Medford Mail Tmb
Weathe Year Ago
Highest year ago today 63
lx)icst year ago today 38
Dtlly Twcnty-fourth Yeir.
SIXTEEN PAGES
MEDFORD, OREGON, FRIDAY, APRIL' 12, -1929.
No. 21
The Weather
Formutt- Probably rain, beg-In-ntff
Into tonight or Saturday.
Highest yoKicrtiay M S3
I aa vast tfil mornlnjr 38
94 hrs. preWpUatlon to 5 a. m... .T.
Today
; '.By Arthur Brisbane
A; Pleasant 3omb.
Only $72,000,000.
Mr. Coolidge's Work.
Transplanted Gorillas.
(Copyright ty King remiurw
Syndicate, Inc.)
The story of the "deadly"
bomb intended for New York's
governor, Roosevelt, explodes
pleasantly. It was an imitut
tion bomb, manufactured
f-
placed and "discovered" by
one whose hope was profit and
a glorious memory.
M
"The aspiring youth that fired
the Kphesinn dome ;
Outlives in fame the pious fool
that raised it." .
The aspiring gentleman that
invented the Roosevelt bomb
will be less fortunate.
The Ford - .company state
ment,, filed in Massachusetts
Tuesday, says Mv. Ford has on
hand $r82,620,.r0:l. Not exact
ly poverty, but T2 000,000 less
than Ford had a year ago. This
shows that it costs money to
change one car to another, rip
out great factories and install
new machinery.
However, the Ford plant is
now producing more than 7000
passenger cars and trucks per
day. That $72,000,000 wijl soon
be replaced. Two million cars
a year should easily yield $100.
000,000 profit, r per cent on
two billions.' - '
President Coolidge becomes a
rtireotor jn the New York Life
Company in place of -the Into i
Ambassador H.errick. ,
1 Such a man as Mr. Coolidge
could not remain idle.- And he
could with difficulty find work
more useful than life insurance.
It inculcates thrift, provides for
widows and children.'
A family of gorillas living in
the Kivu district of the Congo,
where they inhabited a peace
ful volcano, killed by Carl Ake
ley, are now "dwelling", stuf
fed, in the Museum of Natural
History in New York.
All those that can, should see
them.
Nothing could have made
those gorillas, when romping
around the volcano, believe
that such a place" as New York
existed, or that they would ever
go there. ; But it does exist and
they did go.
That might encourage athe
ists to believe that there may
be something finer than New
York, and that we may go there
later. .. : - "
The United States, producing
4000 airplanes in 1028, leads in
aircraft output.
France in 1028 bmlt only 1,
410 airplanes.
Great Britain sells more air
planes abroad than we do.
France, however, has five
f times as many fighting planes
as we hae. Ifer fighting air
fleet is so big it makes great
ritain very polite.;.
France is the real airplane
country, no matter what others
may manufacture. "Britain is
catching "up. We lag behind,
but that will change.
A gentleman of the Ameri
can Defense Society, who would
only accept imminrants as much
as possible like the Puritans.
keening out others, says " I'rcsJ ns to whether liquor was being
1 , Isold aboard the liner Leviathan
ident Hoover tioesn i Know n
much about immigrants as some
of us,"
Mr. Hoover knows a pood
I deal more about immigration
than the American Defense So
,ciety knows.
Fo-mer Secretary Redfleld.t a
(Continued on Pact Four). .
HARDY HAD
FOR MISS X
Mrs. Wiseman-Sielaff Tells
of Jurist's Aid in Fram-
ing Alibi for Aimee Ar-j
rangements for 'Miss X'
As Carmel Companion of
Ormiston Made With
Carlos Hardy.
RACRA-MI3NTO, April 12. (P)
Wllh .Mm. Lorraine Wise.mnn-Slo-luff
on the stand testifying that
she aranged wllh Judge t'arlos S.
Hardy to produce a "Miss X" in
the Aimee Semple McPherson kid
naping case, the prosecution wns
blocked today in its attempt t
enter as evidence a copy of the j
affidavit the Carmel mystery wo- :
man was said to hate signed sial- I
lug that she accompanied Kenneth I
Ormiston to the artist colony.
She testified that she produced I
the woman who "posed as Miss X-' I
In the McPherson kidnaping case
and that in her affidavit the i
woman claimed she was with Ken
neth Ormiston, radio operator, in.'
Carmel during the period Mrs. Mc
Pherson was missing from l.os
Angeles in 1926.
The affidavit was drawn and
signed in the of ice of Judge J. H.
Bardin in Salinas, Mrs. Wlseinan
Slelaf said.
The witness testified 'that ar
rangements to prodce the "Miss
X" were made with Judge Hardy,
who is charged In one of the four
articles of Impeachment with ob
struction of Justice. . . '
..She wild she. went, to his home,
discussed the "proposition", und
that when she questioned the
safety of going ahead with it,
Judge Hardy assured her "I am a
respected Judge on the superior
bench in J.os AngeleR and have a
great deal of influence."
. ,', ,- . .
PRESENT DRAFT
RELIEF BILL FOR
HOOVER STUDY
WASHINGTON, April 12. (iP)
President Hoover will receive from
the house agricultural committee
late today a copy of the farm re
lief measure which that body has
just drafted for submission to the
house soon after the beginning of
the special session next Monday.
A subcommittee was appointed
by the entire committee to present
the draft to the chief executive so
he might study it and make any
suggestions that might occur to
him.' Mr. Hoover will deal some
what extensively with the farm re
lief problem in the first message to
congress which will be transmitted
separately to the house and senate
Tuesday. ' x
The house subcommittee, after
leaving the White House, will con
fer .with Secretary Hyde to obtain
his 'opinion as to the worbalillty of
the measures they have prepared.
Members of the subcommittee
feel that If the bill they have draft
ed Is not completely In accord with
the views of the president. It Is not
jtoo late to make such changes as
he might suggest.
T
BATESVILLU, Ark., April 12
(Jp) Thirty persons who had been
without food or water for more
than 48 hours were discovered hid
ing in caverns 'near Cuion today by
national guardsmen searching the
regions for lfodles of those killed
in the tornado late Wednesday.
DOUBTED BY PAPERS
NEW YOUK, April 12.
There was Home mystery
-opy
today
on her present trip to Europe.
Home statements attributed to
.Joseph K. HhjMly, exerutlve vice
president of MhcQl'nitcd states
L'nes. Inc., the new owrs of
the vessel, said his orders were
that sale of liquor was not to be
K'n until the return trip.
The New York Times today sal.l
that 'so far as could ho deter
mined tbiuor wns being sold on
the I-evlathan as she continued
to Europe."
JUDGE FIGHTS
Judge Carloa Hardy (eea(ed) denies that a check from Aimes
. gelist, was for legal services and
Sacramento.
i. Standing, left to right: Rex Hardy, son of the jurist;
of Oakland. .
Frank Carr i
L
F
Teller Awed By Bottle of
Nitro-Glycerine 'Hate
to Mess Things Up'
Threat Gains Bundle of
Bills.
DENVER, Colo.. April 12.
A pretty young woman, who bal
anced n .bottle which, she said
contained nitro-glycerino In one
hnnd and n match in the other,
and who didn't want five dollar
bills "If you please," because
they were "too bunglesome" ob
tained $5000 in currency, in a
single-handed hold-up of the Colo
rado stale bank here yesterday
afternoon.
Tile woman, a well-dressed bru
nette, stepped up to the cage of
C. E. Kenney, a bank teller, and
passed a nolo through the , bars.
'Give me all the bills you have
in the cage or I will touch off
this bottle of nitro-glycerine and
blow you through the window,"
the note said.
Kenney hesitated nnd the wo
man looked suggestively ut the
brown paper parcel in her hand,
from which a short fuse protruded.
The teller scooped up a bundle
of bills and pushed them through
the cage window.
"Not fives, if you' please, they
are too bunglesome," the young
woman said. "1 prefer tens and
twenties and larger."
Kenney hastily passed her bun
dles of large denomination bills,
which the wnmnn gathered up
nna praceo in a -
carried in her rlgnt nanu.
with
the match.
"Now the rest of them, If you
please."
Kenney gathered up the rest of
the bills In Bight In his cage and
handed them to the woman.
"I'd hate to mess things up
In here." remarked the woman.
Perhaps you had better not say
anything until 1 get outside." 8h?
then turned and walked slowly
from the bank.
LADIES WiLL HIKE "
AROUND LAKE AT
LONGVIEW, Wash., April 12.
yP) Garbed in running trunks,
filmy silken gowns, bathing sul's
or whatever costumes fancy may
dictate, 202 fair women hikers will
face the starter's gun here tonight
In a three and one-half mile "bun
ion derby' 'around the shores of
Ijike Sacajawea.
The race, staged as'a feature of
the regional meeting of the lower
j Columbia Itlver associated cham
j bers of commerce, has attracted
' entries from 22 southwest Wash
ington and northwest Oregon
towns, including women hikers who
have won similar events elsewhere.
Elsie I'lamojidnn, Indian maiden of
Vader. is one of the favorites, as Is
Marie Ktenman, Astoria, Ore., high
school girl, who won- in a similar
event In Astoria over a field of iH
entries.
Oregon Weather
j Rain west and snow or rain late
' tonR-ht or Saturday over the east.
Slightly warmer east tonight.
- n-sh and strong southerly winds
i on coast.
BRUNETTE
ROBS COLORADO
RANK 0
5000
SENATE OUSTER
W f i V J) i
, XY 6 Mi?
has retained counsel to defend him
Dr. Ralph Fenton
j Flies to Operate
; . Un Pendleton 5oy
!
April !
PENDLETON, Ore. ,
it li. tr) ii z-.av p. m.-yeter- v
I day Dr. Ralph Fenton cqinplet-
. fr ed a mastoid operation in. a
I Portland hospital. At 4:30 p.
i m. he was performing a simi-
1 lar operation here. He was !
brought here by plane from
Portland after the mother of
Tom Brooks, 12, had tele-
phoued that her son was In a
critical condition and that
each fleeting moment meant
I tTiat much less chance for her
4 son's recovery. 4
The trip from Portland to
Pemlloton was made in 1 hour
nnd CiO minutes through rnin,
S wind nnd dust storms. ,
4.
Coirnh fnou. Dirlino Moo
uv-ciuii uiH. nauiuo lino
ft ninArtWAnn rJ Clin
01 UlSCOVery rOOa OUP-
plies Dropped All Ap
pear Safe and Well
Lieut. Anderson Still Lost
SYDNEY, N. S. W., April 12.
(Pi After being lost 12 days In
nn nt U'tld.,at mid rt,,.a,
, pitahlo regions of the world. Cap
tain ChnrlPH KiiiK"or1-.Smlth anil
his three cumpanionK of the air
plane Southern Cl'OHH were located
loduy by the piano 'Canberra, the
larKe-st of Ht'veral machine! Hearch
lnK for them.
Brief me.sHneeft from the Can
berra to a radio rcccivinjr ntstlon
at I-arwin, northern territory, re
lated the flighting of tho mlimlng
plane, which once flew from Cali
fornia to Australia. The Canberra
said the four fllern appeared date
and well. Food was dropped to
them, sufficient to satisfy a want
which II was feared had become
acute.
Captain llolden, piloting the
Canberra, gave the plane's loca
tion as on a mud flat about 3(1
miles south from Port George mis
sion station, which Is located on
the I'rlnce Hegent river nbout'130
mile! , eiisl of f)erby.
There was In the sighting of the
men a reminder of the death of
Captain Knald Amundsen on a
mission of rescue for his former
enemy. General Umberto Noblle.
Lieutenant Keith Anderson, bitter
rival of Klngsrord-Hmllh. himself
has been missing for more than
4 hours after flying into the wilds
of northwestern Australia ln
search of the .Southern Cross.
The senrch for him may pre
sent a problem every bit as dif
ficult as has been that of the plane
Just found. Anderson had a com
panion with him, Hubert Hitch
cock. They have not been heard
from since Uiey left Newcastle
Waters, northern territory, about
400 miles from Wyndhnm.
LINDY LANDS ON
JEW YORK FIELD
"
MITCHELL FIELD. N. Y., April
12. tI'l Colonel Charles A. Llnd-
bergh landed at Mitchell field at
4:f,.ri p. m., after n flight from llol-
lug fUvhl, Washington,
Mm rLAINt
IIS FOUND NEAR
MISSION HOUSE
i
PROCEEDINGS
MePhtrcdn", Lo Angtlc evan-
in .Impeachment proceedings in
Ray .Nimr.io of Los Angeles and ,
.
TR AO 0TAPC0
! AftO 0 1 AUtO
Night Club Hostess Misses
WHOOPEE
FOR
ID
Y
Chanr.P tfl Writp StoriPS Bent ln ahead of the returning cav
UldMUJ IU VVIIIB OlUIIG!jaIry( and other woro bong broMKhti
fin loll I Ma Imilflo unUer 8"" around the west shoul-
UI1 Jdll, LUC iriVllCb der of San Jose mountain. Arms,
i ri..u 'ammunition and a Hiipply of cluth-
LfUUI l IU OIUU I Ul UUllllliy
OUt Party,
NKW YOHK, April 12. (P)
Hohn Mock un, Hlngor of pluintlve
rttot. Ild it.iH Iho nnlit .-nninn ova.
Cininan hh the iriost populur ntpht
cluli hoHtesH on Broadwiiy, will
on Moiuluy ulutul trial on the
Hume chartjo of which
Texas was
it ci uttteti.
MInh Morgan, : musical comedy
actress, la charged with . maintain
ing a nuluance through aula of
liquor at the Helen Morgan club,
nt 'which, she was hoHtesH. 8he
quit, the night club bUHinens aft oi
lier arrest laHt fall.
Texas Vnn acquitted yesterday
In 04 mlnutcH by a Jury of middle
aged men, who took but two bal
lots. None had ever been to a
UK'" club.. Tho verdict win
,, w(lll ,.,., of ..whlo.,0B.
gn
i Uy l" "PWUHOrantt J-CXRH HIV-
Uhly dlHlrllmted kisses among the
spectators and Jurymen,
Jler only regret, she said, was
that by her acquittal hiiu lost
f 5O.0U0 that had offered her by a
newspaper syndicate to write a
series of articles on life In Jail.
To Norniun J. Morrison, special
deputy United Stales attorney gen
eral who prosecuted her, she said:
"I want to thank you. You
were a perfect gentleman."
"MIsh Ouinau." suid the prose
cutor, "you were the toughest cus
tomer 1 ever had."
Hhe then Issued an Invitation to
all present, lawyers, Jurors and
spectators, to puss the evening at
her new night club.
The "coming out" pnrty, ns
Texas termed it, was attended by a
crowd mat taxed the capacity of
the club.
Texas, Hn a gown of red tulle
and satin with stockings and' shoes
match, marie her entrance to
the danco floor whilo (ho orchen
Ira played the "prlMiner Hong" and
the audience rose and cheered.
PORTLAND. Ore., April 12.
W) One hundred mothers of unl
verslty of Oregon' students were In
lha field hero today, the first The state charges that Moore,
day of the drlvo to raise 55,0OO I gnry because he had been pal
for a new Infirmary to be con-ije8B t,an he expected fo.' some
structed on tho campus. Parents worK he had done for his uncle,
of university students were to he shot Raymond wllh a rifle,
solicited first In an effort to raise The ,efBnBe contends the shoot
the sum, which will be matched ng was accidental and that the
with a similar amount by the fatal bullet was released when Ray
stale legislature. mond Moore grasped the rifle car-
Tho
campaign was formally
launched nt a meeting held here
vesterday.
PUNEifOllOPS
s
OAKLAND, Cel., April 12. (P)
rry Andrews, pilot at the Ouk
d airport, was flying ovor the
I bay today at a 1.600. foot eleva-
j tlon, when suddenly his motor fell
j out tif the plane Into the water.
Andrews successfully brought
the plane to a landing In the water.
lie wns uninjured. There was
slight damage to the plane,
GIL FORCES'-?"
TAKE FIGHT MgK
TO ESCOBAi
Federal Cavalry Charge,
Rebel Camp Take Hun-,
dred Prisoners Arms
i
Ammunition Cap-j
-Indians Form Ma-
and
tured-
jor Portion of Captured
r- ii ! i.
force MOI Bailie WageU
NACO, Sonora, April 12. (P)
Federal cavalry today carried the
lni tie Into General J. tiunzulo Esco
bar's rebel camp. Ninety cavalry
men from the federal garrlsmi here
this morning charged into a con
tingent of rebel troops on the No
gales road, west of Wan Josh moun
tain, demoralized the revolution
aries and look approximately lui)
prisoners.
The number of dead and wound
ed in the battle, which was fought
out of sight and hearing or Naco,
had not been determined definitely.
The federal cavalrymen returned
to the garrison with six or eight
empty saddles. They reported they
thought one trooper had beon i
killed and several wounded. I
Casualties on the rebel side!
were unknown. Asked regarding
them, the federal cavalrymen said
"Muchos." Hair of the rebel pris
oners, disarmed and on foot, wore
ing. shoes and other equipment
I iBi'oi icii oy uio cavuirymen
Ulo to have been taken.
moBiiy inaians
Most of the prisoners appeared
to be Yaqul and Mayo Indians.
Colonel Flores was in command of
the federal horseman who, tired of
wultlns for ithe rebels to Hhow
themselves again In Tront of Naco,
sallied forth in search of them. The
cavalrymen, not sufficient lv sfronir
j numerically to attempt an attack
on the main rebel enmp to the
BoutheuHt, near General Fatisto To
peto's train nt Nina Oro, slipped
out of the west trenches and gal
loped over the rocky hillsides to
ward Sun Pedro. Circling San Joan
mountain on the west, they came
upon the rebelx on the Nognles
rond, nnd charged into them.
The battle raged hotly for some
time before the rebel xoldiern be
gun to throw down their arms and
beg for quarter from the federal
horsemen whirling and circling
nnd raining lead upon them from
the brush.
EL PASO. Texas. April 12. (IP)
Approximately 500 soldiers from
Fort Hllss here were on the march
to Hachlta, N. M., today to he avail
a Mo with the ISO cavalrymen al
ready stationed there, to protect
lives and property on the Arizona
Mexico border in the event of a
battle between opposing forces in
the Mexican revolution.
JURY SIILL OUT
GRANTS PASS, April 12. 7P)
The Jury In the case of Clyde
Moore, charged with secontl degree
murder, began Its deliberations
this morning shortly before 11
o'clock, and at 4 o'clock this nfter
noon was still pondering tho fate
of the 22-year-old youth, who is
alleged to have shot and killed his
uncle, Hayuiond Mooro, 211, as tile
climax of a quarrel last Jannury,
over a money payment. The shoot
ing look place at Itadlo park, 15
. mi. north of Grants Pass,
; rl, y Clyde and that It was dl
charged as the defendant Jerked it
away from him.
Moore was arrested the afternoon
of the shooting at the home of an
other uncle, Orvllle Moore, on Coy
ote creek, 15 miles from Radio
park. He offered no resistance
when arrested.
lionmOAtrX, Krnnee, April 12.
iff) The new French nlrplitne onr--
rlr, "Commandant Teiito" of 12.
5oo ton dlnplHcemcnt find with i
rupnclty of 20 plane, wnn hucchhb
fully launched todiiy. Itn arma
ment Include 12 ffunf) nf 100 mil II
mntr nnd eight ffunn of 37 mllll
mfftrn, Tho vphmpI will hnv t
mining HVffd of 20 knots nnd it
no pq nipped it can burn cither coal
or oil.
f .
-A
v-
Aimed McPherson, Los Angeles
evangelist, who wns summoned to,
Sacramento as a witness in the im-'
peachment trial of Judge Carlos
Hardy of Los Angeles.
UN TALLEYil
OF
TRY
Youthful Star to Quit Stage
at Height of Career-
Voice HaS Made Halt ,
I
.Ml! A ' l.f L tll!ll-
minion uoing west wnn
Family, She Says.
NEW YOUK, April 13. W')
Marlon Tiilley, youthful Metro
politan Opera star, , whoso .phe
nomenal career brought her a for
tune In three yearB, has decided
to retire to ft farm.1 Kfltlnmt.es ure
that her KMn,"Vr)to' ;hyuIo
IftOO.OflO. , - '
Blnoe alio Ih only 23 years old
and pn'Humtthly in yeiim to come
would earn hundredH of thousands
more, she huh amassed her concert
manager und friends with the
Htutemcmt:
"I have made up my mind to
retire from the profeMSional stage.
By this I mean all operatic ap
pearances as well. My retirement
wilt he permanent.
"I am going west wllh my i
family. The farm might be In '
California and It mlpht be in Colo
rado, but I am going to look first
In the middle west. . 1 am going
to he just like it II other farmerH."
llor laHt appearance will be nt
Clovoland, where she will sing In
"IjUChV' May 4. Her engagement
with the Motroplltan expires with
that appearance.
MIhh Talley came from Kansas
City, Mo., to make a 1100,000
debut at the Metropolitan Febru
ary 17, 1926, as Gllda in "lligo
letto." Born In Nevada, Mo., Miss Tal
ley gave promise of musical talent
at an early age. She sang popular
flnngs nt two, began the study of
the piano ut five und the violin
when she was seven.
ln 1U22 she had her first audi
tion before offlciuls of the Metro
politan. Her lyric soprano was
favorably received, and on advice
of Mr. Uattl-Oiwnzzu, general man
ager of (hi Metropolitan, she con
tinued her Htudies In New York
and Europe.
The retirement of a singer so
early in u stellar career Ih un
precedented. RED AGITATORS
CANTON. China, April 12. (ff)
More than a thousand alleged rad-le-al
agitators are estimated to have
been executed by muchlne guns
during the past week In a cam
paign by the Canton authorities to
stamp out radicalism here.
Accused of Instigntlng comrnun.
1st agitation, 30 students of tho
nationalist Hun Yat Hen university
were arrested, enurtmartlaled nnd
shot. The Hun Vat Hen university,
a co-ed'ucntlnnal Institution, has
long been declared a hotbed of
radicalism by the locnl authorities.
In back of the curront tenseness
Is the "declaration nf Independ
ence" Issued enrly this month by
Canton, In which the city's Inde
pendence of the Kwnngsl military
clique was openly declared, Tho
local authorities hnvo 'expressed
fear that the Kwangsl group might
use tho radicals as a means of
stirring up disorders In Kwnntting. I
Ho great was this fear that the local
authorities declared martini law. I
and troops are now patrolling tho
alrueu.
0
OPERA
FARM
CANTON FORCES
SLAY THOUSAND
CURTIS HAS
SUPPORT IN
SOCIAL TIFF
Letters Pour in From PublicVice-President
Often
Asked Why Not Marry As
Solution of Sister Status
Mrs. Gann Accorded
Rank of Wife at Embassy
Dinner.
WASHINGTON, April 12. ()
P. S. Why aon't you get mar
led?" In the hundreds of letters which
poured into the office of Vice-
President Curtis during his con-
roversles with the state depart
ment over the aocial status of his
' uiutbr unit iloalvnota,) hnutuuu Mtu
Edward Everett Gann, this naive .
suggest ion was found mure than
mice.
The idea alwuys struck; the '
broadly aeveloped sense of humor
of the vice-president, but his only
response was a chuckle and an oc
casional reflection that marriage,
was one of those things that was
ensler said than done.
Just lookiug over his increasing
Btock of mail was euottg,h to con
vince him that he had said and
done something which at least was
attracting attention. Intent at
! righting whaL he considered - a
'Btt to his sister, he had not
counted on a public storm, and
una, ltd la nrtiwul ttt ta VIHm.
"15. 7st majorTt,
of his correspondents supported
him. .,
Friends of the veteran Kansas
hnva InuiutuH all ntnnir flint ha wns
actuated only by loyalty to family
ana to on ice in ins ptiniio ugnt
for social precedence for his sister,
and he confirms tnat view m pri
vate conversation. But h la now
wondering It the publicity will ever
end.
- Ait, the flvafc official dinner which.
WatT affected by tho situation. Mrs.
liana rani nini was accuruea ine
same- precedence she would have
received if she had been the wife
of the vice-president. , ;
Th dlnnnr wan given bv Ambas-
narfnc rtau'lti riMo In hfiiinu nt
lits government's minister of tin
unce, Pablo Ramirez, who came to
Washington to return the courtesy
nf Pt-ualrlant - Xlnrwar'a nva. Inn llrl1.
ral viBit to hlH country. ,
,
RAN FRANCISCO, April 12.
(fP) Twelve members of Com
mander Richard E. Byrd's An tare
tic expedition arrived today to de-
scribe the "heart-breaking slug-
gles of the explorers in repeated
encounters with the forces of
nature. - --i .
The members of the crew were
met In Ban Francisco by Robert
Bryer, of Los .Angeles,-a member
of the Byrd organization in the
United mates, and one of 'the
backers of the expedition.
They plan to return to their
homes after ' remaining 'In Han
Francisco until Hunday, and will
return to the expedition as soon as
the Ice pack breaks.
Will Roger Say
NEW YORK, April 12.
Yesterjlny Al Smith wns
mRtle director in a second in
Riiruiice company. Saw Cal
vin one and raised him' Ode)
Sec where Mr. Coolidge is to
Ket transportation to and
from li l s
home to tho
head v office.
Ho ought to
have joined
t li e I'mden
tial. They
meet on t li e
rock; of Gibraltar. With all
our prominent men hooking
lip with insurance companies
it looks like they figure pro
hibition will remain.
Had all this social stir in
Washington over . a sister.
Suppose it was a mother-in-law.
That's not improbable.
There are some queer people
elected. ,
Leviatha'n sailed with
seven hundred , bottles ,.of
"medicinal whoopee."
Yours, -WILTj
ROGERS.