C, T A1 r A iv ,St? jeSI fctt Jk ftS&ialfcVs? &4b4 3A-?A V T aa-taaeaaasassssssssssssssssssss tfpiV' --''ftrfLXr ' iTvylQKSJ li- I-1 city editionFJ r ' VJI ;( vf .1 JkX Jf " VKSSBiiS-X V-"- FlvJL Lr'v' " "IW r A1 - THE -WKATHER--Tortiah.tr and - idy, - ; . VY iV)V,V Sl.V'V-'xV ''y-SXSn''S0mK i ' jT-NSt fFtI'' cioaJ'; ttnaetUedjeasterly wind. v . ? . V . - Jr t -t ; V6"-y Ay VVVO'V-----V"V: ' 7 ? " V - - Maximum1 temperature Wednesday: S. rial .agaTi-'. WINLT - jT'- ' -7 T CY'- V ' .Portland . .i.,.. M Nw OrlcaS. ...T. . CITY EDITION If All timrm and If s All True GAT AMY OOURAUD Broiled when her foster daughter vamped bar. husband, but I a Turk for a son-in-law mad br rasp. Th stnryls one of tba entertaining tea-' turea in Th SunJay Journal magaxine. VOL. XX. NO. '206. , at rartotfka, . PorUaad, Ortsoa PORTLAND, OREGON, THURS DAY EVENING, t NOVEMBER i 3, 192L WENtVIfOUR ; PAGES. ' '' PRICE TWO CENTS ? cm waisJg otw ' - .- V- J.i aTAMDS riVK CtMTS Y PARLEY mav An much A f-v.' dispel many f old ; V" which are held about aims of .By David Lawrence- Oitiirliht. ItSl. kJ Tfc Joareal) . ! (la thai, tha foarta a of algtir in- .w. 4lmh4m wiaa tli fMdcr a mci- kim wcf H. UUa h CWaa ta a ta tarulloaal prytkia.1 , 1 , Washington. Nov. . China h aJwaya . bacn si problem common to tha alx reat powarf-Ortat BrtUln. United 8Ut, Crmny. Japan. RuaaJa and Ftanc. ' Tim and aala efforts hava bn made ta float -tlx-powsa loans or flve-pbvrer kwoa among banklnr fteupa of alt the major countrlM In an tffart ta help put Chlaa on her feet. ' Uttl by Uttle the nation of th world Hare been encroach In m her domain. .Her undeveloped re sources hive bn temptlnf to tha alart baalaaas man of othar countries. Conceariona hava been obtained in aU aorta-of waye from the helpless covern mont which In recrnt gtnerattbng has really had no strong; central government, but baa moved along with curloua indlf . ferenc as local govarnmenta ' and pro lnrlal authorities hava sprung up with in tha immense empire. 4 ' KAItWATB IMPORTANT Th poaaasston of railways means a great deal to the nation which owns and eperalaa them in China. It lnaurs c caa to the mlna of the Interior for the bringing out of valuable freights. . Brit. Uh, Amerkan and German capital have Keen content to develop railway enter prises without assuming to obtain, polit ical control for their respective govern. ments of any territory In China. The much-talked-of province of, Hhantung. ith us , Immense territory, wae never , reeled to Japan at the Paris peac con. ferenc. put the port, which Irf practically the door to Hhanluhg province was gtvan Japan. -as wall as. Jurisdiction over' th railway to the interior. Including a SO mil strls) on esrh side , of the railway. It la true the Germans .had that very ricbt and Japan waa asking only for that which Germany had forfeited through her defeat .In the war. Japan waa ask- ' In for thoa richla aa her reward for ousting the Germans from Klachow and the Tut. KasU C It IX A PKABS JAFAW But that brought the rub. Would the Japanea be content to operate aa tha German hadT Indeed, th Oermw en tered Into working agreements With Brit ish and other European buatnesa ma th th r Bast. . It waa purely a commer cial, not a political, propoaitlon. ; Would . the 4a panes keep It commercial or baa U to pehetrata China politically and get s hold r the administratlv tndepend esiOf China? 9' v---vi-t ( The Chinese thought ao. They openly said fOm , That's. the basla for their op. posltloir lo Japan's acquisition of one iiv a mar of e. foothold in China- If s a cmestlon of faith, f Urtist or suspicion. Th Jupancs .protest .that theynaver break their word j that-they have only disinterested motives snd seek merely a place for commercial expansion for their (toavluded en- Pass Two. Column Om) PEGGY AND JOYCE NEAR SETTLEMENT Chicago. Ko. I. IV. P.) Peggy Hop kins Joyce, former Follies beauty, and her mUllonalr lumberman husband to day were, hear agreement for settlement of their marital and financial dlffJ tultlfj out of court. S Reports In some quarters were that air agreement had been reached allowing Peggy to retain tho II.I9I.IW.I2-worth ; of gifts which Joyce gav her from ' August I. -ltl, to th time of their ' separation. ' Weymouth Klrkland. attorney for Mrs. Joyce. Intimated tho negotiations were near conclusion, but refused Jo confirm the report that an agreement! had boon reached. i . ' Id return for allowing her -to keep the expensive) gifts. Peggy IS understood to have agreed to permit Joyce's ault for annulment of tha marriage, which cornea up for hearing before Judge Joseph aabath on Tuesday. Th hearing, according to the) agree ment, will b only perfunctory and an annulment will b entered by th court Peggy- will not hava to appear. - At present loyo la paying Peggy tllte a month temporary alimony and baa given her 1 10,000 attorney fees. . .Rumors connect Peggy's name with that of a wealthy son of a Parts banker la can, her marriage with Joyce Is aa- nulled. ., . . Labor Federation Opposed: to Mine : J Strike at Present IB rsited w) Washington, Nov. t American Fed. ration of Labor officer win calst tho calling of nnauthortaeid minora strikes at thla tim. It, la Indicated In high Quar-tera.- . f i . , Th time, according' to thos In a po sition to knw the attitude of federa. lion officials. 1 Is not ripe. - Later, how ever, per hap even kef or the expiration Urn of tberpreaent national, agreement among miners and employers, a strike la Inevitable 1n tha Industry, and when that time cornea between S&u,Qflo and 4W.0O0 man will go out. It la predicted. ' - ' . Th national agree merit expire In March.", . ", . t i JAPAN Five Dead in Clash t Of Jews and .Arabs .. -fi. , . London. Kov. JL (L N. --Fou' Jews ' and on Arab were .killed, by .a bomb . during an outbreak Of violence In Jero- salm.aald a Na-Agency dlrpatch from that city today. . Ill fbas between Jew and Arab nav kd to numerous cUh- ; - -,'.'. ' BEEBE BOUND OVER IN LINN DEATH CASES Prisoner Breaks Down and Weeps When First Degree Charges ' Are Read, Saying, "I Didn't Do It"; No Bail Is Permitted. By Wallare C. Eakla Jorar Coneepondent Albany, Or.. Nov. J. pete Beebe. charged with first degree murder for the alleged killing of his employer, John rainter, and Painter's son. William, Oc tober 1), was bound over to the grand jury without bail at a preliminary bear ing here this morning. When Beebe heard the complaints read he cried out. "I didn't do It" ' Then he turned in his chair, put his. arm on the 'back and hi head on ; his krwu sobbing violently. He maintained thla position throughout the hearing, which lasted nearly an hour. Former. District Attorney Gale S. Hill waa appointed to defend him. The court set 120,000 as the amount of bonds but as under the charge made no bonds can be allowed this wss changed. Tho grand jury is scheduled to. meet during the last week of November. None bf Beebe's relatives waa at the hearing. Sheriff Kendall waa the only witness. WKPT .MOST Or NIGHT The hearing waa held before Justice of th Peace Victor Oliver. Sheriff Kendall produced the gun with which it ta alleged the two men were killed on the Painter (arm near Lacomb. He tes tified that he found one empty shell and one loaded shell In the revolver, which showed evidence of having been used. Jailers said Beebe' slept little during the night.: spending almost the entire night weeping. After the hearing today he waa returned to the jail and ; de clined to talk on th advice of Attorney Hill.. -?': :. " Sheriff Kendall returned to the scene of . th , murder Wednesday to', net the Jl .calibre revolver with which tho Painters wer s.iJtd October 19. : Fol lowing ' directions given them' by Pete Beebe. he found tho. gun-in the Painter granary, awhile at th. Painter: place. Sheriff Kendall gave the cabin a more thorough search and found in the wall t U),buildlnr - nark-that' might nav been, mad by, a deflected bullet; r This discovery was believed, to confirm, the suspicion that the" elder Painter bxd been 'Shot while In the ta.bn . . . . Further' thait th acd'ulslUon of lhfor-j matioa' concerning, Beebe'a Itahlts the aherltf . bbtatned ; no' Information that would -unfold the death atory. En route back to. Albany the sheriff called at tha Beebe farm and Instructed the accused young man's father and brother ta come to Albany.- - They fol lowed Immediately, and wlllinrly. Neith er had been Informed of the tragedy. aocoruing to their word, and neither sought to learn from the officials the caua of their being called to Albany. xneyv eaid . they . had. been near the Painter homo Tuesday, October 18, the day beforo tho murder, but had noticed nothing to excite suspicion. Th pur pos of their visit waa to meet Pete, who vaa en route to Lebanon, they said, and their mission did not require them to go as far as the Painter place. ALLOWED TO GO HOME On Thursday, after Pete had taken tha Painter team to his father's homo. Oeorg 'Beeb accompanied his brother back aa far as the gat on , th Painter piacc, no saia, put did not go near the cene of the murder. After being ques tioned a to minor details that might aid the state's case, the officials allowed Carson and George Beebe to go home. They confirmed th prisoner's state ment that he had been blind and that he had partially regained his sight The eider oeeoe aiso remarked that, hla son u a. good marksman with a shotgun. i-ituourg. Fa.. Nov. 1. (L N. S.) Thirteen nun asleep on the second floor of 8t James convent In the west end here. -escaped death early today when Ihey fled through smoke filled corridors. Several of th nuna were assisted to safety by firemen.- An unknown person who discovered tho fir fired three shots and attracted tho attention of one of mo nuna to the bias. , Armistice Day Made Municipal Holiday Armistice day hereafter will be a legal aoiiaay in th city of Portland. The usual eminence declaring the. da v a holiday for city employes, with the ex ception or inoajo.tn th fir and police department, waa brought before the council at the meeting Wednesday after noon.--At the suggestion of Mayor Baker the ordinance waa 'amended to ma lie th day a legal holhiy. it was unanunouaiy adopted.- Three Workers Are Caught in Cave-in OeveUnd. Ndv. . LN. a ) Three workmen were reported buried alive when debrta at tho riew public audito rium on sixth street caved in ' this morning, carrying th workers, with it Follow workmen were attempting to rescu mem, wall - doctors wita - pul motors were rusnea to the seen. - 13 NUNS RESCUED Capta in and Hootch Slip Off a t Sea (Br Eni venal hnisl New fork, Nov. I. To ho, ho and a bottle of rum." t - With 11.000 bottles of good sea-going sea whiskey on her manifest 'the Brit ish windjammer J. B. Young in charge cf Mate Leon Mangoy, who couldn't navigate, slipped Into port today. It's a sad tale, mates, but a true one. The schooner waa jibing and filling off the Jersey shore today with no one at the wheel ivhen a pilot boat went out snd brought her up. The first news the mate had to give, on landing was that while he was supposed t have '1300 cases of hootch in the hold, he was shy 1H0 cases. He was also shy his cao- tain. who had taken a small boat and departed into the mist while the schoon er was somewhere off the Long Island shore. - Whether the 1000 cases of "whiskey disappeared with- the captain, the mate didn't say, although he did say that he had a tale to tell the British consul of mysterious doings at sea that would make that worthy's blood run cold. ' '' After his captain's desertion Mangoy said that not being able to navigate, he had drifted around the Atlantic until t'-.c Navesink loomed and the pilot boat look him in tow. The J. B. Toung was bound from St. P;erre to Nassau and is owned by. J. B. Smith of the latter port Two holdups around 5 o'clock thi; morning brought out a ha,lf dosen. uni formed police under Captain Harms and two plainclothesmen who scoured the neighborhood without finding 'any trace of the bandits. While William Riley was milking his cows, a bandit entered his house - a Forty-first avenue southeast and Elfhty second streM, and forced Mrs. Riley to hand over "several dollars which were cached in a sideboard While police were searching the neigh borhood, another call came from a home on 118th street, reporting a similar rob bery. Police believe the nam bandit committed both.- The man w ho entered the- Riley" home was described by Mrs. Riley as beine about 29 yearn trfd.'i five feet four' Inches tall and weighing 129- pounds. She said he wore over 4ho lower, part of .his face a : dirty whiter handkerchief. He ear; ried a black revolver and a flashlight 'Wrecked' m;Eiot J Over Dice Game Kansas CJity. Nov. 3.(1 A rloV which raged for' nearly two hours between convention visitors, : hoodlums and police badly wrecked the beautiful lobby of the Hotel Baltimore here early oaay. The fighting began when officers at tempted ,to -break up a crap game on the lobby floor. Over 100 DOlica were called ' and charged Into the fia-htlns- mob'-which surged back and forth In tho lobby. More than 100 shots were fired before the lobby could be cleared. The majority of the rioters were cltv hoodlums, well known to the do lie. Thev had been "running gaVnea" to fleece American Legion convention visitors for three days, the police . stated. Twenty-five officers responded to. the rirst not call, but were unable to gain entrance do the lobby. Another riot call brought all police available. The "offi cers cleared the lobby, after mirrors. glass and furniture had been broken, and fighting- was then resumed In the street Boards torn from a nearby fence around a -partially constructed building were used aa . weapons by tha. rioters. i;. A check up after the rioting showed that over a score of policemen were suffering from bruises. N arrests were made. , .r .. . Two: Men, Thought : Camorra Members, Held for Big Theft New Tork; Nov. (U. P.) Tho hand of tho Camorra, stretching across the Atlantic to guW a gang of International gunmen In this country, was today said to be behind th 1&.000.000 mall robbery hero October 21. .Two' men wer today locked up In Jersey City, suspected of connection with tho -robbery..' They are Italians with criminal records. r -. Michael Arbesl. alias Rafael de Rosa, and JTrank Calabrcae, suspected of being tools of tho Camorra. were held in S50.000 bail each. . e- .. x ..... : Drop in Bread Price "Benefits Consumers . . , : : : ' ; - - -. ' . Consumers will get the "benefit of the cut in -price on tho larger loaves of bread, according to announcement of retailers today. Th price of the 1 poand loaf remain at 10 cents to the consumer, but' tha -pound aix wCl bo dropped from ' IS to, ltcenta. "Two pound toave are not generally handled In retail trad. - Grocers and other re UUera buy the lVk-Pound loaf from bak ers for .11 ( cents under the now price schadule. a " .i v : , - i. , .. . . UoMdierof Italy, Paid; Homage v .j ' '".' ??.' e- ; Rome. Not.j J. L K. 8.) Thousands of reverent men and' women paid h om asa today. to" Italy'a unknown warrior, who will b Interred -with royal honors Friday. Th body arrived from th lson so battlefield yesterday and since then baa been lying in state In tho church of Santa; Maria Degll Angilt Tomorrow It will be buried under Victor Emanuel's monument, "the altar of tho nation." ; HELD UP hN HOMES IKE PARLEY ALL LINES IN ToRTHCUrTE SrATES Upon Secret or Open Sessions Depends Failure or Success of ! Arms- Conference, Publisher Tells Guests at Tokio Dinner. 1 By Clarence Daboe Tokio,- Nov. 3. (U. P.) Lord North-' cliffe, ;am,ous British, publisher, advo cated full publicity for the sessions of the Washington conference "on limitation of armaments here today, addressing a dinner given him by newspaper pub lishers. Later in an exclusive Interview with the United Press he declared the Anglo-Japanese alliance had "outlived its usefulness," and that sentiment is againgt its continuance, He then touched on the Irish question, declaring that if De Valera represents the ma jority2 opinion in Ireland, then Ireland is "asking for-trouble." DEPENDS OS FRIENDSHIP "Whether the Washington conference means peace or ultimately war," Lord Northcliffe declared, addressing the dinner given in his honor, "depends greatly en whether it holds secret or open sessions. "It is of exceeding importance to the world's welfare that the fullest publicity be given." There is no solution of the Pacific problems, he said, which is not' based on Anglo-American friendships For that reason. Lord Northcliffe told his hearers, the Anglo-Japanese alliance is the dominating factor in preventing a settlement of Pacific problems because It places the United States definitely out of consideration. a -.: Elaborating his views later in an in terview with the United Press, Lord Xorthcliffe declared: . "I have not met any Englishmen or Americans in Japan who disagree with (Concluded oa l'a Two. Column Seren) - HIS MUS - 'v , By Frater Edwards Washington, Nov. 3. Senator -Tom Watson. Georgia, launched into a bitter attack upon senators who criticised him for his charges that American soldiers were hangeS wllhout trial in .France when the senate convened today.; ' The Georgian reiterated his charges and declared that he could substantiate every word that he uttered. Watson presented a newspaper which he said contained a picture of the hang ing of an American soldier and asked that it be printed in the Congressional Record. Watson then sent to the desk a letter from an ex-fervice man in Philadelphia, which stated that he had a photograph of a scaffold upon which two negro sol diers were hanged in Prance. . The writer stated that the soldiers en camped nearby, had been invited to at tend the hanging. Senator Moses (R N. H.) objected to Senator Watson introducing two photo graphs he had said he had Just received from one of his correspondents, on he alleged would show "an American - sol dier dying on the gallows"; the other he claimed was "another American sol dier being prepared for death." "I consider the objection of the senator from New Hampshire a very cowardly one." Watson shouted. "I - demand that he apologize to me for- the insulting attitude he has as sumed toward me." Senator' Moses resumed his seat with out making- any response. Foch and Pershing '.Capture1 St. Louis; Ovation Extended St. Louis, Nov. 3. L a) Tho "center city waa captured early today by Marshal Ferdinand Foch of France and a coterie of other notables, tncludinc General John J. Pershinc, Missouri's most noted eon. Smilinjr, though obviously weary from half a dozen daya 6f "being: received," the noted visitors alighted from a special train, which brought them hero from Kansas City, where they had attended tha third annual convention of the Amer ican Legion. . :,- . ' . " Notes of bands and rousing cheers from throats of eager thousands greeted . the Party. Bill Opens Alaska Land for Homestead Washington. Nov. S.(I. JC. S.) A bill authorising tho opening .of COO.OOO acres of land in Alaska for homestead fmrposes passed tho house late today. The land is now classified as coal land. but it is regarded as land valuable for farming purposes. . . Victory 4 34 Bonds. ' Are Selling at Par New York. Nov. . U. P.) Victory 4 bonds sold at par today. Shortly after noon 309 worth of that issue sold at 100. pp 40 cents. .The record for this bond Is 1.4 and the lowest price is WATSON ATTACKS Reductions Sought Run From 20 to 60 Per Cent and Include Nearly rEvery Article Which Is Used in Average Household. Proposal hag been made by all trans continental lines to reduce railroad rates from 20 to 80 per cent on hundreds of commodities moving east and westbound and in and out of the port,: according to advice received by local railroad offi ces today from the 'transcontinental freight bureau' at Chicago. The reductions have been proposed to meet water competition via the Panama canal and - represent many weeks of work by railroad traffic managers at Chicago. , Copies 'of the list of reductions have been received by the traffic departments of the Union Pacific and Southern Pa cific systems. Included In the list of reductions are many proposed on the most important commodities such as 'lumber, canned goods, fruit and steel and iron. . Many of the proposed west bound rates are dependent upon-whether the railroad lines obtain relief from section 4 of the interstate commerce act Hearings are soon to be obtained 'on this application tor relief. .. On the east bound rates some of those proposed for carrying articles east of Chicago are dependent on concurrence or fjastern railroads. Te; list of more important reductions ou cast-bound movements follow : Commodity. " Prnent Kite. Proposed Bits. Fruit and Teaetable waste f 1.25 H t 0 Frozen meiU . (for eait- ' era ports) "3. S3 I 2.$0 Strained hone; (all ett- ern territory ) t.ti 1 IS Machine campreawd bops 2.92 2 30 Pickled berrins (.Chicago and wrat) 1.08 .85 Canned saeds leaatern Canada). $1.31.1.21 Banal cam and coffin stock. (Chieaao. wet . 1.92 " .8 Infusorial earth N. Y- r- - and Piitshurr territory) 1.00 .43 Lumber (for piano aound boards ICturaso,. wot) ..SH r "A .. , We: Rate msec i . Wooden plan snd roller end (Chieaao i and nesti . . . jv . i -. .-. . ; v . ,:. . .$1 00 Comb ben): " i . . ; i 3.7S GiroLlal erctna MTitrmco and not) , . 3.S6 4 Wpgjw Mil , :ftrt jJ . wm I , ,:. . -1.00 f ."Ht0, .fie giorV Atlantl Ceart I i tmroodjtj. - Preaeajt TUtea. Propoaed Rates. Ream (dried) . t . . . 0.B5 H te-.. . SO.SO . Canned srtotU i .$O.SS J ' .80 tTMd frna (boxea) . . , l.0 os Dried fnait (aan.-n .... 1.30 - 1.15 i . . WrealbeuBd lte .1 Comuodits. - Present Hates. . Propoeed Bates. Simp, molasses and slaeoae (NewaTort) . . S1.S2 $t.S lln ' and , teme , plate inUatmn) .-.'-.. 1.8SH , 1.2 Packing bouse product . . Missouri river rats for , , W Pi. - n uioow giaas ; iwew Tork 1.30 1.4i Stare (Chicaav "west l.Ma ura ana 1 cooavoa . oil (Xew VAV ,.-. 2.60 ' i.ee Iron ; itore pipe (New Trk) . ..l....v. ". i- 1.40 Pianos-(Xew-Tort .... . 4.43 8.92 H&idwood lumber (Chi- caso) . ........... 1.08 .i sn Leather (New Tork). 2.8SH 2.10 Turpentine (Sew Tort) 2.86 1.75 Refriceratara and ceol- ! mg materials (X T.)... 2 83 H 2.00 ' . New Mum PrmwiS Tires and tutbea 32.73 Pitch and tar (Cincinnati and IWtmit) i sa Hog (in double dedt from Sioux City) . l!42 -newin ...'........,.... t.50 Rates t terminab only subject to fourth aee tion relief. - . . . , Imsort Rata ComnMditif. - Present Bates. Pmnauwl Rt. Graphite . . .-. . . . ..$1.42 l.oe Reaaa . .. ........ . 1.2SH - ' , 1.0& Irj comb 2.6 S 2.20 Crada rubber 1.00 .73 Hardwood lumber ....i ...... .90 Ton 3 es , 3JTS Caaert JUtaa ' Commodity. Preaeat Bates. Propoeed Rates. Aoto parts and trac tors . t a 2.00 Steel rails (eaat of Chi- .SOcwt. lS.4Sar.ton. 8teel rails Chicago and Birminshamt . . .71 ewL 13.44 mr Arm Cast iron pipt( east of fJBicaeo) RO .fifl Car wheel ......... .71. Piano 3.40 3 no Iran and steel (east of ctiicaro) 80 fift All commodities (Cfai- caca and west) .... 5.00 1.5A Cheat and slate 80 .SB Railroad equipment (eaat. of Chicaso)... 87 .6? Booth-KeUy Mill , At Springfield to Reopen December ! , i Eugene Or'., Nov. t. The Booth-Kelly Lumber company mill at Springfield will be reopened December 1, according to announcement of A. C. Dixon, manager. today. The mill will operate with a nor mal crew and at normal capacity for eight "hours, which means a cut of 165; 000 feet. . - ;- .-i I This will mean daily employment for 17" men and will yeliev the unemploy ment situation to a great extent here. If market conditions permit, the - com pany will resume logging operations about January 1, and they hope to be able to atart th Wendllng mill at that tim or soon thereafter. 4 120,000 Eeservists i Galled by Spain in Tight Against Moors : Madrid. Nor. 3. (L N. S.) One hun dred and - twenty thooaaad : Spanish rev seiprlsts of the 1S21 class have been called to the color and today 20,000 vere allo cated to aervtc against the rebellioua Moors - in -Morocco. - This brings the strength or the Spanish army In Morocco to more than 150,000 men.- ; . . .-.i . i The Spanish advance toward the Kert river has been checked by Kebal trtbeev men, but tho Spaniard have captured Taxudu on another sector of th frost; This place was taken after a- stubborn resistance, and the Spanish ad aan in that district continues. : -( . . WITNESSES IN CLJI0( "Maze of Contradictory Evidence Stamps Courtj Accused Lad Given to Parents fending More Inquiry in Juvenile Tragedy. Chehalis, Wash, Nov. J.-(C P.) Judge W. A Reynolds oda'y remanded Herbert Coleman. 6-year-old slayer of Lynn Peters, 9, to the custody' of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Coleman, pending further investigation At the conclusion of the two days' hearings during which 20 witnesses were called, the judge said both sides had so exaggerated the facts that he was un able to get anywhere. He j ordered Mrs. Amanda William. Lewis county probation officer, to go 'to Randle where the shooting occurred and make a personal investigation of affairs. Mrs. Williams is to obtain a written re-! port to the court. .HAT TAKE WEEK "It might take a week ; It might take all winter." said Judge Reynolds. "I shall j withhold my decision until2 Mrs. Williams reports." "My mind is made up." It was the calm. deliberate voice of John Peters, father of five stalwart eons, who came to town out of the Big Bottom country east of here with his youngest lad's dying words burning in his memory: "Papa, you must do something about this or he will kill some other boys-", I have made up my mind." said Peters. 'What the judge says will he final.: I shall bear no erudae in mv heart against the boy that shot my little boy ana I have drilled my other boys to abide by what the court decides, and keep their, heads." If the .lad is found delinquent and the cause of the shooting was Herbert's en- r vtronment, the Judge must further de cide whether he should be. removed from that environment and. If ao. whether he F'shouM be sent to a state institution for boya or- paroled to some good family. ' - i Judge Reynold brought .4o tight that Herbert bad. in times past pointed guns and snapped them at other., people and once threatened anOthee boy. 5 ; QCABREt IS CLAIMED , Boy. witneaaes testified iat the quar rel .which ended rlth th Peters boy's death started .several days- before when Herbert accused Lynn - of stealings a couple of tin cans from th ptayhous of Herbert and hi S-year-old sister; Aether.- .- : - - K4die . McNee and t Dwain Hampton told of Herbert's 'threat- to shoot Lynn and of the shooting. Thelr stories dif fered alightly, Kddie aaylngr frequefitly "I don't think he-Intended to do lf - Kddie said he had accompanied Lynn and Dwain into the Coleman house to see the gun of whjch Herbert boasted, that they 1 were ,11 looking -at it 'and that it went ofL Dwaln's teetimony was that they had followed Herbert into the house to see a squirrel gun and that Herbert had confronted them with a shotgun which he fired atr Lynn and then hifL - -BOTS !JTITf G STORY , Dwain's version is said to coincide with the dying boy's statement to his fatherland to Joe Hatfield en route to the hospital .Hatfield and John P.eters both re lated the dying boy's story to the court I wiil show," said Attorney Thacker. "that when Lynn and the other boys followed Herbert Into the house to see the gun, none of them thought it .was loaded , and that Lynn - asked Herbert to snap it!" Herbert and. his mother came out of the courtroom once yesterday afternoon. The little boy looked whit and fright ened and Mrs. Coleman seemed on the verge off tears. J . Some j of the witnesses say the Cole man boy was showing other boys a .22 rifle and made tho remark that be had a larger gun in the house. One of the visitingi boys asked him to get It, they say, and he picked up the shotgun. They assert one of th boys said. "Snap it," which be did. Toung Peters was in line with the gun, according - to these witnesses. ' ' ' : ' Halsey .Man. Wins Auto Licensed, 1 In Salein Drawing ' Salens. Nov. 3. James A. Stevenson of Halsey, Linn 'county, drew . automo bile license tag number one ' for the year 1922 in the annual drawing con ducted by Secretary of Stat Koser, Wednesday night. N. A Erlckson. of The Dalles drew '- number two and Howard A. Weed of Beaverton number three. Others among the first 1Q are R. V. Davis, Union, fourth ; J. C. Gor don. Vale, fifth; M- D. Z wight, ISWi. dale, sixth; Louis Levinger, Baker, sev enth ; , i Senator L L.' Patterson, Eola. eighth ; R. S. Vancleve, Toledo, ninth, and Paul R. Kelty, Portland, tenth. " Number 13 goes to R a Lewis of Echo, and John . Baker of . Hood Bivef gets number 23. while number 100 goes to Harley J, Curl of Corrallia. : Approximately 1500 applications have been .received to date. Secretary of State Koser . estimates the 1322 applications at 130,000. .v ,.. Portland Soldier Is ' rBuried in lington ' , J - 'Washington, Nov. 3. (WASHING TON BCRfAO OF'THE JOURNAL.) Among soldiers who died overseas and were buried tn Arlington National ceme tery - today, was Arthur E. Beebe . of Portland, machine gunner, - dead from wounds in action, 'His nearest relativ la Mrs. William Beebe of PorUaad-, and Roy A. White of I:d Infantry. Centra- STIRvRADIGALS NICOLA SACCO (above; ; and 7Bart;;Vantti;;con- , Victedc of murtleritiffa paymaster at Dedhasu MasSn and whose case Has been .taken up by radicals j all A over the world. VTwo attempts V have been made to . kill American representatives abroad, by theirt sympathizers.-; " v - waSsrSssaf- I'ELRY BAT 1 ri Sa, Paul. Minn., Nov: "i.-iV. P.) Two bandits robbed, tho A. U Shapiro & Sons Jewelry 'store .of .S,000 worth'" of diam onds here' today and escaped! r . 27. Million More for Navy, Harding's Plea Washington, f.Noy.j 2.--U. P j--Preal- dent Harding .today asked congress for addiUonalt deflpienity; appropriaUon ) of $137,92J,-877.74 ta. meet government ex pense .during -the -present - fiscal year, which ends June 30 next : With the arms limitation -conference nearlng, the pres ident asked an additional appropriation of T27, 000.000 for" the anny department. Poleseslgife . Action jRiots Menace Berlin,' Nov: 3.-LN." S. Fresh trou bles were threatened in 'Upper-ileiia to day. According to advice from Beuthen. a'oiisn residents of ihe. province. -dissatisfied with the decision of the League of Nations, plan rlota and demonstrations In favor of extending, the .Polish boun dary, to the Odor river. '- . ff-- ... t t t. . i v - X A , . f v 1 - s-. . ! .w'.!-r 1 i i "I I ' ' J ; r 0' A'; ri i r .-v- mnn nnn oltAi wulJu CHlU3d3rac:er,a'dc-.5"ia the Far Zlz t j -frc i other vHI ti a feature c! Tl.; C. v I ial next Suniiy. fz- 5"- Inland JZ Zrzith cl VctiLzr.i, r.:: 13 ZJ -Trench IcdD-Chir.a izrw-rds his i-r.rv--!: 'z cl C Vin alcttcf fron-i IIoti'tLcr.-r. - -Zealand ia a -chatty l:rr, JIubert.G. Ccher.ck ct -writes frcr.i Ciirtcn U's irr interior cf CI In 2, r--Frefrri:'! ITcCcr-rick cTcscres in 1x7--- f ' -what he s-'.v In tl- jSifcri;a jrcvir-:a cl C::.-i:::r.. "Paul S- Reinsch, former United States r.L-,!i;r t - China;- dcu::s-'the 2ttcs-::-s c! the mrzlj.- Tfaess several artldrs, cn ccr.!' - -fJL WHEAT DROPS Lowest Mark in Fiv& Years - Reached When Price for De- ' " cember Cereal i Falls to." 99 Cents a Bushel; May Ga Lower . ' . ' ' ; -. S' Chicago.' Nov. 3. U. P.) Wheat sold today below a dollar a bushel on the Chicago board of trade the first time" in five years that it has reached that low mark. " ' - i,' The. "price was driven to 99- cents, 4 ket. It closed at that figure. Score of brokers made vain efforts to hold the, price above a dollar.4 - -- ." .; a hectic day of wUd trading ith mar- . If wheat Isn't Worth a dollar. It isn't worth i. dime a bushel." Or broker re marked early In .tha, day. to .the United Press, in; predicting -.it would never go that low. . j i - V ' -v " December, wheat, opened stronger-at $1.02, under support given by optim- . latic brokers. -r . - - , MILLERS TIRX THICK Millers were credited with driving down the price. . ' ?- Hundred ; of ' brokers and . traders watched the price. slowly driven down . until it reached the low level at noon.-; The price held at SLP03t for some timer' and brokers predicted that would be tha " low 'mark, but it finally broke through. James ' A. fPatten. grain king. , who ' made millions out . of the corner-in- th . corn market, waa among those on the side lines who watched the wheat pries go down. - "l haven't got a: nickel In the 'wheat market," Patten told the United Press correspondent aa together they watched . tho tape and saw tho steady decline. r ' - "I was afraid of'it." remarked 'the V man who by his operations on the com market had driven hundreds of trader to - the wall and : was once tho . moot feared trader in-the pit.'. J rREpiCTS FURTHER DROP. " , v t .-Wheat - wont top at . a: dollar," Tn predicted, "lt. will go down much fur- 'j Lther. ' ' .' 7?V ?-t '.-. ! fTher?; isn't -any consumptive demand, ( to . bolster ; up the market nothing to . hold n th orloe. -1 , - . - f -Eurofjeaa credit.-i ahot ao poor that -. w eannot look ,f oTan export demand -to bolster up the market ' - Farmers once regarded dollar a bushel'" wheat as an Ideal. Patten said. - . . - . I ' Tt 'waa-itnelr battla ery. but now, it doean't pay tne cost or growing.'7 - no added-:,v-ff-S; '-r. " ' w. . hi r," : .... ' . . WsTCAT fRICES OH LOCAL 3tARREt SHOW BIO DECLIKE , ' Portland: wheat bids' went down to IT ' cents a bushel for. the best, varieties r Thursday on (he Merchants Exchange.' This "means a loss of 3 to 3 cent ra bushel. for the day. '-- ". The new jtices are the lowest namej. , in this market for approximately jrix years and even at the' lower figure there is little desire on the part of buy- , ers to take hold. In addition to the minions of dollars, dropped last season by Portland M porters alone, this season's losses are said to be staggering even though defi- r nite figures are not . available. - Because of the lower prices that wheat -is available at in Canada aud i n Aus tralia, Japaneae buyers have been try, . lngr to resell wheat purchased here, ::-, . Train Kills Woman; Suicide Suspected - . Marshfield, Nov. ,3 Mrs. J.- B. JHlll. . aged . 8SV who resided at. Power, was killed when struck by ' a logging train at that place. Persons -who witnessed the accident think it was suicide, . Mrs. , Hllf stepped In front' of the train, and -put her - hands to her eyes. Th .. en-: . gineer blew the whistle but she did not' tnbvs.V. The train was coming " down' grade and efforts to stop failed before the engine and several car ran over the -woman. ..Mrs.; Hill's husband is said to be aa engineer In Nevada,; Se- had ' relatives at Powers . -'.' . ' . - 3 - - - - the UrJvtrc'.ty cf Cr--zi - rc: :r.s cf v. illuctmed fcya tt-?, srs i:n. it t..- . i i -i ' i I: ' wir' '-jfc--.-s' 'i. .'-'i..- - . jj -s - . I -ej -4 . i