Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, March 12, 1920, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    -- S " ;
. .- .. S -s
V
: : - .
VOL. LIX. NO. lSlOl
Entered at Portland (Oregon)
pnstnfflce a-" Second-Ola Matter.
PORTLAND OREGON, FRIDAY, SlARCII 12, 1920
26 PAGES
PRICE FIVE CENTS
PALMER'S ENTRY
MOTHER AND BABY
WILSON SCORED BY
FAITHFUL FOLLOWER
FAULT FOR TREATY DEADLOCK
LAI TO PRESIDENT.
FEMININE PRODIGALS'
PLAINT IS FLOUTED
LEFT
NATIONAL DECADENCE
SUBLIMATED LOVE ;
ARE KILLED BY GAS
BLAMED ON WOMEN
TO GRIP RUSSIA
IN CYCLONE PATH
PURITAN MANIA" SCORED BVH
BODIES OF MRS. A'. I. LAMBERT
A"D CHILD FOIXD IX BED.
WOMEN WASTERS WHO PRO
' TEST RENTS DECRIED.
CHICAGO DOCTOR.
DEATH AIR SEEMS
MA
PLEASES WORKERS
COMMUfJIST IDEAL
..-.I
Candidacy Gives Party
Heads Encouragement.
PRESIDENT STILL IS SILENT
McAdoo's Conduct Thought
Not Sportsmanlike.
NOTHING IS YET SETTLED
Democrats Would Disintegrate if
Hoover Were dominated and
Then Beaten.
BT MARK SULLIVAN.
(Copvright, by N. T. Evening Post,
Inc.. Published by Arrangement.)
WASHINGTON. March 11. Attorney-General
Palmer's entrance into
the presidential race this week was
followed by statements to the effect
that the act was taken In pursuance
of an understanding with the presi
dent, and that "Palmer in the race
means Wilson out." This in turn has
been followed by denials. The way
this episode came about gives an op
portunity to get the first glimpse of
clarification in the democratic situa
tion. For more than three months I
powerful group of democrats who are
strong in the party organization have
been urging Mr. Palmer to be a can
didate. Undoubtedly Mr. Palmer has
wanted to run, for he is an exception
llv ambitious man. But he felt
obliged to take the position that he
could not announce himself bo long
as he did not know and had no way
of finding out whether such an act
would be agreeable to the president.
Preaideat'e Silence Embarrasses.
The president's silence has been
embarrassing to the friends not only
of Mr. Palmer but of Mr. McAdoo as
well. On Mr. Palmer's part the ir
resolution forced upon him by the
conditions persisted as late as last
Saturday. Then a situation arose
which made It possible for Mr. Pal
mer to get in the race not so much on
his own account as in the role of a
volunteer giving help to the adminis
tration. In Georgia one of President Wil
son's bitterest enemies within the
party, ex-Senator Hardwick, was
making an effort to capture the dem
ocratic delegation on an anti-Wilson
i5sue and t,hose democrats in Georgia
.who are loyal to Wilson needed some
candidate favorable to Wilson to
make the fight. The opening was
presented to Mr. Palmer and he
jumped into it.
Initiative Comes From GMnrli,
Mr. Palmer in his public telegram
of acceptance to these Georgia demo
crats was careful to make it clear
that the initiative came from the
democrats of Georgia and not from
him. In the same spirit he stated the
reason for his act in these words: "I
derm it highly Important that the
democrats of Georgia should have the
opportunity to directly pass upon the
record made by the present adminis
tration and the candidacy of one who
supports that record in every phase."
Deputy Coroner Decides to Hold
Autopsy Husband Employed
In Candy Factory Here.
i
Mrs. Albyn I. Lambert and her 154-
year-old baby girl were found dead,
apparently from asphyxiation, at the
Lambert home, 20V4 Grand avenue
North, yesterday afternoon.
Deputy Coroner Leo Goetsch, who
took charge of the bodies, announced
that an autopsy would be held to de
termine the cause of death.
The two were lying on the bed and
when found had apparently been dead
but a short time. A gas water heater
was burning in a rear. room. The
water tank had burned dry and the
air was filled with the odor of burn
ing paint.
The woman and the baby were ly
ing on the bed and they had appar
ently been, either asphyxiated or had
died from suffocation, Mr. Goetsch
said. ' ' .'
Motorcycle Patrolman Schad and
Detective John Moloney also made an
investigation.
Mr. Lambert is a candy maker, em
ployed in a local factory.
Suffering and Privation
Fearfully Depressing.
AGONY ENDURED BY MILLIONS
Belgians, French Nor Ger
mans Can Cite No Equal.
LENINE PROVES PARADOX
OLIVES FOUND POISONED
Gninca Pig Killed by Liquid Taken
From Bottle.
DENVER, March 11. Poisoned
olives were discovered in this city
today after one woman was made se
riously ill. A warning has been is
sued by W. F. Cannon, state food and
drug commissioner. The woman, Mrs.
M. E. Blake, used the olives in a
salad dressing. Another is slightly
ill.
High Soviet Official Flashes Along
In Automobile While Poor
Stumble in Streets.
CHICAGO, March 11. Contaminat
ed elk meat and .not poisoned olives,
probably was responsible for the
death of five persons near Kalispell,
Mont., recently, according to Sprague,
Warner & Co.. wholesale grocers who
had sold the stuffed ripe olives eaten
by the Montana family.
Federal officials traced the deaths
to bacillus botullnuH, after liquid from
the olive bottle had Jellied a guinea
pig. The grocers claimi however, that
the victims had eaten meat from an
elk carcass - known to' have been
tainted.
Federal chemists have not com
pleted their investigation of olive
samples collected in eight stales fol
lowing the. deaths in the west.
CASH HIDERS SENTENCED
Two Men and Woman Admit Con
cealment of $40,000.
HELENA, Mon., March 11. Oswald
and Elmer Watkins, brothers, and
Mrs. Aenes Watklns. wife of the lat
ter, entered pleas of guilty in district
court here today to grand larceny by
hiding $40,000 alleged to lave been
stolen from the Union Bank &. Trust
company of this city last November.
Upon the plea, of Prosecuting At
torney Loble for leniency. District
Judge Word sentenced them to a term
of one to two years in the state peni
tentiary and suspended the sentences.
Charles Steven?, a bank messenger.
was convicted last week of stealing
the money and sentenced to a term
of seven to ten. years in the peni
tentiary. Oswald Watkins is declared
to have confessed that with Frank
Smith, be found the money where
Stevens hid it. About $17,000 has
been recovered. Smith has not been
arrested.
That appeasing language can fairly
be interpreted as indicating a deter- i GERMAN VERSION GIVEN
BT LINCOLN EYRE
(Copyright by the New York World. Pub
lished by Arrangement.)
PARIS, March 11. The first thing
that impressed Itself with photo
graphic clarity on my consciousness
a few moments after our arrival in
Moscow was the sight of Leon Trots
ky, people's commissary of war, rac
ing through the Tverskaja in a big
limousine. .The second was the spec-,,
tacle of an old woman dragging be
hind her a diminutive sled, heaped
with small logs, falling down on the
ice-slippery pavement .
That the old woman should have
fallen was of little moment, for she
was evidently unhurt, but that of
many passersby not one .should have
gone to her assistance was a painful
phenomenon. In any great city out
side Russia a dozen persons would
have hurried to help the old dame to
her feet.
Now the Moscovites are not less
kind or courteous than other folk; it
is simply that If they undertook to
pick up every woman who slipped
down in the snow they would be thus
engaged all day long. - In Moscow
there is too much big distress to make
the lesser troubles even noticeable.
Comrade Trotzky and the poor little
babooshka (grandmother) tottering
along with her sled of logs were both
of the proletariat, therefore both dic
tators over the erstwhile empire of
the czars. Yet the difference betveen
them was as broad as that separating
Nicholas II from Leon Trotzky three
years ago. That is the paradox of
proletariat dictatorship and of Mos
cow. Substituting sleighs for taxicabs,
snow for asphalt and sheepskins and
furs for tailor-made clothes, the scene
that met our eyes as we emerged from
the big terminus in the capital of
the soviet republic differs little from
that which one beholds outside the
Grand Central station. New Tork.
There were porters, though their skin
was white or fairly so and they did
not wear red caps. They were paid,
and well paid, for their services.
The taxi chauffeurs, or rather the
sleigh-driving isvostchiki, also got
paid, and at exorbitant rates. ' Two
(Concluded on Page , Column 1.)
Senator Ashurst Wanders Away
From Grain Resolution Dis- .
cussioa to Fix Blame.
i
OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU,
Washington, March 11. Serious criti
cism and a touch of humor marked
the discussion in the senate this af
ternoon on the Reed resolution to in
vestigate the United States grain cor
poration and charges made by a Spo
kane federal grand jury against Max
H. Houser of -Portland. Or.,, grain ad
ministrator of the northwest.
Senators' Chamberlain of - Oregon
and Kellogg of Minnesota took the
serious side of the question, while
Senator Ashurst of Arizona became
facetious in elaborating on the al
leged political tinge of the resolu
tion, declaring it was aimed at Her
bert Hoover and not at the grain cor
poration. Mr. Ashurst also assailed
President Wilsoii's handling of the
peace treaty. . '
Hoover Is Defended.
Senator Chamberlain said ' be
would not oppose the resolution, but
that he thought the investigation be
ing made by the department of jus
tice was adequate. He defended Mr."
Hoover as a man of fine character
and a patriotic citizen, after which
he said: t
The strange part about this whole
situation to me is that a grand Jury,
acting upon the advice of a trained
lawyer, should go to work and make
a damning report against an Indi
vidual without finding an indictment
against him. It seems to me that if
these men were justly criticised in
the report' of the grand jury,- there
must have been enough evidence to
have warranted their prosecution and
conviction."
Senator Kellogg, like Senators Ash
hurst an Chamberlain, said he was
not opposed to the resolution, but he
paid a high personal tribute to the
men who managed the grain corpora
tion. Senator Ashhurst said:
Ashurst Favors Motiom.
"I am heartily in favor of the mo
tion. We have only 66 Investigating
committees out. Each committee that
is conducting an investigation is a
joke and we ought to have another
investigation because we need another
joke. This is the season for jokes, so
I think tlje resolution ought to pass
unanimously. ,
"I hope that no one will object to
the resolution, for I understand that
it is not an investigation of the grain
corporation, but is an indirect thrust
at Mr. Hoover. ' Let us therefore add
the name of Mr. 'Hoover and strike
out all the other parts.
"Mr. Hoover will never be president
because he is not a democrat, but if
he would say the words, 'I am a demo
crat,' he would be elected president,
because he can do things."
Senator Ashurst wandered away
from the discussion, which began
with the resolution to investigate the
grain corporation. He asserted there
was an effort to keep the peace treaty
before the senate in order to avoid
consideration ot other questions, such
as universal military training and sol
diers' relief.
Then he startled his hearers by re
ferring to the treafy situation. He
wound up with this parting shot at
Apartment House Proprietor Tells
of People Who Wear $20 Shoes
' ' ' and Want Rales Cut.
SAN FRANCISCO, March 11.--"Many
of the women wljo are demanding j
rent reductions in San Francisco are
wearing $20 shoes and $3.50 silk stock- i
ings and spend as much as $12 at a j
single sitting in a cafe," C. K. Nicker- j
bocker. an apartment - house pro
prietor, told the public welfare com'
mlttee of the board of supervisors
here today in a hearing on apartment
and hotel tariffs. '
The hearing' followed a meeting of
the committee att which it received
the complaints of tenants against ex
isting rents.- The evidence of both
hearings is for the benefit of the
city attorney's office in an effort to
see if corrective measures by the city
are necessary.
SAN FRANCISCO, 'March 11. A
meeting of 35 representative mer
chants, federal officials and former
food administration executives was
called In. the. federal building here
today for the announced purpose of
"rounding up and stigmatizing the
food and clothing profiteer ., and
stabilizing and normalizing the cost
of vital commodities here." The con
ference was suggested by the mer
chants to determine the best possible
means of overcoming the unrest re
sultant on high prices..
"Shepherd of the Hills"
Country Stricken..
HOMES ARE CARRIED AWAY
WASHINGTON, March 11. Efforts
of the government to check profiteer
ing have resulted in 1046 prosecutions
under the Lever food control act, At
torney-General Palmer announced to
day.
Convictions have been obtained and
sentences Imposed in a total of 107
cases, Mr. Palmer said. In 744 addi
tional cases indictments have been
returned and the accused are awaiting
trial.
In addition to the drive on profiteers,
Mr. Palmer reported tha large quan
tities of foodstuffs had been forced
on the market by operation of the
law. .
Buildings Demolished; Num
ber of Injured Unknown.
REGION CELEBRATED ONE
Ozark Hills In Missouri Scene of
One of Most Violent Torna
does in History.
POLES BUY ARMY GOODS
(Concluded on Page 3, Column 2.)
Soldiers to Be Re-equipped by Pur
chase in United States.
WARSAW, March 11. (By the As
sociated Press.) The Polish army
wll be re-equipped by the purchase
of supplies from the United States,
it was learned here today.
- A formal contract has been signed
between the Warsaw and the Wash
ington governments. It Is stated, un
der which the American liquidation
board will sell to Poland such of
the surplus American army stores
as Poland may require.
RETAILERS IN SESSION
George A.' Phillips Is President for
Washington State.
SEATTLE, Wash.. March 11. George
A. Phillips, Spokane, was elected pres
ident of the new Washington State
Retail association here today. Other
officers named were B. C. Beck, Seat
tle, first vice-president; Frank Card
well, Garfield, second vice-president;
C. W. Rhodes, Tacoma, treasurer, and
C. T. Colman. Toppenish, secretary.
mlnation on his part that his action
should not be misunderstood at the
White House. Persons whose public
acts have any relation to President
Wilson are a little nervous since the
Lansing episode.
But Palmer's act does represent an
understanding with the party organ
lxatlon, with what may be called the
"staff officers" of the democratic
party. About 25 of the more lmpor
taut leaders of the democratic organ'
lzatlon held a meeting in Washington
this week. The meeting was called
primarily to discuss means of over
coming a deficit in the headquarters
treasury, but It resolved itself into a
meeting of minds as to how best to
meet the embarrassment which the
party suffers a the result of Preei
dent Wilson's position.
Leaders D Net Blame Wlleoxu
Mr. Wilson will not at this time
say whether or not he expects to run
himself nor indicate in any other way
what his wises as party leader may
be. There is good reason why he
should not. The democratic leaders
don't particularly blame him for his
silence; but they have a painful reali
sation that this silence embarrasses
them, e dates of the presidential
primaries are coming close, and ii
the organization leaders in the vari
ous states don't put forth someone in
those primaries, there is danger, from
their point of view, as in the present
ease of Georgia, of a good many dele
gates being picked up by persons
outside the organization, like Hoover,
Bryan, Edwards or Reed.
In this dilemma the organization
was forced to choose some one to en
tar the presidential primaries as be
ing bt an Informal way the organiza
tion representative. Propriety de
manded that this should be some one
connected with the administration,
for the organization must seem to
approve the administration. Within
this limitation the choice narrowed
down between Palmer and McAdoo.
Kesusoaa for Palmer's geleetiesi Gives.
The chief reason for their selecting
Palmer Is that they like him better.
Palmer has long been a member of
the democratic national committee,
and his associates have a high affec
tion for him. Palmer has always been
- (Geaciuded ea fm 3, Colusa 2.1
Bureau Says Attack on Frenchmen
Was for Poaching. -
PARIS, March 11. A version of the
attack on March 9 on eight men be
lieved to be members of a French
military aviation commission at Wer
nitz, near Potsdam, published by the
semi-official Wolff bureau of Ber
lin, says guards caught the men
poaching and fired shots as a sum
mons to halt, according to a dispatch
from the German capital. The French
men fired at the guards, the bureau
version asserts.
The frenchmen who were attacked
declare only two of the party carried
hunting pieces and these men fled
without firing, while two others ran
in another direction, the other four
surrendering. Volleys were fired at
thein, they assert,' even after one of
the fleeing men fell mortally I
wounded.
MISSION SCHOOLS CLOSED
Methodists. Having Trouble With
Governor of Cores.
TOKIO, March 6. Two American
Methodist schools in Cores have been
ordered closed bv the governor-gen
erai. according to dispatches received
by newspapers today.
The edict closing the schools, which
were presided over by H. D. Appen-
zeller and. Miss B. A. Smith, says they
failed to prevent the students from
celebrating Corean Independence day
despite the government's strict prohi
bition.
P0ST0FFICE EMPLOYE DIES
James O'Conneil at One Time in
Pnblic Service at Seattle.
SAN FRANCISCO, March 11. James
O'Conneil, employed in a confidential
capacity by the United States state
department, and former oily post
efflce Inspector, died here tooay. He
came here from Washington several
weeks ago on account of illness.
Before .entering the postal service
here he worked in the Seattle post
Oflica, . '
r .............
t BUSY BIDDY IS SETTING A GOOD EXAMPLE. i
t ttfVT the: 1 I EE? tP flrv, i
i-
I . Ij
z t j -rKr . www j
SFRINGFIELD, Mo., March 11.
Eleven persons are known to be dead,
one reported-dead, two missing and
eigat Injured as the result of a tor
nado which swept through iht valley
of Turkey creek, near Branson and
Hollister, In Taney county, today.
Seven of the dead are minor chil
dren of Dan and wniiam Sox, broth
ers, living at Melva, a . small town
five miles south of Branson.
Mrs. Alva Howard and child, living
at Melva, were killed instantly and
William Jackson, living five miles
southeast of Branson, is dead. The
sisters of Jackson were missing but
were found later, one seriously In
jured. John Gross and his wife, liv
ing on a farm near Oasis, north of
Branson, were blown away with their
home and no trace found of them or
the house.
' Man Carried loOO Feet.
Ridgeway Manky was carried 1000
feet from his home at Melva. and
when he regained consciousness on
the opposite bark of Turkey creek,
he saw his young brother William
struggling in the water. He was too
weak to give aid. Later the body of
the brother was recovered down
stream. The bodies of the Box chil
dren, according to reports here, were
taken from Turkey creek, which had
been swollen to large proportions by
Incessant rains last night and early
today. Because o&the rains the roads
were impassable, and there was no
school in most localities today. Con
sequently, many children, who were
playing away from home, are be
lieved to have been caught unawares
and injured.
The storm was not confined to Mel
va. Reports of homes carried away,
buildings destroyed and children In
jured continued to pour Into the cen
ter of the stricken area tonight. The
storms swept through a district In
cluding Melva, Kirbyville, Taneyvllle,
Mildred, Oasis, Forsyth and Branson
although not so fiercely in the last
two towns.
Rra-lon Crlebratrd Oar.
The entire, area Is well known to
thousands of tourists who annually
visit the Ozark region, known as the
"Shepherd of the Hills" country.
Reports of unusual effects of the
storm were numerous. A work train
of eight cars south of .Branson, on
which the wives of six workmen lived,
was moved 200 feet down the track
and the cars uncoupled, but none of
the occupants hurt.
The hotel at Melva was practically
demolished, while six women were
seated near the fireplace. Falling
bricks, plaster and splinters struck
but one of these women, and she was
not seriously injured.
As a result of heavy rains In the
Ozark region the last 24 hours, the
White river was rising rapidly to
night and threatening the huge dam
at Powersite, Taney county, through
which electrical current is furniBhed
numerous south Missouri towns. In
cluding Joplin and Springfield.
"American Pep" Passes, Birth
Rate Drops, While "Man Apes
Woman, Whoops lfcr Reforms."
CHICAGO, March 11. Dr. William
J. Hick son. hesd of Chicago's psyco
pathlc laboratory, today declared that
"decadence of the nation can only re
sult from the ascendancy gained by
women In affairs."
"The women have secured the drop
on the men In this country," said Dr.
Hickson. "The nation has put its
head in the noose of purltanism and
degeneration of Individual and na
tional fiber Is inevitable."
Dr. Hickson said "prohibition is
typical of the modern puritan mania."
and added:
"The church movements are typical.
They, with prohibition, with so-called
high standard of morality, result in a
deterioration of masculine physical
and mental virility. There Is a fall
ing off of creative ability. The low
ering of the birth rate already Is no
ticeable. American pep, which wn
the result of a masculine-dominated
country, soon will be a thing of the
past.
"The effeminatlon of man already
Is noticeable. The male today is in
ferior In most respects to the female.
He is aping her in the matter of
clothes. He bows to her legislation
and vaguely whoops It up for her re
forms. He is fast taking second place
and with his fall there is no question
that production in the United States,
mental and material, will decline."
SENATOR'S RELATIVE FREE
Gustaf Nelson Acquitted of Charge
in Connection Willi Death.
ALEXANDRIA. Minn., March 11.
Gustaf Nelson, son-in-law of United
States Senator Knute Nelson, was ac
quitted before a Justice of the peace
here tonight on a charge of assault
with a dangerous weapon In connec
tion with the death of Joseph Middle
ton, a farmer who was shot yesterday
during a quarrel and a struggle with
Nelson. The shooting was accidental.
Nelson said.
During the hearing tonight a crowd
of about 40 persons gathered outside
the Justice's office and when Nelson
was released from custody he was
attacked and knocked down. Nelson,
guarded by two deputy sheriffs, was
brought back into the office.
Appeals by authorities to the crowd
to disperse failed. Someone suggested
that Nelson be locked up for the night
and the matter discussed again to
morrow. This was done and the
crowd went home.
Joys Unknown to Sordid
World Visioned.
WORKERS 'UNIVERSAL FAMILY'
All Who Toil to Be Brothers
and Comrades.
COURT VIEWS PROPAGANDA
Evidence of Preaching of Ilailiral
Doelrlnrs Produi-rd at Trial.
"Dreams," Sas Mr. C ltciu
NEVADA, Mo., March 11. Three
former service men were killed and
property damage, estimated at $100,-
000, involving every building in the
business section, was sustained when
a tornado struck' Nevada today.
. The three men were crushed when
the upper walls and roof of the Ne
vada Trust company building were
blown over upon a smaller building
housing a ahoe-shinlng stand. The
storm lasted less than five minutea
LEGAL FUGITIVE SOUGHT
Attorneys for Edgar Woodcock
Cited to Answer Questions.
SAN FRANCISCO, March 11. An
order citing them to answer ques
tions regarding the present where
abouts of Edgar Woodcock, a fugi
tive from Justice following his indict
ment on a perjury charge, was issued
for William Kehoe and C. H. Connlck,
Woodcock.'s attorneys,' by the presid
ing judge of the superior court her
today. Woodcock was indicted on
the perjury charge following his ac
quittal on a charge of murdering Ed
ward Kelley, a newspaper employe,
it being alleged that Woodcock made
false statements during his trial.
KING'S VILLA IS ROBBED
Silverware and Antiques Toll of
Norwegian Bandits.
COPENHAGEN, March 11. Bur
glars have ransacked the villa of King
Christian, situated on the Skaw.
Silverware and antiques valued at
several thousand kroner were stolen.
LOUISVILLE CENSUS GAINS
St. Jocph, Mo,, and Chumbcrsburg,
Pa., Also Show Increases.
WASHINGTON. March 11. The
census bureau tonight announced the
following 920 population figures and
increases:
Louisville, Ky 234,831. an increase
of 10.963, or 4.S per rent.
St. Joseph, Mo., 77,730, an Increase
of 332, or .4 per cent.
Chambarsburg, Pa., 13.171, an in
crease of 1371, or 11.6 per cent.
INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS
The Weather.
TESTE It DA VS Maximum trmpfraturt.
S dirre; minimum, 2 dVrreea.
TODAY'S Hair; southerly winds.
Fsrrurs.
Air of death "mi to pervade throughout
Kuaila. Ttse 1.
National.
Wilon blamed for treaty deadlock by
faithful follower. Page 1.
Frienda and foea of treaty reitervatlona
lining up for final vote. Pass 2.
mH 0f ! per cent for coal miner recom
mended by commlralon. Pace 7.
Palmer'a candidacy for presidency ald to
pleaaa democratic party workers.
Pas 1.
Colby nomination probed bv senate, foreirn
relation committee. Page 2.
Champ Clark not sctlvs in rsca for presi
dency. I'age 10.
Domestic.
Grand Jury lodlcu it in coal prove.
Pag 4.
Feminine prodigal" proleet agalnat high
renta snawerea dj janu.uru. 1
Wood has lead-wlth republicans of Dela
ware, wltn Lowuen eei-vuu. ra .
Many left dead in patn 01 rye, one in
Gxark nma country. re .
National decadence blamed to women.
Page 1.
Plesa disregarded, declares Admiral Blma.
Page .
Parlfle fisrthweet
Dr. Arthur Lachman, rhemlut and ex-pro
fessor, neaeveu lounu. r.t,
Labor Juror" at Montesano admits aiding
defense. Page 8.
Commercial and Marine. '
Large holdings of cheese remain In stor
age. Page 25.
Sharp advance In corn options at Chlcsgo.
Page Si.
Stock gains Increased with rise in sterling
exchange. Page -o.
One port body urges, to assure naroor
future, page 11.
Bids on new steel bull for dredge Colum
bia autnoriseu.
Rperta.
Hill cadets outplay Commerce in rough
game. Page IS.
Jack Grant resigns from Portland boxing
commission. Page 14.
McCredle tickled at first workout of
Beavers. Psge 14.
Pertland and Vicinity.
Charges may be dropped acstnst woman
bank robber. Page 10.
Mother and baby found asphyxiated in bed
In home. Page 1.
Evidence of free love advocacy produced
at criminal syndicalism trial. Page I.
Henry f. Pusey, unci of Willard Hawley
Jr., Is sued for divorce. Page S.
Dr. Esther P. IveJoy seeks democratic
nomination to congress. Page 11.
City's civil servlcs method Is changed. , recognition
Pegs 8.
Visitor from, China asks business men
to help maintain friendly relations.
Psge
General advance in freight rates la fore
cast. Page .
City-county government consolidation in.
dorsed -by East Side Business Men a
club. Page .
W. C. T. U. offers prlxe for school eassyf
on evili of tobacco. Page 18.
four suspects csught in burglary set.
s'aga 1.
All the Joys of the so-called free
love, ennobled by true social equal
ity of the mates, Joyi unknown to
the commercial society of the capital
istic regime," were to be enjoyed In
the communist mate toward whlrh
the eyes of Karl W. Otcr, Fred W.
Fry and Claud Hurst. orRanlxers of
the communist labor party In Oregon,
were turned.
Troof of direct advocacy of the com
munist Idea of state parentage was
established by IMstrlrt Attorney Evans
yesterday with the Introduction Into
evidence In the criminal syndicalism
trial of "Soviet Russia," offlclsl or
gan of the Russian soviet government
buresu in New Tork, taken from
Hurst, local financial secretary of the
new party, who had subscribed for
SO copies of the publication weekly
and had 421 copies on hand before the
federal raid on state headquarters.
Second and Alder streets.
lalversal Family Ylsloard.
"In place of the Individual an
egotistic family, there will arise a
great universal family of workers,
in which all the workers, men and
women, will be, above all, brothers,
comrades," reads the comment on
"The Family on the Communist Ktate,"
by Alexandria Kollontay. In the arti
cle admitted into evidence by Judue
Morrow because of direct connection
with one of the defendants.
"The family Is ceasing to be a
necessity to tne slate, as It was In the
psst; on the contrary. It Is worse than
useless, since It needlesxly holds back
the women workers from a more pro
ductive and far more serious work."
argues the propaganda which the
labor communist party ncntirrrd.
"The woman In the communist city no
I..-.., H..r,n on her huebsnd but
on her work. It is not her husband
but her robust arms which will sup
port her. ...
Hnbllmatesl Marrlsa Aim.
"Marriage Is henceforth to be trans
formed Into a sublime union of two
souls in love with each other, each
having faith in the other; this union
promises to each working man and
working woman, simultaneously, the
most complete happlnes, the maxi
mum of satisfaction which can he the
lot of creatures who are conscious of
themselves and of the life which sur
rounds them. .
"This so-called Indissoluble mar
riage, which was at the bottom
merely a fraud, will give place to the
free and honest union of men and
women who are lovers and com
rades. . . .
"Henceforth the worker-mother
who Is conscious of her social funo
Hon will rise to the point where she
no longer dlf ferentlstes between
yours and mine; she must remember
that there are henceforth only our
children, those of the communist
state, the common possession of all
the workers. .
Ilamaatty Asaared All Joys.
This new relation will assure ta
humanity all the Joys of the so-called
free love."
While having nothing to do with
the designs of the communist labor
party dubbed by District Attorney
Evans "the little brother of the bol-
hevikl" toward getting possession
of the government, allegedly by force,
the preceding document was consid
ered by the prosecution to be of con
siderable Importance In Its revelation
of one of the supposed alms of the
men who are called by their attorney.
W. S. IJ'Ren, "dreamers of harmless
Jieams."
Hours of desperate fighting by the
defense to prevent the admission Inle
evidence of I. W. vV. literature ended
In defeat shortly before noon yester
day, when Circuit Judge Morrow
ruled that the phraseology of the
communist labor party platform
showed thst It viewed with approval
the propaganda and example of the
I. W. W., end that the state hsd a
right to divulge that which was ap
proved. Triea'e rale ta I. W. W.
On one paragraph in the communist
programme, the entire battle cen
tered the defense placing one con
structlon on it, the prosecution an
other, and the Judge, with the as-
istance of a dictionary, making the
final Interpretation.
"In any mention of revolutionary
Industrial unionism In this country,
read that paragraph, "there mut be
of the Immense effect
upon the American labor movement
of the propaganda and example of
the Industrial Workers of the World,
whose long and valiant struggles and
heroic sacrifices In the class war
have earned the respect and affection
of all workers everywhere."
Following this sentence, the elg
niflcsnl concluding line of the para-
tceociudsd ea Pase 4. Coluias V)
r
r
'-
: .'
- t r
v.