CITY EDITION If All Here and tern All True SPORTS EVENTS the world over, yield their color to th sport pages of t he daily and Sunday editions of The Jour e nal. The ;fleld f i sports i covered completely -and entertainingly by a ' specialized staff for .The Journal sports ' ' pages. : ' - CITY EDITION jem All Here and If All Truk ' THE WKATHKR--Ckody tonight and i . Tuesday; variable winds. -i : Minimum temperatures Sunday: i Portland ...... .63New Orleans .. Focatello ..;.i..0!New York. .;....6S Ixs Angeles . .. S St. TPaul .... 84 VOL. XX. NO. 189; Entered Second-CIaa Mittxr M Poatsffica, Portiinri. Orasoa PORTLAND, OREGON, MONDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 16, 1922. EIGHTEEN PAGES WCICE TWOCENTS m;,:j2 V - Constabulary Backed by Republican State ticket' becomes While many Democrats -Fight to abolish it In Colorado -By David Lawrence- ; - (CopTrisht, J 922. The Journal) Denver. Colo., Oct 18. lw and order, which specifically means :the maintenance of a state constabulary. is ; the big issue which has split' J.??'-? :" the two old parties in Colorado and il- 1 drawn: a clearly f -V ' 1 defined hattleline . between conserva tives and radicals. Former United States Se n a t or Thomas, D e m o -' cirmt, and "Jvson t I n e s , another leading Democrat, are prime movers lit an organization 1 of- business and professional men who have indorsed the Republican candidate for gov ernor. Benjamin Griffith, because he favors the continuance of the policies of Governor Shoup, Republican, whose administration has been very popular, while .William E. Sweet, the Demo cratic nominee, not only wants he constabulary abolished, but favors the erection of state warehouses for farmers and other proposals ot the Non-rJartisan League of North Dakota fame. , LABOR FOR -SWEET Labor unions are ; fighting the con stabulary Idea and" are lined up fee hind Mr. Sweet. Democrat, -who, by the way, defeated the two-other Demo cratic aspirants for the nomination by an overwhelming vote in the pri maries. Th other candidates were conservatives and much of their fol lowing will naturally-gravitate to the Republican ticket. It Is natural to- find the friction between capital and labor a deeply Imbedded circumstance in the politics of , Colorado'. This 1s the state whose memories of labor warfare, with its tragedies of Cripple Creek and 'ILud low, are still vivid.' Colorado, too. has been a pioneer in what has since developed into the Henry Allen idea of an industrial court. Back in 1915 the legislature passed an act creating an Industrial commission. ' There can be no strike or lockout "save on 30 days' notice, and the dispute must be submitted to the commission first for mediation.- It is. not compulsory arbi tration: as provided ' by the Kansas plan, -but there have been a labor troubles of consequence since the In dustrial commission began to function. COMMISSION SrCCEEDS f , The secret of th commission's suc cess Is its personnel. It -consists of three men a representative of labor, a business man and a lawyer. They do not sit as representatives of a class, but as disinterested mediators: They are respected because of their impartiality. One of the difficulties about ' the labor problem everywhere is the pro tection of hen who are willing to work In the place of strikers. Colo rado doesn't feel it has absolutely prevented strikes , or lockouts; even though the danger of them has been reduced to a minimum. Labor evi- ( Concluded m Face Two, Column Two) HOLDS UP TRAFFIC Traffic over the Morrison, Hawthorne and Burnside bridges became so badly tangled Ahis morning that many east ouie residents were delayed upward of an hour-in getting to the west side. The difficulty was precipitated by the repairing of the Morrison bridge in the driving of piling at the Morrison street draw Span, which was closed for 45 minutes between 8 and 9 o"clock. 'The first closed period was between 8 and 8:20 o'clock and the second from t :30 to 9 o'clock. Some of the streetcars caught in ftie first closfng were unable to get through the Jam before the draw was closed again and the automobiles in their effort to turn back to another, bridge crossing succeeded in tangling traffic so badly that it became al most immovable at Hawthorne and Burnside bridges. Bear Helps Himself In Ckmp Kitchen; Cleaver Kills Him Astoria. Oct. 16. When Frank Todd, cook at the camp of the Saddle Moun tain Logging: company, 'entered the cook shack at daylight this morning to start a fire and prepare breakfast for the crew, he discovered a large black bear had taken possession of the place. - Summoning i several of the men, he led the attack on bruin, and the ani mal, which dressed -230 pounds, was dispatched with meat cleavers and clubs after a short fight. Henry baumgartner, veteran hunts man of Olney; and three friends, at the headwaters of the Walluakt river, near Astoria, Sunday morning killed their twelfth bear this year, when the Baumgartner dogs treed a huge brown bear, the first of Its kind killed by Baumgartner - in 15 years hunting in this vicinity; 1 waa treed -four limes before the hunter could get a good tar get, and While on the ground severely clawed one of the dogs. "-.' r. A few days ago. Ben ..Gronnell, a rancher in the Kleie aelghborhood. In the Nehalern - valley, killed a female cougar, reported to have measured 10 feet from tip of tail to nose, which his dogs treed in the. woods "near his farm. This cougar Is the one for which a countrywide hunt has been on all jom. mer, the animal having- killed aumer eua cow and calves. In addition . to which it is credited with having slain . many -deer. '-v';-;!';-;, ;! :.. i . .. t - Main Issue A M - I II tmm BRIDGE REPAIRING HARDING !S RAPPED FOR BONUS STAND - I . Administration Scathingly De nounced at Legion Meeting at New Orleans by Na tional Commander MacNider. New Orleans. La., Oct. 16. While his "buddies' shouted and stamped their approval, retiring National Com mander Hanford MacNider opened the fourth annual convention of the American Legion here today with a militant declaration that the soldier bonus fight has only just begun. From out of the long, hafd battle he and bis aides directed unsuccessfully to put the "adjusted compensation" bill over the top at Washington. Mac Nider asserted that "no one , man un touched by war, .without kith or kin to those who served, no one group, finan cial or otherwise, can stand bettween the wishes of the American people and the fulfillment of what they believe to be a government obligation. He made no direct reference to the vote by President Harding on the Mc-Cumber-Fordney bonus measure, nor to the little group of senators who sus tained the veto, but he left no doubt as to whom he- referred as he carefully aimed, each of his barbed verbal shots at the opponents of "adjusted compen sation." for the nation's ex-soldiers. 3IAJORITY WITH HIM "A great, well financed attack which we cannot help but feel as sordid and selfish has given us one little setback, but those who represented the people at Washington- are with us by a great majority." MacNider added as he dwelt upon the passage of the McCumber Fordney bill" by a vote of 333 to 70 in the house and 47 to 12 in the senate. "We have only Just started to fight," he said. "The adjusted compensation legislation is right. We know it is right always prevails in America, It is not a question of raising the neces sary funds. A maximum annual pay ment of $100,000,000 is not even an appreciable fraction of a S 4,000. 000,000 national budget. That is simply cam ouflage, thrown up to hide the real issue. ' " "It is a question of promises unfilled, a question of whether, the man who offered his life; to his country In time of need is-to be left with the feeling that ! his -country i is ,unj-ast and un grateful. ." ' '7: IfOT WILL OF PEOPLE "Thai ti : htot' 'tor: the good of "the motion that Is not "the desire of the peopler back. home tand in a republic their, will, will . be eventually, carried out. That is our task and we shall accomplish it. Upon the scathing condemnation of the national government's care -of sick and disabled World war veterans arid the biting criticisms of President Hard ing and his personal physician'Briga dier General Charles E. Sawder, chief coordinator of the federal board of hospitalization!, contained In the 158 page report made.fsuhlie previously by A. A. Spragu-'of Chicago, chairman of the legionsi rehabilitation commit- (CoBfeluded on! Paae Six. Column One) Charges Are Denied By Morris Goldstein Salem, Oct. Iff. Denial of the charges filed against him by the grievance committee of the Multnomah Bar association and a request for a dismissal of the disbarment proceed ings instituted against him, is con tained in an answer filed-by Morris A. Goldstein, Portland attorney, with the supreme court today.. Goldstein is charged with unprofessienal conduct. He is represented by Martin L. Pipes and J. F. Kavahaugh, Portland attorneys- Proclaims Tuberculosis Cure it wt e r l x ' Serum Treatment Denounced Paris, Oct. 16. Scoring lung serums as "cruel deceptions which are in no case permanently successful." Profes sor Georges Arnold officially Informed the medical congress that tuberculosis In any except the last stages can be and is definitely cured. His method Is a vaporising process' which reaches the seat of the malady and kills the' germs. In view ofthe fact that the medical congress stressed. the supreme Import ance of the discovery, the highest au thorities asserting that there Is no doubt that a tuberculosis cure has "finally been achieved," Universal Service cabled Professor Arnold's re port at length. To the medical con gress ha stated: ; -The principle of the treatment Is not dv The present statement is the result of experiences covering near ly 12 years. Only after such a period can the permaiecy- it the eui-ebe attested.'. f - - "The treatment 11 founded on the double principle of wbrk on the ulcers In the lungs and bronchial tubes by bringing them la ctmtact with anU septlc cicatrising; substances, while at he same time cleaning ! the surface f the ulcers so as to prepare them for the action of the medicine. i j "It is demonstrated subcutaneous ln- jectiona provoke a deviation and per haps & temporary amehoratkm of the malady, but do not cure, the patient finally relapsing inte v the condition where ha would have beenlf the la Section had not been made. .' 4 j. n t unhestltatlngly, - therefore, con demn all tuberculous 'cures' j based, on serums if used solely without recourse to other methods. It Is j definitely established that pulmonary disease be gins in the form t of a tiny abscess in the lung, which Is inaccessible to , ex- No Trace of 2 Aviators Is Reported Alarm was felt today over the pos sible outcome of an. air trip for the photographing of the Mount Hood loop road undertaken ' by C. S. Woodruff. Portland : photographer, in an Oriole plane driven by TBUly" Graham, a flyer who has been operating at near by summer resorts. The expedition started from the municipal aviation field Friday at 11 a. m.. and Wood ruff expected to finish the circuit of Mount Hood and be back the same day. The return has not been made and all trace of the plane and its pas sengers has been lost. From practically all points reach able By telephone, along the lop it was reported this morning that the plane had not been seen. The party is sunnosed to have passed Hood River Friday afternoon and it was reported from The Dalles mat tne .noise oi motor had been heard, although no one noticed the plane. A If the plane has come to grief some where ini the Oregon national forest south of ftood River, It might be days before the pilot and hie .passenger can get to th outside world, forest service officials Indicated this afternoon. Thri whole Mount Hood region, ex plained A- O. Waha. assistant district forester, 1 is now pretty thoroughly snowed in.' No rangers are stationed in that corner of the national forest at this season when the fire haxard is past and few recreationists are in the woods. ; The situation is complicated by the lack of landing places among the big trees, the deep canyons and the cliffs. It was not explained why the plane had gone as far as The Dalles, when the object of the journey was, the (Concluded on Pie Six, Column Three) Bill Will Punish Theft of Glands Chicago, Oct. 16. U. P.) A move was made today to make the stealing of human glands punishable by death. Representative Thomas J. O'Grady an nounced ) today tht he would intro duce at the, January session of the state legislature a bill to make the robbery of glands a capital offense. The mystery, of the stolen gland cases was still unsolved today. Police and Chicago doctors planned to canvas atl surgeons! offices in the hope of re vealing some clue.. Two and possibly three icasea of "gland banditry" have been reported to police. Court Holds Mies Are Not Monopoly WashirigtOBOct. 16. (L N. a) The United States supreme court today de cided, by inference at least, that the motion picture industry is not a mo nopoly under the Sherman anti-trust law. The court declined to review a case In which Charles G. Binderup of Omaha, . sought to recover $750,000 damagesi against the Orriaha. .film board and the Pathe exchange. Bin derup charged the Industry was a mo nopoly because he had been shut off from securing films and "blacklisted." The lower courts decided against Bin derup. t Loggers Flee With Wrists Handcuffed Astoria. Oct. 16. Two Big Creek Logging i company men, arrested on charges of being Intoxicated at a pub He dance, Saturday evening at Knappa, one withi handcuffs on both wrists, the other on lone wrist, escaped from Sher iff Slusher, who arrested them aMkd who putjthera In his car to bring the prisoners! to Astoria. Slusher arrested six men at the dance for being drunk and for ithreatening to interfere with the officers, but had allowed all to go with pevere reprimands except the two who escaped. ternal remedies and must be attacked through the respiratory channels. "The first thing is the evacuation of the perulent deposits, then cleans ing the abscess, then ' the cicatriation cure. ( . "The war demonstrated that gas and toxic vapors traversed not only the bronchia) parts, butv also the entire ramifications ef the pulmonary organ lam. If deadly gas can thus be assimi lated by the lungs, then curative toxics and Vaustica can, also. "This la the basis of the treatment. Thanks to the employment of a simple apparatus which ensures a regular sup ply of toxic vapor for th lungs, hun dreds of tne severest cases have been cured. "No man has any right to claim a cute for tuberculosis,'' said Dr. E. A. Pierce, tuberculosis specialist. In com menting on the claims of Dr. Georges Arnold ef Parte, that the disease can be cured! by curative toxica and caustics- 4 ' ... "Wheni a part of the organ la actu ally gone through the ravages of the disease, -! it cannot be , replaced : only some sort of substitute can he offered. The statements attributed to Profes sor Arnold are misleading, to-ay the least, , and quite unwarranted. 1 f eel sure they were made 'for the purpose Of exploiting thia so-called cure, i . "The 1 denunciation -'f---the serum treatment is very bad. Much benefit Is derived from the serum treatment properly) administered ; . the same la true in regard , to inhalation. I have used both for many years and , they are excellent., but I cannot claim that they are cures and the public should be warned against placing their con fidence in such claims. . OREGON IS HONORED m COMMITTEES Many Delegates Seat by Beaver State to New Orleans Legon Convention Are Appointed to Places of Much Importance. By Earl R. Gooewia Journal staff (Jorrapondent. New Orleans, La.. Oct. 16. Committee- appointments formed ' the main order of business following the open ing ceremonies of -the fourth annual national convention of the American Legion' this morning. The Oregon delegation was well represented. Oregon State Commander George R. Wilbur was named on the resolution committee. Harry N. Nelson, state committee, Harry N. Nelson, state ad jutant, was placed on the credentials and permanent organization and rules committee ; Roy R. Knox was chosen on two committees, naval affairs and military affairs ; Charles W. Ersklne represents Oregon on the constitution al amendments, G. Lane Goodell on the time and place for the 1923 con clave, ' Glenn R. Dudley on Internal organizations, G. Lane Goodell on finance, -Pat H. Allen on legislative, William B. Follett on Americanism and Dr. Eugene "Buck" Rockey on re habilitation. OREGON DELEGATES The Oregon delegates to the Forty' Homines et Eight Chevaux are : Pat'H. Allen, chairman and secretary of the outfit ; Harry N. Nelson. William B. Follett, Charles W. Ersklne. Dr. Eu gene Rockey, all from the grand vol ture ; George R. Wilburn. from Hood River voiture No. 64, Earl R. Goodwin. from Portland voiture No. 25, Glenn Dudley from Eastern Oregon yetture No. 42, and A. R. Dorrls (alternate ) from The Dalles voiture No'197. The fun makers from, tche far west who were selected on' the convention committees follow s Allen on creden tlais; Nelson, resolutiorts ; Follett. (Con tinned tm Fas Fif temj. Column Oh) Expect Kesignation Qf . noyd Georges Any Da.y f his Week ' London, Oct' 16. (U. P.) Lloyd George's resignation or dissolution of parliament may come any day this week, it was learned on high authority. Austen Chamberlain, nominal leader of the Unionist party, called a con ference of Unionist members of the government to consider the crisis. Upon the -outcome of this meeting of conservatives today depends the date for the forthcoming general election, now considered inevitable. With friends and ! enemies of the prime minister clashing in the press over the government's -Near Eastern policy, the Issue will be put squarely up to the people, lt.as believed. "We are on the eve of a general -election." many of the newspapers, both pro and anti-Georgian, are stating.' The premier was enthusiastically greeted at every station yesterday on his way from Manchester, where he made a speech In defense of his poli cies on Saturday, to London. In Lon don he was cheered by throngs. The British public knows no more today of the premier's Immediate plane than it did before he made his speech at Manchester. He made no mention of whether he intended to resign, thus precipitating a general election. School Income Tax Levy Is Held Legal Washington, Oct. 16. CU. re states have the right to levy a, special tax on incomes for a special purpose such as the maintenance - of public schools, the supreme court held' to day. This was announced by the court in upholding the Massachusetts state law of 1919 placing a special tax on Incomes to raise funds for' paying higher salaries to public school teach ers. The court . held. In effect, that public school maintenance Is a general and state-wide purpose that properly can be accomplished out of state funds. Loses Foot in Hunting Accident Eugene. Oct. .leV Billy, IS -year -old son of Mrand Mrs. C. F.' Moore, Cres wetl farmers, lost his foot and ankle on the operating table of the .Eugene hospltaTHast night as the result of an accidental shooting Sunday afternoon. With a pal.! Kenneth Schwertag, Billy was hunting China' pheasants near Creswell. Schwerings gun became -entangled with his overalls, and waa dis charged. The full loat .of shot mangled Billy's right ankle, a few feet from the muzzle of the gun. , -, C: German Bark Cabin r BbyfBMedrat Sea Astoria, det- i 16. According o the ckipper, of the German bark Harald, the first" Teluton vessel to' come Into the river since before the World wars which arrived Saturday night f 9 daya out from th Orient V., Ronga, cabin boy of the vessel, died 'at sea of dysen tery on August 27, He waa hurled at sea. The- bark also- had a close call from' beng wrecked when it narrowly averted -a collision-with as -oil' tanker which' suddenly crossed her bow, in ' a JILTED MAN SHOOTS GIRL, KILLS SELF Young Draftsman Attempts to Take Life of Former Fiancee Because She Broke Engage ment! Exptains Act in Letter. - Crazed1 because the girl of his heart.' pretty Helen Stackhouse. broke their engagement. A. T. Reed, dangerously wounded,, her and killed himself at the Stackhouse home. No. Ill East 70th street north, Sunday afternoon. Miss Stackhouse is In Good Samari tan hospital, a- wound through her left side near the heart, and Reed's body is at the iCounty morgue. The girl's con dition today was reported, favorable to a peedy recovery. ' The shooting took place in the base ment of- the Stackhouse home, where Reed apparently induced the girl to go that he might carry out his plan. Hel en's mother was in the living room oa the first floor of the home when the attempted murder and suicide took place, and was the only other person near enough to- hear the shots. Miss Stackhouse and Reed met a year ago and their infatuation became Jmu tual almost at first-sight. He wajs 23 years old and she Is 18. He formerly was a student at Oregon Agricultural college and was a draftsman for the Pacific Telephone and Telegraph- com pany. Helen has been a cashier in a department store, for several months. -After four months of ardent court ship, Helen consented to marry Reed, the wedding to take place, February 22 of next year. Their honeymoon was arranged and' they had begun to plan the home that was to foliew. From the date of their engagement until last Thursday the romance was perfect for Reed. ENGAGEMENT BROKEN But not so with Helen, "I was doubt ful," she said Sunday afternoon In the hospital. ;i thought I loved him, but I grew so doubtful I thought It better that we call it off. Many things about him seemed to irritate me, and I do not doubt -but that the same 'was the case with him. I saw that our- engagement 4 must be broken and told him as gently as I could. "He seemed stupified. He said many 'Cooetaded on Pace Six. Column Four RULES ANNOUNCED Chicago, Oct J6. OJ. P.) Rules governing wages and working condi tions of the yardmasters an railroads throughout the country were an nounced by the railroad labor board today. The rules virtually amount to an in crease in wages of 25 per cent. J. L. Eldridge, president of the Yardmasters' association, declared. This ts the first time in the history of railroads that .yardmasters have been governed by any set of work ing conditions. The rules specify eight hours as a work day. Previously yardmasters worked unlimited hours. Overtime will be paid on a pro rata basis. Many yardmasters hold seven-day-a-week positions. The new rules provide for two days a month- off for these men. Body of Girl Who Left Home Found On Bank of River Boise, Idaho," Oct. 16. The body of Alyse Lester, 19, talented violinist and college girl, missing since June SO, search for -whomattracted statewide attention, was found on the river bank more than a mile below Boise, Sunday, by a duck hunter. After disagreement with her mother on the evening of June' 20, Alyse,' hysterical, rushed from the house. Search - was made of the foothills for several miles' around Boise, also of the river. ' ' Clues were followed to Portland and other places by hei father, Myron Les ter, deputy "warden of the Montana penitentiary, and rewards were of fered. Alyse was .graduated from Boise high school fn 1920, And spent her freshman collegiate- year at the University of Idaho, and .her sopho more year at Montana university. She had been In Boise but a short time and was attending Summer school. Her mother objected to her being out eve nings. , ' Child, 8, Hit by Auto, May Have Fracture of Skull Xt Is feared that Dorothy Woodside, i, who was injured , at Mil waukJe and Cramptoa streets, may have a' frac tured skull.' aa symptom peculiar to that injury developed Sunday.- She la the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. I M. Woodsldejf No. SS8 La Verne street. The child had been out riding wlthher father and had climbed out of the au tomobile while he waa about to back 1t into ': a garage. - She i ran from be hind the machine directly into the path of an automobile -driven by Earl Rush light, No. 1117 "Milwaukie street. i Rushlight tried to avoid striking the child, but she Was caught by a front fender and thrown to , the; pavement. It waa thought at the time that her injuries were - not " serious, but exam ination after developments Sunday in dicated a severe 'injury. ' She waa taken to the Sellwood hospital. ' - FOR YARDMASTERS Tragedy 7 GIRL'S change of mind after engagement caused young map Sunday to kill self after wounding sweetheart in basement of her home,. In picture above, pretry Helen Stackhouse, who had come to doubt the validity of her own feelings and, below, A. T. Reed, who fired die bullets that sent girj to hospital and himself to morgue. ; . . r wmmmmMmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmtmmmmmmmmmmmm lu.iiiii.,.iiiiniui..nuniiiiH mnnnumn $ , . - A ' 'f I' s' ""5 HUNGRY GREEKS Paris. Oct. It TJ. p.jThe Greeks, not the. Twkar-, deliberately burned Smyrna, Franklin, Bouillon, French en voy wr Just returned from the Near East, ehargad today. .; Bouillon-, : Inf '-a statemfeiit to the United Press. said that- the Greeks 4ejiso burned '4wft,aeeJ nouses tn the lnteri-sr of Asia-Mlaor; The Greek, were worse than the Ger mans in the late war; he chafged.v CoMtantinople, ; Oct. 1-(U. P.) Thousands of Christiana, many hungry and with all thekr earthly , belongings packed on their hacks, trudged out of Thrace today, as the Cross made way for the Crescent. Aged men and omn, many carry ing children, walked toward the Bal kan peninsula, leaving forever the homes they have occupied for years. Some loaded their household 'goods in carts ; others left everything behind and fled in, order, to he out of Thrace in 15. days, the time limit aet by the allied generals and Turkish representa tives at the Mudanla conference. " Most of the trains in Thrace have been commandeered by -the Greek gov ernment to carry - soldiers who' wUl be loaded on transports when they reach the ports. The civilian , population had to depend on the rickety carta or walk. Rodosto, ' on the Balkan peninsula, was choked with refhgees. j The suffering and foodless Greeks and Armenians awaited some means Ito carry them to -Greece. j Four British had three French bat talions were entering Thrace today on the -heels of the - departing Greeks. When the last of" the Greeks have de-. parted, the allies will turn the terri tory over to 8000 Turkish gendarmes! Athens, Oct. 16. U. P.) Many Greeks were slaughtered and a number of girls "carried f f In bondage when the ' Kemallst gendarrnarie, on, its way to Thrace, destroyed I the village of Chile, according to an unconfirmed re port received, here today; Chile Is on the railroad' not far from the Black Sea. It Is directly 'north of Ismld and northeast of Constantinople; . Seattle, Architect ' Dies Near End of ; Long Motor Trip Tacorha, Oct it.iU. P.) Death from heart .failure -terminated the 13,-000-mile trans-continental motor trjp of A. .Warren Gould, prominent Seattle architect, whose body was found tn the' Tacoma Union' station -at" 540 Sunday evening . when within J5 . miles of his journey! end." J i' s.---"it3-;. ' ! Three women companions were watting--in the- car parked outside ' the' sta tion when -Gould was rushed away itova local hospital in the police 'r patrol. LThey did not .learn" of the tragedy un til inquiries were -made m. tne station. The women. Miss Hazel M. Phelan. a niece ; Mrs. Edith Phelan, Gould's sister-l-law and mother ; of Miss Phelan, and Mrs. Thomas F.. Anderson of Boston, had made the ; trip " with Gould. He had complained of Illness In Portland and Miss Phelan drove nearly all the way to .Tacoma to re lieve him or th atraln-v, - Schooner Cdines'in . With Cargo of Fish -' ' ' -. - . ' Returning- from an eight, day cruise on ..the fishing, banks off Taquina bay, the gasoline schooner Spray, operated by the Burke Fish company, reached Portland . Monday morning, , - She brought ll,00 pounds of fish- divided as' fellows ; - Halibut. 6000 pounds ; blacks cod," Cteo i pounds ; . scrap, 2000 pounds. The price oa halibut la quoted at , eenta. "Heavy' weather ,ff the coast made; fishing slow ,v. ' . EVACUATE THRACE tfSK aim mi sJ,la..'l , '('IW'A.W.'l1 K'.v m iuiw wK- its 4 :.'4M-.. Mme. Matzenauer : Will Reopen Her Suit i for Divorce - -r " .. n i'ii . San Francisco, OcC 16. N. S.) Mme. Margarets- MatzenauerV prima donna of the Metropolitan Grand Opera company, . wtir- reopen J and press the suit for . divorce she dropped In ' the courts - of ' New York ' against' Floyd Glotzbach, : her' "wild mustard' chauf feur husband," she announced today.. - Upon arrival here she Was served with a summons in the new divorce suit-Instituted by Glotzbach, In which a division of community property . Is sought. . . . ;.-" ' She declined to discuss the ease ex cept through a M formal statement . in which she declared she 4 had In her possession evidence which-would aid her to successfully prosecute her " di vorce suit and explained that -it was dropped only in order that she might give- her'whole. attention to singing. A young woman now, holds the posi tion of secretary which Glotzbach once held. . - American Army on Rhine Is to Return Washington, cU 16. (U.a P.)-r-The lOOu , troops constituting" ' the United States artny of occupation in Germany are to be . returned , home, it was un derstood today, following a conference of Secretary of War Weeks and Gen eral Pershing with" President Harding. It waa learned that this question was taken up by Weeks -and Pershing with the president and that a virtual de cision ;was - reached ' to return the American army on the Rhine. MdtofcleRider l - SuffersBrokeu Leg .Medf6rd.;Or.. Oct. 16. J. A. Hacklin. recently v from - Portlands -but .whose home is it No. 416 South Sixth street. Fairport, Ohio, la in a hospital at Medford with a "leg broken as a. result er a collision' by hla motorcycle' with an automobile - -yesterday - - about 6, o'clock.- carl i Seebe, local- taxi.: was entering his garage on the. north river side -when -Hacklin failed to observe Beebe s , signal, and -crashed. Tacoma Theatre ' Bobbed of :$1650 - Tacoma. Oct.-16v Tfi P.) Every po lice department In the Northwest' was on the lookout today for the two dar ing bandits who late Sunday night walked Into the office of the Colonial theatre, forced Manager Ralph Winsor at the -point of a gun to open the safe, bound him to a chair, and then walked away, with J 1650,61 m caah, " .. . . ':'..;:'.''.:'.-'. ?! s vl - - t: ', " N , s- -, -. s -e I ' - - V - A " ' - v , 1 '5, , , , i1 OF SEA FIRE REACH SHORE Passengers of City of Honolulu Tell of Experiences Following j Discovery of Flames; Held Quarantine All Night. WiUnlngton, Cal., . Oct. 16. Salvaged voyagers of the sea, the 74 passengers and 186 of the crew of the. burned Los Angeles-Hawaiian liner City - of Honolulu disembarked here today from the! United States army: trans port Thomas. 1 , a The passengers were in a happy mood when they walked down I the gangplank, even though come were clad in parts of clothing hastily snatched when the fire call sounded ' aboard the liner. early last Thursday morning when the Los Angelea-bound vessel was 670 miles from its destine- tien. '- - ;,. - ' !- - Vivid word pictures were graphically painted of the hours spent In the water. Paradoxically, though, and an frppar-' ent tribute to the marvel radio.) never , did the full horror of being victims of a eea. tragedy dawn on the passengers before they realized they were saved.' HELD OX STEAMER ;Vi . While ; the passengers were being summoned from their berths, electric tongues were sending their vibrant cries 1 ofS distress broadcast : over the sea.-"?;?. r -:-.-.' i- :-;f:-i -j--.;-':;.;-- f Although the transport Thomas ar rived off the San Pedro breakwater at ll:30 o'clock Sunday night,' the passengers were held in quarantine un til morning, the-customs service offi cials i invoking the time-honored law of pratique. This ancient - rule. Its origin a mystery - to modern tnarinerei : prohibits passengers of : foreign ports disembarking in American harbors If the1 vessel arrives between sundown .3: H r... , K 1.. - sengers last night Impatiently paced the - deck of the transport j Thomas, hoping any hour to be allowed to go ashore. - . - i . ! Meanwhile' through the night, j the government's quarantine doctors slept ' peacefully. In their bungalows-10 miles away. . . ' BETb ATITKS A3T XlOr S ' 1 Although unwtlHnr- to he ouoted, sev- eral. of ."thpassehgers ; declared - they would : endeavor; through' their .con- (t ,uavito) . i . ... ' 'Shortly after the Thomas dropped ancoor, Bpecuj iwiur liv ioiu can Pedro submarine base drew I alongside and. three marines f tflly tarmed with ". AS caliber side arms, climbed the "Ja cob ladder and took up their .posi tions at 'convenient points- where , the vessel could be boarded. " f 1 .' -I'Nobody can come up, a peremptory voice called down from Jibovewhen a newspaper man sought to follow the marines. " -"'''Ji - Through the nlgh't telegrams from friends -and anxious relatives continued to come in at the telegraph, off ice, but no telegrams were sent ashore! from the transport.: ,"' v'i-'-' ' "" ! The International News iservtce cor respondent - went to - sea Inj a ' water taxi and while the big white steamer i. , l Concluded oa I'M "lx Oqluinu .8UJ i - - ''aii if a iinn 11 mr UN lAlMmfttlNt S . ' t - I ! - i ; . - - 1 'i - ': tTrglng the early financing and' com pletion of the ' proposed Portland Tfaklma rail iconnectlon that would Ien" up territory 1 now reached" .with difficulty from Oregon,- a! conference was held this afternoon at the Cham ber' of Commerce,-participated; in ..by representatives of cities which 'would be opened up and by Portland business men.:; " ; "-. :.:-:.'r,r'Sii'.----- Judge N. B. Brooks of Golderidale, In an opehlng t statement, declared the time 'now ripe to use "moral suasion on ' the transcontinental liner' -which, hitherto have not seen the wlsdpra- of such a link. ' He favored completion of. the Goldendale-Toppenlsh link by pri vate capital. : ' ' t -'i -irfi. -,'4,-s-. I t In the belief that this meeting might tern : out . something of '" value-, to the communities ' affected by such a rail line, cities and towns Of central - and Southern Washington sent delegations toi thet city today. --. .-- . From Yakima came O. C. Soots, sec retary of : the Commercial 'dub, - and J.t I Ly tie, head of . the Yakima Irri gation district. Toppenlsh sent C It." Allen, "e H. Dovrln.Jl W. Timpson and William .N. McGowaru Ooldendale sent Judge-N. B. Brooks, Robert Sun derland, Ralph Fenton' v and -1 Dr, H. H. r Hatley. White, Swan . sent. A. " C Cotiurn. C. E.' Beisig artd'.M. A. Hale, j Delegattone from other cities in, the Yakima., and Columbia ' river districts of Washington were-expected to arrive In time for the afternoon meeting, f The delegates were guests of th e Chamber of Commerce at the members forum lunchen held in the' main dining room of the chamber at noon. After an (all t day meeting the visitors will " be guests of the chamber at a dinner this evening. - - ' -f "v ?;--R v ' i The Portland committee Is com nosed ifitl E. VB. 1 McNaughtoiv- chairman : Joeepn reai, r v owara, John S. k Beall. Boy TV, BUhop, Nathan Strauss, E. 1. Thompson, F. A. Free man. H, J. Frank. B. . W.- Xwls and t. T. Honeyman. ; ....;;:".;(' - , , . , - 1 -, Brewers; Attack -Prohi Amendment i ,fij:i -if-'M:: . ' spM 4.iS i-i' - - Washington, Oct 16. f Cl P.) Suit attacking the. validity of the Wlllie CarnpbeU amendment to the Volstead act. barring manufacture and sale of beer as medicine, was filed with the supreme court today by Plel Brothers, former hrewera- r URGE EARLY vORK & : U4 f ' i ' V-'