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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 10, 1946)
Maritime A rhiters Suggest Seaman Bonus In Th Bay's km Br rnANK jcnkins THE dltchea till morning give li un Intereatliig ex amnio of legislation I" aeed. The village of Skokle, Illinois, rum lipuvlly to Iota 30 feel wlilo. It linn a building ordinance MTlfyliiu thut MO house iniiy be built which dues nut have Hi i-ul a tlioumiiiil aquare (ret of floor apace and requiring ut the nmn tliim space of four fnot on rui'h irliln between Hie walla ml I ho iroxrty llnt-a. The remit In tint cun of 30-foot lola It thnt hmite cun t bo more limn 22 fret wlilo anil mimt hp aoinewhat more thnn 45 feet deep. The correspondent who flip , Hid dlapalc-h aiiggetla that aueh ' a hfiiiM uiiinlrl tunic a uiliirl bnwllrg alley but Isn't too well adapted to modern living. AT the prcent nuiinenl In hit tory, Hie United Slain la priictlciilly bunkrupl for goods. All over Hie country are govern- iKfitl ujart-lwinana hllllllnU Wltll i aurplua war gooda that ciin't be old becHime of Icgltlutlon ao ...,...ll..i...l Murl unworkable Hint It can't be unraveled enouuh to iMTinlt talcs. riMUftlnnlntf an unfnrtu unto Inlenl In America for lawa Hint won't work. rllOM Aaunclon. the Hlllo- known capital of not at all well known I'araguuy, cornea a dtapatrh telling of a pre-duwn barracks revolt In which five I'urmiunyon aoldlera were killed fii-r rifle and artillery fire had rallied around the town for four houra or more before the revolt uiiM minllpd. The uprising aecma to have been headed By a 1-nionci vie torlano Vera, who waa peeved hri-aiiui of hit removal aa com' mander of a Paraguayan cavalry dlvlalon. THATS what happena when pvervhodv who can command a FOLLOWING can take hla neevea out on the government. Snrh altuallona can be aC' ciirately described a LIBERTY gone to iceo. nrllE new from China today la mixed. A I4..lnu If-lll-A llPlWAPn tllC rival factiona haa been arranged, with Uenerai Marnan a neip. luil Ihn rilttniitehea are full Of ..l. .. ..... ' nl ulnlnllmta nf the truce. It will be little less than a miracle If the natlonallata and Iho communUU In China get together without a civil war. It la an extremoly anfo gueaa that peace and tranquility are 1 what the' common, ordinary 4 mattes of China want more than anything else In the world, but their hoiiea and dealrea are being frustrated by ambition for per sonal power on the part of Chlna't factional leadera. History telli ua that thli situa tion has been prevalent In more or leaa aggravated form ever ince what we loosely term "civilization" began. tyE'VE made a lot of progress " some directions, but no where npar enough progress In the direction of Intelligent and workable human relationships. TTALY today formally becomes a republic. That sounds like NEWS. May be It Is. It all depends. ROME, dominant In ancient Italy as a clty-stote, START ED aa a republic. The republic cli'cn.ved because the citizens let scheming politicians pull the wool over their eyes. Rome then became an oli garchy, ruled by a patrician sen tries -which decayed In time be 7 cninij everybody who amounted io anything became so absorbed In grabbing personal wealth and personal power that no time was loft for governing the. country decently. There followed then ONE , MAN despotism, wllh power A held by all kinds of despots " from efficient, even statesman like, Julius and Augustus down to insane Caligula. SO don't pay too much attention to the GESTURE by which Italy has again become a re public. Gestures mean so little. Democracy THAT WORKS t goes so deep and means so much. Phony $50 Bills Appear In U. S. SAN FRANCISCO, June 10 (IP) Counterfeit $50 bills of ex ceptional workmanship and pos sibly made In the Orient are ap pearing in the United States, William E. Merrill of the secret . service announced today. Four of the spurious bills have been found In San Francisco, six In Seattle and one In New York Clly, Morrill snld. "It Is the best Job of counter felling that I have over run In to," he addod, No Grain Left At The Dalles THE DALLES, Juno 10 (I') Grain supplies at the nort ele. vntors liere nro exhausted, Port SI (lunger uolph Klnisey snld to ny. The Inst two carloads of -wheat wero shipped last week. The famine relief program within the last six months took most of the grain, he reported. A survey showed that most other Wasco and Sherman coun ty elevators also are without wheat. Iowa Hotel Death Toll Goes To 16 DUBUQUE, la., June 10 (IP) The death toll In a tragic (Ire 'Ink lug leading nurta in tlio Investlgutlon were tlio state fire marshal's office, the Dubuque county attorney and the coroner. At the tnino time, Dr. r. a. Leonard, coroner, countermund- cl a prevloua decision and aaid an iniuvat would bo held before a three-member Jury, The 16th falul victim of the fire waa Mra. William Canfleld, 73, wife of the hotel owner. Her husband was taken deud from the ruins yesterday. She died of third degree burnt. Three of tlio dead remained unidentified and 23 persons allll were reported missing by the Red Cross. Fifteen more were 111 the hospital. Hatard Delays Starch While officers held off fur ther search for bodlet on orders of Deputy Stuto Fire Marshal Zach Cook, who said the walla were "dunguroutly nigging." the American Red Cross continued a radio appeal for all persons who were registered at the hotel Saturday night to report to the Red Cross. The hotel register listed 123 names, many of which were illegible because of water dam age. The Red Cross said the misting probably Included the three unidentified dead. Fire Chief Perry Kirch aald he expected to find "a few" more bodies In the piles of charred debris. The blaie waa fought 2 Hi houra by 75 firemen and there were aconea of horror and hero lam. Kirch praised the work of civilians who aided firemen and 35 policemen to bring out vic tims. Car Kills Man NearTulelake TULELAKE. June 10 Her. bert Theodore Bird, 42, a'lubor- er on tlin Charlc waiarip ranch at" Tulctake, waa fatally injured at 11:05 last night when he was struck by a car driven by Gus Tllch of Tulelake about a mile and a halt norm oi tuie- lake, California. California stale pollco inves tigating the accident said that llird came ud on the muni high' way from the atdo of the roud, crossed to the center and then started back when he was hit Police noted the odor of alcohol on him. He was .rushed to Hillside hosultal by Merchant Police am- bulance where his Injuries were aald to Include extensive skull fracture and a brain injury. He died at 2:18 a. m. and the body was taken to Ward's Funeral home pending location of friends or relatives. The Impact of the crash knocked Bird about 30 feet, of ficers said, and damaged the front end of Tilch's auto. He stopped as soon as Bird was hit and, after Investigation, was not held. Tllch, a mechanic at Balslg. er s gurago In Tulelake, was driving home from a fishing trip to Diamond lake. In the car with him wero Lylo Sheror and Harold Clinton of Tulelake and Clinton's father from Reno. Very little is known about Bird In Tulelake other than his namo and birthdate, Juno 15, 11104. He fans been in Tulelake only a short time and Saturday night, June l, all his personal effects were stolen from his bunk at the Waldrlp ranch. His mother who resides at routo 1 box 46, Rolla, Mo., has Dcen notuieo. at the Canfleld hotel went to a'-'W X v. "! -'7iT f' S w ' t, T7 - . 10 today aa a three-pronged 1 KK ' tf . ', ' ' ' ' r . :W 'I'" ' --'," " ! .";'' vcatlgallon waa atarlod to d' 57iK-,v." t V 1KtZt' A ' rt' mine the cause of the , siPjp l2Ntt.Js'i'- mftfiiltf tlr' 'A 't " ' " which awept through the A . iZWSitwl iTrtHI a m. ' room atructur. ahortly aflJ' I W i&?r5mlMi midnight yesterday. , v t-f fetAj'Jfll tTJ ai A ' li Communist Blows Charged As China Negotiates Peace NANKING, June 10 P) U. S. General Marshall and commu nist Gen. Chou En-lal today discussed conditions for perma nent peace In China while the government made new charges that Red troops violated the current trace by attacking sev eral cities. Chou reported on weekend discussions ho held with party leaders at Yenan headquarters. Ycnan decisions and Chou's con versation with Marshall were secret, as have bcon all recent negotiations. The government controlled Central News agency charged that 200 national officers and men were killed or wounded as 12 communist brigades assault ed government positions at Lata and Kiu railway stations, cast of Yungkl, Yu Fel-peng, mlnlster of com munications, also visited Mar shall's headquarters to discuss restoration of communications, one of the government's three prerequisites to a pcaco treaty. There was no Indication when Marshall would confer again with Chiang Kai-shek, who per sonally is negotiating for the government, (Associated Press correspon aril .11 ""V . - A-V flll . art wftraw mm mw & o' t . : PRICE Plelurtd above is nart of the r V lOf KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON. MONDAY. JUNE 10. IMS (Telephone 1111) Number 10842 -O i . ' ' iMab. Loaii ' llltflla... . . . . t ing to rtgitttr for the tummtr swimming clattes which will bt inaugurated tomorrow and continue throughout the vacation teason. Klamath Sheriff's Posse Places Fifth At Portland By JOY BIGGS Despite obstacles and misad ventures, Capt. E. P. "Hat Ivory guided the Klamath County Sheriff fosse to nun place In precision riding, with a military drill, In the 1048 Rose Festival's Thursday night ahow at Multnomah atadium, Port land. The Klamath cavalry drill, presented second In contest with nine oilier po.mc rxniui Hons from as many Oregon counties, was the only one of Hi kind In the entire show, the other posses all following some whnt different patterns. Sheriff Lloyd Low led the Klamath county posse. Mlxliup dogged me group oi 30 men riding for Klnmoth county from the stnrt, but was met Willi such a mood of non chalance that the - grandstand was led to believe it was a "gag" when one rider was dis mounted and another "frozen" in Hie arena. Trouble started for the group when Keith Mooif was crowded against the barn and suffered a cracked rib while loading his palomino Tuesday night for the festival. He received medical attention upon arriving in Portland and with several lengths of tape across his chest rode In his place as corporal of Board Studies Barracks Use The proposed use of the Klamath Marine Bnrracks as an extension center of the state board of higher education was under discussion at the board meeting in Portland this after noon, with no definite action re ported at mid-afternoon. Indications were, however, that a question of staffing the proposed institution was prov ing a stumbling block in the Portland discussions. There was some contention that the board couldn't find teachers for the schools already operating, and would have too few instructors to handle a new set-up at Klam ath Falls. This development threw a pessimistic slant on the Bar racks plan, which was fostered at the start by Gov. Earl Snell and Dr. Lowell T. Coggeshall, former Barracks' mcdicnl chief. dent Tom Masterson radioed from Pciping that the govern ment's Central News agency charged the communists at tacked four Manchurinn cities four hours after Chiang's cease fire order to government troops became effective Friday. (Masterson said it was likely' the red troops were without radios and were not Informed of the truce, news of which was broadcast a day in advance. (The government agency's re port, from Chnngcluin, tho Man churian capital, snld the com munists attacked Tnolnichao, 70 miles to the north; Lata, east of Yungkl; Hushuhsein and Hal ahai. It described tho Lata of: fenslvo as "largo scale." (Masterson, in another dis patch, sold a government spokes man, told of "heavy casualties" In battling to retain the Impor tant Shantung province rail city of Tohslcn, 70 miles north of Tslnnn, provincial capital. The spokesman said 20,000 Chinese communists attacked the city at nightfall. (Fall of the clly was Immi nent, the spokesman added. He reported that a truce team at tempting to halt tho fighting could not get outside the city limits because of heavy firing.) 1 Swimmers Swarm to KUHS thronot which lintd up at Klamath Union high school this morn story on page e. squad four in the show and pa rade, and stood his watch with Hie others. Two Mounts Left Behind Through some delay in get Ing two horses to the Klamath county fairgrounds in time for loading, these horses were left behind. Two substitute mounts had to be rented in Portland, but with a strenuous practice drill Wednesday afternoon, they shaped up well in the show. En route, one of the three trucks of horses was hit by an oil truck, delaying It by several hours. Rain descended in tor- (Caatlnaat aa rasa t, Calarna SI Rome Decrees New Republic ROME, June 10 (VP) Italy formally became a republic late today. In brief ceremonies In Monte- cltorio palace's "Hall of the Wolf," Chief Justice Giuseppe Pagano announced that the court of cassation, highest tribunal in Italy, had officially determined that the people had voted out the House of Savoy monarchy in the plebiscite last week. Meanwhile, with royalists pressing last minute demands that Hie court examine their claims of fraud in the plebiscite before making any announce ment, the newspaper "Espresso" quoted an associate Justice as saying the court, "after careful consideration," had decided it was not competent to pass upon Hie monarchists contention that an absolute majority of all bal lots cast both valid and invalid was required for a republican victory. In any case court function aries expressed belief that the number of ballots invalidated for Irregularities would be far below the republican majority of 2,011,000 which the ministry of interior announced last week. Truman Cancels Trip To Manila WASHINGTON, June 10 (IP) President Truman today aban doned hopes of visiting Manila July 4 for the inauguration of Philippine independence. White House Press Secretary Charles G. Ross said Mr. Tru man had been forced to cancel plans to visit the islands be cause, with congress likely to be in session through the middle of July, it will be impossible for him to get away. The president, Ross said, has designated Secretary of Interior J. A. Krug to represent him at the inauguration as his persona) representative. Veteran Minister Dies In Portland PORTLAND, June 10 OP) Dr. Walton Skipworth, 83, who served 51 years In the Methodist ministry before retiring, died at his home here yesterday His first pastorate was at Springfield, and served later in Portland, Bend and Richmond. Ho was a former trustee of Wil lamette university. In 1905 he introduced a resolution at the Oregon Methodist conference which resulted In removal of the body of Jason Lee, the mis sionary, from Canada to Salem. Gen. Emmons Moved From "Alaskan Post WASHINGTON, June 10 (IP) The war department said today that Lt. Gen. Delos Emmons has received a "routine" transfer from command of the Alaska de partment. It added that it had no announcement yet as to his new assignment ai a successor, . 'Fence' Held Crown Jewels CHICAGO. June 10 P The Hessian crown Jewels, prize of the "greatest jewel robbery' of modern times," were in the hands of a "fence" when Col. Jack W. Durant and Wac Capt Kathleen B. Durant were seized, the army said today. Major John D. Evans of Lin coln, Neb., sixth service com mand provost marshal, related at a news conference that Col. Durant had no idea of where the jewels were when he was seized by military police In the LaSalle hotel last weex. On Friday the colonel asked for permission to make a tele Dhone call. Evans said the colonel talked to the "fence,' an underworld name for dealer in stolen goods, and was told to wait for another telephone cau. One hour later, Evans con tinued. Durant received a call at a restaurant and was in formed the jewels had been hid den In a locker in the Illinois Central railroad station. The caller gave Durant instructions on where to find the Key. . Durant and the military escort nicked up the key and wnt to the station where the precious loot was recovered. Mat. Evans did not make known where the key was obtained. Evans said Col. Durant made his call to the "fence" at 7:30 p. m. and inai me can dbck came at o:ju d. m. ine an nouncement of the jewel theft had appeared in the afternoon papers Friday and the "fence" knew the stuff was excepUon- ally "hot," Evans said. Hotel Sold For $36,000 Announcement of the sale of the Lake, hotel to Mrs. Athel Smith, of Eugene, for $36,000 was made today by Chllcote and Smith, who handled the sale. Mrs. Smith, who comes to Klamath from Eugene, pur chased the property from Mrs. Ruth Kerns Ray, former owner. Present plans, according to Mrs. Smith, are to continue use of the building as a hotel for the pres ent, but to turn lt into a teen age center as soon as materials are available. Plans for the youth center will call for an almost complete remodeling of the building, with recreation facilities on the first floor and offices on the second. liAt the present time the short age of building materials win hold up any such plan, she said. Baseball Scores American Lttgut R. H. E. Cleveland 3 7 1 Boston 6 12 0 Gromck, Klicnman (6), Center (7) and Lollar; Butland, Johnson (8) and H. Wagner. R. H. E. Detroit H 12 1 New York 3 5 2 Trucks and Tebbetts; Gettel, Gumpert (3), Wight (6), Byrne (8) and Robinson. National League ' R HE- Philadelphia 8 1 Chlcogo 8 13 2 Milnar, Mauney (1), Ripple (8), Karl (9), Raffensberger (9), Schanx (9) and Semlnlck; Borowy, Meers (9), Blthorn (9) and McCullough. - R. H. E. Boston 10 13 1 Pittsburgh 5 9 4 Wright, Pscdel (8) and Masl; Roe, Albosta (6), Gables (8) and Salkcld. R. ' H, E. New York 5 11 1 Cincinnati-. .7 13-0 Span Open Tomorrow On 0.C.&E. Logging trains will roll on the O. C. and E. again tomor row, according to SP officials. The O. C. & E. - Altamont span, wrecked in last week's logging train mishap, is under going repairs at the present time, and a temporary roadbed will be in operation sometime tomorrow permitting use of the bridge. W. W, Simmons, steel bridge foreman for the SP, is on the ! spot with a four man crew from 1 the Sacramento Division, and reports that work Is progres-: sing satisfactorily. Some 25 1 men from Hie Klamath area are also working on the repairs. A pile driver, brought ud by special train from the bay area, is driving a total of 38 pilings under the bridge for additional support while repairs are un derway. The pilings, 30 feet in length, are being driven down to the sandstone strata under the canal, a distance of about 14 to 15 feet. Crews have been working two shifts on the Bridge to get it open as soon as possible. Beams Removed In the course .of repairs it was necessary to remove the top beams of the span to allow the pile driver to work, and these will have to be re-riveted. Five of the vertical posts were so badly damaged that they will have to be replaced. These five beams will be made some where in the bay area and ship ped to Klamath for installa tion. No date has as yet been named as to when the bridge will reach final completion, but it will depend in a large meas ure on the SDeed with uhih the out of town steel work can oe accomplished. . , . Grand Jurors Begin Session The Klamath county grand jury went into session this morning and immediately began calling witnesses for criminal cases which have come up since the jury last met in December. The jury sessions in the court house are secret until the final report is ready but it was be lieved that Judge David R. Van denberg gave only routine in structions to the jury and a quiet session is the expectation. Witnesses called for today in cluded those in the Tex Ains worth shooting-stabbing case in which Ainsworth survived a duel with Glen Harris three weeks ago. Ainsworth, who was shot five times in the fight, is recovering but is still in the Klamath Valley hospital. Three of the five .22-caliber bullets have been removed from his abdomen. Another case for which wit nesses were called today was the charges of rape placed against Robert Lloyd Farris and Harold Richard Gartin, who are accused of raping a 14-year-old Umatilla Indian girl. The grand jury may also be called upon to investigate con ditions of the county and city jails and workings of the juve nile office. Tale Of U.S.-Nazi Opens Trial BELGRADE, June 10 (VP) Marshal Tito's Yugoslav govern ment charged at the opening of Gen. Draja Mihailovic s treason trial today that American of ficers sat in on a conference be tween the former Chetnik leader and the German commander in Yugoslavia. The government Indictment was read at the opening of the trial of the man who was left behind by former King Peter's government for the announced purpose of waging underground war against Hie Germans. It also charged that Mihailovic was sent word by British officers in Cairo to "liquidate communists as soon as possible." - The voluminous bill of par ticulars, with detailed charges of collaboration and war crimes against Mihailovic, said Hie Brit ish sent tho instructions to the King Peter's supposed resistance leader in the spring of 1944 by two officers who attended the king's marriage to Princess Alexandria of Greece. In the summer of 1944, the indictment continued, "the Am erican Colonel McDowell, chief of the American military mis sion to Mihailovic's headquart ers, arrived at the airfield at Pranjlna. As soon as he met Mihailovic he told him 'we Americans are not interested in your fight with Germany. They must be put out of Yugoslavia by action of the allies. It is up WEATHER NEWS Jatt It, Hit Mai. IJaaa Itl M Mm. PfteltlUlloa tail if atari , ,, aa tlraam rtar 4ala IIM Narmal 11.4a 1 11! ri'r IS.M raracat.li Cltar ladar ant Taaatar, ----------------- - ,-,-irir,riri nnruui Seized Terundori Aral. 26, with Jap aneta guard aittr being seised in alleged plot on life of Gen. Douglas MacArthur. Aral alleg edly said ha had joined com munist party to make assassina tion attempt appear as rtd plot. NEA telephoto Arabs Prepare For Mufti Aid JERUSALEM, June 10 UP) Arabs decorated most of the narrow streets of the old city of Jerusalem today with flags, flowers and olive branches on hearing unconfirmed reports that the grand mufti of Jeru salem had arrived at Damascus to help Arab resistance against Jewish immigration. The Moslem leader was exiled in 1937 for anti-British activi ties. - His pictures appeared every where in Jerusalem, surrounded by wreaths of olive leaves. Many streets In the Arab quar ter, of the new city also were decorated. "Guides" and beggars all were saying with conviction that we know the mufti is in Damascus and he will be coming to Jeru salem in a few days." The Arab league council currently is meet ing in extraordinary session in Damascus, capital of Syria. Despite the belief of the Arabs in Hie street, Jamal El Husseini, nephew of the mufti, reported by telephone to the secretary general of the Arab higher com mittee that he was unable to confirm the news of the mufti's arrival. China And India Demand Shipping SEATTLE, June 10 (JP) China and India today demand ed a fair share of the world's shipping tonnage, to permit them to compete in world trade, when spokesmen addressed a plenary session of the international labor organization's maritime confer ence here. Mansukhlal Atmaram Master, secretary of the Indian National Shipowners' association, said Great Britain and the United States must listen ot China and Indian and other Far Eastern countries and must heed the ILO principle that no nation can exercise a shipping monopoly without world disaster. Parley Of Mihailovic to you to remain among the people . . . America is helping exclusively you and your move ment in Yugoslavia. In August, 1944, the indict ment said. McDowell "took part" in a meeting at the village of Focsi between Mihailovic and the chief of the administrative staff of the German military commander ' in berbia, ieu' bacher. McDowell also partici pated in a latter meeting in Sep tember between Mihailovic and Neubacher's deputy, Sterker, near the village of Panjina, it was charged. The indictment declared that in 1943 the axis launched its fourth major offensive against Tito's partisans, Mihailovic per sonally and through Maj. Ostojic ordered all his Chetnik units to take part in the operations "aimed at destruction of the forces of national liberation (Tito s partisans). ''At that time the British col onel, Bailey, who was attached to Mihailovic s supreme 'com' mand and who was fully ac quainted with the plan and de velopment of operations carried out by Mihailovic, said that the allies were preparing an Invasion for the spring of 1943 on the Adriatic coast and that it was necessary to liquidate the com' munists in order to have a clear hinterland which would enable his forces to take up a position unhindered on the Dalmatian coast. Congress May Act In Crisis WASHINGTON, June 10 (At Federal conciliators In the marU time strike threat today sug. gested a cash bonus system for paying for hours worked over fixed limit within the present 56-hour week for seamen. The new government plan was offered In a negotiating seta sion between representatives of east coast ship operators and the CIO National Maritime un. ion, biggest organization In the seven unions affiliated with tht committee for maritime unity. The CMU has called a nation wide merchant marine strut for midnight Friday. The government move cam after a house labor subcommit tee, with an eye to the dead locked labor department nego tiations, decided to go ahead with hearings tomorrow in an effort to work out some con gresslonal solution to the crisis,' Ktllty Promises Action Chairman Augustine B. KeU ley (D-Pa.) of the tub-commit, tee on labor-management, told reporter that his group had held, off hearings hoping the labor de, partment could work out a set. tlement. "We had hope for a settler ment by tomorrow but now that it looks like there will be nothr ing coming out of the labor de. partment negotiations we feel that we should get busy right away," Kelley said. - 'The deadline for the itrlkt is getting right on us." Seven unions affiliated with the ClO-dominated committee" for maritime unity (CMU) have set a strike date for midnight Friday in behalf of their de mands, principally for a reduc tion in the present 56-hour-work week. " Prince Chosen King Of Siam I BANGKOK, June 10 WH Prince Phumiophon Aduldet, 18;' was named king of Siam today while this nation mourned the! death of. his brother, 20-year-old King Ananda Mahldol, who was found in the royal palace y ester' day with a bullet wound between; the eyes. -- The new king, who will be come "the ruler of more ' than 200,000 square miles and 18,000, 000 subjects, was unanimously selected by an extraordinary session of the legislature, meet ins 12 hours after his brother'! death. The Siamese police director general told the legislature that Ananda's death was accidental. - Phumiophon Aduldet, the al most constant compaion of his older brother, was born in Bos ton, Mass., while his father, tho late Prince Mahidol of Songkhla, was studying at Harvard. Phumiophon Aduldet and Anan da attended school together in Switzerland. The young ruler had been 111 for two days and arose at 6 a. m. yesterday to take some medicine. Nothing was known of his ac tions after that time, official sources said, and his body was discovered several hours later in . the bedroom of the Barampinian palace by a servant. Ananda was a fancier of fire arms and often oracticed firmer in Hie palace grounds. : Revolt Fails In Paraguay -: ASUNCION, Paraguay, Jun 10 (IP) A p re-dawn barracks re volt in which five Paraauavan soldiers were killed Sunday ap- peared quelled today after Pres ident Gen. Higinio Morinso "re- assumed" control of the army and (our high cavalry officers fled to the Brazilian embassy. '. Rifle and artillery fire rattled around the suburban Camp Grande barracks for four hours to 6 a. m. Sunday and truck loads of soldiers sped through the streets. Asuncion, mostly un aware of the uprising except for . the gunplay, was quiet for ths rest of the day and transporta tion and entertainment facilities operated normally. It was the second attempted revolt this year. Ihe noisy but futile revolt ap peared to have been headed by Col, Victoriano Benitez Vera, who was angry because of his removal as commander of the first cavalry division, while he was in Buenos Aires on a spe cial diplomatic errand. Return, ing, Benitez Vera went to divi sional headquarters where he apparently gained sympathy ot other officers and raised the re bellion. Moringo took personal com mand of the army from his com. mander in-chief since March 26, Gen. Vlncente Machuca, who was reported not involved in the barracks incident.. The presi dent ordered all troops in the capital to surround the barracks and the first cavalry division soon submitted. Artillery was hauled up from Camp Paraguarl. The ministry of interior is sued a communique after the firing ceased saying there had been a "lamentable Incident among some units of the first cavalry division over internal questions."