Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 02, 1930, Page 1, Image 1

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    r"The Weather
flttttf- Tonleht anil Tuesday
"j,,,. wmKtuiu temiK'nilure.
vr-Fifth Year
Today
By Arthur Brtabani
the Marvelous Zeppelin.
Chinese Practice lor
Russia.
Hn Interesting Crime.
bbie Jones, He Wins.
Opirlght King Features oyna. inc.
The giant Oriif Zeppelin sail
j, scroiiflv from Brazil to
Lakelmrst, X. J., V. S. A., 3000
iles in three days, is a iniig-
jificcnt demonstration of deter-
ioatioii, engineering skill and
fewer of the German people.
Defeated, humiliated, snaci;-
(d industrially and financially
(or years tn come, and hnmper-
nl by (lie : Versailles treaty,
fierainny leads the world in nvi
ition. There is no substitute for sei-
atific intelligence.
Riissin finds China a conven
ient parade ground to practice
"A troops." , The French
litt n saying, "An easy as heat
ing China." Exhausted, starv
ed, liarrassed, the Chinese field
of chaos offers excellent oppor
tunity for marching troops up
Hid down and shooting and
bombing.
however, there is a "tomor
ivr." Mongolians are hereditary en
emies of Slavs. Russia's chil
dren for a thousand years have
been taught to fear and hute the
men whose eyes slant upward.
Russia now shows many
things in China about fighting,
killing, bombs, etc.
Later, Asia may show some of
Nose same things to .Rusnia,-ou
rnssian territory.
Xcw York's latest ",big head
line" murder becomes more in-
lerestilng.. The dead ' woman
wore jewelry, including il ring
irith several small but genuine
diamonds. That attracted at
tention. Diamonds are import
ant. Detectives find a dentist
rto made the woman's false
teeth. She was the wife of Mo
mi, gangster recently mur
dered. Newark police had been look
lag for his wife to tell who mur
dered him. But gangster meth
h include efficiency.
They murder the man in one
it)', then kill his wife in an
Jker, throw her into the river,
d sho.will never tell.
M
r. Reid publishes in his New
Tork Tribune, Republican, an
tutorial, most useful.
He points out that our sys-
,em of allowing Japan and
Britain to regulate our defenses
does not even let us build, in
,l,e l'hilippins Islands, gas
Proof chambers, in which sol
ars and civilians might take
Abe Martin
ibT" a,n mm rtopo 1
h "I"r o- pomilnllon'll remain
, ,,"'l Imlrnrurti at Blnomln--j,.
'"'"""nr." Mid l4ifo Hull to-
Ml Hll .,.l.. t. .1 I.,
V I , !", ..Ill IIM'IIKII
' np I m n w... ... . i ... i..
Med
FORMU
LM I L!
LES
Shipping and Growing Inter
ests of Rogue River and
Hood River Areas in Port
land Meeting With Horti
culture Board.
PORTLAND, Ore, June -.?)
.Delegation or pear growers rrom
Medford and Hood Hlver were
meeting here today Willi represen
tatives of the state hoard of horti
cnlliire in nn attempt to agree upon
proposed specilk-ations for Oregon
standards for cannery pears. The
meeting will continue fov two or
three days. Those who attended
today's meeting said little was done
other than to read the proposed
specifications. It was decided to
hold a meeting In Salem lit 10 a
m. June 14.
The tentative schedule was drawn
up by the slate hoard of horticul
ture ami would hring cannery pears
under three classifications, I lie
specifications being applicable only
tp unlidded containers.
Grades Outlined
No. 1 grade would consist of
pears of one variety which are ma
ture, well formed, tree from broken
skins, decay nnd free from damage
caused by limb rubs, bruises, drouth
spots, sunburn, bail marks, russet
ing, disease, Insects or mechanical
agencies. The diameter of the
smallest pear permitted in this
grade would be not less than 24
inches.
No. 2 grade would consist oi
pears of one variety which ure ma
ture, fairly well formed, and free
from "serious damage" from agen
cies mentioned in relation to grade
Xo. 1. The diameter of the small
est pear permitted In this grade
would be not less than two inches.
Culls would be classified as pears
which do not meet the requlre
ments of either No. - 1 or No. -
.grade. . ":-,.,, j .... , .
' "Serious dnmage" is specified as
meaning any injury which affects
the paring quality of more than
one-half of the fruit. After paring,
cutting in halves and coring, one
of the halves shall be well formed
or the pear is considered seriously
damaged. "Damage'' is considered
as indicating that neither half is
injured to tlio extent that the form
if either hall' is Impaired.
A meeting of high interest to
the pear growers of the state,
principally the Hood Itiver nnd
ItoKlie Itiver districts. Is being
held in Portland today, between
representatives of the shipping
and growing interests of the two
(Continued on Page 6, Story 1)
OVER JUNE 7TH
FOR OFFICIALS
The frost season for Medford
nnd the valley will officially end
next Saturday nigni, us
the government frost warning ser
vice Is concerned, for this even
ing Kloyd I). Young, who Is In
charge of the frost warning and
research work of the Pacific coast
slates, nnd who has been stationed
here on this work since Inst March
will depart to look over the frost
work' of the past season at the
stations In the Washington m it
districts and other parts of tnc
northwest, after wnicn ne
turn to his home at Pomona,
taHln assistant here In this work.
Roy Itogers. who Is "lo a me
. ' th 1'. S. weather
.'.in remain until June 10
. . .i r..r fhiirles City,
wnen ne ui.-i'..i - -----la.,
to do relief duty
three weeks for the head of tna
weather station. Mr. Hogers w 1 1
continue the dally evening f.ost
broadcasts until naJ5unda:
PEAR Rll
IN CANNING
FROST
SEASON
Honeymoon Hubby Shoots Friend
Who Played Joke on Bridal Trip
DENVER, Colo., June 2. P) A
short lived honeymoon ended here
last night in the death of man
whom police believe to have been
a practical Joker, following sup
posedly "faked' 'hol'lnp-
Everett K. Stewart. 2b who was
married In Colorado WWa
one minute past
mining, .hot his Ln'LZ
WD. Maloney 38.
art screamed: "Help! lollce.
small w! ' ...r, .
rooming house while M art re
ford i
Eighteen Perish Off Santa Monica
r - - -.- ..... . i ',; "- - 1 '
1 "' 'wiurvCS isiyM
Associated Press Photo. g i &J?ZzJ3k. jiul." " " 1
1 IgllK-en ln-llcl imtUIhhI off k f l),'!'.,'r sjl ' .,
aiita loiiiiu. Cal. I e.ifli. v!ien .x1 -tXLM HMb&ji i v v
mei. 4-,-lool ruhlnit boat, cup- L--x C' 3oJ . s ' ' V
-J il les, thiin mile ofMioio on . V frfK jffc l " J1S t s jfX&Sjls. N
MeiiKiil.il dn 'llnee iKMlies ic- SV lJ . ! J. i " WyB
cineriil and lilteen s.i-st nirei-s or- f Z.'Ww X 1 i . ' , .if '
f...all, n,Kslff. IM.010 ol boat FH' 'T4'(?$ " Jllv! ? ' 1 ifi'Wk '
bef.e ,li,.s... , .r snrMo.s. w 1 7 1 &ll3 , ,fi
iiuiiinii I iiL.lv IK, w t's : k , i . i u y
from kia; hkmm
Found By Freight Engineer
Near Hilt Railroad Of
ficials Unable Account for
Accident.
In a critical condition and not ex
pected to live, Mrs. K K. Garrison,
55, Salem, is a patient at the Hilt,
Cal., hospital following a mysterl-
nim Tnll from tlio nnilt htlOlind South
ern Pacific. Shasta limited Saturday
nignt. sue was louuu u louia
later in nn unconscious condition
along the railroad tracks near Zu
leka, close to Hilt, by an engineer,
Prank Deane, on a local freight.
Reports from Ashland today indi
cated that the woman had no
chance for recovery. She was still
unconscious nt noon.
Mrs. Garrison, a passanger on the
day coach. Is believed to be a wom
an of small means. Itailroad au
thorities havebeen unable to deter
mine how or why she fell off. Doors
are nlwuys kept tightly closed and
to get off she would have had to
open two latches to reach the ear
steps.
Kfforts were also being made to
day to locate relatives but they
were unsuccessful.
Saturday's Shasta must have been
in line for unusual events, as dis
patches from Salem tell of an en
raged negro chef who threatened to
attack a waiter when the latter at
tempted to tell the cook how to
r utu u.ttrl Tlio elinf seized
a long knile and threatened to carve
.. i ..m..n i.ita
I the culinary w hi rci "ihqh
I while the Shasta was approaching
I Salem from Portland. The enraged
i negro was taken off the train but
! was permitted intar to proceed to
iKlnmalh Kails on another truiu.
T
F
OAKLAND, Cal.. June 2. (P)
.. ..unnpnr Mrs J Cno-
1 per of San KranclBco. was so seri
louslv Injured she may die, when a
San Francisco air ferry, bearing
eight passengers, struck a tug and
i nose dived Into the Oakland estu-
i ary. ijauncucs irom m o.i...c -"
i cued the Imprisoned passengers.
. rn. u-na tnkpn to an Oak-
1 ill.i. v.u"tvi "
land hospital, where physicians said
I she was suffering from severe cere
i hral hemorrhage.
Hearintc the words, "Stlcp 'em up!"
followed by hi wife's cry for help,
he turned and fired three times, a
bullet piercing Malony's chest and
'resulting In his death in a local hos
pital 45 minutes later. An nnlden
tltlnd man, according to Stewart,
was with Maloney hut fled when
the shooting started and has not
yet been located.
Stewart told police that about a
'year ago his wife, then Miss Alta
Srhnelder. was held up and robbed
In the same neighborhood and that
i . liml r-nrritwl a rnvnlvpr
i since i h" . ....- - -
for protection against any similar
MEDFOliD, OuJTnON,
Fifty Per Cent Loss of Fruit
Crop Seen Local Or
chards Lucky in Escaping
Scourge.
Prof, V. C. Reimor Kpeaking on
tho KIwaniH club program toduy,
loltl nt the blight Hltuiitlun uh it
affects orchards in California and
Oregon, lie visited one orchard
rt'rt'iitly near Sacramento and
there found J0 men at work and
late reporiH indicate tbat this num
ber lias been increased to 176.
The blight, never bo serious In
the hiKtory of California, linn al
ready r en u lied in the general Iokh
of 50 per cent of the fruit crop
and a much an 05 per cent in
certain sections, he' said. iillght
han entered regionH where It was
unknown before and Is the biggest
problem the fruit industry in Cali
fornia has had in yearn.
The Kogue Hlver valley has been
fortunate in escaping the ncuuigc,
made eHpeclally dangeroun thin
year because of weather condition.
which have been favorable to the
spread of the diseaue, caused by a
form of bacteria. If there had
been much "hold-over" blight from
last year, the local orchards might
have suffered oh did thofte in Cali
fornia but orchardista were careful
tn keeping the dlseawe under con
trol, cooperating with fruit Inspec
tor and horticulture commlnslon
crB in a commendable way.
I'rof. Itelmer foresees a big crop
for this valley with better than
average prices due to the condl
tiotiH In California.
Kiwanlun Karl Newbry gave a
report of the Joint meeting with
tho Talent grange Thursday even
ing and said plans were going for
ward fur a similar meeting with
tho Central Point grunge In a
nhort time.
It. A. Addis was a visiting Ki
wanlun from Pendleton.
TYPOS RE-ELECT
INDIANAPOLIS. June 2. Fh
The plurality of Charles P. How
ard, candidate for re-election as
president of the International
Typographical union, today had
reach erf 10.020 when tho votes
of 539 unions had ft-en unofficial
ly tabulated. The vote was virtu
ally complete.
The vote Howard was 31,306.
His closest opponent, Iged Darker
of Spokane, Wash., had 1 l.ssS.
R. K. Hoderstrom of Streator, III.,
'was third with 9401.
iMlilir
BLIGHT MENAGEf LOCAL AIRMAN
OF CALIFORNIA DIES IN CRASH
MAILT
MONDAY. Jl'XK
ii)::u.
Plane Hit By Gust of Wind
During Race in- New Jer
sey Was Pioneer of
Medford Flying.
TKTIORBOUO AinPOHT, Has
brouck Heights, N. J., June 2.
(JP) Captain - Ive McKenney, Has
brouck heights, died Suturd y
night of injuries received when his
plane was turned over by a gut
of wind during a race, and crashed
from a height of 50 fi
Ht.
Captain Ive Me.Klnney, 35, pio
neer Oregon aviator and former
Medford resident, was killed at
Telerboro, N. J., Saturday, wh-n
his piano crashed In an lr race,
according to word received here
yesterday by relatives. Captain
McKlnney lived here for several
yearn and U remembered by many
southern Oregon residents.
He was born In Ilarriman, Tenn.,
April 15, 1815, and came to Med
ford with his family in 1SU. He
joined the air corps here in. 1919
and was stationed at the local
airport for some time while In the
service. Later, ho engaged In fly
ing service nnd was one of tho
first to carry passengers here.
Mr. McKlnney Is also remem
bered for his stunt flying at loci I
fairs and celebrations. He crash
ed at the fairgrounds once In 192ft,
but wns not injured. For several
years he has been In the airport
and flying business at Teterboro,
N. J.
Ho Is survived by his parents.
Mr. and Mrs. W. L. McKlnney. two
brothers. -John and I fuse, nnd a
sister, Mrs. Sam Colton. all resi
dents of Medford. Tho funeral
will probably be held here.
ROBBERS ARE SHOT
LOS ANGELES, June 2. (P)
Two bank robbers were jhot and
probably fatally wounded In a gun
fight with bank employes and po
lice officers who pursued their
fleeing automobile down Washing
ton Boulevard today. Six hundred
dollars cash, which the robbers
had obtained from the West Side
State bank, wns recovered from
their drlverless automobile.
ttonn Open Congress
ASnt'RY PARK, N. J., June 2.
The annual congress of the
national society of the Hons of the
American uevoiuuon openeu ncre
today with 600 delegates attending.
. i
IE SLAIN;
BY GUNS OF!
unnuuiLiiu
i
'Little Massacre' in Chicago
i
Accounts for 3 Woman ;
Wounded Fourth Man Is
: Killed in Second Attack
5 Die in Detroit.
CHICAGO. June 2- P) Mnltt-
pie murder, raised to its high point
St. V alenttne's Day, 1 passed
another milestone yesterday. Three,
men were slain and two persons,
one a woman, were wounded per
haps fatally.
The killers used machine guns.
An hour, later mid nt a spot on
North Clin k street not half a mile
from the scene of the Moran gang
massAcre. of last year, another
fusillade was fired, critically
wounding two others, and killing
a nother.
Police said the attacks nmrkrd
tlio opening of new, intense gam;
gunnery, and they hud substanti
ation today when the body of n
ride" victim wiw found propped
against the alley wall of the Ital
ia n Trust a nd Sav Inge ban k on
Milwaukee avenue.
Resort. Hotel Sceno
Sunday's "little massacre" was
at u resort hotel at lux Lake. The
victims, believed to have been
members of tho gang faction head
ed by the Druggan brothers, wore
seated at a table on a glass en
closed porch. Without warning,
the machine gun attack was open
ed on them from outside.
The dead: Michael Quirk, west
side gangster; Horn Pellar, Identi
fied as a west side hoodlum; and
Joseph Bertsche, whose brother,
Barney, has been called a pioneer
In north side, gang life.
George Druggan. brother of tho
better known Terry, now in trou
ble with the federal government
over his Income tax. was wounded
so severely In the machine gun
attack, that H Is unlikely he will
- - woman Wounded
The wounded woman, Mrs. Viv
ien McOlnnls. 27, wife of a Chi
cago lawyer, also may not sur
vive her wounds, flhe. was IDrug-
gan'fl companion at the table.
The subsequent gnng attack, !n
which three Were wounded, was
.conducted in the gang manner,
machine guns blazing from thn
dark interior of a passing motor
car which sped away leaving two
men wounded. Tony Tornatoro
and Joseph Ferrari and 8nm Min
istero are d-ad.
DKTKOIT, June 2. Gang
sters guns, breaking Into activity
pfter several weeks quiet, took five
liven n the metropolitan area dur
ing the week-end, two of tho vic
tims being) policemen w'ho wero
shot down from nn automoht'o
vestlgallon of a hit-run accident,
which they stopped In their in-
The fifth victim, nn Italian who
wus not Immediately Identified
was sent to his death with four
bullets in his head and body .it
daybreak today. Police connected
this killing with the shooting ot
two Italians in a fish market Sat
urday afternoon.
The policemen, were believed to
have been killed by rum runners.
Two men were held In connection
with this crime.
The 'slain policemen, described
by their chief as "tha best men
in the department," were Krhardt
W. Meyer. 28, and Claude Lnnstra,
24. They had been sent out Sun
day morning to look for an auto
mobile which had run down Mrs.
Ina Fiasco, fifl.
Quest Inn AiilolstH
A license number which h id
been given by a witness of the ac
cident caused the policemen to
question three occupants of nn
automobile. Meyer, who had left
the police car,' was shot down by
the occupants of the (it her ma
chine, who then turned their guns
on l-anstra. The latter had open
ed fire but wns shot three times as
he did so. The killers sped awn.
A bullet pierced automobile
bearing the reported number of
tho killers' car was found In i
garage at the home of Frank K.
Mercurfo In Detroit. Ho and his
father, Ham, were, nrrnsted,
(iaspere Koibllln and Samuel
Parlno were shot by two men as
they sat at lunch In the rear room
of n fish mnrket Saturday.
Prisoner Would Trade Invention
Based Upon Vision For Freedom
JOL1ET. III., June 2. WV-John
King, nn nged convict. Inventor of
nn airplane propellor of revolu
t binary design, has refused all
monetary offers. Insisting thnt
when society releases hlnj from
prison, It will receive the benefits
of his discovery.
Though King has been Incar
cerated for 15 yenrs and has never
seen a modern airplane, the Unti
ed States navy, Henry For,d anJ
the Guggenheim Foundation hnvo
communicated with him about the
propeller.
The original Idea for his inven
tion c0o In a dream while h was
Baseball Scores
.National
It. 11. K.
St. Louis II 111 1
Philadelphia a 1 5 1
HullaliMii. lhihl. Hell ami Wil
son: CmIIIum, Kill, itt and IJavls.
i:hiblllnll
It. II. K.
i New York I A 1 S 1 a 1
j VlncliumlJ .l 5 I I 1
IMwMrds and lteiiKnuh; S. John
; son and bukeforth.
I-'lilhltloil
R. !
" I
1
and
Philadelphia (A )
i'iitbu,Kh ..
Shores and Perkins
i"i.
Resolution Introduced in G.
0. P. Central Committee
Meeting for Return of Old
Selective System for
Candidates.
SALEM, Ore., May 2.JP) A
resolution was introduced nt n
meeting of tho Marlon county II
publlcnn central committee here
today by Henry Porter, commit
teeman from Aumsvllle, asking for
a virtual return of the old conven
tion system In Marlon county. The
resoltulon asks that delegates be
apportioned to each precinct based
on the vote for Hoover, thnt these
delegates and precinct committee-
en meet before the next primaries
and nominate a county ticket. The
resolution was referred to the
county central committee's tnves:
Ignting committee to be ' reported
on at a later meeting.
Vi'h r)solutton -tcorMrtng 01rot
primary, says the present methods
of nominating candidates have
been weighed in the balance and
found wanting, that they do not
express a truo majority opinion of
the party electorate, that the sys
tem is too expensive for many
worthy men and women to place
their names before the- people as
candidates, that the majority of
voters have no way of ascertain
ing tho qualifications and fitness
for office of candidates and that
candidates announce their own pri
vate and meaningless slogans in
stead, of standing upon party plat
forms and that the present system
Is causing less Interest among the
voters than the old system.
T
OF
E
POIITLANO, Ore., June 2. (fl)
Robert Gordon Duncan, defeated
candidate for tho Republican nomi
nation to congress, and self-styled
"Oregon Wildcat, " was arrested to
day by John Day, United States
marshal, on charges of violating the
federal radio act forbidding the
broadcasting of "obsecene. Indecent
or profane Innguu.e." The license
of station KVKP over which Dun
can has been broadcasting lor
three months, was revoked last
week by tho federal radio commis
sion. Duncatl, who termed himself the
"chain store Nemesis," wus arrest
ed May 17 for electioneering on
election day and will have a hear
ing on that charge next week.
Ills talks over the radio were de
clared by rodlo commissioners to
have been "shocking," Protests of
Portland business men and Individ
uals brought the case to the com
mission, which found that Duncan
had Indulged In "obscene, Indecent
and vulgar" language in attacking
purumlnent Portland men.
In solitary confinement, King said.
He worked for flvo years on plans.
After MaJ. Henry C. Hill became
warden of thi state penitentiary.
King wan permitted the use of the
prison work shop to complete a
model,
Hl discovery Is a multiple pro
peller designed to utilize every
otince of l'0rsepouO' Riving 90 per
cent efficiency Instead of 40 per
cent as In tho present types. There
are four blades, each connected
separately to a hollow central
shaft. As the outer shaft revolves,
thO blade move back and forth
along the length of the shaft.
OLD STYLE
SYSTEM IS
MARlnl
ARRES
DUNCAN
VIOLATIONS
RAD 0
Temperature
Highest yesterday 6ft
InnwrtL this morning 46
Precipitation:
To 5 p. in. yeMortlny 06
Tn ii. in. Mils morning T.
No. 72.
BY GAS IS
Crowd Peers Through Win
dow in Lethal Chamber
As Nevada Gambler Pays
Price of Murder Doctor
Records Heart Beats.
CAKSON CITV, .'ev. June 2.
iA') It. II. -Bob" White. Klko
gambler, died todi4y in the lethal
gas chamber at the Nevada slate
prison here, lie had been convict
ed on circumstantial evidence of
Hie murder (f Louis Lavell, an
other gambler.
White was taken at 4:40 a. m.
Into the Htoue chamber he helped
build an Air-tight room nine feet
long by eight wide and seven hlga
and strapped Into u chair.
I le smiled and nodded to the
people looking In the window.
There were Ii3 witnesses including
two women.
Before White's chair stood n
two-gallon crockery jar containing
a quart of sulphuric acid and half
u gallon of water. Pulling a string
In the next room opened a con
tainer, dropping nearly a dozen
one-ounce "eggs" of cyanide of
potassium Into the acid solution.
The deadly gas was generated
almost instantly.
Doomed Man Nod
White nodded again as the g;s
slatted to come up from the gen
erator. Then he took five deep
breaths, as deep a he could take.
He leaned back easily. At thif
third breath his head fell back.
His arms and body twitched as In
a convulsion, then was still.
Three minutes after he entered
the death chamber he was appar
ently dead.
White wns not a bit nervous.
He shook hands with the warden
and the other two men who help
ed strap him In the chair.
He was dressed In a hlue shl't
and ni pair of overalls..
1 Miss-' Margaret fikeeter, h. "' N.,
Reno, and Miss May E. Kenney,
another nurse, Carson City, were
the women witnesses. They were .
admitted at their own request..
There was no minister present,
White wanted none.
lteronls Heart Bouts
Officially, the gus was turned
on at 4:37 n. m. White's heart
stopped beating for ten seconds at
4:3ft V4 . nnd natural breathing
stopped at 4:39 V4. After a lapse
of ten seconds the heart started
beating again, but stopped com
pletely at 4:47, nine- and a half
minute from the time the gus
was turned on.
At the start White's pulse was
10s, contrasted to a normal of 72.'
Ono minute after the gus came on
his pulse reached 120. At 4:42
his respiration became very con
vulsive, long nnd short breaths.
At 4:37 his head fell back, a
quarter minute after the gas came
on. Then he took five deep
breaths nnd his head fell forward.
From 4:43 to 4:46 huj respira
tion -was very convulsive.
This figures a,nd data were
given nut after the execution by
Dr. K. E. Humer, Btate health of
ficer, who kept a specially do
vised stethescope on the condemn
ed man throughout the execution
proceedings.
How strange that prominent peo
ple always happen to be slumming
the very duy that tough joints are
raided.
WILL
ROGERS
f$qys:
HEVKRIiY IIIIiLS, Oil. Juno
2. Kt'iul the new oenHiis. Talk
about n quota on immigration,
why the Yankees nre swurniinu'
into the South like locusts. Get
some of these giiiiw. Houston,
Texas, showed a gain of 110 per.
cent, llest bet in the South .
Atlanta, 73 per cent gain. Will
he Houston's nearest rival in
20 years. Miami, 273 per cent.
Oklahoma City, 100 per cent.
Amnn, Carterville( registered
under the postoffice name. of
Fort Worth), away over 100 per
pent. Tulsa, 95 per cent. Bir
mingham, 44 ; Memphis, 55 ; Sun
Ar.ionio, 57. And the Caroli
nes just packed 'em in. Only
one drawback, the rascals bring
their Republican politics with
'cm ; they ought to be met at
the lino nnd de-loused.
iw M.K.Mi In imiiM.
EXECUTION
WITNESSED
attempt.
i
" In now si raw hue todnjr.
maiued benina i w-