if I in nil it g' VOL. LIX NO. 18,017 Entered at Portland (Oregon) PoRtofffc an Second-Class Matter PORTLAND, OREGON, MONDAY, JULY 20, 1920 PRICE FIVE CENTS 2 IN PORTLAND HURT IN AUTO ACCIDENTS GREEKS 2000 NEGROES GATHER TO WELCOME JOHNSON FISCAL -YEAR. INCOME FOR U.S. TOPS BILLS RESOLUTE, SHAMROCK iCIICprPT T WARM UP ON SUNDAY' dUdl LUI m 1 TAKE WOMAN LEAVING MACHINE IS HIT BY ANOTHER. "IvIIi ARTHA" JAILED IN JO LI- REDUCTION IN PUBLIC DEBT DEFENDER GOES FOR TWENTY MINUTE SPLN" IN BAY. ET; CROWD DISAPPOINTED. ANNOUNCED BY HOUSTON. EMBARGO Of COAL IS EXPEGTED TDDRY U. S. to Try to Clear Up Muddled Situation. ONRUSH ADR ANQPLE BREAK JAIL I Guns and Ammunition Are Taken by Fugitives. POSSES START PURSUIT Fivc-Ycar-OId Child Run Down and Licg Is Injured; Skull Probably Fractured. Umatilla Sheriff Dies From Wounds Sustained in Fighting Outlaws. iMEN FLEE ON FREIGHT TRAIN Deputy Overcome and Bound by Prisoners Attack Is at Dinner Time. Turkish Resistance to Ar tillery Is Weak. Two persons were injured in auto mobile accidents in Portland yester day. Mrs. C. Nelson. 21, of 431 East An keny street, was eerlously injured last night when- she was struck by an automobile driven by J. E. Hedges, 455 Market street, on Terwilliger boulevard near the city limits. Mr. Hedges said the woman got out of her husband's automobile and ran di rectly in from of his car. -. , - , .... t ; 1 1 , K vpara. whose home il at 756 East" Twenty- GREEK TROOPS PUSH ON fifth street North, was knocked down and severely injured last evening at 6:45 o'clock by an automobile driven by E. G. Chandler, who resides at the pjeas of -Turkish Nationalist Com FORCES IN RAPID RETREAT King Alexander to Enter City Sunday, Says Athens. mander for Hard Stru; Have Little Effect. gle LONDON, July 25. The Greeks have occupied Adrianople, according to an announcement made in the Athens newspapers Saturday and for warded to the Exchange Telegraph PENDLETON, Or., July 25. (Special.) T. D. Taylor, sheriff of I Umatilla county, was shot through the breast and fatally wounded here I this afternoon when six of seven prisoners confined in the county jail I made their escape. Sheriff Taylor died at 6:10 P. M., four hours later. Posses were formed immediately I at Pendleton and at nearby points and towns and took up the trail of the outlaws. One prisoner, Robert Jeffries, re- Imained in the jail and took no part in the break. The prisoners who escaped were: INeil Hart, Indian, aged 22, held in Ijail after a duel with Taylor and (Deputy Sheriff Marin in the hills near Reith last week, and who faced charges of grand larceny and at ! tempt to kill; Jim Owens, Indian, aged 29, caught with Hart; Jack IRathie, 22 years old, held on rob bery charge; Albert Lindgren, al leged check raiser; Richard Patter son and Lewis Anderson, held on a sad-check charge. All of them were awaiting grand jury action. Deputy Sheriff Overpowered. The prisoners first overpowered lake Marin, a deputy sheriff, who Ihad entered the cell to ' carry them iheir dinner. The break was made it 1:55 P. M. Then, led by Hart, the Indian, the irisoners made their way to the sheriff's office and began a search J'or guns and ammunition. Hart evidently obtained a rifle Lvhich he loaded and, accompanied iy two of the other .prisoners, left raylor's office. Taylor and Guy Wyrick, a friend, kvere just entering the sheriff's 'of- J'ice when they saw Owens and Pat- Ierson rummaging the drawers in he search for ammunition. They -ushed the prisoners and Taylor hrew Owens down. "Wyrick over- lowered Patterson. University club. The youngster was taken to St. Vincent's hospital wnere examination showed, the left leg to be fractured in two places, a possi ble fracture of the skull and internal i injuries. The Miller boy was hurt in the acci dent at the corner of East Forty-sec ond and Division streets. The boy. according to the statement made by Chandler, darted out Into the street in front of Chanrler's machine from company. hfihlnrt another automobile standing at I King Alexander will enter Adrian the curb. Chandler estimated his speed ople Sunday, the announcement saia. Jafar Tayar, commander or ine Turkish forces, was reported to be retreating in the direction of Kirk- Kilisseh, at the time as 17 miles an hour and declared that it was impossible foi him to bring his machine to a 6top In lime to keen from hitting the X'-S In the accident in which Mrs. iNei- son was Injured, both machines were headed south. Mr. Nelson's car was ahead and about one-fourth of mile beyond the Terwilliger rest sta tion. Mr. Nelson drew up by the curbing and stopped. Mr. Hedges rirovo un behind him and says that when the cars were nearly together. Mrs. Nelson jumped out and almost dived in front of the approaching au tomobile. The police could learn no adequate reason for her act. She was knocked down by the right front wheel and the right front fen. der of Mr. Hedge's car. Both front wheels oassed over her body. She was taken to St. Vincent's hospital. where the house doctor said her skull and face were fractured and that her condition was critical. AID IN EUROPE URGED Member of Inter-Allied Rhlneland Commission to Report. NEW YORK. July 25. Self-interest requires that the United States should help out in the great crisis of Europe, according to P. B. Noyes, who with Wallace Dav. American members of the Interallied Rhineland commission arrived yesterday on the Baltic. Mr. Noyes is going to Washington to re- nnrt on his work. Conditions in Europe are very bad, he said. "The only one of the war countries that is really getting on is Belgium, he added. 'There they have buckled down to repair the ravages of the invasion. France is making no prog ress. The French policy now is purely militaristic, not through any inherent love of militarism, but through fear of Germany. With all the hatred of Germany which was the heritage of 1870, there was always present the element of fear, a fact of which the kaiser's government was cognizant and upon which it worked "Now that Germany is prostrate. the fear still lingers in the French heart, and France can see no comfort until it is assured that its enemy is bound so tightly che cannot move hand or foot. CONSTANTINOPLE, July 25. (By the Associated Press.) The Greek forces in Thrace occupied Eski-Baba, the junction point of the Constanti nople and Kirk-Kilisseh railway line, Saturday. They Immediately pushed northward toward Kirk-Kilisseh and westward along the railway and northwestward along the highway to ward Adrianople. Turks Klee Rapidly. The Turks, offering slight resist ance, are fleeing rapidly towara Adrianople. Reports say the Greeks were begin ning a heavy offensive against Adrl- nople today. The pleas of Jolonei Jafar Tayar, the Turkish national ist commander in Adrianople, for stubborn resistance, apparently are having little effect, the Turks being unwilling to face the Greek artillery which is displaying good marksman ship. RnlaUace la Feeble The Turkish commander at Tcha- taldja telegraphed Colonel Jafar Tayar saying the Turkish resistance was feeble against oreek landing parties and asking what to do when the Greeks advanced eastward. Col onel Jafar Tayar has declared he will kill himself rather than surrender. Police Reserves Forced to Beat Back Admirers From Gates In Chi cago Station. CHICAGO, July 25. Two thousand negroes gathered at the depot today to welcome Jack Johnson back to Chicago after a voluntary, exile of eight years, a fugitive from justice in foreign lands, but "LIT Artha," idol of the south side, failed to appear. Federal officials removed Johnson from the train at Joliet and hurried him to the jail there when they learned the size of the welcoming throng here. When the train reached Chicago the negroes stormed the gates in an effort to see the ex-champion heavy weight. Polile reserves were forhed to beat the crowd back with clubs to clear a passage 'for Lucille Cam eron Johnson, white wife of the pugi list, who appeared wearing a bright red hat and a blue serge suit. Po licemen loaded Mrs. Johnson and her eight suitcases into a brace of taxi cabs and assisted her out of the crowd. No effort was made today to ob tain ball for Johnson and prospects tonight were that he would remain in the- Joliet Jail until arraigned. Johnson is under sentence of a year and a day in Leavenworth peniten tiary for violation of the Mann act. District Attorney Charles F. Clyne. who yesterday refused an applica tion for bond for Johnson, said today any further application would have to be made to Federal Judge George Carpenter. Carpenter is in a hos pital and is not expected at hi3 office for some time. Johnson was in the best of SDlrits when the train halted at Joliet. State and federal officials and news paper men were there to receive him. tsoys, I am glad 'to be here." he shouted. Recognizing newspapermen. ne stepped back in a soarrinir nnw nd "shadow boxed" around the piatrorm. Johnson was not hand cuffed during the trip. War Provocation la Charged. BERLIN. July 24. Charges that de termined efforts are being made to- provoke Germany into active partici pation in the Kusso-pousn war on the side of Poland were published bv Die Freiheit today. WOOER FREE WITH CHECKS Logger Jailed, Accused of Obtain ing Sum to Buy Maid Jewels. HOQUIAM, Wash.. July 25. (Spe clal.) Sam Fizulich. 30, who has been a Jogger on Grays Harbor for the past ten years, spending the majority of his time in. the woods, has Just landed in jail as the result of his plunges during the last few months into the mysteries of love. He was arrested, charged with pass ine worthless checks, but was given until noon Saturday to make the checks good. Yesterday he was ar rested while making a get-a-way in a hired auto. Cecil Moore. . a young Hoquiam girl, is also in Jail charged with receiving jewelry and clothing valued at $500, which Fizulich is al- jlcged to have bought her with- bad checks. Important Reduction in Gross Public Debt Is Promised for Next Twelve Months. WASHINGTON, July 25. The gov ernment income for the fiscal year ending June 30 exceeded expenses for the first time in three years. Secretary Houston declared today in a statement. He announced a re duction in the gross public debt and forecast a further "important re duction" for the next 12 months. While the annual operations of the government showed a surplus of 1291, 221,547, the more important change, treasury officials said, was the cut ting of $1,185,184,692 from the gross public debt during the year. The national debt aggregated $24,299,321, 467 on June 30 and $25,484,506,160 I year previously, but in the meantime the obligations of the nation had mounted to their highest point $26,- 596,701,648 on August 21 due to the operations incident to the handling of maturities of treasury certificates of Indebtedness. Thus, a reduction of $2,297,380,180 from the peak is shown. Outside of the transactions involv ing the gross debt, treasury receipts for the year aggregated $6,694, 565, 3SS, while expenditures totaled $0,403,343. 841. The statement revealed, however, that the surplus was due largely to a partial liquidation of the assets of the war finance corporation. Exclusive of the special income from that source there was a deficit of $71.- 879,072 in the actual handling of In come and expenses. The operations incident to the handling of the maturities of treasury certificates frbm June 15 to July 15 have now been completed." the state ment said, "and have resulted in fur ther reductions in both the gross debt and the floating debt of the United States. The gross debt on June 30 1920, on the basis of daily treasury statements amounted to $24,299,321,- 467, as against $25,484,506,160 at the end of the previous fiscal year on July 30, 1919. and $26,596,701,648 on August 31, 1919, when the gross debt was at its peak." NEW ENGLAND IS FAVORED Interstate Commission Issue Priority Order. to LAKE PORT MORE SLOW Transportation of Fuel to Xorth vest District 50 Per Cent Be hind Summer Schedule. MOBILIZATION IS DENIED Chilean Allegation of Peruvian Movements Answered. LIMA. Peru, July 25. Sweeping denial of Chilean allegations with reference to Peruvian . mobilization was made in an official statement issued yesterday by Cnehcellor Porras, tor circulation throughout legations abroad. Owing to Influence brought to bear through the legations. Emilo Zalles former director of Bolivian posts and telegraphs, who was held In connec tion with the assassination of General Jose Manuel Fando. has been de ported to Africa. General Pando was a former president of Bolivia, whose death at La Paz was reported June 20, 1917. Sheriff Taylor Is Shot. Then Hart entered the office with I he loaded rifle and shot Taylor. He then commanded Wyrick to stand lip and release Patterson or get a lose of lead, too. Wyrick obeyed. L'hey placed Taylor on a couch. Hart vas about to snoo. layior again jiecause he would not tell where the Iimmunition was hidden. Wyrick pegged Hart not to fire again and Ivas finally allowed to get some Irater for Taylor. Hart then became more abusive ind again threatened to shoot the mr. Then Taylor, pointing to his iesk and to the drawer which con- lined the ammunition, said, "All hicrht. take the ammunition and ;et out." Immediately after they obtained he guns the prisoners fled from the uilding. They then made their way o the O.-W. R. & N. railway tracks Ivhere they boarded an' eastbound freight train. They kept under cover Jong- the railway tracks until the I rain passed and then boarded it ust outside the city limits. Train Ridden Four Miles. The fugitives rode the train for our miles, getting off at Mission tation. From there they fled into Ihe timber. As soon as the news of the jail- reak had bee.i made known every ible-bodied man in Pendleton was hressed into service and posses were lent out in pursuit of the fugitives. Word of where the outlaws had ft the train was brought to Pen- pleton an hour after the escape by iembers of the crew of westbound height train 2136. U. S. BARS WALES' HORSES Entrance Refused Because of Foot and Mouth Disease In England. Copyright by the New Tork World. t Published by arrangement.) LONDON, July 25 (Special Ca ble.) Fifty thoroughbreds owned by the Prince of Wales have been refused entrance to and transit through the United States owing to the prevalence of foot and mouth disease in the Brit ish Isles. On his trip to Canada the Drince acquired a ranch, and it is his intention of stocking it with thor oughbreds from his stables here. The shipment was arranged for this month through New York. It is not known whether the prince's represen tatives intend shipping the horses di rect to Canada, where there also are 'strict regulations of import of live stock from places infected with foot and mouth disease. AUTO VICTIM YET LIVES Woman Hurt in Auto Accident Shows No Improvement. SALEM, Or., July 25. (Special.) Mrs. Ednah Imhoff, Portland woman who was injured when a machine driven by George Adams, also of Portland, turned turtle near here, was reported by hospital attaches to be in about the same semi-conscious condition.- Unless she shows improvement in the next 12 or 24 hours it is expected she will die. WIFE SLAYER LYNCHED Mob Takes Man Sentenced to Life Imprisonment From Jail. FAY ETTE VILLE, W. Va.. July 25. William Bennett Jr. of Fayette- ville, sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder of his wife and un born child, was taken from the jail today by a mob and lynched. WHEN MA AND PA RETURNED FROM THEIR VACATION. j I 1 Ob, 1 p - I i 1; J 1 1! ! III Ivfesk.. " ' rtfVC 00 V- WAHT fv I Hill V I ! 1 NVHY WE. VNrMV TO I, ! goia- m of cjouftSE-j J! ' 1 1 . ! HE.e.'s YOUR ?ftrft I I 'ft ArV NSrVvAA . (. . 1.1 itww)- r-Ji WASHINGTON. July 25. The gov ernment will take definite steps to morrow to straighten out a muddled coal situation. The Interstate commerce commis sion will issue an order for priority of movement in the transportation of coal to New England. The order tonight was expected to include a prohibition against any movement of coal to tidewater unless consigned to England. This, in the view of coal experts, will amount to an embargo on the exportation of coal. Under a recenc order of the com mission, more than a score of rail roads serving bituminous mines in western Pennsylvania, Ohio. West Virginia, Virginia, Kentucky and Tennessee will begin to move coal to lake ports for transshipment to the northwest Summer Movement Slow. The summer movement of coal to the northwest is more than 50 per cent behind schedule and the rail roads will attempt to dump 4000 car loads of coal a day at lake ports. Department of labor conciliators tomorrow will begin efforts to end the walkout cf mine laborers in the Illinois fields which is reported to have closed about two-thirds of the mines Officials of government agencies concerned In the straightening out of the coal tangle today read the state ment issued by John L. Lewis presi dent of the United Mine Workers, last night, but declined to comment. Mr. Lewis had declared that any settle ment of the Illinois strike which would modify the basic Interstate agreement unaer which the miners of the central competitive field are working would result in action by national officers of the United Mine Workers to bring about a cessation of work by the 210,000 men employed in that field. Orertare Reported Itejected. The National Coal association, an organization of operators, said to rep resent two-thirds of the country's bituminous production, denied the III inois operators had expressed a de sire 10 nave ine existing wage con tract amended, as stated by the pres ident of the mine workers. The only overture looking toward reopening of the wage agreement. I which was entered into March 31, and wnicn was effective two years, the association's statement said. was made by the miners. This overture, it was added, was re Sir Thomas Upton Confident Last N ight Challenger Will Take Cup Back to England Today. SANDY HOOK. N. J.. July 25. Reso lute and Shamrock IV both took sail-stretching spins this afternoon In Horseshoe bay preparatory to what Is to be the final race lor the Ameri ca's cup tomorrow. The American yacht bent on a brand-new mainsail and after it was hoisted set an outer jib and went for a twenty-minute sail in the bay. Shamrock IV got under way late this afternoon and worked in the Horseshoe for some time. Once at their moorings the mainsails of the wo racers were put under covers and the crews were permitted to rest for tomorrow's race, which Is to be fought over a course 15 miles to windward or leeward and return. Sir Thomas Lipton still feels the Shamrock IV will lift the cup. Indi cations today were for a light south westerly breeze, which would give the yachts a beat to windward 15 miles down the Jersey coast with a run home. MURDER IS JAILED Chicagoan Believed Man Wanted in Detroit. MYSTERY TIP GIVEN POLICE Luggage Found in Room Same as That Holding Body. ALABAMAN OFFERS CLEW STUDENTS VISIT MOUNDS Erection Took Place Berore That of Pyramids, Is Belief. ALBANY, Or.. July 25. (Special.) That some prehistoric mounds in Linn county, situated south of Albany and in the vicinity of Tangent, were erect ed before tho pyramids of Egypt, was the statement yesterday of Dr. J. B Horner, head of the department of history of the Oregon Agricultural college, who conducted a class of 45 students of the college summer school on a trip to the mounds. Dr. Horner has been investigating these mounds for years and has made a study of the peoples who built them. He says that the skeletons and im plements which have been taken from the mounds Indicate that three different races of mound builders lived in this vicinity successively. Before going to the mounds the lass came to Albany, where they isited the museum of the late Dr. L. Hill and inspected the big col lection of prehistoric relics collected by J. G. Crawford of this city. ritish Embassy Explains Alleged Insult to American Flag. WASHINGTON, July 25. At the request of the Bermuda authorities the British embassy authorized the following statement today relative to the recent alleged insult to the Amer- can flag at Hamilton, Bermuda: Recent accouiits of the alleged in- ult to the American flag at Bermuda ave been greatly exaggerated, the facts being as follows: Two drunken sailors began to lower an American flag which was flying at a hotel in Hamilton, but when Colonel Outerbridge of the United States 23d infantry remons trated with them, they desisted and eft the flag flying. 'They were subsequently arrested for drunkenness and their actions were severely censured by the magis- rate, who fined Hiem And handd them over to tne naval authorities tor disciplinary action." (Concluded on Page 2, Column 2.) INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature, 80 u . o . iiiiiiiiiiuiii, ueirreea. TODAY'S Fair; northwesterly winds. Foreicn. Greeks reported to have captured Adrian ople. rase 1. Armistice meeting- of Poles and Ruesla liaely to do at Hrest-Litovsk. Page 3. National. U. S. expected to put embargo on coal exports today. Fago 1. Cox. democratic nominee, an advocaffc of government control 01 utilities. .Page 5. Domewtle. Two thousand negroes gather at Chicago station to welcome Jack Johnson. Page I. Harding declared hope of farmers. Page 2, Police jail suspect in trunk murder case. Page 1. Cox soon to draft acceptance speech. fate Resolute and Shamrock take trial spins on Sunday, fage l. Coolldge 'restingr on father's farm. Page 3. Candidates for governor in Washington ea liven campaign. fage 16. Pacific Northwest. High price of barrels will cause apples t be shipped In bulk to market. Page 33 Sheriff Til Taylor slain when six break jail at Pendleton. Page 1. Slayer of little girl at Seattle eludes two posses, rate n. Candidates for rovernor in Washington active, i-age jo. Sports. Pacific Coast League results: Portia 4-11, Sacramento t-o: Los Angeles 9-3 Vernon 6-s: salt l.aKe 6-B, Seattl 0-18; San Francisco 7-8. Oakland 3-3. Page 8. Crown-Willamette baseball team defeat carmen, J to l. rage 8. Leading Inter-City clubs defeated. Page 8. Vardon drops Ray and loses golf match. Page . Portland and Vicinity. School building probe to be made. Page 1 First outdoor religious service attended by GOO. Jage l. Til Taylor without peer as western sheriff. Page 5. Girl counterfeiter bids Jail good-bye page 10- Courtship- by mall ends in marriage Portland man to .Minnesota woma: Page 10. Mew era of prosperity predicted by finan clal Ilrms. rate n. General manager and staff busy on plans for livestock: exposition. rage 15. County and city send manhunters to aid In chase for escaped Pendleton pris oners. Page 5. RUNKEN 'GOBS' BLAMED Birmingham Linotype Operator Thinks He Knows Victim ; Hus band Reported to Be Jealous. CHICAGO, July 25. Roy Mullen. 29 years oid. said to answer the de scription of Eugene Leroy, wanted by the Detroit police as the alleged slayer of the woman whose mutilated body waj found in a trunk shipped from there to New York, was arrest ed tonight in a hotel. The arrest was made on an anony mous tip. the police say, and Mullen was taken to the detective bureau for questioning. Police found a trunk in Mullen's room. It corresponds in description to that in wjiich the woman's body v.as found, ihey said. Suspect I Salesman. Mullen told the police he was a haberdashery salesman and visited Detroit frequently to see relatives living near that city. He waa there a month ago. he said. DETROIT, Mich., July 25. Detec tives assigned to identify the man who shipped a trunk from Detroit on June 10. in which the mutilated body of a woman was found In New . York, were tonight checking up state ments said to have been made to Birmingham, Ala., police by Allen A Tatum, a linotype operator. The name given of the shipper on the waybill was "A. A. Tatura." According to the dispatches to po lice here. Tatum walked into police headquarters at Birmingham Satur day and volunteered a statement. He said to nave told officers he be- RAIL PAYROLL GREATER Southern Pacific Estimates Award Will Cost $17,500,000. SAN FRANCISCO. July 23. An in crease of approximately n,ouu,u will bo added to the payrolls of the Southern Facine railroad as a resun of the award3 of the railroad labor hoard, according to an estimate made nubile by that company. It Is pointed out in tne statement of the company that last year tne dividends 'of the Southern Pacific were J17.478.460. It is also pointed ri,e thai the Southern Pacifies an nual report recently published showed that the increase in wages and cost of materials used in 1919, compared with the year previous, amounted to $18,833-,500, or an increase of almost si. 500.000 move than the dividends paid to stockholders. ELKS JOKE WITH CUPID Two Couples Sent to License OT flee to Test Clerk's Efficiency. SALEM, Or., July 25. (Special.) Fun-loving Elks in attendance at the state convention of the order here Saturday conceived the idea that it would be well to test the efflclency of U. G. Boyer, county clerk, and his assistants, and at the same time find out if he was conducting his office strictly according to law. Two couples appeared at the clerk s office and asked for marriage licenses. They were told that their cases were out of the jurisdiction of the clerk's office and the license could not be Issued. Later in the day Mr. Boyer ascertained that the pranks were those of fun-loving Elks. PLANES AT PORTAL, N. 0. Fliers Bound for Alaska Make 2 90 liles in Day. rORTAL. N. D-. Jufcy 25. The four airplanes from New York to Alaska arrived here at 1:10 P. M. today from Fargo, N. D., a distance of 290 miles The trip was made in 3 hours and 10 minutes. Tomorrow a flight is scheduled to Saskatoon; b'asK. lieved the murdered woman n- Katherine Jackson, whom he met in Birmingham. He admitted, the dis patches said, that he was acquainted with Lugene Leroy, the name iriven . by a man who rented an apartment at the address given by "Tatum" on the trunk waybill. He said Leroy was an automobile mechanic. Huaband . Said To lie Jealous. Tatum met Katherine Jackson - in . Birmingham, he said in June. 1919. He visited her often, twice in Detroit. Police found that "Mrs. Katherine Jackson. Nashville." was registered at the Inter-Urban hotel there October 30. 1919. Tatum said he visited her in June, 1920, at another hotel. She told him then, he said, that she was married and that her husband was extremely jealous." According to Tatum's story the woman wrote him every day or two. He last heard from her June 4th or ' th, he said, and gave that as his reason for believing something bad happened to her." Tatum Is said to have left Detroit June 28. He Is eaid to have denied knowledge of the crime. The trunk, shipped here from New York, was partially identified today by Mrs. Lottie Brooks, manager of the apartment at No. 105 Harper ave nue, as having belonged to "Leroy." Clothing contained in the trunk in which the body of a woman was shipped from Detroit to New York was positively identified tonight as having been the property of Mrs. E. Leroy, according to detectives as signed to the case. Patrolman Leo Trumbull, a member of the Detroit police force and a close personal friend of the Leroys, was said to have made the identification. Trumbull also stated that Mrs. Le roy was formerly Miss Katherine Jackson, a southern girl, and that she and her husband lived at 105 Har per avenue, Detroit, the address given, on the shipping bills for the trunk. Trumbull to Chicago. Trumbull will be sent to Chicago, it was announced, to assist in the identification of a man who gave his name as Roy Millen and who is be lieved by the Chicago police to an swer to the description of Leroy. Mrs. Trumbull, wife of Patrolman Leo Trumbull, said that Katherine Jackson married Leroy here in the fall of 1919. Their married life, Mrs. Trumbull said, was unhappy, and on one occasion Leroy threatened his wife with a dagger, according to a Btory told her by Mrs. Leroy. Mrs. Leroy confided, Mrs. Trum bull said, that she had been married before, unhappily, and had lived in Birmingham, Ala. A. A. Tatum of Birmingham vis ited Mrs. Leroy at her invitation in Detroit, Mrs. Trumbull said, but was unable to give the date. Detroit po lice announced that the second trunk, presumably shipped by Leroy from the Harper avenue "address and be lieved to contain parts of the woman's body, had been traced as far as the Michigan Central station here. BIRMINGHAM, Ala.. July 25. Ex pressing fear that "Leroy," whom h named in his statements to pollco here in connection with the investi gation of the Detroit-New York trunk (Concluded on Page . Column 5.) (Concluded on Pae 4, Column l.J