apitfidiiJoiRnial.-
CIRCULATION
Dally avenge distribution (or the
month ending Ma; 31, 1829
10,284
Average dally net paid 0,918
Member Audit .Bureau of Circulation
FAIR
tonight and Thursday but unsettled
with probably showers. Mild temper
ature. Southerly winds.
Local: max. 75; mln. 51; river 9.1
feet. No rainfall. Wind south.
42nd YEAR, No. 152
SALEM, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26, 1929
PRICE THREE CENTS
UN rKAlNH AMI .r
tiTANim rivr im
rfi
i
flPft
mm
NORMAL DROPS
USE OF HOME
FOR TRAINING
Withdrawal of Children
For Work in Fields In
terferes With Teachers
Greenwood School in
Polk County Selected
As Training Center
Die board of regent of state nor
mal schools voted Wednesday to
drop the children's farm home near
corvaiiis as one ox the teachers
training centers for the Monmouth
normal school. This was on recom
mendatlon of President J. 8. Land
ers of the Monmouth normal.
One reason for the recommenda
tion was that the superintendent of
the farm home -vas said to exercise
too great freedom in withdrawing
Inmates of the homi from school
whenever it is desired to have them
work in the fields.
"In the week Jul- closed." said
Landers' report, the upper grades
were out or school lour days and
the superintendent desired the
teacher of this room to withdraw
from the work and leave the room
vacant. Things of this sort are be-
in done without any regard to the
needs of the students of the normal
school sent there to do practice
teaching."
Another reason given was that
living quarters for the student
(Concluded on page 10. "column 8)
AUTO OUTPUT
FOR YEAR BEATS
ALLRECORDS
Washington, ( World auto
mobile production set a new record
to 1928.
The department of commerce an
nounced today that the total pro
duction last year was 6.203,139 ma
chines, combined output of the
United States and Canada was 4,
601.141, an increase of 1.020.761. De
creases were reported for England
Spain and Denmark.
This indicates that the Industry
Is approaching what might be
termed a stabilised condition, that
is, each year an increasing percent
age of production is being absorbed
in the form of replacements. Unit
ed States and Canadian exports
alone, totaling 586,498, almost equal
the combined production of the
balance of the world which num
bered 601,998.
The production of passenger cars,
trucks and busses in the United
States and Canada during 1928,
which was the highest ever record
ed, amounted to 4.601,141. White
this was a gain of 1.020,761 over
1927, the 1928 production was only
95,280 in excess of 1926.
LIQUORPRICES
Memphis Tenn., 0P More than
70 persons were in Jail here Wed
nesday because federal prohibition
agents have determined to "raise
the price of liquor in Memphis to
the national level."
Forty-two agents started out early
Tuesday with thick sheafs of war
rants sworn out by under-cover ag
ents, and by nightfall all the Jails
In the city were crowded.
Colonel A. W. Mays, of Louisville,
district prohibition administrator
was in charge and had cooperation
of local and county authorities.
"We are going to raise Memphis
liquor prices to the level of the rest
of the country," Colonel Mays de
clared. "Liquor has been to cheap
and too plentiful here."
PLANE FLIES 6000
MILES FOR hliCORD
Minneapolis, Minn. (LP) A new
.oiid record for continuous miles of
flight was claimed by Owen Haugh
land and Thorwald Johnson as they
passed the 76 hour mark at 9 a. m
Wednesday in their projected en
durance record flight.
Sponsors of the fllrht declared
the Minnesota fliers already had
travelled more than G.0O0 miles in
their Miss Minneapolis which was
flown on a triangular course be
tween twin cities, Hastings and
Northfleld. The present continuous
mile record is said to be 3,200 miles.
Haugl. and and Johnson began
their endurance record attempt at
6:02 a. m. Sunday. They have re
fueled in the air several times e:.
day.
Good Evening!
DON UPJOHN
OFFERS
Sips for Supper
Under the proposed ordinance
making folk who eat in restaurants
take all contents of bottled goods
from the original containers and
suck them through a straw, wc fig
ure there'll be a great falling on
in the use of mustard, catsup and
horseradish.
Taking mustard and catsup out
of a bottle through a straw wouldn't
be so bad, with an A No. 1 straw
without any kinks in it. But we
figure if a man wants a good en
joyable meal of horseradish it's i
darned wasteful, unsatisfactory way
of getting it by trying to hist it up
to the epiglottis through a straw.
Its apt to cause the main feed
line to oe stopped up and just as a
man is getting a good sip of it the
fource of supply is cut off.
We suggest for the benefit of
Salem merchants that Charley
McNary's oat crop over the Gem
Cafe on South Commercial
street be harvested and con
verted Into straws for restaurant
use. This would be a saving of
money, boost the use of home
products, and also get rid of
the oat crop. Leave it to as to
be always in the forefront In
advancing the interests and civ
ic pride of our fair city.
BIO SCOOP BIG SCOOP
ELEVATOR AVIATORS MISSING
Local People Last Heard of Tues
day Great Anxiety Felt
Great anxiety is felt about the
city over the fate of a Salem dele
gation starting out Monday morning
in the new courthouse elevator on
a pioneer expedition promising to
make the first non-stop flight from
the basement to the top floor. Load
ed with provisions for three days,
with plently of gas aboard, the radio
sending machine working perfectly
and an expert elevator aviator at
the controls, friends of the group
felt little anxiety as the party gay
ly started off on the beautiful Mon
day morning with high hopes and
aspirations. Radiograms came
through constantly advising of
progress when suddenly the words
from out the ether ceased, the last
report received late Tuesday even
ing saying t.ie elevator was making
good progress between the first and
second floors although bucking
strong headwinds and hitting air
pockets. Prom then on silence has
reigned. Under good headway the
elevator should have reached the
top some time Thursday afternoon,
but watchers at the second floor
report there Is no sign of it and
somewhere In the vast recesses be
tween the firs'; and second floor the
elevator and Its crew are facing un
known perils and hardships.
If nothing is heard by midnight
tonight, it is probable the county
will borrow some of the city's fire
ladders and send out a rescue crew.
The fact that Miss Theresa Kirrch,
operator at the controls, carried
with her a book by Horatio Alger,
Jr., entitled "Slow and Sure," is the
one bright spot which gives heart
to the waiting, anxious relatives and
friends.
SANDINO TO LIYE
IN YUCATAN STATE
Mexico City, P) The department
of interior announced Wednesday,
Augustlno Bandino, former Nica
raguan Insurgent leader, would take
up his residence in the state of Yu
catan, probably at Merida.
The department's announcement
said: "Augustlno Sandino has solic
ited permission to come to this coun
try to reside In Yucatan. The Mexi
can government has not considered
it inconvenient to grant this permis
sion which is In accordance with
Mexican law as well as international
custom which permits the citizens
of any country to establish them
selves honestly in another."
Late Season Brings
Special Values For
Annual Bargain Day
With merchants laying in fall supplies, a late summer
season and very little if any spring weather, it is apparent
that consumers in the Salem district will greatly benefit from
the merchandise offered by many of the leading retail stores
in the city at the 12th annual bar-
gain day event which will De ob
served Friday.
While much of the merchandise Is
first class and the retailers hate
to part with It at give-away prices,
room must be made for expected
arrivals and also seme of the older
stock gotten rid of at once. Broken
sizes and odds and ends will be
PORTO RICANS
PROTEST NEW
SUGAR DUTIES
Increase Described as
Prohibitive to Industry
In Dependency
Pleas Heard for Reten
tion of Proposed Tariff
On Hides
Washington, (JP) The tariff du
ties to be imposed upon sugar and
hides, commodities affecting every
household and each individual, were
taken up for consideration today
by subcommittees of the senate fi
nance committee.
Rates to be placed on these art
icles precipitated a storm of con
troversy when the tariff measure
was before the house and the dis
pute now has been transferred to
the senate where arguments pro
and con again are being heard.
Although not listed to be reach
ed until Friday, the hides schedule
was taken up unexpectedly today to
hear two of several dozen witnesses
who have asked to be heard on the
subject and the first of these, P. E.
Mollin, Colorado, urged that the rate
of 10 per cent ad valorem, proposed
in the house measure, be retainea,
Before another subcommittee.
Prank A. Dillingham, of New Jer
sey, representing the association of
sugar producers of Porto Rico, head
ed the long list of those waiting to
discuss sugar duties. He described
as prohibitive as far as the island
was concerned tne increase irom si
to $3 a ton on sugar cane as recom
mended in the house measure.
E. B. SpiUer, Port Worth, Texas,
representing Texas and the south
western cattle raisers' association,
(Concluded oo page 10. column 7)
STOWAWAY OF
YELLOW BIRD
ARRIVES HOME
New York. UP) Thr. surwaway of
the Yellow Bird, Arthur Schrelber
of Portland, Maine, returned to Am
erica aboard the Leviathan Wednes
dayfirst class attired In extreme
cut French clothes but with little to
say about himself or his uninvited
trio.
He was met at Quarantine by his
father, Morris Schrelber, Portland
fur worker, with whom he exchang
ed affectionate greetings and then
he posed, with his father and by
himself, for several photographs.
The youth had nothing to say
about his future plans. All he wished
now, he said, was to get back home
and see his mother.
The French clothes he wore were
purchased for him by Armeno Lotti,
backer of the Yellow Bird flight
and one of her crew of three that
flew from Old Orchard, Maine.
Schrelber started home from
France In a second cabin but was
shifted to first class on the voyage.
Money for his better passage was
furnished by his father.
Aside from his father and the
photographers and reporters there
was no one to meet tne stowaway.
The elder Schrelber said he and
his son would leave for Portland
during the day.
DAWES A DOCTOR
Oxford, England. (IP) Ambassador
Charles O. Dawes Wednesday re
ceived the honorary degree of doc
tor of civil law from Oxford uni
versity. Spanish Ambassador Mer
ry Del Val aL'O received an hon
orary doctorate of civil law. A large
and distinguished audience crowded
the famous Sheldonian theater to
see the degrees conferred.
offered at highly attractive figures
and thousands. If experiences oi
the past can be taken for a guide,
are expected to take advantage of
this opportunity.
Nearly every line of merchandise
la offered this year and a wide
ranee exists from which a selection
(Concluded on page 4. column 3
HEALTH RULES HIT
Stores and
aa va ano us) a 6a ms a? .
CANNERIES A JOLT
- By HARRY N. CRAIN
Masked behind the professed purpose ot providing ma
chinery whereby the health authorities may "clean up" a
few allegedly unsanitary small restaurants and cafes in the
city there lies in the proposed sanitation ordinance a threat
of senseless and impracticaole
food establishments" employing
probably 5,000 peolpe either regu
larly or seasonally In Salem.
If the proposed ordinance, as
drawn and approved at a meeting
of six health officials and three
restaurant men one evening recent
ly, is enacted the 3,000 men, women,
boys and girls employed in the can
neries here during the peak of the
season will be required to undergo
medical examalnatlons at tne nanas
of the city health officers or his
regular deputies.
Nor would a single examination
during the two or three months
that most of these workers are em
ployed be sufficient.
Every time they changed then-
place of employment from one can
(Concluded on page 10. column 4)
DRUNK FIRES
SHOTS AT PRIEST
BEFORE ALTAR
Chicago, (JF Fifty early morning
worshippers were tnrown into panic
as a drunken man tottered down
the aisle of Our Lady of Sorrows
Catholic church today and fired
three shots toward the priest as he
administered communion.
The third shot struck a kneeling
parishioner In the hip. The man
then turned the weapon upon him
self, the fourth bullet grazing his
scalp. The priest saved nimseir oy
dropping to the floor as the shoot
ing began.
The assailant, Charles O. Faster,
45, was arrested. Befuddled by liq
uor, he thought himself mortally
.wounded.
"I wanted to finish him and fin
ish myself," he muttered. "I'm not
a Catholic, but you can give me the
sacraments If you want to.1
Foster's wife said he had been
drinking heavily. She could offer
no exnlanatlon for the act
The communicants saw the
drunken man stagger toward the al
tar, but no one moved toward him.
Then he took a seat in a pew, sat
there a moment and as the priest,
the Rev. Father A. E. Keenan, began
to attend the communicants he
drew a pistol and fired two shots
in quick succession. Then a third
shot was fired, wounding Richard
Murphy. The priest and most of the
parishioners had dropped to the
floor, and as Foster pointed his wea
pon at his own head an occupant of
the same pew grappled with him
and disarmed him.
Father Keenan said he had never
seen Foster before.
SALEMlTElHOT
DURING BRAWL
Portland. Ore., (IP Wakefield
Eubanks. 38. Salem, a longshoreman
was In Emannuel hospital Wednes
day, suffering from two bullet
wounds which police say he sus
tained at a beer party at au'.a
Cherry street.
Jack Rhoads, 36, who lives in a
house at the rear of that address.
was held for questioning but denied
any knowledge of the party or shoot
ing. The house in wnicn tne party
was held was unoccupied when po
lice arrived there but several dozen
fuU and empty bottles of beer and
disarranged furniture bore mute evi
dence of a brawl.
Rhoads claimed that he heard two
shots and ran out of his home, find
Ing Eubanks In the yard. He called
an ambulance.
Eubanks haa been working In
Longvlew, Wash., as a longshore
man. He came here several days ago.
WESTERN BANKER
FOR FARM BOARD
Washinaton AA The business man
or banker to bs Appointed to the
federal farm bosrd will probably
come from the northwestern tier of
states.
This was made known at the
White House Wednesday aloni with
Lhe news, that Mr. Hc3er vn mak
ing satisfactory progress to.vnrd the
naming of the farm board r.i mDrr.'
and it was indicated that some ol
the names probably would bs
ncunced d'.:rln the rrfk.
Hands in
regulation 01 some auu or ouu
CATHOLICS OF
NATION MEET
HERE JULY 13
Portland IP) Arrangements were
completed and committees named
here Tuesday night for the 74th an
nual national convention of the
Catholic central society of America
which will meet this year in Salem
on July 13, 14 and 15. The society
met last year at at. Cloud, Minn.,
with 30,000 delegates attending.
This year the meeting will take
place on the state fair grounds in
Salem. Tne mn annual conven
tion of the Cathollo women's union
will be held at the same time.
The celebration of pontifical high
mass at an open air altar at the fair
grounds will mark the joint observ
ance of national Catholic day, Sun
day, July 14.
Delegates from every state In tne
union will attend the Salem meet
ing, It was said Tuesday night. More
than 500 will arrive on a special
train from St. Louis. Arrangements
for the convention are In charge
of Frank Saalfeld, Salem, president
of the Oregon section ot the central
society, and August Moormann, and
Dave O'Hara, vice-presidents; John
Meyer, secretary, all of Salem, and
Andrew C. Weber, treasurer, of
Portland.
LAND GRANT OF
NORTHERN LINE
IS FORFEITED
Washington UPi A bill removing
2,800,000 acres of national forest
land claimed by the Northern Pa
cific railway from operation under
the Land Grant acts was signed
Wednesday by President Hoover.
Under the act, the United States
retains the title to the lands in
question. All unsatisfied Indemnity
selection rights, if any exist, claim
ed by the company, together with
all claims of additional lands Dy
virtue of grants made to the rail
roads are declared forfeited.
The act. however, has no effect
upon the present title of the railway
to the right of way acquired under
the grant or lands used by the com
pany in the operation of its roads,
or such as lands used for depots,
station buildings, work shops, ma
chine shops- and for similar pur
poses.
Under the act the attorney gen
eral is directed to institute proceed
ings to make secure the aim of tne
legislation which is to reserve a
large amount of forest land claimed
by the railway to the government
the theory that it cannot De
used by the railway for the purposes
for which it wa; given.
LOW TO ENFORCE
WEED CUTTING
Patience has ceased to be a virtue,
Insofar as it pertains to property
owners and their crops of tall grass
and weeds in various parts of the
city, stated Walter 8. Low, city street
commissioner, Wednesday, and from
now on there Is going to be more
action and less talk.
He has been extremely lenient
with persons who have neglected to
clean up their parkings ana vacant
lots as required by ordinance, ne
says, henceforth the owners are to
to be notified and If they fail to
act. the city will.
The city ordinance covering the
matter is very specific. It reads in
part: 8ec. 1. It Is hereby declared
to be the duty of every property
owner, . . . to cut close to the
ground and remove or destroy all
weeds, thistles, grass or other rank
vegetable growth.
Section 3 reads: "Any person who
shall violate the provisions or wis
ordinance shall be deemed guilty of
a misdemeanor and upon conviction
thereof shall be punished by a fine
of not less than 5 nor more man
25, or by Imprisonment In the city
'Jail not to exce.-d 10 dayv
LUTHERANS OF
WORLD MEET,
COPENHAGEN
King of Denmark Attends
Opening of Second
World Convention
Swedish Archbishop De
clares Zulofly on Gos
pel of Martin Luther
Copenhagen (JPi The second Lu
theran woild convention opened here
Wednesdry in the presence of thou
sands of delegates and visitors from
all parts of the world, and of King
Christian of Denmark.
Divine service was held In the
Copenhagen Cathedral with a ser
mon by Bishop Ostenfeld of Co
penhagen. The very Rev. Nathan Soderblom
of Upsala, archbishop of Sweden,
opened the regular sessions with an
address to the delegates and visi
tors, among Wi.om were hundreds
of Americans from all over the Unit
ed States and Canada.
The archbishop declared that when
Martin Luth-r nailed his ninety-
five theses on the church door at
Wittenberg, he had not the inten
tion of forming a new church or
(Concluded on page 10, column 0)
FIVE HELD FOR
SLAYING NIGHT
CLUB OWNER
New York UP Five persons, one
of them a young woman, were ar
rested Wednesday as material wit
nefses in the slaying of Frank Mar
low, night club owner. Police Com
missioner Whalen announced that
homicide Indictments would be
sought against two unidentified
men.
The commissioner said detectives
had traced Marlow's movements up
until 4ft minutes of the time when
he was found fatally wounded Mon
day night near a cemetery at Flush
ing. Long Island.
Those arrested, an of whom were
said to have spent the afternoon and
early evening in the company of
the slain night club owner, were
Johnny Wilson, former middleweight
boxing champion; Edward M. Lewis,
known as "Boston Louie," a gamb
ler, of Boston; Al Siegel, a dancer
of Coney Island; Ignatius Coppa,
proprietor of a West 62nd street
restaurant where Marlow dined
shortly before his death, and Mary
Seiden, of Coney Island.
Two night club hostesses, Betty
"Mickey" Farley, 19 years old, and
Billle Burke, her roommate, who had
been questioned for several hours
by the police, were released from
custody. The Farley girl denied
she had seen Marlow on the day of
his murder.
LINDY INSPECTS
AIR STATIONS
Columbus, Ohio, P) Col. Charles
A. Lindbergh's program before he
continued his transcontinental air
journey with his bride, the former.
Anne Morrow, Wednesday bore out
his statements that the trip is pure-1
ly for business reasons.
Lindbergh is hard at worr,- ne
said, on a flight of final Inspection
before the formal opening July 8
of the air-rail system of the Trans
continental Air Transport, to which
he is technical advisor. Wednesday
he faced numerous conferences with
company officials and a survey of
Port Columbus, eastern air-rail
Junction of the line, before he con
tinued the Journey.
The trip in his open plane will
carry the Lindberghs via Indian
apolis and other stations by easy
stages to the coast. He will serve a
pilot on the first eastward flight
from Los Angeles to Winslow, Ariz.,
when the line is opened.
SEEK RELEASE OF
CAPONE FROM JAIL
Philadelphia, JP A petition for a
writ of error was filed In the munic
ipal court Wednesday for the pur
pose of having "Scarface" Al Capone,
Chicago gangster, released from the
Hnlmthiit-ff rmintv tall where he is
serving a one year s sentence for
I carrying a itmueu pmioi.
Radio to Enter
Movie Field to
Rule Industry
Chicago, (P The Chicago
Daily Journal today quoted
Leon Rubinstein, a represen
tative of the Radio corpora
tion of America, as declaring
that negotiations for an affil
iation of Fox and Zukor
film interest with the Radio
Corporation had been broken
off and that radio would now
enter the movie industry com
petitively, and Its program in
the movie field would be to
"dynamite all competition. We
will buy and build theaters.
What competition we cannot
swallow into our organisation
we will dynamite out of the
field. "Mr. Fox and Mr. Zukor
prefer to remain in the pic
ture business. That Is the
reason the deal is off.
FRENCH FLIER'S
YANKEE DRIDE
REACHES HAVRE
Havre. France. WV-Pauline Par
ker, new Madame Jean Assolant, was
welcombed to France with an air
plane salute Wednesday while her
husband and his two comrades of
the Yellow Bird bent low and kissed
her hand.
When the He de France, bearing
the American wife of Assolant, came
Into Havre, a military plane with
Assolant's friends aboard flew to
meet her and circled low while the
gangplank was lowered to allow the
American bride, her arms full of
roses, to be the first to land and
to be greeted by her husband.
The three fliers were the only
ones who knew the bride, so after
their greeting came the formal pre
sentation of the officers and friends.
They had planned to fly to Duclair
on the river Seine, but military reg
ulations forbade a woman going
aboard an army craft. Consequently
Assolant and his bride went by au
tomobile.
Madame Assolant was shielded by
her husband from too much ques
tioning, but she insisted on telling
how glad she was to be with her
husband. Asked if she was going to
settle down In France she replied
that she would live wherever her
husband wished to live.
KNEE CREECHES
DISCARDED BY
H ELL' N MARIA
London A Ambassador Dawes
will abandon the example set by
certain of his predecessors, and will
not wear tilk knee breeches and pat
ent leather shoes with silver buckles
at his presentation to Queen Mary
at the Third Saint James' court
Wednesday night.
Instead the American, a former
general t unetimes called affection
ately "H-ll N Maria" Dawes, will
wear plain swallow tail evening
dress. Both former ambassadors,
George Harvey and Alanson Hough
ton, donned knee breeches for court
functions.
No reason was assigned by the
sources revealing the former vice
president's Intention, which was in
defiance of the convention laid down
by the Lord Chamber., in's office.
In the caves of Ambassadors Har
vey and Houghton their compliance
with the old world formality oc
casioned considerable comment In
America.
The ambassador and his wife met
both Queen Mary and King George
when General Dawes presented his
credentials recently, and Wednes
day night's uttendance at the court
will be merely in compliance with
formality.
Plant Thief Caught
In Act of Robbing
Garden of Flowers
Officers think thov may
good share of plant theft and
plained of for some time, by the arrest at an eariy nour Wed
nesday by Officers James and Winterstcin of Waller E.
Downing who operates a small plant and bulb nursery nt
21st and State streets. Downing when discovered had just
hidden two delphinium plants
which he had thrown behind a
hedge at the Sally Bush residence
on Mission street and which h-
afterwards admitted to the olll
cers he had stolen from the gar
dens of D. H. Upjohn at M South
Liberty street. By coincidence It
was discovered the two plants wcro
of the choicest ones In the ganlen-
RATIFICATION
COMPLETED BY
PACHR3
Japan Privy Council Ap
proves Kellogg Treaty
Outlawing War
Count Uchida Resigns as"
Result of Interpreta
tion Attached
Tokyo, UP) In an unusually
strained atmosphere the privy conn
ell, presided over by the emperor.
Wednesday finally approved the)
Kellogg anti-war pact.
The approval was given without
reservations but an interpretative
declaration was attached regarding
the hotly contested phrase, "in tha
name of their respective peoples"
which according to many members
of the privy council violated the em-
peror's constitutional prerogative.
It was understood Count Uchida,
who signed the pact in Paris, strong
ly contested the necessity of attach
ing either reservation or interpre
tative declaration but he was over
ruled and haa resigned from tha
privy council.
Count Uchida, who has a long
and dlstinguisned record In the Jap
anese foreign service, represented
Japan at the historic signing la
Paris of the Kellogg pact.
Japan's ratification of tha signa
ture met difficulties, however, when
the opposition entered strong objec
tion to the phrase "in the names of
(Concluded on page 11, column sT"
BISHOP'S STOCK
DEALS HELD AS
SPECULATIVE
New York A1) The trading ac
count of Bishop James Cannon, Jr
of the Methodist Episcopal church,
south, was described as speculative
in testimony on record today in th
bankruptcy hearing of Sable and
company.
C. W. Kable, who lent his name to
the brokerage concern while he did
clerical work for $35 a week, was
examined at length yesterday con
cerning the relations of the South
ern churchman with the firm. Ho
was shown photostatic copies ot
ledger sheets bearing entries of tha
bishop's deals.
"Don't you see from that account
that the stocks were not held and
that it was really a speculative ac
count," he asked. "Yes,'' replied
Kable.
Harry L. Goldhurst, who employ
ed Kable, testified Monday that)
Bishop Cannon bought stocks)
through his firm on a part pay
ment plan. The bishop recently said
in Washington that his dealings
with the company had been part
payment stock purchases for in
vestment. Kable said Goldhurst had full
charge of Bishop Cannon's account
and that he was nothlnr more than
an office boy to the bishop.
He said the bishop kept in close
touch with the stock market and
once when he made a trip to South,
America left with Goldhurst a 11: t
of places where he could be reached.
Washington, (H It Is now First
Lieutenant Herbert Hoover, Jr.
The son of the president Wednes
day was given that rank in the spe
cialist reserve of the army.
The name of the son ot the presi
dent moved through the machinery
of the war department In the usual
way and the appointment was an
nounced along with 500 others.
have located the cause for a
vandalism which has been com
and had been taken from separata
places as II they had been selscted
on their merits.
James and Wlntersteln, operating
In the prowler car along Mission
street shortly alter midnight, saw a
figure duck behind a hedge at the
Bush place. They Jumped from the
"l(:(MirUiMcd oil mi. 4. column 3)