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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 3, 1929)
! The Weather T JT 7 Forecast l'arllj- cloudy tonlflit f II Ir 4 anil TucmIu)'- Wanner TucmIii)-. J I f IS 1 J I Z-J JlY JULli Mail Tribune . c Temperatures DFOR lllKhtwt yesterday 70 lamest this inorniiMC 4tt MEDFORD. Oh'KOOX. MONDAY. .Il'NK Xo. T. D&lly Twtoty -fourth Tur. Today I ASKHONEST T By Arthur Brisbane T D I A I ffl D s The Lora ana tne Laay. I 1 1 1 n I I 1 1 1 1 I Advertising Celery. '- ll Expense Is Terrible, But. j I A 1 A f Take Care of Slight II U V I A Mil' l wounas- I U! I Lhu (Copyright by King Feature Syndicate. Inc.) It is a good thing not to be 'j rich, when you are young. 'I Lady Astor, of a fine Virginia ; family, had everything but money. Now she lias every -I thing, AND money. Ij Iter husband, a fine young I man, cursed with inherited I wealth, which makes real effort j seem not worth while, is busy gVith his nice horse C'ragadour. ; favorite for the derby, to be fi run next week, jiif One man trains that horse, it another bred the horse, another iwill ride it. But Lord Astor iowns it, and that is his great ftnterest. i His American wife is not in terested in C'ragadour, except s mildly. She sa's she will keep h track of Ramsay MaeDonald, iand "keep the socialists up to : their promises. " i That sounds a little like the editor of the Skibberteen Eagle, .'writing, "We have our eye on the czar of Russia." I But it's better than having your mind on a race horse, now s that you can buy for $1500 a runabout that would run the world's ten greatest race horses to death in one day. t N'ext week' derby is inter- esting, to the student of hu man stagnation. It interests .tens of millions throughout the British empire. They know the i odds on each horse and its breeding. They think hard on the problem "How shall I bet" Like ourselves, they think little about "How shall I vote?" And many of them will not think again until the next derby conies around. If you have anything to sell, let people know you have it. To let theni know, advertise. This applies to widowed In dies with a hall bedroom for rent, and great estates and in dustries that need millions of 1.1 it urn ii I iniinnm . .' Instead of merely WONDER lN'lf, Florida celery growers employ an advertising firm, (iottsehaldt & Humphrey, to ..'upend $100,000 telling people to eat more celery, and buy it from them. . . ' 11 you wain uie ic"in- lnow nnvtliiiiK or do anything, rri-i r t'iil'M 'PI1IntV'ir ! TKIJy Til KM nilvOlCII AlJ- CVKRTISINO mhcrtisiiitf nent as you would jjet a good architect or engi neer. -- - ANusliingtnu is horrified he cause our defense, within a few years, will cost us $1,170,800, ' (HiO for the navy alone. . It is horrifying. Hut in tho -ist war, (timed at uermany, jiol nl us, caught unprepureM. wc spent iil.out one liuiulrod 1 . ltillions, nnd not for the money hirsliips that would not fly, MiipH that .were useless nnd can not now be niveii away. ' Hetter pay well for defense, fn advance, nud get it. than pay ten times the price to dollar-ayeir pa triots and tfrafters, at the last minute. Hnd set nothing. President Hnover knows that: he's an engineer. t ware sngni wounas. on ine Mirlace; disinfect them well. Iodine 1s safe. On the outside vnu are .'well protected, inside iroorly pro- tected. , King George's new trouble Is an nbscess starting from the scar of vnrface operation on the chet. Knemies of ten thousand kinds (CvaUuued vu l'$9 Fwt) i Message to American Peo ple Signed By Ford, Edi son and Other Prominent Men, Seeks Support Hoo v'er Enforcement Plans Lawyers Organization Opposed By Choate: NKW YORK, June 3. (A) A "message to the American people," urging that "prohibition should be given an honest trial" unci bearing the signatures of Henry Font, Thomas A. l-MlHon. Cant. Robert Dollar,'.!. ( Penney ami 20 other men prominent m business ami Industry, was published today. The message quoted the plea fur law observance in President Hoo ver's inaugural address and Invited Americans, "whatever their previ ous opinions and social practices, and particularly those in business and professional life, to join with us in following the president. Let us unite to give the eighteenth amendment an honest chance for complete enforcement." The signers were: Halpli II. Rurnside, lumber, Portland, Ore. Col. Patrick Henry Callahan, varnish, Louisville, Ky. Frederick S. Chase, metals, Waterbury, Conn. W. 11. Crosby, metals, Buffalo. R. Fulton Cutting, financier. New York. Cap!. Hubert Dollar, steamships, Kan Francisco. Thomas A. Edison, inventor, West Orange, N. J. Henry Ford, automobiles, De troit. Ctiarles It. Cook, typewriters, Hartford, Conn. J. C. Penney, merchant, New York. George A. Plimpton, publisher. New York. Alfred C. Fuller, brushes, Hart ford, Conn. A. A. Hyde, drugs. Wichita, Kan. James N. Jarvie, sugar, New York. Clarence New York. ll. Kelsey, bunker. 11. A. Long, lumber, Kansas City. George F. Milton, publisher, New York. James IL 1'ost, sugar. New York. Fred W. Ramsay, metals, Cleve lu ud. W i n s I o w Russell, insurance, Hartford, Conn. Dr. William Jay Schieffelin, drugs. New York. Alfred P. Sloan, Jr., automobiles. New York. Ambrose Swasey, machine tools, Cleveland. A. A. Welch, Insurance, Hart ford, Conn. A letter, expressing disapproval of the recently organized volun tary committee of lawyers opposed to the einghteenth amendment, and an answer to it by Joseph H. Choate, Jr., member of the board of managers of the committee, were also published. Marshall Stimson, Los Angeles attorney, asked that the commit tee refrain from using the word "lawyers" to avoid "bringing the legal profession further into dis respect." He asked whether any iiiitiiiurin ml uiK iTuiiiiiiiiit'e. were r(.tPl by interests seeking ap- ' 'be amendment. Mr- 'h"ale reiilied that honest ,.,., ,s , ,e n)lllnsl)r,n of llcl Ht't n (O0(ltlle moveincnt. mldilm "We believe uuiL rii-uxi kiii itm is ine most seri ous remediable evil from which the country now suffers." The messiiKe to the American people and the lawyers' letters were published a day after the announcement that Justice Frank line I'. Hyt of the .New York children's court had been awarded the prize of f:.,.mit) offered by William It. Hearst for a sulmtltule plan for prohibition. Justice lloyt's plan called for repeal of the Volstead act anil en actment of a new law diflnliiK "llHoxIcatinir liquors," as "all alco- j nl""e , f distillation. " thereby excluding wines and beer. Truffle In wine and beer would be under stale regulation under his plan. t NKW Oltl.KANS. June 3. i.Vi- . Viu'm K""d will filers, en route , fnmi va-h:L't.m t Lima took off from Ca!lendar airport here at ,r):nj a. m., central stiindaid titu-. In their Reliance cabin monoplane n't a lion-: top flight to xi o City. Caidaln iailos I'lnillow, n.ivl g.itor, said he exp'cted to cmn- I'bt" the M-mco t ,:y trip within 1 1 -' hours. Lieutenant Cuius Ze- Fuss Starts When Husband Held Out 45 Cents on Wife I Bl'XKER HIL.U, 111., June j 3- A1 An urmnnent over 45 cents com the life of Mrs. i .Mary Williams, 5;!. of near j Woodburn. She was shot by her husband. Kred Williams, 47, after they had quarreled r fr because he was short the 45 cents which be was siulosed 4 j : to have obtained from the sule of three boxes of straw- r berries. 10 BEDSIDE OE George Honored On 64th , Birthday Passes Good Night Looks Forward to! Next Year's Derby Press Club Is Thanked. WINDSOR, Klip., June 3. (P) Numerous congratulations were re ceived by King George today in honor of his 64 th birthday. The kins, again in bed because of the formation on an abscess on the site of bis recent operation, pawned a good night and is looking forward to next year's derby, even though his illness will prevent his attendance at the great derby this week. Iti-plying to n message of greet ing from the Pre.SH club, where an annual luncheon was held in honor of the founder of the famous derby stakes, the king's private secretary conveyed the king's thanks, adding: "His majesty was much touched by your reference to future victory in the greatest of all runes which next year he hopes once more to witness mid enjoy.".. Members of the royal family of fered tlu-ir congratulations during the day. IN DEATH OF DKTROIT, .June 3. (fP) Po'.lce and the coroner's office were at loggerhead today In theories ac counting for the death In a hotel room Saturday of Miss Mary Huy lis hoc, 27-year-old duughter of wealthy New York parents, and formerly a teacher In fashionable schools there. I)r, James K. Burgess, coroner, believes a broken neck, battered face and chest, scratched hands and arniH sufficient evidence that the young woman was slain after a struggle. Inspector Fred V. Frahm, head of the police homicide squad, an nounced he was satisfied Miss Lee died of heart disease and that her neck was broken while the body was being taken to the county morgue. The body of the girl was found last night reclining In a neatly made bed In a position simulating sleep, by a hotel maid who en tered the room to clean. Miss I.ee was working here with a crew of Columbus, Ohio, magazine so licitors and did not appear for work Saturday morning. It Ih be- I lleved she met death during the '.preceding night. LONG lilCACII, Cnl., June 3. dVf Two were reported dead and two others not expected to live as t he result of an automobile col lision here last night. The dead: Mrs. Howard Ellsworth, 32. St. , Paul, Minn. j Harry Christian. Fargo, X. O. Mrs. Hllsworth, her husbnnd, lo- I gei her with christian and Dr. ! Frank Harrow, were guest of, Kdwiiid Klliot of GlendalP. CjiI.,1 in the latter' machine on a slcht-i weeing trip. The guests Were here i to attend thi' Shrine convention. Klliots ear collided h-ad-on , with another d riven by James i Johnson of SiL-nal Hill. Cal. In t lie bt I ter Vehii p W'Me Johnson. bis wife nnd three children. John- son nnd hfs younifst child. Carl j 4. sustained fractun-d skulls and yviQ not cxpwtud to rccuwr. GREETINGS SEN! SICK INARCH MYSTERY SEEN MAGAZINE GIRL PREPARE FOR GOOD-WILL FLIGHT Copt. De Pinllios of Peru at the controls of his cabin plane In which he hopss to visit Central and Scuth American countries on a gocd will flight. Carlos Ztgarra, navigator who will accompany him, 16 standing at the side. THINK HEIRESS South Jersey Girl Found Dead in Bedroom Suitor Turned Gun On Self En gagement Broken After Childhood Romance. MOORKSTOWX, N. J., June 3. (P) Tho deaths of Miss Ruth Mowday Wilson and Horace Rob erts, Jr., members of two of south Inost Jersey's wealthiest a n d prominent families, were under in vestigation .today. , The police theory was that Roberts shot tho girl and himself. Miss Wilson, the daughter of ! John O. Wilson, Camden flnan- cler, attorney and real estate op era tor, was found dying in her father's home here yesterday. She had been shot twice In the head. A few feet away on the floor Roberts, a member of an old Quaker family of Moorestown, was found unconscious. One pistol bullet had entered hfs right tern pie emi two niu taKcn erieci near uie n. ui iii ui.tu. .in wn noui regain in? consciousness. Clutched In Roberts rlht hand was a pistol. Six bullets had been fired from it. The jmir were found by M Iss Wilson's father in the youny woman's bedroom. She was lyinw on the bed. Both were fully clad. There was no evidence of u struggle. They had been sweethearts from childhood days. liach was lift years old. 1'olice learned from friends that Miss Wilson iiad broken the en casement two months ao, but recently she and Roberta had re newed their friendship. FLYING TO 'FRISCO IN ONE DAY If SKATTI.H, June 8. (VP) fin V ernor George. A. Parks of Alaska arrived hen at 10:30 a. m. today en route to San Kranclscn from .1 uneait, Alaska. He left Juneau at 1 : 1i a. m.. Pacific standard time, and expected to reach San 1 Francisco by r:3o p. m. The governor flew from Alaska to Seattle In a plane of the Wash ington-Alaska Airways company, and expected to leave shortly after his arrival for San Francisco. He plans to attend the graduation of his niece, Mary Thompson, at Mills cid lege. Oakland. The flight Is the first evV attempted In one day from Alaska to California. l'p unt II press time. Governor Parks had ind. yet passed over .Medfoid, although be Wiis sched uled to arrive here around 2:3'). I ,( t; I u l'nhlv.m, h- June 3. I of the v. bi- h I lPi P? ie-ei valivi bet n In yt us will ' gn .-I OHM-tit pou.-r for th ast fi resign In coiif qu-nc of p .h h ( f i t in l.iL uc'-ks ami vicwii. SLAIN BY YOUTHiRAIN AND HAILI SHE REJECTED STORM SHAYj i'.V-A -St i-lot nt Pfcsn Photo KANSAS HIT BY Heavy Damage in Wake ot oiA r- rt Storm Passenger Plane Is Destroyed WindOWS Shattered Wyoming Also Suffers. KANSAS CITY, June 3. (?) Torrential rains, hail and windif Kadcliffe college, "I believe caused damage amounting to hun- dreds of thousands oi dollars ! Kansas and Missouri yesterday. I severe ruin and wind storm ul Wichita, Kun., wrecked several bnlldums niul a dozen nh-iiinttnu ui the municipal and Swallow factory airports, damage approaching the SiMUMM) mark. , The Western Air Kxnrcss I ri-motored lilnnn Imnnd ironi Lns Anireie? t. !;..,. u cm. landed five minutes before the storm struck and was demolished. The plane, valued at J7r),oao, was on the second flight of the new Kansas City-Los Angeles line. Windows in buildings In Wich ita's business district were shat tered and trees were Uprooted in the residential section. HeoreH of ,K.,.HunM we,.(1 injui.,.( sjKi,tly y Ki;ihS UJHl MmliS fal llli; from lieew CHEVKXXK, Wyo.. June 3. (!) One woman was drowned and two irrigation dams were destroyed In a rush of water following u severe hall and rain storm here yester day. Railroad tracks were under mined, houses were inundated and five of six bridges over Crow creek, which was swollen to flood stage, were washed away. .Mrs. Saledad Rodriguez, 70, deaf and Infirm, was unahle to struggle to safety and was drowned. Her body was found in a room of her house, submerged. Damage of $2(10, 000 at the Wy oming Hereford ranch was tho greaiest loss of the sudden flood, Hie worst this region has experi enced since inna, when Crow creek last went on a rampage. DAVIS ELECTED HEAD HUSTON, June 3. OP) William W. Davis of f'iimhrlfli-n M ...... was elected president of the Chrln - tian Science mother church at the'. ,.uiM-nni,.Min iH (.specially active In tilts til annual meeting herj today. Other officers elected were: Clerk, Fzra W. Palmer, ltrookline, Mass.; treasurer, Fdward L. Ripley, of Itronkl.ne; fi;;t re.'iiler. Georgo Shaw Cook, Chicago; second reader. Mrs. Kllxuheth F. Nor W'tnd. Ilrokline. E FROM HEAVY COLD NEW YORK. Jane 3. JP) Ha 1 1" Ruth was taken to a hos pital today for treatment of a I heavy cold, whb h kept him out of the Va nkees' lineup yesterday i for the first time In two years. 'The treatment was deyerlbed as a pn-ca ul binary measure to prevent tin- cold ih-velopiiig Into prion it ion ': He probably will be out nf the game about a Week. Cahle Kills I I MAIITIVKZ, Cal.. June Ml 'Joseph Franko. riding fin a Ikiv babr. tried to lift a high tension cable f allow the baler to pum be.ea.h. The leavllv chafed cable hurled liU body 1.'. ft-ef nnd RF A.QMflR ' uLnunuu if success i IS DESIRED f . I I . " Massachusetts Tech Gradu ates Told Easy to Marry ( Boss' Daughter if Gentle manly 'Front' of Har-l vard Has Brought Pub-; lifiitv and Mnnpv. Is fllaim' I nf Prnf Rnnprc Ul riUI. nuyua. I I:osto June 3. (!') The no- j cessiiy of snobbi-sh news, a doctrine ' enunciated by 1'rof. Robert Km- ' nions of Massachusetts Institute of Technology in an address before I the member of the graduating class, was under debate hero today. "He a snob," Prof. Rogers told the seniors. "You will find it is Just as easy to marry Hie boss! du lighter us the stenographer. Uresis, speak and act like a gentle man ami you will be surprised at the amount of murder you can get away with. "Never buy a suit of clot lies unless you get an extra pair t f trousers. Keep one suit of clothes pressed every week. Never buy shoes unless you buy nhoe trees XZ J'tt same collar ui night which you m ,.,, n day." i Harvard, he declared, has re WlCnittl vived more publicity and money I than anv other American nniver. 'si,y 1",llst Harvard has never nio)iimi p ii( uiig up a i roui, never gives in, iK'ver argues, blandly going on its way." Among those who rallied to l'rof 1 Ada Hogers' snpjMH t was Mis, . .oulse Comslck. president . i 1V,,r' w UM'nB tho word !"' I thtvbotter nene, or lit Umm in an unusual sense, sne saiu. I "To ni( 11 "PlH'arH that he wishes the young men of technology lo (uuiuviiio the virtue or siuddiish- J ,lt'HM and u nwnnn self-respect, nign sianuaroH ana dressing neat ly, then I quite agree with him." The J larvard Crimson, undcr- gl ad out e dally, said "It is little short of astonishing that a man belonging to a pro fession usually considered to rep resent the sternest of realism should have fallen for the vagaries of tho 'right crowd,' " said the Crimson in an editorial today. "1'erhaps the boys at Technol ogy have not had the time to fre quent the dance halls of the back and so discover that the boss' daughter and his stenographer are slstera under n, very thin skin." SUSPECT IN NEW CHICAGO, June 3. (T) Mrs, Catherine Casslor, who spent J!7 montliH In Jail for murder, part ofj the time closo In the shadow of the scaffold, was back there today with new murder accusations flying about her graying head. A mesh of circumstances which began forming ever before her re lease from jail April 30, has In volved her In the Inquiry Into the death of Cammeolia Soular. The 24-year-old divorcee whoso body, a bullet through the heart, was found deep In a swamp near Hebron, Ind., last Friday. In the face of police hurges, Mrs. ,. . , v. - imm ice uu i Ken, ai in, 1 , , I h"H ",uintlt1";t,,, " (aswler has maintained a calm d Miss Sotitars death. She said she knew her husband, 'Iruman, had) employed the young woman as lunisekeeiier during part of the dm she was In Jail7 and that she had heard other things Involving the two. "Cammle," as Miss Soutar was called, was said to have called on Mrs. Cassler In Jail seveml months ago, taunting her with a story t hat she and Mrs. Oassler'n husband were to be married, Mrs. Cassler, however, said she "wasn't r'':' d at hr for It. 1 don t get 0. S. C. ALUMNI ASSN. ctiRVALLIM, f)re June 3. -(VPf Mark J. McAlllrter of Sab-m. cor- poi allon fommlMxioner of ( u gon. Is the new president of tin- Oregon Stale Colli e Alumni assocla t oi(. Th result of the annual election j w here yeHterlay. i 'barb Reynolds of Grande 'y ' member of the board of 'Ib-eetois. .l-anette Cramer, port- "hejed Vice president. ''Itfr"'-I Huun. Kl.unatii Fall., ick Prince o W 1- A Prince De Sagan, 19-year-old son tne frmer Anna Gould, whose telf-inriicted bullet wound proved fatal. He sought death when his parents refused to let him wed. 1 :6 i nriiTrainrn nr SINCLAIR AND ! AIDESJfLD William J. Burns' Fifteen- h- ves to have been near !:'.ry, Intl.. where men Immediate Day Sentence Only Ex-. lv. i-'nautied mat i.e te mem ' I where the still was. ception-Power of Court ' u T-0Z"lWJtmn for Protection Seen As X?nr&& i itientlty nnd that he had no distll raCtOr in UpiniOn. !l'-ry and was not eiiKaKed in the litiuor trutle. To force him to talk. WASIllXd-roN, June 3. OT the men Btrliietl him and cut his The sentences Imposed upon lliu iy riosll with Klass. When they burn R Sinclair. Henry M.isun Day ami ed blm with clBnrettes, Zlmmor w. sh. riv.au Hums for havlni; me man Bald, he begged them to kill Kull-Sinc luir Teanot Dome jurv him (llldWed. were upheld today by ih KUi.i e.n nrt. hut the I K-rtuv sentence on William J. Hums wua looking at the captive, the new disapproved. I comer cursed the others and do Justice McIteyiolds delivered 1 claied" i the opinion uf tli. court, wbieti jwaH unanimous except that Jus tlee stone, win. was attorney Ken- era! during some- of the oil lease litigation, took no part. Pointing out that the defense contended that the evidence failed to show the detectives had estab lished contact wit h any of the Jurors, the opinion said, "Wo can not accept this view." "It would destroy the power of courts adequately to protect them selves lo enforce their rights of I self-preservation," It continued. J Chicago Suppose, for example, soiim lit igant should endeavor to shoot a juror while silting in the box dur ing progress of the case. He might escape punishment for con tempt If some quick-witted at tendant quietly thwarted the ef fort and kept the circumstances secret until the trial ended. Leo A. Rover. United States at torney who prosecuted Sinclair, said the oil myn would start serv lug (he six mouths' sentence for criminal contempt as soon as ho completed the prevent three month senlenco for refusing to an swer questions asked by the senate ommittee. SMALL Fill OF In the shipment of rnrload lots lot' small fruits and vegetables last year, Medfoid ranked high In the shipment of 7S cars to Pacific coast and eastern Vnirketa, according to a n H,"1Wi ,,r lm? "'. 'I he HhlpHieil IH lOOk 111 a UllgO Variety ' produce and Indicated this sec, j vision: Shipments were as follows; Cherries. 1 ear: neaches. G: green corn, li; peppers. 2; green beans. 1; pears, 3; tomatoes, 11; cants loupes. f; watermelons, 1; dry on ions, 2; grapes, 2; apples, II; her lies, 1; sacked carrots, 1; hunch carrotH, '1 ; bunch heats, I ; green onions 2; cucumbers, 1; winter squash, 4 ; sack turnips, 1 ; pota toes, .'I; rhubarb, 2; lettuce, 3; cah gaho, 2; hot house toniutnes. 2. Four cars were also made up of egit plant, tnualduelons, cnsahan, honey dews, Persian melons, hunch tur nips, ritdises, summer squash, green peas nnd pumpkins. Important Notice Kxhlhitors planning on sending exhibits to the Portland rose show are urgently requested In see Mrs. Allen Rrury at the M dfnrd Gar den club nhow this evening. Port land has asked for garden flower xJilbils from this cltv, and detail lltI( information on this point will ,e given. 4 ' St"k Cam it Ahl W S1 1 1 N IT' iN, June 3. (IV) Invent gat ion by t he senate com merce committee of methods by which the Ki.vi-i anient may aid In ihseovi Imr a cure for cancer was authorized In a iesoilou adopted jlvdu) L lbv ocualUt DRUGGIST TORTURED IN CHICAGO Gangsters Inflict Slashes and Burns On Wrong Man to Extort Still Information Taken to Shack Near Gary, Ind. Tossed From Car When Mistake Is Dis covered. l I TP Aim 111 tw t.-Mni.iw,,! ,'...,,. . i .V . ,,,..,..' ;,,.,.," " I" ' ' ' i bnilsi'd and hluedlng Horn un auto jimiliilu, .Mulllicw Zliumorniun hud u suily lo lull today. lit' HtaKKt'l'eil Into Ills home yes lonlay Hutiuring from scurug of hunis and nils, tho latter havhiK hi'i'ii Inl'lli tcd by pieceH of JaKKml KlasH Hhmhi'd across his hotly by his cuiilors In an effort to niako him tfll about u still ho know noth lug of. i Zlminonnan toltl polipo he was 1 kiilnapod Tuesday niKht when he i answered the hull of several men , who addressed him as ".Matt." 1 1-uretl to their car, he was seized, ' blindfolded imrl llrll'.n In n al....ir Saturday night another member n, . V." V " 1 "You've got the wrong man." "The men blindfolded me" 7tm. mercan Bald, "and put me back in their car. A little later they threw ,ne out ,10HP Hammond. Ind., after j telling me I was lucky to be alive." - Baseball Scores A merlin ii. n. 0 1 II. R. 2 1 6 0 New Vork Lyons and Hlckey. Autry; Wells nnd n. H. E. Detroit 2 4 4 Philadelphia 3 11 0 UhleNand Phillips; Grove and Cochrane, (Twelve Innings). National R. IT. E. Now York 8 12 0 Chicago 1 80 iCuhuell and Schalk, O'Farrell; Malone, Carlson, Jonnard and Gon zales. R. II. E, Philadelphia 2 6 2 Pittsburg 14 15 1 Ilatterles: Sweetland, Roy and Ler.an, Busee. Grimes and Har grcaves. San I-'niitHwco Fruit Pi-lete. SAN FItANCIHC, June 3. (P) (Federal-State Market News Serv ice.) A pples: Oregon Newtowns, Xl-V $3-3.60; fancy, L.7fi-3. Ar kansas I Hacks. XK, $2.fiO-$2.?5; fancy, S2.25-2.fi0. Will Rogers Says: A.MARIM.O, Texas, .Tunc :t. We c!o.scl the t'red Stone hIiow lust ninht in I'itt.s lmrt;li, niul I stiirted in right nwny pineli liiltint; for I.iml- IhtkIi. Wliile lie iH lioney ni o (i n i u jr I inn noma west over hi' T r ii n s o n e n t a 1 A i r Trans port line. Left 1'iu.siiiirgli ul midnight last night, and eaught the big three-motored Ford plane at Indianapolis tit !l o'eloi'lt this morning, St. I.nnis at 11, AViehita, Kas., at l!, anil into here, Aniarill", Texas, at fi ::tl) thin afternoon, stay here for the night and on to the coast tomorrow. It's going to he n great route and the only way to come or go west, so go ahead, I.indy, mid stay hid, the line is go ing great. Yours, WIU, lKHiKUS. S8a