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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 2, 1916)
- ' -v. : Tonight and to morrow, fairj. variable winds,' mostly norther ly. Humidity. 63. VOL. XV. NO. 176. PORTLAND, OREGON, MONDAY EVENING, OCfOfiER 2, 1916. -SIXTEEN PAGES PRICE TWO CENTS gP &g I L n EH X A 11 I tf 1 II XI I S Mil A I III VrysVWTBCiS!!i N III rJ I M I I N I I f I I J 11 'II II. 0 13 GOLDEN SPECIAL STARTS ONTOUn OF Wealthy Women of East Are Now on the Way to West to fell Women How to Vote in Presidential Election. PROFESSIONAL SPEAKERS WILL DO THE TALKING Hughes, Candidate of Plutoc racy, Is Idol of Heiresses on Luxurious Train. New York. Oft. 2. Wall street Is too busy harvesting Democratic pros perity to go campaigning. but is send ing Its women f"lk. The greatest ag gregation of wealth and- social dis tinction ever presented In a political campaign leaves New York today by special train to tell the women of the went how they should vote. Stopping at Albany, U'.ica and Syra cuse on their first day, the Itinerary takes the women's campaign train through the principal cities of the north route acios the continent an. I brings them back through Colorado. Nebraska. Missouri and Kentucky, a tour lasting until November 4. The expenses are paid by and the tour I conducted under the auspices of the women's commute of the Hughes Na tional Alliance. ' "Women's Hughes Alliance" sound Innocent and harmless enough until one examines thfi personnel of the or ganisation and discovers, that It rep resents the feminine side of the r ganlced and Morganlzed wealth of Wall street. : Wealthy Heiress Is Treasurer. The treasurer of the women's coni Inlttee Is Mrs. Mary Itarrlman Rumwy. heiress to the millions of the late Ed ward H. llarrtman, railroad magnate and "practical man," of the days when Theodore Koosevelt received campaign funds Crom the business which politi- (Conduded on Pigs TweWe. Column Ttroj Tr r 1 1 . '. ) AS MINUS. OF BIG Ei Liners Would Meet in City for Transshipment -of Oriental Freight Cargoes. Washington, Oct. 2. (I. N. 8 The Chinese-American Produce Exchange company will be launched here within the next few days to meet the pro jected commercial exploitation of China by Japan and her allies. The company proposes tfo construct two fleets. One will operate between Norfolk and Portland, Or., by way of the Panama canal, taking In on the. outward voyage such stops as Charles ton, New Orleans, San Pedro, San Diego, San Francisco and possibly Se attle. At Portland, the goods will be transhipped to another line, likewise owned and operated by the company, but of much heavier tonnage and of . greater speed The Chinese-American produce Ex change company has been negotiating for sometime with the Portland Cham ber of Commerce relative to the estab lishment of steamship service to the orient. ' Executive Secretary W. D. B. Dob son said this morning that until a definite proposition is put up to this ctty for the establishment of terminals and general facilities he cannot say of a, certainty whether or not the service 1 to be started. The executive com mitts Is In a highly favorable state of mind, however, and expects to co operate to the fullest degree aa nnnn as it Is known here Just what Port- lana is expected to do. Ths Produce Exchange company was ; originated by the Southern Commercial congress, Including many of. the big cotton growers. It is backed by the T,.F. Southgate Terminal co Vny of Norfolk, ,Ya, owners of vi Tware houses and water terminals und said toNiave ample capital to put over al most any deal. At the same time "associate memberships" in the pro duce . company are being solicited among Portland business interests, as part of the financial arrangements. The opinion of Chamber of Com merce officials is that If the Produce Kxchange company, carries throusgh this deal. It will sjean great things for Portland, probably including the trans shipment here of. great cargoes of cot ton from the South. , The company proposes to establish banks and com mercial' houses in China and to enter the general commercial field on a large scale. The Chamber 'of Commerce is wait ing for a definite proposition from the promoters of the company before making. any formal announcement or starting any campaign. The plan is one of a number of steamship propo sitions on which the Chamber has been working for many months. Rigsdag Agrees to Sell Islands to U.S. London, Oct. 2. (I. N. 8.) The up per and lower houses of the Rlgsdag hava unanimously voted In favor of the sale Of the Danish West Indies to the United States, says an Exchange Telegraph dispatch from Copenhagen. ; The political crisis that was threat ' ened by the controversy, baa been 1 averted, the dispatch adds. v . EDUCATION PORTLAND 0 0 SHIPPING eris ON THE GOLDEN SPECIAL Top (left), Mrs. Daniel Guggenheim, whose kinfolk control the smelter trust; Mrs. Q. H. P. Belmont, inheritor of great wealth, who has undertaken to raise $500,000 to defeat President Wilson. Center, Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt, who represents inherited millions in railroad properties. Bottom, Mrs. Alice Roosevelt Longworth, daughter of Colonel Roosevelt, whose husband inherited a. large fortune; Mrs. Gifford Pinchot, wealthy in her own right and wife of wealthy man who followed .Roosevelt back to the Republican party. 1 II tik- nil mMwK if 111 I f v - I l-X,H llf I ' Vf Ifl 111 I . ... 1 1 fyJ' r ? i 1 1 jn II iM i W' '"i y y ; :JJJ . -J . -i , "s., 1rrr Li : ; . GOOD ANGEL' OF THE 10 GIVE TO Mary McDowell Announces Stand After Thorough Con sideration of Both Men, - Chicago, Oct. 2. Miss Mary McDow ell, "good angel" of the Chicago stock yards district and worker with Jane Addams for social betterment has an nounced through the- Chicago? Journal, in a letter writetn fr6m iAke Geneva, that ehe is -lor President WUsoik The letter is addressed to George Slkes of the Woodrow Wilson Independent leugue. Miss McDowell declared that the president's stand on Mexico, his advo cacy of the child labor and eight-hour lawa and his fight for efficiency in government, have decided her to cast tier firtt presidential vote for Mr. Wll- (Coccludvd on Pago Nine, Column Two) Cotton Prices Soar On Federal Report Damage to Crop Is Kiddle States Causes' Sensational Advance on Vw York Cottoa Exchange. New York, Oct. 2. (U. P.) Cotton jumped-60 to 80 points on the New York Cotton Exchange today, Jollow lr.g publication of the Agricultural Department bulletin showing damage to the middle states' crop. December cotton sold up 67 points to 16.76 cents a pound while January was up 80 points at 16.10. Washington. Oct. 2. (I. N., S.) The department of agriculture today estimates the condition of the cotton crop on September 25 as 56.3 per cent normal. Forecasts of the yield place it at 156.3 pounds per acre with a total pro duction of 11,536,000 bales Astoria Man Killed Today by Automobile fori XTordatrom Flanges From Ex change Street to Sand PUl Twenty Fast Below Heck Was Broken. Astoria, Or., Oct. S. Turie Nord strom, well-known young man of this city, son of Councilman Nordstrom, was inatantlv killed Arl thi- . ing when the automobile which he was an this piungea irora xixenange street, in the seat snd of tha ev in th fill 20 feet below. Ills neck - was Di-oaen. it is tnought that the steer ing gear L was, defective. , STOCKYARDS SUPPORT WLSON MONTGOMERY IS BACK, BUT TWOYEARS ARE 'ED FROM ME Man Who Looks on October, 1914, as Yesterday Can Not Explain Happenings, With the happenings of the last two years completely erased from his mem ory, Bernard J. Montgomery returned home last night and was surprised to see his baby changed from a tiny tot 6 months old to a Sturdy little lad of -V4 years, who rtsns and plays and talks to his daddy He waa brought home -from San Francisco by Mrs. Montgomery, who was at a loss to account for his dis appearance last March, until she was notified a few weeks ago that he was in a hospital at-San Francisco. Where he was during all the 'time he was gone and what he was doing, neither him self nor anyone else knows. After living for nearly two years in Portland, he left last March for Salem to look for employment on a farm. He wrote a letter to his wife (Concluded on Pape fourteen. Column Fire) Count Aichelburg Funeral Tomorrow Titled Austrian Took Own Idfe While Financially Impoverished, Das to In ability to Hear From Family. Count T-udwig Aichelburg, the Aus trian noble who last Wednesday com mitted suicide by taking poison In a South Portland rooming-house, will be burled tomorrow in Rose City ceme tery, i he body Is at the East Side Fu neral Directors' establishment and ser vice will occur at 10 a. m. That Aichelburg was of titled fam ily, the Investigations made by Aus trian Consular Representative- Joseph Woerndle leave not the slightest douDt, woerndle communicated with the general consular headquarters at New York and his family connections were accurately learned. He was a member of one of the oldest families of title in the dual monarchy. The family home Is at Budapest, in Hun gary, and Aichelburg was of Magyar Wl MY stock. rne lamiiy estates are In Hungary. Mr. Woerndle was unable to learn why the young man leff his native home. He has been in the United States almost two years, and Mr, Woerndle insists that he did not de sert from the Austrian army, as was reported, - - , . -. '- Financially impoverished because of his Inability to- reach .his family dur ing the War Is thought to have created the state of mind resulting in bis self destruction. . s... . ,T- ... -, " T'"4t . " rl-f ' Ul '-- 4 . .-.."' V,. ' - GOOD SAMARITAN TO WAR-RIDDEN POLAND IS PORTLAND GUEST! Isidor Hershfieid, Man Who' Opened Way -to Relief for j Suffering Millions, in City, j Isidor yershfield of New .York, "the master .bridge-builder," reached Port land this morning. H is the man who built a "bridge" from Poland to America, His bridge contained neither steel nor stone nor wood; but, nevertheless. It spanned continents and seas Just as the mightiest cantilever or suspen sion. His bridge closed a void; it made communication possible oetween the people of war-ridden Poland and other parts of Russian territory, now under German and Austrian control, and their friends and relatives in the United States. The titl. "master bridge-builder." (Concluded on Fag Nine. Column Fire) Marshall Hooper Is New Bank Examiner Grants Pass Btan Appointed by stats Bank Superintendent Sargent to Sno oeed George SC. Tracy, Promoted. SalenjI'Or.. Oct. 2. Marshall Hooper, cashier ' the Grants Pass Banking companjr,- 5ot Grants Pass, was appoint ed state pank examiner to succeed George M.Tracy Jr.. by State Bank Su perintendent Sargent, Monday morning at a session of the State Banking board from which reporters were barred. The '. appointment was unanimously con firmed by the board. The place pays 1 4 000 a year. Tracy was given the title of assist ant superintendent so that he could act In the absence of Sargent, and Charles H. Stewart; who has been bank examiner for some time, waa appoint ed assistant superintendent. t Tracy resigned to take a place as vice-president of an Oregon City bank. , i i 1 1 ' Two' Craft Named i Bremen Captured Galveston, Oct. 2. (U. P.) Naval forces of the .entente powers have cap tured ,t'w. German submerchantmon named ' Bremen, according to Captain Van-. Bchoonbeek, of . the Belgian steamer- Elizabeth - Van Belgie, . Which arrived: hers tddayV Van Schoonoeek said the first-submarine was, captured by the British' and the second by the Franca. Pbotos Copyrtabtad by H. A E., ind 1. T. S. DR.f BUNGSON Of PORTLAND DISTRICT Appointment of Pastor of RoseXity M.' 4.. Church Is Announced Totjiy. Lebanon, Or.. Oct. 2. Dr. William Wallace Youngson, pastor of Rose City- Methodiist Episcopal church, presiding lder in the Willamette val ley cdrfference 'of the Methodist Epis copal ch'uTfch, Just closed at Lebanon, was1 thia morning appointed superin tendent of the Portland district to suc ceed J, J. McDougall. . Theappointment was announced by Bishop Hughes. The, appointment did not come as a surprise, for Dr. Youngson has been prominently mentioned for the posi tion along with Dr. T. W. Lane of Centenary. Dr. Youngson is one of the most prominent ministers of Portland. Here Only Few Tears. Going to tlie Oregon metropolis only a few "years ago, he took charge of te infant Rose City Park Methodist church, and has built it up until its membership is numbesed by the hun dreds. One of the features of yesterday's program was the love feast presided over by? Dr. . H. J. Talbott. This was heJd at 6:30 o'clock and was well attended, tit showed the interest of tho ' ministers in the old-fashioned revivals. ' Dr. James Moore, pastor of the Al bany church, was appointed superin tendent, of the Kugene district. His pulpit will be occupied by Charles K. Gibson. Joshua Stanefield of , Indianapolis and W. L. Airheart were appointed ministers of the First church, Port land. , Bishop Hughes was unable to preach at the morning service as had been planned, and he delegated Dr. (.Concluded on Ptge Fourtn, Column Four) Dodgers Win While Phillies Split Even Philadelphia, Pa., Oct. Z. (I. N. 8.) With the Dodgers winning against the Giants at Brooklyn, 2 to 0, the Phillies today split a doublcheader with the Boston Braves, winning the first ftarn. .2 to ,' and losing the second, to 4. As the-result of today's game the 'PntUies remain in second )lace, the Dodgers leading the league by 'two points.----" - . : ... ;.. . ,. .' " i? ' i j ''i 'i.-.- Two Norwegians Are' Bunk. Copenhagen, Oct 2. (I. X. The Norwegian steamers Pimn" snd Ravn have been aock by GerA&n submarines. .."' - . t -si" . ; -. SUPERINTENDENT HUGHES 10 BE I "SMOKED OUT" BY PRESIDENT Wilson Will Force Opponent to Show What Changes He Would Make in Foreign and Business Policies. PERSONALITIES NOT TO ENTER IN DISCUSSION Trip to Omaha Will Begin To morrow; Will Speak on Thursday. By Robert 3. Bender. Asbury Park, N. J., Oct. 2 (U. P.) President Wilson is determined to "smoke out" Charles Evans Hughes on what the Democrats have now defined as the real Issues of the campaign. When he starts west tomorrow night to speak in Omaha Thursday evening, the president will have completed his plans to force Hughes, if possible. Into a thorough discussion of what changes will be made In the foreign and busi ness policies of the government if there is a change of administration March 4. Wilson will continue to challenge his Republican opponent to divulge how far the policy of peace of the present administration will be followed in case of a Republican victory. Hew Optimism Apparent. There may be no direct question, no Indulgence in personalities but the questions and challenges will be found in the president's speeches, even as they abounded in his address to young Democrats last Saturday, when lie in dicated'ar would be the Republican method of its foreign policy. A new optimistic atmosphere was apparent in Democratic circles here (Concluded on Pass Tw.lre. Column Tbrre) Santa Fe to Seek to Change 8 Hour Law President Xlpley Sends Statement to Stockholders Suggesting Use of Their Xnueaee for smadlal" legislation. ' Chicago, Oct. 2. (U. P.) Plans to enlist all stockholders In the Santa Fe railway. In a fight on congress to en act measures changing provisions tn the Adamson bill were revealed today In a statement sent to stockholders of the company bl E.J3. Ripley, president. In part the statement read: "The Brotherhoods made It clear at the session of congress Just ended that they will resist with all tl.clr power any such remedial legislation, whether it seeks to prohibit strikes in advance of public investigation or to put and form of restraint upon labor combinations. It is therefore reason able to assume that the public demand for a remedy will have to be forceful or else the public will continue In its present defenseless position. "Since the preceder of abandoning ruiuauun ana nurrieaiy paying the demands of railroad unions by special congressional enactment has thus been established, does it not behoove you 10 e-xerclse your influence In favor of ap propriate remedial legislation?" Pheasant Season to Close October 15 Pheasant hunters will find the per iod allotted them for the bagging of Chinas Just half as long as normal, according to action taken today by the state fish and game commission. Thousands of young birds perished during last winter's storms and the number this season is about half of what it should have been. The season, therefore, will be closed October 13, instead of November 1. Union Stockyards At Cleveland Afire i Cleveland. Oct. 2.-r-(U. P.) Firemen this afternoon gave up hope of savl;.g the Union Stockyards here from a flrj that started shortly before noon. It is believed that the fire was started by Incendiaries. More than 1400 hogs In cars nearby were hauled away safely, but several carloads of cattle were turned loose from the pens and ran wild about the yards. State Fair Receipts Made New Record Salem, Or., Oct. 2. The receipts from all sources for the state fair totaled between $55,000 and $57,000, Secretary Manager Lea said Monday. This is greatly in excess of any pre vious year. Lloyd's May Pnt on "AWa." ' San Francisco, Oct. 2. ( U. P.) Lloyd's of London may go into tho theatrical business to "hedge" their losses on a weather bet. It was admit ted today. When it rained Saturday Bight and prevented the performance of "Alda" on Ewing field, Lloyd's lost $26,000 to the producers. Now tho local Lloyd's agents are planning to stage "Aids" next Saturday, night themselves to get back the money. Church Floor Falls; Ten Hart. Binshampton, N. Y-. Oct. 2. (I. N. ;&) During the dedication services afc Johnson City or. th First Pres byterian fchrurch yesterday afternoon a portion of the flooring caved' In, dropping 200 persons to the- base ment below. Ten of the number are reported to "have been seriously in jured and may! die. Nearly all sus tained minor injuries. Greek Cabinet Has Resigned, Says Report New KoIy, Formed Recently, Ac icused of IllockhiK Participa tion In War. Iyondon, Oct. 2. (U. P.) The Oreek cabinet has resigned, said a Central News dispatch from Athens this evening. The new Greek cabinet, formed onlv a fortnight ago, was not recognised bv the allies and was generally believed to be blocking Greece s participation In the war. Turks Massacre Greeks, Report. Rome, Oct. 2. (U. P.) Reports that Greece is about to declare war on the Fide of the allies has led to the whole sale massacre of Greeks in Asia Minor hy the Turks, the Greek legation was advised today. Greek residents of tho Smyrna dis trict ViavA Aiiffr,ri prHtlv from rter- Btcution and In outlying districts many Greeks tiave Deen executed. "Tanks" Play Important Part Again in Capture of Ger man Trenches, London. Oct. 2. General Halg's men continued throughout last nJght the smashing advance begun yesterday toward Bapaume, it was officially an nounced today. , After beating off German counter attacks against the newly won posi tions of Kaucourt J"Abbiaye, the British" established tlwtr front in that region and cleared feurroundlng buildings of the enemy. The British loss In yesterday's vic tory at Eaueourt l'Abbaye when the Germans were driven back on a 3000 yard front were unusually small. It was learned today. The new "tanks" played an important role in the ad vance and helped make It possible for (Concluded on Page Nln, Column Throet Occupants of House Forced Out by Fire i i, .. t right People la Home of W. JSoob son Flee in Wight Clothes at Early soar This Morning. Eight people' In the home of W. Jacobson, barber, residing at 191 Ar thur street, were forced to flee from the house In their night clothing about 2 o'clock this morning, when fire partially destroyed the residence. Mr. and Mrs. Jacobson and their six children were in the house at the time. A. 12-year-old daughter asleep on a couch in a downstairs room, awakened to find the flames roaring towaras me ceiling, ana aruuea ine others. All were out of the houiK by the time engine 5 arrived. The loss will amount to $1000. Insur ance to the extent of $200 covers the damage. The fire started from an un known source In a clothes closet on the first floor, and sweeping to the roof, burned off the top of the house. - Captain Wilson Was Shot Accidentally Ballet Fired by Mexican Sentry After Escaping Prisoner Hits American Officer. Washington, Oct. 2.. ( U. P.) Cap tain Wilson. Second , Idaho infantry, was accidentally shortest erday after noon by a sentry on the Mexican sldh of the Une, who Is said to have fired at an escaping prisoner. General Plura mer telegraphed the war department today from Nogalefc, Ariz. Shooting Starts Rioting, El Paso, Texas, Oct. 2. (I. N. S.) Dispatches received here this afternoon from Nwgales, Axlz., state that 26 American militiamen and truck driv ers have been Jailed at Nogales, Ho nora, following rioting between Ameri cans and Mexicans, precipitated by the shooting of Captain H. Wilson, Idaho guardsman, yesterday. Henry Ford Meets Wilson in Conference Praises Hatioaal legislation of Pres ent Administration May wot con tribute to Campaign. Fund. Asbury Park. N. J., Oct. 2. (VI. P.) After his conference with President Wilson at the summer White House today, Henry Ford of Detroit, said he most likely would not con tribute to the Wilson campaign fund. "The office should seek the man, man should not seek the office," was his stated reason for not contributing. He had warm praise for the national legislation of the Wilson administra tion. British Take Two Village. Salonlkl, Oct. Z.i'V. P.) The vll Ilages of Karazakoibala and Lara- cakolzer. as well as other parts of the Bulgarian line, were captured by the British It Saturday's fighting In the Struma region. It was officially an nounced today. Enemy counter-at tacks'" were beaten off with heavy toss. 5 Twenty-Fourth Child Arrives. Waterbury. Conn., Oct. 2.-(I. N. Hi -"Mrs. ' Patsy Derelnaa today became tne motuer or her twantyrfourtn child. Twenty ox her children are Utbig. HARD FGHTNG NOW PROGRESS Wlffl BRITISH ADVANCING HUGE ZEPPELIN SHOT DOWN !M RAID ON LONDON Commander of Destroyed Air-" ship Found in Field Near Wreck, Alive but Terribly -Injured From Impact. : FRAGMENTS OF BODIES SCATTERED ON GROUND Blazing Mass Plunges From Sky to Earth Like a . . Comet. London. Oct. 2. (U. P.) The huge super-Zeppelin shot down in last -night's attempted raid on London, crumpled up and broke Into several -pieces as it plunged earthward before the eyes of thousands of Londoners. ; The commander of the destroyed.; Zeppelin waa found in a field near a' part of the wreck this morning, stilt"' alive but terribly Injured. He was driven Into the wreckage with such force that the imprint of his body was plainly ..visible when he was picked UP. Thirteen bodies had been recovered at noon. Fragments fell from BO to 60 yards apart and with them mangled bits of bodies. Seems X.lke Speck a First. Unlike previous raids In the vicinity of Iyondon, last night's attack was signalled by no tremendous gun firing. A few shots from aircraft guns brought thousands to the rooftops or to the streets throughout London. They gazed toward the starlit heavens , while searchlights converged their sli ver shafts on a Zeppelin, the whir, ot whose engines could be -heard very faintly. The Zeppelin waa lost to view for a moment, f Then suddenly a email red (Concluded on Page TwnWa. CeiomS Two) TJ Convicted Forger Given Term of From Two to 20 Years; Legal Quibble Fails, . ' - Homer N. Tord, convicted of forgery ', as the result of having Elisabeth 1. Frary sign a deed aa his wife when his . legal wife was Mrs. Caroline For.-,: was today sentenced by Circuit JudR Davis to serve two to years In the' state penitentiary. - Before Hontence was pronounced, v Judge Davis denied a tnotlon for rrjt of Judgment, which was argued by At torney W. A. Williams for Ford and" . Deputy District Attorney Collier for! the state. Next Monday a motion for a new trial will be argued. nd If that falls, the defendant will appeal to the . supreme court. ,, Attorney Williams nnjued that Ford ' was illegally convicted on the grounds. that no forgery was proven or charged in the lnclctment. From the Indict-' ment, he argued, the defendant could -not tell for what he was being tried.' "The purpose of an Indictment la to -Inform the defendant named therein of the crime charged against him,""' said Judge Davis, In making his rul-. . Ing. "That this defendant waa fully , acquainted with the nature of the' . charge against him admits of no. doubt. It is a moral certainty that at no ttme during his five day trial was Mr. Ford, surprised cr prejudiced by any lack or peculiarity of statement of fact In ths -Indictment. j "In the absence of this, to disturb .' a verdict because of a legal quibble'ls not In accord with the spirit ot modern Jurisprudence." ' . , -zt:. Ilnfty Nail Causes Death, v J. H. Barnes, a farmer residing near Sherwood, died last night at ths Ooad Samaritan hospital from blood poison ing. Several weeks ago Mr. Barnes : stepped on a susty nail near his home, ' and the blood poisoning appeared af tar . the Injury had apparently healed. Ha had been at the hospital a week, 3Tha body will be taken to Sherwood 'for burial Eye-Opening Business Trip ,i That Is Just what a glance " through The Journal Want' Columns is business tour ' for here snd there you will -find large sign posts which are the classified heading and "' whenever you see one that you are Interested In you- stop and.' read it over Just as a train for' tourists slows up at Interest- " ing points along the route to ' j give the passengers a chattca to enjoy the scenery. , H will pay every man and woman, wh Is in the work a -day world, to take this bust ness tour every day and there J' by keep in touch with ths op portunity that abounds in? Ths '. ' Journal Want" Columns for' " them. - - -; , "J To reach alt, ;th people of." fectlvely you may leave your r Want Ad at The Journal office ' or phone ms to. send- for it r- ( ' phone to Main ?17S or A60SL. - . ' " FORD IS SENTENCED TO UDGE DAVIS