Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 11, 1929)
! - r PACE TEN. OMSK COO-Acre Fire Shows Red In ; Southeastern Sky Late . Yesterday li i ' (Continued from Pas 1.) - mt vtxm aitnatlaa with scores of ser- ; toes Htm reported burning there. ; several cf tneni tnreate&iag vaie of Port Orford cedar. " ; All loggias opeatlons ia the two : eeaftttes nave been saspenaea bo that crews could Join volunteers ' ' tti ftr-Mnitf-- : " " A 'fire In the Sncllstrom hold- - tags la Lane county was reportea n hw broken thronxh the lines tossy-and was heading toward several small settlements on Wolf creek.. - In Washington, Major John D, Onthrle of the district forest of ru ttmrm aid. tha Dole fire con- tlaaed to threaten settlers In the bimp IJttle Waihouaal district. It was also said to be hogging the edges of the ColumBia national forest. - - ... ' r- ' The , Dnckebrnsh " fire In the , nivmnta national forest has Jumped the Dnckebush river and " ta roaring on both sides. Major Oathiie said. It had spread over 'mm. area of more than 4000 acres tonight- - Uiliw Cntttrta M ttiii ftolvlltii flislan ' anrl rolamtila national forests In Washington will be closed simultaneously with those la Oregon. . II FOB ' ; -". (Continued from Pas U " lag; of the late crop Is well under way, and the' smaller yards will acobably hare the season's work cleaned up In another four or fire ays. - The Horst, McLaughlin and Ltresley yards will continue an other 10 days or two weeks. . - Mold has hit particularly heary ta the Adam Orey yard, the Mag aess yard near Wheatland and the Imp yard belonging to Mrs. Kay Bop Lee. . Mold Is the worst ex perienced since 1915. Despite the mold, as many hops wtll - bo . picked around here as war harrested last year, accord ing to Frank Needham of the Ltresley offices. This Is account ed for by the fact that approxi mately 20,000 more bails were on the Tines at the start of the sea son this year that last. L GUIDANCE TO BE PROJECTED HERE J,.. ; . . (Continued from Fag 1.) aartments he hoped they would work together for a "metfrod of agreement" this year, aiming al ways to do what the group agrees apon and let the rest go. The de partment heads will meet each Tuesday from now on until the end of the school year, acting not as an administrate body, but coming together for counsel. ' The greatest amount of read justment ever to be undertaken at one time in the local high school will be made this year, not only from an administrative stand paint, but from readjustment of classes because of the freedom from college requirements and a complete breaking away from the alnth grade or Junior high school. Ia all changes, the policy has been ta meet needs of the individual student In a way never before done here, : rather than draw . a program and xrowd it into pupils. Ta renner told the faculty- mem - hers In substance. Fred Wolf, new principal, also spoke, to the teachers, outlining - the new . f Ire-minute supervised study program to be put into ef fect this year. , ' .Present at the meeting were: Tavenner, Wolf, ,- Mias ' Mable P. Robertson dean of girts; Mrs. Eula 8. Creech, head of domestic science; J. C. Nelson, head history department; Miss Ada Ross, head English section; Mrs. Grace Wol UIBMIET PLIPI p i our rnenas nave telephony, an can talk to each other but telephone to you? - . If a telephone received only in- r coming messages,' and couldn't carry your outgoing messages at " all, it would still be wofth far more than the few cents a day it costs. - ----- - I Tes Pacific Telephone -A- .. ' gamott, physical education; Mer rltt Davis, commercial; Miss Lau ra V. Hale, head Latin depart ment; Miss Beryl Holt, mathemt les; Miss Elizabeth M. Hog, head stenographic section; Miss June Phllpott, head science. OF MILL V, (ContUiMd from Fas 1.) way back to Charlotte nine hoars later. Their appearance in a po lice station at Concord, N. C, early today and return to Charlotte this morning was the j- first - definite word that any person had been attacked by the crowd.' V":-.-' Today there was ao official rec ord in any way of the places visit ed by the mob that there had been any disorders. Police blotters In Charlotte, Gastonla. and Bessemer City failed to ahosr sny record of there having been any trouble. The only information came from eye-witnesses .who saw the mob. In Charlotte police and ; deputy sheriffs doubled the guard about the county Jail, where the IS men accused of the murder of O..C. Aderbolt, chief of police of Gas tonla, are held. "v .1 TGE One boy was dead and his fath er, mother and baby brother were In the hospital Tuesday as the re sult of an automobile accident on the Pacific highway a mile north of Gervals that morning. Juna Moody Sim tustus, 18-year old In dian boy, died of a fractured skull and brain Injuries -at 11:20 Tuesday morning without regain ing consciousness. The Simtustus auto was at tempting to pass two other cars and a hayrack, also going south ward, when It met a northbound car driven by Robert Bishop' of Salem. Neither driver was able to stop or dodge the other and a headon collision resulted. Donald Sneers of Aumsville, passenger In the Bishop car, was severely cut on the back Just be low the right shoulder. Bishop received painful bruises around the knees. Mr. and Mrs. Simtustus and the baby, Lindbergh Simtustus, will probably be released from the hospital this morning. . They were treated for minor injuries and lacerations. Their other two children were not Injured. Cliff Bollier Arretsted Upon Driving Charge Cliff Bollier of Long Beach, Cal. and formerly a resident of Salem, was arrested Tuesday night by the north prowler and charged with speeding and having five persons In the driver's seat. Bollier was released under $f ball to appear this morning, but In lieu of the money his machine was held. Officers said he was driving 42 miles an hour on Cen ter street when picked up. Dan Howe Goes Back to Work After Accident Dan Howe, son of Ret. D. J. Howe, pastor of the First Chris tial church, was able to return to his work in West Salem Tuesday morning, following injuries In an automobile accident early Satur day morning. "Young How was taken to a local hospital about 5 o'clock Saturday morning for at tention to minor bruises and cuts and was able to leave the next day. Details of the accident are lacking. MAN SUICIDES SEATTLE, Sept. 10 (AP) Shooting himself through the head while his wife was' out of the room for an instant, Joseph A.' Maglll, Anchorage, Alaska, can neryman, died here tonight from the wound. can they 7 - ' . v And Tixegxxafii Company 1 OFFICES ROY KILL EU M CRASH fl RVAES SAIDPLDED Charge Advanced by James J. Smitiv Former Warden" : Of Penitentiary ' (ContlntMd from Pass I.) papers in his hands and after talking; - briefly, with Slchofsky asked:,-?i.v;"- J" .. "Well, count, are you ready to sign now?" " . . r . Wawdea. 'Iaterirapts , ,. Coovenatioa Soddealy -Sign what " Smith said ne asked as he stepped cut-from 'be hind the screen. , - " Smith - said that he and Jen nlngs went to the prison offices and that there the papers Jen nings carried were examined. He declared that a will to which had been attached a notary seal was found to have been drawn provid ing that in case of Sichof sky's death Jennings was to receive $2000 and that provisions were made for the payment of 1200 to eaeh of two convicts, whose nsmes Smith could not reealL - A further provision In the will, Smith' said, was ; that . Jennings should take the $2000 and go to Europe on a hunt for Sichofiky's relatives. Relative discovered were:, to . be made beneficiaries. Smith said , the document stated that ia case ao relatives were found all the count's money should go to Jennings. Beslgnatton of Clerk Accepted : "Jennings broke down, Smith said,, "and finally declared that the only thing he guessed he could do was cult. I told him I guessed that was . right and accepted his resignation. I made a complete,- detailed report of the matter to, the prison board and a man by the name of Cornell was employed to succeed Jennings. A day or so after this incident I found another anonymous letter on my desk saying that I had act ed In the nick of time and that the count was to have died In the hospital. I had Slchofsky shifted to another section of the hospi tal, gave him different nurses and his condition improved." Officials of Folsom prison said today that Jennings was re-employed as record clerk on May 1, 1927. Jennings denied emphatically all that Smith said. Jennings de clared that "all these things are lies," and that the story was a vicious one. Smith was Questioned about this angle of the Slchofsky case after William Gannon, examiner for the state railroad commission, and a former member of the pri son board, denied in Los Angeles today the acts Slchofsky charged against him of handling trans actions for him while he was in prison during which period cer tain sums of his money "myster iously disappeared." Smith was reticent about the Jennings angle of the case until told that Gannon had mentioned it and had referred newspapermen to him relative to the alleged will plot. Then Smith recited the story. As to Sichofsky's assertion that S T I L L Southern Pacific. Opens A New Route to the East Other barriers have been conquered. Other frontiers have been pierced. Southern Pacific is still pioneering. Oregon and the east are new connected by a aew transcontinental rail line. - Linking the Cascade Line of the Shasta Route with the transcontinental Over v- Qvsmcowu ' W ,12 Th faming of thU new mnd i tahma thorter torn tm thm Ett m- I rotted construction expend . MMftVlftw C tmret of pproximttfj $39 vo Hfoartaaa OOOMO. The Ne4:Coli. Vf fomit-Oregon roilromd wot re- II eonstmcted from norrow . to .. a,!4 Q brood f(, ond 93 miles of y new rail wot toid to com pit to Vk -una the Unking of Southern Po- U sue djx, sh4llU tnd Orerlsmd M$tsuM A route. RANTS PASS q BlAMAni FAUS I wlffweonsltteji cuka&O , I VKl1 f JL ST.imag - 'Iv - jf n Tr I I mi $7.50 HaUins; the completiom of the aew line m a boos to the territory is serves, as well as to the entire Northp west, a, great celebration will be staged at Altaraa, Satarday, Septrm- For. SOUTHERN p OBOTIJIS 30 P WZl kouvxs uaoxassTJ The OREGON STATESMAN. Salem he was, "rushed" from the prison to Ellis sland toe deportation, Bernard Base, secretary to War den Court . Smith of . Folsom de clared today ihat the count's dis charge from the penal Institution ta June. l2t. had been regular: that federal Immigration officials arrested aim at the gates of the orison, took him .to Sacramento Lwhere they drew money and dia monds belonging to the prisoner from a bank and then took;: him east - . Despatches from New Tork and Washington ; stated that Immigra tion officials were holding Slchof sky until federal authorities had completed an investigation of his charges. . : - . . LOS ANGELES. Sept. 10. ' (AP) Officials of the dlstrlclat torney's office tonight declared that comprehensive check of all records, here indicated little grounds -tor assertions of Alberto Slchofsky now facing deporta tion at Ellis island, that his for tune disappeared - without ' his knowledge. Tom O'Brien, chief In vestigator of the district attorney's office, under direction ' of Chief Deputy District Attorney Robert P. Stewart, . investigated all of Sichofsky's accounts here in an effort to aid federal authorities in clearing ap his charges. (Continued from page D tof ore these rates have In the mal napplied only to Portland and San Francisco but now Seattle and Los Angeles seek addition to the port schedules. Early in October Mr. Ellis will appear in the interests of western livestock men through the Oregon public service commission. Lower railroad tariffs are sought 'for livestock shippers under the provisions- of the Hoch-Smith act which provides that all types of agricultural producers be given advantages wherever "possible in freight rates on livestock. Mr. Ellis said Salem was fortu nate In having river transporta tion available which would make possible water rates here to com pete with railroad freight rates. Amity Appeals To Howard in Routing Fight The Amity school district has appealed to C. A. Howard, state superintendent of public Instruc tion, from a decision of the-county boundary board of Polk county re fusing to approve a proposed transportation route extending in to that county. The route has been formed nnder provisions of the act of the 1129 legislature. The dispute will be submitted to a board of arbitration named by Howard here next Monday' morn ing. BANDITS GET $4,000 ALMO, N. D., Sept. 10 (AP) Forcing the assistant cashier to lie on the floor, two men held up and robbed the First State Bank of Almo today and escaped with approximately 14,000. LOCAL EXPERT WILL TALK FREIBHT M PIONEE R ING land Route, southern Oregon is brought 211 miles closer to the East, A substantial redaction in time ef freight movements will be effected sad through passenger service inaugurated between Portland, Ogdea, Chicago aad intermediate points. to Alturas and Return for opening celebration September 14 , ber 14. Ton are cordially iavited to Joist tn this gala cdebraUon. - Hpe elal train will leave Salem 12:08 A. m. Satarday. Returning will arrive Aalesa Sanday nwnlac. further information phone SO or Qregcn. Wednesday Morning, BR01 CHOSETJ Nominations Made at Har monious Meeting Of Cap ital Post Tuesday (Continued from Pace L) gins. : iv - . i - - i . For historian, King Bartlett. L. A. Hamilton, Incumbent, was nom inated, but declined to succeed himself. . t ; . .- . ' - For .executive -committee, five to be elected Douglas . McKay, William Poerman, H. G. Malson. Karl Stelwer, Lee McAllister, A. C. ( Biddy Bishop. Willis Vincent and Walter ZoseL 9750 Contributed To Louisville Fund The. post . voted to contribute $760 to the "on to Louisville" fund to Send the drum corps to the national convention. This was the amount o f prize money brought back from the San An tonio convention by the corps, and turned into the general fund. - The convention commission 're ported receipts of $10,4(1 and ex penses of $9(40.22. leaving a bal ance of $ 8 2 5.7 8. The report was accepted with general commenda tion. Criticism that had been men tioned in a local newspaper as forthcoming apon the question of salary paid H. G. Malson, execu tive secretary, was conspicuous by Its absence. Commission Disbanded As Work All Finished The commission was disbanded Tuesday night at a banquet at the Gray Belle, at which its members were the guests of John Blakely, manager of the restaurant. Praise of the local post for the manner In which it conducted the convention, was voiced at the post meeting- by Carl Moser, depart ment adjutant, who declared this was the first legion convention of which he had heard no subsequent adverse comment. Appreciation of the help given by the Dallas post, was expressed by Brazier C. Small, after talks by two visitors from that post The post passed a resolution en dorsing the effort to change the regulations with respect to rec ognizing war service responsibil ity for tuberculosis, so that vet erans diagnosed as having this di sease since January 1, 1925, may obtain compensation. Read the Classified Ads. Alumina Flat Wall Paint Here is a soft toned wall paint that won't smell up the house every time the weather Is lamp Velumlna washable wall paint Sold by WELLER HARDWARE AND PA'NT STORE 428 Court St. Telephone 5SO 41 PAGIFIO 08 Ouoqt-ig InqYl '& tf aOLiiO SSODUL 2X13 . September 11 1S23 Barber See Trouble Taking Job LONDON, Sept 10. (AP) The problem of getting a proper hair rut for William F. Kenny, New Tork, millionaire contractor. is raising almost as much dust in England' as the Angela-American naval negotiations. The British Immigration officials have been brought Into the case, holding that the New Tork barber who was summoned to London by Mr. Keaaey must obtain a special permit, before -he can apply the shears to his client's bead. , Several of the newspapers have printed pictures of the New Tork contractor and hare had rather unkindly pointed, out the lack of hlrsutical adornment on the top of his. scalp. They ssked why -he should find difficulty In getting a proper hair cut from British bar bers in View of the rather limited field offered for their skill. Meanwhile Louis A. Rico, a New Tork barber, is steaming toward London on the Leviathan. Wheth er he will be permitted to land as a barber or only as an individual tourist Is a moot Question. . DRIVER ARRESTED Lome Simklns. 1810 .Market street, was arrested by the south prowler late Tuesday night and charged with excessive speed He is to -appear in police court today. WEBSTER'S HEW RITEIUlATIOriAL DICTIONARY THE MERB1AM WEBSTER . Because Hand reds of Supreme Court Judges concur in highest praise of the work as their Authority. The Presidents of all leading Uni versitiea. Colleges, and Normal Schools give their hearty indorse' mera. AH States that have adopted a large dictionary as standard have selected Webster's New Interna tional. . The Schoolboots of the Country adhere to the MeTrianvWebsser system of diacritical marks. The Government Printing Office at Washington uses it as authority. WjuiB for a sample past of the New Wonb, specimen ef Regular and India Papers, FSEE. a ac Merrtass Co, May field. ftt'Jfl V " ' f TAPPAH XAP PA M lrM With INSUIATE1VENTILATBD OVEN -retfted eVmce tine Ore Heat Control The IdW range for Oven Cstrntng and Whole-Meal Cooking Now, at last, the kind of range that hctaewives lone luire wanted.' v The Tappaa In-So-Top insulaUi with 20 pounds oi rock wool to keep heat IN the oven, OUT OF the kitchexw VentUattd -to keep foods Savory and fine. Oven heat controL The right degree of oven moisture. In the Tappan In-So-Top meats will shrink lm, cakes will rise higher. No steamed flavors. No sogsy foods. Come la and see the In-So-Top. Eiiamcl finish inside and outside. All corners rounded. Easy to clean Learn what's new est and best 2h cooking efficiency and kitchen comfort. - Open Wednesday: 136 S. High (near State) IS i Knocked Down BfJitomobile When he ran from behind a' car narked on Belview street Tuesday, Ttm-m Vaafelnr Jr wu hit and knocked down by a car driven by 0. E. Palmatecr. 331 south zara A new patented device that will com pletely remove all or a portion of the cream from the milk bottle. Ever alert to means of improving the quality of our product or of our service to our patrons, we are pleased to an nounce that we have been fortunate in securing for the exclusive use of our Patrons a Large Assortment of the new ess Burg Which we will gladly loan to our cus tomers while they take their dairy Re quirements from us. THESE WONDERFUL CREAM LIFTERS ARE NOT FOR SALE Entirely new in principal; a complete Success. The manufacturers distributing them only through one dairy in each city. Do Ton Want One FREE? Call Waldo Hills Guernsey Dairy Phone 85 F 25 i And we will gladly furnish you with a Cream Lifter Our regular customers will shortly be supplied WE PRODUCE ONLY GRADE A MILK k Thursday and Friday ?veninffs Until 10 pj It . .. . ' . r r street, -according to an accident report made with local police. He receired face and head cuts. The boy six years old son of. Ray Teaching, 185 . South IStH street. Is reported to have gotten out of bis -father's ear on the right side and to have run around behind the car directly In front of Palmateer's machine .which was passing at approximately 20 miles an hour. 8 . " Cream Litters V I ' TO CELEBRATE OUR OPENING f no.00 tofi on aU Appliances Costing l" over $100.00 , $5.00 off on all Appliances Costin? from $50.00 to $100.00' Phone 373 - ... t..