96 Pages Eight Sections Section One Pages 1 to 22 VOL. XL NO. Entered at Portland (Oregon) PoMof.'ice & Secorxl -Ciaae Matter PORTLAND, OREGON. SUNDAY MORNING, JANUARY 9, 1921 IMUCE FIVE CENTS MOLALLA BANK VAULT BLOWN OPEN BY TRIO CITIZEXS, AROUSED BY EXPLO SION, PREVENT ROBBERY. BUTTLE FOR LIFE IN WILDS THRILLS 3 TOWNS ROCKED IN MORROW COUNTY MAN; ELECTORAL COLLEGE TO MEET TOMORROW SAN GABRIEL VALLEY1 WILL SUCCEED KIDDLE BY ANTI-LEAGUERS ADMITTED BT PAIR SHOCKS WITH LOUD REPORTS YV. B. BARK ATT IS APPOINTED HIGHWAY COMMISSIONER. HARDING XOT ELECTED OFFI CIALLY VXTIL FEBRUARY 9. BELIEVED EXPLOSIONS. OREGON SOLO S KNOX PLAN BACKED NIGHT OF BANDITRY Legislature to Organize Without Any Friction. FlflEWORKS ARE IN RESERVE Turmoil Over Redisricting of State Is Threatened. ECONOMY TO BE SLOGAN Port Consolidation, Japanese Question, Highways, Income Tax Are Big Issues. Oregon's Slst legislative assembly convenes tomorrow morning at li o'clock at the statehouse in Salem. Without fuss or factional strife, Roy W. Ritner, senator for Umatilla eounty. will be elected president of e senate, and Louis . Bean, repre sentative for Lane county, will be elected speaker of the house. All that is cut and dried. The resolutions committees will be appointed and then recess will be taken for a few hours. Tuesday morning the senate and house will be ready to receive bills. Organization will proceed with dis patch, thanks to the usual absence of a fight over the speakership and presidency. The staff on the desks will be selected tomorrow, there ber ing practically no contests. Frank Drager will resume his usual place as chief clerk of the fjouse. and Joseph F. Singer as sergeant-at-arms. In the senate, John Hunt will be chief dark. Firework Will Be Brilliant. Although launched quietly, the ses sion will have its full quota of fire works. A number of measures are In process of construction which will provoke debate and cause turmoil The two measures which will involve more political -connubiatinfir than any others, will be the creation of a new congressional district and the re aistrlctlng of the state for the legis lature. In the latter case a battle royal can be looked for. Portland will- be concerned chiefly In the port consolidation bill and In the tax supervising and conservation measure, either of which is designed to affect directly the interests of this community. The teachers' tenure bill is likely to be a bone of contention unless the legislature decides to refer the sub ject to the electorate of school dis trict No. 1. Bad Year for Extravagance. Off hand, it looks like a bad year for swollen appropriations. Any ap propriation that gets the approval of the ways and means committee mus' possess unusual merit. The high taxes Dow in sight will make members of the committee especially cautious and conservative. Salary Increases will not be popular, save in a very few instances. The altitude of the average legis lator is that the peak of the high cost of living has been passed and prices re on the decline, therefore, as the purchasing power of the dollar in creases a small appropriation will be worth twice as much as the same sum was two years ago. On house and senate committees of the ways and means the personnel Is made up of very hard-headed indi viduals. Income Tax Measure Drafted. Aside from noiaing aown appro priations, refusing salary increases and enacting legislation to control budget making and tax levies, the legislature may find new sources of revenue. To this end a state income tax measure has been drafted and will make its appearance. Considerable dissatisfaction is ex- Conclu.lei on l' Co.urr.ii IV 1 i i iit-.irr aa 11 I IX s. A Thleves, Alarmed by Commotion in Street, Succeed in Slaking Tlielr Escape. MOLALLA, Or.. Jan. 8. (Special.) Yeggraen blew open two doors on the vault of the First National bank of Molalla in an attempt to rob the safe at 3 A. M. today. The noise of the explosions attracted neighbors, and the robbers were frightened away be fore they had obtained anything. The damage to the vault was about 9250. The robbers opened the outer d,001" of the bank with a skeleton key, and pried open the inner bank door with a crowbar. Reaching the vault, they blew a hole in the outer vault door with a charge of nitro-glycerine, and repeated the process on the inner door. Three explosions were heard, and Sheriff Wilson of Oregon City, who investigated the case, believes that one of the charges failed to open a door, and was repeated. The vault doors were not torn off, but were so broken that the robbers were able to reach inside and operate the com- Dinatlon. Opening of the second vault door admitted the robbers to the chamber where the burglar-proof safe stands. but evidently the yeggmen heard the commotion which the explosions had caused, and fled. About 920 in change in the bank office was not disturbed G. J. Taylor, editor of the Pioneer. was in his office near the bank build ing, and heard the explosions. He paid no attention to the first, but after the second explosion he noti fied W. W. Eberhart, cashier of the bank. Several other men in the vicin ity had been aroused, but before they reached the bank the robbers escaped. The tools used in forcing the bank door had been stolen from a shed owned by the Willamette Valley Southern railroad. Three well-dressed young men arrived in the city on the 6:10 P. M. train yesterday, and were seen standing around near the sta tion. Sheriff Wilson believes that they were the robbers. None of them has been seen today. Several persons caught glimpses of the robbers as they fled, but were unable to give a description of them except they were well-dressed men". One man saw two of them and another man one. It is believed that there were three rob bers. P0ST0FFICE BUYS BONDS Savings Deposit Bank Earns 5 to. li Per Cent on Investment. WASHINGTON. Jan. . Detail of the government's bargain counter business in Liberty bonds popped out today during debate in the house touching, the postofflce appropriation bill. The postal savings bank, it ap peared, was a large holder of bonds, havinc purchased in open market for $106,000,000 of deposits bonds hav ing a face value of 1111,000,000. By the deal, it was said, the post office bank earned 5 to 6 per cent on its investment as against the 24 to 24 per cent which it has paid for the use of the deposits. PORKER TREES FAMILY Animal Puts to Flight Men Who Attempt Slaughter. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J.. Jan. . A 500-pound porker slated to be slaugh tered on the farm of Dr. William Raith at ' Farjnlngton today turned "rogue" and compelled the doctor, his father-in-law and 1 other members of the family to take to trees. Tfce family, unarmed, remained aloft half an hour. Finally neighbors shot the maddened animal. HOUSE INCREASE COSTLY Outlay for Added Members Fixed at SI. 000, 000 Annually. WASHINGTON, Jan. 8. A minority report opposing the Siegel bill, un der which the house membership would be increased to 483. based upon the last census, was riled today by six members of the house census com mittee. Addition of 48 members of the house, as proposed in the Siegel bill, wcuid cost the government more than $1,000,000 annually, the report said. r 1 - Hit Aeronaut Offers Body to Ward Off Starvation. LOST TRIO FINALLY SAVED Letters Reveal Adventures of Naval Balloonists. CRAFT TOSSED BY STORM Companion Forced to Travel in Snow Wilderness in Underwear to Keep Him From Giving Up. Out of the silent, froxen wilderness of Canada there has come the first authentic narrative of the adventures, the sufferings and the rescue, almoet dead, of Che thre United States navy balloonists whose frag ile air vessel, storm-buffeted beyond con trol, landed near James bay, Ontario, on Tuesday, December 14. That narrative is presented herewith. It is In the form of two letters written by Lieutenant Walter Hinton, one of the three daring officers who made up the bal loon's ere-. This is the first time any of the men themselves have spoken. Hitherto only disjointed, fragmentary messages have reached the outer world. And coming from Hinton the narrative has all the greater authority because he was the actual though not the nominaJ leader. One letter is to HInton's wife, who Is rejoicing beyond words in their cottage near the Rockaway air station. The other is to his frie-nd Peter Talbot, a feikw avia tor, who with Mrs. Talbot shares the Hin ton home. To his wife. In the missive written the very moment he and his companions. Lieu tenant Louis A. Kloor and Lieutenant Ste phen Farrell. reached the haven of Moose Factory, after four days of wanderlnr, Hin ton gave the stirring account of the great adventure, hi which all three proved them selves heroes, ar.d in which one was ready, to offer himself up as a sacrifice so that the others might live. To his chum Tal," because the air is "Ta;s" element, too. Hinton. who was on of the pilots of the United State XC-4. which m It made the rirst trans-Atlantic flight, set forth more of the technical de tails of the balloon voyage, although he re vealed to Talbot as well as to his wife some of the hardships he and his fellow of ficers underwent. Here is Lieutenant Hindoo's letter to his wife: (Copyright by the New fork World. Pub lished by Arrangement.) MOOSE FACTORY, Hudson Bay. Dec. 21. Dear Addie I cwi imagine how pleased you will be to get this and how you must have suffered thinking we might be lost. We were lost for a time and these are the circum stances: We were in a terrific storm that night and could not see the ground and figured our safest place was in the air until we could locate our selves. We were in the air more than 25 hours and averaged about 33 miles an hour. At about 2 P. M. Tuesday, while at an altitude of 6500 feet and with all our ballast expended, w'hich in cluded thermos bottles, carpet, lining of the basket and drag rope and everything we could throw out to stay up, we heard a dog bark. Descent Is Bcgua at Oner. We immediately started valving be cause we figured where there are dogs there must be life. We couldn't see the ground until we were almost on top of it and found ourselves landing in a dense forest. We started to walk and arrived here four days later. We had to eat during that time two carrier pigeons and moss from the ground. I lost my flying suit and could not sleep nights for fear I would freeze and never wake up. I didn't fear death, but felt so sorry for you and my only hope was that you would some day find out what had really happened and how much I really thought and felt for you. One Falls From Kxhaustion. Mr. Faxrell fell from exhaustion several times. Wanted us to cut his throat and take his body for food and asked us to go on and let him die. but we decided to stick and die to i Concluded on Paffe 9. Column 1.) PICTORIAL COMMENTS 0VNG A LOT O-tr ' ' ( 7 I, ? ? t i f i i ' ' ri . I Tremblings Resemble Eanhquakes Otherwise Shakeups Come at Regular Interval-. LOS ANGELES, Jan. 8. The towns of Covlna, Glendora and Azusa in the San Gabriel valley, 20 to 25 miles east of here, were rocked tonight by what was declared by Inhabitants to be a series of explosions, according to re ports received here. Every house in the towns was shaken and window glasses were broken in some, it was stated. The first shock was felt about 9:31, it was stated, and was followed by two more within half an hour. Each was accompanied by a loud report. Otherwise the tremblings resembled earthquakes, it was said. At nearby oil fields it was said no explosion had occurred there. Efforts were made to communicate with camps in the mountains north of the towns, where large Quantities of dynamite were known to have been stored for quarrying purposes. Two hours after the shakings the cause remained a mystery. A survey of the quarry camps nearest the towns disclosed no explosions tiad taken place there and no blasting work was In progress. Los Angeles county road officials, who have several quarries in the mountains, said they knew of no sup plies of dynamite stored anywhere in sufficient quantities to shake the towns. Covina residents said the shocks came at fairly regular intervals, and each was followed by a loud roar. In this place, as well as in Azusa and (Concluded on Page IS, Column 3.) INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather! YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature, 43 degrees; minimum, 41 degrees. TODAY'S Rain; westerly winds. Departments. Editorial. Section 3, page 10. Dramatic. Section 4. pagre 4. Moving- picture ne.vs. Section 4, page f. Real estate and building news. Section 4. page 8. Music. Section 4, page 6. Churches. Section 5, page ". Books. Section 0. page 3. Schools. Section 5, page 8. Special annual auto show news and auto mobiles. Section 6. Womrn'i Features. Society. Section 3. page 2. Women's activity. Section 3, page 8. Fashions. Section 5, page 4. Miss Tingle's domestic science column. . Section 3. page 4. Madame Rlchet'n dressmaking column. Section 5. page 5. Auction bridge. Section 5, page 5. Mrs. Hargreave's article on care of in- i fants. Section 5. page 6. Special Featured. Censors guard against fake advertising. Magazine section, page 1. The home port of Man o' War. Magazine section, page 2. The girl with the' "charity" face. Mag azine section, page 3. News of the world as seen by the camera. Magazine section, page 4. The fairy romance of Europe's most beau tiful princess. Magazine section, page 6. Having fun with the fashions. Magazine section, page 6. Chess declared to be less like life than bridge. Magazine section, page 6. Court of last appeal In basebal 1 talks of plans. Magazine section, page 7. Hill's cartoons "Among Us Mortals." Magazine section, page 8. Beautiful homes from tumble-down houses? Section 5, page 6. Darling's cartoons on topics of the day. Section 5, page 7. Foreign. Fourth Internationale may be organized to break power of Lenlne. Section 2, page 18. Three balloonists' battle for life In Cana dian wilderness is thrilling. Section 1, page 1. National. Electoral college to meet tomorrow. Sec tion 1, page 1. Knox plan backed by anti-leaguers. Sec tion 1, page 1. Japanese imitate and undersell American toys, says manufacturer. Section 1, ' page L Large quantities of food reported still held unsold in country. Section 1, page 4..- Higher exemption for small incomes favored. Section 1, page 4. President may yet defeat purpose of war v finance law. Section 1, page 4. Harding inauguration promises to be big gest show of kind ever held. Section 1. page 18. Revival of historic inaugural ball seems assured. Section 2. page 18. Domestic. Wild oast shows staged daily In terrified New York. Section 1. page 7. Big navy favored by Senator Harding. Section 1, page 2. German-Sinn Fein plot is revealed. Sec- 1. page 17. I BY CARTOONIST PERRY ON SOME TOPICS IN Heppner Farmer and Sheep-Grower Selected by Governor Olcott After Jay H. Dobbins Declines. SALEM. Or.. Jan. 8. (Special.) W. B. Barralt, prominent farmer and ?heep grower of Heppner, Morrow county, late today was appointed by Governor Oicott to serve as a member of the stite highway commission. He will succeed E. E. Kiddle, who died recently at Island City "Mr. Barratt .a widely known throughout Oregon," said Governor Olcott in announcing the appoint ment. "He is one of the leading farmers and aheep growers of his lecLion, is past president of theOre gon "Wool Growers' association, was prevlcus.y mayor of Heppner and at the present time is a member of the sate livestock sanitary board. "Mr. Barratt always has oeen an advocate of good roads and has taken an active interest in all matters re lating to the development of Oregon." Governor Olcott "said that he had rceived assurances that Mr. Barratt would accept the office, and that his appointment would be agreeable to the people of the district which he represents. As a business man and sheepgrower, Mr. Barratt is said to have made a success. Governor Olcott held off making the appointment of a successor to Mr. Kiddle until he received a telegram from Jay H. Dobbin of Joseph yester day to the effect that the latter had reconsidered his original decision to decline the appointment, but waa un able to accept the office because of business matters needing his atten tion. Since Mr. Dobbin first refused to (Concluded on Page IS, Column 3.) Domestic, Kansas governor assails Townley and non partisan campaign in state. Section 1, page 3. Removal of air mail service head asked. Section 1, page 6. Strife is followed by peace In Samoa. Sec tion 2, page 18. Pacific Northwest. Governor Ol cott appoints W. B. Barre it of Morrow county to vacancy on Oregon state highway commission. Section 1, page 1. Senate committee bertha being drawn. Section 1, ,page 10. Molalla bank vault blown open by yeggs. Section 1, page 1. Three million invested in Oregon public utilities. Section 1. page 16. Anti-alien land bill, aiming at Japanese, Introduced in Idaho legislature. Sec tion 1, page 20. Telephone employes urge early Increase in rates. Section 1, yage 8. v W. J. Hofmann heads new Shrine asso ciation. Section 1, page 6. Vote on bond Issue is asked by board. bectton 1, page a. Sport. Sky is limit for Cubs In purchasing play ers. Section 1, page 1. High school basketball league opens on January 18. Section 2, page 2. Hunter relates stirring chase after cougar. Section 2. page 2. Radical Olympic reform expected. Section 2, page 2. Devere has record in fighting negroes. Section 2, page 3. Swimming season occupies attention. Sec tion 2, page 4. Spokane bowlers are strong team. Section 2, page 4. Commercial and Marine. Export outlet necessary to save prune market. Section 1, page 21. Wheat firmer at Chicago, with buying for European account. Section 1, page 21. All classes of stocks weak at close. Sec tion 1, page 21. Two more vessels chartered to load grain In Portland. Section 1. page 30. Portland and Vicinity. Irrigator hits state commission. Section 1, page 20. Nose leads health officer to large still. Section 1, page 17. Oregon legislature convenes tomorrow morning at state house in Salem. Sec tion 1. page 1. Famine kills 10,000 Chinese daily. Sec tion 1. page 14. Reorganization of Oregon state board of health Into bureaus is indicated. Sec tion 1. page 9. , Bench and bar unite in memorial serv ices for Ralph R. Dunlway. Section 1. page 12. Christmas jaunt to Spirit lake full of ob stacles. Section 1, page 14. Necessity of trial commission cited. Sec tion 1, page 13. Tilt due in council tomorrow over revoca tion of soda works license. Section. 1, page 12. Etherldge Is about ready to make state ment. Section 1, page 12. George M. Orton. school board member, sued for divorce. Section 1. page 11. State leaders of democratic party blame direct primary law for political ruin. Section 1, page 11. Two soldiers confess to night of banditry. Section 1, page 1. i the utu v.bJs ee.ei-J vj"&m3 Mark Sullivan Thinks It May Win. COERCION NOT TO BE TRIED Harding's Idea to Be Dis closed in Inaugural Address. COMMISSION IS DESIRED Xew Members Constituting Repub lican Majority in Senate Reported Swinging Toward Irreconcilables. BY MARK aUlXTVAN. (The New York Evening Post, Inc. Pub lished by arrangement.) WASHINGTON, Jan. 8. (Special.) If anybody assumes that Harding, out of all he has heard from his re cently ended conference with "best minds," is going to make a distilled essence, so to speak, and that distilled essence is going to be Harding's pro gramme with regard to the-league of nations, such an assumption is very wide of the mark. Harding's plan will not go into de tails. Harding does not intend that it shall go into details. It is merely a set of principles, so to speak, and he intends to restrict it to that. This plan he will disclose in his inaugural address March 4. Harding Plans to Negotiate. Within a week after March 4 he will put certain machinery in motion. As to what this machinery is. Sena tor Herding has made no greater dis closure of details than he has made of his plan for the league of nations. 1 assume this machinery wilj consist of a commission to negotiate with the leading nations of Europe. That is all that Harding has in mind. So much f jr that. Let us now consider the forces at work outside of Harding and to some extent antag onistic to Harding. The first thing to remember is that Harding cannot make or cannot put through any plan whatever affecting foreign relations except "by and with the consent of the senate," so far as that is concerned it would be contrary to everything we know of Harding if he should try to combat the preroga tive of the senate. Conciliation Deemed Likely. Harding is much more likely to conciliate the senate, to find out how far the senate is willing to go and then adopt that as the maximum of his own plan. Let us then see what the new sen ate is likely to do. The new senate is overwhelmingly republican. What action it is to take about foreign af fairs is most likely to be determined by the republican majority. The pre vailing drift of that republican ma jority is markedly anti-league. The republican majority in the new senate in all probability when the time comes will hold a caucus on this subject. Indeed, I suspect that informal caucuses are already being held by a group of senators who I think are likely to be dominant on this subject. Informal Caucus Held. I suspect, but can state it no more strongly than s a suspicion, that the plan which Senator Knox announced last week as an alternative to our en tering the league of nations was the result of just such an informal caucus of a group. It is fair to Senator Knox to say that he rather evaded admit ting this. In the first place, most of the new republican senators are irreconcilable in their leanings. I know this is so because I have been-at pa'ns to talk with some of them and correspond with nearly all of them. The bulk of them say they are opposed to the (Concluded on Page 12. Column 3.) THE RECENT NEWS. . VKB UP! Congress Will Have to Count Cer tificates From Each of 4 8 States and Announce Kesult. WASHINGTON. Jan. 8. While War ren G. Harding and Calvin Ccolirige were chosen for president and vice president in November, they will not be elected officially until February 9. Two important steps remain to com plete their election. One, the meet ing of the electoral college, takes place Monday, while the final step will be taken February 9 at a joint meeting of the senate and house, when certificates of the vote of each state are counted. After this ceremony Vice-President Marshall officially will declare them elected. The people, as is well known, did not vote directfy for Mr. Harding or Mr. Cox in November, but for electors. Th successful electors of each state comprise the electoral college. They are equal in number to the senators and representatives of each state. They are required to meet in their state capitals on the second Monday in January to cast their votes In ac cordance with the wishes of the voters who elected them. The electoral college therefore wiK be in session in the 48 state capitals Monday. If any electors have died since the November election, the remaining electors of the state may select some one to fill the vacancy. After organ ization, balloting begins, first for president and then for vice-president Each elector votes for the candidate for whom he was elected to vote. When ballots are counted, three cer tificates are prepared and signed in each state. One is sent to the judge of the United States district court of the elector's state, one is sent by mai! and another by messenger, usually one of the electors, to the president of the senate. These certificates will be opened by the vice-president act ing as president of the senate in the presence of congress. This ceremonv will take place in the house Feb ruary 9. COUSIN OF HARDING WEDS Ktafi Mildred K. Harding Bride of Former Salem Man. SALEM. Or., Jan. 8. (Special.) Mildred K. Harding, cousin of President-elect Harding, und Kimball B. Palmer, until recently advertising manager of a local store, were mar ried here this afternoon. The cere mony was performed by Rev. H. N. Aldrich and was followed by a dinner at' a I coal hotel. Mrs. Palmer has made Salem her home for several years and is well known here. Mr. Palmer came here about IS months ago. He was a student at the Uni versity of Washington and a member of Theta Chi fraternity. Mr. and Mrs. Palmer will leave Sa lem within the next few days for Se attle, where they will visit friends. Later they will go to California and subsequently to Arizona, where Mr. Palmer is interested in raining prop erties. CABLE LANDING BLOCKED Concession Granted Western Union in Cuba Suspended. HAVANA, Jan. 8. A presidential decree suspending the concession that had been granted to the Western Union Telegraph & Cable company to land its Barbadoes cable on the shores of Cuba has been signed and is in the hands of the government secretary. The decree has not yet been pub lished in the Official Gazette, which would make it effective. WEEK WILL BE RAINY ONE Normal Temperature ts Predicted for North Pacific States. WASHINGTON. Jan. 8 Weather predictions for the week beginning Monday are: Northern Rocky mountain and pla teau regions Generally fair and nor mal temperature. Pacific states Rains in the north Pacific states and generally fair else where; normal temperature. f INCOME. J- Two Soldiers Caught at Vancouver Confess. VICTIMS IDENTIFY BOTH MEN Patrolmen Simpkins and Skoglund Suspended. COWARDICE IS CHARGED Just What Became of One Police man During Chase Has Not Vet Been Determined. Willi the signed confession of one soldier, the verbal admission of the other and both positively identified by the victims, two ooldiers from Vancouver barracks, whose brief, but meteoric career In street banditry aroused, the Portland police bureau early Friday night were held last night without bail at the city Jail.aj Each reused the other of doing the shooting which shattered the wind shield of the police emergency ear in which policemeii were pursuing them. The two soldiers are Walter Mc Cleary. 21. and Boyd Ellis, 25. both of Vancouver. They were arrested at Vancouver early yesterday a'ter the Portland police had telephoned, a de scription of the two soldiers who held up E. C. Larson, a for-hlre chauffeur and then appropriated his automobile while they robbed the Broadway Inr garage. Klltu Returned to Portlan.1. Kills was returned to Portland from Vancouver yesterday morning by Lieutenant of Inspectors Moloney, and McCleary, who first insisted he would not return without extradition, was brought back late yesterday after noon by Lieutenant of Inspectors Goltz. Major Dclaplane of Vancouver barracks turned McCleary over to the Portland police after Lieutenant Goltz and Inspectors Tackaberry and Phil lips had shown him the signed con fession mad by Ellis, In which Mc Cleary was implicated In the series of street robberies. The army automatic revolver which it was said was used by McCleary In the Pistol duel with Patrolmen Simp kins and Skoglund was found a short distance from where the two aol diers were last seen near Sullivan's gulch by J. E. Backenstos. a street sweeper. Backenstos is the man who struck McCleary with a broom as the latter fled past him. Two Patrolmen Suspended. Because of evidence of alleged cowardice, Patrolmen Simpkins and Skoglund wets suspended early yes terday by Mayor Baker after the first investigation of the chase had been received at police headquarters. It developed yesterday, however, that Simpkins had followed the two high waymen to the edge of Sullivan's gulch and had given up the chase only because his brother patrolman was not in 'sight and because he believed it futile to make a search of Sullivan's gulch alone. It was Backenstos who first said the men had gone into this gulch. 9 In his confession to the police de tectives, however, Ellis said they did not enter Sullivan's gulch and that oi policeman, believed to have been Simpkins, had followed them to a point where they had separated. Just what became of Skoglund during the chase has not yet been determined, although the soldier said that but one policeman followed them for any dis tance. MeCleary's Verxion Obtained, Little by Little during the course of the early evening Inspector Maloney drew from Private McCleary his ver sion of the Friday night escapade. McCleary flatly contradicted his part- j (Concluded on Page 18. Column 1.) OWING tvNT5