.LLr.".Z'l...vI
mmm
lira c.i
Consolidation of Ths Evening Ntwt and
The Roeeburg Rsvlew
RMMnt NnnuMr. PvbllWMd fee
Hi Interests e Mm Pessle.
.1
ROSEBURC OREGON. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 16. 1925.
ftOSEBURO REVIEW
VOL. XIII NO. 17t OF THE- BVENINO Nf 1
. GENERAL'' FAIR
vol. xxvi s
rnfiiiniiu v.." v
Lbuiiiuiu rih
.
400 Million. Needed Can't
Be Provided, Because
of Retrenchment.
GEN. CONNOR SPEAKS
Huge Sum Proposed for Air
Service Not Justified
- If Other Branches
Are Not Aided.
(Assorhtfd Ftms M WU.)
WASHINGTON. Oct 16. Brlgi-dler-General
Fox Conner, finance
officer of the army, told the presl
dent'a air board today that because
. of the "economy policy of the gov
ernment,' the war department had
been unable to Increase the ilie of
the army air serrlce aa recom
mended by the board headed by
Major-General William Lasslter.
"So long as the ammunition re
serve Is disappearing," he said, "all
money demands Increasing dne to
exhausting of stocks, animals re
tained In serrlce beyond their use
fulness and 40,000 officers and
men living In war-time shacks, the
war department would. In my opin
ion, be quite unjustified In urging
the Lasslter board program to the
exclusion of all else. There would
be little left for the rest of the
army If the Lasslter board program
were put Into effect without in
creasing total appropriations.''
General Conner told of other pro
blems of financing facing the war
' department. "The department," he
said, "has programs for strength
ening our defenses both In the air
and on shore, in Oshu and Panama
a program for a slight Increase in
the regulsr army other than air,
the national guard program : the
organized reserves officers training
corps, and the citizens' military
training camps program; and oth
ers as well.
"Altogether the war department
has 13 separate programs: some of
which have received approval and
some of which have not Taken
separately each may make out a
case of vital Importance. But each
would cost additional large sums
of money and If all were put Into
effect the cost of the army would
reach more than 1400.000.000 in a
single year. Under the present
pollcq of paying off the national
debt an dreducing taxation no such
sum is available.
SPECTACLES THAT
WILL MATCH DRESS
LATEST PARIS FAD
f tuorlattd Prus Vnuti Wlrr.t
PARIS. Oct. 16. Dame fashion's
lstest vsgary hss been to set all
the women to wearing spectacles.
The pretty eyes of the 1925 Parls
lenne are no weaker than those of
1925, but the celluloid frames of
the eye glasses, made In any varie
ties of colors, are novel and chlo
when they match her dress.
A Paris optician In the Rue Rl-
n n n p aaas a
ARMY PROGRAM
" tS. Hoec.m'e known' berT SEE
hft wTndws r large tray mfed with havI'lderamedrtlTtoEraDlia of "an
celluloid frames In mauve, green, h Identified photographs of An
beige, blue, rose and. in fact al- h, came to
most any conceivable color that South Bend last Saturday and ap
mlght be required to harmonize 'P111!, ,or1wo.rlt ' bakery Ander
wlih mademoiselle's suit or frock. IB, ' hve learned the ba
"I sell about one hundred pairs k.er df "" ln
of spectacles with plain glasses. Atlanta Federal penitentiary,
"hrougn which anyone can see. ,'ro which he is now . .fugitive,
every dsv," ssld the optician., "The I The man "Pect'"I of being An
correct thing Is to have the framea ! "on le t South Bend for llwaco
made ln colors to mstch the dress." the Columbia river by stage and
" - 1 since then he has not been located.
LONG-BELL CO. TO
SPONSOR NATION
WIDE CAMPAIGN
(AaorUKd proa Uavd Win.)
TACOMA. Wssh., Oct 16. A
plan for a national advertising
campaign, to cost nearly 11,(00.000
and designed to bring to tbe atten
tion of the entire country the ad-
vsntages of Pacific cosst lumber , Three school children were Injured,
and forest products, will be placed one critically, and eleven others
before the West Cosst Lumber-,were badly shaken up when a
men's association this afternoon at school bus collided In a heavy fog
the regular monthly meeting of the here today wltha car driven by
orrailzatlon In session here. jMrs. Helen Osynor. The children
The advertising program Includes ; were thrown to the floor of the bos
an annual appropriation for adver-,when Mrs. Oaynor'a car alde-swlp-'
Using of $475,000 annually for a ed It.
three-year period. The plan has ! The United ' Ststes Westher
been worked out by' a special com- Boreas forecasted cloudy weather
mit'ee for trade promotion heeded for tonight and tomorrow with a
by S. D. Tenns-it of the Long Bell possibility of rslir tomorrow night.
Lumber company. tThe fog, which has extended from
p i Prince Rupert B. .. to the coast
MaeNIOER SWORN IN. - jof Oregon, three days Is expected
ito lift tomorrow.
WASHINGTON. Oct 16. Han-1 For the third day In succession,
ford 8. MscNIder of Iowa, took the baseball games between Portland
oath of office todav as aaslstsnt and Seattle were postponed on ac
secretsry 0f war. In charge of In-.count of the fog.
dustrlal mobilization phases of tbe Shipping has been at a virtual
national defense. standstill for tbe past three days.
RFFfiRM VHOOL SO
ATTRACTIVE, BOY
- BECOMES BURGLAR
- -
(Aswlated rna Ussed Wh.
SALEM, - Ore.. Oct. 16.
Eleven year old James Melvin,
son of a Portland mail car-
rier, who boasta that he has
run away from home 35 times,
that he la making every effort
to get into the reform school
and burglarised a Portland
store for that purpose, only to ,
be sent to thff-Frazer home, Is 0
to be sent home with his
father here after bis 35th run-
away.
While his father - pleaded
with tea re running down his
cheeks for the little boy to
come home of his own free
will, the lad sat like a atoic.
His only comment on his fatb-
er's pleaa was a reiteration of
his statement, I want to get w
Into the reform school." 0
"
E
SECITYJIIEIIIY
Violation by Either Will
Bring Great Britain
and Italy to Aid
of the Others
iinUfi Pn Ltmt vtrr.t 1
LOCARNO, Switzerland, Oct 16.
The security conference this af
ternoon adopted the arbitration
treaties, bearing on Germany's
eastern frontiers. It was decided
to publish the texts of the agree
ments In all the European capitals
next Tuesday morning.
Under the western security pact
the signatories France, Germany
and Belgium engage themselves
not to invade the other's territory
and to abstain from war. - Standing
in ine uwnnnianu a auaramurs
of fulfillment of the terms of the
agreement will be Great Britain
and Iealy, ready to use their might
against any of the signers of the
tri-partite agreement which viol
ates its terms.
Should disagreements arise, arbi
tration between the dissatisfied
states Is obligatory,. The perma-
nent court of international justice,
boards of conciliation and the coun-
cile of the League of Nations all
are possibilities for settling dis-
putes.
' There will be collateral arbltra- nera jury at Fortuna last night in
tion treaties between Germany and j vestigating the death of Hear?
France and Germany and Belgium Sweet who was found dead with a
which will Interlock with the Rhine bullet In his bsck. after he had left
pact itself and also arbitration on a hunting trip with Miss Car
treaties between Germany and Po- men Wagner. 18, a beauty parlor
land and Czecho-Slovakia. Separ
ate conventions will be drawn up
between France and her eastern
alliea guaranteeing France the
right -to aid them If they should
meet with unprovoked or flagrant
stuck.
ANDERSON, PAL OF
CHAPMAN, SEEN IN
WASHINGTON STATE
(Aianriatrd Prea lurri Wir..) '
TACOMA. Wash.. Oct. 16.-
George "Dutch" Anderson, pal of
Gerald Chapman and wanted In In-
- " - " " 1 '"I '""I'T.V IT .IT
It has been learned that several
federal officials are seeking the
man.
SEATTLE STILL IN
GRIP OF FOG: BAD
ACCIDENT OCCURS
8EATTLE. Wash.. Oes. Is
MISSING GIRL
IS PRISONER OF
DEMENTED MAN
Posse Off to the Rescue
in Region Northeast
of Eureka, Calif.
TRACKS FURNISH CLUE
Evidently Made Prisoner
by Homesteader After
Murder of Escort
Last Sunday. '
(Aanrlatrd Prcs Lrurd Win.)
EUREKA. Cal.. Oct. 16. Carmen
Wagner, 18-year-old beauty parlor
operator of Ferndale, who has been
missing since Sunday, la the pri
soner of a demented homesteader
near Showers' Paas, sixty miles
northeast of here. A posse of
twenty men has surrounded the
district and plans to close In on
the couple this afternoon.
This Information was brought
here today by Deputy Sheriff Clyde
Randle, who - returned from the
Shower's Pass region.
The Wagner girl and an uaiden-
'Med man have been sought since
the discovery Sunday of the body
of Henry Sweet shot to death be
side his auto in a wild section of
the Humboldt mountain country.
Sweet and Miss Wagner were on
a hunting trip with the other man.
Early in the search the theory
was advanced that Sweet was shot
and killed by this man, who then
abducted Miss Wagner.
Deputy Randle made s hurried
trip to Enreka today tor food and
ammunition and was to return Im
mediately to the Showers Pass sec
tion with reinforcements to cap
ture Miss Wagner's supposed ab
ductor and to rescue the girl.
Randle said he had not seen the
couple, but had authentic informa
tion that Miss Wagner was being
held captive, by the demented
homesteader.
EUREKA, Cal., Oct 16. Leland
IBryant, bachelor rancher, was
questioned by the Humboldt coun-
ty district attorney before a coro-
proprietor. Miss Wagner dropped
from sight after the killing and a
search is now being conducted for
her.
The pointed questions put to
Bryant by the district attorney
last night were significant. He
brought Bryant before the father
and brother of Mlsa Wagner and
the coroner's Jury asked him in
rather dramatic fashion:
"Mr. Bryant, can you look these
people squarely in the eye and say
you do not know where Miss Wan
ner Is, or who it was killed Henry
Sweet?"
"I csn," Bryant answered calmly-
"Your conscience la perfectly
clear?" again queried the Interro
gator. "Clear as a bell," answered Bry
ant. Bryant wss not detained,
Raymond Shields, 32, of Brlrigo
vllle, came to Eureka early this
morning snd said that he had dis
covered the footprints of a woman
aul a dog on a deserted trail In
the hills 60 miles from Eureka.
Shields also brought a piece of rib
bon of the same color and texture
as one worn by Miss Wagner. Miss
Wagner took a dog with her on the
hunting expedition whlcl ended in
Sweet's death.
PROHI NAVY SHOWS
TELLING RESULTS
FROM ITS PUBLICITY
(Aanrlatn! Pna Lraad Win.)
WASHINGTON. Oct. 16. The
coast guard's dry nsvy hss csp
tured 238 sea-going vessels and
approximately 400 prisoners since
Its concentrstlon sgsinst rum
smuggling wu started about
ren month !ko.
Thl result hss been obtsined
with the loss of four government
ships and three memliers ef their
crews.
Msklng public the figures to
day, the cosst guard said Its rap
tures of rum hss exceeded 1 10,
OOO.AAQ la vslue.
Officials believe they csn con
trol the situation provided ade
quate personnel and eoulpment is
made available and congress will
he a?ked to increase appropria
tions for the work. "
In carrying out the winter pa
trol program, the roast guard is
moving some of Its vessels south
from the New England roast and
Is putting them In serrlce around
the Florida keys.
Female Star iti
for Divorce" flow Presents
Some Grounds oj Her Own
(Amedttrt fnm tmmi Wire. -CHICAGO.
Oct. l. Inez Clai
re, comedienne, once the star In
'Grounds For Divorce . wants to
repeat the role here, this time In
the circuit court. She has filed
suit for divorce from James Whit
taker, former Chicago newspaper
man and niusio critio, charging
desertion and cruelty.
They were married six years
ago a Jazz marriage, the actress
told a dramatic critic.
"I had always fancied myself
parading to the altar In white
BStin and pearls," Miss Claire said
then. "Instead, Jimmy and I mo
tored to Whealon, III., and were
married with the chauffeur and
a man in blue overalls, recruited
rrom ine street, as witnesses.
They kept the marriage a se
cret.
The actress' bill, filed through
El
(AanrUtfd ym l-Mird WHO '
PITTSBURGH. Pa., Oct. 16.
Popular opinion may set up "Ktkf
Cuyler as the outstanding hero of
the Pirates over the Senators In
the 1926 World's Series, for It
was his mighty mow in the pinch
that won the seventh and decid
ing game, but an analysis of the
records fails to bring out any
surpassingly prominent figure,
such as wss flucky Harris In the
triumph of Washington a year
ago. '
Cuyler not only struck the de
ciding blow yesterday, but his
home run clinched the second
game for the Rucaneers. while hi.
iteming was rrequeniiy senBauuii
al. Nevertheless, the remarkable
all-around work of Pie Traynor.
brilliant third sacker of the new
champions; the spectacular hit
ting and base running of the vet
eran Max Corey; and the stellar
twirling of Vic Aldrldge and Ray
Kremer, also figured largely In
the Pittsburgh victory. For
Washington, the most conspicu
ous work Included Johnson's brll-
lliant pitching in his first two
latarta; Sam Rice's startling , de
fensive work, particularly his
cstrh off Smith in the tblrd game
as well as his consistent batting;
and the slugging of Goose Goslln,
also of Joe Harris., who was the
most risngerous man in the Sena
tor attack In, the pinches.
FEDERATION ASKS
INQUIRY INTO BELL
TELEPHONE SYSTEM
(Awnr-lalnl Prim WlrO
ATLANTIC CITY. N. J.. Oct. 16
The American Federation of
Lalior, at its concluding session
today, voiced Its condemnstion of
the transportation act snd the
railroad labor board. The board,
raid, a committee report, no lon
ger has the regard or respect of
sny political party and "Its ahol
Ixhment would bo but the painless
excision of a dead and withered
appendix."
It was voted to nrge union or
ganization not to permit the pro
motion of social lealslallon to -
uaihioilA the trartn linlnn'a own I
purpose of fostering self-reliance 'proof of this is available.
and self help. Tl former mayor also declared
The federation voted to ak Its that If all fscts In the esse are not
executive council to continue or-1 revealed before the next state elec
ganlzatlon work In Porto Rico. ;tlon ln Washington that he will en-
A congreaslonal investigation of ,tor the contest for the governor
the Bell telephone system was ship and In his campaign will ex
urged. "The company" said a re- pose the methods of those who
port, "has a monopolistic grip on ,have been in control of political
a vital public aervire and has be- ;offices In Cowlitz county,
come, year by year, more arro-1 The speakers were not formally
gant, more arbitrary and more Introduced to the audience as Mr.
detrimental to the progress and ,Todd stated that he did not desire
welfare of the country." ito embarrass anyone by having
o them appear on the platform with
FIRST HUSBAND OF him which would Imply that they
MURDERED WOMAN
IN SELF-DEBATE
(Aanriatxl Pr l-runl Wlr.)
JERSEY CITY. N. J.. Oct. 16
Arthur B. Wllllsms, . of Jackson
vllle, Fla., who came here today to
view the body of his former wife.
Mrs. Margaret Winters. 21, hsckl
to death by her second husbsnd,
Oeorge Winters. 22, In their apsrt
ment early Wednesday, was un
decided todsy whether to visit Win
ters, to whom be yielded his wife
because he loved her and becsuse
he valued her happiness more high
ly thsn his own.
"When 1 first arrived today I had
made up my mind to see Winters,"
Williams said, "but now I don't
know If I'll go to Ihe hosnltal or
not, and If I do go I don't know
whether to sympattiize-wlth him or
punch his nose."
Winters la under police guard in
the city hospital where he was tak
en after the slaying when he drere
the bread knife used In the murder
into his own chest. Hospital offi
cials believe he will live.
ff Grounds
her attorneys since she and Mr.
Whittaker are In New York City,
charged that her husband left
July 4, 1923, while they were
occupying a honeymoon apart
ment of three rooms. Mr. Whit
taker, "with great violence and
force," ejected her, she charged.
Two weeks before, the hill con
tinued, her husband struck her In
the fsce while they were vaca
tioning at Mamahawk Lake. Wis.
Anent the secretary of the
marriage, Mlsa Clair ssld:
"My friends have said that
Jimmy should be called "Mr.
Claire," hut he's never called that
in my presence, and I'm never
called Mrs. Wblltaker before him.
We ara the most publicly unmar
ried couple. I know of.
"We have two professions, two
names, two salaries, but only one
home." ..
(Ametatrd Pma Uaard Wirt.)
ST. PAUL, Minn.. Oct. 16.
"Ptomaine poison is only a
myth," numerous authorities were
quuiea 10 prove mil contention
liy Dr. Milton J. Rosensu. pro-
lessor of preventive medicine, .
Harvard university, yesterday be-
iuiq i no iiuerniaie puai Rriauuv
assembly of America, which clos
ed Its annual session here today.
Ptomaine was thought to lie a
degenersle product of trotaln
footfli, but five years of experi
mentation has proved proteins
can not yield anything which
gives the ptomslne symptoms, Dr.
-Roeenau stated.
:Tneae are due.Tie'sald, to Infect
ed, not decayed food, but this in
fection can not be deterred. The
sickness tskes the fqrm of pain,
vomiting and diarrhea and Is sel
dom fatal, , more so now than In
the past when food was not so
carefully handled,, Dr. Rosenau
said. . '.
Diet, he Considers, is the single
outstanding factor of health.
TODDRECOUIiltS
KELSO AFFAIRS
Tl
(XanHatnl ha Lns4 Win.) -
EUGENE, Ore., Oct. 16. Firm ln
the belief that the murder of Thom
as Dovery, Cowlitz county editor
waa the result of a political plot
and that prominent men are lmpll-
cated In it, A. Rurlc Todd, former
mayor of Kelso, Wssh., spoke Isst
night at the Armory here.
Mr. Todd, who has been active
In efforts to" trace the murderer of
Mr. Dovery, declared that the men
responsible for the death of the ed
itor would be found and that the
theory of Luke May, Seattle crim
inologist, who hss been working on
the case, is wrong In that robbery
not the motive and that vauu
- mcal sltuationTn
Cowlitz county.
BANDIT GARDNER
DECIDES TO DINE
AFTER THIRTY DAYS
fAOTlalrd rws ll Wtts.)
ATLANTA. Oa.. Oct. 16. Roy
Gardner, mall bsndlt. stickup man
and train robber, broke a 20-day
hunger strike, soon after he ar
rived at the Atlanta federal peniten
tiary from Fort Leavenworth, Kan.,
where he has been confined since
June. 1922.
Officials here ssld Gsrriner hsd
been fasting at Fort Leavenworth
protest against certain dls-
elpllnary measures taken there
and that he had been removed toiT t" and hedges are being remnv-
the Attests ponltentlsry ss a ed and a road diverted In order to
means of Inducing him to est. ,take In an adjoining stretch of land.
Oardner has about 14 years yet When thla sddltlonal ground be
to serve. Prior to bis confinement 'comes available tbe air ezpresses
at Fort Lear en worth, he had sent- will have a clear unobstructed
ed time at Sen Queatin prison In space of between two and three
California and at McNeil Islsnd, i miles upon which to lake off aod
Wash. (slight.
MURRAY'S LIFE
MUST PAY FOR
GUARD'S DEAIR
Jury Finds Convict Guilty
of Having Murdered
John Sweeney.
SMILES AT VERDICT
Attorney King Will Appeal
Kelley and Willos
. Trial Is Now in
Progress.
SALEM. Ore, Oct 16. Tom
Mu.-ray, leader of the convict trio
whosshot their way out of the
Oregon penitentiary on the even
ing of August 11 and a veteran of
I three prison terms la tbe last five
years, most nang ror me zauraer
of John Sweeney, one of the two
guards killed In the recent break.
The case against Murray for the
murder of Sweeney went to the
Jury at 3:54 o'clock yesterday af
ternoon. At 8:45 o'clock last night
less than five hours later, the Jury
sent out word Ihst It was ready to
report Nearly half an hour was
!nirMi . Krin Mnrr.v from the
prU(m to ,he toun ,, ,n0 ,
K,ther ,ne ,Uorney. and court at-
taches.
Except for a slight nervousness
evidenced by the msnner In which
he rubbed his hands together aa he
sat In his chair, Murray was as cool
ss at any time during the trial.
He sat with his eyes downcast dur
ing the reading of the verdict, bit
Ing his Hps. then tamed to Will R.
King, his attorney, and smiled
As the jurors filed out of ' (he
court room. Murray rose. Deputy
Warden Llllle and two guards from
the prison stenped to his side with
handcuffs. He placed his cap on
his head and extended his hands,
saying:
"I guess they won't arrest me for
putting my hst on In court."
In the afternoon, as the Jury filed
out to consider his esse, Murray
offered to wager the deputy warden
that he would not hang.
Judge King announced last night
that an appeal would be filed. .
Thla morning the trial of James
Willos and Ellsworth Kelley. com
panions of Murray In the break,
also on charges of killing Guard
Sweeney was progressing In the
circuit court, and the attorneys
were busy selecting the Jury which
Is. to try them Jointly.
First Venire Exhsusted.
SALEM, Ore., Oct. 16. Wllh 15
Jurors psssed for cause In the mur
der trial of Ellsworth Kelley and
Jsmes Willos. who were partlcl-
pants In the slate prison escape of
August 12, Ust. and who with Tom
j Mui-ray wt-ie Indicted for murder
1 1 the first degree for the killing of
Guard John Sweeney, the panel
war exhausted Just before noon ta
nsy and coirt adjourned until to
morrow morning.
A special vililre of 20 Jurors was
ordered bv the court.
The defense hss five peremptory
challenges remslnlng 'and the ststn
three. By stipulation Itctwen at
torneys for the state snd ttr de
fense r II members of the Jipy sat
In the Murray trial were evr.ned
it.im the Kellcv-Wlllns cane be
csuse of the length of the previous
trial.
Late yestesdsy Will R. King, at
torney for the defense, moved that
Kelley and Willos he tiled together,
not separately ai he requested af
ter thS Indictments. Ills purpose
In asking that they he tried to
gether was so that each could be
called to testify in hehslf of the
other. The motion was not contest
ed by the slate.
Much of the evidence that was
submitted In the trial of Murray
will be reiterated In the trial of
Keller and Willos. For this reason
and the fact that Murray waa the
leader of the escaping trio and the
most picturesque the Interest upon
(he part of the public hss waned to
a narked degree. The court room
was only mesgerly filled with spec
tators. LONDON eXPFXTS TO HAVE
WORLD'S FINEST AIRDROME
CROYtXIN. Oct. 16. fA. P.)
A scheme, which It Is ststed will
make the London terminal air
drome Ihe finest commerrlsl sla
i Hon In the world and which will
cost nearly a quarter of a million
pounds, hss now been begun In
I earnest.
Much work will hsve to be done
. before Ihe airdrome Is complete.
NEGRO BAPTIST
CHURCH WRECKED
FOR SECOND TKXL
S - lUwbbd Fim Uaarf Win.)
CHICAGO,- Oct. 16. The
Bethesda Baptist church, larg-
vest community center in the
I south negro district, was
, wrecked In an explosion of a
dynamite bomb, which caused
w uamage, eaumaieu at siuv.uuv w
early today. No Injuries nor
fir resulted. The church,
purchased by Its negro congre-
gallon after It was abandoned
f as a synagogue, was bombed
a year ago. At that time the
police attributed the attack to
a racial prejudice. ,
SKOQTluG ELDS
LIVES OF COUPLE
TOWS
Railroad Worker Believed
- to Have First Killed
17-Year-Old Girl
Then Himself.
' ItwIiM hta l4 Xki.) "
THE DALLES. Ore., Oct 16.
Harold Steel. 26. and Miss Cressa
Crane, 17, were found shot to
death in an auto oa a road In a
remote district on Benson hill,
four miles south of The Dalles
today. Coroner C. M. Zell, who
brought the bodies tolthls city,
expressed the opinion-That Steel
had shot the girl and killed him
self. The bodies were found by Paul
Lemke, who drove paat the park
ed car and saw the two sested
side by side, fte went on, pay
ing no further attention .at the
time, hut when he passed later
on his return and saw the young
man and girl In Identically the
same positions he- Investigated
and' found them dead.
Steel bad been employed at
The Dalles by the Great Southern
railway. He drew his pay yes
terday, saying that ha was going
to be married.- Mlsa Crane was a
student nurse at Hamilton hos
pital at The Dalles.
A note found In her pocket.
stating "please notify Hamilton
hospital," caused authorities to
believe that she hsd been anti
cipating trouble of aome kind.
The girl ia shot In the tem
ple and the youth had a bullet
in his head.
Officers reported this afternoon
thly had learned that Steel and
Miss Crane bad been enaged to be
married, but that her father had
objected. Yesterday while at the
home of Mra. C. I. Weal fall, at
Friend, the couple had a quarrel,
but later they made up and1 went
together to The Da I lea. They
started yesterday afternoon to re
turn to Friend!
AIRPLANE CRASHES
BURNING TO DEATH
THREE OCCUPANTS
f AwM-lstnl Fm lasted Wire.)
DAYTON. O., Oct. 16. Three
flyers killed todsy In the accident
at New Salem, Pa., were partially
Identified by Wilbur Wright field
officers as Lieutenant George H.
Burgess of that field and Maurice
Hutton and Verne Tlmmerman of
the Dayton Herald staff. The
three had piloted the "Honeymoon
Express" to the air races at New
York.
The "Honeymoon Express" was
built during the World, war and
was ssld to have been condemned
several times. It wss one of the
obsolije types hit by Colonel Wil
liam Mitchell In his testimony bu
fore the aircraft Investigating
board.
NEW SALEM, Penn., Oct 16
Three men met death late today
when an armv airplane craahed on
a farm nesr here.
Arcordlng to eye witnesses the
plsne. while pssslng over Ihe Iluf
flngton fsrm. exploited and crash
ed, catching fire before It struck
the ground. The three occupants
were burned fatally before they
could be taken from the biasing
mass of wreckage.
Clothes worn by the victims were
burned from the bodies snd It was
Impossible to ascertain If they had
been dressed In army uniforms. Re
ports here were thai the plsne was
from Washington.
A card partly burned, and re
covered from one of the bodies.
Irontlned the name of Maurice Ilut
iton. Dayton, Ohio. A camera. :fce
I kind used by newspaper men, was
found In the wreckage.
According to those who witness
ed the crash, the III fated plsne
came Into sight, flying ahead of a
second plsne. The latter ship dis
anpeared flying west, aa the first
plane came down.
To Sored Week End
I.eo Berkley. Lvnn Heckler,
of
this rltv, and Bernard flruhhe, of
Oakland, who are attending O. A.
C, will arrive this evening to
spend the week end visiting their
psrrnts.
SUPPOSED DEL
MAM YIELDS III
R0L1E LOCGIu
Own Name on Tomb Fellow
Worker He Is Accused :
of Having Murdered.
LIFE ABROAD PALLS
Prefers Trial for Life to
Existence as Nonentity
' Heavy Insurance -.
Paid to Family.
ihmxMti Tnm lri Win.) ' '
NEW YORK. Oct 16. William
K. Turner, former coal mine fore
man of Feudist, Pike county, Ken
tucky tired of being "dead" In
Germany, la back in this eoastry
to face charges of murdering the
mldeatlfled mine worker whose
tombstone beers Tuner's name.
He Is also accused of the sour
der of Henry Wilson, another mlm
worker, killed In a mysterious ex
plosion In a coal mine at MeCarr.
Kentucky. The fatal explosion was
considered an accident until Tur
ner who blames others for the af-
fair, got homesick In Hamburg, and
wrote to a Kentucky friend a let
ter that reached the authorities.
When Turner, under weight from
short rations and with hla belong,
lnga In a papier mache suitcase,
stepped off the gangplank of tbe
steamer Resolute, arriving from
Hamburg yesterday, he waa greet
ed by Tsylor Hatfield, one of the
famous feudist clan and a deputy .
sheriff of Pike county. Hatfield
showed Turner a warrant tor his
arrest. ....;-:.- '... . ..,.; aj
Insurance Collected1.
Mrs. Turner, who has been living
in Trenton. N. J., with her five
children since she and Turner's ,
alster. Mrs. F. F. Farley of Coral
Gables, FIs.. collected $68,000 .In
surance after Turner's supposed
death, said she had thought her
husband dead and had been bring
ing the children np In that belief..
She said she hsd no part la
Idenllfirallon of the body. " '
In Williamson. W. Va., Joe Jacks
Turner's father-in-law. who waa an
electrician for the Auburn mine at
the time of the explosion laat Jan
uary, haa been arrested on a man
lier charge also.
"We were blasting through grav
el to a new cut," Turner began bla
story to Hatfield and New York
police yesterday. "Henry Wlhwaa
and some other men were aettinc
dynamite charges. I was In another
part of the mine." r
I ii iiiiinriij, i-vifriiiiit iu iwun,
lit Is a ssfe and simple thing to at
tach wires to a dynamite charge,
but the circuit must have closed.
and the explosive went off as soon
as the wires touched It Wilson
and his companion were blown to
pieces. .
Coercion Charged. i . .
'I didn't know anything about
it," continued Turner. "A brother--In-law
of mine took me out to
drink some white mule. He would
n't let me go where anyone could
see me. He kept making me drink
and when I was good and draaki
ihe pulled a gun on me and said I
avould have to get out of town and
star nut. He told me where to go
and what to do. I went."
The remains nf Wilson were
Identified, and when Turner's ab
sence continued for several days,
the other bidy. badly mangled, but
about Ihe right weight snd nuW
urnments, was Identified as his.
An Insurance company paid his
"widow" and his sister his Insur
ance without protest.
Home Longing Too Strong.
Turner went to Columbus, Ohio,
and thence to New York, where be
wss mi-t hy his fsther-ln-lsw, Joe
larks, who hsd tickets for Norway.
From Norway, Turner went to
iHsmburg.
"I got sick nf hearing German
and no American all the time." ex
plained Turner, and "not getting
enough work or enough food... I
IJust decided In write home and
find out. what It' waa all about and
get In loticb wllh my wife."
The friend to whom he wrote,
hurried wllh Ihe letter to the sher
'iff and shortly sfterwsrd. the
' grand Jury brought Indictments
against Turner and Jacks.
RETURNS WAILET AfcO OETS
FREE BARBERINO FOR LIFE
YAKIMA. Wah , Oct. 16. (A. .
P.) Because LcRoyt'nole hunted
nn the on.-r of a wallet contain
ing lino which he had found, hn
can sport a clean shsven face and
a trim poll the nut of his life, with
out cost.
The ownr of the wallef was a
bsrber. When Poole refused a
monetary reward, the barber Insis
ted upon his receiving an oder for
"free harhering for life" aa a mark
of gratitude, i