Newspaper Page Text
VOLUME XXXI. No. 26.
RELEASED AFTER
Suspects in Slaying of Benjamin
Collings are Given Their
Freedom When Mrs Codings
Visits Daytona
STATES THEY’RE NOT
MEN WHO SLEW MATE;
Made Special Trip From New;
York State to Look at Pair
She First Identified Through
Newspaper Pictures.
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Daytona Beach, Fla., Oct. 3. (/P)—
Dr. Leslie D. Ritchie and his son were :
released from custody here early to¬
day when Mrs. Benjamin P. Collings
failed to identify them as the “psr- j
ates” who recently boarded the Col- ‘
»,” liel husband '■;« and “ abducted her. ;
With , an attorney, William L. Kel- j
ley, the Stamford, Conn., yachtsman’s 1
widow arrived at midnight from New 1
York arrested to view the before. Ritchies who were | i
two days They went
almost Only immediately officers to the jail.' i
and attorneys were
^present when Mrs. Codings confront- j
• the two prisoners. They stood ini
j group of twelve men of similar ap- !
pearance.
She singled them out readily, but,
she said, it was because she, had prev¬
iously seen pictures of them. As Mrs.
Codings shook her head negatively,
Dr. Ritchie spoke up.
“I am not the man,” he said.
“No,” Mrs. Codings assented.
“Thank you,” said Ritchie.
Then William Ritchie, 23-year-old
son ed of the former veterinarian, rush-1
up to Mrs. Codings and shook her i
ham) Tfew emotionally. minutes after Mrs. Codings j |
fat/ed to identify the Ritchies, the pair I
wah released from custody. They left!
the jail with their wives and the ?- !
year-old-daughter of the younger man
tor their home, located near a wood
yard they operate on the outskirts of
the city.
The Codings party included be¬
sides the widow and her attorney,
Kelley, Fred J. Munder, assistant dis¬
trict attorney of Suffolk county and
her sister-in-law, Helen Codings. Af¬
ter the hearing they said they would
leave at 5 p. m. to return to New York.
TA CANAL i
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CITY COUNCIL TAKES ACTION
ON SUGGESTIONS FOR DEVEL¬
OPMENT OF WATERWAY
Augusta, Ga., Oct. 3. UP)—The city
council had adopted the Augusta ca¬
nal commission’s plan for the develop¬
ment of the Augusta canal following
the failure of the Georgia Power Com¬
pany to submit a lease contract.
The ordinance authorizing the ca¬
nal commission to proceed with its
plans, regardless of development of
the canal by the city, which was adopt¬
ed by council, specifies that all costs
'V A“t connection by ....... with bonds the project provided be paid by
revenue as
a recent act of the legislature.
A standby plant is to be built under
legislative permission, but it was spec¬
ified in the ordinance that no tax mon¬
ey would be used to meet expenses in
building an electric plant.
The commission, under the ordi
nance, was authorized to proceed with
its work and to prepare a statement
of the revenue bond requirements so
that definite authority might be grant
ed for the issuance of the bonds.
E. Inman Curry, who appeared be¬
fore council in the interest of the pow¬
er company, read a letter from F. Bay¬
ard Culley, power company division
manager, in which Culley said that
the company at this time bad not pre¬
pared a proposal in contract form,
but urged that the company be permit
ted to appear before council or the c-a
nal i commission • in • the effort r to work _i
out details of a similar plan.
LAST OF CARLIST - *
PRETENDERS DIES
Paris, Oct. 3. f/P)—Don Jaime of
Bourbon, last of the Carlist
ers to the throne of Spain, died in
exile Friday night after a heart at
tack. He was 61 and unmarried.
' only after
His death came a week
it was announced that he and former
King Alfonso, his distant cousin, had
ended their lift-long rivalry and
henceforth wrn,»f labor together
“the salvation <rf Spain.” Alfonso’s
associates emphasized that the recon
ciliation was a family affair and did
not involve the rights to the throne.
ATTORNEY IS DEAD
Atlanta. Ga.. Oct. 3. (/P)—Otis W.
Russell. 34, attorney died suddenly at
his residence early today. Physicians
believed he died of acute indigestion,
Mr. Russell was a native of Kentucky,
moving to Atlanta about 12 years ago.
He was active in work of the Presby
- terian church. He is survived by
m e , three children j»nd his
J. W. Russell, Elkton, Ky.
THE BRUNSWICK NEWS
LEADS TO SLAYING
John .Mcllvaine, 5.S=Year-Old
Farmer, Jailed at Lake City,
Fla., After He Wounded Man
and Killed Wife
PRISONER IS TAKEN
TO JACKSONVILLE
Fear of Mob Violence Causes
Arresting Officers to Trans=
fer Accused Man to Stronger
Bastile.
Lake City, Fla., Oct. 3. (/P).....Au
thorties today arrested John Mcll¬
vaine, 55, year old farmer, shortly al¬
ter he is alleged to have shot and
critically wounded Jep Kent, 75, and
killed Kent’s wife during an argu
ment over a stray hog. Mcllvaine
was taken to the Jacksonville jail to
avoid possible mob violence.
Sheriff W. B. Douglas said an al
tercation started between Mcllvaine
and Kent after Kent found one of Mc
Ilvaine’s stray hogs on Mis property
and had thrown it over his fence.
Kent returned to his own home and
eating dinner with his wife, when
Mcllvaine appeared with a shotgun.
Mrs. Kent, who was about 35 years
old. rushed out of the house and Me
Ilvaine opened fire, Sheriff Douglas
said. The charge struck her in the
heart and she died instantly.
Sheriff Douglas said Mcllvaine then
turned . , the ,, shotgun , , on Kent, ,, . mulcting ■ , ■
a serious wound , in • ,, the neck i and , , , lett j?
cMm. Kent .Vri 11 was "«s taken mi'oi ..., to a hospital. in’.' 1 'uoi.
The shooting was witnessed by
Kent’s four year old son, who was
playing on the back porch.
Shortly after taking Mcllvaine into
custody. Sheriff Douglas decided to
transfer him to the Jacksonville jail
for safe keeping. He said considerable
feeling had arisen over the shooting,
but there had been no demonstration.
STEAGALL PREDICTS
DEFEAT OF HOOVER
CONGRESSMAN SAYS HE WILL
NOT RECEIVE ONE HUNDRED
ELECTORAL VOTES
_____
Warm Springs, Ga.. Oct. 3. UP) Be
lief that President Hoover could re -
ceive not more than 100 electoral vote.
if Gov. Franklin I). Roosevelt of
York state is the Democratic nominee
for president in 1932, was expressed
».««. here hv by Cnn(pressman Congressman Henry Hem-v B. I! Sesur- Seag¬
ull of Alabama who stopped here yes¬
terday to visit Mr. Roosevelt.
The Alabama representative, who
passed through here on his way from
a vacation trip spent in Connecticut,
said he thought the Democratic party
would be “smart” hot to listen to “the
advice of Raskob and Al Smith on
making prohibition an issue in the
coming campaign.”
Mr. Roosevelt, vacationing here is
giving considerable attention to a mat¬
ter that may prove the secondary is¬
sue in the 1932 campaign- Unit of
water and power development.
While here he hopes to complete
his decision on the steps to be taken
in protecting New York’s rights in the
power development now the subject of
negotiations between Washington and
Canada.
New York state has completed plans
to build a huge dam for hydro electric,
power at Massena Point in the St,.
Lawrence.
FASCI
LIMITATION OF ARMS
SETTLEMENT OF WAR DEBTS AL¬
SO FAVORS BY GRAND COUN¬
CIL OF ORGANIZATION
Rome, Oct. 3. UP)—Limitation of
armaments and settlement of war
debts and reparations were advocated
by the grand council of fascism today
as the most effective remedies for
world-wide depression.
Premier Mussolini, chairman of the
council, in meetings last, night
j early today re-affirmed his long
I standing conviction the reminders of
the World war must be wiped out
■order to restore genuine peace and
prosperity.
Foreign Minister Dino Grandi’s
j 'arms proposal for an immediate truce on
to last until the disarmament
conference in February, submitted to
the council of the League of Nations,
was said to have “surmounted preju
dice and placed the international arms
problem on a realistic and
. basis.”
Fascism’s example in acting quick¬
ly to meet the emergency within its
own borders, it wa said, should he
made known to the world as a help
ful influence.
It was admitted that unemployment
probably would increase in Italy this
■ winter But confidence was expressed
that emergency measures decreed by
■ the government to stablize the lira
(would pull the nation through.
Elopes
Associated Press /'iioto
Jane B. Stetson, Philadelphia so
.
as Cartledge, amateur aviator
STONE IS SPEAKER
HEAD FARM BOARD OUTLINES
PLANS BEFORE BODY OPPOS¬
ED TO ORGANIZATION
Washington, Oct. 3. </P)—The or¬
ganization which has been the most
strenuous opponent of farm board pol¬
icies today heard Chairman Stone out
line his views of certain phases of the
farm situation.
Stone spent an hour before the
board of directors of the chamber of
commerce of the United States behind
closed doors. What he discussed was
not immediately disclosed,
Board members have vigorously op
posed stabilization and other opera¬
tions —~ of the * u - * farm ----'----- board J and — J a' - resolu¬ ’
tion was passed last year by the
chamber urging that the board be pro¬
hibited from “competition with pri¬
vate business.”
Stone was asked a series of ques¬
tions by the directors and it was un¬
derstood that they were considering
some recommendation regarding farm
credit.
The antagonism of the two organ¬
izations is of long standing. In April
of last year, Chairman Legge of the
farm board went before: the annual
meeting of the chamber and told it
the chamber had failed to take any
constructive action to improve the
farm situation.
In reply to the outspoken farm
hoard chairman, Daniel A. Millett, a
Denver banker and stockman, charac¬
terized the farm board and the agri¬
cultural marketing act as a fantastic
dream.
RUSSIAN AVIATOR
TRANSPORTS KIDS
IN GIANT PLANE
New York, Oct. 3. I/P)—Leo Ter
letzky doubled today for the old wo¬
man who didn’t know what to do; and
he didn’t even have anything as stable
as a shoe to put the 'children under
his care in.
Terletzky, A Russian war ace,
brought into Floyd Bennett Field one
^ig ampnibians which has been
in summer service between Boston
and Halifax and is now going back
to winter flying in the Caribbean. The
plane stopped, the door opened, and
out came children.
There were only five all told, but to
astonished field employes it seemed
at first a troop ns large as the one led
by the Pied Piper of Hamlin.
The children were attended by their
mothers and fathers, the latter of
whom are mechanics for Pan Ameri
can airways being ferried back to the
Miami winter base, they all had
crackers profLpvu and a r»ci mill.- milk, trooped tmnno/ hack ImoT/ into ml a
the plane, and a moment later Terletz¬
ky, flying what he considered the most
precious ing southward cargo of his career, the sky. was head¬
across
MACDONALD READY
TO CARRY BANNER
~
T London , Oct. „ 3. „ l/P, Prime T , . Minister .
again repudiated by his
constituents, said today he would run
tor reflection to parliament from
•Acaham Harbor if labor leaders of
?? the L official or unofficial organiza-
110 "? inv, V‘ f * h ,rrl t0 a candidate,
Hls decision was viewed as a chal
len , *? e to th “ ^ eaham “ a rb ? r labor
, which reiterated . its ( deci
support another candidate last
night after he had explained his rea¬
sons for heading the national govern
i ment and asked for its endorsement.
j this i Mr. morning MacDonald to keep visited him King inlormed George
, on the latest political developments
tending toward a general election the
latter part of the month. The cabinet
will meet Friday to prepare a mam
testi which is expected to appeal for
free hand” for the prime minister
and his ministry in bridging the rta
‘tion over its present difficulties.
BRUNSWICK., CA., SUNDAY. OCT. 4, 1931.
Warns Democrats
Associated J'jv.ss Photo
Senator K. I). MeKellar, Demo
era I, Tennessee, warned his party that
nothing but a wet plank would stand
j j n way of a Democratic victory
j j n nox ( year’s campaign
j
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| i GOVERNORS OF TWO STATES
j DISCUSS COTTON SITU \TION
| AT INFORMAL CONFERENCE
| Atlanta, , ,, La., Oct. ,, . UP)- ,, Governor
■>.
i 1 Richard , , B. ,, Russell. ,, nr Jr., said that he
i and , Governor I). Blackwood ol South ,, ,,
I Carolina informally discussed cotton
regulation for 1932, following a short
conference here this morning.
Gov. Blackwood said after the con¬
ference he was desirous of obtaining
a uniform cotton prohibition law en¬
acted in. ail cotton growing states, lie
also said a conference of cotton states
governors should he called to discuss
the problem.
The South Carolina executive said
the legislature of his state meets in
January in regular session and at. that
time can enact legislation similar to
any passed by other states which may
act in tile meantime. Such action, he
said, would supercede the hill recently
passed in the South Carolina legisla¬
ture, plan.” similar to the Long “no cotton
j
I Governor Blackwood said he anti
i t-Rmled an automatic reduction ol
(about 50 per cent in citton grown in
i South Carolina in HK»2 even without
| Carolina legislative raised restrictions. about 900,000 No said hales South
! declared ie had heard expressions
01 deceases in the acreage* ol tobae
j ( '° H \ planted next year,
“Me lave a diversified soil comli
tlOn 10 South ( arollHH that Simplifies
our problems. We can grow many
things to take the place of cotton and
I obacco,” he sa id.
Governor Russell said he was well
I leased with the conference and add¬
ed that Ihe proposed meeting of gover¬
nors was in line with his suggestion a
month ago.
Accompanying Gov, Blackwood tb
Atlanta were Charles II. Gerald, his
secretary, Sam Gannon, state elec¬
trician and J. M. Smith, state hank
examiner. They look no part in the
conference with Gov. Russell.
GOLD RUSH STARTS
AS MINERS DEPART
FOR HIDDEN
Las Vegas, Nevada, Oct. 3. UP)
gold rush, with all its attendant
citement and profiteering, was on
day as hundreds of prospectors
amateur miners headed for the
den Forest mountain range, 4X
northeast of Las Vegas.
Two prospectors, F. E. Vassar
LeRov Mason, apparently unable
keep their find a secret after an
say of samples of their ore
a reported value of $5,1)00 per
caused the rush With 12
the two have staked out 37 claims.
As soon as the word spread
this desert town, gateway to the
huge Boulder Dam project, there
a rush for supplies and food.
Automobiles took the more
ate to the mountainous country.
ers went on muleback and some
j j ed Vassar afoot. and Mason declared the
I was 37 feet wide and had been
. for a distance of 900 feet.
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Grain Is Accepted
As Admission Fee
By Fair Officials
Sylvester, Oct. 3. UP) - Lack of
cash need keep no one away from
j the Worth county fair, officials of
i the show have announced.
In lieu of the coin of the realm,
admission may he gained according
to the following price list:
Cotton seed: Adults. Hi pounds;
: children, (i pounds.
Shelled,corn: Adults 25 pounds;
children TO pounds.
Peanuts: Adults, 20 pounds; chil¬
dren, 8 pounds.
j Fresh eggs: Adults, one dozen;
children, 5 eggs.
i
Ml IMS PI SN
FOR BIG HER
Interstate Commerce Commis¬
sion Has Been Asked For Au¬
thority For the Consolida¬
tion
PRINCIPAL EASTERN
LINES ARi: INVOLVED
Pennsylvania, Baltimore & Ohio,
Ne>\ York Central and Ohio
Nickel Plate System are
Roads Involved.
Washington, Oct. 3. UP) Principal
eastern railroads today asked the in
lerstate commerce commission to per
mil them to consolidate into four sys
terns.
The plan presented by the Penn¬
sylvania. the Baltimore and Ohio. Hie
New York Central and Ohio-Nickel
Plate System hmterially alters the
consolidation plan proposed by the in¬
terstate eommerce commission in De¬
cember, 1929.
The commission plan, drawn after
lengthy hearings provided five sys¬
tems ill the east.
The four system plan dismembers
the northern end of the Wabash-Sea¬
board system suggested by the com
mission and extends the Pennsylvania
railroad as far south as Wadeslioro,
Durham and Flklund, N. and Bris¬
tol, Tenn.-Va.
Aside from dismemberment of Ihe
fifth eastern system, the plan raises a
problem for railroad financiers and the
commission as to what is to become
of the Seaboard Airline Railway. The
Seaboard, a vital line in the commis¬
sion plan, lias been in receivership
since last December.
Today’s petition would authorize the
Voads to consolidate. It informs Ihe
cominision of the proposed lineup.
The plan representes a compromise
on many phases of a problem which
has been in negotiation eight years or
more, 'file presidents of Hie four
systems agreed in principle Iasi De¬
cember, and Ibis agreement was firs I
made nublie by President Hoover on
December 30 lari.
The new plan was described as re¬
quiring comparatively mail expendi¬
tures by the petitioning systems. Most
of the principal lines involved already
are owned bv the carriers seeking to
incorporate them into one system.
T
LOCAL ORGANIZATIONS ASKED
TO RALLY REMIND DRIVE TO
All) UN EM PLOY El)
Washington, Oct. 2. (IV) A call for
local chambers of commerce, to rally
behind drives for funds for emergency
relief was sounded today by Ihe na¬
tional chamber.
The hoard of directors of the cham¬
ber of commerce of the United Stales
in the resolution they adopted* urtf<*d
local chambers “to he the initiative iu
lending the full weight of their in¬
fluence in seeing to it that in each
community, where emergency relief is
needed, the funds which are raised arc
adequate.*’ providing
The resolution said that
work was of primary importance and
I that next came the provision of ade
|(|unlc The relief hoard funds. also had before it today
!a report of its committee on the eon
Itinuity I of business unemployment
urging; some soH of national planning
ihoard to prevoid depressions,
j lexpendilures Committees on federal submitted taxation and
also reports.
n
PRESIDENT OF FEDERATION OF
LABOR I > I.!, I!'. V l.,s II WILL
BRING PROSIT, Id I 1 IIA< K
i Washington, Oct. 3. < /I „
)
j Green, president, Labor, of believes the American in
Federation of an
|crease ; of all of workers 50 cents “would in the weekly do wage to
more
start, us toward prosperity than wage
; cuts or price cuts. I’ edcra
Writ ing 111 the American
fi-nist published today, he argued
wage slash,■: “do not reduce selling
'prices in full proportion” arid “do reduce
tl,. to help the manufacturer
cost. or to furnish employment lor
more workers.
Comparatively few plant w,.. v -j)|
dose down because of high wage
rates, he said Lyeii though labor
rates may he high H.e.c arc many
that the labor costs per urnL may
reduced. KIT.cicnt management arc do
“Nor will price cuts justify
: reductions. Relatively purchasing the wage than
>r will lose more in
be gain.- by lower prices.”
The "otial thing, he added, is
jestablisi. faience which starts
ling.
In Court F’ight
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Ammo.M ated F’fcss Photo
l >dia Lilidgren. in private life Mrs.
Raoul (Joerze, brought a SNiO.OOO
soil against Otto II. Kalin. New York
banker and music patron, charging
Kahn broke an agreement to
burse her for that sum spent
operatic career.
PARTNER OF .1. P. MORGAN
STRESSES SOUNDNESS OP
AMERICAN BUSINESS
New York, Oct. (/!’) The “un¬
derlying soundness of the American
situation” was stressed by Thomas W.
Laniont, partner of J. P. Morgan and
Company, in a speech discussing busi¬
day. ness and employment, published to¬
“We have clearly ill sight Ihe elc
nienls of business and industrial re¬
covery," he said. “It remains for the
community to utili/.o these (dements.
Our people must regain confidence in
Uietnsclve.s, in the unedrlying si rengtli
of our American institutions.”
The dole, he eonlined, may he the
method of meeting unemployment in
some countries, “but il is not the
American way.”
Time, he said, will cure some of the
ills of the ciirrenl business depres¬
sion. Concerning unemployment, In
warned that unless “through private,
efforts, wo do out 1 share lo relieve tin
situation, we shall inevitably load all
the burden upon Hie stale.” This, in
said, is a situation not to be desired.
lie criticised rumor mongers who
(predict misfortune '“Unit never will
happen." Optimism was carried to
alisiiI'd heights two years ago, lie said,
while “now pessimism i being carried
to unreasoning and fantastic depths.”
“There is no royal /» , I lo recovery.
But in a stale of unreasonable appre¬
hension or fear it will never arrive. It
is high time once and for all for ih
lo lake counsel not ol our lours lint ol
our reason.”
Mr. La moot spoke at a meeting of
250 financiers and business leaders
coiisl itut.ing the general committee ol
the emergency unemployment relief
organizal ion.
LINDY REGARDING
DUCKING IN RIVER
AS MINOR MATTER
Hankow, China, Oct, (IV) Col,
(Thar If* A. Lindbergh fetfards the
ducking h<* and Mis. Lindbergh re¬
ceived with the capsizing ol’ their
monoplane in the flooded Yangtze
river yesterday as a minor matter.
Departing today with his wife and
the crippled plane aboard the British
aircraft hai,' Lindb'ergii' carrier laughed' Hermes oT for Shang
questions
about the inc........
“Thu piano was not seriously (lam
aged,” ho said. “We expect H to be
a simple mailer to I'opair her at.
Shanghai.” lo
Lindbergh rna.de anangemenG'
have the plane repaired and over
hauled at Shanghai preparatory to
continual ion of flights in the bar Last
| arid eventually hack to America.
.. Bl , yfjm| shanghai,” - lie said, “out
1 j plari- remain indefinite, although we
to visit Peiping when Hie plane
I is in good shape again.”
| yy||T|r 0p G BFCK
DIES IN ATLANTA
__
Atlanta, Oct 3. UP) Mrs.
l Bowlv Beck, wife of Gharles G. Beck,
j manager for the Southern Bell
I, .J ..... .. (',) m pany, died early today
p| ! . |vat( . sanitarium. '|
( Mr )a ,| |,,., rl health
fo) . I i)m , am) recently was op
„„ fa j| ( , ( | rally,
i , Mrs. Beck was a native of Virginia,
familv waK prominent in
- . l(r ., irs „ f MtaU . a long time,
^ ^e. h( , s( , nt fo Winchester,
\ former home, for funeral
iMerv.«-K and . . interment . ,
Since her marriage it years ago,
,n Georgia, removing lrovn Savannah ..... ’i
1° Atlanta 6 years ago when
Beck was stationed here,
In addition to her husband, she is
survived by her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Oeetfge W. Bowly, of Winchester, Va.,
a sister and three brothers.
PRICE FIVE CENTS
POLICE USE FORCE
)N GLASGOW CROWD
10 QUELL RIOTING
Most Vindictive Trouble in
Years Comes to Abrupt Halt
as Armed Officers Sweep
Streets of Cify Clean
PROTFSTFD
A0AINST DOLE CUTS
Battle Between Forces of Law
and Demonstrating Unenu
ployed Men Continues For
More Than Six Hours in City.
Glasruw, Scot land, Oct. 3. UP)—The
mi'sl vimlieitive rioting nml looting in
yciii-s, extending intermittently over
Iwo niglils and n day, came to a cli¬
max early Inday when police swept the
Heels clean and restored order.
The lint tie between jobless men
demonstrating against dole reductions
and the forces of the law raged for
more than six hours. An unidentified
of the rioters and several
liue were injured and upwards of 100
arrests were made.
Ihe melee began when police charg¬
ed a body of about 100 men who were
holding a manifestation outside the
jail in which John McGovern, labor
M. l\, and his lieutenants were being
held for Thursday night’s outbreak.
Almost simiiltaenously trouble started
in the Gallowgate, Glascow Cross and
other sections of the city.
Ear out numbered, the police tided
< ri fool and horseback to disperse the
mobs. They charged time and again
with loaded batons and the rioters re¬
plied with hammers, hatchets and
makeshift weapons of every deserip
t ion.
As fast as Ihe demonstrators were
driven off the main streets they dart¬
ed into alleys and formed for renew¬
ed attacks. Thrnupjiout the night
and early hours they broke into count¬
less shop and carried away great
slocks of food and other merchandise.
The damage was estimated at
thousands of pounds and the loss in
foodstuffs was considered incalcu¬
lable.
Scores of marauders were dragged
info police stations with blood stream¬
ing from their wounds.
CAST BEFORE JURORS
WILL BE HANDED BY BODY
I'll I RSI) A > I OK PROBE OF \( -
TIY1ITES IN ELECTION YEAR
Washington, Oct. it. UP) - Records
of Ihe stock market dealings of Bishop
Janie Gannon, Jr., will he presented
l<> the grand jury next Thursday when
ii begins an inquiry into charges that
the ehiirehmnn violated the corrupt
praeliees act in handling I92K election
funds.
John J. Wilson, assistant district
attorney, obtained the records yester¬
day in New York from Pie accounts of
Harry Goldhiirsl, stock broker with
whom Bishop Gannon dealt. Goldhurst
is now serving a prison term for mail
f nun l
I'(oilier Senator Frelinghuyscn, of
New Jersey, who gave $20,0110 to the
southern Methodist, leader to further
Ihe lullei'V campaign against Alfred
K. Smith, will he called before the
grand jury, as well as Frank P. Fe. gu
siiii, president of Pie Hudson County
National Bank n| Jersey City, and
Thomas P. Dowd, superintendent of
Ihe postal Telegraph Campony.
Complaints that Bishop Gannon vio¬
lated Ihe corrupt practices act by fail¬
ing to report all fund received and
spent by him in the 1928 election were
( utried over to Hie district attorney’s
by the senate campaign lunds
' 1 1 <<
LEFTY GROVE MAY
NOT PITCH AGAIN
IN WORLD SERIES
I’liiladclphia. Oct. 1/P) The pos¬
sibility arose today that the St. Louis
Cardinals have seen the last, of Lefty
Grove, left handed ace of the world
champion Athletics, as a starting
fdii'hei in the 1932 world series.
Grove has a bli.-ler on the index fin¬
ger of his hurling hand and today the
flesh was pink and raw.
Although Hie player: believe Grove
will lie held out for relief duty the
ri-MiHin.l..'- of the series the Big Lefty
,h |J lkK ' v,)1 ^ a)1
• ,K ‘ 2:J "% Athlet’cs
,. ,,e a " r !« hb ./
lean pitch i the opening game in Phtl- ;.
! uddphia Monday easy.'
TEN MILLION IN GOLD
New York, Oct. 3. UP)— The liner
Viledam sailed today with a cargo of
$10,011(1,000 iu gold consigned to Hol¬
land. Of the total $1,790,000 was
shipped New by the Guaranty Trust Co. of
York.
*•■»■!= FLIERS ARE DELAYED
jlayed prevented first from by motor taking trouble off by and adverse then
winds, Hugh Herndon, Jr., and Clyde
I’anghorn, American aviators, were
defeated here today in their effort to
get away for a trans-Pacific flighty
but made plans to take off tomorrow*