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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 2, 1929)
M The Weather Forecast Fair tonight ami Sun. clay. .Not much change in tem perature. EDFORD MAIL TRIB'xNE Temperature UilK'st ywtordny "I liimt'St this moriitiitf '.V.i Dally Twenty-fourth Year. Weekly h'ifty-ilnhlh Year. MEDFOliD, OTiKOON, SATURDAY. N0VKM15KU 2, 1929. X. 2:24. Today YALE WINS By Arthur Brisbane 1 P 1 1 01110111 Big Steel On the Pacific. Good News, Generally. enator Nye, in a Hurry. Bigger Than Finance. (Copyright by King Features Syndicate, inc.) Ony three hours of troding on (lie stock exchange Thurs day. Opening lit noon, closing nt .'I, no more buying or selling until Hominy. ' Mimy rushed to buy ns (hough (hern would never be nnolher eliiince. There will be oilier ehnnees. Prices went up, then went down a little, not lis fur down as they hud gone up. liig news wns the announce )iieu( by the United States Steel Corporation (hat i( bad pur eliased (he Columbia Steel Cor poration, biggest organization on (hi! Pacific Coast. It is important news for (lie steel industry, and particularly important for California, and all the Pacific Coast States, when (he biggest steel concern in the world, hitherto confined to Chicago, Pittsburgh, (lary, and Birmingham, Ala., reaches into the great west, moving from the Atlantic to the Pa cific. M The purchase of the Colum bia company, with annual ca pacity of 340,000 gross tons of steel ingots, shows (he wisdom of modern industry. Under antiquated methods Big Steel would have moved to Pacific to fight " Columbia Steel and "try to put it out of business." Instead the pow er and intelligence of the big steel company, directed by Chairman Myron C. Taylor and President Farrell, will be con centrated on making steel, not devoted to lighting somebody else or paying doubly for a double overhead. M Mines in Utah will supply ore for the United States Steel Pa cific Coast plants for the pres ent. Later hydro-elect ric power from the Columbia river may take the place of coal, if the steel experts develop, as they hope to do, slecl production by electricity, which will mean a saving heat, and production of pirc steel of a quality hitherto never made in quantities of the "pure iron'' of the Da mascus blade. 4 News Thursday wns good news, generally speaking. l!ro kers' loans diminished iJ1,0!l(i, 000,0110, which means that spec ulators found that amount of money to reduce borrowings on mai'L'iu. Continued on Vakp Four) PitMPKi "An' as nxiiul Hut not B IioIIck ling In lglit." mll Mir Him p. wIkmj lflntln' limv he w" Vngmil mi" mhlml lu4 night. An Slltcr rK-no T llldn' ml t" linvc wii nnjrln' nil entirely new lllo of Lincoln over' iminlfi w o. DARMOUIH Intercepted Pass and 75 Yard Run By Ellis Gains Final Touchdown for Yale Gators Bow to Harvard 14 to 0 Fumbles Costly Princeton Defeated By! Chicago. YAI.K HOWL, NEW, HAVEN. Conn., Nov. 2. WPI In a name or thrills mil furnished exclusively by Albie liooth and Al Mar.steis. as had been fort-cast, Yale de feated Dartmouth today. Hi to 12, tho winning touchdown comins late In tho game when Hoot Ki lls, one of the fastest men on Hie field, intercepted a l):i rlniimtn pass and ran 75 yards for the last touchdown of the (tame. Hooth was away to a great running start, hut was stopped later. Mnrsters never did Bet away, hut he passed the green to one touchdown and scored the other. lliuviii'ri, 14; Florida, 0. CAM Mil UGR, AI(ia.. Nov. 2. (A1) The invading Florida football team apparently sufforins from stiulium fright, bowed to Hurvarrt, H to 0 here today before 35,000 Hpertators. The 'Gators fumbled at every vital moment. Harper and Mays ripped the southern line to shreds for Harvard's first touch down in the second period and Wood completed n 25-yard pass to Harding in the last minute or play for the other tally. ( hiratfo, 15; HrliMt'ton. 7. PALM Hit STADIUM. PI1INCK- TON, N. J Nov. 2. (-'H) A sturdy Chicago eleven with occasional flashes of brilliance, trounced a finunofntfi Prliirton team.-lEi to 7 today in the resumption of a fa mous intersectional rivalry. van Nice threw one pass for Chicago's first touchdown and ran 80 yards for the second score nfter the mid-westerners scored on n safety in the second period. WUtmer passed to Lea for Princeton's lone touchdown. Pcnn, 7; Navy, 2. FRANKLIN FIKLD. PHI LA DKLPHIA. Penn... Nov. 2. (JP)- With Walt Masters. Kin-pound halfback, showing the way, Penn defeated the Navy. to 2. before a capacity crowd of 75,000 on Franklin field today. Pcnn counted on Wilner's 30 yard dash to the goal following a long pass from Masters In the second period. Masters then place kicked RiirJ. Navy scored a safety lale in the same quarter when Gette's punt was . blocked back of the goal line and re covered by a Penn backfield man. FIRST 9 HOLES PORTLAND, Ore, Nov. 2. (P) Hurry Cooper of lluflalo. N. Y whose ernitle pliiylnK in one of t lie I.os Anneles 1 1 0,000 opens brouKht him (he aobrUpiet of "l.islit lloiae I lurry." but whose ttmne siiu e has stendleil down to neenrate Irons, smashed his way into a tie for sec ond place with Walter Hafien, De troit star, today In the OreRon open roK championship by round ItiR tlie turn 'of nine holes in a 31, Iwo under par. Cooper, playlnR with llorlon Smith, .loplin. Mo., sensation, who lends the 51 surviving players with a four-stroke lead, and liiullc Wll helin, Portland hope, stepped off the nine boles Willi tremendoirs drives and perfect pitches lo Hie Kreen. Smith rounded Hie turn with S", three over his competitor. Ilaccn. who last niRht at the completion of the :!! holes was third, climbed Into n lie with Cooper lifter shooting 35, one un der par. Mortle Dutm of Tacoma, with 140 yesterday, trailed second to Smith's VU, dropped two strokes behind today with n 37, making him 177 forhe 45 holes. Tommy Armour of Detroit wns fifth today on the turn with n 3il. Other nine-hole scores are: Olln Dutra, Ixis AiiReles, ,17; Kd Dud icy, Delawnre, 37: Craig Wood, New Jersey, 37; Hlllle llurke, New York. 3S, and Nell Christian, Portland. 3!. The 12 lowest professionals will be In the money at the end of the flna'.s today. Sifiith, favored from I the first day of the open as the I winner, remained tho favorite of the gallery to walk nwny with the IU'imi first prize. HARRY COOPER AND Al TIED TWO MEN, GIRL KILLED IN AIRPLANE PLUNGE ' All tif'fl ',."0 'WO Ctiyih Rogc, ?.2, (right) co-pilot; Cnpt. FrnnSi O. Mercer, (left) p;otor:.p!.cr, and Pilot William O: Clark loot their lives in an aerial accident near Cotisge Grove, Ore. . lilriiBpcoffl GET LIFE TERMiMEETING PLiSOE STATE HAVE FOR SLAUGHTER ARE COMPLETEDiHUGE INCREASE i t Jeff Harris, Oklahoma Prohij Raider, Convicted. of First Degree Manslaughter for Killing Farmer Faces Second Charge, CHANDLER. Okla., Nov. 2. (P) Jeff D. Harris, deputized prohl- j lilt ion enforcement oi ftcer, was convicted of first degree man slaughter by a jury in district court here today for the killing of Oscar Lowery, Pottawatomie county farmer, in ah Indepen dence day, liquor . raid. Punish ment was left to Ihef court. .ludgc Hal .Johnston, "who pre sided over the trial, set November J 2 for sentence. Harris was charged with mur der In connection with Lowery's death. He also faces a murder charge in connection with tiu slaying of .lames ( Harris, Low ery's brother-in-law, on whoso farm the shootings occurred. Jeff Harris was one of four men headed by W. W. ThomaBon, fed eral prohibition enforcement offi cer, who participated In the raid. Harris and Tom Little nnd John j Williams, other raiders, were spec ially deputized by .Thomason to assist him. No liquor was found. Harris, who is ((5, can be sen tenced to from four to Iii) years in the state penitentiary on the manslaughter charge. NOMK, Alaska, Nov. 2. (A) Pi lots Hen Kleliion and Frank Dor bniidt, who took off from North Cape, Siberia, Thursday in two Alaska Airways company planes witli six passengers and 1000 pounds of fnis, expecting to reach here the same day, had not ar rived at a late hour yesterday. it was believed here that the planes had probably encountered heavy snow storms near llering Straits and had landed on the Si berian const somewhere in 1 ho vi cinity of Kust Cape, which is oppo site Prince of Wales island. Football Scores I'liM (Juarler. Oregon. 1. . L. A.t 0, V. S. I'., H; it. S. l, 0. Fh-t Half. ( altrorniii, J 5 ; , I . H, C. 0. Mcdloid, 7 Kiigcnc, 21, 1 inu In, Penn State, (i; Syracuse, 4. Washington and Jefferson, 20: Lnfaytite, o. Ohio y., J4: .Miami, 0. Georgetown, II; N. T. C 0. Wlttenbers, 13; Cincinnati, 7. Cornell, 12; Columbia; . Villa Nova. 1 7 ; Oglethorpe, 7. Lmgers. l!i; Crsiniu. 13. Army, 23: South Dakota, fl. Ohio Wewleyan. 41; DenWon, 0.1 Exeter, 2fi; Hebron, 12. i Tufts. 14; Poxton ' 0. Amheisi, 13; 7,1 ii km. Aggies, 0. Juniata. 12: Kus'iuehanna, 0. Colgate, t!0; Hampden Sydney, 0. Connecticut Aggieir, 34; Ver mopt, 0. I lutes. 2fl; Ilowdoln, 0. Hrowil, 15; Holy Cross, 14. Manpiette. 6; I'nivfrsity of De troit, 6 (tie). Carnegie Tech, 1!; Washington t, 0. Allegheny. 0; Thiel 0. Notre lame, 2d; Georgia Trh . Garden Clubs Western Ore-1 gon Also Coming All Sessions in Elks Temple California Pear Grow ers Board to Attend. General plans for the fiftieth annual meeting of the Oregon State Horticultural association, In this city November 13, 14 and Hi, were completed yesterday after noon. Jn conjunction with tho horti cultural meeting, the Garden clubs of Western Oregon, recently grant ed affiliation, will convene - No vember 1. All the sessions will be held In the Elks' temple. Invitations have been extended to all the pear growing districts of tho Pacific coast lo send u delegation of growers to the meet ing, lor consideration of tho prac ticality of an all -coast organiza tion for the conducting of an ad vertising campaign to Increase con sumption of pears. V The sessions of these delegates will be held evenings of the three i days' meeting. The 1 J lortlcultural association sessions will lie held mornings and afternoons, and will be ed voted exclusively lo discussion of the problems anil prospects of the pear industry from all angles. lie ports of extensive researches conducted by the University of California and the Oregon Stal-j college will be made. California iih Coming, Frank Swett, president of tho California Pear Growers associa tion, and its entire board of di rectors will attend the conven tion. The forum for consideration of the all-coast advertising project, i ...in t.. .... ...I.,.. ciit hp i iii iinJ work of the local winter pear committee, now securing excel lent results in the opening of the Detroit market. , H. Van Hoevenbcrg, president of tho State Horticultural society, David Itosenberg, chairman of the progt am committee, and l'onar I 1!. Carpenter, conferred all yes terday afternoon with Prof. Clay ton Long of the Oregon Stale cot- lego on the plans, and expect to have a complete program, with aj list of distinguished and practical) fruit men of the Pacific Coast as speakers. I It is expected that between 2 l and 300 growern from outside district.-! will be In attendance. The I rortlcultural association In this valley has a paid up membcr-:-hip of 2"0 members. The asso ciation has no interest or con nection save In the development of the pear Industry, along chtab llshed mid practical llns. Oregon Weather. Oregon: Fair tonight and Sun May, colder east portion tonight. Gentle easterly winds on the const. Fourteen-Year-Old Lad Slays Bear That Frightened Mother TOIIONTO, Out., Nov. 2.(R') Dad Face, wire-walking bear, Ih no more. He met his death while at tempting to eiicnpe via the over- hem! route, along telephone wired, nml he WBHii't electrocuted. He writ nhot. The utory of Jlad Face wan tcilil today by (leorgo Phillip, mipi'i Intetident of eaxtern flying opera tions for the provincial uir force, and Frank MclJougall, dlntrlrt fur eater, A H yearold lad named tiaileati, from the little hamlet of Algomu, won resKnslble for the audilen le mlxe. Itruln ntlempted to enter the llollenti home. Aim. Holleait J: Accumulation of Capital Is Nearly Three Million More Than Last Year 38 As sociations Operating Five Foreign. " SALEM, Ore., Nov. 2. (P) At the close of the fiscal year, June 30, the accumulated capital of do mestic savings and loan and build ing and loan associations doing business In Oregon showed an in crease of $2,KU0.004.31 over the previous year, , Hays the annual re port of State Corporation Com missioner Mark D. McCallister. The total was ?26,78i,704.31, with 3S associations actively operating. Five foreign nttsociii ions were active, with an accumulated capital of JfiK, 887, 304.1 1, Net receipts of the corporation department for the year totaled $'IG0.3(2.&0, an increase of $22, 737.41 over the previous year. The net cost of operating the depart ment was $3(1,6411.21, or $3,430.70 more- t ban tho year before. The report says this Is a normal in crease due to the increased vol ume of business. Coder the blue sky act. 332 per mits authorizing sale of stocks, bonds and other securities were issued to dealers during the year. 4 4 a permits were cancelled and 16 applications for permits denied, and 4!) 1 were outstanding at the end of the year. Thlriy-slx brok ers' permits were issued and 1 7 were cancelled, and at the end of the year 1 1 (J were outstanding, of which 17 were brokers dealing in interim certificates. The law re quires that the latter must be ex amined annually. Several illegiti mate operators were convicted. CHINESE RETREAT TOKYO, Japan, Nov. 2. fP A telegram from Harbin, Manchuria, today said there liad been severe fighting between Chinese and Ho viet Russian troops at Kucliinsien, ami that tho Chinese had retired i;n miles In Dig direction of llua cluian. Further reports indicate there has been a revival of noviet ac tivity on tho northern und eastern Maiichurian front. Chinese houicoh report that soviet troops attacked Tnnglitir! last week but wro re pelled. PORTLAND -Klta Coleman and Marjorin Stuhhs, waitresses, were sentenced to 30 days In Jail nfter they hud been adjudged guilty of horsewhipping Mrs. Lenora .lack here several monlhs ago. Hcreamed and Had Face legged It rlulit merrily for a telephone pole. !The kid followed, armed with bin I father' rifle. j l'p the pole went tho bear. Ho reached the copiicr Htrandn. He 'didn't Ik HltolK. One brniid loot came down on a mrnnd of wire. i A nefrnnd came down on another ntrand, Then away went Had Face .with out balancing pole or piiiiihoI. lie did nobly progrcwilng 20 or 30 feet of tho tricky traveling. Then llol lean cut looae. Ilia (Irnl allot atrnck the bear'n neck. The niuMhroom bullet aprend. Had Face alumpcd. lie fell ncrnxa the wlrea. He kicked n couple of tlmea. Ho died. MRS. FALL CONFIDENT OF FUTURE Wife of Convicted Former Secretary Steadfast in Adversity Believes His tory Will Identify Hus band As Patriot Denies Financial Aid Received From Doheny. Hy Marguerite Young: Associated Press Staff Writer. WASH 1 NGTON. Nov. 2. (V) Mrs. Albert II. Fall said today she was going back home with her husband next week as confident in their future as she was the day they were married nearly f0 years ago. ltuoytMl by a fervent belief that history will Identify him as "a patriot," she said today that "the white flag of surrender shall never float over me i.nd mine," and with eager assurance she told of plans to "work in all directions' toward bis vindication. They will return to the home In 101 Paso, Texas, which she owns in her own name, she said, and after a brief rest, she will go to the New Mexico ranch to manage there "whatever her husband's failing health will not permit hjm to ac complish. The ranch will be their homo until it is sold. The ranch, Mrs. Fall is confi dent, will net them something over the amount they owe Doheny something to add to her own small ihcome, which she said is sufficient to keep the family from want. J)cnys KupiMH-L Vehemently and with some in dignation, she denied reports that Doheny lias supported them since their troubles began. Tho family is, and has been since the crush, and will be, sustained on tho re turns from Investments made with her own Inheritance, she said. Still maintaining Fall's inno cence of bribery, he repeated with spirit: "If he were guilty, 1 would be." For she had been with him step for step, she added, since he was 21 and she 18, and that 48 years ago, "We aro going to uso every means to prove our Innocence," she said, using the pronoun with a casualnesH born of having em ployed it these many decades when telling of her husband's career. She smiled as she explained she always said, "when we were on the beneli," and "when we were in the senate," and "when we were In the cabinet." One way of vindication 'she sees is the publication of "the whole story" by Albert H. Fall. She wants the world to have a picture of his romance from prospecting days, and hopes to see It in print before she dies. Several writers already have signified eagerness to undertake the task, and she is planning to cooperate now. WASHINGTON, Nov. 2. (?') Scniitiir (MittliiK, Ui'publloim, New Mt'Xioo, produced (locuinunlx In the Ht'lmtu toiluy (U'Hcrlblntt uh In nccuralH u iivwHiiiii'r lirtlelo puli IImIuiI In Him which ri'iiorieil Albert Jl. l-'ull "pulleil the covers from I'reHlilent W'IImom'h bed" when 11 Henulorln! delegation culled at Iho AVhltu Jloune. ItererrlUK to a limitation of the arllele n ntly by Henntor lleflln, Democrat, Alabama, C'liltlnK lead a letter from Admiral Urayxon, WIIkod'h physician, innl a tele Kruni from Clilbert M . Hitchcock, former Democratic Henalor from NeliraKka who accompanied J-'all. Itoth Hold the arllclo wan errone ous. ' I'littliiK: also read the AMnoelated I'icmh account of the vlult, III which no mention of the aliened Incident wax made. L LONDON, fcnr.., !ov. 2. (J') The IlrltlHh laitllcBhlp KamllllcH la reported In an authorilativo quar ter to havo been aent lo Jufra, I'aleHtlne.i iih an ordinary precau tion In cnno of further trouble there, The coincidence of the Jewlah Habbalh today with the nnnlver nary or the llalfour declaration led to many unconlirmed r,mor that further dlHorderB might be expect ed in PalcKtlne. .JKKCSAI.KM. Nov. 2. () All Arabs In Palestine were In mourn ing today under a general strike proclaimed on the anniversary of the llalfour declaration pledging British support In establishment of the Jewish homo land. Nearly all shops were closed nnd black flags were flying from A run residences and minarets of I lie mosque. 71 ?c Bump Has Happy Sequel For Estranged Couple ( ! 4 INDIANAPOLIS, lnd., Nov. 2, ifV) An automobile a eel-. dent may spell a reunion for George Evans, his wife, and their twit children. Divorced a year ago, tho couple met on a street corner yesterday. The city truck he tlrove look a wheel off her coupe. George heard a fa- miliar voice. It was M rs. fr Evans demanding damages. He pleaded. 4 She relented. Each agreed to pay half. Then 4 "George, how are (he chil & drenV" 4 "Fine. Come up and see 4 them." ' I'd love to- and " 4 That's all there was to it. 4 4 4 4 4 ! 4 4 4 WILLIAM G. LEE LABORLEADER Long Fight Against Cancer at End for Railway Train men's Chief Credited With Averting General Strike of 1921. CLEVELAND, Ohio, Nov. 2. (P) YV, (1. l.ee, whose colorful leader ship o the Hrotherhood of Hallway Trainmen brought him national proinluece, died at his home In Lukewood this morning after a los ing buttle of months against the ravages of cancer. Leo attuined tho presidency of tho brotherhood In 1!KI9 ntul served in this capacity until 1928, when, nl the age nt lis, ho was defeated for re-electluu. Ho wus then named secretary-treasurer but because of illnoss resigned lust June 1. Uc's riso In tho organization was meteoric: National recogni tion first came to him when he was given credit for averting tho threatened general strike of all the transportation brotherhoods In 1921. In 1922 he again enme to the front with his plan to settle all railway disputes 1(nder a regional system and insisted that nil strikes lie called by the general officers of the union. His famous statement that lie would "rather spend months In con ference than one duy in strikes" won him tho respect of the railway officials with whom he denlt. E T WlIATIHJItKOUD, Tex., Nov. 2. (I1) Nervous and Ills voice qua vering, It. II. Hamilton testified In his murder trial here today that his son-in-law, Tom Walton, Jr., was slain last May 4 In Hamilton's Amailllo law office " In n mortal buttle" over a 44 caliber pistol. Hamilton said he. was In his of fice when Walton entered. Walk ing to tho door of the reception room, be said be saw Walton, hus band of his 17-year-old daughter, Htanillug there with his band in his right coat pocket. "Ili moved his right band nnd I Immediately, grabbed for my pistol," Hamilton said. Hamilton had testified be bought it pistol from his law partner, Harry O. Hendricks, April i4, and carried It all the time becuune be feared for bis lire. "When I grabbed for the gun, he mado u dash toward me," the former member or the Texas school commission of appeals told the Jury. "I pulled the gun out, nnd he Jerked it out of my hand and 1 caught hold o( It and It discharged right over my shoulder. From that time until Tom Walton fell to the floor, there was a mortal com bat over that pistol. He was doing everything to shoot me and 1 was doing everything to shoot hlni." NAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 2. iP) The weather outlook for the week beginning November 3 was announced here today by the United Htates weather bureau as follows: Fur western stales: The out look Is for fair weather, except occasionally unsettled west of the Cascade mountains, with rains near the coast. l.'ncnsnnnhly warm In California rtt the beginning of the week: otherwise normal temperatures. DEATH BECKONS JUDG CLAIMS SHD FIRED IN EIGHT FOR GUN GASH STOCK i DEALS SEEN ON STREET Impromptu Share Markets Set Up in Hallways Dur ing Wall Street Recess Brokers Hope to Catch Up Before Monday Morning Opening Tuesday Will Be Holiday. NEW YOltK. Nov. 2. W') Wall Street workers began to see t belt way out today as they labored lo clear away ttie mass of ac counting piled up in four record breaking days In which 4:t.4!i!i,54u shares changed hands on the stock exchange. Trading was suspended yester day und today, but activity was not. Itrokers and their staffs hoped to hove their books .straight ened nut und all the tangles un snarled so that trading could bo rosumed . without difficulty Mon day, There will be another holi day Tuesday which is election day. The floor of the exchange yes terday presented as busy a sceno as any ordinary session. About 800 brokers were on the floor most of tile dny closing transactions that had not been completed at tho end of the three-hour session Thursday. In the brokers offices clerks tolled over their books nnd ad ding inuchines and messengers flitted in and out. Althuugh members of the stock exchange wero forbidden to trudo over tho counter, there were some' sales of stock in the Htreot by non members, who set up impromptu markets in corridors nnd on street corners. Such deuls were for cnuh MliNNHAHULiH, ' .NOV.. tV) Continued operation -Jt a inujorlty of the. subsidiaries of the. W. II. Foshay .company, which went into receivership yesterday, wns fore cast today by Clark It. Fletcher, momber of the law firm which brought the suits against the Fo shay intorests. Fletcher declared thut In many instunces the public utility com panies, operating in about 30 states, would not be nffected by, the action aguinst the three par ent compnnles, the W. 11. Foshay company, the Public Utilities Con solidated company and tho W. It. Foshny Building corporation. LOS ANOELliS, Cal.. Nov. 2. l7P) Frank Wyckoff, the Univer sity oi' Southern California cham pion sprinter, suffered a slightly injured ankle today when firs which destroyed the Kappa Alpha fraternity house on the I). S. C. campus forced him to jump from a third-story window. He lunded on the veranda roof und dropped to snfoty after the flames had cut oft his escape by the stairs. The fire, the third to attack fra ternity row within a few days, caus ed loss of approximately $29,000 in destruction of tho building and Us conlents and damaged a neighbor ing private residence. , Will Rogers Says: llKVKHLY IHUiS, Oil., Nov. 2, Mr. Hoover is bo coining n typical American president - by becoming dis gusted with his ndmiiiistrn- lion. Distrust of tht) senate by presidents started with W a s h i n g t o n, w li o w ante d to li a v e 'em court martialed. Jclfersott proposed life imprisonment for 'em. Old Andy Jackson said, "To hell with 'em," anil got his wish. Lincoln snitl the Lord must have hated 'cm for he made so few of 'em, Roosevelt whit tled a big stick and beat on 'em for six years. Taft just laughed at 'em and grew fat. They drove Wilson to . an early grave. Coolidge never let 'em know what he wnnt etl, so they never knew how to vote against him. And Mr. Hoover took 'em serious, thereby making his only po litical mistake. Yours, will nonkns.