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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 6, 1949)
if in mm m mk j .. . luTho : 1 1 mm) j re i : , Br FRANK JENKINS FROM Washington: "President Truman today signed bill providing i&,Hoo.utK),ooo iflve billion, eight hundred and nine mil linn dollars! to carry on th foreign Id program until next June 30." I hope II work.. We all hop It worm. If It doesn't, we're out a lot of cash and In lor a lot ot trouble. What 'n trying to do la to ahara our prosperity i which by com. parlton with the rest of th world, la great) with our friends until they can get bark on their feet and be come prnperous In their own right. Paale thi In your hat: NEVKK SINCE THE WORLD BE GAN waa a mora generous gesture iila by any nation toward other itlons. ifcaill rime WEATHER klsauUl rlla VWlslivl Vsrl. tl Im4imm Mr mm4 (MitM lib srIUrMl stvvara. rsrllr rnaar. aia iar ss. tw uusst tt. Hifk rntor M.t lOel. (I t Mia. . tl rrclalUUa Im4 t4 fcaara PRICE riVE CENTS KLAMATH MIX, OREGON, Tllt'HKDA Y, OCTOBER . 1MI Tetrahatsa till Ne, una NOTIIKn on from Waliliiton: ""President Truman today elgned tha 11.314.010000 lone billion. Uiree hundred and fourteen million) arma aid bill, calling It a notable contri bution to tha collective security of tha free natloni of the world." PIIAT ona Involvet a aomrwhat dlf- fcrent principle. What wa re doing there la to give tuni to our frlendt III Western k'urcpa In - the luiie that If com munut Huuta runa amurk they'll be abla lo atop her before aha get to tin. Our motive In Dili case ta some what less altruistic, ROAIN I hope It works. Wa ALL " hope It works. But It'a gamble a rather long one. In fact. Aa ol now. thla la the aituatlon: If RiiMla. even alter waiting for Ui to get our billion dollara worth of guna Into the hsnds of our frlendi. ahould go on the prod, It eernu re ruin that aha could trample all of Western Europe Into the mud before we could do anything lo pre vent It. In that event, we would merely have poured our billion dollara worth of guna down a rat hole. By giving them away, we'd have weak ened ourselves lo that extent. a WE know thla much: " WE ARKNT OOINO TO START A WAR Wa hope we can convince Russls that It wouldn't be aate for her to atart a war. TP Ruula la bluffed out of alartlng a war to conquer the world In the name of communism. It will be our TRKMKNDOU8 ABILITY TO PRODUCE that will do Ui Job. It waa our lenuullo ability to produce that won tha laat war and the war before that. ft we're going to bluff tough Rus ala, we'd better keep our great pro duction machine operating at top efficiency. Aa we read the headlines of tha pant few dsys. wa can't help wondering If the efficiency of our machine hn t beginning lo auffer. TP to. It Un't because of any defect In the machine luelf. The ma china la better than ever. The trou ble seems to be that we can't agree as to how It ought to be driven. Snow, Ice Show King Winter Near Bnow and freezing temprraturea red lettered the morning houra and winter made Itself known In the higher elevatlona with a fairly atlff anowtali which closed both the north and east entrancea to Crater Lake national park. It waa anowlng heavily tale yes terday afternoon on tha Willamette pass. Klamath bound motorists re ported. Minimum temperature reading here waa a atraighl freezing 3, but the U. B. weatherman forecast a low of aft degreea tor tonight. Precipitation totaled M Indies tor tha past 34 hours. Know - Klurk! At Crater Lake park Chief Ranger Louis Hallock aald It waa anowlng heavily Just before noon and tor the first lime thla season a car waa atuck In a drift. There waa a four-Inch depth of now at park headquarters and "still coming down." Plowa were keeping the south and west entrancea clear and the rtm road waa open to motorists. Mini mum temperature In the park thla morning waa 34 degrees, one of the coldest morning of the season. Word from Yreka advised the temperature dropped from 47 de greea on Wednesday morning to 38 degreea this morning, lowest mark since last spring. There waa i rather heavy frost In that area. -;).s.ar.. maw aaw, any .... - ..,, ... ., ' . I Q P"r - '; "',' "":'!: --;, I .-, Bums Win 1-0; Hodges Drives In Victory Run YANKEE STADIUM, New York, Oct. 6 (AP) Preacher Roe, a gangling bag of bones from Arkansas, shut out the New York Yankees with six hits today as Brooklyn squared the 46th World Series, at one game each with a 1-0 victory over Vic Raschi, while 70,053 fan; watched in comparative silence. This second straight 1-0 game was a new exper ience for the serifs. Never Vipfnro Viarl turn 1.0 o-amoa PrTTSBUROH. Oct 0P- The 1 . owt ihr, t. T 7 , . . cio united steeiworkera made j bte" tnrow In tne 8ame season, let alone in succession, peace with Henry j. Kaiser but! Brooklyn scored its lone run off Raschi in the spread their walkout to two more second inning and Roe held tight as the Yanks staged a mreai in eacn oi me last tnree innings. Jackie Robinson's double to the left field corner, qis first hit of the genes, Kaiser OICs CIO Terms; Coal Stuck plante today. And aa the nationwide steel shut down over pensions reached the sixth day, the federal government still Ignoring Philip Murray's bat tle with Big Steel announced It would try to settle he lt-day-old strike of 3su,0OC soft coal miners. The ranks of 500.000 striking steei workera were Joined but night by 1500 at the Atlantic Steel company In Atlanta and 2000 at the River dale plant of the Acme Steel com- ; pany near Chicago. j' Ne Peace Sigoa Despite these developments there i are no signs of an early peace in the double-barreled iteel-coal walk- Anybody See 'Mike,' Hitch Hiking Puss? Have ynu seen a little Persian kit- : ten who likes to hitch rides In cars? If you have, then he probably be j longs to 3-year-old Mike Aram who lives at .' Crosby. I The grey feline, who has no white i msrklrus. has a habit of following ! little Mike around like a pet d. Mikes mother. Mrs. Arant How ard, aald the kitten has a habit of climbing Into the back seat of a ear and going to sleep. He la liable to be Just about anywhere. Bo If you ahould happen to a e e Mike's kitten, the young lad would appreciate your calling 69M. TEACHERS WENT TO school todoy, kids hod Thursday and Friday to themselves, as the out. Southern Oregon Regional conference ot teachers and educators gathered at 9 o clock in ' Sporadic violence marks the coal the) newly dedicated Mills auditorium. From the looks of this shot, not o single teacher in i t"l. A few thousand non-union Klomoth, Loke, Jackson or Josephine counties, missed the opening session. General meet ings are held at Mills auditorium, but the sectionol gatherings will be held during the afternoons ot KUHS, Roosevelt and Fremont. Superintendent of State Instruction Rex Putnam is among the educators here for the session. Klomoth County Superintendent Carrol Howe is general chairman of the conference. Teenagers Save Woman From Blaze Senators OK Farm Price Support Bill WASHINOTON, Oct. ( iyfi The senate agriculture committee today approved, I lo I, flexible farm price support bill. Democratic Leader Lucas of Illinois aald It will be brought before the senate lomor- Basin Mens' Names Drawn For Homesites miners continue digging with pro- tection of heavily armed guards and I ! police. ; j Kaiser did what Big 8tecl refuses i j to do. It signed an agreement to i ; give four cents per man-hour fori j insurance and six cents an nour tor ' ! pensions paid completely by the: i company. "rT iti a PREACHER ROE , Ace from Arkansas Mrs. Mae E. Fowler of 218 Wash Ington street may well credit group of teen-age neighborhood Two Klamath be.-un men will have youngsters for saving her We late flm crcks M homesteads yesterday afternoon. ing opeI)rd on ,he Rtverton rec- The boye were playing In the tarnation project at Rlverton, Wyo.. street in the Powler block when one It w u learned 'here at noon today j noticed flames reflected In the front through the Associated Press. winoow. mey Drone tne bedroom' Drtairig No. I aa Rudolnh L Butte Airport Bids Soon YRFKA The board of supervi sors. In aesslon here yesterday, de rided to advertise for blda on the Butte Valley airport at Dorria. Con stnictlon bids will be called In tha very near future. The airport will be built on a match-fund basis. Tha board also authorized oiling and patching Improvements of Dor ria city streets at a cost not to ex ceed (1000. New Endurance Air Mark Set YUMA. Arl.. Oct 11 Yuma'a refreshed and rejuvenated en durance flyers continued to add more houra lo their new world flight record today. They passed the old mark of lOOf houra last night, and Immediately announced the emotional lift of reaching their goal had removed much of the growing fatigue they have felt In the pant four day Their plane. The City of Yuma" carried them past the record with out a major falter during their alx weeka In the air. It la a four-place Aeronca monoplane. Ing the lines of the long-range farm measure originally Introduced by Senator Anderson (D-NMi. Bill Returned The senate sent the Anderson bill back to the agriculture committee Tuesday night, after Vice Presldnet Berkley had broken a tie to give senate approval of an amendment tor price propa under major crops at M per cent of parity. (Parity la a price level calculated to give farmera the same returns on their crops, measured In things they buy, that they had In a paat favorable period I. the floor, unconscious. She waa car- ' member of a coroner's jury, said AMA Says US Probe Making Meet the People mm INTEREST WAS centered today In the Southern Oregon Regional conference whkh it the 1949 terminology of the old fashioned teachers institute. Here are three teachers from Rogue River registering with Joyce Griffin. Standing, left to right, Mrs. Eugene LeVoy, Ralph CruMnbach nd . David CHICAGO, Oct. (Pi Trustees of the American Medical associa tion said today that the AMA and 16 state and county medical socie ties are being investigated by the anti-trust division of the Justice de partment. The board of trustees Issued a statement "protesting the use of the police arm of the government In a campaign to discredit American medicine and terrorise physicians Into abandoning their opposition to compulsory health Insurance. The board aald that on February 10 the board room of the trustees In Chicago waa broken Into and records of the board were thorough ly searched. Police Seeking Highwaymen BAKER. OcL 6 MV-State police today are searching for two mysterious hold-up men who report edly forced a Wlngvllle man at gun point to drive them about IS miles west of Baker on a by-way off highway 30. The utory. told by Virgil Kuhn, Wlngville. to state police was this: Kuhn was driving his pickup truck west on highway 30 near Baker about 10:45 p. m. Wednesday when two men flagged him down. Both entered the pickup and one, with a gun, ordered Kuhn to drive them along by-roads to Haines, Where the road Joins the highway a car waa waiting for the men, Kuhn aald. He aald they took his bill fold, threw his keys In a ditch and departed In the waiting car. Drawing No. 9. Arthur R. Patter ns nut or II,. h,-. h. th. "r rviiumu. rain. stere, one of whom then turned In , luh v rtnl the alarm. , A World War U. veteran from A aarden hose was then hroncht i Utah waa No. 1 for the unlta tn a Into play and the fire fairly well Public drawing staged by the bureau -.bout 70- pupils were aboard the under control by the time the fire of reclamation at Rlverton. i hul whlch mit tot 42. department arrived. There were Ml applications re- Screaming children, books and New Radio l ard i 'vc1 ttom 40 states and Alaska iunch baskets Uttered the swamp- Por the first time, firemen made ,or the h" hundred Irrigable farm I bordered roadside. use of a new two-way radio to sum-! unlu- winners wu oe acreenea oy mon Kaler'e ambulance. Mrs. Pow-! n examining board In a final re ler waa then moved to Klamath Val-! "tor. ley hospital where she waa treated and released. Credit goes to five neighborhood kids Max Heiken, Lloyd Oass, BIU Oasa, Bum Buck and Gary Meid rlch. Firemen credited the blase to a burning cigarette. Play by Play FIRST INNING DODGERS Raschi hurled the first pitch U Reese over the heart ei the plate for a called strike. Reese swung at a twe and two pitch and sent a high akyacraping fly U Linded in medium left field. Jorgenaen looked at a. ball and strike, then grounded U Hemic h wha beat him In a race for the bag to make an usaaaUted potent. Snider swwng vieiowsly and aniaaed s wicked curve ball, -them shaped , Two of tne' Injured were -not- tx "' "ebi'e tmnf pitch right M Ru pee led to live. "to who leased hha eot with D. H. Bunn Jr. of Middlesex, P1 Prr. said brambles and weeds overhung I N " errors, acne the rilrt rnari at the site nf the 1 'c't. crash, obscuring vision. Bunn. a i FIRT INNING YANKEES School Bus Crashes; 5 Children Die I MIDDLESEX. N. C, Oct. OPi A school bus packed with children and an ice truck crashed today on a narrow wooden bridge, killing at least five pupils and Jnjtmng IS. Another Power Shortage Seen SEATTLE. Oct Wl The Pacific Northwest is getting ready for another winter o.' electric power shortages. Chairman Owen Clarke and Ray mond Clifford of the state public service commission said the agency expects to Issue an order next week to outline a program for private power companies. Bonneville power administration officials said earlier this week that power for aluminum reduction plants may have to be cut in a few ahiff. fn-. i a! n . i weeks. The declining level of the search party were scouring the I Columbia river, and the prospects Hunter Lost In Tamarack Flat 7oods OREGONIAN HONORED NEW YORK, Oct. (P) James Dnlton Cunningham, president of Republlo Flow Meters company, Chicago, has been elected president ot the American Society of Me chanical Engineers for luou. Elected for two-vear term as regional vice president waa Samuel H, Oraf, Corvallts, Ore. FERRY BIDS ASKED SALEM, Oct. P The atate highway commission called for bids today on providing ferry service across the Coos river at Knegren crossing In Coos county. Tha bids will be opened November T. heavily wooded area of Tamarack flat near Tennant in Northern Cali fornia today, seeking a 75-year-old missing hunter, Chris Abrams ot Beaver Creek on the Klamath river. The aged hunter was reported missing at 3 a. m. today to the sher iff's office in Yreka by his com panion, Russell Tolln who Uvea near Montague on the Klamath river. Hunters Separate Tolln told officers he and Abrams had started out early yesterday morning and hunted together until about noon when they separated. Tolln waited for hours at camp be fore reporting his missing com panion. Deputy Sheriff Harold Cool and a county employe. Dean Myrick. left early this morning to organise a searching party in the hopes of lo cating Abrams before he was forced to spend another night in below freezing weather In the brushy sector. Night High School For Employed Evening classes for 16 and 17-year-old students who are regular ly employed are being held Tuesday and Wednesday nights each week in room 201 at Klamath Union high school. This Is in accordance with the compulsory school law which re quires all young men and women to attend school until 18 years of age or graduation. In addition to requir ing that the 16 and 17-year olds be regularly employed the law also re quires that they attend school five hours per week. Any exceptions must clear through the local high school. TRAFFIC DEATH PORTLAND, Oct. 6 (P Mike Chrlstofferson, 70. Wolf Point, Mont, died In a hospital today after he waa struck by a ear In Portland. of the same in the Grand Coulee dam reservoir, are responsible. Deputy Pankey Not Conscious I Yet, Critical Deputy Sheriff Willis Pankey's; condition was reported to be un-1 changed today at Klamath Valley hospital. I Pankey has been unconscious; since the accident early Monday j night in which he and Sgt Mark; Sullivan ot state police were tn-j Jured when they swerved to avoid : hitting a deer on the highway near j Bly. Sullivan remains In Klamath Val ley hospital, but his condition is good, and he Is showing steady im provement, attendants said. !TI7" pC' IMOGENE GOES HOME With o gay smile and a worm handshake, 14-year-old Imogene Wittsche, whose feet were sheader off by a speedboat propel lor three months ago, bids goodbye to Superintendent of Nurses Moida Pringle as she leaves Washoe Medical center in Reno, Nev., for her home In Roteville, Colif. Rixxato foaled Roe's first Bitch Into the lower stands in hack of the Dodger dug eat He ignored a ball, then rifled a solid single over Third Baaemaai Jergensen'a bead Into left field. Teauny Hen. rich, her of yesterday's l- Yankee win, received a trrmen desa ovation aa he stepped into the batter's box. Hermanakl raced into the right field earner to get under Henrieh's looping fry. With Bauer at hat. Cam Due lis almost threw the ball away in aa attempt to pick Rfamto off first. A nice catch by Hodgea saved him from aa error. Robinsen gauopeal into foul territory behind first base to gather in Bauer's pop. DiMaggio fried deep to Snider who made the catch in left-center field. Ne rona, one hit, B errors, em left SECOND INNING DODGERS Robinson slashed a doable ever Johnson's head coming in ahead at Lindell's throw to Rixxato. Hermanakl fooled to Coleman di rectly in front ef the field boxes In abort right Robinson tagged up and made a daring dash for third which he made easily when Coleman slipped on the grasa aa he made the throw. Raekley sent a dribbler down the third base line and was out In a very close play. Johnson to Henrich as Rob inson waa forced to hold third. Hodges rifled a single past the outstretched glove of Rixxuto to score Robinson. When Lindell fumbled the ball m left field. Hodges continued to second on the error. Campanella waa given an Intentional walk. Hodges' hit was the Dodgers' second, aa many aa they made In the entire game yesterday. Roe struck out swing ing. One run, two hits, one error, two left SECOND INNING' YANKEES Pitching carefully to Lindell. Roe saw the count go to S-t, then got Lindell on a soft fly to Hrr manski In short right Johnson also ran up a 3-1 count then filed to Snider who made a glovrd-hand catch after nearly misjudging the ball. Snider slipped as he suddenly hsd to backtrack In order to make the catch. Coleiun fouled off four consecutive pitches, then lifted an easy fly to Snider. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left THIRD INNING DODGERS ' Rlssuto gobbled up Reese's bounder and threw him out. Jorgensen sent a high pop foul to Silvers about 1 feet from home plate. Depending mostly on a alow curve, Raschi got Snider to roll out to Coleman to Henrich. No rune, no hits, no errora, none ten. THIRD INNING YANKEES Silvera popped to Jorgenaen about a foot or two Inside the third baas sack. Raschi bounced (Continued, on Pag Jr started the Dodgers on their way in the second. I When Gerry Coleman ;fell after racing back of nrsi 10 snare liene Her manski's foul pop, Robby tagged up and ran safely to third. He held while Billy Johnson threw out Marv Raekley. Gil Hodges then slammed a game-winner, a Jingle to left scoring Robinson, when Johnny Lindell fumbled tha bsll for an error. Gil went to second. The single was the ball game. Rob Inson scoring easily and Lindell a error didn't make too much dif ference because Hodges was left oa second. Roe. the Sl-year-eld Dodger "stopper- from Hardy. Ark, turned fas a superb effort al though he waa in danger threwgh the late stages. Each time ha had all he needed to pull out of a Jam. Never walking a single man. Roe struck out three in his first series appearance The Yanks never got more than one hit an inning and only one Jerry Coleman's double in the fifth was an exus baser. . Don Newcombe In losing to Alii Reynolds yesterday also did not dole out a base on balls. Roe's performance was all the sere ranarkable because he had bee bit on the right hand by a greuad ball la the I earth Inning. He- hesitated coming aut far tha fifth and the Dodger bull pea was busy. It was the first time all season a lefhander had shutout the Yanks. They were blanked In the regular American league season only twice by Bob Lemon of Cleveland and particularly by Lindell. Big John, righthanders. There was some weird outfield play In this second series game, Bllis Kinder of Boston. Both are ef course, fumbled Hodges' single In the second. He also played with Roy Campanella 's single in tha fifth but recovered In time to aava himself another error by throwing out Campanella, hot-footing tor second. The Box YANKEE STADIUM. Oct. (fl Official boxscore of the second game in the 194 World Beries: Braeklya (N) AB R H O A Reese, ss .. 4 0 1 Jorgensen. 3b 4 114 Snider, cf 4 0 13 1 Robinson. 3b 3 113 1 Hermsnski, rf 3 0 13 0 a-Purillo 1 0 0 McCormick. rf 0 0 0 1 Racklev M 3 0 10 9 Olmo. If 3 t 1 3 0 Hodges, lb 3 0 1 1 Campanella, a 3 0 1 4 Roe, p 3 B 0 1 1 Totals 31 1 7 37 11 a-Popped out for Hermsnski In th. New York (A) Rtzzuto, ss ... Henrich. lb Bauer, rf DiMaggio. cf Lindell, If .... Johnson, 3b Coleman, 2b Silvera, c .... b-Mize c-Stirnweiss Niarhos, c ... Raschi. p d-Brown Page, p - AB R H O A 3 0 10 4 0 0 11 1 4 0 110 4 0 110 4 0 0 3 1 4 0 10 3 4 0 1 3 3 0 0 0 1 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 27 11 Totals 33 b-Singled for Silvera in 8th. c-Ran for Mlze in 8th. d-Struck out for Raschi in (th. Brooklyn 1N .: 010 000 000 I New York (A) . 000 000 000 0 Lindell, Reese, Roe. RBI Hodges. 2B Robinson, Coleman, Jorgensen. 3B Hermsnski. SB Rizzuto, Johnson. 8 Rtszuto, Rob inson. DP Rlzzuto. Coleman and Henrich. Earned Runs Brooklyn (N) 1. New York (A) 0. Left Brooklyn (N) 5; New York (A) 7. BB off Raschi 1 (Campanella). SO by Raschi 4 (Roe 3. Robinson); Roe 3 (DiMaggio, Brown, Lindell). Hits and runs olf Raschi ( and 1 In eight innings; Page 1 and 0 In 1. Winner Roe. Loser Raschi. U Resrdon (NL) plate; Passarella (AL first base; Jorda (NL) sec ond base; Hubbard (AD third base; Hurley AL) lelt field foul line; Barr NL right. T-2:30. A-70,-053 (paid). Receipts $313,293.73. STRIKE OVERT HONOLULU, Oct WH-fnleal ' Leader Harry Bridles declared to day he had aegetiated a settle aaent ef the IM-day-ald Hawaiian stevedore strike, bat aa siuplsjee spokesman aald, -aa aettlsassat V.