jt,JHH: 3 s v., -i . - Vacation Time -tl Keep p o a t e d on local new. while , on : your' vara tlon. Have The Statesman follow' yob. Telephone 0101 in ordering change. ; - WfiATU ER " v 1 '. Fair today "and r.Ttim day, bo change la tempera-' tore; liar. Temp Tuesday -83. Mia. 43, river: .4 foot, northwest wind. - , V EIGHTY -THIRD YEAR Salem, Oregon, Wednesday Morning, July 19, 1933 No. 98 3?-...;;wvl.i, vviW'.jTv .-!(J-;!i-ii '"V - ;; :-:"--'V; "'"l lJl'L FOUNDED ! 185! ; ' .':'-r '.-'; :"' ' - a . Train; i ARE KILLEO AS BOILER BURSTS Sixteen ilmured in Queer f v Accident toAkrben : Uniited aVOmaha'. - 'Jit! S Z' f v 5 - i "i r HI?- Passenger iCare Hurt but 'Several Bystanders at Station Victims ". OMAHA. "Nibr;iul: 18 (APJ The . eoglneec. and firemen m llie - Barllngtdii jalfroad'a , crack Iraln, the' Ak-Sar-Beh, wer killed ind -a Union station porter Jser- ouBly hurt" tonight' when the-boll- ir of the locomotive palling the vain, blew up under a viaduct near the Union station here. Sev tral others, .were, reported hurt. aone. seriously. :. -;. -.. .-, . ',' r - The : dead. were. .Charles E. .-Ut ter, Creton( engineer, and - JK.. Z, Zimmerman, Lincoln, Neb:, the fireman. The Injured porter was James McCrae of Omaha. - The train, en route from Lin coln to Chicago was pulling into the covered areaway connecting the Union and Burlington stations when the explosion occurred. The areaway was almost cut in "two as the force of the blast sent the boil er of the locomotive 25 feet in the area. Sixteen Reported Injured in Blast Everett Battles is Charged as Hit iver, Run r'Z:i c m lit -iv:., AT--..- - T. 1 Injury Gase Police Reticent About . Cliies" biii Guard Skid . Marks ;.Wa Hong, Victim of Machine, J ' ii. ; In Critical .Gphditiohi Word.; ;v DING .up ihree" day ..of investigation of the injuring of "Wa.Hottg, S5 year old Chinese,' by a hit-run driver Saturday night; city police last night arrested -Everett Battles, 24,' or 1179 Third street,, West Salem, and charged him with responsibility for the accident. ' The arrest was made on North Commercial street near Center. ... .. . .. .. formal charge against Bat- ties was tiled . witn Miner tiay- den, ; ( justice "of . the .peace here, at p. m. . Battles was charged with ' being Involved in an- auto accident in which Wa' Hong was run over and seriously . injured Battles was held . to have failed to stop and render aid and as sistance after the accident. Hayden Immediately set Bat ties' ban at 2000 and . If was eVpected that he would be hailed into court this morning to be formally charged and to make his answer. . Under -' the state law, . failing to stop after an accident Is felony, . and conviction on the charge renders one subject to sentence to the county jail or to the state prison. . While Battles denied he was no rats Must Begin Serving 3-Year Sentence :Soon;; Bonds -h :--Case. Being Seard . Last hope for Charles Archerd, former Salem grain dealer and Implement . salesman, to avoid state prison faded yesterday when the state supreme court upheld a motion by District Attorney Trin dle, the motion calling for the dis missal of Archerd's appeal from the judgment of the circuit court here. . As a result. Archerd must short- A child walking through the ly commence to serve the three- tunnel connecting tne stations year term in state prison to which was reported seriously hurt. Judge Arlie O. Walker sentenced A check of city hospitals show- him. Archerd, who was prominent ed that at least 18 others had in business and fraternal affairs been injured. Most of them were here, has been at a mine near standing near the engine at the Grants Pass for about two years time of the blast and were scalded after leaving here suddenly when or hit by flying fragments of his business affairs became so in steel and iron. r volved he could no longer con- "Just one big flash and a tlnue. boom," was the way C R. Craig He is expected to be In Portland of Hastings, Nebr., a brakeman today to testify in a suit being on another Burlington train, de- carried on there to collect from scribed the explosion. Craig, who his bondsmen when he was in the was 50 yards away,-, was hit on warehouse business here. Trindle tne jaw by a nying piece or metal, said he expected Archerd's bonds Far & hriRf timn aftr fha hint I . vint..i a.nn ..Aniit naniC ruled In the -tWO-StatiOnS afl I 1Hr Arharit n th .horlff hara the; crowds mlUedJihout, Ignorant shortly. The formal mandate of of what had happened. The ex- dismissal had not eome down plosion ripped out a 20 foot see- from the supreme court to the tlon of the passenger viaduct and cjounty clerk yesterday afternoon. the . motorist whose car struck Bouthern end of Lake Baikal, the , "VV . Oklahoma flier was 16 hours and tinned to weave their net of.evi- 3i m,nnt oy,omA nf (Turn to page 2, COl. 1) set hv Harold fiattv and hlmaplf in 1931. ' When he got to Irkutsk the dar ing airman had accomplished more than half the distance of his projected round the world flight. broke windows for hundreds of yards around the scene. None of the Ak-Sar-Ben passen gers was known to have been in jured. TERM FACES OFFICEH'S SLAYER The higher court held Archerd's counsel had failed to take a man datory step in making an appeal in that the county clerk was not duly served with notice of appeal, Three of the justices dissented, holding with Justice Rossman who wrote the dissenting opinion. that service of the county -clerk was an unneeded technicality and that the' court should reverse its former decisions In the Interest of justice. M Blooks Road Job fines of the Oregon state peni tentiary was the destiny that to night faced John Alvin Barrier, 17Lof Huntington Park, Calif. The youth was convicted In circuit court here today of first degree murder for the slaying of a state policeman. The jury re commended lite imprisonment To Take 200 Men Oft Relief List An order for 200 laborers was placed with the Marion county re lief office yesterday by Contractor YSIalrA rV . la 4a VavIm nW miking that sentence mandatory Uidening the Pacific highway near On; the COUrt. IHrnnVi within thm. ma-rf Aa Barrier was apparently unmov- two Tno men were all to be'oneg who had received relief, under the R. P. Cr setup. The U. tf.-Y. M. C. A. Employment office was advised that Blake'a crews would not be composed of the men who regis tered there the past few days In hopes of obtaining the highway jobs Twenty-two men were placed by ed as the verdict was read. His father and mother, who had' sat at his aide throughout the trial, showed little outward sign of emotion. Only the father's pat on the! mother's shoulder Indicated their feelings. Selection of a jury to hear the trial of Harry Bowles, 21, also Charged With first degree I , ArrrnlnvmAnt hnroin VMtprdiT murder for the death of State n as cherry pickers, two as rasp- Policeman MIlo Baucom, got un- berry pickers, five as highway derj way late today, and It was workers in the Santiam I region, expected opening statements two as laborers and one each as would be completed sometime to- I flunky and farmhand. INS ID FOG Iowa Congress Veteran Called V-;X 1 6 Hours, 34- Minutes. Ahead 0f, Farmer Time ;When .j Irkutsk vReacHed : ' Rossi and Codos Unable to Hop off for Distance; . Record Attempt Is J ' ' a. it IRKUTSK, Siberia, July '-It Wednesday APV Heaw rain and fog early today delayed a Cilbcrrt , N.'Haugeii, former Iowa takeoff by Wiley Post, American aviator on an around-the-world flight, for his next stop, Khabar ovsk, Siberia, 1400 miles east of here. - The Oklaheman, who ianded here at 3 1 35 p. m., Moscow time (7:35 a. m. E. S- T.) .yesterday after, a flight from' Novosibirsk, Siberia. had' intended to take off from -Khabarovsk at 11 o'clock last night (3 p. m., ' Tuesday, K. S. T.) The heavy weather pre vented him doing so.' The time of his departure was indefinite. When he descended at this city congressman whose name- was associated with that of Senator Charles Lv McXary. of Oregon, in the drafting of early farm re lief IeglsUtlon, died last night, aged 74, of bean, disease. FARM RELIEF BILL ; GO-AUTHOR GALLED U. S. Kidnap Law Invoked InLuer Case France' and England: Offer n Easier:cCredit; i Fear y: H S:BecogmUon i ; fr; Hearken ? to i Proposals for Trade Agreements by V Soviet Diplomat NEW TOHKT JulT 18 AP '-England arid. Pranee;.' tn x'the Ttew-.pf 'Russian trade circles to night, are. uneasy; over the" possi bility of American ..recognition of the IT. S. 8. R.: and are rushing forward with Easier credit terms for' the Soviets Along with word from Paris to day that France, and .Russia .are discusslngf- a $22,000,000 order for steel and allied products came advices from London that British firms are . looking forward . to greatly Increased exports to the soviet union. The British, according to the belief held here, are anxious to erase the bitter aftermath of the Metropolitan-Vickera I n c Ident In south central Siberia near the Hannpn in Fnilinn Health ith its embargo on Russian goods r I I IMMMVII I I ?J w ---- m ,., . When He Retired Last listen to the trade proposals of ST. LOUIS. July 13 CAP)- A charge of violation pf the national extortion ct , was nied-tonignt against Percy' M. FKagerald, -an ex-convlct known as the dice-box kid," after he was identified as one of the kidnapers' - of August Lner, -aged .Alton,- in.,"'bankarr-. Identification was made.- poHce said, by the wife -of the banker, who ' came bere f rtfm Alton - late today- and viewed Fitzgerald- at police headquarters: . " Fitzgerald 'was1 arrested' last night at, Madison, IXL.- across, the Mississippi Tlver, at- the request, of department of justice agents after Mrs. Luer had picked out his pho tograph from a group otjnctures, and told them It resembled on of the' two men,-accompanied by a woman, who - seized her husband a week, ago Monday night at their home In Alton. SffflslD Officials say Bonds Spund And Extension Required Only by tax Delay STATES FflVO R PR OH I REPEAL .Margin 3 . to 2 in Arkansas 1 J. ,A.nd tdviJ-jAliabama. Say Latest Figures . ; : Administrator ; Says law is Doomed, Urges Start tn ' .Whiskey Distilling - LITTLE ;ROCK, Axi July J. (Wednesday) - (AP) X tabulation of nearly' 90,000 Tele br the Associated Press at J: 4$ am. today gaye a heavy majority for repeal of Mh eighteenth amendment, 1051 precincts oat of 204 in the state showing 82S for repeal and 34,778 against. Most of the heavier voting pre cincts had reported' and ' It was estimated the total vote cast did not exceed 125,000. Spring Recalled Indignant over implacatlons contained in the interview of Gov- Maxim Litvlnor, commissar for ernor Meier regarding purchases foreign affairs and leader of the ot Dond3 by the state treasurer's E DOUBTFUL OF k mm olilce fo investment of state funds, and .defending themselves against any insinuations that they had put over anything wroug on the state in the sale of 165,000 PORTLAND, Ore.. July 18 (AP) Against the skepticism ex pressed by some officials investi gating the case, Mrs. R. E. Close tonight declared without qualifi- Lieutenant Maurice Rossi and I Paul Codos planned to take off from Floyd Bennett field at dawn in quest of a distance record but i adverse weather reports later caused them to postpone their Russian delegation to the London economic conference. NORTHWOOD, la-, July. 18. visit la Costli to (AP) Gilbert N. Haugen, 74, American Exnorta former congressman from Iowa, Alreadv. LitTlnoT'a visit tn Tnn. died at his home here tonignt. don has Droved costlv to Amer- in bonds of Oregon City for 364.- He had been suffering from lean exporters. 000, J. L. Franzen. city manager heart disease and complications It was authoritatively learned of Oregon City, and C. Schuebel, brought on by an attack of lnflu-1 tonight that one contract with an city attorney, called at the state enza last winter. I American industrial firm, calling capital yesterday. When he left office March 4, for purchases upward of 330.000. "If our tax levies had come in the co-author of the McNary-Hau- has been cancelled within the last would ha naid the bonds off gen bill and militant farm leader few days and the order placed in when due," said Mr. Franzen. "As it was our funds on hand had to BIRMINGHAM. Ala., July If. (AP) Tabulations from Ala bama's prohibition referendum en Tuesday, early today showed re peal of the eighteenth amendment to have a growing majority, reaching proportions of nearly 2 to 1. Tabulations of 1159 out of 2137 ballot boxes in the state, gave; For repeal, 73.980; against, 44.&3U. Kepeal had a majority on Incomplete returns in 4 4 out of tne 67 counties in the state. start. The Italian seaplanes In Chica- had completed 34 years continu- England. eo tuned no for a hon tn Now out service in the house of repre-1 The reason assigned to the C&H- I Ha nand tnr rnrront cTrtAnaPa nntll t a . . . a 1 . 1 a. 1 " I a m a. ai .11. if - . . ... . I cauon inai sne Deneves me siory York, the first leg of their home- aeniauves, me longest recora 01 ceuauon was inai me Hrnisn taxes were paid in. Our schedule of bond payments called for re tirement of all city obligations by Arkansas and Alabama yester day apparently moved Into the column of states favoring repeal of tne eighteenth amendment. With more than half the vote counted in Alabama, dry leaders of that state conceded that repeal- ists nad won, while a 3 to 2 ratio for repeal was being maintained In Arkansas. The vote in Alabama: 1159 out of 2137 ballot boxes, 73,984 for repeal; 44,530 against In Arkansas: 1528 out of 2103 her husband, superintendent of ward Journey Cnlnni an Mm any national congressman. firm granted easier credit. the Oreeon anti-liauor league. I r.harioa a r.iniik.,.). .r.t I Haugen won the reDublican I This gave an authoritative note told police of his reputed abduc- more favorable weather before r- nomination a year ago after a to reports here that England soon , anA tM. fnHino. ?eclncU' 5829 tor repeal; 34,- tion yesterday by two masked I gamine their aerial mannlnr erne. I close race with former State Sen-I would reinstate the partial guar-l ,,. ,t. m, u l 778 gln". men. dition in the arctic ator C. .A. Benson of Elkader, but antee- on soviet sales, abrogated I T.Vji vj. i v I Sixteen states already have waiJiereatei in tne democratic wun ine embargo arter the trial "r"tZ' " iiect nn are not T.oieo .or..eiiace.ment. 01 Close informed- police he had Jimml Mittm u niuirtsii u been kidnaped by two men .who have Teeftten7r6mAhadyr by a I raiidslidw-tnioTember- by- RP-1 of -the- "MetpoIiUn-Vlckers en-1 r,. l! entered his home shortly after Soviet seaplane which was to fly I Fred Blermann of Decorah. mianignt, pouna mm, inrew nim him to Nome, Alaska, but he had 1 waugen naa oeen in poor neaun into tne back seat or an -automo- I not arrived there and no further 1 mce nia return irom wasmngton bile, and drove him southward information about him was avail over the west side Pacific high- able. way. He said the men represented themselves as members of "The Chicago Six" and demanded 312,- 000 from the anti-liquor league. Detectives who questioned the league superintendent at- length today, indicated they were in clined to look askance at some de tails of the story as Close told It. He said he had escaped by work ing loose the rope with which he was ItinnA liv tliroo toTiIti w Vita two assailants with a pen and pen- odge L. O. LewelHng Tuesday ell in such a way as to make them afternoon .heard arguments and think he had pistols against their hhwiid case heard here in March and his son, Lars G. Haugen, an officer of the Nation al City bank of New York, was called here two weeks ago. He and Hau gen's daughter, Mrs. Joe Johnson of Northwood, were at the bedside. Haugen s wile died 40 years ago and he never remarried. Funeral services and burial will be held here Friday afternoon, PLEA FOB REPEAL prohibi tion. Similar action in 35 states Each of the city officials made TrnJ' r affidavits covering the detail, of D TroWbltlo. SJtatal iae uauipoi uuua wuivu wtuv m- i trator said FJ 'Prohibition Is on the skids. We can't escape it and we might as well not 'kid ourselves." He urged immediate distillation of whiskey. backs, then shoving both men from the moving automobile. Powell to Plead Before Poulsen, then took under advisement the case of the Oregon-Washington Railroad and Navigation company against Utilities Commissioner Thomas. The railroad company asks that the court grant a writ of prohibition to restrain Thorn 5 L A Y E R SENTENCED TO LIFE III 1 1 corporated in the minutes of the bond commission, approval of which was withheld by Governor Meier and T. Morris Dunne, new member, because of objection to the Oregon City bond item. The purchase, say the Oregon City of flclals, was approved by Charles T Varlv t nr-mer members, and by Advocating "true temperance", GoTernor MeIer. Further in their branding the 18th amendment as affidavits they say: unenforceable and productive of "We Informed Mr. Early and crime, and promising to work for Mr. Paulus that we could sell the establishment of state liquor's ! a J tlZ 1 Twinria t mr anil accrued Inter- eontrol, five speakers last night t t A t of la h. nayine a W"h 25 truck operator later- aaaressea a erowa estimatea at commission of $900 and at said wiea wuiwucrs, me case i ab aaa in TtrminT. t.v . .nvvMtf tn Mr vtt I derson against Thomas, Involving - . I. -a w- t.t- . wid the validity of the 1933 legteUttva urging uera io yoie lor repeal hna enactment, ram. . fa . . . . . . ...... i nrrr tn fliaconnc ine Donaa tu i ' -w - me xeaerai ana siaie proniDiuon . " m argument late Tuesday In etrealt amendments. This was the last "J ,.- . . com- court nere before Judge L. Q. l.'r" .aa jewelling. Argument will be re- BUS TAX VALIDITY ARGUED IN COURT ?rVltV Pnitlwn aa from orderlnr certain refunds BEDFORD, July 18. (AP) menamen. mis was xne iui f 1000 ratner than ft - ietOre rOMSen, onnSSmfnJSiil EarlHanscom. 28. husky Eagle stand of the motorcade of the ml8lon ot ,00 to private par- Tf fU .l.if. i.v". 7 Point farmer boy. was sentenced woman's organization for national tle.. sumed Thursday, ReCkleSS Charge &S2fin2'ViEL .onmetS prohibition reform which ha. been "he deal was approved by Ear- JSIS The company petitioned Thorn' as to order the refunds on the al In the state penitentiary for the touring the state. ly nOW deceased, Meier and Paul- Mayor Douglas McKay, Intro- us on that basis. duced by Mrs. Louts Lachmund, welcomed the visitors, and Mrs. David Honeyman of Portland In troduced the speakers, who were morrow. Ira Powell of Monmouth is slat- iegation that an overcharge had l4y,n JolT f Albert J. Ting ed to appear in municipal court k-en mad. ercnarge naa mIdale.agea farmer today to plead to a charge of reck- Counsel for the railroad assert- Tingleat was beaten to death less driving placed against mm oy that Thomas has no inHndic during a quarrel at a dance, city police after he drove his au- l tion over Artiir. w,i I Hanscom leaded aulltv to sec- tomobile over the embankment at -orne befni-a fdr,i . ond degree murder before Circuit Miss Lillian Harris. New York. the west end of Mission street ear- yo mminjgtratjT. officers. Judge G. F. Skip worth after walv- represenUtlve of the woman's re ly Sunday. Marion Wilson, who The raliroai also agBerta tnat the lng grand jury action. He wept Pel organisation. Frank Manning was injured In the accident, was cage lnT0iTea inter-state tm t bitterly throughout- the nroceed- Thomas Ryan, Portland at- recoveiing Daubiacioriij i b w night, Salem general hospital at tendants reported. Condition of Mrs. Mary Tergen, who was lnlnred in a collision at MTtcheU corner east of the .Ute 7": tb ecnn"rVVn,r 7JZ " Portland. -Prelude and intermls-l Papenfus. v u.. ,i.a - J i went ui'iu iv "in ium.. o I loruier sajem attorney now coun-l Uy . and everyone court's final de termination' on the case, opera tlon of the new truck law has been held up by a temporary Injunc tion. Under the new law truck operators not only must pay i, high license and mileage fee, but must provide property damage Woman Struck by far ?IVPr Roiad Insurance and a good faith bond. I Plaintiff, who renresenta the Oregon Motor Truck association. WMie waikinr to the mailbox contends the new truck law la -w " I J a a m mtra-state rates and is not under tags. lornejrs. 1 B,'uu. ,lwf"r. V';1" . " i" w e. TiTer road highly discriminatory and is un Thomas' control. I Waiving the grand Jury actloiu v me aerenaant contended show-1 Hanscom said: "I'm guilty. I rZl"- icv .n eyerel lnlnred by Percy Cupper appeared tag he had jurisdiction. Brief, don't Intend to blame anyone else. "-T driven hv John Pontiff yesterday and Willis r II t A at a m kV. .... n. Iwa m .em. a a. a I LilB LU1I U UiBlllLl. BaamiUlh I I If .... v m m Sb recetTed a bro- 'IUU1B na 4. sn. uevera ior for S. TJUli- r to nis gion ambers were pUyed by the ken ankle and head lacerations, "es commissioner Tnomas wno is concerned. I cherriin bind I It was determined when she was with the administration PBESSMAD ON RECOVERY PLAN (LBriefe Aurora Men Win Delay Youth Drowns, Klamath Nurse Dives to Death Bee Causes Bus Wreck v tt i -,. i . - - I i. n em an nana. r",c '"V men to- w nybody." - RVfore rhe rallv member- ot the brought to Peaconess hospiUl by u.uu, icpiracutcu iuo ptajnuii.i fnfnrmeil hv tlva court that . . ' . 1 n. j ir x..n.. r.- of the law. SESJ- rtend8 one'sentence to hi t7TfOrTgon b PflHe GrOWCrS floner ' represented th commIs- granted. It 1. mandatory, life lm- a plflcnIc af the Jim Unn sister. Mrs. All ee Coolidge on - C jS. ...uovwu. .v"-- i mace on Laneriy roaa. , iiiiiiiifiirH iit-ii I am ready to take my punish-1 . ; I - . upemng frices ment. I don't know why I should n't. WASHINGTON. July 18 (AP) Complications over how to con duct a campaign for bringing all Industry and business quickly in to wage-raising, work - snaring 30 DATS GRANTED ' PORTLAND, Ore., July 18 (AP) Dr. B. F. Giesy and Zeno Schwab, former officer, of the Willamette Valley Mortgage and agreements delayed Its start to- Loan company of Aurora, now In day but there ! were indications the hands of the receiver, today that the policy had full admlnls- were granted a 30-day stay of ex- traUon approval. t - ecutlon by Federal Judge McNary. Successive conferences of Pre- Each of the two is under sen- sident Roosevelt's executive conn- tence to serve 10 months in the cil, composed of director for the county jail and to pay a fine ot new emergency unit, of govern- $750. They were convicted in fed- ment. and of the sneclal industrial eral court here April 21 of nslng recovery cabinet board, consider- I the malls to defraud. Their mo- ed the temporary plan but after- j tions for new trial were denied. JJ!!!.? SEIZED WITH CRAMPS. . nbt fully satisfied as to methods J lov50bwSrhaMr La v. .i jta. 1 18 (AP) John Wascnau, 20, of 10 I sorague river near Bly last night. I Because of wide difference. In The youth Tlslttag relaUve. here employment condition, between for the Pt ek wa. Mixed with factories and atores and business tTamps while taking a moonlight offices, Johnson Intend, to bare WI!E -f11 ;wr , vvrrmuwut,:. separate types . of agreementa I boys SEE FATAL LEAP in the wag and working T hoifr Yfr Zu conditions. These preliminary The body of MaryE. Tracy, .8. . agreements would be eftecUve on- Portland nurse, waa i. . navement todaT beneath-a nign be aubmitted, tudied, and pro- bridge. Police said sha had evl vnAi.at.a v. .v. . ti . I ontrv leaned from the span a few minutes before. Small beys, playing at one end ot the bridge. saw Miss Tracy standing near the rail, then realized suddenly that she waa not there. Peering over AID ON PRUIU E CODE 1 Late sPrts Problem ot Waiei Bonds Sale 1 diked by Leaders c3Arp AHfirvTn Tniv i rAP. ! Informal discussion of ways and I -w ' - P - - x ' I aa.e .VI. V. - w si a vn ad ti wnir n wnn 1 1 nm.iim aun i.ilv sne was not mere, reenng over rvKiuAnu, juiy 15. &ry , . ZT 7r . tn acnnlre the Oregon-Washing- the side, they saw the body on the The formulation of plan, for price Jonlght a. a Sacramento gBJJSS5?ffit pavement peiow ana nouuea po- iuwum "a couo 01 7 WV7 ' n.' b,m hi kere at the lowest possible price, lice. nesa practice, in accordance with - rr w, had here late Tuesday after- . j f v. .1 .. J..41. noon by Mayor Douglas McKay prune ""eJf ... II and City Attorney Chris J. KowIU the national industrial recovery j act was undertaken by Pf1 U HW A jr wn iv IIIUITTI HEWTON, Or KlylS. J grower, and packer, of Orllll Xm to four tTm. at .M&MSlj'S (AP) - One littleTbee. etriking EwhlSVn 2 a elnrbere stretch hU string of hiU in con- Mond'T . . . . . 1 I mm n.- K..I. BIKBt UJ Ul IHJ VWMUV... out once, wrecieo m stage louay t today secnuve games 10 . tno dwi - tv. and caused injuria, to three per-1 Delegate, from the WUlamette failed to keep pace with their maJor huT(U in the pr0pos- dwuo. . I waiiev. mnr 11 mbhit ana ciarr i vuubu j uuur dmi Uwn., . . m fv. ih uia The insect flew through the county. Washington, reported that Sacramento won, 8 to 4. f gBfficient city bonds to enable winaow 01 tne stage ana strucx northwest nroduction of dried I la (k rf to h mad to the LeeT-aylor, the driver, In the eya I nnnem. wfll be about tha aanta aa I : LOS -"ANGELES, Julr II." I MmnHT While tba manl- Just a. the stage was rounding a 1 iMt Tgar. S on t h e r n Oregon, (AP) GoriUa .Jones, negro market wa. strengthen- curyw. cultural ii, uuuubu, i though, u expected to produce a miauieweigui xrwm Aoieuu u ed materially in the last 99 cays, lor lost control of the machine, I marA than nanally larr nrooor-1 Points south, won the decision I ,-., vfcTTaT anL'Kowlt were and it crashed into a telephone j tlon of the; total crop because of over Wesley Ketchell, the Port- J doubtful if an adequate amount of poie- on tne mgnwya oetween i farorable weather when the prune I land, ore. snocaout artist, aiter i eitr bonds to acuuire the plant Echo and. Stanfleld. . : ' I treea vera in bloom. .. I a lis ties s" 10 round fight herel-miid hm marketed now. The ; Katherine L. Walker of Union, j Members of the eonunlttea an-1 tonight. before lesa than SOOt I bonds bear not to exceed fire per Mo., suffered several broken ribs I pointed today, to perfect the plana spectators, I cent interest and cannot be sold and, possible Internal injuries. included W.' Q Fisher of Rose-1; -A '- .' Ifor less than $15 for each $100 m.m XT PV1m tit nmaba. I bnr SI M. VnUnnn nf Pnrtlanit. I ! SAV FPANCTSCO.' JnlV 11. I mf nine bond taaned. Nebr ' sustained bruised knees. 1 George B. Paulus of Salem. Henry I Ap) Jim Browning. .Ill,' of While the eounell has auihorix- ltfrk C. A. Wlndle, Seattle, was Crawford of Salem. George Neun-1 Missouri, made It two straight to led McKay. Kowit and Alderman reported tb hare suffered possible I er of Roseburgh, a L. Firestone I defeat- Richard - SUhl,-- 820, ' of Hughes to negotiate tor tho water Internal in juries. The driver was I of Vanoonver.Waabu, and John F. I Germany, in a wrestling boat bera I plant and to determine what pur badly shaken.. .... " " v"Twhita of Portland.2 lltonight.-- - . 'cnase prica the latter would set, SAN JOSE, CaL, July 18. (AP) The United Prune Grow ers association announced opening prices on Imperial prunes here to day. Representing a gain of one and one-half cents, or 20 per cent over prices last year. Hugh Herman, president of the association, said the total crop would be about 25,000 tons. . The price scale as annouaced by the ass tela tlon: 31-33's. e; 25-30's. 8c: 20-24's, tc; 2Q'a and larger 11 He Officers Asked To Locate G. 17. - Evans of Brooks G. W. Evans. 38, of Brooks waa missing from home last night,. city Meanwhile yesterday another I police here were notified. The man hurdle barring the way to muni- had net been seen ' by rehUrvea clpal ownership waa crossed when since' S n.m. Thursday when ha the state snpreme eourt overruled left for work fn an onion field. Ha : a motion tor a rehearing made by failed to call tor his automooue the defendant in the suit of Salem I which he .had left in a, garage, vs. the Oregon-Washington Water I saying he would .return Thursday Service corporation. : J night. V. ' .- . .-s The suit lnvoxing.tne vaiiaity i ronce saia no trace ot aruir. a the vi2.kao.0Sa. authorisation I Atcheson. 24. 1 Hollywood ' meat - of water- purchase - bonds origin- 1 market manager who disappeared,,. . (Qirn to page 1, col. 1 j . . '.last weeka had yet been xouaa. j - no date was set yesterday for a conference with water company officials, ILAnd when any agreement on a purchase can be made, with wa ter company officials, if and when moneys may be obtained from sale ot city bonds; the entire proposed purchase will be laid before the city council which has full and final authority In the matter. Un der the 1931 charter amendment authorising the water plant pur chase, the acquisition of the plant here must be through the entire counclL ' Meanwhile the acquisition of the. plant here must bo through the entire "council.