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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 13, 1923)
CIRCULATION 5 .r Anrtge tor the month of Septem ; her. 1923: '.M r V Ciadaye only ........ . ... .8173 1 1 Daily and Sunday ....... .5502 In the City of Calem - and elsewhere la ' Harloa and Polk Counties' Nearly everybody reads TIfE OREGON STATESMAN - The. Ilome Kewtpaer - " mm SEVENTY-THIRD YEAH SALEM, OREGON, SATURDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 13, 1923 "PRICE five CEirrs siEtras A- For Second Time Kansas C 1 1 y Castaway Drives Giants to Victory With uigamic uiout RECORD-BREAKING ' CROWD SEES GAME Babe Ruth- Walked Twice, Singles Once and Whiffs Another Time '- NEW YORK. Oct. 11. (By the Associated Press, i Cast perm nently. it would seem. In heroic mold.' Casey Stengel "Casey the inmortal" smashed the f New Tork Giants : to victory with tome run drlte this afternoon for t&e second time In three days ot rtcoTd-breaking world's aeries strife with the Yankees. Lashed Into the right field bleachers ot the Tankee stadium lit. the seventh Inning. Stengel's tlow broke up a hurling duel be tween Art Nehf. southpaw star ot the Giants, and "Sad Sam" Jones of the Yankees, and rare "the world's champions their sufficient margin in a brilliant 1 to 0 trl- . Drama' la Stirring ' The greatest throng that ever paid its way into a baseball arena 55,000 frenzied fans massed la the gigantic enclosure while 33,090 more swirled about the en- t" rif.ft outside, saw Stenrel Ha- L. :r the climatic blow that gave j cia Mcuraw ana nis warriors a 2 to 1 adrantage in the most s Irring basehn fims ot all All world's series records for tv -dance and gate receipts were t ttered by that vast gathering ia 1 1 ssiall's -greatest -am phitbe- ter. " Actual paid attendance was 2,439, besides; 3,000 more? who dii cot go through the turnstiles, while the total receipt j were 1231,072,,, putting the three-game figures beyond 1500,000 and prac tically assuring for 1923 the first cHIion dollar championship in history. The r paid attendance crcke the former record of 60, 211. established In a double head er at the stadium late in the reg cl r season, while the .gathering ai a whole has but one superior la size', la baseball, that Of a i rxlmately 70,000 that witnessed t: j dedication of the big struc t:ra last spring. ;! , Bow-Lrggrd, Lion-If earted For a day; Stengel had stepped t t or the limelight while Babe r.ntlt rose to the pinnacle of famd :a two circuit clouts that swept t a. Yanks to victory in the sec c ! game ot the third successive t .3 straggle between these! Goth an rivals, -.( .. ji . Dut today "Old' Casey'J bow 1 isd but lion-hearted, j knew :3.1a the call to glory that was 1 when his ninth, inning j home rea gave ,the Giants their first triaaph and again he answered 113 summons, u Perhaps the setting today wax ret so dramatic as In the first caae, but Jht; mattered not to Ccsey, for the result was just as Active and gare to the veteran a record that has no renewal In world's series annals the feat of waning; two games with two home rc-s in a single contest. IM near rt approach is the mark of "Home Ran" Baker, - who woe two games for the old Athletic ia circuit blows, -but itt separ ta Beries1911 and . Pipp Again ' Injured And so, stripping to its essen tia the classic of 1923 In which lae run punch o far has played monumental role, the, score 'ands: " Stengel," -two Tlctories; r.-ta, one. : : v " y- i- V., It was a heartbreaking .setback fcr Jones, melancholy moundsman r! the Yankees, who pitched ever t : re brilliantly than did hU -thpaw riral, Nehf, in triumph. too. it was doubly disastrous (Continued on page 8) THE WEATHER ItEGON: Fair; LOCAL WEATHER ; (Friday) " 'azlmum temperature, 74: -islmum temperature, 43. -rer, 1.1, falling..' iafalU none.- . - ' ' iosphere., - clear. vT? ) :1, northwest A " " if J : "Giants 5 ; AB B H PO A E Bancroft, ss .'.3 0 0 2 6 0 Groh,, 3b ..J.4 0 0 1 6 0 Frisch, 2b .v.1.4 0 2 5 4 0 Younf, rf ...L4 0 0- 2 0 0 E. Meusel, If 4 0 0 1 p 0 Stengel, cf . .13 1 1 1 Q 0 Kelly, lb ...'.3 " 0 0 10 0 0 Snyder, c : . .!. 3 0 ; 0 5 0 0 Nehf, p . ....1.3 0 10 10 Totals,. . . . 31 1 4 ' Yankees 27 15 0 AB R H .4 0 1 PO A E 3 0 0 Witt, cf .... Dugan, 3b . . !.4 1 3 u 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 r 1 0 0 1 ' 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 4 5 8 0 3 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Ruth, lf-lb . R. Meusel, If PlPP. lb . . . .1.3 :U .14 .1.3 .'.2 ..1 Mil .Co Ward, 2b . . 3 ,0 0 0 4 1 2 0 Schang, c . . Scott, ss . . . Jones, p ... . Haines, rf . . Hoffman . . 0 0 0 0 0 0 Bush, p Totals ... .31. 0 6 27 9 1 Batted fori Jones In eighth. : jTwo i base : hits. Dugan. Home run,; Stengel. ! Double plays, Ban croft, Frisch8 I to Kelly; Jones, Scott to Pipp; Frisch, Bancroft to Kelly. Left on 'bases, Yankees 7, Giants 5. Bases on balls off, Nehf 3. off .Jones 2. Struck out : by Nehf 4 (Jones; Witt. Ruth, Ward;) by Jones three (Nehf, Bancroft, Groh.) Hits off Nehf 6 in 9 Inn ings;, of Jones 4 in 8 Inn ings; off Bush 0 in one. inning. Winning pitcher Nehf. Losing pitcher, Jones, Umpires, Nallin at plate. Hart at first, Evans at sec ond, O'Day at third. Time -of game z hours 7 minutes. ; I .. -t.iV. i BRITDrJ THRILLED Lloyd George Speeds Thru Canada to Keep Appoint .. ment at Winnipeg ON BOARD, LLOYD GEOROE'J. SPECIAL TRAIN, Chapleau. OnL. Oct,' 12. (By Press.) On 'a - i the r ' Associated 1400-mile jump from Niagara; Falls to Winnipeg. Lloyd : George c war-time , premier of Great- Britain, in i his tour ot Canada today went through a re gion little removed from prlmi tire wilderness. ' Passing on his special train to the north of Lake Superior, he made' a tew stops at isolated points where the log house is still used and where big game ' is plentiful.3 At Hudson Bay company points Indians were conspicuous, drawn up in silent lines ; beside the train. - The for mer premier enjoyed the experi ence to. the full, with its fascir nating scenery of woods and qpiet lakes.' , . i ? :':', - "It is like passing through . an endless picture gallery by a first class artist," he said. "Why there should he slums in Europe when there la so much wealth here, I don't know." . Peter B. Kyne. the American novelist, has left the party after having joined, it atNew York to assist In the making of . arrange ments, especially In the United States. Although, there has been no official word concerning a dis agreement, it is understood that Mr. Kyne left of his ! own will when ' he and , Mr. Lloyd George were found to hold different views on the question of some speaking arrangements in the United State. Lloyd George will leave Winni peg Sunday afternoon for Minne apolis. " . ; '';.".. Tl LOST if! i Men. Believed Drowned Near Reedsport Search Be- ; ing Made for Bodies REEDSPORT. Or". Oct. . 12. Charles Snell of Reedsport, Char les Small of, Marshfield , and an unidentified man were believed to day to hare been drowned on Ump qua bar while attempting to enter the Umpqua rlfer in a small pow- boat on their way from Marsn- fiM to Iceedaport. - The ooaxs and gloves of two men have been fodnd near the lighthouse at the mouth Wt the Umpqua rirer. Snell left Reedsport Monday in fishing boat to buy a lifeboat a at Marshfield. He f wan expectea tirt TnesdaT r Wed to nesday.'' 'The new lifeboat he hid bought was : found near tne ugw- BY BIB WILDERHESS LUBE N house today ; LABOR RANKS TO BE SOLID SIMPERS President of Federation Says That Convention Has Giv en Notice of Cleavage From All Radicals OFFICERS RETAINED , IN FINAL ELECTION Dunn Was Not Regularly tieqted Delegate Claim in Gbmpers' Speech PORTLAND, Or., Oct. 12. (By the Associated 5 Press.) Samuel Gompers, re-elected unanimously as president of the American Fed eration of Labor jnst before ad journment of the 43rd annual convention here today,' declared in his closing address, that the gath ering had given : notice that a cleavage had been made between those loyal to organized labor and those who. boring from" within. had sought to stab the i labor movement in the back. - The results of this convention, he said, will make for . solidarity in the ranks of labor. J EI Paso Win ,; I ,, ' - .- -; s ; - - ' " i f ,; v : The convention came to an ex citing close in a sharp contest for the next convention in which El Paso, Texas. won over Detroit, Mich., 14.58S to 12.884. El Paso's claims were urged by George L. Berry of New York, president or the Pressmen's' union, S who de-clao-ed ; that by , meeting at ! El Paso the American Federation of Labor would be of great help tu organized labor in Mexico. James Wilson of Cincinnati proposed De troit.: Andrew Furuseth of San Francisco' and James Connors d! Chicago seconded El Paso.? Con nors said that -the--weather would be cold in Detroit when the next convention Is held, aa it Js to open the third Monday in Novem ber, and added that Detroit had extended no Invitation. . I Officers of the federation were retained. The vice, presidents, who. function, as members of the executive .council are; James Duncan, Qnincy, Mass., .first; J. F. Valentine, Cincinnati. ' second ; Frank. Duffy, Indianapolis, third; WjUIam. Green,: Indianapolis. fourth; T. A. iRlckert, Chicago. fifth: Jacob Fischer, Indianapolis, sixth; Matthew Woll. Chicago, seventh Martin F. Ryan, Kansas City, eighth. Since the last con vention W.i D. Mahon of Detroit, resigned as fifth ; vice president, and those following him in rank had been stepped up one notch. - " , , Gompers Sneaks . Daniel J. Tobln, Indianapolis, was re-elected treasurer,1 and Frank Morrison, Washington, sec retary. Peter P. Brady, New York and Edward Gainor. Washington, were chosen ; as delegates to the British trades union congress, and William Britton. New York. as fraternal delegate to the Canadian Trades and Labor congress. - President Gompers, in his ad dress, reviewing the convention's work, referred to the expulsion of William F. Dunne, delegate from Butte, Mont. "This Is a conven tion of Organized labor," he said, "and any man who Is hostile to labor has no right in this conven tion I feel that the action taken has clarified the atmosphere. I think we have been entirely too lenient towards those who have been boring from within. I y "Those men who meet at mid night in 'the forest plotting not onlyagalnst the government but against ' the labor movement can go ahead, as they please, but they must do so outside the ranks of organized labor." '' : ' i - '; Gompers declared he had been informed that Dunn had not been regularly '; elected as a delegate from the Silver Bow Trades and Labor council ot Butte, to which he ' was' accredited,: but ' that he had solicited credentials on the condition he would pay his own expenses to the convention. Mrs. Coolidge Visits Sons . At Pennslyvania School . WASHINGTON, Oct! 12. Mrs. Calvin C.oolidge, wife of the presi dent, left Washington by motor to day for Mercersburg. Pa., to spend the night and a portion of tomor row with the Coolldge boys, John and Calvin, JJr., who are attend ing Mercersburg academy. It is the first time Mrs.' Coolldge has left the capitol since she took up her residence at the. Whjte Honse. PAN AMERICA HAS PROMISE OF GOOD WILL Secretary Hughes Addresses Women of Two Continents at Big Conference ; WASHINGTON,' Oct. 12. Rela tions between the Unite States and Its sister republics to the south .carried better promise of good will. Secretary Hughes said here tonight.- speaking at the Columbus Day conference of the Pan-American international women's commit tee. ': "I say this," he said, "after tak ing into account the complaining utterances that find place from time to time in the press and the criticism of. those mentors and publicists who supply the , tang which gives relish to our intellect ual repasts.! . The, millenium Itself would turn out to be a tame affair if no fault could he found with it." Fl GUILTY OF WHITE CAPPING Alleged Leader of Whipping Gang Sentenced to Two Years in Prison AMARILLO, Tex., Oct. 12.--The state scored' In its first case in a series of indictments growingJ out of a recent flogging here when T. W. Stanford, alleged. Ku Kluz Klaneman, was oday fould guilty in district court on a charge of white capping. His punishment was set at two years in the state prison. ', J. - i ; Motion for a new trial was de nied by District Judge Bishop and defense counsel gave notice pf apr peal. . , ;- Stanford was the alleged leader in a hand. of. men who, dressed in klan robes and hoods, ordered E. T. McDonald, railroad worker, to leave this city and on a Jater night took him to the country and cave him a severe lashine. - Four other, men are awaiting f rial 'onAbont rihe? dead woman's throat charges of assault with a prohib ited weapon. Sheriff Less .Whtt- aker. and County Attorney Henry Ford : are under indictments of misconduct in office all growing out of the flogging. II- IT KUliTll FALLS Passing of Covered Wagon Shows History of South ern Oregon Country KLAMATH FALLS, ' Or., Oct. 12. After a day of parades and sight seeing visitors to the Klam ath Falls railroad celebration marking actual, construction on the Eugene-Klamath Falls line to night' revived the days of the early west when (hey attended the historical pageant1 "The' Passing of the Covered .Wagon." . -r ; i ; Old time Klamath Indian scouts who serred under Captain C. C. Applegate ot Klamath Falls in the Modoc war; Mike Weeks, Captain Sly, iLionbeart, -t Brick Jim. Jim Dewase, Jim Cowan and Charley Cowin performed i their tribal dances In regalia. j , i- The coming , of . the .. ruiroaa ushered in ,presctnt day,, develop ments and a special engine -and cars were driven across the .big outdoor stage and, the most mod ern logging devices loaded on t a flat bar 1n record time with the aid of a picked crew of Klamath 10ggers-.:-W:'iri'Ci:Ti-ir:- -1 Special , cars of :, ,excursiopiata from Eugene and Medford cam In with the Portiana . aeiegaiion this morning. v s i,.. ; -j i.K'':t;i Two California excursion trains arrived one hour, after. the Portr landore Lwith a big delegation of San Francisco and Sacramento businessmen. . ii4 : ' ; -) Tomorrow visiting v, excursion? ists and train for the conven? tence' of the local people will go to Klrk 45 miles north of Klam ath Calls and the present termi nus of the Facmc line., wnerw silver pike , will be driven and a celebration at the commencement of work on he Klamath f Lake lino to Eugene held. jIany exroljj 5 ; EUGENE, ore., Oct. 12. The nrniimcnV it th TTniversltV of Oregon tcjday. was 2195, which is five more than ttiWijpji ep.r.oi ment tor the fall term last., year, according tox Carleton SpeU'cer, reglstar. The 220 mark will be exceeded in a few; days, hi; pre dicted. PA LIT FEATURE FL AG WILL BE PAINTED UPON ENGINE 1028 Locomotive Whicli Carried Harding to Portland Last . Time to Be Memorial SEATTLE, Octi , 1 2. Locomo tive Nov 1028, which pulled the late President Warren G. Hard ing's train to Portland after his last publje utterance in Seattle July. 27, has been designated by officials of the .Great ' Northern railway as a memorial to the dead executive. At the direction of Ralph Budd, president of the road, an American flag has been painted on each o! (he two cylinders of the engine They will remain on the cylinders as long as the locomotive remains in service. X , it:. POLICE SEDI KILLED GIRL New York Department Store txecutive Found Dead in Room By Friend NEW YORK,4 Oct. 12. Police f tonight broadcast descriptions of a man, believed to be the son of a Montreal millionaire, who oc cupied a furnished room in West 97th street, adjoining that ot Miss Estelle Phillips, attractive depart ment store - executive whose, muti lated and almost nude body was found today on the floor near her bed. Police believe .the assault was committed by a man who en tered the room while Miss Phill ips was asleep and strangled her before she-could call for help. , A handbag j containing . four cents, found open at her feet, in vestigators think, was left by the aurderer to glTe the. appearance U robbery as- the, motive, pf the rime.t..A, towel . was knotted and, there were evidences of a. des perate struggle. - ;- s; ; r Miss Kathryne Meitrla, friend of the murdered . woman and an occupant ot the same house, gare the best description ot the suspect after she had found Miss Phillips dead when she entered the room to arouse -her this morning. She said she . was, awakened. ; shortly after midnight by 'mothered, gurgling sounds," from the direc tion, of Miss Phillips room. Alarm ed, she arose and lighted the gas. She said she beard steps in the hall a halt hour later. , Opening her. door, she peered out and saw the man starting down stairs. His room separated hers from (Miss Phillips'. -,' : -;-;! L -. The man wore a cap and car ried a suitcase, and an army over coat on his. arm, she 31 said. ' Plaintiff Seeks tq Have Mortgage Qiven Bertha McDougal Set Aside . Isobel McDougal yesterday fil ed suit against, the lorn Hill Or chard company Inc., ' Walter Mc Dougar, Elliott McDougal and Bertha McDougal his wfe. The plaintiff eeelcs to have a mort gage given to Bertha McDougal for $15,000 set aside, oh't the grounde that it was done without consideration and with the ' In tent of defrauding the plaintiff. , . Isobel McDougal wis granted a divorce, from . Walter j McDougal. November 15, 1922; , and ': was granted $150 a month alimony and $800 costs and tees. There is now. a total due the plaintiff of $1800 from Walteii VlcpougjU she alleges. -."rf ..IViK.VRiVt t - Before the divorce was granted but during the time when marital trouble- was- known to exist be tween Isobel McDougal and Walt-; er McDougal the holdings of the latter., were lnoorporaed', by hip? as the lorn Hill Orchard company. One share was. retained by Walter McDougal, 4 8 were in his father, Elliott McDougal's name- and the other share was and still is in-the name. pf Isobel 1 McDougal. ; ' Latef ,tho plaintif f wad Induced, to aigq 'a mortgage for $l.fiJ0 for supposed. indebtedness of WaL ter McDoogalr to Is-sister. Ber tha -"McDougat '-The! - plaintiff claims tfce mortgage was without consideration and aska set, astt. ;, WHO SUIT FILED BY ''" 11 0111 ESCAPE IDE IS IHDICATED Redding Men Recall Seeing Plane Near City Early in Day Owners Warned Watchers of Explosives EXPLOSIVES SET. BY LONG WIRED MAGNETO Unconfirmed Report Says Clew Found indicates ' Air: Route of Escape , , REDDING, Cal.P Oct. 12. An unconfirmed report received here is that officers at tunnel No.j lS, where, the San Francisco express of the Southern Pacific railway was held up yesterday, have a clew that the bandits escaped in an air plane. . j This recalls two Incidents in Redding which appear to give foundation to the belief. One is that early morning travelers yes terday saw an airplane upside down but apparently undamaged on the east side of the state high way at Chnrn Creek crossing, six miles north of Redding. Last eve ning the craft was gone. - Machine Observed , The second incident is that two aviators in one airplane'landedion the Placer street hill, west of Red ding, about 10 . days ago. : Out of curiosity, Arthur Thatcher motor ed out to see the machine. ' The aviators asked Thatcher to watch the craft while they went down town . for supplies. As Thatcher accepted the charge, one , of the aviators said: " c,;.;;; "Don't touch the airplane as there are explosives aboard." ; The aviators were gone half an hour:; Whin ,'they' retdrheg rthe flew north -Hiits, Calif., -near here the train holdup occurred yesterday . ia . north '6. 'Redding. X ;w Wires Csecl ... y SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 1 2. Re ports today from Daniel O'Connell, chief special agent ot the Southern Pacific company, who is investigat ing yesterday's holdup of train No. 13, Indicate that the explosion in the mall car -was set off by means of a magnetic exploder, equipped with long wires. ; ?y Two men believed to have taken part In the holdup boarded the train as it was leaving Siskiyou. One wore a duck hunting coat and the other wore a slicker. : Each apparently was not more than 30 years old , and of medium height ana weignv-wfi.v rtrtt 'ill Illinois V Man,' T Wo1 Sops apd Assistant,' Held With 1 out Bail for Grand Jury 'J-. PANA, 111.. Ocj. .12. (By the Associated Press) J John Tokoly, proprietor of a soft drink parlor, hfs two sons) Paul andi . Stephen and Robert A Smith, a. chemist, tonight were ordered held without bond on charges of murder for the grand Jury, by. a : i coroner's jury Which investigated the deaths of five men presumably from poison ous whiskey here, Wednesday , and yesterday. The jury returned a verdict that1 the. men died aa a re sult of drinking fusel oil in bever age, sold to them by John Tokoly. .TPholy with his son, Stephen, is under arrest at a local hospital where they are suffering from the effects, of drinking the beverage while : Pan! . has not , beep appre hended and ' Smith left the city this , afternoon, telling his wife he was going to Pekin, IU.. .. The coroner's jury returned its verdict this evening after hearing the testimony of ,25 witnesses, in cluding prominent businessmen of Pana. J.Qhn Tokotl. who was one of the witnesses, asserted . that Smith . concocted ".the. alcohol nsed n jthe whiskey." State's Attorney Dowell said. Tokoly collapsed on the witness stand, and was taken to the hospital where physicians said little hope was held for his recovery.. ' V Three" more mem were taken to the hospital tocfy suffering from the effects of the poisonous liQuor, bringing to six the number of per-1 Sons who are in a critical condi tion as,' a result: of drinking the beyerage. Doctors hold ot little hope or their recovery - r: BDGTLEGGEfl F.CES CHARGE OF MURDER BLOODHOUNDS IA TO . fm : OF HOIJUPBMI . ... ". i .-.( ...... '..'. Footprints Found Leading up Hill Nczr Sccno of Robbery Tracks Led to Old Toll Rczl Thought it Would Have Been Easy Fcr Highwaymen to Make Get Away. ASHLAND, Ore J Oct. 12. Bloodhounds worked today in an effort to locate; the trail of bandits who-held up th.3 Southern Pacific train No. 13 in tunnel 13 af trie summit of the Siskiyou mountains yesterday. Footprints were found leading from the south entrance of the tunnel where tho mail car was smashed to kindling with dynamite. The trail was seen to lead up the hill from the point in tne Drusn ciose to tne: tracK wnere a re led from the blast set under the car and where the bandits set off the explosion. Tracks led into the old toll road,! now abandoned, that uz:l to cross the chain jof mountains from this point. It 'is z:.U it would, have been easy fdr the train robbers to reach th3 highway to the north of the little station of Siskiyou, closa to the north tunnel portal, where it is surmised they pcd away in .an automobile. . ',' r . ".' ". "' " ' " 1 " '" The inquest of Coroner -John MARSHFIELD BOY ADMITS ILLIHG II Coos Bay Youth and Uncle Indicted of Charge of Murdering Stepmother MARSHFIELD. . Or., Oct. 12. Martin Corell, 16 and Arthur Co veil, his uncle, a cripple, were in dicted yesterday '. here today . on charges of first degree - murder growing out of the slaying of Mrs. Fred Covell, wife of , a Bandon chiropractor, at . her home two months ago. Following the in dictments and 'a onfe6sloir whch Bheriff Ellinson said had been made by Alton Covell, i Dr. Fred flovell :4is released ;ironl3aIl where, he -had been held , with jom pUcity in f the prime,,', , ; f According r to the story which the officers said Alton Covell told, he killed Airs. Covell, who was his Stepmother, at the instigation find wun tne am of Arthur , coveu, by applying bandage saturated with ammonia to her, nostrils and hold ing her until she 'suffocated. The motive, he is alleged to have said was a general family j dislike of Mrs. Covell. Aldrldge' Blake( v Executive Counsellor, and State Bank 7 ry Eyammer Deposed . btKUiHQMA ,ljlTf Apptft ytrr (By -the Associated Press.) Al drldge Blake, the executive ' coun seUor ond Dr. E. T. ..Bjrnum; '"'stata bank commissioner," were' remov ed : from office tonight .by Ooyef" nor J. C. Walton. --u-y . It .. wasj '; understood. hoFevtr, that the executive . counsellor, had broken ; wlth Governori Walton oyer the.-lstfer's recent! policies, particularly with regard; to his military activities against, the Ku Klux Klan. - V- : - : ."Dr." Bynum's administration has been entirely un8atIsfactoryf", the executive declared in a com munication to the bank, commissioner!.'-; '' .. . 'Blake, told the Associated Press that, he . would go tonight before a special investigating committee appointed by the lower : house of the state legislature to Inquire in to impeachment charges against the governor; He declined to make known his purpase Vand likewise would make no statement as to his removal. t y j He declared he : would "have something to say tomorrow." .; Dr. Bynum is .before the legis lative .' investigating . committee now, members of his family told the Associated Press when an ef fort was made to locate' him for a statement. v;; -,17 ff::'; i PHYSICIAN FOUND GCTLTr. SPOKANE. Wash.. Oct. 1 2. Dr W.f Valentine, aged 19; , a ploneert physician of this pity, was found guilty by a jpry In federal cour here;tpday on two counts of an indictment charging jthe sale of narcotics to an aloged drug addict. Because of his ' age the Jury ? recommended clemency! Dr. Yflentine' .1 claimed that .. (he ' nar cqUc was "part of'a cpursajof treatmenj e had prpscrlhed, iLWEifBii STATE OFFliLS 1. UP IM Perl of Jackson county, held here today, dereloped the facts al ready known and responsibility for the four dead trainmen was fixed upon "persons unknown in the" act of train robbery." 1 ' M:" Inquest Held William Merritt of this place, in .charge of train 13, told bin story at the official inquiry. II? told of the plight of his train in the more than half-mile tunnel, set In the heart pf the wildest part of the "conntry traversed by the railroad. . Sixteen of his passen gers were injured slightly by fall ing glass, when the (dynamite ex plosion shattered the car window s. It; was thought then that thero had been a' failure of the loco motive boiler. '.'.'."Mr." Merritt calri ed his passengers as best he coul l. H,' C. Mlcander. a civil . engineer working for the Southern Pacific who was with the conductor &t the time, rah ; a mile downtht track to White Point, where fc' got aid from a.. work train crew. The passengers; fwere in more dan ger after the explosion than bo. fore, since the aynamite charge cut' the air brake lines, and a the heavy equipment stood on a grade, it might have set out ou a ilong plunge, to a derailment. Still at Liberty ', , TREKA,, Cal., Oct. 12. Dan dltp who yesterday murdered four trainmen in the holdup of South ern Pacific train No. 13 in a tun nej , 17 miles south of Ashland,' Or still. were at liberty tonlsht, having .mcceeded for more thac 30 hours In dodging California and Oregon posses in the wooded fastnesses of the Slsklyons. f AI Whitmore, a miner living on the Klamath river, north ot here, reported, to the sheriff's office that .three men broke . into his cabin last night in search of food. Whitmore did not know at the time that the train robbery had been committed and he supposed the trio were ordinary maraudets, he said, ,i .,. I It became known - today that three .strangers spent several days in the town of Hilts, Cal., and vanished from there on the day the . robbery took place. These men were not known In Hilts and their presence there has not been explained. , t. . , Jjact Taken Bloodhounds today tailed' to pick up the scent , of the desper adoes. Other hounds from .Se attle and Yreka are to be given trials later. . ' " , Contrary to first belief that the bandits fled empty handed, it was said today by W. G. Chandler, special agent of the Southern Pa cific company for. this division, that they undoubtedly obtalnel some loot from the mall car be fore itt was consumed by fire caused by the explosion of dyna mite used by the robbers.. . Two . j suspects s were detained han tnAav . hnt iithnrltlfla ! mitted they have no evidence against either of them. William F.'Ounne' Hot Allowed Seattle Tcmp!3 y, i v. . a, .-. SEATTLE, Wash., Oct. 12. William F. Dunne, who was re cently expelled as a Butte, Uont., delegate ! to the American' Federa tion of Labor," because of alleged communistic'' activities, will not be permitted to speak in the Seattle Labor temple Monday night, ac cording jto a decision reached to day" by members of the house com mit fee of the Seattle Labor Tern pie association. tj Following the meetln, F. B. Clif ford of the Civil Liberties nnlcn. who was making arrangements for Punne'e appearance announced he would file suit against the Labor Tem'plq" assoclatlpii tor treach cj