Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, June 25, 1947, Page 1, Image 1

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SI
LILTQ
mam
Day's Jtavs
My Fit AN K JKNKINH
TIIK United Stale UMliiy protest
"hrply" to th ltinitiilnn gov
ernment against Uto arbitrary rnrrnt
without warrant or chnma of hun
dred of members of thd Hoiimnlan
political puny tlit oppose com
munism. Our hole ay llm arrest "appear
to represent deliberate effort t
lilt suppression or terroristic In
llmldntlon "f (li'iiiocmHo element
opposing Hi present coniiiiunlsl
dominated regime In Homaiila.
It adds that "nurd evident de
privation of tin rami tlrmatila
human right Mid fundamental
freedoms" conflict Willi llm Urmn
of llm uer.e treaty signed by llm
KoiiibiiIbii government mid rallllc.il
by the United mntc;
THE protest, of course, 1 only
geslur. IUiiiibmIb, for nil prer
llrnl purposes, Is now A PARI OF
HOVIKT HU8H1A.
Hfl to Russia nd lirr ultimate ob
J Jcrllvra III Kurope. watch Hit
'1 .-1n..-A.lrli.flr linn of WlUdl lilt
lorn of the Kll river It a party
llecall Uial 111 Urn cloning days 01
the shooting war every Ume our
troops stepped over Una Ho they
were yanked buck by ordcra from
Washington,
It weina altogether likely that
tliU line wa agreed uon al Yali
or clscwherei an the western
boundary of Russian influence In
Kurope and Uial Russia l moving
de Isivcly to make good Hie agree
ment. . , ,
TIIKUK la another Internum de
velopment In the Kurupean new.
Molulov, Huwla a No. 3 "mil. U
to go to Pari to talk over with
HldttUll of Franco and .levin tit
Hritaln America prul to
hungry and drscrl Western
Europe back on It feel. On Ha
lace, that lka hopeful. Maybe,
after all. Ituasia la going to be decent
'a waveof' optimum haa awrpt Urn
world In the wake of announcement
of Molotova participation III Uie
Parta conference. t
PRAVDA (newiiiaiier organ of Uie
Russian communist party i daslica
cold water over thcat hopea Una
, morning. ,
It ays!
No Mlf-rwpecllng Kuroiean na
tion could accept Uie U.S. prooal
If accepuinct mean American inter
ference in the internal affaire of
those nations." , .
11 add that Uie "busnics world
of the Uiillrd Hlatca la trying
lUirollKh lhl propoaal Ul llelfl WivU
ern Minim-" lu WHAKr.N I UK
RII'KNINU Kf.'ONOMlO CKIHIH 111
America and declare Uml If Amer
ican aid to Kitroiw under Die new
Winn I "conditioned on llm Greek
Ttrklsh aainplo" II la doomed to
failure. , . . ...
, . - V .. v -
KKKP In mind that Una new plan
for helping Weatern Europe to
get buck onto it feot pule Russia on
Tim spot. She muni elUier help or
hlndeV It. H the HINDKItS. It will
amount to confession that what
Russia really wanU U CONT1NUKO
CHAOS becaune chaoa U the toll In
which rommuniam flourishes.
CO don't build any high hoit on
Molotova forUicomlng trip to
Parla. It doen't necessarily mean
anyUiIng good.
If your rivala were cooking eome
thlng up. you'd want to be In Uie
kitchen to aee what Uie broth waa
going to be. That oouid easily ex-
Jilaln Molotov a participation In the
"aria parley.
Keep your flngcra croaaed for Uie
preaent.
NOTB Pravda'a muierllon that our
new plan to help Europe la a
arheme by bualiicw men In Uie
Dulled State to head off the RIP
ENING KCONOMICJ CRI818 IN
AMKHICA. .
Thai I Inlereatlng and probably
VERY algiilflcniit.
It betray Kumila'a hone Uiat the
United Htate la headed for another
depresHlon like Uiat which began In
1V.I0. In that event, Moacow ob
vlousl" reanofia, the United Stnlea
MIGHT RECOME RIPE FOR COM
MUNIHM. In view of Rusala'a clearly P-
fiarcnt HOPE that capitalist Amcr
ra Is headed for another bust, we
can't afford to overlook the prob-
(C'anllnard en laf a. Colama al
'1 .
1
,P a'cUk Special Sr5
I . ,.!...,
Dorothy and Tatay Heath had Just orotaed taat Main atreet at
Orchard with this load or groceries wnen in f o ciook pnoiog caugni
this picture with their dog Tippy. Th Healh g4rla are the daughters of
Leo Heath, 2432 Orchard.
PRICE FIVE CKNTtf !Q9 KLAMATH r Q ' r . rVKDNKMIMV, JUNE M, 1M7
Talk Terms
WASHINGTON, Junt 25 (AP) Soft cool operoton from
the North ond Watt gathorod todoy to diicuit termt they
might offer to John L, Lewit In an effort to avert on industry
wide mine strike next month.
Even oi the producer! met, nearly half of the loft coal
minora already wore Idle in what gome coal diggers doicribed
as a protest against enactment of the Taft-Hartley labor bill.
Further curtailment of operations is due when the miners
start a 10-day vacation Friday, throe days before the govern
ment relinquishes the soized mines to private owners.
Unless the operators and Lewis' Unitod Mine Workers
agree on a new contract before the vocation period ends July
7, the pits aVe likely to stoy closed. The miners traditionally
have refuted to work without a contract.
The contract negotiations broke down several weeks ago
in a dispute over Lewis' wage and other demands. Despite
the meeting of Northern and Western operators, there was no
indication that they had an immediate data with Lewis.
Firemen Beat
Call To Fire
City firemen were Johnny-on-tht-apot
tlila morning when Uiry
got to Uie fire before they had
been called. The fire, a chemical
blaat In a cleaning vat at the
New Method Cleaning plant, 1463
Eaplanade, waa apolted by firemen
from an upper atory window of Uie
station only a few block away.
Hllght damage waa done, Uie lira
department reHirted.
Firemen were called to extin
guish two graa flrea Tuesday, one
al 4th and Rooaevelt and Uie other,
on the nil edge of town at tho
city until.
New Trains .
Due In Fall
The new flhaxla daylight train,
arheduled to oerats between Ban
Francisco and Portland via Klam
ath Palla, are expected to be ready
for service sometime In the late
fall according to Southern Pacific
railroad. These dleael-powered all
coach tralna are a part of the
new streamlined equipment' which
ha been ordered by the railroad
eompany. Total coal of the equip
ment ta expected to reach B0.
&00.000. According, to A. T. Mercler.
prealdent of Uie Southern Pacific
company, the City of San Fran
claco. operating between Ban Fran
cisco and Chicago, will be put on a
da,lly run between the two clllea
aa soon a new equipment become
available. It now makea three
trip a week. Equipment needed
to make the Cltv of Snn Francisco
a dally train will coat SS.0O0.00O.
Prince Of Iran
Found Today
PARIS, June 35 M'l Prince Ha-mld-reaa
Pahlevl, younger brother
of Uie Shah of Iran, who disap
peared from his New York hotel
Monday night, arrived here by
plane today and waa whisked awny
to the Iranian legation by an at
tache before the 16-year-old lad had
time to protest.
Mahmoud Sal el) I, Iranian consul,
said Uie prince had "run away"
from the school he had been attend
ing In Uie United States and had
intended to take Uie first available
plane from Paris to Tehran.
4 7 1
However, fjecreuiry of Labor
Schwellenbach or some other gov
ernmenl official may seek to bring
tne two slues together oulckiy.
Houthorn coal operators, who have
insuileti oil separate negotiation,
were standing by while the northern
ana western coal men planned their
strategy.
Probe Hurled
The proUrsl walkout this week
have stirred a Justice department
Investigation mid an apparently
funis congressional move to revive
expiring federal seizure powers.
The number of those who had
Jumped the gun stood al HS.tOO
last night. Those who would talk
said they acted to protest passage
or ine labor mil.
A United Mine Worker official at
Harlan, Ky said, "Tve never seen
Uie miner so aroused before.
Government officials disclosed Uie
Justice department I seeking to de
termine wheUier Uie miner went
out of Uielr own free choice or
whether tbey had ome sort of
leadership.
Hoth in the Justice department
and congress, however, the feeling
seemed general that the Taft-Hartley
law would be Inadequate to halt
a coul shutdown al this time.
Italian Head
Resigns Post
ROME, June 35 Provisional
Ptfsldent Enrico de Nicola. 6H, sent
his resignaUun to the constituent
assembly today.
The resignation came after ap
proximately 6.000,000 members of the
communlsl-doinlnated general con
federation of labor held a nation
wide half hour strike at mid-morning
In protest against a aeries of
alUck on Sicilian communist head
quarters Sunday.
De Nicola's message, read to a
hushed assembly by Speaker Um
berto Terraclnl said 111 health pre
vented him from exercising "my
function any longer."
The iiosslblllty remained that Uie
assembly might a.sk De Nicola to
serve again. Other candidate
mentioned were the three old men
of Italian politics, all former pre
mier: Ivanhoe Bonoml, Krencesco
Saverlo Nlttl and Vlttorlo Emanuele
Orlando, last urvlvor of Uie Big
Four of the first World War.
Bee Sting Kills
Seattle Woman
SEATTLE, June 35 P Stung by
a wasp. Mrs. Catherine Mosley, 33.
died within )b minutes Tuesday
after miming from her yard to a
neighbor's home. Coroner John P.
Brill Jr., reported. The neighbor,
Mrs. Edward T. Welch, telephoned
a doctor and the fire department
but Mrs. Mosley died on her dav
enport while first aid was being
administered. The death was due
to acute pulmonary congestion
caused by the poison In Uie sting,
Brill said. I
Search For Boy's
Body Called Off
Search of Lost river near Merrill
was called off yesterday afternoon
for the body of 8-year-old Oerald
Dickenson, who is believed to have
drowned in the river Monday.
Six boats with dragging equip
ment combed the bottom of the
river yesterday without success.
The boy was a son of Mrs. Thomas
Watson of Merrill. Searcher were
hampered by clams on Uie bottom
of the river and by brush and willows.
Vessel, About To Sail For Far
East, Burns At New York Docks
JERSEY CITY. N. J June 25 (P) Fire- spread through two holds
of Uie U. 8, President Lines" 10,780-ton cargo ship, Uie S3 Marine Flier,
todny as londgshoremen loaded the vessel for sailing Friday to the Far
East.
A heavy pnll of blut-gray smoke rose from Uie ship and drifted
across the Hudson river over downtown Manhattan. Two coast guard
bout including- the flreboat, Sauk, the New York City flreboat John
Harvey, 10 railroad tugboats, and 13 fire companies Joined In subduing
the blaze that broke out at 11:10 a. m, (EDT) , and was not under con
trol until an hour and a half later.
When Jersey City firemen arrived at the acene they were told that
eight longshoremen had been trapped In No. 3 hold of tho Marine
Flier, Fire Chief Frank J. Ertle said. Ho added that the report was
soon discounted when firemen, wearing masks, went down into the
hold and found no evidence of anyone being trapped. '
Origin of the fire, Police Captain Patrick Flanagan said, and a
damage estimate were not immediately determined. . '
Flanagan said the fire, In a hold containing ammonia sulphide,
caused fumes and Intense heat that hampered the work of firemen.
The Marine Flier had been scheduled to sail Friday with general
oargo to the Far East. It arrived several days ago from the Orient.
.
Little
Constellation
Crash Lands
EW YORK. June 25 (4V-An Air
France Constellation "plana from
Pari buckled this afternoon a It
was coming to a stop on a 6000-foot
runway at LaOuardia field.
The extent of aamage was ' not
ascertained immediately. The acci
dent occurred at J3:09 p. in. PST.
The plane waa half way down the
runway when It appeared to col
lapse. The landing gear appeared to
buckle, and Uie plane tipped over on
one wing.
The two right engines also were
reported to have buckled. Crash
apimralu was rushed to the scene.
It was reported the plane had 30
posjiengers on board.
The plane had come Into the pre
vailing southwest wind and had gone
about 3000 feet along Uie runway,
which was described ea a northeast
outhwef:'rtmway.:k ;
The craft was reported to have
left Pari yesterday.
-
Phone Books
Ready Soon
New telephone directories should
be In Uie mall to subscribers In this
area in early July. Charles Seavey,
manager of the Pacific Telephone
and Telegraph company here, said
today. The 1947-48 books, are being
printed and all Indication are Uiat
Uiey should be finished by July 1.
The books are about a month be
hind schedule this year, delayed by
the telephone strike several weeks
ago. Material could not be given to
printers in time to make the usual
June 1 date. Seavey explained.
More than 6000 names appear In
the new directory, a record num
ber In this section. The figure does
not include listings for Merrill,
Mulin, Tulclake, Bonanza, Bly, and
outlying point. '
Amnesia Case
Identified
YREKA. Calif.. June 35 The
young woman who wo picked up
more than two weeks ago at Duns
mulr, apparently an amnesia vic
tim, hB been tentatively Identified
as Bonnie Jean Wallace, or Bonny
Jean Owsley, 30.
She Is held in Uie Siskiyou Gen
eral hospital as a mental patient.
The Identification was made by
the California state bureau of Iden
tification by fingerprints. Print
taken at Yreka matched a set taken
at San Dlcgo over a year ago when
a woman who gave her name as
Bonnie Jean Wallace was given a
30-day suspended sentence on a
drunk charge.
At that time she said that she
was a native of Louisville, Ky. At
Yreka Uie woman has given her
name as Jean Lange, and appears
unable to recognize Uie other names.
The woman was picked up at
Dunsmuir, Saturday, May 31, wan
dering about Uie streets in an er
ratic manner.- She was cradling a
pair of shoes in her arm as though
fondling a baby.
WaiLialLrAxatiarifce
(Telepba
"Mils X" IcWifi.d At
iv i
Flaxen-haired "Miss X." who
K p.TalJM.TalJITaMWsM.TalJITalsjfWWP IHUP W I.. . sp jH"H "V WWPW?- J
VA f J A'" -,
: . '1 : : . i .x.- .. . . -.
" I ! -i " ""IF "' 1 r 1 '-"I
. , -
days recovering from a sadistic betttag apparently received at Weed,
June 15, haa been Identified a Mary Jasw Meddlln. X. daaghter of Mrs.
Laura Lucille Meddlln of Selma, Ore. Hugh GHreath, Mrs. Meddlin'a
common law husband, la held In
with intent to commit murder. The
wirephoto, was taken in Grant Pass a State Police Sgt. C. R. Borg.
man questioned Gllreatai about the crime last night. GHreath admitted
abandoning Mary Jane In Weed. The child's mother will be taken to
Yreka to face a like charge this af ttrnota. The two pictures of the
little girl wera taken in the SlaMjron General hospital by Deputy Sheriff
Thorae West.
Spiraling Meat Prices May
Lead To Return Of Control
WASHINGTON, June 35 OPI Ed
ward A. O'Neal, president of the
American Farm Bureau federation,
said today a threatening meat
shortage may make It necessary to
restore price controls, but Senator
Taft (R-Ohlo) commented: "Not a
chance."
O'Neal expressed his views at a
hearing by a senate-house commit
tee headed by Taft. This group
the Joint ' congressional committee
on the economic report Is seeking
information on how to stabilize Uie
economy.
Before O'Neal testified, Paul O.
Hoffman, president of Studebaker
Corp.,' told the committee that the
Income of most Americans could be
"doubled wlthlft 35 years" by "wise
actions" to smooth out Uie national
economy.
Senator O'Mahoney (D-Wyo.) de
veloped O'Neal's opinions about
meat prospect. Tne senator noieo,
that floods In the Midwest are
seriously damaging the corn crop
ana said tnis win ieaa to a snort-
age of meat and possibly start a new
wage-price spiral.
"What are we going to do?"
O'Mahoney asked. "Does It mean
we are going to have to go back to
price oontrol?" j
WIATHEK
H. Uaae 4I..M . feua (
rreltMala leti M beert.....- a
Kim rf "
Leal . ia.t .rl ll.H
rereeMii Pair, felpli eleeit.
till)
Nt. ltMt
Yrtka
haa beta In a Yreka hospital for 10
Jail at Yrtka on a charge of assault
Sop p4etare. from Associated Press
O'Neal said, "We may have to
go oacc. ,
But Taft told reporters later
"there is not a chance", of restoring
price controls.
"We ean control prices somewhat,'
h said, "by controlling exports.'
O'Neal urged that congress enact
addlUonal labor legislation "to deal
adequately with labor-management
relations, but he did not specify
what he believes Is needed ' beyond
the new Taft-Hartley law.
Herald And News
To Publish 4th
The Herald and News will vary
Its holiday publication schedule
In connection with the Fourth of
July celebration this year.
Uanally, the paper suspend
publication on July 4. But thl
year a paper will be published on
Jaly 4, and the suspension will be
effective on Saturday, July 5.
That wlU give Herald and News
employes a double holiday Sat
urday and Sunday, July 1 and 5.
Man Confesses
Leaving Tot Bui
Denies Beating
By HALI SCA KB ROUGH
A sudden break in the mystery of little "Mies X," eeiwsni .
from Grants Pass last niakt,
spent the past 10 days in hospital at Yreka recovering from)
a brutal beating, as Mary Jane Meddlin, aged 2.
Hugh Gilreoth, 23-year-o4e) Selma, Ore., millworker, le
held in the Siskiyou county jail today on open charges. He hee
admitted abandoning the child
the beating.
The child' mother, Gilreath's law wife, is held
in what officers called "protective custody" at Selma, 20
miles from Csranti rass.
Formal charges of assault with intent to commit murder '
wera filed against Gilreath and the tot's mother at Yreka,'
and Deputy Sheriff Thome West and Mrs. Wast left for'
Grants Pass to get the mother, Mrs. Lucille Meddlin. She
will be taken to the hospital and confronted with the child
this afternoon.
Yreka sources said that feeling is running strong agamst'
Gilreath there and officers ara considering taking him to an-'
other jail for safe keeping. The 25-year-old man could not
even be placed in a common cell when he was brought to the) .
Siskiyou jail this morning on protest of other prisoners.
Lat nignt unreatn was arretted a
by Oregon state police at Senna.
wnere ne work, ana taken to
Grants Pass where he was ques
tioned by Siskiyou Deputy Sheriff
Thome West and Weed Police
Chief Dan Bennett.
Confession Given
Gilreath is said to have confessed
to abandoning Uie child, with the
consent of the mother, Mr. Lucille
Meddlin, 32, because there were "too
many kids around." A child waa
born to Oilreath and Mrs. Meddlln
at Grant Pas. June 14, Uie day
before Mary Jane was left at Weed.
He said that on Saturday night,
June 14, he took Mary Jane on a
bus from Grant Pas to Weed, and
left her sleeping In a parked ear.
Then he said he waited at the bus
station a while and took another
bua back to Grants Pass. Oilreath
denied beating the child. When
found June 16, in a dump of bushes
back of a Weed dance hall. Mary
Jane was unconscious from a vicious
beating and "criminally mishan
dled." Woman Questioned
Mrs. Meddlln. Questioned by Ore
gon Mate police, sald that Gilreath
took uie ntue Dionae girl away with
her consent She said Uiat they
had talked over plans for abandon
ing Mary Jane because "she was too
much trouble." a far back as but
December. Mrs. Meddlin told offi
cers they decided "It wouldn't look
right to putvher in a foundling
home" because Gilreath was work
ing. , . . j' . , . , ,.-.,.,;..
- She aafd that when the child was
taken away her body bore bruises,
a black eye and whip mark received
Friday, June 13, when "both Hugh
and I whipped the girt" She told
ICUUM Fat a. Clsaa )
B-29's Leave
For Tokyo
FAIRFIELD. Calif.. June 36 Ufy
Nine B-293 and their escorting C-54
"mother shins" headed toward
Tokyo from Fairfteld-Suiun army
air oose toaay ana an August l at
tempt to make a one-stop flight
from the Japanese Capitol to Wash
ington. The aircraft, carrying 180 men
and maintenance parts and' equip
ment, leit tne air transport com
mand base last night after arriving
earner in tne aay irom meir nome
station at Ft. Worth, Tex.
Barbers Point air field, on Oahu
in the Hawaiian islands, wo their
nrst stop after leavine here. Fuel
halts are scheduled at Kwajaleln
ana uuam en route to jaDan.
The August 1 Air Force Day
ingni win nave Ancnorage, Alaska,
as refueling point.
Highway Work
Slated Soon
Work Is slated to start Julv 7
on construction of the lower Klam
ath lake secondary highway con
necting U. S. highway 97 with the
South End basin area on highway
39. F. L. Somers, contractor, aaid
today that he hopes to have the
job finished by early November.
Cost of construction Is estimated
at $169,759 for the 7.01 miles of
roadway which will be surfaced
with bituminous macadam.
The state highway office expects
Paul Jones, formerly of the di
vision office of engineers at Bend,
to be in charge of Uie work. The
improved highway will give Tule
lake and South End people a good
southbound route of travel, making
it unnecessary to come to Klam-
atn rails before going south.
Lakeview Gun
Draws Four
LAKEVIEW, June 35 Melvln
Storey, 36, gun wielder In a spectacular-shooting
fray on the Men
dell road- northeast of here last
Thursday morning, was sentenced
to serve four years In the Oregon
state prison yesterday after a grand
jury had returned three Indict
ments against him charging as
sault with intent to kill.
Storey pleaded guilty to one In
dictment, accusing him of trying to
kill Rudolph Minor. Circuit Judge
Charles Combs withheld action on
the other two true bills, which
charged that Storey tried to kill his
wife. Arleen, and William Minor.
All three of Uie indictments were
returned yesterday. The Lake
county grand jury was called In
principally to hear the case against
Storey, who had been held In jail
In lieu of $15,000 ball since Thurs
day. The incident which climaxed In
the shooting spree was believed by
officers to be a spotlight deer hunt,
identified the child who hee
in Weed Juno IS, but denied
Soviets Kill
Hopes For
Cooperation
LONDON, June 25 ' UPV-Pravdav
the communist nartv nrran in R na
si, daahed cold water today on the
warm, rneoaiy reeling which Dae
encompassed Ehrope since the So
viet Union accepted last Sanday av
British-French InvitaUon to talk
about the Marshall ald-Eorope
plan. , .
With Soviet Foreign Minister V.
M. Molotov reportedly scheduled te
leave tomorrow lor Paris, where
the three-power talks will get ander '
way Friday, Pravda aald no eeH
reapeeting European nation eoaid
accept the Marshall propoaal V
acceptance meant American inter
ference In the internal affair el
those nation.
It said the business world of the
United States was trying, through
the Marshall program, "to weaken
Uie ripening economic crista" In
America. . and declared that it
American alcj to Europe under ttvf-" !
puui - was conoatloned on- the
"Greek-Turkish sample' It wee
doomed to failure.
Conference ConUamed
TJ. S. Undersecretary of Mate
William L. Clayton continued his
conferences, on world economic af
fairs with Prime Minister Attlee,'
British Foreign Secretary Erne
Bevln and Sir . Stafford Crippe,
president of the board of trade.
U. S. Ambassador Lewis W. Doug
las also attended the talk today.
One high British government
source said Britain would defer
final decision on catting her barf
ing program in the United States,
"at least until the full scope pos
sibilities of the Marshall aid
Europe plan emerge."
This apparently was in answer to.
previous reports that Washington
was expressing "concern" that such
curtailment might amount to dis
crimination against American goods, '
which Is prohibited under the terme
of the loan agreement of 194.
Voman Juror
Beaten Up
SANTA ANA. Calif.. June 16 M.
A woman juror in the Overall yacM
deaths case was beaten up by as
unidentified intruder who broke In
to her house today. Her assailant
waa quoted by an authoritative po
lice source as saying: "This ain't
all you'll get if you vote the girl
guilty."
The reference apparently was to
Louise Overell, 18-year-old heiress
on trial with her boy friend, Oeorge
GoUum, 31, in the slaying of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter X.
Overell.
The second day of testimony-taking
In the trial was delayed as Mrs.
Ovon Putnam, red-haired, 39-year-old
wife of a shipyard worker, and .
Superior Judge Kenneth E. Morri
son were closeted for Jt conference.
There have been repeated re
quests from the prosecution that the
Jury obtained after a month's
questioning be locked up for dura
tion of the trial. Court source pre
dicted that Uie Putnam Incident
would bring a renewed demand.
Under California law, such an in
cident must be reported first to the
trial judge, and law officers would
not be quoted officially. ' :
Wielder
- -
Year Sentence
accompanied by drinking, by Storey
and his wife and the Minor
brothers. . ,
Out on the Mendell road an ar
gument started. William Minor
jumped out of the car and ran for
the bushes, with Storey in pursuit.
Storey fired several rifle shots at
William Minor, then turned and
pumped five shots into the ear
where Mrs. Storey and Rudolph
Minor were sitting. They weren't
hit.
The fight continued on the
ground, and Storey broke William
Minor's arm with a swing of hie
rifle. Rudomh Minor came
with a club and knocked out bol
Storey and William Minor,
The day he was arrested Storey
appeared In j istice court at Lake
view and indicated that he wanted
the grand jury to look over hie
case. Storey had said that the Mi
nor brothers kidnaped him end hie
wife. .. ,
hie Z: