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About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (June 13, 1925)
OufWeather M-n J, "V t n .SEBUM Consolidation of The Evening Newt and Tha Roteburg Review FAIR TONIGHT AND SUNDAY dougLas county An Independent Newtpaper, Published for ' tha Beet Intereeta of tha People. Today's CircuUHea Over 43QO And Still Growing VOL. XXVII NO. 177 OF ROSEBI' REVIEW ROSEBURG. OREGON. SATURDAY. JUNE 13. 1925. VOL. XIII NO. 178 OF THE EVENING NEWS HEATHEN MM FMOFClTONiifuMDS OF BOLSHEVIK-LED FACTION City Capitulates After Traitorous Desertion of Unit of Defenders Remaining Soldiers and Innocent Natives Shot or Drowned After Being Beaten and Robbed. One EVENTS IN CHINA Canton Anticipated capture of Canton by the Manchurian faction under Bolshevik officers occurs, followed by slaughter of surviving soldiers and innocent non-combatants and general looting. Foreigners apparently not molested. Peking Government warns British legation not to allow repetition of the affair at Han kow, where British marines re pulsed native mob by the use of machine guns; coupled with no tice that compensation would later be demanded. Shanghai Hankow affair causes enlargement of strike. Force of 2,000 Manchurian troops arrives and converts city into armed camp. British and American forces continue guard of foreign concessions. (AMMX-inlfH) Prpta Loaaod Wire.) CANTON, China, June 13. The attacking Kwanetuna; and Can ton forces under IJolshevik officers, after a fierce attack on the defend ing Yunnanese army, today forced them to BurretaoVr Canton and to day imposed extreme cruelties on sotdlt.-ra and civilian population as well. The attacking force landed -2,fl00 soldiers at Tunttuhan and fi-om that point they attacked, leav ing the defending forces without river transportation facilities and therefore unable to launch a coun ter attuck. -After landing the Kwangtung troops pave the surrendering forces no consideration, although the de feated troops had voluntarily given up their arms. The winning forces then began looting the city. This was not con fined to stations of opposing army forces but extended to homes of pon-combatant citizens. Kevolting scenes followed In all parts of the cily, many of which were stoned and beaten by mobs. members of which Beemed to have lost their senses. , The bodies of slain Innocent sol diers strewn along the roads. - The surrendering Yunnanese troops In many cases were beaten to death by the Kwangtung forces. From Shameen. th foreign popula tion saw a conquered soldier com mit suicide by diving into the river after witnessing the killing of his com rades. The winning forces either shot defeated troops or threw them Into the river after beating them with bamboo, stones and rifles. looting was carried on In an extensive manner. The winning troops took even petty ar.tlc.es of household property In their canj pHign of terror. The principal cause of the de feat of the Yunnanese troops, not driven out of Canton, was the t readier! in the ranks of the K wanes, troops, who quit for a cash consideration. Considerable damage was done to buildings owing to heavy gun fire. The most revolting scenes Inside the city were caused by the Kwangtung troops. The defeated army leaders swore they would return to avenge the wrongs done today. Ten thousand Cantonese troops now are on the Canton side of the river, ail wearing red neckties. The success in capturing the city was attributed to the leadership of Rus sian officers. Kighting began at Canton eight days ago between rival elements of former followers of the late Dr. Sun Yat-Sen, the South China lead er. 1 The Immediate cause of the trouble was the efforts of the Can- : tonese government to dismiss the Yunnanese army, former allies of the Cantonese under Sun Yat-Sen's regime. The dismissal was desired because the support of the army had beconfe burdensome to the Can tonese government. Yunnanese generals tinder Gen erals Yang Hsl-Min and Lau Chun- , Wan and their troops bad complete control of Canton. I Cantonese troops under General Hsu Ch-Ung-Chl, reinforced by General Chu-Pei-Tak, attacked the i Yunnanese occupying Canton with the object of freeing the city from their rule. Today's dispatch Indicates this effort had been successful. i I I PEKING. June 13. The Chinese government today protested by note to the British legation the re cent killings and wounding of Chi nese at Hankow. The note em phasized the seriousness of the sit uation and reserved full liberty to demand compensation later. The Chinese note requested the British legation to notify all Brit ish consulates to take measures to prevent recurrence of incidents such as took place at Hankow. In, referring to the seriousness of the situation at Hankow, the note point ed out that the Shanghai affair Is still unsettled. SHANGHAI, Jime IS Two thou sand troops from the Mukden army of General Chang Tso-LIu, the Man churian dictator, arrived In Shang hai this morning under the com mand of General Changs son. Chang- Hsueh-IJang. The, troops were posted throughout the city and at the boundaries of the In ternational settlement which was marked by Chinese flags. Strikes In the Industrial plants which started spreading when 'news of the kilting of eight Chl i nese students in a riot at Hankow was received here continued to en large here today. Local shipping Is completely tied up. Hot weather with overcast skies prevailed today. It Is unofficially reported the Peking government has decided to Issue on Monday a mandate Instructing Chinese pro vincial authorities to protect for eigners during the present distur bances throughout the country. Shanghai tonight had settled In to the condition of an armed camp. Bayonetted troops patrolled the principal thoroughfares. Foreign marine contingents were on guard at boundaries of the foreign settle ments and the approaches to the water works and powef stations. The appearance of Chang Hslen Liang, son of the Manchurian war lord, Chang Tso-LIn, at the bound aries of the settlement with two thousand troops, for the declared purpose of keeping order, added to the military aspect of the situation. The weather threatened rain. Conferences between the Peking envoys of the central government and the authorities of the foreign settlement continued today but still without results. STANDARD OIL OFFICIAL MAKE HEADQUARTERS HERE C. B. Rogers, superintendent of sub-stations with the Standard Oil company, has arrived tn the city and will make his headquarters here in tbe future. This work has formerly been handled out of Port land, but Mr. Rogers, who has su pervision over the stations south of Eugene to the state line, will make his headquarters tn this city In the future. The change was made In order that the supervising office may be more centrally located, the distance between Portland and the southern Oregon district being con sidered too' great. Mr. and Mrs. Rogers are now seeking a suitable house In which to make their resi dence while In the city. DRAG CnOiJILLE RIVER FOR THE BODY OF ACTOR Member of Movie Company Drowns When Canoe Overturns in Jam. WAS NOT DOUBLING W. R. Hates and wife and daughter Wlnnlfred, returned to Roseburg this morning from Ixs Angeles where they have been vis iting for the past two months. Mr. and Mrs. Bates are leaving at once for Seattle where they will locate, but Miss Bates will visit for a few days with friends before continu ing her trip. Lightninsr Streaks Down Flue of Schoclhcuse Killing 3 Children; Storms Bring Death to 2 Women rAwrtitM Pr-M IuH Wr.) CHICAGO. June 13. Five per sons were killed last nleht In the pi'ddle West end Southwest by wind and v-leetrlcal storms. Two bad ben Killed by storms Thurs duv night In Minnesota. Three children met death and 15 person were Injured, half dnsen seriously, when a bolt of lightning crashed down the flue of a school house two mllfs south of llreckenrldee. Texas, at the close of a community meeting. An aged woman was crushed to death nesr Chicago, when a shed topped over qn her. A Chicago woman was kHld and her two rons were badly 'njured near Lake Zurich. Ills., when their autc struck a hole that had been wash. d nut by the storm. WINNIPEG, Man.. June 13. Five hundred persona fh?d their homes In the township of Medlka. southeastern Manitoba, when the White Month and Illrrh rivers overflowed following several days of rain early this week. The wa ter began recedng yesterday, but eavy rains last night augmented the danger. The flood waters were three to four Vet deep, and children and elderly persons were carried to drv land. Flghty three Rnthenlsn fami lies sre being cared for In nearby localities and th provincial gov ernment Is snpplvlng food and esrlng for tire livestock: of the the settlers, who are going about on rafts. ' riood conditions o a less ser ious character prevail in several other districts of tha province. First Reports Stated That Man Was Doing Double Stunt for Jack Holt. According to a t tephone mes sage to the New, -Review this morning from .la Haas, exploita tion representative of the Famous Lanky motion picture company, who Is In Coquille today. It. D. Jones, the Hollywood actor, who was drowned In the Coqullte ri ver yesterduy, when his canoe up set, was not doubling for Jack Holt. The -actor was In a canoe shoving the logs down Into the river when one of the flood gates of the dam was partially opened and the rush of water caused the canoe to nose into some rocks which upset It. Mr. Jones was a fine swimmer and was able to keep his head above water Vor fully a mil's, although he could not reach the banks on account of the swiftness of the current. He was 25 years of age and has a wife and two children In Los Angeles. He has been with the Wlllat unit for the past two years. According to Mr. Haas, the river Is being dragged In an effort to recover the body, the work con tinuing all last ntght without suc cess. It Is thought that he has been carried a Ion? distance downstream by the strong waters running the log Jam. The river Is now Inw however, and is reced ing rapidly and hopes are enter tained that the man will soon ba found. Every possible "effort Is being made to recover the body. Jones was sent through the Su gar Loaf Canyon, a dancerous narrowing of the rfver.. with ra pids and rocks. His canoe struck first one rork and then another and overturned. Jones was one of alout 12 men sent here for preliminaries on James Curwood's "Ancient High way.' The party consisted of a number of cameramen and several actors who were at the scene1 when Jones was lost. The film company had arrang ed wl'h a splash dam company for special features, like opening dams and filming the rush of the logs. The work was well advanc ed when the dam was opened to day and the cameramen ' were nearlng the end of the work wlilrh wo'ild have soon been laid aside until some tfm In July, when the man capt of the picture is due. The dam was openedx partially and a considerable volume of wa ter was pouring out when Jones, dr'f-lnr In h-s canoe, struck the rocks and soon went under after being nn'Gt. The dam was shut down to wait for the excitement of the occasion t sub'lde and the scene will be tried over. Irwin Wlllat, directing the mo tion picture operations here, fell from a log boom todny sjid wna Hererply battered by logs In the rushing water before he was pul led out of the river. His own po sition prd that n' his rescuors was made rartlulnrlv baznrdous hr the swiftness of the current. He will be able to ! about when ever filming of the picture Is re sumed. ? EIGHT DRY AGENTS DROPPED BY CHIEF Fosdick, New Rockefeller Pastor,' Plans "Church Lincoln Could Have' Joined" 111 ' . H WJ, Jk A fH Emepson J V 6j ifiA'-y "I want a church Abraham Lincoln could have joined." Tims does Dr. Harry Emerson Fosdick itnte his plans for making a great liberal church of Park Avenue Baptist, New York City, of which the John D. Rockefellers, junior and senior, arc members. He was called to the pulpit after demanding that his salary be limited to 5,000 a year, Uwt baptism by immersion be mado op tional, and the church thrown. oJ-:-to all Christians, of whatever f Jf .A SKVKX CITIKf AKTKIt XK.XT tX).VK.TIO.N OK .MVSIUA.NS (Auoclattd I'm. Lfuml Win.) PORTLAND, June 13. The next meetingrplure of the National Federation or music liuds. whtcn concludes Its fourteenth biennial gathering here today, will be sel ected by a sub-committee of the bourd of directors, it was decided by the hoard this morning. llos lon. Providence, H. 1., Hot Springs, Ark., Atlanta, (la., Co lumbus, Ohio, Omaha, Neb., and Chattanoogu, TVnn.. extended in-vitatlona. " The delegates were entertalnod today on a trip over the Colum bia River Highway and a barbe cue ut Eagle Creek. STONE'S ENTIRE LIFE DEMO TO ENGINEERS TI POLICE SERGEANTS ONE GANGSTER SLAIN IN PISTOL BATTLE ON CHICAGO STREET Third Officer Fatally Wounded; Fourth Captures Two Fleeing Gunmen After Killing Leader Fight Follow Exciting Chase and Presages Finish War Against Beer Runners. Indefatigable Executive at Desk When Not III; Never Knew Recreation. BE USEFUL ONLY WISH Leaves Brotherhood With $150,000,000 Funeral Is on Day Set for M. A. Degree. ER TRAPPED BY CH THURSDAY still ii ran CREDIT MANIA OF AMERICA BAD SIGN EXPERT POINTS OUT S (Ainvljitnl Prpi Ulml Wii.) A SACRAMENTO, Cal., June 13. nscue workers, delving Into a mass of fallen earth . . and rock In the Daltic Tunnel of the Alta Combination mines, three miles west of Grass Valley. Cal., this morn- ing had picked and shoveled away between 45 and f0 feet of a cave-In which last Thurs- day Imprisoned Robert lllll, a miner ,saya a telephone dls- patch from a Btaff correspond- ent of the Sacramento Bee. Cheered by reports that early last night sounds bellev- ed to have been made by Hill tapping on the rock walls be- yond the cave-In, the relays of miners, working three at a time In the face of the tun- nel cave-In. renewed their ef- forts. It was estimated today that the cave-in had covered about sixty feet of the long 4 tunnel Into the Sierra Nevada 4 mountains, although estimates varied. ' WASHINGTON, June 13. The lengths to which Install- ment buying and selling are going on In America were pointed to as a bad slxn today bv Itodman Gilder, editor of I the Credit Monthly, .in ad- dressing the National Asso- elation of Credit Men hnre. "Did you know", he asked, "that a man with only J12.60 4 In cash can buy a new Ford In Michigan? This is a sign of the times and a bad sign. "Credit men realize that more than 90 per cent of all legitimate business Is done on s credit, but at the pace we are now going any man with a dol- s lnr In caBh -w 111 soon be able to buy a house; any womnn with a quarter may get posses- 4 slon of a vacuum cleaner, and any boy with a Jitney may buy a wedding ring. Mrs. Itohert Sommerhalter and granddaughter, Mrs. Madelon Too nen of Long Ilcach. Calif., are vis iting in Koseburg with Mrs. Som merlialter's son George and grandson Tommy Connelly. ; Held as Slayer of Kidnaped Girl WASHINGTON. June 13. Eight reneral prohibition agents In th- Philadelphia district wore rfronpe,! todsv on the orders of Commissioner Tllalr of the Intern al wprefiue Bureau. The action follows a reorganlratlon of the enforcement corps nder DMti al Chlvf John A. Foster at Philadelphia. SACRAMENTO. Ca!., June 13. ; The Sacramento Boo at 11 a. m. i today received through a hotel clerk In Grass Valley a message ! delivered at the request of the paper's ataff correspondent, thre , miles from Grass Valley, quoting i Robert Hertford, In charge of the 1 Robert Hill rescue work, as having talked to. him through a pipe. ! MRS. ALICE POE PASSES AWAY Mrs. Alice May Poe passed away Friday at the home of Orval Whltsett. where she had been III t for a week, following her removal from the hospital here. She wns born in Douglas county, was 44 years of age at the time of her death and lived here most of her life. Mra. Poe made her home on Flint street and wa)l well known In Rnseburg. Surviving her are two daughters. Velma and Allhea. ! her mother, Mrs. Rachel Whltsett, ; of this city, and one sister, Mrs. Nellie Ingram of Remote, beside a host of friends. Funeral aervlcn will be held at tha ftoseburg Tn- j dertaklng Chanel. Sunday after noon at 2 o'clock, Rev. Stewart O'Pell officiating. Interment win ' follow at tha Odd Fellows ceme-1 tery. (. . : in- Howsrd Carnes and son were In the city today mm Carnes station : looking after business affairs. Police are attempting: to link Harry A. Kirhy, held in Win throp. Me., im the charge o( murdering. Aida Raymond after abducting; her from her aunt's home, with the death of Lillian White In Nyack, N V, In l2a. Kirbj denies the (Aaxclilnl prrm tenant wire.) CLEVELAND. O.. June 13. Ar rangements were being completed today for the funeral of Warren Sanford Stone, 65, head of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engl neera and Ita trust companies, co operative banks, office buildings and qther holdings, whose resourv ces approximate $150,000,000. Fun eral services will be held Mondn'v. They will be conducted on the day Oberlln College was to have hon- ;ored the labor leader and f'nanolor bv conferring upon him the degree of master of arts. Mr. Stone died vestenlnv from a general breakdown, causeil hv hrlghts dlsense. Death came In a hospital where less than three' months aro Mr. Stone had written nn edllorlal for the Mny Issue of 'n- nroroernonu organ, in wnicn he 'ndlrated he hnd an intuition that llfe'a end was near. He recovered sufficiently to re. turn to his duties, but was taken I to the hosrtltal Tnesdav after col lapsing In his office and never fill lly regained consciousness. "The highest temperature they have anv record of here In the hos pital Is 10S 7 8 degrees", Mr. Stone wrote In part. In his first edltorlnl. I "I ti led to break the record, but could not, my highest being 108 6-8 land that for only s day or two at a time. After you pass 1041, you I do not know the difference: the I wheels are going round, but you ! do not Know It. "Now I am hack to normal tern iperature and the doctor says I am coming through and that the old ; machine Is good for vesrs to come. I hope he Is correct becsuse, while that Invisible Intangible, some thing we cal life has never meant .so much io me, even at the best, vet I want to live as long as I can 1 be ef use to mv fellow men. I "Bv the time this reaches you, I shnll perhaps be back In the har jness agaln.-lf I am all right; I want tn keep on as long as I can !he useful, If not, It Is all rleht anyway. I am way ahead of the gsme and hsve not a single regret because I have lived every minute of life to the full: have practiced the hospel 1 have preached the 'gopel of the great eternal Now". In the next Issue of the magazine Mr. Stone wrote that he had "nesr ly regained mv former health and am happv to be back on the Job end handling mv tonnage as usual. Good health, like our other many hie.nlngn, is never fullv sppreclat ed until wo aro temporarily depriv ed of It." i After referr'ng to "hundreds of kind snd svmnathPtlc letters" from members of the Brotherhood while he was sick. Mr. Stone continued; "Sometimes when things do not go as thev shou'd I wonder If It Is I all worlh while snd then along j comes such a demonstration as j this from those for whom I am working, and It heartens a man to : rarrv on the work for their aakes ! to the end. I' Friends pointed out today the veteran leader was at his office from early morning to late In the evening. No time was token for recreation. He knew nothing of , rolf, tennis, swimming or horse hsck riding. When III he would go to a lajispltsl; well again, he was back at work as usual. ier becomln-f head of the en rlneers In 1903, Mr. Stone led the brotherhood In msny movements for higher wsges, winning at least ,part of faery demand without a! strike, except on an unimportant railroad occasionally. (AnnrlatiHl erea laanl Wire.) CHICAGO, June 13. Gangsters and police shot It out today at close quarters in a revolver fight result ing In the death of two police ser geants and of Michael Genna, of the attacking gang, and the wound ing of a third policeman and Sen na's two companions, Genna is believed to have been a brother of Angelo -Genna, gangster recently assassinated,- and the killings are believed to presage a bitter police war against gunmen and beer run ners. Superintendent of police Morgan A. Collins declared the police kill ers should be Indicted and hanged before the day ended. Two of the wounded men may die. Shortly before noon, the death list stood at three: Police Sergeant Charles Walsh: almost Instantly killed. Sergeant H. Olson, died In a hos pital. Michael Genna, gangster: died of wounds. The wounded: Sorgeant Michael Conway, shot near the heart; may die. John Scale, gangster. Albert Anmalie, gangster. The fight burst after a chase of nearly mile and a' half on West ern Avenue after the police squad or lour sergeants from the detec tive bureau auw a large automo bile speeding aouth. Tha police car turned and pur sued. The gangsters Increased the speed of their car and at Sixtieth Street their driver lost control and the car erashed Into an Iron fens. The detective sergeant squad came to a stop a few feet away and the gangsters tumbled or jumped from their car. with revol-, vera and sholguns ready for ac tion. A fusslllade of slugs and bullets was launched at the police squad. The first deadly volley dropped sergeant tllson when a slug crash ed through his mouth and shatter ed his jaw. A hall of bullets rid dled Walsh, killing him Instantly. More than fifty shots were fired, tho crashing of firearms alnrmlng the neighborhood. The fight took place on Western Avenue, the Dixie highway entrance to Chicago rrnm ( ne south. As tho police sergeants fell und er tho severe fire of the gangsters, Genna and his confederatea alert ed to flee. Sergeant William Sweeney, the fourth member of the police squad virtually single handed shot and enptured the entire gangster crew. He pursued Genna Into the base ment of a private residence as thev made targets of each other, their revolvera barking and spitting bul lets at every step. As Genna reached the basement, one of Sweeney's bullets dropped him and he fell through a window. Spurred by the shooting of his three rnmpsnlons, Sweeney left the dying Genna where he fell and gave chase tn the two other gun men as they leaped on the running hoard of s street ear. Signalling the conductor of tho car. Sergeant Sweeney lenped aboard, felled one of the gunmen with a blow of his fist and the other, bleeding from a leg wound, surrendered without further fight. The fight Is believed bv the po lice to hsve had a connection with another shooting earlier In fhe dav In which police heads suspect thst an attempt wns maih to avenge the death of Angela Genna. beer running gangster, who lived with his bride at an expensive hotel while he and his associates -piled their trade elsewhere. , Young Genna, who had 111.000 In currency when he was assassin, lated, was driving bla auto along at I North Side street when shot Ha was removed to a hospital, where before he died he observed the rile of silence of the gunmen of tha underworld. With his death, the police await ed the next assassination In re venge. For the gangster gunmen, contemptuous of the law, prefer to take vengeance at their own time and In their own way. what aeemed to have been a Genna vengeance party was report ed from the West aide Italian coK ony, where five men in an auto fired a fussllade Into another auto occupied by three men, all of whom were reported to have been wound ed, but all were spirited away be fore the police arrived. Two ot the assailants also were believed by witnesses to hare bjeLouaak eflfml beeS helped away by tlieln companions. I i An hour later thrt police aquadl encountered John Genna and hist companions, John Scale and Albert Anmalie. ... , The attack on the police squad resulted In orders to raid the West Side district In search of the Genna Brothers and their confederates. The Genna family la wealthy and the bold leadershlo of the sons baa made them feared. . Later a policeman, who knows the whole Genna fnmllv. Identified the dead man as Michael Genna. youngest of the brothers. Gangster Llva Like King , Since 1911. forty gangsters havd. been slnln In rival battles ot gun men. Only In recent years the bootleg 'ring aristocrats, and ganrs lived Hike millionaires and have been jbt'eted like kings. I - Wealthy gangsters now drive! : their atltos costing thousands dol'ars over the same boulevards with the mlllfonslres and Industri al chiefs: thev live in supposedly exclusive snartments and hotels, have their boxes at the theatre and when thev die, bv assassination nsimllv, e-reat outpourings of the underworld mixed with nolltlclans, attend the services, while numer ous automobiles carry to the cere mony the losds of f'oral pieces that cot thon-ands of dollars. The killing of Dion O'Banlon. forlst-gunman-beer runner, last December In his floral shop onpo slto a cathedral hronght a climax to the esnaster sunerlstlves. Ho was hurled In a $10,000 casket with nearly $100 000 worth of flowers carried In ?8 motor cars. In a studv of vanglaad. for tho TTnlversltv of Chlcaeo. professor F. M Thrasher, of IMInnls Wesley an Vnlversltv, 'recently declared (Continued on page The Weather Highest temp, yesterday 73 Lowe n t temp. . last night 61 Fair tonight and Sunday. A a rule a man's a fool Whn It's hot h wants It cool Whfn U'n cool ho want It hot Miift hitY- aomtth)nc that In not. Resort Purnosely Established by Medford Prosecutor Lures Hooch Peddlers Into Arms of Officers MEDFORD. Ore.. June 13. What he sa'd was another Important step In his policy of ridding Jsckson county of liquor vlolstors during the Oregon Na tional Guard encampment was .laken last night bv District Attor ney Newton C. Chancy. Assisted hv Sheriff Jennings and the Med ford oollre. he arreted B. F. Hod ges, Mr. and Mrs. R. Dswson and Mrs. Ilettv Hedges, all of Klamath Fslls. whom officers ssv they csiighlr delivering moon-hlne to the Hut csndv store sltnsted on the Crster take highway near Cp" Jnckson. The arrests were the result ef a carefnllv conceived plan worked out hv the dlstrlrt attorney several weeks go when he learned there would bo a concerted attempt to flood Camp Jackson with liquor. The Hut candy store and soft drink establishment was establish ed bv him at a strsgetlc point on (he hlrhwgy snd then nature waa I allowed to tnke Its course. The .proprietor of the store said he was jsoon annrosrhed bv the moonshtn icrs, and last n'ght waa made as thai rlnlo for delivery. Cheney and Sheriff Tennlnga assembled seven I men fullv armed In the building land It we, !) that an Hodges iwnlked In with the liquor, he waa 'coverrd snd disarmed snd his ear j eonf'sesied. Mr. and Mrs. Dawson (were given the ssme reeentlon. A fh'nl car wss scheduled to arrlvo (but sonareetlv the operator grew I sinlclo" snd thus escaped. In ddltlon to the automobile1 isn't three automatic revolvers, 30o gallons of moonshine were secured. .The Tawnn. Hodges and Mrs. j Hedges w'll be given their nrellm ilnarv hearing In Judge Taylor' 'court this afternoon.