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El Paso Herald from El Paso, Texas • Page 1

Publication:
El Paso Heraldi
Location:
El Paso, Texas
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1
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PRICES Mexican gold, nacionales, 14.00 bid, no sales; foreign bar silver, copper, lead (N. 8.25; stocks, higher; Galveston cotton, spot, 12.40. EL PASO HERALD HOME EDITION WEATHER FORECAST El Paso and vicinity, partly cloudy, colder; New Mexico, unsettled, colder; Arizona, fair; west Texas, partly cloudy, colder.C sj 5 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS FORTY-SIXTH YEAH. Telegraphic Daily Over Four Leased Wires. EL PASO, TEXAS.

THURSDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 28, 1926 ff, The 24 -Hour Daily UAREZ police usually take care of Americans better than those Americans are disposed to take care of themselves ASl Around the The Associated Press (Night and Day) United Service. SINGLE COPIES, FIVE CENTS. 108 COLUMNS. 12 PAGES PROBE ARIZONA CAMPAIGN Feudists Riddle Road House VETERAN JUMPERS TAKE HONORS IN FORT BUSS SHOW ETERAN junipers held the spot- lil ight Thursday when the second contests in the annual 1st Division Horse Show at Fort Bliss were witnessed by a crowd estimated as more than 3000. and who have been winning blue ribbons for years, were teamed with and ridden by Lts.

Frierson, Bennett and Thomson, to take first honors in the Corinthian class. Each of the winning riders made point scores of i)8, nearly perfect marks. This was troop, 1st cavalry division; second, headquarters battalion, 82d field artillery; third, troop 8th cavalry. Best Artillery Sgt. Johnson.

7th cavalry; second, Pvt. Casey, 82d field artillery; third, Pvt. Kiernan, 82d field artillery. Best Wheel Draft Sgt. Ficka, service troop, 8th cavalry; second, Pvt.

Smith, service troop, 7th cavalry; third, Pvt. Johnson, service trocrp, 8th cavalry. Best Turned Out Enlisted Pvt. Crowe, 8th cav- BIG FIRMS COMING IN ASSOCIATION Texas Farm Bureau Cotton Outfit Handling Much Staple. LOCAL COTTON SHOULD BE MORE Field Man Visits Ft.

Hancock Meeting With County Farm Agent. easily the feature of the mornings airy; second. Pvt. Saneski, 7th cav exhibitions. In the Saddle Class, Miss Ada Averill, daughter of Col.

Averill, and a real of the 7th rode home a winner. Mrs. R. C. Creed on was second, with Mrs.

G. P. Cummings on third. One of the real sights of the show was presented when the radio sections of the 7th and 8th cavalry airy; third, Sgt. Norris, 8th cavalry.

Mule Pvt. Gray, service troop, 7th cavalry; second, Pvt. Schwartz, headquarters troop, 2d machine gun squadron; third. Pvt. Collier, troop machine gun squadron.

Corinthian 8th cavalry team (Lt. Thomson, Lt. Frierson and Lt. Bennett, riding and second, regiments passed before the Judges. 82(j field artillery; third, 5th cavalry! Both outfits sent black teams, with black harness after first place, but the entry of the aggregation was chosen.

It was one of i the prettiest exhibitions of the i day. The Summary. The morning summary follows: saddle horses. First. Miss Ada Averill, riding second, Mrs.

R. C. Creed, riding third. Mrs. G.

P. Cum- mings, riding Bario 7th cavalry; second 8th cavalry. Best lead draft Pvt. Christie, service troop, 7th cavalry; second. Pvt.

Martin, headquarters troop, 2d cavalry bridage; third. Pvt. Brown, division haedquarters troop. Recruit Pvt. Tairn, riding troop 7th cavalry; second, Pvt.

Bradley, riding troop 8tb cavalry; third. Pvt. Dickson, riding troop 2d machine gun squadron. Best Turned Out Charger First, Lt. E.

S. Thomson, riding 8th cavalry; second, Lt. Hearcy, riding the 2d machine gun squadron; third, Gen. E. B.

Winans, riding division headquarters. Light headquarters Jumping Events. Several jumping events, including classes, will feature the show Saturday, the last day. Polo matches will be played Friday at 10 a. m.

and 3 p. m. The show will open Saturday at 8:30 a. m. with judging of heavy weight charger and best light weight polo pony.

The third and last phase of the Remount Cup contest will be held at 9:10 a. m. This event, which consists of jumps over various stacles, is expected to appeal to spec- i tators. Polo Mounts. Group of three polo ponies will I be judged at 9:55 a.

m. This will i be followed with jumping events at 10:25 a. m. Then comes judging of enlisted mounts. The afternoon session, beginning at 2 p.

will open with selection of the best ordinance equipment. Then comes the three man hunt team followed by jumping events at 2:35 p. m. At 2:55 pair of hacks will be shown, followed by musical drill. The show will close with selec- I tion of the championship jumpers competed for by winners of previous jumping events.

Salvation Army Relieves Pitiable Case Of Distress RANDING burns, agony, sickness, I fray the expenses of transportation poverty misfortunes, faling and the man is left destitute by the like the sword of the illness of his wife, brave smile of a Salvation Army I Husband Tubucular. mother give these things the lie? In a bare shack at a local camp First the lash of a gasoline ex- ground, Mr. Wise is tossing beneath plosion, then the agony of waiting thin patched blankets and wondering a doctor, delay because of a nickel what tomorrow can bring of sorrow fee. and finally the hospital. which it has not already brought.

Heavy handed fortune marked When Mrs. Wise returns from the Mrs. Elizabeth Wise Oct. 21 for a jCity-County hospital, her pallet victim of its tortured bullying and lias shown no pity on her or those whose fate is linked with hers. Mr.

Wise is too weakened from sickness to work, having come here troni Amarillo in the hope of convalescing from tuberculosis. pallet must be the lloor as the house is possessed of only one cot and the draughty boards would mean death to the pale man who is shivering under the mean coverlets. Already the mother-in-law of Mrs. has sickened from the hard- big boys are now coming 1 into the Texas Farm Bureau Cotton association, which is handling 30 to 100 percent more cotton this year than ever said A. J.

field representative, who is assigned to work with irrigated cotton growers here. there was smooth sailing on the sea of cotton markets, the big boys said, need to join the association; get along all right. But now that they are being pinched along with the little independent grower, they are falling in line. will be a big help to cooperative marketing. Some small growers have said, I were as well fixed as the big fellow, I would get They know.

It has developed that where the little fellow owed hundreds of dollars, the big boy owes many thousands of dollars. association can in almost all reasonable cases, through arrangement with the federal intermediate credit bank, take care of local indebtedness to banks, and enable men that are involved to join the At Fort Hancock. Mr. Thompson with county farm agent B. S.

Trumbull and W. D. Outlaw visited farn.ers in the lower valley Wednesday afternoon and attended the Hudspeth county farm bureau meeting in Fort Hancock schoolhouse night. said Mr. Thompson, will appeal to local farmers most, through the intermediate credit bank we have arranged production credit.

On the same collateral, we can get as much from the federal bank as local banks will lend. advances now being made on cotton to be held are on the basis of ordinary Texas cotton, which is being scrapped in south and east Texas and is of quality. local cotton, which is nearly all good middling and of long staple, is sent in and graded, we will give an additional advance according to grade. cotton is entitled to more advance than ordinary Texas staple. It is pitiful that farmers have not been getting all the bonus that local cotton is entitled Better Organized.

are 50 percent better organized than they were 10 years said T. D. Lovelady, president be reached. Divorced Woman Incinerates Self Provo, Utah, Oct. 28 Making a living torch of herself, Mrs.

Jennie Lind Young, 26, is a suicide today protesting her innocence of the charges upon which her husband obtained a divorce two weeks ago. She leaves three children from three to eight years old. After writing a note to her former husband, declaring she was entirely innocent of the charges he had made, the woman piled a heap of papers on the floor of her modest home, stood in the center and applied a match. CHEST FUNDS REACH PEAK FOURTH DAY ARMEDTRUCK Echoes Of Life LIFE MACHINE GUN ARE IN USE EXISTS Rival Illinois Gangs At Pistol Points, Awaiting Battle. FOUR BUILDINGS SHOT UP BURNED National Guard Officers Continue Tour of Battleground.

U7EST FRANKFORT, 111., Oct. 28 i smoldering feud be- Total of $71,480 Report- tween the Birger and Shelton gangs i nf Williamsnn rniintv nn ed At Meeting. TWO GIFTS MADE OF $2500 EACH Goal of $193,486 Is Sought By Saturday Night. REARING the best report of any yet returned Community Chest today reached total subscriptions of $71,480. The goal is $193,486 by Saturday night.

Workers reported 122,036.81 at luncheon. Represented in this are two single gifts of $2500 1 ne r5lnI each. I by three recruits Wednesday, Total number of donations today tered activities around the leader 4sv rt-jio roadhouse, 12 miles (By THE ASSOC1ATEL PRESS). New effort to make people happier will be the principal aim of the National Broadcasting company formed to take over station WEAF. There will be no competition with newspapers, it is announced, and no cramming of education down the throats of people who do not want it.

of Williamson county flared up again early today when a band of some 15 men attacked a road house frequented by Birger men, riddled four dilapidated frame buildings with machine gun fire, and, finding no one to fight back, burned them to the ground. Marion, Oct. 28 Franklin and Saline counties today assumed a policy of watchful waiting, with two southern Illinois gangs almost at pistol points. The Charles Birger faction had declared that revenge was theirs; the Shelton crew had armed and was on guard. The death Monday night of two members of the Birger faction was the incident that fanned the feud to feverish heat.

Both camps held in readiness an armored truck and heavily armed men. The Birger faction, reinforced cen- was brought to 3313 L. M. team continues to lead with reported. I.

team is trailing second with $11,193.75. Among the teams, that of Mrs. W. L. Brown jumped to the lead today with total reported.

J. D. team maintained the lead in number of subscriptions with 559. George Emerson, campaign director, begged workers not to get discouraged. are now at the he said.

do anything but go up. Thursday, in all Community Chest drives, is the bleak day. You usually come up with only two more days to go and find you have less than half of the money needed as we are here. you will be surprised at the donations that pile in on the last day. see enough persons and we will reach the The goal of the chest workers is at least 10,000 subscribers.

Last year there were 7500 subscriptions. L. Simons, campaign chairman, said that if 10,000 subscriptions are obtained and the amounts all average as high as those turned in the first four days of the drive the goal will AUNT HET Bv ROBER1 QUILLEN. Everything but a few rags of bed ships which have come upon them clothing and dress was sold to de- since Thursday. By sleeping on the bare floor and half starving on the meager food they were able to procure, she has contracted a heavy cold that is bordering on pneu- raonia.

AH this bad come to pass before I mother Warren of the Salvation i Army learned of the case. Mother Warren Relieves. I Wise is still in the hospital and it will be a long time before she can undertake the responsibility of providing for the family. The husband is too ill to work for many months to come, while the mother-in-law is both sick and feeble. To the dingy shack, mother War- 5 ren came with her smile and her i words of encouragement.

She brought fuel and groceries and a promise that these would be provid- Mrs. Wise is able to work. somehow, just somehow, a home other than the dingy, camp shack, and beds will be provided for haven to the family flayed by says mother Warren. are too kind not to Smiling under her black bonnet, her eyes bright with love of the world, mother Warren has somehow the look of a prophet, whose smile shall bring good to pass. takes a lot good sound character to be as careful about toenails as you are about finger Copyright.

1926, Publishers Syndicate. of the Hudspeth county bureau. 10 years more they will be setting prices on their products, instead of asking the public what they will pay, and being at the mercy of speculators. should have a 40 percent reduction in cotton acreage next year. On that acreage taken from cotton the farmer should grow the feed and food that he needs at home and then grow truck for the market.

Farmers should organize so they will not have to accept prices dictated by other organized interests. interests who will not cooperate with the farmers will soon pass out of the Local produce jobbers have told county agent R. S. Trumbull, he said, that if they knew what produce would be available for the market, when, in what quantity and quality, they would govern their outside orders accordingly. Wants 10 Men.

John Viljoen, Fabens, is seeking 10 men. each to plant 10 acres of onions and market cooperatively, according to C. W. Bickley, Fabens banker. Mr.

Viljoen believes onions can be grown for fall harvest and command a better price than those harvested in summer, according to John Hansen. The visitors to the lower valley saw fields of cotton that will yield two bales to the acre that have not been touched by pickers this year, due to the scarcity of pickers. L. A. Ellis saying he is disappointed in his yield, estimated he would get 90 bales from 80 acres.

Bismark Dreyer said he got a bale to the acre the first time over some of his acreage and will get another bale to the acre when he picks again. Clyde Mebus, who entered the state irrigated cotton contest, got six bales off five acres the first picking and says he will get as much more. Women of Mt. Sinai Icmple. with Mrs.

Martin Zielonka as chairman, served the lunch today. Following is the list of women who served: Mesdames Erna Krakauer, Leo Gale, Max Borschow, I. B. Goodman, D. Pearlman, L.

Feiner. Sol I. Berg, Charles Auer, Nathan Borschow, B. P. Dubinski, A.

Nasits, S. Kahn. S. Katosky, Weinstein, G. W.

Young, R. Fessinger, John Cohen, Maurice Schwartz, F. Rosen, A. Roth, Max Mayer, C. Hirsch, May Move, J.

Winner. Eli G. Krupp, J. H. Bromberg, A.

Strelitz, Sam Borschow. L. Mandell. J. Shanbcrg, I.

Hirschberg, Ben Swatt and J. Talpis. Relief For Nassau West Palm Beach, Oct. 28 relief expedition was ordered by the national Red Cross to leave here today for Nassau in the Bahamas. Two doctors with medical supplies were included in the party.

Ship On Fire San Francisco, Oct 28 steam schooner Everett, of the Charles R. McCormick Steamship company, is on fire north of Point Gorda, 150 miles north of San Francisco, and is sending out repeated distress calls, the Federal Telegraph company reported. Gets Divorce Los Angeles, Oct. 28 Karl Dane, former carpenter, whose role of in Big brought him fame and fortune in the movies overnight, secured a divorce here Wednesday from Emma Dane. The big actor charged desertion, and Mrs.

Dane withdrew a cross complaint as the case was called, leaving Dane to secure his decree uncontested. west of here, while the Shelton gang, who have succeeded in keeping under cover, were reported to be centering around West City, a small town near Benton, in Franklin county. Battle Is Near. Birger was authority for the statement that a battle is only a matter of time. have a good story for you in a few he told newspaper men, we get bumped need have no fear.

Birger declared. Instructions to his followers were, have to be careful no innocent ones are Meanwhile, four officers of the Illinois national guard continued a tour of the territory, conferring with county and state officers. They have given no indication of how long they will remain in the district, although it is likely their visit will be extended past next election. Machine Guns Heard. The resort is two miles south of here and eight miles north of Marion.

It is generally believed to be owned by Charles Birger, gang leader. Mr. and Mrs. Louis A. French, who live in a brick cottage about 100 yards from the roadhouse group, said the raiders came from the woods behind the resort and departed ths same wav, having no automobiles.

The resort is about six miles across country from the reported strong- held of the Shelton brothers and their gang near Benton. were awakened by the noise of the machine guns and ran to a Mrs. French related. main building was in flames then, and the gang had surrounded the building nearest us and was shooting into it. I counted 15 men in the crowd and I believe more than 300 shots were Buns German A rms San Antonio, Texas, Oct.

28 (AP). will spend 1,300,000 pesos in Germany for arms, ammunition and agricultural machinery, consul general Alejandro P. Carrillo announced at his office here today on the strength of dispatches from his government. The contract, he said, has been placed through Celestino Gasea, special envoy of the Mexican government in Berlin. Pennsylvania Bars Baseball On Sunday Harrisburg, Oct.

28 The Dauphin county court today declared Sunday baseball in Pennsylvania worldly and a violation of the of 1794. The decision upholds the state in an action against the Philadelphia American league baseball club. The proceedings resulted from a game played August 22 between the Philadelphia Athletics and the Chicago White Sox. Yaquis Surrender Nogales, Oct. 28 reaching the Herald say that 281 Yaqui Indians, in arms against the Mexican government, unconditionally surrendreed to federal troops near Mapoli, slate of Sonora.

Not a shot was fired as the Indians, including men, women and children, met the force of soldiers face to face, the warriors laying down their arms in token of surrender. Lorenz Freed Springfield, 111., Oct. 28 Arthur Lorenz, former editor of a German language newspaper in Chicago, was today definitely freed of the necessity of serving a six prison sentence for libelling the American Legion when the state supreme court upheld a ruling of judge Eller of Chicago. from the dark is the ideal for which Leopold Stokowski, conductor of the Philadelphia symphony, is striving. He thinks that elimination of visual distraction would be a great improvement at concerts and he appeals for help in devising the method.

Agassiz, B. a new record for laying of eggs by a hen in a year. A white leghorn at the University of British Columbia has produced 348 and the year has still a few days to run. The previous record. 347, was held by an Australian hen.

Leninakan, the disastrous quake last Friday 130 operations by candle light have been performed by Dr. Walter Sisson of Wausson, Ohio, assisted by Mrs. Sisson, and Miss Edna Steiger of Williamsport, Pa. president Coolidge goes to sea he reads about wars and the sea. Only such hooks are in the library.

New 'N George Bernard Shaw ever should have the misfortune to be a widower, he may produce some interesting reading. In count new book on marriage, G. B. S. writes: man dare write the truth of marriage while his wife lives unless he hates her.

I Atlantic City, N. J. Nature has helped Uncle Sam uncover some clever moonshiners. They built a big still in the woods and camouflaged it by painting boughs and green leaves over it. Came autumn colors on the surrounding foliage and a $300,000 plant was raided.

lord bishop of London disagrees with sundry hundreds of thousands who yell themselves hoarse Saturday afternoons. He thinks American football is Uses Auto Engine For Power; Makes Gold Mining Pay gACRAMENTO, 28 mining is still profitable in California. Using a dilapidated automobile engine for power, W. D. Wilson extracted S1444 worth of gold in four days.

claim is known as the Rainbow' Mine and is located in the Indian creek section of the Mother Lode region. ON MARS SAYS PHILIP FOX CITY AGOG ON EVE OF RACE MEET MO. SENATOR TO CONDUCT QUIZ SOON Reed Orders Investigation of Senatorial Funds. Professor Infers That Animal Must Be Something Like Seal. MARS MESSAGE Englishman Pays 72 Cents To Radio Telegram To Martians.

Many Visitors Already Here For Fall Racing Season In Juarez. SEVEN EVENTS ON CARD Inaugural Handicap Will Be Feature of Opening Day Program. PASO is taking on a festive air on the eve of the opening of the fall meeting of the Jockey Club Juarez, which gets under way Saturday with a card of seven races. There already are several thousand visitors here for the meeting. WTith more than 500 horses already at the track and more coming, the army of workers connected with the stable amphibi- and track also reaches a high figure.

1 ous, something like our seal, enab-; With nine entries for the inaugural ling it to swim along with the handicap, the opening day's feature streams of icy waters melted from in before noon Thursday, indications the snowcaps. are that a corking field will face Of course, nobody has seen evi-' starter Jarvis in the top purse num- HICAGO, 111., Oct. 28 A certainty that vegetable life exists on Mars from which animal life may be inferred, is expressed by Prof. Philip Fox, head of the Dearborn observatory of Northwestern university. seems certain that vegetable life exists on Mars, and where vegetable life exists, animal life is certain to conditions being he said.

Martian animal, however, Is probably a fur-bearing equipped by nature to live in the wastes around the polar snow caps. It must be of necessity quite small to be able to migrate rapidly with the changing seasons. Something Like Seal. probably would be dences of animal life, and with our present instruments there is no likelihood that our generation ever will her of the day. This race carries $800 as the purse and will bring out OREGON INQUIRY WILL END TODAY Contributions To Election Expense Under Scrutiny.

CT. LOUIS, Oct. 28 Investigation of the senatorial campaign in Arizona was ordered today by senator Democrat, Missouri, chairman of the senate campaign funds committee. McNary In Charge. Senator McNary, Republican, Oregon, now conducting an inquiry into the campaign in his own state, was asked to proceed to Arizona as soon as his present work is concluded.

Senator Camerorn, Republican nominee for reelection in Arizona, asked for an inquiry, charging that 8100,000 had been contributed by copper and hydroelectric power interests for use against him in the present campaign. Ashurst Denies. After reading senator telegram, senator Reed placed into the record a telegram from senator Ashurst, Democrat, Arizona, saying that the Cameron charges were I and and stating that there were evdences that large sums were being used in senator campaign. Still another telegram, from W. L.

Barnum, Democratic national mitteeman from Arizona, was placed in the record. This asked for an in- vestigation of 1920 cam- aign, charging the expenditure of large sums of money. Explaining that the committee had the best horses at the track. Among Observation of the planet was j.those nominated Thursday morning thwarted Wednesday night by rain were Purl, Arravan. Zing, Sweepster, and dense clouds.

Beap, Dr. Larrabee, Claxon, Bego- Message To Mars. I nia, and Mulhull. I ondon Eng Oct 28 Presiding judge Primrose said return for a navmeiit of 72 cents Thursday morning that he looked committee has not been called to it the British government has done its Kor fine field to break the opening until this time. Of course, it is im- 1 day racing in the feature event, possible for this committee at this Entries will be accepted all day.

No Passports. Manuel M. Limon. chief of Juarez immigration inspectors, received a best to send a message to Mars Gravity was maintained by the officials of the central radio office Wednesday night when Dr. Manfield Robinson handed in with a business- Unusual But True (By United News) New Brunswick, N.

fourth of the freshman class at Rutgers college failed to pass in an intelligence test, according to dean Walter T. Marvin, but a freshman, Arnold Snow, of New Brunswick, helped brinsr up the general average by going over the mark and scoring 107 per cent. materia! result of the debate between Sir Arthur Holbrook, a Conservative, and Dr. Alfred Salter, a Laborite, who charged that members were frequently drunk in the house of commons, has been new drink at the house bar. The cocktail is called the and and is said to have an immediate kick but slight after-effects.

New York. Diney Curley closed his work as apartment house janitor by putting a piece of poisoned bread on the floor and depositing his store teeth on the dressing table in the janitorial boudoir. Then he went to bed breathing a little prayer that that dratted rat would take the bread. When he woke up the rat had not only taken the bread but also the set of false teeth. Birmingham, months ago traffic officer, Sidney C.

Holder was put to the unpleasant task of arresting Mrs. W. F. Aldrich, the widow' of a former congressman and reputedly one of the wealthiest women in Alabama. Firends of the widow learned Tuesday that she was on her way to New York with the their honeymoon.

Brooklyn, N. he is held in the county 'jail on charges of first degree murder, $1.65 is still $1.65 to Chin Sing. A fellow prisoner pledged his hat to the Chinaman in return for a loan of $1.65. Then the borrower, Herbert Phillips, was released from custody but he had to go hatless until his attorney had visited cell and duly turned over a dollar bill, six dimes and a nickel. Portland, a control fuse blew out on a street car here, Mrs.

Peter Hoffman became so frightened she leaped out of a She suffered a fractured shoulder. like seriousness a message for Mars, telegram Thursday from Mexico City some 42,600,000 miles distant, and asked the rate. message was prefixed with thrge which Dr. Robinson said was the call sign for Mars, lt was composed of two words, strictions will be removed and that tia The receiving clerk pedestrians will be allowed to cross asked what the language was, and to Juarez over the Santa Fe street authorizing him to grant the same courtesies extended El Pasoans and visitors, starting Saturday, as last spring during the race meeting. This means that all passport re- no authority to investigate a campaign of six years ago, senator Reed said: rather astonishing that, if large sums have been spent in primary elections, the attention of the late date to go into all of the matters now being called to its bridge.

They will not be allowed to walk back to the United States over the Stanton street bridge. William P. Kvne, general manager of the track and I. L. Hildenbrandt, resident manager, have completed all the details for the opening of the fall season.

Overnight entries will be available early Friday morning. Dr. Robinson replied, known 36 Cents a Word. The message was accepted by the clerk for transmission by Great most powerful radio station, Hilinorton. The sender was charged the long distance ship rate, equivalent to 36 cents a word.

The clerk informed Dr. Robinson that be could not guarantee ery, but the doctor agreed to take the risk, the message as no reply has been received. Dr. The charge has been made here in Robinson, who is versed in psychical a speech by Joseph Jones, secretary research, claims he has previously cf the Yorkshire association had psychical communication with and a member of the official min- Portland, Oct. 28 of the Republican senatorial primary campaign in Oregon probably will be wound up today.

With testimony now limited to the bearing on the specific charge that the Portland Electric Power company contributed 835,000 to the Portland Oregonian to be used in support of Frederick Steiwer, party nominee for the United States senate, senator Charles L. McNary, who is conducting the hearing, expected to move on to Chicago tonight. He is to confer with other members of the senate committee investigating campaign fuuds in various states. The charge that was paid by the power company to the newspaper to be used in Steiwers behalf Charges Mon eu Was he doctor agreed to take nni fjjiiijj iif made by George Putnam, news- lt is not known whether IsUHimUiUblS publisher. Putnam telegrab- ge reached its destination Rotherham.

Oct. 28 ed the charge to Dnited States sen- the Martians. Santa Fe Bridge Is Opened To Juarez Bound Pedestrians For the first time in two months, pedestrians were crossing the Santa Fe street bridge to Juarez Thursday morning as a result of an order received by Juarez immigration au- ers' delegation which recently visited the United States, that the hundreds of thousands of dollars collected in America by supposed comrades, ostensibly for the relief of the striking British miners, was actually employed in paying communist propagandists in the mining area. Mr. Jones said that only $1000 of all the money collected by these men reached the federation.

He added that when the coal strike is thorities Wednesday lifting all pass- settled he intends to devote his en- port requirements during the fall energy to rooting out corn- racing meet in Juarez. mumsin in the coal fields. The Santa Fe bridge has been closed to Juarez bound traffic since a recent visit to Juarez by Fernando Felix, immigration inspector from Mexico City. Although passport regulations have been in effect in Juarez since the close of the spring racing meet, immigration officers have not been enforcing the order, which is officially removed. No one will be allowed to cross back to El Paso over the Stanton street bridge, El Paso customs collector Tom P.

Gable said. This ge to Dnited States senator James A. Reed, chairman of the committee investigating campaigns. It was testified at the hearing Wednesday by two witnesses that Putnam obtained his information from Walter Hayes, vice president of the National Surety company of New York, and formel private secretary t'o the late president elt. Dispatches from Washington Wednesday night quoted Hayes as denying all knowledge of any such contribution.

Emphatic denial that or any other sum was paid to the Oregonian for any purpose whatsoever was entered by Edgar B. Piper, editor of the newspaper, who testified Wednesday. Walter H. Case, by two votes to one bridge has never been open for traf- fic to El Paso. I Sheriff Orndorff friends are su- Orndorff Backers Say Double Case Vote ven money was being offered strong machines against them.

Thev day that sheriff Seth Orndorff have the habit of Democrats who go will beat his Republican opponent, to the polls to vote for a Democrat Train Bulletin reported on time All trains are Thursday. Today-Tomorrow El Calendar TODAY. Horse show, Fort Bliss, 7:30 a. m. and 2 p.

m. Community Chest luncheon, Y. W. C. 12:15 p.

m. Rotary club, Y. W. C. 12:15 p.

m. club. Hotel Paso del Norte, 12:15 p. m. TOMORROW.

Polo, Fort Bliss, 10 a. m. and 3 p. m. Boxing, Gyp Williams vs.

Bobbie Rendley, National Guard armory, 8:15 p. m. Community Chest luncheon, Y. W. C.

12:15 p. m. no matter who he is to overcome and they have to stir up lcthargic Dem, voters to the point where premely contident of his election they will go to the polls and vote for by an overwhelming majority. They a Republican, point out that he has both the county and city machine backing him. Count on Veterans.

II Opposed to In a general election it is the ma- on enemies of Mr. Orndorff to add chines that get out the vote and that up many votes for their candidate, show results. 1 hey expect to poll the war veterans It almost 100 per cent because of Mr. The machine leaders merely have war record. Though over the to send out instructions for all con- draft age, he volunteered during the troled voters to go to the polls and World went overseas and was it elevated to the rank of captain.

1 hose votes count up in solid In addition to these things, Mr. blocks. Opposed to this the Republi- Case is making a whirlwind cam- cans have no machine. They must paign, talking on street cars, speak- depend on their handful of loyal ing before labor organizations and Republicans plus what Democrtaic industrial plant workers and ringing votes they can pull. The Democrats, who feel it their duty to vote the ticket because of habit and for political reasons, usually stay away from the polls, the Democratic leaders point out.

So the Republicans are handicapped three ways. They have two doorbells. He is putting up a fight for the office that is attracting the admiration of voters, some of whom will vote for him just because of his scrappy campaign. He is scoring another hit by leaving all mud out of his campaign..

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