4 CITY EDITION ( All Here and lea All True THR WEATHER Tonight and Sunday, fair : easterly winds. .Maximum temperatures Krlday : Chicago ........ 66 New Orleans ... Ixia Angeles .... 78 New York 63 Portland ;U KL Paul bi CITY EDITION Today's Suburban Page Turn to the suburban page today and read about the goings on tn the little cities .that are a part of Portland. You will be surprised how much It will Interest you.. PRICE TWO CENTS ON TRAINS AMD NtWI STANDS I V I CENTS. VOL. XX. NO. 28. Entered ai Second Claw Matter at . PcMofficc. Portland, Oragoa PORTLAND, OREGON, SATURDAY EVENING, APRIL 9, 1921. SIXTEEN PAGES . .J MEAT PRICES PACKERS SAY Quotations on Beef in Particular ' .' Expected to Hit Toboggan, but Pork Will Not Be Af fected; Supply Is Adequate. a Chicago, April 9. U. P.)- Ade quate meat supply with steady .or declining prices in the next six ; months, , were predicted today by packing house officials. Beef, .prices' were expected to fall, while pork will remain at the present level, experts believe. Frank W. Waddcll. vice president of Armour & Co., said the. hogr "crop" this season will be -above that of last year. '"Prices on pork will be no better from the farmers . standpoint this - spring," Waddell predicted. "America Is not exporting pork. For eign nations want it, but they have no one to buy. ' "I do not anticipate an improvement 1n the Amertcan pork market until the United States and Germany have con cluded the peace treaty and until the reparations question between the allies and Berlin has been settled." ' Packing house officials are not ap prehensive over "farmers strikes" to cut down production. "With only the domestic market to provide for, the beef market Is favored with an excellent supply," V. H. Mun necke. a beef expert at the yards, said. Munnecke referred to reports from the West as showing calf production normal. DENIES CHARGE : Medford, Or., April 9. "My arrest ori this charge has done me an awful Injustice as will be shown by later developments." , said ... C. 1L Owen, former Medford rancher and so- ' called '"master mind" of the Bank of Jackson Y.UJf failure. who1 arrived here t6day from Salt Lake City In custody of Sheriff Terrill. j, Owen was arrested there a we-k ago cn ' an Indictment returned in Jackson county, charging him ' with aiding and abetting a cashier to defraud a bank. The indictment charges an overdraft of S21.0H0. , - "I did business with William H. John son, cashier of the bank, legitimately, the" s-irne as with any other business man." continued Owen, "and ,the news paper accounts published about me were grave mistakes. 1 never went under any other name but my own." Owen, who' has been In the oil pro moting business at Salt Lake, is seem ingly' prosperous, and two companies in which he is Interested recently struck pood wells tn the Wyoming field, one of them .a gusher. It is understood that Owen will seek a conference today with the county authorities about his arrest and may possibly furnish bail' of $-5,-000,. which was . set recently.. Sheriff I Terrill says that . Owen has a good busi ness standing at Salt Lake. Decrease Shown in ; Lumber Shipments i . ! Spokane, Wash.. April 9. U. P.)-s-Lumber shipments for February show a decrease of'S"57 cars compared with the FeWrunry, 1920, tots!, according to West ern Fine association announcement to- ! day. This year 12 mills cut 22.000,00ft feet; 'last year. 31 mills cut 85,000,000 feet. Auto Turns Over; Man Severely Hurt I. ... . . i ' Alvin Rank, 23.ES04 Fifty-second ave nue southeast, a laundry driver, was badly Injured about the head at 7 :30 this morning when his automobile turned over on, the Canyon road. Rank was taken to St. Vincents hospital. It is believed he will Recover. MEuFORD RANCHER Serviss Explains Einstein All Things Found Relative By Garrett P. Serviss . Araric' for mot, t writer on Scientific mbjeetA. Written for nd cmyrirhtd. 1921, by Inter national New SefTrice. New York. April 9. (I. N, S.) -Thanks to the presence in this coun try of Albert Einstein. I have just had an opportunity, in the course of a social conversation with him, "to obtain somewhat clearer-Ideas con cerning .the most puzzling points in the application of "his great theory - of relativity to the fundamental laws of modern science. There are . three chief points of the Einstein theory which stand out con spicuously and to the average reader seerffs to be rather- stumbling blocks " than aids to comprehension and these I 4 tried to have cleared tip.' They are: KO ABSOLUTE MOTI05 V First, that absolute motion has no existence bo far as we are .concerned. but that all motion of every kind that we see. or of which we perceive the ef fects are only relative to one another and ran be measured in a relative sense. Ochbco Dam Is Opened on Thirsty Land , The giant Irrigation dam on the Ochoco project, near Prineville, went Into operation Friday when the first flood of water was sent swirling through the spillway. It was a day of holiday and rejoicing, of speech making and feasting in Prineville. More than 1,000 people of the irriga tion district Joined the citizens of Prineville in celebrating the event. The1 dam and attendant canals have been constructed since 1917 and at a cost of $1.440.514.u4. . The system will be maintained at a cost of $1.10 an acre. The project was paid rof by a district bond issue of 11.050,000, and $100,000 de rived through direct assessment of the acreage served. Some 21.987 acres will be under irrigation, of which 19,520 are already served. Crop valuation in the district for 1920 amounted to $33 an acre. The vast acreage Is divided into tracts of 40 and 80 acres in extent, which are being rapidly taken up. The Ochoco Land company is handling the develop ment of settling. Some 1000 people pop ulate the district, including some 20 fam ilies who have taken land since Novem ber 1, last. Artesian wells can be struck almost at any point and at depths as low as 265 feet on the lower levels. W. F. Brown, E'ortland representative of the land company, left today for Prineville to Inspect tlw operation of the dam. of 'p.-i: Seattle, April 9. (U. P.) John H. Perry of New York today an nounced that he had bought control of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. He was elected president of the com pany and. chairman .of the board, the other directors being Charles H. Lilly, L. J. Clarke. Kenneth Mack intosh and W. V. Tanner. Perry is president of the American Press association and chairman of the board of the Publishers Autocaeter Serv ice company. He is a former Seattleile. Perry has long been -associated with the Scripps publishing enterprises. He is a son-in-law of Charles H. Lilly, wealthy Seattle seed man who appears as a director of the new corporation. Terminal Plan Is Discussed, but No I Decision Reached Officials ! of the railway lines serving Portland were in conference this aft ernoon in discussing the terminal plans which are being worked out for cen tralizing transportation service. At 2 o'clock no decision had been reached, according to announcement of W. K. Turner, president of the Spokane, Port land & Seattle railway. Those in the conference with Mr. Turner were : Judge L. C. Gilman, vice president of the Great Northern ; Judge George 'T. Reid. vice president of the Northern Pacific: J. P. O'Brien, vice president of the O-W. R. & N. ; Ben C. Oey, counsel for the Southern Pacific, and James B. Kerr, counsel for the Hill lines. Greek Losses Heavy Against Turks in Recent Offensive Athens.! April 9. (I. N. S.) Greek army headquarters today issued the fol lowing casualty list covering the opera tions from the commencement of the ill fated offensive against the Turks : . Afiun-Karahlssar sector: 324 wounded. Broussa sector : Total losses. 4000, in cluding 600 killed and 400 seriously wounded, i Judge Lindsey Case Is Postponed Again Denver. April 9. (L N. a) The remitter proceedings in the case of Judge Ben B. Lindsey, Denver juvenile court judge, on charges of contempt of court were postponed today until next Satur day. This is the third postponement of the case in as many weeks. In other words, we have no fixed back ground to which all motions alike can be referred.; Until recently It was "thought that by refined observation it should be possible to detect the effect of the earth's motion through the ether of space. The failure of the most elaborate attempts to detect such motion was the beginning of Einstein's discovery of the principle of the relativity of motion. This, put in a sentence,; means that no uniform motion relative to the ether can be detected. DAILY PROOFS SEEN We are S surrounded every day by proofs of relativity that we ordinarily da not notice. When a railway train standing; beside our own in a station starts to move sometimes we can scarcely persuade ourselves that it Is not our own train that Is In motion. This Is a perfect example of what is meant by relativity of motion." It becomes more .complicated, but not less clear, when we apply it to the motion of the earth around the sun. combined with the mo tion of the sun together with alt its planets through space., and the probable motion of the entire svjitem of the stars. CunetuUfd cn I'atfc 'iele, C'oiumn Twoj SCR PPS MAN BUYS CONTROL HUGHES COMES NOMINAL KIND 10 FRONT AS Secretary of State Takes Leader ship j in Foreign Policy and Leaves No Doubt About It on Capitol Hill, Says Lawrence. By Da rid Lawrence (Opyrwht, 1921. bjr Tb Journl) Washington. April 9. -Charles Evans Hughes has assumed the lead ership in formulating America's for eign policy. There J is no longer any question about the directing force behind the new 'administration no longer any doubt about it on Capitol Hill, where reservation ists, irreconcilables and bitter enders hare had their own way during the last two years and no longer any doubt at the execu tive end of the avenue where Mr. Harding, true to the pledge he made in Florida, has given Mr. Hughes complete freedom of action in the conduct of foreign relations. HUGHES MAKES SELF D0M1XA5T The significance of what hag been go ing on more or less under the surface, or rather on the quiet, in the last fort night, is just beginning to be fully un derstood. The process of making each personality in the situation understand that after all the executive is charged with the conduct of foreign relations un der the constitution and that the secre tary of state accepted the portfolio with that idea in his mind has been : accom plished without friction or dissension. There is no trace of discord above or below the' surface of things. Almost everybody concerned recognizes : that Charles Kvans Hughes Is a dominant mind and that he means to do the best he can with the tangle in which lie ( 'onc!tdi on IUse Twelve. Column One) INTEREST KEEN IN PIGEON PLANE RACE Speculation Is high among: the members of the;' navy and marine corps- recruiting parties as to what the carrier pigeons will do in the race between the De Haviland army plane from Portland to San Fran cisco Monday. The race has been arranged by The Journal and the San Francisco . Bulletin cooperating with the army, navynd marines. Books of all sorts are being "cracked" to find i records of pigeon flights and what pigeons are capable of. STBOSO FOB BIRDS Chief Gunner's Mate Sauers of the navy office, who in his boyhood days was a pigeon fancier, claims that the plane has no chance against the birds. He points out that during the war birds made flights of 500 miles and averaged between 80 and 100 miles an hour. One feature against the, pigeons is that they have been cooped up away from their home for , several days and that tends to lessen their sense of direction. Ordinary homing pigeons are affected this way, but it remains to be seen whether the military training is more thorough. The six pigeons, three from the navy and three from the marine corps, are now in custody of Captain E. B. Ham mond, commanding the marine recruiting office. ; They have been let out in a screened yard at his home, 1115 Bybee avenue for exercise. RACE STARTS MONDAY Monday morning Governor Olcott will write messages to the governor of Cali fornia and release the birds at the same time the airplane piloted by Major H. H. Arnold, chief of aviation of the Western division of the army., takes, off from Bloomfield field. The speed of the birds, authorities say, averages about 90 miles an hour. In the races held in Belgium before the war the prize winners made 270 miles in 3 hours and 15 minutes, making an aver age of a trifle . better than 89 miles an hour. The American blue 'ribbon races are flown at the distances of from 100 to 600 miles. The speed of a De Haviland plane Is rated at 120 miles an hour. This is top speed and varies with the wind. On the flight made by the governor of Oregon from the Canadian line to San Francisco, the average velocity was 75 miles an hour. This taken into con sideration with the fact that birds have been , known to fly 600 miles at an average of 80 miles and can choose more direct .routes that are free from atmos pheric J disturbances makes the race about an even break. Major Arnold will spend Saturday and Sunday with the governor at Salem and win return to Portland for the flight. The governor expects to come up Sun day evening. -'.- Accused U. S. Navy Ensign Surrenders On Theft Charge Boston, April 9. (I. N. S.) Ensign Joseph Lynam. missing naval assistant paymaster sought by the government for many months In connection with a short age of $22,000 In the accounts on the scout cruiser Chester, surrendered here today to the department of justice. ; Lynam dropped out of sight. leaving a wife and two children after cutting, a wide swath In Boston theatrical circles. He was known to chorus girls i pd taxi cab drivers as- -Santa Claua." - MASTER MIND OF PEACE IS Message Will Espouse Putting End to State of War, but Will Leave Details to Be Worked Out; Domestic Affairs Treated. By Robert J. Bender I'nited News Staff Correspondent Washington, April 9. President Harding, in his message to congress next Tuesday, final draft of which is now being prepared, will probably recommend a peace with Germany in name only, leaving the final de termination of details to later con sideration. For, the most part, his message is de voted 1 to domestic questions, the inter national program, of necessity, being held Up, pending adjustment of difficul ties the administration is now seeking to make in the .allied execution of the Ver sailles treaty. SEVENTEEN MOYES PLAJflf ED Among the foremost domestic proposals Harding is understood to recommend are the following: L Complete revision of the tax law with specific advice . to eliminate the ex cess profits tax. 2. Enactment of ah emergency tariff, to take care of vital needs of the farm ers and certain industries pending the enactment of a permanent tariff, which shall be based on economic rather than political premises. 3. Recommendations for a prompt re port by the congressional committee in vestigating ways and -means of depart mental reorganization designed to reduce administrative expenses. BUDGET IS SUPPORTED ' 4. Suggestions for a definite system by which good roads, once constructed by government aid, shall be maintained by the states. 5. Passage of a budget law. 6. Favorable action on the Colombian treaty, which would give Colombia $25, 000.000 as a result of this government's taking the Panama Canal sone. .7 An attitude of cooperation with Mexico on the basis of Mexican assur ances of f protection for the hves and property of .Americans.; ' v . Measvres for estaVUshinrt Jraetly the status Of foreign obligations to this government, both as regards jpajiment of interest and payment oi principal. 9. A general pol fey of volitional ar bitration in labor disputes with the rec ognition of the right of labor to organize and ; bargain collectively. 10. : An army of 175,000 men. 11. Completion of the "big navy" pro gram started under the .Wilson admin istration. 12. Establihment of an inter-departmental commission to standardize radio service. 13. Consolidation of ex-service men'? relief organizations under one head. HELP FOR FARMER WASTED 14. An agricultural policy embracing wide representation for the farmer in governmental affairs, reduction of ab normal price fluctuations, a liberal ad ministration of the farm loan act which would tend to reduce farm tenancy and cooperative associations for buying and selling farm products. 15. Extension of the merit system of appointment and promotion in the fed eral civil service. 16U General policy of cooperation as opposed to antagonism-, in the govern ment's relation to business. 17. Revision of the shipping board act to permit of much of that board's work being placed under the interior depart ment. On the question of social welfare legis lation and railroad legislation Harding has not yet decided whether to make recommendations in the pi rat or a later message. CALIFORNIA WINS ANNUAL BOAT RACE Oakland, Cal.. April 9. (I. N. S.) The University of California today nosed out the University of Wash ington in their annual eight-oared boat race over a three mile course in Oakland Estuary by the narrow margin of four feet. A great crowd witnessed thf exciting race. The victory brought the Pacific Coast Intercollegiate rowing championship to the. Bears and means that the Califor nia crew will be sent East to repre sent the Pacific Coast at the inter collegiate regatta at Poughkeepsie, N. Y. The time was 15 minutes 32 seconds over the three-mile course. The Washington freshjman crew de feated the California frosh by 2 lengths In the preliminary- Treat ' Cops' Rough, Is Philosophy of Youthful Criminal Eureka, CaL. April 9. L N. S.) Tell "em nothing. .Let them find out what they can and then prove to them they are wrong. You gotta treat cops rough. If you don't, they'll railroad you. Such is the philosophy .of "Wee Willie Clark. 80-pound, 16-year-old bandit who has a record of seven jail breaks and a long string of burglaries, automobile thefts and check passing, regarding of ficers of the law who he has lead on such a merry chase during ; bis three years Of law breaking. . Three Kureka women have made ap plication to the district attorney for per mission to have the boy paroled so that hey can adopt him. ; THEY MAY BE THE NEW RULERS OF ENGLAND TYPES of English coal miners now out on strike and who .threaten '..to ..tic up the industries of the entire island, with the possibility o overthrowing the Lloyd Georges government. : The faces peering out of the railroad carriage door are those of colliery pit boys. The dam age done by the strike already amounts to millions of dollars, 'i ; ; ' i N N. ' , r Wlllim mi iimMmniiiiwun, t '. . ' Ji '-. ':i ::'..:-.::.v 3,; 'Vr " . fe, ' t rrr: , . - 1 - 4 4 " t ' f - V IV iff t" , V . , ki t i I i 1' J H ' - ' " ' J I ji ' ' y " r KJ i i , i y J I 5 iw4 V , ' ' I , , IS y r" jv K at'"'x 1 .... -1 g x ' ' s m , ,i , Mf-',, ' . , V" I I VT - f - " : -.. r)' " , 1 ' A I ' , . ) JkOf-V'V l ? - i ' I l x t til - : I - i " i I fl i ' ' S.-.!T. y.i.- l-i W i it ,-ii y ii: ; K.i s if ' A v " U v t' lr,-. - - 1- v ' ' -x -f ' ', i v - :::: w.:'.- i.:"- .. ....... . . . ..-..mam " V4 , -t -"--x.- r r Wti1rliiii,,n.ui,i. w,l',,l'li.uj;ugt,imin4JK r MraMnM.iwi V,lf 11 R1 WWW Mill fl'ITtlrlTTrU, 1 I SAYS BRITAIN CAN By Harold IX Jacobs Scarborough, NJ Y., April 9 ). cu.- P.) "Great Britain has 'muddled through' grave crises before; the chances are . she will 'muddle through again the underlying com mon sense of the British people should win." This was the statement today of Frank A. Vanderlip, noted economist, when asked by the United Press for his views on the industrial situation in England, growing out of the miners strike. He has made a special study of British eco nomic conditions and has personally con ferred with ail of the leaders on both sides of the present trouble. "There is one extremely serious phase to consider," he continued, "and that is the effect the industrial war m Great Britain will have on other European countries. "Isn't it conceivable that Germany wili be greatly encouraged in her attitude ot defiance , toward the allies and that France will be correspondingly discour aged ? f - "Then, too, the Bolshevik! may be em boldened to the extent of casting aside all the reported recent reforms in Rus sia. The effect on the smaller European nations should be quite marked." Vanderlip was asked if he believed there would be any serious effect upon the United States. . "Compared: with European countries, there should be very little." he replied. "At first, of course,; there will be a stim ulation of our coal exports, but the fall ing away of British commerce will do us no good in the long run. even should we temporarily acquire a large share of it. What we want is solvent, not insolvent, foreign customers." One Telephone Line Is Not Public Utility Salem, Or., April 9. The Deer Island Rural Cooperative Telephone company Is not a public utility and therefore not subject to the jurisdiction of the state commission, according to an Order issued by he commission Friday, The com pany's lines serve, but 22 patrons.' all stockholders. " r. Decrease in Steel Orders Reported j - 9 . '. New York. April 9. (U p.) The United States Steel corporation today announced a " decrease of .649,102 tons in its unfilled Bteel tonnage for March. The unfilled tonnage on March 31 to taled 6,284,7t5, 'compared with 6.933,867 on February 28, 7.573.164 on January 31, end 9,982,0 i on March 3L 19i0. MUDDLE THROUGH Strike Called Decisive War Of 2 Classes , By diaries M. McCann London, April 9.r-(U. P.) "The approaching strike is the opening of a general decisive war between capi tal, and labor," Ramsay Macdonald, labor leader in j parliament, declared in an interview with the United. Press today. ' . ' Macdonald Added that ; If .the general strike is not averted, British industry will be paralyzed with in a week. - . , There may be some "head breaking", but it will not be the result of a "de liberate planned bolshevism." ;. The workers now thoroughly distrust the government, believing "It is an un witting tool of capital. 1 j HATE AS 5ETEK BEFORE ; The miners "hate capital now as never before."- . . .. . v "The general strike Is not merely a walkout by miners, railway men and transport workers, but a showdown in the division -of interests between capital and labor generally," Macdonald aald. - "Capital wants to force labor to ac cept anything it wants to offer. The government is behind the owners but is only partly conscious of the mischief it is doing; . ' -j: - 'The roinera. determined to have a living wage, are forced to fight against the owners' contemplated reduction. The other workers realize their fight Is com ing. All orgrjtized labor realizes this is their fight and accepts It as such. If the general strike is not halted, all British industry will be at a standstill within a week. ." IlEGAHDED AS 6E5ESAL WAR . "The present situation is regarded as a general war opened by capital for the subjection of labor, for which the own ers and the government have been pre paring for months The miners were not prepared. . . t ij "Capital selected I the point of attack, planned not only to overwhelm the 'regi ment' of miners, but to smash the .en tire army of labor. British workmen, like soldiers in the field - awaiting an attack under fire, are consequently say ing it is better to fight than await the detailed assaults and detailed defeats of small enemy offensives. "If the triple alliance strikes, it will ICoofJuded on X'ace Two, Column .Two) B. G. Oholmley-Jones Holds Old -Position Washington. April CL N. S.) R. G. Cholmley-Jonea of New' York ! was today reappointed a director ; of the bureau" of war risk insurance by Sec retary of the Treasury Mellon. iw I wmMiemiMmvtt&wi-' : 7;. v ...... -II. i --.Jvp -- i mmtmw t 1 "' ... "" - ' U- rS J'J TETRAZZINI AIDS T In view of a bigr throng of Port land citizens. Madame Luiza Tetraz zini at noon today' mounted the plat-' form before . the v-Community Chest and presented" to Mayor George I Baker her check for. 1200 to ahow her enthusiasm' for the city's concerted charity drive. '. 4 ' Mayor Baker accepted this gift in be half of the city. ' The BHks drum corps furnished music for the occasion. At 4 o'clock the diva will share the precious gift. of. her wonderful, voice with Ihe poor and with the city's convalescent soldiers, making the trip to the Mult nomah county farm near Troutdale for this kindly purpose. -The contribution figure to date this morning was placed at $51S.183,-and it was reported that the total list of sub scribers was well over the 17,000 mark. Horace Mccklem, general in charge- of the re-sol ici tat Ion 'division,- reported that over 25 per cent of the previous conlri- (Conaludal on Two, Column Two) Weeks Would Sell Surplus Army Food To Hungry Nations Washington,. April 9. OS. P.) Secre tary of War Weeks announced today that be had recommended to the' Chair men , of the senate and house military committees that he be authorized to sell ..surplus army food supplies to starving countries of Europe. " , . By an act of -congress, a ban now exists'- on Oth .belting of -' army food stocks to Europe. The question of the sale 'of these, food . supplies to- European countries was brought Up today at a conference between -Weeks and Senator McCormick of Illinois and John F. Smulksi of Chicago, bead 'of Iolish re lief in this country. Jsmulskt urged the sale of food to Poland. . , American Draft : Dodger Is Bounced ! About Minus Home Mexico City, April 9. Lynn Gale, the American draft dodger who recently was deported by . Mexico, bids fair to rival the fictional character "A Man Without a Country." The radical must get out of Guatam&la. according to the Information today. Dispatches to the local newspapers say the government in the other Central American country has decided be Is undesirable ' and will de port him to Salvador or Honduras. COMMUNITY CUES ENGLAND IS FACING BLACK DAY Industrial 'Crisis Looming Over Kingdom Called Gravest Peril Faced Since Empire's, Army, Was Trapped in Flanders. London, April 0. (I. X. S.) Ne gotiations between the Ktrlking Brit ish coal miners and the mine opera tors will be reopened Monday, It wan officially announced here at 10 o'clock tonight. By Marie C. Reeves London, April 0. (I. Is. S.) The blackest day In England's history since Ilalg issued his famous "Buc-.k-to-the-wall" message to the half trapped British army in Flanders, opened with both aides in- the great industrial crisis absolutely adamant. Representatives of the triple alliance shortly after 7 o'clock tonight appeared at Premier Lloyd George's office seek ing another conference. The transport workers, who had been in aenaion all afternoon, took a recea. at 7 o'clock. No statement was tasutd. but" it was said they might meet again at 9 o'clock. . DIMAGREKMF.XT MANIFEST 1'nmifltakable signs were rnanlfrxt that there is a disagreement tn the rank of the organization. Officials bntleve.il that the transport workers were en deavoring to find a peaceable way out of the situation. Premier I-Joyd George told representa tatives of the transport workers lonlcl't that. if the miners agreed not to Intimi date volunteer pumpmen at the mine the government would discuss the ques tion, of wages with the miners Imme diately. The transport workers' repre sentatives agreed to urge the miners to accept this condition. ADDITIONAL TROOPS TJRED .It u officially announced at K o'clock tonight that additional troop.! have been sent to South Wales and to rV-otland "to aid in the preservation of national "-peace.' ' - The cabinet late this afternoon recon sidered and held up the manifesto which Premier Lloyd George planned to make publics today, appealing to the masses to support the government in the situation growng out of the mlnera' strike. The action of the cabinet was con strued in- official circles as tndtcatlnr that there may be some poielblllty of (Conrluilfxl cn !' TwI, Column Four) Detective Believes - Harris Confessed To Get in Movies Buffalo. X. Y.. April 9. (I. K. S,) Arrangements were belnjj made today to take to New York Roy Itarria, the young man who claims that he, with a com panion named William Duncan, was hired to kill Joseph B. Elwcll, New York sportsman, lst June. "If the pollfve persist In thinking I am telling a lot of lies, let them keep at It," Harris said this morning. "It will mean my freedom, no .why should I worry 7" . Detective Sergeant Oswald of New York has not yet been convinced that Harris actually had a hand in the killing of Kl well. "My notion is that thia fellow wants to get into the movies," said Oswald, when pressed for an explanation as to why Harris should make a fale confession of murder. i xoi-uiuNnf? CHEST THERKOSIETER. $ S5Q, OOP 80O, OOO 75o, OOP 7oo. OOO 650,000 600, OOO 55o, 000 5oo, OOO 45Q; 000 . 4-oo.boo 55o, 000 3QO, 000 250,000 100,000 1 50,000 100,000 5o,ooo