I HOW and to Get Out of China Seem to be Less Important to a Lot of Resentful Americans Than Taking New Chances on WHAT to Get out of China. THE WEATHER Humidity G p. m. yesterday tH Highest temperature yesterday 7(1 )owest temperature last night 50 Prmipialion for 24 hours 0 Prwip. siiH-o first of month 3 Prerlp. from Sept. 1, 1J37 3ft LxceeH since Sept. 1, 1937 10 Increasing Cloudiness Wed. It's mill the IiIrIiIIkM of the duy's new a. with pmmUe of greater in tensity that may have fnr-reaehln eoiiHHqtielic'os. Vour best suuree of iufornmiii.tr la your home-city daily, l'l ituiiit, ui-curalo. VOL. XLII NO. 32 OF ROSEBURG REVIEW ROSEBURG, OREGON, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7. 1937. VOL. XXVINO. 112 OF THE EVENING NEW3 ill mix v Mi Ml H MH "Tift - . : -fl isteoiM' , -"MD , 'W-. war ' - THE DOUGLAS COUNTY DAILY MEM m 1 I 1 1 Editorial ; on the Day s News By FRANK JENKINS CURD W. F r Pacific to FULLER flies from the Atlantic In nine hours and 35 minutes, beating by more than a half hour the record set three years ago by Col. Roscoe Turner. He wins $9,000 for the Los An goles to Cleveland leg of the Ben dlx trophy race, $2,500 for heating Colonel Turner's coast-to-c oast time and 81, 500 for the fustest time from Cleveland to the Atlantic coast. He Is a San Francisco sports man, and probably values the glory more than the money. IF YOU were able to duplicate Fuller's feat (which will be com monplace a few years hence) you could leave San Francl.sco after an early breakfast and arrive in New York in time for an early dinner. If you could equal his time from past to west. Jt ho averaged- around W0 miles an hour) you could leave New York after an parly break fast and arrive in Sun Francisco In lime for a LATE LUNCH. pLYING against the sun, you know, you LOSE time. Flying with the sun, you GAIN time.) 1I7HEN the ox-team pioneers Bet out ftom the Missouri 'river Tor the Pacific CoaM, they faced six to nine months of hard travel. Now we cross the continent be tween sun up and sundown. A lot of water has gone over the dam since those days. DUT do you suppose we really '"THINK ANY STRA1GHTER , than those pioneering ancestors of oura did?) A MOTHER thought: These pioneer ancestors of ours wanted the country west of the Missouri for their own. So they took ft away from the Indians, just as their ancestors had taken the country east or the Missouri away from the Indians. That is (Continued on page 4.) ADITS CAR THEFT Wehnid Mnlnhurst, 1(1, of 1.09 Angeles, was arrested by state po- in-e at uoseimrg Saturday, and was taken to Eugene to answer to a charge of car theft. Maln hurst, It was reported from state police headquarters here, was ac- cused of stealing an automobile i o(iinifiuciu nuu ui iv ins it iu a mummy ninji uuuu luiitmniB point near Yoncalla, where he short illness. Born at Tablerock, abandoned It following a collision 1 Texas. October 26, 1S73, he came: with another car. He was said to to Rosebftrg with his family from have fled from the scene of the California in 1936. j accident Into the woods and then! Surviving are his wife. Bertha caught a ride on a freight trainlShafer Beaty; a daughter. Max Into Oakland, from which place he ine; a son, John, and a sister, Mrs. hitch-hiked to Hoseburg. From aG. M. Sills, of Kelley's Corner, description sent out by the state i The body was removed to the police radio station at Salem, local Roseburg Undertaking company officers succeeded in identifying parlors. Funeral arrangements him here, and he was reported to await receipt of word from re la have admitted the theft. Hives. CCC Enrollment Open to 700 In This Area to Fill Vacancies More than 700 men in CCC " camps In this district will he dis charged this month, and there will be an equal number of openings for eligible young men, Franklyn Voyt, executive secretary of the Douglas county relief committee, announced today. Enrollment will start the first or October and young men interested In joining the CCC are advised to contact the relief office immediate ly lor any desired information. All enrollees who have reached their 24th birthday, all who have had more than 18 months of total eligible are applicants who do not Marshfield was sentenced to six service, and "local experienced j hate legal residence in Oregon. Ap-' months In the county jail and a men" who are not eligible for re-jplicants who are residents of Ore-, fine of 1100. His arrest followed a classification as Juniors, will be gou and who have dependents in i collision Saturday near Scotts discharged September 30th, it is, other states are also eligible. Se- burg with a car driven hy Eme-y stated. lectees must be unmarried, must I Williams of Roseburg, resulting In This elimination of enrollees) he unemployed and must be in minor injuries to Williams' datigh from the corpj, together with those need of employment. Iter. 2. 5 R is- With Praise Or Economic Gains Workmen on Way to Greater Influence In U. S. Affairs, Richberg Says LaFolIette Avers Political Lines Changing; C. I. O. Lauded by Lewis, Hit by Green. WASHINGTON. Sept. 7 AP) lhor day oratory, hulling the American workman's economic gains, echoed today a keynote of a greater voice iu government for him in the future. ' Donald R. Richberg, former NRA administrator, told a Duluth, Minn., audience that labor was on the way to control of the government. Uiltor is on the march , in America," he suid. "Not to a con trol of the government In the in terest of any one class of people. but fo the control of government and industry in the interest- or all the people." ralk of a realignment of politi cal parties in 1U4U also was re vived In the speechmaking to la bor's warring forces greater in number than ever before. Governor Philip La Folletto of Wisconsin, speaking at Omaha, said this realignment already has begun. "The development will continue until reactionaries ' are in - one camp and the progressives in an other," he said. "By next year In many states, and by 1910 in the ii ii I Inn thp nit) cimril nf hnth imrt-l ies will be on one side and the progressives on the other." !.a Follette is titular head of Wisconsin's progressive party. Some have speculated that it might he the nucleus for a nation al labor parly In 1!M0, perhaps with the governor's brother, Sena tor Robert M. La Follette, as its candidate for president. Lewis Hails Gains John U Lewis, mllltntit lender of the CIO, largely avoided politics in speeches at Pittsburgh aud Loechburg. Penn.. but he told a cheering throng that for tho wel fare of the country as a whole lanor must oeconie strong euuuKii to "take Its proper place at the council tables of Industry nml of the nation." . Philip Murray, leader of the CIO's campaign to organize the steel Industry, estimated 250,0(10 heard Lewis' Pittsburgh speech. He said this was the country's laigest Labor day gathering. Lewis hailed the past year as one of great achievement by labor and his CIO. His group clnlms a membership of 3.71S.0O0 and the American Federation of Lnbor one . of 3.(100.000. Lewis was boomed for president (Continued on page 6 EFFIE A. BEATY OF WINSTON PASSES Effle Andy Beaty, G3, resident of Winston, died at Mercy hospital who wilt not wish to continue, will creato an unusually large number of vacancies to be filled during the reenrollment period in October. Age of enrollment is from 17 to 23 years, inclusive. Relief status requirement is now completely eliminated. Also those who were honorably discharged may re-enroll, providing there has been a lap.oe of six months since the last discharge. Previously regulations required a lapse of one year. .Also' Day OratoryMmMM T T TRAILS AXE INJURY Frank Strader Gashes Foot, Auto Seeking Aid Hits Wood Truck. Frank Strader, manager of Sun shine ranch, was in Mercy hospital today suffering from a badly gash ed foot, which resulted when an ase was deflected while he was engaged in clearing brush .Monday morning. In u second accident, which wrb a sequence of Mr. Strader's in- Jury, Ivan Pickens, locul bank enl' ploye, nnd his infant son, and Les lie (.'.. Johns of Wilbur, miraculous ly escaped being hurt ill a, motor vehicle collision. Mr. and Mrs. Pickens, on their way home to Hoseburg from Sun shine ranch, found MMr. Strader bleeding badly. Mrs. Pickens, a former nurBe, gave first aid, ami accompanied the injured man In the car which brought him to Hose- burg, while Mr. Pickens hurried to Hoseburg in advance to secure nhvsician. At the corner of Court nnd Fowler streets Mr. Pickens' auto mobile collided with a wood trucK driven hv - Mr. Joints. The truck was turned completely over, but no one was Injured. Mr. Pickens cur was badly damaged. "POLIO LAbLS IIN OREGON ON, WANE PORTLAND, Sept. 7 (AP) Oregon has had no inrease In In fantile paralysis and Portland is "unusuallv free" of the diseuse. Dr. Adolph Welnzlrl, city health officer, told parents of children returning to school today. "The season Is now sufficiently advanced to make the likelihood of a local outbreak exceedingly Improbable," he said. "Only three coses of infantile paralysis have hniin roiinrlf.il itmnil r-oruanu res)dentg sllce January 1, 1US7 THEATER ROBBERY FITS MOVIE TITLE BAYONNE, N. J., Sept. 7. (AP) Three men were sought by police today for a $150 robbery at a Broadway theater. Edward Rowe, manager, snid three men, two armed, poked their hands through a barred al ley window Into ills office hint night, ordered the night's receipts pussed to them, anil fled The theater's featured picture was: "The Crime Nobody Saw." CHILD KILLED BY CHURCH FETE BOMB LOW, N. J., Sent. 7. (AP) Fif teen-year-old Rene Porhiel was in jure(j fatally today when an aerial bomb prematurely exploded at church celebration One of 3.000 spectators at the fi nale of the feast of St. Joseph, at St. Joseph's R. C. church, the boy was struck In the stomach by the bomb. Salvatore Daleo. 45, of Iodl. was Injured in a similar mishap Sun day. COAST COUNTIES TO ASK BIG ROAD FUND MARSHFIELD, Sept. 7 (AP) Oregon coast counties will ask the state highway commission for Sfi.000,000 for roads in the next five years, Ed Miller, secretary of the Coast Highway association, told 1,500 persons attending a bar becue at Sunset beach Labor day. He asserted that "the period for holding back because of coopera tion that resulted In completion of the coast bridges has passed." DRUNK DRIVER GETS JAIL AND $100 FINE InailliiK eulliy In jUBtico eaurt hore this morning to a charge of drunken driving. Kred wheeler of S.F. A. F. I.. Teamsters Warned bv' Bridges Not to Try j - . Spreading Fight to Other Points. SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 7 (AP) AFL teamsters, slowly stifling waterfront activity in a union jurisdictional fight were warned today by their opponents against spreading the dispute to other coast ports. lans to refuse handling of dock cargoes In Oak hind Wednesday have been followed by threats to extend the embargo to all west coast harbors in a situation such as never before bus placed Pacific ports, scenes of two of the nation B bitterest strikes. lusl Wednesday the teamsters began what they said was a "fin ish" fight against the CIO long shoremen and ' warehousemen,! w hose attempts to organize ware house workers claimed Dy tne teamsters precipitated the clash, r The warning not to spread the blockude was voiced In Oakland yesterday by Harry Bridges, west coast CIO organizer and head oi the longshoremen aud warehouse? men. "By Wednesday morning the AFL officials may get out of their stupor, and if they don't wake up we may have to take the first step and wake them up ourselves," ho said. v Bridges, addressing a labor rally vjhicb followed wo ..Oakland La bor day parades,- ono for' AFL units and the other for CIO, dis closed no plans beyond saying "the CIO didn't intend to move a step toward bloodshed." The labor chieftain, a leader in the costly 19:14 and 1.136-37 mari time strikes, accused employers of backing the current teamsters "strike." Cargoes Accumulate Close of the Labor day holiday, during which teamsters and some other AFL units boycotted a huge muude here, found most of San Francisco's 4il piers piled high with cargoes which the truckmen refused to move away. Within a few days, shippers said, stevedore activity must halt, because there will be no space left to store the cargoes. Then, the ten m titers' boycott w ill strike di' rectly at the longshoremen,- who will have no work to do. Dave Beck of Seattle, interna- (Continued on page 6) . GIRL UHG ASLEEP OAK PARK. 111.. Sept. 7.-(AIM Patricia MaUuire, wIioho Htmii "sieep" of five years and nine months has attracted international uiuntioti, today was described as a "very sick girl.' Her sister, Mrs. Gladys Hansen, sul.l tho pretty Sl-year-ohl victim of sleonimr Bickness has develop ed two new troubles an abdomin al tumor and phlevltls that are causing much concern. The latest complication, phle bitis or Inflammation of the veins. bus left a painful thumb-sized swelling In the sick woman's left Ug below the knee-cap Mr a. Han sel) said. "Pat" has been quite 111 sUco, Mr. Hansen said, adding that she Might be taken to a hor.pltal for care because of a high tempera ture. About three weeks ago when Pat wus u patient in the Went Subur ban hospital for treatment aud oh Hervation an examination revealed the presence nf tho tumor. Although the ductotH considered an opetntiun then, Mrs. Hansen hatd, they were opposed to it uu- lefs deemed absolutely necessary ROSEBURG COUPL E INJURED IN CRASH Mr. and Mrs. E. A. fiross were Injured Saturday afternoon when their car rolled off the Roseburg- Coos Hay highway near Bridge. Mrs. Gross suffered three broken ribs and numerous bruises. Mr. Gross, of the Radio Music Store, was cut and hrtilflpt! but was able lo return to ItoseburK Hiinduy, Mr. Gross Is In the hospital at Coqullle, where ?he will be con fined for several days. The car, it was reported, skid ded on wet pavement at a nharp turn, and rolled about 150 feet to the edgit of the Conullle river, The auto was practically demolished. BAY PIERS? GETS HEAVIER . j Car Crash Hastens Birth as Mother Lies Unconscious DES MOINES, la., Stpt. ?. Fatherless, 1hree-day-old Baby Wel born enoded anil kicked his legs lustily In the obstetrical ward of a hospital here today while his mot tier, Mrs. James Wel born, 20, unconscious since early Saturday, hovered near death in a room nearby. She still was unawure of her baby's birth Saturday or her husband's death yesterday. Hospital attendants said Mrs. Welborn's condition was criti cal.. Tho baby was delivered Tour hours after Mrs, Welborn was admitted to the hospital with her husband following an automobile accident. B o t h suffered fractured skulls. The lather died yester day without ' regaining con sciousness. The baby, about three weeks premature, weighs seven pounds and was reported "doing well." of Party Slightly Hurt as Car Takes Roll Off Tiller-Trail Road. 11 A YS CREEK, Sept. 7. Seven people narrowly escaped death Saturday In an automobile uc.cl dent which caused minor Injuries to Vernon McKenzle of Dairy, Ore., and M. F. Pence of Trail. The car. driven 'by- McKenzle; left the Tiller-Trail road near the more footbridge on the Bland grade, about three miles east of Days Creek, and rolled down n steep bunk. Mr. and Mrs. McKenzle and daughter, (leraldlne, were accom panied by Mr. and Mrs. Pence and daughters, Mary and Gertrude, and were on their way to Rose burg to visit relative.-;. The car turned completely over aud came to rest at the hotlom of a 20-foot embankment. The wo men aud children escaped with n few scratches mid bruises. Mr. McKenzle suffered several broken ribs and a lacerated ear. Mr. Pence was cut on the hip and forehead. The injured men were taken to Myrtle Creek by Archie Ferguson and II. A. Moore and were given treatment by 'Dr. jVlaxon. The party was taken to ituHcnurg later, o HITLER STRESSES THREE-NATION PACT M'KNilERU. ..ormntiy, Sept. 7--f A P) Adnl ( 1 1 : t ler st i essed ii izt Gr' inauy's so".! 'ar.'v vji:i Imiti Japan and Italy today agaiust "communist confusion" In eust and west. Ills annual proclamation, read to the nazl congress, also made an em phatic reiteration of (ieriiiHny'H de mand for return of her war-tost colonies, ami caned the attlttule ut inner powers inward tills demtuid i ucum iireiieiiKiuie. Both the Japanese and Italian am- hassadors were In the crowd of 46,000 which heard Hitler's state ment that Germany would stand hy both Japan and Italy in a "de fensive fight against communism. CRASH KILLS GIRL RIDING ON CYCLE EUREKA, Calif., Sept. 7. (AP) --A motorcycle-automobile crash near here led to tho death of ah Hensel, 23, formerly of Eun-ku. K. L. Williams, sheriff and cor oner of Mendocino county, :nid tho young woman was ridtiiR tan dem on u cyel operated by Louis Spungler Jr.. 15, of Cnmmlngs, when it collided 'yesterday with a car driven by Thomas II; Wclner, Coluinbufi, O. WlllianiH said Mtsa Hensel's parents re.'ddo 'at Ash land, Ore. McGRADY QUITS AS ASST. LABOR SECY. HYDE PARK. N. Y., Sept.. 7 (AP) The resignation or Edward F. Mcfirady as asnlntant secretin y of labor was nnnounced today at the summer white house. It I understood McCrady will become director of labor relations for the Radio Corporation of America. Accepting the resignation wl'h "deep regret," t he president said: "I wlHh you all the buccphh yon so richly deserve. I am glad that you will alwuys be available for fit tu re service to government." CQURT RAISES NEW ISSUE IN PINBALL GASE Question of Law Voidance Because of Uncertainty Arises at Hearing Held Here. The question of whether the Oro-, gon 1!i3i session law under which, piuball machines are being ope rat-, ed is void hcaufe of uncertainty, was voiced tills morning by Circuit Judge Carl E. Wimberly. Heating an argument this morning on the demurrer of District Attorney J. V. Long to the complaint of Karl Bush, piuball operator, In bis injunction suit to rest rain the district attor ney and sheriff from halting the operation of the games, Judge Wimberly raised the new issue ami gave the dlstrlot attorney and Hush's counsel, Ray B. Coinpton, until Friday in which to file briefs. "The li)::r law gives municipali ties and counties tho power to li cense, regulate, impost a privilege tax. or prohibit piuball machines and other games," Judge Wimberly said. "In the event a county should prohibit the machines, white at the same time a municipality witlilu (hat county would Impose a license, which would prevail? Is this law void because of uncertainty where tho power to license resides?" The attorneys were instructed to submit their answers to tho ques tion iu brief form, together with au thorities. , -1 J Equity" PhawHnvolved. Tho question was raised by tho court on a declaration or ruling law that a court of equity in the state of Oregon lias n right to re strain prosecution under a void statute where direct invasion of property rights is concerned. The court s question. Attorneys Long and Comptoti said, opens a channel by which the matter of pin ball operation may be brought with in jurisdiction of a court of equity, rather I hull In criminal court. Both, however, said tho Issue is foreign to the procedure under which the piuball matter has thus far been conducted 111 Douglas county. At first glance, each attorney said. neither side, apparently, would be in a position to benefit by a rulln (Continued on page 0j MEDFORI), Sept. 7. (AP) Earl II. Feb), former county judg? ol J.tckmm county, who served a state priHon sentence for ballut-theft conviction mid. under (lie terms of a parole, was not permitted to re turn hero until August irlh lost. I ims filed a "notice demand" with culling upon tho county clink Canity Judge Earl II. Day "to j fm thwllh yield and vacate unto mo, tun duly elected and quallliod county judge, the office you have usurped. Fchl, In the unusual document, asserts he Is entitled to the coun ty Judgeship, "because 1 have never resigned, been recalled, died or surrendered the office to which I was elected." The district attorney reported the "notice demand" luts tio legal weight, and that Kohl's citi.enship has not been restored since his conviction of a felony, and, that no cognizance would be lasen of (I, unless Fchl riled a suit In clrcull court to establish his claims. Count v Judge Day was appoint eu to mi the office, noon the con- cllon of Fehl by a Klamath enmi ty Juiy. and in the next election was elected to the post. Fehl avers he is ciiHtlcd to the poHitlon until January 1. lii:t;i. . PERKINS TWINS TO BE HEARD ON KRNR Caroline and Julia Perkins, twin daughters of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Perkins of this city, are to be pre sented hh KUefd artists on the KRNR "Variety Show of the Alt' Wednesday. The chhrmlug girls. who recently returned from Holly- w nnd, where they Imvr been en en ml I n motion pit t u i e work, ha ve been hooked for t wo son c and a hk 1 1 before the mlcrnnhoii The twins apnea red In "Old Hutch" and are being trained fin two other picture', soon expected to go Into prr.dueUon. The "vnrlety Show the Air," a daily font urn, Is heard from 1 1 : 15 to 1 1 Mf a. m. Traffic Leads Causes of Labor Day Toll, 428 By tho Associated Press. At htti;.t 48 poisons died vio lently In tho United Stales dining the Labor day week-end. As iu previous years, motor traf fic ugain was tho chief cuu:io of accidental deaths. Fair weather anil the double holiday drew mo torists to the highways by thu I' ll of thousands. - A survey by the Associated Press rdinwed 302 uuto traffic deaths in 14 states. There were 2.1 during the corresponding period last yuar Fifty-five drownings were re ported, aud 71 persons died iu va nous other accidents. Airplant' crashes caused six deaths hi the iHiloii. Three persona were hell-.:-d to have perished In a pium which felt fntn Lake Erie near V.v: Canadian shore. There were 49 deaths 111 Callfos- n in alone. Thirty-three were at tributed to auto accidents. The nation's death total of wu.-t less than half tho uuuilmr t peeled hy the national aitl'oty eoiui ill. Basing Its ehlimato on td at lu ll cm of previous years, the council tiguretl approximately Loot) would ho killed over the week-end r.uo in truffle accidents, itto from drown In;; and -100 from other euustM. ES Traffic Crashes, Streams Each Take Three Lives; Rock Kills Seventh. (By the Associated Press) Seven accidental deaths only two less than New York, the most populous Htntn. gave Orogon an un isvorable position today hi the black list" of labor day tragedies. Three persons met death In tin f- fiee crushes, threes more drowned and the seventh died beneath a hugo rock. Melvln Erviu, 17, of Portland died en route, to a hu-tpilal-from injuries received when an automobile blew a tiro and overturned near Ualuler. A collision between a truck and a passenger car near Echo Sunday j broiiKht Instant death of Mrs. Da vid Dallemaud, 80, of Ixivclund, Colo. Mildred Gabriel, 15, drove a neighbor's car homo from Sunday school. She lost control when a wheel struck a soft shoulder. The car overturned aud crushed tho young driver. Grapplors recovered the body of Lyle C. Ayers, 40, executive of the Pacific. Telephone and Telegraph company, from the Columbia river yesterdi:y. He fell from a cabin cruiser Saturday night.. (. M. Baker of Staytoti, lumber company manager ami city council man, drowned Sunday In the Mc Kenzle river. He apparently sank into a deep hole while Bwiminfng. i sinking skiff carried Thomas Cunuiimhum, 18. to his ileal Ii at an inlet near Marshfield. A rolling rock struck aud I i lied Tom Ojitlhol, Stayton, Saturday ns he completed bis work fop a lum ber firm at Lyons. , TWO OF TOURIST PARTY WED HERE Wilfred Paul Grant and Lora Emily Herron, both of Wllniar. Callf., were married hero this morning at a quiet ceremony per- formed by County Judge Oeorgo K. Qulne. Oddities Flashed (llv Ihe AHocia!ed Press) Big Help ROCKY MOUNT, N. C The telephone rang a:t C. E. Exuin and several other volunteer firemen were lying on the floor of the smoke-filled living room of Exnm's home fighting a blaze. Exuin crawled to the phonei Here Is what he heard: I "This is Frank Collins nt the fire station (who notifies voluntee' firemen when an alarm Is receiv ed). Oo to box No. 121. There Is a fire there." Ex n in hung tin In disgust. Box 121 Ik in front of his bonne. Reasonable Doubt KVANSVILLE. Itei.-Cre!! Now b.v, :t. Just out of the hospital, had lifn doubts todny about a "life of milk and hony ' A runaway (tow 1m had been i haulm; into u neighbor's field kick ed over n hive of bees. The heos h warmed unto Nmvby, slinging htm unconscious. Neighbors rescued Newby, rushed him to a hospital, NORTHWEST PART OF CITY Big Adventist Mission Seized For Military Purposes Despite Its U. S. Flags. Imperilled Americans Send Protest on Warning of Roosevelt to Quit War-Torn Zone. SHANGHAI, Sept. 8. (Wednes day.! (AP) Tho Japanese army today seized tint hugo American I Seventh Day Ad veil tint mission properly iu the Yau;vlnepoo dis trict, north of Shanghai, for mill-: 1 (ury purposes. I 't lie properly waa confiscated do-' nplto the protects of iM owners and the fact that the mission flew many rutted suites t'lnj-s to Iden tify it as American property. , Japanese wurshipj were scatter ed down the Wlmngpoo all the way from Shanghai to WuoHiing, about 10 miles north of the city. They renewed their heavy gun . mbardment of Chapel, Kiangwan ml other Chinese concentrations in u effort to crack Chinese re st stance and pnvo the way for a Japanese offensive inland. Roaring Games across all north western Shanghai lighted tho path of a tierce Japanese effort to bat ter down the Chinese resistance that-- has brought their Shanghai Fires spread across the whole area. Tho Commercial Press build lug, rebuilt' after the 19,12 Sino . it panose host ill ties, was reduced U ashes again after It was struck hy three Japanese homb:i. Americans Protest Warning With the peril to American and other foreign 'residents drawing sleadllv closer from the fiuhtinir ringing the International ttclt le nient, the American chamber of commerce of Shanghai protected against President Roosevelt's wnrn- (Continued on, page 6) STOCKS. BOMB HIT OHM OK NEW YOIIK. Sept. 7. (API Touched off by a fresh foreign war scare, engendered chiefly by the Rubco-llallah quarrel, utock.H crashed In today's market for losses of ono to ten points gener ally. There were a few wider sot hacks. Heavy and sustained selling hit Ihe bond market and priee.i tum bled from as much an t to 5 points in one of Ihe worst breaks of the year. Convertible issues and rnllroad liens took the heavier! hammer ing. Federal loans Joined the down slide with the whole list off frac tions of a point. SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 7. (AP)The atock market look a bud beating today from war scares i that drove buyers into their duc- outs. i Tho Block exchange had n dozen ! new lows, and some 40 declines to '1 gains around noon. From Press Wire Curses, Foiled! SANDPOIXT, Idaho A burglar did not know the H. E. Brown Lum ber company Hiifn was unlocked becaur.e the owners had no conibl- tln 1 1 mi riii- ll II.. 1 I.I twi I, about trying to turn the handle, In stead he hammered ft, Tho pound fug ret the lock. Now the company has a safe ciaclting problem of its own. Wrong Number ST. JCSEPH. Mo. Clifford Trcftz told police of an argument he bud with n drunken driver nnd gave the officers n license num ber. In a few mi;i;:ic; Patrolman appeared at tho station escorting a prlfinner. Here's your drunk driver, nntj the car Is outside." they said "Why, that's the man who re potted tho drunken driver," Lieut. C. R. Pursel exclaimed. Treftz explained that In his ex cltement ho hud given hip owq number. 1 GRIP