YOL. LX NO. 18,789 Enter! at Portland (Oriron) pnjfnfflr s Snnl-Oiiit Mntter PORTLAND, OREGON, WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY, 9, 1921 PRICE FIVE CENTS EX-HUSBAND SLAIN; BIO, TROPIC CITY. EGG PRICES FALLING; END IS NOT IN SIGHT STORM-TORN TIMBER HEAVY EARTH SLIDES HAMPER CITY TRAFFIC MAYWOOD DRIVE IS BLOCKED FOR THIRD TI3IE. WOMAN, MAN JAILED LOSS IS $100,000,000 DUETO GERMANY ED B. WILSO.V SHOT DEAD IX DROP IX PORTLAND IS TWO TO FOUR CEXTS DAILY. XOTHIXG HEARD FROM 20 TO 30 ISOLATED FA3IILIES. XOKTH B.D LODGING HOCSE, STATE REQUESTED 'TO CENSOR FILMS NO APOLOGY HELD MM G NT ISSUE WONDER CAPITAL 0 0 EVADED Legion Regrets Nation's Action on Bergdoll. ESCAPE PROBE APPROVED Resolutions to Be Sent to Members of Congress. NON-PARTISAN CASE UP Organization Refuses to Take Any Action as to League, Declared by Some to ,Be Disloyal. WASHINGTON'. D. C. Feb. . Regret that the American govern- nent saw fit to apologize to the Berlin government lor the attempt of Americans to capture Grover C. BergdolL wealthy American draft evader, was expressed In a resolution adopted today by the executive com mittee of the American Legion. The resolution ordered sent to all members of congress, approved the proposed congressional investigation f Bergdoll's escape from custody. Efforts to put the legion on record as opposing the non-partisan league ere made by members from Okla homa and other western states, but various resolutions were voted down nd tabled. Tbe committee voted unanimously to uphold F- A. Gal- braith, national commander. In ad vising state commanders of Kansas, Kebraska and Oklahoma that the legion itself should take no active art against tbe league. Leaders Declared Disloyal. Correspondence with respect to the non-partisan league question which began with an appeal from the Salina, Kan, post for support from the na tional committee in a fight against the league, was read. Other appeals bad followed from western and southwestern posts and all were shown to have been given the same Answer by the commander. Speakers urging the legion to go n record as opposing the league declared Its leaders were disloyal and were using the league to cloak sedi tious activities. Opponents con tended such action would be con sidered by many farmers and other league members, who themselves were loyal, as Indicating opposition of the legion to economio and politi cal policies of the league. All speakers agreed the legion should not oppose the league's status as a political party. Conditioned Gift Declined. Announcement was made that ef forts would be made to have the Knlghta of Columbus remove certain conditions from their offer to the legion of 15.000.000 for construction of a war memorial In Washington. The committee las', night voted to re fuse the offer unless made uncondi tionally. John G. Emery, chairman of a com mittee appointed to take the matter up, expressed belief that money of fered by the Knights of Columbus could not be used to erect a memo rial under an agreement entered into by the Knights as one of the seven participants in the united war work campaign fund. This agreement was said to stipulate that no funds raised by public subscription "should be spent for non-war work or perma nent structures." The $5,000,000 of fered by the Knights of Columbus was said to have been that organ isation's remaining share. V. M. C. A. Fuad Is Used. The recent bestowal by the T. M. C. A. to the legion without conditions as a. part of the war work fund is being used by the legion as a trust fund and. under a resolution adopted by the committee today, may be used as collateral. The committee adopted a memorial urging congress to unite with the Hied natlona in assembling bodies of the unnamed dead of the associated armies in France and erecting a me morial to them. Committee members spent much time appealing to con gressmen to take immediate action en legislation for relief of wounded ar veterans. " - 0IOCSE DECIDES OX PROBE (Military Committee to Determine If ' Investigation Is Justified. WASHINGTON. Feb. 8. A prelimi nary investigation of the escape to Germany of Grover Cleveland Berg doll. wealthy Philadelphia draft dodger. Is to be made by the house military committee to determine whether a thorough Inquiry by a Special committee is justified. This was announced today by Chair man Kahn, after an executive ses sion of the committee, which voted to launch the preliminary hearing Thursday. "I'm convinced the whole affair was rotten and that we should go to tbe bottom of it," he said. Copper Pays Dividend. NEW YORK. Feb. 8. The Cerro de Pasco Copper company today declared a quarterly dividend of SO cents a share, payable on March 1 to holders of stock at the close of business Feb- ruary 17. The dividend three months' ago was II a abare.- Mrs. Wilson and J. B. Stephens Re' fuse to Discuss Killing; Vic tim Rusiies to Street. NORTH BEND. Or., Feb. 8. (Spe cial.) Ed. B. Wilson, shot through the heart at the Alpine lodging house this afternoon, staggered through the hallway to the street and fell de-d on the sidewalk. A number of per sons who saw his exit did not realize the man had been killed, but thought bo .waa. stricken, with some ailment. Inside was J. B. Stephens, known about the city as "Oklahoma Red" and Mrs. Ed. Wilson, divorced wife of Wil son. Both were arrested by the city police and placed in separate jails here and at Marshfield. Mrs. Wilson being sent to t ie neighboring town. First questioning ellcted no infor mation from either, other than that Stephens declared to the first officer who arrived; "I know all about It." Later Stephens told the officers he killed Wilson, but would make no fur ther admissions as to the cause of shooting or what led up to the deed. Coroner Wilson declared be would hold an inquest, but was impelled to wait until tomorrow before calling a jury, under, the possibility evidence might be found bearing on the case. Mrs.. Wilson steadfastly refused to mal:e any statement. Wilson bad been a resident of this city for a number of years and bis reputation was not the best. Be passed a year in Jail at Oakland on a charge of counter felting, waa mixed up in a number of court cases here and suspected of being a bootlegger. WOOL BILL IS APPROVED Committee Reports Favorably on Truth-ln-Fabrlcs Measure. THE OREGONIAN . NEWS BU REAU. Washington, D. C Feb. . Representative Webster of Washing ton was authorized by the house com mittee on interstate and foreign com merce today to report out favorably the French truth-in-fabrics bill, the author of which is Burton D. French, representative of Idaho. The measure is one for which the wool growers of all the western .states have been carrying on an active campaign backed by many wearers of clothes, The bill requires the manufacturer of cloth and clothing to mark it plainly to show what percentage of wool and what proportion of shoddy It Contains. The purpose Is to pre vent the sale of shoddy cloth as all wooL The only amendments adopted In committee were offered by Mr. French himself and were- toward strengthening the bllL ARMY STAGES TANK SHOW Xew Types of Battle Wajronss Ex hibited in Washington. WASHINGTON. D. C. Feb. . The army held a "tank Bhow" today, put ting new types of, battle wagons through their paces, with Secretary Baker and war department officials watching. Many spectators saw the machines rumble up and down seem ingly impossible slopes, leap ob stacles and push down trees. Among the tanks was a new model armed with a six-inch gun mounted in a turret. It developed a speed of 12 miles an hour over broken ground, officers said, and SO miles an hour on ordinary roads. HOTEL PATRONS ROBBED Masked Tonth Gets $14 From Two In Rose City Hotel. A youth whose face was masked with a red bandanna handkerchief held up at the point of a .38 revolver late last night Douglas Lively, pro prietor of the Rose City hotel, 102 North Sixth street, and two of Llvely's visitors, W. B. Edwards and J. W. Welch, in the lobby of the hotel. He got from the trio only Sit and made his escape before inspectors from the detective bureau, who came shortly afterward, arrived. Police say they have no clew to the man's identity. BASIN PROJECT BOOSTED Washington Would Err in Aban doning Irrigation Plan, Is Belief. THE OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU, Washington, D. C, Feb. 8. It would be a mistake for the suite of Wash ington to abandon the work on the Columbia river basin Irrigation' project. Senator Poindexter said, in a telegram sent today to the Spokane chamber of commerce. The senator said that while the size of the project undoubtedly jvlll require much time and work to pro cure its adoption by the federal gov ernment, he had no doubt that even tually this would be accomplished. BLOW-UP LAID TO THfEVES School Tragedy Believed Result of Xltro Plant Robbery. LAWRENCEVILLE. 111., Feb. 8 Thieves were believed by the authori ties today responsible for the deaths of a teacher and seven pupils killed yesterday at the Cross Roads school.' near here, by the explosion of a can of nitroglycerin found by a boy in a creek near the school. A coroner's Jury returned a verdict' o' accidental death. It was reported that a nitro plant was robbed Sun- day. Oriental Scene Spirited to Occident. VIEW AT NIGHT FAIRY-LIKE Splendor of Brazil's Metropo lis Defies Description. LIQUOR CHEAP, PLENTIFUL Citizenship Is Made Vp of Many Races, Fond of Pleasure; Clubs, Lottery and Policy Flourish. BT LOUIS SEIBOLD. Copyright, 1021. by the New York World. ruDiisuea oy Arrangement.; Rio is the show window of Brazil Its scenic splendors defy adequate description In mere verbal terms and figures of metaphor. That which 'lies back of it Is not so fascinating. But one never thinks of this wnen ne comes upon this tropic city, whose dally life presents bewildering facets of contrast not to be found in any other metropolis in the western hem isphere, or in the eastern, for that matter. Any one privileged to gaze upon Rio from the sea by day or night remembers it. Approached under the heated glare of a summer morning in Decem ber, It wears the garb and atmo sphere of the orient It looks as if it might have been transplanted from the vicinity of Treblzond or Azerbaldjan overnight and set down back of the wide horseshoe of pearly beach, lapped by tiny violet wavelets crested with silver. Silhouetted against the blaze of amethyst and gold that marks the dtad day's funeral pyre, Rio sparkles with a dazlinig magnificence of color, duplicated only by Cancpus, the southern star, whose, glories are veiled to the northern eye. Klo at Mb lit Farylllce.' Left behind at night, as the Ameri can dreadnought r lorida left it on Christmas eve, ' th picture of Rio that remains in tf-Smind is almost fairylike In its unrealties. Brilliantly lighted, the trtental town. In an occidental environment that hides the squalor, ignorance, su perstition and savage bigotry of me diaeval Portugal and uncivilized na tive, stood out under a full moon that radiated cascades of gorgeous silver tips from the "Sugar Loaf," looming high, sheer and tapering at the mouth of the harbor; upon the "Finger of God," another creation of nature shaped like the hand of a man or a woman set down between two of the (Concluded on Page 2, Column S.) NOT EVEN I I I f Mlfn Ml. - sw- -M-fS f S - - S J III III let 1 u t fc Mifflin ufr. if u hi "v Great Increase In Flocks Over Pre vious Years and Mild Win ter Receive Credit. No matter what happens to other food prices, eggs are going to be cl.eap this year, in fact, they are lower now than at this season for many years past. Egg markets all over the country are declining fast. Experts in this line say production will be of record volume as several years of abnormally high iyios have had a most stimulating- effect on the poultry growing Industry. With the great Increase in flocks there has also been a mild winter in most sec tions and this has started the hens laying several weeks earlier than usual. In the local market egg prices have been falling 2 to 4 cents a day. There is a large surplus in this territory that must be disposed of In the east and prices here consequently follow the course of eastern markets. Yes terday prices dropped in all the lead Ing distributing centers, Chicago heading the list with a 6-cent break. Portland dealers who are shipping to the east sent bids of 25 cents to coun try sellers for today's receipts. Prices at retail are still around the 40-cent mark, but are likely to be a dime lower before the week is over. Storage operators expect to put away eggs this spring at under 20 cents, something they have not done since several years before the war. SPOKANE, Wash., Feb. 8. (Spe cial.) Egg prices here have dropped about 10 cents in the last two weeks, quotations in retail stores today showed. - Strictly fresh eggs now are quoted at 60 cents a dozen. Ranch eggs range a few cents lower. VOTE IS PUTJJN RECORD Summers of Washington Set Down as Opposing Winslow Bill. THE OREGONIAN NEWS BU REAU, Washington. D. C, Feb. 8. Representative Summers of Washing ton, who caused some consternation among bis colleagues of the north west states yesterday by casting the one vote which defeated the Winslow bill to pay the railroads part of the money due them under the Esch- Cummins law, will stand in the rec ord as against the measure. . - Wben the bill was passed today no record vote was taken. The bill was bitterly fought by the Plumb plan leaguers and by representatives from districts where tbe non-partisan league is strong. STATE OFFICIAL ACCUSED Impeachment of Oklahoma Lieutenant-Governor Recommended. OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla., Feb. 8. Impeachment of Lieutenant-Governor Trapp of Oklahoma Is recommended in a report read In the house today by an investigating committee. . Fraud and false claims in connec tion with bond purchases are charged. STOPPING TO SEE HOW" BADLY ' i 1: a. vv-fT I " fr-. mm a Assistant Forest Supervisor in Washington Declares Relief 'MayTake Several Days. PORT ANGELES. Wash., Feb. 8. Earlier estimates of the amount of damage to timber by the storm which swept the Olympic peninsula of Washington on January 29 and 30 were greatly Increased today with the announcement by Charles Mor ganroth, assistant federal forest su pervisor for this district, that the loss In uprooted timber Is more than 3100,000,000. The estimate was made after a. trip to the stricken district. While no loss of life has been re ported, from 20 to 30 families In the Clearwater. Boeochiel. Hoh and Queetz river districts have not been heard from, according to Mr. Morgan roth. Many of them are believed to be short of food and it may be several days before they can be reached with supplies, he said. Sixty per cent of the timber can be salvaged with prompt action, Mr. Morganroth said today. 'Something must be done before the summer months," said Mr. Mor ganroth. "The danger of fire Is ter rible. Fully 60 per cent of all the area of the 2200 square miles of storm-swept territory Is down, and of the remainder the best trees are damaged, the scrubs remaining standing. All along the coast the hemlock has suffered great damage. One can stand at Quillayute prairie and see the Sol Due river three miles away. A few days ago this was a dense forest ' ;me of those trees were standing 600 years before Columbus discovered America. The storm is the greatest disaster that has ever happened in Washington." Thousands of small timber owners are affected by the terrific havoc of the storm, according to the report. The big companies and their approx imate holdings are: Lacey Timber company, 40.000 acres Mct-artny Timber company. 1.260.000.000 feet of fi-- Milwaukee Land company, 40.000 acres; Merrill & Ring company, 1.000,000,000 feet; Goodyear Logging company, 1,000,000.000 feet; A. Fair service company, 300,000,000 feet , The Washington state schools and university holdings are particularly bard- hit No loss of life has been reported, but there are 20 to 30 families in the Clearwater, Bogochiel, Hoh and Queetz river districts that have not been heard from. Ail trails to those districts are obliterated and it is re ported It may be weeks before com munication can be established. Roads and trails were reported blocked In places by piles of fallen trees 40 feet high. Reports from Forks. La Push and other towns Indicate the widespread effects of the storm. An Indian from La Push reported six houses at that place completely destroyed, among them the home of William Penn, Quillayute Indian, who rescued the two survivors of the steel barge W. (Concluded on Page 2, Column 1.) HE'S HURT, If t s t 1 I Hflnn nt nTPrPSK SPPn IIUIIU W I III kvl WW LV WW W-l III Senate Action. HOPE OF RESTRICTION WANES Big Organizations in Market for Che?.p Labor. SENATE SEEN AT WORST Sullivan Tells How Bill Intended to Bar Hordes From Europe Was Chloroformed. BY MARK SULLIVAN. ' (Copyright By the New York Evening Post, Inc., Published by Arrangement) WASHINGTON, D. C, Feb. 8. (Spe cial.) It was not merely racial con sideratlon that led the senate Into evading consideration of the Imml gration restriction bill. The only racial element that ap peared to take much interest In th bill and the only one that put In formal appearance at the hearings was the Jews. They made their pro test through a prominent Jewish law yer of New York and through agents of the National Hebrew Trades Unio Immigration Bureau, the Union of American Hebrew Congregations and other similar organizations. This Jewish opposition may have had some weight in Isolated quarters, but It is doubtful If the aggregate of It helped their own cause. A discom fortinsr Issue arose over statements . made before the ommittea hv aerents of 8ome of tnesa orjranlzatlons tnat , , ii ,v- ... they were not accelerating the re moval of Jews from eastern Europ to America, and, on the other hand contradictory testimony produced by advocates of restriction that on othe occasions agents of these same or' ganizations had spoken with en thuslasm of the energy and effective ness of their work to facilitate th coming of their co-religionists. Jewish Bulletin Quoted. For example. Professor Jeremiah Jenks of New York university pro duced a copy of the Jewish Immigra tion Bulletin and quoted an official statement to the effect that last Oc tober the Hebrew Immigrant Aid so ciety had been "enabled to engage 50 more workers" at Warsaw, In Poland, and that "we filled out 600 applica tions a day, having 12 clerks on duty for this particular work." But it Is not probable that many senators were moved by the Jewish opposition to the bill, which was the only racial opposition that appeared at the bearings. It is probable that a much larger number of senators were moved by the energy of the agents of powerful interests who have a commercial mo tive for resisting any limitation of Im migration. A list of steamship com panies, railroad companies, beet sugar companies, lumber companies, construction companies, building com panies and other commercial inter ests, which were represented in oppo sition to the bill, would fill a page of this paper. Big Interests Active. Each of these organizations is powerful locally and the aggregate of all of them may well have been able to influence the senate as a whole. The senators from the New England and eastern states have powerful constituents who want im migrant labor to reduce costs In their mills, "while senators from the south western states respond to the stimu lus of beet sugar companies and other large land owners who want the use of peon labor from Mexco. To a large degree the hearings were a case of general nlerest versus special n terests. For example, a Texas representa tive, John C. Box, said the masses of bis constituents don't want Mexico peon labor to come In and placed his objection on the same fundamental social grounds that constituted the objection to bringing in slaves before the civil war. Immediately after Representative Box testimony the committee wae In undated by telegrams and personal messages from tne ureal western Sugar company, the Ctah-Idaho Sugar company, the Texas Land Owners' as sociation and similar organizations. Against the compactness and energy of these special interests the lone and unorganized advocates of restriction bad an air of futility. Happy Poaltloa Occupied. In the course of the hearings It turned out that there Is a National Federation of Construction Industries, which Includes the Associated Gen eral Contractors of America, the American Wholesale Lumber associa tion and more than a score of other organizations, covering every phase of the building industry. .This fed eration of construction Industries has among Its otner activities an immi gration committee, whose function appears to be to obtain foreign labor. The chairman of this immigration committee of the National Federation of Constructive Industries, in open ing his argument against restriction. remarked that "I am in a particular ly bappy position, because I live six months of the year in each of two cities, and, fortunately. Senator Edge iCusvludud on tu.fi 3, Column S.Jt Terwilliger Boulevard Again Bur- Hi! led and Earth Thunders Down Willamette Heights. Serious slides at the base of the heights at the west of the city yes terday blocked one road and greatly hampered traffic on two others. The slides will require the expenditure of a large sum of money to clear. The most serious slide was on Maywood drive near Washington street. The drive is one of the two entrances to Kings Heights, and Is the only direct artery to the St. Francis hill district. The earth com pletely covered the drive for a dis tance of about 50 feet, varying In depth from four to ten feet. This slide was the thirl on May wood drive since Saturday. The first was fairly well cleared away and a 10-foot space opened and barricaded on Monday, when the second started. almost pushing a largo municipal truck over a 20-foot embankment wall on the far side of the road. The men were at work clearing this second slide yesterday, when, at 10 o'clock, the third and largest catapult of dirt tumbled down the hilL A new slide on Terwllllger boule vard was caused yesterday by the excavations for the county hospital. This slide was directly beneath the excavations and consisted of dirt piled on the hill as It was taken from the hospital site. This makes the fourth or fifth slide since September from the same causes: The third serious slide was In the Willamette Heights section on Thirty- first street, near Thurman street where 25,000 cubic yards of earth thundered down to the street. The thoroughfare. however. was not blocked to traffic. SOLDIER WEDS IN FRANCE American Marries Daughter of Mayor of Gevrolles. DIJON. Feb. 8. Lieutenant H. T. Allen, son of Brigadier-General Allen commander In chief of the American forces In Germany, was married today at Gevrolles to Mme. Juliette de Sousev. daughter of the mayor of Gevrolles. The population of the village witnessed the wedding. HANGMAN FORGETS TASK Sheriff Asks Alabama Governor What to Do With Xegro. BATON ROUGE, La., Feb. 8. Sheriff Grant of Ouchita parish, notified Gov ernor Parker today that he had for gotten to hang Lonnle Eaton, negro, convicted of murder February 4, as required by the sentence and asked what to do with the prisoner. The governor has put the problem up to Attorney-General Coco. INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature, 52 decrees; minimum. i aegrees. TODAY'S Rain; southerly winds. Foreign. Rio. Brazil's wonder enpital. IiKe oriental city spirited to Occident, face 1. French optimism over reparations fast dis appearing, fage - America declared after Kamchatka. Page S National. Hand of big Interests seen In failure of Im migration bill, says buiuvao. fags 1. Legion regrets apology made to Germany In .Bergaou inciaenu ray. x. Senate naval committee against halting capital ship construction, rage 8. Colonel Charles R. Forbes of Spokane, Wash., selectea Dy presiaent-eiect lor, shipping board membership. Page 2. Foreign liquor shipments across United States barred, rage is. Domestic. Witness) alleged to have confessed Mooney case was a "iraaie-up. fag s. Spending instead of hoarding money urged by national prosperity oureau. x-age u, Harding to desert houseboat and go to St. Augustine by train today, r age 13 Legislatures. Idaho housa passes senate Din repealing two-mlil nignway tax iw. rim o. Mandatory death sentence for first-degree murder deleatea Dy wasaingion jegis luture. Page 5. House, like senate, passes seven port bills. Page 6. Spare to ship food to China sought In joint memorial oi ic "bc Representative Burdlck In Oregon house replies to personal bo mm uy state engineer. Page 6. fish regulation problem solved by senate. Page o. Banks bill, providing rree tatnooks ror elementary scnoois, passeu oy senate. i"age 7. State is asked to censor films. Page 1. Adjutant-General White gives law-makers data on cost OI soiuier oonus. x-age I. Irrigation bill manace development. Cup per an l bcnneewcK ien juiui toiuum tee. Page 4 Paclfie Northwest. Ex-husband is slain: woman and man ar rested at JNortn nena. rage x. Storm causes 100,000.000 loss In Washing ton timber. Page 1. ( Sports Dispute over independent basketball cham pionship In city looms. Pags 13. Bill Brennan may get bid to fight here. Page 12. Multnomah boxers lose two to armory amateurs. Page 13. Cutbitl beats Ray in feature race of Indoor meet. Page 12. Commercial and Marine. Good market for apples found In Scanda- miyia. Page 19. Green bug scare sends wheat up at Chi- age. rage is. Sharp advance in stocks when money rates weaken. Page 10. Portland-Seattle, run to be resumed. Page 18. Portland and Vicinity. Heavy earth slides hamper city trafflo. Page 1. Counterfeit whisky seals seized; 7 alleged members at liquor ring Jailed. Page 20. Egg prices falling, with end not in sight Page 1. Bulgarian bunkoes countrymen out of about 50O0 by appeal to sympathies. Page 11. Policeman Lander, overseas captain, curbs Juvenile lawlessness in Albina by whip ping gangsters. Page 10. City to begin park work to assist unem . ployed. Pagi 10. Edward Mining, son of self-styled Russian princess, menial wreck of war. Page 20. Portland Ministers Urge Legislature to Act. MORALS DECLARED WANING Financial Features of Bill Op posed by McAfee. OTHER SIDE GIVEN, TOO Long-Drawn-Out Sensual Kisses on Screen Declared Injur ious by Mrs. Baldwin. STATE HOUSE, Salem, Or., Feb. 8 (Special.) State censorship of mo tion pictures shown In Oregon Is nec essary for the protection of the wan ing morals of the growing genera tions, according to the general opin ion expressed by Portland and Salem ministers, who appeared tonight be fore the committee on health and public morals, advocating passage of the state censorship bilL The bill now before the legislature, however, was not accorded the whole hearted support of some of the church men who appeared before the com mittee. Ralph McAfee, secretary of the church federation of Portland, de clared that financial features of the bill framed ty Itepresentatives Childs and Fletcher make It impossible for him to give his full support to the proposed bills. i "Statistics gathered by our federa tion," he said, "show that during the month of January more than S00 films were viewed and to do this It required 22 out of a possible 20 days In which to accomplish the work. CommlaMloner Is Proposed. "I would favor appointment of a motion-picture commissioner by the governor to serve without pay, and use of the $6000 fund contemplated from charges provided In this bill in the payment of salaries to viewers responsible to the commissioner. Paternal influence rather than the Influence of motion pictures Is what really counts, according to Joseph A. Hill,, head of the Hill Military acad emy in Portland. Mr. Hill explained that pictures were shown to the boys attending this institution three times weekly and he was satisfied that If the boys or girls receive proper at tention In the homes they will not be Influenced by pictures. This be lief, he declared, was the result of watching the effect of pictures upon the boys attending this school. Resolutions Report Made. The Portland delegation of repre sentatives of the federation of churches, who spoke In favor of state censorship of pictures. Included Dr. Bryan J. Clark, president of the Port land Ministerial association; Monroe Everett, chairman of the committee on motion picture censorship of the church federation, and Ralph McAfee, secretary of the federation. Dr. Clark informed the legislators -that the association which he heads, at a well attended meeting on Mon day, had adopted resolutions urging the legislature to enact laws provid ing for state-wide censorship. Local censorship, he contended, has not (Concluded on Page 6, Column .) J ' MADCAP M ARGOT'S REVE ! LATIONS OF BRITISH I HIGH LIFE Call them whatever else you ' may, these delicious memoirs ' of Mrs. Asquith, wife of the ', ex-prime minister of Great Britain, are genuine glimpses of English statesmanship and society from the ever-so-exclusive inside. They are the incidents that never before have been bared to the amazed contemplation of the public, or held up to the winds of laughter. Margot Asquith's own diary will appear serially in The Sunday Oregonian, beginning with the issue of February 13. Say to yourself, "I must read that." For you must. England and the colonies, and all Eu- j rope, have scanned each line of the brilliant, caustic, witty J confidences of madcap Margot J who knows, who most as- suredly knows, her Variety of I august topics. They say that the great are never truly great to the view , of their friends and familiars, t Names that have thundered in portentous headlines and that will reverberate in history are J tossed about by Mrs. Asquith in most amazing style, from I Gladstone's day to the present. J Follow this sprightly serial in j THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN 1 All the News of All the World j Just Five Cents t