J . CON STATE 'LfBRAK- J N! 3 0 Vfti VOL. LX XO. 19,073 rRICE FIVE CENTS Entered at Portland Ore(rr.n Fowt office nconr.-c1fti!t Matt". PORTLAND, OREGON, FRIDAY, JANUARY G, 1922 FAIR TO BE HELD LEGISLATION OF BLOC OPPOSED BY HARDING DRYEMFDRGEMENT TO BE TIGHTENED BILL CALLING FAIR -ELECTION IS VETOED $1,000,000 THEATER WILL BE BUILT HERE JUNIOR ORPIIEUM VAUDEVILLE HOUSE IS PROJECTED. LIMIT 01 DIRS STATE FILES CHARGES AGAINST' LEN SMALL GOVERNOR. AND OTHERS SAID TO HAVE USED $29,418,500. L E LIKELY TO AGREE VIEW'S OUTLINED TO LEADERS DOUBT AS TO LEGALITY IS CACSE OF ACTIOX. , , OF FARMER MOVEMENT. FACTIONS III UNDER fJ W PLAN N WAR ACCEPTED Method of Financing Proj : 7 .ect Taken Up. STATE LEGISLATION IS DEAD Other Communities Want to " t Do Their Share. SENTIMENT IS' STRONG Some Method to Be Worked Out and Then Submitted to Rep resentative Organizations. ACTION TAKE.Y BY EXPOSI TION COMMITTEE. Be It resolved. That the '192S executive committee of the Ore gon exposition reaffirms Its purpose to proceed with the plara for holding the 1925 expo sition and that this committee give Immediate consideration to wafi and means for providing funds for holding such exposi tion, and that a plan therefore be submitted by this committee' to representative bodies In all . portions of the state for the purpose of obtaining state-wide co-operation, and that action on such plans be taken at the - earliest possible date. Adopted by unanimous vote. It Is agreed that " The Oregon 1925 exposition will be held. Sentiment for the exposition Is trong throughout the state. .Communities want to contribute their share and do not want Portland to carry thl load alone. Nothing further be done regarding the exposition measures which were hamstrung by the legislature. Borne plan of finance be worked out And submitted to representative state organizations for co-operation. Executive Board Sleets. .' Such were the highlights developed aU the meeting of the executive board of the stated-wide 1925 exposition committee yesterday afternoon. The gathering went firmly and unequivo cally on record for the exposition. There Is to be no abandonment of that enterprise.-Representatives from upstate counties reiterated the state ment that in their respective com munities 'the people waflt the fair. How the exposition Is to be financed ,ls a problem yet to be solved, but whatever the plan or method pur sued. It will be sh that the state will De asked to assist. This became apparent when upstate delegates protested vehemently against a sug gestion that Multnomah county take care of the costs., Initiative Is Recommended. Whether the plan to be approved Is to . require a measure to be Initi ated at the November election Is, of course, n abeyance. Not until a pro gramme has been evolved will this Question be determined. A number of delegates recommend ed an ' Initiative measure for Novem ber; some suggested the gasoline tax; others a property tax. One sugges tion Tras for a Combination of the two and another member proposed .submitting both gasoline and prop fei ty tax on the ballot and permit ting the electors to take their choice. Emphasis was laid on the fact that k the 1925 exposition Is to be an Ore gon undertaking; that the purpose has been, from the Inception of the K fair thought, to exploit the resources . of Oregon and to cause the tourist to ' visit every section of the state. This L has been the dominating motive and the main idea has been to work for ward to the development of latent re sources and to have a million popu lation, LeicUlntion Is Killed. When Julius L. Meier, as chairman. r called the meeting to order In the Old Colony club at the Multnomah hotel at noon, the first definite action taken was a decision to wipe off the slate the 1925 fair legislation left in doubt- f ful validity by the special session. . It was agreed that the logical course to pursue was not to take the matter Into' the courts but to forget it and have a. new dal. To this end a resolution was adopted Informing Governor Olcott that Insofar as the 1925 fair committee Is concerned no occasion exlBts for the holding of a special election May 19. A bill au thorizing a special election had been enacted by the legislature in order that, the exposition measures could be referred to the people. As the ex position legislation was left In a tangle, the committee points out that there will be no measure on this sub ject before the people, in .May. ' . Members Express Views, - Having disposed of damaged In heritance from the special session, upstate committeemen present wer called on to express their views. Out-of-town delegates were unanimous In saying the people of the state want the exposition, but There wag a dlf- Presldent Said to Have Cone So Far as to SayHe Would Veto Bill If It Passed. WASHINGTON, D. C. Jan. 6. Pres ident Harding was said tonight by members of the senate agricultural bloc to have Indicated at a conference today his disapproval of bloc-sponsored legislation providing for farmer representation on the federal reserve board. Views of the president on the legis lation, which is to be taken up in be senate for final consideration Janu ary 17, were outlined to Senators Kenyon of Iowa and Capper of 'Kan sas, both republicans, and bloc lead ers, who called at the White House, accompanied by Senator Kellogg of Minnesota, republican. None of the three senators would discuss the visit, but other members of the agricultural bloc said It was their . understanding that the presi dent had Indicated his disapproval of the legislation. Some of these bloc members said that the president went so far as to Indicate he might veto the bill if passed, but other members said this waaiot their understanding. The president. It was said by bloc members, said that he desired In every way to promote the Interests of the farmers, but that the pending legislation would tie the hands of the executive with respect to appoint ments. ORE FINDER IS INVENTED Arizona Scientist Said to Have Per fected Device. TUCSON, Ariz., Jan. 6. O. M. But-, ler director of the Arizona bureau of mines, announced here today that the organization has perfected and ap plied for patents on an electric proc ess for- locating underground ore" bodies. Dr. Butler, who Is also dean of the college of mines and engineer ing of the University of Arizona, an nounced the invention at a. meeting of the board of regents of the unl- irsity here. , Dr. Butler indicated that the depth. size and other Information regarding concealed copper ore bodies may be ascertained with the electrical device, which, he said, operates upon scien tific principles and embodies none of the features of the "touch stick"' and similar apparatus. He declared the device had been proved accurate by teets in mining regions In Arizona. STAGE HITS TRAIN, 3 HURT Driver's Brother Injured in Crash of Phiiotnath-Corvallis Bus. PHILOMATH, Or., Jan. 6. (Spe cial.) This morning -at 7:30 o'clock the Phllomath-Corvallls stage, driven by George Jones trf this city, struck a freight train which was backing up at the Fifteerith-s'treet crossing near the oil tanks In Corvallis. George Jones was injured to some extent and his brother. Earnest Jones, more seriously. Earnest Jones was taken to the Corvallis hospital where an operation was, performed to re lieve a fractured skull. It was thought doubtful that he can recover. There was one other passenger, D. W. Bath of Corvallis. wm sus tained a three-Inch cut on his head. DEATH CAUSE IS SOUGHT Result of Probe for Poison Searles Case Desired. LAWRENCE, Mass., Jan. 5. Dis trict Attorney Donncll of Essen county announced today that he would re quest from Dr. William Boos of Bos ton a report of his examination of the organs of the late Edward F. Searles, multi-millionaire of Methuen. The organs were turned over to Dr. Boos on October 28 after the district attornev had received n n nnnnvmi,,- Setter charging that Searles died of poisoning. WIFE MURDER CONFESSED New York Clerk Surrenders to Po . lice- in Honolulu. HONOLULU, T. H., Jan. 5. Frank. H. Gatherell, 37, a clerk, surrendered and confessed, according to the police authorities, that he had murdered bis wife in New York In Jnly, 1919. Gath erell said, according to the police, that he shot his wife because of her alleged misconduct. Gatherell suffered because "he could not escape the brooding feeling that umcuiiq v xn iuuuwing mm. me po lice said. . A VESSEL LOST, MEN SAVED Rescue Effected While Schooner Is Afire at Sea. BOSTON, Jan. 6 Rescue of seven men from the y 3-ton Nova Scotia schooner Ruby L. Pentz, while their vessel was afire at sea, was reported today In a radiogram believed to have come from the tank steamer Mus kogee. The ship was destroyed, the message indicated. The position given was in rthe vicinity of Bermuda. BREAD 5 CENTS LOAF Pre-War Price Is Established Cincinnati Stores. CINCINNATI, . O., Jan. 6. Begin ning tomorrow bread will be sold here at the pre-war price of 5 cents for a 16-ounce loaf. The price cut was announced today by the manager of a chain of grocery Modification of Laws Is Not in Prospect. STAFF LARGELY INCREASED Problem to Be Easier When Bonded Liquors Disappear. MORE FUNDS AVAILABLE Hope of Wets Defeated by News That Congress Is Bent on Clean 'ing Up Illicit Traffic. BY MARK SULLIVAN. (Copyright. 1!21. by the New Tork Evening Post. Inc.-Published by Arrangement.) WASHINGTON, D. C. Jan. -fc No body is more .deceived either by his wishes or his fears than those who interpret the news that comes out of Washington from time to time as meaning that the prohibition laws are going to be modified in the direction of greater looseness. The truth Is exactly the contrary. All the news that gives hope to the "wets" is ru mor or surmise. Whenever anything tangible Is done by congress it is In the opposi- direction. In a year when congress is' Intent on reducing appropriations more than on any her one subject the prohibi tion enforcement officer Is the one man who has been given most consid eration in his request for an Increase over the previous appropriation The chairman of the appropriations com mittee of the house stated a fact and uttered a sentiment ""which reflects the true disposition of congress more accurately than aTt rumors. Staff Is Enlarged. "This is the only case In all the hearings we have had." the chairman said, "where we have allowed any argument or any suggestion from anybody on the other side of the table about Increasing salaries." It is true that the Increases of in dividual salaries -Were not allowed. But what is more significant is that the head of the prohibition enforce ment department was permitted to add 828 men to the force srf about 3000 men he already had; that he was given $1,750,000 more-for the coming year than he had last year, and was given within 8 per cent of all the money he wanted an approximation to the estimate that is unique in the way the appropriation committee is now doing things, ' Those who look sympathetically Into the enforcement of prohibition think the chief difficulty lies in the enormous quantity of whisky still legallyfn existence." It Is about this (Concluded on Page 2, Column 4.) 1 (Concluded oz. Page 6. Column 2.J 1 Concluded on Page 2. Column 2.) ' HE CAN'T DO THEM ALONE. irr ' - ' - li in T I . III i , lilfM , i , , or. HE.LA- m ' j Governor Declares TJiat to Allow .Faulty Bill to Become Law Would Be Folly. SALEM, Or., Jan. 5. (Specials Governor Olcott tonight vetoed house bill No. 31, providing for a special election on May 19. to be held in con nection with the regular primary con tests, for the purpose of referring to the voters of the.atate two resolutions and an enabling act, approved at the recent special session of the legisla ture. One of theJ' resolutions, which was scheduled to go before the voters at the special election, authorized an tn- creased gasoline tax with which to provide funds to finance the proposed 1925 exposition in Portland. The other resolution authorize Linn and Ben ton counties to levy a tax with which to redeem outstanding warrants. The enabling act provided' for putting the world's fair machinery in motion. The special election measure was fathered by Representative Korell of Multnomah county and carried an appropriation of 815,000. "The purpose of this bill,'' said Gov ernor Olcott In hiSveto message. "Is to call a special election to be held at the sjme late as the primaries. May 19 of this year, such election be ing part'cularly to vote upon two measures in connection with the in ternational exposition which It is pro posed to hold In Oregon In 1925. "Grave doubt exists as to whether these two measures were enacted by the special session of the legislature which passed the bill now under con sideration. At least their validity Is of such doubtful nature as could be determined only by the courts. "I am advised it was the intention of the legislature to Include In this bill a saving clause to the effect that this measure would be of no force and effect In event the exposition bills were found to be Invalid. No such saving clause appears In the enrolled bill, and it Is this bill by which this office must be guided. "It would be folly to allow this bill' to become a law and to further allow the election to proceed with the possibility of but one measure coming before the people at a' time, and that the measure being a local and affecting only Linn and Benton countle's. "I am further advised that It would be as well to allow this local meas ure to be voted on at the regular election in November as at the spe cial election In May. . , "I am pleased to add that the exposition committee coincides with my position and has so advised me." The special election bill was passed by the house by a substantial ma jority, but upon reaching the senate was attacked by the so-called agri cultural bloc of 14 senators. A lengthy discussion prevailed, and finally Senator Moser of Multnomah county appealed to the opposition for fair Dlav. He argued that in case any of the measures approved by the'l legislature were referred to the people, the expense of a special elec tion would be much less If held In Martin Beck, Head of Big Circuit. Announces Plan to Construct Palace of Amusements. Portland Is to have a neWOrpheum theater. In addition to the four-day-a-week show now running In this city a 1,000,000 structure to house shows under the junior Orpheum plan will be opened within the next 18 months. This announcement was made yester day by Martin Beck, president of the Orpheum company, who was in the city for several hours. Sites for the proposed theater are under consider ation and a choice will be made within three months. Soon after the selec tion is made the work of breaking ground will begin. ' Under the junior Orpheum plan three shows a day will be given, for a full week's time. The acts, accord ing to Mr. Beck, will be of the Orpheum standard. The bills will have seven acts of vaudeville, a hlgh olass motion picture and screen news and comedies. ' " Several years ago Mr. Beck made his first venture In Junior Orpheum theaters when he "opened the State Lake theater In' Chicago. There four shows were given daily, and the plan was so successful that other theaters of the same class were erected. Dur ing the last year the Hennepin ave nue theater was opened In Minneapolis and the Main street in Kansas City. In two months the Hill street will be opened In Los Angeles and a month later the Golden Gate will begin oper ating In San Francisco. Plans are under way for the erection of a simi lar theater In Seattle, and this will open at approximately the same "time the theater In Portland will be ready for Its shows. "I am planning to erect theaters In those cities where I have made money," said Mr. Beck. "Rather than go out and seek new cities where I might establish show houses, it is our plan to expand our activities In such cities as Portland. We feel that there I a brilliant future for Port land, and for that reason plans for the new theater are being made." The proposed structure, without fur nishings, will cost between $750,000 and $1,000,000, acordlng-to Mr. Beck. It will have two' floors only. The first floor wlH seat 1800 persons and the second floor 1200, thus giving, a total seating capacity of 3000. No pillars are to be placed among the seats and arrangements will be so made that a clear View of the stage can be gained from any part of the house. Top prices will be 50 cents, and there will be no reserved seats. "Music will be a feature of our shows," said Mr. Beck. "We will have a large orchestra, and in addition there will be a great pipe organ, which will cost not less'than $50,000. In other cities where we have con structed theaters to be conducted on the junior Orpheum plan we have given them street names. T.ius, if our proposed theater here were to be erected in Broadway, it would be named the Broadway theater." The depression which .has been felt in other lines of business has been experienced In the show business Merchant Ships Are Not to Be-Attacked."" FIVE GREAT POWERS AGREE Naval Committee Rapidly Nears nd of Task. WORLD "AID IS Impossibility of "Csing Submarines as In Conflict of 1914-18 Is Recognized at Parley. WASHINGTON, D. C.. Jan. 5. (By the Associated Press.) The five greatest naval powers of the world decreed today as between themselves abollshmenC of submarine warfare against merchant ships. To purge the seas forever of this hidden men ace to peaceful folk and ships, the world hs been asked to subscribe to the decree as a new principle of In ternational law. As adopted by the naval committee of the arms conference, the resolu tion proposed by Elihu Root, and amended by A. J. Balfour, to become Immediately effective between the five signatory powers runs as fol lows: "The signatory powers recognize the practical Impossibility of using submarines as commerce destroyers without violating, as they were vio lated in the war of 1914-18, require ments universally accepted by civil ized nations for the protection of the lives of neutrals and non-combatants, and to the end that prohibition of the use of submarines as commerce de stroyers shall be universally accept ed as a part of the law of nations they now accept that prohibition as henceforth binding as between them selves and they invite all other tia tlons to adhere thereto." ' Committee Action, Final. Action of the committee was final so far as the conference and the five naval jfowors are concerned. The conference merely will give formal ratification to the it! - submarine pact when the five-power treaty in which It will be Incorporated comes up in open session. The naval committee also adopted the first Root proposal to declare In simplest terms their adhesion to the rules' of international law applying to merchant , vessels, their full appli cation to submarines and the lnvita tlon of the five powers to all other nations to Join In the declaration. -This proposal, as approved for In corporation In the five-power treaty. follows: "'One: The signatory powers de siring to make more effective rules adopted by civilized nations for the protection of the lives of neutrals and non-combatants at sea in time of war. declare that among those rules the following are to be deemed an estab lished part of the International law. Vessels Can Be Senrehed. " 'A -merchant vessel must be or dered to submit t6 visit and exarch to determine Its character befA-e It can be seized. " 'A merchant vessel must not be attacked unless It refuses to submit to visit and search after warning, or to proceed1 as directed after seizure. "'A merchant vessel must not be destroyed unless the crew and -passengers have been first placed In safetyr "Two. Belligerent submarines are not under any circumstances exempt from the universal rules above stated, and If a submarine cannot capture a merchant vessel in conformity with these rules the existing law of na tions requires It to desist from attack and from seizure. and to permit the merchant vessel to proceed unmo lested." Assent Is Requested. The signatory powers" invite all ether civilized powers to express their assent to the foregoing statement of established law so that there may be a clear public understanding through out the world of the standards of con duct by which the public opinion of tbe, world Is to pass Judgment upon future belligerents. , When the naval committee ad journed the" third Root proposal to declare violations of the rules laid down by submarine acts of piracy for which submarine commanders could be held to account personally, regardless of orders they may have received from their governments, was still to be taken up. It was indicated that It also would be adopted. Cbantce 8narsreted by Krench. In its final form, the resolution de claring submarine warfare against merchant ships abolished so far as the five powers are concerned showed a direct relation to the German war time" practices not included in the original draft. The clause, "as they were violated In the war of 1914-18," was Inserted on motion of the French delegation. Some significance may attach to the fact that It was the French group which made this amendment In view of the "misunderstandlng" of the French attitude on submarine war fare which brought the committee Allegations Declare That Money ' Transferred Earned High In terest With Packers. WAUKEGAN. 111., Jan. 5. (By the Associated Press.) The state's bill of particulars In the conspiracy case against Governor LenN Small and Ver non Curtis, Grant Park banker, filed late today, recites that the state will attempt to show that during the term of Fred E. Sterling, as treasurer of Illinois, the defendants, together with Mr. Sterling and the late Edward C. Curtis, used $29,418,500 for personal profit. The bill also says that the ntn'fA win ahnw that Governor Small IMITCn'and the othcr defendants profited to IIM VI I LUf th8 extent of $535,000 by the use of state funds. The state alleges that it Is unable to present all the evidence It desires to present because Governor Small and others have taken the books away and they are not obtainable. The bill names amounts said to have been lifted in the state books as a "safe fund," and which were really turned over to a "pretended and fictitious bank, the Grant Park bank." Thece funds, the state al leges, were used to gain personal profit for Fred E. Sterling and Gov ernor Small, who heM adjoining terms of office as'stato treasurer, and Edward C. und "Vernon S. Curtis. The state further alleges that the money so transferred earned from Z to 8 per cent by Investment with Armour & Co., Swift & Co., Morris & Co. and the Cudahy Packing company, all large packing corporations. Th amount turned over to the state aa Interest on these funds was said to have been 2 per cent. WOMAN ALLEGED CAPTIVE Kansas City Suitor Charged With Vslng Pistol Arrested. SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 5. Philip Whitney, 30, of Kansas City, was ar rested today after the police had re ceived Information that he had held Mrs. Maud Huxhorn, 20, also of Kan sas City, a prisoner at various hotels and other places In the city for three days, much of the time at the point of a pistol. In an attempt to force her to marry him. A charge of threats against life was placed against Whit ney and he was released o $1000 ball. Relatives of Mrs. Huxhorn here no tified the police that Whitney had followed her from Kansas City, from which place she fled to escape him, and was holding her a prisoner here. The police said they learned that even when the couple were riding on the street cars Whitney held a pistol to the girl's side, folds of her coat. hidden under the SEAMEN'S PAY TO BE CUT Reduction Held Necessary to Meet Foreign Competition. ' NEW TORK. Jan. 5. Wage reduc. tlons of 13 per cent and upward will be put Into effect Immediately by the American Steamship Owners' asso ciation, Wrnthrop L.. Marvin, genera: manager, announced after a meeting today. Wages of officers, Mr. Marvin said, would be cut 15 per c-ent, with higher reductions for some other classes of employes. These cuts were necesary. he added, to meet competition with foreign vessels. It was pointed out that there Is no wage agreement now existing between the ocean boatmen's unions and the Steamship Owners' association. INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. TBSTERD AY'S Maximum temperature, 46 degrees; minimum, 'W. TODAT'S Kaln; southwesterly winds. Foreign. Factions in Dall likely to agree. Pass 1. National. Lef?llatlon of farmer bloc opposed by Harding. I'aga 1. Clyde 13. Attention attacked by South. Pag 8. Increase in customs granted to China. Paga 2. Dry law to be enforced more strjctly. Page 1. Major Ople denies killing of soldier. Page 3. Limit on use of divers la warfare accepted. Page 1. China and Japan -deadlocked again - Pasra 2. Senator Gooding may get Interstate Job. . Page 4. Domestic. State files charge agalnat Governor Small. Page 1. Raining of marriag ag limit leada Ne braska girla to tlb. Page 3. Police In Chicago make debut aoclally. Page 8. Funeral of Senator Penroae shrouded in mystery." Page 6. Mra. stlllman still seeks evidence In Can ada. Page 6. Pacific Northwert. Bill calling talr election vetoed by gov ernor. Page 1. Spokane delegation peeks aid -on Columbia basin project. Page 7. Sport. Vi'IlMs-Tate bout at Mllwaukle tonight. Paga 18. South Parkway defeats Arteta In annual basketball contest. Page 10. Commercial and Murine. World shortage of hops expected to af fect coast prices. Page 22. Eastern wheat markets stronger' on en larged milling demand. Paga L'3. Liberty and victory Issues higher at New York. Page 23. Henrietta due off mouth tomorrow. Page 22. All grades or wool quiet auring week. Page 17. Portland and Vicinity. Big. modern still captured in ravine. Pago 24. Man shoots wife and'then himself. Page 8. Exposition to be held under new plan. Page i: Bond money now goes for future needs. KarA 17. Junior Orpheum theater costing 81.000.000 Rank and File Members in Peace Committee. ACCOMMODATION IS SOUGHT Michael Collins' Agents Res cue Times Reporter. PRIVATE SESSION TODAY Vnlitint Erfoits Made to Patch Vp Differences Regarding Irish I'ree State Plan. DUBLIN. Jan. 5. (By the Asso ciated Press ) The Tail Elrcann, which met this mornlnK- with disrup tion threatened, adjourned tonight In the hope that a basis of agreement might be reached between treaty supporters and opponents. The ptaoo committee, which is trying valiantly to patch up an accommodation be tween the two factions, nut again tonight and will report at a private session of the Dall tomorrow. Announcement of the existence of a peace committee was the chief fea ture of the day and a thrill was given to the general situation by tho revelation that armed men, assumed to be Irish republican army oppo nents of the treaty had kidnaped the correspondent of the London Times and carried him to Cork. Word has been received, however, that the cor respondent was rescued by agents of Michael Collins and is returning here. Cabinet In lxcludrl. No member of tho cabinet Is In cluded In the peace committee, which Is made up almost exclusively of able members of the rank and file of the dail, who have spoken for and mgainst the treaty. The most notablo of these are Owen O'Duffy, liaison officer of Ulster, who Is a supporter of tho treaty, and 1.1 tun Mellowcs, an I'.ncompromislng republican, who will have nothing to do either with tho treaty or Pe Valera's alternative pro posals. An Influential member who Joined the committee at Its request Is John T. O'Kelly, Sinn Fein representative in l'aris. In whom Mr. da Valera and J nis colleagues opposing the treaty have great confidence. O'Kelly Makes Appeal. The committee resumed consulta tion today, and It was regarded as significant that It was Mr. O'Kelly who uppealed to the Dail to adjourn In the morning, and enable a further attempt to be made. The committee had not got much further after lunch today, and this time Mr. O'Duffy moved adjournment until tomorrow.'' Mis motion was supported by Rich ard Mukahy, chl of staff, in a speech suggesting that the matter was so serious that it would be worth discussing In private , session, at which, even If an agreement were not reached, they might learn how far they had progressed. Notwithstanding the many resolu tions sent to the members of the Dall from their constituents urging thorn either to support the treaty or re sign, only two of the 120 deputies have yielded. They are P. J. Maloney of Tlpperary and Alderman Drohan, mayor of Clonmel. Press Articles Delmted. Most of the, public session tody was occupied In a discussion regard ing the attitude of the press toward the Dail. Many members were eager to take action against the Freeman's Journal by expelling Its representa tive from the chamber as punishment for Its editorial attack on Mr. de Valera and Erskine Childers. Action was postponed, pending an apo'.ogy, but although the' deputies were agreed fn condemning the attacks, some of the most prominent members, including de Valera, Childers, Cirlf flth and Collins, thought such attacks should be ignored In the interests of the freedom of the press. Mr. Griffith and others pointed out that the supporters of tne treaty had been abused In te republican news paper supporting Mr. de Valera, but they promised to ignore it. Tins discussion gave Desmond Fitzgerald, minister of propaganda, the oppor tunity to call attention to the kid naping of the Times correspondent, which he described as an act of "some criminals." De Valera Ignores Attnrk. Mr. de Valera Ignored the attack on him by the Freeman's Journal, but did complain of the suggestion In that paper that he had acted as an auto crat In declaring his intention to follow his own procedure. Efforts of the peacemakers are be lieved to be directed toward an ar rangement which would allow the treaty to go through, while safe guarding the republican position In the future. Mr. O'Duffy explained that the purpose of, the meeting of the committee was the formulation of an agreement whereby De Valera's leadership would be retained. The committee found It Impossible to reach a compromise last night. How ever, it got so far as placing a pro posal before Mr. de Valera, but did not obtain his approval. In the discussion on the press at- , tacks Sean ttthingliam contended that the Freeman's ournal had in- : : ' - jaaassaaaaaaiSBBsn G?1 107.2