Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, February 15, 1952, Page 3, Image 3

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    Kill DAY, FEBRUARY IS, 10152
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
PAO TOREK
Pend Oreille
blasts Loom
HPOKANI5 Ml Tim Nuvy ap
parently Illtl'llllN to conduct under
water explosion liwla on I.uko I'cnd
Ornllln In Northern Iditlio deaplte
uhlrulloiin friini Hpiikiwo oily of
llululn unci aparuiiiien, .
Wlllnrd Tuft. Hpokium titlllllcii
crimnilniiloiirr, mild after n two
liour DimNlon with u Niivy Minkca-
mull Tliiimiluy, Unit lio under
ntii ntln tlio Nuvy In roady to k
anriici. - -
Hut lie added, "I wmit to ko on
record tin not having iiIvcii us-unit."
City Wutcr Kimliicfr Elmo
Jniiit'B nim-ril.
Ciipt. A. U. Miimmn, Nnvy dc
imilltlon expert told llin Kroup the
plnniipil TNT tenia would have no
harmful I'lli'it on Uui Bpokuno wil
ier iiupply nor tlio flMiliiK lit tlif
lake.
"Hut there In Ntlll nil element
of rltk. mi clement of cloulit,"
'I ult aald, referring- lo fear Unit
the blatila nilulil duniuiie under
itroiind pimniiurn Irom I'end Oreille.
'Ilio Nuvy hint not rcleaned dc-
lulln on the experiment but lint
termed them vllul. '
Muiiiiiiii left for Wunhlniiton, D.
C. 'Hiuraday nlglil.
'Scandal' Book
Review Slated
. Tile highly controvcralnl book
"The Public School Scandal," by
Eurl Conrud will be reviewed by
Mr. Victor O'Neill ut a 3:15 p.m.
nieellnu of the lloonevelt Parent
Teachcr Awioclatlon Tuesday.
Mm. O'Neill nuld nhe would try
' lo point out Unit niont of the crltl
( InniH voiced In the book do not
apply to our local erhoola.
Ten will bo nerved In the cafe
terln by Third Clrudc mothers fol
lowing the bualncus (icwlon ai:l
proitrum. Mrn, C. L. Miitunch In
chnlrmun of the coininltieo 111
thnrue.
Tliln dny meeting lit Roosevelt
wnn orlKlnnllv nchedued for the
evenhiK. Mrn. Klovd A. lloyd. nren
Idenl, pointed out, In culllnx at
tention to (he chuniie of lime. A
board meetlnir nl 1:30 p.m. In the
teachers' room of the nohool, will
precede the regular meclliiK.
Koundern' Dny will bo observed
with routine of the history of
PTA. Given bv Mrn. Itobert A.
Thompson, proa rum chnlrmun.
Punt prenldentn ut rtoosevelt will
be Introduced to the prcnent mem
bernhlp. Weather Traps
Hundreds
VIENNA Wl New nnowfnlln nnd
uvnlunchen cut road nnd rail com
inunlcullonn In AuMrlu Friday
leaving hundreds of villages tern
porurlly Inohiled.
Evacuation of farmers from
areas endnnuered by uvnlunchen
appeared, however, to hnve pre
vented new casualties to ndd to
Aunlrlu'n denth toll of 20 since
Sunday.
More thnn two feel of new nnow
fell In muny nrenn during the nlitht.
ficoren of trnlnn were lit a stand
still and Internntlomil pnuicmiern
waited for hourn In ntutlons nn
.transportation between Auntrln and
Jinly .broke down.
Flu Troubling
Some Areas
PORTLAND I The Influenza
outbreak null In causing trouble In
aome section of Oregon, health of
Jlcern reported Thurndny. - .
They noted the outbreak had
uluckcned from the level of late
January, but nald school absences
ran 35 to 33 per cent In Clackamas
County la.M week. Earlier absences
an high as linrney County's 20 lo
60 per cent were recorded.
Portland school olflclnls nnld ab
sences were about normal for thin
time of year, although In some
schools they were up to 12 per cent.
FCWF.R TltACiKItlF.S
SALEM i.fl Automobiles took
a toll of 20 lives In Oregon at
month, eight fewer than In the
previous January.
1965' ROCKETTES? Nine members of the Isa Dorah Moldovan dance school put on a
cute display of grace and form as they demonstrate .what they'll show at the annual
Klamath Junior Follies revue Feb. 29 at the Pelican theater. They are (1 to r): Susan
Frcdricks, Crissie Graham, Linda .Goehring, Kathie Chilcotc, Sandra Lawson, Linda
Drew, Barbara Ann Cody, Janice Humphries and Marsha Kelly.
Horse Betting
Setup Rapped
SAN FRANCISCO I Mans
batting at horse tracks, via mes
senger ncrvtce. Is Just an Illegal us
bookmiikliiK. nnyn Attorney Gen
eral Kdinund G. Brown.
Ills rullinr was prompted by a
Glendale, Cullf., service which ad-
vertlnen that It denvern "scaiea
messages" Ibets) to Bnnta Anita
Race Track near Los Angeles lor
a 10 per cent fee.
The Glendale service Is operated
by George Semau, 28, who snld he
merely sends mennnges containing
money and betting Instructions to
Bantu Anita. "People sometimes
want me to send out money and In
structions so I do, and I charge
them 10 per cent lor Uie service.
"If they win, I send the money
to their houses. If Uiey lone. I
send Uiem the mutuel tickets."
Defense Started
In Meat Case
PORTLAND W A Portland
store chain began Its defense Fri
day against government accusa
tions of upgrading meat and selling
It at above-celling prices.
Tlie defense began after the
government put on Its last witness.
Clarence Benson, 63, former ment
cutter for the Fred Meyer Store
chain. Benson uuld the meat mar
ket manager, at a Meyer store In
structed him lo remove federal
grade marks on beef.
rami
Fine Food , . . Alweyi
ti.
VV
oiinnv.Q
If) I NnnyTjho011
KIIAM
Tax Liens Seek
Big Amount
PORTLAND I The Internal
Revenue office wants from
Harold J. Fleck and Norma J.
Fleck, former used car lot operat
ors here.
Tux liens for that amount were
filed Thursday by Collector Hugh
W. Eurle, who nuld It wan owed In
bnck taxes for the years 1B45
through 1950. The filing reported
the Flecks sold the used car busi
ness last yenr to enter the orchid
business.
Court Alarmed
By Ringing .
PHILADELPHIA i.fl A steady
muffled ringing interrupted the
Quarter Sessions Court of Judge
Francis Shunk Brown Thursday.
A court aide Investigated and
traced Uie sound to a clerk's desk
drawer behind the bar of the court.
There he found a crudely
wrapped package. "It looks like a
time bomb," he said.
A court officer blushed. "Thai's
my alarm clock. I took ft In to be
fixed and Just got It buck at noon,"
he explained.
SWKKTLAND FILES
PORTLAND iPi Monroe Sweet
land will seek re-election as Demo
cratic national committeeman for
Oregon. He announced his decision
Thursdy. Already filed for the
position Is Mike DeClcco, who was
defeated by Swectland In 1048.
The first meetlpg of the Ameri
can Bowling Congress was held In
Beethoven Hall In New York City,
Sept. 9. 1805.
Deputy Prison
Warden OK'd
SALEM I The State Board
of Control approved Thursday hir
ing oi a temporary deputy warden
at the State Penitentiary next
summer to speed up the prison's
classification and training pro
gram. The new deputy, who would work
for seven weeks, probably would
be either a faculty member or
graduate student In the University
oi oregon s sociology uepartment.
The reouest for the temporary
deputv came from Warden Virgil
OMalley and Prison superinten
dent George Alexander.
The board also asked the State
Indian Rights
Bill Offered
WASHINGTON It) A bill to put
Oregon Indians on an equal footing
with non-Indian citizens was pro
poned Thursday by the Department
of Interior.
Master O. White, acting assistant
secretary of Interior, proposed the
bill In a letter to the Senate.
It In the first of several bills
which the Indian Affairs Commis
sioner has In preparation to free
Went Coast Indians from govern
ment control.
White nald Indians of the Grand
Ronde-Slletz and Klamath reser
vations have approved the bill, but
opposition came from the Warm
Springs and Umatilla reservations.
'the bill would extend Oregon
criminal law to all but the Warm
Springs reservation, where Indians
maintain a tribal court. The entire
stale, except Warm Springs, would
be freed from the Federal Indian
Liquor law. State Courts would be
permitted to settle civil controver
sies of any nature affecting In
dians, except for those Involving
the Warm Springs tribesmen or
Indian trust property.
The federal government also
would keep Jurisdiction over cer
tain crimes and would safeguard
fndian hunting, trapping and fish
ing rights, privileges and Immun
ities granted under federal law or
treaty.
White aald the department has
agreed to exempt the Warm
Springs Indians because they have
a tribal law and order code, a
tribal court and employ policemen
to maintain order.
Billy Claims
Senate Credit
WASHINGTON m Evangelist
Billy Graham noted Thursday night i
two actions In Congress prompted '
by his "crusade" here. j
The Senate Thursday unanimous
ly adopted a resolution urging all
the people of the United States to
offer prayers that "God may guide
and protect our nation and pre
serve the peace of the world."
Sen. Robertson, D.-Va., author of
the resolution, pointed out that
Graham will conduct prayer serv
ice Sunday at the Washington Mon
ument grounds.
The evangelist aald Robertson
would read the resolution at the
Sunday gathering, Graham's con
cluding meeting here.
Graham told his audience of 8,
400 Thursday night that a resolu
tion he proposed for a national
dny of prayer on some week day
would be reported out by the House
Judiciary Committee next Friday
In his sermon, the evangelist
used boxing bout descriptive.1! to
tell of a round by round Biblical
.story of the battle between Jcsos
and Sulan.
It ended with what Graham
called a Sunday knockout punch
Meat Packers
Hit Controls
LOS ANGELES W The West
ern States Meat Packers Associa
tion continued hammering Friday
against the government's price and
slaughter control program.
"High production Is the real ans
wer to Inflation," E. Floyd Forbes,
San Francisco, the association's
president, told the final day's ses
sion of Its annual convention. "But
if we are to achieve full produc
tion, the unrealistic, arbitrary, con
fusing and unsound price control
system must be abolished."
Forbes said the association will
inaugurate a campaign to tell the
public that Western meat Is as
good as any produced elsewhere.
"This is necessary because Mid
western packers have surpassed us
Superintendent of Public Instruc-1 in advertising and promotional
lion to survey the school program i campaigns featuring 'Eastern beef
at the State School for Boys at 1 and 'Eastern corn-fed pork,'" be
Woodburn. The last such study was : said.
made three years ago.
James Lamb, superintendent of
the school, said he thinks a new
survey Is needed.
Reapportionment
Hearing Today
EUGENE i.H A committee of
tate legislators will visit Eugene
Frldnv night to hear cltliens who
have ideas about reapportionment
of the Oregon legislature.
The group is the Reapportionment
Interim Committee, composed of
Sen. Philip 8. Hitchcock. Klamath
Fam, Sen. Richard L. Neubergcr,
Portland, nnd "the following state
representatives: David C. Baum:
La Grande. H. H. Chindgren. Mo-
lulla, and Ivan C. Laird, Sltkum.
He aded that 300 commercial
packing plants in the nine Western
states represented by the associa
tion slaughtered 15 per cent of all
the cattle killed by commercial
establishments In the country in
1951.
Accident ,Mars
Honeymoon
ASHLAND tfl A highway mis
hap interrupted a honeymoon trip
Thursday, sending a Chicago bride
to the hospital with multiple frac
tures. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph B.' Cala
brese had stopped their car nine
miles south of here In the Siskiyou
Mountains to put on chains. She
was standing beside the car when
Taft Defends
Labor Law
POCATELLO. Idaho W Sen.
jTaft (R-Ohlo) stormed this Idaho
labor center Thursday night and
spelled out a defense of the oft
crltlclzed Taft-Hartley labor law.
The Ohio Republican president
ial aspirant also spoke of the gov
ernments part in aiding both the
workman and the farmer.
The government, he told Idaho
Republican leaders at a Lincoln
Day banquet, should aid both class
es. But, he added, only to the ex
tent of assuring them equality In a
free enterprise system.
BASE
"The base of the Taft-Hartley
law Is the assurance of collective
bargaining . . ." he said.
Government "Intervention" in
the farm field is Justified for the
same reason as in labor, the sen
ator said, adding that the Repub
lican party had encouraged co
operatives so farmers could better
deal with large markets and buy
ers, rather than with "an arbit
rary market, or with buyers of
large and extensive power."
In his speech, and in press con
ferences both here and, earlier in
the day at Boise, Taft affirmed
these beliefs:
The U.S. should arm the Chi
nese NaUonalists. But we should
not push an invasion of China un
less the Chinese Communists try
to invade Indochina.
The Truman administration Is
leading down "the road of social
ism." NO PLANS
Foreign policy: "In Korea we
have no plans."
The Joint chiefs of staff were
wrong two years ago and are
wrong now in their estimate of
the money necessary to keep Rus
sia at bay:
Taxes are too high.
The recent price ceiling imposed
on white potatoes is evidence of
"lederal bungling in industry."
The federal government should
have the final say in developing
rivers which flow through several
states.
Wurlitzer
A
Moqnificent
PIANO
At o Low Prico
LOUIS R. MANN
PIANO CO.
120 No. 7th
with Jenus refusing to be tempted
by Satan. , .
ArU AT CHAM,
KLAMATH ruM.
AMERICAN CHINK!
Fee et theft beat)
f. 4H Fet Men Te Take Oat
Ben B. Lee, Mgr.
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