mm Mb LTQ aw flflflMPS In The Hay's Jews lly KHANK JICNKINH His Albany Dcmocrut llrrnld paya: "Frank Jcuklim In his Day's Nnwit column miyit he In linmeitkoly tmprctutcd Willi the Mntnncnt of Hcimlor KlUMiell ol Georgia (when ho announced Ills candidacy lor I ho Demoorutle nomlnutlun (or 1'rrnldcnll Ihul he believes In Ihe tircalctl practicable degree of lo cnl self-government. "No wonder Frank Is Impressed. An he polnu out, Russell linn put hln linger on the thing that In the pant couple of decades hnn led un lurthiMtl iiNtrnv Mom the American wny o( llle nn the FoundliiK I'alh era envisioned It." The Democrnt-llernld adda: "HuhhcII Is a Democrat, from the Deep Bouth, nnd nrobuhly Frank Jenkins nn a Itnpunlli-aii won't vote lor him In November. But none the lens Runnell hnn given exprcn nlon to a point of view Unit leiutrrn In bolh parties cim't nllord to lone nlilht of. The New Deal hnn moved the government further end further Iroin the people, with the rather hupelenn acqulcncence of the people. "More mid mfire there In it tend ency to turn to ihe national govern nient for whntever we wnnt done. State nnd local rlRhts havft nlro phled. nig government at Wash ington him collared nil Ihe loose tnx money until stale nnd lonil governments lire finding It harder nnd hnrder to Ret Uie cftnh to enrry on ndeQuntely the regional end locnl phanca of Kovernment." I'm not no sure nbout the Democrat-Herald's ntnteinent thnt come November I won't vole for Senator Runaell. I MIGHT. Movbe not thin November. Tack 1 lntr first things flrnt, It neemn lm probnble nt thin moment thnt Sena tor Ruiwrll, Routherner, enn be nnmlnnted by the Demorrntlr par ly, which In DIVIDED SHARPLY on Norlh-Bnulh linen. An of now. nt least. Ihe Northern wing of the 1riv holds the edge In voting power. It COULD he Hint fnclnir In" of power to the Rcpubllcana Ihe Democrat at their convention might COMPROMISE on Senator Russell an a cnndldute, but It neemn utterly lmpofilble to me thnt they could ro o fnr an to nominate Kennlor Runiell on ft STATES RIGHTS platform. Hut It DOES neem to me that brlng InR Uie bulk of our Kovernment hack to the ntnle houses, the court hou-ica and the city hall In already TIIK BIGGEST ISSUE THAT FACES THE AMERICAN PEO PLE. How else are we ever to have economy In government? When Rovernmenl la Immense - and sprawling; and far, far away, how are we ever to control It? ' But, If we can get It back so clone to un that we can look over IU shoulder and blow down Its neck, we CAN control It. Here In OreRon, we have a splen did exnmplo of what hanpens when tlm bulk of Rovernment In moved off Into remote outer space. In the IB ycara from 1033 to 11)51. the federal Rovernment COL LECTED In OreRon (In taxen) the agronomical sum of 13.731.465 204.. .01 (approximately two and three quarter billions of dollars.) In the same It yearn, It RETURNED to Oregon the sum of $71)4, 581. 1M. That In to say, for each dollar we've sent to Wnhlimton In these 18 years, we've got two bits back. I'm more than a little disappoint ed that SO FAR no Republican candldale for Uie presidential nom ination has even mentioned thin Iwiue. which to me seems fundu mentnl In Ihe situation thnt faces us. I'm Impressed by the fact a Southern Democrat has men tioned It prominently. Let's look facts frankly In the face. Senator Russell has raised aRaln the Issue of states rights. But, as he has raised It, It Isn't a SECTIONAL Issue. It concerns us ALL whether we live In the North or In the South. When Jef ferson raised the Issue of states rights he rained It not as a South erner but an an American who wanted government kept clone enough to the people lo enable the people to CONTROL their gov (CONTINUED ON PAOK 51 - : I - ' t&W P -A, ' t T V v !i V . ! s i ' WARM WEATHER the past few days brought flood conditions to the Wocus area. Above are homes almost surrounded by water from the quick snow thaw. XL r1- 1 its 14 Pairs " Price Five Cents 14 I'aira Killer, 3 Companions Try Break 8ALEM W) John O. PliiMin. the notorious killer and escape ar tist, failed to make It Wednesday night In another escape attempt with three olher prlfioucrs, Tliey ran Into trouble sawing Ihelr way lo the roof of the ncgre uatlon ward at the Oregon prison. and an 11:46 p.m. check of cells caught them before tliey could get away. Sirens sounded Just as they broke through to the roof, and Plnson nnd two others run meekly back lo Ihelr cells. The fourth limn, the also notorious Duprce Poc, wa nnlibed hiding on the roof. Warden VlrRll O'Mnlley said none ollered any violence. Alter Investigation he told this story of the escape try: Plnson, now 34: Poe, who la 54; Richard M. Moore. 46; and Allen D. Brunllcld. 37. got a hucksuw blade and used It to cut a loot-long inetnl haat from the door of each of the four cells. They made wood, en blocks to look like tllo hasps and put them In place Some time In the evening they left their cells. Bwed through two other doors to reach a corridor and there sawed through an over head ventilator. Just as they pushed Poe through to the roof, uie sirens sounded The check of ceils nad msciosca they were missing. They had a number of sheets tied together with a grappling hook at one end for use In gelling over the prison' wall. Plnson. Bruntlel.l and Poe are convicted killers. They are KervlnR life terms, aa Is Moore, who whs convicted of being ft habitual cri minal ftfler a series of armed rob beries Plnson ' once escaped success fully. Ha and Poe have been In volved In other tries at the prison. No Moves In Madden Case No new developments were re ported bv the district attorney's office today In the cane of 19-year-old Jerry Oscar Madden, charged with receiving and concealing stol en property. Madden wan arrested Tuesday afternoon by Cllv Police. Hln ap prehension brought to light a series of burglaries and shoplifting cases said carried on by a group ol youths aged 10 to 14 years. In District Court Wedncsdnv af ternoon Madden waived prelimin ary henrlng on the charge. He Is held In the County Jail under (2500 ball. Weather FORECAST Increasing cloud Ineaa tomorrow. Low tonight 28, high tomorrow 64, High yesterday .... 53 Low last night 24 Preclp yesterday 0 Preclp. since Oct. I 14.09 Same period last year 12.58 Normal for- period 9.16 Steel r. x ..i..4;, .. ; KLAMATH FM.r" KLAMATH FAM . THURSDAY, MARCH 27, 195 Telephone sill No. 2776 . - ttke Dssue Temise CARLOS YOWL, well known Klamath farmer inventor, has announced the invention of his new "Spring Bringer Onner". This contraption, says Yowl, can make the difference between a .good farm year and a bad one. Determined that this one won't be a bad one, Carlos went to work last night. This morning he came up with the above machine. The "Yowl Spring Bringer Onner" is not dangerous to human beings yet. Two dogs and a gray squirrel disappeared, though, shortly after being seen in the neighborhood. Driver Smacks Guard Rail 'That sharp curve at Main and Riverside Sts. caught another un- wury motorist about 2 a.m. this morning and the City Street De partment Is fixing the guard rail again today. Earl Halrlsen. 31, Gibson. Cnllf., told Municipal Judge Robert Elder he tried to round the curve at 40 miles an hour but didn't quite make It. Hnlrlscn's car was de clared a total wreck by City Po lice. In court Halrlsen wan ordered to pay $25 for violation of the basic rule and 55 for not having an oper ator's license. He had spent the night In jail In preference to put ting up $30 ball. MORE PAROLES GRANTED TOKYO Ifl Occnpntlon forces Thursday granted paroles to 18 more Jnpanese convicted as war criminals. The Allied Command had paroled or reduced sentences of 1,140 war criminals. Jr jC? ,Jkatm i m yA"THlJIt8DAY, m' Radioactive Material May Aid fa Crop SALT LAKE CITY Wl Use of radioactive material was suggested Wednesday as a means of making rapid and accurate tests of the effectiveness of Insect killing sprays. The project was outlined by Dr. Dale W. Jenkins, of the Chemical Corps medical laboratories at the Army Chemical Center In Maryland. He spoke at the annual conven- Daylight Time Battle Opens PORTLAND Ifl The contro versy over daylight saving time Is on In Oregon again. The Oregon Broadcasters Asso ciation asked Governor McKay Wednesday to put daylight time into effect In the state again this year. The broadcasters said that be sides co-ordinating radio programs with East Coast broadcasts, It also would save power for defense in dustries. The broadcasters said In a state ment that an average of 100.000 kilowatt hours of "peaking power" would be saved dollv, according lo Bonneville Administration estimates. Neahkahnie, Mountain Of Holes, Guards Mythical Spanish Gold ASTORIA Ml A fortune estl. mated at more than $250,000 has been poured Into Neahkahnie Mountain, known as the "Moun tain of a Thousand Holes." Neahkahnie, legendary burying ground of Spanish gold, has never given up a peso to scores of for tune seekers who have riddled the mountain with holes In a 90-ycnr period. Three men Mllo Merrill. Har vey Tuttlo and Charles Pike have devoted their lives to hunting for bullion said to have been burled in the Pacific promontory after a Spanish galleon was sunk off the coast. Barney Lucas of Genrhnrt. who purchased the mountain In 1945 for a possible real estate development, estimates that a quarter of a mil lion dollars has been spent digging for gold there since the Civil War. Lucns said that he had Intended to keep treasure seekers out of the area when he bought it. but relented after Merrill's touching appeal. Merrill, - a native of Nehalem, i - - Spraying Test tion of the American Mosquito Con trol Association. Dr. Jenkins described experi ments he and J. M. Davis of the Forest Insect Laboratory at Belts ville. Md.. made at the Armv Chemical Center. They used a small auantitv of radioactive gold in a solution Which was sprayed aerially over a test plot. Gelger counters then were used to show the distribution of the radioactive material. "The use of a radioisotope tracer presents several advantages over the dye tracer method," Dr. Jen- Kins said. "It Is possible to assess the re sults of airplane spraying within a few minutes. It can be measured in the field rapidly and relatively accurately without resorting to panels and time-consuming chem ical analyses In the laboratory. "It is possible to move a Gel ger counter over the surface of a leaf and determine immediately whether It is covered effectively with spray." Dr. Jenkins estimated that only one-tenth the time would be needed for checking the coverage of a spray with the radioactive tracer method as Is required in the com mon dye tracer method; The scientist said that the testing method could be used efficiently by fruit and vegetable growers to check on the effectiveness of thelr spraylng activity. said he had started hunting for the gold as a child and spent his entire life digging In an area 200 feet wide nnd 500 feet long for a 17th century chest of gold he be lieved to be in the area. Indian legends about the hidden fortune are responsible for the search. Lucas said one well-financed crew went to the mountain four summers ago, bought a bulldozer, erected a power plant and wound up spending $25,000 without find ing gold. One shaft was driven down 40 feet, but nothing more exciting than clay covered chunks of basalt was found. One early and persistent digger was a surveyor named Smith, said to be the grandson of Chief Con comly who welcomed Lewis and Clark to the region. He delivered a speech on the Indian legend be fore the Oregon Historical Society In 1899. His son, Pat Smith, grew up and died looking for the burled gold. Pat found an Indian woman who knew the legend, but she would Government On Fence; YSB Upset By NORMAN WALKER WASHINGTON I Chairman Nathan P. Feinsinger of the Wage Stabilization Board told reporters "Hell no" Thursday when asked If Delense Moblllzer Charles E. Wil son has asked the WSB to reduce thi steel case. He had Just left a meeting witn Wilson, who has said the WSB's settlement plan, calling lor ft 17 h cent wage boost, was a serious threat to anti-inflation efforts. Wilson also talked with Econom lc Stabilizer Roger Putnam and Price Stabilizer tills Arnaii. PLAN STUDIED Wilson apparently was trying to work out some plan to help settle the steel labor dispute. A strike of Philip Murray's more than 650,000 CIO Steelworkers in the basic steel industry Is scheduled for April S Arnhall left Wilson's office 40 minutes after FeUuinger. As re porters followed him down the cor ridor, linng questions, he replied: No comment ... no comment . . . no comment ..." Wilson declined a request of pho tographers that they be permitted to take pictures of the meetings. When the request was placed, the cameramen naa assumea a Joint, tour-man meeting still was scned uled. Wilson switched from the Joint meeting pian 10 me series ol sepa rate. Individual talks. A spokesman for Wilson's Office of Defense Mobilization refused to confirm or deny that he plans to keep hands off the steel wage dis pute for the present in hopes of progress In union-manaeempnt ne gotiations which started Wednes day in Pittsburgh, and resumed inur&uay. The situtation was such that 11 SVMI flnWBVMl nnnkU . Ik.. .lw President Truman due back from mis rwnui vacation late Thurs day, someone in the mobuization hierarchy may quit soon. One thing appeared certain: That the Steelworkers union will get nowhere in negotiations with steel firms until the administration makes up its mind. The companies said they'll need price boosts of $12-a-ton if they grant the WSB - recommended terms. Transamerica Gets The Axe WASHINGTON 111 - The Feder al Reserve Board voted 3 to 2 Thursday to order a breakup of the Transamerica Corporation's big banking empire in five western states. The majority found that the cor poration which controls seven billion dollars in bonk deposits and half the bank loans in California, Oregon, nevaaa, Washington and Arizona tends to "lessen com petition and restrain commerce " In a minority dissent, James K. Vardaman, Jr., said the record falls to warrant or sustain" such a conclusion. Further. Vardaman cnargea, ine Doard's hearing offi cer In the case "arbitrarily and un- lairiy aiscriminated against Trans america." Board member Oliver S. Powell Joined Vardaman In the dissent. 'Chairman William M. Martin Jr., M.S. Szymczak and R. M. Evans, the hearing officer, made un the majority. Transamerica was built un over a period of many years by the late A. P. Giannini. INCORPORATE SALEM I Articles of incor poration Thursday: Pass Creek SawmlU, Inc., Drain. $25,000 capital stock. Incorporated by P. L. McMahon, P. Y. Wllmot and O. F. Vondcrheit. A Thousand not tell him anything. Lucas said that in order to tret the secret. Pat Smith married the Indian, and soon was feverishly digging holes in the area his wife designated. After long digging. Smith brought Charles Pike into the hunt as a partner. Pike is still a present member ol the trio seeking tne gold. After Smith died. Pike induced Merrill and Tuttle to loin him. Lucas said that Pat Smith made a trip to Spain to search archives for information on the treasure ship, reported lost on the West Coast while running between America and Manila. The date 1630 Is on a rock, but Lucas doubts Its authenticity-. In fact he's skeptical about the whole legend. He thinks the mountain that now has over a thousand holes contains no treasure. But Just In case. Lucas has a contract with diggers that he gets 25 per cent of any weaitn louna on nis property, . ... i- ! NO. 1 DREAM GIRL Combat correspondents of the First Marine Air Wing in Korea, whose stories are often censored; but whose dreams cannot be scrutin ized, have,-' voted Motion Picture Actress Mary Castle (above) their No. 1 Dream Girl." Stores Draw Beer Rebukes The alcoholic beverage licenses of two local grocery stores have been ordered suspended for short periods by the Oregon Liquor Con trol Commission. The license of Erma A. GeRue, oDerator of Fremont Grocery. 18 Nevada, is to be susoended for 30 days beginning April 1, for selling beer to ft minor. That suspension also is to re main in effect until a new license is okayed by the Liquor Commis sion bearing the names of all per sons naving a iiuttimiui unci cab in the business. The present license was in Mrs. GeRue s name only, but the Liquor Commission determined that her husband. Lee GeRue, also had a financial Interest in the place. Last Monday the city council recom mended to the Liquor Commission that a new license be granted the Fremont Grocery. The other suspension Is of the license of Gustaf and Verna Brake velt, operators of West Klamath Grocery, for 10 days starting April 1. Basis of that suspension order was the Liquor Commission's find ings that consumDtion of beer on the premises had been permitted alter hours ana mat me licensees had lnterferred and hindered in spectors of the Liquor Commission. COMING HOME SEATTLE Wl Eight Washing ton State soldiers are among the 1.578 Army officers and men sched uled to arrive here from the Far East April 1 aboard the Navy Transport Pvt. Joe P. Martinez. They Include M-Sgt. Paul H. Hammons. Star Route. Brewster, and Sgt. Clarence H. Sebring, BR 1, Box 257, Port Angeles. f i - t. 9 O'Clock Special f SHARING A SHEET of news this morning were (I to r) Don Wells, operator of the .Medical-Dental barber shop, and Dr. Earl Clanahan, , V Prineville Families Flee Homes By The Associated Presa Flood waters of the Crooked Ri ver receded temporarily Thursday after forcing 150 families In the Central Oregon town of Prineville to flee their homes. But weather experts warned that continued warm weather could bring a peak even higher than the one Thursday when water four feet deep In places swirled Into homes In three sections of the town. Farther east at Vale, floodwatera dropped without causing major damage although at least two bridges were washed out. Wheeler H. Ruckcr, district field engineer for the Army Engln".ria, arrived at Prineville from The Dalles to direct construction of dikes to confine the rampaging river to Its banks. 500 EVACUATED The evacuation of an estimated 500 to 600 persons began late Wednesday afternoon aa transfer nd lumber companies and the U. S. Forest Service kept trucks working steadily until midnight. The entire town turned out to help load tne Deiongings of tne flood refugees. The gymnasium of-the old Crooked River school was con verted into a storage depot and the flood victims were cared for In the homes of other residents. Twenty pieces of equipment. In cluding trucks, graders and bull- aozers, tnrew up a temporary levee after flood waters topped a sand- Dag ante, woric was halted wuen the water began to recede. Rucker and Mayor Stuart Sheik made preparations Thursday to continue the levee building. HOMES FLOODED . About 70 of the flooded homes were in the new Riverside Village district at the southwest edge of town. On the northwest stfe, back waters on Ochoco Creek, swollen by the heavy mountain snow melt, flooded about 65 other homes. Although the river had drupped 10 inches Thursday, the staff of the Ochoco National Forest said continued warm weather could bring a new peak. Foresters poin ted out that the mountain snow, which measured 40 inches in places, contained about double the usual water content. RANCHES HIT The flooding river inundated ranch bottom lands along a 25 ml'e stretch to the south. Damage was not expected to be high, however. and stock had been moved out of danger. Oregon Highway n- was still olosed to the south of Prineville, halting maU service to the area. Nearly a dozen other roads were closed in Central and Eastern Ore gon as other streams, fed by the snow runoff, rose rapidly Wednes day. t BRIDGE OUT , The Powder River washed out ft bridge on Oregon Highway 86 be tween Baker and Richland. Four other Baker county roads were closed by high water from the Powder and North Powder. Two farms were isolated In the Keating area 10 miles northeast of Baker, but were in no danger. Livestock had been moved to high er ground. A bridge washout on the John Day Highway between Mt. Vernon and Dayville marooned a Pacific Trailways bus temporarily Wednes day, but it reached its destination before nightfall. ROADS CLOSED The Halfway Highway was closed by a slide east of Baker. The State Highway Department re ported these other roads closed: Lakeview-Burns highway between Alkali Station and Suntex; Central Oregon highway between Gap ranch and Junction with Three Flags highway; Rome-Princeton highway between Princeton and Follyfarm: Frenchglen highway south of Burns near the Nevada line. ft CI