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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 6, 1954)
TUESDAY, JULY fl, 1054 JIKRALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PAGE SEVEN Former Attorney General Criticized By House Group WASHINGTON M1A House J 11 dietary subcommittee, In a dls. nuted report, orlttcUetl Justice Tom 0. Clark today lor declining to leatlly alter ho Jellied the Bu preme Court but nutd It hud turned up no prool of wrongdoing by Clerk Villi' 1)0 wns attorney general, tin document drew liuiiindtitla fire from llrp. Byron O. Rogera initios members, who said Chair-ID-Colo), one ol Die live euboom nun Keating I It-NY I pulled a "sneak pluy" by hi) "unwarranted political release . . , ol Ilia pro poned libelous report." ' Rogera delcndcd C'lulk. en ap nolnloo ol luriner Prcaldrul Tru man, and ald moil ol the report liad not been approved in suucoiu inline or even considered by the committee's Inquiry laat year Into parent Judiciary group. The report, dealing with the sub committee's Inquiry lent year Into operatloua ol the Justice Depart- jnrnl, said mo invcauuaiora wore "troubled" bccauno aonie conlro veralul aotlona were traced back to Clark. Clark was alloruoy gen era! In 104MU beforo gulng 10 the Supremo Court. Keating aald In an accompanying alalement Ihitl Clark'a lallure to tastily was "unlortunale" because "we were deprived ol the benellt of any llvht which mluht have been ahed by a lormer member ol Pres ident Truman' Cabinet." - Clark could not Immediately be reached lor comment. But Rogers called Keatlnii'a atatement "com pletely baseless" and accused the New York Republican ol violating his own lair play code In making tnc report puunu. i The 153-page printed report con tained no signature ol subcom mittee members In Its major sec tions. At various points "Minority 'views" wero contained under Rott ers' name. Separate vlrwa were also entered by two congressmen who were membera ol the lull committee but not the subgroup. ' There waa no explanation why the report, transmitted to the par ent committee ll months aito, hat tiot yet been acted on theie. The report ssld Uie subcommit tee "found no conclusive evidence of wrongdoing by Justice Clark at any point during his service in the (Justice) department." Then It asld: "ll waa troubled, however, by repeated aiiggeallon In the testi mony of his associates and sub ordinates that some ol the actions tor which they have been criticised were traceable, ultimately, to him. "Ills testimony alone could have removed the last doubt that the responsibilities the aubcommlttee hss plsced on various department officials came to rest, In every case, on the right shoulders." The prlntrd report summarised eight dllferenl phei.ee of the sub committee's Investigation Includ ing an Invitation to Clark to appear briore ll and testify. It reproduced a letter Irom Keating sending the right reports on to Uie full Judici ary Committee laat Aug. a. An other letter by Rep. Chauncey W. need IR-III), chairman of Uie full j committee, aald that with Uie ex cetpion of one ol Uie eight portions, lli.i subcommittee report "iiaa not received Uie consideration of the committee , , , and does not neces sarily reflect the Judgment or con clusions of this committee." Rogers, In a separate statement, cited these circumstances and noted that one of the rulea which Keating propoposed and Uie sub committee adopted and which in reprinted In the document reads: "No report shall be made or re leased to Uie public without Uie approval ol a majority of the full Committee on the Judiciary. " Rogera also said he had evidence thai, there had been "flagrant In stances of suppression of vital doc uments and evidence during Uie course of Uila Investigation, either by Mr. Keating or by members of hla alall," and Uiat he would ask Uie lull committee to look Into Uie matter. Keating, in a statement accom panying Uie report, termed "untor lunate'1 the Clark episode, and he added: "There, is little hope that the tlustlon which remains untouched Uie Supreme Court Justice who refused to throw any light on his years ol service In the department will ever be revived or effective ly pursued." In a minority dissent printed with Uie report, Rogers comment ed: "Just what evidence Juitlce Clark was expected to give to this committee thai It did not already po'soas Is not made clear," There were many references to Clark In the group's hearings, and Keating wrote him June 14. 19(3, clung some of Uiem and luvlllng him to testify. The Justice replied two days later Uiat "Uie courts must be kepi free from public con troversy" and Uiat therefore he would not follow a "personal inclin ation" to tostlfy. He submitted a memo commenting on some of Uie cases Investigated. Among t h recommendations which Uie subcommittee msde: I. A revision of lawa dealing wlUi conflicts of interest, between service to Uie government and service to private Interests by pres ent or former government em ployes. 3. A re-examlnallon of brlbory lawa with relation to gifts between public officials and cltltena affect ed by Uie authority of such offi cials. 3. Recognition of Uie quasljudl clal nature of certain administra tive officers and the need for a high atandard of ethics because of Una situation. 4. Closer supervision of the of fices and activities of Uie U.S. at torneys. 6. Closer scrutiny of Uie profes. tlnnal qualifications of presidential appointees. 6. Oreater uniformity in Uie handling of federal grand Juries. VISIT LONDON Vfi Soviet Ambassa dor Jacob Malik Hew back to Lon don Monday night alter a 13-day visit' to Moscow. ' -i - . l fl, UNDER CONSTRUCTION AT WORDEN by Tulana Farm, i. this hue, grain iloraqe elevator Expected to be completed by herveit time, the bin will hold 1,100,000 bushels of grain.' Tha itructure will ba 400 feat long and 100 feet wide with 32 foot walk Two Accidents Mar Holiday Two highway accidents north ol here msrred an otherwise quiet Fourth ol July holiday, according to Oregon Stalo Police. The first of Uie two mishaps, which sent Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Fau blan, Arbuckle, California, to the Klamath Valley Hospital lor treat ment, occurred about noon Sunday at the Junction ol Highway 03 and 87, north ol Modoc Point. Tho'aocl dent happened when Uie Faublan vehicle plowed Into Uie rear ol an other operated by Klndell Weir. 2346 North BQlli, Eugene, The Weir car turned over at the side of the road but neither the driver, his wife nor daughter, who were passengers in Uie car, were Injured. The Faublan couple was taken to the hospital by Kaler'a Ambulance Service where Mrs. Faublan found to have a Broken arm ana possible Internal injuries and Fau blan received a badly cut head,. Three others were hospitalised late Sunday evening when a pick up driven by Wordcn Oale Eggs man, awerved to miss a tractor op erated by dene Oration, about lour mllea north of Modoo Point. The pickup rolled over throwing Uie driver and four passengers out. Mary Knight, her 10-year-old sister Judith Ann and Eggsman were tak en to the Klamath Valley Hospital for treatment. Oerald Captain and Annette Jlasklns, also passengers in Uie pickup were uninjured. All six persons involved are residents of ChlloquUi. Of the live persons Injured Mrs. Faublan was Uie only one remain ing In the hospital today. The oth ers had been given medical treat ment and released. Mrs. Faublan waa Improving satisfactorily, hos pital authorities alated. AFETOY- TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY PGCIALS! PRICES EFFECTIVE TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY, 'July 6 & 7 Tomato Juice 1 Bee. 1 MiL-assss"" Sunny Dawn 46-oz. can W CherubHak TALL TINS 219 HAM SLICES Smoked and Sugar-cured Tender mild-flavor (o)(5)c lb. 2 CANNING PEACHES your best buy of the year in peaches! JUICY ELBERTAS U FLAT If you plan to can peaches this year, now is the time to' get started . . . peaches will be short this yearl Lorella Man Takes Own Life Charles Reeves, 78 Lorella, took his own life by shooting himself In the head with a .22 caliber rifle shortly before 5 p.m. Monday, ac cording to Oregon Stale Police. The aged man had been In poor health for several years and re cently had become despondent, his son-in-low Orvlll Uchroeder told authorities. The suicide occurred at the Schroeder ranch about lour miles south ol Uie Lorella store. The body removed by Deputy Coroner Ward to Ward'a Klamath Funeral Home. Date of the funeral will be announced later. DEATH KARACHI, Pakistan tjfi - A member of an Italian expedition seeking to climb unconquered K2 Mt, Godwin Austen Uie world's second highest peak, died of pneu monia June 21, reports reaching here Tuesday aald. The climber was Identified as Mario Puchez, 3. Mae West Has Advice For Marilyn By BOB TIIOMAK HOLLYWOOD (-Mae West hai some advice lor Marilyn Monroe: you'd belter win over Uie ladles, baby. Miss West, still Uie epitome of sex, Is a logical party to hand out advice. Bhe made millions by muttering spicy comments. She can still command a top salary, aa she will when she opens at Laa Vegas' Sahara July 27. I won an audience with the uirirtuur ' eHltPMHJW"fff Ceremony Held By U.S. Jews NEW YORK lH-The American Jewish Tercentenary, commemor ating the 300th anniversary of Jewish settlement in this country, was proclaimed formally yester day. , Ceremonies were held on the steps ol Uie congregation Shearlth Israel, founded In 1730 by des cendants ol a small group ol Span ish refugee Jews who landed in ISM In New Amsterdam, the old Dutch name for New York. The proclamation lixed the peri od of the tercentenary between Sept. 12, 1954, and May 29, 1955. Three rabbis read Uie proclama tion, wnicn was signed by leaders" of Orthodox. Conservative and Rp.l form Jewish rabbtnlo and synago gue bodies. Salag l.ntolf WHHL CHAMI CURRINS for. drugs fth aae Main h. 2-J47J fabulous star In tier sixth-floor apartment near the heart of Holly wood, The living room was un believably garish. It was all done In white, with Louis XIV furniture trimmed in gold. On one wall was a nude painting of Miss Weat, for which she says she has refused a 1100,000. Atop the piano waa her nude likeness In white marble. Be side the statue were tintypes ol her parents. Miss West's entrance was in character she sauntered Into the room in a flowing negligee. She looked impressive. The record books indicate she's around 60, but she seems 20 yeara younger. Her figure is still plump and curve some, her skin smooth and her chin lingular. I asked her how she felt about Marilyn Monroe. "I haven't seen her on the screen". Miss West aald in her soil, nasal voice. "But foiWtell me she Is using a lot of the things I do. The walk, lor Instance. They tell me she walks the same way I do. And the humorous things she says. I don't know whether she has said them herself or not. At any rate, Uie press boys have done a good job on her. "But if she's as great as -they say she Is, why Isn't she saving Uie studio, Uie way I did with Paramount? I paid off the mort gage on Uie place." Miss West reflected on her own rise to fame and said she "broke records everywhere" because she Lr(l itk 1ee inr aisha planM Is tali sari at ia will. Baat a Spinal alaaa. Baalal sar ahaas alas. Hemaaonel Orgea Cfcerd Orgea LOUIS !i MANN PIANO CO. 120 Ne. 7th didn't alleilate the female audi ence. ".You'll notice In my pictures I never went after a married man or took a man Irom another wom an," she said, "I alwaya treated other women with respect, That was all part of my plan to keep the women in the audience happy." LYNN ROYCROFT STANDARD'S (aanaaaMhe to Ma. " At no obligation or cost to you, you can get experienced guidance in planning your insurance progranT. Your Standard Insurance Agent will help yr- decide on a sound program to be sure ou get : 1. the protection you and your family need. 2. a sound investment. 3. a good return on your money. Write Of releekoM Lynai Reycreft 1037 Mela Sr., Mwm 717 No. 8 in a series of Rare Creatures. TIIE IIIClUlaCVCL SQUINT thinks he knows tht forest but has never met a tree The Squint is an advertising executive who prefers to float above the rough-and-tumble of selling. He thinks he gets the "big view" by closing his eyes to details. And his favorite art is a silhouette - because it has no highlights and shadows. He thinks of the nation as a one-color map where towns and people and needs are gratifyingly all alike. And he advertises accordingly. Fortunately the Squint is a rare creature. Most ad-men adapt their advertising to meet the problems of sales -and sales problems vary. ' , They know that one town may buy twice as many . girdles or puddings or toothpaste as another town even though incomes are equal ., . because returns are different, tastes are different, and people are different! So most advertisers concentrate their advertising in areas that pay instead of spending loftily in across-the-board campaigns. Their "national" advertising starts'at the local level in newspapers! ' All business is local . . . and to are all newspapers!. This message prepared bj BUREAU OF ADVERTISING, Amtrkaa Newspaper Pablisberi Assoclatloa ' mm! published m the Interests of fuller andcrstandiaf of Mwspapen