Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 27, 1952)
I'AGK FOUR m, KALI) & NKWS. KLAMATH KALLS. OHKGON TllUilSlMV, WOVKMHKIt 2,J0ri'2 Taft Said Likely For 1 4 Senate F oor Leadership f MARKETS AND FINANCE I) Livestock i By J.D. VKKTRKKS Kiamalh t'ounlv Apfnl SI.AK.MIKB CATTLE: Receipts of all catile were 800 compared with 774 lst week and 746 momll go. Most classes of slaughter cot tie were down 1.00 to 2 Oil. Market wa slow with limited oticrinpi of leers. Commercial cows irom 13.00 to 14 60. Utility kind from 11 80 to 13.00. Lower grades from 900 to 11.00. Commercinl steers from 16.40 to 19 10 with limned number oi belter kind lo 20.00. Utility steers irom 1310 to J4.O0. , Good heifers 19.70 to 21.011 Willi commercials bringing from 16. M) lo 18.60. Lcs-er kinds around 14.00 to 15 00. Utility bulls fold mainly round 17 15. Mo-l ttood slaughter calves turned r.t 19.10 to 20.00 with a top of 21.50. Commercial calves moved at 17.20 to 18.00 with lesser kinds 12.50 to 15 SO. STOCKKRS AND KEKDKKS: Fee der cattle weakened livs week slip ping around 2 00 to 3.00. One arnft of warmed steers weicluni; 750 went at 20.40. Most good fleers ol all weights went front 18 80 to 20.00. Medium steers from 17.25 to 18.70 wilh lesser quality down to 14.60. Good heifers turned 18.90 to 10.40 w ith one draft of 730 pooum-Ms at 18.75. A few bred two year o'.ls a. 172-50 each. Medium quality heif ers from 14.00 to 18.00. Good stock er calves from 18.40 to 20.60. Baby calves of beef breeding went from 18.00 to 35.00 bv the head with dairy types between 6.00 and 8.00. Medium to good stock cows moved from 126.00 to 138 00 with common kinds around 90.00 to 114.00 by trie head. SHEEP: Receipts of shtep were 21 compared with 95 last wees ana 12 month ago. Slaughter lambs around 17.60. Other sheep too few to test the market.' HOGS: Receipts were 26 com' pared with 147 last week and 89 last month. No. 1 and No. 2 butcher hogs were 17.10 to 18.30. Light sows round 13.10 and good heavy sows at 1250. Feeder pigs went at 14.80 with limited weaners at 1.50 each. Boards held at 4.40. K"- Potatoes J KLAMATH SHIPMENTS 1941-51 1953-53 Nov. I SK Truck - 0 10 Rail o 28 Month o date 14;.".- 13:16 Truck 216 220 Rail' .. .... .12i9 1116 Season lo dale 3461 JO.'I Truck 735 525 Rail 2726 2499 Kin Traced To Mayflower 1 1 J ? f . ' fl ' . -J .a . ' ' WiVW.A I 4 -a : C-rorlt ' Ho Ac (Continued from .pare 1) tartes: Rudolf Margollus, 39. for ' mer deputy minister of foreign . trade: Otto Fischl. 50, former ' deputy finance minister; Karel - Bvab. 48, former deputy minister - of state security; and Lt. Geo. intelligence man and former deputy defense minister. ALL JEWS Al the defendants are Jews ex- cept dementis, Svab and Frank. During the trial which the Reds apparently staged as a com panion piece to the famous Moscow purge hearings of 1936 they con- lessco. v ICIlguJ uia lucy plotted with Israel, Zionist "capi - talists." the United Slates and Britain to overthrow the Red Eden Praises Truce Plan LONDON UP Foreign Secre tary Anthony Eden Thursday her alded the Indian proposal for settl ing the Korean war as a good one but admitted prospects for im mediate peace were "slender" in view of Soviet opposition to the plan. Eden told the House of Commons he sometimes wonders- whether regime and wreck Czechoslovak- Russia's eagerness to continue the Thanksgiving Day has a special tignificance for several residentsj ol Klamath Fails, descendants ot the Pilgrim Fathers who signed the Mayflower Compact; rovenrnt agreed upon by the men and women aboard the Mayflower which anchored in Cape Cod Har bor. Nov. 21. 1620. Mrs. Bert Thomas, 828 Pacific Terrace traces her ancestry to Slcphan Hopkins, and Edward Fuller brother of Dr. Samuel Ful ler, physician for the colo-'- s. fie is the only Klamath Frlls resident who is a member of the Oregon State and National May flower Society. Lloyd Harvey of Bell's Hardware Is a direct descendant of John Aldcn and Priscilla Mullins. Mrs. R. E. Wattcnburg. 219 Pine. Klam ath FaH pioneer is descended Irom Francis Cook of that historic voyage. The Mayflower was a vessel of 180 tons and on the 17th of September, she set sail from Ply mouth England, with 102 passen gers aboard. Including 41 men and their families and IS male ser vants. The stormy crossing took 63 days. . Before one man set foot on the rockv shore of America each placed his name upon a covenant f embodying pledge to enact, con stitute and frame Just and equal laws for the , general good of the new colony. One year latef, survivors of llwu firct viortrmt . 11 mnnthc celebrated with thankfulness the' OAKLAND. Ia Talk about harvest rf me., akn f unexpected Ruesis now would i-rMrj -'-tar , ... WA81IIN0T0N i.f neimbllcan leaders unit Tliuiaday llley con sltler II likely Dial Hen, Itiibri 1 A. Tuft will lake Hie Jub of ninlorlly floor leader In Hi "fw Bonto. A clo.s aaxoclaie of Ihe Ohio senator, who wan beaten In his bin for his parly's presidential nnmliia. lion, anld he believe 1'nfi conilil era linldlng Ihe. pwl of majority lc;iicr the be.st way to maintain sound relations with Ilia White llouve. None of the parly leaders wanted m ue qiiiuen uy name but uiey were uuiiiilinotis In aaylng they knew nollilnp about pulillxhed re ports that a secrei agreement had been rcrchetl lo make Taft major- ALL SNOW AND A MILE WIDE, the qrtat op.n slop: on Dollar Mountain at Sun Valley, Ida., offer every kind of skiing at the level of the intermediate and novice skier. Even experts, who generally prefer the 9,250-foot Baldy Mountain, can find action to their liking on these slopei. Two gliding chair lifts serve the mountain the intermediate lift shown above, and a shorter lift on. the beginner's slope. . , Family Has, 82 Guests from the rocky land. . la i limping economy, ine violent aiutcKB on iiiuiiinu wblch marked the trjal reportedly ' umeaaned a wave oi terror uirougn ' states, where many other Jews hold high places. . 1 Ul.. I. L.1- .nM. c a A open anti-Jewish attacks had bro ken out In Bratislava, Slovakia, where Nasi-like signs "Jews" or "Jews live here" were chalked on the doors of Jewish homes. The report added that the words "Down with the Jewish capital ists" were spread in front of a synagogue and on the streets and that the police refused to order their removal. In Tel Aviv, the Israel Foreign Office said lt had reports of a wave of suicides among leading Jews In Czechoslovakia as a result i of the trial. The Israeli Parliament J in a resolution has expressed I shock at the trial and described it as an affront to the Jewish nation. Their confessions came after I long months in Jail, for some more than two years, and were the well rehearsed, admit-everythlng recit als characteristic of Communist trials. No Western newsmen are in Czechoslovakia but reports of the trial's progress and recordings of some of the confessions were broadcast by Prague radio. For Slansky, the kingpin of the group, tne week in court was next-to-last chapter in his fall from a high place of power in inter national communism and of favor with Moscow. It finalized his loss in a long struggle for power with President Gottwald. The deposed party chief told the court he was a "person with two political faces" and "in reality, never was a Communist," but he had joined the party in 1921 and been a member of the Czech group's hierarchy since 1929 As the party's hatchet artist. Slansky purged the Czech Army and Communist party to root out persons with nationalist or West ern rather than Communist lean ings. In contrast to his lengthy ad missions he long had been con sidered an International Commu nist, more devoted to the cause of world communism than to his own country snd after the Red coup appeared to be Czechoslovakia's boss. Slansky and Gottwald were re ported at odds as far back as 1949. For some reason unknown to the West, Moscow finally turned Its favor to the latter. In September. 1950. Slansky was removed1 from his party post and kicked upstairs to be vlcepremler and eo-ordlnator of nations) economic planning. The following month he was arrested jnd the sweeping purge was in iuii swing, war hi based on tne tact me Chinese "are doing the fighting for toem." He predicted the United Nations assembly would approve the In dian plan for dealing with pris oners of war by an "overwhelm ing majority." yot like to have 82 people drop In without notice and stay up to 24 hours? Weather Western Oregon Fair through Fridnv but considerable fog and low cloudiness in valleys night and morning hours, continued cold with highs both days 35 to 45 in interior and 45 to 55 on coast. Lows Thurs lav nirht is In K In Interior and ina.s wnai nappenea to .Mr. anc M IO 38 on coast, winds off coast Mrc. Roy Williams who lue about I easterly to northeasterly 10 to 20 six miles west of this Southwestern miles an hour. Iowa Community. I Eastern Oregon Considerable The "guests" began arriving now cloudiness and tog through Tuesday afternoon when the first Fridnv. Continued cold with highs traffic stalled In the snow on a I of 25 to 35 both days. Lows Thurs U. S. Highway 6 hill ne.rr the small 0 mn,. 10 t0 jo cept Mro in ircme Wuliains farm home. imaa ealleva. Mome To See White House Woman Held For Forgery A Negro woman 35-venr.nlri I Irene Jlinmle Burkes, was ar WASHINGTON . The White rr,lca ycicrd.y on a chatgr of House Is due br Inspection next I forgery, and a short lime later Monday by to first ladies of Ihe 1'? ,'.rom Cou"ty Jail on One of the stalled vehicles- was a bread truck. And several families were carrying provisions for Thanksgiving dinners. So .no one went hungry. A snow plow finally reached the ';-' 'ate Wednesday and the Wil liams' "guests ' departed. ' "They all were wonderful people, commented Williams. By The Associated Press Max. Mln. Prep. land. Mrs. Truman has Invited Mrs. Dwight D. Elsenhower, wife of the President-elect, t0 go through the Executive Mansion where the El senhower's will live afier Jan. 20. the White House announced yesterday. She was accused of drawing checks on the account of Dlllard Odom, another Negro who current ly is on probation from Circuit Court sentence on a charge of larceny by bailee. Valley Homes Still Need Gas PORTLAND I The ga came on In lime Thursday for a number of Willamette Valley homes 10 cook Thanksgiving dinner, but many mi were without service. A gas company official estimated 50 per cent of the Willamette Val U : custoinriH still wnv without It. i al iuu;.il,;v as a ic nil of the break in loimh main serving the valley. lite pipe snapprd Tuesday night when a truck hit a beam on the Tualatin River bridge nrr Tuala tin, and the bridge collapsed. Three temporary lines have been slruiiT acro-s Ihe river as crewa alU'inpt lo restore serviie to Salmi. Albany. Corvallla, Lebanon ana oilier towns. If V lender ami Ben, William A. Knowlmitl of California head ol Ihe UcpilbllCBii I'olley CoiiilillUee. Ill Cincinnati, Tall anld "no ui'ii ib agreement has been reached" on a luiijni'liy leiulri. "I don't know where Ihey uil that," he remarked alter a report, er told hint of Ihe necret agree menl ieKirls. He had no (miller comment. Tall has been head of Ihe pollov coinmltlrn for a lung lime. And ha aald last week lie w "available" (or majority fluur leaner. The floor leader la the int"l powerful mm r Hi the Henale In IrHlslatlon lo cull UP I'M' action and the nrilor of bunlni'sn, Den. Slylra Drlllges of New llniiipshlie w floor lender for Ilia Kepiiblirsus In the 82nd Congress, but he says he Isn't anxious In rnn tlnup In that poM when Congress reconvenes Jan. 3. He aald lie would rather become temporal v Senate president, which would make him third In line of presi dential succession. Flrldue did aav. though, dial ha would take the floor lender assign ment if Hint was liie only way to avoid a Unlit. Know land haa an- ' noiincert his rnmllilnry for floor leader against anybody but Bridges. He aald he'd step aside f "iKI'ies runs lor lli- "'. r.noivliind asked annul rrpoits lie would bow oiii hi lavor of Tnll providing he gm the policy coin. mlllre posi, nald: "1 would not care to comment al tills lime." Insure vnur furs with liana Nor land. S27 Pine SI. Spy Starts Prison Term SAN FRANCISCO tifl Morton Snbeli, 35. convicted atomic spy, began arrvlng hla 30-year term ui Alcanas prison Thursday. As he walkrd off a plane from New York Wednesday night the handcuffed bespectacled radar prrl Insisted he la innocent of pass ing atom bomb secrete to the Sov iet government, - He said hla conviction was "a clear case of political peraecu tlon." BoDell was convicted last year with Julius and Elh Rosenberg. All three were found guilty of con spiring to pass atomic Information lo Ihe Soviets. The Roaanberga, sentenced to death, are seeking a re-hearing. Commies Hold American GIs BERLIN u. Three American Army men are apparently spend ing their Tlianknglvlni Day in Soviet Zone detention The Army aked Ihe Rusalans Thursday to check on a lieutenant and to military po'lra enlisted men missing since Wednesday, Ttie ofllccr cut through lha Orunewald forest to join an "ag gressor" unit in Hilh Infanu maneuver, presumably look wrong turn and wound up in 7.one territory. He waa wearing regulation Army fallguea but with special red taba lo dulingulah from the "friendly torcea of lha ma neuver In which several platoona look pari . The military police. asalgrjB ta guard rail freight, ware aen by Oermana being taken into custody on the Soviet side of the border near Tellow. The Army withheld Ule Identity of Ihe men. lanUy LIGHTNING HITS I MBRH.LA HALIFAX, Canada Two' Dartmouth Nova Scotia women had a narrow escape when a bolt of lightning struck the umbrella carried by Mrs. E. Purchase. Ac companied by another woman, she W J iRilii Tnhin ftener.i Man. .was walking along Ihe street when ager of the Chicsgo Blsck Hswks the lightning "msde a sliding the NHL. is in his 21th season I sound" and blue flame shot from witd the Hawks. the steel tip. 1 Baker 35 11 Eugene 40 19 La Grande 37 15 Lakeview , 40 14 Med'oxd 47 20 North Bend , 47 30 On aTfe f I 33 , 17 - Prndletort ? 22 20 T ! Pnrtlanrt Airport 40 I 32 tRaseburil 22 23 ; T Salem 42 19 . Boise 34 19 Chicago 51 22 T Denver 15 -4 Eureka 48 43 Los Angeles . S3 45 New York - 57 64 .01 Red Bluff 81 San Francisco 55 39 1 "Many have been the blessings" 1 u or- fo Om Heeainga tostsy aee aaa I . , rhinV ami sneak. to live and work, to give wanks ka God . . , caih in ins cwii y. These hlesfiogi. together wilh our higher standard ot I r. ing. thim'd ever be taken lor granuV ,'f n he ' I ..r p.n in kghiinc, rfgain.i .ever) thrcii io our individual ireeook. Indian Starts 60-Day Term Raymond Leonard Varels 30 a California Indian from Beaity.was ; brought to the County Jail yester- i day afternoon to start serving a 1 80-day term for disorderly conduct He was arrested at. Beatty and i pleaded guilty before Justice of I the Peace Jack Orltton. 1 UTILITYWStHVICE CALlrOHNIA-PAOiriO XY7 V Utilities Company 1011 Moin St. YOUR GAS COMPANY Phone 741S fJlcfiregor1 Sportswear at ion's - 1 I . I Se ttfYK M Proportioned I . - I the Vnrrno ' , y' ' mmJLmm liyhtiva when you ff ' ' ' '7 4 moniKi-r hi whfrc It f ! D ff "I " bswmJinm fonit tiirnfimi. f f I H L U S Prrelllsl J l , M lerfc Fit i: Proportioned a American custom t the ankle ( .' , ).jfl no more umightry ' : f (' Jr "Tinkl- ' ' J cutom-mndc stocking tuH at all othrr ;, ' ' ; vital point! , ' I S :jff:K iiiiniiiii lining ( y Colors ' Only 1.50 1 V a " i,h ,h "xl lonea, , the moy greens, lha jewel hides, ' , HUMMINff IIIRD proporlmnrH Morkinp let Fall are now ready in B ' f- D . J D, , . . , . . u aa popular Siardurt and Rom Paul. I PL M B lJ T I , ' L&VlVj J) ' V AI,.HN.C.nrol J '' ... ... - i Madford, Oreqon I k , '25 Main I ft , ' '" ! I 1ILMMLNG BIRD propor.kmed ..ockings fit hrtlm or the game reason that cuaiom-ht clothe fit beltcr-lhejr're melkulo.isly aired at every ,winu Proportioned for length, yea; and proportioned at every other point that aeierm.ne. ul. ou gauge, IS denier, that'. revol.HKm.'ry, K.vyBeiu,Uul.f4Uinc nd naturally beauiiful-Hearing. , HUMMING BIRD M aauge,, 1J Jenier or 30 denter, Alio 21 N. Central Medford, Oreqon 125 Main