fo) o) n.Tlift Hay's Sews lly FRANK JF.NKINK JliEitB ire qurrr tiling In the nrwa. Fur example: Representatives ul llrltaln's Labor parly government ri already ei riving III Washington Ui talk ovrr with our government tilt Idea ut pulling up ft LOl mom American dollars In order to keep Britain from going bankrupt. Yet, only few days ago dual about the Ulna Ilia Urlllsh negotia tors wrro leaving lr Washington), Labor parly member ol parlla mrlit Irt go a alatrinrnl for publlie lion In allien li accused American "big business" ol compiling to over throw HriUln's labor government. lie adilrd: "Mriuin might ba templed to pielcr coininunlMu to bring kiikrl ammid by the unlettered, pot bellied money magnates ot Uia United Stales." MOW that Isn't nlca. The aid e Amerliaii have given to the llrltlnh eoplc snur the war niiu Into I lie inultl-bll-Iioim. All ol thu aid has come out il the taxrs we pay lor will pay In ihe luiurei and our taxes arc brimming to bile, and bite haul. ' And din't foiurt thu: It hain't been luiiiiy munry wave breu sharing with the llrlti.li. j It ha brrn CHKIDH. The dollar . wa talk ao much about are just ! rmintrrs. We ve brrn giving. T HINUH to the Brltiah loud and law material and such. ! Were not morona. We are fully aw are thai the more of our re source we give away the lra wa iContlnurd on Page ti ft 0 Only Billion For Foreign 'Arms-George WASMINOTON. Aug. 71 iPi Sen lnr Ornrue iD-Oa.) aald today that 1 1. 000.000 .000 b the moat the admlnl atratlon fan hope for from the neurit In anna aid for Allnnllc pact nnllnni. He aald (ha autn would be ipllt between eaih and eontrart author llr. "And they won't gel that," ha preillrted, unlll after ft long de drbale. If al all." Prr.aident Truman lias a.skrd tl.4MinoO.oiiO for Ihe arm program, Including 1 1. 1 no 090.000 for the At rantii pact nation-. The house alahrd the l. 160 390. 000 In half, but Irft unchanged the propoard 1211.370 000 for continued military .sllanre to Greece and Turkey, and $27.540000 for Iran, Korea and the Philippine. The combined aennte foreign rela tion find armed aervlcea committer alart Ihelr arconri week ot grma-alil dlacuMlon Mondny. Next Council Meet Sept. 6 City councilman will not meet In ragular aeulon until Tueailay, Sep tember 6. Mondny la the fifth In the month of Augtint and tluia the city dada will havo free week, Labor Day is the following Monday, necraMtallng I -witching the meeting ta the day alter Labor Day, aw.,,. J) il i i .'...-aiiliii n naifiilii.in i.i.anr , I'HICF. FIVF. I'KNTH Senate OK's Air Force Expansion WAHHINOTON. Auk. 37 A; -Au-thurify (or a big rxiiuiwim nf thf air forre won wnate approval by uttunlmoui nmtent tmlay alter oi lef Il paaaed the 1i-gruup air forre bill previously approved by the hoiiM after mtvlng out a section thai aprlled out the It combat group and other unit. Retained Hi the bill. h.mever. a (ha hntiw-approvrd authority fur I Cohllmird on Page 3 ) thutlty for mi-m -fcf ' ' ' ' 4k - ' ..... ' i ' 7yv . v , i W r;: Hr-x Vw- MOORE FARK HAS BIG SUMMER Klamath's Moore park is finishing the vacation season this year with new records marked up In visitors . . . 9000 picnickers were bn scheduled events from July 1 to August 21 . . . and indications ore that twice that number used the park's facilities without be- ing on the scheduled lists. Pictured here are a few scenes pulled right out of daily activity at the park, 7 t . V - at I '' 4 .0 A, OKF.GON, HATL'RDAV, t -Ya"-f 'v. x. w. I (Top, right) Russell Fronklin and Noncy Long try to get the attention of a Japanese deer. (Center, right) The kids look over one of the bird cages. (Left) A view of the big five-acre plot of gross below the -caretaker's cabin. In the background are the city tennis courts, where the city-wide tournaments were held this summer, as well as out-of-city competition. (Bottom) Kids sneak a few handfuls of straw and leaves into few-months-ctd fawn. ALGl 8T II, IM . 'JA, v. V a. rV.ai;,.. - J v. . a aw - i a Va . i jr. 1 ... .t?'- WEATHER fti.aui ran sua vitiunf r.ir ua.r a a.n4.. niib L4.r M. Law Ifai 44. Hifk ftsaS.r 4. h.i. (. a at Mia.... as rrMlellallva laM M bears . ta Telephone gill No. 204 r it i 7 ;-y Sports Bulletins DOIX.IRS WIN BROOKLYN. Aug. J7 .4" Home runa by t'arl Furillo and Billy Cox featured ft aix run sixth inning rally today that gave the Brook lyn Dodgera a -1 triumph over Ihe Chicago Cuba. CARDS WIN NEW YORK, Aug. J7 Stan Muaial poled two home runa. Chuck Dieting and llnoa Slaugh ter one each and Ihe St. Louie Cardinale came up with ft triple play to aqoash the New York (llanta. 5-5, In Ihe lint game of a doublchcader today. YANKS WIN CLEVELAND, Aug. VI W Lefty Tommy Byrne pitched the New York Vankcra to ft 4-0, two-hit triumph over the Cleveland In diana today before ft paid gather ing of e.tu7 fans. RED SOX WIN CHICAliO, Aug. it in The arrond place Boston Red Sox re mained game and a half be hind Ihe league leading Neve York Yankeea by handing the Chicago White Max 7-t licking before lt.lSl pereoru today. t AND 40' PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 27 ) Mrs. Herman Edwards, Portland, Ore., la to become the vice presi dent of the S and 40 for 12 west ern state. Ala.aka and Hawaii here today. Mrs. Edward, wife of a Portland newspaperman, was un opposed In nominations last night. Damage Totals Millions; 2nd Blow Expected MIAMI, PU., Auk- 37 VPyA re tirade tropical hurricane whirled out over the Gulf of Mexico for a trcond punch at Florida today leav ing one dead, hundreds home lew and property damage In the millions In the state ' rlcn report and citrus areas. Borne hat tamed a It crossed land, the freak uh storm was ex pected to resume hurricane strength in a six to eight1 -hour croulni of the culf probably to tKe Apalachicola-Tallahajuieo area. "Winds will continue to increase In northwest Florida." said W. R. Labor Wage Hike Battle Starts Again AKROV. O.. Aug. 27 iA Union labor's ftritl msior strike for ft fourth round of postwar wage In- nrwn uiuncnra loaay. ine CIO struck B. P. Goodrich, one of the rubber Industry's big four. Ordering some 17,000 Goodrich workers In seven slates to strike. President H. R. Lloyd of the CIO Cnlied Rubber Workers said: TnforiurutrlT, (he company showed not the slightest Interest Is reaching aa amicable aettle-sa.-ni. We were eomprlled to take Hits action U protect the Interest of our soembershiD.' Uoyd made this statement In ' Dayton, O.. where negotiations on ft new contract broke down but night just before the old one ex pired. As authorized by the union membership, the strike started at 12:01 a. m. lEOTl today. Right on time. URVV's biggest Goodrich local here set up picket lines, halting work by 11.000 em ployes. The other plants at Los An geles, Csdillsc. Mich, Tuscaloosa. Ala, Miami. Okla, CUrksville. Tenn.. Oaks. Pa., also were ordered to strike. Far Its part. Goodrich com pulsed ra letter sent oat before the strike was called that the TRWA has choaea Goodrich tea sad woaacai aad oar eoaipaar to be gaiaea pira la the fourth round wage try." And after the strike started. Goodrich Vice President J. W Keener contended the union had served no notice on the company. However, both he and Uoyd agreed to resume .negotiations in Dayton again, today iu another et fort to aettle dilferencea. First Stage British Aid Parley Opens WASHINGTON. Aug. 27 1 The United States. Britain and Canada opened preliminary talks on Brit ain's economic crisis today. The conferences at the state de- prtment will continue about 10 i days. Then full scale negotiations i among the three governments will be opened. I Officials and technical expert of I the three countries met In fifth J floor conference room at the state ! department with Undersecretary of I State Webb presiding. 8ir Henry Wilson Smith, second secretary of the British treasury, headed the British group, and Norman Robertson, secretary of the Canadian cabinet, the Canadian mission. The task of the negotiators will bi- to determine the basic facts of Britain's economic plight In prep aration for the cabinet-level talks which start September 7. Klamath Ice Loses $600 In Bag Theft A canvas sack containing over $600 waa reported stolen from a truck parked at the Klamath Ice and Storage company loading dock yesterday fternoon. State police learned that the money belonged to the Zero Froz en Food company and was taken from a truck operated by Irft Zir kle. salesman tor the company. The sack contained about 1400 in currency and silver and the re mainder in checks. Log Slips, Kills Swisshome Man ROSF.BURO. Ore.. Aug. 27 (.4 Ben Benson. 38. Swisshome, was fatally Injured this morning by a log which spilled off truck at the Rock Island Lumber company pond at Sutherlin. Benson, a truck drl.ei. was being assisted In unloading by Melv:n Hoff, who told Coroner H. C. Stearns that as binders were re leased a 00-foot log rolled oft on the wrong aide of the truck. A glancing blow spun Hoff out of danger without serious Injury but Benson was crushed and died al most. Immediately. Benson and his wife, Alice, were preparing to return to Bwlsshome later today that their two sons, Ronald and Richard, might start to school. Davis, Miami storm forecaster. "The center will crona the coaxtllna again around nightfall, pocsibly a, bit earlier or later, according to the storm's behavior now that it ta over water again." Davis reminded residents In the old south section of Florida; "You are under hurrfrane war taint a. These warnings have been nolsled from Cedar Key to Carra belle and of course extend to Inland points behind this coastal area." Once again, evacuation of planet and persons from danger sputa under way. )u.t as It was yes- terday on the Florida east coast. The storm cut wide swath of destruction on Ita way across the F.NOl Gil SAID MIAMI. Flaw Aug. 27 lP The weather report from Lake Placid, In central Florida, read this way en Ihe Miami bareaa'a teletype: "Wind indicator blew aarar. Palm trace blown down. Observer will blaw away if he goes out to estimate winds." peninsula after pounding the east coast and searing the Lake Okee chobee region. It swept through Florida's rich citrus belt and was last reported by the weather bureau over Pasco county on the edge ot the Gull of Mexico above Tampa. Stuart said Red Cross disaster officials reported at least 600 home less In the east coast cltr. At West Palm Beach the Red Crosa estimated more than 2000 K0-MILE WINDS MIAMI. Flau Aug. Zl The V. S. weather bureaa aaid today thai hurricane would "compare with the great hurrleanea of the aast- Highest winds recorded by la Btrumenls In the past la Florida waa li an lies per hoar at Hilla boro light la the 1947 storm, he aaid. Gssla of wind ap to 1&0 mile aa hoar were reported la the storm which sweat ever Florida today. of the city's 7000 homes had been damaged. The baseball park grand stand collapsed. Two companies nf national ' guardsmen patrolled the streets to prevent looting of stores whoie windows had been smashed. West Palm Beach Sheriif John P. Kirk said they were needed to curb vandalism In the city s badly hit business district. A number ol bridges were Im passable because ot washouta and wind damage. Senators Pat Owns Backs On Economy WASHINGTON. Aug. 37 tft Economy-minded senators congrat ulated themselves today on a L 400.000 000 slash in defense funds -the bipzest reduction in any one bill in the history of our govern ment. The words were those of Senator Elmer Thomas D-OkJa., who U guiding a multi-billion dollar mili tary money bill through the senate. The huge cutback ordered by the senate yesterday included two Items: H A cut ef SMl&toO.aoe n house approved funds for army, navr and air force upending durinf the 13 months which began- July 1: and a si75.OO.OOt reduction In money that both chamber-, had earlier approved for stockpiling, critical materials. Oregon Fires Incendiary, Forester Says GRANTS PASS. Aug. 27 W A forest fire which burned over ap proximately 200 acres In the Illinois valley week ago was definitely In cendiary In origin, John Kincaid, local state forest patrol supervisor, announced today. It has been established that fires a; three locations, at least, broke out shortly after an automobile has been seen in Ihe area. Kincaid said. Also, other "spot fires" occurred tip-wind and could not have resulted from sparks from the main blaxe, he said. The state fire marshal is conduct, ing an Investigation, Kincaid re. vealcd. TITO. FROGRF.SHIVES BELGRADE. Yugoslavia, Aug. 27 (i The Yugoslav presa reported today that Premier Tito granted an interview to group ot five Ameri can educators and clergymen studying conditions In eastern Europe. The press described them aa members of the the progressive party ot Hear A. Wallace.