Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948, January 21, 1929, Page 1, Image 1

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    J
T
Weather
Highest temperature yesterday .30
Lowest temperature last night.-25
Forecast for interior Southwest
Oregon: U nettled tonight and
Tuesday with snow turning to
rain; rising temperature.
THE NEWS-REVIEW
Goes Into Over
4200
Homes Every Day
EBU1RGI
Consolidation of Tht Evening Newt
, The Roseburg Review
" rt o
DOUGL AS COUNTY
.ndent Newspaper. Published for
the Best Interests of the People
ROSEBURG. OREGON, MONDAY. JANUARY 21. 1929.
VOL. XXIX NO. 233 OF ROSEBURG REVIEW
VOL. XIX NO. 313 OF THE EVENING NEWS
N
I
5
J
DIES fN CHAIR
Murderer Who Began Life
as Choir Singer Spurns
Religion at Finale.
ARROGANCE IS GONE
Falters in Paralytic State
in Death Chamber; Took
Seven Lives, Once
Broke Jail.
(AMocIitcd Prew !ad Wire)
ROCKVIRW PRISON, Itellfdnte,
Pa., Jan. 21. Paul Jaworski, no
torious bandit chieftain and killer,
today paid with his life for the
part he admitted playing iu the
deaths of seven men. lie died as he
had lived, a man without religion,
going to the electric chair here un
attended except by two guards.
Directly after Jaworski had boon
pronounced dead, Calivln D. James,
or Upper Darby, was strapped In
the chair and paid the toll for hav
ing killed a Doylestown bootlegger.
Jaworakl was given his first
shock at 7:02 and was declared
(lead at 7:06. James took his first
shock at 7:10 and was officially
dead at 7:14. Robert Elliot, official
execut loner for several states,
threw the switch that sent both
men Into eternity.
Arrogance Gone
Jaworski, supported by two
guards, entered the death chamber
in a daze. The arrogant attitude he
had steadfastly maintained was
gone, liis flatering step, produced
by a paralyzed leg, the result of
police bullets, caused him to be
supported.
As he stepped up to the chair ho
3tumhled on the foot electrode.
The guards prevented his falling
and he was seated in the chair of
death. Three men. Including the
fxeculioner. strapped him in. Then
Elliot stepped directly behind the
rhnlr, took a last glance at the
killer and threw the switch.
James had spiritual guidance as
he entered the death house. He
was hastily bound to the chair, the
executioner again stepped back
and after the first shock James
was pronounced dead.
Shot Way to Liberty
Jaworski in his younger days
was known as Piul Pallas, a
church choir sinaer.
He was leader of the Flathead
mob of payroll robbers of the Pitts
burgh district. At one time his
gang mined a highway and blew
an armored payroll car from the
road. The mob specialized in pay
roll robberies, and during one of
these Jaworski killed a f;ard. For
tint crime he was sentenced to
death.
Awaiting nonience in the Alle
gheny county jail fn downtown
litth-burgh, Jaworski In August,
!'L'7, made a daring escape. Aided
bv a two-sun man. who met him
in the visitor's cage, he shot his
way through the corridors, out the
main door and into an automobile.
, Two guards were wounded.
For months Jaworski was In hid
ing. A Pittsburgh resident, who
knew the criminal, spotted him in
Cleveland restaurant. The police i
were called. As they stepped into
the doorway, Jaworski drew two
guns and attempted to shoe! his
(Continued on page 6.)
1
r
fJ CHICAGO POLICE
E
f. .-iatin prt lnw1 Wire)
CFIICAGO. Jsn. 21. Three thou
sand persons were arrested be
tween Saturday nlchtfall and to
day's dawn in one of the mot sud
den, widespread and successful
police drives In the history of Chi
cago. v
Haids were conducted ngalnst
every known habitat of the gang'
pter, gunman and robber. The
theatre district swarmed with plain
cle'bcs men. seeking the "dress
suit" crooks, and police patrols
were booked for hours ahead, so
so swift were the arrests.
The drfre was Police Chief Wil
liam Husselt's an?w.-r to a week of
crime marked by 1"2 roSberies In
which four per5on were shot deal
and several others sf riously
wounded.
Two-thirds of the city's force of
5.000 policemen were kept on
double duty over Sunday to lnmr
the success of the drive.
MINSK
FOR HIS GRIMES
AL G. BARNES
SUED BY WIFE
bm war reaching;
( SERIOUS STAGE
Circus life and the atmosphere of
the sawdust ring were scheduled
to be detailed in the separate main
tenance ruit of Sarah Jane Barnes
Stonehouse against Al G. Barnes
Stonehouse, better known as Al G.
Barnes, circus proprietor. The
circus man's wife formerly was the
star equestrienne in his show and
was named co-respondent in a bit
terly fought divorce suit against
Barnes several- years ago. . Mrs.
Barnes-Stonehouse, in her present
suit, brought in Los Angeles, narred
another bareback rider, Carlotta
Bricker, as co-respondent in her
action. Mrs. Barnes Stonehouse
asks 82500 monthly allowance and
$50,000 attorney fees. She alleges
in her petition that Barnes is worth
over two and one-half millions.
(Atvlt InM retell Wit)
SAX HKRNARD1NO, Calif . Jan.
21. A Sunday motoring family of
six. including a grandfather, today
was describing to their neiehbors
the frights nnd thrills of having an j
airplane swoop out of a snow
swirling sky to collide head-on
with their automobile and of how,
good It was to have escaped with
nothing more than a severe Jolting.!
The lone aviator, who was
cnu?ht in a raging snowstorm
which swirled down from the San;
Bernardino mountains to the,
fringes of southern California's,
orange groves, likewise was alive;
and able to tell the unusual tale, j
The mute evidence of the crash
a plane with a broken propeller
and wing, and a motor car with a
smashed radiator and hood stood
ahamloned In the ditch alongside
the National Old Trails highway
three miles east of here.
On the records of the San Ber
nardino police station, where the
survivors were brought last nlcht
by other Sunday motorists, were
written the seriou facts and the
having humor of the highway cnl
lisdon. There was the officially
riven but humoroun statement of
William Tlce. the white-haired
motoring grandfather, that the
j plane and the car were on their
own or the ngat sfies or tne
road."
Richard Crooks, the aviator, re
ported tt the snowstorm, sweep
ing out of Cajon Pass, forced him
to turn back toward his air field
st San Bernardino Ps Increasing
f.iry forced him to k a land ng
where h could, rather than en
danrer Mmeif among the snow-
hiddfn wires and buildings of th
: rltv. The rond. and an
apparently
clear stretch, presented itself
'crooks was about to set the plane
onto the paved roadway when th
Tl motor car poked out of the
white wall ahead.
CHICAGO'S If K
Big Quantities Destroyed
or Spoiled; One Truck
Driver Manhandled.
SUPPLY RUNS SHORT
City Authorities Call for
Inquiry by Grand Jury;
Federal Department
Agent Enroute.
r.Mnrlat-4 PfM I-oawil W"!n)
CHICAdO, Jan. M. City health
authorities today demanded a
grand Jury investigation of the
"dairymen's strike" that menaces
Chicago's nittk supply.
There were several reports of
violence by armed men; of the
dumping of thousands of pounds of
milk; and of mixing of kerosene
with milk. Dr. Arnold Kegel, Chi
cago health commissioner, has
asked the state's attorney's office
to institute grand, jury action.
.eaders of the striking milk farm
ers said they would welcome it.
All Demands Supplied
Chicago's milk supply yesterday
was 4mu,000 quarts under normal,
yet the distributors said they had
been able to supply all demands. A
shoitage as great, or greater, was
predicted for today.
Dr. Kegel asked Mayor Thomp
son for a $15.0u0 emergency appro
priation to be used in employing
chemists. Additional chemists are
needed, the commissioners said,
to keep a 2-1-hour staff available
for the testing of milk and for the
protection of the city's health.
Almost the entire supply of one
arge dealer was found polluted by
kerosene. The pollution was
blamed by distributors upon the
strikers who are demanding $25
a hundredweight Instead of the
$2.50 distributors are paying.
Uncle Sam Steps in
A department of justice agent
was expected today to begin an in
vestigation, 1'nited States Senator
Otis K. Glenn told officials of the
pure milk association in response
to their plea that he awk that de
partment to intervene in the dis
pute. Dr. Isaac Hawitngs, director
of the state department of health,
also volunteered services of his de
partment. Additional producers joined the
strikers' ranks yesterday as vio
lence became more widespread.
Deliveries to receiving plants of
(he two largest distributors, the
Howman and l'orden dairy com
panies, have decreased dally.
Man Beaten Insensible
John K. Stancy was pet upon by
seven men, armed with shotguns,
near Lake Forest yesterday. He
was pulled from his truck, beaten
unconscious and bis load of al
most l.Onu pounds of milk was
dumped into a ditch.
About 30,oiH) pounds nf milk
were destroyed yesterday : 2.500
pounds dumped from two trucks at
(Continued on page 3)
(Awv!at-1 Vrm ll Wire)
NEW YOKK. Jan. 21 The body
of Leonard Cllne, novelist, who
was released from Jail last July,
was found In his Greenwich village
studio yesterday. The medical ex
aminer said he had been dead five
days. Heart disease was indicated
as the cause of death.
Helen Todd, agent for the build
ing in which the author had bis
quarters, said Clfne bad complain
ed of pain In the heart at a party
at which he was hont last Tuesday
nieht. That was the last time he
was seen alive.
hast July Cline was released
from a Connecticut prison where
he served ten months of a year's
sentence for manslaughter for the
slaying of his friend. Wilfred Ir
win, advertising man. Irwin died nf
a shotgun wound after a party at
('line's farm. The author main
tained the shooting was accidental.
During his Incarceration he turn
ed to the study of theology.
Before he d' voted his time to
novel writing Cline was employed
as a reporter and critic on news
papers in Chicago, Detroit, Balti
more and New York, lie was a
frequent contributor to magazines.
His wife, Mrs. Katherin O.
Clfne. waa notified of his death at
the home of her parents in De
, trolt.
l
SENATE CONFIRMS
CABINET MEMBER
BY 54 TO 27 VOTE
4 ( AM.vi.it rtl I'rt-M lflfc-J Win-)
WASHINGTON. Jan. 21-
Dy exactly the two-thirds ma-
jority required, the senate to-
day confirmed the nomination
of Roy West of Chicago to be
secretary of interior. The
vote was 54 to 27 and the sen-
ate then voted not to make
the roll call public.
Confirmation followed three
days of senate discussion in
executive session. Opposition
to the nominee was voiced by
republican Independents who
complained particularly of
Air. West's former holding of
stock in the Samuel lnsull 4
utility Interests.
The attack on West was
led by Chairman Nye, of the
lands committee, which re-
commended his confirmation
by a vole of 9 to 4 along with
Senator Norris of Nebraska.
Senator Deneen and Glenn,
4 republicans, of Illinois, de- 4
4fended the cabinet officer, 4
4 joined by several democrats. 4
444444444444444
DOLLAR LIU OH
'J I! Ui
( Awvlilfl PrtrM Lca t Win)
NEW YORK. Jan. 21. Her 81
passengers transferred to another
ship, the Dollar liner President
Garfield was hard aground today j
on a ooral reef in the liahama is-1
lands. :'
The passengers, with their bag-
gage and the ship's mail cargo, j
were taken by the Pan-America lo :
be landed at Nassau, Bahama is-1
lands, today.
The l'an-America went to thg ,
assistance of the President Gar
field when the ship sent out an 3 1
()' S at 7:2B a. m. yesterday. The'
dl.Htress call was followed by
wireless messages saying the Dol
lar liner was aground on the Mu
tluilla reefs at the northern tip jf
the Jiahaina islands.
Announcement of the safe trans
fer of the passengers 12 hours la
ter was made by Itohert K. Duff,
operating manager of the Dollar
line here, lie paid the officers and
crew of the President Garfield,
numbering 1.10, bad remained
aboard their ship, which was not
taking water and wits In no im
mediate danger.
The President Garfield left Ne
Yoik last Thursday, starting on a
world cruise.
LEWIS PLANS COMEBACK
NEW YOHK. Jan. 21. Kd
(St rangier) he win, who lost his
heavyweight wrestling crown to!
the former Inrtmouth star, GusJ
Sonnenberg, recently, makes his!
first New York appearance in five)
years tonight, w resiling Itenaio
Gardlni in a finish match at Medi-j
son Square garden. j
.And
I fTsV yji'jw- 7 ; " v
i 'Cv SHOCKS'.
.B-rsarr: Go Ahead-- i'il
l"" -"-. I WAIT FOR. THE MEXT
'A& ?V I J s. CAR-S0IGW
II AUTUEKXWI S-Nv SEAT.'
COLDEST HERE
E
1927
Mercury Drops to 19 Above
Zero; Broccoli Thought
Protected by Snow.
36 BELOW IN UNION
Snow Falling in Portland
With Rain Possibly to
Follow; California
Fruit Periled.
The minimum temperature of 19
degrees at 8:30 Sunday morning,
was the coldcBt to be recorded at
the local weather bureau station
for two years, or since January 21,
1127, when the mercury dropped
to 18 degrees, according to K. H.
Fletcher, the local meteorologist.
The temperature last night was
slightly higher, he reports, with a
minimum of 25 degrees. The
weather was below freezing all
day Sunday, with 30 degrees the
highest recorded. .
It Is not believed that the cold
weather has damaged broccoli to
any great extent up to the present
time. The plants have been fairly
well protected by a light fall of
snow, and unless freezing weather
continues over a fairly long period
of time it is not believed that any
serious damage will result.
Mr. Fletcher reHrts the follow
ing minimum temperatures for the
past five years:
1924. 11", December 25.
" 2S 31 January 15. -
192(1, 25, December 14.
1!27, IS", January 21.
l!i2S. 22, December 2.1.
The forecast is for unsettled
weather tonight and Tuesday with
snow turning to rain. Warmer
temperature is promised.
Baker Coldest Spot
PORTLAND. Ore., Jan. 21.
(Continued on page 6)
7000 ERUPTIONS 24
HOUR VOLCANO MARK
PAT A VI A, Java. Jan. 21 The
Island volcano Krakatao, which
has been in violent eruption re
cently. Is reported showing in
creasing Intensity. The visible
eruptions rose from nearly 4.n(io on
Saturday to nearly 7,00 during the
past 21 hours.
At least a hundred times yester
day burning material was hurled
higher than 2.Hit feet aud one
eruption reached about 4.0(H). Con
tinuous tremors nre felt at sea in
the neighborhood of the Isolated
and uninhabited Island.
Besides," He's Used
SUNDAY
S
JANUARY
Nation- Vide Share Owners Gust
Exploiters And Put Business On
Moral Basis, Financier Avers
(Associated Press Leased Wire.)
NEW YORK, Jan. 2 I . rOwen D. Young, chairman of the
directing board of the General Electric company, believes
morals shape "big business." and dishonesty is scarce enough to
be news. The recently appointed unofficial American member
of the committee of experts named to consider Germany re
parations spoke from the pulpit of the- Park Avenue Baptist
church last night on "what is right with business."
"Our bi busim'88 Is no longer!
fcaieil lay i he people." he sulil. judiiinent of kocxI drivers where
"Kxplulterg no longer own the big the truffle is heavy aud the sig
coneerna. Ituuketa no longer own nuls ure compllenteil." he said,
them. Their shures are unread "Hy and large, looking over the
from one end of the country to thelnuurler century with which I have
other, llroadly speaking the vast
organizations are In skilled hands
aud the roads are reasonably safe.
The danger today, Mr. Young he-
lievea, comes not from bad men In
business or bad principles hut from)
the difficulty of applying right prin-j
ciplei to complicated situations." i
Our greatest risk is the mistaken!
j SHE
fiHD
The Itichfteld Ol! company.
which announced several
months ago Its plans to con-
struct a series of Neon air
beacons and highway service
stations along the coast air- 4
way, today purchased a 3 acre
tract from ;he Gllham estate
about three miles north o!
Hoseburg and on the east
side of the highway. The ne-
gotlations were made and
completed by Max h. Gordon.
representing the. company, 4
who spent the week-end in
Hoseburg making the arrange-
mentfl for securing the land. 4
While this station is about
two miles north of the nlr- 4
jMrt, it Is In a direct line with
the revolving beacon and !
field beacon to be Installed by
the government, anil will !
serve as an excellent guide to
Illerp.
The com pa r: y is bul'dlng
service stations to serve auto-
mobiles on the h'ghvay, and
at each station la en-ctlng a
huge N'eou beacon, w hlch w 111 4
lie visible for many mlh a In
each direction. The Neon 4
light also has fog piercing 4
qualities that make It ex-
tremely valuable to fliers.
The company also plans
eventually to erect a modern
hotel at each of these sta-
tions. Sites have been select-
ed at Grants Pass and on the
summit of the Slsklyous In
addition to the one north of 4
this city.
to Waiting!
been familiar 1 am pleased with ihe
rapid progress which we are mak
ing toward the right in business,"
he said. "We are not perfect and
never shall be, but we are training
our young men with a sense of
their great responsibilities and we
are providing them with experience
from our own mistakes."
All But One of Seventeen
Tracts Offered Find
Purchasers; Total
Paid $103,000.
The Roat'burK hind office todav'
I illinscl of 16 trni'ta of iirant land
I timber for 'aniiroxintHtftly S1U3.0U0.
1 li in Is Ihe lumcat Umber sale In
recent years, and vsh particularly
InlereHtlnR from the standpoint of
the percentage of sales aB all
tracts except one were purchased.
Usually there are it number of Ihe
iraciB i nut no not sell, but this
time only one mnall piece re
mained utiHold, IndlcathiK a much
more favorable condition in the
j demand for Umber. It is under
I stood that an offer Ik In Ihe malls
for the one unoold tract, hut the
I money lias not yet been received.
I The pales made todi'.y were as
! follows:
j Kl.Thr l.timbtr tim;pny, Mnr
! cola, 3,:ioo,oiiu feel of Umber on 80
' acres O. unci ('. crant lands, Twp.
j 1 S . II. 2 W., Kec. 6, I.lnn Co ,
1S.7SB.65.
Corvallis I.oi'cImk Co., Corvalll.
3.9UU.IIUU feet of Umber on t.3
acres o. and C. grant lands. Twp.
13 S . H. 6 W., Sec. 19, llentun Co.,
ti.s:is rr.
Snellslrom Ilros., Kurrene, 6,r,9o,
noil feet of Umber on 620 acres o.
and '. grant hinds, Twp. 18 S , !.
6 W., Sec. 17, iJine Co., $11.611. 7'J.
Willamette Valley Lumber Co.,
nulla, l,2r."i,iiuo feet of timber on
I2U acre (). and :. grant lands, :
Twp. 7 S.. II. 7 W., Sec. 31. 1'olk
Co.. $1.62 07.
VI'I1U,..U Vtt,. f
! Dnllas, l,M5tl,0( feet of Umber on
4o acre o. and C. gram land.
iTwp. 8 S.. II. 8 W, Sec. II. l'olk
Co.. $1.4S2!I6.
James Taylor. Cottage Grove,
30(1.000 feet of timber on 40 acres
o. and C. grant lands, Twp 20 8.,
It. 4 W., Sec. 23, Lane Co , $661.30.
Hen It. Chandler, Marsbfleld,
14.1133.000 feet or timber on 200
acres Coos llay wagon road grant
lands, Twp. 26 H.. II. 12 W., Sec.
36, Coos County, $2J,744.37.
Coos Hay Lumber Co., Marsh
field, 6.626,000 feet of Umber on
120 acre Coos Hay wagon road
gram lands. Twp. 27 S.. it 12 W.,
Sec. 27, Cnuii Co., $12 S60 65.
K. C. Martinson. Molalla. 1.160.
0(10 feet or Umber on 40 acres of o.
and C grant lands, Twp. 6 H , It. 2
K., Sec. 9. Clackamas Co.. $1,841.18.
Hansom Miller. Kugelle, 960.000
ret of limber on 40 acres o. and
C. grant lands, Twp 19 S . It. 2 W.,
Sec. 29. Lane Co. $1.42786.
James O. Farmer, llrldge, 3.7(10.
ooo feet of timber on 82 acre o.
and C. grant lands Twp. 29 S., U.
II W., Sec. 24. Coos Co., $14.523 99.
Wesley J. Miller, Monroe, 8S6.000
feet of Umber on 4o acres o. and
C. grant lands, Twp. 14 S . H. 6 W
Kec, 17, llenton Co.. $1,629 30.
I'enn I-umOer Co., Mcillynn,
1. 83i.nnfl feel of timber on 40 acres
O. and V. grant land. Two. 18 S H.
7 W See. IS. I.sne Co.. $3.582 16
Milliard N. Mcl atby, Marsbfleld.
2.H60.HIM feel of timber on 80
acres Coo llay wagon road grant
land. Twp. 27 S , It. 11 W., Sec. 21,
Coos Co., $.160.30.
Mi llrldge Lumber Co., Junction
City, $1,800,000 leet of timber on
4o acres I), and C. grant land, Twp.
15 S . U. 6 W., Sec. 15. Lane Cu.,
$3,166 30.
(. Herggren, North Plain. Ore
gon. 1, 51.',. ooo feet of Umber on 40
acre o. and C. grant land. Twp.
2 N It 2 W., Sec. 21, Washington
Co.. $2.277 05.
Herbert D. Qulne of Qulne and
company and Mrs. Qulne returned
here Saturday night from Eiigeno
and Portland where they spent sev
eral days last week. They report ft
very cold In the metropolis an I
were glad to return to the warmer
climate of the tmpqita valky.
E
RILL HEARINGS
SET BY SENATE
State Bankers Sponsoring
Plan to Reduce Tax on
Cut-Over Lands.
LOW RATE PROPOSED
Industrial Accident Board
Asks Salary I ncrease ;
Measure Would Add
Two Members.
(AwocUtiil rrr UuiM Wlr)
SA1.K.M, Ore., Jan. 21. A pub
lic hearing on tiie reforestation
bill sponsored by the Htate bank
era' association, Ihe Portland City
club, 1'ortland Chamber of Com
merce, Associated Chambers of
Commerce of the lower Columbia
river, Ihe Carkin properly tax re
lief commission, and the West
Coast Lumlier Manufacturers' as
sociation, will be held In the sen
ate chamber tonight at 8 o'clock.
Then senate committee on forea'iy
aud forent product called lliu
meeting. The reforestation bill Im
intended to encourage the planting
of tree on logtred and bumed-ovee
lund.
One Definite Plan
Of the leverul plan presented,
one by the forestry committee of
the Portland (liiumber of Com
merce calling for a specific yearly
flat tax per acre and yield tax.
lias met with the approval of aev
eiul legislators. A strong objector
to thia plan, however, 1 Represen
tative Charles W. Iloblnson, of As
toria, who feel that neither tim
ber nor logged-oft land should ha
guaranteed against taking tax In
creases to which other classes of
property may be subjected.
The chamber or commerce plan,
which. If passed. It Is thought by
its RpoiiRors would he most encour
aging to reforestation, call for
a yearly flat lax of ftvo cent per
ucie and a gross yield tax of 10
per: rent at cropping. The laud
would he sLbJicted to fire patrol
laua and future mule forest reu.
;.llci::i. It la culd.
Low Tax Plan Cited
The flat tax of five cents per
acre vould axsure the Umber land
owner a speeilied yearly lax. An
It Is now, taxes on logged or burn
ed over timber lands range from
four lo 24 cent per acre. Although
only slx-teuili of one per cent of
the total taxes today are derived
rioni re forested land, five cents
per acre for 60 year, which I Ihu
growing-life of a tree, compound
ed ul an Interest rate of alx per
nt per annum approximates
$26 8," per acre, a committeeman
pointed out.
At the present lime there aro
over l.ooo.ooo acre of timber land
In Oregon Hint are tax delinquent.
If the proposed plan liould becomo
a law. It Is believed bv legislatom
that many land owners will pay
their back taxes and regain the
land, thereby adding lo the lax re
venue of Ihe atate.
RALKM, Ore., Jan. 21 Senator
N'nrblad today introduced a bill
providing that cities wishing to
(Coullnued on page 3)
OF
AMK-lated 1'rrai Iaarnl Wiir)
I.A GllANDK, Ore., Jan. 21.
The body of Harold K. Duck nor,
Varney airmail pilot, who died
Thursday night fmni injuries duf
fered when hH plane crashed la
the Illue mountains 36 miles east
of Cove. Ore., will be sent to LloUe,
Idaho, tomorrow for burial.
KxamiiiHihm today of the pilot's
body showed that both arms werti
broken In the cranh, that he suf
fered compound fractuns of botli
legs, his left client crushed,
and he surteied severe head
bruises and oilier Injuries, rhy til
clan said the i runlied chest wd.?
the cause of death.
Hut ktier died In an Isolated trap
pers cabin while Jack Handy, one
, of the two trappers ho fvund hl'ri
in the wrecked plane, sat hy Ma
) sido. Handy'a partner, Phil Hrock
j man, was trudging over fifteen
i mile route to the nearest telephone
I at Horse ranch when Iiuckner died,
i The trip waa made through snow
six feet deep.
Buckner'a body waa froxen when
the rescue party reached her
I last night.
REFOR
STATION