The Omaha Daily Bee VOL. 51 NO. 71. f Ui4 M ftMleu MtllN ! !. IMS. (I OMAHA. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 8. 1921. l II tM'l. O.M M4. I?M. 0M, Mil. til wtr. J.SJ It M WX MM Ui mi. THREE CENTS 0 m a ha ii Is Chosen by Sinn Fein Invited To Inverness Hard Fight Expected On Tax Bill 'Most Perfect Woman J Sends For Young Apollo of Omaha He's Better Off On Board ICocn-lfil! IKl. Br 1U CblflM Trikos.! Film Venus ( Audrey Munson Put Andre Delacroix, Omaha's "Perfect Man," Among Five, One Of Whom She'll Marry. Selection MadeFrom 250 Omaha's "perfect man," Andre Delacroix, has been named ti one of a group of five candidate but of a field of 250 applicant in a nation wide quest for the hand and heart of Audrey Munson, famous model and movie star of Syracuse, N. Y. A letter received yesterday morn ing by Delacroix, and also inde pendent telegraphic information from Syracuse, brought the new of the success of the Omaha man in J:e first elimination contest. Delacroix expect to journey to Syracuse a soon as his preset, t mo tion picture contract will permit. Youth Only Drawback. The following telegraphic infor mation was received yesterday :norning from Syracuse: "Audrey Munson, the world's most perfect woman, who recently announced she was willing to marry i:ny physically perfect man, has f elected Andre Delacroix of Omaha iif. one of the five possibilities, from among 250 applicants. Site has invited Mr. Delacroix to come to yracuse to meet her and he has : consented to do so. The only drawback to the Omaha man is his youth. Miss Munson says. "But he writes the dearest letters you ever realf," Miss Munson said in an interview Tuesday, "and he insists he intends to sec me and begged hie, to promise him not to , become engaged to any one. else until after our meeting. So I am counting him among the five." Same as Hermes Clayton Bridgewatcr of Okla homa City is the second man in the contest. He is a business nwn and wrote that his measurements arc . identical with those- of Hermes of Praxiteles. He says he has a tine car and could give a girl everything she desired. The third is Capt Arthur C. Griffin of Tucson, Ariz., who has two "little girls and wants Miss Munson to act as their mother. The fourth is Cleve R. Wood of Dallas, Tex., world veteran cowboy and now night jailor of the Dallas county jail. , The fifth is Capt; Wal ter Wanderwelly of Chicago, globe trotter, who ha made seven trips around the -world and want Miss Munson to' accompany him on .-his next trip, ' - In her letter to Mr. DcLcroix, Miss Munson wrote s ; . . , ,'T enter you in thoblue ribbon class,' meaning that the Omaha man is in the first division of five out of a field of 250. Mr. Delacroix was visibly elated (Turn to Vaf Tw Column STn.) No Trace Is Found Of Est Warden Believes Roy Gard ner Still Hiding in .. Woods. Tacoina, ; Wash.. Sept, 7. Roy Gardner, mail robber, who escaped Monday from McNeil Island federal prison," is concealed in the under brush of a densely-wooded belt on t'.'.s island, according to the belief of W arden ThomasMaIoney, who has maintained vigilant patrol about (he tract since the . prison break. Yard by yard prison guards are beating over the area which is thought to be the fugitive's refuge. There arc many deep crevices and al : some places the underbrush scarcely is penetrable. Springs are plentiful and prison authorties point ed out Gardner might be able to re main there undetected for days. A prison library card was found near the road which marks the ' t - .1 - T1.a authorities consider it unlikely that the card was dropped under .any but suspicious circumstances, as the spot is remote from the prison and no prisoner has' been ovr the road since a jail break 15 years ago. The road is little frequented by prison guards, giving strength, it was said, to the supposition the card may have been dropped by Gardner. Court Holds Man Entitled To Damages for Tarring St. Louis. Sept. 7. The United States circuit court of appeals in a decision field in federal court, held that John Meints, a contractor of . Luverne, Minn., was entitled to re cover damages from a number of neighbors who. in August. 1918. tarred and feathered him because of charges he was disloyal and drove ' him into South Dakota. - In the Minnesota federal district court, a damage suit by Meints gainst several neighbors resulted in their favor. The present decision reverses that finding and remands the case for a new trial. Corporation Advances $lj?00,b00 to Cotton Men Washington, Sept'7. An agree ment to advance $1,200,000 to a cot ton growers' association in Ari arona for the purpose of financing the , tsounced by the war finance corpora-. tion. The corporation also an- noonced that 'it had agreed to make a further advance of $150,000 to a co-opetaiire association m lautonm for thi purpose ot assisting in fi- tiancing the exportation of canned D : 2l Audrey Hvuxsorvi Nebraska Given Three Assistant XL S. Attorneys Kinder to Be ' Assisted By Pratt, Stewart and Lane in Enforcement of Fed eral Laws. By E. C. SNYDER. Wiishlliflun CurmiwnilfBt Oniuh B, Washingtoii,' Sept. 7. Kcorgan- iation in policy and personnel of the cflice of the United States district attorney in Omaha took definite shape today at a conferenci between District Attorney', J. C. Kinsler and Assistant Attorneys General Guy D. Gotl and Rush Holland. One im portant result of the corffcreote was that there will be three assistant United States attorneys for Nebraska instead of two as heretofore. The assistants were decided upon at" the meeting today. Thr.y are George W. Pratt of Omaha, Don W. Stewart and A. W. Lane of Lincoln. Mr. -Lane was deputy distrirt attor ney during the incumbency of Frank Howell.-' as attorney. . Attorney General Daughertjv con fined to his home by a slight illness, did not participate in the meeting, but at a brief interview 'Mr? Kltfsle'r had with him last night the attor ney general assured hiin of hearty approval of his policies. 'Mr. Kins ler -left .-Washington tonight in a happy frame of mind over the first steps taken tor reorganization ot Ins oilice. - - :. . r "Everything is now arranged for efficient enforcement of law in Ne braska," said Mr'. Kinsler- upon leav ing the Department of Justice, "and the prospects are convincingly bright for a sure and steady decrease in law violations, there, . especially in the violations of the narcotic law, the prohibition law, the' interstate automobile theft law- and the laws to prevent using the mails for pur poses of fraud." Mr. Kinsler is returning home by way of New York and expects to be in Omaha Monday. - Italian Mountain Village i v Is Destroyed By Flames . Rome. Sept. 7. By The Asso ciated Press.) The mountain vil lage of Molteno near Trent, in the Italian Tyrol, has been destroyed by fire. Seven hundred persons were made homeless. The flames was spread by a chill wind, which added to the-discomfort of the women and children, who already had suffered much from ex posure to the frigid, mountain air. Tents and other relief materials have been sent to the scene by the government, v - : University Students Cross Lake Michigan in Rowboat Benton Harbor, Mich., -Sept. 7. Several university students, life guards at the Rogers park beach, Chicago, who left at 6:15 a. m., Tuesday in a rowboat,1 reached St Joseph, Micli at 3:30 a. m. today in tiptop condition. The 6S-mile trip across Lake Michigan was made in 11 hours and la minutes. . JANE DONO HUE would have given her life to cross the ranch' of The Doves and The Sea. But no strangers, except dead ones, had ever traversed The Road of Hate By Clark Saxby A BLUE RIBBON atery Im Next Sunday s Bit cui J k CY TV - Tail i- Andre Delacroix. T 14 Mingo Miners Again on Trial ' For 1920 Battle Names of Sid Hatfield and Ed Chambers, Recently Mur dered, Omitted From List of Defendants. Williamson, W. Ya., Sept. 1. Two names that figured prominently early this year in one of Mingo county's most protracted circuit court cases those of Sid Hatfield and Ed (Cham bers were omitted today when the roll of defendants was called at the opening of the second trial of a group of men from Matewan, charged with complicity in the killing of seven pri vate detectives in that. town May 19, 1920. , . . Hatfield and Chambers were shot and killed a few weeks ago on the McDowell county court house steps at Welch. In connection with their kdeaths three men, including C. E. Lively, principal witness for the prosecution in the first Matewan case, were arrested and held n $10,000 bail each. ' Todav 14 men went to trial on an indictment charging complicity in the killing of W. J. Ferguson, one of the private asistat-T'hey' are Seece and name cnanmers, nrcn vvnnams, Fred Burgraff, Doug and Ben Mounts. William Bowser Coleman, William Bowman, James and Clare Overstreet, Vanelay ami Lee L.oier, Jess Boyd and Charles Kiser. ine aeienaams in int urai uwi were acquitted. Mai. Torrh Davis, Governor Alor- o-an's nir!onal reoresentative to en force martial law in - Mingo county,. has announced that state forces will control the situation arouncTthe court house during the trials. "None but court officials, jurors, witnesses, law yers and duly accredited representa tives of the press will be admitted to the court room, he stated, and "all persons entering the court room will be made to give conclusive evidence that they carry no weapons of any kind." - Ex-Senator Beveridge " May Be Appointed New U. S. Envoy to Germany Washington. Sent.' 7. -Former Senator Albert T. Beveridge of In diana may be appointed ambassador to Germany, according to political gossip. ' - No confirmation of the report was obtainable at the White House, where- it was stated that an ambas sador to Germany will not be se lected: until after the Berlin peace treaty is ratified. It is also not unlikely that when the peace is pro claimed a charee d'affaires will be accredited toiBerlin, giving the presi- still further time m which to select an ambassador. Mr. Harding is known to desire to reward Jiins wring ukski, uic American commissioner in Berlin, for his work there including the. negotiations of the peace treaty and Mr. Dresel not improbably will be the American charge d'affaires. Demonstration of Cork "Workers Ends Suddenly Cnrl- Scot. 7. (By The Assosi- ated Press.) A demonstration by the transport workers union against the harbor board, because of a re fusal of the board to aji'horize a minimum wage for the workers, ended as suddenly as , it arose by reference of the dispute to an arbi tration conference. On the confer ence there will be representatives of the harbor board and tiie trans port workers. It is understood that the men will resume -work immediately. 300 Moplahs Convicted Calicut, - India. Sept 7. More than 300 Moplahs, who -were ar rested at Tanura and elsewhere for! participation in the recent rising, I ihave been convicted bv . court-mar tial of looting and other offenses. They were sentenced to two years at hard labor tor each offense. Methodist Minister. -' Indicted for Murder Birmingham, Ala., Sept. 7. Rev. E. R. Stephenson, Methodist minis ter, was -indicted for murder in the' second degree by the grand jury in connection with the killir.g of father James E. Coj-k, Catholic priest, on August 11, - J Yalera Aled to Send Di'lrgutc to Meet BritUh Cabinet in Scotland on September 20. One Condition Imposed By Tb AoMtrtntxl I'm. London, Sept. 8. The I'ritish cab. ii:ct hat invited Mr. Dc Vakra to end delegate to a conference with the cabinet minister at Inverness on .Siptember 20, according to the Daily ,Mail' Inverness correspondent, who add "Only one condition. U 'imposed. ramcly, the understanding tl.at Ire land must remain within the cm, pire." Decision Reached. Inverness, Scotland. Spt. 7. A decision which may mean peace or war with Ireland was taken by the British cabinet at an all-important meeting today. The government tculv to Eamonn Dc Yalcra, Irish republican leader, unanimously ap Droved by the ministers, is being car ried to Dublin by Robert C Barton, the Sinn Iein courier who brought the Dail Eireann's message to l re niier Lloyd George and who was brought into the council chamber while the council was in session. The natine of the government's decision has not been made known, but it is not necessary to await its publication tomorrow to realize an iiunortant step forward has been taken. . Committee Appointed. Directly after the ministers had reached their decision came the an nounccment that "a committee con sisting of the ministers now in Scot land has been appointed with full powers to deal -with the situation the moment Mr. Dc Valcra's answer arrives.'' The committee comprises the premier, - Austen Chamberlain, Earl Curzon. Sir Laming VVorthington Evans, Winston Spencer Churchill, Edward Shortt, Robert ' Munroe, Lord Birkenhead, Sir Hamar Green wood and Sir Robert Stevenson Home. This is taken to mean that thd government has appointed the com mittee of ministers to meet the Iris', plenipotentiaries, should Mr. ' Dc- Valera be ready to proceed. It is contended that if, in the opinion oi the cabinet, a. rupture was likely to follows today's- tiecfstdn, ""lt wvould nardly be necessary to appoint a cabinet committee. - ' Hope to Avoid Break. . 5 Dublin. Sept. 7. Activity is ao- parent in moderate Irish circles to prevent - a rupture . of negotiations and the rejection of the terms until the significance of Premier Lloyd George's offer is definitely ascer tained. Sir ; Horace Plunketf. who was chairman of the Dublin conven tion, and Captain - Harrison, chair man of the dominion league, ad dressed a joint letter to Eamonn De Valera and his cabinet, saying: "Ireland would be well advised to accept dominion status, if it implies, as we believe it must, full legislative and executive economic independ ence and imperial relationship, func tioning as to policy and action by co-operation founded, on mutual agreement arrived at by consent and carrying with it direct representation-in the imperial, conference and the league of nations. "It would reasonably follow that true acceptance by solemn treaty of dominion status . by Ireland would be accompanied by extension of concurrent agreements to regulate co-operation between Ireland and other units of the empire in - all necessary matters." They argue that the premier of fered dominion -status in express terms, subject to six conditions, which appeared to indicate there were Questions that might be ad justed by agreement. , They voice the belief that Mr-. De Valera must have some special information- derived from his confer ences with Mr. Lloyd George and they invite him to take the public into his confidence" -- They show they believe thalf on the documents made public dominion status for Ireland can be obtained and are anxious to know the grounds for Mr. De Valera's contrary opin ion. . Southern Beauties Hit By Silk Hose Famine savannah, ua., Sept. . With a high demand for only the best, the women of this city are today facing the greatest shortage in silk stock ings in local history, according to merchants who claim strike condi tions in the north make it impos sible to secure enough silk hose to meet the increasing demand, i Merchants say the women do- not care for cotton or lisle thread, but demand full-fashioned silk. They claim the mock fashion hose will not lo because of baggy qualities en countered about the can. The shortage particularly applies to white hose. Local women do cot favor the half hose, it is claimed. Methodists Send Messages of Cood Will to King and U. S. London.-Sept. 7. (By The Asso ciated Press.) Greetings to Presi dent Harding and King George, voicing a hope for world peace, were sent today by the world's con ference of Methodists in session here. In the address , to the king the conference said: "Especially is this world's confer ence united with your majesty in your earnest desire that the efforts j now making for peace and content ment in Ireland may meet with early and complete success." J Use of All Funds For University Strongly Urged . . - Appeal Will Be Made to Gov ernor Today to Exclude Re- , gents' From Rule. Govern ing Expending Agencies. Lincoln, Sept. (SpcciaDq-rH. IL-" Baidridge -tr Ofiilliratid"'!:; . Hainer of Lincoln will assist Dean W. A. Seavey in attempting to get a jpceial dispensation for the. univer sity regents, which will exclude then from the nil recently inaugurated that all expendinir agencies of tliei state must set aside 111 per cent of their Appropriations as a , reserve fund in an effort to keep away from deficiency appropriations winch m past years have run into, the hun dreds of thousands of dollars. Baldridge and ' Hainer conferred with Phil Bross, secretary" of finance and revenue, and Mason Wheeler, assistant attorney general, in regard to details of the proposed petition for mandamus to be filed, probably in the supreme court, to compel Governor McKelvic to turn over a. appropriations- to the university. A conference between opposing at torney? and Governor McKelvie is scheduled for Saturday morning jr. the governor's office, when an cf fort will be made to. reach , an amicable agreement as to the me thods to be used in ascertaining whether the legislature had ariv right to authorize the governor to guard against deficiency appropria tions by forcing expending agencies to outline their proposed expendi tures in advance, tell just what th-. expenditures are proposed' for and set aside 10 per cent for emergen cies. ' - ' " ' ' ' . Many Women to Help Nurses' Drive for Funds Seven - hundred women will help the Visiting Nurses' association in the sale of tags today. ' . Women will be stationed on every prominent corner in the city and Will solicit sales from all passersby. ' ! The women are offering their. services free in order to 'assist the association in its ' annual ' tag day sale to raise funds to carry on'-the work of the organization the com ing year. - Stock of Grand Trunk Road , Held Worthless By Board Ottawa. Sept. 7. The common and preferred stock of the Grand Trunk railway is worth nothing n the opinion of the majority of an ar bitration board appointed to deter mine what the dominion government should pav stockholders because of Its purchase of the system. Ihe de cision was given by Sir Walter cas sels, chairman of the board end Sir Thomas White, representative .of the government. William H. Taft. the othei" mem ber of the board, who heard . argu ments in the matter before becoming chief "justice of the United States, dissents. He represented the com pany. v' Judge Munger to Visit President Harding Today Washington, Sept. 7. (Special Telegram.) Judge Munger of Lin coln visited' the Department of Jus tice today and conferred with As sistant Attorney General Goff in the absence of Attorney Genera! Daugh- erty. Tomorrow, accompanied by Congressman Rfavis, Judge Munger vri'.l be received bv the president at the White Hooso '- x , Uncle Sam Approves Bobbed Hair; Draws Line at Powder Puffs Chicago, Sept. 7. Bobbed hair and short skirts have received Uncle Sam's approval in the federal board for vocational training here, but Col. Charles R. Forbes, the director, drew the line on powdered noses, loafing or social calls during office hours. "We are anything you please, girls," he said. "Be comfortable, but dqji't be salary slackers, because there arc hundreds of cases of dis abled men awaiting your attention. Aud wheia. crippled . .doughboy comes in here, smile his discourage ment away."" . Missing Denver Teller Located Father of Edwin F. Morse, Accused of $78,000 Theft, Gives Detectives Clue. Denver,' Colo., . Sept. 7. Definite information; was received here to day by Leonard De Lue, head of a detective agency, he announced,' that Edwin F, Morse, former head teller of the International Trust company here, who rs charged in a federal warrant with having robbed that in stitution of about $78,000 and who disappeared about August IS, is in Mexico City.. Jims ' information, according to Mr. De Lue, came from Morse's father, Dr. George O. Morse, 359 Vernon avenue, . Los Angeles, Cat. Mr. De Lue said that as a result ot communications with Dr. Morse he had learned the son's whereabout and that he was in the Mexican cap ital yesterday. , Mr. De Lue said the young man's father declared . his son had ob tained only about $15,000 of the money he is charged with having taken and thahc was the "dupe" oi two other men whose names havi not been ascertained, the detec' - said. Officials of the International Trust- company'today admitted ne gotiations had been carried c-n witn Dr. Morse, in an effort to obtain the surrender of his son. Of fiders Unable to Locate Convicted Postal Robbers Toledo, O., Sept. - 7. With of ficers searching the country near Toledo for the three convicted post office robbers who escaped from 'the county jail, Federal Judge J. M. Killits issued an order barr ng other postoffice prisoners held in the jail from receiving visitors. No trace of the three men, Toe Urbaytis, Charles Schultz and, George Lewis, alias Rogers, who made -their escape Montlay, had been found. - Forty Persons Injured In Chicago Tram Wreck Chicago, Sept. 7. More than 40 persons were injured wten a street car jumped the track and almost plunged over a 40-foot viaduct. It was checked only by a steel guard rail which caved in the front vesti bule of the car. There were over 80 persons in the car. The passen gers became panic-stricken and many were injured in the effort to escape. Others were cut by glass. Election in Indiana Indianapolis, Ind., Sept 7. Early scattered returns received from over, the state in the special election held yesterday to vote on the 13 pro posed amendments to the state con stitution indicated that the two pro posed tax amendments, including a state income tax, were defeated and that amendment Xo. 1, which will prohibit aliens from voting until naturalized, had --carried. i Attendance ai Fair Continues To Show Decline Management Looks to Omaha To Swell Crowds Today; Crime Wave Sweeps ' The City. : ;.-Lmco1ri, 'Xeb.,'Sept. 7. (Special.) The slump In attendance at the state fair continued today when but 53,334 people pasted through tlie turnstiles.. Last year the attendance vas -61,427. - - ' The iair management Ita? liopes cf increased attendance : tomorrow, Omaha Day." ' Band is Popular. The boys' industrial school ban'd of Kearney is attracting considerable attention. Ihe youthful musicians are being quartered in the chapel at the insane hospital. , ronce reported a man slugged, a midnight robbery netting the burglars $2,000 and' the "lifting" of a $412 war risk check from a citizen of Lincoln cu the fair grounds. Criminals Are Busy. Fred Kennedy, 30, Springfield, in., was -lound slugged and uncon scious at the rear of a- hore barn. iuesday night After he recovered consciousness. he could remember nothing of the attack. '. Burglars broke into the Gcorire H Holden home, and stole $2,000 worth ot jewelry and clothine. While G. H, Nobe was looking at tne exnimts someone supped a hand into his pocket and extracted a $412 war risk check. , , , r W. G. Jamison, former pres ident of the Colorado Farm bureau. spoke to farmers in the auditorium. complimented work ot the agricul tural piocs in Washington and a so relief measures inaugurated tor the farmers' at the last session of the Nebraska legislature. . Rail and Water Carriers , Authorized to Cut Rates Washington, Sept. 7. -Rail and water carriers were authorized by the Interstate Commerce commis sion today to reduce rateson freight from the Atlantic coast to Texas points by way of Galveston. The commission thereby reversed, its former decision in the case in which it held that the reductions proposed by the Mallory and Morgan lines were not justified except in certain particulars. . , . - Board of Trade Suspends Indemnity Contracts Chicago, Sept 7. The Chicago board of trade adopted an amend ment to the rules, of the associa tion providing for discontinuance of dealing in indemnity contracts. The vote was 545 to 41. The Weather Forecast Nebraska Unsetled and cooler Thursday; showers in east portion Friday. Iowa Showers Thursday; cooler in west portions; Friday fair; cooler in east and central portions. Hourly Temperatures. . M t p. m t p. in. v J4 I - S P. m.... jit M 4 p. m jut M m t p. m jet 1 . M p. m n II 7 p. m .1 it Mm H S p. m .IS Highest Wednesday. xoriii run. Pare .i . -IM ra Moiiin.. MwtW Tttr halt t.ak... . MirrMnit r ::::::::( ; j ...;! Sata t Ih'inocraW Line AguiuM Rctrtiaitive llrpcul of I!t reus l'rofil Ley and Cut in Surtax. Final Outcome in Doubt By ARTHUR SEARS HENNING. ( b Iritis TfJlMMv-Ontatia Itt-a Hk- Washington, Sept. 7. There will be a ( desperate battle fought in the senate over retroactive repeal of tl.a excess profit tar and the reduction of the maximum income turt..x from 65 to 32 per cent. The democrats are nearly tinani 'nioiisly opposed to these proposal and lining tip with them there will be just cnoiiEh republicans to make the contest exceedingly clow. Jut how close it Is, already it indicated , by the fact that Chairman Trurose i-t counting on a majority of only one in the senate finance committee to approve an amendment making t'ltf repeal of the excess profits fax and the reduction of surtaxes elective January 1, 1921, instead of January 1, 1922, as provided in the house bill. .President Harding insists upon ful fillment of republican campaign promises that the excess proiits tav be repealed without delay, which he construes as a promise to exempt 1921 proiits from the tax. Would Release Capital Administration leaders argue that the retroactive repeal of the excess profits tax and reduction of the high er surtaxes will release a vast amount of capital for the expansion of business and relieving the business depression enormously. The opposition contends that busi ness and industry already has made prices on a basis of recouping them selves for prospective 1921 excess profits taxes, thus passing on to the consumer a tax which will be pocketed by capital if the govern ment fails to collect it. The reduction of surtaxes would affect about 5,000 persons with an ag gregate net income of about $1,200, 4)00,000 on which the tax yield is now about $600,000,000, but would be only about 300,000,000 with surtaxes re duced. The opposition does not be lieve that such reduction would re lease sufficient capital to produce any appreciable business expansion of would dissuade the rich from con tinuing to avoid "income taxation by investing in non-taxable state : ar.d municipal securities. , ' Short of Funds. , ' . .After 10 days of close study of the house bill, the minds of a ma jorityof the finance committee mem bers appear to be well matfe up that the amount of money it is designed to raise during the next year, about $3,000,000,000, is froni $500,000,000 to $1,000,000,000 short of the sura the government must actually have, un less a deficiency- is to be created; that with the excess profits tax re pealed and the higher brackets of the individual income surtax reduced (Tom to Pate Two, Column Two.) Forest Fires Are NowUnder Control Destruction of White Pine, Believed Incendiary, Is Probed. McGrath, Minn., Sept 7. Firs burning in the district near Onomia, Hillmau and Johnsdale early today ' were reported under control by na tional guardsmen and citizen volun- , teers. . , : - f Fire fighters in the Solana section also were holding their own, al though at one place the flames were covering a five-mile front toward Arthyde. Two hundred and fifty men are concentrated there back- . firing. A sudden wind would en danger 2CUamilie still in thiT-Solaua region. 1 Stats military authorities today were preparing to investigate the cir cumstances surrounding the burning of the village of White Pine yester day. Adj. Gen. W. P. Rhinow ex pressed the opinion that the -fire was of incendiary origin, notwithstand ing that a foreest fire was burning itt the outskirts of the town. He said the wind had been blowing the flames of theuorest fire away from the town. Minister Gets Warning To Stop His Crusade; Newport, Ky., Sept. 7. "Preach the gospel; quit visiting gambling rooms and disorderly houses." 1 nis warning was received by the Rev. E. R. Overly, of this citv. known as the "fighting parson." For several weeks he hasbeen recounting Sunday after Sunday from his pul pit the things lie learned in a visit to alleged resorts within a stone's throw of the Campbell county court house. Despite threats Overly declares he will continue. his crusade until of ficials take it up. He has invited thd men of the church to accompany him on his next tour of inspection. Seattle Man Claims He Gave Ride to Escaped Convict Seattle, Wash., Sept. 7. Police here are searching for Roy Gardner, escaped mail bandit, following a re port by Lloyd Harris, San Fran cisco salesman, that he believed a man he picked up in his automobile near Tacoma, was the fugitive. Har ris said the man wore brown trous ers and a flannel shirt. Harris after seeing newspaper photographs of Gardner declared he sis positive tnat the man he - ted was the escaped convict. t