The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, September 07, 1920, Page 1, Image 1

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    V .
CITY4 EDITION
CITY EDITION
The Journal Special
train to the Round-Up will be parked en
th Main street In Pendleton lor the two
days of the big show. No fussing for a
place to eat and eleep. Passengers will
board the train In Portland and live there
In comfort, Reservations being- received.
ie All Here and If, All True
THE WEATHER Tonight and Wednes
day, fair; winds mostly westerly.
Maximum 'Temperatures Monday 1 .
Portland ....... New Orleans ... IS
Helena .. . 71 Boston TO
Los Angeles .... 71 St. Paul 74
Rife
PRICE TWO CENTS
OK TWAINS and wrws
STANDS riVg CINTf
VOL. XIX NO. 155.
EntrM m Bsood-CUat Matter
Porioffk. Portland. Oregon
PORTLAND,; OREGON, TUESDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 7, 1920. SIXTEEN PAGES
' - - i a 1 -a W .I.I.J U II. I I II 3 I I IJLM, ,.l , ,', ' M
P0RT10NS0F15
BODIES FOUND
IN H0TELRU1NS
Twti Portland Guests, Grace Hall
and Man Believed Charles D.
Shadrick, Missing; Thomas
Butts of Portland Is Safe,
Klamath Falls. Sept. 7. what
was thought to be portions of the
bodies of three more fire victims
were taken from the smoking
wreckage of Monday's fire Tuesday
morning, making 15 in all. The lat
ter have not been identified. The
presence of metals and glass beads
leads to the belief that one was a
woman. Most of those occupying
the building- were not known here,
thus making identification difficult.
Only three poHitive Identifications
have been made.
vv. Identified dead:
CHARLES HARMON. Klamath
Palls, peanut vender.
M.-RGARET HANLEY, chamber
maid. MRS. O. BILDERBACK, Medford.
Known missing, probably dead:
LEONA BILDERBACK, daughter
of Mrs. BUderback.
GRACE HALL 6f Portland.
SHADRICK. Portland.
CLYDE POLLOCK.
- DALTON.
Unidentified girl, 19, of Medford.
Known guests of hotel:
Thomas Butts of Portland.
Frank Wilson. ,
Mrs. R. E. Chapman, Chlco, CaL
Cliff O'Brien.
Mike Connelly.
Garfield.
It. E. Mlllner.
Jack Holcomb.
Martin D. Schuler.
Harry Jones.
Alfred Kinable.
, Pappas.
Tony Souca. 1
- Injured: ; '
Alva Beals, badly.' btirnsd.-
William Morse.
J. E. Ponder, badly burned.
William R. Scott.
Harry McCharles.
Thomas Hlgglns, back tiurt, leg
broken.
Leona BUderback. daughter of the
Identified .woman, and Grace Hall of
Portlands Or., are known to have been
In the burned hotel, but have not been
found. Searchers believe they will find
more bodies ss the ashes cool. Loss of
the hotel register makes identification
a difficult process.
Work of extricating bodies from the
ashes and fallen iduwi of smouldering
debris began at noon Monday and con
tinued throughout the day. .
Although the source of the blase is not
(Coneludad en Pe Thra, Oolm Thrta)
Oregon Deer More
Plentiful Thari Ever
"There are more deer being taken out
now than ever before." declared William
Brown, game warden, who is just In
from Columbia county, Nehalem, Goble
and Deer Island. Everywhere Is the
hunting good, declares Brown, and hunt
ers are coming out of the forests well
satisfied with their game.
Nell Brinkley and
Scribe Are Married
New York, Sept. 7. I. N. S.) Miss
Nell Brinkley, famous artist, and Bruce
, McRae Jr., a newspaper man and son of
Bruce McRae, well known actor, were
married on last Saturday evening at
New Rochelle, N. T.. It was learned here
today.
Foremen Excluded
From Macey Wage
Oakland. Cat.. Sept 7. (U. P.) Su
perior Judge Koford of Alameda county
handed down a ruling today holding
that foremen end assistant foremen are
not entitled to the benefit of the so-called
"Mavey award" determining wage scales
for shipyard workers.
REBEL MINERS
DEFY CALL OF
UNION HEADS
ILKESBARRK, Sept. 7.
(t p.) Anthracite coal
miners represented In the Insurg
ent wing of the United Mine
Workers voted at noon today to
continue their "vacation" strike J
For the second time In a week
they served notice on President
Wilson, the coal operators and the
recognised officers- of she union
that they will not return to work
until they are given higher wages
and working conditions are im
proved. ' "'),'
Speeding Auto
Crashes Into
School Children
2 Dead; 4 Hurt
New York. Sept. 7. (I. N. 8.)
An automobile going at a terrific
speed dashed straight through a
crowd of. school children at Fifty
fifth street and Seventh avenue here
this afternoon, killing two. instantly
and Injuring at least four.
Two of the latter are expected to die.
The car went right on, and no trace of
It had been found an hour after the
tragedy.
The automobile, according to the po
lice, was driven by a man lnhaki uni
form, probably an ex-service man. A
general alarm was sent to all stations to
be on the lookout for the car, whose
license number the police have.
Kaots Child May Recover
Suffering from what Is believed to
be a frsctured skull, S-year-old Louise
Kauts. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A.
F. Kauts of 7919 Sixty-fourth avenue
southeast was reported Tuesday morn
ing to have rested well during the night
and physicians hold out hopes for her
recowery. She was Injured when struck
by an automobile driven by' John Scha
fer, 688 Irving street at Thirteenth .and
Morrison streets, Sunday night.
HARDING GREETED
Aboard Senator Harding's Special
Train. Chicago, Sept. 7. CU. P.)
Senator Harding, en route to the
Twin Cities, arrived in Chicago at
8:30 p. m. today. He was met by
General Leonard Wood, who was a
candidate for the nomination. Sen
ator Harry S. New of Indiana, head
of the Republican speakers' bureau,
and a large delegation of leading
Chicago Republicans.
After shaking hands with many
in the' crowd, Senator Harding ac
companied General Wood to Fort
Sheridan. .
LEAVES MARION FOR SPEECH
AT MINNESOTA STATE FAIR
Marlon. Ohio. Sept. 7. (I. N. S.)
Senator Warren O. Harding left Marion
today for Minnesota, where tomorrow
he will deliver an agricultural speech
at the Minnesota fair. It Is the first
departure from the front porch program,
and the candidate's first speech of the
campaign outside of Ohio.
The senator's special train pulled out
of Marion at 7 :80 a. m. Aboard It were
Senator and Mrs. Harding. George Chris
tian, Senator Harding's secretary, and
Mrs. Christian ; "Jimmy" Sloan, secret
service operative ; members of the Hard
ing headquarters staff, stenographers
and newspaper correspondents.
Only'one speech is planned on the trip,
that being the one at the fair tomorrow.
It Is probable, though, that the candi
date will be forced to make some short
talks from the rear end of the train en
route.
Senator Harding's train will arrive In
Chicago at 2 p. m. The senator will
leave the train at Englewood. on the
south side, and motor straight to Fort
Sheridan, 'where he will be the guest of
Major General Leonard Wood for sev
eral hours. Chicago proper will not see
the candidate. '
The party will pick up the train again
at Deerfleld station, north of Chicago, at
p. m. tonight and proceed to St. Paul,
arriving there at 9 :15 a. m. tomorrow.
The senator will speak at 1 :30 o'clock in
the afternoon and leave at 11 p. m. to
return to Marlon.
Senator Harding planned to utilise the
time on the train In working on speeches.
He has two speeches to deliver from his
Marlon front porch the last of this week,
one to a Detroit delegation on Friday
and another to a delegation of Northern
Indiana Republicans .on -Saturday.
Two Loggers Hurt
By Falling Trees;
Injuries Not Fatal
Falling trees In the forests injured
two loggers Monday In nea-by logging
camps. Neltner mans injuries will be
fatal, according to physicians at Port
land hospitals where the loggers were
taken.
Elmer Jacobson, 28 and single, resid
ing at Stlverton, and employed by the
Spalding Bumber company, was brought
to the Good Samaritan hospital Monday
afternoon suffering from serious back
Injuries. His condition wss reported to
be slightly Improved Tuesday.
Robert Sigune. 22 years old. single.
residing at 381 North SeventeentlTstreet
was brought to the Good Samaritan
hospital Monday from Kalama, in a
serious condition from injuries about
the shoulders and neck. Sigune was
employed by the Kalama Lumber com
pany. v
t
Kidnaped Yank Flees
From Mexican Bandit
Mexico City, Sept. 7. U. P.) W. A.
Gardner, American, kidnaped by Za
mora, escaped from ' the bandit yester
day, following a fight between the lat
ter and government troops, the foreign
office announced today. Zamora was
said to have escaped with only 20 men.
Arbitration Asked
Of League by Poles
Warsaw. Sept. 7. (U. P.) The Polish
government has appealed to the League
of Nations to arbitrate the territorial dis
pute between Poland and Lithuania, It
was learned today.
BY GENERAL WOOD
36,000 GO TO
SCHOOLS ON
Attendance Estimated to Exceed
That of 1919 Many Schools
Are Crowded. Because New
Portable Not Beady for Use.
With the hammers still resounding
on the new "portables" that' are to
house a large portion of Portland's
school population, the city's public
institutions of learning opened their
doors Tuesday morning to receive
some 36,000 children back from their
summer vacations. N
It was estimated from incomplete
reports from the various schools that
the first day's attendance would ex
ceed that of 1919.
The morning was spent 'in registra
tion and assiignment of lessons, and the
children were dismissed at an early
hour In order to buy their books and
get ready far actual work Wednesday.
The new buildings. In spite of the
assurance that they could be used, are
not yet ready for occupancy. At the
new Beach school, which Is composed
entirely of 1 new portables, the fur
niture has not yet been installed. Only
121 (children appeared, however, and
the remaining number drawn from -the
Thompson and Ockley Green schools
will not be transferred until the build
ings are complete. At other schools
where portables have been erected the
children will be crowded Into other
rooms until the portables are ready.
James John high school Is probably
the worst off In the matter of accom
modations, the students being housed
In scattered rooms and portables all
over St. Johns until the renovation of
their building is complete, about six
weeks hence. No word had been re
ceived at the school administration of
fice up to noon Tuesday as to the
(Concluded on Pk Two, Column One)
FIRED ON IN N. Y.
New York. Sept. 7.L N. S.)
Increasing violence fciarked the
ninth day of the Brooklyn Rapid
Transit strike.' The worst disorder
occurred when about 15 men, in two
automobiles, opened fire upon the
men's clubrooms at the East New
Tork carbarns, where? about 600
strikebreakers ere quartered.
The attackers, the" police say. were
armed with automatic pistols equipped
with Maxim silencers. Police reserves
were rushed to the scene and the at
tackers fled, firing npon their pursuers.
The police commandeered automobiles
and gave chase and a thrilling running
fight developed. About 20 shots were
fired, but so far as known no one was
wounded. The attackers escaped.
Small bands of marauding strikers
harassed the company by tampering with
signals, greasing rails and cutting trol
ley wires. 1
Motorman Arrested
After Car Smashes
Into An Automobile
R. F. Tubbs, J21 Savler street, motor
man-conductor in charge of a streetcar
which crashed into an automobile driven
by. Victor Anderson,' 333 Madison street,
at the east approach of the Thurman
street bridge 8unday night, was arrested
Tuesday morning on a charge of reck
less operation of a streetcar.
Tubbs said he was counting fares at
the time of the accident and did not see
the machine, which was stalled on the
tracks. Mrs. James Blake. 10S5 Vaughn
street, suffered two fractured ribs and
body bruises,, and Mrs. Anderson's leg
was cut. According to Blake, who. was
also In the machine with two others, the
streetcar was over two blocks, away
when the automobile refused to run. An
derson was standing out In front work
ing on the engine when the automobile
was struck.
Portland Chamber
Invites Harding to
Reclamation Meet
Responding to an invitation sent by
the Portland Chamber of Commerce to
Senator Warren O. Harding to attenB
the reclamation and development con
gress in Seattle, September 16-47, George
t. cnrtstias, secretary of the senator.
has informed the chamber of Harding's
Interest in the subjects to be discussed,
though it will be impossible for him to
be present
A large delegation is expected to at
tend the congress from Portland. Word
has been received that 100 persons art
planning to attend from Weoatrh
Mrs. Winnie Braden. who is en charge of
me uregon exhibit, is in Seattle, arrang
ing the entire display of Northwest
proaucts. Whitney L. Boise Is chairman
of the Portland committee.
American Minister
To Poland Returning
.
Washington, Sept. 7. (U. P.) Hugh
Gibson. American minister to Poland,
has arrived at Warsaw on his return
from this country, where he was on
leave of absence, the state department
announced today.
STRIKEBREAKERS
Women Voting
On League in
Massachusetts
State Primary
Boston, Sept. 7. (I. N. S.) -Women
walked Into the polling
booths at primaries In Massachu
setts and New Hampshire today and
for the firs time cast their ballots
on equal terms with men.
It was estimated that mare than J00.
000 women were voting In this state and
several thousand in New Hampshire.
Ram failed to stop them. A Massachu
setts woman, Mrs. Alice Cram, widow of
a Boston building contractor, was un
opposed for the, Democratic nomination
for state auditor. Four women were
seeking; Republican seats In' the Massa
chusetts legislature.
tJnited States Senator George IL Moses
of New Hampshire is opposed for re
nomination by Huntley N. Spauldlng.
former state food administrator, in New
Hampshire Republican primaries. Spauld
ing favors the League of Nations with
Lodge reservations
Moses was one of
the senate
lrreconcllables."
VOTCNO IN WISCONSIN
PRIMARY CALLED LIGHT
Milwaukee. Sept. 7. (I. N. S.) De
spite the fact that women are voting for
the first time, it was evident this after
noon that a light vote Is being cast in to
day's primary elections to nominate
party candidates.
Senator Irvine L. Lenroot Is being op
posed by James Thompson, who has the
support of Senator Robert M. La Follette.
for the Republican nomination for
United States senator. There are five
Republican candidates for gflvernar. In
cluding James J. Blaine. R. Wilcox,
James W Tlttetoore, Merlin Hull and
Col. Gilbert Seaman. Blaine has the
support of La Follette and he and Wil
cox are regarded as strong contenders.
Nominations in the Democratic party
are not contested and the same is true
of the Socialists.
PARTY CHIEFS WATCHING FOR
RESULTS OF PRIMARY TODAY
By Ed I- Keen
New Tork, Sept. 7. (U. P.) Returns
from today's primaries In a number of
states will be watched with especta.1 in
terest at national headquarters Of the
two big political parties here, particu
larlj because of possible bearing on the
senatorial and congressional elections.
Probably the greatest Interest centers
In Wisconsin and New Hampshire,
where Senators Irvine L. Lenroot and
George H. Moses, both Republicans, have
been engaged irt bitter fighting for re
nommatlon. In Wisconsin, the situation has been
considerably complicated by local Is
sues, including wet or dry, "German
ism, railroads. Non-partisan league,
etc. as well as intense factional party
strife. Although originally Lenroot was
regarded as a protege of La Fo'Jlette's
the senior - Wisconsin senator in the
(Concluded oa Pk Two, Column Tvrt)
Washington, Sept. 7. (I. N. S.)
General Budennys bolshevik forces
In the region of Lemberg are in
flight and have already crossed the
Bug river, with Polish forces in pur
suit, according to a dispatch received
by the state department today from
Warsaw.
Paris, Sept. 7. (I. N. S.)- The
Polish f ryit has been . pierced in
Galicia and General Wrangel's anti
holshevik forces on the Crimean
front have been forced back, accord
ing to claims made ln a soviet war
office communique wirelessed from
Moscow today. It says:
Southeast of Brest-Lltovsk fighting
has continued ' with alternating success.
West of Hrublesof we drove back the
enemy and captured 200 prisoners. In
the sector of Rohatyn rOalician front)
we pierced the enemy's lines and oc
cupied Podkamir (SO miles southwest
of Lemberg) capturing some prisoners.
"Crimean front: In the sector or
Pereiasla we drove back the enemy who
was attempting an offensive. We In
flicted havy losses. We captured two
enemy tanks and destroyed a third."
Babe Ruth Defendant
In $250,000 Suit of
Big Film, Corporation
New Tork. Sept. 7. (U. P.) Babe
Ruth, home run king and. member of the
New York Yankees, today was made de
fendant in a suit for $250,000 damages
filed in supreme court by the Educa
tional ftlm Corporation of America.
The petition alleges that on August 28,
last, Ruth, in an Interview in a New
York newspaper, asserted the film com
pany's pictures of him were unauthor
ised. .
The suit was filed as a counter action
to a suit Brought by Babe against the
corporation for $1,000,000.
Report Denied That
Japanese Have Fort
On Turtle Island
Washington. Sept. 7. L N. S.5 The
state department has no Information
that Turtle Island, off the coast of Call
fornla, has been fortified by Japanese.
Secretary of. State Colby said today tn
commenting on a reported statement of
Representative Schall of Minnesota that
he had been Informed or snch rortiuca
tlon. .'.--!.
- Secretary Colby Indicated that he gave
no credence to the reports which he said
were "constantly recurring reports."
RED ARMY DRIVEN
ACROSS BUG RIVER
COX DRY, HE
SAYS; WOULD
LET LAW ALONE
J
Governor's Fighting Spirit Is
Growing as He Travels West
Through Dakota; Campaign Not
to Be Pink Tea, He Declares.
By Herbert W. Walker
Devil's Lake, N. D Sept. 7. (TJ.
P.) Governor James M. Cox stated
here today that he does not intend
to Interfere with the eighteenth
amendment. His statement, the
first on the liquor question, was
made to a woman who questioned
him on prohibition as he shook
hands with her.
"ly dear lady," he said, "I have
always, voted dry and do not intend
to Interfere with the eighteenth
amendment."
By nerbert Walker
Grand Forks, N. D., Sept. 7. (U.
P.) Cooperative buying and selling
by farmers was advocated by Gov
ernor James M. Cox in his first
speech in North Dakota here today.
The governor warned that measures
must be taken to stop the trend from
the farm to city or within ten years
the United States will have to be im
porting foodstuffs.
New anti-trust laws, stating Just how
far labor and cooperative farm organisa
tions may go in their work should be
passed, he said.
"The farmers must compete now with
the manufacturers and for that reason
they should be allowed to cooperate in
purchasing and selling." Cox said.
He -made a sharp attack on Uie big
packing and cold storage Interests, claim
ing that cold storage has been made an
agency of profiteering.
With his fighting spirit apparently in
creasing as he moves farther West, the
governor was scheduled to mske
speeches at Devil's Lake and Minot. Sev-
(Concluded on Pace Two. Column Three)
E
Paris, Sept. 7. (L N. S.) A vio
lent earthquake was felt along the
Mediterranean coast of France and
Italy early today, according to a dis
patch from Nice.
S. P. Lines Found
In Good Condition
By Kruttschnitt
Julias Kruttschnitt of New York.
chairman of the board of directors of
the Southern Pacific company, accom
panied by a number of other high of
ficials of the road, spent Tuesday fore
noon inspecting the Southern Pacific
shops at Brooklyn and planned to leave
later in the day for San Francisco.
Kruttschnitt and his party arrived
Saturday night and left Sunday morning
for an inspection of the Tillamook line.
They spent Sunday night at Hlllsboro
and on Monday went over the lines in
the vicinity of Corvallls, Albany, Eugene
and Springfield.
Accompanying the chairman are Wil
liam Sproule. president of the Southern
Pacific company ; Vice President Shoup,
General Manager Dyer, Assistant Gen
eral Manager Burckhalter and Malnten
ance of Way Engineer Kirkbride.
The party was Joined here by A. T.
Mercier, superintendent of the Portland
division, and H. M. TuU, division engi
neer. .The officials report all properties
of the Southern Pacific company In Ore
gon in excellent condition. Considerable
time was given to an Inspection of the
work on the bridge across the Willam
ette river at Albany, where the wooden
framework is being replaced by steel.
Captain Speeds Boat
So That Child Might
Be Born in America
New York. Sept 7. (L N. a) Little
Oscar Danielsen. aged 16 hours, will
grow up into an American cltisen, thanks
to Captain A. J. Schmidt of the Scandinavian-American
lineri Oscar II. which
docked at Hoboken today. When the
liner was in mid-ocean, the surgeon not!
fled the cantain that one of the steer
age passengers, Mrs. Clara Danielson of
Parsund, Denmark, was expectea to give
birth to a child and she Was'anxious that
the child should be bora in America.
The captain sent the ship ahead at full
speed and the child was born after the
ho, i -ntvrA the three-mile sone
American waters. The happy mother
named him after the sWp
Grand Jury to Take
Up Baseball Scandal
Chicago. Sept 7. (J. . N. S.) Grand
Jury investigation of gambling at big
league baseball games here, from t and
10 cent "pools" to the $50,000 betting
scandal, which is alleged to have In
volved players of the Chicago National
league team, was ordered today by Chief
Justice McDonald or the criminal court
Judge McDonald ordered the Jurors to
"clean - op" all forms' of gambling en
baseball In Chicago. -
MEDITERRANEAN
ROCKED BY DAK
OURNAL AIR
PILOTS ROUND
OUT SEASON
Labor Day Flights to Oregon and
Washington Beach Resorts Fit
ting Climax; Achievement Rare
in Aerial Service in U. S.
. The Journal s seaplane express
concluded Its flights to the beaches
for the season of 1920 Monday after
noon, ending an achievement in
aerial navigation that has never been
equaled anywhere else in the United
States.
In conjunction with The Journal's
service Monday, the Oregon, Washington
& Idaho Airplane company carried out. I
with no hitch of any kind, the most am-
bitlous Tying program that has been
?A BlnCS organisation was
Only one plane, and It wss out of com-
mission, was leu on lwis ana ciarK
field while every pilot in the employ of
the concern was busy. Of these planes.
tr-roe were nymg lor me journal, car-
ry ng thousands of copies of the early
afternoon editions to all the beaches
most frequented by residents of Port-
,a . ,. . . .
The deliveries of the newspapers by
sir to Newport sjid Tillamook were eas-
V u . wr
was the first ever to fly over the beaches
of that section, while aerial visitors to
the Tillamook beaches are sufficiently
rare that the coming of the seaDlane
Monday was the attraction of the day.
Pilots Archie Roth and Jack Clemence
slipped out together from the landing
basin st Lewis and Clark field at 1 :10
p. m. in F-boats. Roth arrived at Sea-
side at 2 :55 p. m.. having to go out
around the mouth of the Columbia river
because the weather was lowering and
the air mnticy. Taking on gasoline anrt
oil .n the Necanleum river, he sailed for
Rockaway, arriving over the beaches st
S, o clocfc ami -after circling, the town.
dropped his bundles of papers success
fully. He then turned and came back
direct to Portland, arriving, at the field
afrain at I -.If p. m.
(Concluded on Face Two, Colons Two)
E
TO FACE CHARGES
San Francisco, Sept 7. (U. P.)
Commander Warren Terhune. U. S.
TM v.rnnr ftf Am.ri..t Rmn.
nas been summoned to Washington
as a result or charges brought
against him by native Samoan chiefs
ana umera, ucuruui w iiuKni
from Apis, Samoa, arriving aboard
the steamer Sonoma,
iney said native unrest in Samoa nas
become so serious mat recently a large
scale demonstration was staged ln front
of the governor's residence.
Journal Round-Up
Special Will Leave
Portland Thursday
All aboard for the eleventh annual
Round-Up at Pendleton, the cowboy
classic of life on the last frontier! '
m,. t, .rr.i T'
The Journal special Round -Lp train
Am. 1AM..A. TTnln. Y .
us iuh s """""'i x - uri -
land. 10:30 p. m.. Thursday, Septem-
ber 21. Arrive ln Pendleton the next
morning. Returning, leave Pendleton
11:10 a. m., Sunday, September 26,
arriving borne in Portland the same
morning at 8.
The fare for the round trip will be
$45, which Includes passenger transpor
tation, sleeping-car accommodations.
meals for the full two days, and re
served seats In the grandstand for the
two days of the big show.
Reservations on the special are being
made rapidly at - The Journal Travel
Bureau office on the main floor of
The Journal building.
Deserting1 Sailor Isf
Famished by Hunger
! j
Dubans Paltland. . a sailor' and
cltisen of Russia, was picked up by
Sergeant Crane and Patrolman S perry
of the St. Johns station at Flsk and
Lombard streets at o'clock Tuesday
morning. He was In a famished condi
tion, having walked to Portland from
Seattle, -where he Is said to have de
serted ship. According to the police,
it had been five days since he had eaten
anything. The policemen gave him a
meal and then too khlm Into headquar
ters where he Is being held for the im
migration authorities. f
Moonshiner Fined in
State and U. S. Courts
' ' - V'H
After paying a fine of $400 in the
state court and serving 19 days In the
county jail, Roscoe Lane of Madras was
fined $300 additional by Federal Judge
Bean Tuesday morning on a charge of
violating the national prohibition law.
Lane pleaded guilty to building and
operating a still In the woods "near
Madras.'. Officers found the still at the
end of a narrow path, at a point tn the
woods that was hardly accessible. ' A.
large quantity of mash and liquor were
also found. .,.- - - .
SAMOA GOV
RNOR
ARM BROKEN
AS PITCHER
THROWS BALL
McMlNNVILtE,8cpt.7---W. W.
Nestles Food oompAny, suffered s
broken arm while pitching ball t
Pacific City on Labor day. A
compound fracture of the apper
arm Is said to be doe solely to
pitching the ball. Two games
were played, one resulting 4 to 3
In favor of McMlnnvllle against
Pacific City, the other IS to a In
favor of Tillamook over McMlnn
vllle. The crowd wss estimated
at 1500.
BONDS TO BE SOLD
Vancouver, Wash.. Sept. 7. The
sale of $30,000 of dock bonds was
ordered by the city council Monday
9veningi on h9 condltlon that the
honds be sold at par.
Construction of the first unit of the
dockt where tin going vessels way
landi w, on the sale of the
bonds. The cost of construction of this
unlt whwS wln pracUcany represent the
toU1 of the open dock a 75 t
of harbor platform? has tseen estl-
mated at 6480.7. A harbor platform
60 feet .j, 465 feat ,n .,enjrtlw
,ncluded ln the plan, and H,000 has
beer, allowed for dredging.
Although the IO-foot.hannel will prob-
bly ranted be the government, the
P" dredging between the
channel and the dock will be additional.
Considerable dredging at this place la
considered necessary to bring the water
Pia 01 ,eMt reet. It is now
lrom Iour lo 8,x !
The Standlfer dooic will probably be
used as It now stands, and sufficient
storage facilities for the anloadtng and
the handling of ocean-going cargoes will
be provided.
MacSwiney's Wife
Thanks Sinn Feiners
In America for Aid
London, Sept 7.- (T. K 8.) Mrs. Ter
ence MacSwiney. wife of . the hunger
) j striking lord mayor of Cork, today sent a
message of appreciation to the Sinn Fein
sympathisers In the United States for
their efforts to start an economic boy
cott against jsagiana.
"We appreciate and sympathise with
the line of action taken in the economic
boycott as shown by the withdrawal of
Doliciea from Enrltsh insurance mm.
pan lea and the refusal to handle Eng-
l'sh shipping," says the message in part
nl " T ring home to the
feet will, be throughout the world-If my
nusoana goes to sis death In an Eng
llan PrlaoD
lonaon, sept. 7. (L ft. ) ( J : 1 p,
") Terence MacSwiney, -hunger strtk
" 'w',,."r ,.JT" " i"
shadow or death,
Fire From Gasoline
Explosion Destroys
Garage and Auto
Fire resulting from a short circuit In
batteries of the automobile completely
destroyed a- portable garage and the
machine, at the resident nf irn-v
peters, $15 East 'Stark street esrly
Tuesday morning.
Dlax spreading through the roof
or ln garage oia.some slight damage
I tn th. hnnu -r. k ...
10 the house. The' flames becam anor.
. .
1 lacuiar wnen me gasoline tank ex-
ploded and the biasing fuel scattered
aoout.
Engine 12 answered the alarm and
soon had the fire under control.
Reunion Is . Held by
Veterans of Civil
War atMontesano
Aberdeen. Wash.. Sept- 7. Small In
number but staunch In their patriotism.
Civil war veterans met in Montesano at
a reunion and campfire of the Grays
Harbor County association. Eldredge
Wheeler, superintendent of the Monte
sano schools, , delivered an address on
Washington and Lincoln.
Two hundred dollars damage was done
the Montesano high school by boys, who
broke windows and doors.- ',
Pasha WiU Guide
Keel Force in India
By Karl H. vea Wlegaas
Berlin, Sept 7. At the . request of
Premier Lenin and War Minister
Trotsky of ths soviet government, Enver
Pasha,, the , Turkish nationalist leader,
has been made commander-in-chief f
the Bolshevist forces mobilised against
India, according to advices received
here from Moscow.' This Includes the
Bolshevist troops tn the Cancasus. Per
sia. .Afghanistan and Turkestan, the
dispatches declare. " , .
5 ChildremKilled .
When Hit by Plane
Paris, Sept 1. CO. P.)--Flve school
children were Skilled and more than a
dosen seriously Injured lata yesterday
when an aviator doing trick flying
crashed info the Mont Rouge school
yard. The mechanic also was killed and
the pilot Injured. -
VANCOUVER'S DOCK
REPARTEE IN
Committee Told It Is Not Trying
to Get Best Evidence to Prove
Cox's Charge of $16,000,000;
Names of Money Diggers Given
By L. O. Martin
Chicago, Sept. 7. (U. pj) In -a
session marked by constant bicker ,
lng between "YIN witness and the
committee, Ed II. Moore of Youngs
townl Ohio, Governor Cox's personal
representative, today began, to tell
the senate "slush fund" Investigating
committee his story of a great "dual
organisation," which he charged the
Republican party built up to raise a,
$16,000,000 campaign fund.
Moore submitted many names of men
he said could be oced to testify under
oath concerning his charges. Ohio, Illi
nois, Massachusetts, Kansas and Utah .
were Jthe states from which he suggest
ed men he named be called. Some of
these men, he said, belonged to the
"unpaid whlte-shlrt" money-raisers,
under command of Colonel William
Boyce Thompson. Others, he declared,
were professional paid money-raisers,
forming the other half of the dual or
ganisation under command of Harry
M. Blair, assistant treasurer ' of the
Republican national committee.
ALL WILL BE CALLED
All those, he named to the committee
will be called. Senator Kenyon, chair
man, announced.
At the very outset Moore and the
Republican members of the committee
began quarreling because he said be
had no personal knowledge of facts-
covered by his charges. Moore charged
the Committee with not trying to get
'the best evidence It could,, while Re-
publican committeemen in turn charged
him with trying to pass off hearsay
rumors as evidence.
Elimination of Governor Cox as a
witness was made practically certain
by Moore's statement that he believed
he had been Intrusted- with all the evi
dence Cox had, and that the governor
personally could not add anything vital
HOW LIMIT WAS BEATXIT "
The Republicans .got. around the 1100 .
limit 4n ' contributions by -accepting
$1000 before the convention and an
other $1000 from ths same contributors
after the convention, Moore claimed.'.
Kenyon asked about Cox's ' charge
that many contributors were0 In favor
of using the bayone In labor troubles.
Nearly every big contributor In
Youngstown Is connected with some
steel company, said Moore, I don't
know whether they gave because they
wanted to use the bayonet"
But they have used the bayonet la '
industrial disputes in the past"
Moore took up Massachusetts, fol
lowing Ohio. Me submitted a Newton,
Mass., newspaper, which stated that the
town's quota was $25,000.
7Me IK CHICAGO
In Chicago, Moore said, a dinner was
held to raise $700,000. which be de
clared was fixed as the city's quota,
Charles Pies was in chsrge -of the
drive to raise Chicago's quota.
Ernest Bamberger, Utah national
committeeman, filed a sworn statement
that $0000 was sent Into Utah by the
Republicans, Moore said, whereas Fred
TJpham, Republican treasurer, accounted
for only $1835 In that state.
Senator Spencer said the recsd would
show that Upham said he sent to Utah
$1835 more than was raised In that
state, arrd suggested that Moore apolo
glee to Upham.
"Don't you think It would be better,
before virtually charging a man -with
perjury, to make sure of your facts H
asked Kenyon.
Moore said he had no access to , the
official record.
The committee Interrupted Moore's
testimony to hear Walter SL Dickey of
Kansas City, whose wife is critically
ill.
rPHAJT WAS HIS BOSS
Dickey, chairman of the Missouri state
ways and means committee, said hie in
hi ructions earns direct from Fred W. ,
Upham. Republican treasurer. Upham
appointed him last winter. Dickey said."
Dickey said a chairman was appointed
in each of the II congressional districts
of the state. 1
Dickey testified W. A. Kllng. Oakland.
CaL. was a regional director from the
ways and means commttee, in charge of
Missouri He talked often with Kline .,
about raising money, Dickey said.
Wild Steer Gives
Pursuers Two-Mile '
Run Upon East Side
The spirit of western cattle land was
brought home to East Bids residents
Monday afternoon, A wild steer escaped
from the union stockyards and ran two
miles before It was cornered by two men
who were pursuing it on horseback.
The steer was cornered st 12U Borth
wick street The stockyards men em
ployed James Doddridge, 1201 Commer
cial street, to shoot it The carcass ef
the steer was taken back to the stock
yards slaughter house.
Harding .and Cox
Discuss Each Other
.) "What Cox Thinks of Hsid-'
tog What Harding Thinks of
,'Cox." A remarkable pslr of,
counter portrslts written for Ths
Sunday Journal. " Over their own '
signatures the two candidates '
- analyze each other's personality
and avowed principles. See next ,
i Sunday's Journal. , ,t. ',
;.V;
'