Chronicle I) l THE FORECAST Fair Minimum aSStW'' THE DALLES, OREGON, FRIDAY EVENING, APRIL 8, 1921. No. 83. VOLUME LXI. REVOLUTION IN TS NDUSTRY APPEARS CERTAIN TRIPLE ALLIANCE CALLS MEET ING TO CONSIDER GENER AL STRIKE. COLLIERY IS STORMED HAND GRENADE3 ARE HURLED AMONG VOLUNTEERS AT MIDLOTHIAN PITS. . , By United Presi LONDON, Apr.il 8 An industrial revolution in Great Britain .appeared certain today when executives of the "triple alllan6e'' called for a joint meeting at 4 o'clock this afternoon to decide on the time and method of a general strike to support the coal miners. The triple alliance meeting was called after the miners refused to reopen negotiations with colliery owners under an agreement that the first question settled would be that of pumping mines now threatened with flooding. The organization includes the min ers, railway men and transport work ers totaling almost 4,000,000 work-, ers. By shutting down fuel supplies and transportation, they can para lyze all industry. I It was believed a strike will bo called for Sunday night. Officials clung to the hope that by specifying it would consider "the time and method" of a strike, there was still a chance that the call could be averted. The mine owners' committee-Vhich approved the government's call for a renewal of negotiations, remained in session at the board of trade in the hope that the workers might yet agree to meet it. By Ed L. Keen (United Press Staff Correspondent) LONDON, April 8 British miners "practically" refused Premier Lloyd George's request that they renew ne gotiations with mine owners, the board of trade announced today. At the same time it became known that transport workers and railway men voted to strike unless the min ers and owners reach an agreement. A general strike, if ordered, is ex pected to begin . Sunday at midnight. There was no slackening In pre parations to have the nation ready to withstand a prolonged industrial paralysis. The government's great air forces were to be turned over to food con trollers to deliver necessaries from the country to the city, and even to the continent. Aircraft of all kinds was to be devoted to the work. The delivery system will be sup- (Continued on Pae 8.) CONSPIRACY TO GET MRS. STOKES, CLAIM ATTEMPT MADE TO INVOLVE HER IN EL WELL AND STILL MAN CASES. Br United Fred (NEW YORK, April 8. Details of the alleged "gigantic conspiracy" which W. E. D. Stokes is said to have directed against Mrs. Stokes in his . divorce .suit, today were revealed ex clusively to the United Press. Martin W. Littleton, Mrs. Stokes' counsel, said that he would Intro duce evidence in an effort to prove the following: That Stokes' agents sought to ob tain evidence showing that Mrs. Stok es had killed Joseph B. Elwell, turf man murdered last June. That he sought to obtain identifica tion of Mrs. Stokeg as one of the "red-haired women" reported to .fig ure in the James A. Stillman divorce suit. Littleton eraphaslied the "utter rid iculousness of the alleged conspiracy." BUILD MT, HOOD LOOP SPUR, URGED COUNTY COURT PLEDGES TO " BUILD 41 MILES OF HIGH WAY. Delegations from Maupin and Wa pinitia Plains Commercial clubs, to gether with representatives from the forestry department and cattlemen's association met at The Dalles at 2 o'clock Thursday with the county court to urge the immediate cooper ation of Wasco county with the for estry department in completing the Mt. Hood Loop spur to Wapinltia to connect with the market road on the east and the forestry boundary on the west. This spur will then link up central Oregon with the Mt. Hood Loop highway, and form the eastern gateway to the scenic skyline boule vard that will start at Mt. Hood and go down the mountain divide to Cra ter lake. The cattle and sheep men, tourists and farmers want the road as a con nection with the forest range and wood and lumber supply. Wasco coun. 'ty wants it as a means to increase tourist travel. The county court said that the four and one-half miles outside of the for estry boundary would be built but that it was waiting to hear from the state highway commission Just what amount the commission expected from Wasco county. The delegates went home In high spirits. . The Best Big Sitter TWO BOYS FIGHT; ONE DIES; OTHER IS HELD By United Press LOS ANGELES, April 8 The po lice are today investigating the death of Hiram Vaughn, nine-year-old schoolboy 'of Watt's, near here. Henry Laws,- 11, is held for investigation, following a fight between the two lads prior to Hiram's, death. The Best Big Sister ISN'T ELWELL SLAYER WIFE SAYS MAN WAS WITH HER AND BROKE NIGHT OF MURDER. By Joseph Wasney (United Press Staff Correspondent) BUFFALO, N. Y., April 8. "He is innocent. He whispered to me In the district attorney's office, 'Don't be lieve that Elwell story, I'm Innocent.' ' Mrs. Roy Harris, wife of the man who has confessed he was one of two paid assassins in the murder of Jo seph B. Elwell, wealthy New York turfman, made this statement to the United Press today. Young, smiling, pretty, evidently not at all nervous,, she coolly dismissed her husband's confession as the fabrication of a dis ordered mind. (Shrewd ' criminologists of the New Vork and Buffalo police departments, however, were inclined today to put more trust in Harris' confession than they did at first. Nervously pacing hts cell, smoking one cigarette after an omer, he has clung desperately and stubbornly to his story, despite all the clever attempts to make him adm't that 'it was a He, and that he was In nocent of complicity in the murder. This strange procedure was kept up for hours by detectives. Revers ing their usual tactics by which they try to make prisoners admit' guilt, they pounded away with their ques tions trying to make Harris admit his confession was false. But he stuck to it. The questioning was resumed to day. Dotalned In another cell, Mrs. Har ris Insisted, just as vehemently as ner husband asserted he was guilty, that he was absolutely Innocent the victim of an hallucination. "He's not guilty Just crazy," she said succinctly. "Why I was walking with him on Riverside drive the night Elwell was killed. Ha was broke. le had no money to take us to a show. That's the kind of a hired assassin he is. HARRIS (Continued on Page 8.) TENtPER TO GET COOPERATIVE ORGANIZATION IS FORMED BY 3,000,000 U. S. AG RICULTURISTS. NO COMPULSORY POOL POOLING' HELD MATTER OF ED UCATION, SO IT'S LEFT OPTIONAL. By United Press CHICAGO, April 8. The farmers or the nation have started to fight as a unit for a fair price for feeding the world, Carl Vrooman, former assistant secretary of agriculture, said today. Vrooman described the cooperative agency for the marketing of the na tion's grain, which was organized al the end of the conference here last night, as "the greatest weapon farm ers have ever had for fighting lor fair prices." The cooperative agency, known as the United Grain Growers, inc., is to market the nation's wheat and corn for all farmers who pay an annual fee of $10. It is a non-stock proposition 'and money left over al the end. of the year will be returned, pro-rata. By Alexander F. Jones (United News Staff Correspondent) CHICAGO, April 8. After two days of hot debate, farm leaders repre senting 3,000,000 farmers, late Thurs: day night decided not to go before the grain growers this year with an Iron--clad proposition calling for the forma tion -of. a great cooperative grain pool. The organization formed here, to no known as the United States Grain. Growers' association, Inc., is to start the work of amalgamating more than 6,000 cooperative grain elevators which will contract with farmers to buy their grain for cash, on consign ment, or for, optional purposes on a five1 year contract. The delegates to this conference, rep resenting farmers' organizations growing and buying millions of bush els of grain annually, with an annual turnover, it was estimated, of one 'Hi lton dollars, decided that a compul sory pooling contract might defeat tneir purposes. Their attorneys advised that a rul ing of the supreme court might bo necessary to decide If a great coop erative wheat pool would be lable to interpretation as being in violation of the Sherman anti-trust act. Texas and Oklahoma delegates fought for the pool declaring that they already had rormed great cotton pool's, controlling hundreds of thou sands of bales of cotton annually with out being declared in violation of tho law. While the pooling clause in the con tract of the new corporation farmers is not compulsory, It is declared that within a few years, when organization Is perfected, it will bo able to swing tho most gigantic pool ever conceiv ed and to control wheat prices for the farmers. 1 There was little opposition to tno t plan to form this great cooperative or ganization, once the pooling question was decided. ! The niODOsal defeated was that itarmors hold one third of tho wheat ;they grow for a pool to stabilize tin market. Opponents of the compulsory pool Idea argued that farmers would re - jsent the proposition of having to pool their wheat. They said that the pool 1 could, and would be maintained with. ' U. ,a CO,n,m,HOr'' : , 'This must be made an educational. , campaign," declared Secretary J. M. Anderson, of the committee of 100 : ! and president of the equity exchange , ' of St. Paul. "First wo have to get , ' nances to swing our proposition. Wo ! need from 10,000,000 to $50,000,oou ! 'and then we can talk without fear, in ' I 6ur nrcrnnizntlnn. w I,, .v.. lin.l inn.. F Hi S WEAPON FAIR (UN PRICE (Continued on Pat I.) MANNING FLAKED AS AT WILLIAMS TRIAL FEAR OF FEDERAL OFFICERS DglVES PRIMITIVE BLACK TO CRIME, ALLEGATION. CASE GOES TO JURY OUTSIDE INTERFERENCE IN THE PROSECUTION SCORED BY ATTORNEY FOR DEFENSE. By United Prese ' COVINGTON, April 8 The fate of John S. Williams, proprietor of Jas per county's alleged murder farm, Is in the hands of the Jury. COVINGTON, April 8 Outside In terference in developing and prose cuting the case against John S. Wil liams, proprietor of the Jasper coun ty "death farm," was scored today by Greene F. Johnson, "country law yer," in his closing argument for tho ' defense. "Who is back of all this?" John MURDERER son asked. "Whey is it necessary to ent ,u the banquet. State Highway send special prosecutors here toiEnK,nocr Herbert Nunn is also ex prosecute this man? Not that those ,)ccte(i t0 como to The Dalles with interested citizens of Atlanta haven't m .,.k the right, but all virtue is not con-' ft,! Atmtp fined to Atlanta "On the splendid 'evidence of Clyde Manning, confessed liar ,and murder- er, these .citizens employed counsels to come hero and cAdenvor to con-' vlct I his man. It can't be done." ATLANTA, April 8 That the Ku Klux Klan Is In no way concerned in the case of John S. Williams, -on-trial in Covington charged with the murder of a numbor of negroes, and that tho order docs not believe in taking the law Into Its own hands, was the statement today of Colonel William Joseph Simmons, imperial wizard of the Ku Klux Klan. By United News COVINGTON, Ga., April .8 Clydo Manning, black as coal, Illiterate and primitive, and not John Williams, the wealthy land baron of Jasper coun ty, was the murderer of 11 alleged peons, Williams' attorneys declared In their defense of the plantation owner at the close oi the Thursday session of the murder trial In tho Covington court house. Williams' farm had been investl- gated by operatives from the United States department of Justice, In search of evidence of poonage, Wil liams' defender, C. C. King, pointed i mi t fsun.l nn In. oui. i no luvcaufiuiui o luunu criminating evidence and witnuruw, Mrs. Kobh rooties in nor cumiuunu. , TACOma, April 8. Suffering pain King declared, after warning the no-' Another indictment of tho young. , mJllr; servant girl in tho fa.n- .... . I... .. t I., .1... nl.i Inl trf'u nu. ' ' gro fieiu doss, Mamunn, wuu. "ought to bo hung" tor tne nes uu had told them. They also warned Manning that, being a boss, he was, just as liable as his white employes, should peonage bo discovered. This alarmed the negro boss, King declared, and he, with tho cunning of a primitive brute, schemed to de stroy the 11 negro hands who might mcrlminato him by exaggerated stor- les of their condition or . servitude. "Manning is a cunning nogro," "Take his testl - mony.away and there Is nothing left of tho state's case." "Bcforo Cod, I am Innocent," Wil Hams swore fervently, referring to ; j,i0te decree of divorce, $50 a month the three negroes found dead in the nllmony and restoration of her maid npmnlL'oo and Yellow rivers bind-' en name, Lucille Wean. a..v ptm-Hon. Wllllo Preston and j Harry Price. "As for tho other eight I men killed In Jasper county, I will j explain when tho tlmo comes. ' "I treated Manning mighty good ! I "P'1 lhnt neKrH n thoMBnnd w,uyB' ! Once when he was nil shot up In a 1 M, ,hla ,loC " ." "! ej J Z ln a Tie hpcauso I turned nlm up In a lie d to he federal officers when 1 a t0 placo ,ooklllK for y n(, mnt flnd any." ,o,ll0 agent8 8ad j wnB technically KU,Uy )f j WOrked 'Jnil birds' after falling them out. bo I told the no gr0es to leave If they wanted to ana nn but one left and I never saw them again." nrahnrn Wrlcht. nHBlstant State (Continued on Page 8.) COOPERATION, NEED ROAD MATTER HIGHWAY ENTHUSIASTS TO LAY PLANS. WITH COMMISSION TOMORROW NIGHT. The necessity of absolute cooper ation between all parties working for tho passage of the $800,000 boun ty bond Issue and the resultant con struction of The Dalles-California highway, if the approaching cam paign is to succeed, was impressed upon a number of local business men and Wasco county ranchers by Coun ty Judge J. T. Adkisson at an In formal gathering held yesterday af- ternoon In tho county court room at the court house. With the Jssue to be placed before the voters at the state-wide special election on June 7, tho entire coun ty must be canvassed and voters shown what the new highway will mean to them and tho county In gen eral, and what a catastrophe turn ing down tho measure would be. Judge Adkisson explained T ,7, 7. . 7 ;,i. ,' A definite plan ol campaign will 7 v, " t,a be formulated sat a banquet to be given tomorrow night at Hotel Dalles, it was decided. In a longdls tnnce telephone conversation with Commissioner J. M. Booth, Judge AdklBBon was assured that two mem- bors of the state highway commis sion and possibly threo will be pies- u , planned to haVe seats at the . " " 1 ,.. u.. .. Dnnquei uviiiniuiu umj uj iuuuhiuu, with a majority of ranchers from va rious Darts of tho ..county in atten- uanc0 t this time, It is thought tlin hlirhwav commission will go In- to detail concerning tho early con struction of The DaleoB-Callfornla . hBnwny nnd the value of ' such a highway to Wasco county, r " r , The Best Big Sister- LDREN FIGURE IN DIVORCE SUIT HUSBAND 15, MUST HAVE GUAR. DIAN APPOINTED BEFORE TRIAL PROCEEDS. By United Proas . , PORTLAND, April 8 Pathos and humor are quaintly mixed In the dl vorco suit In the circuit court hero today of Lucille Ross, ngo 15, ag.ilnst Homer L. Ross, nlso 15, who Is n ,lcged to be a "cave-man typo of hus- band." "On numerous occasions said Horn er L, Ross flow Into a rago and told ..It. tM 4 t Pf ,n (rt lii.11 " HHIfi i ci i in iMiuiiuu iu . - mrniH lymiauiui . L..U !... . Boruon mai no wuuw own. mu v.u,..- pany of other women In preference ... !.,...' t.n.l linil tionn known tn I stay away from his bride until 2 . to collapse of their home at Dash o'clock in the morning ! "olllt yHlorln. The house was be- Tho defendant, appearing before J"K raised on Jucks, preparatory to Circuit Judge Tazwell, stated his do- moving, when I ho supporting timbers slro to contest tho suit, principally ' gave away. The houao crashed to tho to clear his good namo, Ho was, lowever.ho asserted, handlcappwl by tho fact that his toiai rosoiircun wn.., only $1.70, nnd "he couldn't get Uj .ir.wvor to work for him" for that; li mount. Tho Rohsos have been married 30 days. Mrs. Ross now seeks a coni' Proceedings are now ni iei- , porary standstill, tho coirt having ruled that Mrs. Rosa would lmvo to get a guardian appointed for nor, huobund before the case could pro-. IJy Unltt.tl VrtiaH ; t-eed. A wonu n becomes of age when ; WASHINGTON, April 8. "Berg i carried, the law holds, but not so do)j wllj uo brought back," predicted the man. 1 Jtepresentatlve Kahn of California, . The Best Bia sister- r I cmlrman of the house military af- AIRPLANE CRASHES; f"' committee. Ho said that ho ENSIGN DIE8 OF HURTS would re-Introduce a resolution Mon- day demanding Investigation of, tho Uy United Pre 1 entlio affair. SAN DIEGO, April 8 Ensign Har- "Rorgdoll can't get by with hli ry C. Ilatchelor, a Los Angeles boy Insults to this country; wltli his stationed with the navy filers on idea that thero Is one for mllllohalro North Island, today died or Injuries Blackors and another for poor ohW received In an airplane crash over Kahn said. "Ho must be punlsho-J San Diego bay. Tho machine went and tho cloud hanging over tho, way into a tall spin and he was unable hu escaped from this country nust to right It. I ER-THE DALLES ROAD TO 'CONTRACT AWARDED FOR HIGH WAY BETWEEN APPLE CITY AND GRAVEL PITS. BIDS ARE CALLED FOR W0RK FR0M CITY TO PITS WILL BE LET ON APRIL 16. With the announcement yesterday by the state highway commission that bids will be advertised for the paving of the Columbia River high way between The Dalles and the gravel pits, every indication now points to the completion of paving " y. between this city and Hood River, ' ' " , , D" , T T . I T hn lnat rP Mi I a trnnt T TI Ustrttt 1 division engineer for the eastern Oregon district, said today. Bids for Pav,,ng f th,s stretch W,U bo opent"1 AJI II J.U. A contract has already been let for paving the highway between Hood River and the gravel pits and tho A. D. Kern company, which se cured this contract, is at tho present t,mf constructing two paving plants t a big rock crusher near Mosier. preparatory to laying the "hot stuff." It Is expected that actual paving operations will be started in about 30 days. It Is possible that tho road around threo mile hill, near Rowona, will not be paved this year, Instead being surfaced with macadam and allowed to stand and settle through the win ter, Scott explained.' -This procedure would bo to mako sure that the grade had reached a permanent level nnd would not continuo to settle be neath the pavement, causing tho lat tor to crack. -The Best Bio Sister WILLS TO HAVE ASHES SCATTERED OVER SOUND By United Press SEATTLE, April 8. In accordance with tho terms of his will, tho ashes of Fred 13. Sunders, Seattle pioneer, will be strewn over tho waters of Pu get sound. Sanders dlod Thursday at 'the ago of G7. Ho had lived In Seattle slnco 187!). -The Best Big Slster- HOME COLLAPSES, SERVANT GIRL PAINFULLY HURT j United Press ily of Walter MacCiuarrlo is today re covering, while .Mrs. MacQuurrlo and live children are unharmed, following 1 beach and was completely itomollshod. -The Best B'o Sliter- L TO BE REPRESENTATIVE KAHN SAY8 SLACKER CAN'T GET BY WITH INSULTS. bo cleared up." BE A E ffl BE POL RETURNED AM c I