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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 8, 1925)
' . 1 '! . r - - ' " . t . t i - - " j " " . '-j i " . ' - i : . ' . . ' ,- I - - ' ' . .: . 1&. BEVEN1Y-HFTH YEAR SALEM, OREGON, TUESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 8. 1925 PRICC FIVE CENTS i coauiiii : iw 1 MURDER' OF LITTLE GIRL IS ADMITTED BY MANIAC u-' HARRISON NOEL, 20, MAKES CONFESSION OF CRIME COAST DEFBiSE IS E, OFFICIALS ARE RETICENT AIR DISASTER PROBED i - i ABOUT MITCHELL CHARGE BY GERMAN NAVIGATOR nil STATEMENTS ARE EXPECTED TQ DRAW HEAVY CENSURE "FALSE SECURITY" DECLARED CAUSE OF CRASH SOP BIG IDE FOR FLOOD ITIfiiS Secretary of Labor Declares Vast Economies Obtain ed by Mergers i Denial Blade in Connection With Death Of Negro; Boy Is Thought Insane Steady Work Said Obtained Iadustrtel" Consolidation; Union Matters Taken Up By Davis MONTCLAIR, N, J.. Sept. 7 (By The Associated Press) Har rison Noel, 20, year old son of a prominent Montclair family, today FMPI ftYMPNT nlnilRRFn Pleaded goilty to a charge of kid- uaping six year - oia ., ry uaiy. whom be has told the police he tnlltv tnhft mnrder of Raymond Pierce negro chauffeur. ; In an earlier confession- INoel said that he had killed Pierce in order to obtain an. automobile for the kidnapping. He will be arraig ned later for the murder of the child. I. " j Noel's plea oh the kidnaping charge Was entered at Montclair where the child J lived. He was then taken to Cedar Grove, where he said the murder of Pierce oc curred, for arraignment on the oCher charge. j ;:; Still Indifferent ,to the crimes to whiojj he had confessed. Noel to night was in the Essex county jail at Newark. He will be charged with the murder of Mary in Mountain View, Passaic county. In west Paterson be still faces a charge of atrocious assault and battery brought by John Shandin, the Report Declares the United ' . i n -1 If- states is t-ar Benina tng land and Japan Nature of Rcnorts To Be Filed Against Former Chief Not ' s Given Oat Authorised Elimination of Safety I Valve Blamed By Air Navigator ; ; WASHINGTON. Sept. 7. (By Associated Press). Decision as to the action to be taken by the war deoartment In connection with mi L MITCH ELL UPHELD Public charges made by Colonel wuiiam Aiucneu, iormer assistant. Attack on United States Would Come From Alaska, Investi gator Says Air Serv . vice Small " ' . KlOOSEHART, -III. Sept. 7. ( jBy Associated Press). Indus trial consolidation as k 'step to eliminate waste ', in production, assure steady employment,1 reduce costs And curb, over development, was advocated tonight by Secre tary of "Labor Davis la his Labor Day address, broadcast from the Moose, headquarters station WJJD. '"Laws "which make economic consolidations illegal ' serve no public Interest ahd ehould :Te al tered" to conform to present day tendencies,", Secretary Davis as , eerted. He warned against or ' ganized attempts to abolish the preraiilag system of selective Im migration, urging friends of the method to loin him In an effort i to make the present law more chauffeur wounded by Noel as the . selective. " "i- I latter fled with the child In the . t aiimMnr inri tnniiv ! tn ar. I car taken from Piferce. ganized labor, he said that trade unionism "will -have hard sled ding and a rough road to ' travel if It cannot Itself 'adjust the Juris dictional dispute." !r ; ' " "The unions alone can settle that dfficulty and they should." . Secretary Davis cited the boot and shoe, bituminous mining, and transportation as Industries in which vast economies might be effected by consolidations, i - ' "The greatest source of unem ployment In this country is the over development of Industry." ; He said 227, or 14 per. cent, ct 1,570 boot and shoe factories In the country shipped 6$ per cent of the industry's production. In this group, each man produces While he was being fingerprint ed at the Jail, the! youth, who for a -few months last fall, was a pati ent at the Essex ( county Insane asylum at Overbrook, said to the officers:'. - ! "Remember," gentlemen, I never killed anybody." ; Police Captain James F. Mason, who assisted In obtaining Noel's confession said the evidence would be submitted to the Essex county grand jury which! meets Septem ber 15. . I ; .' j; Captain Mason said Prosecutor John O. 'Briglow would ask the court to apoint a commission to pass on Noel's sanity. Governor Sulzer today sent a representative to the Essex county LOS ANGELES, Sept. 7. (By Associated Press.) W. B. Shear er, experimental expert for th American narv during the world war who has been investigating naval conditions on the Pacific at the request ot Senator William H. King of Utah, tonight made pub lie a report on aviation affairs which be has forwarded to Senator King and which reveals the Unit ed States air -service's standing sixteen per cent in size and effec tiveness as compared with France and Japan 100 per cent each and Great Britain 58 per cent. The report, which also deals with the American army air strength in conjunction with the navy, submits the following esti mates as . necessity 'increases to bring the services up to a stand ard comparable to the air strength of foreign powers: '' Officers r 4,000; men 30,000; machines 4,000. .Referring to the American navy's surface and submarine craft, which are declared to be es sential to the country's defense in cooperation with the air, the re port points out that of naval ves sels in commission and reserve. Great Britain has 673, the Untted States 408 and Japan 308. In the Pacific it adds, the speed of the United' States fleet is only 16 knots as compared to Japan's 22 knots and declares that the greatest American naval guns are chief ot the army air, service. against the air service adminis tration of the war and navy de partments, awaited today the re turn to his desk tomorrow of Act ing Secretary Dwight F. Davis. "In his absence deoartment offi cials maintained the absolute, ali enee they have observed since the publication of the Mitchell charg es late Saturday added a. new and sensational chapter to the air power controversy of which he has been the center for more than two years. They would not even disclose what steps had been taken since Saturday to obtain an offi cial record without which there would be no basis for disciplinary action against Colonel Mitchell, either by way of reprimand or court martial." There is reason to believe that Major General Ernest' Hinds, com manding the eighth corps area on whose staff Colonel Mitchell t now assigned, has been instructed to transmit to Washington an of ficial report with any recommen dations he might care to make as action against the air service of ficer. Owing to the absence of Colonel Mitchell over the week end from his post at San Antonio, Texas, General Hinds has had no opportunity since his statement was made public to establish its authenticity or otherwise to ques tion the colonel with regard to it. Colonel Mitchell is expected to return to San Antonio tomorow. As Acting Secretary Davis also ill be back at the war depart ment then, presumably it will be possible for the official record of this new Incident involving the colonel to be made up during the week and transmitted for the sec LAKEHURST. N. J.. Sept 7. (By Associated Press). The loss of the heavy dirigible Shenandoah was the outcome of "a false sense ot security" arising from incom plete tests of the reconstructed system of safety valves. Captain Anton Helnen, former, German dirigible pilot and construction adviser of, the airship, said today. In a formal statement he an swered assertions' . ot , natal air station authorities that the new system had been thoroughly test- Four Bodies Are Missing In Wreckage Pifed Up by Wenatchee Flood YOUNG SPEED KWG WINS IN TERRIFIC AIT TO RACE : - - boh Mcdonough rets aver age TIME OF 18 MILES Harts and Earl f Jboper Take Sec ond and TTilrd la Great 230 VlJe Drive DEATH TOLL' IS NOW 16 i Damage Estimated at Over Half Millioa; Apple District Hard Hit; Debris Covers 10 Acre J ALTOONA, Ptnn SepL 7. CBy Associated Press.) Driving pace ot SENATE BOLES IE ASSAILED BY DAWES Vice President Continues Bitter Attack in Speech Made In Portland ,250 miles at the terrific WENATCHEE, Wash., Sept. T ed and could not have caused thel (By Associated Press.) Efforts disaster over Ohio which Captain Helnen had declared traceable to the removal of eight of the 18 safety valves on the dirigible's gas bags. ' i We learn from reports for warded to Lakehurst," Captain Heinen said, "that tests were con ducted with 10 ot the original 18 valves shut off from operation and'that nothing happened when brought over 'pressure height. It is but fair to Inquire why the all-important time element of such a test is omitted from the report. It is entirely conceivable that the ship could be lifted In quiet air slowly with only one valve working In combination with all gas bags, but an emergency Is an entirely different proposition." Captain Heinen said "a false feeling of security" had been en gendered and the safety j valves from being "a device tor the pro tection of human life' became a device for saving the valuable of work crews of the Great Nortl. em railway and volunteer worl: ere were being concentrated lajte today on clearing away debris lot Saturday's cloudburst, beneauh which four missing victims are 'be lieved to be buried. Twelve others. whose bodies have, been recovered also were killed by the torrent which swept across the apple .yard terminal ot the Great Northern road, washing out tracks in places and covering ; them with impass able deposits at others. One point where it was bolleved bodies of the missing mi;ht be found was near the railroad's roundhouse, where bridge tl znbers. rails, rocks, mud and other debris were piled to a depth ot U n feet. 118 miles, an hour without a single stop, young Bob McDonough, the .speed boy from the west coast, this '.afternoon won the annual autumn -automobile race classic on the Al- tooaa speedway. Hb official time 'was 2 nonrs, t minutes, s sec- 'tftrtfle i Two minutes later. Harry Harts flashed across the line, taking sec ond place. His time was 2 hours t minute and 12 seconds. The veteran. Earl Cooper, who I gave the monster gathering of rac- j ing fans, a sample of high speed, j during the final 60 miles ot the grind, was third,' 26 seconds be hind Harts. LONG DEBATES FLAYED Right of Unlimited Arrowed ( Tend Toward MultipUeaUom of Bflla, genata Leader . Declare LAUREL SPEEDWAY. MART- LAND. Sept. 7. (By Associated Press.) Three world's motorcycle speed records fell today as the na tional motorcycle championships were raced for the first time over the new Laurel bowl. Joe Petrali ot Los Angeles starred in setting new marks ot 5:23 4-5 for ten miles, and 14:05 2-5 for 25 miles. He also captured first place in the fifty mile championship and forced Jim Davia of Columbus to sneed to a new record of 2:42 2-5 In the (Coatinii4 en Pt 3) MRS. WILSON AT GENEVA WIFE OF LATE PRESIDENT TAKES PART IN PARLEY VAIN SEARCH CONTINUES IIUI'K Or FINDING FIVE IfEX ALIVE W DESPAIRED OF (Coatiaued on pace 7) , ' 7 , " i representative io me Jssex county greatest American navai guns arej , , , , r-trt' it a I r- -Mlen?V:?M!.6 Pair! jr1,Ue,1 hospital fronr whUh Noel escaped outranged 8,000 yard by the Jap-1 RALPH HARR IS CALLE ZZZ 1 V. on June 29. to obtain a report on wu" -y Vmv.juieufc vu. Noel.8 cofflg llled there. produce all present .requirements. I i ,. . - . a: i . i.. Ana i i " -producing about 31 per cent ? of JAPAN WAR. ! S FEARED anese. The Shearer report refer ring to Colonel William Mitchell's i CIVIL WAR VETERAN LIVED HERE OVER 15 YEARS the country's shoes, the average production of worker is 1,388 pairs. In a third group of -605 factories, the output tor .each em ploye is 1,069 pairs. . "Another 19 per cent of the factories employing 60.4 per cent of the workers now produce 65.6 per cent of the output and could, with steady work tor 300 days a year, produce all the boots and shoes we need. t V "The balance of these Workers operate solely in an economic sense to prevent :any of the work ers 'from getting a full year's work ; operate solely, from a labor point of view," to prevent any-one In the industry from earning a decent living. : s'. !m : r; "It may be that the law stands as a barrier to any remedy.. If so, I, submit that there must be some thing wrong with the law. If this was so it cannot be stopped under existing law; . then let us have a law under which it can be stopped. United States Steel cor poration as a stockholding - cor poration has - been permitted to gain such control as will enable , It to stabilize the running' time Coatinued oa pc J) RELINQUISHMENT OF ISLANDS , WOULD SAVE TROUBLE MAN KILLED IN WRECK i (Coatiaaed es paga 4) GREAT FALLS j Mont.. Sept. 7 (By The Associated Press) Expessing the fear that possession ot the Philippines j by the United States eventually fill lead to war with Japan, Congressman John M. Evans of Montana, advocated re linquishment by" America of its hold on the islands in delivering a labor day adderss here today. Mr. Evans declared he believed the United States would remove a threatened cause of war if she would give up the islands, assert ing the cost of operating the navy would be greatly jreduced if this were done. "I fear that the Ja panese will take the Philippines," he said. "Then the American peo ple win get excited. Bands will pity, speeches will be made and the question Will 'be whether Am erica shall take the islands back." He cited the Immigration bill and the restrictions on Japanese In California as factors precipitat ing ill feeling in j Japan against the America he declared In his opinion American j possession of tht TMHrmtn fat 9 veal cm which threatens war between Ja- SHERIFF OF COOS COUNTY IS NOT EXPECTED TO LIVE MARSHFIELD. Ore., Sept. 7. Sheriff E. P. Elllngsen of Coos county is being brought here from Curry county where be su tiered a broken back when .his car went over a 250 foot embankment. His father-in-law, J. B. Sweet, was instantly killed and E. D. Hatcher slightly injured. Elllngsen is not expected to live. Ralph Harr, 81 years of age, died at the home ot his daughter, Mrs. L. W. Gleason, 225 , South Fourteenth street on Monday. Mr. Harr was well known in Salem and had lived here for over 15 years. He was a musician. Mr. Harr was a veteran ot.the Civil War and active in the Maca- bee lodge: He is survived by a son, Ed Harr; and a daughter. Mrs. L. W. Gleason. A grandson. Clifford Gleason, also survives him. Announcement of the funeral will be made later by the Rlgdon & Son mortuary. . . ! ! GENEVA, Sept. 7 (By The As sociated Press) "It Is magnifi cent," Mrs. Woodrow Wilson said -to personal friends tonight after spending . the entire day closely following the opening day in the celebrations in, the league of nations assembly. She left the league auditorium deeply affected by the day's experience. She was particularly impressed! by what Dr. Eduard Benes. foreign minis ter of Czecho-Slovakia told her of a practical attribute of the; league of nations which is not generally known. -' I I "Do you realize, he said to Mrs. Wilson, "that by spending four weeks each year at Geneva I see every foreign minister in Eu rope. Like other ministers. I am able to treat in this neutral at mosphere many questions existing between us which are amplified later into important agreements. The league ot nations founded by your husband is a great time saver." rw l. . . . Tha flMwl (nr. w a fwnnM I " " " a OT- ' - : I Aar trx win DriugB ucar no re. ai wuuuier point, along a spur track, a great pile ot debris accumulated, against a etrlng of freight cars, and searchers were eeeklng here for bodies. ' i t An area some ten acres in ex tent was covered with wreckage. Water from Squllchuck creek, the sources of the .flood, still la flow ing in large volume, and this is interfering with clearing of the wreccage ior t tne complete re moval of which it is expected that three or four! weeks will be re quired. ' ' On the chance that some of the bodies of the i misslngj may hare been washed Into the Columbia river, into which the creek emp ties, a search was being made along its banks for 30 miles be low the mouth of the creek.' The estimated damage still stood at upwards ot half a million dollars. This Included the direct loss suffered In the flood, and also as. m m . toe io ot several nunared car loads of apples, stripped from the trees by the hail storm which ac companied It. HONOLULU, Sept. 7 (Br The Associated Press) One week ago commander John ' Rodgers and rour otner navy filers took off from San Francisco In the sea. piane pn-j no. 1 for a non-stop flight to Honolulu. They have not been seen since. Despite the increasingly appar ent hopeless nature of the sesreh. officers and men ct . the United States navy In Hawaiian waters to day continued to seek some trace ot Commander Rodgers - and his seaplane. They expressed them selves as determined to save the . . musing aviators or rind some trace confirming their loss. By day airplanes and surface ships pursue the hunt in the wat ers where the seaplane last was reported while submarines and omer snips comb the waters to the north and west, where the air ship might have drifted had . It made a safe landing. By night tflA M.wtltl.hl. v 1. .klu rCAI nLUUKU IS UnUNtN Pr the empty waters, trac : Ing patterns in the clouds. Mean- AUTO DRIVER SET NEW MARK IN CLIMBING MOUNTAIN THE RUB IN RUBBER CAR OWNERS WARNED paa and the Upited sutes- 3 ' MANY AUTOS STOLEN; LOCK ," ING URGED BY POLICE ' Keep your automobile securely under lock and key and take all possible precautions tor Us secur ity, is the advice of local police who over the week-end received four reports at the loting of auto- mobiles."' . ', : : , ; ; A. Chevrolet coupe stolen" from the T. W. Pettyjohn motor com ' pany was recovered Saturday night by NighfSergeant Edwards after J. A. Peterson of Route 3 "hadj re ported having seen the car abandoned on the road a .mile ot Liveeley station. The car had been s stripped of a battery, mdtormeter, and 'the globe and lens from one headlight. :f S. P. McCollum ot Gervais re ' ported to police Saturday night i the jtheft of his Chevrolet touring car from a parking space hear tne : corner ot Court and Church street between 7:30 and 10:00 o'clock la the evening. - .J-.:y."- Sunday morning Sam Paris of ? Lakf Labish told police that thiev es, had loted a Ford car at his home and had taken a battery, 4 laotbrmeter.' speedometer, - dash light, and a headlight lens and light bulb. 2 , The theft of a-Ford wheeL tire and rim from a Ford car at 2640 Lee street, helonglag to 'Roy Ray, "Was teporled to " police Sunday morning.;: ILL LUCK PURSUES RUTH BAMBINO'S DOG KILLS TRIZE COW OF NEIGHBOR BOSTON Sept. 7. (By Asso ciated Press). Babe Ruth, still under the shadow of s 35.000 fine Imposed by Manager Miller Huggins of the Yankees, had an other piece of bad; news today. On the eve of his return to the game after his suspension by Hug- gins the babe learned that , his Engitsb nun terrier . uot had run wild on his Sudbury" farm and had killed a pedigreed cow owned by I a' neighbor. The feetghbors plans to bring suit against Ruth. ,, ""They come In bunches, like bananas." Ruth , remarked when he heard the news.. "Well, this luck can't last forever." , BRIDGE LEAP IS FATAL SUICIDE MEETS . DEATH IN 50-1 FOOT FALL TO STREET PORTLAND, Ore.; Sept. 7. A man believed to be John Flinn, 38, of Youngstown, Ohlo committed suicide by jumping from the west end ot a railway bridge over the Willamette rlTer. ' He struck the ground, 50 feet below and 10 feet from the rlrerredge.: ire died at a hospital an tour "later without regaining consciousness. ,, . ' 1 j ' ' -V f"1'' f j 1 1 COLORADO! SPRINGS. "Colo. sept. 7-(By The Asoclated Press) Charles Myers of Colorado Springs tedsy piloted his automo bile from the foot ot Pike's Peak. king of the Rockies, to the clouds that hover on the summit a dis tance of 124 miles. In 17 mlnut es and 48 2-5 seconds. Smashing all previous records In the annual climb of the tower ing peak. Myers, off to a fast start flashed across the finish line more than a minute ahead ot Glen Schultz, also a home town boy, add won possession ot the Penrose silver trophy and a cash prize ot 3 1500. -Six thousand per. sons lining the slopes of the fam ous old mountain from the foot to its crest, cheering hltn to vic tory. SchulU., finishing second. made the distance In 18 minutes 52 4-5 seconds.. The previous re cord for the climb was established last year by Otto Loesch, covered the distance la 18 minutes IS seconds.. ' time search squadrons of destroy ers, on their return from Austra lia and New Zealand are on the last , lap of their return Journey. They will reinforce the searchers when they arrive. A dispatch from San Francisco today said that Captain Stanford E. Moses, commander ot the air craft., squadrons of the battle neet. who had charge of the flight, had publicly admitted that he had virtually given up hope of finding the five aviators alive. "aaaBMvmaaiMkBMBHMMiB HEAT WAVE IS UNBROKEN IOWA CONTINUES TO 8 WELT. ER IN UNUSUAL WEATHER DOWNPOUR HITS SALEM TOTAL OF .31 OF" AN INCH FALLS IX AFTERNOON An unusually heavy tall of rain accompanied by ball fell in Salem Monday afternoon. An electrical disturbance, although .not felt ra full here, occurred at the same time. Official weather bureau figures place the rainfall at .21 I ot an inch. - ! Reports from other parts of the state indicate that the rainfall was general throughout western Oregon. ' DES MOINES. Iowa. Sept, T (By Assuiatecd Press). The heat wave that sweltered Iowa all of last week continued over the week-end and throughout today, One death was attributed to the unusual September weather in Des Moines today. Inoccncio Gar- eio. nine years old, was drowned in the Racoon river when be went swimming. He failed to com? up after a dive. The wind vhlch had turnel to the north this morning shifted back to the south tonight and brought a hot breath. la Des M6lnee, the maximum thermometer reading was 9, enrtewhst tatter than the 90 to 100. degrees weather thi: held throughout lat week. Thunderstorms which visited parts of the state , over Sunday. broaght only temporary relief. Meager reports. from different parts of the state indicate that the corn is sufficiently matured to feed now and that - further, hot weather may damage It. PORTLAND. Or, SepL 7.-(fft Asoclated Press.) Charles ' G. Dawes, vice president ot the Unit ed Sutes, brought 6500 persons at the public auditorium to their feet here tonight in a rising rote that pledged support to a reform in senate rules and roused his hearers to applause for the cause he has consistently championed since his Inauguration last March. To the American people he ssld. he was taking the issue. I be lieve you are with me," he de clared at the close ot his address and roars ot approval answered bJm from packed floor and galler ies ot the big building. h Mr. DawM declared he would win the crusade for senate'rule reform saying that he relied upon the common aense ot the American people to see to it that bills were no longer talked to death or changed to their hurt through ar chaic rules that allowed individual senators to trade and win advan tage by exercise ot prerogatives. - It stands to reason," said Mr. Dawes, "that any body which for the privilege of acting as a unit must make concessions to. its in dividual members will pass more legislation other things beig equal than a body that does not operate under that handicap. The facts are that In the last five ses sions ot congress, the senate with 96 members has passed 182 more bills and resolution than -.the house of representatives, with 45 members. "The senate passed Its larger number ot 3113 bills and resolu tions In those "10 years out of a total ot about 29,000 introduced. And the house, with majority clo ture passed its lesser number of 2930 out of about 82.000 bUls and resolutions introduced. 'Since May 12. 1110. 66 dlfftr ent times It has been necesssrr for the majority and ' miner! ty leaders In the senate, both parties, to go as suppliants to every In dividual member of the eenate to get his consent to a unanimous agreement that the senate ot the United States could do Its business properly and get It through with. Declaring that defeat is impos sible la the fight he is waging the vice president asserted: "There is nothing more msjes- tie than the march of a truth among the ranks ot the American people. Because it la right you can't lose.' For the time, one pre senting the truth msy seem de feated. Then he rises stronger by . every defeat.' Every time anything happens when an issue is ones la the minds ot the American people he gets stronger.' . Don't . any of yon feel sorry for. ma when you read I am getting beat. It is not me. It is not my proposition. Jt. has been fought for by many of the best men In the senate, from the days of Henry Clay to the day ot Oscar Underwood. It Is not a partisan question. The reason why I as vice president of the United States have v-come to yon and speak to you upon the Issue Is be cause it Is my duty, as It would be" my duty. In connection with the budget as director of the budget; it is a question in which all par ties are Interested a non-partisan question as to how the bu ' lnesa of this government, your' government, should be Tan." RENE VIVIANA IS DEAD FORMER FRENCH TRESrDF.Nt DIES OF LONG ILLNESS . EUGENE. Ore.. SepL 7. Labor day events in Lane county were marred today by a heavy rain fall. The total precipitation was half an Inch, according to ' the local weather observer for the govern ment. To"b!i celebrations, "one at Florence -and one -at Wendling. were held and hundreds cf Eugene people out in the tnour'.a'n and at coast resorts were caught' la the downpour, : PARIS. Sept. 7. (By The As sociated, Press.) Rene VlrUcl. former "president of Franre. and twice his country's representfttlre en Important ml&rlons to the" Untted States, died this morninT in the MalaiAon maBitoriuro. wfcere' FREIGHT TRAIN WRECKED te rent f the uu two yaars. 17 CARS LOADED WITH GRAIN PILE IT ALONG TRACK DL'LUTH, Minn.. Sept; 7 (By The Associated Press) Seventcrn Northern Pacific freight cars loM ed with 17.000 htifthels ef rrln consigned to Duiutii elevators were wrecked when a broken wheel caused a derailment here I tonight.. No one was Injured, - M-Tlvlanl's end came peaceful ly after a long period of extreme feeblenew. which friend M.ld s to be traced to Ifce d-ath of Mi wife soon after his return Utm Washington in 192:. Ha collarscd -bl!e plc-ad'.ns cat la court on June S. 1 J2 J. ar 1 had been'corfiaei to the ss;.;r lum since, sallirirx frca c;:: rlete hrea'own.