The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, June 27, 1922, Page 1, Image 1

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    Si!
. OXXOUXJITXOV
Arms far May, 1922
. Of TOT CXTT OT llTiTf
- am larvaar la -XiriM
Flk OmiHn
'ily TrjW4y mti "31
The Oregon Statesman
SOlt
set.
mm
Aran lor tlx Matt m4iaf May II.
BsUy a!y - , 6758
Pailj u4 8oady 6909
PSVENTYECOND YEAR
SALEM, OREGON, TUESDAY MORNING, JUNE 27, 1922
PRICE:? FIVE G23T3
WEV COLD STORAGE PLANT IS
RACIAL PREJUDICE MAY BE
CAUSE OF ENSIGN'S GRIEF
CA1NERYH: GREAT ,
STRIKE LASTS
SERVICE DONE BY INDUSTRY
i
N
GOAL SHORTAGE
TO BEFACEDIF
OBENCiN
LOVE NOTES
FROM CONVICT
IKBR1S
BOOM
TO
Railroads Will be Unable to
Get Supply for Own U$e
Within Few Weeks Under
PresentjConditions.
T -
SITUATION AT HERRIN
UNCHANGED SINCE RIOT
Harding and Union Presid
ent Hold Conference
. : New Wage Hinted
GIESY WOULD
GIVE REWARD
TO TWO GIRLS
WASHINGTON", June 26.--By
the Associated Press.) Adminis
tration efforts to brink about a
settlement of the bituminous coal
strike met a preliminary check
After conferences with Presl
eat Harding and Secretary of
Labor Daris, John L. Lewis, pres.
ldent of the United Mine Work
ers or America, announced that
the anion policy still was an
altered and including in its In-
siste nee that a new wage scale
must be set up for the strike-
ridden mining districts by nation
- ai or semi-national conferences
conferences with operators.
' Conference Held at Luncheon
The meeting between Mr. Hard
Ing, Secretary Paris and Mr, Lew
.' is. which took place around the
i White House luncheon table, was
toe last of a series of conferences
Into which Secretary of Labor Da
vis took Hr. Lewis after his ar
; riral from Cincinnati 8unday. ;;;
V Officially no statement was
forthcoming though Secretary
Hoover Was also called to the
WWta House for i word with" the
president about the situation Im
mediately after Mr. Lewis left.
; ; 'We talked orer the general
problems of the bituminous indus
try and the Strike," Mr.: Lewis
declared, pa lea-ring the White
. House, "ts pTer derelopment and
Jotermltteacy and projecte for its
; stabilization, ;
. Strike Situation Unchanged ,
"With relation to the present
. etrike we considered the matter
pt a Joint conference of operators
and miners, especially the merits
of proposals to hold district joint
. conferences between ' operators
and talner for wage settlements
as compared, with Joint confer
ence in the central com petit Ire
field, or a .najtlonal conference
of all fields through represents-
tires. ; No definite plans affecting
the strike were decided npon. The
strike sitaatlon Is unchanged.
Serious Shortage Faced
"The country will be facing a
serious shortage of coaJ.wUulna
ew weeks and if the strike con
tlnues the railroads will be, un
1 able to transport enough to take
care of railroads and ; domestic
consumers. .;.
There were no indications of
what further steps might be taken
Police Committee Member
States Attitude on Distribu
tion of City's Portion
As far as the city of Salem's
8500 portion of the 11200 toward
offered to the person or persons
responsible for the arrest and
conriction of C. A. Sloat in con
cerned. Alderman John B. Giesy.
one of the members of the police
committee of the city council
will take the position that the re
ward should go to the two little
girls who were rlctlms of Sloat's
attack if it Is paid to anyene.
The hot weather of the past
two weefcs has ripened up the
strawberries grown in the
valley, until they came in
faster than all the canneries
and all the canners could han
dle them. They began to jam
down juicy in the boxe3. A
few more hours of waiting
and they would have been a
total loss to the grower, the
canner and the wage-worker
who needed the money.
Did they go to waste?
They did not.
They went bodily into the big
new cooling rooms of the Cap
ital Ice & Cold Storage com
pany. Fourteen thousand
cases of them were hustled
HELP! HELP!
SAYS STRANGE
NIGHT VOICE
Folsom Admits Writing En
dearing Missives to Ac
cused Woman in Kennedy
case.
Another Replies Tauntingly
Searchers. Can't Find Either '
in Careful Hunt
"Help, help!" came a roice in
distress through the darkness of
niduight.
, "O. you want help, do you."
taunted a second roice that was
louder and clear.
'Help, help," pleaded the first
roice, this time not rau-h more
than a groan.
Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Wilson, who
lire on the road between Liberty
into trio ir mnms wViero f Viov I and Jefferson wav ra mvatifiAri
Mr. Giesy takes the position f-;. fV,;- :t, bv these vnir in frn.t r.t Kir
that no suspicion was erer direct- u. h'''d""irCt "f7" th'v ; "
ed toward Sloat untn he had been weather panting, came back tSSg'Jg
arrested on another charge, and to normalcy With a sweet and si"e7ton
that his Identification should be Wipf Smile, and said, Mr. wilaon seized a lerolrer
v..- W -w ..uu 1 xiii,o muie ii.c iir guesa and Hurried to the road to see
vKnisea mm. 10 assist eiiicers we'll StAVl" whether mnri) y, k.-
mf - I ub m w aauu lVDII UUU(.
They did 3tay, on an aver- or 11 someone were crushed be-
age of six days, and hot a ber- neath an overturned automobile,
ry was lost. There would have , He toun not 8 tn,ns an much
been 14.000 r-aSP nf fl, A. I00 abol,t w,th a "ashlight
i., .. .v.'h.W- lu BUMro tUB mystery.- uai
. . 7 I I . , c ujpinw wuu losa er Mr. and Mrs. Wilson cruised
wiunu tmien, uut ior iius excellent new aa-lup and down the road as far as
wants to Uke personal gain Mem enterprise. Jefferson way in their automo-
.a ine "UIInS oi mtie Better Than Portland bile bat to no effect
ennaren. The new Ice factory has per-
Glesy made the motion in the formed a notable service for the
city council that caused the city fruit growers of this community,
iu wiicr a rowara oi f auu.
on rarious occasions the two girls
made rereral trips about the city
and Ticinlty when different per
sons were under suspicion. '
"Besides." says Aldermaa Giesy.
SWEETHEART TRIED
TO GET FALSE EVIDENCE
Attempt Made to Swear Two
Men Committed Crime
Roman Claims
STOLETJ
IE HIED
(Continued on paga C) ,
The new plant, with iu perfect In
sulatlon and refrigeration. Is able
to keep the soft berries almost in
definitely. The Portland cold stor
age plants hare not been willing
to guarantee . keeping for more
than . three days, . where some of
the Salem berries bare been. kept
for 12 days and are still apparent
ly as perfect as the minute they
were nicked. '
hairman Sam Vail of Typo- jrftee racked u lunrj,
oranhUol Phonal Uao ' The company now : has abo
? 6i vMiyi i iao . 450 barrel, of trWrlM nnrb.
Pleasant Surprise " ed In bulk for Salem canners.
These will be chilled to about 25
degrees Fahrenheit. To go much
Dfd some person hare a stroke 1 lower . woud be to damage the
of conscience and turn orer a r veeb berry texture, ft takes about
new leaf, or did he simply get a week to chill clear to the center
scared out and return stolen pro-Jot a barrel of these sugared ber-
perty whtlo the returning was in Tier, but once chilled, they would
ut
order T
Sam . Vail, chairman of the
Statesman chapel of the local typ
ographical union would like to
hare the two questions
ed. ,
In March of this year Vail lost
keep tor ages, if the temperature
were maintained.
Loganberries Are Hardy
Loganberries In barrels will
answer-1 stand a much lower temperature.
The losan la essentially a Juice
berry, and as Juice it would stand
a wauet containing a 20 gold almost all the temperature that
coin and a sllrer -dollar.There was I water would stand which la close
also 150 in checks in the purse, J to absolute sero.
which were made out by rarious
members of the chapel to the
secretary . or the local union as
dues.
Testerday Vail received the wal
let la the mall, minus the 121 but
with the checks Inclosed. Ap
parently the one who found the
parse considered the matter of
returning it for thre months.
then decided to extract the ready
eash as a reward. Howerer,
Vail Is grateful.
CRIPPLED VETS
RALLY ROUND
FLAG AGAIN
. . i
SAN FRANCISCO, June 2. t
A spare and shattered battalion-1
broken on the wheel of war nd
counting in its numbers the blind,
the halt and the lame, arose In
inspiring salutation to . the
national banner today when the
second annual conrention oi the
disabled veterans of the world
war wan called to order. "A
rendesrous of faith," was the
phrase by which this initial ses
sion was referred to by the
speakers. The whole conrention,
they said, is a plea to the country
not to forget, as the broken war
reteran Intends to cling to his
faith in the things for which he
fought. ...
Merrymaking Rules Day
Today was given over to xner
rymaking for the most part, the
reterans dispersing on picnics
and automobile rides after bar-
m s, t,
fit' - . .4'
IMIIIIIWIT BILL
HITS JAPANESE
Ing been addressed by Gorernor
Stephens. Tomorrow the serious Roman also wrote.
LOS ANGELES, June 26. Let
ters written by Paul Roman, Fol
som prison conrice, to Mrs. Mada-
lynne Obenchain in respnose to
affectionate missives she sent to
him. were introduced in evidence
today by the defense in Mrs. Ob
eachaiu's trial for the murder of
J. Bel ton Kennedy. Roman had
previously identified Mrs. Oben
chain's letters and declared she
had sought to persuade him to
testify that he overheard that Ar
thur C. Burch. co-defendatn in the
case, killed Kennedy at Mrs. Ob-
lenchain's instigation.
Roman, who passed practically
all today's sessions under cross
examination, admitted writing all
the letters shown him. In them
he spoken of his correspondence
as "my dearest, dearest Mada
lynne. and "My dream girl."
"My lore for you had no begin
ning and could hare no end," he
wrote in one. In another he said
"If you and I should erer go
down to the ocean some day, rest1
assured you will then hare reach-
I ed the end of the rainbow. What
you need most is attention and
lots Of It."
Wanted to Leave It All
StUI another read:
"I would give all I erer expect
to hare just to take you In my
arms and kiss you and hug you
and then take you awp.y from
ererything."
Asked if he was sincere in these
expressions and whether they ex
pressed his true feelings toward
the defendant at the time he
wrote them. Roman replied "yes."
'Do by all means send me more
data for my narratlre." was a sen
tence in one letter. Roman testi
fied be had an understanding
with Mrs. Obenchain that when
ever anything was written con
cerning the testimony she wanted
him to give she was to refer to
it as If It were a magazine ar
ticle he was supposed to be preparing.
Ask Her to be Brave
"I haven't told you all I know"
Another pas-
if, '-r - ;j" N v- i.y
tti'i-j p.
1 1 j. y
H' T
u i
W": Cj e; 11
fit " ' &
' ' IIS
One Man Circus With Con
gressman Voigt as Ring
master Starts Show All
Over Again.
MEMBERS TRY TO RUSH
VOTE ON AMENDMENTS
Demands Reading of En
grossed Copy, Then Op
ponents Go Home v
WASHINGTON, June St. At
ter laying in cold storage all day
the .i Voigt filibuster ' broke out
again In the house tonight,
abruptly halted proceeding and
forced adjournment until tomor
row. The Wisconsin Republican,
handling the filibuster without
help, demanded m roll call at the
opening,: which showed 224 mom
bera were present or SS more than,
the largest number Toting Satur
day. Thereafter he held back per
mitting the grain futures bill, the
only measure up during the day,
to jog along. But whea It went
from the committee to the fcousa
proper with 14 amendments. Mr,
Voigt demanded separate rote
On each. ': "'-,:-'; V.K-.,v,.:;,-':,
" House dieers. '.
The bills brought 2f3 membere
scurrying to the chamber to rote
on the lfrst rt the 14. . Then
quite unexpectedly Mr. Voigt
withdrew his demand and the
house cheered.
A moment, later, howerer, just
v j x.' iA ; tho An. " " was P inr paaaage.
xiiiisijii Lieuuaiu napiau a ntuic nas juuvw the Wisconsin ' representative
napolis year book in connection with a caricature. He says C4iieil for the reading of the en
he's willing "to let the matter ..drop but several United; grossed copy of the 16 pages. It
States Senators are investigating the possibilities of racial had not been engrossed and the
If:
1
discriminaion at the Naval Academy.
house quit.
HANGINGS NOW
SEEM LIKELY
Attorney for Kirby Probably
Failed in Appeal to
Washington
IRISH WARNEDP
British Will Resume Free
dom if Violation of
Treaty is Made
formalities of the conrention will sage was: "Ererything seems to
berln in earnest with a bis: narade I be for rou. For my sake be
from the embarcadero to the braro,
CI rlc Center. In this, the "liring Iu the cross-examination which
Unless the attorney for Elvie
D. Kirby and John L. Rathie,
succeeded In getting his appeal
from, the Oregon supreme court
to the United States supreme
court into the court at Washing
ton by June 21. Kirby and Rathie
must on Friday, July 7, Pay the
death; 'penalty for their implica
tion In the murder of Sheriff Til
Taylor, Of Pendleton J
LOXDON. June 26. (By The
Associated Press) After a de
bate, which was not so heated nor
1 A
acrimonious as wag expeciea I P;...-J... fi
government tonight won a rirtual rlrecraCKer llUSe3
ote of confidence on its Irish pol
icy when a "die-hard" motion pro
posed by Sir Frederic Banbury, CRAIGMONT. Idaho, June 25.,
unionists for a reduction of the I Miss Leatha Young, 18, who:"
I3IM
PICNIC
DS ENJOY
All Aliens Ineligible to Citiz
enship Would Come Un
der Exclusion. Act -
This" f the fntnrbretatinn of the
hall of fame" will appear. This preceded the Introduction of the I t -to ?hnm' Aj,rt nffir. hre
Is comprised of state heroes from letters Roman was questioned K,rby anJ Rathie were granled a
m nwis vi iwica wuu uaio vwu rinscIT auOUL IDC oriKiD Wliu uiui
designated by their respectire Q the -story of the "two men."
gorrenors to add new terror and u. was asked whether he had
inspiration to the conrention. taA of it to other persons prior
to the time he said Mrs. Oben
chain mentioned it. He dented
this was the case.
SUELE
v There used to be many elks
around flake ' Labish. 80 years
'ago; they were' there by the hun-
dreds 'and their horns cluttered up
. the whole landscape. Bat' there
were nerer as many or as jorial
elks In the bid pioneer days, as
there were at the big Sllrerton
picnic' Sunday, when the Salem
B.P.O.E took possession of the
place in the name of. their order.
Nobody counted em. ' They
were too busy. ; They had a band
that played all day,', la relays
when it needed to stoke up on hot
wieners' and coffee and pickles.
. Singers On the Job -
They, had the orchestra and Os
car Gingrich and Mrs. Pruuk and
Claude Stevenson to atng. They
- had the fat men s baseball game;
they had the kangaroo court, that
dispersed justice with an unspar
- ing hand. J Anelaborate program
of sport 8,- foot races, egg races.
large-family contests, pie-eating
races, and other amusements,-was
carried out. , n
The big . bull elk of a century
ago mJgbt jfeare JoughJ M'put and
cleared the road; but when these
later horn-bearers from Salem
met an excited man! in a lumber
wagon that had lost a wheel right
on an Impassible part of the road.
and he had tied to the .wagon a
Jersey bull that loqked as if it
could fight Its weight in wildcats
or bullets, the Elks gave pause to
their passions and their 100 cars
and. waited. , :
H e Was Brother Bill
Flnallr thv rot tnthr tn
heln lift the waron and rstorl24'000-
the wheel, but the wagon-master PWUBe rcaucuon. ac-
Lame and Halt to March
Other parade units win be
made up of natty bluejacket and
marine units from the Pacific
fleet, now In the harbor, police
and troops. There will be some
in the pageant who will not be
able to mahch, although they
struck out toward the east with
a right good will back in '17 and
18. Conveyances will be prorld
ed for them, and they will be
glren a cheer that will bring back
the rtctorious flush of the war
days to them again.
Wounded 102 Times
Arrirals today were C. C. Mc
Gonegai of Grand Forks, N.D.,
who was wounded no less than
102 times, and who carries hooks
in place of hands; Mrs. John Paul
Jones, the lone woman delegate.
jWASHINQTON, June 26. Un
der a bill designed to tighten up
the Immigration law. Introduced
today by Chairman Johnson of the
house Immigration committee, ad
mission for permanent residence
in this country would be granted
only to aliens eligible for citizen
ship, the - house, it was pointed
out, shutting the gates to Japan
ese. Chinese. Mongolians and
others not granted the right-of
citlxcnship who desire such resi
dence. Would Reduce Quota
The Johnson bill also would re
duce on July 1, 1923, the quota
percentage from each country
from three to two par cent, based
on 1910 census bureau figures.
In addition to the 2 per cent
quota each country, however,
would h rhren a fist allowance
l mm , r n 1.L-
of 600. the maximum total from MeQIOrQ Man S Ueain
this 600 now being estimated at Accidental Savs Jury
mf W
SEPARATION
F
OUGHT
IS
ey
Salem Commercial Organiz
ation Against Unmerger
of Railroads
Salem doesn't believe in the un
scrambling of the Southern and
who hails from Minnesota and Central Pacific railroads, accord-
I - . . . .a 1 m - - us v v V u U Mil
Clyde Doney of Levoll, Wyo., who ing to the action or tne comnier- reached Sa,em to wheth
repriere to July 7 by Governor
Olcott to give time for the de
cision of the Oregon supreme
ccurt and appeal to Washington.
Specified Time Expires.
The attorneys had a specified
period of time in which to enter
the case in the United States su
preme court after the decree of
tne uregon supreme court was
handed down. This expired June
21.
Prior to that date Charles Gar
land, the attorney, appeared in
Salem and sought a writ of error
from the Oregon court as the ve
hicle by which to get the case
into the United States supreme
court. This was denied by Chief
Justice Burnett after consultation
with his associates. Garland's
next ,move was to seek the writ
from one of the justices of the
United States supreme court, and
he. went to Washington for th.it
purpose. No information has
chief secretary for Ireland's sal
ry as an expression of disapprov
al of the government's policy and
failure to afford police protection
for Field Marshal Wilson, was de
feated. The rote was 342 to 75. :
Treaty Observance Demanded
Winston Spencer Churchill, sec
retary for the colonies, in his
statement on Irish affairs, made
it clear that the imperial gorern
ment would expect the provisional
gorernment, now that It had se
cured the people's mandate, to
take the necessary steps to assert
Its complete authority and with iWoman i7 HOldUD IS
equal irannnesa emphasized that r - Contanarl Dam
WViitviiWWU IU 1 1.11
"rode the beams'
clsco.
to San Fran-
cial club board of directors who
met last night to talk it orer.
They hare not yet picked out suf
ficiently hot words to express all
they mean; but they direct that j
battle-axe remonstrance go in
to the gorernment ' to halt the
succeeded in entering the case at
the national capital. It is be
liered here that he did not sue
ceed.
Case Originated Here.
The case is a habeas corpus pro-
ii IP k r f T .. . A MAMA.
had framed a cunning hitch to the i cording i Mr. Johnson's eatl- J WT'B jury lnrestlgating the death
w cm me iniu 4uu Frank G. Owen, Medrora. ure..
admlssior from around 255,000 lirmber deater. wno was killed In
. . - f t k A
man hoisting himself. orer the W Vio.opo. Kxempup.u are Uf i E faU fr0m,a tmh-etory window growing snipping mieresis oi ca-
a. w .a. . . i i n iinan a m v aoa mmm t i vnn r w r-. a . -n. i v i larn liih a i una a. a wau & umw uu i .
hwih n own wramnps, rn.ua i ioi vbiubu om " - i posea constitutional - amendment
v. A . u a i . m Nnt mnra than in ur nni ni 1 -a .iu ...m..ii i larma inn naner mm h DruaucL ....... -
V UCJ TTUUIU UB III LI UK LIlHlH THL 111 wv.. i,wbu. v j"-. w. I rHLUrCKu n ICMUU Ul SWIUCUUI I 1 -----
lerer that he let the boys lift on.
that worked on the principal of a
nnerationa of the unscrambling cb"nglng the constitu
i-4 .. w uonaiity or tne Oreson canital
punisnment uw and was first
that the "fast K16" ln4the circuIt coiurt for Mar
iuu vuuui;.
It Is said that should a
vandals, and to let well enough
alone.
It was shown
nro-
a rernict or acciaeniai ", -" r. . ii.i.fn . . m
lth dehydrated fruit products LV. '".TAT .wb repea
...... iiuhkh uuu uku:u- --i - - 7 i cb.u - i ... . me capital PUUlsnment nrnvl.lAii
. m j -a .t. MitM intn ,h TTni. ci.ta. In mL . ,v. ) nn rnasonablA f rpicht con- I - .. . ul provision
tor mo vie iuei'"-"- -r" ... .- IOT iiruivipu .iiucmot i - i oi tne state constitution t mi.,
park. He was Julius Aim. one of hne month which would extend bearing were S. F. Owen of Med- nection withtbe eastern buying gtTe reason fan ., fuwW
the vSilrcrton .BJ.O.E. ' contln- the ) morement over a period of ford. ore., uncle of Frank Owen public save through the Southero prteTep
gent, a banker who packs n cham- 10 months instead of fire. a3 a: and G. E. Anderson of Owen. I Pacmc route.
pioasbip fun-wallop In eaclt burlyj present. r. ;. - , . . J'ts... secretary of the Johns Ow
mit.. They didn't know just where No attempt will be made to en Lumber. company at Medford.
the laugh came In, at first, bull hare the house rote on the John Ore., : and personal friend of
they do now. . - - - lson proposal at this session. , lOwen.
$100,000 Necklace -
Leads to Woman's Arrest
CHICAGO, lane 2r-Mrs.
Laura Kachelmacher of Fargo, N.
D., is being held by federal nu
thorltles in connection with the
smuggling into this country of a
$100,000 pearl necklace, accord
ing to Charles Salter special
treasury . agent from ' Seattle,
Wash. ,
Treasury officials in erery large
city have been looking for (his
necklace, which : has been taken
from city to city la n attempt to
evade federal treasury agents,
Mr. Salter said. '
Young Woman's Death
dress was Ignited by a tlrecracV :
thrown Into it by a smal boy "a
a Cralgmont street Sunday r"08
died this fternoon, from n
Juries. Two' thirds of tbr young
woman's body was affected, and
the extent of . tht burs baffled
erery efort to rellere ne suffer-r.-H;7i
. ' v'K "
Barns r sustained T 3. U.
Reeres ind L. M.rJa,ngs. wo
went to Miss Yw' aid, and
smothered the lames, are pain
ful but not serious.
THE WEATHER:
mnner re-
But SO far 9o' mmtnM
of the .kind nas been Initiated
and it would now be rirtually tf
wwsioie ior it to be done for
Tuesday, fair; contJaqe4 wajna, 1 IConiiuugd oa pags
the British gorernment would not
allow the coercion of Ulster, by
the south in cast, that failure to
observe the treaty would mean the
British gorernment resnmlnr
complete freedom of action.
Heal Test of Fitness
Premier Lloyd Georee - In a
brief speech, winding up the
bate, repeated the familiar argu
ments in support of the go11
ment policy and contended l
the Irish provisional gorerament
now had the people of IrIna De"
hind it and what it did f Ia,iea
to do would be the re1 test of
whether it was fit te gorern.
The question of field Marsnai
Wilson's murder id not figure in
the debate as .largely as mignt
hare been anticlpld- "ome sec
retary Shortt bI to bow
that the mmfters nd otheri
from who P,lce Protection had
been withdrawn, bad acquisced in
the wljhdra1-; ,.;
;-Vip' ADMIRAIi DIES
TOKIO. June 26. Prince Yori
fcJy4, Higaspl-Fushimi. scion of
one o' the oldest princely famll
let and admiral in the Japanese
j. J 11.1 w
oary. aiea .bis morning at Hir-
ama. The prince . Is believed ; to
hare been suffering. from cancer
complicated by an attack of in-
fluenzat He was 55 years old.
YAKIMA. Wlashu, June 21.-
Mrsr11 Young, conrlcted last
Saturday of robbery in connection
wftft tbe holdup of Carl Fielding
tf ortland. Ore., resident, today
was sentenced to fire years In the
penitentiary at Walla Wglla.
Fielding testified that Mrs. Toung
lured him to the spot where the
Jobbery was committed. Mrs.
young .after here arrest by the
Yakima ' si rn faL
arwa a w avaAaaw - ask w
sion admitting her part in the
crime and Implicating, her has-
band. George Young, who gare
11,000 bond and disappeared.
FIRE DESTROYS LOGH .
EUGENE, ore.. June 28. A
million feet of cat logs were de
stroyed when a forest fire near the
Walter Woodard saw mill In the
southern - part of Lane county
spresd todsy. The fire Is now
under control. ,
8CHOOXEB FROZEN DT
NOME. Alaska; Jane 26. The
schooner Teddy Bear, missing
nearly eight months and bellerel
to be lost. Is frozen in at Poten
rlrer. 12 miles south of Emmi,
a Tillage on East cape Siberia.
AH on board are 'well and waiting
for the Ice to clear' out o th3
rlrer before returning to Ncjaa.