Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, February 28, 1952, Page 1, Image 1

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    FIE sirjioitt
n . ,in....i .11 ' i i ii i ii i r i
.ocsfi orifMfe Mirs Ice Causes
,..,.1., L , Yf-.. .,,...&zxiA.kwji- - - I rt TSv II
ny 1'ltANK JENKINS
From L Grande 'Oregon):
"Lloyd A Cnuiullrr, 63, who stnrt
, rd yawning wlUi the new your. la
Kllll ut It, lio yuwiw every llvo
minute, mid n . encouraged by
llinl, tin thinks ll' a big improve
ment over the early days o( Jan
miry, when lie was yawning every
two MCCOIlds."
I think mnybe I know what's
wrone with him. HE'S BEEN
HUAOINO TUB NEWB. Generally
iuokiiit It has been Hint kind n(
news. I know, because I've been
rending It myselt,
I've boon doing a lot of yawn
ing. 1
For your own good, Lloyd, I
none you rend thin burr dispatch
which hit Jual coins over the tele
type; "Senator Russell of Georgia an
nounced today he will neck the
Democratic noinlniillon lor Preai
dont , . - , .He emit himself aa
a 'Jetfrrsonlan Deinocrnt who be
lieves IN THK ORKATE8T PRAC
TICABLE DKOKKK OP LOCAL
BKLK-CSOVKRNMKNT.' " .
Thivt, Lloyd, In NEWS.
It ought to atop your ynwns lor
at leu.il an hour,
WHY I It news? '
Well, here In a good roan who
announces himself as a candidate
for President and then puts his
finger on tho thing that In the past
couple of decades hss led us
FARTHEST ASTRAY FROM THE
AMERICAN WAY OF LIFE ax the
Founding Fathers envisioned IL
Our ancestors were wine. They
wanted government kept CLOSE
AT HOME, where they could watch
It and control It. They started. In
New England, with the town meet
ing. The town meeting was govern
ment on a scale that could be
handled bv the people.
But, gradually, population spread
beyond the villages. When that
came about, there were COUNTRY
people s well aa TOWN people.
They were entitled to their share
ol the sav In government.
So we extended the scope of gov
ernment to Include the COURT
HOUSE, In time, as we continued
to grow, we widened our circle
to Include the STATE HOUSE.
There, for a long, LONG time,
we stopped, It la true that one of
our first acts as a new-born na
tion wns to create a NATIONAL
government, But, In our thinking,
we limited Its powers sharply. We
fcave it control of foreign relations
and foreign policy and NATIONAL
DEFENSE. We permitted It to
lew tariff duties partly to pro
tect our youthful Industries against
foreign competition and partly to
enable our national government to
finance Itself, Wo gave It a few
more powers.
Rut there we stopped.
We were Inherently suspicious of
BJO government,
We Wonted government kept
close enough to us so that we could
handlo It.
That was the root of our think
ing until the REVOLUTION OF.
THE 1930's. which arose out of the
Oreat Depression and was spear
headed by the New Deal.
In the course of time a sur
prisingly SHORT time the New
Deal moved the court houses and
the state houses to Washington.
The result of It has been to move
the bulk of government so far from
the people that they no longer can
rontrol It. Instead, government con
trols Uie people.
Tn recent years, I think I must
nave heard ten thousand people
lev: "I don't like what's going on,
BUT WHAT CAN I DO ABOUT
IT? What can ONE PERSON do?"
It Is true that when the bulk of
(Continued on Page 4.)
.A HINT OF SPRING was In the
ing girls were snapped by. the
flowers, at a locql store. o :
Price Five tents 22, Pases
Old Burner At Weyerhaeuser does
The giant burner nl the Woycr-
haousor Timber Company plant Is
being taken down now, und Its
demise might symbolize the death
oi an era in iiiosawmiii ousiness.
There will be no moro waste at
Wcyeilmcuser, Pliint Manuger
Rulph Macartney nays, nothing to
burn. Everything coining in from
the woods will bo used,
Sessler Inc. la handling the lob
o( dismantling the HXMoot steel
and brick monster burner. It was
build In 1020 and contulns prob
ably 200 tons of sheet steel In
plates, plus the lining of thousands
of brick.
The steel Is to be salvngca as
far as possible at Weyerhaeuser
plants here and elsewhere, and
some of It will be Junk,
In Us day the burner consumed
thousands of tons of suwdust und
leavings from tho mill for whlcll
at the time there was little use.
Rodeo Plans
Studied By
Committees
Appointment of Bill Hamilton,
Falrvlew School teacher, as secre
tary for tills year's Klamath Basin
Roundup was announced toduy by
Bob Robbing, Roundup Association
president.
Several applicants for the post
were screened by the association
before Hamilton's appointment,
Robblns Raid.
Robblns also announced appoint
ment ol several committees for the
Roundup:
Queen Tryouts, Elmer Balslger
with assistance from the entire as
sociation board: "
Children' Parade, Junior Cham
ber of Commerce;
Parking and Ushers, Sheriff's
Posse;
Advertising and Publicity. Al
Schmeck. Ureer Drew, Arthur
(Ricky) Rlckbcll. '.
Orounds and Concessions, Hank
Ring, Elmer Balslger, Keith Rice,
Bob Robblns and Bill Hammond:
Programs, Roy Murphy and Al
Hnttan:
Tickets, Bill Hamilton, Orecr
Drew and Bob Robblns;
Parade, Don Klrkpatrlck, Keith
Rice, Charlie Read and Elmer Bal
slger: '
Races, Hi an jonnson, nana ning
and Charlie Read;
Local Events, Stan Johnson, Mcr-
yn Wilde, Bill Hammond - ana
Friedman Kirk:
Arena Director, Mcrvyn wnae.
The Roundup Is scheduled for
July 3, 3, and 4.
Next director's meeting is set lor
March 11.. 7:30 p. in., at the Wll-
lard Hotel.
Per Capita Pay
Set In March
KLAMATH AGENCY A per
capita payment of 300 Is to be
paid to the Klamath Indians some
time In the latter part of March,
E. J. Dlehl, superintendent of the
Klamath reservation, said today.
There are approximately 2,000
Indians on the tribal roll, so the
total payment will be about $600,-
000.
air when these: two charm
photographer admiring the
, .
KLAMATH FALLH, OREGON, THURSDAY, FKBKUARY 28, 1952
4-. - J- ? J mhM
ABANDONED AND BEING
burner at Weyerhaeuser Timber Company, a giant structure
of brick and steel. When this picture was taken, two men
(not visible) were crawling around on top of the structure,
Jack McDonald and S. R. Crouley. ; , 1
Koung Republicans Take
Look At New Truck Bill
Klamath Young Republicans had
a lively session here last night.
Several proposed new state laws
were discussed and argued after
they had been outlined by State
Hep. Ed Geary and County School
Supt. Carrol Howe.
All of the bills discussed are sub-
Woman Con
Flees Prison
r
SALEM A woman convict,
Mlckele O'Brien, 27, escaped from
the Oregon penitentiary Wednesday
night after robbing the purse ol
the deputy warden's wife.
The amount of money she ob
tained is undetermined, but she
used (26 of it to pay for a taxlcab
trip to Portland.
She Is the first woman convict
to escape in many years. She was
a trusty working at the home of
Deputy Warden and Mrs. E. C.
Hailey.
Warden Virgil O'Mallcy said he
thinks she left about 10:30 p.m.,
although she was not missed until
Thursday morning.
She was received from Clatsop
County lost July 25 to serve five
years on a bad cnecic cnargc.
O'Malley said he thinks she plans
to meet a convict who was paroled
three days ago.
Hallcy's house Is located on the
prison grounds.
No Socialist
Pubs For The
British Drinker
LONDON tfl No, Sir I There
won't be any state-owned pubs In
Britain. Not while Winston Churc
hill's Conservatives are In office.
His Conservatives in Commons
Wednesday night repealed a bill
passed by the previous Labor gov
ernment to sci up siate puds in
new towns planned to ease city
congestion. The vote was 306 to 266.
"My constituents dislike the very
Idea of state beer," cried Conserva
tive Nigel Fisher.
Laborite O. S. Lindgrcn charged
the Conservatives were fronting for
brewers who own most of the pubs.
The brewery-owned pubs serve on
ly their brand, which, he said, pre
vents citizens In the new towns
"from drinking their , own choice
of beer."
In the House members and their
guests can get just about anything
alcoholic they want. The House
runs its own bar a sort of form of
publlo ownership.- .
' X A.
TORN down now is 'the big
ect to referendum approval or re,
lection in the coming election.
Of prime Interest was the new
schedule under which truckers' tax
rale would be Increased approxi
mately irom 28 to 33", per cent-
Rep. Oeary, who backgrounded
this bill, pointed out that the State
Legislature had voted It an over
whelming approval and said he
was strongly in lavor oi it person
ally. He said the bill was being op
posed principally bv large truck
ing concerns many of which oper
ate interstate trucks from which
Oregon realizes little revenue in
return for use of the highways,
Many of these large Interstate
trucks, Geary said, get by with
paying only me fuu lee . , . They
carry large fuel tanks so that they
do not even pay gasoline tax, he
aanea.
Howe spoke on five bills and
voicea approval oi lour of them;
1) Appointment of the State Rn.
perlntendent of Public Instruction
oy me aiate Board of Education,
rather than election bv the people:
2) School svstem reorirnnfziitinn
bill following recommendations of
uie iioiy report;
3) Permit increases in the tax
base:
4) Limit state nropertv tax tn
etix nuns;
S) Introduction of a clgnret tax
which it has been estimated would
bring in some six million dollars
in new revenue.
It was the measure limltinor prop
erty tax to six mills which Howe
was a bit dubious about. Geary
argued in favor of the bill but
Howe expressed a fear that "the
measure might hurt the school
structure.
Charles Johnson, president of the
mamam young Republicans, an
nounced the next meeting was
scheduled for March 18, 8 p.m., at
the Winema Hotel.
Bonanza Man In
Army Training V
C. J. Andrews, 22, Route 1. Bo
nanza, was Inducted Into the Army
yesterday at Portland, filling the
Klamath County Draft Board quota
of one man for February.
The board's March call also Is
for lust one man and he is Ed
ward Haydcn Bell, 21, of 433 N.
7th, who Is scheduled for Induction
March 12.
McKay Urges RC
Support In State
SALEM W Gov. Douglas Mc
Kay urged support Monday of the
10S2 Red Cross campaign "as the
channel through which millions of
Americans fulfill ther desire to
serve others."
He urged nil to "give generously
according to their means to rep
resent humanity in action to serve
whenever help is needed."
Telephone sill
No. 2752
But the lumber business now Is
coming to the point where there
Ik a use for everything and every
thing will be used.
Weyerhaeuser some months am
announced the planned construction
ot a libcrboard plant in conjunc
tion with the mill here, and when
put inio operation that plant will
handle species ol timber not con
sidered particularly valuable as
lumber today.
The company must obtain per
mission of the National Production
Authority for the construction, and
that's where the plans for the fiber-
board plant rest now, in Washing,
ton. D. C.
Weyerhaeuser Is also installing
a barker here to tear the bark olf
logs by a jet of water under very
high pressure, and at present Is
replacing the timber structures of
each of Us four head rigs with
steel.
Cape Cod
Blasted By
Snow Storm
BOSTON HI At least ten per
sons were dead, 10.000 Cape Cod
homes were heatless and more
than 100 miles of Cape highways
were completely Impassable Thurs
day alter one of the worst north-
cast snowstorms to hit Southern
New England In 50 years.
Drifts as high as 12 feet halted
an modes ol highway transporta
tion. . , . . ..
There was an approximate (0
per cent power failure on Cape
Cod about as bad as in the 1944
hurricane. ,,v
Most homes require electrlo pow
er to operate their heating equip
ment, i
Nearly 1,000 automobiles were
burled in snow on main highways.
The new mid-Cape highway and
the old route 6-A, familiar to sum
mer visitors to Cape Cod, were
paralyzed. Dozens of telephone and
power poles were down.
Two boys, missing overnight dur
ing the near blizzard, were found
Thursday morning and rushed to
medical attention.
Resort hotels which function only
for summer vacationists were hast
ily thrown open at the request ot
officials to put some of the hund
reds locked in the heavy snow.
Others spent the night in town
halls and fire stations that were
lighted only by candles and kero
sene damps and heated only by fire
place wool fires and poo-bellied
stoves because of the lack of pow
er. Some 250 civilian personnel were
given shelter at Camp Edwards
when the storm trapped them In
the big cantonment at the end of
the workday Wednesday.
Nantucket Island, with a winter
population of approximately 3,500,
had no contact with the world outr
side except through a radio on a
nearby Coast Guard patrol boat.
Swine Sale
Set Friday
About 30 head of red gilts were
being readied today for tomorrow's
Oregon Purebred Swine Growers'
Assoc. third annual sale at the
Klamath County Fairgrounds.
Three Klamath breeders Bryant
Williams, Earl Wilson and Richard
West have consigned top animals
to Uie sale, set to get underway
at 12:30 with Bob Rhodes crying
the auction.
Ben Newell is sale manager.
The sifting committee, really
working the herds this season, has
eliminated all but the best for the
sale, according to County Agent
J, D. Vertrecs.
"And a bum hog is just as ex
pensive to feed as a good hog,"
he said.
He called the consigned swine
a representation of the best in the
state, and pointed out local de
mand has been extremely, nign in
the past few weeks.
Eight breeds are represented on
the sale catalog lists Herefords,
Berkshlres, Durocs, Spotted Po-
lnnds, Poland Chinas, Hampsnn-es,
Chester White and Yorkshires.
Newell said all swine are regis
tered, and should farrow In March
or April.
Weather
FORKCAST Klamath Falls and
vicinity and Northern California:
Sunny Thursday and Friday. High
Thursday 30, low Thursday night
20.
High temp yesterday 43
Low last night 17
Preclp Feb. 27
Since Oct. 1 - ....12.77
Normal for period 8.07
Some period last year 11.91
(Additional Weather on Page 4)
I V k. I I
r 1
ROOF INSPECTION occupied the duo above this morning.
They are (I to r) Marvin Kuhlman, 430 Riverside Ave.,
and Ted Bechtel, 544 Harlan Drive. Kuhlman operates the
Kuhlman Insulation Co.. .
Russell Of Georgia Will
Seek Presidential Post
By The Associated Press
Sen. Russell of Georgia an
nounced Thursday he will seek the'
Democratic nomination for Presi
dent.
And President Truman told a
news conference he won't announce
whether -he will seek re-election
until after he returns from a vaca
tion trip to Key West. Fla.. a
month hence.
Sen. Russell said In a statement
he could "do no less than comply'
with the unanimous requests of the
Georgia General Assembly and the
stale s uemocraic Executive Com
mittee that he become a candidate.
As the second Democrat to make
a-formal entrance In the race, Rus
sell cast himself as a "Jeffersonlan
Reds May Be
Kept To Area
WASHINGTON W! The United
States and most of the Western
Allies were reported Thursday to
have agreed to hit back at Moscow
by restricting the movements of
Soviet representatives in their
countries.
Diplomatic authorities said pre
liminary plans for combined action
were taken up at the Lisbon meet
ing of the North Atlantic Treaty
Council and won the support of
a substantial majority of the 14
member nations.
Definite action is expected pos
sibly In the next two or three
weeks after a further exchange of
views.
The planned acUon would amount
to a tit for tat retaliation for the
Russian order of last month which
in effect confines foreign diplo
mats to the Moscow area.
In the United States the expected
result is an order prohibiting So
viet ' Ambassador Alexander S.
Panyuskin and members of his
staff from traveling more than 25
miles from the capital without ex
press authority of the State De
partment. They now can go anywhere in
the country with the same freedom
as American citizens.
. FAIR
SALEM W) The condition of
former Gov. Walter M. Pierce, 90,
remained fair Thursday, Salem
Memorial Hospital said.
Hitchcock,
Phil Hitchcock and Ed Geary,
Klamath County's two Republican
members of the State Legislature,
announced today they would be
candidates for re-election. -
Rep. Henry Semon, Democrat
and senior man of the local dele
gation to Salem, made his an
nouncement several weeks ago,
Hitchcock, president of the West
Hitchcock Corporation, has served
one four-year term In the Senate,
and during the last session of the
Legislature newspapermen cover
ing the session voted him the out
standing member of the Senate.
Hitchcock is 47 years old. a na
tive of Pomerov. Wash., and has
lived in Klamath Falls since 1943.
His territory, the 17th Senatorial
District, is probably the largest in
the stale, covering Klamath Lake.
Deschutes, Crook and Jefferson
counties, almost one fourth of the
total area of Oregon.
Ed Geary, operator of the Geary
ranch, ,has served two terms in
the House of Representatives. He
was first elected in 1948 and re
elected In 1950. He also was con
sidered one of the outstanding
members of the Legislature last
term, and was chairman of the
House" highways committee,
Democrat who believes in the
greatest practical degree of . lo
cal sell-government."
Sen. Kefauver. of Tennessee is
the other announced candidate lor
the Democratic nomination-
-A mm-iber ot southern Democrats
SENATOR RUSSELL
have been urging Russell to make
the race-
They said that If the President
ran again they wanted their own
candidate so that they could sup
port him wholeheartedly.
Three File For
Tulelake Council
TULELAKE Intentions of only
three candidates to seek four year
seats on the city council in the
coming city election. April 8, had
been filed early today with Vic
toria Thaler, City Clerk. Books
close at 12 o'clock today.
Aspirants are Virgil Barron, ap
pointee Incumbent who succeeded
Don Potter who resigned several
months ago. Dr. Earl Spry, Chiro
practor and Ross Ragland, man
ager of the Tulelake Cold Storage
Company.
No statement has as yet been
made by Mayor Dick Moore on
his plans. His term also expires
this year.
There will be no special Issues
on the ballot.
- r
Geary, Seek Election Again
Geary Is 59. a native of Med
ford, and for years has been one
of Oregon's outstanding ranchers.
Both Geary and Hitchcock filed
their candidacies in Salem today.
PHIL HITCHCOCK
Crash Over
Nova Scotia
SYDNEY, Nova Scotia. Wl
Eighteen men 17 of them making
their first leap from an airplane
safely bailed out of a U.S. All.
Force transport early Thursday,
moments -before it crashed In a
blinding blizzard. Only three men
were Injured, none seriously.
The plane, a C-47 en route from
Westover-Field, Mass., to Its base
at Torbay, Nfld., crashed on the
outskirts of this Industrial city of
30,000 not far from some homes.
It had carried 14 passengers and
a crew of four.
As the pllotless craft roared over
Alexander Street, residents wera
aroused from sleep and rushed
from their homes. Two ot them
found the wreckage In a wood bait
a mile from their houses.
- The pilot had made 20 attempts
to land through the ;torm at Syd
ney Airport, eight miles from the
crash site, before he ordered every
one into paracnutes.
Staff Sgt. Robert A. Redinger of
Chambersburg, Pa., the only man
aooard witn previous jumping ex
perience, fitted the 'chutes and
gave each man Quick instructions
for the leap.
The escape door jammed for a
moment, but broke loose when the
men heaved against It the second
time.
The jump was made at 3,000 feet,
When the last man leaped into
the darkness, swirling snow and a
50-mlle-an-hour wind, the plane had
oniy tnree minutes gas supply leit.
All 18 men were found within a
half-mile radius by search teams
of police and reserve army troops.
li. uoi. james A. narron, ot
Grosse Point. Mich., cracked sev
eral ribs in his landing on a hilltop
and was carried off in a toboggan.
Capt. James P. Amaro, of Bir
mingham, Ala., twisted his knes
In a tree top landing only yards
from high tension wires carrying;
electricity into Sydney. ,
The pilot, Capt. T. E. KoblenskU
said the storm "chtied us righC
from Westover-' .
Klamath Flier
In POW Camp
Lt. Robert L. Wood, fighter pilot
shot down in combat- Sept. 1. Is
in Prison Camn No. 2. somewhere
! in North Korea, according to a let
ter irom mm received by his fa
ther. George Wood, of Klamath
Falls yesterday.
The letter said that he was In
good health, was eiven mod fnnrt
and had a warm place to sleep.
ana assec: nis relatives not to wor
ry about him.
Lt. Wood was pilotii;? an F-51
Mustang when he disappeared, and
was reported first ts missing in
action.
Later his name appeared on
prisoner of war list released by
me communists.
Yesterday's letter was the first
direct word received from Lt. Wood
by his family, and the letter was.
mailed Jan. 14. He wrote that he
had received no letters written him.
Wash. Fights
Fast Time
OLYMPIA W The Washington'
State Grange filed an initiative
Wednesday which would ban day
light savings time throughout Wash
ington except in times of national
war emergencies.
The measure would exclude any
federally controlled areas such as
the Hanford-Richland area.
Fifty thousand signatures of reg
istered voters are necessary to
place the initiative on the ballot.
This is the second time an initia
tive dealing with daylight savings
time has been filed. Secretary of
State Earl Coe said.
An initiative which called for
uniform daylight savings time
throughout the state was filed in
1948 but no signatures were ever
registered, Coe added.
At present they are unopposed
for their nominations, as Semon la
unopposed for the Democratic nom
ination. j1
ED GEARY