Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, February 02, 1952, Page 1, Image 1

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I it The
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Day's Jews
l)y I HANK JliNKlNS
In Portland, where these words
in written, tho Oregontaii mid the
Journal mo vicing with each nlhcr
n I he ii minim of npuoo dovotod to
lifting the tiiuni'H ul persons who
ivci'iiiild their tuxes unci lira due
in get refunds, Honiuwharo along
.he linn HiIh system nl refunding
iviir-p.iyiiiriilH urn flippantly re
lulled to by dome reporter as
"tho Jackpot."
At nny rule, the principle Is the
wiiiio, In luxes an In Mot ma-ihliu-M,
In these modern diiyn, we
put In a lot inoro tlmn we titke
JUL
Did your eye happen to (nil on
liny ul llie.to llhthV
If mi. I'll bet this In what you
did: Mr;.!, you looked to see II by
i. ny oil ciiiiiu'e your own mime
win there. 'I hen you rend on to
hfr II nny of your friends were
Jin-hided.
1 That'll news, An n innttrr of
fiirt, It's "innn-hllos-dog" news,
which Ik ii Biniirt crutk for un-
ii. 'iuul now. When the' lux collec
tor put the bite on the clllxen.
Us no common that we pay little
attention to It. But when the cltl
vicn puts the bile on the tux col
lector, Ifa BOMETHINUI,
Speaking of news, U Colorado
senator hut Junt Introduced bill
to rcuulre rudlo stations to give
nil candidates equal opportunity to
miike political speoches over the
111!'.
That In to say, If one candidate
goes down to Ills locul broadcaster
mid buy time to tell why he
i,lioiild bo elected tho broadcaster
must thereupon offer to all other
modulates the immo chnnce.
What I'd like to know In this:
II Cuiidldnlo No. 1 makes
tinrd-ticuded. able. intelligent
i.peecli and Impresses people and
wlnit votes and gels elected and
Candidate No. 2 is no dumb that
he disgusts people mid scares off
votes and takes a bud licking, will
the politician! then contend that
No. II was DISCRIMINATED
AUAIN8T by belli Jockeyed Into
a position where he hud to show
what a moron he reauy iaf
Speaking seriously, I'd like to
add that there Is only one wny
to got better government and that
la FOR ALL THE VOTERS TO
GIVE MORE SERIOUS AND IN
1 ELLIOENT ATTENTION T O
POLITICS.
Car Smacks
Police Bike
Slight bumplnr of t traffic off!
rer's motorcycle Friday afternoon
on Main 6u between loth and 11th
Bis. lead to an argument aivj ar
rest ol William McFayden. 49. 3086
Summers Lane, on charge o dis
orderly conduct,
McFavden pleaded guilty In Ma
niclpal court this morning and was
fined (23. Bui ne acniea cursing
the an-entlng officer or saying that
police officers wore oppressing the
lax payers.
The affair started when McKay,
den backed Into an officer's ma.
rhlne while attempting to purlc his
car.
Car Check
Nabs AWOL'S
Routine traffic check by Stale
Police on U.S. Highway 07 near
Chemtilt Friday afternoon resulted
In apprehension of two Air Force
men AWOL from Oelger Air Force
Due, Spokane, Wash., since Thurs
day afternoon.
Held In custody at County Jail
hero for Air Force authorities are
Pvt. Jackie Lee Moore, 18, Sncra
niento, Calif., end Pvt. Doyle
Grimes, 18, Hood, Calif,
The pair was driving south on
U.S. 07 to BacramciHo In a car
registered to Orlme's father.
fLOODTIME came to Hie city
Esplanade St, ; .
WlfaiA v f X ' I
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmiimmmt iiiii'i
1'rlee I'lve Cents -14 Pagra
IPIainies
nils Is the day upon which, as
the Scottish folk poem has It:
"It Candlemas Day be dry and
lair.
Tlie half o' Winter's to come
and malr ..."
In other words Groundhog Day.
From the above lines came the
legend that the groundhog, after
hibernating through the deep Win
ter months, crawls out of his hole
orr Feb. 2 and looks around.
Randolph Collier Objects
River Diversion Plan; Asks
SACRAMENTO. Calif. Ml Wa
ler should not be diverted from
the Klamath River Basin Until local
needs are met, Sen. Randolph Col
lier, R-Yreka. told the State Water
Resources Board Friday, .
He said the rights of the State
ol Oregon to some of the water
also must be considered.
The stream rises In Jackson
County, Ore., and live Northern
Red Trial Off
To Fast Start
LOS ANOELES W A soft-
spoken. Southern-born Judge with
a firm hand on the legal tiller
steered the trial of 15 Communist
parly lenders off to a speedy si in t.
A Jury of eight women and four
men was chosen Friday cutting
valuable days off a trial still ex
pected to run three or four months.
rhe trial opens Tuesday.
The aulck selection, courtroom
observers agreed, was due large
ly to the wuv U.S. Judito Wlllliim
C. Mathes cut through a maze of
305 questions which defense at
torneys wanted put to the prospec
tive Jurors.
i lie live-man defense stuff not
Including William Sctmcldcrmun,
alleged acting party chief who Ik
defending himself gave up chal
lenging veniremen after 47 persons
were questioned. By then, defense
und prosecution attorneys hud
agreed on tho Jury of 12, plus four
alternates. -.
early this year. Above, is a
.. .
Mm iifto
KLAMATH FAM.8, OltKGON,
Strafe
PELICAN PETE: Git buck in there, or
If It happens to be a bright and
tunny day, the timorous little crea
ture of course sees his shadow. Is
frightened thereby and pops back
Into hlx hole. That, so tho legend
goes, denotes thnl there Is six
tnoro weeks of Winter coming.
But If the day happens to be
overcast and grey, no shadows arc
cast and the groundhog doesn't get
(Tightened. Hence, an curly Spring.
California counties are In Its water
shed.
After hearing Collier, the board
voted to support his reauest for
(60,000 California study of the
basin's water resources and !os
slblc future needs.
A hearing Is scheduled for Feb.
7 In Wcavervllle on the possibility
of diversion from tho Trinity Riv
cr, a KlumaUi tributary, into the
upper Sacramento River.
"We want none of those waters
to leave that watershed until a
study has been made," snld Collier.
He said Jl Is vital to make a
Lauritsen Death
Learned Here
The death of a well-known Klam
ath man, 82-year-old Louis ' H.
Lauritsen, was learned here this
week by friends.
Lauritsen died In a San Rafael
nursing home Jan. 2B.
An operator of stores In Fort
Klamath and Chiloqutn for many
years, Lauritsen was preceded In
death by his wife Daisy, who died
In 1948. '
He Is to be burled at Turlock
Monday.
Weather
FORECAST: Klamath Falls and
vicinity and Northern California,
showers Saturday night and Sun
day. High both days 45, low 32.
High Friday 40
Low last night 27
scene at the S.P. overpass on
1
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 11)58
.A A. V
I'll
Back In Lancaster. Pa., a group
of fellows became so Intrigued by
the groundhog story tney formed
an organization and sends mem
bers out each to Feb. 2 to look up
aroundhoK holes and keen watch
The first 15 or 20 years of such
research, the soclcly reported.
showed the groundhog was right
in his weather prognostications just
about half the time. That's not
bad, for a groundhog.
To Trinity
For Study
nulck study as to .whether there
Is any surplus water. Until Oregon
Is consulted, he added, "we Just
can't assume that those waters arc
ull ours'
Collier said he will seek $50,000
for the Calllornla study at the
March session of the legisture.
Three Die In
Car Accidents
By The Associated Press
Three persons died In Oregon
traffic accidents Friday and Sat
urday. Harold C. Scholl, 24, Wittenberg,
Mo., sailor, stationed at the Tongue
Point Naval Station at Astoria, was
killed outright in Portland early
saiuraay.
The cor In which he was riding
crasned imo a tree and the driver,
Richard C. Larsen, Portland, was
held under $2,500 bail on a neglt
gent homicide charge.
Two women were killed Friday
Mrs. Thora Wheatley. 60, Jen
nlngs Lodge, was killed when
struck by a car as she crossed
McLoughun Boulevard near Ore
gon City. The driver was not cit
ed.
Mrs. Genevieve Hendrickson, 29,
Coos Bay, died in a two-car smash'
up at Coos Bay. She was a pas
senger In a car driven by George
Pappas, 24, North Bend. The car
ran out of control and crashed into
a car driven by Mrs. Ira Tucker
Curry County, Ore. Poppas' Injur
les were critical. Mrs. Tucker was
hospitalized with minor Injuries,
Dallas Dam
Work Slated
PORTLAND MV Construction
of the Dalles dam will start about
Feb. 18, Col. Thomas M. Lipscomb,
Portland district engineer, -indicated
Saturday, . .
He notified commercial and plea
sure boat operators to proceed with
caution alter that date from the
upper end of Throc-MUe Rapids
10 a point opposite ine lower en
trance of The Dalles-Celllo canal.
The first work will Include blast
ing for rock excavation on the
Washington side of the Columbia
River, Lipscomb said. The initial
contract Is for cofferdam construc
tion and powerhouse excavation.
Hart Mountain
Dates Changed
Annual outing of the Order of
the Antelope on Hart Mountain is
to be held July 18, 19 and 20 in
stead of July 25. 26 and 27 as pre
viously announced.
Antelope Secy. Doug Fctsch sold
today the dates- had been changed
because of three state American
Legion conventions scheduled here
for July and August. The "8 and
40" convention opens here July
25, followed by the "40 and 8" and
then tho regular Legion meeting,
mm
Telephone 11
No. 2730
. in ac
Tank Patrol
Meets Reds;
Action Slow
By MILO FARNETI
SEOUL. Korea Unidenti
fied planes bombed and strafed Al
lied front line troops in Central
Korea about noon Saturday, a U.N.
command ofliccr said.
The officer was unable to sav
whether the aircraft were Commu
nist or Allied planes.
Possibly os many as six oroDCl-
ler-drlven planes look part in two
separate attacks near Kumsong,
the officer said, and three South
Koreans were slightly wounded.
Kumsong is approximately 70
miles northeast of Seoul arid 27
miles north of Parallel 38.
Eighteen American Sabre lets
damaged three Red MIG Jets in a
M-mlnule battle with 50 MIGs over
Northwest Korea Saturday.
The sky fight, ranging from 40,
000 down to 30,000 feet, was fought
over a 40-mile area near Sinuiju.
The Fifth Air Force made no
report of any Sabre losses.
Earlier, a fiillht of Sabres slehtorl
about 50 MIGs and exchanged fir
ing passes but made no damage
claims.
On the ground, a tank-supported
Allied ntttrol clashed hrieflv Katur.
day with Reds on the central front
hi un oinerwise quiet war. i
Eighth Army Headquarters said
the patrol enenced a Ret nhm
northwest of Kumhwa at 7:11 a.m.
and later was reinforced by tanks.
The Allied infantry elements with
drew at 8:40 a.m. under cover of
the tank fire.
Fifth Air Force said It lost 14
warplanes in the week ended Fri
day two below the seven-dav
record. Thirteen were destroved
by improving Red ground fire. The
14th, a Sabre Jet. crashed after a
mechanical failure.
' During the same week. Allied
Jet fighters destroyed one MIG and
damaged two. There were no Al
lied losses in air-bttles.-
Waitress Hurt
In Accident
PORTLAND CP Sarah J.
Church, 17-year old waitress, was
treated at a hospital Friday night
for Injuries suffered when she was
caught in a restaurant dish con
veyor and pulled into a chute.
Police said she became wedged
tightly In the chute before another
employe raced to the basement
and shut off the power. The wait
ress was bruised.
The conveyor operated inside the
chute to carry dishes to the base
ment. Paper Faces
Jury Probe
SAN FRANCISCO Wl An im.
mediate federal grand Jurv Investi
gation to determine if the San Fran
cisco Call-Bulletin printed news
stories that obstructed justice has
been ordered by Federal Judge
Oliver J. Carter.
Judge Carter's action was
prompted by on article in Friday's
paper which linked Federal Judge
George B. Harris to a Carmel,
Calif., land development plan
which It said was promoted by a
deputy collector of internal reve
nue. The article, Judge Carter said,
was the culmination of a series ol
articles by the paper.
After ordering the investigation.
he handed a copy of Uie poper
headlined "U.S. Judge Harris
named in land deal," to Jury Fore
man Sidney Kessler.
Randolph Hearst,' publisher of
the Coil-Bulletin and son of the
late William Randolph Hearst,
when informed of Judge Carter's
action, told the Associated Press:
"It's oil right with us If they
want to investigate us. We print the
news os we see it."
The Call-Bulletin had been run
ning a series of articles on income
tax scandals In INortnern uaiuornia.
Blast Rips
Coal Mine
GREENSBURG. Pa. (iTI All ex
plosion ripped through a coal mine
near here Saturday, leaving one
miner dead and five missing.
Four miners were rescued by
their companions who fought their
way to safety tnrougn cnoKing gas.
Three of the Injured are In seri
ous but not critical condition.
State Police Lt. J. F. Maroney
sold 65 men were In the Carpenter
town Coal and Coke Co. when the
blast let go. It was at least three
hours before the Injured were res
cued. Richard E. Maize, Pennsylvania
secretary of mines who was week
ending at his home in nearby Un-
lontown, hurried 10 tne scene to
direct rescue operations.
Lt. Maroney said one oony was
recovered about four hours after
the explosion. Cause of the blast
could not be determined Immed
iately, ' .
Egypt Seeks
Mediation;
Arabs Aid
CATRfY V.avrtt. tn Prftmlip Alt,
Msihef Pauhit fclleri hla -nhlnn to
gether Saturday as the newspaper
ni Mmri -repuneu a new attempt
by King Ibn Saud of Saudi Arabia
to mediate Egypt's bloody dispute
wilh Britain,
A nrntnlinirallnn frmn Amkln
was expected to be handed to
Maher Pasha Saturday, the news
paper said. The enhlnel. mnatlnar
was called for 1 p.m.
I n, .... U TU Ii
to the previous Egyptian govern-1
nient thnl. if. und Rriluln Nortl,, thole
quarrel over control of the Canal
jtiiiu htki inn K r un nnpr me -
plan the British would withdraw
their tl'OOtls In tnvnr nf Rrllich.
trained Egyptians within a year.
inc luture oi ine Anglo-Egyptian
Sudan would be solved . by the
ttuuaiicse tnemseives.
The renortert now nntp from Thn
Sauti was believed to be a lollow-
uu un uus plan.
Maher Pasha opened the way for
H,( Hiu,uuijciii:m
tlirougn his spokesman Friday
niBi". mi ne is wining to talk
with the British.
Maher Pn.hn' innlMmnH nt
"if a reasonable basis for negotla-
l ulw uoiiaisient witn r.gypt s na
tional aspirations is forwarded to
11M UItt ara ,11
IE 7 . "-""J w uioi;u3s uiese
proposals immediately."
.rac aspirations, as expressed
In laws passed last October by the
Wafd-dominatciJ Parliament, are
departure of ull th vinrui tiwiu
troops guarding the canal and unity
uuuuu will, .cgypi.
The nremier u nniitinni im
pendent. U'llR hanrlftH tha Al
- . . icua Ul
government by King Farouk Sun-
.u lne Iormer regime of
the Wafdist party failed to control
lit """-"""sn noting in Cairo.
- , .,... ..tnocr m
Ahram reported Saturday Jhat po
lice raids resulted in th oerao,
88 more participants in the violent
Cairo demonstratinnc uhi-h lBf, ttn
I dead and many of the capital's
n.ab uuuuiiigs ournea.
Tax Plan Gets
Objections
WASHINGTON I Sen Wnev
D-N. C., said Saturday he still ob
jects to one part of president Tru
man's Internal Revenue Bureau re
organization plan. He said conces
sions made by the plan's sponsors
don't go far enough. . -"
The part he doesn't "like would
permit top bureau officials to se
lect regional tax officials from any
part of the nation instead of con
fining appointments to men from
Uie districts Involved.
Secretary of the Treasury John
W. Snyder assured the Senate Ex
penditures Committee Friday initial
selections for the regional posts
would be made from men residing
within the area.
Hoey, second ranking Democrat
cn the committee, told newsmen
"I appreciate that as far as it
goes.'
"I am sure Mr. Snyder and the
Civil Service Committee would-fol-!ov
that policy. But they will not
always be in office. Their succes
sors could change It overnight,"
Hoey said.
Princess Is
Lunch Speaker
NAIROBI. Kenya Wl Princess
Elizabeth Saturday praised the
men and women "of all races"
who took East Africa away from
wild animal herds and turned Nai
robi into what she called "a great
center of commerce and finance"
in the dark continent.
She spoke at a civic luncheon on
the second day of a week-lone stop
over here before she sails on the
rest of a five-month tour to the
Asiatic and "down under" parts
of the Commonwealth she will
someday rule.
90'dojckSpBudl S
if
CATECHISM STUDENTS . The three youngsters above were on their way to a study ses
sion at Sacred Heart this morning. They are (1 to r) Ysmael Herrera, 638 Owens St.,
Dickie and Tommy Krois, 2004 Orchard St.
Gobbler's Knob
Seer Predicts
More Winter
PUNXSUTAWNEY, Pa. (PI
Don't bum the long woolies,
ooys and girls. There's six
more weeks of winter coming,
according to the seer of Oob
oler's Knob.
The Punxsutawney Groundhog
3iub Issued this bulletin shortly
ifter sunrise:
"At 7:52 a.m. the groundhog
:ame out, saw his shadow and
jrawled back Into his burrow,
Indicating six more weeks of
winter."
Dr. Frank A. 1 Lorenzo, the
wrtly 73-year-old doctor who
leads the groundhog club pound
Jd his lur-Ilned mittens togeth
:r and commented:
"It's Just as we've always
said. This is the seer of seers,
rhis Is the only groundhog who
cnows a shadow when he sees
Mie."
Political
Parties To
Pick Chiefs
PORTLAND IX) New chairmen
were to be named here s.nnrrinv
for state committees of both the
nepuoncan and Democratic par
ties. Ed Boehnke. of Eueene. Lane
County chairman, and Robert El
liott of Medford. former Multnomah
County chairman, are candidates
tor tne Kepuoucan post being va
cated by Sigfried Unander.
Walter J. Pearson, state treas
urer, and Howard Morgan, form
er state representative, are seeking
the Democratic chairmanship be
ing vacated by William L. Josslin.
Unander is expected to announce
his candidacy for state treasurer
while Josslin has not indicated his
future political plans. Pearson said
earlier he would not seek the treas
urer s office again.
The Democrats will conclude
their session with their annual
Jackson Club banquet at which Ed
mund G. Brown, attorney general
of California, will speak.
In other political developments
Friday, it became known that Sen.
Robert Kerr. D-Okla., might file
for the Democratic nomination in
the Oregon presidential primary
Monroe Sweetland. Democratic
national committeeman, said he
got that information on a recent
trip to the Midwest. Sweetland said
another Democratic prospect. Gov.
Adlai Stevenson- of Illinois, would
not file in the OrcEon urlmary.
Stevenson will speak at the annual
Jefferson-Jackson. -Day ..dinner - in
Portland May 10, Sweetland said.
The Oregon Women's Committee
for Kelauver announced it soon
would put "Kefauver for Presi
dent" stamns on sale. Funds will
be used to finance an Oregon cam
paign for Sen. Kefauver, D-Tenn.
Anions members of this group are
Mrs. Joada Leonard, former state
vice-chairman, and State Rep.
Maurinc Neuberger.
Unander told the Portland City
Club that Republicans in the com
ing campaign would criticize Dem
ocrats for "socialism, foreign pol
icy and malfeasance m omce.
Groundhog Day
Weather Gray
Rv The Associated Press
Saturday Is Groundhog Day and
while the nation's weather is gen
erally mild it looks like the little
animal win not see its snauow ui
many parts of the country.
According to an old legend, six
more weeks of winter weather will
follow if the groundhog sees its
shadow.
Rainv and cloudy weather ap
peared In prospect for much of
the southeast, nonneasi ana rar
Western sections of the country.
It will be mosty partly cloudy in
other areas.
But the Weather Bureau said tne
groundhog might see its shadow in
areas from Chicago southwestward
to Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska and
Western Texas.
Legal Snarl
Developing
Over Case
PORTLAND Wl Mrs. Jada T.
Kader, 21. who a week ago was
charged with murdering her littl
girl, Sherrie Ellen, was up for the '
(Second day of preliminary hearing!
in municipal court oaturuay.
Usually a routine affair, tha
hearing for Mrs. Kader opened Fri.
day afternoon with the courtroom
jammed and her attorneys spar
ring with the two state witnesses
called.
There was a legal tangle, too,
and Municipal Judge John J, Quil-
lln recessed court without ruling
on the defense demand that four
detectives, a policewoman and a
physician be called as defense wit
nesses.
Purpose ol the hearing Is to de
termine whether there Is enough
evidence against Mrs. Kader to
warrant holding her to the grand
jury.
Wednesday of last week she
called police and said her 3-year-old
daughter had been abducted.
Sherrie's sister, Vickie, 4. wit
nessed the kidnaping, he mother
saia. nut VicRie, alter Mrs. Kader
finally changed her story and led
police to the child's body In an
enclosed drainage pit, said her
mother had smothered Sherrie,
then dropped her In.
The first decree murder charge
then was filed and a doctor's cer
tificate took Mrs. Kader, a slim,'
freckle-faced woman with a tangled
marital past, to a hospital, pre
sumably for rest.
Friday as the hearing opened she
appeared pert beside a white clad
nurse. As the afternoon wore on
she became increasingly nervous
and when the recess came and
she was led away to a Jail cell
instead of tne hospital, her lipstick
was gone, her hair was tousled and
her face was pale.
The only witnesses were Detec
tive Bob McKeown and Coroner
Floyd South. Reason for the de
tailed questioning of them by de
tense attorneys was not apparent
to the hundred or so spectators who
filled all available space in the
small courtoom.
George Dollarhidc, father of tha
children, who never used his name.
sat beside the defense attorneys.
Gl's Survive
Al t I it tuiu
FAIRBANKS. Alaska fPl Four
service men fled almost naked
from their burning barracks tn the
Alaska wilderness and survived 38
hours In 20 below zero weather and
SO miles gale. ' ... ---
n i ' MHMnt a
.1 T Aim TTirimn Ha.a Cotllt..
Ultr JJHUU 1 A-W1-V wvn. -
'.., Ihoir tnlrl nt hllrillincr tlVrettier
'in an unhealed shack under tat
tered oianktets ana scraps oi can
vas until rescue came. A helicop-
la- can, their sternal for heln In
the trampled snow.
"I'm probably the only man who
ever tramped an SOS in the snow
with his bare feet." Col. Delroy
Cady said.
we aian t nave enougn uwko
to make us decent, let alone
warm," Cpl. Royce Henry aaaea.
Thai- nnmnitnlnna flpr Cnl. HaZ-
el George and Sgt. Everett La
pierre. None of the men suffered
Ul eilCCts. tneir noiiie tiuca wwiw
not immediately avauaoie.
Air Force
aerial gunnery range installation
in an isolated area north of Fair-
l-.nba nrhon thplr stnve CXDlOded.
retting the wooden building aliame.
They leapea irom uieir duh- mn
fled outside, but only Corporal Hen
ry managea to grao an amiim u
clothing. Warner Canyon
Ski Outlook OK
Temperatures dropped somewhat
as the weekend approached. The
Warner Canyon Ski Area, north of
of Lakeview, and the ski tow was
scheduled to operate today and
tomorrow.
According to a short wave dis
patch from Fremont National For
est Super. John MacDonald, ski
conditions should be good.