Sa-M- U K. J J f Jr j i J r ' .vfa .Tonight and Sun- ITS ALL TRUE- J V fair; norther- winds. in it J. i f .-."l ' t - - ' ' ' PbRTLAND, i OfeGON, SATUR DAY EVENING, JULY 19, 1919 EIGHTEEN; PAGES; ' ' ; ITftT ; ' VtfTTT i M A' 2 1 1 i Enteml u SeeoBd-cteia' Mittef PRICE TWO .CENTS On TWAINS MD STANDS flVC ti !i - V y Y1U. .' "W. pMtoHiec Psrtluul Oncoa 41 PS I 1 .13' KV" iii BIKD; ..III G.I LtD Reinforcements. Needed to Battle Ragfng Flames Eating Their ,. Way Through Valuable Timber. ' MontananV in Ex-War -Trucks Are Sped to Zone of Destruc - tion; Blaze Leaps Mountains. Butte," Mont.,' July 1.(U. P.) Continued . dry weather .nd hlgrh winds further, intensified the forest fire situation In Montana today. , Reports of many new fires coming 'into the forest office led. officials to declare . that. . unless the weather moderates, there -will -not .be . suffl cleni men In the state to conquer the conflagrations'. ' Reports from the rSt.' Rests fire show Is spreading' at th rate of several miles an hoar 'unchecked. - ; -i Officials -declare there is little hope of checking the ' Henderson fire, which Jumped the mountains into Mullen gulch. SPREADS UNHAMPERED . The entire. Sun river -watershed' near Great Falls is threatened by the blase which is rarinf apparently unhampered along: the, north fork, of the river.' , '' "Boienum reports Indicate the fire on the-Madison river In-the Bear Tooth re serve is raffing, wiuie the , one on . iioss 'Peak in the Bridger range apparently has been controlled. . . r Report - from, Missoula declare - that fires. mth Selwayonse-under oontroi, have, broken -oiat arain,. and that . the sit uation has become serious. -. -? The "village "of 'Jimtown near Helena is :r threatened, V according to . reports . from- Helena. -. The Kvaro fire, in the Helena forest, ia. still on a. ramptge, ' but? several-other, fires in that vicinity are reported , under control, ,.'-., ' The Cedar -creek '.fire' fn the Kootenai forest -ts spreadlnar rapidly , and numr. : ous small Isolated camps in the" htlis are threatened. ' Thus far no lives have - ben; reported lost.-" This may . .be . be- cause: communications with many vil lages ' have been entirely cut .off and reports are in many instances unavail- able. -; - i,f .. - Seventeen hundred sheep ownedJlsy (Cenctaded on Pas Two. Column Three) Professor at Reed Wants to Know ; If Latest Flight of ; Hi Cost Is Justifiable in City. ' r- . ' Asking that the city start an in vestigation to determine the justice or in justice of the latest increases in s the cost of living. Professor A. A. Knowlton of Reed college has bent a ' letter to Mayor Baker calling atten tion to the smoldering resentment of ,the public. " f , v .Professor Knowlton' said he did not know what grounds there might be for the recent increases and that noseihlv they were justified, but if so he held it to be the legal right of the city to ascer taln. .... ? The " producers - and : distributors ' have formed an alliance ' to safeguard their interests but the consumers have no such :' protection. Knowlton asserts. It is there fore a duty of government to accomplish this protection, for the people.. . . Regardless of whether prices artifl- ;v cally are too high, Professor Knowlton 4 asserts that the people have a' suspicion that they- are. v With such convictions, he says, the seeds of discontent find ready lodgement. Mayor Baker, was undecided this morning as to what procedure the coun- - cil should take in following out this sug gestion, s , Reconciliation to :; Settle! the Strike - Of Grainhandlers Under an agreement reached bv both - uuiwii ku 1.119 em ployers Involved.: the state board of concuiauon tei to bold hearings on the issues at stake and 1 the suggestion of the board, will be- taken as. a rulinir bv both parties. .The opening meeting will oe neia at 10 o'clock Wednesday morn ing in Ubrary halt. Otto Hartwig, sec retary of the board, stated this morn ing ; that this : agreement had . been reached., so that -the board became in jthis ' case - virtually a board of arbitra tion. : ' . - i - . - -This award by the; board of . concil- . iatlon will - affect the wages of the grainhandlers all over the : Northwest, : because, consequently, representatives of the grainhandlers unions of Seattle and Tacoma and other ports are to be nres- ent at the. bearings and to offer testi mony if desired. . -: Refusal - to give ' the grainhandlers a raise of & .cents an hour to go cents resulted in a .walkout by the members of the union July 1. . The handlers re turned o . work . July . 1, agreeing to abide by the decision of the state board of conciliation whether they should get the raise. . . ..,,...' MAYOR ASKED TO LOOK INTO PRICES PEOPLE OF DONE WITH SAYS HENRY FORD . ' .By Harry Reulllnger . .Mount Clemens, Mich..'. July 19. L N. S.)Thls is a tale of a three mile hike on which the hjkers were, as soma one "put it;; .la man with a half a billion and a man with a half a buck." '.". ; Perhaps the ' figures -were not exactly accurate. Henry Ford's wealth may be somewhat . more ' or ." somewhat - lees than the sum mentioned and the- correspond ent who trudges along with, him through the rutted country roads probably had more than "four bits' in his possession. But the phrase was relatively true - - .After the heat of the big legal bat tle -which has kept him on the stand all week, the chief figure In the. Ford Tribune , J 1,000,000 libel suit sought re laxation.' STARTS OFF OJT STROLL : "Lefs stroll," : he suggested as he touched the shoulder of the correspond ent in the lobby of - the- hotel from which, - for the, time being, Mr. Ford is directing all his Immense interests. : He was . hatless - and clad in a . thin gray suit ' of - modest cut , and material. So the pair started off. First mile. The correspondent ven tured something abeut the . peacef ulness of the main street of the town, "It is peaceful," Mr. Ford agreed. "The whole world should "be peaceful. I "don't mean - the whoie ?world should be as quiet as this. ' We have to have cities and we have to have noise. But the whole world-might g well have as much peace as - this particular- place seems to have. "WHO WAX T8 WAR!" . - ' "la .there anyone who, after what the world has gone through recently, wants anything but peace?' There may be some those who profited from the war or who would profit from another war." But the people of the -world, the -men who fought , and - those : who remained behind and grieved,' those .who saw' the WITH ; PRESIDEN Oregon .Senator .Firm, for , Ratif h . cation.. Wilson .-Explains vI'Points ;. Not 'lean :t:iA Washington, ?Jly (WASH INGTON BUREAU. OP-THE JOUB NALO Senator McNary was at the White House' for an hour Friday, dis-J cussing the , League I of Nations, in details. ' He described it as a pleas ant conference, ; the president plung ing at once into the' subject of the league.; - '" .. . - f , ... The senator found himself in, Agree ment with the' president as to, the un desirability of any reservations Which would change the meaning of the treaty and Involve resubmission of the - docu ment to negotiation,, because other ' na tions whose amendment -have been re jected would then come forward' with demand for their consideration, in ad dition to . the delays and . danger ' from unsettled condltiona ' The president explained : the difficul ties of the American negotiators in hav ing their own way, and the necessity for reaching a compromise between conflict ing Interests, with the situation further complicated by agreements entered into long before and. relied upon. ' Out of this sort, of accusation came the Shantung clause, Senator McNary told the president he disliked . that, but said its severity is mitigated by ex planations which, he is not free , to dis close. Senator McKary told the president of the construction he places upon article 10 and the domestic question and Monroe doctrine features,' which- he . Intends to discuss in the senate Tuesday, his views substantially according with those of the president. ' They did not discuss the separate - treaty with France, which Senator McNary will oppose. The president said he has not decided upon the date he can, start WesU Discharge of Fire Fighfers Serves to V QuietWil(i Bumorg . . in -' Because It had succeeded in getting the fire under , control in the Oregon National forest along Herman .creek, the forest service this morning laid off ZS men1 of . its fire fighting crew. Wild rumors that the town of Cascade Locks was menaced by flames and that the woods were - burning , around Wahtum lake, where Portland Boy Scouts are en camped. were thus discredited. ; ' The . fire - started July 10, presumably from a camp fire that some 'sojourner in the woods had failed to extinguish. Tor a time It assumed serious proportions, but was put under control early in the week. A high -wind, however, caused; it to spring Into life again, but It gradually died 'down under 'the combined Influence of more - favorable weather conditions and the efforts of the fighters. ;. Indications were today that the fire would be completely dead within a few hours.' . r 1 , Rioting Breaks Out ; . AinongEanks dSea. Workers on Strike New .York, July 19.iri. N. S.) Riot ing broke out fn the marine strike her today. Two men were - seriously in jured and numerous others , suffered minor hurts. The disturbance started with a clash between striking seamen and strikebreakers. " ... Five hundred ships, both privately and government -operated, -were tied tip today by 'the strike," and officials es timated that the. monetary 'loss already incurred . totals approximately .15,003,000. WORLD WAR awful waste J of human ' life ; and " of natural material do they want an other war? I don't believe so. But un less, there Is a stable, easily available means of settling difficulties,' I fear there will be more wars and that the lesson of this one will be wasted." "What method of settling difficulties would you suggest V the ' correspondent inquired, i . a - - "A League of Nations, by all means." Mr: Ford replied. - . HOW DISPUTES ARE SETTLED ; "If this property owner whose house we are passing Jiad a' dispute with his neighbor over4 the line of that fence right there, -does t he ; go out and hire a gang of gunmen to.' shoot up the neighbor? Of course he does not. - He goes down there to- the red ;. brick, courthouse, a judge and a' jury settle the matter and he and his neighbor are good friends again. , ' .. ; . ' "A couple of- states may differ. Do they Arm their citizens .and go whoop ing Into war? ' They, do not. They send their' representatives down' to Wash ington and the' highest learned supreme cpart. adjusts .their .difficulties without loss of life or. a day's productiveness. SEES NO DIFFERENCE.' . . "Now; what's the difference.: I'd like to know, between these two- neighbors having j a dispute, two -states having a difference, and two nations of the world having a. quarrel? - And if the neighbors and ; the t states can have their affairs settled by a county court or a supreme court, why. can't two nations haye their difficulties ' adjudicated by a court of the world? . " . I . think the main that ' ' opposes - a league of nations 'and a court of , the world Is -all wrong." i, - t Second mile The' pair of pedestrians turned- off into a by-road. v ' At a fence was a farmhand who had just "put up his horses and was bavins a pipe in the darkness before -turning in. "I look to see In a few "years," Ford (Conceded on Face Two. Column Tiro) " TELEPHONE GIRLS ; LIKELY TO RETURN T - " ir ' isssBBJss-sseBss . s m Meeting This Afternoon Expected .to.Yote tq.ObeyOrdersof.i! f u vi jMisrjiatJonal Union; t. ;;.V " sy-ikln mployesi bfjthe; P'aeifio Telephone & Telegraph company are expected to. slgii up asf prepared to return to work Monday, morning at S o'clock' at a- joint meeting to be eld this .afternoon , In J,he Selling-Hlrsch building, including both the topera-' tors and 'the linemen. 'A vote will be taken" on. the question." iDelegates of he union, in- San. Francisco and in the' Bast have advised returning, and the international officers have given orders to that effect. " It ' is ' necessary, , however, to take . a vote though- the failure to obey probably would mean loss" ef- the charter In the international organisation. COMFANT COMES, HALF WAT ' The telephone company here . is, ac cording to w. J. Phillips, commercial superintendent. ' prepared to take back the employes," and it Is believed that there Will be little difficulty over th la, W; E. Moore, superintendent of plant, made" the statement during the hearing of the state board of conciliation, that if the employes returned to work before the breach . had widened too far, it would be possible to take all back and let the . overturning of the forces take care of the excess. He said that, unless the ' offices were : too much filled with new workers, it would be possible to shut - down the -schools of Instruction for a. short time, and the overflow, would' gradually lower to normal, . The big mass meeting that was to have been held in the auditorium of the Central library this evening at 8 o'clock has been called off, on account of the changed orders. SETTLEMENT TERMS UNKNOWN It- Is not known locally just what de mands ' have - been granted, but It : is judged from the telegrams received that tha retroactive pay to January 1 has been granted, as well as recognition of the union and certain concessions In regard to arbitration of grievances., It is believed possible that the return to work Jbas been ordered pending the final adjustment by the wtre control board as to. the matter of - wages. The pres ent rate of wages guarantees a minimum wage of' S a day for men and 912 a week for girls, which increase became effective on June IS,, and was announced here, on the day the girls went on strike, Jane 80. MASS MEETING SUNDAY A mass meeting of the ' linemen and operators will be held in the Selling Hirsch -building Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock, according to schedule, though there la some question as to the hour, owing, to the . meeting's depending on the arrival home of the delegates sent to San Francisco. ' C 'BL Dunaven and Miss 1 Lilly Schunke, who have been there for the last week; will arrive Sun day 'and will report at the meeting.. . Even Home Brew -And Wineior Use -;At Home Must Q6 Washington, July 1. IL N. S.) Home made wides and beer, even though intended 1 purely for home consumption, will not be exempted under the prohi bition enforcement law. . - Representative Fitzgerald ef Massa chusetts.: this -' afternoon offered an amendment "to the . blir seeking . excep tion for home brew," but Representa tive Good, who was Jn the chair, sus tained - the contention, of Representa tive Blanton of Texas that the amend-, mcnt ,was ot In order. - ' ' " ! OAPFf n IP EllLLlOI Fourteen Nations Represented by 18,000 Soldiers and Sailors In London Peace Procession Today - v , - t S 1 .- S . " 5 " " r General Pershing; Leads First v Section and ReceivesThunder ous Applause All - Along " Line. . , ' .. . ;. . . -f ...London, . July "-.If. il..JN. With American troops In the place-qf honor, 1 1 4 nations .joined with Eng land today in celebrating peace with the most , brilliant and . stupendous parade this nation has ever seen. I Fully 2,500,000 people saw the seven-mlle-long v ' procession that passed through the 'city amidst, the plaudits of the multitude.. --At- some points the spectators - were massed from 100 to 200 deep on ; both' sides of- the marchers. ' .Marshal Foch, . generalissimo of - the allied armies. General Pershing, ; the American commander--in chief, and Field Marshal Haig. commander Of the British army, took part.. : , , Eighteen thousand . troops were V in the procession which took , two hours to pass :a. given point. For - the first time - women were given as place in such . a strictly military event. Six hundred "Waacs". in, uniforms marched with the men. i , , ., , ' . - Great excitement .was caused in Trafalgar Square - when he. f spectators broke through - the police lines and-500 police.-reserves battled - with' the' crowd in i an effort, to .open; a lane; for the troops to get into the Mall.., . A dozen women fainted-in the erdsh. Never had -London. heard ' such .'up roar , aa , the - salvos, of .applause '. which greeted the . famous airnyy and., navy officers, as the 'troops swung through the , streets- :to j the , sOrrlng -martial tunes of the bands. " . And no less was fCoeoiodcd att 'Tvur Sixteen,, situate ia) Pumping Engineers Walk ;0ut and 1 PiaceV Are Filled .With ; .--- r. II '. -''1 Lmergencjneip. Chicago, July ; 19.- (U. P.)-Chi-cago's labor;, problem already in volving more than. 115,000 persons was made more serious today, when resignations were received by. the fire department of 237 fire department and . pumping station engineers.. City officials declared that stations will, be manned with emergency . engi neers and that the city will be amply protected from fires. - ,.: . .The. engineers voted to go out at 8 a. m. today, and to stay -off duty ' until their demand of 80 cents - an hour- is met. ...They, now receive .41. : Surface and elevated - transportation employes announced their vote of more than 100 to 1 in favor" of a strike to force their ' demand for more pay. Sur face line employes voted 10,01t for:and 435 Jtgalnst the strike, while . "L em ployes were 3501 to 38 In favor. - -. Hope of a settlement in the building trades -lockout.' affecting lOO.OOflr men, appeared today.' . ; TR.CTI0N . LIVES ARE TIED " - UP WHEN CITY BEGINS DAY . Providence," R. L,' July 19. (L ' N. " S.) Half" a' million4 people ..here ' awoke today to find all of the traction lines operated by the 'Rhode Isjand company tied . up with 2500 - employes " of ' the road ' idle,' more than ' 600 cars locked In the barns and- - approximately 400 miles, of track useless, as the result of the failure", of the trustees of the street ' railway company, and represen tatives . of - the. Providence . street . car men's - union to- agree- on t a . wage schedule. ' The strike ties up virtually the whole- state of : Rhode . Island " with the exception of Newport." . eight hundred trolley men at Westerly, In the south ern corner of . the . state, , are also on strike. - - . - ' ' i t -.'.'..',- ' ' " ; - The. strikers t demand - 75 - cents -. an hour. - . They had .. been- - receiving a maximum of 43 cents -an hour. f Portland Youth Is Awarded Medal for 4: Herdism.atVerduB " Washington, July -19. (WASHING TON BUREAU OF THE JOURNAL.) It is announced 'that General Pershing has awarded the distinguished service cross to Private Eugene' McEntee of headquarters company. Twenty -sixth in fantry. ' -.----.- His mother is Mrs. E. M McEntee of 817 Gantenbein avenue. Portland, Or. U The award is for extraordinary- hert ism In. action near Verdun on .October 2... 1918, when Private McEntee was in charge of maintaining a telephone 'line with an advance patrol." "; - j After being shot In the ankle;: be re fused to go to the rear . and advanced 1300 meters- under heavy machine gun fire to repair the lines and keep up com munication by telephone. with the forces In the rear. - ' , - ; FIREhiEli JOiij.lij : CHICAGO STRIKE . ' , V ' - - -i - t I- . J". -'3 - . HiUOvms 45,00 Acr6$ of Timber He and Associates Plan to Pool . - Pine for Milling on the , .-' '. , Deschutes, i ' - . ' Bend, July 18. It has been' ascer tained from . official records that Louis Hill and associates own in Cen tral Oregon,- from the summit of the Cascade, mountains eastward to the Deschutes, river, approximately 45, 000 acres of valuable vpine timber, which surrounds , the proposed line of the Portland V Southeastern rail road, which - It ; has been announced wilt be ; projected from Mt. Angel to Bend as soon as the railroads are re turned to private ownership. ; . Careful check has been made , of the timber belt 'and it has been found that of the five billion feet of Umber directly tributary- to -the proposed line, .which Includes government timber;' the Hill in terests own , approximately 800,000,000 feet of timber. ''--, ' - It is certain here -.that 'for 'several months a ;plan . for. a- merger has been going, on by which private . owners, In cluding Hill Interests, plan to pool tim ber' for milling somewhere on the Deschutes river near Bend." - LUMBERMEN EIGHT State' Chamber Putting Shoulder to-Wheel te: Flatten Differ- ; ' Vnce in Rates in Oregon. -.r'-,--v;; - -'! i ' ' "',- ; "V - - Practically every lumber, and tie concern 'west of the Cascade moun tains and between. Portland and the California -boundary has joined in an appeal to the railroad administration to' secure for shippers and consumers the , same . rates . on. lumber , between, local points in Oregon" as now exist bf tweent i.pcal,ppmts Jnashingtoni ; Alleging that,'lntresta" lii 'Western. Oregoa - shippins? eve - the Southern- Pa- eiflc ana the 'Oregon El eetrhs and their branches - bave- . been " unjustly discrim inated - against, the Willamette , Valley Lumberhjens . association and 22' firms of the western jart of the staW. are go ing to. present a- solids front, backed, by the-rState .Chamber, of .. Commerce and other state, bodies, demanding -an equali sation of, rates, - -, ', . - t;, " -A , letter' calling attention to the In equality, of .freight rates .maintained on . lumber and r lumber products , be tweeiT point in.' Western Oregon - and points., in .Western ..Washington: on the Northern Pacific" . Oregon-Washjnfton lines,. Chicago, Milwaukee at-1 St, . Paul and. Great' Northern railroads, has been presented' to the Portland district freight-traffic committee. .-- . .', ,-S'Revews of the existing tariffs," says the complaint,' "which has been organ ised by F. G.; Donaldson, traffic man ager of the-association shows that the local rate on lumber In Western Oregon are very materially higher than in West ern Washington for the same distance. The operating conditions between points In . Western Oregon and Western Wash ington i are substantially similar and there - seems to - be no -Justification lor the railroad administration, ? which, now controls all .lines, continuing the. long existing discrimination against Oregon shipments. Undue .preference has been granted Western Washington shippers in the matter of local lumber rates." . . The report ': says further ' that; the higher bate being, paid in : Oregon for transportation . of .lumber and, its pro ducts amounts to from . 15 to 40 per cent more than the rate' in Washington and that tn -all fairness both, districts should be ' given the -same rate. - Believing that the subject of rate equal--Ization Is one of . state-wide import to producers and users of lumber, since it la estimated - that' 25 per cent of the total product is consumed locally and that on nearly air of . this the alleged ex cessive - rate Is now : being - paid, - the State- Chamber of Commerce has Issued an' appeal to Its constituent bodies for their cooperation . in eliminating the un just rates. , - Accompanying the complaint of the Western Oregon . lumber and" tie men is a petition signed ' by nearly every lumberman west, of the Cascade moun tains asking ' that a public hearing be given the case by (he local traffic com mittee so i; that the shippers may be afforded an opportunity to give - testi mbney why there should be a parity of rates between these two producing sec tions. i '; ' ; t ' : . ; ; Auditorium Needs" r -Reinforcement to : Bemoye All Danger Complaint reaching Governor Olcott that the auditorium at the Gladstone Chautauqua was unsafe' has led .to an Investigation by W. C. Knighton.' chair man of the .slate board of architectural examiners, and City Building Inspector H. E. Plummer. That the structure is In no Immediate danger, and can be eas ily made safe by reinforcing the buck ling top chord of the trusswork was the statement of Mr, Phimmer today. The building la comparatively new. It has a seating capacity, of about 5000. . MaU Flyer Is KiUed. .When Plane Plunges EeUefont. Pa, July 19. L N. S.) Aviator Charles Lam born, one ot the postoff Ice mall flyers, . was- killed, when his machine fell from a distance of 6000 feet at a point about 10 miles west cf .here .today. Lamborn' was : on. his way to Cleveland. The aviator's home was t Lea Angeles, Cal' - On Proposed Line - - ' - ' " 'i iiiiiim .ma hi fc w ii mim i, , -vT r - RAILROAD CHARGES Hill LDOul.'C I,1 RffilSE Justice 'for Columbia v Ports Re quires Solid Front; Opponents " of Water Grade Join ! Forces. Railroad Administration,; Forget ting Economy Promises, Sends ; Experts- to Help Opposition. 4 " ' Portland's chief business next week will be 'the Columbia basin rate case hearing before Interstate Commerce Commissioners Hall, Danlela ; and Eastman. : . The hearing begins Monday morn ing in room 203 of the Multnomah county courthouse. r ' Though this is a busy time for bus iness men and shippers, .. many of them., will drop their, personal affairs entirely. If necessary,, to offer their testimony supporting the Justice "of the great -fight1 for recognition ' the Colombia water grade. " , . , t EXTRA. TAX WOW LEVIED They realise that as long as the rail rate by way of the Columbia is the same as over the mountains to Puget Sound an extra tax will be .laid upon every bushel of wheat that leaves the - Inland Empire, upon every" commodity . that is brought Into or taken from, the Columbia basin and upon every article used by the people of the entire- region. . . -- The discrimination places . a handicap upon, the development of the Inland Em pire and-the growth of the ports of the Columbia. And those who have testimony bearing importantly on the Issue will give it eagerly, knowing that now is vther time when ail who: are Interested la -the .fu ture, of the Oregon . county, must Join forces and .fight to a. finish , t . OPPpSKSTS ARBtTIflTEB !y ,. t. Opponents of the Columbia basin cause -are --uniting . for -determined resistance against granting the petition of the In land Empire , and ..the ports of the Co lumbia, . . . v.'V.-;' : .: The; railroad administration, 'defend ant- in the 'action, is'i sending its'- best traffic experts-to testify that the water grade fates should be maintalned' on a par with the rates of the northern mount tain linea " ' -g ,' ' Although the testimony, of these men appears time and again .in 'connection With other actions, declaring that the cost of railroad transportation over' the mountains'-is 4 always greater tha by way of. "valley, lines,". they are. coming here noW to say that the cost of perform ing . the transportation - service should have no bearing on the rate charged for the service., .-. GOVERNMENT PROMISES rORGOTTEir - ' .The fact' that the railroad administra tion announced at the outset that the railroads would be treated as a group, that the shortest lines and easiest grades would be employed. ' that the laws of economy would be observed In the inter ests of efficiency, and that the burden of transportation . cost upon . the public would be made as light as 'possible .Is apparently given no consideration by the experts who have come at public - ex pense to' attempt to defer Justice to the people of the Columbia .drainage area, J. G. Wood worth, assistant to Regional Director. Aishton of the railroad admin istration - and vice , president in charge of traffic of .the. Northern Pacific, has been tn Portland several days actively aiding the attorneys who are to fight the Columbia basin rate case, WASHINGTON COMMISSIONERS -OPPOSED - - . -. j - . L. E. Wetting ef r Chicago,' general freight agent of the Northern Pacific and a statistical expert of noted ability, la here and has been observed In close conference with O. O. Calderbead, - the rate expert of the ! Washington public service commission. The three members of the - Washington commission, ? E. F, Blaine, Arthur A. Lewis and Frank -R, Spinning, have been in Portland going carefully ever the ground in their prep aration to defend the interests of Puget, Sound' and Ignore the Columbia basin portion of- Easterin Washington. ri :. Hance-Cleland. assistant attorney gen eral of Washington, has arrived In Port land and is expected to assume the act tve conduct of the case for 'the Wash ington commission. . - .. i , , -: Another of the railroad rate experts who has .come to help defeat the Co lumbia basin .petition... is Charles Don .nelly of the Nothern Pacific. ' ,j ' COMJIISSIOJTER" ON WAT " j Interstate Commerce Commissioners HaU, Daniels and Eastman are expect ed to arrive In Portland Sunday morn ing, coming from the south,' They tele graphed the - Portland - Ad club Friday, accepting the club's Invitation for lunch eon at the Benson hotel next Wednesday noon. They will not, of course, discuss the rate caWat-that time. - -. 820,000,000 Estate Beingllivided; Heirs Are Sought in rlTi S. : - ,,', , i . -v- w . Dallas Texas. July s4Xi N. : S.) Felix Voorhies, a Dallas mechanic, said to be a distant relative of Pope Benedict, was notified today that he has Inherited a 11.500,000 share in an Italian estate that was left in trust with the 'Italian government In 1833.' : Joseph . McDonald a hod carrier of Lake Charles,. La also is said to be heir to $5,000,000 of the same property. . The , estate is ' declared to" be ; worth $20, 000,00 and other heirs are I being sought-' v- ' " '- -.- Airplane Vill Be Used in Unique RaceAgainstTime Robert E. Smith, Director of JVar . Loan Organization, . to Mike . .Speed on Trip to Alaska.1 A pony express using a steed of the akies will leave San Francisco this afternoon and come byway of Port land in a. spectacular race - against time; to transfer .1500,000'. in United States treasury certificates from. the Twelfth .Federal ; Reserve ; bank ; to Alaska. , ' , . Robert E. Smith, formerly manager of the Liberty : loan organisation for Ore gon and now director, of the war loan organisation for the twelfth reserve dis trict, Is the express rider. ( He comes, by airplane from San Francisco to Port land, will leave the plane here and pro ceed by fast motor boat to Kalama, and proceed thence byautomoblle to Seattle, where the package of treasury certifi cates will be placed aboard the 'ship for Alaska: ' , . The leaving time at San Francisco Is 5 o'clock today; He expects to arrive In Portland at 4 o'clock Sunday . after noon, having stopped at Redding over night and at: Roseburg, his home city, for a, few minutes to take on oil and gasoline. v Arrangements for the motor boat and automobile are in charge of E. E. Edmunds, accounting-' of fleer , of the Liberty loan organization . for - Oregon. Mr, -Edmunds expects to' ge a boat which will make a new speed record for the. run. to Kalaraa. Mr. Edmunds received .the . following .: message ;,. this afternoon from director Smith : ; , , -. "Am arranging for pony express ' by airplane, auto and "motor ' boat, San Francisco to Seattle, with half, million dollars new treasury savings certifi cates to catch mall boat " to Alaska. , I return Seattle to Portland by rail.' I will ; leave ; San . Francisco by airplane late this ' afternoon and should, arrive Portland about 4 o'clock tomorrow af ternoon, when I go by . motor boat and auto to'- Seattle." ' ' '' '. !" - WHO BOUGHT THE AUTOMOBILE TIRE if , -t ,, Ex-County Purchasi ng'Agent J4aj " Explain 4 Purchase! Perturbing ; i'- j-. Office. Holders. ' " Responsibility for f the purchase with county funds of the mysterious fifth automobile tire" laid at the door of County 4 Commissioner Rufus C; Holman by County AudUor 8am Mar tin, knowledge of . which was denied by.Holman and ,Jater traced, by Mar tin to the car of William Davis, busi ness associate of : the commissioner had resolved itself at noon today into a matter of which would require, an explanation from C. A Kelson,', for mer county purchasing agent; . . Following Martin's discovery that the tire .was one the car belonging to Davis, a deputy sheriff, on his statement that the tire belonged to the county, removed It from the car and brought It to . the courthouse. Martin stated that he did this to pre vent It being lost and -, said that the wAole matter would be laid before the grand Jury on Monday morning. COMES WITH CHECK Later Commissioner Holman appeared at the courthouse with a cancelled check for $44.60, made out to C. A. Nel son, Indorsed by Nelson and dated Feb ruary 19, 1919. which was the day after the tire in question was bought.; Hol man said he found that amount charged against Davis ; in the books "of their concern which would indicate, he said, that the , tire had been purchased by Davis through Nelson.- Holman said that : today was the first time he had ever heard of the purchase of the tire. Martin, on the other hand, said , that the books of the county treasurer con- '( Concluded on Ptce Thirteen. Column tmr Secretary Daniels ' . Coming to Coast Washington,: July 19, (U.PO Sec retary. Daniels said today he expects to leave Washington for the Pacific coast about August 1, arriving in San Diego August to 'meet the Pacific fleet, ' which Is due the -morning of August 1. The president. It Is under stood, will arrange to be on the Pa cific coast in mid-August and probably will review the fleet in San Francisco; THE SUNDA Y: ' The Complete Home Newspaper of the Oregon Country. What it'offers you: ! -i Constructive 'editorial comment, ," . ( All of the news from home and abroad. - ' "Sports news from airfields.. " Real estate and-building news and reviews. . ' Competent chronicle, of markets, finance and marine. . Drama and photoplay, developments-invitingly presented. ' , r Informing and helpful automobile comment. , , News of. the summer resorts and the great outdoors. Happenings of. the week In society and women's clubs, , What U new In realm of music, r ' , , , 4 ' Fraternal news and gossip. . , T ' Activities In labor circles. " s - . Features from many fields. , v' The best newspaper magazine. published. - ,j-X comic section that challenges comparison. r - - " ' All sections" -carefully arranged for reader's , . i ' - convenience, and , attractively l.lustrated. FIRST IN QUALITY FEATURES-SEI? FG J-.'-YOURSELF-TO:.:0?aUOV H f "x Six of World's Most- Powerful 'Dreadnoughts 23 Destroyers, Lead' Grand Naval Procession. First of Aggregation of 200 Wcr Craft to Guard Coast Depart Unattended by Any Ceremony. . Newport News, ; Va July 19. (I. N. S.) -The proudest ships of tha mighty fleet which ' henceforth will guard -our Pacific shores sailed out of Hampton Roads today, bound on the Ipng Journey to home waters. - Six of the most powerful super dreadnoughts In. the world, 23 de stroyers and three supply ships formed the naval procession which left , at full tide today, under com mand of Admiral Hugh 'Rodman. But before' the fleet passes through the4 Panama canal and begins moving- northward in the Pacific prob ably 50 ships will be in line. From every port on the Atlantic son board fighting craft of the American navy will meet up with the main fleet. Others will travel along and within six weeks or two months . there will be massed along the California, Washing ton and Oregon : coast - line nearly 200 war 'craft of every description a fleet which will remain permanently in then waters and provide absolute protection for" every: exposed spot along the Pa cific coast. i.sNoi : salvo of - cannon from the' hore batteries at Fortress Monroe marked the departure of ' the fleet 1 today ; no tu multuous, farewell was blasted by har bor craft. There was, strangely enougrh. In the sailing away of the fleet a cer tain solemnity and grimness unusual for peacs .times. :. - Shortly before :30 a. m. the M.t for departure was flashed from Mltlp to ship, and at one- there was feverish ac tivity. , Anchors were weighed; the crhfts made shipshape for the long voya:e. . Four, destroyers, - moving aUicast, started out of the roadstead to the fa. When the- New Mexico, flagship of the fleet, ihe greatest ship in the navy, per- (Conchidcd on Pr Tw, Column On FRUIT M DECiiV SHKIIIT m ' aspeiSMpaBSHMSBBSSSBBSSsaBSBBsMseSBMI - Dealer Claims Undue Effort Made in New Tariff to Placo - Burden on Entire Industry. With a review of the history of perishable ; freight shipments oris-, inatlng. in the Northwest, and with sweeping objections to proposed widespread changes in the-charges fruit and other freight have to bear, J Curtis Robinson, traffic manager of the. Northwest Fruit Exchange of Seattle, entered valuable testimony in the interstate commerce commis sion ..hearing on. perishable ' freight tariffs late this morning. Robinson, who presented a great col lection of exhibits covering the pattt snd present status of perishable freight rates, is one of the last witnesses for northwestern fruit growera and uhippcrs In the cae that is expected .to cauwe the - Interstate commerce commission to prevent radical Increases In freight costs proposed by the railroad adminix tratlon for the benefit of the Paciflo Fruit express and others That the hearinc will be concluded this afternoon is the opinion of thone conducting the ease. Technical testi mony on freight rate charges. Includ ing the expenise of Icing, heating on.l hauling perishable freight, such as fruit, will be submitted in scores of exhibit prepared by the several different per sons and. groups endeavoring to thwart the rail administration's new and rad ical tariff schedules. , .- The first witness for growers r.d Cooelodcd m Page BrcnUn, Column Eiabt) JO U RNA L fi B . I?" " "n" 6-Lll 1 - l: fpi irp.ir.fr"