Local Forecast Generally fair; warm. e JOsLffl High 83; Low 59. f&Sc J OREGON: Generally fair; no tern- . jfDT perature change. &Z , , , ,', ES HERALD SERVICE ra ilnrald subscribers who full to revolve (heir pupor by OiUO p. m. lira requoalod to rail On Uornld business office, pbon 1UUO, anil papoi will bo lent by (pedal carrier. ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS Price Five Cents KLAMATH FALLS. ORE., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 13,l934 Number 7043 VMUMIH Editorials On the Day's News ..''l',,..1 aUK,1'jIM''4 STBEtl SETTLE lly I IIANK JENKINS SPEAKING ttt tint opening aoa lou of tho Olat convoiitluu of llio OruKon alulo gruugo In Roso burg on Tuesday, Bluto Maator liny W. 0111 niudo two atutomouta that, com Ins (rout the (Into hood ot tho country'! loading farm organisation, nro Interesting. COM.MICNTINO on (be agrlcul turol adjustment act and the national recovury act, be aald; "While crop reatrlctlons muit bo used, tho f armors o( America cannot be forced to submit to roKlmentntlon of their cropi, Tbe problem mint be approached from different anglo." - That U to say, In Mr. GUI's opinion, ruined Individualism lu't dead yet among the farm era ot America. jll HEN ho added. Much can be accomplished by withdrawing marginal and sub-marginal landa from cultiva tion, but I am convinced wo have been thinking too much about crop reduction rathar than In creased consumption." THIS writer, who dlsngrces with Mr. Cilll troquonlly, agrees with him abaolulely on that point. All the talk one bears these daya Is ot restricting the out put, working less, boosting the price. In this humble Individ ual's opinion, prosperity NEVER WAS created In that way, and NEVEIt WILL, UK. The way to have prosperity la to work more, produce more, lowor the price and HAVE MOltH. e rOU can t get away from Ibis fundamental faoi: , The more we produce, the more wo have. Tho less wo pro duce, the loss we have. You can't bave more by pro ducing leas. e e TUB thing that Is out of Joint Is distribution. If we could only loom how to distribute equally what we produce, so that each of us could exchange what he produoes for what tho othor follow produces at a fair and equal rato of exchange, the liogey ot over-production that now frlghtons us so greatly would disappear. AS A regulator of production, " especially farm production, old Mother Nature has been a rathor outstanding success. Evory time sho has turned nor hand to tho job, during the sor oral thousand years of which we havo a historical rocord, she has got away with It. It you went to Sunday school In the yoars when you should, you will remember Joseph's in terpretation ot the Pharaoh's dream ot the aeven fat cows and tho soron lean cows which, he snld, symbolliod the aeven yoars of loan production that follow seven yoars of fat production. Even away back thore, you see, they rocognltod the foot that Na (Continued on Pago Fonr) ROGERS HOLLYWOOD, Calif., Juno 13. -When tho national re covery set (NRA) was drawn up thore was one clauao In there In regard to "collective bargaining," and It was known at the time that the thing could mean just about any thing Mint anybody wanted it to. Now thoy never will got through with all those strikes till thoy aond that clause, to a supremo court that has a Wohstor dictionary, and let them hold .a final clinlo and nnnounco Just what tho thing moons, in enno It (loci moan anything, It's always bottor to brand a calf plain tho first time, You Just oan't brand him so ho will belong to both outfits, Yours, NR A RESIGNATION FROM DARROW BOARD MAD E W. 0. Thompson Enlarges Upon Charges of Monopolies. CHANGE IN CLASS STATUS ADVISED Attack From Johnson De clared With Justi fication. WASHINGTON. June IS. UP) Baying that the development ot NKA "day by day reveals more clearly a marked trond toward fascism in the United States," W O. Thompson resigned today aa number of tho Harrow NKA board. In his resignation, delivered at the White House, he asserted that the trend of tho national recov ery admlnltlratlon has been and continues to be toward the en couragoment and development of monopoly capitalism In tho unit' ed Stales." Full Itcspontllillity Shouldered . "Tho only solution," the for mer law partner ot Clarence Dar row said, "iuvolvos a change In class relationships. Only a gov eminent by the workers and farinora can plan production, pro duce goods for use and not tor profit, eliminate poverty, and rulso the standard ot living for tho entire population. Thompson said he alone was responsible for tho preparation and conclusions ot the rocont sup plemental report ot the board which recommended socialisation of Industry. It was signed by hlmsolf and Darrow, and accompanied a gen' oral Indlctmont by the entire board ot tho operation ot NKA codes. General Criticised "The publication of our re port," he addod. "was the occa sion for an unjustified attack by Oonoral Johnson, the labor advis ory board, and othor agonts and supporters of monopoly capital. "Thoy crltlclzod us blttorly tor doing the very thing we hnd boon appointed to do, namely, to hear. investigate and report on the complaints of small business men. "The purpose of their attack was obviously to divert public at tention from the clear content or our findings, which showed the growing encouragomcnt of mo nopollstle combinations and prac tices by the national recovery ad ministration. Real Policy Unchanged "Without my knowledge and without my signature tho recov ery revlow board was recently (Juno 9) Issuoci a statement null ing tho nowly-aunouncod NKA prlce-ffxlng policy. "It declares that tho NRA thus ackuowlodgos the truth of our findings and has provided a moans by which 'the monopolis ts prnctlcos we rovcalod and pro tested are now to ba cured and abollshod.' "That this slatomont of the re view board is merely a maneu ver by which It hopes to re-es- (oontinusd on rags imgnij PORTLAND, Ore., June 18 UP) While war veterans of two na tions heard an Inspiredpica that thoy "wage n bloodless battlo so such memorials will not be need ed tor future generations," mom bora of the Canadian Legion and of the American Legion Joined horo today in solemn tribute to their war dead. Ilofore n conotnph services ware road and floral plooos laid for tuoBO men and women who dlod for their nations In the -groat war. The service, solemn and prayer ful, was In striking oontraBt to the other events In this year's Festival of Hoses, which Port land now Is eolobrntlng, Jointly with tho oonvontlon ot the Brit ish Columbia command of tho Canadian Legion, . ' , Trend Declared Storm's Toll Reaches 3,000 "Itll.V, MIHKKV AM) MUD, REPORTED FHOM CENTRAL AREA. TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras June 13, (A't Stricken Central America received additional re ports today of wholesale destruc tion of life and property In s hurricane which struck six days ago. "Ruin, mlsory, mud!" was the graphic description of one ob server. Dead Over 8,000 Flights into the intorlor of Honduras and El Salvador re vealed that entire villages and many families had boon wiped out by dovsstatlng floods. The known dead In the two countries waa estlmatod at 3,000, but ob servers feared the toll was much greator. Weather forecasts said another tropical disturbance to tho north which bad menaced tho coast of Mexico and Texas in the Gulf "apparently" was dissipating. Towns Hwrpl Awny A dispatch from the Associat ed Press correspondent at ban Salvador said victims ot tho hur ricane would probably greatly ex- ceod tho 2,000 now listed. Anuarontlv reliable reports, ho said, woro that me town or ver- a pas, located at tho foot of the Chlnchot volcano, was swept sway by water rushing down the mountain. Llkowlso the town ot (Continued on Page Eight) HE E Taxicab Driver Converses With Outlaw Killer in Minnesota. ST. PAUL. Minn., June 13. UP) Tbe wlll-o-the-wlsp trail ot Tnhn mnint turned hack to the northwest today as federal offi cers checked a report mat me Indiana outlaw naa ocen seen alive. Donald Murray, a former taxi cab driver in Chicago, roportod ha hurt anen Dllllncor in North- rlnlH Minn . IK mile south of horo, about 8 a. m. luesoay morn ing. Murray said ho Know uu linger because he had driven him Mnan f tlmiu" in ll lit Cab. unrr.v1. Btnrv. not altogether agreolng with Known tacts smui Dllllnger, was that he alighted .An m fMiFht train and encroach ed a parked car containing tour men. "I wanted a smoke and when (Continued on Pago Bight) III SESSION HERE T.H....nBMv.. nf noar arow- nv)irssuH.,M w. , 1 .nnnam, nf thn northwest and California, mooting in Klam ath Falls Wednoaday in an ef fort to rostrlct this yonr's pick. hnd agreed ny noon inni mi can pears will be eliminated. Tht. thA first nnlnt dls- cussod and the conference was to oontlnuo tlirougn mo auor noon, taking up point by point nhnana nf nnnnd-fnr temnor- ary ngroemont under the agricul tural adjustment auimiusiruuuu. About 30 wore present from tXTnahlnnlnn Ornfmn unit flail- fornla for the meeting., Klamath Falls was chosen .because oi us InlDKmaHlnt. Mention TIlA P.nn- ference was hold In the Wlllard hotol. Presiding at the session was Dr. F. R. Wilcox ot tho Uni- ....It. n Pnllfni-nln Prflfitnnt also was Edgar M. Hums, secre tary of tbe Nortnwest unnnors as sociation. hoped at the contoronce to estab lish a price tor racmo coast Bartletts and to limit tho pack so that itrowera will set a fair price. Killing May Lead to Assassinations SOFIA. Bulgaria, June 13. rVPi Kroum Stankotf, an adhoront of tho MlhallovlBt faction of Mac edonians, was killed' today by un identified men In an open street. Police sold thoy feared tho kill ing might moan tho hoglnntng of anothor series of Bulgarian as European Nations May Be Permitted To Pay in Goods Roosevelt Willing Consider Partial Payments to BRITISH REFUSE TO ACCEPT PLAN Possible Favor of Idea Considered Strongly in Paris. WASHINGTON. June 13. UP) President Roosevelt Is willing to consider payments in 'goods by European war debtors on a par tial oasis. This was made known at the president's semi-weekly press con ferenco in comment on the United States note to Great Britain yes terday pertaining to the payments due next Friday. London Not in Favor. Tho suggestion for this man ner of payments mado In the note was declared not to be an offer for full payment on such a basis. Reaction abroad was divided, with indications ot disfavor la London -and - possibly favor in Paris. Mr. Roosevelt emphasised that the American note was simply a reply to the British default, point- lug out a way of payment rather than making an offer. In other words, the United States said It was willing to dis cuss the war debts if asked by Great Britain and Is willing to consider ways of avoiding the ob stacles raised by the British of making full payments In cash. BRITAIN SEES COMPLICATION, LONDON, June 13. UP) Great Britain does not Intend to make a war debts payment "in kind' as suggested In an American note yesterday. It was Indicated today in authoritative political circles. Great Britain, It was under stood, bolleves payment in goods would only complicate the situ ation. Much surprise was created In London by the reference ot Cor don -Hull. American secretary ot Btnto to payments In kind, as the United States heretofore has In sisted on dollar payments. Official quarters at Downing street were silent while the cab inet took a full opportunity to study the situation before the gov ernment's attitude Is stated to par liament, probably tomorrow. British political circles feel there has been some misrepresen tation in Washington in regard to the section of the rece.nl Brit ish note referring to the debts European countries owe England. The British note merely said. it was pointed out, that if Great Britain resumed payment to the United States she would be forced to call upon her debtors to pay her and this In turn would create another world economic crisis. She did not moan, it was held, that the two categories of debts amount to one transaction. Baseball AMERICAN LEAGUE. . . R. H. H. Chicago :. 8 8 1 Washington 11 10 0 Lyons, Tietje, Galllvan and Madjeskl; Whltehtll and Sewell. R. H. E. St. Louis 2 8 1 Now York 8 10 1 Hadley, McAffee and Hemsley: Gomes and Dickey. R. H. B. Detroit 18 22 1 Boston ..15 14 6 Marberry, Frasior, Hogsett and Cochrane, Hay worth; Welch, Grove, Rhodes and R. Ferroll. R. H. E. Cleveland 2 5 1 Philadelphia 11 14 0 Poarson, wlnogarnor and Pyt- lak, Myntt; Cain and. Hayes. NATIONAL LEAGUE. R. H. H. Brooklyn 2 9 3 Pittsburgh ...15 17 0 Horrlng, Beck, Munna and Lo pes, sukoforth, Berries; , swift and Paddy. . , . R. H. E. Philadelphia 2 , 8 1 Chicago 1 . 7 1 Davis und Wilson; Root and IlarUiett. i Lusty Crying Cheers Doctor for Quintuplets CORBEIL, Ont., June 13 UP) The Dlonne quintuplets are now doing some lusty crying and tbe tears today cheered Dr. A. R. Dafoe. "The bsblcs are doing very well," be said, "and It any thing are a little stronger." SAC CITY. Ia., June 13 (VP) Squalling lustily between periods of feeding and sleep ing, the tour tiny Wycoff quadruplets showed "plenty of pep" today. Undisturbed by the fact the babies had lost weight since birth, Dr. C. H. Swearingen and the nurses Insisted all was well. T REG! Dry-Spell Not Yet Over Despite Welcomed f : Moisture. ;:. WASHINGTON, June 13 VP) Recent rains in tbe parched areas of the central states were ad judged today by the weather bu reau to have been ot "inestim able" value. The forecasters add ed, however, the drought was far from broken. In Its weekly weather and crop bulletin, he bureau declared rains had been sufficient to re lieve the serious livestock situa tion by aiding forage crops. Downfall Too Late The downfalls "came too lata to bs of material help to most winter and early spring grains, tbe report added. The farm administration ad vanced its drought relief pro gram by adding 172 secondary counties in 10 states, bringing the total official drought coun ties to 732 in 21 states. - States Included in today's list were Missouri, Iowa, Illinois, In diana, Kansas, Minnesota, Ne braska, Wisconsin, Wyoming and Oregon. All Iowa counties are (Continued on Page Eight) E WASHINGTON. June 13. UP) The White House foresees "health- lor trado" growing from the coun try's now tariff policy. That policy, giving President Roosevelt power to negotiate re ciprocal trade trcatlos, was writ ten into law last night with the presidential signature. Tbe chief executive, now for the first time, can make tariff bar gains with other countries and reduce or raise this country s im port rates accordingly without oonsent ot congres. Changes in rates will be limited . to 60 per cent. YOUNGSTERS GIVEN 4-H SCHOLARSHIPS SALEM. Juno 13, tP)A. H. AverllJ, state fire marshal, at Cor vallis yesterday presented to Ivan L. Newton of Corvallis and Ireno Ettor of. Pilot Rock in Umatilla county, scholarships for the sum mer school session at the state college. Tho awards were offered In connection with a statewide con test, In which several hundred 4-H club workers filed written reports with tho state fire de partment covering In dotal! what steps thoy , had taken in their homo communities to eliminate fire hasards. Avorlll said the presentation was made bofora an assembly of 600 4-H workers at . the summer school. Toward GILL ASPIRES L State Master Re-Elected At Annual Session in Roseburg. TRIP INTO EAST j HELD SIGNIFICANT House Speakership One of Many Political Topics Talked. ROSEBURG. Ore., June 13 UP) Ray W. Gill of Portland was reelected master of the Oregon State Grange at the annual elec tion held here today at the morn ing session ot the State Grange convention. Other officers cbasen were Morton' Tomkins, Dayton, overseer; Mrs. Alice Goff, Rose burg, lecturer! Bertha J. Beck Albany, secretary; Peter Zimmer man, Tamhlli, Geci-ge Palmlter, Milwaukee, and Dr. Albert Slaughter, Portland, executive committee. ROSEBURG. June 13 UP) Ray Gill, master ot the State. Grange of Oregon, aspires to be national head of the organization. This was the explanation ot the real reason why republican nominee for the state senate from Multnomah and Clackamas county has been reputedly opposed to entering the lists of possible can didates for Independent candidate tor governor, and was voiced by grange leaders here today for the first time. Meetings Are Private While all business sessions of the State Grange convention In Its second day's meeting here to day were closed to the pnblic and to the press, and where it was declared no politics would be discussed, nothing else but poli tics was talked during recesses and outside of the convention hall. While Gill himself is evasive on the subject, observers here have seen in his recent trip east the past month and his visit to. numerous New England and eastern grange Jurisdictions, as well as his visits the past tew years to western grange conven tions, a strong indication of his desire to replace National Master Taber who has been at the helm for more than a dozen years. Returns from East The Oregon leader Is a mem ber of the national grange exec utive committee and Just return ed in time for the Oregon meet from, a trip he started early In May. He attended the sessions at Washington, D. C, and then went to the New England states. (Continued on Page Eight) NEW YORK. June 13. (P) The United Fruit Lines report to day receipt of a wireless message from tho steamer Zacapa, report ing the rescue of the captain and 16 members of the orew ot the Norwegian freighter Knut Ham sun, which burned and sank Sun day night 120 miles off the coast of Honduras. Seventeen other members ot the crew were reported still miss ing. WEATHER The Cyclo-Stormograph at Un derwood's Pharmacy has register ed but little change in barometric conditions during the last 24 hours and a continuation of pleasant wenther is probable. The Tycos recording thermom eter roglstered maximum and minimum tomperatnres Wednes day as follows: High .83 Low 59 - Forecast for next. 24 hours; Generally fair and warm. The United States weather bu reau reports .25 Inches precipita tion tor the 24-hour period end ing Wednoaday at 5 p. m.; 8.49 Sir the season to date; 11.17 nor TO NATIQNA GRANGE POST mal; 8.36 last year. Missing Jap Envoy Found SUBJECT OP DISPUTE BE TWEEN NATIONS PLAN NED SUICIDE. NANKING, China, June 13, UP) The strange case of Eimel Kura moto, the Japanese vice consul who disappeared four days ago was cleared up today in time to avert threatened difficulties be tween China and Japan. Kuramoto was found sitting In a graveyard beside an ancient tomb of the Ming dynasty. Planned Suicide ' He was unkempt, hungry, and not Interested in the fact that soldiers and warships bad been called ont by two nations because he had strayed. He told Chinese authorities he had gone into the cemetery to commit suicide because he bad failed to achieve promotion in the Japanese consular service. Apparently he bad not eaten during bis Eojourn, and the pangs of approaching starvation saved him from self-destruction. Jap Hhlp on Hand "Hunger forced me to hold on to life," he said. Japan had informed the Chi nese government officially that it would hold that government re sponsible for the safety of the vice consul, who dropped from sight in Nanking last Friday. Japan backed up its note with warships which it rushed up to anchor eft Nanking. HGPPER COrJTRQL iHOGRESSES Poisoning Program Elim inates Hundreds in Basin Fields. Many kills of grasshoppers, ranging from .50 to . 500 dead Insects per square foot, bave been reported In tee Klamath basin where the poisoning program is progressing .satisfactorily, accord ing to County Agent C. A. Hen derson. ' . - ' : Results in the hopper control project have been uniformly good, the agent declared, with some districts now reporting that tho grasBhoppers: are virtually cleaned out, This Is not true, however, is the districts which are suffering from Major infes tations. Marsh Area Infested The most serious condition prevails in the Upper Klamath marsh, since man power nas oeen (Continued on Page Eight) Klamath county -will need ad ditional SERA projects shortly to keep the crews at work, W. M. Plnkney. district engineer for SERA, informed the relief com mittee Wednesday morning. Plnk- nev said the present projects are nearlnc comnlotion and consider ation should be given new work giving enterprises. Miss Phyllis Hnrtzog, county relief director, informed the com mittee that the relief load Is ris ing because ot a slackening in mill employment. Miss Hartzog reported that district relief thus tar in June has cost only S948. Representatives of the county medical society discussed with the relief committee the possi bilities of getting medical aid through the state relief com mittee for those on relief. It was felt there Is some hope of getting such a plan through, al though thus far the state relief committee and the state medical society have not been able to come to terms. Crescent Cut-Off Grading to Start Grading ot tho Crescent cut-off road will begin-Thursday, accord ing to County Engineer Joseph Jensen, , , , -. The road will be ' graded 'for about ! a mile beyond the new bridge over the Little Deschutes river. . There It will eonnoct with a side road. Jensen said that at that point, ' the cut-oft construc tion will be suspended until next year because ot lack ot funds. Fascism END TO COAST Longshoremen Represen tatives Confident of Peace After Meet NIGHTFALL MAY HALT DEADLOCK Seattle Makes Preparation to Open Port on Thursday. SAN FRANCISCO, June 13 (ff) Belief that the strike ot Pa cific coast longshoremen might be settled soon was expressed by Joseph P. Ryan, president ot the International Longshoremen's as sociation, after a conference with Mayor Angelo Rossi and other of ficials here today. ' Ryan left the conference atteT promising to prepare a written proposal of the best concessions the longshoremen would agree to in ending . the strike. , ., Outlook Now Hopeful . .. "With 'the attitude, shown by Mayor Charles Smith of Seattle. Governor Julius Meier ot Oregon and Mayor Rossi ot San Fran- ' Cisco, who are hopeful of set tling the strike satisfactorily to both sides, the situation looks decidedly hopeful,", Ryan de clared. "All other Intermediaries," he added, "are trying to settle the strike in favor of the employ ers." - At the meeting with Mayor Rossi were Ryan, Michael, Casey, ot the Teamsters' union, Dave Beck, district secretary of the Teamsters' union ot Seattle, and John McLaughlin ' of tbe San Francisco central labor council, : Hiring Halls Issue . ' Mayor ' Rossi read a 1 letter from Thomas G. Plant, represent ing the waterfront employers here, who informed the mayor tbat so far the employers had made all the concessions and on June 6 had agreed to allow tho government to operate -the hir ing halls or employment agencies. ' Plant told Mayor Rossi that the employers felt they had made all the concessions they were able to in their efforts to end the strike, which began May 9. Program Not Released The longshoremen's represent atives have sought the exclusive" privilege ot operating the hiring halls, claiming discrimination in employment had been shown to ward union members. , Ryan did not outline am points in the longshoremen's best proposition for ending the walk out, which Involves more thai 25,000 maritime workers. Meanwhile, the industrial as sociation ot San Francisco notl lied the San Francisco chambei of commerce that it intended to take lawful steps to protect the citizens of the community and restore trade, tied ud bv the strike, to Its channels. MAY END TONIGHT PORTLAND, Ore., Juno 13 UP) Union offlcialn anrt nt lonat one steamship operator said hers waay me coast-wide longshore- (continued on Page Eight) ny SUSANVILLE, Calif.. June 18. UP) "He broke up my family. Now I have broke up his." On this confession of motive, which . authorities declared was given to them by Peter Alosl, 45-year-old lumber milt worker. In' tho presence of a court reporter, District Attorney Grove C. Julian prepared to go to court today to charge Alosl with stabbing to death three women and two men, There wore rumors yesterday an attempt Do lynch Alosl would be made, but Sheriff James Lear nt last night went Into the Ital ian quarter and pleaded for or derly procedure. Community load- era sided with him and plodged support, and tho sheriff roturnsd tu his office convinced there would be no trouble of that sort.