) ' WIRE SERVICE The 'torah! end News molisrribe to full leased wire service III the AOCIOClittCli PCCSIS Will the United Press, the world's greatest nowsmallarring organizations. ror 17 humors daily world news Collins into 'Ike Herald. News office on teletype machines. vJIIIT 0 t Potato Pickers Get 5 Cents By FRANK JENKINS Folt the moment. turn your eyes from China, where Japan id ngaged In the eges-old enterprise of taking what she want a BY ipitcE from momebody who Is Direct your gaze toward the :lediterranean. It is there that portentous eventa are taking place. . roll a week or more, twittery a- submarines have been torpe doing ships along the Mediter ranean trade lanes, ceusing the nations of Europe to bums like a nest of nngry hornets. Russia claims to have SOLVED THE MYSTERY. She says theme submarines are Italian, and in support of her charge she offers nnmes and num bers of Italian undOEMPI1 boats which, she says have engaged in these attacks. ASSUME, for the sake of argu ment, that Russia In right, and that I hPfl 0 myatery submarinea AIM Italian. tVitat does it mean? It can mean only one thing-- that Italy In picking a fight. If Daly starts a fight (with France or Englan(t for example) all Eu rope will moon ho into it and au other world war will be on. 1 That lit why the nowt; from the Mediterranean in so importa t. W Ar.1, STREET (which provides an aeeurate reflection of the way people are thinking) had a sinking spell on Tuesday. Stocks broke to now low points, and pee pie wore no anxious to sell that for an hour or so the ticker fell behind. The value of all stocks listed on the big board shrank by more titan a billion dollars on Tuesday. 'o As STOCKS dropped. commod1- 1-1 ties rose. Wheat soared. Sol (Continued on Page Three) This Project Rates No. I for Toughness Editorials On the I Day's News LOCAL PINBALL BAN TO STAND REGARDLESS OF POLK COUNTY DECISION 7,4-'"'r'r-t'''''7'-'t, i , Awrir F"'WIr., ,., ,-,1-..,- , ,T.'-7,-74?"771777,77,77.27T1' i."1.7,.s ;,... t ,Ir '; ' 4.t'it' C., Z ':" Ve- Ir. ...) ' ', .4 N 1,7$- ' 004! ' , ' ' 4:1 , ' A?, , , -4 ,;-1 I" '..ig ic,.4---tv rir, '04 ev-,;.-P ,,1, ,b4416 . Et, .:..: 41: ;,' '';',..,' ,- ' , m 141. , 44' i 4: V,,, ot' zi'' Al 4 ,- t r , Pr'''',t , .1'4i e, ),', M.,, j:t. 411 ,.! :;', .. 4.. ''ta P 4,4 v- ..L', l''Pl ' ' '''''. ' '0. "I''' '' 1,' lir, ,. 't, ,- t., , r';',. I -,..i.; ,,), 4 .4 it .".-ik",., . :14: i), l ot e,,;.,v, kf,47,-, -- 1. 1.. t . . ll ,,,, u , 4, ,., 14,61, 4). 4 .r, , ,S.6.L .!....C$A. 44, , ! d-.1 . 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L 0 ' : A Sr..,1441 6, ',.tii , , 4 dr 7 , , , ,gt '1,P- loot ,;' c.ig- , ,:-.1i.14,,,,,:;,.;,, ,, , e , idt "- rei e,l'';''00: ',..4 1 0411-..7.1c4:-.1-m 0 . , 4,10. , ,., v,, sr , .vt ,s ,, t i ?T.'''. , -',01.1' 014.4'.; it ...Jr r'''Z'''. it:1 cll.' i ,,,, -,-olt I 41 'le :--,i 1:,,,, ,-a, .., t , - , 'A, kl,,,,::..1,,,r. , ,, ' Ner- ' -"2 -' .)-, 4 .,, ' ..a.1., . 1. 1....iLliagillba.ati.t.r ,At ' ' , '': . ? ' 1; 4 ::LaP t, ,A" 4,-,,K- ' t ' -r ,r w , sit:-' ....- -.......-...... Klamath rounty'a ban on pinball machines will remain in erect re. gurdiems or court action in other parts Of the. it District At torney Hardin C. Blackmer de clared Wed n esti a y. and pin ha operatorm who violate the attor ney's order will be subject to int tnediate promocution. It is it a number of in it biting Ivor unpadlocked On Vedneaday morning when word was received from Dallas that Cir cuit Judgo Arlie Vallter of Polk eintnly had sustained demurrera rih,d by council tor C. C. Coats on two indictments charging hint will operating "nickel-in-the-slot" machines and promoting and set ting up a lottery. Blackmer milled Mama Attor nay Bruce Spaulding at Dallaa and learned that tho Polk county pros ecutor planned an immediate ap peal to the elate supremo court On Judge Walker's Blackmer said that until the (Continued on Page Three) 0:11 ASSOCIATED PRESS zi Cents lgi70,,r;:00,ak1110RI 131-071z-1L IE Lb fi 0 0040; ID 4 00 It 11 ' I : 't 114'4 5. tri, J. kr Thn present rim road construction cont met a heavy rock work. has a reputation among wester undertaken in' the west. l'icture at upper len sh It from the tort h. The I ruck at the bottom giv upper right shows the it rut, look In g from th roadbed. The scene below showa more tit f Mull( c building rock all to support the roadbed. The I I heir resting place. Tho contractor on this job I lite. Oro. Rex Bord Dies at Olene Ranch Home Ono of the colorful Old-timers or the Klamath country, Rex Dord of Diene, died Wednesday morning at 4 o'clock. Death come nt his home on the Olene ranch, whore he has oper ated an extenalvo sheep busineso for almost 40 yearn. Ile was 78 years of age, and had been III for about seven months. A native of England, Ntr. Bard went to sea when but a boy. Ile (Continued 00 Page Three) CAPTAIN URI'S AWARD PORTIAND, Sept. 8 (AP) Walter Meaehant. Oregon direc tor of tho Oregon Trail Memor ial association, distributed 15 life memberships to residents Of the state In recognition of work In preserving and marking .old trails. Recipients Included Cap lain O. C. Applegate, Klamath aiming 3 trait IN THE SHASTA-CASCADE WONDERLAND UNITED PRESS NMATII FALLS, ORE., WEDNESDAY, SEPT. h, '037 Number 8041 1 KLAMATH FALLS, ORE., WEDNESDAY? SEPT. h, '937 ' 'YR Yi , I -,, vt alk4,'2! 14; pon,; )0.:7,,,et,42z , ,7 sfi --)11 'A P's 4.44: 4.sur 194, - ts.3 41t1(t,"),,T)4. tzt:1:;c4;otri:-.1 '.1 I t A, t Crater lake. 2.009 miles long with 70 per cent n road builders as one of the toughest jobs ever os the first high cut of the rim road. looking at es an idea of the height of the cut. The view at o south. This cut is 1 45 feet from its crest to the onstruction. The men working at the bottom are ong derrick is used to lower ton-heavy rocks to s tho Sant Orino Construction company of Bonne. CITY ENGINEER GIVEN AUTHORITY TO CLOSE RICKETY CANAL BRIDGES Rickety and dangerous bridges across the government canal in the city limits of Klantath Falls may be closed to traf fic if the city engineer deems the move necessary, Recording to nuthori zation given Monday evening by the city council. Engineer Thomas presented formai report Of the dangerous condition of 1 he bridges late Monday when the council had virtually adjourned, and I he gravity of t he situation set the councilmen back nt their table for a longer session. In a report released to the press last week the city engineer stated that stringers on the Es planade canal bridge were eaten with dry rot which worked front the inside of the timbers, and as a result the load limit on the bridge was reduced to three tons. Limits have been placed on (Continued on Page Three) NEEDS VOTE SCALE SIMILAR TO LAST TEAR Spuds Moving Onto Mar kets At About Half 1936 Price. Potato picking ratos In the Klamath basin for 1937 were dis cussed and set Tuesday afternoon when the directors of the Klamath Potato Growers association and the Tule Lake Potato Growers met at the county agent's office in Klamath Falls to discuss im portant matters relating to the potato industry. After lengthc discussion rates were set at 5 cents for 120 pounds of potatoes, or two half sacks, I without board for pickers. Some growers felt that ex tremely low prices prevailing for potatoes at the present time, along with the heavy crop, should ne cessitate a considerable reduction in pickers rates from the prices paid last year, but it was finally decided to leave the rates as they were without any reduction. Prices ' Per Cent Lower For other labor paid for on a per-day basis, the growers Tues day set the rate at 3.50 per day and board, or $4.50 per day with out board. This rate applies to potato picking where done by the day. It was stated at the growers meeting that potatoes are now moving on the market throughout the United States at prices ap proximately half of what they were a year ago, and that grow ers in general were taking a con siderable loss on this year's crop. It was also brought out that the national crop is estimated at 402,- 000.000 bushels this year, as com pared with a harvested produc tion of 329,000,000 bushels in 1936. Favorable to Pickers Compared to last year. when potato prices were good, this (Continued on Page Three) OUTSIDER ELIMINATES CHAMPION FROM NATIONAL WOMEWS TENNIS TOURNEY FOREST HILLS, N. Y., Sept 8 0'3Dorothy May Bundy, husk). free-hitting daughter of May Sut ton Bundy, today tossed a major bombshell into the women's .na tional singles championship by eliminating defending champion Alice Marble. the stylish blonde from San Francisco, 1-6, 7-5, 6-1, to advance into the semi-final round. Miss Bundy, ranked eighth in the first 10 and seeded sixth in Allis tournament, stunned a crowd of 4000 at the West Side tennis club with her elimination of the No. 1 ranking and seeded star of this country. Run ragged by her own errors in the first set, the muscular girl whose mother was the first wo man to win the Wimbledon title, settled down to a determined bat tle from the baseline in the next two sets. In the second, trailing at 6-4, she saved off match point by Miss Marble, won the twice-duced game to draw even at 5-all, then cap tured the next two to square the match. The eleventh game, which she won on her own service, went to 20 points, and saw Miss Marble have game point in her grasp six times before her youthful rival won out. SCHOOLGIRL SLAYS LOVER TO ESCAPE ASSAULT ISELIN, N. J., Sept. 8 (AP) A 20-year-old schoolgirl admitted after hours of questioning today, Police Chief George E. Keating announced, that she fatally shot Paul Reeves, 25-year-old father of two children, when he at tempted to assault her. The Woodbridge township chief gave the girl's name as Margaret Drennan and said she was a student at a New Bruns wick secretarial school. She was the "lady in red," Keating said, who was seen running from the bungalow where Reeves was shot to death in his bedroom last night. Unaware Her Baby Was Born 300 Non-Combatants Killed, 400 Injured as Jap Planes Bomb Chinese Refugee Train By JAMES A. MILLS SHANGHAI, Sept. 8 (AP) At least 300 Chinese non-combatants were killed and 400 in jured today in one of the worst disasters caused by Japanese air bombs in the three months of undeclared war. Five railroad cars, packed with 1500 Chinese refugees from the war zone, were blown from their track by Japanese bombers at Sungkiang station, 30 miles from Shanghai. 'Two densely crowded second cials coaches and three third clast cars were shattered by the blast and turned over. Many passengers were crushed to death in the wreckage. No Warning The bombs fell without warn ing as the train was standing in the Sungkiang station, on the line to Hankow. The fearful explosions literally showered human forms and blood-smeared debris into the air. The bodies of the dead were scattered in all directions. Injured and dying were sprawled gzotesquely in the rail road yards as though they had been shot down in battle. A Chinese spokesman declared the train carried no soldiers and 210,000-ACRE ANTELOPE REFUGE MADE PART OF BIG WILDLIFE PROGRAM WASHINGTON, Sept. S (AP) Development of 270,000 acres near Lakeview. Ore., to protect wildlife. especially antelope, is included in a huge program for wildlife preservation outlined to day by the U. S. biological sur vey. Nine regional offices, including one at Portland, Ore., will be the first step in the program which eventually will provide a "good refuge" each 100 miles along the main line of flight of migratory waterfowl. Sage hens and grouse will also be provided for. "Regional men will help de velop plans for Improvement and (Continued on Page Three) Baseball NATIONAL LEAGUE Second game: R. H. E. Philadelphia 0 3 2 Boston 1 7 0 Jorgens, Kelleher and Atwood; Shottner and Nue Her. Second game: R. H. E. Cincinnati 2 4 2 Pittsburgh 8 10 1 8looty Hallahan, Lombard Cascarella and Campbell; Tobin and Padden. R. H. E. New York 9 15 0 Brooklyn 7 13 1 Humbert, Coffman and Dam ning; Butcher, Cantwell, Lindsey and Phelps. R. H. E. St. Louis 0 6 0 Chicago 4 5 0 j. Dean and Ogrodowski; French and Hartnett. R. H. E. Cincinnati 6 11 3 Pittsburgh 7 14 1 R. Davis, Derringer and Lom (Continued on Page Three) NO ,,I .JLns1&nnJvuvuvu1flrUUmrUW.r1tfl-- - TN MORE BIG PORTLAND MILLS CLOSE AS RIVER PICKETS BLOCKADE LOGS WEATHER Pair; Moderate Temperature Maximum at 2:80 Minimum 44 PRECIPITATION Season to date 11.82 faun year to date 15.24 Normal precipitation 12.20 DES MOINES. Iowa. Sept. 8 (AP)Mrs. James Welborn. 20, who was delivered of a normal seven-pound boy four hours after she and her husband suffered fractured skulls in an auto-train collision here last Friday night, remained alive today. Twelve physicians were in attendance at the young mother's bedside. Mrs. Welborn does not know she is the mother of a five-day-old boy or that her 21-year-old husband is dead of injuries suffered in the crash. Picture shows Mrs. Welborn and her infant child. that the station was Serving no military purpose. Red Cross officials rushed aid from Shanghai to reinforce the crews of doctors and nurses al ready on the scene from the Sungkiang Chinese hospital. Poor Aim Spoils Attack Poor Chinese marksmanship again defeated a combined aerial and artillery attack on Japanese men-of-war in the Whangpoo river off the Shanghai interna tional settlement. Three daring Chinese planes swooped down low over Japanese warships under cover of a moon less night and dropped bombs. Chinese artillery opened simul taneous fire on the Japanese lines in tiongkew. But the airmen's aim was bad. The air bombs only churned the river waters while Japanese anti aircraft guns sprayed the skies with shrapnel. Chinese denied a Japanese re port that one plane was shot down over Pootung. The French concession was (Continued on Page Three) PORTLAND. Sept. S (IP) : Shutdown hit two more major sawmills today. bringing the total to four and throwing hundreds of more employes out of work, as AFL river pickets succeeded in blocking off log supplies from CIO-operated mills. Confronted with this newest loss of working operations for its members. CIO lumber union lead ers, warring with the AFL over control of sawmill employes, re plied grimly: "Let's get this straightthere is going to be no more interfer ence: we will see to that!" Declining to say how log de liveries would be made, John H. Sullivan, business agent for a CM local, predicted all the mills would be open again in "a day or two." As to the river pickets, Sullivan remarked: "The Willamette river is a navigable stream and supervised by the government. No one has a right to block navigation on the river." Whether this indicated an ap peal to the courts to remove the pickets, Sullivan did not say. SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 8 (iP) Teamsters affiliated with the American Federation of Labor stopped moving cargoes away from Oakland docks at 7 a. m. (PST) today. CIO-affiliated long shoremen continued to unload cargo and stack it on the piers. Potatoes SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 8 (APUSDA)--Potatoes: Two cars Cali fornia, one Oregon, arrived: five unbroken, five broken on track; by boat seven California arrived; truck, one car. Supplies moder ate, demand fair, market steady. Oregon. Klamath district, Rus sets, No. 1. mostly 81.50. California, Long White, $1.10- 1.20; choice 40-60 cents. MILD OPPOSING WAR FLEETS ENGAGE EAST OF SPAIN Britain, France Dispatch Patrol Ships; Soviet Threatens Force. ALGIERS. Algeria. Sept. 8 MI A Spanish government fleet of two cruisers and five trawlers steamed in battle array in the western Mediterranean today to engage an insurgent warship and try to keep the sealanes clear for supply ships bound for the gov ernment coast. Heavy cannonade off Tones preceded reports of conflict he tween the government fleet and the insurgent cruiser Canaries. Just before the battle, the Can aries had forced two Spanish gov ernment freighters ashore in one of the newest incidents of Med iterranean attacks on merchant vessels. Results in Doubt Results of the battle were in doubt. although some advice. said the government cruiser 1,14 bertad was damaged. With her was the government cruiser Men dez Nunez and the five trawlers. The French destroyer L'Iphig enie and two torpedo boats put out from Algiers to investigate. (Three British destroyers left Gi braltar to be near the newest scene of trouble in the inland sea). The government fleet late is terday ordered the freighters Al.. decoa and Antonio de Satrustegut to leave Algiers for Valencia, the Spanish government capital, un der the warships' protection. Freighters Beached But when the Canaries attack ed the freighters. their captains beached them under fire. Sounds of the ensuing battle were heard on the coast for two hours, later subsiding. After the battle ended, 08 French warships patrolled the area to "guarantee the safety of navigation." The engagement apparently took place six miles off Tene5, but fog shut off the battle site from the shore. By the Associated Press The soviet red army 's news. paper served notice today that the (Continued on Page Three) Today's News Digest LOCAL Spud picking prices for 1937 set Tuesday by Klamath and Tule lake Potato Growers' as sociations In joint meeting here. Freight rates. advertising and other important matters dis cussed. Page 1. CCC camp to be established on Hart mountain, will build fence and roads on 270,000-acre refuge. Page 1. District Attorney declares pin. ball ban to stick despite court action in Polk county. Page 1. city attorney investigating le . gality ot condemning dangerous bridges across government canal in city limits. City Engineer E. A. Thomas authorized by council to close these br id g es if he deems it necessary. Page 1. - Rex. E. Bord, 78, prominent stockman of Olene and colorful old-timer of the Klamath coun try, dies after illness. Page 1. - Rim road project tough con . struction job. Pictures on Page 1. City food handlers' ordinance to be discussed this evening by council and citizens' health corn. mittee. Meeting with culinary alliance set for September 16. Page 3. Parking meter demonstration occupies city council for moot of Tuesday evening meeting. Page 4. IN THIS ISSUE City Briers Page 1 Comics and Story Page 6 Courthouse Records Page 4 Editorials Page 4 Family Doctor Page 4 High School Now Page II Market, Financial News Page 5 Railroad News Page 5 Recreation Notes Page 8 Sports Page 2 I, I , .............,............, ) ' WIRE SERVICE Thr &It T1 la 'Wald nnol Nowa mulloyfIlie to full litmil oil. mervIce of Ili Alosoulittvil Mons iand ill.. Unit nal Prade II.. ...vitt,. ..... I16,"...00sos.o. This Project Rafes No. I for Toughness , , !-- --I--, 6010 . Z1:77,,,,,Si,,,. .,4 !, --0.4,,.. , 3 , , ,,-rd ' , .. , ,', ,,lt,k,-"("'", 4,-4 .,,., L 14, k , ,mei;z:;.I, ( ct;;';';'!',;, ' i '' 5Pi. 1 1-, '';'''',1,1,-(11it".'( ilA. ','-IIII,' it, I '''tt ' 4' ,lict.,1; ,;1 $,' "-1,4,$1,4;;,, c- Z .,, ,-, tr'. ;! x", I g ,1 4 ), ,..,,,, , i t '', ,t .',,:"tg, ,,,,,cr . ,, , , L.: '1,..., . 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