Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 21, 1957, Image 3

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Eisenhower
To Study State Responsibilities
By MAUREEN GOTHLIN
United Press Correspondent
Washington W President
Eisenhower took another step
Saturday toward getting work
started on a program for return'
ing to 'the states some of the
vast powers now exercised by
the federal government.
He named a seven-man com
mittee of federal officials, in
cluding three cabinet members,
to work with a 10-member com
mittee of state governors on the
problem.
The committee of governors
was named earlier by Illinois
Gov. William G. Stratton, chair
man of the executive committee
of the national governors' con
ference. Action Committee
Eisenhower said he hoped the
tudv eroun to be known as
the joint federal-state action
committee will begin work "as
soon as necessary arrangements
have been made.
The president, an advocate of
the states assuming more of tne
govern mental responsibilities
now centered in Washington,
proposed creation of the joint
committee June 24 at the gov
ernor's annual meeting at Wil
liamsburg. Va.
He said Saturday the commit
tee should:
"Designate those functions
which the states are ready and
- willing to assume and finance
that are now performed or fi
nanced wholly or in part by the
federal government.
Revenue Adjustments
"Recommend the federal
nd state revenue adjustments
required to enable the states to
assume such functions.
"Identify the functions and
responsibilities likely to require
state or federal attention in the
future and to recommend the
level of state effort, or federal
effort, or both, that will be need
ed to assure effective action."
He suggested the group decide
when the particular government
'activities should be re-assumed
by the states, the amounts by
which federal taxes should be
reduced as a result of such a
step, and the amount by which
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Appoints Committee
states taxes should be increased.
Single Activity
He recommended the group
concentrate first on a single ac
tivity and relate it to a specific
federal tax or tax amount.
The governors' conference ap
proved the president's proposal.
Stratton and New Hampshire
Gov. Lane Dwinell called on
Eisenhower last week to discuss
a start on the program
The president's appointees to
the joint committee are:
Robert B. Anderson, treasury
secretary-designate: secretary of
labor James P. Mitchell, Mar
ion B. Folsom. secretary of
health, education and welfare;
budget director Percival F.
Brundage, Meyer Kestnbaum
and John S. Bragdon, special
assistants to the president, and
Howard Pyle, deputy assistant
to the president for intergov
ernmental relations.
Besides Stratton and Dwinell,
governors serving on the com
mittee are Theodore R. Mckeld
in, Maryland; Victor E. Ander
son, Nebraska; Robert E. Smi-
Rough and Ready Bids
Low on FS Timber
Grants Pass The Rough
and Ready Lumber company
bought about 5,090,000 board
feet of national forst timber in
the Ramsey creek area south of
Hayes hill Thursday.
The sale was held at the
Grants Pass office of the Siski
you national forest.
The appraised price was SZl.Zo
per thousand board feet for an
estimated 4,200,000 board feet
of Douglas fir; $25.45 for 790,-
000 feet of Ponderosa pine;
S14.80 for 20,000 feet of Port
Orford cedar, and S6.45 for 80,
000 feet of incense cedar and
other species.
Rough and Ready bid S21.35
on the Douglas fir, and the ap
praised price on all other types.
Only other bidder was Cabax
Lumber company.
Three Daughters Die
In Sandy House Fire
American Falls, Idaho Hfl
Three persons died and two
were seriously injured in a car
truck collision four miles east
of here on U.S. Highway 30
North Friday afternoon.
Dead are James Boyd Lynch,
19. his mother. Mrs. Olive Mae
Lynch, about 40, both of Prine
ville. Ore., and Mrs. A. M.
Lynch, about 70, Anderson,
Calif.
Seriously injured was Norman
Elmo Lynch, 49, husband of
Mrs. Olive Lynch. Robert H.
By Jimmy Hatlo
T HOW DOES SHE SOUND OFF
DEAR BABY TO HER
GIVE A LISTEN
ley. Idaho; Price Daniel, Texas;
James P. Coleman, Mississippi;
Dennis J. Roberts, Rhode Island;
George M. Leader, Pennsyl
vania, and George Docking,
Kansas.
Indian, Relatives
Face Problem of
Land Division Law
Washington (in An Indian
known about the reservation as
Walking Many Arrows has a
problem.
So have his 98 relatives who
along with him inherited 116
acres of land near Ft. Randall
Reservoir in South Dakota.
The problem is the palefaces'
laws on division of Indian lands.
Sen. Francis Case (R-S.D.) said
Saturday the land laws call for
minute division of inherited In
dian lands down to the last frac
tion. So, when Walking Many Ar
rows and his relatives came into
their inheritance the government
divided it into lots of 1-54 tril
lionth of 116 acres.
$585 Worth
Walking Many Arrows, also
known among the braves as Ar
row Sticks In Him, received
4.199,168,842.400-54 trillinoths,
That's S585.67 worth.
Francis Hairy Chin received
only 2,887,967,628-54 trillonths.
That is worth 37 cents.
Case said dividing the land
like this makes it hard to man
age. He has introduced a bill
that will enable Indians to put
the pieces back together.
"Fractionalized heirship Indi
an lands tantalize the Indian
owners and torment the stock
men who tries to use them,"
Case said.
"And, when heirship interest
can be determined, some Indians
find themselves like the young
returned soldier Sioux did in
Denver, a few months back. He
got a check for seven cents as
his share of a lease fee. It would
cost him 10 cents to cash it."
Curzon, 52, a truck driver, was
hospitalized in Pocatello with
"serious" injuries.
A gravel truck driven by Cur
zon apparently skidded out of
control and crashed into the
Lynch car, according to Power
county sheriff Rulon Neal.
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All-While Jury is
Expected to Get
Clinton Case Soon
Knoxville, Tenn. IB An
all-white jury from the hill
country of Tennessee faces an
unprecedented decision here
Tuesday when defense and gov
ernment attorneys present final
arguments in the trial of 11
segregationists charged with
hindering integration of Clinton,
Tenn., High school.
The jury of ten men and two
women will be asked to furnish
an answer to one of the thorni
est questions facing the South
how far the government can go
to back up the Supreme Court's
integration order.
The defense contends federal
agencies cannot pick out faces
in a crowd of integrationists and
send those persons to jail and
that the government has done
little more than pick out the
faces of the defendants in the
Clinton trial.
Prosecution Side
However, the prosecution
holds that a definite web of cir
cumstantial evidence of conspir
acy to interefere with the
school's integration has been
built around the 11 defendants.
The jury, made up of 12 per
sons all 40 or over, pondered
the weighty case during a week
end recess that followed the end
of the defense's case Friday.
"Where are the Negro wit
nesses?" asked defense counsel
Thomas P. Gore, cousin of U.S.
Sen. Albert Gore (D-Tenn.).
"They are the ones who are sup
posed to have been affected by
this alleged violation."
Prosecutor John C. Crawford
Jr., the U.S. district attorney
leading the government's case,
said Negro witnesses were not
necessary to prove conspiracy.
. Crawford said events them
selves showed concerted at
tempts to violate the injunction
Negro students stopped at
tending classes after some of the
defendants set up a watch at
the school, which had to be
closed a few days later because
the principal feared for the
safety of all the students.
Extradition Sought
For American Couple
Paris W Assistant U.S.
Attorney General William F.
xompkins huddled Saturday
with U.S. Embassy officials on
his mission to obtain the extra
dition of an American couple ac
cused of spying for Soviet Rus
sia. Tompkins met with U.S. Am
bassador Amory Houghton and
other embassy officials Saturday
morning. It was his second meet
ing with the ambassador since
his arrival by plane Friday.
lompkins appeared optimistic
after his meeting Friday with
Houghton and officials of the
French Foreign Ministry. He
said he was "well received" and
the talks were "extremely cord--
lal."
The high-ranking U.S. Justice
Department official flew here
to persuac" the French govern
ment to extradite George Zla-
tovski, 47, Russian-born ex-of
ficer of the U.S. Army, and Jane
Foster Zlatovski, 45, his Amer
ican-born wife.
Male phalaropes do the house
keeping. The father bird not
only selects a nesting site and
builds the home, but hatches the
eggs and rears the young. Fe
males, after laying the eggs,
go off in flocks by themselves.
Some 2,000,000 people visit
the Lincoln Memorial in Wash
ington, D. C. each year. No oth
er national shrine or park at
tracts so large an audience, the
National Geographic Society
says.
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Former Ashland Man
Killed in Redding
Ashland Samuel W a d e n
Petty, 50, of Redding, Calif.,
was killed by a falling tree
while logging about 35 miles
west of Redding Friday. Petty
had been a resident of Ashland
for 10 years previous to June
this year when he moved to
California.
He was born Oct. 21 1906 in
Harris, Ark., and was a member
of the Ashland grange. He is
survived by his wife, Freda, a
daughter, Jeanette, and two
sons, Fleener and Larry all of
Redding.
Funeral services will be held
in Litwiller's Mountain View
chapel here at 2 p.m. Monday,
July 22. The Rev. Thomas Balch
of Cavalry Baptish church will
officiate. Interment will be in
Mountain View cemetery.
Police Conduct
Frankenstein Hunt
Chicago HP Police conduct
ed a nationwide search Satur
day for a teen-age "Frenken
stein" in connection with the
slaying of three Chicago school
boys whose killer has never
been found.
A Chicago police artist drew
a sketch from descriptions given
by a woman- who saw a man
annoying one of the slain boys
in the Chicago Loop shortly be
fore the murders. Copies of the
sketch were mailed Friday to
other law enforcement agencies
in the country.
Robert Peterson, 13, John
Schuessler, 13, and his brother
Anton, 11, were killed two and
a half years ago., Their naked
and battered bodes were found
in a forest preserve!
Terry Riley, Memphis, Tenn.,
said the ske'eh resembled the
man he knew as "Franken
stein." Terry used to live in
Chicago and said he and other
Philippine Army
Starts Huk Drive
Manila tw The Philippine
Army Saturday threw 16 bat
talions of troops into an all-out,
no quarter drive against diehard
Communist Huks who ignored a
government offer of general am
nesty. The massive offensive started
after President Carlos P. Garcia
refused to extend the 30-day
grace period under which mem
bers of the Communist under
ground organization could sur
render and escape the death
sentence provided under the new
anti-Communist law.
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Two Are Reported
Arrested as Spys
ing for U.S.
Warsaw Wl A former
west German citizen has been
arrested on charges of spying in
Poland for the United States,
security authorities announced
Saturday.
It was the first such arrest
announced here since, "liberal"
communist Wladyslaw Gomulka
was installed as communist
party chief last October.
Security officials at the min
Heinz Weszka, who was a citizen
of west Germany until his re
patriation to Poland in 1956,
was arrested "while trying to
cross to west Berlin with the
espionage material he had col
lected," including an "espionage
report" written in invisible ink.
Security officials said Weszka
established contact with "func
tionaries of the American intel
ligence service" in west Ger
many before he returned to his
home in Poland.
Reports Arret!
London W Radio Prague
reported the arrest of a Czech
"agent of the American espion
age service."
The broadcast coincided with
an announcement in Warsaw
that a Pole repatriated from
West Germany last year was
arrested as a spy for the United
States.
The Prague broadcast heard
here said Antonin Heryan, a
student who fled Czchoslovakia
some time ago "desiring adven
ture" was seized near Zndjmo
after illegally crossing the bor
der from Austria.
The radio said Heryan was as
signed by the U.S. counter in
telligence corps to gather mili
tary information and mail it to
a CIC "cover address" in Vien
na under the name Rudolf Op
ieri. The Czech radio charged that
the CIC "made use of his hope
less position as a refugee and
recruited him in Munich for sub
versive activity in Czechoslova
kia." boys, including Peterson, were
frightened by a man who chased
them and used gestures like the
movie monster.
Lt. Joseph Morris, head of the
special unit seeking the killer,
said boys in the neghborhood
told police of a "large, peculiar
character" who chased them.
The woman described "Frank
enstein" as 19 years old with
bushy blond hair and dispropor
tionately large shoulders.
Street
Iff
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE THREB
Newspaper Circulation
Shows Large Increase
Chicago W Daily and
Sunday newspaper circulation in
the United States and Canada is
up 2,070,811 copies over 1956
for an average issue total of
111,683,042 paid, the audit bur
eau of circulation said Satur
day. The report was based on a
study of 2,398 newspapers. An
earlier report, ABC said, giving
the increase as 1.698,274 an av
erage total as 111.310.505 was
an error discovered after the
figures were released to news
media.
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