Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948, August 28, 1922, Page 1, Image 1

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V FATHER
nt ye.trd)T
rt l.tt "'Oht
t nd Tuesday,
s Z?r&&'
2. - Newt and Th Roieburg Rsvltw,
e DOUGLAS COU NTY
An Indtptndsnt nawspaptr published for the best Intt rest of the people.
ConMliif'0" of 1 .j
2
ROSEBURO, OREGON, MONDAY, AUGUST 28, 1922.
VOL. XI, No. 49, OF THE EVENING NEWS.
3?
m EICHTl'
IN GOLD I..'....
ENTOMBED
WHEN FIRE
IN SHAFT CAUSES CAVE-IN
For Savin? Miners Brightened This Morning When Word
as Received That Shaft Above Had Good Air Pitiful
Scenes Enacted-Rescue Work Continues.
'
CKS
,CKSON. Aug.
E MIRACULOUS ESCAPE.
;8. (United
. , riarence lirausna ,
iuo who with two other
in capl the fate of the
Jed moo. ii escaped
fraping their heads in
Und nudiing through the
es. illicueii -
kich were with him.
fnartial list of those trapped
pw:
roes Clayton.
W. Olberit.
H!iam Fessell.
mes Cerber.
jorce Steuniei.
nrlselea.
karles FiUcerald,
Uke Sinucicn.
Derovicn.
Uelonga.
Fire Is believed burning on the 2S00
foot level.
Forty-Eight Entombed.
JACKSON, Cal., Aug. 28. (Asso
icated Press.) forty-eight men, en
tombed in the famous Argonaut gold
mine, below the 3500 foot level by fire
which broke out in the main shaft at
midnight, were still In the mine this
morning at 7:30 o'clock. EtTorts are
being made to rescue the miners thru
the abandoned Muldoon shaft.
The fire was discovered at mid
night when dense smoke and tierce
heat was noticed by two men at the
3000 foot level. They came to the top
and spread the alarm.
Rescue parties 'equipped with gas
masks, went down, and found roaring
flames. They were unable to reach
the lower levels.
The situation of the entombed men
was made worse when the air pipes
burst and the electric wiring went out
of commission.
The fire is burning at the 4300 and
4500 foot levels, according to the superintendent.
SENATOR M'NARY BOOSTS
SOLDIERS' BONUS MEASURE
kirty-three of the entomneu
are married anil a majority w
k families.
(By United Tvessl
jKSON, Amador county, Califor
nia. 28. The chances of laving
I miners entombed by fire and!
tin on the 2800-foot level of the
ut gold mine, brightened this!
k.. Mn.rf. parhri the1 (By Associated Preas.l
U , "u?w.r"e?.efoundej WASHINGTON Aug ore
S. " .1. ... I has en opportunity "to do a grand
r T j i ..Li-- fir. thing ln empire building In connec
ter was piped 'J. tlon with the soldiers' bonus." Sena
B .pparently assured of juccets McXaryi of Oregon, declared to-
(net are being driven .throiighl' '' ,h' , .,, hit. recla-
SSSU men hW,B" m.tlon amendment to the bonus
..tombed men. I measure. Declaring that m every
Ut the condition of th. prisoner government had provided as
may be his not yet been learn., ,.,. ,he veteran,. he argued
ZZL '".J.;that there was no good reason for
Mill I help could reach w"??" IT
llllie. III? HHIll l niliriiuuiviii
'oood air within a hundred feet of
lace where the dirt-choked pass-
shut off all communication with! for reclamation of
L thut in ; arid and overflowed
f . , . , , of 1350.000,000. 1
Red Cross forces and the mine T, '
l workers equipped with oxypen !
is sought to reach some of the!
tnbed men through the abandoned'
loon shaft, used now as an ai
days fire Is the fourth In the j
the arid, seml
liinils In the sum
He said that the
amendment does not supercede or
displace the present, reclamation law.
r HERRIN MASSACRE TO BE
fs history.
Ilful I
scenes were enacted at the
ft mouth as the relatives sought
cws ot moie entombed.
Five Hundred Feet Caved In.
iCKSON. Cal., Aug. 28.-U has not
determined ihe number nf mln.
Jelieved entombed In the Argonaut
I .one of the largest rolil nrruino.
Bines In California. Five hnndrMl
(of the shaft caved in. The res-
nrorkers have been discing fran
lyfor eicht hours with no results.
INVESTIGATED BY JURY
(By United Press)
MARIOU 111.. "Aug. 28. After two
month's apparent Inactivity the spec
ial Williamson county grand jury con
vened today to probe the Herrin mas
sacre, when twenty-three men were
slain.
Attorney General Brundnge of 111 I
nois said that probably one hundred
indictments would be returned.
fra Meeker, Ox Team Tourist,
Vn New Tri
J-Vii li I'lis S Mf
ENGINEERS, FIREMEN, SWITCH
MEN AND CONDUCTORS QUIT
(Br Associated, Preaa)
ST. LOUIS, Aug. 28. Passenger
and freight service on the western di
vision of the Chicago and Alton is at
a complete standstill today as a result
of the walkout of engineers, firemen,
conductors and switchmen, who are
protesting against armed guards at
Slater Missouri and Roodhouse, III.
judgFsSilbrede
dies at corvallis
Former. Roseburg Resident
Dies After Long Period
Of 111 Health.
WAS PROMINENT JURIST
Was Appointed by President McKln
Icy to Position of Judge ln Alnska
mill Saw Many Stirring Scenes
While In That Territory.
CORVALLIS. Aug. 27. Judge C.
A. Sehlbrede died at his residence
here this morning. lle was 70 years
of age. Mr. Sehlbrede was born ln
Louisville, Kentucky, and came to
Oregon In 1877, locating at Salem,
where he practiced law. in 1880 he
married Ianthe Downing and moved
to Hoseburg.
Mr. Sehlbrede was elected to the
legislature from 'Douglas county in
1 St 7. and the following year was ap
pointed judge by President McKlnley
for the southeastern Alaska district,
with headquarters at SkagwayT Mr.
Sehlbrede was judge of this district
during the famous Sophie Smith
crimes, and took an active part in
bringing the Smith gang to justice.
Judge Sehlbrede was a constant
preacher of government by law, in
that all but lawless country and when
a mob broke open the jail ln which
a part ot the Smith followers were
incarcerated, with the definite inten
tion of hanging them to the nearest
limb, the judge left his bed In the
middle of the night, worked his way
through the mob and harangued it
vehemently, urging them to help him
lipoid the dignity of the United States
government and permit the law to
take its course. Because of his ear
nestness and very evident patriotism
the mob surrendered to his plea and
returned the prisoners to jail. The
prisoners afterward were tried and
convicted of numerous crimes, and
some were hanged.
On his return from Alaska, Judge
Sehlbrede went to Marshfleld to prac
tice law. While there he served as
president of the it'oos and Curry
oounty bar association and also as
president of the state board of the
Christian church.
Five years ago he came to Corval
11a on account of failing health.
Here he had practiced law ever since
his arrival, though for the past year
he had been too feeble to pay much
attention to business. During the
war he was an active worker In the
various patriotic campaigns. He Is
survived by his widow and two chil
dren, Mrs: W. A. Reed, of this city,
and Mrs. Bertha Gettins, of Arling
ton. Funeral services wll be held here
Tuesday afternoon at 2 o'clock, with
Rev. C. W. Reynolds officiating. In
terment will he held in the Newton
cemetery, where the services will be
In charge of the Odd Fellows, of
which organization Mr. Sehlbrede had
been a member for nearly 40 years.
n
Au'AnT,s!hrTnl lUI ,)e no element of fiction In It. It
ld niin k "UK. 28. 'will K. oil kl.i.l..l ,!! , '
, 'I-'fl I V ni h l . ... l 1 ' 1 1 " vv.1.1-
F" nd ti . healthful Tr . ""-morale the Trail and old pioneers
P'ein iWi.. V neamiiui of h iw,.., io1. ur... f
the I.." . California; Senator James Nesmlth.
of Oregon; Senator Levi Ankeny, of
Washington, and Governor Isaac I.
Stevens, of Washington Territory.
"I plan to appear before the sen
ate military committee In Washing-
ion in behalf of Senator Jones' bill
spite hi.
, K t- . on the
i nil-, si
22nd trip;
f a t am Ha t
Mon. i. ' . . " r-Ir
s-H.ni - . ,ur": "istorlnn.l
i aiifir 01 m f in ,
UI1 f
MM
-migrant became national-1
jenrs ago when In hl 1 "enaii or senator Jones Din
;,r- he cc.ii!!,,.tl h,' .h,,(5., Provide for the establishment of
Tnss run
"ted his third
the old Oregon Trail as a military
ntgnway.
intn. 1
I" In sv v J ' ""-'earn, ar
t An .. Tnrl eily late In tnr
f.Jn f,.- 1
,,vtpam and n 3 n' ltlT Z
iy automobile
pr he U travel.
ind train 11;.
irtinfif riot.
"ma
V' fvnt Jon
V 'ltnrnr.bilo
"II 1.
to Ih
prepara-
'""' of lb. Farther
tirVi.V"?rin for
1 '" ; fl '""'rate
lr lto and .J , . ' fou"a " "
, nd as I f,nd lt now
KKTTI.K.MKXT KFFIXTKI
CINCINNATI. Aug. 28 Th
clerks and station employes of
the Chicago, Milwaukee and St.
Taul and the Kl Paso and
Southwestern railroads have ef
fected settlements n wages and
working conditions, the union
Judge Sehlbrede, 'whose death is
reported from Corvallis. was for a
number of years a resident of Rose
burg and one of the city's leading
citizens. He had an active law prac
tice while in Roseburg. and was one
of the best-known attorneys In the
state and figured In some of the hls
storical cases of the county. He was
an active church worker, and was
one of the Incorporators of the local
Christian church. He leaves a great
number of friends In this city who
sre deeply grieved to learn of his
death.
FEDERAL AUTHORITIES CONNECT
"REDS" WITH STRIKE DISORDER
fPhr TTnltad Press 1
CHICAGO. Aug. 28. The federal
authorities today claimed Informa
tion connecting the "Reds" with the
recent wrecks and strike disturbanc
es In Illinois and Michigan. Fout
PLANS COMPLETE
Labor Day Festivities in Rose
burg to be the Biggest
Event of the Year
LONG PARADE PLANNED
Business Hoox and Fraternal Or
ders to Kilter Floats In Procession
ljtlxir Organizations lo Have
a Place in Line of Marcb.
SPKAKJUt P1UH I KDD 4
According to word received
this afternoon by the local Fed-
eration ot Shoiwraft Employes,
J. T. Thorpe, international vice-
president ot the order of ma-
chinists, will speak here on
Labor day. Mr. Thorpe is na-
tlonally known as a leader In
organized labor circles, and Is
returning direct from Wash-
ington, D. C, where he has been
taking an active part ln the
conferences on the srtike situa-
tlon. The message Mr. Thorpe
will have to deliver will be well
worth hearing.
Roseburg's big "Whoopee" celebra
tion to be given Labor day by the
Douglas County band and the Rose
burg baseball team, will be one ot the
biggest events of the year, the pro
gram assuring a day full ot excite
ment and entertainment.
The day's entertainment starts at
10 o'clock ln tbe morning with a big
parade. This parade will be headed
by the band and will cover a great
many blocks. The committee ot ladies
which has been arranging for floats,
has received assurances that a large
number of business houses will be
well represented while fraternal or
ders will also have floats. The labor
organizations will niake a. strong
showing, and will have several hun
dred ot their number in the line of
march.
Immediately following the pnrade
there will be a sham battle, in which
a band of 35 Tiller Indians will meet
Major" George Ward and his pla
toon of blood-thirsty cowboys. This
will be followed by a program nt
Laurelwood nark, where the festivi
ties ot the day will be held.
The speaker of the day will be one
of the most prominent labor repre
sentatives of Coast, arrangements for
the speaker being In the hunds of the
local federation of shop-craft employ
ees, who will have one of their most
eloquent and representative men on
hand for the occasion. There will
also be several special musical num
bers to add to the entertainment.
At noon will be held the big veni
son barbecue and basket dinner.
Several of tbe best hunters In the
city will bring in the bucks for this
occasion, and they will be barbecued
by Jack Cordon, whose ability along
this line is well known thruout Doug
las county.
Thruout the afternoon there will be
plenty of fun and enjoyment
for everyone. The "country store"
will be a scream from start to finish,
and will also offer an opportunity to
win some very valuable prizes. There
will be the usual concessions along
"Joy Alley," and the skillful will
have an opportunity to try their hand
at knocking down the nigger-babies,
tossing balls in the buckets, ringing
canes, etc. During the entire after
oon tbe band will play while the
"Bowery dance" will also be In prog-
TeAn open-air dance pavilion 70 by
70 feet In size Is being constructed,
and will be artistically decorated.
Dancing will go on all day and this
feature will doubtless be well patron
ized. The main event of the afternoon
will be a baseball game between the
Roseburg and Grants Pass teams.
These are two of the fastest teams of
southern Oregon. ind the contest will
be well worth seeing.
Electric lights are being strung
In the grove, and the festivities will
continue thruout the evening.
4imen are held In connection wlln tbe
headiiuariers announced today.
ow. There .
ItOKF.Ilt IWJ WIXM (iAMB,
The "Invtneible" Roseburg
baseball team yesterday defeat
ed the Kutherlln team by a score
of 7 to 1 In the last game of the
t'pper Willamette Valley league
to lie played by the local team.
Irv Street, pitching for Rose
burg wonld have shut out the
visitors, had not onf error let
ANTHRACITE STRIKE WILL
BE SETTLED IN FEW DAYS
fBv T'nltsd Press.)
WASHINGTON. Aug. 28. The offc
lal White House spokesman today ex
pressed confidence that the anthracite
strike would be steeled within a few
days, following Harding's return from
the Potamic cruise with the "strike
cabinet." The optimism was caused
by strong opposition ln congress to
the seizing of the mines and railroads.
CANNERY MAKING
RUN ON PEARS
Expect to Put Out More Than
Thirty Tons Daily If Help
Is Secured.
NEW MACHINERY AIDS
Automatic Cookers Allow Fruit to
Puss Throughout the Full Cooking
lriM-eN Without the Cans lie.
Ing Touched by lliuids.
Over one thousand cans, or more
than thirty tons of pears will be put
out daily by the local cannery as soon
as tbe force of workers can be re-
culted to full strength, according to
Manager Frank Norton, who Is today
making arrangements to attack the
llmpqua valley pear crop In real ear
nest. With the season just starting,
the canpery Is putting out more thun
400 cases daily, but the fruit Is com
ing ln much more rapidly than lt can
be handled by the women wbo do the
peeling, grading, etc., and, conse
quently, the plant Is not working at
full capacity, as it will as soon as
additional helii can be obtained.
The new automatic cookers which
have lust been Installed, more than
double the capacity of the plant, and
in addition, does away wltb the labor
of five men who are employed in oth
er narts of the plant.
With these cookers In operation
the Jruit Is' not touched by hands
from tbe time lt goes Into the cntu
until It Is dished out by the consum
er. The cannery nt the present time
nresents a very active appearance.
There are 110 persons eniployod
and all are kept busy. The main floor
is piled high with pears undergoing
a ripening process or being graded
and made ready for tile peelers, in
the canning room approximately 76
women are busily engaged ln peeling
the pears, slicing them and removing
the cores. The fruit then goes to
other tables where It Is carefully
washed, all spots removed, and Is
graded and sorted and placed In cans.
This work is al! done by women and
girls who are quite adept at this
task. '
From there the fruit goes to a long
table from which It Is taken, can by
can, and placed on a long conveyor.
This conveyor passes under a series
of spouts which pour the cans full ot
syrup. The cans then pass on thru
a long box filled with steam, which
exhausts the air In the cans, which
are then sealed by an automatic top
per. With the cans still untouched,
they are conveyed automatically into
Ihe cookers, and there the fruit Is
cooked at a temperature of 212 de
grees for a certain period of time,
and then It passes out of the cookers
onto other conveyors which carry the
cans thru a vat of cold water where
the temperature In the cans Is re
duced to a point below cooking. Re
moved from this vat the cans are
conveyed to another trough from
which they are removed and packed
Into the boxes ready for shipment.
In the event they are to be labeled
before shipment, they are removed to
the labelers' tables before being
crated.
At the present lime the cannery Is
sending out about 400 crates dally,
but the capacity of 1.000 crates will
be reached In a few days, Mr. Norton
predicts. In order to handle the fruit
100 or moro women are needed, and
an effort is being made today to ob
tain this help. The pears are coming
in faster than they can be canned,
and In order lo save them, the com
pany has leased cold storage space
and will continue the season until
October. '
The pear crop this year Is excel
lent In quality. Mr. Norton says, and
the fruit being canned should bring
rood prices on the market. The pro
cess thru which It goes results In a
thoro cook, while none of the true
flavor of the fruit Is lost. The fruit
in also whole and firm, and is
very nice In appearance as well as
delirious in flavor.
o-
FORMER ROSEBURG ATTY.
ADVANCES NEWTHEORY ON
BRUMFIELD MURDER CASE
F.C. Heffron, Personal Friend of Convicted Man, Says Doctor
Is Not Guilty New Theorist Is Personally Sure of His
Ground and Hopes to Free His Friend. V.
P. C. Heffron, former Roseburg at
torney, now located in Eugene, has
advanced a new theory concerning the
famous Urumfleld murder case. The
theory, lu detail, la given In the Sun
day Journal as follows:
Not Brumfleld. but bandits! Not a
criminal, but a man pitifully Insane.
Dr. Richard M. Urumfleld, Roseburg
dentist atid prominent citizen, did not
kill Dennis Russell, near-hermit of
Douglas county and victim of one of
Oregon's most baffling murder mys
teries.
"In any event, there Is ground
enough ln support of that belief to
warrant to command a rehearing be
fore the state supreme court ot the cir
cumstantial evidence that convicted
llrumfield and now holds him ln the
shadow of the hangman's noose at the
state penitentiary."
These bombshells were hurled Into
the comparative quiet that has engulf
ed tbe Brumfleld case by F. C. Heffron,
Kugene attorney, who brought to
Portland on Saturday the results of an
investigation he has privately carried
on since the day of the fiendish mur
der of Dennis Russell near his Impro
vised little home lu Douglas county
more than one year ago.
Knew Brumfleld.
Heffron. schooled In caution, yet per
sonally certain of bis ground, asks
only, he says, that his deductions and
theories be given such consideration
as will lead to an official Investiga
tion. He promises in such an inves
tigation developments enough to thrill
a Dr. Watson or a Craig Kennedy,
lliose keen, fictitious Investigators
who pry into the oddities and the
vague psychologies of crime and crim
inals. The Kugene attorney, although In
no manner legally connected with the
Urumfleld rase or family. Is personally
interested because of the friendship he
held for Brumfleld when he had offices
in the same building with tbe dentist
at Roseburg a few years ago. There
ho had, he declared, opportunity to
know the mnn as few others outside
his family could know him.
"I knew Brumfleld and I would not
for the world see him or any other
mnn pay the great penalty for a crime
he did not commit," Heffron said.
"Remember that Brumfleld was con
victed on circumstantial evidence:
that the state never did prove Its case!
conclusively.
'Dennis Russell was killed at a time
when the roadways near Roseburg and
trying to rob Brumfleld, killed Dennis?
"A jury that would have acquitted
Brumfleld at a time when every man's
blood trailed and when every pulsa
was fevered, would have been lynched.
"No motive was ever established
that would give the slightest reason
for Brumfleld to commit such a crime.
Urumfleld had drawn from the
bank a large sum of money and lt was .
in his possession when Russell was
killed. That hasn't been explained
away. i .
"There never waa a 'woman' in the
case and none at tbe circumstantial
evidence against Brumfleld gave
weight to such a supposition. Such a
theory, to one who knew Brumfleld, Is
too silly, too impossible even to coun- -tenance.
"None but an Insane man could have
acted as Brumfleld did."
Offers Bandit Theory.
These are the major points ln lleff
ron's rase, offered almost coincident
ally with Brumfield's plea for a rehear
ing of the case before the state su
preme court on the ground that a mis
understanding .la. the matter of a
change of venue had emlt4 Jn a
previous supreme court refusal for a.
rehearing.
The Eugene attorney is convinced
that highwaymen and not Brumfleld
accomplished the awful death of Den
nis Russell.
"The highways were made terrible
by bandits about that time," Heffron
points out. "My belief Is that Urum
fleld bad gone to the Russell shack to
give Russell a 'lift' to the Brumfleld
farm, where the hermit had been en
gaged to labor.
"Urumfleld was In possession at that
very time of a large sum of money and
lt Is reasonable to presume that high- '
waymen knew that fact,
"Therefore, either at the Russell cob
tage or not far from lt, the dentist
and Russell were attacked. Either in
an effort to shield himself or to pro-
lect Urumfleld, the probable object of
the bandit attack, Russell was killed
by gunshot
Other Auto Tracks.
"Brumfleld was bordering then on
Insanity and the terror of the scene
enacted before his eyes threw over the
balance and the quiet professional man
became a maniac to whom the sight
of blood shouted for concealment of
the crime. That is one theory.
"The other Is that, with death at
his hand, Brumfleld waa in a 'mental
haze without an idea What to do. He
throughout southern Oregon were in- therefbre loaded Russell Into his auto-
lesiea wiin nignwaymen. i mobile and drove back thminrh Hn..
Much Not Explained. burg over the main highway. Instead
The bullet wounds In Dennis Rus-mf takinz a hnnrfv little inv.l.H mi
sell's body were never explained In j where he could have been shielded
any court. from all eyes and could have conceal-
'The presence of automobile trarka eri nnv iim of .rim. ihniumj
other than those made by Brumfield's ; times. On that road or elsewhere on
car at the Russell shack were never, the route he took he could have con
explained nor sufficiently considered, cealed the body and hurtled bis auto
Were theyimuleby the bandits who, I (Continued on page 3)
Court Must Decide Who Gets
Coin Taken In Gambling Den
SHERIDAN, Wyo.. Aug. 28. lost tins r it in . ..m k,
Serving papers upon himself Is gW that amount the sheriff couldn't
.'il. k", " ,B"y. of S""1" figure belonged to him any longer.
Dolph Thomas of Sheridan. Coun- ,, not tMnn allJP chances
ty and he says he wonders where It having to pay It back to the court
all will end. for no less thaa three im,f r m, nn .!.- r tin
tn a Sutherlln runner. The re
mainder of the team "played Eugene yesterday defeated Harris-
Gary wreck, according to the police wonderful hall and had the I burg, thus tying them for pennant
who claim mat manes iiusons eon- nutnernn toys ai ineir merry ai wicnanee in tne i pir nun u -
fessed that he. with three compan- 4 all times. Filch, the famous ley league. The championship game
Ions, pulled up spikes which sent th: Rutherlln Hurler, was roroed to will be played otf next nunuay on
Mli hiran-Tentral express Into thei retire from the game on account some neutral ground. Devlne. Rose-
rtitrh with two dead. Husolls wlthi of wlldness. He waa succeeded il.urc's former catcher, played with
his companions, have been arrested,! by Anderson, whose pitching Olttugene yesterday, and was largely court he stole
ml hve confessed to other eonteir-j was no tamer. 4 : responsible for the victory. He slam- jury of twelv
plated bomtilngs, according to tne , nil out two two-baggers and two
federal officers. 4 4 singles In the game.
times tn as many days he has bad
to aorve papers upon 'himself to
make answer to cases filed against
him In the district court.
And all because one stormy
Sunday evening last Decemler whun
most of Hherldan is at church, Ot
to Haegger Is alli'K -d to have rob
bed the Palace poo! hall of $499.02
In silver, $185 of whlrh he said h?
bad lost earlier in the evening.
Haegger was taken before a jury
In the district court and admitted
robbing the game, which he said was
losing conducted in a specially I
casino within a block of the po'
station.
The Jury derided that "honesty
Is the best policy" and after deliber
ating ten minutes upon Hwagger's
candid story returned a verdict ol
"not gtiyty.'"
With a verdict of "not guilty"
Ilaegger's attorney said that I'
didn't steal it, the only logical thing
to do was to secure the money for
Haeggmr.
Hheriff Thomas, with whom the
money had been Intrusted when Use
wwek," said the sheriff.
Then Orln Moore, whom Haegger
charged with operating the pool hall
brought a suit against the sheriff, on
behalf of Haegger to force the sheriff
to give over the money. This was
time number 1 for the sheriff to
serve papers upon himself to make
answer to the allegation.
Then Orln Moore, whom Haegger
said In court was "running the
game," called the sheriff Into a quiet
corner and suggested that he be giv
en the money. Another refusal and
another suit.
Later, W. F. Keith, proprietor of
the pool hall, whose tnnot.'ent looking
tables covered over with their 8nb
bslh dressings concealed more In
teresting tables In the sidewalk ca
sino, made a visit to the sheriff.
"Say. Dolph. how about handing
over that money? That was house
funds, and I've got to have It," he
said.
Hut Keltb had told the court that
II was money he had exchanged with
Moore for currency In place of the
ger was arrested, didn't "get" the1 bulky silver that had been collected.
lawyer's line of talk and balked at
the Idea of giving to Haegger th
money after Haegger had told the
It, even tnoiign
repesentative men
as he said, "In Saturday night's pool
games."
"There's too many of you birds
claiming this coin, and If any of you
: get II, it II be because you tell It to
had acquitted him of the charge. . the Judge, (lood-by.
True, llaeiK'T said he had And so Keith sued the sheriff.
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it
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