the train stopped, Wash., Monday and Tuesday of this when he was precipitated to th week, 200 delegates from the three I ground. states united in an organization to State Highway association," which CORONER S URINK KILLS) III yi UIUUID llio UUllUlIljJ vl na in cm oiaiD H'6un y wnucviuiK lilts MAI I - , , it iolning eastern corner reeions of n. S liro-uenzoi ana brain .noonoi jii gon and Washington and the Lewis ton section of Idaho. gredlents of Deadly Cocktail. This proposed road will open un I CHICAGO. Feb. 11. Police are the hitherto largely Isolated but ex- I searching today for the maker of a remely rich country of Wallowa kind of "coroners cocKtau more county, Or. The territory affected bv deadly in its effect than wood alcohol tne new project, which will cost, it is Twenty-nve victims oi tne arm estimated, about 1750.000. include are in a serious condition and one has Anatone, Grouse, Cloverland, Hanson's' already aiea. Ferry, Peola, Asotin and Clarkston iniiyra i uwiraieua In Washington; Enterprise. BartletL to be nitro-benzol and grain alcohol. Joseph, Flora, Troy, Wallowa, Para dise and Lost Prairie, Oregon: Lew- iston and adjacent towns, Idaho. Speakers on subjects connected wits the new highway at the meeting in- luaea Mayors- j. js. fiooDler of Clarks ton, C. F. Owners, Lewiston; J. B. Pollard, Asotin; J. H. Dobbin, promi nent sneep man ot eastern Oregon; GILLETTE ON BLACKLIST (Continued From First Page.) and Polndexter of this state to fight against the measure. With the foreign exchange in chaoe Attorney E. A. Cox, Lewiston; Engi- the Gronna bill might be the match eer u. u. van Arsaoi, s. L. Burnaueh. which would lire tne powaer oi a state representative from Wallowa aster. President Langdon declared at county; Elmer E. Halsey of Clarks- the meeting of the club Tuesday. He ton. James Allen, highway commis- .no,,n.ed that the farmers, bankers innpr rT wanning, An. if.. r . " C . u , tfiac nOKC. I j k..,U.., tnta,.ata "-f t ha Ann. prominent citizens of the inter munlty are dsck or tne pian to iignc localities. A fine spirit of co-opera- I the bill. lion prevauea, ana citizens of th three states will unite in a vigorous campaign to get legislative and fed- erai appropriations, which with coun ty money will finance the 1oint project. A Lazy Liver SSUE BEFORE PRESIDENT (Continued From First Pag-e.) Causes a great deal of trouble, bil iousness, constipation and sicic headache. Do not put up with it; correct it at once by taking Hood's Pills Vide by C I. Hood Co., Lowell, Ma si. CONSTANTINOPLE, Feb. 10. (By the Associated Press.) The latest in formation received here from Odessa says that the bolshevik army now is in control of the city. Ten thous and refugees are on ships in the har bor. .Russian officers and other refu gees are marching in small bands to Tiraspol, 73 miles northwest of Odessa on the Roumanian border. The city fell into the hands of the bolshevik! at 3 P. M, February 7. Maclne gun fire was heavy all day on the seventh. The fire of the bol shevik! upon the allied warships caused the vessels to move into the outer harbor. - American Fleet on Scene. Rear-Admiral N. A. McCully, com manding the United States naval forces in Russian waters, arrived from Novo Rossisk and as senior naval officer is in command. The British battleship Ajax, three British destroyers and a French gun boat are standing by. Several allied ships are steaming away loafled with refugees. All shipment of supplies to South Russia have been halted temporarily by order of the allied port authorities here, who refuse to allow any vessels to clear for Black sea ports. The American steamer Sangamon arrived a few days ago carrying a cargo of 1000 tons of clothing to be distributed among the typhus hospitals in South Russia.. The steamer is still being held in the harbor and her cargo probably will be unloaded and sent on to Novorossisk when conditions make it safe for a vessel to enter the port there. Refugee Ship Sank. Bandits in considerable strength are operating in the mountains just behind the port of Norovossisk, caus ing great unrest in the city itself. LONDON,. Feb. Il-A wireless dis patch from the soviet goternment at Moscow today says: "According to a message from Novo Rossisk, when the volunteer transport Karantin, with officers and officials and their wives and children aboard, ! numbering 1400, left Mariupol (in the Russian province of Yekaterinoslav) on the approach of the bolshevikl, the volunteer army, incensed at being left behind, fired, on the ship. A shell pierced a boiler and the transport sank with all aboard." The war office announces that th bolsheviki in southern Russia have crossed the sea of Azov from Tagan rog and succeeded in gaining a foot ing on the southern coast between the Don and Yeva rivers. Denikine Army Rented. Remnants of the army of General Denikine, former anti-bolshevikl leader in Southern Russia, are re treating southward, according to wireless dispatch from Moscow today, General Denikine has proceeded to lalta in the Crimea, the message auas. BUDAPEST, Feb. 11. General Denl kine will be superseded in active com mand of the anti-bolshevik forces o the southern Russian front by the 30- year-old General Wrangel, it Is re- ported by persons returning from southern Russia. NEW YORK, Feb. 11. The Ward line passenger steamship Orizaba o the New York, Cuba and Mexican trade, will leave here February 21 fo Black bea ports,., it was announce today. Officials said the vessel woul be operated by representatives here of a large Italian steamship company. EX-CROWN PRINCE SILEN Interview on Offer Refused to As sociated Press Correspondent. WIERTNGEN, Holland, Feb. 11. As far as the villagers of Wieringen know, former Crown Prince Frederick William of Germany has not received any answer to his telegrams sent to the kings of Great Britain, Belgium and Italy, the emperor of Japan and the presidents of the United States and France offering to surrender to the allies for trial. Through his aidee, Frederick Wil- lam sent word to the Associated Press correspondent today that he ould not answer any questions on the subject of his offer. The former rown prince busied himself today in boxing bout with a professional nstructor. DANISH PRODUCE READY oreign Producers Sa They Can Undersell Market. NEW YORK, Feb. 11. Assurance as been given by Danish merchants that' they will ship to New York un- Come in ject, will take final action relative to its disposition." Events leading up to the disagree ment between the conferees cam! rapidly. In the course of the day, Mr Hines conferred with. Attorney-General Palmer, acquainting him with the details of the controversy. The meet ing was not to be construed as indi cating action by the department of justice, however, Mr. Palmer declared The attorney-general declined to say whether any action was contemplated under the Lever act in event of a strike, saying that the department did not know wnere, wnen or how" ac tion would be needed if any necessary at all. B. M. Jewell, acting president of the railway employes' department of Sure Relief 6 Bell-ans Hot water Sure Relief BELL-AIMS FOR INDIGESTION ASTD HEAR THIS EXCEL. LE.T LIST OF RED SEAL RECORDS. 64822 Carmen Prelude to Act I . ..By Philadelphia Orchestra 87292 Sans Toi (Without Thee)... ........By Geraldine Farrar 88298 Dinora (Shadow Song -. By Luisa Tetraxzini 64816 For You a Rose By Emilio de Gogorza 74499 Rigoletto Caro Nome By Amelita Galli-Curcl 74571 The Song That Reached My Heart .By Evan Williams 87018 Rigoletto Questa o Quella.. By Enrico Caruso 64S21 Tango. By Mischa Elman 64840 Pagliacci Vest! la Glubba.. By Edward Johnson 64835 Zaza Dear Zaza By Renato Zanelli G.FJohksonPmoCo, 149 Sixth St., Bet. Morrison and Alder. Chickertngn Jlehlln, Packard, Bond, Linilemnn & Son'a Pianos. N aiartln saxophones, Guitar. Lkulelea. Abraham Lincoln JNSTILL the prin-L-ciples of the great Liberator into our young manhood and v you will bring forth men with the deep est desire for right and justice Citi zens who can be re lied upon as 100 Americans. Milt v TTfJ P IVJJ ' Mm I iff J MENS WEAR Mathis, Corner Fifth and Morrison limited quantities of butter, cabbagea and potatoes, according to an an nouncement today by Edward J. O'Malley, municipal commissioner of markets. These commodities will be sold much more cheaply than the same foodstuffs produced in this country. It was said - POLICE NIP THEFT PLOT Five Arroted In Connection With Proposed $5,000,000 ltolbery. NEW YORK, Feb. 11. Five rr.-Mf In connection with the r,.nnn.nnn - cur It Ion theft pint have le"n m1". The district Httornoy's office an nounced formally toclny that one of the prisoners h"d contended tn Imv ing lakrri part In Mr.illnir more than 1 1. "00. on n worth of hlo. kn snd bond rrom Ws 11-hi rrH niPhM-iign In My ml .fun' l;ist cat i7 MM OREGON PRODUCTS ARE ADVERTISED EVKKYWHKKE f In newspapers, in the big national maga- ' zines, in trade and technical publications, in farm papers, by bill-boards, street oar cards and all the media known to the adver tising world, the quality of Oregon prod ucts is heralded. This advertising is expressing the faith of Oregon manufacturers in Oregon's raw mater ials, in her resources, and in the craft- manship of her workmen. Thus thru quality and advertising Oregon products are establishing a world-wide prestige, . Watch for the advertisements of Oregon manufacturers. When you buy, specify the products advertised. You will be helping to enhance the popularity of Oregon prod ucts and to augment the prosperity of the Oregon producer, manufacturer, and workman. BUY 0REG01 PRODUCTS Associated Industries of Oregon A i