1 SySlmMilesmf PACIFIC SERVICE U SPEEDS UP MAIL ' Plans of Newly Created Di - vision of Commercial Aviation Launched b kl' V j - '. . 1 ..; i 1 1 , l t s - CtrtrI Fre) 1 1 nto, i Secretary i Hoover's plans for spreading: a network of air ways over the United States and "putting: ,'wings on the American public" by stimulating commercial - aviation will be incorporated some 8,314 miles of aviation routes al ', ready being utilized, largely by the air mail service. . Plans of the newly created Di vision of Commercial Aviation es tablished , in the Department of Commerce by, the last Congress contemplate 1, 431 additional miles of airways, chiefly in south ' eastern United States, which are indicated' by ; the light parallel lines in the accompanying map. ' i The first work to be done by William- P" McCracken. Jr.. of Chicago,, rec.en.tly ( chosen as assis tant, secretary of . commerce in charge of aviation, is the lighting of the airways traced in this map. The map shows 9,745 miles of air ways, of which 2,041 are at present-lighted; The department of commerce expects before the fiscal year is over to light 1,167 more miles, and has already assigned five service aviators to survey as many Toutee forthe establishment of guiding beacons' and boundary lights for the' emergency fields to be established at about every 30 miles along the airway routes. Secretary Hoover's plans' for a commercial aviation service, as re " cently approved by President Coolidge, contemplates two' great air routes which would bisect the United States East and West and North and South, linking the At lantic with the Pacific and the Great Lakes with the Gulf. The "transcontinental airway" will run from New York to the Pacific coast, via Chicago, Cleve land, Iowa City. Des Moines, Oma ha, North Platte, Cheyenne and Salt . Lake City, dividing at the ' latter point with on'e branch run ning "to San Francisr-o and the other to Los Angeles. This route, the map indicates, is virtually es tablished Jby. usage, except for the completion of facilities. ! The" southwestern airway" will Ifnk Chicago with Fort Worth and DallasjLwith stops at Moline, St. Joseph; Kansas City; Wichita, Ok lahoma City and Tulsa. In addition, there will be the various branch lines,, some of ' t; . Is tEe Of3y'Uquid, - , J r flammable, "non-explosive 'deodorant that I t i . ' , ! enables you to easily dean under the flush- . . ' ' v" ' . . , 2 - rim .of. the, toilet bowL And there is , t .,' ; - .'where offensive odors ' emanate. - Pour a ' .rWlitde-ITLUSH'A-WATothe brush and r..wnnSHA'WAY.Inanistations 1 r. -Jlpdonj will disappear as if by magicf -r Harmlsit to "kanda aadliarm j to pfcimbins - -f,"r : '. - t i ! :?5S?jf3.' FLUSH -A -WAY- for roUef Bowls THE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM, OREGON New U. S. Government Stimulates Commertidl Aviation . v. " , America's which are Indicated in the map. Within six months. Secretary Hoover predicted during a recent visit with President Coolidge at Paul Smith's, a commercial avia tion service covering the whole country.' carrying- passengers, freight and mail, will be a reality. GAME WARDENS ELECT SKATTLE COMMISSIONER WILL HK.il) ASSOCIATION BOTE. Idaho. Aug. 27. (AP) S. F.Ttathburn, Seattle, Washing ton state supervisor of game and fish, was today elected president of the Western Association of State Game Commissioners which concluded its sixth annual con vention here tonight. Government will spend $75,000 dredging shoals, in Sluslaw river. nonisonovjsf - non - tn ; AT Your i f tfinmu rr- rl ZONE 2 Vv'-1 Vt '-v v i , - 1 . 1 ' r V i "i n p I 4 P.o.AoirrE v Ks. j ' . v CONTRACT ROUTW J ' I 1 . "if l .PROPOSES R0UTS HOoveR. ' - 1 1 - , "' r i ' . . ., r.. : ,! '" : f , ., 4 A . : -.. f : f --- ''"' ' ' "i . f '. i " Airiyciys -m f . - v ; I v-.yt-f '.. .. ...v..v4n arrway jnd the men who are eucouragiiig it Rodgers Comes of Long Line of Famous Sailors Dead Ait Commander Won Much Fame bv Heroic Actions in Unsuccessful Non-Stop to Hawaii WASHINGTON, Aug. 27. (AP). Youngest of a "John Rodger?" who long line of served with jrlcan navy distinction in the Am since 1776, Commfcpder John Rodgers, who died frsm injuries suffered today in ai. aeroplane crash at Philadelphia as the hero of an attempted non stop flight to Hawaii Forced down into the PaciHc, he and others of the crew pf the PN-9 Number 1, one of the sea planes which undertook the flight from San Francisco bay in' Sep tem'r, 1925, wero rescued pear -cneir goal. They had been? miss ing for nine days. One of the pioneers in naval aviation, Commander Rodgers had been assigned to command of the Hawaiian expedition after brilliant serrice in the air service. Born- here January 151881, Rodgers entered the naval acad emy in 1899. i His first tour of duty at sea after his graduation from the academy began in 1905, he being commissioned lieutenant in 1908. 'Aviation soon attracted" the young officer, son of Rear Admir al John Augustus -Rodgers retired, and he qualified as an aviator at the Wright training school, -Dayton,. Ohio. Iater he won the Hearst .prise as the first to fly across the United States. 'Rodg ers became a leading figure in establishing -the air station in San Diego in 1911. f , He was promoted to lieutenant commander in 1916 while serving Chemicals-May Replace Rowers for Perfume NW -PORK. The chemist's laboratory has duplicated nature "successfully, this" time in the realm; of scents, and the' chemical formulae of odors much different than those usually associated with chemistry will be told, the' Gold en "Jubilee meeting of; the Ameri can Chemistry ( Society - meeting here September 6. : '' ; . - Research in perfumes" head an imposing' array of subjects which life by the - biological chemist, work in the dye industry, " rub ber production, petroleum re search ' and 1 hundreds of other rjelda: wV ; ':t ;-.;: t '. The largest; number, of foreign chemists ever to visit America will be included in the three 'or four thousand attendants at the con vention, among them being some of Europe's foremost research au thorities. ."; Pilgrims. Progress Sets . ? Demand in Book Market -LONDON The sale of a first edition copy of Bunyon'a . "Pl grlnis'' .Progress' ' published; In L678for 6.500 pounds has haul a curifrus .sequel: J r 4' f ' During the next - few days fol lowing the sale dOiens of people wlWi had .read the .'news carried copies of the' "Pilgrims Progress" to" the auction rooms' In the fond hope that' they , might possess a treasure. The copies submitted ranged from 10 to 100 years old and " of course ' proved almost wortblss .- I - ....... - . ". .- . -- -.. ' : I - Will - -At. Flight From San Francisco with the submarine squadrons, re ceived the temporary rank of com mander in 1918. At the close of that year he was placed in com mand of divsion 10 of the sub marine forces with the United States Atlantic fleet. Cleaning up the allied and German mines strewn in the North Sea was' his next assignment and in June, 1919 he served with the mine sweeping detachment. In December of that year he was executive officer, of th U. S. S. Nevada and the follow ing November ho received the per manent rank of commander. Commander Rodgers in July, 1922, reentered aviation, being given command of the naval air station at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. It was while he was later com mander of the U. S. S. Wright, tender with the air craft squad rons of the scouting fleet, that Rodgers was selected to command the non-stop flight from the west coast to Hawaii. The day after the reseue of Rodgers and his crew on that great flight, the aviator was ap pointed assistant chief of the bur eau of aeronautics, a post be did not desire, but which he took only at the urging of navy officials. Recently Rodgers was relieved of this assignment and given com mand of a new experimental long distance scouting squadron with a base at San Diego. He also has been presented with a gold watch by the Associated Press in appre ciation of articles he wrote after his rescue. Air Service Enlists Aid of Old Time Stereoscope DAYTON. The stereoscope, that parlor thriller of the nineties, has come back strong, and in 1 a field where it may save lives. The sterescope has joined the U. S. Army Alr'Service. There are times in war when the topography of a tract of land is as important to an army as the layout of fields and buildings, and ordinary photographs da. not show topography well. Now the aerial - photographer takes one shot and then a second a . hun dred feet or so farther on. When he lands, . the two photographs are placed In a powerful and specially built sterescope that makes little hills stand up until they almost poke the gazer in the eye. ''. Gullies and - ravines, indistin guishable in an ordinary photo graph, yawa ominously ' when viewed under the stereoscope. Yale Seismograph Has! Coddling Infant's Care NEW HAVEN, Conn. A codd ling infant and the new sei sino graph at the Peabody Museum. Yale university, are very much alike n certain respects. Both toeed the most painstaking atten tion. S; ..." ' .. :-: ... ,' . The machine deep In the base ment of the museum, with Us foundations on bed rock, is kept In a glass nursery; Like an in fant it receives constant care that both the crowing aVl rheumatic pains of Mother Earth may be faithfully recorded. , T ' 'But v Cotton, Corn and Rice Fid Inundated, Death Lis Is Mounting RAINFALL IS 13 INCH Pathetic Stories of Ruined C Told by Refugees, N'o Woif Recelvel FVoiii Lone Gulf Island NEW ORLEANS. Aug. 2 fAP). Estimates of storm age tonight bad mounted they stood between the five 10 million dollar mark as rept continued to come into New leans from the devastated are Wednesday night's hurricane. he?death list stood at five, though there were several Tep of persons missing in different calities. Newspapermen who j neyed 200 miles through storm swept area told vivid stol of the storm's toll. Towns, villages and faimhoi were twisted masses of ireck Cane fields were flattejieti. ton and corn fields wore ru and hundreds of acres of rice victim to the storm which deli them with salt water. Sugar Factories Hit The storm, striking soutl Louisiana, tossed its fury i; the cotton belt of Louisiana. ens of splendid sugar facte along Terre Bonne were b damaged by the storm. Loss of tho sugar planters not confined to the premat harvest of their crops by tropical winds. Livestock die barns crumpled upon them. ''Rain gauges of Glenwood Madewood showed that more tra 13 inches-or rain reii in ipss irx 12 hours, driven in sheets befdk the hurricane which at times aoy tained a velocity of 120 miles atf hour. jj Island Is Cut Off suAnxlety was expressed for the safety pf a group of prominent Thibodcaux citizens who went to Timbalier Island in the Gulf of Mexico early Monday., All efforts to communicate with Timbalier Is land or the light 'house there had failed today because the nayous were clogged with water liHics. Houraa, Morgan City and Thiba deaux appeared hardest hit by the storm. Terre Bonne. Asumption and LaFourches parishes each suf fered damage to property and crops which was estimated at be yond a million mark. P0LA NEGRI COLLAPSES FIAXCE OF VALENTINO GIVES WAY TO GRIEF KANSAS CITY. Aug. 27. (A. P) Pola Negri, fiance of Rudolph Valentino, collapsed in her draw ing room on the Golden State Limited shortly after it left To peka, Kansas, late today when she was confronted with a news paper picture showing the dead actor's body reposing on its bier. It was the first time the Polish actress, who left Hollywood Wed nesday, to speed across the conn try for Valentino's funeral, . has given way to her grief. Miss Flor ence Heim, her secretary, de clared. NEW YORK, Aug. 27. Burial of Rudolph Valentino has been postponed until Wednesday to await the arrival of Alberto Gug lielmo, the actor's brother, who is on his way here 'from Italy. The funeral will be held Mon day, as previously announced by S. George Ullman, Valentino's manager, and the body will be taken back to the Campbell fun eral parlors. Railroad Once Had $35, Payroll Now in Millions! LOUISVILLE, Ky. Rankin welt among the leaders today in the railroad field, the Louisville and Nashville Railroad when founded did not contain enough1 money In its treasury to. pay fot a month's Ice bllf. as now con sumed on any one of its leading Pullman trains. - The road'g treasury at the time of its foundation contained but $35.4 5 in actual cash. Today Itf monthly payroll alone approxi mates S6.500.OflO. DKMPSEY LOSES WEIGHT ATLANTIC CITY, Aug. 27. (AP).--Jack Dmnpsey is within five or six pounds of his fighting weight. The heavyweight cham pion stepped oh the-scales before his workout today and tipped the beam at exactly 195 pounds. . c ATTinnAY MORNING, jr. a w - - mgs on A oiners, commamwemr and "kidnaping" one of them. Two Ditched battles between the (Outlaws -and "their pursuers wero held during .the day, one in Se quoyah county, Oklahoma,' and the olhcr'ncar Rudy, Arkansas. Descriptions of Martin ard Geo. Kims, ex-convicts in tho Arkansas state penitentiary, are said to re semble thoso of the hunted men closely. Police Chief J. C. Wall of Salli- '-I'! 8 Miller's Basement V m M ILLER'S B A S E ' w - - ' ' T . , 1 ' ir-w. AUGUST 28, 1926 American f and ty dep- in the he men. a Fort ook the of- forcing Wall erratic course county they ar- noon in Arkansas. in the shoulder. m tne car at Peters- Members of the pur se took' him to Van kin- re It was said his condi- not serious. ots were exchanged with the jjemen when they closed in on fugitives a half mile north of tudy. The pursued men whipped their car around and again es caped. - No one was injured tn the interchange. TUXNKY GOES PADDLING SPECULATOR, N. Y. Augf 27. vi(AP). Gene Tunney returned IfVjii.s Lake Pleasant .training camp this evening after a 18 mile pad dle, 4' lighted as a boy With his trip akd declaring himself ready to plunge with renewed vigor into his training for his bout next month W;th Jack Dempsey, heavy weight champion. TODAY ! in A J SI - - w p ; A Feature Sale of 1000 yds. Fine Percales at - Hcrc3 an opportunity to shop for fine per cales at a price that brings thefn near the half way mark. Newest autumn prints in light, medium and darks in full .36 inch" widths. You'll like every one of these desirable pat terns and most of all you'll like their low prices. Early shopping gets the best patterns. 9 9 COOLIDGE BUSY ON U QUESTION Ambassador Sheffield jVill Discuss " Matter With President Soon PAUL SMITH'S, N. Y...Aug. 27. (AP.) Any recommendations as to the' policies with reference to Mexico that James R. Sheffield, American ambassador to Mexico City, may make to President Cool idge, it was said today at tbe sum mer White House, will have great weight with the chief executive. Discussing the proposed viHi,t of the ambassador to White PJno camp, officials said Mr. Coolidge would like to see him and talk about the Mexican situation and obtain his first hand views about condition in the southern republic. Kq date has been set for the visit?as yet, but it probably will be soon. The ambassador, who has come to this country for a va cation, was received by Secrery Kellogg of the state department Wednesday and is understood to be planning a visit to Atlantic City before coming here. In the opinion of the president Mr. Sheffield is an able man and trained lawyer, "who has' made an excellent ambassador and has handled a difficult situation In Mexico with great skill, and dis cretion. " ; - That Mr. Sheffield is in agree ment with the administration ou its Mexican policy has been em phasized by secretary Kellogg both here and in Washington. While President Coolidge has not read the recent magarine ar ticle of William Ripley of Harvard college urging some action by .the federal trade commission to . as sure security noiaers more com plete and more frequent Informa tion about the financial condition of corporations, he Is understood to be inclined to doubt that there is not so much opportunity for.na tional as for state action in that field. i . Yet, any recommendations on such matters that might be-made by Professor Ripley, it waa said today by the president, would bo entitled to every consideration be fore they could be dismissed a unfounded- j , Moreover, it was .empbafzed that Mr. Coolidge is keenly sTT that there are 0,000,000 securttj holders in this country and U wants everything possible to' bo done to safeguard their interests. Klamath Falls Black Hutle telegraph line, Ka. miles in length, is about completed. Nehalem Local telephone com pany extends lines up Salmonberry to Mayo camp. ME NT 6 People m f ' .4 'I n f i