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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 6, 1948)
TUESDAY, JAN. 6, 19-41 PACE TWO HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON milium rllONE 4IMJ7 NOW MaUneea 1:30 p.m. Ere. 6:45-9:00 p.m. Matinee 1:J0 Eve. 6:45 - COMEDY HIT of the YEAR! FRANCHOT TONE LUCILLE BALL In "Her Husband's Affairs" t m in mtmmmi swMri Phone 8484 STARTS TODAY LET TIED SETkt TRBTR! EVERY Mother should bring Her c4oV Daughters EVERY Father should bring his Sons I MM4B4IC MOOUCnONS I ' I 2&7P.MJ i Mr it Htm NOUVWOOft Mmw 9 p U WITH AU-STAR ' : HOUYWOOD CAST BttA" PLUS H,T S 4 BY Vomct SlMW" Buiiiingjmiuuufj UK To Take Up Indian Problem I LAKE VirtTESS. Jan. 6 UV I Thr strife and bloodshed touched off by the partitioning of India of ficially come to the attention of the I tilled Nations today when the security council takes up India's complaint against Pakistan, her sister dominion, over fighting 1st Kashmir. Hie Issue of Kashmir, a prince ly state about the size of Kansas in northernmost India, covers only the current focal point of lighting, but some observers believed that other problems of splintered India might now be aired before the UN. British India was carved up along Moslem-Hindu lines last August 15. with most of the Mos lems in Pakistan and the Hindus in India. Much of the strife has centered on which of the two coun tries some of the princely states with split populations should join. Three-fourths of Kashmir's 4.000. 000 are Moslems, but their ruler. Maharaja Sir Ilari Shun, is a Hindu, and a tug-of-war has been under way over affiliation. India charges that Pakistan is supporting an invasion of Kashmir. Brief Meet Indications were that the first council meeting here on the sub ject would be brief and that full de bate would be delayed pending the arrival of experts from the con tending parties and from Britain. The U. S. also will have expert rep resentation. Pakistan asked the council for a delay in discussions to allow For eign Minister Str Mohammed Ze frullah Khan time to reach Lake Success, and there was no apparent opposition to the appeal. In New Delhi, the Indian govern ment announced that Gopalash wami Iyengar, minister without portfolio and former premier of princely Kashmir, would hurry here to represent India. Britain sum moned Philip Noel-Baker, minister for colonies, to Lake Success and the United States called Ray Thurston, assistant chief of the state department's division of South Asia affairs, from Washington. , The session, the first in 1948 for the 11-nation council, finds Can ada. Argentina and the Soviet Ukraine taking seats for the first time, replacing Australia, Brazil and Poland, whose two-year terms have expired. Illegal Hunting Fines Handed Out Two Ashland residents, William Wright Beagle and Jim Bemell Kerns, were fined $29. SO each In Justice court Monday afternoon after pleading guilty to hunting by Illegal methods. The federal officer who made the arrest said that the men were driv ing ducks with a power boat on the Klamath rlve. They were arrested this morning. Greek Army Opens Drive ATHENS, Jan. 6 11 National forces launched drives Monday to expand the Konitsa perimeter and clear guerrilla units from the area north and west of the town, press dispatches said. For the first time since the com munist attack on Konitsa was launched Christmas Day, no shells fell into the town yesterday. Dis patches said that from Christmas until Saturday more than 3000 ar tillery and mortar shells had fallen in Konitsa. The area which government troops are attempting to clear lies between the Sarandoporos and Aoos rivers. Lykotnoro Height, key rebel position only a mile from the Al banian border and north of the Sarandoporos, was captured by a commando unit after savage hand-to-hand fighting. Thirty guerrillas were killed In the passes leading to the height and another 15 on the slopes during night fighting. Eugene Man Up For Murder EUGENE. Jan. 6 ( Stanley Charles Eubank, 60. is In the Lane county Jail here, charged with first-degree murder alter a drink ing party here Sunday evening when he beat Eva Myrtle Sather, about 45, about the head with a hammer. The woman died at a local hospital late Sunday night following surgery. Mrs. Ella Hileman, a neighbor, re ported Mrs. Sather's injury to state police who sent her to a hospital and arrested Eubank and Oarme Walker, who informed Mrs. Hileman of the accident. Walker, who was held in jail as a material witness, had ap parently been drinking with the couple before leaving the house, re turning to find Mrs. Sather injured. He was the victim's former husband and lived In a trailer house at the rear of the couple's residence. Reds Boycott UN Assembly LAKE SUCCESS. Jan. 6 (P The United Nations "Little Assembly" began its ycar-around sittings Mon day with Russia and the five other Soviet bloc nations boycotting its opening session. Secretary-General Trygve Lie, in opening the meeting at 11:25 a. ni. (EST) took no official notice of the boycott but he gave his full approval to the new experimental body, originally proposed by Sec retary o! State Marshall. Although Ignoring the vacant seats at the huge committee table. Lie took issue with the contention expressed previously by Russia that the "Little Assembly" would under mine the security council and threaten the entire UN structure. "I am "convinced." Lie declared, "that the Interim committee iLlttlt Assembly) can make a very con structive contribution to the effec tiveness of the general assembly and thereby strengthen the United Nations as a whole." A Soviet spokesman said in ad vance of the session that Russia still felt the U. S.-sponsored "little assembly" was unconstitutional and therefore would not attend. In formed quarters said the same at titude had been taken by Czecho slovakia. Poland, Yugoslavia, White Russia and the Soviet Ukraine. ! Morse Speaks For More Democracy j PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 6 OP) I Senator Wayne Morse (R-Ore.) ! urged passage of a bill prohibiting : discrimination In employment be cause of race, color or religion. He spoke at the second annual conference of the joint defense ap- ' peal here and said: "The bill of rights gives the pab- i Urn for a practical working democ- j racy. Every time a man is discrim inated against because of race, cieed or color, democracy dies a ! little, since intolerance and in justice strike at the very root of i democratic government" More than 600 Jewish leaders ! from all parts of the nation attend- , ed the conference. They recom mended a fund of S6.104.54o In 1948 ! to finance activities of the Ameri can Jewish committee and the anti- : defamation league. SEE dork Goblt as, log h ivIUr, wfco tami tfnpaitos ScorisM O Horol ' Thm ormHft lovo story war a tcrwnl EVERYBODY WANTS TO SEE GONE WITH THE WIND! PELICAN THEATRE SUNDAY Hospital Patient Jumps Out Window SEATTLE, Jan. 6 liPh-Leaping , through the closed window of a room on the third floor of the Seat , tie General hospital, a 42-year-old patient, Earl Johnson, suffered ln ' Juries early Monday which caused his death. Police said his nurse, Miss Mary Moss, told them Johnson threw off an oxygen tent, struck her in the face and dove through the window, landing on the lawn below. Johnson had been In critical con- dltion after accidentally swallow- Ing cleaning fluid Christmas Day, 1 thinking It was mouth wash. Rates Bureau To Meet January 21 Change of name and election of officers of the organization are two mgtiart fr, mm hpfnre membershiD of the Klamath Basin Rates bureau at a meeting scheduled In the cham ber of commerce board room on January 21 at 7:30 p. m. Revision of by-laws and a pro gress report are other matters on th atininff'i hii.inewt agenda, ac cording to Margaret Santo, sec retary ox the bureau. Portland Notes Cop Shortage PORTLAND, Jan. 6 (JPi Not enough boys want to be cops and chase robbers, the city civil service board observed today in noting that less than 50 men applied for patrol man Jobs. The board said it had expected 200 or more applications for the January 15 tests and that the ex aminations might be called off and re-offered later. The Jobs available have salaries ranging from $240 to $270 a month. Church Council Protests UMT PORTLAND, Jan. 6 W) The Portland council of churches will sponsor circulation of petitions among college and high school stu dents here protesting enactment of universal military training. Members of a church committee voted to oppose the training pro gram. Earlier Lambert A. Beard, a veteran of both World Wars, said he favored universal training to "protect us from another stab In the back like Pearl Harbor." BANQUET PORTLAND. Jan. 6 OP) Ray H. Brannaman, Denver, national com mander of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, will confer In Portland Friday with state VFW officers and attend a banquet In his honor that night. Accompanying the commander Is Clyde A. Lewis, Pittsburgh, N. Y., Junior vice commander. Traffic Fines Handed Out Traffic accidents early last night brought about three arrests by city polio, all for failure to yield the right of way at intersections. Ralph L. Tut tie. 27-year-old cab driver, was fined 10 In police court this morning after a minor collision at Main and Center with a car driven by Frank L. Uhrlne, 117 El dorado. That accident occurred about 5:15 p. m. Some two hours later Harold P. Patterson Sr., 50, nf 425 N. 2nd. was cited tor a court apiiearance after a collision with a car driven by R. R. Macartney Sr., at 3rd and Pine. Everett Lloyd Hoover. 28, of 1805 Derby, was fined 5 in court today after his car struck a pedestrian, John Scully. 507 S. 4th, at Sth and Walnut right near the police sta tion Inst night. Scully was not In jured. Robert D. Fox, 32. of 2061 Want land, arrested on E. Main after mid night for reckless driving. Is cited for a court apiiearance. Other police arrests during the past 24 hours Included several minor traffic violations, one vagrant, two drunks, one for disorderly conduct and one Indian for possession of liquor. Horry McClenry. " 69. was sentenced to 30 days in jail for selling an Indian a bottle of wine last night. Indian Battle Still Fomenting KARACHI, Pakistan. Jan. 6 t?) A Pakistan Information ministry official said Monday the dominion foreign office had prepared a com prehensive reply to India's memo randum to the United Nations se curity council charging Pakistan with aiding raiders :n Kashmir. It is understood the reply con tains counter charges, offers evi dence Intended to show the Pakis tan government has nothing to do with the raiders, and expresses sympathy with the Kashmir people, who are predominantly Moslems. Undeclared warfare broke out in October in Kashmir, a border state aligned by its Hindu maharajah with India. (India's complaint is scheduled to come before the security council at Lake Success. N. Y., tomorrow.) Slayer Says Letter Told Of Shooting (Continued from Page One) uniform to march In a military pa rade. Afterward he and his wife visited a service bar and that stint ed Mnrle on a prolonged "bust." Five Day I'proar For the five days Just prior to the slaying. Franklin told reporter, his wife remained Intoxicated and kept hla home in an uproar with her tantrums. She refused to eat or sleep and wouldn't let him sleep Any little difficulty was sufficient to throw her into a ruge. One such Instance, he said, was a sudden obsession that Marie want ed to locate some "trinkets," little souvenirs he had picked up from time to time. She ransarkrd the house and complained bitterly Ilia they had been stolen by Franklin's relatives. On Sunday. November 30. Frank lin said he stayed nt home with his wife to try to cheei her up. Hut matters didn't Improve it ml Mrs. Franklin even ripped the wires from the sparkplugs of the family car to keep him from driving to town to get something to cut. Franklin said. "I don't imagine I'll ever learn what she did with those wires now.' Franklin said. About 9 o'clock thai nlilil Frank tin said ho went to bed, but before he could get to sleep his wife railed him out to look at some papers slit, had. Then be went hark In bed. asking Marie to "Please let me sleep." "By that time I was completely worn out. She hadn't slept or been to bed for five nights and kept me awake, too." the 54-yeor-old for mer tavern owner said. "I heard her clattering around to the kitchen, then saw her come across the living room, cursing and screaming 'You won't gel away from me again.' "I knew alio hud a gun, and I wasn't going to bo trapped In thul Utile bedroom. 1 went down the hull to the front bedroom, got a pistol and stepped behind the door "That's where the tragedy oc curred. " Franklin's statement lu the dis trict attorney is thut he fired when his wife came through the ueii door with a shotgun. He kept the body In the house while diguing the backyard grave, and burled Marie December 3. In the Interim, after Mnrle was killed and before she was burled, hci body lay in a butluub at the house and later was placed on bed. Franklin said thut while Ills wile's body was on tile bed a local Insurance man cuine to (lie house to Inquire about u policy on hei llle which had lapsed. Frunklln Mild Hint ho luul Just "blacked uut" from weariness the uiKlil of the slaying, mid niter that he went on n "bust'' himself. "When I began to come out of It, lit said. "I wrote all the details to my brother In Portland. I wanted to get It over with " Franklin has retained Attorney U S. Unleiillne to represent lilin and probably will huve a prelimi nary hearing before (lie grnnd Jul v convenes January 19. The fart that ti.o district attor ney has filed the first degree mur der charge Indicates that Frank lin's self-defense story Is not be- Sale Of Store Told Russell J, Ariinl of IliMiiurck, N. 1). tins purchased outright the Const-T'o-Consl stoles film lit Iltll and Mnlii, and Is scheduled to be open for business WrdiicMluy. At pie.M'nt the store is closed for Inven tory. Found' owners Welti Finery D. Ilyland unci tleurgo UtU'ibuck. Arnot Is now residing at 1420 Hummers lime with Ills wife and two children, drain. 5, uud Hiimiii, 2, He Is n former army air corps mtiubcr uud has been In til In mid abstract work nt Ulsiunrck. This Is his first venture Into the retail sales business. (Alll OF THANKS We, sister wild brother of Mrs, Alfredo. Dorothy HlelllluoU, ot yulir fine city, who passed away on De cember 27, 1U47 und win burled here III the lily where alio hui lived fur nearly 40 years, wish to thank all of you, her devoled frlendi for the uiiluthoiiilesi kindness und Ucvolluii to her mid sympathy to us who have lost n gracious nud loyul sister. AI.VF.DA M. Wll.l.IAMB, Furl Morgan, Colo. Dlt. AI.IIKHT W. CARLSON, Los Angeles, Calif. The Mexlrun Jumping benn Is the only crop In the world thul must be wormy In order to have a coinmercliii value. Il l a worm In side the benn Hint makes It Jump Hived iifllcliiily. First degree mur der implies miillra aforethought ii ml premeditation. - For Kent TRUCKS PICKUPS CARS U-Drive - Move Yourself Local or Long Distance, Save 'i STILES' BEACON SERVICE Phone 8304 1'iOl East Main ... KNAPP SHOES - Complete line for both dre or work. Shoes for men and women, direct from factory to you. Cushioned for comfort. Any last you require. For a perfect fit and complete satisfaction, save middle-man's profit. rr n.ll.r Shaft Itur Hiiaep J. O. KENNETT g'!9 East Main Phone 8200 c 3 JANUARY CLEARANCE Boy s Wool Suits Wool Bloiori Wlndproof Suit Two-Pleco Jodhpur Soft Girls'- Wool Suifi Two-Piece Jorioy Suits Two-Pieco Voluct to 98 10.VH rtnnTriTTiC 619 Moin Phon 5497 LEGAL NOTICE SUMMONS FOB rL'BLlCAllON iQBity 7?7 IS THE CIKCUIT COURT Or THE STATE OK OREGON IN AND lOR THfc COUNTY OF KLAMATH. MAY DEXsANY, Administratrix of tht Estate of R- C. JOHNSTONE, da ceased. Plaintiff. v. EDDIE SANTRY and JANE DOE SAN TRY. (us wife: DAISY P ETHAN. aUo known as PETRAM, and BERT PLP RAN, also known as PETRAM; all of the unknown heirs of the above named defendants. If any of them are i deceased, and also all other persona or , parties unknown, claiming any right. uut, estate, lien or interest in or 10 the real property described in the com plaint filed herein; Defendants. To EDDIE SANTRY nd JANE DOE SANTKY. Ms wife; DAISY PETRAN, t also known as PETRAM. and Bart P ET HAN, also known aa PETRAM; all of ! the unknowu heirs of the above named 1 detendants, if any of them are de. ' ceaed, and also all other persons or ; parties unknown, claiming any right, 1 title, estate, Hen or interest In or to ! the real property described In the com- plaint filed herein, defendants: IN THE NAME Or THE STATE Or ; OREGON: You are hereby required to ! appear and answer the complaint filed ; against you in the above entitled suit on or before the 14th day of January. 1BH8, that being the time set by the order of : this Court, authorizing this publication ' of summons for appearance herein, and If you fall for want thereof, the plaintiff will apply to the Court for a decree adjudging the plaintiff to the owner In fee of the following described real property situated in Klamath County, Oregon: The Went half of the Northwest quarter iW'aNW' and the North half of the Southwest quarter N'i-3SWt;r of Section 1, Township 24. South of Range 6. E. W. M . subject to a light of way granted to the Central Pacific Railway Com- pany. a corporation, by ded dated I March 9. 1924. and recorded In Vol ume 63 In Deed Records of Klamath County, Oregon, page S61, and sub- jpci to a rtgnt of way granted to Klamath County. State of Oregon, and dated the 20th day of June, 19.14. and recorded In Volume 103, Deed Records of Klamath County, OrKon, at page 277. free and clear of all adverse claims of the defendants, and each of them, and direct that any such claims, or any of them, be null and void, and that the defendants, and none of them, have any right, title, estate, lien or interest what soever in or to said real property, or any part thereof, either at law or equity and forever barring said defendants and each of them, from asserting any claims whatsoever In or to said real property adverse to the plaintiff: removing from the plaintiff's title to said real property, any cloud by reason of any claim of the defendants or any of them; This publication served upon you pur want to an order of the Honorable DAVID R. VANDENBERG. Judge of the above entitled Court, dated the 12th dav of December, 1947: which said order directs the first publication of this sum mons to be had the 16th day of Decem ber. 1!M7, and said summons to be pub lished once a week for four consecutive weeks. I- ORTH SISEMORK Attorney for Plaintiff 7.11 Main Street Klamath Falls, Oregon. D. 18-2.1-30. 3 6. No. 933. Opening Day Is Now A Holiday MEADVTl.I.J! Po .Ton a iu, CIO employes of the Palmer Well- I m iwi company win nenceiortn have a new paid holiday the open ing of the Pennsylvania deer sea son. Last December 1 most of the 100 employes, members of the CIO United Steclworkcrs, took off for the woods to get their. deer and the plant had to close down. So Robert W. Palmer, president of the firm, decided to make the holiday a formal one. "Shucks " he CONTROL MEET SALEM, Jan, 6 (ft The state board of control will meet today for the first time since the Christmas holidays. Secretary of State Earl T. New bry returned to his office Monday, ; while Governor John H. Hall will come back today. Both- have i been absent since before Christmas. I PUMICE TILE For Every Building Need e e e "There it no Finer Pumice Tile Mode." see Klamath Pumice Tile Co. 1040 Owen Phone 4019 "Nunn-Buih Shoei"" Just Received! Large Shipment of Arrow and Manhattan Colored Shirts 3.25 to 5.00 Showing the new Kent Collars! WHITES also are available In several collar styles. y Sine. If II- MANSTORI- JANUARY SUll7a.lTuS iM dramatic accents tell the smart Vy new story of important and " ik s T1700 1 a 26" M Beautiful winter coats with popular hoods! fl r"Tfj "Hi ' V c,.:. ii.i .i.. ...i i 1 1 i W ' i V .i,.iwi duns ui uii-wwr, yicuiiy ivuuicu lor jH Sears January Clearances! Assorted colors. ff j jL blouses JJ Ji MA R-2-" 199 J? JJS Re 1.98 99 ty: v -Jf Lovely blouses in whites and colors to match your suits and skirts. Sizes 32 to 38. hats B8 V 1 Reg. 2.49 I in winter white The season's most wanted hat silhouettes in the year's most popular color! Wonderful complements for tailored or dress-up costumes . . . priced at the unbelievable low of $1.88. . . . Attractive open mesh veiling, feather and ribbon trims in black, brown, coffee. w SEARS Store Houn 9 to 5:30 133 So. 8th Phone S188 added with a eleam In his eve. "we 1U Mala FASHION PARK. like to go, too."