.HE WEATHER
oorfiON: Generally cloudy tonight
w r.i-Hav no cnango hi .wimp!
' Sa,rn variable winds. Tern.
l"1 ? m Ilmum Friday, 30 da
'"'"maximum Thursday. 53 de
Z Stow of river, mlnut .8 .1 I
Wind, south.
FINAL HOME
EDITION
B E L I V E Ft I E 8 Tha fUglettr
fluard la making tvary affort ts Ik
aura prompt deliveries. In tut your
Caper la lata or loat telephone 1200
afora 7. p. m. tad It will Mat til
by apeolal uataengar.
LANE COUNTY'S HOME NEWSPAPER.
kESWELL gets frost
P TODAY'S NtWS TODAi
IQjj I WILL IT FLY MONDAY?
'iS LOWEST bf-I
THIS FULL &&&m,,-M
EUGENE, OREGON, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1930,
PRICE: ON STREETS Sc; ON TBAIN8 AND NEWS STANDS 8a.
15) leflMfiflR)
ercury Skids Down to 30
Degrees Above Zero
Friday
IcKenzie Pass Is Blocked
For Winter, Engineer
Reports
hrh mercury took a bis slip In tha
mediate fcugene distncc iouraunj
ht, anil a" a result a new minimum
30 decrees, two below freezing,
, recorded at the local weather
reau. a neer.v, pencil uni's ii
ich hung over the town most of the
ruins intensified the cold.
he night wits the coldest in H.U-
e since March IT of tbia year,
n the mercury fell to 20 it was
luounced oy u. o. atoruehcu, wca
fr observer. Tho maximum tem-
kature Thursday was 33. Thero was
liwo-mile wind from the northeast
Eutene Friday.
Creswoll Frosty
Puttide o( tho Eugene district, ex-
t in the l ascaues. ine lempera
s were not recorded as sub-nor-I.
Creswell reported a henry white
st covering the around Friday
-ninp but there was none- ree
led at Cottugc Grove. Junction
r Flrtrence. nr Wnlrerville.
Nbere is snow to the depth of 25
ips on the Cascade Bummit, it la
orted by Southern Pacific offi
s, although the- temperature there
i oot unduly low, 2S beiliK the last
.line recorded Thursday night
fere are 2o inches of snow at Mc-
frdie Sprint's.
inoiv is blocking the McKoniie
s. it is reported by Knymona
Ih. highway engineer, and tliere is
much prospect that tlie road there
he onen Benin this winter unless
Farm Chinook wind and rain should
inn a thaw. The barometer at
sent is very bitch. Mr. Walsh aaiu.
bating a continuation of cold and
mr weather.
Snow On Hills
:now lien on the bills as far down
McKenzie valley as Vida, Lea
z. and Walterville. although there
none on the lower ground, it is
"rted. The temperature came
to the freezing point nt Wol-
nie xiim-suny night, although the
t was not tlie coldest of the year,
iorence reported clear nnd quite
rm weather Friday morning. The
jlieruiure there reached a mini
m of 38 Thursday night, but with
sun shining and only a gentle
id at 11 o'clock Friday the mer-
r was up to m. There was a
e-imle wind blowing from the
if. it was reported from the const
rci station, and the Burf was quite
'HI!.
Miction City reported a small fog
-h lifted early and moderate tern-
attire. There waa Quite a bit of
at Cottage Grove. It wn renorted
In the weather bureau there, but
Bunt like a boy't paper dart, thla queer looking craft, designed
and built by Roy B. Sorogga, local tailor, will have Ita first real teat
flight at the Eugene airport Monday morning when a navy teat pilot
cornea hera for the purpoae. Above you see a view of the craft, called
"The Last Laugh," with the Inventor, Mr. Scugge, and below, from
left to right, you tea Mr. Scrogga, Dwlght Newman and Henry
Scrogga, who aseiated In the building of the plane.
SOUTH SHUT DOORS
Succession of Failures in
Finance Laid to Other ,
Crashes
PUNTYVS. CLTY
CiSE IS STARTED
HE DALLES. Or... Nov. 21
h-A case that will be watched
r interest by many municipalltiea
nas Deen initiated in cir
ctmrt here, with farm orgnnlia
a of Wasco county bringing
Iannis proceedings against the
'iirt to force that body to
aensmeuta agninvt city pro
r f'-r county road building pur-
i anstiror filed by the city denies
omty court lias such authority
of charter provisions of the
ipilitT.
e case will be expedited and
to the NinrpmA crtirt- a inAn
potable in orrtpr th!lt t decision
point of conditional law may
"tamed. All parties by stiptiln-
" r-?a tDr aecision wm
elfect HCiu budgets.
pneral Warrants
Called For Nov. 24
;M tV.ntworth.
J issued a cnll for all general
warrants registered np to Aug. 1
jneiiding gjnernl wnrrant No.
': 1 he wnrrantK will cense to
.merest after Monday. Nov. 21,
".eninortli announced. Tax turn
'id misceg11roll, collections
'g ne pnst month will make pos-
' retirement of S.'iS.iJO0 or
' worth of warrants.
ruth In Meats"
Plan Is Favored
Kf. Ore.. V "1
i':ttlIffmon ; f '
. u v, rK,p, R,ur v
t'siklation that will permit the
- "'id marking of meats ac
the "truth In meats" plan
.' . mmnier. spretnrv ot
'iflC Tnternntitr,l I.itr,...'trw.lt
r;"'i ami member of the na
nieBt boR,d. sar Dr. W. H.
tate veieriuariaa.
By ASSOCIATED PRESS
Elaven banks in five states ot the
south and lower middle west failed
to open for business today, con
tinuing the succession of failures
ot the last week.
Banks in Kngltsh, Leavenworth.
Corydon and Corydon Junction, all
small communities in southern
Indiana, wero taken over by th
state banking department on the
heels of the failure yesterday of two
hanks at New Albany, Ind.. across
the Ohio river from ljouisviue.
Banks at Paris, Tenn., Doniphan
and Edinn, Mo., at Crestwood. Louis
ville suburb, and Mndisonville, Ky.
at Asheville, N. C and a negro
bank in Nashville, Tenn., were the
others to close. 1
Closing of the aix Indiana banks
was attributed to the recent failure
of a group of Louisville banks. Tho
closing in Kentucky today brought
the number there to fifteen in a
week, seven in Louisville and two
in its suburbs. The Asheville clos
ing was the ninth in North Carolina
intwo days. The Missouri closing
was blamed to heavy withdrawals.
Eugene Couple
Wed 62 Years
Mr. and Mrs. George M. Dlllard.
5S2 East Broadwoy, celebrated their
sixty-second wedding onniversary on
Thursday. In their honor their son-in-law
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. John
H. Patterson, entertained at a fumi'y
dinner, those attending including .Mr.
and Mrs. George II. Dillard, Mr. and
Mrs. Alfred H. Dillnrd. Mr. and Mrs.
John B. Patterson. Kenneth Patter
son. Miss Doris Helen Patterson, and
Miss .Martha Patterson.
Mr. and Mrs. Dillard were married
in Lane county 62 years ago and hove
lived here since. Both crossed the
plains when small children. Mr. Dil
lard was SI in August and Mrs. Dil
lard was so Nov. 2. Tbey have the
two children, Mrs. ratfrr.on and Mr.
Dillard.
SURPRISE PARTY IS
HELD BY DEPUTIES
T.ee Hubbard, 40, la in the county
jail charged with possession of
beer following a surprise party at
Vida late Thursday afternoon.
Walter Edmiston and Glenn Bown
of the sheriff's office went to Vida
on other business, and dropped in
at somebody's house to hunt for a
man. Edmiston said that when they
were seen at the door Hubbard grab
bed something and started out the
door Into the brush. The officers
got him with a box with eight
quarts of beer, be said.
InsMe the house a "capping party
has been going on, he said. A five
gallon batch had been fixed and was
being capped. The beer which bad
not been rapped wa poured down
the sink before the officers got back
to the house, they said.
Freak Plane
To Have Test
Here Monday
X
"Tb Last Laugh," frenkish-Iook-ing
airplane 1 invented and built by
Roy Scrogga, loco 1 tailor, will be
given an opportunity to tent its
wings, or rather lack of wings, at
tha Eugene municipal airport Monday
morning, provided the fog is not too
dente, otherwise Monday afternoon.
The plane, which ia shaped after
fashion of a paper dart, without
the usual wings of an airplane, will
be handled on ita trial by Henry
Hershev, United States Nary teat
pilot, who will come here from
Spat tie for the purpose. Claude
Gardiner will serve as the mechanic
in giving the ship the test.
"The Last Laugh" made its first
trial a year ago Labor, day at the
Newman ranch on route 1, where It
wan built. At that time the plane,
piloted by Hersbey, rose from the
ground a few feet, although it did
not attnin n great altitude. Since that
time Mr. Scrogga has made a num
ber of improvements nnd Is quite
confident the freak ship will raise
properly Monday.
Mr. Scroggs first designed and
started working on "The Iast
Laugh" during the World War.
Since It has been completed It has
attracted much attention in avia
tion circles. A model of the machine
was recently made and exhibited a
the aeronautical show at Miami,
Florida.
Among the advantages of the
plane are slower takcoff and land
ing speeds, and more passenger and
freight space. The La?t Laugh left
the ground at a speed of 'Jo n.iles
per hour a year ago. That speed
is much less tbau is required for
ordinary airplanes.
T
BOSTON. Nov. 21. OP) Liquor
rnlued at a million dollars, one of
the largest seizures in the history
of prohibition enforcement, was in
the bands of government agents to
dnv. This estimate of the value of
caraoes of two liquor laden barges
was given at the office of the east
ern division commander of the coast
guard.
The barges, the Edith and Eagle
Hit) nnd Hie ocean-going tug Murrell
of New York, were captured by the
coast gunrd patrol boat Jackson off
the Maine const Wednesday nnd
brought to Hosion Inst night. Nine
teen men, the rrews of the tug and
barces, were taken into custody.
Government agents who made a
preliminary examination of the car
goes said if all the containers and
eases that appeared to contain con
tra brand did in fact, the seizure would
probably be the bigest ever made
on the Atlantic coast.
Mrs. Joe Lillard
Is Enroute Here
Mrs. Joe Lillard, wife of the sensa
tional colored halfback on this year's
University of Oregon freshman foot
ball squad, will arrive in Kugene
Monday to make her home bere with
her husband. They plan to establish
permanent residence here.
Lillard, who promise to be one of
Oregon's football mainstays during
the next few years, was drawn to
Oregon by his adnvratinn for loai-h
"Doc" pear. Me wan married short
ly after graduation fiom high school.
Here's Index
of Paper
Plans are being worked out by the
editors of the Hegister-Guurd to let
the readers help in the final selection
of the features which will be assign
ed to permanent places in the paper
when the adjustment period is over.
When the last installments of "It's
a Groat War" have been cleaned up a
much more satisfactory placement of
news nnd features will be possible.
Meanwhile here's today's index:
Pages 1-2 tlene'ral news.
Page 3 City News, Neighbors.
Page 4 Editorials, Wash! ngton
letter, Dr. Copelnnd, Early Eugene,
Side Glances.
Page 5 Women's page, society, re
cipes. Your Children.
Pages 6-7 Sports, Highclimbcr.
Pages 8-9 Theaters, luburban
news. Badio.
Pages 1 0-1 1 -12-13-1 4 Week-end
food section. Miss Iehr's Recipes, Lo
cal nnd Suburban News.
Page 15 "Great War'1 (continued
story). Jiggs.
Page 16 Comic page, "Heart
Hungry" (continued story.)
Page 17 Markets.
Pages 18-19 Classified ads. cross
word puzzle. "Believe It. or Not."
Pago 20 Flapper Funny, local
news.
BE
Heavy stocking of the McKentie
river with Rainbow trout within the
next yenr, conctructinn by the state
.highway commission of additional
fish ponds near the Eugene city
power plant nt Lenburg. and early de
velopment of the Willamette highway
were three projects which were an
nounced at tho monthly meeting of
the Lane county chamber of com
merce "tMiursday evening. The meeting
wna held at the Howard dining room
on the Pnciflc highway north of Ku
gene, with H. K. Mnxey of Spring
field, president of the chamber, pre
siding. The release of 300,000 Rainbow
trout two years old in the McKenzie
river next November, one year from
now. was announced ot the meeting
by David Evans of Eugene, member
of the Oregon state game commis
sion. The trout which will be re
leased were hatched in 1920. Mr. Ev
ans said, and at the time when they
are turned loose in the McKenzie
ther will be from eight to twelve
inches in length. They will be placed
in the stream just after the close of
the 1031 fishing senson.
The release of trout that size. Mr.
Evans said, is in accordance with a
new policy of the game commission.
State game wardens have come to
the conclusion that the rate of mor
tality among fingerlings, which have
heretofore been released, 1ms been
entirely too high. The two-year-old
trout will be much ' better nble to
take care of themselves, and they will
have from November until the open
ing of the next fishing season in the
spring of 1932 to become accustomed
to the river before becoming eligible
for catching.
The -state game commission will
hereafter include In ita bud tret each
year a sum ranging from $2000 to
V000 for construction of additional
fish ponds ot the Leaburg power
plant on the McKenzie, Mr. Evans
announced at 'the meeting. One fish
pond adjacent to the dam was con
structed as an experiment by the Eu
gene water board, and there is space
for many more. The ponds will cost
in the neighborhood of $20tK each,
and one or two can be constructed
each yenr.
Complete development of the Wil
lamette highway as soon as is prac
tical is favored by the stute highway
commission and by the federal bu
reau of public roads, it was an
nounced at the meeting by Judge C.
V. Barnard of the Lane county court.
However, .fudge Barnard said, no
work will be don on the Willamette
highway above Onkridge until the
sections of the Mr-Kenzie nnd Itoose
velt highways in Lane county are
completed. '
N(
i i
saass-sss.. a s.....ia.... a.saaassa I
LITTLE HELP
Pictures Taken Shortly After
Death of Man Held in
La Grande
IDENTITY NOT DECIDED
Views Show Man Wasted
By Hunger; Scar Is
Lacking
, Two photographs of the man be
lieved by the sheriff of Union county
to be Bay Sutherland, Marco la mur
derer, were received at the sheriffs
office Friday afternoon and were ex
pected to reveal whether the killer of
Deputies Oscar Duley and Joe Saun
ders has bceu found.
Sheriff H. L. Bowu uud Deputies
John Cnrlile, tieorge- Cunudy and Lee
Bown were out of the city, und their
return was being awutted for identifi
cation of the pictures. There was no
one in the office who knew Suth
erland. The photos were taken shortly
after the death of the old man in the
La Grande hospital. One shows him
I Hiore he was shaved. He had a
heavy beard. The other shows him
after he waa shaved.
If the photographs are considered
enough like Sutherland to the sheriff,
a deputy will probably be sent to La
Grande or the remains of the old man
shipped to Eugene.
Return Awaited
The return of the sheriff is expect
ed to put an end to the case, which
turned out n puzzle to La Grande
authorities. Sheriff Jesse Bresheors
of Union couuty told authorities here
tlint the old man conformed in every
particular to identification, of Suther
land published on the poster broad
cast after the murder. Doctors who
examined the body at La Grande,
however, ttuted there was no scar
over his forehead as Sutherland-had,
and that there were no bullet wounds
on the body.
Believed Wounded
Sutherland was believed to have
heen wounded in the gun battle at
Marcola with Deputies Lee Bown and
Bodney Boach and a trail of blood
was traced to a creek the morning
after the murder of Duley and Saun
ders. The photographs revealed the hun
ger nnd wasting of the old man. He
was found in a barn and taken to the
hospital, where be remained two
weeks before attention was brought
to authorities. He waa clothed in rag
ged waist overalls and was nearly
famished.
PORTLAND, Ore.. Nov. 2L OP)
Detectives investigating the alleged
murder of Mrs. Leone Bowles, 'A3.
Portland society matron who died
from a knife wound ten days tgo, to
day turned their attention to n soiled
towel, apparently bloodstained.
The towel wan found yesterday In
the apartment of Mrs. Irmn Loucks
Paris, 2'S. in whose apartment Mrs,
Bowles died. Mrs. Paris and Nelson
il. Bowles, 34. widower of the dead
woman, have been charged with (he
murder. They told police Mrs. Bowles
stubbed' herself,
District Attorney Stanley Myers
soid, he attached little importance to
the towel but others were of the
opinion il might prove to be nn lm
portimt clew. Iietectives said the
towel Intro two large stains with an
unstained portion ltetMeen them sueb
as could have been made by wiping
the death knif.. with the cloth.
Direct Program For Child
Welfare Assured
WASHINGTON. Not. 21. OP) Sliding; past a point of danger,
the President's conference on child health and protection proceeded
today toward adoption of a promised direct program for welfare of
the young.
The storm, which broke In a sub-committee over a recommenda
tion to give the public health service maternity and child health
activities now handled by the labor department's children's bureau,
was quieted for a time at least. The question may he passed to a con
tinuation committee which will take up all the conference leaves
unfinlnhed.
At the center of the difficulty stood
Miss Grace Abbott, head of the chil
dren's bureau, who has been sup
ported by some as a successor to the
retiring secretary of labor, .lames J.
Davis. Hbe was in a minority of on
aeainut the transfer when last night
the entire public health section of tlie
conference approved the plan.
The majority agreed, however, to
glre her dissenting opinion the same
distribution granted the report of the
majority views, presented by the iib
committee which earlier In the day
bad voted the change over a stronir
protest by women supporting Minn
Abbott.
Itealizing the seriousness of a pos
sible break, the ronferenc's proced
ure rommittee is tied a declaration
that the entire program was so im
portant ns to justify any amount of
time and effort to secure harmony.
It pointed out questions defying so
lution may be passed over to the
group which wilt carry on the con
ference work.
The transfer question is of long
standing as a source of conflict be
tween the health service and the
children's bureau. Support for it ap
parently rests on a belief the mater
nity work fs more of a medical func
tion, than it is a social service.
Miss Al.bH yeMerdoy had the
strontf support of Secretary Davis
who in an address to the whole ron
fere nee declared emphatically against
subtracting any functions from the
children bureau.
WEST'S REPRESENTATIVE!
SAYS PR
ACT CAN'T
BE UPHELD
C. Crabbe, Ohio Solon, Is
Willing to Permit
Beer, Wine
SHOULD SUIT PEOPLE
Strict Governmental Control
On Sale Suggested
As New Plan
Barbara Dunn, Eugene high tchool Junior and outstanding 4-H'er,
who will leave Saturday to repreaent 11 western atatea and Hawaii
in competition In Chicago for the Sir Thomaa Llpton trophy. She It
ahown In the dresa the made to win the Oregon atate champlonahlp
In the national 4-H eongreaa In Chicago, and which waa in Important
factor In her telectlon to repreaent the weat In the Llpton contest.
Three Elderly
Sisters Form
Suicide Pact
LOS ANOICLES, Nov. 21. 0W
The cold waters of the Pncific ocean,
wushing ashore in Snutn Monica buy
the bodies of two elderly sisters, to
day had uncovered what authorities
term one of the strangest suicide
pacts ever recorded here. The body of
a third sister is being sought.
Westerday the bodies of Ada Mc
Keon, a widow HS years of age, and
Abba Miller, 63, a spinster, were
found. About the same time Ralph
Miller, 72-year old Hollywood artist,
prominent in bis profession, received
a letter informing him his three sis
ters planned suicide. Reading in news
papers of the strange case, he sent a
friend, A. Dow, to the Sawtelle, Cal.,
mortuary where the -bodies had been
token and identification was made.
Miller, who lives with his family In
Hollywood, gave the letter to the
police. It was self-explunatory,
"Hear Ralph: Take n good grip on
your courage, deur, and try to think
that what will have happened when
you receive this is for the best.
"It fs useless to try to hold out
any longer wo have- come to the
end Wo owe lfl.'t2." nnd have no
other way to pay it and nothing to
meet expenses nnd live on and we
cannot get work or sell anything to
carry on "
POLICE BREAK UP
LOS ANGHLKS, Cal., Nov. 21.
(A1) Police claimed today they had
broken up a gang of alleged kidnapers,
responsible for threats recently made
against several prominent Los An
Keles citizens, 'ITie announcement
came after the arrest of 12 men and
a woman In a series of raids con
ducted by Edward ChHwood, bead of
the narcotic S'luad, Inst night.
Although members of the suspected
gang, allegedly nagnnized in east St.
Louis of volunteers from Chicago
and New York were held on charges
of violation of the state narcotic act.
( hit wood snid he- had information
from the underworld they plotted the
kidnapings and actually carried out
tno of them.
25 Persons Killed
By October Wrecks
SALEM. Ore., Nor. 21. C)
Twenty-five persons were killed and
4'VJ injured br traffic accidents in
Oretron dnrinz October, sriy n report
by Kent Shoemaker, chief state traf
fic inhpector. The total number of
accidents was 2706,
HONOR EUGENE GIRL
Farewell Reception Is Set
For Barbara Dunn at
Court Houss.
More than 200 4-H club leaders art
expected to attend the farewell re
ception for Barbara Dunn and the
Moses trophy Friday night at 6
o'clock in the circuit court room of
the courthouse.
Miss Dunn will leave Friday night
for Corvallis. where she will board
the Oregon State college special train
Saturday morning to start to Chicago,
where she will represent the west in
two important contests. She will leave
on the same train that will take the
O. S. C. football ten in to Chicago to
piny West Virginia. Mr. and Mrs. H.
O. Seymour will accompany Miss
Dunn. H. C. Seymour Is state 4-H
club leader.
Barbara Dunn will represent the 11
western staff h mid Hawaii in a con
test with tliret divisional champions
for tho Sir Thomas Lipton trophy,
emblem of higheHt record In nation
al 4-H club work. She will represent
Oregon in the national style dress
rovue n lo. in which the prize wilt be
a trip to Paris.
The meeting Friday night will also
(TURN TO PAGE
12)
"Cacklistic"
Expert Works
EVANHTO.V, III., Not. 21. OP)
Policeman Osrnr HwnnHon claima to
bo a "Cneklislic" pxpert by which be
monns be enn till an much nltout a
hrn by her cocklo as a ballistic expert
can alwut a gun.
The onimrhinily came to him to
miiko a prartiriil demonstration Inst
nitfht when Krcd iJitlmer telephoned
the polim (luit he wanted them to
do something about tho .trantfn noisra
he was hearing in bin bnrn. Swannon
got tlie ennc and there wan cackling as
he and IJittmer entered the barn.
"Those," .Hid Itittmer, "are my
light Mrnhmns."
"Mght Itruhmns, nothing," said the
expert. "They might be Rhode Island
Ifa.l. t .n.. ... LA.t ft,. Li.wt oil
they might be Huff Orpbingtonn if the
Eitch waa a Mile higher, but since you
ave none of thene the cackling must
be coming from something else."
With which remark be switched on
the light nnd ilixclosed, he reported,
thnt the cockier wan Alliert Took. 15.
who snid he had just dropped in (or a
cilcVea.
COLUMBUS, Ohio, Not. M. W
O. C. Crabbe, father of Ohio'a irj
lawn and former attorney general of
Ohio, today announced he favored a
modification of the Crabbe act to per
mit the eale of light wines and beer.
Crabbe said tha enforcement of the
present stringent prohibition law, la
Ohio was "not aatlsfactory" and that
the people of the atate bad not re
spected the statute.
Modification Need
Tho former attorney general said
the law waa filed to promote trut
temperance and that It needed to be
modified to eult the majority of the
people of the atate.
Crabbe aald he waa for modification
which would permit the aale of light
winea and beer under atrict gorern- '
ment control. Thla plan, he pointed
out, could not become effective, how
ever, without a modification of tat
Volstead act.
"Light wines and beer under strict
governmental control would be pref
erable to what we have now," Crabbe)
said. "There i neither respect for nor
true enforcement of the present law.
If the law aa enacted had been prop
erly respected and enforced I would,
not have advocated exchange but I
am willing to concede that this la
not true and consequently am In favor
of modification.
Favor Majority
"We need t statute that will mart
nearly meet the wishes and command
the respect of the great majority of
the people. The present prohibition
law has not commanded the respect
of the great majority of the peoplt.
The present prohibition law hat not
prevented the one of Intoxicating
liquor but on the contrary baa brought
about t condition where there are
greater percentage of our peoplt
drinking now than ever before. The
drinker, are a different element too
than In former yeara. '
"I believe I majority of the peoplt
of Ohio would still favor a reasonable
Inw regulating use of ntnxlcanta but
they are not In accord with the pree-'
ent rigid measure."
NEW TOUK, Nov. The New
York World today quoted James M.
Cox, democratic presidential nominee
In 1020 who waa here to attend the
wedding of bis son aa anving he be
lieved the democratic nntional plat
form in 1032 would contain a plank
calling for repeal of the eighteenth
amendment and the return to atatt
liquor control.
Roosevelt to Run
It aald he believed Gov. RooaeveH
of New Tork, hia running mate on the
1020 ticket would be nominated by
the democrata for president In 1032
on the Insnea of water power, utility
regulation, unemployment and the
working out of a scientific tariff to
place the country on a Bound economit
tinsla.
"The democratic party." the World
quoted the one time Ohio governor,
"hna never had a more necensry mis
sion or a brighter prospect than it
has now."
CAPONE LOST?
SAN FUANCISCO, Nov. 21 W
rolloe officials of bay district cit
ies snid today Donald Conn, manag
ing director of the California vine
vnrdists' asaoclntion, bad not been
nhle to give them any Information on
the wherenhouts, nctivitiea or re
ported movementn of Al Canone, Chi
cago gangster recently reported ia
California. ,
AUNT HET
By ROBERT QUILLEN
"My eloctrio vibrator
ain't reduced mo none,
but it's worth the money
just to scratch my back
where I can't reach."
(Copyright, 1939, Poo. Syndicate)
V