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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (March 25, 1925)
'-. v A -. . ., i :- " - - ... r There are 75,000 people within the trading area of Salem, These people come to Salera to do a -good partiOf their tradlrg and most. all of tneta are readers of the Statesman and loo 3c. to -w advertisements to guide them In their purcas;?. rains extreme Treat portion;, mild temperature; fresh west to Bouth'winda. Tuesday- Max. 65; Mini 39 ; Hirer ; 3.4 falling:; Rainfall ; none;' Atmosphere clear; ;Wind north. . r SEVENTy-FOUETHyEAB PRICE FIVE Cn:'3- -SALEM, OREQON, WEDNESDAY lMORNING, MARCH 25, 925 i; SliURDEHTnifiL OF ELLIOGSON GIRL STARTED 16 Year Old Slayer of Mother Breaks Into Sobs During Court: Proceedure; Jury incomplete ; . TALESMEN CHALLENGED CLOSELY BY ATTORNEYS JuryExpected 'to Be Ctomplet cd in Two Days ; Ques tioning Sharp i SAN FRANCISCO.' March 24.- Adjournment of the second day of 'the murder trial of Dorothy El- ; lingson, 16-year-old slayer of .her mother, 'found the jury box filled temporarily.! four of the state's : ten peremptory challenges ex hausted and three of the defense's 20 used. ' . ., Counsel anticipated that anoth er day; perhaps two. would he re- ; quired to complete the Jury. Mean while, the young, defendant appar ently-is winning what seems to be a battle to maintain i her compos ure. ; The first day of the trial she fainted and was not revived for several minutes. ! Today shortly before noon she slumped sobbing ly into a police, woman's arms who sat beside; her "attorneys; during the afternoon she watched the tedious progress of jury selection with a grave, stolid' expression. ' Woufcn Questioned j The first temporary Jury panel contained nine men ' and ' three women. One of the -women, Mrs. May E. Qoodbertel, a middle-aged housewire, was excused -by the de fense on its second peremptory challenge, ! The defense showed a tendency! to interrogate women Jurors closely. - But the complexion et the jury " at " the los of court today meant little, as sufficient challenges re mained to change every seat twice. .Mrs. May E. Goodierlet. the only woman questioned today, was the center of all eyes Jn the court room as she was lnterrogated. She Is, a mother. Bhe; hesitated be tween questions, apparently giving them deep thought, and watched interestedly while . the- attorneys wrangled over her answers. : The women spectators kept their eyes fixed on her face. :: i:-' Prejudice Probed "As a mother yourself," Attor ney Skillen demanded, "would you enter this trial with prejudice be cause iwroiny Kiungson is alleged . to hare murdered her mother?" "xv. o, i don t tnink so," she said - slowly. ' r "Would the fact that the girl dkt not take the stand In her own defense. prejudice you r against her,R McAtee, for the defense then asked. ; r '" t 'It might," Mrs! Goodberlet an swered, "according to the evidence that was- given." -.i v , She was excused on the second challenge. . . . . ,: ;:--: (The courtroom filled as soon as the loors were opened at 10 o'clock. Men, middle-aged trades men and bachelors, predominated. IMack born-rimmed spectacles pre dominated, groups and dozens of them. There was just a handful of women at the morning session. They looked like leaders of clubs. It was a crowd prepared lor thrtjls but they missed the only one when Dorothy Ellingson fainted and "fell - after ' the close of the morning session. SCI BEFORE DIG FAIR Tentative Date Set for Sep tcmbec2l, WJth'HoHday On Sajem.Day . ,The tentatlre dae for the open ing of the high and Junior1' high schools was set at September 21 by , the schqol s board last ; fight. Th(s is a radical. change as It sets thq date one" week! before theopen 'ing' of the state fair It was sug gested," how ever? that the. students be given a holiday on Wednesday of. fair wecjc, Salem gday. tha.t ihey milht be able fa see at least. a part of the exhibition. , n ; The suggestion Was 'made by a member of the board that a large map of Salem, be raade by a few of the high school students who in o h Wool Rate Hearing Is Continued; Mill Men i Voice PORTLAND, Or., March 24- 'i Oregon woolen manufacturers to day lodged protests against grant ing joint rail and water rates on wool from the ? interior, through the coast ports; to ; the? Atlantic seaboard, as petitlpfte,d by, theBos- tpa wqol trade. aas,oclatlon,Jbefore interstate commerce Commission er Campbell, who, is holding a hearing on the case" here.- It would be a severe blow at the industry now , being huilt up Jn the Pacific northwest, E. I Thompson president' of the Port land Woolen Mills;, Roy T. Bish op,- president, of the Oregon Wor sted company; . Adorph Jacobs, head of Jthe Oregon City Manu facturing company and Clarence Bishop of .the .Pendleton Woolen Mills, told the commissioner. -; , j, Others , interested ; In - the wool trade supported; the .position :; of antagonism to the Boston propos al, but; the showing of thejwoplen mill men was regarded as most convincing of all. WooV buyers and dealers cannot see justice in the Boston.plan of diverting Pa cific northwest wool tof Boston for scouring and 1 re-sale to , eastern manufacturers, por can the. manu facturers rlew with, much calm the scheme to rush most .of the wool produced In f this stretch of territory to the east when a great deal of it Is needed lor an industry now well expanding here, witness es declared. J ' Boston seeks .a . cheap through Japanese Ambassador De clares US-Japan War Is an Impossibility NEW. YORK, March 24. rT3eu- aeo MatsQdaira. new .Japanese ambassador told the Japan society at Its annual dinner here tonight that on his way to Washington he had j been 'asked what he thought of the possibility of .war between Japan and America. Con vinced no issues exist between the two countries which awaited ad justment 'by force the ambassador said he replied: "I don't' think aboat It." With unimportant exceptions he said both , peoples , have .disclaim ed bellicose desires and deprecated all idea, of discord. , "I am . curious, . therefore, to know," he said, who is going to start a war between the two coun tries and; who is going to fight In It. I should not mind wltpessiog an American and Japanese war Jn wnicn neither America or Japan Is involved. That would be a queer war." . .; ;y.jj,,-; ,i '; t. Ambassador x Matsudaria con fessed, that the .American law. ex cluding Japanese had given Japan a i "great shock and J disappoint ment." He said he would not be honest' if4 be were not to tell that the dissatisfaction was Widespread. But the Japanese placed faith in the justice of the American peo ple "which gives us hope that the day will come when, this question may be settled in a manner sat isfactory; to both countries." OIDSMIEODB ii Washington Building ' May , be Kepatred and, used ; Again Next Year I Bids for jthe Washington Junior high school property were laid on the table by the school board last night. -.The member ot the board contended it , would in all . prob ability be necessary to repair the building and use-It next year be cause of the crowded conditions in the schools now in se. i t , f The building committee was authorized to aecure some person to sleep J,nthe building, to protect it fronv petty thaft and - to make such repairs as were necessary to check the depreciation, on the building beforet It gets beyond pos sible repair.,'.- -A . j 4 It. Was Ifiugge&tedL the,..UulldlnjE be r used- for the .ixth grade, stu dent of rthe - entire city as ' that wan the cJas most crowded at t&8 PEAGEIS HELD : J jii'sisH BY SCI 0 Strong Protest rate by rail to the Pacific ports and . thence by steamer through the Panama canal to the Massa chusetts capital. It would work out In this .way l Two cars of wool from Pendleton to Portland might be hauled. in the same train.. One carload destined for , Boston by way joftna canal wpuld. be hauled by the, railroad at the rate of 19 cents per 100' pounds" while an other car billed to Portland,-also "r!JSSr2f?SSJ be charged at the rata of 56 cents per 100, pounds, , making, a differ ential of 3 7 cents i against the wool to be manufactured at Port land. , Coast : manufacturers maintain this Is discriminatory and places an undue handicap on manufactur ing northwest wool here at" home - "We are for low rates,- the low er . the " better," testified Mr. - Bish op, "but we are against any arti ficial advantage that ':- might be built up in favor of the Boston market to our own disadvaatagei If we hare to pay more for haul - ing the same wool over the same railroads, the same distance from the same points of shipment to the same destinations, than the eastern wool manufacturer, we are put to a distinct disadvantage,, we are bound to labor under a handi cap, since coast . manufacturers sell in a competitive market with the eastern mills. i r Entire Mountain Seen to Move 100 Yards in .Two Pays; Roads Ruined ROAD COHERED lILLiOllES MEEKECUaor-. 4iarchrS.'--fsUted Meeker's "moving mountain" Is I keeping right on traveling west- ward tonight In what has proved to Jte the most serious of a num- ber of disturbances -of the same kinrt In naat vars. The neak ant- -'-"-."r-? -f 7" aways- nas taKen, is movmg almost visibly it the rate of some two feet an hauf, and has entire- ly obliterated, . several nnndrea I feet of the ! main road between I Meeker an,d Rule, 45 miles away, l In two days the movement has I been approximately 100 yards. I ,The shifting of the 2,000 foot mountaln is ; undulating like a wave, and observers on the ground report , that at times ' the tremors on the mountain side are compar- able to a small ocean swell. The road is almost1 closed to I traffic, hummocks from three to I 2S feet havinar been thrust upward 1 in the roadbed or in some places the road having ;teen overspread with dirt and small Tocks. About 300 feet of the road is thus af fected and of flcials tonight aban doned hope of again : using the present roadbed. : Immediate, work will be started toward building a new road ;sev eral hundred feet away, which will necessitate building two bridges across a draw. , ; Such movement as that of a moving mountain Is not 1 un common among the foothills and small mountains, Charles Hender- snn m norfl f t rorranlinr of - the TTnitAfi state, wifilorieal nurver. I M tnHatr -tnTiAiivcr. tlThn rob- lem Is simplr one of gravity, Mr. t.n ... M.ti. i.fl -Mil I cn-r strata, which .has been wet I fcv .opnara and ronid : not . bear i the weieht of the mounUin. S100LP1IIPALS - fleauS 01 ;UepanmeniS ne- tained Upon, Recommends of Superintendent The matter of selecting teachers for the year was considered at thej regular meeting of .the school board held last' night. : . Only the principals of the junior highs and the principals 'and heads . of de partments at the high school .were considered. The other teachers .will be considered - at a special J meeting oi me noara to oe peia Tuesday, March 31. . i ine ioiioic5 wcib le-eieuisu, ELEGTS SHS TEAi.1 TO LEAVE SIEfil Funds for Chicago Trip, Se cured; Hians - uompietea for Participation in East ern'Toiirnament . : SALEM BUSINESS wen RESPOND TO PLEDGES National Tournament Starts on March 31; Interest Runs High tYith several , hundred i young people enjoying , the dance-: at the Crystal Gardens , last night . and mora thfl n , s 1 AO rec1iri1 -at ttia ) door, it was conceded tha suffi- 1 dent funds had been received and money left over for emergencies and that the high school basket ball team would be able to partici pate In the national tournament at Chicago. More -than $106 has been i turned in from the aale -of licEets and u was 'estimated tnat nearly; 2 00 was yet.out and Jhad not been, turned in to the commit tee by the ticket sellers..-;: r. - Pledges Not Complete r Harry Levy announced yester day, that he. had collected 1 S3. 50 at the Kiwanis club luncheon and that when all had been seen,' at least 225.. would bave beep re ceived " from the club - members. Nothing has yet been heard from the tLion8 club but '- members of cms organization, as - weu aa ne Kotary ana ntwanis, made tneir contributions through their chil dren attending school. Late Tuesday afternoon!; the minimum f 11T00 "was short paly a few dollars, and while it waa not possible to obtain the exact amount subscribed,"4 the difference was so slight as to be negligible. It -raa at the dance last night that if $200 is turned In from the sale of tickets, in the neighborhood of dance gQme eztra moaey derived from the sale of 'punch and the hatroom concession. Will Leave Thursday After being beseiged by a flock of railroad represenUUves, Itwas finally decided to make the-trip east over the Great' Northern Mines, leaving Salem at A o'clock Thursday afternoon. . The entire Btudent body and -faculty Is ex pected to De at the . train to bid the nlavers . eoodbve and wish them luck. Playipg in the national tourna- ment starts March 31. By getting started as early as . possible, the team will have an opportunity to get in two or three days' practice before entering the tournament and to overcome the effects of, the long train ride. The return t to Salem will also be made over a northern route. CLERK IS SAID TO lITIiFBS Bookkeeper Declares He Ex pected to Make Strike in : Oil Investments : SEATTLE, March 24.-Lv S JJrocitway, a Bwaivvr today, on. a charge of, embezxling $47,000 v from three real estate concerns; wrote a confession 10 days ago Breakaway ; said he invested thousands of dollars in oil and mining stocK .irom wnicn , n& re ceived no return. "rThese . invest ments looked good to me," bis confession read, "and. although I knew I was doing, wrong ; in tak ing the money,-1 expected to make .strike and clean up, everything.' About 1913 1 began , to , take funds in small amounts from the WT aahlnfftnn GcviifIIIm itnmnontt rkf which I was secretary. These amounts were, paid on real estate taxes and interest and into var ious companies. r This ran until 191$ when-1 acknowledged the shortage, amounting to $1,735 and the sa,me was paid off in install ments. ending in 1923 The money which Brockvsy is charged with embezzling was giv en-to him to pay -1923 taxes On land. Instead of using it for thisl purpose he paid delinquent taxes of the Washington Securities com Danv Bnt Atemrvrv - Brockway salary was $a,0 00 a year. - A bank deDosit, book how- g4 that Fiace(i $95,000 to tl3 ATTORfJEVFflR S LEASE BIB J. W. Lacyi Pean of Wyom ing Lawyers, Quotes De cisions pf Supreme Cour on Lease Contracts LEGALITY IS SAID TO BE UNQUESTIONABLE Fall Declared ;to Jlave Had Right to Enter Into Any Oil' Contract CHEYENNE. Wyo., March 24 r(By AP)-rlolding the court the attorneys and spectators for four and one half hours the en tire eourt day J. ".W. Lacey, vet eran .Wyoming attorney,.' one of the cousel ; for , Ijar ry P,-. Slpclalr's Mammoth QiJ company closed his fight i today , in the Teapot ,Dome lease .annulment.. suit.- -The dean of Wyoming ; lawyers quoted 49- cisio.n after ;decislon of the United States supreme court to uphold his contention that the lease given JlarryF. Sinclair by former gecr retary ot the Interior, Albert B. Fall, was legal and binding on the government. - !- t Act Held Legal He spoke at great length on the provision in the. act of Jupe-14, 1920, under which congress gave to the secretary of . the navy , the right. t "develop, conserve, use and ..operate," the naval reserves, and argued that act made It man' datory for the head of the nary to proceed with that program. "Every portion of the statutes is replete with instructions to get the oil from the. field and. there are no contingencies- no 'If'." Bids 'Not Necessary . Mr. -lacey-argued -that-the powers granted to'-, the -secretary of the navy under the aet were so broad that re was not required to submit the project to competitive bidding. "The government," he said, "charges . that the policy, of the administration was changed overnight from conservation to one of exploitation. t- We say that the act of 1920 which made it mandatory for the secretary of the navy t.o develop, conserve, use and operate' the reserves was the chang In the policy. and. that the law itself, caused, the change." Mr.- Lacey argued that the pow ers of congress were not overrid den because under the. act it .was self-enyldent that if .development were ordered there must have fol lowed provisions ..for"; 9U storage and that the , government con ten tipn that oil storage tanks could be built for the .navy only - .under congressiopal appropriation was an incongruity in the . face pf the act of ,1920. Jle contended that every provision of the lease . and the circumstances .under which it was made were well, within the 1920 law, -t ' . POLUSB Evangelist Explains Solution of "What Must I Do to Be Saved" "My freckles and red hair have provoked some peculiar questions from I some .people in the past. Though both .hair and freckles are sadly , faded, "there Is still "enough evidence left of the Irish within to .cause - some, folks to want to stir it up. I used , to conduct a question hox, but I am not so fool ish pow." said f Rev. Charles - Pol ing at the opening of his sermon last night at the First. Presbyter ian church on the topic. "A Ques tion .and the Answer." t !What must I do to be saved?" was the question of Mr . Poliag'a sermon. '; "This Is a' question pt distress. Distress is easily under stood by everybody. Whether It be expressed in Welsh, , French, Chinese, : German or English, w all know what it: means.' If you and I are so sensible of the earn-t est cry of distress from a fellow human being how much more will our Father -In heaven quickly In terpret every sincere cry-for help that comes from you or me. " "Jesus .Christ must have - the last word as to what you must do to be saved.- If you are not saved you . most surely are a lost ' man. If a man is outside ot Jesus Christ British Declare Pact With Germany Should . '' w ' -w i . w w - a " s be Formed ov Allies f LONDON, - March 24 ( By the AP) Austen. Chamberlain, secret tary for: foreign affairs, : informed the British .parliament .and ? the rest: of the world tonight that Great Britain - will ; bare nothing f prther to do with the . wreckage of the Geneva protocol, but -- will seek to build permanent peace for Europe on another foundation a. mutual - pact between Germany and her late allied enemies. ' ' This pact .would guarantee ' the presents frontier of .western Eu rope ' against, change .and in. It Germany would renounce all idea of ever going to war . to bring about alterations in her eastern borders as they were fixed after the ' last .war. ' . ' . With the pact Mr. Chamberlain envisaged Germany's admission, to the .league of nations with full- f ledgf d.Jnemhersbip in the coun cil -of that: organization. This vis ion, based , on Germany's recent proposals, will not bear fruit," Mr. Chamberlain thought, unless Great Britain and the" neighboring . na tions across the chancel "can deal successfully , and expeditiously with the remaining obligations of dis armament and the , evacuation of the Cologne area." Since the war, no less than dur ing, it,' .Mr. Chamberlain asserted, Europe had been divided in two camps, fear haunting the councils of every . nation and the home of every continental people. If this sontinued. sooner or later Europe Maiestic Array of -Battle Forces United, in War Tests in Pacific NAVAL BASE, San Pedro, Cal., March - 24.By . the Associated Press). A thunderbolt will crash out from the United States fleet tomorrow seventy miles off shore from here. Some two , hundred guns from , eleven - superdread naughts simultaneously will belch forth - the greatest gunnery fire ever held in the Pacific, hurling projectiles ., aggregating approxl? mately 50,000. pounds. r- - The first line ships of the battle fleet and the scouting fleet have completed twft days of battle, line maneuver formations for ' the big shoot tomorrow, to "be known as force practice. ilTonight all is in readiness for the staging; probably intht forenoon "of the? enactment of full gunnery power of the strongest fighting arm of the navy after th.e manner in which it would attack an enemy fleet of equal size in running battle. The force prac tice not, only ena braces the mpst intensive gunnery fire at one time the military forces of the United States have ever engaged In at sea, but it simulates the full striking effect of a larger naval force than ever went Into direct action 'as a fleet in battle line, naval officers say. Eleven dread naughts will belch simultaneously their total gunnery power at moving 'targets afloat and in the air. Scout cruisers, de stroyers and aircraft will partici pate. -The - great fleet win steam into -the battle line, locating the enemy', by airplanes for the- fleet commander' will ' have no know ledge of Just: where the enemy tar gets have been set. : The aircraft carrier Langley will go with the fleet, sending Its airplanes, to gether with those catapulted from the dreadnasghta and -cruisers,' to seek the targets, v ' ' ..- Beforethe 'fleet will nave op portunity of locating the taTgets, squadrons: - ot ' destroyers, repre senting an enemy- forcer, will strike at the capital 'ships just' as they would in a naval engagement with real . torpedoes ' although the -destructive explosive charges will be removed from the torpedo- heads. Thus the battle fleet will be forced to tig 'sag. to protect Itself .from the torpedoes : while its aerial ob servers locate the targets and by radio give thedirection to the plotting rooms of the sea fort resses. - - "I)ISO" IS IMPROVED DES MOINES. Iow. March 24. Pronounced "improvement was noted in the condition of. J. N. Ding" Darling, cartoonist, by at tending physicians today. A bulle tin .early tonight said: ".. . s.- .if "Ur. Darling's condition is bet ter toixy than at any time since he -w-.s etrlciea, ill last Ye-lEes- HUCEGiSTO PROVEiUIETILE would be marching to a new -Ar mageddon, but in the new propos als for a pact in which Germany and her late enemies would make mutual guarantees, - he saw the possible dawn of a better -day. - "Unless you get away from-this atmosphere of fear and suspicion, away from this attitude of an armed camp, he went on, "then, if not in my time,-in my child fen's or grandchildren's time Eu rope - will be ; given up to a new struggle and the news generation that has to pay the penalty, of that unnecessarytwar will Judge harsh ly the statesmen of today, .who failed to take in time measures by which it . migVJjaye been pre- vemea. "The .statesmen of our. country hare, great ' responsibilities and our policy, and not wholly through opr own fault, has been waverlpg and inconsistent.. Our influence - no one can move as. I have done among th statesmen , of Europe and more than Europe and not feel itour , influence has lost something by our. hesitation., our inconsistency. But now the chance is given to us. I. see in these proposals the possible dawn of.a better day.. . - . . "Without our Jxelp nothing will be done;, without pur help Europe shall march .surely, though slowly to new disaster. .With our help the waTicbapter may; be brought to a -setose? and the real triumph of peace may begin. Food and CtothinaNecessary for. Families. Stricken By Tornado - MURPHYSBORO, 111., Mrch 24 (By The Associated Press.)-" Official list of Mprphysboro's tor nado victims tonight stood .at 208 but the unofficial , list 'gave ,214 names, the discrepancy , being due to the- fact- that six negro .women killed by the storm were, taken to Carbondale and burled. Their names are - not known : here and hare not. been added to the offi cial list so far as known The.Anierlcan Bed Cross nation al relief, organization today offer ed rtq take over the entire relief work in the three states of Illi nois, Indiana and Missouri if local relief committees desired it to do so,? and to rehabilitate all home less families and establish them in homes. . Meanwhile, however, the relief work had relapsed in some. com munities . according to officials In charge of civie organizations en gaged, in . relief work, the reason being that the. first crisis having passed, the people outside the storm zone fall to realize the tre mendous amount of relief work among the injured still to be done. While Murphysboro's relief work is well organized and. there is ap parently asafficiency ot food and clothing to .care for. the homeless here for some time to come, there are serious - conditions .elsewhere CCootlsaad on. page S) LUPB DECK! : . TO BE ffiLED Willamette r Valley - Irrigated Land Company to Carry Com Cast to Court Notice that the Willamette Irri gated Lands ,. company, would ap peal his decision relative to water lights, to the . circuit court was received .Tuesday by Rhea; Luper, state engineer. Mr.. Luper favor ed the farmers of the Stayton dis trict in their controversy with the company relative ; to water , rights on the Santlam river for irriga tion purposes. . Mr. Luper, In -his decision, held that land owners had the right to distribute water on1 their own holdings. ' The land company .con tests this ruling on the -ground that Mr. Luper did not have the right talgrant over-lapping water permits. . .. - , . - - It was announced yesterday by the stat Tenglneer that 1 he had granted, the Willamette Valley Irrigated, Land company an exten sion of two years oa its pernits 1 s 3 1 1 AnECARED FOR to arpreprlate water frcn iSIL'TTfl 1 nnnrrnrnnr tiyUUIilrtilllljtiL Preparations Mado fcr Cell ing Supplementary L'avl Uraitations Meeting Oy President 5-5-3 PLAfj SHOULD DE COMPLETED, IS BELIEF, Foreign Powers to Be Iztvitcd . to Participate in Jdni Council , ! WASHINQTON, March 34. President Coolidge's plans with respect to calling a supplementary naval limitations conference are taking more definite shape. I3y his direction, Secretary Kellorg has initiated an intensive study ot the minutes of the original Wash ington conference to acquaint him self with what traspired jn. regard to those elements of naval arma ment for which no formula of liti gation was found. Work to, Be Finished The president feels there is op portunity for a conference to take up and complete the work of the 1921 meeting which laid down the 5-5-3 rule, as to capital ships a&d also found it possible tp limit pro portionately aircraft carrier ton- page and to fix the maximum size of auxiliary craft and.paval guns. A decision as to extending an In vitation or even as to inforjial sounding out of sentiment at for eign capitals with regard to a fur ther conference , is unlikely until the secretary; has completed th preliminary urveyf . . - ' -To .Call Conference- .. . ' ;-TbO'tudyj-Probably wm repairs discussions with the eecretari cl war and naty and with the rtt:! and- military experts of the gov ernment so the. president riay t s made fully aware f.the practical nd technical aspects of ;thet eup- piemeatal -conference proposal.;,, mere is no doubt the aircraft question occupies a large place in administration consideration of the arms limitation matter. . There is a feeling in some quar ters, that failure of the original conference to reach an aircraft limitation agreement does , not foreclose, another effort to that end. Whether this vjew reflects to Jtny extent recent official thought en the question In Lon don, Paris, Toklo and Rome is not known.: . ,. . BILiESTIOi fJDTYETEf Shepherd's Attorney Cay; ueniaioi uaii would uzzn "Thumbs Down" CHICAGO. March 24 c. for WiUiam Darling Shepherd told the court that denial of bail would mean "thumbs down" for hi rii. ent. Shepherd is accused of the murder of his foster son. v.'nuar-i Nelson McCllntock. - Mr. Stewart argued that bail eoulL only be denied In caoital offense v,ra proof is evident and presampt3?-i great, ana mat to deny bail would be to. decide that the evidence warren ted capital punishment. Assistant state's attorney Ciar lea Marshall said tha e.nni -., provided ,ball might be d? where "nroof fa vMAnf i,. sumption great.' The conjunction - to' and, he .sr?-Tf'! o phases set the maximum e-d 1 imsm limits of the court's c ; -cretion. He conffn-i (Continual ea pif ) .".Tunc - - 4 v Premier Mussolini IsWio'u'' The Red Crosa nn' 1 r relief caravans far v .--- c- . mid-west stom e-ct!--i Cabinet ' meL r? -v , dent CoolMse their - , . nation's tcs!-'; '-.-... ' 1 . Cor-- ' -nt W23 I: ' retary .,ellc-j f - 0 0 ' Cpctlanea rtf. 2 " i :