Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, January 13, 1936, Page 1, Image 1

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    Mr
The Weather
Forecast: Unsettled with occa
sional rain tonight and Tues
day. Not much change In
temperature.
Highest yesterday....si
Lowest thta morning . , in
Right Method
Sav time .Save steps Use
the rljht method tor quick r
sulta. If jou have a want of
any kind advertise In the Want
Ad columns of this newspaper.
FORD
Thirtieth Year
Full Associated Preaa
MEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, JANUARY 13, IP J
Full United Presa
No. 250.
Med
M3mi RIBUNE
yiwmiBiiT.cv.v r i .vt 1 a m w
Tffl
w ssaasssasaaesai I - ...
m
By PAUL MALLON .
(Copyright, 1936, by Paul Mallon)
WASHINGTON, Jan. 13 Subtle
lighting effects - are one of the
oustandlng unheralded accomplish
ment a of the
new deal. .
To-wlt, Presi
d e n t Roosevelt
started his press
conference off
recently by an
nouncing he had
I J juat algned an
order extending
the stabilization
fund for another
year. No one
cared anything
about the sta
rt UL MALLON blllzatlon fund.
All naturally .wondered about dol
lar devaluation authority, which
waa In the same law.
Devaluation? The president did
not appear to know about that. He
would have to see. Mumbling halt
aloud, he read through the order.
No, the order did not make clear
whether he had continued his de
valuation authority or not. News
aeekera would have to check up with
the treasury on that..
rLSJ
Present waa the treasury's excel
lent publicity adviser, Mr. Gaston.
Be did not know either. He would
also have to check. To do so, he
went off, not In the direction of the
treasury, but back into the WHTte
House secretarial offices. Later It
was announced that the president
Nfaad "also" apparently continued his
devaluation authority, unbeknown to
himself, if you can Imagine' that.
Newsmen, emerging, eald to them
selves: "Well, the London devalua
tion rumora today must be wrong.
S because the president did Tiot even
know about the aubjoct." This was
the desired glow. It was reflected all
over the financial world.
It would be . simpler If the new
deal shading system were not occa
aionally like the street traffic alg
esia In Washington. Some of the
red stop-lights here mean go right
and left. Some of the green go-signals
mean stop (one at the main
entrance) to the capltol grounds).
Thus, while Mr. Roosevelt waa
turning his green dlmmera on the
devaluation rumors, some of hla
Democratic congressmen were pub
licly seeing red Inflation probabili
ties from the AAAdeclslon. Also,
the house was passing a two or three
billion dollar . bonus bill without
funds, and Postmaster General Par
ley was telling the Democratic na
tional committee that Mr. Roose
velt wax a sound money man.
. Through the kaleidoscope, this
much can be seen for certam:
Mr. Roosevelt Is preserving his
(Continued on Page Pour.) .
Union Head Visions
21-Hour Week
WASHINGTON, Jan. 13 (P) An
ventuul 21 hour work week for
American labor waa predicted today
by Prank Morrison, veteran secretary
or the American Federation of Labor.
Making the opening speech at the
International seamen's Union con
Mntinn. Morrison recalled that not
afM t.h Ktvtv hour week
maujr now .
waa almost universal. He said the
forty hour week now waa generally
scce-pbru.
SIDE GLANCES
. by
TRIBUNE REPORTERS
nrm Newland telling about the
prodigious amounts of food he and
Angy Todd eat while bucking up
logs over In the Klamath country.
Mrs. May Barnum atopplng her
car on the Barneburg road to show
' her four-year-old nephew. Billy
Heath. Jr soma pigs, and delight
ing that young man by enticing
all the porkers to the car by a bit
of extemporaneous hog calling.
Vern Cannon, backbone of de
mocracy In these parts, bewailing
the lose of his right hand man. Bob
Smith, who has gone to start achool
at the TJ.
Milt Ottoman with nose glued
against the window gating out Into
the drlrxle. and wondering when
the aun shone hot enough to draw
all that water up Into the sky.
' A woodsel'.er In the lot on Sixtn
street near the sv. tracks, tossing
a chunk off his lc' to .put
Into the oil dram "stove," with
the remark "We've got wood to
. burn."
Joe Dobbyn. grsoer, looking loom
lly at the swlrlpool of water In
front of his Oakdale store, which
j stream might keep a few prospective
customers away.
TO BE RETURNED
Question of Billion Already
Paid to Farmers Is Left
Open Cotton Control
Test Case Is Dismissed
New Deal Law Score
WASHINGTON. Jux. 13. (AP)
Here Is the scoreboard on the
government's defense or laws un
der President Roosevelt:
Gold clause won (5-4).
Railroad retirement lost (4-5)
"Hot oil" lost (1-8).
Mortgage moratorium lost
(0-9).
NRA lost (0-9).
AAA lost (3-6).
Government right to processing
taxes Impounded lost (0-9).
First Bankhead act case dis
missed' (9-0). '
WASHINGTON, Jan. 13. (API
Ordering 200,O00,00o In Impounded
taxes returned to processors becaubo
they were invalid under AAA, ' the
supreme court left open tod-iy
whether the 1.000.000.000 of such
ta7.es already paid to farmers could
be retrieved by the taxpayers.
In another unanimous action, the
high tribunal also dismissed the first
test- case on the Bankhead cotton
control act.
No decision was handed down in
the only other new deal case before
It Involving the Tennessee valley
authority act.
The tar ruling, given In the Louis
iana rice millers case, did not cover
whether the processors must prove
they bad not passed the levies on
the consumer before recovery' could
be made. Litigation, already under
way in the lower courts must decide
that.,
Remains In Effect
Government attorneys later em
phasized this requirement of the
amended AAA act would remain In
effect unless the supreme court holds
It Invalid.
Normally, the court does not rule
on questions unless It considers they
are directly presented In litigation
before It.
Considering that no case had been
made against the Bankhead law. the
Justices said their review In this in
(Continued on Page Eight)
SLIDE DELAYS
GRANTS PASS. Jan. 13. (API-
Southern Pacific officials here
ported this morning a small mud
slide near Roseburg delayed the
southbound Ashland local passenger
train.
Pour and one-half hours late, the
Oregonlan. Southern Pacific train
No. 329, southbound local between
Portland and Ashland, arrived in
Medford at 12:30 p.m. todayafter
being delayed by a slide over the
tracks near Prairie, aouth of Rose
burg. According to railroad officials
here, the slide was caused by the
excessive rainfall experienced in
southwestern Oregon during the past
few days.
More than 3. 600,000 were spent In
controlling Insect pesta In the south
ern California citrus belt In 1934.
Income Shares
Maryland fund, bid 118.41; aaked
19.91.
Quarterly Income shares, bid 1.S4;
asked 11.89.
Townsend Chief Cheered
By House Bonus Action
CHICAGO, Jan. 13. (AP) Chances
of passing the Townsend pension
plan at this session of congress look
ed brighter to the field general of
the Townsend forces today aa a result
of bouse approval or the soldiers
bonus.
Asserting the bonus vote was "an
admission by the powers that be of
the soundness of the Townsend plan.'
Robert B. Clements, secretary and
directing head of hie pension move
ment, predicted addition of at least
100 representatives to the Townsend
bloo in the bouse.
The big argument for Immediate
payment of the bonus was the effect
the money would have In Increasing
purchasing power." Clements de
clared. "That la precisely the argU'
meat for the Townsend plan.
34 Seamen Lose Lives
BY BABY BONDS
IS SENATE PLAN
Harrison Introduces Bill and
Predicts Passage All
Veteran Organizations
Favorable for Measure
WASHINGTON. Jan. 13. Pay
ment of the bonus in $50 baby bonds
convertible Into cash at local post
offloea was proposed In the senate to
day by admlnlatratlon foroes.
Senator Harrison (D Miss.). Intro
duced the bin he predicted would be
enacted Into law." He said no new
taxes would be required to raise the
funds at this time. -
A statement appended to the bill
said the additional money required
to redeem bonus certificates would be
2,23 7,000.000. But advocates of the
bond plan contended It would offer
an Inducement for the veteran to
hold hla bond, rather than cashing
In Immediately.
The three percent bonds would be
dated June Is, 1936 and run until
June 15, 1945 year of the original
maturity date of the certificates. The
authors of the bill Harrison ana
Senators Byrnes (D., 8. C). Stelwer
(D., Ore.) and Clark (D.. Mo.) esu
.nated the amount due veterans In
bonds at 1.838,ai3,950. To clear up
odd amounta 187,786,050 In oasn
would be needed, while the remainder
of the estimated 3,237,0OO,OOO Invoiv.
ed the treasury Ufa .Insurant ana
other special funds,
The American Legion, Veterans of
porekrn Ware and Disabled American
Veterans Issued a Joint atatement
that they were "united In support'
nt the senate bill, adding:
"We hope for enactment of the bill
Into law."
The senate finance committee waa
expected to give It speedy approval
late today, but floor consideration
can not start until Thursday, next
rfav the senate meets.
The bonda to De issued wouiu o
In. small denominations. Harrison ex
plained. In the belief many veterans
would not cash all oi mem immwir
tely, thereby lessening the strain on
the treasury. '
The bonda would not be negotiable
but would be redeemable In local
postof flees. They would run for ten
years and would bear Interest at I
ner cent.
The Interest la an Inducement .to
the bonus holders to hold on to the
certificates for greater value,
4-
OFF INDEFINITELY
LONDON. Jan. 13. (AP) Tuee-
dav'a scheduled session of the Inter
national naval conference waa post
poned Indefinitely tonight, and I
Jananese spokesman aald that dele
gation again will consult with Tokyo.
The spokesman aald tha decision
on postponement waa reached at a
long conference retween British ana
Jananese delegates.
However, no reason for the surprise
move waa given Immediately.
Earlier. It had been reported the
Japanese delegatea would make
new atatement on their "equality
proposals at the Tuesday session.
The bureau of blolojlcal survey
of the federal department of agri
culture has 14 wildlife refuges in
Florida.
"If It would aid business to In
crease the circulation of money once,
with the bonus. It should be much
better to do It over and over a rain
each month with pensions for our
old people."
Not only did the bonus advocates
use Townsend arguments, Clements
aald, but administration lawmakers
Indicated they would "revert- to out
system for raiting the money." He
explained:
"After a conference with President
Honsevelt at Warm Springs, Sena to!
(Walter P.) Oeorgt (D.. Oa.) an
nounced that If they paaaed the
bonus they would raise the money
by a tax on Industry."
The Townsendltea advocate a two
per cent transactions tax to raise
200 a month pensions for every per
son over 80 years.
NAVY CONFERENCE
LAWYER SLAYS OPPONENT
TAKES 2 SHOTS AT JUDGE
CHICAGO, Jan. 13. (AP) A dis
gruntled lawyer shot and kilted At
torney Christopher O. Kinney In cir
cuit court here and then fired two
shots at Judge John Prystalskt, pre
siding. The judge ducked behind lit
bench and escaped.
The pistol wielding attorney, Iden
tified as John W. Koegh, 69, ran
amuck when Judge Prystalskl ruled
against him In a case he had argued
for twenty minutes with Attorney
Kinney.
Kinney dropped dead beside the
HOUSING ACT IN
TO
AT
SPUR BUILDING
MEET TONIGHT
Five members of the headquarters
staff of the federal housing adminis
tration will hold a meeting at 7:30
tonight In the Jackson County Cham
ber of Commerce to explain the pro
cedure for the constructions of new
homes and buildings.
Those Invited to tha meeting In
clude dealers in building materials,
supplies and household equipment,
contractors, architects, bankers and
mortgage company heads.
The meeting will be addressed uy
John H. Hoppes, field representative
of the federal housing administration
in Portland, and John R, Towlea. spe
cial assistant to the regional director
In San Francisco who has been
signed to Oregon as acting associate
director. Other admlnlatratlon repre
sentatives to be at the meeting are
.Stewart Jameson, field operator, Irv
ine Diamond, publicity man, and
Leslie Peyton, manager of financial
relations for Oregon.
It la understood that the admin
istration representatives will empha.
size new construction under the fed,
era! bousing act, not, however, neg-
( Co-tinned on Page Five)
4
HEAVY
CLOSES TRAFFIC
E
PORTLAND, Ore.. Jan. 13. (AP)
Rising flood waters held a menace to
Willamette valley communities to
day.
Edward L. Wells, federal meteor
ologist here. aid the Willamette river
was rising at all points and that It
will continue to rise from eaiem
north for the next two daya.
Wella aald the Salem creat probably
will be 24 feet, highest since 1037,
Already the muddy waters have dis
rupted hlghwsy traffic between Sa
lem and Albany. Monroe was almost
Isolated. .
SALEM, Jan. 13. (AP) Portion
of the Umpqua highway west of Elk
ton and the coast highway at
Coqullle may be closed to traffic
moat of the present week because of
high water and slides, R. H. Baldock,
Mat highway engineer announced
today.
ALBANY, Ore. Jan. J3, (API
Albany and Corvallls were separated
by high water that overflowed the
highway directly across tna winanv
ette river from Albany last night.
There appeared to be little prospect
that trafflo would be restored bef'rj
tomorrow afternoon.
EUGENE. Ore., Jan. 13. (AP)
The Willamette river was near tha
flood stage here today, and was ris
ing. Between 7:00 a. m. Friday and
this morning 6 43 Inches of rain (ell
The amall river that runs through
tha city of Kugene went out of IU
banks twice) yesterday, halting trar
fie on last Nineteenth avenue.
Several sections of tha city wer
without power during the day.
HONEYMOON OF WEEK
ENOUGH, SAYS JUDGE
PHILADELPHIA. Jan. 13. (API-
Judge Harry S. McDevItt set a tlms
limit on honeymoon wnen n isaura
a warrant for the arrest of Louis
Hsmburt on a two weeks' old speed
Ing charge.
Hamburg raid he was starting on
his wedding trip.
"A week seem long enough for
a honeymoen these daya," Judge
alcDevttt remarked.
Judge's bench at the first shot from
Keogh's small bore weapon.
Keogh fired three more shots De
fore one of the attorneys In the
crowded courtroom knocked blm out
with a blow to the Jaw.
One, aimed directly at Judge Pry
stalskl as he sat on the bench, hit
the judge's heavy chair. He ducked
behind the bench.
Another of the courtroom crowd
struck Keogh's arm, and the third
shot, again aimed at the Judge,
ground Into the celling. A fourth
went Into the floor.
5 NEW CCC UNITS
WILL FILL CAMPS
NOW VACANT HERE
Five new CCO companies will ar
rive from the mid-west this week to
bring the Medford CCC district back
to a strength of 32 camps.
The companies will reoccupy Oampa
Steamboat, Wlmer, Oasquet, Clear
Lake and Applegate which were vaca
ted last week when four aecond-oorps
area and three ninth corps area com
panies were disbanded.
Only two oampa which were vacated
will not be reoccupled for the present
period. They are .Cooa Head, near
Marshfleld, and But Creek, near Med
ford. Oooa Head'a company was not
disbanded, but moved to Camp Sit;
kum when the second corps area
company there .waa sent home.
Three special trains are bringing
the five new companies to thla dis
trict. The first two left Two Harbors,
Minn., January 12 with Co. 709 for
Camp Oesquet and Co. 4742 for Camp
Wlmer. It will arrive about January
15.
The second train also left January
12 with Co. 2702 from Two Harbors,
Minn., for Camp Applegate and Co.
703 from Allen Junction, Minn., for
Camp Steamboat!
Another special train was to leave
Madison. Nebraska, January 14 with
Co. 4740 for Camp Clear Lake.
The seven old companies were dis
banded as part of the program to
reduce the civilian conservation corps
to Its original strength of 300.000 men.
An effort Is being made on the pan
of the COO sponsors to make the
corps a permanent Institution.
HUGE RELIEF SUM
WASHINGTON, Jan. 13. (AP) An
appeal for an additional 13,500,000.-
000 relief appropriation was reported
under consideration today by the
United Statea conference of mayors.
Mayor F. H. LaOuardla of New
York City, president of tha organi
zation representing most of the larg
est cities, emerged from an executive
aesslon to .promise a statement late
In the day.
"Relief," he aald. "was the sole sub
ject under discussion."
' In addition to La Quardla, those
In attendance Included Mayor Joseph
K. Carson, Jr., Portland, Ore..
YOUTH IS SLAIN IN
DEFENDING FIANCE
NEVADA CITT. Calif- Jan. 13
(AP) Deputies bad few due In
the search today tor two masked
slayer-bandits who shot and mortally
wounded a young miner, righting
to defend his fiance against asssult.
Chsrles Merer. 24, died a ' few
hour after hla assailant beat him
off with a rifle bullet and tossed
his body Into a ditch, when he
sought to protect tils sweetheart'
honor.
fflNGlEESLETNEW
EXECUTIVE OF SCOUTS
Th application of Irving Beetle)
aa executive ot the Crater Lake area
of th Boy Scout of America wis
approved Saturday night by the exe
cutive committee of th area coun
cil. Mr, Beesley, who comes neie
highly recommended by the Oakland
Calif, council, will arrive In tho city
Wednesday, January 13, to take up
hi duties.
in Wreck Off
NEW MOVE HINTED
IN FIGHT TO SAVE
HAUPTW'S LIFE
Two Washington Attorneys
Join Defense Forces
Possessors Ransom Coin
Known, Claims Lawyer
(Copyright, 103s. The Associated
Press)
TRENTON, N. J.. Jan. 13 Brunc
Richard Hauptmann today told nls
wife he waa ready to undergo further
questioning by any of thr authori
ties. He said he would tell anything he
might have neglected to say. But oa
reasserted his Innocence.
By Dale Harrison
(Copyright, 1933, by the Associated
Preas)
TRENTON. N. J.. Jan. 13. (AP)
Bruno Hauptmann' lawyers, audden-
ly augmented by two Washington
attorneys and bolstered by possible
new evidence, swung vigorously today
Into a last ditch fight against his
Friday night date with death.
Retention of Attorneys Nugeot
Dodds and Neil Burklnshaw, who a
year ago saved a condemned man,
was accepted a an Indication that
a new move was contemplated In the
United States supreme court.
They were employed after the New
Jersey court of pardona had recused
Saturday to grant clemency to ihe
condemned kldnap-slayor of the
-Lindbergh baby.
Ransom Claimed Found
Bernard M. Flnnlgan, a Chicago
lawyer, flew here to tell Qov. Harold
Q. Hoffman a story of threo men who
he said possessed 323,000 of . tho
Lindbergh ransom money.
Captain John L. Lamb, head of the
detective devlslon of the state police
said today that Flnnlgan had. writ
ten "on March 38 last year that -be
had a client who had told him the
namea of three men who "mlghi"
have Information leading to some of
the ransom money.
Lamb said Col. H. Norman Schwar
kopf. head of the state police, wrote
Flnnlgan two daya later and asked
I continued on Page rbre
' f-
ITALIAN CAMPAIGN
. (By Associated Press.)
Fascist Invaders of Ethiopia, their
campaigns hampered by weather
opposltes on two main frontiers, were
reported today pushing aerial at
tacks on southwestern river valley
settlements,
A neutral observer who flew back
to Addis Ababa after a visit to Ras
Desta Demtu's camp said the Italian
air squadrons ,bomb the courses oi
the Wobbe Shlbell and the Oanale
Dorla dally between 7 and t a. m.
The crash of an Italian bomber
on a hillside nesr Asmara took the
Uvea of three fascist soldier hesded
by Lieutenant Lenta, pilot.
Troop movement In the north
have been hindered by driving early
rains which have turned Italian
constructed roads Into mud holes
or have washed them away. Lack of
water In the terrlflo heat of the
desert south, together with malarial
fever also have complicated the
Invaders' drives.
Starting December 20. Wood county.
West Virginia, children received 13
days cf Chrlstmaa vacation
Religious Group Prays
As Girl Lays in Trance
DETROIT, Jan. 13. (AP) Mem
bers of th "Pull'salvatlon Union." a
rellgiou sect, kept up an almost un
broken series of prayer services today
about tha couch of 17 year old Shir
ley Tapp. uncotuclou since last
Wednesday In what a physician said
was an "auto-hypnotlo" etat Into
which she entered at a meeting of
the group.
Th high school girl lay on a couch
In th living room of her home,
respiration and reflexes apparently
normal, but In a trance-llka sleep.
At Intervals, a th exhortation of
th worshipper reached It height,
she would intend her clenched hands
rljldly Into the air. holding that po
sition until th prayer ended.
Her father, Lavern Tapp. automo
bile factory worker, said th girl
Rules Against Law
' .!
v .... VI
$k V 1 J
mi
LJ A L
Federal Olstrlet Judge Merrill E.
Otis In a ruling made at Kansas
City declared tha entire Wagner
labor dispute act, New Deal law
giving employe th right to organ
ize and bargain without Interfer
ence from mployer. was Unconsti
tutional. (Associated Press Photo)
E OF
APPLEGATE T
latJtnnn r.mltU.V. thfOllBh Sheriff
Syd I. Brojvrt announced today tha
onering oi a rewara or e.w
evidence leading to the arrest and
conviction of the party or parties
who shot and seriously wounded
John W. Pernoll, Applegate store
keeper and postmastor In an at
tempted hold-up last Thursday
evening.
Rumors to the contrary notwith
standing, i there have been no ar
rests of suspects, Sheriff Brown said
today. Street corner gossip has re
ported all the way from three to
.1 fttini,nt in citatodv. The sherllt
aald a number of men had been
questioned but all were eliminated
furnishing perfect alibis.
Pi,rnnll Imnrnvlnc
Pernnll waa renorted aa resting
caay today and on me roaa to im
provement.
Th. fit-tt. tmllAt fired bv th thug
grazed Pernoll's chest, going through
his coat nd vest, ine ouuoi
grazed the elbow. The margin of an
in.h wmiiH have sent the leaden
pellet crashing through hi chest
The second bullet passed inrougu
the fleshy part of the leg and thigh,
missed the leg none and arteries.
An inrh htuher uo' and It would
have entered the lower abdomen
ann Rtniek vital oraans.
Stat police and sheriff deputies
are at'.ll Marching tne ppi
district for cluea. Thou officers are
(Continued on Page . rhree)
4-
BACHELOR'S DEGREE
ITtHVAnn TTNIVFRfllTY. Calif.
Jan. 13. (Spl.) Edward Reamea or
Medford was awarded tne argree
bachelor of art here this week, fol
lowing th conclusion of the autumn
quarter.
Edward Reames, son ot Mr. ana
Mrs. A. I. Reamea. transferred from
Stanford to Oregon university at
th beginning of the new semester.
"slain by th power of Ood" In her
(tort to attain a greater sense of
rellgiou grac. He explained she had
been deeply religious alnc she waa
"saved" at a meeting of the sect, but
th "sinful nature" which remained
had been "slain" by th trance-like
sleep. He said she would awaken on
tha seventh day of th trance.
Roaa Kllgore, leader ot the sect,
aid th prayer service at horn would
continue unabated until the . girl
awakened.
Under belief ot the members, the
unconsclcu girl 1 "suffering from
the whol world" while her natural
Impulse ar subdued or "slain" by
th unconscious state.
Th parent said Shirley answered
questions relative to rellgiou sub
ject, but responded to Da other
questions.
Astoria
HURRICANE SINKS
FREIGHTER IOWA
WITH ALL ABOARD
Eight Bodies Wash Ashore
Crew Never Had a
Chance After Ship Hurled
on Sands by Terrific Wind
ASTORIA, Ore., Jan. 13. iify The
crushed hulk of the 410-foot freighter
Iowa awayed to the swells in It grave
of sand today while coast guardsmen
searched for the bodies of It crew of
34 men. All were lost. At 10:30 a. m.
eight bodies had been reported found.
Three had been Identified.
In th worst hurricane tha north
Paclflo had experienced In year, th
States Line freighter crashed Sunday
on the sands of the southwestern
Washington ooast.
Captain Edgar L. Tate, M, veter
an of th line, and hi crew of 34,
"never had a chance." It waa said by
Captain R. Stanley Patch, command
er of the coast guard cutter Onon
daga. Captain Patch and hla crew of
53 almost shared a similar fate aa
they drove through the raging gala
In futile attempt, at rescue.
The fllAfcjwm Mimt. ww.n -...a
Identification had been completed of
the bodies of Marlon J. Perlch, car
penter, New Orleans: Theodore J. F.-l-on,
second assistant engineer, Port
land, and Charles Ogan. third assist
ant engineer, San Pedro.
. By Wendell w. Webb-
Associated Press staff Writer'
ASTORIA, Ore., Jan. 13. vp Aa
angry Paclflo, apparently little -sauged
by the 34 lives It treacherous
waters olalmed from tha Steamer
Iowa, oontlnued to crash th Ore
gon and Washington shores today a
menace to all things which dared It
wrath.
Six bodies were recovered from th
foam-capped surf and coast guards
men maintained their constant patrol
for others.
The hammering wave pounded th
Iowa to bit on tha sand of Peacock
spit off th coast ot southern Wash
ington yesterday. The entlr crew
(Continued on Pff rhrae) .
AND CHEESE THIEF
BELIEVED NABBED
Thrr men, 4wo of them long
sought for crlmtu in Jnctuon county.,
were apprehended ymterday and
lodged In tha county Jill, the sheriff
reported today.
Raleigh H. Hoylman, vented tor
an alleged aeries of check forgeries
and auto thefts In thla city and
county, and who mads aa escape
from state policemen recently by
fleeing from his room In his under
clothes, was caught Sunday at Camp
Kerby In Jnaephlne county by CCO
enrottees. Hoylman was captured
when he attempted to break Into
the ganollne warehouse of the CCO
camp. His captors stood guard over
him with meat cleavers until the
(Continued on Pag Pin)
AUTO SMASHUP FATAL
FOR TACOMA
YAKIMA. Jan. IS (AP) Dac
Roberta ot th Robert and Johnson
Construction company of Tacoma.
died yesterday following an automo
bile crash on the TaJtlma Canyon
highway and hla partner, George W
Johnson, died shortly after 10 o'olooc
today. Johnson suffered a skull trao
ture from which he did not rally
nd Robert died as a result of head
and Internal Injuries, Jack Klaasen.
driver of the car, and Oeorg Warter.
architect for the company and aloo
from Tacoma. received sever Injuries
but ar expected to recover. .
Their sedan crashed Into a trailer
behind a truck loaded with hay.
KIPLING'S CONDITION
REMAINS VERY GRAVE
LONDON, Jan. 13 (AP) A bul
letin Issued at 1:80 p. m, tonight
said the condition ot Rurtyard Kip
ling remained extremely grav. but
that there had been no Chang u
th last tour.