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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 8, 1955)
u 1 1 In The- Day's lews Br FRANK JENKINS I listened yesterday to re markable citizen. His name is Ted Gamble. His home is in Portland. He had just been named by the secretary of the treasury to serve as chairman or the Oregon sav ings bond committee, succeeding Eddie Bammous who has worked like a horse on thai lob lor a decade and a half.' . . He is making a flying tour of Southern Oregon, and was here to discuss the bond sales program with the good citizens of the Klam ath Basin who are giving their time to the job. . At the ripe age of 35, Ted wo3 drafted by the then secretary of the treasury. Henry Morgenthau, to be national director of the na tion's war bond drives. His ap pointment came about in this way: , When the state of Oregon was e.-sanized for the first defense bond drive in 1941, Ted and Ep Hovt and Eadte Summons so. stuck Willi the job. Ted was then in the theater business. Ep was then publisher of the Oregonian. Eddie, then as now, was high brass of the U.S. National Bank of Portland. He was the only linancier in the -outfit. The three of them put the Ore- con drive over in such a big way lhat Treasury Secretary Morgen thau reached out and grabbed Ted to nead the national bond program Boiling the story down. Ted and his organization sold TWO HUN DRED BILLION DOLLARS worth of treasury securities in the next live and a half years. It was the Diggest job of selling since the world began. Just what were they doing? They were financing a war. There are two ways to finance a war: 1. Start the printing presses. 2. Borrow from the people (by selling bonds to them.) The first way means huge in flation which has destroyed more nations than any . other cause, including war Itself. The second means taking the moaey out of the people's pockets NOW. so that it may Be put Decs in the people's pockets LATER. Fortunately, our country chose to do it the HARD way (which in this case was the right way) and Ted and his bond organization did the job. It vorked. There was some inflation, to be sure. Over the period, the buying nnw-er .o.- th-flniisr nas hecn cu about in half partly, as a, result of the war financing and partly as a result oi too reckless spend ing alter the war ended. But Compare that record with the record of France over tne period covering two world wars. Before World War I, the French franc was worth JO American cent. It is now worth less than one-third of ONE American cent. Thai's what happens when na tions choose the EASY way that is to say the printing press way to finance wars and such. Ted Gamble and his crew did H the hard way. and they did their job so well that under the awful strains of war 'and the later strains of too reckless spending (largely by politicians who wantea to keep their jobs and thought the wav to do It was to SPEND and SPEND) our dollar's buying power has shimm only half. It was a great job and I think all Oregonians are proud of Ted's part in it. Incidentally, while here yester day, Ted announced thai Klamath county has gone OVER its 1955 savings bond quota, with a month to spare. Klamath, he told us. Is the SECOND major Oregon county to go over the top. being beaten a few days by Washington county He presented Mike Shannon with n medal to commemorate the good Job that has been done by Mike and ms Kiamain crew. gTiie Klamatli quota was $778,000 What does this "going over the top" mean? It means that Klamath country people have put $778,000 into SAV INGS In thete 11 months of 1955. You can bet your bottom dollar that all this saved-up money will tome in mlchty handy sooner or later to the people who have t-aved it up. Chiang Rejects U.S. Appeal TAIPEI. Formosa yf Presi dent Chiang Kai-Shek Thursday turned down a fresh appeal by the United Stales for Nationalist China to refrain from vetoing the admission of Outer Mongolia to the . United Nations. An official source of Cabinet rank, who talked with Foreign Minister Ge'orge Yeh on the let ter's return from a conference with Chiang, said: "There is no change In our position." Yeh and U.S. Ambassador Karl L. Rankin had gone to Chiang's home a: the Sun-Moon Lake in centra! Formosa to confer with the president. Weather FORF.C'AST Klamath Fall and vicinity: Partial rlearing with few snow flurries Thursday nlrtt. rartlr rloudr Friday. Hich Friday fa: low Thursday mini 25. Low last night - . !0 ... 33 i High yesterday Preclp. last 24 hours . .! I Preelp. tlnce Oct. I ... 63 Same period last year l.irj I Normal for period l.K I i i ar i wy a I k fix . s. x abm fl Aran VtftiME Price Five Cents 4 Page ' KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1955 : .-.' Telephone 1111 No. 3347 Assembly Proposition Stili Faces Veto Threat UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. Ifl The U.N. General Assembly over whelmingly approved a package deal designed to bring 18 new members into the world organisa tion. But the deal still faced the threat of a veto. The vote was 52-2 with five ab staining. This was the same as the vote in the Assembly's spe cial Political Committee late Wed nesday. - The Assembly's action puts the problem squarely up to the Se curity Council, where Nationalist China. has said it will veto Outer Mongolia and Russia has threat ened to veto 13 non-Communist countries unless Outer Mongolia and four other Soviet satellites -are admitted. COUNCIL TO MEET The council is expected to meet either Saturday or early next week to act on the applications. All five of the permanent members have the veto power. The only members voting against the package deal in the Assembly were Nationalist China and Cuba.' The five abstainers were the United States. France, Bel gium, Israel and Greece. There was no indication that private appeals to the Chinese Na tionalists had shaken their determ ination to use the veto to exclude Outer Mongolia. In a speech just before the vote. Chinese Delegate T. F. Tsiang voiced vigorous opposition . to all five Soviet satellites Albania. Bulgaria,-Romania. Hungary and Oute Mongolia. While he did nqt repeat his privately-made threats to use the veto, his aides said he still Intended to do so. The United States has Indicated It would abstain on the five So viet satellites when, their bids come before the council. IKE APPEALS - President Eisenhower reportedly has sent two appeals to Chiang Kai-shek to refrain from vetoing j Outer Mongolia. The seven Security Council mem- bets that voted for the resolution in the committee were Britain, Russia, Peru, Brazil, Iran, Turkey and New Zealand, Belgium and France abstained. . With the outcome hinging on the Formosa government, delegates have warned Nationalist China that to veto a proposal which has such overwhelming support might well cost her her U.N. foothold when Russia next brings up the peren nial demand to seat Red China in place of the Nationalists. Sources close to the Nationalists say they feel they must reject Out er Mongolia as a Soviet satellite and companion of Red China. BEFORE VOTING Before the voting. Chinese Dele gate T. F. Tsiang assailed admis sion of all five Communist states Outer Mongolia, Albania, Hungary, Bulgaria and Romania, saying they represented a "new type of Imperialism practiced by the Soviet Union." Cuba tried unsuccessfully to put through a scries of amendments which would have stressed that admission of new states must be based on a charter provision that they be peacelovlng. Cuba replaces Brazil on the Security Council after Jan. 1. Klamath River Hearings Set SACRAMENTO. Calif. W The j California Klamath River Commis- i slon Wednesday called a series of i public hearings on a proposed com-1 pact between California and Ore- gon for the use of upper Klamath River water. The schedule: Klamath Falls. Jan. 17 and 18: Yreka. Jan. 24: Redding, Jan. 31. and Eureka. Feb. 6. Earlier the commission had ar ranged hearings on the compact in Yreka, Dec. 12 and 13. The announcement was made as the commission wound up two days of hearings to gel the views of state and federal agencies on a tentative draft of the compact. A legislative subcommittee on conservation, planning and public works, meanwhile, has announced plans for an Investigation of the California Oregon Power Com pany's Klamath contract wllh the U. S. Bureau of Reclamation. Assemblyman Francis Lindsay (R., Loomisii subcommittee chair man, said his group will make iu study jit the request of "official and unofficial agencies and iroupj" in the upper Klamath Basin. Concern exists in some areas over some of the stipulations In the proposed contract,, he said. I Ok's Legion Commander Lauds Ford's Criticism Of Fund DETROIT JH The national commander ol the American Le gion Thursday applauded Henry Ford II for criticizing some ac tions of the Fund for the Republic, but an industi ialist who heads the fund defended its activities. Legion Commander J. Addtngton Wagner, a critic of the fund, said Ford's criticism "strikes a reas suring note tor every American who is concerned with the na tion's security." J . Bennet Named Chamber Head Warren C. Bennet, owner of Peo ple's Warehouse, .was elected presi dent of the Klamatli Counly Cham ber of Commerce for 1950 at the egular meeting of the directors of; WARREN C. BENNET in chamber Wednesday neon In ' ""?' ,. I The ncw president has been ac-i live in chamber affairs for many years. He served as a director and as one of tile two vice presidents during 1955 and was co-chairman of the Natural Resources Commit tee and a member of the execu tive committee. During 1954 he was the director in charge of the Roads Committee and co-chairman of the Water Policy group. Elected to serve with Bennet were two vice presidents. Robert E. Veatch ana William Ganong Jr. Lloyd Porter was reelected treas urer and R. Frank Tucker was renamed chamber manager. . Three Survive Plane Crash HONOLULU ifl A two-engine Navy patrol bomber on air-submarine maneuvers crashed at sea Wednesday night and the Navy re ported Thursday three of the 10 men aboard were rescued by a sub. Seven submarines and four planes searched the flarc-llt ocean for the seven missing airmen. Two escort destroyers raced toward the scene. 26 miles east of Kauai a point roughly 40 miles northwest of Oahu on which Honolulu is sit uated. Three survivors, picked up short ly after the crash by the submarine Bashaw, were identified by the Navy as Lt. K.C. Guedcl. Dover. Ohio pilot: Lt. Ik E. J. O'Mal ley. Chicago, copilot; and Lt. (g Robert S, Smith, Montgomery. Ala., navigator. Another P2V patrol bomber on the maneuvers reported the crash when its crew spotted small flares ion the dark -sea. The plane radioed ; the submarines to the rescue. The bomber was from the Bar bers Point Naval Air Station. Oahu. Other subs In the search were the Blur-gill. Sterlet. Carp. Xugara. K-2 and K-3. Joining them were the escort destroyers" Carpenter and Sproston. " Safe Driver Mrs. NclHr Nlcol. 4A.11 Clinton Avenup, hnlder of Oregon II cfnw number 3F-016A won the $10 mfe drlvlnr prfre from the KUmftlh Counly Junior Cham-, brr of Commerce Thumriay. The ifety Committee picked Ihe holder of License number 5J-5649 the ourleY driver today. . The holder or thU li cense number can win $.1 hr calllnr 4062 bf 11 a.m. r'rlday and Idcntlfyinr himnelf. The Jayreea are sponsoring the eon test In an effort to promote safe driving. .A ii wi i - leal Industrialist Paul O. Hollman, who is chairman or the board for the fund, issued a statement in L03 Angeles declaring an exami nation of the record, of the fund shows it has "made Important contributions'' to the country. i Wagner said in New Yorit tha Ford has made a "necessary ana commendable move In the right di rection," 1 in "deploring some ac tions of the lund. , SPONSOR OF FUND' The Ford Motor Co. president is chairman of the trustees' of the Ford Founuation, which is sponsor of ihe fund. Ford made his crit icism hi a letter to a Syracuse, N.Y., American Legionnaire. He saia he acted "as a private cit izen." The Legionnaire, John K. Dun- gey, chairman of the Antisubver- sive Committee of Post 41 and the Onondaga County American Le gion, wrote Ford that the fund was "only helping those who would like to see tnis country of ours under communism, socialism . . ; one-world government." Ford's answer, written Monday, was made public yesterday. . The fund was set up in 1952 by r. 15-million-dollar grant from the Ford Foundation to. promote prin ciples laid down In the U. S. Con stitution and Bii: of Rignls Operations of the fund have been; criticized in some circles as lcfti wing. "I have not as yet heard any! denunciation ot the Fund for the i Republic from you," Dungey said i he wrote. "Certainly you don't go along with their thinking." NO LEGAL RIGHT Ford's letter emphasized -thai his post with the foundation gives him "no legal right to Intervene in the aflairs of the Fund for the Re public." V ' . . Nevertheless." he added, "I have exercised my right as- a pri vate citizen to question the manner in which the lund has attempted to achieve its stated objectives. Some of Its actions. I feel, have been nublous in character and Inevita bly have led to charges of poor judgment . . ." ; Ford Foundation trustees have : no control of fund activities. Rabies Plague California SACRAMENTO (UP CaWor nla faces the most serious rabies problem since the epidemic of 1915-17, a state expert on communi cable diseases said today. Dr. Arthur Holllster Jr., chief of the state' Bureau of Communicable Diseases, said the spread of wild life rabies exceeds anything previ ously experienced in California. Thirty counties have reported wild life rabies cases so far this year, he said. Hollister said. "It can be con servatively staled that California is, now experiencing an epidemic of' rabies Involvinn not only wild life, but dogs nnd livestock as well. "The potential of the existing situation cannot be ignored," he said. "The risk of human rabies exposure and infection, and the number of persons requiring pro tective treatment, will be greatly increased if dogs become more seriously involved." He recommended (he mass In oculation of dogs and a reduction of the number of strays. Police Capture Dope Peddler SAN FRANCISCO UP An armed narcotics peddler surren- dcrcd to San Francisco police last night five hours after he made dramatic break for freedom In Alameda County Courthouse. Roger Mcintosh telephoned po lice headquarters at t p.m. to say he was coming in. He ap peared shortly after saying. "I must have been crajy." ! Mcintosh made his break after , pleading guilty to conspiracy to sell narcotics "b e f o r e Superior Judge Chris B. Fox in Oakland. , Fox had ordered him remanded to 'jail pending a probation report and j sentencing on Dec. 28. While being taken to the County Jail on the 10th floor of the court-1 hniiv Kfrlntnch .nrirfnnlt, nrnrfiu, a. .38 caliber revolve and ordered elevator operator Charles J Leo- nard to take the elevator to the ground floor. . Also In the elevator were deputy sheriffs Hollce Turner and Robert Serac, both of whom were un armed. When the elevator reached Ihe ground floor, Mcintosh (tepied out and fled. , MRS. VICTOR MILTON and her son Frank were stopped by the 9 o'clock photographer this morning as she was on her way to work and Frank was "eagerly" going o sohool. Mrs. Milton it employed at the Singer Sewing is an eighth grader at Fremont : V 7VV SHOOTING HOURS OREGON December 9 OPEN CLOSE 6:54 4:3S CALIFORNIA California 5eson Closed " Until Dec. 10th : Blood Donors Give 337 Pints The 1955 Christinas gilt of blood crivnn Iw Klnmnt'h Hnunlv Honors Is to the December Red Cross blood j "e iKt.. mere was no ex program totaled 331 pints valued ! planatlon as" to why the plane at $8,300 if sold ior SI'S a pint- price charged by some hospitals. The two-day operation. December 6-7 was held In tho armory which was donated by the board of last January. It, made Its first directors. flight July 14. and put on a brll- Tvpewritcrs li.sed during eachillant performance ' at Baltimore visit of. the blcodinobtle stall were donated by Shaw's Stationery; the sound truck by Conner's Scivicc. batteries to operate . Hie sound truck by Ditsan and Mcst. Nick Wltte, custodian at the armory gives his time to keep the pro gram moving smoothly. The canteen,, manned this visi by co-hostcsses Mrs. joe i nomas aim na. u . . uaain . was u... - ed wiJi holiday mollis. Two callon donors who received pins this MM", were Robert L. But . . ton, 1019 Jctlerson Street; Everett -Miner. 430 North Third, John ZUm- wall, 114 Eldorado and Jack llop-j kins. 320 Front. Street. i Gallon donors were Shirley Lee j Ortls, 734 Plum Street; Walt Ken- j rett. law tarle Street: Ralph I Freeman, 121 Dahlia Street; Har old Christy. 1737 Wall Street; Ott Mulligan. 32J Shasta Way; Mar- I Ian Lewis, 515 Washnuin Way; i Lawrct.ce Mueller, P.O. Box 132; 'Orvllle Mcndenhall, Chlloqulii: Mrs. Nellie Smith, Keno; Mrs Esiin Kigcr. 4707 Clinton Stieet r.nd Mrs. Ruth Tribe, 533 Korth Eleventh Stieet. Bonney Reports On Rink Status Cl'.y HecreMlun Director Bob Bonney said todav that the changes I .n temperature over the past week j have made It Impossible to open the Mooie Paik ice skating rink. The park workers cannot remove ! 11, i.nu- thn rtrtk until kiim. tallied cold weather Ircexes the base. Bonnev said. A special base i was put on the rink las', sumtnei : and damsge to this base would . seriously h. mpet skatlnti this year Bonnev said that 'he onmni! ol the rink has ton nrlonlv in the rerfealioii department. He saldishow." that a soon as the cold continue 81100k adlournrd court one houl for a long eninm period ihe rlnk'earlier yesterday and ordered it to will- be upciicd, icume at 2 p m. today. . 3 JO if Machine 'company and Frank Junior High. i : i Salvage Begins For Sea Master WASHINGTON Wl Salvagers sought to recover from CbeM- peake Bay today the wreckage of' a martin oeaiwasier, me navy s giant new Jet seaplane .which promised much for the future. , , The' 600-pius m.p.h. craft . ex - ploded on a test flight yesterday about two hours after takeoff from the airport of its builder, the Glenn L, Martin Co., near Balti more. . '' 'Three Martin employes and one Navy officer were aboard. ' One unidentified body, attached to a parachute, was recovered. Eyewitnesses reported the four engine craft was trailing heavy black smoke a few moments be fore it exploded "right in the mid dle. " One parachute was seen to open. Another blast was reported as the nose hit the water, in the area about 70 miles southeast of Washington where the Potomac River flows into Chesapeake Bay. Pending recovery and study of crashed The 8eaMaster was the first ex pcrlmcntnl model of a long-range seaplane unveiled by the Navy last month for Adm. Arleigh Burke, chief bf naval operations. and Adm. Earl Mountbaten. first British sea lord. In the medium bomber category. It was designed to cruise at 40.000 leel, carry a 30,000-pound payload (which could include atomic bombs! nnri nnei-ntn frnm tLnlr. WBy., virtually anywhere In the , world. The Navy said Its primary : missions were minelaylng and nhntnoranhte r.pnnnaiMm-. Another SeaMaster has been built but not yet flown. Web Tightens Around Abbott OAKLAND. Calif., (UP) Ut-i After Hie session, Whitney and. to the intent Jury of seven men and fense attorneys prepared today toHove announced the defense has I've women. .. cross-examine the crime exurrti ...,,. w His principal findings: who in effect placed Burton w. j ini",cl erv,ces 01 Lowcl1 w-j l. Heavy, red clav taken from Abbott at the graveside ol Steph-I Bradford, 8an Jose criminologist j ln). ,0e5 nnd nee, 0f Abbott's en nine Blyt.lt. who once studied under Kirk. gmecr's boots was identical with The expert. Paul L. Knk ol the They tried unsuccessfully to have sub-soll nine inches deep in Steph University of California, took the I Snook appoint a criminologist. I anie's grave. stand vestr rday In an altcmpt Ui. prove through science that Abbott1 kidnaped and murdered the teen-, age Berkeley schoolgirl. ; made at the outset of the trial. His testimony appeared so con- Once the croas-cxainlnatlon ol eluMve thru defense attorneys I Kirk Is ended, the prosecution's Stanley Whitney and Harold Hove case agalnsv Abbott will be virtual asked Superior Judge Chailc? ly complete. Assistant District At Wade Snook to rece.is Uie trial ' torney FoUcr Emerson said he until Monday. would call one more witness, after They said thev "had no Idea", which Coaklcy will real ihe stale's that District Attorney J. Frank , case. Coakley would akaKlr: lo present Abbott Is accused of lining II evitlcnce of such 'a lecnnlcal na-.vear-old btephanle lo hei death on "'u "" " '"' time lo prepare lliclr cross-cxam- Snatlon. Snook said: . "Mi . Whitney. I feel that yo.i should have listened lo Mr. Cos k - l-y'o opening address, which out- i lined what the prosecution would Bsmo Hopeful Reps COP Labor Policios NEW YORK im 'Adlai Steven son Thursday accused Republican leaders of "hate m o n g e r i n g" against labor and asked whether It was an attempt "to stir up class conflict." The Democratic candidate for the 1956 presidential nomination said he was speaking "bluntly against what appears to be a de sign to play the ugly politics of group hatred." Stevenson told cheering dele- Labor Hears Confab End Amid Strife NEW YORK iflThe AFL-CIO neared tho end of its historic founding convention today amid a disagreement over arranging talks for a labor peace pact with busi ness. . ' , George Meany, AFL-CIO presi dent, said representatives of the National Assn. of Manufacturers had talked with him and accepted a bid by Meany to discuss a live-and-let-llve arrangement. The, NAM denied having agreed to any such discussions. While Meany Indicated he would try to straighten out the difficulty today, there remained the solid fact that' this No. 1 leader of or ganized labor was courting the idea of working out a nonaggres slon deal with industry. SHRPItlSF. ' Charles R. Sllgh Jr., the NAM'S board chairman, expressed sur prise at Meany's overture. Sllgh did not, however, throw any cold water on the underlying suggestion that labor and management could work out an agreement narrowing their differences. The more than 1.400 AFL-CIO convention delegates hear an ad dress today by Adlal Stevenson, announced candidate for the Dem ocratic presidential nomination.. i' Alter Stevenson's talk, the con-1 as he puts it, who are 'running ventlon was due to take Up a reso-' things'; lutlon outlining AFL-CIO political t Republican state chair- I plans for the 1868 election cam-1 man has proclaimed that labor palgn and wind up convention ses- headers are 'Marxist-Socialist boss ljo8V ' m who are trying to take this Meany said talks with the NAM country down a rat hole." looking toyart a Ubor - meiMwte - ment nonagorcsslon pact hove .bw? fl"?, ! sUl2, ?on' ','! staff level." He said he would , be in on ,',lem , ,he begInI)ing( AltRANGFMKNTS ONLY i Sllgh said that while Meany has Decn lllvlted 10 "ddress an NAM luncheon tomorrow, "no authorized 1 representative . of the NAM has been In contact with George Meany ! except to invite and make arrange ments, lor mm 10 speas. It should be quite possible,1 Meany said, "to reach an agree- n(t dangerous brand of politics, ment if they (the NAM) have any TnS divisive and therefore de good will In our American system ! structlve. We in this country are and I am sure they do. Continuing jUst emerging from long and to snipe at each other .Is a bit shameful Interval of hale and fear archaic. . and slander. Today McCarthyim "After all; they are Just as In- i, 0U(, f style. ; tcresled in seemg the American system worn as we are. more is no harm, at least, in seeing what can be worked out. We In labor don't introduce legislation to hurt them or put them out of business." Germans Set Bomb Probe FRANKFURT, Germany ( UP) attacks have risen among our Re West German authorities express- publican friends." ed suspicion today that a Com-; . , munlst bomb plot may have been responsible for an apartment house explosion that took at least T.6 lives yesterday. Federal authorities ordered au topsies performed on the victims and close questioning ol mc sur vivors. Federal German police and bomb experts Joined state and city officials In combing through the wreckage of the live-slory 1 uidlng for clues. i suspicion was arousco bv the1 met ih.L .11 hni (wo coui.les'llvlnu f , .u .....1 from Communist-controlled East I Prussia and the Sudelenland. Tin we nuilUlliK wnc ii-iiiurtrn Snook lelu.-ed, saying It would un- dul delay Ihe' case. He said such an application should have been "i" " "'"u "" his Tilnily County mountain cabin j on July M. Iivo days alter some ol her belongings had turned tip In 1 basement ol his Alameda home. K.rk ollcred exhibit alltr exhibit linking Abbott with Stephanie. He delivered Us evidence Ire a matter- of-lact. ilmosl prolessonal tone. I using charts to explain his findings gates at the AFL-CIO convention a number of Republicans Including! two members of President Elsen- '-. bower's Cabinet have recently en- ' gaged In "a dangerous brand of politics" In criticisms against or ganized labor. His speech was interrupted 37 times by applause and when It was finished he received a standing ovation. In 1952 Stevenson received the endorsement of the AFL and CIO meeting in separate conven tions.' WGLV POLITICS . . Stevenson said "there appear to be a design tb play the ugly poll tics of group hatred," and he asked: -. : . "Is this, Indeed, an attempt to stir up class conflict? No election, no office Is worth such a price." He said the highest df of American people nowadays is to say nothing in the political arena which will hurt democracy's chances abroad. He added: t "And the politics of hate mon gerlug even blights democracy's future here at home." Stevenson, defeated 1952 Demo cratic presidential candidate who now Is making another bid for his party's nomination, spoke out be fore the AFL-CIO convention. He said , he had Intended "not to let this become a political speech," but went on to add: "I propose, nevertheless, to speak bluntly against what ap pears to be a design to play the ugly politics of group hatred." He continued: - " "It started with the secretary of agriculture's attempt to blame the farmer's current depression on the city worker's wage increase. "And now the chairman of the Republican Senatorial Committee has charged labor leaders with or ganizing 'a conspiracy of national proportions' to take over the fed eral government; SAl.t'TE DlNNF.ItS "The national chairman of the i 'Salute to Elsenhower' dinners has made his curious insinuating state ment that labor became a potent political force in America at ebout the same time as the rise of the Nazi Party in Germany; "A member of the Cabinet has said that he doesn't 'happen to go along with some of the "goons' t moger Tubby Stevenson's press j dei s0 I " id the four persons stev 'efpi-l-erl (n worn Sen :rtalrt- water m-Arizi. chairman' of the Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee; Frederick C: Craw ford, Cleveland industrialist and national chairman of the "Salute to Elsenhower" dinners; ; Secre tary of Interior McKay, and Philip Kuehn, Wisconsin Republican etate chairman.) . Stevenson continued: This. I repeat, Is a distressing haTF. CAMPAIGN But Is a similar hate campaign In the making around distorted Images ' of 'goons' and power hun gry labor bosses.' ugly phrases we hear almost daily? . ' "Must the image of America he further defaced? Is this. Indeed, an attempt to stir up class con flict? "No election, no office, li worth sueli a prlccl" Stevenson added: "I say let us put an end to this nnd quick and I am glad to note that voices of nrotest against these SHOPPING DAYS LEFT I Htlp Fight TB , U BUy VhrittmaS SmIS J ' ' . , T Sand found In Abbou s oxfords matched Ihe loam In the basement 0( Abbott's home, where Stepha- nle's purse and other belongings were found. s 3. The rear Ilnnr mat of Abbott's car had blood deep In the nap of Ihe In one. The mat had been thoroughly scruubed to remove sunace blood. 4. Two dark brown hairs from ihe back seat of the car were "Indistinguishable" from Stepha nie's, and six others could have been like hers. 0. Vacuum rwerpings It 0111 Ab bott's csr turned up 18 bits ot labile. Kirk traced them lo Steph. anlr's navy blue cardigan sweater, while oiion sweater, green petti coat and turquoise skirt. . Abbott was pasty-laced during Kirk's testimony,, but during -re- i cevses he talked and Joked with I reporters as though none ot It 1 matteied.