GENERALLY CLOUDY
Consolidation of The, Evening Ntwi and
The Rouburg Review
DOUGLAS COUNTY
Iiws-IReview
An Independent Newspaper, Published for
the Best Interests of the People.
IP IT WILL HELP DOUGLAS
COUNTY OR THE STATE
Or OREGON THE NEWS-
REVIEW IS FOR IT GOOD
AND STRONG
VOL. XXVI
NO. 24 OF RO'
IRQ REVIEW
ROSEBURC OREGON. SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 5. 1925.
VOL. XIII NO. 145 OF THE EVENING NEWS
Hill Sal -O
Am oLKVIbt
RAKED WITH
vi, 0 wr. nrimTrn
ORAL VOLLEY
Incompetent Bureaucrats
Blamed for Tragedies
by Col. Mitchell.
d. -o om iNniNO OF
M m ni mil A DIM
$. SUBMARINE
WORDS NOT MINCED
Shenandoah Trip Called
Propaganda to Offset
Failures in Arctic
and Pacific.
(Associated PrtM Lta-sd Win.)
SAN ANTONIO, Tex., Sep. 5.
Predicting that he would be placed
under military arrest by Monday
because of what be said, Colonel
William Mitchell, air officer of the
eighth corps area, and deposed as
sistant chief of the air service, to
day Issued a statement denouncing
the war department and the navy
department in connection with the
disaster which befell the Shenan
doah and the loss of the seaplane
PN-9. No. 1, on an attempted hop
to Honolulu.
The statement was issued after
"mature deliberation, and after a
sufficient time has elapsed since
the terrible accidents 10 our naval
aircraft to find out what happen
ed," to quota from the statement.
"These accidents are direct re
sults of Incompetency, criminal
negligence and almost treasonable
administration of the national de
fense by the war and navy depart
ments." he wrote.
Chancing that both the army and
navy departments have gone to the
fit most lengths to keep down the
development of aviation, and to
maintain, areanautlc as a part of
the two departments. Colonel Mit
chell said that all aviation policies
are directed by nonrflying officers
who "know nothing about flying
and that lives of airmen are being
used merely as pawns in their
hands."
Airmen Bull-Dozed.
Colonel Mitchell said further:
"The airmen themselves are
bluffed and bull-dozed so that they
dare not tell the truth, knowing
full well they will be deprived of
their future careers, sent to the
most out of the way places to pre
vent their telling the truth, and de
prived of al chances for advance
ment unless they subscribe to the
dictates of their non-flying bureau
cratic superiors."
Colonel Mitchell asserted that
"the conduct of the war and navy
departments has been so disgust
ing In the last few years as to
make an self respecting officer
ashamed of the cloth he wears."
Colonel Mitchell declared that
the determination of the members
of the flying service to place the
issue "snuarely up to congress and
the people" dates from the killing
of Lieutenant Pearson and Captain
Skeel in the dilapidated racing air
(Continued on page a. I
. , lMd win.
WXV vfON. Sept. 6.
Lleuten. Charles H. Mar-
tin has been found guilty
of negligence as command-
ing officer the submarine
8-19, which went aground off
Chatham, Mass., January 12,
last and sentenced to the
losa of five numbers in rank
under a dictslou approved to-
day by Secretary Wilbur.
Lieutenant-Commander Stu-
art K. Hray. commanding of-
fleer of the submarine S-48,
which went aground during
a storm off Portsmouth, N.
H., January 29, was acquit-
ted of iharges of negligence,
and of failure to obey orders.
Mr. Wilbur disapproved the
finding of the second of
these charges, but the dis-
approval has no practical
punitive effect.
Descendants of Pioneer
Couple to Meet for Picnic
at Cedar Grove In
Riddle Tomorrow.
The sixth annual reunion of the
Riddle Clan, the Gescendanta of
William H. and Maxamlllla Riddle,
will be held tomorrow at the cedar
drove near the city of Riddle. The
pioneer couple whose descendants
will meet tomorrow, crossed the
plains from Springfield, III., in
1S5I, coming over the southern
route Into Oregon and settling in
what is now known as the Riddle
valley, the first settlers in that
section.
They were the parents of eight
children, four sons and four
daughters, only three of whom sur
vive, George W. Riddle, command,
ant of the Oregon Soldiers Home,
Abner Riddle, a resident of the city
of Riddle, and T. Stilley Riddle,
the youngest surviving member of
the family, a resident of Cody,
Wyoming. The descendants of the
pioneer couple now number over
150 and are widely scattered
throughout t:e country.
The reunion tomorrow will start
early In the morning with a picnic
dinner in the beautiful grove at
noon. An organization is maintain
ed by the clan, George Riddle be
ing president, Mrs. Mary F. Riddle,
vice president and Miss Helena
Riddle secretary.
An effort Is being made by
means of a questionairre to all rel
atives, to piece together a com
plete history of the Riddle family,
which It is expected will eventually
be made up into book form. '
Navy Plane and Her Crew
Hill-TRAGEDY
OF SHENANDOAH
Evidence Shows Dirigible
Buckled in Air, Not in
the Tree Tops.
WILL PROBE LOOTING
Souvenir Thieves Forced
to Surrender Records
Lansdowne's Cap
Commercialized.
KX-OOI WIXS WATK.lt RACK.
1I4VVII11T. Mn Bent C '
James Martins. 48. former traffic
policeman from St. Louis, won
jthe 22-mile marathon swim ' of
the Mississippi river, between '
Quincy, ills., and Hannibal today.
His unofficial time was five hours i
ana forty minutes.
(A-oclauJ Pro. Land Win.)
CALDWELL. Ohio. Sept. 5.
It was definitely determined today
that the giant dirigible Shenan
doah buckled in mid-air and se
parated in parts before falling to
the. ground.
Witnesses of the accident told
their stories officially today to
the board of investigation head
ed by Captain George Washing
ton Steele. Jr., commandant of
the Lakehurst naval air station,
who arrived this morning.
Kour of the five witnesses ex
amined told of seeing the "Daugh
ter of the Stars" buckle and
hump In the middle and separate
iu two sections. A fifth said it
appeared to him that the She
nandoah sagged in the center and
separated. Thro was no testimony
to substantiate reports that the
dirigible struck the ground or trees
before breaking aparL
None of the witnesses told of
having seen the Shenandoah
break In more than two pieces.
It is assumed by the naval au
thorities that the middle section,
about forty feet, tell from the
rear section as it settled to the
ground after being severed by the
elements from the nose. There
nvr has ben any question that the
nose and rear sections brushed
trees while free-ballooning across
country. The Investigation was
conducted In an old fashioned
farm house parlor in the home
of Fred C, Mary, tenant on the
land owned by Charles Davis,
where the control and radio 'ca
bins fell with a majority of the
1 4 dead. The first witness wus
G. R. Davis, who lives a mile from
the Charles Davis farm.
Fire at Shreveport, La., Wipes
Out Nine Blocks During 5-Hour
Job Repairing Broken Water Main
fAerl.leil Pre-. rw4 Wir.,1
SHREVESPORT, La., Sep. S.
Nine city blocks, embracing more
than 250 dwellings in which lived
more than 1.000 persons, were lev
eled here last night and early to
day by a fire which broke out
shortly after some mighty force
had wrecked the city water mains
In three places.
Property loss was estimated ear
ly today at upwards of 1500.000. ex
clusive of losses by public utilities.
Three blocks of the fire area
were occupied by homes of moder
ately well to do persons while the
remaining six blocks, which ex
tended up to the business district,
housed poorer persons and ne
groes. Six persons were Injured, two
seriously.
The fire originated In the bath
room of the home of O. C. Child
ress, a barber, and whipped by the
heaviest winds In many weeks,
quickly got beyond control.
Hundreds of persons formed
bucket brigades In an effort to
stem the rushing tide of flames.
For five hours, however, the city
was left virtually at the mrrry of
the fire until finally the breaks In
the mains were repaired.
The fire started In a house own
ed by a former fire department
chief and across the street from a
fire station.
The breaks In the main remain
ed unexplained early today. One
theory was that they were caused
by dynamite used in nearby con
struction work
Mayor I.. E. Thomas called cit
izens' meeting for ten o'clock this
moraine to plan relief measure for
the homeless.
The cotton belt and the Texas
and Pacific railroads rushed car
loads of water to the scene and
;lent irreat aid while private water
,concerns distributing well water
rushed their supplies and cltv
sprinkling wagons, filled at Red
river, kept running to and from the
scene of the conflagration.
I City officials did not venture to
,flx responsibility for the break In
the water main.
"Oh. God. let It rain!" one wo
man cried frantically a sshe sat
In the street and witnessed the de
struction of her home and the
: homes of her neighbors. Sobbing
I women carrying children In their
:arma hurried away froiq the path
of the flames. At 11 o'clock the
jwlnd changed Its course, veering
from a northerly direction to south
jwest. ( At one place, three men wrapped
In gunny sacks to protect them
from the heat, fought against fierce
odds and won.
I From a hillside a thousand spec
tators stood Idly watching.
As the fury of the flames died
down, groups of the homeless
.gathered around what property
Ithey had snatched from their
home, and bepan their all night vi
gil j Here and there families dlsrnse
'ed their loss. Occasionally the
'robs of a weeping woman was
hesrd. Bui there also was laugh
ter. A negro boy played on a pi
'no that had hen drags. d f'om a
threatened residence. while a
grnnn of negroes stood abont him
and danced to the strains of "Ala
bama" and "Railroad Blues."
CALDWELL. O., Sept. 2. The
much sought baragraph and rec
ords from the Shenandoh have
been found and may aid the naval
authorities in determining the
cause of the smashup.
The baragraph was located at
Cambridge and the logs sheets
there from a short distance away.
They were In the hands of sou
venir seekers.
The baragraph record will show
air pressure, atmospheric mois
ture and temperature. From the
graph drawn on the automatic
drum by a moving stylus It will
be possible also to compute hor
rapidly the Shenandoah rose In
the buffeting of the storm before
the buckling amidshlp occurred.
The authorities have not had
time as yet to check up I be read
ing on the baragraph records.
The record Is to be phatogra
phed and enlarged so that the
authorities can more easily de
termine the altitude during the
storm and before the storm.
Captain George Washington
Steele, Jr., Commanding officer
,of the lakehurst naval station,
I arrived here today and immedi
ately set out with Commander
i Jacob H. Klein and other Lake
i hurst officials to visit the scene
tof the wreck at Ava and Sharon.
If found necessary Captain
'Steele and the other Lakehurst
lofrlrfals will follow overland the
path taken by the drifting prow
I of the ship after It left the aft
(portion, they said as they de
i parted. Should they follow that
course,' they will be obliged to
climb hills and rross ravines.
Most of the day may be con
sumed In the Investigation.
Looting to & Probed.
CALDWELL. O.. Sep. 6. Two'
agents from the federal depart
ment of Justice arrived here from
Cincinnati this morning tw Investi
gate the looting of the Knenandosh.
Thnv ..mfn.J 1 1 V. C.ntal.
'oeoTge W. Steele, Jr., In rharge of
I the Inquiry here, but refused to
make any comment as to their
plana.
Captain Steele said that It an
ipeared to him that ttv pillaging of
Ilhe Shenandoah was just plain
thleverv, which might be prosecut
ed by the district attorney. It will
probably be first determined
wheth'r the looting was done by
souvenir hunters or by persons eg.
, peetlng to market the stolen prop
ter! y.
A number of valuable Instru
ments, such as a barft-raph. al
Ireadv have been returned to the
naval authorities by farmers wha.
found them on their farms, wherirj
Ithey must have dropped from the
(Itas-latecl Ptms Uwd Win.)
WASHINGTON. Sep. Captain
Stanford E. Moses, commanding
the Hawaiian flight project, re
ported to the navy department Jo
day that an analysis of the situa
tion "gives reason, to hope for the
recovery today" of Commander
Rod iters and the missing seaplane
PN-9. No. 1. ;
Intastsiva Search Continue.
HONOLULU. Sep. 5. The work
of wresting from the stubborn si
lent tropical sea its precious secret
of the whereabouts of the missing
seaplane PN-9. No. 1, was under
way today with renewed Intensity.
Eighteen destroyers were rush
ing toward the scene by breaking
away from the fleet detachment re
turning from the Antipodes.
From the east the airplane Lang-
ley, with a cargo of scout planes
aboard, was cruising to the vicinity
where search was being carried on
i for the missing plana which was a
'Victim of fuel shortage while on a
non-stop flight from San FranciBCO
to Honolulu five days ago.
' The destroyers and aircraft
; aboard the Langley will augment
-the forces on sea and air which
'have been cruising for days In
search of the plane, the last word
Ifrom which Included this laconic
message :
! "We will crack If we have to
i land In this rough weather with no
' power."
, With the patrol base at I.ahalna
abandoned, a new base for air
j planes will be put in operation on
, Western-most Island on the Archl
jpelago, Kauai. The spot, which Is
i inhabited by few, contains many
j coves which may provide a new
! searching grounds for those In
quest of the missing blrdmen and
I their plane.
JONES KEEPS GOLF
TITLE RESULT OF
OAK MONT. pa.. Sept. 6. Bob
by Jones, the invincible golfer
from Atlanta, retained his nation
al amateur crown here this after
noon when be overwhelmed the
young Watts CJunn, also a rest-
dent or the Georgia city. lne
match finished In the 29th green,
wben Bbby put down a pretty
putt for a par four. He was
eight up, with seven holes to go.
DUEL; OTHER IN
IT
BURNELL-ROBERTS f
WEDDING TODAY
Mrs. Flora F. Roberts became
the bride of Mr. Charles M. Hur
nell thia afternoon at 1 o'clock .-at.
the home of Mr. and Mrs. John H.
Hers tine, at Riverside. The cere
mony was performed by Judge
George K. Qulne among only im
mediate relatives and friends. Fol
lowing the ceremony the bridal
party and guests were served a
dinner. Mr. Burnell resides at
Happy Valley, and la a world war
veteran. The couple will make their
home there.
o
EUGENE GOLF COURSE
ENLARGED AND IMPROVED
EUGENE. Ore., Sep. 5. The
second nine holes of the Eugene
Country Golf club course, will be
Informally opened today when
Todd Gardner, club professional,
and Roy Moe, holder of the present
course records, will meet Iu a
match play of 18 boles on the en
tire course.
The new half of the course has
been put In .first class condition,
and Is ready for play. The holes
are all sporty and rival the first
nine for beauty, members declare.
The course will be formally
opened later in the fall, when It Is
planned to have several of the lead
ing golf players of the state here
for a tournament. The club now
has a course the equal of any In
the state and one that in many
ways has no rivals.
(AMDCtattd Vtrm Lfftafd Wirt.)
TACOMA. Wash.. .Sent. 6.
holar I -a plant. Marshal of Eaton
ville. Wash., la dead, and William
Charles, who killed httn. Is In a
idylng condition at the county
I hospital, as the result of a shoot
ling at Eatonvllle yesterday after-
Inoon.
Implant died at an EatonvlIM
hospital at five o'clock this morn
ling, and Charles was brought
here.
A bullet U lodged at the base
of his brain. Physicians do not
expect him to live.
The encounter between Marshal
La plant and Charles occurred
when Charles, said to have been
Intoxicated, attempted to evade
arrest. Charles fired ' and La
Plant, although mortally wound
ed, grappled with him, obtained
hia revolver, and fired a bullet
Into Charles' head.
A charge of first degree mur
der was filed against Charles In
justice court here today!
FAILURE TO OBEY
STATE LAW COSTS
TWO BUIIDERS $50
MURDER STORY
GIN IN FULL
BY EX-
DUFFY LEWIS, HEAD
OF PORTLAND BALI.
TEAM, STEPS DOWN,
GOHHTTEE
GOnVGT
Slaying of
Taxi Driver
Independence ?
Outcome
of Sudden Impulse. !
- i:
MERELY WANTED CAR
Former Crime Barrier L
Employment and Only
Sought Means to
Go Elsewhere.
(AMoctatfd Ptms Iunl Wire.)
PORTLAND, Ore., Sep. 5 W. It.
I.loyd, ex-convict and confessed
slayer of C. F. Baun, Independence
garage man. held I n the Multno
mah county jail .following his ar-
rest in The Dalles, Wednesday, to
day ahowed no algna of remorse.
'I had been bumming around In.
dependence for a couple of days,"
said Lloyd. "I have an uncle there
In the bop fields. I wanted to see
my folks, who are working In the
hop fields near Springfield, and-1
asked Ilaun to take me to Dallas.
"No, I had never seen Ilaun un
til I went to Independence."
"I dldn"t Intend to hold him nn
when we started. Something went
wrong with the car when we were
about in miles out of Independ
ence. Daun got out lo fix It. I had
a revolver In my suitcase. When
he got out of the car. the thoucht
of taking the car struck me all of
a sudden. I wanted Ihe car lo lake
me to Springfield.
(Anm-html I'm lurd Wire.)
PORTLAND, Ore.. Sep. 6.
George (Duffy) Lewis, mana
ger and part owner of tha
Portland club of the Pacific,
Coast- league,, announced his
resignation todav as manager,
following a , .ifvrence with
President Tjmas L. Turner.
The Niuse if the resignation
was a rov, 'lewis had yester
day wlthlhlrd baseman Har
ry Rlronda. Lewis said he
would retain his stock In the
club and would remain with
the team. He said he would
do some scouting next year
and assist in the business
management.
Harry (Truck) Hannah was
named manager of the club,
following the resignation of
Lewis. Hannah, who Is a
catcher, was obtained last
suring from the Vernon club
of the. same league. Club offi
cials indicated that Hannah's
appointment was temporary.
FRUIT SELECTS
SUB-CHAIRMEN
Organization Meeting Held
at Office of County Agent'
and Work Planned.
INCOME IS BASIS
County Realizes Over Three
and One-Half Million
From Fruit Crop,
Report Indicates.
Subsidiary Concern Buys
65,000 Acres of Pine
For Price Reported
Over a Million.
f AawncUtM proaa Imm. Wire.)
PORTLAND, Ore., Sept. 5. Au
thentic reports In timber circles
here and at Klamath Falls are to
thn erfect that the Fremont Ijind
company, a corporation subsidiary
to the Slievlin-lllxon company, op-pi-alln;
at Mend, has purchased
from R. K. (lllchrlst of Klamath
Falls, approximately Gft.000 nmH of
Hill., tinih.tr lun.l In i ....
'I (tot the revolver out of ih I tinn nnwi,.n iri,.n,a.h
sitltcaBe and stepped out of thn car. i'1'he timber on the land to
When URun started to net In In paid fr h tint under the sales rnn
slart It I told him to stick Vm up. tract and the total conciliation Jh
I jtuess he madfl some kind of a !h( to be much mow than l ,..(.,-
Mwnrtatetf ITmi Lm4 Wire.)
EUGKNR, Ore., Sep. g. First
prosecutions In the state under the
amendment passed at the last ses
sions of the legislature to the
work Inn men's compensation law.
(wherein anyone about to enftaK"
jfn a hazardous occupation must
i first notify the state accident com
! mission, were conducted here yes
terday. W. J. and J. I,. Leplny
pleaded guilty and were fined 25
I each.
The men were In charge of the
construction of a bank In Rpring
j field, and failed to notify the com
.mission of the project.
I Ml lard A. Klklnn, chairman of
the state Industrial accident com
mission, brought about the case.
move and I shot. I don't know
how many times I shot.
I loft him In the road didn't
even touch the body. 1 Rot in the
car and drove toward Portland. I
dldn t know where I wns Kolnsr. I
wanted to (tet out of the country
as soon as I could.
"I passed throiiRh Portland on
elehty-second street and then
drove out the Columbia hlRhwav. f
ran out of aas near Mosler. I wall
ed there until the express nfflre
1)01).
Accord I tiK to Portland timber op
erators who are fumillur with this
transaction, the cruise of the tim
bered area pold by It. K. Gilchrist
to the Hhevlin -Hlxon Interests ex-
At an organization meeting of
the horticultural committee of thn
Dour la a County Agricultural Con
ference, held in the office of County
ARt'iit Cooney, the complete per
sonnel of the horticultural group
i was selected. The committee which,
1 is headed by Charles A. Brand,
, prominent local fruit grower, dec-id
Ii-d that the work should be divided
into- sections, headed by sub-committee
chairmen. Thia would in
clude special committees on prunes,
apples, pear, peaches and cherries,
walnuts and filberts, small fruits
and grapes.
The subcommittee on prunes Is
j headed by A. H. Marsh, and other-
er members Include It. A. Here her,
John Arxner, George K. Aikin, J. E.
Carter. Itrnilc Kate. 8. S. Johns, Hu
ron Cloiifch, J. A. Snyder, John O.
Bacon, C. H. Maupin and F. For
tin.
The committee on apples, pears,
peaches and cherries, of which R.
W. 1 link ley la chairman, includes
F. S. Hamilton, R. S. Hulton, John,
Sinclair, M. N. Tlsdale. C. A. Ltlles
bcrg, 11. A. Winston, Goo. A. Brad
burn uikI H. 1). Kleist.
Wm. Vnorhle of looking, Glaus
in chairman of tlie committee on
walnuts and flllM-rts, and other
members me G. C. Bailey, Mrs. J.
D. Young, M. T. Cannon and A. I.
A Ik en a.
The committee on tuna I! fruits
and gram's tonsUt of D. N. Busen-
Imi k, chairman, Ucar Hanson, and
ceeda 1,300, oiHi.oon feet of litth ItougluH Watte.
quality pine and the consideration j It was brouuht out at the meeting
paid is apprnxlmate,y-1,KHO,f.no. that the work of this committee so
The timber just sold Is inter-! rHr SB Income is concerned is the
locked with the Weyerhaeuser i niost Important, as 2,1.7 per cent of
holdings for which a mill at Klam 1 the county's f:.,ioo.ooo.oo annual in-
ath Falls is to be erected, accord
onenod and then sent my suitcase to official announcement made
bank itKsi;it t;s hi tor.
Shenandoah after she broke In two
and while still In the atr.
The navy men here were In
censed today when they received
reports that the cap worn by the
late Commander Zachary T.ans
downe, captain of the Shenandoah
was on display In the window of
Wheeling, W. Va., store where
souvenirs of the wrecked ship are
being sold at 25 cents each.
to The l11as bv expens. went
ifo Thp Dnlles. Thev nicked me n
Jwhlle I wns walltnK In the freight
jyards to 'hop' a freight.'
TJoyd served 11 months In th"
nenltentlsrv for forgery. Tie had
fcnen sentenced Octohnf 26, 1f?l,
from Tne county to two yrnrs, but
I wss allowed s(t months for good
i behavior. He Is 26 years of see
Jam! small, welching about 125
nou ml.
"It's tough for an ox-eon vlct and
(I had a hard time getting work."
lb said. "I've pitched hav In
K stern Oregon and worked at odd
jobs, but I couldn't hold a Job long.
Thov had nte marked. I guess."
l.lovd wan brought Ivrc hv Sher
iff T B Hooker and Distrlct-Altor-ney
J. N. Helg"rson of Polk county.
recently on completion of the
Southern Pacific's Kugene-Klam-
nth Falls cut-off. The surveyed
come is derived from the sale of
fruits and nuts. The committee
ptnus on making a thorough analy
fA of ihe horticultural industry as
It exists In the county at present
linn of the Orezon Trunk railroad ! "'"I "."n the basis of this aiiajysla
Hi rent Northern-Northern pa. I HI bullil a program which -will
clflc) Is through a large portion oftlak ,m" comsideration production
f Aawkr-UtH Vrm WlnO
NKW YORK. Sept. 2. The
actual condition of clearing house
banks nnd trust companies for
the week shows a deficit in re
serve of SIX, 617,270. This Is a
decrease in reserve of $ 1 8,897.
810 compared with last week,
when exress reserve of $:tHO,640
was reported.
the R. K. Gilchrist tract
The timber sale announced from
Klamath Falls is distinct from the
re,nrted sale last February or
ooo acres of timber In Klamath
and Desrhutes counties from W. A.
Gflchrlst and associates of Alpena,
I Mich., to the Shevlln-Hlxon Inter
jests. Iu that transaction ftooooo,
,000 feet of pine was said to have
! been taken over.
HM. (.'ItOl MHNG MH,
ami marketing statistics tor future)
guidance. Not only will tho fruit
production of this county be studied
hut the relation of Ibis production
to that of other competing produc
ing sections will also he considered
In order that the final program
may be more soundly based on fact.
Statistics gathered throuRli the
office of Comity Agent Cooney In
dicate that Duuglas county In the
.w ar Pin priMluced .10 per cent of
the total prune rrops of the ptaie,
and S.l!l per cent of the total crop
produced on the Pacific coast.
I Willi pears, it was disclosed, ac
cording to Information collected,
Mhe county shipped out 71 car loU
I In l!t:!:i. which represents 3. IS per
J cent of the car lot shipments of
pi-ar.H from the state of Oregon, anil
II
HKATI.K, Wash., S.'iit. r..
The rourih vishH In mu ll a pIlRhl
In nlnn (In vm (in I'iikH ShiiikI unit
nil jurrMit watiTs. Ihe r'rciirti sli'a
tiirr Saint I'niil was hitch suit dry
In I hi' Inirlmr si Anacnrli-s. " u f due pi r ci nt of the cntlm
mill's north of hen', al low till" Cn.p proilmnl on ihi' Pacific coast,
imliiy. All I h- groiimllnRs were I ti .,. tain arc b.'lnit nalheri'il in
1 n 1 1 1 iliiil trt lo tut.
SPICE OF THE NEWS
lliTbi'it Myers, of ( anyonvllli'.
' mnloreil hfrc yrslnnlay ami upcnt
ill
niniTrP' ITl"''v,'r", h"",, vision fii.nils anil
I I tin I Lu ULILn I 'H""n'""K '" b,",ll',,!"' affairs.
i Black Abductor Murders Another
nnliT thai miine Information may
Im hail as to hat fxlcnt hong-las
i-onnty ptoiliu-iion may affect tho
nint-kt-t of Ihp country.
A (tli' OoniiHirt' wbh workril out
(('ontlrucil on T'Hiie sj
BARE NECK FEMALES BARRED
ROME Woman without hiqh-ntckad, long sleeved dresses are for
bidden to enter the basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore.
EQUAL RIGHTS MYTH
JAMESTOWN, N. O. Two women have been fined IS for smoking
on the street No perfect lady does so, says the chief of police.
KNEW VALUE OF SILENCE
OXFORD, Eng. A muety tome haa been found which shows that a
monk In the 13th century knew that tha world was round.
SCORE ONE FOR THE BULL
ZUMAVA, Spain Belmont., the world's greatest bull fighter, Is In
a hospital, having been gored at hia trade.
IN THE ORDER OF IMPORTANCE
PEEKSKILL, N. V. Mra. Alfred E. Smith was greeted at a na
tional guard camp with a eslute of 16 guns by mistake. When the
governor arrived later the salute was repeated.
(AmimI.iImI lrrm tMl Wlr..)
NKW YOItK. Hep. 5. The Amer
frsn Ii'Mkiip pennant, alresily flylnK
over Ihe nalional capltHl's major
lesRile hasehall park, was fastened
a little more securely to Ihe WhkIi
Inaton msHOieait toilay.
HiK full (tames si'psraleil Ilia
leanina: nen.nnrs ami sernnii piHce:,nB aiom,
Ainieiics as a resnir ot ine cnsin- ))ty( .ix-venr oM
Negro, Wounds Pursuer in Car and
Escapes With Wrong White Child
(Aawnrf.tH Pttm 1M Wlr. I
MONTCLAIII. N .1.. Sepf. B.- -Dloodstalns
on the front sent off
whl.-h Mary
rfiin-in.-f i.r
pion's triumph over the Ht KoxtiVe F. Dnlv. well-to-do New
yesterday, ft to 3, while Ihe Mack . York hardware dealer, was held
men were Idle. !nv tM kf,Hner. who carried her
Pittsburgh, with a long lead over lawny yesierdsv non have given i 'ho had borrowed the car which
the (ilants lu the National, failed i rise to the belief that the child Ihe abductor used. Hut Pierce's
to keen pace with the Washington tin longer Is alive. .body was fun mi Jat night In
routes, was vHflng him.
Instead the negro crabbed Mary
Daly, ci' year old di-ugh ter nf
I ta vfd rt. Daly, hardware mer
chant, near the Mower home thm
terdav afternoon.
I'olii" at first suspected Ray
mond IMerce. a nsro chauffeur.
winning streak In the American, j
culvert with n bullet hole in the
head. The assumption Is that ho
i'l hn teuflv niHifh nf Dim I'lruiosi viz-ives'i tin vf f i t r
I was finally Interrupted hy Ihe far-j w.e, to.iny ' luienslfli d "their "I"" .kl"''ri ''.v, ""' kl'l"1',,,' or
dinal. lo 3, afur MeKci Imle's s.nrHn tor a Hole while irlrl :"
ANTIQUITY'S BOOM.
PHILADELPHIA Two de'endante In liquor casee are free because
a atate law 21 years old prohibits the serving of eearch warrants on
Sunday.
SHOULDN'T HAVE BEEN DISAPPOINTED.
CALDWELL. O After collecting S00 for letting eighteeera view
the wreck of tha Shenandoah on hia farm, Charlee Niewonger fled,
thinking he was going to be arrested. He's back now doing busineea
as usual.
DAUBER HAS POLITICAL VISION
C A R M E L-B Y-T HE-SEA, Cel. Frederick Eastman, reeldent of thl
artist colony, la running for yvernor on an evolution platform.
nun nan puen up nine virion' s in , klilnnpned hy a ni srn lio pro
a row. ninHhly killed another neuro In
Hoe-ers llornshv's thirty flflh clr-I order in ei an aiitomoMIe f ir
ictllt blow featured a St. I.nuls lint-Hi" ahdin llon.
Itlna attack which reached the peak ! Apparently linvlnar planned to
of Its f-ffiTtlvrnpsa In Ihe ninth,' kidnap the niece of a wesltliv
when five runs were scored hy the Ihanktr. the fiiKitiifH s'-euied 10
Cardinals. 'have found that he ahdiutid the
! A home run hy Terry In Ihe. .rnn girl.
Inlnlh enabled the ,ianls to diaw j The kldnuplns: plot, police be
ta little closer to (Be. Pirates bv de- . Ileved, was aimed arslnst .Inrcph
featlna the Phillies, sis lo five, j A. Bower, vice president of the
The ylcinry reduced PlltsburaVa i New York Trust Company, whom
''gaantase to eluht full games. j' da en year old niece, linrothy
to act the i-iir.
1 !..'!t nii'ht. Mis. Power WHS
railed on the telephone by a man
!whu di miindi d 1 1. on" for the re-
turn or her niere. Put her niece
an. snfe In ord .it the time.
Mary Paly end IMrothy Contra
look very ninrli alike.
Artrr the kidnnper hud Rral'hed
M.-irv he pcd awiiv. John Pnnd
tn. the Power ch.totf ur, gave
.rlisse Artrr ten miles ondin
'crowded Ihe fugitive car toward
'the curb nnd the neirro fired,
hitting Sanilln In the hind. Ho
iwas tsn to a hospital.