Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, July 13, 1949, Page 1, Image 1

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By FRANK JKNHINH
JN Washington IhU morning. Sli
Hrrrelery Arhreun lietly opposes
any rut In our projected billion and
hull program to provide arms for
Western k'urnpe. lit thla fig
tire represent the absolute min
imum needed I fur salely.l .
P you lived away out In the woods,
and tilt wolvea were a constant
ntrniri, and you were the only one
In tin neighborhood who could af
ford to buy guns, you'd probably
buy iuiu for your nrighburs,
wouldu't youT
Even If you had to cut down on
anma of your l.KSrt rlHMKNTIAL
M-ncliii to find Hie money.
)1IK Ulk a lot about aecmlly In
thru daya. I
Don't KVKIl forget tliat the NO. 1 i
FKOUItn Y Is preservation of our
national rxlalrm.
pHlHONAU Y, I think our mil- I
llary coata art extravagantly ,
tl'Jali and rould b greatly reduced ;
better buinru manaxemrnt Hut :
tlial'a nrlllirr here nor Uirrr. Wevu j
got to have adequate defense, no
mailer what It coala. , '
PIIK papers are full of Ui Hilllsln
dollar cruu and whet sill bap-1
pen If It lan I relirved. If you ve
never paid murh attention to the
complicated buaineaa of foreign ex
change, thia thought may occur to
you: !
Why don't we Juat print rwue do!- ;
Ul and CIIVK KM TO THE
ItltlTIMII? I
IT un I aa almpla aa thai.
form tl trade ran only be bal-
atlced by EXCHANGE OK THINOH
Monry 'dollars, ouuuda, kroner.
lieaoe. alntyal la only the grease j
that keeps the wheels moving. Only ,
THINGS count in foreign trade.
The British are buying morel
THINOH from ua than r buy flora '
thrra. That a where the rub coiuea.
TF we print more dollars and gie
them to the Brltlah so iney can
buy more things from us. we'll aim- i
ply be OIV1NU AWAY OUR BUB- j
rtl'ANCfc and getting nothing In re-
turn. ;
1
HNOTIII.K ahallow thought may1
occure to yuu:
Why don't the British pay their
bdle with gold'
...
QNK good reason la Utat e already
have moat of the gold In the
wot Id. Tor yeara we. been buying
all over the earth paying for II
In r-APKH 1X31.1. Alls, which have
been used to buy from ua the
TIIINOri thai me have produced In
our fartorica, on our farms, etc. i
The net mult of all of It la that
we have the gold imusl of It burled
In the ground, at Port Knog anJ I
elsewhere! and the people from t
whom we have bought It HAVE
THE THINGS.
NOTIIFJl thought for you to muil
in your mind:
What good will all IhU gold do!
u it the real of the world faila in :
the future to produce enouah I
THINOH to awap back to ua for the
gold?
Or If we rrfue to BUY the thlnia
the real of the world producea?
... I
COMB things to remember:
" Only THINGS count.
You can't eat money or wear It,
or aheltrr yourartf with II.
ALL trade mot merely foreign
trade) haa to function aa a TWO
WAY afreet or It won t function at
all. If trade flowa ONE WAY too
long, there will be a aurplua at one
end and a vacuum at the other.
When that happen, we have
hard limes.
1 nr i
"I I -Xifirx- h
; - V
m ! (MA
:! 1
STILL WALKING Pot Patterson, hired picket for local 220,
AFL laundry and dry cleaning workers, continues to make
his appointed rounds os the union's strike against A, D. Lam
bert's Klomoth Cleaners passes the one-year mark. Lambert
A watches from the door of his establishment.
Forest Fire
RipsThrough
Pine Timber
By The Aaaorlatrd Press
A forral (Ire waa swrcplnr over
four aquara mllra of the Malheur
national fur rat today (Wednesday!,
aa Orrgon awrllerrd In another day
of heal.
The blase one of nearly it aet by
lightning en the Central Orrgon
forrat Jumped out of rontrol yra
trrday aflrrttoon and ale through a
I by 4 mile atrip ef fonder oa pine,
young Umber, anaga, and aagrbruah.
Purrst auiervlaora rxjiected to
rnntrol the blare by thla afternoon.
Two thirds of It were alrrady flre
trailrd, and 200 men anil six csier
plllar tractora were working on the
rest.
J. E. Elliott, fire assistant for the
forrat, headquartered at John Day,
rrported the worst burning condi
liona the forrat haa had In a decade.
"The long aprlng and the dinight
have Irft the woods tindrr diy,'' hr
aald.
Kmall Urea
The other lightning. art fur on
the forrat were email, and all had
been controlled.
A toe-acre alaah fire on l.ot rrrek
In Cooa eounlv wa hreuihl under
eonlrol laat nlthl after an all-day
fight.
The slate kepi alert atalnal fire
haaarda again today, aa another day
af high Irmperalurra and dangrr
euale low tauaaldlllea prevailed.
Itul Hie wind dlrrrllen gave hope
le foresters. W hat Ihev feared ml
waa a allir rasl wind that would
aprrad aay small blase; and the
lereraal waa for norlhwrat brreae.
Tempetatures hovered In the
nineties over much of Orrgun yea.
trrday, and e niaiimum of loo waa
reported by the alate forrat patrol
at Oranta Pbmi.
Mrdfaed and Ontario rerorded M:
Klamalh rails It: Kedmond. Roaei
barg. Burns and Pendleton II)
alem. The Itallra. and r eiene. aa;
la t.rande ga; and Peelland ga.
Only the raaal was root, with tem
peratures la) Ibe littles.
Operator Of
Tavern Guilty
On Beer Count
Char let l.lticUnv. oprrttlnr of
Tiny uvern. Mm-ill Lakrvtr
Junction, ftu ronvitrtsfd ymndtf
rtemnun In twtlrv court on a
mUulrmrMtior civane of artlinf brrr
to minor.
eVnteiK pemtpunrd until
ThurMlity.
Convtrtrd Hh Uirduy ai
Orarff DarlifK (Sharp, barmaid at
lha tavrrn. Thry tmc a prooablt
fine of up to iauo
I ''' and Mum Sharp mere
arrujbfd of arllluc brrr to thrrc
Klamath Union high athonl tun.
I? and IS yean of aire, the niuht
and early mornlnc of May 13-14.
Tlrf-y denied nrrvint the minora.
The tli-man jumic court Jury
remmmended lemrnry. Both art
free on I1&0 bail each.
Portlanders Get
Water Warning
PORTLAND. July II 0P1 fort
land la uaing more than 130.000 000
gallons of water day and houae
holdera have been aakrd to observe
alternate-day sprinkling.
Olen Morrow, general managrr of
the water bureau, aald the long,
hot, dry spell is putting aurh a
heavy drain on the water evatcm
that pressure la falling off. There
la plenty of water In the Hull Run
reservoir on Mount Hood, however,
he aald.
iewf1" 77 u n, .. ,.. ui - i , .
. . o h . -
rKICR I'lVE CK.NTIf i- .--vVv ' KLAMATH KAI.LH, OKf.tiON, WKONKNUAY, ji ly h, 1M
. .V1 '
Solon Says
Soviet Yill
Avoid War
WAMIIINf.TO. Jul IS "ft
A belief thai Rtiavaia will avoid war
any lime mod was offered by Hen
ator Hmer Thomai U-OkU. to
dar "the underlying reaon" for
rut ling appropriation for the
armed tervire.
"I think everyone agree right
now that Hutwia hi In no rood It ion
for another war. Thomas told a
re pearler. "Not too cr.g ago, we
were told we anlcht be bombed aav !
minute."
Thorn a callrd a cloaed-dnor aea
rvlon, tartlng at 9 a. m. KiTT to
day, of a aenatr appropriations
aubtommltlee to art on futida for
the army, navy and air force for
the next 12 monihi.
Hlf Klaah
T think e ran aafrly rut $1,
ftoo.uoo.ooo and perhajM a lot more
nut of thin bill ai It paaaed Uvi
houne," Thoma aald.
The hue approved juat under
f liaaaaaa.aea N raah and roo tract
authority for the armed aervkea
In this blggent of alt regular ap
propriation. OellheraUona of the arnate aub
romm 1 1 tee ma y tab e several da vs
and then thry will be rrvtrwed
and subject to rbange by the full
ll-tnember appropriations commit -tee
before going o the senate.
Meanwhile, the aenato drive to
eul bark government spending and
balance federal outgo with uwome
offered a mixed picture.
F.cromy r Harts suffered a set
back late veaieeday whew the an
nual Interior department monry
bill waa approved by the appropri
ations committee. It contained
VUM.MW.ewa ruh, more than 154.
Ot.eot abovo the llguro approved
bv the house, and nearly 17
too con tract authority, or some
MOM. more than the novae.
(Contract authority permits a gov
ernment agency to eon tract for
pro)ecta, with the money to be ap
propriated later .
Klamath USER
Project To
Get $803,460
A total of M.0 was'reconi
mend for the Klamalh reclamation
project lor the current nscai year
today by the senate appropriations
committee In Washington.
Reclamation officiate here aald the
amount la "about what waa asked"
for the orolecl here, although It la
allghlly under the previous allow-
anre br the house of M50.000.
It is about equally divided In op-
erallon and mainlenance costs and
construction allowances. It covers
considerable worlt already alarted
such as the diversion channel en
largement, channelisation In Lan-
gell valley and some lateral develop
ment In the Tulelake area,
Thla appropriation la not con
cerned with other proposed develop
ment In the Klamalh area, such as
Boundary dam which may be built
on the upper reachea of Lost river
That project la still In the picture as
a flood control measure, and la un
der consideration at the Sacramento
and Denver USHR offlcea.
AFL Laundry, Dry Cleaning
Union Fickets Finish Full
Year Of Picketing KF Shop
One solid year of parading bark
and forth along the 25-foot stretch
of pavement before Klamath Clean
ers, 431 Main, la the record hung
up today by pickets employed by
local 710 of the AFL Laundry and
Dry Cleaning workers.
And the picketing still goes on.
It waa a year ago, on July 13,
lleta, that the small union posted
Its plckela on Main atreel to call
attention to a grievance between
the union and A. U. Lambert, owner
of the establishment. .
The difficulty started when the
union went on an "extended meet
ing" strike June 30. closing down
all dry cleaning plants In town. The
strike was settlrd July 9 on he
basis of a 10-ccnt hourly y laiae
and vacation concessions with all
plants except Klamath Cleaners,
Lambert did not take back his
union employes, kept his plant open
with non-union help and In general
kept doing business at the aame
old stand. He was put on the central
labor council's "unfair" list July S.
The union first planted lis pick
eta at the shop two In front and
two at the bark door July 13. An
am billons plan, of photographing
customers of the plant "for union
- - i
' - y
RESCUERS AID PLANE CRASH SURVIVOR? This picturtvtoken yesterdoy at the Susana
pass Site of the tragic commercial airline crdsh shows rescuers plowing through heavy brush
to aid survivors of the mountoin crash which -claimed of least 35 lives.
Plane Yields 40
I Bombay; New
Denies Fears
BOMBAY. India. July U or The
reln-eaaa.ee ndrrbntah ea Chat-
kepar hill today yielded the eodiee
f te ef the tl perssma killed yeater-
ear In the flaming crash or a Koral
,)nUh RIM
airiiBrr en oomDaj
hihirid.
Thirteen of the dead were Amerl-
can ncwa correspandeiila. The bodies
of all but one ol the correspondent
! r." """" ""
c""-
Hundreda et p e 1 1 e e ,In(
through snonaoon tmlna ewnUnaed
'he search for five missing bodies.
Luggage aboard the iU-fated plane
; aa ereu
The plane, a Constellation, crashed
on the sou-foot high hill while pre- ;
paring to land at an airfield IS
mtlea north of Bombay. Controller :
of Airdromes Shumsnere Jung aald :
the field waa "perfectly okay" at the
time of the crash and that other
aircraft had made takeoffa a short
time before.
The American consulate received
Instructions from the U. 8. state
department to have seven ot the
bodies of the correspondents ere-
use only" waa atarted then aban
doned quickly when it became ap-
parent that gome customers were
going to put up hearty objection to
being photographed
Aa the summer of 1948 wore on
and the strike began to sap the re
sources of Local 1!0, the picket line
waa reduced to Just one or two per
sons, working five-hour shifts when
ever the plant's doors were open.
They stuck It out during summer
heat, rain and sub-aero winter
weather.
The controversy gradually wore
down to what it Is today, a "matter
of principle" tl'i .union a principle
and that of Lar.a.crt.
The plant owl t on the anniver
sary of the strike today said he
nt ill hadn't changed his mind and
figured he could hold out Indefi
nitely. The union Is being helped
out financially by Its International
affiliate and likewise shows no sign
of giving in.
And the sight of pickets on Main
street has become a familiar one.
Klamath Cleaners happens to be
one of the oldest dry cleaning es
tablishments in town. It was atarted
In 1W11 by Bob Robertson, who now
lives in Gold Hill, and waa later
taken over by Lambert! father.
plot in
Bodies At
York Writer
Of Sabotage
mated at the request of relative
I who want the ashes arm to them. '
, )a Hong Hama;, Mrs. Dorethv ;
Brandon af the New Vera Herald
Tribune, denied that ahe had re-
, tmea i. kMrtl the Diane because
, she had feared It woald be aabav '
taged.
j 8ne uid ,h, wanted It made
, -TPTT rr itlti i m not aospeet
! aaboUge."
I j Manila ye.terdav. William R.
Mathews, publisher of the Tucson. ,
, Aru uld Mr,. Brandon had
, ,,,, nlm ,,,, wouidn t board the
pl,ne ,t Batavla because "it's going :
; to be sabotaged as sure as you live.
Mrs. Brandon aald In Hong Kong.
however, that she and Mathews had .
made BP their minds In New York,
before the correspondents' Journey i
had begun, not to make the return :
i trip with the ethers. She told
interviewer ahe and Mathews were
i the enlv enea among the party who
' had planned te go north after the
: Batavla lour.
.
Hot Veather
Forecast Here
Hot. lary summer weather Is still
on the docket for Klamath people,
most of whom are finding work dif
ficult In this week's scorching after
noon temperatures.
Forecast for tonight and Thurs-
rf.w I. foe fair weather with the
I trm tm hlttll,g M , u
ton,orrow. mercury aet a new
season record Tuesday with the
dnv's high at 92 degrees.
Goverment fire weather forecasts,
provided for use by the Klamath
Forest Protective association, pre
dict continued warm weather with
the humidity low through Thurs
day. Friday and Saturday.
City Firemen Aid
In Trash Burning
' The clly fire department Is happy
to assist as much aa It can with
burning off weeds and rubble
around town, and urges property
owners to contact the fire station
before doing any burning.
Firemen are doing considerable
burning ot weeds In vacant lots
around the city and will assist prop
erty owners with burning if they
can.
It la not necessary to have a writ
ten permit before burning trash or
weeda, but It la required to call the
fire station for oral permission.
Crash
Alaska Called
Weak Spot In
US Defenses
: WASHINGTON'. July 13 ) A
senate committee was told today
that "Alaska is weak" and "Uncle
Sam ia asleep In the north again."
! The statements were made by
Fergus Hoffman, atatf correspond
ent of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer,
who said he waa assigned to make
1 an investigation of the territory's
defenses by lb Hearst newspapers.
In prepared testimony tor the
senate appropriations subcommittee
handling funds for the armed serv
ices. Hoffman said:
"Military men are not exactly In
the most favorable position to tell
the public the plain truth that
Alaska la in sorry shape, that de
fenses are not what they must be
to be what their name Implies."
Hoffman urged that Alaska's de
fenses be strengthened with more
military bases, the military be given
more money to provide troops to
defend the bases it now holds and
that a rigid perimeter warning sys
tem be immediately established
with maintenance there of forces
sufficient to repel any intruder.
WIN
OREGON CITY, July 13 v The
Oregon City American Legion Junior
baseball tram defeated Stayton 6-0
here last night.
Ditch-Digging
Can Be Fun-lf
You Hit It Rich
CINCINNATI, "JiiIt 1J (Pi
Whs save dltrh-aiggtng can't be
fun? Mrn working en a down
town building excavation here
think It la.
While digging yesterday, thry
broke Into a long-forgotten wine
cellar and discovered hundreda
of bottles of that delirious fer
mented drink. Some of the wine
was more than log years old.
"The best wine we're ever
tasted.' they heartily agreed.
The bottles bore faded lbela
saying the contents were "In
valuable for general debility,
loss nf appetite, prostration and
nursing mothers."
The spirits, then about 75
yeara old. ahould be consumed
three times a day," aald the
labels.
Old time Cincinnati residents
said the cellars were part of the
old Longworth Wine House
which went out of business more
than St years ago.
WEATHER
Klauia Vail. sa4 Vlelallr
Cl.ar lar.sia TB. radar. M'lb
.Ik a,a as. L.w uaigai as.
Mas. IJ.Ir It) aa alia.J4
realaiuu.a lael 14 fea.ri S.
Telrpheoe gill
Cayse
Fist Fight
Checked As
'Possible'
LOS AVGELF.R. July 11 lP Of
ficial sources differed today wheth
er a fight abaurd an airliner easaed
it te crash and explode It aallea
north of here with a loss of 15 Mree
and Injuria le 14.
A C-4fj transport operated by
8tandard Airlines snagged a wlng
tip yesterday In the Santa Susana
mountains In a fog and exploded on
a steep canyonside In what civil
aeronautics board inspectors aald
was the worst non-scheduled flight
accident In the nation's history.
Jaaaea V. Peyton, regional CAB!
chief, as id that a brief fight be-1
tween twe aaen nasaengera appar- j
ently did not cause the crash. He
made thia statement after talking te I
asiTTrrora. Peyton aald the crash !
acenried an now and a half after
the scran.
Howerer, Capt. I R. PowelL chief
pilot far standard, aald hie Investi
gation eonvrceed htm the battle
canaed the tragedy. He described
the pilot of the twin-engine craft.
Roy G. White, as highly skilled and
careful. White waa killed.
8tanley Weiss, airline president.
expressed belief that the fight 'may
have contributed to the crash."
Has pension Order
Standard Airlines previously had
been ordered by the CAB to discon
tinue flight operations next week
for violating retulationa.
A half hour before the crash.
Pilot White had radioed Lockheed
airport at Burbank that he wanted
police to atand by to arrest one of
two men passengers who had been
fighting aboard. He aald one man
' area badly beaten. The plane was
inbonnd from New York.
A aaaeeager. Mrs. Mary Settle ef
Lang Beach. Calif, amis! ahe saw the
fight (she aald ahe saw a swan hit
the man next te him Jaat enee.
Stewardess Vicky Zebdorf aald In
a Long Beach hospital that ahe
awed her Hfe te the tussle She
j aald ahe tare np her seat te the
i man who waa etrwefc. The nun In
j that aeat waa killed. She aald the
' twe men had been fighting the day
I before also.
! When Mrs. Zelsdorf saw they
j were going to crash ahe threw a
I blanket across her knees and abdo
l men. Doctors said thla was her
I maternal Instinct to save her un
j born child, which they hoped to
' save. The stewardess was serious
j ly injured.
Normal Approach
i CAB Chief Peyton arrived on the
j scene- 90 minutes after the crash.
He said the plane was making a
normal approach for a landing at
1 Lockheed and waa on course, except
I that It was too kr. He aald the
t altimeter waa working and that
i "there was no apparent malfunc
j tlons of the engines or structural
failure of the aircraft."
t He haa recommended a formal
j hearinr and aald investigation at
'. the scene will continue aereral days.
"I believe we knew what caused
the crash." he aald, adding that the
information would come out at the
hearing. He declined to disclose
the reason before then.
Second Recall
Petition On
Elliott Filed
PORTLAND. July 13 (IP) Two
young democrat leaders have Joined
! Multnomah County Young Repub
licans In sponsoring organization of
a committee to work for the recall
of Sheriff M. L. Elliott.
Don C. Walker, president of the
County Young Republicans, said a
public meeting tomorrow night
would name officers of the group di
recting the campaign.
A new recall notice, which must
be followed up within 90 days with
petitions bearing some 30.000 signa
tures. Is planned. A recall notice
filed Monday by two republicans
was declared yesterday to be faulty.
Walker announced after a con
ference yesterday that he and
Walter Dennis, president of the
Multnomah County Younc Demo
! crats, John M. Winkler, first vice
president of the Young Democrats
of Orrgon; R. J. Burke and Max
Donnelly. Portland republicans,
were calling the publlo meeting.
Neither of the two young political
party members' organizations are
to have an official part in the ac
I tual campaign. Walker aald. "Some
. body had to start It and we felt
thla was the best way," he ex
! plained.
Elliott still waa keeping quiet
after an Initial reply to the rerll
action In which he said he 'had
only begun to fight" to stay In the
office he took over In January.
Plants Not
In Line To
Be Struck
PITTmil ftCH. July 13 m The
CO lolled Bteelworkera today ac
cepted a presidential proposal te
avoid a etael stria, for en daya. But
Union President Philip Murray aald
be woald call a strike tomorrow,
effective af midnight Friday, against
thoaa companies who declined Pres
ident Trwman'a acopoaai,
The walkout will be effective at
midnight. Friday. July IS, aald CIO
President Philip Murray.
Murray said be had no definite
information on which companies
would be struck but that they ap
peared to be the U. 8. Steel corp..
Republic Steel corp., and Bethlehem
Steel corp- "a far as my present
Information goes."
Murray's telegram to Truman
aald:
-. . . We will eontinoe te work
ander the terms of the eaUeetrre
bargaining agreement not In effect
for a period of fe days from July la,
IMS. with respect to those com
panies who likewise accept yenr
proposal and agree te continue ep
eratione during thla period . . , and
to appear before the board (fact
finding beard) ..."
strike Call
Murray told a newe conference
alter the 'unions 170-man wage
policy committee ratified acceptance
of the presidential proposa. of his
plana to call a sinks "sometime
tomorrow" against companies op
posed to the plan.
Murray said a total of 315.00
workers In el steel company plants
were now working under contracts
which permit a possible strike. Oth
er companies could be struck later.
Murray apparently waa vnawarn
that Wheeling 8teet and Yeauigs.
town 8hcet Tab also hare re
jected the sareaMent'i pripaaal far
farCfinding board.
M array aald eompanlfa which as
cent the sareasdent'e mapaaal wonla
be aaaed te eon tinna contract negs
tia lions en the onion's demands for
wage Increases, penal ana and an-
Reds Loose
Fresh Blast
!At Mac Policy
! WASHINGTON. July 13 UP) Rut.
: sis charged today that Gen. Ooug
I las Mac Arthur and the Japanese
1 government are carrying on a
brutal" campaign against the
"democratic forces" In Japan.
Soviet Ambassador Alexander ft.
Panyushkin told the 1 1-nauon far
eaatern commission also that
American policies have brought the
"Japanese economy to a state of
total collapse."
Panyushkin called on the com
mission to rule that workers in
Japanese government enterprises
may bargain collectively and go on
strike.
Ms Arthur and the Japanese gov
ernment have forbidden strikes on
government enterprises.
Panyushkin declared that all the
Pacific allies but the United States
favor giving strike right to govern
ment workers. He charged the Unit
ed States ha tried "by all possible
means" to keep the commission
from adopting a policy on this
Issue.
"Hot Shirt" Is
Latest Prank
CHICAGO. July 13 0FV-The lat
est gag of the "hot foot" type I a
new and perilous "hot shirt."
Arthur Bard told police he was a
victim aa he stood on a street cor
ner last night talking with friends.
Four youths, he said approached
him and squirted lighter fluid on
the back of lua shirt then tossed a
lighted match on the wet spot
He waa slightly burned on the
back before he could rip off the
shirt. His friends seised the can of
fluid from one ot the boys, all of
whom fled.
Murderer Hides
iOn Wafer Tower
I LIMA. O, July 13 lP A War-
ren, O.. murderer, trapped In an
i escape attempt this morning, acaled
a 130-foot water tower t the Lima
'state hospital.
He still is there.
Dr. K. E. Bushong. hospital su
perln' dent, said he would 'alt
nut the patient, Raymond Jutlla,
34.
Dr. Bushong said Jutlla escaped
a small courtyard at 9 a. m. today
by scaling a wall crossing l m l
and ascending a wall on the other
side. As guards closed in, he ran
to the ladder leading to the top os
the tower and climbed the 130 feet
in less than two minutes.
Dr. Bushong told newsmen:
"Jutlla will get elthet tired, hun
gry or sleepy and eventually he
will come down. We will wait him
out."
BULLETIN
VATICAN t'lTY, July 11 IIP)
The Vatican today decreed manr
excommunication ax a In a f commn
nlata. The decree waa issued by the
sacred congregation of the holy
office. F.xeommanlratlon enta off
t'atholieo from participation In
the eaeramente of the church and
the society ef the faithfnl.
)