N VOL. LIX-NO. 18.08.$ Entered at Portland (Oregon) PpNtof flee a Second -Class Matter. PORTLAND, OREGON, MONDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1920 PRICE FIVE CENTS WILSON IS CHIEF ASSET OF RIVALS PRIBILOFF ISLANDERS FACING STARVATION POLITICIANS MAP FINAL OFFENSIVE BRITISH TO ATTACK RED DIVERS ON SIGHT CLEVELAND VICTORY MEANS $4204 EACH REWARD CONTINGENT UPON WINNING WORLD'S SERIES. J-1, AMrA,;sZnBRJALORIGH SAYS TWO WIVES MAY BE HIS VESSEL TO MAKE DASH FROM WARNING NOTE SENT BOLSHE VIK FOREIGN MINISTER. EXCESS OVER PREVIOUS YEAR IS BILLION AND HALF. SEATTLE TO SAVE 6 00. INDAN IN AMAZING GAME Public is Alienated by At titude of Dictator. SECRECY OF ILLNESS FATAL President's Advocacy Injures Instead of Helping League. ALL U. S. IS EXASPERATED Isvue Found to Be Store Topular Than Chief Executive Personally in Survey of the 51id-Wcst. BT MARK EULLTTAN. fOprrlirht. 1!20. by the New fork 'Even ing Post, Inc. Published by Arrange- ment. KANSAS CITY, Mo., Oct. 10. (Spe cial.) It Is now more than a year tnce President Wilson collapsed here In Kansas in the middle of that tour which was meant to convert the coun try to. his version of the league of nations as against the reservations which the senate wanted. Just on the anniversary of that tragic episode came dispatches from Washington to the effect that Wilson was going to revive his fight for the league, Including intimations that he might make speeches in behalf of it. Those of us who have been in Wash ington know there is nothing in Presi dent Wilson's condition that would prevent his making speeches if be should desire to. Considering what he has been through, he is in good condition. He weighs more than he ever did, and his countenance is healthfully tanned from his automobile riding. No one doubts his capacity for Intellectual productivity and his friends are count ing with confidence on bis writing a two-volume history. Wilson Ready to Be Martyr. But those of us who know all this know also that what happened to Wil son is of such a nature that only care ful restraint from over-exertion will prevent Its recurrence, in possibly more serious form. Of course that is a chance that Wilson would cheer fully take. He is of that temperament and of that early training which some times tends to regard martyrdom not as a pain but as a luxury, not as -a thing to avoid but as a thing to court. He has more than once seemed to be of that type of man to whom a cross is a temptation and who even tends to get off the track at the sight of a potential cross in the distance. However it may be as to all that, travel through this country convinces that even if Wilson were to put the last ounce of his strength into a renewal of that old contest with the senate he could hardly win. He has not the strength to give that he had a year ago. Kansas Can't Be Warmed IT p. In fact, it is the incapacity for continuous effort for sustained driv ing power that is the chief defect his illness has left him. Even if he had all his old power It is doubtful if he could warm up again here in Kansas that emotion that once made Kansas strong for the league. At the moment he collapsed here a year ago the fight was already be ginning to go against him. Reed and Johnson and the other senatorial In dians who had been sent to stalk him from city to city were already be ginning to gain on him. Even if Wil- ton had kept his strength he would probably have lost It so long as he stood out against compromise. As we all know, sick or well, he could always have secured ratification by compromising on the reservations, Wilson's sickness might have been Just the thing that would have thrown the fight in his favor. The dramatic tiuality of his breakdown in the m'dst of what had many qualities of a cru tade might have raised among the people a storm of high emotion which would have driven the senate to sur render. Secrecy of Illness Fatal. That might have happened. We all know it did not happen. The reason Wilson failed to get the universal sympathy which other presidents in his circumstances got lies, I think, In the secret with which his illness was surrounded then and now. The generous public that wanted to sym pathize and show its sympathy was denied the opportunity. The giving cf the details of his illness to the rublio was prevented, so far as his official household could achieve pre vention, and when details were made public unofficially the incidents were resented. To this day the public has never had any but furtive and indirect ac cess to the facts of the president's condition. Someone within his house hold seemed to have the purpose to build a wall of coldness between him and the people. Whether by purpose or by failure to understand the human aspects of the case the wall has been raised and is there today. Woodrow Wilson is not a popular figure. It is a brutal fact to be com pelled to record and I did not believe it to be so generally irue as it is until I came on this trip. The republicans are accurate when they say that Wil ton is their best asset and are politi cally shrewd in trying to make him the chief issue. The other day here in Kansas Gov ernor Cox was answering questions tCoucludcd ou rasa 2, Column 1.) Early Winter Threatens to Isolate Xativcs From All Aid Until Next June. SEATTLE. Wash., Oct. 10. (Spe cial.) In a desperate dash to provide food for the 600 natives of the Pribil off islands who are rapidly approach ing the end of their supplies at a moment when an early winter threat ens to insolate them from all aid, the United States naval radio repair steamship Saturn will speed from Se attle for Bering sea next Thursday with 800 tons of provisions. On her ability to fight her way to the islands and land the supplies de pends the last hope of the natives of being saved from months of near starvation on a meager seal-meat diet. The relief expedition ranks as one of the most daring staged in northern waters for years. If the Saturn' fails no other relief can be sent to the natives until next June. The Saturn arrived back at the naval station, Pugct sound, ten days ago from a splendid but futile effort to land supplies on the islands. For two months she fought a succession of storms in Pribiloff waters, but suc ceeded only in landing mail and a cow and a calf. Then, as she was running short of fuel, she had to race back to Puget sound. On the way back she stored her Pribiloff provisions, total ing 800 tons, at Unalaska. But she dare not take a chance of being un able to reload that shipment on her coming- race Into Bering sea, and so she will go out with a duplicate order in her cargo holds. Besides the food shipments she has COO tons of sacked coal for the Island stations. To prepare for the dash to the Prlb iloffs the Saturn, Lieutenant-Commander R. J. Carstarphen, U. S. N commanding, shifted from the naval station to pier 10 yesterday evening. PORTLAND' BLAST MYSTERY Excitement Crcafcd in Residence District; INo Damage Don. An explosion of unknown origin, which caused no damage, created great excitement last evening at East Twenty-fourth and Davis streets. Residents In that vicinity rushed Into the street at 6:45 o'clock immediately after hearing a loud noise and found nothing but black smoke. The police have information that Ray White, who is about 18 and lives at 551 East ' Twenty-fourth street North, set off the explosives. The boy drove off In a red "bug" after the ex plosion and his father promised later to take him to the east-side police sta tion when he should return. CYCLONE LIFTS ROOFS Damage Reaches Thousands in Storm at Stevens Point, Wis. STEVENS POINT. Wis., Oct. 10. Property damage totaling thousands of dollars was caused today when a cyclone swept over the city suddenly, accompanied by a blinding fall of hail. No fatalities were reported. The storm was general over central Wisconsin, with its fury concentrated apparently on this city The lighting system here was put out of commis sion. Roofs were torn from factories, fences and outbuildings were demol ished and two residences were lifted from their foundations. QUAKE HITSJJJZON TOWN Observatory, Water Mains and Con crete Walls at Bagnio Damaged. MANILA, P. L. Oct. 10. A severe earthquake today at Baguio, capital of Benguet province in Luzon, about 150 miles north of here, damaged the observatory there, broke water mains on the military reservation and cracked a number of concrete walla. A landslide occurred as a result of high water In the river at Baguio. No loss of life was reported. The shock was felt slightly in Manila. WIND BLOWS BOY IN TREE Santa Clara Visited by Small Hur ricane Doing Minor Damage. SANTA CLARA, Cal., Oct. 10. A high wind that passed through Santa Clara yesterday tossed J. Bingwall. 15-year-old boy. Into a tree, knocked over George Campra and a horse he was hitching up, uprooted fruit trees and demolished several private ga rages. Considerable minor damage was re ported. LOGGERS FIGHT I. W. W. Special Crusade Inaugurated In Coos County Against Agitators. MARSHFIELD, Or., Oct. 10. (Spe cial.) F. E. Endicott, organizer for the Loyal Legion of Loggers and Lumbermen in the Coos county dis trict, announces a special crusade against the I. W. W. Mr. Endicott declared that the I: W. W. had sought to hamper the Loyal Legion in various places. MAN SHOT BY DRY AGENTS Running Battle Staged With Al leged Liquor Ring. HURLEY. Wis.. Oct. 10. Federal dry agents early today shot and killed John Chlapuso of Hurley in a running battle with an alleged "booze ring" on the Mercer-Hurley road. Chlapuso was piloting an automo bile said to be loaded with liquor. Parties in Washington Speed Up Campaigns. ALL CANDIDATES TO TOUR Republican and Democratic Leaders Called to Parley. NOMINEES, HART TO MEET Office Seekers May Cover State in Groups or in Pairs Last Week of Drive. SEATTLE, Wash., Oct. 10 (Spe cial.) With election day three weeks away rival leaders will plunge this week into the real work of the cam paign. The working forces of Charles Heb- bard, republican state chairman and George F. Christensetv, democratic state chairman, have been augmented in the last week with the result that the speaking literature and publicity offensives are now fully under way. Leaders of the farmer-labor party also have been busy. Itineraries for the candidates on,all tickets have been arranged for the week and speakers have been assigned to meetings and the local leaders of both parties have been called in for conferences on plans. Hart Leaden to Confer. Governor Hart and all other re publican state and congressional nom inees are to gather tomorrow at the Tacoma hotel for a talk over the part they will play in the contest from now on. Chairman Hebberd will slip over and give the candidates the benefit of his advice. It Is expected at this meeting it will be determined whether the nominees will tour the state in groups or in pairs. During the last week Governor Hart and Clifford L. Babcock, candi date for state treasurer have been meeting the voters in the eastern counties. They returned to the west side yesterday and have planned to start Tuesday on an auto trip through Snohomish, Skagit and Whatcom counties. It may be that other state candidates will decide to join them. Two Parleys on Tuesday. Two important republican confer ences are scheduled for 2 o'clock Tuesday afternoon at the Hotel But ler. Chairman Hebberd has called all western Washington committeemen, chairmen and county committee sec retaries to meet him to discuss plans and to learn the needs of committee men in their various counties. The other Hotel Butler gathering (Continued on Page 2, Column 3.) WHY CHANGE DRIVERS j ; , j. : - ; : 1 " j Wlicrever Encountered on High Seas', Russian Submarines Will Be Engaged by Warships. LONDON, Oct. 10. (By the Asso ciated Press.) Any Russian subma rines encountered on "the high seas will be attacked on sight by British naval forces, according to a note sent by Earl Curjon, British foreign secre tary, to M. Tchltcherin, Russian bol shevik foreign minister, October 2. The note was published today along with other correspondence recently exchanged between Great Britain and soviet Russia. Earl Curzon points out that he previously sent a communication re garding a submarine launched in the Black Sea in which he said that in view of repeated declarations of lead ing members of the soviet that gov ernment considered itself in a state of war with Great Britain and in view of the Impossibility in these cir cumstances of waiting to ascertain whether the intentions of the sub marine controlled by the soviet gov ernment were hostile or not, there was no alternative but to issue orders to British ships to attack the sub marine should it be encountered on the high seas. Upon hearing rumors that submar ines of the bolshevik fleet had put to sea in the Baltic, Earl Curzon sent his note of October 2. To it M. Tchitcherin replied that Leonid Kras sin, soviet representative in London, would receive instructions. Earl Curzon also demanded com pensation for the widow and son 'of Charles Frederick Davison, who is alleged . to have been "niurdered in cold blood with no charge preferred against him," by the soviet authorit ies in January last. Yesterday Earl Curzon sent a lengthy reply to M. Krassin's note of October 6, in which he pointed out that Great - Britain, more than any other power, has sought to bring about peace between soviet Russia and Poland and "has only been called upon to stand by its treaty engage ments to its allies by the faith which characterized both military and dip lomatic movements of the soviet au thorities." Concerning the use of Danzig for the transmission of munitions. Earl Curzon asserts this was an obliga tion imposed upon the allies by the treaty of Versailles. Should Great Britain rive to General Wrangel the kind' of assistance Indicated in the Russian, reply, he said the position of southern Russia would be very dif ferent from what it is at present. He charges the soyiet with trifling with the.-q.ue3tion of the return of British prisoners and with sending troops to Persia in open violation of Its promises. Earl Curzon also charges the soviet with having engaged in a military conspiracy which it assisted by the dispatch of considerable numbers of bolshevik troops to operate with the Turkish nationalist party in Asia Minor; with threatening an invasion of Khorrassan, in Persia, on the Rus sian trans-Caspian border: with hav ing created a great organization in Tashkent), for marshalling the forces Concluded on Page 2, Column 4.) WHEN WE'RE RUNNING ALONG In Case Brooklyn Wins, Robins Will Get $3951 Each, According to Tabulation of Receipts. CLEVELAND, O., Oct. 10. Today's game was the last in which the play ers share in the receipts, and tabula tion of the figures for the five con tests show that if Cleveland wins each player tn the American league club will receive approximately $4204. while if Brooklyn wins the National league athletes will get only $3951 each. . The discrepancy is due to the fact that Brooklyn's share must be split among 27 men, while only cieve landers will be rewarded. One share, in addition, goes to Mrs. Ray Chap man. In neither case are the figures as great as for last year's series, when Cincinnati players got J4SS1.55 each and Chicago men received $3254.37 The Cleveland players' portion of the receipts as losers would be ap proximately $2930 each. while it Brooklyn is defeated the Dodgers will get ,2387 each. The second and third-place teams Chicago and New York in the Ameri can league, and New York and Cin cinnati in the National will receive $53,717.68 from the receipts to be di vided. This represents 25 per cent of the players' share in the first five games. The second place teams got 60 per cent and the third placers 40 per cent. The receipts in the remaining games go to the national commission and the owners of the contending clubs. Figures for the first five games follow: Attendance, 123,638; net receipts, $397,919; players' share, $214,870 74; club's share (divided equally), $143. 255.15; national commission's share, $39,793.10. " ' WOMAN AND- MAID KILLED , Masked Men Assassinate Wife of German Admiral. WEIMAR. Germany. Oct. '9. The wife of Admiral Rheinhardt von Scher, chief of the German admiralty staff, and her maid were assassinated and his 18-year-old daughter serious ly wounded by two masked men who broke into the admiral's villa today. One of the murderers, identified as an artist named Buechner, committed suicide, while the other fled. Admiral Von Setter was asleep in an upper chamber of the house at the time. No motive has been discov ered as none of the family's belong ings were taken. BRITISH GOLD RECEIVED Fourth Recent Shipment Amounts to $9,500,000 in Bullion. NEW YORK. Oct. 10. Gold valued at approximately $9,500,000, con signed to the federal reserve bank, arrived yesterday on the steamship Aquitania. This is the fourth recent shipment of gold from the Bank of England, making $38,000,000. SO SMOOTHLY NOW? Brooklyn Outhits Rivals, but Has Hard Luck. HflMPR xTT WflRin RCP.nPn! IIWIIII.il ULIU IIUIII.U IILtOIIU Smith Soaks Ball 50 Feet Over Fence; Grimes Victim. WAMBY PUTS THREE OUT Dodgers, With Two on Bases Fourth and None Down, Arc Slopped by Play. in BT GRANTLAND RICE. Baseball Editor New York Tribune. CLEVELAND, O., Oct. 10. (Spe cial.) Brooklyn's astonished Dodgers were crowded over the precipice to day In the most amazing ball game ever played. Two world's records and an important section of Brooklyn's spinal cord were broken, and this Is not half the story. Cleveland won, 8 to 1. and that, too, is a mere detail. If you don't believe it, pick up this historical order of events and figure it out for yourself. 1. In the first Inning, with three on bases and no one out. a lean and lanky cove by the name of Elmer Smith soaked Burleigh Grimes for a home run that soared over the right field fence netting, 50 feet above the ground. This is the first time a heme run with the bases full ever was made in a world series. Insofar as the oldest soothsayer here can locate the dope. C. Mitchell Slashes Drive. t. In the fourth Inning, after K.11- duTf and Miller had singled with none out, C. Mitchell on the hit-and-run slashed a line drive to right cen ter which the bounding Wamby hauled down in time to complete an unassisted triple play. After miking the catch, all that Wamby had to do wa to step over, touch second and then tag the highly-ajouncd Miller, wno was sprinting for the tag. This is another world series record, al though the unassisted triple play was duplicated by Neal Ball of Cleveland on the afternoon of July 10. 1909. a. The Dodgers ran up 14 hits for a total of 16 bases off Bagby and these salve-saluting swats yielded precisely one thin tally. Dodgers Outlilt Indians. 4. The Dodgers outbatted the In dians by 14 hits to 12. one nf Ktr lyn'a hits being unofficially credited, yet the same set of Dodgers - was beaten 8 to 1. If this isn't another record we'll inhale the score card. 5. The Dodgers hammered out 13 hits without scoring a tally. The 14th safe blow was needed to produce the lone run. 6. In the third tnnlnir the. Tnri laced out three clean hits without setting a man as far as third base. 7. In the fourth Inning, with John j ston on base. Grimes walked O'Neill to get a whack at Professor Bagby. The professor promptly retaliated by lifting a home run into the center field stands. Crowd Has Chttrlnj Fits. It was in this fashion that the merry athletes whlled away another Indian summer afternoon while an other big crowd passed from one cheering fit into another. All this record business may have been highly pleasing to the populace, but the de feat of Burleigh Grimes was a heavy blow to Brooklyn hopes. After the second home run the an cient bard was vindicated. He knew something after all. 'OM Grimes Is dead that good old man. We ne'er shall see him more. Since Smith and Eagby hit home runs Ibut let tnose bevta score With Grimes so badly battered. yielding as he did six singles, two home runs and a triple in four In nings, the Dodgers must win with Sherrod Smith tomorrow afternoon or they will be out in the heart of the barren lands without a guide. For if Duster Mails stops Sherrod Smith in tomorrow's game, Stanle; Coveleskie and his Polish spitter re port for duty on Tuesday where only a budding miracle will carry the Dodgers over the rock-fretted falls. They must beat Mails with Smitl: or Cleveland will make good her boast of "four straight here at home." Eye Blinkers Again Misalng. Having removed the blinkers from their batting eyes on Saturday irf the first home same. the Indians re ported today with the said blinkers again missing. They tore into Grimes with a rush that sewed up the battle before a man was out. Jamieson and Wamby singled at the start, Speaker beat out a bunt and Elmer Smith fol lowed with his historic crash that sailed across the fight-field wall." In the meanwhile, Bagby was either kidding the Dodgers or his luck was 100 per cent pure, for they hit him with everything but the bat bag and yet couldn't score a run. In round after round, the Dodgers rapped out base hits only to have some mate crack into a double or triple play. They couldn't score with anything and yet Bagby looked to be a spongy target. In the second, Koncy tripled with one gone and couldn't get home. In the third. Miller singled and Grimes hit into a double play. Olson and Sheehan then followed with base Concluded on Page 3, Column 3.) Approximately Three-fourths of the Total Is Received From In come and Profits Levies. WASHINGTON. Oct. 10. (By the Associated Press.) America's tax bill for the fiscal year ending June 30 amunted to $5,408,075,468. approx- ' I imately a billion and a half dollars j more than paid into the federal treas- ui j in iiie previous i - montns. i nc figures were contained in the prelim inary report of the commissioner of internal revenue, made public tonight. It showed that from income and profits taxes the government re ceived approximately three-fourths of all its revenue. In these two items there was an increase of $1,356,000. 000 over the fiscal year of 1910. re ceipts for the two years being. 1920, $3,957,701,000; 1919, $2,600,000,000. From multifarious sources of "mis cellaneous" taxation, the levy pro duced $1,450,374,000, an increase of $201,000,000. Internal revenue receipts for 12 months by states and territories in cluded: Alaska $500,650: Idaho $4. 963. 264; Montana $6,770,257; Oregon $27,569. 223; Wyoming $4,225,282; Washing ton $42,107,772. The total for all states and terri tories was $S.40R.07r.46S. PROWLER ATTACKS GIRL Ben Reed, 2 7, Held at Bay by John Beaver Until Police Arrive. Ben Reed, 27, was arrested last night by Sergeant Crane and Patrol man Sperry and charged with prowl ing In the home of John Beaver, 1000 Leonard street, and attacking Mr. Beaver's 14-year-old daughter. The girl fought her assailant and escaped injury except bruises about the throat, caused by the man trying to choke her. The police say Reed con fessed that he had followed the girl after she got off a street car and had entered the house expecting to find her alone. Mr. and Mrs. Beaver were asleep downstairs when the attack was made. The father heard the girl screaming and drove Reed Into a bed room at the point of a revolver. FAMILY FIGHT CHARGED Woman Said to Have Broken Um brella Over Mate's Head. Mrs. J. M. Black, 33, and her hus band, J. M. Black, 28, were arrested at Tenth and Morrison streets last night following a fight in which Mrs. Black was alleged to have broken an umbrella over her husband's head. The quarrel was said to have started over the disposal of their automobile. Patrolmen Seely and Davis, who made the arrest, said that after hit ting Mr. Black with her umbrella, the woman picked up a hammer and chased her husband for nearly a .block. The broken umbrella and the ham mer wero taken to police heado.ua.r ters as ev'dence. STORE OF COTTON BURNS 70,000 Bales in $1,000,000 Blaze Believed of Incendiary Origin. CAMERON, Texas.. Oct. 10. Loss estimated at $1,000,000 was the toll taken by fire early today, which de stroyed 70,000 bales of cotton and the compress and warehouses of the Cam eron Cotton Press company. Officials said they believed the fire was of incendiary oris'.n. INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. TEPTERPAT'S Maximum temperature, VJ.3 degrees; minimum. 64 degrees. TODAY'S Rain; southerly winds. Politic. Wilson chief asset of republicans. Page 1. Idaho trains eye on poHtk-al arena. Page 3. Hudson w-ill stump for Senator Jones. I'ag 2. Harding Joy-rides at engine throttle. Page 4. Washington parties map final offensive, page 1. Cox declares Taft advised Wilson at cove nunt sessions. Page 3. Foreign. British to attack Russian submarines on sight. Pago 1. Sweeping changes in postal relations of the world to be effected. Page 6. Lithuanian rebels take Vllna. 1'age -. Wife of Kerensky and two sons escape to London. rage Naval commander In Ireland is slain. Fa go 3. National. America's tax bill for 1920 fiscal year is 1S.408.075.46R. Page t. l'aelfio Northwest. Death cells open to condemned slayers of Til Taylor. Page 4. Six hundred on Pribiloff Islands facing starvation. Fage 1. fciporto. Pacific Coast league results: Oakland 1-4. Portland 1-3: Vernon and Salt Lake postponed; Sacramento San Fran cisco 3-1 .(second game It Innings); Los Angeles 2-3, Seattle 3-2. Pago 8. Sensational plays win for Cleveland. Page 8. McCarthy has eyes on Jack Britton. Page 8. Whitman's strength Is gridiron surprise of Saturday. Page 9. Share for Cleveland players In the event of winning world's series will be $42U4 each. Page 1. Cleveland wins 8 to 1 in amazing game. Page 1. Portland and Tictnity. Aldrich says two wives may be his. Page 1. Directions for treatment of wheat seed for smut given to growers. Page 14. Value your wife, advises Dr. 'McElveen. Page 16. Two women In hospital result of automo bile collision. 1'age 1$. Plans for erection of Portland vegetable oil factory arc being perfected. Page 14. Portland lumDermen tavor better water terminals on Atlantic coast to handle cargoes, raga u. Federal engineers to hear channel proposal upon return to r-oniana. l age 7. Tortland banker go to convention. Fage 15. Ex-Officer Is Ready to Be lieve Reports. CONFESSION IS GUARDED Liquor, Women, Night Life Blamed for Downfall. SECOND BRIDE HIS CHOICE Prisoner I Confident He Can An nul First Wedding and Have Had C'lHH-k Charge-. Dropped. With a despairing sliru; of the shoulders. Glen T. Aldrich. ex-lieutenant. Vnitcd States navy, guardedly confessed to a reporter for The Ore sonian in the city jail yesterday that he may he wanted in Chicago for big amy as well as for passing bad checks totaling $4000. Night life along Chicago's white way, interspersed with all-night cab aret parties, wild women and strong liquor were given by the Chicago fugitive as the cau.se of his downfall. "Honestly. I have no recollection of my marriage, to Lillian Dombrow, but in view of the reports from Chicago, I am now ready to believe that it must be true," he admitted. "I am old enough and smart enough to know that they wouldn't accuse me of that first marriage unless they had proof of It. However, I want to see the legal documents." Aldrich DlKruanra Spree. It was with an apparent reluctance that Aldrich consented yesterday to discuss his brief but meteoric career, during which time he was said to have married two Chicago girls within ten days of each other, and topped off his Jouble matrimonial ventures with passing bad checks which ho admits total $1S00. and which the Chicago police assert aggregate $4000. For two days Aldrich lias consist ently maintained that he knows noth ing of his reported marriage to Lil lian Dombrow at Oak Park, 111., on September 25. but when confronted yesterday with an ' Associated Press dispatch telling of this first marriage, lie admitted, "they must have the goods." "Which of the two wives are you going to stick by?" he was asked. Second Wife III Choice. "Why, the second one, the one, I married in Great Flls. of course," he instantly answeicd. "She is the only one I recognize as my wife, and as soon as I Ret to Chicago 1 am going to have my attorneys file a petition for the annullment of the first mar riage." When he was informed that it was the second marriage which was il legal, rather than the first, Aldrich expressed confidence in his ability to get rid of wife No. 1 in order that he might retain wife No. 2. whom he married at Great Falls. Mont., Sep tember 7, last. "I will get the marriage to the Chi cago girl annulled on the ground that It was performed while I was men tally irresponsible," he said. "I have no recollection of it, and don't antici- i pate having any trouble in procuring evidence of my mental condition' dur ing the two weeks I was so drunk. My friends who helped me to spend more than $6000 during those two weeks will stick by me enough to show what condition I was in." Wife No. 1 Hu Letters. On Saturday Aldrich would admit nothing concerning the 18-year-old bride in Chicago, whom, according to reports, he married after a courtship of less than a week. These Chicago dispatches told of the wife having received a letter from him while he was in Seattle, urging her to have their marriage annulled. He was in formed that this letter in his hand writing is now lij her possession. "I think, when she checks up on the date, she will find that that letter was written to her even before I got to Seattle." he said yesterday. "In fact, I wrote It several days before I reached there." Aldrich was not so debonair in appearance and actions yesterday as he was the preceding day. In fact, he was plainly worried. He ex pressed fear that the navy depart ment would start hji investigation and have him court-martialed be cause of the bad checks and the al leged bigamy revelations. He insists he Is still on the reserve list, class A. and 6ubject to court-martial. Life. He Wars, la Ruined. This thing has ruined my life and set me back to where I was 15 years ago." he said. Although a detailed description of Aldrich as sent out by the Chicago poJice gives his age as 42, he said yesterday he Is but 36 years old. "They must have got that age off the marriage license," he laughed. "Which one?" he was asked. "The one in Chicago," was his emil ing reply. Although he admitted practically everything, Aldrich would not admit having posed as a lieutenant-commander in the navy during his two weeks of riotous living just prior to his leaving Chicaso. "I never even wore my uniform once during those two weeks." he said. "My standing In the business world was worth more to me than the Concluded cn Page 'i. Column 1.) ft