Page 1 of Aug 30 1929 Issue of Mitchell Evening Republican in Mitchell, South Dakota

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Mitchell Evening Republican (Newspaper) - August 30, 1929, Mitchell, South Dakota Weather unsettled cooler the evening Republican third edition of Xxxvi Mitchell s. Friday August 30,1929 ten pages number 273 Radium victims hear life tick away Hoover plans Protection of Vford Poison tightens grip on m women afflicted ones take course As year Given them to live passes re hence seeks cure York. N. Y., aug 30�? ins a a curious contrivance half set. Half Dictaphone a Volt not Long ago and listened j cd Clicks came from the j. Steady insistent Oman i what she heard was the i in rattle of atoms going to j a victim of the dread and j is Radium poisoning she j cled to hear the decompose her Bones As they were As j by ruthless Alpha Radium i scene transpired in a room York s museum of peaceful the device on exhibition j the newest tool to be called j Nee a feverish a Effort to j r the malady from which j n persons in the United i suffering and Twenty j hate died. Scientists know j be handling of radioactive \ cause the disease they i a hit it attacks and decor j Bene but they Don t know j i cure it. Breath is recorded recently perfected machine s the breath of the patient it through a series of com i mechanisms and if a Raison my is present the Clicks my explosions Are rimmed audible. Thus it is possible ure and Chart the course of of Radium poisoning. Tick the victim can be aware never ceasing bombardment that will take his life and ? their seige Long after to hold hearing re c in v b Joseph p. Knef. Of new York Bern a Pioneer in bringing the. Or to the Active attention of clans and laboratories every be. It was he who treated miss a Maggia sister of one of the women who were last year Ted $10,000 each and $600 Antica use they had been not i in the Plant of the United is Radium corporation in or new Jersey. Clr attorneys conferred with clans and found that some or i in of the victims might be dead i before the cases Ever came to trial. So a settlement was accepted out court for $10,000 each outright $50 per month for life. The Are mrs. Quinta Mcdon to a miss Katherine Schaub mrs. Albin a Lance. Miss Grace Fryer mrs. Hussman. Given year to live Dors declared it was doubtful her they would outlive a year told them so frankly. So they their Money and used it acus to their respective temperaments. Katherine Schaub is Gratis it a Long suppressed ambition to yid. Write poetry. Mrs. Hussman ret the Leisure and music she has always craved. Mrs. Lance is Able to travel. Mrs. Mcdonald has put the bulk of her Money into a Trust fund for her children. Grace Fryer the fifth and last of meet is the Only one who has refused to accept the a of her doctors. A year to lot if the concentration of a girl Means anything Anc refuses to accept her Fate and a Mace up her mind to go on Liv in despite everything. And perhaps she will. Already the year is up. All five Are still alive. Nyht and Day in laboratories of r am kinds experiments Are going Forward to conquer Radium poisoner. Before the sentence upon these in can be executed by the to a do us Alpha rays. They Are being and. Experimentally by methods or Hope against Hope. There is is s Chance that a cure is Lurk we some scientific Comer. Brawny pilots now wearing hair nets j attitude toward the packers inn., aug. Farm organizations opinion on consent decree change evening Republican Bureau the Albee building. Washington d. Washington b. C., aug. 30�? in order to obtain the views of South Dakota agricultural interests regarding the probable economic effects of the proposed change in the packers consent decree asked in a petition just filed by Swift and co. And Armour and co., the u. S. Department of agriculture has asked farm Organ Lions in the state to present their views at a hearing to be held Here beginning september 3, it was announced today. Officials of the department realizing the Many possible results of the packers move to engage in ownership and operation of meat markets and the distribution of products unrelated to meats have requested that representatives of each farm commodity in South Dakota present their views prior to action on the petition by the supreme court of the District of Columbia in october. Wire Craig for opinion j. T. Craig president of the South Dakota Stock growers association at i plane stalls 50 feet off los Angeles coast line Here Are some smiles of Victory at least partial Victory in the cases of the five new Jersey women whose lives Are slowly being sapped by Radium poisoning. Left to right they Are mrs. Quinta Mcdonald mrs. Edna Hussman mrs. Albina Larice miss Katherine Schaub and miss Grace Fryer. Below right is an exclusive photograph of or. Joseph p. Knef of new York who first discovered Radium poisoning in the five women. He is testing a Bone from a victim which revealed evidence of Radium activity after four years. Two fliers die 74 thought lost at rapid City in boat crash up i 30�?of a 3 victors who heretofore a univ guarded their Manli a Cen to wearing women s the style was revealed a r Thurwald a Thunder John a ii Pilot As he prepared from the twin cities to Comfort Economy and prac to keep the hair out of the i let the Breeze in. There is like the Pilot averred. Weather forecast Belle four Che was wired by the department this week for his views and others Are requested either to appear in person or Send their opinion in the form of written statements for consideration. As an indication of the marked change which will result if the petitions of Armour and Swift Are granted officials Point out that. Under the 1930 consent decree these companies Are enjoined from ownership of stockyards and from Competition in distributing commodities with the Large Chain store organizations. Two activities which they now ask permission to pursue. The 1920 decree absolutely prohibits Swift and Armour from handling any commodities unrelated to the packing business and from owning any part of a Public store. Under the recent petition these concerns indicate their intention to become wholesale and retail Distri a Butts of wholly unrelated products and possibly operating their own system of Chain stores with internal control of Means of Supply and distribution. Seine support packers department officials state that Al a ready Many Nebraska interests have expressed varying opinion a to the effect of this sweeping change in the decree asked by the giant meat companies. Some have expressed sympathy they say. With the Contention of Swift and Armour that economic changes in the past eight years have made it impossible to compete further with Chain store organizations which control the source of the manufacture of their products and distribute widely unrelated commodities with others stating a dissimilar viewpoint. The Punnose of the Barin a month officials explain is to coordinate the opinions of South Dakota and other farming organizations Lin order to gain a Clear View of the de to the Dakota somewhat unset to tonight and saturday cooler r relay and in extreme Northwest Yors tonight. Braska a somewhat unsettled and saturday slightly Armer tonight in extreme East porn. Cover saturday in West and y n portions. Minnesota a mostly unsettled to Cochrane it and saturday probably local Lowers or thunderstorms slightly j Armer tonight in East Poi lion and erg Lake Superior. Saturday Cool saturday in West portion. On rth Dakota a partly Cloudy to h Ana saturday cooler Satur baseball scores National league Pat Philadelphia 410 too 013-9 13 i Boston. 012 too 020-5 15 i Willoughby Collins and Davis Brandt. Cantwell and Spohrer. New York too too too 0-1 4 i Brooklyn. Too 010 too 0-2 8 0 Hubbell and of Farrell Vance and Deberry. Chicago. Too too 000-0 3 3 Pittsburgh 101 623 20x 15 211 Bush and Taylor Meine and hem sley7test a other game not scheduled. American league p 1 it Boston. Ooi 002 010-4 to 0 Philadelphia too 101 00x-2 7 i Russell and Bern Earnshaw and Washington new York postponed other games not scheduled. Ground on instruction flight rapid City s. D., aug. 30�? it pm Captain w. W. Spain assistant lecturer instructor at an aviation school Here was killed instantly and William c. Kearns 18, student flier of Marysville kans., received fatal injuries in a plane crash Here late yesterday. They were coming in apparently for a Landing and spiralled Down from about 1,500 feet. They apparently levelled about fifty feet off the ground stalled and were unable to regain flying Speed before they nosed into the ground according to the Fields manager. Spain a transport Pilot of 14 years experience came Here from Redfield. He was the first National guard officer from this state to go into aviation before the War and was a flying instructor in France. He is survived by his wife. Kearns who lived about an hour and a half after the Accident is survived by his father Mother and a sister. Captain Spain was Well known throughout South Dakota. He was reared in the Alcester Vicinity. After serving with the South Dakota regiment during the philippine insurrection he returned to Redfield where he was married to Mae Hunt. He came to Sioux Falls in 1914 and joined the Federal Bureau of investigation with which he was connected until called into service with the National guard in the expedition against Pancho Villa in Mexico. Returning he took aviation training at Dayton Ohio and returned to Sioux Falls. He joined the aviation corps when the United states entered the world War and was stationed As instructor at the flying school at Tours France. He later was transferred to the intensive flying Field near the front but the ural ended before he got any actual combat flying. He came Back and rejoined the department of Justice and was one of the agents who investigated the celebrated bribe Case in which senator Burton k. Wheeler of Montana was investigated and cleared. Later he joined private investigating agencies but deserted that Field to connect with the rapid airlines at Huron. Finally he was placed in charge of the rapid City Airfield which position he held at the time of his death. Funeral arrangements Weie being made today for Captain Spain 46. And Keams. O Steamer sinks near san Francisco san Francisco calif., aug. 30. Map a revised figures on the number of passengers aboard the Coastwise Steamer san Juan when she Sank off Piegon Point South of Here today showed thai seventy four persons remained unaccounted for and May have perished. San Francisco calif., augg. 30 a off it a radio advices from two Rescue ships indicated that 65 persons May have perished with the sinking of the Coastwise passenger vessel. San Juan 30 Miles South of Here Early today. The Rescue ships reported they had picked up 35 of the too passengers and Crew of the vessel. The san Juan went Down in five Public lands president intends to see to it that private a a grabs Are blocked position is praised by Mark Sullivan Washington d. C., aug. 30�?president Hoover s announcement of tentative policy about Western lands remaining in Possession of the Federal government has been followed by Many expressions of a Proval from the West. One of the earliest commendations came from the governor of Idaho a state which has endured seeing More than a fifth of its surface withheld under Federal Domain and therefore kept from contributing to local taxation. From the East. As Well As from some sources in the West there has been criticism. Much of the alarm is based on misconception of what the move Means. The phrase a Public is not completely understood in the East where frequently it is supposed to include National Parks and the like. The scope of the proposal can be made Clear by stating what it is not. There is no intention of alienating any part of National Parks or any National Forest or any Indian Reser vation. The intention is quite contrary. Before the remaining Public lands Are transferred to the states they would be in mutely surveyed and any forests on them would be withheld by the Federal government and added to existing National forests or National Parks. Attempted a a grab frequent it is a fact that National forests and National Parks Are constantly menaced by private commercial interests attempting to get hold of parts of them for lumbering operation or for water Power. There is now pending in Congress an attempt to alienate thirty six Square Miles of Yellowstone Park. It is fair to assume that such attempted a a grabs would be More successful if the lands involved were owned by state government. The feeling of conservationists that there must be constant vigilance is abundantly justified. As respects the present proposal however the fact is that these questions Are not involved. Little horse Fly just naturally upsets farm bites one of team which runs away and nearly kills three children Man is knocked Down dog bites him in stomach and turmoil ends Cambridge wis., aug. 39�?the j directly to the path of the horses horse Fly bit the horses the Jeanii a Gallop now. And Lea made a dash i and picked the boy up. Ran a a two children narrowly j by. Cam swerved almost at escaped the farm wife was Hurt right angles and headed straight for and the dog bit a Man to the stomach. Twice. The Fly evidently was at ease so were de Heath s horses when de drove into Oscar leads farmyard the other Day and left the team quite a Way from the House. He went in and about that time the horse Fly. With possibly a few Brothers. Decided it was a Good time to eat. One of the Lea boys noticed the team had started to walk. One of the horses appeared excited. The horses were worked up by that time however and started to Trot just As the boy grabbed the bridle of the calmest one. But the horse Fly s Choice decided it and the boy was c ragged until he had to let go another Lea boy 5, was playing leads 3-year-old daughter playing in the Sand. Mrs. Lea had been watching from the rear of the House and now she made a mad run. It was a close race. She reached the child in time to push it to one Side but went Down herself under a threshing mess of horse legs. The team started a Ben Hur around the House with that and Heath started around the other Way to Stop them. But there was Lea s dog chained just a few feet away and As excited As a dog could be with All that going on and his mistress prone just out of reach. And Heath tripped on his Chain there was a wild tangle of Man dog and dust and when Heath broke away he had bites on his stomach. Judge Kenyon May seek old Senate place Iowa judge is said to be growing restless on Federal Bench Hague accords by. Welcomes get signatures Eckener Crew conference to finish its task by about noon tomorrow Graf prepares for Start to Germany at Midnight saturday. The Hague aug. 30�?op a letters and documents regarding the agreement of France great Bri come Tain Italy Belgium and Germany on evacuation of the Rhineland and financial questions incident to acceptance of the Young reparations plan were signed at 12 15 p. In. Today by representatives of those nations. The protocol and other documents in which will be registered the results of the Hague conference of the governments will be ready for approval this evening and the conference will adjourn sine die about noon tomorrow. Aristide Briand French Premier was leaving Here at i p. In. For Paris. Several matters will be left to future action either by another conference or by individual action of the governments concerned. Among these were the proposed International Bank of settlement. The reparations problem As it of a _ the Whol facts the successors to the Austro attitude it the Federal Gye rement hungarian Empire and the anal accounting Between the former enemies for private property sequestered and sold. These matters will be handled through the various Cha Ceries a far As possible and will be liquidated finally when the parties to the Hague conference meet again to ratify the Young plan and Complete organization work of the Bank. O is one of keeping the National for ests and Parks adding to them perhaps and carefully guarding them. Neither does the proposal contemplate alienating any known Mineral or Oil land now in Possession of the Federal government. On this Point the theory is that most of the important Oil and Mineral deposits on Public lands have by this time been discovered. Consequently it is useless to continue to withhold Public lands from settlement on the Chance that they May turn out to contain Oil or Mineral. All the Mineral lands and especially the Oil lands owned by the Federal government will be held and administered in the spirit of strict conservation As illustrated by president hoovers recent order conserving Oil lands. The lands that would be turned j Over to the states under the present j proposal Are almost wholly lands adapted to grazing or farming. The new York aug. 30.�? to a the City Flung wide its Gates today to Wel commander Hugo Eckener officers and Crew of the German dirigible Graf Zeppelin on their return from Many a fastest trip around the world. An official municipal Welcome afforded an Opportunity for the citizens of the Metropolis to shout themselves hoarse a claiming the German aeronaut whose exploit has captured the imagination and admiration of the world. With its commander the Center of attention Here the Graf Zeppelin was being prepared in the Navy hangar at Lakehurst n. J., to continue its eastward flight to its Home port Friedrichs Hafen Germany possibly at Midnight saturday. The Airship will make the last stage of its journey in charge of Captain Ernest a. Lehmann while commander Eckener remains in the United states for about two weeks to attend to business in new York and visit the Goodyear Zeppelin company Plant at Akron Ohio. Minutes after colliding with the a _ Standard Oil Tanker s. T. Dodd principle of conservation is not in of Pigeon Point Cal. Although one i solved. In grazing lands. Almost All i Side of the Dodd was stove in she i the lands available for settlement in lowered her boats and went to the i the Ordinary sense have Long ago judge Comerford Dies Chicago 111., aug. 30.�?up a judge Frank d. Comerford of the Cook county Chicago Superior court once known As a the boy orator of the died suddenly last night. He was 49 years old. Iowa a partly Cloudy tonight and. F urday possibly showers saturday Quot Northwest and North Central por is slightly warmer tonight and j extreme Southeast portion Satur j Cav. A a local temperatures maximum and minimum temperatures As recorded by the official a eminent thermometer from 7 a. Yesterday to 7 a. In. Today maximum 88. Minimum 63. At 7 a. In. Today 69. Roads Good. Precipitation. 0 precipitation wee january i. 18.42 inches precipitation excess since january i �?~��?�3 it inches. Weather and roads temp5 the associated pass it 1 our Falls Berdeen Watertown f Huron Van ton rapid City Phil am Hilo of fads 69 83 61 Good 66 86 62 Good 65 86 58 Good 65 84 54 Good 69 85 67 Good 66 91 64 Good 68 83 68 Good would Rush water Plant in the opinion of a. F. Smith vice president of the Mitchell National Bank the matter of the development of amusements and recreations at Lake Mitchell is subsidiary to the proposition of first putting the Lake to use As a source of soft water for Mitchell people. A the important thing is not the development of a Beach or a dance Hall As i see it a or. Smith said a a but is getting the water Supply into the Mains As soon As a i have not bothered to study about the recreational Side of the matter because i think that should come after we have put in All our efforts to get the soft water Supply. I have no ideas As to the development plan to offer nor do i care to express myself As to the financing of such a plan. In his address at a Public meeting at the City Hall next tuesday evening j. R. Batchellor Field Secretary for the National playgrounds and recreation association of America will discuss the Lake question from both the recreational and business standpoints. Everyone in Mitchell interested in the question of a what shall we do with Lake Mitchell should hear or. Batchellor. Been taken up by homesteaders. Consequently the lands involved in the present proposal Are chiefly i ranges adapted Only to grazing in fairly Irreg units. Favors local control the underlying principle is that j such lands can be better adminis altered by local state governments close to the scene and familiar with the conditions. President Hoover in his letter twice emphasized the phrase a local in the broadest sense the underlying principle is decentralization from and local administration by the states. One Type of land involved in the proposal consists of reclamation and irrigation projects. Such projects involve intimate and continuing Contact by the government with the settlers who pay for water rights. It is considered that future reclamation projects can be administered by state governments better than by Distant capital at Wash n r a n carrying out of or. Hoovers proposal would release to Western states Large sources of taxation. At present in some Western states a third or even a half of the territory is unavailable for taxation because held by the Federal govern a ment. This condition frequently leads to an attitude of leaning on the Federal government for help. The Broad underlying principle is that states should have Dominion Over their resources and should accent the corresponding responsibility and self management. Of a Dawes Macdonald t la London. Eng., aug. 30�? .4> the conversations Between Premier Macdonald and ambassador Dawes on naval disarmament were stated in British official quarters today to have reached a Point where it is possible a Public statement May b i made next of the passengers and Crew who were pitched into the sea As the san Juan Sank. Aids Rescue work another ship the Sunami turned from her course nearby and aided in the Rescue work. Several hours later the Dodd was on its Way to san Francisco with 27 survivors some of them badly injured and in need of medical attention. The Sunami had taken eight others aboard and was tending by looking for those who May have remained afloat after the ship Sank. Radio accounts of the Rescue indicated however that the chances for Many of the 65 unaccounted for persons were slim due to the Speed with which the san Juan Sank and the fact that darkness and confusion handicapped the Rescue workers the san Juan left san Francisco last night for los Angeles. She was an old vessel of about 1,700 tons was operated by the los Angeles and san Francisco navigation company and featured Low rates for travel Between the two California cities. Most of the passengers were from los Angeles. Captain is lost survivors aboard the Dodd said they saw Captain Adolph f. Ask Lund of the san Juan go Down with his ship. A heavy fog had Hung Over the Pigeon Point area since yesterday afternoon. Offices of the los Angeles and san Francisco navigation company owners of the vessel announced that their advices indicated forty four of the too persons aboard the san Juan had been rescued. The navigation company a report indicated that thirty of the survivors were aboard the Standard Oil Tanker s. T. Dodd. Ten others were said to be aboard the Steamer Sunami and four More were reported picked up by the motor ship Frank Lynch. Ralph Hillsman second radio operator of the san Juan who was picked up by the Dodd reported that the collision occurred while he was asleep. He sprang from his berth and ran to the main deck. The deck was sinking beneath the surface and he was hurled into the sea. Hillsman said no lifeboats had been launched from the san Juan. Two coast guard cutters the. A a m a Shawnee and the Tahoe went to a Varmall tractor and the scene of the wreck from san a. _ j i a t Francisco while preparations got equipment advertised by l. Ess just to revive the Wise of Letcher brought Jared from Tho Oil Tanker. A officers of the los Angeles Aud him what he considers Tine j sought peace is near in Palestine Jerusalem Palestine aug. 30 a a a five Jewes were killed last night and 20 wounded when arabs attacked houses of the jewish Community in the ancient town of Safe. Arabs set fire to buildings in the main jewish Street where Oil was stored. Troops finally quelled the trouble. Arabs again today attacked the jewish Colony in Tel Pioth Between Jerusalem and Bethlehem. The attack was repulsed by a platoon of British troops from the South Wales Borders regiment. The troops were accompanied by a police commandant. Eckener takes plane to Lakehurst from capital Washington d. C., aug. 30�?c/pj�? or. Hugo Eckener the Graf zeppelins record breaking master left the naval air station at Anacostia at 7 13 a in. Today for Lakehurst n. J., after his Day of Triumph and night of rest in Washington. He returned to the scene of his great world girdling flight s beginning and end in the same big Navy transport air plane that brought him Here yesterday to express his appreciation for american cooperation to president Hoover and government officials and experts who assisted him in that undertaking. Lieutenants r. Irvine and a. P. Storr the pilots counted on banding him at Lakehurst about 9 a. Rn., in plenty of time to keep his engagements today with new York financiers interested in his plans for development of a trans Atlantic oceanic dirigible Airship service. Or. O. Kelp. Charge do affaires of the German embassy accompanied the commander on the return trip. Just before leaving he again expressed to newspaper correspondents his gratitude Lor the assistance of the american government and people and for the reception Given him Here. He enjoyed the visit and the Long nights rest he obtained in the Home of or. Keip he said. Loan associations in s. Are prospering Omaha. Neb. Aug. 30�? a3 a National farm loan associations in the eighth Federal land Bank District comprising Iowa. South Dakota. Wyoming and Nebraska Are in excellent condition it was revealed yesterday in a Survey made by the Federal land Bank of Omaha. In Iowa where there axe 156 associations whose 10.081 members have borrowed $80,785,272.33 from us land Bank it was found that there Are 144 associations in class one of which 88 Are placed on a special Honor Roll. Seventy seven of too South Dakota associations have been placed in class one and 23 Are on the Honor Roll. The South Dakota Loans Jerusalem. Palestine aug. 30 top a Palestine today gradually approached Tranquility with the Strong Arm of the British military enforcing peace where for five Days turmoil and racial strife reigned. There was continued desultory fighting in the less populated sections. Looting continued even in Jerusalem and danger from marauding tribes of bedouins from Southern Palestine and trans Jor Dania still existed. Looters caught in the Active ordered shot forthwith by court martial. The Fela Heeny the Arab peasantry who fear the wild bedouins almost As much As do the jews brought their children. S hostages of peace to the jewish labor settlement Kirjath total $31,008,74419 to 6.444 borrow Anavian. F ers the jewish colonists were deep i Nebraska has 146 association. Of by touched by the sign of friendliness which served somewhat to Cool the passions aroused by stories of Arab atrocities on jewish Ris incl youth in other parts of the holy land. Today the moslem Sabbath was looked upon As critical with mus Selmen gathering at their mosques with its passage it believed the situation would grow steadily better. Arab leaders arranged a huge Assembly at the mosque of Omar in Jerusalem. Which 134 have keen rated first class and 80 placed on the Roll of Honor. A total of $48,491,436.42 has been loaned to 9.178 members in the state. Of building caves in Algiers Algeria. Aug. 30.�? up a an unknown number of persons were buried Early today in the crash of an old building on the water front some estimates placing the number of victims Between 50 and 70. Gang guns balk Tony Domingo s vow t o avenge w if c s murder 2 years a go tractor Chicago. 111., aug. 30�? it pm Tony Domingo a two year old vow to avenge the dynamite death of his wife must remain forever unfilled. A feud gun got his Range last night. The violent death of Tony a Wile through explosion of a bomb concealed in her automobile was no More sudden than Tony a own. A Shotgun pressed against his Back nine slugs in his body and Tony Domingo 35. One time a Talky Cocker on a Little Michigan farm dead on the floor of a North Side cafe. Other diners in the Ogden Avenue cafe dropped to the floor or shelter under tables. Ralph san Francisco navigation co., own ii i ii _11t_ Bartuli. Domingo a dinner Domijan ers of the san Juan announced that a a a us. Be Hes Naa a Nurmi on police he barely had time their latest information showed there j Joe 0f were 65 passengers aboard the vessel. A when she collided with the Standard Oil Tanker s. T. Dodd in a thick fog at Midnight the Crew of the san Juan numbered 45. There were conflicting reports As to the number rescued. Aboard the Dodd were 27 of the san Juan a passengers and Crew. Nine others had been picked up by the Steamer j Sunami which was still at the scene i of the collision at 8 a. In. One report said there were four othe survivors aboard the motor ship Frank Lynch but this could hot i be confirmed inquiries and a1 the though he has no made a i detectives were unable to connect i. Domingo with any Chicago Gong 3c a amp in yet be expects to and Tivi ties but a Newspaperman with says a if you Ever have anything Worth while to sell a Good memory recalled new mrs. Tony Domingo had died in St. Joseph. Mich., during the fall of 1927, his Story today started officers just run an and in the Kerub on a new line of investigation. Heart a mrs. Domingo received a Telephone Man. Ker farm heme one morning there is always a Market a october 1927. Who called or what. I the Nies Sage was. Police never learn ror used machinery in sea de but mrs. Domingo immediately i t went to the garage started the to son use me Diane. I Tor of the family car and drove away. A mile from Home there was a terrific explosion that demolished the automobile and killed the woman. Parts of the car were blown 500 feet and fragments of mrs. Domingo a clothing were found on the Topmost branches of nearby crees. An infernal machine had apparently been hidden under the automobile Hood. A wire running from it to the manifold. When the manifold became hot the wire melted and the explosive was set off. The theory of sheriffs officers was that the bomb had been intended for Domingo himself possibly because of his connection with the sugar a a alkyl manufacture. Domingo himself undertook to find the persons responsible and take care of them himself but co far As records show he never succeeded. During the investigation into mrs Domingo a death officers were told that the Domingos erd in frequent quarrels in the immediately preceding her death. The friction developed neighbors said after two of her Brothers by name i Maria had met Des a a Large vat of Mash used on the Domingo farm for making whisker one brother fell into the vat while the mixture. The other was pulled in when he attempted to Rescue is brother he May be drafted evening Republican Bureau the Albee building. Washington d. Washington d. C., aug. 30�?u. S. Circuit judge William s. Kenyon member of president hoovers Law enforcement commission is mentioned in reports received Here from Iowa As a possible candidate for the Republican nomination for United states senator in 1930. Some of the party leaders in the state who worked with Kenyon when he was Active in politics have written the iowans former colleagues in the Senate declaring their belief that the judge can be a a drafted for another term at Washington where he served in the Senate from 1911 to 1923. In the latter year president Harding named him to the Bench while he was serving As floor Leader for the Senate farm Kenyon a name has not figured seriously in political discussions Here since the 1924 convention at Cleveland when president Coolidge selected the judge As his running mate for vice president. Kenyon sent word through National committeeman Charles a. Rawson of Iowa that he would accept the nomination but at a dramatic moment in the convention senator David a. Reed of Pennsylvania won the backing of a Large group of Eastern delegates for general Charles g. Dawes and the latter was nominated. Thinks he May accept Western Republican senators who served for years with Kenyon Are inclined to believe that he will accept renomination next year to the Senate and that his re Entrance into the political Arena would furnish a spectacular feature of the 1930 Campaign. Kenyon entered the Senate nearly 20 years ago As a a Trust busting lawyer succeeding senator Dolliver whose fight against the Payne Aldrich Tariff Bill paved the Way for the insurgent movement in the Middle West in 1912. Though less advanced in his views than senator Norris of Nebraska and the elder la Follette of Wisconsin with whom he served in the Senate Kenvon followed Dolliver a Independent course As senator from Iowa and before he retired from the Senate broke with his colleague the late senator Albert b. Cummins. Kenyon was regarded As potential Timber for appointment to the United states supreme court Early in the Harding administration and it was generally reported Here he had accepted a place on the circuit Bench As a stepping Stone to the higher court. The judges friends Here declare however that after his Long service in the Senate and in the turbulent politics of his own Section he Bas found the seclusion of the Bench irksome and might Welcome a return to the activity of Washington. Iowans May draft him if he becomes a candidate Kenyon would put up to president Hoover the problem of filling the first vacancy on his Law enforcement commission. The commission has embarked on a five year study of the causes of Law violation and is not expected to Complete any phase of its investigation before the 1930 Campaign. Kenyon was a Lead Ier of the a Bone dry group in the Senate and his appointment was accepted Here As an off set to the selection of chairman George w. Wickersham a Liberal on the prohibition question. Active efforts to induce Kenyon to become a candidate have already been taken by those planning the a a draft movement and it is reported Here he will be visited by a delegation urging his candidacy within the next few months. Machine gun used to loot Iowa Bank Estherville la., aug 30�? Pic striking one Man unconscious five robbers with a machine gun held up the Emmet county state Bank. At la a in. Today and escaped with about $2,000. Turning in a fire alarm to distract the attention of people on the streets the five robbers drove up before the Bank in an automobile beam an Alabama License number. Four of them rushed into the Bank and drawing revolvers ordered employees and customers to put a hands the fifth member guarded the Bank Entrance with a machine gun in the car. Three of the bandits walked behind the Cage and scooped up the Money while the fourth ushered persons in the Bank into a rear room. M. K. Whelan a customer was knocked unconscious with the butt end of a pistol. He was reported in a serious condition with probable concussion of the brain. W. Currell cashier said the men were unmasked. No shots were fired persons on the Street who witnessed the hold up being held at Bay by the machine gun operator. Dou Kobors jailed for nude Parade Nelson. B. C., aug. 30.�?the provincial and City jails Here were packed to overflowing today with 150 Dou Kobors. Members of a russian religious sect who started nude Parade on the Highway is Miles South of the City yesterday Only to be rounded up by provincial police and special officers. A March on Nelson was begun several Days ago in protest against the imprisonment of Peter Olsoff a Dou Hobor in c Section with the burning of Pouk honour schools. When provincial police appeared yesterday to arrest four members who had disrobed Over too of the marchers men. Women and children took off their clothes. They were Given half an hour to dress. Refusing they were loaded into trucks. Automobiles and hisses and brought Here. Sixty special officers were swim in to Aid the police. A special truck carrying discarded clothing dumped the garment in the prison cd but the protestants still declined to the Hab aliments of a tubs amp to feb

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