Evening Star Newspaper, June 21, 1928, Page 1

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WEATHER. (U. 8. Weather Bureau Forecast.) Considerable cloudiness tonight and tomorrow; slightly warmer tomorrow. ‘Temperature—Highest, 82, at 6 p.m. yesterday; lowest, 66, at 6:30 am. to- Y. Full report on page 9. WITH SUNDAY MORNI 7 ¢ Foening Star. NG EDITION Within the Hour” The Star’s carrier system covers every city block and the regular edi- tion is delivered to Washington homes as fast as the papers are printed. Yesterday’s Circulation, 104,336 Closing N. Y. Markets, Pages 14 and 15 — ch No. 30,732. Entered as second class matter post _office ington, D. C. MACK ST STAND 201 s CALLEDBODYBLON v, Dot TOHOUSTON PEACE Ardent Smith Man Believed to Have Made Mild Dry Plank Improbable. Reel Excerpts | By the Ascociated Press. ! | NEW YORK. June 21—Friends of | Gov. Alfred E. Smith today threatened |legal action to prevent the use of a | news reel of the governor. in a film/ dramatization of two prohibition boaks by Prof. Irving Fisher of Yale. | The picture, titled “Deliverance,” was made for Prof. Fisher and Robert E. | Corridini, research secretary of the World Alliance Against Alcohol. It is being booked by the Young Men'’s Chris- | tian Association for showing in Y. M. C. A's and churches throughout the coun- try. ryoeorxe B. Graves, secretary to the governor, has written all news reel com- panies which have taken pictures of Gov. Smith warning them inst per- mitting improper use of their films. | Counsel has informed him that a pic- LATER SAYS HE SPEAKS ON ISSUE ONLY FOR SELF *Governor Is Opposed to Prohibi- tion,” New York Committeeman’s Statement Says. BY G. GOULD LINCOLN, Staft Correspondent of The Star. WASHIN GTON, D. THURSDAY, &y J 21, 1928—FIFTY-TWO PAGES. - TO FIGHT FILM SHOWING HIM IN ANTI-DRY ROLE e,” Made for Prohi- bition Leaders, Said to Contain News Of GOVCI‘I\OI‘. poses without the governor's permission, and that among the commercial pur- poses of “Deliverance” is the advertis- ing of Prof. Fisher's two books. The governor’s friends say the ex- cerpt used, by implication, purports to show the governor signing the act re- pealing the Mullan-Gage State enforce- ment law, and thereby allegedly con- tributing to evils which other parts of the picture depict. In reality, they say, Gov. Smith is signing an income tax reduction bill. Mr. Corridini said that anything un- fair to Gov. Smith in the picture would be taken out “if his representative comes to us and shows us we are wrong.” “The story,” he added, “is not propa- ganda, but a dignified dramatization of an historical event.” He said one scene showing the governor, along with the title, “The acknowledged champion of the anti-prohibition forces,” already had been deleted. I ture cannot be used for commercial pur- HOUSTON, Tex., June 21.—Norman E. Mack, Democratic national commit- teeman from New York and an ardent Smith man, arriving here, promptly threw down the gage to the drys. In ST NIBLE, BYRADN, | S DRETS SR He is for temperance. content. If the State desires o be dry, | Sl o gt ot state to be | QOthers of Crew and for Amundsen. By the Associated Press. KINGS BAY, Spitzbergen, June 21.— Cheered by the 650 por of provisions yesterday upon ‘his camp off Northeast Land by Maj. Maddalena, ever since May 25, | plane MD piloted on the ground, i George | #11 be no effort to stampede | the: vention to Smith on the first ballot. The favorite sons are to be treated politely, but he adds, of course, f Gov, Bmith will be nominated not later than the third baliol. So much for the favorite mlh mr,h\lan Nwfl:‘:x; sists t Smith w ave more Sotes ‘cast for him on the first | ., ‘This is wnél&lxbllz’mmre lh’l{n ity of the convention vote. He xu)vr:o say just how large the vote on that first ballot, however, | Hold Back Their Views. | The Smith people are not tying up | to any vice presidential candidates at this stage of the game, they say. They may have their preferences, but they pre keeping them to themselves. This | §s much the same strategy as that of | the Hoover managers at Kansas City. There is 1o be nothing doing unul $mith has the presidential nomination. “There s & huge crop of vice presiden- | tial possibilities here, however. | Jesse Jones, the Texas treasurer of | the Democratic national committes, | who hed more 1o do with bringing the | eonvention to Houston than any one | else, except the Smith supporters, is *in the talk” There are those who assert that Mr. | Jopes has higher aspirations and 15 thinking of the possibility of the presi- | dentinl nomination itself, if Smith hflp-‘ ens W be “stopped” by the dry and | otestant opposition W his candidacy. | Hull of Tennessee, Evans Woollen of | Indiana, Gov. Vie Donabey of Ohio, { | i § i #enator Robinson of Arkansas, Demo- eratic leader of the Senate; former Sen- stor Pomerene of Ohio, Government ol | gase prosecutor; Senator George of | Georgla, and even the fire-eating Sen- #lor Reed of Missouri are among those | whose names are mentioned for the | wice presidential nomination. Alliance Not Yet Formed. Of course, included in this group of wiee presidential possibilitief are men who <till hope for first place on the tioket. who believe ihere s a chance " §Continued on Page 4, Column 4.) ice where he is stranded and the exact , | successful expedition was only enabled |{and their signals were heard only a few | ble Italia met with dis- ship Citta di Milano the present situation. He gave some instruction about what further procedure is to be followed in rescuing his party and gave details as to what were the conditions on the felt, would play a finding. It was real- t search over the vast 10 reach Nobile when he sent out radio signals to guide it throughout its flight. | Amundsen and Lieut. Lief Dietrichsen | started for Spitzbergen on Monday night from Tromsoe, Norway, in a-French sea- | by Rene Guilbaud and | manned by a crew of three. It had a| radio, but this was working imperfectly | hours after their hop-off. All Experienced Men. ‘What hope was held for their safety was placed in the men themselves and their plane. Amundsen and Dietrich- sen were missing in the Arctic for al- most a month 1925 when they at-| tempted to reach the North Pole with Lincoln Ellsworth, Then they had shown their resourcefulness and skill when faced with conditions which to some would have meant death, abandon- ing one of the two planes in which they had set out and come down between the ice floes far to the north, the llx; members of the expedition flying back to Spitzbergen in the other plane, Guilbaud is held to be one of Prance’s | most capable airmen, and the piane had | been prepared for a transatlantic flight | and has a cruising radius of 2,800 miles, There was a possibility that they had come down at Advent Bay or some {so- lated spot on the Spitzbergen archi- pelago and been unable to inform th Kings Bay searchers of their predica- | ment. It was also possible that they | might be operating independently in ' search of the survivors of the Italia,| Before leaving Notway Amundsen had sald that the wide flying radius of the French plane offered an opportunity to (Continued on Page 2, Column 7.) Drought Hits Brazil Crops. FORTALEZA, Brazil, June 2 : Prolonged drought in eastern Brazil has caused thousands of families of that section 1o abandon their farms and leave the country, Crops are estimated DEPUTIES' DEATHS AROUSE BALKANS Grave Results May Follow Sheoting in Parliament. Treaty Endangered. By the Assoclated Press. BELGRADE, Jugoslavia, June 21.— The killing of two deputies during a session of Parliament today was re- garded as likely to bring grave conse- quences throughout the Balkans. Radical deputy fired six shots, which wounded four deputies besides the men killed. Outright rejection of the Nettuno con- vention was predicted. This pact, which permits Italians to own land in the Dalmatian coastal plain, has been the occasion of anti-Italian demonstrations in the past, straining Jugoslavia's rela- tions with the Mussolini government. ‘The assassinations’ will probably re- sult in the breaking up of the confer- ence of the little entente—Rumania, Czechoslovakia and Jugoslavia—now in session at Bucharest. Italy’s penetra- tion of Albania, Hungary's attempts to revise the treaty of Trianon, and the Neftuno treaty were on the agenda of | the conference. Democratic Members Resign. Democratic members of the cabinet it that follow suit. It press crime inflame public opin- ion. Grave consequences were feared in Croatia, however, where the wounded deputies are popular. All of Jugoslavia was draped in black flags. Newspapers appeared with black ‘mourning borders. Punica Ratchitch, the murderer, a Radical deputy, was under arrest today. (Continued on Page 4, Column 7.) PAY ROLL BANDITS. SLUG WRONG MAN Victim, However, Had $2,600 in Cash in Brief Case Which Is Overlooked. NEW YORK, June 21.—Two robbers invaded the Grand Central Terminal Bullding shortly before noon today, slugged a man they thought/was carry- ing a $3,500 pay roll, discovered he was the wrong man and fled without finding out that he had $2.600 in cash in a brief case. One of the robbers was captured. The robbers who apparently had in- formation concerning a pay roll to be delivered to the electrical engineering firm of Peet & Powers on the fourth floor of the terminal building, waited in a corridor on that floor for their in- tended victim. When Grover C. Hartman came out of the engineering offices the robbers knocked him down with a blackjack. Finding that he was not the man they had been waiting for they ran down the stairs toward the street, ignoring Hart- man’s brief case which had $2,600 in it, ‘William .J. Monahan, a railroad brake- man, and Patrick Keagan, a conductor, captured Michael Costello on the third floor, Hartman was taken to a hospital, where it was believed he might have a fractured skull. QUAKE RECORDED HERE. Georgetown Instrument Registers Disturbance 7,000 Miles Away. By the Associated Press. The seismograph at Georgetown Uni- versity began registering earthquake shocks at 5:56 o'clock this morning and continued to register for four hours. The shocks were of “considerable intensity,” reaching their maximum at 6:30 o'clock. The distance was esti- mated at over 7,000 miles, NEW YORK, June 21 (#).-—A mod- - | erately severe earthquake approximately 7,000 miles from New York was recorded on the seismograph at Fordham Uni. versity today at 7:056 am. (daylight time). The earthouake reached its at less than 50 per cent normal o M Tl Eag]es. in Farewell Her He Has O Nicholas Lee Eagles, condemned mur- | derer, who will die in the electric chair i the District jail at 10 a.m. tomorrow, bade farewell to his mother this after- noon——but the bent, lonely old Jewish woman did not know it Bhe speaks end reads no English, Eagles sald, and he had told her that his sentence had been committed to life | imprisonment and that he will start for {the Federal Pcnitentiary in Atlania to- morroy, maximum intensity at 7:30, btained Life Sentence ‘This story, the condemned man said, his mother belleves He has arranged to have a letter sent to her from Atanta in a few days, tell- ing of his death from natural causes, ‘The others of the condemned trio, who are W die tomorrow, sald farewell Lo & constant stream of relatives this after- | noon, AL 4 pm the gates of the outside world will close on them forever, TWO OF BUSCH TRIO APPEAL T0 FORMER PALTO STAY DOOM “Will Cheat Chair,” Say Mo- reno and Eagles, Combin- ing Against Proctor. PLACE HOPE IN McCABE, FOURTH MEMBER OF GANG Proctor Refuses to Take Blame Repeats Assertion That He Had No Gun. With the emphatic deglaration that “we will not go to the chair,” Nicholas Lee Eagles, one of the three condemned to die tomorrow morning for the mur- der of Policeman Leo W. K. Busch, today is making a desperate effort to save himself and his friend. Samuel Moreno, from execution through friends “on the outside” and attorneys for him- self and Moreno, who are running down a story that John F. McCabe, originally indicted with the trio but acquitted of the charge of murder, last Summer stated in a public place that John C. Proctor, the third member sen- tenced to die tomorrow, possessed a gun on the night of the shooting and fired at Busch. This is offered by Eagles in direct contradiction to the emphatic and steadfast claims of Proctor that he had no gun on the night of the homi- cide. Say They Fired at Ach. Eagles believes that if the proper authorities can be informed of the al- leged statement of McCabe that this Al will strengthen his claim and that of Moreno that neither shot at Busch, but concentrated their fire on Busch’s fel- low policeman, Frank L. Ach, who was seriously wounded in the Petworth gun battle in “September, 1926. Eagles is guarding closely the source of the information regarding the alleged statement of McCabe. The combined ac- tion of Moreno and Eagles against Proc- tor is the climax of a feud -among the three with Proctor tsanding alone. Eagles and Moreno are intensely bitter against Proctor and they declared with- out hesitancy today that “he is taking us to the chair with him.” Believe Proctor Will Crack.” Eagles' declaration ghat “we will not 80 to the chair” is founded on a be- lief he said he held today that “Proctor will crack at the last moment and exonerate Sam and me of the killing.” So convinced is Eagles of Moreno's innocence, he said, that he to Proctor that they both admit they Busch' In order. that the young nm=ml:':: mmn'-md a 3 a deaf ear to this proposal as well as of several prisoners that “come clean.” Proctor was as emphatic as he al- ways has beermr that he did not possess & gun on the night ‘of the shooting and therefore had no part in the shooting of the policeman. He reiterated his innocence, declaring that the others knew he possessed no { revolver and therefore is not guilty. Prayed Over Two Hours. Moreno was serious and stolcal today. However, he maintained “had hopes” up until the last minute, having placed great faith in his attorneys, who, he declared are working for his life day and night. Moreno said he prayed last night for over two hours, his conscience is clear that he had told the truth and that truth is that he did not kill Busch. He was just as bitter toward Proctor as Eagles is and belleves he is being “carried to the chair,” by Proctor. Eagles hopes and believes he will be the last to go if all is lost tomorrow, “because I am the happiest of the | three.” He pointed with &flde to the hearty breakfast he ate this morning explaining that he consumed so much food it was not necessary for him to | wear a belt to hold his trousers up. He held and caressed a playful kitten | which belongs to the section of the jail {in_which he is housed. Proctor spent most of the morning with his mother and sweetheart, Miss Lelia Lauder Johnson. Shortly before the luncheon hour at the jail Eagles’ mother arrived and a few minutes later Moreno's mother, accompanied by some relatives, visited her son. About an hour prior to her arrival Moreno's father spent several minutes in con- versation with him. Receive Coolidge Denial. With 10 o'clock tomorréw set for the execution, President Coolidge’s .denial of executive clemency in ‘their case arrived by mail late this morning at the Department of Justice. Official communications of the Presi- dent's action were sent to both District Attorney Rover and Superintendent William L. Peake of the District jail. The specific action of the President was to deny the application of John Proctor, Samuel Moreno and Nicholas Lee Eagles for a commutation of sentence from death to life imprison- ment. The papers in the case had been sent to President Coolidge at the Summer White House in Brule, Wis. Contents of the papers were with- held today as a privileged communica- tion of official files, and the papers will remain in the secret archives of the Department of Justice. It was known that among the papers sent to the President were not only the formal application of the three doomed men but also reports from the district attorney, the presiding judge and the Department of Justice, S ol FIRE SWEEPS DAMASCUS. Dead, 8yrian Blaze, DAMASCUS, Syria, June 21 (#)— I'welve persons lost their lives and many have been injured in & fire which has destroyed a section of the city with heavy loss. The fire has been raging since 9 o'clock Iast night. Twelve Many Injured in CARRANZA GOES NORTH. MAREERT oy Flyer Hops Off From Mitchel Field for Massachusetts. MITCHEL FIELD, N, Y., June 21 (®), ~-Oapt. Emilio Oarranga, Mexican arm; pilot, hopped off from Mitehel Field af 1026 am, today to visit Lowell, Mass, He piarmed to return this afternoon. ' REED'S LEARNING TO BE PUBLIC PERSON HARD WORK. SAYS MISSEARHART Showered With Offers to Act and Marry or Accept Gifts of Great Variety, But Declines. tically mobbed by -hundreds of kind. hospitable welcomers, and where I first RETORT! BY AMELIA EARHART. By Cable to The Star and New York Times. LONDON, June 21.—Flying the At lantic involves learning a lot more that I ever dreamed about when I ac- cepted the invitation to take part in learned that people like autographs. London is putting the finishing touches | on this bit of education. Today I have been receiving offers; the flight of the Friendship. Ever since landing in England I have been learning what it means to be a public person, the center of some big event in the news that is interesting mmmm-me.nnmxlnmm and to accept numerous gifts from an automobile to a hushand. The usual letters of eriticisnr wnd threats which I have always”read celebrities receive have also“arrived, and I am people. This first lesson started at Trepassey, Newfoundland, when the news of our first ineffectual efforts to get out of the water began to be pub- lished in the newspapers. It was continued at Burry Port, South Wales, where our littie party was prac- OPEN GOLF FIELD Bobby Jones Equals Par for Course in First Nine Holes of Match. OLYMPIA FIELDS, CHICAGO, June 21 (#).—Equalling par over the treacherous No. 4 course, Leon- .ard Schmutte of Lima, Ohio, jumped into the lead of the first round of the National Open Golf Champion- ship today with a card of 36-35—71. By the Assoclated Press. OLYMPIA FIELDS, CHICAGO, June 21.—Bobby Jones got off to a sensa- tional start in his quest for a third American open champlonship today, using his putter with magic effect to card even par, 35, for the first nine holes of the opening 18-hole round. His partner, Johnny Farrell, was badly off form and took 40. Jones had a few lapses with the wood and iron, but his putter saved him nearly every time. He sank long putts for birdies on the first, fourth and eighth, holing out from 25 feet on the latter green. Farrell, meanwhile, was having all sorts of trouble. 2 ‘The first big gallery of the day, at least 2,000 strong, set out after Jones and Farrell, the best dressed profes- sional. Their cards: Jangg—Out. 44534442535 Farrel—Out. 545553 44540 ‘The international character of the by the pairing of Tommy Armour, present title holder, with Archie ston, a leading player of Great Britain, Both have been playing well in rnm,!ee. Compston setting an unofficial course record of 33-36—69 yesterday. While Armour had a couple of rounds in 72, Hunter Turns in 41, Monroe Hunter, the long-driving Washington pro, turned the ninth in 41, Vincent Eldred of New York, had 39; Jack Gordon of Buffalo, 40; Walter Kossman of Belleville, 111, 38, and Jack Forrester of New York, 39, Walter Hagen was the victim of two bad breaks, but A 6 on the first hole, a par 5. rive went out 250 yards to the rough, and he used a midiron to approach 20 feet from the green, His pitch was 15 feet from the pin and he took 3 putts, missing his second by a fraction of inch, His partner, Maurice McCarthy, jr., New York, scored a birdie 4. Dave Sutherland of St. Louis had too many 5 holes and went out in 38. Densmore Shute of Cleveland, found 5 a favorite and had a George Smith of 8t. Paul, scored 39. Harry Cooper, last year's runner-up after a play-off, went out in_ 38, three over par, along with Willle Hunter of Los Angeles, who had another 38, Gallett of Milwaukee found his stride on the in-nine and came home in per- fect figures for a par 36, giving him a 7 Von Elm Takes 38, Cleorge von Elm, former national amateur titieholder, had two bad holes and turned for MoLeod, an open champlon of gone by, played steady golf for going out, two worse par. Horton Smith, the Joplin, Mo, profes- slonal, equaled Bobby Jones' par figu gol out with a 35 His eat (Continued on Page 3, Column 8) years a3 competition was graphically portrayed | ing also 38 home in 39, Freddle caught in a situation where very little of me is frée. I am being moved in- ltenddl:&vl::, There no stage appearance nor acting in the movies. I am not going to commercialize my flight in the Priendship and I will be happler when (Continued on Page 4, Column 2.) VIRGINIA' SELECTS fax County Split Over Sup- port of Al Smith. Special Dispatch to The Star. ROANOKE, Va., June 21.—Seating of a contesting delegation from Fairfax County proved the first fireworks of the State Democratic convention, which of Rival Contestants From Fair- o convenes here at noon today. The con- testants were placed on the temporary roll of the convention late last night, after a lengthy hearing in which the delegation certified as regularly elected had been flayed as ‘nondescripts,” who are not Democrats but “members of an organization whose purpose is to de- feat a Catholic presidential nominee.” ‘The expected contest over the delega~ tion from Arlington failed to material- ize, it being stated that a compromise had ‘been reached by the rival factions. Party leaders also brought harmony into the ranks of the Norfolk County and Richmond delegations, where the most serious vention discord pre- vailed. The ‘hmond delegation num- bers 163, or approximately one-tenth of the convention. The Fairfax County fight came from Providence district. F. H. McCandlish and John R. Barbey, law partners, headed the rival delegations. The con- testants claimed that at the regularly olution was adopted pledging the mem- bers not only to oppose the nomination lof Al Smith, but to vote against him | next November, if he is the party nom- ce. Protest Resolution. ‘The contestants protested against such a resolution and sought to put into effect another to the effect that those cipating in the meeting would be und to support the . I to secure the a Lot by resolution, & rump conven! k { Former Senator Walter Tansil Oliver le & fight against the “regu- lar" delegation, declaring that those attending the meeting were not Demo- crats, but nondescripts. McCandlish was asked by the com- mittee hearing the contest if the dele- gation would think it unfair if asked whether they would support the party nominee. “I feel the question is unwise,” was the answer, called meeting to elect delegates a res- | S The _contestants were seated by a ~"(Continued on Page 2, Column 1) ~ (Continued on Page 2, Column 5) () Means Associated MRS. BAILIE GOES ONTRIALBYD.AR: Charge of Disturbing Peace of Societly Denied in “Black List” Case. Mrs. Helen Tufts Baille of Boston, Mass, who came into the limelight resently as the circulator of the now famous “black list” which she said existed in the Daughters of the Ameri- TWO CENTS. Press. DR WORK IS NAMED 10 TAKE HELM AS 6. 0.P. CHAIRMAN Special Republican Commit- tee Today Selects Na- tional Group Leaders. R. D. WILLIAMS RETAINED AS FIRST VICE PRESIDENT Mrs. Alvin T. Hert and D. E. Pom- eroy Are Picked as Other Members. Dr. Hubert Work, Secretary of Inte- rior, today took the helm of the Hoover-Curtis campaign ship, intent on bringing her safely into harbor next November at that port of high hope, the White House. His formal designation as chalrman of the Republican rational committee was announced early this afternoon,by the special committee of 24 members of the national organization, following a brief executive session held at the Willard Hotel. Secretary Hoover and Senator Curtis spectively. . s Representative Franklin Fort of New thought that he, like Hoover, will choose to remain in the cabinet for the time being at least. Announcement of the selection of of- can Revolution, went on trial today at short a closed session at Memorial Conti- nental Hall before the society's national board of management, charged with “conduct disturbing the harmony of the soclety.” Nineteen members of the organiza- DELEGATES TODAY * cipline a member can receive—repri: mand, suspension or its constitution, Mrs. Bailie, her attorneys, George Alger of New York and Lawrence G. Brooks purpose of remedying conditions and of T an hich peace harmony, had been destroyed by the conduct of officers of the soclety and not by mine.” Mr. Burton arranged to show that Mrs. Bailie, who is a member of the American Revolution, and charged that she made many mis-statements con- cerning the society. The soclety’s coun- sel accused Mrs. Bailie of having had issued a pamphlet filled with half- truths, false statements, villifications and condemnations of the national so- clety and its officers, which she eircu- lated, not only within the society, but outside. What He Hopes to Show. The attorney said he was to show that Mrs. Bailie m ments derogatory to the good name of the soclety, belittled its great work, ac- cused its officers of unaul acts, stated that its officers were duped and and opposed the triotic :lmr which the national society tands. He arra to lay before the board, ‘which consists of the national officers and State regents, some 60 of whom were present at today's hearing, evi- dence tending to show that Mrs. Bailie accused the organization of acts in vio- lation of the Constitution of the United States. Mrs. Bailie was charged with having organized a committee, which New Jersey: necticut: Pat Sulivan, G. Skel Oklahoma: with the committee. It was stated that Mrs. Hert would have charge of the women's division of the campaign forces. Chaiman Work was empowered to appoint Eastern and and such she called the “D. A. R. committee of | yge, protest,” in violation of the by-laws of the soclety and did so to give it the semblance of an official committee. ‘The board was informed that Mrs, Baille was mtxmmudbynn«n motives mn her criticism, but that she intended to destroy its useful- ness p:l‘lc:n patriotic nlntk‘}nmumlm its were pat an o accused was so violent in her opposi- tion to those things which the average American citizen feels are a t fioed_sod .d he :ool leading t Secretary an a in the early Hoover boom. He been as the chief strategist of the pre-convention Hoover organization. He has been in conference with Sec- mn:mnen rt of his very existence and ex- | % tence of the United States that ap- parently she is willing to go to any ex- treme, In her formal reply, Mrs. Baille sald: {Chicago Judge Is Bad Insurance Risk, Says Company By the Assoclated Press. CHICAGO, June 21.—Criminal Court judges who preside over trials involv- Il‘\& nn.am- are not regarded as good risks by re insurance companies, Judge oh ;. McGoorty has dmm A fl:\m - wmu;’ the m::wh:; e WAS CAn yuurdulm the explanation that he was risk. It was Judge MoGoorty who presided at the recent trial of l\m- McLaughlin for att During the trial And thtimidate ) .'lgn home of one juror was bhombed and Judge MeGoorty was threatened, in Canceling Policy Radio Programs—Page 42° i A1 fi ¥

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