News-. , Cfta Weather Highest temperature yesterday 69 Lowest temperature last night 49 Forecast for southwest Oregon: Unsettled tonight and Wednesday, mild temperature. . 1BIQKG and Local t Z7 4 Industries F ITSt : . -rfj An Independent Newspaper, Publishes tat the Best Interests of ths People, Consolidation ot The Evening News and The Roseburg Review ROSEBURG, OREGON, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1927. OL XXVIII NO. 152 OF ROSEBURG REVIEW VOL. XVIII NO. 226 OF THE EVENING NEWS t i, 1 mm BAD WEATHER IS AGAIN CAUSE OF DELAYING 'DAWN' Study of Reports Made by Steamers , Forces . . Postponement. NEW LANDING GEAR Trying Scheme to Raise Gear Hurriedly Allow ing Pontoons for Water Landing. (Auociated Pnu Iued Wire! OLD ORCHARD, Maine, Oct. 18. Adverse conditions today apainst forced postponement of the Euro pean flight of Mrs. Frances Wilson 'Grayson and her two companions In their amphibian plane, The Dnwn. A radio poll of steamships Rhowed contrary winds clear across the Atlantic. Undismayed by their false start yesterday when an excess load of gasoline made the machine nose heavy and forced a return less than o quarter of an hour after the take off and after a large quantity of fuel had been hastily jettisoned, the fliers had hoped to get a,way with first available , tidal condi tions this forenoon. Mrs. Grayson herself announced the enforced delay (today after he, together with Brlce Goldsborough, the navigator, and Wilmer Stultz, pilot, had studied the 'weather re port gathered for them by the Ra dio Corporation of America through Its Chatham, Massachusetts, sta tion, i Mrs. Grayson Bald that the delay would be utilized in an attempt to speed up the hydraulic median. am for lowering the landing gear. On ;. returning to the beach yesterday ; the Dawn . was forced to circle nbout almost eight minutes before the landing wheels, drawn up as., the ship went out uver the water, ' could be lowered for the landing. The plane Itself Is fullv ready' for the new attempt. Gasoline which was dumped had been re-J piacea anu mecnanics were ran King a few additional minor adjust ments. ' ' LACK OF FISH ; THIS YEAR 1 AnocUted Pre Leaaed Wire) REDDING, Cnllf., Oct. 18. Be cause of lack of fish the fall take of salmon In the McCloud Rivor United States fishery at Baird has been abandoned this year for the first time in a qarter of a century. The streum was so muddy from glacial flow all winter , and last summer that it was impossible for the fish to 'live. FALLING TREE (Aaaoctated Pre Leaaed Wire) EUREKA, Calif., Oct., 18. Ben jamin Peterson, 45, died last night from Injuries received when he was struck by a falling tree in the wood of the Little River Redwood Lumber company twenty miles north of here. He is survived by a brother In Oregon. . . .& . ., GIRL-MQTHER IS (Aaeoclated Pre Leaaed Wire) SAND POINT, Idaho. Oct. 18 Margaret Brooks, 20 year old Ravalli, Montana, girl- mother, was sentenced to one year In the state penitentiary on a charge of manslaughter here yesterday when she ad- mitted throwing her baby boy out of a train window. The Infant s body was found near Granite,, Idaho, September Id. HERE'S A BIT OF BRAVERY FOR YOU, FOLKS! (AaaocUted Pieaa Leased Wire) ' BATAVIA, N. Y.. Oct. 18. Androcles showed great courage in removing the thorn from the lion, but Batavia citizens were asking today how about Harry Rus sell and Lockwood Ager. "There's a skunk running around here with a can on," said an unidentified voice telephoning to police head quarters. "Well, what do you want us to do, make an arrest on a public intoxication charge?" the desk sergeant answered. It developed, however, that a full grown skunk was running blindly around in Franklin street ' with a sal mon can wedged over its head, unable ' to find the open fields back , of the street. Russell and Ager, em ployes of. a factory, .picked up the skunk before the po lice arrived and with a pair of shears removed the ican from its head and allowed the animal to scurry away uninjured. The appreciative skunk spared its benefactors. TOPI COAL FIELDS THREAT RED AGITATORS Denver's I. W. W. Distiir ' bances Reach Serious ' . Proportions. HOLDING MEETINGS Four Thousand Miners in , Boulder Field Meet and : Decide to Walkout . Officials Worried. (Associated rren Leaaed Wire) ; DENVER, Colo., Oct.' 18. Den ver's I. W. W. agitation which had its root in sympathy for. Sacco and Vauzetti, grew to fulfillment today as" the state faced a possible tleup of its coal fields as'-the re suits of caTling a general coal strike by I. W. W. leaders last night, to become effective today. With the I. W. W. agitation sweeping from the Southern Colo rado coal district to the Boulder coal fields, law enforcing bodies In the districts affected mar shalled their forces early today to combat any disturbances ' or at tempts on the part of I. W. W. strikers to prevent those' that re fused to strike from reporting for work at the mines. Thomas Annear, chairman of the Colorado State Industrial com mission with George Taylor, com mission member, were "standing by" at Walsenburg today until the exact extent of the strike is de termined) What line 'of action the commission would follow In case the strike took on a serious aspect had not been announced today. . Meetings were held last night at Walsenburg, Agullar, Lafayette and Boulder, with I. W. W. lead ers spurring miners on to make the strike a "100 per cent, propo sition. . First word of the spread ot the agitation to the Boulder field was received here last night when it was learned that more than 4,000 miners, .representing that entire section, had met and voted unani mously to walk out. : The meeting was held in a baseball park and presided over by A. S. Embree, I. W. W. member from the southern field. .The meeting had been scheduled for a down 'town' hall. bat the crowd was so Immense that it had to adlourn to the ball park, where automobile spotlights were used for Illumination. ' At waisenourg the miners num bering 400 met in the I. W. W. headquarters building which last Saturday night was raided by Mayor 'John J. Prlchard and committee of business men and all records burned. Permission for I the meeting last night was granted ; by Msyor Prlchsrd who accepted the responsibility for Saturday night s raid. v ' Intense excitement was evident at Agullar last night when mem hers of the town council met with L W.iW. leaders and discussed the ,' (Continued, on page CI - FALL-SINCLAIR JuRYCDMPLETE TRIAL STARTED Forty Talesmen Examined in Selecting Body to Hear the Case. TWO ARE WOMEN Celebrated Case to Deter ; mine Whether Two Men Conspired in Dispos ing of Oil Lease. (Associated Pren Leued Wire) WASHINGTON, Oct. 18. The jury for the trial of Albert B. Fall and Harry F. Sinclair was com pleted today at 12:18 p. m. after the examination ot forty talesmeu. WASHINGTON, Oct 18. After two days of painstaking examina tion, a jury was placed In the box today to decide whether Albert B. Fall, former secretary of the in terior, and Harry F. Sinclair, oil promoter, conspired criminally in disposing of the lease of the navy's great-Teapot -Dome oil reserve. ' The jury was completed alter a veritable procession of talesmen in and out of the box. Although when court opened only one jur or's seat remained vacant, chal lenge after challenge from both government ana uetonse removed those to whom the lawyers ob jected. The jury which win near tne celebrated case consists of two women, one married and one single and ten men, eight married and two single. The jurors all live in the. District oc Columbia; and are as follows: ' " Mrs. Annela L, Bailey, clerk, age not elicited. - - MUs Bernlce Heaton, a tele phone Instructor, age not elicited. Gardner P.- Crenfell, .26, single. cable splicer. , William H. Goucner, 39, married. a tire vulcanised Conrad J; Herzog, 56, married. saleB manager. . ' 1 . , Robert ..C. Flora, 39, married, sales agent.' ' ' " Jbhn P; Kern, 32, married, sales man. . r'r Bradirer W, . Holmes, -34, -mar-. rled, department store floor mana ger! ' ' 1 John P. Cosllnett, 61, married. tailor. ' . . ': ... t i. Norman L. Glos&cock, , 47, mar-, rieu, clerk. , , . Edward J. Kldwell.'j'r.. 31. single. leather worker. ' , Charles Holt, 63, married, retired brick mason. One of the flrs't jurors' to be re moved from-the box' today was Mrs. Pauline Levitt, chosen yes terday with the two other .women (continued on page three.) MAN WITH TEN WIVES CAUGHT; WORRY IS OVER , (Asm-latrd Press Leaaed Wire) 1 CHICAGO, Oct. 1 8. i Women have caused Alfred Herbert, 32, more or less concern, if the police ac count of his being friarried to ten of them at the 'same time is accurate. Thus it was something of a coincidence that .his ar rests on a bigamy , charge late yesterday was made by a woman police officer. The policewoman, with drawn revolver, arrested Herbert in front of a loop . office building where he was em-, ployed as private watch man. ,t His father, Frank Her bert, said he knew of "at least six wives" of his son. Two "Mrs. Herbert's"; met at the police station and by comparing notes and infor mation brought the total to ten. Some' of the women to whom Herbert may have been married are believed by police to live in San Fran cisco and inquiries are be ing made there. TAX REDUCTION FOR YEAR TO BE $250,000,000 Treasury Officials Regard I Estimate of Thsit Sum - a Safe One.' . ' ' OTHERS TOO HIGH U S. Chamber Commerce and Finance Committee Estimates Declared .. . to Be Excessive. (Auoclnted Pros Leafed. Wire) WASHINGTON, Oct. 18. After studying figures on the prospec tive surplus from the current. fis cal year, treasury officials es:i mated today that tax reduction could not safely exceed $250,000, 000. ' ' ' The controlling factor for tax curtailment In 1929, a high trea sury .official declared, will bo .the (Continued on page 6.) The Little Gray Dome in the Where the The cross marks the locality where the tank steamer Barendrecht .Florida flapper, and her pilot and New York.to.Pans line, and was neadea ror uisoon wnen a oroKon on thirds of the journey had been completed. ROSEBURG MAN GUILTY OF POLYGAMY; 3 YEARS IN 10 . (Auoclnted rre Leaied Wire) ' KANSAS CITY, MO., Oct. IS. A human serum has been discovered for the treat- ment of Infantile paralysis and has recently been admin? 4 lstered to fifty patients in a Massachusetts hospital. ij)r. Milton J. Hosenau, profosBor of preventative medicine at Harvard -University, said .last night at . the Joint meeting here of the post graduate medical association and the 4 Kansas City Southwest CUnl- cal . Society.,. , Br. Itosenau warned his auditors ngaiiiBt assuming that a cure for the now epidemic - disease had been found, and pointed out that . use of the serum ' was only in the early stages of 'development. t The serum is prepared from the blood of. convttlus- cent parnlytlc patients. EARL CARROLL IS TO GET A PAR'OLE , ' ' (Anoelatnl Pre Leaied Wire) 1 4 WASHINGTON, Oct. 18. Earl Carroll, New York the- alrical producer, has been re- commended for a parole by parole board. ' ' ': 11 West i Flying Flapper Was navigator. The map also pictures FOUND LIVING WITH WIFE'S Left Wife In This City . and Took Girl To - Hood River - (AMoclatcd Pren Leued Wite) HOOD RIVER, Ore., Oct. 18. Sam Heinken, 46, plead ed guilty in circuit court today to a charge of polygamy, un der a statute passed in 1864, and was sentenced to three years in the state penitentiary. The law which the district at tomey's office said fitted the case, provides that where a man is legally married ..and thereafter lives with another woman as his wife he is guilty of polygamy, though he has not been married to the second woman.' Heinken was married at Roseburg in 1926, and was charged with having lived with his wife's daughter, Maybelle Taylor, 17, for several months this year at North Bend, Ore' gon, and other Coos Bay points while his wife remained at Roseburg; Recently Heinken and 'the : girl ' came'' to Hood River picking tipples in orch. ards her.' His wife became sus picious and started an invest gation which resulted in Hein ken's arrest Saturday. County Budget Completes At the mooting of (lie county budget committee Monday to con sider the needs of 1928 tho total amount allowed was $169,140.05 Ipsr the estimated receipts of $16,- 960.03. leaving the general county levy $142,189.02. Increases total ling around $10,000 were asked by the various county offices In their tentative budgets for next year and submitted before the committee named' by the county court and consisting of Rpencor Hinsdale of Reedsport, C. O. Garret of Olnn dale and Napoleon Rice of Rose burg. Tho $4,750 asked for roads and highways was allowed by the com mittee. - The sum of $3,600 was asked for election fund, but because of tho fact that two elections must be held In 1928 tho sum was Increas ed by the committee to $7,650. The amount asked by the Sher iff and tax office was cut $300, the amount asked being $14,780 and the sum allowed was $14,480. The sheriff's office, in the budget, ask ed for the Increase to provide for an extra deputy to take care of the sddltional work thrust upon the of fice by the state through handling of automobile licenses and to as sist in th law enforcement work. .To provide for board of prison ers the Jail fund was set at $2,000 but was cut (ISO, making the sum DAUGHTER Rescued rescued Ruth Elder, ths flying where the plans deviated from ths pins rorceo ii Down, more man iw. IS KILLED IN AUTO II J (AmocUIkI Pre team) Wire) ' , MARTINEZ, Calif., Oct. 18.! A middle aged, iinldentl- 4 fled man believed to have come from Oregon, died at a local hospital today ot Injur- les received when the auto- mobile on which he was glv- en a "lift" crashed into an Ice truck. ' - . The man Was plowed up by v y.i..i. Jtoiey wno, Willi hod- 9 ert ltuckman, both of Marti- 4 nez, wore headed for .Bay Point. In the collision the stranger was hurled to the 4 pavement and neither ot the two men was hurt. The name J. A. Drlskell, Marshfield, Oregon, was founil penciled on the tailor's mark of his coat. It - was used by the police to' chock the man's Identity. v FOURTEEN FEDERAL Tf (Aaaoclital Pre- peaaed Wire) ' NO0AI.E8, Ariz., Oct. 18. Spe cial dispatches to tho Herald to day say that 14 Mexican federals were,klllod and 48 wounded In furious fighting Wednesday near Suchil on the border between. Vera Cms and Pucbla states with rebel followers ot General 'Arnulfo It. Gomez, Insurgent presidential can didate. THEATER IS ROBBED (Aaanclaled I'reaa Leaaeil Wire) MARSHFIELD, Ore., Oct. 18.- Robbers looted the . safe of the Liberty, theater at Coqullle ot $400 early yesterday and escaped, leaving no clue. Committee Work; Reports 11.850. ... The county clerk's office was al lowed $150 less than In last year's fund. In 1927 $8,840 was allowed and for 1928 only $8,690 was allow ed by the committee. The budget for the treasurer's office was allowed, the sum bolug $3,200. The naseasnr'N hiidget was cut $200, making the amount $10,500. The court house was allowed $4,180 In the budget The circuit court asked $7,450 and was allowed $6,850. The county court was allowed $7,840. the cut being $375. . In the Justice court the amount asked, $2,300, was cut to $1,950. Tho county coroner was allow ed $1,000, nn cut being made. The county school superinten dent's office was allowed $3,900. The bureau of Vital statistics was allowed $150, the sum of $175 asked In the budget being decreas ed $25. The county home and Indigents budget was allowed, the sum bo- In" $15,435. The budget of $7,000 for depen dent mothers was allowed. The county agent and fruit In spector budget asked for $1,550 and was allowed $4,300. Tho sum of $2,935 asked hy the . (Continued on page tlx.); PEN CRASH RUTH EMBARKS ON STEAMSHIP; Wave Farewell, to Islander and Is Still Wearing ; Captain's Cap, , !r EXHIBITED NERVE Charleston With a ( Hand- Englishman , some englishman , on ! Wall: fof.. VeraBahi' i '; j ooe Harbor. t j hi' : f, - i n - r ; . ) ! (Aamrtated.Fre- teaaad Win) HORTA, jsland Of Fayal, Asores, i Still weariiig Captain Goos' cap as ' a reminder of her thrilling; rescne by the steaniBhlp Barendrecht, Ruth Elder sailed early this morn. : tng for Lisbon aboard the Portu- guese mall boat Lima 1 with' the ; cheers of a great crowd of spec- -tators whose hearts she had com pletely won, ringing in her ears.- With her sailed George W. Hal- trans-Atlantlb 1 venture'' in the ' monoplune American Girl, and the two- waived a vigorous farewell n , the mall boat crept away from ths city bathed In a brilliant moon- . light. ' The last view of the Amerloan aviatrlx, who had captivated her hosts by her spontaneity and de mocracy, was the picture of a tiny . figure aboard the Lima, waving hands, blowing klsBes and made more jaunty than ever by Captain Goos" hat polBed . on her wind-. losseu ouris. "Has my luggage gone below?" was the flrBt question Bhe asked as she boarded the ship and the crowd laugliad at the quip, know ing that tho clothes she had on plus fours and red sweater Includ ed were nil that she had been able to rescue from her plane. .... Horta, during the three-day vis it, of the American aviatrlx, wlt nessed one incident that gave proof of Miss Elder's nerve when she Charlestoned with a handsome englishman on the - wall or the veranda of the Mackay house, de spite tho tact that the wall rlaea above the harbor below. - Lilly Dillons, Viennese actress and passenger aboard the Junkers plane D-1230 which is now wait ing for favorable weather "to re sume Its flight across the Atlantic to the United States, has deep praise for the little American, flier. .',?., , , "I have never been so charmed by another woman," said Madame Dlllens, whose path by a strange quirk of fate had crossed that of Miss Elder at this island town far from their, respective starting points. , Tho crew of the D-1230 . last night decided to postpone their tnke-off until tonight. ' A heavy swoll In the harbor ' last night made 'a tako-oft un.wiBe. It was raining today with but a slight wind. ' . SON LOCAL PEOPLE ! -MADE COXSWAIN OF 150 POUND CREW Hall Seely, soa of Dr. and Mrs. A. C. Reely of Roseburg, who en tered his third year at Yale Uni versity this fall, has been made coxswain of the 150 pound varsity crew, according to word received here. The first coxswains chosen alternnto In taking the crow out each night until within two weeks of the spring regatta at the uni versity and at that time one of the men Is permanently made cox Bwaln of the erew. He and an other student are the coxswains who will alternately take out the crew. ' There will be a number of crews In training at tho university during this winter. TOUCHES IT OFF 4 (Aanetated Preaa Leued Win) 4 WALLACE, Idaho. Oct. 18. Daniel C. McUlnnJs, 59, committed suicide by dyna- mile. The body was found yester- day near Mullen, with the ab- domen blown away. McUIn- nls had tied the stick of ex- plosive to his stomach before setting off the blast. Ho was a miner. - . He leaves four children and a widow, who said that he had been drinking heavily. 44)444444444444 ENROUTE