Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 20, 1928, Page 1, Image 1

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

    The Weather
'Forecast Fall toulftht "nntl
Tuesday.
Maximum yesterday 87
Minimum today 46
M
EDFORD
Weather Year Ago
Maximum !l
Mliilimint i. ...-I!)
Dillr Twentr third Tea
Weekly Kifty-ttventh eu
MEDFORD, ORKGOX. MONDAY. AUGUST 20. I'L'S.
No. !.")().
"RQCKFORD" A
MAIL TRIBUNE
Today
By Arthur Brisbane
Hoover and Boulder Dam.
His Father's Name.
She's Too Young at 51.
Ford On Prohibition. M
MISSING
tCopyriellt, 192S, by Btur Co.) j
HERBERT HOOVER, with,
100,000 CnlU'ornians applaud- '
, ing, put in 300 words the fact j
that many states and hundreds
of thousands of future Amcri-1
can homesstends depend on full
use aud development of the Col- j
arodo river and water power.
Ho advocates "the grentest ;
reservoir and the highest dam j
at'Boukler Canyon that the en- :
ineers will reeommenil." i
H i
Mr. Hoover said nothing!
about government ownership j
of the power development. Thtifc
faet will comfort some of the'
"best Wall Street minds" that '
shivered when he was nomi
nated. In a few days Governor
Smith's keynote speech will
give the country his attitude
on the Boulder Dam project,
among other matters.
It is safe to predict, in view
of his record, that he also will
advocate full control and de
velopment of the Colorado
river water and power, now
wasted and dangerous.
Tearlinff colt, untried, speed
unknown,, sells at auction for
!)!6r),000, bcenuse his father's
name is "Man o' AVar." "Man
Air -I .1 lawa ,
o War won rapes. nnH miielii. i-.
monev, therefore his SOU mav TeleKrams sent by ActlnR Sec-f
, .ii,., ' irelnry of state Cantle asked that
v.Je expected to do tile snme. Lhe governments lie Informed that
(thiH1 Kovcrnmcnt would "apprc
; Offer at auction the earilill": .elate any practicable measures on i
Dowers of a l-venriold liumnii' hollnlf nr 11,0 m'oly of th" Amc"'i'
poirs 01 a -I-jear-Oia Human ean nvlntors UameM and Cramer,
Colt, with n suceessflll monev Inst reported 70 miles off l.ahra-
. ., 111 -li 'dor and 400 miles short of Ml.
earning tamer, anil nonptly will ! ,,ns fi,.t.enland. at 3 a. m.,
hid. The wise would say, "IiAuuust I'j."
would not have him for noth-1 chicac.o. Aim. so. lie Crow.
inn:. He pr'obnblv was spoiled i
1
ten years ago.
If rich men were as wise
about theemselves and their
sons as they are about their
race horses, they would not die
so young and their sons would
not be spendthrifts and fools
so often.
Miss Mary Garden denies her
engagement to a young French
writer. "We arc friends," says
she, "but I am not, going to
marry yet." '
Miss Garden, only 51, hnow
ing that the best part of her
life is before her, does not wish
to tic herself down prema
turely. M
Some unhappy women, reduc
ing, lacing, perspiring and
painting, do not know it, but if
the mind is keptaetive and
young, the years after 40 are
the best.'
"All. very well," some lady
replies, '-'but men are interest
ed only in young girls."
That is true, of fools, but
what of if? Why regulate life
to suit men's folly? Men don't
do that for you.
The only orkinal statement about
prohibition cornea from Henry
r-rd. He nays: "KverythinK in
the I'nited States in keyed tip to
a new pace which started with
prohibition. The speed at which
we run our motor cars, operate our
Intricate machinery and generally
live, would be impossible with liq
uor." Some of the nnrefseneratlvp
would be content with leu a speed
aud more beer, but there is no
prospect of their getting It.
Mr. Ford says he Is turning out '
of his new cars dally, and ex- j
peets a production of 10,000 a day j
for January 1. Asked If hft Is mak-1
ine money on the new car, Mr. ; '"
Ford replied: "I am not worrying j HAN mANrrsro. ai?. 20.
about that. If you have the rlKht;f4i Kedernl-Stato Mnrkt New
product, there Is no trouble about jsrvirio Apples. Unxf. firnvpn-
making money.'
Mr. Ford's equipment and prepa
rations for the new car are said
to Involve more than $100,000,000.
lut that sum fr. Ford could af
ford several times over. His usual
, (Continued on Page Four.)
MCE
OF PLANE
Worst Is Feared As Silence
Seals Fate of Sweden
Bound Plane Last Radio
Message Received Sun
day A. M Still Hope of
Forced Landing in Green
land. WASHINGTON', AllB. 20. (P)
Hf-urWi I'or t lie plmie, fireatel'
Jiuckrord. is to lie miule by the
r.onnt. Ku:ii"l '(.'itltpi' Marion, whudi
ix now In Hit vk-inity of ih route,
which Urn fliers iilunneil to follow
on their trip to Sweden. Keiir
Admiral ltilhtril, coast Kuartl eom
iinintlant, has onieretl the Marion,
in command of l.lcut. Commander
laluanl 11. Smith, to lake up the
quest. ,
The Marlon has been between
tile American count and Green
land for more thnn tt month. She
lust reported that .she was off
Cape Chldley, Labrador.
WAHH1XC1TON, Auk. 20. (A1)
Assistance of the Canadian. New
Foundland and Danish govern
ments in locating Beit Hassell
and Parker Cramer, missing on
their Greenland-Stockholm flight,
has been asked by the government
through ittt representatives at Ot
tawa, Copenhagen and St. Johns,
"" nxu-iy was felt today for the
safety of Hert Ilnssell and Parker
Cramer, tfood will fliers from
R o.c k f o r d, ill., to Stockholm
Sweden, after moro than 31) hours
had plnpsed since last radio sig
nals from the nvlntors had been
heard.
The piano was last heard from
Sunday morning at 4 a. m., C'hi
caKo daylight lime, when a Mad
ison, Wis., radio operator inter
cepted Hinals sent from the plane
then flying from Cochrane. Ont.,
to Mount Kvans, C, reenlnnd. Those
signals Indicated the fliers nt that
time were 7fi miles off Cape Chld
ley, flying over Davis straits and
hud completed about three quart -ers
of the 1.000 mile trip from
Roekford fn Mt. Kvans.
As hours continued to pass with
out any word from the aviators,
the most optimistic ventured the
opinion that the Kockford fliers
had reached Oreenland and made a
forced landing in which event days
might elapse before tly-y made
tbflr way to some point to com
municate with the outside world.
The fliers in their big mono
plane, fireatel Uockford. left
Ilnckford Thursday,' mall inn the
hop to Cochrane without Incident
and started the second Uk Satur
day noon after which there were
infrequent signals from the plane
until Sunday morn inc.
W ire Ts Optimistic
ItasseH'K wife and three children
at Rock ward anxiously awaited
some word of the aviators fate
but Mrs. ffassptl Insisted she was
certain that her husband had
reached Greenland. "Planes that
fly as long as his don't stop sud
denly," she declared.
Klsewhere in Uockford, which
financed thr flight and where Has
setl made his homo, however, grav
est anxiety was expressed and
hundreds were making Inquiries
for word of the aviators as the,
dny wore away.
OTTAWA. Ont.. Aug. 2(KA
The Canadian government wireless
service had received no word of
the Orenter Roekford up to f:3'
a. m. today. The operators had
listened for signals from the miss
ing plnne or for reports of its be
Ing sighted.
4
Fruit Prices Today
steins, packed D'a- tier. li.3rff
1.R0: 4-j tier. 1 i 1.2.-; lug. C,T,
a few. -1. Red Jones, park
ed. $1.502: lugs, r-n 43 7c; Alex
ander. US fif 75r: Crabapples, fi.'tcff?
1 lug. Pears; hartletts, l 7,1
Lake county, 2 -f 2.75 lug.
REFilED
ATTEMPT U. S, TO
I f S J 1
j Above are shown Bert Hnssell. of Itoekionl. Illinois and I. I),
i Cramer, his er -pilot, who are now reported missing somewhere In
I the Attitude between the Canadian rnnst and (ireenlaud. The plane
j"wreatrr iEnckford.' which curried a radio, Inst reported early Snn
,day morning a few miles west of tho Greenland const. As there
was no "SOS" or report or trouble, friends of the tw men nre
1 hopeful that Ihelr silence Ik due to radio trouble, or be Inn forced
down on the barren Greenland shore JTiir from human habitation.
F
ONITED STATES
Art Goebel Breaks Non-Stop
Cross-Country Air Record
By Over Seven Hours
Exact Time Is 18 Hours,1
58 Minutes.
Cl'RTISS FIELD, Aug. 20. (P)
' The first trans-continental non-
stop plane flight wrom west to
east was completed hero today by
: Art GoHel and Harry Tucker, who
! crushed the country from Los Ans-
eles in a Lockheed-Vega mono
i plane In IS hours and 58 min
: Utes.
Their plane the Yankee Doodle,
j landed nt 11:04 a. m. eastern dny
j : iilu lime, beating by seven hours
42 minutes the record made by Lt.
John A. Maeready and Oakley
; Kelly, who made the east-west hop
in 1S23.
Leaving Mines field, Los Angeles,
, at l':0t! I coast time Sunday floe
I be I piloted the plane across New
i Mexieo .sailing over Wichita, Kan.,
winged above St. Louis last night
, anil crossed Columbus, Ohio at
; dawn today.
Oochel, who won the Dole race
to Hawaii, was at the controls
J throughout. Tucker, a Sfinln Mon
ica sportsman, who backed the
flight, rode as a passenger.
"(Jood morning Frank," said
fioebel. smiting, to Frnnk R. Tirh
etinr, i-ditnr of Aero Digest, who
hurried to the plane as it taxied to
rest.
The Yankee Doodle had 00 gal
1 Ions of gasoline left of the 4 50
stored when she left Mines field.
She average I ri miles an hour.
One of Ctoebel's first acts was to
wire liis mother, Mrs. L'innm f.ioc-
r he I of Los Angeles, news of his ar
rival. The fastest previous time for a
transcontinental flight was " I
hours, 4S minute made by Lt.
Hu.ssell L. Maughan in 1924. That
was a nonstop flight. Muughan's
route was from New York to San
i Francisco and five stops were
'made enroute for n-fuMlng.
Cl'RTISS KIC.LD. N. Y., Aug.
2KiAt Art Ooehel, landed here
at a, in,, after a non-stop
flight from Callffirnia whi'-b broke
the existing record by almost six
hours.
Ooehel's first act as he Ftenped
from the plane, which tvWthc first
to make the trans-continental non
stop flifht fmm west to east, was
to ulance at his watch. ,
"Kigbter-n hourn and JiS min
utey," he exclaimed.
The record for transcontinental
flight, made in the opposite dir
ection was 2ii hours, .' minutes,
4S seconds, set by Lieutennnt J(hn
A. Maeready and Oakley Kelly jn
l!i23.
fbichel slumlded from the stiff-
(ConUo'ted on Pagt Elfht),
LIES ACROSS
IN LESS 19 HRS. NATIONAL TILT;
. ; ' j
SWEDEN FLIGHT
i
EN GOLFER
IS LEADING IN
Don Moe of Portland Springs
Sensation in Western
Open at Chicago By
Leading Field With 69
Three Under Par Frank
Dolp Also Shines.
t
, HOP O LINO CLIMI. CH ICAflO.
!Aug. 20. (Pj Don Moe. Portland,
; Ore., topped the field In the wes
' tern amateur championship quali
ffying round today with a marvel
ous score of 33-3i! tilt, or three
i under par lor llio 7200 yard course
I that lacks only a few yards of fig
! uring par 7.S. the P.ritish chain -;
plon, T. P. Perkins, jdaying with
1 Aloe scored 71.
1 Willi many of the players still
out, Chick Kvans of Chicago, eight
times western champion, a n d
h-'ranl; Dolp of Portland, Ore., were
'tied for second place with 71 each,
while John Dawson of Chicago
stood next with n 7 2 and Dr. Wil
liam Tweedell of Oreat Rriluin had
; 73.
The cards:
! Moe out I 4 1 4 1 4 3 2 4 33
' Perkins out 4 si fi 3 5 r, 4 3 4 3S
I Moe In 5 4 3 4 3 4 4 4 4 3110!
' Perkins in .1 3 4 4 4 3 4 4 3 74
' W. L, Hope, fourth of the Rrlt-
'!h Walk'-r cup team to finish,
.turned in a 7 9, getting a 41 on the
' out and 3 on the home cards.
; His card:
Out T. 4 a 3 Tt tt 4 5 i
In Tt f, 3 4 .1 4 3 4 iH 7H
MOM O LINK CLCI!, CIHCAtJO,
jAllg. 20. tA Leaden skies greet
i eil golfers today when the first
; qualifying round of the western
' amateur golf championship got
under way over the 7,04 f, yard
course of the Rnb OLink club
which has a par (if 72.
The weather seemed tn please
j members of the Rrltish Walker cup
; team and a goodly breeze remind
ed them of tdasts for which Kng
, lish courses are note,). The b-nyth
' of the course niade par difficult
; of attainment, especially J(s (,(.
addition of only 3S yards at (he
' proper places would Increase par
i to 7S. Three holes lack only a
j yard ea' h of being par .1 instead
I of 4.
In addition to tho fnternatior.Ml
phase Mf the tourney due to the
presence of the Rritons a novelty
1 for the club was the presence of
wonv-n. who normally are b.-nred.
( No woman has set font m the
, Hob O'l.fnk ground? for a do-e
years since it changed from a soc
ial organization to a strictly man'
club.
None of the American Walker
cup team exeept. '-rbbs" i..tii .
j who has held this title debt times!
' In addition to his national op"",
and amateur crowns, entered the
.(Continue on Fagt ivbt
TOM MIX IN
REAL MIX-
UP FIGHT
Popular Film Star Is Ac
cused of Kicking Stage
' (median With His High
Heel Boots and Knocking
Down His Wife Talking
Movies Cause of Battle.
Los anc.li.ks, auk. so. uv
I The "talking movies" may be the
'talk of Hollywood, but talking too
, much about them Is blunied by
! Will Morrissey, stage comedian.
! for a mfxup, 01 nit her a Tom
.l ix-up. that sent Morrissey, and
his wife. Miilgin .Miller, tu a police
: station for medical aid and de
tained the m In Jail temporarily
.011 drunkenness charges.
The version of Tom M ix. mil.
' llonaire cowboy of the silent
screen, agreed wan Morrissev that
the latter h talking was at least
'indirectly responsible for the sei-
iiut his blow-by-low account
! was considerably different from
the story told to the police officers
of Venice, a "beach siihurl), by the
.stage and cabaret comedian and
his wile.
The i-litrniy meeting of the
.loquacious comedian and the silent
actor of the films took place at
the. close of l he house warming
party given by Oeor-e Reban. film
player, nt his new home near the
coafit.
! Tony In Talkies!
"I told Tom that bis horse Tony
;had a great future in the talkies,"
i Morrissey (old the officers. "The
horse could at least snort. Hut
what could Tom do?"
When Mix was leaving, Morris
;sey said he thrust out his hand to
i shake hands but instead the cow
boy planted a hard fist to Morris
1 sey's Jaw. Moriissey, who was
swathed In bandage, said be
: knocked Mix down twice.
"Then the rug slipped out from
; under me," said Morrissey. "I
.fell backward those high heels of
his cowboy boots thumped my
head like a drum, but, boys, m
a break Tony wasn't there,"
. Here Mrs. Morrissey took up the
story: "Will was down. Mix was
kicking him around horribly. 1
tried to come to Will's aid.
'Oh. so you are a member of
the family loo,' Mix said to me.
Then ping be cracked me in the
eye. I fell down." She also said
1 Mix kicked her. ,
Mix Denies Charge
; While Mix w.id there had been a
fight he denied any of the kicking
and declared he struck no woman.
Morrissey, according to the film'
actor, bad been abusive all evening
.and followed him to the dour
when the nartv broke up. Al-
th'iunh .Morris
Mvunc on n.e a
aid, he pushed
few limes" Mix
him away.
Put when the
rying after him
K-iof fame hitr
a Ming him vile
names and struck him, Mix !
elie, he. knocked him down.
"Some woman grabbed me, but
I Jijt -hook her off.'' said Mix
"f certainly didn't kick uny one
ind T didn't strike any woman."
Several hours alter ihWr arrest
the Morrlsseyn obtained their re.
lease on $2" bail each.
Morrissey's "wlse-ci a- k inii" has
featured al least two I,om Aiu-'cie
louil sew-dons once bringing a
coniempt rhare-e for the actor and
again cuunlng a mistrial of a suf!
in which a friend was involved.
Japanese Near Death
PORTLAND. Ote Aug. 2'. fl't
T. Kishlmoh), a JnpaneKe, wlrnc
home is In Portland, w;is reported
near death today with a fiartitted
skull, suffered when his automo
bile overturned yesterday near
Cuhby, Ore,
!'"
Pennsylvania Boy
Scout Wins Honor
of Byrd Selection
t
Paul A. Sipi,.
Ni:V YORK. Aug. 1!H. Pt Paul
A. Siplo, nf Ki-lf. Pa., today
was .selected as the buy scout to
serve as .special assistant and or
derly lo Commander Richard K.
Myrd on his Anlai-etlc expedit inn.
The aniiouneeinent was made by
James I:, West, chief scout execu
tice. Clark Spurloek of Kugene was
the boy .scout emiaiil frcnu Ore
gon, S. AMERICA IS
Col. H. P. Fawcett, Missing
for Three Years, Reported
Killed By Indians By
Members Searching Party
Wife Denies Report.
IEIO .lANKIIKi. Uracil. Aug. 20.
ol'i . i-.-pon nf the deal h of Col
""''I H- Fawcett. Ilriiish ex
plorer, who has been 4missinK In
central lb a .II since i ri,t was
kicm out luciay by a sen Abreau,
radio amateur who has been In
touch with I he 1 ),vot t sen rch ex
pedittoii. .
"I reccied last Thursday a ra
dio from the Dyott Hlattou ou the
K u luenc river in the Zlngo re
gion, slating that l-awcetl wav
killed by Indians in July, IflSB,"
.breti told the Associated Pres.
tJeorge M. Dnyntt went into the
Itia.ilian wlblet uess in search of
Col. P. II. Faweett, a Kritish ex
plorer, who entered the rewlnn
early in um.', lo search for a hidilen
city which he believed was the
original Catden of Kden.
The party was soon losl. in com
munication and the final word
came from them in May. I!i2a. Since
then there have been numerous re
ports (hat they had been sei-n or
that. news concerning (hem had fil
tered through from the jungle In
dian tribes.
One of the must persistent was
lo the el feet tl.al Colonel Faweett
hail ";one Indian" and had found
a jungle parad!e which he never
intended tn abandon. This was as
cribed lo linger Coiirleville. but
when a son or Fiiweett's journeyed
lo Lima, Peru, to Interview Cmu-te-ville
the aullietillcily of the report
was denied.
Yet ii was largely on the Infor
mation furnished by Court evil le
that the search was based.
Hut the Dyott expedition radioed
from lliirlty on May hi last that
the rumor could not be confirmed.
Tl oreiipnn the searchers cut them
selves from com m un b at ion ami
plunged into the Jungle. The re
gion Is cut by many streams, one
of which became widely known
ulien Theodore Kousevelt named it
the Hiver of Doubt.
The most persistent believer In
the safety of Colonel Fawcett has
been his wife, She claims to have
I. ad several telepathic niesssi '.'es
from him and lad Saturday ret
eiated belief in his safety. She
asi.ed newspaper of the world tn
deny reports i,f Hie colonel's death,
saying she knew for a certainty
I hat he was alive.
Portland Church Robbed
POItTl.ANI). Ore,, A tl . 20.- (fi
- ''he West minuter Presbyterian
church was entered by thieves who
ilmmb-d ti basement window some
time last night, mid stole ubout fj!'
from the office.
EXPLORER IN
REPORTED DEAD
FOREST FIRES
LOCALLY MOW c nnPN! Y
UNDERCONTROL L ,
Danger Not Over, But Losses
Not As Great As First Re- :
ported Fires in Cali-
fornia and Washington,
Continue Serious.
With the two fires In the Ruch
! district put under control last
evening al'tt r burning over IS 00
. acres, and the Calls creek fire
jnear Cold Hill being put under
I control today after covering near
j ly (iuOtl acres, the forest fire siiua
i lion hi Jackson county was re
I ported this afternoon by Crater
1 National t'urest and stato forest
Uift'ieals as being as satisfactory
' as conditions allow.
! The Calls creeli
lire, one of the
largest that ever Inirned In that
region, at Its height Friday and
Saturday burned with a front nl
six miles on one side and three
miles on another, burning rapidly
. through acres of underbrush and '
'small trees. One additional ranch'
; build ng on the Al liogus prop- '
'. erty near Kane creek was de
stroyed Saturday afternoon. Thi:-.
! was tenanted by John Pankey.
! nccordltiK to D wight L. t'hipps, !
'district state tire warden, who
said this afternoon that no mine :
I buildings were destroyed, as re-1
ported Sunday.
No additional ranch buildings.
outsido of those which burned I
t Friday afternoon and the liogus
'property Saturday, were destroyed, j
While the Itlll Nye mine, located
litem-, the-Old Stage road between
.Jacksonville and (iold Hill, was
j endangered, a backfire saved ibo I
I miiUlings. Likewise the Mraden,
I Tin ...Pan and Lawrence mines
-were saVed from destruction, With
the possible exceplhm that tho
flames may have burned into a
good stand In the K'anes creek
district, no limber of any value
was destroyed. Warden Phipps
I said this afternoon.
I'Mve crews nf men labored on
: the fire and establishi'tl a main
'camp al the Lawrence mine prop
' erty near tho center of the firo
area. Ity hack firing and mak-
. ing trails, the men gradually put i
the spreading flames under eon
; trol. With the exception of :it
1 a . ds. I lie fire was pracl Icftlly :
, corralled Friday afternoon, but ;
j with the'rlsinu of a strong wind,'
i ii e nircao ra pii ly aim ouru
ed over a wide strip, two mllest
long, in two hours, making It im-:
, possible for the small ai my of ;
' file fighters to successfully cope
with the situation.
' Working unlit after dark Fri
Iday night, fire fighting efforts
: were resumed Saturday morning
J and through the use of back fires, I
the mining property was saved. I
llowwver, one back fire cruised the
(destruction of the Homis dwelling:
'property, the backfire Jumping be-!
yond control. Yesterday, the fire
nurneu stowiy anil little trouiue
I Ire riglilers Itelievcfl.
Many of the fire fighters were
.relieved of their duties last even
i ing, and approximately r.O today
are making trails arounil portions
i of the fire which are still burning.
including a small corner at M II
( ler creeji and a small acreage a
imlle above the Pill Nye mine, in
.addition to smaller ureas, on the
I sout h border of t he fire.
The Calls creek conflagration Is
i conclusively blamed ou a firebug
i by Warden phipps, who explained
(hat seven fires, a pproxhnat elv
ilea yards apart, were net Wednes
day evening at the base of seven
inoonTiiili lidui'S along the creek's
west side. AfP'r the.se fires were
s"i inree more ih-okc out oil tne
'east sble In grass and fox tail. '
but these blazes Were speedily put;
under cuirol by Warden l'hipp. j
and three men. Three other m m ;
work eil op t he opposite fides of
the creek and managed to put 1
sevetal of the flr'S tinder control, '
Were unahle to Keep the
others from spreading. Thos--thai
spread undid the fire fighters
work, by burning behind the blaz
iug area they bal put under con
trol. ! The lire burned to the po. k
Point l.lldge. followed the Call
creek road, burned to Miller creek
crus.-cd a ridge over into tin
'CnnllmiM hp Pnirn Rlrbt'
SAMPLE PRESIDENTIAL BALLOT
T itif end tn vote for v
for IMesiilent t the Nnvomher
I itm I'og-islcnul as
Signed (Xitnic)
AtMress
(Kill out jiihI mail to Straw-IIallot-Conti'st-Kilitoi', l;til
Trilmne, Medfurd. On-trnnV
. COL.HARVEY
rHOoto un
Former Ambassador to
Great Britain, and Noted
Political Publicist, Victim
of Heart Attack at New
Hampshire Home Aided
in Preparation of Hoover
Campaign.
!i;i!,IN. X. II., Aug. 20.
Colonel lienrge 11. Harvey, former
ainhassador to Oreat Rritnln, died
. middenly at his home here, this
afternoon uf a heart attack, lie
' Miul l'"''n m iU ""'"U" fn wini'
time.
Colonel Harvey, who was ; I
yeurs old. bad come to New Hamp
shire early in tin u miner for
treatment of a severe attack of
asthma. Last Thursday he suf
fered an unusually serious attack
-VBI8MT K'VIIONl VI1W CO. HI .TO HA
Col. ;e(. II. llari'v
but be appeared to have recovered
sal isfact ot'My. Last night , mem -hers
of his family said, he rested
well. Today a sudden heart attack
caused death within a few seconds.
During his Hojourn here Colonel
! Harvey had taken a deep Interest
In ihe progress of the republican
; president hit campaign. William M .
iliutler of Huston, former chairman
jof the republican national com
mittee, was one of his guests here,
j while lit the Harvey home Senator
! .Moses of New Hampshire, coiii
jpleted his address for the ceie
, mony of notifying Herbert llimvr
: of bis choice ax rcpuMli a n t a nd i -idate.
Baseball Scores
Score:
Si. Louis
i: n
I N
Philadeitdila .2 I i
Ou'il.'ii and Schatiu: I'-hml;-Hush,
Homme and ' lu ;i m-.
; Seor'
I! II
; 12
fiiicago
inmton
i,'.,hcr and Croupe
,,,,., riM , t(.r.v.
, . , . , ,.
National
Score:
IMiiladcIphla
P II
II is
(r'heiago
F'-rgtison, Walj.li
.lone-. P.iwh, Jtolley
Hartnett.
und L'-ri;
W.lietl :
New York
inclnn;itl
Philadelphia
;f'hleago . .
election.
;
(iiiiip party)