171
if
! 5
P'A'GE TEN '
10 HIGHEST PEAK
OF LAI IE
Pasadena Flash Called
Equal Of Bill Tilden After
Conquering Lott In Fast
Title Contest.
FOREST HILLS, N. Y.. Btpt. 13.
(AP) There was none left tonight
to dispute the American supremacy
of Ellsworth Vines, Jr., 19-year-old
University of Southern California
sophomore, In the world of lawn
tennis.
The last of his rivals fell today
nhen George Lott, Jr., Philadelphia's
Davis cup star, went down before the
coast sensation's magto racquet In
four thrill-packed sets at Forest Hills,
7-8, 6-3, 017, 7-a.
Twelve thousand spectators set up
a mighty roar as the Pasadena strip
ling, who b year ago was ranked only
number 8 In this country, blasted
bis way to the tennis heights.
It was nip and tuck every minute
of the two-hour and 17 minute
struggle, with Vines forced to come
from behind after dropping the long
drawn-out opening set.
When the two weary athletes drag
ged themselves from the court the
experts wer comparing Vines to Big
Bill Tilden who witnessed the match
from th press marque. They said he
was the equal of the former cham
pion In his prime.
Within an hour of the match Vines
was aboard a fast train for the coast
to take uo his studies.
Vines, who also holds the national
clay courts crown and. numerous club
titles, won on his tour of the esst
. this summer, is the youngest player
to win the national ohamplonshlp In
the present century.
The lanky, good-natured youngster
succeeds John Hope Doeg of Newark,
N. J., as champion. Doeg lost his
rhance of repeating yesterday when
he was defeated by Lott In a listless
three-set match,
1
CALIFORNIA TITLE
AT PEBBLE BEACH
PEBBLE BEACH, Cal., Sept. 12.
(AP) Descendant of a golfing fnm
lly and worthy successor to a prized
title, chunky David Martin of Los
Angeles became California's twentieth
amateur champion today with a 10
8 victory over Ernest Petper, Jr., of
, Ban Jose In tlw 36-hole finals of the
annual classic.
Stroking the rolling fairways and
slick greens of Pebble Beach with
stesdy but not brilllsnt golf in the
morning, the 34-ycar-old youth re
turned to tbe after-lunch round to
play the next ten holes In two un
der par.
Young Martin's father, Ernest and
his two uncles, Hutt snd George,
are professionals. Coached by them
from youth, he stalked the ocean
bordered course much as If out giv
ing Instructions cool and unruffled.
The morning round gave Martin
tour up. Nothing spectacular marked
the round. Martin's par 37 for the
first nine put him one hole In the
lesd. Peiper had a 38. The Incoming
stretch saw the lad from the south
go two over par, with a 38. but his
younger opponent had streaks of
wlldness to take a 43.
As Martin tightened In the after
noon, Peiper weakened badly. Good
drives and deadly approaches brought
a par-slashing return to Martin. His
lead mounted steadily. Meanwhile
Peiper found the trans, the trees,
missed putts and even on one occas
ion stymied himself. His 43 for the
nine Jet the bars down for his rival
and a dormle nine situation at the
87th resulted,
portSsTars
play eagle point
The Eagle Point baseball team,
champions of Boutliorn Oregon, play
the Portland All-Stara headed by
Jimmy Ault, at the fair ground thia
afternoon. In what promise to be
the beat game of the aea&on In these
part. Ault will be opposed In the
box by Cliff Beet, now at the peak of
hla form for ihla year. The visiting
tam la composed of the pick of
Portland semi-pro players, and are
said to be fast fielders and heavy
hitters, and able to give the valley
team more opposition than they have
encountered all season.
A lsrge crowd la expected to turn
out to see the game, which is apt to
be the last of the year here.
A majority of managers In the
Southern association picked Bob
Hasty, of Birmingham, as the cir
cuit's best pitcher.
Add Warren, whose boxing exploit
have carried him up and down the
ladder the past two yeara, will de
sert the ring temporarily to become
boxing coach at the University of
North Carolina.
The Texas Aggies have opened ne
gotiations for a football game with
the University of Hawaii, to be
played at Honolulu during the
Christmas holidays,
E
5-3 VICTORY OVER
Nlcht Games
SAN FRANCISCO. Sept. 13. (AP)
Steady pitching on the part of
Walsh tonight gave the San Fran
cisco Missions a 6 to 3 victory over
the Portland Ducks. Walsh allowed
the Reds six hits, while his team
mates took seven off Malls, KUleen
and Fosedel. A fifth Inning rally
brought the Ducks their total runs.
B. H. E.
Portland 3 8 0
Missions B 7 0
Malls. Killeen, Posedel and Wood-
all; Walsh and Rlccl.
8ACRAMENTO, Sept. 12. (AP)
Hollywood took Its fourth victory
here tonight to cinch en even break
on the series by winning 7 to 3
from the Senators. Vance Page, who
failed to retire a man last night,
started again and hurled tight ball
throughout, beating Tony Freltas. It
was a loose game.
The score: R. H. E.
Hollywood 7 14 1
Sacramento ... w 3 0 2
Page and Severeld; Freltas and
Wirt. ,
Coast'
The score: R. H. E.
Seattle 7 10 3
Los Angeles 2 12 1
Page and Cox; Wetzel, Moss and
Hannah.
RIFLE TITLE
AT
CAMP PERRY
CAWP PERRY, Ohio, Sept. 12.
(AP) Tho United States marines
outshot the coast guards at long
range today to win the national rifle
team championship for the second
straight year.
The marine team of 10 men finish
ed with a score or 2800 out of a pos
sible 8,000. The coast guards came
second with 2788, the Infantry third
with 2700, the navy fourth with 3767,
the cavalry fifth wUh 2740 and the
engineers sixtn witn a n.
The match finished the national
rifle matches which have been In
progress for a month.
The District of Columbia National
guard team was awarded first place
In the national guard classification
of the team match with a score of
2716. The Massachusetts guard team,
which at first was placed at the top,
finished second with a corrected
score of 271 S, three below Its original
count. The Washington state guards
finished third with 2712 by outran
lng on the long range the Ohio Na
tlonal guard, which had the same
score.
In the civilian classification Wash
lngton state was first with 2697. Ari
zona came second with 2667, while
Arkansas; originally announced as
second, rdopped away down in the
list on revised scores.
WIN NET HONORS
PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 12. (AP)
California was vtotorlous In both di
visions as the glrla' national singles
and doubles tennis championships
were decided today. .
In the biggest surprise of the tour-
nament, which started Monday with
fifty entries In the singles represent'
lng many states, Ruby Bishop of
Pasadena, Calif., upset the top seed
ed star, Alice Marble, of San Fran
cisco, fl-1, 6-4, to gain the title left
undefended by Barab Palfrey, of
Brookllne. Mass.
Unable to win the singles crown,
Miss Marble later paired with Bon
nle Miller, Junior girl champion of
Los Angeles, to win the doubles. They
defeated the New York combination,
14-year-old Mllllcent Hlrsch, Bvan
der Chllds high school student, snd
Carolyns Roberts, New Rochelle high
graduate. 4-8, fl-1, fl-a, In the finals.
Miss Bishop surprised spectators by
outplaying Miss Marble In every de
partment. Miss Marble sometimes
showed flashes of her former bril
liancy sending placements down the
side line. This wus true In the second
eat when she gained a 4 to a game
lead. But by constantly returning,
Miss Bishop forced her opponent Into
errors and won four games in a row
to take the match and championship
The new queen also holds the Cali
fornia intcrscholastlo crown and the
Atlantic Junior's dlsdem.
s
Twenty new tennis courts planned
at Texas A. M. college will be
colored for better visibility and
to avoid sun glare.
"Bull" Elklns. Texas university
quarterback and captain-elect of the
cage squad, Is a member of Phi
Beta Kappa, honorary scnoiaauo so'
clety.
Art Wels, Birmingham left fielder.
has been picked as the best all
sround player In the Southern asso
ciation.
Don Connors, afto-pound Indian
football prospect at Oklahoma A.
It M.. will not be eligible tnis nil.
due to scholastic difficulties. .
Students at the summer coach
ing school at Texas A. tt M. college
numbered 300.
Mac Smith Is good tennis as
well as a good volt nsme. Mac
8m!th of east St. Louis !s the new
singles rhsmplon ot southern 1111
uols.
MEDFORD MAIL
OVERTIME SETTO
BY BOST
BOSTON, Sept. 12. (AP) The Red
Sox made It two out of three In Its
filial home series with Detroit this
yesr by winning today, 1 to O, In 13
Innings. Eddie Durham, who twirled
for the Sox bad the edge on Arthur
Herring In the close battle.
B. H. E.
Detroit 0 8 2
Boston - 1 10 2
Herring and Ruel; Durham and
Connolly.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 12. (AP)
Cleveland's Indians pounded three
Washington pitchers today to take
the second of a three-game series
from the Senators, 7 to 4.
R. H. E.
Cleveland 7 10 1
Washington 4 9 3
Ferrell and Sewell: Jones, Hadley,
Marberry, Fischer and Spencer.
PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 12. (AP)
The Philadelphia Athletics and tbe
St. Louis Browns broke even in a
double-header today. The world's
champions winning the first game
3 to 2, and St. Louis taking tne sec
ond 10 to 3.
R. H. E.
St. Louis ..... 2 6 0
Philadelphia 3 6 2
Gray and Ferrell; Grove and Coch
rane.
(second game):
R. H. E.
St. Louis ...
..10 16 0
Philadelphia
..2 9 1
Coffman and Bengough; Hoyt, Ma
haffey, MacDonald and Hevlng.
NEW YORK, Sept. 13. (AP)
Darkness halted the Yankees and the
Chicago White Sox In a 13-13 tie in
the second game of their double
header today after 10 Innings of slug
ging. The White Sox had taken the
first over time clash, 8 to 6 in 13 In
nings. R. H. E.
Chicago 8 10
New York 13
Fr&sler, Paber and Orube; Ruffing,
Plpgras and Dickey.
second same): R. H. E
Chicago 13 13 4
New York 13 15 2
Wetland and Orube, Caraway; An
drews, Rhodes, Wells, Johnson, Oom
ez and Jorgens, Dickey.
GIANTS TROUNCED
BY TEXAS ROOK
PITTSBURGH, Sept. 12. (AP)
Bill Harris, 30 year old recruit from
Texas, won his second major league
game today as the Pirates defeated
the aiants 8 to l, Tne score:
R. H. E.
New York 1 4
Pittsburgh 8 12
Mooney, Berly and Hogan; Harris
and Phillips.
CINCINNATI, Sept. 12. (AP) The
Reds hammered Van Mungo from
the hill In the eighth Inning today,
bunching four hits for as many runs
to defeat Brooklyn, 4 to 1. The
score:
R. H. E.
Brooklyn .......... ......... 1 8
Cincinnati
, 4 10
Mungo, Shaute, Moore and Lopez;
Rlxey, Ogden and Sukeforth.
CHICAGO. Sept. 12. (AP) Young
Johnny Welch held Philadelphia to
seven hits today and the Cubs made
It three straight In the series, 6 to 2.
Tho score:
R. H. E.
Philadelphia ...... 2 7 0
Chicago 6 9 0
Collins and McCurdy; Welch and
Hartnett,
ST. LOUIS. Sept. 12. (AP) Syl
vester Johnson held the. Boston
Braves to four hits and turned in
his second consecutive shut out vic
tory for the Cardinals here today,
ft to 0. The score:
R. H. E.
Boston 0 4 1
St. Louis 5 9 0
Zachary, Cunningham and Spohrer,
Bool; Johnson and Wilson.
AUTO RACER DIES
IN SPEED TRIAL
SYRACUSE, N. Y., Sept. 12. (AP)
Jimmy Gleason of Philadelphia.
Pa., who participated In automobile
races In many parts of the country
for 15 years, was killed on the race
track at the state fair grounds here
today while trying to qualify for the
100 mile championship of the Ameri
can Automobile association. Earl
Younger, Asbury Park, N. J., his me
chanic, was seriously injured as he
hurtled from the car over a cement
wall into the midst of spectators,
five of whom were less seriously hurt.
AMERICAN SLOOPS
OUTCLASS FIELD
PORT WASHINGTON, N. C. Sept.
12. (AP) American sloops made a
clean sweep of the first nine places
In the opening race of the interna
tional star class yacht racing series
here today.
Carl and John Pflug of the Great
South Bay fleet aalled their boat.
Wing. In first. The Vega, sailed by
William Lyon of Newport Harbor, was
second, and W. J. McHugh's Colleen
from Central Long Island sound wss
third.
Judge John B. Ogden of Ardmore.
one of Oklahoma's best known Ju
rists, waa runner-up In a state golt
meet for lefthander.
TEIBUNE, MEDFORD,
BY ALAN (SOULD
A lot of harsh things said about
the United States Golf association's
1931 "seeding' or ranking list
should be and hereby are retracted.
Only two of the first eight on the
list failed to make the qualifying
grade at Beverly. Whether It was
because they were paired together
or not, the extraordinary fact waa
that the two conspicuous failures.
'Jimmy" Johnston of St. Paul and
Phil Perkins of New York, played ft
total of four rounds of golf In two
days, without either being able to
break 80,
They were the No 1 and 3 men
on the "seeding" list, which acquir
ed no prestige 'thereby and which
further was made to look bad when
the No. 2, 4 and ft men, Gene Ho
mans, Johnny Goodman and Charley
scaver, were bounced out of the
championship at Beverly tn the first
round.
Buy State Feud
Until Fred Wright lost a battle
with the hailstones and his fly
weight Kansas City opponent, Paul
Jackson, it appeared likely Beverly
would furnish the battleground for
an all-Boston debate between Wright,
the state champion, and Francis Oul
met. Whether tt has been exactly a feud
or not, the Wrlght-Ouimet rivalry, it
seems, has developed some acute ar
guments among their followers In the
old Bay state.
Mainly it Is due to the present rat
ing of Wright in his home state as a
one-handicap man and Oulmet at
scratch. Wright's friends contend this
Is a slap at the five-time state cham
pion. Oulmet has stayed out of the
Massachusetts tournament for a
TO
NEW YORK, Sept. 12. (AP)
Twenty Grand raced on to new latir
els today as he carried the. colors of
Mrs. Payne Whitney to an easy vic
tory in the Lawrence realization at
Beelmont park.
The big bay son of St. Germans
Bonus scored much In the same man-,
ner that characterized his hollow I
triumph over Sun Beau in the Sara
toga cup last week, finishing the
mile and five furlongs with five
lengths to spare.
His cloaest pursuer was Mrs. Kath
erlne E. Hitfs Sun Meadow, while
another five lengths back trailed the
Be! Mr stud's Sir Ashley with the
Wheatley stable's Blenheim fourth
and last.
Twenty Grand went to the post at
the unusually short odds of 1 to 20
and although there were few takers
at that price, the chowd of 16.000 let
a mighty yell as the favorite came
charging down the stretch.
The victory waa worth 129,700 and
boosted Twenty Grand's total earn
ings to $240,525, just $60 more than
Man o' War earned during hla ben
sattonal career. The triumph also
placed Mrs. Whitney's ace seventh on
the list of the leading American
money winners.
With Charley Kurtslnger back In
the saddle, Twenty Grand covered the
distance in 2:14 1-5. He ran the first
mile and one-half In 2-28, four-fifths
of a second faster than Man o' War's
track record, but Kurtslnger took him
under double wraps during the final
furlong.
CHICAGO, Sept. 12. (AP) Dark
Sea, the four-year-old gelding owned
by Herbert M. Woolf of Kansas City,
today won the $5,000 Steger handi
cap at Mncoln fields, defeating elev
en of the fleetest sprinters in the
west. Dirk Sea, under a smashing
ride by Jocirey C. E. Allen, raced the
mile in 1:38 2-5, Just two fifths of a
second short of equalling the track
record.
LATEST PROPOSAL
CLEVELAND. Sept. 12. (AP)
Adaption of steam power, oldest of
modern sources of power, to the air
plane, newest form of transportation.
is to be put to practical test here
soon.
The power Is being developed In
the airplane by the Great Lakes Air
craft corporation of Cleveland.
Engineers of Great Lakes Aircraft
declare that developments of the
steam plant for planes has been made
possible only because new metals
have been developed In the past few
years which furnish the required ten
slle strength, lightness In weight and
metallic hardness.
The plant would work up 2.350
horsepower, especially desirable for
large transport and commercial
planes and military craft.
Capt. "Kid" Brewster of the Duke
Blue Devils for 1931, has been captain-elect
of eight other football
teams, starting In grammar school.
SALEM. Sept. 12. (AP) Conside
ration of routes from Portland to
the sea, and decision as to what
course will be taken, will come be
fore the state hUhway commission
at its special session, tentatively set
for next Thursday at Portland. The
highway department here today was
not Informed of definite arrange
ments. CHARLESTON. W. Va, Sept. 12.
(AP) An amputation performed
under Jagged slate far down In
coal mine, with the surgeon lying
flat upon his back, has saved the
life of Aukstock Cotter, 30-year-old
miner.
OREGON", SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1931.
ort Slants
number of years, thereby avoiding
conclusions with Wright.
The veteran's friends contend his
International record Is sufficient to
end any argument, but the Boston
delegation would have been on hand
in solid formation if the luck of the
national championship draw had
brought Fred and Francis together.
Boy, Copy!
Bobby Jones doesn't manipulate a
typewriter but he writes his own
newspaper copy In long-hand and
patronizes the facilities of the. press
tents now at national tournaments
with all the ease of a veteran at the
scribbling business.
Apparently he does not need edi
torial prodding to get his copy to
the wires early. Allowing for some
Interruptions for debate with the
Journalistic professionals, he does a
speedy Job.
Beverly's Tough Hole . '
Beverly's particular pride Is Its
No. 0 hole, a one-ahotter, 1B7 yards
from the championship tee, craftily
trapped and laid out. The club's
officials pointed it out to Mr. Jones
and others with unconcealed satis
faction. A very, very tough hole, In
deed, they remarked.
Imagine the shock, therefore, when
In a single afternoon of the national
amateur championship .play, George
Dunlap and Jack Westland halved It
in deuces; Paul Jackson of Kansas
City hit the pin with his tee shot and
missed an ace by six inches; and Fay
Coleman sank an explosion shot from
a sand trap for another deuce.
On the same hole, Sandy Somer
vllle, the Canadian champion, play
ing with Coleman, hit a spectator
on the head with his tee shot, and
scored ft knockout.
MOSCOW,' Sept. 12. (AP) Joseph
Lebrix, noted French aviator, and his
mechanic, Rene Mesmin, were killed
when their airplane Hyphen II In
which they were attempting a record
non-stop flight from Le Bourget to
Tokyo crashed In a field near the
mouth of the river Tanlt, in the vi
cinity of Ufa, at 8 a. m. today.
Marcel Doert, co-pilot of the plane
and its third occupant, saved himself
by a parachute Jump.
Delay in identifying the two air
men who were killed was caused by i
the fact that none of the populace of
Ufa could understand French. A dis
patch received here said, however,
that all assistance was being provid
ed for Doert by an official of the
Bashkir republic who went to the
scene with a doctor.
The accident occurred when the
filers had been in the air only about
twenty hours after their take-off
from Paris. Unfavorable weather
which beset them during their entire
voyage across Russia was believed to
have been a contributing cause.
Fighting heavy fogs, clouds and
rain from the moment they crossed
the Soviet frontiers, the aviators pass
ed Moscow last night and faced a
continuation of bad flying conditions
for several hundred miles. They were
unreported after leaving here until
word came from the catastrophe
which befell them about 750 miles
further on.
Two months ago the same trio bare
ly escaped death when their motor
failed. Lebrlx and Mesmin took to
parachutes and Doret brought the
powerless plane down in treetops near
Shebortl, abandoning It Just in time
to save his own life.
Sport Briefs
South Carolina and Mississippi
sandlot baseball teams will compete
In the American Legion eastern tour
nament for ohamplonshlp of the east
at Manchester, N. H.
Don Forsyth, little 170-pound
guard, may replace Jimmy Steele as
stellar guard on the Florida gridiron
this fall.
Oliver Sansen, fullback who will
captain Iowa's grid team this year,
has won four letters In football and
track.
Claude Wilson of Birmingham, for
many years a clever boxer, has doffed
the gloves and is now coaching ama
teur fighters.
Lefty Jenkins, who pitched a 19
Inning 1-to-l tie game tn Springfield
Mass., formerly hurled for the Duke
university baseball team.
Frank Thomas, new Alabama foot
ball coach, made his first public ad
dress before a civic club at Birming
ham.
Sixty-five candidates for Tulane's
Green Wave are expected to report
to football Coach Bernle Bier man this
season.
Henry Robertson, Oklahoma ama
teur golf champion, considers knick
ers a Jinx. They brought him bad
luck once, and he has worn trousers
ever since.
Hotel Medford
Dinner $1.00
Every Day in the Week
"The Food Ii Better"
at the Medford
HURRICANE DEAD
AT BELIZE- 700, .
PLANES RUSH AID
BELIZE, British Honduras, Sept.
12. (AP) More than 1.000 of the
16.000 Inhabitants of Belize perished
in Thursday's hurricane, it waa esti
mated tonight after a survey.
MIAMI, Fla., Sept. 12. (API Ap
peals for relief were received hero to
day from the stricken residents of
Blzle, British Honduras, where a dev
astating hurricane swept a path of
death and injury Thursday.
A radio report to Pan American
airways today said the estimated
number of deaths waa increased from
400 to 700.
Pan American airways radio car
ried a plea for an additional 500
pounda of medicated cotton, 20
pounds of iodine and 1,000 rolls of
two-Inch bandage for use In treat
ment of the several hundred per
sons Injured by the storm and Its
subsequent tidal wave.
Ellis McLane, amateur wireless op
erator, contacted amateur station
V2BA, and heard a call for "all pos
sible help."
JThis Informant said martial law
was established through the city by
the colonial government, to prevent
looting of bodies and property.
The leport said every building in
the city waa damaged, and that in
some Instances, vessels In the harbor
and their crews disappeared during
th-1 height of the storm.
Meantime, Richard W. Gray, gov
ernment meteorologist, here, kept
close watch on a second West In
dian hurricane, which whipped San
Juan Thursday night, sweeping by
Santo Domingo and Port Au Prince
yesterday.
The storm was reported today as
being near Navassa Island, off the
Cuban course, with Indications that
it will pass south of Jamaica If It
continues its present course. It was
losing Intensity as It progressed
westward, government storm warnings
said.
i
GIRD FOR BATTLE
AUSTIN. Tex., Sept. 12. (AP)
Two southern governors Ross S.
Sterling of Texas and Huey P. Long
of Louisiana antagonists In a bitter
fight over cotton relief legislation-
counted strength tonight for a final
contest Monday on the floor of both
houses in the Texas legislature.
The south as a whole awaited the
outcome, because of Texas' domin
ance as a cotton producer.
The Texas senate agricultural com
mittee remained aloof from both fac
tions today by reporting favorably
upon two bills, one providing for the
acreage reduction program advocated
by Governor Sterling and the other
for the cotton prohibition plan for
1932 championed by Governor Long.
Followers of the Louisiana gover
nor saw a gain in this, as the house
committee considering cotton bills
was ready to report favorably Mon
day a bill providing for one-third
acreage reduction In 1932 and crop
rotation thereafter.
Governor Sterling resented the
radio "invasion" of Texas by Cover-
GABBY
STREET
llie story of .
'has-been" who
climbed to the
peaks of baseball
fame an epic of
the diamond told
byA LAN
GOULD
Associated Pres.
Sports Editor
A series of 12 Illus
trated features
Starting Monday
September It
IN THE
MAIL
TRTO E
ACE
V Y f
llfJ Cards
;? i. . . .'
i
nor Long and held the more strategic
position by threatening to veto any
measure which embodied the cotton
prohibition plan of Louisiana's exec
utive. He declared he would not be
swept off his feet by "any hysteria,"
advocating acreage reduction as a
more sensible program.
Governor Long, meanwhile, kept
up an almost nightly barrage of
radio addresses from his own state,
directed at Governor Sterling and
Texas legislators and farmers.
m
r WW i
llTH the
the . smoothness of an Eight, who cares now aboul
counting cylinders? Results count Facts talk. A five
minute ride will tell you more than all the words
in the world. Don't buy any. motor car until you
drive the New Plymouth.
jffgff
Your Best Friend . .
ftfSlk In Good
ggp Times
"K Times
In every emergency money
is the i'irst need. Right now
while you have money is the
time to start a savings ac
count so that you'll be
ready to meet the next
emergency . . .
Medford National
Bank
COUNT
YELLOW
BOXES
Real Proof That
Country People
Read the
MAIL TRIBUNE
NATAL. Brazil. Sept. 12. (AP)
Three men were killed and a fourth
badly injured, when a plane taking A
rtff from the Potenev river struck
a bridge and was wrecked.
Springfield. Picking of early
hops started oa Anderson Brothers
hop ranch.
Delake. First unit of De'ake ho
tel formally opened to public In
spection. New Plymouth giving
535
AND DP. P. O. B. FACTORY
FLOATING POWER
FREE WHEELING
HYDRAULIC BRAKES
SAFETY-STEEL BODY
DOUBLE -DROP FRAME
EASY-SHIFT TRANSMISSION
THE