Ue Weather
Probably Showers Tonight and
Wednesday r Cooler Wednesday.
Highest temperature yesterday... .94
Lowest temperature last night. ...56
Mews-R
DOUGLAS COUNTY
"The End ot the
' Homeseeker's Trail"
DOUGLAS COUNTS Ja
An Indf
Consolidation of Tha Evening Nawa and
The Roseburg Review
.paper, Published for.
a of the People
ot Qea" 1
VOL. XXVIII NO, 62 OF ROSEBURG REVIEW
ROSEBURG, OREGON. TUESDAY, JUNE 21, 1927.
VOL. XVIII NO. 127 OF THE EVENING NEW8
EYIEW
ES
FOR STATE IN
'BITTER SPIRIT
Prosecutor Flays Defense
Attorneys as Well as
De Autremont.
COURT HALTS CLASH
Newbury Argues Defendant
Not Linked With Crime;
, Case Goes to Jury
This Afternoon.
(Associated Press Leased Wire.)
COURT HOUSE, Jacksonville,
Ore., June 21 The fate of Hugh
lie Autremont, charged with the
murder of Charles O. (Coyle) John
son during the Siskiyou Tunnel
holdup, drew closer to the jury UiIb
morning when at noon - United
Stales District Attorney Neuner
approached tho close In the flnnl
argument for tho stato. Tile In
structions of the court. will then
Htand alone between him and the
deliberations of his peers.
The fiery prosecutor ou.ee turn
ed his face livid upon Defense
..-Attorney Collier and shouted:
"Why did you put In a self-declaia-lion?''
"Because it was testified to,"
nnswered Collier.
Neuner then sprang before At
torney Newbury, and shouted:
"And you said 'we were basing
nn inference upon an Inference'."
"Talk to the jury, not to me,"
snapped Newbury. : "I'll talk to
you outHide."
, The court calmed ' the rising
storm.- ' . . 1
- Resents "Frame" Charge-'
"This Is not a mutual benefit so
ciety," shouted Neuner. "We are
here trying a murder case, much
ns we all regret it. It is a duty
of the prosecution to demand the
death penalty for Hugh de Autre
mont. 1
'Defense counsel has spoken1 ot
this boy, nnd they accented the
word hoy. They painted Klddlford
(postal inspector) as one with a
cloven ' hoof and Jefferson as ' a
stool pigeon. It is unfair to play
upon your prejudices.
"To the gentlemen who told you
Professor- Heliu-lch received pay
from the government, I tell you,
nnd him, it is a lie a lie. The
prosecution are not savages 'fram
ing up' a case. Uncle Sam does
not do that. Neither does'tho state
Qf Oregon."
' With scathing sarcasm Neuner
Hayed what he culled "the ridicu
lous reasoning of . the defense,"
, and Bpoke directly at defense at-
torneys as he roared his charges.
' Looking straight nt the defen
dant, nnd answering the defense
mention of trlnl composure, Neun
er shouted:
"It doesn't bother Hugh any
Aore to have lawyers fling sting
ing accusations in his face.
"Somebody shot Coyle Johnson
In the back when he writhed with
seven buckshot In his abdomen.
Tho shells nnd cartridges don't
prove it," cried, Neuner, "but It is
n circumstance consistent with
guilt."
Exhibits Reviewed
Neuner then discussed the suit
case belonging to the de Autre-
.. .. . . .,
monts, they claim, and found near
the tunnel and the tree-shooting
near the bandit camp.
"They shot at It to 16 feet, nt
straight trees with bodies the size
of a man and all in thicket. The
(Continued on page six.)
KANSAS CONVICTS
MUTINY BECAUSE
DENIED TOBACCO
' (Associated Press Leased Wire.)
LANSING. Kans.. June 21.
Three hundred and twenty-eight
prisoners In the stnte penltenllnry
mine here mutinied today, over
powered fourteen guards and
blocked 'the cngcB, It was announc
ed from tho warden's office this
afternoon.
The prisoners placed heavy tim
bers beneath nnd above the mine
cages so they could not move from
tho ton. A mutinous spirit has
been prevalent at the prison since
Sunday, it Is announced, when the
prisoners demanded that they be
allowed to have cigarettes and cig
arette papers sent to them from
outside.
Last nicht prisoners caused a
MM
COS
slight disturbance In one of the ally brought them their clews
rell houses, the warden's secre-1 which led to the capture of the
tnry said. twins at Steubenville. O. noy.
The "bide out" of the prisoners jthey said, became drunk one night
In the mine Is similar to one siag-.two years ago, while carousing
ed in July, 1926, when prisoners i with moonshiners in a shack In
made several demands upon War-1 the Kentucky hills. While intoxl
den W. H. Mackey. The demands Icated he told his drunken compan
were not granted, and the convicts , Ions of his real identity and of
1 surrendered after staying 36 hours I the crime for which he and his
In the mine. I (Continued on page i )
Back In Oregon
Hugh DeAutremont's brothers,
twins. Roy (above) and Ray.
JAIL BARS AT
JACKSONVILLE
.ifrrt
IP
Ray and Roy DeAutremont
Meet 'Parent! and Pose j
't -for. Cameramen. 1 I
ARREST CUTS WEIGHT
Brothers' Capture Due to
Remark of Roy While
i " Under Influence
of Liquor. -
' ' (Associated l'rcsa Leased .Wire.)
JACKSONVILLE, Ore., June 21.
Ray and Hoy De Autremont.
charged, with their brother Hugh,
whose fate goes to the Jury this
afternoon, with the Siskiyou Tun
nel holdup and- murders, arrived
this morning nt the county jail in
custody of Sheriff Jennings nud
postal Inspectors.
They were arrested In Steuben
vllle, , Ohio, on June 8, last. The
twins were greeted through the
bars ot the county jail by their
father and mother.
Hugh was taken to the court
room before the arrival or his
brothers, and enrouie faced a
movie camera.
"Smile," suggested the ' camer
mnn. "I can't do It. I'm not used to
it," was the rejoineder from the
j manacled prisoner.
I Mnv finfl ltnv wen
Kay and ltoy were brought to
the county jail In two automobiles
and a few minutes later were tak
en through the jnil door.
Roy was all smiles, but Ray, his
hair bleached, und who left a wife
and child in Ohio, was sober.
In reply to a request from a cam
eraman for a smile, Ray answered
"It's pretty hard to do."
Both replied, "you'r welcome" in
response to thanks of photograph
ers. According to Captain C. B. W.
Long of the postal inspection ser
vice, Ray weighs 128 pounds and
Roy 129 . pounds, losing weight
since their arrest. They normally
weigh 145 pounds.
The two brothers will be ar
raiuged some time today, at first
opportunity.
Liquor Betrays Roy
IRONTON, 0., June 21. Corn
liquor, made In a moonshiner's
shack in the Kentucky hills, caus
ed the capture of Roy and Rny De
Autremont, wanted for their alleg-
ed holdup of a Southern Pacific
passenger train nnd the murder of
four trainmen on October 11, 1923.
This was revealed here by offic
ials who paid It was Roy De Autre-
mont's love of intoxicants that fin-
TINS
FOUR YEARS OF
DODGING TOLD
BY PRISONERS
DeAutremont Twins Recite
Changes of Residences
to Evade Officers.
POSTERS NUMEROUS
Month Longer Wanted for
Final Flight'; Refuse
to Talk of Case
-, Against Them.
(Associated Press Leased Wire.)
PORTLAND, Ore., June 21.
Living the life of a hunted thing,
dodging about the east to escape
recognition and arrest, maintain
ing an aloofuess hardly iu keeping
with their friend-making propensi
ties, Iiay and Roy De Autremont,
charged with Hugh, their brother,
with four brutal murders and the
dynamiting of a mail. train, finally
fell Into the hands - of the ever
searching government. '
They told about it last night,
between ruins, they ate and smok
ediu the county jail;-' : . . .
They told of being witnesses in
Scioto county, Ohio, of greeting
the sheriff of the county -lis they
emerged from the court room; -of
passing the bulletin board in the
same court, on which staring at
them, were their likenesses on a
government reward poster. ' .
They told of hasty departures
from this town and that; or the
night when officers closed In on
their home to effect their arrest,
only to find them flowni- of- awo-i
man neighbor 'who told litem she'
had oude been, hostesses, for "one
of the twins," though she had not.
and ot Ray's wife Hazel, and their
year Qld.' baby, Jaokie Hugh, i
And then, in the .close pustody of
Sheriff Ralph O; Jennings, and his
son, Louis, they were bundled
aboard a Medford bound train at 8
p. m. destined for Jacksonville and
urraignment today or, tomorrow, j
They will be returned, probably
tOmorrO w'nighti to the Multnomah
county jail.,
Last night ' the train bearing
them to Portland, made a pre-arranged
stop at Montavilla station
and the party of officers and pris
oners alighted and proceeded to
the jnil.
The two tired youths were
searched. Then newspaper report
ers began their barrage of ques
tions. The interrogation continu
ed until 7:30 p. m.
Talk, But Not of Crime '
The twins were eager for the
opportunity to talk until the case
itself was mentioned. Then Ray
looked at Roy. Roy looked at
Ray. Each shook a decisive head.
"We're not crossing any bridges
until we get to them," Roy said.
"Better leave the case out of this."
It was while they were eating in
(Continued on page 5.)
Newspaper Advertising Now In
Important News Class; Success
Of Business Depending On It
(Associated Preu Leiued Wire.)
PORTLAND, Ore., June 21.
Newapiiper advertising Is news; It
may be store news, but it is news
to the newspaper readei'H .
Developing this inoiiRlit, Ii. M.
Barton, adveritsiiiR director of the
Chicago Dally News, today told
delegates to the Pacific Coast Ad
vertising club association conven
tion here that newspaper advertis
ing is such a prominent factor in
the distribution of merchandise
that many manufacturers reduce
their sales cost through the uae
of it.
"Newspapers today are such an
Important factor in the distribution
of merchandise," Barton said,
"that manufacturers first seek the
Retailers who use the newspaper
advertising themselves. , They
know, both of them, that newspa
per advertising Is news.
"The manufacturers salesmen
who are calling upon the retailers
of our country today place as
much stress upon their employers
advertising schedule In the local
newspaper as they do upon the
quality and outstanding virtues af
the merchandise itself."
Advertisers Lead
"The most casual review of the
advertising columns of auy dally
newspaper will reveal," Iiarton
pointed out, "that the leading and
most aggressive manufacturers of
merchandise today are likewise
the leading newspaper advertisers,
"To them, newspaper advertising
Is a genuine (actor In the distribu
tion of their product. In fact,
newspaper advertising today is
seeond only to the necessity of
making a good product at a fair
OIL SCANDAL HITS
BIG BUSINESS MEN
I (Associated Press Leased Wire.)
LOS ANGELES, Juno 21
Dr. E. J. Llnckley, city pro-
secutor, informed the city
j council today that more than
300 criminal complaints, in.
volving . some of the biggest
( business men and leading
citizens of Los Angeles,
would be Issued by his office
In connection with the Julian
Petroleum stock scandal. -
- , .
ATTENDANCE AT
FREE COOKING
SCHOOL LARGE
Attractive Setting Due to
Cooperation of Local
Business Firms.
NEW RECIPES SHOWN
Varied List of Prizes at
News-Review Event Is '
Stimulus to Keen ' i
' Competition.
The Roseburg News-Review's
free cooking school opened at the
Armory this afternoon with a largo
attendance. Every Indication points
to one of the finest schools of its
kind ever held in the southern
part of the state.
In making arrangements for this
school the News-Review has- been
given the complete cooperation of.
a 'number of business firms, con
tributing greatly to the success
of. the -event. ., : . . . ,
i The kitchen furniture, including
tables, kitchen cabinet .. and Con
goleum rug, have been furnished
through the courtesy of McKean,
Darby and Baldwin.
All kitchen utensils used by Mrs.
Sexton in her work have been
provided by the Churchill ' Hard
ware company. 1 -' ( -
The fine concerts which pre
cede each lecture are being fur
nished through 1 the courtesy 'of
Ott's Music store.
Tho Model Dairy is supplying all
of the milk and cream used In the
cooking demonstration.
The flowers used to decorate the
Armory and platform are furnish
ed by The Fern, Florists.
The meat Is furnished by Boyor
Brothers ot tho North Side Meat
Market.
- The Calumet Baking Powder
company supplies all of tho bak
ing powder, and the Crlsco com
pany is furnishing a liberal supply
of Us product for use In cooking.
. The electric ranges used are
furnished by The California Oregon
(Continued from page 2.)
cost and a reasonable price.
"If I were asked why any adver
tiser should use newspaper adver
tising, my reply would be: 'It costs
least and serves best.'
"Newspnper advertising Is flexi
ble. It Is a god-send to the man
ufacturer, or, what we in the news
paper industry, term the national
advertiser. When I say 'flexible,'
I mean It may be used at will and
in keeping with local conditions In
every part of the country.
"Can you imagine a manufactur
er of electric fans advertising his
hot weather fin in Boston in De
cember? Yet, he may profitably
advertise electric fans In Florida
In December. The same method
In reasoning applies to almost any
kind of merchandise."
Ten Reasons Given
Ten reasons wore listed by Bar
ton In support of his statement
that newspapers occupy first place
in both the distribution and sale
of merchandise. The reasons were:
Practically no waste circulation:
ths reader can act instantly by g
ing to the dealer and buying;
practically everyone reads news
papers: newspapers are timely and
up to the minute; tho potential
buyers can be selected to conform
with places where dealers are
ready to sell; charges can bf
made to conform to conditions of
the locality; a waste of: advertis
ing money is not necessary to get
a dominant position; Intense read
er Interest; the dealer benefits
from national advertising used In
conjunction with his own adver
tisement; advertising and distribu
tion may go hand In hand, placing
the advertising near the dealerand
the dealer near the advertising.
ELECTORS
1
IT.
BiS. NICHOLS
Only Small Difference in
V Standings of the Four
! Candidates.
,;;. j ; ! . . :
LARGE 'VOTE CAST
Five Hundred and Eight
','Ballots in Hotly Con
; tested School Elec- :.;
tion Yesterday.
; B. S.' Nichols and V. T. Jackson
were elected school' directors yes
terday in ; one of the closest elec
tions to be held In the district in.
many years. ..There was a fairly
good turu.out of voters, a total of
608 votes being cast. The elec
tion was so close, however that
there was only 62 votes difference
hetwoen the highest nnd the low
est number received by the candi
dates. V' ' ' '
The election was hotly contested,
as each candidate had a great
many friends who were working
industriously in the campaign.
The voting was quite brisk from
the time the polls 'opened at 2
o'clock until the closing at 8 p. m.
When the vote was counted It was
round that B. S. Nichols had re
ceived the highest number of votes
266, with V. T. Jackson second
with 262. J. F. Byrd was third with
236 votes, despite the faot that
hi? name was not muled upon the
ballot, but had to be written in.
T. II. Ness received 213 votes. Two
blank ballots wore Cast.' 1
The two directors chosen at yes
terday's election are well quali
fied for the positions, both being
men of business ability and hav
ing a' strong Interest in the city
schools. Mr. Nichols has been
quite prominent in. many public
enterprises in the past. He has
served several years as a member
of the city council. He is active
in church work and was recently
selected to represent the Presby
terian church of this city at the as
sembly iu Los Angeles.
Mr. Jackson has been a member
of the school board for the past
three yoars and has served as
chairman during the- past year.
He has been a very valuable direc
tor because ot his executive abil
ity and has at all times been will
ing to give a great deal of time to
school work. 1 ' ,
. Marshfield Results
MARSHF1ELD, Ore., Juno 21.
School Directors A. E. Adelsperg
er and E. P. Lewis, were re-elected
over E. A. Baird and W. N. Ek
blad' yesterday after a bitter cam
paign. The recall ot Directors
Mrs. Frances H. Pock nnd C. P.
Huntington lost by a Bmnll ma
jority, leaving a deadlock In the
hnnrri in filling a vacancy unde
cided. Over two thousand votes
were vast, being more than three
times any previous vote In a school
election here. A school gymna
sium bond issue was defeated.
MISS WHITNEY IS
: PARDONED AFTER 7
YEARS IN COURT
(Associated Tri-ss leased Wire.)
SACIIAMHNTO, June 21 Char
lotte Anita Whitney, way-haired
social worker, yesterday won her
seven year fight to avoid a term
In San Quentin prison, following
conviction of syndicalism.
A pardon issued last ulnht by
Governor C. C. Young removed the
convict stigma which had grown
more and more menacing as court
after court refused her plea during
tho long legal battle hlch only
ended in tho federal supreme
court.
In explaining bis reasons for
the pardon, Young denied that
Miss Whitney could bo classes as
a "criminal" despite her violation
of the criminal syndicalism act.
Miss Whitney was arrested in
November, 181!), when she defied
Oakland police and delivered a
! speech on behalf of John Machu
go, accused I. W. W. Site was
convicted of syndicalism and the
case eventually reached the su-
iprcnie court of the United States
j which last May upheld her ronvlc-
lllon.
: Body Shipped South Dakota
I The body of Monro Spafford, !)!
year-old resident of this elty, who
'.passed away Sunday at the home
I of his graudaugliter, Mrs. A. B.
i Minium, Is being shipped by the
Itoseburg Undertaking company,
I to Dcadwoodi South Dakota, from
.where It will be taken lo Hlurgls
I for interment. Mrs, Hnttle : B.
IBrlgham, a daughter, left last
night, accompanying the remains
on the journey.
'Awaiting Nod From Weather Man
COMMANDER j'SW'' ! '
R.E.BYRD yy '
SCIENTIFIC DATA TOR
POSTERITY,
Flies Not for Adventure, but
- Weather for Future Aviatioiv Establishment of
Passenger Routes Rests on His Reports.
N13W YORK. Juno 21. This
Now York-to-Paris Hop-off vogue
hus now reached the statistical, tho
scientific stage. .
Hazard heroes have had their
fling. .They have added much to
romance and legend, hut little to
exact science. That can bo done,
they have demonstrated, hut they
have provided no charts, no 'fig
ures and no data for the necosBary
conclusions of those who calculate
in terms of the future. (
. , Air Sherlock. '
And that's whoro Commander
Tfli-ltuwl I?. rtvi-,1 nnmnu In 1-Ilu
rolo is that of an "airplane Shor
' lock," who must apply ticuto oh-
iservntion, analysis mid . deduction
I to his task. That myslorlous sky
way lying between Amerlcu and
France must he charted, its air
currents, landninrks and. weather
studied, ': us the-. 'early- m'arlners
charted (he sea for reefs and
Islands and other dangers to fu
ture navigators.
Atlantic Air Lines.
Thereafter, with everything nice
ly noted on blueprints nnd maps,
filers enn begin to approximate the
practicability of air lines across
the A l hi n 1 1 c.
A Lindbergh's exploit goes Inlo
tho records of - glamorous adven
ture; a Ilyrd's exploit rocs Into tho
records of standardized Htatlstlcs.
Ho will avoid the more dangerous
route; he will perhaps add many
inllos lo ' Iho flying distance of
Lindbergh and fhamhorlln, follow
ing closer to Hie sleamer lanes; he
will make Ills conditions as nearlv
Ideal as possible. Such Is Iho way
of established truffle!
PAVED HIGHWAY I
WEED TO KLAMATH
ANNOUNCED PLAN;
(AkM'IhIi.I I'r' l-iisf. Win-)
SAN FRANCISCO, Juno 21--Stnte
.Senator J. .1. Murphy of
Weed, California, annittnceil yes
terday after a lour of Iho north
ern California counties that plnns
for a paved highway from the Pa
cific highway at Weed to Klamath
Falls, Oregon, would he discussed
at a conference to be held in Sac
ramento, July 20. Tho object is
to provide a direct motor route
to the Klamath region In compe
tition wllh the Oregon hlghwny.
SALKM, Ore., June 21 The
slate highway commission an
nounced today that the McKenzle
Pass is now open to truffle. A snow
plow broke thru at '8 o'clock lust
nlghf, followed by a line of cars
from Bend.
BYRE
to Chart' Atlantic Skyway
That, for many years, has been
the story of Commander Ilyrd. He
haB dedicated himself to mingling
the romnnco ot pioneering with tho
practical ami scientific. Though
he stands as one of tho nation's
finost explorers, ho has let scien
tific, purpose strip him of consider
able glninor. Ho may not. fire the
public ImaKluntinn as u Lindbergh,
nor hold it captive as long,. hut bo
has already achieved the lminor
lullly of Iho historians. ,
Ills flight across Iho polo attend
ed to that, llefore then, he was
setting down data for tho sea
ships that plough I ho Icy lanes of
the Arctic, And his records will
not end in Paris. If ho decides not
to fly a rolurn trip, you can put it
down In your note book that ho will
be In tile vnnguard of those who
circle Hie globe. If not thlB time,
then somo other. ...
A Virginian.
Science lias a way of taking Its
ttme and In nil things Commander
Ilyrd Is carefully methodical.. Ho
came out ot Virginia, where his
brother Is tho governor. In appear
ance nnd actions ho Is typical of
the high-bred "southern gentle
men." Ho was on Iho field to bid
1,1 ii (I hoi Kh Uod-spced and ho dated
his take-off after the Lindbergh
welcome.
That's- Tllchard Ilyrd, all over!
Sincere, considerate, enthusiastic
over the reals of olhers, first to
rccoguizo iho other fellow's vic
tory a true sportsman!
Upon his report will rest largely
the future of passenger flying
ncross tlie Atlantic. The men who
navigate tho sky In years to come
will Htenr by his stars!
SNOW HALTS BOY
SCOUTS ON WAY
TO THREE SISTERS
j K. A. Billion, scout execntlvo for
i mis anu jjougias counties nns
written homo that tho Boy Scouts,
who recently left Roseburg for nn
outing In the Threo Sisters dlB-
Irfcl have been located at Alder
Spring but Intended to leave today
for Frog camp. They were halted
; by snow but expected lo be able
j to get through lo their destination
I today. They will leave Friday or
j Monday, Mr. Ilrilton says, and will
j go lo Bend and then In to Diamond
Luke, making the trip by auto.
J Letters may be addressed to the
boys In Frog Camp. Scout Camp In
Stage Terminal Hotel, Kugene. !
Mrs. O. Lindsay left yesterday af
ternoon for Portland lo spend n
few days on business and visiting.
BYRD CHOOSES
3RD
COMPANION
OC AS
Lieutenant , Bernt Balchen,
Former Norwegian Army .
Officer, Is Named.
WIDELY!, EXPERIENCED
Hop-Off: (Across i Atlantic
for Paris Will : Occur .
, t ; Tnmnrrnw A M at . 1
the Earliest.
(Associated Press Leased Wire.) ?
NEW YORK, June 21. Takeoff
for France of the four.man crew
of the monoplane "America" will
be impossible either tonight or to
morrow -morning, and present at
moapherlc conditions do not look
favorable for a hop-off any time to
morrow, jamae H. Kimball, weath
er .meteorologist, announced today.
ROOSEVELT FIELD, June 21
Formal announcement, was made
today that a fourth man will travol
Iu the trans-Atlantic monoplane,'
America, on Its ocean flight anil
that the man will lie: Bernt pal
chen, former lieutenant in tha
Norwegian army. . '
"I decided to take a fourth man,"
Commander Richard E. Byrd, who
Is in charge of the expedition, an
nounced, "to demonstrate that
such a number can be carried on
a trans-oceanic trip. I would like
to call tills fourth man a passenger,
but Balchen is so useful that in
effect at least, he will be an . Im
portant mombor of the crew. Ho
deserves lo go' along because. ot
all the help he has given us and
because he has- proved himself til
he. a man," ; , , -. . ,.-.
Ill tlllllUIIUUlllK JISIUUCU a nil
polntment this morning Byrd said
there seemed to be only about one
chance in 10 of hopping off for Eu
rope tonight. He said that with
sucli weather reports as he had he
would tentatively set tomorrow
morning as the earliest time for a
takeoff, 'More complete reports
of atmospheric . conditions due .
later in the day, however, he ack
nowledged, might alter this guess
elthor forward or back,
Balchen Experienced
Lieutenant Balchen is an experi
enced pilot, navigator and me
chanic. He came into wide no
tice in 1925 when he flew over
the Artie wastes in search ot the
missing expedition headed by
Roald Amundsen. Last year he
was a member of Amundsen s
North Polo expedition in the air
ship Norge, being stationed at
Spitzbergen.
There he became friendly with
Commandor Byrd, who was ggttlns
ready for hla polar flight In the
MIbh Josephine Ford and after
Byrd have flown over the pole, ho
brought Balchen back to this coun
try with him. 1
Balchen .became a member ot
the flying staff of the Fokker air
plane staff at Teterboro, and it
was he who made the final testa
on the America and flew it from
New Jersey to Roosevelt Field,
where Is was officially turned over
to Byrd. During the month of pre
paration here Balchen has been
constantly about the hangar, aid
ing In many ways. Byrd said to
day that. Balchen probably would
be called on durln the flight lo
net us nuvlgntor while he takes hie
(Continued on page 6.)
PRAGUE-NEW YORK
FLIGHT LATEST ON
AVIATION PROGRAM
(Assoflslril Press Leased Wire)
PRAGUE, Czecho slovakia, June'
21 Two Czecho-Slovak airmen.
Captain Franz Malkovsky and
Lieutenant Ludwlg Pavlovsky, an
nounced today their intention to
fly from Prague to New York and
r4turn In Auguslt. Thelr; plane
and Its motors will be Czecho-Slovak
manufacture.
Plans for trans-Atlantic flights
were announced at London Monday
by two British lmperinl airways
fliers Captain Robert H. Macin
tosh and Lieutenant Colonel F. F.
Mlnchin. They hoped to fly back
across the Atlantic, nfter refuel
ling and an 8-hour rest.
The Lindbergh and Chamberljn
flights also have spurred Oerman
aviators to thoughts ot making a
wcatw are" flight across the ocean.
Advices from Oerman Monday said
that Ernst Udot, noted airman,
was seeking a suitable machine
I In which to atlempt an air voyugo
to the United States and return
during Hie summer. Another Oer
man, Otto Koemiocke, Is planning
4- ,lnriBl,a nnn.atnn fl I fir II t from
1 Berlin lo San Francisco, with a
brief stop at New York.
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