The Weather
Forecost Probably kIhiuck to
nljclu ami tYlilay. Mild unnHir
aiure. Highest ye-lerdny 01
nn
foe
Temperatures
lamest UUm morning 47
24 hours precipitation to A it' iu. .77
pally Tu fill y fourth Year.
Weekly Kifty-fcnmth Year,
TWELVE PAGES
MEDFOliD. OUIXiOX, TUUIiKlUY, .JUNK (i, 1!)19.
No, 7ti.
Med
MAIL
D
li II U II II U II I lA El I 1
., i i i -- - Trm. n . , . , , - . :
Today
By Arthur Erlsbane
Mussolini Rebuked.
Trigo Wins 33 to 1.
150,000,000 Years Ago.
Not So Very Happy.
(Copyright by King Features
Syndicate. Inc.)
Important news from Home
tells of tin? rebuke administer
fil by l'ope I'ius to Mussolini
In eonnei'tion with the re-establishment
of the pope's tem
poral power, Miiolini spoke
in u' manner that the pope of
ficially called "conilemnahlc
modernism. "
In Mussolini's attitude the
pope sees a danger to Chris
tianity, "heretical and worse
1han heretical expressions as to
1 1n very essence of Christian
ity and CatholocisiiL."
The pope's letter to Cardinal
(lasparri rebukes the Italian
dictator, in stern fashion, and
Kurope wonders what the re
sult will lie.
Mussolini is not patient, and
the Italian accord with the Vat
ican may be in danger.
U0 11 Mils, (lofying AhlSSO-
lini, reminds you of nn earlier
pope nearly 1500 yeais ai;o.
travelinu to the Daniihe to
Dlllce liinLSt'lf in tlll nowr of
jiiiii t llJlltst LI in uu, iui
the savage Attila and causing
the latter 1o turn away from
Tfonie. -
Five hundred thousand Brit
ishers Avatelied the running of
tlie derby and saw Trigo, an
"outsider," win the race at 'Si
' 111 1.' ' -:" '
Millions were won and lost
on the running. Worse than
the loss of .money, which im
poverishes, and the winning of
money, which demoralizes, is
the amount of T1IOH0IIT wast
ed on a raee without meaning
However, a horse raee, or
even a prize M"igllt, is better
.1,1 i ii i
uiiiii iii': iiiiiivx i "ii.i f,iiuuui !
games to which they bav
SUC-
reeded.
pi i
J he human race must
improve slowly. And the
1)0
per cent of us that cannot think
seriously must be amused.
The Museum of Natural His
!ory in Chicago, established by
1 lie generosity of the late Mar
shall Field, exhibits two new
paintings, ea i -5 feet long,
nine feet, high, given by Krnest
U. (irnham. '
. , , , ,. , . , ,.
r UU( amc uai sis w o neiieve
and do not believe that ' the
, i .rt ' it
eann is oniy uxnnt years om.
will be interested to hear that
one picture shows the bronto-
saiir, tliat lived l;W,UtiW,iHPi
years ago, the other the mosa
rPnntintipd on Pir FnnM
1 mull when n feller wux purty
Umciiic tr ho dlchr own n irliite
iMivIn in us wlili hU ninno mi
w ii. -in inun n BiNiHi
iry wiin a ithiik n inn mkhhh
m i ik in iy wniM"n "
limn Ihrtf iiiMlerMilrtV wrlti
VM Vawn Mpplnnitt fer the
limim'lioUl Kigc o Ut Weekly Ml
Jlwu. .
DRY STUDV
i IS SOUGHT FOR RADIO
BY HOOVER OPERATOR
President Recommends Con
gress Appoint joint Com
mittee for Study Enforce
ment M alters Depart
mental Body to Aid New
Legislation Needed for
Reorganization.
WASHINGTON, June II. (!')
Ihinlly 1'rcHidenl Hoover's
rccdiiitiu'iitlalinn I'm- u study hy n
joint conKi'i'HMlonul committee of
the trannfei of the prohibition unit
to the Justice department been re
ceived by the house und nen:ite be
fore u number of administration
Icudfl-H indicated they were pre
pared to create such a committee
immediately.
WASHINGTON. June 6. (P)
President Hoover today recom
mended to congress the appoint
ment of a joint select committee
to study matters pertainins to the
transfer of Ihe lll-ohlhition unit
from the treasury to the justice I
jdeparment. and other subjects in
tion oi tne nureaus naving 10 no
with dry law enforcement.
The chief1 executive Informed
cimfi'CMM in ihiH his second mi's-
HHge to the special session, that he
.....,., t
tne departments to co-operate
with the congressional committee
and that the national commission
on law oservance and enforce
ment also would co-operate
through their st miles uf the de
partmental organization.
The joint congressional commit
tee would be expected to formu
late recommendations for the con
sideration rojE congress at the reg
ular session In lJeeembfr and at
which the chief executive desires
enactment of the necessary legis
lation to place the major responsi
bility for prohibition enforcement
In the justice department.
Mr. Hoover's message follows:
"To the Congress of the United
States:
"In order to secure the utmost
expedition in the reorganization
ami concentration of responsibility
in administration of the federal
brueaus connected
with prohihi-1
Itlnn enftux-ement so greatly needed
I to improve their effectiveness. 1
recommend that the congress ap-
! point a joint select committee to
mane an inimeniaie siuuy oi inese
. (Q ..
mendatlons for consideration at
the next regular session.
"I shall be glad to appoint a
committee from tne departments
to co-operate with such a com
mittee of the congress. The na
tional commission on law -observance
and enforcement will also
co-operate through their studies
of the departmental organization.
"The subject involves the trans
fer of parts of various bureaus and
agencies from certain departments
to others, and it includes as well
1 and strengthening of our border
. hlll iu.,i , .-i.t.
' prohibition and illegal entry of
aliens.
'Ah the question embraces nu
merous laws and regulations In
several bureaus, it will require ex
tensive consideration whiclw if
given joinuy oy sucn comnuuees'
m ine congress una me uepari
ments prior to the regular session,
will save many months of delay."
Baseball Scores
National
It. H.
. 'I ti
. 4 !)
UoKton
Pittsburgh .
Siebolil and
Hargreaves.
Taylor;
Krenier and
It. II. E.
Philadelphia 2 9 1
Cincinnati 0 5 0
Hcnge and Irain; Muy, Kemner
and sukeforth.
n. II. E.
lirooklyn 6 13 S
I'lili-UK" 8 C 3
Koupnl, Monh, llulloo nnd IMci
nich; IthMh, Malone and tlrace.
.American.
ft. If. I,
rhicnga 1) 14 it
Huston Ii 14 3
Ailkln unit Hern. Motrin. I!ay-
ne and Hevlntf, Herry.
It. H. fC.
. 9 1J 0
. 7 IJ 1
I,. Sewell:
llrohowskl.
Cleveland
New ork
! Miller. Pen-ell and
! Pipcras. Zachary nnd
I Dickey.
It. II. K.
Sl ( nn)s
phllmlelphfa
Hinehohler. Kimsev,
senanK, i-arrep; artisnaw, Knara
nun k oenran.
iM'iron i i u
Washington 5 7 1
Whltehill. Stoner. and Phillips,
Hadley, JJui ke, U;.ka and Ituel,
j Tate. . ...
SEARCH ON
William Tallman Escapes
From Boat Missing Life
Preserver Only Clue
May Have Perished in
Attempted Swim for
Shore Police Search
Vessel and Watch Depots
SAN KPAN'CISOO, Juu C (A')
Discovery thut n life-preserver was
missing un the steamer Admiral
Henson from which . William I.
Tallinim, suspected of slaying Mrs.
Virginia Putty in Io Angeles, dis
appeared lust night, led police to
believe tutlny that the young radio
man may have swum ashore or
perished In the nttumpt.
In spite of the clue, however, GO
police were searching the vessel at
pier 20 on the theory that Tallman
is still aboard, hidden In the carso
or engine room.
A tiiird theory i that the sus
pect may have heen furnished with
a woman's clolhinK by an accom
pllce and walked ashore when the
vessel docked, led to a guard be
ing placed at stage anft train de
pots. SAN FUANCIHCO. June 1!.-
. "imam lanman. young
tradio onerntor chmired with th
munlcr of Mrs. Virginia Patty at
Lo Angeles, either was still hiding
aboard the steamship Admiral Ben
son or had been killed In an at
tempt to escape, was expressed by
police today.
Tallman was a former radio
operator nboard the Admiral Ben
son and It was during a trip sev
eral months ago that he met Mrs.
Patty, whom he Is alleged to have
beaten to death" ln; a Tos Angeles
apartment during a fit of Jealousy
believed to have been Inspired by
the fact that Mrs. Patty was about
to return to her husband, Frank
Patty, a broker of Portland, Ore.
IA)S ANOKl,ES, Cat., Juno G.
(IP) With the discovery of nar
cotic pellets and a hypodermic syr
inge in the apartment of Mrs. Vir
ginia Fattv. alain wife nf n Port.
I land. Ore., investment broker, po-
luua? weie purnuiiiK a new
imu ui iiieiiKuuou in me. aiiairs
of the comely 28-year-old woman.
Mrs. Patty's battered body was
discoVereil Tuesday morning in the
closet of a rooming house, in a sec
tion of the city far removed from
the exclusive district where she
had maintained her residence.
William Tallman, Oakland radio
operator, wanted In connection with
the murder, wus missing when the
steamer. Admiral Henson, arrived
at San Francisco last night.'
The finding of narcotics in Mrs.
Patty's apart menu scorned to the
police to hear out an expressed
suspicion of her husband, Frank
Potty, that his wife had become
addicted to the use of stimulants
Ite hud previously told police of
adding that
they had resided In Ijjs Angeles
during several past winters on ac
count of It. She had, Patty said,
spent some time in Arizona for
treatment of tubercular nilment,
hut Pntty had understood, he said,
that she had not suffered further
symptoms lutely and was appar
ently cured. .
In their investigation of the
rooming house apartment yester
day jtolice tabulated the following
new asserted evidence:
A man's brown, blood spattered
suit of rlnthes, hearing nn Oak
land trademark. The suit was
found in a suit cose, in which wav
also an Oakland newspaper dated
Muy 18. Police said Tallman was
E. 'known to have left Oakland May 1
(Mother articles of apparel, a razor,
t:jshavlnK brush and lotion were in
'the suit case. Police said the shav
ling Implements hud yielded sharp
specimens of finger prints.
I Chief of Detectives Herman Cllne
declared that the brown suit hail
been described by Mrs. Dora Scott.
mother of the dead woman, as be
longing to Tallman. She was well
acquainted with Tnllmun, police
salti.
OlBlTFEES
III STATE
S Ml'M, ro . 0. (fV) The
total amount In fe'M received by
ho Htnit motor vhlrle i eMi fi
tion tleiiii rt lonl tt,r Ihtw vn'ir rmm
.r-inuiirv 1 to Mnv 21 un ifi Ti'T .
K "ifJR. Uuiimr the wholfl of V.2 fe
K U 0 ' M 9t.it9.2Sfi.K7, or only
(den nnd "!r, K7 morn than for the
rirt five months of
five months of this yrnr.
Hofir.tH for May thin
yenr. were
l ,3fift 90 agilnt f 2 5 62 for
.Ma v. t yar. The fees are those
rweived from utoinohile. truck.
' motorcyrle. d-nler, chauffeur and
'upcraiuis' rcgistrutiun.
SCHOLARLY AND COMPANIONATE
. r I: ; Yl
Jos-phine Haldeman-Julius now has her maiden name Inscribed
on a diploma at well as a weddlnj certificate. The girl who attracted
att.ntion after her companionate mariage to Aubrey Roselle received
high honors on graduation from
National Electric Light As
sociation Hears Message
From Wizard Through
Medium of Talking Film
Proud of Achievement.
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., June f.
(JP) I'Yom hiH home near Fort
Myers, Fla., Thomas A. Edison do
livered a personal message to the
dulogates of the National Kk-etiic
W) I IJIllllll I II I II ILLU Ull I
BY PROGRESS INjWHEN BROKER S
nilRF INniLSTRYlPASSHIN COALS
Light association who today cele- . , . -
, , ,, The fashionable apartment from
brated Ldison day. Mr. ImIIsoii j .,,. ,,,,..,. Jum,led Is at 1220
appeared through the medium of a j .North state street. A moment be
movie film, which pictured him us fore her death she called the
strong, active and smiling. Mr. switchboard operator, saying: "This
Edison saitl: is MIks Cole. 1 um going to Jump
"When 1 invented the incandes-j from thu window."
cent lump, 1 realized thut the lamp! The operator rushed to the front
alone was not enough. It was nec ! of the building and looked out. The
ossary ulso to peifect a system ofibdy of Miss Cole was there,
electric generation and distrilm- Kduin Page, a broker, lives at
tlon. I immediately set about to I the A.stor street address given by
develop It, and it makes me happy the actress. He said he hud known
to know thut the system as well her for Nome time. Yentenlay after-
us the lump still persists In all its
essentiuls.
"1 had in those days a high opin
ion of my Invention. All Inventors
have. Hut I must confess thut I
never dreamed Hint from It would
come the stupendous electric In
dustry of toduy.
"Naturally, I um gratified to feel
thut I huve heen privileged to play
a part in this vast uchlevement. I
am proud of the electrical Industry
of its vision, coinage, zeal and
devotion to public service und I
suspect every Amerlcun feels the
sutue way uhout it."
IS SAVED FROM
FOREST FLAMES:
Til!-: PAS. Man, .lune 6. (A)
A sudden lull In the wind, com
bined with the battle of men
against t he roatitiK flames of a
forest fire, has saved Cranberry
Port n if e, plct nresfue mining town,
TjO miles north of the Pas, from
destruction.
Kurly today reports from Cran
berry said the f hi me were beimc
held In check after 'a strunt-'le
the part of mincfH and prospectors
under the direction of f n rest
rangers, but danger still threat
ened. The fire st ill was r;iiiii(f.
and if ii f I Iff wind nira In me
on from tin' Totribeant the re
in a (nine build hits In t he town
would le endangered.
Kill l nt ending
HAf.IIM. Ore.. June ij't J,.hn
Hubbard, 71. tiled at a local bos,
oifl late ye-teiday f r 'tin in juries
received when his auiomobile was
-truck bv n Smii.tern Pjcific en-
gin at a trade crowing in Hub-
laid vvalviduy uficiuowi.
Associated Press Photo '
Guam, ftas., nign scnoo. ...
LM I I SI It r V "' am vorv strongly against pro
vllll'lllLV' nll)l""'' 'fl"'d Uarrow, "because I
I I I I I I I I" like to take n drink and because I
U U I U I U ll)iwal" lo ni11"1 ,nv own lul"esH. I
w w I mm w i oijjoet to any organization of
;
'
Barbara Cole;" ShOW Gin,!
I
Leaps From 12th FlOOr I
r
of Fashionable Apart-
, -r,u Inn4
ment Telephones Intent
Before Death Jump.
CI11CAOO. June C. m Miss
Barbara Cole. 28-year-old show
girl, Jumped 12 stirles to her death
lust night, giving us her reuson only
tills nutation on the flyleaf of b
j diary: "1 love i:.l Page, 12(ia Alitor
! nun, he said, she telephoned, li
liirinu he wuh urnwlnu "cold und
distant' 'tuward her.
"She threatened then to jump
out of ihe window," 1'une fluid,
"hut I though l wus idle talk, and
hung up."
In hooks In thn apartment the
yoiitiK woman's address was Riven
simply aa ' London, Kntum!." She
hud appeared In minor role In the
r?nii'l yhowa "ltore Marie" and
"liio Kim."
HA MOM, fin-., June fl. (A') Kx
Iradition of Clarence Friek, under
iirn'Ml nt Medford, was authorized
by the office of (iovernor Patter
son yesterday on a requisition from
h
nlu. lie Is wanted for H
HUtory offense alleged to have
ommltted at Stockton.
l-'rick was arrested here Sunday
by Policeman Joe ( 'uve on tele,
graphic Instructions from 'uliior
nlu, and was to leave this eve
ning for Stockton in the custody
of un officer who arrived here
this forenoon. I-'ilck's charge In
volved a 1 ii -year-old school girl.
WASHINGTON. June i.
A ti ho ui: h Its r- n.uoi s had
, tb.it the farm relief bill, o
j H'i iciilttirul marketing net,'
(A' -hoped
t:ie
us it
! 1" now known, might be sent to
the While House by Saturd.iy, it
' n ppearcd totlay that final con -
gi '"sioim ct Itm would he delayed
, until next week. Conflicting
w k -end plans of members
, s eiuet to pieclude any possibility
OR. WILSONj'
C. DARROW
IN DEBATE
Prohibition Question Argued
Before Heckling Wash
ington Audience No De
cision Will Be Given
Senator Fess Suddenly III
Place Taken By Tem
perance Worker.
WASHINGTON, Juno (!. (P)
In the presence of a'n audience
which guvn vent to lis leellnga
with hissing, honing, heckling,
Clarence True Wilson, secretary
of Ihe Methodist hoard of temper
unce, pvnhlbltlon and public tuur
als, and Clarence Durrow, promi
nent Chicago utturny, have told
WuHhiugtoti what tbey think uhoul
prohlhltluu.
'i'hey debated the question last
night: "Resolved, that prohibition
I is tight in principle, a success in
practice, und should be enforced."
henalor llurkley of Kentucky, pre
siding, announced that no decision
would be given and that Senator
j,,,a of t)hl(li who was , hnve
Biuikii in the affirmative, had "be-
come suddenly 111" and that
Ir.
Wilson would tuke his place.
' preachers or other highhlndera get
ting together and telling me what
1 1 cau't do.
"As long as 1 live I'm going to
I live my own life nnd to choose my
own religion, if 1 want to, without
, Interfering with thu rights of my
jrellow man. We propone to mind
our; own business, and we propose
to mane you mind yours, if you
have any."
lr. Wilson urged that prohlbi-
U"" o Blven the same chance for
success given the liquor traffic
A"ru 'la approximately UO years
oi legullzed existence in America.
Ho Insisted that "Uncle Sum haa
gone out of the liquor truffle for-
luver" a,ltl tl,at tl10 prosperity of
thB i8t 10 yenrB waa (luo a,mos,
entirely to proliibitlon.
"We've hud 1(1 years of prohi
bition, mostly under the wets," he
said. "Prohibition has given us the
greatest clcun-tip in Amerlcun iwjII
tlcs of any single movement in the
history of on rcountry. it was In
tended to onnlhllute the licekiso
syHtem, and baa- ended the sys-
tern
E
U. S. OF INTENT
Sir Esme Will Forego Privi
lege of Importation Is
Word to Secretary Stim
son No Pressure By
United States.
WAHI 1 1 Nt iTON, June fi. A1) Sir
Ksiue Howard, the British ambas
sador, has Informed Hecretary
Hlimson of his contemplated ac
tion not to Import Into the United
Statics any more liquors under
diplomatic privlh-Kes.
The secretary of state said to
day he had advised tho ambas
sador that the American govern
ment had placed no pressure
whatever on the question of diplo
mats KivinK up the Importation of
intoxicating heveruges.
He mhinil hn hml ltifMrtiit.fi fltA
'ambassador thu mutter wiik one of
: (1l,n,,mtle Itnnuinlt v ft nrl i.rlvlloirn
and 'that thu Amerlcnn govern
j ment lid not desire In any way to
narrow or Infringe the Importa
tion rights. While such a course
by the embassy would not be un
precedented, since several missions
are now known lo Import no liquor
whatever, or to use their Impor
tations solely for members of the
staff, the entire diplomatic corps
wus considerably stirred over the
repotted fiction of Hlr Ksme.
Chens Master Dies,
I'll At II K, Czechoslovakia, .Tune
6 (fl1) Ith hard lteti. noted Czech
oslovak hi n cites s master, died to
day from Hcurlet fever. lie was
40 years old. Itctl took part In
many international chesn tourna
ments. MI'TTK, Mont., June . (!)
Walter Morrison, -45. Hut to police-
iimti, facPH K first degree murder
U'harKe as a result of the death
! htre uls morning of William
iNniKhlass, 'j;t, of Phllndelphtfl.
from a bullet wound In the left
temple. What caused the uhout-
NVOY NOTIFIES
TO BAN LIQUOR
lug wus uot IvuiogU.
-
! riously 111
IBrrtrrmiiiii'
Diiseiu' I) N'clll
I.ON'hON', June 6. ((T) The l.on
don Hnily l-:xpri'KM today s:iid l-:u-j
gene O'Neill. Amerlciin pluywriKlit.
was seriously 111 with tilln'rculnsis ,
ill Switzerland, Illltt thiM-efore w:is I
tmtihlc to cotlH- ti i.nndon for thr
pretnli-ri' hint night nf his pluy
"Welded."
There were reports lust Decem
ber that Kugene O'Neill was suf
fering in Shanghai from a recur
rence of a lung ailment, but the
reports were denied by his lawyer
In New York.
At Shanghai It wus said his mal
ady was bronchitis and a nervous
breakdown, lit went from Shang
hai lit Manila to seek rest and se
clusion. E
Lava Flow Slackens Hope
Danger Over Villagers
Pray , for Deliverance
From Wrath of Mountain
Bar Sightseers.
NAPI.KS, Itnly, June C. (I)
Kxploslve activity in the eruptive
cone of Mount Vesuvius Increased
today wllh tremendous barrages of
rocks nnd ushes bombarding the
walls of the great crater. There
was a slight subsiding In the flow
of Inva. however.
An official bulletin from the Ve
suvius observatory Vuld further
danger probably would he avoided,
yet It concluded:
"Hut the life of volcanoes i no
mysterious that one cannot Judge
the outcome from the appearances
of the Tiumenl."
Villagers around the southern
nnd astern base of the volcano were
panic-stricken us they deserted
their homes. As they went they
prayed they might be delivered
from "the wrath of Vesuvius." and
sang hymns of trust and faith in
Providence.
The erstwhile Utile village of
Terizno appeared to bo hecominu
encircled with a belt of lavu from
a flow which first started toward
Cam It e n woods hut somehow
changed Its course and entered the
Village Itself.
The Inva oozed around the dwell
ings, smoke poured from windows,
and then the walls bulged like the
skin of a baked potato. ' As the
walls crumpled the house disap
peared In the river of fiery liquid
rock. Speed of ll'.; flow was as
serted by observers to be at times
as high as l.Tton feet an hour.
Because of the danger from fly
ing rocks authorities, as much as
possible, have prevented sightseers
from approaching the tnotintaln.
Guilty Conscience
Causes Leap From
2nd Story Window
H H H H
4
HT. PA CI- Minn., June 6.
(A) "Open the door," said
the detectives, "in the nnmo
or the law."
A woman's voice 'answered
this summons last night, say-
lug; "lust a minute until
I change my clothes."
The minute been inn ten,
nnd the detectives went In.
Che w o in a n, Mia. Kthel
Hrown. 211. had Jumped from
the two-Mtory window, and
wus severely Injured.
Tho detectives W(mler Why
she Jumped. She wasn't the T
one thev were look inn for.
Mr. and Mrs. II. Chundler Kgnn
returned yesterday by motor from
peldde Peach via the Itcdwood
highway. Mr. Kgnn, though un
able to enter the Callfornln gtlf
tourney heruuse of n sore back,
was an Interested spectator nnd
saw his old friend. Jack Neville,
win the title which "Chandler' hus
Ik 14 in Uiu yuaL
ROCK AND ASH
BARRAG
FROM
VESUVIUS
AS HEAD OF
Scion of French Nobility Is
Taken By Under-Cover
Agents Believed Euro
pean Agent of Interna
tional Rum Ring 37
Others Rounded Up in
New York Prohibition
Drive.
NHW VOItK, June ti. p) Count
le I'ollKnue. said to he of the
obi French nobility, wus acres Led
by undercover prohibition agents
today and charged with being the
uropean agent of an Interna
tional ium ring.
Seven coses of liquor were
seized In the count's suite at the
Savoy-PlaKU hotel.
Ths count's arrest occurred In a
general roundup of 37 men who
are charged with conspiracy to
violate the prohibition act in con
nection with the activities of the
alleged ring.
William J. Calhoun, chief in
charge of the 40 agents making
the roundup, said a pile of papers
relating to uctlvities of the ring
were found In Count De Polignac's
suite.
Another raid conducted on the
''headquarters" of the ring resulted
in the arrest of two other 'alleged
leaders, William Hortels and Philip
D. (lowen.
liartela and flowen occupied, of
fices ut 200 Fifth avenue under
the firm name of the . "Go-Bart
Co., Kxporters and Importers."
Two other men arrested In the. of
fices were Wtltium 13. Flynn and
George Heath. , .
LOS ANQEI.ES, Cal., June 6. '
(P) CltriiH fruits from the area
infested by the Mediterranean fly.
in norma nave oeen seized here
and ordered destroyed by Harold,
J. Ryan, county horticultural com
missioner, lie said today.
The seliures, the commissioner
said, have been confined to (his
oiange and grapefruit brought in
on dining cars and Pullmans of
transcontinental trains. While ex
amination of the fruit HAS NOT
REVBAI,ED ANY INFECTION
from the fruit fly, added precau
tion will be taken to keep eastern
Hhlimients out of California, Ryan
said.
To brlnu citrus fruit Into Cali
fornia Is In violation of quarantine
laws established In 1914, a meas
ure passed to protect the Indus.., y
in the slate aanlnst citrus canker,
a disease which totally destroys
tho trees. i
Rullroad officials have been
warned to advise all employes to
see that citrus fruits from other
stutcs are destroyed before the
trains cross the California border.
Tlnw FatallticM.
NKW OHLKANS, June 6. (IP)
Kutulitls In yettiprday's liollvr ex
plosion at the (lulf & Valley Cot
ton Oil company ut llretnu, reach
ed three toduy. Alex Lussen, 4S,
und Walter J. Horell, 24, died to
duy. Will Rogers Says:
KKVKRLY II ILLS, Cal.,
June (J, KiikIhihI electH a
liilmr (fovcnimi'iit. When a
inn n oe to the pUh over
hero ho has
no time to la
bor imtl any
mini that In
lllll'N llllH ll(l
time 10 fool
invny with
politics. Over
there polities' is an oulixa
tion, over here it's a busi
ness. Yours,
WILL ROCJKKK.
I. S. : .There is one tiling
about Lindbergh 'h escape
it's the only thiiin that hap
pened this NpriiiK that hasn't
been laid on the federal reserve.
BOOZE I'll!
NO FRUIT FLIES
IN CONFISCATED
FLORIDA CITRDS