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rer PAGE TEN BLAST VICTIM 15 IDENTIFIED AS NEW YORK MAN Body Feud oan Fiscs Laboratory Thought Murder Victim. wvas ten thes whoee c the Iaporat lose con plosion and which C nomist is being so charging m gathered rtz, ugh who D Was believed at t had adver. the plant a he .was ing a man from New York. theory Sher’ e and District ng hoped to establish the dead man burned beyond recongn: tion, and solve the mysterious case which is believed to be an insur. ance poax plot. Sebwartz carried insurance poll- cles in excess of $100,000 payable to his wife and the Cellulore com- pany in which Mrs. Schwartz was heavily interested. The reappearance yesterday Joe Rodriguez, Portugese farm ha Re had been virtually accepted as @ victim left the investigators with few clews upon which to work and threw the entire case again tnto & purziing situation. A description of the “man from New York" was given officials by Theodore Tonitls, who lives near Walnut Croek where the plant wae located, and tallied closely with that of the dead. man in regard tu both stature and clothing, pieces of which ‘were found in the laboratory where the crime toek place. death, of CHICAGO, Aug. 5.—(By The Asso- cated Press)—Jack. Dempsey will fight again; ho will fight under the management of Jack Kearns and he will fight Harry Wills, These three points were emphasized as positive by Jack Kearns shortly after his arrival here today from the coast. There has been many misunder- standings between Dempsey and myself,” said Kearns, “but all of these have been over business mat- ters such as apartment houses, and not over our business of fighting, You can eay that Jack Dempsey will fight again, where or when I cannot say, but 1 will leave here for New York after the Walker-Wells fight Friday night and expect to tmmed- fately fron out all difficulties with the New York boxing commission over both the Dempsey-Wills matter and the Walker-‘Shade matter. SARATOGA SPRINGS, Aug. 5.—(Associated. Press Piay today with Mad Play second and Big Blaze third. See fi )—Blind GARDEN CITY, N. Y., Aug. 5.— (Associated Press.}—Netson Davies, representing Cleveland, was medalist today in the qualifying rounds of the national public links championship at the Salisbury Country club, with 147. R McAuliffe, of Buffalo, yester+ Gay's leader, gained second place with 149 while El! Ross of Clevieand, who shot 71 yesterday required &% for his s¢eond round to score 158, enough to qualify but several strokes behind. New York obtained the Harding cup, lematic of intercity team supremacy with 616 strokes. L. H. Willams sper vesterday from Every Pair of Dress Slippers whose ‘MIDWEST TAX PROTEST CASE | _ IS POSTPONED CHEYENNE, Wyo., Aug. 5.— (Special to The Tribune.}—Hearing of protest filed by the Midwest Re | fining company against increases in property vaulations for tax pur Db !n Natrona county was post- poned tor by the Wyoming State Board of Equalization until August Protests of other companies be heard as scheduled begin. tomorrow. Aggregate in- es made by the Natrona county board amounted to approximately $5,000,000, ——_————_ WRPLANESPUT TD NEW TESTS WN CREENLAN Aviators Busy Tuning] Up for Flight to Pole. WASHINGTON, ciated Press).--With al] three of its airplanes embled, test flights were conducted at Btah, Greenland, yesterday, by the MacMillan Arctic edition, 5,000 feet and over great glacier.s Describing the teste, Lieutenant Commander Byrd, commanding the navy section of the expedition, sald today in a radio message to the navy department: “N A-S took the air today at 4:00 p. m., Chief Boatswain Reber, pilot, and Nold and Sorenson, mechanics Aug. 5.—(Asso- won the Delaware handicap | N A-3 remained In air one hour and then tied up to buoy in water along- side N-A-2. N A-L took the alr for a test and reconnoltering 9:00 p. m., H. Byrd, pilot, and Bennett, me- chante. Ascended to five thousand feet and éncountered very bitterly cold temperatures, but motor be haved perfectly. Encountéred solid field of ice 15 miles from the cape (probably Cape Alexander), whieh stretched entirely across the sound to the north of up. “On return flew over two of Greeniand’s great glaciers which join several miles back of these mouths forming a tremendous lake of ice. N A-l landed and tied up to buoy at 10:15 p. m. ‘Tomorrow will carry on radio tests and full load tests, It will be tour or five days before a start can be mado for tho first base. Peary has been recelving radio tick from Bellevue (District of Columbii nightly with remarkable accuracy.’ It is understood to be the inten- tion of the expedition next to estab lish a base, on Ellesmere island acrofs from Greenland about half ay to Cape Thomas Hubbard in actual Axel Hiberg island where the advance flying base will be located overlooking the polar sea. SLAYER SANE, IAILER SAYS |. CHICAGO, Aug. 5.—(Assoclated | Press)—William Wallace, a jail of- Cicer who guarded Russell Scott in death row, testifying for the prose- cution In Scott's sanity hearing to. day, said he found the prisoner ‘as sane as any one could be under the circumstances.” The court ordered the qualifica- tlon stricken from the record on the ground thet a layman is not competent to quality hia observa: | tions of a person's sanity. Four other jailers testified | believed Scott sane, | t State's Attorney Henr had a Mist 6f 50 jatlers Judge David witnesses and th limited him to 10 fice allenists In our store is included in this bargain week special. Think what it means to buy Wiggins Quality Shoes at You are ac- quainted with the beauty, fit and service of Wiggins high style footwear—and you know at $7.45 they are indeed. expect to buy them for this price next week. this price! bargains Satin Kid } This Ad Don't sort. one being at a height of |: Know Good Shoes—The kind who ap- preciate the niceties of fit, finish and balance that are found in high grade footwear of this Wiggins regular customers will know that an opportunity of this sort comes rarely « and will profit by it Scene of Last Rites for William J. Bryan historic old N sought three times to achieve. RUNNING GUN FIGHT STAGED. IN ST. LOUIS ST. LOUIS, Aug. & Pregs.)—A downtown lunch hour throng was thrown into confusion and two policemen, a deputy city marshal and an unidentified check forger were wounded in a running revolver fight here today. The forger, who had just attempted to cash a bogus check at the Missis sippt Valley ‘Trust company, was! captured, The pursuit, which was taken up by policemen at each corner and in which many shots were fired, caused the greatest excitement and Cusion in the downtown section. At Broadway and Lucas avenue, ne: the point where the man was tured, an éssamblage formed which Packed thé street so that all traffic wap stopped for blocks The wounded are Patrolman Louis W. Falkenberg, Patrolman Joseph | L. Duggan, Deputy City Marshal | Rudolph Lange and the unidentified | man, who is in a critical condition. | TWO DIE IN EXPLOSION AT SOFIA SOFIA, Aug. 5.—(By The Asso. ciated Press)—Two persons were killed and two hurt in an explosion in the railway station today. The station bulldings were damaged, but train service was not interrupted The cause is not known. This i# the second explosion in Bul. | zarla In today’s dispatches, Pre: | viously is had word of the blow- ing up of a munitions dump with loas of several lives near Plovna, 75 miles northeast of Sofia (Associated STECK LAGS IN Ny WASHINGTON, Aug. 5.—(Asso-| ¢iated Press).—Recount by a renate | committee of uncontested paper bal lots in 33 counties of the 99 {n Iowa's | senatorial election last year, | pl a today, gave Daniel F. te | democrat 126,397, and mith Ww Bookheart ree | In the and 2.077 Brookh com jena repul Man Slated to Receive Millions Is Careful Not To Start Spending Orgy [ih Che Casper Daily Cribune fa! iW [its last honor Villiam Je y imple services in the “Offical Washington paid its last honors to William Jennings Bryan at simp! te ew ote AvenueiPreaB) terian church, three blocks f rom the White Howe which Bryan Sr In, in : questioning of her former neighb By 4. ©. JOHNSTON, (Copyright, #325, Consolidated Press Association.) SPRINGFIELD, Mo., Aug. 5.— ys for Jim Rucker, year-old saw sharpener—quite a rast to the tlie before he let it ‘ome generally known that he had fallen heir to $18,000,000. Then searcely anyone knew him, Now he can scarcely stick his head out of his modest little room, with out being saluted with a smiling “‘Howdy-do, Mr. Tucker." But Jim‘s millions haven't gone to his head as yet. He says he is going to wait until he gets his hands on the coin before he quit LIMBER DEAD IN FALL FROM GRAND TETON CKSON, clated Press Portland, Or down Grand Wyo., Aug 5.—(Asso- -—Theddore Teeple of . Was killed by a fall Teton mountain near vere today. He was descending from the top of the peak which he had climbed with a group of companions this morning. Rescuo parties e today had been unable to extricate his body which dropped a mile oyer-a cliff onto a small =o ledge. ——_——__—_ MAYO ESTATE IS VALUED AT THREE MILLION DENVER, Colo. Aug. 5.—(Asso clated Press).—The value of the es- tate of Mrs. Margery Reed Mayo, daughter of the late Verner Z. Reed, Colorado pioneer mining man and Capitaliet, was affixed at $2,924,- 460,42 in an Inventory fllea in the sounty court here today by her hus: band, Paul T, Mayo, former attache embassy at Lima of the Americar P M is adrainistratrix the stock in the tn of various in Ye fo ol mi | | | Press).—Picked cants, a dancing blue-eyed Cinder ella with flaxen Mary Pickford curis, looked forward today to a paradise Browning, daughter was spending the id, and that #' formation was engaged Browning advert over fourteen” to be adopted as his daughter THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1925 - ‘BOHEMIAN GIRL (O GHOGEN FOR loi HEIRESS Selection From Among 12,000 Applicants Is Announced. NEW YORK, Aug. 5.—(Associated from 12,000 appli r’beyond the realm of fairy tales. Of poor Bohemian parents, Mary Louise Spas, 18, has become the adopted daughter of Edward A. millionaire realtor. She is the girl with the kind of a sunny smile for whom Mr. Browning adveriised. three weeks ago. Her parents are Marie and John pas, of Astoria, L, I. While Browni newly adopted day buy- apparel! shops, rs Astoria, according to the New rk Evening Post, brought the in rmation that she was 21 years e was formerly a otion picture actress, The neighbors from whom this in- was obtained, said she to dentist when 1 for a girl “not g dresses and other c exclusive Fifth stly avenue It also was learned that the girl's father owns a $60,000 apartment fijing business, Then he will spend | house in which he lives with his the remainder of hig days in travel] wife in Astoria. Browning, sald, and aiding the poor, Real “estate agents, automobile salesmen, in fact salesmen in almost every line, are dogging Rucker's trafl. But to all of thelr sales talks, he replies: st “I haven't got money yet. When I do, maybe I'll talk business with: you.” For twenty-five years Rucker has been spending all his meager savings to continue the litigation In London for a part of the $200,000,000 estate | w of his great-great-grandtather, Pat rick Ruck Within a few da Rucker says, he will go to Kansas City, where he will meet his cousin, Nelson Rucker, former representa tive from Trinidad, Colo., to. go-over final settlement papers. : Nelson Rucker only recently re- turned fron: London, where a settle. nent was made. “What are you going to do with all of your millions when you get thei?” Jim was asked. “That's hard to say, off-hand,” he teplied. "I have worked hard all my life and it hasn't hurt me any. But I have been beastly poor—that. has left its impression upon me. “So when I do get my share of the estate, I am going to be con- siderate to the worthy poor, I am going to help them first all I can. Then I am gotng to spend the rest of my days in trayel.” however, that the fat $0 a week and that he considered the family’s finan ciated Press.)—Althoush adopted daughter Browning, New York millionaire, is sald to bé an only child, a young voman, Denver sanatarium she is the g iy, Keep SLEAN - CLEAR and HEALTH’ deme tet tree bye Core Book Murine Ce, .Chicaze,U.%. er makes only Reporters :interview!r ter adoption, were told by her that he could drive an automobile, as her father owned a car. DENVER, Colo, Aug. of ill with tuberculosis in a today declared U's sister. wever, di Phy clans, 1; clared that [RIN Night «é Morning ana Your Eye: WAIT! THE NEW Oldsmobilés ARE COMING! pee FUPNiTURE To] MOVING | Have Buyers for Fords. Will Accept a Few Good Trades on Essex Coaches. R. N. VAN SANT We Move Anything We might say we move the earth. lots. furniture, but we also pack and ship as well as transfer. If you have any sort of mov- us, we can do it. Our vans are spacious, our men ure careful and our service is prompt See Ben Transfer Co. We do—in cartload We not only move your ing to be done, depend upon JUST PHONE 74 Stanley Overbaugh, Prop for Bargain Week In the Better Grades of the Following Materials— Patent Suede Woven Satin Patterns in Profusion— One Strap Two Straps Pour Straps Gore Pumps lumps Is Addreseed to Women Who IGGINCG "YOUR SHOEMAN’ In All Heels— Spike Louis Cuban Low In Ample Size Ranges for Better Fittings— Widths to AAA shoes are. she was too {il to be interviewed, saying that she appeared “greatly pleased” at news of her sister's good fortune, CWA AS Bt Spanish Vessel Goes Down Off The Bahamas WEST PALM BEACH, Fia., Aug. 5.—(Associated Prees).—A wireles message was received this afternooi. by the Palm Beach Radio Corpora- tion that the Spanish schooner briél Palmer has sunk off the hama Islands. The mesage was broadcast by an unidentified vesrel, giving warning to other shops to be on the lookout for the crew of the sunken ship, K. of C. Re-elect Three Officers DULUTH, Minn., Aug. 5.—(Asso- clated Press.)—James A. Flaherty of Philadelphia, supreme knight of the Knights of Columbus, was re- elected to his ninth two-year term at the 43rd annual supreme conven- ton today, defeating Edward Hax- gerty, Greenwich, Conn.,. newspaper publisher, 258 to 51 votes, Martin- H. Carmody of Grand tapids, Mich., deputy supreme knight and William J. McGinley, of ew Haven, Conn., supreme secre- ta lected by acclamati: Loveliest of the Colors WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 5, 1925 \Security Pact Sponsored By U. S. Ofticiaf WILLIAMSTOW. —Argociated Pri + Mass., Aug. 5 )—The statement that Alanson B, Houghton, Ameri- gan ambassador at London and for. merly ambasador to Germany, spon sored the proposed “security pact tween Great Britain. France ar Germany, wus made at-a confere: at the Institute of Pol Professor Bernadotte i. Sehmitt, of the University of Michtgan, - “ Removal Notice DR. H. L. HARVEY to || 207-9 O. & S. Building | Phone 61 Call for Demonstration On an Essex Coach. Immediate Delivery of Same—$1,025. The Wonder Car for the Money. Now we have hosiery for you in which the very newest. colors are at their best. Beautifully brilliant shades andtints. Fabric sheer and lustrous—exquisite! The amazing durability of HOLEPROOF HOSIERY makes it really economical to wear, too. We haye a com- plete stock to show you, right now. Also Holeproof Hosiery for Men—35c to $1.00 These $9, $10 ‘and $11 Slippers Rediceif In the Season’s Three Best Colors— Black Blonde Tan You Can Buy Shoes Any Day at This Price, But—They aren't the beauti- fully made, daintily balanced and trimly fitting footwear that these You don’t buy Packards at Ford prices every day, you know. For the Rest of This Week Only a