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THE ADVERTISER-JOURNAL C O M P L E T E D A Y R E P O R T O F T H E A S S O C I A T E D P R E S S TODAY'S NEW S TODAY In tlio Evening Paper the Nows Is Complete Up to 4 P. M, AUBURN, N. Y. TUESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1929 PRICE THREE CENTS FLIGHT TRIUMPH AVIATION Sm ashes A ir Record For A g r e e m e n t o n tificatioK of Kel- Pact Has Col- sed — Cruiser' B ill shed to Fore ington, Jan. S.-—(/P) iI<>porf of; embers of tlie Semite who have vine to set nn’azrc-emen: on the Lv over an Interpretation of Hogg “anti-war treaty took h ird turn today. . . . (ireement which seemed 1m- Ust‘ nigbt whereby an early ratification of (lie treaty was ■‘t was said today by tlio i to have collapsed. -rulser construction hill await- ‘ deration after disposition ot Upi>o pact apparently is playing ln°the negotiations. Opponents treaty, who bare been demand- jnterpretatlve resolution nre the strong supporters of tlie bill,.. This ■ has' aided tlie tore’ In getting some support his group In. favor of a report e Foreign Relations Gommltte*. erica’s Interpretations Instead ohitlon of reservation.- compromise arrangement which near completion last nlgnr. , did not succeed today and we signs that some <.t the \bill - opponents' were among ooking with disfavor on the With Brother, He Inherited Modest Business That Grew to Be Valued In Millions—Gave Large Sums to Educational and Chari table Institutions \ rtorni, Pa.; Jan. 8.—UP)— Ten- f purpose that is the outstand- ll of the Pennsylvania Dutch .'access, to Mnj. Carl Spats, far of' Ihe endurance record ; plane Question Mark, said I). Saptz, fat her of the nvla- lils home here today. Isa Pennsylvania Dutchman,\ retired newspaper owner, £ s Pennsylvania Dutchman he hotv what It wns to start iny- Hliout winning In the ond.\ Question * Murk, piloted by and four (light companions, « Los Angeles yesterday af- Mlstiing an endurance record tliiin 150 hours In the air. toother and myself had an Iw hours while his ship was n|fi said Mr. Spatz. ‘‘Carl M m would succeed but never ™t they could remain in the ’j’R Ho confided confidently J he believed the limit, would _ days. H|s mother— she’s \■as rather worried. *rote to as from the ship and tfn r 'V lvoro,! hr nt>- man Iw r! ^ ,'lns fniwtl t° land.” tin £ n'f worry— we’re i? iim~ mJrt wril Tf'R * Hrtlo I S '\'J \‘p \H I land i, ^ that record down IS THE B firlves n ' 1 t,l0lr niece, ln 11 fire thnt ,i» T l,nrnec> to Nn>'- The t ’ lu?ilr ''ere n,'m °n the t l i ’T ot’p«Pied an lc an'l nnmro ! of tho ? ne 'hey s C lost thulr ^JVEATHER forecast w ^ 8—Western (Tuesday w:lh , ,0night aml h ^ r a t u , S,:nvI-v rirfns Wa(TES1Pl‘RArrURES er DeP<- Thermometer) [*>um 1928 \•Hum 20 today 7 . 0 33 l ^ fon«oVrou 7:23r S 4:51 New York, Jan . S.—(iP)—Benjamin N. Duke, tobacco manufacturer, died a t his residence a t 2 East 80th Street early today after a lengthy Illness. Benjamin N. D u k e was one of two sons 'of W ashington Duke who helped extend''their father’s inconspicuous business to such proportions that It niade the fam ily name known through out, the\ world. The father, alm o st impoverished by the r war - between .the states, had raised tobacco on his' farm and the product was sold to country mer chants by ‘ his sons, Benjamin N. and the late James B. Duke. This busi ness- soon afterw a rd was expanded to include the manufacture of the ra\y procHict on a sm a ll scale. Continued prosperity enabled the father a few years later to move to Durham, N. C., where he started a small factory. T h a t was the actual beginning of the business that event ually was valued in millions. The little factory was a success from the start and was extended from time to time until Washington Duke at his death was regarded ns one of the country’s most prosperous tobac co manufacturers. Tltli the death of thc fntlier the business passed to the two sons nnd innovations were introduced. James Inaugurated the manufacture of cigar ettes by machinery when thnt method of using tobacco first came Into favor. Under the firm name of Duke Brothers, tho business grew to giant proportions until 1SOO, when It was merged with The American Tobacco Company. Jam e s became tlie guiding genius of the combination ns Its presi dent for many .years, while Benjamin served.a? treasurer,,nnd-.director until •'the'dissolution^of .the' company’ by the United States Supreme Coiirt in 10.11. At tho time of the merger thc D u k e , brothers were reported to have re ceived $7,500,000 In. securities for their holdings. In • the new combination they were said to have held 30 per cent ..of ..the. stoc.k of The' American Tobacco Oompans-. In. the early 1020’s Benjam in Duke’s wealth was esti mated to be in excess of $GO,000,000. He was born a t Orange (now D u r ham ) County, North Carolina, April 27, lS5u, nnd wns educated nt Guil-‘ ford College, North Carolina. On February 21, 1877. ho married Sarah Pearson Angler of Durham. They, had two sons, George Washington Duke and Angler Buchanan Duke, both of whom are dead, and a daughter. Mary .Lillian, who was married lo Anthony •T. Drexol-BIddlo, .Tr. Beniamin branched out Into rail road, hanking, cotton and other Indus trial enterprises and during his later years devoted much of his time to New York rpnl estate and bnnklng. lie owned a handsome residence In’ upper F ifth Avenue, New York, ns well as a palatial estate a t Durham, N. C., In addition to having had at various times homes in London, Tarls and Florida. Like his brother James, Benjamin gave largo sums to educational and charitable institutions. His gifts to T rinity College, now Duke University, at Durham. N. C . and Guilford Col lege are said to have exceeded $1,000.- 000 1-Ie never would permit a list of Ills benefactions to be mnde public- Death was due to acute bronchial trouble. At Mr Duke's bedside were his wife. Mrs. Sarah Pearson Duke: his daughter, Mrs. A. J. Drexel Bid dle.- Jr.: his son-in-law. Mr Biddle: nnd his clergyman. Dr. Ralph W. Sockmnn. THRONG AT STATION WHEN FUNERAL TRAIN OF RICKARD ARRIVES Dempsey Accompanies Body of Sport Promoter. Disinclined to Talk at Any Length— Mrs. Rick ard Near Collapse— Body to Lie In State <$'$><$><&$<§><§><$<$> <$> <§> <s> $ * Keeping her monoplane, Golden Eagle, in the air fo r 12 hours and 11 minutes, Miss Bobbie Trout, 19-year-old Los Angeles aviatrix, eclipsed the w o rld’s endurance flight record fo r women by four hours. Bobbie is shown in the cockpit of her plane. , 22 LIVES TAKEN BY ERUPTION IF Five Bodies Recovered From Ruins — Many Injured Taken From Stricken Area, Dispatches State — Disturbance Subsiding—Resi dents Flee to Mountains Buenos Aires, Jan. S.— (JP)— With five bodies recovered from rums reused by the eruption of Hie Chilean volcano Galbuco near Lake IJunqul- liue, it appeared possible today that [lie lava i'nd taken a toll of 22 lives. Dispatches from Puerto Montt said carbineers bad unconfirmed reports that live families, totaling 22 persons, were missing. These families lived In the region which was- heavily damaged when the vo’cano poured lava and iiSJies over it Other dispatches said u a n y Injured had been taken from the stricken area *) Puerto Varas,. across L.ute Llnnqtiiliue. A ll bo’its on the UO-inile wide lake wore pressed into service for the New York, ,!an S —(iPJ—The train bearing Ihe body of Tex Rickard from M iam i Beach, where the career of the fam o u s sports promoter ended Sun day, readied Pennsylvania station to day at 10.20 a. 111 . Thousands jammed the station, but only friends and newspapermen, num bering more than 100, were permitted to enter the approaches to the train. Most of tbe members of the Hoard of Directors of Madison Square Gar den, led by Col John S. Hammond, new acting general manager, were there to arrange transfer of the body, as well as, to meet Mrs. Rickard and Ja c k Dempsey. Mrs. Itickard was near a state of collapse. The hociy ot the promoter, encased I 11 a $15,000 bronze casket and covored w ith on immense floral gift of Demp sey-w h ite carnations with “My l ’al” tiaced ii' red tlowers— was taken to fune r a l parlors prior to being laid in state later at Madison' Square Garden. J 'empsey, much affected by the scenes and disinclined to talk at any length, nevertheless made It. clear he hud riot made any decision about re tiien.ent from the ring, declnred he had 110 intention of trying to till R b karri's shoes at the Garden and ex plained his Interest in promotion of the ■Shnrkey-Slribllng fight at Miami Beacli. ‘•When a fellow like Rickard dies it takes tbe edge off everything,” said iJempsey, \He was my pal.” The former champion indicated he w p u ld have 110 definite statement about his future ring plans or rther activities unit 1 he leaves New York tr returns lo Florida. “ My plans now are only for Ihe im m e d iate future,” said Dempsey. ‘‘1 shall., try .to, carry out, Tex's ideas as w e ll as I can. ' -- “W e were interested In many things together and these are the unes I want done ns Tex would have had riiem done \Before I decide anything about iny personal plans I am going back ro M iam i Beach to help with Ihe Strlb- lingr-Sharkey fight. I agreed 10 f:ght ag a in for Tex 'but, everything i.= so scrambled now that I don't know w h a i I w ill do until I sit down m il think it a ll out. •‘I am not interested In faking Tex a place in 'Madslon Square Garden. No one could do that and myself perhaps least of all. \M.v part In helping with the Miami Beach figh't. will only lie in behalf 01 Mrs. Rickard and bccau.-'’ T knew what Tex wanted done ” Dempsey explained bis part in the Grim Change In Setting at Sports Palace ♦ New York, Jan. 8.— (/P)— Madis-m Square Garden, tangible evidence of Ills genius, will shelter Tex Rickard’s bodj until it is taken lo Woodlawn Cemetery for burial tomorrow. The- scene of some oi his greatest triumphs, the huge sports arena liis ! brain built, will experience a contrast. Instead of cheering jrowds the Gar den luis known so often, there will uu a funeral silence, row 011 row of empty seals, nnd hushed thousands tome to pass in solemn tile before the lacr ot it dead king of sportdom in the centcr of the arena. One hundred policemen were ns- signed for duty this morning along 1110 route from the Pennsylvania S.allon tu the Garden during the removal of the bronze coffin from the train ih a i brought it from 'M iam i. l’lans were for only the promoter s widow and his closest friends lo visit ihe Garden today. At 10-.t0 tomorrow morning thc public will be permitted to pay its last respects to the greatest ^ President Elect Informing HimseJf on Political Developments Dur- j ing His Absence In Central and! South America— Adopts Role of Listener (By James I.. West, Associated l ’res^; StafT W r it e r ) 'Washington, Jan. S. — (fl*) — W ith characteristic dispatch aud thorough ness, President-elect Hoover Is inform ing himself 011 political developments during bis absence in Central nnd South America and obtaining the views of Republican Party leaders In and out of Congress 011 a maze of ques.ions. Picking up tho conferences where he left them off Inst night In a long conveisation at his home with Vice President-elect Charles Curtis, the next chief executive found a rather full engagement list lacing blni during his second day In Washington. Senator Borah, Idaho, one of tlvj foremost ot the campaigners on his behalf, had been invited to the Hoo ver home for breakfast and a confer ence afterwards. The Idaho senator is In the forefront of those who insist promoter the boxing game has ever 1 tli.it. a comprehensive program of 1 known. Services nre to be held at I :.‘!0 ! p. 111 . Burial a t 2 is to be in the ceme tery where the promoter’s Mrst wtie and daughter lie. With the appointment of Col. JoJin S. Hammond as acting general man ager of the Garden corporation, t.iere was a lull in speculation as lo who Rickard's permanent successor will be- There was still some guessing as to thlet question, w ith the names of Ham mond, John M. Chapman, czar of thc six-day bicycle race game, Jess Mc Mahon. matchmaker at the Garden, Jack Dempsey and Gone Ttiuney ng- uring most prominently. Colonel Hammond's first announce ment.ns general 'manager wns to the effect, that plans'would go forward for the SlriblingJSharkey light at Miami Beach, February 27. As a matter ot fact, Rickard had left the situation In regard to this, match In subh shape that little remains to be done. Estimates as to tho extent of tno dead promoter’s personal fortune varied from $1,000,000 lo $5.000 001). Less than a year ago Richard hlmseir estimated It at around $2.-300,(W0,. near ly half of It in cash. As a mark of respe’t. Hie Garden was ordered closed tonight and ((.mor row night. Tills forced postponement of a hockey game between the New York Rangers nnd lies Cnnndlons of Montreal, «et for this evening, nnd oc an amateur boxing show, scheduled tor tomorrow night. The capitalist was stricken with the i _ bronchial attack last ni^bt and failed j.us been relatively quiet to rally. icscue work. After the people bad been brought to safety cattle were be-Scorning fight nt Miami Bench lias i.c,tn Ing taken from the grazing land upon • ing to do with the Mndlson Square which the l.ot ashes were falling. Hot water also was streaking from the snow cla 1 volenno into thc lake. The diMnrbancc wus sa.id to be sub siding today. The threateued district is largely settled by Germans and the I»eopIe were regaining tranquillity with the lessening of volcano activity. The Culbuco volcac.o is 6,000 feet In 1-eight aad of peculiar formation. Its three extremities border Lakes IJanquIhue, Todos Santos and Chape de Este. It was believed that hundreds of homeless persons had fled to tbe moun tains to escape the lava flow and low hanging clouds of gases. Cnlbuco was in violent eruption in 1802 when sovernl new craters opened near tho summit a f ‘er the cone bad been completely blown off. Tlie last eruption uf any importance was In M ay, 1027. At. other times the volcano Stabs Wife Then G a rden Corporation. He «ald he and R ich a r d were interested in tbe dog track where Ihe bout Is lo take placi* ancl for that reason he feels he should carry out the promoter's wishes. U n d e r no consideration, Dempsey said, would be referee the bout. W h ile he did not actually commit him s e lf, Dempsey gave the Impres sion he had signed a contract wltn R ickard for one fight this year. When asked the direct question on this, (lie form e r champion did not make n denial. TWO CHILDREN PERISH IN FIRE I OF WINTER VISITS IT OF U. S. farm relief be enacted at an early session of the Seventy-first. Congress. Others 011 Ihe engagement list of ithe president-elect at Ills temporary headquarters at the Mayflower Hotel included Representative Walter New ton. of Minnesota, who was chairman of tbe National Speakers’ Bureau dur ing tbe campaign; Robison of Ken tucky; Free of California, nnd White of Maine, nnd Dr. Julius Klein, rilrec tor of the Bureau of Foreign .and Do- m'estlc Commerce ln tho Commerce Department. The president-elect also hart 011 his waiting list tbe Washington City Committee 011 Inauguration ceremonies with a rather'elaborate program. Mr. Hoover Is known to be determined to have an inaugural as simple ns any of those in recent years. For tho present at least, Mr. Hoo ver hns adopted the role of listener and according to his callers is offering no comments or suggestions of Ills own with respect either to cabinet and other appointments or to ihe question of when 'farm relief legislation should be put through. Representative Tilson, Connecticut, Republican leader In the House, nnd others who called on Mr. Hoover yes- terdny went away with (he Idea that the president-elect Is not going to have anything to say ns to enactment of the pending McNary farm relief meas ure. V Ith Mr, Hoover determined not to even remotely place himself In the position of interfering I 11 any way \ I t h legislation pending during flic Coo’.irlge admin’stration, leaders lioih in the Senale and House declare there I Is 11 tlle prospool of farm legislation I before March •! N o n e of T h ree 225 H o rsepow er 'M o tors E n tire ly A irw o rth y W h e n Q u estion M a rk Lan d s — C rew P h y s i c a lly F it New York. Jan . S.—W )—The coldest weather of the winter was visited upon thc greater part of the couutry toda.v From the northwest, where tbe tem perature dropped to 20 degrees below zero at Devil's Lake. N D , the cold Doctor Who Never Charged for His Services, Dies Los Angeles, Jan. S— (JP)— The hu m a n engine is after all superior to the mechanical one iu endurance flying. The question, one of tbe maiiy put to the Army’s monoplane Question M a r k , wns answered beyond a doubt when the great Fokker gave up tbe battle yesterday afternoon and settled to earth, after a flight which lasted the Held of nvlatlon, a record-shatter ing flight of 150 hours,-40 minutes, 15 seconds and nearly 12,000 miles safely completed. Neither the astounding distance or endurance performances of tho re m a rkable ship were regarded by her A rm y sponsors as the prime accom plishment, however. That distinction w e n t to her thorough proof of the theory that refueling of airplanes w h ile In flight Is practical, which arm y officers said was the chief mis sion of the cpochal flight. None of the three 225-horsepower motors was entirely airworthy when the crew finally nosed the ship down to earth. After a flight which lasted nearly a full week. On the other hand the Ave-mon aboard were pronounced physically fit by army physicians who said they needed only rest. First state ments from the men also voiced the fact they frero feeling physically fit and could take oft again If the motors would permit. F a it h f u l to the last In the mission assigned them, the Question. Mark’s crow kept tlie great ship aloft until the very end of Its endurance, bring ing it to earth with one motor-.dead, another fa'lling rapidly and practical ly powerless, and the third able lo m a k e but 1,000 revolutions per m in ute. B u t even against those Insurmount able odds the courageous crew refused to give up without a daring Inst m in ute buttle against mechanical failure*. W h e n every effort to revive the lag ging motors failed, Maj. Carl Spat/, in coirmand, finally gave the landing order, excess gasoline and supplies were dumped, nnd the ship glUlod to earth practically at the spot from which it took off at 7.20 :-10 a, m. Jat.uary 1. Assured of Record Landing at the Metropolitan Airport here guaranteed the crew official recognition for record-breaking per formances made by the ship, which flew ,*12 hours longer than airuratt ever stayed aloft before, and S5 hours longer than an airplane ever before had llown A b o u t thc only record of conse quence not lifted by the 'Question M a r k was the non-refueling endurance flight record of the Germans, Johann Ilissticz and W ilhelm Zimmerman, m a d e about six months ago. That rec ord of (io hours, 25 minutes stands -• O i. U L 1 8 . Youngstown,- O., Jan. S— (/P)—Two men were arrested here todny In con nection w ith'the slaying Sunday of M r. and Mrs. John Oser of near Canal Fulton, Chief of Police McKicholas an nounced He said Youngstown police had seized an automobile which had been sought in two states since the killing. One of tho suspects. Donald Me- Candless, 21, of Fort Wayne, Ind., ad mitted he had worked on farms in the neighborhood of Canal Fulton, Mc- Nlcbolas said. Carpenter Asphyxiated Cbappaqua, N. Y., Jan. 8.—' ^ — Asphyxiated by carbon monoxide gas from the automobile on which he ap parently had been working. John Tips ter. 50, a carpenter, today was found dead on the floor of his garage. The hood of the car- was rnjsed The gasoline tank was em p ty /T t evidently had supplied the running motor until i fuel was exhausted. Dexter Is sur-' vlved by his widow and eight chil- New York, Jan. 8. — —lxt’iis Rond o7, n tailor, stabbed Ills wife to death last night aud a few hours later cut his own throat with a pocket knife in liis mother's home in (lie T.ronx, where he had (led after tbe slaying. lie was taken to Fordii.im Hospital in a critical condition. Police said Roud stabbed his j estranged wife, Rae, 30, when sbe | wen I to Ids apartment late last night to sene him with a suriimons to ap pear in family court. After the kill ing. police said, Roud, without hat or coat, leaped 20 feet from a rear window and escaped, going to his mother’s home. O n e i d a , Ja n s— H ig h w in d s an d d e e p sn o w In the ionel; country n o r t h o f T f i b e r e wr.,p ' the sto r y o f 0 ^ , v ‘ c h ild r e n w e re vn‘d fo 'm .n t ii in a fa r m h o u s e fire w h i l e th e ir m o ther and her em p loy e r s t o o d b y unable save them o r fight th e flam e s . ( oroner H F H u b b a r d o f R o m e a n d U n d e rtakers S a n b o r n & B a r b e r o f Camden nil m a d e unsuccess f u l a t t e m p t s to reach the scene o f the tr a g e d y and were forced bnck because o f d e e p snow. Gannett Acquires Brooklyn Eagle only by virtue of thc fact that no Residents new supplies were taken on board during the flight. T b e rc-fuellng e n d u r a n c e record of CO h o u r s , UT m inutes, held by B e lgian iv i c t o r s , w a s broken by m o r e th a n 00 In v a d in g th e re a lm o f lightor- ib a n - a ir c r a f t the Q u e s t io n M u ik 55 STbSrSK the A t la n t ic coast an d the G n lf.w h o had dw e lt in hoi. miri>t for a i ( jjp dirlfrlhle D ix n u id e , w h ich State- lo u a r t e r of a con tin- m inistering t o |hplf, the ]p(.or(J o f n g hou).s> B ism a r c k N l> . had te m p e r a tu r e o f | t .ieir ir Ills w ith o u t charge ^ | .ln s i how far reaching an effect the Q u e s t m u M a r k ’s ach ie v e m e n t w ill liavi* upon Ihe fu t u r e o f m i li t a r y and c i m i i i e r i m l av ia tio n w n s yet to be C r a ig. C o l . J n n . S.— (JP)- o f this sparsely setllf-.I m o u n tain coun- tiy today p r e p a r e d lo open (lie snowy sercn-m i'” tra il lo the hom e of D r B . A A b rogiisl in orde;- th a t ,he.v m ig h t ]h o u r s , conduct l.'icre the fiin t r a ! rites for N 1>. ha d t e m p e r a tu r e o f i t . i e Ills w it h o u t charg e 24 degrees below w h ile tem p e ratures] A lthough b r i l l l a n t h educated and from 20 to 2”> b f*bivi were reported t w 'ilcly triv e 'e d D o c ir Abrngast, w h o i from points in Iow a . died S u n d a y o f in ll'ifii/'n at the age oi’ 84. selected the lonely backwoods in w h ich to p r a c tice , and showed a modern, > ! u i . telephone-; aulom o lif.e* n \ 1 T r a n s c o n t in e n ta l tra‘n s ~ u v j , , i id s service*: Chicago experienced tbe coldest j w e a ther-of th e w in t e r when tbe tern- ! J _ n . t l . i - i . i ‘ b e l o w w i t h | s t u d i e d d i s r e g a r d t'f r ( i i i n .......................... ........ . .......... .. ............................. la y e d f r o m o n e h o u r t o t h r e e h o u r s b y ] I I o w l ) ] llft t o m o r r o w a t t h e t h e c o l d W i r e l o m m n n i i a t i o n w a . ? ^ , o w o f ( ] ,f . j,;] ] n |lf>vc h i s lo n e l y c a b i n | u n a f f e c t e d . ^ | v h e r e h e c h o s e , w l i l e b e i n g a t r u e : I n t b e S o u t h . V n I io n H !.* N > t e ^ f r i e n d to r i n n . t o l i v e a n d et t h e r e > t j ' s t e r e d t h e l o w e s t t e m p e r a t u r e ' , U(, g o b y . ' N o c a l l e f h i s a i l i n g f o l l o w m a n w e n t u : \ a n s w e jo r i b y t h e i g o d p r a c t i t i o n e r \ i , n l h e d n n u n e x p l a i n e d h e r m i t - l i k e I I i i i i ^ m . m , .. m . . . I , .v i s t e n c c . O n l y t h r e e w e e k s : i _ n h e 'e i e r n i in i 'd It prom p ted a r m y an I im\.\ :i\i,itlon t■»/',., < ne w era iu /i.Woir 1 1 dem o n s trated th > \ > ,iily of re f u e lin g in a i r un- .7,”r*'a \ariety of conditions. UfTcrls Far Kearhing ft mused Rear Admiral W A. Mi.tlVtt i hlef nf naval aviation. 10 ei,\isi«m loimd the world nonstop flights It prompted many aviators In decah-. that trail*, continental and • ■'.(•nt um i'oceanic flights might ln>- ( unio commonplace It fore(a«-ts that airplanes of the fu ture will (arrj more pa.\ load and less Sampler For Governor. Albnnv, Jnn. S.--W — A sampler worked by Alice Bull of Syracuse r'ached Covernor Roosevelt’s office In today's mail. The pampler, worked in red yam on a white background, 1-tars th's inscrlntion: “TIon I ranklin D Roosevelt. Born taiiliary 00, 1SS2. Elected state senator, 1010. Assistanr secretary of navy, 1013, urder Woodrow Wilson. Elected governor of New York, No- aren. [veruher li, 192S.” N e w York. .Tan R.— — Formal an nouncement of the sale of the Brook lyn Eagle to Frank E. Gannett, own er of 15 other newspapers, was made today. The price was not disclosed. T lie purchase, effective Immediate ly. was made from those who have been in active charge of the Eagle's m anagem e n t under Herbert F. Gunni son. He has been associated with the paper for 40 years and will remain as chairm a n of the Board of Trustees. F r a n k E. Tripp, vice president of the Gannett newspapers, becomes act ing publisher He announced that no changes were contemplated in the per sonnel of the various departments'. H a r r is M Crist will continue as man a g i n g editor ! mercury there dropping t\ jo losr'>es | above zero. Atlanta. G ii had 2T de !grees and Louisville. K\ . .md P-lr inlngham, Ala., each had 24 V> hop,- ml'ddle^of^thp1 weekiT-ut his horse throng-, three-foot snow , r„|, fllking small supplies of gasoiine 1 1 K ' V 1 i'fe?° Th”' ’ pr'ivation ’of *•”« lohe t crew of .. - . .........* sr; was recorded with colder weatb-v ii).1111]',., .... from Afl. jw a s recorded w ith colder weather .... ..... m inis(e.,ln „ m , , b nt , t a r j ,, T , , „ 1(,0 from • .«*,*, ~ jrt,i .liii.ps to th«' onwbovs iuul hcuuPstcndiH*-' «iud others. ; W e s tern N e w \or ; S tuto rr-port^1 ^ ‘ ^ S0V tIm , TM ov Al.ro j E x a r t nntnro of ih e m o to r tro temperatures only a fevvdegr,o. ..... v\ V . ; ; ! ' v , . „ d e a H . i r W for his ^erv 'w h ic h forced the ship down was zero, accom p a n ied by h h m wln-K . 1.1 n ■ ™ ^ rhp\ frpp f,e t o n n m o d as the L-reat yellow I — - — ——~ — — - — * M l ' ' U 1 . . .1 . ............ i l . i i m 11 i i . - t i i v I a c I i n f . I | \ir l f p to Aid Sear-h. iVkron, O l r o . J a n S. — (/P; An lugs of ! k . p a tie n t an d UMinlly wa- ....... .................................... a -;r. |u.th a Mile o f l-eef or p irk . veg<* sh ip w ill he used today In a search for tuble-. nay g r a in or flour lie vp.irned M e lv in H o r s t , fo u r year-old O r r v llb* It leplioces i,nd m a d e bis cab boy, who d is a p p e a r e d from his hom e bat k i lior- in that place D e c e m b e r 27 The baby j b l im p P u r ita n w a s ordered today to fiy over c o u n t r y su r r o u n d in g O r r v ille j in the hop.' th n t som e trace of the hoy le lg h t be io u n d . Flv.- Dcrson.-. are u n der arrest in conn e c tion w ith the boy's cisnpp e m a n c e . b u t no clue to his fa t e i’as been u n c o v e r e d . tro u b le not nnd hbn-k m o n o p lane w a s ta x ie d into a iia n 4 .-ir inimediatel\ . an d placed under iruiird pend ns e\am!n a tio n of her n m i n r ' . w h i i h w a s o r d e r e d fo r to d a j . T h e pilot-; themj-elve'.. w h o s u b m it ted to physical e x a m in a t io n s and Indeed au tom o b iles cannot npproa. h ,|ieir loc u p to d a t e before ids ralr. i, a i! ‘! lho^e w o o .itte.id tb fi-.'.eral w ill have to tn .v e i : \ Imr-e back C unity i-omm'-^ioiiers of M o f fat fn i n t . . hav e nrtlered out a snow lio w to ( j.i'ii the w in d in g trnll H e is M i n 'v e d oy a m > h .md a di- Voicod w ife w h o live In Denver ■n i n i n g in for a long-deferred quier x'efijt. boMevpd fa u l t y valve springs i nile d the llijl t 5 205 (i lllens of F u e l I'S e d 1 l-e s h ip consum e d .V-Xlo g a llo n s of ( I ’o n tlnue d on P a g e N in e )