fo)M
o n
JiUvU
Im The
Feasibility,
i - t -t t ' , " , , 1 i .
Mo)
IdP
. , ;;, .. 1
Day s Sews
CCU IUIIU1C
.. BT FRANK JENKINS ' J
' The shah of Iran, returns from
exile te resume his royal lob :iow
that Weeping Willie Mossadegh is
finally In jail under heavy guard.
The dispatches describe the young
ruler as happier than a kitten to
be sitting . in the driver's sea
again.
I suppose this habit of rulership
grows on. one. Anyway, no king
ever seems to be happy anywhere
save on his throne and in his
. palace. ,t
Here In (relatively) happy Amer
lea, Ave think ANY king Is a pimple
on the fair face of nature. What
we frequently forget Is that dem
ocracy Is a good habit that must
be acquired slowly and painstak
ingly, with' due regard for ' the
self-disciplines it Imposes, if It is
to work. i '
I sometimes fear that a lot of
the trouble we have run Into In
our well-meant efforts to run the
' world better than it has been run
before arises out of our firm, con
viction that the first thins we must
do is to mould everybody else's
. lorm of government- Into the pat
tern of OUR lorm ,01 government.
Here's hoping Iran's shah gets
4Va titiiatlmi inutoi- f-nntrnl and
restores some semblance of sanity
in' his country's foreign relations.
Also, here's hoping Russia de
cide this isn't the time to go
i after; Iran's oil.
' Russia's official communist
newspaper- Pravada is hopping
mad about the way we have han
dled the news ot Russia's asserted
mastery of the secret -of the ny-
drosren bomb.
. lit one breath, it wails that the
American Dress Is telling the
American people the Russian
H-bomb is hot stuff and we'd bet
ter prepare with all our strength
to meet the threat of it and in
the next breath It howls because
our State Secretary Dulles
doesn't Rink It amounts to much.
These commies don't seem to
like ANYTHING we do.
Personally, (he only criticism
. .tin. 1- 4fcat mil Man of IrfWl-
' tag everything connected with the
. handling of the atom bomb a dark
and cloudy secret 'doesn't appear
- ham nut tlrt WPll. Thfi
secret has been so well kept that
ONLY THE RUlr. nave oecn
able to find out anyunng arouv
Weather
FORECAST Klamath Falls and
vicinity: Fair through Saturday
with high' of 19; low Friday night
. High yesterday :.
' Lew last night ,.
Preclp last Z4 hours ....
Since Oct. 1
Normal for period ........
Same period last year
It
........ 45
' 0
14.87
Vt.it
....17.Z8
A year ago la Klamath Falls
Ugh and low temperatures were
S3 and 46. .
MRS. RUSSELL WILSON and
daughter Kay were shopping
and planning a visit to Kay t
aunt. They live ar a.a win.
I p -tjAtvh.
Washington Reformatory Riot Leaves One Dead, One Blinded For Life, Five Buildings Fired
" .... .. .. .... ....... . '.. , j t ' 1 t 1 1-..U1. J...l 1U. Ja t A nnitiAH amilr kw I flat aAt-vtlltT tlmA fflP hll l'rj!tir'
MONROE, Wash. Ifl - Rio'ous
Inmates of the Washington State
reirrnltory set five bulld.ngs alire
Thursday night in a violent out
break in which one of them was
killed and three wounded.
Quiet was restored during the
napped on the ground.
AUof the institution's 615 in
mills were stul without breakfast
MISS Sir approached
cause the kitchen was wrecked
d.ru the night', bours-wng spree.
HoWver. some of the inmates in
KLAMATH
Price Frre Ceatt-U rages .v
Civil War
In Morocco
PARIS im Moulay Mohammed
Ben Arafa was proclaimed the new
Sultan of Morocco Friday.
Moroccans received calmly the
dethronlne of Sultan Sidi Moham-
mMl Hen Youssei. M. WHO whs ce
iled by France to the island of
Corsica Tnursaay ana nis rcpmuo-
ment by nis ot-year-oia uucis,
Arafa.
The threat of civil war Between
the Sultan's nationalistic followers
and Berber- hlUsmen who rallied
to the banner of Pasha Tbami El
Olaoul of Marrakech bad receded
No -violent outbreaks were re
ported, either in French Morocco
or Tangier, tne international zone.
But France clamped a steel
guard on her North African pro
tectorate. Heavy troop and police
patrols were on duty in all Moroc
can cities. . ,
1 The official proclamation of tne
sew Sultan took place In the grand
throne room of the Imperial palace
at Rabat. -.
An assembly of 350- Moroccan
leaders, including pashas (nobles)
aids (tribal leaders) and religious
dignitaries signed a document
pledging their alliance, in the
presence of the Maghzen, or su
Dreme council. -
But In Cairo, the 1.000-year-old Al
Azhar, which claims to be Islam's
most authoritative institution, took
a dim view of the proceeding and
called upon the Moslem world to
"start a crusade against France."
The deposed Sultan has been
widely espoused by nationalists in
the Arab worm Because no encour
aged the Istaqlal (independence)
Party In his own country.
Cairo dispatches said Egyptian
president Gen. Mohamed Naguib,
on a pilgrimage to Mecca, stood In
front of the Kaaba, Islam's holiest
shrine, and prayed that "Allah
ventre the Moroccans." The Kaa
ba contains the stone on which the
Archangel Gabriel is supposed, to
have rested his head.
Two more deaths were reported
from street fights In the turbulent
Rabat native quarter, This brought
the official total of known killings
iu the-past . -week-to n:
At United Nations headduarters
in New York, Asian-Arab repre
sentatives failed in an attempt to
dramatize their protests against
the ouster of the Sultan. Syria's
Farls Zeineddine, chairman of the
16-nation group this month, was
ruled out of order when he tried to
speak on the issue at a meeting of
the General Assembly's Political
Committee.
- France has -threatened to walk
out of the U. N.. if it puts the
Moroccan question on the agenda
of either the Assembly or the Se
curity Council. The French say the
U. N. has no business interfering
In what it claims is a domestic
affair. ,
UN Asked Into
Morocco Issue
- UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. Wl
The Arab-Asian countries in the
U. N. decided unanimously Friday
to ask the Security Council to in
tervene in the Moroccan situation.
The chairman of the 16-nation
group, Syria's Farid Zeineddine,
told reporters a formal request for
action would be transmitted ,to the
president of the Security Council
later in the day.
The Asian-Arab diplomats began
drafting their communication after
a one-hour session. All the mem
bers of the group will be asked to
approve the text before It Is sent,
Zeineddine Indicated the group
would charge France's removal of
the Sultan of Morocco is a threat
to peace.
Corps Going To
Illinois Valley
Klamath Falls' state champion
drum and bugle corps of the Amer
ican Legion local post will be one
of the features of the Illinois Val
ley Jubilee slated for Cave Junc
tion on Labor Day, according to
local Legion officials.
The Klamath corps, which nab
bed the state victory at the June
convention in Gearhart, will be the
guest of Glen Morrison Post, No.
70, while in Cave Junction, and
will be one of the main attrac
tions in the big parade planned
for the occasion.
Other events slated for the Jubi
lee will Include such things as log
rolling, a gold-panning contest,
bucking and other entertainment.
the yard got canned food from the
burned cannery ouuaing tor an out
door snack.
Most of the kitchen knives disap
peared during the rioting, and the
thorough search for them was one
of the factors slowing up the re
turn of the rioters to their cells.
Only half of the Inmates partici
pated in the outbreak, prison ofli
cials reported. Half of the rioters
were in one cell block, which still
echoed Friday morning to intermit
tent shouts and Jeers; the other
half were still locked out of the
cell block.
With their fight and defiance ap
parently gone, they stood about the
yard where the only comfort came
from a small fire on which wood
Threat Eases
FALLS,. OREGON, FRIDAY, AUGUST Zl. 16SI , - ' - r i J
TeleJhee MU No. U
. v:
PVT. OUT E. IELLANT. son
of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Beilant, -3943
Clinton, wears the coen-i
skin cap he received from
Mai. Gen. Robert F. Sink, 7th
-Armored Divition command
ing . general, for nis expert
marksmanship on the rifle
range at Camp Roberts, Cal
ifornia. Beilant was high scor
ing rifleman with Company B
of the 434th Armored Field
Artillery Battalion.
Rex M. Dye
Heads Drive
The Klamath County 1954 United
Fund-Red Cross campaign com
mittee announced today that Rex
vr nv a nartner in the Dun bar-
Robins on Agency, has accepted the
campaign chairmanship.
Dye was born in Idaho -and at
tended school mere. Alter tnree
REX M. DYE ' '
mm1 aolf waare -naw-rvlc htH
tuiu a hhh -
became a floral designer in Los
Angeles. He moved to Klamath
Falls two years ago and has been
very active m Junior chamber of
Commerce work. He Is the cur-
,.nl .t.iwM nrAeiHpnt.
IT- mtattut that V-t nma TVT 11fl H
to take the drive chairmanship
i..mlnn r,t tha thnrnilffh
lubcr ICM1IU1Q -j - o--
study the campaign committee has
maae of the tacts concerning iunaa
raised in the Klamath area, the
cost of. such efforts and related
problems.
"This matter of giving has two
sides," Dye declared. ; "One is
the need for health, welfare and
u-Miallnn nnumm, in thft nnm.
munlty. The other is the amount
or . money neeaea. Any pan 10
,.nU Hmn.inta vi,,at. IA fT.
rttiac nivii aiuuuuu ...mm- -
ganlzed efiiciently, ana in a bus
inesslike manner. This is no mir
acle that one man or group of men
can accomplish. Every citizen in
the Klamath area must do his
part."
Autoist Who Hits
Child Dies Himselr
SAN DIEGO, Calif. M An auto
mobile driver died yesterday after
nis car hit a chiia.
The coroner's report said Lester
P. Blelcher, 42, of nearby Harbi
son Canyon, was backing out of bis
yard and accidentally ran Into
Phillip Turner, 6.
. He was taking the boy to a hos
pital when he was stricken with a
fatal heart attack. The coroner said
the child was only bruised.
from the ( I lelie field ' bleachers
burned.
Ouards, stale' patrolmen' and
other hurriedly recruited law en
forcement officers waited orders
to start herding the men back into
their cells, -which were being
searched for any possible hidden
weapons.
The cause of the outbreak re
mained a mystery and the amount
ot damage was unknown.
Harold D. Van Eaton, state su
perintendent of Institutions, esti
mated damage to the exterior of
buildings was 8160,000 to 8200,000,
but be said the loss in equipment,
such as In the power house, was
undetermined.
Van Eaton aald he thought there
't J-
f
W 7
VjfL
Public Can
Vote Direct
On Charter
SALEM, U)
No pror
a new state ConstiUitlr tr
submltted to the peor
& 4
AT -or-
a consmutiuuui cu
ner General Rot jCr
.rnton
ruled Friday, s
The ruling J-'A opinion to
State Repn- A4
iV.iV- -ark O. Hat-
ueid ot r kry
. du,j win uou
AtiirA iwulil Riih-
asked 1
mlt
,ew Constitution to
the. pt
xout using the pro
constitutional conven-
ceaure
Uon. - -
"The Legislature has authority
to propose amendments (to the
Constitution)" Thornton ' pointed
out. "It can not validly resolve It
self Into a constitutional conven
tion and submit a whole new or
ganic document." -
Thornton also told Hatfield that
the committee for constitutional
study appointed by the last Legis
lature "can not be deemed a com
mission with power equal to that
of a constitutional convention."
In view of the fact that this
committee was crated by resolu
tion and such a resolution is not
a law "it Is clear that the Legis
lature had no other purpose than
to obtain the advice of the com
mittee" Thornton said,
"It old not contemplate that the
findings of the committee would
appear In any form- other than a
report to the 48th Legislative as
sembly. In' any event no proposal
for a new Constitution can be sub
mitted to the people except by a
constitutional convention called as
provided by the existing' Constitu
tion of Oregon.'! .'
Laniel Relents;
' .PARIS WV-Thousands . of strlk-
bur Frenoh nostal. teleE'ranh and
telephone workers started back to
work today. It was the first Break
in the wave of walkouts that dras
tically slowed the nation's eco
nomic life, for It days, .
The trek to work began after
the two big non-Communist unions
the Socialist Workers' Force
(Ff and the Christian (Catholic)
Labor-Federation (CFIC) reached
ah agreement early today with
Premier Joseph Laniel's govern
ment. -
Though other government work
ers were expected to Join the re
turn movement, observers warned
that plenty of trouble may still lie
ahead on the nationalized rail
roads, . In a .communique early today,
Laniel promised to consult inter
ested unions before putting into
effect decrees cutting public pay
rolls and increasing retirement
age limits for government em
ployes. He also agreed to have
another look at the problems of
the (owest-paid workers and get
something In motion toward the
idea of full employment. -
The walkouts began as a protest
by the FO and the CFTC against
Laniel's plan to balance his budget
by . firing surplus employes and
upplng retirement ages. The Com
munists came in later with de
mands for Increases in wages and
cost-of-living allowances.
All the unions' argued the gov
ernment should begin its campaign
to rescue the national Treasury
from near, bankruptcy by moving
against the tax-evading rich.
Senator Sees
Pro-Hellers
PORTLAND (IPl Supporters of
the proposed federal dam at Hells
Canyon on the 8nake River -met
here Thursday with Sen Dennis
Chavez, (D-NM), a member of the
Senate Public Works Committee.
Afterward Lloyd Tupllng, man
ager of the Hells Canyon Associa
tion, said he was Encouraged about
prospects for the project. The dele
gation found, he said, that the Sen
ate committee "isn't deceived
about the real feeling of the people
on this Issue."
In the delegation, which opposed
Idaho Power Co. plans for small
dams on the 8nake, were repre
sentatives of the Washington and
Oregon Granges, the Otegon CIO
and the Northwest Public Power
Association,
might be three contributing
causes: an elfort by some to es
cape; an attempt to embarrass
authorities, and "some times there
is the same carnival spirit In penal
institutions that you have in uni
versities." The rioters struck without warn
ing during the evening recreation
period. One group took over one of
the reformatory's two large cell
blocks and the other ran through
the grounds setting fire to the
buildings surrounding the recrea
tion area.
Three-hundred ' other prisoners
took no part in the uprising.
Guards at first made no effort
to stop the stone-throwing, bat
hurling, cursing, bowling convicts.
i 5 -j , w ' "a , , ' ' 'jT -J
l - I aF- . - m
j 1 1 - v;
&Wi.
POPULAR SUMMER SPORT onv Klamath Lake Ii water skiin. The Hilton brothari (Don en
top) and Billy are caught executing a precision maneuver behind one boat. -
Staff Photo by Don Kettler
Old Thriller
Complain About
Vp-Trfp Only
BRISTOL, England Wl Frank
Oadsby came out of retirement
at the ge- of 74 Thursday to
rWime his old carnival act"
a lo-foolr. dlye Into a tank -of
biasing oil. -
Pinch-hitting for his ailing
son, Oadsby told a reporter;
"Those 100 steps up the lad
der made the old heart go pit-ter-pat,
but I was , all right
coming down."
Dawn Starr
Case Bogs
By LTLE DOWNING
Prosecution of Dawn 8tarr. Okla
homa night club dancer, charged
with giving a Klamath Falls bar
ber a bogus check for shaving her
legs, was forestalled again Friday
when the District Attorney's office
failed to produce, the complaining
witness.
- Denutv District Attorney Joe
Thalhofer told District Judge D. E.
Van Vactor that barber E. u.
(Pat) Patrick, who signed the
complaint against Miss Starr, is
still on vacation and his where
abouts is unknown, '
If Patrick fails to appear by
next Wednesday it will be man
datory for the court to dismiss the
case. Under the law to have a pre
liminary hearing continued, it Is
necessary for the district attor
ney to file an affidavit with the
court every 24 hours to justify
the delay. However,' the hear
ing cannot be continued more than
six days unless the defendant so
stipulates. ! ?
Friday morning when Attorney
Thalhofer appeared in court with
his second continuance affidavit,
Defense Counsel Ben Goddard stipulated-
that a continuance could
be granted until 10 a.m. Monday.
Miss Starr, who says she is the
great-granddaughter of Belle Starr,
fabled character of the Old West,
denied reports that she cashed bo
gus checks in Hollywood. Bherilf
Murray Britton is holding a Los
Angeles warrant for her arrest.
"Just- because, some other girl
down in Hollywood poned as me
and cashed worthless checks. Is no
reason I'm guilty," Miss Starr de
clared, "They've got the wrong
persons charged. Somebody's been
using my name."
The dancer indicated she will
fight extradition, If an attempt is
made to return her to Los Angeles.
The Monroe volunteer fire depart
ment was called and was Inside
the walls within minutes. But tney
were driven back by stones and
bats.
Other fire equipment arrived but
none ever got Inside the walls de
spite the hundreds of peace of
ficers who came from all over
western Washington, including Se
attle, 20 miles to the southwest.
No attempt was made by the
convicts to communicate with
Warden P. 3. Squler or other of
ficialsexcept to hurl taunts, im
precations and debris through
windows and at guards.
- No explanation for the outbreak
could be had from Squler. One
guard aald, however, that there
' - . . ; - --J
v a,
BOB A. LONGUEVILLE
Longueville,
Teacher. Dies
' Bob A. Longueville. 38. for the
last six years Industrial Arts in
structor at Altamont Junior Hign
School, died at 11:04 p.m. Thurs
day at Klamath Valley Hospital
after being 111 in the hospital three
days. , !
His brother-in-law, Julian Ager,
Klnmath Falls, said Longuevllle
suffered a coronary thrombosis.
He had planned to return to his
school' teaching this fall. '
Longuevllle, who served in New
Guinea and the Philippines in
World War II, was a lieutent in
the 642nd Boat and Shore Battal
ion, of the 92nd Army Engineers.
He was the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Delmer Bell of Redmond and was
born at Baker, July 27, 1916.
Survivors Include his parent,
his wife, the former Helen Ager,
and two daughters, Cecilia Marie
and Nikola Ann. The famUy made
Its home at 4238 Laverne Avenue.
Funeral services will be under
the direction of O'Hslr's MemorlM
Chapel. Details will be announced
later.
SOME PRICES DROP .
CHXCAOO W Sears. Roebuck It
Co.'s 67th anniversary mid-season
fall catalogue 390 pages Is
ready for distribution. .The com
pany said prices have been cut on
about 840 Items, including kitchen
ranges, home freezers, snowsuits,
electric blanket and vitamins.
had been trouble during the day.
He would not explain lurther., .
- Most of the Inmates at the re
formatory are younger offenders
in their 20s. Older and more
hardened criminals are kept In
the Washington State Penitentiary.
- Inmates rioting In the cell block
tore up plumbing, broke windows
and destroyed furnishings. They,
too, bowled and cursed.
Then, several hours after the
first outbreak at 7 p.m. PST, a
group of the men on the grounds
tried to break through the gate.
Ouards, almost shoulder to shoul
der atop the 30 foot high walls and
armed with everything from riot
guns to tommyguns, opened fire.
Four men fell. One was mortally
i V s ' ' f
L I J
Southerner Beet
About Coohhookn
Cooked Vp Forth
J-CLEMSON, -S. -O. Wl Most
nutrition textbook "ara writ
ten by Yankeei who don't know
the first Hno; about; what we
eat down" hei " ' Tne:v uth
Caroline, Nutrition Committee
was told yesterday.. t
Dr. Julian Price of Florence,
editor of the South - Carolina
Medical Journal, declared: '
. "You won't find anything
about pot likker or cornbread
or sweet potatoes in those
books, but we eat 'em and
they've got to be considered
in our nutritional problems." ,
Shah Heads
Toward Home
ROME m Triumphantly smil
ing Mohammed Reza v panievi,
Shah of Iran, flew homeward to
day for the royal welcome in the
explosive country be fled five days
?-.:. ... . . -Il .
Awaiting mm in w w w ;
pets, caviar and oil were a new
Premier loyal to the monarchy,
Jubilant crowds cheering their 33-mar-ald
ruler and a pajama-clad
prisoner under heavy guard shaky
old ex-Premier Mohammed Mosa
degh. Rome s Iranian coiony ana iesa
tinn. which turned Its back on the
Shah's arrival as a fugitive Mon
day with ao-year-old Queen Soraya,
came out' in force to cheer his
departure by plane eany toaay.:
.- -
Jap Premier Speeds
Up Road Project i
TOKYO Wl Prime Minister
Shlgeru Yoshida fretted and fumed
on the way to Hakone summer
resort last weekend while his car
was delayed 16 minutes at a one
way detour,
Back In Tokyo, Yoshida sum
moned the Construction Ministry.
He was told the project, started
In June, 1952, would be finished
by December.
now il l sept. l.
PFC KOHLER DUE :
PFO Robert D. Kohler, 1607 Sum
mers Lane, is among 2000 Marines
aboard the transport oeneral Nei
son M. Walker en route to San
Francisco. According to an Associ
ated Press dispatch, the. transport
is scheduled to reach port Sunday.
wounded. Another, struck by a
ricocheting bullet which passed
through his head right behind his
eyes, lay on the ground screaming.
Doctors said later he would be
forever sightless.
The other two were not wounded
seriously.
Tne Inmate who was killed was
Identified as Walter Thomas Ly
shall, 21, serving three years from
King County for auto theft. He had
been In the reformatory only a
few months.
Another wounded prisoner, who
was ' not immediately identified,
was reported in "very poor" con
dition. One wounded Inmate wag iden
tified as Richard Brattaln of Seat
lit Interior
SAN FRANCESCO W Secretary
of the Interior McKay aald Friday .
that aa long aa ha heads the Inter
lor - Department it will actively,
plan and recommend construction
of reclamation projects, Including .
power facilities, 'whenever eco
nomically feasible and Justified."
The secretary, In a speech pre
pared for the Commonwealth Club, . ,
discussed the power policy an
nounced this week by his depart
ment. It emphasises the rote of
local private and public interest
In power development.
. McKay said;, "We wftt also plan
single purpose projects that are
necessary for the economy of any
part of the country and which can
not be provided by local, public
or private enterprise."
, He said the department bad al
ready been applying some of tha
principles embodied In the policy.
Recommendation of the ' Ark-'
ansas-Frylng Pan project in Colo
erado, a combination Irrigation, do
mestic water supply and nyoro
electric project, was cited as an
example of "our active Interest In
sound reclamation and power proj
ects." -. The secretary also saM
award of a 87,882,991 contract; lor
construction of- the Montlcello Dam.
to this state abows tne aeparcmem .
will continue to be interested ' "In v
a sound reclamation program and
the power- generating facilities
which are part at . that program."
. He then told of department op- .
position before the Federal. Power
Commission (FTC), under Demo
cratic admiiuWatlma, to proposals
by the Idaho Power Co. for ai de
velopment on the Bnaka River, by
the Virginia, Klectrlo and Power
Co, for one on the Roanoke River
In North Carolina and by Pacific
Oaa and Klectrlo Co. for one eat
the Kkigs River in California,
He said that in the Idaho Power
case, the company proposed a s
three - dam development between !
Idaho and Oregon, rnetedtof a,
project at Hells Canyon, where)
hts predecessors suggested that a
federal project be built. .
McKay said the department after
the nhanita In administration "aim-
ply withdrew itself aa a protestants
before tne rpu. . ' . .
- "We are continuing to lunusn
the FPO with every biVof lnforma.
tlon at our disposal," he con
turned. "We are witnnoraing noin
lng. We are simply recognislnfl;
the commission as legal eon
stituted 'Judge -to tha matter.? .
Noting tnavuie mm iwvt
ja now ta.tropurtsk.Mcm,an-
jnenteo: ,--''---' -
"Look what happens when one
department of the government In
tervenes. The case drags out in
court which must have months or
years to consider the testlminy. In
the meantime the area goes with
out vitally needed eleotrlo power."
Tulelake Barley
Pokey Despite i
Watchful Wishing
TULELAKE Just a trickle i or .
grain Is arriving at elevators in
this area a farmers are anxious
Iv watchinir the weather and wish
ing the barley crop would ripen
faster. -
All irrigated barley appeara to
be past the stage where a frost
would damage it to the extent
that it would not be accepted aa
malting barley. However It ap
pears that combining win not get
underway in full swing before
Sept. 1. ' "
. Rumors that one company- was
offering 82.76 CWT for top grade
Hannchen, could not be verilied
this morning. Farmers appeared
to be reluctant to contract their
crop at this price. , - ,
Hai'f Threshes
Ra'inus Barley.'
Exacts High Fee
MALIN Combining of a barley
field on the. Jerrv Rajnus ranch ,
northeast of here discloses that the .
bail storm which swept across tne
lower end of the Klamath Basin
about two weeks ago did a first
class Job of threshing this piece ot
grain. . .
Two socks or oariey per aero
was th. best the combine could
produce .from the devastated field,
which would normally have turned
out thirty or more sacks per acre.
The storm traveling in a north
easterly direotlon dropped some'
hailstones as it passed over .the
Tulelake area, started hailing har
der as It passed over Malin, and
seemed to dump Its load as It
approached the footnuis or sryam
Mountain.
Other .farmers nearby also re
ported some crop damage from
the freak storm.
Hail Insurance was carried on his
barley crop, Rajnus said. - i ,
tle, serving time for burglar'. He
was reported to have suifered a
creased scalp from a bullet ;
Then, the law officers started
moving Into the cell block and
onto the grounds. They were greet
ed with a barrage of debris and
curses. But this subsided quickly.
The inmates on . the grounds
huddled in circles as midnight
came, stark figures under the
floodlights. They started bonfires
to ward off the night chill, using
wood which littered the grounds
from one end to another, ; -"We're
in no hurry to get Ihem
Into cells." the warden aald, "We
titt,. nl.nt.tf nt time.'
t