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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (May 17, 1948)
MONDAY, MAY 17, 1948 HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON PACE THREE Wreckage Of Guard Plane Holds Bodies ' KKI.NO, VIi., May 17 M'j The huillr. of Ultra Ori'siili imilimul unril airmrii have hrru fntiiicl near Hie shuttered wreckage (it a llIH A III liunilier Hint crushed Into llnlnl intiunluhi rust uf here over a tmiiilli ". Tim plunn win loculcd yesterday, a dny nller the body nl one of the t'lirlliintl ulrincn will fiiiiud nrii hi tnllcri'd piiriiiliiilii about ail) feet from the scene of the crush. The plmin hnd vuliUlii'd April U nn It ap proached I'lirlliiud nlr bane. Trlrd Jump ('mills (utility Sheriff ('. V. Key iiiiltta snlil rigt. Jurk St'liuylur, 110, apparently linri trlrd lu puruclititr lo rurlli lit ft vuln attempt tu llvr. The liters, I'apl. Alrxunilrr MrCorkle, 211, mill I'l C Jack T. Tulle, IK, ap parently were klllril wlirll the plane .luininrd Into llin liiiiuntultl. All Here rortlamlrrs. The nci-ne wan 23 miles eiul nt Castle Hoik III A louucil uvcr tract 'owned hy the Wcyrrliuciwrr Tlmher company. The plmie waa broken In lo small pieces hy Ihn Impact. Hritrrh for the plane hml been halted lute In April. It wa. re suill' I Saturday when hl. Nchay Iiir'a buily waa (omul by sheriff's 'tpullra who entereil the urea alter fj finite park hum brutuht here hy a Hrl.u rr.ldritt. The plane wreckage was alihleil yr.trrduy fniin the air by Paul Nainer. Knufliwcat Wa.li Inctitll air aearrh ruunllnatnr. Where Does Your Tax Dollar Go? COUNPY UNIT HIGH' WITHIN THE MAUN PARK OIJTAlCT' TAX DOLLAR COMBirllD uiv r 41 CUHHthl " omnict l.eiM ' ' .. , , , , J-C OUM l00l COum uw I 'a ' high .CmOOi 191 COUhli Uh'1 ltlMIN1a kCHOOt '!' In the Malln area, uulalde or lawn liul within the park illatrlrt. the tai levy fur IIM7-4H amounted lo HI mills, and the division of earh dol lar went like IhUt for the park dlatrlrt IfUl per rent, rounty for rur rent eaprnae IU.ZH per cent, county library .01 per rent, schools 60.S5 per cent. Boyle's Column UN Loses Big Attraction When Gromyko Quits Post Truck Smashes Safety Sally MKHH1IX, May nllunrda of the schools highway crossing were brought lu the Httrntlon of pnrrlita and othrr Merrill rcslilcnta when truck ruumletl the curve Jut beyond the Merrill lilth school mi hlKhwny 3U. aiiuck "Hafeiy Bally" flmire, knocked II oil the road and Mat tered broken piece In the sraan. The driver ied on lil way with out Uiipliii or reHirtlng the Inci dent, According to City Mamhal fjmltli, Information from an unnamed per aon led to Identification of the truck by yellow paint mid upllnten from the "Surely Hiilly" on the truck body. Bmltli naid the truck wb owned by lluylenn utl Jot ConMruciInn company. The driver, r. A. Surratt. appeared before Ma Ifarllerode, actum police Judue. pled millty lo the clinrue nualnst him and paid M) fine, phu court cnMa. It l neceaiuiiy for the lilnh and Junior lush achwil atuilenta to croaa the highway to (jo to the cafeteria at noon and many of them ern the , hmhway lo no to and from their .honira. Una la the tenth 'Safety 'S illy'' that ha been broken alnce they were put III ue at the becln miiK of the year, but the first lime office were able to determine the eaunf. Delegates Not Bound By Unit Regulation BKATI'l.t, May 17 The WafihliiKlon deleiiutlon to the re publican national convention next month la not bound by a unit rule. Oeorue Klnnear of rientlle. one of the deletiatea to the atate conven tion, explained today that the con vention did not bind the deleitatei lo vote aa unit and hence r.ch delriinte may follow hla own prefer ence at the Philadelphia meeting. Klnnear added that the 19-mem-ber roup could not bind Itaclf to vols aa unit either. He auld the majority ha no power over Uie minority. Claaalfled Ada Brlnn Real Reaulul CVER PAY MORE? ACCIPT IESS? VOTE FOR Fenton Mahrt Republican Candidal for SHERIFF Young, rl vie minded, I yean practical perienrc. Fair and Impartial. World War II rcL M. Adv. !'( Mhrt lly iiai, novii: NKW YOHK, May 17 iI'i The United Niitlona la lining Ita hlgneat drawing card thla auinmcr with the dcpiirturo of Andrei Andre- yevlch Oromyko, the "o I d e t young mini In the worlfl." Luke Bucc won't be quite the aiima with out the black, browed Rtuuilnn delegate, a boy wonder ' of the . . .1.1 i,. a i p i o in a v i c i ?r world. Perhapn f nn man hla aire In hlatory ever HAL noVI.B aald "no" on more major lwiuca In ao ahort time. lie put hl "noca" Info the record ao often tlit even the ncwa chron icler! are mixed up In the box core. One morning newnpaper here put the total lit 23. Another credited lilm with 22 putoula and nn ftaalat from Andrei A. Vlnhliwky, who aet the Soviet pattern with the flrat veto, delivered In London. "Thunder" Man Oromyko whoae nickname "Orom" mean thunder" In hla own language merely announced lie wiui going home to Moacow for hla flrat vacation In three yearn. Other diplomat here believe, how ever, hla departure may algnal hla elevation to an even higher policy making atatua In the Soviet atruc-ture. At 38 Oromyko already has be hind him a brilliant career In world diplomacy, moat of It apent In the United Statea. He came here flrat In 1030 aa counsellor to the RUMlan embaaay In Waahlngton. In 1043 he became ambaaaador hlmaelf, perhapa the youngest man only 34 ver to repreaent major power here. He replaced the veteran and friendly Maxim Lltvlnoff, and aome obaervera at the lime anw In hla appointment a cooling off of the Soviet Unlon'a relation toward the weaU-rn power. Little has hap pened alnce to dlcl that belief. Diligent and aloof, "The Orom" becume a atandout attraction of the United Nation aeaalon after he took hla fumou walk during the aecurlly council deliberation of the Iranian problem. The flrat queatlon nine out of ten vlnllora to Lake Succea asked win: "Can we aee Oromyko?" And they also came to ak: "Will he give a veto today?" An Occaalon It win alwaya an occaalon when he auld no. Bomctlmc he did It with a clipped "nyet." Sometime he did It with a 40-mlnute addreas. Suaplclou and often critical of the American pre, Oromyko now and then has joked with newsmen assigned to the United Nation. Once, after he had declined com ment on several questions, a re porter said lightly: "Well, Mr. Oromyko. maybe you can answer thla. Where can I get some vodka?" Oromyko, who drink Scotch nd soda himself, smiled and said: "In Brooklyn there 1 very good vodka." Oromyko like .to read Mark Twain and alao ha become some thing of an American movie fan. His favorite film: "Oone With The Wind." DIES NEW ROCHELLE. N. Y May 17 lA't Dr. Jame E. West. 71, former chief scout executive of the Boy Scout of America, died Saturday. He was bom In Washington, D. C. Tea connoisseurs say Darjeeling, rarest of teas, has no peer for flavor, bouquet, refreshment. Enjoy the thrillingly different ' pi fj flavor of rare Darjeeling MgJgL ,n lree lea... it costs no Jyf inure . . . try it uuuay: TREE TEA Pulp Workers Get; Boost In Wages VANCOUVER, B. a, May 17 UN Signing of a new contract, providing pay Doojita of from 12 to 16 rent an hour for MKK) llrlilh Columbia pulp and paier workers, waa dls cloaed today. The contract, effective May 30 In April 30. HMD, was announced by officials of the Interniilloniil Broth erhood of Pulp. Sulphite and Paper mill union, and International Broth erhood of Piiperniakers. Doth are ACL affiliate. KII.1.H) PORTLAND, May 17 Pi Ocorge Thomas. 34-yrur-old Vanpnrt resl dent, waa fnlally slabbed early Sun day morning In a fight during a party at Vanpnrt. Deputy sheriffs were questioning party guests today. A 28-year-old man waa Jailed pending Investlga. Hon. ft EARL T. NEWBRY Secretary of State Frl T. Newbry'i pin record as a fclilior reveal, thai ht wnrki juM a hard at iht public's buiincii as ht has at hla own. I le works ust hard in product tlie moinitim from the public's dol lars as he did 11 making a record as a succenlul orclitrdiit, business and civic leader. for billet govimmtnl-i ,,kt, kttp Er T. Ntukry Sccttltrf 0 $111, it tor by "Ntwbry loi Sttntory ol Slola Commillaa", Gsna Rouman. Chm., 1135 5.W Yomhill, Potllend S, Oiioon FAalA oj; Hoyul quality MArlr I AT st tmV CAMHcl ft VU9I9 VVU 1.99 VII JWVSI Cold Pack Canner JHolds 7 Jon or 19 Quorts You Sovt At Just... '1.8 9 Cob th aoiy way we the cold pock BMlhodl Sturdy Connor with durable bhie onomol Anbh. 7-of wlro rock. Floor Wax Maid of Honor Wooden Curtain Stretcher 1 89c qf. 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Never theless methlnks the first conven tion waa a two-man affair attended by a couple of our ancestors In the Garden of Eden, Anyway those two boys set an early pattern for conventions; since out of them usually comes a quite similar aftermath. Half of the con venera (jet blKKer and stronger. The other half may not meet Abel's late but they often dissolve Into impotent competition if not Into true oblivion. It wouldn't be much use to review the aolld accomplishments of con ventions. There's rarely a deviation. One who owns a proceedings report of the first convention he attended need never tote home another. The same bird with the same phobia makes the same speech he made last year, offers the same pal liatives and geta the same place nowhere. The committee on ways and means suggests the same ways: no matter how meagre may be the means to grease the ways. ... , At the tail end of the proceedings, th closing session on the last day, when the few yet able to get out of bed assemble among the empty chairs that's when the only new thing happens. The necrology com mittee reports. True, the resolutions are the same ones that Sam Taber wrote back in 1886; but the names are different. About the only thing certain to be new at a convention comes when everybody bows in memory of the departed brothers. Agenda makers haven't yet found a way to have a member die more than once. There are several appealing, If not profitable, reasons. First off, far from the meeting hall, in a dnrk corner oi newly found hide-out, a member from Al buruierque has another from Chilli ccthe hanging on the ropes. From copious quantities of spirits frumcn tl to which he's not accustomed. The New Mexico delegate Is try ing to get a trade secret from a competitor by an age old process not yet outlawed by the fair prac tice act. Whether or not he gets It, he does get himself a comfortable anootful on the firm's money and strength ens his much boasted acquaintance In the trade. Knowing somebody has kept many a guy on a payroll. Then there's another attractive thing about conventions. The boys all get vacations with pay but they're on their own then. They pick Inexpensive places to go and there's no way to get big dinner checks on an expense account. 8o they have their real vacation on the boss at convention time and use their own vacations to recuperate. ... A lot of 'em have found how to take the wife to conventions at min imum cost. Some wouldn't take her along on a bet for reasons of their own but those who would do pretty well. If they can drive, that takes care of her transportation. The bargain convention hotel prices let her slip in double while the old man's ex penses get turned In at the higher per capita slntrle rate. It's a legiti mate way to give friend wife a swell time pretty cheap. The ladies of the entertaining citv take the wife in tew, keep her off hit neck, and If she's smart she brings back an armful of souvenirs or prizes she's won In a bridge tour nament or something. shoe pitcher not to worry about how old yurna are, braves me to recall th hnbltuul convener who had a. terrifically homely wife. For years he had attended alone. Then one yenr ho took her, A pal with whom he had drunk hla way through srorea of conventions, ap prrached him In the hotel lobby and sii Id: "My Ood, joe, I Just passed tha homeliest woman I ever saw In my life. She stands right over there." "That's my wife," sulci Joe. Bill waa profuse with apologies, which went over okay because ht and Joe had so much on each other. By wny of explanation Joe pro claimed: "It's like this, Dill. Every year when I came away I hnd to bid her fnrewell. I ain't as strong na I used to be and when I thought of having to go through It again, I decided I'd rather bring her along than kiss her goodbye." The Hawaiian Islands gradually are pushing up out of the ocean and, within a generation, may form a territory as large as Japan, ac cording to scientists. rm 3 So why do conventions flourish? Encouraged by a famous horse- J. L. DEAN Public Accountant and Auditor New Office Location 306 North 1th SU Phona 9346 M overrfmerfca... Smokers Report IS SIlSElll Him when you smoke PHILIP MORRIS ! wJCr r-HlUP MORMS is DEHMireiY LESS IBRIMTIMG than ony other leading brand! . .! What On. ot America . Ib.uirHair"l,ls line th-n oW , PHILIP MORRIS . . . only PHILIP t cigarettes leave your throat dry, your mouth stale and smoked-out that's "cigar ette hangover". And that's what takes the joy right out of smoking! So remember this . . . 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