VOL. LX XO. 18.839 Enter4 at Portland Ore iron) Pnntoffiee as Second-Clara Matter. PORTLAND, OREGON, FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1921 PRICE FIVE CENTS FLASH, NOISE, QUIVER, SEATTLE UNIVERSITY CLUB RAIDED; 2 HELD 238 QUARTS OF LIQUOR ARE PANAMA STANDS PAT IN COSTA RICA ROW ALLIES ARE EXPECTED TO RECOGNIZE RIGHTS E PUZZLE TO NEWBERG TO PLAN TO HARDING SaBB--aBB-H.B.-B-Me-MB . FALL OP METEOR REPORTED, HCGHES TOLD WHITE AWARD IS XOT ACCEPTABLE. DECISIONS BT LEAGUE HELD v XOT BIXDIXG. BUT AO TRACE FOCXD. ' SEIZED BY POLICE. CORPORATION RAIL UNIONS SEND WILLIAMS FAVORS BIDS OW 125 MILES WE HANDLE REHEARING Conference to Draw Up New Rules Opposed. .12 BASIC POINTS OUTLINED collective Bargaining and 8-Hour Day Demanded. WAGE TRUCE SUGGESTED Right of Craft to Select Own Del egates and Overtime v . Also Featured. CHICAGO, April 7. Five railroad labor unions with 500,000 members tonight submitted to President Bard ing-'s labor plan for ending industrial dlspates between the roads and their workers, proposing- that the president call a conference of representatives of both sides at which new rules governing working conditions would be made to take the place of the national agreements, now in dispute before the railroad labor board. The proposal was contained In a . statement by representatives of the five mechanical unions and was sent to the president by B. M. Jewell, president of the railway employes' department of the American Federa tion of Labor. . It proposed that all wage disputes be held in abeyance pending the con ferences. Prr.ldrat Asks Plan. The telegram was sent in response to a request from President Harding at the conference with Mr. Jewell that labor submit Its plan for ending the railroad industrial troubles. It included 12 points which were termed "labor's self-evident and inalienable rights" which, it said, would have lo be settled at the proposed confer ence, and specified that the national agreements should not be discounted In any way pending the outcome of the proposed conference. It was suggested that the confer ence be held under the jurisdiction of the railroad labor board. Included In the 12 points were the basic eight-hour day, the right of col lective bargaining, the right of each craft to decide what organization should represent it in any conferences with employers, and adjustment of "proper pay" for overtime. , The statement outlined the 12 points as follows: "The right to organize and nego tiate collectively through representa tives of their own choosing. "The protection of employes against discrimination because of member ship in trade unions or because of legitimate trade union activities. "The right of the majority in each craft on each railroad to determine what organization shall represen them; this organization to have the right to negotiate an agreement which shall apply to all the workers in the craft. "The right of the majority of each. craft on each railroad to select committee or representatives who shall handle all grievances which may arise affecting all employes of the craft in accordance with the pro vision of the agreement. "Eight hours as the recognized measure of the standard work day. "AS a protective measure to safe' guara me stanaara wort day, pay ment for time worked in excess of the regular eight hours at propor tionate overtime rates. The beginning and ending of working shifts to be so arranged as to permit of living arrangements by employes and their families. "Clear and concise definition in the ease of each craft of the work to be performed by -mechanics and helpers. Establishment of apprenticeship requirements so as to develop a suf ficient number of competent me' chanics. "Applicants for employment as me chanics to sbow that they have served an apprenticeship of four years or performed mechanical work for a similar period and not to be denied employment when their services are needed for any reason other than their inability to perform the work for which they are making applica tion. "Craft point seniority to be recog' nixed. "Establishment of reasonable safe guards for the protection of health and safety of employes." The railroad labor board today an nounced that a consolidated hearing of all wage reduction petitions would be held April 18. Twenty-six roads, which have filed appeal for lower wage scales In the lact'30 days, were named In the hear ing docket today. Other roads pre senting similar requests also will be included in the same hearing. The decision to act quickly on the wage reduction appeals came at the same time that permission was de nied the New York Central railroad to make a provisional cut, effective April 1. The New York Central will .be among the roads which are parties to the hearing April 18 and which will decide whether a permanent reduction in the wages of unskilled labor may be made. In order to save time, the board restrict each side of the con-. Load Explosion Rouses Residents and Homes Are Shaken Auto,, ists See Gravel 3Iove. XEWBERO, Or., April 7. (Special.) Residents of this section were aroused about 10 o'clock last sight by a sound like a loud explo sion and a simultaneous concussion which shook houses and buildings for miles around. The cause of the phenomenon has not been determined, although many believe It was the result of a meteor striking Parrett mountain, tw and one-half miles east of the city. This theory was advanced by Henry McGuire. who lives, northeast of Newberg. He said he had gone out on the back porch of his home to get a drink of water and that he saw the meteor fall. The noise, he said, followed an instant later. The same theory was upheld by a party of autoists, who said they were near the mountain at the time, and that the concussion was so. violent that the gravel on the road .was shaken as though the earth bad been struck with a mighty hammer. ' Parrett mountain is a peak near Rex. and is about two miles long and 1200 feet high. Mr. McGuire thought the meteor hit between Rex : and the mountain," and quite close to the highway.- Efforts to fin traces of a meteor on the .mountain nave failed. Mr. McGuire said the visitant gave off a orignt Diue iigm u u flashed across the sky. BOY, 18, SAVES GIRL'S LIFE McMinnvllle Youth Rescues 3- Year-OId From Deep Creek. McMINNVILLE. Or., Aprl' 7. (Spe cial.) Prances Coffey, three-year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Coffey of this city, was caved from drowning yesterday by Harold Wal dron, 18-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. W. C Waldron. The little girl had wandered away from home and through the city park, where young Waldron sat reading. He watched her for some time, but became absorbed in his reading when be heard ber cry and discovered that she bad fallen into Cozine creek. which skirts the park on the west The creek is deep and swift at this point but not wide. Young Waldron Jumped in after her and brought her to land Just as others came up. The mother was out looking for her daughter and saw her being carried across the park toward home. This was the mother's first knowledge of the danger the little girl was in. Young Waldron graduated from high school last year. HIKE FOR BONUS IS PLAN Ex-Soldier Says He'll Walk. From Seattle to North Dakota. SEATTLE, Wash., April 7. (Spe cial.) P. E. Leigh. 2019 Ninth ave nue, will walk 2256 miles to collect a 1250 soldier's bonus. Leigh enlisted in the army from North Dakota, and as that state has voted a bonus to its ex-service men, with the provision that they collect in person, he will return to North Dakota to collect, walking to Minneapolis. He has taken several cross-state jaunts, and In tends to make the cross-country trip a pleasure excursion. It will require about two and one- half to three months for the trip, as J Leigh intends to average about JO miles a day, starting probably next Monday. MORE LIFE BOATS FOUND Equipment of Sunken Liner Washed Ashore on Wbidby Island. SEATTLE, Wash, April 7. (Spe cial.) Two more capsized life boats from the passenger liner Governor, rammed and sunk off Point Wilson early Friday morning by th freighter West Hartland, were found today by searching parties on the shore of Whidby island, several miles from the scene of the disaster. Residents of Coupeville) reported finding the boats. The searching parties were headed by Robert Mar quart, who was first officer of the Governor. CANTON NAMES PRESIDENT Dr. Sun Vat Sen Is Elected Head of "Chinese Republic." HONOLULU. April 7. The Chinese parliament sitting at Canton has unanimously elected Dr. Sun Tat Sen, first provisional' president of China at the time a republican form of gov ernment was substituted for the em pire, as "president of the Chinese re public," said a dispatch received from Canton, China. ' The news wis received today by the Liberty News, a Chinese news paper here. ALL GREECE CELEBRATES Hundredth Anniversary of Free dom From Turks Observed. ATHENS. April 7. (By the Asso ciated Press.) Greece . today cele brated the 100th anniversary of her freedom from the Turkish yoke, there being a street parade and many mass meetings. Members of the royal family, cabi net members, ministers and high church dignitaries attended a service at the cathedral. 1 Washington Report Says Buchtel Does, Too. PETITION DRAFT IS RECEIVED Commission Head Sees Men' in Portland Claims. CASE IS UP APRIL 18 Airing of All Allegations of Ine qualities and Discriminations Is Held Justified. SALEM, Or, April 7. (Special.) Fred A. Williams, chairman of the Oregon public . service commission, following his return here tonight from southern Oregon, Issued a state ment in which he said that, in the face of representations ECt out in a draft of a petition- prepared by the city attorney's office In Portland, asking for a reconsideration of the decision in the Pacific Telephone & Telegraph rate case, he would favor a rehearing of all the facts previously submitted to the commission and new evidence bearing on the situation. Mr. Williams made it plain, how ever, that he was discussing the case from a personal standpoint and was not speaking for the commission. Baefctel -Reported la Favor.- A report today from Washington indicated that Fred Buchtel, another member of the commission, also had expressed himself in favor of a re hearing of the case. H. H. Corey, the third member of the commission, was in eastern Ore gon and his attitude on the Issue could not be learned. " "Through the city attorney's office of Portland, I have Just received a draft of the petition for rehearing In the Pacific Telephone, & Telegraph company rate case. said Mr. Will lams In his -statement ' "The date for a hearing on the peti tion, as set out in the draft received by me today, is April 18. Explanation Held Needed. ."Seldom is a member of a tribunal clothed with judicial duties justified in commenting upon a matter pend ing, before final order; but person ally I feel in this instance that there are misapprehensions as to the law and facts involved that impose upon me the obligation of an explanation. "I believe without reservation that the commission should encourage the (Concluded on Page 4, Column 4.) HE HELPED WIN THE , t i 4 n i v m - - r ry t i i : - -:. - . - m - I Attendant Declared to Have Been Making Liquor in Basement, Where Mash Is Found. . ' S3ATTLE, Wash., April t. Police early today raided the exclusive Unl versity club, . in the Madison-street residence district arrested two club members and an attendant and seized 238 quarts of liquor said to have been found in the basement of the club building - David Brown and John Martin, club members, were arrested leaving the building with suitcases filled with liquor, the police said. T. Yamada club attendant is said by the police to have been manufacturing liquor in the club baeentent. where, it Is al leged, a quantity of mash was found DOCTOR'S JJCENSE HIT Alleged Drug Addict May Lose His Right to Practice Medicine. BOISE, Idaho, April 7. (Special.) Action will be brought in the district court for Latah county by Robert O. Jones, commissioner of law enforce ment, to revoke the license for the practice of medicine now held by Dr. C. K.. Hinkle of Troy, on the ground that he is an alleged drug addict The action will be brought on the recommendation of the state com mittee of medical examiners, which today held a hearing in the caucus room of the senate chamber. Dr. Hinkle has been confined as an Inebriate in the Northern Idaho sani tarium at Orofino. STREET CAR HITS CHILD S-Year-Old Evelyn Cato Probably Is Fatally Hurt. CEXTRALIA, Wash.. April 7.-r-(Spe- ciaL) When she was struck by a street car this afternoon while play ing in the street in front of her home Evelyn Cato, 3-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. O. Cato, was injured so seriously that her death is ex pected. The wheels of the car passed over her, cutting off her-Tight arm below the elbow and fracturing her skull. The Injured girl was rushed to a hospital, where it is said-there was no hope for her life. MARINE PLANES IN CUBA Trail . Blazers, on Way to Virgin I&laiHls, Reach Guantanamo. WASHINGTON. D. C, April 7. The two airplanes piloted by marine corps aviators, now making a trail-blazing flight to the Virgin islands, arrived at Guantanamo, Cuba, at 2:40 yesterday afterncon. the navy department was advised today. The planes are to leave for Port au Prince, Haytl, tomorrow, the message said. WAS AND HE'S NOT GOING TO Assembly Declares Country Is Pre . pared to Accept Consequences of Its Decision. P-'-XAMA, April 7. (By the Asso ciated, Press.) The foreign office's reply to the note of Secretary of State Hughes of March IS, reiterating Panama's refusal to accept the White award as a basis for settlement of the Costa Rican boundary controversy, was approved unanimously by the na tional assembly tonight - The assembly declared it was pre pared to accept whatever conse quences might follow national' de termination to preserve territorial lntegr'ty. It is expected that the note will be forwarded to Washing ton tomorrow. The assembly passed the first read ing of the proposed decree granting tho president the right to expend $50, 000 to retain the services of three Panaman and three foreign experts for the purpose of supporting the government in its fight against the White award. he first consignment of arms and ammunition ordered during the Costa Rican hostilities has reached Pana ma from Buena Ventura. It included 100 rifles, three machine guns, hand grenades and ammunition. Another shipment Is expected shortly. CAPTIVE TWICE ESCAPES Prisoner Fulfills Boast He Would Be Out on Day of Sentence. OREGON CITY, Or., April 7. (Spe cial.) J. W. Wells, who escaped from the county jail here on the night of February 3, and was rearrested in Sellwood three days ago, again escaped from the county jail by pick ing the lock to the main door of the jail room about 12 o'clock last night Wells was first arrested on a burg lary charge, and was indicted by the grand jury. When he was recaptured. Judge Campbell sentenced him to six months in jail, and fined him 175 When sentenced, he boasted he would be out the next day. Prisoners in the jail rooms say they did not hear Wells leave and did not know until this morning that the jail door was open. ... When captured the second time Wells was found operating a still in the baslraent cf an abandoned school house in Sellwood. !. ' . . Z . " T TI.MBER BRINGS -$225,000 Fortland Lumber Concern Closes Deal in Washington. TACOMA, Wash, April 7. The Weyerhaeuser Timber company, with western headquarters here, has com pleted, the sale of 63,000,000 feet of timber in Cowlitz county to the In-man-Poulsen Lumber company The price was $3.50 a thousand and the timber - standing on two tracts brought approximately 225,000. The lumber company will begin logging operations soon. TAKE A BACK SEAT. ROAD IRK NEXT Awards to Be Considered in April and May. PROGRAMME TO BE RUSHED Aisea Highway Is Finally Put on State Map. OLD TROUBLE SETTLED Benton County Award 'Is Made Matter of Record Xew Jobs to Cost About $1,500,000. DOINGS OF HIGHWAY COM MISSION. Engineer Is ordered to pre pare for advertising 125.5 miles of road work for April and May meetings. Alsea road Is put on map, in accordance with old agreement with Benton county. Decision made to try to ad vertise 42 miles of road In Lake county in May. Twenty-five miles of road work Is decided on for Morrow county. - ' Wheeler county gets offer of $100,000 for matching on John Day highway. Grading from Monmouth south and from Holmes Gap to Rickreal In Polk county to be advertised in May. Commission will meet with Wasco county at The Dalles Saturday noon. . in rusn roaa work, and get as much as possible under contract early so that the Jobs can be in prog ress this summer, the state highway commision , yesterday ordered 125. miles of grading, surfacing and pav lng advertised for April 22. Such jobs as the state engineering department cannot have ready for the April meeting will be advertised for May letting. This work will ag gregate in the neighborhood of $1,500,000. Benton county received its long- desired award yesterday, when the commision for the second time placed the Alsea highway on the state map and made it a matter of record. A couple of years ago the commission agreed to place this road on the map, and on tnat agreement the county voted $100,000 for co-operation, but somehow or other the action of the commission did not get into the rec ord and the affair hung fire until Commissioners Yeon and Barratt con firmed the agreement yesterday, Terminus Is at IValdport. The Alsea highway connects with a forest road and has its terminus at Waldport, in Lincoln county. It is one of the principal roads of Ben ton county. The petition of Benton county that the state take over the county road between Corvallis and Albany was placed on file. Some action may be taken on this at the May meeting. As the long-standing controversy with Polk county has terminated, the commission is eager to clear up the road work there, which has been de layed by legal tangles and objec- tionists. In May the commission wants to place under contract the grading of the highway from Holmes Gap to Rickreal and from Monmouth south. Also the commision has di rected Oskar Huber to resume paving of the Salem-Dallas road. But for the controversy Polk county's state roads would have been completed this summer. Another 25 Miles to Be Let. Another 25 miles of the Oregon- Washington highway in Morrow county is to be let this month or next There will be grading from Heppner to Lexington and macadam izing from Lexington to Morgan and grading from Heppner to Jones' hill, toward Pilot Rock, in Umatilla coun ty. In Union county there will be work let from. Hot Lake to North Powder which with the Jobs let Wednesday from Kamela to La Grande, will mean that all of the old Oregon trails in Union county wi.i be under contract. On the Roosevelt highway the com mission will co-operate with Curry county, which plans a bond issue, half of the bond money to be spent north of Gold Beach and half south of that point. The commission will tart this summer grading from Brusn creek to Arizona inn, at Cor- bin. Two Paving Jobs Awarded, Two paving jobs which will glad den the hearts of motorists are to be let within a few weeks. One is the Canby-Aurora section of the Pacific highway, the only unpaved link be tween Portland and Salem, and the ten miles between The Dalles, and Rowena, on the Columbia river high way. . Following are the Jobs which the commission wants to award April 22, or if not ready then, for the May meeting: : Toledo-Newport, Lincoln county, surfac Ing 7. '! miles. Concluded ea fage i. column ,) Shantunsr Agreement Is Not at Issue, "Overseas Possessions" Being Used Advisedly. WASHINGTON, D. C. April 7. (By the Associated Press.) Administra tion officials confidently expect the allies to accept the principle restated by Secretary Hughes in his notes of Monday, that the United States has surrendered none of its rights in the overseas possessions of Germany and that it cannot be bound by decisions affecting these, "made by the league of nations without Us assent." There is reason to believe that the correspondence, begun In November, will not be closed with the receipt of the replies from Japan, Great Britain, (France and Italy. If the expectations or American officials are realized, de tails regarding American rights will have to be worked out in negotiation. If not, probable action Is a matter of conjecture only. The Shantung settlement, which has been sharply criticised. Is not at Is sue. It was learned that the phrase, "overseas possessions," was used ad visedly and it was pointed out that Shantung was not a German posses sion. Kia-Chow, also a part of that province, was held by Germany through a concession from China. The view, of the Harding adminis tration on the Shantung settlement has not been stated, but this settle ment was vigorously opposed by the new administration leaders in the senate while the treaty of Versailles was under consideration. The latest notes were known to form a third chapter, at least In the diplomatic exchange with the allied governments on mandates In general and the island of Yap in particular. The American viewpoint was first stated by Secretary Colby In his notes of November 9 and was supplemented in a note to the league of nations council. The notes of November 9 were nev-:r made public, nor has It been disclosed whether the allied govern ments replied. The note sent to the council was referred by it to those governemnts, the council explaining this was a proper course, since it dealt .with the Japanese mandate to Yap, which it was claimed was voted by the supreme council May 7, 1919. while the peace treaty was being framed. Japan, however, has replied to at least one American protest. It was received March 2, and in It Japan in sisted on its right to a mandate over Yap by reason of the award of the supreme council. There also have been reports that Japan made the further point that its forces had cap tured this and other Pacific islands from the Germans. Immediate replies to Mr. Hughes' communications were not expected. BRITISH STICK BV TREATY Important Official Savs Provisions Are 'ot in Melting Pot. BY JAMES M. TUOHY. (Copyright by the New York World. Pub- lisnea Dy Arranireineni. t LONDON, April 7. The British gov ernment is only willing to discuss with America questions arising from the peace treaty on the basis that present decisions are binding and not that the treaty provisions are still in the melting pot. it was learned from (Concluded on Page 6. Column 2.) NO EX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather, YESTERDAY'S Maximum, tS decree! : minimum, 89; cioudy. TODAY'S Fair; wester! l Klnda. Foreign. Examination of league amendmenta begun. Page 3. Communist acores tyranny ef aovlat Page 3. Panama stands pat In Costa Rfca row. Page 1. Premier startles commons with new coal mine atrlke proposal. I'age 4. National. Allies are expected to recognize Unite Slates rights. Paga 1. Senate over-eager to assert Its power. declares Mark Sullivan. Page 2. Closer tab on aid to veterans is advice to president. Page 5. United States warning given business crooks. . Page i. Spokane farm loan bank unable to meet demands lor money. I'age 9. i Domestic. Rail unions send plan to Harding. Page 1. Descent of commodity prices nears pre war oasis, faga i. Farmers vote unanimously for co-opera tive grain marketing agency. Page 1. Plantation owner, on trial, denies 11 mur ders. Page 6. Pad fie Northwest. Meteoric flash puzzles Newberg. Page 1. Mill closings cut industrial accident rev enues. Page 6. Journalism students at Eugene conduct own classes. Page 13. Rehearing .of phone rate seems assured. Page 1. Automotive show opens at Baker. Page 8. Sports Paclfio Coast league results: At San Francisco 8, Portland 3; at L.oa Angeles 4. Seattle 3; at Sacramento a. Vernon 8; Halt JUaKe-uakiand game postponed. i'age x.. Five bouts booked for MUwaukle tonight Page 13. Judges and contestants la diving meet to confer. Page VS. Bonecrushers vie in preliminaries of na tional meet at Los Angeles. Page 13. Commercial and Marine. New clip wool coming on market with no demand. Paga 1. Chicago wheat buying based on correct anticipations of government report. Page 21. Stock decline due to unfavorable foreign and domestic labor situation. Page 1't. Transfer of harbormaster to dock com mission held legal. Page 14. Portland and Vicinity. Chest home drive will begin today. Page lit. Bids on 1Z3 miles of road work to be called soon. Page 1. Serving coffee and tea in school cafeterias attacked, rage jv. Bridge rent Just, says railroad lawyer. Page 11. American mining experts favor minerals tarirt. rage . phone rate cut is .formally demanded of Chicago Convention Unit for Co-operation. FARM PROJECT IS APPROVED Work of Organizing Concern to Begin at Once. COMPULSORY POOL FAILS Report of Committee of 17, Result of Six Months' Deliberation, Comprehensive One. CHICAGO, April 7. Representatives of the farmers In convention tonight voted unanimously to accept the re port of the committee of 17, which provided formation of a co-operative agency to market the nation's grain. The report was adopted after a two-day fight In which delegates sought to have It amended so that pooling of grain by the farmers would be compulsory instead of op tional, as provided in the report. An amendment to that effect was defeat ed tonight, 61 to 38. Another amend ment offered by Carl Williams of Oklahoma that the pooling be made compulsory in states where wheat Is the predominant grain, also was de feated, and the convention thon unanimously adopted the committee's report. Under the plan a non-profit stock corporation will be formed through which the grain will be handled front the time it is raised until it reaches the manufacturer or consumer. Local agencies will be formed throughout the country and elevators, terminal warehouse corporations, port corpora tions, service departments and other subsidiary departments will be a part of the plan. Karl y Organlsatloas rianard. Each' member of the corporation will pay a fee of f 10, which will be used for expenses. Surplus over ex penses will be returned to the mem bers. . The organization will be governed by a board of director elected by tho grain growers. The committee of 17 has been at work for six months on the plan. It has held hearings In all the grain states, called scores of persons to dis cuss the plan and sifted dozens of proposals. Organization of the corporation will be begun immediately and it la hoped to have It working in time til handle part of the 1921 crop. The farmers' conference voted late tonight to have the committee of 17 divide the grain growing sections of tlii country Into 21 districts, appor tioned according to the value of the giain marketed in the past 10 years. Market centers, rather than state lines, would govern the limits of the districts, it was staled. ' The committee was expected to complete the drafting of the districts by 10 o'clock tomorrow morning, so that the farmers' representatives meeting then could caucus, and dele gates from each district choose a director for that territory. -rheua 21 districts would form the controlling body of the co-operative marketing organization. The fight over compulsory pooling of farmers grain, which began yes terday on presentation of the com mittee's report, broke out immediate ly today on reconvening of the ratifi cation conference. Compulsory Pool Fought. The attack on optional pooling was opened by U P. Bailey, chairman of the Kansas organization committee of tho Wheat Growers' Association of America, which stood for 100 per cent pooling, but was willing to compro mise on 33 1-3 per cent. Ho declared that effective regulation of wheat supplies could not be accomplished without a pool The committee of 17 made Its first answer through William Hirth, mem ber from Columbia, Mo. "Compulsory pooling would mean absolute defeat of this proposition be fore it got started," he said. "Advo cates of compulsory pooling urge it to get a better price for the grain. That Is what we are all after. "But lately o have had the great est pool In the history of the United states. K-:pecting higher prices, tho farmer has so thoroughly withheld his wheat that it only trickled Into market. It was shut off as never be fore and yet he hus not been able to get a decent price for his wheat." CARLIMES PAY CHICAGO Company to Orfcr $2,133,832 al Clly's Share or Profits, CHICAGO, April 7. The um of 12,135.833 soon will be offered to the city as its share of surface line net profits by the Chicago surface line and will immediately be turned back to the company, under advlco ct counsel, according to an announce ment today. Special counsel for the city h. advised the city controller not to take the money unless the companv would stipulate that acceptance would not prejudice In any way tho city's contention that the company has no legal right to collect la res in txctsa of five cents. ILvacludcd on Pago S, Column i.) tompany. rage t. j .. . 3 102.2