VOL. 1,1 X XO. 18,Go4 Enterd -t Portland (Oregon) Pntof flee- a Scond-ClaN Matter. PORTLAND, OREGON, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1920 PRICE FIVE CENTS ROCK SLIDE CRUSHES 3 IN NIAGARA CAVE DEMPSEY WIIIS BI 11 KILLED, 70 HURT PREMIER SAYS CORK MAYOR CAN BE FREED GUARANTEES THAT POLICE WILL SOT BE SLAIN" ASKED. CITY JOINS LABOR IN OBSERVING 011! 32,000 STOP PLAY TODAY FOR SCHOOL PUPILS REGISTER A1 GET BOORS THIS MORNING. AMERIGATQ LEAD, IN STREETCAR CRASH TWO IXJCRED; 100 TOURISTS HAVE SARROW ESCAPE. IXTERURBAXS COLLIDE HEAD OS KOCXDIXG CURVE. TEH LOSE IMS II KLAMATH FI Two Portland Persons on Missing List. KNOCKOUT NTHIRD SAYS M R 1 DEAD MAY REACH SIXTEEN! Seven Persons Are Injured or Sustain Burns Loss Is Put at $150,000. OTHER STRUCTURES RAZED Flames Jump Across Two Streets and Destroy . Nearby Residences. KLAMATH FALLS, Or., Sept. 6. (Special.) Ten persons are known to have been burned to death, seven are injured, and several others, two of whom are believed to be from Portland, are missing as the result of a fire which destroyed, the Hous ton hotel here today and also razed a part of the business district. -Estimates of the number of dead have been placed as high as 16. The property loss was estimated at $150,000. The Identified Dead Are: Charles Harmon, Klamath Falls, peanut vendor. Miss Margaret Hanley, Klamath Falls, chambermaid. Miss Leona Vilderback, 19, Ash land, Or. Mrs. Lottie Vilderback, wife of Grant Vilderback of Ashland, Or. The Injured Are: j nu-- rT nf rl Mary Brung, serious burns. Thomas Higgins. 3ames Pofder of Madero, CaL Mrs. Mary Campora. William Morse. One man whose name was not learned when he received first aid. The Missing List Includes: Woman believed to be Mrs. Dolly Taylor of Portland but who regis tered as Miss Grace Hall of Medford. Chadrick of Portland, Or. Dalton, address unknown. Clyde Pollock, Klamath Falls log rer. Other persons who are known to have occupied rooms in the hotel. All those who lost their lives were occupants of the Houston hotel, which was crowded with 180 persons who had come to Klamath Falls for the Labor day celebration. Seven Persons Injured. . The seven persons who were hurt sustained injuries or burns in at tempting to make their escape from ' the flaming building. The fire rap idly swept through the old three story building which almost at once was turned to a fiery furnace. Many of the patrons were forced to leap from the upper windows. The flames, in almost no time seemed to have cut off all avenues of escape from the hotel. The hotel register was destroyed, making the work of identifica tion difficult. . It was feared that in some cases the names of the victims might never be learned. Five un identified persons who were known to have occupied rooms in. the hotel are missing, according to statements made by Mrs. Goldie Houston, who managed the hotel, and Harry Jones, night clerk. 180 Patrons in Hotel In the Houston hotel there were 180 persons. It was said that pa trons were sleeping in the office and other rooms not ordinarily rented for lodging. Hundreds of visitors arrived last night for today's labor day celebration and packed the hotels to the limit. ' Two brothers and a sister of Miss Hanley, one of the dead, live at Pla cerville, Cal. Miss Vilderback and her mother, Mrs. Lottie Vilderback, arrived yesterday by 6tage from Ashland and engaged a room to gether. The woman believed to be Mrs. Dolly Taylor of Portland arrived Thursday on the stage from Med ford and registered as Miss Grace Hall of Medford. She told the stage driver that she had had trouble with her parents in Portland, had sepa- jpfitiuded sn Pag . Column 1.1 Boat Crew Risk Lives to Recover Bodies From Pool in Cav em Under Falls. XI AGAR A FALLS, N. T.. Sept. 6 Two women and a man were crushed to death and two men were Injured this afternoon when a slide of shale forced out a bridge leading- to one of the stairway in the Cave of the Winds, under Niagara falls. A hun dred or more tourists who were in the cave had narrow escapes, many being bruised and cut by the falling rock. . The dead and Injured were mem bers of a, party of tourists .complet ing a tour "of the cave.; "With a guide leading, the party was in the middle of one of the four bridges in the cave when the slide came, its noise drowned by the roar of the cataract. The guide was not touched. To recover the bodies of the dead it was necessary to take a ro,wboat from the Maid of the Mist steamer which had been run up as near as possible to the falls and the cave. It was a hazardous venture, but the rowboat crew finally brought the bodies out of the pool and regained the steamer. The -accident Is the first of the kind in the cave since the first stair way was built in 1883. There have been ' slides before but only In the winter or early spring. FRANCE IS PAYING DEBT Plans for Meeting Share of Anglo- French Loan Completed. NEW YORK, Sept. 6. French gov ernment arrangements for repayment of its half of the $500,000,000 Anglo French loan, due October 15, includ ing public Issue ofJ100, 000,000 of French government bonds under written by the American syndicate and J150.000.000 in cash and gold, ar riving from France, were made public tonight. The statement said: "Maurice Casenave, minister pleni notentiarv. director-general of the French services in the United States, and Jean Parmenier, special financial envoy from France to the United States, announce that the French government has arranged for the re payment of $250,000,000, being Its one half of the Anglo-French loan due October 15. 1920. Of this amount ap proximately $150,000,000 is to be taken care of by funds already in hand and by gold shipments from France. " The- remainder will bo pro vided by a publio issue of $100,000,000 in bonds by the French government to be underwritten by a syndicate now being formed by J. P. Morgan & Co. 2 KILLED IN PLANE FALL Machine Plunsres to Ground Xear Tennis Playing Crowd. FOREST HILLS, N. T., Sept. 6. Two aviators were killed this after noon when a navy seaplane in which they were flying crashed into the ground a short distance from the For est Hills tennis courts and witnin view of the crowd watching the finals in the national all-comers title tour nament. The aviators had been circling over the courts when their engine suddenly slopped and the plane dropped. AIR ACROBAT IS KILLED Airman .Plunges to Death While Attempting Stunt on Plane. DETROIT, Mich., Sept. 6. Myron K.1 Tinney, former army aviator, fell 500 feet to his -death today while perform ing aerial acrobatics at the state fair grounds. In an attempt to catch a rope ladder on which be was to cllmo irora one plane to another flying above him, he missed his hold and plunged from the top of his machine. A crowd of 200,000 witnessed the accident. SHEEP 0WNER IS KILLED Henry O'Keefe Goes to Death When Automobile Capsizes. KLAMATH FALLS, Or.. Sept. 6. (Special.) Henry O'Keeie, wealthy Lake county sheep man, was killed today near Lakeview when his auto mobile capsized, according to a tele phone message received here. The accident occurred early this morning. O'Keefe died at 3 o'clock this afternoon without regaining con sciousness. NON-UNION JVIINER KILLED Second Fatality Follows- Labor Troubles in Alabama. BIRMINGHAM. Ala., Sept. 6. Sam Lynn, non-union miner, was killed and several others were injured in clash growing out of the coal strike at Gintown, Jefferson county, last night. The death of Lynn is the second fatality since labor troubles started In the Alabama coal fields. CHURCH SEATS STOLEN Discovery of Theft Not Made XJatl Service Hour Arrives. OMAHA, Neb.. Sept. 6. Seventy three, all the seats, in tlit United Evangelical church here, were stolen some time last week. Discovery of the theft was not mads until last night when the church building was opened for services. Tne tniei had entered by a pass kty , . World Champion's Ter rific Blows Crush Miske. 3 SMASHES GET $50,000 Challenger Apparently Never Had Chance al Title. MANY WOMEN AT BATTLE Deteated Heavy in Statement Pay Tribute to Victor as Un beatable Fighter. RINGSIDE, BENTON HARBOR, Mich., Sept. 6. Jack Dempsey, heavy weight champion of the world, dem onstrated today that he still retains the terrific punch that won him the title. He knocked out Billy Miske of St. Paul, a fighter as big and game as himself, in the third round of their 10-round mated. Three hard smashes were sufficient to win him between $50,000 and $100,000, his 50 per cent share of the gate receipts. At the start of the fight, his first in 14 months, Dempsey peeled off tb same worn and patched red sweater that he wore when he knocked out Jess Wlllard. His face wore the same fighting frown, he danced about the ring with old-time lightness of foot and finished up by taking the fight in the third round just as he did at To ledo. The third round went one min ute and 13 seconds. Miske Down Three Times. Miske went down three times In the less than two and one-half rounds of fighting. In the second he meas ured his length on the floor for the count of five. In the fatal third driven to his corner under a rain left and rights to the stomach and chin, the challenger took the couitt of nine and had Just regained his feet when Dempsey, carefully measuring his balance, finished the bout with right-hand punch to the chin. - The fight was- watched by one of the most .orderly crowds on record at a championship match. Women in bright clothing were scattered throughout the audience from the ringside to the back fence, where they perched alongside the wicked barbed wires and outshone some of the sign boards in attracting attention. Dcmpatr'i Arrival J Ovation. Delayed special trains held back the fight and in the confusion of the long- wait, Miske, first into the ring, slipped through the crowd scarcely being noticed. A messenger from the champion's camp presently arrived to whether the" challenger was inquire (.Concluded on Page 12. Column 5.) i (Concluded on Page 2, Column .) f ...........-. ..i. . IS EVERYBODY PAYING STRICT ATTENTION? ' t r r r j 1 - " d , iff v I - it : h i v vvt I it I I a II ' J T' . . . II 1 hHliliiiiliiiiiiinTirr-rS- l I A I A. 1 II 1 T K - I-J ' I I - ' o - i j............ . . t ,. .....r't't-Tt Conductor of Special and Trailer Carrying Holiday Crowd Fails to Obey "Wait" Order. DENVER, Sept. 6. Eleven persons were killed and 70 injured when two interurban cars collided head on on j a curve Just outside of Globevillef a suburb, this afternoon. Tonight all but one of the dead had been iden tified. A special car and trailer carrying a load of holiday pleasure 'seekers to Eldorado Springs, a resort, collided 1th a regular car returning from Boulder to Denver on the Denver & Interurban railroad. According to officials in charge of the Globevllle station, the conductor of the outbound failed to obey orders . to wait at Globeville, for the . Incoming car. The incoming car was two minutes : be hind schedule and was running at high speed to make up the' time. "When the cars. struck, they plowed into each other a distance of 15 feet. Most of the casualties occurred on the inbound car but few or either car escaped without Injury. ' . At least two persons were killed when they Jumped in an attempt to save themselves, according to T. F. Searlino of Louisville, Colo., who was on the Inbound car. - One of these was C. W. Grenmayer, conductor, 60, who was in -charge of the car. The other was Frank Dalby of Louisville. . Four of the dead and many ofthe Injured were from Louisville and were on the car coming to Denver. As soon as word of the wreck was received in Denver, a squad of the soldiers here in connection with the tramway strike was rushed to the scene. J. w. scnuitz, conductor, who was in charge of the outbound car, de clared that he received orders at Globevllle to go on. Agent Richards of the Denver & Interurban company at Globevllle declared that he must have gotten the wrong orders, as he should have waited for the inbound car to pass him at Globevllle. .A revised list of the dead and in jured follows: Dead. Joseph Lombard!, 17, Louisville, Colo., miner. Frank Dalby, 21, Louisville, Colo, miner. Joe Cortez. 30, Louisville. Colo, miner. William Zarlna, 21, Louisville. Colo, miner. v ,. Judge R. S. Morrison, 65, Denver. Archie MaUoyy 25, Boulder. Joseph Chapman, 23, Boulder. C. W. Grenmayer, 60, Denver, con ductor incoming train. William Hillburg, 29, Globevllle. Colo. Frank Craveth, 58, , Cal. Raymond Joyce, 21, student. Uni versity of Colorado, Boulder. The injured include James Ferrari, 22, Louisville, miner, will die. Ed Kokalecik, Louisville, miner, body crushed, will die. George Cheek, Sparta, N. C, . pos sible internal injuries. i. mAsci it Other Hunger Strikers Included; McSwiney Failing so Rapidly " Conversation Is Limited. . ' LONDON, Sept. 6. A dispatch to the London Times from Viege, SwltzerV land, quotes David Lloyd George, the British prime minister, as saying that If guarantees are given that the mur der of policemen In Ireland will cease, the premier is convinced that Lord Mayor MacSwiney and the other hun ger strikera" will be released from prison. Other special dispatches tend to confirm the Interview printed In the Times. . Accordlnr to the Times, the pre- mler. sald not a single appeal for clemency offered the slightest assur ance that g'ueh. killings would be stopped. He added that the uncon ditional release of the imprisoned men would be- disastrous to the morale of the Irish police and make government in Ireland impossible. Each day as the fast of Lord Mayor MacSwiney in . Brixton prison pro gresses there Is staged by the bed side of the dying man a tragic little act, which. was disclosed to the Asso ciated Press today by Father Dominic, Mayor MacSwiney's private chaplain. Every morning food in some form or another Is brought in By the prison authorities and offered to the starv ing prisoner In the hope that his al most uncontrollable craving will mas ter him-and that he will be tempted to. eat. Every morning' there is the same end to the act MacSwiney, who is too weak to utter a epoken refusal. crushes his desire and turns his head away. it has gone on until the 25th day of his hunger strike has been reached. ' There have been many rumors that MacSwiney has being given suste nance in drinking water or otherwise, This is denied by relatives and friends and the Associated Press was further informed that the prison authorities have not given the lord mayor any food in this manner. Father Dominic also denied that the prisoner was be ing fed and added: "Although some people say that. the desire for food disappears after a few days' abstinence, it is not so in Mayor MacSwiney's case. He is still hungry but refuses to take anything. "The lord mayor looked pale, drawn and haggard this morning when I ad ministered the usual sacrament, and the local rumor that he received the last sacrament today is not true. Mac S-wlney has intervals of dizziness and is only able to speak in short gasps, owing to difficulty in breathing, and any attempt at continual conversa tion Is Impossible." Lord Mayor MacSwiney Is in the same room Sir Roger Casement occu pied before he was transferred to the tower. The main entrance to the prison Is guarded by several police, who refuse to admit any but relatives of the inmates. Many vsltors were turned away to day. But beyond these, the police and the coming and going of Mayor Mac Swiney's relatives, there is nothing to Indicate the battle of wills going on behind the high walls of the Jail, the outcome of which may have a far reaching effect. Dream of Eleven Years Is Realized by Toilers. TEMPLE CORNERSTONE LAID Workers Crowd Auditorium for Ceremonies. PICNIC ENDS PROGRAMME New Home Will Have Rental Tn. come of $35,000 a Tear; Costs Estimated at $19,000. Portland, In respect to brawny toil. I halted Its usual pursuits yesterday I and Joined the forces of organized 1 labor In the celebration which was conducted under the auspices of the airniated union bodies of this city n n H vlninllv To organized labor it wa an epoch- ai aay. or In addition to the usual paiu to tne men and women who gain their livelihood by toiling nanas, it marked the -virtual realiza tion of long-cherished hopes that some day all organized labor of Port- land might have a central building in I v. men to conduct its deliberations and 1 business. I And in order that full emphasis I mlght be given to the laying of the 1 cornerstone of the new labor temple, I now nearing completion at Fourth I and Jefferson streets, the usual Labor I uay parade was eliminated. Every TJnlon Represented. Tnc.. ' . . . cpreseniatives or every "'"" Day n the Portland district, together with members of their fam Bainerea in the public audi torium, where W. H. Fitzgerald, ......ur qi me cigarmakers' unlnn Land deputy labor r.en;re8'def.and M1s this ..,.,ucu in a oopy to the new laoor temple and witnessed the cere mony Incident to the laying of the cornerstone. Mayor Baker, State Treasurer vtnff City Commissioner Barbur, City Au- j. ui.jv ana onerirr Hurlburt all spoKe Dneny at the Auditorium. r,v ing tribute to the organized laboring hosts of this city, following which" Dr W. T. McElveen gave the principal nuuicaa oi me aay. xu iHie or years of strenuous ef- .i mo pari or individuals with in the ranks of labor, to comni,!. 7 7" . ; ' "rsanizea labor of this cny rniem nave its own home was re- countea oy Air. Fitzgerald. " ws oacK in i09, he stated, that a committee was appointed for the purpose of viewing property at Fourth and Aflder streets as a pos- .k.j mr a laoor temple. Dis agreement among members of this committee, the speaker averred, re- sulted in virtual abandonment r n plans for an exclusive building or uiguuizeu moor, S Locals Carried om Work. T3nf ntfh 1 . " eecu sown, many members of the labor forces were not wining to allow the plan to die, and as a result eight locals began an in dependent eriort to gain a building Th T-OB..1, f .1,1. .. -" w.to cuuri was tne leas ing of one floor In the building at Fourth and Alder atreets, which for many years was operated under the direction of the Labor Temple asso- ""tr Headquarters or or ganized labor wa moved to 162 Sec ona street, where a so-called labor temple was operated under the dire'e tion or the building trades council. According to J. W. Wheelock. an umer sptKtr ac tne Auditorium meet ing, the Portland Co-operative Labor Temple association was organized and incorporated fn 1918 as a stock com pany, with all stock eold to members 01, organized labor exclusively. Al though the stock Is owned Individual ly Dy members of organized labor. such stock must be voted throue-h the various bodies of organized labor and not by individual shareholders. Mayor Baker, Introduced by Chair man Fitzgerald as a man who did not always agree with organized labor but who always expressed his honest convictions, congratulated Portland's laboring men buu women upon Its new home. Home Owner an Asset. "Home is the foundatl.on of Ameri can institutions," said Mayor Baker. "America Is the land made up of homes and home-owners. Whenever a person purchases a home, imme diately ooes sucn a person Decome an asset in a community. Labor is dominant factor In the life of every community. With a home of Its own organized labor of Portland will have a iirmer grip on 11s own at ialrs, a more active Interest In the future of our city and, above all else, will con tinue to be an ardent supporter of America and her Institutions." The church, and the church alone. can restore stability and security to the present ' troubled industrial af fairs of this country, according to Dr. McElveen, the principal speaker at the auditorium meeting. He said in part: "Since the civil war our country has experienced an industrial revolu-l tion. The industrial revolution that tool place In England in the middle of the 19th century began In this) country after the civil war. That In- iCuncludcil ou I'aso 11, Column 1.1 Big Increase In Attendance Ex pected Portables Have Been Provided for Overflow. Play time ends today for more than 32.000 boys and girls of Portland. who must, after a three months' cation, resume their studies. While classes will not actually take up until later In the week, this i the first day of the fall term and has been set aside for registering pupils. distributInff book iista nd selecting Disa Bcnooi courses, A noticeable increase In attendance is being looked for and additional portables have been provided to ac commodate the overflow at some buildings. Ockley Green and Thomp son schools will be in a. position to transfer several hundred children to the new Beach school, a 12-room por table, west of Jefferson. Attend ance rolls will not be complete until all families are home from the hop fields. Difficulties In housing the boys and girls of James John high have been overcome and they will be distributed in various buildings until repairs are completed on their own about si weeks hence. School will take uo this morning at 8:30 at the high schools and 8:45 in the grades. BUT AIMU' UlttL, ID, LLUrL Message to Apprehend Youthful Pair Sent From Vancouver. Campbell Cribble, 16, and Myrtle Boyer, 16, eloped from Vancouver, Wash., yesterday and were believed to have come to Portland to get married, according to information telephoned the police last night by the Vancou- ver authorities. The parents of the two youngsters want them , appre hended and held until the Washing- ton authorities come and get them. The boy is described as 5 feet. 8 Inches tall, light compiexloned. with red hair and blue eyes. He wore a light suit and a cap. The girl was 5 feet 6 inches tall and weighed about 125 pounds. She was dark, with dark hair and eyes. She wore a pink or blue dress and a gray check coat. FOUR KILLED BY TRAIN Auto Stalls on Crossing In Front of Speeding- Passenger. SIOTTX FALLS. S. D., Sept. 6. Mr, and Mrs. Clark Wagoner, who live near here, and Roy DobinskI of this city were Instantly killed today and Frank Dobinski injured so severely that he died an hour later by an east bound Omaha passenger train. The dead were in an automobile that stalled on the track near Moun tain lake, Minnesota. The train crashed, head on, into their car and burled them in the wreckage COUPLE FATALLY BURNED Gasoline Used by Mistake in Kin dling Kitchen Fire. MARSH ALLTOWN, la., Sept. 6. J. L. Johnson, 60, a foreman in the Min- neapolls & St. Louis railroad shops and his wife were burned to death to day, Mrs. Johnson, by mistake, poured gasoline into the kitchen stove to hurry a fire. INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature, 67 degrees; minimum. 04 degrees. TODAY'S Fair; westerly winds. . Vnrflrn. Bolshevik army driven across Dnieper river by V rangel xorces. fare O. Metal workers In Italian cities seize. and operate bis plants. Page 3. Lloyd George names conditions for lease ot McSwiney. Page 1. Domestic. Ten killed, TO hurt In head-on collision of Interurban cars on curve. Page 1. Three crushed by rock slide in Cave of "Winds at Niagara tails. Page 1. 19 radicals- plot wreck of train and death of passengers. Page 4. Parents claim babe is restored to them eight months after death. Page 6. Democrats to offer evidence today in cam palgn fund case. Page National. Farm Implement prices held unlawfully I J . , V. mn n Ufa .tlir... Ta. K raised by manufacturers. Page Pacific Korthvrest. Ten die In Klamath Falls fire. Page 1 Hood River celebrates completion of Co lumbla highway pavlntf to Portland. Page 5, Rev. Father Lane of Albany Invested with high apostolic olilce. i-gga 7. I Pardon of Pender again belne sought by I inenuo. Learue snd labor discussed by Cox. Page 3. Harding victory In state of "Washington predicted. rase 11. Democrats Joining republieaa clubs. Page 10. Mr. Harding may not finally reject league, says George N . lcker&uam. Page 1. Sporta. Coast league results: San Francisco 0-V Portland 1-3; Sacramento 5-o, Oaklan 0-1-; Vernon 4-4. Seattle 1-8. eecon game 11 innings: Salt Lake 4-7, Lo Angeles 11-n. Page 12. Dempsey holds world title by knocking out Mlfcke. Page 1. Portland Golf club wins three-cornered city match. Page 13. Commercial and Marine. Sale of wooden steamers recalled by ship ping board. Page '21. Rail and water carriers urcred to absorb wharfage charges. Page 'Jl. Stockyartla trade good on holiday. Page 21. Portland and Vicinity. Joo Anderson's fatal fall attributed to whisky Instead of foul play. Page 9. Portland grocers declare United States fig ures on milk profits are erroneous. Page 10. Citv joins with labor In celebrating day. Page 1. . Waterway convention, to be held in Port land October 4-5. arouses interest. Page 15. Thirty-two thousand Portland children re turn to school tuday, rags 1. Europe Looks This Way for Peace Policy. VIEWS ON LEAGUE OUTLINED Purpose Previously Stated Declared Unchanged. SPECIFIC PLAN UNFORMED Definite Action on Lcajrue Ones- tion to Follow Conference of Ablest ThinVers. MARION". O., Sept. 6. Senator Harding's views on the league of na tions and labor issues were further elaborated today on the eve of his departure for Minnesota to make his first campaign speech outside of Ohio. Amendment or revision or recon struction" of the league covenant, h declared, still was among the policies to be considered when the time comes to frame a specific program for international peace. In such a recon struction, be added, Europe wanted this nation to lead the way. The republican nominee advocated closer relationship between employers and employes through Joint advisory committees and voluntary arbitration. and asserted that although he be lieved In unionism, he opposed '"la bor's domination of business or gov ernment." Railway Law Indorsed. He indorsed the labor provisions of the Each-Cummins railway act, and declared the cost of living could be reduced only If laborers gave honest effort In return for the present high wages. The nominee's views on labor issues were voiced at a local Labor-day cel ebration in a speech which he cut short after the chairman of the meet ing had informed him he was ex ceeding his allotted time. A local speaker who advocated the Plumb plan followed the senator to reply to some of the former's statements, but the candidate did not remain. Statements by several union offi cials indorsing his stand were'made public at Harding headquarters to night. League Support Hinted. The candidate's declaration regard ing a league psogramme was made tonight in commenting Informally on the visit here yesterday of George W. Wickersrtam, former republican attorney-general and a league support er. After his conference with the nominee Mr. Wickersham issued a statement saying the former would not "finally" reject the league. "General Wlckersham's statement," said Senator Harding, "calls for no criticism from me. We do not write statements for our visitors nor censor their words. This Is not a campaign of one mind, nor is there Insistence that all republicans shall think pre cisely as the nominee thinks. "I have spoken In the speech of acceptance and again on August 2S on the matter of the league of na tions and. the purpose uttered in these addresses will not be altered. America to Lend Way. "It Is folly to speak about a spe cific programme. The specific thing must be evolved out of a conference of the best thought and highest capacity which, can be brought to gether, not from the dictation of one spokesman. We are all agreed now that amendment or revision or re construction is possible and vastly better than reservations. Moreover, Europe is In accord and has sug gested that we lead the way. "Manifestly the path is opening clearly and we shall play America's big part and hold fast to all that America holds dear. There can be no lack of Clarity about that." The nominee also indicated that he might carry his suggestion for a new association of nations a step further in the near future, but he emphasized his belief that it probably would be Impossible because of rapid ly changing conditions abroad to com mit himself to any definite; or de tailed plan. Voluntary arbitration was de clared by the republican nominee to be the ideal solution of labor trou bles, and he advocated Joint commit tees of employers and employes, "not to run the business, but to promote mutual understanding." He asserted that no one could deny a laborer the right to quit his employment, but that adjustment of labor problems should be on the basis of Justice to every one. Plnm Plan Disapproved. Senator Harding also indorsed the Cummins-Esch law, restoring rail ways to private operation, and said he could not approve the "socialist plan," which proposed that the prop erties be placed under control of em ployes. Citing his own experience as an employer, the candidate said he never had any trouble with his employes in his newspaper establishment and added that, although print paper prices had increased his expenses by an amount equal to $300 for each worker In his plant, none of them ever ad suffered financially on ac count ' of it. In the course of his speech he also assailed profiteering, declnring that ..(Concluded un 1'ige 2. Column 2.) t.