Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1937)
The Weather Forecast: Fair tonlfht and Saturday, but becoming vn . settled; cooler Saturday. Te mperature Highest yesterday SI Lowest thl morning, .. 44 Sunday Ads for th classified psg matt bt In this oftlr by 1:10 p.' m. Saturday. Ads received after that hour will run "Too Lata to Classify." Ad doting time S p. m. Saturday. Medford Tribune Full Associated Press Full United Press Tbirty-Secotid Year Eighteen Pages Two Sections MEDFOBD, OREGON, FRIDAY; MAY 21. 1937. No. 52. fo) ft ML mm m rare mm . . i i J mm VgW I VICTORY TERMED W CLEAR WARNING f TO INDEPENDENTS By Paul JMallon (Copyright, 1937, by Paul Mai Ion) WASHINGTON. May 21. Some-i thing went wrong Inside the senate 1 Judiciary committee when It repudiat ed the president's court packing bill. At the very mo ment the com- mlttee waa rejec ting the White House program, an I eminent oongres- alonal leader waa assuring hi assort- t. Afinttw that i k""5 .wo I 1 would not do It. VI I When the bad news XfW -f)p w a - brought to raui .Million mm, ne was su hocked he would not talk to any one the rest of the day. At the White House, surprise was likewise Indicated The president did not get hla wind back in time to discuss the matter In his press conference later that day. The fact la the presidential major domos thought they had arranged for an entirely different result. They are not saying anything now, except among themselves, but they thought th committee waa going to have a tie vote (nine to nine) on the Logan compromise. This la a proposal to pack the court at the rate of one a year Instead of six at once. Such a deTelopment would hare saved the court packing program from the Ig nominy of a direct defeat. It would have lifted the Issue out of the committee to the senate floor for open discussion with the least pos sible pain to all. Everything was fixed for It, or. at least, nearly everything. The sklda were greased, all except one skid. What happened, the Roosevelt domo say, was-hat oi.uWf the pals on the committee waa asleep at the switch. He was supposed to vote for the Logan compromise, but got to-voting against all compromises so fast he did not know when to stop. The question now has arisen as to whether he took or waa given a sleeping powder before the meeting. If he had voted for- the Igan proposal, the vote would have been exactly nine to nine. As It waa, the compromise waa defeated, ten to sight, and the committee went on to defeat the president's plan by the same score. What It sems to boll down to is that the demos did a very bad Job on the committee, or else some na tural and unavoidable misunder standing arose. At any rate, they were flabbergast ed and were unable to do anything about It after It occurred. A Democratic group of anti-pack- (Continued on Page five.) Justice Successor Remains Mystery WASHINGTON. May 31. (AP) President Roosevelt reiterated today he had given no thought aa yet to the question of appointing a euc ceasor to Associate Justice Willi Van Devanter of the supreme court. The Justice will retire June 3. The president aald he would defer until next week the sending of a special message to congress outlining a comprehensive national program embracing power, flood control, soli conservation, reclamation and related projects. CHETCO FISHING BEST OF SEASON IS REPORT The outlook for week-end fishing In the Chetco river Is reported the best thl year, according to word received from Tom Page, of Brookings, Ore. SIDE GLANCES by TRIBUNE REPORTERS Mem Alford reortIns to a cigarette when his cigar stub became what he described as "water-logged." Chief Roy Elliott telling how ele gant fire headquarters looked afttr getting doused with paint and kalso mtne, he Inviting everyone to come up and see the place sometime. Dr. Sherman Land on Divine becom ing poetic about setting suns and lengthening shadows In speaking of outdoor vesper service. ' Bob Gil? trap being alight ly st loss when tbe gear lever on hi auto broke neatly off at the floorboard as be shifted and he being forced to continue hla drive home In second gear after futile attempts to stuff the recalcitrant lever back into place. Dorothy Nyswaner experiencing -1 f $ flculty with a balky bicycle that per sisted in trying to precipitate her uto the rottdwaj T .. Collective Bargaining Con tract Presented Jones and Laughlin Steel Corpora tionMay Sign Saturday By the Associated Press. The steel workers' organizing com' m It tee promptly presented a collec tive bargaining contract to the Jones and Laughlin steel corporation to day following It victory In the first major employe election. The result in the balloting, super vised by the national labor relations board, the committee termed : "A warning to other Independent pro ducers." In the election the S. W. O. G. was favored as bargaining representa tive by 17,028 of the 24.412 J. and L. employes voting. A majority vote authorized the S. W. O. C. to assume exclusive bargaining rights for all employes of the concern. .May Sign Saturday. Company and union representatives planned to meet tomorrow when contract may be signed. After an overnight sit-down ot workers objecting to speed of produc tion, operations were resumed at the Ecorse, Mich., plant of the Murray corporation. The plant manufacture frames for Ford Motor company and Chrysler. The United Automobile Workers of America and management reached an agreement. An accord Including an eight cents an hour wage Increase ended a strike that threw 900 employes into idle ness at the Olobe Machine fc Stamp ing company, Cleveland, and threat ened to throw 12.000 Detroltcrs out of work, The V, A. W. A. waa deslg nated bargaining agent pending a national labor relations board de cision on the Issue. Striking employes of 16 San Ftan clsco hotels rejected en employers' proposal that they return to work for the duration of the Golden Gate bridge fiesta. (Continued on pace fourteen) STOCKMAN KILLED IN TEAM RUNAWAY H. E. Hansberry. stockman who has lived on a forest homestead with his wife adjacent to the Pelican guard station for the past dozen yean, waa fatally Injured In a horse runaway yesterday afternoon. He died en route to a hospital in Klamath Palls. Mr. Hansberry was a grazing per mittee on the Rogue River national forest and Hugh RJtter. district rang er, left him about 2:30 yesterday af ter a conference. It la believed the team of horsca he waa working ran away shortly thereafter, dragging him after them. His hip was broken In three placea and he suffered other Injuries, the forest office said. Mr. Hansberry waa aoout 60 years old. His home was in Klamath county about nine miles northeast of Lake of the Woods. Relief Work Plan Here To Stay Avers Hopkins WASHINGTON. May 21 (AP) The house stood by President RooMtelt today and approved tentatively a $1,300,000,000 re lief appropriation for the fiscal year, startlnn July 1. The teller vote for $1,500,000 was 310 to 128. It defeated a determined drive to slash $.vto.oon,ooo from the total In the name of economy after shunting aside a series of efforts to doom the fund as high as $4,000,000,000 and cut It as low as $1,000,000,000. WASHINGTON, May 21, AP) Harry L. Hopkins completed four j ears In charge of federal relief today, convinced that government work for the Jobless permanently haa replaced private charity aa "the American sys tem." The lean, low a-bred administrator tas supervised the greatest retlef fund In history amounting to al most $7,000,000,000 for work relief alone. "My years here have taught me that Americana like to work for what they get." be said, "and that the na tion haa use for their labor in public improvements when they can't find a h b in .rivate Industry. "1 am culKlent tint me ;11 neter go back to the dole or tat vicious Haab Recaptured - Parker Boy Accidental Injury For 1 In Each 14 Is Year's Outlook PORTLAND, May 31. (P W. E. Longfellow's outlook upon life la none too bright. The national director of the Red Cross first aid and life saving services says one out of every 14 persons In the United States will be accidentally injured this year. Accident took the live of 111. 000 persons last year, he said, and Injured 9.700.000. They coat the American people something like $9,500,000 a day. Longfellow la here for a serlea of conferences. OREGON RELIEF TAKESHARPDOWNTURN PORTLAND, May 31. (AP) Com bined state end county relief costs dropped from $232,580 in February to 1200.576 in April. State Relief Administrator Elmer Goudy told the state relief committee at Its meeting here today. . He aald the number of cases fell from the peak load of 88,367 In Feb ruary to 28.280 laat month, a 19.4 percent decrease compared with the 13.9 percent drop in relief costs. Groudy explained that the costs did not fall as much as the number of cases because unemployable who have gone off the relief rolls nor mally are the lightest loads, the re maining relief clients being the heavy cost on sea. , Families on relief will have their living standards raised by tbe federal child welfare program, soon to be come effective. The committee approved May bud gets of 99.964. for blind assistance and $270,319 for-old age assistance, the federal government paying half and the state and counties one quar ter each. - The committee took no action on a request by Multnomah . county commissioner. Prank Shull, for state aid In clearing up the county's re lief deficit, which he estimated would reach $103,934 by the end of the year. MEDFORD PI READY SPOKANE, Wash,, May 21. Walter O. Crank, Medford, Ore., made final preparations today for his mar, rlage Sunday with his bedridden fel low townawoman, Ruth A. Holmes. With Dr. A. H. VanWlnkle, Cen tral Christian church pastor. Crank applied for and received a marriage license. R. M. Butler, marriage li cense clerk, then accompanied them to the hospital where hla bride-to-be signed the application. Mr. Van Winkle will perform -the ceremony. Miss Holmes' back waa broken In an automobile accident nearly a year apo. Idea that poverty should be pun ished." It was Hopkins who, late In 1933, oegan the transition from state aid to federal work. The civil works admin istration, which put 4,000,000 on the treasury payroll within a month. :eaulted. Unemployment had been an Inter mittent problem for more tban 40 j ear before Roosevelt took offtoe, but federal aid was not granted until late :n the Hoover administration In the form of loans to states. "Tbe American system," Hopkins rcalled, "waa to take care of the Job less through private agencies. It worked well until the load became too jreat. States and cities had to get ousy." Congress first authorized the re construction finance corporation, to July. 1032. to lend 13.00,000,000 to the state. Spurred by eatlmatea that 18.000. 000 person depended upon public funds and that needs were growing, .he first Rouse velt congress voted 9500,000,000 for stats grants Super vision became partly a federal re sponsibility. After signing that bill, the prest jent telephoned bis friend Hopkins r New rork-where he headed ut i .-ellef a -tn (Me- to catch the next j rain here. On May 27 he iegn act 1 J2g on governors' pleas for funds. E AT L Edith Whillock Valedictorian Helen Chirgwin Salu- tatorian 176 to Get Diplomas Next Friday Edith WhUlock has been named valedictorian of the 1937 graduating class of the senior high school and Helen Chirgwin la to be salutatorlan. The selections aro based entirely on scholarship. Baccalaureate services for the class, largest in the history of the school, will be held Sunday night at 8:00 o'clock In the school, auditorium. Rev. Oscar G. Gibson will deliver the sermon. The 176 graduates wl'.l receive their diplomas next Friday evening at commencement exercises. Dr. Bruce Baxter, president of Wil lamette university, la to make the commencement address. Captain G. R. Durham la to be presiding minister for the baccalau reate service. The complete program follows: March from Tannhauser . .... Wagner High School Orchestra Holy. Holy. Holy Hymn I Congregation ! Invocation Preetdlng Minister On t Life's Highway Bertrand-Brown Vocal Bnaumble Prayer Presiding Minister Sermon Rev. Oscar Q. Olbson America the Beautiful Hymn Congregation! Benediction Presiding Minister Coronation March ..l Meyerbee ' High School Orchestra Graduates nre: Bo l. Albert, Cyril Herman Baker, Floyd Henry (Continued on Page Five.) FEHL ARGUMENTS SLATED SATURDAY Argument on motions to quash, filed In actions brought by Earl H. Fehl, on parole for ballot-theft con viction, hla wife Electa A. Fcht. and his mother-in-law, Cortnthia E. Stailey against the estate of the late Ted E. Helm roth, will be argued Sat urday afternoon, before Circuit Judge E. B. Ashurat of Klamath county, as signed to the case by the state su preme court. Judge Carl D. Wlmb erly of Douglas county had been dis qualified by an affidavit of prejudice filed by the Fchls. and Judge H. D. Norton had disqualified himself. The motions grew out of mortgage foreclosure suits filed; by Helm roth Involving the Pacific Record-Herald building, and a West Park street resi dence. Release of a lien on $828 held by the sheriff for a sheriff's sale pur chase of the Went Park property, la sought. Mrs. Stailey bid $828. and It was afterwards attached. The Pacific -Hera Id action 1 based upon the claims that Helmroth and Mrs. Stailey had an agreement, whereby ahe was to be paid $100 monthly, from rentals. - BASEBALL American. ((It Innlnga) R. H. E. Detroit 4 8 1 Bonton 3 8 0 Coffman and Cochrane; Grove and Desautela. R. H. E- Chleago , 3 4 1 Philadelphia 4 10 1 Stratton. Brom and Bewell; Caa ter and Brucker. (11 Innlnga) R. H. E. St. Louis . a 11 1 New York 4 IS 0 Hogaett, Caldwell, Blake and Huff man, Henuley; Pearson, Murph; and Dickey. National. R. H. E. Roston . 8 10 0 Pltteburgh 8 7 1 Macpayden and Lopea; Borman.Hoyt, Brown and Todd. R H. E 6 8 0 8 13 I Hew York , Chicago . Schumacher, Melton. Oabler. Smith and Dannlng; Shoun, Lee and Hart nett. TREKA. Calif.. May 31. (API The Weatern hotel at Fort Jonea burned today from an undetermined cauae. The loaa waa covered partly by Insurance Wins Divorce Vv , Oliver Hardy, hefty half of the screen comedy team of Laurel and Hardy, is shown on the wit ness stand In Los Angeles as he won a divorce from Mrs. Myrtle Lee Hardy, in a suit based on a sealed complaint. F BALL FIELD BE ... . , ; , "" . ...J,'-- Medford high school will have lighted football field, with actual In stallation of the arcs to start Im mediately and be completed within the next two weeks. That w i the . announcement of E. H. Hedrlck, city school superin tendent last night at a meeting Of softball team managers In the M. N. Hogan Brokerage company. At the same time the Medford Softball as sociation was formed with ten teams ready for action under lights. Definite decision to erect lights on the Medford high turf football field, already considered the finest In Oregon, came after a concerted drive by school officials and softball enthusiasts. With ten teams already entered Jn the league and pledging their $18 entrance fees, the school superintendent deemed It safe to announce the definite decision. Cost of Installing the lights will be borne by the entrance fees of the competing teams and admissions received at the gate. Actual league play will start as soon as the field Is ready. All teams will be outfitted In uniforms. Teams definitely enter ed are 20-30 club, Hughes and Under wood. Timber Products. Office Boys, Lamport's, Jennings Tire company. (Continued on Page Three.) PAYS $50 FINE John Harvey Bran nan of Klamath Falls, a Southern Oregon Normal school student living In Ashland , was fined $50 In Juatlce court here yesterday on a hit-and-run charge. The fine was a result of an al leged automobile amashup Involving a car driven by Brannan' and parked machine belonging to Mrs. t. R. Frldeger of Ashland. According to the authorities. Brannan ran Into the Frldegar car while It was parked In front of Lane's confectionery on Siskiyou boulevard Wednesday night, and failed to atop or to report the accident. The Frldeger car was considerably damaged by the impact, according to city police In Aa.Uand. ',57, CALLED BY DEATH Newton Henry Eddy, aon of the lata' Isaac N. and Sarah K. Eddy, died at his home In Central Point laat evening from a heart attack. He waa 87 years old. He waa born In Eugene November 31, 1870. Surviving are hla wife, Flor ence Eddy of Central Point; a aon. John, of Medford; two Bisters, Mrs. Sidney Anderson of Hyder. Alaaka. and Mrs. Mary Harpham of Baker, and a brother. William Eddy ol Mount Vernon. funeral services will be held at the Pert funeral home, arrangements for which wrt being mad today, TOLD MUNDELEIN Gestapo Seeking Source of Information of Chicago Cardinal Headsman's Ax Penalty If Caught "Sewage" , SAN FRANCISCO, May 31. &) Mayor Flore Uo H. LaOuardla of New York suggested today that German press comment on assert ed immorality In New York high schools be referred to the New York aewer commissioner. "Statements such as those made in the German Press," said LaQuardla, "can only be referred to Commissioner Blngor who has charge of the sewage disposal In New York City. "No decent person can answer, or even comment, on such filth." BERLIN, May 21. ( AP) The pow erful Gestapo, German secret state police, began today to seek detailed Information on German sources from which. It believed, George Cardinal Mundeleln obtained the Information for his castlgatlon of thlr Reich's at titude toward the Cathallc church. Reproductions of purported Amer ican newspaper accounts, published here,' said the Chicago Cardinal ob tained hla data, about '.Immorality" trials of German Oathoilo monies 4"nd lay brothers and other material on the church-state situation from Ger man residents, relayed th roughs the Franciscan Sisters In Illinois. Penalty Is Av If the Identity of any of these Ger (Continued on (age fourteen) AUTO SALE SUIT The civil suit of T. W. Gray, rep resenting the plgueroa Auto company of Los Angeles, against W. N. (Farmer BUI)) Carl of the Applegate. and his son Gene, Involving sale of an auto to Norvel Carl, a minor, Is underway before a circuit court Jury today. The plaintiff seeks return of the automobile, and the defendants cash paid on It. The sale was consummated December 30. 1035, with a down pay ment of $325, and a balanee due of $204. The complaint alleges that Gene Carl, at the time or the sale, was a minor, and legally unable to make contract, and since the turning over of the auto, it has "received rough treatment.' It Is further alleged, that Gene Carl, knowing Norvel Carl, waa a minor 'stood idly by," while the deal was consummated. The Carls si's represented by At torney Allison Moulton, and the plaintiff by. Attorney Charles W Reemes. Income Shares Maryland rund, bid 8.77: asked. 10.71. Quarterly Income, bid 17.80: asked 10.37. No Religious Ceremonies For Windsor and Wallis MONTH, rtance, May 31, (API There will be no rellgloua ceremony to unite the Duke of Windsor and Wallis Warfleld, apokesmsn an nounced tonight. Herman L. Rogers msde the an nouncement. He refused to say why the plans for a rellgloua service to follow the civil service on June 3 had been abandoned. It waa known, however, that the duke and his flancoe had been try ing without much success to find an Angellcan pastor who would marry them In the face of the church's stand agslnst re-msrrMge of divorced person, and It constant op position to the Edward-warflrld un ion. Rogers did say the British consul from Mantes would attend the civil ceremony, thua giving It something of a British official flavor. However, the conaul'a capacity will be unof ficial. The British government .till la steadfastly opposed to any public recognition, of tha match, and no Joins in War in Spain At a Glance By the Associated Pres HEN DA YE, Franco-Spanish Fron tier. Insurgents reported Incendiary bombs set fire to the Basque yacht Golzeko-Izarra, carrying refugees out of Bilbao. The reports aald the yacht was fired during an Insurgent government aerial battle In which a government plane waa ahot down. Baaque militiamen at Bilbao, sup ported by government planes, went over the top In a serlea of counter attacks. LONDON Diplomatic sources said reported German and Italian opposi tion to proposals for a Spanish .civil war armistice and withdrawal of foreign volunteers has ended, and that U countries are willing to Join In armistice discussions. PARIS France, Belgium and the Vatican were said to have approved tho British plan for an armistice in Spain and withdrawal of foreign volunteers. The plan was reported to call for sending International com mission to Spain to bring about truce. OF HUGE 0. AND C. DEFICIT WASHINGTON. May 31. (AP) The Interior department urged the house public landa committee today to approvo a proposed bill which would permit tho treasury to liquid ata ai0i000,000 deficit accrued a)nos tha government withdrew some 000,000 acrea of western Oregon rail road and wagon grant lands more than 30 yeara ago. The department aald the adminis tration advocated orderly reimburse ment of funda apent by the govern ment for the lands and for money paid aa taxes or in lieu ot taxes when the lands reverted to the gov ernment. A solicitor aald revenue never had been sufficient to return the gov ernment's original Investment ot 3.50 an acre or to meet entirely taxes and tax subsidies paid the counties. OPENING HARD JOB ROSEBURO, Ore., May 31. (AP) Only by "getting all tha breaks," can the crew attempting to open tha Union Creek road to Diamond lake, clear the way for trafflo by Sunday, according to Bob Mercer of the Rose burg office of the Umpqus national oreat. Mercer returned here last night snd re Darts that the snowplow la burking hard packed anow drifted aa high aa four feet in places. Crews working two ahlfta ot eight hours each, he reporta. have cleared the road for a dletsnce of 18 miles. It la possible, he states, that leaser depths may be encountered on part of the remaining eight miles to be cleared, In which case the road will be opened so that fishermen may reach the lake by Sunday, the open ing day ot the sAson. WASHINGTON, Msy 31. IAP) Nevada and California reached agree ment today on proposed legislation which would result In a reduction of approximately one-half mill a kilowatt hour on Boulder dam power chsraes. member of the royal family will come here. Mrs. D. B. Merryman, Mrs. War fields "Aunt Bessie." arrived at the chateau today from tha United States to be the "number one" wed ding guest. Just ahead ot her were Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bate, described as Americana who are "personal friends of the duke." They will stay over the week-end. The duke and Bates set out for IS holes of golf, wltb Mrs. Warfleld and Mrs. Bates trailing. When "Aunt Bessie" arrived, Mrs. Warfleld Kit the course to greet her. Britain's government wss reported meanwhile to have denied the former monarch the protection of the Brit ish navy for a honeymoon cruise down the ooaat of civil war torn Spain. Windsor, hla friend aald. waa con sidering turning to a foreign nation for the guarantee of safety which ha waa unable to get from the naval emplr. ha one ruled. Flight J'VILLE BURGLARY ADDED TO CRIMES IN 4-DAYLIBERTY Telephone Call to Pal in County Jail Gives Officers Tip On Whereabouts Parker Boy Uncaught Elmer F. Haab. It. of Ashland, who escaped from the sheriff lsat Monday noon, after having received a three year sentence to state's prison for burglary, was captured laat night at the Pine Cone, on the North Paclflo highway. During hla four daya of freedom, Haab burglarised two Jack sonville stores 'and a residence, orig inated a plot to attempt a Jail break, with daring Impudence telephoned, four times yesterday to Arthur W Roaslter, a Jail pal, and persuaded Robert (Red) Parker, a paroled youth, to leave the home of hla benefactor, Albert Tessltore, In the Eagle Point district. Hsab la being held In the solitary call at the county Jail today. To Prison Soon A charge of "escaping after convic tion and sentence," will b. filed against Hsab. the aherlff aald this morning. With Roaslter, also under a three year prison sentence for burg lary ot Brown's place here, Haab will be taken to the penitentiary at Salem tomorrow or Sunday. , Parker, la sought aa a parol viola tor, and If caught, will be sentenced la a parole violator, authorttlearaateftn. ' ,-'M. J, Beasonette of the Pin Con J'as attempting to telephone Rossltar m tne county Jan. - Tuesday night, Haab hurled eight hack saw bladlea stolen from the Ray Coleman store In Jacksonville Mon day night, from the lawn to the courthouse roof. During the duy. Haab telephoned Roaslter In Jail, ot hla plan. Roaslter waa directed to have a trusty bring the sawa to him. The sheriff came In possession ot the sawa, all Incapable of cutting through the steel bars. Went To Jacksonville i BVltlftwtnv ht. w.aia f a ' vhv .'.UIIU-J AW, Haab hid out In the northwest Med ford district. Monday night, accord ing to officers, he went to Jackson villa in a driving rain and entered the home of Dr. E. O. Rlddell, whet be obtained a eoat and bracelet, and burglarized the Wilson Confec tionery store, where he obtained Vt from a plnball machine. Haab. the officers say, then ransacked the Colt man store, obtaining the hacksaw bladea, two wa tehee belonging to VI Beach, wrestling match timekeeper, and money. When arrested Haab bad 138. Haab apent Tuesday In a weat Med ford barn, coming out twice to tele phone to Roaslter In the county Jail, from the Jackson street etora. Both times Haab disappeared before the of ficer arrived, after tracing the call. According to Haab'a story to the aherlff. ot hi wanderings, Wednesday morning he rode on a logging truck to Eagle Point and then Journeyed to tha ranch of Albert Tessltore, where Parker, Jail pal on parole, waa work ing. Haab told the aherlff, the two had an agreement to leave together, after Haab had completed hla first sentence of 90 days. Acting a a trusty, Haab walked away and wa oaptured three daya later la the Slsklyous. Visited Parker Haab apent most of Wednesday "vlaitlng" with Parker, as the latter worked clearing bruab on the Teaat tore place. In th evening, h went to the barn to spend the night. Tes sltore working with hi cows, discov ered Haab, and ordered htm to leave. The fugitive loitered In the brush un til early morning, when he awakened Parker, and the two came to thl city, walking down the P. as B. right-of-way. They hid Thursday In tin Man zantta near the airport. In the afternoon, Haab came out of hiding to procure food, and on these trip he telephoned Rootlter In Jail from th Pine Cone. On hi final call he waa captured. Haab then led th sheriff and state police, to the airport section hide-out, In an effort to catch Parker, who had becarm alarmed and failed to answer calls. A highway watch la being maintained for him. Tessltore Shaken Tessltore. when he discovered tbe absence of Parker Thursday morning, reported It to th authorities, and waa badly ahaken by th action of th youth he had befriended, Sheriff Brown aald. He also reported finding the strange youth In his barn, but his description did not tit Haab. Parker, with Henry Elmer Dale, now paroled to hi brother. In an upstate town, was arrested after the attempted (, Continued oa Tm Thr.) .1