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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 1, 1928)
The Weather Forecast, jprobablc rain, unset Weather Year Ago tle I tonight. Maximum yostcrduiy "7 Minimum yestcnlay . -18 Maximum .Miiiitmiin 0Uj Twoty-thW Tatf WkJy rtftj-Mveoth Y MEDFORD, OREGON. MONDAY, 00T0 UK I 1. UfJS. X... 19:2. Ford and Filene 0 Get Nomination Two-Man Conclave "THREE KINGS" DEATH NOTE OF JAPANESE SLAYER Poisoned L Gives Imp, Cleanup AL SMITH to -icy JliWWHIIII III L---. ... - . MEDFORD A TT If "OT13 r Uf, . By Arthur Brisbane rVflDCPCCO Good Bye, Dayltjht. To Be Heard, Ye!!. Britain PleasedEasily. Mrs. Stillman's Weekly. (CoiuriKlit, ICS, hy Slur Co.) Summer tlaylisilit saving cml ' oil yesterday at 2 a. in. To the ambitious that makes no differ-1 ence. 1 ney ueiu mr u s; work, and the night's sleep i KAMA", passing the failures at both ends of the day. ... . To attraet attention, make yourself 11KA 1(1). That seems to he the motto of Walker's l)e ' )artineut Store in Los Angeles, ; plililisliint; in tilt; l.os Angeles Examiner one advertiseim nt nf lf pages one 1 2-patr; section,; plus tltree pages in another see- tion. (h It is safe to say that nobody ; in and around Los Angeles will j overlook the i'aet that the j Walker store is celebrating its I thirty-third birthday and lias things for sale. 4 j This will interest merchants ; and publishers everywhere. j There are many ingenious ways of attracting attention, j Hut the ((iiickest, shortest, sur- i est way is to YKUj when you i have something to yell about. -f-f-Britnin,. "pleased" with the (.'oolidge-Kellogg note on the 1 French-British plan to outwit the United Stales in a naval agreement, reminds you of the! salesman kicked down ten flights of stairs, n different ! man kicking at the to)) of each i'ltglit. On the sidewalk he re j Marked: "What a wonderful i i system yon got." j Tt J Mrs. James Stillman, oner- getie and intelligent wife of a I well known financier, starts a weekly called "Panorama." j Mrs. Stillman writes about ! the latest fashions, which she ' understands and wears. A wo- j man less wise would have ehos- j en to write about political eeon- j omy, or jurisprudence. 1 Doing .Mrs, Stillman a favor, j w hich she will not appreciate i until later, wc will tell her lhal on the present basis her weekly j will lose money, and. in due. time, like Lucy, will "cease to. be" in spite of her two able j edilors. J it ,urs. . 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 win mane M,t, u,1 ,v,.t,iv!vn. ; ly about women's fashions, it; will lie sueee,ssful, anil pro ft -j able. This is an age of special ization, i I A Uritish boy dug up liW Komaif" coins, buried four feet below the surface. The liritish j law of "treasure trove" says! "Jt dotb belong to the king." The king will reward the hoy. , , I Untlor old Genuao law, an told hy ("lortlic in the uccond part 6f Kutist, a farmer can Uoop any trca.sun; turned up by his plowshare, Thai wasn't, all, generosity. Tho farmer ploughed deep, hop ing to dig up Pomethhig. got lictter cropn and his ruler, sharing the erop, Kot more than treasuru trove liad given him. IltilldiDR trades unions In New York demand the five-day week, which 13 sound. In five days work ing cheerfully, well rested, after two days of leisure ued Henslbly, workers would do as much as they could do In six days of ordinary work, IP THKY WOl'hU. As Hnry Ford says, the five-day week la needed to increase pros perity by giving men a chance to spend WHAT THEV EARN. Let a man earn 'rood wases for five days, spendfng his money sen-f-ibly un Saturday and Sunday, and you will have a better, more pros perous country, wages c!retiltlng usefully, less money oinr to race tracks, speakeasies and other fool ffefcaess. V- Husslan justice is interesting. l Yourw Russians In Rostoff op ) posed to Htissla's government de- (Cuntfiiutd on Page Four.) A.uIuuLu HIGH HOPES Work Optimistic Hoover's Chances in South First Campaign in Dixie for G. 0. P. Propaganda Charge Denied No Cam paign Mystery. WAS1 i INOTON. Oct. 1 .(Pi Clmirm:in Work of the Republican national committee is highly opti mistic of Herbert Hoover's jrns tpi:ts in i ho usually wiuuiu'lily DciiMK'iatic' Ktiuth. lie issued a siati'incui la.st u1k1i saying- that lor the first timo hi y furs tlif itcnuljlifan parly is actively c:ampai(fiiinf in Dixie. A rr port suit mil toil by 1 loraco A. Maim, tin ilh't-ctor f lloovnr ac llvittOH in tho souihorn division, was appended which prodlciod that Hiutvor would rccoivc an ovor whclminw electoral majority in tho stuith, and declarfd that in sonif of Iho .southern slates the llepubli enn noiiintre is in Ihe lead al the present time. hi his re purl, .Mann, who has been referred to as the mystery leader,' declared untrue charges to the effect that his office had flooded the south with propaganda attacking (Jovernor Smith and had been in '.'lose contact with agencies 'liemi Dating material ot this luiture. .Mann's territory Includes the states of North and South t Caro lina, Georgia, Flm-ida, A labama, .M ississippi, Iotiisiana, Tennessee, and Kentucky. These. he said, have US votes in the electoral col lege, and added that it was his opinion that "if the election were held tomorrow. 1 louver would he pi vo nan overwhelm ins majority of these itS Voles." Hoove i (iainliijr At another point, he said that Hoover was sain ins hi the south and predicted that his followers there "will continue to increase sn') wii: i'chuU on ejection day in our not only obtaining electoral votes from the south but a major ity of all the votes the south will cast." Republican organization in the south, -Mann said, had been imped ed by "an unfair press," almost unanimously Democratic, adding that through Democratic speakers the southern electorate was. never theless, becoming familiar with th issues of the campaign. The southern leader termed fake charges that a mystery had boon made of the southern cam paign, lie said that while his of fice had not courted publicity it bus not avoided it and Is equipped to furnish inforniiitioit to the press "fully and courteously." The offices tif t he sot it hern di vision are loraled in the Munsey building rather than in Die Marr building w here the general cam paign headquarters are housed, a fact whih .Mann said hail proved of va lue in cooperating with Democratic, leaders who are op posed lo Smith. To these, he said, "it undoubtedly would haw been embarrassing to walk Into the gen eral offices of the Republican na tional committee." HE VISIT Los Angeles Evangelist Not to Be Barred On Religious Grounds To Be Treated Same As Other Aliens; j Paper Questions Visit. LONDON, uci. 1. iAi Official rnnnuuncenit.rit wan made today! j tliat the home wecrettiry will not prohibit Mrs. Almee rfeniplc .Me-1 ! I'herson, I.os AimeK evangelist, from landlnt; in Kmiland "on the i ground merely that she may advo- i U;nte rcIUiuiiM beliefs and ducttines of .1 controversial nature." i Like must every other alien, 'however. .Mr. AtrPhcrson must ! satisfy the Imniiiji atlon officer at ' tht port of at rival that she may 'properly be allowed to land within the term of the aliens order of ! Kt-pres-ntatlonj recently were made that Mrs. .Mcl'herson should , be burred from entering Ureal Itii- : tain, fjeeausr of what were deserili ied on her fnatlunal evnnif'.'Ilstlc methods. The Holly Mall on tit 'iirday printed an 'ditutial exp.e-; j inp the hope thrtt the home secre-; tary would look very carefully Into the ("'tion t.,f Mr. Mcl'berson's I proposed visit. 1 IS D O BY BRUSH KIMtlNliKlKI.il.. Mass., Oct. 1. lP) 1 tile utmost com- 4 plete Rllenee of n private room Henry F.nl ami Edward A. Ft- i- lene were nominated for president and vice president. 5 respectively, hy the "national convention of the American Home Progressive, party here ! J. yesterday. Today the two delegates who comprised ihe C! ! "convention" were awaiting ! acceptance hy the candidates. S The "convention" will be re- 8 sntned Tuesday and mnv nomi- 4- nate otlter candidates if those ! now on tile ticket refuse. The party is heini; spoil- f- sored hy Ccmrad Heno uf this I- city, who was chairman, dele tfato and Keneral spokesman ! 3 at yesterday's session. 4, 4.4, 4,4. OPENS FILES 10 VETERANS Information On War Risk Insurance Available De cision Reached in White side Case Other Suits Now in Court. TORT-LAND, Ore, Oct. 1. (A') ! Over protests of Ooni'.n NeuntT, I United States iiuurney, r.nd C. 1.. i Dawson, special counsel for the j veterans' bureau, Federal .Indue Mc.Nary today ordered that world war veterans be allowed to see the ; bureau's files pertaining to their ! claims for benefits under their war I risk insurance. ! The motion was presented by Kl- j ton Watkins, counsel for Kdwtn K. i Whitesldes. one of 1 r. plaintiffs in ; a series or suits now beiiiK tried j in tile federal courts. "1 see no reason why the veter- ans should not he allowed to sec. the files pertaining to tlielr Indi vidual eases." said Judge .Mc.Vary after .Mr. Watkins had told of the , refusal made by tile bureau when ; he asked to examine the records of I his client. j Other nttorjieys for veterans said that the decision would Do valuahl eomini; at this time, since it would :;tve them a chance to Ascertain Ihe ratings Ivon the veteranst upon their examination by the bureau, Mr. Dawson and Mr. Neuner said that they would appeal t lie order following the ials. E rivi-; KAitsts coi u.si:. I.MOHK cor.sTitv Cl.l'll, TIMOItK. Oct. 1. OVl Christ of the Uoeliester. 11AI.T-l!AI.-CreorKe N. V.. Country dub. led early finishers in the 30-hole qualifying ruond of the N'atlutial Professional (iolfer.sj association clicaniplonshlp today. Christ tnk a 1 5t despite a 4 1 on ; the last nine htdes, , Walter llanen turned In a 73 three strokes over par. for the! first Ifi holes of today's IHi-holej qua llfylnif round of the Nat ional 1 Professional Golfers' association chcamplonship tournament, I n which he is defending his title. j I lasen mn de a b-'i 'A nn the ! first nine but took a seven the par fourteenth. Kxeept for this one l.md hole he played pa r jrolf despite the stiffness of the course, coining in In U remained for A I Ksplnosa to beat both Mnifcn and ('hrlst for the first IS holes. The stalwart Illinois Country club professional added a 31 to a fine Rt for n Tn. Tho first par of the duy. "With this as a starter, Kaplnoss loomed as a real threat for medalist hon ors. fiene Snrazen. old rival of Huuen. for this title, nlso pulled som" Kreat sots out of his bai: and came home with n brilliant TI. Tommy Armour lied Hairen and Christ with a 73. Smilina: Al K-pinosa, resplendent In a. briu'ht blue sweater, kept mil- ing along with a 3 for the third JUDGE MIRY nine whb h added to the brilliant j burc. hid, par 70. with which he topped the The historic Peecher house hero field in the morning, gave him J(" was the home of th Monfort fam and a golden chance for medalist i y f,,r mor than 6.1 yours, liar honors. 3 rlet I leec her Stow e th"i e began fienrge Christ, Rochester. N. V.,i writ Iritr her famous book ' l acle 73 77 l.0. Tom"s Cabin." churles Hheppard. Alameda. cJ., j(;,js 1 7S. Fred Ondley. I,os A ngeles, Klamath Falls. Hid asked for buttactat uf unfinished portion of ! gale, Zt, of Aurora. Ore., was Shasta Vav in Mill.t nddlMon andlkilb-fV clarn.o l,epinky. who oie half mile of Algotna roud, was driving, escaped serious injury. j fMttm miwiwiwn iw -i-n 11 'T ft'oyiilfMTn'3' fc i '"''-X A These three halves of playing cards, all kings, and the scrawled notes were found beside the body of Gill Jamieson, son of Frederick W. Ja.nieson, Honolulu banker. The kidnaping and slaying, patterned after the Hickman case, was confessed by a young Japanese, Myles Yutaka Fukunaga. "Three Kings' was the pseudonym he used in sending the ransom notes. HAZING STUNT STATE FAIR TRAFFIC IN ELECT ROCUTESENOEO SUNDAY TEXAS STUDENT Tragedy Follows Horseplay Texas University Ath - lete Dies in Initiation Raw Oyster in Castor Oil Part of Ceremony. Al'KTlX. Tex.. Out. I. l-V, Nolte .McKlroy, 1 H-yeur ol.l l"nl veixlty ot Texas slmleiu niul ath lete of 1 Illusion, Texas, was tleail today the victim of a mock Delta Kappa Uppllon fraternity Initiation whieh turnotl frum a hit of siml ent horseplny lo trae'ly. .MeKh-oy died hist tifht a few minutes alter helm; shoeUed ly II,-hi ivii'ou ri.ntioitit liv 11 rlliHi- I stat to two sets of tied sprinus thi-om;li whirl) he crawled as part of tht- traditional rntterulty rltuiil for Neophtes. Two pbywli'liitis who examined tile body declined to say whether frlRht or the electricity Itself caus ed death. Wiviwlll uf lllr ! tl - l - eal chai-Ke wbl.-h entered his liuily was not ueternittieo. District Attorney Moo re. who in- stlluletl an ttntneoiate in vest 11:011011 by questioning upper ctasHtiien wlin.ns compared with f :id,!t!i taken j participated in lite ,i,l,lo. earlylp,,, y, I today had not announced an lo- tecause of the crnw. leil niinll. qtient. No arrests had been made. The fraternity Issued a statement ;saylnu' the youth fainted durinu board will Kn before tho 1 the stunt, throtmh which, it was t legislative assemtdy in an erron asserted five nth"!- students had ,' to obtain u new agricultural lrtiibl j preceded him. and to which lJs41n and a K'andstand seating 700H. iither students bad been subjected : nearly double the capacity of the I durlnu' th local chapter's history. present struct tire. Twice during i Kruternlty members expressed the week, every seat in the Ki'itnd i the opinion that the youth prob-; stand and bleachers was sold and I ably touched an exposed live wii " j hundreds tin ned away. The boa! 'l leading to the springs. He fell . is highly satisfied with the show .screaming to the floor, and lapsed' inn thii' year, am) though a new into unconsciousness. His fralern- ba i n was built In timo for th Ity brothers attempted to revive 'fair, additional housing facilities him. but when their efforts proved I for livestock wilt be souht. futile, carried him bodily to Seton Infirmary, a block distant where phystcbins worked over him in vain for thirty minutes with a pul moter. MelClroy was sabl to have been fed a ra w oyster, t p ra t ed with castor oil as a not her pun of the mock Initiation preceding the bed springs stunt. The youth who was a member of the university football team was a sophomore. i Ms rather, u , a . McIMioy, Is president of the Mc Klroy Itond and Itrokejage corpor ation of Houston. An older broth er Was cm diluted from the univer sity recently. The Noted Dead CINCINNATI. Oet. 1 . A'i Tlv ; Rev. Francis c. Monfort. forj many years owner and editor of the Herald and Presbyter, church pnhllcation, diefl at his home here! Sunday. ! Descendant of a long line of ; ministers. Iteverend Monf(,rt re-j tired in I 2 - and devoted h thnej J to writing. If' was born in Or US- - Till-; IMLLKH, Ore., Oct. 1 (flf !wtin an itutomotdb- i rt whbh h"f ! was rldinic went off the second 1 Mo-der loon on the olumbht river highway yesterday Howard Appb - - SETS RECORD Attendance : 106,000. 93,000 in 1927 $120, 408 in Receipts Net Profit Small. SAI.KM. Ore., ()(. 1. (iv The t7th oretion slate fair passed Into hlstoi Sunday alieriioon when t h takers were called t'r'in duty in A o'eloek, though tn'J Kiounds remained open until 0 o'eloek. leaving huhlnd ii record attemlanee fur I he einlit da H the i e.xposit ton wii:i open. Attendance , 1 h is year In eHlimated at Htli OOU, I as compared with ita.Wio ' l!liT. Total receipts for the week weiv ? 1 SU.4M7. -IN. as cumpareil with 1U7. ti 11.17 la:.i year, hid due to the unusui'.!!y larwe b nuniher of . special attractions the margin of profit, it Is estimated, will nut h ' . great. Horse show receipts were, .Vj:tl, as compared With $ i:. 1 ivra,sii, 7li24 as eonipaied 1 , ,ni j:.tiii'i. ,m, eoncesslims 2 I,- i r i 11. as compared with u'.Otnl last. Ve;ir. Nearly la. (Mill paid admis- ; slops were reeelved at the gate :nn i),jH year, every Inch f avail- table ntnee beinn taken, the fair Judqe Fullerton ItOKL'Urm;, Ore., Oct. l.irV .lames. C. Fullerton. well-known Ore gon pioneer, former receiver for Ihe I'niled States hind of I lee here, stain Keimtor ami circuit judge, died hen today, aged Ti. Horn in Hamilton, Ohio. December I. IK lit. he came to Oregon with his parents hi'lNu::, and had lived in l(m;las county continuously since that date. KKATTLK, Oct. J . (A1) Tho bis SAN V U A Xt 'ISCO, Cnl Oct. !. tanker Solitaire of the Texan com- ,, Kern, Klbhy & Company, Ine pany. ooonu inim i.os Ahgeien ei , Seattle, wet ashore at West Point: here today. I.V) yards from t!m iikoi nous--, wiicu sne ceungeo nei(Kns oi vock to oxi nni I lie ( resceiu cooise tmriei:iy to avfMfi coiiioiim with a log raft. Brock and Schlee Remaining Aloft c As Time Drags HAN DIKOO. Cab, Oct, t. r rr" u mi in i'. in oik a mm -r Kdwmd MiJile-, round tin w o ld fliers, were still in the -V air at i;:sn p. tn. today In 9 theli attempt to establish a nw word s duration fligl v, fr record, & fr At that lime the airmen ! had been .n the aiV approxW mately r arid one half hours. ) in onbr to establish n new record it w ill be necessary for them to remain aloft until .fr 1:1.1 o'clock tomorrow' morn- j " 4m 4f4444'S44444' J3 i 5 I I r i 1 ' - T ITT i .V- 7 t A W I NOT GUILTY T COR FIN Estimated at Howard and Rinehart Ex--Best Previous oncrated Charged With Spotting Deer - Kause;!;;!;;Hh,m Confesses Guilt -May Be Reinstated Men OIIANTS I'AriS, Ore. Oct. (I'l--M. Howard and 11 Uinehari, of the Ktutt traffli 1. de- pai'tineiil . were found not guilty lale Saturday tin harge shouting lii'i-r after night, with use of autoioolille heaclllKhls. 1 he two traffic officers were Hie ones speellve Ciiitlinttl rivals by Ken-i dismissed by Traffic Chief T. A.,.rous maiBlns, are liiindicanped ! Ilnflety last week for the allctted j by Injuries of one dearer or an- "fl ense. I other, and the loss of any one ofj .V. M. Kraose entered a plea of them would more Ham cut up any Kuilly to the chsiue. ex ratlna hallliiK niamln which mnv be vim- imiiik. uiiiiun I'm "hi- lesslon. lie Whs lined li.a. I H- ; r.-lt tlcolarly over Ihe co.ldl - case was beard lielore the .old;U , Ua,.. but the (, 11111 J"s"''" '" "" .aa.ned his way throtmh the last .Mnv Itcliisiaic. S I I'M n.e oci I (-V)r A-'ltaifeiv. chief state traffic In - spec.,,-, when advised tudav that Ii. It. .Mn-lmrt an.i W. II. Huward i i i . iMii . ; ,i , ,,1,-i.t i.v n i.t r.f .m ' ,, 1 ! ltli lu L wotlld ,. .. ' . . , ,,, hil Vl.( further inf iii'iiin tion. KelhlniiT and Mow aid wr-i-e both discharged fmin tin; service of the state truffic de parttm nt upon information re- .celved from thcf stile game tie-, partmcnt. Since both have been! exonerated in the confession of A. ' M. Krnuse it Is believed here that1 tuo officers may be reinstated, 'ortlam , ;re., today nil limited ib., inu-,.Mi bid in ,,, m n. k. government's call for 20.im0 y hHthor breakwater inU feet . , the OPEN BIDS FOR ! BREAKWATER ! i CRESENT CITY i , - ! i lie I'ortiann (ompanv otier was I jiabe Hulli's margin of .. t hnu-n $2.r0 a ton, or .Hdi.0n0. The itm!nms lo 31 over Jim Itottnmley of ?7Kl.(Kio had been appropriated :gVea the Yankees a bin bulge In hy he government Tor the work ; long distance clouts, but Sunny and a surplus r $U1!UI00 remains. ; .mim n t:i:t runs batted In romimrn The bids were opened at the Han ( mora favorably with (lehrig's lt.1. Kratit iseo i iistoms house by the j 1 river and harbor division of the I t'lnplfes Named. I. H, engineering dejiart ment. The! SKW Yop.K. Oct. t. contract will be awarder) after ap 'harb's Itlgler and Charles II., proval by the chief of engineers at il'ftnmin, national leauue umpires, j Vahlimton. will officiate In the World series j Work on the Improvement of tll!thln year, .lohn A, Hnydler im- breakwater must start hy April 1.1, !!'!, under the terms of the appro- prfiition. When completed the har bor will be three and a half miles hum nd two miles wide. The pres ent extension will lengthen the breakwater In the direction of itoitnd Kock, feet fiom the shore. Air Mail Crowded CHICAGO. O' t. . ffl, Ho great has been the increase In nlr mall; 1n the last two months thst the National Air Transport, today on - noiinced a temporary suspension of passenger servlcw in Its mail and express planes lor want of space, f m:v vtiiuc, oit. i. . city-wide cleanup of speak- ! easies, planned at !i secret ! meeting of police oi'liiials last I week, was believed to have been given iinpetih; uuluv hy : the death- ncr ih- w e.-u end ol' two pec -tons I'roiu alcoholic i' poisonin-: and the treatment in hospitals of others. Co- lice said the number was un- usually large. f It was said at henduuacters ! that wherever possible the ! fr source of the liquor was being traced and that speedy action would be taken against those -I places and other known sa- ! loons. One of the dead anil the if those ueatid at bos- pitals were women, ; EXPERT SEES FOR' SERIES i Yankees Have Small Theo-; retical Advantage Offset By Injuries to Stars -' Combs May Play Fans! Think Cards Dangerous. , I By William ,. Cblpnuiii, I Associated IM'i-nm Sports Wi'lti-r i -MOW VI UK. del. I.--IV) Th" t Yankees enler Ihe wurlil soi-Ii-k ;vlth a paper offensive 1:1 lull- than that of with much ot ' (liis iluMMOtical advantage offset ny iiiuiiie.s to star helied compile it. playcrs. who . The ininminceineni loday that 4ir CihiiIih hail suffered only -i sprain and not a iraeltnu of Ids right wrlKl in Oeindt lusl Thurs day mid will he aide lo play, huls-t-reil Yankee hon,-K. m his .:!( Pat did lunch, tu lulu (he Anieil- i can leauue cliatmiluits almiL- to ofjdleir te'ani aveiagi' uf .lliiTi. Hiihe Ituth. Mark Koen'g and Totiv l.iinzerl who loohli in, e. Men to me lanKees. .arni wits iniee weeKH ui ine American !' "r,e " w,,,n ,np n"u I ",l ' . I .1 '" t " 1 I! , f T IT" . ! . ltit!n . ."f l,.lttt"w UX" ri" ma men u ouiu ine i itniiualN ever Mlnrp u,,,'n Hoinsby first ""' ""f",' T m .'"'Be Imve looked upon the HI. j LoniHa ns as uncommonly danger (oils yil the 1 1 low regard les.- : I of the actual averages. The new i j champions are hy no means poor i batsmen, but t hey fall far short : i of being the hardest swalsmll hs ! In even their own league ami In ; jduat league statistics rank fifth: j to the PlrateM. the (Hants, the ' Yankees and the Athletics. ; Cardinal iea ins of recent years nave known the knack of making t he most of their hits, however and Ihe runs have pattered over the plaie when needed, The Na-; I ional league Invaders will K ' forced to make the most of their I drlvcH when the championship s"- ries starts at the Kuppert siadium on Thursday If the teams hat auv' where close lo Ihelr season's pe ' formances, The St. I.oulsans will be siih-' stantlally outbatted individually at five of the nine positions on Thurs day with Combs in center field. -Cnb'MM iJiiKiin resumes his post 'it third base, six Yankees will enter t he tame with a margin over their various rivals. ; The series will bring blether itlm lespectlve league !e-:ders In . i ' ... ....... ...... L. .uJ : a merlean league liome t un i ham- pbm amilnst the man who tied for r,.m-.i.. twn...- in th.. .ii,.,,ni. nouneert today, c. Owens and i William Mcdo'san were mimed for the American league last nigh' NO FAVORITE by K. M. Itn nut d head of th.'icimt time. younger major league. j .,',, v, TTT. . , 5 Ni;W YOIIK. Oft. I . -oTN To- Had bt Man A.retedl j night's political speakers on the PORTLAND. Ore., Oct. I, ftfV rndm Include: Arrested at Salem late Saturday) Oovernor Alfred K. Smith at th. on a charge of iieing a fugitive Now York Democratic state eon from n penitentiarv sentence tn ventlon at Klrhestor, at 10 p. rr , j Mlsfonit on a murder dim go, ! Ha rry Harry McDonald, .illus Knilif. In Jail here tod.iv "awaiting action f Missouri offle - jlals to lake htm to that stute. McDonald had been conducting a small rodeo at the tute full", back N.KJTAIE Lays Aside Standard to Talk State PoliticsHotel Route Blocked By Crowd Receives Leaders -Declines to State Guberna torial Choice. My l. H.nuid Oliver. Associated I'reiM Staff Writer. i:ooni:sTi:ii, x. v., Oct. 1-- ( ij1!')--Laying aside fur (he llnie le lag his stiimlard as Uemocratte presidential candidate, Ouverilur 1 Smith came tu itochester to talk state politics today and found tho way tu his hotel conference room Mucked hy a huge throng of Ho-ehee.-iier citizens who turned out tu welcome him back, from west ern fields. j Kium the linn hy arrived at tin depot, where a large crowd gave him a mUsy greeting, until he ' entered his suite at the Seneca hoi el fur a series of conferences witli New York party leaders, the ' governor was the center of a wild ly shouting ami milling citizenry. So dense was the crowd thai it look more than half a a hour to drive ihe nominee's car the few ; blocks to the held, I A hand, playing chiefly the ' "Sidewalks of New York" led the ! way and the guvernor'H car was ; held up half a dozen times while police cleared tho path uf sluiot ing well-wishers. Arriving ah the hotel, the gov ' oritur, with difficulty, made his way in the fifth floor, and almost '. hnmeiltalely began receiving pnllt- leal leaders to get the lateft In- form at bm on the - .mate situation. Tonigh he will address the Dcmo- mule slate eunveni ion, stresnlng particularly his desire that the campaign In New York be divorc ed from the efforts tu place him In the White lonne. Declines To Suite holee The governor declined to be drawn out oh hh,' choice for the gubernatorial nomination, which. along with a camtUktte for l-nltcd Slates senator and other statu of fices will be decided upon tomor row. Sunimarlzlng what he believed had been accomplished by his first two weeks' campaigning tour, tlov. Hnitth had this tn say to Hewspa- ,,,., . "i ,1,1,,,. . t,rt,. i u , . ,,, ,ul . ,SUI,H j, ,uU(. whMi. I IhlnR I v j ., N1)1 ,,,tly ,, ,.,, ,,,., ,tn Ihe things that were brought up In the course uf the two weeks' travel. nd I am satisfied that it was very effective." 1 I'.essed for an elaboration of his reaction, taking in the farm ques tion, the nominee replied: "Then is not anything more to be said about that. What I said about it Is u mouthful." The governor based his statement on "tho largo number of telegri iiis that keep fol lowing I his train ami by what I hear from ihe pcuple that listen In on thi! radio." Asket if he thought the type or campaigning he followed had Just ified itself, he paid: Thinks People IVd Vp "I think the people of this coun- ) try are fed up on set speech eh" with meaningless phrases In them. There Is no doubt about that. I ! think It Is an Innovation to talk right out, talk plainly ami glv them, ns I put 1 in St. Paul, the low down' on the CI t nation they never yet la set speeches." The governor- aald he felt fine and he looked It whtn he appear ed in the dub ear for his last press conference en route. New State Park Ml-:.l. Ore., Oct. L P Pilot lltitte. landmark of central Oregon, which tulderl emigrants to a water ing plnce on the. Deschutes river, heenme a state pnrk yesterday when (iovetnor I. L. Patterson for- . V , V . mn,,-v "ccepti'd a deed and turned It over to H. II. Van Du.er, chair i man of the slate highway commis sion. Political Talks on Air Tonight POUTLAXit. Ore;, Oct. L (t Address of Senator William K. Month at Mlnnoap.illi tbnlght on Herbert Hoover's stand on farm relief will be broadcast by the v ,l,in"l T'"""dcMng Service through KC1W, 'ortland, between tonfMht, Pacific ' ' 7 p.. eastern siatuiard time, over ,7, 'nl six eastern stations of the Nu- jtional llionilcasttng Co. 1 Oov. llliehle of Maryland nt S:S p. m. ehstern standard time jover WOK and 21 stations of the Columbia U road ousting chain.