kTClT I V (1 18 081 enm n PrlUa lOnnal PORTLAND, OREGON, VJXESDAT, SEPTEMBER 21, 1931 2G PAGES. PRICK FIVE CENTS E MAN IS SHOT TWICE; HANNA LEAD?jRSUM IN SENATO.L RACE DLJIOCRAT f& ORED. 1652 TO 19 86, IN ALBUQUERQUE. 68-MILE STORM HITS NORTH PACIFIC COAST L SEASIDE HOTEL LOOT FOUND IN PORTLAND FOUR UN AH OADPOGIM NEW CO 0 HMO FILM MEN LOSE CITY AUDITORIUM Metro Officials Charged With Sharp Dealing. , WIFE REPORTED CAUSE W1LDIH JACKS IS IX CRITICAL. PROSPERITY ROAD F1KST BIG GALE OF SEASON ATTAINS HIG1I VELOCITY. STOLEN rUOPEUTY SAID TO BE WORTU $5000. CONDITION IN MEDFORD. ONMAHONEY URY IS GOING FORWARD All of Refined Type-Three Are Married. SPECIAL VENIRE NECESSARY Challenges May Throw Out Entire Tentative Panel. LONG TRIAL IS FORECAST Alleged wife Murderer Makes No Effort to Continue Itrpuled -Insanity Pretense. RKATTLE. Wash.." Sept. . 10. (Spe cial.) Kleven Jurors seven men nd four women were tentatively select ed today for the trial of James E. Mahoney on the charge of murdering Ma aged and wealthy wife, Mrs. Kate Mooerg Mahohey. This exhausted the available sup ply of jurors and Judge Ronald ad journed court until 9:30 o'clock to morrow morning to permit the sum moning of a special venire of 100. Prevailing opinion Is that the jury cannot possibly be completed until late tomorrow afternoon. The state has five peremptory challenges still and the defense ten. making It pos sible for the entire tentative Jury to be thrown out without cause. lMim Trial ladlrated. That the trial will be a long drawn out affair, was Indicated by the ques tions of Judge and tawyera, who made It a point to ask prospective Jurors If they thought they could stand the strain of two weeks' con atant confinement. The Jury as Jt now stands Is con sidered by court attachea as being considerably higher In standard than the average. The four women mem bers are all Of a refined type. Three of them are marrid and one single the latter I the youngest person In i'lie box. Most of the men are higb grade artisans. The tentative Jury was completed with the passing of Charles W. Angel, w confectioner of 860T Klrkwood place, and L. G. Weaterman; a sales man of 3614 Wallingford avenue. Vmn la f kallraared. After a brief recess the court took up the matter of peremptory chal lenges, and Juror No. 1, .Mrs. Rose E. Ilellman, was Immediately excused by the state. It was found necessary to examine six Jurors In order to fill her place. Mrs. Tena Facklane. 110 Twelfth avenue, W.: I. Brumbaugh of Tolt; Mrs. Miry M. Kid red. 815 Twelfth venue, S. ,W.: Mrs. Caroline Turn bull. 7323 Twenty-eighth avenue, N. W., and F. O. Lusthoff, 5642 Forty sixth avenue, S. W., all being chal lenged for cause. C. K. Murfln, 245S Sixth avenue, W, an electrician and steamfitter,. was finally accepted and took No. 1 chair. The defense then excused A. L. Miller, juror No. 5, who had been challenged by Johnston before be was seated, and Charles K. Davis, a motorman of 7038 Thirteenth avenue, N". W., waa chosen In his place. Venire la Exhaaated. ' Mrs. Covington was the last Juror to be challenged, and her place went unfilled, as neither I G. Gray, a check clerk living at Algona, nor Eurt N. Welton, a carpenter living at 1317 Findlay street, could qualify. This exhausted the ordinary ventre and proceedings had to be halted until more Jurors could be summoned. Mahoney made no effort to con tinue the reputed pretense that he la Insane when he was taken Into court today, and he wore an expression throughout the day that denoted an Intelligent Interest In the selection of the Jury. For the first time since he "went craxy." weeks ago. he publicly rec cgnlxed his mother and sister Mrs. Nora Mahoney and Mrs. Dolores Johnson and sat beside them throughout the court proceedings. Taper Itrlnas Grin. In striking contrast to his appear ance at the time of his arraignment when hJs attorney entered an Insan ity plea he waa Immaculately tireafd. his face was clean-shaven and the little hair that he has was carefully arranged. He seemed to be In fine fettle and exchanged remarka with both his mother and sister during the after roon. Shortly before adjournment for the evening Mrs. Johnson smiling, ly handed him a copy of an after noon paper, Just off the press, which announced that "Mahoney Ignored his sister." Mahoney grinned broadly and read the article through, apparently en Joying every word of" It. When he waa through he handed It back to his sister, with what looked auspiciously like a wink. ' Mother I Kissed. . Before be was taken out of the court room at the close of the session he affectionately kissed his mother and n-.dded over his ahoulder to bis sister. Wrlle prospective Jurors were be ing Interrogated Mahoney maintained an air of constant alertneaa. He didn't seem to be worried by the attitude f anv of them although quite a few yera frankly hostile but he peered iCeacludsd ea Page . Comma 1.) I Ilvllie Matthews Surrenders to bhc'rlff and Says Duel Was Fought In Eagle Point. MEDFORD. Or., Sept. 20. (Spe cial.) Wilbur "Wig" Jacks, ex marshal! of Eagle I'olnt, was taken to a Medford hospital In a critical condition with two- bullet holes In his body, and Rollie Matthews, lso or Eagle Point, was held in the county Jail as the result of a shoot ing affray in Eagle Point thia morn ing. Bad blood has existed between the two men for the psst five years, according to Sheriff Terrlll. over at tentlons Matthews waa alleged to have paid Jacks' wife. Matthewa waa on horseback at the time of the shooting. Conflicting stories were told by both sides. After the shooting Mat thews returned to his home, where he awaited the coming of Sheriff Terrill and deputies, to whom he surrendered and handed over two re volvers, saying: "This Is my gun and that one Is Wig's." Two empty cartridges were found In Matthews' gun and one empty one and a snapped e In the gun Mat thews said waa Jacks'. While still conscious after the shooting, Jacks said to Sheriff Terrlll: "There Is no self-defense about It. He said he waa going to shoot me. and I said, go ahead and do it. 1 don't care." Jacks then collapsed without fin ishing his statement. John Nichols, In front of whose place the ahootlng occurred, said he first heard loud talking, and then two shots and saw a revolver in Mat thewa' hand, and Jacks crawling over a wire fence and failing. Nichols, who Is a relative of Jacks by mar riage, said Jacks had no gun. JUDGE TO ENTER SCHOOL Ileppner Municipal Jurist Will Bo Freshman at Vnlvcrslty. HEPPXKF1, Or.. Sept. 23 (Spe clla.) Hcppner la perhaps the only town in Oregon that will end an active Jurist to the Cnlve-rity of Oregon this year. Munlcipil Judge hughes of Heppner leavea tomorrow morning for Eugene, where te will enter the university as a freshman, taking a course In business admin istration. Judge Hughes as ap pointed to the position of municipal ;uige about IS months agu to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Judge Williams, and has made an enviable record as a Jurist. He was the youngest Judge In the state. Other Heppner students giing to the university this year arj Arthur 1 nomas, Elisabeth Phelps, Leta Hum phreys, Elma Peterson and Roland Humphreys. Students leaving this week for Ore gon Agricultural college are' Helen Parrett, Violet Corrlgall. Max Rogers, Edward Notson and Jasper Cswford. Robert Notson will enter his second year at Willamette university and Jared Aiken goes to Columbia uni versity at Portland. SOVIET GETS SHARP NOTE British Demand Explanation of Al leged Asiatic Intrigues. LONDON, Sept. 20. (By the Asso ciated Press) The British govern ment has dispatched a strongly word ed note to Moscow calling attention of the aovlet government to alleged serious breaches of faith Involved in the pursuance by the Russians throughout central Asia and Afghan istan of a campaign of intriguer against Great Britain. An explana tion is demanded. The note Jetalls fully the alleged hostile acts. Most ef them were in Afghanistan. HILL SEES IMPROVEMENT Great Northern Chief Impressed by Conditions on Coast. ST. PAUL. Sept. 20. Louis H Hill, chairman of the threat Northern Rail way company, reported upon nts re turn from the Pacific coast aad the r.orthwest today that conditions were improving. "Business Is definitely on the up grade," Mr. Hill said. BANK MESSJENGER ROBBED San Francisco Youth Attacked Near Place of Employment. SAN FRANCISCO. Sept. 20 Arthur Field. 22. a messenger fo.- the First National bank, was attacked, beateJ and robbed of $2220 of the bank's funds today. The robbery occurred a few blockr from his place of employment, ac cording to a police report. SUBMARINE R-27 IN PORT Naval Craft That Cave Distress Signal Arrives in Cuba. WASHINGTON. D. C Sept. 20. Safe arrival at GuanUnamo bay, Cuba, of the American submarine R-27, which, while en route from Coco So'.o, Panama Canal sone. to Guantar.amo. sent out a distress call Sunday night, was reported today io the navy department. Work Pushed Though Commissioners Are III. ONE CONTRACT IS AWARDED More Than 100 Miles of Work Ordered Advertised. NEW PROJECT APPROVED Million-Dollar Block of Bonds Is Sold; Another Block Is to Bo Offered Shortly. DOINGS OF HIGHWAY COM MISSION". More than 100 miles of work ordered advertised for letting at October meeting. One million dollars of four year, per cent bonds sold. An other block of bonds to be of fered In October, the commis sion fixing rate of Interest. Commission agreea to approve Scoggln valley highway Im provement district, first of Its kind under new law. Postal Telegraph company in formed commission will resist to limit the planting of poles on lower Columbia River high way. Commission will not contract for aurfacing two onita of Mount Hood loop In Clackamas county until January. Survey of The Dalles-California highway through Maupin ordered, ao town can be rebuilt. Attorney' Instructed to collect money Gilliam county owes the state. t With R. A. Booth, chairman, re cuperating In the mountains of south ern Oregon, with W. B. Barratt sick In his hotel room, with John B. Teon on deck but coughing violently, and with Attorney Devers aneesing, the state highway commission and its attaches needed the attention of phy sicians rather than that of contract ors, bond buyers and county courts yesterday morning. As a one-man commission could not function, adjournment was taken un til the afternoon, after bids had been rece'ved, and later Commissioner Bar ratt dragged himself from bed to I l Ooneludt-d on FaKe 4. Column 1.1 Grant County, Lost In Gubernato rial Election Last Year by Can didate, Carried This Year. ALBUQUERQUE. N. M.. Sept. 20. Returns received by the Albuquerque Morning Journal up to o'clock to night from the senatorial election held today Indicate that the aouthern part of the state is showing unusual strength for Richard H. Hanna, demo crat, and republican majorities are being cut down, while In the northern counties Senator Bursum, republican, is running strong. Indications are that the result will be very close. ALBUQUERQUE. N. M.. Sept. 20. Practically complete returns, from the city of Albuquerque in the sena torial election today give: Bursum. republican, 1652; Hanna, democrat. list. Last year Hanna for governor car ried the city by more than 1000. SILVER CITT. N. M., Sept. 20. Practically complete, but unofficial, returns Indicate "that Hanna. demo crat, for United States senator, has carried thia (Grant) county by 250. Last year. vhen he ran for governor, he lost the county by 221. ROSWELL, N. M., Sept. 20. Four precincts In Roswell give for United Statei senator: '. Hanna, democrat, 1347; Bursum, republican. tS. SWISS BALLOON WINS Gas Bag Lands in Ireland and Get James G. Bennett .Trophy. LONDON, Sept. 20. With the land ing today cf the Swiss balloon, piloted by Paul Armbrustcr, all T4 competi tors In the international race for the James Gordon Bennett trophy, which started Sunday at Brussels, have been accounted for. The balloon landed at Lanbay island, oft the east coast of County Dublin, Ireland, and therefore wins the cup. GENERAL WOOD IN CHINA Day of Leisure Enjoyed Before M.iklng of Official Calls. PEKING, Sept. 20. By the Associ ated Preas.) Major-General Wood and W. Cameron Forbes, .who have arrived here from the Philippines, were given a day fo leisure today be fore entering on their programme of official calls and entertainments. ' . They plan to depart for Japan by way of Korea on Sunday.. 22 BODIES ARE RECOVERED 70' Victims of Colliery Explosion All Believed Dead. BRISBANE. Queensland. Sept. 20. Twenty-two bodies have been recov ered from the Mount Mulligan col liery near Cairns, where an explosion of gaa occurred Monday. -It Is believed that all those en tombed, about 70, perished. THEY OUGHT TO BE ABLE TO STOP THAT FELLOW. j Wind Warnings Continne to Hang on All Coast Stations of Or egon and Washington. The first storm of the season struck the north Pacific coast yesterday with a wind velocity of 10 miles an hour at North Head and f A miles an hour at Tatoosh. At fi o'clock yes terday evening, according to reporta received by the local office of the weather bureau, , the gale was etill blowing miles an hour at . North Head, but had blown itself out at Tatoosh. where the velocity had dropped to alx miles an hour from the west. The stronger blows earlier in the day. both at the mouth of the Columbia river and the entrance to Puget aound, were straight from the south. , Whether or not the tailing off of the blew' farther north indicated the approach, of the storm's end on the Oregon coast could not be stated last night by Forecaster Wells, for the entire northwest was still enveloped in an area of low barometric pres sure, and it was thought that there might be a aecond gale stacking up behind the first one. Storm warnings ordered early yes terday for all Oregon and Washing ton coast stations were ordered con tinued at 5 P. M. PORT TOWNSEND, Wash., Sept. 20. A southeast gale swept the lower sound early this morning. The purse seine fishing vessel Athena was driven ashore in Port Townsend bay and left dry by the receding tide, but escaped damage. The Port Townsend city float waa oast adrift, but later was recovered. Small boata generally scampered for cover. ASTORIA. Or, Sept. 20. (Special.) The rain which started last Satur day haa developed into a southerly gale which today was sweeping along the north .Pacific coast. The barometer was fairly high, but haa been dropping slightly since morning. Many believed this waa the equinoctial atorm which was con sidered due either today or tomor row and that it would be followed by a period of pleasant weather. JUDGE SPANKS OFFENDERS Juvenile Delinquents Persuaded to ' ' Return ' to School. KANSAS CITT, Mo., Sept 20. Judge Porterfield, presiding over the juvenile court, stopped a acssion of that coiyt here today, removed one of his low shoes and spanked four juvenile delinquents with It. The (our boys, in court' for truancy from school, told the Judge they would not go to school and asked h m to send them to the county in stitution for youthful offenders. The judge sent out for a sultab'.e stick. tut none could be found, lie then used his shoe. '"What about school now" he asked when he had replaced the shoe. The four said the felt it was a good Idea. "Silver State" Now Rich Agricultural Land. OLD MINING GLORIES GONE Livestock, Grain, Sugar, Corn Now Leading Products. SOME HANDICAPS NOTICED Recent Slump, However, Appears to Have Been Less Severely Felt Than Elsewhere. Br RICHARD SPUXANE. (Copyright by the Publie I-edxer Co. Pub lished by arrangement.) DENVER. Colo.. Sept. 20. Denver means Colorado, otherwise the silver state and the centennial state. The silver state Is a misnomer. There is .little silver, mined here today. It doesn't pay despite the Plttman act. Mining men aay silver can be mined profitably only aa a by-product. Today Colorado is an agricultural land. In this field it nas made great progress, although less than one-third of its area is under cultivation. Wheat ranks first, with a yield of about 2S. 000.000 bushels Sugar beets second, alfalfa third and corn fourth. The potato crop is Immense and sorghums bulk big. Of course every one knows of Colorado cantaloupes by reason of the Rocky Fords, but the fruits, particularly apples, peaches, pears snd cherries, bring six times the money total of the cantaloupe crop. Truck farms abound. Perhaps the finest cabbages of the country are grown here. The dairy business has grown amasingly. Last year it amounted to J28.0O0.OOC. Tne livestock from Colo rado farms brings a yearly return up to three times that of the state's metal output. ' Old Ml A 4itortes ;. Gone are the glories of Leadville, Cripple Creek, Sllverton, Aspen and euch places. Men talk of beet sugar. Improved livestock, tire factories, the tourist traffic, merchandising and industrial enterprises. Denver is the jobbing center of a rrest mountain region stretching well north Into Wyoming and down deep into Nev Mexico and reaching into a portion of Utah. Trade has been pretty good. Locally It haa been a trifle better than the average of eastern cities. This Is explained In part by the tourist business. Last year 240,96 tourists were booked here. Tourists' purchases have made July the second best month In the year in Denver stores, December ranking first. Department store reports are about the same as those of eastern citlea, an Increase In purchasing with a de crease In money volume. July, 1921, for all the retailers reporting, shows 10.) per cent in money less than July, 1920. Warehouses are bare of goods and merchants are buying In ac cordance with seasonable require ments but not laying in excessive stocks. The most prominent depart ment store head In the city considers conditions satisfactory and says mer chanta are alowly and steadily re covering from the losses sustained through the forced sacrifice of goods bought at peak prices. CmI aad Steel Frodaeed. . The biggest single industrial con cern of the state Is the Colorado Fuel & Iron company, which In its coal mines ahd Its steel mills, its lime quarries and ore properties normally employs 14,000 men. Its mining business can be classified as cne-half coal and one-half steel. Its steel plant la the only one west of the Mississippi manufacturing pig iron. The anomalous aituatlon is pre sented today of the company having Its iron mines and its lime quarries shut down and operating only its lolling mills and its wire mills as need requires, and yet it has orders booked for (1,000 tons of raila. The pipe foundry operates Intermittently and wire nails and staples are manu factured only as needs require, which means about 81 1-3 per cent of that department's capacity. There Is evi dence of a slight Increase of orders for wire mill products but It re mains to be seen if this Is permanent. The company is capable of producing 200,000 tons of rails annually. Orders for 1921 were substantial and the mills worked two shifts until after April. Then distress cr.es came from the railroads asking for deferred rollings. When these became insist ent the rail mills were shut down. The company hopes to resume opera tions of the rail mills In November. This depends, however, on the ability of the railroads to take the products. Meanwhile the orders remained booked. Coat Deposits Eionaoon. Colorado has mors coal than any othsr section of America. Over the divide, in the territory of which Glenwood Springs is the center, there are enormous deposits of highly volatile coking coal. Further west In the Summerset district there are other large field". In the Durango section the supply is practically un tCutuluUcd ua i'ass , Culuuia 3.) official to Drop Case ou Fledge of Thief to Restore Value of Goods to Owners. Silverware, table linen, bed linen and other articles were stolen re cently from the Seaside hotel and recovered in Portland on a search warrant signed by officers and stock holders In the hotel company, it be came known last night. The total value of the property recovered was said to aggregate more than 15000. According to long-distance tele phone report from Seaside, no war tants have beeu issued for the arrest of any person or persons thought to I be implicated in the theft of the I property. Although hotel officials and officers of that county know tne person who owned and shipped trie trunk, no arrests have been made, and, according to authentic reports, there will be no arrests. Those said by hotel officials to be Implicated or to have complete knowledge of how the property was taken from the hotel have promised to make full restitution for every thing that la missing. It waa re ported. The trunk was shipped from Sea side to Portland early last week. Later In the week officers of the hotel company came to Portland and procured a search warrant for the seizure of the trunk after they had received Information that it con tained considerable property stolen from the hotel. According to Deputy Constable Miles, who seized the trunk. It was in the basement of the Klledner building on Washington street. It was taken to the courthouse and opened. It was found to be full of property claimed by the Seaside hotel. Further reports from Seaside re garding the theft of considerable other property from the hotel were denied by stockholders and officers by long-distance telephone last night. All of the property taken from the hotel has been recovered, and no criminal action Is likely to be taken In view of the fact that full restitu tion has been promised, it was said. DEATH OF TWG MYSTERY Motive for Killing of Los Angeles Girl Not DlHclosed- LOS ANGELES, Sept. 20. The po lice today aald they had been unable to discover the motive for the slay ing of Miss Esther Greening, high school girl, whose body was found shortly after midnight on the porch of her hornet beside that of Albert Pemberton, an oil worker. Each had been shot through the heart. Positions of the bodies, the police said,' indicated that Pemberton shot Miss Greening and then himself. MEXICANS KILL AMERICAN Soldiers Slay Oil Company Employe In Fields Near Taniplco. WASHINGTON. D. C. Sept. 20. Carl R. Tabb, an American employe of the Mexican Petroleum company, was shot and killed Sunday night "by Mexican soldiers" In the oil fields near Tamplco, the American consul at Tamplco reported today to the state department. The consul. In his report, gave no details, but aald that the shooting had been reported as accidental. FOREIGN MINISTER NAMED J. D. Trlnce of New Jersey to Kep resent Vnlled States in Denmark. WASHINGTON. D. C. Sept. 20. Dr. J. D. Prince, a language pro fessor at Columbia university, has been selected by President Harding as minister to Denmark. Dr. Prince Is president of the state civil commission of New Jersey. INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS - The Weather. TESTER DAT" fr Maximum temperature, 67 degrees; minimum, e ai(ac& TOD A r a Rain; southwesterly winds. Fereign. Sinn Fein district In uproar again. Pas 2. National. Arms conference to open solemnly. Page t. Domestic. Seven witnesses examined In Inquiry to tlnd source of Arbuckla liquor. !' a. IT Samoan chiefs sentenced to Jail- Pag I. I'aelfle Northwest. All In readlnea for opening of great west ern drama at i'eodieton tomorrow. Page 1U. Will Governor Olcott seek offles sgalnT la punllng Salem. Page 2o. Husband is shut by another man, wlf ropuried c.use. Page 1. Sports. 200 entries expected In city golf tourna ment. Pag 14. Korty Unlveraity of Oregon football play ers scrimmage. Pag 14. Pacific Coast league results: At Portland S, San Kranclsco 7; at I-o Anaeles. Vernon ft. Salt L.ak lo; at San Fran cisco, Oakland S, Sacramento T. No gsm at Seattle. Los Ange.es, traveling. Pag 11. Three ex-champlons survive first golf round. Pag 14. High school football achedul drawn up. Pas 14. Commercial ami Marine. Oraded valley wools sell at good premtuma Pag 17. Rain damage reports hav steadying ef- tct on Chicago wheat market, fag 17. Bond market strong with liberty Issues actlv. Pag 17. Ke wheat shipping concern to export grain in bulk. Pag IS. Portland and Vlelnlty. Film men los city auditorium. Pag 1. Oregon road programme pufthed, rtesplto itlnesa of commissioners. Pag 1. Eeaxlde hotel loot Is found In Portlsnd. Page 1. Two go on trial fnr murder today. Pag 10. G8-mll gal atrlkes north Pacific coast. Pag 1. Marked decrease In number of divorce sunt lutU sated la lotal sjiuL Tag L "4 HORSEMEN" CASE ENDED Carl Stern and Melvin Win stock Under Ban. BUILDING OPEN TO MOVIE Councllmen Say KcxpoiiMlblc Per son May NcgotlHte for Vso of Municipal Structure. Carl Stern, northwest branrh man ager of the Metro Film corocraUon. and'. Melvin U. Winstock, l.-id rep- . resentative of the same couc.-'n. were barred yesterday by unanimous action cf the city council from uv.ng the public auditorium f.r thowlrr "The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse.' Evidence showed that effo-ta had been made to sell this picture to the Jensen & Von Herherg' Interests after a contract had been signed for the use of the auditorium. The councllmen made It pliln. how ever that they were not barring the f.icture from the auditorium, and that any responsible person could obtain elates fv showing the film If satis factory arrangementa were agreed fpon with H. M. White, ma-.ager of the auditorium. Film I.lkely to Cerae Ilete. It waa evident at the hear. no- that Portland probably will get an oppor tunlty to see this picture, for not only did Dan J. Malarkey, of the Jfneen & Von Herberg concern, state emphati cally that his clients were wHIIng to enter Into negotiations wi'.h thii Metro company for the plc'ure, but William T. Pangle. manager pf the Helllg theater, aald he was ready to negotiate for the purchase or leaati cf the picture rights In Portland. It developed at the hear i.g that last June the picture was booked In the Hellig theater for a tw?-weeks' straight run, and datea were set aside. I Later, Mr. Pangle said, the dates were canceled without any explana tion whatever. Mr. Panglo then went to San Francisco and viewed the picture and Interviewed repre sentatives of the Metro corporation. He was advised to proceed to New York to determine why the dates reserved at his theater had been canceled. w York Trip Taken. "I went to New York and called upon W. K. Atkinson, general man ager of the Metro corporation," aald Mr. Tangle, "and he told me that the reason we were not getting the picture was because his representa tives were dickering with the Jen sen Interests. He promised me thst he would telegraph Mr. Stern In Se attle and determine what the situa tion wss. "I called on him a few daya later and he told me to communicate with Mr. Stern on my return to the coast and he was certain (hat I would be able to obtain the picture. I called Mr. Stern on the telephone when I reached Portland and h3 -promised to send a representative to see me. This was not done, and not only was I left with two weeks of dates on my hands, but I was not even given an opportunity to obtain the picture after I had Journeyed across the continent to that purpose." Injury la Claimed. Mr. Pangle maintained that If any body had been Injured In the contro versy It wss Calvin Helllg and him self, and that he should be given an opportunity to show the picture. In asmuch as he had signed the first contract with the Metro people for It. Acting Mayor Blgelo declared developments during the last few hours had rhown plainly that It i necessary to clean up not only the acting features of the motion picture business, but also the business side of the Industry. "The evidence produced In' this case shows conclusively that Mr. Winstock and Mr. Stern attempted to sell this picture to the Jensen ft Von Herberg people after they had signed a contract to show the picture in the auditorium," he said. Dickering Is Described. Additional evidence ahowed that Mr. Stern telephoned to Mr. Jensen Saturday, September 10. two days after the contract had been signed with the city, and attempted to make an appointment with Mr. Jensen to discuss the sale of the "Four Horse men"'picture. September 13 Mr. Stern again called Mr. Jensen on the long distance telephone and asked what his best proposition would be for the purchase of the feature film. Mr. Stern told the council that the reason he had called Mr. Jensen on the telephone was to avoid angering him by the auditorium bookings. "I had other films to sell to him," said Mr. Stern, "and I had to do my best to keep on good terms with him." Copies of the telegrams exchanged between the New York and Seattle o.'flccs of the Metro corporation showed that this organisation antici pated box office receipts of 125.000 a week from showing the "'Four tCeacludvd ea Pag 8, Column 1.)