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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1954)
Mm ; : - , ; - 4i In The- Day's lews By FRANK JENKINS President Eisenhower started his day off this morning with an ad dress to some 300 Republican par ty workers in New York City. He told them: 1. "We have the difficult task of dramatizing and selling MODER ATE government. 2. We reject the EXTREMES of both sides the extreme right and the extreme left. 3. We have carried the cause through the first round. A tre mendous start has been made to reach the objectives of the crusade we waged during the 195a cam paign." What Is "Moderate" government? I'd say it's government for ALL the people. Not just Republicans. ",v,Not just Democrats. Not just Big Business. Not just Big Labor. Gov ernment FOR EVERYBODY. Personally, I believe it is true that President Eisenhower and the men he has gathered around him have directed their thinking to ward providing good government for ALL of our people not just the people who VOTED REPUB LICAN in 1952. What about the "rejection of ex- tremes" - the extreme right and the extreme left that be men tions? - Well, the hard-boiled Old Guard of the GOP has never given him very active support. It has hung back in the pinches. The extreme New Dealers the Big-Govera-ment-Handle-Everything wine of the Democratic party has been agalast him and his moderate, middle pf the road objectives from the beginning. What of his statement that a tremendous start has been made toward reaching the objectives of the crusade of 1952? Let's take a look at JUST ONE of these objectives the checking of inflation. For more than year, the value of the dollar has been more or less standing still. That means if it can be con tinued that when you put-a dollar In the savings bank against the inevitable rainy day it will BUY AS MUCH WHEN YOU . TAKE IT OUT OF THE BANK as it would have bought when you put It in. It means that when you buy a retirement insurance policy or con tribute to a retirement pension plan your retirement insurance or your . retirement pension will have buy- ' intr power enough to SUPPORT YOU WHEN THE TIME COMES '--FOR YOU TO RETIRE. ' ' , These things these laudable objectives of a moderate govern ment go to the very ROOT of human happiness and human wel fare. ,: Back of the Democratic cam paign to regain control of con- - gress at the coming election lies the implied promise to GO BACK TO THE BOOM. There are two sure ways to bring Back tne doom: 1. RESUME INFLATION. 2. GO TO WAR AGAIN. Unless the Democrats if they regain control of the congress lall pack on these snots In the arm the process of readjustment from war conditions to peace con ditions will go forward much as it has been going. I'd rather trust Ike with the backing of a friendly congress to go forward with the moderate mid dle of the road objectives that have been pursued during the past. couple of years than to go back to the EXTREMES of the New Deal and the Fair Deal. Hunt Search Unsuccessful DALLAS, Ore. (fl Rain and fog Thursday prevented search, for the second day this week, for the long-missing Norman Zeiszler fam ily of Newport. Police confessed themselves with out a clue in the baffling disap pearance of Zeiszler, nis wife and bis wife's 14-year-old son. They left Oct. 9 to go deer hunting in the Coast Mountains west of here. Several days later their car was found beside a mountain road. There has been no clue to where they went from there or what hap pened to them. Wednesday's search, headed bv Sheriff Tony Neufeldt, was carried out in foul weather that at times cut visibility to 20 feet. The going in the extremely rough, heavily timbered country was so bad that one searcher, Milton P.eimer, Dal las, collapsed. At the hospital here he was treated lor latlgue and cole". He was among the 85 National Guard members from this area or dered Into the search by Mnj. Gen. Thomas E. Rilea. Sheriifs depu ties and other volunteers swelled the total in the search to more tlian 100. The sheriff, who called off Thurs day's search, said It would be taken up again when the weather Improves. Similar bad weather had baited the search on Tuesday. Aside from that, daily hunts, in cluding with the aid of a helicop ter, have turned up no clues at all. r The Zeiszler family moved to Kwport from North Dakota last spring. J PREDICTION MANILA Indonesian For eign Minister Dr. Sunario Thurs toy predicted his country's claim to West Irian (Dutch New Guinea "ill be granted by the United Na tions shortly, i Ike Backs Ives For NY Governor NEW YORK ( President Ei senhower told state Republican campaign workers Thursday prior to a whirlwind tour of New York City it was "tremendously im portant" that U. S. Sen. Irving M. Ives be elected governor to carry on the GOP program. newsmen traveling with the President said it was the most outright endorsement that Eisen hower has given to any individual candidate in the present political campaign. The President's visit to the Re publican headquarters in the Ho tel Roosevelt came at a time when newspaper polls indicated that Ives is trailing Averell Harrlman, the Democratic-Liberal candidate for governor. The tour of the city, which be gan immediately after the brief talk to campaign workers, came as a surprise. It was reminiscent of the fa mous motorcade of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who, seek ing a fourth term, toured the city bareheaded in a heavy rain dur ing the 1941 presidential cam paign. Eisenhower's motorcade was scheduled to tour through Man hattan, the Bronx and Brooklyn. Accompanying him was Gov. Thomas E. Dewey and Ives. Referring to the current politi cal campgain in the state, Eisen hower said: "One indispensable ingredient in any victory is heart." He said that in the military service this was known as morale and esprit de corps.' The former commander of the American military forces in Eu rope said he thought he knew something about battles and said he never knew anyone to win when they looked "like this" putting his hands to bis face and showing a gloomy expression. Rain Storm Hits Oregon PORTLAND Wl A Tain storm north section Wednesday night and than two inches on Newport. - Portland's" downtown - weather station reported 1.02 inches in the 24 hours to 4:30 a. m. and it was still ralninc. Rut at the Portland aiiDort. the total was only .56 of an inch, Salem Teported .65 of an inch but southward the rain tapered off to .11 at Eugene and none at all at Roseburg. A number of reporting stations on the western slopes of the Cas cades told of an inch or more of -nin cnH thA same was true across the valley on the eastern edge of the Coast Range. The Weather Bureau said the rain came from one of a series of storms moving in from the mid Pacific. Weather FORECAST Klamath Falls and vicinity: partly cloudy with occa sional showers through Friday. High Friday 65; low Thursday night 35. High yesterday 59 Low last night 34 Prcclp. last 24 hours 0 Since Oct. 1 29 Same period last year .1.44 Normal for period 68 JOSEPH K. CARSON Carson Rally To Be Held Guy Merrill, chairmak of the Carson for - Governor Committee , said Ihursday all persons Interest-; ed in good government should at- i tend a rally Friday night for the I gubernatorial candidate in Klamath ' County Courthouse. ! "Joe Carson b one of Oregon's most competent men." Merrill de clare. "His public record places him in the forefront of American leaders. He has had wide exper- j ience in municipal, state and fed eral affairs." The former mayor of Portland will begin his talk at 7:45 p.m. in the circuit courtroom. Democrats from all sections of the basin are expected to attend. ' " ' ' i i fl-i ml 1 hmi.- IS 'UV , , , , , , . - , . , . II m I XW.t . V " Price Fire Cents 28 Pafea Deer Hunter Struck By Stray Shot A stray bullet from a hunter's rifle early this morning struck Clyde Rose, 27, Keno, in the leg between the knee and hip as he and his father-in-law Otto Peter son were hunting near the state line on the Grohs Ranch east of here. Rose was placed in Peterson's car and taken to Dairy where he was transferred to a Kaler's am bulance and brought to the Klam ath Valley Hospital. According to hospital authorities the leg bone was not broken and his injuries are not considered serious. Peterson told Oregon State Po lice the following account of the incident: Rose and Peterson had just arrived at their hunting spot and Rose had gone up the hill a few yards when Peterson heard him shout for help. Peterson said he shouted "What's the matter?" and Rose replied "I've been shot." '- From another direction Alfred Donaca, 627 South Sixth and George St. Johns. 914 Owens,- ar rived at the scene at the same tune as Peterson and the injured man was loaded in the car and started for Klamath Falls. Donaca told officers he had dropped a deer with one shot and almost immediately heard Rose cry for help. He believed the slug went through the deer and then struck Rose in the leg. State police left immediately aft er the report was received to in vestigate the accident, While transporting Clyde Rose, victim of a hunting accident on the Vic Grohs ranch to the hos pital this morning, the ambulance operated by Charles Theodore Fra ser crashed into a car operated by Donna Lee Rookstool, 826 Cal ifornia Avenue, at the Intersection of Fourth and Pine, direotly in front of the hospital where Fraser was taking the patient. Praser admitted he did not stop at the stop sign and did not see the Rookstool car in time to stop. He had turned off his siren as he approached the hospital but the red flasher light was still operat ing, Fraser stated. He was cited for failure to stop at a stop sign. No injuries resulted. Death Claims W. E. Estes Funeral services for Williams Everett Estes, 82, who died Wed nesday, October 20, at the Hill side Hospital, will be held Friday, October 22, 2 p.m. from Wards Klamath Funeral Home. A Chris tian Science reader will conduct the services and interment will be in Klamath Memorial Park. William Estes was born in Den ver, Colorado, July 2, 1872, and he has been a resident of Klamath Falls for the past 25 years. He worked as a barber in the bar bershop he owned on South Sixth Street until a few weeks before he died. Survivors Include daughters. Mrs. Katherme Penny, Klamath Falls; Mrs. Olive Spalding. San Jose, California; sons, Louis J. Estes, Salem and William E. Es tes, Hemet, California, and 12 grandchildren. Tribal Council Election Held An election is belne held tnrtnv Thursday, October 21, at Klamath Agency to elect a president, vice president, secretary, treasurer, .ergeant-at-arms and eight mem bers to the executive committee of the Klamath Tribal Council. Nominees for executive officer.1 Include: Seldon E. Kirk, president; Delford Lang, vice president; Dib bon Cook and Lawrence Witt, sec retary; Dibbon Cook, Gerald Ches- er and Dorothea McAnulty, treas urer. Eight members of the executive committee will be chosen from a slate of 12 candidates who are: Boyd J. Jackson Sr., Dice Crane, Jesse L. Kirk Sr., Lawrence L. Witt, Wernle Foster, Elnathon Da via Sr., Dorothea E. McAnulty, Gerald Chester, James Johnson, Doris Richards, Wilbur Eggsman Sr., and Joe Miller Jr. POTATO SHIPMENTS SEASONS 51-54 54-55 Daily Truck Ore. 11 1 Daily Hall Ore. 4 Dally Truck ( allf. 2 4 Daily Rail Calif. 17 11 Dally Total ORE, A CALIF. i 22 Monthly Total 750 273 Season's Total 890 387 - KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, p irrr V - ' 1 "VI , . ... WRITING UP AN ORDER this Buick Company were Erv Dowry, Bell, office clerk. Washington Entries Sweep Pacific Stock Show; Dale West Wins Angus Awards PORTLAND I.T) i Washington ranchers swept nearly all the hon ors in the Shomhorn beef cattle show at the Pacific International Livestock Exposition Wednesday. The Broughton Land Co., Day ton, Wash., won firsts in the three young bull classes, and the young est of the three a 9-month-old bull, became grand champion of the show. All three were sired by a bull imported from Scotland. Broughton also had the reserve junior and reserve grand champion SHOOTING HOURS Oregon October 22 OPEN CLOSE' 5:57 5:04 California October 22 OPEN CLOSE 5:52 5.17 - r L V V f 1 ' ', THESE GIRLS, Kathleen Moore, left, and Georgia Thomson, were runner-up end winner re spectively of the two-county Soil Contervation District speaking contest held at Bly October 15. Presentetion of cups was made by Walter Smith Sr., right of Langell Valley, Kathleen's great-uncle,-Dave Campbell, left, looks on. I THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1954 At VT'1 N Spuria! morning t the Jim Winde used car manager, and Vivian bulls, and the best 10 head in the show as well as the junior female uimmpiuu.. - -' J. W. Bennett and Sons, Ouk vllle. Wash., had the' senior and grand champion female. B. D. Reser and Sons, Walla Walla, had the reserve grand, reserve junior and reserve senior champion fe males. George M. Wolf, Latah, Wash., showed the senior champion bull Washington ranchers were kept from a clean sweep only by the fact that J. C. Moran and Son, Vernonia, Ore., had the reserve senior champion. In Aberdeen-Angus competition, Lloyd K. Ruud, Longmont, Colo., had the senior and grand cham pions in both male and female classes. Dale West, Merrill, Ore., had the best 10 head and the junior and reserve junior champion bulls. In the Ayrshire show the senior and grand champion bull was en tered by V. E. and James W. Mad sen, Gresham, Ore., but British Columbia exhibitors won the other honors. R. W. Adrian, Lanlcy Prairie, had the junior champion bull; W. H. Savage, Lodncr, had the senior and grand , and junior champion females, and the Univer sity of British Columbia had re serve grand champion female. Top awards in the sheep show: Cotswolds Champion ram and champion ewe, entered by Kenneth McCrea, Monmouth, Ore. Fat sheep Champion grade wether pen, Washington State Col lege; grand champion of show Claude Steusloff, Salem; chanir (Continued on page 4) Ji ip"'?jj n; 'I i y. Tiff t m -j 14t No.2948 N. Y. Truck Settlement Ends Strike NEW YORK lm A five-day strike by truck drivers in the New York metropolitan area ended Wednesday night as the last "hard core" employer group agreed to the union demand for a 25-cenK an-hour package Increase, Trucking company officials pre dicted that the. settlement will raise trucking fees by 10 to 15 per. cent, that many trucking companies -will go out of business and that manufacturing firms will flee the area to avoid the in creased rates, . David Kaplan, chief economist for the union, . urged the drivers to "give the employers a good day's work, and to cooperate in every way possible to increase ef ficiency so as to minimize the unit cost of the wage increase." . To the employer predictions of the effect of the Increase. Kap lan said it coeld not be "so dis astrous or the strike would not have ended so quickly." Two small northern New Jersey firms, employing about 1,000 driv ers, continued to hold out. The reason lor the firms' resistance is an added 41-cent-an-hour in crease they would have to pay to close the gap between wages in their areas and those in New York' City. At the start of the strike, 24.000 drivers were out. The walkout ended officially when Joseph M. Adellzzl, chair man of the area-wide employer negotiating committee, announced that all of the area's 3,500 firms were released from a pledge to resist tne demands or the strik ing AFL International Brother hood of Teamsters, However, a majority of the firms broke the solid employer front on Monday, the first work day of the strike, and signed in dividual contracts with the union. Coon Urges 'Fair Play' Fair play was urged Wednesday by Sam Coon for his opponent, Al unman, Democrat of Baker, who is reported charged with mis representation and improper deal ings in connection with the sale of a house to a veteran. In a statement made at Bend, the Eastern Oregon Republican congressman said: "hi fairness to my opponent, I hope the real estate commissioner will make an early decision on these charges so that if he is in nocent, my opponent will have a chance to clear himself before the election. "I am very sure," Coon con tinued, "that my opponent will not accuse me of having anything to do with this matter. I do not know what charges are preferred. "I have not mentioned my op position," Coon continued, "in the last election nor in this one, as many times my opponent has mentioned my name, particularly in a recent radio broadcast. I campaign on issues and not on personalities," he concluded. DEATH VATICAN CITY W Domenico Cardinal Jrio, prefcot of the Sucred Coongregation of the Sacra ments, died Thursday of a heart attack. Ho was 87. 1iW Telephone 8111 1 WILLIAM H. STEIWER GOP Leader Urges Votes For Cordon An aDneal to get out and vote was made today by William H. Sielwcr of Fossil, chairman of the state Cordon-for-U.S. 8cnator Com mittee, who was hero to confer with Republican leaders of the Klamath Basin. "The people of Oregon have come to a full realization of what a calamity it would be to the state and the nation if we should lo3e the services of Senator Cordon, Klplwer declared. "How can we fail to return to office one who has such a grasp and knowledge of Oregon's needs for its irrigation, power develop ment, its Industry and its agricul ture and one whose high position in the United States Senate is so v;ell known? "We have had many offers of support from Democrats as well as Republicans. It appears that his opponent's smear campaign has backfired. Neuberger has attacked Senator Cordon with untruths and half-truths which have served only to focus the people's attention on NeuberRer's own dismal record in the State Legislature. "Ncuberger's campaign speeches prove his slight knowledge of Ore gon, and in particular Unit part of Oregon which lies east of the Cas cades. An outstanding example of his lack of knowledge is shown by his vote in the 1351 Legisla ture against H.B. 681, introduced bv Henry Semon. Ed Geary, Phil Hitchcock and others, to forbid the export of water from the Klamath, Deschutes and Rogue rivers into California, Fortunately for the area, the bill passed in spite of Neuberger's opposition." Steiwer stated that his friend ship with Senator Cordon goes back to the days when Cordon was serving as department commander of tho American region. "I was president of tho Oregon State Senate," Steiwer recalls, "when Senator Cordon was ap pointed to succeed the late U.S. Senator Charles L. McNnry. Guy Cordon still maintains his interest in veterans' affairs and is proud of the fact that the first bill bear ing his name in the U.S. Congress was the G.I. Bill of Rights. "Cordon's Interest in agriculture Is evidenced by his support of the tariff on clover seed, his sponsor ship of tariff and incentive pay ments on wool, and the limitation of imports of barley and oats into the United States. "I appeal to every good citizen to get out and vote on November 3 so that Senator Guy Cordon will be returned to the United States Senate," Steiwer concluded. Soil District Contest Held The annual two-county speaking contest held at Bly School Friday evening, October 15. was won by Georgia Thomson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Thomson of Bly, and Kathleen Moore, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Lester Moore of Mcrrlll,i runncrup. The contest was sponsored by the soil conservation districts and topic for the speeches was: "Soil Conservation Problems In My Soil Conservation District and on My Farm." Judges were Dr. Robert J. Har- rahll and Fred Lewis of Klamath Falls and Don Barnes of Chiloquin While judging was going on, the group heard accordion solos by Connie Hall, a reading by Sher ry Rentle, both of the Bly Juvenile Orange, and a short talk on the history ol the grange by Mrs. Fred Lewis. Representatives were present from Shasta View, Midland, Lost River, Langell Valley, Fort Klam ath and Bly granges. The two speech contest winners wore driven to Medford Wednes day altemoon by Mr. and- Mrs. Dav Campbell of Blv. They will participate In the State Associa tion of Soil Conservation Districts contest being held at Medluid to day and tomorrow. VACATION CAIRO, Egypt Wl The con stituted assembly of Egypt's pow erful Moslem brotherhood ousted the association's governing coun cil Thursday and granted Su preme Guide Haxtian el Hocleiby as "Indefinite vacation," Sovereignty DocumentTo Be Ratified PARIS Un The three Western powers and the Bonn Republic Thursday reached complete agree mtrnt on steps to end the Allied 'occupation of West Germany and restore virtually all sovereignty to the West Germans. The foreign ministers of the United States, Britain and France took the action Thursday afternoon in a brief session with West Oer man Chancellor-Foreign Minister Konrad Adenauer. The four statesmen put the fin ishing touches on a series of lengthy, detailed docaments which are to replace the two-year-old treaty of Bonn, never completely ratified. These documents set forth the conditions under which the West Germans will recover sovereignty after almost a decade of occupa tion. ARMED FORCES .' These documents, along with a series of annexes covering West Germany's future relations with the West and the status of Allied armed forces in West Germany, are to be signed in a formal ses sion Saturday afternoon in the French foreign ministry. Thursday's action cleared the way for West Germany's incorpor ation into a seven-power West Eu ropean Union and membership in the North Atlantic Treaty Organi zation. Treaties embodying these steps are to be Bigned Saturday after noon at the same time, pending successful conclusion of additional talks to be held here. The three Western powers re tained a few strings on West Ger man sovereignty to enable them to negotiate with the Soviet Union on German reunification and on a peace treaty for a reunited Ger many. OCCUPATION They also kept the right to re sume the occupation in esse of emergency and power to cope with tho special situation in Berlin. Following this brief session Ade nauer and U. 8. Secretary, of Stats Dulles, British Foreign Secretary Sir Anthony Eden and French, Pre mier Foreign Minister Pierre Men- des-FrBnce went into session with ministers representing Belgium, The Netherlands, Luxembourg, It aly and Canada to study the projected 'Western European Union." This union, embracing' a revised and reinforced Brussels alliance and grouping Britain, France, the Benelux countries, West Germany and Italy, is designed as a frame work for West German rearma ment within the NATO structure, Canada and the United States are in the role of guarantor nations. REARMAMENT The parley was considering measures to supervise and control German rearmament under such pact. West German and other sources predicted quick agreement before nightfall. The French-German dispute on the Saar appeared the only major hurdle in the tight ministerial schedule. Indians Held For Theft When a Pitt River Indian and a Pueblo Indian came to Klamath Falls for a good time, they ran afoul of the law because they de cided their celebration would not be complete without a blanket. Thursday they faced District Judge D. E. Van Vactor on charges of petty larceny. The defendants, Manuel Lente, a resident of Ari zona, and Edward Van Meter, who halls from California, confessed to breaking into an automobile be longing to Howard E. Simpson, an entertainer at Molatore's Restaur ant, and stealing a green blanket. "We were full of wine, Judge," Van Meter told the court. "We thought it would be a good Idea to have a blanket so we could flag down a freight train when we got ready to leave town." Judge Van Vactor informed the defendants they wouldn't be leav ing town until they served 60 days in tne county Jan. Lost Women Hunters Found Four weary women hunters ar rived in Chiloquin tired and hun gry Thursday moming after being lost overnight in the wilds near the headwaters of the Williamson River. Two hours after a ground and air search was launched early Thursday morning, the women Mrs. Robert Hall, Mrs. 8. M. Johnson. Mrs. Ray Deffenbacker and Mrs. Norman Wymer were lound by two unidentified hunters huddled in their car on an Isolated logging road, 35 miles from Chilo quin. The women were escorted to the highway and then they drove to Chiloquin. All of them were suf fering from cold and hunger. it was uie loneliest night I ever spent," Mrs. Hall declared. "And I've never been so hungry In my life. We were soared a few times by prowling animals that came near our car."