VOL. LX XO. 18,8T Entered at Portland (Oregon) Hoatoffice ns S?cond-C1a9 Matter. PORTLAND, OREGON, SATURDAY, MAY, 21, 1921 PRICE FIVE CENTS TEN HURT WHEN ONE BIG LIBER MILL NINE ALLEGED EXPERT 36 DESTROYERS HUNT MISSING NAVAL JUG , ) THREE CRUISERS ALSO BEGIX COMBIXG PACIFIC. POACHER SUSPECTS FIGHT WITH OFFICERS REVOLVER AXD FISH GAFFS USED FX STRUGGLE.. FLOOD PROSPECT GROWING RAPIDLY TRAIN HITS ANOTHER BOMBERS ARRESTED WILL RISE IN CITY SMASHP AT ECGEXE DUE TO TERRORISM TACTICS CHARGED OPEX SWITCH. BY CLIQTJE MEMBER. DRY AGENT CLERKS ACCUSED OF GRAFT Dishonest Deals Exceed Salaries, Is Charge. StAMENENJOINED ROM PICKET NG Peninsula Company to Build $750,000 Plant. STORAGE SPACE TO BE VAST Construction to Start When Fill Is Completed. Payroll to be doubled Oregon Corporation Prepares for Xew Era in Milling Opera f ' tions of Jforthwest. ' Construction of an entire new mill for the exclusive sawing of high trade logs, with independent dry kiln and planing-mill capacity., and the utilization of the present mill for handling timbers for the domestic and offshore markets, was announced "-. yesterday by the Peninsula Lumber company. Actual building will be undertaken as soon as a fill now under way on the north side of the site has settled sufficiently to per mit the structures being begun. It Is estimated the cost will be close to $750,000. When in full operation pay roll expenditures will be about dou bled, reaching $1,000,000 annually. News of the final approval of gen eral details of the project, which has followed three years of preliminary labors by engineers and sawmill draftsmen, under the direction of F. C. Knapp, president of the company, has been received by those in touch with the programme as among the nfost conclusive illustrations of how Port land's stability and future develop ment Is regarded by financial inter ests concerned in lumber production. Dock Space to Be Enlarged. The plans Insure another monster boost for the water-borne commerce of the state, inasmuch as provision is made for additional berthing space to augment the 1000-foot dock now serv ing the first unit, while the new mill will have as admirable facilities for increased railroad shipments. With its main mill and essential auxiliaries the second unit will mark the prop erty of the Peninsula Lumber com pany as distinctive among sawmill establishmenta on the Pacific side. Aside from the fact the combined plant will turn out all classes of ma terial, from timbers four by four by ten feet to squares 40 by 40 inches and up to 120 feet in length, to the high est grades of structural and finish ing fir, there will be provision for the storage of vast stocks of its prod uct, since space is reserved in the ap portionment of the tract for fair-drying and crosa-piling 70,000,000 feet of lumber. Conatrnctioa Walts on Fill. Although there has been no previ ous announcement of the construc tion, the Port of Portland commission is alre'ady depositing material dredged from the berth of the new 15,000-ton drydock at St Johns onto the prop erty of the Peninsula Lumber com pany just south of the east approach of the Spokane, Portland & Seattle Railroad company's Willamette river bridge. There the second mill unit is to be located. Early construction of billkheads and spillway paved the way for the big fill and an actual tart waits sn the last yard of ma terial being pumped there. - Stretching south from the property line of the railroad system the Penin sula interests now control 3550 feet of river frontage and the tract ex tends landward to the Willamette boulevard, the boundary line being on auch an angle that the frontage on the boulevard is about 3000 feet. The average depth of the site between the river and boulevard is 1700 feet. Log Storage Provided. On the south half of the property, Is located the present mill and its Various adjuncts. In front of the plant Is the 1000-foot dock, which, owing to berthing space available on the inner side as well, really repre sents 2000 feet for the accommoda tion of vessels. Extending from the main railroad artery into the prop erty to the dock is a standard-gauge track that not alone serves for mov ing cargo Into position for loading, but provides means as well for dis charging any character of cargo fromi juuouuu auupa ujrecuy into cars, lor J : - V . . . . Xone Seriously .Injured, -iccordln; to Keports; Damage to Rail road Property Also Light. " i EUGENE. Or.. May 20. In a col lision between the outgoing Southern Pacific Coos Bay passenger train and a freight train In the Eugene yards this morning ten people were Injured, but none very seriously. The colli sion occurred when the passenger train went through an open switch and bumped head-on into a freight train standing on the track. The injured are: C. J. Griffith, messenger, cut on forehead and sprained .back; Joseph Hastings, conductor, bruised arm; Engineer Deninney, bruises; Mrs. Wharff of Marshfield, lip cut slightly; Mrs. Christiansen. 2303 East Sixth avenue, Spokane, bumped nose; -Ernes!. Kitzler, 246 Burnslde street, Portland, bruised knuckle. V. E. Daugherty news agent; Donald Jlilliken, North, Bend; Barbara Xaughton, North Bend, minor bruises. Neither train was- badly damaged, railroad officials estimating the loss at $200. TKJHT ENFORCEMENT ASKED Anti-Saloon League Counsel Before House Committee. PALMER IS , CRITICISED ROBBER GETSMAIL BAGS Clerk's Watch Is Taken and He Is Forced to Stop Train. SACRAMENTO. Cal., May 20. A robber boarded Southern Pacific train No. 20, eastbound, at Newcastle to night, and after holding up the mail clerks, escaped with several bags of mail, according to a report received here tonight at the sheriff's office. Local dispatchers of the Southern Pacific were informed that the rob ber forced Mail Clerk Decker to stop the train about a half mile from Newcastle and robbed him of a watch and chain. , He was then said to have escaped from the car with the mail to an automobile waiting in the highway nearby. A check of the lost mail could not be made tonight. SAN FRANCISCO, May 20 Post office inspector W. I. Madeira here tonight declared Tils belief that Roy Gardner, escaped mail bandit, who eluded authorities at Napa, Cal., two weeks ago. held up mail train No. 20 near Newcastle tonight. Mr. Ma deira said Gardner was last seen in that vicinity. PERSHING TO SEE CAMPS General Lands Association of Mili tary Training Bodies. CHICAGO, May 20. A- letter from General Pershing announcing his whole-hearted sympathy with the Military Training Camps' association and its objects was read before the convention of that body at the gen eral session today. "I plan to visit as many of these camps this summer as possible to meet the candidates," he wrote. "I believe the purpose of these Institu tions is so closely Interwoven with the question of adequate national de fense that all Americans should ren der every assistance and encouragement." STREET CAR IS HELD UP Unmasked Robber Take Com pany's Money From Conductor, An unmasked man carrying a small blue revolver held up In charge of a rison streetcar, Several Investigators Hit Ruling That Volstead Act Does "ot Pro hibit Use s Medicine. WASHINGTON, D. C, May 20 Wayne B. Wheeler, general counsel of the Anti-Saloon league, declaring it was not possible to draft a bomb proof liquor law, told the house judi ciary committee today that some clerks employed by district prohibi tion commissioners were mak'ng more money in a week through dis honest dealing with fraudulent per mits for withdrawal of alcohol than they would earn on straight salaries in two years. Approximately 35,000,0 0 0 gallons had been withdrawn in the last year, or considerably ..more than a quart for every man, woman and child In the country, Mr. Wheeler said. His was the concluding argument on the Volstead bill to tighten up the Vol stead law and prevent sale of beer to the sick. Amndnwit la Suggested. Mr. Wheeler contended that of the 35,000,000 gallons fully SO per cent was used for beverage purposes. He suggested amending the law so that none of it could be removed until by medicating and denaturing it had been gendered unfit for drinking. Mr. Wheeler presented hundreds of petitions from many states, most of them from doctors opposing any let down in the Volstead Jaw under, which beer could bs prescribed for the ail ing. Medicinal Beer la Denied. Dr Harvey W. Wiley, who was once delegated! to find out "what is whisky?" told the committee in a 10 mimite talk, that there were no med ical properties in beer, and that it had never been recognized by the medical profession as a remedial agent. Several members of the committee took a whack at ex-Attorney-General Palmer for ruling, as he stepped out of office, that the Volstead law did net prohibit that product as a medi cine. Representative Sumners. democrat, Texas, took issue with such views, de claring there was no good sense in criticising the opinion of Mr. Palmer Responsibility for Outbreaks in Re cent Labor Troubles Is AN leged by One Pirsoner. CHICAGO. May 20. Nine men. said by one of their number to be the organized clique of .expert bombers responsible for most of the terrorism tactics that 'have marked recent labor troubles, were under arrest tonight. v A" tenth member of the' alleged clique, Cornelius ("Con") Shea, labor leader who headed, the 1905 team sters' strike in Chicago, in which 21 men were killed and 415 injured, also was being sought. . ' , ' " The arrests resulted from an al leged confession made by Andrew Kerr, a member of the etatlonary en gineers' union. Kerr is said to have named a dozen men who have becr prominently identified either as per petrators or as the instigators of sluggings and bombings, during a strike recently waged against laun dry owners by the engineers' union. Those under arrest included several union officials, an I. W. W. member, a dhauffeur and two men known to the police as professional sluggers. iterr was inspired to make his con fession, according to the police, be cause of the fact that he wa not paid for several,bombings during the laun dry strike. TRAVELERS COMING HOME More Trade With Orient Possible Says Seattle Man. MANILA, Way 20. Twenty mem bers of the commercial commission of the Pacific northwest, principally from Seattle and Tacoma, arrived yesterday on the jtrans-Pacific liner Wenatchee. They will re-embark for the United StateS'Sunday. JamesS. Gibson, chairman, of the Seattle chamber of commerce v de clared that it is highly important to establish more American steamship lines and draw the Philippines closer to the Puget sound region. "It is certain that Manila, if nat ural topographical advantages are properly developed, will become the clearing heuse for a tremendous traf fic between the United States and the orient," Gibson said. (Concluded on Page 3, Column 1.) WASHINGTON JURIST DIES Ashley M. Gould' Passes Suddenly at National Capital. WASHINGTON. D. C, May 20. Ashley Mulgrave Gould, associate Justice of the District of Columbia supreme court, died suddenly today after a brief illness. Justice Gould died of heart disease. He was in court Tuesday, but that that evening compfained that he had injured his leg and remained at his home thereafter. He rose as usual this morning, but fell in a faint later and died before noon. He is survived by his widow, a son, Ashley M. Gould, living in California, and three mar ried daughters, all of this city. -- Craft Which Left Mare Island for Samoa Xot Directly Report' ed Since Departure. SAN DIEGO. Cal., May 20 No re ports .had been received here tonight from the. fleet of 36 destroyers and three cruisers which left this port early todayto begin a search for the Pacific fleet tug Conestoga, which left Mare Island for Samoa late in Marchxand has not' been directly re ported since, although naval officers have heard that the little 'vessel was trying to ride out a gale some 500 miles from Honolulu on April 8. Plans announced before the vessels left port made it plain that a thor ough search-was contemplated. The cruisers and destroyers were to begin combing the oceaa -east" of Cerros island at noon tomorrowr The rendezvous was set at a point near the position off the Lower -California coast in which the Admiral liner; Senator reported that on Monday,-May 16, it picked up a lifeboat believed to have been from the Cones toga and in which some of the tug's 32 officers and men may have tried to reach shore. The vessels will con tinue steaming westward toward the Hawaiian islands until about 1000 miles from the Lower California coast, then will swing northward for 300 miles and then come back toward San Diego. . Three mine sweepers and the fuel steamer Kanawha were sent out as an additional division to search various islands and shore lines on which the missing tg or its wreckage may have been swept. Unless some trace of the tug Is foun before that time, none of the small fleet is expected back here before June 1, a fact that may necessitate several changes in the summer fleet schedule already mapped out. Orders for the search are said have come from Washington and have shown plainly the .desire of See retary Dcnby of the navy departmen that every possible effort be mad to find the Conestoga or determine its fate. These orders were transmltte by the commander-in-chief of the Pa cific fleet here late Thursday. U. S. Court Takes Action in Strike Crisis. TEMPORARY ORDER ISSUED Date Set for Unions. to Pre sent Their Case. DAMAGES ARE DEMANDED Members of Striking Organizations Ordered Forthwith to Cease All Obstructive Operations. TACOMA, Wash., May 20. (Special.) Several Tacomans during the war served in the missing navy tug Cones toga and are greatly interested in th search now under way by the navy department. Captain Ernest Heinrici now in Portland, was commander o the tug for a part of the time on th Atlantic when the vessel was engaged in -submarine chaser convoy work The tug was formerly a Philadelphia Reading tug, ;'t was said. PLANE KILLED TWO IN Pilot and Woman Are Victims of Accident After Making 'Loop PATERSON, N. J., May 20. Lieu tenant Coates and Mrs. Jonn Brady were killed today when an airplane In which they were riding fell 2000 feet to the ground at the Preakness flying field near here. Spectators told the police that the machine had just come out of a loon and was making a bank when the wings crumpled and the plane fell. T. E. Ellis, one-man Depot-Mor- last last night, re lieved him of J15 of the company's money, and refused to -take Ellis watch because "you are a working man." The" holdup took place on Thurman street at the end of the car's run. Ellis reported to the police th the man was inexperienced, as evi denced hv his nervousness. The rob ber disappeared In nearby brush and nniir-n mild find no trace of him. delivery inland. In connection with plans for the second unit provision is made for another dock at the north end of the tract, which will add ap proximately 1000 feet of berthing pace. The new arrangement on the river side will afford the company space for the storage of 15,000000 feet of logs and, as the. first unit is up stream from the site of the second unit, all logs found in the timber rafts that grade up to requirements for cutting in the .stew plant can be shifted into storage there by the as sistance of the current. Unit to Be Model. In carrying out the aonstructlon details not the slightest Interference is necessary as regards the existing plant, since the various structures will be located toward the northV?nd of the site, much of the intervening space reserved for storage. In every respect the second unit is to be a model Trim be r manufacturing plant, Concluded on Page 14, Column ST STORM HITS TWO STATES Man Killed in Xebraska: Havoc Wrought in Minnesota. OMAHA, May. 20. Violent wind storms Jn Nebraska yesterday and last night resulted In the death of one man, injuries to others and con siderable damage to farm property. PIPESTONE, Minn., May 20. A tor nado, which swept the southeastern section of Minnesota last night killed scores of cattle and destroyed a num ber of farm structures. No lives were lost. WAGE CUT IS PROTESTED Southern Pacific Engineers Refuse to Accept "Reduction. SAN FRANCISCO, May 20. Sta tionary engineers and boiler-room employes of the Souther Pacific fol lowed the lead of other classes- of railroad employes today by refusing to accept a 20 per cent reduction in wages proposed by the-- company. Their announcement was made at a conference between their representa tives and company officials. ATTORNEYS- MUST ACT Aliens Must Get Citizenship Papers in Six Months. SACRAMENTO, Cal.. May 20. Gov ernor Stephens today signed senate bill 164, forcing alien attorneys to bBtain their first citizenship papers within six months after it becomes effective. j PUZZLE: FIND THE CAUTIOUS BATHER. j IF 1- ,V & i - i Tmms mil i Continues molestation of crews of shipping board vessels by pickets of the striking harine unions led to the granting by Federal Judge Wolverton yesterday afternoon of a temporary restraining order commanding the various unions, their business agents and all persons assisting them to cease all picketing operations imme diately. The defendants were ordered to appear before the district court of the United States May 26 at 10 A. M. to show cause why a permanent in junction should not Issue. The specific commands of the re straining order were to desist from trespassing upon any of the proper tics of the shipping board, either upon Its vessels, or any dock, dolphin or wharf, and from interfering in any way whatsoever with employes of the shipping board. Even while the papers in the case were being prepared in the office of United States Attorney Humphreys, four ex-navy men, who had been in the office of the sea service bureau applying - for positions on vessels, emerged from the Concord building and were set upon by a dozen or more pickets who wereolterin about the entrance of the building. The four would-be strike breakers successfully fou eh t off their assailants in a run ning encounter from Second and Stark streets almost to Third street, where the assailants dispersed at the sight of an on-rushing body of police re serves. No serious injuries were In flicted on either side and no arrests were made. Papers Served on Unions. " Papers in the case were given into the hands of George F. Alexander, United States marshal, i and were served by him upon the unions named as defendants late yesterday afternoon. The complaint, with affidavits which served as the basis for the re straining order, filed by United States Attorney Humphreys yesterday in federal court, alleged many acts of violence against employes of the United States shipping board and as serted that continuance of such ac tions on the part of the offending waterfront organizations wouldjJo IrreDarable injury to the merchant marine. It was alleged that damages amounting to 110.000 a day since May 1 had been done and that amount was sued for, in. addition to a re straining order forever stopping such practices. The suit was one in equity, filed by the United States against the Marine Engineers' Beneficial association and Benjamin Thomas, president, and Bar ney Dlonne, business manager and financial secretary; the Masters, Mates and Pilots of the Pacific Port land branch"! and W. C. Snow, busi ness agent; the Marine Firemen. Oil ers' and Water Tenders' union of the Pacific, Portland branch, and Thomas FarrelJ, business igent; the Sailors' nion of the Pacific, Portland branch. and Jack Rosen, business agent; the Marine Cooks' and Stewards' associa tion of the Pacific, Portland agency. and Frank Dean, business agent; and the Neptune Association of Licensed Masters and Mates of Ocean and Coastwise Steam Vessels. Wilful Obstruction Charged. It is recited that the plaintiff owns nd conducts the shipping business of the United States shipping board and uses Montgomery, Alblna, Pacific El evator. MerseyAO.-W. R. & N. com pany, Portland Flouring . mill and ther docks in the Portland harbor and the Victoria Dolphins in the con duct of its affairs; that on May 1 wages were reduced by the shipping board. In accordance wun prior no tice; that on that date the defendants walked out and now refuse to allow their members to work for the plain tiff upon the terms and conditions the plaintiff established, and that the defendants since May 1 have been obstructing 'nd hindering the plain tiff and its agents in the operation of-lts ships and its plans and have knowingly and wilfully obstructed and retarded the passage of the United States mails on vessels carry ing mall and that they continue to do so, as shown by affidavits filed in support of the suit. Defendants are alleged to have been guilty of threats, intimidation and violence against persons willing to wok for the plaintiff and its agents and have picketed docks and vessels and otherwise obstructed and Inter fered with the plaintiff. Defendants are said to have trespassed upon the plaintiffs property and upon its ves sels -and have assaulted and beaten members of the crews of the vessels owned and operated by the plaintiff and have placed pickets who have Charlie Straight and Bill Freeman Charged AVith Angling in Clackamas River. A fierce struggle In which a re volver and fish gaffs were used pre ceded the arrest of two alleged no torious poachers on the Clackamas river yesterday, according to word received by Carl D. Shoemaker, secre tary of the atate fish commission. The battle ended only when one of the deputy fish wardens fired a shot directly at one of the poachers, who. It was said, was attempting to hit him with a pike pole. The prisoners were Charlie Straight and Bill Freeman. They were arrest ed, while operating in the Clackamas river, by Deputy Fish Wardens John son and Murphy. Their boat, a net and seven Chinook salmon were seized by the wardens. According to the message received by Shoemaker, the two men resisted arrest and tried to upset the officers' boat and run them through with their gaffs. The fight waxed warm until Johnson pulled a gun and fired point blank at Freeman, who, he said, was wieldjng a gaff. The bullet whizzed past the hand holding the gaff and the Implement was dropped. The two men were charged with fishing illegally in the Clackamas river, a closed stream; with fishing without a license and with not hav ing their corks numbered. They will come up for hearing before Justice Noble at Oregon City Tuesday. PROFITEER HUNT PLANNED Lcnroot of WlsconMn. Wants to Run Down Guilty Ones. WASHINGTON, D. C, May 20. The senate committee on agriculture to day ordered a favorable report on the Lenroot-Strong resolution, authoriz ing a general survey of agriculture and related. maTtcrs by a joint com mission of the serate and house, to be composed of five meinbern from each body, three of them republicans and two democrats. "Let's find out just who Is profiteering,"- said Senator Lenroot, urging federal action on his resolution ami Indorsing the suggestion of Presi dent Harding tor some government agency to give publicity to costs and" profits in various lines. Pub licity, with fair price findings, he added, would be more potent than any legislation. Senator Gooding, republican, Idaho, said the proposed joint commission should b in sympathy with agricul ture and Senator Lenroot agreed. Front Street May Be In undated, Says Welfs. . 25-FOOT STAGE EXPECTED Melting Snows Fast Swelling Columbia System. BEND FLUME GOES 0U1 Damngc to Farms in Union Con ill y Estimated at $250,000; Heavy Hu in full Continues. TEMBLORS FELT AT SEA Two Severe Enrlhqtiakes Shook Ship Orf Mexican Coast. SAN FEDRO, 'cal.. May 20. (Spe cial.) One of the most severe earth quake shocks ever felt at sea, was reported yesterday by the crew of the steamer Spectator. The vessel was off the Mexican coast, north of Mexico City, when the quake was reit. ine officers alnd crew thought the steam er had struck a roctrr The second shock was so severe tht the officers made ready to i;nancn the lifeboats. DKVKI.nrMKST l .ORTII- WMT KI.OOI MTUATIOY. Portland possibility of Front - street flood growing hourly. Weather forecaster counts on 25-foot sIhrc. Vancouver. Wash. Columbia river rises 12 Inches In 21 hours, reaching 10-foot stage. Farmers move livestock from lowlunils. Tho Dalles Columbia contin ues rampage. Grain cropp on lowlands flooded. Mark of 21 feet reached. La Grande Estimate of dam age to farms KSP.lHO, and may reach 1300. 000. Worst of flood not yet past. Total of 22.000 acres In Union county under water. Kai.-.s keep up. Medford Heavy rainfall con tinues. Bend Irrlgatlrn flume eight miles from Ucnd wanned out. Rainfall is heavy. INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Went her. YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature, 06 degrees; minimum. 51 decrees. TODAVS Fair; westerly winds. Foreign Harvey's address Is praised In London. I'lie 2. National. Prohibition enforcement clerks accused of graft. Page 1. Whole nation pauses to nouor lata Lniei Justice White, l'age 2. Harding psya honor to Madams Curie. Pago 3. - Railway chief declares costs must be cut. Page -l. Base at Alameda target in senate. Page 4. America's foreign polity mstlo clear by re fusal to interfere In Silesia. Pago . Domestic. Thirty-six destroyer search for missing naval tug. Page 1. Nine alleged expert bombers are arrested. Paaa 1. West Virginia mine battle area put under martial law Page 3. Vice still rampant drolsns reformer. Page 0. Ten persons hurt when passenger train hits freight at Eugene. Page 1. Big llqour Influx foreseen for Seattle. Page 0. Four-cent bread rumor In Spokane. Page S. Counties may aid enforcement of prohlbl ton law, says attorney-general. Page 10. Pports. Elks' boxing card now complete. Page 12. Kerns bpys and girls win grammar school meet. Page 13. Carnentler afraid of "xe reporters." Page 11. American golfers face big test today. Page 12. Clear sky augurs well for coast conference (Concluded on Page 2. Culuum 3.) today. Page IS. Kerns boys and girls win school meet. Page 13. ' Commercial and Marine. Many salmon canneries win not operate this season. Page -I. Chicago wheat soars oa bullish crop news. Page 21. 1 Ralls and other stocks under professional pressure. Page -l. Terminal congestion problem is viewed. page la Portland and Vicinity. Poacher suspects light with officers. Page I. Umpqua taxpayers rousea By deal for dredge, page Ji. J. C. Johnson, who robbed benefactor, sen tenced to six years in prison, pags 7. Girl cooks show skill to parents. . Psge 10. Realty board starts drlvs to reduce tax levy. Psge n. Seattle business men to visit Portland Wednesday, page (. Peninsula Lumber company to build nsw wmlll in j'uruauu. xnib a. Location for automobile stage terminal tentatively seiecieo. ran j. Two men caugnt in a rug ram are Held for ball, page jo. Flood prospect Is growing rapidly. Page 1. Members of striking seamen's unions en joined by leoerai court, rage j. Pacific univernity Jlay festival - depicts landing of PDgrlais. I'sge 4. Though prediction of river stages more than a few days ahead Is lin. possible with any degree of certainty, Portland stands a good chance of see ing Front street flooded st several of the lower points along the water front. It was .said yesterday by ICd ward !. Wells, district forecaster. Conditions are practically the samo this year as they were In the sprlns of 189-1, when the greatest flood of Portland's recorded history took place, and the future behavior of the river all depends upon the tempera ture at the watersheds of the Snake and Columbia rivers. The river will reach a stage of 2 S feet above zero Monday, according to Mr. Wells' forecast of yesterday, and unless the melting of tho mountain snows is checked by cool weather, t rise will continuo after that day. .Mr. Wells admitted yesterday that he really expected to see a stago of 2.1 or 26 feet wlthhln the next threa . weeks, though he would not Incorpor ate this estimate into his'forecast. Flood Prospects) Inerense. Prospects for a flood st Portland were Increasrd yesterday by a rapid rising oi the Wcnati-hee river at Wc natchce, the Snake river at Lewislon and the Columbia at L'ni.'itlll.i and The Dalles. Where tho Columbia Is confined in a narrow channel at The Dalles a rise of 2-t feet was reported at 8 o'clock yesterday morning. At Wcnatchee the water was up 12 feet and at l.ejylston 1.6. Tlie rise at Umatilla In 24 hours was of a foot. The general conditions throughout the drainage area that point to an abnormal rso in the Columbia end Willamette rivers this year during the annual run-off are a generous supply of snow In the mountainous territory drained by tliu Columbia system, and a prolonged cold spring ending with a sudden turn to warm weather. ' Dredging i:ffee Mlukt. Normally the rrnako river, whose tributary mountains are much farther oiith than those of the Columbia' should accomplish Its run-off quietly before the Columbia starts. This year, however, the two ore performing to gether, with a consequent Increase In the volume of water the Columbia is required to dispose of. Tho more or less popular belief that recent dredging operations In tho Col umbia and Willamette rivers have so increased the depth and width of the channel In these streams tin to expe dite the flow and thus tend to keep down floods was flouted yesterday by G. 1. Hegardt, chief engineer' for the commission of public docks, tv-ho has made an intensive study of tho flow of the rivers. The effect of dik ing and dredging upon the flow of the streams, he said, is entirely theoret ical and Is so slight as to be unnotlc able; , , Foar Floods Here on Heeord. Four real floods worthy of being classed as such are known to have oc curred at Portland. The first of these. In the early '50s, must have reached a stage of about 30 feet. In June. 1S7C. the river surface stood 8 or 10 Inches above the sidewalk at First and Sturk streets. The third flood Is tho most serious winter freshet on record. It occurred In February, 1S90. and sent the turbulent Willamette swirling to the corner of Second anil Alder streets. Tho "great flood" of June. 1S91. resulted In a river stage of 31.5 feet and caused men to travel ubou the downtown business section In boats. Because of the hlRh water Harbor master Speier yesterday lsned un (.Concluded ua Pags 4 Columu l.J fETI 104.21