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307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
60,
46,
52
] | COMPROMISE SOUGHT ON TWO
OF OUTSTANDING ISSUES
French-ltalian Deadlock anc
Methods of Limiting
lleets to the Fore
| “- ers woved toward compromise
Monday on two of their most tron-
blesome problems—the physical
methods of limiting fleets and Ita-
ly's demand for parity with France
Great Britain made a new ges-
ture of faith in the naval confer-
ence’s success by announcing, that
construction of her two newest
cruisers has been cancelled,
The British announcement coin-
cided with a meeting of the “Big
live’ in Downing street at which
lurther progress was said to have
been made toward a compromise on
a tounage plan designed tu settle
the perennial argument on this
technical phase of naval limitation.
At the same time, it was disclos-
ed that serious consideration was
being given by several delegations
lo @ proposal that the Italian par-
ity problem be met by a treaty de-
claration in which all powers would
join. This would state that the so-
vereigu right of every nation te
build an adequate fleet was fully
recognized but that the signatorics
voluntarily agree not td exceed a
certain construction pregram be-
tween now and 1956.
Week Starts Happily
The twin attack on two of the
weet diffienlt of the conference
problems, coinciding with the Bri-
tish croiser cancellation aunounce-
ment, started the second week of
the conference in an atmosphere of
swing confidence, It was empha-
sized on all sides, however, that nei-
ther of the compromise formula.
has yet been aceepted and that
much remained to be done even if
these two obetacies should be over-
tome,
The tonnage measurement plan.
discussed for more than two hours
at the Downing street session, had
been upder study even before the
conference began, but the proposal
to straighten out the PFranco-Italiau
question apparently developed over-
wight, This latter idea bas not yet
been acceptable to Mussolini's gov
ernment although first renetions ap-
peared hopetual.
Italian-Trench Compromise
As it steed in tentative form, the
suggestion was that the five chiet
naval powers join in a declaration
perbaps in the preamble of a limit.
ation treaty, suying that the sover
tign privilege of possessing a navy
of any sive could not be abridged
escept voluntariiy., This, in effect.
would dv away with any fixed ra.
tio understanding such as was late
fjown in the Washington treaty
Then, in the body of the treaty
cach power wonld stipulate the eut-
~ide limits ov Hs building needs be.
iween now and the conference of
1936 when the whole situation i
expected to come under review
again in conformity with the agree
ment reached at Washington,
Whether application of this gen
eral formula te the Italian situatior
would be supplemented by a secu
itY pact covering the Mediterran
ean, as bas been sugyested by
trance, remains for future determi
vation. A spokesman for the Ameri.
can delegation said teday there bac
heen no disenssion whether the
(nited States would be willing té
om such a pact ip a consultive ca
pacity,
Monday's weeting of the big five
“as the lengest yet beld. The dele
sathten beads discussed a detailer
propesal fer the conference pre
cram with the tonnage measure
went question uppermes!, The com
‘Continua +d on Page six. “ol twor,
ee
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307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
61,
50,
57
] | OPPOSES CIVIL SERVICE
STATUS FOR ATTORNEYS
Prosecutors Would Be Trans-
ferred With Unit
| pram gen —Aj— Atlorpey
General Mitchell Monday urged
the house expenditures committee
to expedite action on legislation to
transfer the probibition enferce-
ment unit from the treasury to the
justice department. .
Mitchell said he was in accord
with the recommendations of Se-
cretary Melon before the commilt-
tee favoring the transfer and en-
dorsed the Williamsen bill to effect
this change.
To Transfer Prosecutors Also
Attorneys ip the treasury depart-
ment connected with the prohibi-
tion unit would be transferred to
the justice department along with
the agents in order to carry on pro-
seentions, Mitchell said.
He opposed putting prebibition
unit atiorneys under the civil ser-
vice, and said they would be ab-
serbed in the office of the justice
department on an equal basis with
these already in service,
Many things under the bill, the
attorney general said, would have
to be worked out as administrative
problems.
Representative Schafer, republi-
can, Wisconsin, asked “why not put
ull United States attorneys under
the civil service?”
Mitchell replied that the question
Was not pertinent to the matter ua-
der discussion but added his depart-
ment felt attorneys used for the
special work should not be placed
uuder civil service,
Sebafer, a wet, remlrked that
Mrs. Mabel Walker Willebrandt,
former assistant attorney general,
had written that one reasyn for
failure of the enforcement of the
dry law was the “spoils system”
used in appointing district attor-
ueys.
Representative Cochran. demo-
erat, Missouri, asked Mitchell te
xive him assurance that dry agents
would wot use federal court sub-
peenss on large industrial concerns
to obtain tnfornumtion. He charged
that dry agents bad summoned of-
ficials of the Awerican Can com.
puny and the Corn A’roeducts com.
pany trom St. Louis tu Sprinefield,
il., with federal court subpoenas,
Can Probe Industrial Athy
Mitchell answered that he did
juet believe in considering questions
of that kind during the formulation
of legislation of the character be-
fore the committee, He explained
he did net plan to make promises
Jot what be was guing to do, but ad.
ded: “We de the best we can un.
der the law.”
In answer tuo questions by Scha.
fer, the attorney general said he be.
lieved the proposed bill would give
the justice department adequate
authority to investigate the diver.
sion of industrial alcohol unde
treasury department permits for
iegal purposes,
The measure provides for the su
pervision of industrial aleohol and
narcotics to remain under the treas
ury.
Mitchell asserted bis department
would have all the power needed t
investigate law violations throug!
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3167.2717285156
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|
307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
18,
27,
35
] | NINETEENTH STATE
ROAD SCHOOL OPENS
TODAY AT CAPITAL
Thousand Registering For An
nual Session of Highway
Builders and Officials
| MADISON.—(")—Highway prob-
lems, particularly those of federal
aid,: will be studied by state and
county officials at the sessions of
the nineteenth annual road school
here which opened today.
- At least 1,000 persons were re-
ported to be registering.
' The school sessions were to be
| opened by an address by Governor
| Walter J. Kobler. Jobo F. Herzog.
‘president of the county highway
commissioners’ association, was to
reply.
Charlies M. Baeock, Minnesvta
highway commissioner, was to
speak on “planning a state high-
way system.”
For the first time, sessions are to
be beld in the assembly chamber at
the capito! Instead of hotels. Last
year, stories of wild parties at the
sehoo! were ciréylated, and this
| year the program admonishes “to
aveid§ criticisim, say nothing, do
poco be nothing.”
| [
[
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],
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] | [
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2
] |
|
307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
28,
0
] | READVERTISE FOR
MOTOR, PUMP BIDS
| The board of pubjic works today
announced it bad readvertised for
bids for a motor avd pump for the
new well unit to be constructed
ithis vear in the mareh north of
| Myrick park, At the January meet-
ing of the common counell the al
dermen rejected the bids offered on
‘the motor and pump. and asked
, Chat ihe board readvertice. The
bids are to be opened at the city
ball February 12.
| [
[
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[
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3
] |
|
307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
32,
4
] | DELIRIOUS PATIENT
SHOOTS NURSE AND
DIES 4 HOURS LATE!
| : RICHMOND, Va... —(®)— Mrs.
Tom P. Kerse, a nurse, was in a
critical condition in a local hospital
Monday with a bullet wound tn the
bead. which police said was inflict-
ed by her patient, F. L. Heath, 36,
Heath died of pweumenia about four
bhuurs after the shooting.
| WVeliee said their investigation in-
‘licated that Heath was delirious at
times and that he said shortly af-
ter the shooting he remembered
having wounded bis purse.
| [
[
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307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
12,
26,
41
] | FUNERAL SERVICE
FOR ADAM KRONER
WILL BE TUESDAY
Deceased Was Prominent in
Business and Civie Af-
fairs Here
| UNERAL services for Adam
Kroner, who died at a local bes-
pital early Sunday morniog, wil!
be beld Tuesday afterneou at 2
o'clock at the German Lotheran
church, corner of West Avenue and
Cameron Avenue, the Kev. J. T.
Gamwm officiating. Interment will
be made in Oak Grove cemetery.
Adam Kroner was born in Ser-
sheim, Wurtemberg, Germany, June
“1, 1847. He attended scheol in
his native town until he was 14
years of age when he learned the
locksmith trade. In 1868 be went
to Bern, Switzerland and two years
later to Paris, where the :argest
universal exposition ever held in
the world up to that time was in
progress. The same year be return-
ed to his native bome to see bis
parents and then came to Awerica,
locating in La Crosse. For seven
years be was employed by bis
brother, the late Fred Kroner, who
was in the hardware business and
then he formed a partnership with
the late Fred Dittman on Pearl
street between Second aud Third
streets. Fifteen years Jater the part-
nership was dissolved and he erect-
ed the building, 521 Pearl street,
and a few yeurs later, owing to the
coustantly growing business, built
an alidition. In 1917 the business
was incospurated under the uame of
the Adam Kroner company
Mr. Kroner was affiliated with
pumerous orgapvizations, both civic
and otherwise. He was made presi-
dent of the German-Americav bank
when it was organized in 1894 and
held that office until 1904 when it
was consolidated with the La Crosse
National bank. He was one of the
founders of the La Crosse Lutherau
hospital and served as its treasurer
for ten years; one of the founders
jof the Deutscher Verein, now the
Germania society: presiden’t of the
Hlarmonia choir of the German
Lutberan church for forty years and
for a number of years was presi-
deot of the La Crosse Board of
Trade. Mr. Kroner was active in
civie affairs and served for four
years os a member of the commen
council] and 16 years as a. trustee
ot the county losape asylum
He was united in marriage In
1875 to Minnie Miller of Barre
Mills. who «preceded him in death
seven years age. Besides his two
seeps aud twe daughters. Edgar
Krover, William Kroner. Mrs.
Jobn H. Gatterdam of this city, and
Mrs. Chester A. Disbrow of New
York, he is survived by four crand-
children, Edgar and James Kroner
of this city and Nancy and John
lisbrew of New York.
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] |
|
307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
11,
5
] | ASKS RECEIVERSHIP
FOR FOX FILM:
| SEW YoRK —(Pi— A petition
tet the appeiniment ef an equity
hoeeiver fer Pox Theatres tC orpera-
tiw stock was filed today in the
tuited States district court by
Muurice Shutte. a bolder of 100
shares of class A stuck,
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|
307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
42,
47,
19,
51
] | City of Dreadful Night
Is Turkey’s Village of
Blind; 6,791 Afflicted
FIELSON’S WRECKED PLANE FOUND IN ARCTIC ZONE
| DIYAMAN, Turkey —()-— Now
that communications have been
opened partially in Turkey's long-
isolated turbulent eastern prov-
inces, travelers are bringing to the
world news of the existence of a
hidden and dreadful village: Adiya-
man, the village of the blind.
In the dusty, sandy district of
Misnimansour, not far from the
city of Malatia, lies this village of
whose 7,000 inhabitants 6.791 are
wholly or “partially sightless
through the ravages of trachoma.
Jt is a village without gound ex-
cept for the tap, tap of hfhdreds of
canes on cobbled roads as the pop-
ulation gropes its way through a
ghosily life from blind childhood to
blind old.age and death. Through
Adiyaman's squalid dung-thatched
huts and dust-polluted alleys, hu-
man beings craw! like animals with-
out eves.
No School or Hospital
Utterly disregarded by the old re-
gime of the sultans, the village has
for centuries been without a school
for hospital. Without solace or help
ite peasant population, stricken gen-
eration after generation by tracho-
ma, has made its living painfully
and half blindly through farming
and herding.
Fives times a day. year after
year, this derelict population has
filled the village mosque to pray to
Allab. Their prayers have not
mentioned the affliction, for accord-
ing to the Moslem faith, complaints
arouse the wrath of destiny. The
prayers of even the most wretched
followers of Islam thank Allah for
what they have, lest worse befall.
No Lights at Night
The village is utterly unlighted
at night for there are cnly a hand-
ful of villagers who could see by
any light. Kipling’s City of Dread-
ful Night becomes a reality in this
Anatolian town where night and
day are of the same dire biackness.
Adiyaman is probably the only
place in Anatolia where Moslem wo-
men wear no veils. For the women
of Adiyaman, religious as they are,
no veils are necessary beyond the
veil of universal blindness which
hides a woman even from her fath-
er and husband and child in this
sightless village.
Government Fights Plague
The government of Mustapha Ke-
mal is struggling to combat the tra-
choma peril here and in all the sur-
rounding district. Doctors have
been dispatched to the province and
clinics opened. Already, within a
brief period, the government has
spent $75,000 on the treatment of
155.144 trachoma cases, including
the entire population of blind Adi.
vaman and the afflicted in forty-
eight other villages of the Misni-
mansour district.
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15,
24
] | INCORPORATE NEW
MERCHANTS’ GROUP
AT MEET TONIGHT
| RTICLES of incorporation
ot the newly organized La
Crosse Independent Merchant-
association are to be read at a
meeting of all local tudepend-
ent merchants Monday evening
at 8 o'clock in the Wiggert
hall, Fourth and Jay streets.
J. W. Boyer, president of
the organization, bas extended
an invitation to every wer-
chant in the association et at-
tend the megting.
The association was tounded
at a mass meeting Thursday
night of some one hundred
merchants. At that time wear”
ly a 100 per cent Iembership
was secured. It is the plan of
the organization to have every
wholesaler, jobber, retailer and
professional man in the city a
member.
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8
] |
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10,
14
] | LIGHTNING PROOF
MATERIAL DEVELOPED
BY GENERAL ELECTRIC
| SEW JORK.——(4)— Discovery of
‘a new material pamed tbyrite,
which offers better protection from
lightning, was aunounced to the
American institute of electrical en-
siveers Monday by Karl B. Me-
Eacbron of the Geveral Electric
company.
| Thyrite is a compound, in appear
auce a cress petween black slate aud
porselain. Its pame, of creen deriva.
thom. means gate, and for electrical
carrent it is almwmest literally a gate
‘iv more senses than one.
ber the ordipary currents used iv
the industrial and bousehold worlds>
‘Ubyrite is a good insulater, a re-
strainer that keeps the current from
jumping out of bounds, a closed
vate. But when electricity becomes
too ardent, thyrite, “gives it the
sate.” If a tremendous evercharce
comes alensc the wire, <uceh as a
| stroke ef licbtning. thyrite chauges
rom insvleter inte a coml conductor,
[vatirnas a ready and barmies*
pathway fur escape of the over-
charge,
| [
[
3403.8574648438,
9821.217328125,
4459.9862851563,
11465.7191953125
],
[
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]
] | [
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] | 18 | 18_307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | 307,178,147 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 9 | 4,174 | [
3521,
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] |
|
307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
13,
25,
38
] | WHITE HOUSE DENIES
SHOUSE CHARGES OF
“PLAYING POLITICS’
Newton Explains Action of
Hoover in Compiling Data
on Government Employes
| WASTES LUNA} A OSLeruly
worded denial came quickly from
the white house Sunday bight af-
ter Jouett Shouse, chairman of the
demvcratic national executive com-
nuittee. had charged Presideut Hoo-
ver with cowpiling information on
government employes fer the pur-
pose of brioging patronage iufiuence
io bear against recalcitrant mem-
bers of congress,
The democratic statement said
Mr. Hoover had sent cards to all de-
partments “to be filled out by every
employe giving a full picture of the
bistery of his employment.” This,
be suid, was “difficult to explaip au
apy non-political bpothesis.”’
Walter Newton, ove of Me. Hoo
vers secretaries, replied that
neither he nor the presiden’ had
“ever beard of the matter until it
appeared in the press.”
A card index of presidential ap-
pointees and other non-civil service
employes is kept at the white house
as a matter of office routiae, he
said, aml sowe eight months age,
cards were sent out for the purpose
ef bringing this list up to date.
Shouse’s statement suggested
that members of congress saw in
the new system which he charged
to the president a purpose of *visit-
ing presidential displeasure’ upon
appointees “for the sins of tbeir
sponsors, such as voting independ-
ently” of the chicf executive's de-
| [
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9375.927203125
] | 19 | 19_307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | 307,178,147 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 10 | 8,610 | [
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7006,
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368,
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] |
|
307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
30,
9
] | YANKS IN LONDON DO
ALOT OF SINKING
| LUNDOR, England, — Dele-
gates lo ship sinking conference
suuk as follows: Sunday af-
ternoun Ambassador Hugh Gib-
sou supk a six foot putt aud
when Stimwecn almest sunk an
approach Dave Reed of the
Grundyville ecltib, one vf his
epponents, almest sunk his
Adams apple. Senator Reobiu-
son from the Persimmon and
Paupaw country, making bis
first appearance in slow com-
pany ou Eneglish- greens, sunk
his dewecratic identity behind a
check plaid suit with knee
breeches in bappy discord.
luawes was the referee and
sunk over twe cans full of de-
composed Carolina dry leaf dur-
ing the attempt at festivities.
It was a great day of relaxation
after one solid week of doing
uething but attempting te pre-
bounce the Japanese delegate,
Wakatsukis, name. This week
the agenda calls for the pro-
nounciation of French names-
If our putting and eur driving
holds out, we are going te be
hard to beat im this conference,
Yours,
WILL RhuGerks.
I. S—Mr. Merrew didn't
eonter with ‘em. They didu't
have amy poys’ clubs,
| [
[
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9345.25053125,
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],
[
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]
] | [
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] | 20 | 20_307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | 307,178,147 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 11 | 5,154 | [
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|
307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
69,
56,
62
] | Prices Expected to Hold to
Same General Level
SEES IMPROVEMENT IN MARKET
CREDIT CONDITIONS IN 1930
|
ASHINGTON—(?)—The Ameri-
can farmer is advised by the
department of agriculture that he
may expect more favorable market-
ing credit conditions this year and
a somewhat greater supply of labor
at slightly lower wages, but is
warned against imminent over-pro-
duction in several lines.
The department’s annual farm
outlook report, issued for publica-
tion Monday, forecast a lessened
demand for farm products through
the summer and fall, as compared
with the same seasons of 1929, al-
though an imrewoved domestic mar-
ket was predicted for the closing
weeks of the vear.
Detter Financing
The forecast for 1950 listed more
favorable farm mortgage mre
conditions, no immediate change |
the price of fertilizers and an un-'
changed price level for farm ma-
chinery. —
Wheat prices were forecast as
much the same as those prevailing
throughout 1929 unless winter
damage should prove severe or the
spring acreage is reduced. |
Dairymen were advised to cull
jtheir herds closely and send more
heifers to slaughter in order to
avoid a continued increase in dairy
herds in 1931 and 1932. The gen-
eral situation in the dairying indus-
try was said to be “not as bad as
jwould appear from present butter
| pric es.”
Ilog prices were expected to
average at least as high as in 1929
and possibly higher, while reduction
of slaughter supplies was indicat-
ed, this probably partially offset by
a decreased demand for hog prod-
ucts, 5 é
Hits “Blind Production”
WASHINGTON.—(#)— Secretary
| Hyde told the farmers of the nation
Monday that “blind production”
was the bane of agriculture.
Speaking over tbe National
Broadcasting company network, the
secretary closed the broadcasting
of the report on the 1930 agricul-
tural outlook with the warning tbat
sovernmental farm relief measures
will be useless “unless each in-
‘dividual farmer intelligently plans
|} his production.”
Hyde said he wanted to em-
phasize that i&% order to obtain a
higher level of prices than prevails
‘|now it appeared necessary to re-
duce rather than to increase 1930
production and that the problem
rust be met on the farm.
Pians Institutes
“If we are to ma agriculture
.| Profitable we must not only produce
tat lowest possible cost but must
also keep our production reasonably
close to prospective domestic de-
mand,” he said. “Blind production
for an unknown demand is now the
bane of agriculture. Competitive
selling by 6,000,000 individual
farmers usually gives the purchaser
a great advantage. The challenge
tot the new decade is to act collec-
‘itively to overcome this situation.”
The secretary said that detailed
‘}imformation on the agricultural
‘|outlook will be brought to every
jcommunity within the next month
at thousands of farm meetings con-
ducted by the extension service of
the department.
,
\
| [
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] |
|
307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
16,
2
] | COUNTY CLERK’S —
CONDITION SERIOUS
| Esther Domke, county clerk, whe
submitted to a second operation a!
a local hospital Saturday morning
Was reported to have rested easily
‘Sunday night, but her condition i:
‘still said to be serious. °
| [
[
4481.9287539062,
8689.275921875,
5522.17134375,
9068.4926328125
],
[
4484.1938476562,
8423.482421875,
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8659.6533203125
]
] | [
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8423.482421875,
5522.17134375,
9068.4926328125
] | 25 | 25_307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | 307,178,147 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 13 | 13 | [
13
] |
|
307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
64,
66
] | PEPORT 60 PARROTS
| W YORK.—Siaty undesirabie
ialiens are about to be deported to
Colombia, whence they came. They
are parrots. «
| [
[
5545.0659609375,
11198.0151796875,
6614.1689023438,
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],
[
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] | [
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] | 26 | 26_307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | 307,178,147 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 14 | 14 | [
14
] |
|
307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
8,
20
] | State to Get
Highway Aid
From U.S
| geo pet Wis. —(#)— Federal
| highway aid for Wisconsin will
be forthcoming for the calendar
‘year 1930 without the necessity of
‘a special legislative session to effect
a change io the law governing con-
trol of the highway appropriations,
Governor Walter Kohler announced
Monday.
The governor's anhnouncement
said funds which total almost two
million will be avallable as a re-
sult of negotiations betwecn the fed-
eral bureau of public roads and the
| Wisconsin highway commission.
| Federal officials are of the opin-
‘jon the present Wisconsin law does
not comply with the requirements
that expenditure of federal aid mon-
ey be administered by the state rath-
er than by counties. Because of this.
the matter will undoubtedly be one
of the subjects for the 1931 legisla-
|ture, the governer said.
The present Wisconsin law places
administration of highway funds
with the counties. For some time
rumors were current that a special
session of the legislature would be
necessary in order that federal aid
might be obtained through an
amendment of the law but they were
dispelled by the governor’s an-
nouncement.
| [
[
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],
[
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] | [
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] | 27 | 27_307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | 307,178,147 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 15 | 6,340 | [
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|
307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
3,
22,
39
] | MOSES AND KAHN
AIDED GERMAN DYE
INTERESTS, CHARGI
Francis P. Garvan in State-
ment Accuses Senator and
New York Banker
| LEW YORK —(#)— Francis P.
Garvan, president of the Chem-
ical Foundation, in a_ statement
publisbed Monday. charged that a
conspiracy by German chemical in-
terests to influence United States
tariff schedules bad been aided by
Senator George Moses of New
Hampshire, Otto H. Kabn and oth-
ers
The statement was issued with
copies of a deposition which he
‘made for use inthe suit brought
lugainst him as former alien proper-
ty custodian chargivg that be and
others tried to defraud the govern-
ment of $5,555.546 in the war
| time disposition of the assets of the
Busch Magneto company. The suit
was dismissed in a federal court iu
Boston Saturday, where the deposi-
ition is on file. . F
| Garvan said in his statersent
| that during ten years he had “as-
sembled evidence of the German
penetration of American industry,
invelving cabivet officers of tHe
; Harding regime and Sevater Moses
jef New Hiuupehire as allics of the
German ivterests in their attempt
to regain control of the American
situation.
“The only reason I make this
statement is because after this case
has blown up. the fight goes on te-
day. Some of you saw the otber
day that Senator Moses bad = ap-
pointed Otte Kabn as treasurer for
the election of vew senators. You
did wet assecinte the fact that bis
friend avd partner, Warburg, ix
head and front of the American in-
terest in the American Interessep
Gemeinschaft in its attempt to de-
Strey our chemical industry.’
Mr. Kahn and Felix Warburg are
partners in Kuhe, Loeb and Com-
pany.
The statement ‘also named Mer-
ton E. Lewie, former attorney gen-
eral of New York, as an American
official aiding German dye _ inter-
exts.
| [
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|
307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
21,
29
] | HERR WILHELM HOHENZOLLERN
OF DOORN 7! YEARS OLD TODAY
| RERLIN—/)—Tohree of the sone
) of the former kaiser. now piain
Herr Wilbelm Hobenzollern. were
in Doorn, Holland. Monday to at-
tend celebration of their exiled
father’s 71st birthday.
Frederick Wilhelm, the former
crown prince, the former Crown
Princess Cecile and Prince August
Wilhelm constituted the Pectsdam
contingent to the’ birthday party.
while Prince Adalbert and bis wife
started from Hamburg and Princess
Victoria Louise, with her busband,
metored to Doorn from Bruuswick.
None of the grandchildren went
to Doorn, not even Wilhelm, the
eldest son of the former crown
prince who is studying at Koen-
igsburg university. According to a
Berlin representative of the Hohen-
zollerns, Wilhelm “found the ex-
pense of the trip from East Prus-
sia to Holland too big.”
Of other relatives. only the Prin-
cess Margarete, the former kaiser’s
sister, went to Doorn with her hus-
band. Landgrave Karl Hessen. At
ithe former emperors request the
festivities were reduced to a mini-
mum because of mourning over toe
death of Princess Victoria, who was
l the wife of Alexander Subkoff, Rus-
| sian adventurer.
| [
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|
307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
1,
37,
40
] | STATE BAR TAKES
STAND ON COUNTY
COURT'S SCOPE
Disapprove Legislation Giving
| County Courts Civil
Jurisdiction
| That the Wisconsin Staite Bar
issociation bas gone on recerd as
, disapproving legislation i ziving
county courts civil jurisdiction, was
|the statement made by Judge R. 8.
Cowie this morning. “I believe
there should be a municipal court
in La Crosse.’ continued the judge,
“to take the place of the police
court. This court should have juris-
diction over all criminal matters,
which are now being bandied in the
county court. The county judge*bas
more than be can handle and-if he
attends to his probate cases, to-
gether with juvenile court avd old
age and widows’ pensions, Le has
no time fer criminal work. The
juvenile court is distinct from all
criminal matters now, esnecially
since the new state code becuime ef.
fective. This could therefore not be
classed as criminal matier.
“The circuit court bas pleuty of
time to be in session to hear civil
cases at any time. Motion days are
held here every two weeks or often-
er if necessary, aud if the attorneys
have their court cases ready they
can be heard any time during the
week, if desired.
“This matter came up before the
La Crosse Bar association once be-
fore and the county board refused
to consider it on account of the ex-
pense. A reorganization of the
courts in the county creating a mu-
nicipal court, relieving the county
court of all criminal and civii mat-
ters, would take ture of the litiga-
tion to the best advantaze.
“The circuit court calendar bere
is pretty well cleaned up. there be-
ing no cases over six months oid and
these can be tried whenever the
uttorneys are ready to try them.”
| [
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18
] |
|
307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
33,
6
] | DRY DEMOCRATS PUT
FORWARD ROOSEVELT
AS 1932 CANDIDATE
| | NEW YORK.—(4)—The New
York Times Monday queted William
EK. Sweet, fermerly covernor of
Colorado, a8 expressing the vepinion
that Governor Franklin D. Reose-
velt of New York would be accept-
able to dry democrats as a presi-
dential candidate in 1922.
Mr. Sweet, who has been a
leader in prohibition movements iu
bis own state, is visiting in New
York.
He suid it was time fer the dry
demeecrats sud democrats of the
south te get tegether: otherwise Al-
fred E. Smith was likely to get the
pomination again with pruspect of
election.
| [
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|
307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
23,
17
] | FORMER LA CROSSE
MAN PASSES AWAY
AT HASTINGS, MINN.
| Word has been received of the
death at Hastings, Minn., of Bb. A.
Edberg. formerly a resident of this
city. He was 40 years of wee and
before leaving La Crosse was in the
insurance business bere. Ue left
this city several years ago, locating
in Glasgow. Mont., where he was
agent fur a motor cur company.
Later be moved tv Hastings where
be has since resided. At tke time
of bis death he was factory repre-
sentative of a motor car conipany.
On December 20 a brotber, Edgar
Edberz. was accidentally killed in
los Angeles. He is survived by his
widow: Lillian Ldberg, oue dauehter,
Marjorie, aud wne son, Leslie. He
also leaves his father. George kd-
berg, formerly a resident of Saud
Lake coulee, now living at Seattle,
Wasb., aud fvur sisters.
| [
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[
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20
] |
|
307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178147-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
68,
45,
48
] | HOLD BUT FAINT HOPE
"THAT. FLYERS ARE SAFE
Provisions in Plane Untouch-
ed; Ship is Badly Dam-
aged in Crash
| De ee
.
OME, Alaska —(4)-— Mushers
from North Cape, Siberia, Mon-
day headed their dog teams toward
the spot where the wrecked airplane
of Carl Ben Eielson, noted Arctic
flyer, and his companion, Earl Bor-
land, was located Saturday, expect-
ing to find the bodies of the two
missing birdmen.
Belief that EKielson and Borland
were killed when their plane crash-
ed and their bodies would be found
jammed under 18 cases of gasoline
in the cabin was expressed here af-
ter a more detailed report of the
finding of the wreck was received.
Joe Crosson and Harold Gillman,
Alaskan flyers, found the wreck-
ed plane, climaxing a search which
has lasted for more than two months
and which recently became an in-
ternational affair with the entry of
Russian and Canadian aviators.
Crosson and Gillman have been
operating from the fur trading ves-
sel Nanuk, frozen in the ice near
North Cape. They took off again
Sunday for the seene of the wreck,
and dog teams from the Nanuk also
went out. No word bad been receiv-
ed from them Monday.
Nearly Buried in Snow
When Cros#n and Gillman sight-
ed Ejelson’s ship, only a small part
of one wing and a portion of the
cabin protruded from the snow.
Wreckage was found scattered in all
directions. The engine was 100 feet
from the cabin. Crosson opened a
deor of the cabin and a slab of ba-
con fell out.
Messages deseribing the discovery
of the wreck indicated that Crosson
jand Gillman did not inspect it
closely at once, believing Eielson
aud Borland had been killed by the
impact and that their bodies would
be found buried in the snow and ice.
Later messages gave rise to the he-
jlief Eielson and Borland died in the
Jeabin of their sbip and that the
|gasoline cases concealed their bod-
ies.
| QEATTLE.—(/)—Halt ihe mys-
tery of the disappearance Nov.
8 of Carl Ben Eielson and Earl Bor-
‘tland was solved Monday with dis-
‘icovery of their wrecked plane in an
‘licey lagoon 90 miles southeast of
-+North Cape, Siberia, but absence of
the bodies of the two American avi-
‘lators from the wreckage kept alive a
j bare hope they may still be alive,
The note of optimism was ex-
tremely faint, however, as experi-
leneed flyers said they believed the
plane struck with such force as to
‘kill the aviators and throw them
-|from the ship. It was pointed ont
‘Ithat snow might have concealed the
bodies from Pilots Joe Crosson and
| Harold Gillam, who found the wreck
iSaturday.
: Cro@son and Gillam took off again
||Sunday from the fur trading ship
| Nanuk, ice-bound at North Cape, for
_}the scene of the wreck.
EKielson and Borland were al-
iempting a flight from Alaska to
the Nanuk when they crashed, They
had removed one load of passengers
and furs and were returning for a
second,
Hunt for Bodies
With Crosson and Gillam were a
trepresentative of the Russian Trad-
ling company and a sailor from the
| Nanuk, owned by the Swenson Trad-
| ing company. Dog teams preceded
the plane and will join in a search
‘tfor the missing flyers.
, Crosson, first to sight the Eiel-
‘|son plage, signalled to Gillam and
‘tthe two flyers Ltrought their ma-
‘lchines down vear the wreck.
| | The condition of the plane, Cros-
J
‘Ison said, indicated that both oc-
(Continued on Page six “ol one)
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|
307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
63,
46,
70
] | WRECKAGE DESTROYED BY
AIRLINES COMPANY ME
Coroner's Orders to Leavy:
Debris Undisturbed are
Ignored
| ANSAS CITY, Kas.—()-—Burn-
ed and mutilated bodies of four
men and one woman lay Tuesday
in Kansas City morgues, victims
of a crash of a Central Airlines
plane which dived, and exploded
into a mass of seething flames
Monday night within a mile of its
destination, Fair airport.
Cause of the accident probably
will remain a secret of the dead.
Almost as soon as the charred bod-
ies of the four passengers and pilot
were removed employes of Univer-
eal Airlines, Inc., a subsidiary with
Central Airlines of Aviation vorpor-
ation, backed to pieces the still
smoking frame of the plane and
dragged its parts to widely separat-
ed sections of a stubbled corn field.
Baggage Is Burned
Even the pathetic remnants of
the passengers’ personal baggage, a
magazine, a box of cough medicine,
a woman's handkerchief — were
destroyed by a tire built upon the
spot where the single-wotored
plane imbedded itself in soft black
<arth,
The dead are Dyke Laucdeman,
Kansas City, Kas., pilot; C, R. Me-
Kinnon, Chicago business man;
James B. Eggert, Chicago, music
publisher; Miss Margaret Dice, St.
Joseph, Mo., and William Flynn,
Kansas City, former city alderman
and theatre owner.
All are believed to have been
killed by impact of the plane, the
second section of the regular Cen-
tral Airlines afternoon flight from
Wichita, when it sideslipped and
dived from an altitude of about 500
feet.
The plane appeared over the air-
port almost 30 minutes late. Air-
port attendants said it circled the
field with motor Apparently dron-
ing normally. Then, south of the
airport, already flattening for the
landing, it faltered, dipped and
plunged into a cornfield. An explo-
sion marked the moment of im-
pact and flames roared into the
air.
Employes of a nearby factory
and airport attendants rushed to the
wreck with fire extinguishers but
were unable even to approach the
plane because of the blistering heat.
The passengers, blackened and
seared almost beyond recognition,
were pitched forward in a grim
huddle against the motor, jammea
through the splintered cabin.
Aviators said they believed the
most plausible explanation of the
tragedy was failure of controls.
Laudeman had been flying seven
years and was known as an unusu-
ally cautious pilot,
Ordered Wreck Left
Dr. L. 8S. Fisher, deputy coron-
er, said an inquest would be held
Tuesday. The deputy coroner said
he gave orders that the debris was
to be left untouched. However,
workmen for the Universal Aviation
corporation, directed by E. L. Slon-
iger, branch manager here, ad-
vanced on the wreck with hack-
saws, axes and ropes immediateiy
after departure of Dr. Fisher and
within an hour only scattered parts
ef the metal framework could be
found.
Sloniger reported the accident to
Richard H. Lees, Jr., district in-
spector for the aeronautical branch
of the department of commerce,
and said Lees gave permission to
remove the wreckage to a hangur.
Newspaper photographers were
threatened and told they would get
“badly hurt” if they attempted to
take pictures of the debris. Despite
the warnings, however, photographs
were obtained,
Sloniger said Paul Goldsborough
ot Chicago, vice president ia charge
of onerations of the line, would ar-
| [
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|
307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
71,
58,
65
] | Close Open Hearings on Bill te
Transfer Enforcement Unit
SETS FORTH HIS VIEWS IN
LETTER TO HOUSE COMMITTEE
| ASHINGTON —4(#)— Habitual
drinkers and those definitely
opposed to prohibition on principle
considered unsuitable by the
Hoover administration for federal
offices directly connected with the
prosecution of violators of the dry
statutes.
In addition, the personal views
and practices of applicants for ap-
pointment or reappointment = as
United States attorneys and mar-
shals are being thoroughly investi-
gated before appointments are re-
commended to the president “ the
justic department,
Tells The Dein.
This was revealed by Attorney
General Mitchell in a letter sub-
mitted to the house expenditures
committee, which is considering the
Williamson bill to consolidate the
government's enforcement and pro-
secuting agencies in the department
of justice.
The letter dealt only with attor-
neys and marshals, although it is
assumed that Mitchell will follow
the same policy in selecting men
for the enforcement unit when that
agency is transferred to his juris-
diction.
“I have not made any hard and
fast rule on the subject,” the at-
torney general wrote, “and there
ure many matters respecting a
man’s ability and personal qualifi-
cations that have to be considered,
but I believe that no man who
makes a practice of drinking intox-
icating liquor, or who has definite
or pronounced views in opposition
to prohibition, belongs, during
this administration, in any post
having directly to do with the pro-
secution of cases under the national
prohibition act,
Use of Liquor a Handicap
“I have not made any bDlare of
trumpets about this matter, but I
am not at all reluctant to have it
known among those in the service
of this department that the habi-
tual use of liquor and opposition to
prohibition are very definite handi-
caps to appointment or reappoint-
ment in this service.”
With the receipt of Mitchell's
letter, the expenditures committee
cencluded its open hearings on the
transfer bill. Executive sessions
were planned, beginning Tuesday,
and it was expected that the mea-
sure would be reported out by the
end of the week,
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|
307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
18,
22,
27
] | HITS LEGISLATORS’
FAILURE TO VOTE
SNOW REMOVAI
Too Much Interested in Owr
Salary Raise, Says Barron
County Official
| MADISON, —(#)— A condemna-
tion of the last legislature because
it failed to fulfill election promises
to care for snow removal was made
here Tuesday before the annual
road school by Ed Gleason, Barron
county highway commissioner.
“The representatives from 50
counties, whose boards adopted
resolutions favoring a gas tax in-
crease for snow removal, could
have gotten an increase if they had
been as much interested in getting
it as they were in getting their
own salaries raised,” Gleason said.
“I do not believe the people of
Wisconsin are going to tolerate this
condition much longer,” he continu-
ed. “We have begged and coaxed
asking the legislature for relief
and it has availed us nothing.
“I believe it is time for us to do
something more effective than pass
resolutions.”
| [
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|
307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
24,
6
] |
HEAR OBJECTIONS
ON PAVING WORK
PROPOSED HERE
| )
Objections to proposed = street
paving in the city were heard Mon-
day by the board of public works.
Property holders on St. Paul and
Wall streets were the only ones of-
fering objections to the proposed
work.
The proposed paving on Sit. Paul
from Rose to Avon streets was
asked delayed for a period of time
because there is no business on that
street except where it intersects
with Caledonia street. Nine proper-
ty holders signed the petition.
Seven property holders signed a
petition against the paving of Wall
street from Copeland avenue to
Avon. No reason for the objection
was given.
Other projects for which objec-
tions were open, but which found
no petitions against the paving
work were on Windsor from Cope-
land avenue to Avon, La Crosse
from Fourth to Sixth, and Forest
avenue from West Avenue to La
Crosse,
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25
] |
|
307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
28,
5
] | GROVER TO ADDRESS
TOMAH ROTARIANS
| Frank Grover, local member of
ef the advisory beard of the state
conservation commission and an ac-
tive Izaak Walton League member,
will address the Tomah Rotary club
Wednesday noon on the subject of
conservation,
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26
] |
|
307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
17,
11
] | SEES HARD JOB
AHEAD AT LONDON
| LANDON. Had iuncn today
in their rooms with Mr. anc
Mrs. Morrow and elder daugh-
ter Elizabeth, and Mr, and Mrs.
Stimson were there and he told
me, “you go back home, Will,
and announce that one of
America’s muchly advertised
talents has been over-estimat-
ed. We are not the masters of
bunk.”” He had just come
from a five-hour siege with the
jrhole mess of "em. Morrow is
funny. He pulled a good one:
“We are getting along fine,
beautiful compliments, but no-
body has mentioned the word
navy- I look for that word to
come up some day and when it
does I just want to see what
the conference will do.” Eng-
land this morning ordered work
stopped on two cruisers, the.
Surrey and Northumberland.
These are the same two Mac-
donald ordered work stopped on
last July when the papers were
all full of it, and Mr. Hoover
saw him two and raised him
one by stopping work on three
of ours. If Mr. Hoover sees
this raise, I hope he does it
with the same ships, too.
They will keep on stopping
work on these two till the first
thing you know they will be
late building "em. But all sink-
ing aside, our boys seem very
optimistic and feel that some-
thing will be accomplished.
They are all crazy about Joe
Robinson. Mr. Hoover can feel
proud of his lads but boy, there
is some tough babies here.
Talk about taking boats away
from them! There is delega-
tions here that wouldn't give up
an oar to see eternal salvation,
Yours,
WHIrr, RPOoOcrRs.
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|
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73,
50,
51
] | HEAR FRENCH DEMAND FIRST
AT THURSDAY’S GATHERING
Tonnage Proposals to Hav
Attention in Alphabet-
ical Order
| the whole world listen in through
the press at all future plenary meet-
ings of the naval conference.
Greatly expanding previous ar-
rangements it was decided at
American insistence that seats be
given in the conference room at St.
James’ palace to 78 reporters rep-
resenting all nations.
Loud speakers will be installed
to carry the proceedings to the
press room outside for those impos-
sible to admit.
American newspaper men are to
get 12 seats in the meeting room.
The plan applies only to full meet-
ings of the conference and not to
sessions of the Big Five or com-
mittees,
Senators Robinson and Reed of
the American delegation played a
prominent part in initiating the
move which Secretary Stimson took
insistently before his colleagues of
the other represented nations.
Italy made reservations to deci-
sions reached Tuesday at the meet-
ing of the heads of the delegations,
it was learned shortly after the
Tmeeting adjourned. The exact na-
ture of the reservations was not
disclosed.
ONDON —(4)— French = global
tonnage proposals were put at
the head of the naval conference
agenda Tuesday, but Italian co n-
ter-proposals also will be given
their day in court at the next open
session of the full conference cal-
led for Thursday morning ‘am ten
o'clock,
Again invoking the stebaiet. the
Big Five at a meeting in St.
James’s palace Tuesday decided to
eall the roll of nations at Thurs-
day’s session, thus giving France
the right of way over her Italian
neighbor,
France will present her proposal
to limit fleets as a whole and not
in separate categories, Great Bri-
tain will reiterate briefly her pre-
ference for category regulation and
Tialvw will then make her niea that
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40,
74
] | GOSSIP BRINGS
Cricinck FCEeEeOP”
| MILWAUCARELE——H4) — WDistract
ed becanse neighborhood gossip ac
cused her of infidelity, Mrs. Mary
Liska, 27, attempted to commi
suicide Monday night. She _ sho
herself, and probably will die, doc
tors said ;
| [
[
3519.2912128906,
10994.02925,
4555.51371875,
11390.800828125
],
[
3535.2255859375,
10863.037109375,
4550.724609375,
10970.2744140625
]
] | [
3519.2912128906,
10863.037109375,
4555.51371875,
11390.800828125
] | 21 | 21_307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 307,178,157 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 29 | 29 | [
29
] |
|
307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
29,
1
] | HOOVER REPORTS
SLIGHT INCREASE
IN EMPLOYMENT
| WASHINGTON — (#) — Presi-
dent Hoover said Tuesday that re-
ports to the department of labor
showed an increase in employment
for the week ending January 14 of
3.3 per cent over the preceding
week.
This increase, which the chief
executive said was “encouraging,”
extended to almost every industry.
The department of labor was ad-
vised last week that the trend up-
ward had begun January 6 and the
additional reports indicate a con-
tinued climb.
| [
[
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[
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] | [
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] | 22 | 22_307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 307,178,157 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 30 | 6,357 | [
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|
307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
30,
8
] | REPORT OF STRIKE
STARTS NEW GOLD
RUSH IN ALASK.
| LOS ANGELES—(?)— Er.
nest Walker Sawyer, assistant
to Secretary of the Interior
Wilbur, said Tuesday he had
received word of an apparently
rich gold strike in the Wild
River district of Alaska, near
Bettles.
Sawyer said miners have
brought out samples’ which
have created great interest in
Fairbanks and that airplane
parties are speeding into the
Wild River country to locate
claims, and to make prepara-
tions for mining in the spring.
| [
[
4623.121046875,
3602.5746601563,
5606.543015625,
4560.6597148438
],
[
4599.2041015625,
3229.9631347656,
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3547.7314453125
]
] | [
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3229.9631347656,
5609.7084960938,
4560.6597148438
] | 23 | 23_307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 307,178,157 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 31 | 2,500 | [
2500,
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|
307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
12,
14,
26
] | BORAH T0 DEMAND
SENATE PROBE OF
DRY ENFORCEMENT
Tilt With Lowman May Result
in Investigation of
Whole Service
| WASHINGTON, —(#)— Senate
investigation of the _ prohibition
enforcement service was in prospect
Tuesday as a result of the sharp
disagreement between Assistant
Secretary Lowman, of the treasury,
and Senators Borah of Idaho and
Wheeler of Montana, over. the
qualifications of John F. C. Her-
bert as dry administrator for Mon-
tana and Idaho.
Borah indicated that he would
ask the senate judiciary committee
to go into the enforcement problem
as soon as the committee takes up
the pending dry bills, as a result
of Lowman’s defense of Herbert.
“We ought to have the facts,”
he said. “‘We have been told by an
investigator of the department of
justice about the record of Herbert
as prohibition administrator for
Maryland. We may have been mis-
informed but we will have to find
out.”
It also became known Tuesday
that Senator Borah has been told
that the department of justice is
watching his office, :
“I am not interested in that,”
laughed Borah, “but my secretary
was informed by an investigator of
the department that my office was
being watched. There is nothing
there of interest.”
The prospective senate inquiry
into prohibition enforcement, how-
ever, must await the disposition of
the pending tariff bill, Borah said.
| [
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|
307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
38,
4
] | RESCUER AMONG
SEVEN VICTIMS OF
FIRE IN COLORADO
| FREDERICK, Colo.—()—Sefen
persons were burned to death in a
fire Tuesday in a two room shack
near the Slopline mine. Mrs. Paul
Martinez, her five children, rang-
ing in age from 13 months to 15
years, and a miner named Newlon
lost their lives. Newlon discovered
the fire, broke into the shack
through a window and was burned
to death trying to rescue the fam-
| [
[
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8053.11128125,
5651.5054179687,
8736.9853984375
],
[
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] | [
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8736.9853984375
] | 26 | 26_307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 307,178,157 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 33 | 33 | [
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2928,
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] |
|
307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
9,
0
] | OSCAR HALLER
KILLS LARGEST
FOX OF SEASON
| The largest red fox killed in La
Crosse county this season was
brought to the county clerk's office
Monday afternoon, by Oscar Haller
of the town of Shelby, where he
killed it. The animal was not only
unusually large, but its fur was of
exceptional quality.
| [
[
4581.4740742187,
9131.113234375,
5661.5303203125,
9615.863328125
],
[
4601.865234375,
8776.8046875,
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9100.1484375
]
] | [
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8776.8046875,
5661.5303203125,
9615.863328125
] | 27 | 27_307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 307,178,157 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 34 | 34 | [
34
] |
|
307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
31,
19
] | Independent Merchants
And Professional Men
Organize; 200 Turn Out
| ‘DEPENDENT merchants and professional men of La Crosse definitely
organized themselves for the purpose of promoting their mutual
benefits resulting from organized and associated effort in the protection
of their business interests at a meeting Monday night at the Wiggert
hall, Fourth and Jay streets. About 200 men and women attended the
meeting.
Following the adoption of a constitution and by-laws, the following
officers were elected: William Boyer, president; George Krause, vice
president; Ed Steinmetz, secretary and treasurer; Glenn Sather and
Ed Erickson, directors for one year; William Stevenson and H. S. Rice,
directors for two years; and Herman Tausche and George Shimshak,
directors for three years.
At the present time no name has been adopted by the organization.
This will be taken up by the board of directors at a meeting within the
next few days, and the board’s recommendation discussed at. the next
meeting, which will be held February 24.
Its Preamble
The preamble of the constitution follows: The purpose of this asso-
ciation shall be exclusively educational, benevolent, charitable, refor-
matory, social and literary; to provide for the financial, physical, in-
tellectual and social development of the members of the association
and to promote their mutual benefits resulting from organized and asso-
(Continued on Page six Col. one)
| [
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],
[
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35
] |
|
307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
20,
16,
15
] | JOHN COSTLEY “INVENTS”
TRAP FOR RATS—DOESN’T
CARE IF “WORLD” KNOWS IT
| HE old adage, “If you build a bet-
ter mouse trap than anyone else
can build the world will beat a path
to your door,”’ may apply to the dis-
covery of John Costley, register in
probate, 2131 State street, who uses
a common quart milk bottle for a
rat trap.
Monday afternoon he received a
telephone call from his home that a
rad had been discovered on a shelf,
occupied by milk bottles and other
foodstuffs. The rat had made its
escape through a hole into the base-
ment. “You know when I was a boy
I was quite a trapper,” said Mr.
Costley, “studied the habits of ani-
mals, what they lived en and what
to use for bait. In view of the fact
that it was after milk I decided to
use milk for bait.”
Taking a milk bottle into which
he poured a few teaspoons of the
fluid he placed it in the side of an
ash pile in the basement. About two
hours later he went into the base-
ment to fix the fire for the night
and there was the rat inside the
bottle, struggling to get out. The
milk was gone but the rat, even af-
ter succeeding in turning around
inside the bottle, was unable to
work its way out. The smooth sur-
face of the glass made it impossible
to imbed its claws ang finally the
animal became exhausted and quit
trying. It was afterward placed in
a tub of water and drowned.
“I don’t know whether the world
will beat a path to my door,” said
Mr. Costley jokingly, “but from now
on I will use milk bottles for rat
traps and I don’t care if the world
knows it.”’
| [
[
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36
] |
|
307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
23,
2
] | MADRID DENIES
RUMOR DE RIVERA
HAS QUIT OFFICE
| | Tp 2c Spanish
government, through the
office of the chief censor, late
Tuesday denied reports, pub-
lished abroad, that Premier
Primo De Rivera had resigned,
stating that the reports were
without foundation.
The premier presided as
usual at Tuesday evening's
cabinet meeting. Whether he
will resign in the future con-
tinues speculative, being de-
pendent upon what attitude
the army and navy take in ac-
cordance with the premier’s
expressed desire for a roll call
on their approval or disap-
proval of the dictatorship.
| [
[
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],
[
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]
] | [
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] | 31 | 31_307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 307,178,157 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 37 | 37 | [
5056,
37,
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|
307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
42,
56
] | IGNORED pig WHISTLE;
T COST HIM A LEC
| NEENAH, Wi1s.—-(4&) — Juuus
Dennhardt’s sense of hearing failed
him by just one set of railroad
tracks. As a result, he lost a leg
when he didn’t look around as a
train whistled. He thought it was
on the east-bound track. It was on
the westbound, and so was he,
| [
[
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5297,
38
] |
|
307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
10,
21,
39
] | ENTHUSIASM BIG
PART OF SUGGESS
SPEAKER ASSERTS
Rev. Joseph Stump Delivers
Inspiring Address at Col-
lece (‘am menramaoant
| That enthusiasm in one’s field of
work is essential to success in that
work, was the message of the Rev.
Joseph Stump, Jr., to the mid-year
graduating class at the State
Teachers college, Tuesday morning.
“The will to do a thing is but
a small factor in success,” the
speaker said, declaring that those
who attempt to do things through
sheer will-power are rarely success-
ful. “After all,” Rev. Stump said,
“the heart-felt emotions are the
driving forces of life which lead to
success,” and he cited instances to
show how the emotions of fear and
patriotism, for example, have in-
spired men to do prodigious feats.
“The enthusiasm you have in
your school-teaching,” the speaker
told the graduates, ‘your ability to
make your work a part of yourself,
will make you a successful teacher.
If you teach through will-power
alone and only to earn your pay-
check, you will never go far. But if
you have enthusiasm, and are deep-
ly stirred, you will really accom-
plish things in life.”
Those who received diplomas:
primary course, Mary Coughlin;
grammar grade course, Iola Harris,
Pearl Hintgen and Helen Wolf; ru-
ral course, Mrs. Mildred Meinking.
Irene Erdlitz, graduate in the phy-
sical education course, received the
degree bachelor of educatien. Ar-
thur Lyon, who also received tthe
degree, has already taken a teach-
ing position and was not present at
the graduation exercises,
A solo by Mildred Forseth, and
selections by the college orchestra,
under the direction of Thomas An-
nett, were features of the program.
| [
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[
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39
] |
|
307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
33,
13
] | JOE CANTILLON
NEAR TO DEATH
| HICKMAN, Ky.—(#)—Pongo Joe
Cantillon,grand old man of baseball
earried on his battle with death
Tuesday morning, hours past the
time doctors predicted it would be
possible for him to remain alive.
Will power alone kept the veter-
an alive, doctors said, as scores of
messages came from notables of the
enart waoarld.
| [
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40,
6355,
1736
] |
|
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72,
60,
59,
76
] |
WILL ASK AT LEAST ONE
CLEARED CHANNEL IN STAT
Delegation Plans Statement te
Be Laid Before Radio Board
| BI RUD A. DUALA
ASHINGTON—Wisconsin con-
gressmen are perfecting plans
this week to “lay claim to Wiscon-
sin’s lawful share of broadcasting
facilities.”
A meeting of the congressional
delegation will be held early in the
week to determine the final form
of a statement to be presented to
the federal radio commission in the
name of the state of Wiscensin,
setting forth the way in which
Wisconsin has been discriminatea
against in allocating radio broad-
casting facilities in the fourth zone.
Representative James A. Frear of
Hudson, chairman of the delega-
tion, has said that he will call tne
meeting at the first opportunity for
the delegation to get together.
Meanwhile, a tentative draft of
the statement has been sent to the
two senators and the eleven con-
gressmen for their study and their
suggestions so that prompt agree-
ment on the final form of the plea
can be reached.
Demand One Clear Channel
This tentative draft asserts firm-
ly that Wisconsin should have at
least one cleared channel and that
it should have more regional sta-
|tions on good positions than it now
has. Only in the allocation of local
stations of 100 watts power or less
has the Badger state been granted
|what the law entitles her to, the
|draft says.
Pointing out that this is the first
time the Wisconsin delegation has
appeared before the commission to
make a united representation in
|the name of the state, the draft of
the argument asserts that “on the
proposition which brings us here
|there is complete and wholehearted
junanimity, a unanimity which re-
flects the sentiment of the three
million citizens in whose behalf we
address you.’
No plea is made in behalf of any
particular station or application for
ta station, the statement makes
clear.
Charge Discrimination
‘Reading the radio law and re-
‘}counting the early discriminations
against Wisconsin, the tentative
draft accepts the allocation to the
whole fourth zone without question,
‘tand takes up only what Wisconsin
has and what she should have un-
der the commission’s$’ own regula-
tions and the statute.
The commission has established
40 cleared channels and hag allo-
cated eight to the fourth zone. On
the basis of Wisconsin’s population,
the state is entitled to one of these
cleared channels; she has none. Il-
linois has 4 4-7; Missouri, Iowa.
and Minnesota each has one; In-
diana has one-half and Nebraska
has three-sevenths. Wisconsin, as
the delegation points’ out, has a
larger population than Iowa, Min-
nesota, or Nebraska, so that two of
these states with smaller popula-
tion than Wisconsin have cieared
channels.
Under the commission’s own rul-
ings, Wisconsin is entitled to 2.208
per cent of the total positions on
regional channels, and has received
only 2.160 per cent.
Few Desirable Positions
“Even this figure is really exag-
| gerated, we are told,” says the del-
‘legation’s tentative statement, “be-
cause the desirability of the posi-
tions actually assigned to Wisconsin
stations on these channels is very
low. In fact, it is said that during
the past year the state has enjoyea
only one desirable position on any
of these regional channels and that
ir. the past few months even that
has been utterly ruined by putting
stations in other zones on that
channel.”’
The local stations of low power,
of which Wisconsin has her nu-
merical quota, “are rarely heard
with any degree of satisfaction be-
yond the confines of a small town.
They give no service at all to the
great rural population or to any
listeners that do not live under the
shadow of their transmitting anten-
nae,” the statement now in the
hands of the delegation says.
Then comes one of the firmest of
the statements in the vigorous
brief:
“The State of Wisconsin cannot
and will not barter away its right
to its lawful quota of cleared chan-
nels and positions on good regional
stations for the empty priviiege of
having a number of 100-watt sta-
tions, The hundreds of thousands
of her people living in smali towns
and rural communities are entitled
to have the very best that broad-
easting has to offer brought into
their homes from stations located
within the state, operated by citl-
zens of the state, who are familiar
with the wishes and needs of the
listening public, and giving Wiscon-
sin talent a fair hearing before the
radio audience.
“They have a right to hear dis-
jeussion of the state’s public prob-
lems by her men in public life, and
to have the advantages of the edu-
eational opportunities which her
|great educational insitutions have
| gladly placed at the disposal of her
| broadcasting stations. Certainly our
citizens are as much entitled to
these privileges as are the citizens
of neighboring and other states.
State Also Has Message
“Wisconsin, too, has a right to
make her voice heard beyond her
own borders. We know that she has
a message just as imoprtant and in-
(Continued on Page six, vol. two)
| BY RUBY A. BLACK
Pa eer TrarTsc? reese aT WI 8 on ee ee oe.
| [
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41
] |
307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
35,
3
] | CLAIMS TEN GIRLS
WERE KIDNAPED IN
UNION LABOR WAR
| NEW YORK.—(/)—-Police Tues-
day were searching for ten girls re-
ported by the proprietor of a Brook-
lyn dress goods factory to have been
kidnaped from his factory Monday.
William Shindler, owner of the
factory, told police seven men en-
tered his place and threatened to
harm him if he did not unionize
within 24 hours. He said the men
then lined up 12 women employes,
two of whom managed to slip away.
The other ten were taken away in
three automobiles.
| [
[
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8346.9169453125,
8903.2061015625,
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],
[
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]
] | [
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] | 40 | 40_307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 307,178,157 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 42 | 8,258 | [
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|
307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
25,
7
] | LAST RITES FOR
ADAM KRONER ARE
HELD HERE TODAY
| Funeral services for Adam Kroner,
prominent and pioneer business man
of the city who died early Sunday
morning, were held at the German
Lutheran church, West Avenue and
Cameron Avenue, this afternoon at
2 o'clock. The Rev. J. T. Gamm of-
ficiated.
Pall bearers were William Fy
Strauss, Casper Newburg, Paul Zeis-
ler, F. R. Schwalbe, J, R. Wolford
and Robert Albrecht.
Interment was made in the Oak
Grove cemetery.
| [
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],
[
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43
] |
|
307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/307178157-la-crosse-tribune-and-leader-press-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
66,
49,
69
] |
CANADIANS TAKE OFF FROM
TELLER TO AID IN SEARCH
Examination Indicates Wreck-
ed Plane Struck a Low
Foothill
| ELLER, Alaska— (4) —The mr
north Tuesday awaited reports
from the searching party near
North Cape, Siberia, which has
been digging into the ice and snow
about the wreckage of Carl Ben
Eielson’s airplane expecting to
find the body of the noted Aretic
aviator and his companion, Earl
Borland.
Meanwhile, Pat Reid and Ed
Young, Canadian pilots, took their
two powerful planes into the air
here Monday for a 400 mile flight
to the Siberian coast where the
Eielson-Borland plane was found,
Believe Men Dead
Alfred Lomen, director of the
search for Eielson and Borland, aft-
er receiving a report of the discov-
ery of the wrecked plane, express-
ed the opinion that the bodies of
Eielson and Borland would be
found there.
The searching party, composed
of four men, was taken to the
scene Sunday by Joe Crosson and
Harold Gillam, American flyers who
iocated the wreck Saturday. Since
Crosson and Gillam operated from
the fur trading ship Nanuk, frozen
in the ice near North Cape, reports
from the searching party were ex-
pected from that source,
Canadians To Scene
Reid and Young, who came here
in the hope of flying to Siberia and
finding Eielson and Borland alive,
were instructed to remain at the
scene until “everything is cleared
up.” They also will transport vatu-
able furs and possibly some of the
passengers of the Nanuk to the
Alaskan mainland and witl make
other trips to return gasoline bore
rowed from Russian sources by
American flyers in order to contin-
ue their search for the lost, aviators,
Fielson and Borland were flying
to Nanuk, soon after the ship was
frozen in, to take furs and passen-
gers back to Alaska when they dis-
appeared November 9.
Plane Hit a Hill
tielson’s plane struck a low foot-
hill. It was believed he was blinded
by either fog or a blizzard and the
altimeter may have misguided him,
as Crosson reported it registered
1,000 feet when he found it. The
scene of the wreck is almost at sea
level.
——————
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|
254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
62,
50,
76
] | Today
Dangerous Rioting.
They All Stay.
Happiness Foundation.
Thanks for the Shearch-
Hah?t. :
| Lina ew nell
a: 1929, “by, Bins features Syn. Ine.)
E, Cal. Jan. 27.— Vicious:
ota in this state. Filipinos
waite men quarreling, murder-
| <jy warn against Asiatic immigra-
von, from whatever. source. The
riots starting: in: the pg ng rd
ovr wratsonville, spread for =
neat ie 22-year-old Filt-
‘er Lovera,.. @
Perea shot to death. ‘Alfred
pind, Wa chite youth, was stabbed
johnson,
yn the back.
* Filipinos have been imported in
considerable numbers to work on
fruit and _egetable farms. That
vaused trouble, aggravated by the
Filipinos hiring white girls to enter-
rain them in their so-called club-
Nouses. seventy: Filipinos spent the
nernt in the City Hall for protection.
Regardless of opinions as to hu-
man rights, international brother-
iad, etc, the fact ts that white
meri, | ‘hite country, will not al-
iow their jobs OF their women to be
siken by Asiatics and common sense
orbids Asiatic immigration of labor-
ers, from, our own Asiatic islands, or
vay other source...
nied
originally Californian are more des-
perately enthusiastic than the native
born. -In other parts of the country,
‘ee off occasionally, plans for mov-
ben nother part of the country,
50 er state.
p oNever here. Fathers and mothers
som the east and middle west. tell
vou “even if we wanted to move, our
-hildren would not let us. You can-
not talk to them of any other part
of the world.” As for: Swasey, news-
paper man who nas lived everywhere,
ihe says, “the only... wonder. is that
pverybody does not come here. They
would if they knew about it.”
A resident of this Mojave Desert
alley has among his books “60 true
ort. stories.” by Bob Davis. One
relis of a tablet in @ ruined Chinese
remple, with inscriptions: on both
One reads “health, love, food
shelter, labor, “The founda-
all human happiness.”
The old Chinese omitted the most
important word AMBITION. With-
rut that, life means nothing—it with-
t light or purpose—has no reasor
oul
‘or being.
The other inscription reads “ruler
sriest, officer, merchant, prisoner
pauper. All are the: ‘same man.’
Also inaccurate. Huxley. . says the
difference between a low. grade bush:
nar and an intellectually developec
European, is greater than the differ:
ence between that savage and <¢
ylade of grass
ides
hiberty.
tions <
some that the world calls failures
re greatest among men, and som
called ‘great are puiserable failures
But the real. faiftre need not seed
‘neolation in the theory that al
y are alike. They. are as fa
as Niagara Falls and a. cit:
* prohibition enforcement says. le
here be light, and - establishes:
500.000-candle. power searchlight 01
‘he Buffalo custom. house: at the foo
f hoist street, opposite «th
Bridgeport, Ontario, liquor. docks.
The theory is that. rum -runnert
cbashed, will cease their’ smuggling
Valse theory, rum runners now loa
veir beats, in broad..daylight, “fo
one to see. Searchlights © wi
nply enable them: to--work - longe
US
To eniorce prohibition;. you" mus
eate respect. for the. prohibitio:
‘, of failig that, make it a. fel
to buy liquor. If: you ‘do tha
nd juries do net refuse to convic’
1 will discourage. the ~bootlegge
aia .
Mr. Carnéra, from. Italy,’ weigh
59 pounds, knocked-out “Big. Boy
eterson of Minneapolis, in. on
und A victory of the Latin ove
‘ Nordic race only the Nordic. rac
righed 60 pourids Jess than: tb
‘early seven feet. high, indifferet
> pain, powerful beyond. ordinar
cerstanding, the. huge Italian,
guided and not. swindler
ifs’ in prize. fighting shoul
a) unbeaten... If he: could: t
for three. months. by. h
oe brother, Peter’ Jackson, ‘fb
eh be Unvincible,. probably...
uy Youthful ambition . will” kind
er bi for the hundredth | tim
* the zoo, so short--he woul
idly teach to” Carnera’s wails
a Hives: < srnera’s:.alleged cous
' pound cousin: named. M
would. pursue. .M
* dround the ring, and: dri
‘Of it happy to: escape, Ar
at brother Mir. Gorilla~ wou!
mpooe Of 20 Carneras.”
ALrICA!
eae
livnt.t. &) Oe Oe
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|
254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
63,
79
] | _ Students Save Scheonl ¥ thence
| ‘y attired “student: volunteers
tried 71600 rahe lo safety when
H early imorning fire Swept the lib-
cot Elmhurst College, Damage
- “suunaled at $25,000, - ae
| [
[
234.0456271973,
7829.2727695312,
924.3662685547,
8087.56365625
],
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46
] |
|
254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
61,
57,
55
] | Drink Varnish Remover,.
wis VG... 2D. ee 8
| “SS MU POUR aero nos
CARY. Ind Jan. 27, S ae Bi
4 were found groj ing t
us & Cahunet City coat last night.
*y had been drinking oe
police, AH may be. -perma _
sunded. physicians: declared, and
" hlnes of three ef them-appeared
’ Nave been atfeeted.'
The one member of the group
Nom polee found rational,’ said. the
“) Had purchased ‘thealeohol: from
Hainmeond Cruggist, explaining that
oe
» Sanled it to retneve varnish.
ON, Hh. Jan. 27, )—Vernie
80, @ life-time ertpple, was
i Me between life and: death in
Re" Herrin Hospital today “as. result
i being hit by an automobile at
bhnson City Saturday’ night:
Ha
Volks collar bone'-was- broken
nd both feet had \o. be amputated,
® Car that struek him. was’ being
th by Elbert True: of : Marion.
‘nother “automobile hit True’s car
tid forced jt against. Harroll,
| [
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47
] |
|
254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
41,
66,
73
] |
House of Dr. E. M. Bow
Man Also Damaged by
Flames
Residence Total Loss
| ' When Mr. and Mrs. H. E, Florris re-
turned today from a visit at Hart-
ford they found their home at 220
Allen street had been destroyed by
the fire.
Fire companies Were called at 3 a.
m. today, and found the four-room
frame house in flames. The blaze
had gotten such a start that an ad-
joining house had caught fire Be-
cause efforts to save the Florris house
were useless, firemen gave their at-
tention to nearby structures and pre-
‘vented further spread of the flames.
Bee Loss Over $2000
| A house to the north of the. Plorris
‘residence was damaged, the loss esti-
‘mated at $300.
!- Joss to the Florris home and fur-
‘nishings was estimated to be in ex-
‘cess of $2000. Florris and his wife
‘left Sunday afternoon for Hartford
‘for an over-night visit, and just be-
‘fore departing at 5:30 p. m., Florris
‘fired the kitchen stove. The fire is
believed to have started when the
| stove .- became overheated.
| Plorris is a barber, and conducts the
‘Laclede shop. in the East End.
i Doctor's Home Damaged
| Damage’ estimated at .$500. was
\caused by fire to the home of Dr. E.
|M. Bowman, Fifth and Cherry streets
jat 3 a.m. Sunday.- The ftre is be-
‘Heved to have started in the chim-
|ney on the west side of the house.
‘Firemen prevented the flames spread-
~ and loss was confined to the west
| wall.
Fire Saturday afternoon in rubbish
‘in the basement of Young’s dry goods
|store, Third and. Piasa, was extin-
'guishedby- firemen before any. dam-
age was. caused... :
| [
[
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],
[
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48
] |
|
254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
6,
21,
39
] | Demadecrarie “Leader "Had
~ Charged Appointees
Were Quizzed
White House Denie:
Patronage Thrust
Against Opponent:
| |. WASHINGTON, Jan...27, “—A
sternly worded denial came. quickly
from the White House lastnight af-
ter Jouett. Shouse, ‘chairman of the
Democratic National Executive Com-
mittee’ charged © President Hoover
with compiling information.on gov~-
ernment: employes. for the -purpose
of ‘bringing. patronage influence. to
ern against recalcitrant members
of, Congress. :
Such phrases as “Democratic pro-
paganda bureau” and “not an item
of truth nor bass of fact” were. min-
'gled in the reply of the White
| House, issued through Walter New-
jtone one. of .Mr. Hoover's secretar-
The Democratic statement said
that Mr. ‘Hoover had sent cards to
all departments..“‘to be filled out by
‘every employe giving a full picture
lof the history. of his. employment.”
This; he said,.was “difficult. to ex-
= any. non-political, hypothe-
s Bo .
Newton. replied that neither he
‘nor the President had “ever heard
lof the matter until it appeared in
ithe 7
Acard. index of presidential ap-
lpointees and other non-civil serv
| ioe employes ‘is: kept at the White
| House’ as a matter of office routine,
jhe. said: and some cight months ago,
‘cards. were sent out for the purpose
of ~ bringing this list up to date.
| Three hundred cards have been cat-
‘alogued .since that time, he added,
land no- civil service employe was
included
Sihouse’s statement suggesied that
lmembérs. of Congress saw in the
|new system which he charged to the
[prem en @ purpose of “visiting
|} Presidential displeasure” upon &p-
\pontees “for the sins of their spon-
sors, such ag voting independently”
lof the chief executive's desires.
| [
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|
254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
35,
45
] | Indictments Voted
Ry U.S. Jurys
| SPRINGFIELD, 2). eahh se”
Among indictments voted here last
Friday by the district coart grand
jury and .miade public are:
Charles. H. Depper, Alton, sale of
wine.
James ‘Tepatti and Rose Tepatti,
Pocahontas, sale of mal!
Alex Lacout, Wood River sale of
quor:
Harry Stokes, Madise! ll. for
manufacture. of spirits
Albert R. Justi, Pocohontas, sale
of malt.
Homer Etcheson, Sener omg
Eteheson, jr. and Erwin Etcheson,
of Pocahontas. sale of liquor.
orge. H. Granau, Benid. is charg-
ed with failing to. keap records‘ of
‘narcotic: distribution and George. H.
Bay, rural mail carne! of Mt “Olive,
is charged with theft of money order
‘and C: O. D. posta! funds amounting
to approximately $100
- Prank Margatrosd Beardstown,
violation of national prohibition law:
- Wenter Killed Crossing Fenee
* CHESTER, Lit, Jan. 27. (?)-—Frank
Bieflield. 55, tarmer. accidently. shot
and killed Himself while hunting near
his. home af Modoc Saturday,
shotgun. disetiarced when he attemp-
ted to erdw} throug barbed-wire
fence. :
| [
[
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50
] |
|
254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
8,
37
] | Saturday Last to
Apply for License
| Next Saturday, Peb,.1, will be
the last. day. of grace for apply -
ing for state automobile license
tags, according to .a. bulletin
from the Iinois Highway De-
partment received by the Alton
Auto Club. Beginning that date,
hghway. patrolmen -are to opeii
a drive to enforce the licens:
regulations and: motorists should
either have. their 1980. tags dis-
layed. or be able.to. show they
ave. made application, the bu.-
fetin’ warns..'The license. drive
by state: officers will be starting
@ month earlier: than usual 1
undertaken’ Feb, 1.
Agencies here which supply 1li-
cense application. blanks report
that .business is increasing. ‘The
Alton © Auto - Club headquarters
alone has. sent.-in - more” than
500. applications for motorists, it
was said. The club handles the
matter without peere® for . its
members.
| [
[
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791.0551791992,
2391.5531582031,
1865.5659755859
],
[
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636.6153564453,
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]
] | [
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51
] |
|
254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
5,
25,
36
] | Chicago Robberies
Believed Solved
By Arrest of 22
Round Up Follows
Month of Secret
Investigation
|
~ “CHICAGO. Jan. 27; (4)—-FPollowing
a... month.~of. .secret investigation,
which included telephone. wire tap-
ping, police last: night and early to-
day rounded up 22 persons in a. series
of spectacular raids which they say
may -lead to. the. solution of jewel
robberies totaling more than $100,000.
An. assistant state's attorney, a. po-
liceman.. and several:. women’: were
among the persons questioned.’ The
assistant. state’s attorney,..Harry H.
Busch; was released. on order of. Pat-
“rick Roche; chief ‘investigator. for the
‘state’s attorney, who said “while: his
‘name was metitioned in telephone
conversations, there is. insufficient
evidence to hold him.”
-‘The-policeman Roche said, explain-
ed satisfactorily the linking of his
‘name with the persons taken. in ‘the
‘raids. He. also was released.
- Roche said he also had information
the gang’ intended to rob. a: Detroit
ppotel tonight.
|. The. raids. were led by. Roche’ and
Chief of Detectives John Stege.. At
one place.they found what they term-
‘ed a small arsenal. Sawed-off shot-
guns and revolvers were concealed: in
“auto cushions equipped with flaps: to
permit easy access.
Thomas Abbott, reputed head of
| the gang,.who also is accused of ‘sell-
ing narcotics, was. taken with his
wife, Lillian. a
said they, expected to by the
arrests was that of Charles M. Rich-
ter, president. of the Consolidated
Magazines. whose ~ Gold
| Coast. home. was invaded January.‘
by robbers who todk $25,000 in gems.
They held ‘Richter, his wife and. four
| Servants at bay with guns during the
jdinner hour.
Six men were -arrested ‘following
the robbery:and later yeleased. Po-
lice ‘watched their movements. close-
Lly.. Among: them” were Abbott and
Willie Francisi, who were. taken ir
the: raids.. eee
Assistant State’s Attorney Busct
| denied any connegtion with the gang
jand sald if his Rame was mentioned
in telephone conservatious It mus!
have been in. connection with case:
he prosecuted. ,
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681,
6792,
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|
254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
9,
42
] | Mine Leader Arrested
Witte By role Str ike
| | “TAYYORVILLE, Il, Jan. 27, @?—
Charged with censpiracy to prevent
the Peabody Coal Co., employes from
working, Freeman Thompson, nation-
-al- board member.-of the National
Miners. Union, was arrested by coun-
ity. authorities at @ mass meeting of
} pune workers yesterday afternoon.
; ‘Thompson, at the time of his ar-
“rest was, urging the miners to stand
-by the National Miners Union and its
demands, The organization led the
‘strike Which fied up Peabody mines
‘in Christian county and resulted in
‘the calling in of the militia early in
| December.
| Bond was arranged for the radical
“union leader who, then returned to
the meeting and tintshed his speech.
| Upon: concluding his wddress, ‘Thomp-
,son Jeft for Peorria where members
‘of the United Mine Workers of Amer-
jiea. are on strike.
| [
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],
[
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]
] | [
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5061.0424804688,
2472.1517910156,
6155.7076992187
] | 13 | 13_254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | 254,489,976 | front_page_20_99 | 53 | 8,608 | [
8608,
53
] |
|
254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
43,
56
] | Nelivery Cuts Ward Frofits
| CHICAGO, Jan. 27, (4)—Extru ox
_pense incurred from the inauguratio
‘of the plan of ‘prepaying eharges 0
all shipments. to customers caused
_recession of net profits of Montes
;mery Ward & Co., in 1929 of $5,066,
365 compared with those of the pre
jvious year, President George B. Eve!
itt announced. The 1929 net prc
| fits were $14.504,935,
| [
[
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3219.6483730469,
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],
[
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]
] | [
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] | 14 | 14_254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | 254,489,976 | front_page_20_99 | 54 | 54 | [
54
] |
|
254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
46,
75,
77
] | \ssistant. Electrician a
Laclede Crushes Both
Heels
Man Hurt in Fall
| Three weeks of icy conditions of
the ‘streets of Alton had taken heavy |
toll, today, in automob le and other |
accidents. Today the streets were, |
so to speak, back where they started. |
The snow had disappeared in sec-—
tions and the motor cars weré mov-
ing on the original ice. oo
In streets of the. residential see-
iions two tracks in the snéw had
been worn to the bricks by sutomo-—
biles and on the bricks ee
coating of ice. To get out of the
tracks was a difficult task/and many.
on were averted as cars skid-
y One accident due to the wea
was. that in which George Hardy.
assistant chief. electrician at — the
Laclede Steel Co. plant was injured:
.He was on.an inspection of the new
‘tube mill, on a roof, and when ~ he
i stepped.-on glass° that. was _ hidden
“by snow and ice broke through and
‘fell 15 “feet.. Both his heels - were
‘crushed.. He was taken to St. Jo-
.seph’s Hospital. and will be unable to
‘return to work for three months,
| Four years ago, Hardy suffered a
\skull fracture when a 15-pound
| piece. of steel fell .on - his head at
‘the Laclede plant. :
_ Crashes at Corner
Broadway and Allen. street was a
hazardous corner.-over the -week-end
due to-ice on the intersection, a po-
lice report of two ‘automobile acci-
dents . discloses.
At 3:30 p. m. Sunday an automo-
bile driven. by Earnest. Weaver. of
‘Milton: Heights skidded out of con-
trol as he attempted to pass an-
other’ car; the police report says.
‘with: result it. collided with a car of
|Paul: Holden of East Alton, who was
-driving. into town.
|. Officer. Mourning who. investigated
ithe crash said that both cars were
badly damaged, but that occupants
‘| apparently escaped injury, despite
the fact that broken | glass from
, Shattered windows ‘was thrown all
‘over Weaver's. car.
| ‘The seeond bad smash at "the
same at gla ot
‘ip. m. yon a Hown-
ership of which police traced © J
Seehausen of Haller . street
Wood ‘River, turning ups'de down
: No-one was injured as far.os officer:
who. -investigated . last, night. could
ascertain.
Ss Cinders
Cinders were. being spread Satur-
“lday. by men of the city streets de-
“| partment at intersections. where ice
-\conditions were bothering motorists
and pedestrians. . Today. more cin-
ders. were being .spread.
Due to the long continuation ol
lice: -conditions—three weeks today—
“there are some intersections, par-
ticularly at foot of hills, where layer
lof cinders and ice are to be noted
“/It has been impossible to free these
points .of ice, sand the only thing
that could be done was to put oF
more cinders as ‘layer after layer o!
‘icé formed.
Sunday police called on the stree'
* department to spread some cinder:
rat intersections of Fifth and Sixtt
. with Ridge. ‘There were two rea-
1 sons, one to stop. coasting by chil.
"dren, a hazardous proceeding, anc
lithe other to make it poss'ble io
- cars to make a boulevard stop
} Continuing work on stolen
leases, Officer Mourning recoverec
~'one more Sunday, and it. was to be
, restored to the owner today.
,
slee
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55
] |
|
254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
16,
12,
1
] | Buys S« thool Building on
Historical Site for $425
| The third building to be erected on
what: is one of the met historical
school locations: in; Madipon county
was sold Saturday) when Joseph
Havelka, township road supervisor
for Wood River towne: ip purchased
the old Brushy Grove © hot for $425.
The heating plant in the old build-
ing went for $100.
It. was thought Haveika intended
to move the house to 8 tot of his
ewn along the Alton-Edw ardsville
road. where it is located @ present,
and transform, it to @ 1 sidence
The old building is a frate strue-
ture, and at present has a brick and
rock foundation, built under it since
‘the structure itself was put Up.
Give Way to Progress
Jt. like the building 1° succeeded
on the site. has given Way to pro-
gress in school buildings. having been
date by the latest
rendered out of
| another factor whieh
imprevements. -
truction of the new
led to the cons
the ald
‘school was the fact that
building was overcrowded
The first school to be constracted
on the ‘Brushy Grove site ent up in
the early 60's. Later it, burned @
had to be replaced with & second,
which the third structure succeeded
when ‘state school laws prescribed
systems of ventilation ‘and sanitation
whieh | the second building did not
embody...
Work on. the latest ae a
f i
brick structure corlaining tow Cc.
rooms with necessary halls, elouk-
‘reoms, and administration offices
was begun last summer, and was
completed two months ago,
Vote Unanimous
With only 19 votes cast. bu! ail of
them in favor of the proposition,
Lresidents of the Roxana schol dis-
trict then decided to sell ti old
school building, and the aucticn % a3
held on the grounds Saturdas
Pupils of the Brushy Grove district
of Roxana moved impo thea new
home following the Chiristiitem yll-
days. At that time they filled only
three of the four rocins provided in
| the building, but, with an increase 1”
enrollment whieh will bring it © 100
Superintendent F. M. Scott of the
district thought-it advisable thts och
ester to add another teacher to he
faculty there.
Miss ‘Harriett ‘Stevenson. who [r-
merly. served as-music and art super
visor inthe district, will take = (he
fourth room, leaving. the teachine ©
_ her. two” subjects “to. the indiyidua
teachers ‘in. the. district and thus
making {it unnecessary to hie 8)
other “a ;
Superintendent. Seott, today esti.
mated: the total enrollment for the
district at 240 for. the three schools
jalthough exact ‘figures for the scitt
ester DOW had ‘mot been com
ee.
| [
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56
] |
|
254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
64,
81
] | Balice Gtarex ta (ios?
| CHICAGO, Jan. 2%, Bera ise ile
| leasehold ‘expires; the Leiter Bulld-
ling Stores, thought to ‘be the first
| co-operative Gepartiient store. 1b rhe
country, will close permanently Mar
31. . His business ainountod ta $12;-
000,000 a year.
| [
[
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7692.8230625,
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],
[
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] | [
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] | 20 | 20_254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | 254,489,976 | front_page_20_99 | 57 | 57 | [
57
] |
|
254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
2,
40,
48
] | Victim Dies—Had Wed
Divorced Wife of
Slaver
Fatal Shooting of
Brakeman Result
Of Home Triangle
| ‘VENICE... Ul; Jan. 27, (#)—Ray. T.
‘French, 33,of Bloomington, Ill., was
‘held: by police here today on charges
‘of. slaying his. former friend, LeRoy
Rudder, 32; also.of Bloomington, who
‘died.in .a hospital. at Granite. City,
early: yesterday of bullet wounds.
| The shooting followed an. argument
jin a local hotel Thursday. and cli-
‘maxed a grudge of .several months
istanding. Both men were brakemen
; i the : baad % _ anc
hen R: fe died % t. two
years ago, French invited. him, te
ishare his. home,- Later, French. de-
‘elared, Rudder and Mrs, French be-
[came enamoured of each other and
/made no attempt to: conceal their af-
ifections. French .sued for divorce,
‘which. was. uncontested and. was
granted. Mrs. French amd Rudder
were married at . Bloomington, Jan.
1/4, 1930.
_ Witnesses told police French fired
‘three times as Rudder drew @ knife.
No such weapon has been found by
“police nor have witnesses offered to
corroborate. the testimony.
| Mrs: Rudder was at the bedside of
‘her: husbarid and returned with. the
|
ibody to Bloomington yesterday. She
did not visit French in his cell.
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58
] |
|
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14,
29,
38
] | Charge Seeretary
Spent Insurance
Cash on Waitres
Assoviation ik 52.000
Short. lnspector
Reports
| MUNICE, Ind, Jan. 27, ()--W) P
Noifsinger. =cerctary ef the Tri-
County Mutual Protective Ass >cia-
tion, was held in jail here today
pending a grand. jury investigation ol
charges that he spent more thaar $50,-
000 of the association's funds on lav-
ish gifts to Mrs. Margarct Shaffer.
formerly: a waitress in & restaurant
at Indianapolis
| Noffsinger was arrested yescerday
at his home in North Manchester and
was brought to jail here. He bs guard:
‘ed carefully, officers said, to prevent
‘him from cartying out a threat te
end hiis fife He has a wife and five
children.
Noffsinger's arrest was ordeyed fol.
lowing an: investigation made by Mu-
‘ton. K. Alexander, ¢iicf tnspector 0!
the State Insurance. Department The
| specific. charge against frm bs misuss
| of $880: of the funds ol the Tri-Coun:
iy Mutual Protective Asscciation, al
insurance company
| ‘Aceording to Afexander’s report
Nof{singer has spout $32,525 53 of the
‘company’s funds.
| [
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|
254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
31,
24
] | Little Hope Held for
Life of Joe Cantillon
| Nl HICKMAN, lhy., cab. 2), (~The
‘condition of “Pongo Jo Canrilon,
| thie “grand oldman of baseball” was
| unchanged today. doctors announcing
| that he had practically no chance
‘recover, -
Cantilicn, who ha» spent 46 ot his
64 years in: baseball, seivied as super-
yisor.of umpires. for 1s Americal
| Association last year lie started his
i baseball career ‘in 1984 playing fe
‘the Green Bay cub in tfc Wisconsin
| league. Later hie served a> Managet
‘of elubs at Burlington. Is.. Dubuque
la, Marinette, Wis, Rockford Ul,
and Oakland, Calif:
—someeaenegny senna reece =
me Bde Gide: Se pe “ann
| [
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|
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20,
60
] | Drives 135 Miles to
| ~ssene ie hi iae Aseavy
| GRAFION, Jan, «f, “‘opeuesr?
Robert | H.. Marshall, -Graftca
gasoline salesman, drove 135_miles
Saturday to deliver 400 gallons of
gasoline to’a customer, six miles
north of: here.
Since: the Calhoun ferry. three
miles ebove Grafton, operated. by
Herman: Pohiman, has been
taken out of ‘the river, Calhoun
customers: have “to be’ supplied
just the same with: gas and: oil.
Marshall: dreve to. East. ‘Hardin
via Jerseyville Saturday, crossed
en the Hardin ferry through’ the
floating © ice; and traveled~.on.
down: through Calhoun county to
the’ Haug Mereantile Co. just
six-miles above Grafton.. He left
Grafton at 8:30 Saturday, morn-
ing. and was back here at 5:30
p..m. He reports. the roads. are
an fair eondition.
| [
[
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61
] |
|
254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
10,
22,
34
] | Glider Collapses:
Kills Pilot Trying
Loop at 3.000 Fee
Flyer Loses Struggle fo
For Life by Few—
Seconds
| OAKLAND, Cal... Jan. 27. (#)-—-
Lieutenant Norman A. Goddard,
former navy flier and recently op-
erator of a.Palo Alto aviation school,
is dead as. the--result of the. collapse
ofa glider in which he attempted to
execute .a loop yesterday over the
Alamada. airport.
The frail craft collapsed as -God-
dard pulled it. out of a dive, prepara~
tory to looping at an altitude of 3,-
000 feet, Entangled in the flapping
fabric of the wings, the pilot, strug-
‘gied to free himself and use his
parachute, but a matter of seconds
‘cost hun his. life
While lhorr:fied spectators watched
tthe talling cralt, Goddard worked
‘Jooxe and jumped from the cockpit
at a heght of 150 feet. His para-
chute opened a tew seconds 109 late
to cheek his fail and Goddard
plunged ipte the waters of the Oak-
land estuary. He was sul alive
when aiport attaches reached him
in a luunch, but was pronounced
dead from a broken neck on arrival
at the Alameda hospital
Goddatd fad hoped to break the
existing world’s record . for looping
iy a motoriess plane.
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|
254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
7,
13
] | Keep Wires Busy to
Halt student Eloper
| CHICAGO. Jan. 27, GA bar-
prage of telegratis was directed today
ito the pepulae marriage centers of
the Chicago prea in the hope of in-
tercepting oo high school girls and
‘ther young ecnsorts, who notified |
‘their patents today they Were elop-
. 41s
| fhe two ceapiles ae Harriet Nel-
con 1? and Larry Mouatt, 19, of
Fyarsten and Wilmette, “Frances
Bell 17 and Joseph Montfort, 20,
-poth of Walmette. Tt -was thought
they udeght be en route to Lincoln,
Neb. where Montfort is an aviauion
sudent, or to Wankegan or Crown
Fait
| [
[
4048.7041660156,
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[
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63
] |
|
254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
68,
78
] | eeuaffalan Has Biende Bandit
| | BUFFALO, N.Y. dan 17, (The
blonde-haired @itl ‘bandit, principal
‘Ngure in several robberies in Buffa-
‘fe. recently, led two. yeung gunmen
Linto the jewelry: sore ot David Click-
stein of Broadway, shortly before
| noon today. bound the: gagged Ghick-
i stein and escaped with gems valued
jat $10,000.
| [
[
4825.6384921875,
6511.8045078125,
5600.112484375,
6903.4801601562
],
[
4909.373046875,
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]
] | [
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6903.4801601562
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8317
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|
254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
0,
27,
32
] | U.S. Investigating
Death of Witness
Ih Big Rum Plo
Oklahoman Had Sought
Safety in Jail After
Confession
| OKLAHOMA. CITY, Jan. 27, @)—.
Circumstances surrounding the. death
of the. government's principal witness:
against. 102. officials. and residents of
Pottowatomie county, on the. eve of
their trial on charges: of participating
in a giant ‘conspiracy to. violate the
ition laws, y. to initia-
tion of an inv tion by Roy. St.
Lewis, United’ States. District Attor-
‘chief. of. police. of oe Oxia.
‘died. here Saturday .night.. He had
admitted: participation in .the al-
leged “rum rebellion” St. Lewis . said,
and furnished information: on which
ithe government’ expected to base. its
case,
puller died. in an. Oklahoma. City
“hospital, his. death certificate describ-
}ing his fatal malady as a liver infec-
tion. Members of Fuller's family, the
‘district attorney said, had voiced: sus-
_picions regarding his death: which St.
Lewis declined to divulge. i
The witness, who also was.a -de-
fe dant in the trial, was confined -in
the Garfield county. jail at Enid, .sev-
eral weeks ago, at his. own request
He said he was afraid to remain al
‘Jargée. His. health which was poo!
iwhen he eiitered the jail, became rap-
‘idly worse, causing his removal to the
‘Oklahoma City county jail-here. He
was. taken recently. fromthe jail
‘the hospital where: he. died.” <--
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|
254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
17,
4
] | Five Girls Leap. From
Sehool FF ire: Into Net
| NEWPORT, R. “1, Jan, 27. (P)-—Six
students, five of -them® girls, of the
Newport Business.’ College. leaped
from the third story of the Coge-
eshall building into a firemen's net
today. after they had been trapped
in the building by a fire whieh caused
damage estimated at $100,000, BSix-
teen students and three instructors
were taken from the buliding over
indders.
| [
[
4811.0403476562,
5251.0569492187,
5564.5094570312,
5705.7223476562
],
[
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|
254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
53,
23
] | Steve Duich, Wood River
Pav. bine Following Raid
| Steve Duich of Main street, Wood
River. paid @ fine on a--charge of
manufacturing and selling intoxica-
ting liquor Saturday following a raid
made on, his home by Wood River
police Friday night.
Duich Hves to the rear of a ‘store
reom, aad when police entered the
back door of his. residence, they found
a large quantity of beer there.
_ Polies also searched ‘the home of
Charles Zupan. 132 South Main street.
Wood River. Friday night, but were
‘unable to find any evideiice.
| [
[
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[
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67
] |
|
254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
15,
54,
3
] | Dog Tries Vainly To Save
Master from Icy Death
| VANDALIA, Hil, dan. 27. (>
Tracks on the show: covered ice of a
small jake near hére known as Tevis
Slough, stood as mute evidence to-
‘day of the unsuccessful: effort of a
little dog to sreseue his master Ed-
award Boggs. 43, of Siminary town
sip who erashed through=the thin
iee to ys death Gaturday. afternoon
‘Boggs. & ‘unter, trapper, and
preonicorn raiser. left his-home Sat-
_urday afternogn: about.2. o'clock
Fun his traps, At, 4 o'clock his dog
-returiied alone only ‘to-run off agrein
on the diréeetion-of the lake. Wier
jihe anual gréturmed again two hours
ily, uneasy over (he
‘gs tO return, orgahized
arty and: followed the
‘ee where. they discov-
hole in, the -ice where
had broken. threuse>
afternoon, :
i been broken.in a +
incating that Boggs ha:
-peyate effort to save
. tracks around: the hele
ppesition that. the a
hed faithfully to rescus
was. not sovoveres ulidd
hing, :
| [
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8593,
68
] |
|
254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
19,
69,
70
] | ‘Searchers Find Craft Torn
By Crash of the
Impact
Snow MayHideBodies
| SEATTLE, Jan.. 27, (#)-—Half the
mystery of the disappearance Nov.
9 of Carl Ben Eielson and Earl Bor-
land was solved today with d'scov-
‘ery of their wrecked plane in an i
‘Jagoon 90. miles southeast of N
Cape, Siberia, but absence of the
bodies of the two American aviators
from the wreckage kept alive a bare
hope that they may still be alive.
| ‘The note of optimism was ex~«
‘tremely faint, however, as experi-
‘enced fi'ers said they believed the
plane struck with such force as to
‘kill the aviators and throw them
from the ship. It was pointed out
that snow might have concealed the
bodies from Pilots Joe Crosson and
/Harold Gillam, who found the wreck
| Saturday.
Dog Teams Start
Crosson and Gillam took off again
rday from the fur. trading ship
| Nanuk, icebound at North Cape, for
‘the scene of the
| gielson and Borland were at-
tempting a fi'ght from Alaska to the
Nanuk when they crashed. They had
removed one load of passengers and
a and were returning for a sec-
ond.
With Crosson and Gillam were a
representative of the Russian Trad-
ing Company and a sailor from the
Nanuk, owner by the Swenson ‘Trad-
ing Company. Dog teams
|the plane and will join in a search
for the missing fliers.
| Crosson, first to sight the Eielson
plane, signalled to Gillam and the
‘two fliers brought their machines
| down near the wreck.
| Motor Thrown 100 Feet
| The. condition of the plane, Cros~
, | son said, indicated that both its oc-
-\cupants were killed in the landing
¢;but he and Gillam were unable in
¢|the short time available to find any
z | trace of the bodies.
S|" One wing of the Bielson-Borland
| ’ crumpled in landing,
. while the motor was torn out of
ithe craft and was found 100 feet
‘from the fuselage, The teil wes
wivrokens ae
|. "These who were @niloule to the
d wreck. were to clear away the snow
+ and make-a thorough search for the
1: bodies of the missing men,
bh! Because of slowness of communi.
5 cations at this season of the yea
lin the north it was not expectec
Yi that the men engaged in the searc!
-| would be able to report their pro-
i jpadelnes for some time.
| [
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|
254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
11,
26,
28
] | C. of C. Envoy Tells of
Wish to Relieve
Indiana
Evansville Wants
To Build Bridge
— In Kentueky Suit
| |
| WASHINGTON, Jan. 27, (#)—-The
‘Evansvwville,. Ind, ‘Chamber of Com-.,
merce wants to build: the
bridge: across ‘the Ohio’ River at Ev-
ansville that: has involvevd the states
of Kentucky. and Indiana in litiga-
‘tien. before: the supreme court,
“Henry .P..Koch,.of the chamber,
‘urged today before the House Inter--
state: Commerce Committee that his
organization be permitted to build the
bridge ‘order to: keep Indiana “out
of polities."
Controversy. “over ‘the proposed
| bridge began after Indiana aud Ken-
| tucky. entered into .a contract to erect
i the ols oe Citizens of Indiana
| obtained 1 injunction ‘restraiming
their state from fulfilling its part. of
the contract, Kentucky.in ‘turn took
j the case to the United. States Su-
i preme Court seeking an enjoiner: to
| restrain, citizens of Indiana from in-
terfering :
| [
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364,
70
] |
|
254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
30,
18
] | Frozen Assets Close
As. .wcanville Rank
| MORRISONVILLE, Ul, Jan. sf,
(Directors of the Morrisons itle
State Bank closed the doors of thelr
bank this morning and inforined ihe
‘state auditor that froven asset and
a depleted cash reserve had brought
them to the edge of fature, The
\state auditor dispacched a bank. €X-
|) aminer to take charge for -xaminae
‘tion and possible adjustuent.
| This was one of the Christian
‘County banks unaffected py the gene
feral failure in tat county several
months ago. Qtfieers are W EB
HJohnson, presid nt ahd F. C. Deate
| derfi, cashier Capital sock Was
($50,000: surplue $5-000 and depose
/ approanhately $350,000.
re ~
| [
[
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71
] |
|
254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489976-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
33,
59
] | Fire Destroys Hall
ae Viliary Schoo!
| AGFDO, TH, Jan. 27, -Fire of
unkROWH Origin 9% utved the jumor
dormitory of the fiiuneis Miliary
school Saturday Eight. Ip is believed
detective chimney, Was responsible
‘The structure Was one ©
ay tne county. .aving beer built 1
187: = and was first vaed at the Me:-
er county jail When the. later Jal
was buht the older building wat
Fused as the womerrs gor nutory
Wiliams and Va college: which
was re conunued wi YOM
soe s = =
| [
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72
] |
|
254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
80,
59,
77
] | Today
Millions From the Sky.
Meat and Alcohol.
idleness and Vice.
7. Talk or Not to Talk.
| ‘say
pusiness;
rain.”
{India moves slowly on the road
to liberty. ‘To be free, you must
be ready for freedom. Hindus, de-
nding in along mild
Gandhi jines, raised a new national
flag, crying “pown with the Brit-
‘she Union Jack!” Three hundred
ists,
rete ussia, objected to both
A handful of British in India
ng little: islands far away
represent
have -proved that beef-eating, beer
drinking. men. can have their way
around the earth. They did not
hold. on herein. 1776. But then
they. were fighting their own kind,
also meat eaters and liberal con-
sumers of. alcohol. Perhaps they
won IN SPITE cf alcohol and meat.
But history does. not say 80.
Investigators. in California's San
Quentin. prison” f that idleness
is the purse of. prison life, leading
to rebellion, brooding and vice. In-
vestigators might make the same
repert, far from. San Quentin, at
Palm Beach, Agua Caliente, New-
port and other well-known resorts.
For. those made. worthless by in-
herited or too. easily acquired
wealth. there is no eure generally
but the undertaker, But there
should be some way of keeping
convicts ‘busy and interested in work.
They should: not compete to the det-
riment of. free labor. or. private busi-
viecs, but they may be occupied with
{ir profit to” themselves, without
such competition, and made to know
by experience thet. work is better
and more profitable than crime.
Paris tells women that skirts for
cay wear will hereafter fall at least
fiy nes below the knee.. That is
al wn the direction of sanity, 4
h » blessing to many womer
vw es would not get thin
matter what they did.
Later, says Paris, all dresses wil
be long, as fashionable dresses are
now for evening wear.. ‘That womer
-hould give up freedom in walking
ecquired after centuries of struggle
seems incredible, But .as- the sheet
before her shearers was dumb, so are
women silent, aequiescent, before the
tashion dictator. 4
|
Charles Chaplin-says he will make
no talkie, at least for. the present
He is making a silent picture. tha’
has already cost a million, anc
‘thinks his silence more eloquent that
his volee, asking you to notice tha
the heavens declare the glory ..0
God. and the ‘firmament’ showett
forth His handiwork, silently, mot i
talkie fashion
Chaplain said, and may be right
A good talking . picture: is. inferio
‘0 @ good stage play, while “a goo
‘lent picture is superior to a- goo
tage play.” :
Phoenix, Ariz. not far from here
8s western distance is reckoned
‘eports the greatest. mining yea
hat ona has known, In coppe
alo state produeed.more tha!
83 pounds, 100,000,000 pound
— than last year, value: $149,200,
That interests comparatively. fev
inericans, of whom teo many kno
f mining only through: bad get-rich
qui experience, Arizona's climat
in ere ts everybody and: will be wort
© the state more: than metals -eve
ere after the mines are: exhaustec
Millions, deeply religious, . will b
terested in’ @ e¢remony that too
P! ce elsewhere in Arizona yester
Gay, A statue of “Christ, the King.
"as unveiled in the garden of th
Holy Family. Chureh in’ ‘Tucson ‘amt
amare cries of “Viva. Cristo,
ms A special message “from: th
| ne a read to the multitude, an
vi t Or pt &
reer vi Archbishop Dacger €
. ane Catholic religion, .complainin
bitterly ‘Of perseeution in Mexico, |
prospering on this side of the .borde’
Separation of church and state |
good for church and state.
«oct forbids use of hard tire
PB public highways. No. automobil
'Tutk trailer or. semi-trailer weig!
mor, than 1800 pounds: may - Us
mn roads unless’ full. equippe
ath matic. tires. -If that high
dei werving. idea should spread ¢t
ee, wates it Would mean a differ
“ee 10 Ure. makers. :
oipernaps some one will find a ehea
— “ for rubber in heavy dut
road; nd cement..or ether har
= * Wl be made: to endure an
ort of wear, safely,
| [
[
74.4608828125,
1895.5574404297,
829.7572568359,
7804.5942929687
],
[
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575.9956665039
],
[
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]
] | [
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] | 0 | 0_254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 254,489,988 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 73 | 73 | [
73
] |
|
254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
65,
79
] | litineis Pactal Beceimi« Cai
| a: -—_ >»? A
CHICAGO:. Jan, 28. (#)-~Hilinols
stoffics. -had. receipts of $76.610,-
1854, in 1999," decrease of $150--
#477 from the 19g8 tofal, the Miinois
amber of Commerce announced.
| [
[
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8083.3013242187
],
[
200.8293457031,
7823.2900390625,
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7862.0063476562
]
] | [
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7823.2900390625,
852.1555722656,
8083.3013242187
] | 2 | 2_254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 254,489,988 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 74 | 74 | [
74
] |
|
254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
56,
63,
72
] | Inquiry Asked by Parents
_ Mr. and Mrs, Alphonso
| Newcome
Expires After Meal
| At request of Mr. and Mrs. Al-
Newcome of 2903 Sunnyside
avenue, Deputy Coroner Streeper to-
day had a postmortem examination
made in an effort to determine the
cause of the sudden death of Wilson,
their ll-year-old son, who fell un-
conscious at 2:50 p. m., Monday, in
the family home, and died within a
few moments.
The parents of the child asked the
deputy coroner to check the possi-
bility that a bump on the head which
he said he had sustained in school
last Friday might have had a con-
nection with his death, But Deputy
Coroner Streeper said at noon today
that the autopsy revealed no indica-
tion whatever of a fracture or skull
injury. A rather acute uleerated con-
dition of the stomach was disclosed,
Streeper said, and to make the check
as complete as possible a blood test
also will be made. The report of the
physicians will be presented to 4
coroner’s jury, but time of the in-
= had not been set at noon to-
y:
Plans for funeral of the boy also
are incomplete.
Wilson Newcome’s death occurred
\a few minutes after he had partaken
of a light meal.
Members of the family were finish-
ing dinner. Wilson, who had left the
table earlier than the others, 5
from the living room to the kitchen.
Just as he reached the door from the
i dining room to the kitchen, he stag-
gered and fell on the floor.
2 Boy Complained
| For the moment, it was believed he
ihad fainted: His father picked him
‘up and laid him on the dining room
‘table. Then. it was noted that the
-boy no longer was breathing, and a
physician. who was ealled pronow
him dead. :
Mrs. Newcome told a reporter that
Iwhen Wilson returned from schoo!
‘| Priday that he complained of a head-
jache He said that as he was @#bou'
to run through a doorway at recess
‘Hn another
| he received a bump on the head.
| There was no apparent bruise, Mrs
Newcome said, but the poirtt her sor
complained about was. just back ©
the left, temple.
]
;
L
and he was given aspirin tablets tw
or three times when pain. was sever
‘ and these gave him relief. “Monday
‘morning he. complained at schoo
‘i time and was itted to. stay home
‘|. Later, he felt better and went ou
to play, she said. ‘About 1 p.m. by
| went to the restaurant at the Lacled
:| Steel Co. plant where he purchase
a box of aspirin. But. he brought. th
box -home unopened, she said, an
| later examination. show. the boy hat
taken. none of the medicine immedi
t | ately before his death.
1; Mr. Newcome. had . been huntinj
| yesterday, it. was said at the New
tl come home, and luncheon was no
{| served ‘until 2:30. Wilson ate spar
1 | ingly but did not-complain of feelin
1 unwell: Just, before starting. for th
‘kitehen at time he collapsed, he a
been sitting on 4 divan.. talking: t
other children of the family. If on
j | felt suddenly ill, he did not remar
4/about it, and his death came lik
i\a thunderbolt from a clear sky to th
| family.
:
a Was In Good Health
Bl es heen a healthy --bo}
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1605.3167050781,
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] | 4 | 4_254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 254,489,988 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 75 | 75 | [
75
] |
|
254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
17,
40
] | | i
Labor: Reports Show
2° Percent Increa*
| WASHINGTON, Jan. 28. ‘4?
President Hoover said today that re-
ports. to. the Department. of Labor
shewed. an - increase in’ employment
for the week: ending January 14 of
3.3 per cent over the preceding week.
This. increase, Which the chief
executive was “encouraging.” ‘€X-
tended: to aimost every. industry.
"Phe Department of Labor was ad-
vised last: week that the trend up-
‘ward bad begun. January 6 and the
additional | reports indicate @ con-
‘tinued climb.
| [
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8782,
4562,
2772,
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2299,
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] |
|
254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
13,
27,
53
] | Wic kersham Tells Dyer
| Commission Will Hear
| His 2.75 Beer Proposal
Wolves Seek Food: —
~ Hunter Seeks Them
| GRAFTON, Jan. 28,--(Spec-
ial.)—Reports that several farm-
ers located near here have ccen
timber wolves, evidently driven
to seck food near human habi-
tation by the cold, have brought
about the organization of a
hunting expedition which will
go out after the animals. —
Members of ‘the © expedition
against the wolves w ll. take with
them hounds for trailing.
The animals, it. is’: reported
here, have been prowling near
farms. It is thought they. had
been driven down from ~ the
north to. seek food and a_ less
severe climate, and are how
faced with the necessity of. ap-
proaching human dwellings,
where food can be procured.
| [
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[
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],
[
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] | [
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77
] |
|
254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
57,
76
] | ee pean Pile Rankruptey
| gr. LOUIS. Il, Jan, 28.
~Edward..H. Bareiifanger and Wa!
ter H. Barenfander. prothers, Who, af
Pertners in a contracting firmy at Sa
lem, Til, filed petition» in barikrups
ey in federal court here yesterday.
| [
[
1663.7096621094,
7425.3920351563,
2397.9399960937,
7705.6040585937
],
[
1740.2717285156,
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] | [
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2397.9399960937,
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] | 11 | 11_254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 254,489,988 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 78 | 78 | [
78
] |
|
254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
49,
70
] | viskét Peied On Liquor Piet
| “CHICAGO. Jan 28. =Bi¢ht by-
ons, Jib, residents meluding the ‘chief
‘of police and. pottmasiér. went -0r
‘erla! in federal court, on eharges of
acter ta. viciat: tae 5 poe ion
ley. -
| [
[
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],
[
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7783.4721679688
]
] | [
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2420.6226132812,
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] | 12 | 12_254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 254,489,988 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 79 | 79 | [
79
] |
|
254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
5,
19,
20
] | Cl aims Plan to Give
Trust Control of —
Power
Norris Charges
Nullification of
Boulder Dam Bil
| WASHINGTON, Jan. 28, (#)—Sec-
retary Wilbur of the Interior Depart-
ment was charged in the Senate today
by Senator Norris, . Ne-
braska, with nullifying the provisions
of the Boulder Dam bill and moving
to turn. the power from the proposed
project over to the. “water power
| The Nebraskan read an opinion
‘given by the solicitor of the Interior
Department which. held power could
‘be sold to private interests. He called
/attention to the provision in the
| Swing-Johnson. Boulder Dam Act
| stipulating that preference should be
given to municipalities and states in
ithe leasing of power.
| “That means that. the Secretary of
‘Interior is able,” shouted Norris, “To
jmullity the. most important provision
in that law and give every kilowatt
jof power. to the water power trust.”
Senator Johnson, Republican, Cali-
‘fornian, the author of the Boulder
/Dam bill, agreed with Norris and
iwarned’ that..“'we. will not be slow
| when the: time comes to express out
| views on this matter. No matter what
\the solicitor has advised.”
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80,
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3252,
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|
254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
8,
28,
43
] | ‘Rivera Confers With Mili
tary, Ready to Meet
- Demands.
Spanish Premier
Holds Rule Despite
Resignation Rumor
| | The. following. dispatch directly
| from Madrid was filed there at 2:42
Lp..m. Spanish Time, ‘or 9:42 a... ™.
Eastern Standard ‘Time.
MADRID. Jan. ‘28, . (#)—Premier
Primo de Rivera, today continued
conferring with high. army officers
regarding. their attitude on continu-
ation. or resignation of the .present
nish dictatorship.
Unofficial indications of the. reac-
tion: of ‘prominent. military officers
thus far seem. favorable for the con-
‘tinuance of Primo. as head of the
government.
Student. disturbances, . apparently
not’ of a serious nature. broke out
at Barcelona, and the universities in
Madrid and most of Spain have re-
mained closed .as & result_of govern-
ment orders. or the action ‘of local
authorities because of the students
strike-.of: the past few days. ‘
So far as the public has been in-
formed the issue continues. uncertain
as the King, the. Premier and. army
anc navy. leaders consider the prob-
lem. forced. by the premier himself as
| to. whether.-he shall remain Dictator
Rumors constantly. circulated tha!
the. government had resigned, that
the. King and, Primo: had disagreed
\'The the King had. decided. Prime
must stay, that. the “generals .had
agreed: that, Primo must 60. that the
general had agreed that Primo mus!
istay and a. host of similar rumors
| None of them could. be verified.
Late this. afternoon the situatior
appeared. to .be unchanged from tha!
lereated by Primos notes Sunda}
night saying that he would resign i
ithe army and the navy did not. sup
| ‘The latter have so far given né
|indication of what. their ettiuide wil
‘be. Consultations continued late
} into the afternoon.
j
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|
254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
47,
68
] | Three Killed in
| SCRANTON, Pa, Jan. °8. (P)--
Three’ persons. two of then women:
were killed or burned to death In an
explosion and fire at Carbondale thir
morning. . The dead:
Miss Ella Clark, 50, and Mr. and
‘Mrs. Owen. Mangan, elderly people.
| [
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] |
|
254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
21,
6
] | Borah In Tilt With Ju
tice Arm Over
Charges
| i WASHINGTON, Jan. <& \VPi-
Chairman Wickersham of the Law
Enforcement Commission in a letter
to Representative Dyer of Missow'l
made public. today, said that Dyer's
proposal to legalize “beer containing
2.75 pereent of alcohol would be sub-
mitted to the commission for ¢on-
sideration on February 5. a
| Senate investigation of the prohi-
bition enforcement service was in
prospect today as a result of the
sharp disagreement between Assist-
‘ant Secretary Lowman, of the Treas-
ury, and Senators Borah, of Idaho,
| and Wheeler, of Montana, over the
‘qualifications ef John F. CO.
las dry administrator for
jand Idaho. ; ie
|. Senator Borah indicated today he
‘would ask the Senate Judiciary Com-
mittee to go into the enforcement
Problem #5 Foon #5 the
‘takes up the ‘pending dry bills, as @
i of Lowman's defense of Her-
rt. :
| “We ought to have the facts,” he
Said. “We have been told by an in-
‘vestigator of the department of jus-
‘tice about the record of Herbert as
}
‘prohibition administrator for Mary-
misin
#
;
‘land. We.may have been -
formed but we will have to find out.”
It also became known today that
‘Senator Borah has been told that the
Department of Justice is watching
) his office.
- “J am not interested in that,”
-\jaughed Borah, “but my secretary
y | was informed by an investigator 0!
~ the department that my office was
S being watched. There 1s nothing
B there. of interest.”
1 ‘The Idahoan said the department
tl investigator who told him about the
, inquiry into Herbert's record hac
r | Placed these facts before him during
a | the holidays. He said that shortls
4 | thereafter the investigator called anc
e reported to his secretary that he hac
\been removed to another section o
¢| the country and he expressed the be.
“| tief that Borah’s office was Being
ew
| . Hebitual drinkers and those defin
o itely opposed to prohibition on prin.
4 ciple are considered unsuitable by th
t Hoover administration for federal of
» fices directly connected with thi
prosecution of violators of the. dr
yr statutes.
qd. In addition, the personal views an
x practices of applicants for appoint
r ment or reappointment. 3s
it States attorneys and marshals ar
being th ly investigated pees
are epeane vi)
the t by thee | Depart
ment. P
This was . revealed Attorne
General Mitehell in a ri
. ted to the House Expenditures Com
> mittee, which is considering the Wil
‘liamson Bill to consolidate the gov
‘ernment’s enforcement and prosecut
"\ing agencies in the Department ©
Justice.
The letter had been written to |
. friend. of the © attorney genera
I" whose name was withheld, ‘and deal
only with attorneys and marshals, al
though «it is assumed that. Mitche
will follow the. same policy in select
| ing . men: for the ‘enforcement un!
‘when that agency is transferred. ‘
Y nis jurisdiction.
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|
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7,
26,
33
] | Night Session of Commons
Passes Ratifying
Measure
Britain Pledges
Its Slee octal
To World Cour!
| LONDON, Jan. 28, (#)—“iree*
Britain today subordinated: itself to
compulsory jurisdiction ot .the Per-
manent Court of International Jus-
tice, kriown as the World Court, and
was pledged to accept summons be-
fore that tribunal at the behest of
any. other national member.
Fulfilling a pledge made prior to
the general election, the Labor Gov-
ernment of Ramsay MacDonald in
a cnight session. of the Comr-ons
forced through ratification of the
optional clause of the court against
stiff ‘Tory opposition by vote of 278
to..193. The Laborites had the sup-
port of the Liberals.
There are three reservations ta. the
British adherence; first, that dis-
‘putes. with other members of the
British Commonwealth of Nation
are not. affected: second, that dis-
putes: about matters within the do-
mestic jurisdiction of the state shall
not reach the court, and third, that
the tribunal may not consider dis-
putes for the submission of which
‘to some othe: method of peaceful
settlement provision already has been
‘made in existing or will be made
he fiiture agreement.
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|
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22,
71,
73
] | ‘Effort, to Surprise Mother
Nearly Costs
Life
Runs From House
| . Julia 12-year-old daughter of -Mr.
and Mrs. George Gerbig, was in a
serious.condition today at 8t. Josephs
‘hospital from burns received at her
home at 2121 Johnson street, Monday
afternoon. The girl was burned about
the body and arms, but her condi-
tion today had shown some improve-
ment and she is expected to recover.
Presence of mind of a neighbor
probably saved. the girl's life. When
she ran from the. house: screaming,
her dress in flames. the neighbor. N.
L. Elmore; was. coming: heme . from
| work He ran to the girl, tore the
‘burning “clothing from her,.. then
|wrapped her in a blanket. He took
the -child to Kis own home and later
to the hospital.
| Mother: At Store
|. The mother of the little girl had
gone to a grocery, nearby... In her
mother’s absence, Julia decided: to be-
gin preparation of dinner. in her
childish effort to provide a. surprise
for her mother. One burner on the
gas stove wes. burning. The. little
girl tried to light another and in ‘so
doing leaned over the fire, Her ¢lo-
‘thing was. ignited.
| She first ran to the sink in a fran-
tic effort to put out the flames with
water. “Failing, she retained. presence
of mind enough to. try something
else. She ran upstairs to get a bian-
\ket. Again she was. unsuccessful and
lran downstairs and out of the house
| screaming.
Taken To Hospital
Elmore, returning from work, sa¥
her and acted quickly. A doctor was
called and. immediate preparation:
were made to take the girl to the
| hospital.
| oMrs. Gerbig, returning from... the
| store, almost. was . prostrated wher
‘she learned her. daughter had — beet
| burned. Neighbors tried to quiet he
and the seriousness of the burns suf
|i fered by her daughter was not re
| yealed to her.
|| "The: Gerbigs have three other chil
\dren. The father is employed by Al
Plinn Taunndre Co.
| [
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85
] |
|
254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
11,
29,
35
] |
Aretie Waits as
Searchers Dig in
Snow for Kielson
Two Canadian Flyers Jou
‘In Quest For
Bodies
| TELLER... Alaska,’ Jan... 28. (P —
The far. north: today awaited. reports
from the searching party near North
Cape, Siberia, which. has been. dig-
ding into-.the ice and snow about
the wreckage of Carl Ben Eielsons
airplane expecting to find : the. body
of the noted Arctic aviator and. his
companion, : Earl Borland.
Meanwhile, two other. flyers who
for weeks: have been awaiting “an
opportunity. to join in. the hunt. for
the. long. missing birdmen. were at
last on their way to North Cape
The two, Pat Reid and. Ed Young.
Canadian’ pilots; took their. two
powerful planes into the. air here
yesterday for a 400-mile flight te
the Siberian coast where the Eiel-
son-Borland plane was found.
Alfred. Lomen, : director of the
search for: Elelson and Borland, aft-
‘er receiving a. report. of the dis-
covery of the. wrecked plane... ¢xX-
pressed the opinion that the bodies
of Eielson and. Borland would be
found there.
| The. searching party. composed of
four men, was taken to the scene
Sunday. by Joe Grosson and Harolc
Gillam, American.. fliers. who lb:
‘cated the. wreck. Saturday. Since
Crosson. and Gillam operated fron
‘the fur: trading ship Nanuk, frozet
in the -iee near North Cape. report:
from the searching. party were ¢%
weeted fram that. source.
| [
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|
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15,
30
] | Bishop Anderson
Paceea “Fair Night
| CHICAGO, Jan. 28. © Although
his ‘condition ywas,.sti!) described a5
critical; ‘physicians attending Bishop
Charles P. Anderson, head of the
Episcopal Church. in America, said
today he passed @ ‘fair nights
The Most Rev. -Ande:son, Bishop
of the. Chicago dioces:. 184 been
reriously M1 for a: week vith heart
disease. ,
| [
[
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3964.3704160156,
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],
[
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] | [
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] | 27 | 27_254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 254,489,988 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 87 | 87 | [
5882,
87
] |
|
254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
16,
24,
0
] | eal
Claim Plot to Murder
Gil and Rubio Nipped
| MEXICO CITY, Jan. 28. P) -
Mexico City police élaimied today to
have {frustrated a plot. to assassmare
President Emilion Portes Gil. and the
| omg ono Pascual Ortis Rubio
blow. up several ‘publie- buildings. «od
seize administration. of the govern:
ment. 7
| Of 19 persons arrested sévera) da\>
‘ago, Valente Quinte ns, ehief of po-
Hee. said: 17. have ‘confessed -connes-
tien. with the plot and: are being held.
The ‘two released were. women who
proved their. innocenes:
“The chief of) police. said the’ plo'-
liers: were adherents: of Jose “‘Vascou-
celus, defeated candidat’ fer THe
Mexican, presidency, who charged
after. his loas the polls last Nov.
17 that the Orfiz-Rubisia had taken
advantage of certdin peculiarities of
the Mexiean election laws fo “IP
from him,
The plot, he said, was to mH onecrs
the guard at the government power
plant here, capture the plant. seie
arms ata fagtory in the center af
the eity, ‘and subsequently fo fe ror-
ize. the lace by: shooting rockets
with al large dynamite conten! inte
che aire In-the- eonfusien the per’
‘dent and sident-elect. were ta be
chet end the government seized.
| [
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|
254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
3,
32,
34
] | Former Oklahoma
Governor Called
Tn Rum Ring Case
U. S. Charges Protection
For Liquor Sales
Was Given
| OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla., Jan. 28.)
@)--Speculation as to - what part
Henry 8. Johnston, former Oklaho- |
ma governor, and W. 0. Gordon,
“evidence man” for the attorney gen-
eral’s office, would play in the Potta~-
watomie . county liquor. conspiracy
case today overshadowed interest in
selection of a jury, which was ¢X-
‘pected. to: begin this afternoon. -
| The names of the former govern-
or and. Gordon were. introduced
when stbpoenaes were issued for
their appearance’ in federsl district
‘court here today when 102 citizens
‘and Officials are brought to trial
charged with a vast conspiracy by
whieh the manufacture, distribution
and me Ni quer is alleged to have
been vw ai
Johnston ordéred two investiga-
| tions. of vice and liquor conditions
hin: Pottowatomie county in 1927, and
| sent Gordon ‘into the. county. to
‘make | reports. Following Gordon's
“nrst investigation several officials re-
| signed. :
Just. what part the state’s activi-
ties in’ Pottawatomie county will play
in the Government's case has not
been revealed: 2 |
Not all of the defendants. will be in
court today when the case ‘is called:
‘One, Marion Fuller, former chief of
| police ‘of. Earlsboro and considered
lone. of the’ Government’: strongest
| witnesses, is. .deat; several have. in-
| dicated they will plead guilty; a few
cases of mistaken identity: will fur-
“ther décrease the number, and 39 of
| those named in the: Government
| charges still-are fugitives from just-
i ice. .
| Fuller, the Government contended
was a collector for a. liquor “Tine’
‘| which the Government charge, guar-
| anteed exclusive liquor tights i
; Pottawatomie county to members.
| Cfreumstances: surrounding Puller’
| death
| In. the. trial which opens today. the
Government will attempt. to prov
\ that Puller, Randall Pitman, count)
Yl attorney; Frank -Fox, at the tim
lh sheriff; Clarence Burdette, one
chief of police of Earlsboro; Home:
| Knappenberger, then. mayor of Earls:
boro; Osear Motley, then deput)
ft sheriff, and numerous other. person
, were involved in the control of th
alleged ring during the last thre
| years The Goverhiment charges tha
, | the plan ineluded assessment fron
‘15 to $50 a week against saloon:
j{ barbecue stands, rooming house:
"| @iling stations and drug stores fo
. | official protection
| [
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|
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18,
14
] | sentenced to Hang Twice
Mor Murder of Couple
| OAKLAND. Cal, Jan: 28. (P)-—>
Found guilty of the double. murder
, ot Steniey Montero. and. his. fiance,
| Mary Munoz. Ernest. A: Dias, 24, o-
day was sentenced to hang .twice on
April. t. ; .
| Superior. Judge Fred .V; Wood
‘passed the sentences: and to his
‘knowledge it is the first time in the
history of Fnglish or American law
that @ murderér has beet sentenced
}to pay twice with, his. life. for his
jermies Dias shot the. couple to
| death as they cat in their automo~
. bile
| He ‘ormerly was an inmate of the
| Sonoma state hospital. for feeble
minded persons. but. a jury foun
him sane
| [
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|
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2,
4
] | Jury Finds Brakeman
Killed in Self: Defense
| GRANITE CITY, TL. Jan: 28,
Ray T. French, 33, Bloomington,
ill. railroad brakeman, was, absolved
by a coroner's. jury last night whieh
investigated the fatal shooting ef Le-
rey F. Rudder, 32, ‘alse a Bicoming-
ion brakeman.
Rudder died Sunday.ef three bul-
iet wounds inflieted. by. French: “iat
Thursday in a'Venice, 11. hotel when
the two men met. for the first: time
sinee, Rudder married French's i.
vereed wife. Another beakeman. 311.
tor Tasler, testified Rudder. drew *
-knife end started toe. attack Frenc!
‘before the later shot.
| [
[
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91
] |
|
254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
12,
23,
38
] | Clock Cuckoos,
Betrays Thief
Riot Over Girl Dancers
| CHICAGO, Jan. 28. ()—At
exactly 4 p.m. January 27, 1930,
something inside Godfrey Smith
went cuckoo.
Smith. had no actual need for
a cuckoo clock, for he gets up
when he feels like it. He could
not, however, resist the time-
keeper he saw in a store window,
so he stuck it under his coat.
As he strolled languidly toward
the exit it was just 4 p. m.. The
clock beneath the coat went
“Cuck-oo, . Cuck-o0, Cuck-oo,
Cuck-oo.” i
A policeman arrested him, for
it is against the law to take
Cuckoo clock.
| [
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9,
31,
36
] | Ex-Convict on Dry
Raid as Informer.
Kills Mountainee!
Victim Riding Mule it
. Pass, Kegs Slung
Over Saddle |
| |_- NASHVILLE, Tenn, Jan. 28, #)—
| Federal and state officers today were
“investigating .the slaying last Sat-
urday.of a: Tennessee mountaineer
by Buford “Buck” Rader, ex-convict
and member of a raiding party of
government prohibition agents.
Tom Morris, traveling on a_mule
with two empty kegs in a pass of the
‘Cumberland Shain near Winchester,
was shot to death when encountered
‘by the raiding party. Officers said
Morris opened fire when they told
him he was under arrest’ and was
shot by Rader. ,
United States District Attorney A.
V.- McClane said he believed the
case was one for the state to handle,
but Tom “Stewart, state's attorney
said he would postpone action until
he had made an investigation.
Rader was sent to the penitenti-
| ary August 18, 1928 to serve a yea!
|and a day for violation of the state
| Hquor laws. He received @ condi-
tional pardon a month later, but was
| returned to: the -prison ‘for a. viola-
ltion of the terms. of his release. -He
was. said to: have been instrumenta:
in the. uncovering. of counterfeiting
joperations within the penitentiary, b)
| Howard Barr, “master counterfeiter.’
| ‘His action in this ease led officials
; {daring for his safety in the prison
to. release. him to the federal gov-
ernment.. He-was worked with pro-
‘Thibition officers as an informer. since
ee palease it. was said.
| [
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|
254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
81,
74
] | a ...cane HOinels River Bridee
| APPrave tere eT ee
WASHING LON. Jian, 28)" ~The
(War depa aent ‘today. approved
| Plans tes construction ofa bridge
Fagross tho Usineis river gear Ohithi-
l eattie by Atchison, Topeka . and
Genta | avay under authority of
i ; :
ithe state rhe. proposed bricys
wil) re-place existing. bridges,
| [
[
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[
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] | 37 | 37_254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 254,489,988 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 94 | 94 | [
94
] |
|
254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
45,
42,
50
] | Youngsters Walk 4 Mile
Home From School
Three Children
Cross Viadue
| Alton police. were asked to: Jom 4M |
a search Monday evening: for three |
emall children of William Walls after
they had failed to arrive’ at the
tamily: home two miles south. of Ni- |
agara station after leaving ‘aida
Barton. schoo! in Alton. .
The ehildren go back-and forth to
school’ by. interurban -car between
Niagara and (he foot of Mali street.
Theig father. it ts said, met the ‘in-
| terurban at Niagara. at 4:15 but. the
ehildren were not on-the car-as ex-
-peeted: Driving to the foot of Main
street in Alton he .could not find
‘them. ‘Phen he and neighbors set
lout on a search
| Just before, 6 o'clock, however, the
“youngsiers came heme. ‘They . had
walked all. the way, they said. Fol-
‘Jowing the netorurban tracks, aceord-
ng to. infermanien given E.: Calame.
ia neighbur. trey crossed the high in-
te uber s.aduc going out ef Alton:
,j also. the intel aban bridge over -Wood
}} River. oF
Li The cluldien Fre Violet. -10,. Rose-
8, end Jerome, .6 "years: old.
ae
Mia).
| [
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95
] |
|
254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
51,
52,
64
] | Says Night cht Clerk Hired
Him to Burn
Annex
Watchman Confesses
| emt ra te
8T. LOUIS, Jan. 28, ()--Warrants
charging arson and murder in the
first degree were issued today against
three of four men arrested in a@ re-
'yived investigation into the burning
of the Hotel Buckingham Annex De-
cember 5, 1927, in which seven per-
‘sons perished.
ST. LOUIS. Jan. 28, (4)-—-The pos-
sibility of additional arrests in an
alleged plot to burn the Hotel Buck-
ingham Annex, which was destroyed
by fire Deoember 5, 1927, with the
loss of seven lives, was seen today
by authorities as they continued their
investigation into the reopened case.
One development promised today
by Joseph A. Lennon, assistant cir-
cuit attorney, was ‘he filing of mur-
der and arson charges against three
of four men already in custody. The
linvestigation was continued on the
‘theory that others may have been
involved in the alleged conspiracy.
Owner Denies Knowledge
‘allegations by Meadows and Cothan
that he was involved in the plot.
No warrants had been prepared to-
\day against the fourth man under
| arrest, Lewis E. Balson, real estate
dealer and majority owner of the ho-
tel properties at the time of the fire,
|who has said he was unaware of any
plot to burn the hotel.
Failed To Pay Up
: A lengthy signed statement was
‘taken from Meadows by police last
|night in the presence of witnesses.
labout the only respect in which it
| differed from his original. statement.
according te police, was that he said
‘at one point he was to have received
|10 per cent of the fire insurance for
‘setting fire to the hotel, instead of
‘receiving $5,000 in cash as he at first
I
~ |" Altogether, according their
® | statement, Meadows actually recelv-
r | Got
e\in the Annex at the time of the fire
e and to Edward T. McFarland, a for-
‘mer manager. Greathouse, whose
%, Cothan owed him $500, and with Mc-
|Parland’s help questioned them and
\. turned the evidence over to investi.
e | peters of insurance companies, wh
e,|in turn gave the case to authorities.
a |
| [
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4962.3335507812
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[
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1739.5767822266
],
[
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1371.5769042969,
6202.0883789062,
1471.5847167969
]
] | [
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6229.6387265625,
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] | 42 | 42_254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 254,489,988 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 96 | 5,876 | [
96,
8561,
5876,
2556,
6813
] |
|
254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
10,
39,
41
] | Narcotic. Defendant Gets
Decision On
Slip
Juror Errs, Giving
Doctor Mistrial
On Drug Charge
| EAST ST. LOUIS, Ti, Jan, 28,
<Becauce’‘a’ juror left the
Building after - hearing ‘preliminary
statements by attorneys. @ '
was declared yesterday in. the case of
Dr: Commodore. E. Bennett of Ben-
ton, charged. with violation of .the
“Harrison Narcotic Act, in U. 8, Dis-
- tfiet. Court here. eo
EL-W. Walker of Christopher, the
juror, said he had not heard. im-
, structions of Judge Wham ‘ordering
‘the jury to remain together.
| | The government charges Dr... Ben-
‘nett bought large quantities of nar-
eotics and tssued illegal prescriptions
| to himself and an unnamed «person.
R. Shad Bennett, St. Louls lawyer
who, is- defending his brother, ‘told
the jury his brother had become ..ad-
| dicted to the use of drugs following
jan iliness.
| [
[
5497.2518984375,
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6623.4819882812
],
[
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],
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97
] |
|
254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
25,
46,
48
] | F.F. Bixby Found
Dead in Garage
Brother of Capitalist Dies
From Auto Gas
| ST. LOUIS, Jan. 28. Fred Pv.
Bixby. brother of Wiliam K. Bixby,
éapitalist, was found dead in. & Bar
age at his homie in Webster cirovea,
Si. Louis suburb, late last night. “The
‘motor of his car was rushing ané
ue to carbos
death apparently was a
monoxide poboning
Police. summoned — by relatives,
jound Bixby lying on {he tloor. of the.
igatage beaide the autoaiobilé,. the
moter of which “as recing: An. ite
halator was used withodt suceeme.°
Bixby, 65, was wmanager of, the rye
terial departnent of the America®
Car & Poundty Co, pnd bad been
eoiines OG wih tice Mispaut? Pacit %
Texas vo Pacitie fad Le Wabash.veste
proacs.
| [
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5538.6986757813,
7150.4901796875,
6297.9087460937,
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],
[
5531.275390625,
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6923.2338867188
],
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] | [
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] | 48 | 48_254489988-alton-evening-telegraph-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 254,489,988 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 98 | 98 | [
98
] |
|
15485314-athens-messenger-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/15485314-athens-messenger-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
43,
72
] |
EE IS KILLED
| SOLUMBLS, Jan. 28.—UR—
James Cain, leycur-ohl Negro,
was killed here list night when his
sled was struck by an automobile.
Two other boys were injured tn
coasting accidents.
| [
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441.7346420898,
3830.8902207031
],
[
112.5307159424,
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3689.6625976562
]
] | [
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3665.1862792969,
441.7346420898,
3830.8902207031
] | 0 | 0_15485314-athens-messenger-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 15,485,314 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 99 | 1,229 | [
99,
1229,
1519
] |