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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1937)
Weather: Fir Home Edition u- 'TW LAN C COUNTY'S HOME NEWSPAPER. L93 ' today's news TObAt EUGEXK, OREGON', SATURDAY, AUGUST 21, 1937. PRICE: onstkjcet?8 news wands a. NO. 53 mm BMLWflY IBBfllEB IV JAPS IBS-Mil : LUMBER MILL y5ii aSIMIOPINIS wa A mwmMSl&: J new ahack MAtiMfcJ5:.'. 1 i Damage Is Estimated At ir1'"P. rl&ll Wf?- 1' 'JL . ...... . c. swta v v . t, j.w; ii - i immui imiii-ntm a - ..!- .; . wa.4s jimi unneentration oi unmcsa I rr J . L...t-tv-.: JBtifclb Aitt m- pot -.. 3&l - f I Aid to Stricken rt'"'rfL i uY"P "IttH ir - J ,W. 5 G..ENDALE.Ore..Au,,l.) V vtE.------l' f LI'-HHJ'5 I J C,a- j . .l - Weary firemen still fought tnia morn- ""Jrf?NiiS : " " M "xStfTi -:- ' iuil SI Cw- !"E, m ,p i i'i"'k ."".k", wcb H i r O ' f. I . M rjfe PwTIaIpoo riverH'1 mm'm mmmjiw ',w -IVHilaTITMSaasaCTfc a-" -ni , y last night rased ibrotiib the Ingham it -4 m f , 'f4- 1 j . ... LJj -VjTT V" J ' rSaMaaJilj fMW5lwlLuiiJ lui'r . . J.; . y A I.umbor company plnl horr, ruinK f .1 ' ' " 1 K k'i fcWkVJVN-' " 1 ' '" . f . V.iV daiuasr rouEhl.v rsiimaird at W. lr f " Tl l'! 1VT if 1 'V fc L,,- ,1,71 FwSL. J Lday Adjournment Is: Assured By Action In Congress JOSEVELT REBUFFED. Turned Down By Legislators fASHIMiTOS. Aug- J1. hcojf ai'proM a compromise L.( . t-, r,)N',.X low-cost hous- 1 F . " , l-MI 1'hn L nj totf wis l- io -at irfVtan'P " lhe tr,,mtro tl nd thr raeaMirc to the : HouP. k DMjrr rprPPois tb first : ittfk "Q th pf'blem of get iiuo dwpll"8 tuto decent homes. l"ASHINjTN, Aus. J1. 0P IniT conirfss nearcd s'ljounimrnt but wi'h f-r- mun ot it onsinai :-io p"strrtnd (hit members half 'M Print Hortfevelt to rail i bifk in two months. tbi pin h end will come itfldown." Tut Bills Passed (ro mijor piprfs of If prislation went tit White H"Ue yesterday the r qucti hill and the tax loophole ft tax bill wa. certain of approval. pmjeDt bad asked for it Then Sotuj revenue was fnr below ex li tions lt.t sprinft. It hits par lirlj it what treasury officials t the urt by the wealthy of pQil holding companies to avoid fcf leute aUo sent a $'14,000,000 m control lull to the White House, prwlfnt indicited he would siirn I'houch not approving of all its MM, VfltoH Pla. . Rvelt TPtooH a Kill v ..i W n the minimum annual pay luiw Matei marshals. PWl rt.fiH.nnT annronria- SEE CONGRESS STORY PAGE 6 I'LL TELL ONE WITH Sir Hubert Wllklni, Arctic explorer, and a crew of four aboard, the 17-ton flying boat Guba In lower nicture rlaea from the water at North Beach Airport, L. I on the flrat leg of a flight whoie ob jective waa to search for the six Russian flyera who were forced down In the northern wastes on- trans-polar flight.- Huddled around the hatch In the fuselage the rescue flyera are seen at top before the take-off. Left to right, In foreground, are Wllklns, Herbert Holllek Kenyon, pilot, and Raymond Booth, radio operator; In back, Harry Brown, mechanic; and Russell Rogers, pilot. Franco Nearing Santander Area liy EOB RUINS "J Eittfr wbat business vnii'r in. pmtcni dpnds a whnle lot on Cr"D'P- ibis d-iit mean that y"u have'ta keep zahhln' away all the time. The best salesmen know when to stop talk in. They know that too much enthusi asm li;ib!(i to By EDWARD J. NEIL WITH INSrUliENTS ON THE SANTANDER FRONT, Auc 21.) Weather permitting:. Generalissimo Francisco Franco expects his army to reach Santander possibly in the early part of next week and that Spanish city may be his before another Satur day. Today his two strone southern col umns hammered with almost monoton ous success at dwindling government defenses, with but 2" miles of road way to cover before they can knife into Sant-andor. In the mountains on Santamler's southwest, with one of these columns, this writer witnessed a battle as .fan tastic as anything in Spain's fantastic civil war. It was a battle of ghosts mud and blood-smrared ghosts strug make the o t b e r cline hand to hand in a dripping fog. For six days r rancn s airmen, itupi.-i There j re even t i m e a . tillery and infantry had blasted at the A'hen dnn-nri"lit in. finrAmmnnl linos mnst ac u better than s lot'ta words- of the time under the broiling rays of an uncurtained sun, routing the half-hearted Basques, the more stub liorn Santanderese and the diehanl Asturian miners who are the back bone of the northern defences. Then down came the fugs, shroud ing the mountaintops. snaking every one in mist and hiding attacker and attacked alike. Yesterday the Bnrtros road column of shock troops thrust J t'Wnm frPro'h,r fella 'askin' - 0U d hinrr, V,:. '1 V! raph office 'and sent ysnm with j(JM on, woHt r'!1, n" The telegraph k.i, ' '"rr.s llir the same , . ' l,h' says. "No. ,! rV'B b"' '"ink Im f'-t 11- through the fug at a point abut 1- ' t.!-':ir- Features. Inc. miles south of Torrrlaveia. BARROW. Alaska, Aug. 2.) Pilot Jimmte Mattem. noted American distance flier, reported today he flew 14 irt miles out over the Arctic ocean seeking the missing Soviet trans-polar olane but instead found impossible landing conditions. Mattern flew north of Barrow then west to a point where his gasoline supply began to run short. He landed here with his tanks empty. He said be had difficult flying con ditions and encountered frequent fogs. He flew low mo5t of the time. The Soviet jce breaker Kra-sin pro gressing about five miles in 15 hours through heavy ice floes, was off shore. Aboard her were three ski equipped planes which will use the Krassin as a base for another phase j of the hunt. Sir Hubert Wilkin and his five j muipi'iiions took off from the Slave ; river on the next leg of their search. They left for Coppermine, N. W. T. : I'il.t .adkoff of Kussia was pre paring to hop off in his hjdroplane to coer the coast from here to Ak l.mk. about .Vm miles en--t and south, lie then planned ti fly to Bank?. Laud, in th Arctic ocean about fiixi (mile- northeast of Aklnvik across h-dphin and I'nin strait. He re- i fuelled here with ni gallons of gaso line GLENDALE, Ore.. Aug. 21. OP) 1 Weary firemen still fought this morn ing to keep hi check flames which lait night raged through the Ingham Lumber company plant here, causing damage roughly estimated at $250,000. The flames, which cast a glare Tisiblc for more than .10 miles, swept through five dry kilns, destroyed tbe large planing mill and consumed more than four, milliou feet of lumber. Hundreds of men, engaged in fight ing the blare shortly after its di covery at 7:10 o'clock last night, drove tbe fire back from the main portion of the mill and saved that 300,000 plant. The firefighters were aided by the wind, which waa blowing away from the mill proper. Stomp Out Em bars Lacking equipment sufficient tot the needs, men engaged in combatting the blaze stomped out live embera with their feet and tore away burning ma terial with tbeir hands as they work ed on the mill root and on pilea of lumber in the mill yards. Lumber carrier drivers, shielding their faces with blankets, drove their ungainly vehicles into the very edge of the blistering inferno, aud at high speed dragged out smoking piles of lumber and robbed the fire of fuel for its spread. The speed with which the "straddle bugs'' cleared the, dnfks between th mill and the yard waa in h large measure responsible for sav ing the mill. Water to fight the blaze was pump ed from the mill pond by tbe mill's steam plant, which was put into op eration after power lines were de stroyed. Calls sent to Roseburg and Grants Pass for equipment, resulted in a pumper being dispatched from Grants Pass to furnish additional lines of hose. Men furnished by the Doug las County Forest Protective asso ciation aided the Glendale fire fight ers. Tbe fire was believed to hare started from sparks from the waste fuel incinerator or from a locomotive. Humidity waa low, and the flames spread. Glendale residents said, with the rapidity of an explosion. The loss is fully covered by insur ance. B. D. Gardner, office manager reported. CJHANGHAI'S world-famous Bund, fronting on the Whangpoo river, now a street of shambles at Japanese kJ and Chinese forces fight for control of this city of 3.500,000 Inhabitants. Death toll was counted Into the thousands Including three United States citizens and Immediate evacuation of all American women and children was ordered at battle between land, air and water forces became general. BOltllf BILL WASHINGTON. Aug. 2 L fU.fi President Roosevelt today aimed the Mansfield bill to administer the tMKMiUi Bonneville hydro-electrlc. navigation and flood control project on the Columbia river. The nlll rnllK for the appointment of an administrator at lo,O00 per year to sell and distribute the power nfler it leaves tbe central "switch board. ' The administrator w.mld be appointed by the secretary of he in terior. The army engineers would have charge of the flood control and navi gation facilities together with genera tion of electric power up to the "switchboard." Proponents of the legislation In both houses pushed tbe bill to final action rigorously atnet the power w ill be ready for dstribution about Jan. 1 and heavy losses would have occurred unless there waa a set-up to admin ister it. Student Nurse Is Victim of Killer; Police Start Hunt CHICAGO. Aug. 21. fU.R A 10-year-old student nurse was ravished and slain in the Chicago hospital to day l.'lth victim of aei maniacs in two years. Police assigned extra squads to hunt for a "long-armed" negro seen near the hospital. The victim was Miss Anna Kuchta, red -haired member of a south side Russian immigrant family. She had been a student nurse fhe months. Tbe crime was discovered only a BREVITIES PORTLAND. Aug. 21. CHO rov er Whalen. president nf the New York World's Fair Corporation, appointed C. T. Haas of Portland as chairman of the Oregon unit of the nations! ad visory committee for the fair planned in llWti. Other members include Carl W. Washburne, Eugene. PORTLAND. Aug. 21 . (Pi Tres pass charges brought by Paul D. Ross, Multnomah county relief administrator against 17 persons who picketed bis office here ITiiirsdiiy, will 1 aired in court at a hearing Aug. 25. PORTLAND. Aug. 21. P- Po lice had no legal objection to a Chin ese at Rrooks. Ore., ordered a ship ment of tear gas. but they wondered why he wanted It. Their attention was called to the shipment when the express company was unable In locale the assignee. PORTLAND. Aug. 21. iP- Re. tail business during the coming holi dar season will be as great as in 1120, Henry Heimann of N'e-w York, executive manager of the National SEE WIRE BREVITIES PAGE 6 OPEN FIRU Strife-Torn Shanghai I3 Swept By Flames Of War BULLETIN! SHANGHAI, Sunday, Aug. ?2, (U.Rl Japanese lines on the Whangpoo river were severed by desperate Chinese assault for the first time early today. Nippon, ese strategists responded Instant ly with a concerted attack by air, water and land. PORTLAND, Aug. 21. OPr An1 AFL challenge of the legal Tight. f tha national ImIiot relations hoard to interfere opposed today the. offer of Charles W, Hope, regional director of the Itoard, to conduct an "unofficial audit in seven Portland mills closed by the AFL-ClO dispute. Abe W. Mulr, tire president of the I'n it ed Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners, pnrent organiraflon of AFL woodworking unions, voiced the defiance, claiming that the labor board Imd "violated its own purposes" in acting In the case of the St. Paul and Tacoma Lumber company plutit at Tacit in a. "Now the Tacoma mill, under the law, must reopen and face a boycott declared by AFL organir.a lions throughout the Cubed States," Muir said. 'Will that benefit either labor or lhe employer? Certainly not. 'The brotherhood is going to un tangle its own affairs. Portland null owners biive no right to break ciiMing agreementa with the A I'L and we won't recognize any pretended rinhl of (he labor board to step in." A t'WMt property deal was com pleted Friday evening by the Eugene city school board when it voted to pur chase the property of W. L. Kincaid, north of the Frances Willard school. The property comprised about 10 lots. With J. F,' Cramer In attendance ss the superintendent of schools, the Utard went ahead to consider teach ing assignments in the city school sys tem and came out with these announcements: I.yle hnwtli. eiser, Idaho, was urn If?,, af H Has Sermons "Preached" Twice Defiant Medford Matron Released moment allr II bapp-n.1 t7 Miss hirnl inMniTtnr in urimr. and norrnre I'.lnioioki, IS. Mum Kuril- mm hptnatim l Kiia-rnr Inch -b""l. la s rnnmmatr. Miss Plm"ki rnt Mr,. Mnhl Kir-rhrn.n hirH i. I" awiilrn thr nlh.r cirl ftr Min i .i hool nun. K.it-. r-p,iiiK Mrs. Itillh Ktj'-hrn In-,, -hour r-.i ri'f. Mi.n I.Hrxon. rrKicm-il. KiK-hn a iiii.l. b"dv ni nrnr llir Kin- llr Tj..r , hired " i-uttwliati i"w- ; nt KliHn e.-li'.nl. A dnrk man In a while nhirt. dark j q he lx.rl el... aullinrir.,'i llie pur tr"iji.erh and rap had me fo.,t nut the ,-hai.e -of 'J! f.,l.inc metal rhaira for windw. He rlatfere.l (piieklr don n the Kuzene hivli -hf',l atl'ht'.ri'lin. he ftre e.cai hile Mi. a Palinw.ki and .Vat o,m rhaira for the hiKh ereameil. .rhoni cafeteria. -T:. Hi-. .! 'ss tl. f , -1. pe- re snd du-turbs no one in the -.n-M'nnonite cr"Ct i..n. ho are neark all familiar lew C.UI1 III, I.Ukllsu. .u-u 14 ii-'n of being worM where ' hed it tbe rime -i' i a rel;sic From County Jail' Late Sports with the sign language. A few jears ago it wait a ittle morr difficult. Tbe Mennonites nearly all speak German, but in those dajs only -erroon was given in German. An in i MLI'FoRD. Ore,. Aug. 21 'A" I Fl-rhannah M .e Becknell, Mdford matron was freed from the county jail rlv this morning after serving 2 dats of .Ml day sentem-e. imposed bj Eugene Man Wins ("Iran! fKamnion in Grant Pass Event SP Schedule Delayed As Wheel Comes Utf GRANTS PASS, Aug. 2!. P A magnificent spike of llfrinltnge, fav orite new salmon pink va nety, dis played by D. S. Pruitt of Eugene, won the grand champion award as the Crania Pass gladiolus show entered its second day. Exhibits by William V. Gli of Grants Pass garnered seven first places, three second awards, ami three ihird places to total .'17 tointa as wweei.Miake winner. Mr. Pruitt won the sweepstakes Inst year with first prir.ex. A huge Lrberly Bell of white glads hung on a yok of orchid and all Riispended in an orchid arch won for G. A. Shaw and Sons of (.rants Pas, the majority of the 'J.'Mmi vole cast bv visitors in the general eUnlul f 'In ijk A nfler son depicted a rn in b"W in flowers, and Melt mi Parker a pastel shell, for second ami third prizes. The show vull close tonight when Shirley Kiehel. chosen tuern Gladif. mi. I're-iileni u i; Phimrner of the GrHnls Pas. Iilndiolus society, oiion -ors, distnliiMr lhe pri.e-w inning flower. A repair crew from Southern Pa cific headquarters in F.ugene was sent out Saturday morning to Heather, about i'iTi miles southeast of this city near McCredie Springs, where a wheel broke on the diner of the West ('oast Limited. The trnin was not derailed and passengers in the rear rnra were moved forward to prrmil the train to continue. Southern Pacific officials i;taid the accident caused no injuries to paengere., hut I tint train rcIicmiiIpk to Kin math Fulls were delayed about three hours. By H. R. KKINS TTnite1 Treaa Staff t'orresponjiilenfc (Copyright, J037 by l.'nited Press) S H A NO H A T. An g. 2L 0J.RV- Scores of Japanese airplanes late tfH night launched a terrific bombardment of the Shanghai-Nanking railway along which Chinese reinforcement n were pouring into the battle area; around this flame-swept city of 3 ."MKt.OOO people. Simultaneously Japanese warship in the Whangpoo river began bomb Itardlng the Chinese positions in the Vangtsepoo area of tha international settlement. Strong Chinese units hail been concentrating there all dny prep aratory to a midnight assault on the Japanese lines In the Hongkew sec tor. The Japanese were attempting to eonsolidnto and reinforce their front line positions extending from lionk liew to Yantrtaepoo, Battle Increases The battle which has raged heraj for a week following the shooting of two Japanese navy men by Chine, sold (era the night of Aug. 0 had reached unprecedented pro port inns na midnight approached. Hundreds nf fires were burning ami more than 2.V) square blocks of tlia city chiefly in the Chape), Yangtse poo, Hongkew, and Pootung areas either were in flames or were smoul dering ruins. Hauiage was estimated at $ir0,0MM)00. Battle crewa on foreign warships in the Whangpoo river were at their stationa fearing new shelling such as that which killed Seaman Frederick -I. Falgont on the lr. S. S. Augusta, flagship of the Aniatic squadron, yes terday and wounded 17 of his com panions. With four American ntlzeni known to have been killed and many wounded the naval board of inquir sitting altoard the Augusta completed Ita investigation of the shelling of the ship and adjourned after sending ita report to Washington, where it will be made public. Bombers Roar Overhead At. 0 pr m. sqiiadroua of !,; bomb 500,000 Feet of to l ireen ierprt,r rt it into Kr:lih for the ! Jumit of the i'ea'-e William It. t "1'- 'I'W- . ... ........ rj an n lhe most few who ri,H not underMnnd t.erman am tie talley 1 ,nj ,,. mt ,ime ii was nen in ' "arriab'jru. ! the nen lancuase, thu aorommodat- num.er nf I . ,hr,, .rp,. "tten The interpretinc la ilua!l.r done bv Earl Baker or 1-evi II teter and if ther are not peron who nr-rsMonailr M "-an read as IJ! -hie to h.ar lanc'iaEe. man, lor non-P'."es.ion v. no ..t ilrier license, ."-he waa aenienre.l Jmly - I. and m allowed foir days off her .eiiten'-e for a-l behavior. The jailer reported Mra. ller.nell had I-een a model pn.oner. and "wa- prejent bj aome other j in fine ipirita hen .he 1" ft."" mav be a : r rtenn. re(H.rie.i ..i... .o,, NF.WrtiKT, ft I., Aue. '.'1. Ion itudge. world amateur tennia are. won the hi.tortr Newport I'aaino tour nament for the aerond lime in three .ears today by defeat inr one nt Amerioa", most promiaiiig- yoijnjutera, Ul year-old Hobby Hirt tt( Ia An telea, tl-4, 6 b, H I, H i Logs Lot in Fire Firecrackers Save Lite or 1 my Child Wingrove Jailed On Drunk Driving Count Wilbur Clark Wiiigrotc was fined 51 'Hi and given ::il d t s in jml by .(net ice of the Pence .(.. n P.ryson Satnr'lay on a drunken liming clmrge. HlS license wa ttbo si-pefilci. Cver ett Sherman Van Km -n haw been cited to appear in court on a reekle driving charge and Herman Clifford Bradley on a "harge of operating a truck of e.ce.fi width without proper clearance lighti. SEE CHINESE WAR STORY PAGE & WEATHER NEWS Saturday was a fair dsy, w-ith thl sun shining and the temperature re maining at a comforttible level. Fri day' rnitf irnuin was OREGON: Fair tonight and Sun day but cloudy in north portion mid on coast: wanner in inferior of south. west portion tonight; cooler in inter ior Sunday; moderate changeable wind off coait. STATISTICS: Maximum Friday, V; minimum Saturday, 4. No pre cipitntion. Willnmettc riter minu 2 feet; wind. nortliwt, SIUSLAW TIDES: Sunday, high, 12;(tt a. m., : ',f p. m.; low. :t a. tn., tt:.'i2 p. m. Momlav. hitrh, I2:4tl a m.; low, 1 :.'! p. m. Tuesdav, huh, I :.'t:; a m., 'J.i p. m.; low, 7.M a. m., K:27 p. m. MARSHFIHI.H. Aug. 'Jl - t'ioa county's fimt irrvmi fire of the season, burning in 12' nt seres nf lash on the east fork of the Millicoma river, was belieted to hare destroyed ,'fts'l.iss'i feet of decked loga and threat ened Valuable merchantable stands. The C. K. Hick. Brady and ,al operations were affected. Smrf rvVi loggers and CCC men were fighting the blan. to st un not 'me child. Although tbe children nf mutes , not apply immenia-eiy w.r n, . .-IL- . nr,1.P tn i,nHertnd t he ir d n e r a e-cne, "b'lt want.- to think parents they are trained In the sign ..le,j J "ff orie " fe tbre. i l lrejrhing ! .serrnon to Hinds in r csrsf.;py ; ":i t lnje it n-.t inter I tae prea'h- lanrunge and ptck it up almot ss eaibi as tliet do the .p.-kr-n Kngbh. lhe mute part of the rot;gregtioii here often con-i's of 12 memlers, thus makirg quite a portion of tb cong regation wb are aecomro"JateJ by the sign interpretation. This is sa id by members of the ! Mennonite church t be the or'v , -hur. il in the ,.r'd h-ri I n- rid ; j'U'-b a provitwn f-r mtubTi of thir I sert. the matter ot er for a w b'1.'' Tne I'-H 'license under ubirh Mr. lie knelt hd -en driui-j br tut". ha been de rlnred woyj. and turned over to the ecretarj of :-tae's offu-e. Im applications of Mrs. Bekne for a dmer's Iieeu-e were rejened i b th secretary of itte on the ground she bad faded to fill out the lir'h di -pace pptperlt. Mr. Berk cell, fnend. aj. sMI in-"t he it. reju :r ed "V v to report t 'ie number of br jesrt. Dot the date. KOBKST IIILIpH. Aug. 21 P--Helen Jscol clinched the Wigblman ctjp for America for the seventh straight year by defeating Mary Hard nick of F.nrland, 2 ft 4. H 2, in the j f i re t of toflay s concluding matches, j D.-li!- A -1.- lie, ,rtor. .... ,h. Am.,!,.. ,. ' KCSOlU tlOn ASltS four straight and p'lt the remaining three matches in the light of eibibi lions. Dog Legislation DALLAS. Aug. 21 . A A pack age of f irecrackerh, hidden away on a kitchen shelf, were rredited today by William Siirmger with sating tbe life f if hia tw'i-tnonth old baby boy when his four room house caught fire fol lowing the eiplosion of an oil stove. Springer's wiff sit outside the hou e and her fir-t i-vlitnation of dan ger was the eiploding f irecrsckers. Alarmed she rushed into the house and found the kitchen ablaze and lhe flames already eating their way through the nail into the bedroom where lhe i hihl lav sleeping The child was not harmed. Sustained Yield Program Will Be Provided For 0 And C Lands WASHINGTON, An. 21, . i Representative James Mtt of S Oregon emigre-men- and interior de- 'tire., said he was "well satisfied" lie in, with UNDER Hit BED At the eierijtive meeting of the fjiae County f ederation of Women's FAIR TO OPEN jeluhB r rtday afternoon at the f reswel) riunoouse, a resolution was passer. PORTLAND, Aug. 21. 'i The proposing that a state taw be parsed NEW YORK. Aug. 21. & They Mjltnmah county fair will open Mon- t that 'wuM protect human, sheep 'hauled two girl- from under Robert day here with the largest rrr nf and rattle from vieioija d"gn." The ! Taylor's bd and held buck hundred tnatofk and farm eththils in years, matter was brought up s a rr-nli of father admirer- at t h ( ' h I If ! fa n Will hat ttflmiHaw: fraat fin the nt th fit frr.ni Knein f i1rl m.m lha nuilinti r.icttiro tcl opening day. j pending retrial ka i'iatre court faert. .Europe oo tbe liner Rereuiana. parttnent officiaN Joined IikIhv in ev presHing sat infacl mti with a toll setting up a sustained-) ie mnntigeinfiit pro gram for some 2..VKI.IHNI timbered acres of reele grunt lands. The measure, aaiting the pres. flent'a si gnat tire, provides for red Is- jtnnunoit m revenue, giving grunt laml counties Bipronimlely jkhi.immi annualtv in lien of fates previously rei-nted from the Oregon at Cali fornia Railroad company and the Coos Bar Wagon Road company, from which the government confmcaled the ila nd for violation of grant terms. pier t"day Iniern-r lcparlioent officials said sailed for;the lie plan ltottld lut the adiuinis- Hration "oo a business basia," while the protisiona which include; 1. Sustained yield management. 2. Perpetual payment of ."( per cent of the revenue to the counties. ii. Payment of 'Ti per cent to coun ties until delinquent lax h"s reim bursements have been liquidated, alter which 2.1 per cent will go to the government to clear a deficit in the land grant fund. 4. Payment of 2f pr cent to the interior department for administra tion. 5. A guarantee that the annu.il rev entie o count ie h;ill never h less than 7H per cent vi the f)0,tMjU ireceired in 1931