PAGE TEN - HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON February JS, FIVE RIFLEMEN TAKE LIFE OF UTAH KILLER SALT LAKE CITY, Feb, S (Pi Five volunteer riflemen, paid S25 each and one firing a blank shell, shot to death Walter Rob. rt Avery, sallow-faced killer of a policeman, In the Utah prison yard today, thereby fulfilling his choice. The shots were tired at 8:23 a. m., and two minutes later Dr. Rich Johnson pronounced Avery dead. All persons condemned to death in Utah must choose be tween the firing squad and the hangman and Avery, 34-year- old former marine, picked the, ruiemen. la Cellbloclc Although five rifles rattled at Sheriff John R. Watson's signal, only four spat death-dealing slugs. One of the .3O-.30 caliber weapons loaded secretly by the sheriff contained a blank cart ridge, but none of the execution ers knew which drew this weapon. The riflemen stood in a cell block adjoining the yard with a canvas hung over the door, their guns thrust through eight-inch slits. Woman Sees Execution From a range of 22 feet they pumped bullets into a target pin ned over the heart of the con demned slayer who as a marine had engaged in exchanges of shots with Nicaraguan revolu tionaries without getting a scratch and also had come un scathed through later brushes with the lfljW. Avery, strapped securely In a battered old arm chair, stiffened as the guns cracked and his low moans were audible to news papermen and other witnesses standing only eight feet away. One woman, Jean Hubber, a Salt Lake City reporter, saw the execution. Good Loser The death sentence was im posed on the former marine for the slaying of Detective Hoyt L. Cites in a gun battle during chain store grocery holdup at Ogden February 11, 1041. In a 10-page "autobiography' written for a Salt Lake City newspaperman, Avery said, "death to me is simply the cash. Ing in of the stack of chips all of us receive at birth and while I have lost heavily in the game of life, I Intend to face the cashier as a good loser." OFFICE AT SEATTLE PORTLAND, Feb. 5 (IP) Dean Wayne L. Morse and two other members of the war labor board were here today making plans for the opening of a Pa cific northwest regional labor board office at Seattle. The dean of the University of Oregon law school said mem bers of the regional board would be divided equally between Ore gon and Washington with four representatives each from the public, labor and industry. The national board will name the members, Morse said, but in dustry and labor will submit their own nominations. Morse said the Seattle office and 11 other regional offices throughout the nation probably would be functioning within 10 days or two weeks. The regional office will not have jurisdiction that conflicts with that of the west coast lum ber commission, which will main tain its office here and continue to be responsible only to the na tional board, Morse said. BLAM E FO MILK TROUBLES LAD ID GOVERNMENT PORTLAND, Feb. 6 (P) Oregon's dairy industry today put responsibility for the milk production problem on the fed eral government's doorstep. Some 75 producers and proc essors, meeting under ausnices of the Oregon Dairymen's asso ciation, charged that production has been retarded by the gov. eminent I laiiure to evolve a policy that could be understood Demands Made The group asked that the state milk control law be retained because It "is beneficial to pro ducers and consumers alike in that it provides legal means for the dairy industry to settle its differences, especially in the larger markets." Higher ceiling prices, more farm machinery, draft defer ment for dairy workers and in clusion of labor costs in revising the parity formula were other demands of the group. Wife Admits Poisoning Husband After Argument HTLLSBORO. Feb. S CPl mrs. imest Lribbons has admit ted poisoning her husband, a Hillsboro area farmer, after an argument over repairing a froz en automobile radiator, Deputy Sheriff R. H. Busch said last night. Busch said the woman, held in county jail without charge, admitted cuttine coisnn into Gibbons' coffee yesterday morn ing. He died within a short time. SALEM, Feb. 8 VP)- State Director of Agriculture J. D. Mickle warned dairymen today that existing conditions offer no. excuse for reduction in the but- terfat content of milk. He said his Inspector had found several Instances where the content was below the 3.2 per cent minimum. Merchant Gets $3610 Fine, Six Months on Tire Count PORTLAND, Feb. 5 (Pi Morris E. Barhan,' Westport merchant, was fined $3810 and sentenced to six months in prison by Federal Judge Jnmes A. Fee yesterday for tire rationing vlo lations. Barhan ' pleaded guilty last December to charges of selling new tires at prices above OPA schedules and without receiving ration board certificates. Sen. tence was delayed pending in. vestlgation by a probation off! cor. It was the first tire ratlonlns case in uregon. GROCERS' LOSS PORTLAND. Feb. 6 (jWRn. tioning of canned sooda. start.' t ing warcn i, will affect as per cent of all items handled by srocers and 60 wr cent nf thnii-1 business volume, estimates M. R. Alisner, district OPA food ra tioning official. OOIIE THROAT due tea cold. ..let a little time-tested in'ywrmouth f I C K S worra nnei w VAPORUS New appetite ppel ! In sandwiches, salad dressings and recipes you'll enjoy die smooth flavor and tangy rot of Schilling unproved Mustard. 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