PAGE TWENTY. torn OSEGOII STATESMAN. Salem. Oregon. Friday Morning. August 7. IS 12 Additional LAKES COACH By Sords itll ;f . . Y filill sift ' ,s - I " ft , kM -fow A m pi GzexxiAYtes K fbar6AU 7! jj at tab tfAWeRsrry of cmicacc AaIp CoAcrtfP AT (SUftCR. Ben Hogan Sets Record, Pace In Canadian Open Breakaway TORONTO, Aug. 6-(iP)-Ben Hogan, the crack shotmaker from Hershey, Pa., set a blistering pace in the first round of the Canadian open golf tournament Thursday with a par-shattering, record-breaking 65 over the Mississauga club's 6543-yard cham pionship layout. I Nation Heard It One of the last to finish the first day's play in the 72-hole test, Hog an took the lead from Craig Wood of Mamaroneck, NT, and Ralph Gnldahl of Santa Fe, Calif., melting- seven strokes off par and setting a new com- . petitive course record. The old record of 68, set by Walter Hagen when he won the Canadian open in 1931 and tied by Gordon Brydson, the Missis sauga pr6, in the, Ontario open of 1837, already had been blasted by Wood arid Guldahl, whose 66's left them in a tie for second at the end of the opening round., ; After; shooting " the first four holes in even par figures, Hogan birdied seven of the remaining 14 holes, dropping a 10-foot putt on the 18th 'green to nose out the early leaders. Clayton Heafner of Durham, NC, took over fourth place with a 68, while Tony Penna of Day ton,' C held the fifth spot with a 69. . Four Canadians, Gerald Proulx of Montreal , Bobby Reith of Windsor, Ont., Jules Huot of Que bec City and Willie Lamb of To ronto, were tied for sixth with Wright Victim Of Al Stolz (Continued from Page 16) that Stolz didn't even need the 7 two rounds Referee Billy Cava naugh gave him for Wright's low punches in the third and fourth sessions. Wright was handed the fifth when Stolz was guilty of the same violation. , ; . For 'five rounds, , with a crowd of 9468 roaring! approval, t was a brawl as close as the buttons your vest During these early beats, the California! negro, who admits 32 yeare, crowded Allie into close-quarter action; teed off on his body with both hands" and countered Stolz rights 'with swinging left hooks. : - Allie, opening slowly, switched w pre-battle plan of action fey aiming his guns at Wright's head during the early going, instead 7 of trying to follow out his inten tion of slowing Wright down with tummy thumps, , - Al result. It wasn't until the sixth, when be really opened P and started his sharpshoot Ing to the mid-section and .smashing right-crosses, that AK ill got in the groove and began "to giTe the. enstomen, who had ; Installed hist a 5 to 9 betting ? favorite and. had! contributed to " ; s gross gate of $23455, a few neasy moments. From there to the finish, how ever, he was the boss. . " Iindsay Brown to Enlist in Nayr PORTLAND, Aug. G.-CLind- 'Ik'- ; 4 . v T S : . When Pvt Walter Bailey of New Rochelle, N. Yn and Grace Mel-" ville of Palmer, N. were mar ried at 'Keesler field, BiloxT, Miss, they had' the whole nation as an audience. The marriage took place over the radio. Photo is by the Army Forces Technical Training Command. Stephari Must Die,Treiason 1 German-Born Says He Will Be Saved ; By Germany ' i , i . t DETROIT, Aug. 6.--0 e r man-born Max Stephan must die for treason , against the United States, despite his boast that "Germany will not let me hang.' He will be hanged within the red brick walls of the federal cor rectional institution at M i 1 a n, Mich, on the morning of Friday, Nov. 13, 1942, Federal Judge Ar thur J. Tuttle decreed Thursday. His crime was the assistance he gave an escaped nazi prisoner of war who visited Detroit April 18 whiles trying to flee from Canada to his fatherland. The prisoner, Lieut. Hans Peter Krug, was cap tured in San Antonio, Tex, and testified at Stephan 's trial for the government. "Stephan never lost his love for Germany," Judge Tuttle told a packed courtroom. Weary, pale, wearing the same wrinkled gray suit he wore dur ing the trial at which he was con victed by a jury July 2, the heavy-set restaurant owner stared blankly as his sentence was read. His wife, a rose-complexioned woman in a pale dress, crushed her head into her arms and left the jammed courtroom. -'. Outside she wept bitterly, and then fainted. Several hundred men and wom en heard the verdict in startled silence. It was the first such conviction in a federal court in 148 years. In 1794 two men were convicted in connection with the so-called whisky rebellion in Pennsylvania. President Washington promptly ! pardoned them. j John Brown, the abolitionist, who raided the federal arsenal at i Harper's Ferry before the Civil War was convicted and hanged for treason, but it was in a Vir ginia state court. "The life of this traitor, Max Stephan, is less valuable than the lives of our loyal sons which are being given to the cause of the United States,". Judge Tuttle said in a husky voice, visibly wrought. "This , court does not hesitate to take the life of one traitor, if it, in turn, will help the just cause of the United States. "This court should, in no hes itating and uncertain way, say to the disloyal element that during this awful war the penalty for treason is death." Until the last Stephan appar ently did not expect the death sentence. In his cell, puffing a cigar, he called out: "Victory will be sure. Germany will not let me hang." And at another time he said: "This war will be over soon and when it is over I will get out of jail. A victorious Germany will not leave Stephan in jail." Judge Tuttle himself discussed this point of view, in explaining why he had not selected a pen alty of life-imprisonment. 'Disloyal citizens know even better than the court . does," the udge said, "that a prisoner sen tenced to life is eligible to pardon after 15 years and also that after the war such prisoners often are paroled or their sentences com muted. 'Max Stephan's entire interest was to aid Germany s cause by helping Krug to return to Ger many so that he might continue his career of death and destruction against our allies." Gov. Murray D. Van. Wagoner, in Lansing, said he would not in tervene. Fairview Group Attends Meeting FAIRVIEWOrla Deedon, . El eanor Moddemeyer and Audrey Timm of the Hopewell United Brethren church left Sunday for u r a-vangeiiea annual camp meetings at Jennings Lodge. Mr. and Mrs. John Putio have returned homo after visiting their daughter and, family at Hood River. . Ha and den Tadunen are home after visiting their grandmother in Portland. The $17 received at the Hope well Women' Missionary silver tea Friday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Versteeg has been for warded " to Miss Gladys Ward, missionary worker in China. Portland club in the Pacific Coast baseball league, will enlist in the navy at Seattle August 18, he said Thursday. He expects induc tion will fee deferred until the Powder Plant Blaze Halted SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 6WP) Fire which threatened to destroy the Pacific Coast Chemical and Processing company magnesium powder plant at Aberdeen, Wash, was checked Thursday before' it reached the powder, the San Francisco ordnance district an' nounced. The interior of a three story building was destroyed, but Gen eral Manager W. L. Saunders re ported, "production will not be stopped for more than a few days.! The ordnance district credited prompt action by the plant and city fire departments with saving all of the magnesium powder from the flames. - Army officers from the district reported there was no evidence of sabotage, but that a bolt from rotary cutter broke loose and bounced into a hammer mill, set ting oft a spark among highly- inflammable magnesium chips. A Cash explosion of the vapor re sulted. Damage was estimated at $5000. SHE SHOPS "CASIimiDCfJLTyT Without Painful Ir-lw. Ifaay mflmn rctier aanhic beefcaeba ncUy, eon tbv onaawt that th ml ? 7 "" r t IM kidey TtokidacfvaraKateraVclutt way at tk " nut tta nana maim aad nt cut t tfaa nooa I My telp mat paoete paaa mbmt purta Uy . -. -1 i - . .... n on ciaoroer xin fuartioB rwmita pMOMXM natter to remain is tout bknd. it aaar eaaaa naiobnc baekaeba. rlwnuue puu. . m pep im bctk7. attea fytrt. aweiinc. aoffiaaaa aakr tba aya, " diunrna. lYaqueot r acuity pwatty wita awartiiK and burain aeon. thovt titan it omftamt wram with yoor BJNiMva or biadtUr. . Doa k wait! Aak war rorrt or Oou f" ""WMmiW toy muiona for vwr M ycara. They pn happy wlwrf aada til help tha 15 milt ml kidney tubra fiush eat sax. Best Tanks in the World my in mi ijivimiji ..jv.v.-v-V'-,J M.ffiWfff TJ. s. Army's new M-4 medium tanks, 28-ton Tariety, are shown at ; Fort Knox, Ky, lined up for maneuvers. . The M-4, said to be the t most powerful tanks in the world, have a 75-mm.' cannon mounted on a revolving turret. These tanks are welded, instead of riveted. ; Oregon Seed Harvest On r Slate's Prodaction to Hake US Independent Of Former Imports CORVALUS, Ore, Aug. -Harvest of Oregon cover crop seeds is underway as the state's farmers push forward a program to make the United States inde pendent of importation of a long list of important seeds. ; ; When war severed foreign trade routes, Oregon already had the foundation on which to build a multi-million dollar, business and- keep domestic supplies" at near their former level. ; - This T year Oregon's production of seeds formerly . imported, will have these ' approximate values, E. R. Jackman, farm crops exten sion .specialist at Oregon State college, estimated Thursday: Hairy vetch, $4,500,000; Austrir an winter peas, $4,000,000; vege table seeds Including spinach, "on ions and carrots, - $200,000;- peren nial ryegrass, $360;000; bentgrass, $200,000; chewing "fescue, - $150, 000; sugar beet -seed, $600,000; white clover, $90,000; orchard grass, $40,000. -1 CfvC Shipments of the legume seeds to the deep south have already started. There as a cover crop, plowed under in the spring, they make unnecessary the use of ni trates as fertilizer. Oregon's 200-million-pound seed crops is ex pected to release enough nitrates to make nitrogen for 12 million 100-pound bombs. .. " ',v But seed, production 1 is only a part, of Oregon farmers' role In the shifting economy of wartime. " In the eastern wheat belt,t a million-dollar canning pea indus try has been developed in the last 10 years, utilizing 25,000 acres of former wheat land.- - - On another 200,000 acres'" that once grew wheat America's No. 1 surplus headache today-crested Wheat grass is providing fqpd for cattle urgently needed , to in crease meat supplies for fighting men. " . .1 , And on a. smaller scale, the state's little fibre flax industry doubled its production to 16,000 acres this year to help compensate for the loss of linen imports. - j i BUFFAIjO, NY, Aug. 8 After circling Buffalo airport for eight hours while its crew strug gled to repair a damaged landing gear, ' a giant Curtiss commando transport- (C-46) plane made a "belly- landing early. Thursday night without injury to its seven, occupants' . V:.;.:." ': : Curtiss test pilot Herbert Fish er was at the controls with First Lieut. John-P. 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Big rayon satin binding, ton with rich sateen 72"x80". 72" x 84". . 72wx84". - binding. 70" x 80". , "GOLDEN DAWN" COMFORTER WmmJI 1711 S.H Knri.n null " m..A - ' . TZ. krwy! Covered with fOS.S O f -" rayon UffeU in an Vsbr, " WNTXf . auracuve scrou oe sign. 72wx84". , MEZZANINE o o CoN-90 o o o o o o o O O O O O O Q o o v . .... -, ? A 0 O O o 9 V cT o . ' '- v" i ty Brown, shortstop , for the end of ti season. . yaw bkMd. Cat Ooaa'a ua