S3
THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND," OREGON.
TUESDAY; SEPTEMBER 21M620.
LOST MOTHER AND
SON FIND WAY TO
PAiuif) nr i nppcoc
UHimr ui luuulij
After wandering In the wood for
24 hours, Mr. K. grawford and her
11-year-old ' son. George, of 2tt
Grand avnue, stumbled. into one of
the ' logging- camp of the Orant.
Smith " company back of Rooky
Point Monday afternoon, hare- they
were found by deputy sheriffs.
They had left their picnic camp In
search of a bear, rould not find the
back trail and soon were hopelessly
lost.
back of the point, which la 18 miles out
from Portland on the Llnnton road, Sun
day, In company with Claude Ellis, Mrs.
Crawford's rousln. After finding- a
camp site, Kllla took his rifle and went
bark Into the ttmher for a possible deer.
When he heard Tour revolver. ahota he
atarted hack, fearing aoma danar had
befallen the woman and boy. lie found
tbe ramp deserted, and after searching
all the rent of the day, reported to tlte
sheriff's office, and a aearchlnir party
Vent out at daylight.
Sunday night Mrs Crawford and
George alept under a tree, without
blankketa or other covering-. Had they
known It, they were then but a short
distance from shelter, for In the morn
ing they were awakened by the ahrlll
whtatle of a donkey engine.
They followed the sound and event
ually entered the camp. There Deputy
Kherlffs L,a Monte. Wllsfn and N Rex ford
found her an hour Inter. They were
eight miles from the picnic camp.
Mrs. Crawford and her son were un
injured, but very hungry when they met
an aiman near, the camp who gave them
his lunch. It' was the first they had
eaten since early Sunday morning.
FISHER SEES G. 0. P.
SWEPT BY LANDSLIDE
(Continued From Ti Km On, t
war. lie said : "There must always be
a policeman behind the Judge."
He said In t'.ie New York Times, Octo
ber II. 1915. that lie favored a League of
Nations and that "the nations should
agree on certain rictus which should
not be questioned, such us territorial
lategrltjr. All should guaran
tee each of their number In the pos
sesion of these rights. They
should furthermore uRree. not only lo
abide, each of them, by the decision of
the court, mjt all of them i unite, with
laelr military forres, to enforce the de
cree of the court as against auy recal
citrant member.
"Under these circumstances It would
be possible to agree on a limitation of
armaments that would be real and ef
fective. It would b Impossi
ble, to say. that such an agreement
would at' once and permanently slop
wax. but it would mark an important
advance. It would certainly mean that
the rhasret of war were minimized
for It wUJjnean that t lai-t a
long stride has been taken In the efforts
to put the collective strength of civil.
Ised mankind behind the collective pur
pose of mankind to secure the peace of
rlulileousncKS. the peace of justice,
amousr the" nations of the earth."
Could a prophet have described bet
ter, rive yearn before '.t whs born, the
League of Nations as It Is. Including
ArtlcM XT
The Lodge reservation on Article X
Bays : "The United Utatea assumes no
obligation to preserve the territorial
Integrity or political Independence of
any other country."
Koosevelt or Lodge?
JlfcSTROTH GOOD WILL
If we enter the league we want to
command the respect, and friendship of
Other members. What would an Indi
vidual think of Joining a club but with
the reservation that he was to get all
the benefit and pay no dues? Would
be be the most popular member of that
club, especially if he were the only one
of 40 members entering with reserva
tions? The obstructing senators have already
gone far to destroy the most precious
asset, though an Intangible aaset, which
a nation can have and one which- we
possessed two years ago In a higher
decree than any nation In all history
International good wilt. If Harding
la elected, .we shall enter the league (If
at all) with nullifying- reservations and
under suspicion ; It will then be widely
believed both at home and abroad that
our entrance into the league haa Insuf
ficient sanction of the people.
W want an honorable peace whether
we enter the league or not. The Knox
resolution, simply declaring that "peace
exists," will not give us that honorable
standing in the eyes of the world. We
' shall be disgraced before our allies.
HOOTER FOR l.EAGl E
- Tbe Knox resolution means tha7we
get peace by the cheap and easy method
of running away and leaving our allies
to Impose terms on Germany and en
force them. Worse than that, we say
In the Knox resolution that we expect
' nevertheless all the benefits of the
treaty or Versailles ! Can self-respecting
Americans submit to the humiliation of
being called "quitters" T
Aa Hoover, who closely follows Taft.
has recently said, our adhealon to the
treaty of Veraalllea Is a necessity. And.
If we reject the league, we shall have to
reject the wh61e treaty (of which the
league Is only the tenth part) and make
hww iriy w n utrmany, or. aa
t-enator Harding proposes, d-.clare we
ar quit of the war Ind of Europe and
are i peace."
In mat case we shall lose alj aorta of
benefits which we would have had un
der the treaty of Versailles and beeome
atengie la all sorts of complications
wltt) Europe from, which that treaty
would have freed aa
LIABLE FOR QCITTI5G
For Instance, we ahatl be obliged to
restore 3erman ships, and all other Ger
man all .n property, billions of dollars
worth, which we appropriated 'during
the war and which under the treaty of
' Versailles we ere to retain. If we
.should not restore ' this property we
V rvsea. isiisk, ( uu as v Ul HW
treaty with Prussia of 17 Si. renewed In
the treaty of 1I2 which, unleae we ac
cept the treaty or Veraalllea. will re-
, main In force. It we violate the treaty
vi . is.e ; we .oecaine ourselves covenant
breakenrand liable to be haled Into the
lnternational court'- which under the
League of Nations Root hag lust a-
- aisted In forming. Germany 'could -appeal
.to . that court and our awn allies'
would rondemn us ' -
Again,, under h treaty of Veraalllea,
the' property, of ours which Germany
clxedtcan recovered. "Otherwise it
"V casnot. ' f"! ,; ; . - . .
- Again, if wa reject the ireeiyWe lose
- alt claim to Indemnity. v-.-Vi, -
Again, we snail lose Valuable trade
, - , , J
. i n.r j . '
.. ' , ' ;: .- , . ' : . ,.
rights and pot our merchants at av dis
advantage or rather keep them so. as
they are at a disadvantage already.
MEA98 LOSS IK MONET
This all means a lose in cash of -billions.
. - The Republicana , claim they
want to get in. In order to effect econ
omies. If they could save all the ex
penses of government and run the gov
ernment for nothing, they would not
save what they are proposing to loa by
failure to ratify the treaty of Versailles,
especially If our policy of washing our
hands of Europe's left-over war prob-,
lema results, as It may. In bankruptcy
and inability, therefore, to pay us back
some of the ten billions borrowed of us.
If we don't ratify, we shall have in
numerable private lawsuits of American
citisHis against Germany which we
can't, prosecute with success, and of
German clUiens against the United
Statea
Let us take a concrete case. A young
American on the Sussex, torpedoed by
a German submarine, was In the water
four hours and contracted pneumonia
which led to tuberculosis. He is en
titled to damages of, say, 150.000 which
could b assessed and collected under
the treaty of Versailles, but, without It,
ha can do little mora than whistle for
them. Is that the sort of protection
to our citlsens afforded by the Repub
licans? These complications could be
multiplied Indefinitely.
TWO ARE INSEPARABLE
The Republicans have gotten them
selves into an Impossible situation.
There Is only one practicable business
like thing to do and that la to ratify.
The league cannot be dissected out of
the treaty and, if It could, no other of
tbe 37 nations now in the league would
consent. No workable plan la possible
by which we accept the treaty without
the league while the rest, of the world
accepta it with the league, any more
than one man on an atnletlo team could
play football while the rest were play
ing baseball.
The league had to be a part of the
treaty of Veraalllea At first many of
the tranters of ilie treaty tl-ouglit to
have peace and! the league later, aa
tienator Harding now proposes. But
they soon' saw that thia waa impracti
cable. The-'Urt-over war' problems were
so numerous,, complicated and vast, and
their Immediate and complete solution
so Impossible that the league came at
once to be recognised aa an indispen
sable mechanism to be first erected so
that through It the problems could be
worked out deliberately and properly.
BEPL'IiLlCASS REACTIOXARY
These three reasons tot voting for
Cox and Koosevelt. naaeely, (1) to in
sure our entering the league, (2) to
check the senate oligarchy and (it) to
uphold the honor of the nation, are the
great, and compelling ones. There are
many minor ones such as :
To Intsre progressive legislation.
This is a period of reconstruction where
tbe watchword should be "progress."
Governor Cox Is progressive and con
structive. Senator Harding and the
group, whose creature he Is and whose
tool he will be, are reactionary. The
Republican platform Is full of the word
'not." It Is little less than negation,
criticism, complaint, hatred.
A vote for Harding is really for Pen
rose and his group, denounced as the
worst of reactionaries ly Theodore
Koosevelt, which means a return of the
old scandal of special interests to be
"protected" in return for campaign con
tributions. HE E FORCES LAW x
It is said that Harding will surround
himself by men abler than lie. But
when a weak man, naturally vacillating
and without guiding ideas of his ovfn, is
surrounded by abler men than ho Who
know exactly what they want but aren't
renpoiuilble for the action which they
Induce, the reaults are not promising.
even If there be the best of intentions.
One of Cox' bitterest political en
emies in Ohio aaid to nae, "I must con
fess I voted for him the last time be
cause he gave us the best govemmeht
the state ever had. He enforced the law
without fear or favor and whether he
personally approved of it or not."
Haa the Republican party lost Its soul
in the death of Koosevelt? I shudder
at the cynicism of one of the Repub
lican leaders, who said, "The people are
more interested In their stomachs than
in the heart of the world."
VAK9 OF AVALANCHE
If our boys at Chateau-Thierry had
been more Interested in their stomachs
man in me neart oi me world, tney
would have run away. They wiped away
that very reproach which had been
hurled at ua during the three long
weary years (1914-191) when England
and France did the fighting for us and
kept back the Hun at the cost of mil
lions of lives and billions of treasure,
and now that they are exhausted be
cu they defended us, we are asked to
desert them as 'a bankrupt-concern." "
Colonel House recently said of Eu
rope : "The feeling is general that
America has Shirked her responsibilities
and has deserted the world at a critical
time and for selfish reasons. Some feel
a grim satisfaction In the conviction
that if Europe foes down America will
go with her, no matter how hatd ahe
tries to hold aloof. On Wedneaday of
last week, at the unveiling of the
statue of the great, humane and uni
versally beloved Lincoln, Premier Lloyd
George gave voice to the feeling lying
deep in the hearts of all, when he said :
This torn and bleeding earth la calling
today for the America of Abraham Lin
coln.' M
In view of the logic of events, I be
Here tha( Ike loandattont which attach
the Republican voter to his party are
rrambllag away as the moantala side Is
loosened by the rala preparatory to ai
avalanehe.
Sawyer Drowning
Due to Efforts to
Save Child, Theory
Salem. Or.. Sept. 21. The body of
Glen Sawyer. 35-year-old mechanic,
drowned In Willamette sWugh here
Sunday evening, has not been recov
ered, although local officials have been
dragging the slough and grappling
since the drowning was reported. A
request telephoned by Mayor Wilson
to Mayor Baker of Portland for the
loan of City Grappler "Hugh Brady was
declined, as it wit explained that
Brady s services could not be spared
from Portland. .
It ta, believed Sawyer was drowned
In an attempt to swim to the boat in
which his I-year-old daughter Mary
had drifted out onto the waters of the
slough. His boots and coat were found
on the bank. Monday, - and marks on
the sand show that he had been run
ning toward the water. The drowning
was discovered when cries of the little
gin attracted, tne attention of men pass
ing along the bank, one of whom awam
to the boat and rescued the child, who
tuia men wai uaaay is in th river.
Bomb jBStsHouses ft
At Spliaeffliausen
' i ,
LondotC- Eept. St. (L N. J3.) A miro
per or nouses weee.-damaged by a bomb
explosion at Schaeffhaueen, capital of
the Swiss canton et Schaeffbauaen.' said
a Central News dispatch from Geneva
today. . Purine the police Investigation
a bomb waa lounl- -.:.:',..',- -
SHOOTING VICTIM
SAYS WIFE OWNED
GUN LIKE ONE USED
Balem.'Or.. Sept. JL that tha
gun used by Jesse Mullinix In his
assault upon TJgeo Stelger, aged
farmer, at his home north of Salem
last March la Identical to one
owned by Stelger's wife since their
marriage some eight years ago, waa
the testimony offered by Stelger
Tuesday in opening the case against
his wife, Lena Stelger, S3, pharged
with complicity in an assault with
lhtent to kill.
Jesse Mullinix. who confessed to the
assault on Stelger and implicated Mrs.
Stelger, Is serving an eight year sen
tence in the state prison here.
The gun. Introduced ss evidence, was
recovered by the sheriffs office from
North Mtll creek, near the city limits,
a few days after the assault and has
been identified by. Mullinix as the one
tith which he shot at Stelger, who was
seriously wounded.
Mullinix, In his confession Implicat
ing Mrs. Stelger, had declared that he
bad been hired by Mrs. Stelger to make
way with her husband and the prosecu
tion Is basing its case against the aged
woman on her ownership of the gun.
Eight of the 12 members of the Jury,
which was completed this morning, are
farmers.
Mullinix, who was placed on the wit
ness stand, positively Identified the re
volver as the one with which he had
shot Stelger. The gun, Mullinix de
clared, had been given to him by Mrs.
Stelger about It months ago.
Questioned as to any expressed de
sire on the part of Mrs. Stelger to rid
herself of her husband. Mullinix de
clared that ahe had so expressed herself
at one time, after reciting a story of
cruel treatment at the hands of her
husband. After Stelger waa gotten
away with, Mullinix stated, he and Mra
Stelger were to divide Steiger's property.
Mullinix also admitted on the stand
that "J. Smith and wife.-" entered a
score of times on local hotel registers,
represented himself and Mrs. Stelger.
Mulliijlx Is an unwilling witness against
the woman.
STAGE RATTLES BY;
(Continued From Pin One)
that the steam cars had come to stay.
They were skeptical and predicted that
the puffing, snorting carriages could
not make a living. However, where a
stage could carry not more than 14
persons, the first train out of Pendle
ton carried more than 30 passengers
and the doom of the Concord was
written.
"In those days stage coaches ran In
relays from St Joseph, Io., to Sac
ramento, with branch lines radiating
north and south, with Pendleton as
the depot center of the Northwest, from
whence stages operated Over many
routes in four directions.
FLEARIHE IX STORE
"My run for the most part was from
Pendleton to Umatilla, a Irive that
required the concentrated powers of
Six horses. Say. but It will be pleas
ant to visit again witto old Dave Horn
and Charley Beals and to .see those
rumbling old wagons!
"One of the most vivid hours in my
Mfe as a' driver Mr. Jackson will re-
eaU- it was about 3 :S0 a? m. on the
morning of August 23. 1881. The treas
ury box at my feet contained 91750 in
gold and other valuables from the La
Grande land orfice. In the coach were
Mrs. Ida Boyd, a Walla Walla school
teacher and aunt of Mrs. Jackson : a
preacher named Klrkman ; Oscar Gru
now. a liquor drummer: George Oillen
back. a Boise blacksmith, arrtl the in
evitable Chinese.
"At the foot of Dtaoemona hill, 14
miles from Pendleton, two masked ban
dits charged into the road and halted
us with a flourish of gu.is.
WOMAN. PARSON SPARED
"Mrs. Boyd and the preacher lined ud
with the rest of us, ready to yield their
jewelry and cash. But the. bandits would
have none of them. 'Guess we can find
enough on the rest of you and In the
box," they said, 'without robbing a par
son ana a woman. But the liouor
salesman gave up everything he had and
that was ho mean pile. The blacksmith s
pockets yielded a little cash, but the
thieves overlooked a heavily laden wal
let. The Chinaman had nothing to give.
out he was frightened out of six years'
growth and couldn't even chatter."
STERLING FOLK PREVAILED
The days of which Barger tells so In
timately were tiie dayg of men and
women, veterans of the times explain.
But upon those men and women folks
of sterling character whose handiwork
is reflected uisrr'np.!y In the progress of
the great wewt upon the foundation they
built by the r to.ls. their hopes and their
loves devolved the task of rearing the
present generation of business men and
women who are carrying on their
works in a great manner, but less ac
tively, less hazardously and with less
force of personal character.
To take the world back to the days
of the rough .-idlng, straight shooting
pioneers of the Western plains and Pen
dleton Round-Lp is staged. In It par
ticipate thoie of the younger genera
tion who have 'tvlved the blood and the
nerve of their fathers, and In the
grandstands, sprinkled here and there.
are the remaining memoers of that
earlier generation who saw the wild
west lamed by just such methods and
have seen it advance from great
stretches of barren land to fertle fields
of grain.
MORE HORSES THA5 ETER
Barger. who went to Pendleton to
drive stage hr 1878, is now employed at
San Francisco by the American Railway
Express company, where he has dis
covered. In spite of mucf, weeping liter
ature to the contrary, that the Wells
Fargo branch of that company, uses in
San Francisco alone, more horses than it
ever did ir. all the rushing days of the
plainsmen. The automobile has made
its .inroads, but the fact remains that
more horse i are actually In service than
ever before. ,
Born at tht present lawn of Silverton.
which coy. n part of his father's dona
tion land claim, Barger early answered
the call of h hills and plains He has
driven stage in Oregon. California, Mon
tana, Idaho ana British Columbia and
pioneers testify that there waa none who
could nater handle horseflesh,
t Tht visitor la a son of the late Rebecca-.
J. Barger. "Queen Mother of
Oregon Pioneers," and counts mong
friends oi the plains such men as
OLD DRAMA RECALLED
"Buffalo Bill . . Cody. Tom Ward and
others of that famous stripe. Here he
waa a guest of hia cousin, Mrs. J. Mar
cus Freeman, 08 North Twenty-third
street. , . . ' . .
H .- i 1 . l r a .
't .
0. A. C. Hospital Is
Newly Equipped;
Staff, Increased
Oregon Agricultural College, Corval-
ll ' Sent. Tt The onllee-o ttaanital haa
been awly equipped - throughout andl
another physician and two additional
nurses are employed. Dr. H. S. Irvine
will assist Dr. C. R. Matthis. bead phy
sician.. Miss Charlotte Beckett, gradu
ate nurse, will have charge of the col
lege hospital and will be assisted by
Miss Marlon Doty, the fourth trained
nurse on the staff.
Dr. Nathan Fasten, assistant profes
sor of aoology at the University of
Washington, haa been appointed asso
ciate professor of s oology at the college.
CROWD WAITS TO SEE
THREATCARRIED OUT
(Con tinned From Pace One)
the great crowd, giving a thrill to the
'masses of people in tha streets.
Fear or a possible attack on the cus
toms, house from the air led lo a scat
tering of the crowd at some points, while
others strained their eyes and craned
their necks to see what the airman wan
going to do. it was estimated that tbe
crowd bad grown to several thousand
people by this time.
There was a heavy detail of police on
duty about tbe customs house while
secrtt service agents thronged the build
ing and mingled with the peopie in the
Streets.
B10 BILL" INDIFFERENT
There was an air of suppressed ex
citement within the building. The clerks
on duty found it more and more diffi
cult to concentrate on routine duties as
the "aero hour" drew nearer. Collector
Edwards, genially knoVn to his Intimate
friends as "Big Bill." waa at his desk,
affable, smiling and Indifferent to the
tension all about him. -
Discussions of the Wall street bomb
blast and the mystery which has en
shrouded that as well as the possibility
of further outrages of the same kind
were on all men'a lips. The whole inci
dent furnished lower Manhattan with
a fine thrill.
With the prospect that the Wall street
bomb blast possibly may be added to the
nation's list of great unsolved crime
mysteries, the federal, county and muni
cipal detectives today settled down to a
long, systematic hunt for the bombmaker
or makers and commenced to eliminate
clues and theories that have so far yield
ed no result.
The grand Jury Investigation, which
began yesterday, has produced no evi
dence which would aid the Investigators
in solving the mystery. If the witnesses
who were summoned to testify today are
unable to giveany valuable evidence
It is likely UI at the grand jury will turn
to other matters tomorrow.
Thomas Lawlor, assistant custodian
of the custom house, estimated that
about one-third of the employes of the
postoffice substation in the building and
probably one half of the customs em
ployes had appeared at their posts. The
others had "important engagements"
elsewhere or were "detained at home by
illness."
One clue on which a large squad of de
tectives were concentrating their efforts
was contained in the sawed up 'window
weights which formed part of the in
fernal machine. Some of the Iron slugs
bore numbers between raised lines by
which it may be able to trace the plant
where they were made.
"DOXT CROWD A HUNCH." SAYS
FISCHER TO HIS 'QUESTIONERS
By Westbrook Pegler
I'nited Newi Staff Correipondent.
New York, Sept 21. Whining and
complaining like a petulant child, big
Ed Fischer, one-ttme Metnppolltan ten
nis champion, defeated the best efforts
of shrewd examiners who tried to catch
him in a rational mood and find out
how he was able to foretell the Wall
street disaster, in a long Session at the
district attorney's office Monday.
"I tell you I got any information out
of the air from heaven," Fischer in
sisted in a complaining voice. "God
told me."
"Well, why not ask the same source
of information and tell us who set off
that minTT" asked District Attorney
Swann.
"Can't crowd a hunch, judge," Fischer
replied. "Must never crowd a hunch.
And. so far as the investigators made
known, that was the limit of Fischer's
revelations.
UIMBERMEN PLEAD
RATE UNFAIRNESS
(Conrttmed From P One!
Burroughs of Chicago, representing the
transcontinental freight traffic bureau ;
President R. W. Vinnedge of the-West
Coast Lumbermen's association from Se
attle, representing the Seattle district
A. C. Dixon of Eugene, representing the
Willamette valley district ;E. O. Griggs.
representing the Tacoma district : F. H.
Jackson, representing the Northarn
Washington district ; H. P. Olwell. repre
sentative of the shingle manufacturers
from Everett : N. J. Blagen, representing
the Grays Harbor district : R. H. Burn
side, representing fhe Wlllapa Harbor
diatrict ; Phillip Buehner, representing
the Oregon coast dlstaict; C. H. Watsek
lower Columbia river district ; Judd
Creenman. the Olympiad district Joseph
N. Tea! of Portland appeared as general
counsel for the lumbermen's association ;
Robert B. Allen of Seattle, manager of
the association, and H. N' ProebsVI of
Seattle, tratric manager of the associa
tion. OTHERS ARE JiAMED
In addition to the railroad traffic
heads whose coming; had previously been
heralded were W. P. Kenney, vice pres
ident of the Great Northern and R. M.
Calkins, vice president of the Chkago,
Milwaukee & St Paul, together with H.
H Brown, assistant traffic manager of
the Great Northern: J. R. Veatch. as
sistant traffic manager of the C. M.
St P. ; W. P. Capron. assistant general
freight agent of the Northern Pacific,
aftd. from Portland, W. I. Skinner, traf
fic manager of the S., P. and H..-E.
Lounsbury, general freight agent of tke
O-W. ft. A N. company. W
Uleffal Detention
In Prison Alleged
Salem. Or.. Sept XL Application for
a writ of habeas cordis has been filed
in the Marion county circuit court here
against H. L. Compton. warden of the
state prison, by Austin Mann, who is
seeking to gain his liberty from the in
stitution, where, he claims, he is being
illegally detained. Mann's action. Is
based on the claim that he was not It
years of age when sentenced from Uma
tilla county for larceny. The case has
been" set for, hearing September 17.
STOCKYARDS SCENE
OF RIOT OF RACES
Chicago. Sept. 21. (I. N. 8.)
Heavy details of 0olice are os aruard
in the stockyards district of the
South Side today to maintain order
foil -in g a race riot last night in
which one man was killed and sev
eral wounded. Police reports this
morning declare the situation is well
It hand.
Three negroes, accused of J. he mur
der of Thomas R. Barrett ire under
arrest today while several others are
held on suspicion of participating In the
riots The negroes charged with mur
der were captured after a mob of 6000
persona had driven Xhem to take refuge
in St. Gabriel's chrrch. The coolness
of Father Thomas Burke pastor of the
chorch. who held back the mob while
police spirited away the negroes, la be
lieved to have averted a lynching that
probably would have resulted in pro
longed and serloua rioting. '
Barrett, a former policeman, was
killed durln" an argument which Bar
rett Is said to have precipitated by re
marks made to three colored men who
had stopped on a street corner to buy a
paper. Barrett is said to have ordered
the negroes to "get out" and to have
knocked one of them down. The negroes
charged with 'irtmder are Sam Hayes.
Harry Snow and Frank Gatewood.
Barrett's friends gave chase to the
neirroes after he had fallen to the street
with numerous ratal knife wounds In his
body and a crowd quickly Joined in pur
suit. The negroes, terror-stricken, en
tered'St. Gabriel's church and hid. one
In the belfry, one In the confessional
and one in the sacristy. The mob
pounded st the church door.
Father Burke climbed to a pew and
shouted for silence.
"What -is this sacrilege?" he asked.
"Who are the rowdies that storm the
house of God?"
The mob quieted down and retreated.
A patrol wagon arrived. Father Burke
turned and called to the terror-stricken
negyoes. After some persuasion he in
duced them to come forth from hiding
and they were removed through a rear
door just ss the mob again gathered
about the front doors of the church.
One .whltt .nan was shot in the back
durjng the mobbing of a negro and a
negro was pulled from a car and beaten
with clubs.
JOHNSON MEN LEAN TO
PRESS IS UNFAIR
Continued Pram Pas One)
and is an American I think It la a dan
gerous tendency. For the people of the
country expect the press to be fair to
give both parties a square deal. That is
the ofrty safe way to retain confidence.
The governor, having been advised by
local ' leaders that very little about his
campaign in other states has been pub
lished in coast cities, has made it a
point to repeat many parts of preceding
speeches. His approach to Southern
California was a continuous reception
at the stations along the coast route
liven though he made no speeches on
Sunday and the people evidently did not
expect any, folks came out in large
numbers to greet the Democratic
nominee.
LEAGUE WELL RECEIVED
California Is hardly considered a
doubtful state by Republicans this year,
many of whom insist that the majority
for Harding will not be less than 100.-
000, but while some of the Democrats
are Inclined to agree with that estimate
today, they decline to admit it will be
the final decision of the state. Cali
fornia, can turn its vote x upside down
in a week and the splendid impression
made by Governor Cox en route through
California has raised the hopes of his
friends that the tide has begun to turn.
The enthusiastic welcome given Gov
ernor Cox in San Francisco by the busi
ness men and at Oakland by a crowd
that was plainly in sympathy with his
League of Nations argument haa stimu
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Bi m' fv v - . - ' a i II
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I MORESQUE
The Melody' of
a Mother's Heart
SPECIAL MUSIC
Ii roruana notes t
LAST WEEK
wnw gi Aviwf!
R II
B II
lated Ahe nope of even those Democrats
who were Inclined to despair ef the out
come bef&ra Governor Cox got here. ; .
Followers of Hiram Johnson are
friendly to Ooi erase. Cox. Tney see in
the Ohio governor points of similarity to
tneir own laoi. lnorea. it is- wmsperra
that Senator Johnson will confine his
disagreement with Governor Cox chiefly
to the League of Nations, aa he Is said
to reel a keen admiration tor ine pro
gressive record of the Ohio governor.
JOHXSOH LIKES COX ,
Several Johnson men told the writer
that If it were not for the strong fight
made by Senator Johnson against the
League of Nations -as an issue In this
state. Governor Cox would carry an-
farnia aaallv M tha lasua Of BTOrreS-
slvism. Certainly the rank and file of
Johnson supporters are leaning u w
and some of them openly characterise
Cnuinr Hinllnr aa a reactionary.' HOW
much of this is due to disappointment
over the failure of the Republican party
at Chicago to select Johnson as stand
ard-bearer, and how much or u renecis
a frindiv feel In it towards, a progressive.
Is hard to say. Certainly, as one trav
els about the state observers point w
tha large' Republican registration tn the
nrlnarlaa mwiA mMW that tUrS WOUld b
a big vote tn the senatorial contest, but
a surprising number or people wm no
nd. , althev Hardin. Bvi-
Tdence of a sullenness In this state Is not
lacking. The people who helped .jonn-
son win the primary vote ior w presi
dential nomination are deeply hurt that
their verdict was ignored and Oovernor
r-, nnnea nil Ml tha troubled WalSTS not
WW v w.
only by emphasizing that Senator Hard
ing didn't carry any primaries ouisiue
his own state, but that If Senator
hail entered lie ttrlmary he
would have captured the elate s votes.
Northern California, wrtn its anti
League of Nations sentiment among the
irixh as a factor of Importance, seems
to be at the present moment Inclined
toward the Republican nominee. xnia
state, however, had everybody guessing
vaaa art and ahowa some of the
same symptoms of uncertainty this year.
CO. IS ATTACHED
Attachment proceedings were
filed against the Sam Connell Lum
ber company Monday afternoon in
the federal court by th Big Creek
Logging company of IoWa to col
lect $9070.69, said to be due on a
log bill. Devuty United States
Marshal John Mann served the pa
pers on Connell and closed the mill
pending further orders from the
court. Shortly .before noon orders
were given to allow the mill to op
erate. According tp the complalnL Connell
purchased the logs August 7 and de
clined to pay the bill September T.
Connell said thia morning that owing
to car shortage he was unaDie 10 move
his finished product and therefore could
not get ready caah to pay the bill.
Several cars were delivered to the mill
Monday, Connell said, which, when
shipped, would have brought returns
enough to have settled the sccount.
The mtll is located at Burlington, ern
plovs SO men and has a capacity of
S0.OOO to 75.000 feet a day. The com
plaint gives D. E. Stewart as manager
and C. H. Watsek as secretary of the
T I TAHlnr pnmnnriV' Tha los-
ging company Is Incorporated under the
lews of Iowa, but operates "extensively
in the forests of Oregon.
Brake Begins Life
As Oregon Convict
Salem. Or.. Sept 21. Russell Brake,
convicted in the Clackamas county cir
cuit court-of the murder of Harry Du
binsky. Portland forIre car driver,
was dressed in conylct garb at the state
prison here Monday afternoon to begin
serving hia lite term. Brake had no
comment to make except to reiterate
his oft-repeated claims that he is innocent-
COM LUMBER
MRS. VfLLARD IN
PORTLAND ON VAY
TO BIG ROUND-UP
Mrs. Oswald Garrison Villard of
New York city Is one of the city's
interesting visitors. She is at the
Hotel Multnomah. Mr. and' Mr.
Villard have spent 'several weeks In
a tour of the Northwest, their chief
objective being Glacier National
park. Her husband was obliged to
return to New York last week and
Mrs.-Vlllsgrfl: came down to Seattle
and then to Portland. On Tfrsday
she will go to Pendleton to witness 1
the Bound-Up, returning east. from
there.
I had not visited Portland for H
years and I did not want to return to
the East without coming here," said
Mrs. Villard. "Even after Qlacier park,
your city looks beautiful and I am hop
ing the clouds will lift a little for the
drive up Columbia river highway, of
which we. in the ' Rast,4iave beard so
'much. The Round-Up Is going to be
something different from anything I
have ever seen and I am anticipating
it with great pleasure.''
Asked what she thought the woman
vote was going to mean in the forth
coming presidential election, Mra Vil
lard said that although she is a ruf
fragist, she has never been prominently
identified with the movement. However
she feels that the very struggle Incident
to securing suffrage is going to bring
out a large woman vote.
Mr. Villard la the editor of the Na
tion. Mr. Vlllard's father. Henry VII-
A girl! the copst a storm!
a bursted dam I a soul
stirring race against
death! and "Dusty"
opined that for he-man
thrills a speed car is only
a truck's baby sister.
From Byron Morgan's
smashing Saturay Eve
ning Post story, "The
LJ Hippopotamus Parade
PLAYING
TODAY
Lots of
Other"
Doin's
Too!
i laawRR iHdfofa iwm I
WEDNESDAY
SPECIAL
Round Steak
a
I vJ .
U Cascade Market
I 3rd and Yamhill
highly
LOib.
1 irtSI v jp
Sanitary fiapkin -
Tbe 5paeram JMess-filling of FAG-O-SAM U three times)
more absorbent than cotton - cooler, and doesn't pack when
moist Dainty .women tpprcdatt thia added protection.
Secure It br
lor FAG
THI STHAbNUM PRODUCTS CO.
V ttu- "
IRTIAHD, OREGON
lard, was one of the early developers of
the Northwest, the builder, and for ,
many years president of the Northern !
Pacific 'railway and tbe prime mover -la
the erection of the Hotel Portland,
the plan for the hotel being drawn at
his Instance by the well known New
York architects, McKlm, Mead White.
Another Interesting visitor, du '
Wedneaday from Santa Rarbara. will b
Mra. Kdith C. Perkins of Boston, widow '
of George W. Perkins, noted financier..
She haa frequently visited the Round
Up an-of late years has missed few of
the annual celebrations.
Alleged Assailant
Of Marshal Gains
Freedom on Bond
Albany, Or.. Sent 11. After two of
bis friends had furnished 181100 in bonds.
James Ward, accused of assaulting
Mayor H. J. Bchenk and Marshal M.
Rtory. 78. of Sweet Home with a dan
gerous Weapon, waa released from, the
Linn county lalL Story Is still la a Wl-
oua condition, according to word from
Sweet Home. '
Fleadlng guilty to a charge of Shose
Ing Chinese pheasants near Browns
ville. Sunday. Ralph Peine wss fined $21
and Iewla F.cgleMton was reprimanded
by the Juvenile court.
Senator Smith Not
To Run Independent
Marshfleld, Or., Sept. 21. Slate Sen
ator I. S. Smith of Marshfleld, repre
senting Coos and Curry countlee in Ihe
Oregon senate, announced Monday that
he would not be an Independent candi
date agalst Charles Hall, the Republican
nominee. Smith said many had urged
him to run but that he could not take
the time to fight a contest. This leaves
tbe field clear for Hall.
What'sYour
Hurry?
. .
fcconomy Market
4th and Yamhill
absorbent
simply esklng
- O - SAN
DOT
vUesssLIasy . ,.'
HI