98 Pages Eight Sections Section One Pages 1 to 22 VOL.' XLI "YO. 43 . -Entered at Portland (Oron PORTLAND, OREGON, SUNDAY MORNING. OCTOBER 22, 1922 PRICE FIVE CENTS m. mi. rasi MILLIONS OF EGGS DELUGING CHICAGO CALL TO CONGRESS AWAY WITH SLINKER SKIRT, SAY DEANS LATEST STYLE EDICT ROUSES EDUCATOR'S IRE. i C flPUT U. S. APOLOGY LIKELY IDARTY u Null I t rriD unu erne DAin?rnII 1 1 u 7- EXPECTED SHORTLY i uii i nun oi-rivj iniu IS FLAT FAILURE JERSEY SftYS EX-PREMIER SPECULATORS ARE CAUGHT IN BEAR MARKET. SESSION OPEXIXG ABOUT SEPTEMBER 20 FORECAST. SEIZURE PAST 3-MILE LIMIT CALLS FOR EXPRESSION. REVOLT BLOCKED ITS, DRY 1 HI 4 Palice Continue Drive Against 1 Radicals. SIXTY ARRESTED IN RAID Municipal Judge Reverses Stand in Campaign. 16 REDS TURNED LOOSE Jui1 st Declares That Experience Has Changed Sympathies to Some Extent. "With the threatened I. W. "W. in vasion of Portland a complete and miserable failure, police officials asrain turned their attention to local members of the outlaw organization yesterday, and in a. wholesale raid on the I. W. W. hall. 109 ft Second street, arrested 60 self-proclaimed radicals. The 60. all of whom had been be fore the municipal court and who had been released by Municipal Judge Ekwall, were locked up on charges of vagrancy. Orders Issued yesterday by Police Chief Jenkins definitely closed the I. W. W. head quarters and further attempt to hold meetings there will result in more wholesale raids. The day was a quiet one' as far as the longshoremen's strike was con cerned. Picket lines were reduced, according to police reports. No vio lence was attempted. Non-union men went to and from their work without molestation. Radicals Held Cowed. The prompt and decisive action by the city's mayor and chief of police has evidently thoroughly cowed the radicals. Despite appeals for "foot loose pickets to march on Portland," circulated among all 1. W. W. of the northwest, none have responded to the call. Even the ordinary hobos map Itineraries that do not include this city: Though police squads searched all incoming fretght trains yesterday they were able to find but one hobo and that hobo was simply a runaway 17-year-old boy. Friction between the police and the municipal court, though, has given courage to the L W. W. who claim Portland as their temporary home. Sixteen members of the or der' who faced Judge Ekwall yes terday were released. Some had been arrested in the wholesale raids of Wednesday night. The court showed a slight irritation at the ac tion of the bluecoats. Judge Ekwall frankly admitted that his associa tion with the radicals had made him a bit of a radical himself. It hap pened during the examination of a foreigner who had been caught in the dragnet. The court asked the prisoner if he was an I. W. W. Judge Changes Views. "No, I wasn't, until X was put In jail last night. Now I am one, though," the defendant answered. "Well, I was made something of a radical myself, yesterday," the jurist answered. Despite the apparent 'Change of attitude. on the pan or the munici pal' court, the police continued their campaign against the undesirables. No deportation parties were held yesterday due to the lack of ma terial furnished by the court. Between midnight Friday and o'clock last night, 95 persons, SO of whom were avowed 1. W. W., were arrested. Twenty-five were picked up in the I. W. W. hall and about the streets. Eighteen were released after examination by the police. Literature Is Seized. Copies of I. W. W. and radical papers of other cities, how in the hands of police officials, show that the leaders of the organization are making desperate, attempts to flood the city with pickets. Reliable in- (Concluded on Page 8. Column 1.) YeH v6to VMCfc TWufrte havikg: .Ne?TvEt h "the: 1 ASY,- W WVJSV CE TftUSH TO fcAVE TO JVV(C. THEe ' FORE! 27 Cents Asked for Fresh Prod uct, While San Francisco Quotation Is 6 7 H c. CHICAGO, Oct 21. Egg speculat ors In Chicago and other produce centers . are being caught beneath surplus supplies of millions of dozns of eggs. Lower prices are largely due, egg men said today, to the greatly increased activity of the hens. It was estimated that of Chi cago's approximately 3,000,000 in habitants would have to eat an- egg a day until January 1 to wipe out the surplus thai is being Increased by arrivals of 300,000 dozens weekly. Speculators were said to lytve been holding eggs at a loss of three cents a dozen wit.. 19,000,000 dozen more eggs in storage than at this time last year. Storage eggs which last brought 30 cents a, dozen by the case in the commission district today were sell ing for 26 cents. Fresh eggs at 65 cents last year were quoted today at 27 cents. SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 1. JuBt why fresh eggs in Chicago shouni be selling for 27 cents a dozen wholesale, while in San Francisco they are selling for 67 cents, with this city a scant hour away from Petaluma, which professes to be the egg capital of the universe Is puz zling students cf marketing condi tions here today. The dairy mar ket was closed today but the quo tation remained at 67 rnts, with every indication that the quotation would hold for a few days at least. FATHER IS SHOT BY SON AV. H. Bare Dies as Result of Hurt Suffered In Quarrel.!. BURNS, Or., Oct. 21. (Special.) W. H. Bare of Calamity Creek, near Dre'wsey, Or., was shot and fatally wounded by his son late Thursday, according to a report to officials here. Mr. Bare died shortly after the shooting. The two men had quarreled, ac cording to the report, and the father attacked the son with a pitchfolk. D. O. Bare, the son, was quoted as a.ving 'that he drew his pistol In self-defense, and that jthe weapon went off accidentally when his father hit him on the head with the fork. The' bullet struck the man be tween the eyes and ranged down ward. . .. '"-'-..: , . .. v MEXICAN REBELS ROUTED Band Threatening Power Plant Scattered by Troops. MEXICO CITY, Oct. 21. Mexaca, in the state of Pueblo, the site of the power plant supplying the en tire federal district, was threatened with attack Wednesday flight by a rebel force of 800 men under Lin dorm Hernandez, but the raiders were scattered by the defending government forces, according to a dispatch to the Excelsior. Hernandez recently attacked Ja cala, in the state of Hidalgo, 'and committed many depredations. DUTCH MINISTER NAMED Diplomat Now in Tokio to Be Sent to AVashington. ' THE HAGUE, Qct. 21. Jonkher Dr. A. C. D. Van de Graeff, Nether lands minister to Tokio, has been appointed Dutch minister to the United States, it was .learned here today. He will succeed Dr. J. C. A, Ever wijn, whose resignation as minister to Washington was announced last July. CARS COLLIDE, 4 KILLED Two Others Injured In Mishap ' . Near Wheaton, III. AURORA, 111., Oct. 21. Four men, employes of the Chicago, Aurora & Elgin railroad, were instantly kiUed and two were injured in a mishap today. A motor truck was struck byan Aurora-bound car at Westmore, near Wheaton. i ' lFff"1 ArnJNyCY r Uhwwiuuut' M HANKS J6VW CftU fSRouiHD rj i A ?oTWftNt- - MMK r-. . A' Action in Strike Emer gency Defended. "CIVIL WAR" HELD EVADED Campaign at Home Opened by Attorney-General. , FRAUD CASES DISCUSSED Attacks on Department's Record In 'Prosecution Declared . Made by Those Hit'. CANTON, O., Oct. 21. (By the As sociated Press.) Attorney-General Daugherty, making his only cam paign speech to the voters of his home state, tonight gave an ac counting of his stewardship at Washington, defended his course in the Chicago injunction proceedings and in the prosecution of war frauds and declared that despite "accusa tion and calumny" the department of justice would proceed to perform its duties as it sees them under the constitution. In the strike emergency, the attorney-general said, the federal government used the injunction as the least drastic means at hand for rescuing the country "from the grip of civil war." He ascribed some of the blame "to the radicalism and character" of prominent labor lead ers and some of it to "hard-boiled" railway executives, and asserted that any attorney-general who r would not have acted under the circum stances "should be impeached." Td Spot Declared Hit. Mr. Daugherty, declaring the real purpose of attacks on the depart ment's record in war frauds investi gation was to force the hand of the government tand prematurely dis close important evidence, said such assaults had been inspired! not by the department's inactivity, but be cause tender " spots had been touched by the suits already under way." ..'-;.. "We would have heard little criti cism of the department of justice," he said, "had it not been discovered that a case like the chemical foun dation, for instance (in which val uable patents were assigned by public officials to companies, which they themselves had organized) was under investigation, and . the part played by those involved also was being scrutinized by government agents. Trickery Is Charged. . "And let me suggest here, with out ; ivlng any intimation as to who the men w-ere, that I have had the unique experience of sitting in the department of istice and listening to the story of a man formerly con nected with the government and hearing patiently his pleas for cer tain fairly legitimate concessions, when, at the same time, in the city of New York, another ex-official, one of his associates, was busily engaged in getting contributions and makirfe connections in order that the attacks upon the depart ment of justice and the government might be Increased, reinforced and successfully continued. . . "I can give the names of these parties if ever they lift their voices to dispute this statement, but, un less I am authorized by '.hem to do so, I should like to go through this investigation without prematurely mentioning names except . in . the orderly process of court proceed ings.x Their names, however, will be found in connection with certain litigation wherein some of the most important questions and some of the most questionable transactions and some of the most valuable prop erties in the world are in dispute, and the right and wrong of 'the transactions connected with the (Concluded Page 8, Column 3.) HIGH LIGHTS IN Kansas Representative Believes All Xeeded Legislation , Can Be Effected by March 4. WASHINGTON. D. C., Oct. " 21. Prediction that ' congress will be called in special session about No vember 20 was made by Represen tative Campbell, republican, i Kan sas, today after a conference with President Harding. Mr. Campbell said if congress should convene about November 20 undoubtedly all the necessary ap propriation bills and other legisla tion could be disposed of before the sixty-seventh congress ends next March 4. He indicated, however, that no call would be issued until after the elections. The Kansas " representative , has been engaged in a speaking .cam paign through the east and planned to leave tonight to make additional campaign speeches in the Rocky mountain states. Upon his return, he said, as chairman of the house rules committee, he would take up with the president the legislative programme, adding that undoubt edly the first important measure to come before the house would be (he merchant marine bill, this to be followed by the regular appropria tion bills, the senate in the mean time considering the Dyer anti lynching bill. McADOO SCORES TARIFF American Prosperity Wrecked, Says Former Secretary. PEORIA, 111., Oct. 21. Interna tional co-operation to prevent war and a sound basis for agriculture are among the biggest problems confronting the country, William G. McAdoo, former secretary of the treasury, declared here tonight In a democratic campaign address. He charged that the republican admin istration had by a policy of defla tion destroyed prosperity and at tacked the Fordney-McCumber tariff bill. . "It is estimated that the cost of living to he American people will be increased by the Fordney-McCumber bill $4,000,000,000 per an num, of which only $400,000,009 Will go Into thcfederal treasury," h said.. .''"' INDUSTRIAL PEACE SEEN America Is Said to Be on High ,Road to Prosperity. ELIZABETH, N. J., Oct. 21 Sec retary of Labor Davis, speaking last night in the republican campaign, declared that America is nearer to Industrial peace today than It has been for many years. , "In spite of the great industrial conflict in three of our basic in dustries, affecting mflre than 1, 000,000 workmen," Secretary Davis said, "the nation has brought itself back to the high rpad of prosperity. Production is on the increase and wages have been stabilized in many lines on the basis of pay. which will provide more than a. mere living for the workman and his family." WARSHIPS IN NEAR EAST United States Destroyers Due at Constantinople Today.' CONSTANTINOPLE, Oct., 21. The flotilla of United States destroyers hurrying to new duties in the near east will arrive at Constantinople Sunday morning, the American em bassy was notified todajl by wire less by the approaching vessels. At the entrance of the BospKorus the flotilla will be reviewed by Rear-Admiral Mark L. Bristol, com mander of the American ' naval forces in 'near eastern waters. FAIR WEATHER AHEAD Occasional Rains on North Coast Predicted for Week. WASHINGTON, D. C. Oct 21. Weather outlook for the week be ginning Monday for Pacific States is generally fair and normal tempera ture. Probability of occasional rains on the north coast, however, is forecast THE RECENT NEWS Women's College Heads Would Banish High Heels, Ear Bobs, False Curls and "Rats." (By Chicago Tribune Leased Wire.) CHICAGO. Oct. 21. Long "slink er" skirts, with their attendant high-heeled shoes and ear bobs and false curls and "rats," were roundly denounced today by deans of wom en's colleges in Illinois, in session here. . All deplored the departure of the short skirts and bobbed hair and low, comfortable shoes, which helped breed a healthy,, vigorous race of girls. The deans agreed that the new styles, in addition to being ungrace ful would result in poor health for the girls who follow them. The long skirts will hamper their movements and deprive them of grace. The nar row shoes with high heels will re sult in stilted, painful locomotion and the wearing of false hair will be injurious to their own hair, their scalps and their sight. ' NEW YORK, Oct, 21 Skirts not at the knees, not on .the ground "just sensible' lengths seven inches from the shoe soles" are recom mended by members of the New York City Federation of Women's clubs. . A resolution to this effect is to be voted upon at the federation meeting October 27. Present vogues of long, sweeping, draped costumes drag the ground and carry germ-laden dirt into the home, the resolution says, and sug gests that new garments, including draperies and panels, should be no nearer the ground than seven inches and cut In such fashion as to permit freedom of all parts of the body. FATHER JOINS MATHILDE Harold F. McCormlck to Buy Es tate In Switzerland. LAUSANNE, Switzerland, Oct. 2L (By the Associated Press.) Har old F. McCormick of Chicago has rejoined his daughter, Mathilde, and her fiance, Max Oser, the Swiss riding master of St. Peters island in ' Lake Blenne. Mr.- McCormick, the natives understand, intends to purchase a country estate In this part of Switzerland. The Oser McCormick party will remain on the island until winter sets in and then they will go to Italy. The marriage will take place as soon as Mathilde attains the .Swiss legal age. Mathilde has engaged Fraulein Settler, daughter of the manager of the Island, as her companion. She and her fiance - often take long horseback excursions to neighbor ing towns and castles. FRANCE CONTINUES WAR Fight Against Profiteers Not to Be Discontinued. PARIS, Oct. 21. There will be no letup in the prosecution of French war profiteers. This was assured today when the senate , quickly adopted measure already passed by the chamber of deputies continuing in operation the anti-profiteering law which would have expired next Monday. As continued the prosecutions are restricted to offenses prior to Oc tober 23 of this year. The senate abandoned its disposition to reframe the legislation when it was seen that such action would lead to all night 'sessions of both -houses and that even then there would prob ably not be- enough time left to put the bill through before the law would expire. . LEAGUE B0DYJN VIENNA Association - "Conference Opens With 19 Counties Represented. VIENNA, Oct. 21. The League of Nations' association opened a con ference here today with delegates seated from 19 countries. American was represented by Professor Jere miah Jenks of New York university. Turkey and Ukraine had the largest delegations. . . - Soviet Russia , and the states formed out of the one-time Austro Hungarian monarchy were not represented. AS CARTOONIST PERRY SEES THEM. Senate Election to Be Volstead Referendum. RACE FOR GOVERNOR FADES Frelinghuysen and Edwards Now Fill Arena. POLITICAL WITS TESTED Thirsty, Resentful Voters and Prohibitionists to Forget Parties in . Choice. BY LLOYD LONERGAN. NEW YORK, Oct. 21. (Special.) According to the law, as set down in the statute books, the sovereign state of New Jersey will hold an election next month, to select a gov ernor, a Unitea States senator, 13 representatives in congress and various minor officials. What actuals iywill happen is that the state of Jersey Justice and Applejack is to have a solemn referendum on the subject of prohibition. Not that anybody expects that New Jersey will be able to set aside the Volstead law. Not at all. But moderate and Immoderate drinkers hope to make such a demonstration of force as will impress congress with the necessity of reforming the present unpopular one-half per cent limit. Wets and Drys In Fight. The standard bearers in the fight are United States Senator Freling huysen, republican, who hopes to be re-elected on a dry platform, and Edward I. Edwards, the present governor, who does very little drink ing himself, but is as wet as a cloudburst. Edwards was elected governor of the state on the wet issue three years ago, and is making his present campaign along the same lines. In ordinary political battles it is the nominees for governor who hold the center of the stage. In New York, for example. Senator Calder and Dr. Royal S. Copeland, his op ponent, are minor leaguers as com pared with Governor Miller and ex Governor "Al" Smith. But Jersey- ites are not interested in the battle for chief executive. It is doubtful if a majority of the voters know who is running. It is a certainty that a majority does not care in the slightest. The one subject of inter est, the one matter that is talked about is "Will Eddie trim Joe, or will Joe lick Eddie?" Expenditures Not Limited. Frelinghuysen comes from Rarl tan, down in the center shore sec tion of the state. He is a big. im pressive looking man and lnde pendently wealthy. The way things are going he may not be so wealthy when the campaign closes. For New Jersey doesn'l have any of those "campaign expenditure limit" laws It is presumed that a gentleman knows how much money he wants to spend and, it is regarded as bad form to ask him about it later. So Senator Frelinghuysen will be per mitted to go the limit in tact, he may be urged to do so. Edwards is a lawyer from Jersey City and only fairly well off. Ed wards has been active in democratic politics for. a long time, serving In the state senate. before he became governor. He is an able debater, a fine handshaker and Is not a bit afraid to come out with straight forward attacks n the present pro h."bition law. Edwards Is Shrewd. There Is no "pussyfooting" about EdWards. He is a shrewd politician and thoroughly realizes that his one chance of success Is to "ride" in" on the ' anti-Volstead sentiment. When Edwards ran for governor three years ago he promised that (Concluded on Page 2. Column 1.) ANKS JfjtfN CAVA. AROONt) Formal Action Probably to Be Taken as Result of Over zealous Dry Agents. (By Chicago Tribune Leased Wire.) WASHINGTON, D. C, Oct. 21. Formal apology probably will be made by the state department to the British government for the ac tion of overzealous prohibition en forcement officers in seizing the Canadian schooner Emerald, with a liquor cargo, beyond the three-mile limit off the New Jersey coast, it was learned today upon high authority. i. A thorough investigation which has been conducted by the treasury department, it was . stated, has es tablished that the seizure of the Emerald calls for an official expres sidn of regret by the American gov ernment. A report of the treasury department to Secretary of State Hughes will admit that the Emerald did nt establish contact with the Jersey coast and that members of the crew did not land, facts which prove that the seizure was unwar ranted. The Emerald T"as "captured" by the "dry navy" chaser Hahn, about eight miles off the Jersey coast. The Hahn trained her guns on the Emet-ald and brought her into the port of New York. Officials of the prohibition enforcement bureau con tended that the Emerald was plan ning to land liquor in the United States, but admitted that there was no evidence of smuggling. The seizure of Jthe Emerald was followed by protests from the Brit ish government through the em bassy in Washington challenging the right of the United States to search or seize ships beyond the three-mile limit. The protest will now be answered with an expression of regret that the zealousness of the prohibition officers carried them too far. EMMANUEL SAVES PARTY Italian King Throws Rope to Oc cupants of Sailing Craft. ROME, Oct 21. (By the Asso ciated Press.) King Victor Emman uel is pictured in advices from San Rossore today In the role of a rescuer of an endangered pleasure party. While the king was out on a fishing exj.cditton with the royal lrincesses at the mouth of the Amn in Tuscany, he saw a sailboat being carried into danger by a strong current The royal party hurried to the rescue and the king, with the aid of the princesses, threw a rope to the men on board the sailing craft and saved the boat with its occupants. STUDENTS F0R UNIONIST Lord Birkenhead Elected Rector of Glasgow University. GLASGOW, Scotland, Oct. 21. (By the Associated Press.) The present political turmoil in Great Britain was reflected in the pro ceedings at the rectorial election at Glasgow university this afternoon when Lord Birkenhead, unionist, was elected with 115 votes over Sir John Simon, liberal, who received 630 votes, and H G. Wells, the nov elist, as the labor candidate, who re ceived 353 votes. In the course of the polling sev eral free fights occurred among the students. In which flour, soot, rotten eggs and decayed fish were freely used. Several students were Injured. SPOKANE PROTESTS CUT No Rate Reduction Wanted Un less Interior Benefits. " SPOKANE, Wash., Oct 21. Ob jections to a proposed 6-cent reduc tion in freight rates on rails and rail fastenings from steel mills at Midvale, Utah, to Pacific coast points, unless like reductions to in terior points are granted, were voiced by Spokane hardware dealera at an Interstate commerce commis sion hearing here today. The Oregon-Washington Railroad & Navigation company has proposed to cut the rate from 67 ft cents to 62 ft cents a hundred. "I Stand for People," De clares Lloyd George. '; STEWARDSHIP IS DEFENDED Coalition's Work in War and Peace Upheld. CROWDS CHEER ADDRESS Bonar Law's Position Likened to) That of Horseman Hold ing on by Tail. . LEEDS, England, Oct. 21. (Br the Associated Press.) David Lloyd George, the retiring prime minister, speaking at a great meeting of coalition liberals here this after noon, declared the "banner of party strife" had been hoisted at the re cent meeting of conservatives at the Carlton club, which voted against continuing the coalition. "It is for the people of this coun try," he exclaimed, "to decide whether party comes first or the nation first. I stand for the peo ple." Mr. .Lloyd George asserted that the combination which had achieved the victory in the late war had been brought to an end, not because it had ceased to serve the nation, but because a party was not getting enough out of it Administration Is Defended. He then launched into a vigorous defense of his administration. "I have . sought hpnestly, sin cerely and within my dominant pur poses to serve my native land to the best of my ability," said Mr. Lloyd George. "In the war the govern ment did everything it could. I am told: You may have been a very good war minister, but you are no good in peace. War is not a bad test and I have done a few thing in peace." The speaker was greeted with loud applause. The hall seats 3000 persons and more than twice that number ap plied for admission. Persons on the platform included Sir Hamar Greenwood, ex-chief sec retary for Ireland; Charles A. Mc Curdy, ex-parliamentary secretary of the treasury, and others of the late government. New Party Not Suggested. ThOBe who were expecting a sen sational announcement from the re tiring premier were disappointed. There was no suggestion of the formation of a new party. Mr. Lloyd George declared ths whole bent of his mind was demo- . cratic and progressive and he ar dently defended the coalition as an instrument by which the country had done its part in winning the war and through which reconstruc tion had been effected. Further along In his speech Mr. Lloyd George said: "I promise the people of this eoun- try that whatever the future may . bring forth I will do nothing mean or jjaltry. I will not play any part which is unworthy of the confidence that has been placed in me. Stand la for Progress. "My whole bent of mind is demo cratic and progressive. They do not like it (he was referring to his po litical opponents), and they have got to like it less and less. I stand where I have always stood for the same sound progress."- Alluding to the United States, Mr. Lloyd George said: "The United States of America and ourselves march side by side on the path of peace and international good will. "If Lord Balfour had not come to the disarmament arrangement with the United States of America you might have had competition In (Concluded on Paffe 4, Column 1.) rAAKtNG.THfVt NEW AEftlAL RE. COV.c oV Z4t.S tA LE.S ' AN HOUR.