TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 8. 1955
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
PAGE NINE
GM Too Big,
OM. But he said the subcommittee
wants to try to find out how OM
grew so big and to look into com
plaints that GM has exerted un
due pressure, on iu dealers and
suppliers.
Quuui said the legislation he has
in' mind would be aimed at "lim
iting and restricting oversized cor
porations" and restoring "econom
ic freedom in many fields that are
now practically closed."
In general, Quinn said such leg
islation would define an oversized
company as one with perhaps IOC
million dollars or more in net
worth. In certain high-capital in
dustries, such as autos and (eel,
a ;00 or 300 million dollar ceiling
might be allowed, he an id.
Quinn suggested the Imposition
of steeper corporation Income
lax rates on firms exceeding the
maximum. Tax rates would be
graded upwards as the size of
these firms Increased.
Quinn Tells
I fit i ' '.v w.)Ji!S5' j " 1
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MABEL HAItSON, CHAIRMAN ex-officio, and Charles Woodhouse, chairman, supervisinq
24 , Klamath County schools who will participate in American Education Week, November 6
through November 12, inspect the special week's official, poster. The six-day affair, which,
will culminatu with a gala "Klamath County Open House" in Klamath Union High School's
Pelican Courf on November 9, received the official "green light" last week' when Mayor Paul
Landry and .Jludge U. E. Reeder declared this week officially dedicated to the city and county
schools. Theme for this year's week is "Schools Your Investment in America."
Photo by Dwayne Prather
Senators
WASHINGTON tfi T. K. Quinn.
bus.liCiksiiiau and author, told sen
ators today "General Motors is en
tirely too big."
"It unwillingly threatens the
very existence nl countless good
companies and eventually our own
free American Institutions." Quinn
said in a statement prepared for
tile Senate Antitrust and Monopoly
subcommittee at the opening ses
sion of a four week "study" ot
GM, the world's largest manu
facturing firm.
Quinn proposed a "maximum
free enterprise bill" designed to
restrict the size of lare corpora
tions ar.d possibly to persuade
j them to break up. This.. said Quinn,
la im: viny tu uctw vwui wmifc in:
termed the "irlnntlsm issue." He
said this is the "pressing, dread
ful Issue" facing the country.
Long a critic of lartss corpora
tions, Quinn formerly was a vice
president of the General Electric
Corp. He now is head of two small
firms. T. K. Quinn Co. and Moni
tor Equipment Corp.. in New York.
He hps written a number of books,
including "rtiant Business; Threat
to Democracy" and "I Quit Mon
ster Business."
Sen. O'Mahoncy (D-Wyo), pre
siding over the hearings, has said
they are not an investigation ol
Educes tors Planning Fetes
During U.S. Education Week
Pageant committee members
completed prcr -tramming plans to
day for American Education Week,
nnd released their entertainment
tgenda for the special week's
'Klamath County Open House,"
dated for November 9, in Klam
Ith Union High School's Pelican
fcourt.
The open hoose will be the high
light of a full week, November 6
through November 12, dedicated
h the cause of education in which
14 Klamath County schools will
participate. ,
Merrill Hij;h School will offer a
Undent act entitled "Potato Fes
lival Drill." Bonanza will send 12
students in an act that will inter
pret International Understanding
Through th o United Nations. Four
teen Malin elementary and second
ry students, will be featured in a
tzechosloviiiklan dance.
Fairview School will present
'The Yelloiv Rose of Texas." Mu
lical attraction of (lie affair will
lee Pelican School's accordion
band in acUon. Ferguson School
Kill present a delineation of the
life of Twj'la Ferguson. Altamont
elementary and Junior high will
feature a j Swiss dance by 12 par
:nts. "Memories." enacting scenes
3f old Ke n o school days, will be
Keno's offjftring.
A Westcsrn ranch theme in song
will be Hty School's contribution.
Varied en1 ertainment will be given
sy Mills School, and Klamath Un
ion High School will present a se
ries of dramatic skits. "
A spetsial feature of the open
house , celebration will be an
vielinj? cd the "Freedom Shrine."
i series of framed copies of his
torical documents. The shrine will
be presented to Klamath Union
High School as a gift to the com
munity by the Exchange Club of
Klamath Falls. .
American Education Week was
founded by the American Legion
In 1921, and has gained impetus
through- the years. This year's spe-'
cial week, nationwide in scope, is
under the combined sponsorship of.
the legion, the National Education
Association, the Oregon Education
Association, the National Congress
of Parents and Teachers and the
United States Office of Education.
Mabel Hanson, currently presi
dent of the Klamath County Chap
ter of OEA, is chairman ex-officio
for the six-day affair, Charles
Woodhouse is chairman, .
Driver Sentenced
To Jail, Fined
Joe Lee Payne, 30-year-old po
tato grader, was sentenced to 10
days in the county jail and fined
(150 Monday when he pleaded
guilty to driving an automobile
while his license was suspended.
Payne, who pleaded guilty to
the charge, told District' Judge
D. E. Van Vactor, that his license
was suspended after he was found
guilty of driving while intoxicated
by Police Judge Frank Blackmer.
He was arrested on the latest
charge by state police.
CONVICTED
NAHA. Okinawa l.fl A U.S
Marine court martial Monday con
victed Marine Pfc. Raymond E.
Parker of raping a 7-year-old Okl
nawan girl and sentenced him to
life imprisonment.
EAGLE : EQUIPMENT CO. .
AM OREGON CORPORATION
has purchased the Stock of Farm Equipment
from the
Police Seek
Coast Mobster
PHOENIX, Ariz. (UP) Authori
ties today sought a West Coast
mobster for questioning in the
gangland slaying of former labor
racketeer Willie Bioff.
Maricopa County Sheriff L. C.
Boies said his office Is checking a
tip that the mobster arrived by
plane in Phoenix about 16 hours
before Bioff was murdered Friday
by a dynamite bomb rigged to the
starter of his pickup truck.
An inquest was scheduled today
(at 3:30 p.m. EST) into the mur
der.
The hoodlum left Phoenix a lew
hours alter Bioff was killed, ac
cording to the tip which Boies'
office received,
Bioff is believed to have been
the victim of a revenge killing.
inspired by his testimony against
several men including members
01 tne Al uapone gang in con
nection with , a million-dollar ex
tortion racket agcinst movie stu
dios in Hollywood.
In another development, police
arrested William (Bill) Savoie, 29,
of New Orleans, on charges he tried
to extort $10,000 from Mrs. Bioff
by claiming he knew where 10 find
ner nusounci s Kiner.
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' 'The Finest Buses!
e No Local Stop's!
. from KLAMATH FALLS
eNo Change of Bus
No Extra Fare
to
Euejene $3.95
Sacramento 5.50
Portland 5.85
to
Oakland ...$5.95
San Francisco 6.10
Seattle 9,1$
Los Angeles $10.40
Rtturn Trip 20 ... RtunJ-Trip Ticitli
On many trips you'll refe a sensational
HIGHWAY TRAVELER orSCENICRUISER
There A Greyhound Aqent Near You
1. J. MADERAS, Aqent 904 Klamath Phone 5521
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Many a big moment in life start with
the telephone... whenever a call bring
news of an engagement in the family, or
a birth, or of a visit by someone special.
And this doesn't include the hundred
and one oilier ways your telephone serves
you helping you get things done and
milking life easier and more fun.
lilt;
'Round the clock, every day of the year,
telephone people nro on t,he job to see that
your telephone is ready to serve you in
every way possible. whenever you need it.
Thp phono rail lln'nun Hill drramrd nf fr mnnllm. The
long, low tanker had docked earlier in the afternoon. But it was dusk
before Bo'sun Bill could step ashore and get to a telephone. He had
thought about this call for nearly half a year. For looking forward
to a reunion with the family back home is a favorite pastime when a
man's away at sea. As Bill placed his long distance call, he sounded
perfectly calm. But inside, his excitement ran deep. And maylie you
can imagine the feeling at the other end of the line when the phone
rang moments later. For can't you recall telephone reunions that
meant just as much to you? Indeed, time and again, the telephone
plays an unforgettable part in lifo ... as it helps bring each of us
closer to those who count most. Pacific Telephone.
The telephone people
of Klamath Falls
i
work to make your
telephone a bigger value
every day
Ttui butlrtiu ffiiti I JO N. Ilh SI., Til. J-J401
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