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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 8, 1919)
0W TIIK WEATHKH, Tbe Statesman reet'lrrs the leased wire report cf the As sociated Press, the greatrrt and moat reliable press as sociation la the world. Fair andcolder; moderate northerly : SALKM, Oi:FX;ON SATIKOAY MOKXIXO, NOVKMUKIt IUIO. rillCE: HVK CKXTS. ow pe'i two! ker, Ml our oat- un jre- the and res. Btei islst MSON BACK OF DEADLOCK FOR TREATY First Affirmative Step Taken by Senate After Adminis tration Leaders Annonce Decision to Oppose i REPUBLICANS SOLID BEHIND RESERVATIONS President Says Program De structive and Preamble : !"Embarrasing" WASHINGTON; Nov. 7 The first affirmative step toward qualification of th e pace treaty was tagen toaay by the senate after administration leaders, with the backing of Presi dent Wilson, had re-affirmed their intention j of voting against ratifica tion if the reservations drawn by ths senate majority are adopted. The initlal test! of strength on the reservation program of the foreign relations committee found the Re publicans almost solidly behind it. the group1 of mild reservationists who helped kill . the committee's -rfmt and the irreconcilable rronp of treaty foes standing togeth er for thf first time since the long treaty fight began. -. preamble Approved a vote of 48 to 40 th?-senate latter all efrorta 10 aroeuu lied, the committee a prc- reservation gronp. re quiring thkt to make the treaty bind ing t leaft tbrea of the four great powers mtfst accept tlie senate quali fications. The only Republican who did not swing into line for the pro- i Senator McCumber or North Dalvjota, while three Democrat.. Senator Keea, wissuuu, - noma and Walsh. Massachusetts, vot wt with trie majority. ' v When fldiournment was rVached first of ihe 14 reservatiorts was Aetata nna ReDublicanleaa yiaimtBr that they had sate i nAvtA fnr the entire The mild reservationists, n vas declared, had turned down a ,ew Democratic offer of compromise while the Irreconcilable wing was de vMnr Dlan of action -by which they hoped to defeat the treaty enure y v .uim made bv the admlnis- Lipshhz Mast Face His Accusers in Savannah Governor Olcott yesterday honored a requisition from the governor of Oeorgia for the extradition of Charles Lopshitz who is wanted in Savannah for the alleged theft of a trunk con taining 150,000 worth of jewelry. The trunk is alleged to have been stplen from Howard Sileen, a trav eling salesman. Lipshitz was arrested in, Port land two weeks ago by Jamesj M. Ri ley .superintendent of the Portland office of the Pinkerton Detectiv agency, when the defendant with Ifts wife and two- children arrived there to make their home. Lipsbitz's wife made a pitiable plea for him' yester day. He was represented by Attor neys Thomas G. Ryan and Frank J Streibig and Mr. Riley was here for the detective agency, accompanied by Thomas J. McKay, an officer from Georgia. ' LOWDEN IS OUT FOR PRESIDENCY ON CO. P. TICKET MINERS TOLD STRIKE END UP TOT HEM . J ... Attorney General Palmer De livers Brief Ultimatum Af ter Conference With Gom pers Labor Leader Silent Officials Repeat That i November 11 Is Holiday Notwithstanding Governor Olcott has issued a . proclamation setting aside November 11, Armistice day. as a le?;al holiday in Oregon, and that J. A. Churclll, state superintendent of schools, has announced repeatedly that the uay would Ikj observed by the schools as a holiday, letters and telegrams are being received by the score In the offices of both these of ficials asking if the day is to be a holiday. In the hope that the stream of inquiry may be curbed the govttrnjr'a office yesterday requested that further mention be made in the 'newspaiters that November 11 will be a legal holiday in Oregon. WLAKOUT IS SOLUTION Feeling General That Injunc tion Will Be Postponed Withot Prejudice ny sppraved. it bad fa amble to Name of Governor Coolidge, Massachusetts, Given as Running Mate SIGNIFICANCE IS SEEN Representative Rodenburg Makes Speech at Spring field, Ills. Meeting cpniT.FiF.l,D Til.. Nov. 7.ri-Tn a- keynote speech tonight launching the candidacy of Governor rranK u- Lowden of Illinois for the presidency of the United States. Congressman William A. Rodenburg of East St. Louis, presented the name of .Gover- rv v Aiaim made bv the tration forces was that the treaty 11 M vaHd Into a deadlock which in the end would make a com promise inevitable. Wibton Suoports Deadlock m.. vntA seainst the thim deadlock the ratifl tation fight was declared to have President Wilson's unqualified sup port. Senator Ilitchcpk of Nebraska: DemocraUc leader, aw the president for the first time since Mr. Wilson MtnTtit from liia apeaking tour and went over the entire situation sur rounding tne treaty in the senate. im..-a ' u. Hitrhrock said the njkClWBtu . . - . - executive regarded the committee reservations as "destructive" and the preamble a "very embarrassing, advised the administration sen aton to stand by their guns. The president was said to have s erted an aggressive opposition to accepunce of reservations which would impair the treaty, but to nave ihown a willingness to leave the matter of a compromise in the hand of administration senators, to be f. -worked out after the deadlock stag Ud been reached. " Mr. Wilson ei Tliined, senator Hitchcock said that ha bad sent for the administra tion leader to give assurance of W j tnpport in the contemplated pro rram and of his gratitude over the mccessful fight against amenu ments. . - . Ieanock Means Com prom Ise. After thA whttA conference the Democratic leader declared his con tSctiaa that there would be no com promise until the deadlock actually tad develoned. He concedel,;ihat most of the committee reservitJons would be written Into the ratifica tion resolution and that after the lat 'er had been killed by Democratic votet an unqualified ratification res olution alHo wmil.l orobably Ifail. Then the time would be ripe, he de flared, for the senators favoring rat ification without reservations and loose wantine ratification with! res ervations to pot Inset her. By leaders of the .reservation Re publicans, the possibility of suth a compromise v omnhaticallv denied nd It was declared the group had Rone as tar as it would go In Icur-tailing- treaty qualifications. As adopted by the senate, the res 'rTi!on preamble was as follows: ne reservations and understand ing adopted by the senate are to be made part and condition of the res olution of ratification, which ratifi cation Is not to take effect or bind ta United States until the said res ervations and understandings adopt- oy the senate have been accepted hJ an exchange of notes as a part and r ndltlon Of: said resolution Of ratl- i nation by at least three or four of o principal allied and assoeiatea nor Calvin Coolidge of Massachusetts runnine mate for lxwden. a a meeting of thr Illinois Republican ttsirtal nssnciation. ine .menirj" of Governor Coolidge's name urougni a storm of applause. Coupling SlRniflcant csonifioannn was attached to the linkins: of the two names by the fact that Congressman Rodenburg has been picked to make tne , nominating speech on tne nuur the national convention. Governor Lowden jras given ovation when he was referred o by Congressman Rodenburg as the na tion's next choice.' Iowden Spe)aks RrieHy i . Preceding the Rodenburg address Governor Lowden spoke briefly. He paid tribute to the history of the Republican party. ' Will H. Hays, chairman of the Re publican national committee, also spoke. - WASHINGTON. Nov. 7. Eleventh hour efforts by Samuel Gompers to settle the coal strike were met. to night by emphatic declaration " from the government that injunction pro ceedings would be dismissed the in stant the strike order was withdrawn and not before. 1 This final decision was given to Mr. Gompers, heading a delet;atlon of high labor officials, at the close of the third conference of the day with Attorney General Palmer, and after Mr. Gompers had talked over the telephone with John L.. Lewis acting head of the United Mine Work ers of America, at Indianapolis. iompers Fight Hani. Mr. Gompers, fighting hard to have the government drop its injunc tion suit set for a hearing tomorrow, plainly showed that he was under a severe strain as he leit tne depart ment of justice, flatly and bluntly refusng on his way out to say one word about the three conferences or hope of ending the strike of more than 400,000 miners before the Unit ed States could press Its suit against officers of the miners' organization. Attorney General Palmer, to whom Mr. Gompers referred all requests for information, refused to see news papermen. There ware only 18 words in the statement Mr. Palmer dictat ed to newspapermen as he left the white house after the cabinet" meet ing and an earlier conference with President Wilson. . Palmer Ultimatum Brief. "The injunction proceedings against the coal miners' leaders will be dismissed the instant the strike order is 'recalled," said the attorney general, and his utterance stood as the final word from the government on the eve of what may prove the beginning tomorrow of the greatest FORMAL OPENING OF CANAL SOON "Big Ditch" to Be Dedicated in December Builders K to be Present : CLEANUP OF ANARCHISTS NATION-WIDE Roundup of Reds Covers All Larger Cities Throughout Nation Department of Jus tice Plans Made Public HUNDREDS OF RADICALS ARRESTED BY COUP Ban on Japanese Plan of Hood River People Efforts will be made In Hood Riv er county to send a delegation to t!ie next session of the legislature determined to have legislation enact ed barring Japanese or other Asiat ics from buying or leasing land In Oregon, declares John R. Kdgar. owner of the Huena Ventura farm near Hood River. The fight against inroads of the Japanese is being con ducted mainly by the Anti-Asiatic association that has been organized in the Hood River valley. Mr. Kdgar asserts that the Jain ese are thronging in the valley and threaten to crowd ont the white far mers and orchardists. "The proper way to deal with the Japanese situation !n the opinion of Hood River people." said Mr. Edgar "is throngh legislation, either state or national, and that is what we pro pose to go fter. COMES BACK TO DO TIME IN PRISON Elmer R. Barnard, Escaped Connct, Tires of Watching World, Then Receives Clem ency From Governor Seizure by Agents Under Flynn Made Simultaneous ly Without Hitch WASHINGTON. Nov. 7. Formal opening ot the t'anama canal antdt dedication to the commerce of the world a ceremony postponed on ac count of the war is planned to take place early In Decemoer. secretary of War Raker will represent the gov ernment, the official party including Maior General George Uoetbals. re tired, who was in charge ot canal construction practically throughout its program and a nun:ber of other army officers identified, with the building of the "big ditch." 1504 MEMBERS ARE ENROLLED Vocational Advisor is Strong in His Praise of Red Cross Work -JSfcW YORK. Not. 7. A nation wide raid on anarchists began here tonkht. Agents of the department of justice, led by William J. Flynn. arrested more than 200 radicals as senibled'in the headquarters of the Russian soviet republic and after th had been taken to headquarters of the department of justice and cross examined, fifty were held for deportation as undesirable citizens. F.Iclit Women Taken. Eisht women were taken In the raid, of whom two were held for de portation. A large quantity of radical liter ature was seired. Th? raid was made by seven agents of the department of justice under the direction ot William F. Flynn. I their chief. They were assisted by five mem bers of the New York "bomb squad" and four patrolmen. A big crowd gathered in front of the building. Patrolmen were assigned to watch the building during the. night. REDS ALLEGED TO UNDERMINE .LABOR UNIONS Lenine and Trotzky Finance ' Radical Movements in U. S. Is Charge COAL OPERATOR SPEAKS CIVIL BUREAUS TO LEAVE OMSK i ' ; - Kolchak and Cabinet Will Re mainBig Battle Is . Expected TV... roriar ooen forum meeting c " . . ,i Von ,v coim Commercial ciuu been changed from Wednesday. No . .a . ivMi v November i- vemoer . - ,tw a -.sit , hPld'in conjuncuun B11U " - lo- meeting to organize m ..ni.n nt the club. ine date of the open forum meeting was chaanged becae of tbe performance by Guy Bates post wnwru v Wednesday night. t Leading figures in ine w""5-;-' , v tmnization of the mam sa esmen club are J. T. Hutchason . i rkina. Doth ln- surance men. Mr. Hutchason f issued the call for the meeting ud M . V er kins is considered the originator of the idea. SCH0"lST0GET NURSING COURSE Red Cross Representative Ar- rives to Organize in ims State Courses In home nursing under the direction of the Amerlron Red Cro,s. with Red Cross " nnrsej n charge will be orgamzed for girls i in .'he high schools of Oregon Sta e Fu nerintendent cnurcniu -JeileVday. This Is also being done in other states. ; tnrroPt K Durkin of labor union litigation in the history of the country. Through the day, although it was on the lip ot !all the Washington gov ernment and the miners were consid ering new plans for settling the strug gle without further resort to law. tne feeling grew that-hearing on tne re straining order, set for tomorrow in the federal court betore Judge An derson at Jndianapolis. would be post poned 'without prejudice to either sidfe." ' Statement Oft Repeated. The department of justice will not ask for a postponement but whether it might oppose the request if min ers asked for more time, not an un usual proceeding, officials declined to say. "The only thing that . can stop the proceedings started by the United States is for the miners to call off the strike." the attorney general re iterated time and again (Continued on page 4.) The result of yesterday's Red Cross campaign brought' the total memberships secured at the end of the fifth day of enrollment to-1504. The different teams yesterday se cured 5W2 enrollments. Mrs. E. V. McMeckan and her lieu tenants. Mrs. T. . A.. Roberts. Mrs. Lloyd Farmer and Mrs. Ray Pomeroy have finished their campaigning tor Red Cross memberships in the Cen tral Salem district. This district In cluded the territory from State to Mission and Twelfth, to Hifeh streets. Mrs. McMeckan and jher assistant are accerdlteVl with some very hard work during the past few days. Mrs. David Wright.- 698 North High street, is captain of the Red Cross enrollment platoon that Is raid ing one of the Salem city districts. Mrs. Wrlreht's aides are Mrs. F. L. Swanson. Mrs. George iesko. airs. R. W. Simeral and Mrs. George Ills The five workers are trying to make a record in their district and expect to have a total of memberships se cured by the last day of tbe cam paign that will help to bring Salem to tbe fore in the enrollment caln- Paira- ...... .. R. G. W hlte vocational aavisor with the federal vocational bureau, finished 'his work in this section yes terday. While in Salem Mr. White maintained temporary headquarters In the Red Cross home service of fices at the Dostoffice. Disabled ex- service men of Marion county had been infotmed ot the vocational ad visor's three-day sojourn here and 16 men who had been wounded while in the service niet Mr. White and made arrangements with him for se curing the $80 monthly educational aid provided by the government by mean of a recent appropriation. Be sides the 180 a month, books, medic al assistance, tuition and railroad far u furnished the disabled sol dier who takes advantage of the gov nment'i orovlsion and learns i trade by which he can become mae- fwtnrient. Mr. White expressea. very srci m- trt in the Red Cross ana max ne hnnoii for a successful crtsade for members because of the great work that-organization had before It this winter, in caring for the families and h mm who are unable . to secure ninvmcni At nrpMnt In Portland Mr. White said that the number of men seeking employment is startling compared to the number of Jobs op en and there will be hundreds who will lind it necessary to receive aid thin winter. "The Red Cross is the one-institu tion thaC we rely on aDsoiuieiy. TWO TAKKX IV SAX fuaxcisco Ttouxnrr SAX FRANCISCO. CaU Nojr. 7. Two men were arrested here tonight by the police under instructions from agents ot the department of justice in a raid on alleged headquarters of .radicals. A wagon-load of books pamphlets and leaflets was seised One of them. William Burns, was charged with criminal syndicalism. the other. Jack KoySls. with va grancy. Hundreds of radicals, including many described as among the most dangerous anarchist agitators in the country, were arrested last night by department of Justice agents in slm ultaneous raids .upon radical head Quarters in many cities of the Unit fd States. ' It was learned that 36 warrants had been Issued by Com ml sloner General of Immigration Cam- Seatlle- 1 k . ' . !,-! .Inn representing the of the-Red cross, is V. start Ibe classes in Oregon schools and came to Salem yesterday f ron? Pendleton where a class already has M . Th nurses in charge hfghool be paid by th- Red Cross chapter in which he school is located. The course given Jhe hlghcho,bl 'girls will be instruc tion in homejnursing. State Super intendent Churchill strongly endors es the movement as one of the best opportunities presented In - the schools. BOY DROWNS IN THOMAS CREEK Arthur Underwood Dies as Young Companion Looks on in paze u ALBANY, Or.. Nov. 7. Arthur Underwood .eight year old son of Mr. and Mrs; Quintis Underwood, who live near Thomas. Or., was drowned in Thomas creek Wednes day, according to word brought here todav when he and his five year old companion left the Underwood auto mobile and went wading in tne creeu. Mr. Underwood was taking a neighbor to look at a apiece of ani i . . M white . "It functions al and left the two boys in the car. t p- nd wn, jn dose touch with th rvirA men. We vocational men receive much aid from the Red Cross in our work. When we put a fellow n trainine we cannot furnish him ,uv, nnw monev until he has txm in school at least three weeks Sometimes this delay lengthens Into a mnnth or six weeks before the first check comes! The Red Cross has volunteered to tide the men over for this oerlod and Is lending assistance to many men In this way. Ritchie Leads Wee by 111 Votes in Race for Governor BALTIMORE; inettl for men in New yor consia ered particularly active in creating nrest and it was reported that these men had been cajugbt. J Xat Ion-Wide Plot MppeU. A nation-wide plot to defy gov ornment authority ODenly Is said to have been nipped in tbe bud upon the eve of the second anniversary or the establishment of the Russian so viet government. This plot. It Is al leged. has been advocated for wee hv combined radical eieraem throughout the United States, includ Inr the I.W.W. anarchists and Rus - - c ian aeitators. Plans for the raids, which toog nlaee in New York. Fhlladelpnia Chicago. Detroit. St. Louis. Nework J.: Jackson. Mich.. waierDury and Ansonla. onn.. and otner cities have been in preparation for weeks It was said in Washington. Flynit In Charge. William J. Flynn. head of the d nartment of justice's division of in vestigation. had beneral supervision of -the roundup of agitators. The more important prisoners. It was said would be held for deportation. on their return a half hour later i n derwood found his son's body Jn the water. The smaller lad was too much frightened to raise an alarm. Both boys had on new rubber boots and it was thought that the (..miit inn to wade led the Under wood boy into a deep hole in muddy water. the Re-opening of Tie M arket Indicated by Eugene Sale Eugene. Or., Nov. 7. Indicative of the early Te-opening of the rail road tie market in the northwest is an order Just received by a local lum ber company for 250 carloads of the Douglas fir ties to be shipped to Ok lahoma, where a new railroad is be ing built in one of the oil districts. The order will be filled entirely bv mills in this part of the 'Willam ette valley and calls for delivery with in 60 days. NO. SIMILAR CASE IN PRISON ANNALS Youth Has Good Record Since Escape and Today Goes Back to Wapinitia "They Shall Not Pass" Should Be Watchword of Puhlic Is Declaration ST. LOUIS. Mo Nov. 7. Lenin and Trotsky are financing the "pres ent, radical movements among labor ers In the United States. Thomas T Brewster, chairman of the coal oper ators scale committee, declared In an address here today. Mr. Brewster said the "demonstration made by th gang which controlled the miners nnlon Is only one phase of the ques tion. "For 15 years." Mr. Brewster as- rerted. "I have worked bard for the principles or collective bargaining and we bad hopes we were working out something and making progress. I rM rart kw Is Feared Tn the last four years the radi cals have been boring from without and wltbln until now our great la bor unions are controlled by radical Interests of from five to ten per cent- This Is bringing disorder sad mis rule on the country and will bring about destruction of oar Institutions unless action is taken. "We know that Lenine and Trot sky are financing this move in the United States. The s government knows where the fands are coming from and where they are going. Tb time has come when. If we would save our institutions we must take a stand and say 'they shall - not passV TREASURER KOFF IS OVERRULED t A elesr-eyied. strong featured youth neatly dressed. a:tJ yesterday af ternoon In the office of Governor Olcott. The governor came, and brusquely asked the question that he must ark of strangers a score of times each dav: "Can I da some thing for you?- In as few words as possible the young man made known bis mission. You need not go back." tbe gov- emor said decisively when the youth had finished. The governor's'words of a sudden made a new world for Elmer IL Bar nard. For three years the world to Barnard had been worse than the prison from which he escap i. for though he lived among kindly folk who knew not bis pact, be feared the ubulqultous band of tbe lir, lie had come back to serve out LI tlm In the Oregon penitentiary. Bar nard's resentence and his voluntary return is the only ease cf its kind in Ore gin prison annals. " Ifip TrwMy lmz Barnar-I was convicted In Baker county la If IS for a statutory offense and sentenced to serve from one to 10 years. His minimum was us June 1. lfJC. and he was flared with a trusty gang for f9 day?, a Her which he was to rbe rleas?d. Bat rumor came that j'here would be far ther incarceration within the walls, ro on the night of August 2. MIC. Barnard, with Cecil Griffin and Rar Lindsey. made his escape. Through the Santiam pass they made thlr way on foot across trie .acaae mountatas into Wasco county. Their only sustenance was a bit ct flour taken from 3 raner's cabin and ftduirrels they killed with rocks. Crif- rin and Linsey had money and bought comfortable shoos. Barnard nfad no money and tl- prison shoes caused his feet to bllMer painfully. The reached the Wapinitia plains. Barnard, too footsore to go farther, got work with a threshing crew. C-riffln and Undsey went rn and i.,. irr !n fcetd ftom since. Barnard worked most of the time fcr one farrr un"! September 5, 1$1S. when be enllted In. tbe army Apraisers Are Upheld in Val uation Placed on KJIngcr Estate ' (Continued en page 4.) THE RED CROSS: cy CIVIL BUREAUS TO LEAVE OMSK Kolchak and Cabinet Will Re- main Big Battle Is Expected OMSK. Friday. Oct. 17. Russian Telegraphic .Agency.) Tbe council of ministers at the Omsk government has decided. o, evacuate all tbe civil establishments from Omsk. Admir al Kolchak, head of the government and all the members of tils cabinet will remain in Omsk. Dealing with the situation, the Russkoye Dieio says: -The region bHwevn the rivers Ishlm and Irtish will be the pl?ce where a decisive battle against the bolxhevlkl who try to enter Siberia will take place. Omsk will be forti fied and surrounded by trench and serve as the center of our defense. By a "decree of Judge W. M. Buth- of the Marlon county court yes terday, .objections filed by O. P. Hoff. state treasurer, to the appraisement of the estate or Maurlts Kllnger. the late Salem capitalist, were overruled. Th estate was appraised la May. this year, at f7l.340.SC by Eugens Ecksrlen. T. K. Ford and Chris Paal us. who wera appointed by the county court to fix an appraised valu on the property. The state treasurer, on August 3 filed objections, claim ing the estate should be appraised at S9S.340.SC. and that tbe state was entitled la Inherit a nee taxes from the estate, to a rreater sum than would be forthcoming under-the appral mnt of the rvguiarly appointed ap praisers. A hearing was held before Jadge Bushey oa Monday. Nov. 3. Judge Bushey, In overruling the objections of the state treasurer .mad a find ing that the appraisement fairly made and that It represented the full market value of the property at th time of Mr. Kllnrer's l-kih. John II. McNary was executor of the ut ill and testament of Mauritz Klinr- er. 171 R Unitei States Mandate for Armenia Is Urged by Swiss MIKE BUTLER TO. TRAIN AGGIES Portland Sportsman Goes to Conrallis to Prepare Team for Big Game Nov. 7. Attorney Ceneral Albert C. Ritchie. Democrat ic candidates for governor, was votea nhpa.-i of Harry W. Nice. publican candidate when the election supervisors stopped work on tbe of ficial canvass tonight. His plurality 1 .... 4nrln.lh IV bT !l votes Half the city remains to be order that "Armenia may not perish are to meet University of Oregon at officially canvassed. -from tbe earth. Li.Si0fl ..,u. GENEVA. Nor. 7. A cablegram has been sent to President ilson and Vice President Marshall by the Swiss Federation of Friends of Ar menia urging the United States ac cent the mandate lor Armenia, in PORTLAND. Nor. I.Mlke Cutler local sportsman and trainer, was en gaged today to train the Oregon Ag ricultural college football team for the next two weeks and will leave Monday for Corvallis. Tbe Aggies Have you wmml your 1020 Kf Cross Ilutton! If not, why not I ; One dollar secure the but- ; ton ami make you a mem ber of the Ked Cross for . year. Don't think for an instant that the work of the world's greatest organization for helpfulness has-ended. Dis aster epidemic and recon struction in many countries throw a preat burden on the Kcd Crrw. Ker. M. H- Varounagian, Salem minister who has worked unr-ay!y (or the Armenian vitii us of Turkish atrm-itifH in the world war, s'u yesterday that the Red Cm had effectively dealt villi the situation in that ct'tiiitry wherever its relief Ktation could le- established. Mr. Kninm Cool, J4"i 1 slrtft, ha reeintly received a letter frum her husband, who is rrig-aifd in Kd ns.s work in Siberia, telling of 1he iinendit's? demands for relief work thrown nHn the Ked Cm. The letter Mate that many hundreds of Hu siaus who were fightit g to restore their eonntry to or der were clothed and that every day at Mr. Cr sta tion" many women and chil dren were clothed and f-d who would otherwi.-M starve or ierih of tin eold. Uenolve to wear tbe red find white button of merry lfore the men.berhip eara- paipn ends. 1 i