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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 20, 1949)
m 0 Hays m by frank jknkinm pllKHIUr.NT TKUMAN, (ldrlng flhrlner t tliflr diamond Jubll In t'hlc), give ua qulrkl plclur ( whale wrong with tha world. He put It Uila way: "After llw aigiilug f Hi' UnlLrd Nalloua charier and Uia collapse of Japan. Uia pnri for which the world had prayed didn't com it didn't rumt. "FOR WE FOUND WI HAD AM ALLY WHOHK IIAHIT IT IH AND WHOM. IIAHIT IT HAS HKKN rllNC'K 1U17 TO MAKK AOKKK MKNTH FOR TIIK PUKPOMK OF BKKAKINU THKM. "Now It la absolutely narsuary thai wa assume tha leadership among tha democracies of Ihe world, an that Uirr will ba anuuiih ruitCki in the world to maintain the peat." UK make two point that art In trrr.inig: 1. Tlier must be FORCE on I ha alda of pcac If pear U to prevail. J. Huui makes aurremctit for Uia purpose ol IIUKAKINU them. "aH to hla that point, her la t n searching qutlon: Why do you obey th law whan yon do? la It because obcdlsnr to law la TlloItT Or do you obey (ha law boraus Ultra might b a cop round' a TTS a III I la of both, ol course. But 1 lha cop haa a lot to do with it. You hit a loin au-alaht strrtch of ruad. Your Hi a hurry. How about hitting It up over Ilia speed limn? You look around. If than la no cop In sight, you tromp down on Uia throttle. It Uiere U a cop around, you re-Uein yourself. Un t Uial about lha way of It? PIIK law U Uia law. Force or no 1 force. It la RIOHT. But It neeu tha cop to mak It work. Praca u praca. It la KIOHT. In Itself. But torra la nrrdrd to msk It tick. You can talk yourself hoars to lha contrary, but that atubboru tact remains. JOW for Mr. Truman arcond had an ally hu habit It la and haa been to maka agreement for Uir purpuM of breaking them. Hard aiprnanrw trachra ua Ui ba raitry about people Ilka that. People wtioM word la no good ar bad propl to ba In busliira with. If clr t urruunrra comiirl you to aworlal with auch catUr. you krrii your liium crossed and laka no crlaiioaa ill arum wmi nuwii o v m keep our finger crossed. Filled m with acknlrauou for l.er flghuux " Dualities, w want ALL OUT for nrr. H wasn't just Prsaldtnl Roosevelt. Wa ALL wmt ovrr board for tha hard-fiihtlni Russians. ' It waan'l wlaa. la la NEVER WISE to o all out for a man who doesn't karp hta word. TN hla Chicago Ulk. tha President la hard-headed and realistic. Ha haa no Illusions. It lake force, ha eaya, to maka praca work. Whrn you deal with aomrbody who doean'l krrp hla word, you let Into trouble. That a good, hard common acme. ITS equally hard sens Uiat whrn a man or a naUon apenda per istenUy mora than la uken In ha (or It) la In for bad trouble. I wiah Mr. Truman could are that fundamental fact aa clearly aa ha arra Uit need for force to kerp the peace and Uia unwladom of deal ln( tolerantly and appeasing ly with a naUon that doean l krrp Ita agreement. TN Chicago, President Truman 1 ipoke off Uie ruff. I like him ben when ha dora It Uiat way. I wouldn t go acrou the atreet to hear the biggest man In the world maka a perch that aomrbody elaa had writ ten. If I'm going to all on a hard aeat and listen to somebody talk. 1 want him to apeak hla own thoughts In hia own wordi. qi'KHTION SAVANNAH, Oa., July 30 1 41 A blind man bought a camera, yester day from Oeorge Qllllna, Savannah photo ahop owner. The man came In, asked for reamer ha could aim by aound, found one he liked and bought It. "I waa too flabbergasted to ask what ha Intruded to do with tha pirtures." aald Ollllna. Administration Opens Fight For Brannan Plan Trial Run WASHINGTON, July 20 W The uniliilalraUon opened Ha house battle for a trial run Brannan farm subsidy program today by calling on democrats nut to "bo led stray by th collusive combination of republican controlled farm or ganisations and tilxlecral." The hou convened two hours earlier thun usual to open th bitter fsrm battle. It saw some of President Truman t best friends on Capitol Hill Joining a democrrttlo-repubUcaii coalition brnt on beating his farm bill. Hep. Ours (U-Trnn.l, usually an administration stalwart but now lending the opposition, drew the bat tle line with a substitute bill Uiat propose to kill th Brannan plan trial run. He proposes to continue lha prcrnt farm program Into 1950. Rep. Ha ball! lU-lll.i Ird off for Uie administration with the talk of a "collusive combination." He called the substitute "this mongrel Oore bill." The Illinois member, chairman of lha hous rules committee, declared the administration bill would re lieve "the consumer of unconscion ably high food prices," whll pro tecting farmer' Income, PHU'K riVIS I'KNTH Feeder Line Air Service Here Talked Klamath t'alla prepared today to make a elgoreua fight for continua tion of adequate air service to met ropolitan renters both north and aaulh of here, at a hearing arhrdulrd by the elvll aeronautic board at Han a-nmctoo Atfgual I. The avlarum committee of (he chamber of rommrrre met this morning to eulllnr thr alrpa la br Ukrn In ronnerUon with a f'Aft InraallgaUon of lha advisability of cancelling t.'nlled Ar Llnra main line eervlr to Klamath and sub stituting feeder line aervlre. 'I'he committee decided to aland staunchly on a policy calling for fast, direct arrvlrr to the metropol itan points, without specifying which companies It would prefer to oper ate the service. CAB haa Indicated rhila far it la considering permitting Houthwest Airwave to operate Into Klamath from the aouth. but haa nof hinted what aervlro It haa In mind from here to Partland and ether northern paints. Wrst Coast Airlines represents llvra were at the meeting today and announced their firm will Intervene in tha case before lha CAB at the August 1 hearing, asking prrmia-' sion to Institute service between Klamath rails and Portland. Southwest la rxiw operating from lha south Into Mrdford. and West Coast la operating from Mrdford north. Similar service would be afforded Klamath Falls If the change Is ordered, taking United out of Klamath. The aviation committee will recommend to the esrrwUee ronr mlltr of tha chamber tomorrow that Henatar Phil llitrhrock and Marnier C harwa Klark be sent o tha Woa raarero hearing, which wao snared weat al tha retjoeat of In tree ted rlllea. S lark aald the CAB Idra aeema to be to bolster Uit economic situation of feeder lines by giving them a number of major cities now served br tha main Una operators. He aald Klamath la primarily Interested In fast, drect service and will fight any proposal to carry passengers from here to Portland or Ban Francisco by "around tha barn" roulea. Quick Action By Milkman Saves House Ralph Ramos. Tnllk truck driver who happened to pasa by at Iht right moment, possibly saved th residence of Mrs Mary Broanan, 41 West Lowell, from destrurUon by fir late yesterday afternoon. Th flamra destroyed new fence and several huudrrd dollara worth of building materials alacX ed on Uia place and damaged a garage close to the house. Ramos attacked the blare with Mrs. Brosnan s garden hose as trie fire was eating Into Uie garage and kept It In check until city fir truck arrived a few minutes later. The fir apparently started aa flare-up of a grasa fir that had supposedly been extinguished yesterday morning. Mra. Brosnan, who has been III and waa frightened by the flames, credited the quick actions of Ramos with saving the new garage and possibly her house. Bnbntli's opening statement de fended the subsidy principle of the Brannan plan and he assailed the Aiken law passed by the republican controlled DOlh congress. This law, set to become effective In 1950 un less congress decrees otherwise would permit flexible 60 to M per cent of psrlty support program for major farm crops. The admlnlalraUon bill would re peal tha Aiken law, and continue rigid supports. The Oore substitute would continue present rigid M per cent of parity price props, and act aside th Aiken law for a year, Senator decided to wait and se what the house does before acting on farm legislation. Chairman Elmer Thomna iD-Okla.) aald after a closed door session of the senate agriculture commute. Thomas declined to make public a report of a subcommittee headed by Senator ailletta (D-Ia.l which rejected Brannan' proposal for a trial run limited to lings. Clllleltc'a report said there was no need for such a program In 1849 because an anticipated drop In hoi prices below government prlc sup port levels had failed to tak plac. Fire S vjeeps Befiveen Lakes Hidge CLEARING FIREBREAK ON BIG BLAZE Pic ture taken by Dan Crawford of Tulelake last night shows Rudy Bibole clearing a firebreok around the Bill Kandra camp on Tulelake as precaution against a huge fire that swept the hills between Tule and Lower Klamath lakes in the night. Photo by Dan Crawford. Air Transport Crashes Into Housing Unit At Seattle On Take-Of f ; Seven Dead, 30 Hurt SEATTLE. July I '" wan-, rbedulrd air transport bound far ( hlraga with It peraana aboard crashed an takeoff last night, killing seven people. Mve at the dead war In nausea damaged by th big plan aa it pued op Jvsg after- leaving Hoeing field. Una waa a paasenger. Th bady wa unidentified. Th plan clipped ulllllv and eut wire. It drmaliabed r damaged flv house, an a rooming house with II reatdenta. Thirty people, 11 af them from th plane, were taken to hospitals after the crash. Latest victim waa Pel Chuntoa. at, ho waa ne af lite Injured Uken fram the rooming house. He died thai afternoon, other reatdenta killed were Frank Morgan, S9: Ed ward rtrlghlramp. 71; Olarl N. Merni, 45, and Ralph Parker. Also dead waa ane paasenger af the plane, Frank Calalira t Ksls- Loyal Troops Seize Palace I In Guatemala GUATEMALA. Guatemala, July JO W President Juan Jose Are valo remained In power today fol I lowing a sudden halt In the fight I Ing which had broken out In this capital. The revolt against his regime be gan Monday on the heels of the assassination of Col. Franclscu Javier Arana, chief of the Guate malan armed services. Fighting continued during Ihe early hour of last night and then gave way to a strange calmness. Loyal troops apparently gained control of Fort Guardla de Honor, believed to be the springboard of Ihe revolt. Police Director Victor Manuel Sandoval said reports received thus far showed 40 persons acre killed during the fighting which had centered for a' time before Ihe na tional palace. (This dispatch ass Ihe first re ceived by Associated Press offices In New York from Guatemala In more than 24 hours. Communica tions had been cut at the height of the revolt.) The uprising was the twentieth announced plot against Arevalo's regime since he was elected In De cember, 1944 to a six-year term as president of this Central American republic. Guatemalan law forbids a president from succeeding himself. A new election la due In 1951. Striking Riders Get Suspension PENDLETON. July 20 m Three eowbofs who Joined a strike at the July Fourth rodeo at Renn. Nev., have been suspendrd from partici pation In any further International Rodeo association events this year. IRA Commissioner E. N. Boylen snld the action bars Clary Carr, VI aalla, Calif.; Gerald Roberta. Strong City, Kas., and Larry Flndley, Phoenix, Arlr., from about 50 top money arenas. Bnylrn snld the action was taken by th IRA exrrutlv commute meeting In Ran Francisco. ALAMATII wau., 4iu:.on. WC-IISHKOAY. JtLY tt, IM9 snsioa. Mlrh. HUH unaccounted foe t waa Lawrenc Eltna, another laseenger, rut auL Th plane failed In U .. . , .nk . nJi ,ii.. IK. . ll.ur. after the : p. .. j'" ; J-J" ' PUTI eraah. of th nUnealof utility aolaa. ,, Unks eialodrd. Injuring laur city firemen. , wer clipped, nlmumg the area , A raU w o ercUmment In M-pa.wngrr plane crashed d-rkswaa and aiarapting com- aitlrt Bl Klamath today for 23 aeronda after It toea aff fram ftae- I muntcaUoaa. ' m, Ing fletd an a aon-arhrduled flight Ita wide wing rutting awaths ! Mooee forest. Wlnema. farm la f hlraga for Air Transport Aa- through frame house, the plane j fuleUhe fire department. Lara aorlate. Inc. I ripped through five Georgetown ad, manumrnt and other area- Amos E. Hrarork. company pre. homes. It buried ita naae ia ane j tlrt mm repreaented by the ftre Ident and a paasrnger aa th structure. fighter wh tackled the big blase plane, aald both engine checked 1 About la minute later it ex- as It broke away last night A large aul "without a sputter" at the end I plodrd. I crew waa standing by today and af th runway. I Durlni that short Interval, pes- the fira waa expected to stay In "But soon after we got into the air ane motor began sputtering and th pilot evidently thoaght It beat to continue. A few arrond later h pulled aaek an the throt tle, apparently Intending to land," Hrarork aald. "Then he perceived almost In stantly that he could not land and pulled throttle again, continu- j Ing t climb with a sputtering en j glne." Woman Hurt iln Accident YRF.KA. Calif.. July 20 Mr. Jeanne VauKlian. 26. of 435 43rd street. San Francisco, was Injured In a three-way accident nine miles north of Yreka early Wednesday morning. The car. a Bulck sedan In which Mrs. Vaughan was riding with her husband, Mtke Vaughan. 43. wa thrown into the Klamath river, which la low at this time of year. In the accident which also In volved two buses, a Greyhound and a Trallways. The woman suffered slight head Injuries. The Vaughans were re turning home after vacationing In I Oregon. Driver of the Greyhound Is Jonn Mock. 29. of Mrdford. He had eight pava-ngers. Trallways driver Is Walter Fontes, 38. of Redding, who had 20 passenger. Vaughan claims he thought the Greyhound pulled out to let him pass. Mock claims he thought Vaughan Intended to pass anyway and wanted sufficient clearance. Th car and Uie Trallways bus hit first according to the report re ceived and threw the car Into the Greyhound. Growers Plan To Rebuild Elevator HEPPNER. July 20 IsV-Morro county grain growers co-operative will rebuild Ihe elevator and ware houses destroyed by Monday night's fire. Karl Blnke, president, said work ould not likely begin until it was determined whether there was an Improved site for Uie grain Instal ls! ion here. He said th co-op would truck 1941)' wheat In Ixlngton for rail shipment to Portland. He said 1' was hoped all current contract could be fulfilled. Meanwhile salvage of grain has begun at Uie scene of Uie 6800.000 fire that leveled two elevators and the warehouses of Uie co-op and the Balfour Guthrie and company',) 'Interior warehouse holding 190.000 bushels of wheat. Insuranc firm wer salvaging th train, h aald. Telephone 1111 i: ". a , Another witness aaid Uie right motor of the plan sputtered, then I Pawer Unea and trleshoo wlrea rvirera lumoed ar were tnrown from the tail af th plane, which ' had been sheared off In the crash. At least five homes were badly ! damaged. The home of George A. ! Cordra, where the plane buried Ita naae, as smsshed to the ground. Tbe roof of one home waa flipped free from ita walla and lay crumpled In the street. Two hundred national guards guards-; Si! men formed lines to hold eroad of thousands endangered writhing electric wires. were visible for miles. Many of th plane passengers were servicemen returning Home an furlough. Thr bodies, badly burned, made Identification difficult. ti,. Mnn'i oHier said one of the victims wore a wrist band Iden- the hero that settles this strike -titvtnr the owner aa a corporal In ! said spokesman for seven truck th 15th lr force. Another had I stevedore firms, the Initials "R. T" an anchor and i Senator Douglas iD-Ill ), sug eeveral X i tattooed on hi right ' rested that the president of the forearm. striking CIO International Long- It ass the second crash of a shoremen's and Warehousemen chartered airplane here within the union try to utile the wage dis- last seven month. Eleven l ale university students, headed back to the campus after Chrlstmaa holi days, were killed when a Seattle air charter plan crashed taking off from the same field January t Three crew members also died. It followed by a week the death of 35 persons near Btirbank, Calif, In a charter flight by Standard Airline of Long Beach. Tax Take Shows Drop WASHINGTON, July 20 0P-The treasury department said Wednes day tax collections for the year ending June 30 totaled 840.448.498, 370 a drop of 81.416.043.925 from the 841.864.542.295 of the preceding 12 months. Populous New York, as usual led all states by paying a total of 87.367.802.709. This amount, how ever, was 8607.711.007 less Uian the state's 1R48 federal tax bill of 87.975,513.716. The Individual Income tax col lections. Including tax withheld by employers, represented the govern ment' largest single source of rev enue 818.029.745.S04 this year com pared to 820.997.780.699 In the last 12-month period. Corporation income and profit taxes were 811.568.383.478 1810.174. 409.833); employment taxes 82.478. 980.012 ( 62.381.342.352) and miscel laneous Internal revenue, 18.374,389, 374 (88.311.009.409). The totals for other states (1948 figure In brackets) Included: Ore gon, 8298,269.485 ( 8316.843.555); Washington (Including Alaska), 8506J16.967 (8533,136.028), WEATHER Klamath ralU: fair ladar Partlf rUaaaJf 14Nlfg.. etBet 1 h ?. f. t w aalUrfl fewrt tu UlM Tbaratfay. Mill, UtUr 1. Low UnigHi M U 41, Mitt. Mas. 'imf lt It Mta rrclatutia lat S4 ktjrt...M N. 2031 Buildings On Title's West Side Spared A fire that awrpt nearly MM acre of the mountain) area be tween Tale and Lower Klamath lakes was held In cheek at noon today after bif crews of fire fighters had labored through the night to keep It away from valu able property along the weat aide of Tule lake. Blamed on a eareleaaly-throwo cigarette, the fir started near the old Kandra sheep corrals on the tt'ett Side road yesterday. It was held In rheek nntil about t pjn, when a stiff breeze sent It sweeping through grass and brashlands. The Tulelake city and rural fire departments answered an alarm as the blaze threatened a potato cel lar craned by ET. Webb Staunton on the West Side road. The fire rolled southward, missing the fish and wildlife service headquarters but moving in toward the Wlnema farms ranch buildings. Tanks Saved Two gasoline storage tanks and a pump house at Wlnema were saved through determined efforts ml the firefighter. The fire burned ' eeath af Ram top mountain and inta the Sheepv peak area. It I burned down aa the Lower Klam I ath lake aide of the ridge and inta what la known aa the Peverty Flat area, but did not touch any Lower StlfMth mln It . I.- ; j,,,,, u,e West Side road, which , . . u Tj- i,k, ,,,,. I , , : The blaze worked Into the Modoc : on.i forest .nd th. control ef- ,. . . - . r.i.,., . 7 " ' mown servo, iuc bound unless blown line by another high wind. Snag Seen In Hawaii Strike a a Negotiations j HONOLULU. July 20 (J"v Em j ployers objected today to nefotiat ing Hawaii's 81-day dock strike with Harry Bridges in Washing ton. They m It Wield final decision, however. "We don't want Bridges to be ; pute with a management represen tative ana a leaerai conciliator. Bridges agreed. But the employ er spokesman said Bridge has never Uken part In negotiations here and the dispute la too com plex to be settled fairly outside Hawaii. The companies aald they would give their answer upon the return from Washington of their attorney. James P. Blaisdrll. The ILWU seeks pay raise from 61.40 to 81.72 an hour for steve dores. Negotiation broke off sev eral week ago. Blowout Cause Of Accident TULELAKE. Calif.. July 20 The blowout of a right rear tire caused an accident this morning which re sulted In the Injury of two-year-old David Pierce, son of Mr. and Mrs. Waverly Pierce of route 2 box 277, Tulelake. The child la not believed to be seriously hurt although he Is be ing held for observation at Hillside hospital, David was a passenger In a car driven by his mother. Mrs. Mildred F. Pierce, 27. The automobile was headed north on Modoc county road 112. Just south of Tulelake. when the tire blew out. The car skidded 200 feet and rolled over three times, according to California State Pa trolman Marvin Daniels who In vestigated. Mrs, Pierce was not Injured, nor was her three -month -old baby which was In a basket on the bark seat of the car. They were brought to Klamath Fall by th Tulelak ambulanc. Shotgun Blasts Cut Down Cohen, Three Comrades LOB ANGELES, July M ( Rlvsl gangster ahotgun fira ro tfawa Gaaiblar Mlrkry Cohan, and thre other persons Including a atata appointed bodyguard for th dapper hoodlum aa th party left a smart sunset strip cafa early today. Critically wounded were Harry Cooper, Ig, a apaeial bodvguara aaaigned la Cohen by the California attorney general, and Edward (Neddie) Herbert, XS, a C ohen henchman. Miss IX David, Zt-year-ld blonde, and Cohen, 11, war hurt lea aerloualy. The a.naitet waa picked aff by a pair ol gunmen, firing from aeroa the street Into a crowd af 25 ar more persona leaving the night spot. Sheriff's Investigator recovered ta brand-new shotguna a block away and CapL D. '. Moultaa aald they might provide a link to Eastern gangstera reportedly trying U mora In an Cohen. Moulton aald hia deputiea found eight shells fired, eorne having contained buckshot, an extra heavy load. The cons, lt-gaug auto matic, each had ana abell left. Cohen, Involved la several nrrvioua shooting affrays, apparently turned as the blasting began, witnesses aaid. Hia henchman, Herbert, last an .nth reported 11 shots had a 1 been fired at him aa he entered ' bia apartment. Cohen la a key figure in the six- zling grand jury inquiry Into police vie Ueupa which already has re- I suited in a wholesale ahakeup of the Los Angeles police department. Guard Assigned Only yesterday Attorney General Fted Howser disclosed that he had assigned Cooper to guard Cohen, presumably because Cohen had ex pressed fear that Eastern gang ster were In town to aasaasinau: him. Barney Kuditsky, cw-ewner f Sherry' restaurant, where the i hooting took place, aaid everybody waa leaving the plac when the ahatgnn charge rang ut The thue waa approximately ts.au PST. "It sounded Ilk firecracker and everybody hit the walk. There were about ZS ar M people an the street at the time. "Cooper yelled. I'm hit'. Ruditaky. a former New York City detective, said the shot came : from across the street In tha vi cinity of the Bing Crosby building which serve as office for the various enterprises of the crooner. Sheriff deputies later found two shotcun across the street. Cohen told District Attorney' Investigator H. Lea Stanley that he didn't "know what the shooting waa. all about." Mkss Flora bet Muir. widely known ' . , ,, ,, ii.. .. , Grsc Sharp, injured in an accl- newspaprr columnist, waa among . , k. h. .,rf-wik a mm i dent at Lakeview, is believed to b thAjnhan. race Darling Sharp. currenUy.m- k k. wr., ,H ., ployed as a waitress at the Airport .slg,x. t nXlc Sr.. i. 23 yrs o, age and Rudruky said h found ht;Jtreet .. .. . empty shrT on Ch other side of t the street. He said apparently in I gunmen had fled on foot. I Girea Chaur Doctors at the Hollywood Re ceiving hospital aald that Cooper had a SO-SO chance to pull through. He received two shot through th abdomen. Cohen, wha franta a a Holly-! wood haberdasher, v ha had many ! arnshea with the law and several 1 with assassins' bullets. A year ax Harry "Hooky" Roth man, hand - urn aasorlau af Cohen, waa slain in Cohen haberdashery. Pollce grilled Cohen extensively in the Bugsy Slegel killing of two years ago but nothing ever came of it. Siegel was ambushed as he sat In the luxurious numslon of International Playgirl Virginia HilL j B-36 Comes In On Wing, Prayer PORT WORTH. Tex., July 20 it A B-36 bomber made a 20-mile flight home yesterday after tt dropped one engine and two oilier engines of the same wing quit working. A Carswell air force base public relations officer said he believed It was the first time the huge, six-englned bomber had flown on the engine of only one wing. The pilot waa Capt. Harold Bar ry of Hillsboro. 111. The plane car ries a normal crew of 15. The air force did not say how high or how fast it as flying. The lnsid engine on the bomb er left wing caught fire, burned Itself free and dropped near Jus tin, in North Texas. This eut the electrical connection to th other I two left-wing engines. I Thl occurred at least 30 mile i north of Carswell. The B-36 land jed at Carswell 23 minutes after the engine started burning. All New Game Appointed By SALEM. July 20 P Governor Douglas McKay appointed an en Urely new game commission today. He said he did not reappoint anv of the five members of the existing game commission because the legis lature apparently Intended for htm to appoint a new on. ' The new gam commissioners are: Carl C. Hill, Days Creek, Douglas county. He I a former state repre sentative, had experience as a for est ranger and a Umber cruiser, and represented sportsmen's Inter est during the 1949 legislative ses sion. He gut the five-year-term. Lloyd 8. Blakley. Bend, sales manager for the Brooks-Scanlon Lumber company. His term I for one year, Delbert Gildersleeve. Baker stock man, and president of the Oregon Oame Protective society. His term Is for three-years. J. H. Van Winkle, editor of the Oregon City Banner CourKr, a thrice-weekly newspaper. He got th two-year term. Three Hurt In Upset Of Convertible LAKEVIEW. July 30 A convert ible coup overturned on ita thre occupant west of her last night, bringing critical Injuries to Grace Sharp, Klamath Palls resident. Also Injured In the wreck wer E. A. Hamilton. Eugene, listed as district manager for the Packard distributors for Oregon, and Michael H. 8chuster, Olendale, Calif. Investigating officer said th Packard convertible was headed toward Lakeview when It overturned In a cut about 10 miles west, of Lakeview at p. m. Tuesday. No I other car waa Involved. Cecil Oibbons. West Sloe rancher. came along and found the car lying on the three person. He brought them to the hospital. Mis Sharp injuries Included a fractured peivt and possible In ternal hurts. Her physician sad her condition worsened In the night. Hamilton had an Injured shoulder and Schuster sustained multipi bumes. Rifles Back Up Peace In Florida Town GROVELAND. Fla- July 20 ; An uneasy, bayonet-backed peace ; setUed today over this community ; racked by mob terrorism of Ne- grots, Last night passed comparatively j quietly. Warning shot were fired , at two men one a white-robed klansman and several car sp pt caching the town were halted. The night was In marked con trast, though, to Monday night, when armed mobsters shot and burned their way through Negro arras. Then three Negro house were set afire, and a heavily armed mob of white men wa scattered by a tear gas bomb. Cspt. Stanley Gaylord said a na tional guard sentry fired two warn ing shot over the head of a white robed man near Oroveland. Oay lord said the man escaped, despite efforts of highway patrolmen and a reconnaisance plane to spot him. Several cars, with light out, ap proached the community, but fled when challenged. Another two shot were fired by another guardsman. He said he used them to emphasize a warning to an unconvinced citizen thai troops would tolerate no more vio lence. Violence erupted In this central Florida town Saturday after Sheriff W. V. McCall reported a 17-year-old bride. Mrs. Willie Padgett, had been raped by four Negroes, her bus band beaten and robbed. Commission McKay Today Donald Mitchell, Taft pharmacist. who was named for four years. ! The recent legislature passed a I bill Increasing powers of Uie gam ! commission. It reorganized th j commission, and gave it power to I name an administrator, j Governor McKay said the new I commission would meet here Fri day, when he will tell the member what Is expected of them. "It apiieara to me Uiat the Intent of th legislature, tacit In the new game commission bill, was Uiat I should appoint an entirely new commission," the governor said. "It seems to hav been a man date for a complete reorganization, and I want that made plain, be cause the old commissioners deserve every consideration. They did a remarkable Job under a system Uiat many sportsmen felt to be In adequate." Member of the ou'-golng com mission are E. E. Wilson, Corvallis; Larry Hilalre, Porland; Theodor Conn. Lakeview; R. I). McClallen, Enterprise; and Kenneth W. Martin, Grant Pas.