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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (April 13, 1922)
-OS STATE LV? VOL.. LXI XO. 19,156 Entered at Portland (OrerorO PoBtofflce as Second-class Matter. PORTLAND, OREGON, THURSDAY, APRIL 13, 1922 28 PAGES PRICE FIVE CENTS DOYLE DESCRIBES SPOKANE STUDENTS QUIZZED BY CHIEF PUPILS ASKED TO AXSWEK PERTINENT QUESTIONS. SEMEiFF ELUDES GOTHAM DEPUTIES MISSING BOY'S BODY IS FOUND IN CREEK ARBUGKLE FREED IN SIX MINUTES WILSON IRE ROUSED BY TUMULTY'S ACT CHORUS OVER RADIO DECLARED SUCCESS DEATH SENSATIONS MESSAGE SENT TO JEFFERSON BANQUET RESENTED. FANS FROM NEARBY CITIES SEND CONGRATULATIONS. NEIGHBOR DISCOVERS 7 -YEAR OLD LAD'S LIFELESS FORM. AMERICA CHILLED BY FRENCH STAND Lecturer Speaks as Inter preter of Spirits. PROCESS CALLED PLEASANT Only Feeling Is One of Deli cious Languor, Says Arthur. CROWD HANGS ON WORDS Talsied Heads Shake With Emo tion as Earnest Words Fall From Iiips of Spiritualist. NEW YORK, April 12. (By the As sociated Press.) Sir Arthur Conan Doyle tonight described the sensations of the deathbed as he said they had been communicated to him from be yond the Styx. Listening to him was a vast audi ence, an audience that filled Carnegie hall, an audience many of whose mem bers soon will board Charon's craft for the voyage which all must' take. Palsied hands shook with emotion as the earnest words fell from the lips of a man who has turned from medi cine and letters to a search for the spiritual. Death Delicious Languor. ' Death is not painful, but a pleasant process, said Arthur. As death ap proaches, the soul the etheric body floats out from its earthly shell and hovers above the human clay, teth ered only by the silver cord of which eccleastes speak. The only sensa tion is one of delicious languor. The first sight that greets the eye is one of smiling, loving faces bend ing over the deathbed, continued Sir Arthur. "Proof?" he asked. "I have stood by the side of the dying, seen hands turning cold in death stretch out, heard ifl;St)f en dearment fall from lias" t a a? soon would move no more. Detfri-om, say materialists. No, it is notjSglJrtum." Proof Held in Photograph. "Proof?" asked the preacher of spiritualism again. "The disengaging of the etheric body can be, has been photographed. I am fortunate enough : to have such a plate." Then he told of eight daughters all clairvoyants who had sat beside their dying mother. "It was lovely to see the etheric body disengage itself," he said. "There was a multiplicity of beauti ful lights." Other accounts, agreeing in detail, had been given of the passing of a soul, he added. "Is that not good evidence?" he asked. Applause Is Prolonged. The tense silence was broken as the audience, obviously in sympathy with the doctrines of Sir Arthur, broke into prolonged applause. Throughout the lecture the first which Sir Arthur has given since he came to America to raise funds for propagation of a gospel which he said was the beginning of a new re ligion for the human race though not designed to displace the old -nisi V ., . , . , . . .v.- -..-. . w j the presentation of his evidence of1 th sniri -ri,i i XI - ., j . . . . He described at length his conver- sion from a rank materialist to such a faith in spiritualism that he had decided his wife, his family, his repu tation as a man of letters, were but as mud in the gutter beside it. UNITY URGED ON CITIES Pledge to Stop Knocking and Help Develop Coast Requested. SPOKANE, Wash., April 12. Adop tion of a pledge to stop inferelij knocking was urged upon the Spo kane Advertising club today by Rol lin C. Ayres of San Francisco, presi dent of the Tacific Coast Advertising Clubs association. He proposed that all Spokane civic organizations in dorse the "treaty of unity." "Pacific coast cities should quit knocking each other, so that more settlers may be attracted to the coast," Mr. Ayres said. "California cities can teach us much regarding the best methods of advertising a community, and I urge this club to send a large delegation to the adver tising club convention in San Diego. starting JunV 25." CROOK BURIED IN BOSTON Koted Confidence Man Said Have Left $500,000 Estate. BOSTON, April 12. The burial to at Forest Hills cemetery here of Clark . Parktr of Pasadena, Cal., who&e career as an international confidence man brought him into the federal w courts, became- known today. Parker, a former resident of Boston, who died in Pasadena January 22, left an estate valued at more than $500,000, most of which went to fraternal or ganizations in California, according to his executors. The executors today denied reports tht Dr. Frederick P. Gay of Berke ley, Cal., a nephew of Parker, in tended to contest the will. Information Desired by School Au thorities Solely for Reference Purposes, It Is Said. SPOKANE, Wash.. April 12. (Spe cial.) Have you ever been arrested for any reason? Have you ever been before the juvenile court? Have you - ever ridden the school elevator? Have you ever been reprimanded by a traffic officer or any other offi cer of the law? ' These are among questions pro pounded to pupils of the Lewis and Clarke high school in a questionnaire issued today by Henry M. Hart, prin clpal. Every high school pupil is re quired to answer every question asked and submit the completed ques tionnaire to the principal. . Information furnished by the pupil in the questionnaires will be used only as office references to enable school authorities to keep unde supervision any cases of delinquency. Principal Hart said, and to allow recognition of any former cases of punishment or arrest of school pupils The question regarding riding in the school elevators was asked to clarify a charge that certain pupils seclude themselves in the elevator, an automatic machine, in order to use hypodermic needles and take narcotic drugs. Each pupil is asked to pledge his word of honor to the truth of an swers made to the questions. LIQUOR SMELLERS ACTIVE Students Given to Tippling Are Warned to Avoid "Spies." BERKELEY, Cal., April 12. Stu dents given to tippling have been warned to avoid a recently created squad of the student affairs commit tee of the University of California, known as the "liquor smellers." They have been appointed to detect stu dents suspected of violating the rule of drinking before or during campus social affairs. By warm and effusive greetings they seek a whiff of the forbidden spirits on a student's breath and if the odor of alcohol is present the student is reported. Expulsion is the penalty for proof that a student has been drinking at a campus affair. FLOOD AREAS ARE VAST Inundation of 150,000 Acres of Land in Arkansas Reported. NEW ORLEANS, April 12. Reports from Helena, Ark., that approximately 150,000 acres, or" 235 square miles of land, in the lower part of Phillips county were covered by flood waters from the White and Arkansas rivers, which are backed up by the high stage of the Mississippi river, gave a more serious aspect to the flood sit uation today. . ' Railroad and all vehicle traffic has been stopped in the flooded area, and few persons have remained in their homes to take chances with the high water. Practically all livestock has been removed to higher grounds. FATHER, 64, SHOOTS SELF J. W. Rodgers Commits Suicide at Home on Eas,t Side. J. W. Rodgers, 64, committed sui cide early last night by shooting him- I gait fhrftnp'h rho fnrhfiai1 rith a . ,i-caiioer ruae wmie near nis nom at 1313 Burrage street. The body, ... ... 7 .... - with the rifle in the hands, was dis- covered by his widow at 6 o'clock. . ., J X 11C X Ullvl H11U bllV ,JW11,U ! l. 1 t ; called. The body was taken to the county morgue for an inquest. Besides his widow, Mr. Rodgers is survived by a son, E. L. Rodgers, who lived with his parents, and a daugh ter, who is in the east. DOCTOR WARNS FLAPPERS "Frightful, Fat and Forty" Pros pect Held Out for Some. NEW YORK, April 12. The flapper is in danger of becoming "frightful, fat and forty" if she persists in using cosmetics, said Dr. William L. Lovi of Brooklyn in an address at the State Homeopathic Medical society today. "Many a girl has already ruined her complexion," he continued, "and we tremble to think what the grow ing generation will look like when it reaches the age of 'fair, fat and forty. Unless the girls use veils they will- be 'frightful, fat and forty.' " SEA FLIGHT ON TODAY Portuguese to Begin Third Stage of Trans-Atlantic Trip. LISBON, April 12. (By the Asso ciated Press.) Captains Sacadura and Coutniho, the Portuguese avia tors who are attempting to span the Atlantic in a light hydro-airplane, expect to start on the third stage of their flight to Brazil at 1 o'clock to morrow morning. A message to that effect was re ceived today from the Cape Verde islands. BALFOUR GETS EARLDOM King George's Appointment Offi cially Announced. LONDON, April 12. (By the Asso ciated Press.) King George has con ferred an earldom upon Sir Arthur James Balfour. This was officially announced today. Joffre Reception Shows Change in Feeling. FOCH OVATION IS CONTRAST Significance Seen in Ways Two Heroes Were Treated. ANALYSIS OF CAUSE GIVEN Attitude of Overseas Nation at Dis ' armament Conference Is Be - ' lieved Responsible. BY MARK SULLIVAN. (Copyright by the New York Evening Post. Published by Arrangement.) WASHINGTON, D. C, April 12. (Special.) Marshal Joffre, the first of the military leaders of the late war and the equal of Marshal Foeh in fame to win world-wide notice, has been on the soil of America for two weeks, but outside the communities in which he has actually been visit ing hardly a newspaper reader knows of his presence or paid attention to it. It is Impossible not- to feel a little sorry for this, and one would be in clined to urge that America take more interest in this picturesque fighter if we could only be sure the French pol iticians and statesmen would not mis interpret it, as they have in the past misinterpreted American applause for their national heroes as an indorse ment of their present attitude toward a troubled world. Frrnrh Stand Blamed. In point of fact, the difference be tween the American reception of Joffre In April and the reception of Foch six months previous, in Octor ber, can hardly be looked upon other wise than as reflection of change of feeling. The cause of that change pf feeling can only be attributed to the thing that intervened between Octo ber and April, namely, the Washing ton conference and what the French did at the conference. At the Washington conference the French delegates not only failed to be helpful, not only failed to respond to the spirit which Harding was try ing to bring into the world, but ac tually put obstacles in the way. The French delegates prevented the con sideration of land armament, pre vented any limitation on submarine tonnage o." on auxiliary ship tonnage, and took a position on capital ships which would have made the confer ence a complete failure if Briand had not overruled them in a cable message from Paris. Same thing at Genoa. Now at Genoa France is playing the same role in a manner which justifies America's de cision not to enter a conference in (Concluded on Page-3, Column 1.) WE DON'T KNOW ABOUT OTHER CROPS BUT WE'RE ASSURED Telegram Ascribed to ex-President ' Appears to Have Been Work of Former Secretary. THE'OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU, WASHINGTON, D. C, April 12. Ru mors of a break between ex-President Wilson and His biographer and one time secretary, Joseph P. Tumulty set all political Washington to talk ing today. Mr. Wilson Is said to have resented a message sent as com ing from him to the democratic gath ering at the Jefferson banquet in New York last Saturday night. The message was dispatched by Mr. Tumulty and as read to the assembled democrats just in advance of a speech delivered by James M. Cox quoted Mr. Wilson as saying: "Say to the democrats of New York that I am ready to support any man who stands for the salvation of America, and the salvation of America is justice to all' classes." Mr. Tumulty said today that the message was given to him in a con versation with his former chief at the Wilson home a few days before the banquet. While today's rumors were keenly received, Washington was not taken entirely by surprise at the reports of Mr. Wilson's resent ment. It has been whispered about the national capital for some weeks that the ex-president was gritting his teeth and biting his tongue as he reflected In his lonely study on the attitude of inferiority, if not helpless servility, in which he was placed by some of the passages in the Tumulty book quite commonly referred to In Washington by the paraphrased title, "Joseph P. Tumulty As I Knew Him, ty Woodrow Wilson." It is said that Mr. Wilson is begin ning to fall in line with some of his admirers who have been complaining that the Tumulty book entitled "Woodrow Wilson As I Know Him," was much more a biography and self glorification of the author than a story of the man whose achievements it was supposed to picture. The comment was heard today that the message read in New York last Saturday night carried not the least of the Wilson style. Mr. Wilson as a stickler for original English, and with a 'disposition to express himself differently from other folks, it was asserted, would never have used the word "salvation" twice in the same sentence, if he used it at all. Furthermore, reports have it that Mr. Wilson is not so sure that he likes the manner in which his old secretary appears to have confiscated the White House files, as Indicated by the large number of original let ters and notes quoted, and ofttimes photographically reproduced in the Tumulty story. It is recalled, too, in this connec tion, that James W. Gerard. Mr. Wil son's ambassador to Germany, was never invited to the White House after the appearance of the book, "My Four Years in Germany," which gave publicity to mtny important state papers of a strictly confidential character. Shearing Demonstration Given. SWEET HOME, Or., April 12. (Special.) iThere was a sheep-shearing demonstration at L. Thompson's, near Sweet Home, Saturday. A large crowd attended. J"1 ; . "Vo' VWlK 3UT" Orpheus Body Heard Distinctly in Camas, Vancouver, Chehalis, Al bany and Oregon City. Radio fans from Camas, Vancouver and Chehalis, Wash., Oregon City, Al bany and several other communities and practically all the larger Port land stations, pronounced the radio phone concert given from The Ore gonian tower last night by the Orpheus Male Chorus, Inc., one of the most successful programmes heard so far. The solos sung by Sargent Pat terson, baritone, were acclaimed as splendid, and it was not until his en core was repeated a second time that the thousands of listeners were sat isfied. The original programme of the nine selections had to be extended to 11 and when the concert ended 20 min utes ahead of time telephone calls flowed into The Oregonian radio tower faster than they could be an swered asking f6r more selections to fill out the remaining time. It was the first time chorus singing had been tried over radio by a largo number of voices, and before the pro gramme was started there was somo skepticism regarding its success. The sound waves from chorus singing are not so concise and sharply defined as instrumental music or solo music and it was feared that the 30 voices would be so closely blended that the tones could not be distinguished. The chorus was grouped in front of single wooden sound collector at tached to a diaphragm, to which the transmitter was directly connected. The first selection was purely ex perimental and after it, when calls had been received advising certain adjustment, the programme was car ried out without further difficulty. Thirty voices of the Orpheus Male Chorus, Inc., directed by William Mansell Wilder, sang eight of the se lections. The first was "Carry Me Back to Old Virginny." It was fol lowed by "The Passing regiment' (Mason), "Here in the Twilight Glow' (Bishop), "The Long Day Closes' (Sullivan), "Rockin' in de Win" (Neidlinger), "Old Farmer Slow' (Geibel), "Wake With the Lark' (Geibel), "Venetian Song," barcarolle (Tosti), and "Goodnight" (Dudley Buck). Interspersed as the third, eighth and 11th numbers were the solos by Sar gent Patterson, accompanied on the piano by William Mansell Wilder. The appreciation of these was even keener than that W the chorus numbers. The first was "Mavis," the second "Keep On Hopin' " and the last and most enthusiastically applauded, was "Duna." This was the added selection which had to be repeated. Long distance telephone calls were received during the concert from the Electric store at Camas, Wash., the Commercial club at Chehalis, from Oregon City drug store where a mag navox aided in entertaining a large portion of the whole town; from Spencer Sanders at Albany, Or., and from the army post at Vancouver, Wash. The local calls were too nu merous to mention, but all were high ly laudatory of both the singing and the radio service, which was in the hands of J. W. Weed, local manager of the Shipowners' Radio service. Yesterday afternoon another chorut (Concluded on Page 2, Column li. ) A BIG CROP OF CANDIDATES. Hunt for Cossack Chief Proves Fruitless. SURETY COMPANY CONCERNED Attorneys Declare General Is Still in City. BUTCHERY CHARGES AIRED American Army Officers at Senate Hearing Testify Concerning Outrages In Siberia. NEW YORK, April 12. General Gregorie Semenoff. ataman of the Cossacks, was still at liberty tonight although deputy sheriffs had been hunting him in the city all day at the request of the surety company which went on his $25,000 bonds last week. The general is still registered at the Waldorf-Astoria and his attor neys declared he is in town. WASHINGTON. D. C, April 12. Charges of human "butchery" made by Senator Borah, against General Gregorie Semenoff, Russian anti bolshevik leader, were testified to to day before the senate labor commit tee by two leaders of the American expeditionary forces in Siberia, Brigadier-General W. S. Graves, com mander, and LieutenanfJIwColonel Charles H. Morrow, his chief aide, who gave instance after instance of murder, rape and banditry which oc curred during the American occupa tion of the region. Crimes Held Unbelievable. Called before the committee in an investigation which Chairman Borah hopes may lead to deportation of General Semenoff, now under bonds in a civil case in New York, the two army officers gave accounts of crime, described as "unbelievable unless wit nessed," excerpts from official army records and other evidence covering the period between September, 1918, and April,. 1920, of a nature seldom if ever, laid before a congressional committee. At the conclusion Mr. Borah turned to Colonel Morrow, the witness, and said: "You were there. Now tell us who. in your opinion, was responsible.' Semenoff !' Colonel Morrow snot back, "Anybody who was in that part of the world at that time knows that he was responsible." The committee plans to continue the hearing tomorrow when other army officers will be heard. General Semenoff was represented at the hearing by his attorney, John Kirkland Clark of New York who an nounced that he would attempt to have the Russian officer come here to testify. He said also he would ask Colonel Kroupsky, the general's aide and interpreter, to appear in defense of his chief. Chief Branded Murderer. General Graves branded the Russian general as a "brutal murderer," and declared he had not regretted one of the crimes with which he was charged. Colonel Morrow said before he left S'beria m January, 1920, his command nad disarmed 4500 of Semenoff" s sol diers, adding that had he remained longer, all of them would have been disarmed. "Outside influence, ' how ever, he said, was exerted, preventing the Americans and the Czechs, who were co-operating with them, from carrying out the purpose. What outside influence do you mean?" Mr. Clark asked. I do not care to go into that," re plied Colonel Morrow, "but I assure you there was outside influence." Discussing the "butchery" charges. General Graves recited how at half a dozen points in the interior of Si beria Russians were hauled by train loads to the "slaughter ground" and shot without trial. The only reason given for the executions, he added, was. that they were bolshevist sym pathizers. He told of how at one 'grand festival" more than 1600 per sons were murdered. Both General Graves and Colonel Morrow declared there were other nstances of the same kind, although not as large in the number of kill ings but "outrageous" and unequalcd few instances in history. Continual interference with Ameri can operation of the railroads in their sector was declared by Colonel Mor row to have been the work of Sem enoff's men. These interferences in cluded, he said, not only the holding up and shooting up of trains but murder and robbery and other crimes. PORTLAND'S SAVINGS GAIN City One of Five to Show Postal Excess Above $15,000 for March. THE OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU, Washington, D. C, April 12. While the total of postal savingsdeposits in the United States decreased $500, 000 in March, Portland was one of tive cities ir. the United States to make a gain in excess of $15,000 dur nig the month. The other cities showing such gains were New York and Brooklyn, Chica go and Roslyn, Wash. Portland's gain was greater than Brooklyn's, being $19,785. i Robert Winslow Sought by Depu ties and Boy Seouts Ever Since Disappearance Sunday. The coroner's office was notified last night that the body of 7-year-old Robert Winslow had been found In Johnson creek by a neighbor and taken to the home of the boy's grand mother, Mrs. Ora Fleming. Robert disappeared from his grandmother's home last Sunday. When deputy sheriffs were notified, they began dragging the creek and, searching the woods in the vicinity of the Deardorf road and Gilbert station, with the as sistance of boy scouts. Robert was last seen at noon Sun day, lying on the bank, overlooking the creek. The water Is not deep at this point. His grandmother did not become alarmed at first, since he had previously wandered away from home often. The Oregonian wireless apparatus was used early in the search to notify neighbors of the disappearance of the boy in the hope that someone who had seen him would communicate with the family. Mrs. Winslow Reld, the lad's mother, who had been working in the Bremerton navy yard.'came to Port land yesterday and announced to the sheriff's force that she would give a reward of $50 to anyone leading to toe discovery of the whereabouts of the missing boy. EXPLORER IS UNDAUNTED Airplane Mishaps Not to Block Amundsen Expeditions. NEW YORK, April 12. Captain Roald Amundsen, whose airplane was wrecked near Clarion, Pa., during a bad storm while on a transcontin ental flight, today conferred here with John M. Larsen, builder of the aluminum ship in which Amundsen plans to explore the Arctic regions. "The accident will have no effect either on the trip across the coun try on the Polar expedition," said the captain. "Through no fault ot the machine a wing was crushed when the ship had to land on rough ground. The explorer and Mr. Larsen planned to ship parts for the broken wipg to Clarion, Pa., at once. SPOKANE MAN APPOINTED Fred A. Adams Gets Place on Com mittee on Irrigation Project. OLYMPIA, Wash, April 12. (Sj.e cial.) Director Scott, of the depart ment of conservation and develop ment, announced today the reappoint ment of Fred A. Adams of Spokano as supervisor of the state division of Columbia basin survey. This appoint ment was made that the department of conservation and development might be offiically represented on the statewide Columbia basin com mitee being formed by various com mercial and public organizations. This organization will carry on plans for the development of the Co lumbia basin irrigation project out lined in the report of Major-Genural George W. Goethals. INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature, 53 decrees; minimum, d degrees. TODAY'S Occasional rain or snow; mod erate west winds. l National. 25,000 more non-union men Join the coal strike, rage i. Tumulty message to Jefferson banquet re sented by ex-Freaident w tiaoo. rage i. Railroad chargee ot McAdoo vigoroualy denied. Page 2. Passage of tarriff this session likely. Page R. Navy of 8C.00P a held assured. Page 6 America chilled by French attitude on disarmament. Page 1. Domestic. Arbuckle is acquitted In six minute. Pase 1. General Semenoff still in New York, but deputies fail to locate him. r age l. Conan Doyle describes sensations of death. Page I. Foreign. Reparations action put off to May 81. Page a. Ban on warfare on 'tap at Genoa. Page . Irish factions declare truce. Page i. Pacific Northwest. Washington state to spend $50,000,000 on roads this year. J'age J a. Masked men fire at fleeing youth near Medford. Pago o. Spokano high school pupils suhjected to scarcmng qucsiiunfliiiic. a ua3 x. Sports. Trout season opens In Oregon tomorrow. Page 15. Pacific coast league results: At Fait Lake 9, Portland '6: at los Angeles O, Vernon 2; at Oakland 6. ban Francisco 0; at Sacramento-Seattle game postponed. Page 14- City to celebrate opening baseball came here. Page 14. Commercial and Marine. New rate bills pending In congress ex plained to grain men. Page 18. Wheat offerings increase at Chicago and market breaks. Page 18. Portland's new drydock to take first Tea Bel today. Page 1". Stock market experiences strong reaction. Page 18. New era dawns in salesmanship. Page 17. Liberty bonds advance to par. Page 10. Portland and Vicinity. Re-etecticn sought by Stanley Myers. Page 21. Democrats to have contests for primary nominations. Page 21. Democratic chief Portland visitor. Page 4. Charges against flro chief must be filed by noon today. Page 28. Council debates hiring of engineer. Page 7. American trade declared handicap in China. Page 22. Dr. Gerald B. Webb says rest is surest cure for tuberculosis. Page 0. Receiver for Ice Hippodrome building la wanted. Page 22. Evangelist Anderson delivers telling ser mon at crusade tabernacle. Page 3. Missing boy's body found in creek. Page 1. Orpheus chorus sings over radio. Page 1. Weather report, data and faiecast. Page 10, No Formal Ballot Taken in Manslaughter Case. FATTY SIGHS HIS RELIEF Comedian's Wife Weeps When Acquittal Announced. KISS IS GIVEN McNAB Jurors Issue Statement Which Say Verdict Is Little Enough to Right Great Wrong Done. SAN FRANCISCO, April 12. A vr diet of acquittal was returned by a Jury today In the third trial of Rosen C. (Fatty) Arbuckle on a manslaugh ter charge growing out of the death of Miss Virginia Rappo, motion-picture actress. The Jury was out six minutes. The verdict was by acclamation, the deliberation taking less than a min ute. The additional time was con sumed by details. Edward Brown, whose presence on the Jury was objected to by the pros ecution, was foreman. There was a slight delay when the Jury returned, due to the absence of the district at torney. Fatty Slgaa Ilia Hrllrf. The defendant was deeply effected. The verdict was received by him with a great sigh of rollef. There was no demonstration, tho court having warned against it. Mrs. Mlnta Durfee Arbuckle, the defendant's wife, cried quietly. The defendant and Mrs. Arbuckle ahook hands with the Jurors. Tho quick return of the Jury a surprise, the case takliieT nearly fiv weeks to try. The Jurors and spectators crowded around Arbuckle and h! counsel and finally bore him off to the Jury room to congratulate him further. "Arbuckle has no Immediate plans." Gavin McNab, his chief counsel, aaid. 'It waa a splendid victory." "The Jury did its duty," waa the comment of Milton T. U'Ken, assistant district attorney. Acquittal Held Mot Enough. Christian Wold, one of the alter nates, said after the verdict that ha had expected an acquittal after a, short deliberation. A group of Jurors headed by Brown Issued a statement which said: "Acquittal is not enough for Roscoa C. Arbuckle. We feel that a great injustice has been done him. "He acted in a manly manner and told a straightforward story." Mrs. Arbuckle expressed ber thanks to Mr. McNab by giving him a re sounding kiss. The Jurora held an Informal reception with Arbuckle In the Jury room while newspaper photographers, armed with flash lights, took many pictures. The case went to the Jury at 5:0 P. M. Both sides waived the read ing of written Instructions in the. court's final charge to the Jury and the usual instructions prepared by the court were then read. Tho court room was packed throughout tha final session. Alternate Jurora I'.xcuard. By a coincidence the cae went to the Jury at approximately the ;nie time as In the two former hearings, which ended in mistrials. The two alternate Jurors, one a man and the other a woman, were excused. Both flatly refused to express an opinion. The day was marked by the con cluding argument of Gavin McN'an, chief counsel for tho defense, and Lcei Friedman, yoirthful assistant district attorney. Mr. McNab ciiarKeu mat tin district attorney "procexa.-d" wit nesses to "railroad" Arbuckle to tho penintcntiary. Answering thin Mr. Friedman said that had the prosecu tion undertaken to "frame the case" there would have been no chance for a defense. Mr. Friedman's argument was con cluded at 4:13 P. M. and a recess of 20 minutes was then taken. Mr. Fried man talked two hours and 13 mlnulen. He showed the Jury a picture of Mi- Ilappe's face taken in the morejue and asked tho Jurors to note the "pain that It expressed." Fatty Suld to Have I. led. "Arbuckle lied," he said, "when h told newspaper men In Los AukoIs:" and San Francisco that there were no closed and locked doors at tno party and then testified on the stand that the doors wera locked. Why did he lie? An lnroccnt man should not fear the truth. "From the lips of tho dead has come the accusation against the de fendant," he said In discussing the testimony of Mrs. Virginia Hrtlg, aee retary of Ihe Wakefield hospiul. where Miss Rappo died. In which Mls IUppe is alleged to have directly ac cused Arbuckle of Injuring her. Arbuckle was nervous throughout Mr. Friedman's argument, which finally closed the case. Ho whlsperd to his counsel at times when Mr. Friedman appeared to make a par ticularly telling point. In his charge Jtidre Louderback, the irlsl Jndee, defined iiiarlnnchlcr iCttucluUtd tu i'iu CuiUtliU 1