The San Antonio Light (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 327, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 12, 1922 Page: 2 of 22
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: San Antonio Light and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
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2
BELIEVE FLIERS
FELLINSANTA
RITIBIMS
Mailman Reported Ship
With Motor Missing
Thursday Afternoon.
CAVALRY TO SEARCH
Officers Give Up Hope for
Lives of Lost Aviators as
Fifth Day Comes.
A mail carrier traveling near Twin
Buttes. Aru.. last Thursday afternoon
reported seeing an airplane flying east-
ward at 2 o’clock with the motor bad-
ly missing. This message received at
headqnartera of the Eighth Corps Area
here Tuesday led officers to believe
that the missing aviators Col. Francis
Marshall and Lieut. Charles L. Web-
ber. have crashed in the Santa Rita
mountains.
A report also came from Nogales
that officers were questioning a Mexi-
can who reported having seen two
ariatora walking southwest of Nogales
Saturday.
Lying to the east of Twin Buttes
and the spur of the Southern Pacific
tracks lies the Santa Rita mountain
range a country of jagged volcanic
formations and irregular plateaus
where a forced landing would prove
disastrous.
The mail carrier when he saw the
plane was traveling between Twin
Buttes and Sahuarito. This report
army officials at Eighth Corps Area
headquarters state confirms other rc-
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Crockett
min i
TUESPAT.
ports prvvieu^-ly rectlvwl »nj makes
it almuAi certain that the IlLftUed
flier* are down in the Santa Rita
mountains.
(berk Two Reports.
A telegram from Rockwell Field
authorities stales that one of their
aviators lauded his plane at Jack
Rabbit mine. Ariiona. where the lost
plane was reported '» have been seen
on December 7. and while there talked
with a mine worker and an Indian
woman. The aviator the message said
was confident that the Jack Rabbit
mine report was true as he ascertain-
ed from the inhabitants there that the
plane bad been seen near the same
hour that it was seen by the mail car-
rier. and was traveling in a southeast-
erly direction.
Officers at Eighth Corps Area head-
quarters have checked up on both mes-
sages as to time and distances and
state that each corroborates the othee.
If the fliers went down in the Santa
Rita mountains they are surrounded
on every side by a railroad and could
not walk in any direction without ulti-
mately crossing one. Since it is almost
positive thst they are grounded in this
section the only hope held out is that
they did not encounter a fatal crash
but are injured to the extent that they
cannot travel. It is with this hope
that every available means is being
exerted in frantic efforts to locate the
lost officers.
Immediately upon learning from the
mail carrier that the plane had been
sighted on December 7. four airplanes
were dispatched from Tucson- to scout
the mountains in that vicinity and
also a squadron of cavalry was sent
to search there.
Send Cavalry Out.
Two more planes from Kelly Field
left Tuesday morning to take part in
the search. The planes will not do
any of the actual searching but will
be held in reserve at Fort Bliss so
that other planes from that section
can join the large number of planes
that are combing the desert and moun-
tain regions of Ariiona.
The search over the northern bound-
ary of Mexico is being continued but
officers since receiving the latest mes-
sage from Tucson giving the mail car-
rier's report are inclined to think that
there is little chance of the two lost
officers being found across the borler.
The two fliers who left from Kelly
Field Monday morning are TJeut. J.
J. O'Connell of the Twenty-sixth
Squadron and Lieut. J. A. Woodruff of
the Thirteenth Squadron. Both avia-
tors flew OcHaviland 4-B plsncs ami
were expected to reach El Paso about
noon.
Brooks Field officers said Tuesday
morning that Maj. Italpli Royee. with
two other planes that be escorted to
San Diego last week on a cross-
country flight have joined the search
for Colonel Marshall and Lieutenant
Webber. AU of Major Royce's ships
are DeHavilands.
Missing Five Days.
The message from Tucson received
at Eighth Corps Area headquarters
Monday night reads:
"Mail carrier between Twin Buttes
and Sahuarito states definitely thnt on
Thursday about 2 p. m. saw -plane
its motor missing going east in direc-
tion of Helvetia. Santa Rita moun-
tains. Am sending four planes to that
vicinity and will concentrate search
of cavalry squadron there."
Some sheltered valley or yawning
chasm of the Santa Rita mountains
holds the secret of the missing aviators
for which the entire border service lies
been searching since Friday morning
is the belief of aviators in San An-
tonio following this report. Undoubt-
edly. fliers here say. the ship crossed
the spur of the Southern Pacific that
runs down to Nogales and then crash-
ed in the footbills of the mountain
range or fell in the mountains. Had
they successfully crossed the range they
would have come out over the 8. P.
tracks to the cast along which are
scattered many towns and villages.
If the motor was missing as the
report stated then an attempt to cm s
the mountain range at the higher alti-
tude would have caused the engine
more trouble and if such an attempt
was made it is probable that the engine
quit entirely and without a smooth
place to land the ship and Piers
crashed oa the mountain side.
GOVERNORSCONFAB SET
Meeting on Prohibition to Be Held
Some Time in January--
By the Aeeorlated Preaa.
Washington D. C. Dec. 12. — The
governors' conference on prohibition to
be called by President Harding as in-
dicated in his message to Congress last
week will be held some time in January
it was said today at the White House.
THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT.
UNEMPLOYED HOLD
DEMONSTRATION IN
LOBBY OF COMMONS
London Police Eject Singers
of the “Red
Flag.”
By the Associated Press.
London Dee. 12.—A turbulent but
short-lived scene was staged this after-
noon m the great Central Place joining
the lobby of the House of Commons
when the police ejected a crowd of fifty
unemployed men who had invaded the
place and begun singing the "Red Flag"
and waving placards.
The demonstrators bad entered the
ball in small parties. When they had
assembled in sufficiently strong num-
bers they joined forces and began their
singing. This was the signal for in-
tervention by the police who cut the
demonstration short by tbe ejection of
the manifestants.
SENATE COMMITTEE
OPENS HEARINGS ON
CREDIT LEGISLATION
Kansan Says His Bill Would
Provide for Livestock
Growers.
Washington. D. C. Dec. 12.—Pro-
ponents of various farm credit bills ap-
peared today before the Senate Banking
Committee at tbe opening of hearings
on credit legislation.
Senator Capper. Republican Kan-
sas. chairman of tbe Senate farm bloc
opened the hearing with an explanation
of his bill to widen the credit facilities
of livestock growers by authorizing co-
operative livestock loan associations. He
was followed by Senator Lenroot Re-
publican. Wisconsin a member of the
joint congressional Agricultural commis-
sion who outlined to the committee tbe
Lenroot-Anderson bill containing pro-
visions endorsed by administration of-
ficials.
• Senator Capper ssid his livestock
loan bill would meet the needs of both
large and small livestock growers but
did not deal with the credit require-
ments of the general farmer. Tbe bill
provides for co-operative associations
with $250000 capital whose paper
would have discount privileges with fed-
eral reserve banks. The small livestock
growers be said could secure loans
through suc'.i associations.
CREW REPORTED SAFE
Rescue Ship Takes Men From Wrecked
Steamer.
San Francisco. Cal. Dec. 12.—The
crew of tbe British steamer Ortcric
which is on the rocks at Fish Rock off
tbe California coast ten miles south of
Point Arena was being transferred to
the steamer Cottonplaut at 8 a. m..
according to a wireless message received
here.
The Orteric. with a crew of 55 was
en raute to Eureka. Cal. to load lum-
ber for tbe Orient and ran into the
rock late last night. Presumably she
lost her way in the fog.
Shoe Dealers to Meet.
Fort Worth. Tex.. Dec. 12.— Officials
of the Texns Retail Shoe Dealers’ As-
sociation were notified today by Secre-
tary Sol Jacobs of the Oklahoma asso-
ciation that the latter organization will
meet jointly with the Texans in Fort
Worth in Fcbrunry. The Texas invi-
tation wan extended to the Oklahomans
Inst summer.
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DECEMBER 12 1922.
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Diehl, Charles S. & Beach, Harrison L. The San Antonio Light (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 327, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 12, 1922, newspaper, December 12, 1922; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1628825/m1/2/?q=Cadet+Nurse+Corps: accessed June 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .