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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (May 7, 1954)
FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1UM IIKflALI) AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON PAGE SEVEN this 'n that-' m iUUUWWJ 11(1 By RUTH KING 'wry ' W.. i1- Prison Escape Try Prevented' HAOER8TOWN. Md. OP-SfVdl Inmsles of the Maryland Slnlo Re lormtlorjr (or Mules nurwd buck- nhot wound! lodny while otllcitls probed (heir nttcmpted cwape from Uio Intlltutlon, where (wo riot occurred lt fall, Tlie keven wera imonir 10 youn prlnonern who KAlcd 30-foot atcel wire fence aurroundlnR n recre- "TAKE A DEEP IREATHI H-O-L-D IT LET IT O-U-T The calm voice of Mrgr Louci Mamfiald, X ray technician for Dr. Jamat Hilton, hat toothed the narvei of mora patianti on the X ray labia than tha can ihalce a stick at, Sinca tha day after Paarl Harbor, whan lha bagan studying her profeiiion, Margaret Mansfield has devoted much of her time to siting up broken bones, queer looking "innerds" and foreign 'objects that find their way down tha "human hatch". She is one of four registered X ray technicians In Klamath Falls and is newly elected editor-in-chief of the state X ray publication, "Skiagram", that goes every other month to all technicians in the business In Oregon and to tha editors of similar publications in the 48 states and the territories. It carries "heavy" news and sqibs in lighter vein and the job of editing the assembled material is going to keep Margaret Mansfield burning the midnight oil. She studied at Morningside College, Sioux City, took her graduate work at Ames, in Iowa, lator studied X ray at the Oregon Medical School, Portland, and worked shifts at Emanuel and Coffey Memorial Hospitals while going to school. During the war years she worked night shift in the shipyards. Ten years ago she came to the office of Dr. Hilton, In her earlier life, she lived on a farm In South Dakota, Introduced the first complete soil conservation program in her part of the state and helped launch the Rural Electrification Administration work in South Dakota. Hunting seasons here in past years, have found her and her family up to their ears in duck and goose foathers, operating a sideline commercial waterfowl plucking business. The birds are dry picked and rolled in paraffin to get the down, washed and hung on a clothes line to dry. Customers have returned year after year, Margaret Mansfield is an enthusiastic gardener, loves to tramp the forest In search of rocks and moss and odd bits of wood, she is an. avid camere fan, "puts up" excess food from TvoS.F; Kidnapers Face Death After Jury Verdict the gardon and fruit orchards, is a Scotch Pretbyterian Louise, a son, Joe, both students at KUHS. You'll meat her the next time you break a toe bone, swallow a have an unexplained ache in your anatomy. has a husband Tom, a daughter, sewing machine DooDin or Hew H-Bomb YearlY ?aY Guarantee Main Test Reported TOKYO . Wi Two Japanei nrlentlnts tin Id today the United Stilton apparently exploded a fourth hydroKcn bomb at bikwi belwcrn April 25 and SI. They wld their entlmale was based on Oelger counter testa of rain which fell this week on widely aeparnted area of Japan. Prof. YnMishl N I a h I w a k 1 of Onakn Medical University Mid rain which fell In Osaka, about 300 miles soulhwcat of Tokyo, yester day was many times more radio active than rain tested Monday. Nbhlwakl said there was a simi lar sharp Increase tn the radio activity of rain 12 days after the second H-bomb test March 26 and 12 days after the Ihlrd test April 6. Dr. Hironobu Watanabe of Nl- Itnta University anld rain which fell In Nllgata, about 100 miles north of Tokyo, Monday and Tues day ahowed a sharp Increase In radioactivity. Watannbe'a theory la that It takes about a week for atomic particles to reach Nllnala. rontihly 2.S00 miles northwest of Bikini. 'Therefore the new radioactivity Is helleved to have been caused hy a fourth H-bomb test that took nlncc in Btklnl on April 28 or 27," he said. The scientists cald the rain was not dangerously radioactive. allon yard last night only to bo stopped by a spray of buck: hot from seven guards. Supt. Clement J. Terlmg said turned management of Benjamin, Father, Son Draw Social Benefits OAKLAND, Calif. Iffl A father and son began drawing federal old ago aoclal security benetlts simui taneously yesterday. Thev are Benjamin Adams, M, of Oakland, and his son William, 09. of Walnut Creek. Calif. i On May i they retired and l.. j . . k Aoums ana oans uvci w mnu- u,o.e n am.crra ......or .,cs.. mcinocra of the family. wounds. Three oUiers escaped m-IEncn mi, he woua receive the Jury. ' I maximum WS month. Objective Of Steelworkers PITTSUUROK tft-li guaranteed i annual wage long one of labor's principal alms and an unspecified pay Increase keynote 1954 contract I objectives of the powerful CIO i United Steelworkers. The union outlined Its program for negotiations with the basic steel Industry, due to start later this month, as the 170-rrxmber U8W wage policy committee opened a two-day conference yes terday to draft final bargaining plins. A four-point program embodying demands for the guaranteed an nual -vage and a pay boost was adopted by the union's 30-man ex ecutive board and presented to the policy committee. Final approval Is seen only as a formality. Rounding out the program are demands for Improved Insurance and pension plans and better con tract terms on such Items as seniority, holidays, vacations, over time, severance pay and local working conditions. David J. McDonald, USW pro Idem, said the policy committee took up Ute wage and pension-in surance points at the first day's scsuiou. He declined to state what wage hike the union wants for its 600,000 members In basic steel now earn ing an avcrago of 12.14 to $2.24 an nour. ' On the guaranteed annual wage, ' McDonald said the proposal to be I presented at the bargaining table j will "likely follow the general I trend of a plan which the union 1 has been discussing." He said the plan calls for forma Uon of a supplemental benefit in-1 come to be paid to unemployed workers out of a trust fund. He didn't go Into details. The USW will begin contract negotiations with U.S. Steel Corp. I on May 18. U. 8. Steel, No. 1 steel producer in the country, gen erally sets the contract pattern for the Industry. Talks are expected to be sched uled soon with other basic pro ducers such as Bethlehem Steel Corp., Jones b Laughlln Steel Corp. and Republic Steel Corp. Contracts expire June 30. . Agreements worked out with the baclc producers probably will form the basis for negotiations later this year with the fabricating and al lied Industries which employ an additional 600,000 USW members. Japan To Get U. S. Destroyers TOKYO VP) Japan expects to get four destroyers from the United States under a proposed lend-lease agreement being ne gotiated under the recently ap proved mutual security pact. National Safety Director Toku taro Klmura told a Diet commit tee Japan wants 17 warships from tne united States and hopes to get agreement on the four destroy ers and a small minesweeper by toe end of next week. BAN FRANCISCO UV-Two for mer private detectives condemned to death for a kidnaping In which the victim was rescued and no ransom was paid faced the San Quentln gaa chamber with radical ly different attitudes today. Dapper, 62-year-old Harold Jack son and mild Joseph Lear, 43, were convicted late yesterday under California's Little Lindbergh Law of kidnaping Leonard Mosko vltz, 36, a real estate broker. Jan. 16. They demanded $500,000 ran som; later (300,000. The Jury of six men and six women found that Moskovltz had suffered bodily barm In being chained and threatened with knife before he was rescued by police after 61 hours In captivity. The jurors automatically con. demned the two to death by not recommending leniency. The verdict didn't seem to bother Jackson, a onetime sailor and an all-time adventurer who operated a wartime private guard agency on the San Francisco waterfront, Brought Into court in handcuffs to hear the verdict late in the 33rd trial day. the convicted mas termind of the MoskovlU kidnap ing cracked to his lawyer: "Cheer up, pal; the worst Is yet to come. Here's where we get that old rocking chair." As the verdict was read, pointed ly omitting any leniency recom mendation which could have re suited In life Imprisonment, Jackson grinned and circled his right forefinger and thumb In a symbol of triumph. , "Well, well, old rocking chair's got me," he said. Then be laughed aloud at Lear, wliose face was strained and taunt. When an Identical guilty verdict was read for Lear, Lear broke Into tears. His pretty 23-year-old wife Betty, who eat In the first row with his mother and father, Mr. and Mrs. James Lear of Havre, Mont., O'HAIR'S Memorial Chapel FUNERAL SERVICES FOR ALL INCOMES NON-DENOMINATIONAL SERVING ALL RELIGIONS Klamath Falls 14S tared for a moment, then plunged her face into her hand), Bath women sobbed. ' Superior Judge Twain Mlchelaen said he would hear arguments Tueaday for a new trial before pronouncing sentence. If a new trial U denied, defense attorneys aald they would appeal. California law provides for an auto matic review by the State Supreme Court of all death sentences. Moskovltz disappeared Jan. 16 on the way to a business appoint ment. He testified that Jackson, on pretext of wanting to buy a home, had lured him to a rented house, where he was overpowered and imprisoned. On Jan. 19, alert police noticed a man making a telephone call for ransom, it turned out from a sidewalk booth. The telephoner was Lear, who led police to the kidnap house, where Moskovltz was freed. Lear testified he was hired by Jackson as a private detective: that when he learned he was in volved In a kidnaping he was alrald to break away because he feared for his life and his family's. Jackson pleaded in court that It was all a hoax; that Moskovltz wanted to extract money from his father. Said Moskovltz of the death verdict: It was perfectly Just. . . '. They are getting what they deserve. LOSE UGLY FAT IN TEN BAYS OR MONEY BACK If yeu arc ovtrwsijM, hen is the first really thrilling nnrs to come ilong in yeics. A new I convenient way to ftt rid of extra pounds easier than ever, so you can be as i!m and trim as you want This new product called 0IATRON curbs both hunger t appetite. No drugs, no diet, no tieicise. Absolutely harm less. 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You'll never be satisfied until you do! COLUMBIAN OPTICAL CO. 730 Main St. Klamath Falls, Ore. Dr. Omar J. Nelas and Dr. Scett Wheetlev DESERVES NOMINATION Paul L. Patterson became governor of Oregon virtually in an emergency. President-elect Eisen hower had tapped Governor Douglas McKay to be secretary of the interior. This on the eve of the start of the 1953 legislative session. Patterson almost overnight took the governor's seat and had to prepare his address to the legisla ture. Calm and unruffled, he presented a clear and concise program. He could not have done so unless he had been a competent member of the state senate. As president of that body he had succeeded McKay. Patterson's contacts with the legislature were chiefly satisfacory to that body. There was no bickering and petty squabbling. There was mutual trust and confidence. Patterson's vetoes were few and well substantiated. For nearly 18 months he has conducted the duties of the governor's office with efficiency and dispatch. His appointments have been prompt and high grade. He has handled public matters without bombast or noisy statements. He has cooperated with neighboring governors with dignity and har mony. His office has made frank statements to the public on questions of voter interest. No citizen has complained that the governor is Inaccessible. Patterson has moved over the state to acquaint himself with local problems callinf for state solu tion. The Republican party primary on May 21 finds Governor Patterson, asking reelection, opposed by Secretary of State Earl Newbry, with two years yet to run on his current second term Democrats can sit on the sidelines and watch the Republican primary contest. Their man, former Mayor Joseph K. Carson of Portland, is unopposed for the Democratic nomination. But registered Republican voters will have to ask themselves this question seriously: Will their November ticket be stronger if headed by Patterson, tried and proved in office, or by Newbry, whose con- ' duct of the secretary of state's office has been marked by some unsatisfactory ap- : pointments and decisions and whose itch for public preferment has often shown his judgment faulty? In our opinion the Republican voters will north ' inate Patterson, a man who has given the state good government and also proved a stout pillar in his party without sacrifice of principles or the best interests of all the citizens of Oregon. Tom Humph rey, Oregon Journal COME PATTERSON FOR GOVERNOR RALLY ' SEE YOURSELF ON TELEVISION PHIL HITCHCOCK . .. STATE SENATOR ED GEARY 1 STATE REPRESENTATIVE THEY PREFER PAUL PATTERSON FOR GOVERNOR WHY? SATURDAY, MAY 8, 1954 7:30 P.M. V: FAIRGROUNDS AUDITORIUM SOUTH SIXTH ST. ' Paid tor by Patterson for Governor Comm.