m&&kfa a t)NIO PRICE FIVE CENTS. 1 -rtnrnPi I 10I"5 OL M. i .hi ; BAR VIEW HOTEL 15 SWEPT INTO SEA Great WavesTake Sum. mer Cottages Also. DAMAGE FIGURE FLACED HIGH Lr$ht Plant. Te'cphone and Telegraph Vircs Crippled. SEASIDE STREETS FLCOOEO t Arr ! em.n Hart lay W-ic .rr-d aud I erf Mmrt Un rtlllN rt an'". n r: v t r ',,t "' J ..!. i-w '-'. - .-.,,.- i " " ... ,.,, . .nr 1 -- . , ,fr -' '" " ..... t ! '. t,.,.i- r.irr ' " t ..., ri-.e fvrf a . tt-p..n. !--. o-.a a rrrj':- t' l-' .--v-m ' a ra : r-. i n. r f'"" " Tr i iin ' ",or"- w,.h. tM. rf vt. itot.t t...,M.x ''"" 0,i, 10 t,4. m.r. l,fr- f-" l"r f.ant!' ..h.t e.t tr, t ' T.. ,,, r -' f-" ,.,f...r. nH "'!"" h 1. 1 r-rf t ki.-f f t'"t t"i'" f. li'!-r- t" of w. f.t ? - f ,hm T..Ph"- '!- ' 0,-, i, m.nt D'f'i ImiiH r .rvt b-. n t)!-m.'U I by th w.t.r ,-1 Co l.,mn I. in T " "" . -. " r ru-" fc''' " " -, , ; . , r.t4 on lrmtn. f". ("" '' l. .fT. " '. Tbi... t n.tt. .ii " ' r- '- J---l .mlt b'iillin. I.-. t,, tut m t J -t '" " H !- !! Uf" " " :., ; li.jf.r. rr tb 'm o"1 b-r, l.n. wt t - lr..-'M t; ' tb .t!r. rf tfcc is n r t; .'"rm .jb--f. tic .ff.it. ef lb. m'orm b'ltt I" r--k !'. f f't t'""f "'". annut 3 b bt); ... ,,.n ro. t n'tr r I kn.'k.-t tb v.- ir ,i.l rni lb Lirrt. upon a,',. it ha I b..n r.,..d P,.p..W, t a b.-1 n ni.Ld Kalteaaatd baw affee, Fv.-m I - at tuna (b b. l l .r tb. b..-t an th .. lb w... a-, a r.-t .eim- .n-nj ! wa.ra lb. I b iiM'oi rn'ir.ly lot Iba o.. it wt r. -J i j I. vp - ! a lal. I Tb b"'-t I. !.! al i'f an' ii t a froparly f tr W. . Wl It . i i-.ira.1 f r f 5 r. fc.it n-t ainl t'-.'r'uti-'n be In a a. ' h no in th w. . rev-bad vrt .if if, an-l r.-bd Ibein and al.( vtiial tviy lb He?"! of lb boutbom ! I'..- f. Company Tbi. a Ti!l b. "1 a;, an', ao a a a o--c4pied by thai V e. I. bf i- Iba d'p.it wa. r. "i-l by tb ,a.. tb e-friea-. ware m...d lo Rr b i.l lii tui-tbri. lb hoe Mw ail I awi.i Moiii. Ti IVr I'' Kaitroad Com. J ro woe. In Tt'lanieKik fun i . . ..'.- .,,.. N.,t wa. tb. den.,, de.-o,.d. b.l . .1 .,,.., den. l l'ia ri.af-d T f.i'roal i-nrri.nr Til n f m. n m-. 1 lbr Irain. ba'al X a.,.- f 'r a -.;! off Iba mad laj Iba wa.au wis ao -'- -- -" - (,, It. It.rn.4t cf tha X rtii"tf T- ft. t: I- H r-4 anal w.:t un l . ir y be bally -an,. i rhe a..!- ?-ic ae h rh aluflna a rb. roi-tiora of I da. tb.t tb-y re.rb.d a f .i a. lb-, t fe .a.nr .tatln. f.t .b'-rd f-ona tb. MS la railroad 1 ! .. la'Wtver. t- a. am a al bo . i a a; '! arain.t II. at ( ion w bat I w-t't. ll . . . I oar lrr. I ! Ir orlh. I'ACtf, I Tb W. fo-.e .wa't ..-'. by f-ra iM iofr .ox t- in..;, paiaija lo t h al - ORPHAN BABY IS ORDERED DEPORTED ! twrTi Mr i-.umitti:d iiy IMMIGRATION Ol 1 KIAI. Mr-.. I Very Proa-tor Offer lo I'rw , lO- lr Tiny IVlU ltrlrtl I nlr j to cTa. M;tt. l;K. N. 11 A ll-month.-. Ke'ii.a crl baby. e.nne. wh cam. h.r bv I"' war ' lll.. waa ltr ordrr.d deported bv innKftlioa effi.- al.. Tb deporta tion ord-r w. pi. 4. not l(?illn . eff-f by '" y"y I'ro'. !" -r'T lfoo.. Nortinevot, KUrlUM. to a iopl Id. bb. Jxtiit. arrived on lb- M. Paul IMtffltl. In c-4;l.jdv f woman r n--1 her mt!tr. .1 ,ftK, t t.r.i l.iand. " Proctor el- Ib.i ha- ko'jH ad"Pl caUd ) tr i" htt ot pctui fI ot4 rtiJ. to W.thlnston DUPED BRIDE ASKS DIVORCE Munlln;ltn nniaa IJ Knon lln.hnd Coirtlrt. hvk; t.. or. .n :i i) iti ' ir.rri.4 Wl !" T. fatlon tl frfl'inbrr h frol4 pruca.r f r" m in- hol.ui rHeHr. .IIWI kng.l.'dCf. M'. rllPn. ot llur.ttniion. loUay MJ uil tor Sl otr n-l f-r r'.loraUoo of hr thai ttrr. i1a ftr thlr mar lit ir fvrs'd rfc.tk -4 1'irri'il Is i-ln. M rlt- rcpr..nt4 hlmlf t k m t,hJ""10 ''" "' DINNER FOR 47 PROVIDED lor I'uur Women. on. hundred chol.e ) kraUblla. to..... of bread and a Ur.'e a.aorlmenl ef t.s.tabl'a ffom lha public market are lo bo today at lha City Hall lo lh I ' otnc n ho. namea ara oa ln ril fre employmatil bureau lll of day worker. Tb. rabbtla wera aeet by Andrew M. Aliai.r. of Laldlaw. or. tha treltfhl b.ln; paid by M. Hucna. of I'ortland Tb. bread ba. be... don.i.a ay .w Torb Maker,, and tha prc. U lo ba furnleh.d by tha larmera i ftibex anarket. !50 TO WORK FOR CHURCH lri cf SI. Jam-.' t.ullwran Coiisre Salenn lo b- 1 rry lrnih-r. fitly men of M. Jame- Uulharan r, to b ronimtMi'infil on Pan- d.T morant for an eer-mmber ean- ia 01 ji jna.y aft'rno"f. T. m.n wl.l s- in team, of two and wiil mil. an effort lo call upon a'.ry on. ef tbe li membera. Tha pur p.,.. of lha Vi.it I. lo -irlbula the .n.!or tr t" eonun year and ;et lb. pl.d.ea fcr Ike annual budcel. .M aibt lb. women at tha eliurtn will ,,,la a l'4- hel fr ir workara. MATE FOR NERO PROPOSED Park l.low lo lwi IW-ine Mwal lole riJ). .N.ro, I Va..binto Tarh Zow lion. m-.'.l pa bir abol In a motion p,. lit. pla a ormatty piaiui.d. but in.t.ad will .-I a mate, if r.tomm.n aat..r of I'ark .tuperintend.al Con .1.1 are ad-pt.d Aa eft.r of a llooeaa ... b.a rra4a by lha b;K oo la La Arf.l.t. Ib prwa b.in Mr foa.ill ratarnad ye.terdar from lx. An.l. wha-ra ba went on Rta a " I b-r- e lead, animal. i MASONS HELP PRISONERS IWUIan Order Srod all.wOO tor Allle Urltl by lirriM"'- i i,riv Nov :: A di.pateh from! . Tfca Itnua 4 Iba t:vHiitl Telrph Company y of rtel om hv I 1 plae.-i . franc I $. Bl lb j .i..ro.l of lb mancr of lb fund; , a... i( of ailicd iririr of war lo I rm, n Tki. Bionev I to ba niplod witn- cul regard to Iba nationality or !!' 'fALLIES WIN AFRICAN CITY , t-rnian I one-. Arc Beatrn by r. priar Attack. l-xr.tS. wv :Xom. ial arvraounc .:" n.- loda Of Ih. Tlb.ll. If. lb. German colbny of K a ma run- Wa.l.rn A:rl. a th ra.uli af a urrri ltk. Tha aortharn ara of Kamerun ha b..a cleared of Ih German with lhJ ( . . , !"""" of Mor GRANT IS SENDING TURKEYS Tluik.Sl, !S MrvU ' I l 1 .arcc-l I raru ownlj. llK l'.. Or . Nov tbpeelal I Tbe lrct shipment of lurker from! ;ranl I'eonty wa nl by T. F. Hall. tat Mount mmn. when b tartd S.al t Tbankivm bird . mil lo fori- i I lan 1. j Tu-k ar '.!int al cent a .und al Taker boi. and del ler. aayj ' lb d.nisnd t ae t''' tbl price will! FORM OF PRESSURE ON GREECE CHANGED Allies to Cut Off Sup plies of Necessities. BLOCKADE IS NOT DECLARED Kitchener's Threat Believed to Have Been Effective. SER.BIAN INVASION SLOW rian Jll lo IW- for (rfrnum lo Lit ter Moni.Hr I'lrol. lo Atold l.m-k ljrrllon lo rrot Imllf of llntsarlan. t.'M.fN'. Nov. : Z InlH cf d rUrtiif a grnrtml bleckada of the lircrk port. th Hc-. a'-ordtn to a rlt m.nt I..M.4 of tne Ilrltlsh Kor.Un 'f fla tday. b withdrawn, or thrnt-nc-l lo withdraw. th pecll prlvl t.:r whtrh lirnk fummcrtt h rn jor'H ir. Iho outhrk or th war. What thone p-ll prt !! are l pot vrlflrl!y dctailrd. but. an raampl". lirrrcn hm hrrn allowed to draw h.r iipplin of coal from Wcl.h rolltrri.a. To do thia. I'.rrrk mrrrhantji rrtlr4 spclal pcrmita. a the export of coal from tb Hrltl..h l.tr U al lowed only undrr a peclal licence, rrt.lleaea to He llaeoallaaei. There are Diany other commoditl'K. the eport of wtiHh l permitted only to certain countries. Invariably when ordrra havo been la.ued acaint the ex port of lurh rommodltle Creece haa been among the i-ounlrlea excepted. rtw. uni... h conrede the demand mad by the ai:ie for aaeurancea for the aafety of Ihelr troopa In th Bal kan. Greece w HI b btruck off the lljt of rountrlea which have the prlvl-ea- Whll' tM le.a visoroua attitucje on Soernmenta ha. Pr, of , ru.r.l aoma dia.atiia"tlun In joine quarter where biropr Iii.ure art ailrocate. It baa aae. the actuation 1 ana nr o.nri - - I . - . . n,n...K-(t hv lird Klft-h n I T 1 II K vvn -- - ' rner'a lic and lha threat to her com merce. w'U concede lha demand, reataal Adtaara Melajed. .f Ihe fishtingj In tiie lUlkana. the report for tha Auiro-Ue rman and Hulserian lrop recount lha cap ture ol thouajnda of prlaonera and niny sun from the herblan. From lha loan, mentioned. hOweer. thrlr advance appeara low. It may be. a reported from Italian aouree lhat the rampalsn la wa:tln on a chanse In the d.po.itln of Ihj armlea. ao that tli ;rmn. may be Ihe flrt lo enter Mon a.tir. T!'l would kvold Ihe trouble likely to .-rle throi-eh Greek objection lo Hu!arian tccupafon of lha city abi-h la o nr the border. I.pat:he from Allien, however, ay that lb delay la iw lo l.-.e fact trial the Serbian have defeated Ihe H i;nai w bo were advancing on tie nlunil I 1 I ' I . Pi . .' M I : ready , . yrmymA ,,x : : mmmmmw kvc :, : tiZHW n bouva!; . -ty- I'rif ff ss '& '' "' " 'i l l J : i 2 . , T - : i INDEX OF TODAYS NEWS Tb Weather. TIT.-TnttUAT'S Miimum t.mprtur. e .1 . - minimum 1 - d.rC. TOITS-iulrol ri". outhweterIy a inur. ttar. Alll. to rut off !ort to Grei lntei of d..-lar:r.g blorhad. I'a 1. , . . ..i., an P.rala. I' 3- .irman. b'.l'n In r.l. ul John Red mond. I'aS allnal. Abandnnmrrt of co.t d"t-n tp. of nnaM .,..,.. r. n.irii-rrd by Ny. 1 " Jlary land-eant bi:l to be offered In Con- rea. Ia a. ri.na- io b'jroie of ITrridenf m't- be-r.t.ry ..i.f- t-i.ai-prove rquHll Itcar. Admiral I.IIIK-. H..h .p Moore, formerly of rorl.ann. :.i.lfn.i. Paare eroh.n bbv or icred deponed. re I. ra f or uppi' In ri'rman rliiera it tiertniu aMai-h.. ! 1. MUX finer..-- .ial ilewrld In New lln trial. laic i or-C"n mikii fire .hoain il cp poullr) ehoa. re a. Me1. Atr. Mntml by Oregon eme- I at I Portland ool? Club rVcl officer. r Colo-ado r'tra ha no bo. ol !.. AMiion. !' l. faririe aetbet. r,, ,.n re dr:ue'l by e. Tse -t.i" -n d--.n I "t krr .-ory ol n.a dtli a.'.d burial." Vmsn . Net ti.hien. on le In indu.uial ln.urnce liMitme r. I'S I- ...-.... fci:!i hv train. Pe 1. court t loi I. ehrated by reeon- i lali.m of roupl'. I r ( aw-merelal aod Marlae. r.wr one tMrd of North-. r.t.rn beat cror out ef fl'.l ban.l. I Cblra;o ahral .irnier on orniai oi tirrek b'o.ka-le. -ao 19. tl..trrel .tok .n.--ultln dull, wl'h few Impor-.aiu prl rnanc. Wlna die. d-n ai"PS coa.t. r0 ri-rtland aad trinity. Kobberr .;.i.W 'n.llr.lrd molUe of trunk rnnr.Kr. I'tf I. Donvllle eon Id. e". bek en eonfel"n In poatnfflrr .talion roboary rmtr. I S llui to open headquarter. rse 7. Mr. lMo.k direei. prunlns asamst "In fnfortun.l. are 10 har In Th.nk.glvtn. l-af II. Weather report, d.t and fnreea.t. r 1. ;i-i a if. No. .pin no r.itn In bU- rnlf huabanu'. lory. I'ae . t our Werren ...ter. at Orphrum are f.'und unrpoll'd bv iriuipb. rc 0. "Annli. f.nlen-" srljw l'cllls audl- eii-e. I" IV $1,042,743 IN POSTAL BANK Portland Ix-nds Xoilhr-bl ml I SUth In rniicd Stales. OI5KISOMAX XKAS BimKAL". Wah Inston. Nov. IJ. Only fix cities In the I'nlted Mate have greater dcponlta In poxtal avlns banks than I'ortland. and I'ortlund depoflts arc more than dou ble tlioie of any other city In the North wert. The statement, i.iu?d today by the roalnueler-General (tlves I'ort Und depott a 11.012.713. only IO0. 000 leu t!an that of Fun Francisco. Other Northwealern pobtal bank havtns more than $100,000 In deposit! are: Seattle. IIIO.JtTS: Tacoma. $ll. :o;: A.itorl. IIJI.'I; Bclllnsham. 1 1 . 1 3 ; ; Aberdeen. $113.5:9: Hpokanc. li:.UI. Itorlyn. Wash.. $107,961. PRINCE WALDEMAR IS ILL Condition of Kalwor'n ll SerlOO". Nriihcve KIEL Germany. Nov. S3. Prlnra Waldemar. of Tru!. eldest son ofaIva lru" Prince llenry and a nephew of Em- peror William, baa been nroiiKhl to Kiel from the front. rrlou.ly HI. I'rlnee Wsldemar. a the head of a volunteer automoblie corps, haa hen at tbe front continuoualy since the war becan. IS THIS WHAT 1T3 COMING TO? HONEY TRACED TO GERM ATTACHE Large Sums Placed to Credit of Boy-Ed- CASH SFTo $S FRANCISCO I Quick Dispatch of Supplies toj Vessels Related. FALSE MANIFEST MADE Government Dei-lines Concessions Offeretl ly Men Acctibcd of Con spiracy and Seeks lo Prove Ca? by Testimony. XKW VOUK, Nov. :3. In the aliened conspiracy of several Hamburg-American steamship line official: to deceive and defraud tha I'nlted States by send In; neutral relief ships with coal and other supplies to German mera-of-war in the Atlantic and Tacidc Oceans at the beslnninir of the European war. Captain K. Boy-Ed. German naval at tache with headquarters at the Ger man embassy in Washington, played a leading- role, according to witnesses who testified In the Federal Court here today. One of these witnesses swore that Captain Boy-Ed personally directed the expenditure of approximately $750,000, which, unsolicited and unexpected, had betr. deposited to the witness' credit In a New York banking-house early In September. 1911. i'ljnrila of Money Traced. Of this money, the witness testified, $300,000 was telegraphed to the Ne vada National Bank at San Francisco In one lump sum: $213,000 was paid, in bcvcral amounts, to the North Ger man Lloyd steamship line here; aboul $71,000 to the Hamburg-American line here, and by cable money order In Hamburg, and some of the remainder was still on hand. All of these dis bursements, the w Itnesa asserted, were mi.do by order of Captain Boy-Ed. This witness. Gustave B. Kulcn kampff. a German Importer and ex porter with offices here, and others testified In the trial of Dr. Karl Ruenz, Adolph Hachmeistcr. George Kotter and Joseph roppinghaus. all officials of the Hamburg-American line, who are charged with conspiracy. Treaties Declared Ignored. The testimony, which opened the Government's case, followed a short address to the jury by Iioger B. Wood. Assistant United States District At torney, in which Mr. Wood said that the Government would show that "the defendants rode roughshod over the laws and treaties of the United States " "'"-'' " " I ""r., " "7 oaner William Kand. counsel for the de fendants, offered to concede certain charges of the Government involving li steamers, and In his concession ad mitted Tr. Prnz and hia assitants had 1 1 oprlil'Ied on P. s, I'oilimn 1.) GIRL PROBER OF MARITAL WOE WON POUT LAND ATTORNEY ACCEPT ED BY SOCIAL WORKER. George. B. Gtttliric to Take Chicago Young Woman Known at Col lege as His Bride. CHICAGO. Nov. 23. (Special.) Al though she has heard tbe testimony and personally investigated the sordid cir cumstances in thousands of cases of divorce and wrecked marital craft. Miss Carolyn Grimsby, social secretary of the Court of Domestic Relations in Chi cago, has decided to take a chance on the niatrimoniul sea and will set out with Gcorgo B. Guthrie, an -attorney of I'ortland, Or., as her mate. Both are graduates of Iowa State College. Mr. Guthrie belonging to the class of '0, while Miss Grimsby was a member of the '05 class. Following his graduation in Iowa. Mr. Guthrie went to Harvard and took a special course in the law school, afterwards locating in Portland. Meanwhile Miss Grimsby had taken up sociological work in Chicago. In the course of her official duties she has aeon enough marital misery to make a cynic of almost anyone. Mr. Guthrie is now in the city and Miss Grimsby has sent In her resigna tion. Just where they wiil be married is being kept a secret, but the weddins is set for Thanksgiving eve. WIFE OF BOISE MAN SHOT Mystery Surrounds Wounding of Mrs. Ellen Demnscy. a BOIViE. Idaho. Nov. 23. (Special.) Mystery surrounds the shooting here today of Mrs. Ellen Dempsey, wife of the stenographer in the Prosecuting Attorney's office. She is in a local hospital in a serious condition from a bullet wound in her chest. No one else was at her home at the time of the shooting except her 9-year-old son, who was in the yard. He heard his mother cry and, rushing into the house, found her wounded Neighbors'wcre notified and she was rushed to the hospital. The wound was made by a .-2-ealiber bullet, which passed through the body. LOGGER'S BODY IS FOUND C. II. SI111U. of Aberdeen, Drowns In Own Bam, in Wislikah River. ABERDEEN, Wash.. Nov. (Spe cial.) The body of C. H. Shutt. one of flic best-known loggers of this section, who has been missing since last Thurs day morning was found iu the Wish kah River by Councilman James Einpey this morning. Mr. Shutt met his death in from II to lt feet of water at a point about half a mile above the middle of tile dam of his company's logging works. The funeral will be held Friday. Mr. Sliutt was II years old, a Mason and Elk. He leaves a widow, four children and a mother. WALLA WALLANS PAY VISIT Com Products Dinner Is Boosted at Milton and l'reewater. WALtaA WALLA, Nov. 23. (Spe cial.) Walla Walla business men in automobiles visited Milton and Free water, Or., merchants today to get ac quainted and bool the Corn Products dinner tomorrow night. Speeches weic made by President Paul 11. Wrauch and ex-Mayor A. J. Gillis. The merchants planned to go to Day ton. Waitsburg and Dixie tomorrow, but the trip will Dc abandoned on ac count of bad weather. 5000 PEACE PLEAS SENT Women's Clubs t'rgcd to Telegraph W ilson to Start Move. NEW yOIlK, Nov. 23. Five thousand telegrams addressed to women's clubs and organizations of all kinds were sent out by the women's peace party tonight. The telegrams, which are to be fol lowed by others until $10,000 has been expended for the purpose, call on women to telegraph President Wilson, urging him to call a conference of neu tral nations to settle the European war. The message bore the signature of Jane Addam's. "WETTEST CITY" NOW DRY Prohibition Rules Wliere Once Each -13 Persons Had Saloon. EAST GRAND FORKS, Minn., Nov. 23. Scenes cf revelry marked the pas sage tonight of the 33 saloons of East Grand Forks, known for years as the "wettest" city in Minnesota.. The liquor establishments were voted out in a recent county option election after being in existence since the city's foundation, in 1889. when North Dakota went "dry." At one time there was one saloon to every 43 Inhabitants. FIRE DEVICES PROPOSED Mr. Dicck's Ordinance Would Re quire Sprinklers in Buildings. All non-tirenroof buildings of two or more stories, except residences, with in Portland's inner fire limits will have to install automatic sprinkling sys tems in basements, if Mr. Dicck's ordi nance to be presented to the City Coun cil this morning is passed. r.I.iint nniLlii-cnrrinf buildings tWO or more stories in lieisht will have three years in vriiicn 10 uiaiau ".- prliiKl"rs ROBBERY DECLARED MOTIVE OF GRIME Empty' Money Belt of Trunk Victim Found. MISLEADING CLEWS OFFERED Police Do Not Think Dead Man Harry Rogers. YOUNG LOGGER IS SOUGHT Slayer Not Thought to Be George Bartholomew, but Apprehension. Is Deemed More Important Than Identifying Either. Discovery of strong circumstantial, proof that the motive for the erimre was robbery, minimizing of the possi bility that the murdered man was Har ry Rogers, and discrrf' 'ting of many rumored appearances . - murderer in the city since Friday niu. were lo cal developments yesterday in the-Stark-street trunk-murder mystery. A money belt, dyed with spotches of blood, and with ends raveled, show ing that it probably had been torn from the body of the murdered man. was found yesterday among tiie ef fects of the dead man at tht morgue, where it had been overlooked in pre vious investigations. It was dump and of cloth and had boon mistaken for a strip of underclothing in the first ex amination ot the articles discovered in the trunk. Money nelt F.mply. Though the belicT entertained from the outset by the authorities has been that the victim was killed in cold blood with robbery as the motive, this theory is strongly substantiated by the find ing of the red-stained belt, the flaps ot which flopped over empty pockets. Any. doubt that the belt was worn by tlie man whose body was found in tlie trunk is dispelled by its torn ap pearance and tlie stains-it bears. Still the question of who the. dead man was baffles the police. Sufficient for this purpose that he was John Linnd. not the John I.innd of Boston, but the John Linnd who inquired after property values in both Salem and Al bany. His name does not bother the police, for they are particularly inter ested now in the pursuit of the mur derer, and the identity of the dead man can wait. Tumult of Murderer l nueceful. In the pursuit of George Bartholo mew, alias Ed Hopkins, little headway was made locally yesterday.- As yet the means of egress taken from the city by the murderer has not been dis covered, and the. police no longer be lieve that be is in hiding within the limits of Portland. Though no satisfactory clew to Bar tholomew's whereabouts was found, this does not mean there were no clews. There were many if thcin for example, it was reported to Dctcctiva Captain Baty that one man was cer tain he had seen the green trunk bobbing Jauntily down the Willametto and passing under the Burnsido bridgn on Friday afternoon. "Clews" Are Misleading. As it is positively known that the trunk was thrown into the river be tween the hours of 4 and 5 o'clock Friday afternoon, later than it wa.-f supposedly seen floating, thus does away with that "clew." Further, the tracks of the wagon in which the trunk was taken from Stark street were found cm the Flanders-street wharf, and a floating object thrown in at. that spot could not have, floated out upon the bosom of the river, accord ing to the harbor patrol, because of the back eddies, to say . nothing ot floating upstream. Another clew which Captain Baty sarcastically remarked "does away with all doubt as to when and how the murderer left the city" was brought to police headquarters yesterday moni ing by a volunteer detective. He told his story to Detectives John Moloney and Tichenor and later repeated it for the benefit of Captain Baty. Volunteer Detective Heard. lie was standing in front of the Al der Hotel Monday afternoon, it ap peared, when he saw a strange sight. It was a man on horseback. . There was no saddle on the horse, and across the rider's knee were flung two knotted gunny-sacks. The rider was a big man with a brown mustache. The observer noticed that he had his right shoe on his left foot, and vice versa. "Well?" queried Captain Baty when the narrator reached this point in the story and stopped. That was him." This was stated with conviction. "But the murderer had no mustache," objected the detective captain. "Oh. that was just a part of his dis guise," replied the narrator, airily. Other 'clews," almost as wild, were met by tlie police and dissipated. Not a shred of real conclusive evidence that Bartholomew did not take an automo bile or train out of Portland Friday night was found. "Vhe picture of the dead man has been identiiied by W. J. Scharen. of Eugene, as Harry Rogers, who worked for him for two years but who has been missiii ror several weeks, but the body has not been seen by Scharen. though it an swers the description of Rogers closely. rrt... .fiii-liimnn of Scharen th.it. tilt iC'uiicliiCeii us X'ago 3. Culutna i.j 1 4 mi I .4 a . j U oiaiBtaiota uni i iani. SI i