Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, June 04, 1947, Page 1, Image 1

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tly FRANK JKNKINH
rllK senate armed forces committee
UKliiy uiiHiilnioiinly approves leg
islation to put the nation military
inri nvl force under SINGLE
ircielnry uf national security.
iijdokU purely by
pCRCO-tllllt
amiiilartts. II I big
fitlrnlliiti.
with iiiurli tradition lnvulvml.
Bhniply dlllrrlng oplnlotia are held
III Wnahlngloii. It In likely. how
over, IhHl the non-piofcaloiil pub
lit', uncreated uuly In efficient na
tional defenae, will be almoal m
unlilnua In " approval of the
Idea ul ClNK co-ordinated depart
llirnt of national defcune l tho
Minnie's armed forces comiiilttoe.
Till':
l.il war taught kit prcliy
uliiliily Unit Hi way to umj
nnnlrii, navies and nlr forces ef
fectively l In co-ordination, nil a
Huliler ur hla right and lett flats
flint one mid then tha other, de
wriKlliiK on huw lila opponent opena
Hd hit defense.
'I'ha fighter who doean't keep hit
flila miller complete, co-ordinated
control, ready In a apllt traction ol
a aec'iiud to um whichever one prom
ises the beat rcault umler the elr
ruiiutaiicea ol the moment, wnu
low Iliihu.
To ua nou-prufraalonala down at
I he common herd level, Una acema
lo make aenae. Nothing rlae dot.-,
a
AT a aeaalou III Washington yrilcr
day, President Truman "indicat
ed'' to Argentina ambaMadur Una
roiinlry'a "wllllnanrM to all down
Willi Argentina and (he olhrr Amir
Iran republic (o draft a mutual de
Irnae ireaty."
'Ill conference la aald III Una
morning's dlapaiehea lo have "re
eslabllahrd formal ood relalloiu."
DIPLOMATS III Waalilnilon aay
(hey expect aa a rcault of the
conference that thia country will
now aire to aell military equipment
lo (he Argciillne government.
That would be a feature of con
fidence. When, after a quarrel with
aomrbody. you patch up your
(rouble with him lo the extent that
you are willing to aell him a nun
and ammunition to fit It, It la a
aura mil that you want to be
frlenda with him.
FOLLOWING the good will session
with Argentina. Sprullle llrnden
renlnna aa aaalalant of atale. 11 wa
lliailrn who, aa our ambnaantlor to
Amentum, gueaard wrong on Heron,
who la the Argentine atrong man.
llindrii openly tried to defeat him
In mi Arwrutliie election,
J'KRON WON. Tlial put tia on a
,Vf t spot. Tha purimae of the Tru-tuu-
ronfrtenca. wa undoubtedly
to get ua ulf of 111 Hraden'a reatgna
lion la a diplomatic way of aayliuj
(hat we have changed our mlnda.
TP we are going to face Ruaala
throughout the coming decade In
a aplrlt of competition, It certainly
noaali
good will among our neighbor of
the Weatern Hcinlaphere. It never
paya to hava a acrap In your back
yard when you are looking for
trouble at the front door.
In the paat, wa haven't been too
amnrt In our relatlona with our
neighbor to the aouth. Our attitude
toward (hem haa amacked too much
of "big I and little you." There haa
been plenty of talk of good will at
the top, but not enough KEELING
of good will at the bottom levela.
"Talking nice" seldom wina you
any real frlenda. Frlendahlp that
counla la baaed more on deeda than
on words.
117 HAT we need to do In the case of
" Argentina la to find a way to
BUY what aha haa to BELL. After
all, good honeat business, with both
atdea profiting from the exchange,
la about the beat way there la to
build lasting friendships.
KUHS Band To
Play At Conclave
' Some 60 members of the Klamath
Union high school band will leave
Klamath Falls July 18 for Portland
whero they will participate In the
national Elks convention parade
slated for July IT. The band, which
will go by bus. returns the next tiny.
Andrew Loncy Jr., supervisor of
.music In the city schools, will ac-
kcompany tho band.
All Southern Oregon Elks lodges
are participating In expenses to send
(he band to Portland, according to
Wlllnrd Ward, convention chairman
for the Klamnth Falls lodgo. The
uniforms In which the band will
appear were presented to the mualo
group by the Elks lodgo last year.
Knwerlntr oIoikIh hover over thin
tha rovinf 9 o'clock Hpeclnl picture
Dap Jews
, : O: .Y .Yi,,
cm
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WEATHER
Mil 'Jmia Mia. It
rinlrllalln lail .... a.l
airfirtt yiar la iu a.ttS
l.i-l ' mi Naimal Il.ai
Karacatll rarllr tlaae? laiar,
(mafia,
PHIL'K FIVK CKNTH
Police Probe
Shooting On
Reservation
Kvtland Chilouulii. 37-year-old
Klamath Indian, la hi Klanialh Val
ley lioapllal In a critical condition aa
the rrault of gtmahol wounda re
ceived aomellme 'iueaday after
noon at the Frank Hummers ranch
14 mile eaat of Chllottuln.
Chllouuln. a World War II vet
eran, was aald to be "holding hit
own'1 at an early hour tlila after
noon but he haa a gaping wound
In the left groin. A bullet from a
high powered rifle such aa a 30.30
shot at clone range, paused through
Chlloiiulira Ixxly, according lo Dr.
George II. Adler, called late yester
day to administer aid.
Driven to Town
The shooting apparently look
place around 2 p. m., Special Indian
Officer John Arkell told The Herald
and Newa Unlay, but Chllouuln was
not brought Into Klamath Kails un
til several hours later. He waa
driven here In the Bummers car by
Mrs. Roland lilcka and admitted to
the hospital at 6:46 p. in.
Immediately after Arkell received
word of Uio ahoollng, two FBI men
from Klamath Falla. and members
of ala(e llce, started Ihe Inveallga
lion. Arkell aald no arrests had
been made at noon today.
C'hlloquln. a full Klamath, waa
born at Chlloquln In IIUU. the sou
of the late Klldie and Maggie Chllo
quln. 11 Drowned In
Ship Sinking
WINDSOR. Out., June 4 Mi
Eleven crew members were report
ed drowned and three othera were
missing early today after the heavily
ore-laden steamer, Emror. struck
a rock and sank In fog-shrouded
Lake Hnixrlnr off lonely Isle lloyalc.
Twenty-one aurvlvora were taken
to Ft. Williams. Out., a lJke Super
ior port a short dlaliiuce north of
the Minnesota boundary.
The 7000 ton freighter, operated
by the Canada Hteanuhlp Lines,
Lid. -struck a. rock at 4:10 a.'m,
tfcTi, about flva hours after she
sailed from Port Arthur, Out., for
Ashtabula, O.
Capt. Norman Reoch of Montreal.
oMratlng manager of the line, listed
Capt. Kldon Walklnahaw of Colling
wood. Out., among the victims. He
said the first mate, second engineer,
three cooks and five other crew
members also drowned.
At Windsor, officials of the line
said the Emperor carried a crew of
36 but no passengers.
Tlie scene of (he sinking waa off
Passage Island light, where a wide
but rock-studded channel connects
Upper Lake Superior with Thunder
bay.
Air Travel
Rights Off
BUDAPEST. June 4 Ml The
U. S. legation Informed the Hungar
ian government today thatplanea of
tlie Russian-Hungarian Transport
company Maasovlet no longer are
being iiermltted to fly over the
American aonea of Austria and Oer
ninny because of lack of American
civil aviation rights In Hungary.
Tlie announcement was delivered
to the new premier, Lajos Dinnyea,
and to Acting Foreign Minister Erno
Mlhalyfl, pro-communist members
of tho small holders party. It con
stituted an American response to
Russian and Hungarian hindrance
of American air activities In Hun
gary during the past two years.
The memorandum added that no
answer had been received and askod
when a favorable reply could bo ex
pected. Hungary has negotiated civil avia
tion agreements with other coun
tries (Russia, Yugoslavia and Po
land) and the legation emphasised
that tho U. S. waa unwilling to ac
cept less than Its legitimate rights
as regards air navigation In Hun
gary, eltlter during or after tho per
iod of occupation.
n
burned residence In the Fehcnn
man thli morn Inf.
KLAMATH
RUTLAND. VL, June 4 lTV-This picture, rushed to The Herald and Newa by wirephoto thla morning, shows the area around Pittsford,
nrar Rutland. VL, where roads, fields and homes are covered with water following a sudden flood after torrential rains had drenched the
countryside. This aerial flew taj taken looking south toward Proctor. , : ' ! ... '..(').";' c. H U' ..s.;: :i
Waterfront OK
Held Near
SAN FRANCISCO. June 4 wVi
Prospects brightened today o for
avoiding a repetition of losl year's
long, paralysing maritime strike on
the west coast.
Harry Bridges said his CIO Inter
nationa) Longshoremen's and Ware
housemen's union had reached a
tentative agreement with tlie water
front emnlfiver. It waa imrlerstnori
to call for a year's extension 1
without any pay increase of tlie
contract due to expire June IS.
"I hope before the week la out to
be able to report an agreement on
the waterfront," Bridges told a
union meeting.
Wntcrfront employers, who at
first Insisted on limiting any con
tract extension to September 30. tlie
date of expiration of AFL contracts,
were reported acceding to a year's
extension It present wage levels are
maintained. The employers figure
tlinl a longshoreman a west coast
pay averages up to around 190
weekly.
Officials Probe
Plane Wreckage
SAN BERNARDINO. Calif., June
4 M't Army officials examined tlie
charred, twisted wreckage of the
amphibious patrol plane today,
seeking to learn what caused the
twin-engine craft to falter and
crash during nn attempted land
ing, carrying four of Its occupants
to fiery deaths.
A fifth. Bertram C. Collls, civil
Ian mechanic from Riverside, Calif.,
escaped with minor Injuries by
leaping Just before the plane crack
ed up while returning from a 30
mlnuto test Tllght. '
The dead Inducted Capt. Bernard
J. O'Doiincll, pilot, Portland, Ore.
City urea as they caught the eye of
'-MYvYYV:.Y
FALLS, OREGON, WKDNKHDAi-, JUNE 4, 1847
Flash Flood Covers Ve
r T r . i'
:!c: n - N-'
Prominent Briions Get
Explosive
LONDON, June 4 MV-Scotland
Yard said today that prominent
Britons had received letters from
Italy filled with explosives and ar
ranged to detonate when opened.
Ma). Oen. Sir Edward Spears, an
admitted antl-Zionlst, said he re
ceived one of the letters and that
Coal Talks
Break Down
WASHINGTON, June 4 MV-Contract
negotiations between John L.
Lewis' United Mine Workers and
southern coal operators broke down
today.
Ten minutes before the talks were
scheduled to resume, the UMW
representatives notified operators
they would not attend because the
mine owners yesterday had made
public their wage proposals. These
Included an offer of an 85 cents
dally pay Increase in return for
abandonment of portal-to-portal
pay time tor underground travel In
the mines.
Similar negotiations between
Lewis and operators from the north
and west were suspended last week
after the two sides disagreed on the
Issue of wages.
Two Cars Pile
Up On Viaduct
Two cnrsT a trailer and a guard
rail were damaged about 2 a. m.
today in a traffic tie-up on the
S. 6(h street viaduct.
One vehicle, drawing a small
trailer, was driven by Thomas Mon
roe Smith, route 1. Smith's car had
a plugged gas line and tho motor
died on the grade going up the
viaduct. As the car and trailer
were slipping backwards, a second
machine driven by Lewis Hcrschel
Austin tried to pass and struck tlie
left rear fender of Smith's car.
The Impact threw Austin's sedan
into the guard rail. A wrecker was
needed to tow In both vehicles.
Stee Worker Plunges To Fiery
Death Through Crust Of Slag Pile
JOHNSTOWN. Pa., June 4 l& A 27-year-old worker plunged to a
fiery death from the iron-like crust of a 100-foot high slag pile In what
a Bethlehem Steel company official described as "the most horrible ac
oldcnt" in the company's history.
W. H. Slick, slag train engineer, who was only 18 feet away, said
the victim, World War II Veteran John Smatlak Jr., of Johnstown,
"simply .threw up his hands and disappeared."
"One Instant he was there and tho next he was gone," Slick said.
Smatlak's bride of less than a year, who Is to become a mother soon,
was prostrated at word of her husband's death late yesterday.
If the slag pile Is cool enough today, company officials said they
will use a power shovel in an effort to find Smatlak's remains.
, Slag piles, containing refuse from steel mills, are usually used as
the roadbed of a slag train. Tho Interior burns from spontaneous com
bustion, often for years,
Bethlehem officials said they had never heard of a similar accident.
Smatlak disappeared Into a four-foot hole ripped across the top of
tlie crust in an almost unprecedented collapse. The crust was so solid
a railroad track had been bunt on
(Telephone till)
rmonr City And Area
i ft
Through Mail
It contained "a mechanism like the
Inside of a watch between two sheets
of paper" and a bag of powder
"about the site of a banana."
A Scotland Yard spokesman said
that "I can neither confirm nor
deny" a London Evening Standard
report that Field Marshal Lord
Montgomery, chief of the imperial
general staff, and Sir. Stafford
Crlpps, president of the board of
trade, also received tlie Infernal
machines.
A spokesman for Prime Minister
Attlee said no such letter was re
ceived at 10 Downing street. .
Navy Men
Search Odell
Melvin T. Storer. SF1. and
Charles R. Kay, GM1, navy men
from Portland, are now at Odell lake
to search for the bodies of Harold
Hndley and Leonard Callller, who
disappeared and are presumed to
have drowned In the lake May 24.
The navy men are prepared to
stay at Odell lake for two weeks.
They will occupy the cabin owned by
Edouard Prlaulx of Chlloquln. the
same cabin which was being used by
Hndley and Callller on their tragic
fishing trip.
Storer and Kay have a boat and
plan to make a complete search of
the lake and shore for the bodies.
Storer Is an expert naval diver and
probably will go down to recover the
bodies if they are located In the
water.
New Air Service
Begins This Week
ASTORIA. June 4 Wl Regular
twice-weekly air service between
Hood River. Ore., and Astoria and
Warrenton began here this week.
Flying a Seabee amphibian plane.
Ray Axford. an ex-army pilot, on
his first trip here unloaded fresh
strawberries and took on a load of
fresh fillets, halibut and crab meat.
Axford and a fellow pilot, Luke
Nichols, own and operate the plane
as tho Pelican Air Service. Their
headquarters is at Hood River.
it.
No. loss
Truman To Get
New Airplane
, SANTA MONICA, Calif., June 4
W A - new "flying White House''
was about ready for test flights to
day. The f our-engined presidential
transport plane, replacing the "Sac
red Cow" which has traveled" 430.
000 miles during the administrations
of President Truman and the late
President Roosevelt, is a luxurious
ly fitted ship capable of cruising
at 31S miles an hour, with a top
of 368.
It was named "The Independ
ence." for President Truman's resi
dence city, Independence, Mo.
In announcing completion of the
new plane, Douglas Aircraft com
pany and the army air forces said
it is a C-118 but basically a DC-6.
the Sacred Cow being a C-54 or
military version of the commercial
DC-4.
Braden Quits
Post Today
WASHINGTON, June 4 '
President Truman today announced
the resignation of Spruille Braden
as assistant secretary of state.
Braden is a former ambassador
to Argentina and long was at the
center of controversy within the
administration over United States
Argentine relations.
There have been reports that he
wanted to leave tlie department but
was waiting until the outcome of
the differences with Argentina.
These differences were pretty well
ironed out in a conference yester
day of President Truman and Ar
gentine Ambassador Oscar Ivanis
scvlch. Burglary Suspect ;
Shot To Death . , '
PORTLAND, Ore., June 4 UP) A
burslarv susnect was fatallv wound
ed early today by a policeman called
to Investigate noises on the roof of
a building.
The victim was Identified as Allan
John Cameron, Portland.
Detective Sgt. D. J. Mltola said
Patrolman C. L. Fltzslmmons re-,
ported seeing a man climb down the
side of the Scientific Research
building in East Portland and break
Into a run. The patrolman fired
once wunout enect, men urea a
second shot which brought the man
down.
Mltola said the roof showed evi
dence of an attempt to enter. A
second man was believed Involved.
Bulletin
The two Softball games which
were scheduled for tonight on Modoc
field, hava been cancelled because of
wet grounds. Frank Drew, president
of the city Softball association, said
that the regular games would be
held Friday night, weather permit
ting, and that tonight's cancelled
contests would be played at a later
date.
Rutland
iVlissing: Power
Supply Cut Off
RUTLAND. VL, Jan 4 W This pleturesaa Varment elty of 1I.444
waa without power and water today
torrential rainfall, caused an atlmated l2,04o,Mt damage and left
upwards of 6M persons temporarily homelea.
Thirteen-year-old Richard La Vlctolr waa reported mlaalnf and
fears for hi safety grew. Three other lost In th confusion aa lowland
dweller fled their homes were found by their families.
ior. Ernest W. Gibson ordered emergency supplies of food, water
and clothing rushed to Rutland second largest city In Vermont and
ordered out the national guard.
Flood waters that awept down from mountain slopes were reeedlnf
rapidly, untU at noon they were within the bank of East ereek again.
aca oi wsiier waa creating tne moat serious difficulties, tha gover
nor (aid. The shortage arose from destruction of city water mains.
Ten farm houses In Chittenden lust north of RutUnd .a
away when a power dam la East PHUford burst About a doien bouse
Action On
Tax Slash
Bill Delayed
WASHINGTON. June 4 OP) Pres
ident Truman will not act on the
M ,000, 000,000 Income tax bin before
he leave for Kansas City Friday
moraine Secretary Charles G. Boa
aaio loaay.
Rot told reporters he did not
know whether Mr. Truman would
act before he leaves for Canada next
Monday after his return front the
Midwest In Kansas City, he will ad
ores the meeting of the 15th divi
sion with which he sored in the
first World war.
The tax bill, he added, has not yet
reached the president's desk, al
though congress completed work on
it yesterday. .
Mr. Truman has 10 days, not
counting Sundays, to veto or sign
the blh.
Newa Conference
Ross said the president will hold a
news conference at 10:30 (9:30 a. m.
EST) tomorrow and regular cabi
net meeting tomorrow afternoon.
He said the cabinet session la not
an emergency meeting but Is merely
advanced from Friday to accommo
date the president.
The bill on which the senate com
pleted congressional action yester
day is designed to take effect July 1.
mat means nunareas oi tnou-
sands of revised withholding tax in
structions and forms will have to go
out to employers all over the coun
try in the next three weeks If the
bill becomes law. Most withholdings
would be cut 20 or 30 per cent the
iirsi ox next momn. '
Veto Exueeted
One democratic official on Canltol
Hill told reporters last night that
uruess Mr. uruman nas a last-minute
change of mind he will veto the
bill. But speculation continued rile.
The senate approved the measure
in Its final form vesterd&v. 4A to
28. The house voted for It Monday,
Ml m.
A two-thirds majority in both
houses would be required to over
ride a veto, and senate republicans
concede they simply don't have the
voics io uo so.
Tax Vote To Be
Reconsidered
SACRAMENTO. June 4 in Tha
assembly voted unanimously today
to reconsider the vote by which
uovemor warrens I9S.000.000 a
year tax reduction measure was
denied passage.
The motion was made by As
semblyman Alfred Robertson D
Santa Barbara, who announced
amendments seeking further reduc
tions will be presented tomorrow,
as follows:
1 Lowering of bank and corpor
ation franchise tax, 6 per cent.
2 Decreasing personal Income
tax 5 per cent at all levels.
3 Reducing sales-use tax from
2!i to 2 per cent
These. It was estimated, would
save between 840,000,000 and 60,
000.000. A statement by Finance Director
James S. Dean today estimated spe
cial appropriation bills pending In
the legislature, over and above the
$654,000,000 budget, total 8678,268,
2S9. In addition, he said, other meas
ures It oassed would provide for
transferrin? 847.807,500 from the
state's general fund to special re
sen' e funds for future expenditure.
Committee Okays
Merger Measure
WASHINGTON, June 4 IflV-The
senate armed services committee
today unanimously approved legis
lation to put the nation's military
and naval forces under a single sec
retary of national security.
The bill specifies that the army,
navy and a separate air force are to
be under "unified direction" to pro
vide for their "authoritative coor
dination," but are not to be merged.
Federal Court
Jerry O'Sulllvan's personal Injury
suit for $35,000 against the Weyer
haeuser Timber company was before
Judge James Alger Fee's federal
court today in a non-Jury trial. The
litigants waived the jury during a
pre-trial conference yesterday and
the panel of jurors was dismissed.
The condemnation case brought by
the federal government against
Howard Perrln and Dr. E. D. John
son concerning the Beaumont tract,
chosen site for a proposed veterans
hospital, was continued Indefinitely
by the court. ,
Also continued and In the process
of settlement Is the government's
condemnation suit against the Great
Northern railway.
Jerry O'Sulllvan, walking with th
Yout-h
after a flash flood resulting frooa
In Rutland, Itself.
were deatroved
the ensulnc flood ramd fl
mile Into the elty.
Approximately 200 other house
Were badly damaged.
More than 1000 persons war
evacuated as the food water
swirled on this city after breaking
through the East Pittsford dam,
about five miles to the north.
By The Associated Proa
Another dam burst 18 miles up
the Moose river from Lyons Falls,
N. Y, wrecking a bridge spanning
the main highway Into the Adiron
dack and flooding farm lands,
but the Tillage itself escaped major
Flood IM Home
In Oneida. N. V rm,iH, ni, I
receded after spreading over a six
block area and flooding 300 home.
A fourth of Elmira, N. Y waa y
flooded by Chemung river trlbu.
taries. which aulckiv nmvl-rt til
ing Six-Mile creek caused the evac-
uauon oi aa iinaca lamlllea.
High water took out bridge at
Noblesbororo, 35 miles north of
Utica, and at Flovd. the New vrk
state police reported. Highways In
many areas were blocked by lloodV-'"
damage. ,
Jne rains, which ranged up to
four-inch torrents, forced h
evacuation of 50 families from
Domes at SDrinirvIll- D- .A
others it Conneautville. Water ran
. urP over tne main street
of Kerrtown. Pa.
First to be struck hv h- r.
the Miami River valley north
of Dayton and other inviann. '
Central and Northern Ohio. At !
I?3' p families were forced from
UUUJCO,
Indian Bases
Hsiaiiuyiicu
NEW DELHI June 4 jpi Via. ";'
count Mountbatten. vlceroo? l :,
2LaJ P,Lml,d..tl,e PPI to
day that Britain would retain no
bases whatever within the sub-con- '
toent when its complete lndepend- '
BrishSpIaCnhleVei Under toe ns
"I think It would be most Im
proper for any foreign power to
have bases in India." the viceroy ."
told a news conference. '.
He made it plain that under the -plan,
announced yesterday, Hindu
stan (Hindu India) and Pakistan
(Moslem India) would be lnde-
pendent both of British and each '
other and that neither could con- .
trol the other on the question of
remaining within the British com
monwealth. Both will have domin
ion status for the transitional pe
riod. "Dominion status Is absolute lndea
pendence." the viceroy said.
The native (princely) states will
get their own Independence from
Britain's paramount authority as
soon as power Is transferred In the
rest of India. Mountbatten said, and
will be free to choose whether they '
will be independent or will Join
Hindustan or Pakistan. '
Columnist
Drops Charge
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.. June 4 ',
fPh-Columnist Lee Mortimer has
dropped his assault charge against
Frank Sinatra announcing that .
the crooner had agreed to pay him.
$9000 but the boys didnt make up.
They didn't speak or smile to one '
another during a 6 p. m. Besalon
yesterday In Justice court. Each Just
looked glum when he looked In the
other's direction. 'i
Mortimer, quoted by Sheriff Ser
geant R. B. Fox as saying that '
Sinatra knocked him down and beat ;
him while three other men held
him outside Clro's night club last
April 8, rose from his chair at the
counsel table between two lawyers.
"I acknowledge that I have re
ceived satisfaction for the injury
done to me," he read to Judge Cecil
D. Holland from a typewritten yel
low sheet, much edited In pencil. ,
"Furthermore. Sinatra has publiclr
acknowledged that I did not call
him the vile names he stated I call
ed him."
Mortimer asked the court to dls- :
miss the case. Judge Holland did
so. directing Sinatra to pay court
costs of about 890 and ordering the
crooner's 8500 ball refunded.
Considers
O' Sullivan nury Suit
aid of a cane, was called to the wit
ness stand this morning. He Bald :
that he had been severely injured
when a load of lumber fell on him
at the Weyerhaeuser mill lift April, ,
1948, that his Injuries kept him In :
bed for 30 days and are preventing
him from working.
O'Sulllvan Is represented by Ben .
Anderson, Portland attorney, while
R. B. Maxwell Is representing Wey- ;
erhaeuser.
In other action this morning, Clay
ton Burrell, young Klamath Falls at- .
torney, was sworn In to practice '
before the federal bar, and the civil ,
case of Lampropulos vs. Kent, to set
aside a deed; was declared ready for
trial.