urn mm la) mm (gfprPixnf? mm Costello Faces Jail, Gambling Chief Held Guilty of Contempt 11 v .iohn oiiiin: Wallace NEW, YORK Wl Swarthy, clunky voiced frutik Conlcllu, who iwlon stalked mil ul u Senate Cllinn Committee Iteming nithrr limn answer uucitltuiin, waa convict ed Friday nlwhl ql contempt of tho United males Senate. The (ll-yrur-old hiiiiiIjIit and underworld Hgtire, who lour times previously bent government effort In dhI lilm behind burn, facea powilble niuxliiiiiin hPiilrnrr) of 10 Hy FRANK JIJNKINH From Washington: "The Truman administration's clenn-up-tho-povcrnnicnl proitriim will be run by tho department ol Jiytleo (vhlcli In itself under In vestigation) II President. Truman's choice ol a new u'.lorney general (Federal Judgo McCirimcry) la con flinird by the senate." If I had been lapping the tilt and Minplclun to Hint effect hud L'nl nruund and there waa bustnc like tiilk of calling In an uudltor to Are what had been going on, I'm pretty Mire I'D LIKE TO HE APPOINTED TO INVESTIGATE MYSELF. A I waa coming up from the nrwa room thin niurnlni with a hundful ol teletype copy, one of the bova In the nhop aald to me: "Any nood ntwa. today?" I answered flippantly: "lliere haan'l been liny GOOD news In years." I wna wrong. The copy I held In mv hand contained a dlspauh I elating tlint Rncketeer Comello who fur yeuia has beaten .elforl t put him behind bara waa CON VICTED last nlitht of contempt ol the senate and facea ten years In prison. Tliat In good news. It la ALWAYS good ncwa when vrongdocrs are punched. Only bv Minlnhlng WRONGDOERS can we maintain a moral aoclety. But there waa a FLY In the ointment, The dispatch telling of CoaU'llo'a conviction contained this paraimph: "Oovernment Prosecutor Mllea J. T n,,ft uplift fltiallv trlnnofl tllA llnU iun-borii racketeer, - hatkd "lh jury a veraiut, 01 guilty a mm inn point' he hald It la proof that no man, 'no matter how cunning or powerful he mny seem to be, CAN BK DIGCEK THAN THE GOVERNMENT ITSELF.' " I wish he hadn't nut It that way. I wish he had Mild: "No ONE MAN can be bigger Ulan THE PEOPLE." I ni frankly acared of a federal government that la WOOER THAN ANY ONE MAN. I can't help think Inn ol Gain. Par., the enlightened and liberal editor and publisher ol La Prenna, who wna driven Into exile alter hla moat newspaper had been conllHcaled bv Die diets tonally powerful (TOO powerful government of Argentina. This dispatch la from New York -and If you read It understand Innlv vou will agree tliat It la significant ot the llmea we live In: Everybody STOOD AROUND 111 the slock market Uidav (Baturdnyi end did virtually nothing. Prices moved over a runite covered by a major fraction either way. Many leading stocks held unchanged throughout the session, and mnny irlore didn't even trade at all. "The approaching steel strike was the cause of the doldrums. The strike Is act lor midnight Tuesday, and the steel companies alrcadv have started shutdown op erations." n...,-.- r, n,li.n II RTTTFI. IS TO BE NATIONALIZED as in England for Uic government has threatened, you know, to SEIZE I hi, steel plants If their owners re IUi to meet the terms hild down by the novel mucin for settling the oirlkc. In Ennlniid. nationalizing of steel and other Industries lollowcd a vig orous iiolltlcnl campaign In which NATIONALIZATION was frankly MM admittedly the itsue. There the people deliberately CHOSE SOCIALISM by their bal lots. Here socialism Is CREEPING LP ON US BY STEALTH. Our ledcral government already holds the rnllroods and has held them for a long lime. By this time next week, It may hold Hie steel Indus- That would be a long step to yard socialism and yet the Amer ican people have NEVER signified by their voles in an election In which that was frankly the Issue that they want socialism, Here In the West, the federal oovernment already owns approxi mately half ol our total land area, fn the frightening Santa Margarita rase down In Southern California, It Is reaching for ownership of the WATER, without which ALL of our lend would be valiiuless. The federal government already has seized the railroads. It is threatening now In seize the steel Industry. What Industry will be the NEXT to be seized? I, for one, don't like the trend. It scares me. Weaither FOMX'AST: Klamath Falls and vicinity and Northern California, Increasing cloudiness Saturday night through Sunday, not qulle so warm. filch Friday 6.1 Low last nlitht SS rtrclp Friday 0 Preclp since Oct. I .'...14.15 (Additional weather on pane 13) a inn -i"ivffliyiwl,i MVta bv: ' v years In prison phi 110,01)1) In lines, lie was continued In 0.IKKJ bull pending sentencing Tucsdiiv. Government Prosecutor Mylcs J. Luue, who finally tripped the llullnn - born racketeer, hulled the jury's guilty verdict as a "turning point" and said it was proof that no man "no mutter how cun ning or powerful tie might aeein to be, could be nigger than the government itself." The iriuiillv culm und poised Costello, visibly sunken by tho ver dict, hud ' nothing to any.-' 'I hone were Ills words to news men us he rose unsteadily to his i 'HMt jimwmi'wwu'm m"t i1 wwum ;Y' t ""N FRANK COSTELLO feel after the Jury had reported Us decision. The Jury dcllucriitcd five and a hull hours. The 'ury. ilsell, hud undergone some filiulfllng around bv the Judge In a dramatic last - hour develop ment In the case. Judge Sylvester J. Ryan had llred two ol the lururs and called In alternates. Phone Strike Slated Monday DETROIT I A lleuo of tele phone service for M states edged closer Saturday Willi notice, from the communications workers, chief thut "agreement doesn't seem pos sible" before Monday's strike dead line. Joseph Belrne. president of the CIO Communications Workers of America, predicted disruption of telephone service In 24 stales and the District ol Columbia il Western Electric Co. employes strike as scheduled at 6 a.m. Monday. Belrne. whose telephone opera tors threaten walkouts In Ohio, Michigan and Northern California, ays no CWA members anywhere will cruui Western Electric pick et lines before telephone exchanges. Angrily rejecting an oiler ol an Increase of 13 to 47 a week from Michigan Bell lor its 18.000 om- ploye-membera of CWA, Belrne led for Washington Friday night to or ganize machinery for "a strike on a nationwide basis." The Michigan negotiations had been regarded as setting the pat tern for any wage agreements In Ohio and Northern California and eventually for Bell Telephone sys tems throueh'jul the country. The Bell systems and Western Electric Co. are owiied by the American Telephone and Telegraph Co. Western Eleclrln manufactures all Bell equipment and makes its central swltohboard Installations. Western Electric has planls, warehouses or installers located In all stutes except Maine. New Hampshire, Vermont, Rhode Island and Montana, Planes Smash. 15 Lives Lost MOBILE, Ala. ( Salvage crews dug through the smouldering wreckage of two entwined All Force transports Saturday in a grisly search for the bodies of 15 crewmen and passengers. They were killed when a C-124 Globcmnslcr II, biggest operational cargo plane In the U.S. Air Force, and a C-47 collided In flight over Mobile Friday night.- The transports spun earthwa'rd In flames and landed squarely atop parked railroad box cars, setting 12 ol them nflrc. The crash took Place insiria Hie city llmils a mile north of Mo bile's business district and a few blocks west of the Alabama State docks Industrial area and a battory of gasoline storage tanks. Coast Guard and Air Force crash boats and a Navv hellconter searched nearby swamps bordering me Mooue anu icnsaw Kivcra lor a possible lone survivor. An un confirmed report said one airman in the C-47 had parachuted when the planes rammed. Both planes were based at Brook Icy Air Force Base hero, What caused the collision was not Immediately determined. The night was dark but there was no rain or foj. MaJ, James C, Caldwell, provost marshal at. Brookley, said tho planes apparently locked together on Impact and cnnic to earth lit a neap. ARTS COUNCIL The Klamath Musical Arts Coun cil heard regularly over radio sta tion KFJI 5 to 5:30 p. m. each mmciay nigni will present tne con cert hall division In a program of recorded classical nuislo at 'the usual hour tomorrow. Russell Soun ders narrator. frlte Five Cent 1 Paiea We Kf Houses Hit By Driving Cargo Ship Ily GICOIIGK CORNELL and RONALD Al'TKY NEW YORK i A twln-cnuined curgo plane plunged like a bomb Into densely populated Queens Sat urday, wrcnklng llumlng havoc on homes and killing at least live persons. The big pliinc. Its motors rour lng, dived out of a rain-darkened sky, and nit the curlli with a limn derous explosion. Il ripped through the middle ol one two-story frame house, glanced Into a cruising police car, then barreled In blazing, fragments Into two other nomes. ' Hurtling missiles and spewing gasoline spread fire and wreckage over a block-long area in the heart of the residential Jamaica section of Queens 10 miles eusl of mid town New York. "Il was like everything In the world came to an end," auld Sam uel van Noslranu, a parking lot opera lor. CARS S.MASIIKI) A dozen cars In the lot and street were smashed. One was Hipped on Us top by the blast. A truck blew up. Ilie C - 46 Curtis Commando plunc, owned by the VS. Airlines. u cargo carrier, waa trying lor an instrument landing at New York International Airport, on Queens' south edge. Eyewitnesses said wings of the plane appeared to fold downward just beiore the smabup. -Bolli ol the two - man crew, the pilot, Capt. William B. Crockett, and the co-pllol. John Wocrderhoff, both of Fort Lauderdulc, Fla., were killed. Police Inspector Thomas Boylan died 111 the iniaslied police car. Bodies of two residents were re moved from the wrecked buildings. Others leaped from windows, or fled irom doorways, seven injured were Hospitalized. SKRIKS The crash was the fifth major air disaster in tne greater metro politan area Willi in recent monins Three crashes in nearby Eliza' belli. N.J., took a loll ol 119 lives. Another ulrllner cracked up In Uic East River, adjoining Mannatlan, but all aboard were saved. Saturday's crash turned more than a block-long area Into a ccorching Inferno. Rescuers were kept at a distance, and there was Utile way ol knowing extent ot the casualties, A hcavv rain was lulling, but alrriorl olllclals said a visibility of two miles and a celling of 400 feel prevailed, adequate lor landing. At tlic scene immense clouds of smoke swelled into the rain streaked air, and flames leaped through the smoke. At least two houses were demol ished and lour others were burning fiercely. The plane apparently struck one house, skidded acoss a parking lot, hit another house, setting It ulire, and glanced across a street, hitting still another building. Tlie area, consisting ol small apartment houses and stores, was described as a shambles" by one onlooker. CLOSURE Shortly nfter the crash at 8:25 a.m. (EST. the port of New York authority operations department ordered Iulernatlonal Airport closed for a half . hour. Six casually stations, two of them In garages, were set up in the area. Police sain an oi uicm were "very crowded." The Red Cross blood center rushed 90 units of blood Plasma and 36 pints of whole blood to Queens general Hospital. Three hours after the crash, the building fires were out, but col umns of smoke and steam still floated up Into the rain. Hundreds of rcscuo workers dug through shattered buildings, and other wreckage. Fire hoses snaked in cluttered confusion about the streets. Women's dresses and lingerie, ei ther blown from houses or the planes cargo, hung from limbs and telephone wires, , Steel Strike Peace Sought NEW YORK lPl Federal Wage Chief Nnthan Fclnslnger conferred separately with industry and union officials Saturday In a lest dllch attempt to avert a strike of ,700,000 steclworkers on Wednesday,- He gave no hint whether he was making any progress. Felnsltigcr. chairman of the Wage Stabilization Board, issued tins statement just before noon: "I had an Industry meeting this morning from 9:15 lo 10:30. I have n tentative meeting with Industry representatives at i p.m. I am now going Into a meeting with the union representatives."' r Fk I KLAMA' fork - Moines, cv( '''''' ?; i , '. 1 -A , y2sJx'ij 'vv SHARING THEIR TALENTS A' 65-voice choir from Roosevelt School Friday after noon shared its talents at Klamath County Rest Home by presenting a dinner concert and community sing for patients at the home. The.; outing was part of the Roosevelt School Junior, Red Cross project of "Serve and Share Talents.'1 , Pictured here are -three choir members Sandra Widcef, Nancy Roman and Richard' Norlands forming a. quartet with "Jdhn O'Neill, Rest'Home patient. The choir was under direction of Ellen Sullivan. - Cleanup Drive Depends On McGranery Approval Ry ED CREAGH WASHINGTON The Truman administration's clean-up-the-gov- crnmeni program will be run by the Department of Justice Itself under Invesligallon-lf President Truman's choice of a new attorney general is confirmed by the Senate. And Truman's nominee for the post. Federal Judge James P. McGranery of Philadelphia, savs he doesn't know yet whether there is any governmental wrongdoing to Investigate. He plans to rely on FBI Director J. Edcar Hoover to tell him whether Uicre is or not. McGranery. a souare-iawed. ruddy-faced man with a brisk, con fident manner, outlined some of his plans Friday afler a long White House conference with the Presi dent. REPLACEMENT Truman named him Thursday to replace Attorney General J. How- ard Mcoralh. swept from office In a row over the way New Yorker Ncwbold Moiris was conducting a scml-lndependent search for gov ernment corruption starting with Hie Justice Department itself. McGrnth fired Morris, a Repub lican, Just before making his own abrupt departure. And McGranery promptly ran into trouble, loo. Rep. Vclde (R.-Ill.l. charged Mc- Oranery, while an assistant attor ney general, "whitewashed" tho State Deltas Gather Here Addresses of welcome were giv en to 100 Oregon teachers, mem bers of Delta Kappa Gamma, na tional honor society for women meeting hero today were given, by Arnold Oralapp superintendent of city schools, and Velma Tennery, Klamath Falls; general chairman. . Registration got under way at 10 a.m. with a coffee hour at the Fremont school. The society Draver was sung fol lowed by Introduction of national and state officers bv Mel ssa Mar tin, Oregon State President follow ing opening of the morning bus iness session, Delegates will hear state reuorts before luncheon, 12:15 noon at the Willard Hotel, -The birthday cere- momai win oo ouservett under ttt rection of Eva Burkhalter. Ida Ed- sail is chairman for the luncheon with western atmosphere. Isabelle Brlxner. President of Al pha Chapter and supervisor Coun i.y Elementary schools here pre sided over the afternoon session. An Impressive initiation rjroced- ure directed by Melissa Martin and Dorothy. Bailie has been arranged tor the dinner at the Willard- to night that marks the end of the conference. 1.1.1 II I m.nlf.,-.piljr.j(limaiimM RATI ItDAY, APRIL S, 195Z Telephone Hill Amerasla case, a World War II sensation Involving the illegal possession ol secret government documents, Amerasla was a magazine Velde called It Red-slanted that specialized in articles on the Far East. Il quit publication in 1948. three years after the documents case broke Sen. Watkins (R.-Utahl, said he will "insist that McGranery give a full explanation of his part in actions in the notorious Amerasla case." adding that there were numerous "espionage angles . . . Which never have been followed SCOFFS , McGranery scoffed at the accusa tions, saying he ordered all the evidence presented to a grand Jury. In the end. two of six persons ar rested by the FBI were fined while charges against the others were dropped. Then Chairman McCarran of the Senate Judiciary Committee, which must pass on the McGranery ap pointment, announced that his com mittee would take its time. McCarran,- like Sen. McCarthy iR.-Wis.i, and several others, has been sharply critical of the ad ministration's handing of the Amerasla case. In Dallas Friday night, McCarthy said he'll "have h great deal to say" about the nomination on the Senate floor. Egged Her On OKLAHOMA CITY Harlon Jones sal flabbergasted In his au tomobile Friday while an angry woman peppered his windshield with eggs. They had both stopped at an Intersection. "You caused me to bust some of them and I'm giving you the rest free," he quoted her as saying. Without further explanation, she Jumped into her car and drt off, Jones told police. Scout Show On Tonight The annual Exchange Club-spon sored Boy Scout Exposition was scheduled to start at 3 p.m. in the Fairgrounds Exhibit building today. Thirty local Scouting units were to participate. Last year's exposi tion saw nearly 4.000 persons turn out. Tills year tickets were printed for 6.000 people and will be avail able at the gate. They have been on sale all week. Doors at the fairgrounds will remain open until 9 tonight to allow as many people as possible to view the live exhibits of the scouts. Explorers, Senior Scouts and cubs win participate. Outstanding exhibits will be awarded trophies by the Exchange Club. r r No. 27(15 5 Bie General's Son Lost in Korea SEOUL, Korea Ml Lt. James A. Van Fleet Jr., a B-26 pilot and son of the U.S. Eighth Army com mander, Saturday -vas listed by the U.S. Fifth Air Force as miss ing in action with his two-man bomber crew. The Air Force said their plane felled to return Friday morning from a night bombing mission near Sunchon in North Korea. It was the 26-year-old Van Fleet's third night mission. Crewmen listed as missing with Van Fleet are Lt. John A. McAllis ter, Portland, Ore., navigator-bombardier, and Airman First Class Ralph L. Phelps, Bemldjl, Minn., engineer-gunner. Lieutenant Van Fleet's mother was notified at her home at Long Beach, Calif., by Gen. J. Lawton Collins, Army chief of staff. General Van Fleet received word from Lt. Gen. Frank F. Everest, commanding general of the Fifth Air Force, at an air base in South Korea which the Eighth Army com mander was visiting with Gen. Mat thew B. Ridgway, supreme allied commander. The Air Force said Van Fleet and his crew went out on their mission Thursday night but were diverted from their primary tar get by fog and low clouds. Van Fleet radioed ot 3:15 a.m. Friday that his dwindling fuel sup ply would not permit him to hit a secondary target and that he was returning to his, base. It was his last transmission. Ike Nips Taf t In Iowa Test DES MOINES W The talLa corn state counted Gen. Dwight IV Eisenhower the winner Saturday over Sen. Taft in their battle for Iowa's national COP convention votes. The score In delegates: Hi? senhower 15, Taft 9. neutral 2. Elsenhower forces pinned up their victory late Friday In a GOP state convention which ended on a note of high excitement and unex pected results. Sen. Taft said: "It's about what .we've been expecting in the last three weeks. It's been a vcrv close fight all the way through." He said the two neutral delegates "are certain for me." But ihe Des Moines Register said "there Is some basts for believing that Elsenhower may be certain ol IB delegates at the present time." - Wes Roberts, executive director of the Elsenhower national head quarters In Washington Interpreted the convention's action as a "smashing victory" for Elsenhow er. LADY EAGLES A special meeting and practice for the Lakevlew convention for the Lady Eagles Drum corps is scheduled for Monday night, 7:30 at the Eagles Hall. Everyone be there. Weyerhaeuser, CIO Agree; Hourly Rate Will Be Hiked 7 V2C By The Associated Press Oregon's troubled labor picture brightened Saturday with major wage settlements urnounccd in the Douglas fir lumber Industry and a Portland steel mill. Negotiations also were resumed In a dispute that threatened to cripple Portland's city transporta tion system. On the darker side, though, were the walkout of the CIO Woodwork ers In the largest sawmill in Clackamas County, and the con tinuing strike of Western Union employes In Oregon, as well as the rest of the country. The huge Weyerhaeuser Timber Co. and CIO Woodworkers Friday announced agreement on a 7 "3 cent hourly wage increase for workers In bcth Oregon and Wash ington. The proposed settlement, the first in the Pacific Northwest lumber industry, alio provides for wree additional paid holidays making a total of six and other contract benefits. BENEFITS The 8000 workers will receive about $1.70 an hour under the settlement, plus employer - paid neaitn and weiiare programs amounting to an additional 7 or 8 cents an hour. The union had taken a strike ballot to back up ill demands. me company and the union agreed to petition iointlv for Wage Stabilization Board approval of the new contract wnico will be retro active to April 1. The union has scheduled necntia- tlon sessions with other segments of the lumber industry. The Portland Citv Council, bv a vote of 3-1. Friday approved a fare increase for the Portland Traction Company. That paved the wav for the company to negotiate with the Ar ij streeicarmen s union. The union is demanding a 15 cent hourly wage increase and other con tract benefits. But the company said lt could not nay unless the City Council approved higher fares. With Commissioner J. E. Bennett dissenting, the council granted a 2 cent increase, bringing fares to 15 cents, student fares were raised 1 cent to 7 cents and weekly passes 40 cents to $2.40. The company was scheduled to begin negotiations with the union Saturday in an effort to postpone a strike set .for April 8. CIO Steelworkers and the Oregon Steel Mills announced Friday agreement on a wage contract call ing for a total increase of 17 V cents tout-:?. sx--rifc' v. The plant's 327 union workers are to receive a 12 cent Increase now with 2 ',4 cent hourly increases coming on July 1 of this year and Jan. 1, '1953. A strike of CIO Woodworkers Friday closed the A. F. Lowes Lumber Company at Molalla. A shertu s deputv was called 10 neip get a loaded lumber truck out of the strike - bound plant. A union spokesman said the workers want ed a 5 cent hourly pay increase to SI. 75 an hour for semi skilled labor. A spokesman for the Lum bermen's industrial Relations com mittee, an employer group, said the union demands were for in creases ranging irom 2 !j to 47 cents an hour for most Job classifi cations. NEW CONTRACT In another labor development, heavy construction workers of Oregon and Southwestern Wash ington were to get a lu cent nouriy wage hike. E. F. Harland. execu tive secretary of the Allied Heavy Construction and Highway Crafts. and A. H. Harding, manager oi the local Associated General Con tractors, announced that a pro posed new contract had been approved oy ine wage siaoiuza tlon Board. Official WSB notifica tion Is expected early next week. 11 YOUNG ROY MOTT (right) was asking Dick Wolfe how he planned to fight Sunny Green , in tonight's main event at, the Armory when the 9 o'clock cameraman passed by. Wolfe, the Pacific Northwest welterweight champion, demonstrates with clenched fist. Floodwaters Lap Homes In Alturas ATLURAS Waters of the Pit River spillcl out Into the south and east residential sections of Al turas this morning and more flood ing was expected this afternoon or tonight. Flooding in the south part of town around the Modoc General Hospital was the worst. Water was from six Inches to a foot deep around residences. A few families had to msve out of their homes temporarily, whilo others diked up around their houses with sandbags to keep lb water out. SECOND ' ' ' The flood is the second la lesv than two weeks for the Alturas area, and this ono is worse than the earlier spill-out of the Pit. The river is fed by melting snows, and the recent warm weath er apparently brought more water down the river than normal. The road toward Davis Creek was washed out last night, but the water had receded this morning. The highway south toward Susan ville was open this morning but tho California Highway Department said it might be closed at any time. Flood waters were very near the edge of the highway. CREST The river reached a crest about 2 a. m. and by mid-morning had gone down very little. The High way Department said it expected more water this afternoon or to night. Several days ago flood water closed the highway toward Susan ville and drove a number of Indi ans from their homes near town. In today's flood probably as many as 200 homes were endan gered and in some places water stood a foot deep in the streets. Early this morning fire sirens were sounded to wake up all resi dents of the city. .. Building Hit ,Jty By Automobile An automobile swerved off Oak onto Commercial street early this afternoon and kept on in its left turn until it crashed into the door way of an apartment at 342 Com mercial. The sedan was driven by Blllle Dundson. city police said. Neither she nor a man in the car were hurt. Ir.ey were bing given a sobriety test by city police at the accident scene. The car was badlv damaged and the front of the apartment suffered some damege. The apartment house Is owned by Mrs. Alice Hershberger and the apartment !s rented to Mr. and Mrs. Duke Phillips. They were not ut home. COLLEGE POST BAKER.ifl A. S. Grant, Baker attorney, has been named to the Gonzaga University Board of Re gents, he was advised Friday by the Very Rev. Francis Corkcry, president of the university. t.i-f -"A-'-';!Wlt(