2 fllE MORNING OREGONIAN, MONDAY, AUGUST 30, 1920 RED CHIEFS SURE OF POLISH DEFEAT Warsaw Entry Plans but Go Astray. Laid, BLUFF TACTICS EXPOSED Uilitary Intelligence Department Evidently In Much Worse Shape Thau Propaganda Arm. 100,000 persons despite the strike, f They went In motor buses, moving ! vans and other vehicles. The buses I charged a 25-cent to 30-cent fare to Coney Island, but charged from tl to J3 for the return trip. Temporary municipal bus routes and steamboat service to Coney Island were put In operation by the city tonight. The strikers recently presented de mands to Lindley M. Garrison, re ceiver of the Brooklyn Rapid Transit, asking for a wage increase of 25 per cent and up, an eight-hour day and a closed shop. Mr. Garrison refused to grant the demands and referred the men to Federal Judge Mayer, legal custodian of the company, who sus tained the refusal, saying the demands were radical and excessive. The men appealed to Mayor Hyland, who at tempted without success to arrange a conference. G. A. Whalen, commissioner of plant and structures, announced to night that 500 municipal bus'es to morrow would carry stranded Brook lynites over 20 emergency routes. Patrick J. Shea, a strike, leader, said 11,000 of 13,000 carmen quit work. COX' CRY OF 'WOLF' REALLY HUMOROUS Democrat Glibly Avers Hard ing Hand-Picked. ROOSEVELT MURPHY'S TOY Copyright by the New Tork World. Pub lished by ArranBement.) LONDON, Aug. 29. (Special Cable.) "The Polish armies have captured -irny staffs of regiments, brigades nd divisions who were left behind y the reds In their headlong flight, he officers of the Polish bureau of Hilary intelligence have interrogated ousands of prisoners, some of high jmmanding ranks. "Thus," says the ally Telegraph, "much evidence has -en obtained which has the advan ce of having been checked and oiR-checked in more than one way. .ie following interesting facts may be jnsldered as fuMy proved now: "The reds were absolutely sure of tklng Warsaw. Their bureau of mlli iry intelligence evidently was or anized far less thoroughly than their olitical propaganda. On the "Warsaw ector orders have been discovered emulating the method of their entry ito that city, the measures to be aken when the city was occupied, ae rules as to hostages, and so on. Polish Collapse Expected. "It Is now a well established fact Iso that so sure were the reds of a olish collapse that they found It cssible to dispatch two choice divi lons southward against General '.Tangle. Vrangel. Documents and evidence oint to the growing disorganiza ,on In the rear of the red army, tr.erally speaking the railway sys .m mn to be on the verge of a sfinita breakdown and munitions .id food are being brought by end ss trains of vehicles of all de rriDtions. which have been requisl- or.ed from the peasants. The com lissariat work is described repeat- .-iiv n most unsatisfactory. "The main Idea of the bolshevik military operations appears to have een to work the whole thing as a colossal bluff. In this, the extra rdinarily small necessities of the Russian peasant came in very use fully, the soldiers existing practically on a small quantity of dry bread daily. Treason Charge Usual. "The commissaries and commanding officers seem to have indulged in mutual crimination, and numerous re ports have . been found containing choice accusations of Incompetency and even of political treason. "On the other hand, the central or ganization in Moscow seems to have been developing feverish activities. Folios upon folios of instructions. schedules, memoranda and other bu reaucratic documents are being found every day. If paper and printing Ink could win battles, certainly the bol shevikl deserve to be victorious. Bluff Front la Betrayed. "But even more Interesting than all this material is the information derived from casual evidence as to the internal political conditions In Russia. First of all, there is a nega tive fact which greatly struck all military men who have had experi ence in the great war on the western fiont. On the dead bodies of the reds and on numerous prisoners practically no letters from friends of relatives are to be found. The artny seems to have been deprived for a long time of postal relations with home. On the other hand, important sums of money have been discovered on numerous Individuals. "The power of the soviet seems to have been non-existent in a large tract of country behind the front. Complaints have been found in which commanders of the reds declare that they could not find any soviet or ganization In this or that town or country district. "One has the feeling that, some tow, a process of dissolution is going on. and the more one reads the nu merous fragments of evidence now being collected, the more one becomes confirmed In the idea that the bol ehevikl put up a tremendous bluff. "Europeans have been taken In by the subtle tactics of Moscow." ALL FRANGE IS W0HMWE PUBLISHER REFUTES CHARGE PEOPLE ARE IDLE. Sew York Boss Uses Great Name as Alibi and as Gamble In Grab bing Unsuspecting Votes. appropriated by Great Britain for entertainment at the Washington embassy "had found Its way to the democratic national committee." The senatorial primaries in Oklahoma. In which Senator Gore was defeated, and the pre-convention campaign In Kan sas are also on the docket. ' Representative J. W. Gostt, repub lican, Iowa, tonight issued state ment charging that democratic office holders had violated the corrupt prac tices act by levying political assess ments on federal employes and say ing he wjnla "welcome an oppor tunity" to appear before the investi gating committee. He charged that E. T. Meredith, secretary of agriculture, and Wilbur Marsh became directors of an Iowa club, organ.z-.-d solely to obtain money from federal employes in secret. WILL HAYS PLACES 2,000,000 Population Increases to 4,000,000 in Invaded Regions. Americans Are Helping. NEW YORK, Aug. 29. France's "victory of peace" in her reconstruc tion "nails the lie that her people are not working," Herbert S. Houston, New Tork publisher, declares after a period of research at Paris whence he recently returned. Offering statistics showing re markable rehabilitation In former devastated regions, where German di visions wrought havoc In Industrial, farming and mining sections, Mr. Houston characterizes the recovery of the French people as another "mir acle of the Marne." In an article in the current Issue of World's Work he says: "With government support. Includ ing loans totaling 9,609,082,916 francs for agricultural and industrial recon struction in 'devastated depart ments,' the French people have re opened 5345 out of 6445 schools exist ant before the war; built or rebuilt 28,200 temporary wooden and 16,800 permanent stone dwellings, and erect ed 28,500 wooden barracks to replace houses destroyed; cleared 3,339,000 hectares (a hectare is about 2 acres) out of 3,950,000 of barbed wire and trenches; employed 1500 men pumping out and cleaning up flooded mines; rebuilt 475 out of 600 railroad bridges, with 80 more in course of construction; reopened virtually all of 1100 kilometers of canals destroyed and rebuilt 136 wharves and built 28 new ones. "Today, less than two years from the armistice, the population of the invaded regions has grown from less than 2,000,000 to more than 4,000.000 approximately three-quarters of the prewar population," Mr. Heuston says, adding that the return was "not that of the prodigal son." . American committees have done much to help France rebuild, Mr. Houston declares, adding that Intro duction of farming machinery to the French peasant probably was Ameri ca's best contribution. "A a result to a. considerable de gree of this mechanical assistance, greatly increasing the producing power of the fewer workers, the dev astated regions In 1920 will raise enough crops for food," he predicts. WHAT WILL BRYAN DO? QUESTION AXXOYS DEMOCRATS AND MAKES RIVALS CURIOUS. (Continued From Flrrt Pare- advertently creep in on the democratic ticket and be sponsored by Tammany. Mr. Roosevelt also had an avowed ambition to run for United States senator, an ambition that had no place In the political economy of Tammany hall. Mr. Roosevelt was thinking much along the line of Boss Murphy at about this time and played his cards accordingly. On his arrival at San Francisco, as assistant secretary of the navy, he invited the wives and daughters of the Tammany chieftains to dinner on the battleship fleet, which was anchored conveniently in the bay. That was step No. 1. The next step was for. Mr. Roosevelt, who had been known as anti-Tammany, in ac cordance with the administration at titude, to show his repentance by mounting the platform to say nice things about Al Smith, ' Tammany's New York governor, whom Bourke Cochran had eloquently placed in nomination. Gambling; Venture Taken. After that everything was easy. Tammany was willing to take tha usual gambling chance on the vice president. If elected, becominga suc cessful candidate for a political sar cophagus. It was an easy way put and would add respectability to the nomination of Governor Cox by Tam many, both in New York, where Tam many is known, and outside of New York, where it is not so well known. The next morning after Cox's nom ination, this decision was put in ef fect, and doubtless the first time that 1000 of the delegates assembled heard of Roosevelt as a vice-presidential candidate was when they read it in their morning papers on the day of his nomination. The newspapers of that morning stated rathe- positively that he would be the vice-presidential nominee. All other candidates were swept aside. according to the bosses' edict, and Mr. Roosevelt was nominated to acquire a name which has always been a valuable asset to the republican party. It is noted that neither Governor Cox nor his running mate have ever charged that Governor Coolidge's nomination was the result of a frame up because mention of Coolidce's nom ination would emphasize the help-4 lessness of the leadeps to control the convention at Chicago. COX N D LEMMA Fund Charge Can't Be Proved Because It Is False. PUBLIC HELD INSULTED Names of Thousands of Persons Contributing to Republican Ex penses to Be Given Out. Last Issue of Commoner Shows Heart of-- Peerless One Is Still "in the Gra-je." .OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU, Washington, Aug. 29. What will Bryan do? This is the question which is annoying democrats and causing curiosity among republicans. Bryan's latest utterances give no encouragement to those democrats who hope to see him get into the cam paign in behalf of Governor Cox. The last issue of "the commoner" shows Mr. Bryan's heart is still "in the grave," and if he helps Mr. Cox at all the fear is expressed that he will not do so until he has by his long coolness caused many dry democrats to plant themselves .in some other party. Both republicans and democrats have believed that sooner or later Mr. Bryan would find some pretext for supporting Cox, , but just a little doubt has risen lately. It appears that Mr. Bryan finds it difficult to comr- out for Mr. Cox on account of a public statement Issued on June 12, but which received little publicity on account of the load of convention Etvi which weighted down the wires. The Bryan statement. . which was the San TROOPS AT RIOT ' AREA WEST VIRGINIA COAL MINE DISTRICT UNDER GUARD. ssued two weeks before cratic convention met in !sco, reads:. 'Governor Cox of Ohio is likely to be the residuary legatee of all the other wet candidates and may be re garded as the final rallying point for all democrats who either, because of financal interest In the liquor traffic or because of their own fondness for intoxicants, regard love of liquor as the only legitimate affection and the ieht to buy it as the only inalien able rigfit guaranteed by the consti tution. ' "The absurdity of his candidacy be comes the more apparent when it is remembered that at least 15,000,000 women will be able to vote at the coming presidential election by virtue of state laws. If the suffrage amend ment Is ratified before' the Novem ber election some 25,000,000 women will be entitled to vote." PARLEY SHIFTS TO RIGA REDS ACCEPT POLISH REQUEST FOR TRANSFER OF MEETING. ILittle Progress Made at Minsk ; Peace Conference; Soviet Say Envoys Are Spies. " WARSAW, Aug. 29. (By the Asso ciated Press.) The Russian soviet government has accepted the Palish proposal for transfer of the Russo Polish peace negotiations from Minsk to Riga, it was announced in a Mos cow wireless message to the Polish government early today. Reports reached Warsaw Saturday that little progress had been made at the Minsk conference and that it had been agreed to shift the negotiations in the hope of bettering conditions generally. A wireless message from Minsk by way of Moscow complains about the treatment suffered by the Polish del egates. The message asserts the commander of the western soviet army placarded Minsk with posters labeling the Poles as spies and warn ing the population against associat Ing with them. The message adds that the commander destroyed the Poles' wireless antennae, hindering communication with Warsaw. Employes of Brooklyn' Rapid Tran sit System Walk Out, Vir tually Disrupting Traffic. WILLIAMSON, W. V.. Auir. 29. A battalion of United States infantry. numbering between 400 and 500 troops, under command of Cpionel Burkhardt, arrived today from Camp Sherman, Chilllcothe. O.. to prevent repetition of rioting at coal mines. A detachment of soldiers will be stationed at each mine in the strike zone from Kermit, east to Delorme, a distance of 50 miles, it was announced. Colonel Burkhardt was met by T. M. Davis, adjutant-general of West Virginia, representing Governor J. J. Cornwell, who yesterday asked the government for troops because of disorders in connection with the itrike in' the Mingo field. They vis ited the district and niapped out dis tribution of troops. The situation through Mingo county was reported quiet today. Martial law will not be proclaimed. Colonel Burkhardt said, until occasion for ;uch action arises. 4 Kentucky national guardsmen were stationed along the Kentucky-West Virginia border. NEW DISTURBANCE REPORTED Con&tabto Said to Have Been Driven Out of Willis Branch. CHARLES," W. Va., Aug. 29. Dis turbances at the Willis Branch f'oal company njines, Willis Branch, Ral- eign county, were renewed late to night. A constable who attempted to enter the town was driven out, ac cording to information received by the Charleston Gazette from Magee McClung, prosecuting attorney of Fayette county. There was some shooting, according to Mr. McClung, who was at Fayetteville, but no casu alties were reported. TONS OF ASPIRIN NEEDED Munitions Plant to Be Converted to Making Drugs. TRENTON. Ont.. Aug. 29. (Spe cial.) it is reported that a company with a capital of 131,000,000 has taken over a former large munitions plant here for the purpose of manufactur ing drugs and chemicals on a large scale. Special attention will be given to the production of aspirin, of which an output of 600 to 800 tons Is contem plated. It is understood that firms in Britain and Australia are contract ing for large quantities. The firm has contracts for sodium nitrate amount ing to about 3000 tons and also large orders for phosphate, of which Cana da alone consumes 50,000 tons. HIRSUTE CRISIS IS FACED SHAVE OR NOT BE SHAVED IS QUESTION IN SEATTLE. ASSESSED VALUE RAISED Assessor Predicts King County Levy Will Decrease in 1921. SEATTLE. Wash., Aug. 29. County Assessor Hull announced today that he will certify to the state board of equalization $287,838,755 as the as sessed value of King county property for 1920. This is an increase of $17, 511,295 over the - assessed value in 1919. These figures do not include assess ments on railroads, which last year amounted to $24,073,776, nor assess meets on other public service cor porations. Mr. Hull predicts that King county's tax levy for 1921 will show a sub slantial decrease over that for 1920, SOLDIERS GET ON LAND Millions Loaned Returned Men by Canadian Government. WINNIPEG, Man., Aug. 29. (Spe cial.) Up to date 3667 returned men out of atotal of 18,257 for the whol of Canada, have been : laced on the land as settlers In the Winnipeg dis trict by the soldiers' settlement board. The loans approved in the Winnipeg district have been represented as $12, 247,722, the total loan for the domln ion amounting to $72,236,142. A new branch of the soldiers' set tlement work is in helping the set tiers classes of domestic science. BROOKLYN CARMEN OUT TRANSPORTATION TIED UP BY TRANSIT WALKOUT. MALTA SHAKEN BY QUAKE Numerous Buildings Damaged; Population Is in Panic. LONDON, Aug. 29. The Island of Malta suffered an earthquake shock of considerable force at 2:30 A. M., says a Central News dispatch from Rome. - Numerous buildings In Plorena and surrounding district were damaged I and the population was In a panic, the dispatch says. demo- Fran CHICAGO, Aug. 29. (Special.) Will" Hays, republican national chair man, declared today that Governor Cox would have to prove his cam p&lgn fund charges and that Mr. Cox could not do it because they were absolutely false." Mr. Hays, soon after arriving here today, said:- 1 I am glad to be hare also this week for the hearing before the senate committee on campaign contributions. which begins tomorrow. The repub lican national committee has real sat isfaction in the opportunity to get all of these facts before the people. We have been trying to acquaint the pub lic with our plan of decentralized giv ing for a year. J(r. Cox has charged that millions have been paid to the repuMican national committee by sin ister influences to buy the presidency. Yesterday he is reported to have said in New Tork that many men are making contributions to the repub lican campaign funds for the purpose of using the bayonet to settle Indus trial difficulties. " Charges Declared Iaanlta. "Mr. Cox will have to prove these charges this week. This he cannot do, for the simple reason that the charges ' are absolutely false. His declarations are an fnsult to the thousands of erood citizens all over the country who are aiding with small contributions in this popular cam paign for funds to help elect a repub lican president. The name of every one of the thousands of men and women contributing every single dol lar will, of course, be given to the senatorial committee and the quality of the citizenship which constitutes that list will be such a condemnation of the veracity and Judgment of Mr, Cox that the whole country will know him, and. incidentally, he will have an opportunity to explain the source of some of his own funds collected by his national committee and by agencies outside his national com mittee for his benefit." "I am lust "here from Marlon on my way home from New York head quarters, stopping- there yesterday for Indiana day. It was the great speech of the campaign. Senator Harding cut an unfaltering way straight through the tangle of the league of nations into which the bungling of the democratic administration has led the country, and into which the pro gramme of the Wilson-Cox alliance would keep us endlessly. The over whelming majority of Americans who long ago repudiated the tottering re sult of the president's negotiations has been seeking for the way to pre serve the fundamentally essential rights of America and to promote the peace of the world. Senator Harding has pointed to the path. The chairman made this announce "The ' meeting of state chairmen, national committeemen and bureau heads from the different statee. which SEATTLE. Wash.. Aug. 29. (Spe- will be held here this week, will in- cial) Whether masculine Seattle will 1 elude representation irom tne states shave or be shaved Monday, not to or Amansas, inaiana. Illinois, iowa. mention nhamnnneri and maasaeed Kentucky, Kansas, Alicnigan. Minne- depends upon the attitude of the been a quiet, upright man who never gave offense to anyone, in the dls- ; charge of his duty. I "Am I to be told that this is an act of war; that it is lawful to shoot at sight anyone wearing a police man's uniform and honestly dis charging a policeman's duty? I pre fer to call It by its true name cold, deliberate, wilful murder. Heace. anyone who plans, encourages or even sympathizes with sucn an act. participates In the guilt before God." The cardinal continued: "I know we are living under the harsh, tyrannical regime of militar ism and brute force, which invites nd stimulates crime: that all pre tense of discipline has been thrown to the winds; that those -protessing to be guardians of law and order have become the most ardent votar ies of lawlessness and disorder; that they have been overrunning the country and making the night ald eous by raids, rifle fire," burnings and the destruction of valuable property: that towns have been- sacked and that reckless firing In crowded places has made many Innocent victims. "And when these things are re ported to the authorities, either in vestigation is refused or some hole or corner inquiry held. But we have never heard of punlsTiment. All this professes to be done by way of re prisals but reprisals are generally unjust and often fall on the innocent. Crime does not excuse crime." L" '?-yr Result Depends Upon Attitude of Master Barbers, . According to Union Officials. LEGION ENFORCES ORDER TEXAS POST TAKES LAW IN HANDS IN EMERGENCY. Gamblers and Undesirables Run Out of Town After Their Work. Proved Obnoxious. SAN ANTONIO, Tex.. Aug. 29. (Special) The story of .how an American Legion post cleaned up a wide-open Texas oil town and estab lished a reign of law and order after it had received the challenge of dl rect insult at the hands of a domi nant gambling ring has been received at etate headquarters of the legion here. Gun-play, hold-ups and wholesale deportation of undesirables mae kthe story read like a chronicle of the roaring days of '49. Desdemona. Tex., struck oil, and with the oil prospectors came an ele ment bordering on the criminal that set up gambling houses and soon be came the controlling influence of the town. Peavy-Prlce post of the legion Incurred the animosity of the gam blers through the activity of Its indi vidual members in combating local evils, and on several occasions le gionnaires were held up at the point of revolvers and threatened. Keeping calm under this constant menace, the legion men took no con certed action until their pictures, ad vertising a post dinner, had repeat edly been torn down and defaced. They then appealed to state legion headquarters, which got in touch with the adjutant general of Texas and captain of rangers was dispatched to Desdemona. Further insults in the meantime had been offered to legionnaires, and at a mass meeting they demanded re dress, which was refused. This crisis came on a stormy night, when the population of Desdemona arose, and with 18 legionnaires sworn in as dep uty rangers, arretted the men who had been defacing the veterans' post er and threatening their lives. The crusade against lawlessness moved swiftly after this action, and within 24 hours the original offend ers, together with all gamblers and other undesirables had been escorted out 01 town under orders not to re turn. Desdemona, through the le gion's desire for a clean community, now boasts 1 tee If as orderly and well conducted a town as there is to be found in the southwest. master barbers of Seattle, according to a statement Issued by union bar bers' officials after a session at -the labor temple today. The employers made no announcement during the day to indicate that the tonsorial cri sis will not occur, but it Is believed likely they will lock up their shops. That there will be no strike of barbers tomorrow was the declara tion of Phil J. Pearl, business agent of the union, Sunday afternoon at the close of the meeting. If any barber shops are closed it will be a lock out, he states. At today's session the union barbers again voted to accept the offer of the master barbers' con ference committee to pay & guaranty of $27 a week with 60 per cent of weekly receipts over $40 going to the barbers. As The master barbers' association has voted to retract its offer and has agreed to stand pat for the present scale, which places the weekly guar anty at $22, the man who doesn't practice his own hirsute surgery may well look forward to tomorrow with some uneasiness. sota, Missouri, Nebraska, Ohio, Okla homa, South Dakota. Tennessee, Texas, Wisconsin and Weat Virginia. A great many are coming, all evi dencing an unprecedented Interest In the party's success. This unpreced ented interest is simply a reflection of the conviction on the part of everybody that Governor Cox means four more years of Wilsonism, and that the country demands a change. That's the declaration one hears from everybody. You can't keep' that from being the real Issue this campaign. A responsible political party cannot avoid the responsibility of eight years of mal-admlnistratlon. REPS TRY JO, SEVER" L1HE CAVALRY IN NEW GIRDLING MOVE AGAINST LEMBERG. WHITE SALMON FOUND 180 Albino Fish Produced From " Eggs Fou'nd in 1916. OTTAWA, Ont., Aug. 29. (Special.) Two specimens of albino spring salmon weighing tone and one-half pounds have been received from the department of marine hatcheries at Cowichan lake, Vancouver.- About ISO albino fish, almost pure white in color, have been produced from col ored eggs collected In October, 1916. Experiments are being carried out to ascertain whether these fish will reproduce without going to sea. .100,000 Persons Carried In Buses ARAB PARLIAMENT LIKELY Coney Island $1 to $3 to Charged for Return. NEW YORK, Aug. 29. Brooklyn awoke today to find its transporta tion facilities tied up by an unex. pected strike of 8000 employes of the Brooklyn Rapid Transit system. Tonight no surface cars were run ning and only a few trains were crawling over the elevated and sub- wav lines under police protection. Coney Island lid a crowd of about Native Prince Would Be Governor and British Would Be Advisers. LONDON, Aug. 29. According to the Daily Mail, it has been decided to establish an Arab parliament in Mesopotamia and also an Arab pab inet with British advisers. It is understood that approval will be given if the Arabs name a native prince as governor. Read The Oregonl-an classified ads. HAYS OPENS FUND BOOKS (Continued From First Page.) his national committee for his ben efit." It was generally understood that Ukrainian Army Forces River in Outflanking Attack in South and Starts for North. WARSAW, Aug. 29. (By the Asso elated Press.) The Russians are en deavoring to drive & wedge to sever the Polish front, according to an of flclal statement last midnight. Vio lent fighting is reported north of Belzec which is north of Lemberg, where the soviet cavalry of General Budenny is trying a new encircling movement against Lemberg. . An ad vanced soviet detachment has reached Tyszowiec In the region of Bob rika, the Poles have repulsed repeated attacks Intended as a drive against Lemberg. The Poles counter attacked at Sarniki, and smashed several soviet squadrons. Further south General Pawlenko's Ukrainian army has forced the Dnies ter river in an outflanking movement and is moving northward. There is weak contact with the enemy along the entire northern front from Gra Jevo, to Wlodawa on the Bug river. COAST TIESF0R- INDIA 4,000,000 Order to Leave by End of Present Year. PRIMATE SCORES BOTH Irish Cardinal Denounces "Mur ders" Committed. BELFAST, Aug. 29. (By the Asso ciated Press.) Cardinal Logue, prl mate of Ireland, In a letter read in Dundalk churches today, denounced Impartially the shooting of Constable Brennan at Dundalk a week ago by masked men, and reprisals by the crown forces in southern Ireland. He said: "The poor victim I know to have JAIL ROBBED OF NEGRO Prisoner Is Taken Into Waiting Anto and Disappears. OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla., Aug. 29 Two menu who represented them selves as an officer and a prisoner. tonight took from a cell at the county Jail here, Claude Chandler, negro, who figured in a raid on a still near Ar cadia. Saturday, in which Stanton Weiss, federal prohibition enforce ment officer, and Homer Adrean, deputy sheriff, and Charles Chandler, father of Claude Chandler, were killed. The alleged officer turned a re volver on the Jailer and forced him to deliver Chandler. Sheriff John son and deputies are searching for the men and others, who, according to the report, waited outside the Jail In automobiles. VICTORIA. B. C, Aug. 29 (Spe cial.) The H. R. MacMillan Export the republican national campaign . Tr'' 7Vn iVa "i".?.. . . I - - v,w v -..uwowfcw Wl 1UBR Columbia ties from the government of budget, which. It was said, would be presented to the committee, would total $3,762,000. Concerning the list of quotas, it was said that it "wad entirely different from the list Gov ernor Cox used in his Pittsburg speech," and that evidence concerning it would show that more than 30,000 persons had contributed to the fund, which now totalled somewhat more than a million dollars. Representative Fred A. Britten of Illinois has been subp.naed In con nection with his charges that money India. The lumber will be cut by the Associated Timber Exporters and creosoted at the Vancouver Creosot- ing company. North Vancouver. The order is to go forward by the first Canadian government cargo ves sel consigned to the Indian run. and will be shipped toward the end of this year. S. A H. green Holman Fuel Co. Adv. stamps tor cash. Main 351. 580-iL dee Victoria and Vancouver this Year Go East Through Alpina Fairyland through the delightful route of the CANADIAN PACIFIC ROCKIES. See Victoria first, with its Empress Hotel en throned at the head of the har bor. Then pause to admire a great city spread before yon from the rose-garden roof of Hotel Vancouver. Then a daylight ride up the Fraser and Thompson Canyons . through "FIFTY SWITZER LANDS IN ONE," stopping off at the Chateau at lovely Lake Louise and the Banff Springs Hotel (open through September) to swim in warm sulphur pools while snow clouds play on the peaks that guard the valley. Then east from the Canadian Pacific Rockies on a train whose service from diner to observation car is superb. Let us help you arrange this trip. K. E. Prnn, Gen. Act. Pans. Dept., Canadian Pacific Railway 55 Third St., Portland, Or. Canadian ntwwpapir and tnfbrmnHen regarding Can an u am film mt (Am ofr-OS Songs of Long Ago - How those scenes come thronging those memories of other friends and other days when one sits in. a quiet arm chair before the open doors of a VICTROLA! And how tenderly the sweetest of sing ers render those old, fine ballads to Vic trola lovers ! Don't live any longer in a silent home. Possess a Victrola the Standard Talking Machine of the World and hear- those fragrant, well-loved melodies whenever you are in the mood. We have VICTROLAS from $25 to $1500, in pleasing variety, and will be happy to arrange convenient payment terms. nil 1 Shermanliay& Go. Sixth and Morrison Streets, Portland (Opposite Pomofflce) Seattle Tacoma Spokane PLEA FPU SOVIET MADE XOX-PARTISAX STAND SHO"X BV DIRECTOR-CE"ERAL. Letter to President Asks Recogni tion of Present Russian Rule by Radicals. OREGONIAN , NEWS BUREAU. Washington, Aug;. 29. George P. Hampton, who calls himself director general of the farmers national coun cil, which represents the farmers' non-partisan league in Washington, sent a letter to President Wilson yes terday asking the government to recognize soviet Russia. This move is accepted as meaning that the mask Is removed as to the refatlonship be tween the non-partisan league and the bolshevik government of Lenlne and Trotxky. Hampton is associated in the man agement of the farmers' national council with Benjamin C. Marsh, who was quoted by New York newspapers a few days before America entered the war as saying: This is a war for J. P. Morgan & Co." Marsh also was quoted by the same papers as saying in another speech. "Let us pray for the death of Root and Roosevelt." Mr. Roosevelt has died since that time, but whether his demise was due to Mr. Marsh's prayers history fails to state. Marsh has appeared before numerous congressional committees in behalf of socialistic legislation. In cluding government ownership of rall- roaas ana tna mechant marine. One of his last appearances was befor the senate commerce committee, when he indulged in the Hampton-Marsh boast that the farmers' national coun cil represented 750,000 farmers. It was this statement which caused Senator McXary to remark: "You do not rep resent any honest farmers. You only represent those non-partisan fellows." Hampton and Marsh carry the non partisan league on their stationery aa one of the organizations which they say they represent. Marsh calls him self publicity director of the farmers' national council. Candles still ar.e extensively used and a candlestick has been invented with a snuffer that automatically descends and extinguishes the flame when a candle burns down. ,4 H it-: mm rMM4i JiBilt'l fill: Ijrg&afcJvi Phonographs on Payments Buy your phonograph now from Hovenden Piano Co. and enjoy the wonderful pleasure it will bring to your home. Pay for it out of your monthly income. We Take Liberty Bonds at par PRICES $35 AND UP - Easy Terms Pianos : Player Pianos HOVENDEN PIANO CO. Bet. 146 Park Street Alder and Morrison . IsJlNIil li nil iy p:piM 111 lip i - 11 1 ft n ' ;ppi ill Your. Doctor's Orders WHENEVER it becomes necessary to have a pre scription filled, it is impor tant that the proper drugs in correct proportions are in the make up. The store of "Dependable Drugs" has gained its good name by conscientious serv ice to physician and public alike. ,WE NEVER CLOSE candAlder Stx Selling Bldg. TZ wPRLscmPTioN Druggist PHONE MAIN 72M ? 075-Saj Longer Dollars EVERY dollar saved now, -while prices are high, will do extra duty later when prices are lower and the dollar more valuable. Meanwhile your money may earn 4, which means more income than 3 yields, and conse quently more money to buy with when dollars become more valuable. The Time to Begin Is Now WE PAY 4 ON SAVINGS A Bank for KTcrylway Broadway mm Stark, 3 T