:'.- y-u k' -.vr. v.;?ir?rrj ;? r - . - v . v.": VOL. LIX NO. 18,510 Entered at Portland (Oregon) Postofflce an Second-Class Matter. PORTLAND OREGON, TUESDAY, MARCH 1920 rniCE rivi: ckxts 1 -m (11 YIUIPIJ IF-rtlflHI '?i.5oao is paid ULIIViriH GLGJIUIIij FOR KLAMATH TIMBER SOUTH DAKOTA FOR BENTON EX-SHERIFF ', SENTENCED, PAROLED W. A. GELLATLY ADMITS TAKr I"G $3000 COUNTY FU.VD. PORTLAND GETS PEEK I ASTORIA DIVER BASE Drn CDITC FAVORED IN REP0RT,,LU Jl ,LJ AT AURORA BOREALISi RATIFIES SUFFRAGE IS FORECAST TO 40,000 ACRES .TAKEX OVER BY SEMI-CIRCLE OF RADIANCE HOUSE NAVAL COMMITTEE RECOMMENDS ACTION. LOXG-BELL COM PAX V. FLUNG' ACROSS HORIZON. , '" 23, ATTACK ON BRITISH WORK 100 IS LAID TO BENSON DISCQVEH 1 " . - ' Washington Legislature's Action Is Unanimous. SENATE PASSES SCHOOL BILL "20-10" Relief Measure Put Jhrough Upper House. GENERAL LEVY IS LIFTED Measure Increasing Limit From to 4 Mills for One Year to Go to Lower House. OLTMPIA, Wash.. March 22. (Spe cial.) Washington's duty to the wom en of the nation was performed to day, when without a dissenting vote in either house the resolution ratity- ing the federal woman suffrage amendment was adopted at the spe-; cial session of the legislature, which convened here at noon. After the suffrage resolution had been disposed of at the joint session the senate proceeded to its own work and passed an amended bill late to night raining the general fund tax levy limit from 3 to 4 mills and limit ing its operation to the 1920 levy. The bill as originally introduced, pro vided for raising the limit to 5 mills. The senate then passed the bill for the relief of the common schoofs, pro viding for a payment by the state to school districts of $20 for each census school child instead of $10 as at pres ent. County payments remain at m under the measure. ' The galleries were crowded with women visitors, many state and na tional suffrage leaders attending the legislative proceedings. The honor o introducing the res olution In the house was given to Mrs. Frances M. Haskell, represents tive from Pierce county, whose efforts Lad been a strong factor in inducing Governor Louis F. Hart to call the special session. Csur Members Take Oath. The house was called to order at noon by Representative Fred A. Ad ams of Spokane, speaker of the last cession. Rev. J. C Baker of Olympia delivered the invocation. Following the Invocation, the call for the spe cial session was read and Representa . tives Fulton and Colwell of Snohom ish, Lockhart of Jefferson, and Happy cf Spokane, elected at special elec tions March 17 to fill vacancies oc curring since the last session, were (worn in as members of the house, the oath being administered by Su preme Court. Justice Bridges. A resolution continuing the speaker and chief clerk of the last session as such officers for the special session was adopted and the old rules were adopted. Representatives Happy, Coleman nd Myers were named as a commit tee to wait upon the senate and in form that body that the house had organized and was ready to meet in joint session to receive the gover nor's message. Committee ttftcs Governor. On the committee to notify the gov ernor that the legislature was in cession and ready to receive his mes sage, were named Representatives Hull of King. Gardner of Jefferson, and Anderson of Spokane. In the meantime, the senate had organized with Senator P. H. Carlyon of Thurston county as- president. The invocation in the senate was delivered by Rev. R. F. Hart of Olym pia. Senators Clarence A. Sather of Pierce county and Mack C. Gose of Columbia, Garfield and Asotin, elected to fill vacancies, were sworn in by Chief Justice O. R. Holcomb. On the committee to notify tha governor were Senators Myers of Lin coln, and Loomis of Grays Harbor. Hart Addreases Joint Sesaioa. Accompanied by tne committee on notification Governor Luis F. Hart appeared before- the Joint session of house and senate and outlined the emergencies Justifying the special session and recommending legislation designed to meet the situation. Soon after the senate reconvened, after hearing the governor's message, insurgents led by Senator Lamping of Kin?, supported by Senators Guy Groff of Spokane, E. Ben Johnson of Spokane, Senator Rockwell of King, Fred Hastings of King, John H. Fer ryman of Chelan and Kittitas and K. A. Hutchinson of Spokane, renewed the fight started yesterday in the caucus for an explanation of the capi tol building plans. Comaa Motion Prevails. A motion by Senator Coman pre vailed that the chairman and secre tary of the state capitol building commission be invited to appear be fore either the capitol building com mittee or the senate for the purpose 'ot informing the senate on the plans and expenditures in connection with the construction ot the new capitol group. . , . Under the statutory designation, the governor is the chairman of the commission and tne state land com missioner is secretary. In response to the Invitation extended to Governor! Hart fixing the appointment for 8 o'clock tonight the governor replied that a previous engagement would (Concluded en rse i. Column 2.) Southern Concern Exercises Option for 600,000,000 Feet of Pine In Southern Oregon. KLA MATH FALLS. Or., March 22. (Special.) Forty thousand acres of timber changed ownership today when the Long-Bell Lumber company of St. Louis, Mo., exercised its option upon the holdings of the Western Pa cific Land & Timber company in Klamath and Jackson counties. The tract is estimated to scale about 600,000,000 feet of pine timber. While the exact price has not . been revealed, it is said to have been ap proximately $1,500,000. An option was obtained by the Long-Bell company last fall. Most of the holding Is In Klamath county. By this purchase the Long-Bell pcompany has increased its holdings in this district to 127,000 acres, situ ated in Klamath and Lake counties, Oregon, and in Modoc county, Cali fornia, ranking next to the. Weycr hauser interests in the importance of its timber tracts in the three coun ties. The latter company owns 300, 000 acres. The Long-Bell company, hitherto operating in the southern pine belt, entered the western field little more than a year ago, by the purchase ot the Booth-Kelly holdings in north ern Klamath county, comprising 87,000 acres, estimated ' 'at one and one-half billion feet of timber. THREAT MAY RAISE WAGE Umatilla County Likely to Offer Teachers Higher Salary. SALEM, Or., March 22. (Special. )J unless the school districts of the Willamette valley Increase the sal aries of its teachers to meet those paid in eastern Oregon, Umatilla county has threatened to send a rep resentative here and employ the most efficient instructors available for the term beginning next September, ac cording to a telegram received by the state superintendent of schools today. Umatilla teachers are paid a min imum wage of $1200 a year, while many instructors in this section are paid as little as $900 per annum. Because of the present scarcity of instructors State Superintendent Churchill says the threat of the Uma tilla school directors cannot" be re garded lightly, and may force other districts to pay salaries in keeping with the compensation received - In the eastern Oregon county. SOLDIERS RIOT; 2 KILLED Boisterous Paraders In Dublin Streets Precipitate Riot. DUBLIN. March 22. (By the Asso ciated Press.) There was a riot to night in which two men were shot dead and four seriously wounded. The riot was precipitated by the disorderly conduct of soldiers, about 300 of whom paraded the streets about 9 o'clock singing, jostling passers by, hammering on doors and smash ing windows. After parading through Harcourt street, the soldiers returned toward their barracks followed by a crowd of civilians. At the Porto Bcllo bridge near the barracks a clash seemed inevitable and a volley was fired over the crowd. The soldiers who started the dis order eventually returned to their barracks. Other soldiers not con cerned in the rioting were roughly handled by the populace. NAVAL PAGEANT PLANNED Supcrdreadnaughts to Take Part in Naval Reservists' Parade. SAN FRANCISCO, March 22. The , j i-. , . : v n ... Mexico and Texas are expected to ar- i J rive in the harbor here tomorrow preliminary to the pageant to be staeed here Saturday in observance ; OI naval reserve uajr. a. luiiiujt ui . . six destroyers will accompany the , battleships. 'it Naval reservists are to take part In ; the pageant. Thousands of sailors, ; f n.aMlnau r. 'I a IT V i , A TY1.I1 1 1 ttA T in line. A race between three hydro-aero-4 planes of the F-o-L type from San Diego to San Francisco Thursday has been arranged for as a feature of the celebration. Lieutenants Sheridan i B. Fry and J. H. Parent and Ensign ' . . - i , . . . i 1 1 . . : a 1 7 Van ntAcrn n r A in h. thA nllotfl. MISSIONARY IS SLAYER . !J American Kills Major la India for . Domestic Reasons. , LONDON, March 22. An American J medical missionary, the Rev. Mr. j Jac'kman. shot Major H. D. Cloete ' dead at Sadiya, Assam, British "ndia, a northeast frontier - post, according to a Calcutta dispatch to the Daily j Mail, dated' March 15. ! Reasons for the .trage'dy were do- nlestic. The missionary surrendered himself. V - ' BISMARCK, N. D., LARGER Population of Keokuk and Newton, la., Also Increases. WASHINGTON, March 22. Popula tion statistics announced today by the census bureau included: 1 Bismarck, N. D., 6951; Increase 150S, or 27.7 per cent. Keokuk, la., 14.423; Increase 415, or Z per cent. Newtonl la., 0627; increase 1011, or 43.6 per cent; - Choice of General at Pri mary Today Predicted. LOWDEN LOSES PUBLIC FAVOR Hard, Fair and Even Fight Is Brought to Close. VICTORY IS" IMPORTANT Ability to Repeat Achievement in Oilier States Regarded as Hinging on Outcome. BY MARK SULLIVAN. HURON. S. D.. March 22. '(Special.) The most dependable prediction is that Wood should carry South Dakota in the republican presidential primary tomorrow. Whoever is the winner will have reason for satisfaction and will be justified in assuming that what he does here he will be able to do in other states. Sot it has been a hard fair and even fight. The .two organizations within the. state which have been behind Wood and Lowden, respectively, are of ex traordinarily even strength and have fought with equal energy and equal resources. The advantages in favor of Wood are that he made a rather more favorable personal impression on the people of the state than Low den made when he was here. Wood Finishes in Whirlwind. Also Wood spent twice as much time in the state as Lowden. Finally, Wood has spent the last week of the campaign here, winding up with a whirlwind finish in the Black Hills tonight. During the past eight days General Wood must have personally spoken to or shaken hands with fully a third of all the (voters in the state. The fortunes of the fight have gone back and forth during fhe three- months it has been on. Wood actually was the first in the state, but the Lowden forces, when they did come, came In a formidable. way and were the first to organize the state. There Is .no doubt that -from four to eight weeks ago the Lowden organization had the fight won, but the Wood forces have succeeded in. reversing the situation. Lowden Campaign Disappoints, j Personally, the people who heard Lowden had a-sense of disappoint- ment, which indicated universally and ' in a wholly friendly way that Low- j den's ebb in strength started about '. the time of his personal tour, of the , state. About the same time the Wood : forces began a most energetic work j of organization, which they have (Concluded on Page 3, Column 2.) CONSIDERING THE PERFORMANCE HE HAS GIVEN HE'S I r. : : ' " : : .... -VvNv is.,!,., I A A ntV' JM nE , . UV iTv .t f J M . .ttH It II I T 4 W ,4nt"k a I II I I t gM a Ml .... .--- AW.MVAiUtAW.iJA'JA'JA'.'.A.M . Weakness Rather .Than Criminal Intent Held Responsible for Defa leationj ' CORVALLIS. Or., March 22. (Spe cial.) W. A. Gellatly, ex-sheriff, ap peared before the district court aere this afternoon and pleaded guilty to a charge of defalcation of public funds. He was Immediately sentenced by Judge Skipworth to serve a five year, term in the penitentiary, after which he was paroled to his brother Robert. Mr. Gellatley's books were discov ered a few months ago to show ap proximately $6500 more than his bank balance. He admitted taking about $3000 of the money at various times. Cut claimed to know nothing about the remainder.'.. Portland accountants are working on the books and the eact amount ot the discrepancy will, be' known some time this month. The district attor ney advised leniency In the matter, as it was his belief the former sher iff was a victim of weakness rather than criminal Intent. Brothers of the defendant have made up the shortage. The judge reviewed the case brief- ly, told of his own long personal ac quaintance with the defendant and expressed the conviction that there was no criminal intent, and then gave his five-year -sentence with parole. SHOE PRICES TO DECLINE Reduction on Standard Grades This Season Predicted. NEW YORK, March 22. Prices of standard shoes will be reduced dur ing the spring and summer, 'John J. Slatter, president of the Retail Shoe Dealers' association, announced to day in a communication to Arthur Williams, federal food administrator. Retailers at a recent meeting decided to be content with a smaller margin of profit, Mr. Slater said. Reductions, however, will not applyto "all kinds of fancy and ultra-fashionable foot wear.' The action of the retail shoe deal ers, Mr. Williams said, probably pressages the beginning of a .general narrowing or present margins in otner wearing apparel. YAP ISLAND HELD VITAL United States Wants Information on -Reported Transfer. "" WASHINGTON. March 22. A reso lution asking President Wilson for Information as to. the recent an nouncement by the British foreign minister that the Island of Tap in the Pacific ocean was to be given to Japan was adopted today . by the senate without debate. ' It was offered by Senator Lodge, who presented a letter from John Foord. secretary of the. American Asiatic association. The letter said ,hA isknH was the nnlnt from which radiated three Pacific cables, vital to American business interests in the far east, and that its control was es- Kotial to the conduct of much nf tha . - American commerce with the east. Telegraph Communication in Many - Parts of Country Interrupted by Electrical Currents. , Aurora borealis, the mysterious "northern lights, furnished a display for Portland folk last night at 10 o'clock,, when a semicircle of radiance was flung across the sky from hori zon to horizon. The aurora had none of the dancing proclivities so fre quently manifest In its kind, but glowed with a steady pallid bril liancy. In the cold-weather country to the east the aurora is a common sight- but to Oregon Jt Is a singular one. All over Portland last night ran the question, "What Is it?" "The aurora borealis, of course.' Tet that didn't answer, for no one yet ,has solved the mystery of the aurora to the entire satisfaction of the scientific world. Western Union, Associated Press and Postal telegraph wires were affected by electric currents caused by the aurora, a condition not common, but quite vexatious when it occurs, ac cording to wire chiefs of the big sys tems. Transcontinental lines were "out" at intermittent periods during the night, and the Western Union's St Paul-Spokane wire was among those troubled. Two Chicago lines were out of commission for a time. All of the wires In western Washington and Oregon were working. NEW YORK, March' 22. Aurora borealis tonight kicked up her heels, danced all over the sky and put tele graph wires out of commission. ,The wire chief at Western Union headquarters reported the company had no instrumants strong enough to measure the voltage in the electrical currents. Nature's skylarking in the northland at times made telegraphy an impossibility. " The American Telephone & Tele graph company, which also reported its telegraph service was completely demoralized, said the northern lights had not interrupted its telephone service. Cable terminals were hard hit, as was wireless apparatus. Crowds in the streets had an op portunity to see an unusual electrical display. LEGION ASKS PAY BONUS S 1.50. Per Diem "Wanted for Ev ' ery Service Day. WASHINGTON, March 22.vThe ex ecutive committee of the American Legion tonight put up to congress the proposal to pay adjusted compensa tion to former service men and wo men at $1.50 for every day in service. This action reversed a previous vote by the committee which recorded 37 state representatives for the legis lative committee's plan for cash relief at $1 a day, adopted as a substitute for the original proposal of $50 a month. The committee's determina tion to boost relief followed a general review of a composite bill which the legion will present to the house ways and means committee Wednesday, in cluding privileged land settlement. ome building aid and extension of vocational training. Vi GETTING OFF LUCKY. J Sims Says Admiral Told Him to Be Wary. LITTLE WEIGHT GIVEN NOTICE Commander Says Prejudice of Superior Well Known. SECRECY .4 IS DESCRIBED Few Instructions Given Before De parture for Enemy Waters, Witness Declares. WASHINGTON, March 22. Rear Admiral Sims told the senate inves tigating committee today that Rear Admiral Benson, chief of naval oper ations during the war and now chair man of the shipping board, was the officer who told 'him "not to let the British pull the wool over your eyes; we would as soon fight them, as the Germans." This was not a formal instruction, the admiral said, but was told to him before other naval officers after Sec retary Daniels had given him final instructions previous to bis departure overseas, where he became command er of American naval forces. It was repeated the following day, he de clared, and six months later w,hen Admiral Benson visited Paris. Bennon'a Remark Iirnorrd. Cross-examination by Senator Pitt- man, democrat, Nevada, developed that Admiral Sims had shown his letters criticising the navy depart ment's conduct of the war to Henry P. Davison of New York about Jan uary 15. Admiral Sims conceded this was "an indiscretion. " Senator Plttman said he bad reason to believe a copy of the letter had reached a Washington newspaper cor respondent, who pitfibably would be called later. Explaining his interpretation of what Admiral Benson said, the wit ness said he had not given the state ment serious consideration then be cause he had assumed it resulted from what he described as an in tensely anti-British feeling enter tained by Admiral Benson. He added that Admiral Benson was an "upright and honest man." Commenting briefly on SecretaryJ xsanieis statements Deiore tne com mlttee. Admiral Sims said "that in his testimony on awards, the secre tary stated he' had reminded me of the indiscretion .in a speech I made at Guild hall." "The secretary's recollection Is thoroughly mistaken," the witness added, "no reference was made to that occasion." In reply to questions by Senator Pittman calculated to bring out that he made public his letter regarding naval decorations before Secretary Daniels received it. Admiral Sims de clared neither he nor any of his Btaff gave the matter any publicity. "I am no spring chickerf," he said, "and am not putting my head into a noose unnecessarily. I even carrie the only copy around in my pocket, so I would know it did not get out prematurely." The witness was reluctant to give the name of the officer who gave the instructions to look out for the Brit ish, but' Chairman Hale Insisted. "Then I will tell you the whole story," said Admiral Sims. "Early In April, 1917, I was ordered from my post at Newport to Washington. When I arrived L, reported to the navy de partment by telephone and was tofd not to come to the department but to get in touch with the chief of the bureau of navigation. Rear-Admiral Leigh C. Palmer. Secrecy la Related. "Everything was very secret, the way they like it. 'J could not get in touch with the chief of navigation then and eo I reported to him later at the department and 'then I had an interview with the secretary o" the navy In his office. No one else was present, as I remember It. "The Interview was very brief. I was told that I was 'going abroad to join the allied admiralties and that Ambassador Page had recommended that an officer of high rank be sent there for that purpose. After leaving Secretary Daniels' office, or just be fore going there, I don't remember which, I went to the bureau of navi gation. The admiral was there, and it was at that time that the remark the chairman has asked me about was made." - Whom do you refer to as the ad miral?" asked Chairman Hale. Admiral Sims said he did not wish to indulge in personalities, but when pressed by Chairman Hale he said he referred to Admiral Benson. Admiral Sims said he included Ad miral Benson's remark in his letter to Secretary Daniels January 7 re garding the navy's part In the war, because "If a man has a prejudice against men fighting alongside of him it, has an unconscious influence on him." Credit Given Admiral. The admiral told the committee he had always regarded the admonition as "a personal prejudice on the part of Admiral Benson." ' He described the former chief of operations as "an up standing, honest man, who has strong convictions," and added he believed (Concluded on Pass 2. Column 2.) ; Other Appropriations for Pacific Coast Also Approved Avia tion Increase Denied. WASHINGTON. March 12. The house naval committee today reported favorably the following items of the naval appropriation bill: An appropriation of $250,000 for beginning development of a subma rine and destroyer base at the mouth of the Columbia river on 115 acres of land given by Astoria, Or., was approved. Other Pacific appropriations were approved as follows: For improvements at Pearl harbor, Hawaii, $890,000; at Mare island, Cal., $175,000; at Puget sound. Wash., $320,000; ammunition depot. Pearl harbor, $80,000; T. N. T. magazine at Puget sound yard, $25,000; and fuel-oil station, Cavite, Philippines, $25,000. I The house refused to increase the appropriation ftir aviation from $15, 000,000 to $25,000,000. Without discussion, appropriations aggregating $4,000,000 for the de velopment of Pacific coast shore fa cilities were approved. Most ot the money was for use at San Diego, Cal., the bill providing that the govern ment accept from the city two plots of ground. America's navy will about equal that of Great Britain In fighting power by 1924, Chairman Butler of the committee, told the house In de fending the provision in the naval appropriation bill for continuing work on the 18 capital ships now under construction. "In the next four years," said Mr. Butler, "the United States will put out the most formidable armada the world has ever seen produced in a similar period." In 1924, he said, Great Britain will have SO battleships, the United States 47, France 26, Japan 15 and Italy 13. While England will have more ships, he added, those of the United States will be about equal In power. Representative Mondell, the re publican leader, said that considering foreign exchange values, the $125. 000,000 total of the proposed Amer ican naval appropriation exceeded the British estimate for the year by $100,000,000. "For the first time in many years," he said, "the only naval establish ment and programme in the world at all comparative with ours is that of England. No other navy or naval programme is of a size and strength even remotely approaching oura. In fact, since the practical wiping out of the German navy, all the remain ing navies and naval programmes of the world, exclusive of England, do not equal ours." CHICAGO DRIVERS STRIKE Chauffeurs and Teamsters De mand $8 and $11 a Day. CHICAGO, March 22. The first walkout in what may be a general strike of city employes occurred to day when 500 teamsters and chauf feurs quit work, tying up collection of garbage and interfering with street cleaning. The strikers demanded an increase of $2 a day. The chauffeurs receive $( and the teamsters $9. Officers of the clerks' and stenog raphers' union notified the city coun cil that a strike would be called Thursday unless demands for a wa Increase of $2j a month were granted. INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. YESTERDAY'S .Maximum tmiralur. tiJ degrees: minimum, 41 degrees. TODAY'S Fair and colder; nurtta eaterly winds. f'oreisa. N'oska resigns as Kbert minister of de fense. Page 1. National. Next step In treaty .Ituation puzzles diplomats. Page S. Sims says Admiral Benson gave him In structions "not to let British pull wool over your eyes." Page 1. Astoria submarine base appropriation re ported favorably to house. Page 1. Republican liberals threaten to form new political party, J'age 3. Domestic. Wood frst choice In poll of alaryland county chairmen. Page 3. Wood victory in South Dakota Is forecast Page 1. raelflc Northwest. Washington ratifies suffrage. Page 1. Long-Bell company buys 40.000 'acres of Klamath timber for about f l.ivO.OoO. Page 1. Four Justices of atate supreme court again caadidatea for office, rage 7, Rigid economy urged upon special sea. aion of Washington legislaluro by Gov. ernor Hart. Pago 3. Liquor raid near Seattle nets nine, in cluding two police officers. Paga 4. Kporta. With 21 players now on squad, sorting process begins. Page :!. "Kid" Carson to fight Stanley Willis Fri day night. Page 12. Recruits turn out in large numbers at Sunday'a semi-pro practice games. Page 12. Commercial and Marine. Eastern dealers and millers again In mar ket for coast wheat. Page 21. Corn advances at Chclago owing to poor wheat conditlona. Pag 21. Pools resume bullish operations in stock market. Page SI. Cansumset brings second direct cargo from Europe, rage -'u. Chamber of Commerce chief reports phe nomenal gains In city a foreign trade. Page -'U Portland and Vicinity. Wax figure proves riddle to crowds of shoppers. Paga It. Milk compromise hope of distributors de clares A. M. Work. Pago 13. I. W. W. spies seek to discredit 'Jurors In Laundy case. Page 1. Portland chamber of commerce Indorses open shop for labor. Paga 6. Noted moving picture producer to ba In Portland in June. Page 10. City civil aervlce employes dislike ' new plan of conducting examinations. Pag 11. "Roving marines" delight big audience at auditorium. Page . Portland gets peak at aurora borealis. - Paga 1. I. W. W. Agents Pry Into Local Jury Panel. VANDERVEER ADMITS ACTIVITY Portland Homes Invaded by Union Record Solicitors. WORKERS ATTEND COURT Laundy Trial Ttares Activities of Men Who Mixed Prominently in Montr.-ano Affairs. Activities of lnve.tistors In tho employ of the I. W. W. defense were disclosed yesterday In the course of the Jury selection for the trial o( Joe Laundy, I. W. W. organizer, first head of the communist labor party in Oregon and active leader In the defunct soldiers, sailors and work men's council, for violation of the criminal syndicalism act. The raso opened In the court of Circuit Judge Belt of Dallas, sitting in Portland. That members of the March Jury panel are approached by strangers Intent on "casual" conversation or In the guise of agents for the Seattle Union Itecord a favorite cloak for I. W. W, aaents shout Montesann during the recent murder trial wis admitted in the examination of at leust three veniremen ) ester day. One said that his wife had been ap proached by an agent of the Union Record Friday or Saturday; another said he had been qucxlioncd by a supposed Seattle newapaper solicitor; a third was asked concerning an al leged admission of prejudice made to a man named Hull. Hall was In the courtroom and recoaiiixcil aa bna of the axenta of Attorney George F. Vandervecr at Mnnlesano. lateatlaalera Admitted. "He probably was one of our in vestigators," unexpectedly roncedod Vandeveer when Albert II. Horton. one of the Jurors finally accepted, was being questioned concerning lug solicitation by a Union Itnord rep resentative. "And I challenge the state to; show anything improper about it." By these Investigations the defense hopes to uncover Mime bias In a Juror which might not bo discloM'd in Ins examination In the courtroom. J.lstrlct Atttorney Kvana ai-erted last night that aa long aa he had been office he had never sent In vestigators to question prospective Jurymen. Occasionally his suenia would inquire of neighbors or em ployers concerning the fairness of veniremen, but lie never xouglit to trap the men themselves into admis sion, he declared. "Big Bill" Sliehan. one of t lie prin cipal agents for the ucienre at Montesano and son of Mike Miehan, one of tne acienaaiua. in too uiuiuc. case, was remm-o " t" t.iora In the courtroom yesterday, aa also was Kd Smith, said to have been a Jury investigator at Montesano In the role of a Union Itecord agent. Hall was the third man known to ha an agent of the defense Tealallve Jury Passed. After 11 Jurors had been excused because of admitted prejudice against the I. W. W. which in Ik lit. In a clone question, make a doubt rcwolve Itsalf in favor of the prosecution, and on had been challenged pel ciiiptorlly by the defense a tentative panel of 13 men was secured by 5 o'clock yester day afternoon. The defense has fiva peremplorles left, the prosecution, three. The Jury, accepted ho far as challenge for cause Is concerned. Is composed of the following: Albert B. Horton, grocer; Joseph M. Sic Mahon, general hauling; Alrxauiler W. Robertson. machinist; Hugh Hsyden. building superintendent; William Wnn, machinist; A. B. rUeinbach. merchant, re tired: K. W. Kndlcott, sieelworker; Tst rlck w Reynolds, mechanic; Frank L. Dumas, automobile mechanic; Aba Kosen atein, clothier; Alexander Thompson, re tired carpenter, and John Q. Adams, rail road conductor. Though the defense sought to chal lenge August Zahn, first juror called, on grounds of Incompetence, Judge Belt refused to excuse him. Vaiulor veer asked Zahn If he had not, within the past four days, remarked to a man named Hall that the Hermans did right in shooting Liebknecht, German social revolutionist. .ahn aald he had not and when the prosrcutlon demanded that Hall stand up, Zahn said he had never seen the man be fore Jarsr Prejudiced A (a last t. W. W. J. C. Douglass, second Juror called, was, excused for cause. - He had sat on the jury which convicted ths com munist labor trio last eek and ad mitted he had a prejudice against the I. W. W. Joseph M. McMahon, who gave Ms occupation aa general hauling, aald that he had little use for the I. W. W., that he had hired several at one time nd that they tried to disrupt his business, and mat ne aouutea mat na felt fairly toward them. Vanderveer did not attempt to challenge him, however. The district attorney sug gested thst In fairness to the defense It might be beat to excuse the wit ness, but Vanderveer appeared satis fied. He grinned at tha district at- tconcluded on Tag 3, Column t-J ..... i . ,i ' f t I -' : ) '" r : V .1 ,; t 1 ''-. i . ; ' - T - - ' - s -.' m : ' '. ' j. .-