Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 15, 1929, Image 1

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    The Weather
rut-oust Kulr tuululit ""J Tue.
(lay. Nut hiiii'Ii rluuiKO In temperature.
M
nn
EDFORD
Temperature
Highest yewlenbiy HQ
mum
I lament litis muriilii 17
Oallr Twitf-fourth Tcir.
MEDFORD, OKMIOX. MONDAY, JTLY 15, JiL'ii.
No. 111.
HOOVER SUMMONS FARM BOARD TO MEET JULY 15
m BODY RED troop:
MAIL
iTaJRIIWQ nTATH AMnl
AvIationTeeds 2hSemists. BUDDINGS FAILURE l.
: colupsepune mm:
(Copyright by King Feature WW II w 1 h-l 1 mm ill mm JT
Syndicate. Ino.) Cl& ' X'OS-'Sf
I'aiiH'liii ('arm ou Louise
Jlount batten was christened in
London, on Friday, with pomp.
The Prince of Wales, two royal
dukes, five prineesses, a niareh
ioness, a countess and H duchess
were all present.
The KiiiK of Spain and Kiiijj
Oeorse were the little girl's
joint grandfather.
She is related to Uritisli roy
alty through her father, who
changed his name from Batten
burg to Jtountbatten, to pla
cate British war prejudice. She
is related, also, to the Russian
royal family.
Her grandfather; old South
African Jewish diamond man
whose money gilded the Batten
burg title, was not there, or
mentioned, in society reports.
But he doubtless smiled, look
ing down from above, and said:
"If she's smart, she gets it
from me."
The California refueling
flight lasted 1240 hours, surpass
ing all records by 72 hours.
In !24(i hours, at the slow com
mercial flying rate of today, a
plane could fly around the
World time, len days and a
ipiarter. Jules Verne should
read that.
High finance is building up
great aviation companies, tak
ing more or less efficient units
in great numbers: - That is wise,
from the stock ticker point of
view, but means little to fly
ing. Mr. Sloan of (ieneral Motors.
.Mr. Mitchell of the National
City Bank. Lehman Brothers,
the new Curtis-Wright combi
nation and others will do more
for their companies in experi
mental mechanical and chemi
cal work than in buying com
panies built on old ideas.
-The concern Unit creates and
patents a really compact fuel of
super-energy, will leave compe
tition behind.
The Ccrmans, without any
$100,(100,000 companies, have
just built a lL'O-passcnger, 12
cnginc, three-deck metal air
plane for trans-Atlantic travel
that threatens to make our pas
senger carrying planes obso
lete. Mechanical engineers and
ohemisis will decide tho flying
competition.
Tin' New uun-t). Iiidianny tv
1.T that mimi SH.0M on the Kiwmii
iwrniw derby wvni nn' boiiKiit a
farm Instead o' mvln' hi- money.
Toiiy Mopis tint fl dandy liMikin'
dauuliler wlio'll stsm he twenty
two an' he hnlnt fpt n hamuiei
1'iiirk on her.
(Copyriiiht John K. DiUe Co )
I
(Continued nn Pace Eight.) '
r T ia ..P.lHllsl
i
i.
Montgomery, Ala., Struc
tures Trap Undetermined
Number When Walls Give
Way Deep Excavation
Near Structures May
Have Caused Catastrophe
Rescuers at Work.
MONTfSO.MKRY, Alii., July 15
(PI Two of the city'n oldest hlltd
nesH ImlliliiiKs collapsed today,
trappiiiK tin undetermined number
oC persons under tons of masonry
unit tiinlM-r.
An hour after the walls 'f the
three story structure which were
occupied by the I-tullock Shoe com
pany and Pizitz Department store
had collapsed, the bodies of two
unidentified negroes had been
brought out. Rescuers could plain
ly see two white women under the
mass- of wreckage, but could not
determine if they were alive.
City officials would not hazard
an opinion as to the cause of the
collapse pending a thorough inves
tigation. Adjoining the buildings
was a deep excavation being made
for a new structure anil into which
a portioh of the wreckage slid.
Several workmen were in the pit
and were believed to have been
trapped.
The l.ullock Shoe company em
ployed approximately, IT, persons.
Tho I'izitz store was believed to
have employed well over a hun
dred men and women.
10 TREICHLER
FORCITl HALL
Carkin Clears Up Contro
versy Upon Arrival Home
From Trip to Salem
Mayor Pipes Returns
From Visit in L. A.
Tho old fire depiirlment head
ijuaihTH in tli city hall building
were not leased to the Treicliler
Motors company, as was the report
around town last week which ho
excited some councilmen. and Citv
Attorney John ll.- Carkin bas not
planned to quit, that position until
late In the tall or possibly before
next Christmas, it whh learned to
day followiiiK tho arrival home of
Mr. and Mrs. Carkin yesterday from
their Salem trip.
Mayor A. W. Pipes, who reached
home by train this noon from a 10
days' business trip which took him
to the San Joa'iiu valley in Cali
fornia and jim Angeles, in which
city he visited several of the larg
est airports, was very much sur
prised to iearn of tho citv hall
building lease story, and when told
of Mr. Carkin's explanation said
that It was correct. '
The mayor had intended to come
home by airplane, hut found that he
could make better time by train, as
of Mr. Carkin's explanation and
i because of the rapidly increasinK
-nbinn hiiHinnsft it wms difficult to
obtain transportation without walt-
fiiE. there were so many reserva
tions ahead.
Carkin Surprised
MY. Carkin was also much sur
prised to learn that there had been
so much talk about the so-called
cily hall lease matter. He ex
plained it arose entirely through tt
misunderstanding of the situation,
and idle gossip, in the absence of
himself and the mayor'was entirely
responsible for the story.
He said that be and Mr. Treicli
ler had been friends of long stand
Inn before and after they had lo
cated In Med ford from North Ha
jkotn. and that Mr. Treichler had
roine to him and explained he was
out of the hulldlnc on North Holly
street which his paraRn had occu
pied for some time past, that he
had been unable to find a suitable
location yet, nnd unless he hail
quarters at once bin cars must be
parked on the streets.
Mr. Carkin thereupon railed up
the mayor and asked that if In
this emercency there wo-ihl be hiiv
objections tn Mr. Treichler o" ii
pylnt! the former fire department
quarters in the city hall until the
next council meeting (tomorrow
nlnhn'when the matter of rentim
the quart erst permanently, If Mr.
I Treichler desired, could bo taken
I up bv the council.
I The mayor could see no olijec
ItJon, as the quarters would only
NO LEASE GIVEN
(Continued on Taffe FijfM.)
Polish Pilot Meets End in;
Attempted Landing On .
Rocky Azores Field
Companion Is Injured
Machine Explodes
French Return to Homeland
After Vain Attempt.
HORTA, Azores, July 13! (&)
The first trans-Atlantic air rave
has ended In tragedy and failure,
with the pilot of the Polish craft
dead, its nnvigntgr injured and the
plane destroyed. The French plane.
its comnetor, averted destruction
cniy by turning tall and running
lefore a "wait of wind" into which
it tried in vain to head.
Major 1,11 dwik Idzlkowskl was
killed Saturday evening when he
attempted to bring his plane, the.
Marshal Pilsudski, to earth in a
i ocky field at Oraciosa island, 'ib
miles northeast of hero.
T-lls navigator, Major Casimir
K ubala, was injured. The plnne
crashed and exploded. It was pre- j
simied Kubala either fell or jump-
ed from the plant as it slid to '
earth in a wobbly, fateful descent,
and escaned thus the disastro'.rs
Mast which took Idzikuwskl's lif"!
and wrecked the plane.
The Krench plane, the Question ;
Mark, after battling headwinds for
hours and finding fuel going and
speed cut to :i third, turned back
at fi:lS p. m. Saturday (1:18 p. ?n.
K. S. T. ) and at ! :'7 a. m. ves
lerday (3:27 a. in. K. S. T.) landed
safely at YillaeouMay, France, a
few miles south of Versailles.
"Don't cheer, boys, we just misl
ed out, t hut's all!" itH pilot, Captain
Dieudonuc Costo. conqueror of the
Sruth Atlantic, told the few who
met him there. "Hut we will try
igain, when the chances are more
ii our favor."
.Captain Cosle's landing . enme
after 27 hours and fin minutes of
flying after the takeoff at Be Uour
;ot at daybreak Saturday, when he
f hivalrously allowed the slower
1 olish plane u 4fi-miuute handi
cap in the transoceanic race. At
t he time of turning back he had
flown to a locality northeast
i.r
the Azores about as near the Amor
Uan Atlantic, mi board as to Ku
rop. Winds Cut SihmmI.
The winds that blow from west
to east In mid-Atlantic cut hU
speed from 125 miles per hour lo
lens than no, and after trylnft vain
ly to Oy below them, and around
them, he and his navigator, Jac
ques r.ellnnte, turned their plane
around and headed back home.
Pending establishment of Indter
cf-mmuniciitions with remote (!ra
clo.sa island it was uncertain ex
actly what happened to Idzikowski
nnd Kubala and their plahe. But
from a galaxy of reporta it was
possible to piece together ono story
which was accepted Henerally. A
witness of the tragedy said the lip
Kniy plane swooped down over the
bland, making a few turns as if
yrcking a spot to como down. Na
tives, by gestures, designated the
t lid at If razflcira, and the plane
made for It.
Hut as tt came closer to enrth
tvr the field it wobbled into a
barrel roll, and a body was seen to
hurtle from it, apparently thrown
by the unexpected maneuver. In
n moment the piano touched the
ground and there was a blinding
i;ar-sp lilting explosion.
Kubala was picked up where he
bad fallen, suffering from painful
but not severe injuries. The body
of major Indi.kowski's body was
r xlricatcd from the debris. Na
tives buried Idklowki'a body at
3 p. m. yesterday. Kubala. In a
hospital, was bald to bo not badly
injured.
The plane burned after the two
aviators were removed. There was
Hi me question as to the tiino of
the ern;ii. but It appeared to have
i.appcned between 7:30 p. m. and
0:30 p. tn. loci! time (8:30 and
K. S. T.J. Thus they spent
no met him; N-ms than IS hours In
(be air.
The Polish training shop Ikra.
in the harbor, Immediately left fur
Craciosu.
PAIilS, July lit. (Pi, There pro
bnbly whs not a more dowm,Hst
man in all Trance today thHn
Hieudonne Cnsie. one f the furc
most distance filers in Kurope.
and onep conqueror of the south
At Inn tie, who Saturday failed in
no attempt to eioss from Paris to
New York.
He freeh- admitted today after
his experience, the undertaking
w.is In ompuraldy harder than he
iniauiu' d. " had bern Inform
ed," be sold, "that the w eat her ,
ovfi- the Aliunde whs fine. Ho It I
wii., for sailors, perhaps, lut not
fur airmen." j
Captain Coste was convinced the '
flight might be made, and lie nit
era ted he I n t end rd t o t ry a gain,
but not until he hold "some of the
triumps." V'eather condl t 1 o n s
ICnntlnuPrt pn page Eight)
JXf&J.-Wrr' i mk' Mil tZ
i:lf i Ff$tJ Wh '&iW
23&mWmi A"hvPF Ml C.B.DENMAN- i
President Hoover has summoned members of the new federal farm board to meet in Washington
July 15. The board will be organized under the chairmanship of Alexander i-l. Legge. James C. Stone
will be vice chairman. Wheat la likely to be the first commodity which the board will attempt to
stabilize through employment of the 5150,000.000. made available out of Its SEOO.000,000 revolving fund.
FARMERS URGE
TARIFF POWERS
Establishment of Non-Partisan
Tariff Commission
to Act As Agent of Con
gress Is Suggestion By
Farm Bureau.
WASHINGTON. July I 5. (IV)
"Withdrawal of the power Kr.cn
the president tinder the flexible
lause of the tariff art to change
import duties and establishment of
a non-partisan tariff commission
to act as the agent of congress was
advocated today by the American
Farm Hureau Federation.
Appearing before the senate fi
nance committee at the opening of
hearings on the administrative
provisions of Hie house tariff bill,
Chester 1 1. Cray, legislative repre
sent at ive of the federation, said
bis organization favored setting up
the tariff commission as a rate
making body similar to the inter
state commerce co m m I ss 1 on 1 n
stead of a fuct-finding body alone,
with Its decisions subject to review
or repeal by congress.
Tho bouse bill liberalizes tho
flexible provisions by allowing the
tariff commission to take into con
sideration conditions of competi
tion instead- of cost of production
in determining recommendations
to the president as to rate changes
and roialns the authority of (tie
president to raise, or lower duties
as much as Go per cent.
(!ray endorsed the bill provision
substituting competitive differ
ences for prod uclton costs In
studying rates, hut said the 50 per
cent limitation should be eliminat
ed and the commission authorized
to remove articles from and add lo
the free list.
Levying of rates against Philip
pine and Porto Kico imports and
U-rmlnatlon of the Cuban-American
preferential tariff agreement
was urged by the witness.
C. M. SPECK I
:T
Chni b a M. Spnrk passed away;
at his a p a rlnicnt in the Hotel
Medford Sunday. July I 1th
after a month's Illness from incur
able heart disease, aged fill years,
two months, 1 days. Heeeaned is
survived by his wife. Klva It.
Speck, two brolhers and one dsler.
l-iinernl services will be held at
the perl Funeral
at a :io p. m Ite'
Home. Tueda
uaymonu
officlailntr. Interment in Medford
cemctei y.
orer lo t'nlavtful
SAX litAM ISl.'O, l'a.. July l.'i,
t.Vi .Motoi lstM Whu e.errd a .ipeed
af -Hi mller hii hour on the blgli
wa y s a re l n-a king the la w. re -Kardk-ss
of bow well they have
their cars under control In the
pinion (f States Attorney General
1". iS. Webb,
CUT EXECUTIVES SURVIVOR WHENiAS DEDICATION
IS ILL A MONTH 10
t i ill
FATHER IS ONLY
E
FLOOD HITS CAR
Seven of Beckman Family
Drown in Missouri Flood
Cloudburst Sweeps Car'
Into - Creek - Torrent
, Lightning Kills One.
ilOSKLl.K. -Mo., Joly 15. W)--
Mrs. Marie Beckman,.; R, her four
children, ancs 1.1 months to seven
year.-, her mo' her audi her brother
,., d coed , I.i.,ok c cek..
burst overturned an automobile
and swept them to their deaths.
An eighth person was a victim
of the storm at DeKoto, Mo., Iti
miles from here, when he was
si ruck by lightning white playing
ball.
The dead:
Mrs. Marie Beckman, HX. of Wal
nut Park, St. Louis county.
Mrs. Mary Tigges, 51,, mother of
Mrs. Beckman.
Lawrence Tigges, j ii
Mrs. Beckman.
Virgil Beckman, 7.
Marie Beckman, Ii.
Irene BecUmau, -.
liernice Becknwui. 1
brother of
mmit hv.
Chiieneo Stahl. l.'i, or DeSolo.
Willtam K. Beckman, husband
nnd father, was the only survivor
of the family outing yentenlay, ami
he owed his life to the fact that
be had gone for assistance to net
the automobile started when the
swirling torrent poured down on
the hapless group.
TliKAM A 1 1, Neb., July 1 fi. ll'j
One man was detid today and an
other was suffering from injuries
as the result of a cloudburst which
unshed out 1 00 feet of railroad
trark near here.
Carl llenkle. Sioux City, la..
bnikemaii, was drowned after thejp.y and
locomotive ami tenner or a .viinne
a polls and Omaha freight train
left the tracks ami was wrecked
four miles went of Tekamah yes
terday. ItOSKMi nC, Ore., July fp
'naiitmoiiH aimroval was kIviii
the program nroscntod bv Cbaiies
; iorkwootl jf Koseburg, state presl
cent of tho Oregon Sinrtsmen's
association, at tho meeting held
hero today by representatives of
practically all sportsmen' clubs of
Oregon,
Under this plan the state dues
are Increase'1 fr tm il to i:t n vear.
thus giving ample finances for car
rylns on a much lancer work bv
the state organization.
Members will abo be given hu'j
scrlpllons to the stale numaine
a rcault of the increasefl dues.
A. II. ('. Hum Stall. in.
HKATTI.H, Wimli., .Inly 13. ll'l
Pup'liHw of KI'llK. HHcrmnento,
Cal., and MT, Waterloo. Iowa,
j was announced by Adolph Bind' n.
, president of the American Biyttd-
V!wtJng company.
I ' '
DISEASE'! O SPORTSMEN .
AaaocUitcd Toss l-hott
OCTOBER 2 SET
DATE FOR PORT
PnmmiHaoo a Ctort W nrl
V W I.W WIUI I MWIIi
f r.ii p.i.l(:.
.u. u.clcai u"',bll,,,o ,l;e fa,m;r ae;ua0p.
.. -X n:i.. ll -l 1
in nisiury 01 iiiy pjoieu
..Fliers and Factory Heads
Coming.
At a nieoliiiK of the iliflci out air
porj commltlooK tuday noon at tho
Hotel Medlonl a deflnlto dnte for
tho dedication of the new airport
whh set for ediu;sday, October 2,
Hffreia fomniltlees will
?"'My.. HU"'t ,rk . l"
of the outstanding events on tho
coast thia year.
Noted filers, manufacturcm of
airplanes all over the United
Stales, renresnntiitivno rr ti.
i Prnmpll. hirrm.it ... wui,i
San I-YanclKco and other titlea in
charge of aeronautics, memborH of
the (iugsenhelm Fund for tho Pro
motion of Aeronautics, senators and
other puhliu officials will bo In
vited. Air races from Snn Francisco
and Portland will probably ho ar
ranged for, also aorial Htuula of all
kinds.
Tho committees today authorized
the purchaso ol' a, discarded air
plane to be used as a float from
Medford In llio "Sunset Trail" enln-
brallou at Kugenc, July 25 26 nnd
lo advertise this city an thn!vM H r,,n nt
Air Center" of Oregon and Ihi
dedication of tho class A airport.
Baseball Scores
Aincitcjiiw
First game:
Philadelphia
Cleveland
it.
.. 6
.. H
11.
7
15
Batteries: I'Jhmke, Yerkes and
Perkins, Cochrane; Fcrrell, Hart-
Sewell.
It. If. B.
Wiisblngtoii &
'hicaKo 4 7 11
Batteries; Murberry, Llska and
Tate; WalKh and Here
ft
New York 7
Detroit
ii.
n
10
Kheired, Helmach add Ulckcy;
Carroll ami Phllls.
Nut ioniil.
l-"lrl Ktnne:
I'lliciIKO
I'hlliidilidila
K.
11.
10
.... a 12
... 6 IS
llalt'Tlea: ljtuti
licnre. Mcfiraw anil
Hecond ftame;
rhicauo ,
I'lillinlrii.lila
and Taylor;
jcraln, iJitviM.
It. II. K
.... 7 S 0
.... II 1 I 1
Ilutlerlen: II 1 1 k , Hwi'lonlc,
N'chr and Taylor; Hoy, (.'olllnH,
l-;lliott., Mrdraw and LiavlH.
Jt. 11. K.
HI. Louis 2 7 1
Kew York 7 l.'i 0
l:atlcrlen: Kherilcl and Wiltion;
Sciit nnd tl'l'iirn ll.
Ii. II. K.
r I ii' In 1 1 '.' 4 o
llr.M.klyn 4 N ll
Vnlterli'ti: Kolp. Klirliiinll mid
limi' Ii, Hlikefoi th; Chirk and I'lcl.
nleh.
it. if. i:.
i I'ltlelnirn
5 ; i
Boston I I
(11 inning)
' Batteries: Mc.no and II
$ raven; Urandt an-i fpohrer,
L
BY H00VERT0 BORDER
Get Facts and Find Solution
of Problems Is Presi -
dent's Word to New
Board Hopes Farmers
Realize No Hope in Wave
of Magic Wand Or Over
night Action.
WASHINGTON, July If,. (,!)--President
Hoover In iuIcIi'phhIiik
hia newly Ol-Knulzed farm lumril
today declared "your fundamental "''11 railway, loday said In a teln
lnirpoxe mutit be to determine tho Kram thai JapaneHe tiavelera ai
faeta. nnd to find solution lo a Hvlnir from rtllirria roporteil
multitude of HKricultural prob- moveinenta of red troop" in trains
lenis, amonff them to more nearly under way from Karlmsknya June
adjust production to needs." tlon eastward to Cliltu and Alan
Outlining the acope of the fnnn chuli.
problem, the president said lit- :r , ,.
real'jecl nn.l h h.,.,.i n, , TOkAO. July l.i. (T) Harbin
era realized that "nil this cannot
lie accomplished by a magic, wand'
or nn overnlKlit action
"1 have no extended statement
to make to the re, ,.i r ,
as to Its dutie s. The wide author
ity and the splendid resources
placed at your disposal are well
known.
"I am deeply Impressed v.-lth
the responsibilities which lie be
fore you. Your fundamental pur
pose must be lo determine l'io
facts ami to find solution to .1
Iiilillittidn lif itiri-lfiilf i.f.i.i. n.u
anions then, to more ,B,ly edjusi
or,io,.ti, ... -
pormnnent business institutions for
marketliiK: which, uwned and con
trolled by the funners sl 'ill Ik so
wisely devised and aoundlv founil-
1 eil nnd well mailllKed that they, by
etteclliiK economlcH nnd glvlnu
1 H i 1. 1 n. .. ,
u.
istrenRtn over the years to eome.
Thrnu.k ,.tr o
I Uortunltv in one eennnml.. v.t.m
,..,, ., . ,...,: . -
No Magic Wand.
i'J know there Is not a thinking
m.iori- wno uoph not rcaiio mat i Huwila'ii ultimatum to Uhlnu was
all this can not bo accompllnlipd r6ttrd8( harB titllnly fli
l.v a niaKlc wand or an overnight dangcrlnK the peace of fho fur ca-t
uctl.ui. Keal I M hi It u t Ioiik urn not Bnd WM ylnwrd wltli cotiMidcralilo
hullt that way. If we aro to mio- j anxlety. although presi comment
feed it will ho by strengthening ' WIM nnt general. Two or tiucn
tho foundations and tho Inlllivtive.:,,,,,,,, hid botn l:nimi r.nd
Which we nlrenilv have In farm . .....
! organiauions. and building stead-
; I y upon I hem wl, h I he constant
year ami me next decade.
"In selecting this board I have t0 bo fuU of HiniMtrr possibilities.
sought for suggestions from tho '
many scores of farmers' co-opern- I MOSCOW, July IB. P)r The
tlvo and other organizations and Chinese government, presumably,
yours were the names most mil- has today and tomorrow to comply
versally commended; you aro thus with Husslan demands for settle
In a sense the representatives of ment within three days of the erl
oi L-nnized agriculture Itself. I , hIh presented by Chinese seizure
congratulate each of you upon thn of tho Cnineso eastern railway,
distinction of his eollcagucu and , if then th demands are not
by your appointment I Invest you met, an ultimatum delivered to
with resions'hlllty. authority nnd the Chlnesn charge d'affaires Snt
resources such as have never be- unlay night said, the soviet union
fore been conferred by our gov-j vvlll be compelled to resort "to
eminent In assistance to any In- other men its in defenso of the V.
dtndry." I S. S. H.'s legal rights."
The eight of the nine members i After warning VHuely of retrl
of the board who have thus far butlve measures If China docs not
been chosen by tho president as-, acquiesce in Its torms, the ultl-
' """'bled in response to Mr.
Huo -
the While House
executive offb-e early today. After , withstanding "violent nnd prove
posing for pictures on the Whlto catlvo notions of the Chinese au
Housn grounds, the group returned thorltlos, Itussla once more ot
to the cabinet room whore Mr,
Hoove, . livered his charge to It.
4
LOST IN FLOES
OTTAWA. Out., July 15. tD
The filers of the plane i'ntln'
Bowler were marooned at Port
Burwell today, their aircraft lost
hi the Ice-fllled Hudson straits.
)off northern Quebec. The straits
0 j eonneet Hudson Bitv nnd the At
lantic oeenn.
Tho plane was loist Saturday
night when a ga le broke up -the
Ico to which ll was moored and
drove. II out to sea. Nono of tho
crew wijm aboard. The accident
ended an attempt to fly from
Chicago to Berlin by way of Can
ada, (Irecnland and Iceland.
The pla ne, which was owned
by tho ChlcHgo Tribune, left Chi
cago July :t In an attempt to plot
A new commercial air route from
that elly to Berlin It was piloted
by llohert Cast and Parker O. Cra
loer, with Hubert Wood, avia
tion editor of the Chicago Tribune,
as a pansenger.
Pendleton (train Crop
PKMHiirroN. Hit,, .July IS.
(Pi Henry CoIIIhh, local miller ami
grain man, today estimated the
i929 Uinatllhi wheut crop ut
C.-jo,oon bit."hr!9,
UNI' BOWLER
AVIATORS SAFE
0 iEll
Travelers Report Soviet
I Forces On Wav to Man-
chuli Demonstration Is
Staged in Vladivostok
Against Chinese Con
sulateChinese Troops
Also Head to Frontier.
TOKYO, July ir,. (,!) Tho J;ip.
fincHO conHUI at Maiii'tuill, wi-st-rrn
ti'i'inlmi.H of the t'lilncsn cast-
""l)a,ch,,M 'o tho Japanese news
' "io mui repoiia
have been -received of a demon
"t.1'"tlon Vladivostok against the
i.nineso consulate there.
Tho Vladivostok popu!a;. In
eeiiMecl by ihft Chinese seizure of
the Chinese eastern railway, were
reported to have tairrouiuied the
Chlnexe consulate and ,to havo
hurled stones at it In addition to
rihoutlng Insults.
A Kenpo news aRCin-y dlspateh
from Harbin Bald the Chhieiio east
ern headquarters had announced
Huapcnslon of traffic across
border In the direction of Via
tho
border In the direction of Vladi
vostok. A pHssenn'T train leav
ing Harhln tfunday niKht wiw
stopped by Cblneso uuliurltles at
I'ogranlehmya.
A Itengo dtspatrh from Man
rhuli said large bodies of Chinese
troops wero moving toward the
Slber.un bord'r. Advices of Mos-
cow s ultimatum to Minklntt ann
r .c"u"ort tho m,nr .,.,:r
""l"K -
im officials.
U waa )-nld troops
were to be seen at every station.
LONDON. July lfi. 7P) Hovfet
both a,.,rcntly vlolnt-d tho r.ill-
WI1V ment. IwlW.Hy "f
,ni, ., thn ..it.M.Hon W1M a lmlued
'matum continued with an offer of
the olive bramii, ssylmr Ibat not-
preHWH ItH willlnKneMH to enter ne
BOtlHllanK with t'lllna rvKiirillna
all dticstlons connected with ih
C'hlncHC ejmtem railway."
Tho ultimatum then wild nego
tiation!! would lie iiobmIIiIo only In
tho event of Immediate, rcleiimi of
urrcMted cillzcnii of the novlet re
puhlleH, nnd cancelllition of "all
HIcrhI orderii by tho Chlnoso uu
thorltles." Whoolrr Mountain States Pow
or company established office here.
Will Rogers Says:
SANTA ' MOXJCA, Cal..
July 15. Tluit wns nii:e
hIhhiI iiili(iliuu Siiieillcy
Hutlov. Iff has Sri-veil ill
Culm , I'Vam-f, l'liilailclplii.i
nnd ( Ii t ii a.
Tho only war
In: had tnissr
cil is C Ii i
fll'M). Hi- hasl
mm- in o r t
medals than
any Ameri
can uiitjilde of -1111111 I ninp
Snusa.
Kusiiiu and t'liina aie nr
riniitiif I In- dclnils I'm- a war.
Ari'iirtliliK to I he coiniuiinisl.
all arc equal, sn they will all
be Kflicrals. Yourx,
WILL HOGKKS.
IMf.'