1 'iiO - ' ! -' ..i PAGE TWO. Japanese Deny Raiding Blame Reject Protest From A US Over Destruction of Transport. Plane . TOKYO, Aug. 3 l-f-Japan to- nignt flatly rejected a united States protest against destruction of a Chinv e-American airliner by Japanese warplanes near Canton .August 24. ' - ' " " A note handed US Ambassador Joseph C, Grew denied the inci dent was of any concern to Ameri ca, but disclaimed all guilt and even admitted Japanese planes continued to machine-gun the lin er after she landed on a small river between Canton and Machao The American protest register ed Aug. 26, pointed out the air liner .was owned by a corporation in which "Pan American Airways has a very; substantial interest." ' The only American aboardPi lot II. L. Woodds of Winfield. Kas., .escaped uninjured, but 14 Chinese passengers or crewmen were believed to. have been killed by machine-gun bullets or drown ing when the plane sank in 40 feet of water. ? Two Chinese survived the at tack, which came as the plane was en route- from Hongkong to Chungking. "' . ' ' i The Japanese reply stressed that the American-piloted airliner "acted - in ; such a manner as to invite suspicion" when it dove into cloud banks ; after sighting fire Japanese wftrplanes ap proaching. The Japanese naval planes forced down the airliner, the note said, in suspicion that it was . a Chinese military plane and con tinued their attack until its iden tity was established." Youth Locked up During two Years DE KALB. 111., Aiig. 31.-(EV An emaciated bearded youth, clad only in dirty underwear and locked in a wlndowleaatrjoom in ' his parents' home, was found to day by Deputy Sheriff Lymon i Sebree. " . ' ' The youth, -Vincent Redmond, ' 24. son of Mr. and Mrs. Matt Red- mond, had heen held a prisoner I In the room two years, the deputy 1 sheriff said lie learned. He was removed to the Elgin state hos- pital.' The parents were taken to ; the county jail at Sycamore. 111., i tor questioning. The deputy sheriff said he went : to. the Redmonds' two-story home today to" investigate a charge of malicious mischief lodged by 'L neighbors. On the second floor' ; be discovered a locked door. He t said Redmond told him the room was occupied by his son who slept Tflars and worked nights, but Se bree insisted the door be opened. The deputy said Redmond ad-, mined the youth was his son. but would not discuss the case. Mrs. Redmond denied knowing the youth was held In the room. Ancient Brothers Visit Sick Elder . V WALLA WALLA, Aug. ' Z1.-(JP) . -"All right boys, let's jump in my . -car and go visit him," said. John Sproutz. 73,. to his four younger : brothers when they .heard their : oldest brother. Will, 78, Starbuck, Wash., had been operated upon : in a hospital here.' i . - The five left Turin, Kansas, at 2 p. m.. Sunday and arrived here at. this morning. ' The gronn is composed of John, James. 64, both of Turin; Scett, ; 2, Mullenaville, Kan., AlliBon, ' 55. -of Turin andJZed, "the your iter," 51. Turin,! ' ;. 10,000 Salmon Counted I-''--.--.'.-. At , Bonneville Ladders ; BONNEVILLE, Ore., Aug. .31.-(iT)-More than 10,000 salmon, es timated at 100 tons of fish, were counted through the Bonneville dam fish ladders today. Checkers said another three tons i would pass upstream during the night. . . The peak of the fall run is ex pected in about ten days. L r,.,st i mijw AfiY CRAW Cff ; mm Screen Star Has I , ' , i. " - J . " V v v. o 1 t I . Jean Chat barn Star of the stablt of Jean CSiatbunii film beauty, is Townsman, 3! year-old 'runner which ghe purchased recently. The actress.) pic-, tured with the 1 gee-gee, has three other thoroughbreds at Santa AnitA race track, . . j "So-Called Dumb" Animals Get all In Spokane Will SPOKANE. Wash., Aug. '31.- (P Henry Barnard, who ran a stamp works here and i made dog licenses for the city, left his es tate to "so-called dumb animals" in a will filed here today. Barnard directed the estate should be used "wholly for the benefit of so-called dumb animals .". no part for the benefit or prof it of human beings, orjany socie ty, church, hospital or; any other organization composed j or human beings, but solely for anipials, all animated creatures ofther than man. V. S. McCrea, president of the Spokane Humane Society was made executor of the will. McCrea had no idea how much money was involved.! s j Shots Said Fired On Czech Border : u. ! I .'111 - .H BERLIN, Aug. 3 1-)-DNbI official German i news ;agency, ih; a dispatch from Oelsep, Saxony said tonight that Czechoslovak frontier ; guards i fired from ami bush across the border on a Gerr man- customs officer. F !j -The agency said the officer was not injured.;- ; fU The agency's; account! of th circumstances described the incir dent as "incredible. I i A customs offieeri named Ger lach while patrolling; noticed two uniformed j Czechs! Close to the borderline on the' foutlook, DNB said. i , ' .'I; ' ' When - Gerlach approached the boundary stone one of the! Czechs fired a rifle from behind a hill ock, but the customs officer had jumped behind cover. ,H: Through fieldglasses j he ob-. served the rifleman creepipg back to others who tried to (observe the effect of the shot fori a long time. ; j. . ' ; v I . ' - . i . l:. . -J Sleep on .Highway Costs Dozer 20 GRANTS PAS3j Ore.. Aiig. 31--(JP)G. , T. Wyatt's sleep in his automobile, parked beside the Pa cific fiigb way three miles north of here, cost him 120 and a flash-' light t6day, he toW police.!- Wyatt, from Lohgvlew, Wash., said two men with a gun and flashlight took i his .money, then pulled the distributor head from his automobile to delay pursuit, i Racing Stable .-.w.:-v: with Townsman : Lloyd's Won't Bet Against 3d Term I i Underwriters ' Jlefuse; ' to Quote Odds on FDR I Chance for 3d j ' j WASHINGTON. - Aug. 3t-(P-The Capitol Daily said tonight that underwriters of Lloyd's of London had refused to j quote oddg for or against a third term for President Roosevelt, j The Daily, which described it self as a factual newspaper, said it had made arrangements to publish Its Saturday supplement as an independent, to be known as the Capitol Weekly. For pur poses of promotion, the publish ers decided to offer the Weekly, for a nominal sum 'unil the end of the Roosevelt administra tion." ' -To protect themselves against a possibility of having to carry subscribers an additional! four years, the publishers said, they sought the services of Lloyd's. The Daily said it hjid re ceived the following letter from Lloyd's American claim agents: 'Regarding insurance on Presi dent Roosevelt's oceapancy of the White House in 1940, the only information we have is that the underwriters at Lloyd's ad vised us that -they .have tried the market with this risk and have ascertained' that many sim ilar inquiries have been received but that the underwriters at Lloyd's are not quoting for this particular risk at ' the present time Actress Loses Valuables LOS ANGELES, Aug. Z1.-(JP)-Hala Linda, actress, reported to police today the theft of $20,000 worth of clothing, jewels and oth er valuables last night while she was appearing in a play. She said her possessions were in her car, parked near the. theatre. . I i I 1 tl tnKC3" ami a asi tD iiirJ7J"M' - -a mil) mm os mm Liz J!5j pries' ""ZMm-L i ... iwiiii T r , .f s ws aV bors- mEMMM " ir.,i..ir.in,.r...,- i ii i ii unn , i i I tVHI IN fillAT The OREGON STATESMAN. Salem. vMediation va Attempt Is Failure Rail Lines Announce Cut 11 to Take Effect on .J October! " . CHICAGO, Aug. . Sl.-(;p-Th national mediation, board's at tempt to settle the' wage drspute between the nation's major rail roads and their 929,000 employes ended today in failure". to adjust their differences. j I , .A spokesman for the rail lines, terming a reduction ''inevitable." .announced immediately'a 15 per cent pay cut would be put Into ef fect on October 1. , !'. : . In a quick counter-movei George M. Harrison, chairman of the Railroad Labor Executives asso ciation, -disclosed the presidents Of 19 brotherhoods had decided to take a strike .vote, among their members at once. William. M. Leiserson chairman of the mediation board,! in stating that It had exhausted its efforts (to terminate the controversy, point ed, out, however, that bot sides must maintain status quo in their current relations- for the next 30 cays..- . If -the workers agree upon' strike after that period, he said. me-meaiation. ooard can still pre vent interruption of rail service by notifying President Roosevelt that a "national emergency" exists. Mr. Roosevelt then can -appoint; a fact-rinding commissiom to Inves tigate the. problem. For 60 days after the naming of the commis sion, he added, no ? change lin working conditions can be effect ed except by mutual agreement - i . Girl Breaks Lamp On -Pole to Start Electric Service -i. - I WASHINGTON. Aug. Sl.-(rV Now they're holding ."launching' ceremonies for rural electrifica tion projects. REA officials said i today that the Fayette-Union county rural electric cooperative at Liberty, Ind.,' started service by having1 a pretty girl break a ribbon-covered kerosene lamp on an electric pole. The lamp was filled with water for the occasion not champagne. In Kentucky a kerosene lamp was buried with ceremonies when electricity arrived, in a rural com munity, while in Rockingham county, Va., members threw old fashioned lamps out of windows when electric current flowed into homes. Crash on Bridge Fatal for Woman ; PORTLAND, Ore.. Aug. 31-;p) Mrs. Glenn Taylor, Camas, Wash., was fatally injured Ito night when an automobile in which she was riding crashed into a hay . truck near the Interstate bridge,. j . Carl W, Barnett, Camas, driver of the automobile, his wife and their 9-months-old baby wre un injured. Taylor, also in the car suffered body bruises. Mrs. Taylor was dead on arriV' al .at a Vancouver hospital. Txco Held on Charge Of Highway Drinking Bert Miller and Curtis E. Nel son were arrested Wednesday night by state police upon charg es of being drunk on a 'high way. The officer who made the arrest reported the men' were involved in a wreck near Jeffer son but tio further details were available at state ' police head quarters. The men were placed in the city Jail. I ! Mine w "7 ' let .mess - ' ' : Ji-ivci . !up from rf- IT . CliaOIC CIIC8S. IVIIT III8AT. j i. 1 - I Oregon, Thursday Morning; Here's Oklahoma Rodeo Queen . ' " ABca Farrier . . Pretty Alice Farrier, 19, daughter of an Oklahoma rancher, was elected as queen to reign at the annual rodeo at Woodward, Okla an event which drew a crowd of 35,000 last year. Miss Farrier has won many prizes for ' ridinx; ability and horsemanship in southwest. Shingle Operator Shot by Employe Argument Ends "With Fatal Shooting of Raymond Mill Operator RAYMOND. Aug. 31.--E. E. Case, about 68, prominent shingle mill operator, was killed and El mer Osborne, 62, veteran woods man, was in jail tonight, accused of shooting him during an argu ment. . ' . - "This is the result of an old quarrel," Chief Sheriffs Deputy Al Hultgren quoted Osborne as saying, "I'll tell all about, it when the proper time comes." Osborne surrendered to Chief of Police Truman Swasey without resistance. . i Hultgren saidr many persons saw Case and Osborne in an ap parently heated I discussion on Nemah pier. Osborne was seen to pull a pistol from his pocket. Hultgren said, and fire four shots, three of which struck case. He died almost at once. ' ! Osborne then i walked to the nearby Garner , market and in formed Milton. Garner of the shooting. He asked Garner to call the police. ' la the meantime Chief of Police Swasey heard of the affair, and arrested the man before Garner acted. Osborne, who, worked for Case many years ago, refused to dis cuss the shooting other 'than to say it was the result of an old quarrel: He was taken to the county jail at South Bend. A charge was not immediately filed. Case was .proprietor of Case Cedar and Shingle company, one of the oldest and largest con cerns on Willapa harbor. NSF Check Charged James E. Fenton was arrested by a sheriff's deputy last night on a warrant charging him .if ith IF RED DAVIS. 2043 N. Capitol St., Salem, finds Red Lion . best, for his Packard. He says: "I use Red Lion because it starts fast er, has greater , pick up and gives more miles per gallon." , - F." C. KLAUS. 2221 Fairground St., Sa 1 m, averaged 20.4 miles per gallon in his Chevrolet. "If yon want the peak of mile age,? he advises, "then 'do as I've clone witch to Red Lion." Gilmori didn't pay ana . pawy of rtmuutmratiom a " taty of the driven im lUa -. tttlmll rmeord worm checkad by aa utdepettdent OrtifirJMeAaxmnksnL t. M, MIC (III) RIIWOtK m September lj 1938 giving La check without sufficient funds. ' Conroy Held on Order . Binding Him to Jury Frank Conroy was received at the county Jail last night under an order from Silverton Justice court binding him over to the grand jury on charges of assault and battery and threatening to commit a felony. Bail was aet at 9500 on the former and 91000 on the latter charges. Kellotc Charged With -Giving Indians Wine - -v r v .s Virgil Kellow, 44, was booked ager of the company said the blaze at the sheriff's office last night swept the engine room, boiler on a charge of giving liquor to room, pilot house and declcjiouse. Indians. He was arrested at the He said - damage would 1 reach Lakebrook -dance hall by Special i thousands of dollars" but he de Deputy Grubbe, who . asserted clined a definite estimate until a Kellow gave wine to Indian hop! survey was- made, probably to-pickers.- . - j - 'morrow., ..: , UnEE) MEET EtLJlLIP ... - with most- of the pasture land driefi up, it is a good time to feed the cows beet pulp with the , regular ration. ' . 100-lb. bag for . . . . . . . . . . . . j$1.70 .Half-Ton or Ton Lots at $33.00 f BD. A. WMtte SjmG 261 State St. Salem, Ore. our Printing -Sy WILL EXPRESS YOUR. BUSINESS PE RSONALITY : ' , ' I . ' . .... - f The printed word you seod out re--i fleets your personal and business standards. We are specialists in fine I printing, engraving, linotyping and 'monotyping. For a worthwhile job, consult us. i . Just Phone 9101 QoQpo!niBaiiaMS3o& : - . mam Leyis Opines I a a m ' IT l'l'll J5d Term uniiKeiy Professes Great Concern in California Pension Kan Dangers PORTLAND, Aug. 21- JP) -James Hamilton Lewis, cerise- whievereddembcratic senior sen atpr from Illinois, predicted n'nfvhol -I , . i.vt President 1 SCJIOOi Hoosevelt would not be elected to a third term. " ," '. "Two and a half years is a long time." he said. "Governments have gone into' revolutions in 30 days.. v . - -By the time the president is finishing his . present term, new issues, largely foreign and inter national, will arise and new can didates on "these issues will press all present Issues and all present candidates to the "background or supercede them completely." "Lewis professed to see a "real danger" in the California primary election result. fThe danger " he add that every other stale Intfie west may have independent Candidates running on the Issue of more pensions and larger sums to be guaranteed by the government to all Individuals.! , ' President J Roosevelt was not "slapped" in any recent primary, Lewis declared. The South Caro lina election was "an Issue be tween cotton mill . owners and cotton, growers. The" growers .are In a majority and -they are for (Sen. Ellison D.) Smith." ,In California, Lewis said, "the people reverted bacV to the old Dr. Townsend fight; they resent ed congress having sent Town send to jail for contempt. And then California had the issue of pensions for all and everyone live off the government." Burning Freighter Beached in Cove SEATTLE, Aug. Sl.-iD-Burn-Ing fiercely! the 650-ton Alaskan freighter Chatham was beached tonight In. a cove near Ketchikan after her . hold was nearly . filled with water. The Alaska Transportation company reported it received a message from the Chatham which said the vessel was still aflame. Damage was believed heavy. Winston J. Jones, acting' man- 215 South Commercial Street Training Student ; For Job Is Need Six Month Survey Z Made by Superintendent of Oil Qty School OIL CITY, Pa., Aug. 31-Cp)- A six-month study to determine - U . ' . typical American high can help its graduates- find and hold Jobs shows stu dents, must be trained for - the office, shop and home and given a hand in getting employment. Superintendent Vaughn D. 'De Long, who made the survey be cause he believed the high school in this oil center of 22,000 per sons should prepare students for 'gainful occupations," said to-; dajf he had concluded from - in terviews with 1,551 graduates and 158 --business men that the school should provide: 1 1. Industrial worar training. 2. -Complete , educational and Vocational, guidance programs. 3. vocational home making courses. - " 4. -Expanded and revised com mercial courses. 5. An employment agency.. One business man - suggested schools teach that "common la bor is honorable." and. another added that there is "too much white collar training.'- Others ad-; vocated a substitute for the ap4 prentice system; creation of a Junior college; more grammar courses ; and less study of liter ature; early pensioning, of teach ers and monthly talks by busi ness men to students. " Healthiest Youth Has Window Shut ; DES MOINES, la.. Aug. 51- Sleep : with the window open in the. wintertime? Not Kendall Wilson, 18 -year-, old farm boy who today was named Iowa Four-H health cham pion at -the Iowa state fair. "I sleep with my brother Win ton,"'he said."There Is one win dow in the room. It is kept open In the summer and closed In the winter.? ' V Kendall keeps In trim by play ing guard on the Newton. 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