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About The Klamath news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1923-1942 | View Entire Issue (July 8, 1937)
TDhe Klamath News WEATHER NEWS WIRE SERVICE Tti HniJ4 and Nm ubocrtb to full IhuI wtr Mrvlr of Ihm Au(rUld Vr mid Ilia lull, PrcM, ih world' KroalMt ncwgHlIirlii( orcanlijitloni. K"r 17 hours dally world news romi Into Th Herald" Nm offir on UlwXjrp machine. Partly Ctoady High Mt Low S4 At Midnight M 4 hoar Is I p. m . .00 ..I1.1H .I4.T0 IN THE SHASTA-CASCADE WONDERLAND "o to date ... l-t year to data.. .Normal precipitation 11 Vol. 14, No. 204 Price Five Centa KLAMATH FALLS, ORE., THURSDAY, JULY 8, 1937 (Every Morning Except Monday); Editorial; on lha Day's News Hy FRANK J K Mil ft AN O.MI.NOI'H dlapatrh: "Tha Japanraa army (In Man choukuo) declared today II bad I defeated a alieabl detachment of Ruaslsn troops Is a DAY-L0N0 batlla on lha disputed eastern frontier of Manrhoukuo and SI berla." WK C ir. jr. CAN'T bellev unhesitating- of course, that lha Japan- aa did defeat lha Ruaalans. Wa ran I believe ANY nation whan it reiorla lo warllka acta, for when that happens tha ranaorahlp la Im mediately clampad down, and can sorahip and reliable news just don't (n together. .ni'T "ll.ked t'T II doesn't mailer murh who ed whom. Tha omlnoua chararler of tha neae Hoi In lha fact that Japan and Huaala apparenlly WANT TO FK1IIT. II la reported that mora than half a million men ara under arma In tha troubla lone. If that la true. It meana that both aldea are looklni for trouble. Any nation that la looklni for (rouble ran uaually find It, and when TWO nallona go looking tor It at tha aama time, II la prae tlrally Impoaalbla lo KEEP front finding It. BAD nawa from tho war fronta abroad, but belter newa from tha war fronta at home. Threa thouaand men go back lo work In Cleveland under lha pro tection of national guardsmen. Only a week or ao ago, tha gov arnora of Pennsylvania and Ohio wera railing out tha national guard lo PREVENT men from going back to work. If tha tima ever cornea In thli country when wa protect tha right lo airlka but DON'T protect the right to. work, wa a.halCH bad way not merely lorna of ua. but ALL of ua. . TIIR right lo airlka muet ba pro tected. But tha right to work muat alao ba protected. Both are (Continued on rage Six) ULTRA-VIOLET RAYS MAY SOLVE LATEST TORSO SLAYING CLEVELAND. July T ;P De puty Police Inapector David L. Co lea aald today that ultra-violet raya may give police their drat real clue to tha maddened torao player of Cleveland'a Klngabnry Run dlatrlct, whoaa tenth victim waa dlacovered yealerday. Tba beheaded and aurglcally dlaaeeted body of a alurdlly built man. dla covered In tha Cuyahoga river by national guardsmen on airlka duly, waa bundled In a burlap Bark and partially wrapped In newapaper. Deputy Inapector Cowlea aald f ha hoped finger prlnta may ba de lected on tha newapaper through tha medium of lha ultra-violet ray. Informed by Coroner Samuel R. Oerher that tha body had been In lha water at leaat 48 houra, Cowlea aald that It might ba pos albla to bring out latent prlnta through peraplratlon aalla absorb ed In tha grain of tha paper. Vlctltna of tha killer now in clude alt men and four women. Only two wera Identified: Mra. Florence Polilla. 41. through fin ger prlnta, and Edward Andraaay, it. Tha tenth victim baa not been Identified. About A Match for Weight lk , When It cornea down to a matter ot. poundage there lan't much 1 lo rhooao between Utile Billy Pickett (above), aon of Mr. and Mra. 8. V. Pickett, and that big muabroom haalda him. Tha milah room, found by Charlea Storey on a drain bank H mile aouth of Tulolnke, welgha 33 pounda and la ilM Inche In circumfer ence. Store iayt It'g good aatlng, too. GEHRIG PACES AMERICANS TO ALL-STAR WIN Yanks Big Bats Defeat Dizzy Dean, Hubbell of Nationals; Gomez Wins ORirriTH STADIUM. Wash Ington. July 7 (AD Tha big guna of tba world champion Tan keea. paced by Larrupln' Lou Crhrlg. awept tha Americana to an eay g to 3 victory today over tha Natlonala in tha fifth annual ell-alar game, played In awellerlng heat before I'realdenl Itnoaevelt and a capacity crowd, Including 91,391 cah cuatnmera. It waa tha Americana' fourth triumph. (iehrlg. with a Iblrd Inning home run off no leaa than the great Dlny Dean, and a double off Van Mungo In lha alith, drove home four of the Ameri cana' tallica, while the Yankeea' big bala. all told, accounted for aeven of tha winning alde a mark era. IS Hlla Apiece Each team collected 13 baaa hlla but lha Americana got I hem when hlla meant runa. They drove the renowned Carl Hub bell, aca aouthpaw of tha Glania, from tha bo In leaa than one Inning. Hubbell. taking up In lha fourth where Dean left off. waa knocked out during a three run attack, featured by Red Rolfe'a triple with two on. Tha Natlonala uaed all of their ali pltrhera while tha Americana roaeted home behind lha hurling of Lefty (tomet. Tommy Brldgea and Mel Harder, each of whom worked threa Innlnga. Gontea CJeta Credit Clomet, credited with the vic tory, bla third In four all-alar appearancea. held tha Natlonala (Continued on Paga Six) MOSCOW MECHANIC ARRIVES TO SHIP POLAR PLANE HOME .... VANCOUVER. Waah., July T (IP) Vaaally Berdnlk, govern ment mechanic, after an Inapec Hon today of lha trana-polar mon oplane In which three aovlet bird men flew here from Moacow. Rua aia, two weeka ago, aald there waa only 1 0 1 gallona of gaaolina In tha tanka when the ahip waa land ed on Pearaon field, army airport. Shortly after lha landing, American army mechanlca, In atructed lo drain the plane'a lanka. found only 101 gallona but believed tbey bad not located all tha lanka bacauaa of a atatement of tha fllera that they had euftl clent fuel remaining to fly 7 SO mllea. Berdnlk, apeaklng through an interpreter, aald tha monoplane would ba dlamantled. crated and ahipped to Leningrad via tha Pan ama canal. At Leningrad, the machine will ba reaaaembled and ona or all of tha threa airmen who flew It here will probably take It on to Moacow. Tha monoplane haa been quar tered at Pearaon field hero ainee tha landing, awaiting tha arrival of Berdnlk from Moacow to snper viaa tha diamantllng. Too large lo fit Into any hangar at lha field. It haa remained In tha open, elakad down. STF.VESB 8TRICKF.S MKDFORD, July 7 (IP) Jamea Stevena, former light opera atar. Ilea In a critical condition at hia home bera aa the reault of a par alyaia atroke Monday night. Stev ena In recent yeara hat been lead er of tha Mcdford Oleemen and a almllar organliallon at Klam ath Falla. Ha retired from tha operatic and mualcal comedy alage It) yeara ago. Dirt Flies At Eighth and Main .Streets ; rjCSS fi r Excavation was in full urine Wednidajr on the alt of the nw IT. 8. National bank of Portland, at Eighth and Main streets. The dumping material Into a truck, ready to pull out of the ezcavatlon COURT REVISE L Montana Senator Claims Plan Shelved During Presidential Campaign WASHINGTON', July 7 (IP) Senator Wheeler (D, Mont.) told lha aenata today tha admlnlatra llon'a court plan bad been aug geated to hire a year ago by "two men cloaa to tba preeldent-" He aald ha had warned them' not to lake It Imo the political campaign becauaa It would "wreck tba prea Ident." Wheeler, an opponent of court reorganliatlon. made tba aaaer lion after Menator Logan (D., Ky.) a aupporter, told the aenata aorae opponenta of tha admlnlatratlon wera ualng tha court laaua to "de atroy" tha president. See Court rrejndlre Logan waa tha day'a aecond apeaker In behalf of the court bill, under which ona new juatlce a year could be added to tha su preme court for each Incumbent Juatlce over 7S. Before him Senator Guffey (D. Pa.) accuaed tha court of having been "partisan, prejudiced and blaaed In denying workingmau (Continued on Paga Six) LEWIS APPOINTS COMMITTEE TO AID DRIVE ON SEAMEN WASHINGTON, July 7 (UP) John L. Lewie, head of tha Com mittee for Industrial Organization, tonight announced tha appoint ment of a seven-man committee which will direct a nationwide drive lo bring 300.000 maritime workers Into the CIO. Lewla made tha announcement at a preaa conference after ha had conferred lengthily with 26 lead era of maritime labor broupa, in cluding Harry Bridges, who led tha 1934 and 1931 marina strikes on lha Pacific coast, and Joseph Cnrran, president of tho National Maritime union, an eastern rank and file organisation. Bridges and Curran wera named on tha new committee. Asked by newspapermen It Brldgea alao would ba named CIO director on tha west coast, Lewla aald there waa no announcement to maka "on that yet." Lewie waa reminded that Brldgea repeatedly haa been ac cused by marine employera of em ploying communistic tactics ana that Ben. Royal 8. Copeland, D., N. Y., recently declared tha marina labor movement waa dominated ny communists. Ha replied that ba had no comment to maka on theee criticisms, but added: "You may draw on your own Imagination as to whether I am a communist." OREGON WPA CUT 31 PER CENT PORTLAND,, July 7 (IP) E. J. Griffith, Oregon WPA administra tor, saying that administrative ax penaea muat be pared to keep a proper ratio to tha relief load dur ing tha next year, announced a 31 par cent reduction today In the ranks of WPA administrative per sonnel, Tha cut will throw 101 persona out of 381 employed out of Jobs. At tha aama time, Griffith an nounced a reorganisation by which tha four atata districts will be eliminated and tha officea of resi dent anglneera will ba established here after at aurh polnla where construction activities warrant them. Holy Land Becomes Armed Camp as Britain Announces Plan to Divide Jews, Arabs By JACOB SIMON I'nlted I'rcaa Kuuf Correspondent JEIILSAIKM. July 7 (CP) Mora than 12.000 British troops and police transformed the Holy Land Into an armed camp tonight when Lord Peels British royal commission announced ita plan lo split 1'aleatlna into Jewish and Arab aoverelgn atates in an effort to and 15 yeara ot Arab-Jewish bloodahed. Loud speakers blared tha 40ft paga royal report from atores, theaters, mosquvs and synagogues ttrrougrmnt PaNtina " Troops Krrrywhere Tha British high commissioner appealed to 1,000,000 Arabs and 41)0,000 Jewish colonists to keep order. Troops, with fixed bayon- CHINESE TROOPS CLASH WITH JAPS; SCORES KILLED SHANGHAI, Thursdsy, July 8 (CP) Scores of Chinese were reported killed In a bloody clasn early today between Japanese and Chinese forcea near Fengtal, north of Pelping. Several Japanese wera said to have been killed. A battalion of Japanese troop rushed to Lluwangmiao on the Pelplng-Hankow railway after a apokesman at tha Japanese mili tary headquarters said: "The Chinese forces which were Involved In a clash with Japanese troops near Fengtal will be wiped out unless they agree to disarm at once." Tha Domel" agency reported from Tientsin that Japanese troopa occupied Lluwangmiao and Lukouchiao, near Fengtnl, and began disarming Chinese troops. As tba Chinese retreated across tha Yingtlng river the Japanese opened up with machine gun and rifle fire. The Domel correspond ent said acores of Chinese wera killed by bullets or drowned in tha river. In Tientsin Japanese autborl (Continued on Paga Six) Night Wire Flashes NKW COMPLICATIONS Copyright, in.17, I'nlted Press lON HON, July 7 (I P) Gen eralissimo Francisco Kranco'a threat to withhold Kpanlxh ores needed by British and French arms programs unless his na tlonallsta are recognised aa bel ligerents tonight created new complications In Kurope'a neu trality dcjMllock. OCF.AX KI.HJHT SF.T MONTIIF.AI July 7 (I P) Seven trans-Atlantic flights be tween F.nglnnd nnd New York, Tin Montreal, will lie made from now until Hcptcinlicr, Cnt. J. H. Hhaw, officer In charge of airlines for Aslntlr Petroleum corporation, aald today. MIN'F.R 8CFFOCATKH JOHNSTON, Pa., July 7 IT One man died of sailfocation and several others were over come by anioke when fire broke out lale today In (he fan house of the Black Diamond mine of Hie .Mineral Point Coal com pany. The dead man was John Cunningham, 00. KX-MAVOR DIKS GRANTS PASS, Ore., July 1 (IP) George J. Vox, who at one time was mayor of Oranla Pass, tiled today following at heart attack anil paralytic atroke at the age of 78. home of the local branch of the picture shows the big shorel on to Eighth street. eta, tear gaa and clubs war scat tered everywhere. Tha royal commissioner's plan already approved by the British government and awaiting only consent of tba League ot Nations, glvea one-third of Paleattna to the Jews and two-thirds to their Moa lem enemiea. Orave Feara Felt Between theaa two atatea the Jews on the north along tha Mediterranean and the Araba on tha south and west bordering on the Brtlish-mandatd Arab nation of Transjordanta will ba a Brlt-leh-controlinA -neutral corridor in cluding Jerusalem, Bethlehem and Nazareth. Authorities received tha long awaited report with grave fear. They said it appeared Inevitable that Arab nationalists, allegedly stirred to anti-Brltrsh unrest by foreign agenta, would turn their anger upon the Jews because they have steadfastly opposed exten sion of Jewish concessions. Jevra Angered Many Jewish colonists likewise (Continued on Page Six) AMERICAN'S 4TH OF JULY SPEECH FIRES NAZI PRESS BERLIN', July 7 CTI Chancel lor Adolf Hitler'a newspaper Voel klsrher Beobachter Intensified a bitter attack today on Robert W. Bingham, United Statea ambassa dor to London, for his Independ ence Day speech on despots and dictatorships. The diplomat's speech to the American society in London was characterised here as an "arro gant and Ignorant" attempt to tell foreign nations how to manage their own affairs. Nicholas Murray Butler, presi dent ot Columbia university. New York, who spoke at tha same af fair, was sarcastically referred to In passing as a pompous declalmer ot the high ideals ot the Amer ican declaration of independence. These same Ideals, Hitler'a paper observed, "were fought agalnat with fire and aword by tba Eng land of that day." The paper ridiculed the am bassador assertion that It wis democracies which wera happy and prosperous, while dictator ehlpa were unhappy and bankrupt. It auggeated that Franc, plagued by Internal financial cri sis, must be particularly happy now, and that "Mr. Bingham's homeland can feel equally bappy and aatlsfled, notwithstanding its troops are principally occupied with holding down the worklug classes which for almost a year have been passing their lima with an endless chain of atrikes, some of which have been decidedly vio lent." SHARP NOW THIRD IN AIR CONTEST ONTARIO, July 7 I.T Oregon's touring air fleet took off thla morning for Pendleton, after stnglng a show here Tuesday that attracted practically the entire population of Ontario, business houses being closed for the occa sion. Perfect weather aided the stunt pilots and parachute Jumpera to go through their routines to tha best advantage. George Armlstead ot Brent wood, Calif., took first place In the navigation contest for sports men pilots on the trip here from Baker, Dr. Paul Sharp of Klamath Falls, who bad been leading the field, slipping to third place. Ethel Sheeny of Fontana, Calif., took tlrat for the lap. 20 WOUNDED, ONE DEAD IN STRIKE FIGHT Gun Play Follows Clubs, Fists as Tennessee Aluminum Plant Opens ALCOA, Tann., July 7 (CP) Tennessee national guardsman moved Into Alcoa tonight to maln ta'n order around tbe Aluminum company of America plant where 21 men wera wounded, one faulty, today In a gun battle which fol lowed a fight with clubs and fists. Harrison Click, a striker, died tonight of a bullet wound. Strike-bound for aeven weeks, the Aluminum company'! vaat sheet mill No. 1 resumed limited operationa under protection of troopa and apecial police. Troopa Rushed In While 7 strikers and four offl cere were aent to hospttala with gunshot wounds after a day of gun fights, battle with fiata and clubs and an alleged dynamiting, tbe ehift waa changed In the plant at 7 p. m. without Incident Tha troops were ordered by Adj. Gen. R. O. Smith. Machine gun companiea from Knoxvllle and Maryvllle and a detachment from Nashville and Athena were sent here Immediately. General Smith rushed here to take charge On a fishing trip at Galltln Tenn., Gov. Gordon Browning aald martial law probably will not be neceaaary. Two ot the 21 men In hospitala strikers and a police officer - were critically wounded. Click, dying late tonight from a wound In the throat. W. H. Hunt. policeman, had a bullet wound In the abdomen. Perhaps a score more had minor Injuries Inflicted by fista and cluba. ALCOA. Tenn., July 7 JP At least 14 strikers and two police men were ahot and wounded to day In a clash between officers and aeveral hundred pickets at the tales ef the Alcoa plant ot the Aluminum , Company of. America, (coaunueo on raga on; JAP STUDENTS OF CHRISTIAN SCHOOL STRIKE, HOLD 300 KYOTO, Japan. July 7 (IP) More than 300 atudents ot Dosbia ha university, most Important aeat ot Christian learning In Japan, were Imprisoned today in the uni versity chapel by student strike agitators. Gendarmes came to the assist ance ot the atudenta but failed to force open the chapel doors. Agi tators armed with clubs stood guard at' the entrances. It waa feared military authori ties might be required to take a hand In aettlement ot the dispute, which waa aaid to have arisen among the Institution's 4700 stu dents over policies ot tha achoo! The university la partially sup ported by the American Board of Foreign Missions and la connected with the Congregational church. Dissident atudenta held a rally In which they adopted a resolution favoring severance ot tbe Institu tion's church connection, aboli tion of Christian prayers and paalma on the four major Japan ese national holidays, and punish ment ot professors and atudenta holding Ideaa regarded aa detri mental to principles of the Japan ese state. Baseball PACIFIC COAST I.EAGCB By I'nlted Preaa R. H. E. San Diego 113 2 Missions . Ill Chaplin and Detore; Bolen and Outen. Night Games R. H. E. Sacramento . 4 8 0 Seattle - 0 8 0 Klingar and Cooper; Gregory, Horn and Spinel, R. H. E. San Francisco 11 12 2 Los Angeles 3 12 8 Srores and Woodall; Prim. Overman and Collins. First Game R. H. E. Oakland - 12 20. 0 Portland 8 14 t Douglas, Hatd, Millar. Bonham and Baker; Carson, Moncrlef, Drefs, Laflaemm and Tresh. IRISH PRESIDENT PUT IN HOT SPOT DUBLIN. Irish Fre Stat. July l' (p) Th labor party with 12 aeata In th dall, held th balance of power in the Irish Fr state to day and presented President Ea mon Da Valera with two problems ariaing from the "dead heat" par liamentary elections. Th New York-born president had to decld whether he would sacrifice parte ot his constitution In exchange for a working major ity with th labor deputlea or whether ha would sacrifice the support they usually ftv him on othar matters. West Admits Marriage to New Yorker By LEO BAROX I'nlted Pre Staff Correspondent LOS ANGELES. July 7 (UP) Mae West, baxora screen siren, tonight sdmltted she married Frank Wallace, a vaudeville actor, 2 yeara ago. Aa far as she knows she Is atlll married, Mae conceded in an answer filed In superior court to Wallace's action to establlab the validity of their marriage. But she denied that they had ever lived together aa man and wife. Actor Remarried Tha marriage took place In Mil waukee. April 11. 111. Tbe screen actresa denied that aha ever represented to Wallace that ahe bad divorced him and added that ao far aa she knew he had never divorced her. Yet he remarried, taking out a license In New York City on Feb. I, 1111, to marry Rae Blakesly, tha answer contended. The cere mony was performed three days later. Miss West related that Wallace (Continued on Page 8ix) NEWS STORIES READ AT TRIAL Harry French's Lawyers Contend Items Drove Defendant to Slaying ALTURAS. Cel.. July 7 (UP) Articles published in the country newspaper ot Claude L. Me Cracken were Introduced today at tha aanlty hearing of hia con victed slayer, Harry French, state tax collector, in an effort to prove tney drove French Inaane. Mrs. Gertrude French, mother ot tha alayr, on th stand throughout th day. eollasawd and kad to be helped from, th court room mm- ana anaoe a vaaiatt enost to leave her arck bed In an at tempt to aare her aon' life. Recessed Twice The aame jury of 10 men and two women that found French guilty of first degree murder In the slaying ot McCracken muat determine whether he waa sane or inaane when he fired fire ahot Into th country editor' body last March to end a family feud. The court recessed twice aa Mrs. French found difficulty In answering the questions ot De fense Attorney S. Luke Howe and Walter French, uncle of the con vlcted man. "Wild-eyed for Daya" One article from McCracken'a Modoc Mall Introduced aa evt dence waa headed "Another Brain Storm" and referred to a "tirade" against the Modoc county sheriff (Continued on Page Six) HIGHWAY BOARD . URGED TO SPEND LOCAL MONEY NOW Oregon Slate highway comrois sloners will be urged at their meeting Thursday to spend Imme diately money they have allocated on The Dalles-California highway north of Klamath Falls. Tom Wattera, chairman of the roads and highwaya committee of the chamber ot commerce, waa In. atructed by the directora Wednea. dar to attend the meeting. It waa recalled that in 183. th highway commiasion allocst ed 183,254 for work on the ac (Continued on Pag Six) TODAY'S NEWS DIGEST LOCAL Miniaterial association protests location ot liquor atore on Fifth atreet. Disclosed that present lease on Pelican theatre building quarter la axpiring, necessitat ing move of store to another lo cation. Pag 1. French attorney attempt to show newa articlea In McCrack en'a paper drov defendant In sane. Pag 1. Chamber urge highway de partment to use immediately money it allocated a year ago tor The Dallas-California high way north. Paga 1. New playground for Klamath Falls youngsters to open soon at the corner of Third and McKin ley streets. . Page t. Klamath to entertain It offi cer from U. 8. fleet on occaalon ot Portland fleet week. Pag t. Carl K. Cook named command er of th American Legion her. Pag I. Work atari on nw U. 8. bank building. Eighth ind Main atreet. Picture on Pag 1. GKNF.RAL Amrlca lesgusrs, paced by PLANES SPEED OCEAN SEARCH FOR LOST PAIR Sea, Air Activity Centers on Group of Islands Southeast of HowlancJ HONOLULU, T. H., July 7 (UPf Th U. 8. navy launched Ita searck "i ana air in tne Phoenix la lands tonight for Ameria. K.rh.re and her navigator, missing five days on a flight across on of the moat aeeoiai areaa ot th south Pacific. Three planes, eatanulted from tbe U. 8. 8. Colorado, when tbe nattieshlp waa about 200 mile north of Wlnslow Banka, north ern most point of the widely scattered Coral group, searched port ot tne area for aeveral houra without finding any trace of th adventurers or of their plane. IJghte Sweep Sky Dusk forced the planea to re turn to tbe ahip, from which they will depart again at dawn in ex tending the hunt. Then the Colorado turned on powerful searchlights and cruis ing slowly toward the Wlnslow Banks swept the 7,000,000-candle power lights over the aea and against the clouds. Several hour voyage to the north the coast guard cutter Itasca followed sim ilar tactics. Weather Good Aa the search moved south ot the equator, below the Howland Island objective toward which Mis Earhart and Frederick J. Noonaa were aiming on a flight from New Guinea, laat Friday, ideal weather conditlona for flying prevailed. The aea wr calm, and there wa a gentle southwest wind blowing. The aerial part of the hunt wilt be augmented by Sunday or Mon day when the U. 8. 8. Lexington, aircraft carrier, arrives with it complement of at least 70 and possibly 0 planea. Th Colorado then may withdraw, aa the Lex (Continued on Page Six) MINlSTQR : GROUP JOINS' PROTEST- ON " RUM STORE STTE t Another protest agalnat locae tion ot the atate liquor store on Fifth street between Main street and Klamath avenue waa mad Wedneaday by the Klamath Falla Miniaterial association. Prevloua ly th Central Labor anion adopt ed auch a resolution. - The ministerial nnlon state ment, as releaaed to the new paper, read: "We, the Ministerial associa tion of Klamath Falla. Oregon, rex apectfully protest the placing ot a State Liquor atore on Fifth atreet between Main atreet and Klamath avenue. Mainly, because it la cloae to the public library neces sitating tbe users ot th library paasing th store. Creating a moral haiard to the children andl young people of our library. (Signed) "J. Clarence Ofr. president, ' "Roy E. Southard, aecretary." Construction of a building to house the liquor store la now un derway, and will be completed la about six weeks. The structure, it la understood, la designed especi ally for the liquor store, and legal transactions in connection Willi the leas have been closed. Th building Is th property bt Nelli Bolvin. Sine Its eatabllahment, the li quor store here haa been located In the Pelican theatre building, at the corner of Eighth atreet and Klamath avenue. Tbe lease on those quarters la expiring, neces sitating a move. Lou Gehrig and Yanks' big guns, pound out 8-3 victory over Na tionals befoce capacity Washing ton, D. C, crowd. Pag 1. Senator Wheeler of Montana, foe of Roosevelt court bill, aay plan suggested to him more tbsn a year ago, and that he advised against taking it into election cam paign for fear ot "wrecking pres ident. Page 1. Three seaplanes Intensify search tor Amelia Earhart among Island near Howland. Aircraft carrier nearing with 00 more. Pag 1. On striker dead and 20 other rioters In hospital la toll ot strike fight . at Tennessee aluminum plant after reopening. Page 1. British troop convert Holy Land Into armed camp aa pro posal to divide Jews and Arabs I mad public over loud apeaker. Tag 1. . 'IX THIS ISSUE City Brief .....Pag t Comic and 8tory....Psg I Courthouse Records ...Paga 4 (editorials ...................... Pax 4 Family Doctor ..Page 4 Market. Financial News....Psx 7 Recreation Note ...... ....Pag 7 Resort Newa Page 1 South-End News .... Pag 4 Sports . Pag t