Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1952)
.Ou ro) fo) X 1 la MK IMJ.-U l E in TJiv- , . Mill tty FRANK JUNKINS In Olnolnnatl today, Ilia president ( Ui U.B. Chamber of Commerca ys business can expeol friendlier treatment Iroin President-elect El senhower's administration than It ll from th Democrat. Ha added: "Hie outdoing administration chose business a political whip Ing boy and tli whole economy haa suffered aa result. Kor the tun being, Uit era u over." Then he added wise warning: "Don't look on the Republican election triumph ua a victory lor biulnosa ... On balance, it ap pears to me that In Ihla election NO KCONOMIO UROUP can claim a victory. "That la M It ahould be." Hoe EMINENTLY1 right. In this election, the people of I ha United Ulalee didn't vote aa larmera or labor union membera or Utile bualneaa men or bin bualnoaa men. i Even the Boutli came darned near not voting aa BouUiernera. We Juat voted at Americana. If business people look on thla election aa a victory fur builnass and a mandate to tine POLITICAL POWER to get apodal fnvora for bualneaa, they ought to have their lirada examined. I We've bad loo much of that In the past, and It brought ua to the MESS that we voted AS AMIS HI" CANB to gl rid of. Her' an Interesting note: one of F.inhower'a first visitors this morning waa Claude O. Verda inaii, the Republican aula chair lima o AlP.'jania. Vardaman would lie, romment on what he dl 4yaed with the President-elect, jw he aald he bellevea the two party system will ri-OURISH In the South under Slaenhower'a leadership. Will tit . 7t will all depend, I'd aay, on th Or REPUBLICANS who I'll Into the party In the South, tip until thla year, the typical Southern Republican haa been the aorl of character that causes de cent people to hold their noeea. If REAL FOLKS get Into the Republican party down there because thrv BELIEVE IN ITS PRINCIPLES and not merely for free drlnka and a little petty graft rome OOP convention time every four years the South Can and will have genuine two-party ayetem. Otherwise not. Cherlea trwln Wilton, head of glasnlto General Motors Corpora lion, haa been appointed aecreUry of drlense of tiie United Stale. Jumped by the reporter! for com ment, he grin end y be a going to "give lh Job tii darndeat whirl U aver had." There' an old aaylng that money makea the mare go. Bo let' kwk at dollar and cent for moment. The general tmderetardlng that la year Wllaon'a aalary and bonus from Oeneral Molore ram to about W3.3O0. Beginning neat January JO, be ll get tn.bW from the federal government and NO bonua. DOLLARWISE, that'g quit comedown. !t'a deal In Ideallam (or , moment. ' Mr. Wllaon. presumably, ha done all right by hlmaelf. I Imagine that hi aavlnga and In vestment are auch that be can S keep the wolf from hla door with out too much difficulty. And, from all I can hear, be haa EARNED what he haa got. Oeneral Motori dividends have been quit aatla factory. If men Ilk Wllaon are willing to leave their large earnlnga from hla- bualneaa and aerve their coun- V try for comparative pittance, we i.i mi the road that leada to a ft UAT future. V 7b 1 It LV't'a live him everv chance to ervm hla oountrv well. Lel'a don't bile him In the leg aa long a he U doing all right for ua. Taft Backers Left Out i In First Appointments By JACK BELL WASHINGTON OB President elect Elsenhower' choice of three pre-conventlon supporters for cab inet post left Taft Republicans wondering today ii mey are go ing to ahare In the new adminis tration's top Jobs. Elsenhower ha six mora cabi net places to fill, plus a half doten or more Jobs of almost equal rank, and backers of Sen. Robert A. Taft will be watching the President elects action closely. TAft'a friends found Utile to cheer about when Elsenhower n-' nounced yesterday hla choice of John Foater Dulles of New York for secretary of slate; Charles E. Wilson ot Detroit, Oeneral Motora president, for eecrelary of de fence; and Oov. DourIsS' McKay of Oregon for secretary of the Interior. All were early aupporter of El tenhower In hi successful battle with Taft for the presidential nom ination. . Dulles preserved outward neu trality until July 11 the day El aenhower won the nomination at the Chicago convention because the New Yorker had drafted a platform foreign policy plank to which both candidates agreed. Bv the selection of Dulles, most OOP polltlcana believed Elsenhow er had anawered Democratic charges during the presidential cnmpslftn that the general had "Isolationist." While Dulles probably wouldn't havm been among Taft'a choices lor secretary of atnte, the prospeo ;; Mblnet member and the Ohio sf nator atinre somewhat the same tfew on the Importance of the Ike Names For Cabinet Posts IRK I Oen, Dwlght i-Unlvorslty of Pennaylvanla. He at. wer Friday designated ao waa a key figure In Ulscnhow- NEW YORK D. Bjlaenhow Oaorge M. Humphrey, of Cleve land, ptilo, Secretary of the Tree ury. He named Herbert Brownell, Jr., of New York, attorney general, and Harold K. Bluasen, former gover nor of Mlnneaula, director of the Mutual Bncurlty Agency. Ilrownell New York lawyer, waa a leuder of Elsenhower's campaign lor the OOP nomination, and he directed alralegy In the election campaign. Bunnell la now president of the Death Takes AFL Chief Wm. Green WASHINGTON I William Oreen. president of the AFL, died Friday at hla borne In Conaliocton, O., tile AFL announced. An AFL olflclal aald death came at 10:23 a. m. PUT. He ald Oreen died of a heart attack. It waa the aecond death of a ma jor In nor leader within a month. Philip Murray, head of the rival CIO, collapsed and died at San Franclaco Nor, 8, Oreen waa born In Coshocton March 3, 1873, the eon of a coal miner. He waa working In the Ohio mlnea before be waa out of grade school and waa a full-fledged miner by the lime he waa II. Oreen Ural turned to politics and served a term In the Ohio Bute flensi iben he went Into union ac tivity, pioneering In tit Held of nationwide organization. At 33, he had become president of the Ohio District Mint Worker Union, He advanced to secretary-trees-urer of the American Federation of Labor In 1013. and became pres ident of the union when Samuel Oomper died in 124. The AFL cblefuin had been In fallln- health for yeara, but be directed the AFL at Ha convention In New York In Beplember. Oreen'a widow, Jennie, $3, baa been III for four or five yeara. Plv daughter and ope son sur vive. Death Claims Local Pioneer Tracy Blair, believed lo have been the first whit child born In Summer Lake. Ore., died yester day at KlamalB Valley Hospital. He would hsv been SO year old next Dec. 10. He la survived by sister. Mr. Doyle Reeder, of Merrill; son, Kenneth Blair. Wenatchee. Wash.: a half-brother, Floyd Lane. Orland Calif., a nephew and (even niece. Funeral aervice are to b con ducted Saturday, 10 a.m. from Ward' Chapel, and Interment will be in Klamath Memorial ceme tcrv. Blair waa born Deo. 10, 1172, at the Lake County community, and aa young men went lo Montana where he was active In mining for many yeara. He bad lived In nd round Lakevlew for tb last 30 yeara, and cam her about a month ago. Weather FORECAST Klamath Falls and vlrlnlly and Northern California) Fair through Saturday. High both day 41. Low tonight 33. High temp yesterday , . , 3 i.ow issi mgni . 19 Prerlp last 24 bra .. .. Hlnee Oct. 1 .. Normal for period t.M Same perled list r 3.48 Far East In American policies and alwaya have gotten along well per aonally, Taft, asked to comment on the appointments, gave a curt "no comment" last night. "Why should I be asked to com ment on all appointment," be u id. Tnft won a point when Elsen hower named an Industrialist lo head the Defense Department, But the appointee didn't come from among three men reportedly sug gested by the Ohloan, And It Eisenhower doesnt pick from the score or more of the friends Taft la reported to have submitted for tome of the six cab inet Jobs (till open, there might develop a coolness which would not Increase the favorable outlook for passage of Elsenhower's legis lative proposals. The President-elect has yet to name publicly his choices for sec retaries of the Treasury, agricul ture, commerce and labor, attor ney general and postmaster gen eral. He apparently Intends to make Joseph Dodge, Detroit banker. need or the BUdnet Bureau and reportedly wants Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. of Massachusetts to serve him as a sort of assistant S resident, with rank of ambassa-or-at-large. ' . Other ton lobs to be filled In- elude those on the United Nations delegation, mutual security admin istrator, head of the Federal se curity Agency, three membera of and defense mobilization and eco- thn Council of Economic Advisors, those latter two agencies remain alive. 3 More er'e nomination Humphrey, 03, 1 preside' me M. A. Henna uomp Cieveland. He la a directs -O eroua large corporation It waa the second day llT row that Elsenhower handed out a new list of appointees who will take over key post In bl administra tion. . i 1 James Hagerty, the general's presa secretary, announced the new designations. The following are some of the positions held by Humphrey In In dustry; President or the M, A, Hanna Company, coal and Iron ore ship pers; cnilrman of the executive committee, National Steel Corp.; chairman of the board of the Sus quehanna Anthracite Company, of Cleveland; member of the execu tive 'committee of the National City Bank, Cleveland; director of the Phelps Dodge Corp.; chairman of the executive committee and di rector of Industrial Rayon Corp. Humphrey ha some background In government work, having; been former chairman of the Industrial Advisory Committee of the Eco nomlo Copperatlon Administration. Thla committee dealt with rep arations and the dismantling of Onrman plants after World War II. He waa chairman of the Business Advisory Council of the Commerce Department In 1MB. Blassrn baa long been active tn Republican politics, At the OOP convention, he was an aspirant for the nomination, but switched hla votes to Elsenhower to give the general the nomination on the first ballot. . Brownell, a lonir-ttme rlghthand man of Oov. Thomaa E. Dewey ot New York, took a leading role In masterminding Elsenhower's strat egy at the OOP convention. He also waa a key advisor dur ing the general'a campaign. He had played a similar part In the unauccesslul Dewey campaign for the presidency. When asked If Humphrey waa a "Taft appointment," Hagerty re plied: "I'm not saying anything." The appointments filled live of the nine cabinet positions. Thursday Elsenhower named John Foster Dulles aa secretary of alate, Oeneral Motora President Charles E. Wilson as secretary of defense, and Oov, Douglaa McKay of Oregon as secretary of th in terior. The cabinet designate will uc ceed these men: W. Averlll Harrlman, director of the Mutual security Agency: John W. Snyder, secretary of the tn-asury: James Mcoranery, attor nev-eeneral. ' . Sen. Henry Cabot lodg of Mas sachusetts, who helped engineer the Elsentuner nomination, met Friday with the general, and Indi cated that hi position In the new administration has not yet been definitely decided. "I have no plans," Lodge told reporter. "I don't know what I n soma? to do." He aald he would continue with hi work aa Elsenhower's liaison man In gelling report from the administration and working wllh various overnment anencies He told reporter he felt he bed been given "full coopertlon" by the Truman administration In get ting the Information he bad request ed for Elsenhower. Lodge was asked about report he might become an assistant to Eisenhower at the While House. "I hav no auch report," be re plied. Meanwhile Hagerty told report, rs he expected no more appoint ments to be announced Friday. Immediately after hi ppolnt ment. Brownell aald he would keep J. Edgar Hoover a nead oi me Federal Bureau ot Investigation. Xmas fete Talent Set An rry of Ulent nd experi ence I backing the development of the 1BS3 Christmas Opening pageant slated for Modoc Field one week from today. The pageant to to be short, sweet and interesting no is 10 oe en msxed by the arrival of Santa Claus by helicopter right In Modoc Field. The stage ei tor me pageant I to be at the north end of the field, so placed that people sitting on both aides ot the field will be able to see and near. Andrew Loney Jr., head of mu sic education of Klamath Falls city schools and well known throughout the Pacific Northwest, la in cnarge of both vocal and Instrumental music for the pageant. He la the founder and past president of the Klamath Musical Arts wouncn, which Is securing colorful medi eval costumes for portions of the cIbssIo Chrtstmss tale "Why The Chimes Rang" which Is Included in the overall story of the pageant Christmas la lor utving.' Kristlan Qinno, also a member of the publio school music depart ment and a past president of the council Is to direct the pageant. In professional theater work since he waa 18. Olrmo made hi de but In Oslo' Soilen Theater In IP36. In 141 he served as as sistant state Instructor at the Vasa Theater In Stockholm, and has since studied at the Pasadena Playhouse and directed the San Pedro players. F. N. Scappel Is directing vol unteer who are building the 30-foot stage set designed by UID Fleet. Some 200 trees are being delivered to the set by Weyerhaeuser Tim ber Co. to provide a setting for the forest portion of th story. The pageant la also being de veloped through cooperation of the Klamath Merchants Associ ation and .other local groups, and downtown windows will be deco rated In the Christmas Theme, though no contest is to be held in is year. I lot r J I I I 1 I I f 1 I II II 9 x I Z" f 1 K J II "1 TO 4 yV Cent 1 l JV T.I . T!;. " e . . I .... i-T i .. Trf i 5f;t . . a 1 TWISTED BOXCARS PYRAMIDED on th Southern Pacific' tracks at Chemult this morning -when a Great Northern freight, bound for Klamafh Falls from Bend, derailed. The only casualties war 31 whitafaca fdr clvs which war killed or had to b destroyed. Payroll Plan Nets $7,250 A tola! of om 17,250 ha been placed In Community, chest eof. fera through payroll deduction plan organized In two dozen Klam ath firms, according- to a report mad last night at a meeting of membera of the wag earner' di vision of this year campaign. The average waa more than (300 per firm, but campaign officials were sure that a other reports csme in the average would in crease considerably. Under the co-chirmanahlb of Charlie Mack and Emlo Taylor, tn committee met In the Palmer ton Lumber Co. office lo hear the flrat report of this division. 8o far at local firma employing id or more person nave been con tacted and 4a have accepted the payroll deduction plan. Thlrty-slx have turned It down most because office methods made auch a plan prohibitive. Solicitation will con tinue In those firm. Those already pledged Include Copco. Car-Ad-Co, East Bid Elec tric. Hitchcock and Mosher, J. W. Kerns. LaPolntes. McCulloch Mo tors Dick B. Miller, J. J. New berry. Oregon Water Corporation, Palmerton Lumber Co., Parker Pontlac Specialised Service. Swan Lake Moulding Co., U.S. National Bank, Weverhseuser Timber Co., Big Y Market, Klamath Iron Work Montgomery Wards, City School teachers and employes. Lorens and Co., People's Warehouse, Herman's and Hardy's, HarUield'a and Craigs. The Southern Pacific and an es timated too local employes Is ex pected to receive spproval from It San Francisco office on participat ing In the plan, according to word received here today. Youths Held In Fire Case Court nroceedlngs hav been started against two white boys and sn a young inaisn in cona tion with aeries ot Incendiary tires at Chlloquln. Juvenile Officer Francis Math ews said today that delinquency petitions have been filed sgsinst the two white boys, brothers aged IS and 15, and that they will be brought Into Juvenile Court bere. The Indian boy. 14 years old. Is a ward of the government, and probably action will be taken against him under federal juris diction. ' Th bova have admitted setting Sisl one fire, burning an abandoned ouse at Chlloquln on Nov. 4. State Police said they wouldn't admit any more of them. There were a doxen fires alto gether, an In old or aoanooneo buildings in an around theNlown of Chlloquln In the space of- a few nights. Some of th buildings were completely destroyed'. Chlloauln town authorities, reser vation officials, Stat Police and the slate arson squad, the FBI and Juvenile Officer Mathews all had a hand In the lnvestlgatlsn. Mathews said all three or the youngsters refused to admit set Inn any more ot the fires, but Investigators are convinced they started them all, - KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2L 1393 , m t iw -ijinaaaai ystsja .4 ... Fire Destroys Lithia Theater ASHLAND Fir destroyed the Lilhla Theater her Thursday. Soma record of the Shakespear ean Festival and personal belong-- Xot members of th Vining rep y Co., an Ashland group, also went up tn th flames. The flames left a three-story wall of the building a hazard, and wreckers battered it down fter flame died. An lS-lnch fir wall between the theater and the Elks Temple kept the flames from ad vancing down the block. The theater, which was built In 1313, was used for stage plays. Yets Here For Bird Shooting TULELAKB A Military Air Transport Service plane brlngmg 33 wounded veterans of the Ko rean war and five officers Includ ing Lt. Commdr. F. M. Thomberg, Chief Warrant Officer R. H. Giles; W. I. Hall. HMC: W. E. Scott. HM-1 and J. C. Bates, speclslist on artllictal limbs, landed at the Klamath Falls airport near noon today. The men. all patients at Oak Knoll Hospital, Oakland, will be guests of the Tulelake 30-30 club. sponsor of the trip, and local resi dents, for a weekend of duck-goose and pneasani nunung. The plane was met by a large number ot twenty-thirtisns headed bv Oeorse Douglass Jr.. club presi dent, Tom Pierce wno has been In charge of arrangements lor tne shoot and hosts tn whose homes th men will be guests. They will be taken Immediately to the sportsman a Hotel lor a buffet luncheon and then 'to Indi vidual homes. Tomorrow and Sunday, they win hunt upland snd wterfowi birds on private hunting Rounds. Guns, dogs, ammunition and taiuporta- tlon Will be proviaeo. ana every i fort will be made by those In charge to see that every man gets his birds. Some hunting Is planned for Sun day morning and the plane will leav lor Oakland eariy in we si te rooon. This h the aecond year that a hunt has been arranged for dis abled veterans of the Korean con flict. Last year's attempt was so successful that other men at Oak Knoll were eager lor a cnanc to make the trip here. . This year's trip wss f insnced by the ssle of a truckload of No. 1-A Netted Oems, contributed by local rjotsto growers and sold In the San Francisco Bay area by Safeway Inc. Hosts to the veterans are Mr, and Mrs. George Douglass Jr., Mr, and Mrs.- Bob Heine, Mr. and Mrs. Steve Takacs, Mr. and Mrs. Ken Bemel. Mr. and Mrs, L. C. Klrby, Mr. and Mrs, Paul Rogers, Mr. and Mrs. . W. Olchawa, Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Ryckman, Mr. and Mrs. Elrton Larson, Mr. and Mrs. Oewln McCracken, Mr. and Airs, Ed Os borne, Mr, snd Mrs, W. 8. Ed wards, Mr. snd Mrs. Ralph Faw seti and Mrs, Florence Phalr, BUDDHIST RITES 8F.T HHOPAL. Central India (fl More than 1,000 guests from Buddhist countries ot the world are expected at the sacred ceremony reinstall ing the relics of two famed Budd hist disciples, Sarlputa and Mog- Kmnna,. jsov. aa-ju, at nearoy can- - m 'cWi Wreck Hear Chemult Ti&Up Train Traffic 1 By WALLACE If TERS. CHEMULT A giant three-unit dlesel locomotive and IS freight cats piled up here about a o clock this mornuur in a spectacular wreck of a Oreat Northern train. The train westbound from Bend to Klamath Falls, plowed through Cloyer Price Increase Seen The Canadian government has officially estimated1 its lS3 slsike clover production at - 3.333.000 nounda according to report re ceived here a. far cry front the S.000,000 (Ml, 1.000.000 M or even 9,000,000 (M) pound rumored from numerous comers lew weeks ago. The official estimate is about double last year's Canada crop, but still is a little below the Canadian average between 1937 and 1061 of 3.473.000 M pounds. Agricultural economists are pre dicting an upward swing will be gin In the near future, with one farm forecast, usually dependable predicting now the alsike price to growers here should nit the 40-cent mark. Earlier It had set 44 cents as a possible roof on thla year's alsike price per pound. At present local offers are ap parently still nil. Talk Is still down around the 35-cent mark right at support price or little bet ter. And apparently there la still nothing moving. Canadian use of alsike averages around 1,500.000 M pounds, and total U-8. shipments this year are expected to bit around, the 1,000, 000 M pound mark. Early ru mors were reporting some 4.000,000 M pounds of alsike already in this country. Imports will be some what larger than last year, one factor that makes hlgber-than-40-cent price Improbable, experts re port. The Oregon State Weekly Seed Crop Review reports as of Nov. 17 Canadian alsike was being offered at Midwest points -at 339.SO per hundred pounds, freight and duty paid. The report states that both Ore gon and national farm prices for alsike were well below last year as of Nov. 17, though Oregon bad dropped the most, Lsst yesr, lt points out, Oregon 'and California growers received price well aoove the national average. , Klamath Basin alsike, grown on both sides of the stat line In this politically bisected region. Is among th highest quality, grown anywhere, and about one-third of the nation's oroo is being grown here this year, the Klamath Coun ty Agent's offlc estimates. SHOOTING HOURS . : NOVEMBER .21 .Open wi... 4:35 A.M. Close 1.3:UPX Telephone lilt Me. 277 4 1 a derail and closed: a switdh at the GN-Southern PacilM main line junction bere. The 8P mam line was blocked snd BP officials at the scene Bald they did not expect to clear the track for resumption of aervice be- lore io o clock tonight ON Division Superintendent Eu gene Ovists said lt had not yet been determined why the train failed to atop before hitting the ciosea junction derau and swltcn, which pictects the SP's main line. Oviatt said the train's speed had been estimated at 35 to 30 miles an hour. The 18 wrecked freight ears were splintered and twisted aa they pan- caaea ana puea up against uie massive locomotive. The cab of the engine remained upright, bow ever, and there were no reported injuries to rewmen. The IS cars Included 17 full and an empty . tanker. Three of the loads were stock ears filled with whiteface feeder calves. Thirty-one ot the calves were either killed or had to be destroyed. They Were sold lor ss each and a mass clean ing and butchering took -place In the snow-covered fields beside the railway tracks. ' One car was loaded with what appeared to be telephone poles and these protruded from the Jumbled wreckage like so many Jackstraws. From the door of one smashed boxcar shiny new garbsge cans dribbled. On the end of another twisted, boxcar s "'handle with care" sign warned that the car carried glass merchandise. Southern Pacific officials here said the track might be cleared by 3 o'clock this afternoon. The SPa passenger train No. 13 (the Klamath) with 64 passengers aboard was being held at Crescent T . anH th. nnrthhninvt train. No. 20, wss halted here. It car ried bs passengers. The Shasta Daylight, due here at 3:30 p.m. from Portland, was neid at Eugene and wss expected to arrive In Klamath Falls about 4:30 If the track Is cleared by 3 o'clock. The northbound Shasta Daylight, due here at 4:30 p.m. might be able to get through on scneouie. Several freights were halted bere and to the Eugene vicinity by the derailment. Hugh Davis of Klamath Falls was the engineer of the derailed freight. The Southern Pacific and Great Northern both use the line from here to the wreck scene at Che mult. and there the lines divide, the BP tracks veering to cross the Cascades toward Eugene, and the ON tracks continuing north to Bend. Nevbry Antl Marsh Also In Running SALEM m Sen. Paul L. Pat- terson, 63. of Hlllsboro still Is the best bet to become the next gov ernor of Oregon, but a little more confusion crept Into th situation Friday. oov. Douglaa McKay, named to become secretary of Interior In President-elect Elsenhower'a cab inet, has not said when h will resign aa governor and that makes a big difference. u ne resigns Deiore Jan. 13, Pat. teison Is expected to succeed nun although there may be a court test about that. Secretary of Stat Earl NewDry may ligura in that. If McKay resigns alter Jan. 13. the Legislature will have started Its session and presumably the Ben ate will have elected a new presi dent. MARSH That Is expected to be Ben. Eugene E. Marsh, 53, McMlnnvllie, who says be has enough pledges to be elected. The Senate president is next in line to succeed iht governor. Of couru the Senate could elect someone beside Marsh, knowing the elected man would become governor. Then the senator could fulfill their obligation to Marsh by electing mm presiaent. Patterson is considered next in line from now until Jan. 13 be cause he was Senate president at the last session. A recent ruling by the attorney general said Patterson la consid ered Senate president until the next Legislature meets. Beiore tne ruling aewnry con tended be wsa next In line. The matter came up when McKay went out of the state, and there was a question about who became acting governor. NEWBRY . Newbry thought he did. because new legislators had been elected Nov. 4, and the old legislator no longer could be considered In of fice. He thought that removed the Senate president and speaker of the .House from the picture and left the secretary of state, as third tn line of succession, ready to takvt over. Neuner said the legislators were out of office all right, except for the Senate president and th speaxer oi tne House, rnese re tain their positions until successors are elected. He said. The matter nas never oeen tested In court, though, and there Is a possibility the State Supreme Court will be asked to rule on th matter. For bis part hi the picture. Marsh ssid he hoped McKay would resign before Jan, 13, so that th ' matter will not go before th Senate. 'Otherwise, people would say 30 men elected the governor." he said. McKay has never expressed him self publicly, but H is generally believed that be would prefer Pat terson over Newbry and would time bis resignation, if necessary, so thai Newbry would not succeed him. And since Newbry Is believed to want to be governor, that makea the question of whether the Senate president stays In office past th expiration date of senators' terms. the determining one. Bloodmobile To Visit KF on students will nlsy an lm- nortant Dart in the next visit of the Red Cross Bloodmobile bere Dec. 9. Students have appointed a committee headed by Ward HUler- Ich. wltr Donna Arthur and Jen Lav assisting, which will lay th groundwork for getting student par ticipation in me December blood donation program. The bloodmobile unit visits the college Wednesday. Dec. 10 front 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. and from 1 to 3 p.m. It is hoped to get 32S donors registered at the college. The first day of the visit, Dec. 9, will be devoted to the quota for Klamath Falls. Three hundred in ly donors are needed. A total of 800 pints of blood Is needed on this quarterly trip. The Bloodmobile, under the new travel itinerary comes her only once ev ery three months. Red Cross headquarters an nounced today that the following organizations nave signuiea will ingness to help snd have appoint ed chairmen who will get out re cruits: Elks,' . Esgles, Exchange Club, Oddfellows, Kiwanls, Junior Chamber of Commerce, Toketee Lions, Moose Lodge and Auxiliary, Sons of Norway, Toastmasters, Sub urban Fire Department, Stewart Lenox Fire Department and PTA groups. . Other groups contacted are yet to report to headquarters. Cookies are also needed for the canteen and any individual or or ganization may contribute by call ing the Red Cross headquarters, 7148 or Mrs. J. D. Totton, 4183. Teachers To Mull Salaries A mnlMi.l Bolanf eAtiforetv-li nt teachers, administrators snd In terested ci'.zens is siaiea lor :w a.m. tomorrow In Ashlond under Ih. annnutrahin nf tha Dent. tlf riaaarnnm Teachers. Oregon Educa tion Association. SOCE Prof. William A. Sampson is to give the keynote address The Relationship of Higher Salaries to Better Education". A ri.mnn.tMllmi la nlannarf in ,hMT the proper ways, methods and at- tudes wun wnicn any request lor salary Increases ahould be made. The conference Is to feature workshops to atudy specif lo phase of teacher aalary problems, and a opett to all persona wibslng to t- ci:ij, :