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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 7, 1954)
RSDAY, JANUARY 7, 1954 HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON 'AGE SEVEN otive For Reuther Death !y Remains Mystery As ilice Clap Secrecy Lid tROIT V Police kept a tlglitl in the continuing lnveslige- el the Walter Reuther 1943 hination attempt. Leave tor the 6-year-old am shooting o( the CK leader remained an official secret furs after criminal charges inspiracy and assault were Sit against four men. positive signs were present of yimediate additional "breait" (low yesterday's sensation, (he same time police were re- watching all Detroit's points ry for the possible return to Mty ot me soje missing de bt Santo team) perrone. tone, 56, Sicilian-born big dealer in postwar scrap contracts who was once arm Forum" Wiram W I I 4KANE Wl Plans were an r wd Thursday for a Pacific (west "Farm Forum" here 45 and IS featuring talks by $3. Kline, president of the Scan Farm Bureau Federa ed Herschel Newsom, master National Grange. (Ill be sponsored by the Agrl- Committee of the Spokane tier of Commerce and will ttterned after similar forums as Moines and Aiinneapoiis. speakers will be on the two arogram expected to attract tthan 500 farmers in the west states. Question and an periods, panel discussions and J addresses are included. 4rles Carroll, president of the 4ber of Commerce, said it's first forum of its kind in the iio Northwest. fie Spokane Chamber has long )f -CBized an absurd gulf that we -etimes exists between city and ity." he said. "We are dedl- WamI in fftctprinor hotter unriar. nundlng, greater goodwill and mutual respect between farmers businessmen." y U general theme will be, '"The Warmer and the Future". There '111 be no registration fee. Other speakers announced Thurs day Include G. Burton Wood ot Corvallis, Ore., a member of the President's National Agricultural Advisory Commission; O. V. Wells of Washington, D. C, chief of marketing services for the U. S. Department of Agriculture, end) TTBiwr vjaivei ui vvu&nuiglDn, U. C, manager of the agricultural de partment oi tne u. s. chamber of Commerce. I A banquet will be held Feb. 15. 1 IS i4 s ; a -SO iCt i'e . i lit Atom X-Rays To Be Used , PORTLAND m X-rays or other rays obtainable as byproducts of atomic : bomb manufacture may revolutionize the food canning in dustry, an Oregon State College iapeciallst said Wednesday. Dr. Harold W. Schultz, who Heads the OSC food technology de partment, told of experiments now bains; conducted to find better ways of preserving food than the present out-sterilizing process. He . mentioned aseptic canning. (pressurized canning and electronic cooung in addition to the use of atomic byproducts in the cold .sterilization of food. He said In the experiments so far X-rays have proved successful in packing of fish, where neither flavor nor color is lost. He added that coffee extract lost color, but retained flavor. Prunes kept flavor and akin color, but the, fruit flesh ww Bleached, Schultz said. Ha.SDOke at the final the three-day meeting of the North- wavt.. manners Assn. i Vast Farm Loans l.i State 399 SALEM U) The State Veterans D artment made 399 farm and n 4 loans to veterans in Decem- iw, totaling $2,603,800. It as the biggest month in the w year history of the program, , during 1953, 1831 veterans bor. rowad $10,364,400, also a new rec. or. The previous record was 7,. 00o In 1950. i loo average loan since the pro- Z Bulrlel was 14,492, while the Nr month was 19,531. On last July 21, the 16,000 loan eeuiar was boosted to 19,000 lor and $,000 for farms. Too denart.mnnf hn. inonarf o mMM - ' "I Wflllw. ' . I J.1" to 11,137 veterans, but more haa 22 millions has already been in principal and Interest. 'I r i " ' 1 i ' DEBATE 1 OKANE VPi nnnvnoa Tint. iTanny announced Thursdav its -nth annual Pacific Northwest II a finhnnl rinhata Imim.mm, mill f eid here Jan. 28-30 with 32 w wis from Washington, Idaho, ' Von and Montana pntfrprf f unptoms of Distress Arising from iTOMACH ULCERS veto EXCESS ACID HICK RELIEF OR NO COST r five million packigct of the Woxaju atmemt htvft ben told tor relwl of fcptnrmof diitmi anting from ttofnath I DtMfJtnil Utem due to littn Atr Dlintfwt, Iwr or UmI StwnMli, Intit. HcarttMirn, flMpfmnnt, h due to littn Acltl. Ask for " Wlllirt' which fully explains thit Ttmwk tKxoe treatment-fT) t McCONKET DRVOB PAY LESS DRUG COMPANY Rl'Bl'BBAM DRUO COMPASY .Waggoner drco compact i WOOD'g PRUQ STORE rlil: ''.IXCHRIIT HIALL ITORI convicted of labor racketeerinn. was reporiea irom one source lo be on his way here irom an disclosed cily. Tner'e was no oili-l ciat comirination, however. 1 Perrone, nearly Uliieraie as a witness before Senate crime ui vesligators two years Bgo, was one of a motley group named in Ule charges. Accused with him were his col- legc-eaucated son-in-law, Cart Ren da, 35, also a fortune hunter in scrap metal; feier Lombarao, 61, inmate of Leavenworth Penileu money, and Clarence Jacobs, 48, Tecunisen, Oni., television shop owner once involved Jn alleged alien smuggling. The formal cnarges said the four men and lour "john Does" uiu "feloniously, wickedly and with malice aforethought" try to kill Reuther at his home the night ul April 20, 1948. A shotgun charge was fired at Reuther through his Kitchen window. The next year a similar attempt was made on the life of Victor Reuther, a co-official in the CIO president's Auto Workers Union. Rewards totaling more than $200,000 are outstanding in both in cidents. Renda and Jacobs were ar raigned on the charges yesterday the lormer In Detroit and the latter in Windsor, Ont. Renda sup plied (25,000 bond 'for his release pending examination Jan. 14. Ja cobs was remanded to iail without bond. Meantime, Wayne County Prose cutor Gerald K. O'Brien said flat ly, "we definitely have a motive." But he refused to disclose it. O'Brien also said he did not know whether the Walter and Vic tor shootings had any connection. In the Essex County Court at Windsor a letter from O'Brien was read which said "Jacobs partici pated in the actual shooting (of Walter)." Later O'Brien said, however, that he did not mean that Jacobs was the trlggerman. He refused to say exactly what he did mean. Jacobs pleaded ignorance of any thing concerned with the case. He was arraigned on Canadian extra dition warrant. He will be Riven an international extradition near- ing Jan. 14, Poor Bobo, She's Broke LITTLE ROCK, Ark" (.fl The hand to moulb existence Mrs. Barbara Paul (Bobo) Rockefeller says she's living is said to amount to about (4,000 a mouth plus a rent-free Park Avenue penthouse. Winthrop Rockefeller's Little Rock attorney announced Wednes day that the multi-millionaire had given his estranged wife $'21,500 since June 1 and that the couple's 5-year-old son, WinUirop Paul, has received $750 a month irom a trust fund sn up for him. Edwin E. Dunaway. who has represented Rockefeller since he moved from New York to an elab orate Arkansas ranch last year, said Mrs. Rockefeller also has rent free use of the couple's swank New York penthouse. Savins he wanted to answer Mrs. Rockefeller's charge that she1 had been left virtually penniless, Dun away showed xeporrs canceled checks totaling ill, 500 which had oeen signed by him or Rockefeller and endorsed by Bobo or her banker since June 1. He added that she had been sent two other $5,000 checks which he would pro duce Inter. Hanford Talks Still Stalled SPOKANE HI Associated Gen eral Contractors and representa tives of striking APL carpenters and millwrights scneouiea a meet ing here Thursday in a new effort to end a walkout that has idled some T.70O workers on an expan sion project at the Hanford Atomic wonts. Thursday's meeting was between contractors for highways and other "heavy" jobs at Hanford and the union. A meeting with the AGC'a builder's chapter ended without progress Wednesday and another was set for Friday. The "heavy" contractors and the builders hold separate contracts with the 1,300 carpenters and mill wrights who are on strike. Charles Hively of the AGC'g builders' chapter said the union is standing by its original demand for an Increase from $2.65 to $2.80 an hour. Contractors have offered $2.67, he said. The walkout has idled 6,506 work ers in addition to the 1,200 involved in the strike. National Defense Plans Calls For More Atomic Weapons, Cut In Manpower Tax Aid To Be Given The Portland office of the in ternal revenue department of the U.S. Treasury department, an nounces dates upon which the serv ices of Internal Revenue Agents will be available in this area to assist individuals In making out federa income tax returns. For Klamath Falls, there will be free assistance available at Room 203 Post Office Building, Feb. 1 to 19, inclusive, except Saturdays; Feb. 23 to 26, inclusive and March 1 to 15, inclusive, At Chemult Post Office, Wednes day, Feb. 24; At Klamath Agency, Friday, March 6; , At Gilchrist Timber Company, Feb. SS and 28. Capital Journal Building Offered SALEM The Capital Journal Building hss been offered to the city of Salem for $15,000, publisher Bernard ' Malnwarlng announced Wednesday, The City Council indicated it likes the offer, saying it could be used either for a jail or for water department offices. The building is located across the alley from the City Hall. The council has asked the city attorney for an opinion as to wheth er water department funds could be used to buy the building. The Capital Journal moved Into the Statesman Building last week end when the two papers merged. By ELTOK C. FAY WASHINGTON (fl President! Eisenhower gave Congress Thurs day the new look at national de-; fense - a "great and growing num-. ber" of atomic weapons, expanding air fleets, diminishing manpower. His Stale of the Union message specifically mentioned a one billion, dollar boost in spending for con tinental defense against enemy air, attack. Here are considerations which Eisenhower said went Into a pro gram given the unanimous recom mendation of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and his own approval after assessment by the diplomatic-military policy making National Se curity Council; 1. "We take into lull account our great and growing number of nuclear weapons and the most ef fective means of using them against an aggressor if they are needed to preserve our freedom. Our defense will be stronger if, under appropriate security safe guards, we share with our Allies certain knowledge of the tactical use of our nuclear weapons. I urge Congress to provide the needed authority." 2. "New relationships between men and materials. . , permit economies in the use of men. . . the air power of our Navy and Air Force is receiving heavy em phasis." Here Elsenhower obviously had in mind the proposed gradual re duction of troop strength, which is expected to bring tne Army down from a present manpower level ot about 1 V: million to a force of about 1,128,000 by the summer of 1055. The build-up in air power is ex pected to Include expanding the Air Force to a strength of 116 1-3 wings during the year, to 127 wings two years hence and later to an eventual goal of 137 wings, Present strength of the Air Force is 110 wings, of which about 103 are at full effectiveness. 3. "Our armed forces must re gain maximum mobility of action. Our strategic reserves must be centrally placed and readily de- ployaole to meet sudden aggres sion against ourselves and our Allies." Eisenhower had presented this idea in announcing Deo. 26 that two Army divisions are to be with' drawn from the forces on the truce line In Korea. He sajd In that an- nouncement the two divisions wouid be returned to the United States. In the same announcement, : he emphasised the hlghiy mobile, feature of the armed forces. 4. "Pay aione wili not main to; the career service of our armed! forces the necessary numbers of long-term personnel. I strongly urge, therelore, a more generous' use of other benefits important to service morale. Among these are adequate living Quarters and an ily housing units, and medical care for dependents," 5. Ability to "convert- swiftly from partial to all-out mobiliza tion" of war goods production Is imperative. "For the first time, mobilization officials know what the requirements are for 1,000 ma jor items needed for military use" and thus the country "is at least to have an up-to-date mobilization base." 6. Continental defense measures "must and are being strength ened." In the next fiscal year the government will spend nearly a billion dollars more than in the present year. Eisenhower announced that "we shall maintain indefinitely our bases in Okinawa." Segments of the Japanese press have been urg ing recently that Okinawa, he re turned to Japan. The big Island, south of Japan and off the Communist-controlled Asian mainland, can provide the United States with a powerful forward bastion when eventually it gives un its bases provided in the Japanese home is lands under the peace treaty. Ff,ETED KHARTOUM, The Sudan. IP) Is mail El AzharJ, leader of a mi iority party favoring union with Egypt, has been elected the first prime minister of the Sudan. NO OBJECTION KARACHI, Pakistan ((PI Foreign Minister Zafrullah Khan said In an Interview Thursday Paklston would have no objection to the united States giving military aid to India, Karl J. Kujac Auto Paintinq Body Work MAUN 1 FOR SALE Washed Cull Potatoes On pavement and easily loaded from overhead hopper. GEORGE YOST Whse. Tulelake, Calif. FINED SEOUL tn Aklra Shlraishl, a Japanese newsreel camera man, was fined $55 in a Korean court Thursday for assaulting a Korean gate guard. Shlraishl is the first U.N.i war correspondent to stand trial in a Korean court. -SEE FIRST FEDERAL; MORE o DAYS I FOR YOUR SAVINGS - Ul 9 Ul Ul to TO EARN FROM THE 1st AT U i 2 iHawl AND WAN ASSOCIATION u. S LATEST S s DIVIDEND U PAID AT I 3 ) I ABMUAl Z RATE OF.. at et HAVE MORE IN '54 et POTEET'S MKT. Owned end Operated by Bob and "Peanuts" Poteet Swift's Sliced Bacon;:59e Good Leon BEEF ROASTS ,33e No Waste ' Skinless Wieners lb.39' Tender and Well-Trimmed RIB STEAK lb 35c DEPEND ON US FOR QUALITY SELECT PRODUCE Grapefruit 49 Arizona 8-lb. bog v Potatoes U.S. No. 1, 10-lb. bog 29c FANCY, SWEET SPUDS or YAMS 2 ... 19c CARROTS 2,b15c White Star Solid Pock TUNA 39c Sperry - GOLD MEDAL FLOUR io ib, 89c K1X 2ph.25c Kerr 20-oz. Jar JELLY 39c SKIPPY 14-oz. ior Peanut Butter 39c Pint Jor 35c Oleomargarine 59c 2 Ifci. ' Maxwell House COFFEE 5c off per pound Yellow . 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