I K 1 VOL. 1YVII1. NO. 18,4:tT Entered at Portland (Orefor Postoffice as Second-Class Matter. PORTLAND, OREGON, MONDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1919. PRICE FIVE CENTS i1M" !DEKTH DRINK RING IT FIANCE IS JAZZ MUSIC IS USED PRESIDENT OBSERVES IN EASTERN SURGERY! SIXTY-THIRD BIRTHDAY PRICE GUARANTEE SENTIMENT ASKED FREIGHT CARGO LOST IIDICU IN SOUND COLLISION UUM BAND KILLS IlilO LL.L.IO lOLniKf CLAIMED By WIFE "KING PIN" CAUGHT T'S GUARD THOUSANDS CLAMOR AT NEW" YORK'S GATES. PHILADELPHIA SPECIALISTS REPORT PROMPT CURES. DAY SPENT QUIETLY: HEALTH MUCH IMPROVED. STEAMER QUEEN STRIKES LIL LICO BARGE IN FOG. VSC0UN V V Dr. Vermilye Silent as to Wedding Tangle. DESERTED 'BRIDE' SPURNED Hospital Patient Refuses to See Girl Left at Altar. NO EXPLANATION GIVEN 'I Have Nothing to Say," Is Jotted on Back, of Card Requesting Statement to Reporters. NEW YORK, Dec. 28. Dr. William Grey Vermilye, who failed to appear Christmas day to marry Miss Ruth M. Keeney at Monson. Mass.. and is a patient in the Cumberland-street . hospltul, refused to make any com ment tonight when informed that his wife had been located in Harrisburg, Pa., where she is living: with a daughter. Information that Dr. Vermilye had a wife with whom he had been liv ing up to the time he gave up pri vate practice to take a position with the United 'States shipping board in the south, was given by Mrs. P. E. Zindell of Brooklyn, wife of a son of Mrs. Vermilye by a previous mar riage. She said that Dr. Vermilye and his wife had lived in Brooklyn, but Mrs. Vermilye had gone to Harrisburg six months ago to visit her daughter and was still there. MImh Kreney l.rjnct Hospital. Miss Keeney. who has also been a patient in the hospital since last night when she fainted and became hyster ical because the doctor refused to see her or explain his failure to ap pear for the wedding, left the insti tution today. She and her father again attempted to interview Dr. Ver milye, but he refused to see them. When hospital officials, who say the physician Is there to undorgo a alight operation. Informed newspaper men that he would see no one except relatives, they sent Dr. Vermilye the following note: "Tour wife, said to be located in Harrisburg. Pa., has made charges which perhaps you would be glad to clear up. Will you please make a definite statement and clear up the whole matter?" Doctor "Has Nothing to Say." Dr. Vermilye's reply, which was written on the back of the note, said: "I have nothing to say." When Mrs. Zindell. who lives at the Vermilye home in Pacific street, was asked if it was true that the physician had a wife, she said: "It is. Her name Is Mrs. William Grey Vermilye and she is at present staying with a daughter at Harris burg. Pa." "Had Dr. Vermilye and his wife lived here with you?" "Yes," she responded. "Mrs. Ver milye left this house about five months ago because her husband was In the service." Vermilye Divorce Is I nlrd. "Have you ever heard of Dr. Ver milye or his wife getting a divorce?" "No: so far as I know they are till married." Mrs. Zindell said she did not know Miss Keeney: but had "heard she was a well educated girl." When questioned further as to whether there was any doubt as to the woman In Harrisburg being Dr. .Vermilye's wife, Mrs. Zindell replied: "I have no doubt at all but that he is his wife." Mrs. Vermilye, it was learned to- night, is the second wife of the phy sician, his first wife having died. MRS. VERMILYE IS SILENT Comment on Husband's Plan to Wed Another Withheld. HARRISBURG. Pa.. Dec. 28. Mrs. William Gray Vermilye, who says she is the wife of the Brooklyn physician who disappeared Christmas eve, when supposedly on his way to wed Miss Ruth M. Keeney of Monson, Mass.. and was subsequently found in a Brooklyn hospital, declined tonight to make any statement in regard to Dr, Vermilye's affairs. Major K. R. Baines, her son-in-law. aid that Mrs. vermilye had never heard of Miss Keeney before learning of her intended marriage. Major Baines said that Dr. and Mrs Vermilye were married in 1895. COST PROTEST IS FATAL Havana Police and Crowd Clash; One Killed, Six Hurt. HAVANA. Dec. 28. One man was killed and one woman and five men, including two policemen, were In jured today during a clash between the police ana a crowd engaged In a demonstration against the high cost of living and excessive house rents. The wounded policemen asserted that the crowd attacked them when they demanded to see the permit for the parade. Witnesses say, however, that the police fired on the people without warning. Police and Coast Guards Are on Duty to Relieve Unprecedented Condition Now Existing. NEW YORK, Dec. 2S. More than 3000 Immigrants are clamoring at the sates of New York for admission into the United States. Ellis Island is congested and many hundreds of the incoming passengers will be detained on board steamships for examination. Immigration inspectors and special boards of inquiry have found it neces sary to work day and night to relieve unprecedented conditions. In the meantime hundreds of friends and relatives of the detained passengers from all over the coun try have assembled here impatiently awaiting the release of the immi grants. Police and coast guards are on duty at the piers and the Ellis Island fer ry entrance to hold in check the crowds which gather at the gates dally. Several attempts have been made by friends and relatives of the detained passengers to storm the piers in an effort to reach the ships. Immigration officials claim that their work is delayed to a large ex tent on Ellis Island because of the congestion there due to the detention of, a large number of radicals and un desirables, held for deportation. The greater number of the Immi grants detained are Italians, it was stated. Several hundred Greek pas sengers also are held. DRY MEASURE IS DEFIED Ken Jersey Provides Bill for Own Enforcement. NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., Dec. 28. The preamble of the bill author izing the sale of beer and light wines In New Jersey was made public to night by State Senator Thomas Brown, who will introduce the measure at the next session of the legislature. The preamble set forth that the state qf New Jersey has not ratified the eighteenth amendment, doubts that It was passed in a constitutional manner and intends to disregard the Volstead act and pass an enforcement bill which will be supreme within the limits of the state. Senator Brown said the theory up on w-hich Governor-elect Edwards and his supporters are working is that the eighteenth amendment gives equal power to congress and the states in the enforcement of prohibition and that the congressional enactment ap plies only where there is no state law In effect. D'ANNUNZIO IS OBSTINATE Resistance Demanded to Insure Guarantees to Annex Plume. F1UME, Dec. 28. Armed resistance "to the last morsel of bread and last drop of blood" is Gabrlele d'Annun- xlo's lateBt decision in demanding further guarantees from the Italian government to tnsure the annexation of Fiume to Italy. The situation is at a stronger deadlock than ever by rea son of the soldier-poet's unshaken ob stlnacy to remain in Flume until his demands are met. The national council has reversed its decision to accept the govern ment's proposal and has voted to sup port D'Annumlo, who with a large following of legionnaires, still re mains master of the situation inside the city. RUSSIANS PLOT TO KILL Plans to Assassinate American Oil Company Officials Bared. LAREDO. Tex.. Dec. 28. Agents of the Russian bolshevik! at Tampico "proposed the assassination of man agers of oil companies, superintend ents of all oil companies and other high personages, with the object of bringing about international difficul ties," according to Friday's issue of El Universal, a Mexico City news paper. The newspaper published a Tampico dispatch saying Mexican special po lice there arrested two Russians, con fessed agents of soviet government who are suspected of being accom plices of the person directing the dis tribution of propaganda proposing the assassinations. COSTS UP82 PER CENT Wage Earners Living Comparison Made With July, 1914. BOSTON. Dec. 28. An Increase of 82.2 per cent in the cost of living for American wage-earners between July 1914 and November 1919 was shown In a statement Issued by the national industrial conference board today. This represented an advance of 10.4 per cent since November. 1918, 18.5 per cent since March, 1919. when prices dropped temporarily, and 5.8 per cent since last July. The Increase In the cost of five major Items In the family budget since July. 1914. was: Food 92 per cent, shelter 38. cloth ing 135 per cent, fuel, heat and light 48 per cent and sundries 75 per cent. ESTHONIA T0GET RUBLES Agreement Reported Reached at Dorpat Conference. STOCKHOLM, Dee. 28. A Reval dispatch says an agreement has been reached at the Dorpat conference un der which Esthonla will obtain J0, 000,000 rubles. This is one-hundreth part of the Russian gold reserve. Source of Poison Liquor Traced to New York. FIVE IN BAND ARE ARRESTED Undertaker Taken in Net; Re ports of Deaths Grow. WOOD ALCOHOL IS USED Makers Said to Have Received $1050 Barrel for Compound Sent to Chicopee. NEW YORK, Dec. 28. Federal agents late tonight arrested five men who they claimed were the heads of an organized bapd which has been responsible for the recent widespread sale of wood alcohol concoctions through five states. One of the men arrested was described by the gov ernment agents as "the kingpin of the ring." Two of the men in cus tody were described as New York business men. For ten days, since the first fatali ties were reported irom wooa aim- hol poisoning, Colonel D. L,. Porter, supervising revenue agent for New York, and H. B. Dobbs. special federal agent, have been worKing on me theory that the poison which has caused scores of deaths throughout New England and New York, origi nated in this city. Arrests Widely Separated. The arrests tonight were made In widely separated parts of the city. Three of the prisoners arrested are Adolph Panarelll, a wine and liquor dealer; John Romanelll, an unaer taker. and Samuel K. Saleeby. a drug gist. . Panarelll said: "I am glad you got me. I will tell all I know." Panarelll, according to Dobbs. said he had a friend named Salsberg In Hartford. Conn., who asked him to get some liquor for Christmas. He then got In touch with Saleeby, the druggist. "King Pin" Is Accused. When the druggist was taken into custody, according to Dobbs. he ac cused Romanelll of being the "king Din" of the wood alcohol traffic. Dobbs claims he traced Romanelli to a store In Brooklyn where 50 men were found playing cards. According to Dobbs, Panarelll, after his arrest said: "For God's sake don't send me to Connecticut. I don't want to be lynched. I am an innocent man. My name has been published in all the papers and it would mean certain death." AUGUSTA, Ga., Dec. 28. Beverages containing wood alcohol or other pois onous ingredients have caused the death of approximately 20 persons in Augusta and Richmond counties dur ing the past four months, the coro- (Concluded on Page 2. Column 4.) WAITING T . I ... ..... .. ....................... - Patient Suffering With Paralysis Jumps to Feet When Phono graph Record Is Played. PHILADELPHIA. Pa.. Dec. 28. (Special.) Musical surgery Is the very latest thing in cures with Phila delphia's leading specialists. Music, especially the "Jaxz" variety, is being used in many clinics, and physicians say that It Is working effective cures through its psychic effect. One of the latest cases is that of Morris Hayes, who came here from Connellsvllle, paralyzed in both lees as a result of a motor accident. He was wheeled in a room in which there was a phonograph and a Jaxx rec ord was put on the machine. Hayes jumped to his feet, entirely cured. Music also has been used to arouse people from long sleep, one of the most serious being that of Mrs. Fred Tracy, a former Philadelphia woman now resident In Oxford, N. Y.. where her 80-day slumber finally was end ed by a phonograph. Leading nerve specialists agTee In praising the potency of music. Dr. Charles K. Mills said: "It is espe cially effective in cases of hysterical paralysis, which is similar to shell shock. The music arouses, certain cells of the brain which act on the parts of the body affected." Dr. S. E. W. Ludlam compares the effect of "violent" music to that pro duced by an electric battery. He said the emotional area that naturally would be affected by the combination of "music and noise" would act like a battery under the proper contact and discharge, along the nervous sys tem, a force as powerful as electricity. CANADIAN WHEAT RISES Price of Manitoba Grain to MJlls Lifted From $2.30 to 92.80. WINNIPEG, Man.. Dec. 28. Effect ive today the Canadian wheat board has ordered that the price of Manitoba wheat to mills In Canada be raised fro $2.30 per bushel to $2.80 per bushel in store at terminal elevators at Fort William or Port Arthur. An other regulation Increased the maxi mum wholesale price of government standard spring wheat flour from $10.90 per barrel to $13. 16 f. o. b. cars Montreal. James Stewart, chairman of the board, said today that in order that the consuming public may .have ad vantage of the supply of cheaper flour In the United States, permits will be Issued for the import of the American product. DEBUT MADE UNDER GUARD Secret Service Men Accompany Governor's Daughter. CHICAGO. Dec. 28. Two secret service agents in formal dress at tended the presentation to society yesterday of Miss Harriet Lowden second daughter of Governor and Mrs. Frank O. Lowden, as the result of the receipt by the governor of a threatening letter, It was disclosed today. Postoffice inspectors believe the author was an anarchist. The governor was threatened for "mixing with the enemies of society the plutocrats and the capitalist class." FOR THE PRESIDENT TO OPEN Mr. Wilson Takes Walk and Reads Hundreds of Greetings Sent by Officials and Friends. WASHINGTON. Dec. 28. President Wilson observed his 63d birthday quietly today much Improved In health, surrounded by the members of his family with the exception of Mrs. w. G. McAdoo, who was unable to be present. Mr. and Mrs. Francis B. Savre arrlv.ff fmnt ramhrMw. Mass.. last night and Miss Margaret ) K' I I unn ha Ka a i V YX" v. ; - ! " i-ct i. o v. uic tt line xs.wia i since her fathers nine... i mo president tooK his usual walk about the sick room and later sat out on the south portico for more than an hour. Part of the day was spent by Mr. Wilson reading many of the hundreds of birthday greetings that came from prominent officials and friends In the United States and abroad. FAMILY OF 34 INTACT No Death Occur In Four Genera tions; Pair Married 50 Years. ST. LOUIS, Mo., Dec 28. (Special.) An unusual family Is that of Mr. and Mrs. John Weis of Overland Park. St. Louis county, who celebrated their golden wedding anniversary Decem ber 12. and among whose descendants, to the fourth generation, there has never been a death. Five sons, two daughters. 21 grandchildren and six great-grandchildren have been born. and eery one of them Is living. Both were born in Luxemburg. Weis is 73 years old and his wife is 69. Gustave and Henry, the older sons, were born in Rhelms. France, and christened In the historic cathedral there. The other children were born In St. Louis, where the couple came It 1877. Weis Is a maker of stee' safes, having devised tHe first one made in Belgium, In 1867, at .Mom, scene of one of the first engagements of the war. TELEGRAPHERS GET RISE Western Union Increase Becomes Effective January t. NEW YORK. Dec 28. Thirty-two thousands employes of the Western Union Telegraph & Telephone com pany will receive salary Increases amounting to $5,000,000 on January 1, It was announced tonight. Employes who have been tn the service more than one year will re ceive a 15 per cent increase and those who have been In the service more than six months but less than a year will receive 10 per cent Increase. Only employes earning less than $250 a month are affected. CATTLE TO BE CHANGED 10,000 Head Will Be Transferred From Wyoming Into Idaho. OODEN, Utah. Dec. 28. Five repre sentatives of the Jackson Cattle A Horse Growers' association, repre sentlng 89 per cent of the livestock men of the Jackson Hole country, will confer tomorrow with the United States forest service officials regard ing methods to be followed In trans ferrlng 10,000 head of livestock from the Wyoming district Into Idaho In order that available feed may be pro vlded for the Yellowstone park elk. THE DOOR. Federal Trade Commis sion to Investigate. HIGH COSTS HELD RESULT Complaints S3Y Plan Pre- m , . vents Decrease in Figures. HEARING WILL BE HELD System Is Said to orrer Protection to Bayers in Case of De cline Before Delivery. WASHINGTON. Dec. 28. Business Interests, labor unions and the public generally are to be sounded out as to the sentiment In regard to the guar- an tee-agalnst -price-decline system said to be In use by many manufac turers and wholesalers in the sale of goods. The federal trade commission announced tonight that it had sent out several thousand letters inquir ing as to the opinion of the plan. The guaran tee-agalnst -price-decline system amounts to a guarantee by manufacturers and wholesalers In selling goods that should a decline in price occur before delivery of the goods the buyers shall benefit by the decline, but If the market should rise before delivery the manufacturer and wholesaler would assume the loss. C omplaints Are Received. Complaints lodged with the com mission assert that working out of the plan tends to prevent a decrease in the cost of living. The commission, in a letter to boards of trade, civic bodies, trade organs and papers, labor groups and farmers" associations, made public to day, says: "The question of guarantee against decline In price has been the subject of so many complaints before the commission and opinion seems to be so diverse that the commission has determined to go into the whole mat ter thoroughly. "As a basis for the necessary ex penditures attending upon such an inquiry, such formal complaints have been Issued presenting various phases of the subject. To the end that every party at interest may be fully repre sented the commission Is Inviting, generally, producers, manufacturers. merchants (wholesale and retail) and consumers to declare their Interest so that the commission may know what parties should be represented. Hearing to Be Held. "The commission is asking you. therefore, to communicate as speedily and as widely as possible with your membership, advising them of the in vitation, and to notify the commission of the nature of their interest in the subject. "As soon as this list of the parties at Interest In the matter can be com piled It Is the purpose of the commis sion to Invite each or any of them to submit their observations In writing. "A reasonable time limit for the filing of written statements will be given, after which they will be as sembled and. as far as possible, clas sified, and each correspondent will be furnished with a copy of the docu ment. "As aoon thereafter as possible it la the purpose of the commission to call a general hearing at Washington at which parties at interest may be pres ent in person, by representative or by counsel, and an orderly method for hearing the matter will be laid out." The proposed hearing probably wll! be held about the middle of March. PERSHING LAUDS SCOUTS General Tells Lincoln Boys of Re maining Opportunities. LINCOLN. Neb., Dec. 28. In a short address to the Boy Scouts tonight I General John J. Pershing commended their efforts during the war and told them the future held opportunities for continued activities. He mentioned the work of the scouts in France and also had praise for the Y. M. C. A., whose efforts abroad, he said, were worthy of highest commendation, and the results accomplished, particularly after the war. hard to overestimate. General Pershing was voted a life membership in the Lincoln Y. M. C. A. Tomorrow he will address the G. A. R. veterans. : ' . ... . During the afternoon General Per- i.iF. "ducu a. iiaMini unu apeiu some time at the bedside of Fred N. Alexander, a Lincoln boy, who served two years In France with the 137th infantry of the 35th division. Alex- tie of the Argonne. General Pershing congratulated him nn his valiant service and expressed hope for his recovery. KLAMATH APPROVES RISE Teachers In Schools to Receive In crease in Salary. KLAMATH FALLS. Or.. Dec. 28. (Special.) By a vote of 192 to 7, taxpayers approved a special tax levy of $4500 for teachers' salary increase yesterday. The vote means an increase of ap proximately $25 a month to all teachers in the schools, probably retroactive to November, 1919. .'Five Loaded Cars and Merchandise Valued at $100,000 Go Into Water orf Alkl Point. SEATTLE. Wash., Dec. 28. (Spe cial.) In the dense fog off Alkl Point ; uie steamer vjueen rammea a uhw Transportation company barge Sun day morning, with a loss of five of the six cars loaded with freight val ued at $100,000, which the barge was transporting to Bremerton. The barge. In a sinking condition, with a great hole stove in her port side forward, was beached on the municipal bathing beach. It was kept afloat by means of pumps, and one of the freight cars, containing a load of coal for the navy yard, was saved. The barge was being towed by the LIUIco Tug & Barge company's tug Arab. According to her master. Cap tain Carl Foss, the siren was being sounded at frequent Intervals. When about half a mile off Alkl Point he says the steamer Queen of the Pa cific Steamship company suddenly rounded Alkl Point and because of the dense fog was upon the barge, 200 feet behind the tug. before a col lision could be avoided. The Queen was running slow, but the impact nearly swamped the big" barge, which careened to such an extent that five of the cars slid into the bay with a series of mighty splashes. Capfaln Inman. who was the only man on the barge, started the pumps and prevented, by means of brakes and blocks, the remaining car from leaving the barge. M. F. Tarpey, captain of the Queen, proceeded to Seattle when he ascer tained that the tug Arab was able to handle the situation. The barge is of 1000 tons capacity and carries three standard-gauge railway tracks. The five cars that were lost In the sound contained mis cellaneous freight both for business firms and the navy yard at Bremer ton. The barge was making her 9fi"th voyage to Bremerton from Se attle when the accident occurred. FIRE ROUTS U. S. TOURISTS American Drags Baggage From Burning Hotel in Toklo. TOKIO, Dec. 2S. Half the Imperial hotel, housing 40 American tourists uurnea mte last nignt. There were no casualties among the Americans many of whom were prominent and several of whom were women or chil dren. A considerable quantity of their baggage was lost. Among the Americans In the hote were Charles Hitchcock Sherrill. for merly American minister to Argen tlna. and Mrs. Sherrill. Mr. Sherrill aided In dragging baggage out o the burning hotel. Many of the tourists spent the nigh sitting on trunks in the hotel grounds or nearby streets. Considerable quan tities of Jewelry were lost. DANSEY THEORY DROPPED Oklahoma Officers Decide Boy Is Not One Sought. TULSA. Okla., Dec. 28. A boy be lieved by Chief of Police Robert Au ton of Collinsvllle. Okla., to be th missing "Billy" Dansey of Hammon ton. X. J., is not the Dansey boy. ac cording to statements tonight by Chief Auton and Chief of Police Allen of Tulsa. INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Heather. YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature. 37 decrees: minimum. 32 degrees. TODAY'S Fair; winds mostly southerly. Forelsrn. British Cheer up near New Year. Page 2. Viscount Grey predicts rule of socialism Page 5. Irish band kills member of Viscount French's bodyguard. Page 1. Wilson too harsh on Flume question. Is charge In Italy, 'age 3. National. Killing of James Wallace by Mexicans de liberate. Page 2. President Wilson's conference recommends national Industrial tribunal. Page 4. Domestic President Wilson observes 3d birthday. Page 1. Public demand for fine wool Is blamed for high clothing prices. Psge 3. ! Appearance of Dr. Vermilye's wife comptl i cates case of weddlnr truant. Psge t. 1 congress to probe friction among United States officials at Madrid. Page Thousands of Immigrants ciamor for ad j mission to United States. Page 1. Rail brotherhoods plan co-operative banks and stores to cut living costs. Page 4. ! Federal trade commission asks sentiment 1 on guarantee-against-prlce-decllne 'sys tem. Page L i Jazz music is used by Philadelphia spe cialists for treatment of patients. Pace 1. Eastern cities report more deaths due to woa a'T , v 1 I liwlfic Northwest Four ,., maKe Mcape from county ; jail at Kosenurg- f-age o. jal! Seattle alliance withholds indorsements of candidates. Page 6 Curbing of coming session of legislature promises to be a difficult task. Page 4. $100,000 freight cargo lost in sound col lision. Page 1. Sport'. Gibbons unable to . box McConntck New Year's day. Page 10. Harvard's line Is heavy and formidable Page I. Harvard, behind closed gates, holds stiff workout. Page 10. Hugo Bczdek says Oregon eleven may surprise Harvard suuad. Page 10. Portland and Vicinity. State teachers to convene in Portland to day. Page 18. Vaccinate and Isolate to avert smallpox, urges Dr. Mackenzie. Page 7. Building increases shown by federal re serve district report. Page 15. Modern Christmas is criticised by pastor. Page T. January pales may feature Oregon-mad products. Page 12. Steamer West Hartland due with cargo of crude rubber. Page 11. State chamber of commerce to open session here today. Page 3. Intruder Also Is Slain in Clash Near Dublin. FOUR SUSPECTS ARRESTED Firing Close to Home of Lord French Causes Searc. PARTY FLEES IN DARK Lieutenant. Guest of Governor- General. Shot During Inves tigation of Disorders. DUBLIN. Dec. 28. (By the Associ ated Press ) An officer of the guard and one member of a band of Intrud ers were killed early this morning In a shooting affray In Phoenix Park, a, Dublin suburban station, and only & short distance form the vice-iesa.1 odge. The vice-regal lodge is the official residence of Viscount French, lord ieutenant and governor-general of Ireland. In some quarters the belief was ex pressed that an attack had been In preparation against the lodge. About eight men were believed to have made up the band. Four arrests were made. At 1:30 o'clock this morning shots were heard near the vice-regal lodge. They continued Intermittently at In tervals for nearly an hour in that portion of Phoenix Park between the lodge and the magazine. There apparently was no direct at tack on the lodge. The inmates at f lrt thought the shooting wa connected with some scrt of holiday revelry. Military Guard Starts Search. s the firing persisted, however, a military guard, consisting of an offi cer and two men. turned out and searched the grounds. Finding noth- ng unusual there, they went through the park near the main road. While traversing the center of the park they engaged in a sharp ex change of firing with the intruders. and Lieutenant Boast, who was lead ing his men, fell shot through the heart. One of the attacking party also was killed. He was a civilian about 40 years of age. According to some re ports he was wearing portions of a soldier's uniform. No weapon was found on or near his body, and up to the present the man's Identity has not been ascertained. Pools of blood were found on the scene, which is about half a mile from the lodge. Intruders Flee la Dark. After the shooting the Intruders fled in the darkness. The four men arrested were not taken into custody near the scene of the shooting, but were apprehended as they were leav ing the park about two hours later. They denied having any connection with the affair and It was reported that no incriminating evidence was found. After the shooting the military brought a machine gun to the scene. This was fired in the direction It had been supposed the men had taken flight. Nobody was hit by the bullets. The bodies of the two men were taken to the George V hoapltal where an Inquest will be held tomorrow, t Ity Becomes Excited. Lieutenant Boast was only 30 years old. He was mentioned in Saturday's court circular as having been invited to dine with Field Marshal Viscount French, lord lieutenant and governor general of Ireland, on Saturday night. On Sunday he had bid farewell to his parents who had been paying him a visit, There was great excitement In the city when the newspapers announced the occurrence. Crowds visited the scene during the afternoon. The name of the civilian killed was said to be Laurence Csrey, who re sided at Lucan. near Phoenix park. According to one version of the origin of the struggle. Carey Ignored the challenge to halt and when the sol diers approached Carey seized Boast, whereupon the soldiers fired their pistols, killing Carey. This version did not state who shot Boast. Boast began as a drummer boy in the Lan cashire regiment and won his com mission for conspicuous service in the war. LONDON, Dec. 28. A dispatch to the Exchange Telegraph from Duhlln says that the officer killed in the at tack on the vice-regal lodge In Phoenix Park was Lieutenant Boast. The member of the attacking party killed was dressed in an old uniform of a private in the British army. His body was reported to have been riddled with bullets. The Exchange Telegraph's corre spondent said it understood that snip ing at the lodge continued for only a few minutes and the fight took place on the main road at a distance of nearly a quarter of a mile from the lodge. The fighting near vice-regal lodge yesterday evidently was a preliminary to a second attempt within a month to take the life of Viscount French, lord lieutenant and governor-general of Ireland. On Friday, December 19. a deter mined but unsuccessful attempt was made to assassinate Viscount French. The attack evidently had been most .Concluded on Pace 2. Column J.) I (