- MEDFORD MATL TTJBUyE. TTTTFORT. OTVEOOy. TUESDAY. :MTC,UST 20. 1940. PAGE FTVTf T VOYAGE OF THE 29U126 UP THE ROGUE Til following article, pre sented la cooperation with the Oregon Stele Motor luo ciation. it one oi series de signed to promote travel in the Pacific northwest. Today's eitide hts been condensed from a motorlog appearing i la The Bander Oregoniea BY RICHARD L. NEUBERGER THE 29U12S Is neither as for midable as dreadnought nor as pretentious as an ocean liner. But it can take you on a spec tacular trip no Warspite or Mauritania will ever made. The 28U128 is one of the 32-foot, V-8 propelled boats which each morning navigate the 32 miles of Roque river scenery between Cold Beach, on the Oregon sea- coast, and Agness, locked in the heart of the Siskiyou national forest This journey was undertaken s part of the motorlog to the proposed seashore national pane in Curry county. The Coast highway threads across the Rogue on a graceful aqueduct, so it was not out of our way for us to accept Roy Carter's invitation to go up the Rogue. We left The Oregonian-Oregon State Motor association car at Gold Beach and acocmpanled Roy on the cruise. Our motorlog party or per haps it should be boating con sisted of the same individuadls who struggled so heroically with the headlands of the park area: Wallace Sprague of the Oregon Statesman; Ralph Gil ford, officially state highway T V - . i ,,i.L t 111 nTr i-"6 pr.'-. t - -i-xt - pi ar m w ' w-f tuerir ' 111 sketr II II lW?al:Jeri2fC3i-- Detecting Device Trails Sky Raider Heavy Fighting Off French Coast. CANADIAN ACCORD IAD0LF ROUNDS UP SIS UP JAPAN ANTI-NAZIS 10 FLED F Tokyo. Aug. 20. Japan ese newspapers professed alarm today over the United States' new defense accord with Cana da, declaring that ultimately It would cause grave disturbances Chancy, Swltrerland. Aug. 20. oJ Hundreds of German In the Orient. Dome! (Japanese j antlnaiis who fled their home- news aaencv) reDorted in a nana wnen vaou muer came tlonals were said to have been taken from the Guri camp in the Pyrennes in this fashion within the last week. Tattered French uniforms still were worn by these men as they started their journey back to Germany. Others being sent bark to the reich include intellectuals who in one way or another partici pated in antl-nazl organizations. Cameraman Ralph Cifford vaulted onto a I lverslde ledge to get this photograph of the motor- log psrty cruising up a quiet STieicn 01 me department photographer; Glen O. Stevenson of the state depart ment of parks, and your cor respondent In addition, there were passengers who that morn ing happened to be traveling between Gold Beach and Agness. iilr' 0 cxj " " (-3-? " M f' Njj . i i U Tern Fry and his boss, Roy Carter, watch the flowing Rogue head as the 29U12S approaches stretch of white water. As we started upstream, with the Pacific a white-flecked sheet of blue in the distance, Roy Carter introduced us to Tom Fry, a half-breed Rogue River Indian who has been navigat ing to 29U128 for eight years. So far as we are concerned, we now are ready to go with Tom Fry on a log raft through the Dardanelles or over Victoria falls In a steam dredge. We are sure he is a better navigator than Drake and as good a river runner as Lewis and Clark. This has been a dry, arid sum mer. The woods are ready to crackle. Streams and creeks have waned into thin trickles and the Rogue Is near low ebb. Its rocky bottom is within a few feet of the surface. Reefs and bars ordinarily buried beneath layers of water are now near enough to touch. Wary the boat man who covers this tortuous course. Tom Fry did it At last (iter about 2 hours and ti minutes on the river, we reached the settlement of Agness. Most people who visit Agness do so by boat, reports Lawrence D. Lucas, who runs the farmhouse at Agness which serves as inn, restaurant and hotel. He has lived at Agness all his life, except for service in the world war and a few years at Oregon State college, but he still believes the boat trip is a heart-warming experience. We ate lunch at Mr. Lucas' farmhouse, which he terms the Agness hotel, and, there being no rival to the claim, the name stands. Then we set out for the postoffice. There we met Mr. and Mrs. George Washington Rilea, who keep the general store at Agness. For many years Mr. Rilea was postmaster in the fourth-class postoffice in the store. But Mr. Rilea is a repub lican, and when bis term ex pired recently he had to submit to the fortunes of politics, and Frank L. Vernon, who belonga to the same party as the Honor able James A. Farley, took over the job. However, both Mr. and Mrs. Rilea told us with considerable sltisfaction that Mr. Vernon was leaving the postoffice in the store, so they would con tinue to get the benefit of the mail trade. It seems that the schism between democrats and republicans in Agness is not un bridgeable. Downstream we sped at about 30 miles an hour. It took only half as long as going up. Tom Fry navigated the boat with his customary dexterity and we completed the journey without mishap. Roy Carter's boats have hauled more than a million pounds of freight and several thousand people into the Ore gon coastal hills without an accident The trip has numerous thrills, but it is not dangerous; neither is it rocky enough to distress any but the queasiest digestive apparatus. It can be made both ways, to Agness and back, between 9 in the morning and 3:43 in the afternoon. Any one who crosses the Rogue river on the Oregon Coast high way and fails to take this jour ney is his own worst enemy. Berlin. Aug. 20. UP) A Brit ish Bristol-Blenheim bomber which attempted raid on Ber lin early this morning was shot down at Oldenburg, near Bre men, authorized sources reported today. Detecting devices followed the raider across the country after it was driven away from the capital by anti-aircraft fire, it was explained. The bomber, which dropped numerous flares over a suburb an area only nine miles from Berlin, was one of two which attempted to approach the city during the night. The other was driven away from the far west ern outskirts by an anti-aircraft barrage, Spokesmen said that no bombs were dropped near Berlin by the British planes. So far at Germany was con cerned, the appearance of the British planes near Berlin, which gave the capital Its fourth air raid alarm of the war and sent residents to underground shel ters for an hour and 40 minutes, was the high spot of a day marked by general lull in aerial activity. DNB, the German news agen cy, announced that German planes again had "successfully bombed" the Eastchurch and Southend airports and others in Kent, southeast of London to day. Authorized German sources said air battles were being fought over southeastern Eng land Strong units of British fight broadcast. One Influential paper, Hdchl. predicted that the Canadian agreement was forerunner of a similar American pact with Australia and said it "obliges Japan to be extremely watchful In view of Its possible effect on the peace of the Pacific region. Other papers urged early es tablishment of Japan's "new or der in East Asia" (her program for domination over China, southeastern Asia and the East Indies) as an offset to future col laboration between the United States and the British domin ions. The newspaper Yomlurl said the Canadian pact was "proof that the United States no longer doubts that Britain will be de- feated and, therefore. Is taking measures to meet the come- j quences" of that defeat j into power are being rounded up by his agents In conquered France and taken back to nasi Jails, reports from across the border disclosed today. Armed with long lists of names, nail officials were said to be making the rounds of civ ilian Internment camps In the unoccupied tone in France in a widespread search for fugitive German nationals. Neutral observers told of see ing large groups of forlorn pris oners herded into trucks under guard of heavily armed Ger mans In civilian clothes and be ing driven off to Germany via the occupied tone. Several hundred German na- OF OF Washington, Aug. 20.- John G. Winant, director of the International Labor office, an nounced today the transfer "temporarily" of the organiza tion's headquarters from Gen eva. Switzerland, to McGill Uni versity at Montreal, Canada. Winant said "lack of com munication and transportation threatened to isolate the Geneva office from non-European" na tions which belong to the I.L.O. Use Mtll Tribune wsnt ads. Day In Congress By the Associated Press Senate Continues debate on compul sory military training hill. Labor committee resumes con sideration of amendments to National Labor Relations act. House Debates $300,000,000 bill for trade-promoting loans by export import bank. Military committee resumes discussion of conscription bill. Yesterday . Senate Debate.! conrcrlptlon bill. Passed bill to permit Ameri can shins to remove child refu era were said to have challenged! gees from war zones under safe the German attacking forces In conduct from belligerents. the neighborhood of Dover, At various points along the south coast, anti-aircraft opened fire. The Informants said that, besides the airports, munitions depots and other military ob jectives were raided. Several airdromes were bomb ed with visible success, DNB said, and large oil tanks at Stan low, en the Manchester ship canal, were set afire. A rail terminal also was reported bombed, disrupting traffic on two railway lines. Sounds of cannonading were audible in Berlin during the early morning air raid alarm. Yakima Fire Costly Yakima. Wash., Aug. 20. (P) Fire, apparently starting at the John Dower Lumber com pany, caused a loss of at least 1110,000 before it was brought under control this morning. The pall of smoke from the blaze, which destroyed the lumber company plant and the adjoin ing wood yard of the Western Fuel company, covered the city. War Entry Seen Portland, Aug. 20. (JP) Dr. James Millar, Pacific coast rep resentative of the Presbyterian Christian board of education, told an Albany college audience last night that America prob ably "would have to step in and save the day in Europe.'' Cm Mill Trtbuna wtnt ids. No Plane Inquest Salem. Aug. 20 (Pi No In quest will be held into the death of Raymond T. Bennett, 21, Portland, killed Sunday af ter crashing an unlicensed plane here. Coroner L. E. Barrick said today. House Passed minor bills. Dm Mill Tribune want ads. Wlat Dairy Trophy Salem, Aug. 20. (F A. C. Cameron of Klamath Falls, de partment of agriculture district representative for Klamath and Lake counties, won the depart ment's trophy for district dairy Improvement during the past three months, the department said today. sssssta REBUILT INDUSTRIAL & PLANING MILL FANS Uff wti ta We Dun cntUrtinsJ I'HMWM SHEET METAL WORKS N H tttfc 4 nttun rVrtUnd OrvffM Here Soon! Our Annual Big Subscription Party, Deluxe 10-inch Burner priced. x Vs. ti j ; ". tm$zm IF. BIG SAVINGS Plan NOW To Take Ad vantage of Low Subscrip tion Rates! AND REMEMBER! All subscribers must be paid up to September 1. 1940 to entitle them to Bargala Rate. New 1941 PREWAY OIL BURNING HEATERS ARE IKIIE.EE ! 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