I7airsrtity f Or. Us ' " ' ' f 3 . ... ,4 i 1 VOL. IX., No.' 01. POLTCSWLL 1 BELGIUM IN FEW MONTHS jPItEKKNT GOVERNMENT OXK OK TRANSITION, HI T A REAL GOV. KIINMKNT TO BR KRAMED CATHOLICS CONTROL 40 W I'nlvenml Ijuffriiun Hyutem Will ltf tcnte Iriwts and l4tiiiliwnrni to Status of Wnrklngmeri Brussels, Doc. 20. (Corresjion dunro of the Associated Press.) Belgium la facing a crisis In lu"po lltlral history. The present govern ment comprising ot tlx Catholics, three liberal and throe socialists Is acknowledged everywhere to be only provisional one, a government of transition. A real government which will direct reconstruction of Dot glum Is In the making. It In not exported that elections can bo hold In Im than alx month. Meanwhile the political fUht will be waged upon a buala of universal suffrage one man, one vote. lie fore the war the priests had four votoa, land ownera and nobles as many voles aa thoy had eatatea In different province and socialists and llborala only one vote each. The so cialists wore mostly working men and the liberala mostly professional men. Thla enabled the Catholic party to be In power for more than .4,40 years. Under the universal suf frage aysteln which would relegate ' priests and landowners to the same category as working men, doctors V and lawyers. It la asserted the Cath olic party may bo placed In the min ority. Nevertheless, Cardinal Mor der'a great personality and the en ergy he displayed In behalf of Bel Clans during the war Is said to have greatly helped the cause of the Cath Ilo party. Ouo cause ot bitterness and ani mosity, .In Dolgluui i the Flemish, movement which now Is practically dead owing to the efforts ot the late German Governor von. Biasing to inuke use of It to divide Belgium In to two parts. It la expected that the Flemish movement will revive when life routines normal conditions but It Is held In abeyance now through foar that It might bo construed as German propugaudu. King Albert In his spooch to the parliament after returning .to Brussels announced that the government will propose a bill to create tbo basis ot a Flemish university at Ghent reserving the dotulls to the now parliament to be elected lntor. Pro-Gorman and "activists" who supported the German scheme to drive the wedge between the Flomlshj and Walloons in Belgium are now ostracized socially. Many arrests have boon made In Brussels, Ghent and Bruges. The people ot Ghont dlvldo tholr hatred and bitterness evenly between tbo Gurmuns and the 'activists." Bruges Is filled with a deep-rooted hatred of everything German while Brussels ridicules both pro-Germans and "activists" In Bruges IDS women who dealt ,1 with Geririans were beaten and their hair was shorn. In Ghent pro-Germans and "activists," both men and womon were physically punished. I ST. New York, Jan., 15. The United States cruiser St. Louis, bringing the S4th ' field artillery, comprising 1,300. men, has arrived from Brest. The regiment constats of 99 ter cent conscripted men,, tralnod at Camp Lewis. They saw service In Belgium with the 91st division. GOVERNOR LISTER SOUNDS WARNING WfeililiiKion'N Hilef Etrcutlvo Hny Hut MuHt Provide WtM-k Wnrns Again! I. W. W. Practices OlymplB. Wash., Jan. IS, Wash ington's 1919 legislature Is faced by greater problems than have been faced by any previous legislature, Governor Ernest Lister declared In his biennial message read here today to the senate and house ot represent tutlves. , . New work should be taken up by public and private corporations, the governor asserted, to provide work for returned soldiers and men from the closed war Industries. "I nolleve It Is our duty and responsibility to adjust conditions that there will be employment available In the stale for every able bodied person willing to accept It," be said. "The state can provide employ ment for many men by speeding up highway construction, new state buildings can be started and repairs to old buildings can be made," he added. Proposed Irrigation projects should be put through at this time, he said. Wages should be kept up as long as the cost of living remains up, ho' added. The governor's message reviewed Washington's war time accomplish ments, particularly the state's con tribution ot men. "No less than 50, 000 Washington men put on the unl form of their country during the' em ergency," he said. "Men of the I. W. W. type should not be permitted to continue their unlawful and dangerous, practices," he assorted, "A! any ot the men are aliens and the nation would be vast ly benefitted by their deportation to tholr native land," he declared. THOMAS GETS AFTER Salem, Ore., Jan. 15. Charging that the $6,000,000 hard surfacing act was railroaded' through the last legislature by a paving lobby, and doctarlng that hard surface bills were being drafted In, Portland, Sen ator Thomas, of Jackson . county, presented a resolution today de manding that the highway commis sion appear before the legislature on Monday to present plass so the leg islature could draft Its own highway legislation. XLORAI0 AND IOWA KALI, IXTO MXK Denver, Colo., Jan. 15. Colo rado ratified the prohibition meas ure today. The senate voted 29 to one. The house adopted the measure last week. Des Moines, Iowa, Jan, 15. The Iowa legislature adopted the prohi bition measure today. PORTUGAL ALSO HAS TROUBLESOME TIMES Tendon, 'Jan. 15. Revolutionists at Santarem,, northeast of Lisbon, having refused to. surronder, the Portuguese government troops have surrounded the ' town and com menced a bombardment. 4 EL PASO STIRRED - 4 4 . WITIIU0L8HKVISM..4 .... ., ' ,. 4 4 El Paso, Texas, Jan. 'It. 4 4 Handbills printed In Spanish 4 4 and signed . "Spanish ., Bolahe- 4 4 vista," were distributed , here,. 4 4 urging the deapi of President 4 4 Carransa, Villa, .Felix Dlas, Es- 4 4 taban Cahtu, governor of Low- 4 4 er California and all other po- 4 4 lltlcalleaders and, rich men in 4 4 Mexico. , ; .'" wv': .": 4 tilMffTg PASS, JOSEPHINE COUNTY, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, JAMAHY 15. 11. WILSON FIRM IN ATTITUDE TOWARD ITALY HOIjIM THAT FICMK IS THE N.V Tl ltAIi Ol'TLET FOR AIM. ' TIUAN SLAVS ARMAMENTS TO BE LIMITED Delegate Divided on Manner to Ob tain league of Nations Sonie' for Combined Power Ixjodun, Jan. 15. Commenting upon the. conference between Pre'- dent Wilson and Premlor Orlando last Friday, persons In touch with the premier said he was surprised at President Wilson's attitude. The president la - firm In his refusal -to recognize Italian claims beyond Tri este and Trent. He Is unwilling to give way to Italian claims for either the Dalmatian coast or Flume, ac cording to the correspondent. The president holds that Flume is the na tural sea outlet to the Austrian Slav. Paris, Jan. 15. Lord Robert Ce cil, who discussed with American Journalists his views as to the work of the league of nations, had little to say regarding the limitation of arma ments, but expressed his opinion, however, that the league "certainly would provide 'for limitation and a decrease ot present armaments." Paris, Jan. 15. With the resump tion of the preliminary peace meet ings today, It became evident that the movement for s league of na tions is being carried on by two forces having the same object in view, but differing In their means to make the same effective. One con tends that the decisions ot the league must be backed up by combined phy sical forces; the other believes that findings can be enforced without the aid of the world police force.' ' OOU HOV.SK IMPROVING Paris, Jan. 15. Col. E. M. House Is Improving in health and expects to be able to be up in a few days. OUR DAYS NUMBERED "BUT WE'LL FilAKE WORLD SHUDDER" Archangel, via London, Dec. 20. (Correspondence of the Associated Press.) Tales of horrors within the territory controlled by the Botshe- Ik government are brought here al most daily by some . adventurous Russian, often a; young officer who has made his way through the Bol shevik lines. JThese stories are pub lished in the Archangel newspapers under the headline,' "The Russian nightmare." Two ot the members of the Arch- angol City Duma who Tecently re turned from Moscow where they had been taken under, . arrest, quoted Nikolai Lenlne, the Bolshevikl pre mier aa saying: "Our days are num bered. ' We know that, but. In leav ing the power, we will shut the doors in a way to make Europe Bhudder." One of the Archangel papers sayB that the record of the "Central All Russlan Investigation commission In one it tortures and horrors. Arrest ed people," It adds, "disappear by groups. Agents of the German gen eral" staff nre working in the com mission. ' People are ' shot in ' the building of the commission Itself and In groups of 20 to 80 at a time. Those' who come in order to inquire about arrested relatives are them selves arrested and disappear. Only those who can afford to pay a large sum of money are liberated, ; For 30,000 or 50,000 rubles one ran save his life. Trotsky,1 formerly for etgn minister,, has lost all sympathies WEEK OF IT AND KILLING COMES TO ND BERLIN SEES . ABATEMENT IX BLOODY ST1UGGLE BETWEEN "GOVT AND SPAHTACANS Srone Shifts to retrograd. Where Starving March Through Streets. Given I'nground Oats " Berlin, Jan, 16. A long week of Bolshevism has ended. Only small scattered bands of Dr. Liebknecht's followers are now operating. The property loss will amount to tens of millions of marks. The Spartacans looted systematically. At the Slleslan station they had so much butter that they used It to grease their guns and boots with. " ' Stockholm, Jan. 15. Hunger riots 'took place in Petrograd Satur day and Sunday. It is reported that thousands of. people paraded the streets, shouting for bread, but were tired upon by the Bolshevikl troops. There was no bread In the city, and the people were given unground oats. ; 4 NEW HAMPSHIRE 84th 4 . TO ONE VP WITH DRV8 4 . : . - - 4 Chicago, Jan. 15. New 4 4 Hampshire ratified the prohl- 4 4 bltlon. measure today, making 4 4 the 34 th state to do so. The 4 4 country will probably be voted 4 4 dry within 24 hours. Thirty- 4 4 six states are needed. ,' 4 44444444444444444 GENERAL WOOD TO TAKE CHARGE OP SEATTLE Washington, Jan. 15. Orders di recting Major General Leonard Wood, now commanding Camp Funs- ton, Kansas, to proceed to Chicago to take command ot the Central de partment, have been issued by the war department. among the working men, but Lenlne still has great, success in some places." : One iBolshevlk member of the Central- Soviet, Comrade Zlnovleff, " is quoted as saying in a speech: "If you come to Petrograd you will see the bourgeoise paving the court ot Smolny Institute, unloading the ships on the Neva and. cleaning the bar racks. Winter clothes are being re quisitioned in Petrosrad. The bour geois fur coats will not exactly fit the Red Guards hut they will par ttently bear thla Inconvenience. On the TTral front we have already dis tributed among tile Tied Guards 600 suits and overcoats belonging to the Romanoffs. The, - bourgeoise must disappear In a socialistic state. If, we go on steadily we will soon teach the Russian bourgeoise what it ought to be and after that the bourgeoise of the world." Another speaker at the Soviet gov- ing mat uermany ana Austria no longer were dangerous to Bolshe vism but that the main danger now lay with England and America. "We must support the revolution In the .central empires and we have de cided to sacrifice our blood and our bread to the German proletariat." Other- refugees here report that the Bolshevikl openly confess that their hopes of maintaining power are very -weak and that their only hope Is a world-wide revolution, SAY LE WOULD HOT FULFILL PLEDGE Writer Hay EagllHh Forget Suffer ings of ItumUas at the Hands of the Bolshevikl London, Jan. 15. Harold Wil liams, writing In the Daily Chronicle on the British proposal to Invite the Russian Bolshevikl to the peace con ference says: - Lenlne could not have wished for better luck to give him another breathing space. To absolve him from the necessity of further mili tary effort Just when he is straining every nerve to' bring about a world revolution is almost to agree to the Bolshevikl plan of campaign. The armistice came a little too soon for Lenlne. He desires a breathing space. Just as he did a year ago. and 'now the British government propose he should be given one, proposes, in fact, that he 'should be allowed a clear field for his world propaganda. What new pacifism is this, that ignores responsibilities for the cruel suffering of the people that spent Its strength In the allied canseT I dare not. think of the effect of this pro posal on these Russians who have been loyal to us through the dark est days. Then, supposing the "Bol- shivtU did come to the conference, we should simply see a repetition on a large scale of the spectacle of the Brest-Litovek, with President Wil son, Lloyd George and Clemenceau in the undignified position of Kuehl- mann and Count Czeralrt, while Trotsky and Radek displayed their gifts of Tepartee and their, corrus- cating theories to an astounded world. There could be no more ef fective stimulus to the world Bolshe vism, than this. " TWELVE STATES HAVE OF Washington, Jan. 15. Calling at tention to an increase in unemploy ment of common labor, a message today from the National Council ot Defense says the secretary ot labor urges all state, county and commun lty councils to bend every effort to ward finding or creating' necessary employment, saying It is possible the danger point will be reached within 30 days. Whereas there was unemployment In seven states a week ago, the mes sage says, this condition now' pre vails in 12 California, Colorado, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Mis souri, Montana, Nebraska, North Da kota, Oregon and Utah- London, Jan. 15. An unconfirm ed wireless message from Kiev says that the Ukrainian directorate has fallen. The power in the city now Is in the hands of the Bolshevikl. 6 MONTHS AND A FINE St. Helens, Ore., Jan. 15. Ham Kautzman, editor of the Houlton Herald, was found guilty of printing obscene and indecent articles in his paper. The. penalty may be .six months in Jail and S500 fine. 4 OREGON 33RD STATE 4 4 TO RATIFY AMENDMENT 4 4 ,' 4 4 Salem,' Ore., Jan, lo, Ore- 4 4 gon la the 33rd state to ratify 4 4 the prohibition amendment. 4 4 The "senate voted unanimously 4 4 today, and the house' 53' to 3 4 4 late yesterday. The senate 4 4 adopted a Joint resolution for 4 4 prohibition Introduced by Sen- 4 4 ator Eddy of Douglas county., 4 4, The house adopted Elmore's 4 4 resolution, as did also the sen- 4 4 ate.'-:' J " ' ' 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 f 4 4 4 4 RED WHOLE -MMIlKIt 2.VI3. E FOR A MOSES ' - . MEMBERS ARB KILL OF GOOD INTENTIONS, BIT NO ONE HAS ' : PROPER PLAN ' ' ' ' SOLDIERS AND ROM IN VIEW Irrigation to Receive ConsideraUou, But Immediate Work for Return ing ranks Come First Bute Capitol, Salem, Jan. 15. Schemes, tor the employment ot re turned soldiers, Involving at least $20,000,000 are now in sight In the legislature. Various tentative Ideas are being advanced,' but yet no one has a real solution. In the Oregon legislature there are 90 members, each one sitting back and waiting tor one of the oth er 89 to appear as a 'Moses. The member who produces a practical so lution to the problem of finding em ployment for the returned soldiers and for the civilians who will be' re placed by the ex-soldiers' will have. no trouble in securing' enthusiastic support It Is generally recognized in senate and house that the one big niece of lecrislatlon which mint hat adopted is a program which will provide employment for the .return ing soldiers at good wages." ' Suggestions thus far fall under mese neaas: Jt-r-noaa construction: 2 Public buildings: 3 Irrigation development; 4 Clearing logged-off. lands; 5 Consolidation of Portland' Dock Commission and Port of Port land. ' " '- Possibly alt of these suggestions will be adapted and Interwoven into a reconstruction program. Now as to the finances. There may be $9,- 000,000 for roads, financed by a bond issue 'cared ' tor by motor ve hicle license fees; $5,000,000 for Ir rigation development; $5,000,000 for consolidation ot the Port and Dock Commissions; $250,000, ap proximately, for public buildings. and no one can estimate what the logged-off lands would require. The five groups ' Indicated are merely the high points which have , come to. the surface already. Each one Is calculated to give, employment to many people. There will ' very probably be a dozen or a score of other suggestions brought forward within the next tour or five weeks. - On two facts the lawmakers are unanimously agreed. The first is that they are prepared to go to al most any length to create employ ment for the returning soldiers. The second fact on which there is unani mity Is that no one has advanced' a good, general policy. No legislature was, ever more filled with good in tentions. The members will dO the right thing If some one will show them how. Suggestions are now In order, but they should be workable. 'I am at a loss to advance the right idea," Bald Speaker , Jones. There are a number ot represen tatives who have thought deeply, but tney are apparently as much at sea as the' others." Both houses have agreed on a joint committee to worR out a pro gram ot consolidation of ' the state ' offices and handle all consolidation legislation. . NO LIQUOR TO WET Honolulu, H. T., Dec. 20. (By Mall.) The territory ot Hawaii, made bone dry by action of congress ' itun summer, cannot vote to rescind or ratify prohibition until the gen eral territorial election in November, 1920, according to a recent opinloa by the attorney general's office. V LEGFSLATUR Nf WING