VOL. LIX. XO. 18,483 Entered at Portland (Orecon) Po-tofTic aSecond-Clvs Matter. PORTLAND OREGON, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1920 PRICE FIVE CENTS ALLIES SEE PERIL LITTLE RHODY'S PLEA FOR WHISKY DECRIED ROOT GIVES IDEA 7,000,000 ACRES IN CALIFORNIA FRUIT UP FEDERAL BOND PLANj ONE-HALF, OUTLOOK FLORIDA CONGRESSMAN" HAS ! SHARP RISE IN" CAXNED GOODS BARIHETT OFFERS MASSACRE ALIRI MEXICANS RELEASE I Mf pn flll'T DC MINE SUPERINTENDENT LU,'tljUULUI 1 Dt 'OF PARTY POLICY T- VALIDITY OF PROHIBITION AMOD3IEXT ASSERTED. WILLIAM WELSH ADAMS HELD FOR RAXSOM. NEW LAND SCHEME. I FOR SUMMER PREDICTED. BIND BOH HAWLEY I Hints of Bad Faith on Italy's Part Decried. Brier Filed in Supreme Court by Solicitor-General Holds State Claims Without Merit. WASHINGTON". Feb. 19. Validity ol the federal prohibition constitutional amendment was defended in a briel ! filed in fh Eitnuma fnnrt toHflV bv FRENCH POLICY IS MENACED j TeJ'ol ! dismissal of original proceedings in- Opening Gun of Presiden tial Campaign Fired. President's Attitude on Adri atic Issue Deplored. DALMATIA PRIME CONCERN Reply to Premiers' Latest Com munication Again Calls. Atten tion ot 14 Points. LONDON, Feb. 19. It was consid ered likely tonight that the supreme council will agree to the publication of President Wilson's Adriatic not and the allied reply, although wheth er here or at Washington has not yet ' been decided. The newspaper pres sure in England. France and tb United States for publication in order to suppress erroneous reports and rumors considered harmful, was dls cussed in the council today, but so far as has been ascertained a definite de cision was not reached. BTJENOB AIRES. Feb. 19. A sum mary of the main points in the allied reply to President Wilson's Adriatic note, cabled by the Home corres pondent of La Nacion. discloses that President Wilson threatened to with draw his signature from the Britlsh-French-American treaty establishing security for France, to which the allies reply that such action would destroy absolutely the "new French policy" for which President Wilson Invited protection. The fundamental points of the reply to President Wilson, the correspond ent says, are: First The allies answer the ac' eusatlon of having prepared a con' ventlon for annexation of Flume to Italy, which presupposes bad faith ' en Italy's part, by saying President Wilson is unable to demonstrate this. Dalmatla Held Important.,.'" Second The Italian petition for establishment of territorial contiguity with Flume is a small thing com pared with the cession of Dalmatia, which the world is able to prove by merely examining the map of Europe. Third The allies observe that the project of President Wilson, which comprehends creation of a buffer state, has been rejected by the Jugo slavs. Fourth The strip of territory necessary to establish the contiguity of Flume with Italy has not suffi cient value to Justify procrastination in re-establishing the peace of Europe. Fifth Italy entered the war in spired by ideals at a moment at least as critical as that when the United States entered. She suffered sacri fices in blood and money incompar ably more serious than those of the United States. Fmek PoHry Threatened. Sixth The president in threatening to withdraw his signature from the Versailles treaty, which established the security of France, gravoly in jures the new French policy for which he Invited protection. He not only destroys the value of his first and most important act. but annihilates it since he shows engagements con tracted in accord with this policy can be destroyed lightly. In drawing up the note. La Nacion's correspondent says, British delegates prepared the technical form in col laboration with the Italians, while the political sense of the document is that of the French delegates, who ex pressed sympathy for Italy. stituted by Rhode Island to test the amendment and enjoin Its enforce ment. Arguments on the motions are expected to be heard next month. The control or the prohibition of the liquor traffic the brief said, is now conceded to be a legitimate gov ernmental function. It cannot now be maintained, as a legal proposition, that such governmental regulation or prohibition unconstitutionally in fringes the rights of the individual. The right to prohibit such traffic was a part of the governmental pow' ers which fhe states had when they framed the constitution of the United States. It is a part of the powers which the states, at that time, served to themselves, but it is no more sacred than any power then reserved. "The right of congress to submit amendments, cannot depend on whether the proposed change is slight or grave. Every state is I party to the agreement that what ever change in the constitution is proposed by congress, as prescribed, and is adopted by the legislature or three-fourths of their number, ahall be thus adjudged to be a proper and needed amendment. It is idle in this case to suggest that this power of amendment might be used to change the form of the government It simply transfers power exercised by the state gov ernments to be exercised by the fefl eral government. "The contention that the prohibi tion amendment is revolutionary and invalid is clearly without merit." LIBERTY BONDS RETIRED Block of $14,881,950 Bought Up by Treasury at Par. WASHINGTON, Feb. 10. Liberty bonds of a par value of $14,881,958 were purchased or retired In January, aside from the operations of the bond sinking fund, it was announced today at the treasury. ' This Includes $4,172,250 from the war lisle insurance reserve, which only recently was-made available for arrestment in liberty bonds, and sur plus earnings of the federal reserve banks to the amount of $2,922,450. The remainder is made up of $395,000 worth of bonds delivered In payment of estate and Inheritance taxes and $7,391,750, which was returned to the treasury by foreign governments out of unused credits established for them In the United States treasury. FIRM PLATFORM NECESSARY New York State-Convention Hears Speech. . NATIONAL DANGER IS SEEN Patriotic Party Duty Emphasized by Leader Who Condemns Autocrat - Ic Powers of President. DEBS' NAME ON BALLOT Bryan Petitions Received by Mich. igan Secretary of State. LANSING. Mich., Feb. 19. Sufficient petitions to place the name of Eugene V. Debs on the presidential preference primary ballot as a socialist candidate for the presidential nomination have been received at the secretary of state's office here. The primary will be held April 5. Petitions to place the name of Will iam J. Bryan on the ballot as a can didate for the Democratic presidential nomination were received by the sec retary of state this morning. Senator Hiram Johnsea. qualified yesterday for a place on the repub lican ticket. WILSON" REFUSES TO BUDGE Reply to Premier's Latest Adriatic 'ot Drafted. WASHINGTON, Feb. 19. (By the Associated Press.) President Wilson today prepared and sent to the state department a reply to the entente premiers' note on the Adriatic ques tion. He is understood to have re stated the position of the American government with a degree of finality, i storms Sweep Empress of Asia on Although the president dictated his LEAGUE, TAXES EXPAND Results of Xon-Partisan Control Evidenced to Oregon City Man. OREGON CITY, Or.. Feb. 19. (Spe cial.) The beneficent results of Non partisan league government ere evi denced to L. J. Lageson, who said here today that he owns 150 acres of un improved land near Wllftston, North Dakota. Mr. Lageson, along with other prop erty owners in that state, was told that when the Non-Partisan league got control taxes would be less. He has just learned that the taxes on his property amount to $80.15. The heavi est tax Mr. Lageson has ever paid previously on the land was $42. LINER HAS ROUGH TRIP communication In less than two hours. It probably will not be put on the cables before tomorrow night or Sat urday. The original draft was sent to Act- Passage From Yokohama. VICTORIA. B. C, Feb. 19. One life boat and part of the railing were gone from the Canadian liner Empress of Asia when she arrived here today Ing Secretary Polk for his personal I from the orient. Storms at sea swept study, as he was the head of the ' her decks agd carried the boat and American mission when the Adriatic i railing away. settlement of December 9 was reached j Captain A. J. Holland, master of at Paris, with the consent and ap- I the Asia, said the passage from Yoko- proval of the president. hama was one of the roughest the After Mr. Polk has completed his I boat has experienced in her 30 years examination, it probably will be re- j on the Pacific, turned to the White House for final ' approval before it is dispatched to NEW YORK, Feb. 19. Elihu Root outlined at the republican state con vention here tonight the platform upon which he believes the party should go to the polls in November. Most striking of his proposals were: Decentralization of the executive powers which have made the presi dent "more autoeratic than any sov ereign in the civilized world." - Ratification of the peace treaty with senate amendments "long before the presidential election." Reform of the league of nations covenant by a congress of nations at the call of a "republican president immediately after March 4, 1921," tc establish "the rule of public right rather than the rule of mere expediency." Economy Is) Essential. Rigid governmental economy and the adoption of an executive budget. Limitation of the right to strike at a point where it conflicts with the self-preservation of the community; establishment of a labor tribunal with power to enforce its mandates.. Revision of the system of taxation, which involves the tariff." "Americanization and the elimina tion of a lot of bolshevik! or bolshevik. sympathizers" from public office. Universal military training. Mr. Root's address was regarded as the opening gun of the campaign. More important than all," said Mr. Root, "is the necessity that' we shall restore oar republican form of government, with the liberty of the individual citizen preserved by lim itations upon official power and put an end to the dictatorship which we created in order to carry on the war. By a series of statutes unprecedented in scope and liberality, with single ness of purpose and patriotic devo tion worthy of all praise, the Ameri can people conferred upon the presi dent powers broader and more auto cratic than were possessed by any sovereign in the civilized world. Executive Power Te Great. "Peace has come in fact, if not technically; but the war powers of the executive still continue. They should be brought to an end. It is I Reclamation of Unused Territory j Increase in Cost of Materials and Represents Concerted Action j Labor Are Given as Cause on Great National Basis. WASHINGTON, Feb. 19. Reclama tion of unused lands in the west and south through bond issues, operating similar to the federal farm loan sys tem, would be authorized by a bill in troduced today by Senator Fletcher, democrat. Florida.. A similar measure will be offered in the bouse tomorrow by Representative Smith, republican, Idaho. Under the plan. $20,000,000 worth of bonds would be sold the first year, $30,000,000 the second. $40,000,000 the third and $50,000,000 the fourth, with a total not exceeding $350,000,000. The measure represents concerted action of the south and west for a great national rather than a sectional plan. The southern interests, includ ing the governors of states and off! cials of the southern commercial con gress met here last month and evolved a bill which the represents tives of the west under the chairman ship of Governor Davis, Idaho, later approved. Former Governor Spry of Utah has remained in Washington in charge of the legislative programme of the west. The southern commercial congress estimated that the programme, if adopted, would make feasible the rec Iamation of 5,000,000 to 7,p00,000 acres of land by the end of the tenth year. I. W. W. Tenets Jauntily Upheld on Stand. PARADE MURDERS APPROVED Declared Necessary. 20-YEAR SEARCH ENDS Michigan Man Finds Sister Teach' Ing at Wapato, Washington. YAKIMA, Wash., Feb. 19. (Spe cial.) A search lasting 20 years came to a happy ending yesterday when John TX Miller of Chase, Mich., dis covered that his sister, Mrs. A. W. Cobb, the object of his search, and her. daughter, Miss Hazel Cobb, were living at Wapato, where both are teachers in the Central school of that city. Mr. Miller, with bis wife and child, who accompanied him to this city, went to Wapato yesterday. Years of search to locate his sister led Mr. Miller to believe she was somewhere on the Pacific coast. He made inquiry, but without result. Mrs. Cobb had divorced her husband here, but her whereabouts at that time were unknown. She was finally located through the county superin tendent of schools. Concluded on Pace 16, Column S.) BIG SAFE FAILS TO WORK Walla Walla, 'Wash., Postmaster Unable to Get Safe-Crackers. WALLA WALLA, Wash., Feb. 19. (Special.) Failure of the combina tion of the big postoffice safe to work tied up thousands of dollars' worth of securities this week and Postmas ter George B. Day, after trying in vain to open up the strong box had to get the services of an oxy-acety-lene expert to driH a hole in the safe door, according to a story which leaked out today and which Day ad mitted. A nut on the main lerver had worked loose and fallen among the tumblers. Before Day called in the expert he sought to get a safe-cracker from the penitentiary but the warden was out of that brand of criminals. of Increase. SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 19. (Spe-j cial.) California canned fruit and to matoes may be 50 per cent higher this summer than they were in 1919, ac cording to a circular Issued to the trade today by the California Can neries company, the only offset to the increased cost of sugar, box shooks, labor and railroad transportation be- Demise Of CX-SerViCe Men IS "6 mc pruujiiiuii mat saippcio "iu turn to water transportation wherever possible. The circular says that sugar will cost the canners 70 per cent more this vear than In 1919 hnr shrinks 60 ner cent more and labor 30 per cent more, RIDE FOR GUN RELATED tne latter due to the minimum wage provided by the state welfare board. Keen competition for fruit crops will producer. It Is also predicted. The " , possibility of drouth accentuates this condition. Ihe European market is over stocked with 1919 apricots, the can ners claim, the 1919 crop having been double any previous crop in tonnage. European demand for peaches is ex- pected to be heavy, however, and the American market is said to be lower than at any time in years, licplenlsh- nient of stocks in this- country may However, in Attempt to Disprove Any Part in Shooting. BY BEN HUR LAMPMAN. MONTESANO, Wash.. Feb. 19. (Special.) Eugene Barnett, defend ant, a coal miner since his eighth year, radicalist with the philosophy take the entire crop, however, say the of his creed apparent in his answers, canners. I became the focal fic-nr nf the rn- The question of ocean freights is I tralia Armistice day murder trial to- expecteti to prove a solution to the day, when he took the stand to tes- transportation problem of the canners, tlfy in his own behalf In the trial reducing from 30 to 40 per cent the of the ten L W. W. who are accused snipping costs. The building up of I of the murder of Warren O. Grimm, many seaports through this diversion Dr. William (D. N.) House, of Port of traffic is predicted. land, has been summoned bv the state to appear tomorrow in an examlna tlon of Loren Roberts, defendant, to determine the question of his sanity. Dr. Arthur C. Calhoun, of Seattle, called by the defense and Dr. E. R. Ahlman, of Hoquiam, called by the state, arrived today and will Join with Jul J luai lutein bkhiibi i.uudi nuw , . ... , : . , . . . nation and requested the presence and cock for perjury alleged to Wave been ,. - r ....... .... - assistance of two other alienists in a Wife Learns Bandits Free Hus band Taken From Properties of Company in Mexico. ' LOS ANGELES. Cal., Feb. 19. Will iam Welsh Adams, American mine su perintendent, reported kidnaped In Zacatecas, Mexico,' February 13, has been released, according to messages which his wife said tonight she had received from the American Metals company offices in New York and Mexico and the American consul at Saltillo, Mexico. The message from the American Metals company stated that a tele gram had been received from Mon terey that Adams had been released and was returning to Monterey. The Compania Metales y Mlnerales tele graphed that a telegram announcing the release was received at noon to day and that Adams would reach Saltillo during the day. The .consul's telegram was to the same effect and added that Adams was in good health. The message made no reference to the method by which the release was effected, but Adams' relatives here believed it was by the payment of a ransom. Hope Wrecked When Wife Demands Property. 50-50 PROPOSAL TOO MUCH Touching Private Scenes in Lives of Couple Recalled. HARMONY FOLLOWS SPATS Money Considerations Held to liar Been Too Great Factor in Snit for Separation. WOODCOCK AGAIN INDICTED Perjury in Murder Trial Charged Bail Fixed at $20,000. SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 19. An in committed in his recent trial on a charge of murder, was returned in the superior court today. Bail was fixed at $20,000 and the case assigned to the court of Judge Louis Ward, where Woodcock was tried before. re-examination. Barnett At ten pis Alibi. Testimony of the entire day cen tered upon the attempted proof of an alibi for Barnett. The state al The grand jury's action followed an leges and has produced witnesses to examination of Warren Cooper, a prove that he was one of the gunmen mining engineer, who was the com- stationed in the Avalon hotel, that he panion of Mr. and Mrs. Woodcock on fired the shot which killed Grimm, the night Woodcock shot and killed and that he was in full accord with Edward Kelley, a newspaper man.- the -alleged" conspiracy of the Cen tralis "wobblies" to defend their hall MILLER SUCCEEDS ROOT distant points. The defendant witness took the Syracuse Republican to Be Delegate stand jaui.tily, declared his alibi with apparent directness, showed a trucu- to Convention. NEW YORK. Feb. 19. Nathan I Miller of Syracuse, was named a dele- gate-at-large to the republican na tional convention in place of Elihu lent tendency under cross-examina tion, cited the tenets of the I. W. W. and asserted that the ex-service men slain in Centralia were victims of stern necessity, of whose demise he Root, who declined to serve, by the approved. He gave unequivocal an informal state convention here to- I ewers, seemingly, and sustained a rig- night. Mr. Root gave no reason but it is understood he has decided to accept the appointment as a member of the committee which is to prepare a plan of organization for an international court of justice provided for under the covenant of the league of na tions. PUBLIC: "AND I SUPPOSE ALL I'M GUARANTEED IS HIGH PRICES." for Ambassador Davis at London presentation to the premiers. Prreldesit Stand Pat. The president is understood to have adhered to the position taken in his note of February 10, in which he in formed the allies that if they were te proceed to a settlement of the Adrl- FARM CONFERENCE PLAN Steps Taken for International Agri cultural Meeting. WASHINGTON, Feb. 19. Plans for an international conference on agri culture were revived today at the meeting of the national board of farm atie question without the particlpa- j organizations at which more than 30 tlon of the American government, a : agricultural bodies were represented, situation might be created where the j a committee was appointed to ar T'ntted States might have to consider range an early conference with rep- nether it could become a party to resentatives of farm organizations of lCaciudwrse 4.CeiuLu toieiftu CO u juries. h fcwt vM tHvsus III ;: orous cross-examination. Witnesses Support Barnett. Briefly, Barnett's alibi, as stated by himself and supported by two other witnesses, is that he was not in the Avalon hotel when the radicals opened fire, but was seated in the lobby of the Roderick hotel next door to the I. W. W. hall, that he had no weapon that he had no specific knowledge of the preparations and arming of the radicals, and that he had never seen the 38-55 caliber rifle which sent a dum-dum bullet through Grimm's abdomen. "You were not angered over the shooting of the soldiers, were you 7" questioned W. H. Abel, special prose cutor, in cross-examination. "Not at all," was the calm reply. T approve of anything that's neces sary." The witness had testified that he rode home in haste, following the sacking of the hall, which he declares was attacked by the service men be fore a shot was fired, to procure his own rifle and return to Centralia that night though he did not return. "But you were angry over some thing else, so you went ten miles to get a gunT" insisted the prosecutor. 'I did," replied Barnett. "I said that I was going back to town that night to help somebody get a little law and order." He added that the lynching of Wes ley Everetts, slayer of Dale Hubbard, and known as "the bad man," would not have taken place had he reached Centralia with his rifle. Two Witnesses Called. Two witnesses were ' called' by George F. Vanderveer. counsel for the defense, in direct support of Barnett's alleged alibi. They were J. C Mc Allister and his wife. Mary McAllister, proprietors of the Roderick hotel and owners of the property In which the L W. W. hall is situated. Both testified that Eugene Barnett was in the lobby of the Roderick throughout the affray, and that he was without a weapon, but In occa sional minor points their testimony differed, and differed also from the testimony of Barnett- Both were plainly nervous, the man asserting that he was without fear, and the woman declaring that her experience in jail and the stress of the Armistice day affair had proved a strain. McAllister, though asserting posi tively that Barnett was in the Rod erick and taht lie did not leave until the enraged veterans were disman tling the hall, said that he would not say that the soldiers opened the at tack. Attack am Hall fiat Seen. "Did you see anyone attack the L W. W. hall?" asked George F. Vander veer, L W. W. counsel "No, WASHINGTON, Feb. 19. An exten. sive review of the charges brought against William O. Jenkins, by the authorities of the state of Puebla, Mexico, is contained In a statement by Julio Mitchell, attorney-general of the state, published in Mexico City papers, copies of which have reached j tne state department. Among other things, the Puebla of ficial asserted that Jenkins was in the United States a month before he was kidnaped, where he "belonged to a group of interventionists who reside In the metropolis." Mexico needed to vindicate itself, Mitchell asserted, and it now has been vindicated, by means of the investigations In Puebla which would show, he added, "that there was no such kidnaping, but everything was a plot planned in the United States by wicked persons." - "In the event that justice is meted out to Jenkins, as it must necessarily be," the statement said, "the sentence must be a heavy one since we have an accumulation of grave crimes." NEW SHELL SETS RECORD Projectile for Dreadnaughts Bores . AVay Through 13-Inch Steel. WASHINGTON. Feb. 19. Boring its way through more than 13 Inches of armor-belt steel, a 16-lnch projectile produced at the new naval ordnance plant at South Charleston, W. Va., the third shell fired out of a test group of five, met every requirement in a test today at the Indian Head, Md., proving grounds and established what laval officers believe to be a record in big-shell production. The 16-lnch projectile, which weighs 2100 pounds, against the 1400 pounds of the 14-inch shell, will be turned out in quantities at the South Charles ton plant for the 16-lnch guns of the dreadnought-style ships under con struction. INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. TESTKRDAT'S Maximum temperature, 43 degrees; minimum, 31 degrees. TODAY'S Rain or snow; northerly winda Foreign. Russian soldiers praised by former prince. Page 7. Enlighten France on.Tltal Issues, is Presi dent Deschanel's plea to lawm&kera Page 3. Allies see danger for Europe in president's stand on Adriatic question. Pag 1. Domestic, California fruit to be SO per cent higher In price- is outlook. Psge 1. Hillqult predicts peaceful socialist victory at polls. I'age 22. Ford bitterly attacked in Newberry hear ing. Psgi! 2. Federal bonds favored to reclaim southern lands. Page 1. Mexicans release mine superintendent. Page 1. , National. Republican policy for campaign outlined. Page 1. Cut In commerce approprlstion may en danger foreign traae. rage 4. Legal battle over sale of former German liners Is forecast. Psge 22. Further changes loom In President Wil sons calilnet. rags a. Validity of prohibition amendment as serted by soncllor-gencrai. rags l. Two women burn to death In flro at Camp Dlx. Psge la. Federal head hints at grave problem. Page 6. Labor demands defeat railroad reorgani sation bill. Page . Pacific Northwest Love bought couldn't last long, says Haw ley In divorce suit. Psgs 1. Albsny aesault case becomes mystsry. Psge s. ! Bids on 20 Oregon bridges to bo opened by highway commision soon. Page -a. Wallowa murderer Is believed to have been caught. Page 2. Barnett in attempting alibi Jauntily up holds I. W. w. tenets and murder of legion men. Page 1. Sparta. Bout with Charley While held up as bait for winners ot Bchuman-Marshall go. Psge 14. Lincoln high basketers defeat Hill cadets. Page 14. Three clubs bid for Beaver baseball play- Page IO. Commercial and Marine, High vrices maintained la Oregon onion market. Page 23. Corn firmer at Chicago, with continued small receipts. Page 22. Railway stocks continue advance In Wall street. Page 23. Pacific International company Inrresses capital from 50.000 to 1200,000. Page 22. Portland and Vicinity, Lifesaving expert reaches Portland to lecture. Psge 8. ' County Assessor Reed not In race te suc ceed sell, rase . Ex-poMceman seta year In JalL Psge 18. Activities of reds pictured by "Big Bill" Fljnn. Page i Shriners from Texas on neios io siaa sell in Portland. Psg 21. sir: I never seen anything of Germany Is waiting time to j-epudlst. the kind." responded the witness. "What's the matter? Are IConUuued. ua , Cetums Ut tresty. declares war autnor, on visit ' to Portland. Pass la. TOU uA.-i evhihltnrs are seored at censorship meeting. Pas 4. OREGON CITT. Or., Feb. 19. (Spe cial.) Wlllard P. Hawley Jr.. defend, ant In the divorce suit of Marjorte Hawley, swore this afternoon that the night before the complaint wan filed he had lost all hope of a reconcile tlon when his wife asked him to agree to give her half of his prop erty. He told In detail of the events leading up to the final conference held at their home, after Mrs. Hawley had returned from Portland following a meeting with her sister, Mrs. Clif ford Ball. "Mrs. Hawley said she had a plan," testified Wlllard. "and I asked my father and mother to go for a walk and leave us alone for a while. I sug gested slso that Marjorie'a mother, Mrs, Fraker, go to one of the neigh bors. Then we sat down on the divan and I put my arms around her and told her I would do my part. Mar jorle told me she had talked the whole matter over with Zelma, her sister, and thought she was entitled to some financial consideration. I asked her to be specific and she re minded me that I bed promised to take her on a trip If the separation should be avoided and I told her that we would. Then she said that I ought to split my property 50-50 with her. Kf forts Held l-less. "That was the end of our converse-. tlon," continued young Hawley. "1 went to my parents and told them it was no use to prolong the agony: that if I tried to buy her love. It would not last." "How about the story she related about your saying your father had influence enough to buy courts and lawyers, and that she would have no chance In court?" asked Mr. Allen. "Well, my wife said that Clifford Ball had told her that If suit was filed she would receive one-third of my property and that her family would stand back of her. I told her that I expected her family would be back of her and that my family would be back of me. I asked her why we should go to law when all of our dif ferences were Just little spats." Court Reference Dlaavewra. "Did you ever at any time make any suggestion that your father could buy the courts?" queried the attorney. "Never." "Did you ever say that your father could keep you out of the draft?" "I am glad you have asked ma to make a statement about that" replied the witness. "I had heard such ru mors in Oregon City. I would be glad to have anyone look up the gov ernment records concerning me. I would be more then pleased to nave this matter cleared up." "Have you any emnlty toward your wife at present?" "No. I feel keenly about the charges she has made against me. and cannot understand why she made them." "Have you any deslrs to get even?" Hawley Is Heart-Droken. "No. I feel hurt about It. but per sonally t nave no i. ui even. When she decided to file her suit my heart was simply broken. 1 pleaded with her on my knees to be reconciled and asked her to think of our little baby, and I cried, but It made no impression on her. She told my mother that she had 'seen Wlllard cry before.' " The witness said that when things had reached their highest tension, his wife's mother went to the talking ma- hlne and played a dance record. He entered a flat denail of any Intimacy with his stenographer, Mrs. Robert Waddell. He said her busnand is an Income tax adviser and had been in Oregon City, but that after Mrs. Hawley had objected to his going to the mill during the noon hour and working with his stenographer on his kodak picture album, he bad discon tinued the practice. This was after he had objected to his wife going te the Oregon City hospital three times In four days to call on Thornton Howard, who was at the Institution. ' Side Iaaae Abandoned. "We agreed that there should be no, more pictures and no more Howard." said the witness, who told of going home the day the suit was filed and asking permission to take the baby for a ride, and bis wife's refusal because she thought Wlllard was going to keep the child. "Her attorney, Mr. Schuebel, told Grant Dimlck that we had tried to kidnap the baby." said Mr. Hawley. The witness said his wife bad been very indifferent in her attitude toward him for several days prior to the date of the filing of the suit, and that be bad no knowledge of it until he was called by telepnone to nr. jauoiuosd 08 l as. 2. toluma L