rni T. NO. 15.571. : ROOSEVELT URGES SUPPORT OF LODGE Thousands in Boston Hear Colonel. TARIFF BOARD IS INDORSED Party One on Baste Principles of Protection, He Says. FLING IS TAKEN AT F0SS Fpeakrr Ins.lts It Would Be Calam ity to 'atkn to Defeat Senator lodge Massachusetts rro fresslTe State, IT Insists. BOSTON. Oct. St. Theodora Roosevelt poke here tonight In behalf of the Re publican party of Massachusetts. He said It would be a calamity to the Na tion If Senator Lodge should fall of re-election. He said the Senator wa a friend of progressive legislation. That there waa no difference" of opin ion among Republican aa to the basic principle of protection, aa the party stood solidly on the tariff commission p:n. was another of his statements. The Colonel made no reference to the rayne-Aldrlch bill, confining his remarks to the Indorsement of the tar iff, plank of the Massachusetts state platform, and of the tariff board scheme. He said he waa advocating the same political principles In his speech of tonight that he had advocated in all of his speeches during the Sum mer from the Rocky Mountains to the Eastern seaboard. ThoDwndi Eager to Hear Him. The Ccloaera reception In Boston was enthusiastic When he arrived at the arena where the rally waa held, he found a crowd which thronged the great building. Thousands, unable to gala admittance, blocked the street outside. As Colonel Roosevelt mounted the platform, he received one of the most enthusiastic greetings which has been given him on bis travels during the last few months. Ex-Governor John L. Bates. Governor Xrapr and Senator Lodge made speeches and then the Colonel was In trod ueed : -The opponent of Governor Draper baa said that the tariff Is an issue In this campaign." he said. "All I ask la that the voters compare the attitude of the two parties In regard to the tariff. Co the Republican side there Is no dif ference as to the principle to be ob served. In every state the Republicans are a unit In adherence to the princi ple expressed In the Republican plat form that there shall be an equalisation of the cost of production here and abroad. The difference has been merely as to the way of achieving the common purpose, and more and more we are coming Into complete harmony aa to the method to be adopted. Our op ponents have no such harmony. Tariff flank Commended. The Colonel read a commended the tariff plank In the Massachusetts Re publican platform, which Indi wi the plan for a tariff board. He said Presi dent Taft. by working for the tariff board and for satisfactory tariff rela tions with foreign countries, had point td out the way which the party was to follow. "Experience has shown th the pres ent system of tariff-making Is unsat isfactory:" the Colonel continued. "Our principles were right In the rent- We propose to adopt methods which shall guarsntee the principles being carried out with Justice a id equity." Taking up the Massachusetts situa tion. Colonel Roosevelt assailed Eu gene N. Foss. Democratic candidate for Oovernor. -It would be bad thlus: for the people of this state." he aald. "to elect a man who. having tried to dominate one party and having failed, now aeeka to dominate another party." Lodge- rrocressive. He Sajs. Massachusetts, said the Colonel, la really a progressiva state in spite of the fact that other sL&ies were apt to vrih to her conservatism which she did not have. He said he was radical because he espoused some things which viiurhuutu already had. such as the physical valuation of railroads. The whole Republican party, ne continued. was progressive. Colonel Roosevelt closed with a trlb. ute to Senator Lodge and an appeal to t)i neorjle of Massachusetts to send Mm back to the Senate. He said he had watched the work of the Senator la Washington for a quarter of a century. "I feel It would be a calamity not only to Massachusetts, but to the Na tion." be continued. "If Senator Lodge were not returned to the Senate. Sen ator Lodge has stood for progressive legislation. I ask that Massachusetts be true to its great traditions of the past and send back to the United States Senate for the honor of the country that statesman who has himself been true to her tradttlona," KEPLV MADE TO ROOSEVELT Irlcnds of John A. Dlx Deny He Is Wall Paper Trust Director. X FT.V TORK. Oct. tL A charge In The odore Roosevelt's speech here last night that John A. I'ix. the Democratic nomi ' ti'oociitded ea ! 4-1 MOUSE ENTERS CAR, WOMEN IN PANIC "WEE SLIKIT COWRIX.' TIMOR OUS BEASTIE" KILLED. Creature Flees for Safety to Pocket of Woman's Cos. While Occu pants f Car Scream. X mouse in a streetcar filled, with women caused a panto at East Sixteenth and East Morrison streets yesterday, and brought the gang working with picks and shovels in the street to Lie res cue. The mouse had first been chased up a tree by a cat, or dog. or the workmen In the street, and had grad ually worked Its way out on the end of a branch overhanging the streetcar track. Aa the car came along the trolley flew off. struck the limb on which the mouse was clinging, aad shook It loose. The mouse dropped to the roof of the car. darted Into a ven tilator and dropped onto a woman's top. It then took a short cut- for the pocket la her coat. Two or three women screamed as they saw "the mouse drop through the ventilator and cried "mouse." That waa all that was necessary. Women grabbed uielr skirts, pulled them close about their ankles and were soon tiptoeing on the seats and cran ing their necka to discover the hor rid Intruder. It waa then the lone man in the car cast aside his newspaper, and walking up to the woman who had the mouse In her pocket, said: "I shall be pleased to extract that venturesome little mouse without the formality of an introduction. If you will allow." e Aa be dW o the women clasped their hands and unanimously exclaimed: "Isn't he Just the dearest manT" BABE FALLS INTO STREAM Prawn Through Culvert, tTncon clous Child Is Revived. WALLA WALLA. Wash.. Oct. 2L (Spe cial.) Swept down one of the many little creeka that flow through this city, ino t.ruiuiiil dsurhter of Mr. ana airs. Harry Caldwell was ewlrled through a 0- wt culvert and. when she emergeo. ax the other end. sts nearly drowned. Prompt action In calling a phystclan saved her life, and tonight she Is little the worse for her adventure. The child was playing on the bank of t otwic on Thome avenue near her home, when she fell Into the water. The stream runs quite awlftly and before any ini could seise her she hsd disappeared liua- the eulvet. a here the street owns the creek. if.r . tmm moments of anxious wait ing on tho other r;de. the unconscious form of the child appeared and she was quickly revived. ATHLETIC FANJS SUICIDE Boy tjnlts Job to See Game and When Parent Scold. Hangs Self. nilLADEI.rH I A. Oct. 11. Excite ment over the world's series between the Chicago Nationals, and the Phila delphia Americans, it waa said, wae-the cause of the suicide tonight of Frank Avers. It years old. Ayers waa a delivery boy in a de partment store, and when he was re fused permission to absent himself to see the game here last Monday, the boy gave up wis position. When bis parents learned that the lad had quit work, the boy waa sent to bed without his supper. Later he was found hang ing to a balustrade, having used a sheet for a noose. VETERAN SUFFERS STROKE Operation Restores Mind; rallont Relapses, Now Recovering. WALI.A WAIJ.A. Wash.. Oct. 21. PteclsL Captain Charles Booker, of Peyton, the Philippine veteran whose falling mind waa restored by a trepan ning operation last week, has undergone a relapse, suffering a paralytic stroke while walking down the .street. Upon examination it was found that a gathering had formed beneath the plate that wss InUd In the skull, and this had caused the trouble. The wound waa cleansed and Captain Booker seems about on the road to fjll recovery. He was Injured in the Philippines by the explosion of a shell. GREEK COSTUME OFFENDS Policeman Beats Toga-Clad Man and Complaint Is Made. SAN FRANCISCO. Oct 21. On Mm pUInt of Andreas Pcvarls. one of the members of a company of Greek play er, a warrant was issued today for the arrest of Policeman William Jur gena on a charge 0f battery. According to the story told by De rails. Jurgcns told him to go home and put on more clothes and when he re fused the policeman clubbed him. De varls appeared before the bond and warrant clerk clothed in a Greek toga and sandals. FAMOUS HOTEL BANKRUPT Receiver Is . Named to Conduct Hoffman Itonse In New York. NEW TORK. Oct. 21. The Hoffman House, at Broadway and Twenty-fifth street, on of New Tork's most famous hotels, waa thrown into bankruptcy by creditors this afternoon. Judge Bolt, in the Federal Court, ap pointed a receiver with authority to continue the business, and It was said that the whole matter soon would be adjusted by a reorganization. . i I . l I FEARS FELT FOR BALLOONIST- Relief Expeditions to Take Up Search. THREE RACERS UTTERLY LOST Starvation In Canadian Wilds May Be Men's Portion. DROP IN LAKES DANGER Canadian and American Govern ments Join In Hunt With Aero Club for Missing Aerostats. Germanla Seta New Record. ST. LOUIS. Oct. ZL Relief expeditions to search for the pilots and aides of the three mleslng balloons. Atures, Dussel- dorf II and America II. which start ed In the international race here Monday, will be started from Toronto. Sunday. If no news Is received from the aeronauts before that time. This an nouncement wss made tonight by officials of the Aero Club of St.. Louis. The situation In reference to the un reported balioona assumed a most serious aspect tonight. It la believed here that the men have landed somewhere In the wilds of Canada, where they may be the victims of starvation before succor can reach them. , New ReeWd May Be Set. The German balloon Germanla, Cap tain Hugo von Abercron, pilot, and Aug ust Blanckerts. aide, landed at Coocoo cash. Quebec 179 miles north of Quebec Wednesday morning. This is approxi mately 1195 miles and may mean that all world's records have been broken. The Aero Club tonight called upon Gen era! James Allen, chief of the United Ststra Signal Corps at Washington. D. C. to have the revenue cutters petroling the Great Lakes look for wreckage In Lake Huron. Steamship companies which have vessels fCylng Lake Huron and Georgian Bay have been requested to join In the search. Search Is General. The Ontario government, through Its Lieutenant-Governor. J. M. Gibson, to night notified the club that It would as sist In the search for. the missing men. The Hudson Bay Company also has re plied favorably to a reuee for assist ance sent from bore today. It was announced tonight that a rep resentative of the Aero Club would be sent to Toronto to organise the relief ex peditions. Balloons Away 100 nonrs. All the balloons should have been down and reported by Wednesday night, according to the Aero Club officials, and the fact that more than 1TO hours have elspsed sjfnce the start of the race, and neillier pilots Messner. Gertcke. Hawley or Abercron or their aides have re ported, has given rise to grave appre hension for their safety. It was pointed out that the greatest danger la anticipated In the case, of a balloon having descended in Georgian Bay. Thle strip of water contains mors than .M Islands of all sisea. where the aeronauta might perish before relief could arrive. Helved Pilot Claim Record. Colonel Theodore Schaevk and Pail Ambruster, who landed with the balloon (Vnchidd on Pass 2. GRAVE . s?m2 for GEORGt I Tsvaaaaai a --rs--v j r f -1 a a w. fc as bp sa itt t vn olyy Ti-n AY. OCTOBER 22 1910. PRICE FIVE CENTS. INDEX OF TODAYS NEWS The Weather. TESTER DaTS Maximum temperature, 81 decrees; minimum. 44 degrees. TODAY'S Probably fair and warmer; - southerly winds. Foreura. Dr. Crlppen on stand four hours, gives ewn version of wile's strange disappearance. I Pass 3. I Manuel. Portural's dethroned kins, droops and blames Oabr des Lye. Pass X. National. Panama libel suit arguments postponed un til Monday. Pace i. Pall tie. Oregon City plana big raJly 'In honor of Bowerman. Page a. Bewennan enthusiastically received In Tim hill county. Page ft. Roosevelt tells Boston it would be calamity ti defeat Senator Lodce. Page 1. Revolt against Chamberlain spreads at Sun nyalde meeting. Page 14. Captain i' Smith explains "home rule" to voters at Forest Grove. Pace T. Domestic Missouri Paclfle vets men to nil places of striking mechanical workers. Face 3- Morgaa gives 1 100.000 to aid world church conference; Episcopalians ad journ. Page 3. Extent or sea's toll In Southern hurricane not yet known. Page 2. Detectives Insist they have complete case ag el -.at dynamite suspects, page 1. Relief expeditions to take up search for three missing racing balloons. Page 1. Edrar Allen Poe elected to Hall of Fame. Page 1. World's greatest International aviation meet to open today in New York. Page 6. Countess ds Beaufort suiters serious In juries from fall in home. Page S Mrs. Tlngley wins victory In contest for 350.000 aetata Page 4. y New York bribery investigators fall to se cure admission from convict examined In prison. Page 5. Sports. i Paclfle Coast League results yesterday: Portland 0. San Francisco 0; Sacramento 6. Oakland 4; Vernon 7. Los Angeles 1. Page 8. Portland Academy snd Columbia fnlverslty play no-score football game. Page 8. Fielder Jones says postponement of game Is a-tvantage for Cuba Page 8. Paclfle Northwest. T. P. O'Connor "captures Canada with Home Rule speeches. Page 6. Eugene display of Un County apples at tracts great throngs. Page T. Farmer conference with railroad men comes to naught. Page T. Chinaman attacks white mother-in-law and Is pursued by mob. Page 4. Five hundred students at University of Washington rush theater; 21 arrested. Pace 1. Commercial and Marine. Over 4000 bales of Orecon and Washlncton hops change hands. Page 18.. When prices eontlnus to sac at Chicago. Page 19. Storks open strong and close weak. Page 19. Trade reonrts on the whole are cheerful. Page 19. Self-propelling lightship may be stationed at Cape Blanco. Page 19. Portland and Vicinity. Wehb found guiltv of first degree murder of William A. Johnson, rage 12. Second suit to prevent Issuance of Broad way bridge bonds filed. Page D. Guilford's lawyers contend state promised bribery of Juror. Psge 14. Oregon Baptists declare uncompromising hostility to aaloon. Page 1. Chamber of Commerce transportation meet ing oaillnea seed ofgdo'd 'freight rates. Page 14. Mouse creates panic among women In street car. Page 1. Mary Harris Armour dollvers prohibition talk to big gathering. Page 4. . New bridge across Willamette urged by Council committee. Page 12. Eight divorces granted in Judge Cleland's court, page 12. Pendleton sheep ranrher and two women accused of conspiracy In land case. Page 11. WASPS WAGE WAR WEEK Yellow-Jackets Driven Front Tree by Stung Apple-Pickers. WALLA WALLA. Wash., Oct. 21. (Special.) After an all-week fight with a nest of yellowjnckets. Harry Reyn olds haa succeeded In harvesting the crop -from a tree of Ben Davis apples. The fight wss to the bitter end. and especially noticeable waa the bitter end of the yellowjackets. When Mr. Reynolds sent his pickers Into the orchard, they left the yellow Jacket tree until last. Indeed, no at tempt was made by the stingers to Interfere at first, but one buzzed too close to the neck of one of the pickers, and In brushing' him away the war started. It lasted for a week. too. Several efforts were made to dislodge the Inserts, but it was not until a rag ged, barefooted urchin appeared on the scene that the trouble was ended by smoking the Insects out. EVERYONE'S AWFULLY GOOD TO GEORGE INCLUDING GEORGE DETECTIVES SAY CUSEIS COMPLETE eswawawaSBBwawssswawawsasssawaatawaSl Woman Aids Unravel Dynamite Plot. SPECIAL GRAND JURY CALLED Indictments and Arrests Will Follow, It Is Believed. MEN KNOWN, ROGERS SAYS Proprietress of San Francisco Lodging House Becomes Cheer ful and Is Said to Hare Given Valuable Information, r LOS ANGELES, Oct. 31. It I; practi cally certain that indictments against a number of persons will follow the deliberations of the special grand jury called today to investigate the Times disaster, according to the statements of Attorney Earl Rogers and tho detectives who worked with him in San Francisco gathering evidence. "We have a case that the cleverest criminal lawyer in the world could not break down." said Rogers. "The evi dence of. the Times dynamiting Is com plete. Wo know who did It. and can prove it beyond a dovbt. All that re mains is to arrest those who were re sponsible for the destruction of tho newspaper plant and its men. and that Is almost as sure as death." Mrs. Lavin Talkative. Rogers' statement, although almost ( verbatim reiteration of previous re marks regarding the case,, was made directly alter he had questioned Mrs. Belle Lavln. the San Francisco lodglng housckeeper who is in the cou-ty jail charged wtlh murder in connection with the case. Today tho sullen mood of Mrs. Lavln left her and she became bright and conflden tial. She talked at length with Attorney Rogers, In charge of the detecUves."a.Su apologized for her demeanor heretofore toward the officers. Since childhood it has made her obstinate to be spoken to sharply, she said, and when the de tectives demanded answers to all their questions her temper got the better of her Judgment. Her revelations today are of great Importance, but Rogers declined to say what they are. He admitted she told all she knew. They will have an im mediate bearing, however, on the San Francisco hunt for the murderers and their accomplices. The woman seems more Inclined to trust herself to the officers who are accusing her of murder than to the lawyers who are Insistent in their demands to see her. Letter From Lawyer Crumpled. This evening Attorney Seymour, who has been watching outside the jail al most from the hour of her Incarcer ation, vainly teeklng admittance, wrote her a lengthy' registered letter which tho Sheriff . delivered. Seymour In formed her that he had been retained as ' her counsel by an emissary from her friends in San Francisco. Mrs. Lavln crumpled the letter in her hand and laughed. Another development today was the bringing to Los Angeles from Hanford of Morris Fitzgerald, who fell or was thrown from a northbound Los An geles train there on October 2. the day of the disaster. Fitzgerald has been Concluded on Page 4.1 THEATER RUSHED, STUDENTS JAILED RIOT CALL GIVEX TO QTELL VARSITY "jPARADERS. Police Arrest 21 of 500 Rushers. Comrades Threaten to Batter Down Jail Doors. SEATTLE, Wash., Oct. 21. (Special.) Five hundred students of tho Uni versity of Washington, as a fitting climax to a "shirt tall"" parade adver tising the Washington foot ball game on the Varsity campus tomorrow, made a rush on the Majestic Vaudeville theater while the second performance was on at 9:30 this evening, breaking down doors and smashing windows which caused the management to sen! the riot call to the police station, re sulting in the arrest of 21 students. The remainder of the "rushers" ran to the ity Hall, following the arrest of their comrades, and threatened to rush the police department, but met by a determined squad of policemen and superior officers, finally - dis persed and went to their homes. Tho recently Installed red flash sig nals on the patrol boxes were Im mediately thrown into use when the riot call came to headquarters and every policeman from Tesler Way to Pike street.' a distance of 12 blocks on First, Second, Third and Fourth ave nues, was sent to the theater In ad dition to the squad which rushed to the scene in the emergency automo biles from the Police Station. Only through the intervention of At torney John C. Higgins, a member of the Board of Regents of the Univer sity, were the students spared spend ing a night in the city jail. Higgins communicated with Mayor Gill, who instructed Chief of Police Wappenstein to release the students upon the pro mise of Higgins to present them in court tomorrow. f AIRSHIP SCARES FISHERS Schooner Off Nantucket Nearly Struck by Wellman Balloon. NOANK, Conn., Oct. 21. When the auxiliary fishing schooner Ada Bell put in here tonight, the crew told of a narrow escapo they had, of being hit by the equllibrator of the Wellman airship on Sunday. Captain Harry Chrlstophsen said that they were fishing on Nantucket shoals during a fog Sunday morning, when a large dark object appeared, which they took to be a heavy bank of fog. As the object approached, however, they saw something bumping along on top -of the water, and the motor was started just in time to get the boat out of the way, the airship passing not more than 30 feet from bhem. The captain could easily make out the members of the airship's crew, but neither his crew nor Wellman's, he said, made any effort to speak and the balloon passed by and was soon lost In the fog. The crew Is the Ada Bell did not know that Wellman had started across the ocean until they put into port to night. CHICKEN THIEF REPENTS Snlem Man Receives 6 0 Cents Through Mall for Stolen Fowls SALEM. Or., Oct. 21. (Special.) M. E. Grimes, of this city, was astounded today at the action of a chicken thief who en tered the Grimes poultry-house and helped himself to two chickens recently. Today Grimes received a contribution of 60 cents through the malls. Inclosed in an anonymous letter. The letter was marked "Poultry," and evidently was a contribution toward a conscience fund on the part of the thief. As tho chickens taken were of excep tionally fine variety and were worth many times 60 cents, Grimes suffers a loss. Nevertheless, he considers hlfself the first man In history that has ever been reimbursed to any extent by a chicken thief. PURSER LEAPS OVERBOARD While 111 With Fever, Man Jumps Into Sea ; Is Rescued but Dies. SAN FRANCISCO. Oct. 21. While suffering from malarial fever. George W. Moll, purser of the steamer Tara, bound fromf Panama to this port, leaped overboard October 16, while the vessel was off San Lucas. a hmt was lowered and Moll was brought on hoard tho steamer In an unconscious condition. AH efforts to revive him failed, and he died without recovering consciousness. He was 33 years of age and lived in San Diefto. The remains reached here today on the City of Para. SPAIN WANTS STAIRCASE Government Would Prevent Re moval or Burgos Relic to America. MADRID. Oct. 21. The- Government is taking steps to prevent the removal to the United StatPS of the famous staircase in the ancient Casa de Miran da at Burgos. The staircase is a beautiful example of renaissance architecture. Jt is an nounced that J. P- Morgan has pur chased it. 50 DROWN IN SHfPWRECK Steamer Wally Goes on Rocks Near Arrosales, Off Para. NEW ORELANS, Oct 21. A cable gram from Rio Janeiro tonight to the Picayune says: The steamship Wally was wrecked near the lighthouse' at Arrosales. off Para, today and is a total lose. Some of the passengers wre rescued, but It is believed- that nearly SO .were drowned. GAINS NICHE L OF Author of 'The Raven Revered in West. EQUAL VOTE GIVEN HOLMES Harriet Beecher Stowe Leads All in Balloting. ELEVEN NAMES ARE ADDED Number of Writers Is Doubled and Now Kxcecds. Statesmen Jlotley Is Chosen, but Parkman . Loses Two Votes. NEW TORK. Oct. 21. Edgar Allen Poe Is at last In the Hall of Fame. Tears of effort on the part of staunch supporters to have his name added to the list were rewarded today by the announcement of Dr. John H. Mc Cracken, chairman of the Senate of New York University, that this honor had been accorded to the author of "The Raven." with 10 others. The 11 names added follow: Harriet Beecher Stowe, 74 votes; Oliver Wendell Holmes and Edgar Allan Poe, 69 votes each; Roger Williams, 64; James Fenlmora Cooper, 62; Phillips Brooks, 60; William Cullen Bryant, 59; Francis E. Willard. 66; Andrew Jackson, and George Ban croft, 53 each, and John Lathrop Mot ley. 61. - Poet Gains 2 7 Votes. The total number of ballots cast was 97, and the number required for choice was 51. Poe's vote jumped from 42 in 1905 to 69, an increase of 27 votes. An analysis of the vote shows that of this 69 votes. 21 were cast by college presidents, 17 by professors of history and scientists, 18 by publicists, editors and authors and 13 by Jurists. Contrary to the general Impression, the memory of the poet Is as famous in the West as In the South, according to the vote. Since the last election hU fame increased more among the col lege presidents than among any of the other groups. As a result of today's election, the author's corner doubles Its population and goes far ahead of the st.-- ien in number. Eleven bronze tablets for the names of those chosen will be designed, with an appropriate quotation from th works of each, and the formal unveiling will tako place In October, 1911. The vote of 74 for Harriet Beecher Stowe Is noteworthy, as the only one who received such a majority in tho election In 1905 was Louis Agassiz, and In the first election the number was surpassed by only 14 names, including Washington, Lincoln, Grant and Emer son. One of the most Interesting re sults Is that whereas the historian Motley gained four votes over the elec tion of five years ago, Parkman, the historian, lost two votes. Phillips Brooks gained 11 votes. Oliver Wen dell Holmes Increased 20 votes, his com petitors. Lowell and Whittier, havins been removed by election. Women's Names Are New. In the vote for women the names chosen are those of women who were not eligible at the last election, not having been dead 10 years at that time. Of those who were voted for In the last election, but still lack the nec essary votes, Charlotte Cushman shows a gain .from 39 to 45 votes; Martha Washington from 32 to 43, and Lucre tia Mott from 33 to 41. Those failing of election by 10 votes or less were Francis Parkman, Char lotte Cushman, Mark Hopl-.lns, 43 each; Patrick Henry, 44; Martha Washlrrton, 43; Daniel Boone, 42; Samuel Adams and Lucretia Mott. 41 each. WEEKLY CLEARINGS LEAD Portland's Bank Showing Is Gain ol 22.9 Per Cent Over 1909. For the week ending October 20, Port land was the only city In the Pacific Northwest whose bank clearings show an Increase over the business for the corresponding week a year ago. The clearings of the Portland banks for the week aggregated $12,424,000. or an in crease of 22.9 per c,ent over the same period in 190-9. Seattle clearings, however, for the week show a decrease of 16 yer cent. Other Pacific Northwest cities show the following percentages of decrease In bank clearings for the week: Ta coma, 8.3; Spokane, 17.7. SOLDIER PREFERS PRISON Rather Than Go to Alaska He Chooses Hard Labor and Gets It. VANCOUVER BARRACKS, Wash ington. Oct. 21. (Special.) When John L Coy, of the Hospital Corps, was or dered to go to Alaskt, for duty, he In formed his commanding officer that he would go to Alcatraz Island first, and take his punishment. He was at Fort Lawton at the time. For the remark and Insubordination he was court-martialed and ordered to be sent to Alcatraz Island, the military prison, for two years at hard labor, and to be discharged without honor from the service of the Army. POE L FAME V I