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About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 28, 1925)
CowUhCj .' Umpqua CI. FRIDAY Consolidation of Th Evening New and Th ReMburg Review c(DOUG An Independent Newspaper, Publlehed tar the) Best Interests erf Ik People FAIR TONIGHT AND TUESDAY ROSEBURG, OREGON. MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 28. 1925. VOL. XXVI NO OF ROSEBURQ REVIEW VOL. XIII NO. 1S1 OF THE EVEMINO NEWS CPU Nix n ' 'A. ONOPE OF STATE Best Brand Oregon Weather for Program of Stunts, Music and Races. STOCK JUDGING IS ON Juvenile Exhibits Feature of Industrial . Section American Legion Furnishes Fun. (AaeorUtrd Prea LeaeM Win.) I SALEM, Ore.. Sept. 28. Seven thousand people passed through the Kates yesterday started the sixty-fourth annual state (air on its way to another attendance record, and bright sunshine and Legion day attractions were boosting the totals still further abore the aver age today. Three thousand ot those entering the turnstiles yesterday paid ad missions, according to J. E. Me . ('Unlock, veteran cashier, and the total attendance was by more than 1.000 the greatest ever recorded for Sunday. With the weather man promising fair weather for tonight end tomorrow it Is estimated that Tuesday will see at least 30.000 people on the grounds. The 100.000 record attendance mark for the week should exceed by several thousand this year with any semblance of favorable weath er. In the opinion of those In charge of the big show. SALEM, Ore., 8epL 28. Mellow sunshine, bringing promise of a full week of pleasant weather, greeted the opening of the 64th annual n,.. a,.,, i-.i. i , ... lav anil nut at .t !..,. .t least, the speculation that has been worrying he minds of state fair officials for-the last 10 days, For a week i of pretty wealh means a fair of big profits, while rain-too much of It-would be a severe blow to the exposition ex- chaur I H 1 Today has been set apart as OLD SOL SS imin nt IN i ml IIIIIW Will Anmenran region ana iniiarens . . . ... . , -.".""u A'! .:ithe wife who was found with him Ing legionnaires cavorting about "r,A"': :,u" "r."'"urea' "'n" I 7? rP.' nected to be.heard during the day. No guess was made this morning by Mrs. Ella 8. Wilson, secretary as to the probable attendance for the day, but the opening day la al ways light In attendance and ad misHions are not likely to go above 10.000. The Douglas county concert band, led by W. D. Strange, start ed the day off with a musical pro gram at 9 o'clock, playing at the main entrance, and by 10 o'clock tne American Legion musical or ganizations were well assembled and could be heard here and there about the grounds. Meanwhile more serious and to the bulk of the crowd more prosaic business was under way. This was the fudging of the livestock exhibits, i A glamorous touch was added to Airplanes are a hobby of Greens, this, however in the livestock I Before he left Milwaukee he order judging contests encaged In by the led a fast one built. boys' and girls' Industrial clubs. The boys' band from the atate I training school gave a musical concert at 10:30 o'clock. There I was another open air concert by the Douglas county hand and the forenoon's program was concluded I , , , , , . , . I and agricultural display In the The American Legloaawlll start the afternoon off in a'nvely man' ner with a series of stunts arrang ed In front of the exeiMlve offices of the fair board. w The six day racing program will begin at 1:30, featuring today the 2:15 pace and 2-year-old stake. Those not caring to see the races will be entertained otherwise with a variety or al tractions . At 2 .'Tactions . At i o'clock Miss KVhryn Gunnel, of Salem, will give an Informal talk , h. nttfA many bv private sub In the art department on the loan UcrlpHon. It Is estmated that (he exhibit from the Pacific Interna- Lost will be In excess of $2.r..0on. tlonal Photographic convention. At -,.. Henry Waldo Coe of Portland 2 S0 stunts Will be put On In front II. advlanr to lh. rnmmltL,,. of the grandstand by American L- ginn posts, ana nv ine same organ- Izatlons at 3 o'clock on the main grounds, and again at 6 o'clock in , the main buildings and on the . MWarren. Portland; Frank C. ruling being-made bv Federal grounds. A drum corps competl- gtcllmsrher. Albany; Howard C. Jndge Grubb today ordering the lien will he put on n the stadium WaiVtll. Rosebiirg: Homer A. fjsl-1 New York Lit Inanrance Com at 7:30 o'clock tonight lswav. Cottage Cuve: P-neca pany to pay the 1'nlted States The Douglas county concert Fnuts.-Portland: Jar If Tpton, government $100,000 1n accrued band, state training school hand 'fiend: Robert A. Sawver. Portland; taxes. . and singers from the Salem Indian Ralph R. Huron. ?-a Grande; Carle Judge Grubb held that the el training school at Chemawa will be ! Abrsms. Salem: Wllher Hendernon, I'ln of combined life-accident heard at Intervals throughout the (Portland: Frank S. C.odfrev. R"a- policies for special premiums day. 'side; T. T. Maginnls, Marsbfleld. 'rendered the Insurance companies Some of tbe Features. I o I liable to taxation against the In- A house of health showing cot, I Harry Mcfteown. of Mar-hfleM. jcreaaed premium, rect and Incorrect practices la fonped over In this cl a short I The New York Life company proving one of the popular exhibits time Sunday, enronte home, after had appealed from a decision on arranged tv the state college and I arcomnanvtng his daughter to this point as a test case. Counsel the experiment station. A young Eugene, where she will attend V. 'or Ike insurance company an (Contlnued oa past . lot O. this winter. no u need tnat they will carry tht mi id nun norm rip i uurM unur diidmc. , niiwi llVJTlluwnMiJi VPARENTS ARRESTED wliM m UeMd Wire.) iiRETT. Wash., Sept. 18. --iour cnuuren oi -jar. aim w laviira. Lake, ' ! this mi Nels Peters, of Sliver were burned to death morning in a fire that de- strayed the Peters' home. The children, three boys and eV a alrl M a I v rlvM Ihrtta e at anH ..us. 1 ,4 ah The children's parents are now in the county Jail, The Peters' run a dance pavilion at the Lake and are said by Stowell Challarom- be, acting coroner, to- have been drinking and quarrel- Ing last night after their dance closed. Mrs. - Peters e la said to have been at tbe home of a neighbor, while Peters returned to his own home. When neighbors saw the burning structure and roachi.fi the acene. It waft Im. posslbleOto rescue the chll- dren. Peters dented to Sheriff McCulloch that he had re- turned to his home. He said he had gone to work to clean bis dance pavilion and was in the pavilion when he saw that tbe house was ablaxe. A lamp bad been left burn- Ing In a room of the house. OF A SEATTLE MJ1N Career of Varied Pursuits ' Halted by Attempt to Swindle Company on a Loan. SEATTLE. Sept. 28. Clarence F. Oreen, aviator, lawyer, (Oicken rancner h'M powered saleT- man' 11 was announced to- M1?' wer a watw forgery r6 oeioro rei urnm g io face accusation ot a I200.0U0 swin- die in Milwaukee. I uf . ' "Pnicne reiaieo torn machines back cat. He told a prosecutor here aher arrest Strday Iiyt contracts he Juggled "' """KVT, " """" '"r ,". 0,f,e d, A,pP"a,n" ST" hvve 'fteJ h'e.m.'To only ..5.000 and when n came to Gaallla loaf nrlniat hrriiivhr Anlv i Ill Ml. ,".,., ... - Ion their chicken ranch at Iea Moines. 15 miles south of here. This wife was from Milwaukee, and " , ' " ' ,.iPlirBnhMi '""1,7 w telegraplled Green's arrest followed a mis take in a loan association here through which Green had borrow ed $3500 on a honse , in Seattle which W. L. Thompson owned. (Jreen had rented the house. The association malkd Oreen an over draft. He came into the office and asked why the extra money was sent him. Checking this mistake, clarks discovered evidence that Oreen had forged the name of Thompson In obtaining the loan. When an examiper for a title In surance company called a police man, Oreen ran out of the office of the loan company. He stumbled !ln an allrv. and tbe policeman caught him. CD A WICI-OlAVAD VFTQ T. . , FURTHER PLAN FOR ROOSEVELT STATUE xw-jav ias " v- OALti.n V SALEM. Ore., SepL 28: The "!!Ie" '?m.m "A ,1. 15. Vnlted T . Rock, at Port Orford. Curry coun ity. Is In session here today and will adopt a resolution asking the national encampment meeting at St. Petersburg, Fla., to endorse the movement. Tne proposea aiatue wonin siana on Battle Rock where It would be visible along flaa Roosevelt high wav for severs -, . ,...m.,ii .n h. iMnllf ;viaihi in .hinc .t ..a mih an. The members of the committee Frank R Tlchenor. Portland, President; George F. A. Walker, Portland, secretary-trea-iirer: Jas. DUCT m GOMES TO END AS Great Crowd in Attendance During Closing Hours of Event ALL WELL PLEASED Prizes for Flower Show An nounced Fine Talk Is Made by Manager of Portland Chamber. ' Roseburg's Annual Home and Land Products Show -came to a most successful conclusion on Sat urday night. The crowd during the final hours was the largest of any of the three nights. From every standpoint tbe show was far superior to anything of the kind Rosehurg bas ever held be fore, and the success this year is certain to work tor a bigger and better event next fall. The only regrettable Incident of the entire show was the ruth less depredations committed on Saturday night by a group of thoughtle-ej youngsters. Late in the evening exhibitors started tearing down their booths, and this became a signal for a group of boys and girls to stark wrecking operations. Melons, fruits, flow ers, and otber exhibits, together with prize ribbons were carried away, tables overturned, and a great disturbance created. Such a display of almost crim inal actions was not only disgust ing to the spectators, but cost many ot the exhibitors something In the way of a monetary loss. for some of tbe exhibit removed or destroyed had considerable value. Many of the- exhibitors also lost their prise ribbons. The disturbance was quickly quelled, but It made a black mark on the show which otherwise was fault less. The program on Saturday night was quite Interesting, being fea tured by a talk given by W. D. B. Dodson. manager of the Portland Chamber of Commerce. Mr. Dod son's talk was excellent, and was greatly enjoyed by all who had the opportunity of hearing him. Efforts to secure the 'boys' band to give a concert were un l"'ling. owing to the fact that many ot the boys had previous engagements and were unable to appear on euch short notice. Prizes for the flower displaya were announced as follws: Individual D. H. Lenox, first; Mrs. D. R. Shambrook, sec ond: Mrs. M. Wilcox, third. Asters D. H. Lenox, first; Mrs. M. Wilcox, second; Mrs. D. Ii. Shambrook, third. Daliaha Mrs. J. E. Punyan, first, second and third. Zinnias , Mrs. D. R. Sham brook, first and second; Mrs. Fos ter Hutner, third. ARRESTED SOCIAL FLIER DECLARES NEVER IN BEND, OR. (Aartat-4 Pn-a- U-u-d Win-.) LOS ANGELES. Cal., Sept. 28. Robert A. Winthrop, whose arrest In Pasadena on Saturday on grand larcenv charges from Bend. Ore- on- Urred ,oclal clrcle' of ,he frm,r cty- t0ciav stoutly contln- tued to protest his Innocence and jdeclsres that he never had been In BimuuBU oiieriti a wiiitrm Sheriff 8. E. Roberts at Bend. nrglng them to hold Win- thron. The message from Rend said: "Hold Winthrop. We want bim badly." ' The prisoner said bis moling and other members of the fnmW live In Beacon Hill, a suburb of Brookline, Mass. O COURTIS DECISION RAISES TAXES 200 INSURANCE FIRMS Matvlat-rf riva taaM Wlrr.) NEW YORK, Sept. 28. Two (hundred insurance companies In ithe 1'nlted States which have been selling combined life and accident policies were affected in Ford Sends 16 Airplanes On6-Day Jaunt oj 1900 Miles Around Middlewest TipmoiT Bont. 8. The Com. mercial Airplane Reliability Tour, o 1 uiiH-nitli rllaht through the middlewest, was formally Insm gurated at the Kord airport this morning, when the first of 1 planes entered, took the air on signal from Kdsel Ford. Others followed at short Intervals. . The first scheduled stop was al Fort Wavne. Ind., one hour and fifty minutes after the take-off. A lay over of three hours and 18 m nrnvliled for at Fort ' Wayne and then a hop to Chicago. ak (Aanrlatfd ITt LraaNl Wlr. LINCOLN, Neb., SepL !S. Two guards were shot at the Nebraska prison In a riot of ak nrtannent late this afternoon, orixon officials told local po- l lice la a hurry can tor rein- w ! foreement to quell the rioters. ! Aid waa rushed by the Io- ! cal police department to the prison which la located at Lancaster, a suburb about e three miles from Lincoln. No further dt talla could be leara- ed from the prison by tele- phone. The rioting was still In progress at 3:2" p. m. Fred Brown. Omaha kid- naper, one of the rioting prle- ! oners, was shot dead by a guard. Another convict, namea Smith, waa wounded when shot by a guard. T. A. Krlger was one of the Injured guards. He was shot in the arm by one of the con- vlcts who waa armed with a regulation army rifle. The other Injured guard was C. K. Morris. (AaavHatrd rreai laapl Win.) LINCOLN. Neb., Sept. 28. Fred Brown, notorious Om ha "chain man kidnaper and Charles E. Morris, a prison guard, are dead as a result of an unsuccessful attempt to break out of the Nebraska prison near here this .l noon' A convict named Smith la be- lleved to be dying of wounds received during the shooting. Brown was sentenced to life imprisonment for kidnaping two girls near Benson,, Omaha suburb', chaining them In aw shack and holding them ' for 4 ransom. 1. Antles. .secretary of the Rose- conference at Ashland. SPICE OF CONVICT KILLED. TWO 9UARD5 SHOT IN PRISON R OT (Associated Press Leased Wire.) DOBBIN 8ETTl.ES GRUDGE. I SAN FRANCISCO A Junk man's horse attacked a parked automo bile of popular make, tore off a step plate, ripped loose a fender, masn ed a headlight and dented the body. The animal desisted from Its ef forts only when dragged away by its owner. FINN BREAKS JAVELIN RECORD. SAN FRANCISCO Johnnie Myrra. world's champion Javelin throw, er. bettered hia record by more thaO eight feet when he tossed the spear 224 feet 11 inches at the Finnish brotherhood picnic games. GREAT AVIATION SPECTACLE. (CJ.OVER FIELD, SANTA MONICA, Cal. Twenty five planes com peteTtn a 100-mile race around the city of Los Angeles In celebration of the first anniversary of the completion of the army aroundthe-woria flight. Captain Lowell Smith, leader of the world flight, paced the racers. . LOVE PIRATE PAYS U8UAL PRICE. LOS ANGGJ.ES A man motored up to the home of J. W. Suther at Vernon, a aHurb, and called him to come outside. Suther penned a brief farewell note to his ewectheart in Houston, Tssaa, and walked out to the waiting man. A few seconds later he fell lifeless with three bul lets In hie body. His caller surrendered to police, gave ts name as Leland Harder, and explained, they aay, that he shot Suther because he had been Intimate with hia wife. - SLAIN FROM AMBUSH. SACRAMENTO, Cel. Richard P. 8tone, well known operator of a lumber mill of Forest Hill, 27 miles north of Auburn, was shot to dsath by an ambushed assailant as he wi entering hie plant on an Inspection tour. Stone was accompanied by hit wife and Mrs. A. Holton of San Francisco. TRAIN HURLS CRIPPLE FROM TRESTLE. WHITTIER, Cal. Trapped in the middle of a Union Pacific trestle whejja train suddenly rinded a bend behind him. Warren Pratt, a cripple, waa tossed a hunBred feet by the engine and killed. His nlne-year-old brother saved his life by Jumping Into the dry river bed 20 feet below. THIEVES STEAL SAFE; GET 1700 RENO, Nev While a man slept 25 feet away, thieves backed a truck up to the Coney Island service station door near Reno, rolled a big safe across a concrete floor, loaded it into the truck and drove off. The strong box contained 1700. I. W. W. THREATS DRIVE HIM TO JAIL. RENO, Nev. 0. R. "Blackie" Dawson, said to be one of the prin cipals In the I. W. W. hop field riots at Marysvillt a decade ago. was placed In a cell at the elty Jail at hie own request. Dawson told officers that he heard threats from alleged I. W. W.I In Reno that they "were going to get him." SNOW STORMS SWEEP MONTANA. GREAT FALLS. MonL A enow storm le raging In Northern and Central Montana. The snowfall was accompanied by a fall In tempera ture to freexing and followed a general rain. Sleet, driven by a atrong wind waa reported at Havre. The filers will proceed to Omaha Tuesday. From Omaha, the planes go to Kansas City, St. Louis, Columbus, Cleveland and return to the starting point Sat urday afiernoon. The schedule calls for an aver age speed of 80 miles an hour. CHICAGO. Sept. 28. The first of sixteen plates which left Detroit today In the P. at annual commer cial airplane reliability tour, reach- led the May wood air mall field at '!:o p. m. I SANDE UNDER WIRE FIRST ON' HAH.V.F.X. (Awiatnl rival lawsl Win) NEW YOI1K, Sept. 28. Saraxen. with Earle Sande up. won the Averne handi cap at six furlongs at Aque duct today. Extra lry was tw second and Anna Marrnne third. The time was 1:11 3-5. I TRAMP, REFUSED FOOD, BINDS MAID AND FIRES HOUSE (AHat ft- lJ BEND, Ore, Sept. S8. Having bound and gagged the maid, a , trump set fire to tbe Tracy rair- child home this morning about 11:- 50 and make good his escape. The girl was rescued by the neighbors who called the fire department. the damage to the house waa slight and resulted mostly from smoke, according to members of the fire department. w jjr- Falrchlld Is local sales man- ,ser D( n,. llrookn S. anlim Lumber company and with Mrs. Falrchlld v,n, Portland over Sunday and j, driving back to llend today. i KOO(i description of the tramp waa secured and the sheriff's of- )CB j. looking for him now. While urferlng from the shock, the girl jn said to have told the neighbors 'that she refused the man food. which angered him. - Tt)e .,., nm(, , Ken- Mn A .88r AnI1B Kpnn.n is a j (apphone operator In The Dalles. wijyi,, - recently been transferred. fTom ella. ., ., ,h. rpit of the .""'J ' "J wa, re! vt' W'ZS'ltt !noon. She managed to drag her- (,f ,n(o lne tiaall and call the flre department after the tramp boutld ner hands. I HrXTKITY TAI.KFKST (XT . (Aanrlatnl tnm La-l Wlta.1 PARIS, Sept. 28. The security nact conference of tne i.erman j -. "? "'J1 p!, THE NEWS 0 APPEAL FILED I Cancellation Teapot Dome Lease Still Sought by Federal Counsel. FINDINGS ASSAILED Wyoming Judge Declared to Have Erred in Ruling That Fraud Wasn't Perpetrated. iAam-iatH PmM laatd Wlrr.) CHKYKNNE, Wyo., Sept. 28. Clyde M. Watts, deputy United States district attorney for Wyom ing, la to arrive In St. Louis. Mo., today with the record of appeal in Ik. f... ... tm.. ...al n.r.. nil Uaaaa annulment ault The appeal will be filed In be eighth. circuit court of appeals. It will write another chapter In the famous Teapot Dome lease, which the government alleged In its suit here last spring that Harry F. Sinclair gained for hia Mam moth Oil company, by "collusion and fraud." between Sinclair and the then secretary of the Interior, Albert R. Fall. Federal Judge T. Rlake Kennedy. found against the government In every complaint In ' the bill and government special nil counsel, headed by Owen J. Roberts and Atlee Pomerene took an appeal. Pending decision of the court oi appeals, the Teapot Dome Issue ennt Inuea In charge of receivers apnnlnled by Judge Kennedy. The appeal waa prepared by At lee Pomerene and O. J. Roberts, special counsel for the government and waa filed bv C. M. Walls. As sistant 1'nlted Slates dlntrlct attor ney at Cheyenne, Yyomlng. Court attaches said that the fil ing probably waa ton late In Insure hearing of the appeal at the De cember term here and the case probably would be heard at the Mav term In St. Paul. The appeal filed here' In the name of the 1'nlted States versus the Mammoth Oil company, Sin clair Crude Oil Purchasing comp any and Sinclair Pipe Line enmp anv. II assigns t alleged errors of Federal Judge T. Rlake Kennedy In the course of the trial at Chey enne and In his decision last June 19. Decision le Attacked. The government alleges that the court abused Its discretion, before the trial. In refusing to grant the government a continuance, to en able It to get the testimony of num erous material witnesses, some of whom were In Canada. The government charges that the court erred In Ita rulings hold ing the Slnrlalr contrails for the Teapot Dohie naval oil reserve valli and that It erred In holding the lease would have been valid without the presidential nrder of Mav 31. 1921. It excepts also to a ruling that there was no fraud In the executive order. Tbe government exeepla to the findings that no fraud was commit ted In negotiating the lease or the supplemental agreement, and also letrepts to the ruling mat Allien r. Fall, then secretary of the In ferior, and Harry F. Sinclair, did 'not conspire to defraud the United Stales by the lesse or the supple mental agreement. It xrepts further to a finding jthat the negotiation of the lease Iwjis not a private or secret agree ment by Fall and Slnrlalr and was not attended by undue and unlaw ful secrecy. CONDITION MUCH . BETTER: SAVAGE . HA SGOOD CHANCE a . tAaarlalnl rtia Uaard Win..) SALEM. Ore., S'J;t. 51 Lute Savage, alnle penitentiary guard, who was wounded 'j the escaping convicts Murray, WTIloa and Kelly on Aiiguset 12. and who was In a serious condition Saturday, Is re ported today as much Improved, wlllr chances strong for his rernv- ery. Ravage left the hospital well on the way to recovery, about two weeks ago, but bronchial pneumon ia developed and he was forced to return Io the hospital. 84-YEAR-OLD MAN DIES AFTER FALL FROM SCAFFOLD KLAMATH FALLS. Ore., Sept. 1 28. W. M. Bwnrtsfarger. t. died at a local hnapllal last night from j Injuries auslalned Saturday when he fell from a scaffolding while Iwnrklng on a garage at his home .here. He sustained aeveral frac jtnred ribs and Internal Injuries, iwhlrh because nf his advanced age Itermlnated fatally. in CONTEST NEWS-REVIEW WILL " BULLETIN GAiVJOF THE WORUrsERIES K In keeping wT-w lYf-V w giving ine pun-n . t r of all extraordinary . e, .!! right off the Associated Press leased wire, the News-Review will bulletin play by play the games ot the world champion ship baseball series between w Pittsburgh and Washington, winners respectively of the pennanta In the National and American leagues. Arrange- menta tor tbe series have not yet been completed in the East, but the opening game will be played, according to speculative reports, about Oo- tober 8. Definite Information as to the date will be given in the News-Review as soon as It reaches us on the wire. Each game will be described by Idnlngs by an announcer In front of the newspaper office Immediately upon receipt of details over the wire. While the News-Review does not publish on Sunday, the bulle- tins on the series will Include games on that day as well. w AL SMITH SILENT Oil PHiBITIO; nTPMPOW Democratic Presidential Aspirant Talks About Economy and Age of. Airplanes. (Aanclattd ITna tM Win.) CHICAGO. Sept. 28. A few sub. Jects jolted flown on tbe back of a torn envelope provided the ammun- ir.iii for tjovernor Al Smith s mes sage to Cook county democrats Sunday a recital which his friends considered an opening bid for the democratic nomination for presi dent In 1928. Co-lncidentatly, Mayor William never, who Introduced the New York chief executive as the "most brilliant parly leader In the na tion," was considered to have start ed a boom for re-nomlnatlon. Neither sneaker, however, mention ed candidacies, but the subject waa assumed by the HHJ.uOO sons of democracy who leadera of tne par ty said attended the plcnlo or Jolli fication. The subject of prohibition, like- wise, was not touched upon either by Ihe wet liberal of New York or the Chicago mayor, who has drawn praise from the drys, although many democrats had gone to the picnic expecting some pyrotechntca on Ihe questions. Newspaper men who had come all Ihe way from Broadway with the underatandlngj mat tiovernnr eimitn waa going io "tear the lid off" also were disap pointed. Dressed In formal black, but wltb a . pink rose adding a limited aesthe tic touch to the sombre color, lov ernnr Smith outlined a tentative program of reform In Washington lhat he aald would save 2iill.iHMI.- liim a year and bring governmental affairs In line with Ihe progress of science and business In Ibis "air plane age." (Aarlalt I'm Lraanl Wlt.) PORTLAND. Ore., Sept 28 Charged witfpcominlttlng a murder a year ago on the I'ma'llla Indian set whlrh could be robbed or her reservation, EI 1 1 1 Hart, a' cowboy, ;rlght of way by Ihe larger passen agid 33. was brought here today ger vee. or: by federal officers Io await action by Ihe grand Jury. Hart waa ar rested In Ihe hills 2n miles from Pendleton by Deputy 1'nlted States Marrhal Morelock last night. He la -charged with beating to death Matthew Hhneshlpa, 3H, a promi nent Indian, on the Umatilla res ervation. Shneblis died September 1", 19 21, alter lying all night beside a trail nn Ihe reservation. Hart, ac cording to federal officials, first reporK d his injuries to Mrs. Shoe ships, and helped her take a wa gon to take home her dying hus band. This fact, and the knowledge that bad blood had existed between the men for a long lime, fixed sus picion on Hart, Ihe government of ficials said. Shneshlps had once arrested Hart on charges of taking liquor onto the reservation and bad clash ed with the cowboy on other occa sions. The arrest was delayed In the firai nlsce bv the death nf Price Recob, a white member nf the In-'fore they were picked no. There liaii service, who died suddenly can be no excuse for snch delay, six days slur he nsd gone to work Bulkhead Not Pierced, on the case. Stale action was con- NF.WPORT. H. L. Sept. 28. aldered according to Asslstsnt j Divers bsve found one of the In I'nlled Stales District Attorney Ily-ertnr bulkheads of the sunken non, but was put aside because of submarine S 61 bent but nut federal Jurisdiction on the Indian J pierced, a radio dispatch received reservation. (Continued on page f.) TO HELD AT FAULT FOR SINKING 5-51 Diver Had Right ' of Wsy Over City of Rome, Navy Officer Points Out SHOW INCOMPETENCE Rescue of 3 Survivors Took' Over an Hour No Hope Remains for Any of the Other 33. NF.W LONDON, Conn., Sept. 28. When Informed by the Associat ed Press early today that Ihe own ers of the City of Rome bad an affidavit which stated that thai S-61 waa commanded by atudent officers, Lieutenant-Commander H. ;A. Flanigan, executive officer at the submarine base here, denied that any one of the officers on the submarine at the time ot the dis aster waa Inexperienced. Lieutenant Commander Flanigan i In a alatement to tbe Associated Press, explained the work of the submarine school and gave Infor mation concerning the alx offlcera aboard the 8 51 at the time ot the collision. The statement follows In part: 'The submarine training school for offlcera Is established before) they are permanently eranaferred to submarine duty. "The atudenta of the present class range from Lleutenant-Com- manner e. w. strother. with 21 yeara naval service, to the ensigns nf the clasa nf 1923. wltb six yeara naval service Including four yeara at the naval academy. , "No officer may enter the atlb- , marine school who has had leaa than two years sea service ataca his graduation from the naval aca demy, and all offlcera, no matter what their rank or experience, must go through the submarine , school before being ordered to per manent duly nn submarines. "All the officers who were on the 8-51. were fully qualified In sur face ship duties, and to stand watch aa offlcera of the deck. In addition, three of tbe six officer had considerable submarine exper ience, and the other three had re celved two month training In sub marines. At four o'clock no word had been receded at the submarine base Io Indicate that operations had been renewed. A delay la the return nf bnata from the- scene waa expected because ot the rough weather. . " The temporary snspenslnii- of reeciie operations, naval officers admitted, waa especially disheart ening al this time. Even if-any" of the submarines' crew ItlH la ii live, his chance for life Is rsnlflly becoming more, precarious. When Ihe H-r, I sank Friday nlghf It waa raid that there was a 72-hour sunplv nf oxygen. ' Thst supply will be exhausted by 10 oclncfc a tonight. City of Roma Blamed. "When the 8-61 was aunk she was operating aa a surface vessel snd there Is no doubt In our minds. that responsibility for the collision resia solely nn the shoulders of the Cllv of Rome. From the reports of her officers, our present knowl edge of the rolllsion and the state ments nf passengers, as reported to us. It Is clear that the City or Home either: , , "1. Assumed that she waa imeetlng a small commercial res- l'2 Trial the officers nn watch nn the City of Rome Incompetently failed to recngnlxe that the two vessels were drawing dangerously clnae until It was too Inle for the City of Rome to take the proper moves to yield to the S-51 her right nf way due to the relative pos. ttons of the two vessels, or took Ihe wrong measurea when It was seen that collision waa Imminent. ''There Is no evidence to show or reason tn billeve that the offi cers nf the 8-51 did not handle their vessel nrnperlv, as was ex pected nf officers of their training and experience, "It Is undoubtedly true lhat the luhherly handling of the City of Rome after Ihe collision, Ihe fall lire of her seareblirhta and the slowness with which her boats reached the points where the men from the R-M were In the water was responsible for the loss of at least three lives. The survivors claim In have been In the water for one hnnr and fifteen minutes be-