PAGE EIGHT HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON MONDAY. FEBRUARY 8, 1954 FBI Seeking Car Snatcher WASHINGTON Wl A 32-year eld ex-convict reputed to have be come a kingpin In the car theft racket Monday was luted by uie FBI among Its 10 most wanted fugitives. He is Nelson Robert Duncan, native of Chattanooga, Term. The FBI said Duncan, many limes in and out of prlran on rob bery and burglary charges, naa more recently recruited a car theft gang built around his broth era and varied assortment of un rirwnrri rogues who had expand ed their operations from the Southeastern states Into tne popu loim Midwest. The FBI said it Is possible that Duncan, customarily n e a v 1 1 y armed, may be traveling at this time with his wife ana inree smaii children. Of small build. Duncan has red dish brown hair and brown eyes, With a mole on his Ngni cnees Ha went on the "Most Wanted" list as a replacement for Alex Bryant, convicted armed robber arrested to Los Angeles Jan. 26 Spuds Back On Lunch List WASHINGTON I Potatoes once again are qualified for the government's school lunch pro gram under an amenamenv io ine cotton ana wneai acreage auui menu bill Just signed by Presl' dent Elsenhower. When Congress in 1950 took price supports away from pota toes, its action also was construed to mean that potatoes wouldn't be eligible for the lunch program. The Senate held that this was not Intended and when the acre age allotments bill came up. Sen. Welker (R-Idaho) added an amendment to put potatoes back Into the school lunch and similar programs carried out from tariff collections on Imports. Nation Enjoys Mild Monday ; By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Mondt-y was mild, for winter, almost everywhere in the nation. The extremes In the early morn ing were Caribou, Maine, with nine above, and Southern Cali fornia, with temperatures Tanging around Ban Diego's 69. Between, the weather was pretty much what you's expect for this time of the year, or better. Freez ing temperatures prevailed from the central Mississippi Valley northward and eastward to the Atlantic Coast. But California was due for lis ninth consecutive day of a warm spell that brought a record Feb. 7 high of 88 degrees at San Diego Sunday. Southern California beaches were crowded Sunday as Los Angeles, too, had 88 degrees. Light snow fell In parts of Mich- Igan. The South Atlantic Coast from Tampa, Fla., to Savannah, Oa., had light Tain. Some freezing drizzle was reported In the West ern plateau section. Elsewhere skies mostly were clear. Search Continues For Alabama Cons BAY 'mINETTE, Ala. 11 Hun ger forced the remaining three un captured Atmore Prison escapees out in the open last night but their brief appearance only brought nr,r ault and no food. The trio apparently desperately hungry, entered the cabin of an aged Negro and demanded food at knifepoint. But the Negro fled, said High way Patrol Lt. W. L. Whltten, and his story pinpointed the search to a backwoods area seven miles north of here. The deadly hunt now Is in Us fourth day. The three Ned Captnelll, Adrian McCrandell and James Norton Ouy are the only ones still nt large of nine long-termers who slipped away under Atmore Prison Thursday night through an electric al tunnel. Brovnell Airs Views On TV Show WASHINGTON OB-Alty. Gen. Brownell says he raised the con troversial issue of Harry Dexter white's 1948 rjromotioo shortly after an FBI espionage report naming White was found last fall among some iv.mi mispiaceu uuv-uments. We found a great many evi dences of slipshod work when we came in," Brownell said on a CBS television interview yesterday. He said the report on White had evi dently been "shoved In a drawer" without evaluation. In a Nov. 6 speech, Brownell aid former President Truman promoted White early In 1948 In the face of an FBI report indicat ing that he was under investiga tion as a Russian spy. Trumon replied that he allowed White'a promotion from the Treasury to the International Monetary Fund to go thrown, so as not to Jeopardize the FBI in its investigation. FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover testified the promotion made it more diffi cult to keep a watch on White. white, shortly before his death in 19'8, vigorously denied being a Communist or a spy. Brownell was asked yesterday why he chose the time and occa sion of a Chicago luncheon to dis cuss the case. He indicated he had learned of the 1945 FBI report only a short while before and said, "I thouctht of the quickest way I could to tell this storv to the American people." Finding of the 20,000 "missing" documents was discussed also at 'House appropriations hearings, made public yesterday, on the Justice Department's budget for the next fiscal year. Asst. Atty. Gen. Warren Olaey III, testifying Dec. 8, said the department has undertaken a re View of allegations against all the Individuals named in the 1945 FBI report which mentioned White. He did not name any. He said there were "amazing" results from a housecleaning of Criminal Division files last Sep tember. None, or at least most, of the material had ever been tu he department's record branch for recording. Many unanswered let ters were found, some of them, dating back 15 years . . . Among otner tnings found was the FBI report on Soviet espion age . . . We still do not know where lt came from. It was some where' in this mass of papers." Mine Union Meet Slated BUTTE, Monl. Ml Negotiations for a consent election between warring factions of the Butte min ers' union No.l will open Thursday under a National Labor Relations Board field examiner. Examiner Howard Hilbun Is ex pected here to seek a settlement of the controversy between mem bers of the International union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers and a United Steel Workers of America (CIO) group, which bolted Mine-Mill Dec. 27. Ernest Salvas. Butte administra tor for Mine-Mill, said 100 miners attended a Mine-Mill meeting Sun day and voted to circulate petitions urging an Immediate NLRB elec tion. The steel workers' group with drew from the IUMM&SW in pro test at what it described as Com munistic leanings in Mine - Mill leadership. POY's Leave For India INCHON, Korea Ifl Eighty eight prisoners who asked to go to neutral countries and some 1,300 Indian troops Monday moved under heavy protective guard from Korea's neutral zone to a ship leaving Tuesday for India. Some SO south Koreans made an unsuccessful last-minute plea at the Inchon docks for the 88 un repatriated Korean and Chinese POWs to change their decision to go to neutral countries. As the POWs boarded landing craft head ed for the transport Asturlas, the Koreans .sang, chanted and made speeches over a loudspeaker. The prisoners, originally cap tured by the Allies, refused to re turn to North Korea and Red China. Under terms of the armi stice thev chose neutral countries over South Korea or Nationalist China, where some 22,000 fellow POWs have been released. Two chose Communist Poland or Czechoslovakia. : ' ' The POWs will stay In ' India pending arrangements to get them Into the countries of their choice. Except for the loudspeaker bar rage at Inchon docks, the Indians and POWs moved uneventfully by train from the Panmunjom area. The South Korean government previously had threatened to shoot Indian troops setting foot on South Korea soil, but a few days ago President Syngman Rhee approved moving about 5.000 Indian troops to Inchon by train. American troops and ROK police guarded the train route all the way. Some Indians will stay at Pan munjom until Feb. 21, when the Neutral Repatriation Commission goes out of business. Seeing Eye Dog Protects Mistress PORTLAND 11 A seeing-eye dog, determined to protect its blind mistress and not understanding what was going on, bit a deacon on the leg during a communion service Sunday. Deacon Mark R. Mayo said the dog attacked him as he approached the girl with communion at the Mallory Avenue Christian Church. The wound was not serious. Drought Drys Up Kansas, Missouri KANSAS CITY Wl Many con munities In Missouri and Kansas, j the states wracked only three! years ago by devastating floods, are faced with a very different crisis today; they're drying up. A merciless drought that lasted j through the summer still shows no : sign of abating. It's no longer Just the preoccupation oi worried farm ers, but has moved, quietly, into the cities and towns. The water shortage varies In j acuteness, depending on locality, ; but there are communities which 1 have little over a month's supply! left. I At least one, in fact, has Tun dry Olathe, Kan., 20 miles south-1 west of Kansas City. The city's supply Is due to be depicted today, : with the level of the reservoir! dropping below the intake pipe. Trucks will haul water from a ! nearby lake while this source holds out. then arrangements are to be made for hauling lt from Kansas City. Dr. Warren A. Kramer, chief of water supplies for the Missouri ; Health Division, said many towns! already have reached the crisis stage, and there's no Immediate rcliel in sight. For Kansas, too. the outlook is. glum. A. D. Robb of the U.S. Weather Bureau in Topoka. Kan.. ! described the general situation as "serious." explaining: "Good, gen eral rains would be the only solu tion. But our long-range forecast doesn't indicate them." Water for car washing and other nonessential use has been banned in some areas. In Paola. Kan., pastors are offer ing prayers for rain at Sunday; services. Daily prayers for rain j are being said at Ursuline College. - Meantime, the town's water rate has doubled, and officials say an other hike is inevitable if Paola as is likely will be forced to im port water soon from nearby Kan sas City. ! Big l.OOO-gallon water trucks are hauling supplies to farm lands and thirsty cities throughout northern and central Missouri end eastern Kansas. Some 20 hauling companies are engaged in the water trade in Jefferson City, Mo., alone. The state capital lies on the Missouri River, so its own supply is ample, and water, is being shipped out in a 60-mile radius. Kansas City likewise has no problem, being on the Missouri River, but south of the city, in the La Cygne, Kan., area, many smaller towns have only six-week reserves left, Springfield, Mo., has taken to rain, cloud seeding to produce without results to date. At Edlna, Mo., the Army recent ly had to step to and build an emergency pipeline to a nearby lake to replenish the community s reservoir which since then has run perilously low once more. Lamar, Mo., Is precariously get. ting by on a well formerly supply, ing an ice plant. j -RaWeM.""' 8T.-.JJ"1 IW7aV I f0RCHILOMNjDOeiO Wedgewood ' Clothes Saver DRYER Completely Automatic WITH GAS I 3 Big Reasons Why You Should Biiy Wedgewood . . . It's FAST! . . . ECONOMICAL! 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