The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, March 17, 1927, Page 1, Image 1

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    Did You Know
We Can HaVe Many nSdre Factories Using Milk as their Raw; Product if We Will Only Proc
Cbvvc?
Produce the IUI ilk
WEATHER FORECAST: Unsettledjwith
occasional rains west and light , local .rains
and snows east portion; slightly .wanner
east portion ; fresh west becoming south
winds Maximum yesterday, 52; minimum,
36; river, 7.3; rainfall, .23 atmosphere,'
clear; wind, southwest. ,
: 4.: 4 t v-
V
ft
4.
The way those Chinese armies posh one
another back and forth tor hear? gains and
losses indicate that they are all In. need of
first "class, football coaches . . : '
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SEVENTY-SIXTH YEAR
HOLDS
JURY DECIK
SINGLA1RGASE
Oil Operator Declared in
Contempt by Not Answer
ing Senate Queries
HITZ TO FIX SENTENCE
Defendant Unquestionably Will
Appeal, and Fight Through
Highest Court, as in
Civil Decision
WASHINGTON. March 16.
(AP.) Harry F. Sinclair, oil oper
ator, was found guilty tonight of
having been in contempt of the
senate when, he refused to answer
questions of the oil committee
during the investigation of the
Teapot Dome naval lease.
; Justice Hits will fix the sen
t nee -not less than one nor more
than 12 months in jail and a fine
of not less than S 100 and not more
than 11,000.
Sinclair unquestionably will ap
peal the case and will fight his way
through the highest court in this
case, as he has in the civil suit
brought by the government for the
recovery of the Teapot Dome naval
oil reserve.
The nTultl-mlllionaire oil oper
ator was convicted of refusing to
answer four questions propound
ed by the senate public lands com
mittee on March 22, 1924, upon
Ms sixth appearance in the oil in
vestigation which furnished the
sensation of that time.
Sinclair wasfound guilty on
each of the four "counts in the" In
dictment,, each count ; containing
containing .one. of ""the , question's
which he refused to answer before
the senate oil committee. . ' , .
Sinclair took the verdict calmly
j . vl v. t-
bond was continued. sentence
probably will be imposed , next
week and appeals will be taken
through the District, of Columbia
our of appeals.
The jury was out . eight ' hours
and 10 minutes, returning its ver
dlc at 10:07 o'clock. It' had
agreed nearly an hoar earlier, how
ever; but could ribt report7 uhtil
Justice Hitz could be summoned
and reach the ceurt room.
Sinclair is the second man to
te convicted in theDiatricC of Co-
. (Comtiaaad fa ft. 3.
RANK OF EAGLE
SCOUT AWARDED
tXUBT OP HONOR PRESIDED
OVER BY TWO JUDGES
About 20O People Attend Meeting
Whore Many Awards Are
Made to Scouts
Impressive ritualistic servftes
conducted by the ' Portland area
court of honor in the auditorium
of the Oregon house of representa
tives, accompanied the awarding
Wednesday evening to Paul .Laf
fwrty of troop 4 and" Ardery Ran
kin of troop 6 of Salem the rank
f eagle scout, the highest honor
that the Boy' Scouts of America
confer.
Thp court of honor was presided
over by Circuit Judges Walter H.
Kvans and John H. Stevenson of
Portland, and Allan Carson, pre
i'linR ofricer or the Cascade area
("urt, sitting en banc.
Scout Executive Oberteuffer of
lle Portland area acted as herald,
and Kicld Executive Shepherd as
clerk of the court. The bugler,
color hearers and color guard of
the Portland court assisted In the
ritualize work.
Ahut 200 local people. Includ
es the parents of many of the
" who- received 'awards, wlt
ness..,i tin; event. ' " ' ":"'
Awards in addition' to the two
lUfil" -"out ranks were: . f "
Troop i: pred Edmuadson, first
flass scout; Norris Kemp, merit
I'adKes in fl.8t aid! wood carTlnjr.
Troop L: Wesley Brewster. John
jailer and Maynard McKinley,
V -''"lul cia.S8 scout: merit badges.
Arti,ur Fisher, first aid to an!-n!a'-:
Stanley King.5 firemanshlp,
"v"-. rafts-wobd; Claude Cross.
I'l-'manHhip. personal health; Mil
ton Taylor, bugling, cycling, clv
Jcs; Myron Butler, carpentry; Ver
on l.uslinell. public health, fire
manship, safety first. - .vsX
Tr"op 4: Joe Darbtr first clasi
worn; Hoffnell second class
fcout; mfcrit badges. Ralph Ennor,
tioneering, personal health," public
calleo4 a sip .x
BRIDGE INQUIRY
COMES TO CLQSE
WITNESSES ; FROM NORTH
WE8T ARE HEARD
Proposed Span Hearing to Meet
Again at Longview; New
Enemies Appear
PORTLAND, March 16. (AP.)
The two-day inquiry relative to
the private toll bridge project
across the Columbia river between
Longview. Wash., and -Rainier,
Or., was brought to a close here
tonight and adjourned to meet to
morrow at Longview. Witnesses
from eastern and southern Ore
gon, from Washington and Idaho
were heard today by the govern
ment officials conducting the in
quiry. Reiterating their declarations of
yesterday, Portland and eastern
and southern Oregon points con
tended today that the proposed
bridge would -ork a hardship on
the agricultural and industrial in
terests of th s state in that It would
prove a barrier to large ships en
tering the harbor, due to insuf
ficient vertical and horizontal
clearance of spans and piers.
Other delegates insisted with
equal vigor that the plans at pres
ent suggested for the bridge guar-
aatee adequate clearance and. that
even the largest carriers would
not meet with difficulty in the
river journey from the sea.
Several representatives of Ore
gon agricultural interests appear
ed at the hearing, advancing the
opinion that th bridge, as pro
posed, would clash with sound eco
nomic principles in that it would
prevent the fullest use of low cost
transportation and make necessary
substitution in a degree of high
cost transportation.
Industrial interests from the
rame districts declared the bridge
would impose, by reason of ob
structions and augmented hazards,
Increased shipping costs ultimately
borne by every producer and every
consumer of the 5,uOC,00 tons
o( commodities now flowing, to and
from the Columbia river ports.
Proponents of1 the Longview-
Ralnier bridge discount all fears
ct the span's opponents and de
clare no alarm need be felt inso
far as adequate clearance is pro
vide dboth vertically arid horizon
tally. Their 'declarations,, they
point out, are supported by the
leading bridge engineers of the
country and concurred in by ship
ping interests.
PINED0 CROSSES BRAZIL
Wilderness Untra versed by Plane
Scene of Airman's Trip
RIO JANIERO, March 16.
(AP.) -Commander Francesco De
Pinedo, Italy's famous flier, today
accomplished what is considered
here the most daring feat of his
great four-continent flight, which
is to touch Europe, Africa, South
America and North America.
Leaving Asuncion, Paraguay, at
6:57 o'clock this morning, he
turned his plane northward across
the stretches of Brazilian jungles
over which no man ever before has
flown. He passed over the great
swamps of South America, inhab
ited by alligators and snakes, and
so muddy that landing was virtu
ally but of the question. There
wca ho jneans of communication
except with the fierce, semi-savage
Indians inhabiting the region. De
Pinedo's plane carries no wireless.
FLIER'S PLANE FOUND
Ed Young, Missing Aviator, Be
lieved Safe At Nearby Inn
FAIRBANKS, Alaska, Mar. 16.
(AP) The abandoned airplane
of Ed. Young, missing Alaskan
aviator, has been found by a gov
ernment mall carrier at Kaltaga-
mut; the Fairbanks News-Miner
was advised tonight In a radio
message from A. A. Bennett, avi
ator who is heading the searching
parties.
The plane was virtually undam
aged, Bennett said, arid the belief
was expressed that Young had
sought shelter at-a nearby inn.
, Kaltasamut is on the lower
Kuskokwim river, .50 miles from
Bethel. Young left McGrath Sun
dar noon for, Bethel and has 'riot
since been seen. '
CANADA WILL SELL RUM
Government To Opi-ii Store For
Competing With Bootleggers
VANCOUVER. B. C.'. Mar! 16.
(AP) The k government . liquor
control board has decided to open
a" pight liquor; store here, la an
effort to "compete with bootleg
gers.' ' The .Vancouver Province
says. ; ' '
- Theclosing time of the govern
ment's stores is now 6 p. m. The
night store will probably open at
S . m and clot?? t ? m,
TO PROHI LI
Amendment Held Unconst
tutional by Discovery of
Musty Volume
NEW YORKER PETITIONS
Seeks to Have Act Ruled Out;
Find Is Epistle From Gouv
erneur Morris, Drafter
of Constitution
ALBANY, N. Y., March 16.
(AP) Constitutionality of the
prohibition amendment was as
sailed by a petitioner in the legis
lature today on the basis of a 123
year old letter contained in a
musty volume published 95 years
ago. .
If this volume, little known and
apparently, never before discov
ered by the opponents of prohibi
tion, had been in the Hands ox the
United States supreme court when
that hody upheld the eighteenth
amendment, the petitioner assert
ed in effect, the court probably
would have ruled against the
amendment and prohibition would
have died at birth.
Acknowledging his own impo
tence to take direct action in
Washington toward reversal of
the august federal body's decision,
based though it might be on mis
apprehension and lack of infor
mation, the petitioner yet ex
pressed hope that something
inight-be, done by the state gov-
( Continued on page 3.)
POST OFFICErHAS'; RUN
Rumor of U. S. Being Bankrupt
Causes Negro Excitement
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.,
March 16 (AP) Believing that
the government was "going broke"
more than 100 negroes lined up in
front of the post office when it
opened here today, and started an
all day run on the postal savings
department.
Recent bank failures, wild ru
mors which swept through the
negro sections of the city last
night and today caused others to
flock to the post office and the
run continued steadily until the
closing hour.
Police tonight took extra pre
cautions to guard against any out
break or lawlessness. Additional
patrolmen were sent into the
street on which negroes live.
5 justthouchti m you dont Wm$ml Vi Wk
fz m come over J MEAN YA TmsJ
on your porch fA ff imMVs
5 AND COOL ( fA IT ' yA'&JP Ywfo&i
SALEM, OREGON, THURSDAY
:'v
D ARROW DEBATES
WHY OF MANKIND
AGNOSTIC . ARGUES WITH
PREACHER-COLLEGE HEAD
Clifton D. Gray Crosses Forensic
Lances With Renowned
Evolutionist
BOSTON, March 16. (AP.)
A doubting lawyer, Clarence Dar
row of Chicago, Agnostic, and a
college preacher-president, Cllf-i
ton D. Gray of Bates, founded by
Free Baptists but without denom
inational control, crossed forensic
lances here tonight in the ancient
tilting yard of "what and why is
man?"
Though they drove at one an
other for two hours with logic,
wit and evidence, neither was tfla
horsed nor was decision rendered;
Darrow traced, as he has be
fore, the analogies between the
functioning of the human organ
ism, digestion, breathing and mus
cular force, and the mechanical
phenomena of transportation of
power, combustion ana leverage.
He did not attempt to hold the
whole ground assigned to him.
"I cannot prove to you that man.
is a machine," he said. What I
do contend is this: That the mani
festation of the human machine
and of living organism is very like
unto what we know as a machine.
and that if we could find it all ou4
we would probably find that every
thing had a mechanistic origin." f
The scientist has found enough,
he declared, "to justify the con
clusion that man more nearly re
sembles a machine than he resem
bles a ghost carrying around a
body for a while." '
Dr. Gray held fairly well to his
announced intent of abstention
from polysyllables, but he leaped
agilely from kinetics and thero-
; Continued on page 3.)
GANG ROUNDUP IMMINENT
"i
Payroll Robberies In Pittsburgh
, District Thought Solvodt-wrf
PITTSBURGH, Pa., March 16
(AP) The roundup of a bandit
gang held responsible for four
sensational payroll robberies in
the Pittsburgh district and the
murder of two guards was believed
imminent by authorities; tonight.
Loot totalling 1182,000 was car
ried away.
Paul Jaworski, a suspect held
in the investigation of the $104,
000 payroll robbery of the Pitts
burgh Terminal Coal company at
Coverdale last week, today named
the members of the gang in a con
fession. District Attorney Samuel H.
Gardner said Jaworskl's confession
implicated the gang not only in
that robbery, which was accom
plished by blowing up an armored
car. but connected its members
with Christmas payroll holdups in
1923 and 1925.
HELEN MARIA!
MDRNINMARCHIT, 1927
TERROR STALKS
SHANGHAI
NATIVES THROWN IN . FRIGHT
BY MURDER SERIES
Cantonese Agitators Said to Be
Using Strong-Ann Method
of Intimidation
SHANGHAI, March 16. ( AP.)
-Terror is stalking in the teem
ing native city of Shanghai ts a
result of a mysterfous series of
murders and the corresponding
spread of a story that groups of
Cantonese agitators are carrying
on strong-arm agitation in prepar
ation for a general strike when
the ntionalists become .ready to
take over the Shanghai adminis
tration. For days there has been an aver
age of one murder daily in Shang
hai, the victim usually being a
laborer or a foreman who had
shown opposition to strike calls.
The outrages have occurred not
only In the native quarters, but
in the international' settlement as
well, and the municipal authori
ties are taking steps to deal dras
tically with the situation.
"Expert intimidators" is the
nearest translation of the Chinese
description of the 15 specially
picked and trained agitators who
have arrived in Shanghai from
Hankow. Labor unrest in the city,
under their direction, is increasing
daily, terrorism being the weapon
t'sed to create solidarity in the
ranks of labor for a projected
general strike.
Particular efforts have been di
rected by these men to disorgan
ized traffic on the Shanghai- Nun
king railway, the train control and
telephone systems being tampered
with. Yesterday the intimidatofs
forced 30 engineers and firemen
and the whole locomotive staff of
the Shanghai South Station to de
sert. The series of murders which
have been reported and the fact
(Continued on page 3.)
SALM TROUBLES QUIETED
Separation Suit to Be Settled
Without. More Publicity
NEW YORK, March 16 (AP)
Count Ludwig Salm and his
wife, the former Millicent Rogtrs,
now in different sections of Eur
ope, have agreed to settle their
separation suit without any fur
ther reading of love letters in a
court of law, local newspapers re
ported here today.
Previous reports of out of court
settlement and rumors of possible
reconciliation with the "blessing"
of the young wife's father, Colonel
Henry H. Rogers, met curt denials
from attorneys, but today It was
learned that the case would be
officially terminated before it Is
scheduled to be resumed next
Monday in the state supreme
court.
- . v h lv- i 1 :.i . . v . .u 1 :
i
ills
Would Cause Discord and
Confusion Among Nation?,
Says Secretary
VIEW GIVEN IN LETTER
Cancellation Of European Conn
tries' Loans Would ' Not Of
Itself Put End To Dis
like For America
WASHINGTON, Mar. 16.
(AP) A re-opening o foreign
debt settlements, in Secretary Mel-lonV-
opinion7"would "be a step
baclrward "calculated to produce
discord and confusion rather than
contribute to the economic stabili
ty and orderly betterment of
world prosperity."
His view was set forth in a
letter to President Hibben of
Princeton university, made public
today at the treasury without com
ment. It was n reply to the sugges
tion of members of the Princeton
and Columbia university faculties
for a revision of the American
deht settlements and was consid
ered at the 'treasury as settling
definitely the question of the ad
ministration'fv attitude toward any
deviation fro-m its debt funding
policy.
Asserting tliat a nation is hardi
ly likely to deserve and maintain
the respect off other nations by
sacrificing its,-own just claims, Mr.
Mellon declared that cancellation
of debts owed the United States
would not of 3tselt change the dis
like with whtch,.the educators de
clared Europeans look upon this
country. !
With reference to unratified
French debt settlement, the secre
tary said that "It would not have
been amiss forr you and your as
sociates to have taken into con
sideration that the Inevitable ef
fect of such a pronouncement
would be to encourage and
strengthen the opposition In for
eign countries to such ratifica
tion." Sdch encouragement, he
added, would !be entirely unwar
ranted in view of the approval of
the Mellon-Berenger debt funding
accord by the American house of
representatives, in which, debate
"indicated that an overwhelming
majority of the representatives
were opposed to more lenient
terms."
Declaring that the advances to
foreign countries were beyond dis
pute loans and not contributions
to allies, Mr. Mellon said that
what the United States govern
ment had done in effect during
the war was to enable its associ
ates to borrow money in the
American investment market, with
government endorsement, liberty
bonds being sold to provide mon
ey for the loans. The situation
he contended, would have been no
different had the foreign coun
tries sold their own bonds in the
(Continued on oaire 3.)
NEVADA KILLS GAMBLING
Senate Defeats Measure By 0 to
8 Vote. After Filibuster
RENO, Nev., March 16. (AP)
Licensed gambling was out-.
Jawed by the Navada state senate
today with a vote of 9 to 8 being
registered against the approved
assembly bill authorizing wide
open conditions in gaming houses.
The final defeat of the bill was
as spectacular as the filibuster
waged in the senate yesterday
when opponents succeeded In
sending the bill back to the house
of origin . twice. Senators Scott
and Henderson; leaders of the op
ponents,' conducted an all-day fire
on the bill yesterday, but to the
surprise pt the proponents and
their colleagues , today aided ma
terially in bringing the issue to
the final vote.
EUGENE TO GET PLANT
Zcllerbarh Paper Company Plans
- to Found Branch House
EUGENE. March, 16 tAP)
The Zeflerbaeb. Paper company of
San Francisco announced today
that It will at once establish a
branch houso, In Eugene. the sec
ond one in Oregbn Property has
been purchased and a concrete
warehouse .firill he. erected." The
branch will serve all of southern
Oregon, Including 'Klamath .Falls,
and territory as far north as Cor
valllg, it was stated,
BANK BUILDING
READY TO OPEN
I.IVESLEY URGES BEAUTY IN
ALL ARCHITECTURE
Entire Structure to Be Open for
Inspection of Public on
Saturday
The First National bank build
ing of Salem is now completed
and awaits its formal opening,
which will take place Saturda
eenlng at 7 o'clock.
, Discrediting the theory that all
skyscrapers are ugly and detest
able, this, the largest and most
rr-odern office building in Oregon,
outside of Portland, raises its
beautiful pink sandstone exterior
11 stories above the sidewalk, as
the first outstanding structure of
the Salem business district.
Its beauty represents the ideals
and principles of its builder,
Mayor T. A. Livesley, to whom
Salem presents a wonderful op
portunity for careful yet adequate
investments. Mr. Livesley is firm
in his advocacy of the beautiful
in architecture, and with this ad
monition in mind, the resulting
plans were drawn by L. L. Dou-
gan, Portland architect, and car
ried" out by Hansen-Hammond,
construction engineers.
Among the outstanding features
of the building are Its massive
bronze door, the sweeping grace
of the interior lobbies, the effec
tive Italian renaissance artistry,
its efficient utilization of floor
space, eliminating the disadvant
ages of ineffective lighting and
ventilation, and perhaps most im
portant of all, the solid snbstan
tialness of the entire structure,
Saturday evening, March 19,
the banking quarters and the en
tire building from the huge vaults
in the basement to the observation
platform on the roof will be open,
that the public may inspect and
familiarize itself with the building
and its many advantages.
-Officers, directors and employes
of the bank will serve as guides
for the -evenings-" -Music will be
furnished by an orchestra until 10
o'clock.
NEW DENATURANT FOUND
"Aldehol" to Give Alcohol Smell
of Overheated Motor Oil
WASHINGTON, March 16.
(AP.) -Denatured alcohol in the
future will give forth an odor com
parable to that of overheated auto
mobile oil as a result of the new
cVnaturant "aldehol" prepared by
government chemists to prevent
the alcohol's flow into bootleg
channels.
Compulsory use of the denatu-
rant will commence April 1, Dr.
J. H. Dorah, treasury chemist, an
nounced today. The process will
be used in the SO denaturing
plants scattered over the country.
Prohibition unit chemists de
scribe aldehol as "non-poisonous'
but nauseating."
BANDIT SUSPECTS PLEAD
Brownlee and .Russell Deny Guilt
. of Robbery and Killing
EUGENE, March 16v (AP)
Albert Brownlee and Dewey Rus
sell, today pleaded not guilty In
circuit court to the charges of
murder In the first degree and
assault with intent to rob. Their
trial wasa set for March 28. They
are charged with the murder of
Eston Hooker, member of a
posse looking for them two days
after the robbery of the Veneta
pool hall and the shooting of Wll
liam Maddaugb, the proprietor.
TWO PRISONERS ARRIVE
Five Federal Charges in Women's
Department at Prison
Eretta bill Ion and Doris Wat-
kins, . federal prisoners, were re
ceived at the Oregon state pent
tentiary here yesterday to serve
vs uia v a vu; jcai auu UHJr
for . forging money - orders.. The
women were- convicted in -the"
United States district court in Se
attle. ? There- are now 'five fed
eral prisoners in the women's de
partment of the Oregon peniten
tiary. Three women also are serr
ing .terms on state charges.. .
author given; DIV0RC
Woman Can't Write Because Hus
band Grouches and Nags-
LOS ANGELES, March 16.-1-(
A P) Adele Rogers St. John.
author, was awarded a divorce In
superior court- here todav i from
Ivan St Jqhn an editor, of- a
motion picture Magazines whom
she accused of being so' ''grouchy
and saggy" that she was unable
todo any writing, r - t ;
PR1.CE FIVE CENTS..
Campaign Furthered by Re
sults Obtained in Meet- ;
ing of Growers Hi
PROBLEM SERIOUS HERE
Committee of Growers Associa
tion Finds Bare Cost of Pro
duction 8 H Cent
Hope Seen
Figures showing theheed o f a
higher tariff on cherries Vjri order
to protect the growers of the'- Pa
cific coast in their efforts to sup-,
ply the maraschino trade, were
compiled at a meeting of the grow
ers' committee of the Salem Cher
ry Growers' association,' held
Wednesday evening in the Cham
ber of commerce rooms.. , j
These data will be used - in a
united effort on the part of coast
growers, to secure the 50 per cent
increase in the tariff which is now
being asked, a campaign In which
the Oregon senators and .repre
sentatives at Washington are as
sisting. Growers from all sectlbns of
Marion and Polk counties," num
bering about 40 in all, presented
figures on their production
costs, and these when averaged
showed that the bare cost to the
grower, computed even more con
servatively than it should be; is
8 cents a pound. - .
Find Cost High V - V
This means, according to Max
Gaylord who presented a Sum
mary of the tariff situation, that -
the final cost of the cherries, '
pitted and stemmed and allowing
for the loss from shrinkage, Is
18.62 cents a pound. 1 .v ; . . - f
The Italian growers, on . the
other hand, due to the, "back .
yard" nature of the industry there
and the cheapness of labor, are
able to sell their cherries at from
SH to 9 cents a pound'ln coast-
cities; and even though ' these
cherries are of inferior qualify
compared to those grown ' here,
the differential is too great. ' '
The Importance of the mara
schino cherry trade to growerf ,
here is evident from the fact that
( Continue par 4.) v jr ,
LETTER RELATES
HEROIC RES&UE
DESTROYER WOOD PICKS UP
MEN FR03I LOST SCHOONER
Crew of Ecuadorian Boat Drifts
28 Days in Small praft on -
Pacific- V- i J
SAN DlEGO, March 16.
i(AP) An account of the drama
tic rescue of three members of
the crew , of ; the Ecuadorian
Qhnnnnf A f Ko f mm a ff aw Kav ttaisf
M'v.MWMua., sw wk)? atawa a,as aiva
drifted 28 days In an onen boat
in the south Pacific was contained
in a letter received here today by
Mrs. H. E. McCarroIl .. from her
husband, a boatswain's inate
aboard the destroyer Wood, from
The successful search" ot the.
Wood for the "ere -6t the Alba-
tross" adds1 another brilliant 'chap-'
ter to the peace time' exploits: of -
McCarroli wrote that the, Wood,
with the'destroyer KiddefY Sloat;
Yarborough, Shirk and Lavallette,
were ordered detached from the
battle fleet', while engaged in. ma; :
neuvers off Panama - and sent id
search of th(j 4 ere' 6t ' th Alba- -tross.
The" Albatross was en.
route ; to" the Galapagos islands
from Ecuador' and foundered' In a ;
severe storm, . s ., ? .
, v .; ' . . ,
the Albatross had gone to the1 boti.
iuih, uu muet souin ot uuaya
quil, Ecuador." Che lookout on the ,
destroyer Wood sighted a small
boat. ;-, 'i " ,, ' . .
In this 14-foot boat were three'
sailors and a dead -one year old
baby which the sailors aboard the
San Diego destroyer later learned
died four days after the small
boat had shoved off . from tho) ,
sinking Albatross.. ' ' '- f1
'l On the tenth day after they had
"been adrift the sailors from th
A i Da tross auiea .and ate a, topt
which had leaped Into their boat
from the deck of the schooner. ' ,
The ailors at the time of their, '
rescua-were unconscious. Their