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ten days. Famous aviators who are  entered in the events, which includes speed, altitude, duration quick starting, acurate landing, bomb dropping, and night flying contests are Farnum Fish, 17-year-old Wright pilot; Glenn L. Martin, Martin biplane; Weldon B. Cooke, Curtis biplane; Lincoln Beachey, Curtis biplane; Howard Gill, Wright biplane; Albert Elton, Wright biplane; Stuart Scott, Curtiss biplane; Horace Kearney, Curtiss biplane; Wm. Hoff, Curtiss biplane; Hillery Beachey, Beachey biplane, and Frank Stites, Curtiss biplane.

Novices Fly

Novice fliers, in addition to page, who received their pilots certificates Saturaday [[Saturday?]], and who are participating in the contests, are W.B. Atwater, Al Mayo and Geo. Alexander, graduates of the Curtiss winter aviation school at North Island, near San Diego; and Harvey Crawford, a Los Angeles amateur.

Glenn Martin, of Santa Ana, Cooke, of Oakland, and Beachley
provided most if [[of?]] the thrills of the opening day with a series of spectacular exhibition flights.  Parmalee was thwarted in an attempt to break the world's altitude record when, after reaching an elevation of 5,000 feet, his recording barograph failed to function.

Fish captured the first day duration honors with a flight lasting 2 hours, 24 minutes and 1 second. Earlier in the day Fish had been arrested for speeding. He was on his way to Dominguez field towing his biplane behind his automobile, when arrested.

Gill, on Saturday, soared above the grounds for 2 hours, with a passenger.

A rec[o?]rd crowd of 60,000 persons poured through the turnstiles Sunday, the second day of the meet. There were 2 crashes, neither of them serious, during the afternoon. The first, occurred when Elton, the Youngstown, Ohio, aviator, wrecked his machine in landing, and the second when Atwater raked a wing of his ship against the fence surrounding the field.

Fish Swoops Down

By an unexplained maneuver in the afternoon Fish, who lives in Los Angeles, caused considerable momentary anxiety to be felt for his safety. The Los Angeles flyer had ascended to an altitude of about 100, and was apparently about to repeat his duration flight of the previous day, when suddenly his machine was observed by those in the stands, and on the field to nose earthward

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made a short flight of 15 minutes duration on Sunday. The 100 yard handicap race between a man, a horse, a motorcycle, an aeroplane and an automobile, was won by the horse, the automobile finishing last.

Beachey, with a flag of Japan, fixed to a strut, won the race of all nations. Beachey also won the principal competitive event of the day, a 5-mile mandicap [[handicap?] race. Parmalee finished second in this event, and Atwater third. Kearney and Martin were unable to complete the contest, their motors failing to function properly.

Page Wins Race

Page's death occurred today while he was competing with Beachey, Parmalee and Martin in a 10-mile free-for-all race. Previously he had won the 5 mile handicap in 6:37 1/2, Hoff's time being 6:53 and Beachey's 6:55. Hillery Beachey, who is Lincoln Beachey's brother, Martin and Kearney were also in the 5-mile contest.

Page was trailing Beachey and Parmalee in the 10-mile race, and was pivoting his biplane sharply around the pylons, when treacherous air eddies, generated by a cluster of buildings at one end of the field, caused him to lose control.

After his machine had dropped from an altitude of about 150 feet down to 60 feet Page sensing the impending crash, but apparently misjudging the distance to the ground leaped with probable intention of getting clear of the falling craft.

Nearly every bone in his body was broken. Meet officials immediately ordered the wreckage burned to prevent it from being carried away piecemeal by souvenir hunters.

The fliers, who were in the air at the time of the accident, finished the race, but all other competitive events were cancelled for the day. Beachey won the event, Martin was second, and Parmalee third.

The dead aviatour is the son of Wm. D. Page, of New York. the body will be sent to New York for burial, Curtiss announced today.

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NAVY HYDROPLANES
HAVE 75 H.P. MOTORS
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SAN DIEGO, Jan. 15 1912 (E.B.)-- Lieut. Theodore C. Ellyson, who Glenn Curtiss taught to fly at North Island last winter, arrived here today and announced plans for the establishment of a Navy air corps base at the island.

Lieut. Ellyson stated that he would be joined here in about 10 days by Lieut. John Rodgers, Lieut John H. Towers and Ensign Victor D. Herbster, who will bring with them from Annapolis to Clrtiss and one Burgess-Wright hydro-aeroplanes.

Towers and Herbster were taught the Curtiss type of control during the summer, Ellison said. Rogers learned the Wright system.
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to Roy Crosby, of San Francisco, and Crosby is said to have made some flights. In April 1910 E. R. Skinner of South Beach, Staten Island, is said to have made some hops along a deserted strip of boulevard and beach.

The Mathewson Automobile Company, of Denver, is said to have built a successful aeroplane in 1910. In Rochester Everett McNabb built a Demoiselle type monoplane and made some short flights, and at Indianapolis captain G. L. Bumbaugh was reported to have flown.

At St. Louis, where a number of aeroplanes were built last year, some flying was said to have been done by Howard Gill, Hugh Robinson, J. W. Curzon, and Sparling.

At Mineola, L. I., during June and July many flights were made by C. K. Hamilton, Clifford B. Harmon and Captain Thos. S. Baldwin, but of a score of novice machines at the field none had made anything better than a few jumps until J.J. Frisbie, of Rochester appeared.

With 2 weeks of practice Frisbie made flights of [[11?]] and 12 miles, carried passengers, flew after dark and in the rain. George Russell succeeded in making some flights at Mineola, as did Phillip Wakeman Wilcox and Joseph Seymour.

Other novices mentioned as having made flights in home-made machines in 1910 are Wm. Evans, Kansas City; J. W. McCallum, Kansas; Michael Paridon, Barbeton, Ohio; B. F. [[Roethrig?]], San Diego, Calif.: C, F. Walsh, San Diego, Calif.; J. E. Clark, San Francisco, Calif.; Glenn L. Martin, Santa Ana, Calif.; J.J Slavin, San Francsico; George Duessler, San Francisco; Cannon Bros., San Francisco; Donald Gordon, Bstonia Calif.; Lieut. A. F. W. McManus, San Antonio, Texas, and W. D. Lindsay, of Oklahoma. 

At Mineola in the fall of 1910 flights of varying distances were made by doctor H. F. Waldon,  Miss E. L. Todd, Pincus Brauner, Charles Mork, George L. Schmidt, Henry C. Cook, Nicholas Rippenbaum, Chester Kaufman, E. F. De Murias, Bud Gaskell and Wilson Post.


Wm. T. Thomas, of Hornell, N. Y., E. H. Wiseman, of Cleveland, M. F. H. Gouvenour, of Wilmington, C. C. Bonnette, Vermont, and M. B. Sellars, of Fireclay, Ky., also made hops in 1910.
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[[Second boxed ad]]
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This But a Sample
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Of the tremendous amount of early aeronautica in the Bulletin files--but we can use more and would be pleased to have personal biographical sketches of all old-timers--we would also like to have rewrites of clippings in your treasured scrapbook--we can be trusted to return pictures.
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The next EARLY BIRD REVIEW will be a request edition memorializing the pioneer ARMY and NAVY airman — copies of the ARMY and NAVY edition will be sent on advance order only — 25 cents per copy.
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Rates for memorial cards and display advertising will be sent on request.
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The Early Bird Scrap Book, which will require six months or a year to complete is in progress. It will thoroughly cover aeronautical development from 1896 to 1915. Price $10. May we have your order — with or without cash — Now.
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While they last copies of the present dish and maybe had for 25c each.
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Address 
The Mountain Empire Bulletin
John Hettich, Editor and Publisher 
Jacumba, Calif.

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Transcription Notes:
The final lines of "Navy Hydroplanes Have 75 H. P. Motors" are found at the very bottom of column 4, so irrespective of column I have put them at the end of the named article.