16 TJIE MORNING OREGOMAX, FRIDAY, JULY 2o. 1010. UTIGMITS IN SUIT Earl Nicholson Criticises Sister and Starts Melee. WOMAN'S HUSBAND BIFFS relatives and friends of the sufferers. A mass meeting- was held in the Swiss hall I and a committee of seven was selected to take immediate steps for possible relief activities here and over the northwest. The executive committee named con sists of Paul Weissinger, John Mon-tag-, Hy Eilers, Rev. K. O. Salzman, Ernst Kroner, John Reisacher and A. E. Kern. This committee, the members of which are nearly all said to have near relatives in the stricken countries, met Wednesday night at the chamber of commerce rooms and named committees and subcommittees to take up the re lief work in every district in Oregon and Washing-ton. A. women's executive committer, also embracing seven mem bers, is being- termed for the same territory. The organization is to be known as the committee for relief of German-Austrian women and children. WIFE REFUTES GHARGES MRS. MAXMOX DEXIES ILL TEXTlbXS IX FLIGHT. IX- Ollier Parties to Case Jump Into Jray and Attorneys Concerned Also Take Hand. When remarks by Earl Xicholson derogatory to his sister, Mrs. Grace Nicholson Holman, were resented by ' her husband, Lawrence H. Holman, as j they left the courtroom of Circuit I Judge Tazwell yesterday morning, a fistic encounter ensued which did not end until after Mrs. Margaret Root j and Rodney Nicholson, other litigants, j and Attorneys Dan J. Malark'ey and E. i B. Seabrook had joined the melee, ac- i cording to witnesses of the affair. Mrs. Root said she was only a spectator. There were no casualties but friend ly relations of the brothers and sisters involved in the litigation over a $30,000 inheritance were severely strained. Earl Nicholson, according to those sitting near him, flung remarks at his sister across an aisle in the courtroom during a preliminary hearing and after their case was postponed Mr. Malarkey followed him into the corridor to tell him that ungentlemanly conduct would not be tolerated in the courtroom an other time. Mr. Holman closely fol lowed Mr. Malarkey and remarked that he had stood for insults to his wife as long as he intended. " As blows were struck, Mr. Malarkey attempted to separate the contestants and was set upon by both Nicholson brothers, he states. The otners entered the fray in short order, either with the purpose of separating combatants, or because they were imbued with the spirit of the affair. Order was restored before there whs bloodshed and the news paper derision made it a draw. The case will be heard next Wednes day hy Judge Tazwell, who threatens libera! fines for contempt if there is any disturbance in the courtroom. -Nicholson Estate Involved. The matter at issue involves the es tate of the late William T. B. Nichol son, an Oregon pioneer who died last year, leaving five ch ildren. Mrs. Mar garet Root and Mrs. Minnie I.. Kill being the eldest daughters, Rodney and Earl Nicholson, tha sons, and Mrs. (Irace Holman, the youngest child. The deceased was owner of a large tract known as the Nicholson addition, val ued around $75,000, which he proposed in a will drawn in 1S94 to divide equal ly among his children. A few years later he sold the portion devised to his son. Earl, disinheriting him except for a small parcel of land left for division among all five children. In 1904, Mr. Nicholson became in sane, and J. V. Beach was appointed admin 1st rator of his estate. In 1914, - when Mr. Beach was on the local school board, it was considered ad visible to sell a portion of the Nichol son property, two blocks, for school purposes. It was disposed of for $50,000. As a portion of the property sold came from the section bequeathed in the 1S94 will to Mrs. Root, Mrs. Hill and Rodney Nicholson, they agreed t hat t hey should receive a portion of the residue not bequeathed in lieu of the property sold. At the same time Karl Nicholson, who had been disinherited of his portion of the land sold, de manded a settlement in lieu of the part he had no claim to, and received it. Mrs. Holman asked no land, as it was not believed any of her property had been sold. Readjustment 1 Refaned. At the death of the father in 191S, it was discovered that a mistake had been made in the 1914 records and that the entire tract bequeathed the young est daughter had been sold to the school district. She proposed a division agreement with her b, rot hers and sis lers so that she could receive a just share of her father's estate but, with the exception of Mrs. Hill and Rodney Nicholson, they flatly refused. When Mrs. Holman, whose husband is secretary-treasurer of the Amcri can Transportation company, went t Attorneys Malarkey, Seabrook & Dibble to see if anything could be done, they advised her not to worry as she had a legal right to the $30,000 residue of the $50,000 paid for the school land as her share of the estate. When the other heirs heard of this, they immediately proposed a division of land, which Mrs. Holman rejected, preferring the money, The present suit seeks to force Mrs. Holman to accept a division of prop erty. CLARKE SENATOR SHUT OUT MEMBERSHIP OX INDUSTRIAL BODY HELD ILLEGAL. u pre me Court Decides Legislators "Who Helped Pass Code Act Are Barred. OLYMPIA, Wash., July 24. (Spe- ial.) State Senator E. L. French of Clarke and Representative Fred Nor man of Pacific are excluded from mem- ership on the industrial code commis- mission, created by the 1919 legislature. by a decision of the supreme court to day. As legislators who participated passing the code commission act hey are constitutionally barred from accepting the $10 a day compensation rovided for time actually given to commission work, or from the personal expense allowance. Although membership of a state sen ator and a representative on the com mission is statutorily mandatory the upreme court holds that the governor can appoint two eligible substitutes without invalidating the act for the prescribed purpose of investigating in- ustnal evils and recommending; a cur ative code to the 1921 session. Representative Norman was appoint ed by Governor Louis F. Hart as labor member of the commission of five, with Senator French representing general interests. It is said the latter may continue on the commission at his own expense. MITRATE PLANT PLANNED DEVELOPMENT WORK WTLIi BE DOXE IX HARNEY. JUDGES GALL ON PIONEER JAMES McCAIX, McMIXXVILLE ATTORNEY", VISITED. Well-Known Oregon Citizen III With Little Hope Entertained by . Physicians. SALEM. Or., July 24. (Special.) Five members, or the Oregon supreme court, including Justices Charles A. Johns. Thomas A. McBride, George H Bi?rnett, Henry I. Benson and Henry J. Bean went to McMinnville last tiinht, where they passed an hour chatting with James Mclaln, pioneer Oregon at torney. who has been in ill health for the past throe months. Mr. McCain said to be in a serious condition, and his physicians have little hope for his recovery. Although 77 years of age. Mr. McCain has a keen mind and recalled many cidents connected with his early life Oreuon and the Pacific northwest. Mr. McCain has a wide acquaintance shin throughout the btate, and for many years was recognized as one of the leading attornejs on the Pacific coast. Until throe months ago he was activ in his profession and was prominen In handling some of the most importan litigation included in the records of the state supreme court. He was at one time district attorney of the third judicial district and held other posi tions of public trust. Sheep Monntain and Stinking Lake Deposits May Interest Capital of Eastern States. BEND. Or., July 24. (Special.) De velopment work on the nitrate deposits on bheep mountain and in bunking ake, both in Harney county, will be tarted this fall by the Oregon Nitrate company and to interest eastern capital the new industry J. H. Morton of this city, president El the company. 1 leave early in August. Expense will be chiefly at Sheep mountain, 100 iles from Bend, as no plant whatever will be required in operating at the ake, 40 miles farther out. Prospect holes sunk at intervals over he 4800-acre property have shown that the entire mountain is an almost solid mass of nitrate rock, assaying high for sodium compounds and from to 23 per cent for potassium salts. That a fertilizer industry may be built up also at the lake i3 the belief of officers of the company and with this in view samples of the stratum mmediately underlying the deposit of mineral salts have been sent to the Oregon Agricultural college for analy sis. Husband, Who Went in Trans-Pacific Pursuit, Alleged Unfit to Care for Children. Echoes of the trans-Pacific pursuit of Mrs. Enriqueta T. V. Mannion and ner two younger sons by former Cap tain James W. B. Mannion. who was foiled at the Hawaiian Islands while his wife continued her Journey to Manila. P. I., unmolested, were awak ened in the circuit court yesterday when Mrs. Mannions attorney filed an affidavit, bearing the imposing gold seal of the government of the Philip pine Islands, and refuting accusations made by her husband in affidavits filed in the local court last April. Mrs. Mannion denies she attempted to flee from the jurisdiction of the local court, saying that she applied for passports in the regular way from the United States district clerk at Portland, and did not leave surrepti tiously or clandestinely. She packed her belongings in casea which had been furnished by her husband when she had contemplated, a few months before, going out of the jurisdiction of the court to reside in California, and believed all the while that her actions were absolutely legal and that it was unnecessary to inform the court that she was leaving with the children who had been granted her by decree of di vorce, she asserted. The Mannions were married at Ma nila. Mrs. Mannion comes from a wealthy Spanish family. She haa gone back to her mother where she has a comfortable home assured for the rest of her life, leaving, she asserts in her affidavit, because of her belief that her husband, who had failed to pay her alimony for several months, intended to alienate the affections of her two younger sons, as well as the eldest who is still with him. and desert her. The wife asserts she will apply to the Manila court for a guardianship of her children, who will become wards of the court and may be taken from her if she proves unfit to care for them. The S5000 she took with her from Portland was all that was left of her private fortune, the remainder of which had been misappropriated hy her husband, sho says. She offers to prove to the court that her husband is unfit to care for their children. OIL INDICATIONS ARE GOOD Geologists Convinced of Existence in Olympic Peninsula. ABERDEEN", Wash., July 24. (Spe cial.) Oil indications in the Grays Harbor-Jefferson county district are good, according to Stirling B. Hill, geologist, of Seattle, who made a study of formations here for the past nine vears. "In common with other geologists I am convinced that oil exists in the Olympic peninsula." said Mr. Hill. "The only ouest'on is whether it will be in commercial quantities. This is a thing which can be told only by drilling down Into the oil sands. I know of no field where preliminary indications were better." . The district contains many anticlines. which Mr. Hill says were caused by the earth being wrinkled up like cloth during the cooling process of ages ago. The oil. seeking a high level because it is lighter than water, nat urally finds reservoirs in these anti clines. HOOD TO GREET TOURISTS Xcw York Party to Sec Orchards and Columbia Highway. HOOD RIVER, Or., July 24. (Spe cial.) Hood River is already shining up for the entertainment of the Brook- yn Ka fries party of 125 New York and Brooklyn folk, who will arrive here Thursday, August 7. The visitors, on tour of the national parks and the Rockies and west coast, will be break fasted at a local hotel and then carried on an excursion of several hours through the orchards. The party will go from here by train to Bonnevilie. where they will take au tomobiles over the Columbia river high way to .Portland. Eugene Elks Organize Band. KUGEXE, Or.. July 24. (Special.) The Kugcne lodge of Klkn is organiz ing a brass band with Professor Albert Perfect, of the university, as director, The personnel and the instrumentation follows: Cornets. Charles Cochran Maurice Hyde. Loyd Pickard, Al Lund- strum. George Houghton, L. Baker and Albert Perfect; clarinets, Harry Woo ley, Milo Roach, Archie Zimmer. Nor man Byrne, C. W. Tage and Wayne Headly; horns, Dan Marsters and Charles Allen : flute, Frank Badollet ; bassoon. Mr. Probtsfield; oboe, Mr. Bar rett: trombone. Mr. - Hayes. Harry Hobbs, Raymond Marlatte, Alf Billard and R. C. Hall; baritone. Russell Cjuis- sen berry. ITALIAN ENVOY RETURNS Commandatore Garbasso, Minister to China, on Way Home. VANCOUVER, B. C, July 24. A dis tinguished Italian statesman in the person of Commandatore Garbasso, minister to the court of Pekin, will reach Vancouver on the Empress of Russia July. 28. according to advices received by Italian Consul Masi from the charge d'affairs at Pckin and from the consul-general at Montreal. Commandatore tiarbasso haa been called to Rome to assume the duties of chief of the foreign office staff under Foreign Minister Tittoni. Family Travels With Oxen. WHITE SALMON. Wash., July 24. (Special.) While Tunis Wyera Jr. and brother were en route for Prinevilfe this week they overtook a team of white-faced oxen, hitched to a prairie schooner, with family and household goods aboard, bound for Spokane. The oxen had on breeching harness, open bridles with bits in their mouths, col lars upside down and cruppers under their tails. Entertainment Planned for Brran ABERDEEN. Wash.. July 24. (Spe cial.) William Jennings Bryan will be entertained by Aberdeen democrats at a banquet Tuesday next in connection with the Grays Harbor Chautauqua. He also will be taken on a trip to the camps of the Poison Logging com pany if he desires to go. New York Price of Eggs 1911 to 1918 1911-Unr. ISe: kith. 44c irl-U. IV: b tt, Se 1.1V-Low. 18c: high. 45o 1814 Lew. lfte; huk, 44. IltIS- Lot. Ik: lSK-Lsw. Z2c: 1.17. -Low. Sic: lflt-Ln. Mc: . 45e : hixti. 52e kit. Mc h4 74. Lutherans Will Build t'hnrrh. ABERDEKN, Wash., July 24 Spe rial.) At a called meeting of the Swedish Iutheran church here Tuesday evening it was de-ided to begin at onre the construction oi a new church on lot which the church owns at the corner of Ural and I streets in the triangle between the First Presbyte rian and First Methodist churches. The men of the church volunteered to turn out to work on the excavation for the foundation, which will be of concrete ;n::;,.i. !! Don't Use a Coffee Pot! liilllM There may be other reasons for eating a thing, but the First Reason is that it is Good. That's the Outstanding Argument for G. Washington's Coffee. It Tastes Better than nine- tenths of the coffee you find, because it is absolutely pure coffee. Makes delicious iced coffee. Ready for instant use when you pour on the water- hot or cold. --. MADE IN THE CUP AT THETABLE CATTLEMEN IN RANGE WAR KLICKITAT COCXTT, WASH., EX CITED OVER OUTBREAK. waa fired being hit. at from ambush, his car Arrests Reported Made AJtcr RItbI Outrits Engage in. Sham Battle Over Troubles. WHITK SALMON. Wash.. July 21. (Special.) Following trouble between rival cattle outfits in the White Salmon region a number of arrests are said to have been made by deputy eheriffs, who are reported to have taken the prisoners to Golendalc. Kxcltement prevails in Klickitat county as the situation grows more aoute. It is reported the trouble started when Kdward Perry, a former range rider for John Wyers of White Salmon, joined hands with Bob Barker in the cattle busings. Perry and Wyers own a small ranch above l.yl' and have leased homestead land, giving them a local operating headquarters. It Is stated that they took in some 300 head of cattle from The Dalles and about 100 head from other souroes: these were put on the range- above Iyle. eating out the range of the native out fits it is said. Incensed at what they considered an infringement of their fights, a vigil ance committee was formed. Members of this committee, heavily masked, are said to have called on Perry and Wyers and warned them to leave the country, giving them a certain time to do so. Considerable wild shooting is reported to have takcji place further to intimi date them. A week ago Sunday night the com mittee Is said to have rounded up some l.'.O to 200 of their cattle with the in tention of shoving them over on the herd law district, surrounding White Salmon, which to quite an extent was accomplished, it is reported. The Barker outfit is endeavoring to round up these strays and get them back again on the ra.nge. Report has come in that what is supposed to have been on-e of the vigilance committee, while driving his car Saturday lsst. EDITORS TO BE GREETED Chrhalls Prepares Welcome for Na tional Delegates' Party. CHEHAXJS. Wash., July 24. (Spe cial.) The local editors of Chehalts and members of the bureau of conven tions and publicity of the Citizens club are busily engaged working out plans for the proper entertainment of dele crates to the National Kditorial associa tion, who are to be guests of the city at a noonday luncheon to be held here August S. A picnic luncheon will be served In the pretty oak grove opposite the city library. LEWISTON TO BID FOR T. R, Commercial Club Takes Steps t( Schedule Address. T.KW1STON. Idaho. July 24. (Spe cial.) The Commercial club yesterday noon decided to take steps to get Theodore Uooevelf for an sddress to citisens of lewiton some time in Sep- tember. T. A. r eeney. commander of the Lewis and Clark post of the American legion, said State Commander hi. hi. Boom- of Moscow informed him that Mr. Roosevelt already was sched uled to visit Coeur d'Aicne and I'oca tello, and that Lcwiston might be in cluded in his itinerary if pressure were brought to bear. The club pledged its co-operation to raise funds for this purpose. The chairman of the committee to secure advertising for the I.ewiston Hill highway reported that an order for 10.000 picture postcards showing a series of attractive views of the high way had been placed. the 14 miles ot the road this year. Tin contract call for grading and paving Chehalls Hoy lron. CHEIULIf. Wash.. July 14. Spc oliil.l Yalmont Kavburk. son of Mr. and Mrs. A. Raybuclc of Chehalis, was drowned in the ("hchalis river near laquato while awimming. The lad was 14 years of age. It is thought that he was seized with cramps. Road Work Progressing. SALEM. Or.. July i4. (Special.) Oskar Hubcr. now at work construct ing the Salem-Pallas road, has in formed the state highway commission that he expects to f-oroleto five of porf mmm ASK YOUR GROCER HMS-fOSTffiBAKlNGCQ PORTLAND. OREGON. SALEM BAKING CQ J5ALEM.OREGON. Jj of the jeefon v. 5 V5f rW'i aM 1 fs9 B W 1 -mv 'for 1 k r, -yr j. GERMAN RELIEF STARTED Committee Appointed to Organize Work Throughout State. A movement for tli relief of al leped distress, suffering and hunger on the part of women, children and aged person living1 in Germany and other territory of former enemy coun tries was started in Portland Wednesday In response to emergency calls that have come more or less indirectly to Wkmt the pnc is a pratrt. it will donsim mt wtstar. ' EGG-O-LATUM mn p-a-fcet,? frwb from pna or nnmw throagb th fitowin wintv at !ost of otmt rnt m dtten. tlmsilT and amjcaJy pplMd. r4re- mrt ev in mi or ww oh in tsetuur. Tw mbtrm Me jWr f or 10 4ammo m. mad CO Jar. 4Rkoaa-B t 200 doawa. Wi aaatl po-tpaid. GEO. H. LEE CO. OMAHA. NEB. Far Ml mt Dra. Fowtry Supply d Saad Bcwaa NURAYA TEA Is delicious Closset Se Devers Portland "TZe -Cettbi, -tfLcvn, kf4xy -cccujLd. mlcon4 cL&mxxsrvct Every grocer every where sells Kellogg's every day. Make them yourself while your wife is away AuhtJehiha When you want an easy breakfast, as well as a mighty good one, make Aunt Jemima Pancakes. No expert knowledge of cooking Is needed all the ingredients to make the best cakes you ever tasted come already mixed in the flour. Even sweet milk, in powdered form s that you add nothing but water. In half a minute you are sitting down to a big stack of pining hot, brown pancakes that sure do "hit the spot." Get a package of Aunt Jemima Pancake Flour from your grocer today. I Sf ALREADY 'I'se in town. Honey I ' ' CarrrlaU lilt. Aut Trailiai Ian riiiHT. St. Joaavh. MliKairl