Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Klamath news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1923-1942 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 24, 1933)
EWS' CLASSIFIED News coverage Tha Klaraalb .Neva M serviced by Assoclat ad hta, lulled Press, news sColerprlsw Association aod McNaught Feature yar cats. County coverage by atari writers aad eorrrripoorients. The Kmmath News riw Klauiatta Newa la Mil la otery section ol Klamath county and northern t allforula. II tliera la aouiethlng to aril, rrnl or Iraila or If job ed eomr-tliliig, Ilia oaaleai method la Ilia claeallled ads. Vol. 8, No. 2G4Prlce Five Cunts. KLAMATH FALLS, ORE., THURSDAY, AUGUST 24, 1933 i E very Morning Except Mondavi N Editorials gj the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS THE national rscovery coda tor the lumbar IndustTywtll an Increasa of about 111.000.009. or a million dollara a month, is payroll! ot tha Western pine ter ritory. Thla Increaaa Id payrolla will ba'dua to putting approximately 1,000 men to work. In addition to thoaa already employed. These additional men will ba required because ot tba ahortar hours. The reault ot theae addition! will be an Increaaa ot about II per cent In tha production coat ot lurnuan or about 16.00 per thoui nd feet. THESE figures. which ara In- t taneely Intaraatlni. are touch ed for by David T. Mason, gen eral manager of tba Waatarn Pint association, who baa Juet return ed to the Coaat from Washington, -jrhare he helped In drawing the lumber coda. e e a IN ITS application to tha Weal em pine lumber lnduatry. you bare a perfect example of the way NRA works If It worka. aa wa all earneatly hope It will. Shorter houra, more men. More men, larger payrolla. More pay rolla, Increaaed coat of produc tion. NRA will work It tha public will pay tha Increaaed coat of pro duction. If the public won't pay tha Increaaed coat ot production, NRA won't work: That to about all there la to It. BUT tile public hae much lo gain and little to loaa by paying the Increaaed coat ot production Higher production coata moan higher prices. But tlmea ara nearly alwaye GOOD when prlcee are high, and nearly alwaya BAD when prlcca ara too low. It la better for the public t.i pay higher prlcea and bare good tlmea than to pay lower price! nd have bad tlmea. Iao't that true? a e a THB lumbar- eeda speclllsa a'a hourly wage ot i cent! bar rn tha Pacific Northwest, and It eenla In the South. So, you see. our Pacific Coaat lumbermen will have to absorb a GREATER Increaae In coat than tha lumbermen ot the South. e LUMBERMEN ot tha plna and fir reglona ot the Pacific Coaat went Into tbe framing ot tba code definitely committed to tbe prin ciple of high wagea. Tha lum bermen ot tba Soutb fought tor LOW wagea. It waa thla tight between the blah wage lumber lnduatry ot the West and tha low wage lumber lnduatry of the Soutb that held np tor ao long tha adoption of tba code. eee tni lumbermen ot tha Waat ara entitled to tha thanka ot tbelr communlttei for going (Continued on Page Pour) : WELLES TO RETl'RX WASHINGTON, Aug. 28 (UP) Tha elate department officially announced tonight Am baaaadnr Bumner Welles. In Ha- rana and Aaalatant Secretary of State Jefferaon Caffery would ex Changs poata September 16, Will Roger Say: CHICAGO, Aug. U. Edi tor Tba Klamatb Newa: Well the "Hill Bllllea" beat the "Dudea" and took the polo champion ahlp of tha world right out of the drawing room! and into tba bunk house. And aha won't go Eaat In yeara, for tha West alwaya thought you had to have a birth certificate to play It. Now every cow puncher la herding In tha heifen with a corn plaater aaddla and even the "hay bearera" hare changed a pitchfork Into a polo mallot. Twenty thouaand Chlragoana witnessed Sunday'! loclal mas aacre. Nineteen thouaand of 'em had never aeon a horsti, much leaa a polo game, bo from now on, Weat of the Mlaalaalppl "O Id Dobbin" plowa In tba field! only till 4 o'clock, when ba will be waahed, acrubbed, hla teeth polished and he goaa out on tha lawn to cavort In what need to ba known ga itrlctly a aoclal recreation. Poor old loclety. They got nothing ex clualva left. Youri, HOOVER, AIDES STILL SOUGHT IN MI QUIZ Hearing Continued, With Priest Hurling Severe Charge at GOP Regime Former President Aided Few at Expense of Big Majority, Says Witness By JAMES C. Al'HTIN I'nited Prras Huff Correspondent DETROIT. Mich., Aug. 23. 0J.R) A new effort to pereuade for mer Prealdent Hoover to appear before the grand Jury Inveetlg Hon of the cauaei of Detroit'! bank failure! will be made. Harry 8. Toy, proaeculor, an nounced tonight. At the nma time aa effort will be made to perauade former Hecretarv of the Treaaury ugneu Mllla, former Comptroller of the Curroncy John Pole, former Aa alatant Secretary of tha Treaaury Arthur M. Ilallantine and former I'reeldent Charlra A. Miller of the Keconatructlon Finance cor poration to testify. Confers With Judge Toy made hla announcement Her a conference with Judge Harry B. Keldan, conducting the Investigation. Former Prealdent Hoover, In declining Toy'a recent request that he teatlty, referred Toy to official! of the Keconatructlon Finance corporation and i the irMBiirv better eourcea of In formation on the eltuatlon. The declalnn to aeek their teailmony waa In line with Mr. Hoover's suggestion. ' Thar conference at which the decision to aeek evidence irom high official! waa rearhed waa held after a session oi me in- nulry during which tne kcv. rather Charlea E. Coughlln. widely known aa Detroit's radio print, attacked the phlloeophy which guided tne Hoover aaimu latratlon In Ua effort! to bring order out of tha fiuanclal aitua Hon. The nrteat made an ini paaaloned plea for the new deal f -President .Roosevelt. Emnbaaising mat. ne nan wo no auarrel with Mr. Hoover personally, but only with hla pblloaophy," the Catholic prleat launched into a defenaa ot Preal dent Hooaevelt, whom ba char acterlxed "a Protealant prealdent who had mora courage man u par cent of the Catholic prleata of tba country, becauaa ha hae followed the encyclical! ot tne people, and becauaa ha placea men above bonds." Hoover I denounced Hla early testimony, delivered In firm, even tonea, changed to oratorical fury aa ba denounced tba Hoover pollclea, which be (Continued on Page Three) Nurse Drop Her Charges Against Star Polo Player CHICAGO. Aug. ll--(UP) Miaa Eugenia Roae announced to day that aha wlahed to drop chargea agalnat Cecil Smith. Tex an polo atar, that l'e attacked her laat Friday night In Hubbard wooda. "t do not wlah to proaocute Mr. Cecil Smith aa I expect to be married and do not want any mora publicity," Mine Roae eald In a atatemeni wnicn ane annt to Judge Willi! R. Bright mire by her father. Dr. R. T. Roae, a dentlat of Cooperslown, N. D. "I will not appear agalnat Mr. Srith and I wlah you would therefore diamine tha case at once," tha atatement by the nurse concluded. Miaa Hoae made the ehargee agalnat Smith laat Saturday. She nld that on Friday -night he took her home from the hospital where she was attending Rube Wllllama, another weatorn polo atar who had been injured In the Wedneadny game. Enroute, ahe aaid, Smith attacked her. "The claim waa prepoateroua and I waa ready to meet It In court at any time," Smith aald before leaving tor tha eaat. Imitation Money Cost Youth $10 PORTLAND. Ore., Aug. 23 UPi Albert Dale, 13, will have plenty of time to figure out whether ha had $10 worth of fun. - He wna arrested on a vagrnncy charge after police aaid he had tried to paaa lomo imitation money at, the rooming houae. One of the "bllla" waa produced In court. It waa marked "play money good tor 110 In fun." Dale waa aentenced to II daya In Jail. Council Will Meet With Armory Croup A special meeting ot tha nlty council to go over plana for Klamath Falla' new armory will bo held today at 8 o'clock at the rlty hall, according to Mayor Wlllla B. Mahoney. Members of the olvlc commit tee which picked tha lite and la working on the plan! will ba preeent. Storm Ravages Atlantic States By H. AUKS SMITH . I'nlted proas Htoff Correspondent ' NEW YORK, Aug. 28. IU.PJ A terrific windstorm, accom panied by a deluge ot rain, awept oft the Atlantlo today. creating havoo aa It moved northward along the coaat and Increaalng In force aa It ncared New York. Six perauna were known to have been killed In tbe vicinity of Norfolk, Va., and two other. were reported dead. teaching the proportlona burlcana at tlmea, the at flooded towni and cltlea, I tared debrla over the country aide, wrecked bouaea and buai neaa building! and paralysed shipping. Mteamer In Distress Tha paaaenger atcamshlp Mad iaon, of the old Dominion line, waa In dlatreaa all day off the Virginia capea and tonight, her auperatructure ripped away, etlll waa fighting the gala aa bait a doxen coaat guard craft hurried to her reacue. Late radio report aald the Madlaon bore to about 20 mllee nortbeaat of Chesa peake llghtahlp. The atorm plunged Waahlng ton Into darkneaa, uprooted treea along Pennsylvania avenue In front of tha nation's capltol and wrecked a number of email building! in tha city. State Will Put Stop To Sales Of Love Babies OKLAHOMA CITY, Aug. IS. (U.R) Bablea ot unwed mothera must he placed by proper bu reaua and their sale to pay hos pital and physicians' fee atopped. state authorltlea aald today. No Oklahoma law forbids the practice, Charities Commissioner Mabel Ilasaett snld, but a meana baa been found to penallio thoae participating until auitable legis lation la paaaed. Mra. Baaaett aald ratlnga of hospitals engaged In any form of placing babies will be lowered by her department. At leaat five caaea were uncovered In Tulaa by the official where bablea of un married mother! were "Bold"' to pay ouatetrlral and "boipttcl fen. She told of one raae where a ' (Continued on Page Three) Coast Baseball R. H. E. San Franclaco ( It 0 Portland . - a BUne and Bottarlnl: Turptu, Jacobe, Wllion and Palmlaano. K. h. a. Loa Angelea 8 11 I Seattle 7 10 4 (10 Innings) NewBom. Sewell and Cronln; Ulrlch, Ballon and Bradbury. R. H. K. Sacramento ....... 10 13 1 Mlastona 11 18 1 'lncl. Sanders. Hartwlg and Wlrta; Leiber, Oaborne, Plllette. Babkb and Duggan, Fltxpatrick. R. H. K. Oakland 16 18 1 Hollywood 11 1 Walah, Gabler, Joiner and Veltman; Shellenback, Campbell and Baaaler. ' 2 Conditions Only to Call Lawmakers, Governor Declares PORTLAND, Ore., Aug. 13. (U.R) Governor Meier will call a apeclal leglalativa aeasion only on two condition!, he announced tonight. 1. If It la positively deter mined that the NRA and fedornl worka program are "unable to meet the unemployment altua- tlon In the a tale, the loaalon will be called. 1. If called for thla reason, the aeaaion will be convened only after a dofonlte revenue-raising program hna been formulated in advance. Thla muat have united aupport ot the preaa and the people, he declared. Sleeping Sickness Carrier Is Hunted ST. LOUIS, Aug. S4...(U.R) Phyaiclnna... mnrahnllrd.. under three U. 8. health department experts, tonight sought the evas ive carrier of enrephalltfo, a form ot alooping elcknesa which la sweeping thla community. the dlaeaao became more wide apread hourly. The question ot what la act Ing aa the carrier far the malady la mystifying henlth experts. While experla Bought the aourre and othora attempted to prepare a combative errum, ad' ditlonal victim! were admitted to a doien hospital!, bringing tha total aufterera to near the 200 mark. He's a Promoter, So It Must Be O.K. SPRINGFIELD, Mo., Aug. 23 (U.R) Clyde Klnaey, 83-year-old promoter, today bought hla tenth marriage license. And he need the other nine. He will remarry hli eighth wife, Lola Shook of Omaha, In a tew daya, he aald. He waa di vorced here three week! ago from Mnrjorie Langaton, 18, wife No. 9. The city of Norfolk. Va.. ap- parently In tha direct path of the gale, wia one-third under water after the atorm itruck and almoet entirely laolated from the outalde world, aava for uae of the abort wave radio. Resorts Hear Hront The ravagea ot tbe gala were moat aevere In tha many towna and reeorla on tha see""" In Virginia. -e. ,tl- V"". u to fallen treea ..u teiegrapn poiee ana anav tercd windowe. Forewarned of the atorm'e approach, virtually all amall craft In the affected area hugged tbe ahorellne throughout the day. Many broke from their mooring! at the height of the gale and a number of colllalona were reported. Report! of electric power line failure were wideapread, nu- merous towna being affected. Four ot the fatalltlea in Virginia were from electrocution. iilrda Mown .North - The atrengtb ot the gala waa Illustrated In New York when a tropical bird, ---daacrl bed aa a baby Louisiana beron, waa blown ashore In Brooklyn. The bird waa badly battered and one of (Continued on Pago Three) 13 INDICTED IN URSCHEL CASE Federal Grand Jury Sets Record for. Speed In Handling Crime Cases OKLAHOMA CITY. Okla. Aug. 23. (U.R) Federal authorl tlea left for Dallas tonight to bring Harvey J. Bailey and the Hbannon family here to be tried for the Charlea F. Uricbel kid naping, challenging gangater friends of tha desperadoea to meet tha cavalcade enroute. AaJunt United -ibIm Attor ney General Joseph Keenan aald Halley and Albert Batea, held at Denver, would be brought here with no attempt at secrecy and that government men would meot gangsters with their own weapone It they Interfered. OKLAHOMA CITT. Aug. 23. (U.R) Thirteen persons were In dicted today In the kidnaping ot Charlea F. Urachel, oil million aire, by a federal grand Jury guarded by 40 offlcera armed with machine guna and auto- matica. Tha namea of alx defend ants were withheld, pending cap ture. Under Heavy Guard Seven others. Including the no torious Harvey J. Bailey, were In Jail under heavy guard. The grand Jury, working un der direction of two assistant United States attorney general! and the federal district attorney, was in session but six hours. It! speed set a record in a major criminal case. R. G. (Boss) Shannon and his wife, in whose farm home near Paradise, Texas, the wealthy trustee of the T. B. Slick oil es tate was kept prisoner; their aon. Arraon Shannon, and his wife, and Albert L. Bates, in Jail at (Continued on Page Three) Movie Strike Ends When Labor Board Goes Into Action WASHINGTON. Aug. 23. (U.R) ihe national labor board aet- tied the Hollywood movie work ers' strike Inte today and an nounced workers would return to the studios immediately. The action came shortly after the motion picture lnduatry buu mlttcd Its code to the NRA Hearings were set for Sept. 12. Dr. Leo Wolnian, acting chair man of the labor bonrd. said terms of the strike settlement were: 1. Employes shall be taken back without prejudice, with strikers being given the prefer enco over new employes. 2. Workers shall retain their membership In unions. 8. All queatlona of Jurisdic tion shall be settled by tho American Federation of Labor and no strike shall ba called pending such settlement. 4. Both parties agree to ac cept as final all Interpretations of today i agreement. Verdict of Guilty Found Wednesday A verdict of guilty was return ed by a Justice court Jury Wed nesday In the case of Les Sutn- merfleld, charged with the lai ceny of furniture from a houae be longing to Mra. P. E. Hnnnon The complaining witness testi fied that the defeudant had lived In this house for 11 montns with out paying any rent, end when h. moved out he took the furniture with him. He was arrested and came to trial Wednesday. Sentence will be pronounced upon Summerfteld Thursday by the Peace W. B. Barnes. NEW MURDER ' CASE WITNESS Pretty Indian Maid Who Worked for Lamsons May Appear for State Many Women Dismissed as Prospective Jurors by Prosecution Chief Bv DAX BOWKRMAN I'nlted Press Staff Correspondent SAN JOKE, Calif., Aug. 23. (U.R) Search for an additional witness agalnat David A. Lamson, Stanford Press sales manager, accused ot murdering hie wife, Aliens, wbs started by the state today aa routine of selecting a Jury dragged through a third day. An 18-year-old Hop! Indian girl, one-time maid in tbe vine covered Stanford campus home where Mrs. Lamson waa found, apparently beaten to death, waa hunted by County Detective Wil liam Drelschmeyer on order of the prosecution. I Indian Girl Prrtt- Lamson one used a photo graph of the pretty Indian maid as tbe frontispiece of a volume published under bis direction. The state aeeka her in the hope her testimony will aid its efforu to send Lamson to the gallows. David Lamson was married to attractive, Intellectual i Aliens Thorpe of Lamar, Mo., after a four-year campus romance. They became parents of a daughter now two yeara old. They lived In a cottage on the secluded Stanford university campus, not far from tba Herbert Hoover manaion. ' There, In the bathroom, Mra. Lamson was found dead, four gaping wounde in her akull. Her nude body waa In tbe tub. Stories Vary Greatly There are two stories of the lives of Dsvid and Aliens In their married years. The stories differ sharply. The stale claims they fre quently and bitterly quarreled. The defense-'Detur he -tba -one Intimate friends of the-Lamsons held that they were btaniora a perfect couple." farmer aualda In the Lamson home, with their Intimate knowl edge of their employers, will be vital witnesses at the trial. One, Clara Malwitx, waa ex pected to testify tor the state. Another Mrs. Delores Roberta Sorensen, will appear for the de fense. May Tell of I-ignis The Honl girl. Prosecutor Al lan Lindsay hoped, mould sup port Miss Malwiti' expected te!- timony of bitter quirrels. The state claims to possess both physical evidence and Da vid Lamaon'a oral admission that the night before Mrs. Lamson's body waa found, she repulsed her husband'a advance! through (Continued on Page Three) President Requests Roads to Maintain Present Pay Scale KANSAS CITY, Mo., Aug. 28. (U.R) Prealdent Rooaevelt, In a letter made nublic today, urged the railroad! of the nation to maintain the itatus quo in their relations with employes. The president said he "deemed it desirable that in this critical period no active warfare between inrluatrv and labor should arise." After the country has fought its way out of the depression, the letter implied, there will be plenty ot time to adjust wage agreements. He fixed that time as - wen Into the coming year." The letter was addressed to Charles E. Johnston, president ot the Kansas City Southern rail- The 8outhern'a dispute with the four ma lor railway unions over wage and worKIng condi tions attracted national attention and for weeks threatened a gen eral downward revision of wont ing agrementa between the car rier and employes. Truckers Upheld Against Thomas SALEM. Ore., Aug. 83...UJ.R)- Provisions of the bus and truck law nlacinz regulation ol con tract and private haulers under the Jurisdiction ot tne utilities commissioner was declared in valid today In a decree by Judge Levelling In Marlon county cir cuit court. Commissioner Charles M, Thomas, defendant In the suit brought by A. C. Anderson, rep resenting a truckers' association. said tbe decision would ba ap peals dto the supreme court. Governor Gets New Boots on Birthday SAN FRANCISCO. Aug. 23 (U.R) Governor Rolph, who wears polished boote ot the cowboy type with dungarees or tun ursss, started hla 6th year ot lite In a new nalr today. More than 1.000 person! at tended his birthday party at local hotel. The boots were pre sented at that affair. First House That llUilf The distinction ot receiving the first federal home loan In the country will go to John P. Flanagan, of Philadelphia, whoa two-story dwell ing (above), bought 20 yeara ago, will thus be saved from forced sale. Flanagan'a family la pictured below. From left to right are: Mrs. Kathleen Flanagan, daughter-in-law, her daughter Frances, Mrs. John P. Flanagan and Joe Flanagan. Pigs Will Bite Dust Today In Farm Program By HARMAN W. MCHOIJ United Press Staff Correspondent CHICAGO. Aug. 23. (UP.) Thousands of pigs tonight await ed slaughter in seven middle western marketa In tba promo tion of farm Interests and in support ot Secretary ot Agricul ture Henry A. Wallaces nog program, Whan It developed that . the government waa not aa well in formed aa It wanted to be on birth control for pigs and piggy sows, the norkers in the main markets were given a one-oar stay of execution. Aa a reault tne aiaugnwr. which Secretary Wallace hopes will eliminate more than 5.000, 000 animal! and thua boost the price of hogs, will begin early to morrow. By the tralnloads. In trucks and a tew on hoof, the aqueal inr nlga were guided Into the maxe of pens at tne union sioca yards in Chicago to make the receipt tor a single day greater than at any other time during the year. More than 8,000 pigs and farrowing aows were herded Into the nens. Other markets receiving pigs in this emergency plan Included Kansas Citv. Milwaukee, umana St. Joseph. Mo., Sioux City. Ia., and St. Paul. Minn. Under the birth control pian ot Secretary Wallace, farmer! are to receive a 84 bonua on piggy aowa of 275 nounds and up, while pigs weighing less than su pounds will go on tankage. Pigs between 80 and 100 pounda are being sold at from I to centa a pound. Secretary Wallace Seems Optimistic Over Wheat Parley W A 8 H I NGTON, Aug. 23 (UP) Secretary of Agriculture Wallace showed his first sign of optimism over tbe London wheat conference tonight when he post poned until Friday or Saturday announcement ot reductions in wheat acreage to be required of farmers qualifying tor agricult ural adjustment administration benefit payments. Heretofore Wallace had In sisted flatly that unless agree ment on International wheat re duction were reduced by tomor row, he would order modified dumping of wheat on oriental markets and probably would re strict domestic production little It at all. His postponement ot decision was based, it was an nounced, on cabled advices that negotiations In London had reach ed a decisive stage. Yeah, It Pays to Give Cops Apples MARSHFIKLI), Aug. 23. (U.R) It paid Hugh Barclay of Marsh- field to give Chief, ot Police Matt Coy a box ot apples, he discovered today. A prowler robbed the Barclay basement. The owner phoned Coy and the chief started hunt the burglar. He had gone but a tew steps when he saw man eating an apple similar to Barclay s gift box. The transient. R. O. Yates, was arrested and admitted the theft. ' ' MAY JOIN STRIKE HELPER. UT.. Aug. 23 (UP) Discontent,' spreading among eastern Utah coal miners, made It nosslhle tonight that men working In tour other mines would Join the 450 already on strike. Uncle Sam Saved 8 JOHNSON GIVES LABOR RULING Open Shop" Term Is Thrown Out cf N. R. A. Dictionary by Leader By HARRY FERGUSON United Pt -fctjift Correspondent WASHINGTON, Aug. 23. (U.R) Recovery Administrator Hugh Johnson erased tha words open shop and cloaed shop" from the dictionary of the NRA tonight and announced the col lective bargaining aection of the law was not lubjeot to Interpreta tion or change. Thla statement, lasned Jointly with Donald R. Rlchbourg, NRA counsel, waa particularly signifi cant because the open shop Issue is delaying action on a code for tha vast automobile lnduatry. Provision Cited The labor provision of tha na tional recovery act states that employee shall have the right to bargain collectively through rep resentatives of their own choos- (Contlnued on Page Three) Spafford Pleads 'Not Guilty to Charge of Arson Milton Spafford, confessed tire- bug, entered a plea ot cot guilty Wednesday morning, after signi fying an early desire to waive trial and go directly before Judge W. M. Duncan for arraignment and sentence. J. C. . O'Neill, appointed by tbe court to defend Spafford, re quested that the court take Into consideration previous lnsenity ot the defendant, and his present nervous condition In relation to the unexpected plea of "not guil ty." Spafford will go to trial on ar son charges on the earliest possi ble date, probably about Septem ber 15, according to an announce ment from the court. The court called the docket ot Jury cases late Tuesday afternoon, setting down the first for trial on August 31, Paul Lambert tor himself and members of the Klamath Valley Savings and Loan company, a corporation, vs. the Guardian Building and Loan com pany, a corporation, and Charles H. Carey, corporation commis sioner. Criminal cases will begin on September 5, with the case ot (Continued on Page Three) Press Time HAVANA, Aug. 88. (U.R) Victor Viscay, former mayor of Ban Louis, and a soldier named Slramoa were lynched by a mob tonight. LONDON, Aug. BS. (U.R) Sharp differences among wheat Importers and wheat exporting nations - threatened tonight to deadlock the world wheat conference ot 81 na tions seeking accord on an In ternational acreage cut agree ment to raise prices. TTCSOX, Aria., Aug. 8", (UR) William H. Woodin, Jr son of the secretary of tha treasury, lay in a critical ren dition In an oxygen chamber of the Desert sanitarium here tonight, suffering from heart disease. . FIRE SPREADS TOWARD CITY OF TILLAMOOK 1000 Extra Men Ready to Battle Huge Blaze; Dying Wind Aids Fight Coos Fire Uncontrolled; Governor Meier Offers Help of Departments TILLAMOOK. Ore., inr 11 (U.R) An attacking army ot 1.00( men tomorrow morning will swing Into action against tha large Coast range forest fire lick- Ing at the eastern part of Tllla- mooK county. Ther will lofn the crew of goo men battling the fire on the eastern front In an attempt to halt Ihe stubborn blaxe. With the dying down of the wind th fire In some caaea baa dropped out of tbe tree tops to the ground, where it can be fought mora inc. eessfully. Fairdale ba Patb 'Uncontrolled and anreadlnr slowly over the Coast range, tbe wiison nver forest fire tonight crept to within 12 miles ot tbe towns ot Tillamook and Fair dais. fielther waa renorted In Imme diate danger, but a heavy pall ot smoxe and snowers of ashes cov ered them. Heavy winds that aided the blaze the laat tew days subsided today. A heavy amoke clond de scended over northwestern Ore- i gon and beat became oppressive for the hnndreds of men making futile efforu to hem In tho fire giant. Mill Fire Checked Tha Corneliua mill tire, closest to Forest Drove, waa reported un der control, as was the blue on the Cadwalder and Daria hold ings, near McMinnvllle. The mill at the Utter place waa destroyed. In Coos county, tbe tiro loath- -east of Powers raged on out of ' control, with 250 men on the fire lines. Other fires were re ported under control In that area. Governor Meier baa ottered aa BiBtanee of any state department under hla Jurisdiction In cmbst tlng ttra WttrrA rrver -ia, the- forestry department aanouneed today. No additional men are needed. It waa aaid, aa their efforts are useless. Only ' a change of weather will enrb the blase, for estry officials aald. Austrian Leader Renews Fight on His Nazi Enemies VIENNA. Austria. Aug. It. (U.R Chancellor Englebert Doll- fuss, embattled leader ot tbe ad ministration's struggle against the Nails, hurried back from hla aummer residence near Omundin tonight to take charge of tbe re newed fight against the menaces to bis control of Austria. One of bis first moves waa to banish the German newa agency. Thla move to muxsle the German preen followed almtlar actlon- against Individual German cor respondents recently, on charges they were pro-Nail and writing propaganda agalnat the Dollfuss government. Several battalions in tbe Aus trian region of Bavaria were re ported to bave been moved toward tbe Austrian frontier in tbe last 3t houra. Dollfuss was irate at tha re newed propaganda attacks by ra dio over the German border into Austria, continued last night In a bitter denunciation of his regime by Austrian Nail speakers, now in exile in Bavaria. Ernst Hablcht, leader ot tba outlawed Nail party In Austria, the speaker, branded as "abso lutely illegal" the recent Doll- fuss decree depriving Austrian Nails who fled abroad of tbelr cltlsenship and confiscating the property ot Austrlans who aided Nails outside Austria. FISH STRIKE ENDS REEDSPORT, ORE., Aug.: 23 (LP) Fishermen on the Ore gon coast south of the Columbia river ended their price strike to day and will return to work im mediately, W. F. Burnett, secret ary of the commercial fishermen's association, announced tonight. News Flashes PORTLAND, Ore.. Aug. 88. (U.R) Approximately 2lUH0 unemployed persons have gone to work since July IS In the Oregon-Idaho district, Frank Messenger, sectional manager of the NRA, aald today. VANCOUVER. B. C, Ang. 83. (U.R) Kidnaping has en tered the automobile field. Five Vancouver youths were In Jail today charged with stealing a car and holding H for "ransom." SANTA BARBARA. Ang. 88. (U.R) Two forest fires raffed out of control In Santa Barbara national forest today as t,MK conservation corps workers entered the fourth day of their fight to subdne the flames.