VOL. LIX. NO. 18,485 Entered at Portland 'Oregon) Po$toffice as Second-Class Matter. PORTLAND OREGON, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1920 PRICE FIVE CENTS RETAIL MEAT TRADE RISING RIVERS FLOOD ARIZONA LOWLANDS 8000 WILL ATTEND EDUCATIONAL SESSION SALARIES TO BE AMONG PROB LEMS DISCUSSED. Imam cc iii i o en r MICHIGAN COUNTY GOMPERS MEMORIAL EULOGY ROAD BILL FIGHT SHIFTS TO SENATE Speedy Passage by Upper Chamber Expected. IVIHI., JJ, rILLO OLLl BY LEAP OFF BRIDGE TOLD TO TRIM PRICE DEFIES GRY LAW FEDERAL PROBE WARNING POWER HOUSE IS INUNDATED; DAMS, BRIDGES IN DANGER. VICTIM IS BELIEVED TO BE SENT OUT BY PALMER. CHARLES B. WHITTINGTON. NEWLABOR PARTY PAD 1 HEROES Armed Expedition -Wil Suppress Open Revolt OFFICIALS OUST If. S. AGENTS Prohibition Rebellion Led by Prosecuting Attorney. WINE SEIZURE IS HALTED Federal Director for Central States to Lead Armed Party on "Cleanup" Raid Today. CHICAGO, Feb. 22. A "rebellion gainst prohibition" has broken out in Iron county, Michigan, and the county, led by its prosecuting: attor ney, is in "open revolt" against fed . eral authority. Major A. V. Dalrynv pie, federal prohibition director for tha central states, notified Washing;' ton today. Prohibition agents leading: a party of Michigan state constables were held up February 19 by Iron county officials and wine they had conns catcd was taken from them, accord. Ing to word brought to Chicago by Leo J. Grove of Marquette, Euper vising prohibition agent for the up per peninsula. Issue of Warrants Asked. Major Dalrymple appealed to At torney.Gcnerai Palmer, through As sistant Prohibition Director Gaylord, to order warrants issued for the ar rest of the prosecutor, two deputy sheriffs, two police officers and three other residents of Iron Kiver, a min ing village. While Washington was setting the legal machinery in motion, Dal rymple issued orders for a company of picked prohibition agents to gather here tonight preparatory to starting tomorrow on an armed expedition. --hlch. he declared, will "clean up' Iron county. The Michigan state constabulary will be asked to co-operate in the expedition. The attack on Grove- and his party occurred within two miles of the spot where Captain Marsh of the constabulary was recently shot by a bootlegger. Barrels of Wine Seise. Grove, accompanied by Lieutenant It. G. Strops and Troopers Masters and Kind of the state constabulary, seized 11 barrels of wine at the Vir gil location, a mine two miles from Iron River, he reported to Major Dal rymple today. The wine is said to have been made by John, Peter and Steven Scalcuccl, wealthy Italians, who own the packing plant and gen eral store at Iron River. Grove loaded the liquor into a sleigh and started to move it to Caspian. When the sleigh reached Iron River it was met by P. A. McDon ough, prosecuting attorney; Chard and Jesse Allen, deputy sheriffs of Iron county; C. H. Sensiba, chief of police, and Claude Brown, police captain, of Iron River. Grove Is Overpowered. McDonough, according to Grove's report, told the prohibition super, visor that he was "under arrest for transporting liquor," and ordered his men to seize the wine. Grove says he put up a fight, but was overpow ered. The wine, he said, was re turned to the Scalcucci brothers by McDonough, who, the report adds, told the brothers to post an armed guard over it with orders to shoot if the federal agent tried to regain pos session. After receiving the report Major Dalrymple asked that Attorney-General Palmer Instruct the United States commissioner at Marquette, Mich-, to issue the warrants. Grove reported that Myron H. Walker, dis trict attorney at Grand Rapids, bad ordered the commissioner to issue no warrants without first submitting them to him. which takes from five to IS days. Manufacture la Admitted. Samples or the wine seized in the raid, taken some time ago, tested 14 per cent alcohol. Grove told Major Dalrymple. The Scalcucci brothers admitted, he said, that they had made the stuff from a carload of raisins. Attorney-General Palmer, who stopped in Chicago tonight en route to Topeka. Kan., told newspaper men that his office was ready to furnish all co-operation possible to prohibi tion agents. An appeal addressed through Dan iel Roper, internal revenue commis sioner in the regular way. will bring an investigation of the Michigan case, he said. Jt may be possible, he added, to perfect arrangements whereby the Cnlted States commissioner at Mar quette may issue m-arrants without waiting to submit the facts to the district attorney at Grand Rapids. Mich-, said Mr. Palmer. Cost to Consumer Must Follow De- dine in Wholesale Quotations, Says Attorney-General. CHICAGO, Feb. 22. Retail meat dealers throughout the country must reduce their prices as the wholesale price of meat declines or else sub mit their books to federal agents for investigation of their profits. This definition of the government's attitude was announced tonight by Attorney - General Palmer. Instruc tions to serve the notice on retail meat dealers have been sent to every United States attorney, he said. "For three months the wholesale price of meat has been falling.' said Mr. Palmer. "The retail dealers have claimed that their supplies were old stock purchased at the higher prices. The old stocks should be exhausted by this time, and unless the price to the consumer comes down we will have to look into the question of dealer:' profits." The attorney-general also an nounced that the terms of the agree ment for the dissolution of the allied interests of the five big Chicago packers had been settled and would be filed in federal court next Fri day. Mr. Palmer's pronouncement on the meat price situation follows the pub lication by the Institute of American Meat Packers of a bulletin announc ing the practical cessation of for eign trade as a result of the adverse exchange situation. Wholesale meat prices at the Chicago stockyards dropped to pre-war levels for some grades, following the publication Results Detrimental Workers Forecast. to Salt River Valley Is Threatened; Stranded' Men Refuse to Leave Homes With Rescue Parties. PHOENIX, Ariz.. Feb. 22. An apron Question of $1200 to $2100 Scale for Instructors Now Getting: Only $630 Is Slated. CLEVELAND. Feb. 22. More than INDIANA LEADER IS WARNED Political Scheme Branded as Full of Danger. BROAD POLICY DEFENDED Welfare of Humanity Demands Ban on "Experiments," De clares Federation Chief. PROSECUTOR DEFENDS STAND Iron County Official Charges Per secution by U. S. Agents. IRON RIVER, Mich, Feb. 21. "The people up in this country are entitled to protection and they are going to get it, so long as it is within my power to give It to them." Such was the reply made tonight EDWARDS ATTACKS BRYAN New Jersey Governor to Ask "Wet' Plank at Convention. . ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Feb. 22. Governor Edwards of New Jersey an nounced here today his intention of going to the national democratic con vention at San Francisco prepared to fight for an anti-prohibition plank in the party platform. He criticised William Jennings Bryan, whom he designated "a man without a state, and declared that he had no fear that Mr. Bryan will seriously injure the party should the convention take an anti-prohibition stand. Governor Edwards said he was convinced that both parties must face the prohibition issue as the livest that will come be fore the national conventions. -I don't care who is the party's "candidate, said the Governor. " My only concern is to see this question of national prohibition threshed out. It is not a matter of liquor; it's a question of principle. Personal lib erty and states' rights are involved." WOMEN DRIVERS BLAMED Accidents Attributed to Lack of Judgment In Emergencies. LOS ANGELES, Feb. 22. Captain James McDowell, head of the police traffic bureau, declared here today that in his judgment, based on acci dent statistics, women should be barred by law from driving automo biles. Women are equal to men as drivers, he said, but when an emergency arises, "Well, women are women," is his conclusion. Captain McDowell said that SO per cent of the toll of 891 accidents and 20 deaths in the last six months here involved women drivers, and that only 20 per cent of the drivers were of the female sex. TOTS SEEK TRAIN TRIP But "Kiddies," Not Even Knowing Names, Are Rescued by Police After riding to the North Bank station on their "kiddie" cars and try ing to buy tickets to "somewhere two youthful adventurers about " years of age admitted to Patrolman Recdahl last night that they oian i know the way home. Consequently, they were taken to the police station and placed in the custody of Matron Patterson while the police tried to locate the homes of the two young fugitives. One of the two little boys said his name was Roy Thorenson and the other said his was Junior. Neither could give the names or addresses of their parents. PORTUGUESE PRINCE DEAD Duke of Oporto, Brother of Late King. Passes at Naples. LONDON, Feb. 22. Prince Alfonso of Braganza. Duke of Oporto, died Saturday at Naples, acording to a dis patch to the Central News from Rome. The Duke of Oporto was a brother of the late King Carlos of Portugal, and after former King Manuel was heir apparent to the Portuguese throne. The duke "married Mrs. Philip Van-Valkenburg of New York In Rome in September, 1917. PEACE BODY HEAD NAMED WASHINGTON, Feb. 22. Formation of a political labor party would be "detrimental to the Interests of labor and exactly in line with that which is most ardently desired by those who seek to oppress labor," Samuel Gom- pers declared in a letter to William Mitch of Terre Haute, a leader of the Indiana state labor party, made public here today. Mr. Gompers wrote in reply to a telegram from Mitch and his as sociates supporting the action of the Indiana state labor party in opposing the political declaration of the Amer ican Federation of Labor calling on organized workingmen to elect thei friends and defeat their enemies. Mitch's telegram declared in favor of making the fight solely through a labor party. Gompers Issues Challenge. "By what right," wrote Mr. Gom pers, "do you assume to declare the work and the policy of the American Federation of Labor to be imprac tical? Surely the results achieved in the interests of the workers demon strate the utter . fallacy of your as sumption. By your declaration you assert the practicability of the course you de clare you will pursue. What experi ence have you had with your political party upon which to base so absurd a claim? 'Of this one thing you may rest assured, that the day of reckoning is at hand for an of those who are in antagonism to the cause of labor, and for those who are. subtle and equally guilty even though they clothe their actions in the robes of. pretended friendship. ' Gross Injustice Charged. When you shall have learned the lesson of the real struggle of labor and the cause for which our move ment stands, you may become peni tent for the gross injustice you have done by your pretension and your course. The effect of a separate political labor party can only be disastrous to the wage-earners of our country and to the Interests of all forward-loojc- lng people. The votes that would go to a labor party candidate would, in the absence of such candidate, go to the best man in the field. In no case would they go to an enemy of labor; "There can be no hope for success ' below Roosevelt dam, which protects S000 delegates had registered tonight (Concluded on Page 2. Column 2.) an electrical power house, went out early tonight in the flood that is sweeping Salt River valley, accord ing to reports received here shortly after 10 o'clock. Five additional spans of Agua Fria bridge, 15 miles west of Phoenix, also went out early in the evening, observers report. For the second time within the past 24 hours, traffic over the South Central-avenue bridge, just south of Phoenix, was discontinued. It is con sidered the longest concrete and ce ment, bridge in the United States. Water was running several, inches deep over both approaches, it was an nounced, and was rising at the rate of seven inches an hour. Heavy rains are reported in the mountainous region which drains into the Salt, Verde and Tonto rivers. A Santa Fe train from the north, the first in 36 hours, reached Phoenix late tonight. , A local amusement park was inun dated tonight and several structures were bending under the pressure of the high water. Scores of reclamation employes and county officials are working dili gently to keep the flood waters free of debris. The epill over Granite Reef dam, which regulates the flow through Salt River valley, was reported at eight feet,the highest in the history of the dam, and to be rising rapidly. A portion of the valley lowlands already are inundated, but officials declare! that all persons living in the flooded territory had been warned in ample time and were safe. The sheriff's office answered a half dozen calls for help. Two Japanese truck gardeners, stranded on an island in mid-stream of the Salt river, could not be located after a party had fought its way to the island. Two other men, also marooned on a flood-made island, refused to leave their homes when the sheriff and his deputies rowed their way to the island. The Verde river, one of the two largest drain basins of the mountain ous region east of Phoenix and the valley, went up two feet between and S o'clock, when the last reports were received. The Salt river, fed by the Roosevelt dam, also was reported rising, but not to such a marked ex tent. Alt bridges over the Salt river are closed to traffic, the water being several feet deep along the river bottom. At Roosevelt dam the water was 7.44 feet over the spillways and still rising. The power house, nearly four feet under water, baa been shut down. State Engineer Thomas Maddock dispatched a crew of men to the Tempe bridge, 12 miles southeast of this city, with a quantity of dynamite. The men were instructed to dynamite the bridge if the pressure became too great. A local stags line reported five automobile stages stranded at iso lated spots on the 'Apache trail be tween Phoenix and Roosevelt dam. wim no means of food and shelter. The flood conditions of the many creeks and streams to the Salt river basin is due to almost continuous rainfall during the past 60 hours, pre ceded by heavy rains last week. to attend the semi-centennial meet ing of the department of superin tendency of the National Education association and 50 other policy-determining bodies of the educational field from all parts of the country. Approximately 8000 delegates are ex pected when the first meeting opens Tuesday. During the week many leading ed ucators will discuss educational prob lems and the convention will adopt resolutions respecting solution. The only meeting held today was a conference of the committee on. na tional emergency in education, repre sentative of all groups of education, which discussed the questions of shortage and salaries of teachers and the Smith-Towner bill to create a secretary of education in the presi dent's cabinet and a $100,000,000 an nnal federal subsidy for public schools. Scores of educators and teachers oc cupied Cleveland pulpits at services. The problem of finding approxi mately 50,000 well-trained teachers to take positions either vacant or filled with incompetents now, accord ing to educators, and the question of a minimum salary schedule of $1200 per annum for beginners and a max imum of $2100 for the 600,000 ele mentary school teachers receiving $630 per annum, according to the re port of the bureau of education, will be the paramount topics before the convention. Other important ques tions will Include: Passage of the Smith-Towner bill; universal military training; health crusade throughout the school systems including a con crete programme for physical culture; broadening of the Americanization work as applied to schools and teach ers; affiliation of teachers' organiza tions with labor unions; necessity of teaching patriotism In the public schools, and whether a course in pa triotism should be made a part of the curriculum. The Smith-Towner bill, creating an additional federal cabinet position. has caused much speculation among delegates as to whether a man or woman should be chosen if the bill passes. Among those mentioned as candi dates for the position is Mrs. Mary C. Bradford, superintendent of public In structlon for Colored and-prst prcei dent of the National Education asso ciation. Mrs. Bradford, when asked her opin ion as to whether or not a demand. for woman secretary of education would be made, said Whether a man or woman fills this important position Is of small mo ment. It is my hope that the bill will be enacted into law and that the first secretary of education, whether man or woman, may be Ideally fitted to serve the nation." Legion Services Rever ence Dead Comrades. HEART THROBS ARE EVOKED Presentation of French Cer tificates Brings Tears. "OCCASION SOLEMN JOY' Edgar B. Piper, In Address, Terms Event One of Jubilation for Heroie Sacrifices. . Mother and Babe Die. KLAMATH FALLS. Or., Feh. 22. (Special.) Twenty-four hours after Mrs. Rebecca Lakey succumbed to an attack of influenza-pneumonia, ber son, Benjamin, 18 months old, died of the disease. The bodies were buried together. The husband and father, Levi Lakey, is recovering from pneumonia. HAD YOU NOTICED IT? OLA CtMX SE.H.v'V'b ,EE.M.SY' RUN rQeViT A "5 SfAOO-YrA AWttEH Wt To BE aooo faR. f:fP. TWO tAo, fsM Y H'W Ho umQT AvSOVlT IT 7 OrV OEM 1 H TW I 1 ' Tewfik Pasha Appointed on Turk ish Delegation. CONSTANTINOPLE, "F eb. 33. The newspapers today announced that Tewfik Pasha, former grand vizier, had been appointed to head the Turk ish peace delegation, which will In clude Naby Bey, former ambassador to Rome: Mustapha Rechad. also a former ambassador to Italy, and Hlk met Bey, president of the chamber of deputies. The delegation will "If ye break faith with ui who die We shall not sleep, tho' poppies blow In Flanders field." It was after the last strains of 'Star-Spangled Banner" had died with the echo. The audience had filed out of the auditorium, leaving only the fathers and mothers and sons and daughters of those who sleep be neath the soil of France alone with their thoughts and their memories. A name was called. Cassius R. Peck, commander of Portland post, American Legion, held aloft a parch ment a certificate of appreciation from the French high commission to an American youth who had made the supreme sacrifice in the forests of the Argonne. Down in the second row a little old lady stood to her feet. Her eyes glistened with tears which came with her memories. A boy scout paced down the aisle and placed the parchment in her hands. She clasped it to her breast. Then her face lighted with a bright, proud smile, for the parch ment was to her a personal message from the people of France telling her that her boy had not died in vain. Kim Are Remembered. Then for nearly an hour the fath era and mothers of Portland youths who went to France never to return sat in the almost empty auditorium awaiting the call of their names in order that they might receive these certificates of . appreciation from a grateful sister republic. And not until the last certificate had been presented did the memorial service to Portland's hero dead come to a fitting close. With prayer and eulogy and martial music befitting the occasion, Portland post, American Legion, conducted the memorial service in reverence to its comrades who died In France and In order that certificates of appreciation from the republic of France might be presented to the surviving relatives. Ashen Are Consecrated. "No poor word of mine can en hance or diminish the glory of those boys whose sacred ashes have been committed to the consecrated soil of France," said Edgar B. Piper, who de livered the eulogy. "I would not strike the golden chord of memory, of affection and of gratitude which ties you to those graves in France. France has sum moned you here to pay its homage and to acknowledge the service of your sons. It is an occasion for joy. not for tears; for proud and solemn jubilation, not vain regret. I would not say that we should rejoice be cause your boys have served and died, but I do say that we should be filled with solemn pride in knowing they were able to serve and that they died in honor and sleep in peace. "The message of France to you is one of congratulation for the heroic service given by your sons and broth ers, and of thankfulness that you gave them to France to do the things which they did." Efforts at Resuscitation Are of No Avail; Witnesses Get Boat and- Rescue Body, A man about 55 years old, believed to be Charles B. Whlttington, who had worked intermltently for the last 15 years as a salesman for the Singer Sewing Machine company, committed suicide last night shortly after 7:30 o'clock by Jumping Into the Willamette river from the Morrison street bridge. Rescue of the man was effected as he came to the surface for the sec ond or third time, but efforts to re suscitate him were unavailing. Mem bers of the police force worked for some little time over the body, but when unsuccessful in restoring life, turned the body over to the coroner. There were many pedestrians on the bridge at the time Whlttington made the junta. Eyewitnesses said that he suddenly put his hands on the railing and made the leap with out warning. He was near the west side of the river and on the north side of the bridge at the time. U Wheatley, 127 Union avenue, and A. Whitaker, 404 East Thirty r venth street, hastened to a nearby boathouse and helped M. McMillan, night manager of the place, put out in a boat. They reached Whlttington as he came up for the second time. they thought. The impact of the leap was believed to have contributed to the man's death. The Identification as Whlttington was made by the police from papers in the man's pockets. None of Mr. Whittlngton's acquaintances has identified the body. They said, how ever, that he had been despondent over poor health, and expressed no surprise over his supposed suicide. Mr. Whlttington worked for the company's office at 110 Grand avenue. He had one son. MANIA PROMPTS ATTACK Erzberger Thought to Be After English Money. BERLIN, Feb. 22.--"I was con vinced that Erzberger was working for English money for private gain only" Ensign von Hirschfield yester day told the court at his trial, when asked the motive which actuated his alleged attempt to murder the min ister of finance. The young officer admitted that Dr. Karl Helfferich's pamphlet "Away with Ene'nerger," served as one sourae of his information, while other acts, such as Herr Erzberger's change of front on the question of annexation, heightened his antlnscav. He described the method of his at tack, repeatedly asserting that he had intended only to Injure Erzberger so as to confine him to his bed for several weeks. Alienists who examined Ensign von Hirschfield pronounced his act "the deed of a fanatic suffering from hallucinations." Ensign von Hirschfield was sen tenced to 18 months' imprisonment. RIGHT OF mi IS CONCEDED Peace Treaty and Other Measures Sidetracked. END STILL IS UNCERTAIN Only Adverse Chances Are for Fili buster or Presidec'lal Veto; Leaders Are Hopeful. TRANSP0RTJ3N WAY EAST President Grant to Carry Czecho slovak Troops to Homes. SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 22. The army transport President Grant, for merly a German liner and second only in size to the Mount Vernon, now In port, arrived here today from New WASHINGTON, Feb. Final fight on tha railroad BUI, ten month in the making, will shift tomorrow to the senate, with leaders predicting Its speedy enactment by an overwhelm- ng vote. The conference report, a compro mise whipped together from the fun damentals of the Cummins and Kara bills, fresh from the house with a clean margin of (I votes, will be laid before the senate Immediately after the reading of Washington's farewell address. It will have the right of way over 'tha peace treaty and all other measurer and, while the sentte works according to Its own fancy. It could concur with the lower branch In half an hour or hold up tha bill by filibustering methods until March I, the date fixed by President Wilson for return of the roads to private con trol. Uaaarrr Thnaa-ht Panned. But. having come through the hours, admittedly the danger point. In the view of advocates of the measure, the general opinion among senators to night was that no serious opposition would develop and that the law under which the roads will attempt to work out their own salvation after the lonn period of federal control, would be In the hands of the president by tha middle of the week. There was wide discussion today over the possibility of the wrecking of the bill by a presidential veto. There was considerable Interest In the meeting her tomorrow of the general committeemen of all the rail way labor organizations to discuss the president's proposal for settle ment of wage grievances. Organized labor mad its fight In the house with varying success, ac cording to the Individual views ot members, While there still was much talk about further efforts, designed to reach the senate, there were -. indications that organised labur hoped to sway the senate to the point of dofcatlng all railroad legl--' lation. t Veto, However, Passible. Few members of the senate it house were willing to go so far in to predict that the bill might be vetoed. There was no doubt that the big democratic vote cast against the bill in the housfe was a surprise to re publican leader and even to many democrats, who had declared that In framing railway reorganisation American History Traced. Mr. Piper traced the history of America from the time that the strug gling colonies, under the leadership of George Washington, appealed to France for succor in her darkest hour of need; and of how Lafayette, his heart touched by America's ap peal for libefiy and freedom, crossed the seas and made it possible for this country to be freed from the yoke of British domination and oppression. He expressed his gratification that the memorial services should be of fered on the day which all America sets aside to commemorate the natal anniversary of George Washington, because the bond which unites Amer ica to France became one of ever lasting friendship d gratitude when France, through Lafayette, assisted the American colonies to gain their Independence. "And Oius it is doubly fitting that this day should be selected in order that France might pay homage to her sister republic and give due recognition to the dead who sleep beneath the soil of Flanders," he said. Peek Pays Tribute. " Cassius R. Peck, post commander, offered a feeling tribute to his dead comrades as he outlined the purposes for which the memorial service was being held. "The record of those deceased com rades has been written into our na tional history." he said. "The per petuation of our American institu tions is the perpetuation of their records. Their willing sacrifice in the promulgation of a principle is a ful filled guarantee of freedom and lib erty to the peoples of the world. The old stars and stripes which they car ried on foreign soil represents the in- INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. YESTERDAY'S MaJlmum trm pert lure. 62 degrees; minimum, 31 degrees. TODAY'S Fair; northeasterly winds. Foreign. Peaee conference today to dlscuvs trad resumption with Russia. Page 2. London papers arouaed over decision to leave Constantinople to Turks, fag 2. 'atlonnl. Gompers declares labor party would prove to be detriment. Psgo 1. Final fight on railroad bill shift to senate today. Pace I. Retail meat denlers warned to rcduc prices. Page 1. Domestic. County in Michigan openly revolts against dry law. Paga 1. Chicago completely won over by lecturas of Frank Branch Riley. Pago 4. Floods threaten big dams in Arizona. Page 1. Eight thousand expected to attend edu cational session In Cleveland. Page 1. Hoax Is perpetrated by soviet Russia Pago 4. Pacific North west. Fare A. Stelnmets. Portland, electer prea t Ident ot Christian Endeavorera. Pago 3. Dancer to fishing Industry revealed by Washington commissioner. Page 3. Wallace Is choice of Beattle Bourbons to succeed Lansing. Page . Sport. Shannon's claims to coast title roll Eddls Marino, rage o. "Death Valley" Jim finds blr league talent on coast. Page S. 1919 proves year of "big wind" in baseball trading, rage . Portland and Vicinity. Memorial eulogy paid war heroes. Page 1. Eleventh annual auto show opens tonight. Pago 16. Research may give Columbia baaln cheap coal. Pago 11. Retail merchants of Oregon go on record as boosters tor oome inuuaines. Pago 10. February la called the month of great men. Page IS. Public asks more Interest on bonds. Pa as 11. Captain Hogan la back from war service. Page 1. Charles B. wnimngton commits sniciao b" leaping irgra juvruwn hiuic Palfl 1. City pays tribute to nation' father. Page 4. Delay to bonus for veterans expected by York, en route to the far east. The vessel will coal here before legislation partisanship should not proceeding to Kobe and Yokohama to 1 figure. discharge 5000 tons of freight. From I Yokohama she will go to Vladivostok . U. S. OWNERSHIP HELD DHL' AM to aid in the repatriation of Czecho- Slovak troop. iPomerene Raps Men "Whose Heads Are Always Above Clouds." NEW YORK, Feb. 22 Government ownership as a solution of th na tion' railroad problem Is being ad vocated in this country by a class of men "whose head are alway bov the clouds and whove feet are never on the ground," United Plates Sen ator Pomeren of Ohio, declared in an address her last night. He added that it "would tak a mlrroacop of greater magnifying power than any heretofore made to discover on man entertaining sorb, views who would be entrusted with the management of the roads." "Let us remember," said Pomererm, "that with an increa of passenger rate approximating SO per cent and n Increase of freight rates in ex cess of 2S per cent in two years of government operation, there I a net los conceded of over $700,000,000 and unliquidated claim held by th rail roads for depreciation aggregating 1375.000.000. And, if the amount ulti mately found to be du In thl behalf ahould be only 2II-I per cent of the total, it would add another f 1 1 ., 000.000 to th t700.000.000 of los al ready admitted, making the total los .825,000,000, or more than ft.OvO.000 per day during th period of govern ment control." New equipment for the roads I required at once, Senator Pomeren declared, adding that one of th ablest railroad men in th country estimated that 100.000 refrigerator, coal, box and miscellaneous car ar needed. "Very few passenger coaches wr bought In the last year," he said, "and at present 4000 new car ar required and 2000 new locomotive. Th se gregate cost of this quipmnt, based on present prices. Is about $723,000. 000. From $(00,000,000 to $1,000,000, 000 will b needed per annum for several years to come." The impression that th railroad stocks ot the country ar owned by men of great wealth la only partially Concluded oa Page 4, Columa 4.) tcoauuued oa Po 4. Column l. number about S tConciudod oa Page 3. Column lo. iJeuienaui-i.oiuM ,