VOL. LIX. NO. 18,45 Entered ht Portland (Oregon) Pontofflce as Second-Clas Matter. PORTLAND OREGON, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1920 TRICE FIVE CENTS E 1600 STORES BOUGHT BY BIG CORPORATION $500,000 GIFT MADE TO AMERICAN LEGION ANXIETY OVER WILSON DISPELLED BY DOCTOR ABLE-MIXDED, ABLE-BODIED, DR. YOUXG'S VERDICT. T NEW YORK SHACKLED IN. BONDS OF STORM ELEVEN DEATHS PAH RAILROAD ISIS IE T INDICTED REPEAL IS FOUGHT FOB SHIP BIG COMBIXATIOX AXXOUXCED IX MERCANTILE TRADE. XO RESTRICTIONS MADE. AS TO . FUTURE USE. PARALYSIS OF TRADE COSTS CITY $5,000,000 DAILY. VmDLY PICTURED EXPECTED TODAY Systems Face Walkout of FRAUDS V Grimm's Last Words Re peated by Witness. WOUNDS' NATURE DESCRIBE Use of Split Bullets by At tackers 'Revealed. DOCTOR TAKES THE. STAND State, Making Excellent Progress, Expects to Close Its Case Within at Least 10 Says. BY BEN HUB. LA1IPMAN. MONTESANO. Wash.. Feb. 10. (Special.) Into the record of test! mony today in the murder trial of the 1U W. W. defendants, was writ ten the description of the wound that brought death to 'Warren O. Grimm, overseas veteran, who fell when bul lets from ambush scattered the ranks of an Armistice y parade in Cen tralis, Narration of the last moments of Grimm's life, and of the wound that caused his death was in the testimony of Dr. Lee A. Scace, of the Centralia hospital, where. Grimm was taken after being struck. Otter Deaths Described. Called to the stand by C. D. Cun ningham, special counsel for the state, the physician told not only of Grimm's death wound, but of those of Arthur McElfresh and Ben Casagranda, two comrades of the American Legion who were slain in the same attack. He told also of the serious, but not fatal wounds of othe-s members of the Armistice day pageant. Interrogated by the state in direct examination. Dr. Scace described Grimm's wound as terrible and neces sarily fatal. Entering the body on the left chest, the missiie passed out slightly lower down on the right side. A fragment of the metal Jacketing of the bullet fatten from Grimm's body was produced by the physician and introduced as evidence. Grimm's Last Wards Bepeated. .. The entrance to the wound from which Grimm died, testified Dr. Scace, was larger than that of the wounds in the bodies of other victims. In cross-examination George F. Vander " veer, counsel for the defense, spent but little time. He asked the physi cian if Grimm had talked after being taken to the hospital, where his death occurred a few hours later. "Hurry up and do something" was the plea of the mortally wounded legionnaire, according to Dr. Scace's testimony. Dr. Scace testified that Arthur Ic El'resh was shot through the head, the bullet entering at the left ear, part 6f it lodging near the right. Death was almost instantaneous. In evidence was offered a portion of the metal jacket and the lead of the mis sile that killed McElfresh. Testimony Cloaea Seaalosu Ben Casagranda, bootblack and ex service man was shot through the body, the bullet piercing a clean holei at 1 passing out. No portion of the bullet had been found in the autopsy, testified Dr. Scace. The teetU.iony of the Centralia physician came at the close of the afternoon session of court. By v' -tue of its graphic necessarily morbid na ture, it brought keen interest to the courtroom, which had spent the day in harkening to rather spiritless testi mony. "We have been making excellent progress with the state's case," said W. H. Abel, special prosecutor at the close of the session. "While it is too much to expect that the state close this week, I feel cer tain, unless the unexpected happens, that the bulk of our tstimony will be delivered within a period of 10 days and that the state will be en abled to cloaa soma time early next week." Morgan to Be Called. Reference in direct and cross-examination today to the absence of Tom Morgan from the prisoner's dock led C. D. Cunningham, special prosecutor, to announce that the state still has Morgan in custory and will call him to testify as one of the principal wit nesses for the prosecution. Morgan was captured In the L W. W. hall following the shooting and originally was named as a defendant, his name being withdrawn when the amended information was filed. Dur ing the intervening months he has been held in the Lewis county jail at Chehalis, but was brought to this city last night and is now in custody here. Testimony of several witnesses this afternoon related to the finding of empty cartridge cases and loaded shells on Seminary hill, following the Armistice day attack, where the state alleges were stationed Bert Bland, Loren Roberts and Ole Hanson, the latter uncaptured. 23 Shells Found cm Hill. The combined total of shells found on the hill, near the spot where the riflemen are alleged to have placed themselves, was 23, according to the testimony of all witnesses in this re gard. Their testimony was largely corroborative. Calibers of the sheilo Gigantic Merger to Be Capitalized at Three-Quarters of a Billion Dollars.. RICHMOND, Va., (Feb. 10. Forma tion of a great mercantile corpora tion, planned to be capitalized at three-quarters of a billion dollars, was announced today by officers of the Southern Wholesale Drygoods as sociation. The new combination is said to have purchased approximately 1600 stores. Holdings of the' corporation were, announced by Southern Wholesale Drygoods association officials as In cluding the Montgomery Ward com pany, the United Candy company an the Marler-Dalton-Gilmer company. George J. Wheelan of the United Cigar stores, the United Retail cor poration of New York, and James B. Duke of the American Tobacco com pany, are said to be the backers of the new corporation. ' In addition to the numerous retail stores, it was said the corporation had gained control of several well- known textile mills. Two Million. TRAINMEN PRESS DEMANDS Track and Shopmen Hold to Strike Decision. FERRY ENGINEER LIVES 'Bert" Brumagin, Veteran of Van couver Boat, Disproves Report. VANCOUVER, Wash., Feb. 10. (Special.) Dolores Burdette (Bert) Brumagin, Veteran engineer on the old Vancouver ferry, who was' report ed to be dead yesterday, appeared to day. it appears that the mistake was made in the report by the death of T. J. Romihger, better known as 'Oklahoma Bill;" who also worked on the ferry, and who died of pneumonia rather suddenly. The names have a similar sound, but as Brumagin - is better known than Romlnger, the story got started. Mr. Brumagin was out of the city when the story was circulated, and when he came to Van couver today he had the pleasure of reading his own obituary, and was greeted by his marry friends as one raised from the dead. He was kept busy all day explaining that he is not dead, no matter what the papers had to say about it. LIQUOR BURIAL COSTLY 'Camel Squad" Police Catch Man In Golden Gate Park. SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 10. Three men burying liquor in uoiden uate park were discovered by a police man today In time for him to seize os. of them, Sterling Baker. The wo others escaped, but one of them. John Balough, later fell into the hands of the "camel squad" of the police department. According to the police, who valued the liquor at 2500, the men aid they stole it and brought it to the park in a hired automobile. They were charged with burglary, having liquor in their possession without a permit, transporting liquor ithout a permit and failure to reg ister intoxicating liquor in violation of the national prohibition law. LORD ASTOR TAKES SEAT Defeat of Peerage Surrender Blocks Commons Honors. LONDON, Feb. 10. Viscount Astor today took his seat in the house of lords. Viscount Astor, who succeeded to the -seat in the house of lords of his father, the late Viscount Astor, was prevented In November last from giv ing up his title and retaining his seat In the house of commons by the de feat of a bill empowering the king to accept the surrender of any peerage. HEAVY QUAKE REPORTED Disturbance Traced to South Amer t lea or Mexico. WASHINGTON, Feb. 10. An earth quake of considerable intensity, hav ing its center approximately 1600 miles from Washington, was record ed tonight at the Georgetown uni versity seismographical observatory. The disturbances were first re corded at 5:16 o'clock and continued until 6:40 o'clock, reaching thsir heights at 5:25 o'clock. Indications were that the quake occurred in Mexico or Central America. OTHER UNIONS ARE SILENT State Laws PreTent Operation of Trains Without Full Crews In Control. WASHINGTON, Feb. 10. The rail road administration nearing the end of Its control over the nation's rail transportation systems, tonight faced a critical situation With respect to the wage demands of more than 2,000,000 employes. Conferences to morrow between Director - General Hines and leaders of the unions probably will determine the outcome. Officials of the unions submitted to the director-general at today's meet ings a new statement which served to open up all important questions. Mr. Hines informed them he would reply tomorrow. Meanwhile W. G. Lee, president of the Brotherhood of Railroad Train men, was pressing Mr. Hines for an answer to the demands of his organ- iation, insisting the trainmen were ready to strike unless a satisfactory settlement was reached. Laborer Give Notice. Railroad 'administration officials also received informal notice that they must contend with a strike called by the Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes and Shop Laborers. Further than admitting that he had given the railroad administration the required 30 days notice of intention to cancel the present wage contract on February 23, Mr. Lee declined to discuss the plans of his organization. The strike vote was said to show a large majority of the men favorable to a strike. This last phase of the situation was giving railroad administration offi cials concern, because, should , the trainmen walk out, an almost com plete tieup of traffic could be only result. The thousands of en neers, firemen and conductors could not operate trains, for In many states they would be forbidden to work under "full crew"' laws unless all trainmen required were on duty, it was explained. Union by-laws also prohibited other employes from tak ing out trains not manned by the regulation number of brakemen. Other Union Sympathetic. Officials of .the other three train operating unions were declared not to be supporting Mr. Lee aggressively Adjusted Compensation Urged by Xational Body for Service Men and Women. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind.. Feb. 10. A gift of more than" 1500,000 from the national war work council of the T. M. C. A. has been accepted by the national legislative committee of the American Legion, it . was announced here today. The money Is the surplus left in the Y. M. C. A. treasury after remittance by the American and French govern ments of transportation charges for post supplies' during, the war. The money, it was said, will be held by the ltsgion as a trust fund for five years. There are no resincuuuo to its use. The national executive committee of the American Legion today adopted resolution declaring it the belief of the organization that legislation looking to adjusted compensation for ex-service men and women was paramount obligation of the gov ernment, with the exception of any legislation still uncompleted, looking to the rights of widows and orphans of deceased ex-service men and wo men and disabled soldiers. The reso lution, a copy of which was sem to a committee on soiaier oeoencuii legislation which will meet in Wash ington. February 18, recommended that compensation for discharged sol diers or service women be adjusted to provide that each such person rxrtlve a-$50 bond for eacn monm of service. It also was decided today to change the American Legion weekly, De ginning with the publication of next week, to a "form consistent with the financial resources of the legion.' Bad Weather Is Blamed for Slow Convalescence of Xation's Chief Executive. (Concluded on Page 2, Column 2.) OFFICERS ARE IDENTIFIED Tacoma Major Among Captives of Russian Bolsheviki. WASHINGTON, Feb. 10. American engineers captured by the bolsheviki in Siberia whose last names were given in a dispatch received yester day from the American consul at Harbin are believed by the chief of army engineers here to be the fol lowing: Major Frank Roscoe Blunt, Piano, 111.; Major Frank Buchanan, Tacoma, Wash.; Captain Walter W. Geisse, Madison, Wis.; Lieutenant George R. McGinty, Wayzata, Minn.; Lieutenant William S. .Meredith, Aurora, I1L; Lieutenant Etienne A. Chevannes, Knoxville, Tenn., and Lieutenant John R. Hosklnson, Dayton, O. These officers were recruited in the. Russian railway service corps. .gu 'TIMBER DEAL COMPLETED Seven Million Feet Sold in Xational Forest Above Oakridge. EUGENE, Or., Feb. 10. (Special.) Seven million feet of timber in the Cascade national forest above Oak ridge have just been sold by the for est service to Edward E. Smith, of Oakridge, at SI. 75 per thousand for Douglas fir. Incense cedar and red cedar and 50 cents a thousand for hemlock and other timber. The timber lies adjacent to Salmon creek. WASHINGTON, Feb. 10. (Special.) Dr. Hugh E. Young of Johns Hop kins university, who was called in by Dr. Cary T. Grayson when President Wilson was threatened with serious trouble with his prostatic gland, was given the Baltimore Sun an interest ing statement about the president's condition. "The impatience of the public as to the president's condition is most natural," said Dr. Young, "and the president is impatient, too, but please place the blame where it belongs -not upon the patient, who has sur passed himself, not upon his medi cal advisers, who really have done better than you could have expected of them but upon the weather. It has been Absolutely the worst imag inable weather for a convalescing case." Ineoslnesa Held Unfounded. "Thisanxlety and the solicitude has not escaped me," Dr. Young continued, "and it is quite natural, in view of tne important role that the president is called upon to fill in our national life. If you think it would quiet un easiness, which is without foundation, and allay alarm, which is without Jus tification, I shall gladly lay all the facts as to the distinguished patient's condition before the public. "From the very beginning, the med ical men associated with the case have never had anything to conceal. When I first saw the president, in October, a crisis had arisen of such gravity, owing to the development of prostatic obstruction, that an emergency opera tion to relieve this situation was con templated, but by a fortuitous and wholly unexpected change in the pres ident's condition the obstruction be gan to disappear. steady Improvement Reported, 'The improvement in this respect. which has been steady, Is now com plete. "It may have seemed slow to the outside world, but to those of us who have watched the improving con ditions day by day and week by week, it has seemed little short of marvelous. 'The president - was organically sound when I saw him first and I found him not only organically sound when I visited him last' week, but fur ther, all the organs were functioning in a perfectly normal, healthy man ner. Pari passu, the president's gen eral condition and specifically the slight impairment of his left arm and leg have improved, more slowly, it is true, but 'Surely', steadily." There have been no setbacks, no backward steps and rumors to that effect are rubbish. "As you know, in October last we diagnosed the president s illness as cerebral thrombosis, which affected his left arm and leg, but at no time was his brain power or the extreme vigor and lucidity of his mental pro cesses in the slightest degree abated. This condition has from the very first shown a steady, unwavering tendency toward resolution and complete ab sorption. "The increasing utility of the left arm and leg, greatly impaired at first, (Concluded on Page 2. Column 2.) Northwest Rises Against Gronna Measure. BARNES PREDICTS DISASTER Passage of Bill Calamity for Coast, Says Director. MILLERS ENTER PROTEST UNCLE SAM NEVER REFUSES. STOCK MARKET HIT AGAIN Fresh Selling Losses of 5 Causes Extreme to 2 0 Points. NEW YORK. Feb. 10. The stock 4 market was demoralised again today, , fresh selling causing extreme losses I . of S to almost 20 points in speculative shares and 2 to 5 points in standard rails and industr'nls. The decline derived additional 'im petus from rumors that financial in stitutions were ordering further cur tailment of loans on stocks and va rious commodities. .(Concluded on Face & Column 1.1 RICH ALIEN IS RELEASED Parole Promised Millionaire if He Leaves for Mexico. SALT LAKE CITY, Feb. 10. Max Reinhart, a German, interned at Fort riAllirlng harA frit tun ..nr. ' n . . paroled today on condition that he ! 4 leave the united States for Mexico within two weeks. Reinhart was arrested at San Jose, CaL He is said to have oil interests near Tampico. Mexico, valued up wards to (3,000,000. '- I A J . J . ' - r fo-a .(Ik 1 I Influx of Canada Grain and Loss of Credit is Foreseen by Shippers. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU.Wash- ington, Feb. 10. Farmers, millers and bankers in every section of the north west were heard from In congress to day by telegraph in protest against the Gronna bill reported out by the senate agricultural committee, which would repeal the government wheat guarantee. The millers began to be heard from yesterday and today and farmers' unions and the farmers awoke to the possiUlity that the Gronna bill if en acted, might mean a loss aggregating millions of dollars to the wheat grow ers, grain dealers of the northwest. Some of the telegrams indicated the belief tn&t the consequences might be more seriously far-reaching. That the alarm occasioned by the bill in the northwest is testified to by Julius T. Barney,' president of the United States Grain corporation, who, in a letter to Senator McNary today said: "There are some phases of this pro posed Gronna bill which are almost appalling, and particularly as it ap plies to the Pacific coast. Promine Justifies Guarantee. "You will recall that the govern ment guarantee basis of $2.20 on the Pacific coast was an effort to make the value of wheat on the coast just as near the Chicago basis as possible, and was only justified by the promise of the shipping board to. give us new tonnage to take wheat and flour from '-ports to the Atlantic at a nominal freight. "The price of standard No. 1 wheat, for instance, in Pacific ports, is $2.20; in Chicago, 12.26; in New York, $2.39 Si. That is, those are the grain prices at which the grain corporation is authorized to buy in the protection of the guarantee pledge to the farm ers, and at which it has been buying. As a practical matter, its purchases on the Pa-'"'c coast have been largely In the form of flour, at the fair re flection of the wheat price and our last purchases of flour a week ago, in the north Pacific were at $10 along side steamer. Disastrous Drop Predicted. "Now let us see what the termina tion of the authority might do to the Pacific coast. At once we discontinue paying $2.20 for wheat and discon tinue paying $10 for flour. Assuming that operation outside of the grain corporation entirely could still con j tinue to pay $2.26 for Chicago wheat. I it costs 39 cents a bushel to ship from the Pacific coast by rail to Chicago. T . I. Ik, nnlv niiM. than ?n t - cific coast, its value would drop from 1 $2.20 to $1.87. It costs approximately . $1.60 a barrel to ship by rail flour from the Pacific coast to New York City, and the Atlantic seaboard. That character of flour is now selling in New York at $10.65; so that the value of flour on the Pacific coast would drop at least $1 per barrel. "That Is not the worst of It, because 30 years of experience in wheat mar keting tells me that the withdrawal of this underlying assurance would alarm bankers, make credit more dif ficult, make dealers demand a wider operating margin against Increased hazards, and generally tend to de press the farmer price severely, so that the Chicago basis of $2.26 might not be maintained by private trade. The New York price of J2.39V4 cents is practically today on an import basis from Argentina. Argentina wheat is offered today, delivered New York at $2.40 In small quantities, and larger quantities may offer later. "Canada, through its wheat board, has held itself up ty its boot-straps for 60 days. The tremendous premium on United States funds in Canada, amounting now to 15 per cent, may any day open the flood of Canadian wheat and flour into our markets. and again disturb the price. "There are hazards against the price on every side, but these are all ac cented in relation to the Pacific coast. "As the full purport of the Gronna bill becomes known on the coast and an appreciation spreads among pro ducers, millers, dealers and bankers, I shall be greatly surprised if you do n.ot hear from that section in very vigorous language, for the damage by such repudiation in that section ex ceeds the probable damage In any other part of the United States." Representative Summers of Wash ington saw Senator Gronna today and arranged for a hearing next Monday, at which representatives of the farm ers and millers, of the northwest will appear to protest. Mr. Summers also conferred with President Charles S Barrett ' of the National Farmers' union and with Senators Jones and Poindexter and plans were made for opposing the repeal of the govern ment guarantee. All Traffic of Great World Port Ceuses and Congestion Is Serious Problem. NEW YORK, Feb. 10 (Special.) New York today presents the spec tacle of a great world capital shack led and bound. Industry and com merce, all business which depends upon transportation Is to all prac tical intents and purposes dead. Here, where trade runs annually Into the billions, there Is now no trade. And in all the varied rami fications of normal activity the life of the metropolis pulses but feebly under the weight of snow and the ice. Statistlcianr of the merchants' association estimate that the paralysis of trade Is costing this city some $5,000,000 a day $30,000,000 since the snow clog was established on last Wednesday. Business men, corporations and the like whose interests are centering in the un trammeled movement of trade are inclined to regard this estimate as moderate. For in no direction Is there the slightest outlet for any activities whatever. There is prac tically no trucking, which meuna that ,goods must remain in warehouses sub ject, of course, to addition .1 storage charges; which means that cargoes discharged from ocean and river car riers must lie on pierr with pros pects of delivery fbr some time to come vague and remote. There are no lighterage facilities. The river and harbor, even in i.ormal times, could show too few lighters for th needs of commerre, and now th scarcity has been complicated by floes of heavy ice, which block th fair way and render docks inacces sible. Again, the car shortage that has been manifest all wintci has in th past few days so increased as to re suit, practically speaking, in an ab solute dearth. It is no exaggeratio to say that the trade of New Yor could not be more hopelessly hog tied were the harbor block 'ded by hostile fleet and ail land approaches in the possession of an enemy hos Not In 32 years not, to be specific, since the great blizzard of 1SSS has business in New York been compelled to sit idle, twiddle its thumbs an gaze desolately out of windows upo street conditions which reflect sar donically upon the progress which civilization in its relation to th scientific ordering of communal af fairs was supposed to have made. Two ex-Officials of Board Are Involved. BLAIN FACES NEW CHARGE Nine Builders Accused by Federal Grand Jury. ALL OUT UNDER BONDS BANK ROBBED BY YOUTHS Securities Estimated at More Thu $13,000 Taken by Four Itandils. LOS ANGELES. Cal.. Feb. 10. Fou youthful bandits, all unmasked, held up and robbed a branch of the Horn Savings bank shortly before 3 o'clock this afternoon and escaped with cash and securities estimated to total more than $13,000. Eight customers and four employes were In the bank at the time. DANES WIN IN SCHLESWIG Plebi.scite Goes Against Germany 30,763 to 12,756. COPENHAGEN, Feb. II. The re sults in the north Schleswig plebiscite up to 1 o'clock this morning show Danish majorities in all except six of the 150 districts. The aggregate vote was 30,763 for Jt Denmark and 12.756 for Germany. INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS Hie Weather. TESTE RDAV'S Maximum trmprrature, 52 degree; minimum, 33 drgreea. TODAY'S Fair; eauterly winds. Forricn. Llovt? Georgo avoids reply to critics of Britain. Page 2. Corruption in all Its fnrms flourishing In Germany Page s. Relief meaaurea outlined by king In ad- dreas to parliament. Page 2. Parliament opens with revival of ancient pomp. Page 2. National. Railroads fare walkout of 2.000,000 work ers. Page 1. Wilson policy faces test In Missouri. Page 5. Senate revives dabate on peaca treaty Page .1. Wheat guarantee repeal protested by northwest industry. Page 1. labor's political fight Is launched. Page . Failures of 2."00 newspapers attributed In main to excessive man rate, rage o. Wily millionaire saves nis lova note. Page 4. Domratlc. New York shackled In Donda or severe storm. Page 1. All anxiety over Wilson's condition Is dis pelled. Page. I. Y M. d. A. makes American Legion $.-,00,000 gift. Page 1. Huge merger announced to operate 1600 retail stores. Page I. Pnelfic Northw-nit. Eleven Indictments returned for north west ship frauds. Page 1. Action to compel Oragon state board of control to sell bonds is failure. Page 7. Seattle, fearing uprising. Increases guard on Russian radicals. Page 7. Deaths In Centralia parade vividly de scribed at trial. Paga 1. 8dHh. Club ticket wins Winged M election. Page 13. National baaehall league holds humorous meeting. Page 12. ronimerrlal "nil Marine. Hearing announced of prnpoaed rules of wool warehouse act. Pnge JO. Corn higher at Chicago, owing to scarcity of rccelpta. Page 20. Stocks decline with liquidation' and short selling. Page 21. Final work on hull of schooner la begun. Page 20. Portland and Vicinity. General Wood to Invade Oregon In April. Page f. Vaccination laws upheld by McCourt In denying injunction. Page 20. Influenia death toll 10 in day. Page 10. City Attorney La Roche sees possible dan ger to home rule. Page B. Fragments of human body found In Ken ton add to death mystery. Paga 14. Cut In rates also for district north of Snake river sought. Paga 13. Six Seattle and Three SHkane Men Jlrlil Ciiptiiln Mujrcc AIo Taken on Warrant. SEATTLE, Wash., Feb. 10. Two ex-offlclals or the United Stales emer gency fleet corporation and nine oth ers, officers of shipbuilding com panies In Wanhjnfcton. were at liberty under ah bonds tonlKht following their indictment by a federal grand jury here today on charges of par ticipation in alleged frauds in connec tion with the government's northwest ship construction programme. Captain John F. Hlaln. ex-north Pacific district manager of the emer gency fleet corporation, and Captain W. A. Slagce. who succeeded him In that poKltion, were the two ex-federal officials named In the indictments. In addition, six officers of the Grays Harbor Motorship corporation of Aberdeen and three officials of the Seaborn Shipyards company at Ta coma were indicted. Illaln Indicted He fore. Captain Hlaln wus recently named In two other indictments returned by the grand Ju.'y charging him with having accepted secret commlsMona from the Steward Davit & Equipment corporation. New York, while man ager here for the shipping board. Officers of the Grays Harbor Motor ship corporation named in the Indict ments were Albert Sihubach, presi dent; Bruce Shorts of Seattle, the cor poration's attorney; Montey Ward, manager; A. It. Shny, A S. Hoonan and A. B. Hunt, officers. They are charged with havlna collected $1M0S .1 . advance delivery of ,a hull, w hen In reality they were only entitled to $3000. Captain Magee Is named In the indictment. The Tacoma men named were Phil lips Morrison, president of the Seaborn Shipyards company, and C. N. Sea born and II. F. Ostrander, directors. Four Trnnaaotlona t 'barged. The Indictment against them al leges four separate transactions in volving false claims for changes, re pr'rs and additions to hulls under construction. It Is charged that they received $54,000 on these claims, when the amount actually due was $23,892. Captain Blaln. In a third Indictment against him. Is alleged to have mada false claims for salary from the gov ernment while receiving alleged se rret commissions from the Hloward Davit & Equipment corporation. He was not arrested today, being already under $10,000 bonds to answer to the first Indictments analnMt him. The ball of all others except Sea born, Morrison and Ostrander -wsi fixed at J2.")00. The ball of the Ta coma men was set at IjUuo. ;rand Jury Is Kxruaesl. Federal Judge Jeremiah Neterer ex. cused the grand j.ury until March j:. when, department of justice officials said, further Investigation or alleged shipyard frauds would be taken up. Bert KchlcsHlnger of ban rrancisvo, special assistant attorney-general In charge of the shipyard probe, ex- pected to return to San r rancisro. coming to Seattle again In time to appear before the grand Jury when reconvenen In March. onaplrary la anrged. Here Is what the federal grand ury alleges against the 10 prominent northwest shipbuilders Indicted today. The Seaborn Shipyards company. hilips Morrison. II. F. Ostrander snd C. N. Seaborn are named in tne earns ndlctment, which charges four sepa rate transactions in wmm n eged that fraudulent claims were made to the government for additions. hanges and repairs to hulls which were under construction for the gov- rnment. The Individuals are charge! with conspiracy to defraud the United States. In count 1 It is alleged that on May 1918, a claim for $22,600 was pre- sented to P. H. tlnagney, assistant istrict auditor of the emergency fleet corporation, for changes and ddltlons to hull 1199. while It Is al leged that the Individuals well knew hat they had not expended In excess $3158.94 on the chnnges. A de tailed voucher tor tne x.-i.Duu.o. 11 is alleged, was later presented to W. A. Magee. an officer of the emergency fleet corporation. Mlmllar Claim Is Ure. Count J alleges that a claim for $24,222.13 was similarly presei.ted for alleged changes to hull 2198, whereas not to exceed $7797.25 was actually due the shipyards company. Count 3 alleges that a claim for $15,738.28 was presented for additions to hull 2200, while only $4870.50 was due. Claim was presented June 3, 1918, it Is alleged. Count i alleges that claim for $15,738. 2S was presented on hull 2201, while only $6059.33 ' -as due. The Indictment states that the con tract provided for additions and tConcludi'd on 1'agt 2. Column l.