Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948, July 27, 1937, Page 6, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    six
ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW, ROSEBURG, OREGON, TUESDAY, JULY 27, 1937.
DONALD BASHFORD
DROWNS IN UMPQUA
(Continued from pase 1)
water by in fti a U r:i eted by t h
mTciiiiiH of .Mm, HoitKt'H and I he
young bat hern. I (Wen White, uti-
I'tili to limK tilin fioin the water.
In id jh head above the miilare
until help arrived.
liusliCord liad been in the water
iilmui thirty minutes, it was esti
mated, when the body was recov-
eieil hy Weldoil lliadloni. Mem
hern of the liOheblirK fire depart
ment eontinued reLi8citalion ef
forln for nearly two Iioiiih and tin
til a physician railed to the, m-ene
declared 1 ni t her w oi k to he use-
l-HH.
(Jieen Halt) that hh llaslilord wan
iihsIhIIhk hi in arros8 Ihe deep
ehaniiel lo tin' rock island in the
renter ol the river, that Ihey wen
caujiht hy an eddy which required
ronsideiable exertion to ctohh.
Moth became tired and hepui: tn
flounder, according to the lad'K
Malemeiil.
As they reached the rock Hash
Tord was too tired to draw hiiiiHelf
up and alter tdioviiiK .reen aui'iHl
the rock, where the yotner lad
Keciireii a handhold, ItuHhford
Hipped away from the grasp of
meinheiH ol the party who were
iryliiK to reach him and was car
ried into deep water.
Cordon Barely Saved
Cries of Mih. Hode ami iHr
f wlinnieiH attracted the attention
of the former's aiMcr, Mih. J. S.
Clark, of (inry, Oklahoma, who If
viiiiuu ni the llodfies home, and
Vhoflfl 12-yearold hoii, Hilly, wuh
a ineiiiher of the parly. Mih. Clark
nired tin aHuiniaiice of Larry
art in, a uearhy rewideiii, w ho
niHhed to (he river, arriving hare
ly in time lo Have Cordon.
A call hy Mih. Clark brought an
nmhiilaiK-e which took Cordon to
the hospital, and brought fire de
partment niemhei'H with an inba
lator. Dlvei-H Hearched for the body
v. hl' h wuh brought up from about
15 feel of water by Weldon lliad
lord, an employe of the Farm Hit
lean Kxeliange.
lalo Stephen, city lire, chief,
dided by lii''iuen and oiherH, con
ducied remiHeilation ellorlH until
the arrival of -Hr. II. It. Shoemak
er, who adiiiiuimered adrenalin
and mipervined the resuscitation
i.ilf iuptH aH long an it was felt
they in iL' IK he availing.
I orothv While. Ill, and Helen
White. Ill, together with Mtlly
Clark and Wully (irnen. who had
been Htranded oil the island for
a long period of time. were
hrouuhl triune by boat. HiifferliiK
loiifliderably from Hhock and hys
teria. Says Bashford Fainted
Although no examination wuh
made to determine the fact, II in
believed by those who witnessed
Hie tragedy and those who gather
ed Inter that Hashford'H exertion
brought on u heart attack and that
he viih unconscious before he sunk.
Wally (ireen insisted that Ilushford
"tainted. "
Donald wan horn in Itonehirg
January 2, Wl'A, and wuh a Bin
dent in the ninth made of Itose
htirg high sehonl. Hi malnliiined
a li I mIi scholastic standing, was ti
member of the Hchonl Bcrvloe club
and was a Hoy Kern"- He was an
accnmpllHhed accordionist and.
w Hit the While sisters uu4 Cor
don, appeared regularly as an en
tertainer on Itadio Station KltNIt
with the program sponsored by
Hie UoimlaH County I'lour Mills of
which bis father is manager. He
was an enthusiastic menher of
the Intermediate squad of the Le
gion Junior baseball organization.
For several mouths be wuh em
ployed as n carrier by the Hose
bum News-lteview and Rerveil pa-
tronH in West llosebmg where his
linme is located.
Surviving me bis parents,
younger brother, Hubert, and bis
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. A. W.
i.nsfitnnl of roitlaiKI.
Funeral services will be held at
111 tu m. Wednesday at the Hosti
hurg I'nderiaUInK company pur
Ioih. with Itev. W. C. Faucelte of
HciatiuK. POLICE GUARD RIOT
ZONE IN CLEVELAND
(Continued nom pnge l)
Ion replied.
Meanwhile Itepublic Steel Corp,
filed a suit lo enjoin mass picket
lim a( (he Corrigaii-McKinney
plant.
Assistant Safely Pireeior Itob-i-tl
W. ChuiulH'lliu asked Itepllhlle
oiiicialH (o abaudttn the night shill
i liauge. placing the plant on a
two-shift day. while I'olice Chief
Ceoige J. .Malowil cancelled all
police vacations. Mayor (Union and
Sherifl Mai I in L. D'Donnell Hiiid
Hu-y would not reunite nalioual
ruaid truopH.
Battle Rages 5 Hours
Si'nradic fighnng between work
er and st ri ner groups leached a
climax last night with n live hour
pitched hatile in ttie valh-y tront
inu the main cntiam-e of the plant.
More I ban tl'i persons were In
jured. Inn nr more aiuomnhilc s
damaged. shuts lired, tear gas
hnmhs throw n, and clubs wielded
so indiscriminately thai oil en, po
lite said, members of the Iwo
groups wen- light tug their ow u
men.
Ile:id(puirters of ihe Mteel work
ri-s 01 gani.inn coiumittet near the
plant was wrecked hy a hand of
workers. A newspaper reporter
who saw the figlit inside the
SWtK' huihlillg said he saw Miss
llosina Artiuo, lit. who had been
pieparlnt: food lor jdeket, siniiU
on the arm with a club and thrown
1 hi ouch a window.
At nhoul 11 nVlork T.UO workers
Identifying Ihemselves wilh white
arm bunds rushed out ol the In
dependence road gate nf the plant,
al lacking a group or about lot
pickets, witnesses said.
The pickets lied before Hie
workers, but occasionally one
v.ould attempt to gran u club or
other weanou from a worker, ami
n fight would Atari.
Kvery available policeman was
ordered to tho Brene as reports
spread that all tho workers In the
plant wire to come out nnd ntttu-k
the crowd of strike synipnthixers.
N'early loo picket n who ap
proached Ihe Independence road
0
an I e w ere d f n perned by 1 car Kfl
bombs. ShoiH were fired, but po
lice said they had no reports ot
aLyone blnK ivoyn:led.
Six SW( C metnber arrest ed
diifliiK laht night's rioting were
h"ld without ( harjre. Seven others
arrested in eai Iter fighting faced
definite charges.
Plant Ak Protection
I(eiublic Steel Corp, lust nlj-'ht
ihKiied u siaieinent askifiK for ro
t I'd ion lor employes who deai re
to work, and placing ns ponl Mi
ll v for yewterday'8 disordem on the
cio.
The CIO, by adopting lawless
lacilcH, by oiTanizirij; niacs niove
inenis of men, few, if any ot
whom, are employes ni Hepublie,
or have a direct Intert-Ht in the
coin roversy, has precipitated u
clash bet w een Cleveland police
and union members which has at
remiv leHtilted in violence, " the
statement said.
Company officials suid normal
operations were carrleo on in me
plant ihrouKlioiil ttie ouy, uuu iu
more men reported for work yen
lerday than had been workinK
since Hie plant resumed opera
lions tbreeweeks ao. 1
fly the AHOcluted 1'res.
San Kruneisco Hotel workem
approve c-4iopioiiiiHe plan lo end
svHay strike at la nosieirit s, uui
walkout Hpokesmau saya sinkers
will not return to Jobs until two
other unions reach agreements.
Uufialo, N. V. Food rupplies ra
tioned ufter strikiiiK truckerH uud
meat packers, firm in demand fur
closed shop, hoot down proposed
compromise and reinl'oree pii-iiet
lines; buicbers estimate meat sup
plies will last only three days;
prices nkyrockel.
iJciroll -Cenerul Motors and
I'nited Automobile. Workers' chiefs
ben in conferences; company nays
tin et iiifs lo iron out wildcat strike
and disciplinary problems; union
siiyt they're to revise contract,
with first consideration to unau
thorized strikes.
Sea 1 1 (e A at iuii (t I laii'ir relations
boaril orders Wisieill Liiion '1 ele
Kiaph cjinpaiiy to prove it ilue.s
mil dominate a unam iii(thl!niL'
most ol its i mjilfjye.i.
v u dii hkKhi - Adniiui. lrallo:i
leaders j.n-uict renal j vole on
wiij' ami hour bill by Thur.-day a.
ihouub propo.- ed auie:diiieia's 1 1
iuci'ease responsibility of lali-n
unions ,i(l oiner ciiaure; i:ay pro
louv, deha.e.
JAPAN PUTS WAR
QUESTION TO JAPAN
(Continued from pag" 1)
cenii al gov erinm-nt ai Nanking
for reinforcements.
The newspaper Asbabl declared
In a bulletin from N inking thai
Chinese tHMieralissimo Chiang
Kai-Shek hail (Muiciud.'d a general
clash bet v. een the, ( v. o Hit I lull.-
could not .te avoided and wus ena
ct nlratlng troops o." Ihe central
army In Hopeh province.
ii.4p:'tclien to Asaui from Its
TieniHtn con espitndent asxerteii a
general and wldesiread clash In
norlh China was Inevitable.
Illltdd told paillarient there was
grave danger of an "untoward out
break r.t any moment." The foreign
minister avoided the use of the
dread term "war" but declared Ja
pan was "prepared" to use all
means consonant with the develop
ment of ihe situation."
Japanese commanders on (be
spot were understood already to
have ordered a general punitive
olfensive against the Chinese un
less they obey the withdrawal de
mand. I'mlcr the terms of the ulti
matum all Chinese of Ihe "7lh di
vision were to be out of the area
west of I'eiping by noon today ami
out of I'eiping itself by noon to
morrow. CHINA SHIFTS BURDEN OF
BLAME BACK TO JAPAN
NANK1NH. July L'S. Wednes
day) ( AP) The Chinese govern
ment. In a sharp statement gen
erally Interpreted uh amounting lo
rejection of Japanese terms for
sidling the North China dispute,
today dei-tareil any future devel
opments depend on Japan.
The statement, issued by the
foreign office, said China had ex
hausted every effort for peace
with Japan and could not accept
responsibility fr what happem-d
in Norlh China from now on.
It charged that Hie Japanese
North China iirinv made an "im
I u?t think of Tt-lrphoue
Service as apart of your vara.
I ion equipment. tf it lo call
ahead anil reach friend. Use
ittncalllloiiicLoiigDistanre
is nearly always right at hand
quick and easy to use.
THE PACIFIC TELEPHONE
AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY
Phone 71 121 So. Stephens
provoked altark on tho Chinese
garrison at langfang" and then
"presented impossible demands
and staged provocative acts on
ibe outskirts of i'oipiug.
(A ChineBfi garrison waa report
ed routed by Japaue.se troops yes
terday at langfaug, midway sta
tion on the 'i ieutniu-l'eipjng rail
road. Later, Chinese and Japanese
1 1 oops fought findde and ouiside
the I'eiping wall.
(The Ijaiigfaug attack preceded
t wo ultimatums by 1 Jeut. den.
Kiyoshi Katstikl, commander of
I he Jajiuneso Norlh Chiiiu army,
threatening a punitive campaign if
Chinese t loops w-ftrfc not withdrawn
Irom (he lortner capital and its
uvfrous by toinorrow noon 'II p.
ii., I-:. S. T., tonight.)
2ND ULTIMATUM FOLLOWS
IGNORING OF THE FIRST
TJKNTSIN. July 27. 'I he first
of the i wo ultimatums by IJeul.
tlen. KiyoMii Katsuki, commander
of the Japanese North China army,
xplred at noon without ( hinese
coiufiliaucH and without positive
Japanese action.
en Katsuki had threatened a
punitive campaign against Ceil.
Sung Cheh-Y nan's '2UU Chinese
army unless Its :!7ih division wiih-
liew Houthward lo ( hangsintieii
from the embaiiled 1-ukouchiao-Wanpinghsfen
urea, southwest of
reiping, where the first outbreak
of fighting occurred July 7.
A Japanese spokesman explain
ed unofficially thai the 37Hi divi
sion was beliifved to he in tho pro
cess of withdrawing and "anyway
the true t .st comes at noon tomor
row before which all :',7tb units
mut be out of I'eiping ami we.st
of the Youngling river."
That waH (Jen. Katsnkl's fcecond
ultimatum.
Seemingly omlnotiH imlicatious
of what Wedm.fulay nilgbl bring
were the hectic movemenls of
men, mnuiiioiiH and siiipjes to
the "front" by the Japanese.
RECEIVERSHIP BILL
HEADS FOR SENATE
Continued from pao 1 )
I'tit' imim diately.
I lie house was readv to dt-b:iii
i a bill in grant Hie president six
a'niiiii!miive assistants. It may
!oe me ol,y reorganization ne-as-nr--
hro 'f.'hi up th's year.
Oilier bills on which action still
(is uii'-eriain are the low eos-t hous-
in 1 1, 1. 1 a lonptioie legisianoil
and n feneral farm program, in-
i ludim; the sugar u.mia bill.
MARINES FORTIFY
PEIPING LEGATION
(Continued from page 1)
possible outbrnaivs, and It was un
derstood the German ami French
embassies had taken similar pre
cautious. The Culled Slates marines ar
ranged a system . of signals, blue
ami white Hags by day and red
ami white lights at night, to sum
mon Americans to (he compound
in tho event of danger.
American embassy ' officials,
however, took no precaulinary ac
tion further than those under In
st ructions Issued two weeks ago,
shortly alter the North China ten
sion arose.
Japanese planes circled low over
Ihe city while a detachment ol
.'ton Japanese troops reached Ihe
embassy lo reinforce the guards
already on duty there.
Chinese Escort Japs
The Japanese detachment was
brought Into Ihe foreign quarter
under n heavy escort of Chinese
troops. They had been faced with
annihilation alter fighting their
way into the outer edges of tb"
city through a hand grenade bar
rage at Ihe Huangan gale.
Two Japanese soldiers were
killed and four wounded in the
clash while two Chinese were
killed and one wounded. Two Jap-
DURING THE SUMMER
Closed Saturday afternoon ex
cept by appointment,
GEORGE E. HOUCK
Physician and Surgeon
311 Medical Arts Bldg.
Office phone 115
Residence phone 272
St. I
uueHO new BpHpermen w ere reiiorl-
ed to have ht-eu wuunded:
Chinese declareu the Japanese
aerial bombardment .'of l-augtau
on the railioad to Tientsin yeater
iay morning killed 1,0 on Chinese
soldieis and civiuhiih. 1 his clash
bronchi the crisis to ' it present
i nd most acute atnf e. I ighting
had ben virtually baited for a
week under terms ot a mien be
tween local military a-iilliurltleH.
The Chinese declartl they bail
been attacki-d while luurying out
terms of an earlier Japanese de
mand lo replace the XTth division
garri.-on at IViping with troojis of
i he ;iMh division.
GOV. MARTIN JOINS
ANTI-ROSS CHORUS
(Continued from piieo 1)
look and extennive exiKM-iencu in
merchandising eieclric power ami
in stimulating development of ptib-
llcly-ov. ned distribution systems.
Stnl tb Bcouted ihe contention
thai Kohh would not give u "Hior-
oughly impartial deal" on public
p.nver as a result of his Seattle
inleresls. ;'lid asserted ihc.t "It i
the general jud!;inenl of ipialiffed
experls that J!os:; is Hie best quali
fied man.
Ross Quoted
The f ireonian said today that
, FINE W. CAMfUI-'-V BM
r r
Ww isc cleanliness and
or in Sicinics better dealers ec
the case today.
9
.a
Moss" opponents in Waehiiigton,
U C, were circulating a purported
exit;tct :rom liis umiua; rejiort to
the mayor and city council of Se
attle dated Oct oho i' 3, KC-I, Haying
"no mutt guard our power tales
juin.;t all opposition," uud that
"tiieie i.: no possible need for a
fedelal po.er 1 eiu west n( the
f.'ascade.s."
The report was guoted further
that "J!Hi,uuo,ouo Hpi-M on toe Co
lumbia riv er means ? Imi.uou.OUO
spent against western Washing
ton." and that all that region
would gel Would be" the lo:-s uf ilS
entile hinterland to Cortland and
tue lower Columbia river citie.-,"
PORTLAND. July 27.-.(.P)
Tho Vanibill county Pomofia
grange has given its support, to J.
. f(o;is of Seallle us administrator
lor llonnevilh. dam, Secretary Holt
Stockton saitl today,
The resolution forwarded to
Secretary or tho Interior Ickes
said "it :u quite likely that the se
lection of someone friendly to pow
er companies would lie fatal to the
cause of public ownership in Ore
gon." BON NEVILLE BILL HELD UP
BY BOULDER DAM ANGLE
WASHINGTON, July 27 The
senate sent back to the commerce
committee today legislation pro
viding for administration of the
yt7
-l.aHD
Blltl-W?inhard
II m- - Midi-
ill i smirmm
X - v r-. -4V AS ill' i v Uy(,ft - 1 ' 5 i MfcSu fs
Hnnnevillo dam project on the Co
lumbia river.
Minority Leader McNary, one of
tiie authorb of the bill, obtained
unanimous consent lo recommit
the measure alter explaining that
an 'unrelated" amendment tnreat
eju d to develop controversy.
The amendment to which lie re
ferred would authorize an investi
gation to determine whether con
tracts on the Moulder dam project
hhotild he readjusted.
McNary said he bad been under
ibe impression senators interested
in the Iloulder dam project were
in complete agreement wilh the
amendment, but that he later
learned some of them desired hear
ings on it.
l'or that reason, lie Kald. lie be
lieved the commerce committee
should be given an opportunity lo
study further the Moulder dam soc
i in to facilitate senate consitlera
ti jii of the nonni'ViHe' measure.
At McNary s request a similar
bill pasoed (he houo yesterday
was placed on the Henate calendar
pending the commerct committee's
furl her study. The house eliminat
ed from Us hill the Moulder amendment.
There are approximately 194 .
imu,ui0 acres uf unappropriated
public lands in the I'nited States,
exclusive of ihe Territory of
Alaska.
,,k, s
- -
OK EG ON
Bfr 0'trlt.(tcd by DOUGLAS ICE A
The Facts About
SYPHILIS
told for the layman in Dr. S. P. Funkhouser'i
new book
The Great American Taboo'
$1 per copy
on sale at
Roseburg Book Store
and at the office of the
Roseburg News-Review
This book was reviewed by the Portland Oregonian and was
mentioned In TIME magazine.
COLD STORAttE CO.
BW-40