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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 3, 1922)
TIIE OHEGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, OREGON.1 FRIDAY? ; NOVEMBER 3.' 1C22. ! YOUTH SEiJT UP FflU ATTEfM . r t OB OowmmfTit property In Oregon i nuit not be -molested- by thieve. t Fdersl Judge B. - S. Bean handefi i down this mandate this morning when 1 .he sentenced Charles ' Bosler, 4 Carl ' VblmmltX, nil Alfravf SttfTntf tn thi-M i year each " in the federal, prison .at Fort leaven Worth, Kan.,, for -attempt-: ing'te dmk into" a postal substation 1 at JDast 87th stmt aitd ; Hawthorne j avenue ten July 19 last. The defend- i anus ' wwrre i wiuw v. .. j '"- "While the court dislikes very much i to sehteiwe young men iik .these to j prisons the laws of the land rhust be obeyed and yie rights of ether re I pected, said the court. The evidence i In' this case clearly show these : men j to be engaged in a criminal practice. 1 It also showed that they had reached ! the ..stag. ven though young men, j" where they were almost professional i housebreakers.. ,' . .-. -.: " J CAfCHT I!C ACT ! . Patrolman Klopfensteiu surprised ifh IvInSrhitn at drnrfr' in a hullwAV'at the .rear Of the drug store. - sterren watatloned at the entrance td the 1 thall as a lookout, and the other! two 'lavere trying to pick the rear lock with j "a wire. Kleinsmlth. and Boater had j two vials of nitroglycerin In their pos I session with which they intended to i blow, open the drug store safe. Pres 1 enee of the postal substation In the A drug store- .made the crime a federal -1 offense. - : . 1 ' During the trial, which closed I Wednesday, "the trio, admitted they 1 were robbers, but contended they ln j tended to rob a motion picture tftea ltre in .the same building, and not the drug store. Postal Inspectors shat tered this story by proving that there was.) no other safe is the - business i block, except the substation safe. , ,. fPL'EA REJECTED ; - Before sentence was pronounced to jday Assistant CnitWC States Attorney IMaguire handed Judge Bean memo jrandum showing that. Bosler had been ' ! arrested a number of times by the po- , 'coming a good yeggtftan. . Klefhsmith ;v itind Steffeos have served terms in the : iOregon and Washington i reform ; tKchools,' respectively,1 the record dis- jclosed. . M A plea, for the. youths was made en ' ibehalf of their parents, but Judged Bean refused to - consider it. - "There Is not a case that comes be fore' this court," he said; ibui that I . an look over the head of the defend ant and see a mother, wife or family who are tRe real sufferers, ft is too had that Others must be made to suf-i Jer, but the court cannot look lightly Upon crimes as serious as this one." 'Alumm Members Plan, University t Of Oregon Rally University ,of Oregon graduates and ex-students win have the opportunity UU CJLC ItCIiUV aI V(U-1.41K1C fatal J ; aTca-vus day noon in tegrUl room ofthe Mult 1 nomah - hotel, where.; a "committee of Portland alumni members . have pre pared, in conjunction with aa adequate lunch, s) "riot6us" program which is naicMlated 40 ..raise Homeoomtng en thusiasm among the' ptssembled to the - nth nerre - k. jii;iniiMiL uresiaein c the vunlversjty wllk"vbe there to speak of the school's plaim for welcom--isg old students os tlvewtek-end.ot No Member it. r y Mrs. Carblln Benson ,'Unander-, president of tfee", Portland .alumni a- pocialloa, will toastmlstresS'Snd M. f G. Hdwe, member- of the athletic coun cil at the university, -wlH be ffte prin cipal epeakef. Coach? Shy Huhtiagtoa will tell why Dreaon will- win the foot ball contest on Armistice day. ; J PILGlttX BOTS -TO irfOLD HALXT , i ,P. W. le of Seattle, svho. fof 18 years 1 has been physical director, will give short address at s rail 5 of the Pilgrlmr Boys chorus at the Y. M. cs. a . Ksturdav aftemooiu The Pilgrims . ire eettin? teady td- assist in the ani ntiat, Father and Son Round-Up to be , held in-The Auditorium next Friday nighy ' - . h : - J',- E3tOCKATS TO SPEAK '1 A'DeTnocratio meeting will be held at the Hose City Park school Saturday . evening at S o'clock. Elton Watkins, . 1 Mrorgs Alexander and Joseph K. Car' won and. Alice McNaoght wtll be among w speaKcrs. ; - ti-os once told by its Bread l - 1 .- ::-i I , v.-;2 bread wai for th : r richl: Brown bresd for th .lower 1 classes Fre&Hly baked bttad was for tfi; Royal larnilY. .One day old bread Ayas. for, the tipbility-T Twd day old bread ia fair the letttrV. !'nd 't6 Sown the scale. V- ,i -lyday there's fresh white bread far rich sVnd poor, hightuid low, arid the spread for. it that suits aU palates and alt poclcetbooks is i ItVfull of the sunshine and the : sweeme of "all dutdoors." - - , . . - - . - :K6 harid toudi Ntlcoa In tha , miking. It comes to yout table ; f r dsK from its rotetting carton, rAtid it is absolutely guaranteed. Yquf-r firdcet " will refund ; your mQney-if.-Kiicoa--doesn't rrtakt th4; brsad you erve . tell -that "your faaiily belon: - to .thft aristocracy ofgood Uis:t- " 1 - Piping hot p&ncakti tt xih tv:reUas-a-nU 1ucr& strutting 7" Kes'img frs lXe N ucoarsprea X .hot POSTAL R TIIK NUC0A cojipany i. ... uusiLyir Kail EateGut on ; Certain1 FreigBt to Eastern Territory ' Reductions . in - railroad rates on wooden ware, furniture,; wheat ? and flour and cured salmon, moving from Portland. -to ' Eastern points, were an pounced - today ! by transcontinental railroads to become effeetlv- Novem ber 6. V . -i -4' ; f ' - 1 Furniture to Colorado points' will be $2 instead of . $3.Tifc per lOO pounds. The rate on cured sabmv will be re duced from fit to SL37. Wooden ware rates will be reduced from -jfLsa to 37 cents v moving to Chicago; ,SL Ixuis and Memphis and from-0 to 80 cents, on movements to. 'Sfc Past. Omaha and Denver .points. - Propo- tionar rates ef M cents to St. Louis, So cents to Cairo and 68 cents to Lou isville will be published on wheat and flour destined to Southeastern ter ritory. . ; - --.- . TEI1TH0USA1JDDIE IH MOTOR WRECKS Washington. Nov. J. FataiUies.from automobtle accidents, the census sureat. has, disclosed, reached the appalling figure of Ivies' for the calendar Year 192t And in announcing these figures, the bureau stresses that this record was obtained from the death regis tration " area ' of the 'UpJted ' States, which comprises but sa part of the total population. ;, ; v , Also th f toU! " doe not " include motorcycle sccldeots.r ' .The enormous Increase In automobile ownership in t'l.S bast five years has not much outdistanced the death rats from motor smashnps. It 'was indicated further.-1 From a: death rats of nine perv ld.00 population in 1917, it has increased it per cen - to XI in U2t Each year : has . marked a "successive iacnease, as: In J91S it was ; S., tn 119 9 4 and l20 10.4. ; New York state, with Its huge popu lation, led in fatalities with 13S, Pennsylvania ' ranked 'second - with 106t, while Illinois and California wets third end fourth with 887 and ,808 re spectively. --',, ,' ' Delaware with bat 17 deaths showed the best record, under ranking even the District of Columbia, whicbXhad 3, and Vermont Keith 18 T .California had by far ' "the highest death rate--24.4- per i 100,0u0-while Mississippi with a rate of but 2.C con cluded the listl" f - - Dr. J, D. Sternberg Loses Faith in tfie Lad HeSBefriended ; With the arrest Tof young 'Josef Retchman, 20-yearold Austrian sailor, on a charge of bootlegging, Dr. J, IX Sternberg, who has been acting as the boy's sponsor 1 : Portland, tor hearty a year, has decided that the United States v immlgraUon officials know thetf business 'better than he doe. ' Young pelchm an, an apparently in& telHgent. promising' yovth, 'earns to Portland as a sailor, deserting the steamship; Iverhea in November of last year. - Tha Immigration officials were notified, - and, ' on .finding the lad, a board of iftqutry consisting . of three Inspectors considered , the "advisability of letting hirn remain her. , Two. inspectors voted for exclusion and one to admit htm, but listening: to the persuasion-of Dr. Sternberg, who had taken- an interest tn the case and who promised to et as a sponsor for the boy, he was allowed to remain there. He was Interested in things electrical Jand in wireless telegraphy, and Dr. Eternberg planned To employ him. In his office. This morning Dr. Sternberg called Emigration Inspector R. P. Bonham with the news that his protege had provfed rnofe thatt disap pointing . and t:it he was already in jail With a charge t oooUegging rand possibly . worse things lodged against him. ' State Institutions To Return $70,000 Salem,' tiov. S. -More than t.(K)d will be turned bacV to the general fund of as state from the. biennial appror prlsfiion ly the stats hospital for taS insane and the state-institution for awiu( w tcjraivo Leiibmrtted to te board vf control this njorning. The, state hospital, accord ing to Superintendent Bteiner, -will re twrri more-.lhan $40,000 of the amount appropriated fof the maintenance ot te ihsUtutlon. hile Superintendent Sfeith. of th Institution tor tha feeble minded reports a surplus of 'approxi MaiAy ..gso.eea nsmauilng "out of the ajneunt allotted: to bis institution. ?;rr tVrtti a ,-.. .. ,g-t-' Industrial School ! BuildiQg Bids High Salem 'Xov. ,3.t-AU hids submitted tor the reconstruction of fas dormitory at the girls' Industrial school here, re cently destroyed by fire, wef ft la ex cess of the I32.W9 authorised for this purpose by the state emergency board, according : to announcement of the board of control today. The bids hsjvs been taket under advisement pending an-opinion on the situation by tnl fOrhey general. The emergency ap propriation authorized for tha recon struction of the dormitory was based upon estimates submitted bv W. Krirhton. architect. The briok wahs of the old buildmg wsra left virtually intact. k " Group' Rate BaSiS"-" Ordered for 'Boads Washington, Nov. .-rWASHI?f TOK BUREAU'OP THB JOURS AIi Ihterstate eommtrce commission today directed Northwest roads tot maintain lumber and forest products rates tn carloads on coast group basis from points on- Southern Paclfte south of Portland to Lona, and from the As toria branch :of toe Spokane, Portland BeatUe road to destinations In the Dakota, sflnnesota. Montana and Wis. tonsm. which opens the market 6n the Soa tins where differentials ap .proxlmating 1 ceBts per huhdred 6w Sxist. , , ' t - i i : - - - i . i i i liTm if 4m hit- f i t WOSE TOTEH t.rSCtlEb!! Candidate will address members of Jth Oregon League of Women Voters at a Isnchoon tomorrov ftoon at the Chamber tf Comnuroe. The lancRcon l.pini at t o"clock. , PLEDGE SUPPORT ;. OF SPECIAL TAX LEW OF 3 HILLS A : largety-attended meting of the Portland Municipal Civil Servleo aseo-CqStkMi.-.held ta thct.city eouneil ciiaro bef Thursday night, waa. addressed . by Cly iCommlsSioner Pier jon the neces sity Of suppbrting fhs -mill tax levy measure at Xh election, next Tuesday, and ' doing earnest work between now and -then so that the citizens of Port land may thoroughly understand the vital necessity to the -city as A whole of the passage of this measure. . Resolutions', were unanimously r adopted, ; pledging . support for the measure.' AA failure to reSuthorise said levy. says the resolution,' Wuld neoesaarUy curtail the functions f the city of Portland to the point of -peril to the health; happiness and safety of the citixeps and to the orderly procsd uts of their" social and huslriess rU- tions.. - -'-:t; - h: The mAetingy also- gave . its nainl moai -tsdoreenieat to. statement t hat f "Necessity forees the employes of the Wty of Portland to assert a1 poiiucal lnfluen3 whlh tbey do not care to exercise," and It resolved "that the council of the islty of PorUandi. and the peopl of said city iSe and are hereby petitioned to so amend the cnarter ot said ity that It may embody th f Pt cent tax limitation as contained In the constitution of the stats of Oregon, and so allow the tax levy: of rsaid city, to operate as intended by the f ramers of Said constitutional amendment. i r -The meeUnr alsonpav: In Indorse tnent to the Boss Island bridge meas ure, the water bond refunding measure, and the measure simplifying procedure In the change of street grades, etc . 1 OL WAtaAKT&'ABE OBBEaiED PAIS HY CITT-COVKCII. An echd'Of the old days of the -ard councilman. was heard at the city hall today When an ordinance was prepared authorising' the payment of warrants' for street improvement woriCTSn which U legal assesBmentS were -made years as, and which were contested la ttt courts. - ' ' .'C- "' 1 The warrants eventually passed mto the hands of Aba Tichener and hs has held them i ll years without payment. Recently hs asked that the city either pay him for ' these warrants or,, issue new ones Tlte result is tnat paymeni will be made from the genera runo of a ' total of $699.4. The principal is ts2i.S9 and h interest during this lohg period has reached $1S.0?. i These wer warrants uwa n ine Improvement work on portion of Kal sey. EastZSth, East 19th and Tilla mook, streets,, where asseesnyntsivere levied ag&lnst tha Street railway Com pany and, which ..U contested, r -y. -I.IIT BTBlEET AS15SSET5 1' ' TOf At ITElf A tlMtt The totaf assessment for the improve ment oFilnt street; rrom the north line of TfiSaiffbolc Street to a. point ISO feet north, 1. 812,727 .10. s City Auditof Funk today issued .notification to the property owners within the assessment district thai these assessments are how due and payable and 'will be delinquent and bear interest after November 12. If not paid by December 3, steps will be taken to celt the delinquent prop-j oiiiuiair. nvu.i(.'Huwip wrr .mm qui by the city auditor on four other nieces of public wtjrk. These ar : - -; i. Improvement of :; the alley tn bloc 21, First Addition to Holladay Paf k ad dition,, t22S.4 ; Improvement of Mal lory avenu. from Portland boulevard to Defeanv avenue, 83401.59 ; improve ment -of Phelps street, from Una to Ochoco avenues, 1593.76 ; newer In Al der street, from 12th to Broadway, 896CO.S3. - ' .,..-', 1 " ' '' '' i ' " - '' -l-r , !. CBiXB BASK STOtESf A child's bank containing I4i5 was stoleft from the home bf Oeorge Oer hardC Nov 4784 411st avenuosoutheast, sometime Thursday night, it - was re ported ta the nollce this niorning. j v " -. ", ,.-v'..--ir i II,, . -. -, ( I - ' COftBEtTS .SATE B AtHtEE A aaoghter Vasbom to itr. and Ur. Hamilton Pi Corbett at Portland Ma ternity hospital this hiornin. i 'i n in r -i ii m iS i aaHataMM- v r Warm Clothes and a warmwelcome toys .with IwO pairs of $g).05 1 2, ; The splendid Equality, oflvthee ' tvro knicker suits their painstaking tailor In Ihfotagho.'Bt and their warm woolen . fabrics. bate made ? them the most popular-" juyenilc suits- in Portland. Popular: "in: pact too although 'their Real' Economy it la&n$ , ; - : " $10 : $ 12.50! $15 $20 -;-:VBiff'rtidmy'''-dvereeafs; belted mdd f f els with., convertible collars tail-; r oreU.tA'ihc styles t) ad wears! - A v V -complete - assortment r of styles,'. 'weights and fabrics will be found fin my 'store for boy$. ..."'.-" c4 Portland' Man's, HobJ)y Is - - To Boirow Lawn-" .;:Mower,jKeep It '1 j - " ; 1 Be careful. - folks, ' about lending your lawa mower. , - Some 'enterprising Individual is operating in the neighborhood of HUt and Taylor. "streets: borrowing mowers on' a wholesale seals. He 'forgets to re torn tbenw . Mrs. Esther- Thompson, 3Co. '211 11th street,' reported to the police this 'morning- she - lent herv lawn mower to a stranger of neat ap peaxancs and - did not get it hack. She started an investigation around the neighborhood- - and found that a number of others had been made victims of the same man. The po lice axe watching the second-hand tores for the appearance of some -r the machines. - - - -" ROUGH RIDER IS PliOCTOR'S IDEAL .S - - i. Theodora . Roosevelt was more picturesque as a rough rider, and at that time, began hi-' career of ac tivity, which subsequently led 'to his election to the presidential chair. A. Fhimstef .? Proctor; sculptor of r tha equestrian statu wntchewiU be un veiled and presented to the city 1 No vember It, decided upon tha .carving of a statue reminiscent, of the great national , leader as a fighter rather than as a statesman. ' h Proctor arrived In Portland today in preparation for the dedication Cere monies With Ms wife he had - Just returned from a big game hunt tn Alaska.- - . 1 aOrGH RIDER BEST "There were hundreds of ways -.In which a Statue of Roosevelt might have been done, said Proctor ""but this represents th best work I can dO." - ' ' - , :; A personal pride Is .taken in the Statue by -its:, originator, mainly be cause he knew Roosevelt and was fa- miliar with him as a hunter and later as the chief executive of the' nation. Every detail. of the Work was super vised by members of Roosevelt's fam ily. i., . . "Several touching incidents attendfed the , carving of 'th ; statue. ; ' ProcWj wiu vnm toaay m wnren at louna a, mlvert-mouhted rabblt'a foot n .the. pocket of his San Juan suit which the family loaned htm for the statue work. It reminded htm of the story ,whlfeh Roosevelt had ,iald him during a meet ing of the Boone and Crockett club. BCLLET MISSES Bin Roosevelt "said, that the rabbit foot Was a precious trinket of his life, He-i told Proctor that hs wa art mi in w w hind a tree darntt the Spanish-American war, peering at the enemy lines' and fondling the rabbit foot, when I a Mauser bullet pierced the tre wjiere his head would nave been had he not been looking around the, tre This Was a story which Proctor said hs be lieved had never been made public.: 5 Th stats WIU be presented to the ity by Dr. Henry Waldo Coe. j ' ' 1 " I :i " TO SPEED UP DfilVE " ' To speed up the Willamette 'univer sity 11.125,000 endowment fund cam paign to b launched November it , uie alumni and friends :ill tather at the First Methodist church tonight for a haiaqut aad rally. , The affair Is "being arranged by th Portland Willamette eiub. Speakers Will include -Dr. Carl 6v Doney.prestdent ; -B. F. Irvihe, Ed gar B. Pipers James T. Matthews and R- -A.- Boothh, Arrangements have been made to seat 390 persons. -' i... MM. , ,n -fc-r-i i . Mr n,j J. HOTEt'YlltTABLjES ifedlTE Sat, IffflTV tAbt)ut i8J0 wrth of -valuables is said to be missing from skfe deposit boxes th the Oxford hotel here, according to.. Aft Jhanagement. While the prosecuting attorney's of fice declined, to give" out Information rt Is' learned that a' complaint has been tilted witb his office against for aier Manager J. BI rtussell. h h been missing since November 1. . 1 Because Suit Knickers -v TV f" I VSkJS.-. "UJ . : , - -: v " m:fi 1 Leading Ctoihfer for over hedf a XZentuty OLCOn HEARD AT ROSEBURG BY 300; OLOGiES t, Roseburgv. pfov, 3L Governor Olcofct spoke to fewer than SOS; people at the aimery here t last nighC On Um plat form with the governor ; were Dtstrict Attorney George Keuner, secretary' of th Douglas county Republican central committee. Senator B. L. Eddy and Thomas Kayof Salem. The speakers war introduced by ISenator Eddy. -f f Governor Oicott declared that hs had no apologies to make tor his adminis tration.: but Tather It "was "with pride that he pointed to the achievements of the:- past three and one half years. Hs referred to Walter Pierce, alleging that the gentleman from &a Qrande was: dramatically tearing tax receipts In naif and declaring that was th way h expected to deal with tha high; tax rat of th state If elected. i - Governor Oloott alleged that no man could make any materiat reductions without aid of ti people, who. b said, had : themselves voted tha present tn debtednces and exoesslve tax burdens. He ridiculed Pierce's alleged statement that; the tat expense was 115,006,000 annually and quoted at length to show that; such a sura was Impossible, but on the contrary that the actual ex pense of th 'state government was something less then $S,e0,009 annually. H paid his respects to O. P. Cshow, who, in a recent articles published In a - local .newspaper, defended Walter Fierce, but mad tittle attempt to dis prove CoshoWa statements. TICKET 1GX0KES OLCOTTl V .j icotTRT hovsb AaorsEB Kow comes th lue tteket," issued by the Republican dub of Oregon With headquarters at Coirtbouss and addressed to ;trus bins HspttbUcana' The . ticket allege that th Republican club of Oregon "has investigated tho character and qualincatlons" or ; the candidates whom it indorses and rec ommends them Tor support. As is to be expected th ticket is quit Republican but it is likewise quite headless, for no recommendation is mad for governor and iother state officers,' It confines Itself to the Republican nominees for congress, th circuit court, legislature and county offices; .Circuit Judges and elscthts heads of offices in the court house tnet at noon today in Circuit Judge Stapleton's of fice and renounced the "blue ticket." A number of those .ttemding th meet butvwer candidates who ar reeom mended on the ticket. Their objection to the ticket Was that on it the Repub lican, club gave its headquarters room MS court house, thus Inferring that It was an organisation represent tlve Of th court house Republicans. Charles laockwood, deputy county clerk and clerk in Circuit Judge Tax well department, is said to be the "lOsT spirit behind tha club, and . is said to have mads oof the blue ticket. Judge Tax well stated that he. did not know untir after the ticket was dis tributed that a roOVn under his Jnriadic- tlon was being used as headquarters of the organization. Lockwood stated to day that the club has more than. 1300 memeers. .. -; . , ;3...-i-'.., DVTSCAS A4JAIJT CITES EECALL Aroused over the recent 'puMWservlcs commission: order tn the telCTr'nrt case, : Robert G. Duncan, .in A istter to Newton McCoy, chairman of the com mission, declares : That on December 16 I win put recall petitions fat circula tion against you and keep them going tHtUfyoa are relegated to that obscur ity: from which I dragged y outlast may. SCHOOL BILL MASS MEF.TIXG A mass meeting to which- the gen eral pumio is Invited (s to to held at 8 .O'clock tonight in the Peoples thea tre,? when speakers opposing he com pulyory education bUl wilt make brief speeches as to reasons why it should not become m law. Bea Setlln Will preside. Speakers will be Dr. Edward H. ; Fence, paster of Westminster church; Dr. Edward O. Eisson of Reed coltege and Richard W. Montague, at loroey and member of the library hoard. tALL S. LtTSK SPEAKS an address at the East Side library-last evening Hall S. IJuk,' canr didat for the legislature, ve;it onl rec ord in favor of legislation looking to a reduction and equalization of th tax burden, attacked the preannt tendency toward paternalism t abd . bureaucemcy in government and reiterated - his op position to the-school hilt Zi- - IOSES liAFDS POIKDEXtER - Jiy WAUA WALU SrEECH W411AJ Wins. Wash.; Kovt 1. In an address before voters of this section at local theatre Wednesday night. Sen ator Jones iauded the administrsxioa of Presidant Harding and thachieve ments of the t Republican party" during the last two years and. urged -ti re election of Senator Polndexteri ' Senator Jones pointed to the. arms parley resulUng. ia. th four-pact treaty., the economy practiced for th payment of the -nation's 823,000.000,000 war debt. thxiwnditures.tcr the care Of th disabled war vtrts and the reduction,: ef , taxes as the Important features of th accomplishment of th present adminlstraUon. He declared that Senator Polndexter shoufld - be reelected for his; valuable connection with important committees in ; th senate and declared ; that his colleague- in . the w senate - shold be praised for having the strength of character to vote a, he felt he ought in the case of the seating of Senator Newoerry. ; ' .-r-' ''.';?i''J.'"-' ';. ' .'.-jiaii stii.1. ;e jLtrxn ;" Deputy sheriffs found what they termed a ."high class" distillery about noon today when they raided the hous of W. . Kemana, No. Ztt East Sev enth street. In the garret they found two iswllla In operation, nine large bar rels 1 filled with mash and 25 gaUene of moonshine. The liquor Is said to hav been of excellent -quality for moonshine, it being classed as thre run. Keaiana was arrested ' i , STARTING TOMOMOW FOR ONE WEEK ONLY t J '-adapted from the famous j '!SJJ V-' r1: . j zmi&t$e play of the same : ; LV-' name " , j j BLUE MOOSE ORCHESTRA V HARRYj Q. MILLS . yi. - "A se- - '." ii WURUTZER L - CARTER; DE HAVEN "Entertaining the DoH in, ' -! i V A ,.'., ail T-M WW WLJ dP M V , Beat In r Pictures ; iff! i-nT- i-nfi,i ii ...,,r. 1 1 I IT f a? MURDER HEARKG IS FEATURED1 DY I! tCeuTrtjkt. 1SJ3. try The JoumJ San Kraoclaco, Nev. IVVhef th mixed jury Of e and women now sit ting In judgment On Harrv Wilton for P alleged wif murder, return their ver- orct wttain the am M hours another chapter, and probably not . th final, will, have been added to on of the most complex and pusslbig cases la th annals of American crimiaology. The case la scheduled to1 go to the jury today, and all of th cltlsens ! roost vi tally j Interested Incline- to the 't belief that the verdict Witt be an acquittal or that a disagreement will be reported. ' For -arx- weeka WU kens, owner f a prosperous garage. ba beea en trial for consph-rog , with two automobile bandits, on of whom since was slain in a desperate battle with nolle,', to kin his Wif. -, I '-- ,- '..V Mrs. Wllkens was murdered May 30 last when the Wi la ens family, after a five-day camping ; trip in the Santa Cms mountains, were returning to their home in an Francisco. Th mur der fqUowed th holdup of tha Wllkens ear In a lonely suburban thoroughfare of the city. r. -j,.-. - , Ehterlng Into the complexities are a 8&000 reward offered for Mrs. Wllketis slayers; a confession by on of the bandits Implicating Wllkens tn th plot; charges ot a rffara up and ab LAST S T R A GE ANGLES HEiRE IS picture packed tight with ac tion and thrills, and heart interest; a production tremendous in its pictorial dramatic qualities. SUCH ii i .- v : -': . V .-' I ' I r . 1 i m ft u i m : 1 y. m r r w I) lNr-Nnrri-si--. rt o i (?, i A story of Paris of its Apdtihe pens, its Latin Quarter, iti tilit teriner midnightto-dawn distHct iiind its famous "Red-MilL" Mats.- (week days) . Eves.(andeSuiidays) ,.v -1 i J f m- tempted extorton b1 counsel for Wil kens atill v antht J confession by man who elaimL tS-J'' rn.r-,rn th bandit car and - av.Ti' TJ3 asy lum with Aott placing any credence In his story ,' parttAl diaprovtl of the or-', tginal confessloAi. by a. scora of volun teer witnesses. Including several police erf leers, aed last fcutj no least -an al leged motive for Wllkens deslr t rid himself of Ala, wif tri the. shape of the retemai 'tnangie." ' As tme of th apexes of th Idv hy- pothtnusei -enfesssd I . a . the ether, woman in the caseis a slater of-the. slain woman.- a youni and pretty G-r-man girt , h easnef V this country ltKiInd Alive; Missing Tnree Days Walla Waua, Waal 2Cov,. 8. Jes Key, promfhent confectioner,, who has beSa mlaslng slnf Monday, whs he Went alone en a tier hunting trip to the upper forks of th Salmon river country, waa found (by ; a searching -party of Knight of Pythias late yes terday afternoon. -Key was wander ing in a half starved condition through snow, trying to find ajnearby cabin. H . talked ; incoherently."1 unmistakable evi dence of his three-day fight without food or drink. T. SCHOOL SENATE ELECTS , llJlton. Nov. I. Th aenat of the Union hlth school, district Ho. S. a.la.,1 : h& fnllnwlnr nfflwrt! -BUill Wllcex Rutn wtison. iivorma t-o. ei- don Cheshire, Ray Edward. i-Usabeth Carter. Lerole Taylor ; house of rrpre- , sentatives: . Roy Hemdon. Kenneth potts, Harry Lamb. Pat Mansfield Oeorre Wfcka. Chester Babcock. 1L TIMES TONIGHT "MY WILD IRISH ROSE" human appeal and .BOc 'I 1 I ! J J -AT 11TII :..-. - ' I i . Y '-,' rl l II cr h I l l i l I I, ii i l w ...