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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 24, 1933)
GapitalAJottiial The Capital Journal Subscribes to President Roosevelt's Program CITY EDITION Oregon: Pair tonight and Friday; slightly cooler; changeable winds. Local: Max. 93; Min. 48; rain 0; river -2.8; smoke overcast; vari able winds. 45th YEAR, No. 201 Entered as second class matter' at Salem, Oregon SALEM, OREGON, THURSDAY, AUGUST 24, 1933 PRICE THREE CENTS ON TRAINS AND NEW STANDS FIVE CENTS fnUI Tlfflit o fifty LTLI Wl DO OUR MftT FREAK STORM STILL LASHES NORTH COAST Entire Village of 800 Be ing Submerged Below Dam of Lake Additional Deaths Added To List of 29 Known Damage Millions (By the Associated Press) An entire village of 800 lying he low the dam of an overflowing mountain lake in upstat New York was endangered today as the At lantic seaboard's raging storm swept Inland leaving in its trail many -dead and injured and millions in damage. Inhabitants of Plcischmanns awoke to find their town half flooded and the emergency gates of Switzerland lake already three feet under the rushing waters. Frantic efforts were started to reach the machinery. Additional deaths were added to the swelling list of 29 known dead who perished at sea, in train and automobile accidents and freak mis haps as the count went forward in affected areas In New York, new Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland and Virginia. The New Jersey toll reached eight In the five davs of storm. Pennsylvania, counted at least three. Maryland recorded seven with re ports from some sections still mea (Conciudcd on page15, column 5) CARE GANGDOM TO INTERFERE Oklahoma City, Aug. 24 (;p Dar 2ng gangdom to interfere, the gov ernment's quick acting prosecutors sought today to hurry Charles F. Urschel's accused kidnapers to Ok lahoma for a speedy trial and, they hope, a sweep of extreme sentences. Hurrying to Texas on the heels of a grand jury's indictment of 14 persons for conspiracy to kidnap the oil millionaire for $200,000 ransom a ransom that was paid Joseph B. Keenan, special assistant attorney general, District Attorney Herbert K. Hyde and D. H. Colvin, in charge of the case for the United States bureau of investigation, sought re moval orders for Harvey Bailey and the four members of the Shannon family, jailed at Dallas for the kid naping. Likewise, airplanes speeded certi fied copies of the Indictment to Denver, where Albert Bates, accus ed of the "strong arm" end of the abduction is jailed, and to Minneap olis where at least five of those in dicted are either held or hunted. "We are ready to meet the chal lenge of these gangsters and outlaws fearlessly and with their own weap ons," said Keenan, in a dramatic statement at the close of the 5-hour grand Jury session yesterday, dur ing which Urschel and a score of other witnesses were protected by sub-machine guns in the hands of federal operatives. BRAIN TRUST MYTH ASSERTS fUGWELL Seattle, Aug. 24 (LP) President .Roosevelt makes his own decisions and the much-publicized, so called "brain trust" is "absolute fiction," Dr. R. J. Tugwell, assistant secretary of agriculture, said here today. He was accompanied by his wife and daughter and John R. Fleming and Fred P. Bartlett of the office of information at Washington, D. C. The party inspected the depart ment's fruit laboratories in Wenat chee and viewed the site of the Grand Coulee dam en route. KILLED IN CRASH SISKIYOU SUMMIT Medford, Ore., Aug. 24 MP How ard A. Ayres, proprietor of a con fectionery at Nisqually, Wash., was Instantly killed about 6 o'clock lasi evening near the summit of the Siskiyou mountains on the Pacific highway in a head-on collision be tween his auto and a large refrig erator express truck. No one else was injured. State police who Investigated the crash said the Ayres car was irav eling on the wrong side of the road at a high rate of spted nd the setting 'sun was probably fc Ay re eyes. Good Evening! Sips for Supper By DON UPJOHN City employes who expected the Blue Eagle to hover over them when the council last met say the Blue Eagle turned out to be just a chick en hawk for them. Aha, so Woodburn is to play Chi cago in the finals of the American league junior tournament. Quite appropriate. The world's berry cen ter against the world's wheat and corn center; the loganberry met ropolis against the pork packer for the world. We'll see whether our boys from the queen valley of the world can knock the sox off a cen tury of progress. Women have undertaken and ac complished about everything mas culine. They gained the vote and we didn't kick. They have taken over men's jobs; gained fame in men's sports from baseball to ten nis; have started wearing trousers; have gained places on the cigarette billboards and have been seen tip ping over steins of three point two in brewery ads. Nobody objects to all of these potent advances for the rights of the fair sex. But, dog gone it, if they start wearing little, mustaches on their upper lips men will rebel. Although, at that, we guess a lot of men would be tickled if they did. A chap named Mo is head of the federal -pension bureau. Whis Is quite right as all of the pensioners seem to want Mo. When informed that her dog that she had left at her Santa Monica home was going to have puppies, 6-year-old Marilyn Howe who is visiting Salem relatives, exclaimed, "Goody I Goody! Has she laid one yet?" . PAGE BILL E1NZIG AND PERCY KELLY prtonville, Minn. (LP)-t-Three men with ravenous appetites, each champion eater in his own right, met at a harvest festival today to see who could devour the greatest number of ears of corn. The winner will get, besides full meal, $50 in cash. Nearly 20, 000 persons from the Dakotas -and western Minnesota will watch. "See the three voracious gorman dizers with gargantuan gustatory powers" was the blazing heading on handbills advertising tne event. The contestants were proclaimed as follows: Pancake Bill Meyer, of Groton, South Dakota, who ate 38 pancakes and 64 raw eggs at one sitting; Corn King Ed Kottwitz, of Orton ville, who won the corn eating championship last year by devour ing 37 ears; Guzzling Gus Comstock, of Fer gus Falls, Minn., who set a coffee drinking record with 65 cupfulls. There will be no doubt about ac curate scoring today. Officials planned to blow a steam whistle each time Comstock munched down a row of yellow corn, ring a bell every time Meyer cast aside a clean ed ear and blow, a siren when Kottwitz reached for a new one, We also understand from reading the foregoing why Tad Shelton went on a diet. BANK CLEARINGS SHOW AN INCREASE New York, Aug. 24 (P) Dun & Bradstreet, Inc., reported today "a further change for the better, over the earlier figures for August, ap pears in the latest bank clearings." The total for the week ended Aug. 23 at leading cities in the United States was $4,134,378,000, an in crease of 12.7 per cent over a year ago. At New York City clearings rose 16.8 per cent 'above 1B32 wnne outside the metropolis the gain was 4.4 per cent. Roosevelt To Approve Bonneville Dam Within Few Days, Portland, Aug. 24 () Congressman Charles H. Martin said here today that "it is only a matter of a few days until President Roosevelt approves the Bonneville dam" on the Columbia river. Word was re- ceived here Wednesday that con struction of this $43,900,000 pro ject was approved by General Lytie Brown, chief of army engineers and head of the rivers and harbors, In a report to Secretary of War Dern and Secretary of Interior Ickes. If the two secretaries approve the huge navigation and power projpet the matter will come before the president. With the presidential approval, the public works directors would then designate the United States army engineers to take charge of the work, and contractors would be asked to bid, A setup similar to the COAST FOREST FIREFIGHTERS AIDED BY FOG C o ol e r Temperatures Prevail Control Re ported In Spots Hot Fires Still Blaze In Many Sectors Along Wilson River Portland, Aug. 24 CP) Dense fog and cooler temperatures during the night materially aided 2000 lire fighters who for than a week have carried on a relentless battle with ravaging forest fires in the Oregon coast mountains west of here. Today hot fires still blazed on thousands of acres of the best vii -gin timber holdings in the west, but ! the favorable break in the weather' gave new encouragement to the fire fighters. Crews of picked men were being sent to critical points to con struct fire trails. It was believed the fire could be held unless usually high temperatures and an east wind complicated matters. At various minor points control was reported. The Flora Logging company was handling that sector with Its own crew. The spot fire on Jordan creek was burning itself out. The Yamhill county fire near Fair- dale was being held by mill crews. The hottest places last night were on Wilson river where for days the most serious fire in Oregon's history had raged uncontrolled, and in the (Concluded on page 14, column 5) 'S Winchester, Eng., Aug. 24 CP) In famous Winchester cathedral, the historic burial place of many of Great Britain's kings and chan cellors, lies the body of an Ameri can boy, the victim of an English railway disaster. The body is that of Roderick MacDonald Duthie. the 9-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. M. Duthie, Portland, Ore. The boy was killed in a disaster at Raynes park last May when several other lives were lost. . Thousands of sightseers have passed his resting place since Mrs, Duthie brought her son's body to rest in state in the beautiful cha pel of the guardian angel, where it will remain until taken home for burial near Portland at the end of this month. Mr. and Mrs. Duthie, who have with them another son, Tommy, 13, are on a business trip in England, and the dean of Winchester grant ed them the privilege of placing their son's body in this resting place of kings and princes until they are able to return nome. Children of Winchester garrison are keeping the bier decked with flowers gathered in Hampshire lanes. The chapel recently has been at tracting, more attention than the graves of Canute and first kings of England, since sightseers persis tently ask the identiy of the great personage now resting between the tombs of the famous Bishop of Win chester and a chancellor of England. LINDBERGHS LAND Lerwick, Shetland Islands, Aug. 24 (LP) Col. and Mrs. Charles A Lindbergh landed in the harbor at this small port at 3:55 p. m. Briusn Standard Time, after a rapid flight from Tveraa, Raroes Islands. Says Martin Boulder Dam construction would then be established. Congressman Martin declared "Oregon is on the threshold of a a new era." R. H. Kipp, executive vice-president of the Columbia Val ley association, said "this is the greatest thing to come to Portland, the lower Columbia and the whole Pacific northwest in fifty years. The army engineers' report said the Columbia river Is the greatest source of potential wealth in the world, Representative Martin was told. The great dam, as now propteed, "(Concluded on page 15, column 3) 9 Year Old Youth Asleep For 673 Days Memphis, Tenn., Aug. 24 (fP) Nine-year-old " Sleeping Joe" Hug gins, unmindful of the investigation at St. Louis into an outbreak of "sleeping sickness" slept on here today. Joe, his mother, Mrs. S. T. Rider said, has been In a coma1 for 673 days. If he "sleeps" until October 21, she said, he will have been asleep for two years. Some physicians have diagnosed j little Joe's case as "sleeping sick-1 ness," but others admit he has them puzzled. He drinks five pints of goat's milk daily, is growing normally and has lost little weight. WILCOXASKS Portland, Aug. 24 (P) Chairman Wilcox of the state relief committee, issued a statement today in which he declared it was his opinion that "it is clearly the duty of the gover nor under the president's policy and in view of the necessities of at least 100,000 of our people to call the leg islature in special session." The governor, Wilcox said, "it wisely refraining from hasty action so that the measure of relief that can be looked for from the NRA and public works program can be meas ured, and so that members of the legislature may have an opportunity to sound public opinion as to meth ods to be pursued iiT providing the necessary funds." Wilcox said there are r.ow about 30,000 families in Oregon, represent ing more than 100,000 individuals, who are receiving all or part of their support from public funds. By Sep tember 30, he declared, the state re lief committee will - ho oracticallv without funds, "and the amount then available from the federal re lief administration together with all resources now in sight from the sub divisions of the state, are insuffi cient to carry the cost of relief even through October." He estimated that there will be required from state and local sourc es between $4,000,000 and $6,000,000 for relief before the end of 1934. "It is clearly the duty of the peo ple of Oregon," Wilcox declared, "to meet the situation as they have all other emergencies, and do it prompt ly and even though the pill may be bitter, swallow it with good grace. FAKE MONEY PLANT IN PRISON WALLS Washington, Aug. 24 CP) The se cret service and the bureau of pris ons are Investigating reports of counterfeiting activities by inmates of the federal penitentiary at Lea venworth, Kansas. Leavenworth, Kansas, Aug. 24 (LP) A complete counterfeiting plant has been found withir. the walls of the federal penitentiary here, it was learned here today on high authority. Details were unavailable, and pri son officials refused to discuss the matter. T refuse to discuss that with you," said Warden Hudspeth. "If you want any information, you must get it from Sanford Bates, prison director in Washington, to whom I made a report." It was learned the warden mailed such a report to Bates. The prison has been seething with unrest for weeks since special privi leges accorded Terry Druggan, Chi cago beer racketeer-convict, were revealed in a shakeup which result ed in suspension of the deputy warden and discharge of three pri son employes. CHILD SKATES TO DEATH BY TRUCK Sublimity, Ore., Aug. 24 (P) Confused by an approachnig truck and automobiles, Irene Zuber, young daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Zuber, roller skated into the side of the vehicle shortly before 8 o'clock Wednesday night and died about 10 o'clock Thursday morn ing as1 a result of fractured skull. The little girl, with some com panions, was skating on the pave ment when the truck, driven by Clyde Todd, of near Meharoa, ap proached, as did two machines from the opposite direction. The children scattered but the little Zuber girl became frightened and attempted to cross the pavement, hitting the side of the vehicle. Todd rushed her to the Stayton hospital where Dr. Brewer perfor med an emergency operation. She never regained consciousness. State police investigated and held the accident unavoidable. Funeral ar rangements have not been completed. TEST OF LABOR STATUS UNDER N.R.A. IMPENDS Johnson Erases Words Open Shop and Closed Shop Under Blue Eagle Coar Industry Trouble Spot Steel Owned Mines Refuse Code (CopyrJght 1933 by United Press) Washington, Aug. 24 (LP) A decis ive test of organized labor's status under the national recovery act im pended today after an "official in terpretation" of the collective bar gaining provisions of the act was made by Administrator Hugh S. Johnson. Johnson's statement "erased the words 'open shop' and 'closed shop' from the dictionary of the NRA." two trouoie spots stand out in tne coal industry. They are in Pennsyl vania and West Virginia and both involve the United States Steel cor poration. The Pennsylvania strike situation has been mediated but not settled definitely. It was reported here to day that representatives of the H. C. Frick Coke company had informed an agent of the national labor board that the company, a U. S. Steel sub sidiary, would never consent to rec ognition of the United Mine Work ers of America and would never op erate under an NRA code. While the Pennsylvania dispute held this potential dynamite, new signs of trouble appeared from Lo gan, Wingo and McDowell counties, West Virginia. Those districts have been "closed counties" so far as the United Mine Workers are concerned and many heated battles over un- (Concluded on page 16, column 6) WOODIN GUEST OF ROOSEVELT Hyde Park, N. Y., Aug. 24 (IP) Persistent reports that William H. Woodin would soon quit his Job as secretary of the treasury cropped up today as President Roosevelt prepared to receive him tonight at the summer White House. At the same time sources close to the administration were equally vigorous in denying that Woodln's visit had unseen significance. He plans to review with the chief exe cutive the nation's fiscal problems. As he awaited the arrival of his treasury secretary, the president re viewed the developments of the na tional recovery program. Keeping an eye on the- coal code situation that still Is confronting General Hugh S. Johnson, national recov ery administrator. Mr. Roosevelt was hopeful when he came to the summer White House Sunday from Washington that the code for the bituminous mining industry would be ready in 48 to 72 hours. That deadline has been passed, however, but he still expects to put his signature upon u Deiore tne end 01 tne week. ROSEBURG MAN KILLED BY TRUCK Roseburg, Ore.. Aug. 24 WV-Phil Singleton, 27, for a number of years employed as a salesman In Oregon for the Zellerbach Paper company and more recently for the Carter Rice Paper company, was killed this morning, when a Union Oil com pany truck which he was driving skidded over a grade five miles from Roseburg. He secured a position with the oil company as truck driver three weeks ago, and was engaged In sup plying farm trade In the Deer Creek area. He lost control of the truck as It skidded on loose gravel near Jhc foot of a short grade, and the heavy vehicle rolled over a six foot embankment, killing him al most instantly when he was pin ned under the cab. Singleton was a native of Rose burg, graduating from the local high school In 1924. He is sur vived by a widow and small daugh ter. LOUISIANA HERON BLOWN TO NEW YORK New York, Aug. 24 (LP A baby Louisiana heron, carried on the wings of a hurricane from the tropics, had a new home today in the Bronx zoo. The bird was found at Coney Island, helpless and bat tered. One wing was broken. The heron has a wing spread of three feet and measures two feet from bill to tall. 80 JOKER-FILLED PAGES COMPRISE FREAK FIRE CODE Committee Holds Hearing Tonight on Ordi nance Drafted For and By Insurance Firms; Property Owners and Business Houses for Senseless Regulation and More Jobs By HARRY N. CRAIN Eighty pages of technical bunk devised in the interests of insurance companies and conceived seemingly for the pur pose of creating another "red tape" bureau to harass the public with the necessity for permits for this and that, and to imp6se unenforceable restrictions upon property owners, is the most apt description that can be applied to the proposed city or- dinance for the organization of a municipal fire prevention bureau. Drafted by engineers and experls of the national association of fire insurance underwriters, or some such interested group, to follow so- caued model codes inflicted upon other cities and modified to some extent by Insertion of the words "City of Salem", it Is doubtful If even its authors have a compre hensive idea of what the ordinance contains and what its effects would be locally. Certainly there is not a single member of the city council who has any intelligent conception of what it is all about. Tonight the ordinance committee, whose members admit that they (Concluded on pnge 15, column 7) TWO KILLED IN WRECK OF TRAIN Washington, Aug. 24 (?) The Crescent Limited, crack Southern railway train en route from New York to New Orleans, carried two cnglnemen to instant death and sent 13 passengers and members of its crew to hospitals when it was de railed over a swollen stream near here at 3:45 a. m. this morning. A weakened bridge over the east ern branch of the Anacostia river, just outside the capital, caused the disastrous, bcfore-daylight wreck. The engine left the rails, plung ing into a mud bank with its oper ating cab submerged In the stream A. H. Bryde, Washington, engin eer, and J. H. Faye, fireman, Per- ryville, Maryland, were killed. A mall car and a coach were hurl ed ahead of the engine, diagonally across the tracks. A deadhead car was thrown into the stream and al most completely submerged. Four other cms hung precariously to the roadbed, saved from a worse crash only by their couplings. Two cars, off the track, swung directly over the stream, partially submerg ed, and only the pull of the cars in front and behind saved them from toppling Into the water. MACHADO'S DEATH SOUGHT BY FLIERS Nassau, N. P., Aug. 24 (P) Re ports that an airplane carrying men determined to assassinale Gcr ardo Machado, deposed and exiled president of Cuba, had left Cuba for this city, today caused placing of guards armed with rifles about the hotel where Machado Is living. Bahamian police generally do not carry firearms and the issue of rifles Indicated the gravity with which colonial government officials regarded the airplane report. One policeman, without weapons other than a "night stick," guarded Machado and members of his par ty for several days after their ar rival here, but the lone guard was removed when Police Commandant Wcibel nald he did not consider Machado's life endangered on the island. First Widow Winner Second Widow Loser Heidecke Will Contest Circuit Judge Lewelling in a decree handed down today in disposing of the contested matter of the estate 6f John W. Heidecke, modified th'e decree of hc county court by giv ing dower Interest in real property to one widow or me aeceasea, nucv Christiana Heidecke and barring a dower interest for another widow, Georglania K. Heidecke. The form er named widow resides In Pennsyl vania, the latter named resides in this section. The .contest revolved around a tangle caused by marriage of Hei decke to two women with no evi dence being put In that a divorce had ever been granted from the first. The first woman he morried in Pennsylvania many years ago Later he came west after having become father of two daughters now Ruby Clark and Grace Brown, also residents of Pennsylvania. Some NAZI LEGION PLANS ATTACK (Copyright, 1933, by United Press) London, Aug. 24 (LP Nazi Ger many's new nationalism caused watchfulness at three points on her frontiers today, while at Prague the Zionist world congress considered oppression of members of their race under Chancellor Adolf Hitler. From Vienna It was reported that several battalions of the newly formed Austrian Legion of Nazis, recruited from exiled Austrian fas cists, were moving in Bavaria to ward the Austrian frontier. Excitement was caused at Sarre- brucken, in the Sarre basin, by a newspaper report that Hitler storm troopers in the Rhlneland had re ceived orders to be prepared for a summons from the Sarre section. A new dispute over the Memcl territory -was threatened when the Lithuanian government, distrustful of the Hitler regime apparently, cancelled the agreement between the Prussian unionist evangelical church and the Mcmel dlrectatore, on the. ground that nazlflcatlon of the Evangelical church in Germany would put Memel unionists under the supervision of an alien body. Reports from Berlin indicate that as the result of the support Aus trian Chancellor Engelbert Doll fuss was reported to have obtained from European powers, radio broad casts from Germany denouncing nim might be modified. SAILORS AID IN BATTLING FIRE Bremerton, Wash., Aug. 24 fjpi Sailors from eight warships, visit ing the Puget Sound navy yard. aided last night in controlling $100,000 fire, which at its height threatened the north end of the city. With both of Bremerton's fire departments, and the navy yard de partment as well, finding the fast spreading flames threatened to get away from them, the detachments were ordered ashore from the war ships. One fireman was overcome by smoke. Other detachments were also sta tioned as a guard throughout the city, to prevent looting. The fire was finally almost com pletely confined to the eight acre holdings of the Lofthus Lumber company, ulthough two small ad joining dwellings were also burned. The entire plant, as well as an area of lumber yards, was leveled before the flames were finally got ten under control two hours later. MALADY KILLS FISH Klamath Falls, Ore., Aug. 24 (LP) An epidemic of undetermined origin has killed scores of fish in Link river and Lake Ewauna, the Klam ath Sportsmen's association report ed today. The malady has taken a huge toll of catfish, mullet, sucker and chubs. Only trout appear to be immune from the disease. time after coming here he married the second wife, now Georgianla K Heidecke and they became parents of a daughter, Helen Ficke. He ac cumulated considerable property In cluding some in Polk county and also a timber claim near Mill City and left considerable personal prop erty. Under terms of a will thi:. was all left to the second wife and her daughter with the family in the cast ignored. The county courty court recognized the right of the daughters by the first marriage to participate In the estate. Judge Lewclllng's modifying de cree holds that the sole Jielrs at law ''(Concluded onpaiie isTcolumn 0) EXPENDITURES IN NORTHWEST Contracts To Be Award ed Today to Employ 1200 Men at Once As Many More Bids To Be Opened Friday List of Bidders Portland, Aug. 24 UF Bids ap proximating $600,000 on nine high way projects, or about half of the letting for the two day session of the state highway commission, were opened here today. The complete awards, most of which are the first of the national recovery public works program in Oregon, will put to work about 1200 men beginning not later than September 10, It was announced. Fred H. Slate, Portland contrac tor, was low on tlie largest job to be awarded, bidding $124,950 on the North Fork-Humbug mountain sec tion of the Wolf creek highway. Other low bidders on the major jobs were Lindstrom & Feigenson, Portland, $118,680 on the approaches to the bridge over Youngs Bay on the Oregon coast highway; Theo dore Arenz, Portland, $91,937 on the Dixie-Line section of the Old Ore gon Trail, and Myers & Goulter of (Concluded on page 14, column 0) FIERY PRIEST GRILLS BANKERS Detroit, Aug. 24 (LP) Father Char les E. Coughlin charged before ft grand jury investigation of collapse of Detroit banks today that 'poli ticians" are blocking payments to depositors of closed institutions. The outspoken priest criticized Amercian capitalism as doing more than the writings of Karl Marx to foster communism, branded as false a 'published fascimile purporting to show he had a brokerage account and charged that Detroit bankers "looted the innocent Detroit Trust company." The priest delved into the compli cated and technical records of the various banks and holding compan ies charging that the Detroit bank ers borrowed heavily from the De- I troit Trust company when "they knew they were going under." He cited one lean of $300,000 which he said was supported by a list of col lateral "now estimated to be worth only $55,000 by a reputable broker age firm." Its the politicians who are blocking depositors," Father Cough lin replied "Get rid of the Con nelly and the Groesbecks (receiver! for the two bank holding compan ies) and the government will step in." TO OPEN BIDS ON FOREST PROJECTS Portland, Aug. 24 m Bids for the construction of six highway projects in Oregon and Washington will be opened here September 13, 14, and 15 by W. H. Lynch, district engineer, federal bureau of public roads. The work will Include two lobs In Crater Lake national park, one In Rainier national park, and two national for est highway projects In Oregon and one in Washington. The Oregon projects listed by Lynch were: Grading 4.5 miles of Weston-Elgin highway northerly from a point 4 miles west of Elgin. Grading 1.7 miles of Tiller-Trail highway in Douglas county north from Ihe Jackson county line. Grading two sections of the rim road in Crater Lake park, one 7.8 miles from Diamond lake Junction to Wineglass, and the other 4.2 miles between Wineglass and Cloud Cap Inn. VISION NEW ERA IN LUMBER INDUSTRY Washington, Aug. 24 (U) Secre tary of Agriculture Henry A. Wal lace said today he believed enaction of the fair code of competition for the lumber industry would result In a new era of conservation and utili zation of American forestts. "The industry is to be congratu lated for lis breadth of vision In providing in the code for perpetua tion of the forests," Wallace said. "Adoption of the principle of sus tained production will help materi ally to maintain a reasonable bal ance between production and con. sumption of timber products.