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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1953)
5 firms! - HONOLULU -The Nvy pur. .efrr'tf"?, s'8bted by a Sunday taPtUSt b9,orf mldnlht "unoay in th, general area 350 mUes east of Wake Island where ,Sfn Air Lines DC-flB was last reported. , planes converged J f but the searchers, hampered by pitch darkness and mmSE""- ,?ported D0 Jurther .T?l.Bfe", fUre was the type carried In aircraft liferalts. Ik the wcond time a gre-n "are had been reported. Earlier another passenger plane had re ported spotting a flare but the nawauan sea frontier said there ' By FRANK JENKIN8 ine siiegea. ruckus between us (meaning by "us" the United .States of America), and President Syngmah Rhee of South Korea ap pears to be petering out. Reports are multiplying In Japan and Ko- . rea that the old gentleman has been so impressed by the sincerity and the good will of our special en vifr Walter Robertson, that he has said to lilm: "You ; have come nere ana you nave conquered me." Rhee Is said on supposedly good authority to have given his writ ten word thaCAfce will not sabo tage . aa-yhn'sfloe. '. - ''Z&toi-" ''. I hope Hti Vue. It has seemed to me fronytlhe beginning that there is no sound reason for a row between W'and this old man -wiiw una given eu oi (s years to the unification, the independence and the freedom of his country. - We Americans have too much respect and admiration for men nf that Art tn hn TtTntTTTNn them. If we have to fight, we'd better fight ALONGSIDE them, shoulder to shoulder, for our common ideal of freedom and independence. :What about a truce? Will there be one? - I still think it will all depend on the commies If they WANT a truce (for reasons of their own) uicre wii uc wuirc. 11 uoi ica- sons of their own) they DONT want a truce, there WON'T be one. They are acting rather olddly about it which is to say that they are acting like communists. This morning, with an armistice ap parently . Just around the corner If everybody decides that an armis tice Would be a good thing, thev throw two whole divisions 20,000 men into a new battle -in Korea and are lighting us for all they're worth, : On the other side- of the world President Eisenhower offers - a million dollars worth of FOOD to the hungry people of East Ger many. He attaches no strings to the offer merely says there are hungry people behind the Irontlur taln and out of our abundance we'll heln alleviate their hunger. The communists are having a fit about it. They say it's a airty, lowdown capitalist trick designed to discredit communism and par ticularly designed to discredit the Kremlin, whence all blessings (ac cording to communist doctrine) flow. They wnt no part of It, they yammer, and allow as how if any body starts sending (ood to the hungry East Germans they'll STOP it, pronto. Just a minute. If you were an East German, living behind the Iron Curtain, and were hungry and somebody pro posed to give you food, and your communist masters WOULDN'T LET YOU HAVE THE FOOD and In effect told you to go on starv ing and LIKE IT or else, vhom ould you be mad at? I'll give you two guesses. The point Is that President Ei senhower's offer to give food, to the hungry East Germans Is a good one. It's always good to give food to, hungry people We haven't had too many good ideas of that sort. Far too often in the past. Instead of giving food QUICKLY to hungry people and asking no questions, we've sent fat S3- " Iefl ena wen - aressea JWsslons" to them. And far, FAR too often the mem bers of these "missions" have spent their time around the big foreign capitals wearing their nice clothes to nice cocktail parties where they TALKED about giving food to the hungry Instead of get ting out into the back districts in the mud and the rain and the filth and the dirt and the rubble and the starvation and GIVING THE FOOD TO THE HUNGRY PEO PLE. If, by any chance, you spent any considerable time around London and Paris and Berlin and Vienna In the pinched and hunury days that followed the end of the shoot ing In Europe, you'll know what I mean. Here's this man Ike proposing to send ACTUAL FOOD to hungry Oermans, with no Questions asked stead of sending "missions" to study the situation. It's no wonder the communist big wheels are upset. A project such as our President Proposes could make hungry Peool In the Iron Curtain counties LOVE AND BE SP E CT AMERICA which wouldn't be good for communism. VACATION Don KetUer, the Herald and News photog rapher. Is on vaca tion this week. Consequently the nine o'clock special will be discontinued antil. next Mon day, as will ether photo com mittments la the area. Bay's Jews HMjill) 0MfS was no indication It came from the missing plane. An empty rait and seat cushion were found earlier on oily waters In the name area. 1 The plane, bound from Guam to Oakland, Ca)lf., carried eight chil dren under 10 years old among Its 60 passengers and eight crew men. It disappeared Saturday night on the Wake-to-Honolulu bop. It Was the first commercial transpacific plane crash in that section' of the Pacific since World War H. ; The Navy transport Barrett, one of at least 10 ships combing waters where the plana last reported Its position, found an abandoned life raft and seat cushions it positively identified as ' coming from the liner. . ,''' -. -.. Cotndr. T. O. Murray. Hawaiian Sea Frontier operations officer and Met Five Ceata 14 races Admitted Job-Maker Held for Tire WILLOWS, Calif. ( Police are holding a jobless 36-year-old man who they say has confessed starting a forest fire, which took IS lives Thursday so he could get a job flghtlng.Jt. Glenn County - Sheriff Lyle O. Sale picfed up Stanford P. Patton for questioning as he was working at his new job of cook at the fire control camp in Mendocino National Forest. - McCarthy Calls Committee Winds Up Being Qnly Member There i WASHINGTON W Sen. Mc Carthy (R-Wis) called a meeting Monday of his Senate investiga tions subcomittee-4he first since all its Democrats resigned Fri dayand he was the only mem ber to show up. ' The other three Republican members were reported to have other committee dates, and there was nothing to indicate that they bad remained away for any other reason. McCarthy said he called the ses sion for the purpose of questioning a witness behind closed doors. He declined to name: the witness. - McCarthy, sitting alone, has held many - such sessions in the PaSt. - ' ' -. , A .-. . ; -V - When he recessed Monday's one man session, McCarthy said he had uncovered evlfence of "an - leged $150,000. shakedown tfjralnst a friendly foreign government" by some employes "in the old Acne son State Department." He declined to name the nation, the employes involved or to even hint at the approximate date. He said he had Informed the State Department of his evidence, and that the department was turn ing the case over to-the Justice Department and the FBI for in vestigation. -' The three Democratic members quit the subcommittee last -week in protest against what they termed McCarthy's "one-man rule." They objected specifically to McCarthy's having sole hlring firing power over committee aides an authority ; granted him by a 4-3 subcommittee vote divided strictly on party lines. The Republican leadership indi cated a disposition, for the time 'being at least, to keep hands off the situation tnis createa. Search Raises Suez Tension - ISMAILIA, Egypt MJ-Machine gun-armed British Tommies cor doned off the strategic Sues Canal town of Ismailia today and an nounced they would search all per sons entering or leaving the town until . a British airman missing since last Thursday turns up. " Armed Egyptian troops at once took up posts around all govern ment buildings in the town, near Britain's main Suez Ctinal zone base, but the headquarters of Egypt's Army said-they were only "routine patrols" and would "avoid any friction . with the British Army." There were no immediate re ports of any violence, through crowds of angry Egyptians gath ered at the British roadblock?. ' The British charged the missing soldier had been abducted and that they believed at least one Egyptian official had been Involved The Egyptians denied the charge. . President Mohammed Nagulb summoned his cabinet into em ergency session in Cairo. Reports were current that a state, of em ergency had been proclaimed in the capital and in Ismailia, but the Army headquarters in Cairo denied this. ' , An Army spokesman said the Egyptian troops in Ismailia were "armed only for defense" and that the town was "fully under the con trol of the British forces." To the British claim that their missing airman had been kidnaped the Egyptians countered today with an announcement that British sol diers at a checking post near Is mailia kidnaped an Egyptian se cret polictman this morning. No other details were given. An Egyptian government com munique iaid the British had an nounced all persons going In and out of Ismailia would be searched for arms and those carrying them without a permit would be de tained. ... ... J search coordinator, said there Is a "good chance there la life around mere." . ' "We will continue the search with that In mind as long as neces sary," he said. "There was plenty of room on four other life rafts carried by the plane and still un accounted for." . , Several entire families were on the liner. . . The pilot, 'Cant. William Word of Oakland, Calif., a veteran trans pacific filer, reported in by Radio Saturday night .with no mention of trouble. There were no further messages "i j- . Some of those aboard, were civil ian workers, their wives and fam ilies, en route from Guam to the Untied States for summer vaca tions. - ' .- One passenger was an employe KLAMATH 'FALLS, OREGON, MONDAY, JULY 13, UN ; Patton is held on an open charge. District Attorney Clyde Larrlmer is- to decide what formal charges to lodge against him. The fire Thursday burned to death 14 missionary trainees of the New Tribes Mission and a profes sional forest ranger. Larrlmer quoted Patton as say ing he started the Northern Cali fornia' fire by throwing lighted matches into tinder-dry brush. In an Interview, Sen. Knowland ..(Calif), the acting , Republican leader, said It would be up to the subcommittee's parent Dooy, .tne Government Operations Commit tee, to determine whether the sub committee should continue with only Republican members. ' Mc Carthy heads the parent commit tee as well as the subcommittee. "Knowland said he had no plans to bring the matter before the Sen ate Republican Policy Committee. Repot GOP Memberi To Boycott Probers tJMJW YSiiK Mti The New York HWhIu Tribune said today It was reported in Washington that there is a plan. tor one or more Repub lican members to boycott the -Mc Carthy . probe, subcommittee .'un til a formula is found to make it uipartisan again." The three Democratic members of the Senate permanent investi gations subcommittee headed by oeu, Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis) resigned Friday. . A Washington dispatch to the Herald Tribune by Don Irwin said the boycott "strategy, known to have been, discussed with the top Republican leadership, comes as an aftermath" of Friday's resig nations. " . . The Democratic subcommittee members, the story noted, quit aft er they were denied a voica hi the hiring and dismissal of staff members, , following the resigna tion of J. B. Matthews as staff director.- ...' In Washington, .Sen. Charles E. Potter (R-Mich), the only mem ber of the subcommittee who could be reached for comment on the Vote oi Sorts Asked on Who ' ... PrineesH Wed LONDON tm The . tabloid Dally Mirror asked its mil lion readers today to say wheth er they think Princess Margar et should be allowed to marry divorced RAF hero Peter Town send. :-. - , " Rumors of a romance ; be tween the 22-year-old princess 'and the 38-year-old grouo cap tain, until recently an equerry to the royal family, have aroused intense excitement in Britain. Citing the Church of- Eng land's opposition . to remar riage of divorced persons, the Mirror printed a ballot with this question: "It Princess Mar garet, now - 22, so desires, should she be allowed to marry him?" : Two KF Delegates To Scout Meet ' Two Klamath Falls delegates to the 43rd annual conference of the Boy Scout National Committee are in Los Angeles for the July 16-1? meeting. From here are Floyd A. Boyd, 1316 Pacific Terrace with Mrs. Boyd and Cal Peyton,' 4100 Sum mers Lane with Mrs. Peyton. The national delegates will visit Jamboree City where 50,000 Boy Scouts are encamped and will be guests at a barbecue on the Jam boree grounds. Business sessions are being held at the sutler Hotel. , : FORECAST Klamath Falls and vicinity: Mostly fair through Tues day with some risk of afternoon thunderahowers. High Tuesday 30 low Mondav nit hi 4R. High yesterday , . , 1 Low last mint 48 Frecip last 24 hoars Since Oct. 1 . . 14.37 Normal In im-HaH 19 99 Same period last year 17.11 of the airline, Charles Oallop of Can Leandro, Calif. Be was ac companied by his wile and two small children. Another family included a Ne braska man, Fred Hansher, 30, of Newman Grove, his wife, and chil dren, 3 and At Us height yesterday, the huge search Included -more than 30 planes and 10 ships. They criss crossed the bleak PacUle In a des perate race against approaching darkness. ,.-..'". . Just . before dark, - the Barrett spotted the inflated life raft, which carried carbon dioxide bottles stamped with, the Initials TAL" meaning Transocear ' Mr Lines. Earlier, . weak . signals were picked up v jours in the lonely W g Jlu lane .eared. The blaze ate through 1,200 acres of brush and timber and trapped the 15 men. ' Patton was without money to support his pregnant wife and three children. He said he last worked as a crop duster, but that job "ran out" on him. Local authorities, who had known Patton since he came to Willows with his family 20 years' ago, said he had never been in trouble. - newspaper story, said he knew nothing about a oycott. . The Irwin dispatch, said tne Democratic resignations left the Hepublican party "wholly - respon sible for the activities of the Sen ate's most controversial investiga tive body." The story added that the Democratic party "shared technical responsibility'' tor the subcommittee's activities while the Democrats were members of the group "although the chairman oy tar tne most active rasm- . Tne story also said: - Many ' responsible . Republicans in view of the, delicate and contro versial nature of the aubcommiU tee's work, . restoration of biparti sanship is essential, , .-, . Since a quorum of the seven- place" subcommittee Is four,mem- oers, it wouia appear tnat aosence of even one remaining member, would raise at least a legal ques tion regarding any decisions the probe group may make before it is orougnt up to strength. In any event, nonappearance of we remaining . members would place the chairman in the position ot acting as a "one-man. subcom mittee," plainly without support of his colleagues. The boycott device is planned to have the effect of a brake on new ventures pendlntt de velopment of a formula to bring Democrats back into the group. In addition to Potter, McCarthy's remaining colleagues on the sub committee are Senators Karl E, Mundt of South Dakota and Ev ett M. Dlrksen of Illinois. . It was understood that at, least two of the three would, have "other Business- when the subcommittee Is scheduled to meet tomorrow. . Truce Hopes SEOUL, HI A well-informed source said today President Syng man Rhee has pledged in writing that South Korea will not obstruct an armistloe and Rhee himself indicated his country has relaxed its demand for unification by force. Rhee said in a statement that South Korea may change its meth ods but not its objective ot unifying the country. . , . A well-informed source told Asso- I elated Press Tokyo Bureau Chief Robert Eunson, that President El senhower's special . envoy won sweeping concessions from Rhee, including the written pledge that South Korea would not obstruct an armistice. The source said that Robertson did not wish to embar rass Rhee by disclosing them. Rhee reportedly agreed not - to free any more prisoners. His order freeing 27,000 POWs held by the Allies last month stalemated the nearly completed truce negotia tions. - . ' , ' j ; The envoy, Assistant V. S. Sec retary of State Walter S. Robert son, refused to agree to Rhee's demand that the United States walk out of a post-armistice politi cal conference if It failed to make headway In BO days on unifying Korea, the source said, In return, Eunson ' said, Rhee reportedly was assured- that the United States would hold another top-level conference' with South Korea after a truce signing to work out a Joint policy and that the United States would defend South Korea if it. were attacked. VIETMINH STRIDES SAIGON, Indochina on Communist-led Vletminh forces captured eight Vietnamese outposts 60 miles southwest of Saigon Saturday and Sunday. The posts, located near Mytho, were held by new. light Vietnamese battalions which had occupied them only 15 days ago. where the pi o Meeting, Rising Again ' Although the signals were' too faint for an accurate bearing, the Navy widened its r. arch to sweep a K'caicr expanse. ' The Barrett fntmH nth, h.u.i. amid 30 to 40 gasoline oil slicks uia plane apparently plunged into the bleak waters. It was nnlv n mil. m. point where the plane last reported A Japanese fishing boat In those waters, however, said it had not seen any crash, . ; i Another naxsjma- nitu ed seeing a green flare In-the out in Hawaiian sea Fron- uer iwa mere was no indication the flat- nam Imm Ik- Transocean said this was Its first Pacific accident in more than one billion, passenger , -miles of world- wtuv upcrmuona since IMS. ' Telephone 3111 No. US Despite Red BERT.TW fA VnnA tnr fciinnv East Germany already Is on the way by sea and the United States "hajv not ahanrtnwt hniva nf ri. llvering it. despite Moscow's scorn- iui rejection oi tne to million oouar offer, u. S. authorities said here today. . . ... :, ;. These ftnurcita ualrf altAi-nnt two. slble ways of aiding the IS mil lion nungry people under com manding rule In Germany's Soviet tone are being studied in Wash ington, Bonn and Berlin. ; - boviet Foreign Minister V. M Molotov scornfully rejected Presi dent Elsenhower's offer of the food Saturday night with a note term ing it a propaganda stunt. He claimed the Russians 'were sup plying their occupation tone adequately.- West German nhnnAAtlnU ' v .... XWWll- rad Adenauer termed Moscow's action "highly regrettable" and de scribed - Eisenhower' nff a "generous and humanitarian ges ture.- a u. 8. High commission spokesman said, "Nobody cart deny tout fiast uermany is nungry." ; Grotewohl Hits Ike Food Offer BERLINS Red Premier Ot- to Grotewohl of Soviet-occupied East Germany haughtily denounc of 15 million dollars worth of food for hungiy East Germans Satur "provocation which serves only the alms of agitation." . - Obviously acting oh Russian or ders, the premier through his per sonal press office accused the Unit ed States of using the food bid to mask an attempt to organize sub ve"jve agents In the Soviet Zone. r The population of the German democratic republic considers the proposal of the U.S.A. government to be an Insult and rejects such 'American help" which Is linked throughout the world with dlshnn. orable national ; concessions, the Grotewohl office said. , President Eisenhower, in a note delibered to the Soviet government in Moscow Friday night, asked the Russians to accept the multi million dollar food supplies to "al leviate suffering" In the "distress ed" east zone. Orotewohl's was the first Com munist reply Just 24 hours la ter. . The puppet premier repeated the old charge that the uprising of two million east German work ers June 17 was an "American led provocation" and added-, . "If the U.S.A. government real ly wishes to help the German peo ple, tnen it must mt ior an time the rentrlctions on internal Ger man trade and annul the Schuman plan. The best help for the Ger mans would be to annul the Bonn and Paris war treaties (peace con tract and European ariny treaty) and call for a four-power confer ence on a peaceful solution of the German question. The American imperialists, who are suddenly so concerned for the German demo cratic republic, should better be concerned that the 1 , million un employed in west Germany are properly fed and get work." - FoodOnVay Turn-Dovn Round & Round We Go: Caymon Knifed Where ' Shortly after midnight on April 3, Willie Watson, Klamath Fans garage worker, bled to death In an alley off Commercial Street, from a knife wound five inches above the knee on his right leg Sunday night Charles Oaymon Jr., acquitted of the murder of Willie Watson, June 26. was stabbed five Inches above the right knee, on his right leg. Gayjnon was treated at Klam ath Valley Hospital and released. He refused to make a statement to police. When- asked who stabbed him, Oaymon replied: "That's my business and I'll take care of it myself." Shortly after Oaymond was acquitted of the fatal - stabbing of Watson by a Jury In Circuit Judge David R- Vandenberg's court, officials heard that friends SMOKI POURS from the 4altor shop imidt Oregon State Prison walls at Salem, Orsgoe. Tke ' fire had been touched ff by striking convicts in angry .reprisal against guards who opened up with tear get. to drive the men away from food supplies at the commissary in left back-'"' ground. The trouble started when 1,100 convicts refuted to work until the warden had met a ' list of demands. This included more and better food. - Coons loo Many Inspections Raise US Dams' Costs WASHINGTON Wl Too man Inspections , makt federal dams more expensive than private proj ects, an engineer said -Monday at a hearing involving whether a pri vate comany or the federal govern ment should build one in Hells Canyon. - - :. , ' Bernard Williams of Morrison- Knudsen Construction Co., Boise, Ida., testified at a Power commis sion hearing on Idaho Power Co.'s application to build three power dams In the Snake River. ' He said the cost of Federal proj ects such aa one proposed at Hells' Canyon, one of the sites sought by Idaho Power, is in creased by action of inspectors of "limited experience" - ana tnose who feel they "have to protect themselves." ' : These Inspectors require work to continue after many federal proj ects are completed and "this costs contractors money," Williams said. The engineer , aald contractors how -wheh to quit'! when, they. build-private projects, "to the cost Is' cut down." " ''''' ...v. - Power Commission Attorney John Mason asked ; . Williams whether Morrlson-Knudsen's . board of . di rectors had authorized him to say the company would' be willing to build the three dams proposed by Idaho Power for 133 million dol lars, S3 hs testified Friday. - Williams said he had been -authorized to make the statement by Harry Morrison, Morrlson-Knudsen president, .and. chairmen of the board. '' '- - '; Interveners favoring the proposed Federal dam and opposing Idaho Power were relnfored Monday by appearance of Albert O. Ullman of Baker, Ore., head of the Idaho- -BULLETIN- WILLOWS, Calif. Ur) District Attorney Clyde Larimer Monday filed a murder charge against Stanford F. Patton, 16, accnaed f startinr a -forest fire which took 14 lives Thursday night. AMA Asks Vet Treatment Cut WASHINGTON ( Curtailment of free hospitalisation and medioal treatment for veterans whose ail ments are not connected with their military , service was urged today by the American Medical Association.- Dr. Walter B. Martin, president elect of AMA, said in a statement prepared for a House veterans subcommittee that Congress should cut down on practices of the Vet erans Administration whlcn he said encourage benefits for non-service-connected cases. . . The committee Is considering proposals to limit privileges now accorded veterans for treatment of non-service-connected disabilities, and to; charge them according to their ability to pay. of the knife victim had threatened to "get" Oaymon; - j It is believed avengers of Wat son attempted to slay Oaymon by stabbing him in exactly the same place that Watson was wounded. An artery in Watson's right- leg was severed and he died a few minutes ' later. Oaymon was brought to the hos pital Sunday night by Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Black. They, told po lice he had come to their home and told them he had been stabbed. They declared they did not know his assailant. The acquittal of Oaymon last month culminated one of the most unusual murder-trials in Circuit Court history. Oaymon was first charged with second-degree murder. On a mo tion of Defense Attorney George raed WA -Hot Coiuito. Oregon Hells Canyon Association and the Hells Canyon Development Association..- -''-.,': .:.. He Joined attorneys for other in terveners, Including 6: Glrard Davidson and Mrs. Evelyn Cooper, representing the National Hells Canyon Association; Clinton, Sin clair, Idaho-Oregon Hells Canyon Association, and Lawrence Potara kin, rural electric cooperatives. ' Another proponent of the pro posed federal dam, former secre tary of the- Interior J. A, Krug, attended the hearing for a time Monday morning as an observer. Krug became Interested In the Hells Canyon project as secretary of tne interior m 1W0-4U. his suc cessor as secretary, Oscar Chap man, also was an advocate of the Hells Canyon project and an op ponent of the Idaho power appli cation. , ft .Idaho Power has estimated Hj would; cost 13s' million to erect dams at Hells, Canyon where a 400-mlUion-dollar government dam has been proposed and at Oxbow .and Brownlee; .. ... ....,'.;; Sidewalk Show Hearers Benefit By Flat Tire Listeners over Charlie McFar lan'a 13:15 p.m. Sidewalk Show to day heard a ' musical treat that came about through cooperation of the folks at Barney's Chat 'n Nib ble and Charlie from KFLW. A group of six young men, in cluding a male quartette from L.A. Facifio College, a Free Metnodist affiliate school, bad a flat tire here as they were en route North to at tend the annual conference of the Free Methodist Church, ' They were hungry as motorists usually are and went Into Barney's for a bite to eat. Thrilled over the "fare" they burst into song and Barney called the radio station to listen in. Arrangements for the lo cal appearance were quickly made. Kenneth Mudge, student body president at the college for 1954 was bass; Gary Smldderks ' was baritone; Dean Smldderks, a double cousin, first tenor, and. Da vid Clark, was second tenor. Traveling with them was Rev. Davis Oarlnger, field representa tive of the college until recently pastor of the church at Medford, and R. J. Cox, president of the col lege. . :., , .,, ... Sword-Wavlnq Earns J nil For i' Milled Driver ; NEWARK, N.J. W Police took a dim view of Baby Al len's method of mating ' his point In a traffic argument yesterday. They said he waved a two foot -antique sword at Sammy Williams, another driver. Allen was arrested and booked on charge of possessing a danger ous weapon. -. Acquitted Proctor and Ben Goddard, the sec ond degree murder count was dismissed. Judge Vandenberg or dered District Attorney Frank Al derson to proceed against the de fendant for manslaughter. Early In the trial Judge Vanden berg told the Jury he did not be lieve the prosecution had sufficient evidence to convict Oaymon. The Judge added that if Oaymon was found guilty, the court would see that an appeal to the Oregon Su preme Court was financed. The trial, which lasted nearly week, was marked by frequent clashes between counsel over tech nicalities. Judge Vandenberg in terposed several times to criticize the proceedings. After only 39 min utes or deliberation the Jury found Oaymon not guilty of manslaugh ter. - 1 . ., ft t a3 ed Salem Revolt ALEM W Rebellious convict uncovered axes and picks over night, iiut were under apparent ' control in the fourth day of a revett at the Oregon penitentiary Monday. - Armed guards, commanding the -walls above the M0 convicts con fined to a fenced-in baseball field: inside the prison, said Unconvict apparently found a cache of tool under bleachers on the field Sunday night. ;.. (,.. -...-vi,." The men got no' chance to us the tools to batter at the fences or to dig. The guards kept them dis persed and away from the barriers. , -The men apparently found the tools when they began breaking up the bleachers for. firewood and to build windbreaks Sunday night. That was after ... they ones ap peared about to surrender, and Warden 'Clarence T. Gladden is sued them soup and bread their first meal since Friday night. - "Now we've got the warden on tne run,": some prisoners shouted after the soup had been distributed and guards had started conducting men from (he chill-outdoors area to the .cells. Taunts and abusive language followed, guards reported. uiadden at once stopped the removal of the' men from the field. About 136 had been 'searched and taken to the cells before the halt. The warden said they would not be let out of their cells Monday. The warden said there would be no meals for the too In the field, but there would be food for those In the cells. About 400 men are In the cells, nearly 300 of them since Friday night, when they sur rendered shortly after the start of the revolt. - Despite the new defiance ef th men, the warden left the water supply turned on for a faucet on the baseball field. Earlier it had been kept shut off for two days and a night. That was after the men had caused $100,000 damage in Saturday rioting. Twenty-one felons, identified by Gladden as ringleaders of the revolt,- gave themselves up earlier last night. Their surrender was the condition Gladden set for turn ing on the water supply to the area. , ....... -.. The convicts had been virtually without food or water since Sat urday morning. Later Gladden conferred with a orison - annotated s committee of three convicts. - The committee, headed by R. H. C. Bennett, a former state leg islator serving five years for lar ceny, was named after the warden earlier in the day told the prison ers he would have nothing to do with their 25-man "grievance com mittee." .:'.'. '.. .'.' : ' Drum Corps Has Annual Banquet ' Klamath Falls American Legion Post . No. 8's Drum and Bugle Corps, which took top state honors in competition recently at Seaside, entertained at the corp's annual banquet. July 11, In the Blue Room Of the Wlllard Hotel. v. : Present were Les Henry, com mander of District 4, and Mrs. Henry, Cave Junction. Richard Gallagher, president of the local Legion post, introduced the guests and "Bud" Steinseifer, president of the Drum Corps emceed the pro gram. A cocktail hour preceded the dinner.' Decorations " included an ar rangement of the corp's instru ments and an exhibit of trophys won by the musicians. , t ,' . . ADLAI IN BONN BONN, Germany HI Adlal E. Stevenson, 1032 Democratic presidential- candidate,- arrived here Monday on his round-tho-world tour for conferences with Ameri can and German officials. Steven son flew here from Berlin where he made a first-hand study of the tense situation created by the June workers' rebellion in the Soviet secipr of the. city. ;i ' FALHKNHORST FREE ' BONN, Germany m Formei Gen. Nikolaus von Falkenhorst, once sentenced to hang because oi the execution of British command oes, was set free Monday from th British war crimes prison at Wert In Fourth Day