TOE ONLY SMALL DAILY IN AMERICA CARRYING REGULAR WIRE REPORTS FROM THE ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS AND THE LN. a DAILY EDITION DAILY EDITION Br The East Oregonlan Is Eastern Ore Bon's greatest newspaper and as a ell ins force gives to the advertiser over twice the guaranteed average paid cir culation in Pendleton and Umatilla The net press run of yesterday's Dally 3,194 This paper Is a memoer or ana audited by the Audit Bureau of Circulations. county of any other newspaper. J COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER NO. 10,217 DAILY EAST OREOONIAN. PENDLETON, OREGON, TUESDAY EVENING, AUGUST 22, 1922 VOL. 34 w W-U. - 1 . . - - - - - MAN BEUEVm TO BE IMPLICATED INORTLANDHOOTING ARREST'yj THIS MORNING AT HAPPY CANYON BY J. MARIN I . SHOPMEN PREPARED FINANCIALLY FOR A LONGJTRIKE Seniority Question Stumbling Block to All Peace Propos als at New York Meeting. . .1 ORGANIZED LABOR ASKED FOR SUPPORT Brotherhood Leaders Will Hold Steadfast to Demand for Re turn of Senority Rights. WASHINGTON, Aug. 22. (U. P.) Railroad executives must accept defeat on the seniority question if the walkout of the shop woraers Is to be settled, one of the leading la bor figures in the strike told the United Press today. Unless the man agements are .prepared to concede the shopmens demands for rtto lo tion of the seniority rights, the peace conference of brotherhood leaders and railroad executives In New York will be futile. This determined the stand of the nresent strikers ,und the determina tion of the eastern railway execu tives for a fight to the finish and the call issued by the American Fed eration of Labor for financial and moral support of the shopmen by all organized labor, have caused the ad ministration jleaders to. lose the hope they one' had for early strike set tlement. This strike leader said that all plans for settlement of the strike in the New York conference "between executives and he hlg four brolher hooU 'chiefs were advanced by the executives. The brotherhood leaders ' remaining steadfast for the demand for the return of seniority rights and threats to 'fight along that line in definitely. The strikers have ample funds to do this, the leaders claim ed. . HELIX MAKES PLANS FOR NEW SCHOOL HOUSE Plans for the $50,000 new union high school building, which was re cently authorized by the voters In union high school district N'o. 1 at Helix, are moving along rapidly, ac-.nI-ritr, tn.n. W. Hatch, local archi tect, who has been engaged by the hoard of education to have charge of tch architectural port of the work. A meeting of the board was held yesterday which Mr. Hatch attended. Several points about tho new school plant have alreody been definitely decided. The exact location of the building will be decided on by an election within the near future, ac cording to the local man. The building will be of brick con- art innf trimming. It will consist of a joint auditorium nnct nil uv nun - - nil ui v.. ...v.. . gymnasium, live via r"""'"- tis 'a office, locker, snowvr mm , rooms. It will oe neaiea oy t.u... and probably will be of collegiate Gothlo design. Hatch, stated. A. C. Voelker, former superintend ent at Hermiston. will be principal of the Helix union high school. It is said. A. C. Mclntyre is chairman of ' the board of education in the district. The building can not be completed in time for the beginning V this school year, the architect states. The bonds will soon be advertised for sale. Reported by Major I-ee Moorhoua weather observer. Maximum, TS. Minimum, 50. Barometer 2.Tn. TODAY'S FORECAST 3imr Wed. . I, 1 i j THE WEATHER 1 ; 1 : : ' . Special Soviet Representatives Sought by Police Fifteen Delegates to Com , munist Convention Were Arrested by Detectives. pmiviEMAX. inch.. Aug. 22. (IT. p.) Fifteen delegates to the national convention of the communist party 01 Am'orirvi were arrested- by deputy sheriffs and federal agents here today. Sixty others, delegates to the conven tion' which has been in session her since Friday, escaped. William J. Burns, head of the bureau of investi gation at Washington, issued lnstrue- tinna ftir the raid. Two pec.al repre sentatives of the soviet premier, Len- tne, escaped and are being sougui Chicago, with William Z. Foster, radi cal leader, who also escaped arrest. OHGAVIZKR, DTCAO PAI.O AI.TO. Cal., Aug. 22 (A. P.) Colonel Harris Weinstock, former state market commissioner noted for organizing the growers, associations hrmii.hnn the state, died today from !i. fractured skull suffered in a fall ( from a horse Sunday nt Los Altos. TACOJ1A; Aug. v22 (U. P.) War den Archer today pressed bloodhounds Into service in an attempt to recap ture Frederick Delage. escaped on- vict.'at liberty from McNeil's Island since early Monday. Delage escapee? from the same side of the prison from which Roy Gardner made his sensational dash almost a year ago. IV J ROY GARDNER STUNT ' DUPLICATED MONDAY RACER JAY SEE SH0Wf; Ww.nrd Wilcox, noted auto racer. has the Pendleton Round-Up bee, and he is planning to be here this year . . i. Di....r ir , rnn nrrnnfire ms schedule satisfactorily, according to 11 ! i.ii.. .dvri from -Howdv" by Hex KUls. Kllis and the Indiana man ar warm personal friends, their ac- minlntanceshln dating buck to tin- time when they knew each other in the Middle West. The letter follows: Mr. Rex Ellis, co Kllis Schiller Co., Main & Water Sts., Pendleton. Oregon. mother and thirty Dear Rex: I am In eW t our 1 nP and grand chtl book. "Let 'Er Buck." and it ce, -, ,on ' recently celebrated talnly i very interesting. It Is dlt.i anniversary. L.-Alna iha T nCrtflilllV Wallt lOll"" R-""-" . . attend the Round-fp Is possilile. H' things break right at Lnlontown ann. K-nnana oiv 8eitember 16, 1 nuns. you will have me on your hands for a few days and if they dont i am sure to be banging around next year when you have the Rounil-l p. After I have finished reading this book 1 Intend to ship the same to my friend Goux In Paris, who, as I told you. Is surely crasy about cowgirls, bucking horses and cowboys. How ever, I will expect him to return It to me, as this is a book worth keep ing. Honine that things break so I ran m MI VCIU UL the Round-l n ann favors. I bee j to remain Yours very truly HOWARD WILCOX. AND KILLED HER, CLAIM nfcXVER. Aug-, it. A. P.) Al bert J. Love, insurance nrent. was ar rested todnr on a Oreeley Colo., mur-j der charge- following a months inves tigation of the death there ostensibly .h...oH . V. avnlnilnn ,1 f a finmltnC stove, of Kdna J. Skinner, youni! aehnM teacher of Rloominlton. III., his ! itr in law. Lowe is accused of In- I ducing the teacher to take out two thousand dollars life insurance, pay able to h'm. and that he bent her to ; death with stove m-eiKht, sMnratu! Ihe body with it.isollne. wrecked the nil tnv ,nrl t fire to th kitchen of his horn- whT- the alleserf crime) occurred. Relatives sisnen m- inva lidation when he reached Hlimminr tn with the ronw and oMoctcrt to l i opening the coffin. 11 GOES ASLEEP SMOKING: 1 1 AWAKES WITH BED AFIRE I CHIAOn. Ant il. Karl Walter K is in a hospital reroverinj from r Toniht and ions b-irns iistind htle m..kme a Wed.. fair.' eirwrette in bJ. !' Wiltm Wl r' ' I until the riaroe tfgran to tosst his 1 toes. WEALTH! WOMAN OFFERS $100 PER MONTHTOR MATE Mrs. Edith Spreckies Wake field, in Love With Artist, Makes Offer to His Wife. PROMISES ALSO TO CARE FOR BABY Statement Issued by the Two Women; Lover Former Wife '" of John D. Spreckies, Jr. . PAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 22. (I, p.) a strange love triangle In which a wealthy woman in alleged to have offered to pay a hundred dollars a month to another woman for the sur render of her husband was revealed here today in published Htnternents of parties concerned. Mrs. Rodney Hen drioli first attracted attention to the sitimtlnn when s-he published a state nnnt in which she rteclnred that Mrs. F.rtilh SprecUels Wakefield, former wife of the lnte John T). Spreckies Jr.. had promised her n hundred dollr.rs a month for life and offered to sup nort ber lis by if she would divorce hrr h"sbnnd, nn nrttst. Mrs Wake f'o'rt 'ssi-eri a rtntement admitting her 'nve for Kenrtrlei.-. her desire to mnrry im n"d her willingness' to see that Mix. Keni'rlelt and her baby-were provided for. .'. ' Killed In Wreck. ' LOS AXIKLES. Aug. 22. (U. P.l killed and several on between two snt,i Fe tmins at Kinghnm. Ariz.. enrly today, according to advices to the general offices here. A relief train has been sent to the scene. De tails are lacking. CWCD V T M E Tfl E FAMILY tVC.ni llitnu mi- EATS IT'S A BANQUET I nni'EN', France. Aug. 22. When the famllv of Frederick Klliot. garden er nit down In dinner they hnvo to put lo U-.iBt a dozen extra boards in me in 1 . . ..' .- . ; 1 ry fvV rr.- :r I Steel Corporation To Raise Laborers Wages 20 Per Cent XKW YORK, Aug. 22 (U.P.) Judge Elbert Clary, chairman or the United States steel corporation, announced that wages of day la borers in the company's manufac turing plants would be raised ap proximately 20 per cent September fust. MINERS SING AS THEY MARCH TO MINES LEFT ' AT OPENING OF STRIKE College Boy Enthusiasm Dis played by Workers as Long Period of Idleness Ends. CHARLESTON, W. Va., Aug. 22. U. p.) rMlners were flocking back to the pits here today resuming opera tions halted April first. They will make strenuous efforts to add sub stantially to this districts turnout to swell the supply of coal needed to re plenish the nations bins. The specter of famine which has haunted the dis trict for months faded as the workers with almost college boy enthusiasm marched to the mines in droves, sing ing "John .Brown's Body." . Operators Sign Pint CREYBNXK. Wyo., Aug. 3Z.-r(V. TM Mine maintenance workers re tutrnud to work throughout the stati today following ml agreement by nner-ii nrs and miners I'epresentativpi- to the Cleveland peace plan. The miners will go buck to their jobs as soon as the operators call tnem. in 1921 wage scale and check off syster was adopted. IT WASyriXfiT.ON. Aug. 22. d. P.) rteprosentulive .lohn Hill, of Mary land, republican, today demanded that Secretary Mellon remove federal prohibition commission Roy Haynes Immediately on the ground that he Is defaulting ihe government by sending out under the official mail frank of the treasury depurtment personal po litical propaganda in the Interest of himself nnd his associates, the antl- snloon league. X .- . 1 .1 WrA .,ov ??r ACTION PUSHED ON PRESIDENT'S COAL PROPOSALS Bill for Commission to In vestigate Coal Situation Favorably Reported Today. WANTS ONLY PUBLIC'S REPRESENTATIVES Daughtery Drawing up Bill for Federal Coal Agency to Act as 'Middle Man.' Washington, Aug. 22. or. P.) President Harding wants the feder al coal Investigating commission to be composed onlj- of representatives of the public, the white house stated today. He opposes representatives 0" min.-rs, operators and the public on the commission. This announcement came shortly after the senate labor committee reported favorably on Sen ator iloruh's bill providing for a1 com mission of five ineiii-.iers. ;The anti coal profiteering hill will probably be Introduced Into congress by the end of the week. - Daughtery Is drawing np the bill providing for n federal coal agency to act as "middle man" by buying huge quantities of coal for Interstate ship ments, thus, holding down prices. Meanwhile notion Is being pushed -in both houses on the president's sugf Seat ion for legislation creating u coal omtnlssion and other legislation In compliance with lj.'iiding's suggestions retfiirdlng alien protection, Inspired !iy Ihe Herrln massacre, when two al iens were reported killed. ROLL OF HONOR BEARS BRAVE PIGEONS' NAMES TAIUS, Aug. 22 A pigeons' hon ir roll lias just been completed bear ing the names of all courageous car riers of dispatches during the Great Wi.r Three axttdes of distinction corresponding to the Legion of Hon or, the Military Medal and the Mili tary Cross were awarded, and the dis tinguished birds will be used to truln other raw recruits. Twice hm,nv tbev need have no feurs for nbl aire, for when they become too aged for service the faithful car riers ure made honored pensioners. Mathilde Married To Oser is Rumor In Switzerland Couple Slipped Away 'for Trip Through Italy and Austria More Than a Week Ago. ZT'ItOH, Switzerland. Aug. 22. (U. p.) Max Oser and fiance or bride as ihe case may be. Mathilde McCormlcU, seventeen year old American heiress, tim-c. lft Mwlf?.prland for a trip through Italy and Austria, newspapers stated today. Many believe the cou ple ore .already married. They slip ped away week ago and have not been heard from since. m'IMIXO WIVES WAY NEW yoitK. Aug. 22. (IT, P.) Twelve workmen 'were crushed and In jured today when the second floor of tho Clarldge Hotel herb crashed to the street below. The steel beams gave awny with a roar that shook the bright lights district, where thous ands of sightseers and pedestrians wiere crowded in the streets. One worker is believed to bo fatally hurt. TELEPHONE COMPANY , NTERVENES IN CASE rnT!TT.ANrr Auir 22. (A. P.l Charging public Sorvico Commission ers McCoy nnd Kerrigan with con Hnlraev the Pacific Telephone nnd Telegraph company today Intervened In the circuit court In tho suit Institut ed by Tlobert O. Duncan and others to set aside the new telephone rates. Judge Rvans allowed the company's motion to Intervene. ' J Wheat prices are higher today, Sep. temhor grain closing at $1.02 Vi, De. cember ut $1.03 5-8 and May at $1.08. yesterday's closings were $1.00 7-R, $1.02 3-8 nnd $1.07 3-8, respectively. Following are the qnolntlons receiv ed by Overheck & Cooke, local brok ers: Open High Ixiw Sept. $1.01 '4 $1.03 1 $1.00 Dec. 1.03 1.04 1.01 V4 May 1.07 1.00 1.06 Close t.2Mi 1.0.1 1.08 The advance In Liverpool which was I Vi higher, was not much of a factor In early trading, the opening gain be ing erased. Towards midday offerings dried up and an oversold condition wns disclosed, which found reflections In an advance of 3 1-2 cents from the low point. At the close it-appeared as though shorts had thoroughly cov ered, and the tone was not strong. The advance In Liverpool according to cable advices wan due to short cover- j Ing. and a let up In practically all of cash wheut recr-ipts, but with not any apparent Improvement In the actual demand. Domestic conditions point ing to a movement from first hands which will bo difficult to absorb with out price consesnlons. We continue to feel that sales mndo on bulges can lie replaced to advantage. CATTIjR mark ft bteaoy. PORTLAND, Aug. 22. Steers steady, cows a quarter lower, calves :,(! cents higher, hogs f,0 cents lower. prime, light, $ll.r,0 to $12; sheep slow to weak; eggs two cents higher, buy Ing price 22 to 2 cents, selling, 24 lo .11 cents, butter steady.. PASSAGE Of BONOS WASHIXOTO.V. Aug. 22. tV. P.) The passsse of the soldiers bonus hill In the senate by the middle of next week seemed aiuiured today. Chairman McCumber predicted a sub stantial majority over two thirds for Ihe hill. It Is estimated the bonus will impose an additional financial burden on Ihe nation of four millions, and opponents are fighting the bill on the ground that the nation cannot bear It. Mcf'umber and other si'n- l,tt-rs claim the bill Is a long overdus 1 Tovernm nl obligation In the veterans.! XTRA CINCINNATI, Aug. il. (A. P.) Clerks and freisht handl-rs on th? t'nion raclflr tiII he Increased two cents sn hor over the old scsle with oration and rick leave snd with Sat urday half holiday restored under sn s(rr-em-nt announced today by union head'iwanera here. MAN ALSO WAHID HERE ON CHARGE OF HUROpOLD-UP Fred Blake and Partner Were in Jail Soon After Arrival in Pendleton Last Night. PAIR ARE BEING HELD , FOR PORTLAND NEWS Jim Ryan Who Confessed to Part in Robbery is Also in the Pendleton Jail. The belief that Fred Blake, arrest ed here this morning by Deputy Sher iff Jake Marin, la One of the two men Implicated In the' holdup und shoot ing of one man nt George evo" soft drink place on the night of August 19 at the corner of 17th and Ncrthrupp streets In Portland, Is expressed , by members of the sheriff's force, and special agents of the O.-W. It. & N. The arrest of Blake, who is nn ex. convict, was made by Marin At au early hour this morning -while the t wanted man was asleep In Happy Can yon. He was armed with a 38 call ber Colt revolver and also had pair of tweezers and a flashlight In his possession. " . ' A ' t,' Also Wanhjlllem.,..,, v:.,;,.,:; ' lllake is also" wanted by tlio tTiun. tilln county authorities, and he may be held here, it Is thought he Is Im plicated In the holdup nt the road camp at Huron on the Blue 'mountains several weeks since when about $800 was seoured by stlckup men who worked the camp Just after pay day. A partner of Blake's was also grab bed this morning by the officers. He gave the name of C. P. Wilson. The 1 two men are said by tho officers to ; have cotne up from Portland yester day on a local freight.' They trot off ' at IVeth and Inter came on to Pen dleton, arriving In the night, Wilson was nnbbed first and shortly after ward, the arrest of Bluke had been et- ' fected. ' ' , Jllake Waa Wanted. ' A search for Blake has been under way by the sehriff's office ever since the holdup at Huron. A description furnished by the men at the rood camp led the officers to believe that Klake might be the man war ted for having taken part In the work there. ' He'hadn't been In Pendleton very long until he was In Jail. When confronted with his picture which was taken while he was In the ' Wyoming state penitentiary, lllake ad mitted his Identity, He Is 30 years old. wears a blue suit, an olive drab army . shirt, an old cap. He formerly wore u moustache, but he Is now smoothly shaven. He was sent tip In 191 for entering a box car, and was released in 1921. Jim Ryan was arrested shortly aft- . er the Huron job and admitted his part in the work, but he is said to have refused to talk about who his , companions were. He Is also here in Jail. Await Portland ewa. The sheriff's office Is In touch with Portland since the arrest of Blake. The description of one of the men who participated in the holdup and shoot ing fray at Bteve's place In Portland August 1$ agrees In every detail with ! Blake's dress and physical appearance 1 the officers declare. Mark llotlch, a I customer In the soft drink place, die. I within two hours after he was shot, and Portland has been searching for the men who did the job every since. Wilson will also be held, pendinjr developments. World Too Fast, Asks to Be Put Back in Prison ALBANY, Aor. 2!. Friend less, and lost without the pro tection of the Albany County Jail, which for nearly thirty years has been his home, at his own request, Ollbert Meade, a deaf mute, asked Police Judge J.,hn J liradv that he be sent to Jail on s charge of vagrancy. He had been released Just twenty- four hours previous. He was recommitted for four months. In making his unique apnea!. Meade wrote a slip of paper: 4 The wortd is too f..-t for me. 4)