FTH DFOBB IL ITOBUNE Second Section . Six Pages Second Section Six Pages Twenty-Sixth Year MEDFORD, OREGON, SUNDAY, JUNE 28, 1931. No. 97. Me MA 2GUN BOY DEATH III Noted Scourges of Crime Start Solution of , Starr , Faithfull Mystery New .York Desperado in Death 'House Questioned. NEW YORK, June 27. The bruised body of a pretty girl is found on the, seashore of the "richest county In the world.'! Her brassiere, shoes, hat and coat, are missing. - Sand is in her lungs. She lies In a depression In the beach of Long Island, wash ed out. by a stormy sea: the night before. ; ' ' V ' ' : The body is identified as that of a 26-year old girl who bore ; the fanciful name of. Starr Faithfull. Was she a suicide? Was she accidentally drowned? Was she Murdered? It is, another mystery for Elvln N. Edwards, district attorney of Nassau county, and his partner in crime solution, Inspector Harold R. King. District Attorney Edwards and Inspector King are. becoming fa mous In Nassau county and be yond. Within the EdwardB-King Jur isdiction is Center Island, a vil lage of 80 families, the head of each a millionaire. Within it, too, are Sands Point and Long Beach, centers of fashionable summer colonies and exclusive beach clubs. Strufigo Story Unfolds J It was at Long Beach that Starr Faithfull's body was found on a Monday morning. She had been missing since the preceding Friday. ' .... Her name was Starr Wyman, hut she took the name of her step-father. Stanley Faithfull. .. She arid ' her ',' attractive -sister; Elizabeth ; Tucker Faithfull, lived with their mother and stepfather on the top floor of an old fash ' loned three story house in Green wich Village. Starr occasionally was intoxi cated. Although she had not been drinking before1 her death, her body contained a sleeping potion. Her love diary indicated she often had contempted suicide. Hints of Blackmail All that, with hints of black mall and murder to save the rep utations of prominent persons, was tangled into a maze of mystery for Edwards and King, who hard ly had disposed of the spectacular affair of Francis (Two dun) Crowley, Half a hundred reporters, cam era men and newBreel fellows swarmed out to Mineola, peace ful seat of Nassau county. They poured Into the vine covered courthouse 'to :. question the 'dis trict attorney. They found Edwards to be a (sturdy man of 48, with light, rum pled hair and tf rather weary, clue Inden air. ) Fifteen years in the district attorney's office, first as RHSIstant, then 'as, chief, have given him :many" crimes to solve. "You have a glrl.!that has been drugged; thaV has : been bruised and teatenj 'and; that was sober," he says. "Therefore, you : must admit the 'possibility of murder." Suicide, Says King Over in . police headquarters across the-street.- the reportorial regiment invades the office of In spector King. He la a heavier set and younger'man, only 35. He wears a -white handkerchief In the upper coat pocket and he does not chew cigars. Inspector King holds to a theory of suicide In the Faithful) case. Thus Edwards and King pursue their inquiries along " Individual lines, at the same lime -collaborating. King was a dispatch rider in France during the war. Returning home he stuck to his motorcycle and became a speed cop at Hemp stead, which Is In. Nassau county. Ardent' Criminologist He became .an ardent student of criminology . and detective science. When the Nassau coun ty police force was organized In 1D25, King woa picked to develop a detective division. 1'romlnent In he King-Edwards career was the "Two, Gun". Crow ley case. . Crowley made the mistake of Killing a Nassau county pollc.man as the climax to his career as a youthful desperado. Me and a girl fled to Manhat tan, where Crowley and a com. Panlon. Rudolph Duringer, shot It out with 200 policemen. Hardly had Crowley entered the death house at Sing Sing before 'he body of Starr Faithfull turned up. That In how mysteries breaK 4 for the crtme specialists of Nassau 1 county. Inspector King and Pis Irlct Attorney Edwards. Ohio era'iluato 1 IS ADA. Ohio., June .27. (UP) The youngest meipbefj of the Ohio Northern, university graduating class Is Raymond Cummins, 18, who received his degree from the liberal arts college. He completed the four-year course In three 'tan. HOOVER DEBT A proposal by President Herbert Hoover to suspend all war debt end reparations payments for one year has etirred the Interest of virtually very nation. ... BARTLETT PACK CANADA WHEATjSTAGE BEAUTY ARIZONA OPENS OF CALIFORNIA PLAN MAY OPEN SEEKS RENOWN WAR UPON AUTO 180'S OR OVERPRICE CUTTING Large Percentage of Grow ers Agree on Sizes For Coming Shipping Season, At Largely Attended Meeting. The California Fruit Exchange, through its generl manager, J. L. Nagle, hs - issued tho following statement to the Bartlett pear growers of California: 'Due to conditions' surrounding the fruit - Industry ot California this season, and in view of -the very heavy crops of peaches In all fruit producing districts through out the United States, It has been recommended that fruit of mer chantable sizes and of good qual ity . only should be Bhipped to Eustern markets this season. A meeting, therefore, to discuss this very Important subject was held In Sacramento on lost Thurs day, June 11, at which were pre sent between 80 and 00 Bnrtlett pear growers from the different districts in . California, together with representatives of the fol lowing shippers: California Fruit Exchange, Pacific Fruit ex change. Earl Fruit Company, Lambert Marketing Company, Hl- mon and French Company, and the Thurston Fruit Company. It was estimated thnt these shippers represented about 98 percent of all the Bartlett peara Bhipped from Callfornl. After a free discussion rela tive to the shipment of Bartlett pears, it was unanimously decided by all present that Bartlett peaiB ihl season for Eustern shipment should be limited in size to 180 to the box, boxes weighing not less than 52 pounds, unlldded, at packing houBe. There are a few non-irrigaieu districts In California that might have difficulty this season In dis posing of any appreciable por tion of their pears for Eastern shipment If the sizes were limited to 180, and it was agreed inni market conditions JUBtltlcd later In the season, it might be advltm ble to allow these districts a t"l- erence of not more than t percent i or. nenra to the box, per car; out this tolerance can be granted to any grower or any district only after a conference of the shippers represented at the meeting ano mentloned endorses such tolerance. It Is understood, therefore, that no pears marketed through Ihe California Fruit Exchange this season will be accepted foi ship ment If they pack smaller thun 180 to the box unless written notice is given, permitting a small pear." I JAP BOW-LEGGED TOKYO, June 27. (VP) Japan's .nmarnllf hflW leas and the short stature of Its people are due to the national habit of silling iur fashion." says Dr. Fusao Ishlwara. head of the medical department of Tokyo Imperial university. If the Japanese would only give up the habit of squatting, they 1.1 ho nrnfessor asserts, ac quire as fine physiques as Amer- Dr. Ishlwara studied this point with Japanese born In Hawaii and California. He says that 65 per cent of the height of the average occidental is in the legs while with the Japanese it Is only SO per cent. But American born Japanese are so built that their legs make up 64 8 per cent of their height and they are taller than their native countrymen. sp SUSPENSION PROPOSAL STIRS WORLD INTEREST Secretary ot the Treasury An- drew Mellon who conferred with British leaders was regarded as President Hoover's personal envoy In the matter. ... Government , Would Give Producer Rebate on Ex port Freight Argentina and Russia to Meet Slash . WASHINGTON,- June 27. VP) Another world price-slashing orgy Is feared by some American ex perts if the Canadian plan to cut the freight rate on export wheat IB reflected in quotations to for eign buyers. i Prime Minister Bennett has pro posed that the government absorb five cents a bushel In tho. trans portation - t:harge. That is,, public, carriers would haul export wheat to the seaboard for five cents a bushel less than the usuul rate and the government would refund the difference. 1 Theoretically the exporter would add the saving In freight to the price he puld for wheat. He no doubt would It there were a scar city of wheat In the world market and consumer countries were bid ding for gruin. ' There Is, however, an overabun dance of wheat, nnd every export er In the world is fighting for a sale. Rather thun udd Ills freight saving to the purchase price the . Cunadian exporter naturally might be expected to deduct It from his selling price. , Iterull IT. S. Experience I , It is recnlied that a yonr ngo, when President Hoover persuaded the American railroads to lower the rate to the senbonrd 76 cents to alleviate the domestic emer gency, the lower transportation cost was reflected In export quo tations and the general world price of wheat dropped 10 centB a buuhel under furious competi tion nmong other nations to meet American prices. Set-Up Awaited It seems to be the general Im pression In Canada that parlia ment will provide a set-up by which the producer will get the benefit of the lower freight rate. Nevertheless. economists say there la always a question who gets the benefit of a cut In freight rates; whether the producer If the market la hungry, or the con sumer If the market Is glutted. Since 70 per cent of Canada's wheat goes Into export, any ar rangement whereby foreign con sumption of the prnlrle product cnuld be stimulated without low- COUNT THE YELLOW BOXES -Real Proof That Country People Read the MAIL TRIBUNE Prime Minister MacDonald ot Great Britain held conversations with Secretary Mellon and has been keeping a close watoh on the Qer- man economic crisis. ... IN PARIS HOP TAX EVASIONS Laura Ingalls, Rival of Ruth Nichols for Aviation Hon ors, Set for Flight From Newfoundland to Paris. NEW YORK, Juno 2". Laurn Ingails, who gave up a theatrical career for aviation, Is tuning her giant Lockheed air express mono plane for a leap from Newfound land to Paris. This tiny, 20-year-old Brooklyn girl Is pushing close on the heels of -Ruth Nichols for the honor of being tho first woman to make a non-stop flight 'from these shores to the French capital. Recently she practiced blind flying In the Canadian border re gion, then flew to California to get the new plane In which she will make the ocean hop. After nn education abroad. Miss Ingalls returned to Broadway and became a ballet dancer. She tried her hand as a dramatic actress, but decided she would rather play among the stars In tho sky than those on the stage. There wos a period of Instruc tion nt a St. Loula aviation field, after which aho started out to set a few records. "Women are far better filers than men," she told a group of university graduates. Then she went out to prove It with some extraordinary Btunt maneuvers. First she set a record for wo men in New York to Lofl Angeles flight and then Bet another one a few days Inter when she made the return trip In 26 hours, 35 minutes. Not long after this hotli of these marks wore bettered by Mrs. Keith-Miller. Mlsi Ingalls then wont In strict ly for circus stunts, and only a year ago set a women's record by staying In the air 3 hours, 40 minutes whllo completing 880 In side loops. In the Dixie derby. In which the powder puff brigade raced from Washington to Chicago, she fin ished In third place. This' Brooklyn nvlntrlx Is fear less and doesn't enre much for comforts. She will pilot from an open cockpit, and the ship will be equipped with neither radio nor pontoons. erlng the price to the producer would be considered of vast Im- portnnoe Aiwrintrtt fruit Vhoto Foreign Minister Curtlus ex pressed the gratitude of Germany and ill id his nation endorsed with unqualified Joy the proposal ol Pres dent Hoover. California Truck Operators ; Under Scrutiny for Sharp Practises in Escaping Li cense in Both States. PHOENIX, Ariz., June 27 (UP) Certutn trurk onenUors of adjacent states who have been avoiding puymont of Arizona li cense fee will find their schemea worthleMH, due to the observance of Geoi'Kt) W. P. Hunt, Arlxona'H 7 1-year old governor. ' With the Mturt of tho fiscal year,' July 1, the flrHt snuad of traffj6 -oriiu'iB ovel-- to servo Art Bona will roll out on the hiKh wnyu. Their fli-Ht job will he to prevent methods of fee dodging which tho governor recently ex posed. i Not long ago tho governor spent a week-end in Yuma, on the Arizona-California , border, and while there, noticed a California truck bearing one Arizona license-plate-. Shortly thereafter he saw another California truck using the other half of the set of license platea. l'Vc-DiHlgliigr System This disclosed a fee-dodging system that of buying one set of plateg for two California trucks operating In Arizona. Interested, the governor learned that some California truck 'oper ators leave Arizona plates Just west of the state line where a truck to enter Arizona picks them up. Tho truck, on the return trip, leaves the plates to be used by another. Governor Hunt told tho Btate Highway Commission of his find ings, with the result that the squad of traffic officers will watch for tax evasions of this sort. Check JUcciikm PIuIoh Another task of the traffic of ficers will bo to check up on for eign license plates used by per manent residents of Arizona. Hundreds of Arlzonlans, It Is said, buy California plates at $3 a set and use them here, evading Cali fornia's personal tax law because of the lack of a permanent ad dress In that state nnd dodging the Arizona personal property tax because the car Is not registered In this state. It Is not ut all unlikely that the Increase In fees paid to Arizona will more than offset the expense of the truffle squad of 14 men. Medford Investment Co Owned and Managed by Local Business Men Offers New Stock Issue in $50 Units 4 Shares 7 Preferred 1 Share Common REFERENCE: YOUR OWN BANKER Further Details Gladly Given Mail Thia Coupon Now Medford Investment Company, 123 West Main Street, Medford, Ore. Gentlemen: Kindly send further detalli of your investment. NAME -.. ADDRESS . : Thii request for information incuri no obligation to buy. Mail this coupon without delay. nrDCCOTnM HIGHER IRnVEUlMfi German and British Scien tists Vie to Rule Stratos cope Rocket and Air Tight Chamber Theory Followed. . . DESSAU, Germany, June 27. (R) German aviation has started on the long and difficult problem of developing rgula. air service from continent to continent via the stratosphere. Germany's famous aviation pio neer, Hugo Junkers, 1h . working on plans and models for a safe slratosphuro airplane. Under his supervision and In i collaboration with, the Society for the Advancement of German Science and A sinus Hansen, an engineer, the Junkers works In this city are constructing a spec lal stratosphere aircraft after tho plans of Professor Junkers. Prof. Auguste Plccard, who re cently reached the stratosphere In a haloon, may participate in ex ploration flights with the strato sphere plane. It is the society's aim to explore nnd study the higher regions with the idea that future nfr services will uso the stratosphere. The plane Is one of the Junkers all-metal low wing craft. It has a width of 92 feet between the wing tips. The building of air- I tight chambers for the pilot and I observer and the construction of a satisfactory working motor were the greutest obstacles to a realiza tion of the project. But these dif ficulties have been cleared away, I Professor Junkers believes, , The motor Is a novelty. A apeo lnl turblno blast-engine, driven by , the exhaust guses, : compresses enouKh rarlfled air to keep tho gasoline" ehglne ' wbrklrtg ut""top speed ut heights over 62,000 feet. The construction of tho airtight and preRsure-proof chambers cuus od much trouble but Prof. Pic card's ulumlnum gondola gave the builders the hint they needed. The chambers are built on the same principle as Placard's sphere ex cept that they have double walls to minimize sudden changes of temperature. LONDON, "june 27. P) Pos sibilities of a trip to oven greater heights than Prof. Plccard's bal loon achieved are being discussed here. Prof, A. M. Low, Brltbih scien tist, said he had been approached by a man who wished him to de sign an apparatus that would car ry Us passenger up 60 miles, or five times as high as Plccard's mark. ' "Ills Idea consists of a man car rying rocket, complete with oxy gen equipment and with a para chute enabling a return to earth," Bald Professor Low. "Theoretically the project Is feasible. Certainly It shows tho trend of human ambition. There is cortatn to be a revival of schemes foi reaching Mars, the moon, or some other heaven ly body. The schemes probubly will be wildly Impracticable, but they may bear some sclentlflo fruit." Experts nt the meteorological office of tho air ministry were keenly Interested In Plccard's ob servations, having undertaken balloon nltltudo experiments for a long time themselves. "Balloons equipped with self re cording Instruments are released at Intervals," an official explain- fContlnued on Page Four) Confessed Slayer V I Aitottaltd Pttu fAul. John 8chopflin, 21, was said to have admitted to 8tockton, CaU police he killed Enid Marriott, Wig gins, Colo., school teacher last wint er because "she talked too much," VAST SUMS FOR 'HOLES IN GROUND DENVER, Colo., June 27 (UP) Millions of dollars have been "thrown Into holes in the ground' In Colorado. Known for the gorgeous vista presented by her mountains, Colo rado may become famed for the length and auantlty of her tun nels. Already she has soma ot the most famous In the country. The Moffat Tunnel is the most famous of all and was construct ed at a cost of millions of dollars, for railroad ' use as a cut-off through the mountains. The tun nel hardly had gotten well under way until It was the subject ot a controversy which had gone Htirditgh most of the courts in the land, not to mention the Inter state. Commerce Commission. Kullroads, and tax-payers, who must pay for the tunnel, are bat tling over Its uses. The big bore Ib 6.4 miles In longth, nnd Is but one of 62 tun nels on the Denver and Bait Lake Hallway between Denver and Craig, Colo. Altogether the tun nels total some 10.0. The Denver and Rio Orande Western, another railroad, has moro than two miles of tunnels In Cotorndo. A flvo-mllo tunnel carries. Irri gation water from the Gunnison River to the Uncompaghre valley. The Busk-Ivanhoe tunnol, a part of state highway No. 104, nonr the once famous mining enmp of Leadvlllo, Colo., la nearly two miles long. The Bhoshone tunnel, a water tunnel, near CHenwood Springs, totals more thnn two miles In length. There Is a 4.6 mile tun nel nt Idaho flprlngs. Hut by tnt the greatest mileage In tunnels In Colorado Is In mine tunnels fur beneath the surface of the Hockles. In one mino alone, the Fred erick, In Las Animas county, the totnl underground tunnel system Is nearly 30 miles. A state bulletin places the total cost of tunnels In the state at "hundreds of millions of dollars," and refuses to make even a guess as to the total length of the hu man burrows. Couldn't Head English RRIDOEOHT, Conn., June 27. UJI') Thomas Kicks, 18, was dls charged In city court when he ex plained the reason he drove by a "stop" sign was that he was un it hie to rend English. film France Starts Campaign to Bring Decency Back to Beach English Women Blamed for Exposures. PARIS, June. 27. (UP) Brit ish Puritans have started a vio lent campaign .to bring decency back to the golden 'sands of. the. French Riviera, the smart beaches much favored, by the. fashionable cosmopolitan crowds,' and send the English "beach-widows' back . to their husbands; - or . make - ttietn sew Inner linings on. their diaphan ous beach pajamas..! . - .v The Vrench police long ago gave up the Idea of making the golden sands safe tor' Puritans.' TwO plece bathing suits gave way to one-piece apparel- and now . the most daring bathers. :are back .to two-plecera again, " a little ' Bilk brassiere and a short pair of skin tight "shorts," with plenty . ot browned skin In between, above and below the two pieces, ,, , Signing herself "A north-of-Gngland Woman," a British Pur itan has written a letter . to . the editor. The letter was published In the "Avenlr" of Juan-les-Plne. smart beaeh ot sand and parasol pines, two-piece (separated) bath ing suits and all-laoe -.pajamae. She protests against the -. display ot flesh and-bad manner:; "Hundreds ot shameless English women Conduct themselves dally on the beach in scandalous fash Ion. These' so-called' emart' wo men from my own - country brine; a blush to my oheeks and to every - decent - English, woman. They came to the Riviera because they knew that they dar not behave In the same manner on -any. Eng lish beuxb, where lleys would- be lulled If thev wore -such transoaM ent beaeh naiamas. - or -euoh .jed- . called suits ; es 'brassiere' f apd shorts, , which ' leaves -the middle unclothed and which they pretend are decont,-'.- ' - . --l '' ' ,'"' "To my own knowledge, ' many of these shameless women have left their husbands In England, I wonder what their husbands would say It they could see the dograded morality of their wives under the Influenoe of the RI-. viera. Hiven trrencn people nave told me they ere shocked, so It la time for the authorities to organ ize beach censorship, . If only for tho sake of the tew decent wo men who come here." ' ;. . I BINOHAMTON, Ni Y., June IT. (UP) The oft repeated story: that Oeneral U. 8. Grant "(ought the Civil war oh liquor'.' Is scof fed at by 8, M. Flint, who served as bugler eaoort ton him,' "Absolutely a fake,'.' Flint said. -"t was right by his Side for If months and I ought to know," . Flint was only IS when he en listed In 1862 at Albany. j in ' Dependable Abstract Service When it comei to all matters pertaining; to ti les, we are equipped to nerve you well. For 26 yean we have been oom- , piling authoritative title records enabling' tu to" offer the fineat possible . service. . . Title Insurance Jackson County Abstract CrOe-v 131 K. Sixth ft : v' rV- 4X 3 ttt 1)f fills' .i-kM V.' i Hf&Wll