Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948, August 21, 1926, Page 1, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    E7ie Weather
Highest temperature yesterday. ...78
Uowest temperature last night 63
Unsettled tonight and Sunday.
Full Associated Press
Leased Wire Service
m
1
TODAY S NEWS TODAY
- pOUGt!COUNTY
Consolidation of The Evening News
.The Roseburg Review
An Independent Newspaper, Published for
the Best Interests of the People.
VOL. XXVII NO 219 OF ROSEBURG REVIEf U) - yvUfln
ROSEBURG, OREGON, SATURDAY, AUGUST 21, 1926.
VOL. XVII NO. 131 OF THE EVENING NEW3
KOBE
EEH GARDEN
AT WINCHESTER
RAIDED FRIDAY
Will iam Beecroft Fined
$200 for Possession
of Liquor.
RAID IS "TIPPED OFF"
Advance Notice of Officers"
Coming Given and Much
Evidence Destroyed
. Before Arrival.
William Beecroft of Winchester
was nrrested yesterday evening
following a raid which netted the
orCcers 15 dozen bottles of beer,
39 orates of empty beer bottles,
fivo 20-gallon crocks, one 10-gallon
crock, a gallon or more of less
and oilier evidence showing whole
sale manufacture of beer. Officers,
upon their arrival found of
orls being made to destroy all
evidence advance notice of the raid
apparently having been obtained.
Following; out numerous com
plaints regarding alleged beer gar
dins nt Winchester, the officers
yesterday received information suf
ficient to secure a warrant for the
arrest of Mr. Beecroft and the
searching of his place. The per
son from whom this information
was secured, however, apparently
I old friends that he had been forc
ed Inlo divulging Information, and
this "tip" was quickly given to
I he people nt the Beecroft farm,
for when the officers arrived they
found indicalions of a hasty effort
to remove all evidence.
Mr. Beecroft. .was. arrested and
a search of his place then ordered.
A Ill-gallon crock partially tilled
Willi beer wa3 found in the house,
according to the report made by
District Attorney Cordon, while in
the rear of the house, hidden in
the willows, was found a place
where fivo 20-gallon crocks had
been tipped over. - These crocks
Ft ill contained some of tlie lees, or
dregs, the officers gathering up
more than a gallon for evidence.
Some of the liquor had been caught
in the canvas covering, so that
enough of this was secured for
evidence, besides a bottle of beer.
Mr. Beecroft was brought to
Rnseburg and arraigned before
.luslice of the Peace George Jones
on a charge of possessing Intoxicat
ing, liquor, lie entered a plea of
guilty and was fined $200.
Officers went back to his place
and in an open field found a pile
of beer in which there were seven
cases and numerous other bottles,
totally 15 dozen in all. Thirty-nine
cases of empty bottles were also
r confiscated.
"Complaints have been received
in great numbers and at various
times regarding the Winchester
beer galdi-V" District Attorney
'.tordon slated today. "The opera
tions of this place have extended
over a long period of months, and
there is no question but that oth
ers are implicated. We have been
working quietly in an efforc to so
e rnre evidence sufficient to per
mit action and when all evidence
is assembled others will be taken
into custody if the facts show suf
ficient cause for further arrests."
The district attorney intimated
tlbat the grand jury will doubt
leas make an investigation and
will call witnesses before it to in
quire inlo conditions at Winches
ter where the beer garden busi
ness is said to have been flourish
ing for some time.
Governor Hartley Uses Official
Axe on University of Washington
Recent of Thirteen Years' -Service
f Asjtftcl.it 11 fires Leafvtl Wire)
RATTLE, Aug. 21. Governor
Hartley today removed O. A.
IforMer, of Yakima, as a regent
of tlie University of Washington.
Fechler, who had sought to have
the regents continue a building
program which the majority, con
sist ing of Hartley appointees, pro
posed until a finanrinl survey is
completed, was replaced hy J. M.
Perry of Yakima.
Announcement that Terry had
superceded Fechtei came after a
pnrty of 20 men, carrying out a
resolution of the alumni associa
tion had removed the records of
the association from the campus.
YAKIMA. Wash., Aug. 21. J.
Perry, who was appointed a regent
of the University of Washington
today, is the founded of the J. M.
Perry's I'mit and Cold Storage
f Company here, and one of the pio
neer business men of the valley,
lie Is not a college graduate.
The offer of the regency was
Cult Allied To
AimeelsSued
For $200,000
(Associated Press Leased Wire.)
SAN FRANOISCO, Aug. 21. As
sertion that the Glud Tidings tab
ernacle In this city and its pastor
llrector, Robert 7, Craig, alienated
from 1dm the love of his wife ij
contained in a complaint by diaries'
U Humphrey, train dispatcher of
Sausallto, who today filed suit for
1200,000 damages.
The Glad Tidings tabernacle" Is
one of the Pentecostal group of
churches with which Angelus tem
ple of Los Angeles, of which Aimee
Semplo MsPhersoh Is pastor, is af
filiated. Behind the court action toflSy
lies the grim background of the
death at Gridley, California, 18
months ngo, of Mrs. Humphrey's
brother, Henry H.Schalow, branded
and burned to death by members
of a religious cult in an effort to
drive out "evil spirits.'
Humphrey's complaint asserts
that Crale induced Mrs. Humphrey
to leave their home, enroll herself
in a school of evangelism and to
undertake a trtn about the statu
in which she preached doctrines of
the Glad Tidings tabernacle.
STATES TO UNITE
SEATTLE, Aug. 21. Herbert
Hoover, secretary of commerce, ar
rived in Seattle today, after in
specting the Columbia Basin irri
gation project which would water
one and three-quarters million arid
acres in central and eastern Wash
ington. "I have been deeply impressed
with the serious purpose of the
Columbai Basin irrigation league,"
he said. "But this project is only
one of many that are being urged
and no one of these can succeed
standing alone. For example, it is
doubtful whether in congress this
Columbia basin project woild have
the support of any state other
than Washington and pernnps Ore
gon. The Big Boulder Canyon pro
ject would have the support only
of the little group of states that
are interested in the Colorado river
development all the rest would be
against It. Bo or any project mat
might be named. .
"But ft the efforts of all states
can be coordinated on a definite
national program of water utilisa
tion, the strife and Jealousies that
now stand in the way of develop
ment can be removed."
Hoover predicted a strong lumber
market for the next Blx mourns.
"The really important question
is how long will the present largo
demand for lumber continue," he
added. "We are now doing more
building than ever before In our
national history. This year's build
ing program is larger than that of
last year, which set a high record.
Of the next six months we are
certain, for the contracts have al
ready been let. This business is as
sured, but that is about as far
ahead as any of us can see."
Hoover praised North Pacific
coast lumbermen for cooperation
with his department in lumber
standardization and wood waste
utilization.
ANDREWS ADDS TO
N. Y- DRY FORCE
(Associated Press Leased Wtre.)
NEW YORK, Aug. 21. Lincoln I.
Andrews, assistant secretary of
the treasury, in charge of prohi
bition enforcement, today took ac
I tion to tighten the lines against
! smugglln of liguor from steam
I shids or other sources in New York
1 harbor. Forty former customs
i guards and inspectors were de
j tached from that service and
sworn In an prohibition officers.
made to him some days ago and he
plans to attend the special session
of the board tomorrow.
O. A. Fechter, deposed regent,
will not make any contest, consid
ering all such moves useless he
said. Me has served 13 years as
regent and was a member of the
committee that selected Dr. Henry
Suzzallo as president of the uni
versity. Fechter has not received
notification of his di&missal. he
said, but expects that "miscon
duct" will be Alleged as justifica
tion. Has Some Fine Fruit
R. D. Kleist. well known fruit
grower of the Dillard section,
brought in some fine grapes and
peaches yesterday and they were
placed on display in the News-Review
and Chamber of Commerce
windows. Mr. Kleist produced some
of the finest peaches ever grown
in the Alley this season and says
lie is finding a ready market for his
crop in the Coos Bay section.
D I C
I LLfl
IDEA REJECTED
Defense Lawyer Will Rely
on Other Legal Means
to Free Client.
NEW TRIAL IS SOUGHT
Fresh Evidence Found That
Strengthens Side of
State, According
to Reports.
(Associated Press Leased Wire.)
SEATTLE, Aug. 21. Willie Wal
lace Cloyes Gaines today in the
cell occupied by James E. Ma honey
of this city, hanged five years ago
for killing his wife, Kate, and sink
ing her body in a trunk in a lake,
awaited efforts to cancel or avoid
ills conyiction Thursday of killing
Sylvia Howard Gaines, his counsel
announced that he "will never en
ter a plea of insanity."
In the cell every movement of
Gaines, whom the jury condemned
to death for, first degree murder,
was visible from the office of the
county jail, - always occupied by
keepers.
The prisoner was reported to
have rested weli in thn niirbl. Ha
Ihetran thn rlnv with n rpnitpst for n
mirror that he might shave. He
was told to use a mirror allowed to
all prisoners in his section of the
jail, but that ho could not have a
special one. Jailers said many
privileges permitted Gaines since
his arrest June 29 had been dis
continued. Motion for a new trial comes be
fore Judge Jones, September 1,
when he -returns from a vacation
on which lie departed yesterday,
after the labors of the Gaines'
tifnl, which opened August 2. ,.
State Has New Evidence.
Police Chief Searing announced
that he had renewed an innuiry on
jwho received from Thelnia Holmes
,oi ueuiugnam, wnsn., a watcnioo
i carrying the initial "G" which she
lounu near the spot on Green Lake
where Miss Gaines was killed and
which she gave to a man she took
to be a plain clothes policeman.
Testimony by Miss Holmes was
offered near the end of the trial
but excluded on the ground that
admission would occasion unwar
ranted delay.
Prosecutor Colvln stated that
other additional evidence npnirtst
! Gaines had been obtained by
Sheriff Stnrwlch, Unde-Sherlff
Hutcheon and Luke S. May, a priv
ato detective.
"We would have a much strong
er case if a new trial were grant
ed," declared Colvin. "Some of
this new evidence would lesson the
weight of testimony by defense
wiinesses."
"If the motion for a new trial is
denied," stated Defense Counsel
Carmody," we shall appeal to the
supreme court."
Lawyers said the only hope if
the supreme court refused to in
tervene was that Governor Hartley
might listen to ideas for commu
tation of the death sentence to life
imprisonment.
JOHNNY DUNDEE
BREAKS HIS ARM
(Associalrfl Prom Leased Wire.)
NEW YORK, Aug. 21. Johnny
Dundee, veteran of 17 years of ring
o.'i vice, sufiVr. d a broken righc
arm ust belo ihe elbow in ihe
third round I hi', contest '; h Fn-.l
I .rti(.:it 1. ilu- French 'e i h.?r-
weight at Ebbet field last night.
The fracture was revealed by an
X-ray examination today. Dundee s
physician said he would be unable
to box for two months.
Dundee was forced to cancel a
match for the junior lightweight
chnmrionship with Tod Morgan,
t'.ili bo!er, at San Francisco Sep
tember 7.
ARRESTED MEN LINKED
WITH THEFT OF AUTO
fAwoHatM PrMs Iaiw-l Wire.)
PENDLETON. Ore.. Aug. 21.
Tom Word, of the department of
justice and Joe Keller, of the state
automobile theft department, have
definitely linked Harvey Coyle
alias R. D. Williams. and T. J.
Auiletly alias T. K. Elders, with
the theft of a touring car August
1 belonging to Charles Serrell,
living near Pendleton, and tlie vio
lation of Ihe flyer act. The oar was
found at McMlnnvllle. Audelly waBj
arrested and Is in jail In Portland.
. Coyle. incited at Athena by Word
and Keller, was questioned by the I
'officials and admitted taklne the '
ear intn Wahlne-lnn. rrrianlnE- thfi
river at Biggs. He later made a
complete confession and is now be
ing held for the United States mar
shal for transportation to Portland.
NSANTY
CASE
Proper Physical Mating
r r. ....... a., rr..
rroauces immunity rrom
Cancer, Authority Says
(Associated Press Leased Wire.) . I
ITHACA, N. Y Aug. 21. Man
can become immuuo to cancer, but
probably never will because
society cannot direct .the mating
of men and women resistant to the
disease, as is done with uuimuls,
in the opinion of Dr. Erwin F.
Smith of Washington, D. C, who
is attending the international con
gress of plant sciences at Cornell
university.
Experiments with animals have
shown that not only is it possible
to breed a race entirely resistant
to cancer, Dr. Smith said, but also
to breed another race 100 por cent
cancerous. It is believed the same
would apply to the human race,
were It possible to direct the mat
ing destinies of man.
Dr. Smith, former president of
the Americnn association of can
cer research, and recognized as a
leading authority on cancer in this
country, believes that cancer is
caused by an organism, or para
site, and that the organism which
produces cancers or tumors on
plants is the same as that which
affect the human body. His own
experiment with plants, he said,
have shown that the cancer organ
isms produced are not unlike those
obtained in rats fed on nematodes
taken from the muscles of the
West Indlnn cockroaches found
around sugar factories or in ships
engaged in the. West Indian trade.
Cancer, he believes, may be
1 AT
Woman Rider Meets Death
That Was Prophesied;
Two Male Riders
Badly Hurt.
(Associated Press .Leased Wire)'!'
CHICAGO, Aug. ' . 21. Louise
, Hartwi)?,' Montana rodeo esquest-
rienne, irampieii to death yester
day by: a wild bronco at. Soldiers
field, confided to a companion
shortly before her injury Hint she
had a possible premonition of
death.
"I wouldn't care If I was killed;
I hope I get my neck broken," she
said to Mario Gibson, a performer.
Then she rode into the rodeo
arena nnd conquered her plunging
steed. But when she loosed her
hold on the reins for u minute, the
animal threw her.
News of her death in a hospital
came during the evening perform
ance and .spectators stootl with
beared lieads in tribute to her. The
body is to be sent to Springfield,
Mo., where n five-year-old son
lives. The girl had been despond
ent, Miss Gibson said, since her
estrangement from her husband, n
Big Sandy, Montana, rancher.
Two other performers were butt
yesterday. Bill Montgomery, of
Chugwato, Wyn., broke three ribs
nnd punctured his lung when a
steer he was wrestling threw him
into a fence, and Jasbo Fulkerson,
of Fort Worth, Texas, broke an
arm, a leg and three ribs when a
horse threw him against a fence in
the bareback riding contest.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Urand and
n, Karl, nnd .Mrs. C. H. Davit s
I have returned from Eugene, where
they spent a day all ending the
Trail to Itail celebration.
Artistic Souls
To Joyous Temperament at
Annual 'Maverick' Gambol
(Associstrd Press Leased Wire.)
WOODSTOCK, N. Y., Aug. 21
The artists of the east held rai ni
val today. This was tlie flay nf
the Maverick, the annual coMmm-festival-of
tho Woodstock artists,
known to painters, musicians, writ
ers, actors and other servants of
all the seven arts throughout tli"
country.
Tlie carnival began yesterday,
but by midnight with several
thousand gathered in this valley In
Ihe Catskllls, it was but well un
der way. and at dawn the end was
not In sight.
The festival Is called Ihe Mav
erick and in fact all "brands" were
taboo. Academicians whose paint
ings hang in the great gallflies of
the world mingled and danced Willi
painters whose futuristic offering
have never been seen outside their
attic studios. Members of famous
symphony orchestras argued
fiercely about counter-point and
other mysteries of their art with
Jazz addicts who onlT know music
as something that comes out of a
trumpet with a derby .atuck over
l cured by operation, If discovered
.in time. .Superficial cancers and
those near or on the skin and
ieasily reached mny be overcouio
by proper and skilful use of radi
um and the X-ray. In this connec
'tlon, however, lie pointed out that
many supposed "cures" cunnot be
called such definitely until the
; lapse of tlmo has brought no re
currence of the malignant growths.
Arsenic One Cause.
I Repented contact with soot, conl
I tar, paraffin and anilines are be
lieved to bo among tho common
I causes of cancer, with possibly a
iinore common -cause, in Dr.
Smith's . opinion, the arsenic
j brought into tho body through cou
jtlnued use of tobacco. Dr. Smith
pointed out that cancers most coi
jmon in men were those of the
'mouth, throat and stomach, caused
possibly by contact with the nrseu
lie sprayed on tobacco as it grows
'in the field and used again as u
( preservative in tho storngo sheds,
j Tho passing of five years, or a
i decade, he believes, may demon
; smile the correctness of this
; theory hecauso of the Increasing
use of tobacco by women, who
now are susceptible chiefly to can
cer of the breast, stomach mid
uterous, types of the disease sel
dom seen In men. hut who do not
'now liuve to any extent cancer of
;the mouth nnd throat that may bo
j caused by contact with tho arsenic
of tobacco and which now affect
men.
ATES
State Needs All ' Possible
Revenue to Cut Down ,
Bonded Debt for
Road Work.
1 EUGENE, Ore., Aug. ' 21. That
the state highway commission
should take over all state roads,
both for construction and maintenance,-
and cease to require county
cooperation. Is the'' concensus of
opinion of representatives of stalo
and Portland automobile associa
tions, brought out nt a meeting
! yesterday at the Portland Chamber
jof Commerce, when Judge C. P.
I Barnard of Lane county met with
i repreHcntatlvea of the automotive
(groups to talk over proposed road
i legislation, according to word
brought back here today hy JmUc
Barnard.
Judge Barnard's proposal that
one-half instead of one-quarter of
the stale receipts from auto li
censes should he turned over 1o
Iho counties waa one of (lie prin
cipal topics taken up and the Lane
I county official explained his view
jof the value of this plan,
i The automotive group, ho said,
'holds iho opinion that ihe stale
should not he hindered in any way
at tlie present time in completion
of its program of road building,
and the fear is expressed that If
: there Is any proposal to change the
slate motor laws, there will be a
deluge of bills in the legislature
that might not all be advantageous
to the stale.
The opinion voiced at the meet
ling was that there should be no
.reduction in motor vehicle rales
until there has been a substantial
reduction in the bonded Indebted
ness of the state and counties for
"road work.
Give Vent
lis mouth. And niini:ling in (lie
throng, all costumed in colors ihe
ralnhow never knew, were dozens
of real artists' models.
The villagers gathered from
miles around, looked on nnd gasp
ed. As the night deepened, the
gaiety grew. The parly reached
fever heat and tiie quiet halls
where It I p Van Winkle slept wit
nessed a wild whirl of color and
sound.
In a glen n hundred camp fires
gleamed on brightly colored fig
ures dancing on the grass. In a
great hall tlt-hlly parked scores
danced and shouted and Iho un
known trod on lite toes of the
famous with great abandon.
In tlie crowd were such persons
as Clemeneo itimdolph, eo-aulljnr
of "Haiti;" Robert ( handler, paint
er and former husband of l.lna
Cavallei i; lieu He. hi Clihsjgo
novelist: Allen Di -." ('nhinii,
inndscaper painter of Cincinnati;
Prof. j. K. Shotwell of Columbia
University and Pamela Wlnlon
Drown, widely known painter of
miniatures.
NORTH IPIjllA
RDAD PRAISED
Bl ENGINEER
High Officer of Forest Ser
vice Sees Great Com
mercial Value.
FUNDS EXPLAINED
Future Expenditures Must
Be Made From Federal
Highway and Not For"
est Service Money.
"The commercial and scenic val
ue of the North Umpqua road is
plainly evident to anyone who in
spects it," stated T. W. Norcross,
chief engineer of the- U. S. forest
service, of the head office at Wash
ington, D. C following a trip over
tho road to Steamboat in company
with Car! B. Neal, supervisor of the
Umpqua national forest, nnd other
forest service officials.
"Tlie forest service,' Mr. Nor
cross continued, "has completed the
road as far as it is possible for it
to do under its fire protection pol
icy. Forest development roads are
built with the idea of firo protec
tion only. They nre used to get
men nnd supplies , lb strategic
points, and do not need to bo con
tinuous, but must ho constructed
In such localities that they .will
lead to undeveloped sections of the
rorost, so that thoro will be little
delay In getting firo fighting crovs
to any one place.
"Wo have built with forest serv
ice and bureau of public road
funds the present road to Stoar
boat nnd tho road from Diamond
lako to Big Camas, any money for
linking up these roads must come
from another fund, tho federal
highway fund. 'Our money is ex
pended for fire protection, But
there 1st a fund Which in lisod ex
clusively for tho development of
the forests and the surrounding
country, but Ibis 1 expended under
tho forest highway burenu nnd
through tho cooperation of state
highway commissions. ' '
"Tho North Umpqua road Is
without question one of tho most
scenic io be found anywhere nnd
its commercial value, if completed,
Is of such outstanding nature that
lis early comnlollon' should' bo of
ureal. Interest to your nounly.1
Mi Mnvfirnno In n nifimlinr of n I
nni-iv nf hii'ii nrriMnls nf the lor-
est service who nre mniung an in'
Rppcllnn till) tlirouKli thn ITniunua
niilioniil forpsl. nnd nil ollior lor-
eats of Iho state, for Iho purpose
of inspecting road and trait work,
wateipower possibilities and oilier
engineering factors of forest development.-
Oilier members of Iho
party are K H. Rriindage, chief .of
roads and trails nf tho foroat serv
ice In Oregon; V. K. Bonner, dis
trict engineer from t.ho San Fran
cisco offlco, 11. IS. Burnett, or the
roads and trails department of the
San Francisco district. These men
in company with Supervisor Neal,
and Assistant Supervisor Oeorgo
lioni'brako, yesterday made nn in
spection trip over tho Norlh Ump
qua road, and left this morning by
auto over tho 'i'lller-Crater Lake
cut-off to Diamond lake. They will
inspect uie wors aiong uiu hiko
Iway through the Crater forest, and
j will then go to Crater Lului, and td
' Diamond Lake, and then over the
road to lllg Camas, Inspecting rond
'work, and examining Inlo wnter
! power possibilities.
I The present trip lias no aim for
planning of Immediate development
I w ork, but is merely all inspection'
llrlp on tlie part of Mr. Norcross
and other members of (lie party to
determine Ihe condition or the
work already done, anil lo obtain
data nnd Information on possibili
ties whleh may be of advantngo in
future development plans.
JAPANESETENNIS
STARS WIN AGAIN
f AmmrtaleH Press Lessed .Wire.)
MONTREAL, Aug. 21. .lapnn
made It four consecutive, matches
over the Cuban Davis cup team,
when Sekio Tawara look the open
ing singles of Ihe final, hentnlg
Sogello Paris, Cuban. 0 2, 0 0, C-2.
By winning tlie two ripening
singles and the doubles, Japan had
previous to today earned a bracket
in the final round against France,
tlie winner of which will challenge
Ihe Tlnltejl Slates for Ihe tennis
trophy.
FOI1BHT 1III.I.S. N. Y., Aug. 21.
Miss KlizahHh Ryan today slash
ed Ihe defense of her sister Call
fornlan, Mary K. Browne, to gain
the final round of the women's na
tional tennis championship, 6-1.
11-3, qualifying to oppose Mrs. Mai
lory for the title on Monday. Mrs.
Mallnr qualified or the finals bv
defeating Miss Marlba B.ivard of
Short Hills, N. J., 0 3, 6 3.
News Hounds' 1
Nose Too Keen
For Berlins
(Awoclatctl Prcw Ltamd Wire.)
. QUEBEC, Aug. 21. Mr. arid
Mrs. Irving Berlin today sought
refuge from tho glare of publicity
at the summer home of Max Wins
low in the Thousand Islands after
falling to achieve anonymity us
"Mr. nnd Mrs. J. Johnson," on the
passenger list of the steamship
Montcalm from Glasgow.
The song writer and the dis
owned daughter of Clarence Mac-
kuy, president of the Postal Tele
graph company, were greeted at
the pier by throe newspaper men
on their arrival yesterdny.
Friends had expected them on
the Homeric, since Al Jolson said
In New York recently that they
were coming home from a Paris
honeymoon on that, liner. Some
newspapers at that time credited
them with a desire to have their
first child born In the Ignited
States. In Paris Mrs. IJerliu de
nied that a visit by the stork was
impending.
On arrival here Mr. Berlin said:
"We are returning to America
becauso it is our homo and we
hope the time has come when we
will bo allowed to enjoy the beau
tiful essential of a home-privacy.
The only question concerning me
in which the public might bo in
terested is answered when I nay
I nm gohif; to begin work on a
new show."
. c 1
Nominee for Governor Will
Be Expected to Abide
, . .. by-Referendum. .7' i
EDICT OF WADSWORTH
Al Smith to Run Again If
; Democrats Call on Him :
: : -rDr. Butler Sticks ' ',
, , to i ns L-olle
' (Assnclfttt'd Press Lwtsol Wire.) ;
NKW YORK, Auk. 21.-Kfforts
"f
Iii'pulilli'ims to nvoiii sprlous
(Ushi'iihIoii over tho Honor issue in
state flections this full wuro soon
I'muium wincm nuio louuy in
the withdrawal of Div Nicholas
Murray Butler as a. Republican gu
bernatorial possibility and Sena
tor .lames W. Wadsworths declar
ul Ion that a candidate satisfactory
to wets and drys would be sought.
Our plan," said Senator Whds-
Woi'lh after a conference' with
President Coolldgo at Paul Smith's,
N. Y., yeslerday, "la to select a
candidate who will abide bv the
referendum."
lie referred lo forthcoming ex
pression of onllllon bv Iho elector
ate, as lo whether eacli stale should
detennlno the alcoholic content of
bevorages. The rofei-nedum will bo.
on the ballot at the election in No
vember. . Drys Assail Plan,
The drys hold that tlie referen
dum is an attempt lo evade the
Elglileenlh amendment and blnnie
(Conl Inued on page 3.)
G. 0. P.1 H;
VIM iq CfiPIRini
mini iii tnutiiu
LIQUOR ISSUE
Democratic Leader Assails Slush
Fund in Urging Pennsylvania to
Elect Ex-Cabinet Member Senator
(Assortntcd Press Leased Wire.)' -.
AI.I.IINTOWN Pn.. Ang. 21.
Both the Pennsylvania and Illinois
primaries show the republicans
have no scruples about buying nn
election. Representative Oldflcld
of Arkansas, chairman of tho de
moc'ratic congressional campaign
committee, declared hero today In
open an aggressive campaign for
Iho election of Wm. B. Wilson, de
mocrat, to the srnnle.
"There is one suliject upon
which Ihe republican campaign
managers will be as silent ns Pres
ident Cnnlldgn this year," Mr. Old
field said. "That is the Pennsyl
vania J.l.nOn.nnn republican prim
ary and Illinois Jl.0ll0.IM") repub-.
Ilran primary.
"Secretary ellon says that Ihe
Kltjr-li fund collected for Iho Penn
sylvania primary was the same as
money rnlleelcd for a church."
"Presumably Mils included the.
cnnlrilMitions of JoseplOW. (Jrundy,
who safil that lie contributed be
cause the Mellon-Pepper ticket's
candidal e for governor was op
posed to faxing corporations and
Grundy wai looking out for tlie
corporations.
"That waa tho caso In Illinois.
VESSEL SI
DURING HEAVY
LAKE ERIE GALE1
One Lifeboat That Held 4
7 of Crew of 20 Found
Bottom Side Up.
SURVIVOR FLOATS IN
Two Boats With 1 6 Men
Picked Up by Piissing'
Ship Attracted by
Signal Flares.
! (Associated Press Leased Wire.) :
CLEVELAND, O., Aug. 21. Tho
lifeboat in which four members of
tho crew of the steamer Howard
S. Gerken, which sank off Erie,
Pa., early today, were cast adrift
in Lake Erie when their craft was
swept from the side of the rescu
ing vessel, the car ferry Maltlnnd,
was found floating upsido down In
mid-lake tills afternoon by the
steamer Uranus.
Shortly before, a man, believed
to be -Herman Wageman, fireman
of the Gerken, was washed ashore
at Erie peninsula today. Although
alive, his condition was so serious
that he was unable to positively,,.
Wavo -fears' Open Hull, i ' '
One of tho survivors, Captain .T.
II. Gamble of the Gcrkun, broimht
ashore on the Mnitlnnd ,salil:
, ''Wo put out front Erie mui ran
Into a heavy sea at 8:30 last nlrjht..
Wo tried to put back into the liar-'
bor but the tremendous wavea pro
vented that. We put down an an
chor which was snatched away as
soon as It was dropped.
Flares were fired, nnd, nlthotiRii .
apparently seen by. Ilia coast guard
station on shore, six miles away,
tlie guards were powerless to como
to our aid in tlie churning sea. -
"A huge wavo ripped a hole In
our- hull, which started to fill
rapidly, and we took to the two
lifeboats, H men. In one nnd nine
in tiie other. ... '-
"After drifting close together foi
20 minutes, Iho Maitiand which
lnul evidently seen our flares,
camo alongside and started tho .
work of taking the men aboard
from the small boats. .....
"After laboring for two hours 111
tho heavy seas, the Maitiand had
removed all the nine men in itho-i
first boat and had taken off seven
of Iho eleven in. tho other. --.Thou--another
gigantic wave tore tho
boat away from the Maitiand and
in tlie darkness it could not again
bo located." ...
CLEVELAND, Ohio, Aug. 21,-r-Tim
steamer Harold S. tlerken,
baltered by gigantic waves which
wero whipped into fury by a fifty
nill an-hour gale, sank in Lake Ki lo
eight miles out of Erie, Pa today.
Two lifeboats containing sixteeiie
members of tlio steamor'g crow,
wero picked up by the car ferry
Mailland of Ashtabula, Ohio,
Another boat, In which four men
put off from tlie sinking steamer
lias not beon found.
The men aboard the missing life
boat aro Oeorgo . McMInn, mate;
Richard Freeman, watchman; Her
man Wageman, fireman, and Wil
liam Logan, derrick engineer.
It Is learned these four men may
havo been washed out ot tho little
craft.' ' .
Report of tho sinking of tho '
Ocrken, a freighter, listed out of
Buffalo, N. Y., and the rescue ot
(Continued on page 3.)
Thn fcuccoHsfu, reimbHcnn cainll
flnto for penator vn tin chnlnnnu
of or a sUita coinmisHion wlitch
lias Juriailirlion ovor public utili
tip corpora ( Ions, oiHTfUjiip In tho
filatn.
"Hnth prJmarips show that our
nppniifMits have no scruplos about
buying an election. Pcppor awl
Varo in Pennsylvania ami Smfrli
In MlinnlR make Newberry n finuro
lo he rnnonlzrd ns a martyr by tlio
party of great mora! ideas.
"Tho American people will not
tolotatfl n continuance or Newbcr
rytam. Thoy have Hhown that In
itio defeat of nearly every rnnator
who voted to Beat him. WhiU? tho
rorrupt. pi-artice act lias been held
not ,to apply'to senatorial prima
ik-s, fortunately thn menatn Is tlio
Judge' of the qunlfcailtlona of itq
members, ami It h;is paid that no
more Nevberrv mhall sit In that
body. Ynu voter.1! in Pennsylvania,
however, havo it In your power to
forestall action by the senate bv
the election of that smipulousty
honest man, that ideal representr.
tlve of labor, who has already
rendered great servlco to tlio nn
linn, as pocrr-tary of tho great
labor department, William B. Wilson."
--'