o
o
Medford M
RIBUNE
Weather Year Ago
Matlioura .' fit
Minimum 50
Prediction.. ..Fair, jtiul IncmtS
IllfC HomlTlieHS
Muilmunt yi'HKTiluy 73
Minimum today ... au.5
OatlrTwMtlrth Ttr.
IT e-lT rtfty fuurth Tf.
. MEDFORD, OREGON, TIIUHSDA V, OCTOBER 1',, lf):r
NO. 177
PIRATES WIN
AIL T
WORLD
CHAMP ONSHP
8TH III
RALLY PUTS
mm
For First Time in Baseball
History, Team Wins Three
Straight and World's Cham
pionship After Being Three
Down Carey, Cuyler and
Bigbee Are Pittsburg Stars
FOrtHKS FIKI.D. I'lTTSm'Rd.
Oct. 15. (By Assuciuted Press.) The
Pittsburg Pirates took the baseball
hn,i,L,nuhli fif I he . WOlill todUV
from Washington by battering Waller
Johnson and scoring their third
straight victory over the genu lorn 9 to
7 in a furious battle fought out in a
drizzling rain on a soggy field.
Washington. AB R H PO
Rice, cf 5 2 2 S
s. Harris, 2b 5 0 II
fioslln, lb 4 2
J. Harris, if 3 1
Judge, lb 3 1
Uluege, 3b 4 0
Pecklnpaugh, ss .... 3 1
Ruel, o 4 0
Johnson, p 4 0
Totals 35z 7 7 24
Pittsburg AB
Moore, 2b 4
Carey, cf ,. 5
Cuyler. rf 4
Barnhnrt. If 5
Blghee, If 1
Traynor. 3b 4
Wrlght.-ju , .
Mclnnls. lb. 4
Gooch, e 0
Smith.
Aldrldge, p.
Morrison, p.
Kremer, p. .
Oldham, p. .
Oranthnm x
Ydo xx
Totals 38
15 27 7
z Pecklnpaugh given base In first
on Smith's Interference.
x Batted for Morrison in fourth.
xx Kan for Smith In 8th.
Score by Innings:
Washington 4 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0
Pittsburg 0 0 3 0 1 V 2 3 x
i R. II. I-
Washington 7 7
2
Pittsburg 5 15 2
Summary:
Two base hits, Carey 3, Moore, J.
Harris, Cuyler 2, Smith. Bigbee. Three
' KAZE CUYLER.
,w bits. Traynor. Home run, Peck-
"".r.h-...: v......
lor. Double plays. .Stan Ilnrrln to
tMiiicn iiiim-n. iiiirj. "
fCnntlniiefl nn phi: ntw.
START MILLION DOLLAR FUND TO GIVE
JOHNSON HIS 01 BASEBALL CLUB
MtTSKOOEE. Okln., Oct. 15. (A.
p.) a movement to raise a fund
among baseball fans of America for
the nurrhnse of ft baseball club for
Tram" of
Big Train 01
itors, has been
Walter Johnson, the
tlw, WiiMhgiatnn Snnnt
launched here. The plan nrlglnilten
with Claude Wllllfnrd, president 01
the Knstern Oklahoma i'iay umumi.
association and local businessman.
-A million fans give a million dol
lar" for a baseball team for nnner.
Is the slogan of Wllllford's campaign.
less
. . . i I-., nlirht
." ' I - -nv. . dollar
eli to the fund.
N. Y. Central Express
Dashes on With Dead
Hand on the Throttle
SYRACUSE. N. Y., Oct. 15.
Willi a dead man's hand grip-
ping the throttle, the Western
Kxpress, New York Central
4- sleeper train, bound for Chica-
so. sped westward for a dor
tnnee of nearly 15 miles early
today.
Charles J. Foreman, fireman,
discovered his engineer, William
Vanbergen, dead with his head
crushed as the flyer came
throuKh Minoa yards, just east
of Syracuse. Vanbergen is be-
lleved to linve been struck by a
girder of a bridge.
4.
HOOVER PLEADS
FOR IRE 10CAI
'Secretary of Commerce Says
Federal Govt. Is Trying to
Do too Much Reforms
Should Be Local Power
Resources Exaggerated
WASHINOTON, Oct. 15. (A. P.)
A ,,tn iipninut nurrender nf local
novernmeut prerogatives to federal '
authority was made here last night
bv Secretary Hoover In an address
to the ' Nil tinnnr Association of Rail
road and Utilities commissioners. '
"Our government." Mr. Hoover
said, "was devised in spirit to sus
tain a dual purpose to protect our
people among nations by a great
national power and to preserve indi
vidual freedom by local self-government.
"If wo aro to stretch the interstate
commerce provision in the constitu
tion to regulate all those things that
puss slute lines, we shall automatic
ally absorb to federal authority most
of the government that lies within
state lines, because our economic life
nan '
Is no longer that easy conception of
our forefathers of what constituted
Interstate commerce. If we do not
resist mis extension, wn.n ucnpium
of that fundamental freedom and In
dependence that can rise only from
local self-government?"
The commerce secretary addressed
himself rim Inly to the question of lo
cal and stale regulation of public
utilities.
locul Authority Bent.
"I want to kick to local author
ity," he said, "when the power rates
are unjust. 1 want to kick where
the searchlight of public opinion and
locnl knowledge can be brought to
beur. Far more than this. I want
to live In a community which gov
erns itself. I do not believe the
people of our communities have yet
become so supine or so careless of
the fundamental advantages of self
government that they are ready to
surrender control of their moBt Inti
mate concerns to a patenal govern
ment at Washington, however wise
or however powerful.
'We should nil agree that reguln
CONTROL OF GOV
Hon of public utilities is vital. He-1 undertake the execution or its grave
cause of the fabulous duplication of, and solemn duties'
I equipment, of Investment, of increns- Declined Nomination
cd financial Instability and operating! The convention bowed to his wishes
.expense with increased cost of ser-ut his friends refused io give up
vice lo the consumer. Involved In n hope, believing that If he were draft
'svstem of unrestricted competition. .-"d he could not refuse to serve And
h. j ncnmr Indenendently " leadership of Thomas
have abandoned the notion of main-
tabling the kind compel Hon a. a
?, .h"' doz
" i -
delihorntely clothe industry with the
(Continued on Page Three)
n .
uci. la. A.
CH A nLOTTE. N.
P.) Hardly had a dlsunteh
from
Muskogee, Okla., announced the
illation of n drive for "a n.llllon dol-
1
j lars from a million fans t,t buy ft
l,ai.i'bnM club for Waller Johnson,
thnn .. nfW1( houndl).. her0
made claim to being the
follow.
n,ui in
Klght
minutes after word of the
fun( h(1 bw) rw.elv,(fi six fnns had'ever. for he was persuaded two vents
la" and the qfcib
l'rTa
i"" been larted.
DEATH CALLS
SfOftlSION
OF INDIANA
Democratic Leader of Middle
West Passes Away at Farm
Home, 67 Years of Age-
Death Expected and Family
Bade Farewell Sketch of
Picturesque Career
INDIANAPOLIS. Oct. 15. ( A. P.)
Samuel M. Ralston, 67. Junior United
States senator from Indiana, and ven
erated patriarch of Indiana democ
racy, died atlils estate, Hoosier home
near here last night after an lllnetiS
of six weeks,
Death came to the senator after
twenty-two hours of unconsciousness
climaxing an attack of uraemlc poi
soning which had confined him to his
bed since September 5 and which had
impaired his health since early this
year.
Members of his family and more
than a score of intimate friends were
gathered at the home to receive the
news, shortly after eleven o'clock last
night that death had come, henator
Ralston had known for some weeks
of his condition and had hade his
family and friends farewell before
lapsing into the coma which preceded
his death. i
Mine runner in his early youth,
Kalston farmed and taught school be-
fore turning to the study of law,
which opened a political .career for
him-UJid brought him in 1 B 1 2 to the
governorship of' Indiana and In 1922
to the united states senate.
Surviving him are the widow, a
daughter and two sons, a brother, a
sister and a nephew of Indianapolis.
Funeral arrangements are expected
hy friends of the family to provide
for interment at Lebanon, Ind., the
senator's old home, from which he
was elected to the governorship.
Sketch of Career
Honored by the highest offices
within the gift of the people of his
own state governor and senator
Samuel Moffett Ralston steadfastly
refused to accept the call of his party
America can bestow upon her sons.
Twice during the memorable dead
lock between William O. McAdoo and
Governor Alfred' R. Smith at the New
York convention In 1924 the party
chieftains turned to Senator Ralston
to lead Ihe way out, at first firmly,
and then Irrevocably, he declined to
become the democratic standard
bearer.
With the characteristic modesty
that had endeared him to his Hoosier
neighbors, Senator Ralston had made
his resolution long before the strife
and turmoil of those sweltering July
days in Madison Square Garden had
so completely recast the complexion
of the political horizon. His decision
was communicated early to bis inti
mate friends, and he remained ada
mant to all their pleadings.
The -time came during the early
summer of 1924 when he might with
modesty have made a public ileclara'
tlon. Speaking to the Indiana state
convention which desired to Instruct
the stuie delegation for him, he said:
. "r,ere is something about the
greatness of this -exalted position thai
admonishes mo against wanting to
Taggi.rt. Indiana's astute political
rLl
.. ...,,.,.
nnllonn Inn lit nil convent on. a mil-
neuver blocked ut last by the prlncl
lul when apparently on the high road
tO SUCCCSS.
A luwytr by profession and u far
mer by inclination. Mr. Kabttun never
really cared tor political office, lie
preferred the battled of I he law, tem
pered by the quiet nnd pence of the
i-olliiiK acre of hl Indiana furm. lie
hud an Abiding IhtereKt In politic,
however, and wan a firm believer In
the. bedrock principle of democracy.
t'ntll he whh Htvept into the gover
noi'n chair In 1911!. Mr. Ralnlmi had
isought public office only twice, and
nefenled. After his
j((U. years' term as chief executive.
he retired to his. htrm near Indian
apolls. and confided to friend, that he
WU(I ,hrou((h wtn politlrM.
Uf h(, mn((1 M RnV(,f.
nur nni ,, campaigning ability.
however, drew the political leaders
again and again to his doorstep
ilKZU his party pleadej with him to
I enter again the race for governor, but
i, reused. It was not for lung, how-
lH""r "ecome a cnnuuistt tor tne
J"
Walter Finally Meets His Waterloo
Walter Johnson, nflor wlnnlns: two world wrlcs riiich, mH IiIh
Waterloo In the final conivKt for Hut worldV cluinipioiiNlilp ttday,
wlicu lie was touclicil up for 15 lii(,s and the I'lniUH won the. world 'h
title, 9 to 7, 111 a M'a of mud.
3
VICTIM
I,ONDOX. Oct. 1 fi. ( A. P.) The
death of Profetwor Harold Mnxwell
LeFroy In hiH battle of mdeuce njiuiiiHt
Inflect pests hns rohhed hygiene of one
of Ita foreniOHt chnmplonH. Death was
due to a poison nan with which he hud
bee nexperimentlnK at the Ifihonitory
of the Imperial College of Science and
Technology at Mouth Kenning0"-
PLEADS GUILTY
L D. Forncrook Decides Not
to Fight on Agreement That
Fine Will Be Suspended
Expected to Quit Post on
November 1
li, P. Forncrook, deputy sheriff, In
dicted hy the lust grind Jury, pleaded
guilty to, an Indictment charging
failure to serve a warrant," and the
felony charge, alleging the obstruc
tion of Justice was dismissed. Forn
crook was given a fine of Ml, nnd
upon the recommendation of the dis
trict attorney's office was suspended.
and no Jail sentence given. It Is un
der Blood that I'orncrouk will resign
November 1st, lo accept a more hi
cratlve position.
The demurrers filed nunlnst the In
dictments, were overruled by the
court before the pleading.
Forncrook was charged with fail
ure to serve a warrant upon Walter
Williams, a Hold f 1 1 1 1 youth chnrK'd
with a statutory offense. Forncroo
elalmed that because of the youth of
Williams, he nrcepted the promise of
the porents of the hoy, win) Is 10
years old, to bring hlnr to Jackson
ville. The hoy rim away, in the
meantime. Forncrook wild t Jin I the
reason for this course was beeuuse
he did not want to put the boy In the
county Jail among hardened mn. a
course he said was followed hy offi
cers generally In Juvenile cases.
C. A. Itamsey, charged with grand
larceny from the Hlirdon residence In
Ashland, pleaded guilty nnd whs sen
tenced to one year In the penitentiary.
He was accused of stealing house
hold goods.
Joe Palmer, a former ?,os Angeles
newsboy and prle fighter, and pal
of Hilly Hhort. Has Shannon, entered
a plea of goy to possesion of liquor,
operation ut still and transportation,
P IY SHERIFF
WILL
RESIGN
INSECT IS .. .
OF OWN EXPERIMENT
Hia life had been dt'votod to com
hnttlng man's Insect enemien and hlrt
efforts had been rewarded with some
remarkable hucccshcs, notably in de
stroying pests which attack cotton,
silk, wheat and wood and also In edu
cating the public against the danger
of the house fly. Ills services In com
batting the fly pest during the World
war received wide recognition.
Han ford MacNider, Ex-
Legion Commander, Is
Made Asst. Secy. War
ivAHiiiwuTnv iv.t lr.iA. V.
Iliinlonl Miii'NIih-r nf Mimon Cliy,
inwn, ritriniT coniiniimitfr 01 iiiw
1 ni.rli.n.i I jinlun UTiu H lltlAl nl Oil til
day lo hp nmintnnl ureriMnry of wiir.
The Noted Dead
To,KIn, Ohio, Oct, 15, (A.
Ocnernl Isoac H. Sherwood. t, re
Mied congressman and Civil war
vt't'M-nn, died, In his home here today.
He had been unconscious for several
days.
and wns given hreo years In stnte
prison on enrh chiil'ge, the sentences
in run concurrently. I'nlmer, when
Shnenon held up Hherlff Jennings.'
nt his Applegate ranch, during a pre
innturn raid. Inst summer, drove away
and destroyed nn auto load of liquor,
a Khannon pleaded guilty Wednesday
and wus sentenced to three years In
slate prison. "
The three men sentenced ff Iny and
Khnnnon sentenced yesterdny. will be
taken to Salem In the morning.
3
r 1 X2J
College Freshman
Dying as Result of
Football Injury
VRRANA. 111., Oct. 15. (A.
P.) Scant hope wuh held today
for the recovery of Jantcn K,
Whitfield. I'nivorslty of llllnoU
frerthtnan quarterback whono
neck wuh brken In scrim mage
yeHterdny afternoon. Kxnmiim
tlon huN d inclosed fractured
verle)rae and parnly.sls. Karly
today he wiia mill unconscious.
CONVICT'S FATE
OF
NW
HANDS
SALEM JURY
Closing Arguments Are Made oToS
. . I The pact will he signed by Germany,
and JUdge Delivers inStrUC- France and Belgium as the principal
parties und by Clreat Britain and Italy
tion, Declaring No Showing as guarantors.
i After the announcement of Ger
nf Qolf.riofnnco Mac Rppn many's adhesion the conference at Its
oi ben-ueiense Has Been elKhth plenary meetlng a4omA th0
Made State Asks Death
Pollsh'German arbitration treaty has
SALEM, Ore., Oct. 15. The argu- practically been reached by enlarging
ment of the defense, the final rebuttal the Bcope of the treaty to make It vlr
of the stnte and the limtructions of tually the same as the treaties ba
the court in the trim of Tom Murray, tween Gormnny and France, and Gor
convict, for the killing of Guard John many and Belgium. This meanf that
Sweeney in the prison break of Aug- all possible disputes, even those uris
nst la, will probably be completed and lng out of frontier questions would be
the case In the hands of the Jury by submitted to arbitration. The Polish
noon today, the tenth day of the trial, and Czecho Slovaklan representatives
With information from the court were Invited to Join the meeting, it
that no showing of self defense lias was explained to hear a statement
been made In the evidence and that outlining the work of, the Jurists oC .
the Jury will be -go Instructed, Will R. the ..draft treatios of arbitration bav
King, chief counsel for, Murray, will twden Germany and France and Oer
start his plea with the .opening of many nnd Belgium; the texts of which'
court this morning. He expects to have been adopted by the delegations
speak about two hours. .concerned.
Most of the afternoon yesterday wus They, on their part, gave the con
taken up with the consideration of ference an acconut of the advanced
points of law and argument on the "tiite of negotiations for the drafting
requested Instructions submitted to f arbitration treaties between Poland
the court by the defense In the ah- and Germany and Czecho-Slovakla and
sence of the Jury. Germany. It wns decided to defer to a
Lylo J. Page, deputy prosecutor, , later meeting discussion of the date
made the summary of the state's case '" publication of all agreements sub
late In the afternoon, pointing out that mltted to the conference for final
the state had proved "not only beyond adoption.
a reasonable doubt but to a mathe-1 The official communique Issued af
matlcal certainty" that guard Sweeney '' the meeting said; .
was killed by a 32 20 caliber bullet "At today's plenary session the con
fired from a pistol In the hands ot.'ercnce accepted the complete text of
Murray, nnd that the convict acted the draft security pact and then the
with "deliberate malice" In shooting question of arbitration treaties was
tbe guard after he had told him to lay taken up. Poland and Czecho-Slovakla
down his arms and come out of the , were Invited to attend."
tower or he would "smoke him 'out." I Present imlicatlona are that the
Pago told the Jury that there had ceremony of signing the Rhine secut
been a complete absence of evidence Ity pact will take place on Saturday,
to substantiate the defense plea of ,
self defense, and that the plea of ; PARIS, Oct. 10. (A. P.) "Today
either temporary or permanent Insnn- marks an historic date." said Premier
Ity wus "too ridiculous to be consid- Palnleve on lenrnlng of the successful
ered." completion of the draft security pact
No man, Page declared, could logic- at Locarno. ,
ally plea Insanity when admitting to Ap soon as he received the news
the mental processes exercised dining "'e Premier telegraphed the congratu
a break of this kind that had been lUon of the government to foreign
shown to be exercised by Murray. Minister Urlan'l, hnd of the French
"To turn this defendant loose, or to delegation at the conference. ,
simply send him back to the prison
would be to say to the four hundred
and eighty some convicts confined
there that they too, might break and
kill with impunity with no fear of be
ing punished further than to he sent
back to the penitentiary." I
Wire Report on
the Pear Market
NKW YORK, Oct. 5. t S. Bu
reau of Markets.) Nineteen cars
California peura; evcn Oregon: nine
Washington;, six New York by boat.
Msrk"t slightly weaker. Oregon hose
three cars, extra fc4.2fi to 5 . 2 T ; uver
ng 94. lift, fancy $4.15 to 4.15; aver
flgf 11-40. Aiijoiis three cars exirus
$:i,r.n io'4.0&; average $3.07: fancy
S3. 40 to 4.rui average $:l.fi.1; special
$3.7T to 14.15; avenge t3.!0.
NEW 'YortK. Oct. U.. A. P.) In
order to make the t'niled Dintes Inde
pendent of foreign rubber producers.
Ifarvcy H, Firestone, president of the
Firestone Tire and tluhhfr company,
Is -preparing to spend UM), 000. 00(1 In
remodpllng a whole country.
The, newly , organised Firestone
Plantations company, Mr. Firestone
announced, haa obtatnedj confessions
far 1,000,000 acres of rubber planta
tions In Liberia, West Afsjca. Plans
rail for the building of harbors, roods.
'towns, nospnais ana posniniy tne or
i gnnizatlun of iteishlp lines, , '
DIIDDCD flit APMliTC DCAfW.Tfl CDCKin '
- lAUDOLIA lllrtDIIHIl. HLHUI IU uTLIIU
SI 00 .QQ0.G0Q TO FS1ABLISH NEW COUNTRY
PEACE PACI
IN EUROPE
AGREED ON
Germany Officially Agrees to
Rhine Pact With France to
Outlaw War Mediation
Wins Over Force Polish
Corridor Problem Declared
t
Solved French Government
Rejoices
I)CARNO. Switzerland, Oct. 15.
(A. P.) Germany today officially an
nounced her adhesion to the Rhine
pact of mutual guarantees, framed at
text of the draft security pact.
A solution of the problem of the
E
APF01NTS JUDGE
HAI,KM. Ors.. Oct. 1 5. W. W.
Hoover nf Kossll was today appointed
by Obvcrnor Pierce as county Judge
of Wheeler county to succeed the late
.fudge (1, O, flutter, who died yester
day at The Dulles. Hoover was for
merly Wheeler county Judge. 4 5 ,
(lovernor Pierce today appointed J.
r. Hievens of Port In nd as a member
of the statu board of higher curricula
to succeed Itev. Jonas B. Wise, who
has removed from Portland ( .i tt.
Ht evens Is a member of the firm of
.Stevens and Koon, consulting , engi
neers, and Is a graduate of th Uni
versity of Ni'brnska.
A 2000 acre Rrllish rubnet planta
tion has already been purchased to
serve mainly ns n nursery for the
lurger plantations to be located on the
most suitable land. A harbor will be
I built at Monrovia capital of the negro
republic.
Employment of 930,000 men Is con
tcmplated when the organization has
reached lis full stride. !; ,
The United Htntes now contDls nffty
three per cent of the world's rubber
supply, but Mr. Firestone bellevee the
l.lherlau plantation ran produce
.'enough tnilve this countr" control nt
J t(l per cenl.
(Continued page !.)
O
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