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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 30, 1949)
.I", t'V '- jmM iLUuluA JUUiyip W Is I i 1 1 i ii i i imii i i in L y ' ; -vL. r - - - . --i j f A jnj I . ' - - - -'V MtlA ,. ROUNDUP ROYALTY Tht 1949 Loke County Roundup spotlight, September 3, 4 and 5, will be on Queen Anne Barry, center, who will rule over the roundup' festivities. Anne hoi lived all her life in Lakeview ond will leave for Ore gon State college this fall. She and her two princesses, Joan Prott, left, ond Virginia Smith, both of Lakeview, were chosen fot pre roundup dances, with U.t C... ,.A . 1 . Sir FRANK JENKINS IN th V. S. wild thu motnliif itit waa a curious and typical pter of business. A grt nt of tht United tat waa considering n mnd mnl to on of th blf monry billi which would have RlXlUUtEU PREHIDENT TRUMAN to cut gov eminent mpnun fir lo un pr eeritl The iwndmenl lot out In tht voting. 1 CTI tak that on (part to a wht make It tick. Under our system. s devised by taw wu foundtni fthrs. conirMa hold th pura tiring. Thai la to aay, th administrative branch ot ovr oimnnl uh President! ran aprnd ONI. If what th legula nv branch lh concmai AP PROPRIATE Hni H wht th mendmenl would hav aomuntrd to: IT WOl!IJ HAVE REQUIRED TrtC P.'lEHIDENT TO KEPt'rlK TO SPEND Alt MUCH MONEY AS THE CONOKKWt WAS WILL VINO TO APPROPRIATE. ... . ... V I W.... , I " .pending from oongreaa U th President. Under auch a acheme. vry member of congreaa In whoa tat or diatrtrt a hug wad ot tovramnl monry I being aprnt could go horn and aay to hla eon iltuenu: 'Congreaa inf which I am a parti PROVIDED THE MONET, but th Preldnl Un I gmng to aprnd It " t rra break tt down a 1ml far ther. In your family, you aa th bread winner ar and ought to be th txaa a to what will be .pent. You know, of roiira. that your chil dren LIKE TO BP END. Muppoae you (aid: "I want U be popular with you. Mo I am going lo giv rach of you (10 a month .pending money. BUT I AM OOINO TO REQUIRE YOU TO RETUSK TO SPEND ALL OP IT." BBAURDT Of cnur He abaurd. H i wane than that. It'a ridtcu loua. Wheel th eongreaa of th Unlled atata falla a low aa to try to pana a law that would compel the Preal dent to rtfuaa to apend aa much a th congreaa appropriate, thli nation of our haa com to a prct- ... TT ail to to ahow that th mm berg of our congreaa hav th Idea that what th people want la I. ... A .MMlnB anH UAPf "llll'i. .uw aiiuui. ......... BPENDINO. A long a they think that la what th people want, they ar going to ipend. lEven If they hav to rmort to chlldlah achemea Ilk compelling th President to re (Contlnued on Pag 4 n TUn Daft Hp. Legion Hordes Take Over In Philadelphia; Kick Off Second Day With Parade PHILADELPHIA. Aug. 30 lP A gay task force of gaud!!) -dressed American leglonnalrra began a 13 hour parade maneuver today to cap ture Philadelphia. Drums rolled, bugles blared. Strutting girls In pretty costumes twirled batons. Martial tunes filled th air. So did confetti and ticker tape and the cheering applause nf a million Phlladrlphlana and visi tor. Tht Qusker city surrendered hap pily to the Invasion th lesions 3lt annual convention parade. Hours before the march began crowds gathered along the five-mile route. The sun thont brightly In the cloudless sky. U.S. military and naval units led nff the march directly behind the legion's parade marshals. The crack lid-man army band movrd like a precision machine up broad atreet to city hall and the review ing atand. , paratroopers, vacs, m a r I n 1 1, sailor and national guardsmen stepped In unison to the martial music. announcement of the winners I. j 1 I , U CM. 1 Anne Barry Named Queen At. Lake view LAKFVIEW, Auc. 39 Enliterii-ymr-old Anne Harry namrd qurn of irta forttirofnliii Lake County Hound up at ft quern con- teMUnU' dance held In tht airport hangar hut Saturday night. Ann wilt rrlgo vr lh thro. day eelebral!a heptember S, 4 and a. Prlneeaora will b Joan Pratt and Virginia Hmllh. Aniie la th daughter of Mr. and Mri. M. P. J. Barry of Lakeview. and I IM gradual of Lake view high aehool. Slv earned a Ber nard Uwlr educational fund acholar- .hip and will attend Oregon Btai ..nil., ihi. fall Prlncea. Joan a parenu ar Mr. and Mra. H. C. Pratt ot Ukeview. Joan waa burn It yeara ago In Ore- gon City and haa lived In Lakeview Ihe put II year. Bhe. too, U a lata lakeview high achool gradual and kill alund OBC at CoivalU. Th other princes. Vlntlnla. la lh dauf htr of Mr. and Mr. C. D. Hmlih o Ukevlrw, and U a lor im Klamath Pall glrL Th family moved to Lakviw year and a 1 . ,.......( m '. an I V V 1 W " " huh at hool traduatr. hrlpa hr par nt operate their bakery In Lake view. Young Solon Keeps Order. ! Stills Elders WA8HINOTON. Aug. 10 ,4i A fmhman lawmkr got to pre ald over th aenatt yeaterday and promptly proceeded to ahut up both th democratic and republican arn at leader. There's a aenat rule, aometlme obwrved, that aenator can yield the floor only for a question. Sena tor Wllhera ID-Ky) enforced It ye terday when he took over th garel from Vic President Barkley. OOP Floor Leader Wherry tNeb) attempted to make aom comment during an angry political debate. Wither pounded tht roalrum and ordered : "Don't make Dche. Jut aak quastlotu." Wherry looked aurtled. A little later Democratic Leader Lucaa 1 1111 tried to break In. Again Withera banged for allenc. Lucaa looked atartlrd. "Now." aald Withera, ""we're go ing to follow the rule. We're not going to hav speaking back and lortli." There wer no more Interruptions. Tht massed color of th 4 stales. The District of Columbia. Alaska, Ouam, Puerto Rico. The Virgin Islands and the Panama Ca nal gone were carried by bat talion of military policemen. Before th parade ends, about midnight, more than 30.000 persons and some 10 drum and bugle corps will have filed past the reviewing stand. Marchers from Minnesota wore Indian costumes, complete with leathered headdress. . Legion departments proud of their slate's history, dlsplnyrd their fa vorite symbols sagebrush from Nevada: Iowa corn; a Santa Clans from Bsnta Claua, Ind : "Rebel yells' and beautiful girls from Mis sissippi, and. Texas sombreros. Legionnaires bonst there's no big ger parade anywhere else In the world. It annrled downtown traffic to a standstill. The parade la the sole official legion activity on this second day nf th convention. Ytftt i r. . I rKK K riVK I fcSTH Iflelson Steer Named. -V' " .- i.oran To Fight Any Picketing IIOS'OLI'l.r. Au. I 14' -Thr trrrllorr f Hawaii todajr plannrtf I rrlt picketing f It dock oprra llona bf atrlklnt CIO lonihorrmrn. Moth government alevedorlng and picketing aitalnat II were upheld by a federal urt. U. 8 DUlrlct Judge. J. Prank MiLauglilln and Drlbrrl f Meu ker announced the d'Kiblr-bltted de cuion yeaterday. They tald lh ter ritorial government could continue In the atevedortng buainra which It began after aeizlng Ui Wanrti' trik-pluggei dock under an rmergeiuy Law panned by th Ha waiian Legulatur Augtut t. The Judgea ala ruled Ihe Inter national Lnghoremen'a and H are houRrmen'a union rould keep ) picketing the government -operated dork. 1 he union's 2ee airvrdom truck 1-J day ago lo rala thru- I hoor'T Py by II cenla. 1LWU t halleng Th 1LWU had challrngod th Uw In federal court. II had asked an order temporarily reatralnlnf tht docka.nThe t wo" )Hdg Mid'tllil? GRAND CHAMPION Looking a little surprised that he topped all other fat steers at the ruling upholding territorial dock op- M 4,h. onnuol junior livestock show is "Yomsey," a Hereford, exhibited by Marianno Hel craiiotu and th union right toilekson. Bonanza, who hos been a consistent 4-H club cottle roiser for five years. The ! continu. pickeung would b. ef.ee- 1 tlve until thev 4romnletd a hparini i on u u"lon' PPcaUon foe a ii" " u...u. i I the raurt'a aetlaa pick- ellng that wrought aa ImmedlaU I prwmb of rel.un from J. Ciar-1 i ner Aninny. in lerntory aperiai ; epuiy (iorne7 general. The Judge ruled that picket at government piera would be renard-' ed a "monumeula to free men In protet agaima th dock aeltur ; law. TlieM picket, th opinion coc-1 tinued. would not commute a 1 "picket Un in connection with Labor di.pute. Aolhaav eald ( k I a ruling -la vgu and Indefinite si U in awa- slbl effects.- Judge McLaegblls) declined to clarify this part Ihe eplnlouj fee reporter yesterday and Anthony aald he could fire n. authoritative statement what the court meant until the order enforc ing lb Judge' deeiaioa I drafted. Sports Bulletins BRAVr.H BEAT CARDS BOSTON. Aug. 30 ! Boaloa Brave who hav rolled over and played dead ami of Ihe season for th Nlional-Legae-Ladlng C'ardlnala turned n their tor mentor from ML Louis today and defeated Ihesa lt-4. Th loos whit tled a full game off the Cardinals' lead aver the runner-up Dodger. The Card, now have at1 game edge over lh Brook. DODt.ERS WIN BROOKLYN, Aug. 10 iP Oil Hodge hit a two-run homer In the ninth Inning today to pace lh Brooklyn Dodger to a 4-1 victory aver lh Pittsburgh Pir ate. It waa the Dodgers' fourth atraight victory. TENNIS I'PSET FOREST HILLS. N. Y, Aug. It i? Jim Brink, the big Kealtle aoalhpaw who upset seeded Vie Helxaa of Philadelphia In yesler day'a first round, claimed another aeeded victim today when he crushed Mareelto Del Betlo of the Italian Darts Cup team. t-4. t-t. t-1. In the national tennla cham pionship. TI RNESA WINS ROCHESTER. N. Y., Aug. M 4 Willie Tornea of Elmsford, N. V.. waa forced to shoot a two under par today t defeat Harold Fore man ot Cilrneoe. III.. I up. In a second round match ot the 49th annual national amateur lf championship. Philip Morris Swings To ABC NEW YORK. Aug. 30 (, The American Broadcasting company announced today the Philip Morris daytime radio operations would be switched to ABO early In October. The cigarette company now spon sors two daytime shows on the Mu tual Broadcasting system. An ABO spokesman called It the biggest single piece of business ever signed at one time by the network but did not disclose the amount. Philip Morris will sponsor two ARC program a heard Monday through Friday "Ladles Be Seat ed" and Walter (email's "One Man's Opinion." On Mutual It haa been sponsoring "Against the Storm" and "Queen for a Day." l-afllk. KLAMATH FALI.II. OKKOON, 1040-pound animal will be sold tonight in the sales oreno Ot r No Settlement Moves Made In OC&E Strike No moves toward settlement of the Oregon. California and East cm railroad strike hsd been start- I t her today and tht next movt aa expected out of the Oreat I Northern's 8ettle or St. Paul, Minn . headquarters, Oreat Northern, co-owner of ! OC&E with the Southern Pacific. Is currently operating the 65-mile fteighi line which runs from Klam ath PaUs to Bly. The thirteen operating employes of OCAE went on strike yeaterdsy morning In a dispute with the rail road management principally over request for a working rule where by employes having been on duty 13 consecutive hour or more would be given a minimum of 10 hours off duty before being called back to work. The Order ot Railway Conductors brought about the sulk and union representatives said other point of friction with the company Included tour back pay claims and a claim against OCAE for hospital expenses for a worker Injured on the Job several yeara ago. The railroader was shot In the neck by a tres passer on the line. Negotistlons to settle the strike should be held on the property, ac cording to O. W. Langr. vice presi dent ot Ihe Order of Railway Con ductors, and ON officials her In dicate that negotiations on the management's part will be up to I. R. Manlon. ON general manager and OCAE president. Manlon Is now reported to be in Seattle. In a discussion preceding the strike, held here last December, Manlon was represented by M. C. Anderson of St. Paul. Both Sides Ponder Over Steel Issue NEW YORK. Aug. 30 iPt Repre sentatives of labor and manage ment weighed today a presidential i fact-finding board's offer to medi ate a wage dispute which threatens the steel Industry with a nrlke on I September 14. I Both the CIO steelwork! audi some of the big steel companies In- dlcated they might give an answer i during the day. The board hopes to nave replies Horn the union and all 13 companies by tomorrow. The surprise offer was revealed last night to newsmen by the three board member- Just before they concluded their formal hearing of the evidence In the case. The medi ation suggestion was made at a private session last Friday. Both sides said they were giving It carclul consideration. Neither would comment about the position they expect to take, but John A. Stephens, U. 8. steel vice-president, and an Industry leader In the hear ings, observed: "The p r o b 1 1 m of conducting mediation would be difficult with t3 companies and one union." Tl T.HDA V, Senate Economy Drive Bogs Down As Three-Vote Margin Blasts Spending Cut Hopes WASHINGTON. Aug. SO '-Pi A senate economy drive which had built up steam, for month appeared bogged down at last today follow ing final sens I action long over dueon billions of dollars in appro priations. In the f lna' votln vesterdav on a $14,800 000.000 defense money bill. Time Tangle Due To Hit In September Br The Associated Pre Oregon and Washington will be a , Jungle of mixed time rones again next month when some 47 c ties , shift, at varied dates, back to Stan- dard time. t Portland It to return to Pacific; Standard time at 15 a m.. Sept. 34. Seattle will make ; th i shift Sept. U,them dcmocr.L, Sen.tors Mc M under terms of i la ! Clellan of Arkansas and Byrd of V..1 Virg.ni.. and two top republican Olympia oficlals may decide today on whether to make the shift to morrow. Scheduled to change to atandard hours tomorrow are Tacoma. Ho quiam. Aberdeen. Kelso. Centra ha, Chehalls and neighboring communi ties. Oregon City is due to change Sept 11. Hood River shifts SepU . 8weet Home and Albany have decided Sept. 13 will be the date there. For the present. Longview. Van couver, and Astoria are expected to change when Portland does. 1 CONTRACT AWARDED PENDLETON. Aug. 30 i The forest service has awarded a con tract for a new section of the We neha trail In Umatilla national for est to Earl Chapman. Milton. Ht bid 190 for the route, be tween Butte creek and Butte rock in the Pomeroy ranger district of the forest In.Wallowa county. It will be used by pack trains, hikers and for fire control work. Six fords of the stresm will be eliminsted. Pel Ducats Go On Safe Thursday Season tickets for Pllcn foot ball games will go on sale at 8:30 Thursday morning and the earliest of the early buyers prob ably will start camping on the sidewalk In front of the cham ber of commerce building short ly afternoon tomorrow. Standard procedure among several Pel rooters In recent years has been to bring sleeping bsgs, thermos bottles of coffee, sandwiches and portable radios down to the C of O office and spend anywhere from 13 to It hours waiting In line to select choice seats. About 1025 ot the season pasteboards go on sale Thursday, IS for five games. The limit Is six to a customer. Al OI HT M, lMft the foirgrounds 9 , economy advocates actually shewed . , .. . ! amendment which would hav. re - quired President Truman to cut government expenses live to It per cent, they summoned a total of 4 vctes against only 21 tor the od- ; rjositlon. 1 But that was not enough It fell three votes short ot the two-thirds margia which Vice President Bark - ley. the senates presiding officer had ruled necessary. That appeared to put the whole economy Question over until the 1950 congressional campaigns, in which It la expected to be a ma jor issue. The proposed rider would have required Mr. Truman to chop from two to four and a half billion dol lars from the estimated H5.000.000.- Ojm h. - t. -w4 -An n . . . 1 . ....,,., .,!.",., ,,. , wh,ch 5Un Jui; lt4 haJrd-won vlc- tory ,or rm0crauc Leader Lucas mh ml... . - ,w year In Illinois. It was a major setback for two leaders. Senators Wherry of Ne braska and Taft of Ohio. With the economy amendment out of the way the senate quickly de feated an antt-oleomargarlne rider sponsored by Senator Wiley iR-Wis) , and a last minute send-it-back-to-committee economy move by Sena tor Douglas (D-UH. Then It sent the huge defense ap- ; propriation bill bark to the house tor action on senate changes slash ing nearly tl.400.000.000 from the house-approved total. i SURFACING TULELAKE'S MAIN STREET The six-block heart of Tulelake's business sec tion is to have a modern paved street instead of a dirty and dusty dirt thoroughfare. In the above photo, gravel that is being mixed with an oil based binder, is piled in the middle of the street. About one-third of the surfacing, a strip along the east side of the street, is already down and the entire job scheduled for completion in about two weeks. Curbs and gutters were put in before the surfacing work began. The 81 -foot-wide street surfacing it between the Klomoth Folls-Alturas county rood ond the Eost-West highway, on approximate distance of 2430 feet. Modern street lights are to be installed the entire length of the sur faced section. U1mmik fall ltd vlci-itlvf Plr tlar Wotliioaalav r few raltvrt'tl lkilralrnB ! Itlilailt, Hit Uelav V. LW Ualgkl Hih KolaB4lr M. Mc.a. iAif. ) ... M Mia. 1 Telfphm till Ctooirap Brandjesky Entry Takes Reserve Post -Yamsey 14 pound Her, ford, raised by 14-year-old Marlan na Helleksoa. Bonanaa, as I rand thaatpioa fat steer of the 14lh Annual Junior livestock show. He will lead the parade of all champ- Ions tonight al the Klamath county falrgrounda. The champ, out of the Yamsev Land and Cattle company herd nosed out Betty Brandjesky Aberdeen-Angus by a narrow margin. Decision of the Judge, Joe B. John son, professor of animal husbandry. Oregon Stale college, was made after the field of dozens of tine animals was narrowed down to two. Betty won Orand Champion honors Last year In the same class, and placed the reserve-grand cham pion Angus steer yesterday. Mananna la an old hand at win ning Pour-H beet honors. During the five yrs she haa exhibited in th. 4-H division she has taken . several lesser placements. This year, not content with raising the Orand champion of all fcreed the exhibited the champion Hereford steer and took first on Hereford. Betty'a mem grand champion Aagu. -Chester,'' la the special award eatt she won last year aa ex hibitor of the grand champion t th abew. The ealf waa givea by (bet Bartu of the Black and W hite ranch, Poe valley. Erwtn Ritter. Bonanaa, walked away with the grand champion ribbon In the PFA fat steer divis ion. His entry waa a Hereford weighing In at 1000 pounds, stian i Champ Th rtaervt champion tn the " cf?' " ""' " n hv Paul Mtcka. Malin. j 10 Shorthorn cla-s itartm ; Rrrn"' K,no . roM' 1001 ltmM" i championship honors, Champion Angus female was shown by Rodney Lyon. Maim. Ted DeMemtt, Malin raised the champion FPA Hereford female ' nd toolc ,lso 00 his Here- i,ora cow na cmu' I The champion and blue ribbon Continued on Page 3 ) Pelican Proves Too Much For Curious Scout Del Ysntls. field executive of the Modoc Area Scout council, has been convinced that It s rather dangerous to stick one's neck out too far, especially too far Into a pelican's pouch. Ysntls and several shipmates hauled a friendly pelican aboard their boat In th course ot the annual Sea Scout cruise on Klamath lake last week. Tt.ty Just wanted to get a closer look at the bird. But Del got Just a little bit too close a look for Mr. Pelican's liking. The bird whirled around and closed it's huge 30-lnch length bill on Yantls' head, cut ting him on th. right cheek with It sharp barbs and raising a Urge lump behind the left ear. "Prom henceforth." said Del, "I'll be more cautious when a Pelican Is In the Immediate vi cinity." i-4 T" Bitterness Increases In Power Feud LONDON. Aug. 30 fP Bovlei Russia, In a new note I Belgrade, accused Premlrc Marshal Tlto'a Yugoslavia today f working -nly a lh In true liens f It wlera masters." Th not was broadcast by the Moscow radio and recorded In Lon don by th Soviet monitor. It wg th eighth In a series of Increas ingly bitter exchange between the two feuding communist countries. The Moscow note denied Yugo. lav charges, made Aug. 3g, that lh Kremlin had double-crossed Yutos laria oy abandoning Y u g s I r claim to Austriaa territory at last June' conference of th big four foreign ministers In Paris. The Russians said Yugoslavian August 30 note was "an accumula tion of fresh scandal and slander ous distortions calculated aa mask ing Its (Yugoslavia's! own double dealing policy and deceiving th people of Yugoslavia." Help Offered Moscow said Us note waa a s "" to eoBTtne the Yugoslav go- ! """". wnten naa long been Uv 'ng without convictions and woeka only on the Instractloas of It west era masters, bat la order to aa mask it and help the peoples of Yugoslavia to see the true face of the present Yugoslav gtrveenmrnl." The Moscow-Belgrade feud ha been tn progress lor more than a year and recently haa Increased in bitterness. Titos communist regime In Yu goslavia was expelled from th con iform (communist International bu reau! for what the Kremlin regards as nauonahstic deviations from orimmox communism. Moscow haa called aa V..i. ""1" " other eoaamunist states ml Fjn Europe hav imposed aa atueeae sa Yugoslavia. Actually Yugoslavia and Russia have been exchanging note on two distinct disputes. One center on Yugoslavia disappointment over what Belgrade regard aa Moscow a abandonment of Its claims to Aua trisn territory. The other has to do with charges by Moscow that Tito regime I mistreating Soviet eltl xens within Yugoslavia borders. Brannan Puts Damper On farm Hopes SYRACUSE. Aug. 30 M Secre tary of Agriculture Brannan today read warning signals Into bumper crop estimates coupled with falling farm Income figures. He told a farmer-labor confer ence here th second largest farm output of all tune is assured but that ."the old price squeeze Is op erating again and the farmer I caught right in the middle." And he put in a plug for his pro gram of price supports tied In with supply-and -demand, soil conserva tion and acreage allotment with marketing agreements. "We must protect our agricultur al economy against the disastrous price declines that have occurred so often In the past," he aald. "We must find ways to keep farmer producing and consumers consum ing. We must Insure our aotlg against further abuse." Baffled Groom Leaves Out Wife SALEM. Aug. 30 ( A Salem prospective bridegroom couldn't re member the details about his flan ceo so he Just left her nam oft the marriage license application. The matter came to Light yester day when the Marlon county clerk j reported he received applications during this month from 131 men 1 and 130 women. The man said he would come back when he Learns more about , th girl. ' i v' ',.- twv.JJ ..y""' ' ' aJ"- 1 V ' .4 A-i.t