to J gjUJiuJiyj ILrQLs gjlLMlg Backfiring Helps NightAttaclcOn Sheep Well Lines By MALCOLM KFLEY Efforts of a huge force of men ond equipment, highlight ed by on immense backfiring operation, had brought the Sheep Well fire under control today after it had covered 16,000 ocres in two national forests ond a national monu ment. Release of fire-fighters was started this morning, but two late-morning flare-ups on the fire lines halted this procedure ond indicated the blaze might still make trouble. Fire-fighters backfired over approximately 3000 ocres along the west boundory of the Lava Beds national monument last night, stopping the blaze on the northeastern front where it made a long sweep after breaking out of lines Sundoy. The big backfire cost a glow on the sky visible from Klomath Falls 30 miles owoy. Potrol was maintained on the fire lines today as the WEATHER Klaaalk rallf aa alclaltx gale laaar aa Mtataaatav. Mis la ear SI. Law laaltM SI t. Hit Wetaaaear is. Mia. Mat. tl . 1 Mia at rraalf Italia laat ft haara ... a Br FRANK JKNKIN THE Tito bualne climb up Into the upptr brsrketa today. Marshal Klrmentl Voroshllov, a number of the Soviet Polllburo, let runt; rtVK CENT .a I'll rAI.Li. OKKtiON. Tl f KOAV. At ,I KT 13. IMS Telephone (111 N. 2064) lito Bouble -Edges Gesture To Stalin go with IhU haymaker: "Tito It a traitor who has be com the mint bluer enemy of Uu t i j . 1 1 i r -h- -T - it ii .o ) nonet Union and the people de mocracies.'' (THE Polllburo. mad up of omo. A what more than baker't dosen communist parly big shot. In what cautious diplomat, reknig to Imp llgliicd maUlie out ol powticr .kega, would describe "tin supreme governing body of the Bovirl Union." Wo llttlt prnplt, whose utterance! dnn't itrt wars. ro In clined in describe It mor rrlsply and perhsn mora relltlclly aa the Inner circle of lha gangsters BUSHIA haa now bun run br OiU polllburo system for approx imately a quarter vf a century. If U la aa food aa the communis' t f tell ua II la and our system la a BAD aa the cnmmunlaU tell ua It la. the common Kuulin down at the bottom of the heap ought to be do. lnc pretty well by Una time. I d aay that If communism la even HAI.r aa food aa Ita booatert claim and our system half aa bad aa Ha dr. tractor liuut the brnrliu enjoyed br trie leneral run of Ruasiam ought to be makini ua a little envloua by thla time a WHAT ARE THE FACTS? Well. I don't know. 1 ve nrver been allowed Imlde Kuaaia. Verr few people era allowed In-ine Rua-aia-thal la to ear. verr few OUT BlDfcRS are allowed Irulda Rusai. Eihrr lha Russian are ao aril aauaftrd with their ayu-m that llieyre afraid at 11 copr It If weie aver permitted to art a luod under. s'siulmg of the way It work, or they era an ANIIAMKI) of IU short rominf a Uial they aeek to rover up the truth from ua. At any rate. e dun't know too much about the atatua of the aver ate Russian. e e RUT there It tome nrw atutf ou'.. Home time bark Uia Norwegian General federation of Trade Union lot runout and aent dele (atlona to atudy rondiuona in both Ruaaia and the Untied Btalrs Theae Norwetian utuon worker made a report of Uieir tindlni. The report waa addressed u then own organliaUon. It haa Just been made publlr. Among 01 her thlugi. . I mentions that- "An average American worker erne a loaf of breed with tlva mm. viae of work: It takea an average Ruaaian two hour of work to earn loaf of bread. "An American buya a pound of meat wltn half an hour of labor; a Ruaaian hag to work a whole day to tarn a pound of meat. "An American can buy a woolen ault after 35 hour of work: a Rua aian haa to work two month to earn a woolen ault." e THE Norwegian trade unionist concluded their report with the Internum obaervatton that their vialt to the United Hi tea gave them "greater confidence In Ilia ability ot democracy to aolvo Ita problem." That la terse, but tignlflrtnt. T TRY to be realistic In my think- lnc Bo It are ma 10 me. after read lug thla Norwegian report. 111: there la a acrew looae somewhere the communist ayatem. I d aay that thla la where the acrew la looae: The MANY RUSSIANS AT THK BOTTOM are getting leat Ulan they are entitled to because the SMALL NUMBER OP COMMUNISTS AT IHE TOP art skimming oft the cream for thenuelvea. Theae top communis want to aklm lha cream not only from the Ruaaian economy but from the WHOLE WORLD. Rebela like Tito want tome of the cream for them- telvea. That la why the polllburo big ahota regard him aa their worat enemy. They dont want to divide fip the cream. 'Pick You Ups Let You Down, YCTU Is Told PHILADELPHIA. A 11 e m i Too many Americana of arhool age - niT iie wra 01 liquor a effect on the human body, the director of the Pennsylvania arhool of alcohol ttudlei aaid todty. Dr. O eerie F. Dunkelhergrr, former dean ef Susquehanna uni versity, told a eympoalum at the filth annual convention af the Wom en's Christian Temperance anion, that "It la guile common to believe alcohol la a stimulant, whereas It actually Iris yon down, pulls you down and keeps yon down." Such "erroneous notion." Dunk elberger said, must be corrected through education. Too frequently, the liquor problrm la avoided In schools became of "Ihe popularity of drinking and Ihe criticism to which teachers think they would be tiiblrclrd." Total abstinence, the educator aald, la the only "safe. Bane and ecnslhle program of living for the yoalh of enr nation." "The excessive drinker," he said, "comes from the moderate drinker. The moderate drinker cornea from Ahe occasional or social drinker and dilie social drinker comet Irom tak ing the first drink." Fist Shaken Along With Peace Me-ye BELGRADE, Aug. 23 (AP) Yugoslavia expressed willing ness tonight to reach a set tlement with Russia on "all disputed questions" between the two-feud'ng countries. In a new note fo the Soviet government Yugoslavia told Moscow thot Premier Morshal Tito was willing to end the bitter fight with the Kremlin. At the same lime, Yugo slavia served a stern worning 10 Ruaaia rulers to keep Uieir hand" off the Internal a Hairs of Una Balkan commuuut country. The note waa the first eaallng ward In a war of wards that had beeataa while hat In the east Iws weeks. It waa the seventh note In an etrhange between ISrlgrade and Mearow. Yugoalavla formerly expressed her "readiness to approach the solution of all disputed questions with the UJ1HR. in accordance with and In the spirit of the International obll gaUona undertaken by both gov ernment." There wa a Immediate Indi cation af what Mosrow'e reettan wauld be la this esunsuna af the alive beanrh. Til haa been at adds with the Kress I la far II snentha. The Moacow-dlrected comlnform fcommunial Inlemetional Informa tion bureau) expelled Tito and hit Yugoslav communist tor national istic deviations from what Russian leaders regard at orthodox com munism, live Russian have called on the Yugoslava to overthrow Tito If he did not change his policy. Ttto hat maintained nil position. however. There was no attitude of knee bending In today s Yugostsv note. Grain Harvest In High Gear: No Spuds Yet Grain harvest In the Klamath basin Is moving ahead at top apeed now and the first heavy shipment were being made today. At the Great Northern a Strong hold nation U carload ot barley were headed out for Vancouver, Wah.. thla morning for diversion east. Agent C. H. Hrndrlckt aald. The Southern Paclflo moved on carload of n't on August 14. two carloads of barley the next day and today had IS cars from Tulelake designated far northern and east ern points, according to Agent H. E. McOhee. There hat been na definite price established for barley but there are re ports that I? St and li.as a hundred pounda have been paid foe No, 1 llaanchrn mailing grain, A reliable report this morning In dicated a 13 a hundred price paid for at least two Iota of the grain. One buyer aald that the quality of the grain la good this year, but there Is a decline in overall yield because of serious damage to con siderable dry-land grain and some dnmage In spots to Irrigated fields. The acreage planted to barley thli year waa also lower and the acre age of wheat higher. Moat of the barley crop la being harvested In bulk. The big grain operation at Tulana Farms and YVInema Farms are being harvest ed now. and the peak probably will be rrarhrd next week. Principal buyera are the Tulelake Grain company. Archer Danlelt Mldland company and the Contin ental Drain company. No spud digging hat been report ed yet and potato shipment! prob ably will not ttart until the middle of September, BULLETIN J ItKAD IN FRANCE ROnDKAI'X. France, Aug. IS Ml Hint rain fell her early to day, lessening the, danger af new eulbrraka of Ihe forest fires which have taken 13 lives, Th new death figure wat the result of th disrovery et four more bodies In the forest near lha village of f'eslaa yesterday. Seventy-right previously had been found. FISH COUNT PORTLAND, Aug. 23 MV-The upstream fish count at Bonneville dam yesterdav: Chinook 1347, Jacks 114, Steelhearl 1330; Bluebacki 3, Silvers 6, total 3IX. - . XrJ &&' . L. - - -r .. -7 - ' 7- , -7. . .i V ,. e K 'f. . ; J ; Vf? ON THE FIRE LINE Here's on intimate picture of a segment of the immense Sheep Well fire. A helmeted fire-fighter is shoveling dirt against the bloze that is crackling around the big stump at right, while in the background flames are rolling through the brush and have climbed the trunk of a pine. This night shot was mode by Herald ond News Pho tographer Was Cuderion near the Medicine loke road. The big fire was under control today. v Tomorrow Is Round-Up Day In Pendleton PENDLETON. Aug. M Oene Rambo, Shandon, Calif, leads the pack a th nation's top rodeo per formers come up to one of the Wett't biggest thowt the annual Pendleton roundup. The roundup, which claims the nations highest dally pay-off for performers, open It four-day run tomorrow. Rambo, winner of Ui Internation al rodeo association all-around cow boy championship In 1M6 and IMS. ha compiled 5146 point in rodeos this year. Behind him come Jim Shoulders, TuUa. with 450: Casey Tibba, rt, Pierre. SD, 4483; Harry Tompkins. Clmmaron ranch. Peek skill. N. Y. 4160; and Bill Llnder man. Red Lodge. Mont. 410S. Rambo will be seeking his second title here. He won the Jscx.son tro phy, awarded to the best all around cowboy at this event, In 1M4. The annual highlight, the West ward Ho parade, featuring 5000 Indiana and whiles In pioneer-day vehicles and dress, will come at 10 a. m. Friday, Sports Bulletins CARDS BEAT RUMS BROOKLYN, Aug. Z3 (IP) Stan Mualal and Knot Slaughter collect ed fire of 8C Louis' tight hits and four of Ha runs to lead the Card Inala lo a 5-3 victory over Ihe Brooklyn Dodgrra today. The triumph Increased Ihe Kedhlrdt' first place margin lo three games, Ihelr biggest lead of the year over Ihe I lodgers. HU Loula (10 301 MO 5 Brooklyn 101 000 1104 I t Lanier. Wllks 131 and D. Rlrr: Matten. Frsklne 16), Mlnner HI and C'ampanella. FEd KIRK WINS ClllCAfiO. Ant. tJ (41 Medal ist Peg Kirk of Flndlay, Ohio, advanced lo Ihe second round of the women's weslern amateur golf tourney today bv defeating Mar garet liunlher ef Memphis one-up In 19 holea. IP ANI DOWN PORTLAND. Aug. 13 (II Op erating revenue of the Portland General Electric company was up In the last fiscal year but net earn ings skidded. The company report ed tales brought tie.64a.338 In the 13 months ended June 30. This was 04 per cent higher than the pre vious fiscal year. Net earnings drop ped to 13.096.330 with per share earnings down frnm 1376 to 13.10. Charge State Prisoner Allowed To Slowly Bleed To Death Alone In Cell POr.TLAND. Aug. 33 v The Oregon Journal ssld today that Gov. Douglas McKay wai launching an lnvestigauon Into the death of a penitentiary Inmate who. the newspaper said tt was told, lay un tended for six hours and bled to death. A signed newt story by Tom Humphrey, associate editor, aald Oren A. Brownlee. 34. sentenced from Lane county for car thelt, died last March 17 and hospital records listed It as suicide. Humphrey's atary aaid Ihe paper learned "from what II can aiders unimpeachable sources" that Brownie lay nntended m his cell from 4:3 tv. as. I 11:10 p. s March 1 although the guard an duty In hit cell reported promptly that he waa slowly bleeding to death from srif-lnflieted wounds. The Journal aald IU tttentlon was called to Brow nice t detlh by a state senator and by prison guards after a Journal series on the state penitentiary mentioned a suicide. The governor w as advised yesterday. Humphrey wrote, and said he would start an lnvestigauon today and probably would ask the attorney general to conduct It. "This la a serious maltrr," the Journal quoted the governor aa aaylng. I shall make a complete Investigation, starting Immediate ly. We did not like eame of the things the Journal aald about the state penitentiary, but II belong ta the people of Oregon not the warden or the governor and they have a right to know what goes on Ihrre." Brownlr-e't body was sent to Ok anogan. Wash. Hit home wts at Riverside, Wash. Brownlee, the paper said, waa known to fellow Inmates as ment ally disturbed and was In frequent trouble with authorities. He at tempted suicide several times. His prison record shows that he was In military service for five months and wat discharged tor nervous In stability. Youngsters To Vie For Free Trips To Fair Thirty Klamath county youngsters will be heading for the State Pair held In Salem on Labor Day. The youngsters, all members of the 4-H club, will have earned the trip by winning grand championship prlrrs In the spring fair and the fall Junior Livestock show, which will br held August 38. 30 and 30. The 4-H office la making a tour of the 4-H club gardens Wednesday In order to pick the garden king and queen. Oardens. both vegetable and flower, will be Inspected for crop growth, planning and variety, and the members will be questioned on their knowledge of gardening and asked to show record books. Joan Howell and Mrs. France Davit will visit the flower gardens, and Francis skinner and Walter Jendrexlewskl will view the veg etable gardens. No Signs Of Life Around Missing Plane WTVMPEO. Mn, Aug. 23 P) The Royal Canadian air lorce an nounced today a search plane hat found the wreck&ge ol a two-engined plane reported missing In northern Manitoba with 21 persons aboard since Sunday. The announcement aald there waa "n signs af life" around the craft which had crashed and burned li milea northeast of Win nipeg. The RCAP announcement said a paratroop-rescue team 1 s proceed ing to the scene ot the crss.h. using three amphibious planes. Aboard the craft were seven crew members, eight sick Eskimos, a Canadian Press reporter, four meteorological department men and a woman physiotherapist. Hurricane Threatening East Coast MIAMI. Fla.. Aug. 23 ir The Atlantic hurricane swirled 300 miles at sea off Jacksonville today and hammered at the steamship Mormac Surf with 90-mile winds and moun tainous seas. At the same time a new storm was generating In the Atlantic about 300 mllea east of Puerto Rico. Winds in thla disturbance were mounting swiftly and at 12:30 p.m. (EST! were blowing at 50 miles an hour. The Mormac Surf reported by radio that she was In no trouble. Death Of Eugene Man Probed EUGENE. Aug. 23 A?i The Lane county coroner's office was Investi gating today the death of Robert Ivan Topperdorf. 26, Swisshome. found at home with a 21 caliber bullet In his head. Deputy Coroner Fred Buell aald the pistol waa found beside the body. The body waa found Satur day night when the parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. I. Toppendorf, went to his room. They had thought the young man wsa in Eugene. Another Big Foreign Arms Aid Fund OK'd WASHINGTON. Aug. 3 (jPV-The combined senate committees on foreign relations and armed serv ices today approved t239.010.000 of arms aid for Greece. Turkey, Iran. Korea, and the Philippine. The committee delayed until later thla week a decision aa to baw much military assistance shall be given European member of the Atlantic Pact ander Presi dent Truman arms aid program. Chairman ConruUly iD-Tei ) of the foreign rclauons committee an nounced that the combined groups approved lillJTOOOO for Greece and Turkey, and $27,640,000 for Iran. Korea and the Philippines. Connally told reporters that th: committee also approved amend ment by Senator Smith iR-NJ.I pledging the United Suites to exert maximum effort to provide the United Nations with armed forces and to obtain an agreement for universal regulauon and reduction of armament. Connally said the committees ap proved another amendment by Re publican S e n a t or s Vandenberg . Mich.) and Dulles (N.Y.i lntendtd to give congress, as well as the president, power to terminate foreign arms aid at any time. Local Church In 'Goats To Okinawa' Drive Goats to Okinawa Is the latest trend In relief efforts! Three groups of the First Christian church here are contributing to this lnter-faith relief project a t present. Each group has contributed 50 with which a goat Is bought and shipped to San Francisco where a govern ment boat await to carry it along with hundreds of Its lour footed companions to Ita destination. The "get your goaf project Is affiliated with the Heifers for Re lief project committee which haa been designated by the U. S. gov ernment to solicit funds for the test ing, care, feeding and transporta tion of the goats until they reach the ship's side. Ooats are being sent to the Pacific area Instead of heif ers since the locale there Is more favorable to their existence. These milk and meat bearing an imal are one ot the mainstays of life on the island, however during the war over 100.000 goats were de stroyed and only tome 2000 re main. NEEDLESS DRAG ASTORIA, Aug. 23 UP) Fire men fruitlessly dragged the fish ing boat basin slip for the body of Guy Murphy, a boat puller thought to have been aboard the Sandra Lee which caught fire yet' terday. Murphy wit found sleeping atfely in a local hotel all the time. Hopes lipped For Klamath Vet Hospital The House veterans committee approved Inflation today to force I President Truman to restore a j IS 000-bed slaah In proposed vet-1 erans hospital construction, an As- j sociaced Press dispatch reported , from Washington. Tbe lertalatien. in trad tared Aa gust 12 by Representative Ran kin ID-Mi.!, eperifically list a 2M-bed S3 million Klamath Fall hfrspltal project far restoration. Last January, Truman cancelled S237.O0O.00O of contract authority voted by congress lor additional VA hospital facilities, cancelling plant for 24 new hospitals and curtailing the size of 14 others. the The appropriation bill left discretion with the president to de termine what hospitals would be built. Rankin's aneaaure. the one ap-aa-oved today by the veterajaa committee, remevea the discretion ary antberity and aaakee the boa pilal expenditure mandatary. Ita approval by the committee Is lust one step In the possible restora tion ot the cancelled construction project. The measure has to be 1 acted upon by the house of repre- i sent Uvea, the senate and finally j would hare to face a possible presi dential veto. ! Th Klamath Falls kwapital waa to have keen built thla year and a situ (Beaumont tract) aa th bill back ef Hot Spring haa been purchased by the Some road-buildinc and well-1 drilline: work had been done at the site before the cancellation order, $1,022,000,000 For B-36 Plan WASHINGTON. Aug. 23 ( The air force gave congress an estimate of tl.022.000.0M today on the coat of the B-36 bomber program. The figure came out in testimony by Lt. Oen. W. Ravlings In the he a armed services committee In- ! vestigation of the fiant atomic bomb i carrier. i Raw Lings followed other high ranking air force witnesses who chorused denials that political In- : tluence or corruption had anything to do with orders for more B-36 s. 1 Rawlings is comptroller, or finance : man. for the air force. ! af 1 1, ' ii aZzL:iL BIG ONE Ernest Puddy of Bonanza is shown with head of antelope he shot in the Plush area Sunday which is right up ' there in the records for size of horns. The horns have a spread of 1934 inches, and o length of beom of 18Vi inches, the latter measurement rating it as the third largest ever token anywhere. The books show 18 116 in beam length as the third plae holder previous to Puddy 's bog. The local meas urements will be sent in for official filing. T weather continued dangerous. th wind and lewerina hu midity creating a condition similar to that prevailing ot the time of Sunday's out break. Craa. Brush. Pin A composite report on the fire released at 10 a.m. .today ahowed that it had burned over siOO acre on the Shasta national forest. 7500 acres on the Modoc national forest, and 2400 acre on the Lava Bed monument. The hlack-n-H a covered with grass, brush. Juniper and scattered Ponderosa pine, with losses counted In sheep range, some merchantable timber, and winter feed for deer. There was no Immediate report on the cost of fighting the blaze, but It obviously ran into high figure, with tome 700 men used in the three-day battle. Shasta national forest official prepared at Ml Hebron thla morn ing to pay ff firefighter aa they were released, and order went eat to bring them in cut ef the bill. 3 at a time. About the time the j first 3 men were paid off, word I came that twa outbreaks had ue- curred on the fire lines. The release ol men wa then held Bp, at least temporarily, against the possibility that a large force might be needed again fe keep the big fire In bound. Perimeter of the fire ws appro sl aaately 47 mile (276 chain! thb morning, making It en ot the biggest fire In recent year In thia . area. The blackened area la sou 111 of the California line, bordering th 1 Lava Bed an the ee.it and the MU Hebron dhtrirt ej the wed. Bark Ire Works The fire suppression resources of two national forest and the mon ument were thrown together into the fire yesterday after the blare rolled over the line Into the Modoc Ranger George Fisher of the Tule lake ranger district on the Modoa set uo a fire fighting camn at Oll- j tern's bluff, at the north entrance to the Lava Beds, historic site of a Modoc war army camp. Strategists decided on the back- ; fire yesterday afternoon, and thia ; operation was started along the road to Whitney Butte, and from the Gold Diffser road ta the Dome mountain road. Roads are customarily used a ) starting points for operations of i thj. nature, providing areadv-made cleared line to start the flames in the proper direction. Heads of the fire fighting orgsnl- . zation were well enough aatlsiied with their work that they rated the big (ire as controlled late in the night. Named for a Unchnark In the center ef the fire area, the Sheet fire began Saturday, appar ently springing from a aheepherder'a rampfire. lt was brought wider con i Continued on Page 2) J f