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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 13, 1947)
i 7 Mm mm , My FRANK JKNKINH PRHHIUICNT TRUMAN, buck lo U. H. null Hi Huffiilo Hi tor a brlof good-will vlnll to Cnniuln, says In Hurt grand visit, nntl In happy lo be home umilll, Watching Niagara falls frnm mi niitouitiblle. Just before he crossed the border, lie remarked: "I'm iilnd I iton'l hevo to go over tlirm In barrel." Simple, kindly words, from simple, klnilly iimn. H' "o world hnklnil thought, but limybe II w had ninro simple klndllnru III Hie world tlirro would be lcm trouble ,l' FROM pleasant wisecracks, such being Bind ho doesn't hsvo to go , over Niagara In barrel, he ttirtts to serious matters as I'renldrnl ajwsyn haa lo do. -i Leaving Canada, he says: '9 "United Hint foreign policy hue i'.hul uno ublarllve pcnra In the world and friendship with every , Bllon." t fR the great bulk of u-prubbly no Mid 44 ine-liuiidredlli r tnil of our 140 million tieuple (hat U a simple statement of it great 'and imple trulh. Peace III tin Cm Id and friendship Willi every na- lii'n, Wlmt a beautiful picture to l.,k all Wlmt a world lor our rhildren to live Inl i ... UNFORTUNATELY. It lakes two U to make peace. II lakes two to make friendship. Just II takes two lo make a bantam. , oul ot that lacl 1KOUULK , iCOMKS. ... VI IKK Isn't simple- ?,L , Washington this morning, the ' II ti. aloiiilo energy commission ay ilhal hall ol u plants and equip iiiirnl are obsolete became ol -iartllng Improvements" In pro- j"ATo.'nle energy I. the newest thing .J . l.l il -IrattV IIAl.r Ul 3 111 me nuiiw. -- what ha been done to develop n is obsolete. . K.fl, Progress Is motion. II we want progress, we muni keep moving. rllOM the South Seas today come another Martini statement. Tho New Zealand Herald hints ol a new weapon Oiat approaches the atom bomb In Importune, but l ('iiFAPKIt. It ui a Joint develop m"u the Slerald aayi. ol scientist, "rom New Zealand. Great Britain ai d the United States. , " i..f..m..iinu. the New Zealand paper ay. " MOS . Kb LIAIIl.fc', but can not be disclosed. THAI' all" a thought: It the world ha to be wiped out iWltnUi m haven't learned how to Act along with each other", la It beilcr to do tho wiping out cheaply YouT.,"iumP that on. In with the old dispute about how many angcla can aland on tho point ol a needle.) ' ... CENATOR AUSTIN, eh lei U. 8. delegate to United Nations. ay In a commencement address at Massachusetts Institute ol Tech nology Inst night: ..... "The United Hlalca. with ha I the productive imwer ol Oie world, haa tlecUive POWKR to crcixle the con dltlonii ol permanent, peace. That U to y. peace doeant Juit happen. It haa to be MADE to happen. m e CENATOR AUSTIN tella tho MIT " graduate! Uiat apparently Ru alan oppoaltlon to the American plan lur prevention ol atomic war tare (which involve. EPKKCTIVE International hupecllon and con troll la baaed on "tear of capluillat Inllltratlon Inalde Ruanla." That arema lo betray an Inferiority com plex on Ruuln a part. II RuMlii haa an Inlerlorlly com plex, la alio aa dangeroua aa we aeein lo tear? Or la alio MORE danger oua? Page a psychiatrist. BACK In the Middle Went yoater- day, a bunch ot educated anakea got loone from a clrcua and aenred a lot nl people pink. Their kcopcr explnlned to a reimrter that thera wna nothing to be acared about that the anakea can be handled beautifully II tlielr atomncha are rubbed gently and aoothlimly. We tried to handle the RuaKlan Hi-1 way, but It didn't aeem to work. Now we're reaching lor a baaebull but. Wo don't know yet whether 4iat will work. Friday The Thirteenth No Worse Than Any Other Klumnth folks, keeping a weather eyo on the calendar, procoenca CKUtlotl.sly this morning as they faced the only Friday tho 13Ut of 11)47. Oettlng out on the right side of the bed, tossing salt over mo shoulder, shying away from black cuts and ladders nil were strictly observed. One baby made Ills entry Into the world on Friday, June 13. It was the son born to Mr, and Mrs. Jack Perry of Crescent City, Calif., at Klamath Vnlloy hospital. Mrs, Perry is the former Joyco Graham,, a Rnulunto of KUHS in 1D4 nnd now making her home in tho Northern Ciillfornla. town where her husband Is a sawmill oporator. doing back to superstitions on a Friday tho 13th, statistics show that the Frldny-13 combination Is no moro unlucky than any other on the calendar. It's nil In tha mind and a hnngovcr from witchcraft days. Only ono of tho events listed by tho Metropolitan Life Insurance company ns major dlsnstora In this country since 1B0R tornndooB, luir rltinnos, floods, flros, sinkings nnd explosions wus on ft Friday tho 13th. Kvcn that began on Thursday, April 12, 11)45, and extended Into tho sup posedly unlucky dalo tho next day. home, Arkansas and Missouri. It whs a tornado which struck Okln- Of tho more than BO major plane crashes since 11141, not one was on Friday with tho Jinx number. Ol thj( 60 worst Aincrlcnn train wrecks nunc 1H7U. none wns on mo learen lay. Tho Frlday-thc-13th record record doesn't Include n single one vf the 20 most disastrous fires since Land Use Expansion Projected Land and water development In the Immediate Klamath baaln area may eventually Inrrraae the agri cultural economy here by 50 per rent, It waa pointed out by '. W. Iliirnliiiham, rhlrf of planning for the Klamath dUlrlrl of the I!, H. re clamation bureau, In a talk to the Klwanla rlub Thurariav. liiiriilughiim aiild that the preient Irrigated urea tolula about ano.ooo acrea, and atlldlea are now bring made ol Ihc pnaalblllty ol develop ing another loo.ooo ecrci In tho up er baaln region. Development Keen The engineer, who haa been with the reclamation bureau for 2ft yeara and had malor aanlgiiinenta on con atrucllon ot Hoover and Orand Coulee dama. aald that tho InveallKa tloiu here have not gone far enough for definite roiiclualoiia, but that In dlratlona (mint to ImiHirlunt Irriga tion development In the future. lie gave ill cowilderubla delull the aluillea which are being made In tho Hutte valley area, aouthwenl of Kla math Kalla 111 California, where BO. ooo arrea of addltlnnnl land may be brought under IrrlKallon. The plan being considered tliere, he aald, la to toko water out of Klamath river at Ady. move It In a canal to the rldico dividing Ixiwer Klamath lake and Multe valley, homing It 200 feel to the Unite valley Iloor. Irrigating the valley, gathering the water at a point In Sam'a Neck, dropping It through a tunnel Into Klamath river. The latter drop ol about 1000 feet at Shovel crek may develop hydro electric (tower eiiulvulrnt lo that neeceiwary to pump the water Into the valley at the other end. Burning ham aald. He pointed out the necen ally of a low power rate to make the project economically feaalble. Hurnliigham died aa another ex ample of the land development poa alblllllea a atudy of bringing Irri gation to 30.000 acrea or ao In the Swan lake and Pine flail areas cant of Klamath Falls. The speaker said that the current Investigation covers all tho laud and water resources of the Southern Oregon-Northern California region drained by the Klamath river and Its tributaries. At the outset, he emphasized Uiat the atudy Is not a part of the scheme to remove water from the Klamath basin to the Sacramento basin, which waa made the subject ol a spirited battle here two or three yriira ago. Thr purpose, he said, la lo determine how lull and economical uso can be made ol the witter within the basin. The study embraces llh and wildlife, power, and other potentiali ties, as well as Irrigation. ilumtnghatu said thai tspreuions of Interest by the people within the area allected are liniwrtanl to tho continuance ol tho survey. Elmer lmler. Merrill farmer and member of the Klwanla club, Intro duced Burnlngham. Mexicans May Be Sent Home PORTLAND. Ore.. June 13 ilCt Some of the 11.000 Mexican nation als In the Pacific Northwest may be sent home became there la not enough farm work for them. This was the report from western state farm labor supervisors yes terday at the cloae ot a two-day session here. They said more migrant farm laborers showed up In the North west this year than In the past tew yeara. and recent storms cut harvest work. They added, however, that the Mexicans probably will be needed this fall lor the sugar beet harvest. Gadget Gives Scented Shower NEW YORK, June 13 (It Quests got a scent In return lor the price oi a room wun a snower at a ivmn hattnn hotel today. Tho Henry Hudson hotel liutnlled gadgets In Its showers which sprayed guests with water and sol uble perfume of pine (for men) and apple blA-isom (for women). Guests morely had to turn the right xuoo 10 smeir me rignt way. 1900, nor any of tho 27 most severe earthquakes between 1096 and 11)41. Three hundred nnd sixty major ship disasters are listed In the 110 years from 1833 to 1043. Only two can be linked In any way to Friday the lath, and It tnkea some pushing to get those on the list. Tho day has brought the death of no president of tho United Suites In all the nation's history. Ot the 80 major political assassinations In all tlie world since 1865, only one wns on the day the shooting nt 8ofin In 1936 of Nicola Mllcff, who had been designated as Bulgarian minister to tho United States. In tho stock, market, the super stition Is refuted by history, the Magazine of Wall Street snys. Thirty eight Fridays camo on tho 13th be tween 1897 and the half-year mark In 1932. The Industrial average ad vanced on 26 of those Fridays, stood still on one, and declined on 11, On 21, the rail overages advanced, de clining on only 17. "Traders who went short on those Fridays on the theory that they woro unlucky days nnd stocks would go down," the magazine points out, "hud nothing but losses to show, on Ihc average, while those who supcr stlllously refused to go along missed profits." But people who believe In Jinx days may not believe In statistics. Maybe you'd better hold off of any extra currlcular activities until to morrow, Saturday. Anyway, there Is only ono Friday the 13th this year but next year there are two, one falling In February, the other in August. j WEATHER 1 Mm, fJvii IXI IS Mln. ,,. 41 I'riolpiUlitn lail 14 heart Ntrti ft ill 11.04 l.ssi yar . II.M Narmtl .,11.41 roraeaill frllr lu4y U4f, I'KK K HVK t rMTH ' s I'OltTI.AM). June parade awrepsUkea. The float waa made of a solid bank of flowers. This picture was sent to The Herald and Newa this morning by wlre pholo Immediately after the parade. Crash Victim's Bodies Found HAMILTON FIELD. Calif!, June 13 The bodies of Vernon C. Coulter, 34, 602S N. Maryland, Port laud. Ore., and his mother, Mrs. W. V. Coulter, were found lost night with the wreckage ol their small private plane on Chaos mountain. 40 miles northeast ol Red Bhill, Calif. A scorch party Irom Hamil ton Held reported the discovery on Its return today. The Coulters had been missing since Otobcr 30. when they left Red HlufI lor Klamath Fulls. Ore. Coulter Is survived by his widow and four children: his mother by her widower, all of Portland. The bodies were lolccn to Keo dlnt by the nriny -parly, led by IA. I A. P. Alagna. Kansas City. Mo., and i the Shasta county coroner. ( Discovery oi me wrecsage was reported a few days ago by a pri vate pilot to the civil aeronautics administration. Army filers estimated that Coul ter's plane nose dived at 100 to 150 miles an nour. nuiing in a roc area surrounded by trees. An ex pensive diamond ring was still on Ills finger. Tho search party carried the bodies a mile and a half to a road from whero army Jeeps took them lo Redding. Basin Enjoys Good Weather The mercury was on an uphill grade and clear skies reigned over the Klamath country this afternoon despite a stato weather forecast of "partly cloudy today, tonight and Saturday." Prospects for week-end gadding were brlehter than In the Dnst three weeks, when heavy rain and murky skies kept most campers, picnickers, and fishermen at home. On Thursday afternoon the ther mometer at the CAA weather station scooted up to 78 degrees, highest In several days. At 11:30 a. m., to day, the temperature was at 63, and going up steadily. . Plane Flies Men To Alaska ASTORIA, Ore., June 12 tPt The first of three planes which will transport 135 fishermen from Astoria to Bristol bay, Alaska, was due to take off tonight with 44 fishermen aboard. Tho chartered plane was to land at Naknek. Alaska, tomorrow morn ing. Formerly tho trip to Naknek took ns long ns two months. Cannery workors for the Bristol bay salmon season will leave , for Alaska by ship June 14. Ferenc Nagy On Way To America OENEVA. June 13 (P) Airport employes said today Fereno Nagy, deposed premier of Hungary, had taken a plnno for the United States, Alndar Szcgedy-Masaak, Hungar ian minister to tho United Stntes under Nagy, said in Washington last night ho assumed Nagy "wished to draw tho attention of the Ameri can public" to recent events In Hungary, whero he was ousted by a communist coup d'etat. Buzzing Bee , Ditches Car GRANTS PASS, June 13 (fl'l "Driving nn automobile when a bumble bee is buzzing around your head Is no simple task," remarked Mrs. Dorothy Bellmore, 7020 Georgia avenue, Bell, Cnllf., to her mother, Mrs. J, A. Crllchfleld, as she shooed awny ono of the buzzing Insects while driving through Northern California on her way to Seattle Wednesday. , It wns more than I could handle," Mrs. Bellmore remarked as she crawled out of the wreckage of her overturned car on Hayes hill near here Thursday, after another bee had struck her In the fact, ilKvv-rnS rvvvS 7tiWwJ Committee I -C- ,n . f JO So-oot In. Rose "' 13 4V-Bonneville power administration's float, depleting power rlslnr from the 200,000 Line Up In Rain To Watch Festival Parade PORTLAND, Ore., June 13 iP An Mmatiwl 900 000 iiwulm lined four and a half miles of city streets today aa Portland's 39th annual Rose Festival parade moved from Its assembly point In a light rain shower. Floats, bands and marching units from Pasadena, Calif., to Victoria, Bay Traffic Still Struck OAKLAND, Calif.. June June' IS" 'tW Drivers' pools, popular In -wartime. Increased today as the strike of 3000 AFL transit employes of the Key System went Into Its third day. Automobiles were virtually the only means of transportation left for nearly half a million East Bay residents, many of whom commute to work In San Francisco. Southern Pacific ferryboats, used mainly to meet trains, can take but a small part of the load. Bridge traffic was near record proportions. The unions Involved called a membership meeting for tomorrow morning but there was nothing to indicate an early end to the strike. No negotiation meetings were held yesterday but the unions sought new conferences today with the man agement. Truman Back In US Today BUFFALO. N. Y., June 13 (IP) President Truman, "happy to be home again." returned to the Unit ed Slates Irom what he described as "a grand visit" to Canada. The president was fresh from an automobile tour of Niagara Falls, where he remarked: "I'm glad I don't have to go over them in a barrel." His decision apparently made on what he plans to do about legisla tion to cut federal taxes by $4,000. 000.000, the president declined to tell reporters whether he would veto It Monday, the deadline for action. Jokingly, he told them he would scts "about 30 minutes before the deadline" when thev pressed him for comment last night as he pulled out of Ottawa after a three-day good-will visit. Navy Veieran Killed In Hunting Accident' At North Calimus Spring Herbert H. Hall. 20. a navy veteran, was killed instantly In a hunt ing accident at 7:15 this morning on the Klamath Indian reservation. A 30-30 carbine he was using exploded as Hall jumped from the cab of a truck to take a shot at a deer. ' The- heavy bullet struck Hall in the left check and coursed upward through his head. He fell right at the running board of the truck. The accident took place nt North Calimus springs, 17't miles north east of Chlloquln. Hall was hunting with two companions. Allen (Chief) Hatcher, 16-year-old Indian, and Donald (Shorty) Taylor, 25, a white man. All throe resided In Chlloquln and went out hunting early tills morning. Hatcher was driving tho truck, with Hall sitting on tho right side and Taylor In the middle. Hatcher said he stopped thti truck and Jumped out when he saw a deer run While Hatcher was taxing two snots at the "deer, Han jumped out of the cab of the truck on his side, pulling his rifle out by the barrel. Tho muzzle apparently wns only Inches from Hall's face when the rifle went off. - Both Hatcher and Tnylor wete watching the deer and neither saw the accident . r A few moments after the deer had disappeared Into the brush, Taylor discovered Hall on the ground at the right side of the truck, already dead. . ' i He nnd Hatcher put the body about 10 miles toward Chlloquln to tho Ida Carbell. ranch, whero they left tho truck and borrowed a car to go into town. They notified Speclnl Indian Officer John Arkell, who made the Investigation. Sheriff Lloyd Low nnd Deputy the body was taken to Ward's funeral home. Herbert Hall has been living In for several months. He was in tho survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank R. Hall of Klamath Falls; two sisters, Elizabeth Muma of this city, and Robin Kried ot Potlatch, Ida., and four brothers, James, Edward and Frank Jr., of Klamath Falls, and Truman Hull, stationed with the U. S. army In Alaska. His father worked for a number of years In a lumber mill at Chllo quln. . , ' ; ' ' FRIDAY, JUNK ....... t Festival Parade i B. C. made up the traditional high- 'light event of week-long festivities celebrating Portland's rose culture. Sweepstakes award lor non-com-' merclal floats went to employes of Bonneville power administration for the second straight year. Their 42 loot symbol ol horsepower rising Irom a river, fashioned from thous ands ot many colored flowers, showed a floral horse rising from waves ol delphiniums. Ranking of floats from outside Oregon was in order: Vancouver, Wash.; Washougal. Wash.: Camas, WaJi.; and Pasadena, Calif. The i Vancouver float was a representa tion of a 30-foot stern wheel liver .steamer. , . t Winning elites outside Portland, ' orawr'Baienr-vnerrmns, uregon Helens. The Cherrlans had built a bower oi white peonies, daisies and larkspurs supported by huge red carnation clusters. Throughout the parade, which moved along to the strains of music from bands scattered throughout IV length, were such scenes as floral depictions ot Mount Hood, boats sailing on oceans of blossoms, a dragon with pink toenails and real vapor snorting from Its nostrils, firemen battling flames of roses, a children's playground complete with merry-go-round and swings and girls plunging Into blue seas. Phone Rate Hike Asked PORTLAND. June 13 m The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph company said today it would ask the public utilities commissioner for a state-wide Increase in tele phone rates to meet the wage In creases granted after the recent strike. ' The company applied April 28 for rate readjustments which would Increase annual revenues in Ore gon by about $1,555,000. The new request would ask for about $694, 000 more a total of $2,249,000 an nually. F. D. Tellwrlght. general man ager of the company In Oregon, said the additional $694,000 would come from adjustments in long distance rates arid miscellaneous charges. The original request would reclassify telephones, resulting In 25, 50 and 75-cent Increases for some subscribers. Similar increases are being ask ed in other states, Tellwrlght said. across the road. in the bed of the truck and drove Coroner Marvin Albee went tip nnd Chlloquln at the Hatcher residence navy with Wayne Hatcher. He is 13, 1947 (Telephone Sill) waters, won today's Rose Festival Plane Joins Manhunt YAKIMA, Wash., June 13 Warden Tom Smith of the state penitentiary at Walla Walla plan ned today to add an airplane to the men and equipment searching the. sageland of Benton county, southwest of here, for two convicts who overpowered their guard and escaped in his car Wednesday night. The third member of the escape party. John Everett Franu, 43, was recaptured yesterday. The two be ing sought are John Nelson, 21, and Harry Belne. 19. L. V. Johnson, the guard, was taking the three to pri son from Seattle when they staged the getaway, leaving him tied to t"Thelr"-" lole "au.tomobUer,was? aoanoonea in a ancn aiicx we ino drove off the highway to elude a pursuing state patrolman. The men are armed with weapons taken from Johnson. Alaska Fire Under Control ANCHORAGE, Alaska, June 13 6FI Fire which leveled an estimated 220.000 acres of tlmberland in the Hidden lake area on the Kenal pen insula was being brought under con trol slowly today and the men who hare been fighting it rested for the first time in eight day:. Alaska road commission crews and fire control service men who battled the blaze said much fine wild game reserve land had been burned out. Another blaze which razed more than 800 acres of timber on the Anchorage-Palmer highway seemed to be burning Itself out. Volunteers, soldiers from Fort Richardson and fire control service crews have been fighting a series of fires in this region. Army Pursuit Planes Missing ANCHORAGE. Alaska, June 13 ey Two army P-51 pursuit planes, missing since yesterday morning and last seen over Cook inlet, were the object today of a widespread search favored by the northland summer which provides nearly 24 hours of daylight Names of the missing men were not reported. Seventeen planes of all types were In the air overnight and all towns and villages in the vicinity were asked to forward any informa tion to Elmendorf field. Army of ficials said they hoped the craft had made landings and had merely been unable to report by radio. .. Buying Rush On Sugar Ends PORTLAND, June 13 (Pi The run on sugar was all over today so much so that retailers predicted sales would temporarily fall even below the level In effect under ra tioning. . The buying rush halted late yes terday, apparently as housewives learned thnt plenty of sugar would be available, and that price controls would prevent any price increase. The sugar rationing office here said retailers must keep records of anyone buying more than 100 pounds, nnd must not deliver sugar to Industrial users.- -.4 v . ,. Judge Reeder On Radio Program County Judge U. E. Reeder, who skippered the pioneer steamer, the Cnnby. on Lower Klamath lake and Klamath river in the 1900- 1910 decade, will tell of those early day experiences on radio station KFLW tonight at 8:15 o'clock.. Judge Reeder will be a guest of Malcolm Epley on the "Managing Editor's Report" program. Epley who has been giving a regional his torical series on his program, will Interview the Judge about naviga tion in the Klamath country which preceded the coming of the railroad to Klamath Falls. No. 10958 St. Louis Transport Strike On ST. LOUIS, June 13 W Virtual ly everything on wheels that would ran was pressed into service today as thousands ol SI. Louisiana sought a way to get to their. Jobs after an early morning strike of street ear and bus operators tied up public transportation in the 81 Louis area of more than 1.000,000 population. Family automobiles, ancient Ja lopies whose lives have been pro longed by the dearth of new cars and all available taxlcabs Jammed main thoroughfares, snarling traffic at most of .the principal intersec tions. Absenteeism High Absenteeism ran high in the heav ily industrialized city during the first hours of the strike which be came 100 per cent effective -with such suddenness that moat Individ uals and firms were unprepared. No attempt waa made by the gt Louia Public Service company to nan etreet ears and busses which were cleared from their routes aa soon as operators completed their scheduled runs. The strike was voted early today by local 788 of the AFL Amalga mated Association of Street. Elec tri. Railway and Motor Coach Em ployes. The last streets cars and busses completed their runs at 6 ; a. m., CDT. I The strike vote came after union ' members had unanimously rejected the company a offer to sign a new wage contract on the basis of a de cision made last Tuesday by an arbitration board. The Missouri legislature recently enacted a bill which nrohlblts strikes against public utilities and aumorizes tne governor to seize and operate utilities in cases of actual or threatened strikes. The governor has signed the bill but it does not become effective until Sep tember. Federation In Final Session BEND, June 13 (Pi The State reaerauon 01 La oor went into its final session today minus Its tradi tional policy of endorsements for political candidates. Delegates wiped out the policy uui&c uuiy uiuiviuuBi records ox can with a 148-103 vote yesterday to dldates known to union members, without recommendation. They also protested government expenditures on vocational schools, passing a resolution that declared "implicit belief in the superiority of apprenticeship training over the so called vocational education available lo industrial schools." This was passed only over opposi tion of Klamath Falls delegates who said the resolution was "nothing but a dirty slap at the Klamath Falls vo cational school project" They con tended the schooling could benefit young persons greatly. The convention also defeated a proposal to Increase the per capita tax to finance education and public relations programs, and decided not to attempt to distribute labor pub lications generally in high schools. Death On life ?' II -1 : pha 'clock - Special 1 f'r A note of tragedy on Friday, the 13th this kitieo, lying on Pin street near 11th was pictured by The Herald and News photograph thl morning. The eat waa evidently tho victim M aa aateamMI. Gives Bureau $104 Million WASHINGTON, Juno 13 MV-Ap-' proximately $.16,220,323 additional ror western reclamation waa recom mended by tho senate aporoDrla lions commute today in approving additions to tho houso-Daaaed intar. lor department appropriation bill. The committee gava tha bureau $104,730,532 for the vear atartlns July 1. This compares with $67,717,- wi approved oy tne nouse. In addition the bureau will hava $56,244,307 money left from the cur rent year to be used next year. This will give It a total of $160,974,880 for its work during the year starting July 1. Interior Fund The house voted $161,413,513 for the Interior department. The senata committee Increased this to $315.-. 530.535. The committee proposed to give tho reclamation bureau $104,730,633 in new money. Adding an unobligat ed balance of $56,244,367, carried over from this year's funds, tho bureau will have funds for a $160, 874,889 program In the year begin ning July 1, if tho senate commit tee's figures are aDDroved bv tha senate and in conference. undo approved by the commit tee for other Interior department divisions include: Bureau of Indian affair, $37, 57,10. Bonneville power administration. $16,222,400. Bureau or Mines, $11.M.J5. Geological survey. $10,256,340. National park service, $10,168,451 Flsh and wildlife service, $6,615,- Terrltories, $9,002,400. Bureau of land management. $4,078,440. Secretary's office, $4JU,7. Tho full committee made only tws changes In the bill as approved by. the subcommittee headed by Sena tor Wherry (R-Neb). It added $25,000 to funds for the fishery market news service, making a total appropriation of $125,000 for that work, and authorized $450,000 for an anthracite coal laboratory at Schulklll Haven, Pa. Wherry said no estimates ar available of the number of employes who would lose their Jobs under the senate bill. "Of course," he aald, "the number will not be as great a under th house bill." Taft-Hartley Bill Probed WAirmNaffcfCrune ls'ow Government labor experts who hava been analyzing the Taft-Hartley bill will advise President Truman' that the measure is "unworkable . and will not stop a coal strike. This was learned today from of ficials who have seen the analysis but who asked that their name' not bo used. . 5 , There have been equally reliable reports, however, that some other presidential advisers are urging Mr. Truman to sign the measure. , This group Is said to contend (a) that the bill does give the gov ernment some means of dealing with the threat of a new coal strike next month and (bl that congress is virtually certain to enact It into law In any event. .' The labor experts are reported to have concluded, among other things that the measure awaiting Mr. Truman's decision follows -more nearly the original version in- ; troduced by Rep. Hartley (R-N.J.) than what they called the less re strlctlve measure sponsored by Sen ator Taft (R-Ohio). The Street Sj3-'..'.