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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 23, 1923)
r. '- V- j t- FiW SECTtOll ' TUO SECriOUS 10 Pages Pczes l to 6 r : EHVENTY-SECOIJP YEAR SALEM, OREGON, FRIDAY; MORNING, FEBRUARY 23,1923. ', PRICE: FIVE CXIIT3 11 II I I I . ri I il licit ...... I I f E)lJ l7 " ; I ... j - f i t i ! BELIEVE SHIP f oBd 1 Fluster .in Senate . Gains Strength f.lild Support crs of Measure Flock ; to imposition. CT "r EREfiCE AT WHITE ,i HOUSE EXPECTED TODAY K::;day Crowds .Marvel at Flovof Oratory on Cur--rent Events. WASHINGTON, Peb. 22. Eureted ,by pother ;Jay of fil 4 duster .In the senate; the admin istration shipping bill tonight ap .r" i Leaded, toward Its .doom. TLa end teemed likely not later :tUa ' Saturday on a motion to recommit the legislation or to dif place It with another bill. ' The filibuster which began ir: " :y eight, continued nnabat ed t roc2h.,the day and 4 n to the !ni; . During Its progress there 'yet. . a number of . prlTate con fer ces between Republican sen. at; j - and later 'between Repub lic : snd Democratic leaders m "wl retaliations were conduct. d r dnnlte ctIon? by?-Satur-iJht'so that the final week of tLi fsion might be left open ,t . the . consideration ,f .other pressing legislation. r " Opposition Gains- -y . --- - - i - ; . . , v. "... Opponents of the ship ibm, af ,ter canraasina the, .etrengtli of their fcrces . C5ealyald : f or the first Una that, they, had" enough Totes to -get -the measure put of the way. tanless v its supporters could obtain action upon it with in the next two da js. The pros pect d its supporters $elng able to do this crew darker with eaeh hour that the- flow of talk con tinned. 'r --" y- -.':',-' . Sereral senators who hare been mildly farorable toward the Mil prirately admitted . during the cay that they would not continue their: support of : the measure much further, - it it pntijroed tp block other UglalaUon. Late today it was thought like ly that a nufciser . ot Repuhlican senators would be called . to the 'White House' for, conference to- morrow. . .. . " "-Adireses-" Varied:": . The filibuster ' toizr v-conslst- , ed for the most part of 4 speech .by . Senator ilcKellar, legunat 1.15 o'clock, an.d V C o n tinned through the. afternoon' and" into the night. The customary reading ,of T.asbir;tsa farewell "addriesa fla -cbssmtse ,of ' the first presl .dett'a tirtl-Iay,- whlchv was done ,ty Ceaator Glass, Democrat,; Virr -,gir. v .-look ; -cpi an hour,imme dlalily after the .senate convened and then Eenator Gooding, Re putllcaa, i:!io, :who : has ' been otly Jake It. arm toward the ship bill,, fallowed with An -address on wheat price stabilization,- lasting va little, fc-.cre tban an hour," : i '.r ',v MXaay Xlear Debate Y' Senator I'cIIellar -then V took he floor, and read a recent dlt tcrial la a, Washington -newspaper t Ich he descjibed as the ad mlnlatratlon organ" condemning 4he flUbuster and then bringing forth two. (huge botind yolumes fOf the same newspaper Tead tat length editsrlaU ' publiahed in .115. t appro vS ag s the r- filibuster then, conducted against the Wil son administration's . ship pur chase Iblll., - H also read : liber-' ?ally trora r the speeches .made i.y (Senator Jones, 'Eepublican, Wash ;inr fon.- In . eharse of th -nenrtlnr bill, and Senator Smoot. Reent- Jican, Utah, both of whom, par' ncipated in the filibuster of 1915. ,i The JiOlIday. allowed, thousands to -hear the debate,' the .galjeries (Ccatiaasd pa pa S) THE YEftHEn OREGfOX: Friday, occasional , rales. . V i r; v - .-. v . ' LOCAL SWEATID3R - - (Thursday) -ITaximuta tesiperture; ;t 6. Mlairaum tenperature.J 32' RIter, -7.6 feet; rising. Rainfall.- none. :;';:' Atrae?phre,v's-.'-.v"-V':,' VTiad, north. . ; 'iil I M PASSED : house mmM EMfEmlBMlW Barring the possible unfavorable vote of, a ref erendiirn, Oregon "will pay an income tax in 1924 under the provisions of a bill approved by the house late yesterday afternoon after a three hour debate. f- ' ' ' ' ' - The bill, as finally passed, is in exactly the form in which it was received from the senate yesterday morriinfir.and does not include an offset of taxes paid on real "property. , It was on this point alone that the final fight in the house was waged, . ' : Despite the fact that opponents of the income tax bill were, assured of more than a majority of votes, before the senate passed the -.amended) bill, final vote in the house re sulted, in 39 favprable yotes, 15 unfavorable votes with six assent. .-.- Governor Tells of Hopes ; for Prison; Admits Using the . Hatchet Freely. ; "This morning I signed seren bills and Tetoed seren others. I'm using the hatchet pretty freely ,t said Gorernor Fierce at the Real tors' luncheon i Thursday.' noon rm trying to act as the case seems to demand. I did that im mediately when the prison matter came to a crisis. 4 I hope to be on the' consultation board, but 'the man named,; to have It In ; charge Is going to run it,' flax and erery- thing. We are "going to f try to make the prison an asset Instead of a Uability.. ' : ::-J : : I We hare an appropriation of $430,000 tor the next two years for. the prison. I We believe we can run it for. 3330,000, and hare the rest for , an operating fund for industry. Some of 'this extra fund Will hare to go for industrial im prorement, like a water wheel to utilize the water power to run the machinery land light the -; place." Some wUl have to go for flax and fire protection. ;The fire hazard scares the warden erery time he thinks of it. But we shall cut off erery - Unnecessary, employe; There is tof be; no; ,gas for Joy riding.; Erery -state car (should have its Identity painted on It. ap that it la recognizable as a state car, and It Is for state use nlj. H don't, know that J can afford a car this yar, ';M H lan walk, erhapsf some others In the state employ canj walk, also," on, state business. v Speaks" n ' flax t h ' - : ; , f . "The post striking laws of the session are the j prohibitory ,ea forceaent laws. When the bill (Continued on page 6) . iiT PB0TE8T Throng Gathers in Madison bquare to Denounce roi- .. icy of France. I A NEW YORK Feb.- 32. Amone the 14,000 persons .who crowded Madison Square .Garden k- tonight at the mass protest of the 'com mittee of one hundred against the Ruhr: "invasion, not one cham pion appeared to "plead the cause Of , .France or to1 clap a hand In admiration , of her German ' pol icy. - ,:: - '.o.'"1: The meeting was wildly demon- strstlva.' ft a nnt th Vltid rtt demonstration, 1 - however, for which tbepolice, stationed within and without , tbe garden 660 strong, had been on guard. - There was , an occasional con- certed and prolonged hiss. There was a tew cries of 'out with him" when some-speaker, dared: to sug- Best that "Germany "should be made toA pay her just debts.? ' -- The meeting, on the whole, was a . continuous denunciation of France's prsmlerl.of her army and Of i her ireparationa policy. . Be PICE Ml(5 f LUiJGHEOi! v tween speeches the 'spirit' of the protest was carried iOu by . tele grams from prominent men In other cities, read-by -the rchalr- csn..'--':- ' :. j-' - '-)-r. Following the passage of the bill by "the - house, 1 the legislative committee 7- of the State - Grange issued an announcement in which the approval of the grange is im plied. The statement follows? ' 'Wbile this ts a ; compromise bill in the main, it seems to be a good measure. 8uch defects as It contains may -be remedied at fu tare sessions of the legislature or through the initiative. ' "It establiehes the principle of the graduated income tax in Ore gon and while it ' may not ' raise more than $2,000,000 .or. $3,000, 000 it wlU reduce the property tax on the small home pwper and the farmer by that amount. ' ' Grange Support Seen "It will place upon the tax rolls many persons who now, pay no tax and, who should, as good citi sens, contribute, towards the sup port of the government in propor tion to the benefits , derived and their. ability to, pay. v. - "We . believe - the j grange ; wUl support this measure JC the refer endum 1 invoked .and. if it is de feated at the polls, a more effec tive' measure can be Initiated to be voted on at the regular election in 1924." - ' - 'i Upon Speaker Knbli devolved the larger share of leading the debate against the" passage' of the Income tax bill as presented to the house, f His position, in brief. was that-passsge ,r any income tax measure at this time jwould drive ca pltal . " ou t t o f r the "state ; that ' this IU -would impose a double s tax on a large proportion of the incomes; that; the business men and merchants would unload the additional tax burden which this - would impose on them onto the shoulders of the ultimate con sumer, and Uhatr fcy- all ; means the income tax bill, should not be passed' wlthput amendment to pro vide ".that .taxes paid , upon real propirty.jhpild be credited upon taxes levied on incomes under the provisions of the state Income tax law.: -. .:''. ':..- W: ::: x-'- Radical Measure Possible At the conclusion of the debate. which came up- on the question of concurring 4in vtb;eenat - am endments to the. bill originally in troduced In the house by Repre sentatives McMahan of Linn. Ben nett, Wheeler and Carkin, Speak er Kubli moved that .; the house go Into committee of "the whole to Insert the property tax; offset amendment, with the understand ing between leaders on both sides that the vote on going 4ntocom mittee of the whole- was to be considered as a vote on the pro posed amendment. This vote failed to carry and the 'bill was put on final passage. .. - The bill as. it now sUnds, l- is. with a few exceptions, the same as the two bills originally intro duced by Representative Carkin, providing for a graduated tax on individual incomes and a flat tax on incomes of corporations.; Representative . Kay of Marlon sponsored the income tax' bill with an argument based largely on the theory that unless an (income tax is passed by the legislature a radi cal Income tax might be Initiated and passed by the 4 per cent of the voters who would still be ex empt from - taxation and who would be glad to saddle the ioaa onto the remaining 10 per eenW .Aimed at biacKero iThe present law, Kay explain ed, is really a tax on income, and unless there Is an Income there can be no tax imposed. 1 ; ; iBrownell of Multnomah dis paraged the r theory , that there would be a more radical income tax proposed by initiative petition, while Keeney :. of ; Lane approved of the J present measure. The charge made by Klrkwood of Mult- 6omah that the blU .was. .actually (Qotttlaned ca Jr.?..; CIGARETTE . r. WAR HALTS . ' FOR TIME i ; Officers Rest on Washington's t Birthday atizens Hold : -- IndignatlonMeet SALT LAKE -CITY, X Feb'. ;' 2 2 There were- no arrests in Salt Lake CUy today for: violation of the; state '. anti-cigarette law . as it pertains to smoking in . public places. , ' The only development in the campaign : to repeal . the cigarette measure was a meeting of prom Inent. citizens at which the Pree raan's league. v. of Utah . was .or ganized for the ' express . purpose of 1 repealing all socalled ,"blue laws." Tomorrow morning at 10 o'clock Ernest Bamberger, Edgar Newbouse and John C. .Lynch, prominent Salt Lake residents are to appear in city .court to plead - to a charge . of violating the : cigarette statute. V These three men.,., and A. N. , McKay, general manager of the Salt Lake Ti ibune,. were arrested late Tues day. ; . t . . ... .: Legislature Votes Remission .,oLCity-s.T.axe& for Period - of Seven Years. . Some real relief for Astoria was voted by the legislature last night When house bill 172, providing for a remission of Astoria's state tax es' for. a 'period of aeven years b taken, frpja the house tableH pass ed and sent to the senate where It 1 was passed. The aggregate re lief in, seven years time will j be about 'half .a million dollars or about s70,opo , a year. : ;, . The bill was resurrected when the bouse last, night beat the bill to .authorise - the bigbjway com mission to rebuild , commercial street in Astoria with state mon ey. ; The bill passed last night had the. unanimous . backing of , the Clatsop county- delegation and all units in .the. city of Astoria. . All . senators except v LaFollet t. Strays r, Taylor, Zimmerman and Upton, voted for the .bill. Gar land was absent. sra for ruiis Business M e n ' s League ; : Grants Only Two Permits at Meet Yesterday, - Only two permits "to solocit funds were granted, and eight ap plications were rejected, during the .past month, by .. . the ,. Salem Business Men's leagu.e, according to the report at the League meet ing, at the Chamber of Commerce last night. - r;:;..r v; The two lucky oneawere to the Student -body of Willamette uni versity, ,to . solicit advertising, tor their college, annual, and to . the YWCA' for their annual mainten ance campaign. The campaigns that were not authorized were .not' named, itv. i, Vi V. -. An animated discussion follow ed the presentation of the '.'grow ing: evil" of food sales in the store windows on Saturdays - or other busy days, -and, the other evil of ; many show Cards In the store windows. . No - action was taken, though the idea. of giving their - windows so freely : for these purposes was deprecated. ' R. A. Thomas, of Marshfield, president of the state Retail Mer chants " association, presented the cause of affiliation with the state organization. It -was figured out, however, that Salem now has 113 members of her local association, payiag $1.2S per month dues, and it would take 60 per cent of this total fund to affiliate with i-he state organlzalon; the local body decided to worry along with its $797.50 60 per cent in its pocket, and .hope for the best. The locals are not yet a: part , of -the state body for that reason. ' The lack of cooperation between the, various plhbs .of the, city, was discussed.' but nothing Was done for consolidation. Two new mem bers, Rosteln " and Greenba,um, were admitted,' ASTORIA GETS MIL BELIEF FiiaiciT IMED FlifJGEGIE . . , ... . A Young Itaiian Costs Invest ors Near Million Dollars; Bank President Held Em bezzler. LOSSES FROM BOGUS ' , OPERATIONS LARGE Marcino Cleans Out Bank's VaultThen Peddles Stolen Securities. I: CHICAGO. - Feb. 22. ( By the Associated Press) -An immigrant from Italy of a dozen years ago who f later became a West - Side barber In Chicago is being sought tonight along the Mexican : border wane bankers and' state officials in the east and mlddlewest trace his , career. In frenzied .finance, a career which has : already cost in vestors ; from alhalf (million 'to a million 'dollars or.more. The missing Darber-bankeV - is Joseph i M. Marcino, or Joseph B. Biata, a dapper man 27- years old just a little over five feet tall and remarkably broad. I'lf yoii see a man about five feet two and al most three feet broad, ifs Mar cino,". a Burns F detective who is directing the; search said, today. -x' Fonda Manipnlated While detectives are- searching tor atarcino,-wno aisappearea in Buffalo, N. I last Friday after he Is alleged" to have, peddled aearly $3 00;000 worth of stolen securities, Frank La Taylor, ex- railroad fireman, who rose to the position of $50 a- week president of the First' National Bank of Warren Mass when Marcino Ob tained control of' that institution, is 2 awaiting arraignment tomor row on a charge of embezzling na tional bank-funds. 1 - Taylor' told .Burns operatives who arrested him that he at. one time worked for the Burns agen cy and also had been a jsecref agent of the department of Justice. Burns agents here figure the known losses from Marclno's ; op erations at $591,000 and say that they expect much more to ap pear before " the ; Investigation is complete.' ' .-"'.-'.u -'" -t '. '-'i Through manipulation of. the funds of the Nigara Life Insurance company of Buffalo, f. Y.. they say Investors have lost; $248,000. Dank Fails ' Tbe closlngiot the Warren. Mass., bank last week revealed a shortage of $213,000. Taylor claims Marcino 1 cleaned out the bank's vault and later peddled the securities in and around Buffalo. The failure of the Mechanics and Merchants bank in Philadel phia on February 12 last, added another $130,000 to the total. - A new York I congressman is said by the detectives to have lost a sum estimated at from $150 to $20Q, through his faith in Mar clno's schemes.Vi ' The detectives are also investi gating the: connection , between a nant' at Wayauwga, Wis., and Buffalo Insurance company. Se curlfles formerly owned by the Wisconsin bank in which Marcino Is said to nave obtained a controll ing Interest about six months ago nave turned up in banks in and around Buffalo,; where they are said to have been pledged by the insurance company as security loans.'-. Local Girl fs Released From City Jail Sentence ? following a j request made by District Attorney John Carson last night I Miss Theresa Zackery, for the past four days confined In the city Jail on a charge of operating a car without' a drivers' license, was 'released - and allowed to go to her. home. She had been held on failure to pay a $20 fine having elected to serve a 10-day jail sen tence Instead. , It is understood that satisfactory arrangements were made with :W. Blrtchet. LEGISLATURE ADJOURNS f The thirty-eecoad legislative, assembly of Oregon adjourned at one-thirty tbjs morning, aft er failing to reach m satisfactory Agreement on the Mnsolidatlon bill wbldh was bopeleesly block ed. ' A lrlef entertainment was provided at close of the seeslciu" KILLER FAILS TO "GET' ONE OF VICTIMS Confessor- io Five Murders - - J mj ....... . j Well and Moved Away. WACO, Texas, Feb. 22. Tes tlmony pt Charles F. McCandless who is reported to , have con fessed in Baltimore today to five murders In Texas between 1900 art! 1908 made a mistake in one of -hie confessions... according to Consta'ble Williams - at Hico. , a small town near -here. "McCandless shot and -wound ed Cull Woods here about-1908 said Constable Williams tonight. but Woods i-never died. Woods has moved -away from there and we do -not. know where he lives. There is vno reward of $10,000 for Woods' murderer., for . he never was murdered.' - i Sheriff Collingsworth : of Coy ell county,, in ; telephone" conver sation ' from Gatesvile, verified the report tjiat a man was killed at !- TurnerviUe, near Hurst, Cay ell - county., between 1900 and 1908 ' and that McCandless - was tried for .the killing. McCandless was acquitted, ; he said. One . Kilied and Two Badly Wounded; Sentences Con i tinued.to Be Inflicted. BOCHUM,- Feb. .22. (By the Associated Press)r-Two French soldiers 'this kf ternoon fired; point blank' into a crowd " of Germans In front of the law courts, killing one man - and severely wounding two others. ESSEN, Feb. 22. (By the As sociated Press )--Gelzenkirchen having been evacuated by the French forces after' their several days of punitive occupancy, the the spotlight in the . Ruhr valley developments rested today on the penalties , the Franco-Belgian court martial and the border con trot bodies are Inflicting j on the Germans because of their resist apce tO the allied authorities. ; 1 The latest move of the occupiers 'Contlaued on page 3) I HEBE 01 SHORT VISIT George -Himes, of Portland, Has Interesting uareer; . Here Many Years. George H. Himes, of Portland," historian and curator for the Oregon Historical society, is vis- TltThg; in Salem-Thursday and Fri day. ; -Mr. Himes spoke -Thurs day afternoon i at the celebration of the 'Trail" monument on the state" house grounds, j f ile will remain today, looking up some early : ; historical, matters that have attracted his attention. . - Governor Walter M. Pierce spoke on "George Washington, the Father of His Country,' on the; occasion of the dedication of the marker placed on the state house grounds by the DAR yester day;, i The boulder is near1 where an old trail up the valley was lo cated and Is dedicated to the plo nee'r fathers and mothers of Ore gon, -ri ': - -'- - : ''I Mrs. TJ. G. Shipley, regent of the local chapter, presided at the ex ercises. ' George H. Himes, of the, Oregon . Historical society, spoke as did Peter D'Arcy, who talked on "Oregon Mothers." 't " ' ' : Rev. W, C. Kantner made the Invocation at the beginning of the program which followed the fling ing f of the Star Spangled Banner. MMr. Himes fame to Oregon 70 years ago, in' 1853. He became a printer on the Oregonlan, and came to Salem In 18 64 to help get"out some of the state print ing; for. he , was an expert com positor. . In . those days, before the present state house was built, the state capitol was ion South Commercial ; street. . The Civil war; was still.: on and gold hunt ers were .stlU dropping in to Sa- OlffSlS HISTORIAr (Coatlnueia on pass 2), house mm$ CO M.UR- BiGpisrii The house late last night refused to concur in the senate amendment to the consolidation bill vhich denied to the gov ernor control of thebanking department. A conference com mittee Was appointed by both houses and they agreed unani "mously to take away from the governor the three main thirty he asked for, namely, control of the fish commission, bank ing department and tax commission.5 The senate refused to accept the report of the conference committee, which has the effect of , Mocking any consolidation legislation, mm pla Number of Counterfeiters Apprehended Mounts; Jail . Terms Are Promised. NEW YORK, Feb. 22. With the International' counterfeiting system wrecked by; secret service agents wlur laid 'its workings1 bare yesterday' and with" 500 to 600 persons connected with the Hng In a ' dozen ' countries under arrest. federal authorities today prepar ed for a court fight to. send the counterfeiters to jail for the max imum term of 45 years, , , While court evidence was .bing set in order, the drag net of the secret, service was extended to ost of the large cities of taa Unit ed States. . to catch hundrfdi - of passers of counterfeit money im plicated by clues captured la Tues day's raids her?. Joseph A. : Puma, chief of the, special 'secret, service dquad which for eight months tracked the mak ers and distributors of : spurious money gave evidence of the wide spread '.international ramification of the plot by 'announcing that 15 persons had been arrested in Eng land,' France, Egypt, Germany, Cuba, Austria and the Bahamas, as a result, of information furn ished by the American secret ser vice. ', .:' - ; ." ' ' ' .. Many Criminals Notorious New York police, who began an Independent 'investigation, pro fessed to ; find direct' connection between the counterfeit plot and many . hitherto r unsolved gang murders of the past- few years. eeverai or tne muroers were oer. Hexed .to have Resulted from pas-; sage of , bogus money I and from double ; crossing; In the ranks of the "counterfeiters. A number of crimes. It was said, had been com mitted In ; or. near the Broome street cafe owned, bjr John Dirosa, arrested yesterday as on , of the gang's large wholesalers of coun terfeits ,-;.:.,.,' ':' i . Palm a agreed that scores of Im portant ' criminals : were ; In .-; the" ranks of counterfeiters. :" ;l ; Immigrants unfamiliar with (Continued on page 2) vno o;i s'iPiij .' -I. -. . - . BILL SUSTAINED Senator Staples and Joseph ; Attack Methods Used by ' Hall on Measure. Senator . Staples . virtually ac cused Senator Hall of double- crossing . Representative Bennett relative, to house bill 206, Intro duced by Bennett, and Intended to prevent" the, taking of - salmon from Coos river, when . the bill came before the senate last night on a Question -whether the gover nor's veto of the bill' should be sustained. '. The veto message . stated the reason for tbe veto was that it was class legislation, but Staples de clared Hall had worked to have tbe bill vetoed for' the reason that a similar bill of his own failed to pass the senate. Joseph attacked Hall "because fit the method alleged to have been used by him In first trying to get the provisions of his bill Inserted into the Bennett bill and then try ing1 to beat it - when -these were taken out. The veto was sustained. - : UNDER ARREST i5 M ; Toe bin was subjected to much, ridicule as the afternoon wore along " and - section after section, and sometimes entire ar ticles were ripped ruthlessly from the measure. Aside from the banking . department beins removed from the blll thwe were other eliminations that left much of the state government as ,it ! has ; been I operated for years. :;: " - ;; V' ". ' ' When it. I came to , a eectica giving '? the governor power to nanle and. 'remove;" the superin tendents vof ',, banks . Hare moved that tke section -be stricken out. Garland opposed this, declarics "the-governor " wants this power, the people want him ;to have it and ; e must give it to him. GoTernor'a;ItteT.Cpod Joseph spoke fair .elimination. of the provision, declaring that it would" enable a governor to build up a political machine. Garland read the governor's letter , of f Wednesday in whiclx he' said . that ' any consolidation approved by him must give him control of- the banking depart ment, the fish commission and the - tax' commissioners depart ment He declared the senators could not on 'theirs honor recede from the position they took whea tfcejr passed house bill 20 wnlch gave the governor all he wants. This bill wasdefeated in the house. -.- -: - , Speaking again on his motlci Hare said: Sees Political Prestige The: governor has no rigbi to ask that we take from Sarj Koser and -O. P. Hoff the powe that has been " given them ani give all of It to him Suppose be wants the scalp of Dr. Stei ner or tha scalp of the super intendent of the blind school; he asks to give him the power to get them. ; Senator ' Joseph, attacking the proposal to :. give the governor full power over the bank "super- mtendent, declared i It was not the desire of the ; people to give the; governor- a big ' political machine, . but was to ; reduce taxes.' Turning to ' the former Hall bill,, - jwhich was an Issue In the early part of the session, Jospeh said ' it was purely an instrument for hoped-for politi cal prestige. M ' 1 "Hall," declared Joseph, "went through the campaign as the apostle of bigotry ! and" Intoler ance. " He has insulted this senate- with some .letters : Intended as political stepping stones, but which will but serve as mill stones; about his heck and dras1 hlra down. This stuff, will no longer--go.";" i' '. v ; ( Joseph listed Too 1 Benaffir Stray err, speaking against the motion I to keep the banking department ! away from the governor, " recalled, that a committee had waited k upon - the governor and agreed to write into; the bill the provisions that the governor ; might ; have control cf the banking, the fish and the taxation departments. V Strayer listed Joseph with those ; who. had so agreed and challenged his alncerlty. "The conclusion is," said Stray er, "that you" were not honest then or that you' are not: honest today." -' '- --;..r-.i : ' i Senator; Eddy "said that tha statements made by Garland and Strayer-as to ' promises made by the IT Jhtroducers of the former consolidation bill were true: He said ' he expected to lire up to his part of the agreement but added: ' '; -,-'-:: '-.'Brands B31 ' "The governor ;; has not dealt . with us as he "wanted us to deal with him. Governor Pierce has been a disappointment to me In this respect. Only yes terday ; ha wrote a letter still harping on the Hall bill." Eddy declared he would stand by his word but branded the pending consolidation till -with. (Continued ca I2 :