The Weather Fair .today "and Saturday, occasional fog and clouds on coast. No change in temper-. ature. Max Temp. Tliurs. SO, MIn.54. River -3.9 feet. AVestwind. Foreign News A large part of European and far eastern news breaks Just before the morning newspaper goes to press. EIGHTY-EIGHTH YEAR Salem, Oregon, Friday Morning, September "2, 1938 Price 3c; Newsstands 5c No. 136 itler at I : :' . ; '. :t p v PouNDno ! 1651 . ; , , ,.'- .Ref ection. of C 1 . l : - ; Flans Reported). Chinese Japanese Lose Bloody Rattle Along Yangtze '- '"' - ' V' P v-" V Chinese Commanders Say Heavy Casualties Are Inflicted Key Point on j Rails Said Captured by Chinese in Counterfight SHANGHAI, Sept. 2.-(Friday) -P)-Chlnese . military command ers reported today) Japanese forces had been defeated pn Yangtze valley f r o n t s "in .the bloodiest fighting of recentj months. Counter attacking westward from Juichang, about 100 miles southeast of Hahkow, the Chinese said their fighters Inflicted 4,000 casualties on the invaders at tempting to advance toward the Yangsin river. ..'-: ' - A second counter attack south ward from Juichang was said to have resulted in .the recapture of Anshao, key point for a Japanese attack on Telan, the Naachang Kiukiang railway;. On the north bank of the Yangtze river, the Chinese "said they fought HjFWgmel, 20 miles north of Kiukiang, base of " the Japanese Yangtze valley opera tions 135 miles below Hankow, China's provisional capital, which the Invaders' hope to." fceach before winter sets in. Japanese reported earlier that their offensives were' "progress ing" on both the Yangtze and Yellow river fronts. Japanese spokesmen said sim ply that both army, and naval . forces southeast of, Hankow were advancing. wlthavIation playing a most important part: On&e Yellow river fron, they said Jap anese troops were poised for a river crossing in northwest. Honan province. . Unconfirmed Chinese advices said Japanese troops were, routed and driven back to the east in a battle near. Juichang, about 100 miles southeast o Hankow. Pre vious reports .from the Chinese side said 13 day and night attacks west of Juichang had been re pulsed. . Japanese naval airmen reported bombardment of the rail junction town of ' C h u c h o w , south of Changsha, Hunan province. They said tracks and freight cars were destroyed. Rattlesnake Pete Passes to Beyond PORTLAND, Sept l-(P)-Rat-tlesnake Petedied Wednesday at the age of 60. Melvin N. Olbert, In charge of livestock for' the Schlesser Broth ers meat concern, was the way the death notice read but old range riders mourned the passing of Rattlesnake. Born in Columbia, O., in 1877, Mel Obert went to Miles City. Mont,, as a boy and got to be a "top hand" known from Texas to Idaho. His fondness for rattlesnake-skin neckties, hatbands and saddle-adornments won him . the sobriquette-of Rattlesnake Pete. . Even after he settled down to city life, ; Rattlesnake went back to the range in? 1926 to partici pate in the dramatic rounding up of 350,000 head of wild horses in Montana, Nevada,. Oregon,: Wash ington and northern California- A roundup that consumed five years. i FLYING HANDS. Tho night crew at Hunt Bros, cannery will pit its crack pear-trimmer, Mrs. Flay" St. Clair of Salem route 6, against all other pear trim mers hereabouts. : - i Working with precision that almost re-proved the magician's rule that the hand is quicker than the eye, Mrs. St. Clair yes terday put.19,005 pears through her routine. (There's no guess work about it, for counters on the machines told the story.) ' i she worked from 7 p. m. to E:45 a. m., and up to midnight had 9000 pears to her credit, which means in the next half: of the shift she gained 1000 on the time in which workers are supposed, to be the peppiest. I One factor which helped was; that on her belt medium size pears so , nearly perfect that little trimming was necessary came throughbut that doesn't take away from the fact that she had to handle every pear. . Incidentally, many workers are happy if they pile Tip 9000 or 10,300 pears for a shift. .' . Finale: Trimmers are paid by the thousand! Claim $30 Every Thursday" Was ' :ry That Nominated r II II 2? -P .-. 7 r j , , - ' 1 s...... ' :.. -:: .. ! I : St:, :::::: :?-:S:VV. i i i : - , . . : ' : i I . ' '" t.'. yv.f , ' i ' , If !jl V " ;t - " i 1 - i r - ; ' a - I- : ! " ' ' I S .i i : f h J . .: ' -v - .-! 'r v -x , S w 0 -it' Pictured with his family is Sheridan Downey, who defeated William Gibbs McAdoo in the race for nomination as democratic U. S. sen ator in the California primaries. Pictured in their Atherton, Cal., home, the Downey family is listening to latest tabulations of the elections.! Left to right are Margaret, Richard, Sheridan Jr., Sheri dan Sr. Sirs. Downey seated in chair, and Patricia, seated on floor. Downey is a -vigorous backer of the $30 Every Thursday" pension ...plan. , i - .'; '.. v n t Pickets Withdraw FromjHotel Doors Union'- . Officials Decline ! Comment on Removal After 85 Days PORTLAND, Ore., Sept. l.-(JP) -A-major break in Portland's 85 days old hotel strike came tonight with removal of pickets at five downtown hotels. ' Union officials declined to com ment on the situation. Pickets disappeared from the Roosevelt hotel. At midnight, replacements failed . to appear at the Benson, Imperial, Park Avenue and Cor nelius hotels. . Pickets were withdrawn yester day from the Fairfield hotel when a new management accepted union conditions. I . Eleven other hotels continued to operate behind picket lines. The five AFL unions involved seek recognition. ' Elderly Man Dies When Hit by Car WOODBURN; Sept. 1. Joseph Hortsch, 72,- was killed .shortly after 8 o'clock tonight when he was struck by a southbound car as he was crossing the Pacific highway . here. Dr. Gerald B. Smith pronounced Hortsch dead 15 minutes after the accident. ; The driver of the car, Harry Poland of Philomath, was not held.;.: , .. Hortsch, who celebrated his golden wedding anniversary here June 18, 1937, had been caring for the auto wrecking shop of his son, Steve, who is on a trip to Minnesota,' and was going home from work when the accident oc curred,'' 1 . . ' -. Survivors 1 include the widow and six children.' Arrangements are in charge of Beechler-O'Hair mortuary. Suit Filed to Block Measure t To. Stop Fixed Gear Fishing : Suit to restrain the secretary of state from certifying for the, No eember election ballot the initia tive measure forbidding fishing for salmon and steelhead with flxel gear; in the Columbia river and its tributaries was filed in circuit court here yesterday in the name j of Dist, Atty Lyle J. Page.- i ..' j---; Sponsors of the initiative, nam ed defendants 'along with Secre tary of State Earl Snell. are list ed as J. ! O. Beck, Hugo Pauh Frederick S. Wllhelm, E. A. Stor vik and Oglesby. Young. Jay. Bow erman and W. S. TJ'Ren are attor Victory Him, I McAdoo Complaint Issued By Electric Co-op Plaintiffs Seeking , Rule From Utilities Rody on Power Rate ' The Salem Electric Cooperative association which was organized here recently Thursday filed a complaint with the state utilities commissioner to compel the Port land General Electric company to furnish It power at a commercial rate apparently for distribution to certain Salem downtown business houses. . The complaints charged that a clause in the commercial power schedule of the Portland General Electric -company based on sale to one customer at one point which prevents its resale or dis tribution when the company has or is willing to provide distribu tion facilities as unjust and dis criminatory. The public utility commissioner was asked to substitute for this such regulation as may be Just or reasonable, alleging the provision to be unjust, unlawful and dis criminatory. . 1 . Plaintiffs said they would use 45 kilowatts of electric energy per month and demand to be awarded the be'nefit of the commercial power meter rate. - ... This was ald tovbe the. first move of its kind ever made in the state. Postal Receipts: Strike new High "."Salem-, postal receipts for Au gust skyrocketed $7323.10 over the local Teceipts for the previous month and also marched $5191.46 beyond the figure for August, 1937, Postmaster H. R. Craw ford revealed yesterday. ; Receipts last month were $29, 219.18; for August, 1937, $24, 027.72: and for July, this year, $21,895.99. - r- -: :; neys for the plaintiff. . The ; complaint charges the sponsors conspired to present the secretary of state 900 petition sheets not verified by the actual circulators but by others. It also alleges ' that notarial signatures were forged, that 8000 signatures were paid for in violation of the law and that over 600 accompany ing affidavits were false. ' Of the 22.894 lenatur unK. mitted to Snell less than 12,000 are proper ones, the complaint asserts. Twenty thousand twenty signatures are required to put the measure on the ballot. ' - on River Navy to Form Atlantic Fleet Oij new Craft Sudden Change in Policy Hints Defense Plans j Are Revised No Atlantic Force Kept Since Sino-Japanese Crisis of 1931 ' WASHINGTON. Sept. l.-W-The navy unexpectedly announced today that a "temporary" Atlantic squadron of 14 of its newest war craft I would be formed immedi ately.! " Without explanation, a formal announcement said seven 10, 000 tcn light cruisers and seven de stroyers would comprise the force. effective September 6. Rear Adnv Forde A. Todd was designated commander. The nation has had no organ ized Atlantic force since the fleet was concentrated in the Pacific in the midst of the 1931-32 Sino Japanese crisis. The order for the new squad ron, .issued by Adm. William D. Leahy, chief of operations, hinted at a recent revision of defense strategy and stirred Immediate speculation as to whether Eu rope's tension over the German Czech dispute was Involved. From naval officials came only the comment that the force was .formed "in preparation for. fleet problem twenty and to visit such ports as are designated." - To work out this problem, In volving defense of the Panama canal against a simulated trans Atlantic attack,- the main fleet of approximately' 'ISO warships is scheduled to engage in war games In the Atlantic early next year. It has not left the Pacific since 1934, when the armada was re viewed at; New York by President Roosevelt; ' Ships to join the squadron Sep tember 6 are: .the cruisers Phila delphia, Brooklyn and Savannah, and the destroyers Mugford, Ralph Talbot, Helm, Shaw, Som 6rs and Washington. Ships to join after completing shakedown cruises are the cruisers Nashville, Boise, Honolulu and Phoenix and the destroyer Samp son. . V The cruisers are ail of 10,000 tons and .are armed with six-inch guns. The destroyers Mugford, Somers and Sampson are flotilla leaders of 1,8.50 tons and other destroyers are" 1,500-ton craft. In addition to the new squad ron, the navy has three of Its older battleships, a demilitarized battle ship, two new aircraft carriers and 16 older destroyers on the At lantic coast. Hull Stays Aloof From Purge Drive Ickes, However, Is, not so Quiet; Speaks Piece on Maryland Race WASHINGTON, Sept. l-(Jfy-Secretary of State Hull he'ld aloof publicly today from the adminis tration's campaign to unseat democratic Sen. Millard E. Tyd ings of Maryland. He was asked at his press con ference whether," if he lived in Maryland, he would vote tor Tydlngs or Representative David J. Lewis, the new deal candidate for the senatorial nomination. Hull replied that if his ques tioner would take care. of , the acute problems of the far east, far west, far north and far south, he 'would be glad to give some time to domestic questions. However, any idea that the ad ministration' would abandon its effort to defeat Senator Tydlngs. as the result of the victory of presidentlally-opposed Senator E. D. ''Cotton Ed" Smith In South Carolina this week, was dispelled by Secretary' of the Interior Ickes. Showing none of Hull's hesita tion about indicating his prefer ence in the Maryland "contest, to be decided September 12, Ickes told reporters he favored Lewis' candidacy. Estabrook Retrial Will Open Tuesday Retrial of " J o h n Estabrook, Washington county, who is char ged with bombing operations, will open at Hlllsboro next Tuesday, Ralph E. Moody, special prosecu tor, announced here Thursday. Estabrook was charged with throwing a bomb into a store near Hlllsboro.; The juries disagreed at the two previous trials. . - Moody said the trial would last nearly a week. Defense Bares Davis' Trysts With Showgirl . - Stryker Charges Visits "Inducement" to Turn State Evidence i Dapper 'Kid Mouthpiece' Reddens as Private Life Revealed NEW YORK, Sept. l-(P)-Tbe defense today threw a blazing spotlight on the semi-clfndestlne trysts of Hope Dare and J. Rich ard (Dixie) Davis, the state's star witness in the policy racket trial of Tammany District Leader James J. Hines. Chief Defense Counsel Lloyd Paul Stryker charged that Dist. Atty, Thomas E. Dewey permitted Davis to visit the red-haired show girl as an "inducement" to turn state's evidence against Hines as a co-conspirator in the multi-million-dollar Dutch Schultx policy racket. With such hammering empha sis that Prosecutor Dewey sprang up again and again' to protest against repetition complaining that "the witness has already an swered" Stryker brought out that Davis made his excursions to Hope Dare's apartment' while he was a some-time prisoner in the Tombs. Davis Squirms Under Quiz ' The dapper erstwhile "Kid Mouthpiece" of the Schultz mob, squirming and reddening under Striker's search Into his private life, protested that while he was a married man he had not lived with his wife for three years. Davis insisted that during! the visits to Miss Dare's apartment he was never alone in the same room with her. "Detectives were always pres ent," he said. The witness said he was re leased froT-". the Tombs on a court order to permit him to see his doctor, and that on "about 80 or 90" such sorties from the gloomy old Tombs the physician had elec trically burned out half his ton sils. Hope's Mother Always There Besides detectives, he said. Miss Dare's mother was always present when he stopped at her apartment to change his clothes. , "Did her mother always know when you were coming so as to be there to chaperone these vis its? asked Stryker. "Her mother hardly ever left the place. She is a stranger in New York and she wouldn't go out by herself unless she went with Hope.". "OhT" said Stryker. ".Well, let's see. Was Miss Dare, always fully attired in the presence of po lice?" "Yes, sir' "Was she ever in negligee at any time when you had your outer shirt offjust your undershirt?" "She may hate worn a morning gown," Davis snapped. "She was not in negligee." "And you just in your under shirt?" Insists He Had His Panti On "And ,my pants on, Davis amended firmly. With a dramatic flourish, Stry ker then exhibited an enlarged newspaper photograph of a scantily-clad man and the woman standing close together at the window of an apartment. "Is -that a picture of you and someone else?" asked Stryker. He handed the photograph to Davis. The witness studied.it with a grimace. "I really can't tell, sir," he said. "I am sure I don't have that stomach. I don't know it might be it Is very Indistinct." "Indistinct or not," Stryker snapped, . "can you recognize who it is?" "It is very indistinct," Davis re peated feebly. "I couldn't recog nize either Hope or myself." . $75,000 of Opium Seized From Ship ; PORTLAND. Ore., Sept. i.-P) -The second big seizure of nar cotics of the summer was made today aboard the Philippine steamship Don Jose 'by a U. S. customs searching squad. They found 1576' one tael cans of smoking opium valued at about $75,000 buried deep in coal bunkers. . The vessel, Ued sp at Portland vegetable oil dock, was subject to a fine of $52,335. No arrests have been made. L Chambers Appointed '. At Business Agent Walter A. Chambers has . been appointed business agent for Sa lem local -No. 9 91 of the Retail Clerks -International Protective association,- L. Wendell Cross, president, . apnounced yesterday. Chambers is also president of the Salem Union Label league and ed itor of the Union Labor Bulletin. Death Toll As Japan After Typ i ; I ; .- - - . ; - Damage to Property Is Estimated at $28,000,000 as Eastern Section of "Nippon Resumes Normal Activity After Blow . TOKYO, Sept. 1. (AP)--Japan, clearing away wreck age left by a 75-mile-an-hour typhoon, tonight counted at least 99 dead, scores of persons injured or missing and property damage estimated as high as 100,000,000 yen ($28,000,000). : j J Authorities estimated the damage to shipping at Yoko- Contracts Agreed For Food Stores Only Minor Changes Made in Clerks Coiitract " With Employers Terms of a new union contract between ' the larger food stores and Retail Clerks .International Protective association, local Nb. 9 9 2 of Salem were agreed upon at a meeting of employer and em ploye representatives at the labor temple last night, L. Mendell Cross, president of the local, an nounced. He said negotiations had been actively under way for l week. "All the larger groceries an markets have agreed on the co at tract," Cross said. "It will be signed within a few days." f The new agreement makes np changes in the wage and hour, scales of the old contract, which expired June 1. One -of the major changes made last night was the provision for the new agreement's being a continuous one, to be al tered only if either the employers or the union give notice 30 days before the June 1 annual expira tion date. The new contract continues thie 54-houf work week for. the food trade, puts no restriction on busi ness hours and calls for double time for holidays and time and one-half for overtime. The union was represented by Cross, Leo Olson, secretary, .and W. A. Chambers, business agent. Exodus of Jews Ordered in Italy Six Months Time Allotted Jews to Leave Italy by new Decree ROME, Sept. 1-fPWThe Italian government today ordered all Jews who have established them selves in Italy since the world war to get out of the country within six months." The order was' contained in a decree which was approved at a cabinet meeting over which Pre mier Benito Mussolini presided. It applies to Italy, Italy's North African colony of Libya, and the Aegean isles, but not to Italian East Africa Eritrea. Italian So maliland and Ethiopia. , j " This omission presumably leaves Ethiopia, which Italy an nexed May 9, 1936, open to the banished Jews if they are not able to get into any other country, j Definite information on the. number of Jews affected will not be known until results of a re cent census of Jews is published, but estimates placed the figure jat more than 10,000. Many Jews en tered Italy shortly after the wofld war' and their number was aug mented after Germany annexed Austria on March 13. Dick Dur ranee Visits Winter - Olympic Field PORTLAND, Sept. 1.-JP-Dck Durrance, captain of the Dart month college ski team, and Jar vis Shaef fler, - ex-Amherst college captain, today visited TimberMne lodge on Mount Hood and scanned probable courses for the national Olympic tryouts here next April 1 and 2. I Holmstrom and First Leg of GREEN RIVER. Wyo., Sept. 1 -(A1) Buss Holmstrom and Amos Burg rested at Covered Wagon camp west of here today after completing the first leg of their projected 1800-mile boat Journey from the Green river's headwat ers to the Gulf of California. ' Holmstrom, Coquille, Ore., riv er adventurer who navigated the Colorado river's grand canyon alone last year, and Burg, Na tional Geographic society photo grapher, arrived at the camp last night after traveling from I Che Green river's source in the Wind rive- mountains. v j .They plan to resume Saturday their trip down the Green river to its junction with the Colorado river in southwestern Utah. Reaches 99 Counts Cost h don Passes O ($1,400,000). The populous eastern section of the nation which bore the brunt of the typhoon in the disaster-crowded hours between 2 a. m. and 6 a. m., resumed a near nor mal .activity. . . Trains, trams and buses were running and communications had been - restored.. Markets opened briefly during the afternoon,' but schools remained closed. School authorities said buildings might be kept .shut for several days until inspected for damage. Collapsing houses and land slides, caused most of the deaths, but two Korean students wece electrocuted as an electric wire snapped and coiled around them when they were fighting their way through a Tokyo street. The typhoon struck Japan on the 15th anniversary of the 1923 Tokyo earthquake, in which 150, 000 perished. Winds, leveling houses by the thousands, left an estimated 15,000 persons homeless In Tofcyo alone. Tokyo reported most of the casualties. Thirty-four r passenger and freight vessels were drivgn aground, mostly at .Yokohama. Hundreds of small boats were wrecked. . Eighty-six small craft and barges were reported swept out to sea from Yokohama and others sank. Five wharves were destroyed. Northwest Girls? Softball Title up Washington Champs Meet Pade-Barrick Tonight . on Sweetland .The- northwest girls' sof tball championship will be at stake on Sweetland field tonight when the Seattle Owls,, all-negro girls team which, won the Washington cham pionship, . will oppose the Pade- Barrick girls of Salem, "Oregon champions. The first of the' two games will start. at 7:30 o'clock. This game was hurriedly sched ules last night when it was dis covered " that the Washington champions, playing that night in Portland, wotzld be available for a trip here. The Seattle Owls were described as being exceptionaUy speedy, with an outstanding pitcher in the person of Lillian Brown, a south paw.: One of their specialties Is bunting for base hits, and the Pade-Barrick inflelders will have to be on their toes. -- - ' " In Portland the Owls were en gaged last night in a tight, exciting- game with " Lind-Pomeroy, Portland champions who were un able to play in . the state tourna ment here. " State tournament prices will prevail for tonight's game, as well as for the men's interstate games. Papermakers vs. S e a 1 1 1 e Dog House Bulldogs, Saturday night. Bandits Victimize ' Bantlon Merchants BANDON. Ore., Sept. ' Mr. and Mrs. Otto Schlndler were forced from their home to their drug store and made to empty the safe of $300 by .three men armed with a sub-machine gun last night. The bandits, abandoning one car. fled in the druggist's 1938 model and took Mrs.. Schindler's hat and c at. . Schlndler is .a member of the city council. The bandits said they were from Idaho. Burg Finish 18,000 Mile Trip P. B. Lunstrom, Portland, Ore artist and cartographer, joined the pair here today,, planning to accompany them-down, the Green river as far as Jensen, Utah. . Burg said he and Holmstrom traveled into the Wind river mountains to the head of Green river glacier, 250 miles by airline north of here, where he photo graphed Gannet ' peak, -13.785-foot mountain ' known for its in accessibility., ; - -' - "' The upper Green river section of the Wind river mountains la the most beautiful country I have ever seen," Burg declared, r Heavy rains in the upper riv er's basin was expected to aid the navigators in. the next leg of their trip. A fire-foot rise was forecast I before Saturday. . Sudeten Head Confers With Nazi Fuehrer Henlein Reported Bound Home. With Rejection of Peace Plans Hitler . Believed Seeking Quick End of Czech - Minority Issue . -. .- ' BERCHTESGADEN. 'Germany, Sept. 1-P)-Higii nari sources tonight reported Konrad Hen lein, leader of Czechoslovakia's Germanic minority, had depart ed bv Diane for home hear in r Adolf Hitler's rejection of an im portant part pf Czech peace plans but carrying new counter-proposals. ': Hitler was understood to have rejected the part of Premier Mi lan Hozda's "plan No. 3 call ing for a three-month truce in Czechoslovak-German n e g o t ia tions to- permit passions of the contending parties to cool down. Prompt Solution Asked by Hitler ! . The reichsfuehrer's position, reached after a long conference with Henlein and highest nazi officials, was- said to be -that a more prompt solution of. the danger-fraught Sudeten minority question was desirable. -What counter-proposals Hen lein carried to Czechoslovakia re mained a mystery.1 Conferring with. Hitler and Henlein at the reichsfuehrer's Bavarian mountain .retreat were Field Marshal Wilhelm GoeriBg. Propaganda Minister Paul Jo seph Goebbels and Rudolph Hess, deputy nazi party leader the top of the nazi hierarchy.! At the same time Britain's ambassador to Germany, Sir Ne ville Henderson, was tackling the same Czech-German problem w'ita Foreign Minister Joachim von Rlbbentrop at Sonnenberg, the latter's country, home! near, Eer Hn. "... - . J :( -. Henderson Brings- - -British Word Henderson, fresh frnm fntifcr. ences with -the British cabinet in London, was believed to have laid, before the foreign minister Brit ain's latest expressions for main tenance of peace in central Eu rope. . ' Reliable sources said Von Rib bentrop would come to" Berchtes gaden tomorrow when a confer ence of even" greater importance than- today's will be held. It Was understood Henlein would return for the, next meet ing after quickly- laying Hitler's counter-proposals, before' Czech officials. ; The Sudeten ''little fuehrer" wore no uniform when he "ar rived here today for his- meet ing with Hitler, the fourth this Tear. -r Henlein's adjutant said ." the present visit was at the sugges tion of Viscount Runciman. Brit ain's unofficial mediator in he central Europe qurrel,- who wished to push a peaceful set tlement of the trouble, Important Talks Planned Today Official quarters insisted the really vital talks, from the Ger man viewpoint, will-take place tomorrow and that nothing of ficial on results will be maria known until Friday night. Though still surrounded by secrecy, the- Czechoslovak plan advanced': was said to. call for governmental changes in Czech oslovakia to a canton systemi similar to Switzerland's, thus attenfpting to satisfy Sudeten German autonomy 'demands with authority divided between can tons and. a " federal government responsible for defense and for eign affairs." ; - Two preceding- schemes of fered by Czechoslovakia to meet the demands of-the Sudeten Ger mans, a minority otj 3.500,000, for autonomy had been rejected. Ranrlman Urges New Concessions -" - As the leaders conferred, hope gained ground that the present acute crisis, over the Czechos lovak ' dispute might be solved by new concessions urged by Viscount Runciman, "unofficial British mediator In Czechoslo vakia. These facts served to ease the tension: - ; 1. Czechoslovak quarters la .Berlin let u do Known the new Czechechoslovak plan contained such sweeping concessions that, from their point of view, the Sudeten Germans could not re ject It. . 2.' Heinlein rushed to confer with Hitler just as soon as he was Informed last sight of the British-backed ' nlan. the third tn be offered the Sudeten Germans-. The" Sudeten German Political committee also conferred today:" in Praha on- the proposals. - 3. German officials In Berlin expressed belief tht British ad vised the Czechoslovak govern ment to make concessions which would break the crisis. 4. The Berlin boverse react ed , favorably to the resumption of negotiations, . after a danger? ous atalemate, and to the calmer TATA A- ia Pnaln m V . ,9 . Ing: stocks gained from three- wav WA, J CT 1 " " II UlCaB. 1jSMU xourtns of a point to two and