Show li 4 & f tt i little i a atore ' ally fair tonight and Friday no change In temper J j — L o Twenty-tw- 2 30C SEVERAL STA1 JF DRYi REVO’ IN LAST EDITION TWO SLAIN: AS RS 8th Amendment AGREE Sre j 1 GANG-LEADE- em- i OGDFTI CXTYjTITAH THURSDAY EVENING APRIL 17 1930 M FT people i S Odd 4I tads Fight jOti r'’ are f ) ployed in thet manufacture 'of artificial ice in Ogden - who Received $3l2JOOO in wages in 1929 t SEEN BORNEO I U 273 MEN 1 Js l St IDAHO — Gener- - WILD Do You Know? m UTAH — Generally fair tonight and Friday change In temper Sixtieth lear--Ko I III WEATHER atore i I M 'At i BAIT IN TRAP ON VICE 1 EXPLORER BY " Lon g-No- - Chicago ALSO HAS WHISKERS Red Eyebrows Bushy Found On Animals In Wild Inland Area ' head of the department of thropology of ‘Chicago university It may he that on the Journey from New York to Chicago the pres’a ent is tucked away under Mr Pullman berth for he has had a hard time so far persuading baggage men to allow him to check it in their cars IIEAiy OF MONKEY " But Professor Cole Is going to like this present Mr Seelmann believes even if the baggage men don’t- Tor it consists of the head of a- long-nos- ed monkey pickled in alcohol In a tin can - Ana Mr Seelmann says he has been told by scientists out in Java 'that It is the only specimen - re-elect- ion 6eel-mann- -- the of long-nos- monkey ever ed brought Into this country Is decideiy sensitive about He that specimen Is Mr Seelmann He Is afraid some newspaper man Is going to write It up as the “missing link" which he swears It is not “If they do" he said gloomily T11 be the laughing stock of the whole scientific world" But anyhow persons who think monkeys resemble - humans “ain’t get a promonkey a forest on strolling along through his hind legs no se It’s an this monkey has even more prominent than that of the most" generously endowed human and It has a decided hook la It giving him the appearance of an old man without any teeth Along with that nose Professor Cole’s present has bushy red eyebrows and red whiskers of the type favored In Civil war days “But please don’t play him up as a missing link or anything" begged mon Mr Seelmann “for long-noskeys aren’t anything new They’re common out' In' Borneo 'and anthropologists have known about ' seen nuthln" file view of until-the- a y long-nos- ed honest-to-goodn- ess -- ed ' ' them for a" Ibhg time" HEADED EXPLORERS' Mr Seelmann who Is only 27 was the head of an exploration party into the Interior of Borneo consisting pf John IL Provinse‘of the department of anthropology of Chicago university Harry W Wells of Washington a radio man - and Charles V Cary of Louisville Ky a photographer He Is ’ the last to return They left this country about a year ago and with an escort of Dutch army officers and native -soldiers traveled further Inland In- Borneo than any other white men have ever gone Once last November and Decern " -- ter Mr Seelmann and Lieut J J LeRoy of the Dutch army together with 28 native soldiers and 13 Japanese convict-cooliwerr lost for three weeks in an uninhabited Jungle away In the Interior They ran cut of food and had to live on bats But Mr Seelmann— the kind of young man who solemnly tells you that Borneo despite little ' annoyances like fevers bad water poisonous snakes and bead hunters - Is really a whole lot safer than Chicago— refuses to get romantic about Vj "Roasted bat tastes all right" be se l calmly “rather like pork They ar' big bats with five-roand bodies the size of fox es -- ot -- ARESNOYININ i ROMAN CHURCH Supposed Table Used - At ' Last Supper Also I J On View — i ROME April 17— CAP)—The bells of St John Late ran “mother church of Christendom" rang out- thl3 morning answered by those of all Rome’s 400 churches on thuccasIon of commemoration of- - Holy Thursday feast of the Institution of the Eucharist recalling the last' supper of Christ with the apostles: What Is believed to be the very retable used at the re- Its from was forth brought past exLateran and In pository St John posed for the veneration ofthe large congregation Two ’skulls- regarded as those of Saints Peter and Paul were also on view there as well as a of the pillar to reputed portion was bound when which Christ scourged In the house of the high sponge priest and a bit of the holy account mentioned In St Matthew’s of the crucifixion The 'mass at the Lateran Basilica was sung by Cardinal- Podplli assisted by 12 priests seven deacons and subdeacons and a chanting Choir that rendered the eucharistlc hymn “Pange Lingua" (SingasO My they Tongue) most Impressively entered in solemn procession Just before the Lord’s prayer In the the service the cardinal blessed lorth-comito be the used oils during holy year In the administration of the last sacrament At' the Invocation of “Angus Dei" (Lamb of God) the attending clergy repaired to the sacristy returning in procession with the “ampullae" Jars containing the chrism for confirmation oil of catechs-men- es and the while a subdeacon brought In a jar of balsam During this portion of the ceremony the choir sang the Redeemhymn “O Redemptor"(0 er) Similar rites were ‘enacted In every Catholic cathedral throughout : the world today - -- -- ng epoch-marki- - - - ‘ ng so-call- ed - wing-sprea- ds rners -- SAINTS’ SKULLS AIRMAN SIGHTS 4-- an 1 -- on ' d Mexicans Kidnap RAFT Oil SHORE Boston Employer ' -- HA CRUZ Mexico April 17— Bos-Ma- ss 'UP— Leonard B Cassidy of was missing today rediy kidnaped by a band of re- dls-ihor- r-d laborers C? Mdy employed by the United vrd company at El Hule Oaxaca u'e r has been missing since Tues-- i-of the Incident reach ' here said to rVrrurtIed were said workers ""5 the Bostonian over the head ht d telenhone after a heated ar They fled with him Into ” iuntalns "h Feline Leaves Pole After Eight Nights ri: XGSBURO Calif April 17— '—Tom a gray Maltese cat to-resting on his laurels after re sat for eight days atop a Pole for no good reason as Jut where Tom was resting was f r’a£ter of doubt He came down rday and disappeared much i --he discomfiture of his owner Charles Schaffer and the Joy ncghbors who had been forced to bis yowling because they --yj —n t coax him back to earth VTvx4l0P IS POPULAR APril 17— (AP)— For 40 vlENNA cr more Frau Demel has been at lhe cash desk in her con-- ci vne:? £il0p and he continues v'-ob dally- - Aristocracy long 1 10 her for choc- els' bread she refuses her to exrpeteaor 10 Introduce Jam mu-‘- c dances - Is Now" DiminlsKed Hope ‘ I That Man On Lake ' L ‘ ' Is‘ Alive V “ - April 17— (A P)— Search for Joe Gutteriez 50 who on disappeared while sailing a raffcenGreat Salt lake last Sunday tered around Antelope Island today following a report of JM Barnes a Varney air mall pilot that he 'the sighted a raft on the shore- ofBoise Island while flying here from r yesterday Barnes said the raft' was made of railroad ties and boards similar to the material used in the craft which carried the railroad worker out on the surging Waves He said there was nothing to Indicate that a man had been in the vicinity Hope that Guttgriez escaped the rough ' lake alive diminished today but searchers added that the hunt to unwould continue in cover some clue which might reveal the fate of the lost nym - SALT - LAKE ’ - -- an-effo- S rt P Closes Protest : Against N' P: Link - Sickness Frees Vet ' of Dry Sentence SEATTLE ‘ 17— (AP)— A April presidential commutation of a 'jail term for violation of the prohibition law spelled freedom here today for Harry E Cole World war veteran of Kelso Wash but it probably will dd him little good court attaches said Cole who was sentenced to eight months In the Pierce county Jail was subsequently removed to a Tacoma hospital a victim of sleeping sickness Physicians said he had little chance to recover His term would have expired June 24 Federal officials ‘urged commutation of sentence in order that Cole for In the veterans' mightbe atcared American Lake hospital WASHINGTON April 17— (AP)— Opposition to the proposed Jinking of the Western Pacific and the Great Northern railway lines between Ked- c die Calif and Klamath Falls Ore was brought to a close today' by EJ DRIVER SENTENCED J Foulds counsel for thea Southern SALT LAKE April 17—R' C Pacific company with vigorous Hughes 2? drunken driver was to thirty days In the city Jail demand that the Interstate commerce commission refuse to author- by Judge nisi Harrington In poize the project lice court Wednesday — ! can-senc- r ed I S' ‘ 'j '" ‘ V - CHICAGO April 17 — (AP) — A opinion of Baron’ de I Meyer international style "expert and ‘ ' peace pact to swell the profits and widely known fashion writer t ami war end the among gangsters “Women have advanced a great many reasons for those another deadly patter of machine car bullets a from gave gun "pay" long skirts but the real reason lies in their own legs” said i ' Jr if :is e'-v- 1 ip- frew Photo - jLM$ociat0d TTENRY II CURRAN president the Association Against the Prohibition Amendment who told the lobby probers the object of the association Is to elect wets to congress He answers questions as to how association’s '!funds are spent' ' not - JURY SELECTED IN LIBEL-- CASES RECESSTAKEII : Taking of Eviclence To Begun Next Tuesday ‘ Morning' ' ! ‘ i 1 Acceptance shortly before noon day of a Jury to hear City Commis-lisioner Fred E Williams $100000 bel suit against The Standard-ExaminPublishing company and its officers and the adjournment of the case until 10 o’clock Tuesday morning were the chief developments to' the second day of the trial When eight Jurors had been accepted by both the plaintiff and defendants each had usd two of their fora- - peremptory'-challengeand 29 box the Jurors had taken seats ip 'j m and been examined ’ The jury as accepted includes the Peter A- Anderson i a following: boilermaker of 832 Twenty-sevenj- h street: Charles' De Wees a retired butcher of 483 Cross street Sephus Jackson a fanner of Kanes vilie Lee A Bhurtleff 427 Cross street T M — — —— — (Continued on Page Two) j to- er s - y — —i mmm him —i mm Insolent answer today to the joint efforts of police and business men to smother Chicago’s crime - While the ity was reading the first accounts of a consolidation of metropolitan gangs - for - monopoly control of liquor vice and gambling an automobile sped through south side streets after a fleeing quarry The smaller car was overtaken and from the “pay" car came a spray of machine gun bullets t i A score of bullets struck the driver and he slumped over the1 wheel dead Joseph Blew 50 “king of pickpockets" 15 years ago and Jong known to police as mail robber safe blower and more lately as bootlegger had been “paid off” for reputed meddling to the liquor trade or double crossing of pals to some almost j forgotten robbery ' CAPONE IS KING f But peace was supposed to reign to gangland In the places where the underworld “mobs? gather to take their orders and pay homage to their chiefs they gathered last night to celebrate an amalgamation of once hostile ganges and the Herald and Examiner said acknowledge “Scarf ace” Alphonse Capone king Their toast was “All for A1 and AI for all” The union was effected at conferences of the - Capone - and George “Bugs” Moran gang leaders whose enmity has been blamed for scores of killings to recent years The terms of the purported pact call for a "community chest” into which the illicit receipts from 'the beer and vice trade will be poured and fromwhich 'will flow to organized manner ‘the tribute necessary :'r protection 'V AGREEMENT CELEBRATED Last night the agreement binding members of several warring groups Into one large gang was celebrated at numerous places where the more congregate prominent gang members The Herald and- - Examiner said these parties Were attended by lesser lights of both the Capone and Moran gangs with Capone men in the majority The Moran celebration of the ratification is planned for a later date i ‘ ’Although the amalgamation brings under one 'leadership the most Important gang men of Chicago it is not entirely representative Neith- i mfmm -- -- ' -- j -’- BRisfOLIS er William "DARNOMINEE t ' t 1 V 1 j Result of Ballot For Vice i ’ P r e s IdentT To CBe -- 1 (Klondike) O’Donnell nor Ralph Sheldon each mentioned frequently in west side gang affairs Is included In the gang union f "'DIVIDED BY GANGS Under the old scheme of things as police often have outlined the city has been divided by the gangs for the' gambling liquor and vice “privileges” The loop for example is generally understood to be under the control of the Capone gang so far-aliquor and gambling are concerned Loop speakeasies are com pelled to buy “Capone beeriVCnd whisky or If they insist upon getting their supplies elsewhere they must' pay ‘a certain percentage to the Capone - group anyway The same condition applies on the south Side while on the north side the “privilege? Is held ' by the Moran 9 $ meni — —f 4t iJ h j s -- Known Soon h -- anti-salo- t j -- ’ THEFT REWARD 1 - ’ AREA Weh-Ufesse- -- 1 t CHICAGO 1 WASHINGTON April 17— (AP)— Fay-Coop- TO CATCH BANK Tribute For Protection To When Dressmakers : Saw Horrible Sights as Skirts White Man Confesses Two Flow From “Commiin-Negroes Were ‘Framed to Had and ' Went D9 Something Up ‘Up They c In Texas Chest Tells Asserts Men and Women ity BaronDeMeyer - f d How - to Obtain That Air NfiVER OBTAINED ENT CAPONE NAMED KING — f t I f J By ADELAIDE KERR Pair Slaughtered As They He Has Beer And GamPress Staff Associated Writer Rushed Into Armed bling Concessions In YORK April 17— (AP ) —W omen ’s legs are responsible Ambush NEW the Rich District - Loop ‘long skirts they’re trailing- around today! in the ’ Henry IL cllrran president of the Association Against the Prohibition Amendment testified before the senate lobby committee today that New York Maryland' Wisconsin Montana and Nevada were in revolt against the' prohibition law Senator Walsh - Democrat Montana a dry who is running for was present when Curran enumerated the list of states Chairman Caraway asked Curran if his association would work against Walsh ! “I think that is our business" Curran retorted Pressed by Caraway to answer the question Curran said he did not know what action would be taken In Montana He said yesterday his ora dry ganization would not supporthis InCurran said he obtained formation about Montana from the 1923 and 1923 election 'returns He added that the five states he mentioned had repealed state enforcement laws PROHIBITION SLAYINGS Curran charged that some of the reports by government agents of prohibition slayings did not fully represent the facts He added that the agents reported killings to “save their own skins" and said Assistant Secretary Low-min charge of prohibition enforcement for the treasury - accepted i the reports ' second the for day Appearing Curran said the principal activity of his association was assembling inand distribution of - - prohibition formation Questioned by Senator 'Walsh Democrat Montana he ’ testified there was “no concealment of facts that come to our knowledge" Walslr uskcd lf t the association compiled statistics concerning the number of 'persons' killed by prohl-bitio-v n fits tuts r“We do and It seems to us a considerable number’’ Currant replied “Have you ever reported that the person killed was shot while engaged in violating f the law and 'endeavordearrest?" Walsh ing to resist ' - manded ri HEATED EXCHANGE? ! V Curran said- government reports had been used -- to state Pressed by Carawaywhether the ' association - reported prohibition agents killed by bootleggers Curran said he would have to look through the ( literature of Hie or gap ration v “I don’t think you ' know any- w Caraway commented thing" : “I might: compare favorably with i you " Curran shot back Caraway pacing the floor continued to demand that the witness answer the question and Curran in—"terjected: ‘ “If youll compose yourself and sit down I’U try - to answer the ques i tlon" " Caraway as“No ni stand up ' ' serted' ' witness Walsh the Questioned by said he was under the Impression that the facts were reported on both sides of the question but he wanted to be certain of his answers' “We try to give the truth the whole truth and nothing but the truth" he asserted adding that that Was not true of the league and the Methodist board of temperance prohibition and public morals- “Well get to them later" Walsh said r'" MILLION NEEDED Curran testified that more than $1000009-woulbe required for the association’s work this year ' ' A letter Curran had 'written to Percy s Strauss of New York was read which said' the chief plan in congress with “Impressing our the fact- that the country is mostly wet Is the holding of state-wid- e referenda such as we last year carried on successfully in Wisconsin and before that In Montana Nevada and New York" ' “This it added “Massachucome first with other setts willyear" states afterwards as fast as we can ' " reach them - - - “For this there’ will be ” required 'over a million dollars to be used this year' of which a little over $200000 been' subscribed" has already ' —7 m i ‘Ik Witness And Caraway 'Have Heated Exchange But It i Is Brief ’ By LORENA A HICKOK Associated Press Staff Writer NEW YORK April 17-- CAP) — Theodore Seelmann a most prosaic -mtnded young explorer who declared that “the wild man of Borneo" was probably the worst 'fake ever perpetrated on a gullible public was with en route home to Chicago today er a present for Professor anCole -- Are Nevada Montana They 0 Wisconsin New York And Maryland ' r MAY OPPOSE WALSH Is IN PRIVILEGES i Route To I Now’ En j j PROBE no LOBBY! e Specimen sed TEl CURRAN MONKEYS AS t r WASHIN GTON April 17— (UP)— Recommendations for a strong national defense which included commendation of utterances made by former President Coolldge while to were presented to the White-Housthe Daughters of the American Revolution convention today by Mrs William Sherman Walker chairman of the D-R committee of national defense ' Election of 'eight vice presidents general and two honorary yice presidents general began at 2 p m with Mrs Theodore Jesse Hoover sister-in-la- w of President Hoqver as one of 11 candidates for a Tegular vice lnclud--etf- r" presidency " Other' nominees ' Mrs Charles Ji Brydnj Tennessee Mrs Benjamin Leslie Hart Mississippi Mrs James Charles Peabody MassachusettsMrs v Neaton D Chapman New York Mrs Matthews Brewster Louisiana Francis Wilson New Mexico- Mrs Ralph E Bristol Utah Mrs- Morton L Sig- man Arkansas Mrs Grant E Lilly Kentucky and Mrs Charles IL Car-ro- ll New ' j f Hampshire --1'—— - V e A s v s - ! - - - - Bare Feet Returns To Campus ' Ji ? 1— I' WALLA WALLA Wash April 17 SenWr-I! ! a — (AP) —After trudging 20 miles to his bare feet from a cabin in the Blue mountains where his abductors had' left him Vernon Wilkenson -- senior at Whitman college who was kidnaped presumably to prevent him from participating to a campus election was back in Walla Walla today He was found last nlght about 10 miles from town and apparently was pone the worse for his experience Promontory Point U Woman Seeks $7625 "vJ Station ‘May Close For Loss of Eyebrow - v t r : i CITY April 17- -t (AP— The Southern Pacific railroad permission of the state today asked utilities- - commission to discontinue its station and operator at Promontory Point at the tip of a peninsula Great Salt lake west extending into of Ogden " Lack of ' business was given as the reason for the proposed i ' discontinuance SALT LAKE J ' SPOKANE Wash April 1- 7- (AP) —Miss Rose Staley - wants $7825 to compensate her for the loss- of an eyebrow She filed suit yesterday against R M Williams charging that an Injury-receivewhen struck by his car deprived her of the ornamental d arch 'Triclc Played On irty 1 iiTh YaAi ggers y E — ms f ' - -- OS ANGELES April 17 — (AP) —Captain James Benton head a of the sheriff's liquor detail today was celebrating what he ' laughingly called a Joke on the bootleggers of El Monte ' hall a Benton and his deputies hired Working incognito decorated it lavishly and spread the word that a wedding was about to take place therein and would anyone who knew any send them around at 7 o’clock bootleggers kindly Precisely at 7 a deputy posing as the bridegroom took his place at the head of the "receiving line" One by one the "results’ came sauntering in and each was shown to the basement Before any of the callers saw the Joke there were seven of them in the official dragnet They were arrested and a quantity of liquor was taken from each j feir rf i the baron who has just returned to America alter a visit to the leading dressmaking salons of Paris : I ! “When the couturiers saw how the skirts were everlastingly going up and up and up when they saw what horrible sights were revealed In bony knees and that Ugly line at the top of the calf they knew something one had to be done There thing to do—pull the skirts down — and they did it as fast as they could That’s ’the real t'-story of he tong skirt" f NOT TOO LONG i At that the couturiers never in tended skirts to1 be really: long by day or sweeping the floor by night he 'believes Just tong enough to give milady a degree of the grace and dignity that is supposed to be her heritage r “T "are If M j women wearing them so now he said Id fact la Americaine is wearing her clothes these days with as much gash and distinction' and chic as any woman! J In the world f 75 cent America’s Moreover of per wealthiest women me buying their clothes right at home to toe United States he said j tv ’ “To be sure they’re buying models to France But they’re original buying them in New York and mot in Paris ft' " “American buyers and dressmakers work so fast and their execution of Parisian models is so perfect that when an American" woman goes to Paris she sees the same clothes she amid buy at home Only a few frocks that have been originated within the last few weeks? are different Why should ' she waste-hetime in Europe shopping! She’d K j rather playi 4 Will America fever originate the I styles of the world? Baron de Meyer thinks not ’"They haven’t the background for it nor the patience In Paris the whole city is tuned to the production of styles between half a' miSioh and eight hundred thousand people work all year just' for that and nothing else" NOTJIOBBLE SKIRT Is the new silhouette tending slowly but surely toward th hobble skirt?- Milady is reported tq be wor' J ried f “Not the hobble skirt as we know It—the old hobble skirt that held milady’s ankles in' a death grip and made her mince r along” he said “Women with the active Ilf el they lead today wouldn’t tolerate it and the dressmakers aren’t foolish enough to try to force It on them “They are hobbling them in a different way' though-hobb- ling them about the hips but with designs so cleverly cut that they don’t really interfere with woman’s locomotion” Who is a woman? The woman said Baron da Meyer who spends hours assembling her costumes watching their design and color with an ever watchful-eyand then tosses them on to a way to achieve a neffect so careless that it looks as though she hadn't spent any time on her 'clothes at all And the map? He’s the same thing only mora- so - He must look careless hut mere' than that his clothes must look old “An old suit a battered hat a perfect-tie and! a good collar— that’s what makes a man” was-onl- y '!!'! J 1 ! HOOVER URGES f SENATEACTION 'i 0N ARF1S PACT 'l‘ v t ¥ St jf- - J Senators Want More Time To Study Londpn 1 Agreement v T -- 5 WASHINGTON April 17— CAP) President Ilccver who is anxious' for early consideration of the London naval treaty by the senate was advised today by some senate leaders to give the senate time to study the draft before deciding to ask for its ratification at this session The president has begun canvassing the situation to ascertain the this likelihood ‘ of senate " - spring leadsenate with Conferring today ers he was informed that they are hopeful of supporting the treaty and getting it through this session but they withheld an opinion pending study of the pact Senator Watson of Indiana the Republican leader was a - Whke House breakfast guest Chairman Borah of the senate was foreign - relations committee consulted later Chairman Hale of the naval committee was called for luncheon was London the object The treaty of discussion- - Senator Swanson of on Virginia the ranking Democrat afthe 'foreign relations and naval fairs committee discussed the treaty last night with the president Mr Hoover was given divergent views from the senators but they were almost united in a plea to be given an opportunity for study of the pact before committing them 4 s selves The president left the impression that he was anxious for consideration of the treaty at this session His conferences today were regarded at the capital as Steps paving the way to that endL 1 ‘ 4 -- 4 -- 0 1 i i- - “ !r 1 t r v § well-dress- - ’ BATES VILLE Ark April 17 (UP)— Surrounded by hundreds who cheered him two years ago on the football field J P Barber 22 prepared to go to the witness stand today in his own defense on charges of murdering Maurice Osborne 24 wealthy young husband - of- the girl Barber loved Norma Osborne 20 pretty widow of the slain Cord Ark merchant yesterday testified she plotted with him to murder her husband last t ' July 1 j Barber and Mrs Osborne were sweethearts when he was the Bates-vill- e high school football star and most popular man and she was the “prettiest girl in school” and the town belle when she married Osborne a wealthy merchant Although she is herself under sentence of nine years’ imprisonment for the part she took to the slaying of tier husband Mrs Osborne told in detail of her affairs with Barber after she had mailed Osborne and how he ‘“simply overpowered" her with his persuasive powers to consent to the slaying of Osborne She testified that Barber was a frequent visitor at her home and that both she and Osborne liked him Last July 1 Osborne had gone to the country on a hunting trip and Barber spent the evening with the wife It was then they "definitely decided" on “putting Maurice out of their way” the pretty widow told the jurors Osborne was slain when he returned home the same night ' groes 1 NO REWARD PAID Subsequently the Bankers’ - association announced that the slayer of the negroes would not be rewarded inasmuch as the polytechnic bank had not contributed to the reward j fund - Two other white men were held this morning one of whom was arrested last night after Boyt’s stateDistrict ment was made to Assistant ' ' ’ f Attorney Brown ’ t JUDGE PARKER’S FADING e well-dresse- ' '1 r WASHINGTON ApriU7— (AP)— There were persistent reports at the capitol late today that two Republican senators who urged the nomination of Judge John J Parker of North Carolina to be an associate Justice of the supreme court were ready to go to President Hoover to ask for withdrawal of his name because of the attitude toward negroes attributed to him The report was current especially at the senate where a conference of Republican senators over the Parker nomination was held a while before! s Some opinions were expressed there that if the president were colled upon by those who endorsed Parker to withdraw his name he might take such action! j ? ed d - ed -- Widow Takes Hand h- Liquor bluying GOES ON TRIAL MAUSTON L WiS April 1?— (UP) " rob the bank and then! laid a trap for them with the design of collecting a reward of $5000 offered by th3 State Bankers’ association for the s killing of any bank robber Last Thursday the negroes rushed into the bank at Polytechnic a suburb with drawn guns and shouted to the employes to hold up their hands Alsup who had been employed toy the bank as a guard on a up tip that the bank was ta be held nedown the opened fire and shot ‘ -- FOOTBALL STAR He Is Accused bf:Killmg Husband of 'Woman J He Loved i ' r - r - well-dress- 4 FORT WORTH Texas April 17— (AP) —Av P Royt a barber confessed attoday according to the district two of the f killing torney that negroes who attempted to hold up the First State bank of Polytechnic last week was a frameup by four white men in a plot to collect a reward offered for dead bank bandits Boyt and! Jchn Alsup former policeman are charged with the murder of the i negroes Will Tate and t f George Terrell Alsup was one of the men implicated in the statement made-b-y Boyt at the- district attorney’s officii TRAP IS LAID The? white men are alleged to have induced the negroes to attempt to - ! " NATIONAL LEAGUE Boston at New York postponed rain i Philadelphia at Brooklyn -- poned rain post- f Score: ‘ 1 R IL E 7 12 0 Pittsburg 1 At Cincinnati Batteries French and Ilargreave Ash Frey and Rixey - Johnson ' 12 Gooch AMERICAN LEAGUE New York at Philadelphia postponed rain I j j Washington at Boston ' postponed t cold r i 5 1 Score R IL H 1 3 1 St Iui3 vengeance At Detroit S 1 9 over the casket of her murdered Batteries Crowder Coffman and husband took a hand today to the Ferrell Wbitehill and Hayworth slayinvestigation of the liquor-feu- d (Called end fifth rain darkness) atof Clinton G Price district ing torney of Juneau county & j For "the first? time since ’Price was killed from ambush last Sunday Two Suspects as he talked to her to the kitchen of ' their home Mrs Price brok her si lence at the bier and revealed that j Price in a dying statement ordered STANFORD Mont April 17— her to “get the man who did this or the favorite pastime there’ll toe more lives tost” ft of crooks was indulged in today by Leonard Hanson I Anaconda and James O’Kelly Lewiston confessed ' MrsVHopver Is j counterfeiters of The pair ’proudly told their op(House erations in different sections of the state ' They revealed that Harwn WASHINGTON April Mrs Hoover Is suffering from a was the man who cast the si wrenched back which ‘although and stamped the cbln imprints To went thd job of passing painful is described by Captain Joel O’Kelley money a task in which T Boone the White Housa physi- the spurious the Lewistown man claimed to be cian as not at all serious a She received the he said proficient Between the i two they In a fall yesterday injury in her living cleared $60 daily room and explained that It was for A widow who vowed - ( -- ( Boast of Counterfeit Jcb (UP)-Boa- sting I Hurt Fall ’ In White — ( ' of the American revolution late to t 'he day Firs Hoover had been suffering from a cold for several days but this Dr Boone said was much improved - a ""44 — LOBSTERS 1 SUFFER? r LONDON April 17— (APi— Peter Freeman a Welshman is perturbed by the groans of lobsters after they are put into! boiling water in the house of commons: kitchen fTelling the house about it he was hif armed by a government spokesman that if he would provide a humane method of killing it would be used The government insisted death was lnstan-taneo- us 4 -- 1 1 1 t t ! x NOT SO BAD VENICE Calif ft April 17— (UP) — It looked like a) bad day’s busi- -1 ness for Joseph I Semper local clothing merchai when he sold a five-doll- ar shirt' and cashed two “N S F" checks of $9750 each for the customer tand a companion but a discarded shirt eared the balance sheet - When Semper learned that the checks were bad he gave the bundle in which his customer had left a soiled shirt discarded for the new one a kick A roll of currency amounting to $300 fell from the pocket of - garment f - i |