Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, April 13, 1928, Page 1, Image 1

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    1 The Weithm-
Prediction Fair, heavy frost to.
nUrlit.
Maximum yesterday 2
Minimum today 4:1
l-wiiltaHn Traif
Medford Mail
Weather Year Ago
Jjfailinuin to
Minimum 30
Piilr Twtntr-tbfrd Yu
vVlr Kiltyliti v'
FOUKTEEN PAGES
MEDFORD. OlJEdOX, Pit I DAY, 'AIM.. I. VX 1!12S.
No. 22.
Today
By Arthur Briibau.
Pituitary Youth.
Give Some to the Bears.
A Lady Says It.
BREMEN FLY
r
asss
"The Moral Is THINK.
Lt
(Copyright, 1927, by New Tork
Evening Journal, Inc.)
Trofessor Steinacli, of Vien
na, who seeks to make old men
young, when he ouht to worry
nbout making them useful, has
a new invention.
Serum, made of the pituitary
pland, tucked away inside the
skull, woAk wonders in reju
venatingnRed rats. Animals,
half dead, arc made young.
Steinaeh should try that on
. . r. . . l mi. . 1
Wall ."Street Dears, mcy uccu ,
it.
Another 4.0(10,000 share day,
linkers getting out of bed load
"fl with overnight orders, 15,
run J.nu of dpnernl Motors
was the first bite of one finan
cial breakfast. On that one :
order two brokers made I.IT'.O. j
No wonder stock exchange j
seats are traveling toward the
$1,000,000 mark. "Buy fifteen
thonstand.. at the market."
That's all, only six words.
Dr. Winifred Sackville Mo
ni'i who is a lady, says "Man
is superior to woman, mentally,
physically, artistically and psy-l
chologieally."
That is not all true, espe
cially the "physically and psy
chologically" part of it. But
suppose it were true. Michael
Angelo's Moses is a finer pro
1 iluctthan Michael, himself. But
Michael Angelo made it.
Whatever a man is, some
r.-oinan made him, and the pro
ducer is nobler than the pro
duct. Better be a cocoanut
tree than a cocoanut.
4-4
To make and save money, use
your brains. Leviathan, of the
American shipping board fleet,
saves $15,000 every trip on fuel
and still does 25 knots an hour.
An improved
priipeller will
11
save that one ship $200,000 this
vear.
A!., niflnni hl'avp Cpvlnncse,
,. . , , ..
nillKOH H living ny puuing
head in Ull olpplllint S mouth
twice daily for Mr. Ringling's
. pimis.
The elcplinnt lifts him up !'
tlio head, carries him around,
nnd one of his ears is almost
' worn away. With one little
NKW idea, Didani could live a
life of luxury and save his ear.
The moral is, "THINK."
Mr. Uonsihton, American
nmlmssftdor, told London "Hen
ry Ford has made us see that
high wages are an integral part
of prosperity."
Thnt is true, and it is Ford's
great service to this age, next
to making automohiles more
lilentifnl than buggies.
The lirith.li were amazed
when Henry Ford at banquet
in his honor made a speech con
taining only 1!0 words. It was
a his first speech. .
Cromwell could make a
that. The greatest statements
. i i . r
are snori. ror instance, j.h
there he light," or these ten
. ...
WONlS, "liive light, ana llie ie-
pie Will find their OWn Way.'
-
Early yestenWy, In civilized
Greater New York. Julius Rubin,
in ,., irt d-d A few hours
rli in a nriie flcht. a "blow
m .ho W knocked him to tliel"dll' nnd gave way to just as
floor, backward. j
u i- a..l an.l notoetfves se t
Qnvo.ii.l ' Thpv mrht Investl-
Rate, while they are about It, poll
tlclan. that dfcide profits on prize
fights O
If men set two dog. to flghtini!
and on. killed, the men would
be locked up. There Isn't much
money In dog fighting.
A railroad built by American.
Hrltlsb, German tnd French en-
(ConMnnxt i Vara Tour,
Second Section)
OVERDUE,
I NO TRACE
OFPUNEj
Reports Atlantic Conquered
Baseless, and Anxiety,
. i
Grows for Safety Fuel
Supply Exhausted
Throng Waits Arrival
Vessel Sights at Sea,
(Py the Associated Press)
The hour has imissed when
the forty- hour fuel supply of
th C!e. man plane, the lire--men,
ho u nil from Ireland to
America, presumably miRht
have been exhausted.
At 4:38 p. m., eastern stan
dard time, forty hours had
elapsed since the start from
Haldonnel airdrome and by
the filers own estimate, their
fuel would be Bone.
There came a flicker of
hope at 9:3n a. ni., when the
Canadian Press reported that
a monoplane, believed to have
been the Hremen. had been
sighted over Kinssport, N. S.,
hut it could not be Identified.
As the hours passed, numer
ous reports were received that
the craft had been Minted,
but all proved baseless.
The possibility of a west
ward crossing of the Atlantic
for the first time by airplane,
which had- been the world's
concern, turned to general
anxiety over the fate of the
three intrepid fliers, ' Captain
Hermann Koehl, Colonel
James Kiumnurico and Baron
Khrenfrled (lunther von
Huenefeld.
(lly Tho Associated Pivsn)
With fuel for only an hour and I
a half more nt most of flying, at
3 p. ni. eastern standard time, the '
n ... : :
.reiiiian pmiii; !rt-iut-ii, i-.ii i j iiik i
inrt't" iiit-ii. i us unri-jjui iirii uii ni.,.."- ....... j-.-- t
flight from Ireland, beyond a
nadlan press report that it passed would BJKTOm .or B eeom.ncn-, - ; h()UK(., ; Va.ial. in ,he wilds of .,,s..-,n
over Nova Scotia this morning. I dalion It would be that the eii-, hJ . ,......, , curry cnuniy. sal.l a r-n.ri re
It was 38 i hours after the start, fnces be commuted to life Imprls- I "VviZ ,,"e Tn..," ceivc-d at Cold lUa.-h. The report
from Kaldonnel and more than five: onment. I . , ... ,. .,, f....i stated that a bullet wound was
hours after Captain ltarkhouse of
the Canndlan cutter Airns renorted
having sighted high over Klngs -
!..... ...
peri. a monoplane ne iie-i"i ic u..u...
lieved was the I! r e m e n. None I Kelley and Willos will be con
other reported the passing of the! tinned under death watch pending
craft, although it then would have;""" ueveiopmems
I been well down the coast with
clear weather, nearlng New York
it was polntol out, however, that
much of the route lies off shore
uini mill ill mi? pirvitius ruii ui
flight the
pected at
plane could not be ex
New York before 3:30
p. m. It was believed to have sof
ficlent fuel for flight gtne hour
after that.
Captain linrkhouse had said he
believed the plane wns on a direct
course for Cape Cod, Mass., but
no reports of sighting it came from
there or elsewher. Visibility was
good and the plane, on the bnsls of
its estimated speed, should have
reached the cape by 1:30 p. ni.
LONDON. Eng., April 13. (ff)
The British air ministry has kept
careful walch for reports of the
llremen's flight, but none had been
received to 3:30 this afternoon.
The steamship offices and others
are similarly without news.
A note of anxiety is already be
gnning to creep into the accounts
published In the evening papers
"Atlantic fliers overdue," said the
Evening News.
"Once more these grave words,
with all they may mean, have to
he written, although, of course,
there is still hope."
Amnnir manv Innnirina rni-nivpd
at the Associated Press bureau was
one from Mrs. Hinchcllffe, whose
husband. Captain Walter Hlnch-;
cllffe, never came back from his .
trans-Atlantic flight. She was anx
ious to know If any news had been
received of the Hrcmen's progress,
mitchkl kiioi.d. x. v.. April
13. iPi a crowd beginning to tire
of rumors which had fed Its en-T
thuslasm since early morning hung
;on doggedly here this afternoon.
I determined to he on hand should
i me uans-,iuanuc piane uromen
at last arrived
Optimism which had been un-
! reasonably buoyant earlier, waned
unreasonable pessimism.
While unconfirmed reports be-
" around of
plane seen
In Nova Scotia, they were accepted
'" " vermrat on.
however, resulted in a spreading
cynicism nd when laier rumors
""""a" of over M"ln
celved wilh scoffing doubt.
At 2 p. m almost 28 hours after
the Btemen left Ireland, the crowd J
at the field was roughly estimuled ;
at loao. At that time the watch- j
(Continued on Fare Eight) 1
KELLEY. WIILOS
GRANTED WIFK
MORE OF LIFEiitiaMslfe
Supreme Court Members
Ready to Urge Life Terms
Death Watch Con
tinued State Treasury
Embezzler Given Condi
tional Pardon.
, SAIJCM, Ore., April 13. (P) The
state supreme court touay Issued a
j formal statement of Its position
(concerning clemency for Ellsworth
K el lev find JnmnM U'lltns. The
j .statement, bears out previously j
i published press statements to the i
i offiW (tint onnrr nu n Itnlioinl hnilv
would make no recommendation.
, ThH press statement, however, j
mentioned a telegram from Ilrad- t
ley Kwers, Willos attorney to the
i governor in which Kwers said I
members of the court would Indi- j
i vldually recommend commutation '
j to life imprisonment. Kwers state-
1 ment was confirmed by Chief Juh-
tice Hand when shown a copy of
j the telegram. The chief Justice
i emphasized to newspaper men that
such was the position of court
1 members not on the bench as a
court, but . individually off the
bench.
) SALEM, Ore.. April 13. )
Ellsworth Kelley and James Willos
I were not executed at the stute pen
! itentiary today as scheduled.
A telegram sent Governor Pat
1 tersnn at Marsh field venlerdav hv
Hrudley Kwers, Portland attorney, I
between the governor and Chief
.luiitice John L. Kami of the . ntatai
8iipieme court resulted In a re-T
; prieve of one week. Thia whs
j tiranted hy the governor In a tele
i graphic ineBsa'fe to his actlns ec
j letary, Miss Beatrice Walton,
i Mr. Ewars' telegram to the gov-
ernor stated that he had conferred
with five justlueH of the supreme:
court, including the chief justice, I
tl,nl tl,a momlwm nf ia i-nm-l fill) t
............... w. fc ..... :
Ca-,tne ana:.. Jul mat u uio governor;
out mat it tno governor
v-mcr Justice nana maae it plain,
however, that such a recommenda-
tlon would not be from the court
K..t frnn, tl.a mamhura In rl 1 virlnn 11 V
SALEM, Ore.. April 13. (JP) '
Clarence Thompson, who three and
a half years a.'to was sent to the
I state penitentiary, for embezzling
$5000 stato funds while holding the
j position of cashier In the state
1 treasurer's office under Treasurers
i O. P. Hoff and Jefferson Myers,
j was freed yesterday under a con
I ditional pardon from Governor I'at
! terson.
I The governor's action was rec
I ommended by the stato parole
board. Thompson's minimum time
j exi)lre( Wednesday, makng him ell
gihle for clemency and, since he
had no scores against him as a
prisoner, the pardon was granted.
One of the conditions is that
Thompson live outside the slate,
and it is said he will live In the
state of Washington.
Baseball Scores
National.
It,
H. K.
Doston 3 8 2
New York 7 9 2
(lenewich, Hearn, Delaney nnd
Taylor; Chaplin, Canlwell, Henry
and Hogan, Ciimmings.
It. II. K.
I Philadelphia. 1
6 4
4 1
Hrooklyn
lienge nnd Wilson; Vance and
Deberry.
n. H. E.
Chicago 2 ' 8 1
i Cincinnati . 03
Nehf and Gonzales; Kolp, Jah
lonowskl and plclnlch.
American,
n.
H.
E.
2
1
Col-!
I New York .
! Philadelphia
8 12
7 12
and
Moore. Sheab, Hoyt
Una; Itommell,
Johnson, Orwoll
and Cochrane.
J II.
... 8
Washington
Hoton
?
I'ucl;
... 4
nnd
Zachary.
Itrnxton
Wlltze, settlemeier nnd Harry.
It. H. E.
Cleveland t 4 1
Chicago 17 0
(Game called at end of sixth).
Miller nnd Haswell; Adams and
Iterg.
w Tt. II. fi
St. I.OUI 4 S t
Detroit J 10 0
Crowder. q Itineholder, Meyers
and Hchnng; Gibson. Vangilder,
llolloway tnd Woodu.ll, Hauler.
CENTER OF NATION-WIDE SPECULATION IN STOCKS
mm
ill.
Tf
If WW
Speculation in stocks listed on the New York Stock Exchange has reached such proportions that
small investors, pouring their savings into the market, have brought about a series of record share days
for the past few weeks. In the whirlpool the bank accounts of millionaires and pastors, bootblacks,
music teachers, widows and stenographers, are min?lid. Above, exterior and interior views of the New
York Stock Exchange.
CERTAIN VETO
Equalization Fee IS I HOm
to President Doubt
White House Can
Overridden Measure
Now Up in House!
Be!
is!
WASHINGTON'. April 13. (IP)'
mnjorily of 311 senate!
votes in lis favor, the MiNal y-
WAITS M NARY ! ROGUE TINGED GEO. HUNT WITH
FARIMID BILL? WITHMSTERY FILIVIS DELAYED
Ilaugen farm relief bill rested lo -
the second time.
I'assed lale yesterday by the sen-
ate hy a vote of "i3 to 23, ns cor.i -
pared to the 47 to 39 saiieuo.i
given it ut the last session, the
r measure retained -the controversial
equnllzatiim fee which caused
President Coolidge to veto the bill
last year, principally on the ground
that this provision was unconsti
tutional. Should the president again r:--turn
the measure to congress wt!!i
out his approval, administration
leaders In the senate doubt whet tier
it could he passed over the veto
even though the v o t e yesterday
showed more than n "two-thirds
majorpy of those present for It.
They believe that with a full mem
bership present a two-thirds ma
jority could not bp obtained.
A farm board appointed by the
president wilh tho consent of the
senate also would be set up, und
advisory councils, named by farm
organizations, established for each
community. Approval by the coun
cils would be necessary before llie
fee was applied.
In nrgulng for executive ap
proval, .McNary contended that be
fore the fee became effective.
plenty of time would he available
for the courts to pass on, its con -
! stittnionality.
T
BY
WASHINGTON, April 13. (P)
Asserting that her son had died
from drinking officially poisoned
alcohol, Mrs. Mnhi-I Allen of Kan
sas City, Mo., today petitioned con
'fress to appropriate $200,000 for
her use.
I i ti pi-muni, uio nrsi oi us Kino
! o,l, .i,m,lun,l 1. (-1.1
,,:...,..- 'iiii.-nn, was Illlll
"nl before (he senate by Vice-President
I Dawes and was referred to the
i claims commlltee.
; v.. aii,. ,h i,-
M veors. set fo.ih ih', i.. .
I Welllnelnn J A Alb.n l:'
old. died last October 10. "after
partaking of Industrial alcohol an
a beverage, said alcohol having
heeu polioneil by order of the sec-!
retary of Ihe treasurv." !
Ihe mother said her son had
been her sole means of support
f f . ... .,,,., ,.;tiikn from the Hoguv liv
and that since lie hud died from , complication hove set In. He Is
drinking a bevero'opofsoned byircported to have hid a "very poor
Ihe ZOVernmnnt aha iff.s antitlo1
relleT.
V Jfl-N-i'., , V.
1 w?tfWmSi
, v nc' "iVS
- tl
; BOClV May Be That 0T MISS
jjk) Trapper A Hint of
'Foul Play May ' Clear
Up Disappearance of De
faulting Gas Manager.
MAUKIIKIKI.D, Ore.. April 1.1.-
M ) A boily wliu n nun hei n In Hie
: water for a consl.l.'i ahle lime was,
jl"Kf,n "oin llie itogue i-imt ui
GRIM FIND IN PLANE BEARING;
expected to!,u" "'uinj, .iih n i.,..n
; found ill the head.
i Coroner J. W. Wheeler, Sheriff
' I'eck Huntley of (Sold lle.itli
started up the Itogue river by boat
! yesterday. They are nut expected
! hack w ith a report until Saturday
' or Sunday. The men bringing- the
report down tho rive r said
th;it the body at Mnrlal was one of
three men who started down the
Kogue river from Oranls Pohs sev
eral months ngo.
GRANTS PASS, Ore., April 13.
A3 Tile body found yesterday
i near Marlal, may bo that of Hai ry
Wallace. Josephine county trapper
I who started down the Kogue river
j headed for (iold Iteuch, on Deeem
jber 24. His boul was found wreck
ed at lilossoin bar, six miles below
Marlal, but Wnllin-e's body was
j never found. He whs last seen at
llilossom bar by a tniill carrier, it
I was thought that Wallace was
i drowned while altelnptillg to llego
jtiate the Ireaeherous niplda at that
j point. Ills boily could lie easily
identified as lie hail a prominent
e,,1,l lnlli In tho fe.,l ,.t l.lu
I mouth and was blind In Hie left!,m'k to ""'';.
j eye.
Roy Johnson, defaulting man
ager of the Grants Puss office of
tne Southern Oregon Gas com
, p.my. Is nlsn supposed to have been
drowni'fi In the rivpr l:it full
u liilc fixhiUK 'Hit hi body whm
nfV'T roenvrred drf-pli a Hem-ch
which Inn'. i-rt fir month. It wiih
commonly huiokci1 th;it he had
li-ft tho country whn hl Mi o rhino
whh discovered nnd hud uttomtcd
to cover hi trull hy the drowning
thoory. ,
Wiillnop Ik known to hvo hn
! on hi pTKon when ho loft
!;alie for tho lower rlvr.
I Thee nro tho only two prrHonn
'known it ho mifMlntf on the Itogue
uriMK (ho mnt yenr.
NEAR TO DEATH
'riiiil will be rejected 1 they nre
j not In his office by five o'clock
LOS A VOI-.I.KS. April Pi 'p. m.
Kicliiird lllx. film ncior. operated Among tho linportant candidates
on three days iigo for iippcndiolils. I who will file today will be Herbert
was reported from Hie Itoosevelt j vr. republican, and Al Hnillh,
hospital here today lo be lii a crlll- i democratic, candldales for presl
cul condition. dent. It Is understood lhat n
Dlx's nperallon was an emi r- , group of Wnlsh candldales for
Eency one to prevent rupture of j ,t,.,.Kt e to Hie national convention
the appendix. He had a severe will file todriv and also several
cold at the time and since the
' operation peritonitis nnd lunir
niirht dliln't i-ct u'ell an.l ...iiirh.
. d all night."
UfSBKWmMMv I I I uii n u I Ull I lllllll
.a
Fnn Npar f!anvnnvillr L astl"1"""1"'" KOt fH''th '"at y1' '"
J J
Evening Forced Return to
" Roseburg Play Hide
and Seek With Storms
Chaplin Picture Shown
Today.
liO.SKl'.r IUI. Ore., April 13.
c,oulg uut, .Midford the-
later man, u passenger ill a piano
, pll.ma by Jack Kvans, of Med-
ford. was forced down hern last
night because of poor visibility
between Canyotiville and Med
fi,rd. The plane arrived shortly
before dusk and as there )vaii a
low fog lying in tho canyon south
j of Canyonvllle, the plane was
tiuitinu in cumiuuo ino inp.
for Mr. Hunt's theater at Mcdford,
I delivery hy train having boen
i delayed so that a special trip by
lair was being mado in an effort
I to get the films to tile theoter
! for a. showing last night. Tho
f piano left hero this morning to
i lliiisti the trip.
The piano ni rived hero at
10
o'clock this forenoon, and, ac
cording to Kvnns, would have, ar
rived hero hist night In time
fin- the first show
terian thentro if
at. tho Cra-
storm had
mit been encountered near Can
yonvllle, making night flying ex
tremely hazardous.
The ship left Portland yester
day afternoon after 4 o'clock and
had proceeded ns far its Canyon
vllle when Kvans decided to turn
llieu 111 l II 111
in the dark -
ness, it is hard
to determine
whether clouds are
clouds
' mountains.
1 The Journey to Portland Was
I ro"gh and the plane was forced
to dndK" a numhr-r of Htormn hy
I round-about flying method,
Tho filniB, which nro of
of "The
! f'JrciiH. featuring ('harlon Chap
lin, will he tihown on nrhednlo
j today.
4
i FINAL RUSH OF
SALEM. Ore., April 13 (Pi A
deluge of filings by candldales Is
expected today In the office of the
secretin- of state for this Is ihe
day under which late candl-
ates may file. Secretary of State
Kozcr bus let It lie known leal any
filings, whether in person or by
more Smith candidal'
On-gon Woallipr
Pair tonieht and Haliirday. Heavy
frriMtM totlluht. Wn rmor In west
portion. Light north to west winds.
Tne fMll W11S carrying fllms!Pat. No compromise was reached
DCAD DflY ATAMTDIIM
;n I I II III UII II I I II 1 I lllllll
SIZES SET I
State Horticultural Body
Makes Compromise Be
tween Rogue and Hood
River Contentions Hope
for Standard for Entire
Coast.
The state hoard of horticulture
ut Its meetng in Portland far1y
this weeK for nny ropused
changes In the pack and grade of
fruits and vegetables, made no
change In any product except
j pears, and therefore all standards
i or i runs ami vegeiauies set tor
last year, with the exception of
size of pear boxes, will remain the
Fame.
This news and also tho fact that
there was an interesting and heat
ed discussion on pear boxen, was
brought back by A. C. Allen, local
member of tho State Hoard of
Horticulture, who arrived home
yesterday. Fletcher Kish also at
tended the meeting as a represen
tative the local pear Interests.
In speaking of the Portland
meeting Mr. Allen today said:
"There was a heated discussion
on pear boxes, the principal divi
sion being between the Hood River
land Iloguo River districts. The
i pear box
ixes by tho stata of Oregon
was 8 'A inches deep, 1 V4 inches
wide and 18 inches long, inside
measurements this for tho fulW
boxes.
"It devolopod that the Callfor
nla box had the same dimensions
with the exception that tho length
of the box was given an 19 3-4
Inches outHide. The Kogue River
district requested that tho box ho
specified to conform to the Cali
fornia box by specifying the out
side length. Tho Hood River sec
lion was adamant in Its stand that
the Inside length of 18 Inches re
main unchanged. Others took the
aland that, whatever the dimen
sions, tho only proper method of
making a standard container was
to slick to inside measurements.
Moth Rogue River and Hood
River had representatives before
tho board and, while the Southern
j Oregon representatives were willing
iii'i uiiiijw, jiiiuii niver sioon
between the two districts nt the
close of the hearing.
Under the circumstances the
stnlo hoard, after a thorough dis
cussion, came to the decision that
In order not to Injure either ills!
trict it would lie necessary to make
a compromise ruling. The result
was that tho board set the follow
ing for the standard for pear boxes
for 1928, or until such time as they
may no cnangeii according to the
I reuulatlotiK:
1 I he size of the pear box shall
no i s yt inches long, 1 1 It Inches
wide, and a 14 inch
measuremenls.
deep, Inside
"The size of tho half box shall
be 1 S 14 Inches long, 1 1 Inches
wide nnd 4 14 Indies deep, inside
measurements.
"The Htiimliii-,1 ll,,...a ..ui.i.
' " tur.nn, i
!""" "hn" 'W Inches long, 1 I 14
" """ Inches deep,
micro inree or more cushluns are
used. Inside measurements.
"The standard three cushion
half box shall h 1 8 Vi Inches long,
1 I V4 inches w ide and 6 14 Inches
deep, inside measuremenls. whera
i or n,"re cushions are used.
. Lt.-uin in r ine inree eusn.
Ion boxes shall bo 6-8 Inches thick,
Hulge is not a factor In the threo
cushion pack.
"The Oregon State Hoard of
Horticulture has undertaken to try
to get a conference between the
sliiles of Washington, California
and Idaho to meet with Oregon to
agree upon a standard for the
Pacific coast nnd northwest."
HOTEL MAN WEDS,
PORTLAND, Ore., April IS. (At
W. c. Culberson, Portlnnd hotel
man. yesterday announced his can
dldacy fur Democratic nomination
for congress from the third dlstrirt
nnd a the same time announced
that he had hcif married lost Sun
day to Miss Charlotte Kandace
Howrn. daughter of Mr. nnd Mrs.
William t Howen, of llelllnghiim,
Wash. O
Culberson Is proprietor of the
Seward and Cornelius hotels In
I'ortlnLid and the Salem and Cor
vallls hotels. He also owns a
newspaper at Canby,
W BOARD SCORES AL
BY HEFLIN
Ranter From Alabama Roils
Kansas Senator Charge
Smith Forces Use Money
Wherever Delegates Won
and Asks Investigation.
WASHINGTON, April 13. (P)
Senator Heflln of Alabama made
another attack on Governor Smith
of New York today In the senate,
charging he was the bead of the
Hon, an political machine in Amer
ica.
There are two standards In this
country," Heflln shouted to a full
chamber and crowded galleries.
"They are the Roman Btandard and
the American Btandard. When they
clash one must ko down and it will
not be the American standard."
Senator Curtis sought to lnvuke
a rule to prevent the address but
waa overruled by Vice-President
Dawes. The Kansan then reminded
Heflln that the senate was to go
into executive session at 3 p. in.
and tt was the deHlre to dispose of
the naval appropriation bill first.
"The senator's speech can Just as
well go over to uome other day,"
Curtis said.
"No, this speech can't go over,"
Heflln replied.
"Why la the Benator from Kan
sas so nervous about this thing?"
Heflln demanded.
"The senator from Kunaaa Is not
"Well, he seems to object to this
speech being made," the Alabaman
said.
"The senator from Kansas lias
no interest in anything the senator
from Alabama says," the repub
lican leader ana presidential can
didate, repled.
'If the senator had let me go on
at the outset," Hetlin retorted, "he
would have saved himself a good
deal of embarrassment In explain
ing his postion here to his con
stituents." "They claim Arkansas has gone
for Smith now," the Alabaman con
tinued. "I say that it Is against
him ten to one and If the delega
tion la delivered to him there will
be more political tombstones
around here than you have ever
seen.
"Scandal lurks In Iowa. The
Smith campaign (und, the largest
and most corrupt ever used, la put
ting this scandal out."
That brought Senator Steck, dem
ocrat, Iowa, to his feet.
"I hope the senutor doesn't Infer
that the democrats in Iowa have
been Influenced by any fund on be
half of any candidate for presi
dent." "If. the senator wants to know
my opinion," Heflln replied, "I
think money was used in Iowa,
Oklahoma and everywhere they put
their foot."
"I don't want to quarrel with the
senator," Steck said, "but I wish
to assure him that money has not
been sent, raised or expended In
any way for either Smith or Mere
dith In Iowa. As a democrat I deny
that money was raised either for
Smith or Meredith.". . . 1
Calling on Senator Borah, repuli- .
Ilcan, Idaho, to Introduce a resolu
tion for Investigation of campaign
funds, Heflln suggested Investigat
ors call "the Tainmauyltes before
them, starting with Mayor Jlmmie
Walker."
"He Is a smooth artist, the slick
est eel In tho pond," he said.
"They say that the Ionlslana
delegation will support Al Smith,"
Heflln wont on. "Champ Clark's
son-in-law has been here and 1 un
derstand trylu( to get a vote In
Louisiana so that the people may
express themselves and say that
the Louisiana delegation Is for
Smith."
The reference was to James M.
Thompson, publisher of the New
Orleaps Item.
RESCUE EFFORT
ST. PAUL ISLAND. Alaska.
April 13. (IP) An Impenetrable Ice
blorkadi which has Isolated St.
Paul island, In Bering sea, for six
months, todny had turnett hack
the United Slates bureau of fish
eries ship Elder, which attempted
to reach here with mall and pro
visions and to rescue several per
sons who are In need of medicnl
attention.
Another attempt to plertv
pack will he made at th
opportunity.