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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 2, 1930)
Ml Mail Tribune Thm Weather Forecast: Tonight and Sunday fair except tome low cloudiness to night; normal temperature. Temperature Highest yesterday 81 Lowest this morning 49 Precipitation To 5 p. m. yesterday 00 To 5 a. m. today 00 DFORD Twenty-Fifth Year MEDFORD, OK'KdOX. SATURDAY. Al'dl'ST 1!):!0. No. 132. i: HOP OFF 10 FLY AROUND THE GLOBE John Henry Mears, Henry Brown and Mary Pick- . ford's Dog, 'Tailwind II' Start On Effort to Break 4 World's Record Hope to Make it in 15 Days. HARBOR GRACE, N, F., Aug. 2. (P) The monoplane City of New York, arrived here at 1:55 (E. 8. T.), Its first stop of a projected round the world tour. Meara'nnd Honry J. Brown. Ills pilot, apparently averaged about 110 miles per hour lor their Journey or more than 1150 miles, which It was at first estimated would require at least nine hours. The fliers appar ently chose the direct route which would In Ue them past the tip of Cape Cod and over the Atlantic to Newfoundland. The aviators said the weather had been perfect and there had been nothing to mar the trip. The City of New York was not due at Harbor Grace until 3 p. m.. according to the schedule laid out by Henry llrown. her pilot, before taking off at 5:40 (13. S. T.) tills fnornlug, indicating she had been glided by tail winds. I(y H'osicr B. Ilullcy. ROOSEVELT FIELD. N. Y., Aug. 2. () Bound for Now York City by way of Dublin, Derlin. .Moscow, and Seattle, Juhn Henry Moms and Henry J. Drown took off Vt 5:40 a.m.. (est) today in their pin no. the City of New York Their . first scheduled, stop was Hilrbur Grace, Newfoundland. Thcv are seeking the round tlit-world record, which Mears bus twice held only to see It broken, and which was set at the present figure 21 dayB. 8 hours and 26 mlnutes-by the C.raf Zep pelin lart summer. Mears and Brown hope to make the trip In les than 20 days, perhaps In ,15 with good weather. With a red. newly risen sun at his back. Brown sent the little red and silver Monoplane winging down the long trans-Atlantic run way through the early morning mists and pulled her nloft. Ho circled the field once, gain ing altitude, and then pointed the planes nose for Harbor Grace. Weather Is Ideal. Ideal weather waited Mears and Ilruwn on their nine-hour 1175 jmiie lournev. and ahead across ,'Uo Atlantic, conditions appeared ;iio be favorable for the next 4s, hours. They expect to hop oft from Harbor Grace tomorrow morning for Buldonnel airdrome, near. Dublin. 1H00 miles away, on their longest over-water hop on the clrcumnavlKatlon of (he globe. Ill-owns wife, his sister, Mary, and Mr. Mears' daughter, Ellzu- beth, were at the field to see them off. "Goodbye, lady," Brown said as he kissed his wife and patted her shoulder. Then he kissed his sis ter and climbed Into the cockpit. Miss Mears' leave taking from her father was more extended, but none of the women showed emotional strain. Not until the city of New Yok was fading into the distance did Mrs. Brown give way. and then only for a moment. Miss Mears Is- the only near relative of the head of the ex pedition, but back In Ilcrora. Ohio, were two small Browns. Henry (Continued on Page 6, Story 1) Automobile gtt rlionper nn rltniipr nil the time, but twine binders an other farm mac'litnery Abe Martin but what tho liv? "If I nur. Th t hk-strrmii I'cf move to Washln' Inn where a feler's purtr wfe If he kmm. loo mm-li." said Tell Hliikl, ). x-akln' o' Nnilonal Chair man llu-ton. (Copyright .thn F. Dllle Co.) Newest Stunt of Dare Devil Powers Proves to Pe Last ! ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., (&) The newest thriller ud by Harry Powers, 47, u pro- fessionul daredevil and para- chute stunt Jumper, proved his last.. A crowd of spectators on steel pier saw him drop 1500 4 feet Into the ocean last night 4 when his parachute failed to S open uftcr he had been shot from a cannon, carried aloft 4 bv airplane. lie died half an hour later. Towers had been doing the cannon stunt tightly for five weokt. 4 He nlso was known as n 4 human fly. scaling the fa- cades of hinh buildings nnd pave airplane trapeze cxhl- bitions before he took up parachute jumping. BLACK EYE IS Vivian Duncan, Little Eva of Famous Stage Team, Be comes Wife of Nils Asther Honeymoon at Tahoe. RENO. Nov., Aug. 2. (ff) Honeymooning "somewhere today wore Nils Asther, Swedish film star of Hollywood, and Vivian Dun can. Little Eva of the Duncan sis ters' stage team of "Topsy and Eva." The two were married here yes terday by Judge Thomas F. Moron ill the Wushoe county district court house and left soon afterward by automobile for an unannounced des tination, reported, however, to be Lake Tahoe. Attempts were made to keep the wedding a secret but the marriage license In the county clerk's office gave the Beoret away. The license gave their ages as "over 21" and stated neither had been married be fore. - th(, wedding ,)arly of five, lnclu(i. Ing Hosetta Duncan, the other sis- ter, and another man and woman, was located In an automobile park ed on a lleno street. While Vivian was denying her Identity to a re porter Asther. known to the re porter by sight, emerged from a postol'fice and expressed indigna tion at being questioned. "This la a private affair and we don't want any publicity," lie added. Miss Duncan recently was re- ettse( fr01n a IOS Ange)e, hospital. where she was treated for a black eye allegedly administered by Hex I.piiho, motion picture actor, at tun Malllm lleach home of Charles Kar l-ell, film slar. The Incident was (lc culmination of a Fourth of .Inly party, lease, whom Miss Duncan alleged struck her when she resis ted to kiss him. was arrested on a battery charge, pleaded guilty and paid a $0 fine. SANTA. BARBARA, Cal. Aug. 2. (Hi An application by Dolores Del Rio, film actress, and Ccdrlc Gibbon, motion picture art director, for a license to wed Is on file here today. Miss Del Rio and Gibbons filed the application yesterday and said they would be married next ert ncRday. The actress gave her age as 24 and Gibbons his as 40. They declined to discuss their plans oth er than the marriage date. LIFER AT SALEM PEN A E SALEM. Ore., Aug. 2. fPl The body of Arnold Samloz. 3H, "lifer at the Salem penitentiary, was found in Mill creek noar the state prison annex last night. Officers believe that ho committed suicide. Sandoz was missed early in the day. Guards who had lung been In contact with the prisoner felt sure that he had not run away and a HCRich was made of the premises, Sandoz was sent up from Wasco county in 1918 for killing a man naid to have been his brother-in-law, fie had been a trusty at the prison for 10 years. ALLOW PRIMO CARNERA TO STAY V A SHI NOT! IS. Aug. ?JF The labor department today K""nt M Prirno Camera. Italian prize ftKhter, leave to ny In the 1'nltefl Stales until Dcpmber 31, 1330. GIVEN A NOW A BRIDE BUMP MER OF J. LINGLE Jack Zuta, Who Planned Jake Lingle Killing, Is Shot Down By Gunmen in Wisconsin Dance Hall First Attempt Month Ago Failed. ClHCAtJO. Aug. 2. OP) The death quad has finished paying off Jack Zuta, gang leader. Five men strode across the waxed floor of a dance hall In a Dela- field. Wis., summer resort where a score of boys and girls were danc ing lat night. 5!uta stood there, smiling, feeding nickels into a mechanical pianu for the dancers. The leader of the quintet firod a revolver bullet into Zuta's body. Dancer stood aghast as this was followed up by a burst of machine gun fire. The killers stood over the fallen gangster and pumped a deadly round of rapldfiro and pistol bullcta into his body. August 1 was his last payday. First Kffort Fulled. Just a month ago, the night of July 1, had been another payday for Zuta, but the account was not quite closed. A carload of killers had drawn up beside the police automobile In which the gangster was being conveyed through tho loop: bullets poured Into tho squad car. stray bullets killed a street car motorman and wounded a by stomder; tho detective lieutenant giving Zuta "safe" conduct emptied his weapon at the gunmen but they escaped, and In the midst of the battle Zuto: disappeared. I'nder Assumed Name. Up at the Lakovlew hotel where he was staying, the Moran-Atcllo gang boss was known us J. H- Goodman of Aurora, III., and it wa not known until today that Wisconsin authorities and Chicago detectives were satisfied the dead man was Zuta, charged by some with planning the slaying of Jake Lingle. Tribune crime reporter and friend of Al Capone. Detectives visited the home of Mrs. Laurz Nelson, a divorcee, to investigate her connection wi'.h Zuta when sevoral long distance telephone calls from "Goodman" at Dolafleld were traced to tho wom an's home here. She denied knowl edge of tho calls, and when sought later hnd disappeared. LIQUOR FIGHT Prohibition Informer and Negro Rum Runners Lose Lives in Battle Between Dry Agents and Georgia Bootleggers. MACON, Ca., Aug. 2. (fl5) Two men, one a prohibition informer and the other n negro and an al leged liiptor runner, were killed In two battles at the same place be tween a prohibition raiding party and bootleggers late last night. Tho informer. Herman Warr, a figure In many liquor cases In this section and In Florida, was fatally wounded In the first battle. Offi cers returned to tho scene of the encounter, a lonely ' road not far from Macon, and engaged In an other exchange of fire. In this sec ond fight the negro, Identified as Sam Knight, was shot to death aft er ho had opened fire on the offi cers. A. Ij. Patterson, 5fl, planter and member of a prominent family, was arrested at his home In Ma con, about eight miles from the swamp, and was ordered held by prohibition officers on a charge of killing Warr. Jail officials said Patterson denied participating In tho shooting. They said he owned land near the swamp. Last June 10 Warr shot and kill ed J. K. Saunders in a cafe in Jack sonville, Kla. He was exonerated by a coroner's Jury which describ ed the act as "Justifiable homi cide." Ixmore Itoduclnjp. NKW YOKK. Aug. 2. i&i I-e-iiere t.'lrlc in working out daily In a ftyrrt to reduce a bit. In her next play she t to appear In a b.frhlng suit. STOOL PIGEON SHOT DOWN IN Tunic In Mode. fin whih the birth of th Prince PA RIM. Aug. 2. iff Oandhljof Walffi w;is Mt1et. b the bit tunics are a feature of the din- lord A sun 1th. play of styles for wlnter.O Th-yj Aiiiih fat behind a sten In fall a foot and a half below thc(ri-n Mary room. At that time aist. Mears, With Dog Mascot Plans 17-Day World Hop John Henry Mears (left), Fred Melchoir. pilot, and the plane in which they will attempt to fly around the world in from 12 to 17 dayc. Mears is holding "Tailwind," the mascct. Mears, the veteran globe trotter, la after bis (bird record. Piloted by Fred Melchoir, the Swedish flier, and with a dog as mascot. Mears has started on a globe encircling flight to better tho 20-day record set by tho Graf Zep pelin. The mascot is "Tailwind." a ter rier presented by Mary Pickford. Mears girdled tho world in 35 days, 21 hours and :ti minutes in 1913. In 102S. with tho late Cap tain C. 11. D. Collyer. he lowered tho mark to 23 days, 15 hours and 21 minutes. Tho Oral's record, from . Fried rlchshafcn and return, of 20 days, 4 hours and 18 minutes, was sat last year. Mears hopes to lower the mark to between 12 and 17 days. A lockhoad monoplane, the City CI.KVKI.AND, O., Aug. 2. (P) Authorltlcs were mystified today liv rlndlnir of hodlea f IWn women In their earlv twenties on country TWU GIRLS AKt UUAKU Wi I NbSS tdi nnvF MURDERED BY AS REDS MARCH S hau DETROIT GANGSjUPON CAPITAL S roads In localities about 25 miles j Unvcrnor c. c. loung and I ill! an apart during tho last IS hours. vlsory pardon hoard today follow. The circumstances of their deaths Ing receipt of word that "a number appeared to be similar, lloth bodies I of ronilnunlsls" were en routu to contained bullet wounds. Indicating : Hie capllal (mm San Francisco, similar deaths. I Word from thu Sacramenio chief One was found yesterday after- of police was to the effect that a noon near Wadsworth, and the "sufficient number" of philn clothes other this morning near licrea, a ; detectives would ha detailed lo pa Cleveland suburb. I ml the capliol with more than 20 The body found near llerea was I slate officials to see that no disor-well-clothed. with dark hair and ! dor occurred outside or w.ihln I he eyes and about five feet tall. There I building. A reserve ton e Is lo be was a bullet wound just above the held on call. right eye. j All entrances to tho capliol ex- Tho body near Wadsworth wasioept one woro locked ill. noon and pioderatfly well dresson. She was flvo fet five Inches tall, and welch ed 140 pound. Her body bore two bullrt wountbt. Hundrrd of person who viewed her body in the Medina county morgue failed to !ve any indication aa to her Identity. Hhe wan be lieved to have b'-en slain Thurmlay nlnht. In neither inntan-e enuld anyone bp found who hail heard a sun fired. Seaside Now filler InMalled at Nntatorldtn, Prom and Second avenue. Ex-Miller Boy to Be Sole Witness of Royal Birth at Bedside of Duchess of York 'SLAM IH. Scotland, Auk. 2. P) The mill boy who became, bin maJeMy's secretary of slate for home affairs. .!. It. 'yne, will pofin cotno bere to be present t the birth of the hahy expected by,cjnrled the Infimt In her iirtnn imd'Mves In Decalure, 111. the Duchess of York early this showed him to Asqnlth, The homej niAntro IrDrillMn month. Secretary then went back and re-j SALEM WORKER UnUUNU This Is In accordance wit h the ancient Mrltlsh law, which decrees that the birth of a possible heir to the throne must be attested by! a secretary "f ftfit". Mr. dynes will carry out thi f-laie duty In the fame manner she wns thu Duchesq of York. The of New York. Willi a speed of 150 miles an hour, will he used. It has boon equipped with a supercharger for night at high altitudes to take advantage of l'avorablo winds. An average of lll.OOU feet alti tude is expected to ho maintained. Mi'ars has mastered (ho radio code anil will operate a powerful two-way set with which ho hopes to .keep In cnnslaill contact with pre-selecled buses. The start was made from Roose velt field for Harbor Crace. N. F.. and across the norlhern route over the Atlantic ocean to the Island of Olympia, Ireland. The itinerary will carry them lo Moscow. Russia; Chita and Vladi vostok. Siberia; Tokyo. J.ipnn; Petropavlovsk, Kamchatka: Sew ard, Alaska; Seattle, Wash., and New York. rxiz SJrllAMKXTO. fill. A lie. 2. (p.Kxtra precautions were plan- j ned by stale and city police u ! guard against deinoiisl nil Ions al ti'e .lonn iwaciionuiu neariug ueiore the open door, ;endiiK into the ro- j tunua, wan netiiH waicneti y eiviu and Htnto ofl'lrers. Local Htithoiilii'H naid they an-dei-Htood "a hUik load of coniinun iHtK" were Hem out of San Kran cIkco to attend the hearing. Kx-l'rrshlrnl Weds. MIOXM'O 'ITV. -UK. 2. P) (ietieral I'lutaiio Kliae i'mIIch, for mer prenldeiit of Mexico and MIhh l.eonor IJoi'ente, 2"i-yenr-otd voice Hludent, were married at 2 uVlnck th's afternoon at the former presl - 1 SJrllAMKXTO. fill. A lie. 2. (.ent'K Hanta Marhara ranch near,KM McClcnncn followed and shot I; (MIkison three times. Mra. Mc- (j,,nn(,n W(IM Hialu Instantly. Princess of Wales, biter Queen Alexandra, with with AhmiiIUi. Wb-n t he present crown prince wns born, the Princess rf Wales, wearing a blue dressing gown, j ortcd the historical fact to his government nnd the royal birth w;is duly registered A Knecinl room in (ibirnis cattle has been n-MTVcii f(,r Mr. Clynevin K. Ul'kard and he will be the guest of the! kllb-d link- and Dohe- f York. jwhen Should the expected Infant be ! I ;i t.oy be will le third in line, after t he prince of le and Duke f displacing r:ilwibeth. O York, for the crown, his s i n t e r, princess CHINK REDS LunV PATI4 inn i m ii OP BLOOD! Rapine and Slaughter Mark of Blood-Crazed Bolshe viks Along Yangtze River Defenseless People Flee in Terror Rich Seized for Ransom. SHA.N'CIIAI. Auk. 2. (TJ l'he Yangtze river cillcs of Hankow, Hanyang and Wuchang, with a joint population estimated at sev eral millions, today lay in the pnlll of China's advancing bluod erazetl revolting armies. Thousands of terrified Chinese, bearing their properly, sought ref uge in the barricaded foreign con cessions of Hankow today, as communist arml"s moved toward the trl-.-Uice. fresh from the con uurst end destruction of Cliang- sha. The eilles were under mar tial law. The capital at Nanking also was under mllUary rule to day. changsha. smouldering remnant of what once was a prosperous silk manufacturing city, still was rci'Orted occupied by remnants of l.iiil loir red forces. activity of which prevented entry of landing parties from foreign gunboats, standing by in Hie Slang river. Hundreds of wealthy Chinese were reported captured and held for ransom. Sixty provincial of ficers, hiding In tho ruins of the elty, were summarily executed by the comiuerors. All foreigners were believed safe aboard the uunliouts or In other cities. Kvacuatlon of Kioklang and the neai-bv mountain summer resort of Killing was under way. Chi nese authorities gave foreigners three days to leave, disclaiming responsibility for them after that time. Nationalist authorities at Nan king, explaining estnbjbdinienl of martial law. said It was precau tionary against . possible commu nist nctlvlty within tho capital. ;La Grande, Oregon Man Slays Wife, Shoots Her Escort and Himself Two Men May Recover. J t A K Kit. A up. 2. (A't (JeoiKO .Mcdlennen uf La (Irande, who yeH terdny shot and killed hid wife, Mrs. itenale Mcdlcnncu, wounded seriously Harold (illklson and turned the gun un himself Infllcl liiK 11 bead wound, recovered In u hospital today while authorities untangled circumstances. Authorities tmld MeOlennen bo came enraged because. MrH. Mo (ilennen threatened divorce pro ceedings couplet) with a criminal accusation against blm. They said he brought bis twit children, ler aldine, II, and Madeline, 0, to Maker where Mcfllennen wan slay ing In n lodKiim huuso whero till kisoii roomed. MeGlcnrien left his automobile, and the two children parked on a downtown street and entered tho lodKlnK. lie beBan shooting nnd j ,.rti ;u-rieniicn an to an adjoln- ,n ,., where (lllklson was in The rhlldren tob) authorities tln-lr parentH had quarreled con siderably. Police, who found tho trio lying on tho floor of Gllkison's room was able to ascertain a few facts from Mr ilennen dcxplto the bullet wound in his head. A note was found on Mcfilon nen'a person. It lead : "Mrs. Me Olennen has done and tried every thing she can. Now th wantu to follow that and take my kids. IV tt time to stop her." Papers found In McOlennen'a pocket indicated the family once lived in California and bad rela- TO DEATH IN MILL 8ALK.M. Aug. 2. UV)VA 2S, Wits Instantly (Ills morning at 1 1 o'clock fiiuubt betwen two lolls of on a mac h ie at the ()re- xori ('nip nnd Ph per coinptiny milt here. i" was woikiriK as a re j winder. He leaves his widow, tt ; bride of six months, ami a father ' in (.'orvallls, iconic Bomb Found at Lake By Park Chief i ritATKFl LAKE, Ovc. Aim. iSpl.l The latest addition 1 i In tlir museum eullecliou in ! t'rater lnke national park in- ! formation bureau is u strange- j ly cracked Klowsy rock, weiyh- j ! nearly l"it) nounds. While ; i inspectiiif; seme leccnt work t in the park. Superintendent E. t'. Solinsky's keen eyes noted this rock. The, irremi- lar, deeply seamed lava block shows characteristics of u vol- I canic bomb. 4 I S This Ixunli probably solid!- j Tied inside the mouutalu ami, beiiiK Itiown through tiie vent, was relieated, causing the ! cracks in its surface and then cooled so nuickly that It haru- ened into glassy texture. f POSTOFFICE IS Li Receipts for July 31 Per Cent Above Same Month Last Year Record Gain, Is Assertion. The unusually large gain In local poKloffico receipts of last month over those of J July, 1929, reveals that Medford has been ill a pros perous condition despite the gen eral business depression thruout the country and despite local stor ies of local business slowness. For tho month Just ended the cash receipts were $H-10-I.40. and for July, 19211, they woro $11413.65, a gain of $ 1 .01)0.87, or of 31 poi nt, one of tho largest monthly gains In tho history of tho local postofflce for many mouths past. Postmaster Warner, In giving out the figures today, said there cair he no other explanation for llin big Increase except that busl-. ness Is good, Tho Increaso in the special sale of envelopes last mouth was only $000 over the July of 1929. and the increase in sale of advertising envelopes was only (Contlnued on Pago 6, Story 2) Baseball Scores NKW YORK, Aug. 2. fyp) Mnbo Ruth clouted his 311th homo run of tho season In the second Rnmo of the double header between the Yankees and Washington. The homer came with tho batton empty in the riflh inning nnd left the YankecH behind by a 0-1 count. Kred Marberry waa pitching for the Heiiatorn. National. New York - 8 B 0 Mrooklyn 0 13 2 ICIeven InninKS.) Walker, Ilevlng and Hogan; Thurston, Muss, Helmach and Lo pez. It. II. II Pittsburgh 14 16 3 Chicago 8 IB 0 Krf'iiu'r and I fool; Ma lone, Mtih, Nelson, Shealy und Hartnett, Z. Taylor. n. st. Louis ti l r i Cincinnati 8 l'J 2 (Kleven Innings.) Melt, (Irabowskl, 1,1 nd fey, John son and Wilson; Menton and Suko forth. First game: i. H. K. Philadelphia 2 7 0 Boston II 10 0 Collard, Klliott nnd Davis; Sol bond und Cronlii. Kirst game: Philadelphia Boslou (Ten Innings! Men go and Kcna; Spohrer, II. ! 8 Hherdel mid American Kirst game: It. II. K. i 2 7 I Hoiilon 2 Philadelphia !l Morris. Hmlth nnd Moving, nelly; Shores mid Cochrane. Con- First game: H. H, K. Washington ! HI 0 New York 3 ft t .font's and Spencer; Johnson, Hoi loway and Dickey, Bengough. II. II. K. Chicago 2 0 5 Detroit 13 1 5 1 Thomas. Henry and Tnte; Uhlo and Dcsaultela. Iliminn 7)0 I iMiili.ioiphiii ir, : M.Tr-l'nydi'n jiikI Kerry; Itumninl Muh.iff. v. Quinn. Hnrnnlmw. Urovo HV'oml K.im: WiwliiriKlon Xi'w Vnrk Mn rhfrry nnd Kuol; loway and Dk'kt'y. 11. I . 1 6 fihi-rld 1. K. r o i l ll"l- WITNESS LOCA BUSINESS GOOD DEMANDS HIGHER S CAUGHT Detroit Judge at Buckley Memorial Services De mands Arrest of Those Who Hired Gunmen to Kill Radio Announcer Hold Girl Suspect. UKTUOIT, Aug. 2. 'bert M. lloliuann, political worker fur Mayor Charles Howies In tho re cent recall campaign, is bolng sought today hy police for ques tioning In connection with tha slaying of Jerry IJuckley, political commentator for radio station WMMC. .Mayor Howies described Hof niann as 'a young man of means, interested in aiding police in rounding up violators of tho nar cotics drug laws." Police found a bank book Is sued to llofmann in an apartment occupied by Marjorio Mansoll, "blues" singer for station WMMC, and Pete Llcuvull, notorious gang ster who has eluded police since 1 luck Icy was slain. Detectives said Miss Manse II ad mitted sho va Llcavoli's sweet heart, but they obtained fur- tber information from her after a day of questioning. Ilofmnnn's bunk book showed average, dally deposits of moro than $2000 for tho past few weeks. Mayor Bowles said llof mann Is rent collector for tho Scherer estate and his bank book "should show largo deposits." C. A. Pfeffer. mannger of tho Scherer estate, said, "llofmann Is not and never hns been connected In any way with tho Scherer es tate." Pollco refused to reveal what connection they expected to estab lish between llofmann and bis bank deposits nnd tho slaying oC Jerry Muckley. Tho bank book wns found in a. tablo drawer, in. Ml ha Mansell's apartment together with newspaper clippings concern ing the Muckley case, the slayinjr of Jimmy Walters, gangster killed Inst spring, and the attempt last Jiinunry- 2 upon the llfo of Pollco Inspector Henry J. Garvin. Six thousand persons attended memorial services for Buckley at the Detroit national guard armory I last niubt. .Tudcro Charles Ij. Bart- lett, who had been n close, friend of tho slain radio nnnouncer, said, "tho people of Detroit want a 100 per cent Investigation," In an ad dress at the services. "They want tho higher tips who did this trick." Judgo Bartlctt said. "Thin murder, wns planned for weeks by persons clthor JoaU ous or afraid of tho power of my friend. Tho men with the guns were tho tools of others. Who were those others?" Miss Mansell was ordered held for 48 hours moro after a hearing on a writ of hnboss corpus today before Judgo Henry S. Sweeney In recorder's court. Her bond was fixed at $100,000 with two sure ties. Prosecuting Attorney James R. Chenot told tho court Additional tlmo would bo required to Investi gate portions of her story. ritrmer Kills 1 People. NA It L'J A, Uumnnla. Aug. 2. IP) The police today arrested a farm laborer for the killing of his employer, his employer's wifo and their flvo children. The authori ties said he had confessed. WILL ROGERS HHVKUIiY HILLS, Aug. 2. 'I'lie farm board bought wheat ami wheat went down. Now tlioy say if they had, left it alone it would have gone up. The Ktork market climbed for years on paying no dividends but just Milling to the. next, fel low at a higher rice. Some body happened to think about dividends and the thing blew up, so they blamed Hoover for someone demanding dividends. So now let's get this heat thing straightened out. Herbert is responsible for this. You would not have eaught Calvin allow ing heat like this. !i give us ,mlI, tllt yyc s ,, brtTZf. o