Em Section One Pages 1 to 24 1Q6 Pages Eight Sections K VOL. XXXIX NO. 42 Entered at Portland Oregon) Postoffice a Second -Clans Matter PORTLAND, OREGON. SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 17, 1920 PRICE TEN CENTS COX UNALTERABLY OPPOSED IN WEST $500,000 CARUSO GEM THEFT SUSPECT HELD '5 STORM TO GRIP CITY . TODAY IS FORECAST MONTH'S RAIX IS DOUBLE NOR MAL OCTOBER' FIGURE. MAIDS PLENTIFUL IF APPEAL LOOKS GOOD PARISIAN FINDS SERVANT PROBLEM SIMPLE ONE. DRY LAW TANGLES UP DEPARTMENTS NATURE-HEATED CAVE IS FOUND NEAR BEND HELD UP FOR YEAR T PITS SALESMAN" ADMITS HE HAS SOME OF JEWELS, SAY POLICE. WARMTH APPARENTLY VOLCAXIC ORIGIX. OF AMUNDSEN DA MILLION MINERS QUI BRITISH V Country Exasperated by Bourbon Shortcomings. DEMOCRATS LACK COHESION Sullivan Analyzes Situation in Trans-Mississippi States. SENATORIAL RACES CLOSE Republican Candidates Expected to Run Behind Harding but May Be Carried Over on "Ware. BY MARK SULLIVAN. ' (Copyright, 1!20, by New York Evening Post. Published by arrangement.) CHICAGO, Oct. 16. (Special.) Cox's fortunes in the west are in ex tremely poor shape. Such elements as support him are too diverse to be of real help. They antagonize each other, pull -against each other and neutralize each other. Instead of helping Cox they whipsaw him. The spots where there is a strong league sentiment which might have helped Cox happen to be the same spots which are fundamentally republican states. On the other hand, the states which are normally democratic and might have been expected to give their electoral votes to Cox happen also to be states which have a con siderable Irish vote, or some other sort of vote that is hostile to the league. Those women who might have sup ported Cox o"n the league are drawn away by the suspicion that democratic victory, especially in the lower house of congress, might tend to endanger prohibition. The labor vote that might have supported Cox is dimin ished by the fact that many who are laborers are also, for racial reasons or otherwise, opposed to the league of nations. The largest single element in the western situation is the thing that Hoover emphasized the other night: A deeply held conviction that the democratic party has not managed Ihe country well, and that the country i. in -a mood of exasperation that hiis reached the point where it isn't willing even to talk about or listen tc the possible shortcoming of the new man. but is determined to get the present one off the premises, bag and baggage, on the earliest pos sible date. As one politician said, It is just plain raw anti-Wilson." Mood tnivtrral UroRrapblcally. Of course, it would be inaccurate and grossly unjust to say this mood is universal among the voters. But it is universal geographically. And such a mood, when it is widely dis tributed geographically, does not need to affect more than 10 or at mo-t 20 per cent of the voters to change the pro-Wilson majorities of 191S to anti-Wilson majorities in 1920. Con eidered state by state, this is the situ ation in the trans-Mississippi states. Mississippi states. Minnesota will go for Harding by upward of 100,000. When Harding visited Minnesota he was accorded a reception which for sincerity and en thusiasm equaled any reception ever given by Minnesota to any candidate, barring only Theodore Roosevelt. The democrats have really thrown up their hands in . Minnesota, not offi cially, of course, but practically. All the democrats really hope in Min nesota is to hold the party organiza tion together by soft pedalling on Cox and concentrating their activities on one of the minor candidates for a state office. North Dakota will go for Harding. The Non-partisan league on the presi dential Issue is officially more or less (Concluded on 1'age 6. Column 3. ) my all. Right ut how , y yl I TArER l Sisters Lead Man On to Offer Loot for Sale YVliile Sleuths Listen, Orricers Report. NEW YORK, Oct. 16. Harry C. To back, a salesman of Brooklyn, was arrested tonight charged with having committed the J500.000 jewel theft from the home of Enrico Caruso sev eral months ago. According to the police, Toback has admitted possession of some of the stolen gems. The arrest, detectives declared, was the result of a carefully laid trap. Police give full credit for To back's capture to two sisters,' Mrs. Catherine Smith and Charlotta , Poll Ion, In whose apartment the suspect was taken at the point of a revolver by H. J. Porter, detective. He pro tested innocence, though the women testified he had told them a differ ent story when he tried to sell them valuable jewels. Toback was forced to drive his cap tore to police headquarters in his own automobile. Receiving Toback in a room in which recording phonographs had been installed, the sisters led him on to make an offer of sale of "jewels, the proceeds of the Caruso robbery, for $30,000 cash." Concealed in a room overhead, sleuths "listened in." Toback was arrested just as he was leaving the flat. Protesting, he was led back into the room. Here he was forced to open a sample case he was carrying, disclosing a collection of women's sealskin coats. According to the account given by detectives, the prisoner told the women that the jewels were in Balti more and that they would have to go there to see or get possession of them. TWO CONVICTS ESCAPE Fugitives From Salem Prison Are Reported to Be Armed. SALEM, Or., Oct. 16. (Special!) Officers at the state penitentiary late tonight said they believed that two trusties, Ralph Turpin, life-termer, and Juhn Tuel, sentenced from Jose phine county to serve from one to five years for burglary, who escaped today from one of the prison farms, were armed. It was reported tonight that a farm house near Aumsville had been broken into and a shotgun and two suits of clothes stolen. Turpin was sentenced life im- prisonment after conviction pf Second degree murder when tries for the killing of William McAllister in Jose phine county in 1917. BRUIN ROAMS IN CITY Peninsula District Terrorized Until Animal Is Shot. An exciting bear hunt in the heart of the Peninsula residential section brought a reign of terror among youngsters and frightened many grown-ups yesterday until the roam ing bruin was brought to earth by a well-directed shot from the gun of the animal's owner. A young black bear, about three quarters grown, escaped from its owner, Vincent Murphy, 163 West Emerson street, and started out in quest of excitement. Pedestrians saw it moving up the street, and with cries of alarm, ran into houses. BIRDS GO MILE-A-MINUTE Two Homing Pigeons Cover 28 54 Miles in 2 5 Minutes. BEND, Or., Oct. 16. (Special.) Two homing pigeons from the W. J. Sproat loft, aided by a stiff wind, made the almost unbelievable time of 28 miles in 25 minutes. The birds were released at La Pine by Forest Supervisor Plumb at 8:30 o'clock in the morning and arrived in Bend at 8:55 o'clock. The rate was well over a mile a minute. Just how much the birds were as sisted by the wind is impossible to tell as its velocity could not be measured. . I ' If I ' -r v s I S 11 J-' I V 1 I rr- I Explorer Said to Have Missed Open Water.' SHIP IS JAMMED IN FLOES Return to Strengthen Crew Is Blow to Expedition. WAY TO POLE IS OPEN Explorer Has Slight Chance to Get Out of Ice in Time to Win Success Yet, View. SEATTLE, Wash., Oct. 16. (Spe cial.) The great , Arctic Ice pack moving westward In dense masses trapped Captain Roald Amundsen's north pole expedition at Cape Serge, Siberia, last month, and unless he has found some means of extricating his ship from her frozen fetters, he ha been thrown back a whole year in his daring venture to drift across the pole. By returning to the Siberian shore in the Arctic instead of sailing eastward he missed the chance of a lifetime to add a great page to Arctic annals. In the eastward section the Arctic oceanwas :iear of ice. This is the news brought to Seattle today by Olaf Swenson of the Hib-bard-Swenson company of Seattle, who arrived home on the fur corpora tion's power schooner Kamchatka. He headed the company's annual ex pedition to Kamchatka and the Sibe rian Arctic on the schooner. Tootsle" In Witb Party. Captain Amundsen has only three men and one woman aboard with him on his ship, the Maude. The woman Is an elderly native whom he took aboard at Nome as seamstress for the expedition. She is known In the mining camp as. "Tootsie." "Amundsen went back to Siberia to pick up several natives," said Mr. Swenson'this morning. "Captain Han sen of the Maude, retired from the expedition at Nome. The vessel's chief engineer and sailmaker also left the vessel there and it was necessary for Amundsen to strengthen his crew. So when ho left Nome late in the summer, he sailed back to Cape Serge, Siberia, which lies about 225 miles northwest of Nome. There he was caught in the ice and unless con ditions have changed and he has suc ceeded in forcing his way out, which is unlikely, he is stuck for the winter. Way East Is Open. "If Amundsen had had a full crew when he left Nome he would have had' the chance of a lifetime to add a brilliant page to Arctic history. The ice this year is all packed to the westward, leaving an open sea in the eastward section, north of Bering strait and Alaska. Our vessel, the Kamchatka, went as far north as 73:15 this year and we could have gone farther without any difficulty. Open water lay before us. If Amund sen copld have sailed into the east ward stretches instead of having to head back to the Arctic shore of Si beria, he would now be a long way on his attempt to drift across the Pole. "As It is, his expedition has been thrown back a whole year, unless he has had a chance to extricate him self from the ice at Cape Serge." Mr. Swenson reports that when the Kamchatka left the far north the power schooners Polar - Bear and Belinda, both owned in Nome, had been - caught in the ice near Cape North and evidently were frozen in for the winter. The Belinda is owned by Arnold Castell, who for years was (Continued on Page 3. Column 1.) PICTORIAL COMMENTS BY CARTOONIST Deficiency for Year, Despite Abnor mal Totals,' Is 3.5 6 Inches; Apple Harvest Sutlers. Portland today will continue to be in the grip of the storm which struck the city yesterday, according to the prediction of the United States weath er bureau. The schedule of weather for today announces that there will be occasional rain with southerly winds. 1 The rainfall yesterday reached a total of .46, making the aggregate rainfall for . the month of October 7.34. This is nearly douole the nor mal rainfall for the entire month of October. September also was a rainy month this year, the aggregate rainfall amounting to 4.16 inches, compared to a normal rainfall of 1.84. In spite of the heavy rainfall dur ing these two months, however, there is still a rainfall deficiency for the year of 3.66 Inches. This is due to the unusual good weather conditions which prevailed during the months of January, February and March of this year. In February especially there was only .16 inches of rainfall compared to a normal of 5.73. Apple harvest is said to be suffer ing to a certain extent, owing to the heavy rainfall. Growers are reported, however, to be going ahead in most sections in spite of the inclement weather. The rain does not affect the quality of the crop; It is merely a question of securing pickers to work. INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. TESTE RD AY'S Maximum temperature. 52 degrees; minimum, 45 degrees. TODAY'S Occasional rain; southerly winds. Departments. Editorial. Section 3, page 10. Dramatic. Section 4, page 4. Motion pictures. Section 4. page 2. Real estate and buildings. Section 4, page 9. Churches. Section 5, page 2. Books. Section 5, page 3. 1 Schools. Section 5, page 10. Automobile news. Section 6. j Music. Section 4, page 6. i Garden chats. Section 5, page 11. ! Women's features. Society. Section 3, page 2. Women's activities. Section 4, page 8. Fashions. Section 5, page 4. Miss Tingle's column. Section 5, page 5. Auction bridge. Section 5, page 4. Special Features. Bridge of the gods born of Indian lore. Ma gazine section, page 1. Fashion's decrees in feathers and fur. Magazine section, page 2. , Review of styles for "first ladies of the land." Magazine section, page 3. Tune for bad tempers are described. Magazine section, page 4. Mits Reid highest salaried -woman in big business. Magazine section, page B. News of the world s seen in pictures. Magazine section,' page 6. . Talks with Roosevelt. Magazine section, page 7. "Among Us Mortals," sketches by Hill. Magazine section, page 8. Second cousin to Lincoln leads' typical western life. Section o, page 1. Art of running spinning wheel revived. Section 5, page 7. Marble palace is mecca for world's buyers. Section 6, page 8. Medford's fight for county seat described: Section S, page 9. Official ballot for coming election. Section 4. page 1 1. Oregon plant series by Helen Gilkey. Sec tion 3, page 1. Foreign. Maids plentiful in Paris if prospect for future looks attractive. Section 1, Page 1. Score wounded in tion 1, page 3. Million coal miners Belfast riots. Sec in England strike. Section 1, page 1. National. Three departments at Washington tangled up over prohiibtien law. Section 1, page 1. Veteran of Haiti taken off probe board. Section 1, page 2. Mrs. Sprockets, jewel theft victim, arrives in New Tork from London. Section 1, page 10. Seasonal credit for agriculture available, is reply of federal reserve board. Section 1, page 23. ' Politics. Democratic administration blamed for high cost of living, by ex-Senator Piles. Sec tion 1, page 21. Indiana becoming pivotal point in presi dential campaign. Section 1. page 8. Flock of speakers to talk democracy in state. Section 1, page 14. Plans complete for republican rally at auditorium tomorrow night. Section 1, page 14. Cox unalterably opposed in west, Section 1, page 1. ViQ PE. V"TL.l ON THE. JOO! Prospect Held Out for 'Marriage Brings Troop of Women Will ing to Do Housework. (Copyright by the New Tork World. Pub lished by Arrangement.) PARIS. Oct. 16. (Special Cable.) Housewives in search of help, which is as costly and as elusive here as anywhere else, are interested but not encouraged by the experience of an ingenious client of an employment agency in Rue Rochechquart, who was overrun with respondents at the first call, all of them ready to promise to stay permanently. Such luck could not be expected by the average despairing servant hunt er, because in this case the applicant for a maid was a man in whose be half the agency placed the following card in its window: "A single gentleman, with a small fortune, living in Passy, wishes to engage a girl for general housework. Will marry her if desired." On the morning after the card was posted the agency received a tele phone message from the client asking that it.be removed at once, as a troop of women were besieging his doors, the agency having given all of them his address. The client? said he felt sure he could select from among them one to suit him, but he had a tull day's, job be fore him to sort out the ages and sizes and reduce the number of ap plicants so that he could make an In telligent choice. Politics. Cox accuses Harding wl flopping 12 times. Section 1, page 2. Enemies of order cheered by Harding pro posal, says Secretary Colby. Section 1, page 20. Harding closes last extensive speaking trip. Section 1, page 10. Domestic Man 'suspected of having stolen Caruso jewels jailed. Section 1, page 1'. Johnson puts fight against league above all other issues. Section 1, page 10. Aunt accused of poisoning three children. Section 1, page 11. , Pacific Northwest. Success of sockeye propagation indicated. Section 1, page 7. Amundsen's dash to pole held up year. Section 1, page 1. Engineers are opposed to bird refuge meas ure. Section 1, page 6. Three-cornered fight for governor In Idaho makes republicans confident. Section 1. page 4. Pendleton jury reports charges of cruelty to prisoners groundless. Section 1, page 18. Mayor of Klamath Falls asks new fire inquiry. Section 1, page 20. , Nature-heated cave discovered near Bend. Section 1, page 1. Northwest Tourist Association elects direc tors. Section 1, page 1 1. Reported discovery of kidnaped Bobby Stagg in New Tork found untrue. Sec tion 1, page 18. Sports. Pacific Coast league results Vernon 3: Portland 2: Sacramento 7, Ios Angeles 0; San Francisco 0, Seattle 2: Salt Lake 4, Oakland 14. Section 2, page ft. Many boxing stars back at Stanford. Sec tion 2, page 3. Tale is smothered by Boston college. Sec tion 2, page 2. Aggies and Multnomah play 0 to 0 tie. Section 2. page 2. More witnesses subpenaed in coast ball probe. Section 2, page 3. Montana defeats Washington 18 to 14. Sec tion 2, page 1. Waverley golfers win punchbowl tourney second time. Section 2, page 4. Heilig fight card an" array of , topliners. Section 2, page 4. Commercial and Marine. Heavy imports of foreign butter bear down prices. Section 2, page 21. Chicago wheat declin.es with insufficient buying orders. Section 2, page 21. Selling of speculative industrials depresses stock market. Section 2, page 21. Record cargo of sulphur brought to Port land by steamer Clauseus. Section 1, page 22. Portland shipping board office officially removed from Seattle Jurisdiction. Sec tion 1, page 22. Portland and Vicinity. Prety woman's love for drug addict causes her death and widower is in jail where he is in Insane condition. Section ,1, page 21. Commerce chamber opposes dock measure. Section 1, page 16. Entries for livestock show Increase 60 per cent. Section 1, page 16. Proper fire protection put up to voters. Sec tion l, page 17. Governor to call on legislature for help In preserving Deauty spots or state. Sec tion 1, page 20. Trade excursion lea-es for eastern Oregon cities tonight. Section 1, page 23. Storrrto grip city today is forecast. Sec tion 1. page 1. PERRY ON SOME TOPICS IN THE NEWS. Jgc ' 1 CI -V";' MtfiELrOr VNOMEN V)NfVrV5QN AfclX Three . Secretaries , Get Into Awful Mixup. . DIPLOMATS ALSO INVOLVED Question of "Probing" En voys' Baggage Hot One. COLBY. OPPOSES SEARCH Position Taken Hostile to Stand of Treasury Department and Attorney-General Palmer. "WASHINGTON, Oct. 16. (By the Associated Press.) Disclosure of a number of prohibition snarls in which three government departments and members of the diplomatic oorps are involved was made today when the state department issued a statement saying it "assumes that no fficlal of the government would attempt to pry into the baggage of a foreign dip lomatic officer." The unusual course of the state de partment in making what appeared to be a public appeal to other govern ment officials was adopted, it was learned, after the treasury had amended customs regulations to re quire baggage of diplomats to be ex amined and liquor removed. Back of the action of the treasury depart ment, it was disclosed, was an opinion rendered by the attorney-general. It was said to hold that the Volstead act withdrew from diplomats the exemp tion from customs examination of their baggage heretofore accorded. Diplomats Are Irritated. Diplomats have made no formal protest. The state department, how ever, has seen evidence of irritation among them here. Since the opinion of the attorney-general failed to sus tain the department's contention that examination exemption should be con tinued, it sought recourse through the public statement. Differences have arisen between state and treasury officials. Treasury officials let it be known that the dis cussion of the status of diplomats baggage began last spring. The treasury ws said to have formulated the policy then and asked the state department for its views. Foreseeing the possibility of em barrassment, the state department obtained a delay In issuance of the new restriction. Late in August, however. Assistant Secretary Shouse, whose resignation was announced this weeK. applied to Attorney-General Palmer for an opinion interpreting the Volstead act. That opinion was said to hold that all importation of liquor was barred by the act. The state department, however, is said to have made representations against the rigidity .of the findings on the ground that international comity and law worked to the contrary. A sec ond legal review by the department of justice resulted and the state de partment again was defeated in its contentions, it was said. Action Canaei Concern. On receipt of the attorney-general's opinion, said to have been written and signed by Solicitor-General Frier son, as acting attorney-general, Mr. Shouse amended the customs regula tions to require "examination of bag gage and effects permitted free entry" into the United States. The change amounted merely to deleting the words "without examination" from customs regulations, but Mr. Shouse directed the attention of customs of ficials to the distinct departure from the prevailing practices. Mr. Shouse also sent confidential in structions to the customs authorities (Concluded on Page 2. Column 2. ) Under Bottom and Pxk Walls Un bearable to Touch; Manifes tation Believed Recent. BEND, Or., Oct. 16. (Special.) Discovery at Horse Butte, nine miles southeast of Bend. . of a naturally heated cave, apparently drawing Its warmth from a subterranean volcanic source, was reported today by C. A. Yarnell and H. D. Eide, local fuel dealers. Investigation verified the report. The cave, located near the top of the Butte, first attracted at tention when a wave of heat was felt issuing from the mouth. The cinder bottom and rock walls of the tunnel are unbearably hot to the touch, the heat increasing as far back as could be explored. That the phenomenon is a recent manifestation was indicated by the smoldering of grass and twigs near the opening. The cave lies on a horizontal plane for about 25 feet, then dips down ward. The opening is large enough to admit the body of a grown man. To test the natural oven, Mr. Yarnell cooked a light breakfast this morn ing by introducing raw articles of food into the aperture and closing the opening for a few moments. Another opening. In which the tern, perature is well above normal, al though not uncomfortably hot, was found at a slightly greater elevation. Horse Butte is of undoubted vol canic origin, and from surface indi cations at least, is composed chiefly of red cinders. Large fragments of petrified wood are seen at intervals, partly covered by the cinders. MONKEY BITE LOOKS BAD Greek King's Condition Grave Re gent May Be Elected. ATHENS. Oct. 16. (By the Asso ciated Press.) King Alexander, criti cally ill from a monkey bite inflicted recently, suffered two hours of the most dangerous crisis last night. The cabinet met at midnight and decided to summon the late parliament to elect -a regent. Throughout Friday the king's con dition remained stationary. His tem perature fluctuated, reaching 104.9 degrees, and he was restless. Dr. Georges Vidal. the noted French specialist, again examined King Al exander yesterday and declared tb case was most grave. The stomach trouble the king suffered was an im portant element, he said. BEAVERS ARE FOR SALE Wares Claims to Have Enough Backing to Swing Deal. LOS ANGELES, Cal., Oct. 16.-(Spe-cial.) Walter H. McCredie, manager of the Portland Baseball club, said tonight that Clyde Wares, manager of the Seattle team, claims to have sufficient backing to swing a deal for the purchase of the Portland fran chise. "Wares has simply asked me if we will sell and I have told him yes," said McCredie. McCredie declared that the club 'will be sold any time anyone offers the price set on it by Judge W. W. McCredie. He refused to divulge the figure at which they are holding the Portland baseball rights. SHOWS HIT BY ECONOMY Failures Reported as Theater Pat ronage Takes Tumble. NEW TORK. Oct. 16. The national economy wave has hit the theaters With a hard thump. The "S. R. O." sign, especially prominent since the armistice, now is an unused "prop." Of 44 leading attractions here, 16, it was learned today, have begun dis posing of seats through agencies. Production failures were reported in excess of last year. Last week 28 road shows were closed. An official of the Actors' Equity association es timated that 3000 actors were out of work in New York. One producer estimated producers' losses in recent weeks at $1,200,000. OVSHT Thousands Idle as Plants, Lacking Fuel, Close. RAIL MEN MAY WALK OUT Shipping Tied Up Within Week, Say Port Officials. WORKER'S RANKS SPLIT Attitude of Many Leaving Jobs In dicates Most of Leaders Ad vised Against Strike. LONDON. Oct. 16 (By the Asso ciated Press.) With 1,000.000 miners out of the pits tonight, thousands of dock and industrial workers already out of employment as a result and transport workers and railroad men called to meet soon to discuss a gym- pathetic strike. Great Britain faces one of its greatest industrial up heavals in the opinion of labor and political leaders today. Reports from industrial centers are not reassuring, while port officials say shipping will be tied up within week. The most hopeful raessate came from Sheffield, where, it is believed, there is enough coal for three weeks. At other centers one week's supply is the limit. Workers' Rink, Divided. The statement that the men struck against advice of most of their lead ers was confirmed somewhat by the attitude of many who left the pits. They said they did not understand voting against the "datum line" meant strike and It is clear a great many misunderstood the "unfortunate phrase," as A. J. Thomas. scrtsrv of the National Union of Railwaymen called it in a speech. He admonished railroaders to listen to the advice of their leaders, which would be given after ihe meeting Wednesday. A different note was struck, how-. Ser. by the South Wales branch of te miners' federation, which called a' meeting for Friday to recommend ' that if the strike was not settled by October 30, pumpmen and other em ployes remaining should be called out. Lloyd Ceoi-Ke Inactive. It is indicated tonight that Pre-- ' mier Lloyd George will take no handf before Tuesday, when parliament meets. London's electrical signs and win dow displays are dark tonight by or der of the coal controller and the races, for which special trains are usually operated, have been canceled. Notwithstanding the food ministry's assurance that there will be plenty ; of food, London provisioners report housewives are laying in supplies. The sugar ration will be cut half Monday. Liverpool la Disquieted. On the marine side, ocean liners have been instructed to obtain bunker coal abroad as much as pos sible. Reports from Liverpool state much disquietude is felt there. Representatives of the United States shipping board stated that they had received assurances from the British ministry of shipping that none of the American steamers would be tied up. Inquiries at the offices of the main trans-Atlantic passenger lines this morning resulted in the statement there was no indication at present of restriction or alteration of the adver tised sailings. Food May Onst Paasenjcer. It is declared to be possible that trans-Atlantic passengers may be ex cluded from the steamers on their re turn trips to the United Kingdom in order to conserve space for food stuffs. Premier Lloyd George today ad Concluded on Page 6. Column 2.) YOU JII5T CLEfVNtb HOUae. "TO .tQv.CH QUAL-XTY? l