PACE TEH Tractor Burns In Straw Fire Grain Field r and Baler at Thomas Farm Saved After Struggle JEFFERSON The ringing of h fir bell Tuesdav afternoon at J: 45 6'clock, called a crowd of men to the scene of the lire on the Thomas, farm. John DeWall was baling straw in the inn 1 IU a a at nt tnwn when a spar from the tractor Ignited -the straw stack, and in short time some straw that had hen baled -and the stubble field were ablate. As there was no water available for fire figbtlng. water was hauled out, and with wet sacks the men were aDie to extinguish the fire before it got into a grain field. Mr. DeWall was able to - save his baler, but his tractor burnea. MandaT afternoon a bis logging truck and trailer oyerturned on the Scio road. Just across Greens bridge. A combine was on the highway going toward Scio, and a Mr. Smith driving his truck to ward Jefferson, In passing got off the road too far. overturning both truck and trailer. The man jumped clear of the cab and es caped being injured. Plan Mink Shed At the meeting of the city council, a communication irom Mr. and Mrs. Pierce Jacob in re gard to erecting a shed for rais- -i ing mink, was read and tne coun cil roted to grant them a permit . to build a shed 14 by 0 by 5 feet; and a storeroom 8 by 12 by 7 feet on their property at the toot of Ferry street. Permits were granted to R. W. Stewart to move a building and one to Jake Meng for erecting a , dwelling in the south part of town. A motion carried that the city treasurer set aside 1100 surplus water fund, for. redemption of bond. A bill for an ordinance repeal ing the ordinance granting the Mountain States Power company a franchise' for light and power was read, and after the usual proced ure, was passed. An ordinance re pealing obsolete ordinances was read and adopted. The following citizens were appointed as ' the budget committee to meet 'with the council at tne bepiemDer meetings Dr. J. O. Van Winkle, J. H. Koland. K. S. Thurston, W. B. McClain, Dave Burnett and L. X. Shields. Game Violations Charged to 1368 PORTLAND, Aug. 17-(iiP)-The state game department said to cay 1368 arrests were made in the year ending June 30, 1938, inr vinlatinna of came law. Heaviest arrests 271 Per- ons were for illegal possession sf deer. Angling without licenses caused 233 persons to be taken into custody, while hunting with out licenses added 121 others. Tillamook county ranked first In the number arrested with 135 taken into custody. Lane was vecond with 126, resulting in JUS convictions, lines o; x,suv vith $537 suspended, 51 paroles or provisions of sentence and live Imprisonments for full or I art terms. Marion county had only 33 ar rests, 31 convictions, tines of 9685 with $370 suspended and 17 violators paroled or suspend ed. Only two persona served jail terms. . Eugene Firm Wins Court House Job ALBANY Only one Linn coun ty firm offered a bid for con struction of the basement of the tew Linn county courthouse, It was found when the county court -completed t- opening of the Aids late Tuesday. Stein Brothers of Eugene were low bidders and as a result the contract goes to them. Their bid -was $10,950. This is $4,050 nn cr the $15,000 estimate of the Architects. Only 12 bids were submitted, aalthough it was expected that at least 11 contractors w o a 1 d sub mit bids. . Work on the basement is to start Immediately following the normal awarding of the contract :y the court. US, Great Britain to Use Pacilic Islands Jointly L. ( t ; - i In a history-making arrangement, the United States and Great Britain recently agreed to set up a re gime La the South Pacific Island of Canton and Enderbnry for Joint nse as an international aviation and communication bases. The islands, for years Uninhabited dots in the Sooth Seas, have grown to be vital in development of transpacific airway transportation, and both the United States and Britain claim them. Canton and Kiku rbary Island are thirty-two miles apart and 1,850 miles southeast of Honolulu. Tboto shows a scene on Canton Island during a recent eclipse expedition. Both countries flags fly over the disputed islands. (IIX).. t - - !.-( ( Three Day Program Planned lor I Perry monnmest at Pwt t - - - I Niagara Perry's I High government officials and governors of several states will gather at Put-In-Bay to participate in the three-day celebration, Sept. 9-11, marking' the ! 125th anniversary of Commodore Perry's victory In the battle of Lake Erie. Secretary of Interior Harold Zckes will speak al dedication of the Perry monument as a national park. Other events In- Group Has Outing At Cascadia Camp Young People's Gathering Well Attended ; Garden j Club Elects Heads i ' j LEBANON The Presbyterian young people's conference held over .the weekend at Long Bow camn above Cascadia was attend ed by 21 young people and eight adults including Dr. Elfrid of Sa lem, naturalist, astronomer and botanist, who had charge of the hikes one taking them to Roos ter rock, i On Sunday the dinner group numbered 64, with Dr. Q. Breen of Albany conducting the services. At the meeting of the Garden club Monday night officers for the year were elected.1 President, Mae Kegester; vice-president, Lucille Lin demand secretary, Laura Old ham; treasurer, Freda Shemanek. Garden j problems were dis cussed and the club accepted an invitation to a tea at the Shedd home at Shedd Thursday night, '.Exchange Pulpits Rev. F. Claude Stephens of the local Church of Christ will ex change pulpits Sunday with Rev. Nelson of Burley, Idaho. ' Dr. and Mrs. J. G. Gill and sons. Warren and Rockne, spent the weekend; at Tamarack, a summer camp near Sisters owned and op erated by their daughter, Donna, and Miss 'Lucille Murphy of Al bany. .They attended the horse show and Warren stayed for the closing of the camp for the year. Lebanon members of the Bilyeu clan attended the annual reunion at Bryant park, Albany, Sunday when 200 members were present. The Bilyeus of Lebanon and vi cinity are descendants from seven brothers who migrated from Mis souri as . pioneers and all reared large families. Called to Tacoma Robert Hay den, one of the edi tors of the Lebanon Express, was called to Tacoma Tuesday by the death of his father. E. M. Hay den, prominent resident of that city. He was accompanied by Mrs. Hayden. f i M. D. Davis, - realtor, ' reports the sale of Mrs. Bertha Buntin's residence on Park street to Ross O'Brien: W. W Lackey's 15-acre farm southeast of Lebanon to Grant E. Mitsch of Brownsville; K V f . V.' .... ; . - ia - Bay 1 1 r" fOswgTe maa Dow Harterj fljgahlp Luther Keith's residence on Dodge street to Marguerite Stryker; Os car Grisham's lot on East Grant street to Leslie Wertx. Ed Kellenberger has men at work on the unfinished duplex house onWestGrant street, re cently purchased from A. F. Bahrke. ! ' Travelers Visit Mrs. Mamie Mossbolder with her daughter, Mrs. Estella Roach of Los Ao&elea, stopped on a cross country trip for a visit with her brother, Joel C. Mayer. There were 50 in attendance at the garden supper party of chapter V, PEO at the E. L. Clark home Friday evening. A social period followed, Mr. and Mrs. Dolph Reeves left Wednesday for San Francisco where Mrs. Reeves will visit and he will continue to Ogden, Utah, on business. The service station being erect ed by J. M. Donaca on j Second and Grant streets is nearing com pletion and will be occupied ; by Smith and Pierce September 1. Dr. J. G. Gill has received word of the death of his brother-in-law, Ross Hibler, in Seattle Sunday morning. Mr. Hibler was well known in this section as he was a merchant in Scio many years and since leaving that locality be came a wholesale grocer in Seattle. ; Mr. and Mrs. Joel C. Mayer have returned f r o m a vacation trip in Alaska. Mrs. Mayer at tended the regional convention of garden j clubs in Seattle. They went as far north as Bennett lake, The young people's sewing circle of the Assembly of God met Tuesday to sew , for . a welfare mission In Kentucky, supervised by Mrs. Amelia Noah, here on a furlough. She spoke to the circle 1n aa1 Frank Ditehen Is Called; Long HI NORTH HOWELL Frank Dit ehen, who has been ill for over a year, died at his home In this dis trict about noon Wednesday, Aug. 17. He is survived by the widow. Rose Schmidt Dit chert: three daughters, Mrs. Dean Schaap, Mrs. Arthur Devries and Miss Freda Ditehen; - and five sons, Frank, Peter, Carl, Joe and Reu ben at home.' ? Funeral services will be an nounced later through Ekman's at Silverton. v Y . Tht OUEVJON STATESMAN, Salera, Perry Jubilee i r- 1 " - - . f . I . . i -j dude a parade, regatta, pageant and banquet. Con gressman Dow Harter'ttf Akron, Is chairman of the congressional commission arranging affairs. The Niagara, used by Perry as a flagship after his , original flagship was sunk, is now at anchor at Erie, Pa. but may be reconditioned and brought to Put in-Bay for the observance. Dodge fadow Says Boat Is to Blame LITTLE CURRENT, Ont., Aug. 17-(Canadian Press)-Mrs. Dan iel Dodge, widow of the heir to the motor car fortune who drown ed in Georgian bay Monday after a dynamite explosion, said today she believed her husband was thrown overboard by, the lurching boat. t (The attorney general's de partment in Toronto K announced that the death of the 21-year-old Dodge would be Investigated. An Inspector from the criminal inves tigation branch will be sent to at tend the inquest when the body is recovered, it was said.) A bride of 13 days at the time of the fatal accident, Mrs. Dodge said she had told her husband two hours before the explosion and tragic speedboat ride to a hospital,, that she would, never ride in the boat again. Paper Purchased At Cottage Grove COTTAGE GROVE, Ore., Aug. ll-VPy-Stile of the Cottage Grove Sentinel by Leonard S. Goddard and A. W. Shofstall to W. C. Mar tin, former co-publisher of the Artesia, N. M.. Advocate, was an nounced Tuesday. Goddard, associate Justice of the supreme court of the Philip pines until establishment . of the commonwealth, said he would re turn to law practice in southern California or New Mexico. Shof stall and other staff members will remain under the new pub lisher. Talbot CE Croup Picnic Enjoyable TALBOT- A group of the Tal bot Christian Endeavor members enjoyed a picnic and wiener roast on the Santiam river ' recently. Swimming was the main diversion of the evening. .. Hop picking has started in the Dave ... Terhune yard, . formerly known as the Johnson yard. The hops are fair considering the dry season. Salem Gets Wet, But not all Wet Salem got another slight taste of rain yesterday, after a dry sum mer but the amount, although it was enough to clear the air, settle the dust and .distress a few coat less citizens, was hardly .enough to measure. - The weather bureau at the air port found in its precipitation guage "approximately one-twen tieth of an inch' of rainwater. 7-Year-Old Dies By Fatal .Mistake MARSHFIELD, Aug. 17-PW The seven-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Helmer J. Farmer was burned fatally today when he mistook gasoline for kerosene and lit a lamp while playing in his yard. . His mother heard his screams .but before she could extinguish the flames by wrapping him in a blanket he was fatally burned. Six Girls Struck ByXightning Bolt WASHINGTON. Aug. 17-OPr- Six girls, s to 15 years old, were struck down by lightning during a storm today. Norma Yates, 15, of Baltimore, was treated at a hospital for shock. The other five. . all negroes, were felled while piaylng under a tree. Phy sicians said none was -critically hurt, ' . . ' . . Oregon, Thursday Morninjr, Angust 18, 1938 Realty Deals at Jefferson Noted R. T. Weavil and B. Red i mond Buy Property; to Build Barn JEFFERSON R. T. Weavll has purchased the small bouse on the Martxell property on the cem etery hill, and is moving it on an acre of land one and one half miles northwest of Jefferson. The Weavil family have been living in what is known as .the ; Clement house on Second street. B. M. Redmond, local dairy man, has purchased a small tract In .northeast Jefferson from Clar ence Davis. The six room house on the place ; is a new. one, not yet completed on the inside. .. Red mond plans to build a barn on the place, for his dairy cows. ' : Guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. . Dan Korb are Mr. Korb's brother, Robert Korb and son. Boyd of Burr Oak, Kansas, and Mr. and Mrs. Burt Hunter of Twin Falls, Idaho. The Hunter's are former neighbors of - the Korb family, in Kansas; and are enjoy ing a vacation in the western states. They will return home by way of California. Sunday the group, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Barker, of . Salem, spent the day at the' coast, - From Michigan Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Taf t and daughter Dorothea and Beatrice. Stewart of .Dearborn, Mich., are guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Wright and family. They came by way of the south ern route, visiting Grand Canyon and Boulder dam, coming north over the coast route. They will return home by way of Salt Lake, visiting relatives in South Dako ta. Mr. Taft is a teacher of man ual training in the Detroit, Mich igan schools. Mrs. Taft and Mrs. Wright are sisters. On Sunday Mr. and Mrs. John Wright and sons, Harold and Lee Wright and their guests from Mi chigan, and Mr. and Mrs. Irvine Wright and family and Mr. and Mrs. Carl Nygren enjoyed a pic nic at Silver Creek Falls. Miss Myrtle Myers who leased the Nancy Miller property across from the Methodist church, some time ago, moved her h jsehold goods Monday from Brownsville, where she has been living for rev eral years. Miss Myers is a sister of Mrs. Fred Wied. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Wilson are the parents of a seven pound, 14 ounce daughter born Monday morning, August 15. at the Al bany General hospital. This ii their first child, and she has been named Anne Marie. Mrs. Wilson will be remembered an Mrrlna i Thurston. Infamous Poison Murderer Is Dead TAUNTON, Mass., Aug. 11-JP -Jane Toppan, 81, often referred to as "one of the most infamous poisoners of the world," died to day in Taunton state hospital, where she had been an inmate for more than 36 years. Arrested when she was 45, Miss Toppan confessed killing "at least loo persons," includ ing Capt. Abner Toppan and his wife, a Lowell couple who took her in as an Infant from a Bos ton foundling institution. She was acquitted of murder in a Barnstable county court be cause oi innerited Insanity but was committed June 24, .1902, to me m . a state hospital. Herbert Parker, attorney ren eral at the time, testified she had killed many of her friends and on two occasions wiped out en ure families. Served Her Right Is What We Say EI, PASO, Texas, Ang. 17-(JFy-Mrs. Juana Vargas, 26, was brought to City-County hospi tal today for treatment to a lacerated finger. She told Policemen McClel lan and Dnchene she cut her self on a razor blade while rnm maglng In her husband's pants pockets as be slept. . Inr?!! A delicious l!bl energy $Wm biding llufcnameis U founded If World's Tallest ; - -1 ? i Robert Wadlow, tallest man In the world. Is pictured shortly after he arrived in San Francisco on a visit. The 20 year old youth Is 8 feet 8H inches tall and weighs 480 pounds. In order to make him com fortable, two beds were moved end to end and all chandeliers in his rooms were tied to the ceiling. Robert graduated from high school and attended Shnrtleff College for one year. His home Is In Alton, 111. He has two sisters and two brothers, all normal size. His mother is 5 feet 4 inches and weighs only 140 pounds. Photo shows Robert receiving a message from Dorsey Cross at a San Fran- - Cisco hotel. Cross Is a nonnal-sized man. Note how Robert towers above the transom of the door. (UN). Post Expedition Hunts Lost Plane BARROW, Alaska, Aug. 17-jP) -A new search was under way to night for the Russian .trans-polar plane that vanished mysteriously In the arctic a year ago last Saturday. Taking advantage of favorable we ther and ice conditions. old-fashioned stove T -m. m I I 1 1 M 1 1 i I i 1 1 1 1 1 I I I Trade it in on a beautiful new Hotpoint Electric Range and intro duce yourself to a whole new world of cooking magic Take advantage of pur liberal trade-in allowance. You'll be surprised how easily conveniently you can own of these gleaming point Electric Ranges. Wide selec tion; easy terms. Come in today. SEE THESE MODERN FEATURES FnO porcelain ensisl.Punt-te-the W r ceasti a tie ... New Select-A-Speed Calrad . . . Combination Tlssa Chime and Tbaer Clock.. .Sead-dlrect !aatp ... Coadl at net . .Two large ntlSty drawers mmd .Pilot DaM...Larx THRIFT COOKER is Hoc point's oversize 6-ot. kettle, installed in the top of the range, which has brought new econ omy anoT convenience to electric cookery. ELECTRIC FREE PARKING at -v Hotpoint's Head- quarters f Man Visits toast ft : members of an expedition that came here to erect a! monument to the late Will Rogers and Wiley Post left by boat for Oliktuk, about 160 miles southeast, to drag waters where natives reported seeing a large ' object disappear about the time the' soviet plane was lost. . j Dr. Homer F. Kellems, pastor from- Delaware, Oklit., headed the Post-Rogers expedition which left for . Oliktuk In its 38-foot cruiser, the Pandor. - new Hot- THE SALISBURY lUtptiut't smmrt mew xp8 luilt- tbJUvr tUctric romgt with uml-dirttl lighting, wutUUd fmdimtnt ttt, SlcUA.Sptd CoirnL full pwttUin rnamtL Inaaaatod avea V 4 v r-.rs s-, SALEJ.I ALBANY SILVERTON O'Connor to Lash FDR on Airwaves Friends Say Irishman not to 'Pull Punches' in Retaliating Talk WASHINGTON", Aug. 17-(P)-. Rep. John J. O'Connor, the pug nacious New York Irishman who got a -political tongue-lashing from President RooBevelt, ar ranged today to answer the chief executive pi a nation-wide radio speech tomorrow night. Friends here said they did not expect O'Connor to pull any punches. Neither did Mr. Roose velt yesterday, when he put the congressman and Senator Millard E.' Tydings of "Maryland on the administration's "purge list" alongside Senator Walter George of Georgia. Each of the three legislators has opposed some of the presi dent's proposals; each lias a pri mary fight on his bands from a "100 per cent new dealer." O'Connor will speak from New York at 7:45 p.m., eastern stan dard time (CU3). He said yes terday he accepted the president's challenge. Tydings had no im mediate comment. George, who was put on the purge list last week, received today the support of an officer of .the national grange for his renominatlon campaign. Green to Manage Hotel in Wheeler MILL CITY Mr. and Mrs. John Green, former managers of the Rada hotel, have leased a restaurant in Wheeler, where they will move. Miss Claude Lavine has gone to Wheeler to be with the Greens. Curtis Thomas of Seattle spent the weekend at the home of bis uncle, M. S. Purson in Mill City. Members and friends of Santi am Rebekah lodge enjoyed a pic nic at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Otto Witt. A pleasant evening was spent with games. Mr. Witt which were shown to guests. SELCCT-A-SPEED CALKCD IIotpointS sensational new cooking unit which provides 5 different cooking (peeds the electrically correct speed for every cooking need nnrjGcs Convenient Terms E.H.F.A. or Short Terra Financing