1 1 PA '-4 r r . ft I i at. ' 9 WfcATHER Part cloudy In settled, with- llgctfthoyers. on .xoaati-local thunder storms In mountains; moderate tem perature; normal humidity. Monday Mar., as; mm.. 4; ryreti tZ ieet. one; atmosphere, clear; wind, . EyENT-$IXTH YEAR 6;R'en, Sfcwer, Lato'ureUe , ; ; v.- r- . ucj u g dj 0 :! .B 1 ' fr. r i i'" ni " ii v " ': ii "r i UiinflBEfil y and Stanfield Expected ;ia41' to Testify CASE COMES UP TODAY Dommentary Evidence to Be Ex- amlned by Graa Joroc In , IfaniflA of I)liitrlct At-' ' , torney Carson ' Charges tKat Frederick Stetwer, republican nominee for United States senator, falsified ' expense 'V Accounts In connection with the mary election last May. will be Investigated by members of the rlon county grand jury in a session, beginning today. Charges were brought by W.. S. ITRen, Portland attorney . District .Attorney Carson said that the investigation probably would require two or three days in' that, ;a large number of wit nesses would be called to testify. ? .'Among., the prominent men who will aopear . oerore tne jury are Mr.lnfen, Mr. Stelwer, : John TLa- tourette. treasurer of the Steiwer- 2 tor-senator committee, and Robert -1 StV" f lel who waa defeated jby Mr. Steiwer at the primary elec- Documentory evidence, to be eX sroined by the grand jury will in- i,e dude the original expense ac- I counts filed by Mr."Steiwr and a ! supplementary expense account y 1 filed by H. Henshaw, an of-tr- fleer of the Multnomah County fU Republican club. VVjMr. U'Ren charged, in his com - aint flIed wltn District Attorney Carson that Mr. Steiwer and Mr. 'JLatourette failed to Include in their primary election expense ac ii counts certain funds paid io at least two members of, the Multno tnah republican organization. . It ?j( also was intimated In the com V plaint that Mr. Steiwer might have some knowledge of, the ori ,yf. gin of the so-called "yellow ticket" - y which was printed and circulated h"ta few days,' previous to the prl 4(Vahary election,. , v - . - ,jf ...i Mu 'row ui i.im imxm Biaicujcui .v ot Stanley Myers, district attorney of Multnomah county, that he had discovered the author of the "yel low ticket." it is not likely that the Marion county grand jury will waste , any time In . investiga,ttng this angleof the charges pre ferred against Mr. Steiwer. ii The charges preferred by . U'Ren caused little comment in Marion county where Mr.-Steiwer spent h la boyhood days and has many elose , friends, . It was the consensus of opinion among Mr. Stelwer's friends here that the charges were .filed by Mr. - U'Ren for . the purpose of boosting the litical stock , of Bert Haney, democratic: nominee for,. United States .senator, : and ; not ' With a tew of assisting in the election of Mr. Stanfield. independent nomi nee for the office. fi District Attorney Carson said that he had received from the sec fetary of state copies of all ex ; pense accounts filed , by Mr. Stel 'Wer, and that these would be placed1 'before the grand jury to day when it convenes. BLqjE FALLS; DROWNS SEATTLE, YOUXQ WO!1 IS : PIIX)T OP TKN.1)AVS SEASUE. Ore., Sept. . (AP) Mrs. Earl Gray. 2fipf Seattle, xfoa drowned at Cannon Beach to day ..when an , airplane ; she was piloting fell .into the ocean just , . outside, the- breakers. Either rao- frttor trouble developed or the gaso- linei suDnlv benma . exhaustiMl. Persons on, wthe i bt'ach said. Mrs. tiray had learned to pilot a plane Lfct recently, Jt wassald, and had gone np alone for the first time Interior; tin xaiung; rain. southwest, i . - $25,00 Silver Made Here 11 Veil Known Brooklyn Bayer and Breeder Takes 31 Peace River Black Silver Foxes From Rainbow Silver Fox Farms How would you like to,liave a few dozen pairs of Peace River black silver foxes ready for sale at this time ? ! You would be able to cash in for enough money to , make you independent the balance of your life, if you conserved your funds; - ' : . , James A. Kane, of 172 Lenox Road, Brooklyn, New York, spent Labor day in and near Salem in receiving and boxing for -express shipment 31 foxes. from the Rainbow, Silver! Fox Farms, a few miles south of Salem, located about a mile! east rnjrjp SMOKE? LOXDON. - Vrer.' by air lin er hav, a a usual thins, but one complaint to make. They aren't per mitted to .fcaaoka during; the long and MBtinii MnottDoai lights. . -And you know how , th tTurit KngiUhuau lorJt to settle down to his pip. Naturally, the complaint met with scant attention at. (irst. for it is much more itnportan it that the fuel tanks of an ainlan stay away from fir than that the smoker , should he his smoke. Ifowerer,-new coaoaa - a safety pipe which, may bo 'furnished, along with baggage, labels, to thone who travel by air -and want to smoke. - The pipe is ' designed to gi the maximum of smoking. comfort with a complete lark of ffre .rtsk.' It fa digir W7K;V a secret but it's not outside the law to guess.' ' X&T IS LONG. FOKTAIXF.Br.EAlT. France. This lovely old town, with its magnificent rhatean and its riosenn of inspiring vistas is, in most ways, the perfect place for an art ' school. And the Franco-American Art- Institute, which uses part of the Louis XV wing of the palace, finds that it really is ideal sare for one thing. And that is the constant " botheration of the tourists. Fpantsinebieau is merely a pleasant motor drive from Paris and daily great crowds of sightseers- hasten out to the palace and it environs for to see and oe shown. They gather in the court of the paltK e, beneath the windows of the Institute, talk merrily in English and tourist-French tnd . the poor art stu dents beyond then window can't kelp hearing and wondering if, among those tourists, there isifH someone from the old borne town. . . . . The instructors, seeing that stringent measures were necessary, have pasted up the windows and for bidden all and sondry to open them. Art is indeed long, and Life is shorter than necessary. : ' KEwAao OS? MADRAS, India. The govern ment -of India has decided that mem bers of the criminal colony established oat the Andaman Islands. should 4e giv en the right to marry after ten or "fifteen years, hoeordlngs to tb prime. The criminal, with j good - behavior, is permitted to emerge " from is maa caUoe eontiaemeat snd choose a wife among the women of tbe islands. A cynical prisoner,- on - learning et - the svew dUaeasation. inquired softly, ''Is this to be a rewrd or punishment t JIJSflc f1Af.D IMPIRCiVES HOSPITAL ' ATTENDANTS DF CLARL8 CONDITION GOOD "r,01tTLANDfc Ore., Sept, 6.---f AP) -The condition of John 1. Rand, Justice, of , the Oregon su preme. court, who was operated on here Saturday was f declared Tx ceptionally . good by hospital ; of ficials: ton(ght.; Justice Randhaa beea U, (or j& pas, mvpi r 1 l! 1 Fox Deal on Laoor Day of the Sunnyside store on the Pa cific highway, the postofflce ad dress being Turner, Route 3. The Rainbow Silver Fox Farms belong to C. R. Gregg and sons, the sons being. Lloyd, Earl and Glenn, who conduct the Better Yet bakery when they are not, Strok ing with their feses. Nine of the foxes sold yesterday belonged to Joe N. Smith, of Salem, and 22 to the Greggs, pater et fils, as the French would say And the whole transaction in volved a payment of about' $25, 000; which even the mint grow ers of this district would have to admit is no slouch, of a sum - Especially when it is considered that most of the Gregg foxes were pups; and. the Greggs have raised 19 pups this year from five pairs of foxes. They have .the five pairs of foxes left for breeding pur poes. Mr. Smith has twd pairs left. After More Foxes ; Mr. Kane, with his son, Wm. H. Kane, are after more I Peace River silver foxes. They have en gaged about 30, pairs in. all. the others .being frpm 3. If. Mqrrlson, the Francis . Fqx Farm, and Dr. Ilussen of Portland, and "Mr. Suhl, ( Continued on page 4.) OREGONIANS SHOULDER dREATESt STVTE XEBRASKANS OWE JfOTHING; FliORIDIANS NEXT Cost more in Taxes to Be Citizens of Xrvatla Than Any Other State I WASHINGTON, Sept. C. (AP) It cost more in taxes to be a citi zen of Nevada in the fiscal year ending in 1925 than of any other of the 41 states for which finan cial statistics have been made pub lic thus far by the census bureau. (Continued on page .) gj. m..m i aim lu.. j . m, n njttS V -' -I iUJi'M.'-' S ' . - lr : f . - -' - - - . ' ! : 1 SALEM; OREGON.,TUESDAY E. L. Sadler of Portland Makes 52 Mites in 9 Hours, 59 Minutes 154 START IN CONTEST Large Crowds Gather on Highway. to Watch Racers Pass; Re freshment Served Hikers Along Road - PORTLAND. Ore., Sept. S. (AP)-r-E. L. Sadler of Portland, walked from Salem to this city, a distance of 52 miles in 9 hours, 59 minutes, today, in a walking race sponsored by a local news- paper. .James. Buckley came in second, one minute -after Sadler, arid T. R. Moyer and E. K. Eubanks follow ed at intervals of one minute. The, meet startr-d at the state house in Salem- this morning and inded at Broadway and Yan.hill streets here. Sadler reached Canby, a dis tance of 29 miles from Salem, in five hours and IS minutes. He averaged 5'.fc miles an hour dur ing the 52 mile walk. The Salem to Portland walking (Continued on page 3.) PANIC CRUSHES WOMEN PROJECTION MACHINE CATCH ES FIRE IN THEATER LIMERICK, Ireland, Sept, 6. (AP). Fifty lives were lost and a dozen persons seriously injured Sunday night in a fire in a tem porary cinema hall in the village of Drumcollogher, near here. The moving picture show was being given in a hall over a gar age in a' wooden building. The hall was reached by one stairway. The projection . machine caught fire and in the panic women and children were crushed and tram pled in the frantic etarrpede to escape from the blazing hall and many were trapped to be burned j alive. 1 i GTDAnt U1T Tfln n PDAGU ii nu I i nuL ui I I iinuv uiinun i a m u a a.a a a a a a -a a a a 11 a a ii a a a a a a j IN WALK RAGE THE POLITICAL GOLDEN RULE j'i'j i .11 ii ..in MORNlKG. AUGUST 7, 192G, IS TAKE 33 IMS Holiday Tourists Tell Graph ic Stories as Cars Collapse in Wrecks BODIES NOT IDENTIFIED First Corpse Taken From Debris Is Two Year Old Girl ; Woman Pinned Down by Wreck age Is Released CHICAGO. Sept. 6. (AP). At least eight persons were killed and 100 or more injured tonight when a local train from El Roy, Wis., on the Chicago and North western railway was ploughed into by a Chicago and Northwestern train from Madison, Wis. The El Roy train was discharg ing passengers at the Corland street station, four miles from downtown, when the Madison ran into it. The last two coaches of the El R3y train were telescoped, and it was in them that most of tho deaths and injuries occurred. Both trains were composed of wooden coaches and were filled with passengers returning to Chi cago after holiday outings. As the crash occurred a north bound train with- headlight blaz ing brightly was said to have been abreast the train struck, and that wait- given as the cause of the Madison train's engineer not see ing the halted train into which he drove. No one on the Madison train was killed. Scores of patrol wagons and fire apparatus were rushed to the scene of the crash. Torches and axes were used in cutting out in jured persons pinned down by the wreckage. j Doctors and nurses from nearby hospitals were rushed to the1 scene and gave first aid. 1 One woman whose leg was sev ered was pinned down by wreck age and was released only after long minutes of agony. . A man was pinned down by a beam, but it was believed his life would be saved. (Continued oa page 1.) Senate Millionaires Lead Campaigns th I" i.V' 'h---:: vr;-1 'n? it - H&v r ? e5-;. j I--., - '-mMy . (By Central Press. WASHINGTON, D. C, Sept. 6. "The senate may be a millionaire's club but the house is a poor man's retreat." "Stick" Howard of Georgia made this amiable generaliza tion a few years ago. In common with most general iations, it's pretty much fact. . And never more than right now has the distinction been more definitely discernable. Consider which men head up. their respective party's campaign committees in the two houses of congress. In the senate the republican party leader " la runner-up for the title of "Rich RIVER WATER SAMPLES SHOW MUCH POLLUTION STATE BOARD OF HEALTH IA BORATORY MAKES TEST Anti-pollution Conference Is Discuss Problem Here Friday to PORTLAND, Sept. 6. (AP) Samples of water taken from 12 different points along the Willam ette river south of Portland dur ing a preliminary survey by ex perts of the state board of health, show that considerable pollution of the river is being caused by the sewage being poured in from Cot tage Grove, Eugene, Newberg, and other towns situated on the river. . The survey was 'made by Dr. William jUeyin, director of the state board of health hygenlc-laboratory, and George N. McDaniel, state sanitary engineer, collabo rating with , Dr. Frederick i D. Strieker,, epidemiologist. .X'-J- The pollution was, found tojbe the worst .below Cottage Grove and Eugene. Samples of the water taken from a short distance above the two towns showed only a low degree of bacterial content and sewage pollution. The situation was found to be less serious near the other towns. Below Salem only a moderate pol lution was found by the experts. According to Dr. Strieker this might be due to tbe great amount of Industrial waste sent into the river at Salem . and which un doubtedly destroys -much of the bacteria from the sewage. Oa the other hand, he thinks, the indus trial waste may hare a decided ef fect of lowering the oxygen con tent of the river and harm its fish life. It is evident, according to Dr. (CeaUnned on page -) BABE DIES OF POISONING PROF. H. NEWS O.'TAXXER LEARXS IX BRIEF WIRE EUGENE,. i Sept. 6. (AP) II. G. Tanner, professor ot chem istry at the' University of Oregon today . received a - telegram from Mrs. Tanner , who. la visiting with relatives In East Orange, N. J., telling of the -death by accidental poisoning of their 16 - months old daughter Myrna, , ' The telegram -was not explicit, raying - only "accidental poison ing". The funeral win be held at Homer, N.-Yl, and afterward Mrs. Tanner and ' her daughter, Betty, vlll - leave r for heir liome -in Eugene. I 1 t BSBBBSaaHSam and Hoiise Plebes of Both Big Parties est man In the senate," senator Lawrence C. Phipps. of Colorado. The democratic campaign leader in the senate possesses the heavi est bank balance among his party colleagues. He is Senator Goelet Gerry of Rhode Island. Between them, these two sena tors could very nearly buy up the entire house of representatives, stow it away'in some dark corner and then go right ahead and fi nance something heavy, say a pri maries campaign in Pennsylvania. But look now at the house. At the head of the republican cam paigners stands the Hon. Will R. Wood of Indiana. His democratic rival Is .the Hon. William C. Old field of Arkansas. These two men are not wealthy. They are not of the aristocracy and there are those who say that they are not utterly at home on the polished floor of an effete ball room. , But in the give-and-take of a caucus they are in their ele ment. They are veteran cam paigners of the sort few can phase and none can bluff. '. All four of the campaign gener als are men who need no particu lar coaching in this crazy game ot politics. " Moneyed or otherwise, they know their material. Perhaps there is more than (CoBtlaaee: e par 6.) U. S.' ATHLETES PRAISED "DO MOST . IX. WIXXIXQ AMER ICAN FAVOR, CLAIM NEW YORK Sept. 6. (AP.) Helen Wills, Gertrude Ederle, and Bobby Jones, "have , done . more than anybody can. possibly realize to offset. the -opinion of us fos tered by selfish and dangerous politicians of European coun tries," said John N. Willys, presi dent of the Willys Overland.com panjr of Toldedo on. returning to day aboard the steamship Levia thian. ,. , .. . . . t He urged that more such en voys be sent to foreign countries to create good will. He also rec ommended an international ex change of manufacturing and .en gineering Ideas to bring about world accord." JUSTICES CONFER TODAY SIX OPINIONS ; EXPECTED . BE HANDED DOWN TO Members of the state supreme court ' who.- have returned from their . annual vacation will , hold a conference here today preparatory to handing down a number of bpiniohi. . It : la " expected - that' at least six opinions wilt be handed down by the court today. v The - California reporters have- a snap. They're neyer called. upon for follow-up stories of an etrthquate. R. t Wolf 4 In Milwaukee Journal.' -t ? ; 'k '. ' PRICE FIVE CENTS KEfi'S WIFE A LA R M IS SENT! Intruder Ties Woman to Bed, Then Husband, Takes Keys of Bank S. L. SCROGINS, BACK from;salem, IS HELD Frees Self After Four Hours, Warns Neighbors THREE SUSPECTS VANISH Officers and Citizens Ira me-, diately Surround Bank, Re maining on Guard Through out Night, While7 Police Hunt, Unknown .Men Whq Vanish With Keys SHERIDAN, Or., Sept. C (AP Held up in her own home by a masked man, Mrs. S. L. Scrogins, wife of the president of the First Nation al Bank, of Sheridan, Or., was bound to her bed, and forced to remain a prisoner from 9 :00 a. m, to 9 :00 p. m. Sunday, t Her husband, who arrived home at 5:00 p. m. was held up, and also bound to a bed by; the same intruder. The man took the keys of tha bank from Scrosrins and remarked that the bank would be robbed. Scrogins managed to free hint and wife at about 9 p. m. and: raised an alarm. Officers and citizens immediately surrounded the bank and remained on guard throughout the night. Threa strange men who were seen about. (Coo tinned em Bare 6.) CEMETRIES WELL KEPT" GENERAL PERISHING IS BACK FR03I EUROPEAN TOUR NEW. YORK, Sept. 6. fAP)--Work of replacing with marble crosses the " old wooden crosses, which mark the graves of thtf 30. 000" American war dead in Franco Is to begin soon, General John J. Pershing, chairman of the battlefield-monuments commission, said today, returning on the Leviathan, after a three months stay abroad. Useful memorials, Instead of 1 ornamental ones. General Persh-? log said, are favored by the mon uments commission. He described the American cemeteries he had' visited as well - kept, and very beautiful." - - ' ' CAR FORCED INTO DITCH --. i- .-. SALEIHTE FRACTURES WRIST IN AUTO ACCIDENT M. R. Moon - received a frac tured wrist Sunday when his car t Was forced, oft: the road on tha Pacific highway, a mile north of Ealem and turned over, - planing Mr. Aioon beneath. Acordlng to I he . report Moon made at pollca headquarters, an unidentified car was pasing bis when the accident happened, and it cut In ahead of ' him to quickly, forcing his car into the ditch. Moon's car was . considerably damaged, receiving a bent front tnd rear fender, broken front; wheel and broken top. - JAP WARSHIPS GREETED ENTER TURKISH WATERS GOOD WILL MISSION 'A j CONSTANTINOPLE, Sept. . AP) The arrlval of the craisern Isomoto and Yakomo,. the lirsti ? Japanese warships to enter, Turk Ish waters since the Great war was greeted today with a gala wel come. ? Admiral Yamamoto. a vet eran of the Russian-Japanese war Is on a mission frpm his govern-' men't to Angora expressing the de sire for closer and friendlier reV Iations between the two powers. TIE012HflfS,