Medfoed Mail Tribune The Weather Prediction Ruin Muxiiuuul yesterday 4-1. ft Minimum toduy l!tt I'relpl(ull.in 87 Weather Year ftgo Minimum , IK Mlniiiiuiii !it NO. Daily Hlovtoutli Tw. jyV tv tMrrt MEDFORD. ORKOOX. MONDAY. FKIiKUAUY f). 1 f). MAN STILL ALIVE, RADIO IN CAM Five Electrical Tests Reported to Demonstrate Entombed Man Still Living Heart Beat Heard At Present Rate Shaft Won't Reach Collins Until Thursday or Friday. CAVE CITY, Kj, Feb. 0. (By the Associated I'ihism) The slin-ft being bored into Sunt! cave, where, noyd Collins lies en tombed was 33 feet (loop at 3 p. m., today. Further tests wllli a sound amplifying apparatus null nn electric wlro In the enve con vinced the observers Unit Collins wuh nllro The test liullciiiu-d, they wild, his respiration was about l!6 times a minute. CAVE CITY, Ky., Feb. 9. (By the Associated Press.) Five elec trical tests conducted with voice amplifiers today have convinced H. T. Carmichael, In charge of the Floyd Collins rescue work at Sand cave, that Collins is alive, despite ten days' imprisonment. H. G. Lane, Munfordville, oper ating the lighting system which supplies current for the bulb left at Collins' head, said Homer Col lins, after listening 20 minutes on the wire, was convinced he had -heard Floyd's heart beating at the rate of 20 times a minute. . Lane said Floyd was breathinq and his heart beating 18 to 21 times a minute. "While we were in the cave we attempted to compare the breath ing of Homer Collins with that of his imprisoned brother, but we couldn't do this successfully be cause Homer Collins was so ex cited," Lane added. The 'test was made on the wire which had been placed around Collins' chest last week by res cuers. "Many people on the out side would not believe our test proved Collins was alive," Lane said, adding that a statement would be given out later "proving that Collins was alive." CAVE CITY, Ky. .Feb. !. (Ily the Associated Press.) The shaft through which rescuers hope to reach Floyd Collins in Sand Cave was approxi mately 30 feet deep at 9 A. M. today, our days after it was started. At the present rate the level where Collins . is thought to be will not be reached before Thursday or Friday. Mother nature today had added an other obstacle to the efforts of man to rescue Collins from the grip of a boulder trap in the depths of Sand cave, sending torrents of rain last night with a promise of more today. Despite precautions to keep water out of the pcniendiuclar shaft aimed at Collins' prison, seepage crept Into the bottom of the shaft and added heavily to the burden of the volunteer diggers. They kept doggedly at it with some slight increase In hourly progress as the tenth (lay of Collins' Imprisonment ended at 10 o'clock this morning. The shaft then was less than half way to Collins, 60 or 70 feet below the surface. When rock slides blocked the nat ural tunnel of Sand cave Thursday, the use of pungent but harmless gas was seized upon as a means of finding the back end of Collins' latest cave, but the experiment tried last night with banana oil was unsuccessful. Despite a strong down draft of air into Sand cave, no trace of the .odor could be located in another nearoy cave. With most of the spectacular, frenz ied striving to free Collins a closed chapter and all efforts centered on . the monotonous toil of digging and hoisting, new theories began to de velop about the situation until they were almost as thick as the outstand ing Incidents In the drama. Scoff at a Publicity Hoax. The principal groups of theories fall Into three classes that the imprison ment of Collins by a rock slide on his leg Is a publicity hoax; that enemies finding him trapped caused the walls of the cave to collapse so lie could not be rescued alive, or possibly caused the slide which trapped-him. Continued on Pair Elsrhtl BABY IS SAVED BY OPERATION WHEN MOTHER FATALLY INJURED IN CRASH LOS ANGELES, Feb. 9. Out of the wreckage of a family, two members of which are dead and one Is dying as the result of an automobile colli ' slon, surgeons at a hospital here to day saved the life of a seven pound baby hoy by performing a Caesarian operation upon Its mother, pronounc ed fntnllv injured In the crash. Sidney' Kahn, 35, and ht 18 months State Senate Passes Bill Providing for Bible in Schools STATE HOUSE, SALEM, Feb. 9. Senator Garland's bill pro viding for lilblo reading in the public schools passed the senate today. Those voting against tho measure were Cnrnsner, Clark) Davis, Rltner and Strnyer. The measure provides for a commission of nine, one of whom shall be of . the Jewish faith, one Catholic, one Christian Sci entist, four Frotestnnt nnd tho state superintendent of schools as chairman. Oarland explained that the purpose of the bill was to teach morality and respect for law without sectarian influence, 44. 4 DOGS TO RELIEF OF NOME SICK FAIRBANKS, Alaska, Feb. 0. (I5y the Associated Press) A race be tween an airplane and relays or dog teams to Nome, Alaska, was starting today. The dngs left Nennnn, fifty miles west nf here yesterday. The plane was all ready to take off early this morning. The burden of each journey Is anti toxin for diphtheria, of which six per sons have died in Nome In nn epi demic reported January 27 and with which thirty persons were reported suffering yesterday. The distance from here to Nome on the route the dogs and plane are to follow was put at about 920 miles. 'Everything looks fine," was the final word last night of Roy S. Dar ling, agent of the department of Jus tice here and navy aviator in the World war, pilot for the trip to Nome. He. and Ralph P. llncklo, an employe of the Alaska railroad at Anchorage, mechanician for tho trip to Nome, had spent the whole day tuning up their machine. This machine is an old one, brought to Alaska three years ago In n half sporting, half commercial enterprise . organized by sourdoughs or pioneers of the north. "Rvei-vthlnp- looks fine." ncreed Maekie, "although the temperature of 3 5 degrees below zero i has made things very difficult. .1 froze one of my hands this afternoon while sitting in the cockpit of the bus warming up nnd testing the engine." The Alaska railroad received at Se ward Saturday 1.100,000 units of diph theria anti-toxin. The dog teams of the United States mall left Nenana at 4:55 yesterday afternoon with 000,000 units. 3D TRIAL STARTS KLAMATH FALLS KLAMATH FALLS, Ore, Feb. 9. Pete Sullivan, alleged to hnvo been the actual slayer of Oscar Erickson In a gambling house robbery here early in January, went on trial here this morning for first degree murder. He is the last of the alleged partici pants in the double crime to be prose cuted. Like John O'Shea, who was acquit ted Saturday night, , Sullivan will en deavor to set tip an alibi according to his attorneys. O'Shea was found not guilty on the first ballot. He was alleged to have operated the auto mobile which took the men to and from the scene of the robbery. MURDER WHITE PAL CHICAGO, Feb. 0. Roy Oillun, 16 years old negro, confessed to the po lice flint he had clubbed to death Edward Schmidt, his 17 year old white companion yesterday. The two youths were to have been arraigned In the Juvenile court under a charge of robbing a grocery store. Oillun told the police Schmidt had been arrested first nnd Implicated him, which he said was the reason for the killing. old child, were Instantly killed when the automobile In which Ihey nnd Mrs. Kahn were ruling coiuueu wim another machine and the woman bus-' talned n skull fracture and other In juries which surgeons said would nr.t-A f;i!i in view nf her aonar-' ently certain death it was decided to operate Immediately. The infant was horn within on hour after the accident. AIRPLANE RACES L E General Denhardt to Investi gate Everything Connected With Trapping oT Floyd Col lins in Sand Cave Truth to Be Determined. CAVE CITV, Ky., Feb. 9. (IVy the Associated Tress) Circumstances surrounding tho trapping of Floyd Collins in sand Cave and tho efforts of volunteer rescuers to release him will be modo the subject of a military court of Inquiry, Brigadier General II. H. Denhardt, In command of guardsmen here, announced today. I hone by this court of inquiry to lay at rest all suspicions, whisper ings of the efforts to block rescue work, nnd rumors that Collins' en- trnumenl was not genuine." said lien eial Denhardt. Tho commander said liis plan for the military investiga tion had been sanctioned by Governor Fields and Adjutant General Kehoo. "It is my purpose to determine ex actly why the efforts to rescue Col lins through the natural passage fall ed," Denhardt continued, "whether Collins went into sand cave, through the regular entrance and was caught coming out and whether he knew ol any oilier way out, are matters which will be delved Into. "I have received information that the eye of suspicion has been turned on Kentucky and its officials and the woyderful cave region by persons un- lnmiliar with too cave section. i propose In the inquiry to bring out every fact. "It is hoped that the findings of the body will he so definite and thor ough from the testimony we hear that the underground whisperings will be quieted. Every witness will be summoned to testify and will be heard in full. " Members of the court probably will be named today, . . Testimony Recorded. 1 The entire testimony nnd proceed ings will be recorded In a complete stenographic record. The court will be conducted in a lent at the scene of the rescue work near the en trance to Sand Cnve. General Den hardt deemed it advisable to hold the hearing before Collins' fate has been determined because of the difficulty of bringing the desired witness to Sand Cave after the work has been ended and the rescuers returned to their homes. Lieutenant Robert Burdon of the Louisville fire department, who has stated that he had "positive knowl edge efforts were made to block the rescue work." will be summoned. He was one of the few who talked to Collins. Tho three brothers of the Imprisoned man, Homer, Marshall and Andrew Collins, will be summoned and William H. Miller, of the Louisville Courier-Journal, Is .expected to give his testimony. All of those who talked to the trapped victim and those who know the circumstances ot his exploring the hole will be heard. Persons fa mlllur with the cuve country and those who huve heard various ru mors will be examined. LOUISVILLE. Ky., Feb. 9. On n busy corner of Lincoln square, a Sand cave bulletin display nnd chart ope rated by the Louisville Herald-Tost attracted many persons today. A cross-section diagram eight feet high has a huge red pointer following the progress of the rescue shaft which early today had passed twenty-seven feet, with more than forty yet to go. LOUISVILLE, Ky., Feb. 9. (By the Associated Press.) One of the two chief outside eye-witnesses of the predicament of Floyd Collins in Sand cave, Lieutenant Robert A. Burdon, when he learned of the military In quiry ordered by Lieutenant-Governor Denhardt today, was emphatic in his assertions that there had been definite opposition to the rescue of Collins by some of the natives when he was there early last week. "When I went back to the cave Wednesday morning," said Lieutenant Burdon, "after resting from our tre mendous efforts with the Jack under the boulder Tuesday evening, they told me that there had been a cave-in that had blocked the passage and that I couldn't go in. They wouldn't let me get by. " 'Skeets' Miller managed to slip past them some way and he and Homer Collins went, down; when he came out he was looking more scared than I ever saw him during the whole time. His nose was bloody. "He would not tell me what was the matter, but told me for God's sake not to go back in there and to see that Homer Collins didn't go in again if I had to sit in the entrance all day long. "He went back in by himself a little later to take the telephone back and I think that was the last time he was in the cave. Crew Had Whisky. "Late in the afternoon I heard some body calling lor me. I was told that I could go back In the cave if I wanted to now, and that they had picked a crew for mo. Each of the crew picked must have been armed with a good drink of whisky, because I could smell it on all of them. 1 went down the (Continual on Fk Eight) MILITARY WIL CONDUCT PROB OFCOLLINSCASE European Opera Stars American 7 . v John Charles Thomas, Balti more, J1&, youth who leaped from musical comedy to the con cert 'platform, has climbed an other rung into opera. lie has been engaged by the Brussels grand opera as its leading bari tone. ITO: VETOES HOUSE BILL AS AID TO TRUST STATE HOUSE, SALr.M. Feb. 9. Holding that house bill No. 91. intro duced by the committee on education is In the Interest of the school book publishers. Governor Tierce today vetoed the measure. It is a measure providing for renewal of contracts be tween the state nnd the companies. "Tills amendment to section fi340, Oregon laws, proposes to remedy a situation arising over the renewal of text book? contracts which will expire in June. 1925." says the veto message. "Your house bill No.-91 proposes to confer power upon the board of edu cation to enter into a renewal con tract with the publishers at the 'host possible price' since there is to be no competition, this means It will be a one-sided bargain, the stato being forced to accept the terms of the pub lishers. ' . "Since the publishers, whose con tracts expire In June, 1920, refuse to renew nt the same prices, although under the present law such contracts would remain in force under their present terms did the publishers not object. It follows that the state is not bound as the other party to the con ract, but is free under such an emer gency to consider competitive offer ings from other concerns. "The state contracts for all of Its other supplies under open, competi tive bids. It would not consider for ii moment the renewal of a flour con tract or a meat contract for Its Insti tutions at Increased prices without competition. Who, should It be called upon to renew book contracts at ad vanced prices and with no remedy other than this proposal to empower the board of education two members being In a majority to moke such u contract? Why surrender to the book trust? "Since the publishers themselves refuse to renew at tho prices enjoyed by them for the past six years, it seems to me that the stale should not deliberately deprive Itself of the right to force tho book publishers into open competition for contracts. To elim inate the right of tho state to uet thru Its text book commission In such a re newal Is, In my Judgment a mistaken remedy. It coold have but one re sult; an increase in the cost of text books. Text book legislation biiouici be In the interest of the patrons of our schools, rather than to afford a eans of further exploitation or an already overburdened public." The Noted Dead itrHTnr Feb. 9. Thomas W, t u-unn wnnrtiirular financier, author and gentleman farmer, will be burled tomorrow beside his wife on a small portion of his magnificent countiy estate that was saved from the wreck of his fortune several years ago. u'hnn Mrs. Iiwson died In 1906 after nine years of invalidism, her husband gave ners thojt noHhln should i disturbed In the room she occupied at "The Nest," a simple cot tage unjoining the mansion of Dream world, at Egypt, Mass. Mrs. Lawson was buried near "Tho Nest." "Tom" Lawson will be laid beside her after funeral services In "The Nest. Mr. Lawson died suddenly yester day. BEND, Ore., Feb. 9. Mrs. Henry McCall of Trlnevllle. Crook county, i a daughter of Thomas Lawson, Bos ton financier, who died yesterday In the east. Mr. Lawson was responsible for bringing considerable purebred stock Into central Oregon. Mr. McCall, son. In-law of the deceased, is a son of rx Oovernor MeCnll of Massachusetts, Douglas Wiwson, son of the Hoc- ton financier, was also woll known In central Oregon country, but left the vicinity at the outbreak of tho World war. MR.&MRS.JACK DEMPSEY FOUND AND LOST AGAIN Heavyweight Champion and Bride Appear at Former's Hotel and Then Disappear Promise to Return Tonight Sport World Agog. LOS ANGELES. Feb. 9. If the sporting world held Its breath with anxiety when Jack Dempsey and his bride, formerly Estelle Taylor, slip ped out of a hotel In San Diego early yesterday and disappeared, it can re lax today and givo Its tautened nerves a rest, for the heavyweight cham pion and his film actress wife have been found; at lcr.,:t they were found for a few minutes .ate last night. , Mr. and Mrs. Dempsey arrived In Los Angeles without being detected, but were recognized, at once, of course, when they entered a hotel, which tlie champion operates when he is not fighting or acting in pictures. The clerk, being on Dcitipscy's pay roll, could not bo mistaken in tho identity of the visitors, but If ho thought they were going to occupy the bridal suite he was disappointed, for in less than ten minutes they played the Sail Diego trick all over again slipped away for a destination unannounced. As a concession to the curious, how ever, the champion left behind him the information that he and Mrs. Dempsey would lie bac k in Los Ange les tonight or tomorrow and that the world need not worry. State Legislature Items for Today 8TAT1.' linT'tiP KAf.F.M. Feb. 9. Senator Tooze who has an income tax hill prepared, announced today that be would not Introduce. It." Hu said he felt It would he futile to attempt to get the measuro through and thet ho will Initiate the bill instead, at the earliest election possible. Tooze has a tax equalization meas ure to which he will devote all his energy as far as taxation measures are concerned. STATIC IIOlSi:, SALKM, Fob. fl. The peniitti this afternoon wil'. havo the fish cominls.sion hill nn a .special ordr. It i one of the tnnin Inci dents In the fitfht hetween tli legis lative roganlzntion nnd the governor, providing that appointment of the state fish rotmniKsion he taken out of the governor's hands and placed with the stato board of control. STATK UOUHK, HALKM, Feb. 9. A special tux classification of lands suitable only to forest growth would be provided under house bill 41(i. in troduced by Representative Motl, Clatsop county, today. The bill In designed to eucourago the reforestation of denuded lands in the state. KTATB TIOUSK, HA LIS M, Teh. 9. House hill 409 by Representative Tucker, Linn county, providing for creation of a stato board of censor ship for moving picture films, was re ferred to the house committee on public health nnd morals when it come up for second reading today. House bill 413, a substitute for house bills 19 and Tift, was recom mended favorably by the house roads and highways committee this morn ing. It sets forth license rates and additional fees on buses and trucks based on a rate of three-eighths of a mill per seat per ton capacity multi plied by tho number of miles traveled. statr untruth KAT.I'M T-Vli n Concluding apparently, after a sur- very or the situation, that It could not muster enough votes to pass the com mcrcfnl flxh hill nvor llm veld nf the governor, tho senate organization late this afternoon postponed action on the measuro until Wednesday urter noon. STATK HOUHH, HALKM, Feb. 9. The banking code bill which was scheduled for third reading in the senate today was made a special order for eleven o'clock tomorrow morning. Death Toll of the Automobile SACRAMENTO, Cat., Feb. 9. Alander K. Hoglnnd, president of the Fyrac manufacturing company of Rockford, III., was killed early this morning when his . automobile went into a ditch here and turned over pinning him beneath It In shallow water. He was probably drowned. During tho war Ilogland was nn aviator stationed nt Mather field here. In December 1918, ho made a coast flying record from Hacramento to Heattlc and return. . LOH ANOKI.KH, Feb. 9. Jack Dempsey will continue to keep In training and arrangements tor a title mutch during thn summer will be discussed In New York next month, It was nnnounced here tuday by Jack Kearns, Dempsej'n inauuger, Snow and Freezing Weather Reported in Bend and Klamath KLAMATH FALLS. Ore., Feb. 9. Freezing temperature and a cloudless sky today gave prom ise of a marked change in the weather conditions in Klamath Falls. Snow lies more than a half foot deep. TEND, Ore., Feb. 9. Two inches of snow covered the ground this morning while clear skies and n low temperaturo gave promise of relief from In termittent showers and snow flurries which have alternated for more than forty-eight hours. Snow which began falling late Saturday evening continued with few interruptions all day Sun day until about six o'clock when the atmosphere cleared and tile temperature dropped several do grees below the freezing point. SLIDES BLOCK IIF.DDING, Cal., Feb. 9. Although t lit heavv rains hail abated today, tho I stale highway north of Redding to Pollock, a distance of 3X miles, Is practically blocked by numerous land slides in that section of the road, which was rebuilt, regarded, altered ind widened. Mere the loose carlh and rocks, propelled by mountain flood waters, have piled down from1 hillsides. Many calls for assistance have been received here from stranded motor travelers. j Steam shovels are already nt wouk clearing the way. .aterals and other. ' side roads have been damged even more on the highways. was Impossible today to reach Weavervilln because or water, ueep nmd, and iau- infill mi .t ..-..,,-,, .... rot-ciling fiiHt. All local hIuko -Hrhcil- ult'H havo boon tornponirlly rancvlleu. KuHl'JMu nu, urn., fi'ii, -a now slide occurred nn the raolilo. highway north of Myrtle ('reek today unit is PACIFIC HI-WAY NORTH&SOUTH homing up an t runic cvrcpi ngni cars. rPnre here by city officials an a re Thn road is covered with about 18 ruU of the flood at Valo and surround Inrhos of soft dirt and mud and rock fnK territory caused by tlie bursting of keep sliding In an attempts are made the irrigation dam on Bully creek to clear tho pavement. Stages aro Thursday. transferring passengers and trucks) Caught in tho flood from 2000 to are unable to gel by. It is expocted 4000 head of sheep and cattle were It will take all week to clean off tho drowned in the lowlands west of Valo Hlides which havo occurred during tho past threo days, although cars are ex- pected to be able to get through by this evening. LEC'I BILL IS S A I.EM, Ore., Feb. 9. Tho house to.i.iy went tnrougn a grist or oius. Among inoso pnssea were: II. II. 211, with amendments call- ing for a potltlon of three-fifths "' the voters concerned In mutters per- taming io cnuiiKuiK ul ruling nvm anil exienoing ine lime lor removal after authorization from 90 days to one year. H. II. 228. making tho law apply JACKSONVJL ing to persons pointing guns nt one ,..,, reC8iveu by Dr. Froredlck D. another reach persons of any ago , strycker, secretary ot the state board rather than only those over sixteen ' r Me!lt, .from local authorities there. S'0",',, are alarming. 11. n. 2SB, requiring marriage II-1 1)ri strycker, however, said there is cense applicants, to file n personal at- n0 epidemic at Vale at present. The fidavlt to tho effect that they hnvo ,iH,)0Bton of between 2000 nnd 4000 been free of certain diseases for a carcasses of sheep, cattle and horses period of one year prior to such ap-,8the paramount Issue, and local funds plication. I nt Vale nro insufficient to handlo the II. H. 109, providing that one must f situation, Dr. Strycker has been in be a resident ot a county six months farmed, prior to fllltlg for divorce in the courts of such county. II. It. 191V, providing a flno ot from1 $25 to $100 ngnlnst persons enn-j vlcted of using stnte automobiles for other than offlclnl business. EX-KAISER SEES LONDON, Feb. 0. Tho Dally Telegraph quotes recent visitors to Doom, Holland, ns declaring that the former Oerninn emperor was extraor dinarily excited by the news that an agreement had been reached between Japan and soviet Russia. "This treaty portends a tremendoui change In the world's outlook," he is reported to hnve said. "'The porll which I, Mono, among the rulers of F.uropo predicted nearly a quarter of a century ago. now has materialized. The repercussions of this event will shortly be felt in the relations of all RUSSIA'S ALLIANCE WITH JAPANESE WATER Bridges Washed Out, Livestock Drowned and Dams Wrecked By Downpour of Rain and Melting Snows Pestilence at Vale Feared Legislature Asked for Help. WAIMNITIA. Ore., Feb. 9. Flood waters, caused by recent heavy rains and tho Chinook winds that have melted considerable, of the snow in tlie eastern Cascades, are filling every creek and stream to overflowing. White river is at tho danger point. Tho Deschutes has swallowed the Shearer Bridge fulls, overflowing the rock basin from one railroad to an other. Ulit roads aro Impassnblo west of Wupinlllu, and carriers are relaying mall by team. . Reports from Celilo are to the effect th.il tho Columbia is overflowing the rocks and caverns ill the Celilo fulls basin and threatens to wash away fish wheels and their foundation structures. in the vicinity of Pino Grove, Chi nook winds huvo melted snow that I will bo needed for Irrigation next Un tho Cascade roof snow 8 S(,ven ee( (eep. BAKER, Ore., Feb. 9. The dam of tho Camp Creek Water compuny on Camp creek in tlie Burnt river district went out nt midnight Tuesday and caused considerable loss to the farm- uru (11 tlm ImmmHiitu nnth nf thn fbmil T,, f.nn, ,,m .a . Btructcd a couple of years ago at a cost of approximately $50,0110 and Btr0u nbmlt U)u ncre feet , water. Twenty-six cows and, ealyesvlwlg4ig- .,, 1 1 ii) nn i ii Dfi in nn warn itvnwtmit The break in the dam la 40 feet wide nt the top and tho damage 1b estl- ntntnd lit nhnnt SWf.nn Pestilence Is Feared. VALE. Ore.. Feb. 9. Pestilence Is and are lying dead in that section. Kvery basement and lower floor ot Vale's residential and business section is filled with mud and debris, and from this standpoint the health situa tion is viewed with alarm. Kvery precaution has been officially ordered, which Includes the boiling of drinking water, as the water system and wells in this locality have been contaminated. Mayor Koomette and city health officials sent appeals for relief to Dr. Frederick D, Strycker of Portland, secretary ot the state board of health. Relief will also be sought of tho Pacific division of the Red Cross at San Francisco. Loss to property swept by the flood will reach $500,000, It was estimated, instead of $250,000, as was first re ported. A large number of ranchera In the path of the flood lost their ilolllc8i uvestock and virtually every. UlllK tjey I)09SeBa0(1, in Vale not a lm,IM.rty owllcr escaped a loss of some nature. A number of families who. had tn((,r ,,()mes swept away are wltilout funtis. Conditions Alarming. PORTLAND, Ore., Feb. 9. Condi tions nt Vale, as shown in several tele- STATE HOUSE, SALEM, Feb. 9. A representative from the flood stricken city of Vale, Malheur county, (Continued on Page Eight) the European states nnd It Is bound to causo deep thinking and heart searching In Germany and among the allleg. France is hacking tho black races, Russia Is backing the yellow nnd America and England are backing" the while, where will Germany slund? Where should she stand?" It Is reported from the same source" that William Is displeased over tho prominence the former crown prince Is courting In Germany and tho at tention paid him by the nationalists and militarists, ns the ex-kalser still regards himself as the only lawful claimant to the Hohentollcrn throne.