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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 6, 1930)
- -4? -- v .CmCCLATIOM Mhr-Jtriaati far tk Uttk adiar Jaly Si, ust - , WEATHER - Fair, moderately warm to- day aad Thursday. Max. temperature Tuesday - 88; mm. 48, clear, north wind; river S.T. 6,555 iTMH UlT Ml HU siss - - Maabar Aalt,Bartta e ClmkiiMM. EIGHTIETH. YEAR,. Salem, Oregon, Wednesday Horning; Angost 61330 No. tl 1TI0HS SEND Texas Pr6Sabiy WillNMeHmi She's Princess - At AsburyFete FOREST FIRES HPS All Hard Hit i Recovery of Changsha NovCM . uiaimea dy naiionai Government Atrocities ReDorted; One .". WomanBajfpnetted, jand. c . ' Others Tortured .; - -. - .. - - SHANGHAI, AngT 5 (AP Twdtllousnnd Qiineie were ex- ecnted vhih) Teoiniiinniste were In ... possession - ot CThangsha, : Hanaa Province capital, Jap aneee press dispatches said to . uv. fa addition. 4000 Chinese auasmc esiner execswea i . :J, . s 1 4 "" ' - i ii " "in V " j0 .4 . I Serious JJlazes, Reported, In -rVancouver7as!hr:AFa-: and Hear. Bend iiwii ill . Bghty ,ThreAm.SterJsd Tby - xl inhtninn - In Irfahn i Lewfstolf Report L that he win be the next tatlre of Us district in -the H :;-or kldaaped. SHANGHAI, Aug. I- (AP) Aroased r by- fartaer . outrages . against foreieners la China by bandit communist armlet, foreign - sot erniB eats- today ordered addi tional warships to speed op the Tanstse rirer to reinforce 11 cb- ' boats .at Hankow , and- fire oft Changsha. , Despite announcement of. the nationalist goYernment Its troops had reentered Changsha, recently rased br the reds, the situation was considered grare there and at Haakow. threatened by ap- " -preaching communist armies. VANCOUVER, B. C, Aug. 1- AP) Twenty men. were rushsd mm r. n TtinauiML of si I from VaneonTer today to aid the Paso, Tex, whoa BOmteatloa I crew of SO already on the ground, for CongrcM on the on mtratw I to corneal a lorcsi mi u ui r ticket seems' certain, - indicate clnlty of West Vancourer, a sam- mer resort, wnen ue piaze mrea tened to break fir line because of a sadden: wind. Vacationists Joined the fire fighters in heat ing back the flames from endan gered anmmer .hfltteit " i Another lire waa reporled to dav at line St anvtha Padfle Great Eastern railway, in addi tion to four email 'fires already barnlng m the district. A erew of 14 men was fighting the new blase, which was running in -tog ging slashing. A new fire was reported at the head of Silk lake, about 30 miles from Victoria, and another at Camp Ten, in the Co wlchan lake region. The Bastion mountain tire in 'M W B gLL DWXD II President Urges . Measures t?l Aidirfferera.hi Rainless Areas"" Iowa Has Showers as Other States Remain Gripped - By GejieralProught . SuFJj 1 .. WASHINGTON. Aug. V-(APT The hayoc wrought in wide- (Xram PrififiJT RflHv Due to Janet VfcU Iagalla, of liOe An- B.or,hinr rainiM. weeks ha be come a Subject of study by agen- aelea; CaU wffl be Prlneess Flora; owe of Queen Tltanla's ladlea-tn-walting, at the thlrtyjinth an nual national baby parade an Am gmst TX. FOB STATE Tlffi Negro Prisoners Monopolize Field, Whites Attack, Eighteen Injured - - NEW YORK, Aug. 5 (Ap, cleg of the gorernment. President Hodrer todsy an nounced he had discussed the problem with Secretary Hyde and Chairman Legge ' and that mea sures the goTernment could un dertake to assist drought suner- mrk wr htnr determined. He expected a report from the agri culture department by Monday of the condition in ' each affected area. Meantime, there was no cessa tion of the heat that beat down of -sun- Grass Famine; Failure Of Corn Also Factor Hundred Million Bushels of Crop May Be Used up, Forecast States J. M. Devers Has Important ;US Bills to Propose to Legislature J. M. Deyers, attorney for the CHICAGO. Aug. 5 (AP) A famine of pasture lands and dwindling crop of corn have com bined to pat hog and cattle of the Ohio and Mississippi Talleys on a wheat diet. C.H.r1n rain hft&Tr enOUffh browned yeretatlon in the east I v Konfit in mrtu of and the middle and southwest tfc gcorched Plains, restored sections or tne eountry. hopes to grain and lirestock pro- The most hopeful note came I Tiiinni rJiwa. todiT from Iowa where fairly general 0ttt .l9ewhere. for the most part. Rain Making Powder Sought as Governor Won't Order Prayer ALEXANDRIA, Va., Aug. 5. (AP) Having failed to get GoTenor Pollard of VbV ginia to call for statewide 'prayers for relief from the drought, Dan 8. Hollenga, business manager of the Alexandria chamber ot.com-raerceJtaji.- ordered '26 'poandsof rain making: pow der from arid New Mexico. The powder Is to be spray ed from an airplane on the clouds orer Alexandria fat the hope It will condense them lnto rain. ' In addition, HoUenga sent plea to President Hoorer asking him to issue a pro clamation for nationwide prayer meetings to ask di vine aid for rain.' AUTUMN RAINS 1Y YET SAVE PART OF CROP Big "IP Seen in Forecast . r-or rroaucuon; mver Areas Suffer Most Early Corn Ruined TotaH By "Flamelike Hear In Kentucky BELIEF FROM Iff WES GRADUALLY he I rains rare rise to the opinion the I .1. A Mriatf Eighteen prisoners were lnjored the Soswap lake district wag - ute highway department, hag in fire weeks' drought in that state th wheat and corn prices re s ponded to the disastrous outlook, The American gunboat, Luxon. h4te today in a riot between ported being brought under eon-1 thrfm imnortant billa which might be ending. armed toaay at uanaow, pre- Whites and nerroes which began I troi. it nas been purning ior bot- ,. n-ntu.hi will nresent to the Cotton withers pared to aid the U. S. S. Palos on. when negro prisoners monopol- eral days. About men are I..,. 1-,1-i.tnre which conyenes I In Southwest which me sauors were wounaea, jxed the baseball diamond on tbe I working on tne lire. n g,jem next January. The pro- Elsewhere, however, tne sun recently while protecting foreign-1 recreation around at Welfare Is- 1 m-A i win t ai with the eare I shone through moistureless skies. S . - m. I VVDVW w -w I I V l US ww era. Ilami i the East RlTer. I BEND, ore., Aug. fi lar) I tami in state I Increaslnr the fire hazard in na- i .... i,n. nn i. n tn i Steaming from Sasebo. Japan.! The trouble began Monday iFire fanned by a brisk westerly . nrovlslon for the poor tlonal forests, drying streams and .bove the season's Middle West Cities Report Temperatures Ranging In 70s and 80s corn rising 1 6-8 to 4 1-8 cents on the Chicago market while wheat advanced 2 to S cents. Wheat has risen seven cents In Jer today, Temperatures CHICAGO. Aug. 5 (AP)- The western plains breathed eas- generally were I i for Shanghai, four Japanese d- when white nrlsoner, went to the wind today y cfeaUon of a power com- wells, .blighting jegation and record of a month ago, JjJJ &J2U: v rntiTswa wars rnininr Tn linn nLir i naii nv rnnnn uuvarT-raavai nimr nan i irniim in riiLuiBi aiiu a. at imuv i a. n a. i inrrpnjiinr umeaan uubciiniiuob. i miiL n . at m i a -w i - By FRAMC I. WEIXER WASHINGTON. Aug. 5.. (AP) Expanding raysof filtered through the drongbt drawn veil of pessimism today aw the department of agrkultnro surveyed the prospects for tor tured crops and livestock. Preliminary figures indicated with normal rainfall during Au gust and September there will w better than average feed grain crops la the New England states) and part of the southeastern states Including North and Souftn Carolina and the mountain re gions. The estimates were obtai by checking the record heat last month against .tne crop age or previous jui mF"- With September wheat at SI 3-8 1" . ... . inn m. to B-8 and September corn sell- v.lt. v.i - .... ... tlnrwi wura raahinr tn loin fith- I MaIiI anil tnwnA nprrn. nalnr th trolled In rntover land IS mllea .T " 4T V t. lnereasinr disease nosslMHUes, -" ir .M IJ-V. " r . r. I" r ralls- ml,Bluu 10 -."',.. t.. okli0ma saw cof- w ia .Mim 1 uwuu. aucb w i '- -- . " . i water power oevewpm wn. . i . 1 10 o-a ana oiieiui iu i ,v ki-v . ... Kew Owtmw but guards were able to prevent cauiorma n'J. ' t.-,- .int.j nt th.t undpr l0Q Prospe.cis - wunenng, aiung . , , , farmers turned .WWUCi. Are Undo Known violence. . ' it had covered about 100 acres. Dews pointed c .ut that under tnMe of otner crop8 im tot H to . ""n w o ,n Ju th0 f0 dayg New outrages against Briusn in- Todav the negroes again got i Forest service ana mmner cum- nou farmers were naunng water .fft-v eluded the wounding of three sail-1 nossession of tha diamond and a nanv units were fighting the iarms are oewg wnunciwi 1ob dtatances to livestock. i .mt ors at Changsa In a annboat en- general fight broke out In which blaze. ' m m I tuf"57'Z-!U. .T i.- I Louisville, where the drought I Bushcl. Egtin,, ! south of Ashland, was reported efficiency and a investigation by the im L0iSBt to have burned more than 100 ing expense to the taxpayers. bod. hoping it might offer tl- ?o loo.MO.000 bushels of wheat acres. r Drasn iua ubiiu vwu day. The fire Is not endangering valuable timber, - forest officials mmtA " , . , . Itral point in eastern urogou I them. Disease was spreading in I5WISTON, Idaho; Aug. S-1 another in the WiUamette 1 the wake of. taeCdrought in that aagement with communists; the nrobable fatal bayonetung or airs A. R. J. Hearne, at Puchen and the sending of a severed finger of a woman missionary with de mand for 850,000 ransom for Her self and companion, keJ4 captive a month. The communist menace jiween- lng the Tangtse valley Included the great southern provinces Hu nan Hupeh, Kiangsi and Fkulen. Dispatches from tar flung areas throughout these provinces said -numerous red bands numbering fTurn to page 2, eoL 2) M1TBU ID I m STIFF CHIEF Rain and overcast skies team ed with a breese from the lake to give Chicago and most of the Grain Great Lakes area a cool day with temperatures In the 70s. Iowa also benefitted from On the same premise " rains part of Wisconsin. Iowa, Minnesota, South Dakota ann Nebraska are expected to maaw average feed grain crops. Sonse what less than average crone aro expected In Texas, Okiaheee. Kansas and tributary parts ! Colorado and New Mexico. Three-Fourths of ij . - i n&nciii Kin to urmtrsi snvwu vi 1 m m. tiia turn min. i nmni n . . mnon. twa ann imn in ruiuic Devers, there would be ?L I a water shortage. Dairies w JS,' th. drought exiewu. poor ams in Oregon One of fmInr mllk with water for that nVT. long "it V. much cooler threugh- into August and September four, these would be located at a een- I t. irv home with I wjL . .i I .... ,.v. . I (Turn to naee 2 .col. ) WASHINGTON. Aug. I (AP) President Hoover today from a few hundred to lt.000 Ppointed Major GB?1 D; ina.. .A.W44An sawsksi aim . " - -r.r . "A 1 1.. r.i.Ati.n hir f at arc f I m blng the populace witnout opposi- . V.."t which ws f I gfvu ax. Mr nauva p vviuauaiHwi wo. Foreigners throughout these e marine corps. areas were fleeing tovird rirer (AP) Eighty three tires set by I ley. All of the poor east of the etate. typhoid being four times as electrical storms monaay u uascaaia uvauwu wu . prevalent as last year. Tnsdav In the Clearwater and I committed to the eastern Oregon I Tn Kew Tork and Maryland, Iselwav national forests, with onelnoor farm, while the poor from forest tires were springing1 up, exception, were dcuotou unn i romana ana wwwtn "s1" til me a anger xrom aucn ouaacu control tonight. would be gent to the wiuamewe were imminent. BRIDGE APPROACH (Turn to page 2, col. I) burning fiercely In thick timber. Most of the others in r.irf.r thn two tn tan were small and easily Handled. In raising the . two to the w ,AAA ,,(W,i.tr tire and coaatai dues, wn.reaoout.oi t ruZT ".hT". . ia t the Selway forest was being neio. many of them were unknown nere. i""."": and slxtr men were released from IiMknArlea. Said uitea tnem aooT. in. noau - . Tlr 0- Roachins- Reface several oracert wno topped mem " - . ' . . I a wa.a- I SaaB 11VUI. Th maloritv were missionaries. I in ran a. xoin am.fr kcb i n, recalled for safety. Headquarters I service In the field in Various here of various missions reported parts or me worio. . i Montana and British Blazes set by storms in other districts of north Idaho, eastern conn sum BY HE Local showers brought relief in Pennsylvania but the weather bureau warned it was only tem porary. Industries at Gettysburg were closed to conserve water. In the south, the drought re mained unbroken. New York, Maryland, PennsyPl to tbe South vanla. District of Columbia . and bridge In the PAVING IS DELfliED temperature at 99 compared to 101 ana 107 tbe last few days. 'St. Paul and Minneapolis were more comfortable with the mer cury in tbe 80s. Nebraska Still In Grip of Heat Nebraska was warm, Lincoln reporting S3, but that was ten degrees cooler than yesterday. It MliUlD LEAVES ; AFTER STORY TOLD Regardless of the fact that the J7. 8 t Omaha Oreron-W ashing! on water serv- SAX FRANCISCO, Aug. i. t kT VCnrn mil wan. John Maa In the eastern sectors weather mad. nls nai appearawen before the state supreme court ro- -Bul- H08TON. Aug. (AP)- varytef proportions of their in- General MacArUur waa the A Tltf. Inm held One lets fired from a coast guard mo land staffs had reached refuge senior officer of the army, with "tw JfjJ J!J? B tor boat off Ipswich upon another places, whfle others were bottled sufficient time left before his re- ,ram"eJ ."r KelwayV B. C.. coast guard craft, a power surf np at inland towns, avoiding the tlrement to complete the full f.J? "?ter thousands of boat out of the Salibury beaeh sta- reds, but unable to reach treaty four year term as ewei oi imu. --ort- timber and a ee- tion, in the mlstaxen oeuei h-cu- a- ..i a. s.. v.. .etiuM him I QOiiars worm or wmuer, a -1 . nAav haif porta. CUU Otners, it waa .eou, oeicu vtuoi ".o wyim i thraatonod' had fallen into the hands of reds, in rank bnt all will reaeh the dr camp were, threatened. Along the Tangtse between Klu-1 retirement age of 04 within the (Turn to page 2. col. 7) next four years. . Child of Fire Drowns Elwood Mead to. Confer Fir-Tex Plant Opened Beats Baby; Arrested nnnin inmi i ii n u. o. rurumiiui ESMTEISHIE talned rum runners, today naa cost the life of boatswain's mate, laswis K. Pratt. 20. Klttery. Jue. A coast guard board of inquiry headed by Commander Sands is to investigate the shooting, tomorrow. Ml t 1 v t rf-.n conditions were more varied up the rubbish on tne approacn Ciy, preparatory to leaving ior Liberty street i"!4 ""ccu huw uvi u j Baltimore for whence ne eame to vent the eitr while in Pennsylvania showers nmiiate 1 '-rear-old testimony. scattered sections elsewhere swel- should wish to pave It. City En- brought relief to scattered see- which helped to send Warren K. tered under another heat wave. gineer Hugh Rogers does not be- tions and held out hope of relief Billings and Thomas J. Mooney to Have the fill will be touched this at least temporary in outers. nrlson for life as bombers of me year. 11 was cooler in New England, July, 1518. preparedness day par- The rubbish left on the flu with a range of the upper 80s ade. .v.. wnrv ah the filter slant I rather than the 80s. MacDonald's closing testlmoey ceased has been one of the ob-1 In Ohio the lake region enjoy- I followed tne announcement duk ataMM in the wav of oaving the ed mild weather uns while down- lnrs. whose pardon plea the u- streeL The other, Rogers says, I state readings or 85 and above preme court justices aro cunwm- HID BEADEB HELD IN DAVIS SUYIKG PORTLAND. Aug. 5. (AP) Pratt was married and the father McCaul Travis, 03. reputed "mo ot a fire year old aaugater. ne Mclne man" and mind reader was died in an Ipswich hospital. held tonight In connection with From the story told ny uieo i the death of Mrs. Rena Davis, 40, rauungnam. n-an a wuijhuuu", xacoma, wasn., aner ociccn-tm i - . , tha .ni)Toaches to wratt went to his death while vol- tannA . messare which oieced to- PV.n ppJ2?Sr j3 - i """" , w " i t ft o ttsHJia'A rtsrwasin - i rnnu aaxiu WASHINGTON, Aug. (AF) 1 untarily going in search ox a ooai gether, read: "Beware of a dark The noDulatlon of continental I that had been arire yesieraay. man is the failure of the people of I were reported. the city or the city council to petition for such a project.. He pointed out Tuesday that tbe council has a right at any time to Initiate a petition for paving of the fill, but that this has not been done. Manr lnaulries have been made for some time relative. to EARTHQUAKE FELT IN mm AREA BODY IS SOUGHT EUGENE. Ore.. Aug. 8. (AP) Jackie Weixe, i. drowned In the Willamette rirer tonight '. while playing on an Island near the Ferry street bridge. A group of other small children who were v with the boy were uncertain how t the accident happened, r . The boy and hi parents ar rived In Eugene recently and were living in a camp near the cene ot the tragedy. - A search for the body was started by the sheriff's depart ment assisted by T. M. C. A. , swimmers. 'rfMAKT VIEW PLANT ST. HELENS, Orew As. (AP) The new 3SOO,000 fir-tex plant was officially opened'' aero today. . More than 1000 Tiattors were present at the ceremon ies and inspected the plant, V V VISIT IS TIMELY PORTLAND, Ore Aug. . I. ff api w. G Ide. manager oz t the . Oregon- state chamber of today received v word TT ihat Dr. Elwood Mead, Washing - jton, D. O, director of the bureau t. t recUmation. will arrivo in 'tis (Portland next Monday for a ser U lea of conferences with tha cham- Iter's land settlement. eommmee. ! ide considers Mead's visit par J ilcularly timely sinee announce iment has been made tha federal reclamation : prolecU Id : Malheur . ; fcounty, the Vala aad Owyhee, : will receive about half the entire. t' allotment for reclamation work 'hie year,i . C- r. riaxTSa ASQESSt DAD , v . PORTLAND. Ore-. Aug. f. - HAP) Jesse Iy' Jones,: It. v . saji arrested today charged with ' hflailnx his seren months old son T tva.a the . babrs crying an- f . uut hrnt. The eomnlaint-was Signed by A. I. , Cross, state hu- i Kern i Crandall, deputy district I t I United States on the basis of ofO-IThey left their station last night The message, torn in bits, was attorney, saia weuare r-nir ensna fiaurea la and after cruising aronna n wnua found in a hotel room where the hodv of Mrs. Davis, beaten to the bridge between Trade and Mill streets. Monday President Elliott of the water company tated the eomoany would re move VENTURA. Calif.. Aug. I. (AP) Centering here an earth- I .,vi.. k erlng, will be brought from hfs Folsom prison cell to testify at tret current hearing "at the proper time." The announcement was made by Chief Justice Waste, who in formed newspapermen the prison-. er's departure from Folsom and the time of his appearance before the court would be kept secret 1n view of the serious crime of which he was convicted. Justice .Waste added a heavy guard would ac company the prisoner, wheeo removed enry -a-i ii -. .-.na w.ina. la I a nil after em lain r and. probation officers who .ex-1 i f.g , - came upon a boat In the darkness "7", , rr ' . r; I This figures was eompued to- '"lninxing sne migni. m death by a ciuo, was oncoverea - "r - - " counties at :z . m. looay. i vrj ?fJ,nA8 "n.. ,!0,ia nlghoiTomdalnnouncements boat we were looking for we ap- JJVoel F. Johnson, Portland 1-t0 the -battering a few window, and Father O Hara duut coTerra wiia u. Dinuea . . . . i r.ikiaram aain. i . . , . a.t. T.h... am auu.v : neaien iui : .. .. a i tvuiui a euu mum This firnres was comc-lled to- "Thinking she might be tne death br a club, was dlscoTered l "7 I counties at 3:25 a. m. today. mpie ume ior aeiuiiig ..raekinr one building fill at botn enas or .hocks here felt in proached her," Falklngham said, ho-e, last night. Johnson told ooay coverea wita weits. nmises I . t- v...m. w. ..,ii.n h ?? i!?7eM!5rvJW-iaM census supervisors in the states "When we were about 70 7xd I aBlhoritles he met Mrs. DavU on 11Z a1"" 1. 7"a "V, after completing the enumeraUon from her a band not to beat the child. Deputy Constable Watkins after completing which began April 2. Only one district in tne United hall of bullet greeted gtrMt rner and she invited him to visit her. When his knocks "Pratt was up in .we ww.m iri jonnMiBiaja iia i - - . . who-arrested Jones quoted Jones stte. rieerfieid eoantr. Penn- fell and cried to me he had &o ! DOshed ooen the door and found I lva "...w " "ZIV-a PUte glass windows or a notei as saying -wnen mat kid yeued i svlvania. wias Incomplete, but a ait. the body, attired scantily, on the v-' . ' r - I .last A M M lialt SVXJ I aaaaai O TU. H U ,n . fill were unanswered jonnson-saio no i Vt t. he stated. It made me sore. I figured the I Brellmlnarr estimate by the super- "The shooting suddenly halted 1 A a MM. : At a. I v I m a. A ilaau aa.aa.ee a N afla S a m a oniy way to stop luwas xo spans: i risor placed, its. population at 1,-1 ana men mu uerc ww -v. i qn a coroner's oruer, jonnson IX. Ill let tua ib wmm w - The tetal flmre for the United I lag.' uaa av avtsa iuixohiau States nennlatlon is. however. SUD- has passed, oe neves ""-lSanU Barbara and SanU Paula Most' OX me uirt -waa we wi5 Aam.r. done in those ana m aian i. uw i h Made Bishop At Great Falls rute glass winuowi oi a now VATTPAV riTY lnr K here were smashed and an un- IATIff "ST:;.fnf:" fT- ??G02.CIITVOr'" As' Jt to revision in the census bu-l Rvnlndp -(AP) The Bank ef Gresham. j reau's official announeemenUf HjXyiUUC Golf Balls Say owner of summer borne property I which la not exneeted for another on ueoar ereex, toaay niea suit I week or so. for 131,000 damages against the! Territories of the United States Clackamas Eastern railroad com-1 and outlying possessions, not in- Pany. I eluded in the continental totaL The. complaint alleges the rail-bring the nation's grand total of TwoDivotters PORTLAND, Ore.. Aug. By acoroners oraer. joimwn D.Jnr. was held ior Questioning pui. I JUCll ti iiUUUbM maintained his innocence; or con nection with the slaying. Travis told authorities he had known Mrs. Davis .15 years, but because his time elements did not Jibe he was Jailed. The message was written in :!ir.vT rr, uapi The pop. today aPPoh.t- 11 itTfSrt" ::ySF oral cracks in its walls. r.' , '1 Citlxens of Ventura were national vainoii wvtiirs . awakened br the first shock, a as nisnop ot ureal, raiu, slight movement and were start- tana. PORTLAND. Ore., Aug shock, the most severe, lasted I iarj ur.- cawin . v. f u wars. Plant Operation Mav iRp Dfil 3 Ved I 'ed by the second which followed road company is building a road popuUtlon to 117.501.5I1. This AP) If the exeesslTS heat eon- tectires pieced and pasted togeth- votiuuia, mwwucio euu cuuui. i ngure lncinaes an estimate ior yam i tinnes golfers may have to race i er. -" . """ tr- i riuuivuia imm wuvbw cowih I another naxara. - ning timber In the Clear creek I controlled br the insular govern-1 , - rt. Wnw ' rh!n eountry and that the road Is be- Iment which hsa not made saennrk -ngny halla when they T-xri In ii irtfl in log built without authority, i,: ImeraUon for several-rears. I . J 7T Damages are asked for tres-l continental . United SUtes had JT- TI. i-ft three Jn the ffai-iJZ'iTi TmA passing, catting shade trees and 1 i.flt.f 28 neonla ten rears kro. d7. JJ-2mfZ : ill 4?naic3JI i03 U doing otner carnage to tne oanx's i while the nation with its outlying Beginning of operations at the i . ,... I who has been appointee; as bishop MiV mvis- bald and was attri" Western Board Products company Bnockt WW9 not Mt onU ot Grtut TtM, Mont., ss a pariah: buWvmherllasSed Plant in North Salem win be held -d elrcle wlth a ,0 mlle prfest seryed the cathedral at JutementwthrpSerwhfc ?P pwbahly until about August , Wn!ch apparentiT Bad foP Portland nd 8 Mary-Catiolie Its center this city. property. " WILL CIRCLE! LASuE t PORTLAND, Ore , Anjf. 8. ---(AP) Horace U. Albright, director ef the Katlanal park ' service, annonnced today con strwetlom et aew highway completely t ewcirclxngT Crate : Lake will he started- ext prfng. .Eld will be called Albctght, who sapped tsu .portlaaal ess av towr of weetern" parks, said cost at the) road was estimated at $1,000,000. ; Engineers - already . have ' ; pre- , pared tentatire plans for the ptoJect-'F'- none the standpoint of the Wfttional parjc errice. Albright ' said. Crater Laka is one. of the znoet important in the aTsteon. poeeesslona totaled 117,85805. Hm Unitary Academy Plans seat. of their closed ear. " returned xrom their aram ther found1 the .In side of the windows covered with a white substance, xney openea 20. several days date planned, according to com pany officials. - Failure to secure water in a well being driven to furnish water for the plant is saw to be the cause of the. delay. r-Tha well has reached a depth of 209 feet, but so far there has . . . AWAnaV Inanr. CrOSSing CraSh Do of HO gUons a minute, VvooiJ5 w j- Teonlrement. Machin- fa f aaiiAt enii hv the time I men, 5. CSpe- the weU is finished the plant will friends, will atte tho aannal of Mrs? A. I be ready to go, the directors he- dairymen's plcnie to be held Sun- church at Eugene. Daiiy men Will Picnic At Fairgrounds Aug. 24 Several hundred Oregon dairy with their, families and fiTt.VUntTf.V lar. the ear tv'oor. hit of rubber, were I -i, AmmrYtmr scattered about the Interior and lyjf the Monitor vicinity were I lieve. two .of the bans una aisappearea. I injured moreVor less 'seriously as. -' a. ..a. , : ' I Tk. H1IAT BT1II EntfTW DUl VUI-I... Ik. ..t.M.Xn. rlYl. flT M&V:lDUlldingSulnOTmmlT large. Mrs. Falk collided With the o-FrUd ReCeiVeS v i uner BDceaer on too iukkuik ru-1 - -. -The rollers decided the heat of I tine- aneeder en tbe logging rail- POBTLAND, Ore-, Aug. . I. .-I the sun had caused the oaiia to lyoad at tha Meridian road cross- (AP J. W. H1H. fiafeaident ' of I explode. ; -.....l- : -li. Tha accident ocenrrea about TTrtt artM,aa. ai.ai.amv anaAiiaMi. 1 ' ' i ' - - ,J I 4 i 10 -lX. . aL ir 'T-.-.'j.Ty today construeuon or n new day, August 24, . at ;. Champoeg park, on the .'east hank I of the Willamette about 15 miles .north of Salem. ; . . Z ' The ' following program aas aU. Am-xA Veen arrahged for-the event: (jOetae AWard Address of welcome by Henry zorn, wno wui aiao , ten ox mi a YwvKrh i n.: . . .t.i- ffmi t -, YiEJNNA. Aug. - s.i iAri i earry niatory oi catuo in uitjuu. ' i-.f-n ..i I vmi.... a. Via etnie e VnrA MsM iariM a fier h-nd end tha other I tTOtessor eiraaiui.JTWO., wona- wra. is wiouiis " be started wltkla the next It days, helonglnr ' to Harold Murphy otl am tojury-and M.om watt Iom v aa.'o, SM.. i.ltll. A.al Ike aaTSa. whaas I lfnataa. a,. BTsniaie at W4A flrl mm wklffU. I HM nf0.1V WawfPSs. ataVVATWI V nmiS- 1 WM IIUUIJUBU B,tUT M.f MJIU VWH I - - -t- aVwOVViHW - mWaJ . - - ' eomptetem res; oVFartrweTT edeyersVwno was wpe awjtrded the Goethe Prtse.nhe f. Jo -m "t"on vSmenrof autJ500.000Blll moredrwneel hef ore, they aban-i aUng the speeder, was not injured greatm scientific . and - Uterary fhtor atha It. fa "saii Construction '''heatTaa doned the ear Uter in the even- although the machine-Was derailed distinction, in Gennairyv tha island -VwtteJ; soon asAKMtecUcal prepare the ing: 'PoUee located the antomo- in tha erash.' The Injured persona ivTha ltsa.wtllsha-; glyen; Dr. swtaW-cl-thaOw aZZH,.. Lrvrivr--- Z .t rntt... .m vin .tret. were hmnrbt to the hosniui here Freud at ceremonies in Frank- sey Cattle club and a. former I minus the wheel1 but later were taken home. tort at. the end of this month. ; ! resident of Guernsey. Address. "Cooperation among the Breeders by Frank Darwin of Salem, president of the Ore- . gon 1 Holsteln-Freslan Cattle association-' ':;"---:;' ;;--- .- Address, The Dairyman.- HTa Friends and His Foes' by Sidney Miller of Woodburn, president t the Oregon Jersey Cattle elan, and "also the Oregon .Dairymen associatlonv - . Fire minute talks by field, ren resentaUres of the dairy breed: H. A. Mathiesen, Holsteln-Fre-slen association of , America; C. W. "Jack" " Robinson, American Guernsey ? CatUe elnbr Ivan; Longharyv American Jersey. Cat Ue club.- 4 V a - : : V " ' -Musicallnumbers are being a ranged by Mrs. Orla Buxton atd Mrs. Edyth Toiler Weatherrcd. '-"if "-VHfg: