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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 26, 1952)
TUKSDAY, AUGUST 2(1, 10S2 HEIMI-D AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, OIIECON PAGE SEVEN Man Held On Statutory Rape Charge lliukv Hulls Mtmir, 3D, was or deird held lur grand liny Invenll gallon of a charge nl atnliitnrv rape against linn alter a Dlntiirt ('null preliminary hearing voter day altrmuun. Moore's ball was set nt ' (K)(), pud ho was rciU'ii'-d itt Ihc County Jail where he liu t been serving uo-tiav ii.shuIi rmt b,ittciy sen tence alme Aug. t The rape c-tiitifcr1 involve II .V year-old Mvilln Point girl Willi GOP Sets Up Farm Council whom Mourn AllrurdlV llvlnit Ul lite ittllllMI IIS4 WU1 WUlU CO-llv ut thn I inn of lilt BTrm on Uir (tKhiitlll mid httUriv clmro. Tlml count wan biouvht bv Mooio'n vit iitniui'f) wile, Juno Moure. F()Uf plOf fCUtlOll Wltllth'.CR tcnli llrrt nt yrMrrchiy hcmliiK: Mm HI Itrd Hrilton; Mi-.. Hull, C.ito lliir Ilum.fc u !(cmot. Oir , moih rr of the uiil; Mm. l.iiviiiK Htrll horn of Kco, who norm left (ho auto court; mid Uio sttl hTtrll. Hhrrill Hi M Ion imllllrrt thai lir found the itlrl and Moot livinu at ihr mito court Ann. 0 whni lio nr rcMrd Moore oil tlif aiitill it rid biillrrv wurmiit, mid Mint lir tulrr nicked tip a rKt .linUon curd how lni Ihc rriiiniriitlon of "Hube Monr ond wllr." Mr. Tliomm riill).hrd Urn ( a 1 f 1 Jt nam nt 1ft tuivlitu ultp u'ii WASHINGTON Thn IlrpuU. 1 born May r.. 1037, nt Mvrttr Point, 1I( bii National Cointnlttrn act up mid thai ulit had bem mnrrird to a Tua.-utnv ft fnnn immcll oriMHit.lUK - ------ conunttlPr which it mi id will nrrvc M "a Ifadrr ol lirinrndonn (arm forrea for Ihf rlrcllon of Ilcit howrr and Nixon " Althur K. tiuniinriflild, thr par ty'a national chairman. Mild the nrw commlttre will nprrntn in all farmmif arrnn of Urn rounliy. H Mil be headed bj, Harold L. Me Ktnlry, llvprtiofk, rnln and vrirr (able fanner from Saint AiLsyai, Iowa. MrKlnky wn,i rimiinuui of thn OOP Platform Commlitcr'n auil cullurnl group at the Clilcugo con vent ion. Anchrr Nrlpon. a dairy fiirnier from HutchhiMin, Minn., and a candidal for Itrtilrnaul Kovrmor of Minnesota, will acrve aa vice chairman Bruce Hardy, a ftitmrr from Rcoltburt. Iml,, will he exerutivr aftibtant of tho committee, which will br headquartered nt the Con rad Hilton Motel In Chicago. Hummerftetd h0tl (bc commlttre "will bo expanded Into nil reuion with orRanixailotml variations to ull each particular arction." Autos Kill 104 Per Day Coal Talks Interrupted WILKES-BAnRE, Pn. I The hunt con I Industry and John L. Lrwlii' United Mine Workcrn re nuiiie tnrlr Interrupted contruct tnlkit today here In Uio hrnrl ol America's anthracite coul reiiion. l.ewla, who remained awny Iroin ncnotiatloiis lust week In New Voik. apml the nlvht in a hotel In nearby llazleton, home of UMW Vice President Tliomaii Kennedy. Neither Lewis nor Kennedy would l monllu lhl vear. Id KO fatiili- comment on the union chlel a pre.v Ilea were recorded, a 3 per rent Inrreau over Ihc half-year toll of 1(51. Traffic accident account for about out-fortieth of deaths front all cause throughout ihc niuitm i ne comparison m ivw was; .uoo 1 ,hi. ir..i. pni,.vi ir.nir, rt..n,.- twnnim rt..u,. 1 centered in thl Eastern Pcnnsj l- CH1CAOO il'i Automobiles an killing people at the ritte nt annul 104 per day an the tuition's streets and highways. Last year, I lie truffle death loll was 37,300. tho, Nallonal Hiilcty Council reports. Durum the first Howard Rites Due Tomorrow Funeral eervlces for Mis. Ralph Howard, killed In an iiiiloinobllo crash near Collier f'srk, H.ilurtlay, are to be conducted from the Klrit Presbyterian Church, tomorrow, 2 p.m. Ilurlnl will be Klamnth Memo rial Cemetery. Ilasln Building Muterluls. 47S4 8 Dili, will be closed from I until 4 p in., tomorrow for the funeml. Mis. Howard's husband, seriously Injured In the fatal rra.th. Is partner In and general manager ol the building nialerlnls firm. iimn named Krsiicla Lea at Reno Miircli 4 of this vcur. Mil. Hluilhoni IrMIIIrd that Mourn rcm' tHrd at the auto court Ihe lulu alleinoon ol Auu. 2, and Hint Hie khI was In his enr when lie registered. Ihry lived there a wcik, she mid, At Unit point District Attorney Frttiik Aldei:.un auituuuced he was ludi.hc'l Willi las urescntsllcin, but tJ.f;. Biuniitme. allornev renrcsenl nig Mooir. .itiuur-d tltiit tho urone- cullou usdn't hhown enough of Its ra:e to prove timl any crime hsd iiera coiiuiHtted JiKlte li. K. van Viif-tor llilerl In nlvur of HHlentlne, mid AlderhOn hnd (lie blonde IV rnr-old girl brought III to tettlfy. Wie ss'd she hsd "broken-up"' wllh her husbimd nl HhlnuleUm. Calif., mid was sttivlng with friends nt Hcddlug when she met Moore. Mir ciuiio with hiin to Klamath l ulls mid stayed at a local hotel one dav. she hiiid. and Ihen moved 10 the nuto court where they stayed (lit It Moore wns arrested. Hhn mm she eird In sexual tntercoiirie with Moore "about elglil limes." No dclenhe testimony was of' fi-red lor Mooro and he was or dered bound over to await grand )ury action. ence In Pennsylvania but II was presumed he was en route here for Hie discussions on Ihe new contract. Meanwhile, the 7S.000 hard coal miners, 90 per cent of whom are from all causes. Oregon Soldier Tried In Germany FRANKFURT, Germany s A Portland, Ore., soldier. Hot, Walter J. Denny, 35. Is to be tried bv rouli martial here Wednesday on a charge of negligent homicide. He la accused of fntnllv Inlurlng a woman bv running into her with Jus car, Ha also is chanted svllli leaving Ihe scene of tbe'accltfent, driving under the Influent of liq uor and being ab-cnt without leave. vanls area, are staying home thts week carrying out Lewis' procla mation of a "memorial" hohdny honoring the victims of mine nis' asters. The halt became effective last Saturday and will continue through Labor Day, Sept. 1. TRAN8POHT Dt'K BF.ATTE I The Navy lisns. port Marine Lynx Is due to arrive here Wednesday with 3,131 Army troops on rotation from the Fur East; " ' . . , . The passenger list Includes 43 from Washington and 22 from Ore. (ton. Adlai Gets Speech Bid litJl'itr.D . K.iv. mm... '.ti WW... mum mrvcim.,11 ni .miiuto vilrd today to speak at the Na tional Plowing Contest Kept. i. the same day (Jen. Dwlght D. Elsen hower Is planning 10 address the expected ciowd 01 more than 100.000. The Imitation was wired to the Democratic presidential nominee slier the contest Board of Direc tors Monday night reversed Its previous stand agutnst having both candidates speak on the same day. A spokesman said the board had been assured Stevenson would ac cept, even though he has a tenta tive spcnklui dale for bent. 6. Wilson Wyatl, Slevenson'i per sonal campaign manager, said In Springfield. III.. Ilia Invitation from the directors will be considered and a decision aimounced. probably la ter today. It was believed Steven ion has tenstlvely scheduled a peech for Des Moines, la., on Sept. The board acted after petitions signed by 700 farmers were pre sented to It. asking that Stevenson be permitted to speak to the same audience aa Ihe Republican stand ard bearer. Earlier, Stevenson had been Invited lor the Minnesota Stale, Plowing Contest .on Sept. 6 but declined. The.- board did rule that Elsen hower, having been first to accept the bid, would be allowed to set the time of his speech. His talk tentatively has been set for about I p. m.. Eastern Standard Time. A board spokesman said the sec ond talk would have to come after plowing awards are made, about three poors later. The vote to Invito Stevenson was II to I, ,wilh one member of tluf board ...absent. JEarllcr, membera had voted down Uio double speak ing program because "we wouldn't get any plowing done." frt l: ill pD3r;:- Trio Return From Treacherous ArcticTrip RICHARD NEWMAN, Lakev'.aw, and tha 'hydraulic lift for mowing machines which he hai pafenfed. Lake County Examiner Phofo Lake County Rancher Patents Hydraulic Lift LAKEVJEW Richard New man, former Lake County rancher, has- received patent No. 2,603,828 on a hydraulic lift for mowing ma chines which he Invented while Hat, Floyd Counly, Ky., six years operating his ranch on the West-1 ago and ranched for five years. A side. He has already had offers lor I year ago they sold their property the manulucture of the attachment 1 16 Vern Howard, who operates the which works with any tractor-pull ' Pocr- "nd hls Partner. Roy Gucck. ihen relumed to Kentucky where he took hia former Job with the HI Hat Elkhorn Mining Company as electrician. The family has been here the past month on a vacation. The only model of Newman's in vention is installed on an I-H trac tor at the Bill Sundet ranoh here where it Is used with every haying. The device, attached to the trac tor's hydraulic system permits in stant raising and lowering of the sickle bar at the touch of a button. EDMONTON. Alta. W Three, men have come out of Nahannl Valley alive to prove that legends ol death stalking those who brave lhat far north wilderness have some foundation, but that the dan gers aro not from aupernatural forres. The three explorers who barely won out In their hazardous trek through the mysterious valley are K. M. enamp. young enemicat en gineer from Washington, D. C.i writer - photographer Norman Thomas of Albuquerque. N. M.-. and botaniU Howie Martin of Yale University. "If trappers and prospecters have failed to return from tne val ley H a because they were not as fortunate as we were," says Shamp.. "There la good reason for their failure to return. It's the kind of country where one mistake can rnean your life." : They financed the trip by a com mission from the U. S. Defense Department to test a new food ration pack, and an assignment to write scientific reports on some of their findings. The trio motored from Washing ton to Watson Lake in the Yukon, where northern aviator C. C. F. Dahrtel picked them up for - the 160-mile flight to their base camp at Glacier Lake, some 10 miles upstream from the . mouth of the Nahanni River. The river is in the northwest territories and about 700 miles northwest -of Edmonton. They started from Glacier Lake because much of the Nohanni Val ley had been covered by prospec tors and trappers, add they wanted to go through a region less likely to have been seen previously. When they got going on foot, each carried a 75-pound pack with a rifle and other equipment. Shamp cracked a knee-cap and fractured a i-houlder-blade soon after the start, but continued with the others. A few days later one rifle was damaged beyond repair on rocks, and the two others were put out ol commission by continual dampness, eavtnz the explorers without InternatlonaJ-Har- arms to kill game for good. On the whole trek they aaw tne sun only three days. In 25 days they walked ISO miles through tortuous country, but were Anchorage, Alaska, lor hospital only 50 miles from their atarttng point. Wllh rations getting short, they decided to return to camp as fast as possible. On the way back they built rafts on three occasions, suffered a spill In glacier-fed wa ters and once were trapped lor two hours in a whirlpool. They got back to base with three meat bars, one pair o shoes among the three, one sleeping bag. a camera and film. The rest of their equipment had been nursed by rain or lost In raft upsets. All had lost a lot ol weight Shamp about 40 pounds, and the others about 2u pounds each. From the base camD thev flew to Watson Lake. Shamp went to mowing machine but la designed only lor the veslcr tractor. The Newmans came here from Hi treatment before returning to Ed monton. He doesn't believe the legend about a tropical valley in the Na hanni, but saya there are some hot springs around which summer growth is luxuriant. They alao found some mineral deposits, but not enough to bother about. t Man Arrested On 2nd Charge Dallas La Verne Cochran, 21. al ready on probation from Circuit Court for forgery, was arrested yesterday afternoon and lodged in the Comity Jail on a charge ol larcenv by bailee. He Is accused ol having failed to return a car borrowed from the Bal.Mgcr Motor Company. Cochran was blcked uo bv State Police at his residence. 4504 Winter. On May 6 he pleaded guilty to a forgerv charge and w-as placed on probation tor five years. Then on Julv 31 he was in Circuit Court again for tailing to live up to the terms of. his probation order, but the probatlonnr.y sentence was cx tendcl. t , . ' . ; . 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