FTllTTr
WEATHER
Cloudy west; fair tonighr,
Friday: slight changes la
temp.; we winds : Temp
Wed.: Mm., 75; Mm, 49.
II 1 M II II I
A-JQJCj
VOL. 67.
EUGENE, OREGON, THURSDAY EVENING, AUGUST 21, 1024
NO. 39 : '
"j
TORNADO TOLL
ISREPDRTEDIN
Every Building in Yale
' Is Reported Down; Two
Killed at Haiti, Say
Reports; Many Injured
HURON, S. D., Aug. 21. Reports
received here today soy a, tornado
itrock through a district 15 miles east
of here, killing one man t Yale,
northeast of Huron, and injuring Sev
an! oersons in the towns of Iro
nnnli and Carvour. Tale, according to
tkre unconfirmed rcaorts, was vir
illT wined out.
Newspapermen are accompanying
k party of doctors and nurses to late
where, uncertified reports said, prac
tically every building in the town was
demolished.
All wires into the affected area are
The storm did widespread damage
to buildings and crops in the Water
town area last night.
WATERTOWN, S. D., Aug. 21.
Wo persons were reported killed
ind serious property damage done by
kit sight s storm at Haiti, s. u.
Iltse reportB have not been verified
u wire communication is interrupted.
PASSES BILL OVER
L
MANILA, P. I., Aug. 21. W)
The house of the Philippine legisla
ture today again passed the measure
ppropriating $50,000 for the relief
of sufferers from typhoons, which was
Tetoed by Governor-General Wood
during the last session of the legisla
ture. , ' .
The bill was passed over the gov-
raor-general's veto at the InBt ses
lion and sent to President Coolidge,
who sustained the governor's action.
Governor-General Wood based his
teto of the previous measurei on the
provision putting distribution of the
money in the hands of the secretary of
the interior instead of "the governor.
A minority opposed the passage of
ue bill today on the ground that he
nose the present measure contains
the same provision, it would be vetoed
tUo. ,
The bill passed today now goes to
tt insular senate. -
CALLED BY DEATH
mn Wambold, Eugene realtor,
W t St. Vincent's hospital, Port
. at 1 o'clock this morning Be
aming to meagre details reaching
ll city today.
H had l,een at the hospital since
gust 1. having undergone an -op-rln
for cancer of the
"tornach.
P. WnrnhnM l
a wife and
"Other. Mr V r WamK1
l was U ft a widow, only a few
nth. aB0. He was 43 years of
Today's
Feature
PHONE
1200
School Girl
Wants Work
In Home
AND LET f
THE
GUARD
Want
ads
Work
pORYOU
OnsrJ AdleU
Make Too
Money
SOUTH DAKOTA
GIANT
Record for Beer
Held by Bavaria
Says Statistician
MUNICH, Jiug. 21. Bavaria holds
the record for beer drinking with
67 gallons per person a year, ac
cording to a German statistician.
Holland is next with K 1-2- gallons
per capita. Ten years ago tho av
erage In England was 31 1-2 gal
lons, but now it amounts to 39 gal
lons. The French are the champion wine
drinkers with S6.3 gallons per cap
ita.
CLEAR LAKE PLAN
IS
E
PORTLAND, Aug. 21. City Com
missioner John M. Mann today in
dlcated that he would report against
the suggestion of Captain George
S. Edmonstone, consulting engineer
of the Pure Water Development
League, an organization urging the
development -of the proposed Clear
Lake water project, that the Port
land city council join the movement
In favor of the project.
Mr. Mann said, "with adequate
storage facilities which could be
provided at much less cost than
joining tho Clear Lake aystom, the
Bull Run river can be made to
supply sufficient water for a city
of 2,000,000 people, .and It therefore
would be poor business for Port
land to spend millions of dollars
Joining the neV project."'"". ' "" "
SALEM, Ore., Aug. 21. The state
hipJiwny commission has authorized
Jefferson Myers, state treasurer to
pay out of the state highway fund
the sum- of $100,000 to retire nn
equal amount of state highway bonds
wliioh mature on September 1, 1924.
These bonds are a part of the co-op
onitive bonds issued in 1017 to
match federal appropriations for post
and forest roads. There has previous
ly been retired 365,750 of tiie bonded
debt of the state on account of high
day bonds. No new stato highway
bond obligations have been incurred
during tho current year.
Olen O. Olson of Eugeno had
his license suspended for one
year this morning after he had
been brought into police court
for speeding. This Is his second
appearance for tho offense with
in the last month.
On July 28 Olsen was cited to
appear In court for having speed
ed. When he appeared and was
asked for the $10 fine, ho said
he did not. have tho money but
would pay on August 2. He did
not appear on the stated date.
Chief of Police Judkins brought
Olsen in this morning for speed
ing, and Judkins recognizing the
young man, asked him why he
had never paid his first fine. Ol
sen replied .he was unable to
raise the money bo did not want
to come back.
For the two offenses Judge Gil
more then suspended his license
for one year.
Iowa Governor Is
For Defense Day
PKS MOINES, la., Aug.t21. W
Declaring that no people can afford
to be "drugged into a helpless coma
by a mistaken sense of their own se
curity," and denouncing tho "dilstori
ness" of the American government
with the reject to preparcdnens be
fore the Spanish-Ameriran snd World
wars and the Mexican crisis in 1910,
Governor Kendall has called upon the
people of Iowa to "cooperate fully and
patriotically" toward the success of
National Defense (by, September 12.
PLANES ON
DEER SEASON
SUSPENSION
IS REVOKED
State Forester Advises
That Hazard Is Ended
By Rains; Order Of
Governor Is Recalled.
SALEM, Ore., Aug. 21. Acting
upon the recommendation of F. A.
Elliott, state forester, Governor
IMerce today issued an order revoking
his recent proclamation closing the
forests to hunters until September 20.
Governor. Pierce said he had been
advised by the state forester that the
recent rains have been general
throughout the state, and that the
fire hazards existing 10 days ago have
been eliminated. The governor's or
der revoking the proclamation closing
tho deer season became effective this
morning.
The proclamation closing the for
esta to hunters was issued by Gover
nor Pierce last Saturday, and resulted
in a storm of protests from various
parts of the state.
As a result of the action 6t Gover
nor Pierce In revoking the proclama
tion it is believed not likely that the
suit now pending in the circuit court
here to test the constitutionality of
the law under which the executive
issued his order closing the deer sea
son, will be pressed.
HUNTERS SWARM WOODS
ROSERURG, Ore., Ausr. 21. Hun
ters are today swarming Into the
wooded- districts of Douglas coun
ty, one of the favorite hunting spots
of the state.
News of the openlig of the season
spread rapidly, And many who had
all preparations made, only await
Ing the decision of the governor,
started out this morning. Local
stores selling sporting goods re
ported a heavy run of ammunition
and equipment. C. C Winslow,
prominent Salem attorney, who has
been aiding sportsmen in the fight
for the opening of the season,
started up Little river this morn
ing on a hunting excursion. .
T
Approximately two score of Albany
business men passed through Eugene
this morning on their way over the
McKonzle pass to Bend, where they
will join with Bend citizens in a meet
ing boosting a road over the Cascade
mountain via Santinm pass.
The trip is expected to bring about
a uniform plan of action on the part
of those interested. The road would
go through both Linn and Deschutes,
counties, and in no other.
An unsuccessful effort baa already
been made by Albany people to get
the state highway commission to build
the road. The commission holds it
would cost too" much money now to
put a road over Sand mountain, which
would of necessity have to be crossed.
Radio Speech New
Abatement Plea of
Harry F. Sinclair
WASHINGTON, Aug. 21. An ad
ditional plea in abatement attacking
the indictment charging him with con-
ppiraey to defraud the government in
connection with naval reserve oil
!eaes has been filed in the District
of Columbia supreme court by Har
ry F. Sinclair.
A 'radio speech by Senator Walab
of Montana, prosecutor of the senate
oil investigation, cited in a similar
document filed recently by' E. L. Do
heny Jr., is made the basis of the
new Sinclair plea. Former Secretary
Albert It. FI1, from whom Sinclair
obtain d the Teapot Dome lease, im
named with him in the indictment at
tacked. BANDIT IS DEAD
GIBRALTAR, Aug. 21. A report
baa reacbed here from Tangier tbat
Mulai Ahmed Kaisuli, Moroccan ban
dit who recently was appointed gov
ernor of the western part of the
Spanish, ,as in Morocco, la dead.
L
I
CUT TRIAL
Many Now. Found, And
Many More Not; All
Knowledge Denied B y
Some of the Witnesses.
LOS ANGELES, Aug. 21. Jewels
to the value of many thousands of
dollars, some of whicn already have
been seized, but the majority of which
are missing, today became the focal
point in the inquiry into the violent
death of Mrs. Theresa W.' Mora, here
August 12, in connection with which
Kid McCoy, ex-pugilist, is held on a
murder charge.
Four different lota of Jewels form
the basis of the invcBtigutian, which
officers working on the case declare,
may establish the real motive forjhe
death of Mrs. Mora, who was found
in her -apartment with a bullet in her
brain. ' si
The largest lot is missing. Customs
officers, acting on adviceB from New
York, aro seeking a dozen valuable
pieces, bno of them described as con
taining thrco exceptionally large
emcraldB and studded with diamonds.
The value of this, with its sparkling
companions in the mystery, hi raid
to run into many thousandirbf .dol
lars. - ;&
The officers "declare thati,; in
structions aro that theae jewel wore
in the Mora family and they wish to
establish the routo by which they
reached that resting place.
Mrs. Mors is dead and Albert A.
Mors, her divorced husband, heir to
her estate, flatly dcnlca nny know
ledge of the supposedly lost valuable!.
The search for the jewels began
last June, almost two months before
Mrs. Mors waa slain, and in July
customs officers seized Bcveral thou
sand dollara worth from the Mora
strong box.
Lot number three was seized after
the death of Mra. MorB when the of
ficers visited another strong box
rented by the Mora family. The value
of this total, with that previously
taken into custody, totaled $30,000,
according to the investigators.
Lot number four, valued at 50O0,
disappeared the night Mrs. Mora was
shot down in her apartment. Mors
charged that these had been stolen
from her body a black pearl ring, a
rnby and diamond broooh shaped like
a quail and a fob watch encrusted
with diamonds.
Yesterday lot number four was re
covered. Attorneys for Mrs. Jennie
Thomaa, aister ot Kid McCoy, turnfd
them over to the district attorney's
office.
Detectivea said this lot was given
to Mrs. Thomas by McCoy the night
Mrs. Mors died.
Both the distrlct'attorney'a office
and the federal officera assert the be
lief that the clearing up of the jcwul
mystery will throw much light on the
case and may establish tho motive be
hind the, sadden death of the antique
dealer's 'i'ife.
'
LOS ANGELES, Aug. 21. Attor
neys for Norman Selby ' ("Kid" Mc
Coy), former pueilist, rharged with.
the murder of Mrs. Theresa W. Mora
here, August 32, today were organiz
ing their forces for an attack on the
iron ring of evidence which District
Attorney Asa Keys believes ho has
welded around the 50-year-old fighter.
While they would not divulge their
plana they took occasion yesterday to
deny catagoric.-.lly that thee plana
provide for a plea of guilty by Mc
Coy, when he appears before Judge
Charles 8. Crail next Monday. Tho
former motion picture actor and boxer
was arraigned yesterday on the mur
der charge as well as on three charg
ea of assault with intent to kill and
four charges of robbery, growing out
of a shooting affray staged in and
near Mrs. Mora antique shop several
hours after her death.
Before his attorneys could ak for
a postponement of the plea until Mon
day, McCoy shonted out in answer to
the murder charge:
I did hot!" To the other charges
he waa indifferent.
Meanwhile arrangements were msde
for his examination by additional de
fense alienists.
JEWELS OCA
PlllfJ
Nl
WAY TO
Failure to Hide Body In
Franks Case Was Turning
Point, Declares Attorney
CHICAGO, Aug. 21. P Failure
to hide sufficiently the body ot
Robert Franks was the breaking
point in the plot of Nnthnu Leopold
Jr., and Richard Loeb, according to
this state's analysis ot the crime
given today before Judge John R.
Cavorly by Joseph Savage, as
sistant state'B attorney.
In Impassioned denunciations ot
the defendants and with waving
arms and pounding fists, Mr. Sav
age, told the court that If Leopold
had forced the body well Into the
culvert. Instead of pushing It with
his foot. It would not have boen
found.
, "They would not have been ap
prehended In 100,000 years," said
Mr. Savage.
; Ho doscrlbed the attempts to
ST
E
J;
CILAX'TAUQUA, N. Y., Aug. 21
Warning of a Gcrman-nusBlnn-Chi'
ncse-Jnpancse combination was ex
prossed today .' by ' , Mnjor-Genernl
Jamea' B. Hnrbord, ' former 'deputy
chiot of staff of the army, in nn id
dress before, the Institute on Inter
national Relations, from the Christian
point of view. He urged adequate
American armament and international
co-operation for limitation of com
petitive arming. '
He declared that ltussia and Ger
many would not remain content to he
excluded from tho Far East and that
"our unhappy manner of doing tho
thing we had a right to do, mny have
lost us the warm friendship of Ja
pan." "What would a German-Russian-ChineHc-Japanese
combination do to
tho plans of the world?" he asked.
"What could withstand a union of
white, yellow and brown, gnthered
from the Rhine to the China Sea, and
what is there .impossible or even un
likely In surh an alliance?
"With all the Lntln-Amcrlenn states
in the league of nntions, can we main
tain the Monroe doctrine, with these
countries south of us carrying their
disputes before that political orga
nization for settlement.
"These are some of tho things that
should be considered by those who
are moved by the pica for disarma
ment." "American armaments have never
been a real factor in either the causa
tion or prevention of war, except
when they have been Inadequate they
have encouraged stronger powers to
presume upon our supposed weak
ness. "But when It comes to the world,
exclusive of the, American continent,
i must bendmitted thnt a competitive
growth of armaments breeds a feeling
of international insecurity."
General Ifarhord endorsed the plan
for reduction of armaments drawn up
by Professor JrT. Sliotwell of Colum
bia and General Tasker Bliss, whch
has been distributed to various gov
ernments by the league of nntions.
"It creates no super-state and sur
senders no sovereignity, " he said.
General Harhord criticized those
church leaders who urge Christians
not to take part in any war, saying
tint this doctrine seeking to align the
church against national defense by
war logically leads to the formation
of a clerical party. He added:
'If tho extreme religious pndfists
were really desirous of destroying our
Independence they could hardly advo
cate a more effective plan."
STORMS IN MINNESOTA
ST. PAUL, Aug. 21.-Tliree severe
electrical storms struck the twin cit
ies within a few hours today, tying up
street cir service temporsrily, break
ing electric lines, flooding basements
snd causing other damage. The
weather bureau .'nnouneed that 8.M
inches of rain fell In Minneapols,
the heaviest In 10 years.
QKttNLAMDmmmi
., nniMM MnTinHs: ;
get 110,000 ransom from Bobby's
father, pointing out thnt the iden
tification of tho body became
known to Mr. Frank only five
mlnutos beforo ho received his
lost mossago from "George John
son" the name used to sign the
ransom lotter.
Mr. Savage asserted . that Leo
pold and Loeb had drawn their
plan so fine, that if the father
hud followed directions and gone
to a drug store in a cab furnished
by tho kidnapers, he would have
been sent scurrying to another
spot, to board a train duo to loavo
a few minutes later.
In a parlor car, the boys had
placed a lotter addressed Mr.
Franks and giving full directions
on how tp throw the money from
the moving train.
"Thoy would havo reached the
designated point In tholr auto
mobile at that precise moment If
the train were 'on time," said Mr.
Savage. "How could thoy have
been traced No one know whonce
came the telephone vail to Mr.
Franks, nor who had ordered the
cab sont to his home. No ono
would hnve known who telephoned
the drug store and tho fatkor
would have had no chance to
notify the police in advance of
where ho hud been told to go or
how to dlsposo of the monoy.
"It wns a coldly intellectual
,plnn, -dTirnh.!n Its dalfhemlion,"
said Mr. Savng'o. ' '
L
Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Onburn left
Paris Monday hnfl started Immed
iately for Eugene to attotid tho
funeral ser vices of Mm. Osbu'rn'B
!on, Harold Glfisou. who died re
cently In Portland and who will bo
laid to hie Inst rent after his moth
er's return. The body will be held
here "until that time. i-
Funeral Btirvlros will ho hold In
Portland nt 2 o'clock Saturday af
ternoon. It Is not known whore
burial will he.
Don Woodward in
Airplane Wreck,
Is Word Received
Word received hero recently from
London, Kntflitnd, tells that Don
Woodward, a University of Oregon
Htudent, was in an airplane wreck
while on his way from London to
Paris on August 7. Mr. Woodward
will be a senior in tiie univeridty next
year, and will be editor of the Ore
gon Pnily Kmeruld. lie and four
ther Ameri'-ans were in tho plane,
one 'of whom wns injured. The pilot
of the plane saw thnt a tliundernlorm
was approaching. In descending in
the durkncH ho had soma engine
trouble which canned the wreck.
Mr. Woodward, with a group of
other univcrnity ihidentM, set out for
Europe in June to attend tho Olympic
gmwff in 111 r in and to tour oihei
pnrtH of the rontinent. He Is expi'de i
to arrive here during Uio firnt part
of September.
Gains Following
Wheat Openings
CHICAGO, Idd., Aug. 21,Opening
wheat prices, which ranged fruin c
to Ic higher, with September $1.27-7-S
to II.2S, and December $1.3.1 to
$1..1.'l 1-S, were follewed by maierlal
further gains.
"Wheat rinsed unsettled 1-2o to
lo net lnwftr, Hept:mher $1,303 6-8
to $1.11 3-4 and December II. it 1-2
lo 11.31 6-8.
After opening x-4c to 1 3-8c lower,
Drrembvr $1,131-4 to $1.11-2, corn
sagged
The close was heavy, S 1-4 to
3 S-8c net lower, December It. 11 3-8
to $1.11 (-8.
Hurting unchanged to 8-8c off, De
cember MlIMc to B7c, oata steadied
at a ttiflo below yesterday's finish.
1'rovisions lacked support.
: , $h
m. - . IUUIIII 111 II I 111 II 1
I I HI lilHI I HI I I1 !K ,
i num. i ii iuu u ujr n r mil k
LEMEATHEi,
Aviators Pass Richmond
Seventy Miles Out To
Sea; Lieut. Locatelli
Five Miles Ahead Then.
IOXDON, Aug. 21. An Exchange
Telegraph dispatch from Copenhagen
stated that Lieutenant Nelson, ona
of tho American army world avlatora
deacended for a fow minutca today at
Skerjafjord, for aorae nnknown reti
son, after taking off from Reykjavik
thia morniug, but re-ascended almojt
immediately.
REYKJAVIK, Iceland; Aug. 21.
W3) Tho American aronnd-tho-world
fliers and I.loutonant Lovatelli, Itu-
llan nlrraan, hopped Okf from hero at
8:15 o'clock this morning.
Tho fllera passed the United States
cruiser Richmond on patrol about 70
milea off the coast from Iceland at
0:33 o'clock.
.Lieutenant Locatelli waa leading his
American companions, Lieutenant Lo
well H. Smith and Erik II. poison, by
five miles.
Tho weather was beautiful and fly
ing conditions woro excellent when the
avlntnrB set out for Greenland. Lieut
enant Suillh'a plane lifted from tho
water a few minutes aftor 8 o'clock
and ' Lieutenant Nelaori'i plane"wu
off two minutes later.
Lieutenant Lncntelll, who caught up
with the Americana in order to ac
company thorn across tho Atlantic af
ter a lone flight from Fisa, Italy, got
off XI minutes after Lieutenant Nel
son. All of the take-offs were msde
easily, none of the fliers having the
slightest difficulty in jockeying from
tho water.'
Lieutenant Smith, the flight com
mander, had been up all night record
ing weather reportB and working out
plans' for coping with weather aud
mechanical conditions which ho and
Lieutenant 'Nelson might encounter
during the long and hazardous Jump
to the shores of Greenland.
Lieutenant John Harding, Jr.', me
chanic on Lieutenant Nelson's piano,
also had been up all night, but ho left
his room only to go on board the
plane, declaring it wao his duty to
take caro of tho machine during the
last hours here. Because of the early
departure, thoro wero very few por-
sohk present when the machines sot
out. ,, , '
The filers nro bending for Frcd
erlksdal, near Cape Farewell, at tho
southern tip of Greenland, a hop of
approximately 825'mllos, according to
the plans which were adopted after
bad Ice and weather conditions In the
north Atlantic had forced them to
abandon their orlginnl Intention to
mako the shorter flight ot Angmagsa
lilt or to another harbor 20 mllea
north north of there, which later also
wns found to bo Icebound.
ZANNI'S PLANE 'WRECKED
HANOI, French Indo-Chlna, Aug.
'i Major Znnni'B airplane, which
oveuturned on his attempted hop-off
for Canton, ,was bo badly damaged
that It cannot he repaired. It has been
estohllnhed. The Argentine flier nt
present is at Hong Kong awaiting In
structions from his manager.
D0ISY IS WELCOMED
MAI1SKH.LES, Aug. 21 Cnptnln
Georges IVIIellor Doisy, tho French
airman, who early In Juno completed
a Tarls-to-Toklo flight, arrived here
today on tho steamship ForMioa, which
hid been purposely deluyed in order
that the aviator's welcome idiould not
be spoiled by debarking at night.
Tho captain and his mechanician
wero takeu aboard the municipal
yacht Miette on which tho mayor and
other notables hnd gone out as a wel
coming party.
. WINS SPEED TEST
WASHINGTON', Aug. 21. Charles
L. Rweem, who was private steno
grapher to l'resltient Wilson, won the
championship trophy for the second
time in the international speed testa
of the National Bhorthand Keportera'
association in convention here. If he
wins It next year, It will be his pcr
mantntlyi ,
IOTP
III IIII 111 IVI III I I I III
Scheme to Refer Repara
tions Problem to Commis
sion Defeated; Premier
Spared From Violence,
BERLIN, Aug. 2L OP) The
RolohBtog tonight edopted all the
legislative bills dealing with the
Dawes report, i
PARIS. Auc. M OP) The cham
bor of deputies this evening upheld
the govornmont, 134 ta 209, defeat
Ins a motion to refer- the London'
accord on the Inauguration of the
Dawos plan to a commission,
DEMONSTRATIONS STAGED
PARIS. Aug. 21. 0P) The. r.waa
reparation plan and the steps tak
en at tho London conference to
mako It affoctlvo wore overshad
owed by violent communist demon
strations In the chamber ot de
puties today when Premier Harriot
went before the chamber and sen
ate, read a long declaration' em
bodying; the government's case and
asked for the approval of the legis
lature. ' -
The premier was spared xnnoh
of thla violence during the hour ,
It took to road his statement, but
before and after his address the
chamber was a mad house and the
sessions had to ba suspended In or
der to restore qulot. ! -
The oommunlst rnonopollsed the
dohnto and manoeuvered In such a ..
fashion Jliat the entire afternoon i
was devoted to tholr motion for an
adjournment until the senate voto
the amnesty bill, ' j w.
Not a word: of discussion about
tho work of the London conference
waa heard. , . :
PREMIER HBRRIOT (PEAK
PARIS, Aug. 21. W Premier
Ilerriot put the Dawes reparation
plan and the London agreement for
making it effective before the cham
ber of deputies this afternoon and
told tho mombers:
"I, for my part, have chosen, but
nothing final has been dono and par
liament, in its turn, can chooae."
Evacuation of the Ruhr, the pre
mier said, had dominated everything
at the international conference at
London, and he had to "choose be
tween the re-establishment of an inter-allied
entente and the continuance
of isolated action."
1 SI. Ilerriot emphasized that arbi
tration was the great principle estab
lished at the London conference and
assorted France would gain by it, "for
It would noed a deal of optimism to
believe that France, In the future,
could gain the majority of votes which
enabled her to enter the Ruhr."
The reparation problem in which
Fance waa the most interested party
had now boen taken from the political
into tho economlo Geld, the premier
said-, "and we have given a very large
role to American citizens in onr or
ganization, which was done design
edly." ,"We can -only rejoice," M. Herriot
continued, "to have associated with us
the great American republic which
has witnessed our sufferings and
which hug all the authority necessary
to supervise the execution of the pro
gram, which was due in a large part
to ita initiative."
France's new freedom of action, M.
Herriot said, had been defended to
the utmost In London, but the situa
tion had. been grnve. Then Prime
.Minister MacDonald of Great Britain,
(Continued on page five)
Rose's Victory For
Senate Is Conceded
CHEYENNE,, Wyo., Aug. 21.
Wyoming voters today considered the
only, major contest of tiie state-wide
primary election Tuesday that over
the democratic nomination for I. S.
ifitor decided, and settled down to
await official retnrna, which aro ex
pected in a week.
The victory of Robert J. Rose ot
Casper, was conceited yesterday by
Joseph C. O'MHlmney, Rose's formid
able candidate, and last night returns
from 286 out of about 600 precincts
in the state showed tho former hsd
lead of approximately 1000. Tbe fig
ures were: '
Rose, 4030. , 1 ;
O'Mhhoney, 3075. - .
I.eroy Ualrd, the third candidate,
noa. , . ,. ..' ... s .
t