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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 5, 1933)
" PAGE TWO Tie OREGON STATESMAN. Salcn, Ore-oa Tnesday Morning September S,1933 PIGlvERS LAUGH J TRIO TIB1 Hopyard Vorkers set Trap For Bristol and. two . Others, Reported- , (Continued Tram pes 1) -on. Pickers - also volunteered to assist la bringing the trio to Sa lem. ' "Send em back to Rossi." the Bicker s were reported to nave yelled as the sheriff drove away with lus prisoners. As a final gesture, the pickers gathered np handbills whkh the agitators had thrown away upon the sheriff's arrival and threw thenvon their fire. A fourth member of Bristol's party departed hurriedly as the other were arrested, and four others came to Salem and unsuc cessfully demanded the Telease of the trio. The handbills spread among the Jerman pickers and read the same as those passed out In other yards. demanding five cents a pound for picking, 50 cents an hour for com mon labor and 75 cents for skilled labor. After a tour of yards both north and south from Salem, Sheriff Vjurk reported that the pickers were generally quiet, interested chiefly In pieking as many bas kets of bops as possible. The sheriff and state police, armed with a machine gun and tear gas,, moved in on the Clark yard at - Fargo Sunday when It was reported a riot was starting there. The pickers were Quieted a call from the Lee Hing yard. when the officers arrived but on the sheriff arrested William Nye, 5 ff, alleged leader in the Clark disturbance, on a charge of dis orderly conduct. He Is alleged to have slapped a yard foreman in the eye when scolded for his man ner of picking. Nye will appear InvWoodburn justice court today, MT. ANGEL, Sept. 4. Hop picking is going ahead at a fever ish' rate in this vicinity. Some growers, fearing rain and alarmed at the appearance of some mould. asked their crews to pick on Sun day also. Rain In the first part of last week delayed picking very little. Nearly all yards are receiving a. cent a pound. In the Butch yards, however, the pickers went on a atrike and were promised a cent and a quarter to get them to return to picking. Good yields are reported everywhere. The Call Board ELSINORE Today Leslie Howard in Captured." Wednesday Wynne Gibson in "Her Bodyguard." Friday Cary Grant in "Gambling Ship." CAPITOL Today Double bill. 'Mys terious Rider" and "Worn- an Accused. THE GRAND : Today Preston Foster in "The Man Who Dared." . Wednesday only Jack Oafcie in "Million, Dollar Legs." Thursday Chester Morris in "Tomorrow at Seven." THE HOLLYWOOD Today Pitts and Summer- vllle in "Out All Night." Wednesday Nancy Carroll in "The Kiss Before the - Mirror." Friday Ken Maynard in "Fargo Express." THE STATE Today "Explorers of the World." Wednesday Bob Steele In "The Nevada Buckaroo." Thursday "Black Beauty." Saturday only Rex Bell in "Broadway to Cheyenne." draw from the field federal moneys and federat supervision would be supplied under the Wagner act provisions. The bureau was opened here In 1921 by the T. M. C. A. In 1923 federal aid was offered but was withdrawn last year with the exception of the franking priv ilege, denied only last week. RECORD IS SET AT STATE FI deaf Weather and. Holiday Bring 27,623 Persons To State Exhibit (Continued, from page 1) cented from J. O. Holt; president of the state hoard of horticul ture, a "nose-gay" of six foot gladioli. Other prominent per sons who participated in the pre sentation ceremony were Mayor W. W. Stockwell of Grants Pass, Grant Matthews, county Judge of Josephine county, and H. R. Richards, superintendent of the artcultural building. . Governor Meier and Mayor Carson of Portland received greetings. ... The bouquet, made up of 15, 000 gladioli blooms from Jose phine county, was sent to Salem in fast trucks and occupies the entire center of the huge agricul tural building. A fresh supply of blooms win reach Salem Wed nesday night. The presentation was witnessed by several thous and persons, including state fair officials. Mrs. Meier responded briefly. - .Mr. Holt declared that more than 73,000,000 bulbs" were arown commercially in Oregon last year, and -that the Industry particularly was important In Marlon, Josephine, Linn, Lane, Douglas, Clackamas, Multnomah. Washington, Clatsop and Tilla mook counties. Rattlesnake is Medford Guest MEDFORD. Ore., Sept. 4. (AP) - A rattlesnake, the first found within the city limits here for many years, was killed in the yard of the Gerald A. Barr resi dence today. The snake was about IS inches long and had two but tons, which It attempted to rattle as Barr reached to pick it up, thinking it a common garter snake. f. If WITHDRAW HUGH 'Whether or not the local T. It.' C. A. will sever all connec tion; with the Salem free employ ment office now operating under the combined auspices of county, federal and association authori ties will probably be decided def initely when the association's board, of directors meets Thurs C. A. Kells, special agent for the bureau since its or ganization, was of the opinion yesterday that the withdrawal of the franking privilege from the employment office here- marked the complete severing of the com- tined agencies which have pre viously supported It and that should the T. M. C. A. with- fl AMaKOradTtater r JOLI.YVOOU ; Last Times Today Matinee 2 p.m. '.V .1 M Wednesday & Thursday . Are Dime Nites Special Matinee, 2 P. M. Wednesday (DefobeV iiJK with Nancy Carroll, Frank Mor gan, Paul Lukas, Gloria Stuarts FORMER IOWANS GATHER Reminiscences of old times and old friends were the order of the day when a group of former Rock well City, la., folk gathered on the lawn at the C. D. Chllds resi dence yesterday tor luncheon. Places were set at the long table for Mr and Mrs. James Walter, Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Stonebraker and daughter Catherine and Miss Belle Tennant, all of Portland; Mr, and Mrs. L. M. Birch, Mr. and Mrs. O. XL Birch and son Burl, Mr. and Mrs. K. D. Birch, Mrs. Lila Allison. Misses Bernlce and Doris Orwlg. Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Chllds Thomas and Frank Chllds and the Misses Lydia, Isabel and Helen Chllds. alt of Salem. Of the entire group, all but tne Misses Orwlg are former residents or the children of residents or Rockwell City. BY FOREST BLAZE WINNIPEG, Sept 4 (AP) Five hundred motorists were re ported . stranded "at Whitemouth, Ontario, '. tonight, unable to get through forest fires raging along seven-mile stretch on the trans- Canada highway. The motorists were bound for Winnipeg. There was little hope they would be able- to reach this city tonight. Many have been held at Whitemouth since Saturday night. . The railway station at Elma was reported to have been de stroyed by the flames. Approximately 100 men were drafted in nearby towns for du ty against the flames . which threatened to cause further dam age in the dry timber 'along the right of way of the Canadian Na tional railway and the Canadian Pacific railway. Seven students of agricultural economics at Texas Tech went on a 6000-mile tour of 15 northern and eastern states to study farm problems. Ob ltuary McaiiUe At the residence, 1 H0. Smith street, Monday, September 4, Stel la McMillen, age , 41 years, wife of Grenn McMillen of this city. Also leaves two sisters, Mrs: Lilly Sheard, Mrs. H. P. Hopping, both of Tacoma, Wash.; two brothers. Walter Nelson of Seattle, and Harry Nelson of Los Angeles. Funeral announcements ' later by Salem mortuary, 645 North Cap! tol street. , Wilklns At a local hospital Monday, September' 4, Kenneth Wilklns, eight year old son of .Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Wilklns, grandson of B. 8. Via of Salem. Remains in care of Terwilllger Funeral home; funer al announcements later; phone 6928. Harrison In this city. Sunday, September S, Charles Harrison at the age of 7 1 years. Survived by two broth ers. Edward Harrison of Denver, Colo and William Harrison of Ogden, Utah. One sister. Mrs. Ethel Weinberg of Portland. Re mains are in charge of Salem mor tuary, 545 North Capitol street. Announcements later. TOMORROW IS BARGAIN DAY Ends The Man Who Dared . with PrestonFoster Zlta Johann' ' TOMORROW -t A r MATINEE XUC : TOMORROW NIGHT IS PAL MIGHT V . GET YOUR COUPONS FROM OUR NEWS PAPER ADS1 . . . see "Million Dollar Leg!" and tangh with Jack Oakie, W. C. Fields, Andy. Clyde, Lyda Robert!, Ben" Turpin. n BLUEBLOODS SHAMED Academy Horses all Beaten in Equine Swim OLD DOBBIN" CHAMP PORTLAND Sept. 4. (AP) Just a plow hone- this morning, "Old . Dobbin" went back to his barn tonight as a champion and a fancy field, of the best swimming horse in 1 Oregon bowed their heada in shame. ?;V-i For "Old Dobbin" won the .first equine swimming contest .- ever held in this, section and sponsors of the Oswego lake regatta pro claimed him the northwest champion..,-;- : v-., f"-.;-:;u1:' ' As the .horses lined up on the bank for the start, several entries from riding academies, sleek and shiny, pranced; about and attract ed the attention of a capacity au dience. "Old Dobbin and another of his kind stood steady, paying little attention to the proceedings. Riders took their places on the various mounts, the starter's gun goomed and the horses were urged into the watters. The race course was to a buoy, several hundred feet from shore and back again. Old Dobbin" needed little urg ing. With the same steadiness he had shown pn shore, the broad backed, work horse went into the lead and he was never headed. Rounding the buoy he started on the homeward stretch, swimming just as easily as if it were an ev-ery-day occurrence. He won all by himself. H BLOCKED DING WOMAN IS I K VIM Contia4 tnm pf 1) and crashed as she landed, but was uninjured. The race In which Miss Klln- gensmith lost her life was won by James R. WedelL Louisiana pilot. In a plane in which he set a new unofficial speed record of better than five miles earlier in the afternoon. Wedell averaged S4S.0S miles an hour to win the $10,000 race. The victory meant $3,100 tor bun. Coming Sunday WILL ROGERS in "DOCTOR BULL" mm LAST DAY! spi mm tm BUZE iU KITCHEN A new Toof. ventilating sys tem and kitchen Improvements will be put in at the rear of The Spa restaurant which was damaged by fire to the extent of between $500 and $600 around 9 o'clock -Sunday night, Frank Myers, proprietor, said yesterday. As none of the kitchen equipment was seriously damaged, the- res taurant was opened for business yesterday afternoon. .Temporary repairs- are being effected to last through fair week. Flames shooting through the kitchen roof attracted a large crowd as firemen promptly and efficiently attacked the tire. The flames were confined to the kitchen with the ceiling, roof; and door casings leading .to the restaurant proper being burned. The fire was believed to have started from defective electrical wiring Inside the kitchen hood. Damage to the building, owned by H. O. White and the Kyle estate, was covered by insurance. As- new it eel. cameramen and newspaper photographers gath ered, around to get their pictures of the "champ and his rider. Ger oldlne Zldney, "Old Dobbin" still maintained his : composed - de meanor. V ; . ;;v f i i ': f y; - However, some' observers con tended that they, saw the- begin ning- of a horse laugh,, as the champion gazed at his competitors from, the academies. ; . Gin jit fi . Albert Toiler, perennial mayor of Tent City out at the Fair grounds, thinks that state fairs aren't what they used to be hut he . is still on hand to welcome campers and visitors. Camping at the fair is on the decline, due to the automobile and other fast transportation which make one day visitors to the exhibition the most com mon, Mr. .Tozler states. However, campers are About as numerous as last year. This year a pair of twins, A. 8. Hulburt and A. A. Hulbert are encamped under the same roof for the first time at Tent City. They are the oldest twins in Linn county and have attended every fair held. Mr. Tosier will be 74 next March. He is one of the few Life Members of the State Fair who rtlll attend every year. Oth ers rho have registered this year are G. O. Savage, O. P. Miller, Judge J. C. Siegmund, H. F. Shanks. D. H. Looney, J. 8. Hunt, F. W Durbin and Edyth Tozler Weatherred. COLLEGE HEAD TrrTT,TTT ALTUS, Okla.. Sept. 4 (AP) Dr. John W. Tyndall, pre sident of Randolph college, Cisco, Tex., and Ewes Davenport, 22, of Clarenden, Tex., were killed and two others critically injured in an automobile collision 12 miles south of here today. "Corruption" is Suspected hi Mysterious Escape Of Woted Criminal - ' tCeotrauea from page 1) - ; -At the direction ot Washington department of Justice officials an investigation was begun to deter mine how Bailey obtained the pis tol and the saw with which -the bars ot his call had been cut. Joseph C Keenan, federal anti- crime adanuuslrator who directed the hunt for the desperado from,, Washington and sent federal agents from several cities by-plaue to join the search, expressed belter that "corruption figured 'in Bailey's escape. Officials at Dallas and else where expressed amazement that Bailey could have obtained a pis tol or escaped from the Jail, con-, sidered one of the finest in the southwest. Bailey was the first prisoner in the history of the Jail to make a get-away. Several Hurt in v Clash at Keizer KEIZER, September 4 A se vere shakenp was experienced by several participants in an auto accident at 11 a.m. here today. A car driven by D. V. Brldgewa ter ot Portland was. overturned when Herman Wacken, , route nine, Salem, attempted to pass ft on the river road west ot the. Keizer schoolbouse. Bridgewater, his wife and daughter. Bertha,, and Howard Stevens of Portland, i -f i re sST "Explorers of the World" Abe Short Subjects Wed. Only Bob Steele who was rldiar. with them, were badly shaken and somewhat eat; Wacken was - not hurt. The Bhidgewater car was considerably damaged. - , a liDJS DEFENSE WILL STMT TODiW . CContmoed Jreos page 1) . called by E. M. Rea, chief of the Lamson counsel, to " aid the de fense theory, of accidental -death. The. defense also will- call wit nesses to testify that Lamson's relations with - Mrs.; Sara M. Kelley, Scaramento . divorcee, were purely of a' business .na ture. The state introduced testi mony . that Lamson visited Mrs. Kelley frequently and presented her with flowers. District Attorney Fred Thomas has announced he has four ex pense accounts of Lamson which he will introduce as evidence if Lamson testifies about his visits to . Sacramento. The expense ac counts, were said to show Lam son. elsewhere on the dates wit nesses at the trial last week said he was visiting- Mrs. Keller. Lamson is expected to take the stand in his defense late - this week to fight the circumstantial evidence presented by the state durinr the first two weeks of the triaL- -. . . v - - FOflO STILL DUTAS DE1IT UED (Continued from page 1) a manufacturer without the blue eagle. v Other vital decisions must 'be faced today when the recovery ad ministration beclst functioning again after the holiday weekend. One ofthe most important is the extent to which labor unionism should be written into future codes.: ic-r ,;. nEALin OEins cunuu AHD HAPPiriESS 7 litte speak of fceakh sad vitality, dear skia attracts. The healxhy active girl U borh happy aad popular, t Perhaps yo sreswt reaQy 111 res when ihe day's work Is done yow are too tired sowJLotaMthe food times that try LydiT & Pialcbaa'segetable - Bftafsnbef that 98 out of 100 wocoea report benefiSi Let is help yowtoo ; V' i ---r m - ; Last Times Today; Two Features U'U mm POB HQ KHTTAYIOR LmJLUUU una mou ikvw hatn. v rs AND nit raGQDliu nSSCIJflGB Bargain ' ti ten world-famom twHon : . , Jlatinee wit Evenine; HgC Nancy Carroll SOC Any Seat Cary Grant Any Seat CHARLIE CHAN Chinese Medicine Company. HEALTH HERBS ' for kidney, bladder. S. B. Pong stomach, catarrh, -w consttptk)B, glands. Every Ailment Disorder 122" N. Commercimal St. Over Salem Hardware Store DaHy I to I; Sunday to 12 Consultation Free mswm Tomorrow and Thursday lifflonmniu 25, "Vff Sab TODAY Tonight and Every Night This Week ILEA'S - to the n HP cents at the gate ad Lit) mits you without further charge to 1 Fairgrounds. 2 Two-houi evening grandstand show Gymkhana and rodeo. 3 Jitney dance by Willamette Park dance v band of Eugene. , 4 Carnival grounds. 5 Exhibits in 17 dif ferent departments. Attend the six - day thoroughbred race meet - each afternoon. Fast horses from the East and from pick of Pacific coast tracks, from Agua Caliente to Canada. Admission to the races : DAILY as R ACES fc-i t in r vsmtf 1 ma mm P ALUS C run ji 3 ( m rm&A 77s tht cireex of Tommy Randolph pro jected by his brawn sad elasxrt hips froci tutotj to collegt . . . blazing s comct-Iikt path acrosi the football heavens., .mixing in High Sodetv...tJid then faced with tbt Problem of changing himstlf from a foot- ball god into a real man! ... : V ' ' " "".''V'. t" r Hers Is bfgdmt foodboll with all tht thrills, . color and hcart-biimpinj action, written from tht thick' of tht scimmagt bj tht author whom Knott Rockne called the best novelist of tht game. Don't miss THATS 11YBQYI Romance, tool j)r ypurqi' lovt under the tndfnt ffiri ; of tht camjua IMv.; --Jj Starts TomoT row in m m i SB a v v r t , sr.si i-vi 77 i 631