Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, February 08, 1952, Page 10, Image 10

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    PAGE TEN
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
KHIDAY. KKHHUAItY II, IIIM
New Truck Tax
Fight Looms
C-rtl'.'GON CITY OVI A Cliickft
Mini County piiiiinnul to lux liit'itu
truckii. will bo Iiiuiilit In the cum In
by llio alulo Uruniio,
Klmir Mt'Cluto, Mllwitukle, Hlnle
Oi ungo innslnr, Mild n Circuit
Court Hull would be filed iikuIiixI
the cminly'H luonlh-olil orrinr iu
qilliiUK a 111 coiinly operation fee
for triii'Li of . mora thnii 10.001)
pnunda.
Ml'I.llll'A Mild till! iH lll'l' won i
1)0 utlia-kcil iih nil Inviwilun u 1 1 10
stute'S flfltl.
Yellow Cob P
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; FUTURE PRINCE OF WALES Prince Charles, son of
i Britain's new queen, Elizabeth, who is. expected someday
J to become Prince of Wales, is shown here in a birthday
. picture as he sat in his pram in St. James' Park, London,
) Nov: 14. Prince Charles now becomes first in line, to suc
1 ceed to the throne.
Truman Backs Brannan,
Snyder in Scandal Tilt
WASHINGTON Wl President
Truman Insists that neither Secre
tary of Agriculture Brannan nor
Secretary of the Treasurer Snyder
can be blamed for scandals which
have nit their departments.
He stoutly defended both cabinet
members at his news conference
Thursday.
The President, disputed charges
by Sen. Williams, (R-Del.), that
Snyder has not been aggressive
enough in clearing up the Internal
Revenue Bureau.
Williams said in a Senate speech
ht knew of no evidence that Snyder
had brought charges against any
Bureau officials who might have
been guilty of condoning corrup
tion. He said Snyder must shoulder
responsibility for "disgraceful con
ditions" in the Bureau.
The President asked how much
more aggressive the Senator would
like Snyder to be.
He said those involved in the in
come tax scandals have been
named and removed from office.
He added that some have been in
dicted and one tried and convicted.
What Williams would like, the
President said is to have all the
Internal Revenue collectors fired
so- Republicans could be put into
the jobs.
Before Congress now is a Presi
dential, plan to abolish the 64 po
litically appointed collectors' jobs
and replace them with 25 civil serv
ice posts.
Mr. Truman told newsmen that
Brannan could not be blamed for
the multi-million dollar shortages
reported In government grain re
serves. He said without naming anyone
that these grain fellows had been
doing the stealing.
The President brought up the
subject himself in commenting
on reports that the government
may lose around five million dol
lars in grain diverted from com
mercial warehouses, mostly for
speculation.
Brannan ' himself defended his
department in a letter to Chairman
Ellender, D-LA.. whose Senate
Agriculture Committee is investi
gating the grain shortages.
The Agriculture Secretary wrote
he was proud that so far the in
vestigation had not turned up even
the remotest evidence that any
Agriculture Department employe
had acted fraudulently or been an
accomplice of private businessmen
in defrauding the government.
Portland Eyes
Gold Standard
PORTLAND m Maybe Port
land will go off the gold standard
soon only 19 years after the rest
of the U.S. did.
Commissioner Fred Peterson
said he discovered that the city's
charter provides that water bonds
must be paid off in gold. The city
still has some four million dollars
worth to pay.
Peterson said he was preparing
a charter amendment removing
the gold provision. It will go before
voters in the May primary.
He added that it wouldn't mat
ter much . if voters refuse to up
date the charter. The city would
do just what it had been doing for
19 years pay off in legal money
with not a gold coin in the stack.
IH-THE-WAY THINGS
BECOME PAY-THINGS
Through For Sale ads
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those un-needed things, in your way, are 'quickly
' turned into cash. For Sale ads find buyers for every
, thing from plywood to pianos, heaters to house
,' trailers, tin and slate to real estate.
Decide, then, on what you'd like to sell, and let
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now, ou want always cash! Phone 8111 for an ex
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Herald & News
QUICK, . EASY,
LOW-COST RESULTSI
Franco Gets
Truman Chill
WASHINGTON I President
Truman is not very fond of Franco
Spain, he told his news conference
Thursday.
The oil-hand comment came In
response to a question about his
opinion of Gen. Elsenhower's re
ported opposition to Spain enter
ing the North Atlantic Treaty Or
ganization. President Truman said he didn't
know anything about Gen. Elsen
hower's statement because he had
not seen It.
But, he added, he has never been
very fond of Spain.
Later, litis was qualified to mean
that he referred to the Franco re
gime not Spain Itself.
The hendquurters of Elsenhower
quickly denier a labor leader's
story that Elsenhower had told a
closed meeting at his headquar
ters that Spain would be kept out
of NATO as long as he is supreme
commander in West Europe.
SHAPE said Eisenhower believes
any military deal with Spain at
present should be on a bilateral
basis between the United States
and Madrid, and not through
NATO.
It added the general had simply
pointed out that only member gov
ernments can decide on the ad
mission of Spain or any other new
member, and that SHAPE has
nothing to do with NATO member
ship. Public Power
Policy Backed
WASHINGTON l.fi Dale E.
Doty nominated Thursday by Pres
ident Truman to be a member of
the Federal Power .Commission,
says he is a strong backer .of the
public power program.
But, he said, he favors fullest
possible developments of the na
tion's hydro-electric resources
whether it is done by private or
public interests.
"The great burden will have to
be borne by private Industry," he
added.
Doty, assistant secretary of the
interior, will fill the unexpired term
of Mon C. Wallgren if the Senate
confirms the appointment.
The 37-year old Pasadena, Calif.,
lawyer entered public service in
1939.
He started out as a field aide in
the Interior Department's Pueblo
Indian Agency at Albuquerque, N.
Mex.
Doty was transferred to Wash
ington the same year, and has been
here ver since.
Doty said he felt he "couli con
tribute something to the Power
Commission" because of his "over
all concept of resources develop
ment." He said he has dealt with and
supervised the work of nearly all
the Interior Department's bureaus,
many of which are concerned with
development of power, mineral and
other resources.
Barajas Rites
In Dunsmuir
DUNSMUIR Funeral services
under the auspices of the American
Legion and VFW Posts and their
auxiliaries were held Thursday, 2
p.m., in the Dunsmuir VFW hall
for Jose L. Barajas, 28. a resident
of Dunsmuir since childhood, and
a veteran of World War II.
Barajas. a native of Mexico, died
Monday in Mount Shasta Hospital
BRITAIN HAS THREE QUEENS For the first time in history Britain has thrco queens
living at the same time. King George Vl's widow (left) will become known as the Queen
Mother, 84-year-old Queen Mary (center) as the Dowager Queen and Princess Elizabeth
(right) becomes queen.
.AY
ATROCITY DEMONSTRATION Masked to conceal his
identity from the Communists, the only known eye-witness
to the 1940 Katyn Forest massacre near Smolensk, Russia,
of 10,000 Polish officers. Shows a House Committee in
Washington, D.C., how the victims were shot. The witness
is using a Russian revolver and the "victim" in the demon
stration is Charles Burke of the United Polish Press of
America.
of a heart ailment. He was for
merly employed in the Southern
Pacific store department. Final
rites and interment will be held
in Golden Gate National Cemetery,
San Bruno. The Victor K. Oolla
Chapel was in charge of arrangements.
Barajas Is survived by his par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. V. Barajas,
brothers and sisters, Enrlqueta, Mi
chael, and Charles, all of Duns
muir, and Mrs. Angelina Haynes
of Sacramento.
MItL OWNER KILLED
GRANTS PASS (PI A falling
tree fatally crushed George Logan,
33, sawmill owner in the Illinois
Valley, Thursday. Surviving are
the widow and four small children.
MIRRORS
for any
Room in the Homtl i
Calhoun' A
SI I Main
l A
y&htfii liVuiiW&V heart Is the stirring '
j " fiS beauty of TOWI.E Sterling ;
itw i ft -especially the beauty of the pattern 4 J
1 1 Jr I f ' h ChSe her "' bc,us " h her 0wn Pwon4,i,y olid Si,vr' i '
Iffej ,v Mt's the Valentine with the long-snd-lovely flfe, becaus every ? j
If will ' flSffitof piece byTowLE if wrought of solid silver, to endure for generations, 1
j S ((flrfmj ' We have her choice registered here, so your buying
I J will v I mrr wi" easy Rea!onab,e too: nm PeCM urt 4 low i
I 'if i'l- iilia 3'75' lpfl!'B rt 335, ptoc ?mt' 27,50, . V .
OCvem rmmrmn rilCOTIlli JlwiLIll
CX '00 Moln St. I V$Ml.iH.W J
Phone 3151
St.JOSGDh
ASPIRIN
cwtntous SERVICE
m m
Mil's Ml
in." "
Servants Pay
King Respects
SANDRINOHAM, Eng. Ml Sen-:
lor royal servants tiptoed past the '
candlelit bier of King Oeonte VI I
Friday, paying last respects to I
their lead sovereign.
On the bier Ih a dimly lit down-.
stairs bedroom of Sumlrlnghniu I
House was a plain oak fofftn. In It ;
was the King's bodv, clad In tho i
uniform of an admiral ol tho fleet. :
Of all the uniforms he wore, It
was tho one he loved best, syin.
bollc of his lonir association with
the naval service in which he
served under fire at the Battle of
Jutland.
Late Friday, after Queen Eliza
beth II drives from London and !
pays homage to her father, Uie I
body will bo cnrrled 300 yards to
the little ltlth Century royal chapel
of Sim. Mary Magdnleno. There II !
will be guarded by the eight game-1
keepers and beaters who served I
the hunt-loving King longest. f
At the chapel the Klng'a people !
his farmers, gamekeepers, wood-:
men and villagers from West New
ton, Derlnsgham Shernbome Flit- j
cham Wolferlon. Ciwtle Rlalng and
Hllllngton. Which neMle nnlrr the I
royal walls will tako their last
leave of tho man they called their
squire.
PRAVDA PKKP
MOSCOW tfl Two Pravda cor
respondents reported from Dot.'olt
Thursday that a "serious unem
ployment problem" has arisen In
the Michigan city due to "militari
zation of the American economy."
AUCTIONEERING
end
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Brown University la In Its third
year a member of the Penta
gonal Hockey League and Is look
ing for Its third straight championship.
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