I f?, " TfllfCs fits "TlTlTl P TIT - " - . - " i i- - s r ' - - - ' ------ ' 4 Tlie Weather Cloudy Friday, unsettled and rains Saturday. Moder ate temperatures. Max. Temp. Thar. 64, Min. 46. River -2.3 feet. North wind. Bargain Days CatH October 81, 'mail subscribers mt6 dollar by ' ordering The Statesman at ' the special year rate of. $4. iv EIGHTY-EIGHTH YEAR Salem, Oregon, Friday Morning, October 7, 1938 Prict 3c; Newsstands Se No. 16S Campaign Body Martha Raye Will Crew cf Bujrning Ship Rescued: lwb Men Are Missing pf 37 Aboard AFL to Keep On With Work Marry Composer Tells Treasury Head He Erred r 1 xpansion POUNDSD 165! Urn ityi (Cfaamberlaim Is Raps Morgenthau Action in Approving Activity of Magruder Maryland Revenue Chief Will Get Attention From Senate WASHINGTON, Oct. 6-(ff)-Tbe senate campaign expenditures committee told Secretary- of the Treasury Morgenthau in sharp language today that he was wrong in approving political activity ny the Internal revenue collector at Baltimore. -The committee added that it would ask the senate to act on the case. t . I , The collector, M. Hampton Ma gruder, has acknowledged telling xton-civil senrice employes In his office that he intended to support Representative David J. Lewis, later defeated for the democratic senatorial nomination by Senator Millard E. Tydings. Secretary Said -A ction Proper When the senate committee called Morgenthau's attention to this : recently, he saidthe collec-r tor's action was proper and had had his approval. To this. Committee Chairman Bheppard (D-Tex) replied today: "The committee does not agree with the position taken by the secretary. ; "On the contrary, the commit tee believes the action of the col lector of internal revenue was a violation of the spirit, it not the letter, of the law; that it was a breach of the treasury depart ment's own regulations; that it was violative of sound administra tive principles; that po excuse is to be found for it, and that the action of the collector Is to be se verely condemned." I , Legislators said the committee, if it wished, could ask the senate to pass a resolution censuring Ma gruder or recommending his re moval. It also might consider jemedial legislation covering such cases. ' Arkansas Case , . Investigated The committee also announced It would report to the senate its findings in an investigation of charges that" Homer M. Adkins, Arkansas collector of internal Tevenue, was guilty of undue po litical activity in the senate cam paign In that state. JAIXJL guiua u aiclo oa.u v a. v no basis for the Adkins charges. The committee said it found no support for charges that He'nry W. Webb was dismissed from the post of Maryland FHA director because he refuted to support Lewis. It considered reports fromTsev en other states, voting to investi gate charges of political activity -by Indiana WPA employes , and deciding to continue its investiga tions in Georgia, Illinois and Wis consin. " " 1 Riclietti Breathes Last Gasp of Gas JEFFERSON CITY, Mo., Oct. 7.-( Friday )-;p)-Sardonic Adam RIchetti, a forgotten man of the big time public enemies, died in ' Missouri's lethal gas chamber ... . . t . , . eany toaay ior me pan ne piayeu In ! Kansas City's union " station massacre of 1933. TWhat have I done to deserve this," he murmured as authorities istrapped him into the chair at six minutes after midnight. Eight minutes later he was dead. ? The one quiet-spoken sentence was the only break the erstwhile pal of "Pretty Boy Floyd made in jthe silence he had maintained since he entered the prison sev eral weeks ago. Clad only in the conventional prison shorts and blindfold, Rich etti walked calmly into "the tank" to ! become its sixth victim. With him went the last hope of officials to obtain a first hand aecount of the bizarre Kansas City, tragedy that cost the lives of four officers and their prisoners. Robert Hermanson son of one oft the massacre victims, was a witness at the execution. He is a Kansas City policeman. m i . unorthodox " Is Great Book i NEW YORK, Oct. 6.-ff)-One of the most unorthodox lives of the Christ in existence is to be published tomorrow, seven years after the death of its author. Hall Caine, the English novelist. s jThe book, of 1310 pages, con tains 650,000 words. j s rCaine's research, begun in the 80's, had piled up more than three million words of text at his death in 1931. In addition, most of his best selling novels were based on Biblical material -"The Deemster" is the story of the prodigal son; "The Scapegoat" of David and Uriah; "The Eternal City" that of Samson and Delilah. The life . of Christ was three years being put into typewritten form, after which Robert Lelgh .ton, English literary critic, spent two more years separating Caine' final draft from a mass of notes and reference material. L J Wide (Six Inches) Were the Smiles r" On ! Martha's Pan LOS ANGELES, Oct. The wide mouth of Actress Mar tha Raye parted in a big smile today as she announced that she and Dave Rose, composer, will motor to Ensenada, Baja Cali fornia, to be married Saturday. ' Constant companions at film, parties for months, the couple announced some weeks ago that they would wed when Martha obtained her final divorce from Buddy Westmore, Hollywood makeup artist. It " was granted September 28. The actress had another rea son to be happy. Her attorneys announced that financial differ ences with her father, Peter F. Reed have been settled out of court. I Italy Promulgates New Bans on Jew Union Between Italians and Jews Is Barred by j Strictures ROME,1 Oct.- 7-(Friday )-UPV- The fascist grand council ended a midnight session early today by issuing . a sweeping series - of regulations limiting the participa tion of Jews in Italy's national life. ; After a four. and a half hour session devoted largely to racial questions, fascism's supreme policy-making body banned all mar riages between Italians and Af rican, Semitic and other races." Civilian and military employes of the state were forbidden to marry -'foreign women of what ever race," and other Italians were required to hare the interior ministry's permission before con tracting any foreign marriage. The grand council prohibited Italian Jews from: : 1. Enrollment in the fascist party. ; 2. Owning or managing busi ness firms of any sort employing more than 100 persons. 3. Owning more than 50 hec tares (123.5 acres) of land. 4. Entering Italy's military services in peace or wartime. Benes Is Offered University Chair PROVIDENCE, R.L, Oct. 6-7P) Czechoslovakia's resigned presi dent, Dr. Edouard Benes, has been offered a visiting professorship at Brown university, Dr. Henry M. WristonJ head of the school, said tonight. 1 ' Dr. Wriston said the university had offered "Benes. who resigned as his nation's leader Wednesday, a position as visiting professor of international relations. The uni versity also offered to pay Benes' traveling expenses, Dr. Wriston said. '.. The offer, Dr.l Wriston explain ed, was made ; through Stephen Duggan,; director of the Institute of international education, who cabled to Benes" from New York. No reply has been received from Benes. 1 - r -Of Benes, Dr. Wriston said, "He Is a great expert In international relations. He was professor before he was politician or statesman." ife of Christ of 1310 Pages "My conclusion la that, Caine wfote, "the accounts of the virgin birth were separate documents put Into. the gospels after -they were written.' The gospels would be more conclusive without them Caine also rejects certain of the miracles, remarking that the only one common to all the gospels is the feeding of the five thousand. "I reject," he writes, "the miracle of turning water into wine as false and wrong to the spirit of Jesus, and Incapable of any rational spiritual interpretation Criticizing the accounts of the resurrection In' the "gospels, Caine declares,; however, that "if we had no other means of judging Jesus than the records of the ef fect produced by his personality, we should be compelled to con clude that he was the world's greatest man." j v,-. Coast Guard Tels Rush to Scene -to Pick ' ujJ" Man . 1 as Oil 4 off Coast of Florida JACK reported g 435-foot Tortus-- f i-ir . t -. : Tlw ler O. M. Bernuth radioed to coast guard head quarters heio she had picked up two boatloads of survivors iOnd was proceeding to Key West Labor Study Body I Broun's Proposal Head of Newspaper Guild Suggests Commission to Roosevelt ; HYDE PARK, N. Y., Oct. 6-(5) -A recommendation for the; ap pointment of a special commis sion to Investigate domestic labor conditions in the hope of bringing peace to labor's factions was made today to President Roose velt by Heywood Broun and Mor ris Watson of the American News paper Guild, who reported. he was giving the matter consideration. Broun said the commission might, make a study of labor con ditions at home similar to that made recently by a special fact finding committee In Great Brit ain and Sweden. Like that which investigated abroad, the proposed new group would make no recommendations, Broun said, but it might contrib ute materially to labor peace by making known facts on the pres ent situation. i i Besides reporting on organized labor, the commission would study the problems of unorganized workers. r Farmers would be con sulted to ascertain whether their interests paralleled those of labor. He added that creation of a special commission would avoid the necessity for a peace gesture by either the American Federation of Labor or the Committee for Industrial Organization. ? w State Office Building Proposed Industrial Accident , Body Would Build $1,000,000 Structure Here Proposal to erect a state Indus trial accident insurance building, to be located opposite the capitol and the new combined state office and library structure, was an nounced here Thursday. i The building also would house the public utility department and the unemployment compensation commission. It would cost less than $1,000,000. ; Funds for construction opera tions would be provided by the in dustrial accident commission but would be repaid by rentals charg ed to the public utility commis sion and the unemployment com pensation commission. Title to the structure would re main with the industrial accident commission until such; time asiit was paid for. Title would then pass to the state: The public utilities commis sion is now paying rent to a pri vate property owner white the un employment compensation com mission is paying rent to the Sa lem school district. ' ; ! Construction of the proposed new building would make : it pos sible to house all state activities in Salem in state-owned struc tures. ; The proposal will be submitted to the 1939 legislature. Members of the industrial accident commis sion were not available for com ment Thursday. ! Two Day r. s L-eit r or Registration , . ' ; :" ' I a ' I Registration hit the upgrade! at the county clerk's office ; yester day as the time for voters to sign up for the November 8 election dwindled to two days.. Three clerks were kept busy at the reg istration counter throughout the day. ;-.. . :..:! r i ) ' "The heaviest day's registration since Just before the primaries," said Deputy Clerk H. C. Mattson. Clerk U. G. Boyer will keep his office open from S a. m. to 8 p. m. today and Saturday to accommo date late comers. The registra tion books will be closed tomor row night. ? ' i Furniture Plant j Dispute Parleyed PORTLAND, Oct. t.-Py-Revre-sentatives of furniture workers and of the Doernbecber furniture factory gathered around a table today in closed session and talked over wage cut differences but jjhe results were unannounced.: : j! ' - The . disagreement has caused suspension of the big plant which employs about 1100. The union refused to accept a 10c per hour pay cut. -V i. , , I ,: Another meeting was .set for Saturday. Tanker Burns and ' L'LE, FlajjOct. 6. (AP) Two men Were , and another injured late today after the E. J. Bullock burned and sank near the Dry with them. Sighting the burning vessel, the Bernuth sped to the scene. The tanker had sunk before the Ber nuth, 10 miles away when the flames were seen, could approach. The Bullock went down about 30 miles east by south of .Dry Terguas, smaU islands southwest of Key West, Fla. Two coast guard vessels were rushing to the vicinity. One, had instructions jto pick up the In jured man. ' j ! Radiomarlne. at West Palm Beach, reported that 35 of the 37 aboard the tanker were res cued and that the two men miss ing were working forward where an explosion occurred about 3:30 p. m. ; Tropical radio at Miami said the O. M. Bernuth reported the missing men were Boatswain Thomas Shepard and Ordinary Seaman Charles Austin. The In jured man, whose name was not avaUable waa the chief. The Bullock, " owned by the Standard Oil company of New Jersey left Smith Bluff. Tex.j Oct. 3 for Baltimore. Wilmington, Del., is home port for the 4,029-ton tanker. State Backs FDR, States Candidate Hess Denies State Office Purge Planned; Pleads His Liberalism A plea to "work for those who carry , the Roosevelt banner""key noted the opening of the demo cratic general election campaign in Marlon county last night. The plea was sounded by Carl C. Donaugh, US district attorney, as toastmaster at the party ban quet sponsored at the Marion hotel by Chairman E. G. Neal and the county central commit tee. ; "Oregon is Just as much In back of Roosevelt now as ,ln 1936," declared Henry L. Hess, democratic nominee for governor and principal banquet speaker. Citing his record as state sen ator, Hess declared he had al ways been a liberal while "many candidates in the opposition party are trying to put. on a coat of liberalism." I Hess firmly denied he planned any purge of state employes and added that if elected it would be his "purpose to put more people to work, both in industry and in the state departments of Oregon." ' ' Oregon can best solve its un employment problem by , taking advantage of federal assistance, Hess declared. He expressed doubt of the state's ability to meet the problem alone and said he believed "in the balancing of budgets in the Roosevelt man ner." . Representing Willis Mahoney, democratic nominee for US sen ator. Warren Erwin, state chair man, warned his audience against being overconfident. He praised J. F. Ulrich for work done in (Turn to page 3, col. 1) T Newspaper Chief Will Be Mediator ' i ' SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. C-fP)- LPaul Smith, general manager of the San Francisco Chronicle, con sented tonight to act as mediator in the dispute between San Fran cisco distributors and CIO union warehousemen, which has closed down more than 100 warehouses here. ' Eugene Paton, president of the CIO International Longshoremen and Warehousemen's union, local 1-6, first suggested that the youth ful Smith act to find peace. Smith said a mediator must be called by both aides, and James Reed, presi dent of the San Francisco Dis tributors association, promptly added his invitation to Baton's. Ten Tons of Sto And That's a LOS ANGELES, Oct. gag, that betters any ever whipped? up In Hollywood by weight, at least resulted in the arrival at the- harbor today of 10 tons of stone. . , ' This stone is no ordinary stfne it is the same unadulterated limestone from the quarry where, in 1446, they broke off the chunks that went into the. building of Ireland's blarney castle. This stone is blarney stone. When Corrigan landed in Ire land, Manfred Meyberg of Los Angeles cabled his friend, John Special Assessment for Organization Work Is 'Approved Typographical Delegates Seated After Appeals by Green HOUSTON, Texas. Oct. 6-UPl Delegates to the American Fed eration of Labor convention, fac ing the prospect of more intense rivalry with the CIO ' in - the in dustrial field, voted Unanimous ly today to retain for another year a special assessment for ex panded organization work. : The recommendation of the executive council . that the fed eration continue the levy of one cent a member a month, was en dorsed without a dissenting note. j Federation officials estimated the levy would raise close to 1500,000 to finance the extension of the AFL organizing drive, not only in the craft unions, but in fields where Industrial unionism is suitable, such as cement, alum inum manufacturing, textiles, chemical, lumber and agricul ture. - ; , , "Even Greater ' Gkins" Foreseen ' ' Applauding the federation's organization drive In the past 12 months which cost the AFL 91.171,014. President William Green assured the delegates they could "look forward to' even greater gains In the next year. The convention leaders brought the special assessment matter to a vote after the convention agreed earlier In the day to ap prove conditionally the disputed credentials of the International Typographical union delegates, whose organization had refused to pay the assessment. Responding to the plea of Green not to force 1 the printers' union out of the federation, the convention voted unanimously to seat the ITU delegates "on pro bation" until they decide by a membership referendum whether they pay up a special assess ment levied a year ago as an af termath of the split with ; CIO. The AFL constitution provides suspension of membership' for any affiliated union three months or more in arrears on dues or assessment payments. j j Referendum Vote To Be Awaited To avoid an arbitrary setting aside of the constitutional! pro vision. Green and Claude G. Baker, new president of the ITU, appealed to the convention to seat the delegates until the ref erendum recently initiated by the Chicago ITU local settles the long standing controversy j over payment of the special assess- ment. , i i Tb4 credentials committee rec ommended seating the ITU del egation, and Green threw his force : behind temporary settle ment by shouting to the conven tion: ' - : ' 1 "We are not so foolish in these days when a dual secession move ment is facing us, as to drive the ITU out i of the American Federation of Labor by extend ing a helping hand to the ITU we will confound 'our enemies." Mountain Girl Picks Off Rug In Front Yard WEBSTER SPRINGS, W. Va., Oct. -JP)-A 300-pound bear that figured today to lunch on fresh pork failed to take into considera tion the deadly aim and collness of Mra. Jessie Mills Ware. The Mills mountain woman heard a pig squeal in the pen near her home and went to in vestigate taking along her hus band's shotgun. - She found the reason Mr. Bear. The animal annoyed at the Interruption, rose on its hind feet and started for the housewife. One blast from the gun: felled the huge animal. , Then Mrs. Ware calmly " went back to .the house, hung up her gun and began figuring on mov ing the living Toom furniture to make way for an attractive bear skin rug. . x , Demos Exceed GOPs PORTLAND, Oct 6-VPy-Tem ocrats exceeded republicans 93, 802 to 85,954 in Multnomah county registration today. JThe total registration was 182,282. The previous high was 182,002. loiv up M. Lotta Rodger, who was visiting Ireland: "Buy , me . the blarney stone." Bodger replied,-"I've bought the whole quarry." Then Meyberg still kidding again cabled: "Ship me 10 tons of it." "I'll be doggoned, said Mey berg when offers ranging from jewelry firms, which want bits of the stone, to the" folks In San Francisco, who'd like to make a new blarney castle out of the 10 tons on Treasure island started coming in.- - - .-' ; . . "Maybe this won't be ! such a lot of blarney, after aU," he guessed ' Blarney Premier Given Approval Vote Of 366 to 144 Further War Preparation Is. Announced Even as Debate Ends Chamberlain Says Nation Kept out of Conflict by Policy LONDON,- Oct. -(ff)-The house of commons today overwhelming ly ratified the government's peace policy which Prime Minister Ne ville Chamberlain- said saved "Czechoslovakia from destruction and Europe from Armageddon. Even as he wound up the four- day debate on the settlement of the German-Czechoslovak crisis with a call to the legislators to recognize that he had saved peace. Chamberlain announced further preparations for war. . The house by a vote of 366 to 144 registered its confidence in his policy, after it had rejected by 369 votes to 150 a labor motion for disapproval, and then adjourn ed until Nov. 1. ' In his final speech, the 69-year old prime minister rejected pro posals for an Immediate general election, for conscription of the nation's man-power and i for a world politicor-economic confer ence. . , : ; 3Iilitary Inquiry Is Ordered He disclosed the government already had "ordered that a prompt and thorough Inquiry should bo made into the whole of our preparations, military ana civil, in order to see, no matter what happens during these hectic daysv what other steps may be necessary to make good our de fense In ' the shortest possible time." In the voting, the house approv ed, in the words of the motion the policy of his majestyjs gov ernment by which war was avert ed in the recent crisis' and sup ported "efforts to reach a 'lasting peace. ! i It was understood zo govern ment supporters abstained: from voting. They Included Former First Lord of the Admiralty Al fred Duff Cooper; and Winston Churchill. ; ;- Defends Policy ; - Before Commons ! Defending his policy in the weeks of crisis which ended with the four-power: Munich accord. Chamberlain told the legislators: "I haveftbeen charged with cow ardice, weakness, presumption and stupidity. I have been accus ed of bringing the country to the edge of war and have been denied the merit of snatching It back to safety : : I . " He said that war today was a different thing from what is used to be and that in. the. very first hour It would strike the man in the street and his wife and chil dren at home, j II Then he declared: I "You cannot ask people to ac cept such a prospect unless you feel yourself, and can make them feel, that the cause for which they are going to fight is a vital cause -a cause than transcends all or dinary human values and a cause to which you can point, if some day you win a victory, and say that cause is safe." j . " He said that when the; British government was convinced that Sudetanland could not possibly be kept r within ! Czechoslovakia It strongly urged the Prague govern ment to agree to cede the territory to Germany. : 1 "To accuse me oi having by that advice betrayed Czechoslova kia is simply preposterous," he said. "What we did was to save her from annihilation and gave her a chance for a new life." Penn Court Raps Newspaper Acjtioh PITTSBURGH. Oct. C.-4'P-The state supreme court ' today repri manded the Philadelphia Inquirer for the publication of a story pre dicting court decisions and turned the case over to the Philadelphia county district attorney "for such criminal or such further iaction" required by law, " i ; The story, for which City Edi tor E. Z. Dimitman assumed re sponsibility, -.forecast accurately the court's verdict on the grand Jury laws last Monday (several hours before they , were handed down. Chief Justice John W. Kep hart told Publisher M. L. lAnnen- berg: - " -I- -:! " , "Such articles bring discredit on the administration of ; Justice. This particular offense,' following another one of a like .. character committed in your newspaper, re quires us to say to you that the practice of writing and publish ing such articles must be stopped. It is a contempt, of court, i We re gard this offense so serious that punishment must .'be visited on those who are responsible." To Accuse Him "Preposterous" NEVILLE CHAMBERLAIN Cauls Wish Soviet To Stick Around ! J - ' --: - - i- Bonnet Hopes Russ Will Join in Guarantee of ! Czech Remains PARIS, Oct. - (JP) - Foreign Minister Georges Bonnet Intimat ed tonight before the foreign af fairs committee! of the chamber of deputies that France still wants thfe soviet union s big army on her side despite any; agreement she may reach with Gesnjimf. Bonnet salt! ho '"hoped." Russia would join the projected inter national guarantee of what la to be left of Czechoslovakia Com mittee members jaid he expressed the stand of the French goyern-r ment. -Reichsfuehrer Hitler has been reported insistently opposed - to Russian participation in the guar antee. . j j " ' It appeared, however, that the French and British governments had ruled against exclusion of Russia. I ? The reading oi a telegram Irom Hitler- to former Premier ; Pierre Etienne Flandin caused an uproar at another point In the committee meeting. The fuehrer thanked Flandin for his efforts toward complete collaboration between France and Germany." Still another development in the crisis aftermath was a move by Premier Edohard Daladier to demobilize French armed forces by next Tuesday despite little In- dication that Germany was taking similar steps. De Valera Seeks Irish Plebiscite DUBLIN, Oct, formed .source Prime Minister . 6-OSV-A.n , in- today disclosed Eamon De Va lera had . seized the moment fol lowing upon the Munich settle ment of Czechoslovakia's minor-: ity problem to raise in London the question of the existent par tition of Ireland; Ireland's prime minister stop ped at No. 10 ) Downing street on his way home from Geneva Oct. 4 to talk with Prime Min ister Neville Chamberlain who was ' fresh from Munich - where partition of Czechoslovakia was agreed. ,' ;.j , ' -. '-'' It was learned De Valera In dicated Ireland felt the time was opportune for la plebiscite in parts of northern Ireland's six counties which jare under the jurisdiction of the Belfast par liament and a governor, appoint ed by the king. j. . Government circles In Dublin predicted that four of the six counties now . cut off from the Dublin government would rote for Dublin if such a plebiscite were held. V V 'Hail Our Liberator39 Greets Fuehrer Cojttnting His Czechs RUMBURG, Sudetenland, Oct. esAdolf Hitler cameinto the second Sudetenland zone today, to a retention which rivalled his pre vious two grand, entries into his newly acquired territory. : Tolling bells and roars of "hall bur liberator" greeted the fuehrer who proceeded ,M a grandstand in the market, square for a brief speech. ; ' " "".' " "Our vow." he said, "in this hour is that every foot of German soil on which the flag of the Ger man, reich has once been planted would remain German forever.! He . reached here at mia-aay, having crossed .Into the second mrf a nftlnrAAn AtaAn an1 . UPtl f fl Tl . Military occupation' of this area was completed yesterday. ' ' Upheld Slovaks Given ? Special Posts InGover nment Dr. Joseph Tisot Named "Prime Minister for Slovakia Bohemia in Siege State : From Slowly Circling . German Army PRAGUE, Oct, 6RPV-T h - Czechoslovak government launch ed a determined program j today to build a more unified repub lic by binding together Czechs and Slovaks remaining within its narrowed borders. j The first step came with tbe appointment of Dr. Joseph Ti sot, vice president of the Slovak People's party, . as "prime min ister for Slovakia" in the new Prague government, His appointment, granting tbe Slovak autonomy within tk framework of the Czechoslovak government, was requested by the Slovak People's party I which formed a coalition with two eth er Slovak political groups tb nationalists and agrarians. Slovaks Promise Cooperation .The Slovaks, holding their congress at Zilina, reaffirmed their independence but promised cooperation with the Czechs in an effort to maintain the repub lic. The new autonomous Slovakia will have four ministers in the Prague government, in addition to Dr. Tisot. I - The Slovak minister, acting quickly to obtain the equal rep resentation in Prague, as? prom ised by Premifr Jan Syrovy, nominated Martin Sokol and Karol Sidor for ministerial posts. , He will propose the nomina tion of. the two additional 'Slovak ministers later from among his followers. j . Slovakia will be In charge of everything in Its territory ex cept foreign affairs, national de fense, administration of the na tional state debt and concen tration of loans. These four Items will be un der the Prague government. Dr. Tisot and his four' minis ters also will sit in Czechoslovak parliament, 1 Bratislava To Be Slovak Capital The seat , of the Slovak gov ernment undoubtedly will be Bratislava, principal city bf Slo vakia, " 'j I J - The Czech half of the repub lic th old kingdom of Bohem ia meanwhile waa almost in a state -of siege from slowly en circling German! domination. The prospects faced tonight by Bohemia, as a result of i cision of the international u detenland commission at i Berlin last .night, were: j 1. The occupation of a fifth zone which gave to tbe Germans a major portion of - the i famed Moravian gateway fortifications once pronounced by a French commission as ' "stronger than the Maginot line." ! 2. Virtual isolation, since rail communications and highways would be "barred by German con trol under the commission plan. , 3. T-h e loss of many coal mines .and industries under the fifth zone agreement which the Czechs characterized as ,) "sum marily approved without i asking us." - - - --- - 4. The loss of telephone con nections with the outside j world. Telegraph and radio would be the only communications ileft. The predicament of thousands of non-nazi Germans, social dem ocrats and communists who fled Sudetenland to the interior f Czechoslovakia was growing ser ious. : , Scens bordering on panic were enacted in Prague as tbe Ger man circle drew slawly aruond the capital. i Doctor Resigns COQUILLE, Oct. 6-.nP)-Dr. C. L, Coyle, former Corvallls doc tor, announced his resignation as Coos county health physician ef fective Nov. 1. . f - ; Approximately 4,000 Jjroops advanced, meanwhile, into tbe Sllesian fourth zone, southeast of here. They were commanded by Colonel-General "Von Rundstedt who took ' over one-third :of the fourth zone by tbe end of tbe flrstday-tf ocenpation. - Preparations ' were under way for .occupation of. the fifth zone, extending " beyond the definite .limits drawn at Munich and since arranged by the interna! ional Su detenland commission, i .This process, to incorporate farther what was regr(2ed as pure German "districts into t!e reich, was scheduled to proceed beginning tomorrow and consum ing until next Monday .