Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, November 16, 1925, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    oo
o
o o
Medfomd Mail Tribune
Thm Weatkw
rmllciloii I iwllli tl
Prubahlo Itulu
Mh1iiiiiiii yesU'rday AO
Mhilinu in today -10
rnH-lplljillon :ttt
Weather Yar Afo
Maximum 01
Miiitinum 32
Rlb Twi-ntlrta Tew.
It rillt lourth T4f.
MEDFORD, OREGON', MONDAY, NOVEMBER Hi, WW
XO. 204
HANEY Will
LOSEJ0B0N
SHIPBOARD
President Informs Senator
McNary That Oregon Mem
ber of Shipping Board Will
Not Be Reappointed Coast
Politicians Defied Hoover
Defends President.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 1C. (A, 1)
President Coolidgo today informed
Senator McNary, republican, Oregon,
that he would not re-appoint IK K.
Hnney as commissioner of the United
States shipping board.
The prcHidcnt requested the Ore
iron senator to submit for his con
sideration in connection with the
lost held bv- Mr. llunev. the names
of a republican and a democrat in J
Oregon who would have the unified .
HUpport of the shipping and the bus
iness men of that section. I
The president's refusal to re-ap-j
point Mr. llaney s the sequel of a
controversy centering around the au-1
thority of the shipping board and:
the fleet corporation. Mr. Haney
was among those opposing the presi
dent's desiro to have the operations
controlled by the fleet corporation.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 16. (A. P.)
Coining to the defense of Bert H.
Haney, democratic shipping board
commissioner whose resignation Pres
ident Coolidgo requested several
months ago, Senator McNary. repub
lican, Oregon, told the executive today
that Mr. Haney represents the. Pa
cific coast's view of the way the mer
chant marine law should be enforced.
He declined to , SRy, however,
whether he had urged the president
to submit .to the senate Mr. Hnnoy's
-nomination to. continue in office:
The Oregon senator said lie was not
Interested in personalities and indi
cated if the president deemed it un
wise to submit Mr. Haney's nomina
tion to tho senate lie would pronoun
the name of some other democrat
from tho northwest, who would gener
ally be in accord with the present
commissioner's views.
Mr. McNary also diHcussed the agri
cultural situation with the president,
offering somo suggestions for use by
the executive In his speech in Chicago
December 7 on the farm question and
In his annual message to congress
1 1 o said he had not determined
whether he would re-introlncc the
McNary-IInugen bill, designed to facil
it.'ite sale of surplus farm products
abroad.
WASHINGTON. Nov. Kv (A. P.)
Kii'liiiK of tho present system ciT di
vided responsibility under the ship
pins board's control of ship operation.
ar.i'onliiiR to Secretary Hoover, is the
most pressing need in thn nation
merchant marine development.
The secretary presented his viewti
on the question in a recent letter to
Chairman White of the house rotn
mfttre on marine and fisheries, which
he made public in an address to the
shipping conference convened hero
today by the chamber of commerce
of the United States.
Referring to tho board's refusal to
follow tho views of President Cool
Ide by vesting operating authority in
the president of the emergency fleet
corporation, Mr. Hoover declared its
present personnel hfld "dented respon
sibility to the president, the one re
sponsibility which every administra
tive officer of the government should
ocknowledRo under the spirit of the
constitution."
Mr. Hoover proposed that In the
exercise of such authority the fleet
corporation be governed by an advi
sory board composed of subordinate
officers and the chairman of the
shiiipfng board.
Government support oT shipping
should be maintained, he said, but
attempt should bo made to enlist re
gional and community aid in meeting
deficits with the ultimate aim of ''t
tine private ownership to assume the
burden.
Inp 'JO. OOO Ft. In Puniclnite.
'If If 311 1I1VKH. Alta. Meutenant
A. Carter made a sucees-tful para
chute Jump from a height of 20.0"0
fi-el off n forest patrol service air
plane. Ho drifted eleven inlbs be
fore eomlnK to earth on the edge of
on Ice covered lake.
E
THEMSELVES BY DRINKING BOOTLEG LIQUOR
CMK'AnO, Nov. 1(1. (A. P.) Chi
na Kuan are drinking formaldehyde,
oidinarfly used to embalm the dead,
and thereby are gradually embalming
or pickling themselves.
Or. William I). .-Nallv. coroner's
chemist, made the statement yester
day after examining hundreds of
Miniplea of liquor and nKlng many
Hist-mnrtein examinations. Formalde
hyde, he said, cannot be separated
Urges Men to Wear
Mustaches As Last
Badge of the Sex
KA VIITJ'UVII.I.K. N. C, Nov.
1C. (A. P.) fiishou Collins
Ileum- advises everv man to
woiir a moustache as the last
distinctive bailee that iiiaBt-u-
Unity has loft unappropriated
by women.
"Wear one." ho tola 300 dole-
gates assembled hero for the fr
North Carolina Methodist con-
forciH-c. "That's all the women
have left tin. They cut their
hair and wear men's clothes,
fr but they can't wear a nious-
taohe. It Is your badgo of mas-
cullnlty."
The bishop wears one himself.
T BE
AI PEACE RATE
. S. Supreme Court Decides
Important Question in Favor
of American Creditors
Debts Must Be Paid at 17
Cents Rate for Mark
WASHINGTON, Nov. 16. (A. P.)
Pre-war Indebtedness in German
murks due ,an American from a Ger
man whose property was seized by
lite alien properly, cuntodian must be.
paid at the rate of exchange which
prevailed when tho debt was due, tho
supreme court ruled today.
Ttie court also ruled that the Amer
ican creditors were entitled to interest
during the period of the war and in
this connection it overruled the lower
courts. ""' 1 ' '" '
Cross appeals by'lhe alien property
custodian and others and by Laden
burn, Tbulmen and company of New
York figured In tho case. The ques
Hon was regarded as a test on which
i large number' of claims depended.
I madly, the decision involves the
quest ion of whether the American
claimants would collect their bills in
dollars on the basis of 1 7 Vz cents per
German mark, the exchange value
when war was declared, or would re
ceive practically nothing should the
value of the mark at the close of the
war be used. 1
The lower courts sustained the con
tention of the claimants that tho gov
ernment in paying the debts owed by
the German firm of Dclbruck. Schick
ler nnd company out of money seized
I iy the property custodian must use
he rate of exchange prevailing ut the
time the debt became due und over
ruled the idea of the government that
the rate of exchange should be that
existing at the time the courts passed
upon the question.
WASHINGTON. Nov. 10. f A. P.)
The supreme Tourl announced today
its refusal to review tho question of
the title to the land In Oregon claimed
by S. Ti. Ieathcrmun und Otto K.
Puny and held by A. J. Maysc. The
land was conveyed to the state of
Oregon by the United Suites for con
struction of wagon rouds and was sold
by the state to a southern Oregon
company. Subsequently congress pur
chased the lands from that company
and opened them to entry.
The company had boon delinquent
in taxes and the lands in question hud
been suld for taxes to Maysc, whose
ttle to them was held good by the
lower courts.
WASHINGTON. Nov. 16. (A. I1.)
The supreme court put Its stamp
of approval today on a provision of
law which prohibits lawyers from
charging in excess of $3 in prepar
ing and presenting papers In connec
tion with any war risk Insurance
policy.
; In holding thu provision constltu
tlonal the court confirmed tho con
viction under It of Jose P. Margolin
of New York.
K. I. Foreman Honored
ItK.N'O. Nov. Felipe. Gonzales.
Mexican sccilon foreman for the
Southern Puciflc company has been
cited for bravery by the company.
Gonzales flagged a train "at great
personal hazard." when the main lino
was covered by mud and rocks during
u cloudburst.
: from alcohol easily and as 0 result It
Is being peddled nnd Chicago tipsters
.are gradually etnhulniing thnjpsclvea.
I ."Deatffs from alcoholism here are
Ion the Increase and now nverage one
a day. I he tormaldohyde. Dr. Mc
Xally said, "hns a pickling efrect on
the human system. The Internal
organs gradually become embalmed.
Death or rlous consequences Is the
penally for Its use over a lon-s period."
PRE-WAR DEBTS
MUS
Pi
II, S, TIMBER
BY
-0, CO,
Local Firm Joins in One ot
Largest Timber Sales Ever
Made By Roseburg Land
Office Nearly ' 70 Million
Feet of Timber Involved-
Many Purchasers.
noSKHURO, Ore., Nov. 16. One
of the biggest timber sales to be con
ducted In recent years by the Rose
burg land office waa held today,
when tho government disposed of ap
proximately 66.600,000 feet of timber
on 1,854.23 acres of land located
chiefly in Coos, Jackson and lano
counties. The sale brought In 1134,
057.40. The largest purchases were made
by lien It. Chandler of Marshfield,
who bought two quarter sections of
Coos Bay wagon road grant land In
Coos county. The total amount paid
was J78.70S.10.
The Booth Kelly Lumber company
of Eugene bought 16.700.000 feet of
fir, codar and hemlock timber off 480
acrca of O. and C. grant lands In Lane
county, paying a total prlco of $53,
J30.12. Ivan and C. M. Miller of Marcola,
Ore., also purchased O. and C. grant
land timber, buying 790,000 feet of fir
on 28.44 acres in Lano.
Henry Fischer of Notl paid I144S.88
for 720,000 feet of fir timber on 41.44
acres in Lano county. -
Three million feot of fir and
1,135,000 feet of car timber on 305.24
acres of wagon road grant lands In
Coos county : wore sold to Jesse D.
Clalnton of Myrtle Point for
13.63?.pl,.i ..;, . i i " -.
Wank and George M. Ovorholzcrof
r.'ottago (novo, bought 400,000 foet of
fir timber from forty acres of O. and
C. lands In Lane county. ' ' ,
The timber from eighty acres of O.
and C. lands in Lane county was sold
to C. V. Cone of Cottage .Grove. Tho
tract contained 450,000 feet of red fir
and 475,000 feet of yew fir and a
small amount of whlto fir. The sale
price was $1637.02.
One half section purchased by Ben
It. Chandler of Marshfield, contained
4.200.(100 feet of old growth fir:
3,425,000 feet of second growth fir,
25.000 feet of spruce, 750,000 feet of
hemlock and 475,000 feet of cedar.
The purchase price was $18,774.98.
The other half section which , he
acquired had 10,470,000 feet, of old
growth fir, 16.005.000 of second
growth fir and 2,515,000 feet of hem-
luck. The price paid waa $69,817.50.
Tho Owen-Oregon Lumber com
pany of Medford bought 996,000 feet
of pine and 710,000 feet of fir timber.
situnled near their present holdings In
Jackson cuunly. Tho timber was on
I2S.27 acres of O. and C. grant lands.
The companV paid $3,203.90. v
Richard N. McCarthy of Marshfield
paid $10,376.00 for tho timber on 120
acres of wagon road grant lands. He
acquired 1700 feet of 'yellow fir.
2.226,000 foot of red fir. 600,000 feet
of white fir, 126,000 feet of hemlock
und 125,000 foet of red cedar.
Four hundred and eighty feet of fir
timber located on 32.27 acres of
wagon roud grant lands In Coos coun
ty were sold to James A. Hobson of
llyrtlo Point for $1,120.40.
The purchasers aro given a sped
fieri length of tlmo in which to re
move the timber from the land after
which the ground becomes subject to
homestead entry, the purchasers
ncqufrlng only the timber nnd not tho
title to the land.
Itnmlll A Pnnailnv prtcrlutni- rif'fltn
Infnl lunrl fiffiftn mnrln in nlinnllnnn I
mcnt this morning that will affect
future timber sales. Whero a nur-
chasor bids on only a portion of a sec-
Hon when tho entire lot In Bold, he
will 1e required to Hltfn an ugreoment
that he will he a bidder on the lattteri
when the Umber han been removed
from tho portion acquired by him.
The Noted Dead
CHICAGO, Nov. 16. (A. p.)
rhnrlen II. Lamb. 04, a major In the
Canadian nrniy In tho World war
and ono of the 23 aurvivlng members
of tho famouB "Prinrcmi Pat" regi
ment, died here yesterday us tho re
sult of war Kan poinonlng. Lamb
was the possessor of the Victoria
cross and also of the king's cross,
awarded for exceptional bravery while
wounded. He enliited an a private
at Vancouver, D. C, after escaping
from the German colony at Hln Tou.
China where he hud been Imprisoned
for refusal lo serve under the Ger
man flag. Lamb also was a veteran
of the Hpantnh-Amerlcan war and
later was governor of Mlndoro and
superintendent of the penal oolony
at Palawan, In the Philippine islands.
I COLOItADO KPHINOS. Colo.
Peter A. Becker, White IIhp guard
at the time of Lincoln's assassination,
chief of si0y scnutn under General
Custer and spoi.r for Buffalo Bill
when he entered the government ser
viclied at the age of H$. '
OWN
. Double Exposure? No, Twins
Dolly sisters have a rival for title of "Most beautiful sisters'
in Europe." The mademoiselles Klca, Danish twills, arc captivat
ing London with their ulchritudc and dancing.
GERMANS WILL
Teuton's New Invention to Be
Tested in Hunt for Wrecked
M-V London Finds Situa
tion Piquant May Find
German Wrecks.
LONDON. Nov. 1C. (A. P.) Tho
people of Lomlnn feel there is some
thing plquunt in having German deep
sea divers in the attempt to locate the
monitor auumarino M-t which Inst
week sunk in the English eh n nnd
with 68 officem und men on hoard and
failed to como to tho surface.
Whether It is a proposition on the
part of tho Germans or voluntary ser
vice in not ccalr. tJome persona prefor
to regard It an a striking act of hu
manity and worthy of being consider
ed tho first fruits of tlyi Iocarno pact.
Tho newspapers today aro mien
with descriptions and pictures of tho
wonderful apparatus of which the
Germans are tho sole possessors. Tho
machine weighs half a - ton and Is
equipped with electric light and a
telephone. The urea ho mo 12 miles
off Htart Point whero oil rose to tho
surface of tho water on Kuturday,
seemingly indicating the probable lo
cation of the submarine nun been
marked by buoys and It In there that
the first attempt to find the subma
rine will be made. It In Indicated that
this will be the first time tho Oormnn
apparatus has been tried In the open
sea. The prevlmis tests have been
made in the still waters of an Inland
lake and It In therefore thought pos
sible that thoipresent experiment may
not be successful. -In any cane the lo
cating of the M-l Is considered prob
lematical us. she may have travHfd
Homo distance under water before she
became Incapacitated or may Imx'e
drifted with the current In the chan
nel since she nank. Naval officials
say they will not be surprised If the
Gormuns locate one or more of their
own submarines sunk by the lirltlnh
in Gie neighborhood where the M-l
went down, after they had taken toll
of Urlltah shipping.
ENGLISH UBQAT EUREKAJURDER
OPENING OF TRIAL!
I'I KIILO. Coin., Nov. 10.- (A. P.)
Piatt May, T'to Indian, was acquit
ted of a charge of murdering his
seventeen-duy-old baby by burying It
alive lute today when Federal Judge
jlvmes directed the jury to return a
verdict of not guUty. The court up
held the contention of the defense
that the government had riot proved a
corpus dclectl.
TWO HALFBREEDS
CHARGED
WITH
i;uia:KA. .cuiif.. Nov. id. a.p,)
District Attorney A. W. Hill of
Humboldt county announced today
that warrants charging Walter David
and Jack Kyan, halfbreoda with tho
murder of Miss Carmen Wagner,
would be sworn out by J. A. Wagner,
father of the slain girl, on tho return
to Kurcka thin week of Dr. K. O.
Hoinrtch, University of California
criminologist, who has been working
on tho case. David and Kyan have
been In Jail hero since the finding of
the girl's body about two weeks ago
buried In the mounlnln section sixty
miles east of Kurelta.
Information in the hands of Investi
gators ulso points to David and Kyan
an tho slayers of Henry Hwoet, com
panion of Miss Wagner on tho fatal
hunting trip Into the Humboldt coun
ty wUdnrncHH. . Kwcet'a body was
found lying near his automobile on
Coyote flat on October 10.
District Attorney Hill's statement Is
Interpreted us indlruting that Hein
rlch discovered from exhibits which
he collected on a visit to the murder
and burial scenes, evidence of a naturo
sufficiently Incriminating it warrant
tho placing of formal murder chargOB
against the two halfbremls suspected,
David and Hyun, hnlf brothers. Heln
rich Is scheduled to leave Berkeley
tomorrow night for Kureka.
Gerard Hopes Jew
Or Catholic Will
?in for President
Ni;V VollK. Nov. 10. (A.
P.) Jntiies W. Gerard hopes
that one of the major parties
will nominate cither a Catholic
or a Jew fin- president.
Pn-sMIng at a meeting of the
Jewish Tribune forum lust night 4
S he said ;ticli a nomination would
fr "do away wlih the miserable 4
fr spirit of Intolerance which lias
shown up In the land." 4
Willi the expression ut his
hop" (he former democratic:
ambassador to Germany gave 4
the following warning:
"When any one race goes to a
pollttciil convention und do-
mands recognition for one man
hecauxe of this religion or that
race, it Is Increasing Intoler-
a nee."
Pmirll (jcls hi Canada
VANCOI'VKIt. It. C Major Luth
er I. Powell, of Portland, Ore., organ
izer of the Kansdlnn Ku Kttx Klan.
received a permit to enter Canada n
thlrtf days. Powell wan barred from
entering Canada last week pending
Investigation into hln activities In con
nection with the Ohm,
7 Z-Y ear-Old Yegg
Shot While Robbing
A Catholic Church
ST. LOUIS. Nov. Hi. (A. P.)
A 73-ycBr-old burglar was shot
and severely wounded early to-
day in a revolver fight In the
rectory of St. Marks Catholic
church by a detoctlve watching
for a persistent contribution box
tiller.
The fight took place In a dark-
4 encd hallway with tho aid of 4
flashlights. Kach tired two shots.
The prowler who gave his name
as Julius Zalonar, snid ho had
come here from Colorado threo
weekB ago.
JILLSON KILLED
MRS. NEIL. JURY
Evidence Shows S- P. Clerk
Bought Lead Pipe On Day
of Murder, With Which Ash
land Woman Was Attacked
Revolver Was Jillson's.
That tho ili-ath of Mrs. Fred n.
Noll, prominent AHhlnml ri-slcleht, ro
aultnd from wouniln Inflicted by n
pistol in tho lunula of O. Kay Jill-
aolf, was' tho belief of tho coroner's
Jury. rcturnlnK a vcrdlet to that o-
feet at tho Inquest hold at Ashland
Saturday evening, following the crime
commlttod Thursday afternoon.
Of tho 11 witnesses heard by tho
NQUEST SHOWS
Jury, Larkln (Jrubb, hardware clork ovoryming oown.
at Ashland, gnvo testimony that tend- - This attemnt by plaintiff s lawyers
ed to shed more light on .the Inex-j to jihow that Alice Bought-to- make
pllcal.le crime. Ho tesliried that on' young Ilhlholander Joalous W S.
tho day Jillson Is alleged to havo continuation of the same effort of
committed Iho murder, Jillson pur- last week when her loiters contained
chased from him threo pounds of references to various stage- celebrl
hoavv lead plpo shortly before noon, ties whom she had met, and to
When Cliul.l. remarked that the rlvnlB for her hand. In the fall of
pike was rather high for such a 1923 alio wrote another letter corn
short pIcL-o, jillson is said to havo Plaining of Leonard's nbBonco and
responded, "Ves. but It'll niako lots telling him frankly that he would
of sinkers." llavo to mart, her. .
A similar length of pipe, found at "I not going to remain to bo
tho scene of tho killing, was Identl-1 ""e-" " wrot0' "because I havo
fled by tlrubh as being tho ploco pur-! had a miserable summer. It you are
chased from him. I n" mea ' remain away long and
Tho plpo was originally round, 1 fwt. mo completely. I love you.
but when found was bent out of but you will havo to come and marry
shapo on one end, ns ir it nau oeon
used for striking som objoct for
cibly. Two srulp wounds on Mrs.
Neil hre believed to havo been In
flicted by such Instrument.
Chief of Police Oeorge MrNubb
and policeman Ingllng of Ashlnnd
told of the position of the bodies uir unu wruio mm:
when found by them nnd gavo other "Darling-. I havo won you. Haven t
information already reported, as did!'- dear?" .
.Sheriff Itnlph Jennings, c. V. t.'nrey. Mnnoy affairs also made their ap
a brother-in-law of tho dead man, I pearniu-o in letters read today. Allco
ldontiflc.1 the .38 calibre Smith and I limes bewailing her poverty,. corn
Wesson revolver as JIllson'B property plaining especially about her In
and said that It was purchased a hlty to tuko a trip to fcUrope. sho
year ago from f V. Priest, a South- said: 11
ern Pacific special ligcnt. In addl- "' "fln w'"1' ' wa B'rI- t
Hon hi. stated that the bullets found The Importance of Leonard's be.
In tho gun. five of which-wore empty coming of ago crops out In anotnor
Bore the sumo that Jillson hud bn Wlw ln March, 1923 When she
accustomed to uso. ' wrote: .' ,
Dr. V. S. Cleniny, rounly health1 "When you become your own mas
offlcer, explained tho rosulla of the!'", whin arc you going to do with
autopsy, taken on tho evening of the "'ur Alice? When are you going to
killing. Two of tho snots struck take her? I am looking for you
fatal snois und cither would have moro tllls Mliy you al- BolnB to
resulted in death. -,
Ho described the sculp wounds
ns being sevei-Ml Iiu-Iicb in length and
to Hie bone In depth, believing theln
tu havo been inflicted by tho pipe.
Illuo and !omudllt.
That Jlitson was tired, nervous,
blue and despondent at times was
testified lo by Miss Marjory lllb-
bard, hln liih-nded wife, daughter of,
Mr. and .Mrs. J. K. Illhbard, resld- ome parents are setting nuscraDio
ing on the Jacksonville highway. Sho! examples ny drinking. . At football
also an I.I lluil Iho gun had been games he has seen old alumni, "hit
shown to her Kcven.l times bv Jilt- '''"K l,lc flask." but not ono Btudont.
son.
ul she could not positively
Identify It. Km" the past severs
weeks Miss lltbluird had been visiting
relatives ul KIm inn 111 Kalis. While
there Jillson ciiine to see her every '"' "I tnp r."r James version, are
Saturday or Sunday nnd during the on exhibition at 'Yulo. connnemomt
lust few weeks of her st.iv was ' the first translation of tho hook
' : lino Kngllsh by William Tyndale
'rnnMniie nn rr F.lvht i I 400 yoars ago.
BRECKINRIDGE BREAKS ENGAGEMENT "
WITH DEBUTANTE TO MARRY MRS. WOOD
NKH" VOHK, Nov. 111. (A. I'.)
Twlay'H American bm'h that llonry 8-Itrot-klnrhlKO,
former urtHlHtnnt hoci-c-tury
of war, In ml to nwirry
Mt'M. Ada rt'AcoHlu Wood, wlluwof n
ncifhnu of Kllhu Hoot.
MIkm 1'hhU) Mi-Kol'Hn of WiihIiIiir
ton recently broke her onKncmont
to Mi. Hrt'ckinrhlKC.
F n mi n nnnoum ptrtont of Mm.
Hoot' engURpment in to lie mJc
ufler tho hollflayii the American nay.
Mrs. Hoot In tho widow of Oren W.l
INLAND R
THREATENED
BY NEGRESS
Letters From Wife of Gilded
Youth Show She Had De
signs On Son of Millionaire
Promised to Keep Still
Until Fortune Had Been In
herited. WHITE PLAINS. N. Y., Nov. 16..
(A. P.) Tho forvor of the lovo lot
ters which Alice Beatrice Jonea,
daughter of a negro taxi driver, first
sent her husband, Leonard Kip
Rhlnolander, during their courtship,
gradually changed to an Insistent
threat that he would lose her unloas
ho married her.
Today's series of letters, Introduced
at resumption of the trial of young
Rhtnelandor's annulment suit are
flllod with demands of marrtaco
and at tho same time promise tho
greatest aecrecy until the wealthy
young scion of an aristocratic family
should have obtained bis majority,
On November 4, 1922. Alice wrote:
"If you can't come home, I will
have to go away with someone else."
It was at this tlmo that Leonard
was attending school.
Two months later Alice was even
more outspoken.
"You are going to bo mine now,
or never," she wrote. "I havo throv n
down two chances for you. I woull
keen things . a dead, dead secret
After you are mino I would koeji
i"" ' -"--
Again on May 16, 1923, she write:
'I doserve everything 1 get from
you. I had had hundreds of chances
to make dates, but 1 havo . turned
In March, 1923, she broached again
tho suggestion that they marry se
cretly, saying It was the advice of a
friend named Kitty. Shortly aftor
that alio received her diamond en-
gagoment ring from young Ithlno-
bo your own boss."
It was In May of thla year that
young Uhinolsnder became-of. age,
their mnrrlago taking plaoo five
months lntor. ''
Alumni Aro Scored.
NBW YOHIC Dofondlng flappers
and "her brothers," the ''flippers,"
tho Itov. Dr. c. K Kolsnor thinks
lUir.i Itlhles KxlilbiU-d.
.view HAVKN, Conn. forty rare
"". including a copy or tho first
Honl, wiin wuH a trnctl'tn oxocntlvo
In Now . York, flho hit len promi
nent In New York and Nowport ho
duty und Jinn dona much ' chnrltablo
work. Uho and Mr. lirocklnrldtfa
CAuh havo two children, Hho Is a
HlHtoi of Mm. 1hlll Lyrilff. v
Mr. Ilrei'ktnrldHo wan divorced thin
year at Oenova. from tho form or
Ituth Uradlcy Woodman of Concord,
N. H. Hln wedding to MUM McKnl
riln. daughter of Mm. 1Olgh Palmor
of Washington had boon set for noxt
month,