VOL L XO 18 817 Entered at Port land (Oregon) ' V' JO, OX Po.tofflr as Sror,d-Class Mutter. PORTLAND, OREGON, MONDAY,' MARCH 14, 1921 PRICE FIVE CENTS E. BRITISH IN IRELAND GREAT INDUSTRIAL BRITAIN'S BULWARK TO BE BIG WARSHIPS EX-KAISER DECLARES HE WAS PEACEMAKER ROUMANIAN QUEEN WILL VISIT COAST PLEBISCITE BIDTS TO HANG SIX TODAY CUT COME TODAY PRISONERS ACCUSED OB COM PLICITY IX AMBUSCADE. OUTLAY FOR 1921-32 PUT AT WILHELM PROPOSED LEAGUE OF XATIOXS IX 19 05. WISH TOLD TO SEE INDIANS AND COWBOYS. 10,000,000 POUNTS LESS. 13 TAR OWN BODIES ATMOB'S BIDDING SIR KEVOT WAGE CGI CTBDEWi LOO S v , -. i i ' ' i -i V. 1 : . .'-4 V i, Packers, Laborers Expect Mediation to Fail. NATIONAL WALKOUT LOOMING Women, Children and Volunteers, in Deriance of Military, Hold Big Demonstration at Prison. Union Leaders Say Industry Wants Them to Act First. ISSUE WITHHELD, CHARGE Stand Tliat Pay and Hours Are Xot Involved in Arbitration Blocks Settlement, Declare Laborites. CHICAGO, March 13. With more than 100,000 employes in the packing industry balloting on a proposed strike, wage decreases amounting to 12's and 15 per cent, together with a readjustment of working hours. will go into effect tomorrow. Both the packers and union offi ciaU yesterday agreed to meet Secre tary of Labor Davis, who offered his cervices as mediator in the hope of averting a strike. Tonight represen tatives of both sides said there was little, prospect of agreement. Union leaders pointed out that the packers, in agreeing to send two rep. resentatives to Washington, had said "We assume that the Justice and ne. cessity of wage cuts will not be at issue; nor can there Justly be an issue en the matter of hours." Nothing Held at iMnt. According to representatives of the men. thla left nothing to be dis cussed. "We know the packers are hoping some of our men will engage in a runaway strike tomorrow," said Den nis Lane of- the Amalgamated Meat Cutters and Butcher Workmen, "and in fact we have evidence that they are aggravating them. "However, the international offi cers have warned our membership to remain on the Job until after the vote has been taken and until the in ternational executive board has is sued strike instructions. Strike to Be National. "When tho etrike occurs. It will be national and will have occurred be cause of the packers repudiating an agreement with tho government and because of their desire for a strike to accomplish the purpose of destroy ing the workers' organization, and unloading at profiteering prices the enormous quantities of meat now in cold storage, which they bought at the lowest price paid for livestock since 1915." A meeting of the union leaders to take action on the proposed strike will be held here Wednesday. By that time the result of the strike balloting will be known, it was ex pected. Thousands Hold Parade. A parade in which thousands of atockyards workers took part was held in the district known as "back o' the yards" today. The marchers bore banners, some leading: "Must labor pay the war debt?" "Making the workday longer makes more unemployment." "Was the wax for democracy a failure?" Later there was a mass meeting addressed by union leader;, who urged the men not to precipitate a premature strike, but to await the result of the strike ballot. EARLY CONFERENCE WANTED Experts' Data on Packing Industry Placed Before Secretary. WASHINGTON, D. ., March 13. Secretary of Labor Davis was tonight awaiting replies from four of the five leading packers and from packing bouse employes to his offer of medi ation in the controversy arising from the proposed wage cut. Wilson & Company, in a telegram received today, agreed to the secre tary's proposal of a conference be tween the packers and their em ployes in which Mr. Davis will parti cipate with Secretaries Hoover and Wallace as advisers. The telegram reported to have been sent from Chi cago by Dennis Lane of the employes' union had not been received tonight. Secretary Davis is anxious to set the date for the conference as soon as possible. He has had experts place before him data regarding packing in dustry labor and he has passed much of the last three days digesting the information. DUBLIN, March 13. (By the Asso ciated Press.) The lord mayor was officially informed tonight that the J government had decided that the law should take its course in the case of the six prisoners in Mountjoy prison, and the executions will be carried out tomorrow. A demonstration in protest against the execution of the prisoners who are accused of complicity in the kill ing of intelligence officers and par ticipation in an ambuscade was held by women today. Banners bearing such legends as "England murders the innocent In vengeance" were carried through the streets. The paraders marched four abreast in military order, defying military regulations. They received constant accessions from women and girls and also were joined by thousands of citi zens, including many hundreds of Irish volunteers. Reaching the prison, the women lined up two deep along the wall and planted their banners opposite the gates. Then they knelt and recited the rosary, after which they dispersed. The lord mayor of Dublin and Father O'Flanagan visited the con demned men today. They reported they were facing their fate with composure. The men will be hanged in pairs, beginning at 6 A. M. The bodies of the first pair will remain suspended one hour, when the next two will be executed. Whe lan and Moran will be the first. Mo ran could have made his escape from the Kilmainham jail but he refused, saying he was innocent and would be released. The Irish labor party has issued a proclamation to the workmen to ab stain from work until 11 A. M. tomor row and to observe the period of in activity In solemn mouring as a pro test against the execution. Whelan, one of the men,- has two brothers in the United States, one in the army. Railroads and Employes Riding to Waterloo. Main Fleet Is Said to Consist of 38 Capital Craft, of Which 8 Are Called Obsolescent. FEDERAL OPERATION ISSU Dead Hand of War-time Pros perity Guides Labor. ROADS FIGHT FOR LIFE Harden Colfax Wonders What Ac tion Will Follow Decision of Issue by V. S. Board. EAST ST. LOUIS WILL VOTE 31 cat Cutters and Butchers to De cide Action on Pay Cut. EAST ST. LOUIS, 111.. March IS. East St. Louis union locals of the Amalgamated Association of Meat Cutters and Butchers of North Amer ica will hold a meeting tomorrow night to determine what action to take on the reduction of wages and extension of the working day, as an rounced by the large packers to take effect Monday. Karl Jlmmerson, business agent of the East St. Louis workers, said the taking of a nation-wide strike vote 1 contemplated but the men will re main at work until the result of the (Concluded on Page Column 2.) NEGRO LYNCHED BY MOB Prisoner Hanged After Jury Falls to Agree In Murder TriaL VERSAILLES, Ky., March 13.- Richard James, negro, charged with the murder of B. T. Rogers and Homer Nave at Midway, October 8, was taken from the Woodford county jail by a mob early today and hanged from a tree, two miles from this city. The mob, composed of about 50 men. came here between 1 and 2 o'clock this morning by automobile. A guard was placed around the jail and four men went to the door, aroused the jailer; took bis keys and went to the negro's cell, where they overpowered the prisoner after a short struggle, ic which a blackjack was used. James was taken In an automobile to the tree and hanged. , The trial of the negro ended Satur day night when the jury reported it was unable to reach a verdict. The jury hid decided that James was guilty, but could not agree on the penalty. AUTO UPSETS; 1 MAY DIE E. W. Radke Seriously Injured;! i Ray Owen, Leo McKay Hurt. An automobile driven by Leo Mc Kay. 173 East Thirty-fifth street. skidded from the road at a curve about seven miles below Rainier at S o'clock last night and turned turtle, pinning McKay and two passengers, Ray Owen and E. W. Radke, beneath it. Radke was the only member of the trio who was seriously hurt, probably fatally. McKay, and Owen shouted and honked the horn until farmers in the Ficinity came and released them. Radke was unconscious. At St. Vin cent's hospital It was said that he was suffering from a basal fracture of the skull. Radke is an employ of the Robert son Drug company and lives at the Hillcrest apartments. TRAVELER IS STABBED Mexican Attacks C. S. Ackerman In Twin Falls, Idaho. TWIN FALLS, Idaho, March IS. (Special.) G. S. Ackerman, traveling representative of Sheurman Brothers, 4 nps Va1t(b nif anil f.ftut house, was 4 . 1 ir sv local uuspiL&i ioiiibiii no o suit of a stabbing affray here th afternoon. Ackerman had just arrived in town a: was standing on the sidewalk in the main business section when a Mexican laborer attacked bim with a butcher knife, inflicting a wound In the forehead. The knife penetrated t' brain a depth of three inches and severed the right optic nerve. Neither man, as far as known, had ever seen the other. It was said that Ackerman had little chance to recover. BY HARDEN COLFAX. fCooyrlght. 1921. by The Oregonian.) WASHINGTON. D. C, March 13. (Special.) The greatest industrial conflict the United States has ever known looms ahead. The railroads and their employes are riaing last toward Waterloo. The dead nana oi war-time prosperity holds the reins of labor; the primal law of sell-pres ervation directs the roads. Through the dust of a dozen related issues there appears the main objec tive: Shall the railroads continue under private control, and, like other previously controlled Industries, set their own wage scales; or snau iuey relinquish all grip on wages and go down, with earning power ana uiui- viduality lost, under the waves oi government operation? Earnings In Red Ink. For the first time in many months the railroads have written their earn ings in red ink. During January the 118.000.000,000' transportation system of the United States, taken as a unit, failed to make a ' penny. Lumped earnings of 122 roads, operating 160,000 miles of line (nearly two- thirds of the total), showed a aencu of more than 11.000,000. Returns are still coming in the same sort of returns. How big the deficit will be, how big it will be for February admittedly larger than lor January time only will show. "All over the United States the rail roads have announced cuts In wages. Here in Washington railroad men, members of congress, departmental and other officials are not unmindful of the consequences. Titanic Struggle Expected. They are looking forward to a titanic struggle with labor, peaceable maybe, but with the chances favoring local walkouts and with the grim specter of a national strike taking form in' the background. Labor has announced that it will resist the downward wage revision. How far It will go in its resistance rests only with labor, but railroad officials and others fully anticipate that there will be strikes on the part of some of the railroad labor organizations. The railroads plan to observe the (Concluded oTi Page 3. Column 1.) LONDON, March 13. Navy esti mates for 1921-22. to be announced tomorrow, will show a reduction of possibly 10.000,000 on the net esti mate for the last financial year, which was 84,372,400 according to the forecast of the political corres pondent jof the London Times. He declared tnat toe government nau decided In principle that the capital ship must continue to be the mal unit of the fleet The correspondent said there were now 38 capital ships, while eight were obsolescent, if not obsolete, and added that it was regarded as un economical to man such ships with expensive, highly trained personnel. Consequently these eight are ex pected to be scrapped. The government, he said, consid ered that the remaining 30 capital ships constitute for the present an ad-equate basis for the maintenance of the one-power standard. But, as - at least four will need to be replaced," the forecast con tinued, "the construction of four ves sels will eventually be necessary.' The correspondent referred to the estimates as embodying a compara tively moderate building programme and said it would hardly be possible to spend more than 1.000,000 on each new battleship laid down. Commenting editorially, the Times hoped that the forecast expectation was "not illusory,- for nothing is more certain than that this country and the dominions cannot bear the heavy burden of any new competition In naval armaments." The decision to replace obsolescent and obsolete warships of the first class by new battleships andi battle cruisers, it added, is not a final pro nouncement on the capital ship con troversy. It means only," it said, "that the case against the great ship is not proved." Furtive Hohenzollem's Book Is Interesting Because Notes Tell of Past Intrigue. 0LC0TT PARDONS YOUTH Ex-Service Man at Eugene Who Set Fire to Jail Is Free. EUGENE, Or., March 13. (Special.) Fred Worthington, who a few days ago waa sentenced by Judge Skip- worth in circuit court to serve 90 days In the county jail for malicious in- Jury to a building, yesterday was par doned by Governor Olfiott..:. . , Worthington is an ex-service man. He Was arrested on a charge of In toxication some time ago and locked up in the city jail. He set fire to the building and was nearly suffocated before the firemen were able to cut a hole through the wall to liberate him- AIRPLANE KILLS WOMAN Spectator Is Struck as Aviator Makes Landing. JACKSONVILLE, Fla, March 13. Mrs. A. Woolenkoff, 70, of Van Wert, Ohio, was killed today at Pablo Beach when struck by an airplane driven by Monte Rolfe of Augusta, Georgia. Rolfe was attempting to make a landing. He was held pending an Investigation. THE HAGUE, March 13. (By the Associated Press.) In the book he has written for private distribution In an attempt to show Great Britain waa responsible for the war, the for mer kaiser paints William II aa a man who tried for 30 years to main tain peace in Europe, but who says he -was foiled by Great Britain, France and Russia. In 1905, he says, he tried to found a league of nations. Sufficient of the contents of the book have leaked out to indicate Its general trend. The leak 'was prin cipally due to the Berlin correspond ent of the Rotterdam Maasbode. He says the book begins with notes as far back as 1884. "In some places," saya the corre spondent, "the document is interest ing, especially notes of August 18, lfH, where he treats of the visit of William to Czar Alexander III at Narvik, when the czar said he hated the French republic and wanted to restore a monarchy In France, but al ready, says the kaiser, a Russian French military agreement had been negotiated." Under date of April 18, 1898, the former emperor wrote: An English proposal for an al liance with Germany against Rus sia is declined so aa not to endanger the world's peace. At the same time Delcasse (French minister of foreign affairs) proposed to the German ambassador in Paris a German-French agreement to pre vent the Portuguese colonies falling under British influence. Thia pro- r "al was not answered." The former emperor claims he drafted a project for a league of na tions March 24, 1905. V proposal," says the book, "was made by the former kaiser to the czar and to Wltte (Russian foreign min ister) to found a league of nations consisting of the triple alliance and the French and Russian alliance, with the understanding also groups or sep ar '.e countries may become members. The proposal was accepted by the czar and Witte. There was no ques tion as to presidential power over this league.1" Regarding the mission to Germany in February, 1912, of Viscount Hal- dane. British lord high chancellor, the book says: "German efforts' to conclude neu trality with England failed in conse quence of the absurd demand for a cessation of development of the Ger man fleet." The ex-e.nperor says that the mobilization of 1914 began in April with "the mobilization of English banks to get large Btocks of gold." Then he continues: June Beginning of preparations for mobilization in England. 'June 15 Russia: Troops called to arms in April and May under the pre tense that they were to serve in maneuvers. July 29 All the Belgian reserve officers called to arms." Regarding refusal of the suggestion by Russic to submit the Serbian in- ident to The Hague court of arbi tration, he says: "The proposal of the czar was not Details of Non-Partisan Attack Are Bared. VICTIMS NOT SEEN SINCE Balkan Royalty Intends to Co Down Into Mines and Look at Moving Picture Laboratories. Ex-Senator Burton Is Yet Heard From. No MEN STRIP AT ORDER All Forced to Roll in Grass in Lieu of Fea Users and Don Clothes as Party Departs. (Concluded on Page 3, Column 2.) THERE SEEM TO BE SEVERAL MILLION STARVING PEOPLE IN THIS COUNTRY, TOO. FIVE ARE KILLED IN FIRE Two ai'issing and More Than Score Injured In $330,000 Blaze. RICHMOND, Va.. March 13. Frve persons, four of them firemen, are known to be dead, two are missing and more than a score are injured as the result of a fire here today which caused damage of more than $350,000 to a six-story furniture es tablishment. The firemen, fighting the burning structure from the top of an adjoin ing building, perished when the roof collapsed, , I T T I WWfHfc&ri5F I VOTED tOB 1 ft I AtAB" j I I i. IUI . . . . . . . . ....... . .jh.. ....,.. . . ........ . . , ,JL t !! K ATHENS, March IS. (By the Asso ciated Press.) Queen Marie of Rou- manla intends to visit America soon and she declared yesterday she be lleved King Ferdinand would accom pany her as far as New York. She contemplates a survey of America. "I hope to stay three months." she declared, "and I am going to the Pa cific coast. I want to see the cow boys and Indians; to go down in mines; to visit factories, police courts, slums and hospitals, and I would like to see a motion-picture labora tory. "I believe I will go to America next autumn. There are six divisions of Russian bolshevik troops on the Bessarabian frontier of Roumania, the queen said. Germans More Confident Than Poles of Result. .- RIVAL COMMISSIONS GUARDED I Native Voters of Territory at Issue Mobifized. QUESTION IS ECONOMIC worrying the Roumanians, The queen inquired for news re garding the near-eastern conference in London. She said she hoped the allies would "not disturb Constan- tine," "He has a tremendous hold on the people," she added. Queen Marie characterized as "rl diculous" reports that she had brought about the marriage of her or Neither Race Now Seeking to Obtain Control. BT ARNO DOSCH FLEUROT. (Copyrliht by the New York World. Pub oy Arrangement.) KATTOWITZ. L'DDer Silvia. March 13. (Special bv wiri,,., ti j - daughter. Princess Elizabeth, to cded(blenlnd on grills that blocked Crown Prince George of Greece, with ana wun otner bars the Idea that the princess would J; .. windows to prevent some day be queen of Greece. """" """cs emg tnrown In upon V..C.M, wis enters or tne rival plebi scite COmmlSMinnM r.,,mc n an Pnl. GIRL, 18, HURT IN CRASH me interviews. The Germans are in the small town Stolen Auto Smashes Into Another; of Vellr' Protected In the hotel Gold oiar. inn -oies are in Beuthen at Cnldcntified Driver Escapes. the Hotel Lemnitz, In the narrow Miss Vaunita Noble, 18 years old. Principal street which has already 6417 East Sixty-third street, was siooo. one all-night siege. Of the two, tne uermans are the less fear ful, as the towns of Upper Silesia are seriously injured last night when a stolen automobile crashed into the larsrelv German, hut th Pnlpn in car in which she was riding and Beulhen ara ln the camp of tbe which was anven oy n.. .1. wclic 1706 East Seventeenth street South The injured girl was eent to St. Vincent's hospital. Wihen the crash occurred, the men in the stolen automobile, which was the property of C. L. Boss, got out and fled. The car had been taken early ln the day. according to a re port made to the police. W. Frank, a enemy. ltiotlnff Chances Foreseen. If, aa some members of the plebi scite commission predict, riots break out between now and voting on March 20, they will probably begin in the Interior in the small towns and center in Beuthen, The Germans gave me a Joint ln- GREAT BEND. Kas.. March 13. Details of the an tl - non - partisan league demonstration in Barton coun ty last night, which reached a climax in tbe escorting from Great Bend of J. R. Burton, ex-senator from Kansas, and the tarring of J. O. Stevic and A. A. Parsons, revealed today that Stevic and Parsons were compelled to apply a coating of tar to them selves while undressed. After they had been forced by several hundred men to roll on the ground, their clothing was returned and they were told to leave. The whereabouts of Stevic and Par sons, who are state organizer and Btate secretary, respectively, of the league, were not known tonight. Neither had word been received as to the whereabouts of Burton or of a Professor Wilson, another organizer of the league. Pair on Way to Meeting. Burton and Wilson were on their way to Elllnwood to address a meet lng yesterday. Whn they did not ap pear Stevic and Parsons came to learn their whereabouts. The latter two then were taken out of the city and told not to return. When they reap peared they were tarred. When word reached Lynons, a small town near by, that Stevic and Parsons had returned to Elllnwood a crowd of about two hundred men gathered. The party left there abotu S-a'dock, Inter rupted a non-partlean meeting at El llnwood and brought Stevic and Par sons to Great Bend. Men Protest Bat Obey. They took the men a few miles from town and ordered them to "take off your clothes." The men protested, but obeyed. When they had undressed, tar was produced and Stevic and Par sons were ordered to "smear that on you." Shivering from the chilly air, the men obeyed. When they finished they were told to' roll in the grass, that serving for feathers, members of the party explained. Then their clothes were returned to them, they were warned not to return and the mob turned back to town. Stevic was told that his treatment was the result of violation of a prom ise to remain out of the county. Feeling- Running Strong. Feeling has been strong against the league here and at Ellinwood since the meeting of the leaeue here lnj summer, at which Mills, a national cent was made; but this was in- polish national feeling has organizer, was egged. A meeting at I creased to two cents as the prices of aroused by their new freedom and haa materials rose as a resuu vi im i been able to maae an aiyem wm;u hospital. railroad worker of lerv,ew '"'-"' " 612 Ramona avenue, was crossing utl1' iuo """- " " the street at Hamilton etreot and marks was this: Corbett avenue last night when a "wnen the question oi giving oils speeding machine struck, him down, sia to Poland was first raised at the He sustained, a bad ga&h in hin fore. I peat conference, were was sucn head and was bruised. The speeder mass meetings here against u ui was said to have fled. The victim the statesmen at Paris had to accede was treated at the city emergency to the demands for a plebiscite. 'When it became evident tnat Germany was to lose the western UPILS THRIVE ON SOUP question and for month, w. have been Making an effort to show tue Hot Liquid Food Is Said to Have necessitiy of unity Between ucrmanjr (and ouesia. Uerman Into. Advocated. YAKIMA. Wash., March 13. (Spe- We have been getting back the ciaL) Hot soup served to pupils in voters born here and have been busy connection witn their school lunches showing the people that their proa- during three winter months for the perity lies in union with Germany, past five years Is given as the prin- The people of this country are neither ipal reason for a high health average uerman nor rniwu, " of the Nob Hill school here, and prac- who long to be unaer oernian uuu.. emics or and who preier uerman oruci m j. This will Bhow In the tlcal Immunity from eplde serious disease during that period, lish disorder. Anonrriinsr to Miss Florence King. Red vote. Cross nurse, the Nob Hill school is "The question is less national than the healthiest In Yakima county. economic, although the former phaae The nlan has been under super- is temporarily being empnasizea. ane ri.inn of Mrs. Elizabeth BelL formerly German national feeling is that. assistant, and now principal of the though Germany was broken by the school. At the outset a charge of one war, reconstruction has set in. The been Ellinwood was broken up. Stevic pro tested this action to Governor Allen and asked the removal of Sheriff Yancy. now a deputy. Stevic's home is in Topeka. He has been active in non-partisan circles more than a year, Sheriff Hill said tonight that he had been unable to obtain evidence that there had been a "tarring party, Stevic and Parsons were ln town yes terday, he said and after several dis turbances for which he believed their presence responsible, he had escorted them out of town for seven miles. He said he saw no machines other than the one which carried them and no evidence of a disturbance. STRIKE END HELD NEAR Mexican President Makes Public Letters to Leaders. MEXICO CITY. March 13. Presl dent Obregon today made public let ters to leaders in the railway strike which express the hope that an amicable settlement would soon be reached. , Reports, which tend to Indicate an Immediate settlement of the strike is not at hand, were arriving today from outlying cities, where disorders and depredations were continuing. All trains from the border and west coast were ln operation but with many delays. SCHOOL TO GRADUATE 17 Students at State formal Will Get Diplomas March 24. MONMOUTH, Or, March 13. The normal school will graduate the fol lowing persons from the standard course on March 24: Mary K. Wilson, Ruth Norton, Edna Briggs, Lota Craig, Mrs. Ethel E. Dickson, Catherine J. Doherty. Gladys J. Evans, Mrs. Ethel S. Gibhs, Wini fred Glossop, Jessie R. McLelland, Kathleen Maddox, Malinda May, Hes ter B. Thorpe, Katherine Hoben, Isa bella Bartlett, Mrs. W. A. Barnum and Amelia G laser. 1 Appropriate graduation exercises will bo slven. . world war. INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS YESTERDAY'S Maximum " te-.per.HwJ er industrial ruin If it goes Ger- began strongly but has gradually dwindled as the people see how badly things are going ln Poland. Inauatrlal Halo Predicted. "If Silesia goes Polish it will mean 42 degrees: minimum. 33 aegrees. TODAY'S Kaln; westerly winds. Foreign. man it makes tbe difference for Ger many between barely existing and prosperity. The people may be t& per Brltlch ln Ireland to han six prlionan cenl Polisht but they are tied to Ger- Bx-kal-r-s b"k declare, h. propod . many by ties of culture. The Poles league of nation, tor world peace ln have been promising land, but they 1906. P 1. nave promised the same land three AnraUyiePOPag1. 4. times over and the peasants are .1- piebiKlte rioting looms In npper Silwla. ready disillusioned. Page 1. "By bringing back voters from Queen Marl, of Roumania announce, ab. otner parts of Germany we are spread- BirWrrPrrb7"Uhf':u.wark. ing th. best propaganda. As th. peo- Page 1. Pi "" neither decidedly German nor Trouble, at home harden allies, Simons polish, these returned natives, steeped tell reichatag. Pag . in German culture, are going to make n2JS&FZZ& a big difference, a, each of thorn will Pag, 5. Induce other home-stayers to vote for National. Germany. The returned natives are whinton social life quickened. Fag. S. iroinar to change the results of th. Greatest Indu.trlai conflict in history of vote ln many places, for example, at Pacific North.t. where the bave "welled the I .. .rn& Kir Of nA naaf U iihnDr 6yrtem of buying tejephon. -n. '; "Vi.M r iVn ' ready prooea, cuhihuhivh .u uiew, v.w n . ....0... - - La Koche. Page V. Domratlc Senratlonal charne. mad. in SUllmaa di vorce .uit. Page 2- Prosecution to rest today in Hamon mur der trial. Page 2. Packer, wage cut and strike vote com. today, rage i. French Held for Pole. "Where the English and Italiaa troops are stationed, there will be a fair plebiscite but most of the troops are French wh, openly favor tin Poles because if Fraye can get Log of .hip Polar Star, arrival in New York Silesia for the Poles, then France harbor, ! tale of plotting of modern Birates. rage iu. Three non-partisan, tar own bodies at mob', bidding. Pag. 1. Rice hoarder, of California hit by price decline. -ag iu. Sport. Joe Gorman .lated to box Fart Balrd In New York on March 17. Pag. . Trial of eight Indicted Chicago Whit. Box players achedulcd for today. Pag. 8. Beavers trimmed by colored Gianu, 10 U 1. t-age o. Commercial and Marine. Bteamer Con.hohocken to VUtt Portland soon. Pag. 10. Portland and Vicinity. Fuel prices will be lowered to eoeoirrar. early buying of .uppllea for But winter. Pag. 18. Farmer, or Oregon profiting from terted seed. Pag. 15. Local financier, expect prosperity. Page 15. Much of world's woe attrttmted by Kev. Thomas Jenkins, to disobedience. Page IS. plea for Irish recognition made by Mlu ilauSwlney, Pag. a, i can control financially the- greatest coal area in Europe and make France the biggest economic factor on the continent. "French troops are largely in tho towns where the German vote will be the heaviest and) few of them are la tbe country where the Poles are in control, and it is the evident pur pose to Intimidate the Germans, ln the plebiscite area there are 60,000 French, two regiments of Italians a-i four regiments of English. The insistence upon two ballots, one of which must be. brought from the voting booth, is merely a means of letting the Polish watchers know how each man voted, In a district where the Poles are atrong. It is going to make it dangerous to vols for Germany." After Interviewing the Germans. T but declared the soviet army was not I People of Country Declared to Be .Concluded en Page 3, Columa