The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942, September 21, 1931, Page 1, Image 1

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Today's News Today
All Ibt mi of lb Klamatli Ussln, fur
olslisd daily by special correspondents md
t coinpsisnt tff of local raportara. Na
tional, ilala aud world uawa by Aasoclsltd
Praaa and Unltsd I'rau laaiad wlraa.
Final City Edition
Hrld subscribers who (all to recelva
thslr papara by 1:10 p. m. ara raquaatad to
eall Iba Herald business office, Parma H00,
and a papar will ba aant at one by api
cUI carrier.
lYko Five Cent
KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, MONDAY, SEPT. 21, 1931
Number 7609
P
01
1
ft
Editor ia Is
on tht
Day's News
fly HUNK JKNKINH
rjpilK Jspsnrse, alrlklni swiftly,
' nrrupr all of southern Man
rhurla, driving out lha Chines In
fw houra of aharp fighting.
Puttied resders, her In mora
r laa peaceful America, striving
tit find an adequate reason for all
I lila auddo dlsplsy of military
forra, are told lr lha corraepood
roll that lha Chinese had raptur
ed and executed aa spiee a Jap-
ansae rapialn and hla three roni
Iranian who were maklug mapa In
Jlsncburla and Mongolia.
It ll added that tha Japanese
ap makera had offlrlal prunle-
lon from lha Chlneee aulFjorl
tles to do Ihalr mapping.
syllEBE aama Japanese, who ara
' ao quick on tha trigger In thalr
resentment of Chlneso punish
ment of alleged aplaa, recently da
talned and fined a couple of
American aviators who In Iba fra
and easy Amarlran way , wtra
snapshooting everything In tha
rour.a of a aluut flight over
Japan.
It U qulia all right to punUh
a couple of fool A mar Irani who
ara too free with Ihalr ramaraa
In Japan, bnt It la rauaa for war
w ban tha rblnaaa punish Japanaaa
who art making mapa In Chlneee
.errltory.
Circumstance greatly altar
ree.
a a a
tr you ara a ehrewd observer.
yon probably noted thla aant
jrnra In tha newa:
"At Fushnn. nesr Mukden.
hr tha Rnuth Menrhuflln
railway baa ls npon tba larg
at coal deposits In Manchuria. Iba
Japanaaa garrlaou took possession
of Chinese Inalllulloni and dd
armed all Chlnaaa pollra."
Tba Japanaaa, you aaa, ara an
Indualrlal ballon, and coal do
joalt ara eedlngly neful In
Indualry,
aaa
CTILL, ono find It hard lo pity
tha Chines TOO MUCH. Tha
Japa wilt haro to do a lot of sels
Itig and occupying In order ta do
much barm to China aa China
)iaa dona to herself with bar con
aunt civil war.
aaa
WT la barely posrlble that tbla
raihsr amailng military oc
cupation by tha Japanaaa of Chi
nese territory may do lha China
considerable good.
You have seen families ataga
titter fights and break up all tba
rllahaa and wrack tha house gen
erally, aud than, when an oulald'
T Intsrvcnea. forget Ihelr quer-
ral and unit to five tha Intruder
anund beating.
roe vuri It haa aeemed to a
(Continued on rage Three)
FOR 'HOPPER WORK
A recent brief report and aum
tnary of tha graaa hopper control
project ot tha pat aeason haa
been prepared by County Agent
C. A. Henderson at tha request
of Henatnr Upton, of Bend, and
Tlnprosenfatlves Srhaupp and Do-
Lap, ot thin city.
Tha anlona will aend copies of
tha report, along with peraonal
letter to their colleague, roll
In the exact altuallon In the
grasshopper control project and
working for Iho support of a
bill to ha preaented at tha 1933
session of tha atato Icglalatura to
ralmhuras Klamath and I.ake
counllea for emergency fund
tbco count leu may lia forced to
appropriate to complete the grass
bopper control work In tha sprint
of 1932.
Kuncl allowed by tha atat for
(rauhoppcr control eitendlng
orer a period of two yeara ware
rihauated by tho past aeaaon'i
work, and It I necessary, accord
ing to lha county agent, to se
cure addition funds for next sea
son's control In order lo reallia
any ultimata good from the work
already dona. ,
Keep in Tune
' Itava you noticed tha Music
Directory, the newest Herald
and New feature? This I the
right time to start tha chil
dren's musical education. You
will find tha most competent
teachers listed In tha Horald
and Now) Music Directory.
QUAKES IK
HDDLEWEST
JAPAN AREAS
Towns in Ohio, Indiana
Badly Scared, Some
Damage Done.
12 Reported Killed as
Severe Tremors Hit
Nippon Isle.
ri.EVKLANO. Rapt. II. OT)
Mora than a dotea cities and
towns In portions ot Oblo and In
diana were severely sbsken last
night by subterranean tremors.
Ih most pronounced In (hla aac.
tlon alnre 111, when the eullre
Oblo river valley was effected.
Altboush attended by Intense
eicltement among buusaholders.
he auake did comparatively little
damage and caused no loaa of life.
It' reached He great t mten-
alty at the village ot Anna, In
Western Oblo. in community oi
1000 persons was without a whole
rhlmnev today, and every bouse
end village was damaged lo aoms
eitent
High Krhool ItaunMea
riaaterlng In tha Anna high
school waa shaken from the walls
and the corner atones of t be Luth
eran church, wera Jarred looee.
Damage waa eatlmated at lie,-
0011.
Klarllng at abont I o'clock,
eastern atandard lime, and con
tinuing over periods of time aa
great as 10 seconds, the quake
attended from .anesvtlle. Ohio,
on the estreme east, to Itlchmnnd,
Indianapolis. Connersvllle aud
Liberty. Ind., on the wnat.
Ilulldlnga were reported to
have swayed In HprlngCleld. Ohio,
while duUuct shocks were felt In
Columbus, I.I ma. Cincinnati. Iay
lon, Cairo, West Minster, Sidney,
Wspakonste and (iotner. Ohio.
Kidney reported fallen chimneys,
but In other localities the effect
aonslsted largely ot rattling dish
es and windows.
(IiIsctu Krltr4
Newspaper office) and police
headquarters Buffered the most,
as thousands ot netted rltlsrns
telephoned In to learn what was
happening. Hundreds ran Into the
street In localities where shocks
(Continued on l'age Three)
COItVALLIR. Ore , Sepl. II (,r
Tha big bronia Beaver mascot,
weighing close to 1.000 pounds,
waa atolen Inst night, along with
the automobile chassla on which
It waa mounted. Campus Invad
ers used crowbars to pry open the
main doors ot tha man's gymnas
ium, where the mascot was stored.
The Hronie symbol ot Beaver
Spirit" always la taken to gamra
In Oregon under a special student
guard.
Student office who were back
for the opening week tbla morn
ing, were organising a search, but
had little to work on, not know
ing whether to suspect fsns repre
senting Colorado, the traditional
rivals at Eugene, or some south'
hound atudenta lo Rtanlord or
U. ft. C where Oregon Stata play
eoon.
Wilkina Crew Hope
to Meet Him Again
But on Better Boat
081.0. Norway, Sept. II (T)
Sir Hubert Wllklns said today
ha waa awaiting ' Instrtictlona
from Washington aa to what to
do with tho submarine Nautilus
1n which ho cruised under Ice In
the Arctic circle.
It I generally believed hero
the submarine will be sold. It ta
considered too dilapidated for
another trip across the Atlantic.
The Nautilus' crow ot II left
for England today expressing tha
wish to meet Sir Hubert again
"but on a bettor boat."
2 Men, 2 Women
Held in Robbery
rOHTLAND. Sept. II. OR
Two men and two women were
held here today while police In'
veatlgated the robbery ot a gen
eral atore at Colfax. Wash., tha
theft ot an automobile In Mon
tana, and tha Healing ot set ot
llrenk nlatna In IHnhn
Ooorge Harris, 43, and Kugena
nigham, 81, were beld tor the de
partment of Justice and charged
with robbery ot the Coltax a'ore
last Saturday. Mrs. Lucy Hosier,
15, and Donna McChesney, 18,
both ot Deer Lodge, Mont,, war
Alia (or invnstiiauoa.
Hoover Warns Vet
Grc , of Danger
V lore Demands
saaaWBsaesw cT"."' asaaeessaesaaa
5
KHTM.LK TAYLOR
REVO, Nav., Kept II. (AD
Tba married life ot Jack Demp
ey terminated abruptly today
after alx and one-half years when
ba waa granted a default decree
of dlvorre from Estelle Tlaylor.
Judge Thomas r. Moran entered
the decree following a lengtny
bearing at wblrb the wife of tba
former heavyweight champion
waa not represented.
Chinese Cry Out Against
Japanese Occupancy
of Cities.
TOKYO, Sept. Si (Pr JYesh
flltlitiog broke out tonight at
IVItaylne, northern suburb ot
Mukden, fhlnrac forrea we
wrra said to bo attacking; Iho
town, which waa the first point
raptured by the Japanese hat
unlay anornlnjt.
PEIP1NC. China. Sept. II (Fl
A Chinese official radio dis
patch from Klkln, Manchuria,
ssld that city waa occupied by
Japanese today.
NANKING, Sept. II (Jf)
China cried out today against
the Japanese occupation ot South
ern Manchuria.
Government official, newa-
papera and Individuals expressed
their resentment In varloua ways,
particularly in Nanking, yeel
In against Japan waa running
high. Mass meetings wero large
ly attended, slunenta parades
the streets with banners decry
ing the occupation and the gov
ernment designating next M
neaday aa "humiliation day" In
(Continued on rage inree)
HI FOR LOST
, Ml IS GIVEN UP
GRANTS TASS. Ore.. Sept. II
(fl1) Monday morning brought a
general relaxation of the organ
ised search for William Dakl
berg. 5!. missing for four daye
In tb thicket and underbrush
ot tho Upper Deer creek valley.
Thero was but acant hope that
the elderly man who beeamo
separated from a group ot huckle
berry pickers, survived the cold
and rain In thohllls.
Todny, however, hi wife, Mrs.
William Dahlhcrg. and their
daughter. Edith, offered a $200
reward for tha person who finds
him, hoping to continue the
search which haa been conducted
by more than 100 men ever aiuce
Dahlberg disappeared.
WEATHER
The Cyclo-Stormagraph at Un
derwood'a Pharmacy la register
ing at slightly lower levels today
and Indications ara tor slowly
rising temperatures.
The Tyco recording thermo
meter registered maximum and
minimum temperature aa fol
low: .
High
Low 18
Forocast tor next 14 houra:
Generally fair and warmer.
OREGON: Flr tonight and
Tuesday; warmer In the Inlorlor
Tuesday; gontlo to moderate
northerly wind otkhoje,
OLYMI'IA ARENA, Detroit.
Kept. II, (A-) President Hoover
lodsy rslled upon the America
legion to enlist In a peace tlma
fight for government economy.
d'-slined to lead tha world out of
tba slough of depression.
Wsrnlng the annual convention
of the legionnaire against tba
grsve risks" of Increasing fed
eral expenditures, either through
further veierana or other legisla
tion, the president said the world
economic crisis was "second only
u war." Pie expressed confidence
that "by united action we will
lead Ibe world la recovery."
Iseflrlt Ahead
Tb president pointed out the
treasury waa faced with another
Urge deficit, that Income taxes
bad declined SO per cent alnre the
period of prosperity, and that the
nation waa carrying at the same
time a "high and necessary extra
burden" ot public works to aid
unemployed and agrlciltur and
to glv Increased benefit to vet
erans. He said he waa directing the
most drastic economy la every
"non-vital branch" of the govern
ment, yet tha essential services
must ba maintained. Including
provisions for disabled aoldier.
agriculture and tba unemployed.
He warned that taxing only tba
rich would not wipe out the fed
eral dericit.
Mast Par Facta
"We must face tha absolute
fact." he aald. "that the rich ran
be taxed to tba point ot dimin
ishing returns and atlll the deficit
oi our ordinary and necessary ex
penditures would not be covered
even upon a basts ot the atmoat
economy.
"Make bo mistake: la these
circumstance It la those who
work In the fields, at tha bench
and deska who would be forced to
carry an added barden for every
cent of our expenditures."
Either loana or taxes beyond
the minimum necessities of gov
ernment, be added, would drain
tha resource ot industry and
commerce, and la turn Increase
unemployment.
"Such action, ha aalc, "can
easily defeat our hope, our plana
and our best afforta for tha recov
ery of our country, and so Indeft
nltely delay the return ot pros
perity and employment.
t an Carry wo Mora
"We ran carry our present X'
pendlturea without Jeopardy to
(Continued on rage Three)
MOYLE AND ALLEN
NOME. Alaska. Sept. 11 (IF)
Thla little town on tbe coast ot
the Bering sea, the "aviation
terminal ot th world" today en
tertained Don Moyla and C. A.
Allen, California aviators, 'who
were unsuccessful recently In an
attempt to apan the Pacific ocean
from japan to Seattle In one bop.
Nearly froien and tired, the
two airmen swooped down on
the airport her at t:05 o'clock
(9:05 P. 8. T.) last night alter
a hazardous (light from the coast
ot Siberia.
We ara pretty glad to return
to American aoil again," were the
first worda uttered by Moyla aa
he filmed out ot the big plane
Claslna Madge." "We are feel
ing fine although wa had a close
call with freexing weather.
Numerous snow storms and
freexing temperatures tasked the
effort of the calltorniana as
they battled Ihclr way over Ber
ing ' era. Movie said storms
forced them to fly far up the
Siberian coast before crossing
the sea to Alaska. i
Oregon Man Killed
As Auto Overturns
BAKER, Ore., Sept. 11. Wi
lt. E. Llndley of North Powder
waa killed today tire miles north
ot llalne when his automobile
overturned on a curve. Tracka
on the pavement Indicated the car
swerved from one side of the
highway to tho other several
times. It left tha road at a cul
vert, rolled over a fence about
10 feet from the highway and
landed on Ita top. -
Llndley was pinned beneath It.
Hla neck wa broken. The body
wa found by rncher.
Jap
Ship Leaves
Bond for Damage
PORTLAND, Ore.. 8opt 11 VPl
Leaving a 120,000 bond be
hind to release her from attach
ment by th city ot Portland,
the Japanaaa motnrahlp Kohwa
Maru departed the Columbia
river yesterday with 4.900,000
feet ot lumber and log for Yoko
hama. Kobe and Osaka.
The ship Wednesday nlgbt
crashed Into a municipal terml
nal when her auxiliary motora
failed. Port official estimated
Uamaio to tha (let t 115,000.
BILL BROUGHT
IN TO SUSPEND
Commons Packed, Tense
as Snowden Tells of
Provisions.
Not to Affect Free Gold
Mart in England,
is Statement.
LONDON. Sept, II. (Philip
Snowden. chancellor of tha ex
chequer, today asked leave of the
house of commons to bring In the
national government'a measure
auspendlng the gold atandard for
the preaent with Its corollary pro
visions.
Faced with the government'a
decision to protect the financial
position of Great Britain by sus
pending tha gold atandard and
closing the London stock exchange
today and tomorrow, tba none
met In a tens atmosphere.
The floor waa thronged while
tha galleries were packed. Tha
chief figure among the apeetatora
waa the belr to the throne, the
Prince of nalea.
Treasury May Act
It waa over an hour after the
house convened before the vital
buslnesa ot tha day could be
tackled.
Outlining tba provisions of tha
bill Mr. Snowden aald in addition
to auspendlng the 192 gold
atandard regulation and providing
(Contlnned on Pag Three)
Hundreds of Licenses
Issued; Cars Laden
with Game Arrive.
Th annual bombardment ot
der atarted Sunday, September
10, the opening day of the hunt
ing aeason. and that evening saw
a veritable parade of deer-laden
cars return to Klamath Falls.
Hundreds ot deer were bagged.
and nimrods say that It was th
greatest opening day in years.
Eight hundred hunting li
censes, netting a total ot 12.100
were aold Saturday by tbe Gun
Store, tbe Klamath Sporting
Gcoda and th county clerk's of
fice. License were also told hy th
Klamath Hardware, Roberta and
Harvey Hardware company, th
Hall Hotel and . Montgomery
Ward and Co.
Tba slaughter started at sun
rise and lasted until sun down.
Scores of fnrturate hunters re
turned to tb"e city within a few
houra
after their departure.
Otbera
woods
are remaining In
the
a week and even two
Packa were taken Into
Inaccessible placea in tba
The wooda were thickly
week.
almost
hills.
(Continued on Page Three)
HUGE PROJECT IS
T
PORTLAND, Ore., Sept. II. (jp)
The Journal said today Intima
tions ot the content of the re
port of tbe United States Army
Knginoers on development ot the
Columbia river tor all It uses, in
dicate "the projects found feasible
by the army engineers awarr. tne
Panama Canal aa a teat ot con
struction and reduce to - modest
status even the gigantic Boulder
Dam now under construction on
the Colorado river.
Tho article apoke of a "single,
titanic dam and power develop
ment capable ot pooling the.mid
Columbta from The Dalles clear
to point above Pasco and Kenne
wtck on either the main river or
the Snake."
Jordan Is Buried
in Simple Service
8TANDPORD UNIVERSITT,
Calif., -Sept. II, OP) Dr. David
Starr Jordan, chancellor-emerltu
of Stanford university, who died
last Saturday, was burled with
simple services hero today.
The active pall bearers were six
Stanford athletes.
Governor James Rolpb. Jr. and
President Robert Gordon Sprout,
president of the University of Cal
ifornia, ware among the many no
table Dreeeut,
Ti
N.Y. Stock
Rallies Despite
British Situation
NBtV TOFIK. Sept. II. IIP)
The New York financial markets
preaented a formidable front to
the tidal wave of unrest which
swept across the Atlantic, today,
following Brltaln'a suspension of
the gold standard.
Officials of tha stock exchange
were deaf to urgent appeals from
both-at home and abroad to close
the market today. Tbelr Judg
ment waa vindicated by an unex
pectedly orderly session.
The market surged up vigor
ously after an opening slump ot 1
to 1 points, showing gain ot 1 to
point in many issue at one
time. A secondary reaction In the
late trading cancelled much of
the advance, and the list closed
irregularly lower, with several
losses of 1 to 4 points. Sale were
about 4,500.000 abares.
I'. S. Steel finished tba day
with a gain ot nearly S points.
HelllnaT Fever Atrona-
'What started aa a heavy liqui
dating movement turned Into a
beer rout before the aeaslon waa
an hour old. Shorts who bad built
up large commitment during th
September decline, eerambled to
cover when the market caught Its
breath after the first torrent of
selling, doubtless frightened by
market's aucceaa in absorbing
those aalea as well aa by the gov
erning board' Invocation ot tha
rule against demoralising abort
elling.
American Telephone fully re
covered a break of 15. 3. Union
Pacific Jumped 16 net after drop
ping IJ.71. and General Motors,
which had fallen It, aold II
above the Saturday close. - Amer
ican Can. Western Union. Bethle
hem Steel and many others ral
lied atrongly.
Liquidation, coming In prt
from abroad, where tha London,
Berlin and Amsterdam markets
were closed, piled up huge offer
ings against the opening. So
strong waa the ante to aell that
transfer In the first half hour
awelled to 1.100, 0)0 abares. the
largest volume for that period
aince June 17, 1130.
MORGAV HOPEFUIi
(CopjHarlit, 1981. by Tba As
sociated Press)
LONDON. Sept. II. (JP) J. P.
Morgan today expressed to the
Associated Pre optimism regard
ing tbe situation arising from
Great' Britain's sensational sus
pension of the gold standard. He
aald t waa a "hopeful and not
a discouraging event,"
Mr. Morgan made this state
ment to reply to a qneatlon from
a correspondent who (ought him
In hi private office not far from
the Bank ot England.
"Thla atep seem to me to be
tha second necessary atage in the
fl Continued on Page Three)
NANKING, Sept. 11, (J Com
pleting the tint ot a series of sur
vey flights over flooded China,
Colonel and Mrs. Charlee A. Llnd-
I bergh set down their black mono-
plaue today at Ita mooring place
here on Lotus la lie.
Their actual flying time today
waa four houra and 40 minutes,
and thev covered the worst flood
sdoIs In that Dart of Kiangsu
province lying east ot tne grana
canal
Tbe survey flight wa the re
sult of an ofler by colonel ana
Mrs. Lindbergh to place them
selves and Ihelr plane at the dis
posal of tbe government to help
In any possible manner during the
flood emergency. The offer was
accepted with thanks by Chiang
Kai-Shek, head ot the nationalist
government, and T. V. Soong, fi
nance minister.
Bulletin
The trial of R. D. Whittle,
aey, charged with reckiesa driv
ing, ranie to a halt thla after
noon when the defense counsel
made a motion to withdraw
a plea of not (ruilty and to
more against the indictment
aa returned by the grand Jury.
The action waa taken on ftie
ground that all who appeared
before tho grand Jury wero
not listed In tbe Indictment
aa required.
' Judge Duncan dismissed the
the jury and will . decide on
the more against tho Indict
Bient.
Slayers to Pay
. Supreme Penalty
OLYMPIA, Wash., Sept, U W)
A death on the gallows for
Harold Carpenter and Walter
Dubuo and Ufa Imprisonment for
Ethel Willis wera the aentencea
meted out to the convicted alay-
era ot Peter Jacobson, aged
Chambers Prairie farmer, today
by Judge John M. Wilson. Exe-
cutloa date war not sat.
Mart
Found
u
j
Oirfotfjm JohanMMni, Porta gal-to-Aiwrk-a
flJr, who, with hi two
mmpuloM, wu rrriid from
flMUivg frrrfcae of 1bir plane
at aa off Itm Newfoundland
coart Monday
M'fiEA BETS FIVE
Wife of Business Man
Breaks Into Sobbing
at Sentence.
Fir years In the state peniten
tiary was the sentence imposed by
Judge Wm. M. Duncan npon W.
C. MacRea. former buaineaa man
of this city, convicted on a charge
of forgery.
Mrs. MacRea, who has been at
her husband's aide constantly
since his arrest several weeks ago.
broke down when sentence was
imposed, and sobbed bitterly. Mr.
and Mrs. MacKea hare been mar
ried only a few months.
MacRea, who has made his res
idence la Klamath Falls tor tbe
past fire years, was indicted on
three forgery charges at the re
cent meeting ot the -Klamath
county grand Jury. He went on
trial September 1 4 on a charge of
giving a fictitious check at
Stroud's booterie.
On the grounds that the indict
ment and testimony In the case
were at variance. Judge Duncan
ended the case the day It begun
by a directed verdict in favor of
the defense.
W. C. Myers, counsel for Mac
(Continued on Psge Three)
KILLED B! PLANE
NEW YORK. Sept. 11. (JP
Peter J. Brady, president of tbe
Federation bank, was killed today
when James Goodwin Hall's speed
plane, the Crusader, crashed In
flames between, two houses on
Staten Island.
Tbe houses wera set tire, and
a woman In one of them. Mrs.
Mary Parito, was burned to death.
Hall escaped by jumping with
a parachute. Brady also wore a
parachute, but failed to extricate
himself in time to leap.
LATE
12-
DETROIT. Sept- 21. ZAP) Five men were killed and a sixth
Injured seriously this afternoon when a sewer which they were re
pairing in Dearborn collapsed, burying them beneath tons of dirt.
TOKYO, Sept- 81. ) Mukden dispatch early today to tho
Rengo ws Agency said Chinese troop shot down a Japaneee
military alrplae Monday morning at Hoshihtal, 12 miles north
of Mukden.
REDDING. Cal, Sept. 21. (AP) When Virgil W. Josteneen,
butcher, killed a deer, he set down hi gun to examine tho carcase.
Tbe gun discharged anil the bullet atrurk Justensen, killing him
instantly.
WEN'ATCHEK, Wash, Sept, 81. (AP) High wlnda today bad
taken toll estimated by orchard lata at from lO to 20 per cent of
thia aeason' apple crop In north central Washington. Loaae In
Individual orchards varied from five to fifty per cent.
GENEVA, Btritnerlanrt, Sept, 81. (AP) Tha Italian govern
ment proposed to the loaguo of nation assembly todaj that a gen
tlemen's agreement be arrived at for a one-year armament true
on land, era and air.
DETROIT, Sept. 81. (AP) Ona man wa killed, two other
wero Injured seriously anil at least two more men wera believed
buried in a sewer excavation which collapaed today. Work. men)
said third man also tuajr ba buried la tha dcbrle.
3 TAKEN FROM
PLANE WRECK
BY MOTORSHIR
Wreckage Sighted Off
Newfoundland Coast
by Norway Craft. '
Rescue Occurs Close
Spot Where Trio
Last Sighted.
to
DESSAL. Germany. Sept II.
(P The Junkera Airplane works
today received Ibe following mes
sage from Christian Jobanssen.
Portugal to America filer, missing
since a week ago today:
"Steamship Belmolra, via Cape
Race: After floating HI houra
we abandoned the plane and are
aboard tbe Belmolra. Signed
Captain Jobanssen."
REPORTED FOUND
HALIFAX, N. S., Sept. 21, By
the Canadian Press) It was re
ported here late today that the
Norwegian motorship Belmolra
bad picked up Cbristlsn Jobans
sen and Ferando Ha Costa Viege.
Who were lost with Wiley Rody
is a flight from Portugal to New
'York. The report did not men
tion Rody.
The Norwegian motorship Bel
molra, bound for Rnaala from Al- '
bany. N- Y., reported thia morn
ing finding tha wreckage ot tba
plana In which Wiley Rody, Fer
nando Da Coata Viega and Chris
tian iJohanxsen left Lisbon for
New York. Tha motorship sight
ed the wreckage oft th New
foundland coast near where It waa
last seen in the air by a steamer.
All At Saved
Later another message cam
from tbe Belmolra reporting that. ,
two of tha flier had been taken
from th wreckage. Still a third
message brought word that all
three were saved.
Will Rody, Christian Jobanssen.
German airman, and Fernando
(Contlnned on Page Three)
V,
FOR DEER KILLED
TILLAMOOK. Or.. Sep. 11
OP Mistaken for a deer. Ralph
Nelson. 40, Tillamook, was ahot
to death by hla brother. William
Nelson, Garibaldi, Ore., on Miami
creek. 15 mile from here yes
terday, it was tbe first casualty
of Oregon'a deer ahuntlng aeason
which opened Sunday.
Nelson's b6dy was carried part
ot the way out of the rough
country where the accident hap
pened by William Nelson and
three other membera of the
hunting party. First word of
the tragedy came when they aent
ahead for help In carrying their
burden.
40 New Firms Have
Located in Oregon
PORTLAND, Sept II (JP)
The chamber of commerce an
nounced today that 40 aew
firma have located here during
the past year through th activ
ity and aid of tha chamber.
"These concerns have meant
Joba for SIS persons." the cham
ber aald. "Ot thla total. 407 em
ployes have famllle. Also, loca
tions of these new concerns here
has meant n Increase of 4,817
In population, and 11,111,000- la
Increased buying power." i
NEWS