The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930, April 21, 1928, Image 1

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    IE WEATHER , fSflik W f M), WhW
FINAL HOME
EDITION
Th Eupene Guard Ib Lana County!
Greatest Homo Newspaper. Call 1200
and have It In your home.
! ESTABLISHED Sje? IN 103 i J
-- " RBTtTTONB; 18 PAGES TTfiPYT' rs,?'P'iVT, ? "TrT,r TrTT m xnrw pi? C? ON STIiKETS 3c: OV TRAINS vrj js
11
. ...mnrn
Hi .Snounceineut of
TkosW- secreuryoi
Health Llay to
1 Santa Clara district
L-five children passed
PS health texts. 'Ill
ri w. u. ""''w
(S5iS;
fi,EU, Laurel Addle
riirCook, Herbert Sed
i R.inville. Kuth Nagel,
L Life s, Louise Lil!8'
tSvXta Fay Holmes.
ICRASH REPORT MADE
'it Erl B. Houston, state
(per. llepor". u" k1-"-vVto
be made to the state
Edna. State aviation laws
tJS .f- .r here
the state uurms i
.sordini to local men ui-
, initios.
I mnn"-"" " , .
i.imiW tnr nfltional char-
lubeea made by H. 0. hey
Tdnb leader, for four Lane
Lidinj to word received al
of Arnold U. t ouirr, couuij
r The followiag cuancrs
Tn'anffln clllh. COOk-
ihlj, Mrs. Mary Slayter,
Ump cookery clubs, Crow,
McCnlioch, leauer. huhj
E Route B., Mrs. B. L. Gay,
I SAW
Lman receive a nroUD
Indi unexpectedly. Hav-
kthlng to serve inem
mt her small son to a
r store to buy candy.
thi nroeervman that
r li entertaining ladles,
tanti some candy to
them.'1 the told him. '
fttle hov returned short.
Ill 20 all-day suckers.
Mrs. i. o.
lat Did You See?
bfi note: Curious
irt happening around
fry day. Tell us what
I. We will print ons
bach day.
Sinclair Acquitted in Dome CaseM OF
AFTER
fOUT
T
wD HOURS IN
Here are First Photos of the Bremen's Arrival
On Greenly Island; in the Lonely Far Northland
FRAUDACTQN
Fall Gratified by Verdict;
Mrs. Sinclair Cries
With Relief
f'AL SCHOOL WINS
ISITI high school tennis
i luperior to that of the
kb school in a duel match
nn rnday and the Eugene
-Inneri in four out tf five
ilchM. The doubles were
1 OWinf to weather n-mdi.
: baseball game was also
vm io wee grounds. Toe
lurns o: me two schools
t Saturday evening at the
C. A. pool at SiUem.
P SURVEY PLANNED
p.H mrvej-ii of the proposed
P"e Vailey-Florenee hiRh-
inane id me near tuture.
w wora receirecl by the
srt from Ensinoer Farmer
oureau ot public roads.
WASmNGTOX. April 21. OP
Harry h Sinclair todap whs acquitted
ot the charge that he conspired to
defraud the Kovernment -lu the leas
uiK t'f Teapot Dome.
A jury iu tlie liitrict of Columbia
supreme court uceepied his conten
tion that when he paid Albert B. Fail
.$2.43,000 in liberty bonds and $35,000
in cash, it was for a part in the
ranch owned by the former secretary
of the interior and was not a part of
a deal through which the Wyoming
naval oil leserve was turned over to
him.
The jury took the case from Jus
tice Bailey at 10:25 o'clock this
morning and returned its verdict at
12:24 p. m.t being out exactly one
hour and fifty nine minutes.
Immediately after the verdict was
rendered Sinclair authoi ized this
statement: "I have felt since the in
ception of the oil cases thatI would
be acquitted of any charge of con
spiracy ' to defraud the government
when the evidence went before n
jury."
Today in tne court room he was
Biirrounded by his friends who poured
their congratulations upon him. Mrs.
Sinclair was so deeply moved that
she became hysterical.
Vhen the jury had left the court
entered the court room, the usual
routine was performed by tne court
before the justice addrcRsed it.
Berdtct is Dramatic
"Gentlemen of the jury have you
reached a verdict," he asked finally.
"We have," replied the foreman.
"What is your verdict. Mr. Fore
man asked the clerk of the court.
Not guilty, came the reply as
the court room strained forward.
"Oh, good," exclaimed Mrs. Sin
clair as she began to crv.
Friends led her into tne corridor
and as Boon as Sinclair could force
his way through the crowd he walked
out. put bis arm around her shoul
ders, then slipping her arm through
his. walked out of the corridor door.
Before the jury filed Into the jury
room, Justice Bailey warned tne spec
tators that anv sort of demonstra
tion regardless of the verdict, would
be promptly punished.
paces two uoums
Sinclair, although freed of the con
sniracv charges today, still is fared
with two contempt proceedings. One
of these is for his refusal to answer
questions of the senate oil committee
URN TO PAGE 3)
IS U1I
IEET HELD HERE
Lane County Farmers'
'' resular hhxhdHu bau.
(TURN TO PAGE 2)
Baseball Results, I
NATIONAL
At Boston . B.H.E.
New York 8 10 2
Boston 8 11 1
Batteries: Barnes and Hoirnn
Robertson, Ilearn. Mills and Taylor.
At Chicago .
Cincinnati 0 4 !
Chicnco 5 10 (
Batteries: Lucas and Hnrjfrave
Sukcfortb; Bush and Hartnett.
Brooklyn-rhiladclphia, postponed;
rain.
St.
rain.
Louis-Pittsburgh postponed
AMERICAN
At St. Louis It.H.E,
Detroit. . .; 2 4 2
St. Lonls " 0 1
Batteries: Sullivan, Stoner and
Haruraves: Crowder and Schnnif.
- uiai quarterly sea
rn,7 , ?r t COtn-
l, , "' nuns lor the state
I - . mime,
a to rVIin.
. irpurts antj
fa"ivWaty "wetary of
I icrin.l, ... . tu
L'olMid that the ciVy
aid ,i. "nnuet nnn
t J r : '""
Kill, ',nu; ol the
Ih r""rtaii,n,.n
tk. , ,ou" 'aK
it ri . "l the officers
V im- ,r "''inoer made
ittefcX ' "ua Horenoe in
f. th. ""at
-ii (.! ,", ' l0- hy
I-,. L- ' I'raents.
I 'r.arD'" """"n. writ.
""Ml 1,1 re
' ai !. ,,'Vd h"t the
. . '"r the imr.
." local ;,
I4" r."""-m 'year.
rt..V.'""- "io t.;
1 ( '"! t (JUJO
At New York-
Philadelphia 10 12 0
iSew York 0 0 f
Batteries: "Wnlher and flochranp
,Tohn"on, Campbell and Ornvowski,
uoinns.
Clevelnnd-Chicaao postponed; rain.
AID QUAKE SUFFERERS
WASHINGTON. April 21.
The American Red Cross today
transmitted $5,000 through the state
department to Bulgarian Red Cross
tor relief of earthquake sufferers.
BLACKBURN ROVERS WIN
WEMBLEY STADIUM. England.
April 21. Blackburn Hovers
won the clAFair English football asso
ciation cup today, defeating Hmi-lers-field
Town, three aonls to one.
..- tl : '.'..;;..- 'A- .
1 w v k , " e k ii
mtf ' 5 wm- fete:
PLANE ILL
HAZARDOUS IRIP
Here are the first plotures to be
aeourod of the Bremen and her gal
lant orew sines the plane landed on
onely Greenly Island lust as the trio
seemed taping death., Willi the world
sighed In relief at their escape from
dath...WEA was busy attempting to
get the first plotures. The story of
that attempt provides another thrill
ing story. Wild storms swept the re
gion, but Duke Schiller, the Intrepid
pilot who made the first resoue flight
to the Island not only brought out.
Col. Fltzmaurloe, buft thess plotures
as well.
He made the plotures exclusively
for NEA and North American News
paper allianoe,1 who oooperated In the
big feat. From Murray Bay the pic
tures were taken by plane to Quebec
Owing to darkness, a train took them
to Montreal. At daybreak a plane
started with litem for New York. Ice
and sleet, covering the wings of this
Diane, forced it down. Another apeolal
train was used, and a record breaking
trip brought the pictures to the tele
photo wire In New York.
Sent aoross the continent bv wire,
the pictures were matted In the NEA
bureau at San Franolsoo, and were
rushed to The Guard by air mail and
special delivery. This Is the first real
art of the Bremen's dramatlo flight.
The upper photo shows the Junkers
plane as It rested at Greely Island,
where It was forced down. The lower
picture shows the orew alter the
trip, lighting up. Mai. Fltmaurlce Is
In the center, and Duke Schiller at
the right.
DEAD AX AGE OF BQ
Floyd Bennett III; Air
Trip to Bremen Held up
LAKE fiTK. AGNES, Qur., April
21. (By tin Cfinndian Press) Ill
ness of Floyd Benni'tt, who is con
fined to his bd, has cuused indefinite
iHiatponement of the flight of the
"ord plane to the rpliff of the
Bremen, which was scheduled for ti
day. Bennett, who was co-pilot with
Bernt halchen on the flight ht-re from
Detroit yetrlnv devcJond a hitch
ffvor during the night and who until). o
Both
IFQRMER STREETCAR
! nil is sick
John Redman of 1000 Moss street,
who is well known to a larire number
! of Eugene people through hi long
; years of service as motorman for
the street railway system, was
i brought to the Eug-ii" .hospital from
ll'renwrll Friday aflernoMO uffriiig
' from a mentnl hre;ikdowTi. Mr. Ken
Elijah Bristov, one of Lane coun'
tV earliest settlers, iinsscd awn l
Saturday morning at 0:30 o'clock at
the Pacific Christian hospital, aged
bO yearB.
Mr. Brlstow was the grandson of
riiioii Uriatnw who built the first
....j.... -' - H.n,.nl I 1 WO"" i'" NIK
Hill district in LvW. The younger iimnl.u ,h, njt.ien. who have re
Elijab Brixtow was born m llitoucr, mMy unurguue extremes of tem
1S47, coming to Oregon in . ponitures. have suffered from heavy
Two cousins, will urision m ,Mgm Should It appear likely that
Pleasant Hil land Harwin Hristjiw of i B(.,inetl Wl b nabV to flv for some
Eugene, and two half-brothers. Marry timP thp hstituiion of C. A. "Iiuke"
ltristow and J. W. liristow. both of Sohillur was beii.g considered. Hrhil
l'ortland. survive. J. W. liristow is , ;pr nHB airen,y mnde one round trip
in town Saturday. I by air to Grceuty Island brought out
Funeral nrnihgements are being j Major James Fitziuaurice of the
nvide at the Mranstetter chapel. j.
Mr. Bristow'a gramllatiier was tne
leader ol tin- first four white settlers
to come in this distrirt. the other
three being Felix Scott. William l)od
son and Eugene i-'kinner for whom the
city of Kottene ami Skinner's butte
are named.
Funeral services for Mr. Kristnw
will be held Sunday at 12:1.1 p. m.
at the Pleasant Hill cemetery. Rev.
W. A. Elkina will preside.
RAINS ARE FORECAST
SAN FRAN'CIsro, Aoril 21. C4)
The weather outlook for the week
heifinnine April 2-' wan annonnred
hire todny hy th I'nited States wea
ither bureau as follows: Far western
I he ouuoos is lor una., i
lireuien crew. 1 he r oril u an
to have taken parts to repluce those
broken in the landing of the lireuien
and a supply of sicejnl fuel to en
able ihe tnins-Atlnntic plane to pro
ceed here, en route for New York.
CAPT. KOEHL HONORED
HEKI,1N April 21. P The
Brunswick institute of technology to
day conferred an honorary dictorntf
upon Captain Hermann Koebl. About
the hi mi time the airiiiaue "Her
mann Koehl," named In honor of the
trans-Atlntitie pilot was placed in tile
regular l-'niutford-to-l'aris air serv
ice, itrf first flight being scheduled
for April 'J-'t. It is a three motor
plane of 1.310 horsepower and will
make the trip between the two cities
In three hours and twenty minutes.
FIFTY HOUSES ARE
1AGEI
rains west of the Cascade mountains j ,Brn IMr, f t,f Htv. t
u ., , A a.'SIIfl EeFJini no , . V. ,.'ing IfOm IMHUUWesi IIP D'onii-
r,""" - 'Tru -7"'"":'r" ?, Temperatures al-nve normal in sii-
flagman hy the Sonthern I'anfie fortiia early in the week and about
normal elsewnere.
j roeij romnany tt that Dlace. His ron
nition is quite scnotis sud it la Im
possible to say at this time how long
he mny hare to remain in the hospi
tal. Mr. Redman had been a streetcar
motormau for about 20 years, being
oldest in point of service at the time
the busses replaced the streetcars
and he took up his new work at Cres
well, previous tn that time be res
a motorman at Salem.e working for
another company. q
JIMMY ANGEL HOPS
MF.XICAI.I. Iwer Mexico. April
21 W Jimmy Angel got into the
sir at :35 o'clock this morning bound
fov fiusvmas. fK"l miles away, on the
iM-ood leg of bis proposed "
mile Pan-American flight from tr'f
no-to-Fresno, (al.. via Cape Horn.
South America.
MEMPHIS, Tenn.. April 21. M
More than W houses were dam
aged, hundreds of trees were leveled
ami many telephones were reported
out of commission as the result of a
.evere wind and rain storm that
swept Memphin early today.
The wind centered Its violence in
ravel
ing from aolltliwesi io norioeasi.
One death and three Injuries were
reported in a hcavr winitorm that
struck at Atoka. Tenn.. Jiday
WOULD REDUCE RATES
SAI.FM. April SI. t'pon no
tice of withdrawal of the complaint
the public service enrr mission yes
terday dismissed the Uramwell White
Pine Lumber company's "complaint
agslnst tbe Northeastern rsMwsy
company In Klamath county. A re.
dnclion in railroad rates was demanded
Asks About
Air Sleeper
SAN FRANCISCO. April 21, OP)
The first effort recorded to re
serve a ulepptr on an air mall plane
was rpported by the Boring Air
Transport today. A. a1. Kiiwr, I'o-
fmlle. Ore., ttlv tbe inquiry and was
fldvicp-d thnt an yet air mail plBnen
did not carry idepn.'rs. Mr, Klmer
Buys h is six feft ttill and Wfifchs
1;m pounds. He want, to .o Io Xjra
rune, N. V.
8CHEOULE8 STUOIEO
BAI.FM, April 'Jl. -Th pub
lic nrric rommiiiion will invrntl
icntP to ascFrtflin if t h lncrrat:d
chdulea proKined by Iwo competing
thee line, the I'arlftc Sae Inc.,
and th Southern lacifk- Motor
Trnnporl romps ny, bet w'po Port
land and For"" Orov In mtr ranted
Vt-wWhg th invent if at inn th addt
tionsil chlula are tiipndM. The
two cmpnniei trftbr proponed to
npemte a tntitl of htiM-es daily be
tween the two point.
Eugene's radio station KOHVC, for
merly KOrcil, will bo reopened in the
W. K. Miner building fttudios Sunday
night at 10 o'clock.
The first program, announces C. Q.
"Shrimp" J'hillipa, will be broadcast
by direct wire from the McDonald
theater, and will be an organ recitul
by Frank I. C. Alexander and piano
Nlectioiifl by Marlon airrher; Kennie
Allen, tenor Koloist with Ceorire Mr-
Murphy'H Kollege Kuighls orrhentra;
.(auk WaMron.,hammnK'a player and
tne jgion uverneRo iiuartet to tin to i
ing of Spike i-Iie. Wujiie Ackers,
Mne .Statoii and Shrimo l'lilllioit. A
violin ipifirtet from the Iigiitlioune
temple will it I ho add to the attrac
tionn of the nroitram.
IminediRtt'ly following tlie ' broad-
cast irnn the Alcnonald theater, fon
trola will he switched to the Sltnei
iMiilding Htudioa and bf arfaniremeut
with ti e mimic department of .Sher
man (Jay romnany. reoiienl nrounima
wili be given aa long an the, requenta
are received.
The ntiihon has 100-watt capacity,
rained from W-watt caparity 0 the
former Jtili. and the mtcrophoriei
are Western Klertric models Linten
ern-ln may find the station ou about
the name din) ponitioni an before.
Tents have lien made at late hours
of the night during the Itnt week and
there have been manv complimentary
long dintanre telephone calls to the
mt..A ill.).... l'..wvmlm 1 llw.
Ko-eburg. Grants Ia, Medford anfi
other remmnnitien In the southern
part of the ntafe.
KORK in owned and operated eg
rlunivelv hv Frank Is. Hilt, formerly
of 11U1S i-.mnnmr atore in lugene.
and Mr. FhllUpn. Mr. rtillllpn la rec
osnifed as the pioneer of rndfo bront.
cfltlng0!n Kugene. He rsme to this
rity a year ago Inut .Innnary and
prior to that he wan with Mat Inn
KnVO In Portland, now RW.I.I !n
th Brordwar theater. He U a grad
uate of the Fnlvernity of Oregon and
while a ntudent here was a member
Report of Successful Flight Comes as Sur
prise, as News Has Been Lacking
LONDON, April 21. (A.P.) An exchnngo telop;rnphi
dispatch from Oopftiilingeii says that tho nowspapeP
Politikcn lias received a irmssngo from Svalbard statiiifr
that Caplain (.ieorge II. Wilkins, Arctic flyer, lauded
near the Svalbard radio station at 11 o'clqck this morn-,
ing. . i
A previous message to Politiken, also from the Sval-j
bard radio station, stated that Caplain tWilkins fler
from Point Harrow and landed near Doedmansoeira)
where bad weather stopped him for five days, Doedmnn
soeira. is an uninhabited island on the north side ofi
Iafjord, about 125 miles frcm Svalbard. ;
The crow of the plane was reported in excollont condition.
The arrival of Captain Wilkins
near Svalbard, from l'oiut Harrow,
Alaska, represents the succesKful
completion of Captain WilkiiiB' plan
to fly across the polar regions and
presumably ncrosa the north pole
iiueir Tim Wilkin nlane clliricd a
radio, but despite a constant watch
by rauio stations, compieie suein-c
envelope dlhe activities of the ex
oediiioo from the time that the
aviator was expected to take off
from Point Harrow. Captain Wilk
ins, a noted Australia explutcr, was
iicconipnnieil by Curl H. I'.uson, uu
Alaskan pilot.
SENDS RADIO MESSAGE
DKTUOIT, Apiil 21. OP Cap
tain George 11. Wiikiua auuouliceil
hia iirt'ival at Spitsbergen from l'oiut
Harrow, Alnsku, in a radio inuasuge
todiiv to tbe lletroit News;
"lleuchcd Spitsbergen lifter twenty
and one-half lionra flying; one stop
fivo davs uccouiit nan weaiuer.
Greetings to aviutlon society and
flying club," the message received
this forenoon said. It was dated
Hvulbard, :1H p. in-. April 21, uud
was aigned "Wi.kina l'.telson, f.lei
sou is the Alnskun flier who bua
accompanied Wilkins on hia previous
Arctic expeditions and went with
him Io l'oint Burrow, Alaska, early
this yenr . oo his lateat effort to
find a lost continent ami attempt' a
flight across the. top of the world
to Spil.hergen.
Hvnihiiril is the name nipNcrt to
the entire archipelago of Hpil.horgen,
liaur' Island niiil the adjacent islands
in the Greenland sea. Tho distance
from Norway to Hear Island is 2oO
uiilr. north and to Spitsbergen 87n
miles. Spitsbergen was the point lor
which 'Captain Klkins set out from
l'oiut Harrow in a direct line across
the uortll pule.
Nuccess cnino to Wilkins on hill
third expedition. Two previous at
tempts at aerial eiplorallou of the
"blind spot" lying north of 1'oinl
Harrow were unsuccessful. In the
first of these in I1I2B, l'uliner H.
Hutchinson, a Helroit newspaperman
accompanying the expedition was
klllo.1 at I'llirounas wueu en m i iij
tho propeller of one of Captain
Wilkins pliines. In tho second at
tempt tninle tho following year, Cap
tain Wilkins flew out into the Antic
spaces and wna forced down. Sev
eral daya later be returned to l'oiut
Harrow, reiterating uis rcmoruuu
that a plane could bo flown across
he "top of the worm to rtiits-
bergen and his determination to
try again.
WI1KIIIB llegan ins curerr 10 niiii
, In llll' after having studied
engineering III Australia. He earned
his way around the world llinsigh
the work ul nis camera, uinum ii.c
tures from airplanes.
lie served in the Vlllijlllinlir mei-
a,.ua ArMie eTiicditiotl ill llll.l
nud when the worm war urose
he commanded the Auslralla photog
raphic section on the western front.
As ecoud in commnnd, he sailed
to Graham's Islsnd with the Hrilish
imperial Aut-Arclic eipeouioii n
11121 and on tins cruise uiaue n ooo
mile trip In a whale boat. Success
ively he was with Sir Ernest Hhackle
ton on the Quest expedition; did
special Investigating work for th"
Hrltish government In Hussia and
silent two nnd nne-hnlf years In com
mand of the Wilkius Australian and
island expedition. He then concen
trated on liu poiar nnriinra..
Elelson. known as the ' gypsy a
il,. nir" I. unlive of North la
kota and a graduate of the uniyer-
nf that Btate. lie mil inn ursi
Prospects for the atnrt of eon
struclion mi the live-mile section
of the "Willamette hieluvny from
Goodman Creek to. Hlack Cnnyoa
are iiiucli brighter now, nccordiugi
to the report of Judge C. 1'. Har-
nard of the county court, .who ro-
Vurncd Friday night from Portland I
where he attended the meeting of:
the stnto highway commission.
Judge Harnnrd in a talk, with,
officials of the federal bureau ofl
public roads waa advised that fed-l
erui appropriations win -not oe cur--tailed
thia year and that if Lane,
county would advance tbe needed
funds to start work, a v cont.ructl
would be let. in the near future and
Ilia project would bo under way by I
the end of May at least. ..'
Tt " would ' be necessary - for iha
county to advance funds for not more1
than ,10 days. Judge .Hnrnard. said. I
With this section provided for llierej
would be l.'l inilea of the 25 mile,,
between Lowell and Oakridge under j
construction.
Contract for the. erection of, the
Coburg bridge wart awarded nt the
highway meeting and work will ha
taken up on this project in the near
future as equipment of the Portland
Bridge company which obtained the ,
contract for $-1-1. .'Kit). Is now neiir(
Newport and will be moved to Lima
county at once, Judge Hnrnard says.
CONTRACT IS LET
POUTT.AXn, April 21. UP) Con
trncts awarded Into yeHlordiiy hy Hie
highway coinminMion were: Voku.il
bridge over Citinrillit river, 1'iiiiitlliu j
county, Kuckcnhcrg mid Wiltiutui.
$l."(.lhtt.
Cfiburg bridge over McKcnuic river.
Lane coimtv. I'ortlnnd Urila' com
pany, $M.Wln.
.SiirfticiiiK L'l.It miles Klfiiniith Falls
WWW L-'Ifview hinlnuiy, Hearty-For eat
IHIllllllJM V uriliiFII, null IIIMI uirru-
ough. 1'ortlnnd. f M(t..'it:t.
'l'en bid on tlie grading I P" milei
HooMcvelt highwny, Ourdnr nummit
Mi ction, Oong hh coiinly, were held up
for inven.ignlion.
V.. !. timew, of liakrsidn. wna low
bidder .nT,417. Three hida for
bridge over Cntherlne creek in I'nioa
county were referred t.-l'nion county.
Three bidw for Wchrll ciinyon mur
ket road in Gilliam coiimy were r
ferred to Gillinm county.
flying when he enlisted in the world
he organized commercial
war.
I-Ater
THREE HURT IN BLAST
S0KANTON, l'enn.. April -Jl.(P)
oft Three persona were injured and
about, ml pemona narrowly enennea
with their Uvea early I hi morning
when a time charge of dynamite, Ih
lieved by the poluo to have been
planted in an ullempt to wreck th
Iai voce tmimmi, n'l iinnnn nw
Hying enterprinen and fr two yenrs pnper. was set off near the prens in
flJw the air mail in Alaska, luaug- j a four-story bnck bu.ld.ng in center
urntlng the route from Fiiip...ttkn ft
McOrath, a dininnre oi ami mrni.i
His record in Ahinka brought about
" (TURN TO PAGE 2)
HITS STREETCAR
(TURN TO PA0E 2)
PORTLAND, April 21. i Mini
Vera Hbanuon, 2T, wan taken to n
hospital today with fractured skull
and ponnible Internal injurien, and V.
A. Adams, (V), with broken nhoutder
and shock, following a coIIUion be-,
tween an automobi.e In which they
were riding and street car. The
rranh occurred at the east end of
the Mnrrlnon street bridge.
Officers said they found t pitt of
moonshine In the automobile..
The automobile was traveling east
serous the, bridge following a street
car.
The car waa forced to stop when
a trolley Jumped from the wire, and
tha automobile crashed Into tbe car
and lurched sideways into the south
bridge railing. Htreetcnr employes
railed an ambulance which took the
fictima to a hospital
A.n Actor the
Stage Lost
"He would hnv in ail o a won
derful actor."
A close, friend said that the
othor day of Vtr.o President
Clinrlos li. Dawea, who Is one
of the small group of men from
which the next president of tho
United States will be chosen.
"A great actor" for Dawes
lan't always what ho seems
Ilo'b not a profane- flro eater all
the time. That's only a mask
thnt helps him to do the work
be has to do. In private life he
la (inlet, reserved, uth.me.
Dawes li worth knowing.
Hobort Talley,, staff writer for
The Guard and NEA Service,
has written a series of those
Intimate charactor studies of
him, the first of which la print
ed today cn pae 2. You'll '
m'ss something good unless you
turn to that page and read It.
l'hen watch for the two sequels
tomorrow and the day after.
if-'S'i