Circulation Average Daily and Sunday for August, 193S Distribution 9170 Net Paid 8773 ' MEMBER A.BJC. - The Weather Fair jtoday and Monday, -warmer falling humidity; Max. Temp. Saturday 78, Mln. & river -3.4 feet, southwest winds. ; FOUNDED 1831 EIGUTY-SIXTH YEAR Salem, Oregon, Sunday Morning, September 6, 193$ Price 3c; Newsstands 5e No. 140 Nine Killed in . - - f I lgktt(teiimg 70 Programs and : Exhibits wm Break Record Labor Day Holiday Will Bring Out Big Crowd for Initial Events Important Changes Made in Setup; Horse Show Here Being Revived STATE FAIR PROGRAM MONDAY, OITENIXQ DAY 7 n. -m. Diamond Jubilee fair officially opens. -9 a. mo Judging starts. 1:15 p. m. Pari-mutuel horse " races start, Lone Oak track. 6:30 p. m. Free entertain ment in front of grandstand. 7:30 p. m. -First amateur performers con t'e s t, grand stand. H p. m. Night horse show, stadium. A state fair rampant 'with color ana Duiging wun me most iTanea of exhibits will open officially at the state fairgrounds at 7 o'clock Monday morning. ; Oregon's 75th annual i t ate fair, it will be the largest in point of program, exhibits and attendance if the expectations of S. T. White, director, and Leo Spitzbart, assistant, are fulfilled. The diamond jubilee fair already has a record start with, all dis play and concession spaces filled. Perfect "falr weather fair and warmer was forecast by the weather bureau last night fof me opening uaj. Five major daily program events will be offered throughout the week: ' Running races on Lone Oak track at 1:15 p. m., state fed eration of woman's clubs musi cal programs beginning Tuesday afternoon, free entertainments in front of the grandstand at 6:30 p. m., nightly amateur entertain ers contest at 7;30 and a horse show in the stadium at 8 with at tractions never before shown in Oregon. Objectionable Games Are Not Tolerated Objectionable gambling games, the fair management has prom ised, will hot be tolerated on the midway this year. This Jubilee fair evidently will be a testimonial to Oregon farm, ers returning profits. The farm ers themselves are bringing more cattle, more sheep, more swine and more birds to the fair this week than ever before and their children, in the 4-H clubs, by to night will have filled every barn allotted for their own animals. Implement dealers will reflect confidence In the state's enviable farm position by aouunng inw of their displays. Overflowing the farm equipment sheds yesterday, they.were taking to tents and the openspaces at the western end of the central plaza. (Turn to page 5. col. 7) Woman Gets Over Atlantic, Landing Forced in Canada LOUISBURG. Nova Scotia. Sept. 5 UP) - Mrs. Beryl Markham. feeling tine," and "with Just a bump on my head" to show for her forced landing, ended her England to New York flight un expectedly but safely today at Ba leine Cove, near here. - , There were scratches on h e r nose and lace, and her plane was badly damaged. b!ut the 33-year old English matron was unhurt. "It was nice to have landed right side up," a h e commented with a nervous laugh. "This-is my first Tisit to America, you kDMrsf Markham, who lifted her small monoplane, -The Messen ger " from the Abindgon airport in England at 12:50 p. m. (East tern Standard Time) Friday, had been in the air 23 and three-quarters hours when she was forced down by lack of fuel at 1:05 P. m.' (E D.T.) today. Foul weath er challenged- her plane most or the way, consuming her gasoline supply more rapidly than she had anticipated. M , M I knew my fuel was almost none, so I landed at the first clear . . K a11 , After BDOl 1 SIS"""' . " . , . she had been bronght to Louis- burg, A a TTorhn Rrace. 1 lie w v i i - Newfoundland, after I had been I heavy tog there jnade a Undlng impossible. lucu " Sydney; and here I am safe and sound. , I ATTRACTIONS VARIED AT STATE FAIR ..... r i - - - 4 sfJ . " " ' i rii i i " ii ii" --- Mn ii rti i - - "-Aniki in i wt. rMii-flnwitir-nmnwnrnmTiitr'vni--" Left, "fire jump" which 24 cavalrymen will do at free entertainment from top, Johnny Johnson, Amity nigh school student, ana one of bis Wbtte leghorna entered In Future Farmer contest; view of grounds through the main gate with cavalrymen's tenta at: far end; Snowflake and her calf. Shorthorn entry by Joe Dodd,; Tygh Valley, Wasco county. Utility: District Chiefs Nominated McKay, Jones Are on List For Election; Names Held Sufficient Assured that there are sufficient signatures on petitions to place the matter of the creation of a public utility district for Salem and Marion county on the Novem ber ballot, supporters of the move yesterday announced the names of the men who will be nominated as directors of the district should the measure meet the approval of Marion county voters. The men who are to be placed on the ballot to fill, the positions of directors are Douglas McKay, Salem; Ronald Jones, Brooks; Harley Libby, Jefferson; Frank Hettwer, Mt. Angel, and Sylvester Smith, St. Paul. For the first (Turn to page 8, col. 4) Announce Awards In Dairy Scoring Awards ! in the pre-state fair cheese and butter scoring con tests, held under the direction of the state agricultural depart ment, were announced Saturday. Hugh Barber, Tillamook, was first In the cheese contest with a score of 95. Norman -Christen-sen, Tillamook, was second with a": score of 93 and Frank Red berg, Cloverdale, third, with a score of 92. . Butter contest scores: Marvin Davidson, ; Dairy Co operative association. ' Portland, first, 95; II. S. Hansen, Swift & Company, P o r 1 1 a n d, second, 94.75; Redmond A. Pieraon, Swift & Company - Portland, third, 94.50; A. C. Madsen, Mc Minnville Creamery, fourth, 94.25. i F. C. Sparks. Clatskanie, was fifth;; F. F, Fisher, Producers Milk company, Salem, sixth; Richard Trout,. Raven Dairy, sev enth; H. R. Dugger, Medo-Land Dairy, Eugene, eighth. The prize-winning butter and cheese will be on exhibit at the state fair, f : : Triple Car Crash Occurs at Labish : Three cars were damaged last night in a multiple collision on the Pacific highway, six miles north of Salem near the Fukada store at Lake Labish. Charles Blank, Portland, land ed in the ditch when he was blind ed by the lights of passing cars. He received a cut on his arm which was given first aid treat ment by State Officer Vera Hill. While a wrecker was attempt ing to get Blank's' car out of the ditch, machines driven by Carl Crow, Bremerton, Wash., and James Wilhite, Gervais, collided when they came upon the signal man for the wrecker. The crash damaged the rear of Crow's car and the front of Wilhlte'a ma chine. Minor injuries were receiv ed by the drivers of the cars. Sawyer Reelected Head Of Irrigation Congress As Vale Meeting Closes VALE, Ore., Sept. K.-P)-Rob-ert'W; Sawyer, Bend, was re-elected president of the Oregon re clamation congress today as the organization's annual meeting drew to its close. f r I This noon Senator Charles L. McNary and Congressman Walter Pierce were guests of honor at a luncheon. Each spoke! briefly, as did Roy Ritner, Pierce s opponent in the November election Otjen's Car Climbs Up Front' Steps of After Corner House Collision A car driven by Ben Otjen, 818 Rural avenue, landed dn the front steps of a house on the corner of Rural and High street last night after a collision' at the In' tersection with an automobile driven by Ted Lowrey of Brooks. After the collision, Otjen's ear ran over the curb, knocked down a small trees and stopped against the steps of the house. No one was Injured in the wreck. . Both cars were badly damaged. ' PARADE FEATURES FLAX FESTIVAL AT MOUNT ANGEL ' . ,-4 ? Top left: Joe Berndt, president of Mt. Angel Flax Growers Coopera tive, on buckskin saddler, paces the parade headed by the Mt. A4 Cel band. Top right: Governor Charles H. Martin, State Treasurer Rufus Holman, Secretary of State SnelL Father Alcuin of Blount Angel, E. J. Griffith, state, director of WPA, members. 9t the state fl) -' 1 .., is ; 1 .1 In front of grandstand; right. 1 f Labor Day Is Zero Hour of Campaign Republicans Draft' Kelly as Tactician ; Knox Visit Is Awaited Labor day Is the zero hour for politicians as i well as for the army of teachers and school chil dren. The first Monday in Sep tember past, the host of office- seekers will get out of , the sum mer trenches and try ' to 'cross the no man's land to November victory. In Oregon the republicans ap pear to be in much better posi tion for the biennial roundup of votes than the democrats. The organization got going! in late July, has visited nearly every county and put the bee on local chairmen and precinct committee men; and now ihey are getting busy. Newest move of QHQ of the GOP in Portland was to borrow Johnny Kelly from the Oregon ian to act as publicity director and political tactician. With his background of Oregon politics (Turn to page 8, col. t) -'- I i ' y Resistance to Rebel Advance Is Now Slifflit San Sebastian Next Goal in Drive Along Coast; One Battle Fought Loyalist Government Not Agreeable to Scheme to 'Humanize War ' (By the Associated Press)1 Spanish fascist rebels, pressing toward the northern city of San Sebastian, seized Fort Guadalupe and the town of Fuenterrabia Saturday nlghtafter silencing the 1 a s tj government defenders of charred and devastated Irun. There was Jonly slight resist ance as the Insurgents moved westward along the northern coast. Government militiamen, fleeing from Fuenterrabia, set the town on fire and crossed to France by boats or went to aid in thedefense of San Sebastian. The Madrid government, mean while declined to consider pro posals of foreign diplomats to "humanize" the war, rejecting a suggestion for exchange rather than execution of prisoners, the diplomats announced. Outcome Disputed As Battle 'Waged - At Talavera de la Reina, about 40 miles west of Toledo, a ma jor battle was being fought, the Madrid administration said. It as serted the revolters were being forced back, .but the rebels claim ed a victory and the seizure of large ammunition and arms suih plies. The French government's deci sion to continue its neutrality policy toward the civil war brought an order for a one-hour strike Monday by the French Metal Workers' union in support of . communist demands for as sistance to Madrid. Dissension among the govern ment defenders of San Sebastian created the possibility the city might surrender without a fight. The rebel high command planned to occupy San Sebastian as the (Turn to page 8, col. 6) 90th Building Permit For New House Issued Now It's No. 90. The 90th permit for building a house In Salem this year was tak en out at the city hall yesterday by O. R. Ethell. It will be a one. story, $1000 frame structure. Ethell will build it at 2395 Cher ry avenue. V I f3C flax board and others inspect load Bottom left: Bevy of Mt. Angel flax. Bottom rizhtx Oueen Irene. their escorts, presiding royalty of Festival Ends: On Dedication Of Flax Plant 4000 in Mt. Angel Attend -Final Events; Parade. ' is Outstanding" Bright Future of Nevfest Oregon Industry Given Particular Stress MT. ANGEL, Sept. 5. Headed by Governor Charles Martin , and a long list of men notable in state and industry, Mt. Angel today saw the largest crowd that has ver gathered here, swell the popula tion of their city to 4000 When, visitors arrived here to help cel ebrate the third and final day of the! Oregon Flax Festival, the first flat celebration ever to be held in thej United States. At 9:30 the. governor and the other members of the board of control, the state flax board, Rep resentatives of the Canby andsEu gene flax boards, Rev. FatherAl cuin, and the members of the lo cal j flax board gathered at the flax plant for the official inspec tion and dedication, of the build ings. Fred J. Schwab, manage of the local concern, was master of ceremonies. C. F. Piper of Port land made a newsreel of the af fair. Notables Introduced As : Parade Awaited Upon leaving the plant the offi cial curs took their place at the head of the big parade that formed on College street, turned south on Main, then east on Charles to the entrance off St. Mary's school, where the officials left their cars to mount thee re viewing stand on the school sfeps. Father Alcuin took the micro phone to act as master of Cere monies. During the interval of waiting for the -parade he intro duced I to the waiting crowd ) the following friends of flax: Myor Berchtold of Mt. Angel; E J. Griffith of the WPA; Prof. q. J. Hyslop of Oregon State college; W. )R.jMay. Portland chamber of commerce; Rufus Holman, state treasurer; Earl Snell, secretary of state; Rev. Vincent-Koppert, Irec tor of Mt. Angel college; B. Fj Ir vine of the Oregon Journal; iliss Elizabeth Lord of Salem, daugh ter of Governor and Mrs. William P. Lord, the first boosters of flax in Oregon back in 1890; R. J. Hendricks of Salem; E. J. Robin son of the Oregon Jour nja 1; Charles A. Sprague of the Orf gon Statesman; and A. J. Herman! the Belgian consul. I About 10:30 the parade began passing the . reviewing stand land a more interesting parade has never gone up the streets ofjMt. Angeli Joe Bernt, veteran if lax grower and president of theMt. Angel board, led the parade en a (Tarn to page 5, col. 5)1 of flax at the Mt. Angel flax plant. misses, on a float decorated -with Prlneeases Dorotnr ana Anna- ana the festival. ' - i i ... . -" One Girl Escapes but Others Burned in Wrecking Tri-Motored Ship ! ; 1000 Feet; Second Explosion Occurs Three Hours Later '" No Record of Occupants Kept, Blaze Makes Identification Difficult; 0 One Lucky Man Refused Ride PITTSBURGH, Sept. 5.(AP)4-Nine persons died ins flames tonight as a tri-motored sightseeing airplane crashed arid burned in Buttermilk Hollow near the coun ty airport. J v One girl,! Linda McDonald, a visitor from Miami, Fla survived the crash. Hysterically calling for "Johnny, John A. Power of Miami, her escort oh a sightseeing tide over the Allegheny county fair, Miss McDonald was f oulnd wandering helplessly around the burning ship by first would-be rescuers. "I jumped and tried to. get the (others to jump but they acted like they were paralyzed," she feaid when she had calm- prl n hit. Shp "was tnkpn in n hnsrnfjil jltrmnri eha Vw-iro tm marks of physical injury. Tenisons Confess Slaying in Texas But Sheriff There Thinks Statement ' of Convict Pair Here Is Ruse , PERRYTON, Tex., Sept. .-(P) -Sheriff J. F. Talley of Ochiltree county tonight said he regarded as a "fake a purported confes sion by Claude and Elmer Tenl son, prisoners in the Oregon pen itentiary, of the kUling of Gene Cone - of Perryton on June 1, 1932, and his two sons, 9 and 6 years old. ? "I have seen the document," Sheriff Talley asserted, "but I be lieve it la a fake. "I want to know more about those two convicts be fore I take any action," he said. "It looks to me as if they are try ing to get out of the penitentiary so it will be easier for them to try and escape." . . Deputy Warden E- C. Holley of the Oregon state penitentiary ver ified last night the reported con fession of Claude and Elmer Teni son to the killing of Gene Cone (Turn to page 8, col. 3) Hiker Bandits Get Ten Years Prison Two young hitch-hikers, Don Curtis, 21, Portland, and George Corbin, 20, . Dallas, Texas, who hurried through Salem Friday af ternoon after robbing John T. Hagerty at the point of a gun and stealing his automobile were back yesterday, committed to the state penitentiary to serve a ten-year term.! - The men 'waived all prelimin aries j in pleading guilty to a charge of assault and robbery while; armed with a - dangerous weapon before Judge L. H. McMa han. The information was filed against- them by William H. Trin dle, district attorney. The ten year sentence was the minimum allowed under the statute. - The two men were arrested by Portland police Friday night fol lowing broadcasts of their de scriptions afterii they had taken Hagerty's ear and left the owner stranded barefoot, one mile from the. Karl Stewier home on the An keny road. Hagerty reported the holdnp to state police and Sheriff A. C. Bark. - Arrest of the thieves came after they had abandoned Hagerty's ear and were walking past the Port land police station. Two city de tectives recognised them from the broadcast description. Sheriff A. C. Burk returned the men here late Friday night. ; v Late Sports PORTLAND, Ore., Sept. t.-UP) M. and M. Woodworkers of Port land, Oregon state softball cham pions, won the northwest title to night by downing the Washing ton State champs. Fisher Bodies of Seattle, 4 to 3. A wild ninth inning which saw three Portland runs cross the plate gave the home team the vic tory. I. Fisher Bodies -I M. and M. - fc 4 S S B. MeKeaun and C Stelnauer; Berlant and Gette. , P er Falls From Height , The Identified dead were Wil liam Leeay, 43, a janitor, his sis- ter anil her husband. A fifiend, Edward Helm, said be saw these three get in the ship and would have 'gone himself if the pilot nad let him. "The told me he could carry n more passengers and 1 would have to wait" for the next trip,'' said Helm. "Gosh, but I'm lucky: The plane, a ten-passenger snip 'pUoteli by Eric Beckley, crashed from an altitude of about 1,000 feet rhortly after it bad taken off fpr a flight over nearby South Park, where the county fair was in progress. A lew seconds after the ship struck it caught fire. As it had fallen into a thickly a joded ravine fire apparatus hurriedly sent from the airport and from the fairgrounds could not reach it. Airjtort officials said no record of th(! passengers was kept and it was likely identification of some of the dead would be a difficult task. The! young woman who leaped from the ship told'a farm couple who rushed to the scene that she was a -visitor from Miami and that her escort had died in the wreck! Hundreds of spectators watch ed th ship burn, helpless to rendej- assistance. The ship was owned by Pitts bargh Skyways, Inc., a sightsee ing firm which had been giving short rides at -one doUar a per son. As I It ieok off from the coun ty airport attendants- there said the pilot appeared to be having difficulty in gaining altitude. Two miles from the field one or mpre of the motors failed and the crash followed. - Three hours after the accident an eitra gasoline tank in a wing of tbje shattered ship exploded. Two hundred officials and spectators scurried" for cover. Nonet was injured. Sn&ll Girl Gives arnins as Attic Blaze Is Renewed A repeat fire at the home of Mr. land Mrs. J. H. Plank, 19'J Virginia avenue, at 10 o'clock last night threatened the lives of two small children and caused an es timated $500 damage to the hous in which the children were sleep ing. I It was Patricia, 10, wbe the alarm to her mother that fire had 'broken out in the attic over the room in which she and her brother, Richard, 7, were sleep ing. -Mrs. Plank Immediately called the fire department, which spent two hours in getting the blaze out. A chimney fire had taken the fire department to the same ad dress at :20 o'clock last night. Firemen put on the blaie. They declared that the construction of the house was such that the hot chimney against, the siding per mitted the fire to smoulder and get a new start after the first fire was i put out. Firemen were forced to tear the roof off near the chimney and to open ,the celling of the bedrooai to gfet into the attic to fight the blaze. Considerable water dam age was done to furniture and waUs in the downstairs rooms of the honse. - t assena