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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 15, 1955)
o)fo) rtn 0 JiyJlixl ITU IO j V7 In The- Day's lews By FRANK JENKINS Foreign ailairs stuff; What nf Germany? Will she slay on our side? Or will she (eventually; not tight away go over to Russia? Or Will she go NEUTRAL? I wouldn't know. As of no at, Russia has an ace in the hole. SHE HOLDS EAST GERMANY. She can tell the Ger mans: "Come over on our side and we'll give East Germany back to you." Germany wants to be reunited, just as we'd want to be reunited if somebody has split our couutry apart. Much depends on Adenauer. lie's a grand old man. He has courage. He has patriotism. He has righteousness. The Germans have faith in him. But he's OLD .rearing 80. There is so much for him to do and he has so little time left. The political farmers (who farm the farmers for voles instead of farming the land for crops) are doing a lot of talking today. Democratic Congressman Harold Cooley of North Carolina, chairman of the house agriculture committee, says: "Farm income has dropped 30 per cent in the past seven years. The situation in agriculture today is a frightening parallel to what happened in the years before the great depression of the 1930's." He adds: "A farm recession Is creeping again over our land." Let's lake a sharp look at this "frightening parallel" he's talking about. The drop in farm income "in ihe years before the great depres sion of the 1930's" began to BITE HARD about 1925. That was about seven years aft er World War I. The present drop In farm In come began to bite about 1952. That was seven years after World War II. This Is the REAL parallel: WAR, which stimulates consump tion of agriculture products, results in a farm boom. During wars, agri cultural production Is greatly ex panded. When the war ends, over production results in declining farm prices. It always has been that way, and it always will be that way. In World War I. the Democrats were in power. The Republicans followed them. So, in the 1920's, the Republicans were held respons ible for the farm slump. In World War II, the Democrats were in power and again the Republicans lollowed them. AGAIN the Repub licans are being held responsible for the farm slump. If the Republicans had been in power in World War I and had been followed by the Democrats, they would have charged that the IU1III Slump Ul luc wan v . brought on by the Democrats. It would have been the same if the GOP had been in power during World War II. The Republicans would now be charging the Demo crats with responsibility for the present slump in farm prices. That's the way political farmers work. Thev farm the tanner for votes instead of farming the land for crops. Keep this in mind: When what is presently wrong with agriculture is cured, it will be cured by sound economists and able-minded dirt farmers. Super Market Damaged By Fire WOODLAND (UP) A general alarm fire roared through a huge supermarket here today causing damage estimated at S300.000 and Mjury to three firemen. The fire was brought under con trol after a two and one-half hour battle bv 50 firemen and six fire units, one of them from Davis, 10 miles away. It was the most costly fire in Woodland's history. The damage to the Raleys Supermarket was listed by Thomas Raley as $125,000 to the building. S150.000 in stock and $25,000 to an adjoining beauty shop and a woman's apparel shop. The tnree injured firemen suf fered minor cuts. Scientists To Study Problem Of Lifting 'Lid' Of Smog LOS ANGELES (UP) Expert scientists set out today to lift from Los Angeles the lid that nature clamps on the city keeping Its deadly smog from dispersing into the higher atmosphere. The layer of hot air which hovers over the city and holds smoke and log at the sidewalk level long has been a ineterological puzzle and is considered the key to the smog problem which has repeatedly plagued the Southern California city. Smith Oriswold. County Air Pollution Control District Director, said the committee of scientist would start immediately to find a way to release the smog through th- lid of hot air or eliminate the hot air lid. The scientists will use 4800 cap tive balloons in a 12-eek atudy of possible wnys to disperse the In version cover. Grlswold announced the scientific studv in the wake of yesterday's dense pall of eye-stinging smog which forced the APCD to call its second straight preliminary alert. The APCD, in its morning fore cast, said first level alert was mra v jv. ik I" V 1 - ilfcA, it ll, i.i. r Price Five Cento 28 race Fires Rage In San Diego County SAN FRANCISCO (UP) Two forest fires raged out of control today in Southern California while rain doused the last remnants of major blazes in the northern half of the state. At Fallbrook in San Diego Coun ty a fast moving brush fire swept along the Santa Margarita River bottom after destroying three homes, five avocado groves, a nur sery and several automobiles. Meanwhile, fire fighters evacuat ed 44 families last night as gusty winds fanned a new flareup in the devastating San Ynez Mountain fire near Santa Barbara. THIRD FIRE ! . A third fire at Converse Creek in ' Sequoia National Forest near Fresno continued to burn as fire fighters tried to tie about one mile of open fire into the rest of the controlled 18,000-acre burn. Nearly an inch of rain fell yes terday on fire-plagued Siskiyou County in the north, bringing an end to the two-week fire emergen cy. The Forest Service began de mobilizing the army of fire fight ers in the area, including Army troops from California and Wash ington, Indian fire specialists from Arizona and New Mexico, and convicts from California pris ons. The California Division of For estry said flames of the Fallbrook fire were fanned by stiff winds and have already blackened more than 2000 acres. The division said the fire raced to within four miles of the small community of De Luz but was stopped there. REACH SAFETY The homes and groves that were burned were located on the river bottom. There is no water in the river at this time of the year. Most of the families were able to get their personal belongings into cars and to safety before the fire reached their homes. Officials had reported the Santa Ynez fire near Santa Barbara un der control only a few hours before the sudden wind shift blew it up again. ,; Some 32 families In the Trout Club area and a dozen families in Maria Ygnacia Canyon, less than five miles from the city of Santa Barbara, were ordered to flee their homes and i "not wait to save a thing." In the touch-and-go Sequoia Na tional Park fire forest rangers pre dicted the possibility of control by tomorrow if favorable weather conditions continued to prevail. Early they expected to bring the new blaze under control by mid morning, but no rain fell in the area last night as anticipated. Portland Area Hit By Storms PORTLAND Violent light ning storms hit parts of Oregon and Southwest Washington, inter rupting power service and causing extensive damage in Portland Wednesday. One bolt knocked 67,000-volt wires off poles and sei a 135.000 volt substation afire here. Another shattered a pole and leu a tangle of live wires across an intersec tion. Police roped off the area while linemen cleared the wires. Still another sent a wire into a tree, starting a fire. Sparks start ed several house fires, but they were put out quickly. One bolt burned out all the lights in the state license bureau build ing, knocked a light fixture to the lloor and, lor good measure, burned out telephone signal lights. At Vancouver, north across the Columbia River, a corner ot house under construction was toppled. Carpenters working there were knocked down but there were no serious injuries. "possible" today. Moderate eye Ir ritation was redlcted for the cen tral Los Angeles area and foot hills. Earlier, the district's evalua tion staff said the alert was 'Toll able." The ozone content, the measur ing stick for tne amount of polu tants in the air, reached .64 in The first stage alert is sounded when the ozone concentration reaches .30. Yesterday's alert was the eighth first level alert this summer. Tuesday's smog concentration hit .90 in the Industrial section of Vernon, the highest in the APCD's historv ana onlv .10 below the sond place alert level, which has never been called. Gov. Ooodwin J. Knight was pre pared to activate the state's disas ter organization in the event of a second alert stage and the county Board of Supervisors were ready to act to protect public nealth. Ill the event of a second stage alert, refineries would be shut down and all except emergency auto traffic would be halted In addition to oiher emergency measures. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1955 Game Commission To Poison Fish In Lake Of The Woods The second largest chemical treatment of one of Oregon's lakes Is set for September 21, said John Dlmick, fisheries biologist, Oregon Game Commission. . Preliminary preparations by a skeleton crew are already under way at Lake of the Woods for the eradication by rotenone of the mixture of stunted fish lile which now Inhabit the lake. These fish include perch, bluegill suntlsh. bull head catfish, bass, carp, suckers, roach and some trout. Although not nearly as large as the Diamond Lake treatment of lust fall. Lake of the Woods cov ers 1,112 surface acres of water and will require 130,000 pounds of powdered rotenone. Another 150 Party Finds Dead Fliers LAKEPORT, Calif. (UP) A Forest Service ground search par ty loday found the wreckuite of a private plane missing since Sun day ui the Lake' PilLsbury wilder ness area .and radioed that "all iour occupants are dead.". The party, cutting its way through heavy underbrush, reached the wreckage shortly alter 10:45 a.m. Andy Anderson, district U. S. Forester for Lake County who headed the search team, said the plane was found in an area called "the Island' in Smokehouse Canyon 12 miles norLn of the Lake Pillsbury landing- strip. He estimated that the wreckage was located in the rugyed canyon country 54 miles northwest of here. He gave no immediate description ot the wreckage scene. Aboard the plane when it made a "touch-and-go" landing at the Lake Pills'oury strip late Sunday evenii.'g were Beverly Cade. 22, re cent graduate ol the university 01 California and daughter of .Frank H. Case, New York, an American Telephone and Telegraph Co. ex ecutive. Paul M. Johns, 27, a San Francisco insurance man: Charles Ise, 28, PitUburg, Calif., auto deal er; and Carol Hove, 22, daughter of E. Francis Hole, San Rafael lumberman. . . Cold Covers Northwest By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Cold air across the Pacific Northwest Thursday dropped tem peratures as much as 25 degrees and snow began f piling on 6,000 foot Mullan Pass, Idaho. The Weather Bureau said a new storm off the Coast will move in Friday but that there should be partial clearing with warmer read ings by Saturday. A low of from 35 to 40 was forecast for early Friday. The 3t-degrce temperatures at Mullan Pass was the lowest of the season. Tt was 32 at Klamath Falls, Ore., 25 at Harrington, Wash., 39 at. Ellensburg, 40 at Spokane and 41 at Ephrala. The storm from Alaska that moved in Tuesday and brought the first genera Northwest rain in 46 days slipped into Montana Thurs day night and sharply changed the weather picture. It was a record 98 degrees Thursday at Miles City. Mont. By Friday morning, Butte had 23 and some snow. Grangeville, Idaho reported 3.01 Inches of rain in the 17 hours from 5 a.m. to 10 p.m. Thursday. Lew is ton had 1-75 inches and Spo kane .14 of an inch. Missile Truck Turns Over A truck carrying a Navy guided missile overturned yesterday aft ernoon on U. S. Highway 97 about seven miles south of Sand Creek, Oregon State Police reported to day. Guards were posted on the mis sile, which was slightly damaged, until the truck tractor was towed into Klamath Falls today. Stale police said they did not receive a report of the wreck until early eening. According to the police report. Rex Maurice McOehee of Monte bello, California, owner and driver of the truck, lest control of hi.s vehicle when he hit a soft shoul der. The truck then jackknifed and overturned. When BalMger Motors tow truck men went to tow in the truck, the Navy guards would hot permit the missile to be moved. The trac tor, however, was brought in. A passenger in the cab of the vehicle was Gay Varga of South .San Gabriel, Calif. There were no injuries, OSP officials said. INTLl'ENZA LONDON ' Prime Minister Eden is conl med to bed with in fluenza at his country home a; Chequers. An official announce ment Thursday from 10 Downing St.. said he has been compelled to cancel hi present engagements He was jepoited running a tcm perature. gallons of liquid rotenone will be used to treat the inflowing tribu taries and marsh lands. Preliminary preparations include marking off of the lake with col ored balloon markers into 3 cube ater and 20-boat sections, mark ing: the shore line, and distribu tion of the rotenone. Approximately 80 game commis sion personnel and an undeter mined number of volunteer sports men and Lake of the Woods home owners will begin work at dawn on September 21 and will be de layed only if weather conditions, make work impossible. Anyone in terested in aiding in the opera tions is advised to contact game agents Bob Borovlcka at Bend, Cole Rivers at Grunts Pass, or Kenneth Cochran at Klamath Falls. Anyone interested can watch the work, and upon completion can pick up a limit of 30' li.sh. The fish are killed by suffocation so it does- not deter their edibility. Tne U. ' S. Forest Service has announced that the hike will be closed to boating except by au thorized personnel on September 21 until the poisoning is completed. During the treatment procedure tt will be permissable to pick up any fish that wash ashore. This ruling has been put into effect so those working on the treatment of the lake will not be hampered in carrying out their duties. . Lake of the Woods will be re stocked with rainbow trout later this fall or early spring.- Bailey Leaves For Alcatraz SALEM Wl Donald "Punchy" Bailey, blamed by Prison Warden Clarence T. Gladden for much of the trouble at the penitentiary, has been transferred to the federal penitentiary at Alcatraz Island, Calif. - It Gladden said Thursday that Bailey was taken -to Alcatraz a week ago by two state prison of ficers. The transfer was made under a 1955 legislative act which per mits transfer of convicts to other state prisons, federal prisons or county jails. Gladden, who says that Bailey was the "boss convict" who had been running the penitentiary, claimed that Bailey was the ring leader in the prison rebellion two years ago. In that four-day affair, the convicts were kept in the prison yard. They burned the prison laundry building. After that rebellion, Bailey was transferred to county Jails in Port land and Roseburg. When Bailey's lawyer brought a court action at tacking the transfer. Gladden brought Bailey back to the peni tentiary and kept him in the seg regation building. Gladden persuaded the Legisla ture to pass the new law to re move any doubt as to the legality of such a transfer. Bailey is the first convict to be transferred under the new law. Gladden said he does not plan any other transfers. All convicts were notified that Bailey has gone to Alcatraz. The warden said he hopes this will dis - courage the inmates from causingjAs guesiH 0 lne polish European' Bailey is serving 25 years for a Portland holdup. He entered the prison in 1948. 1 v ' V T- A ;.:. NU-r-. . v-.'. y y o "s - . . - 'ta V-y .''' '- V" ' ' V x" ' - 1 ' ; a LW ..---.-. .,W-V i iii iTTfciii i m.mm'''-" toun U ii mm -at' mt m ? wm ifiifrw 1 THE GRAND CHAMPION Southdown lamb exhibited end sold at the 1955 Junior livestock show by Sara West, Merrill, has gone to the Shrine Crippled Children's Hospital in Portland. The animal was bought by Dugan and Mest, Chevrolet dealers, Klamath Falls for $2.80 per pound or $280. They presented it to the hospital after it was dressed out locally. Charles Bane, manager of the Bend-Portland Truck Service, donated transportation to Portland. Abov.e are, left to right, Bob Mest, George V. Dugan, Charles Bane and Elmer Balsiger, who serves on the board of directors of the hospital. H I IK Telephone Kill onn Heads Hear Report auer BONN, Germany .P The Wet Germ tin Cabinet heard a report Thursdav on the Moscow talks by Chancellor Konrad Adenauer but toi-k no lonnal action. An official announcement said the ministers wanted to study 'de tailed reports from the Foreign OH ice on the nesbthitions between Adenauer and the Russian lead er?. ' This indicated they needed more time to make up their minds whether to approve the agreement to set up normal diplomatic rela tions between West Germany and the Soviet Union. Adenauer discussed the Moscow talks Thursday aiteniocn with leaders of West German political parties. The political leaders were re-1 liably reported in favor of de bating the results of the Moscow conference in parliament next Thursday. Political sources said the govern ment parties wilt introduce a mo tion qualifying acceptance of diplo matic relations with Russia by the conditions Adenauer made in Mos cow : 1. The return of German prison ers from Russia. The fixing of Germany's final 1 borders must be done in a peace treaty. 3, Only the freelv elected Bonn regime is qunlified to speak for all Germany. The informants said the Bundes tag will reiterate that the ultimate aim of West Germany is reunlflca. lion and that exchange of diplo mats with Moscow will in no way unpty any siucKemng of enorts to ward unity. While Soviet Premier Bulganin's verbal promise to return Getmnn prisoners has naturally been wel comed in Bonn, some politicians voiced1 doubt about the wisdom of exchanging ambassadors with Mos cow. They argued this would Imply acceptance of a, division of Ger many into rival stages.. ZyJi, v . :..JZllul1t- "? .T' . u 0 the .sudden Soviet announcement' Ihat East Germany's Communist Premier Otto Grotewonl, would nrrive in Moscow tomorrow for talks with the Kremlin leaders. This was seen as a Russian move (o reassure the East German Com- .munists they are not being aban doned and to refute Adenauer s claim that only his freely elected government is competent to speak lor all Germany, While Adenauer received a hero's welcome home, many ques tioned whether his mission to Mos cow had brought German unity any nei'.rer. West German officials, mean while, pushed plans to receive the thousands of war prisoners Aden auer said the Kremlin had prom ised to rnleae. He said he expect ed the release to start almost im mediately. KEI'AL'VLR IN POLAND VIENNA, Austria U.S. Sen. Estes Kciauver (D-Tenn) and Brit ish Conservative Parliament mem- I ber Cyril Osborn. visited a num- incr of. Polish cities Wednesday. j Interparliamentary Union, they toured the city of Krakow and the ' Lenin Steel Works at Nowa Huta. yAden y c (i MJd,i. iti'JiinA.JKk SEARS EMPLOYES, Ray White, left, 1723 Oak Street, ship ping clerk, end Nell Lasher, Box 41, Klamath Falls, furniture salesman, paused for the 9 o'clock photographer thit morning. .Weather FORECAST Klamath Falls and virlnity: Clearing Thursday night with local frost. Partly cloudy Fri day. High Friday 60; low Thursday night 42. High yesterday 55 Low last night 25 Precip. last 24 hours .30 Since Oct. 1 7.3:i Same period last year M. 15.35 Normal for period . 12.87 Morse Knocks Farm Program WASHINGTON (UP Sen. Wavne Morse said today that Ag riculture Secretary Ezra T. Benson has made ' ''a belated confession that the administration tarra pro gram is a bust, The Oregon Democrat made the comment fin Benson's promise yes I thrday to recommend something I "very, specific" to Congress . to 'iPiou up falling farm prices. Ben son did not indicate what he would propose Moise's dig fit Benson came as Democrats ohowed signs of making tne drop in farm income a major 1956 campaign Kssuc and Republi cans admitted It was one of their most vulnerable points. Sen. Paul H. Douglas. (O-IH). charged thai Republicans were "trying to rewrite history" to beg votes nexL year by "denying" President Eisenhower in 1952 pledged to support farm prices at 90 or 100 per cent of paiity. GOP National Charman Leonard W. Hall said Dcuglns was talking "bunk." In another development, Chair man Harold E. Cooley D-NC of the House Agriculture committee warned &t East Latibint!. Mich, midst of prosperity elsewhere pre sent an "exact parallel" to the situation in the late 1920s which led to the depression. Benson acknowledged that he ts not satisfied with present farm prices, but he stuck by ihe admin istration's flexible price support program. He said it did not caut-e the present form crisis. Morse said Benson a promise to come P w1111 specific recammenda- Hons on farm income "Is a belated confession that the administration's larm progiam is a bust. Manv Farmers know It is busting them." Tass Reports Bulganin Sick MOSCOW ifl Tuss announced Thursday Premier Nikolai Bul ganin Is 111. . In addition to the almost un precedented Tass announcement. Soviet President Klementi Korosh llov told a Finnish delegation headed by President Juho K. Paa slklvi and Prime Minister Urho Kekkonen the 60-year-old Soviet premier waa too 111 to receive them. There was no hint In cither an nouncement as to what ailed him. This probably means Bulcanln will be unable to head the Soviol government delegation which is scheduled to begin negotiations with East German Prime Minister Otto Grotewohl Friday. , ; The Tass announcement did not say what waa wrong with Bulgan- , in. The Finns said they had no information other than that Bul ganin was too ill to go to the air port to meet the Finnish president when he arrived and too ill to re ceive Kckkoncn, who had been scheduled to pay a courtesy call at the Kremlin later. Bulganin has Just ' completed tough week of hard bargaining with West German Chancellor Kon rad Adenauer. The Soviet leader saw Adenauer off at the airport Wednesday morning. Tuesday evening, when Bulganin and Adenauer signed letters calling for establishment of normal diplo matic relations between the Soviet Union and West Germany, report ers covering the ceremony noted tnnt Bulganin looked tired and ill. Bulganin's eyes were rcd-rlm-med and one American reporter remarked Jokingly, "He looks as though he hud been crying. Those talks with Adenauer must have, been really tough." Bulganin became prime minister last Feb. 8. German Reds Go To Moscow MOSCOW W Moving swillly to follow up its negotiations with West Germany, the Soviet Union has announced it will open talks to morrow with leaders of Commu nist Easi Germany. The Soviet new. agency Tass said East German Premier Otto Orotcwohl would arrive in Moscow lor conferences on ",ucsUont of interest to all side.." The an nouncement came only a few hours after West German Clip ncel lor jtonrnd Adenauer ended his Mos cow conference and lei', lor Bonn The amiouiicemnt was expected but Western observer: weie sur prised it came :;o soon alter Aden auer's departure The Koviet-West German talks resulted in an agreement to estab lish diplomatic relations. Adc.iaiier also said he obtained a vet bo 1 promise itom Soviet Premier Niko lai Bulfzunm that the Soviet Union woula release German prisoners held in Russia sine ; World war II. It was believed the Russia n-Easi Getman tc.lks will inciude th" prisoner Isuc and reunification of Germany. Tass reported that Grotewohl would reach Moscow tomorrow. Berlin .-.ouices arid he has been staying ai a country villa rear the Soviet capittil all during Ihe live days Adenauer spent here. The Giotewohl parley was-seen by seme Western observers as a maneuver to pressure Adcuaue into iifLjotiiiiiiiK with the Kast German remmc. which he ha.t repnaiedly refused to recognize. Tne Giotewuhl meeting also was renardcd a- a move to feature the East German Communist' tha. ihe Soviet Union was not sell inn 'hem out by negotiating with Adcn ftiter. ArleiiHiitr was ciltici.ed In the Soviet, what wan termed hl.v attempt speak for all the Oer - man people on the subject of rc- unmcation. Hilda Leaves Two Dead, Crop Ruin MIAMI, Fla. W Frightened residents of Puerto Rtco and the Virgin and Leeward Islands re laxed Thursday as Hurricane lone began curving gradually to the north, pointing her 30-mile-an-hour winds toward a vast expanse of open Atlantic waters. lone'M older sister, Hilda, rolled on westward across the Caribbean Sea, meanwhile, and Is due to slain into the Yucutan Peninsula Thurs day nittht. . Storm warning flags were low ered over the northern Leeward , and Virgin Islands and the north and east coasts of Puerto Rtco as lone, a small but growing tropical twister, bcaan the northward swing thai now is taking her awuy from those hind areas. This turn, said forecaster Cecil Gentry of the Miami Weather Bu reau, does not mean that lone will follow (he paths of her destructive predecessors, Connie and Diane, toward the North Atlantic states. After some 12 hours on her pres ent course. Gentry said. lone may come under the influence of a lUrh pressure system to the north. This could force her back to a westerly direction. Hilda, weakened by her encoun ter with the mountains of eablern Cuba, had more than regained her old power as she moved through the Caribbean 340 miles south southwest of Havana". ; The Miami Weather Bureau re ported ihat Hilda's highest winds had reached 100 m.p.n. around the ; eye by mid-day. Her gale winds reached out 126 miles to the north and ot) miles to the south. . . Northern British Honduras and the southern part of Mexico's Quiit tnna Roo Province were warned to prepare for gale to hurricane force winds and abnormally high tides Thursaav night. , Hilda, which slogged through the mountains of eastern Cuba Tues day night, left two dead and heavy property damage. Officials ftald 80 per cent of the Oriente province coffee orop, ready for harvest, was destroyed and torrential . rains caused .heavy damage to other crops, on the Island. ' Hilda moved into Cuba with top winds estimated at 90 (Vi-P-h. but weakened in the mountains of the island, and sitil had not regained her strength after moving into the open Caribbean Sea. lone, ninth tropical storm o! the season, grew nut of a low-pressure system that moved into the Allan ago. , . , 'Victim' Kills Alaska Woman JUNEAU, Alaska Ml An tin miployccl carpenter, who toltt au thorities he was the unjust vie I tm of "corruption" In the Alaska Department of Health, killed a woman employe of the department In an apparent haphazard ihoot tng Wednesday. The victim was Mrs. Elizabeth Cornell, 53. wife of Ezra Cornell, resident engineer here for the Bu reau of Public Roads. She had been with the department for two years. The carpenter, Lester Mangle, 85, long-lime Juneau resident, told U.S. Asst. Dlst. Atty. Ted Rclf stech he had not singled out Mrrt. Cornell as his target, but had de cided to shoot someone to call at tention to "the situation" In the department. 1 Mangle was arrested shortly aft er the shooting and arraigned be lore U.S. Commissioner Cordon Gray. Witnesses said Mangle entered the Health Department office and flashed a rifle, its stock missing and barrel shortened. It was hang ing from a device attached to his shoulder. . Relfstech said Mrs. Cornell acrcamed as Mangle came in and Mangle then fired the single, fatal shot. The woman died shortly after ward. Plane Wreck Found In Lake FRESNO fUP Wreckage of a B24 AniiV bomber which crashe.l tnio Hunt in.' ton Lake nearly 12 years ao with six crewmen aboard was spotted late yesterday by a fisherman. Sixth Army Headquarters In San Francisco was notified and is eN pecleci to dispatch a salvage crew to recover the plane from the Hlnh Sierra lake about 70 miles north west of here. Gene Collins of Ccdarernst Re sort, told sheriff's officers he saw the tfil section sticking two font oui of Ihe water and found an ciu-'um n:icclle about 200 feet away. TlK hike is being drained to per mit repair of the dams and .it present Is near its lowest level. Tne four-eniiined bomber van ished in a nnowstorm in December, 1943. white on a flight from flam mcr Field near Fresno. Two crew men parachuted safely but the oth ers went, down with the plane. Bits of wreckage were discov ered shortly afterward in the lane but the Army abandoned Us search when rescue crews were snowed out of the area a month later. Tee search was resumed la.it i month when equipment from th 1 plane was found on the lake aa il was being drained.