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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 21, 1920)
TIIE MORNIXG OREGOXIAX. TUESDAY. DECEMBER 21, ? 1920 . - i i V V . 4 - :j .,1 BITTER FIGHT LOOMS OVER TARIFF- ISSUE itself at this time upon so an Impor tant a question of DrinclDle as that which the tariff proposals involve."' . "Let me say to my friend from Mis- sissippi," Senator Thomas, democrat, Colorado, interjected, "that .1 sym pathize -with - his view and between us we may be able to keep some part of the democratic party in line." Representative Ralney. in present ing the minority views, warned -of dangers which he said would beset Antagonism h Met . in Both K .mnVLr- Houses of Congress. clared that the measure amounted to an embargo and that 1t' would "in evitably" lead to retaliatory tariffs. Trade Treaties Discussed. ' "All commercial treaties ; between Till Hnn wava nnntlnDllv annillll hv EACH SIDE IS CONFIDENT .hB war" Mr- Ralney's report said. auu luuajr uew comineruHi unuo ao In process of formation. Every com- YEAR IN J! IS GIVE IE Democrats Want to Go Slow But Republicans Declare Farmer Situation Is Serious. , WASHINGTON, Dec 20. Presenta tion of the Fordney emergency tariff bill in the house and decision of its supporters to call It -up for considera tion Wednesday was followed today by expressions of open antagonism both In the house and senate. The opposition, hitherto manifested only to a slight extent, was intensi fied by the filing of minority views by Representative Rainey, democrat, Illinois, denouncing the measure from beginning to end, and by decision of the senate .democratic steering com mittee to resist hasty enactment of any. such legislation. Chairman .Fordney of the house ways and means committee, in re porting the measure, urged action not because it was perfect, but be cause it was the best obtainable under the circumstances. The report declared that remedial legislation was urgently necessary to correct a situation which was described as rap idly becoming worse and likely to bring ruin to the agricultural In dustry. The filing of the committee's report disclosed that the measure had been made applicable for a period of ten months from passage Instead of the one-year period previously fixed. Chairman Fordney submitted with the report estimates of the treasury de partment showing that on the basis of available import figures, approx imately $130,000,000 in revenue would be derived from the duties to be im posed under the measure. The com modities enumerated .in the Dill now produce less than $3,000,000 annually. Commodities Duties Listed . As finally approved and reported to the house, the bill carries -import duties on commodities, which, to gether with the rates agreed to in committee and the estimated revenue ti come therefrom, follow: Wheat, proposed duty, 30 cents a bushel, es timated revenue, $2,109,520; wheat fiour, 20 per cent, $657,000; corn, 15 cents a bushel. $137,625; beans, 2 cents a pound, $3,091,760; peanuts, un shtlled. 3 cents a pound. $642,540; peanuts, shelled. 3 cents a pound. $4,405,410; potatoes, 25 cents a bushel, $1,560,000; onions, 40 cents a bushel, $72,7.040; rice, cleaned, 2 cents a WHAT CONGRESS DID AS ITS DAY'S WORK. y- - - Senate,' '-. Concurrence wsts, given-in the house amendment to the resolu tion reviving the war finance corporation,' eliminating all ref erence to the federal reserve board. A resolution was offered de claring the sense of the senate to be 'that no recognition of any kind be- given the soviet government of Russia. The nomination of Senator John F. Nugent, who was de feated for re-election, to be a member of the federal trade commission, was received and ; confirmed in open session. The nomination of John F. O' Bryan of New York to be a major-general in the officers' reserve corps, thereby making him eligible to become head of the militia bureau, .was re ceived. Democratic senators held a conference and decided that emergency tariff legislation is not required, but that careful study and debate must be given the pending proposition for the benefit of. agricultural prod ucts, i Laughing at the refusal of the house to join in the usual holiday recess, the senate laid off work until Thursday, and thus will solve the problem by a series of three-day adjourn ments. House. Ways and means committee reported the emergency ' tariff ' bill for relief of farmers; inter- ' state and foreign commerce , committee had a hearing of ( Sheppard-Towny maternity bill urged for immediate considera tion by the national league of women voters. " " Census committee met and decided to have hearings on the reapportionment bills for the house based on the last census. Representative Stevenson of South Carolina introduced a resolution to turn German and Austrian property in the hands of alien enemy custodian over i to thel war finance coTppration until congress' is ready to dis tribute it. Two ' Others Sentenced for Concealing Paper's Owners. ALL THREE TO. APPEAL pound. $2,900,660; rice, uncleaned, 114 cents a pound, $235,575; flour, meal mercial nation is today prepared with ana broken rice, Vi cents a pound, the means of quick retailiation, and $5037; rice, unhulled, cent a there is grave danger that they will pound, $70,672; lemons. Hi cents a quickly respond to the challenge we pound. J8S1.250: oils, peanut. 26 cents give them in this bill. a gallon, $4,333,420; oils, cottonseed. The Rainey report also charged 20 cents a gallon, $2,479,400; oils, that the bill had been framed without soya bean, 20 cents a gallon, $3,837,- hearings and that no experts had 000; cattle, 30 per cent, $5,851,500; I been examined. It asserted that the sheep, $2 a head, $102,484; lambs, $1 majority in congress proposed pro- a head, no estimated revenue; mut- lection as tne meaicine ior every ecu fun mil limb 2V. cents a Dound. I nomic evil, adding that "this bill is $1,656,792; wool, unwashed, 15 cents a protection mad." The republican plan pound. $9,900,000; wool, washed. 30 cents a pound, $28,500,000; wool, man ufactures of, 45 cents a pound, $11, 250.000; wool, scoured. 45 cents a pound, $45,000,000. Vote Divides Committee. of protection in this instance, the re port declared, offered a remedy worse than the ill it sought- to cor rect. Production Blow Alleged, After, reviewing the trade figures I In avnnrtn i ni4 fmnArta that minnrltv On the vote in the ways and means .... ,,',..,,-,- r committee, on reporting the bill two hibitive tariff ratea meant event. republicans and four democrats voted lowering . of : production, in m me negative. fiepreseniaiives i mgrjca Connecticut; were understood to have "Of course Europe can paj only In ihn rmihii-n who Btonrf gold or goods, he continued. They against- the measure, while Repre- cannot pay in sold and they are not scntatives Rainey, Hull. Tennessee; manufacturing at the present time Oldfield. Arkansas and Collier. Miss- enough goods. kven if they were, issippi; were the democrats who op- we propose in this bill to make im posed the legislation. ports less and less. If we are to re The republican committee members niain a creditor nation, and we must were said to have opposed the bill on do that or suffer now immeasurable the ground that if tariff legislation financial calamities, we must import was to be enacted it should include more than we expoVt. protection for manufactured commod- ' u might be possible to report out i.f , , .hhi, oii,.i , I a more hastily prepared, ill-consid- remain in the final draft. This con tention appeared to have gained some ered measure than this, but up to the present time it never has beee isu vv uau auiGU DUI1IQ I . . , . , strength among representatives from ""in.; r concluded ni expres4- a? viawn nroii'tinir that- thA tricts and I is expected to precipitate report 8ubmltted by Chairman Ford- heated debate. Blrtrr Opposition Expected. Representative Knutson, republican, Minnesota, chairman of the recently organized conference of representa tives from farming districts, said he waa sure there would be bitter oppo sition from the urban representatives, but added: ney "would not venture tar irom shore" and that the republican sup porters of the bill woftld merely de mand that "everybody vote for this legislation whether he believed it right in principle or not." F. I). Roosevelt Gets Job. BALTIMORE. Dec. 20. Franklin D. "We members who see the need of I Roosevelt candidate of the demo. the farmers for help are prepared for cratic party for vice-president in the a battle royaL We think we can last election, will assume charge of muster 200 votes for the bill and I the New York office of the Fidelity personally serve notice on those peo- Trust & Deposit company of Mary pie who seek to defeat this bill that land on January 1. Announcement they will sweat blood before they get that Mr. Roosevelt had been elected anything for their Industries when vice-president of the pompany was it comes to a permanent tariff unless made after a meeting 'of the board mey ao me iair tnmg now. of directors today. Against mis came ine statement oi tne senate democratic steering com- S. & H. green stamps for cash. mittee that they did not regard the Holman Fuel Co Main 353. 660-21. measure as an emergency proposal I Adv. ana wouia aemana mat it be consid ered by the finance committee in regular order when It reaches the senate. i Nstlee Served Pnm Floor. Senator Harrison, '.Mississippi, dem ocrat, served notice from the floor of the senate that he would oppose the bill. ' "The democratic party," ' he de clared, "cannot afford to stultify Verdict Cannot Be Accepted Be cause of ; Knowledge of His Innocence, Says Publisher. ' NEW YORK, Dec. 20. Dr. Edward A Rumely, ex-publisherof the New York Evening' MalV and S. Walter Kaufman and Norvin LIndheiJn were sentenced to prison terms of one year and one day ech in federal court here today on conv'Ction for conspiracy tc withhold from the government knowl edge of the alleged German owner ship of the newspaper during part of the war. Rr. Rumely and co-defendants, who were bothyNew York attorneys, were found guilty by a jury on Saturday of having failed to report to the alien property custodian a debt of $1,451,700 to the imperial German government. The charge that tire German govern ment actually owned shares of the newspaper's stock was-flbt proved. All Three Are to' Apeal. Judge "William I. Grubb of the" Unit ed States district court sentenced all three to the federal prison at Atlanta, Ga. The three defendants announced they would appeal. Before being sentenced all three defendants protested their, innocence of committing any . "wrong-against this country." - '- "Accept this ' verdict . I cannot," said Dr. Rumely In a statement, "for JJefore the tribunal of my own con science I am innocent. For. 15 years, in the school that I founded, in all my public work, in the progressive movement, as in my newspaper, I have given my best to further the things that would be helpful to my country. I have never knowingly done any act to harm it- America ' Declared ' First. t "My grandparents .of, German blood, myself a' student of Germaa universities, I loved the German peo ple. In every Issue, however, that affected this country, I worked for and advocated the full- maintenance of tour rights more emphatically against - German ruthlessness thap against' the British blockade, and in the Evening Mail, I was among the first to urge preparedness in econom ic, military and social' matters." Dr. Rumely declared that the last two and a half years of his life have been "a black hell," his "resources are far spent" by continuous federal prosecution and he has been debarred from all work. Deal Held Honorable, "Today it is hard to visualize our relations of five years ago with Ger many, then a friendly nation," he added. ''Although working against the British -blockade, my association with German representatives was on a decent and honorable basis, It was nothe damning thing it would have been with - German aggression war upon us. "I knew that Heinrich Albert acted as banker for . commercial interests centered in Germany. I believed him when he said that funds were being advances for tne account of Herman Sielcken, who, as an international shipper, had much to gain from an opening of the seaways. To my be lief my report to the alien custodian was truthful. , If with my energies spent, this remains a legally recorded verdict, I must ana win submit to the law of the land; acquiesce I never can." ' 1 I i ' fx nan i 'i-' - , T About Good Luck! Here Are Several Thousand Neckties The Most Handsome Gift Scarfs The Finest Values We Have Ever Offered for Particular Men At $i.00, $1.65 and $1.95 Fresh and New Right Out of the Packing Cases Reaching Us Five Days Before Christmas PARTICULAR MEN will be delighted with these Scarfs, made of fine materials, the most refined colorings, the choicest patterns and the smartest shapes." Positively the broadest and most exquisite assemblage of Men's Scarfs we have ever offered at the prices ready for selection by those who wish to give men friends the one gift that is always right, always useful and always highly appreciated. Whether you want to give him just one superb Scarf, or a half dozen, our holiday collections will give you gratifying selection, at whatever price you wish to pay. At $1.00 At $1.65 At $1.95 Hegadorns, Italian twill and fine quality satins. Basket weaves, fine quality satins and bengalines. Sired Floor Lipman, Wolfe fy Co. Imported Swiss and brocad ed silks, heavy basket weaves of the finest quality. This Store Uses No Comparative Prices They Are Misleading and Often Untrue ALIEN HEARINGS LIKELY SEXiATE EXPECTED TO HEAR AM OF COXTKOVEKSY. and $4,000,000 in Gold Arrives. NEW "YORK, Dec. 20. Gold valued at $4,000,000 arrived today on the Im perator for the account of the Brit ish government with Kuhn; Loeb & Co. ' Braiding, embroidery hemstitching. Booth's. Morgan bldgr Adv. Several Societies Want to Present v Case When'Immigrantion Re striction Comes Up. WASHINGTON. Dec 20. First ac tion since the Johnson bill restricting immigration for one year was passed by the house, will be taken tomorrow by the senate immigration committee. Senator Colt, Rhode Island, an nounced today. The committee will b. asked to de cide whether it shall open bearings or report the bill at once, but Sena tor Colt said that inasmuch as he had received a number of applications from societies and Individuals -to be heard, he would urge the committee to begin hearings the first week of the new year. ' . In addition to the Johnson bill, the committee will consider several senate measure relating to immigration, but differing from that already passed by the house in the manner ana time oi the enforcement of restrictions. Wide differences of opinion exist among senators regarding the Immi gration question and- it is probable that the committee will decide fft hold extensive hearings. Candy Company Passes Dividend. NEW'TCfRK. 'Dec. 2o) The direc tors of the Continental Candy com pany today decided to pass the regu lar quarterly dividend of 25 cents a share, now due. The company s one of the many corporations in which Allan A. Ryan Is interested. A Phonograph The Ideal Christmas G lit V All .the latest models to choose from. Special Xmas' Terms ; PAYMENTS ONLY $5 . A MONTH Jailers Music Bldg. Entrance 287 Wash. St. Take Elevator to 2d Floor It man waiia glo t. Merchandise Read The Dregonian classified ads. Make Yourself a Present of a Bradford Suit or Overcoat Bradford Clothes Are Back to Normal Prices $15, $20, $25, $30, $35, $40, $45 285 Washington St Bet Fourth and Fifth b 3r cf d j (ft f I THOMPSON'S W" 1 " Deep-Carve Lenses A . Are Better jf) ffl Trademark Registered VW El THE SIGN OF PERFECT SERVICE Thoroughly experienced Optometrists for the examt- a) ' . i j ... ' sKiiiea worxmen to con struct the lenses a concen trated service that guaran tees dependable glasses at at reasonable prices. 1 (?) Complete liens Grinding ' Factory n tan Prenataes ' BATH IUUK Cil,a THOMPSON OPTICAL INSTITUTE EYESIGHT SPECIALISTS. Portland's Largest. Most Modern, Best Equipped. Ex clusive Optical Eatabllakment a9-l-tl CORBKTT BLDG, WKTH AND MORRISON ; -, ,.: Since lixm. , cz: c OuyChffittms Seals miMo fyk'Tuberculosis A Sale of Christmas Candies at New Low Prices 29c and 39c Pound Christmas certainly wouldn't he Christmas without plenty of lng!it-eoTorerJ, nuxerl candies and rich, sweet chocolates. Owing to the enormous demand we have provided additional candy booths and are now selling Christmas candies on three floors, as followss ' ' ' , . 4 I Cream Mixed, Broken MixeZ and Hard Mixed, 29c. Tjotatd Chocolate Creams, 39c Zpund. vt..- A All Bunty Candies Half Price " - ' The most delicious of mixed candies in attractive packages Tip Top Inn Bakery, Sweets Booth, Stect Floor anl Economy Basemcnl Store, Lipman, Wolfe & Co, r . , This space donated by s . - 4 the First National Bank Tonight AUDITORIUM-8 o'Clock PUBLIC MEETING In Commemoration of the 300th Anniversary' of the Landing of the Pilgrims Patriptic Address by a Brilliant Orator CHORUS OF 300, ORCHESTRA OF. 100 PUBLIC x ' SCHOOL PUPILS All Are Invited Admission Free , i- t jv . . ' "s ". f - . - ,4 .7