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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 8, 1955)
PAGE EIGHT HKRALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH KALLS. OREGON TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 8, 1955 r 1 x"3! 'V At 1 tr ill (Sh : fv , ' ' '.',1 It sSf THE QUEEN AND HER COURT sat for form si portrait during homecoming festivities at Oregon Tech this weekend. The queen, Edith Wallin, a practical nursing student, was sponsored by the diesel class. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Wallin &747 S,,l, c.:vil j Street. The princesses are Vyrl Hogan (top .left I, Marilyn Whitman (lower left), Mary Lou X Thompson (lower right) and Joanne Mecham. The queen presided over the parade Saturday morning, the football game Saturday afternoon and the buffet and dance Saturday eveninq. I I- jIJ.,J cracker." and this snme smell was nrnn KPiiPVPniopi tic n oumr r the Crash Cause DENVER (UP) A "bomb Hype" explosion shattered a camo Biold In a United Air Lines DC-6B pvhlch crashed a week ago, kllllnR 44 persons, two Civil Aeronautics feBoard officials said todav. 1 James N. Peyton, Investigation frhlef for the. CAB In Washlniiton. fc-ald an Intensive examination of noi(j jjiiic wiecKBRe wnicn is spread Diver three square miles near Lontr- rmont, Colo. has shown definite evidence of an explosion. S The No. 4 bnnRnse hold was r 'shattered," Peyton said. LURRago which had been In the JJjo. 4 compartment smclled "like tunpowder, or an exploding firc- wi'eckaKe, the CAB chief said. Investigation Tltl. CITIES nl'UI I I BL 3 y y rf FLY i 0 in M J jj foNLY QUICtQ g 0 VrVAY J$ m I 5 m r (A o CORVALLIS 2 ALBANY 12" Pluj Tax M Just 2 hours, 46 minutes a J ? away fly back the fl itmi day. Phone 7332. S M N Jack Parshall, the CAB regional Investigator from Kansas City, said Monday that "we have no evidence that there was any kind of bomb explosion. "We are not far ennush along to say what kind of explosion It was", Purshnll said, Parshall also snld Monday that "no evidence" had been found of an explosion In the No. 4 cargo His statements were made In ref erence to a report published In American Aviation Dnily, a trade paper. Iliat crash Invcstmatoi's had discovered definite evidence of a bomb-like explosion In a cargo compartment. But after Peyton revealed that the American Aviation Dally re port was correct, Parshall told United Press: 1 "I'll have to say Uiat Mr. Pey ton's statements are correct. I wasn't at liberty before this to say how much we had found, and we still must await the FBI laboratory reports on the items we have sent them before we can be mole def inite." , MclNTYRE TRAVEL SERVICE Your Experienced Agent WILLARO HOTEL r mcornnnor Ml Sharecropper, Farm Hand T Miff hi GREENWOOD. Miss. I An el derly Negro sharecropper and a teen-age farm hand, who said they fled to Chicago for safety, are ex pected to testify today before a grand Jury considerins kidnaping charges in the famous Emmett Till case. Testimony of Mose Wright, 64-year-old uncle of the 14-year-old Chicago Negro abducted by two white men, and 18-year-old Willie Reed forms the heart of the state's case against the two men. The two Negroes arrived in Greenwood Sunday night from Chi cago and said they had no fear of being harmed, although both said they fled Mississippi earlier lor fear of being killed. The Leflore County Orand Jury, working throuch a heavy docket yesterday, delayed until today con sideration of kidnap charges against 24-year-old Roy Bryant and his half-brother, 36-ycar-old John W. Milam. The 20-man. all-white grand Jury will decide whether Bryant or Mi lam will stand trial. No Negroes were called on the 64-man Jurv panel from which the grand jury was picked. Dlst. Atty. Stanny Sanders said the Jury's decision will be released in its filial report, probably Wednesday. The grand jury could indict them under one of two Mississippi kid naping statutes. One provides the death penalty, the other carries a maximum sentence of 10 years In prison. In the event of conviction. Bryant and Milam are free on SIO.OOO bond each. A trial Jury In ndJomlnij-Talla-hatchie County found them inno cent of murdering Till. The trial, six weeks ago in near by Sumner, was one of Missis sippi's most famous cases. Wright and Reed fled Mississippi after testifying at the trial. Wright said he plans to remain in Chicago. Reed plans to finish high school and then attend college on a $1,000 scholarship given by the National Assn. for the Advance ment of Colored People. ' Wright identified Milam and Bry ant as the two men who roused Till from bed about 2:30 a.m. Aug. 28 and took him sway because he al legedly made off -color remarks and wolf-whistled at Mrs. Bryant. . Reed testified that he saw Milam with Till several hours after Bry ant and Milam said they released the Chicago Negro Boy. The scone was a plantation run by Milam's brother, Leslie Milam, Reed testi fied. Officers testified the two white men admitted taking Till from Wright's farm shack in nearby Money, but said they freed him un harmed when they found he was the wroitg Negro. A body pulled from the Talla hatchie river three days later. Wright and the boy's mother, Mrs. Mamie Bradley of Chicago, Identi fied It as Till's body. But defense attorneys presented three witnesses. Including a doctor and an undertaker, who said the VS II i II 111 i . . . this special ized aspirin for children is made to best fit chil dren's needsl StJOSEPH ASPIRIN FOR CHILDREN body could not have been Till's be cause it had been In the water at least eight days. Jurors said the contradictory identification figured strongly in their verdict of innocence. 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