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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 8, 1929)
PXOE SEVEN' Single Regent Board Controls All or State Higher Education LONGEST HON STOP! kses FIRST HORSE TO GRATER L. WATER MTDFOTiD MATL TRTTiTTSTR, rEDFORD, ORECiONT, MOXPAY, JULY 8, 1!)21. U 1 nniirronrn bUlTOdtUj WORLD'S RECORD ' r 'i i jk' '.. j t'll ATM M LAKK. Ore,. July fi. IIIUI1ULI1LH . . ' .. ;j . Common Law Husband I nrank Tnn Mllfth Detai SMielore. approached 011 land or in , I Pinal Franac Tnlrl Rv Wfl.i -Marmon-built Roosevelt, picked at nnai rracas ioiu oy vwu ininuum from ,he-assemly iine in mnn Dnrtw Tinrl in Dun ' man DOay llCa in DUM-i dle and Rolled Down stairs Taken to Country and Torch Applied. . TOULON. 111.. .7 u!y S. (P) Laura Weaver, a 21-year-oid woman of great size and strength, was held today lor the torch murder of her common-law husband, Wll mer T. Kitselman, Ii2. Six feet tall and welshing 230 pounds, the younn woman told of strangling Kitselman, wrapping his body in n quilt, rolllns It down stairs, loading it Into an automo liilo and driving Into the country where she dumped it hy the road side, poured naphtha over ii and touched n match. A brother identified the victim through a set of false teeth. After two hours' questioning, ttie Weaver woman detailed for county officers the story of her affair Willi Kitselman and lis ending. Her con fession lold of her growing disgust wilh Kilselman's habit nf drillk- "lie came to our room over the Ram I J ins house at Wyoming. 1H., Sunday morning (June SOI." the confession, as released by officers said. "He had been drinking. He grabbed n chair and tried to strike me with it. I got away from that. Then lie tore a mirror from the wall and brought it down on my head. It smashed into a thousand pieces and almost stunned me. "Finally I got him on the bed and sat watching him an hour. He got up, drank some more and fell back , l i?nn i h1in,,lflH . I.0lfLMf.be t,a"lJ.. 'f.?1 it tighter. Then 1 pulled ft around his neck until be got blue in the! ''"u lhe'',Llr,k.e'!1nt m o I were at church. I pulled the old patchwork quilt from under him and threw it over his head. It I seemed' a long time that lie coik tinned moving under the quilt. Kin ally lie was still. "I got some fish line and tied him up, bending him so his chin rested on his knees. I rolled him off the bed, and wrapped the quilt around him. like a bundle. Rolled Downstairs "I went down and drove the coupe up to the door. Then 1 went back. I didn't want to carry such a load down, bo i rolled it down the stairs. At the foot of the mull's I picked him up nnd put him in the back of the coupe." She told of driving out of town, of stopping to buy naphtha and of leaving the main road for a little frequented byway. Then she con tinued: "I took the bundle out and threw It beside the road in some weeds. 1 poured naphtha over It, threw the jar away and touched a match. It was blazing when I drove away." That was on Sunday. The next day the bundle was still smoulder ing when the farm boys found It. The Weaver woman returned to the room and sought to destroy all evidence. One of her efforts to divert suspicion, the sheriff paid, was a letter to lvltselman's bro ther, E. B. Kitselmnn, nf Peorin. in which she said that Kitselman was "on one of his periodical drunks." nnd that she ftas leaving -.to return to her home in Naper - ville. The ynining landlord irom whom I lie Weaver woman nnd Kit selman rented became suspicious at .the protracted absence of hta roomers. He hud heard of the find ing of a body near Annawan. HO miles away. He learned that fras- ments of nquilt had been found, and he Identified these as being from a quilt used Uy his roomers. He then wrote to K. H. Kitselman in t'poria of his suspicions. i n u s was started the investigation wntch ended with laura Weaver's arrest. The girl's father, Henry Weaver, Is a prosperous Fox valley farmer. I'ntil n short time ngo she had been living In Peoria with Kitsel man, their common-law relationship having extended over a period of about two years, her statement said. . 4 lioseburg. Several streets of ThN pi "iled. bleaches remove suinj Tho forces of : Nature overcame the Hutch of riian in Bensnttonal fiiBhioii ni tlio InillunupollH nioior ( siitjt-uway in uims 10 an tMm wit? longest non-stop eiinurance test ill the world's automotive history uu hours ana 40 miumes. This remarkable record, never ! the nir, was accomplished hy a I tae Marmon factory hy American Amomo,ile Association reprexen- tatives, and run under the olficia! observation of that body. The finish of the test, after IS days, S hours and 40 minutes of continuous running, came at the . zenith of one of the worst storms experienced in years in central In diana. A tiO-mile-an-hour gale, ac companied by a cloudburst , de scended with little warning on the speedway early In the evening of the nineteenth day of the tost and, after demolishing Marmon pit head quarters, tearing roofs from grand stands am; tilling the track with debris, brought an unwelcome end to the reconi-muking run. Not only did torrents of rain ob literate the vision of the driver and his riding companion, but the velocity of the wind was so great that the car was swung sideways on the south turn of the famous course and continuance of the run was made physically impossible. Shortly after the fury of the i storm subsided, Marinon officials and A. A. A. representatives visited the speedway, the scene of destruc tion, and agreed to bring the test to Its official conclusion. Not once in the 4 in hours and 4U ininuies did Die car or its en 'f. B!n J" A""? JS motion from a "mother" car and oil and water likewise were added on the run. Representatives of the A. A. A. stayed "on the spot" 24 hours each day. The last record to be broken by the Roosevelt was the sustained flight mark t of the airplane Fort Worth 172 hours, 32 minutes, made on June 19. When the run was completed, the airplane Fort Worth's record was exceeded by 268 hours, or more than 11 days. The previous auto- mile non-stop record, established during a coasMo-coast run in 1925, had been exceeded by 278 hours. The car used in the test was a every mechanical detail ,....1 equip. "iT V. " , " front and rear, and trunk rack. TRIP FOR X-RAY LONDON, July 8. (fl1) The tie pa rt 11 re of K i-n k O eo rgo for the royul summer home at Kandrlng hum, set for today, has been post poned. An official bulletin issued at llucklnghain palace said: "The king was not fatigued by the ceremony of thanksgiving ser vice. His majesty's general health is good. "The condition of the sinus in the right chest has not made sat isfactory progress. "In order to gain the assistance of a further x-ray examination, his majesty's departure for Sand ring ham has been postponed for a short period." SHELLEY FINDS FISH LAKE FISH CAUTIOUS I j Mr. , yy. n. Shelley nnd Kirs. Shelley's parents, Mr. land Mrg, i. j. liristow. of Oakland. Cal., Hpent Sunday at Fish lake. Mr. Shelley, who caught only two trout, says he would like to know if Fish lake makes liars out of fishermen or if only liars fish there. The rough lake yesterday was said to have made fishing poor, which ! niay account for Mr. Shelley's hard ; m-k. Keporu have it that many ; iOCtt anglers have had no trouble m catching the limit at Fish lake 1 1 1 e last few weeks. The ppfcentHgp of protein con tained In a commercial concen trate is a good measure of Its value, as most home grown feeds have nn excess of fat anil carbo hydrates and n shortage of pro tein. Co mm en -la I feeds of Infer ior quality usually contain a lurne percentage of .crude fiber, which is of littln feeding v;iue and tbere- fore n very costly ingredient in ' hieh prfeeri feed. 1 So easy with Clorox! Cleanses, de odorizes, disinfects all at otk Quick and sure. Follow directions on bottle. Just one of a hundred and more Clorox "Easy Housekeeping" ways. AT ALL GROCERS destroys odori kills germs ft Men now administering atfairs of Oregon's higher educational institu tions, who tool: office July 1. Top. from left. B. F. Irvine, C. L. Starr, and C. C.Colt, all of Portland. Center, Edward C Pease, The Dalles; Albert Burch, Medford; K. E. Callister, Albsny, Bottom, Herman Oliver, Canyon City; Aubrey Watzek, Portland, E. C. Samnions. Portland. Hacked by a large majority of the state legislature, a favorable decision of the supreme court, and evident support from the -public, Oregon's new plan for I lie adminitration of Mate supported higher education went into elTect .Inly I under the leadership of the board of education consisting of nine men appointed by Governor I. I- I'alterson. This board, with the assistance of a full time executive secretary, now has full chatge ot the affairs of Oregon State college at Corvaltis, the University of Orcyuu at Eugene, the Oregon Xorinal School at Mon mouth, the Southern Oregon Normal at .'iltiand, and the Eastern Orci'.on Norma! at l.aGramlc. The Imaid lias been empowered to conduct an impartial survey of all the institutions to determine their needs and most effective oigauiza ( irii. alter which it may allocate the total funds appropriated for higher education as it sees fit. I'or the first year there is to be no change in tlir pirsent tatio cA distribution. WINS REBEL FAME! . Uy C. I Nutter (Associated I'resH Staff Writer) MEXICO CITY i&t Knowing he must ierlsh. Gen. Enrinue Clor- oztleia, commander, of all the' 'Cristeros," or religious rebels, in the state of Jalisco and fiercest of the fighters who rallied to "Viva Crista Hey," chose his own manner of meeting death and went with u gesture that aroused admiration throughout Mexico, even among those who were not in sympathy with his cause. Tiie story of the death of (len eral tioroztleta, which dealt a se vere blow to the Irregular rebel lion, has just reuched Mexico City. Disheartened by the cuu- i stunt reverses his men had suffer ed In their engagements with the j augmented federal forces sent' against Jilm nfter suppression of, the Kscuhar revolt, Ooroztietaj gathered his leaders and a few men In the Hacienda Ibarra in Jalisco, preliminary to disbanding 1 them, , There was deceit In the camp, j however, and Guroztleta's head quarters were revealed before bin plans were consummated. He awoke the next morning to find the hacienda surrounded hy 2,000 federals. He was trapped behind the thick walls, with escape Im possible. Calling his men around him, rjoroztfetn told them to surren der inasmuch as they likely would escape the consequences of their acts because of their lesser rank, but that he realized he must pay with his life for his leadership and bloody campaign agnlnst the gov ern ment. After hearing mass, he ordered, his horse saddled and brought to the patio of the hacienda. There be mounted, a six-shooter In eith er hand. i The gates of the hnclenda were thrown open and the doomed lead er, once a trusted federal general and rated as among the finest ar tillery officers In Mexico raced forth, lying low gn the neck of his horse, with his 'revolvers blaz ing at the enemy. " ' lie mummed to get some SO yards outside the hacienda before n shaip-thooting federal soldier got the range nnd knocked him from t he saddle. He was dend when he dropped, hut he had die.i In n manner that had stirred the Mob k admiration of even his ene mlen, Cioroztb'ta's 4 0 nTf leers obedi ently surrendered and were used ns na e eminlwsiiri" by the fed eral nrmy. f Inrnztletn's body wiis embalmed ar.d ent to his family In Mexico City, wher it wis giv en a private burial In one of the city's oldest cemeteries. ATHENS 'Pi The first home, for dogn ever erected here has j been opened by the Society f"r the' 1 oteel tun to A nlllia 1. I 'render nize?- and bis wife took pri rt I In ihv dedication. L Sc.ippnnjitv Installation of new tifocon light at airport completed. ! M.JM& SOUND KNELL OF SEA DISASTERS liy A. B. McComli (Associated Press Staff Writer) PA HIS (A) "Such disasters at sea as the Titanic and Vestris horrors will he made impossible in the future," it was predicted in Paris by Cnpt. Charles Albert Mc Allister, president of. the American Hureau of Shipping, on his arriv al here after attending the Inter national Conference on Safety at Sea in Iondon. Cnpt. McAllister explained some hitherto unknown results of the! conference nnd asserted that al-! most every conceivable element of' danger at sea, for passengers on lareg ships, can be eliminated. I "When the treaty that the con-; Terence has drawn up ,has been put Into effect, it will be virtually Impossible for a trans-Atlantic liner to sink," he said. 'Tinier the new regulations, which will almost certainly bo adopted by the chief maritime powers, the hull of every ship will be divided into water-tight compartments In such a manner that, If any two compartments leak " or are caved In, the vessel will continue to float "Another Important reform is the new ' rule which creates an international standardized code for the helmsman's orders, Here tofore, the helmsman's orders have differed widely In various countries, nnd this has led to con fusion and often to serious acci dents In the case of vessels being ....Sps5.1I etaol Hhrd shrdlushrdl taken into gorelgs ports by for eign pilots." i'ntil the present, Capt. Mc Allister added, there has been no uniform, enforcaldo law which forced all ships to be adequately provided with lifeboats and life saving apparatus. "When the Titanic sank she was equipped with lifeboats suf ficient for only threc-quarte rs of her passengfrs," he continued. "Kvery ship must be equipped with not only sufficient neats in the lifeboat m for everybody nn board, but there must alf-o be a 25 per cent additional amount of fl:itfng material as rafts and lifebuoy. Further measures agreed to at the meeting were; Continued careful Iceberg pat rol of the flrand Hanks by the I. H. Cormt rjuard, the expense to be divided among signatory pow ers. Padio arparatu nn ail ships of more than l.nof) ton. Alarm detectors on all shins ft mnr than 5,500 tonw, which wTI enable the ship to pick up K S. citl and broadcast t he tilai rn, A recently discoverer) letler, owned by lymdoners, Indicates Chr'stopher Columbus' on IHego prob:- bly was the coiinl ry's first a ho! it ionlst. opposing enslavement f Indi.ins by tho conquistadors. Mvr'tle I'nint l'nerili1 Orv Hoods utore opened for biisinf" In Seaman building. (Special.) lion. Kay Lyman Wil- bur. the new secretary of th1 ! interior, and until his recent np J P'dritmiint liy President Hoover, president of the university at Stan ford, arrived at (.Vuter Lake wilh I his party of eight. Saturday after- I ih oii. .Secretary , Wilbur was I entertained by It. W. Price, man. acinic director of the Crater I.nke National l'ark company. I'pon , arrivliiK at the hnli;e alumt 3:30 p. m.. Hecretary Wilbur immediately, expressed a desire to sed t lie lake from a closer point than the rbn. . Dorses were sad dled und the secretary and four companions tile down the trail to thr lake. Secretary Wilbur hav ing the unusual honor of riding the first horse ever to reach the, water of Crater Lake. secretary Wilbur Is a devoted lover of nature and was so im pressed with the magnitude, the wierd beauty of the lake that he could only murmur "It is a most unusual, niost bonutirul lake." Just before, leaving Sunday afternoon Secretary Wilbur and party enjoyed a trip around the rim. Secretary Wilbur's visit here was very infnrinn I and us be im pressed himself, "a get -acquainted stein ion."- POOR, IS REPORT HERI.IX (P) Assertions that Willulm Hojienzollern, former. em peror of Oermany, is the richest individual of the nation, as made by several secret magazine writers here, are denied by the llohenzoi lern Family Administration In Merlin. Instead of topping the list nf rich men among citizens of the republic, the administration says that Its principal has a hard time floating loans with which to raise the ready cash needed for the up keep of his Vast landed estates. Furthermore, It asserts, these es tates are not the solo property of the former emperor, but belong Jointly to him and numerous rela tives. The Ifohcnznllcrn forests and cstatos are estimated to hp. worth only 27.301,859 marks (approxi mately $6,562 44ti) by their ad mlnistratnrs. This contrasts strongly with the figures of the writers, whose conclusions ran all the way from 42,000,000 marks to 200.000.0oo marks, equivalent, to from t10.OSO.OOa to 4K,000,000. And besides, the estate manage ment says, the settlement with the Prussian government was for 1 &, 000,000 marks (about $3.fi000,000) and not for the 210,000 000 marks that , have been bruited among the writers. .-'? While J.1.G00.000 Is n tidy bit of cash It has proved inadequate as a working fund for the landed estates. Economist . have said that the wooded poYtlons of the Hohenznllern possessions have In creased in value of late' years, but the administrators assert that from experience they know that farms and forests cannot be con sidered profitable Investments un der present day conditions in tier many. -.. Then to cap the irguroent ns to the difficult situation that con fronts the llohrnzollern purse. the management points out that the figures they give do not rep resent the proptrey nf one person or one household, but must be divided among K Hohenznllern hniihehuIdH aggregating 4'J per sons. LONDON IM'TLKItK VIKW OLD KILVKIl r.XHiniT LONDON, (A An English but ler's idea of a day off seems to he to attend an exlflbltlon of old sil ver. Hundreds of the stately servitors took advantage of a balf-ratf for butlers recently al the Oueen Char lot te'n ban exhibition at Sea ford houve. the town home of Lord How ard de Welden. They listened ln- tpntly to an expert who traced the romantic history of heavy poman ders nnd chains, of fanciful tazzas, and of Intricately traced porring ers. No flicker of a well-trained eye lash Indicated that the gentlemen of the pantry werp Impressed, The only comment was from one who. picking up a huge wine cistern, said: "My word, what a ld of cleaning that would take." IHlry Herd lteoi"dl T'NAHILLA, Neb. OTf A herd of eight dairy caws owned by V. K. Orton has an average produc tion record of more than- fi 00 pounds of buttPrfat pet cow per year. Ilemotp. New school building under eontructlon her Popular Powder of Beautiful Women lb mil le m who guard their com plexions ue M KLLf M1LO Face Powder only. Famous for purPy -lis colorlnif matter in approved hv i he Oovernment. The skin never looks pasty or flaky, It sprendn more nmothlv and producer n Youthful bloom. Made bv a new French proce. M EI.LO-f I LO Fare Powder -tays on longer. Jarmin A Woods iJrug Sluru. Announcing the appointment of SHELLY MOTORS :.() XWth Holly. Me.dl'onl. Ore. As dealers for the 'New Ma f won and Koosevet Straigjt-Egjtf The Marmon Motor Car Company is pleased to announce the appoint ment of this well known automobile establishment as headquarters for Marmon and Roosevelt straight eight cars in this section. These new sales and service facilities are Mar mon 's answer to the.growing local demand for America's most ad-' vanced development in automobiles . the straight-eight. M fi Time of picking is a vital factor in obtaining email ty in both fresh and canned cherries in Oregon, finds the experiment station In ex tensive research just completed on this crop. A test of maturity was devised ' which, If followed, insures better quality and larger tonnage. as a few days just before picking greatly influences tho weight of cherrrhs. This fruit does not ripen off the tree, hence the importance of having proper maturity nt pick. log time. Canker infection of npple trees usually follows severe hi to woolly aphis infestations, finds the Ore gon experiment station, although the degree of predisposition to canker Infection resulting from early or slight aphis attacks is not entirely known. In discussing the treatment of sheep and goats for stumnch worms and liver flukes, thi) Ore gon experiment' station warns growers that every remedy which will destroy theso . parasites Is more or Jess, poisonous, nnd ad vises against their Use without reasonable certainty that the worms are present. Cureful obser vation of the flock, with treat ment upon the first appearance of symptoms Is advised, us sheep and goats which are allowed to be come thin und weak art) unprofit able, even after the worms have been destroyed. Itutk handling of grain is now rapidly replacing the sack hand ling method In the northwest, re ports the Oregon experiment mu tton. The change from the old laborious sack handling method has been advocated for. the last 25 or 3o years, but It 1 only during the last five years that general progress has been made. Hood I liver. - Installation of new Cold Hprlligs water system and Wilson resurvolr on the 'Heights dedicated. A Farm Pointers The Attention of the Proprietor In given V'ViiryiniH wlm ruHu tio;i ntf, limn inaklnR miro that tli ioli ln nt thin lirgiuil rntlnn will lm pmin'rly piiHt-ntel to lh public, unci Hint our HPrvIni will iilwiiyn lie lll to I hO Hllllll! hlKli Mtlllulll It In mull points nn thin oik? that hitvo to Ulffprentlato ConKcr neivln from tin- ordi nary klml. CONGER FUNERAL SAyirnum in service, moilcstU) priced A visit to these showrooms will impress you with Marmon's as tounding achievement in building a straight-eight for every purse. Here you will see the sensational new Koosevelt which sells for less than Jiooo-the fleet Marmon "68" at $1465, and the luxurious Marmon "78" at ?iy6$. Prices at factory. Group equipment extra. Conven ient income-purchase plan. tZ)Carmon-eBuili Straight-Cights for Cvery Vurse M i. oosever CONNKCTKTT YOlTIf MAY M.VK V, OLYMPIC STO rms-Conn. fP)-Dnrr-Chittr-huck, Connecticut Aggie sopho more, will put his home town on the mhp at the next Olympics iiu less all signs fall. ("hubhuck, now ID. broke two eastern Intercollegiate and five of his own college records in his -first season of varsity competition. He . specializes In the shut put nnd discus nnd can do more than his share in the century, tho broad Jump und 220-yard low hurdles. Paul E. Pltgood, Aggie coach, (now Is working Chubbtick In the pole vault and high Jump In pre pare him for the Hi 20 Penn relays. Itltgnod banks on his protege to show himself worthy of Olympic team consideration at this meet. Sl.KI; 1111,1, A LA It MS M N T A A It KSI UK N TS OPHAT FALLS, Mont. (A) Sliding of a hill above tho Judith river, near Dan vers, in central Montana, caused about 75 ucreH of bench land to sink more than 20 feet. Large crevasses, like those seen In glaciers, were formed In the (in-Ill a m n reuoll nf the move. ment . Ceo I on ImIm believe Hie I movement Is not complete, and that If the hill continues toward tin. i'linr ii n,.i .!,,. w.l t,t,.u I... formed. j W b lie such si Ides a re tn ore or , loss common In the Itocky moun tains, few have, occurred In places so -accessible to inspection. A parly of geologists flew over the sinking hill and took pictures of the "cruet r" formed by tho slide. 1HMHM I S OF !!, !, WtS MAINTAIN OLD Tit F.I PlTTHIinitOII. Off A n elm tree, estimated by tree experts to be over 'la it years old, and cured for in luxurious style out of funds provided In a will, st;i ads hi the Andrew Itayne Memorial -park l,n Itellevue, a suburb. ' Jane Payne Tppcp, who died nearlv n decade ago. provided n PARLORS alwa largo fund In her will to perpetu ate the elm, the property of her I family, for . Knerati0ns. Every (year hundreds of dollars are paid I to tree surgeons to care for thft stately tree, 32 feet In circumfer- unce. unit in icei nig:i. Holes are dug yevjiy to allow the pouring of ferfiizer on the roots nnd the tree stands in a brick pit to allow It '"breathing space.' ; 4 , Krnnce Is building three hydro planes to compete tin the ScheldeV cup ruea this year. COMING WEDNESDAY, JULY 10 HUNT'S ' 0RATERIAN The Triumph of Musical Sensations 1 sjlfeli J CHAPEL i . '