lo) l"Jb ., 1 1 Kr7ft? . ft X X r. ll I By FRANK JENKINS VE8TEKDAY 111 Kremlin (seat of 1 Russia's communist govrnmni writ a formal out to Yugoalevla III which II called till Tito regUn "an nrmy nil a Ik of th Buvtet Union." Today th Woeuw new, paper Pravda. wlilch It ft part of Huula'a communist government, ac cuse Tito of conducting ft "double dealing, traitorous pulley." (What Pravda miu la that Tito la showing aiina of refusing to burp wlienevur Moscow take an alk eluer.f WI American lneilnctlvly 10 all " out for Un Hula man and Uit under-dog. In Uia communist eel up. Tllo la both. Wa d heller keep ft tight hold oil our emotion. II Tito were on of Uia Kremlin big ahou. lit d oa a bad ft communial aa any of them. The thing that Interest ua moil la that communist leedere are be ginning lo fight each other for putter. Tllo wania mure power, aiuf seems lo be willing to fight Moscow III oidrr to gel IU It he geu away with It, other communist small fry Iradera will be encouraged to try. lu thai evrnl, coinniunUm will becuma DIVIDED, and so will be mot eaaily conquered. JJR. KENNETH BCOTT LATOUR ETI'K. orufeaaor of rulMlona and Orleuul history at Yale, Uils Portland aenrlce club that he U con fident communism will KAIL In Clime and that the Chinese will work out their probleme aalufac torlly. BUT, ha add "It may take aa long a 100 lo 1M yeara lo work It out." THAT It aa Interfiling alaumrnl. II serve to remind ua that lot f the thing we are all teamed up about In these days ARENT OOINli TO HAPPEN TOMOHHOW. These great awingi in human hls lory Use tune. pRO VERBS art Inlereellng things. Here la one that beara on the point raised by the Yale professor "Home wasn't built In day." Il certainly wasn't. Nor did Roma rot away la a day. It look hundreds and hundreds of yean to build Hum up lo the point of eupretne and unquestioned power In the world f thai day, and It took even more hundreds of yeara Tor the Roman empire lo rot away rnd fall apail tier Its decline organ. snooerns, uying . arouna roe J arm In airplanes, picking up our telephones and talking lo somebody n th other aide of the world, fail naturally Into Uia error of thinking thai everything moves fast. Bo we tend to lose our perspective. The bw swings of hutory aliU move akiwly. see WE doddering old conserraUvaa who believe that you cant lift yourself by your bootstraps, that you can't vole yourself rich, that there la no such thing aa something for nothing, that wealth la produced ONLY by the application of human labor to natural resources, thai you cant divide what Isn't produced, view the modern tendency to rely on these fallacies with alarm and predict that If thla tendency con tinues our way of life will be de atrnyed and our standards of living will fall. We say: "It won't work." Whereupon those who follow these 111 -o'-the -wisps chortle: "llehl hrht hrhl It IS working pretty well. Isn't It?" This answer discomfit and dis credits us for, measured In psper dollars, ws AKK doing preuy well. Our national debt la staggering al ready and getting bigger, but we atlll eat hearty. , s JT takes a long time for a nation lo become strong and great and rich by adhering lo sound, wise and wholesome pollclea and It lakes fully aa long for It to go broke through abandonment of Uiese poli ces. Thai 1 on of history' clearest lessons. Punchboard Test Falls Flat PORTLAND, Aug. IS MV-Clly officials Inspected all available types of punchboarda In PorUand yesterday. They found Just one that qualified Under the strict quest Inn-and-enswcr regulations. That was punchboard not In wide use. It was on some counters to help movement of a candy com. pany'a product. Anyone who could answer question, on any of the board's slips In 10 seconds would win box of candy, An answer within 30 seconds won a candy bar. Deputy Clly Attorney Darrel L. Johnson said all the other types were Illegal. Punchboard distributors protest ed the city's move, declaring that court case, still pending, must be settled before the city could outlaw punchboarda. Nature Society Checking Flight The Nature society, which held meeting Monday night at the chamber of commerce, la at pres ent conducting a study of migra tion of blrda through the Klam ath area. Members are keeping In dividual records which are com piled at each meeting of the club. ah purHM of the group la to study wildlife In the Klamath region and to discus different natural phenomena at Ui mattings. essisaeaaaM aw i n mmmmmmgmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmr PHICE rmTHNTi l-O" KLAMATH WAUMjfi , -AS '. . -i -ev, t stat" " J aV ,. . i r , . f-- ."?. I '-e- - .. tU(.; ,.fv:,:v-r; w-t; r '.J '. ' e v- ,s , . . -' . I: - a:, - v. j ' j .X1 " , riT'- BIG HORN COLLECTION For 20 yeors, Mark Belli of Al turoj picked up deer horns as he trekked through the wilds of Modoc county. He stacked them up in his yard, and the lower picture shows the 13-foot pile of more than 1300 horns, all of them shed by deer. On the side of a building, Belli has nailed up a large number of horn sets, shown in the larger picture. (Pictures by Jomes O. Souther, Alturas). Man And Science Combine In Attempt Today To View Ocean's Floor 'Mile Down' H.MI'tKll.KR'r! COVE, Calif. Aug. IS lAf Man and eclrnre were ready today for a dramatic at tempt to conquer the crushing pressure of ocean water mora than a mile deep. . If all goes well, by nightfall Otis Barton, 4a, of Boston, Harvard trained marina explorer, will be the first human In history to have peered Into the Icy depths 6000 feet down, where unknown, pre sumably weird creatures live and sunlight never penetrates. The location for this colossal dunking venture Is near thla cove on the southeast shore of Kanta l.'rua Island, 11 miles south of Santa Barbara. Barton In thla world record dive attempt hoped to open a new frontier of aelentlfia exploration atudlea of possible food and oil resources In the ocean depths, un derwater vegetation. Information for military usage, charting of the ocean floor's mountains, valleys and canyons. Ha expected to enrounlrr lee water at 4009 feet and equipped ixMm WMSmSf a, '.T; f x i P i i -A -V-aMTJ,J himself with woolen clothing and blankets. The vehicle for his descent la a east slrel sphere, 57 'i Inches In diameter weighing 1000 pounds, lowered by a S-lnrh sleel cable by a crane from a 100-foot steel barge. I la ahell la 14 Inches thick at the thinnest point. It has a 15 Inrh door and two windows of fused quart i Inrhea thick, one 5i Inrhea across, the other ti Inches In diameter. Seals around these apertures tighten aa pressure at 6000 feel Is estimated at 17,000,000 pounds, or 3000 pounds per square Inch, compared with 15 pounds per square Inch normal atmospheric pressure at sea level. Barton and Dr. William Berhe of New York ael a deep dive record of Jul feet off Bermuda In 1014. NEW RULING VATICAN CITY, Aug. IS UP) A Vatican source said today mili tant communists may not serve aa godfathers at Roman Catholic bap tismal service under the July ex communication decree. .j I KIM Y, Police Hat Causes Much Confusion Police car roared to Third and Lincoln street at 130 yesterday afternoon, and uniformed officers scrambled from their seats and rushed out to do their duty. The word got to The Herald and j Uon "eged: News, and hurried nils were made 1 That he la unsympathetic and In order that whatever th myate- rude with th Indiana about Incu rious event waa It would be covered vldu-il money; that he assume a far th paper. completely arrogant attitude and But by the time the reporter ar- i haa thereby encountered seven! rived, the scene of action had been ! cleared, and there waa not a soul In sight. A call to the police station after things had died down gave a de scription of this exciting action: A poltco paddy wagon bad had a flat tsrev and beuig withojut a spare, snot her prowl car was sent out with a spare. Also a motorcycle patrolman Just happened to come along to lend a helping hand. Snov Flurry Hits Highest Crater Areas Travel and recreation prospects for th week-end look good with the weatherman forecast for fair skies ; and afternoon temperature In the Rangers at Crater Lake naUonal park report Jle weather to be very nice at the park, although a light, brief flurry of snow fell at eleva tions above (000 feel Friday. The weather la cool at night but warm and comfortable In the daytime, th ranger station reports. Yesterday, 009 car and 2o8S people were visitors at the park, slightly below the average dally at tendance of between 1700 to 3000. On week-ends, attendance soar to between 5000 and 6000. Last Sunday, 5500 were there. Friday miximuoi temperature In Klamath Fall waa a cool 70. and the minimum last night, 43 degree. House Brothers Win Eagle Honor Result of quartet competition at the national convention of the Fra ternal Order of Eagles In Detroit, Mich., today revealed that the House Brothers quartet of Luigell Valley placed third. The group waa sponsored by thn Klamath Fall aerie. The contest Is on a national scale with Eagle quartets from through out the country participating. First place winner was a quar tet from Lorain, O., and second, from Aurora, Ind. Methodical Bees Cripple Farmer HOUSTON. Aug. 13 (Ft Not to nurses: Don't call W. L. Bane, "Honey." Bane, Fairbanks dairy farmer, la in Methodist hospital with more than 50 bee stings In hi face and head. He tangled with the Bee neat while cutting weeds with a tractor on hie farm. When they swarmed over him, he leaped off the tractor and rolled In the grass in an at tempt to drlva the bees away. They left when they got good and ready. BULLETIN SMUGGLER'S COVE. Calif., (JT, Rough seas fodsy postponed Marin Explorer Oil Barton' attempt to descend In a diving bell lo a depth of (000 feet below th aurfac at th ocean. . away ley again toasorfva. AUGCHT II, 1MI Tribal Council Demands ; Bitney Transfer; Claims Agent Spends Too Much Klsnuth Indlsni In general tribal council session this week voted to ssk that Agrnrv Kupl. Raymond K Bitney and Chief Clerk ;rorge Smith be Immediately transferred from the Klamath reservation. The vote passed a resolution to be sent to Secretary of the Interior J. A. Krug and Senators Ouy Cor don, Wayne Morse and Hugh Butler. A copy of the resolution was handed The Herald and News today by Wade Crawford, Indian leader and himself a former reservation superintendent. The resolution listed seversl alle gations against Bitney among them: That he will not cooperate with the general council In matters di rectly affecting the general welfare and economy of Indian laborers and that he refused to give Joe Ball the airnry payroll for an Investigation f the employment of Indians. Ball waa appointed by I he council to snske sorb an investigation. That he i Bitney) refused to give the business committee records on the tribal herd and bull pool. That he (Bitney) la extravagant, the amoanl of his requested ISM fiscal year budget prove that his business arose la poor; that he lacks tribal funds: that he haa requested mare tribal funds than any previous aaperinlendent. That he (Bitney hsa failed en tirely to cooperate with the tribal bustnese committee and loan board. Pertaining to Bmlth, th reaolu- Jail-Bound Lothario Yields $7400 CH1CAOO. Aug. 13 f Jailers lipped 17400 out ol Slgmuno Engle's short yesterdey but it did not substract much from the big gest current mystery al the Cook county klink. Ever since the 73-year-old Lothario was arrested June 25 on charges of swindling widows whoso love he courted. Jailer hav won dered about his apparently bot tomless source of ready cash. H seems to be constantly In viola tion of Jail rule lr. that respect. A week ago. for Instance, Jailer said they found 535 In his posses sion. Jail rules limit prisoners to a maximum of M Again last Thursday. John Donnelly, assist ant superintendent of the Jail, Mid he found 1134.70 In Engel's possession. Donnelly decided yenterday to have an even more thorough look. He ordered the prisoner stripped and his clothes examined. The aeam on Engel's underwear seemed a bit bulky and were ripped open. Out came 74 1100 bills. The Jailers were shocked, but not mora so than Engel. The jau physician prescribed a sedative and ordered huu removed lo th hospital. Donnelly quoted Engel as saying that the money had been in the shorts ever since he was taken to Jail. All during his confinement. Engel has been weshlng his own shorts, Donnelly said. Sports Bulletins RYE, N. Y. Aug. IS "l A downpour forced postponement of today's Intersone Davis Cup tennis matches between Italy and officials announced that th slnjl-s match between Marcelio Del Bello and Frank Sedgman and the double match, scheduled for today, would b played tomorrow, weather per mitting. LOS ANGELES, Aug. 13 P) Pacific Coast League President Clarence Rowland today fined Portland Manager Bill Sweeney .. for use of profanity from the dugout In last night's gam with Hollywood here and for throwing hla crutch onto th playing field. Sweeney wa on crutches be cause he had run a silver Into his foot at home. The dispute wa over a play at third baae. Baseball Scores New York ... 010 130004 11 1 Philadelphia 101010 3107 10 1 Raw-hie. Page (71, Buxton (0) and Bllvera, Niahro ti; Fowler, Coleman (t) and Ouarra. leaaaia rail sea vuiaitvt rale lata ISreaa BssSav. Nif I- ar is. i.aw ssiist st. sjita ass as. Maa. )(. It) IS MIS 4t rieclaiuiiaa laat S4 baara..... ee Telephone gilt physical combat with the Individual Indians. That he (Smith) goes oat of hi way to enforce regulation and puts the Indiana to great expense and embarrassment about the individual money. Vote on the resolution reportedly government dock operations. It also i waa 101 to 12 for passage. I Provides penalties o, a 5500 fine In other council business during ; and three months In JaU for tnter the session, the tribesmen asked the i 'ence. secretary of the Interior to Inter- J Ships , vene In an Internal revenue depart- The first Job will be to unload six ! ment move to force the Indians to ; freighters In Honolulu. Then the par an Income tax: voted to try to government will begin loading get a reversal of a government ruling ! sugar and pineapple for the main that the tribe must have 1100.000 I land. set aside for hospital purpose to reopen the Agency hospital; voted a fsll 1500 per csplta payment; delegated Seldon Kirk to attend the Congress of American Indiana: asked the secretary of Interior to allow Indian to sell timber on their land allotments, and voted not to investigate the tribal loan board. The Herald and N'ewa waa unable to eontact Bitney for comment Solons Still Pressing For Mac's Return WASHINGTON, Aug. 1J (,Pi Some senator pressed today for Oen. Dotit las MacAnhur's return from Japan despite hi plea that critical event In the Par Est will not permit It st this time. Republican Floor Leader Wherry of Nebraska said MacArthur should return end tell congress whst poli cies should be followed In tbe Orient. , Senator Mors R-Or added: I "One of the greatest lessons In the democratic process-that Oen. JMacArthuT aouid ri aotsirt be ' I murn ana a1? Driiaujrs luiuciua- ; uon tnev neea u tney are to rep I resent th people of the country I Intelligently in connection with the j number one issue todsy th cub- mon defense. Wherry and Morse gave their Tlew to reporter In separate In terviews. MacArthur firmly rejected an in vttatlon yesterday by the senate foreign relation and armed erv- Ices committees to testify on the presidents gl. 450.000.000 arms pro gram. He refused a ilmilar Invitation a year ago from the senate ap propriations committee. Bum Check Artist Nabbed ALBANY. Aug. 13 Ofl A 19- Vear-old Washington vouth waa held n Jail here today, accused of i advised him to continue on to Og- MUNICH. Germany. Aug. 13 () passing dozens of bad checks In ' den. Dr. Hadfield gave Mr. Hoover About 5000 soviet officers and ol nine Willamette valley and coastal emergency treatment but said im-'. tr desert the Soviet army of cities In Oregon. George Miller, deputy sheriff. ! Identified him as Ted Norman Drake, Hamilton. Wash, and said the youth had admitted the crime. Miller estimated the check total1 was between 51000 and 2O00. i u. -.1,4 r. I- Al,J kim v.-i-1 .... ' "- writing machines were taken from the Cefir Lumber company at Al - sea and the Santiam Lumber com pany at Lebanon In June. Three hundred blank checks also were taken. Miller said Drake used names ob tained from letterheads he found In company offices, and passed checks In Salem, Albanv, Lebanon. Sweet Home, Corvallis. Eugene, To ledo, Newport and Tillamook. Drake was arrested In Sweet home Thursday night by Officer Fred Naeve and William 8prlnger. Miller said Drake also admitted robbing a grocery store of $300 at Foster, tour miles east of Sweet Home, and of taking 570 from the Santiam Lumber company. Sheriff's Office Continues Probe Into Skull Found At City Dump; Bits Of Bone Discovered In Area May Be Rice Remains Several piece of bone which may or msy not be human were sifted out of th ashea and rubble at th city dump yesterday afternoon to go along with a human skull found earlier as possible clues in the dis memberment murder of Mr. Jennie Morrison Rice. The skull, found by R. W. Nichol son yestrdy when he went lo th dump to dispose of some gar bage, probably will be aent to the state pollc crime laboratory ui PorUand tor atudy. Sheriff Jack Franry examined tha charred skull under a micro scop after It was brought in by Nicholson and determined that it may be the skull of a womau and that a few reddish hairs still cling to mlnut patches of akin. Mrs. 11 lea, whoa dtmmtnrd torso wa V- Six Ships Will Be Handled Next Week Under Law IIONOI.I'l.r, Aug. IS lP Hawsli'e new waterfront boas told th Islands Me. 00 residents last night the government would begin unload ing strikebound ships early next wrek. Harbor Manager Ben V. Rush likewise told the striking CIO Inter national Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's union tbe territorial government would book no Interference In operating th seised dock. Hhortly before Rush spoke In a radio broadcast, the striking long shoremen met and ananimously voted approval of a motion condemn ing the "strikebreaking law." This referred to the emergency act andee which the government seised the atrurk stevedoring companies. Rush said the hiring of 16M non-union men to work tha dock waa progressing. He conceded th territory could not control the threat ened picketing on th mainland of ships loaded by government workers. But be declared "We can and will control the handling of cargo Into and out of Hawaiian ports." That meant the emergency law would be invoked If some mart s' me anions carry out their plana lo walk off ships In Hawaii out of respect 1 ILWU picket lines. Tiie law provide for '"j"" t action against Interference wtthi Hawaii's legislature was given an amendment yesterday which would tighten its new seizure law. The amendment. Introduced by Tern-1 tonal Attorney General Walter D. I Ackerman Jr, prohibits: , III Ktrlke. kv enernment en. I pkfyra, 121 picketing of govern ment dock opera liens, (3) any concerted refusal to transport or handle cargo worked by the gov ernment or perform any aervico an vessel worked by the govern ment, (4) any guidane ar direc tion to persons with th object of Interfering with government op era lien. The amendment also make un- lawful any act of giving money to ' aid anyone Interfering with gov-! eminent dock operations. Hoover Taken Suddenly III Aboard Train nnnra TJtah Aug. 13 For- , mer president Herbert Hoover was nrfeken by a gall bladder ailment I , board an eastoound Ufcua today f btit continued hi trip after medical I treatment. Dr. Keith Stratford boarded the , aid daughter. She aaw them last train a It (topped In Ogden and I August 15. 194. when she took off examined the 75-year-old former : on her eastward trip, chiet executive. Sh had hard luck moat of th He said th attack 'was only a : way. Her little plane hit a ditch in mild one and Mr. Hoover will go on , Marseilles, France, and had engine to New York." The physician said j trouble at Calcutta. India. Laat No Mr. Hoover reported he waa feeling vember the plane crashed near th much better. Arrangement had been made to I hospitalize Mr. Hoover here, but the physician advised it was unneces-1 sry. Mr. Hoover was aboard the stream liner. City of San Francisco, trans ferring here from Southern Pacific to Union Pacific track to continue the eastbound Journey. Mr. Hoover was en route east , said, told her to -go home and look after celebrating at his former Cal- after the baby." ifomia home his 75th birthday an-1 -mversary last Wednesday. f V f4 a The train was halted for 30 mln-( a)0 Vlt UeSertlOn utes earlier this morning at Elko. , j Nev, where Dr. Dale Hadfield ex- j amined the former nreslrient then mediate hospitalization was necessary. Burglar Alarm Scares Thieves a . . litTA Riff IITTV i"""w 73 "7 HOUSTON. Aug. 13 P) John McMillan decided It was too much after his drive-in stores had been robbed the fifteenth time this year j this year He rigged up an electric, eye alarm system which trips foghorns. whiisues. sirens and a flash camera. Tov-ard dawn, the gadgets started sounding off. Two teen-aged boys had tried to pry open a door. R. R. Urban, who Uvea nearby, was awak ened. He said the boys seemed ready for straight Jackets In their haste to get away. He told police they ran In circles before getting Into their car and taking off. Police are developing the films to aee what the thugs look like. found In the Klamath river May 27. was red-haired. Her head, arms and leg have never been found but her husband. William Howard Rice, confessed on May 28 that he killed hi wife and Is now serving a life prison sentence at Salem for second degree murder When Rice surrendered the day after the torso was found In the river, he told officer the woman's head and limb should be found In the vicinity wher th body was located. However, a search of the river tailed to turn them up and officer Investigating the crime have entertained theories that th head and limbs were not put lo the river but disposed of elsewhere. Rice went to the penitentiary without revealing anything more about th disposal of hi wife body. Flier Hears End Of Long Global Hop HALIFAX. N. 8. Aug. 13 IP P""y British housewife neared th end of a globe-cirrling flight todsy " Piloting her little plane from Labrador to Greenland In defiance of Canadian air regulation. Mrs. Richard Marrew-Talt, 2. made the :-mlle flirhl with her navigator yesterday. Only two more verwater hop- from Greenland to Ireland to Britain sUnd In th way of fulfilling her dream of being the first woman to pilot a rJngte engined plane around th world. Canadian aviation authorities, who had forbidden the trans-Atlantis flight aa unsafe for single-engined civilian planes, had ordered Mr. Morrow-Tan to fly back to Bangor, Me. She took off at 1 ajn. (EST) yea terday. ostensibly for Bangor, then changed course and landed six and one-half hour later at Bint West One. th I'. S. air base In southern Greenland. Oatside Canada Canadian officials said Mrs. Mor-row-Tait waa now outside Canadian jurisdiction. They would not specu late on whether the British woman would have further-, trouble wun ' U. S. authorities at the Greenland Waiting in England for the world flier are her husband and two-vear- Alaska highway, 233 miles couth of : Fairbanks. She worked all winter a a waitress and singer in a Fairbanks night club. Borrowed another plan and resumed her trip this summer. She told reporter In Montreal that Canadian government officials, tried to discourage her from con tinuing her flight. One official, ah ! Figure High occupation monthly and flee to the western zones of Germany, the Munich Abend Zeltung declared today. It quoted a Russian named Sabik Voguloy, who said he deserted the Russian army several months ago after serving aa a lieutenant col onel. U. S. Intelligence officers said they were unable to confirm th report. m e . . rOTcSX KunQer Killed By Snag 8T. MARIES. Ida.. Aug. 13 lTV A forest ranger was struck by a fall ing tree snag and killed yesterday while fighting a fire in the St. Jo national forest. 25 miles east of here. The victim wa Elmer Marks, 44. He had been a ranger in the Clarkla district of the St. Joe Forest sine 1935. He Is survived by hi widow, Evelyn. After the skull was found at tha dump yesterday, Deputy Sherlll Murray Brltton and two trustle sifted through th ashes In th Im mediate area where Nicholson said the skull lay and found aeveral small bits of bone that were brought In for possible connection with th skull. Brltton said he couldn't tell whether the bones were human. One, he said, had th appt-araiu of a finger bone and another looked like It might fit at the baa of th skull. Nicholson found the skull at th eastern end of the dump in a place below a hill out of view of most of the dump grounds. Th bottom part of tha skull s badly charred and th top scorched. Fiv teeth remained In th upper Jaw. r