Show "SUNDAY MORNING OCTOBER 28 1923 THIRD v i ' THE OGDEN i ' GETS ""'" " mm NEW INTEREST Kansas City Anxious To Get Place In Speedy Circuit j I ' '1-- NEW YORK act 27 — Talk of third major league again fills the autumn air It has been growing In volume since the world series end will probably continue until it dies away in the spring when the big league clubs trek to their training1 campsiand tie show be- -' gins aJl over again The third league gossip haa a different note in it this fall A more sinister note it would seem There are indications that the motive behind the present movement is not uplift of-thplayers as it has been so often in the past but an attempt to smash the monopoly enjoyed by organized baseball so that the Lig time game may be extended to more cities and a wider circle of fans A man who asserted positively that a third major league is in process of formation made the following statement this week to the writer: "I really wish that the New York Yankees and the New York Giants would win the big league pennants every year That might wake up the magnates That is almost what is happening but instead of a sane remedy such as a third and league you perhaps a fourth big wise men of hear "the supposedly baseball suggest such a puerile remedy as breaking up the Yanks! VutiyEB EASTGONTEST e CALIFORNIA NeSRO IS OMW A USURPER 7D UiELTR CROVJUM ) I IV J - 1 V ' f ' -A JOS' AJBt&BO j V in UAC1N6THE- - BV 1 A ATTrER 1 — s i 9 The Ogden Blue Pine soccer team easily defeated the Germania team at Salt Lake Saturday 6 to 0 in a d contest It was the sixth triumph of the fall season for the locals Captain Quick was the outstanding performer for Ogden Germania played fine ball during the first half but could not cope with the splendid work of the Ogdenites in the last period The lineup and summary: Gerimania Blue Pine Nestman Parsons all-arou- r SAMHV BAKE DiDM'r PAVB MUCH TROLpLS To PPOVBTrAT VOOWd GdRBeTPJH MASTER VDNi'r rne Bor cxu&tz nd Goal Binnie H Dransfietd Left Back Udink Schmidt v Right Halfback "W Weisa Lynch Center Halfback Stock Baptist Left Halfback 'JV Lynph Gentner Outside Right Shearer Hierbeck Inside Right G Quick (C) Schwartz Center M Lynch G Nestman Inside Left Dransfield Wakefritz Outside Lefjt Periods — 3 0 minutesi Wittleberg Nussbaum Right Back :- - j I M S MCClD OOr AicOUBPM " I jL SECOKO TME ix - TM& TERRY m k CHANGE LAW i "The government of organized baseball should be changed to meet changing conditions Why can't Kansas City Kansas have a ball team when there are men willing -to back it? The meire fact that a neighboring city in ianother state has a ball team should not prevent it The law should be changed to open baseball not to close it" That is the most radical pronouncement that has been made by any individual Who has plotted to overthrow baseball and' start a little league of his own Heretofore it has been almost withoute excepphiltion the intention of would-banthropists to organize a league for the benefit of the downtrodden players This time- the intent is to x shatter organized baseball not for the benefit of the "players but for the benefit of the patrons and for the extcnsioji of the game The downtrodden player argument doesn't carry much weight any more with the fan when a ball player can get a salary of $5000 to $60000 a year and perhaps $5000 extra tor performing a few days in a world series Ball players nowadays have servants to run for them pnd writers to write articles for them The first revolt of any conse-ftuenin baseball was based almost entirely on the alleged plight of the player The players deserted the National league in a body but the public didn't fall very hard for their sad tale Sentiment was hack of all of the fight together with a little shrewd seeking for publicity and there were those who profited hugely by the pubThe players" league went licity overboard in a year primarily because the players couldn't govern themselves The fans did not patronize the games after the novelty had worn off The men who are now talking about a third big league are not wasting any tears over the "poor to break players" It is theirofintent the organizadown the barriers tion of baseball so that it they wish to place a team in Kansas City whether or Jtans they may do insoKansas City not there is a club What now' restricts Kansas Mo City Kans from getting into big territime baseball is the torial allotment by which a- team may not except by permission of the baseball magnates invade isthe sacred precincts of a club that a member of the organized baseball agreement AXOTHER PROBLEM These hustlers for a third big of league laugh at the statement are organized baseball that there not enough players to go around They ask why it is that each major the league club arrogates to itself outright to claim forty players' for right and make arrangementsnine many more when it takes only players on each team to play a game of baseball The first thing any hew league would do is to try to get as many good players as possible regardless of reserve rule optional clause or any other of the conventions by which organised baseball Binds itself There might be no chance to lure Babe Ruth or Lou Gehrig from the Yanks or Larry Benton from the Giants but rest assured that if a new league were attempted the first play would be to approach such players and to get them if possible for purposes of publicity Even if they were not signed up the projected league might feel very well satisfied with the publicity it received for trying JACK J 1— — 1 ' -- 4 j f A C) s iA r— 0 Blue Pin© 6—6 i 0 0— 0 Germania Referee — L Jansen Salt Lake linesmen— H Wertz T'j Taylor Og den 0 BO YS HELD FOR KILLING 2 MEN DUO - ce 'Is M PUT UKOFFlClAt —— zzz -r- - o(AN WUHfcU C&MB SACK AMD 0©e AuMV dOAHPDSHlP ApMjpsreeo rue same mediciiob To Holdups I f H Man$ New Faces For New York Team Members of Champs Now Doomed By HENRY L FARRELL In the minds of more tfian a few thinkers it is going to be just too bad for Joe Dundee when the welterweight champion goes into the arena in New York in November to expose that lantern hanging chin of his to the shots of Young Jack Thompson the California negro It not only would be too bad for Dundee but it would be terrible for him if one past performance was true enough to shoot the works on In their one previous meeting Thompson flattened the champion and was de prived of the title pnly by the precaution of Dundee's manager who had made the negro some in over weight Past performances are good indications Men who try to beat the races depend almost entirely upon the conclusions they arrive at by a study of what a horse has done previously under similar conditions But they try to strike an average by making allowances for peculiar conditions and circumstances And in striking that average you frequently hear them say— 'xou can throw that race By HENRY L FARRELL Starred in Game While "Cuckoo" By NEA Service FORT WORTH Texas — Football instinct alone enabled Mer-to lead his line Toler Texas Christian unltersity quarterback team against Austin college In ajgame liere recently For Toler was "cuckoo'' all the time he played On one jqf the first plays of the game! Toler was knocked out that is oiitjn his feet as boxers often are But he stayed in the advance game and piloted his teammates once jfor'a He was haken out of the game early in the third quarter after his teammates and icbaches noticed his condition at the rest period and was put jto bed immediately He didn't come to his senses until the next morning - 1 I 60-yar- - d — r- anion out" And the smarj: boxing men who want to do a little yagering on the return match between Dundee and Thompson will jthrow out that first heat between the pair in Chicago and reach their conclu sions on what is shown in the of the previous performances champion and his challenger DUNDEE'S RECORD BETTER Dundee's record shos that he has been a better fighter than Thompson in spite of all the panning tossed at hirn for his zeal in protecting the title In the fashion of a good business tnan he has done hi s best to avoid the toughest of his rivals until he could get real improtant He money for fighting' them was not original in the exercise of this caution He only copied the other champions There is also in his record something that makes him look pretty good as he approaches what looks like an awful tough spot He was flattened once before and he came back and gave a Jine smacking around to j the boy who had flattened him) Dundee thought he was tak ing a sucker when he agreed to fight Thompson in Cliicago and when he was working up fpr a title shot back in 19126 he- - feP for a sucker match against Eddie Roberts another Californian who was just about as unknown at that time as Thompson was a while back HE SOCKED ROBERTS Roberts knocked Dundee out Did You Know That— in the first round arid Dundee when hardly had come around the Purdue he said he wanted i that guy PEST WEICH star waits table again and quick He insisted upat the Lambda Chi Alpha fraon a return match and in a short And runs ternity house time he got Roberts back in a Ford around the campus with him for a and And is one of the few him a good beating gave students permitted to have a' Young Corbett who died last ear "Shorty" Propst Alawas year only prominent bama scout takes movies from boxer who the a sensational And he victory over ascored the press box fighthigh ranking "Wisconsin times scouted three er and made good the same way Tod Morgan the junior in a return bout He startled lightweight champion once was the country when he knocked out Jess the great Terry McGovern and given up with T B who used to be MeMahon he knocked out Terry the secwas ond time when McGovern Rickard's matchmaker tried once a detective Mike to prove that his first victory was a fluke McTigue is wearing a brown And so is Jim derby Billy Papke scored a sensaFarley chairman of the New tional knockout victory over StanYork boxing commish ley Ketchel and ten weeks later The Yanks had to 'send back Ketchell knocked Papke out in a return bout $103 000 because the series did not go that long James Sammy Baker theformer army V Roosevelt son of the Demosergeant who is right up there cratic candidate for governor of wanting a' title fight with thi New York is on- the Harvard winner of the Dundee-Thompso- n Lou Mag-'noli- a football squad fight also figured in one of the the New York referee is same kind of cases a wow on a guitar Baker caused a big surprise Bill Gibson was a bill poster way early in 1927 when he knocked out Ace Hudkins the highly toutback in the last century ed western fighter He cut up And the duke of Muldoon used Hudkins so badly that the referee to be a street car conductor stopped the fight but there was no question that he would have ed er V j V By NEA Service CHICAGO— rdiice more this timei for vr A Stagg is marshaling his suad 2 the thirty-sevent- year Alonzo h at Chicago for a football camI l V paign The veteran coach of the Maroons ijiasi a national reputation that noorlo nrv fonnn t f r r f rr f Via benefit of sports fans He has ChS v '" achieved a remarkably ijecord of ?'f4 t success Chicago despite the fact 't that" the at'enrollment there is prob--" V yj£f& ably the smallest of Big Ten schools the standards of admission as 'land we11 as the standards of leligibHity £2fsir f v i Tio-ri- t '( j -- tS s 'l ti J f - V - He played on Chicago Uams in and 1893(1 coached them at the same time He hag bien coach there ever since ' gaul Weislow The Maroons broke even in eight games this year but there Is belief that the 1928 outfit will prove superior tojthje 1927 eleven Saul Weilow from Englewoojd High in Chicago will captain the team He Is 120 years old and ranks as the youngest Big Ten captain He played jhigh school football for four years before Chicago entering and has played tackle here ever since cpmihg out for the varsity He hfs the distinction of having played mote minutes of competition than afly man on the squad He is steady and capable and weighs 190 f pounds Chicago opens the season witli a doibie-heade- r on Sept 29 against Ripon and South Carolina Another twin hill follows with Lake Forest and Wyoming- Then in the order named come games with Iowa Minnesota Purdue Penn Wisconsin and Illinois all formidable foes — --—— H — 4 1892 I j i— i finished thle Job if the fight had continued II UDK BOUTS A few mo hths later Hudkins beat Baked Ifi a return match irt Los Angeles Baker was involved in another one just rebeWtly He was beaten in New ork by Young Corbett T T L5 rankln? rnnlondo for the titjjfejjbut it was generally admitted tb ihave been a wrong decision5 IrJ return match Bakt er copped the decision although he was beaten so badly in the rounds that his corner early wanted the fight stopped Dundee is !4 smart fighter i He wouldn't have taken a return match so quickly with Thompson if he didnftijfeel sure and it is our hunn llhat he will bea him in'the1 return match Lspeclajiy 'so since that fight in whichi JaiCkie Fields battered Young Thompson all about the ring out Iii California i INS-BAKE- T Bloodstained Trousers In Cleaning Plant Are Clue — hi ten-round- Uf Aii i R — j -- i HEAD LOSES SALTLAlit: Oct 27 — (UP)- -l PAPERS ON SUSPECT HANDED GOVERNOR i r CHEYENNE Wyo Oct 27— (APf)— Governor Frank C Emerson tody was asked to sign extra-diti4- n tapers for the return to Wyoming from Carthage Mo of Jaclf Morris 18 charged jointly with his father H B Morris with the f miirder In Rock Springs in 1924 ofj Mrs Anna Brabe and her fiveiyear-ol- d daughter Geneva Papers requesting the rendition were received today from Walter A Mult" Sweetwater county attorney? It Is believed the signature of (Jovjprnor Emerson now on a speaking tour'in the state will be obtained by mail and the papers made available for Sheriff A G Moitonj of Green River Monday A preliminary hearing will be held within the neit two weeks for the youth land his father and their cases docketed at the opening of the November term of cburt i ? lrouhgAlpjertJ Salt Lake thre4 GIRL GETS HOLE-IN-ONtommy Head Oklahoma in 33 Simons Hunter college Marjorie minutes and then in three minute stuaen shot a hole-irecently in a mach here: last night one oni a New York course E ! n NEA Service Sports Writer New York Yankees" will be THE least slightly altered and perhaps generally remodeled before another season opens it may be gathered from a remark made by Miller HUggins after his club had cleaned up its second world series in straight games The small manager of the world's champions a team that seemed to prove itself again as one of the greatest of all times was asked by an American League official if he had any players on the market "The whole ball club with the exception of eight" he replied The eight he is said to have Laz-ze- ri mentioned are Ruth Gehrig Pen-nock Combs Hoyt Pipgras and Johnson By a process of elimination this would place on the market Meusel Dugan Durst Koenig Gazeila Robertson Paschal Collins Bengough Grabowski and the rest of the pitchers In admitting their intention to make numerous changes in the club Yankee officials! made it clear they were not acceding to the roar of the outlands demanding that the team be busted open so that the other right teams would have a chance And it was mindful of pt situation last year After the Yankees had galloped away with thg pennant and had slammed the Pittsburgh Pirates in four straight games there were serious suggestions even from official sources that the team be torn apart for the good of baseball And Colonel Ruppert replied: Some day we will break up the team but when we do the breaking we will do it to get a stronger team" And if any extensive changes are made this winter they will be made not to mollify a disgruntled opposition but to make the club even stronger Despite the magnificent showing made in winning the pennant this year and in making a mess of the Cardm als the Yankees have some spot ty points The management wants two more outfielders one particularly to help' out the Babe because they do not believe the Babe will be able to play every day through another season From reliable sources it is understood that the club already has obtained Bib Falk from the Chicago White Sox arid that Meu sel will go in the deal The catching staff is very un satisfactory and although the club nas the greatest hope in young Dickey they might pick up an otner experienced man or keep Bengough although he is too fragile The pitching staff is numeri cally light They want Uhle from Cleveland and one of the Bos ton pitchers If they can't get Morris from the Red Sox they will take Ruffing To get the players they want they will have to give plenty and for this reason one of the fav If ored seven may have to go Gehrig had not so distinguished himself in the series he might have been sacrificed lhe club has to send some real good player to minor league clubs for obligations Incurred in deals and it is understood that Mike Gazella will go to Hollywood as part payment for Gor- don Rhodes a classy young pitch : er Joe Dugan and Koenig will be offered as bait for other clubs a HUggins nopes that v era youngster will do at third and that Lary one of the $100000 " - MANYTURKEYS ATLANTA — A pair of Ga 27— (AP) Oct trousers blood-staine- d Several Criminal Cases On Three New Directors In Calendar For NovemProducers' Organization ber: Term Pool Is Formed Cases to be heard during the No BOISE Idaho Oct 2TMAD — vember term of the Second dis meeting of! the Idaho turkey trict court have been set by Judges growers ended here today with the James N Kiniball and Georg S and two directors written president i Barker Cases set for trial in Judge Kim off the rolls land three new ones ball's division follow: appointed State vs J Brisbane and state The meeting was called several vs M J Stewart November 8 weeks ago when the six directors state vs V L Inks state vs Brig of the board (divided on the quesFolkman state vs Fay Carnan tion of retaining a public director state vs John? Harmas and state appoinxen Dynne commissioner of vs Sam Fellis November 9 Ogden agriculture of Today the city vs Martin Smith November the association were amended abol Ashton-Jenki10 Ins Co vs ishing the provision for the com- board of education of Weber coun missloner to appoint a public di ector and g ving this power over ty and others Decomber 4 Merchant's Credit Bureau vs Claude G o a vote of he '2000 members The resignation of George Bar- Ellery November 12 Joseph Sing leton and others vs Hans P Poul- - rett of Wendg )1 president was sub-- e son In J Harris vs V B Nlsh mitted to th association when Novernber 13ii Moroni H Thomas members charged that he had not s Albert W Phipps December 6 acted in the best interests of the Chester S Martin and- others vs association iri recommending the B Shiki and others November 15 replacement of A W B Kjosness Artistic Ad Cp vs Benjamin H former commissioner of ajgricul- ure as puniic director It was on Garr 'and others November 16 his recommendation that thfe com Ogden State bank as administrator etc vs James P Sprunt and others missioner of agriculture appointed Utah Mortgage company and oth- R L Spanglr director of markets or the department as public' direc- ers vs J H Lllshman jr Novem tor when K osness' term expired 20 Mrs Mabel Tucker vs ber William J Toy executtor etc De Spangler's reislgnatiq n was handed cember 20 Ogden city vs Miller in this week The third director to be unseated November 19 state vs R A de was Willard Hazard from the Witt November 27 Cases were set in Judge Barker's Twin Fa lis-d- 1 istrlct Turkey grow- ers charged that Hazard was elect- division as follows: T Thomas ed from the wrong- district but he vs John Ogden city he Association Noverhber 13 state vs Grace Ross refused to resign November 14 Ogden city vs Ruby wis informed today that Hazard Lennox November 15 state vs had ordered replaj ced as a result of the Twin Falla George Edsinga November 20 H of a decision L Taylor vs Ezra Waddoups No district court: last iThursday New directors appointed were vember 21 G M Heppler vs com Jierome George mercial Security bank November John Webster of Ode and W B 22 II B Ekins vs C H Bitten Knight of Vale of Richfield Directors remainand others Npvember 23 Deseret Joy on the board wjefe James How Livestock company vs Marion ing Pearson of Green and others December 6 ard of Emmett George Mrs C G Mountain Home arid Mina Flinders! vs Frank Flinders so who is Brink vs 7 secretary etc Lea Newsan December treasurer C L jMcBridej December 11 P J Methods for penalizing those Farrell and others vs Wells Mar who riott December 12 George Croll members of! the association 1 to sold outside the the pdo escape De vs Theobold Nettie Theobold lf cent a pound dues were cember 13 Fred Peterson vs Jessie one-haThe organization will Petenjson December 14 Evelyn S discussed more ' than a quarter of market etc C N Cheever Glazebrook vs December 18 Florence B Malan million birds this yeara the increase better crop vs Leroy E MaTan December 15 coming partly from an increase in Franklin Paint Co vs James G and partly from Murdick December 19 Myrtle membership due to drawing in aofTOregon turkey growers Gayle Taylor vs Laron Doyle Tay number year 7 carloads were mar- lor December! 20 Ogden Paint Oil Last keted where this year s crop waa & Glass Co vs Joseph Balllf De vs Wil estimated at betwee n 100 and 125 cembe 21 Hi L Peerman liam Howard! December 22 First carloads Savings bank of Ogden vs J P O'Neill December 27 Raleigh vs Uniori Pacific Railroad company December 28 ! one-side- — fcjt v Falls -- If WW ll! Eleven Germania Before Leaders On Salt Lake Lot WIS VDim PROVE TWAT rAG rr-- p - BLUE FINES IN TAtelUBEtES HAVT7£ fro SHIP DAHO 4RIALDATES J The 6ws sore1 i VJ1LL JUDGESISET 1 T ALWAYS REPEAT THEYDOjf THAT'S WHY FARRELL' PICKS DUNDEE TO BEAT THOMPSON r) " ' ' Special Correspondent of Hie ' 13 R mmmmm mmtmm By GEORGE C CHAD WICK Standard-Examine- STANDARD-EXAMINE- Iabbitiwadl sport mews MAJOR LEAGUE ll in a dry cleaning establishment furnished the clue on which two students Oglethorpe university both with prominent local con nections ' were arrested today Charged with a long series of hold ups and the slaying- of two men for "a thrill" CONFESSES TO CRIMES George Harsh 19 sophomore was taken into custody on the uni versity campus this afternoon and shortly afterward police said con fessed to the holdups and slayings and implicated James R (Dick) Galogly 18 of Atlanta a freshman who was arrested at Athens Ga where he was watching the Georgia-Tulan- e football game The series of holdups during a grocery which E H Meek clerk and Willard Smith a drug gist were slain and L V Ellis manager of a chain store wound ed began early this month Detectives found the blood stained trousers and traced them to Harsh who says his mother is a widow of Milwaukee Wis and his arrest followed SEEKS "THRI-yHarsh according to A Lamar Poole acting chief of police said that in each Instance he commit ted the holdups while Galogly re mained outside in an automobile to keep his retreat covered Harsh shaken under question ing detailed to officers how he and Galogly made almost nightly excursions to rob neighborhood groceries and drug stores "for - " " by-la- ns i - 1 CLIMAX NEAR AM ERICANS TO TO APOLOGIZE Made Retort "Ycm Are Too Damn Dumb To Understand DES MOINES Iowa Oct 27— (AP) — A J Livingston of Spencer Clay county farmer at whom was directed Senator Charles Curtis' fa- mous retort "You are too damn dumb to understand" delivered at Spencer Iowa September 19 will be on hand in Des Moines when the senator comes back to Iowa for a return engagement to demand an apology from the Republican vice presidential nominee he sa4d today The apology to be asked Is not a one Mr Livingston said personal but one ' asked for Iowa farmers whom he believes were insulted Mr Livingston already has paved the way for his request for an apology by a letter he has sent Senator Curtis suggesting that the nominee divide with him the allotted speaking time when the senator appears here in November "for a discussion Of importance here to the people at this time" "I suppose you think we are still too damn dumb to understand Let me know by return mail if you accept my challenge" the' letter ' coast kids will fill the bill at short Koenig is said to have been placed on the market rot because he is out of grace but because some good players have to be included in the deals planned and the management thinks that he can be cpared better than others ZEP SAIL-O- Three U S Air Experts To Observe How Craft J Acts WASHINGTON : Oct 27 — (AP) — Three of the United States navy's lighter than air craft ex perts will be' on the Graf! 2ep i pelin when it sails from the naval air station at Lakhurst N lor uermany Thej men jto make the voyage R are Commander Maurice Pierce ' exechtive Officer of "the Lakehurst mfval air station Lieu tenant Charles Edward Baugh of Exeter Mass a survivor of the Shenandoah distaster and the oldestl lightef than air craft man in the navya in point of service and Lieutenant Thomas G W Settle of Washington One of the board who hfelped design and draw up plans for the navy's two new 6500000 cubic feet airships It was announced at the bureau or aeronautics that these men were being sent to observe the performance! of th© airship on its eastward flight ji FEAR IS CAUSE OF AIR CRASH —— Pilot thrill" NTS CURTIS OR CAMPAIGN ') thrill" Taking all the blame for the two slayings police said Harsh told them he opened fire on the men because he wanted a greater - ' Student Killed As Controls of Plane Are "Frozen" Both Nominees Are Satis fied They Hive Done -- Their 1 Very J3est FIELD BRITTLE By Associate! Press Staff Writer WASHINGTON Oct 27-(AP) — The presidential at last has reached its tilimaetic week with the candidates spurring them selves to at drivi: electorate impatiently agitated a turn at trie ballot box awaits All of the country now has heard and-mu- ch of It has seen one or both of the jparty standard bearers and none of it his escaped the drenching" discussion of men and IB- sues Most of it Is reckoned to b ready to cast its vote and as the day of decision approaches Alfred Smith and Herbert Hoover have marked off the zones to which they will make their last direct appeal Governor Smith now is on hl chosen ground bidding for the closely packed electoral votes Of Hoover the Atlantic seaboard having stumped that area himself is packing his baga for a Journey through thej border states to halt at St Louis oni November 2 to talk before gOirig again to the mld-won to California to vote BOTH SAT! SFIED Whatever may be the harvest on election day loth candidates aresatisfied now with the turn of events Smth has repeatedly expressed his optimism that a great Democratic victory is ln store and Hoover lifted the bf g against quoting him longjenoigh to predict overwhelming Success and to warn his follower that the only danger at this point is Republican I But regardless bf the predictions Governor Smith and Mr Hoover are going apout their tasks with a delilpertedness intended to leave no chance for a slip-u- p In the governor's own New York ny laei iviunuuy- - iiigiii mi jwunr departed again from his custom to attack the opposition while appealing for New York's great block of 45 votfes He held up Smith's proposals concerning prohibition farm relief and water power as constituting ("state socialism' He brought a quick retort from Smith who told a Boston audience that "stAte socialism" was a "stock argument of thej power trust" in New York and h Igave that as the source of Hoover's remarks n st ce over-confiden- FREMONT Neb Oct 27 — (AP) An air student paralyzed from fear r'froze" the controls of an airplane here today as it went into a tail fenin and desoite des perate efforts of his instructor to right the machine it plunged 300 to earth killing both instantly The dead are Adolph Pavel 23 of Clarkson Neb an instructor at the Beesmer flying school here and John Seville 19 of Walnut Iowa the tetudent Seville had approximately 50 hours of air experience Instructor Pavel took his student up or stunf practice and shortly alter going into a practice tail spin from which Igeville was to right the plane he clung to the control lev ers vhile Pavel tried to jerk them free! When about 600 feet from execute While thef two the ground! witnesses said Paver the star maneuversgenerals the stump-dwelle- rs succeeded!!I righting th© plane of bjoth parties continue to t& go at it namrner ana tongs wun spin the rank and file orators receiving" As the machine struck the help from distinguished sources grotind witnesses said they heaTd The week fcjjund the vice president Pavel scream: "Let loose: let tial nomineejs Senator Curtis and loose!" V Senator Robinson joined on the rostru rrtby three men who have INSURANCE PRAISED sought ana IOst the presidency for Republicans Charles Evans BY DETROIT VISITOR the Hughes began! a series of - five speeches whle John W Davis and SALT LAKE Oct 27 — (AP)— James M Cox are'' doing their More is accomplished share for the Democrats being In the meantime another ace of through insurance and trust com to the build financial the up panics Republican oratorical force structure of the country than any Senator Borah of Idaho ha4 turned other institution John A Reynolds eastward after a border state and of Detroit told a meeting of Salt southern tour that wound up in j" cV: Lake and Ogden bankers and in Texas eurance men here today ' The Republican but very indeReynolds is vice president of the Union Trust company of Detroit pendent Senator Xorris of Nebraska has definitely thrown his support to BLACKMEU PAPERS OUT Smith on the water power issue PARIS Oct 27 — (UP) — Papers and La Folietfa of Wisconsin long seeking the extradition of Henry silent has publicly recalled that M Rlackmer missing witness in he had "dissociated myself from the Teapot Dome case in the Unit the Republican national ticket and ed States were turned over to the platform throughout the campaign ministry of justice by the foreign nnrt nrtdfd that Smith had made "nnhllA ftfrin rations and commit office today The papers had been pigeon ments whichi are in substantial acholed in the foreign office for three cord with the Progressive views" " on several subjects months VI irl -- 11 1 1 1 A A ! - J Ml "-' 'Oh |