Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (April 14, 1925)
The WEATHER Highest ttmp yesterday.75 Lowest temp, last night. .53 Generally cloudy tonight and Wednesday tiftebtttt Consolidation of Th Evening Newt and The Roteburg Review IB TODAY'S CIRCULATION OVER 4,200 AND STILL CROWING An Independent Newtpaper, Publlahed for the Beet Intereite' of the People XXVH NO. 12S OF hvg J; S VI E W VOL. ROSEBURG. OREGON. TUESDAY. APRIL 1 4. 1 925. VOL. XIII NO. 2 OF THE EVENING. NEWS NATION S SPOF CLASSIC OPENS ON BULL FIELDS! Major Leagues Start 1925 Race for Pennant With , Big Crowds on Hand. nriillN'SDEIlTHi'Worjo WEATHER IS GOOD National Fifty Years Old Ruth Pleads to Play in Opener, but Is Refused. Sheely Cloute Firet Homer (AMncUtH I'rfM LwrI WlrO e DETROIT. April 11. Earl Sheely, first baseman of the Chicago White Sox, smashed out the first home run of the 1925 major . league season to- day. He drove the ball over the left field fence In the second inning of tho Detroit- Chicago opener. No one was on base. Leonard was tho pitching victim. . t - . CHICAGO, April 14. Uright sunny weather wllh iust a touch of the chill of spring Brought record breaking crowds out today for the opening games bf the 1!)23 major lea cue season. Ban Johnson, president or the American league, viewing the Tig er opener nt Detroit, and Presi dent Heydler of the National league estimated that approxim ately 275,000 spectators jammed the parks In the eight cities to view their favorites in action. The weather was fair throughout both leagues. CHICAGO, April 14. Baseball fnndom today started It annual pilgrimage to Nntlonnl and American league arenas for the in itial battles of a six month's cam paign for baseball leadership. The New York Yankees, Wash ington Senators and Detroit Ti gers, according to the dnpestcrs. appear to have an edge In the fight for the. American league bunting, although the St. Louis Browns, with George Slsler at the helm, are looked on as possible contend ers. In the National league, which In cidentally is celebrating its golden anniversary, the New York Giants, the Pittsburgh rirates and Brook lyn Dodgers are touted as possible winners, with the St. Louts Card inals a likely competitor in a neck and neck showing. Perhaps the most sorely disap pointed among baseball's followers and players was Babe Ruth, mighty Yankee home run slugger, whose plea to be permitted to play AMEk AVEk-AG 1924 WORK WAS 672 (Aaoriatxl Pfna Leued Win.) WASHINGTON, April 14. The farmer's national council estimated in a statement to- day that American fanners realized on the sale of their crops last year J5.144.0O0.OO0 less than a fair return for their labor would have given them. Department of Agriculture figures on the value of the crop and livestock production for the year were cited as showing that the average farm family received for its labor $671.93. The total deficit" wa figured on a ba- sis of $15(io as a fair aver- ace return for such labor. KILLS HUSBAND OF HIS EX-WIFE THEN SUICIDES SLAM E LAID TO EX- KLAN LEADER MS IN Jl AT ) SALEM, Ore., April 14. lO Bert "Oregon" Jones, who on March 2S. 1924, escaped from go- M-i it, rj" the state penitentiarv by f si Oberholtzer Expires inB over th wail with fi of Poisoning Following Alleged Assault. ve ' TO BE DEGLftRED 'II IE 5 CLUBS i VlIUilNI. jriHiK IH PREPARING LIQUOR PLAYS PART Victim Prominent School i Worker Stephenson on Heavy Bail Facing Five Charges. Double Tragedy in Tacoma Follows Quarrel Over Slayer's Children. YOUNGSTERS SEE ACT Ignored by His Daughter and Son, Angry Parent ( Takes Revenge On Step-Father. (AMocUtnl ho Lrutd wire.) INDIANAPOLIS, Ind.. April 14. Miss Madge Oberholtzer, age 2S, alleged to have been the vic tim of an attack by D. C. Steph enson, former Urand Dragon of the Ku Klux Klan, died today. Miss Oberholtzer has been in a critical condition for several days as the result of poison which she told her parents she took at Ham mond, Ind., following Stephen son's alleged attack. Stephenson was Indicted on five charges by a grand Jury which Investigated Miss Oberholtzer's story. Stephenson is at liberty on a $25,000 bond, pending a ruling by Judgo James A. Collins to quash the Indictments, which charge as sault and battery with intent to to kill, assault and buttery with In Intent to rapt, malicious may hem, kidnaping and conspiracy to commit a felony. Miss Oberholtzer had been un conscious for two weeks preceding her (Innth 9lia nna wl.1,,1.. 1.nn,n (A-ocuted Pr U.l Wtr..) in ,,,. , , throughout TACOMA, Wash.. April 14. Indiana. She had served as seere- Two men are dead and two chll- tary treasurer of the Young Peo- dren are fatherless following a! pies Reading Circle of Indiana, an shooting irffnty Inst ntijhtwhen ! organization connected with the a d.vorced husband stormed the ! public school system, and also was home of his former wife on the formerly employed in the office of first anniversary of her second the state superintendent of public marriage and shot himself after instruction. killing her husband. The dead Earl Klinck and Enrl Gentry, al men are Fred It. Arnold of Ta- lleged to have been companions of coma and H. A. Winston of : Stephenson, are under indictment Aberdeen. I.wirh him nn n. ,.hnr r mnir. other prisoners, is uuder ar- rest at Sacramento. Calif., ac- cording to information re- reived by Wardeu Dalrymple today from the California State Ilurcaiv or blent idea- tion. Jones is in a Sacra- i mento jail on a so-day sea- tence for petty larceny. PIOXRKIl YXIfCTOIt AXI TltKASl'ltKlt 1'ASSKM A WAV (AaorUtrd Pm Iued Wlr .) ' LA GRANDE, Ore.. April 14. John Krawley, 7 5, a pioneer of Eastern Oregon, died here today. He wps treasurer of T'nlon coun ty for 24 yeurs, resigning In 1!22 because of ill health. He was conductor on the first railroad train to come into La Grande in 1XS4. A few years later he was Injured in a railroad accident fn Washington, causing his retire ment from railroad work. The open season on trout starts tomorrow, and local stores dealing in sporting goods report that the sale of fishing tackle and equipment indicates a great deal of in- e tercst on the purt of the fishermen of this vicinity. Although tire main rivers are open to trout fishing the year uround. the tributaries, where tiie best catches are often made, are closed from Octo- her 15 to April 15. Start- inir tomorrow, however, the smallvr streams will be open, and the sport will soon be at Its best. . e Tire fishermen report the The killing occurred In view of acy to commit a felony. Accord- several children who were play-I nK , members of the'girl fti ... ing with Iwanna Winston. 13. in ,,yi Miss oberholtzer told them front of her home. Shortly be- i h f Gti.non'- t tne muter college district, near J. D. Loffer was here yesterday, spending a few hours transacting business and purchasing supplies. Mr. Loffer resides at Tiller. IRCUR I BY MURDERER lJS streams still high, with much hhow wutur com ins down. However, conditions are im- proving each day, and with- in a short time fishing will be right. A number of fine talc hen liave already been made, the South I'lup'.ua be- Jim heifer than in many past yean. i Steclheads are NSTTUTE FOR SAT. Roseburg Organization Is Sponsoring Meeting for Southern Part State. MRS. DUNBAR COMING President State Federation to Conduct Meeting Women of District Are Invited. row. and some fine sport Is being enjoyed. Halt Is being used gener ally, at present, but as the water warms up tire trout will rise to a fly. Women of Roseburg and Dou glas County are anticipating with Kreat interest, the first Southern running i Oregon Institute to be held by the COMPLETE NEW ROAD OUTFIT ILLDOSESIS PURCHASED Amount Found in Body of.j Court to Have Road Ma- Mrs. McClintock Shows I chinery for North and Not For Medicine. South Ends County. EVIDENCE PILES UPlPLAN IMPROVEMENTS Women's clubs of this section of the state, the meeting being cal- led for Saturday, April 18, at the South Methodist church of this I city. The Institute will deal with the structure of a club, election I and duties of officers and chalr i men, eligibility for membership, j relation of club to community, land participation in community affairs, fundamental principles every club woman should know. introduction of business at meet ings, classification of motions, formalities, club programs, club finance, conventions, reports, rec ords, relation or club to district, state and general federation, and many other topics of interest to club women. Delegations are expected from Medford, Grants Pass, and Yon calla, each of the clubs in those places, having promised to send a number of their members to the institute. Invitations have also been exitinded to the Garden Val ley Improvement club, Green P. T. A. and clubs at Olalla, Camas VoJIcy, Looking Glass, and other points, and Mrs. Foster Jlutner, President of the Roseburg Wom an's Club, which Is in charge of the institute, today stared that a general Invitation is issued by the Roseburg dull to all interest ed women of the entire county to be present. A welcome awaits VICTIM OK Ul'NSIIOT. (.Wrlatrd Frtm Ummi Win.) RRISTOL. Va., April 14 Judge Joseph L. Kelley of the Virginia supreme court 4 of appeals died today of gun- shut wounds. He was enter- tng the basement of his home when the family heard a 4 shot and found him fatally injured. RE-NAMED ON BOARD (AMocUttd Pica lunl Wlr. SALH.M. Ore.. April 14. The state board of control today reap pointed H. H. Witherspoon of Elgin and A. C. Allen of Medford as members of the state boardpf horticulture. FAMILIES FLEE FLOOD AS GOES OUT FROM 1 Structures at Edison and Ford Plants on Huron River Give Way. HOUSES SWEPT AWAY Troopers Prevent Loss p: Life by Speeding in Advance of Water With Warning. BRIAND GIVES UP EFFORT TO FORM CABINET Impossible to Assent to Conditions Demanded by Socialists. BLOC HOLDS POWER Belgium Also in Control of Socialists, Whose Leader Will Form New Ministry. DETROIT. April 14. Scores of families In the valley of the Huron river between Flatrock and Lake Erie were driven from their homes early today, when the dam I ''X the premier acceptable to them, at the power plant of the Kord i " w stated. They apparently Motor Company at Flatrock burst were willing to support a cabinet (Aanclatad rna Ut4 Wlr.) PARIS, April 14. Ex-Premlor Rriand today derided definitely to abandon the effort to form a cabinet in succession to the Har riot ministry. Brland announced his determ ination not to form a ministry to the socialist republican group to which he belong, basing t on the refusal of the socialists to collab orate and conditions they wished, to exact in return for support. He considered the conditions In compatible with his conception of the role of premier. Briad's refusal of the task President Doumergue had re quested him to perform cams af ter a period of uncertatlnty in which it was at first reported his declination had been decided up on and then that he would try to form a combination without so cialists before giving a final ans wer to the executive. ' The socialist action with re gard to taking part In a Brland government was definitely reach ed by tho national council of the party by the unanimous vote. It did not preclude, however, their participation In a miulstry formed fore 8 o'clock Winston, the father of Iwanna, and the divorced hus band of Mrs. Arnold, appeared and took Iwanna by the arm. "Leave me alone; I don't want to see you." the girl In alleged to have said, as she jerked away from her father and ran. Arnold stepped from tho house and. according to the police, met Winston at the foot of the porch steps. The men fared each other angrily and Winston accused Ar nold of prejudicing his children against him and preventing Iwan na and her brother. Horace, aged 15. from writing him. A few angry words were spo ken and Winston drew a pistol her own home, on Sunday evening, March 15- Stephenson, who was prominent in republican politics and active In the successful cam paign of Governor Jackson for the nomination and election, had call ed her on what he said was an ur gent matter, Miss Oberholtzer is said to have told her parents. Shepherd's Case Paralleled by Discovery of Arsenic in Cunningham Boy's Exhumed Body. and released millions of gallons of water Into the valley. The break In the Ford Com pany dam followed the crumbling of the earth embankments that the Put at Work on Rose- burg-Dixonville Road. A new tractor, grader and scari fier have been purchased by Doug- in the opener was met with a cold i from his pocket and shot Arnold reception from his physicians, who twice through the stomach. Arn ordered him back to bed when his old staggered down the walk and temperature still registered at the fell dying in the parking strip. century mark. Fair weather todav brought pre dictions of an attendance of 32.000 Winston stepped around to the side of the house as Mrs. Arnold came to the door, then he enter- (AuocUtnl Prtm Leaied WIrp.) CHICAGO, April 14. Sufficient mercury to kill a nerson within cn..n,u tr.,1 uin h nut In un m..c i at-im-uuu a imuso, h iieu uays was louna in all tne or- the Southern end of the county, cording to her parents, she said cans of Mrs. Kniina Nelson Me- County Judge Quine, announced to- " iu uiiua puiii- winum, utturuiug io tne COI1I- uor. Following the drinking, !pleted report of Coroner's Chemist members of the family say, she j William D. McNally. submitted to told them she was taken on a .Coroner Oscar Wolff today, train to Hnmmnnd. Ind.. and was "The amounts found orerlude attacked In a hotel room there. the possibility of its being admin- celved, they w mi ..loiiuay. ..luren in, .miss wit iieieu as nieuiciiie, saiu nr. AIc erholtzer said she was permitted i Nally. "We found mercury in all to leave the hotel in order to pur- the organs In amounta such as are chase a hat, as she bad left bare-i found in the organs of people dv- all woniwn bf the various com- "Rnlt new Detroit Kdlson munition, and they are urged to Company dam at French Landing, N Fnninmenr Will R-l attend We sessions. j several miles above Flatrock, yes- 1NCW equipment Will oe . . . Ilerday. The Imnounded water of m,i i r, ,, . iZbi,, wii i;,th8 lx mlle artificial lake rushed orn serVe.1 at the church bannuet through Dreak- room, and a charge of flflv cents Tne ,am ' 32 feet high and ,vr plate will be made. Women of nearby communities who de sire to attend the luncheon, are aslced to nollfy Mrs. J. C. Pons ier belore Thursday evening'. This is the first Institute of its kind to be held In Southern orgun and the second in the Blate. The first was held at La headed by llriand without enter ing into it, but found the ex-pre-mler unwilling to accept this sup port under the conditions they named. Albert Snrrault. Paul Palnleve and Rene Renault, In the ordor named, will be consulted by Presi dent Doumergue and asked to a French cabinet. built partly of concrete and part ly of earth. Engineers estimated today that already 10.OUO.000 cubic feet of earth have been washed away, while the river to- KAHL, HAN!K, JOCKEY KINO TO HIDK AGAIN. (AMocUud Ptom UtMd Win.) NEW YORK, April 14. Earl Sande. one of the country's Dre- day is eating into the remaining ! mler Jockeys, who piloted fcev to day. The traitor, and 30 horse "'. ". . ej ... n..l,ln. .rrl.ul ln,I.V A ml . v" " was put at work tills morning on . the Alt. Nebo road. As soon as the scarifier and grader are I be used in smoot eurth works and engineers be lieve more will be swept out. The new power station of the Edison Company was to hare been opened May 1. The cost was n., . . . 'SIIU.UUU. dle'orr" ".Z" Z Z More than 6.000 acre, are re- ning on the opening day at Ja, ' hnrlarl iitiilu urn t nt- nh ,.h tm 1 1 . m RICH . victory over Papyrus, has won the hardest race of hft career one with sickness that threatened his life. San ere Is himself again physically and announced today that he would ride attain be gin- He also has been en re- -late federation, who advocated a! TV" U . 1 ' W, 11 . ' a' in rld Tin the KenWkT TZ plan at the lat state meeting, and !fl , n 80m" f8 . a,nd i ViurrhMl 2owi!s it i i-.-i t ',. ! steadily rising. The valley's In- t derby at Churchill downs. story, I ing from mercurial poisoning. Th v.. ....... .... , ..... . ... - ... - i,., ... 4.1... : sieauny rifting. ine vauey Jng up the two main roads leading -'r " . ' . . hnhitm.a. wm wnrnpri nt th ftfw.,1 eant and west out of the city. ; - upon me mstuum tne , by from Vth Kock- The county has had one set of, Mr8 ,,untjur hag bee inyted wood station of the Michigan state such machinery, which has been ln., ,.ul,,i ,. ,,,, ..,... ,u, police, who started along the fans at the season's opener be- 'ed the houe at the rear and com tween the Chicago rubs and Pitts burgh Pirates, with the veteran Grover Cleveland, right hander. opposing Kmil Yde, left handed youth. The raising of a flag commemor ating the fiftieth anniversnry of the National league was the only ceremony on the program. mltted suicide In the kitchen. LONE BANDIT SECURES $1000 CASH AND RINO NEW YORK. April 14. Greater New York's major league baseball teams, opening the 1925 season at (Continued on pag 6 SEATTLE. Wash.. April 11. With his piytol pointed at several persons who sat at a lunch count er in a cigar store here today, a young man held up Harry Irux man. proprietor, and took $1.0it In currency from a cash reginter and a diamond ring, valued at $15oO and fled. headed. According to the she purchased and look poison j amounts were similar to those in and returned to the hotel, telling; the organs of persons who have Stephenson and his companions or : Uvea 1 days after the mercury tJ ntirR coun, Iirn,I4.ryi BO that hot art Chn (linn U'oat n 1 a fail In i rai arlmln aiararl . . ' s.. nut. re ..rm-u ... ...,,..- e snow ,rm eiponence me ouf , ,. ,,,,, b , "-""-" , , ' .............. ...r..ur, ... ,,ie ... .,. nalf of ,he cunty. day evening. Her family declares gans of the case of mercurial pois- . . oning. We found traces of for- - """V- L.VC1NJ riK31 KAIU mald. hv.le 1 1 as nn emhnlmintr "ron '" an" " u'1 use l..r several years, put iiiki. ne will be present. She expects the great amount of road work be- , bf rolIipllll.d by d. parti.7jnt Ing dune the outfit could not cover ,.,,, ,rom Portland, arid will be me enure couniy properly, so mm assisted l.v Ihem In ronilii.ilni it was decided to obtain another ,Uu ..t-iitute Sande fell In a race at Sara toga Inst fall and organic trou bles following tiro injuries threat ened to force his permanent retirement. '1 am going (o be hard to catch good horse, weighs 109 pounds. Red Cross Expert of University of Oregon Summoned to Tornado Swept Districts of Middle West she was not returned to her home until Tuesday. March 17. when a man left her at the house during their absence. He Is said to have informed a neighbor that she had been In an auto accident. Dr. Kingsbury, called to attend MIps Oberholtzer, said there were many larerptions on her body, but apparently they were not the suit of an accident. RANCHER DROPS DEAD ON VISIT TO WOUNDED SON CAswK-.atd rrv Oatsml Wr HENR Ore., April 14. V O. Rnrfnre. Kedmond ranrher, on bfs way to a local hospital to visit his voiing son. was stricken with f AswHatM rm tt,i.) j $20,000,000 of property damage and Et'GENE. Ore.. April 14. Earl 'caused thousands to desert their Kllpatrick. of Eugene, dean of the homes. Dean Kilpatrlck served as np;irt aitnek on a downtown street University of Oregon extension dl-, assistant director of disaster re- ;at noon today but managed to get vision, will leave for the middle 'lief. He helped distribute a $"iK,- nn flr a thp hospital where he west immediately to serve as a 1 00 relie fund and aided In recon ,. dead. member of the American Red structlng the communities that j flurfarpt ho was about sltv Cross executive staff for the re-had been destroyed. vnrn of ase. was accompanied by habitation of the great area I When America entered the war, n nnn am tn(,v W(..0 coming swept by the tornado on March IS. Kilpatrlck helped through the unl- :tn yni a younger hoy. Garrison, inn uri'ftnn nun in an riper- "tfraiij vxu-unmii un nin m- lenced relief worker and has been i eanlzo the work of the Red Croa on the staff of the Red Cross for In Oregon. Later he went to Seat tle, as director of organization for the northwest and was promoted to manager of the division, which had charre of all operations In Oregon. Washington, Idaho and Alaska. fluid. It Is highlv significant that we could find that after J6 years of burial. Investigation of the death of Mrs. MrCllntork, whose exhumed body was found to contain mer cury poison, has shifted tempnr- re-;arily to Galveslon, Tex., from where in 1909 a physician was summoned to attend her In Ilav view. Tex., wh a she was attacked by her final Illness. Oa'vestnn nufhorttIs have been asked to question Dr. William C Finher. who was practicing there In 1!0!), if he attended Mrs. Mr Cllntoek and what he presrrfb' d for her. Physlr Inns who attended her after she returned to Chimim to din have said they prescribed no mercury. The coroner's Jury later this 1t will resume Its Inqutrr Into the death of William MK llntof k, snn of Mrs. Mc'Hntock, as the fi nal step prep iling th arralen- ment of William I). Shepherd, b river to rouse persons living nenrbv as soon as ruarris at the dam had telenhoned the station I when X get on i of the trouble. So raoldlv did the I Sande said. He watvr rise that the officers were (soon forred to take to boats, go I Ing thus from house to house with their warning, ferrying 1 scores of families to safety and sending the men on ahead In the commandeered boats to aid In the (Continued on page 2 in JUMi iitti in I .1 i natrnrt -r-i wr & art neeibnl for extra heavy work. The UAIxlNLKd 1 tlKLC. county has found tiiat with Its own. crews a great deal of g(Kd main- AocUti ttwm wir tenance work Is possible, and is! SALEM, Ore., April 14. Three endeavoring to keep a sufficient men were arrested and a 100 gal amount of machinery on hand to ina still confiscated between meet emergency conditions. i yVoodburn and West Woodburn The new outMt will probably do today by George Ilurlburt, a fed Its first work on the Roseburg eral agent; Roy H returner, Marion bixonvilie road, which Is to be in ' county deputy sheriff, and William proved during the year, by the ex- 8. Levens, state Prohibition com pendlture of a large amount of mar missloner. It was the first raid In ket road money upon It. The road which Levens has participated. Is to be placed on a permanent The men placed under arrest, grade, and heavily graveled In ord all of whom are believed by offic er to give a solid base. The county court denlres to have James Williams, R. L. Wells and this road paved the same as the Iawrence ('Monte) Montgomery. Eilen bower road, and la working With the still; between two and toward that end. In the event the three gallons of moonshine was tak- preuent plans for the formation of en. -o mash was found. The company with headquarters at Ko- Mrs. Thrush In Mrs. I- U. Thrush wa4 n visitor In this city today from Looking Glass and spent several hours visiting and attending to business matters. Inventor of Horseless Carriage, Parent of Automobile, Passes on After Life Given to Development Amrx-uti prm TrtM wirt. ihls duties as field superintendent KOKOMO, Ind., April 14. El-; for a natural gas company. He de wood Hnyne. f8. who In 1KH1, In-1 aired to make his rounds more vented tho "h (trite tea a earrlnirn la rnnlrllv than ha rnnlrl with a hnrae ers to be old offen rs, were dead at bis home here, a victim of and started his experiments, being Influenza. I of an Inventive turn of mind and On the Fourth of July. 1S94. El- having a technical education. wood Ilaynes. then superintendent for a young field natural gas emergency call since he served during the war as manager of the Northwestern division of the or ganization. Iean Kilpatrlck was ordered to Astoria when that city was swept by fire three years ago and h aervetl an director of relief for the Red Cross, recruiting and organ izing his staff, drafting at that time a number of the faculty of the school of social work In I t lind In 1121 when the city of fftueblo. Colo., and nearby towns 31. while playing with the brother f "n km' Ray, at the family home in Ited mond. urge special road district to on- still was located on the farm of tain sufficient teriai tax to pave Slay Clregorla. a poriion of the road each year,; o is approved, the court w 111 prob ably be able to diver', market road BANK TELLER IS tun.is to me proj.-ct ea. n year, cun rvr r a mimtc mite. n POLE VAULTER HURT U'-lf.U, ..., .IIU o..... ....... .n ". were visited by floods that caused 'graphical of GeneV A few months nro. Dean K Patrick wn appointed on th commission f American experts! for the study of the causes of wa lamsties and of me:0ires lolie . taken for their prevention. The ap- ' polntment was midcby lr. Kaoul i Mnntsndon. presid. of the geo-1 ine him with tvpheld germs. Poison Found In Body of Wnifer C""ninaHafT!, Mother Collanses . t'ltlfAOO. A pt n Poison was found In the bodr of 'Valt.-r . ;r''innint'ham. 11. which was ex- Whlla practicing pole vanltlne ".! ve-'erday st Vslnarnlso. I irith the hlch school track and Ind., a1 whose mother. Mrs An 'field f.-sm. Frnnk !ne. a local rnnn'nehnei. . b"lnT held In ! high school bov. fell resterday ed Jail st Crnwn Tnlnt. Ind , nr. W. fractured his left forearm. The.H MrN'ally, coroner's physician. . pe slipped as he started aver reported today. the bar. thrnwlnr him hejivlly toi I.r. McN'ally'a report wns only a i the rrour noon the srm. The in-i nrelimln.1191 one and did not Indl- Jurv was " raved l the bone set .rate the njiantlty of poison found at the office of Dr. Wade. j (Contlnuea on Ji until the pavement Is extendd at; least In liixonville. As ihis road' Is eventually to beronu. a part of A.-UII Frrm l.d Wlr..) the l'niiia hlglmay, connecting IiKTIIOIT, April 14. Three men Kastern llregon with the seaport today held up the branch of the komo. Ind.. had a queer buggv. without tongue or shafts, towed out onto a country road. He drove It triumphantly back into Kokomn. at the remarkable speed of eight hour, under power gen erated by a gasoline engine. That, A year after his first successful trip with his horseless carriage. Mr. Ilaynes formed a company for the manufacture of automobiles and was president of It for many years. He Invented numerous Im provements In the automobile. "The Father of the Automobile' was a school teacher at the start of his career. This did not ault it Is claimed, was the first trio of him. however, as he always was of a gasoline driven vehicle In Amer- an Inventive turn of mind and, lea. long before he developed the Idea This horseless carriage, which for a horseless carriage, was given at Jteedsport. the rourt desires to American State Hank at Oregon soon became a familiar sight In to experimenting In chemistry, see It permanently Improved, so Avenue and Kpworth Boulevard, the streets of Kokomo. was the re- One of his ambitions was to find tht the cost of upkeep will be re- shot and killed Charles Taggart, uit nf two vesrs of experiments a combination of metals that duSd to a minimum. Jr., the teller, and escaped with be- and now I, preserved In the inlth- would resist the oxldlflng in- - , tween lil.tMiu and lii.ouu. sonlsn Institute at Washington, fluences of the atmosphere and at Miss Enoer Returns Horns Taggare was the second victim n. '. Mr. llavneg said he was or- same time take a good cutting Miss (llsdys Knger. who hnssihe holdup men In the bsnk dered to "get that contraption off edge. An alloy' of cobslt and been vlslilng a r" '" the pasti'hln a month. On March 19, tnn mreets." when he drove his chromium, which Is used now for several days ai the home uf her Percy I., llnj.on, a ruinmer, re- lutomoblie Into Chicago. making dental and surgical Instru- aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mr,J. K. slsted the enaV.-ta of twS men to, yhe automobile was the direct ments. was the result. He also In- Knger. relumed to her home at rob the place and was shot and result of the fart that Mr. Ilaynes vented and discovered a number Ilrownsvllle this morning. fatally wounded. Ihad a largt Vrrltory to cover In of other alloys. e (9