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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 19, 1954)
THURSDAY, AUGUST 19. 1954 HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PAGE FIVE Death Claims F.P. Hannon l LAKE-Death following . long illness, came to Francis P. Hannon, prominent Tulelake ranch er, at mid-afternoon Wednesday August 18, at.Hillside Hospital. He suffered a heart attack several ouys before. Mr. Hannon, was born Septem ber 13. 1898 at Leicester. New orlc, the son of Patrick E. and Counterfeiter Prints Billions TRONDHEIM, Norway lB-A crackpot counterfeiter who made more than five billion kroner In fake Norwegian, currency was be hind bars today because he wanted to make music too. Police refused to name him, say ing he was mentally deranged and they would ask a court to commit him to a mental institution. The money-maker was arrested yesterday In the nearby village of Selbu after he mailed an order for a harmonica to an Oslo dealer In musical instruments. He en closed a 5-kroner note from his own press. Hie sheriff at Selbu rounded up the culprit and also his printing production. When police finally finished counting last night, the total came to 5,004,074,610 kroner $714,856,388 worth had it been real. . Experts said most of the bills were faithful replicas of genuine notes, ranging from 5 to 1,000 kroner denominations. But there were such fanciful productions as a billion-kroner bill, four million kroner notes, and a few decorat ed with small poems to an unlden tilied girl. Skelton Injured In Rehearsal HOLLYWOOD Wl A breakaway door that didn't break laid comedi an Red Skelton low yesterday dur ing a rehearsal for his CBS tele vision show half an hour before the program was due to go on the air for the Eastern audience, the network reported. Skelton suffered a brain concus sion and a severe neck sprain. According to the script he was to walk through the stage prop door yesterday, carrying on his head a chunk of balsa wood painted to resemble a block of concrete. The breakaway door, supposed to shatter when he banged into it, didn't. He was replaced on the show by Johnny Carson. Ellen Hannon, Klamath Tails, pio neers who came in 1909. He was graduated from the Klam ath Falls High School In 1917. He was a- veteran of World War I, training at St. Mary's Officers' Col lege, Oakland. In 1931 he homesteaded on the Fast-West Road at Tulelake where the family still resides. He was a member of Holy Cross Church, Tulelake. Members of his family were at bis bedside at the time of his death. Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Isabel Hannon, Tulelake; three sons, Dr. John P. Hannon, medi cal scientist at the University of California, Attorney William T. Hannon, Emoryville. California and Lt. Robert E. Hannon attached to Camp Pendleton California: three brothers. Richard K. Hannon, Klamath Falls, Walter P. Hannon. Eugene and Murray Hannon, San Raphael; two sisters. Mrs. M. M. Fisher and Miss Bernardlne Han non, Klamath Falls; an uncle E.J. Mnrrav. Klamath Falls: also five grandchildren. His mother died August 23, 1953. Funeral services will be an ncunced by Ward's Klamath Fu neral Home. Church Radio Programs Slated ABC Radio public affairs depart ment is scheduling three programs in connection with the second as sembly of the World Council of Churches which is now in session. These programs will be heard over station KFLW Saturday, from 6:30 to 6:45 p.m., August 21, 28 and September 4. The programs will feature dis Missions which have taken place durinir the previous week. They will feature prominent American and foreign representatives to the as sembly. Title will Be "worm uoun ell of Churches Report." The August 21 program will fea ture Bishop Gerald Kennedy, Meth odist Church of Los Angeles area, the Rev. John C. Bennett of the Union Theological Seminary 0 f New York City, Philippe Maury, general secretary of the World Stu dents Christian Federation of Gen eva. Switzerland. Tentatively scheduled for the programs of the next two Satur days are Charles P. Taft, lawyer and lay delegate to the assembly and brother of the late Senator Taft, Bishop Hans Lilje of Hanover Germany, Canon Theodore Wadell of the College of Preachers, Wash ington, D.C., and Mrs. Elsie Cham berlain of Hampton, England. : iV 1 r ) , " ! ! I Ml 1 fa . ...V . . i , CONGRESSMAN SAM COON is congratulated by President Eisenhower on a recent trip to the White House. The Eastern Oregon Republican has actively supported the President's program nationally, and last week he had the unusual per formance of getting three bills for his own district passed in a single day by the house of Representatives. Schedule Delays Threaten McCarthy Investigations WASHINGTON W Two senate investigations involving Sen. Mc Carthy were threatened ,w I th schedule-upsetting delays today, but apparently not because of disputes over the controversial Wisconsin Republican. Leaders of both Senate groups said the stumbling block was un expectedly difficult work. The Senate Investigations sub committee, which conducted the 36 days of McCarthy-Army hearings, just about gave up hope of reach ing a verdict by the end of this week the date Chairman Mundt iR-SD) bad set. And a special Senate committee headed by Sen. Watkins (R-Utah) to study a proposed resolution of censure against McCarthy indi cated it may have to postpone the start of public hearings beyond the scheduled premiere Aug. 30. McCarthy announced he would enter no protest against a deferred start. Edward Bennett Williams, Mc Carthy's counsel, said, "We have no plans to ask for a continu ance," but it would be "working under pressure," he said, if he had to get ready his. defense by Aug. 30. Mundt said in an interview he still sees some hope of getting out a verdict by Saturday. But Senators Jackson (D-Wash) and Dirksen (R-IUI, assigned by the other five subcommittee mem bers to write a tentative draft re port, expressed no such confi dence. Jackson told reporters he doubts the job con be finishec be fore Tuesday. Dirksen said one delaying factor has been that the two-million-word official record of the McCarthy Army hearings consists of "about two thirds surplusage testimony entirely irrelevant to the charges." At Issue were accusations by Secretary of Army Stevens and Army Counselor John G. Adams that McCarthy and Roy M. Cohn then chief counsel to the subcom mittee, had exerted improper pressures to get special favors for Pvt. G. David Schine, a former subcommittee staff aide. For their part, McCarthy and Cohn accused Stevens and Adams of using black mail tactics in an effort to halt McCarthy's search for Reds in the Army. Watkins, declaring he still hopes to get his censure Inquiry under way Aug. 30, told a news confer ence yesterday he would not want to do so at the expense of over burdening the committee's 70-year-old special counsel, E. Wallace Chadwick, who had just arrived In Washington. Watkins mentioned the possibility of a postponement. Chadwick himself said he can meet any deadline the committee sets. He waded right into his first official assignment an analysis of 46 charges three fellow senators have levelled at McCarthy in sup port of the proposal to censure him for conduct allegedly unbecoming a senator. The charges, by Sena tors Flanders R-Vt), Fulbrlghl (D-Alki and Morse (Ind-Ore), range from accusations concern ing McCarthy's finances to alle gations that he ridiculed senators and other public officials. S3 jf'm ' Vary summer meals with :rrv Ij, r Porter Fril-lets, Saladettes, 5 v.' Midget Sea Shells, Kurie-Q T-J- j) Noodles and Lasagne. 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