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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 8, 1949)
, 1 ) .... JV fo) V n WEATHER llfc rail Vto.al.t-- Psrllr Mir it4 ig-lil. lrrJc I4im carl 4a r wit trr kf fta4y I tail. (illiM4 .-) Uatf-I. Ml M. Low a. St. Hlgk ftaatUy M. Mai. 'Ort 7 . . Mil. . , t rraeiplUUaa lM 14 fcaart , , ,M rRICK MVS CtNTH KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, HATI KDAY, OCTOBKR I, lMt Tdcphmit 1111 N. 2t99 Cold Worries Spoad Growers JOI DIMETRAKOS rambled for tht open spaces last night on Modoc field. Oorgt Bilderbock, 37, Springfield bockfield man, comet up to make the Hop. An unidentified Pelican ' griddcr it sprawled in the foreground after missing a block on Bildcrbock. Springfield' Blockley, 31, is shown in the bcsxkground. The Pels won, 45 to 6, for their third straight vitjtoiy of the current season. (Story of gome is on sport page.) Cartip By WANK JINMSS TISPA10HE8 tlm morning lvf U us tlus quick um-up ol uii Industrial situation In our country: -Theft was nothing to Indicsui an Mrly srtUrnirnt ol th nsUons ni)ur Ubur trouble suikes oy kiiii UO.UUO steel and eosl workers. "Triers were Uireais ol a uaUon wlde railroad amk and a walkout by soms 20.000 aluminum vorkera In eight iutn. -Tin continuing aulk by John L. Lrwta' IWO.OUtt mine workers now three weeks old prompted Cyru Clung, federal conclllallon director, to warn: "EACH DAY BRINGS THE NATION CLOSER TO A CRiaibV " JILL Una la happening al a Um "when Uia prospect ol shooting war throughout Uw world la be coming mora imminent with each day Uiat passes. Uf HAT la wrong with u? ' Here, I Uimk. la Uie aner: Wt HAVtNT YtT LEARNED the thick or ufc-rriNU ALONO WITH EACH OTHER. T lhl point. I d Ilka lo sugneU " a book tor you to read. Iia uUe la -Winuina Your Way wiui People." lit author la K. C. Ingram, a loruier newspaper man, now a vict-prtildeni ol Uie BouUitrn Pa cilic Convauy. , All Uie way through the book, he hammers noma Una advice; II you wank lo get ahead In the world. LEAKN HOW TO OET ALONO WITH PEOPLE. It you have Uiat priceless talent, he says. NOTHJNU CAN 81XJP YOU. Woman Shot Self; Doctors Say Critical A woman Identified ai Kath leen i Kay atunu, 32, of Sacra mento la In a critical condition at Klamath Valley hmpital from a aelf-tnfltcted bullet wound In her cheat. Stat pollc aald the jowg woman ahot heraelf with a 3 caliber revolver In the cardroom of lha Midway tavern al ChemuU yealcrday afternoon. Mua Slunila reportedly had been drinking heavily, police aald, and had told Ralph Bell, owner of the tavern, Thursday aha waa going to kill heraelf. Yesterday afternoon she again told Bell she wa going to kill herself, walked Into the cardroom, took the revolver In her left hand, placed It against "her body and pulled the trigger. She waa brought to the hospital by Kalers ambulance and was under emergency surgery for over an hour last night. Miss Slurgla reportedly had two revolvers, on with her and tht other hidden In the tavern. GloomClouds Low Over Labor Front By The Associated Press There wasn't much to cheer about on the nation' labor front today. Here' a quick run-down of ma jor disputes which already have made Idle more than a million worker There waa nothing to Indicate an early settlement of the country major labor trouble ttrikea b y some toO.000 steel and coal worker. Rail Hlrlke Threat There were threats of a nation-I Arm V ind a walkout: 7 Season Low Here; More Chill Seen wide railroad strike and by some 20.000 aluminum workers Mich idOli in eight states. The continuing autk by John L. Lewis' 180.000 United Mine Worker Naval, Marine Air Arms Slash Forecast WAHHINOTON. Oct. t Ml Chairman Vinson 'D-Oal of the hou.se armed service committee said today the defense department ha decided to cut naval and marine aviation "about In half.'' Vinson report of "secret orders'' at the Pentagon came a the com mittee dug grimly Into "dlsturblna" reoorta that defense chiefs vi scuttling the navy' air arm. . I The mercury hit a seasonal low The armed aervicea chairman aald further that he ha It on reliable I this morning when temperature authority that the air force has taken the position that no large air- I reading In Klamath Pall officially . craft carriers or their air groups i registered 2 degree. A few un- ' should be kept In the navy. i oiiiciai tnermometer gave out wun Vinson spoke up as his committee ; a 22 reading, but CAA records ; started another day s hearing to get I were six degree warmer. j to the bottom of friction In the I Forecast for the week-end is for I armed services, I overcast skies and a low of 25 de- llopaood Eiplslns I free. It will be no warmer than Before the committee wa Rear 1 52 ree Sunday, according to AOro. Herbert O. Hopwood, navy J CAA. Official reading thl morning budget of fleer, to explain the navy ' (t 11:30 2 degree, financial mutton Spud Mew Wetry Hopwood waa called to tell what 1 F,rme" mm Braving for warmer Is happening to funds earmarked ' weather with the big spud harvest by congress tor naval air. : Doul 23 to to per cent oone in Nation's Football Results f m i i 21 7 That inquiry follows up navy : U1' sln COAL TALKH WAHHINOTON. Oct. I Of John L. Lewis and the soft coal oper ators agreed today to resume eon tract negollaUona next Wednea day In Charleston and Whit Sul phur bprlnga, W. Va. One major aerator apokeaman aald: 'I guess we're on dead center anUI next Wednesday." Nary Duke Michigan State Maryland Brown Rhode Island ... Penn Princeton North Carolina mm charges yesterday of air .. Xo i bungling and plotting. force 1 Au sacked spuas must oe unaer rover or nigntiau ana a tew leu in . . a . in, ttei itr tiiimr vr tianiv M Vinson ninueu reeieo on iigurea ' - - ifrom the year s appropriation for i nipped. There was some field frost i the navy which congresa ha not wtu- sueranr pousioes sun ui Cheesecakers Band Against False Fronts HOLLYWOOD, Ort. I A-Comea now Hollywood A PL, not a labor organlxauon but the AnU-Falsiea League. Its a group of young, beautlfislly PHIS, he assert, la the basic rule pronoruoned contract actresses who 1 for getting along with people: have banded together, wiui front ol- "Thing, act and aurak In terms of fire approval, to combat growing Uie oUirr persona Interest." Then he adds: "Another way of aaylng It la 'seek what you want WITHIN THE FRAMEWORK OP WHAT OTHERS WANT AND THINK.' This philosophy holds that there need be no Irreconcilable conflict of Interests between buyer and teller or between employer and em ployee." 1 PIIKN he put on this cap sheaf: 1 YOU DON'T NECESSARILY HAVE TO OBTAIN SOMETHING BY TAKINO IT AWAY FROM ANOTHER PERSON. VOU will reoognlsv, of court, that this philosophy la derived from the Oolrirn Rule. Tin 1 the Oolden Rule: "Do ye unto others aa y ''would that others shall do unto you." If that rule were followed by all of us, EVERYBODY would be better off. It would pay In dollar and cent. It would pay off In the satisfactions of a TRULY more abundant life. ... AfT would do more Uian Uiat. It would get for u the SECUR' ITY Uiat we all crave AND WHICH WILL NOT BE PRO VIDKD FOR US BY PRESENT BCHEMES TO VOTE EVERY BODY RICH AND PENSION EVERYBODY OFF. ... PHIS 1 a fact about our Industrial strife that we can't afford to Ignore: MODERN INDUSTRIAL STRIFE IS THE FIRST COUSIN OF WAR. Save In exceptional cases, such aa our Revolution, war la a de stroyer. ConUnued long enough, It DESTROYS EVERYTHINO. If our Industrial warfare la con tinued long enough, It will destroy our American way of life. Used Wifers Deer Tag Heavy Fine Art' James Redd, 40, of 547 Com mercial, paid S1O4.50 fine an court costa- tin morning for using his wife deer tsa on a buck he killed a few hour earlier near Olene. Ho pltndrd guilty to the charge of possession of a deer tag other than hi own when arraigned be fore Justice of the Peace J. A. Mnhoney. Redd waa arrested by state police and a federal game officer who aald they were able to prove that Redd' wife Wat not along on the hunting trip. public suspicion that movie lovelies are not what they are but phoney. The league developed quickly aft er Mrs. Darwin Greenfield, a New Orleans beauty, sputtered loudly about beauty contestant wearing cheater Natural Winner 'Mrs. Greenfield won the contest but wa disqualified because she a married woman. However, she said that she won It, by golly, natu rally, and hot'estly, sans f aisles, i The Hollywood girl Include such cheesecake photograph posers aa Shelley Winters. Peggy Dow. Leu lye Banning, Dorothy Hart, Peggy Castle. Anne Pierce and Helena Carter. They asked the front office not to sign girls who wear thof things. The front otflre said that waa OK regarding starlet. ELECTION HINT LONDON, Oct. t I) Talk of an early general election In Britain got an added boost from the an nouncement yesterday that King Oeorge VI would return to London from Balmoral castle. In Scotland. now three weeks old prompted Cyrus s. China, federal conciliation director, to warn: "Each day brings the nation clos er to a CjTUlS." Klriko Vote? Offictala of the brotherhood of lo- South Co rolina comotive firemen and englnemen I met In Chicago to consider possible '. , strike action. The general chalr- 10 lC , U a strike vole among the 110,000 Collimbio 7 mcmovrh, 14 7 46 0 14 13 28 13 33 the ground, but this wa not a gen eral situation. A bitter north wind ha been blowing for two days and chilling harvest hand. Some have left here i because of the cold, hut others are coming In and there la no evi dence of labor shortage, according to County Agent C. A. Henderson. Harvest Slowed The cold Is slowing uo the dig ging aa well a the picker but harvest will nevertheless hit a peak thl week-end and little delay is expected even It the present weath er hold. Armed Police Comb Woods For Fugitives PORTLAND. Oct. t A man hunt waa launched In the wooded country south of here todsy for two men and a woman who fled from a wrecked car containing loot from a Benton City. Wash, postofflce rob bery. A doten armed state trooper tramped through a mile-square area near Mllwaukle after a police-pursued car missed a curve and crashed Into a garage about midnight. Fled Into Woods Two men and a woman leaped from the wreckage and disappeared Into Uie cover of the woods. The car yielded SU40 In cur rency. SM In diver, 14175 In gov ernment savings bonds, postal mon. ry order blanks, a rubber stamp marked "Warden. U. S. Penitenti ary. McNeil Island." guns, burglary tools, clothes, a typewriter, and oth er valuable. Some of the Items bore markings from the Benton City, Wash., post office, which waa robbed earlier thla week of $4000 or S5000 by burglars who carried postal safe. Final. Action " On Farm Bill An w" pviiun w -w ; ss. i i. coigat. 2i Due Monday Penn State vi vyJit 32 Boston College Boston U finally decided. These, he aald. show cut for the naval air arm that Indicate "con gres fitended to let It wither on the vine by falling to give It enough operating aircraft." "Reputable Document' "I have seen a reputable docu- ; mem IndlcaUng that decisions nave j been reached In the (defense) de-1 partment to cut naval and marine ! aviation strength about In halt and ; that the air force 1 to be given an I expanded role," Vinson aald. ' "The navy would become a pro- i tertlve convoy to move troop and ' light submarine. t Throughout the state minimum "It la my understanding that se- j temrjeratures were recorded. It was cm order to that eifect have been ! 34 n Portland: 17 at Prinevllle is.ura in ins reniagon. . where the potato harvest was sour- red but no noticeable crop damage: Redmond. 23: Baker. 32: Bums, 28: Eugene. 33: LaOrande. 36: Lake- yvr-s MeoHrrrd. 34:- Ontario. 40 r 40; me Dalles. 43. Pittsburgh West Virginia Georgia, Tech .. Wash, ond Lee Notre Dame .. Purdue Minnesota Northwestern .. 20 7 36 0 35 12 21 7 WASHINGTON, Oct 8 Otv-The senate took a short breather today In it effort to pas a new farm bill, after accepting the flexible price support tprogram it once had rejected. A late-hour tangle on amend ment last night put off final acUon unUl Monday, following the 45 to 28 defeat of an attempt to write In a high-support provision for basic crops. Checkered History That provision calling for gov State's First Fair Employment Case SALEM. Oct. S iPi The first case under Oregon' new fair em ployment practice law has been settled. William Van Meter, administra tor of the law. said a 16-fear-old Negro boy In Portland complained that a man refused to give the boy a job because of his race. But Van Meter found no evidence of discrimination, and said the ease awy 1 n e ss settled to the aatlsfacuon of all parties. Sentencing Due Monday I For 2 Men ; Sentence will be passed Monday 1 morning In circuit court on two young men charged with contri buting to the delinquency of minor girls and the girls themselves prob-1 ably will be committed to a reform school. t Ray Morris. 21. and Gene Arthur , Miller. 22, who brought the girl to , ernment price props at 90 per cent j Klamath Falls from Kellogg, Ida., of parity for such farm product a three weeks ago, have pleaded guilty i cotton, wheat, corn, rice and pes- i to the contributing charges and nuts has had a checkered history ' will be sentenced Monday. MfMeJ A SAMPLE OF KLAMATH SPUDS it being inspected by four of the basin girls who will vie for the title of queen of the Klamath Basin Potato festival at Merrill October 21 and 22.. From left are Eva Alexander, representing Henley; Pat Eagar, Bonanza, Mary Reed, Tuleloke, and Lila Winebarger,. Merrill. . In this session of congress. It 1 the keystone of a house approved measure which the senate thus far has Ignored In favor of a bill written by Senator Anderson 1D-NM1. The Anderson bill calls for supports on basic crops varying from 75 to 90 per cent, depending on available supplies. (Parity I a government-calculated standard Intended to assure farmers a fair Income In relation to Uie prices they must pay for things.) Huntress Still Lost In Idaho COEUR D'ALENE. Ida., Oct 8 iP) Men. dogs and planes searched the snow covered hills of Northern Ida ho today for a 27-year-old Idaho huntress. Mrs. Lola Schreigost, 27. of Rose Lake, Ida., has been sought since late Wednesday when she was missed by members of her hunting party. Officers and residents estimated nearly 100 person took part In the search yesterday and It wa hoped broadcast for volunteers would at tract eveal times that number to day. Today's effort were to be c 0 n centrated In the region where two men heard a woman crying out Wed nesday night. The shouting, pre sumed to have come from Mr. Schreigost, ceased before the men could locate her Red Cross Nurses, Red Captives TOKYO. Oct. 8 dP-At least 144 Japanese Red Cross nurses are prisoner of Chinese communist armies, American Red Cross head quarters tor the Far East said to day. -: - Nurse Klyoko Shtmizu, recently repatriated by the Chinese Reds be cause of Illness, aupplied name and location of 144 outers, authorities said. ALLIE REYNOLDS Bums' Big Bugaboo Play by Play FIRST INNING YANKEES Riant cracked Newcombe's eeeond pitch past Reese in la cen ter field for a single. Benrirb, after fooling off six pitches, tlaahrd a groond tingle past Hodges tending Rixrata to third. Joe Batten, a lefthander, started warming ap In the Dodger ball pen. Berra grounded to Miksls and Rixxuto was esoght In a run down between third and home. Rlzrata ran out of the baseline trying to evade the tag by Cam panel la and wa ruled out by Third Bate Umpire Art PaaareUa. When Henrieh wha had reached areand the play, strayed too far off the base Cam pane lis whipped hroa wot with a fine throw to Robinson who made the tag to complete a doable play. Berra waa aafe at first on the fielder' choice. DiMaggls walked. Newcombe pitched three straight balls to Brown bringing Coach Clyde Sakeforth out of the Dodg er dagoat for a conference. New combe remained In the box and threw a fourth ball to Browa to load the bases. Woodlrng Ignored balls, took a strike, ana then went ant on a virions liner to Snider in dead center. No runs, two hits, a errors, three left. FIRST INNING DODGERS Reese looked at a called strike, and then onloaded a doable off the left ecnterfleld walL Missis topped Least's first pitch a few feet In front of the plate snd was thrown out. Bern to Henrieh with Reese holding second. Snider grounded sot. Browa to Henrieh. Reese still holding sec ond. Rhtsats made a scinUllaUng stop of Robinson's hard groand er near second base and threw to Henrieh whs made a fine pickup af the low throw for the patoat. No runs, sne hit, no errors, one left. SECOND INNING YANKEES Newcombe speared Mapea' drive back to the box and tossed him oat easily at first. Coleman foaled to Compendia near the screen behind home piste. Lonst tiled to Snider deep in center field. No runs, no hits, no errors. left. Dodger Rally Fire Doused : By Reynolds Bv JACK HAND ' EfcBETS HELD, Brook lyn, Oct. 8 (AP) Allie ; Reynolds, the opening day shutout hero, retired the last ten men in succession today ' after relieving Ed Lopat to save a 6-4 New York victory over Brooklyn. The win gave the Yanks a command ing 3-1 game edge in the ; 46th World Series. Lopat took a bulging 6-0 lead into the sixth inning ' before the Dodgers aroused, the sellout crowd of 33,934 by knock ing out Lopat with seven single in a four-run Inning. Then csme Reynold, the oft relieved, to turn in s sparkling re lief Job that rivalled Joe Page effort of yesterday. Walking in with th lying ran on first base snd two swt in the sixth, Allie curled a third called strike past Pinch Hitter Spider I Jsrgenora to end the big Brook I threat. That waa the first of five strike outs for the big Indian from Okla j homa City who never allowed a i man to reach base slthough he was . ; coming back with only two dsa . - rest. Like Newcombe, be pitched la Wedneadsj's thrilling 1-t opener. Big News, ths 235-pound Dodger rookie, wasn't sole to survive a fourth Inning Yank attack. That started a parade of fear Dodger pitchers. Doubles by Bobby Brown, Cliff Mapes snd Lopat tied a series record ss the Yanks knocked outC, Newcombe In the fourth. They opened up on Lefty Hatten for three runs in the fifth when Bobby Brown tripled off the fence In right field wiui the bases loaded. That was all the New York scoring ' but It proved to be enough. Ths Dodger sixth wss an anus fax inning. Lopat, riding easily with a two-hit shutout, suddenly Ust his staff. Tbers was no warning. Pee Wee Reese's single started it off. Pinch Hitter Billy Cox beat out a topped ball that Lopat failed to come up with. When Duke 8 ruder rapped Into a Phil Rizzuto-Tommy Henrieh double play. It seemed that Eddie was out of trouble. That wss only the beginning. Soceessrve singles by Jackie Rob inson, Oil Hodges, Lais Otmo, Roy Csmpanella and Gen Bar ssanski finally forced Manager Casey Stengel to derrick La pat for Reynolds. The experts were amazed to see Reynold. Everybody thought Sten gel was saving him tor tomorrow s fifth game. But It was Inspired move by Casey who seldom makes the wrong decision. Nw Stengel's Yanks are in a great spot to spply the crasher in Sunday's game at Ebbets field. Manager Burt Shotton of the Brooks has used up Newcombe and (Continued on Page 2 Woodllng came In for Hodges' looping fly. Olma slsa filed to Woodling, in left-center. Lopat (Continued on Page 2) Girls Jailed The girls, Ardlth Stark. 16, snd i Audrey Jean Mendey, 17, were be- lng held In the county Juvenile' home as material witnesses against ! the men when they attacked the 1 sECOND INNING DODGERS nome matron. Mrs. zensn M. 1 Houghtallng. 61, putUng her In the: hospital for several days. Miller pleaded guilty two weeks; ago but Morris declared he In-, tended to stand trial on the con-' tributing charge, and the two girls would have been called as prose cution witnesses against him. This week, however. Mortis changed his mind and decided to plead guilty. The girls were transferred to the county Jail the night of the attack. September 27. and have been held there since. They are booked as "delinquent girls" and probably will be brought into Juvenile court for commitment to a reform school, the Juvenile office reports. Also held In the county Jail are two other teen-agers, Leslie LeRov Davis and William David Roche, both 16. who held up a Great Northern freight train at Malln September 22. stealing about 150 and the agent's car. Cspture The boys were captured at Canbv. Calif., an hour and a half after trie robbery. They have been held In Jail while the district attorney's office determines whether they should be turned over to juvenile court or prosecuted on felony charges In circuit court. Snow Traps Deer Hunters TWIN FALLS, Idaho, Oct. 8 m Idaho national guardsmen an 3 U. S. forest service employes used heavy trucks and road clearing equipment today to rescue 3000 deer hunters. They were trapped by an early season snowstorm In the Minidoka national forest of south ern Idaho. Forest Supervisor A. E. Brlgas said scores of cars still were stalled In the srec. There have been no deaths, he said, and only one casa of serious frostbite. . Smog Snarl In Portland PORTLAND Oct. 8 0P1 A ' cover of smog stalled traffic multiplied minor accidents and caused tele phone and power lines to be knocked down In two places today. The worst smoke and fog combi nation in months hung over the Portland area last night and early today occasionally cutUng visibility almost to zero. Some motorists pulled to the side of the rosd and parked until the smog lifted. A car driven by Rudolph Hart man 43 Portland sheared off a mail box. Another car knocked down power and telephone lines in tht same area. j Meet the People . i II ,e -vv " ! M i 3L WOMEN PLAY AN octive port in the business life of Klam ath Falls ond a prominent member of the business profession on the distaff tide is Mary Trulovt Bothwell. -