Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 29, 1938, Page 1, Image 1

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    The Weather
Forecast: Fair tonight and
Saturday; slightly wanner Sat
urday. Temperaturei
Highest Yesterday 12
Lowest thla morning M
Don't Forget
Hera It la Friday again. That
meant It la tlma to prapara
that Classified AdT. for the
Sundaj morning edition. Moat
people ipend more time read
ing Sunday than any other
day. , Don't forget.
Medford
Tribune
Full Associated Press
raited Press
Thirty-Third Tear
MEDFORD, OREGON, FRIDAY, JULY 29, 1938.
No. 110.
M
(MM
The
Capital
Parade
By Joseph Alsop
and
Robert Kintner
Copyright 1937, by The
North American News
paper Alliance, Ine.
STATE DEPARTMENT WINS
BOUND WITH FASCISTS
DEAL WOULD HAVE OIVEN
GERMANY HAITIAN EDGE
0. S. EXPORT-IMPORT BANK
HELPS AMERICAN FIRM
INDIRECT TREASURY LOAN
INANCES rUBI.IC WORKS
WASHINGTON. July 29. The
atruggle against fascist penetration
In Central and South America U
becoming sensationally exciting. The
stakes are huge, for, If the fascists
win. nazl Germany will be the pre
dominant Influence In many na
tions to the southward. American
resources are small and poorly mobi
lised. So It la heartening to be able
to report that the staid old state
department baa Just won a hand
some victory.
An assault on Haiti was prepared
some months ago by German finan
cial Interests, presumably with the
guidance of the devious Dr. HJalmar
Schacht. The rich, dart Island In
the Caribbean, at the very back door
of the United States, was ready to
succumb. Had the German assault
been successful, Haiti would have
become an economic province , of
Berlin.
The story of how the department
beat the. Germane In Haiti la some
thing of a romance of International
finance. To understand it, you must
first understand the American status
In Haiti.
Haitian finances have been under
American control since 1915, when
the Haitian government defaulted
on Its foreign bonds. The control Is
exercised through a fiscal representa
tive, nominated by the President of
the United States and appointed' by
the president of Haiti. The present
fiscal representative la Sidney de
la Rue, who makes a profession of
supervising the finances 'of black
republics, having managed those of
Liberia before he went to Haiti.
Able Mr. de la Rue's Job la to see
that Haitian customs receipts are
used to pay off foreign bondholders,
and he also haa the power to veto
any new Haitian bond Issues.
All went well in Haiti until the
American depression crippled the
Haitian export trade, and conse
quently the Haitian economy. Serious
unrest began about two years ago.
Looking to the example of the New
Deal, the Haitian government thought
longingly of spending. A year ago
the unrest had reached a point where
the stability of the government was
threatened. A $5,000,000 public works
program was decided on and' Mr. de
la Hue was asked to find the money
and approve tho bond Issue.
(Continued on Page Ten.)
SIDE GLANCES
by
TRIBUNE REPORTERS
The senior Frederick Heath aomon
lahlng hla bulldog Grip to quit play
ing with the garden hose, the gentle
man carefully explaining he wanted
to get the watering done before It
rained.
The senior Bill Holloway becoming
known aa the fisherman who catches
everything but fish, his latest
catch being the Junior Bill's fishing
license In the river three miles from
where It was lost a fortnight ago.
Morrla Leonard explaining to a
number of friends the effective ways
and means of dieting, he contradict
ing each statement by consuming a
large amount of luncheon topped off
by pie a la mode.
Bernlce Sears causing a lot of com
motion over the question of her being
or not being a Miss or Mrs., she
averring she la a Mies; the city direc
tory a Mrs.
Qua Newbury averring that the
mystery man number 7 In the Guess
Who contest Is not he although a
very attractive gentleman who easily
could be mistaken for him.
Jack Cumming proving a lifwaver
for two scribes searching for seats at
the Softball game, he graciously
opening up the press box and even
providing s blanket to sit on.
Oeorge Dayton referring s tobacco
customer to one of those new-fangled
cigarette-rending machines snd hav
ing to explain Its method of opera
tion before the customer could obtain
bis amok
14 NAVY VESSELS
TAKE OP
E
Big Plane 565 Miles From
Manila When Last Heard
From Ability to Float
Holds Hope of Rescue
MANILA, P. I.. July 30. (Satur
day) (AP) Fourteen navy vessels
steamed out or Manila today to Join
the army transport Meigs In a
search of the Pacific ocean for the
$450,000 Hawaii Clipper, which van
ished last night with 15 men on
board on a flight from Guam to
Manila.
The Meigs was the first craft to
reach the area In which the giant
flying boat apparently was forced
down. The transport reported It was
engaged in a search through the
darkness and was making a zJg-zag
course, employing powerful search
lights to sweep the sea.
Pan American officials said the
Meigs had made no report to lt
station here since radioing Its ar
rival In the area, and none was ex
pected until after dawn (noon PST)
In the far eastern waters.
Kearlng Manila.
The Clipper was only 666 miles
from Manila on Its 1680-mile flight
when Its radio flashed Its final mes
sage at 8:09 p.m., yesterday. The ope
rator reported rain and a 19-knot
headwind.
pesptte the fate of the missing
Clipper with its six passengers and
nine crew members. Pan American
officials said the Philippine Clipper
would leave Honolulu this afternoon
for the mainland, and the China
Clipper would take off about 3 p.m.
from Its Alameda, Calif., bast for
Hawaii and the Orient, - -----
Plying conditions and visibility
had been generally good, but the
plane had flown through scattered
showers.
No reason was advanced as to why
she might have been forced down,
but It was pointed out if she made
a safe landing she could float on
the Pacific ocean as well as any
boat.
The navy tender Penguin was sent
from Guam carrying one Pan Ameri
can radioman and an airways me
chanic. She was expected to reach
the scene Monday.
Planes to Search
Seven army planes were ordered
to take off from Cavite on Manila
bay at dawn Saturday for Legaspl,
on the southwestern tip of Luzon
Island and closest airport to the po-
(Continued on Page .Three )
On Missing Plane
SAN FRANCISCO, July 29 ( AP)
Fifteen persons were aboard the
Hawaii Clipper, reported missing
Oday between Guam and Manila
n the south Pacific.
..The six passengers were:
Major Howard C. French, Port
nnd. K. A. Kennedy, Piedmont, Calif.,
Pan-American Alrwaya division
traffic manager.
Dr. Earl B. McKlnley. Washing
ton. O. C.
Fred C. Meier, Washington. D. C
E. E. Wyman. New York City.
Choy Wah sun Choy. Jersey City
The crew:
Leo Terletzky. Palo Alto, Calif.,
:aptaln.
M. A. Walker. Berkeley. Calif.,
'lrst officer.
G. M. Davis, Oakland, Calif.,
tccond officer.
J. M. Sauceda, Oakland, third
ffleer.
J. W. Jewett, Oakland, fourth
officer.
H. Cox. Alameda, Calif., engineer
fflcer.
T. B. Tat urn. Honolulu, assistant
engineer officer.
W. McCarty, Alameda, radio of
'leer. I. Parker, flfiht steward.
'Guess Who' Proves Baffler
For Mail Tribune's Readers
Not a single perfect soon up to
the latest tabulation!
piat's how the Mall Tribune":
"Guess WhV contest stood at noon
Wednesday. No one had guessed cor
rectly the Identity of all 25 men snd
women pictured in the contest se
ries. Tabulations disclosed a lot of
wrong guessing. Entrants had as
many ss 23 out of the 25 wrong!
Replies are being tabulsted as rap
idly as possible and contestants are
asked to send in their Answers Im
mediately rather than wlt for the
last minute The sooner the snswen
come In. the quicker they can be
tabulated and the winners oetermln-
Texans Nominate Hillbilly
1
'I- ? ir
i . - , ' ,
W. Lee O'Panlel. Fort Worth, Texas, flour merchant, happily holds
hundreds of tributes mailed by his supporters after he succesfully won
the Texas Democratic gubernatorial nomination. Tom F. Hunter, defeated
candidate, ha wired congratulation and offered hi" services to O'Danlel.
Note the hillbilly campaign slogan on O'Panlel'i shirt: "Pappy Pass the
Biscuits." (
SITUATION EASES
ONLY ONE BLAZE
10 RECENT LIST
One new smsll lightning fire waa
discovered this mornlngon the Rogue
River national forest as the situation
In general became the most favorable
In three weeks. , '
All of the state fires In Jackson
county and the 13 lightning blazes
discovered in the national forest Wed
nesday afternoon and yesterday
morning were under control or com
pletely out today.
Two state fires remained out of
control In Josephine county, one on
Thompson creek, the other on Jack
son creek.
Hie new fire on the Rogue national
forest occurred about e, mile west of
the Seven Lakes basin on the Cas
cade summit near Alta lake. Lester
Brad shaw, fire guard at Lodge Pole,
and four South Fork CCC men were
sent to put it out.
SALEM. July 29. fl1) Forest fire
conditions In. Oregon continued to
improve today. State Forester J. W.
Ferguson announced!
Ferguson declared that virtually
all of the fires were under control
and that severs! hundred men now In
the ValsctB and Smith river districts
would be withdrawn within the next
24 hours.
UNPAID DENTIST PULLS
FILLINGS OUT OF TEETH
MIAMI, Fla., July 29. (UP) Po
lice, attracted by a woman's screams,
rushed today to the office of Dr.
Huston G. Holland, dentist, aud
found him pulling gold fillings out
of Mrs. Blanche Bailey's teeth, while
Mrs. Bailey protested violently. Dr.
Holland explained that he had done
$47 worth of dental work on her
and she paid him only $25, so he
was taking back $22 worth of fillings.
ROME. July 29. (AP) The in
ternational Institute of agriculture
today estimated the 1638 European
wheat crop, exclusive of Soviet Rus
sia, at 45.500.000 metric tons.
This is equivalent to 1 .MS. 300,000
bushels.
ed. TVe tabulation takes consider
able amount of time.
And dont forget: Saturday is the
deadline. Answera must be brought
to the Mail Tribune office not later
than midnight Saturday or mailed
In time to be postmarked not later
than Saturday.
And Just one bit of advice: be cer
tain the nsmes you gtieas correspond
with the number on the photograph.
After the close of the contest all
the totographs with the correct
nsmes under them will be published
so thst contestants may see for
themselves how well they did In
"guessing who.
CANNERIES OF COAST
YET TO MAKE OFFER
ON LOCAL BARTLETTS
Pacific coast canneries, reported ss
offering $15 per ton for Yakima val
ley No. 1 Battle Us. and $20 per ton
for Sacramento River No. 1 Bartletts,
have made no offers as yet for Rogue
river valley Bartletts, according to
A. B. Cordy, county horticulturist,
No offer was made for No. 2 Bartletts.
"The price Is generally come place
between the Yakima and Sacramento
price," Cordy said, Growers here re
garded the figure as too low. Some
thing in the nature of a local price
was expected to develop early next
week.
Reports to local fruit interests said
Yakima and California growers are
resisting the price offer. The same at
titude is held here by many.
The Rogue river valley crop Is es
timated at 2,500 cars, an Increase of
250 cars over last year. County Hor
ticulturist Cordy said there would bo
s good yield of No. 1 Bartletts, of the
required two and three-eights lncher.
diameter. Harvesting of Bartletts Is
scheduled to start between August
10 and 15.
INDICT EV1EDIC ON
I
PORTLAND, Ore.. July 28. (AP,
United States Attorney Carl Don
augh said today that the federal
grand Jury had indicted Dr. J, W.
Huff, long-time Baker physician, on
12 counts of alleged violation of
the Harrison narcotics law.
U. 8. Marshal Jack Summervllle
said Deputy Al Price had left here j
last night to arrest Huff, whose bond
was set st $3,000. I
Dona ugh said no date for a plea
had been set, but that Huff prob
ably would be arraigned here next
week.
The indictment charged that Huff'
prescribed narcotics not In the course
of his professional practice or In
good faith and the Indictment named
as the recipient or the narcotics,
John L. Orter, alias Ed Anderson.
It slleged that prescriptions totaled
S50 half grams extending over a
year.
HELENA WILL EXPEND
$400,000 ON AIRPORT
HELENA. Mont., July 28. (UP)
Work on a $400,000 municipal air
port Improvement project was start
ed today when City Engineer Oscar
Bsarson announced a Works Prog
reas administration allocation of $20 -
000 had been made.
It Is expected two or three yesrs
will be required for completion of
the project, which Involves grading
and surfacing of three runways.
-
The first stage appearance cf Will
Rogers was st Keith's Union Square
theater In New York City la 1005.
PONTIFF APPEALS
FOR TOLERANCE IN
Racialism and Exaggerated
Nationalism Raise Bar
riers Between Men Is
Warning of Church Head
By the Associated Press
, An appeal by Pope Plus XI for tol
erance fell today on a world torn with
dissension and strife.,
The pope was reported to have
told students of the College of the
Propagation of the Faith that radi
calism and exaggerated nationalism
raise "barriers between men and
men."
Hla declaration was uttered as the
fascist regime of Italy waa pushing
a vigorous campaign in favor of Its
recently promulgated doctrine of race
that the Italian people are Aryan
and "Jews do not belong to the
Italian race.'
Greek Revolt fMiort
Discord, meanwhile, spread to far
comers of the earth. In Greece, a
revolt on the Island of Crete against
Gen. John Metaxas, dictator of Greece
quickly was crushed. British troops
fired on rioting Burmese Buddhists
and Indian Moslems In Rangoon,
Burma, where 47 .died in four days
of fighting.
The British house of commons re
cessed until November 1 on ft note
of rancor over the failure of a British
destroyer to defend a British mer
chantman sunk by Spanish Insurgent
warplanea in a port of war-torn
Spain.
In Spain, Insurgents reported they
had released flood-waters of moun
tain streams to break the communi
cations of government armies. Dami
In the Ebro river and its tributaries
were opened above the government
forces, reported advancing on two
aldea of Gandesa, insurgent head
quarters city. In the fifth day of their
surprise offensive on the Cs tal an
front.
Deny Success
Insurgents declared a nine-foot
wall of water had swept away the
government's bridges. . The govern
ment, however, declared the stroke
bad failed to raise the Ebro effec
tively. Government observers said their
line, on a circular front extending 15
miles, reached from north of Villa
Alba de Los Arcos, five miles from
Gandesa, through the eastern out
skirts of Gandesa to Bot, an Insur
gent communications Junction 13
miles to the south.
Japan's forces, pressing slowly
toward Hankow, China's provisional
capital, from about 110 miles down
the Yangtze river, struck today pri
marily through the air.
Japanese airmen were reported to
have bombed Kluklang and Nanchang
In the Yangtze eone. Chinese reports
said hundreds of noncombatants were
killed.
Jap Mnes Severed
A Chinese counter-offensive was
said to have severed Japanese lines
south of captured Kluklang. 135 mllea
down river from Hankow, while
"further Chinese air attacks on Japa
nese warships" nesr Kluklang "dam
aged seven more.' Japanese said a
hospital ship waa struck but made no
mention of damage.
A spark from the Spanish civil war
brought In bo rite fire In the house of
commons when the British govern
ment disclosed the destroyer Hero
stood by without retaliating when a
Spanish Insurgent warplane sank the
British steamer Dellwyn Wednesday
in the British-operated port of Osn
dia, Spain.
Answering bitter laborlte protests.
Col. John Llewellln, civil lord of the
sdmlralty, declared the Hero com
piled with the government's policy
"Full protection to British ships out
side territorial waters and not
within territorial waters.
AIR RESERVE CHIEF
PORTLAND, Ore.. July 28. (AP)
MsJ. Howard C. French, who boarded
the Hawaiian Clipper at Alameda for
Hongkon g. was the sen lor sir re
serve officer In thla area.
The major, a nationally known
aviation authority, was state aero
nautics inspector under the late
Oov. Julius Meier and vice-president
of the Aero club of Oregon.
He left Washington Cute college
to enter the army during the Mexi
can border uprising. He was shot
down twice while with the 50th
squadron In the World war snd re
ceived the Croix de Ouerre from the
French government.
Wages In cotton mills In the earl;
part of the 10th century wcro under
$4 s week for women, and usually
over $5 a week fee men
FORD FIRM HELD
OF
E
Spying and Discrimination
at Buffalo Plant Charged
by Labor Board Exam
iner After Hearing
WASHINGTON, July 99. tJD A la
bor board trial examiner ruled today
that tfo Fard Motor oompany had
violated tho Wanner labor act by
"spying" and' discrimination at Its
Buffalo, N. Y assembly plant.
Tho examiner, Francla M. 8hea,
recommended the company rehire 50
CIO unlonlats and cease "Interfering"
with union activities.
Shea, listing eight methods of al
leged violation of the law. said the
company's service men had spied on
union meetlnga and on men at work.
At the same time, he added. It "dis
seminated propaganda" to discourage
membership m the United Automo
bile Workers of America.
12-Day llearlnr
The findings were based on a 19
day hearing In Buffalo last winter
on charges of unfair labor practice
brought by the union.
Shea held that 17 men were dis
charged for union activity and S3
othera were not reemployed after a
layoff because of other union mem
bership. He dismissed discrimination
chargea wltli respect to 19 other
workers.
Among the findings of unfair prac
tices, his report listed the participa
tion by Ford service men In discharg
es, which the examiner said waa an
unusual procedure. The service men
correspond to company police. Thoy
took charge of men notified of dis
missal and led them from the plant,
testimony brought out. -
Tore Down Banner
Shea ruled trie company waa re
sponsible for the tearing down of a
union banner opposite the factory by
"eight or nine men who came from
the direction of the plant."
He criticised distribution of liter
ature which had been held to be
antl-unlon In previous NLRB actions
agalnat Ford at Dearborn, Mich.. St.
Louts, and Sommervllle, Mass.
The Ford almanac and the reprint
of a, newspaper article purporting to
give Henry Ford'a views on labor,
Shea said, were distributed to Buf
falo Ford workers aa a "deliberate ef
fort" to Interfere wltli labor organ
ization activities.
Tho company was given 10 days to
comply with Shea's recommendations.
Meanwhile, however, It may file ex
ceptions to his report and request
oral argumenta before the board.'
F
PORTLAND, July 20. (UP)
United States customs officers lste
Thursday seized 400 cans of opium,
valued at between $80,000 and $100.
000, on the Norwegian ship Gran
ville. Officers said it was the big
gest narcotic haul here In 40 years.
The seizure was made In a routine
inspection of ships entering the hsr
bor. Fred Flak, collector of customs,
said no prior tip had been received.
The cans were found burled about
two feet under a quantity of bur
lap dunnage In the fore peak of the
vessel.
Five bundles were linked together
with cord, Indicating that plans call
ed for dropping the cargo overboard.
Seven members of the Chlneae crew
of 35 were arrested and held for
questioning.
Republicans Accuse F. R.
Of Misleading Statements
v
Br ARTHUR T. DEUKEVE
I nltrd Pm Ulaff Correspondent
WABHINCITON, July 99. (UP)
The Republican national committee
today accused President Roosevelt of
"Intellectual dishonesty," of making
many "misleading or unfair" atate
menta and of executing "brawn re
venuila" In position In order to
cspltaltze on changea In the politi
cal situation.
The allegations an contained In
the preface of a 100-page booklet
entitled "Quotations From Franklin
Delano Roosevelt," which waa pre
pared and published by the com
mittee aa ammunition for Republi
can candidates -In the current elec
tions. On the cover la quip by
Benjamin Franklin: "Baying and
doing have quarreled and parted."
The quotatlona cover a wide range
of topics. Including a balanced bud
get, congress and the president, cost
of government, government and busi
ness, politics In relief, pork bsrrai.
prices, Roosevelt recovery. Roose
BASEBALL
American
R. R. K.
Philadelphia 2 8 3
Detroit .... 9 7 3
Williams, tPotter and Brucker;
Auker and Tebbetts.
New Tork 4 10 8
Chicago .. - S S
Oomes and Dickey; Lea and Sewell.
Washington 4. S 1
Cleveland 19 IS 0
Hogsett. Kelley and R. Ferrell, Olu
Hani; Allen and Pytlak.
National.
B. H. E.
4 7 0
S IS 0
Cincinnati
New York
Vender Meer, Schott and Lom
bard!, Herahberger; Qumbert, Brown,
Coffman and Mancujo.
(19 Innings) R. H. K.
Chicago ... . 4 10 9
Philadelphia S 13 1
Lee. Root, French and Hartnett;
Mulcahy, Slveas, Clark and Atwood.
Davis.
Pittsburgh T IS 0
Brooklyn S 10 9
Brandt, M. Brown, Bowman, Swift
and Todd; Hamlin, PreasneU and
Campbell.
St. Louis 1 S 9
Boston 9 8 0
Davis, McOee and Owen; Lannlng
and Lopes.
MOSCOW, July 99. (AP) Soviet
border troops today repulsed a Jepa-
neae-Manchoukuo attempt to oceupy
a strategic hill on what Ruaala de
clarea la Soviet territory.
There wen killed and wounded on
both aides.
The Soviet charge d'affalrs at Toklo
waa Instructed to lodge a vigorous
protest, demand exemplary punlah
ment of those responsible, and warn
the Japanese government that Mos
cow holds It responsible for the con
sequences. The clash waa near Poslet Day, In
the region when Japan haa declared
Soviet troops violated the Manchou-
kuo frontier July It. The hlU In
question la near the Junction of
Siberia, Japanese-Inspired Manchou-
kuo, and Japanese Korea.
MARFA, Tex., July 20. Two
soldiers, hoisted by block and tackle
from a narrow canyon ledge on which
they were marooned five daya after
attempting to ride flood waters of
ti.e Rio Orande on automobile in
nertubes, agreed today "another day
and we'd have had to Jump back In
the river."
Private Clarency Hansen of Santa
Pe, N. M hla feet blistered, and his
endurance almost gone, remained
last night at the top of the cliff to
which he and Sergt. Clyde Ryberg of
Mlnneapolla were hauled from the
ahelf 1.500 feet below.
ROGUE RIVER CITIZENS
FAVOR WATER SYSTEM
GRANTS PASS, July 99. (AP)
Rogue River cltlrena voted, 03 to 8
yeaterday to authorise a HO. 000 bond
Issue flnanolng construction of a
new water aystem. Application Is
contemplated for a 114,000 federal
grant.
velt depression, agricultural planning,
banking and finance, communism,
fascism, the constitution and free
dom of the press.
One of the- shortest - aubjecta la
headed "The Pledge to the People."
Occupying less than one-third of a
page, It contains only the president's
oath of office taken under hla two
Inaugurations and a statement he
made In a radio address on May 7
193S, that "I am going to be honest
at all times with the people of the
country."
The committee Insisted la Its pre
face, however, that "many manifestly
misleading or unfair statements will
be found In the record." Statements
are Included In the booklet. It said.
which show administration favor to
special groups, disfavor to othera,
"all Instilling claaa hatred formerly
unknown In this country."
"Intellectual dishonest ypmiwatee
the entire fabric of the prealdent's
declared philosophy," th prefaoa
BONNEVILLE CHIEF
D. Ross Says Develop
ment of Device for Trans
mitting Direct Current
Makes Hookups Feasible
SEATTLE. July 90. (AP) Oreat
transcontinental power networks
hooking together the nation's private
and public power projects were vle-
uallMd for the not far distant ruturo
by J. D. Ross. Bonneville power ad
ministrator and superintendent of
Seattle's city light department.
Development of a device for trans
mitting direct current makea such
networka feasible, he aald.
rrablem Holred
He told the englnoen club yeater
day engineers In the eaat apparently
are aolvlng the problem that haa been
the great obstacle to transmission of
direct current long distances th
necessity for an apparatus changing
alternating current to direct current
at the generator end of the line and
back to alternating current at the t
receiving terminal.
Present methods of transmitting
large amounts of alternating current
energy were not practicable more
than 300 mllea. he aald.
He aald "the great plants of tn
federal government, Bonneville, Cou
lee. Boulder and the Tennessee Valley
Authority and the million horsepower .
Skagit project of the city of Seattle
are already the foundation etonea lxt.
the new auperpower area. 1
More Plants Planned
"It la to be hoped the St. Lawrenea
soon will be harnessed. Then there
an other planto to be butlt on thai
Columbia and Its tributaries to a
total of 19,300,000 kilowatts, Includ
ing Bonneville and Coulee." : , ;
H aald with two-thirds of tho
country's power produced from fuel,
It Is evident huge steam plants wIM
be required. "There are two enorm
ous lignite fields, one In Dakota and
another In Texas," he said. Vast de.
posits of coal stretch through Penn
aylvanla and West Virginia. These
are convenient polnta for our great
national plants." '
LONDON, July 90, W Attorneys
for the former Barbara Hutton, five,
and-ten heiress, and her estranged
husband. Count Court Haugwlaa-Re-ventlow.
announced today the couple
had reached an agreement for a asp- '
aratlon. i
The count waa granted "parental
rights" toward Lance, their two-year-old
son. They entitle him to make
oertaln final decisions affecting bit
ion's education, religion and career.
The deed of separation already has
been algned both by the count and
counteas. It la subject to approval
by the Danish minuter of Justice
but would be valid both under Dan
ish and English law.
Count Court la Danlah and the
eounteae haa adopted her huaband'a
nationality.
Under Danish law their deed of
aeparatlon can be changed Into di
vorce after 18 months If both agree.
or after 19 more months If either of
them dlsagreea,
iE
T
PORTLAND, July 90. tPr-Clrcult
Judge A. P. Dobeon signed an order
yeaterday restraining Portland's eiiti-
vice crusading commissioner, J. 1.
Bennett, from Interfering with game
or devloea at a carnival operating
under city licenses.
Bennett Invaded a "Fleet Week"
carnival ground Wednesday night and
arrested two men who were oper
ating a balloon gam. A throne
followed him through the grounda.
homing "Make way for Hitler."
Judge Dobeon acted arter confer
ences with Deputy City Attorney
John Seabrook and Stanley Meyer,
attorney for carnival concession
aire. W aid port Sawmill
Destroyed By Fire
w ALT) PORT. Ore. July 99. (AP)
Fire department from Newport
and Toledo aided In checking a SIS.
000 fire, which laet night destroyed
the Waldport Lumber Co. and the
home of Ha owner, E. E. Mills.
A beer parlor waa alao damaged.
The lire for a time threatened
weep through tbla eoaat villa.