K VOLi T,IV NO. 18.(GG Ent"f'' ' Portland (Oregon, PORTLAND, OREGON, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1920 PRICE FIVE CENTS 500 GIFT FIRE ON MOB BESIEGES NEGRO SLAYERS OP WHITE L BRANCH P0ST0FFICE IN PORTLAND ROBBED PROPRIETOR . OF STORK IS GAGGED BY PAIR. -HOUR QUAKE ROCKS Q CCrM CHRflC DAPICIP QDfYT U uLLIh MOTHER GUARDS SON FROM FOREST PERIL MRS. CRAWFORD, ON PRIVATE BEAR HUNT, IS LOST. BODIES AND AUTO SOUGHT IN RIVER SOME PACIFIC SPOT ALEUTIAN" ISLANDS THOUGHT TO CENTER DISTURBANCE. WILSON RATERDJUSTMENT F SCENE BLACKS TARE REFl'jE IX CHURCH IX CHICAGO. DRAWS AS RUNNING ROM BOMB Five Times as Much Put in Own Campaign. DEMOCRATS IN LIMELIGHT President Loudly Criticised for Small Donation. COX DONATES NOTHING fionil nor iki tc Is Declared Able, to Do $1,000,000 Without Uteit li!-sins It. ORKGON1AX SEWS BUREAU Washington, Sept. 20. Interest- in ctimpaitrn funds moved over today from the republican to the democratic camp. The reason is that the contri bution of J500 sent to the democratic rational committee by President Wil t,.n terved to distract attention frcrn what the republicans are doing. And singularly, and perhaps unex pectedly, Mr. Wilson has been noisily criticised by some members of his 1 urty for giving only $500 to help elect Cox when four years aKo ho gave Just five times that much to help himi.elf. becretary Tumulty has been quoted as explaining to someone who called to get some light on the president's small ante" that Mr. Wilson 'has been compelled to consider the fact tnat he would soon be off the payroll with no certain employment or income in sight, which, of course, must be accepted as a very good answer, espe cially in view of the broken state of the president's health. This excuse, however, has not served to quiet the criticism that the presi dent should have shown a readiness to invest more than 20 per cent of his contribution of four years ago in this campaign which, by his own state ment, turns on the delicate question of saving the heart of the world. Defenders (iuielc to Answer. The president's defenders are quick to answer that Information up to the end of last week failed to disclose try contribution whatsoever from either Mr. Cox, w.ho has more deep pers-onal interest in the outcome of this campaign tsan Mr. Wilson could possibly , have, or from Franklin Kocsevelt, candidate for vice-president, whoso interest is now less than Air. Cox's. Attention also is called to the dif ference in the ability of the two can didates to contribute as compared to air. Wilson's resources. It is asserted that Cox could donate $1,000,000 to his own campaign and not miss it. while Franklin Roosevelt, an aristo crat by birth -with vast inherited wealth, could give ten times as much as the president without jeopardizing his pin money allowance. Critics of the president's contribu tion appear to have overlooked the fact that Sir. Wilson is planning to give what money cannot buy. That is Intellect. He has begun by writing & statement of 20.000 words on the league of nations, which is to serve as a. textbook to democratic speakers. This will go forth' to every corner of the country in & few days and will be followed by other contri butions from the president's pen tell ing why Cox should be elected. Interest Is Only Passing;. But all of tho discussion about cam paign funds has failed to awaken more than a passing interest. It is thought probable that the public has some recollection of the past which i causes the individual givers of this year, so far as reported, to look like pikers. Here are a few of the leading con tn butions of four years ago to the democratic campaign; Cleveland H. Dodge of New York. $79,000; Edward L. Uoheny, California oil operator, 2o.000; Thomas W. Jones, David B. Jones pnd Roger C. Sullivan of Chi cago, $12,500 each; Nelson Morris, Al vin Lntermeyer, F. C. Penfield, Charles J. Peabody. $10,000 each; W. L. Douglas, shoe manufacturer, an several others. $5000 each. To the republican campaign, Harry Fayne Whitney, of New York made the largest contribution of $30,000; A C. James, G. V. Baker. D. J. Re'id, W. II. Moore, H. C. Frick. and R. T. Crane Jr., $25,000 each. There were five republican gifts of $20,000 each and five of $15,000 each. Fund Issue May Be Dropped. The campaign fund Issue, It is hint ed, will soon be abandoned and Gov ernor Cox is expected to take up something that will make a stronger appeal to the voter's of the oig eastern dates. They have failed to be impressed with his slush fund charges, and to them, it has about been determined, he must go to get the support neces sary to win. The west now looks hopeless to democratic leaders, and it is intimated that the next three weeks , will see the Cox efforts centered on the three big states of New York, Ohio and Indiana. These three states have 84 electoral votes, which, addd to the 135 sure southern votes, makes 219. It Is cal culated to pick up the balance of the necessary 266 votes in such states a (Concluded on Face 2, Column i. Police Armed AVith Rifles Disperse Crowd; Man Slain In Rescu ing Olrl When Insulted. CHICAGO, Sept. 20. Three negroes were besieged for more than an hour in St. Gabriel's Catholic church on the sou,h side tonight by a mob of a thousand persons after the negroes had killed a white man. Charles Bar ret, who Is said to have gone to the rescue of a white girl insulted by the negroes. They were rescued and placed In jail when squat'.s of policemen were sent to avert a possible race riot. Chief of Police Garrity ordered the entire police force mobilized and placed several hundred extra police-, men around the scene at the south east corner of the stockyards, where several thousand negroes are em ployed. t Shortly after Barret had been killed, three negroes were dragged from a street car two blocks away and se verely beaten. The negroes who killed Barret, cutting his throat with a razor, were chased several blocks by a continually increasing crowd and finally dashed into the church. Two hid In the con fessional and one back of the altar. Sticks and stones were thrown at the church and frequent yells of "lynch them" came from the crowd. Father Burke, pastor, pleaded with the crowd to disperse, but without avail. Only when policemen armed with rifles appeared did the mob break up. The south side "black belt," the scene of disastrous race riots a year ago. was placed under heavy guard, as was the stockyards quarter. WOMAN IN AUTO INJURED Mrs H. Klinger Is Caught Under Overturned Machine. Mrs. H. Klinger, 646 Williams ave- ue, was injured seriously last night by being caught under an automobile which was overturned in a collision at East Fifteenth street and East Broadway. T. M. Peterson, an em ploye at the Broadway garage. East Twenty-fourth street and East Broadway, was arrested by Patrol man Forken and held pending inves- igation of the case. Mrs. Klinger was riding in an auto mobile driven by her brother-in-law, O. E. Franze, 646 Williams avenue. The car was going south on East Fif- eenth street and Peterson, headed west on East Broadway, struck the rear end of the Franze. car. The lat ter machine was turned bottom side up. Doctors said Mrs. Klinger might be injured internally. REMIER'S ELECTION SURE MlUcrand's Elevation to Presidency Is Held Certain. PARIS, Sept. 20. (By the Associ ated Press.) Premier Alexandre Mil- lerand agreed today to be a candidate tor the presidency of the republic, to succeed President Deschanel, who has tendered his resignation. M. Millerand's acceptance as a can didate for the presidency has virtu ally averted the presidential crisis, as it is conceded by all sides in the chamber of deputies and senate that his election is certain. He would receive "more than 700 votes, no other candidate officially entering the field. 0. A. C. REGISTRATION ON 1645 Students Enrolled at College on Opening Day. OREGON AGRICULTURAL COL LEGE, Corvallis, Sept. 20. (Special.) Registration on opening day at Ore gon Agricultural college was 1645, which exceeded last year's opening day mark by 200. Applications for rooms indicate that the attendance at the college this year will be 3600. The school of home economics led the list today with 459, while the school of agriculture was second with 374 and the school of engineering third with 339. MINERS RETURN TO WORK General Resumption Reported by Operators' Scale Committee. PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 20. Reports received here today by S. D. Warriner, head of the anthracite coal operators' 'jvage scale committee, showed, it was announced, a general return to work of hard coal diggers. The men quit the mines because of dissatisfaction with the recent award of the anthracite coal commission. STEAMSHIP CHIEF DIES Michael P. Grace of New York Passes Away In London. NEW YORK, Sept. SO. Michael P. Grace of New York, aged 78 years, chairman of the board of directors of William R. Grace & Co., steamship or ganization, died at 11 A. M. today in London. His death, a cable to his office here stated, took place while he was asleep. EX-KAISER WRITES WILL Document Said to Be Last En trusted to Dutch Notary. LONDON, Sept. 20. William of Ho henzoliern, former German emperor, has written a new will, which is de clared to be his last testament. He has entrusted it to the keeping of Notary Schroot at Amerongen, says a. Doom dispatch, to the Daily Mail. Four Railroad Chiefs Conference Here. in INDUSTRY FADES RUIN, PLEA No Decision Reached After , Afternoon Joint Session. VERDICT IS DUE TONIGHT Turin Boost Makes It Impossible for Mills to Compete In East Is Complaint. With vice-presidents of four trans continental railroads, a representative number of traffic officials and 12 leading lumbermen of Oregon and Washington present, a conference to consider railroad freight rates on lumber opened in Portland yesterday and will be continued today. Through the conference the lum bermen hope to bring about some change in the rates which went into effect August 26, and which If con tinued unchanged they declare would mean the death of Pacific northwest lumber business in the east and middle west. ' Following a meeting or the board of directors of the West Coast Lum bermen's association at 10 o'clock yes terday morning at the Portland hotel the lumbermen -adjourned to the Arlington club, where they met the representatives of the railroad and remained ip session until after 6 o'clock in the evening. The conference was behind closed doors. Conferees Reach IN o Decision. After the meeting it was announced by both railroad men and lumbermen that no decision had been reached, but that the entire afternoon had been spent going over data and making a study of the situation. The conference will be resumed at noon today at the Arlington club and by this evening the lumbermen expect to know It the railroad men can grant them any relief in the way of a new freight rate, which will permit west coast mills to compete with southern pine mills in the Chicago and eastern markets. The move to hold the conference between railroad officials and lum bermen was begun by the West Coast Lumbermen's association shortly af ter the new freight rates went into effect on August 26. These rates, which boosted freight charges 33 1-3 per cent on lumber, have been a se vere hardship on western mills, the lumbermen contend, practically mak ing it impossible for the Oregon and Washington mills to compete in the Concluded on Page 3, Column 2.) THE GREASED PIG. t , , vt o , I w.- zf . -.r C c t :: . , ",, i hill 'k l ' ' , n, is,.,. ................. One Robber Enters, by Front Door and Other by Back Victim Bound to Chair. Two armed robbers held up a branch postoffice in a store at 350 West Lombard street late last night, and robbed J. P. Brothers, proprietor of tho store, of $15 or $20. The men tied Mr. Brothers to a chair in a back room, and gagged him with a towel. Mr. Brothers told the police that one of the robbers entered by the front door and forced him into the back room at the point of a rovolver. The other had entered the back door and was waiting in the rear room to stand guard over the prisoner while his partner ransacked the premises. Lieutenant Moloney and Inspectors Anderson and Hall, and Patrolmen Hatt, Pierre, and Belieu, of the St. Johns substation, searched the vicin ity for suspicious characters. Mr. Brothers got only a glimpse of the man who entered by the front door. and saw nothing of the other man, as the room where the robbers tied him was in darkness. Mr. Brothers de scribed the first robber as five feet five inches tall, and weighing about 155 pounds. He wore a gray coat. He said that the robbers wore caps and carried large blue revolvers. The robbers ransacked tho whole store, taking a quantity of jewelry, and throwing other articles about the floor. The gag was pulled so tight around the victim's mouth that the flesh was cut. DRY AGENT IS KILLED California Director Is Fatally Injured In Auto Wreck. SACRAMENTO, Cal., Sept. 21. Loren Handley, prohibition director of California, was killed in an auto mobile accident near Lodi, Cal., ac cording to a report received here early this morning. SAN FRANCISCO. Sept. 21. Loren A. Handley was en route from San Francisco to Sacramento, where he was to preside over the democratic state convention tomorrow. Handley was fatally injured ten miles from Lodi when his automobile went over an embankment in attempt ing to get but of the way of another car. Handley died a few hours later in a Lodi hospital. PORTLAND ORPHAN FOUND Violet Neil, 13, Walks 200 Miles Reaching Woodland, Cal. WOODLAND, Cal., Sept. 20. Violet Neil, a 13-year-old orphan, arrived hero today three weeks out from Portland. Or., afoot, on wagons and in automobiles of tourists, she said. "I was going to San Francisco or Los Angeles, where I heard there was lots of work," she said. Violet had about $2 she had earned en route. She told of starting without money. The girl was given a home here by Miss Sarah Savage until another could be found for her. She said she had walked 200 miles of her journey. Instrument Records Long Surface Waves, Indicating Violent Shook, Say Observers. VICTORIA, B. C, Sept. 20. Seismic disturbances which began at -6:49 o'clock this morning and continued for more than two hours, were record ed on the seismograph of Gonzales ob servatory here today. Superintendent Napier Denison, of the observatory, placed the distance at 1600 miles from Victoria, probably in tho Aleutian islands or Northern Mexico. Long surface waves were recorded on the instrument, indicat ing a pronounced earthquake, accord ing to Superintendent Denison. SEATTLE. Wash.. Sept. 20. An earthquake, blieved to have centered approximately 2500 miles northwest or southeast of Seattle, was regis tered at the seismograph at the Uni versity of Washington today. The temblor, which lasted for more than two hours, was said by university authorities tohave been one of the most severe ever recorded here. WASHINGTON, Sept. 20. A very severe earthquake was recorded to day on the seismograph at George town university. The disturbance be gan at 9:58 A. M. and continued until 12:30 P. M.. with the greatest inten sity at 1:40 A. M. It was estimated that the disturbance occurred 3300 miles from Washington. OKLAHOMA TOWN BOOMS Censu Gives Okmulgee Increase of 317.4 Per Cent. WASHINGTON, Sept. 20. Census announcements today were: . Cheyenne. Wyo.. 13,829; increase 2509 or 22.22 per cent. Grafton, W. Va., S517; increase 954 or 12.6 per cent. Okmulgee, Okla., 17.430; increase 13.254 or 317.4 per cent. Dallas county, Texas, containing Dallas, 210,551; increase 74,803 or 55.1 per cent. ADMIRAL T0BE DETACHED Joseph L. Jaync to Command Training of Pacific Fleet. SAN FRANCISCO. 'Sept. 20. Rear Admlral Joseph L. Jaync. command ing the 12th naval district, was noti fied today that he will be detached October 1 and will command the training of the Pacific fleet. The U. S. ship Minneapolis wi be his flagship. 7 BOARD VESSELS SOLD 4 Steel Cargo Carriers and 3 Tugs Bring $7,041,730. WASHINGTON, Sept. 20. Sale of seven government merchant vessels for $7,041,730 last week was an nounced today by the shipping board. Four steel cargo vessels, aggregat ing 37,598 deaweight tons, were sold for a total of $6,811,730 and three tugs brought $240,000. .Eyewitness Gives Clew in New York Disaster. - ACTIONS AROUSE SUSPICION 'Beat It" Call Seedy-Looking Men Just Before Explosion. JOURNA'UST IS RELEASED Federal Agents Find Cache of Ex plosives Reported on Island Off Shcepshcad Bay. NEW YORK, Sept. 20. Statements by two men, one of whom claims to have seen the "death wagon" which carted the explosive standing near the assay office at 10:30 A. M., Thurs day, one and one-half hours before the explosion in Wall street occurred, and the other, who claims to have seen three men runninjr awav from the scene just before the blast, fur nished the most important develop ments today in the investigations of the disaster. Other developments include: Announcement by the district at torney's office that Edwin P. Fisher, lawyer and former employe of the French high commission, who sent postcard warnings from Toronto, had virtually eliminated himself from any direct knowledge or complicity in the case after eight hours' questioning. V. S. Collector Warned. Receipt of a warning by William H. Edwards, collector of Internal revenue, that an attempt would b6 made to destroy the custom-house at 2 P. M. tomorrow. This was regarded by the police as a hoax. Identification of the -hitherto un identified body, previously believed as probably that of the driver of the explosive laden wagon as that of Elmer W. Kehrer, a chauffeur, and lack of any evidence connecting him with the crime. Release of Alexander Brailovsky, a Russian Journalist, arrestee! on a technical charge of being an unde sirable alien after he admitted hav ing been seen near Broad and Wall streets shortly after the explosion. Explosive Cache Sought. Search by federal agents for a. re- porieu cacne or explosives on Plumb BeacU Island, a government reser vation off Sheepshead bay. where i quantity of trinitrotuluol was found in an abandoned vessel several months ago. joeepn. jueaa, an agent for the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, is the man who claims to have seen the "death wagon." He said he had been sent to Man hattan from a Brooklyn court to servo summons and that while walk ing up Broad street noticed an old red delivery wagon in front of the assay office around the corner. The horse appeared broken down, he said, and he made an examination of it, finding a bad core under the collar. Death Wagon. Described. He looked at his watch and no ticed it was 10:30 o'clock, he told the police, and waited beside the wagon until 11:30 o'clock with the intention of serving a summons on the driver, when he was forced to leave in order to serve his Brooklyn summons. He did not examine closely the contents of the wagon, but described it as an "ordinary dilapidated express wagon." He also told the police the collar worn by the horse was of the "K." type and this is the kind of , collar found in the street after the ex plosion. He also noticed that all the ornamental knobs and other mark ings had been stripped from the har ness and in this, too, his description tallies with that of the material found. He also stated that the horse had been but recently clipped and that the wagon bore no name but had some numerals on the side. . Police attach considerable impor tance to Mead s statement. , Trio Suspicious Looking. Information that three suspicious looking men were seen running away from the scene was furnished by Sam uel B. Wellington, president of the West Indies Trading company. He de clared he left a lawyer's office in Wall street a. few minutes before j noon Thursday and as he did he heard voices calling: "Hurry." "Beat it." "Get out of this." He looked across the street and saw two middle-aged men, who looked to him like "east side peddlers," beckon ing and calling to a third man on the other side of the street nearer the assay office and across the street from the Morgan bank. The third man, believed to be about 60 years old and described as "greasy looking," was then peering into the ramshackle wagon at the curb. In response to the call of the others, the third man, Mr. Wellington said, started to run after them toward William street. He took them for bond thieves, he added, and expected to see them chased by a policeman. When he reached the corner of Nassau street he was knocked unconscious by the explosion. At the conclusron of Fischer's ex (Coacluded on I'aso 2. Column -.Jt Portland Woman Spends Night in Woods, While Husband and Friends Are Searching. Armed only ivith a rlx-shooter. Mrs. Klizabeth Crawford of 92 Vi Grand ave nue and her 11-year-old son George left her camp near Rocky point Sun day morning to search for a bear she thought she heard crashing through the underbrush. Shortly before noon yesterday the pair stumbled into a Grant-Smith logging camp eight miles from the spot they hud left and asked for food. Twenty minutes later. Deputy Sheriffs Wilson, Rcxford and Lamont arrived at the lumber camp, after fol lowing the trali of tho mother and son through the woods since early morntng. Sirs. Crawford could not find the camp she had left and wandered about until dusk, when, picking a fairly dry spot beneath a big pine, she and tho boy bivouacked for the night. The boy slept but she kept watch, often hearing the disturbing tread of animals In tho brush close by. Tak ing up the search again in the morn-in-j through heavy underbrush, drip ping with moisture, Mrs. Crawford finally heard the labored puffing of a donkey engine and made her way to the lumber camp. The couple were none the worse for their experience, they said yes terday. In tho meantime Claude Ellis of 5411 Seventieth street Southeast, a cousin of Mrs. Crawford, had report ed the disappearance to the sheriff's office. The husband of the woman was notified and joined the search party. William R. McCulloch, friend of Ellis and the Crawfords, had been hunting in the woods where the woman and the boy had become lost and joined the party. Sirs. Crawford said yesterday that she had seen a bear from the high way near Rocky Point last Labor day and had. desired a bear hunt ever since that time. Ellis was on the trail of a deer at the time Mrs. Craw ford started on her private bear hunt. BLUEBEARD WEDDING VOID Wife of James M. Watson, Serving Life Term, Gets Annulment. SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 20. Mrs. Irene Root Gordon of San Francisco today obtained an annulment of her marriage to James M. (Bluebeard) Waon, confessed murderer of nine women, who is serving a life term in San Qucntin state penitentiary. Mrs. 'Gordon said etie was married to Watson at Sacramento on March 18. 1919, and he left her shortly there after. TIRE BURSTS, KILLS MAN Top of Head lilown Ofl, liriek Wall Is Blown In. McALLEN. Tex.. Sept. 20.- Peter Rowe was instanly killed today at San Juan when a 'motor-truck tire exploded while he was inflating it with air. The top of his head was blown off and a nearby brick wall blown in.- INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather, YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature, 66 degrees; minlmuju, 54 deKrees. TODAY'S Occasional rain, southerly wind Foreign. Some spot .in Pacifie in rocked by two hour quake. Pago 1. Reds cleared out of eastern Galicfa. Pagro 3. Italy near turning point In Industry. Page 3, Indemnity without parleys ia desire of French premier. Page 7. National. Livestock men call on rcesrve board to prevent calling of loans held by indus try. Page 7. Haiti to be frca-soon, declares Secreta-ry Colby. Page 4. Politics. Cox claim to Ohio fame is disputed. Pago Group tour by republican nominees in Washington planned. Page 3. $0 gift draws fire on president. Page 1 Haxding declares covenant is ambiguous. Page 2. Cox declares Hitchcock re;?er ation met all republican objections. Page 2. Doinebtic. Trio seen running away from Jew Vork bomb scene. Page 1. Negroes incite mob attack in Chicago. fage 1. Aid given cripples by state justified by Oregon commissioner. Page -4. rae i f i c-No rth w es t, Mrs. I-ena Steigcr placed on trial at Salem. Page 5. Clackamas county' 14th annual fair open. Page 7. Hood River people start movement for per manent lair grounds and buildings. Page 11. Sports. Superbas gain while American leaders ait hold own. Page 12. Grand jury starts baseball gambling probe tomorrow. Page 12. Dempsey settles referee question in fast ume. Page 13. Bees and "Beavers open series here today, fage 12. Commercial and Marine. New Zealand butter comes to coast with low tariff. Page 21. Ralls and oils lead stock, market ad vance. Page 21. Corn decline carries down wheat at Chicago. Page 21. British steamer is coming for flour. Page 20. president Wilson has notified foreign na tions oi nw iimuuv -v. Portland and Vicinity. Motorist fined $250 and sentenced to 60 lays. Page lu. Lumbermen and rail chiefs confer on rate adjustment. Page 1. Auto and bodies sought in Sandy river In reported murder mystery. Page 1. Buruslde bridge held to be safe. Page 14. Portland mother lost in forest guards son overnight. Page 1. Two plans to reorganize are put up to Legion. Page 6. Greatest Christian work fn world during next 25 years is faced in China, declares Bishop Birney o-n eve of departure. Page ti. Branch postoffice in Portland is robbed. Page 1. Site near Hlllsboro purchased for giant radio transmission station. Page 1L Shote and Plunge ' Cliff Reported. Off NIGHT SWALLOWS ONE CAR Other Is Declared to Have Dropped in Sandy. MAT IS FOUND FLOATING Sheriff's Deputies lo Continue Search Today; Campers and Farmer Relate Mystery. The flash of headlights from two automobiles, four revolver shots, the disappearance of one machine with the sudden plunge of a heavy object over a 125-foot cliff and the rapid driving of the other toward the city, and the finding" of an automobile floor mat tangled in driftwood floating down the Sandy river figure in the latest mystery which deputies from Sheriff Hurlburt's office will attempt to solve this morning with the aid of a diver. Should human bodies be found en tangled in the w reckage of an auto mobile at the bottom of a 30-foot pool whore Gordon creek empties into the Sandy river, about 25 miles from Portland, the discovery will not sur prise the searchers, though it may be only the beginning of a crime mystery more baffling than that of the disap pearance of Harry Dubinsky, the chauffeur who was slain by boy pas sengers in his automobile. Pool Sounded With Hopes. All day yesterday, without the aid of a d vcr, Deputy Sheriffs Christof fcrson and Mollenhour sounded the pool with ropes to which heavy weights were attached. The c. rrent was too swift and eddies too strong to permit the use of polos. Though they believed they could "feel" the outlines of an automobile there, thoy could see nothing. leading off a precipitous cliff directly above the pool were tho tire marks of a heavy automobile. L. A. Davis of Grcsham reported his suspicions to Sheriff Hurlburt yester day after he came upon the mat of an automobile fouled with driftwood, Sunday, as he was fishing on tho Sandy. He recalled with vividness the events of two weeks ago, which had been dismissed from his mind long before as of little consequence. Davis, who is an inveterate angler. and Samuel Bacon of Boring, who cor roborates all of Davis assertions con cerning the strange events of the early morning of August 31, were camping not more than 1,00 feet from the cliff on the night of August 30. Shot Heard in .N iffM. We wore aroused about 11 o'clock that night by three or four shots not more than half a mile away," Davis told Deputy Sheriff Chris tof ferscn yesterday. "They sounded very much like revolver shots. We thought noth ing of it, but about 2 o'clock ia tho morning we were awakened again by the laboring motors of automobiles) making the grade up to tho cliff. At the top of the cliff the engines stopped and we could distinguish a mumbte of voices. They lasted for a few mo ments only. Two pairs of headlights could be seen. 0 "Suddenly there was a rending noise and a heavy splash. Tho head lights of one of the machines had disappeared. 'Gee, there goes one down the bank 1 exclaimed to Ba con, and we started to put on our boots. Tli en we heard an engine start up. saw ights going down the road and came to the conclusion that nothing serious had happened and that the noise and splash we had heard probably was from the bump ing oi a log or rock down the cliff." Auto Floor Mat Found. Davis gave no more thought to tle occurrence until last Sunday, w hen after fishing over the eddy where trout are wont to run he moved sev eral hundred yards down stream and discovered the automobile floor mat. Recalling the events of the morning of August 31, he went ashore and climbed to the summit of the cliff There he found the tracks of auto mobile tires leading directly off the bluff. He notified Slier iff Hurlburt early yesterday. A farmer named Johnson, living not far from the spot, recalled, when questioned by Deputy Sheriff Chria toffersen yesterday, that he had heard the revolver shots on the night in question and had puzzled over them, but he had no knowledge of sub sequent events in the possible tragedy. The road in question is little traveled, but is reached from the Co lumbia river highway by turning to the right at Spriuguaie on trie way out from Portland. The eddy into which it is thought the machine may have piunged is one of "few spots in the i iver where the water is deep enough to hide such a large object. It is more than 30 feet deep there. Siuintrr Solution PoKsible. foundings of the nool yesterday were continued until the rope ijsed broke, but before that happened Deputies Christof f ersen and Mollen hour had "fished" about some large object. At times the weight used would catch and the object holding it apparently would "give" slightly, aa (Concluded on Page 2, Column 4-i