trJQO i . . . ; ' "W , . - V . - . J..! WEATHER .FORKCAST:4PaJr,6Ter;east;i. I and unsettled' over went portions; in lid 1 temperature;. $ith ; winds on coast - Mai- If Imum yesterday 63; minimum, 60; river, I 1.0; rainfall, 0; atmosphere, cloudy;-! wind, northeast. , " 1 1 -- --tv - t - . i t;irst SecdonRages - l"to 6' H I Threes Sections--r2 0 , Pages j "rtmjmrte ili wi? fulfil fnrw mk: v 'V. v t- . v . . jLMimBMP wafwiwtiMJ. am mi ianma-n acwtnmm wwi . - . i THIRD ID W FOUISLM fl Vidow Strangled to Death : anj Body Left in Attic of 4 Vacant House CASE BAFFLES OFFICES Frst Victim pLsrovered in Trunk "j Crammed ViMler Clothes and Second Located in Resi dence Basement PORTLANDS Or.. Oct. 23. (AP) Whlls bfficial reports Mrere lacking, pending tlws,. completidn ot an investlgatioit and an anlopsy toeing condoled, by the,, cordljer's office; rumorgt were. current, here tonight tha.t physicians who had examined the hotly of Mrs. Eeata Withers, discovered In a trunk in her home Wednesday, pronounced that her neck was broken. " If this la true, police point out, the case will become one "of clear murder, eliminating the possibil ity -of suicide. PORTLAND Oct. 23.- (AP); The third woman mysteriously slain here this week, Mrs. Mabel fluke. 35. a widow, was "found strangled .to death late today in the attic of a vacant house she owned in the Sellwood district. Lying on heri back Itt an alcove under the eves. with a towel, tied around her neck, and knotted at (he back, she; was found by her father and a patrolman who were searching for her. A $2S0 dia mond which, she had worp was Aliasing. - - She had advertised the house for, rent and ent to the building Wednesday td clean it. She was last seen in the yard, Wednesday luentoon. ner Hosence am uui fre alarm immediately because LfWaraflt thought she naa gone tp visit friends at independence. When she failed to return today earch was begun. ; . Her husband died six months ago, leaving her the house. She had no financial worries and her health was good. The body of Mrs. Beata With ers, 32, the first death rictim, was found Wednesday, crammed in a trunk under a pile. of cloth ing in the attic of lier house, in vestigators hive been unable yet to determiner s whether she com mitted suicide or was murdered. The oUier- death was that of Mjcs- Vi A. Grant, whose body was found Friday In the basement of a vacant house. Two valuable rings and an earring missing from her person hate not been found. The, coroner has ordered an au topsy although death may have been from natural causes. According to views held by teveral inspectors who have in vestigated the! case, the deaths of the three wonien occurred under ircumstances tending to link up a gruesome murder trail of an unidentified fiend. An three women naa Deen en deavoring to rent their houses and had placed advertisements in, th Portland j papers. , ! Wearing apparel and jewelry are missing in all three cases. i A three bodies were hidden. No oVidence of violence or of struggle na been discovered in any of the three cases. EARL WILL QUIT RANCH FARMER TO" I RETURN TO ENG 11X1? VOn PEERAC3E big horn;, wyo.,r Oct. 23. API Henry Wallop. Earl of Portsmouth plans to relinquish his role of rancher and dirt farm er and to return to his peerage and seat in he British house of lords early next month, , he an nounced today. The earl said he would remain in England during the winter months and return to his ranch ati Little; Goose .Creek near here next summer to rough it. " $ ; - He declared he 'did some "real ranching" this s summer, rising at five o'clock daily, and "going to bed with the chickens' ' The ear) Baid his .cattle had ben sold at "an excellent price" and that he had threshed 5,500 bushels of grain on his ranch within the last fortnight, r f " f EB WOULD RETURH ?MAN pOYERNMENT IAY K CLUDE FORM ER RULER , LONDON, : Oct. 23. (AP) The former German, emperor Wil liam, the; Doorn correspondent of news" of the world .says, is re volted to return to Germany next July, when 'the German law ex cluding . him' expires. : Princess Bermiae, hit1: wife, la t Oels and preliminary arrangements are be ing made for WUllam to reside at Hambarg. ; ' . : A ftfll tot 'Aamritafrti r-rn ttaVltnt fcowever, declares tfat;the Ger- maa gQVernmenr win take . meas ures to continue the former" etn- WITH IE Election MeasuiM Under Discussion Seymour Jones to Speak on Income Tax and Dennis Resolu tion, Men of CU.v Invited to Attend Meetings ' of Six O'Clock Club 1 The first meeting of the year to be held by the Salem Six O'CIock club will be held Monday night,. October 25, at 6:30. The Salem Six O'clock club is axi organization made up of the men of the First Methodist church, of Salem, but all men of the "city are invited to its meetings. The club plans to have a meeting, each month during the winter at which prominent speakers from different parts of the state will be heard. On account of the fact that election is November 2, the program1 for next Monday night will consist of speakers for and against LEAGUE OPPOSES ST ANFIELb VOTE CITIZENS MAILED IJSTTERS BY A$TCA1iOON BODY Statement Signed by Members of Campaign Committee of Society PORTLAND, Ore.. Oct. 23. (AP) All citizens of Oregon who believe in the principle of prohi bition and the observance and en forcement of the law are urged by the Aantl-Saloon League to vote against Robert N. Stanfield, inde pendent ' candidate -f or United Stales senaidrrlA fdrmi statement to this effect has been issued by the campaign committee of the league and thousands "of copies of the letter are said to be now itt the mails to members of" the league and those in sympathy with tlm objects of the organization. A" statement issued, by the Anti Saldon League states that the league is "unalterably opposed to the election of Robert N. Stan field." The statement continues: "The league, therefore, calls on all citizens of Oregon who believe in the principle of prohibition and the observance and enforcement of law, to vote against the can didacy of Robert N. Stanfied for the office of United States senator at the coming November election." The statement is signed -by mrmbers of the campaign com mittee of the league and bears the signatwr. Of E. A. , Baker, chairman. A. L. Veazle, secretary, and J. P. Newell, "treasure. . KING CALLS FOR QUEEN DIGNITY, PRESTIGE OP DIN . AST X HELD THREATENED LONDON. Oct. 23. (AP). The Sunday Observer, with the caption "Sensational," prints a Vienna despatch that reports from Bucharest say King Ferdinand has sent a cablegram to Queen Marie In the T)nited States asking her to return immediately on account of the scornful criticisms which dis parage the dignity and prestige of the dynasty. Political circles, the despatch adds, connect the reports of the queen having agreed tfith the king's message to her. There is no confirmation of this from any other source. NEW YORK, Oct. 23. (AP). -R a d i u t Djuvara, Rumanian charge d'affaires, denied tonight the report published, in London that King Fermnana oi iiumania had cabled td Queen Marie to re turn home. 'There is absolutely no founda tion for this rumor," he said. INJURED IN WILD LEAP SHELBY JUMPS FROM THIRD FLOOR, LANDS ON GRASS S. R. Sbelhy 30, a patient at the state hospital. Jumped from the dining room window on the third floor .yesterday, receiving two broke legs', a broken right forearm, and a dislocated left shoulder. None of the fractures were compound "ones, it was re ported last night, so Shelby is ex pected to recover soon, j Attendants were washing the dining room windows at the time of the leap, and had left one open. Shelby, according to the reports, sneaked into the room while- their backs were turned, and made a dive for the window. He reached It before the attendants could stop him. He landed on his feet In soft grass, or his injuries wonld have been much more serious, it was said last night by hospital au thorities. Shelby was received at that hos pital August 23. 1926, and is a son of R. M. Shelby of Medford. SHIP -REMAINS SILENT BRITISH CRAFT ASKED FOR ASSISTANCE FRIDAY " NEW YORK, OcL 23. (AP) Wireless stations tonight had re ceived no further word of the Brit ish freighter Eastway, which last night sent but! SOS calls for as sistance.! Two stations, here, one at Bermuda and several ships at sea -picked up: the message.' '.The Eastway's location was - given : as about SO miles' off Bermuda. It sailed 'from Norfoli-on J Tuesday tot Brazil. ki Club Meet different measures to he voted upon by the voters on November 2nd. An examination of the pamphlet issued by the secretary of stater containing the constitutional amendments and measures (with arguments) to be submitted to the voters of Oregon on November 2nd, discloses that the people of this state will be compelled to dq some real legislating on that oc casion, "and uiiless careful study Is made of these measures it is feared that the outcome may not be what it should be. It is there fore, the purpose of the club to give consideration to 'some of these measures at this, its first meeting of the year. The measure known as the Or egon Water Power Board De velopment measure submitted by tfte liousowlves Council will be discussed. A. A. Smith, of Baker City, Will speak against the meas ure. An invitation nas ueen ex tended to those sponsoring tho measure to have a representative there to speak in behalf of the measure. Up to date this invi tut ion has not been accepted and therefore, no definite announce ment" can be made at this time as to the speaker in favor of this amendment. Honorable Seymour Jones, for merly speaker of the House of Representatives will discuss the income tax measure and the Den nis resolution, speaking in favor of tho income tax measure , antj against the Dennis resolution. G; CY Chapman, editor of - the Ore fon Voter has been invited to speak against the income tax measure and in favor of the Den- nis resolution, and it is hoped that I Mr7 Chapmaf willr'kble: to beTwslfen Bottle SaidTTttt Contain present to present "these matters. Other speakers will appear t to discuss other; measures. Judge J. T. Hunt,' county Judge of Marion county, will discuss the measure with reference to the tax upon the trucks and stages of the state, and if time permits a gen-i C-ral discussion Will be had as to the measures to be voted upon. SUFFRAGE LEADER DIES REV. OLYMMA BROWN-WIL-LIS WAS CAMPAIGNER BALTIMORE, Oct. 23. (AP The. Rev. Olympia Brown-Wil lis, one of the pioneer campaign ers for woman suffrage, and as sociated in that regard with Su san B. Anthony, died here today after a short illness at the age of 9L She had made her home in Baltimore for the past five years. WHO , T , " ' " ',' ",'' " ," " "" T lll'"V t I "," .r,.- BELIEF FUNDS SENT TO HELP, QUE REGION Hundreds Buried Alive in Ar menia Following Terrifio Earth Shocks NURSES SAVE ORPHANS Near East Relief Officials Say Neetl of Assistance Came at Unfortunate Time as Deficit Is Faced - NEW YORK, Oct. 23. (AP) Dispatch of funds for relief work In Leninakan, Armenia, where an earthquake worked havoc last night, with scores killed or burled alive and thousands injured, was started todar by the Near East Relief. " . A sum of $5000 was cabled to the stricken area as the initial re lief fund and nationwide appeal for aid was telegraphed to - all state commissions of the Near East Relief. The amount to be raised will be decided when relief workers in the field advise their headqarters of the extent of the stricken area's needs. ' . ' Officials of the Near East Re lief said that the need of its as sistance came at an unfortunate time, as the organization's flnafi cial report on October 1 showed a deficit of $137,000. E. C. Miller acting treasurer, said this was due "largely to delays of more than a year in collecting cairns of $300,- (Continued on page 3.) YOUTHS LODGED IN LOCAL JAIL OFFICERS GIVE CHASE AND SECURE EVIDENCE ft Poor Grade of Moonshine Whiskey Following a pursuit of fqu youths in a car out north Capitol frtreet last night by local police of ficers, H. S. Rabena, Howard Hayes, and R. D. Garrett were lodged in jail. Rabena is charg ed with drunkenness, possession of intoxicating liquor, and break ii:g glass in a public street. Gar ret is charged with transportation of intoxicating liquor, falling to stop at a through street intersec tion, and driving while intoxicat ed.' Hayes is charged with drunk enness. A-fourth member of the party was released. The chase started -When offi cers saw the car pass a stop sign without slackening pace. They pursued it, and saw the occupants throw two bottles out of the c?.r. One of the bottles hit the pave- (Continued on page ;2.) SAID, "TWILIGHT OF THE KINGS?' HEALTH OFFICER SUBMITS REPORT BIRTHS AHEAD OF. DEATHS IN MARION COUNTY Plans Being Formed to Give All High School Boys Physical Examination Communicable diseases in Mar ion county outside of statA insti tutions were eight less during September than during August, according to the monthly report of Dr. Walter H. Brown, county health officer, presented at a meeting of the county health unit yesterday. There were 18 cases reported .during August, and only 10 in September, excluding 18 cases of tuberculosis in the state tuberculosis hospital. Births far exceeded deaths, ac cording to the report, there being 74 births and only 29 deaths. Besides these deaths, however, there were 23 deaths recorded in state institutions and 'six deaths of non-residents. One stillbirth was recorded. Regular daily hours have been set apart for the examination of school children, according to the report. Physical examinations have been given all football play ers and plans are under way to give them to all boys in the high school. Forty have already been examined. The county educational cam paign against diptheria has also been started during September, the report stated. Talks have been given in Hubbard, Wood burn, Gervais, Gervals, Silverton, Turner, Stayton and Jefferson, and will be given in other towns soon. A film on diptheria preven tion is usually show.n with the talk. SLOOP LOST IN STORM 20 SURVIVORS ACCOUNTED FOR FROM VESSEL LONDON, Oct. 23. (AP) The admiralty announced that H; M. S. Valerian, a navy sloop of 1,250 tons, sank In the hurricane south of Bermuda. Twenty sur vivors are accounted for. .The British sloop Valerian was riewwfimissloaed : at VBertttttdar ftt July 1925. She carried a com plement of from 85 to 106 men. She was of 1,250 tons gross and indicated horsepower of 2,000. The royal naval list gave her com mander as A. E. H. Wright. The Valerian carried two 4-inch guns and four 3 pounders. BODY WILL BE EXHUMED COURT SANCTIONS FURTHER HALL-MILLS PROBE somerville, fr. j;, oct. 23. (AP) The body of Mrs. Eleanor R. Mills, one of the two victims in the Hall-Mills killings, is to be exhumed at New Brunswick Mon day. Announcement that Justice Charles W. Parker of the supreme court has signed an order grant ing permission for the disinter ment was made today , at Morris-town. RICH i v- - .... . ....... . i ii .ii D POOR QURJ AT BIER OF LABOR READ Worldly Mantels of Political Faith Cast Aside by Friends of Debs GROUP OVERFLOWS HOME Soft Antumnal Wind Rustles Re quiem Among Fading Leaves as Funeral Ceremony Is Brought to Close TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Oct. 23. (AP) The human brotherhood that Eugene V. Debs gave his life to bring about was his in death today. At the bier of the famous so cialist in his comfortable Terre Haute home there came mourners from every social strata. Outside the flower-embowered parlor where lay the body, they left their worldly mantles of political faith, social convictions and religious beliefs to do obeisance to a be loved friend. Capitalists, against whom Debs used his most effective invectives, were here at the funeral, because they loved the charitable vislon arian. And the seamed faces of labor whose cause was ever on Debs' escutcheon, streamed a ben ediction of tears. Rich and poor, lofty and humble, it was brother hood of man much as Debs hoped for. Here and there in the mass of humanity that engulfed the Debs home and stretched for half a block in. three directions was an enfeebled . neighbor who had known this man since, as a pink cheeked youth of 16. he first learned of, the workers problem as a fireman on the Terre Haute and Indianapolis railway. Later companions, Morris HUlquit ., of New YorR.' Congrf f sm.an CVJctbr Berger of Wisconsin and Seymour Stedman of Chicago,, who had stood shoulder to shoulder with Debs in the battle of socialism, had come to. give testimony of their affection. After the funeral ceremony at the Debs' home the body was taken to Indianapolis to be cre mated. The ashes will be burled in a Terre Haute cemetery. Pall bearers were taken from the ranks of Terre Haute socialists and workers: There was no religious service as Debs was a' member of ho church. Debs died in a sanitarium near Chicago Wednesday night after suffering a nervous breakdown a month earlier. " He had suffered from heart trouble. He was near ing his 71st birthday. "His love was all encompassing. It knew no geographical limita tions, was not limited by race or creed," said Stedman, Debs' mouth piece itt the election of 1920,. when the socialist leader, confined in' Atlanta' federal peni tentiary, was hiS party's presiden tial candidate: j 1 f. Berger, who la said to have con verted Debs to socialism, Hillqult and William Cnnnea, of Chicag, also euologized the Indianian. Cunnea, Debs attorney, when he was convicted of obstroctihg the draft during the world war; recalled Debs serenity at his trial. "There wniP hV hitterhess ; In him," Cunnea asserted, "When the newspaper reporter, whose testi mony convicted Debs, met him outside the court' and ' tears streaming front his eyes, cried: YoU don't blame me, Mr. Debs? This exemplar of the Nazarene comforted him, No, my boy. you told the truth. I bless you;for it ''And when he came back from Atlanta to Terre Haute where, he had been born and had lived all his life, I shall never forget his words at his own threshold. Thousands outside were cheering him. With arms outstretched to gather to his breast the wife who had been his comforter, in dark ness, he said: 'Home again He is now home again where- winds of opposition can' never touch him." ' CAMPAIGN j C0STS TOLfa democratic candidate re lates expense fund SEATTLE, :Wash., Oct, 23. (AP) Total expenditures of $27 926.94 on behalf of his campaign by all agencies was testified- to here today by A. Scott Bullitt, democratic randtdate - for United States senator' in" the senatorial investigation into his campaign costs. - . .' - FAN '.DIES DURING GAME .-- ; , r. ,.. FLORIDA WANT SUCCUMBS AF TER EXCITING PLAY . J JACKSONVILLE, Fla., Oct. 23. (AP) J. D. Alverman, 50, for mer councilman, dropped dead during an exciting minute of the Kentucky-Florida game today. . BURNS SPIRIT SPEAKS MEDIUM TELLS WHERE PORTRAIT CAN BE FOU.ND PORTSMOUTH. Eneland. Burns doesn't like; the conven tional portraits , ot him now In common use. He has' made this. known in a communication from the spirit world,' Sir Ar-. thur .Conan. Doyle, author and investigator of psychic phen omena; declared fa .hV lecture here today. Instead Burns pre fers a long lost portrait which I nas just been discovered. Sir Arthur ' said Barrington Nash; an antique collector,; saw the old picture in an, antique shop but the face was at first unrecognizable. Then ; Burns spirit spoke tp Nash through a medium, . telling him in' a' Scotch accent, ot his dislike fortlje conventional Burns por traits and informing him; that' the picture in the shop" was" a bettor one. Acting on the spirit's, sug gestion, Nash bought the old picture and . on cleaning it found that it was a portrait of t ine ocotcn poei, dui presenting a maturer Burns , than the modern public knows. SOVIET BUREAU OU3TS TROTSKY ACTION FOLLOWS MJ2ETEVG OF EXECUTIVE BODY Violation of Discipline by Faction al Activities Held Reason MOSCOW. Russia, Oct. 23. (AP) Leon Trotsky and Leon Kanieneff were-ousted today from the all powerful political bureau of the communist party. Gregory Zinovief f , was expelled from the third communist Internationale. . This action was taken late to night by the central executive eommitlee and the central con trolling commission of the com munist party,, which thus disci plined - the three men for, their factional activities. They also strongly censuered M. Piatakoff. vice president of the supreme council of national economy jAMr Sekonlkoff, former commissar of finance; M. Smflgit of the coal ahd bil ttureau and M. EVdokimoff, as members of the central executive committee and Mme. Nlktilaieva, as deputy mem ber of the . committee, as well as Trotsky, Kameneff and Zlnotieff, for violation of party discipline. The resolution condemning the opposition' group declares that Zinovief f rendered himself, ineli gible for further work in the third Internationale by his fac tional activities within that body. It further sftys that Zlnovieff does not express the policy of the all Hussian ' communist party Within the third Internationale; thit. he earned the disapproval ot the American, British, French, Ger man and other foreign sections of the-third Internationale, thereby losing the confidence of alt branches of that organization. The case of the opposition group, will be considered further at the fifteenth congress of the All-Russian communist party, opening next Thursday, at which M. Stalin will present the view of the ' majority. ; COURT LEVIES FINES JOE BROWN DISMISSED AT CIRCUIT COURT SESSION Jim ? Angelas Was fined $500, Williiam . Brown Was fne $250, and charges against Joe Brown were dismissed in"- circuit court yesterday. The men were arrest ed in a raid - last summer on a moonshine establishment near Broadacres, in, which John Kam boris .was killed. , Chris Angelus, who was present with the other men at the time of the raid, escaped and has not bfeen apprehended since. The mett 're sisted the agents making the raid; the defense held, because they be lieved they were hi-J ackers'.' "Frank McGrath, captured with Harold Looney in another moon- shine raid, was fined $250,' sus pended during his" good behavior, Looney, who pleaded guilty, will be sentenced Monday. A charge of lewd and I llcencious cohabita tion placed against McGratS has not been pushed. . . -' DRY AGENTS GET SUITS NEW PROHIBITION UNIFORMS MAKE. APPEARANCE NEWARK N. J. OcL 23. (AP)-The- first ? uniformed pro hibition agents in the east appear ed no -the streets' of Newark to day. ... ' Colonel Earl McManus, chief enforcement agent, and four other agents, . donned blue, coats with bras buttons. Broad breeches and ptftteesahd' brown caps. It was announced that 20 men would be in uniform within a short time, and that one uniformed agent will be in each raiding party, to assure .bootleggers and- roadhouse -keeper that the agents are "nor hl Jackers. , - . 1 ; ARRESTS TRAFFIC OFFENDER William Leham was arrested hy local police officers yesterday on a charge of driving a car without a muffler. PROii'rPOBT'S TOIE SiiLEi: Chamber of Commerce Com mittee to Put Its Okeh on Proposed Project LOGICAL PRUNE CENTER Committee Makes Investigation 0f Inttitotry, Location for Pro ' posed': Factory , .Under Consideration " The report of the Prun-Port committee la1 to bfaroraWe: Fol. lowlnr the meeting at the Salent Chamber of Commerce on Thurs day evening.? to talk over the pro position of securing the factory of the Major Fruit Products com pany, making the-syrup for prua Port, a committee was appointed t Port, a committee wa anrwrfntcit to make an Investigation ot -tha- maner, tne members of the com--mittee beings George' F.- Yick,r Frank GibSOni D .B Txrmnn Bnrl George B. Gutekunst. -..-- 5 Give ProposItJow Okey This committee has been hold ing meetings and going into the matter thoroughly, with- the re-i suit that Its members are satisfied; to give the- project their okey. If is now a matter of a few davrf only till the enterprise will be tnorougmy tinanced.H- I v - r Locations for- the proposed fac tory are ; being consideredVu but there is nothing definite to report on this head. iThere is very pros pect that this factory, will be in due course of time -need a large amount Of room- to earrr rn itft business, and it is to he presumed inat in arranging ror ... tne Initial location this - likelihood, will ba considered aad -A decision made accordingly. Salem Natural Location -As has been related, before, this lem "the-,factory for making the SVrUn from Which WHr Ha mann. factured the delightful new hev- VHtrt !Prim-fnT? ritivtt fMrff r,rn duct the basis being Italian prunes the splits, culls and small prunes oemg sv&uaDiei ineyT musx om' drfed nrnnes. and rmfv tb Tta.Ha varietv Wilt hm avsflshlA tn trnt- i tieliehtfnl twanc of. the taata of the beverage. Considering these rs quirements, saiem is the location: in the United States"1for such a- factory, hecause this city is th eerrter of the most extensive ltal ian prune industry In this coun try, ii not in any countryr VOTERS BEING TAUGHT SILVERTON GROUP 8TARTS, SCHOOL FOR BALLOTING SILVERTON, Or., Oct. 22. (Special.) A school for voters is Silverton's latest novelty. 4 This is being sponsored by the local Luth eran Brotherhood and will be held before the coming election. ". The purpose of the school,' ac cording to the Brotherhood, is to enlighten voters In an "entirely non-partisan way ot the contents of the different" measures to be voted upon at the November elec tion. Candidates are positively, not to be discussed." H. B. J orgenson and Alfred O. Nelson .compose the -Brotherhood committee acting upon; the matter. They hope to combine with school authorities In the matter. TURNTABLE .KILLS MAN RAILROAD WORKER RUSHED v . BY TRAIN TO HOSPITAL 4 w . PENDLETON, . Or., OcL 23. (AP) Harry Moyle, 48, was caught in - a moving turnlable. at lh Oregon-Washington Railroad & Navigation company roundhouse at Rietlr today suffering Injuries from I which 'he died three hours later. ? Hhr body, was not released for 45 minutes after the acc'.dent happned.-rrvAr;;,-;--.r , Fellow employes? worked desperately-with cold chisels to free the "injured man., -lie was. rushed to a hospital here on a special en gine, in an effort to save his life. He is survived by a wife and two sons.- ' : : 1 , TRUCK . DRIVER INJURED . . . - ... . . SIACHINE HIT - BY LOGGING? TRAIN AT OOQUILLE : lIAItSHFIELD, Or., Oct. 22. (AP) Elmer Hufford, a truck driverwas injured, perhaps fatal ly 'today when . his machine was bit by a logging train at Coquille. Shortly after the accident, Huf ford underwent, an operation to relieve fractures ; in ; the te c r ! a and jaw. It was belSevedtJbe. waa also injured, in ternaily, BICYCLE IS STOLEN H. Cotfchman reported at lr:;l police headquarters yesterday tat his "bicycle had beer stol-jn frr - lla .front cf lis YiiCA L-ii::t ::. ,