WEATHER Unsettled today and Fri day; Probable rains. Max. temperature Wednesday 78: Mln. 89; Wind sooth; Rain .76; Cloudy. BARGAIN RATE During October, SUtesmam dally for one year by mail $3.00. FOUNDED 1831 BEVENTY-NLNTH TEAR, NO, 173 Salem, Oregon, Thursday Blorning, October 17, 1929 PRICE FIVE CENTS EXT WITNESS mmm. Disbarment Suit Is Filed Against 1 World's Largest Airship CAREFUL 35 Dry Raids Are Conducted At One Time By Officers Federal Agents and New Jersey State Troop ers Capture Fortified Storehouse and Special Broadcasting Station TTEW YORK, Oct. 16. (AP)Striking suddenly along a I WIST SUGAR TRUST TELl$STORY "Contributions" to Publica tions Large Items of Expenditure TELLING STORY r Dr. C. H. Herd Contradicts His Previous Statements In Pantages Case Acquaintance of Nine -Years Standing Defends Mi! 1 lionaire at Trial LOS ANGELES, Cal.. Oct. 1. (AP) Charges of perjury and denials by a defense -witness of statements credited to him by dis trict attorney's investigators over shadowed today the issue at stake in the trial of Alexander Pan tages, theatre multimillionaire, on a statutory charge. While Garland Biffle. a defense 'witness, was Indicted by the grand Jury on perjury charges, Dr.jC. H. Herd was summoned to the stand by Packages' attorneys and creat ed a sensation in his repudiation of statements which he was al leged to have made the day fol lowing the asserted attack on Eu nice Pringle, youthful dancer. Herd's testimony came in a etate cross examination, reading from a typewritten statement. Prosecutor Robert P. Stewart asked the witness: Only Part of Previous Testimony Is Recalled "Did you not say to two in vestigators that you thought the first scream Eunice Pringle made was part of an act In the theatre near your offices!" "Yes sir." "And that you thought the sec ond scream was a riot in the the atre?" "Yes sir." "And did you not tell these in Testigators that you knew noth ing about the case and that your son knew more about it?" "No sir." "Then did you not tell them that you didn't want to get mixed - up in the affair and that your son would go to the district attorney." "No sir." Herd also testified that he had known Pantages for nine years, lie is an optician and rents eight rooms on the second floor of the theatre building - which Pantages formerly owned. It was in the private office of the theatre mag nate on the mezzanine floor that Miss Pringle claimed Pantages at tached her last August 9. Questioning Brings Out Pantages' Actions Q Where were you standing when you first saw Pantages the day of the alleged attack. A In the -doorway of my re ception room. w iou saw vantages come put of his main office. A Yes sir. Q You are positive of that? A Yes sir. Q Where did he go? Concluded on Page 12, Column 4.) ID ANNUAL MEET PORTLAND, Ore., Oct. 16. AP) The Oregon grand lodge Knights of Pythias, brought Its 47th annual convention to a close here today with the installation of officers. It was announced that next year's convention will also be held here. Officers installed were: Grand chancellor, H. E. Dixon, La Grande; grand vice chancellor, Ira W. Carl, Portland; grand keeper of the seals, Walter Glee son, Baker; grand master of the exchequer, J. W. Maloney, Pen dleton; grand master at arms, Frank Taylor, Eugene; grand out er guard, Thorleif Hansen, Port land; grand inner guard, N. S. So den, Vernonia; supreme represen tative elect, Darwin E. Yoran, Eu gene; grand prelate, I. W. Turner, Forest Grove. in mis Vast Improvements Made By Health Demonstration Here in Five Year Period Editor's Note: The 8Utem today preaeata the third of aeriea of daily articles Seaifaed to acquaint the people f Marion county in ompreheniio hum with the program and eeComplliB saenta of tho Karion county child health demenetration and with tho proposed Bianaer is Which tho health program will be carried forward whoa tho demonstra tion withdraw at tho end of this I ear. When Henry Ford told the world be was going to bring out a gear shift automobile, the whole country was agog. Bat when Marion eonnty decided to do away with Its eld f liwer-Uke health re gime and pnt in a get-there health program, not even Marion eonnty people became alarmed. It was In the cards to get genuinely ex cited and curious about the new Ford machine; why get excited about the intricacies of that en gine which runs the human body? Let's look back right now to that old model health program in Marion county which preceded the child health demonstration advent in II z 5. Now, you must n't think that Marion county's JL1 wide front extending from ern tip of Long Island, a small army of federal agents and New Jersey state troopers today conducted one of the most elaborately planned offensives against bootleggers in recent years. Promptly at the stroke of 4:30 p. m., which had been as signed as the "zero hour", the officers conducted 35 simul taneous raids. They arrested' at least 32 men and reported tnat they had uncovered a fortified liquor storehouse in Highlands, N. J., and an unli censed radio broadcasting station near that town which they said was used in communicating with rum . ships along the Atlantic coast. Federal prohibition authorities in the southern and eastern dis tricts of New York and New Jer sey united In planning the raids, which were under general super vision of William J. Calhoun, pro hibition administrator for New Jersey. The raids were carried out by 35 deputy United States marshals, 75 special treasury agents and 20 New Jersey state troopers. Old Mansion Made Over To Resemble Fort Assistant United States Attor ney Robert B. Watts received re ports as they trickled into the federal building bere. He said the raid at Highlands, N. J., dis closed that an old mansion had been converted into a storehouse that resembled a fort. The raiders, he said, found am munition, firearms, machine gun emplacements and magazines and beneath the mansion discovered a lagyrinth of vaults and passages containing large quantities of wines and liquors, which were seized. Watts said the raiding party that descended on Highlands caught Mannie Kessler, alleged "king of the bootleggers," ; and Morris Sweetwood, both of whom he said served terms in the fed eral penitentiary at Atlanta, Ga., for liquor violations. Broadcasting Station And Operator Found About six miles from High lands, Watts said, the raiders, act ing on a "tip" came upon a fuliy- (Concluded on Page 12, Column 3.) CHICAGO, Oct. 1. (AP)- The opinion that the average woman in America takes twice as great a risk of her life in becom-1 ing a mother as a peasant woman in some remote Swedish village, MEDiCAL ATTENTION FOR WOMEN LACKING was expressed today by Dr. James The president's words Wednes Heyman, Swedish radiologist who day will be broadcast from a boat was here to address the eleventh near Louisville between 9:30 and annual congress of the American college of surgeons. Dr. Heyman said the lower mor- tality rate in Sweden was due to the fact that the Swedish govern- ment takes an active hand in the regulation of the medical profes sion, while in this country regu lation Is largely left to the profes sion Itself. "In every province," he said. "Sweden maintains physicians who draw most of their pay from the government, supplemented 7 what small fees the poor people can pay them. Because so many people of Sweden live in remote ists eVerrone of thTsVmen musl be specially trained in obstet rics." "The obstetrical xi-i-- American medical Btudent is sadly inadequate, comparison to the rest of the world or stale. They weren't. In at a. at S 1 .1. taci, a group oi maiTiuiiais ua already fostered the idea of care- fui maintenance oi tne numan macnine, ana as a result me Ba lem schools were paying a scnooi nurse $125 a month for 10 momns oi me year iu biwww health of school children. The school nurse was Miss Grace Tay lor, who Joined the child health demonstration in that same capa city. Prior to 1925, however. Miss Taylor alone acted as school narse, which meant that the eouio only give general health snpervi - slon to the more than t.000 pupils in Salem. : School Physician Kept on PaH Tim . . A part-time school Physician served, to readmit school children ....vw.uj v.. examinations and seldom visited the schools; pupils who sought re- admitUnce slips called At his of- tf and for writins them the - , - 1 - Atlantic. N. J., to the east - ' : rp J Tl j. leurux to Leave Today For Manila Ted Fox, Salem's most noted exponent of the manly art of self defense, will sail tonight from Vancouver, B. C, for Manila, P. I., where he will engage in sever al fights. He has been guaranted a large purse for one bout, which will be against Nationalists, and others are in prospect. Along with Fox goes Willie Gordon as his manager. Fox in terrupted Gordon's fistic career temnorarilv & fei7 weefru am when he broke the sailor's Jaw, but that's all in th hnana rrrlnn holds the lightweight champion- Fox has piled up an imposing array of victories in the past year, fighting in Salem and other nnHhvMl fitlo w(n!nr o n.lnr it nf hi. hnnt'. nn irntta nni .. v.' he will give a good account of himself in the islands. ED 3 NEW YORK, Oct. 1. (AP) The National Broadcasting com pany announced tonight that President Hoover will deliver three radio addresses in as many days next week, one of them from a boat on the Ohio river. The speeches will be transmitted over a coast-to-coast network The president's first address will be delivered at Dearborn, Mich., Monday, October 21, be- tween 7:30 and 8:30 n. m.. east- era standard time, during a cele bration in honor of Thomas A. Edison and the fiftieth anniver sary of his Invention of the elec tric light. Tuesday Mr. Hoover will talk at approximately 10:30 a. m. eastern standard time, at Eden Park, Cincinnati, during the ded- lcation of a monument marking completion of the Ohio river lock system. I 1:00 p. m., eastern standard time, and will open officially a new bridge spanning tne unio river and linking Kentucky and south- era Indiana at the point of the Mason and Dixon line. WASHINGTON. Oct. 1 (AP) -The supreme court may noon be asked to decide whether the buy- er of llauor is equally liablawith I th aller to prosecution. A lesi case nas ucen ucu UJ the district attorney at Phlladel- phia as a result of a ruling by the circuit court of appeals there that ffllf! TO DELIV fill SPEECHES DI LEADERS SEEK D TRY RUM BUYER the buyer is immune from arrest. I Rehb reported that he was driv Charles Evans Hughes, Jr., soli- ing at a speed of about 15 miles cltor-general after conferences ith Attorney General Mitcneii, is expected to decide shortly whether the case will be carried -a thai hlrhARt trihiinnl The decision of the department of tuslee was belnr awaited to- night with Interest, in view of the wii..nroa.ii discission recently concerning the liability of liquor I 0 purchasers. Two dry leaders took m nana today In the devel- opments. mm . MyStery A UIO Has No Axles ya - r. . rZUinOTS Otate nrr ntT txri. rw 11 r api a m .- ... v.. n i . u beine tested here it was 1 !?Ji 25f, 8tea m4cnln' Mld to maa. I v . mtiitn Anur Mr. I Mr.tinn nA. h,!,, financed on wt u t0 Ml, tor nA 2 ooe It na 4lebt traiIE. springs, four in front and four In the rear, which are cen- twed to th center frame. The Mr9 Snaft tne front wneig two maiTersal Joints, ... .. . .. wane au in wneess uvt uufiuiMikiigvvrvK I , .1 Secretary Admits Spending $70,000 Per Year in His Work WASHINGTON, Oct 16. (AP) Examination of the $70, 000 annual expenditure In Wash ington of the United States beet sugar association was made today by the senate lobby investigating committee as it turned to the campaign over the proposed in crease In the sugar duty in the pending tariff measure. H. A. Austin, secretary and treasurer of the association, was the lone witness of the day, re lating that $56,230 had been spent in the first nine months of this year, principally in contributions to various publications and office expenses. Asked by Chairman Caraway of the committee if he thought his services in Washington had been influential In procuring the in crease provided in the sugar duty by the tariff bill, Austin replied he thought "it isn't absolutely necessary to our business to have Washington representatives but it is helpful." Numerous Releases Given to Reporters Austin said his organization represenuug w y ., 8USar praucuon, cooperiCu witu hh domestic sugar producers as- SOCiailon wmco mamiaius u. bureau here to distribute press re- leases to the newspapers and newspaper reuuiien. no um uui know how many or which papers uses the releases but said he thought most of the released "went into the waste basket Naming some "lobbyists" inter ested in the other side of the su gar controversy, AuBtln was asked for his definition of lobbyists, tie divided them into four classifica tions The first class the witness nam ed -as those who have money in vested in a business or are offl clals who come to Washington periodically to present their views on matters pertaining to their bus iness. Own Group Called Trade Association The second class, he said, was those "organised trade associa tions, such as ours, who maintain offices in Washington to dissemm ate information ana present meir Tiews to congressmen. "The third class," he continued. "is composed of those so-called professional lobbyists who are ready to take any side oi any case for remuneration. 'The fourth is the parasitic class (Concluded 9a Page 12, Column L) Frank Vines Injured by Automobile Frank Vines. 60. a transient harvest worker now ' making his headquarters in Balem, was knocked down and seriously in jured Wednesday night about 7:45 o clock at the corner of Cbe meketa and Liberty streets, by an automobile driven by Arthur Rehb of Auburn, Vines, bleeding from the mouth and nose, was rushed by ambulance to the Deaconess hos pital, where a physician who ex amined bim as thoroughly as was possible at the time stated that be did not believe internal injuries were suffered. Vines was baaiy I shake no. and appeared dazed i au uiiim uu iuimhjiv. the accident said Vines was in the pedestrian lane near the center of the street when ne was strucx. per hour and that be sounded his born before the accident happen ed. 7 fotof f l ft no Jtnwt. vivv n p . If A Mil .fe M Olinger Field Plans for a neat red and black brick ticket office to be construct ed at the main gate of Olinger field have been submitted to and passed the high school council, Joe King, president, said Wednes- I day. Tne tic set nuuawg was uo- signed by Lyle Bartholomew, school architect, and will be live I feet four Inches by six .feet four I inches. Red and black, tne ca- lem high colors, will also be nsed on the shingled roof. A flag pole will come ap from tho center of I the four-sided roof, and on top I of the pole and hoisted above the f lag wiUbo a imall letter "S". of metaL iv This structure will take the piace oi me dioci o or wme- the student body raised fnnds through a tag sale last spring, and wiU cost but a tew dollars more !v.. e ! MM -One of the powerful engines dirigible, the R-101, which will soon embark on a test flight prepar atory to a trans-Atlantic hop to the United States. Inset shows Lieutenant-Colonel V. C. Richmond, chief engineer of the new craft. WATER FILTRATION S Work to Start in 30 Days on New Filtration Plant For This City Plans for the filtration plant which the Oregon - Washington Water Service company will erect In Salem, are now being complet ed by engineers of the company San Francisco, and win oe ready for final approval within 30 davs. at which time worK on the first unit of construction will be started, it was announced here Wednesday by E. K. Barnum, chief engineer. The clans not yet finished al so Include those for the pumping plant, which will be located on Mlnto island. Already plans for the Intake pipe line have been approved, and a contract was let Wednesday forenoon to Harmon and Tuttle of Eugene lor excava tion. Work will start as soon as materials and eauinment arrive. This intake will be 1700 ieet long, extending out into the riv er to a Dolnt above any possmie source of contamination from lo cal sewers. It will be of 27 incn concrete pipe. The company plans to have it lnstalledbefore the river rises due to winter rains. The duibd house will be locatea nhnnt 3E0 feet above the present temnorarr filter beds, and wui he 2 8 by 18 feet in dimensions. with a tower rising 40 reet above the foundation, to a level higher than the highest flood mark on record. Entrance through this tower will be possible whenever the doors at ground level are un At water. Th filtration Plant itself wui be located on the east half of the nrnnertT now OCCUOied bV the mnanv'n office, at South CODl mercial and Trade streets, ine nlant will front on Liberty and Trade, and will rise a little more than two stories above street xeT el. After the nlant is partly com- nleted. the company win sena here s snecial architect to design the finishing- touches so as io make the building attractive. The arrounds around it will also oe lanriReaned. The Dumns on the lsiana win . . . ... have a capacity of seven million rail on daily, and the nitration plant will have an equal capacity. it will be so arrangea ia ' tional units may.be added when ever the demand for water is sui fiiHant tn necessitate such con Btructlon. 2 Forest Fires Reported Raging In Tacoma Area TACOMA. Oct. 16. Two ser ious forest fires were sweeping thronirh virgin timber in two pla ces in Pierce county today, forcing families to fjee from their homes and inflicting, damage which It Is estimated; will, run Into hundreds of thousands of dollars. Trmore serious "of the two nlnses. Is located 25 miles south east of Tacoma In the holdings of Uie Eatonvllle Lumber company, five miles east of Eatonvllle. Here s.oeo.000 feet of uncut timber had fallen before a steady march of the flames over three sections late today. Rain, which started early this evening gale promises of aiding the fire fighters. KRU8E THROWS DEMEXTRAL PORTLAND. Ore., Oct. 1. (AP) Bob Kruse, Portland hea vyweight grappler defeated Harry DementraL Chicago, in two out of three falls In the main event of the wrestling card here tonight. In a special one i hour .match Al Karasick,' light ' heavyweight of this city, and Kara Arslan Pasha, Turkish matman, went to a draw neither taking a fall. - PLANS m LION fit 5 ' """" k of the recently completed British SOVIET FLTERS TO Only Adverse Weather Will Cause Postponement Of Takeoff SEATTLE, Oct. 16. (AP)- The four Russian aviators, en route from Moscow to New York on a "good will" flight, will hop off from Sand Point naval air base here tomorrow morning for Oakland. Calif., provided weather conditions are favorable and a test of their plane, "Land of the So viete," proves it to be in satis factory condition. The fliers ar rived here Sunday from Water fall, Alaska. The. Russians planned tonight to be at the airport at 6 o'clock tomorrow morning. Tractors will wheel the plane, now equipped with landing gear, to the field, where the motor will be warmed up and a short test flight made before the final takeoff. The weather was problematical to night. It was raining and the government weather observer at Sand Point predicted rain for to morrow. The visiting aviators spent part of their time today investigating aviation development in the northwest. Chief Test Pilot Les lie Towers of the Boeing Airplane factory here, demonstrated two planes for them, one a commer cial model of the navy pursuit type and the other an 18 passen ger plane now being turned out for transcontinental serviee. E SHANGHAI Oct. 16 (AP) President Chalng Kai-Shek faced with serious threats to his au thority as head of the National ist government Is redoubling ms efforts to stamp out the opposi tion movement. Ha has disnatched his chief from Nanking to Kalfeng in the province of Honan by airplane in order to assume command of the rorernment forces seeking to halt the advance of the Kuominchun or peasant's army into North no- nan. In addition he has sent his crack first division of the Hankow rarrison to vulnerable points in order to stop the Kuominchun advance southward near the Hu neh border. Despite reports that Peng Tn- Hslang, once known as the Chris tian general, who is leader of the Kuominchun. had been "captur ed" by Yen Hsi-Shan, the model governor of Shansl. the exact lineup of Shansi was not clear. Oregon Legion Very, Powerful Mosher States PORTLAND. Ore.. Oct. 1. fAP) Oregon department. Am. eriean Legion, has become one o the most powerful units In the na tional organization despite the fact that it is small compared to the departments of the populace eastern states, and its reputation was enhanced this fall at the Lou IsTille convention by the display of Oregon frodneta and the open house which It maintained In the Brown hotel, said Carl R. Mosher, state adjutant, who has just re turned from the convention city. The Oregon delegation numbers only 18 as compared to 72 for New York and 71 tor Illinois, bnt the Oregonians have attained unique political powen CHAI! SEEKING TO T SU PIER George W. Joseph Thomas Mannix Charges Planting Liquor in Home of Supreme Court Justice; Tel egram Staff Member Involved Charges that George W. Joseph, Portland attorney, con spired with one Henry Hanzen and others unknown, to plant liquor at the home of John L. Rand, associate justice of til i. - 4. ..ivt ntiin -! fa nasi in HicliBrmont nrnrril ings filed against Joseph in the supreme court here las! night. The proceedings were filed by Thomas Mannix, Portland lawyer, who alleged in his complaint that it was the purpose v Suspects in Court Upon Rum Charge Six charges of prohibition law violations have been filed in Jus tice Brazier p. Small's court In the last two days. The three men brought in for arraignment Wednesday were A. J. Hughes, charged with possession of a still; Henry Becker and William Krebs, facing charges of sale of liquor. In each case bail, set at S1000, was not furnished, and the three men are in the county Jail along with the three placed there Tues day. Each of the trio asked time to enter a plea, and was given un til Thursday afternoon. Becker has been serYlng as a juror In circuit court here for the last week, and remarked when ar rested that he had been dispens time, and now hoped to receive ing Justice for that length of time, and now hoped to receive a little for himself. His home is at Woodburn. Hughes, who lives on a farm near Marion, claimed, when In formed that a still had been found on his place, that someone had "planted it" there. The of ficers then went on to tell him that three gallons of moonshine had been found near the house, and a quantity of mash in another location on the premises. - S ITALIAN PLANES Tl ROME, Oct. 16. ( AP) Five laree Italian nlanes were report ed tonight as being prepared for simultaneous trans-Atlantic flight. It was said that the min ister of aeronautics would be a passenger in one to keep his pro mise made to Lewis Yancey and Roger Q. Williams to return the air visit of the Americans. It was announced today that Major Maddalena would begin a flight to America on November 16 or 17 when he would have the advantage of a full moon. He expects to follow a course to the West Indies and thence without to New York, if fuel per- mils. His eventual goal is Dallas, Texas, for the $25,000 prize of fered by Colonel Easterwood. As a preliminary to this at tempt he will make an assault on the world duration record, prob ably tomorrow. Major Maddalena was the first to sight the party of General Nobile on the Arctic ice after the wreck of the dirig lble Italia. VANCOUCER. B. C, Oct. (AP) Major Charles Klngsford Smith has almost completed ar rangements for a non-stop flight across the Atlantic from London to New York next May or June. The Australian arrived today en route to Sydney. "I have one more ocean to cross," he said and referred to the 70,000 miles his plane, the Southern Cross, has flown since his trans-Pacific flight early last year. "We left the Southern Cross In Holland for an overhaul," he said. "She will be practically rebuilt, but the old engines which have crossed the Pacific and Indian oceans and have been around Aus tralia on many trips, will be in the Southern Cross when wo start west across the Atlantic." Father Given Right to Kill Girl9 s Seducer MEXICO CITY. Oct, 16. (AP) A father "has the right to kill hit daughter and her seducer in cases where the girl sacrifices her honor, according to the terms of the new penal code drawn up un der extraordinary powers granted to President Portes Gil by con gress. The code is appearing in installments la the official Ga- tette. - CROSS ATLANTIC SOUTHERN CROSS TO MAKE ATLANTIC HOP J A, VOvJil Aaouaiu niiu iitv other persons involved in the conspiracy, to make it appear that he was the carrier of the liquor. Chief Justice Coshow signed an order citing Joseph, to appear in the supreme court No- vember 4 and show cause w hy be should not be disbarred. "As a part of the liquor con spiracy," read Mannix' complaint, "Hanzen notified the federal pro hibition officers that your com plainant was about to deliver the liquor to Justice Rand. The af fidavit disclosing this conspirary is in the hands of W. K. Newell, federal prohibition director, it was only by discovery of the plot that the said liquor was not planted." Plot Said Intended to Put Court in Bad Light Mannix alleged that the con spiracy was intended to reflect on the supreme court and its ic - I bers. "While the case of Wemme ts. Selling was pending on appeal in the supreme court, and before a (Concluded on Page 8, Column l.J HIGH PRIESTESS' LOS ANGELES. Oct. 16. ( AP) Investigation of the Great Elev en cult, recently brought under surveillance In connection with alleged bunco activities, was giv en new impetus today by Deputy District Attorney Charles Kar. ney's statement. He was con vinced Samuel Rizzlo, missing husband of the second high priest ess of the order, had met with foul play. Kearnev saldTtizzio, nusbaaxi ei Mrs. Ruth Weiland Rizzio. daugh ter of Mrs. May Otis Blackburn, organizer and high priestess ef the divine order of the royal arm of the great eleven, probably "was killed". He declined to elaberate on the statement pending the oat come of a new series of inquiries. At the same time Captain A. Thomason, head of the police bun- codetail. said seven additional wit nesses had been discovered and would be taken before the grand 11 TV "We are satisfied a conspiracy between Mrs. Blackburn Land her daughter existed and we will h indictments against them on bun co charges," Thomason said. Mrs. Blackburn is held in de fault of 110,000 bond pending trial in superior court on twelve counts of grand theft brought by Clifford Dabney, wealthy oil oper ator, who charged she obtained $50,000 from members tbreagn misrepresenting a book she was writing. Mrs. Rizzio was released yesterday after a municipal court judge . declared the evidence against her was Insufficient to connect her with the alleged theft. A letter Mrs. Rizzio said she re ceived from her husband after be had been sent away "on business for the great eleven" in Septem ber, 1924, came under fire. Hand-, writing experts said the letter, which tended to bear out cult leaders' assertion the man was on a mysterious mission, was writ ten by a righthanded person. Bis- sio, his brother ranK maw pointed out, was left handed. Another Suspect In Bond Plot Is Put Under Arrest PORTLAND, Ore., Oct. 1 (AP) John K. Nesbltt. 70 was arrested here tonight by dennty sheriffs in connection with tho resurrection of more than 117, 500 worth of supposedly destroy ed bonds of a $1,000,000 iss of the Interstate Utilities eompany, a Washington and Tdaho concern. Nesbitt was apprehended at bit home after officers had waited there since early morning. The district attorney's office said Nesbitt a real estate deal er, had been watched by. officer for sveral days, he was charged speclficaly with "having a fale Instrument ef debt In his posses sion with Intent to utter it aa true." , Nesbitt was unable to rah $5000 bond. . LT"MBER3IA2f DIES PORTLAND, Ore Oct- la"- (AP) Nils J. Blagen, promltwM lumberman and contractor ot tbw citr died today after an Illness ot i several months. , - - SSLI methods were so antiquated in (Concluded on Pags 3, Column L) " Jwmmmj