PAGE THREE HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON K i n Eyed As Possible Any lie lbleswm Hat rosy - For S 1 siites will Mn in"1 .h. needs of all t fuw rotP can be ys Bolt jtana I . J. m Joe Mason, F.,,' roup which r workers, fiZi 7 msrch on the H pcuiwfc" ' di on to hall came ZLn Local No.l in- !T.i.rfii temporary a" h- local's I CIO MWH foM B. J. Bey said Ljoitolence. Cm termed the march a K . .In which a minor !lT .mim incensed ny KjanmilsUorflinated lead- JKne-mu wcbb"? -...-. .minn hall." Uj .. tdmlnistrator 'or tiboa members chose Sf ton bolt to the CIO, E c.wic of Deer Lodge, ffw appointed to the s MtlHint. f beads about S.OOO min- fa, darting the union had Et leanings and was dom- kr mmmunisv umwoia. U in excelled In 1930 r- . . iCioootne same cubibg. 3 'in Base ? fissured I an rw hi The govern- (aji Spin would have to tn V. 8. bases on her lilt used In war, nut mat i Issued.... there would be Am iflAmnrifltinns snhcnnv pi iks information, at a iirrttif, along fWithi word W fill pa; less than the toirieinally planned of the lllritlsh bases to be used It Air Force. taj taken at the session litis made public Sunday, fir Force is seeking 4 lite to start work on four ( W near Madrid, se M tattoos) and Zaragoza. 'fl Indicated It planned to io million dollars on lUtiotis. cession the most fickle. It fluctuates anions nations. It changes from one veneration to the next. And it reacts sensitively 10 houu tunes and bad. . . During the depression of the 1930's people had too mucn trou ble feeding themselves to welcome any more mouths. Both the mar riage rate and the birth rate went down, as they usually do in Dad times. People got pretty gloomy about America's future and talked a lot about its being a mature economy with no more growth left in it. But the war and tne postwar boom sent the marriage and birth rates ' up again as wars and booms usually do. The population grew more rap idly than ever before. Good times brought earlier marriages and no ticeably larger families. People are talking now about an indefinite boom in the popula tion and therefore in the economy. Some even wender a little where all the food is to come from to feed so many people as most ex perts now predict for the America of the future. i- Only a few seem to wender, should there be another depres sion, would there be as many early marriages as now, as many babies, as great an urge to have large families to feed, clothe and educate. Population has its other phase, Science has steadily increased the term of life expectancy. The army of the aged is growing at the same impressive rate as tne scnooi oi young fry. Chances seem good that the number of the aged will continue to multiply. Business has a big stake in any ihanee in. the-population's gait. Many businesses will be affected it the population .multiplies at the same 'astounding 'rate as now, or if it slows down again, or if it results in bigger proportions of old people and children. Suit Filed In Shooting COQUHAE Ml A suit has been filed in circuit' court here asking $15,000 damage from Rippers Cafe of North Bend and tne weyernaeu- ser Steamship Co, Billie Berge asks that amount for the estate of the late Harold Edison Carter who was one of two nersons shot and killed March 28, 1953, by another customer in the cafe. Florencio Martes Fuertes. Miss Berge, , administrator for Carter's estate, contends in the suit that Weyerhaeuser was negli gent in employing Fuertes on a shin which was docked nearby and that the cate was negligent in ndmittintr him. Fuertes is serving a life term in the state penitentiary on a second degree murder conviction, u, - I """"" y l"' ix EAGER STUDENTS AT FAIRVIEW school helped with the big job of moving books and equipment from old part of building to the new when the new addition was opened and seen for the first time last week. Here, arms loaded, are (1 to r)' Kelita Layman, Karen Hoyt, Douglas James and Linda Nidever, in, the first grade room taught by Mrs. Joe (Mae) La Clair. ;' , . . ... ' :' ' - ' ' Army To End Jim Crow Rule WASHINGTON . (fl : Sept. 1, 1655 is the date for ending segre gation of white- and Negro chil dren in schools on U.S. military posts, under a sew plan of the Defense Department. . Asst. Secretary of Defense John B. Hannah said Sunday the de tails had been worked out with the. Health, Education and Wel fare Department, which will ask Congress for the necessary funds. A key provision, he said is for operation of schools by the Wel fare Department in those places in the south and southwest ''where there, are -state prohibitions against operating non-segregated schools." The .U. S. Office of Education. part of the Welfare Department, would undertake in such places to operate schools independent of the state school systems, Hannah said. Ordinarily, . state systems have supervision over the schools ou posts. Senate Plans V Quake Rocks ft islands PS, Greece m The of Kefallinia, Za- unaca where 1,000 We killed in riPVActntincr lul Atumst ST Dew tremnre Hn vnnva N been reported lost, p. FQMes on Saturday de- P some buildings and set r wtuch blocked roads. "S! neiore the quakes Into the nomilntinn. i- ..... ' : jnmaoaea to the hard- Se in stricken .rod. PJqmke last August 'de- " per rani of the three "dings, leavlng bout "nous tameless. . Rords Show V Tre- J P -Bustoess slowed I' hrtliM Ha raon(n l.Zr!5ermltsl"'bank S??e reported at ta i , was 2 " last month nh L. ..7." "", j.vi ounains oermltii ba '::,""0-S306,'?55 .:. " " S1U.U20 ul January, Here's How Ore. Solons Voted: WASHINGTON Ul How Oregon members of Congress were recorded as voting on recent rollcalls: Senate On confirmation, 58-25, of nomi nation of Robert E. Lee of District of Columbia to be a member of the communications commission: For Cordon .(B); Against Morse (Ind). On ratification, 81-6, of mutual defense treaty between the United States and Korea: For Cordon, Morse. House On passage, 323-27, -of bill pro- vidlne $741,648,788 to write off Commodity Credit Corp.'s losses lor the fiscal year: For Angell, Coon, Ellsworth, Norblad (all R). Water Committee Plans Meetings PORTLAND Wl The State Water Resources Committee will begin a series of meetings Feb. 15 to draw up a long-range water development program for Oregon. '. . .'. Lyle Ff'Watts is-chairman of the committee which r has scheduled these meetings:. Arlington Feb. 16 La Grande Feb. 16: Ontario Feb. 17; Burns, Feb. 18; Redmond, Feb, 19; Klamath Falia March 1; Med' ford. March 2: Roseburg, March 3; Coos Bay, March 4; Tillamook, MarCh 5. : ,.,! Probe Of Navy files Train Plunges Into Deschutes McKayBacks Deschutes Reservoir WASHINGTON Wi Secretary ot the Interior McKay Monday annroved a report proposing con struction of the HaystacE equanza tion reservoir, designed to provide a more stable water supply lor uie north unit of Deschutes irrigation nroiect in Central Oregon. . The secretary has iorwaraea uie officials of the state and federal Reclamation Bureau's report to agencies concerned for their' com ments before submitting it to the Budget Bureau for clearance. This procedure is necessary before con gressional authorization can ' oe sought. Reclamation commissioner w. a, Dexheimer said the proposed reser voir would increase agricultural production on 60,000 acres served by the north unit of the Irrigation protect by increasing the water supply by an average of more than 8,000 acre feet a year. Tne reservoir would be created in Haystack Draw, southwest of Culver, by construction of an earth ana rock-l ill dam.- It would cost an estimated $1,600,000. At present. storage lor tne north unit lands is in wickiup Reservoir, more than 100 miles from the m-oJect lands. Dexheimer raid the water Users had indicated willingness to repay the cost by including the amount in an amendatory repayment con tract wnicn, already has beerr an. proved by Assistant Secretary Fred u. nanaam. since it would Increase tne repayment period from 40 years to about 78 years, it would nave to be approved by Congress. Clark Gable Announces End of Long Contract WASHINGTON Wl The senate Internal security subcommittee re portedly plans to Question an ad miral behind -closed doors witnm the next few days, possibly Tues day, about any wartime destruc tion of Navy files on communists. This was learned Monday from subcommittee sources who de clined to identify the officer: ex pected to be the first of a number ot admirals caned in an investiga tion announced by Chairman Jen ner (R.-Ind) last week. 1 Jetmer has quoted Adm. Ernest J. King, : wartime chief of naval operations, as saying the White House issued an order in 1944 for the destruction of files on Com munist activities compiled by a Naval Intelligence unit in - New York. , . ; . r . . The senator said he recently learned of this from a high-ranking officer on the wartime staff of Adm. Chester Nimitz, then commander of 'thePaolfio fleet. The statement was reported, to have been-made. by King- in con versation ' wiIK Nimitz, 'hut both wartime commanders, now retired, said they- have do recollection of such a conversation. However, Jenner said his infor mation had been "completely veri fied." ' ,. ,.- , MAUPIN. Ore.' Wl The lead diesel locomotive of a northbound freight train plunged into the Des chutes River l .rnues souweast oi this north central Oregon town Just before midnight Sunday. The en gineer and firemen were feared dead. - v . . J. C. Moore, vice president of the Spokane, Portland and Seattle Railway Co.. which operated the train, said two other diesels and 17 of the 67 cars in the train were derailed. ' The engineer was E. H. Barton, Vancouver, wash. The fireman was E. v. Sutton. Wishram, wasn. . Moore said the lead engine hit a huge rock, . apparently from a slide caused by recent heavy snow. and left the track. The bodies had not been recovered at midmorning. Trains were sent from Klamath Falls and Bend to right the derailed units. . - The train was completing a rur. from California to Wishram. . Kimsey Quits Stote Labor Commission PORTLAND .Wl Wililam E Kimsey will not run for reelection as state labor commissioner this year. Kimsey, who has held the post three terms, also .announced he would remain In office until the close of- the present term next January. v. , There had been speculation that the 67-year-old Republican might resign soon. .-. .QUEEN TO AUSTRALIA ' . Aboard The Royal Liner Gothic m Britain's Queen- isuzaoetn tt, rn route to AustraUkJ Beotthe traditional uriusn ni viuc. Mnvwinv inr all hands on the New ZealafM cruiser BiacK rrinos ra snllce the mainbrace."- The ex tra tot of rum was the monarch's farewell to the cruiser which has escorted the royal liner Gothlo for the past seven weeks. - .;. SPAIN RIOTS LONDON 11 Moscow radio took notice Monday of recent ami British rioting in Spain and French Spanish troubles over Morocco. It said the - United States was. to blame for it all. Rosenberg Lawyer Dies In Bathtub ' NEW YORK Wl Emanuel H. Bloch. attorney for executed atom, spies Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, is dead. The body of . the 52-year-old Bloch was found Saturday partly slumped into a filled bathtub at his home. An .autopsy Sunday fixed a heart attack as the cause of death. Bloch represented the Rosen bergs through more than two years of bitter and complex legal efforts to save them. They were convicted of conspiring to give atomic secrets to Russia. oh 0i 'maw Klomoth Fall CLOSED MONDAYS Ben B, Lee, Mqr. OFFICES' OF : Neil Black, M.D! moved to new location ot ; 303 Pine Street on February 1 Some Telephone, 5564 OFFICES OF - John D. "ii i yiuaili Mved to new location ot 303 Pine Street on February" W Telephone, 4410 M.D. ,, KOREA , . SEOUL Wl Lee ciione Yung, a member ot the South Korean National Assembly, was killed Monday in a Jeep accident on an Icy road. - ... rganf far very , Complete Una of mufllcal Instruments kylt morf ) Tom McCall Needs Campaign Chief PORTLAND Wl Thomas Lawson McCall is looking for a manager to run his campaign for election to Congress this year. McCall, former administrative assistant to Gov. Douglas McKay, intends to oppose- Rep. Homer a Angell for the Republican nomina tion from the Multnomah County rilfrlr.t He said he already has' had' two campaign managers but both with drew after other Republicans elded that party support, should go to Angell.. , , four bildwin daald 1038 afaln Free Book on Arthritis And Rheumatism How re Avoid Crlppllnf DtformitiM An amazing newly enlarged 44 page book entitled 'Rheumatism" will be sent free to anyone who will write - for it. ' It reveals why drugs and medi cines give only temporary relief and fail to remove the causes of the trouble; explains a specialized non-surgical, non- medical treat ment which has proven successful for the past 35 years. You incur no obligation in send ing for this instructive book. It may be the means of saving you years of untold misery. Write to day to The Ball Clinic,- Dept. 2608, Excelsior Springs, Missouri. Adv. - Ik " . . ; 1 t v.Vi V y By BOB THOMAS I HOLLYWOOD I-The king Is back at MGM but not for long. Clark Gable announced today he will end his 23-year contract with the studio March 3. His" was probably the longest star contract in Hollywood history. There has been talk mat ne might sign on tor another term MGM has been urging nun to He nut an end to such specula tion. As ot March 3, I'm a free man," told me. "Twenty-three years one studio Is long enough for any man." . Game, wno is 63 toaay, was oaca the Culver City lot for the first time in 2A years. It nas been so long that he even forgot which was last picture here, in was Across the Wide Missouri.") Since then be has made "Never Let Me Go" in England, "Mogam- in Africa and "Betrayed" in Holland. He returned to the studio lor more scenes in "Betrayed" witn Lana Turner and Vic Mature. Look ing trim in an Englis(i officer's uniform, he appeared to have changed little. A trifle grayer at the temples, perhaps, but as crisp and dynamic as ever. He spent a large part of nis first morning at work renewing acquaintences; he asked for his same veteran crew on the picture, but he made it clear that senti ment wasn't going to keep him at the studio. His plans for tne future? "I have no plans," he replied, T suppose there have been pic tures offered to me, but I will not discuss them as long as I am under contract to the studio." There has been talk that he might do "Guys and Dolls," but be said that was news to him, Besides, that's a musical, lsn' He commented, indicating he wouldn't favor that. Gable said he found picture mak ing abroad very interesting and he may do more of ithe same. "But I have no plans," ne aoneo; He said he liked to travel at this point in his life and had just flown in from Arizona the night, before re porting to the studio. Rumors be was shopping for a ranoh in Arizona were unfounded, he said. 'It has always been a favorite vacation place for me between pic tures," he explained, "and I've always kept my eye out lor a goon place to buy. But I have no plans." After ne returned irom nis war time service in the Air Force, he was dissatisfied with the way his career was handled. Most of his films failed to have the impact ot bis prewar hits. His straight salary was heavily - taxed, and MGM m't ' approve of percentage deals. It Is probable that his future picture contracts will Include a share of the profits. . , i Gas Explosion Kills Four NEW HAVEN, Conn. Wl An underground gas leak set off an explosion which killed four per- . sons, leveled a three-family home and heavily damaged another early Sunday. Three other per sons, escaped amid flames, smoke and rubble. " All seven persons were asleep when the explosion literally tore the house apart at 6:60 a.m. The dead are Edward Brown, 60, and his wife, Esther, 47, Char les Epstein, 62, and his wife, Hose, 60. - , , 'Twenty minutes after the first blast a second, less severe ex-. plosion rocked the house next door but the family was out ot tne nome before It occurred. CONFERENCE MANILA (P) U.S. and Philip pine leaders Monday discussed the Island republic's role against com munism in southeast Asia. Army Secretary Stevens and Gen. John E. Hull, U.N. commander In Ko rea and U.S. Far East command er, conferred with President Ra mon Magsaysay. 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