-THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL,, POR TLAND," FRIDAY. ; OCTOBER 10, 1919. osm i HERE T OTESCHENMS AMAZES MASARYK president :ofit2,000,0(Czech8 v SayPeae Cfefen Erred i in Giving Poles Teschen Mines FOR" LEAGUE OF NATIONS Favors Treaty but Prefers ; Cov- ! tenant, Which! He Considers Is ' PossiblGreatest in History." Dy W. J. KiUtr gpceiaUCabU .te The-Journal and Th CbleafO '.. - a DDt Nevi " - ' tCoprrlsht 191S, byChlcaio DaQ Nw Co.), ; Prague, Czecho-Slovakia, Oct. 10. cannot understand the oposl tlon toward us in our just claim to -..This statement was made to me In. an interview which I had with Thomas Garrick Masaryk, the first president of the new Czecho-Slovak republic We were sitting In the red carpeted royal reception room in the Prague castle, once used as a home by the late Austrian Emperor Francis Joseph. The tall, ; grey-bearded; slow-speaking old' man with gentle brown eyes oppo He me Is now master there as president iif iIia vttihll ' A four a trrt Francis ruled there, Masaryk's father was the superior's coachman-and Masa ryk himself was a blacksmith's appren tice. The story of this f ran sit Ion, which really Is the story ' of Masaryk's life. Is one of the greatset romances, of the war. As he sat there calmly discussing the future of the 12,000,000 people whose loader he is it was difficult to realize that little more than two years ago he was an Australian political- exile with a price on his head, living in compara tive seclusion in a modest flat in Wash ington, D. C where he continued to direct the (vwatlons which effectively swung- Bohemia away from the central -powers to the side of the entente. PLEBISCITE SO SETTLEMENT "We sorely need the Teschen coal "fields for our factories," he said. "Tes chen has belonged to Bohemia for- wO years and Poland has absolutely no just claim to it. yet America has been the leader in the opposition to us in this and has forced upon us this plebiscite settlement which Is really no settlement 'ai all. We have unwillingly accepted aihls proposal because, we do not fear Uio result of the plebiscite. It is true that there are more Poles than Czechs, Tn Teschen, but the German population will vote with us. In- deciding that the Teschen problem was one for settlement along ethnologi cal lines the peace conference was in consistent. President Masaryk explained. Koi4 example, he pointed to Alsace and Lorraine, . which., though . having-, many Hermans, went to France, and to parts of the ' Dalmatian coast : populated ' by Jugo Slavs, which was awarded to Italy. speaking or the League of Nationa, President Masaryk4 declared i It to, be "possibly the rreatest covenant In the history of the- world," and holding un precedented and far . reaching f benefits for mankind." He said he -thought more of the league than he did of the treaty, but added that he was thoroughly satis fied with tha treaty with the single ex ception of the Teschen . eetttemenXa "Yours - is a ? Socialist : Democratic Kovemment," I Bald, " and you I are iex t door to red Russia.' Is there any danger of Bolshevism here?" . ?i . .. "None ? whatever," ho. replied. ; The people, here look upon the .Bolshevik! as tne great tna or Americana look upon the L iff.' W." ; ;:;tvtA GRATEFUL , TO AMERICA Throughout the Interview the president showed the greatest respect, admiration and appreciation for America and grati tude for the great help she has given to the new republic, virtually saving- It from , starvation and other peril. He made a passionate plea for farther help from the United States. . I .n "This time," he declared, "we do not need food so much as ray materials, par ticularly cotton, and lone .term credits with which to buy this material to te start the wheels In our .many j Idle fac tories. The crops are good and we hive bread,, but we must atari our factories immediately to provide work for - the thousands of unemployed. We need Im mediately from the American govern ment a loan of $50,000,000 on long term credits 'for this. X hope and pray that' America will , see . the - great advantage, not only to us, but herself In helping us." President Masaryk spoke of the suc cess in Bohemia of woman suffrage which he had inaugurated when he first took office. It has been made a mis deameanor. punishable by a fine for a. we man to neglect to vote. Women are hr.ldlng comparatively many j good po litical of f ices throughout the j land and managing them successfully,! he said. He has been a lifelong advocate of equal rights for women and proved it when, after he had married Miss Garrick. of Chicago, he changed his name from plain Thomas Masaryk to Thomas Gar rick Masaryk. D'Annunzio Marked For Death By Croats London, Oct 10. (I. N. B.) Captain Gabrfele D'Annunzlo. leader of Italian troops that occupied Flume, ' bas been marked for death by an organization' of students which has just been formed at A gram, said an exchange Telegraph dispatch from Rome today.! The or ganization is made up of Croatlans who are leading the movement for the an nexation of Fiume. FATE OF, LORD ELCH0' , J IS STILL A MYSTERY r i v Pv'N - ill if '-. I f ' " V H i i fe a U v V - Boy of 13 Enrolls as Harvard- Freshman Boston, Mass. Thirteen years old Is a rather unusual age for a Harvard freshman, yet that 'Is the age of Jacob Schankman of Chelsea, who enrolled as a member of this year's freshman class. Jacob is no bookworm, but just an ordinary boy with a good healthy boy's thirst for knowledge and love f or ath letics. He has no ambition i to be the youngest student to graduate from" Har vard, but does intend that ; his record while at the university will be such that his college will be proud of him. ' He ' will have some 400 odd comoetl- ,tors for any freshman honors he -may covet. .- I : The, fate of Lord Francis Elcho, two was reported missing after a, battle on the British front in France in the early- part of 1916, is one of the mysteries of the World war.- - Brlt- " lsh authorities have combed!! the war ' records, but nothing '.which might bring light on the .fate of Lord Fsneis has been found. Lady Elcho, wife of Lord Francis, Is do ing all in her power to solve the mystery. She is a sister of the famed British beauty, Diana Man ners, and daughter of the Duke of Rutland. - - FIUME TRADESMEN WANT CITY FREED R ALL POWERS Grafting Fiume ta Italy and Is tria' to Jugo-Sf aVs; Impossible Solution, Says D'Anhunzio. SLAVS DENY TOWN IS ITALIAN Peace Conference Must Reverse Its-Sofemn Decision to Make Fiume Free Port, Poet Asserts. Allies' Aid Plan In Russia Like Backing Broken Down Horse London. Oct. 10. (L N. S.)"The al lies are backing a broken down horse in Russia," declared the Daily Exress to day In an editorial based upon a long expose of Russian conditions cabled by its correspondent at Helsingfors, Walter Muir. . 1 "We are ruining ourselfes in a laud able effort to raise the Muscovite giant to its feet," writes Mulr. As to living conditions Muir, says, that 800.000 persons are- threatened with star vation tn Petrograd during the "coming winter. "It would almost be a crime, against humanity to maintain the blockade of Russia," he continues. "Such a course would only make, enemies of the bulk of the population. With the hope of tak ing Petrograd before the winter it is our obvious duty to send food and thus' earn the gratitude of the bulk of the, peot m www .wn w w ,www, iimrw wotwwm im i w i ..........,...,..,,.,...,,,,T..i1T,miifTiiTtiimii,T,iiini hi osite ' 1 I2d FourbhSb .Mk elsewhere $7.95 , bet. Wash, v-' i . Circle Theatre comparison or pnees, h will prove to you that the "Boston" i undersells and inci- i i tall X 1 1 sss 1 It'Aldar MM S U m C3 dently outsells- Quality at popular prices le without i; $5.95 Beautiful Dress Boots in brown, gray or black kids; QV2-uich leather or cloth tops to match; " long, slender, vamp; full Louis covered heel; hand turned ole; priced at pair ...$7.95 New Fall Oxfords in brovvn Russia Mcauylwith il4-inch heel, Goodyear welt sole; price V. . .v. w $6.95. Same in black calf kin . . . .'.$5.95 . Opera Pumps in patent leather and ' daB0 ;kid; .longy slender vamp; full Louis covered heel; hand-birned sole? price A, . .;. . ... . . . ; . $5.95 Spats .in the popular colors i-.:. , $1.95 ; forced to change the names of the shops, erect Italian signs on tha houses, hoist Italian flags and alter -the street names. Naturally, they, say,- the city looks Ital- Ian! . - - -" ; ' - The report, of tha Interallied . commis sion which investigated the street fight ing In Flume, It is believed, will contain the statement that tha municipal gov ernment or consigtio nazlonale is parti san and not representative of the win of the people. ; If that la so another Italian point Is destroyed, namely.' that the peo ple of Flume themselves elected Italian representatives. It Is on the consigllo nazlonale, that D'Annunilo bases the whole civil, government . The president of this body ia one Groasich. whose name Is plainly Slav but who perhaps, as the Croats say,- is a renegade. ..The men I saw told me that no real plebiscite had ever been-held despite the claims of -the Italians, to the contrary. If- one were taken for Flume it would be travesty on justice not to do tha same In Eastern Istrla, which ' supposedly : has a large Slav majority. jj '!5' (. . "During my stay, here I have crossed twice Into the Jugoslav suburb of 6os sak. - I met two persons, one' a nedea- f trlan and -the- other, a.' cab driver, -who swore that they were citizens of Flume who had been exiled from their homes and dared not'recroes the international brook between' the two1 towns for fear of arrest. In the hotels, cafes and shops I tried : to. QutftttionV the tradesmen i and found that -many -people preferred that Flume should , become a 'free' city an neither ItaUan nor Jugo-Slav. The Ital ians want the town. In their opinion, to save Trieste, otherwise '.they fear that Trieste will ' die , a commercial death. 1.11. Gree Stamps for cash. Hok man Fuel Ce. Main S53, A-SS5S. Block wood,' short sjabwdod. , Rock . Springs and Utah coal, sawdust Adv. Amsterdam Bakers Strike; Bread Gone By LeopeM Aletrlae ' Spaclsl rnbls to The Journal and The. Cbicsto . Daily '1n. . , . r.-.... - (Copyrfcfat. ISIS, h CMcaso rally .rs Co.) Amsterdam, Holland, Oct. 10. The bakers here have gone on a strike and nearly the whole capital is without bread. The restaurants are crowded, the mu nicipal authorities supplying meal - and flour for baking pancakes. The strike began on f Thursday and -was-, followed by . a great run on the bakeries, the stocks in which - were exhausted In a abort time. .The strike threatens to ex tend to neighboring towns. . THIN PEOPLE NEED BITRO- PHOSPHATE kiifninffnmffnf J - ECONOMY EFnCIENCY i By AVllllam E. Nash Special Coble to The Joamal and The Chicago Daily News. (Copyright. 1018, by Chicmso Dafly News Co.) Flume, Oct" 10. In a beautiful palace overlooking Fiume, a little man of middle age, bald head, brown mustache and goatee, pouches un der his eyes and yellow cracked teeth, rose to meet me in his bed chamber. His first words were, "You represent the Chicago Daily News, I hear. Ah, I know your pa per. It was the Chicago Daily News that published an article by me In 1916, urging Italy's- entrance Into the war. Your readers know that I always represented the cause of liberty and Justice." So spoke Gabriele D'Annunzlo, the poet, whose dream has Inflamed all of Italy. He 'continued: 'In 1M I fought in France for the cause of the allies, and never ceased to support their Ideals. Flume is Italian in culture, history and right of self-determination. More than 20,000 men stand at my disposition, and thousands more would come should I allow it." . "But can the peace conference re verse its solemn decision to make Fiume a free port?" I asked. "It must" replied D'Annunzlo. "By What criterion is this body sacred? Every country In the allied cause is now finding- fault with the . treaty it made. The American senate seems about ready to reject the treaty altogether. I have heard that Senator Lodge In tends to bring the question of Fiume separately before the American senate." "What about the future of Fiume?" was the next question. "Can it retain its present size and importance with a hostile hinterland? "Will not the Jugo slavs turn their commerce elsewhere rather than send it through- an Italian portr i At this D'Annunzlo became vehement. "Has not the whole history of Italy proved that she Is a liberal and demo cratic nation V he asked quickly. "We want to live at peace with the Croats and will give them every preference In the port The customs duties will be kept low, or will be abolished altogether. Intelligent Italians realize that it is the interest of Fiume itself to attract Croat commerce and will facilitate it. That is such a rlatter of common sense that no Italan government can afford to neglect Jtl In Genoa, wa have the same problem ?or Switzerland. Shall this port be made Swiss as the solution? Certainly not. Once Fiume is Italian, I am sure that some modus Vivendi can .be agreed upon with the Jugo-Slavs. It ta to their interest as well as ours. 'Recent reports say that the peace conference may be willing to give Flume ,tO Italy, but grant Northeastern Istrla to the Jugo-Slavs. That is an impossible solution. It would cut off Fiume from ' land connection with the motherland and make her a defenseless islet amid a hostile population. I'll never accept such a plan. My soldiers will prevent It by force of arms if necessary." - The palace in which D'Annunzlo reigns was built originally for the Magyar government of Fiume. It stands on a hill in the upper town and commands a superb view of the tea from the islands at the outlet to the rugged shore of Istrla at the right with the mountains of Jugo-Slavia in 'the distance.' The palace is in the Vene tian style. One enters on the ground level, ascends a broad noble staircase and comes into a. grand reception ball of brown marble. This is the ante chamber of Flume's dictator, where vis itors leave their cards and await' his call. D'Annunzlo is much beloved by his followers for His kindness and extraor dinary energy. It is said that like Na poleon he works from 6 a. m. to mid night All the details of the government come to him personally and he will not use a typewriter nor dictate letters to a secretary. One may question whether this does not detract from the efficiency of his government, as in the case ' of Philip II of Spain yet one cannot help admirinr the proof of his diligence. After interviewing D'Annunzlo I made a- point of seeing the Jugoslav notables In Flume. They deny that the city Is Italian ana declare that language Is no criterion. They admitted that the ma jority of the people speak Italian but say they can also speak Croat and German. The Czecho-Slovaks, for in stance, speak German also but no '.one would say that they are German by sympathy. German was made the com mercial and cultural language of Flume by the Magyars In accordance with, the policy of playing one faction against an other. According to the Croats here the Italians have pursued a violent policy of Italianizatlon ever since their arrival last November. The people have been Winthrop Hammond Go, , Your Closest - Friend Is your under wear. -Union S u it s, perfect ittting. . . . $2.50 to $20 maw a Saturday Closing .- We now close ": on Saturdays at ,,7 P. M. instead of at 8 P. M. as heretofore. Successful Men Are Always Well Dressed Good dressing does not follow success. 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