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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 28, 1956)
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 28. 1950 National Republican ChM Named In Fund Fraud Case CHICAGO (ffl Renubllran w. uonat unairman Leonard w. Hall was named as one of 92 defendants Saturday in a suit for an account ing based on an alleged disburse ment record of Orville Hodge's envelope bank account, The suit, filed by Democratic State's Atty. John Gutknecht of Cook County,' named 92 individu als, firms and organizations. Some were referred to by incomplete designations. Gutknecht said the defendants uesiae noage, tne former Re publican Illinois state auditor now serving 12 to 15 years for embez zlement, two other persons con victed of conspiracy, and the Southmoore Bank & Trust Co. were listed Dy Edward A. Hintz, the former bank president, as re cipients of money kept for Hodee by Hintz. The names, Gutknecht said. S'.''F'Ptby una as a record of funds naid th ntLeaur 'er investigators Marine Wives Issue Change SEATTLE t - Arriving here from the Far East Saturday, a group of Marine Corps wives charged that the commandant's "Go home, wives' 'order has dron- ped the Marines' overseas morale to "an all-time low." The women, many with chil dren, arrived here on the Navy transport James O'Hara. They re turned under tne order of Gen. Randolph M. Pate, Marine Corps commandant, who ruled that fami- State warrant .".v"'"0 th h.i. K ,- sent to ,,V .i,. ?e- Placing ' f """e ,n a mam a envelope fa a1 An auditor's report recently put he amount of funds taken from w'b:,HdSe at more than ,,u. ninu, and Edward A "ph".s. lurmer cnief aide to. ,""? "lre imprisoned after Pleadine euiliv in defraud the state. v"'"""at' lu The defendant listed in Gut- ...cm sun included, besides Hall Warren Wright. Illinois' Renubli- tan state treasurer; "John Stelle ' Associates." not further iripnii. "ed "Citizens for Merriam Din ner, an apparent reference to the contribution to the Chicago mayoral campaign of Robert E nicrriam. and "Look County Cam paign Fund." Gutknecht. who filirf th ...; ,v Cook County Circuit Court, said ueieiiuams were ordered to file answers within 30 days after being served with notices of the suit. He said he wanted to determine whether they received money credited to them in the Hintz eager, ana U so, why. uutknecht said his "ultimate purpose" is to sent pnmnlolo ro. covery df funds stolen from the siaie. ine Hintz ledger, which had been held bv U.S. Atlv Rnhort Tieken was released Thursday to me u.a. acnaie Banning and Cur rency Committee by order of Dist. Judge Philip L. Sullivan. Tieken lies were not a part ol the mo bile combat force" required overbad refused to release the ledger, seas. I savin? he was moi-nlv tha mictri;' The women issued a statement i an for it in the name of the federal labeled the "collective opinions of grand jury. Marine wives aboard the O' Hara. It complained "1. It is unjust to disrupt Marine families by ordering the wives and children home within 30 days and to threaten to punish husbands for a policy which has been so hazy and weak as to have allowed Ma rine families to join their hus bands in Japan for years. "2. The majority of Marine wives obtained a military depend ents' visa, valid for 12 months. "3. Freedom of speech is jeopar- Gutknecht said he obtained the ledger yesterday, from the Senate committee. Judge Rules On Custody our identities (in issuing the statement) to protect" our hus bands' careers. "4. Contrary to previous re ports, the moral among the Ma rines in the tar East is at an all- time low because they are asso ciated with other services whose dependents are allowed to be with them. "5. Marine families in the Far East paid their own transportation to Japan, lived in private rentals and paid for their children s schooling." RENO (UP)-District Judee A. J. Maestrettl ruled Saturday that nine-year-old Karen Henvy must live with her mnlhpi- Mrs Natha niel! wnen we are icrcea 10 niaeme Wackcr, Salem, Ore., for the next year. Early this week, Karen created a furore by running out of Maes trctti's courtroom and vanishing into a snowstorm for several hours after the judge ruled that her father, Thomas-Henvy of Re no, could not have full, cpstody of the child. ' Karen ran to a nearby hotel where she hid all day in a base ment room until she got hungry and emerged six hours later. Meanwhile, police had scoured the city lor the missing child. Her father and mother were di vorced here in 1954. At that time, Mrs. Wacker was given custody of Karen during the school year and she was to live with her father during the summer vaca tion months. Henvy, however, filed an action in Maestretti's court seeking to gain lull custody of his daughter. Maestrettl was hearing arguments on this action Tuesday when Kar en fled from the courtroom. Maestretti agreed to reconsider his earlier action following the in cident and today he ruled the girl must live with her mother for the next year. He said, however, that he would reexamine the case after one year to see how things were working out. He urged Henvy and Mrs. Wack er to cooperate for the child's welfare. Anti-Soviet Blast Heard MUNICH. Germany W Radio monitors early Sunday picked up a broadcast in the Romanian lang uage with an excited voice shout ing Death to the Russians. The monitors were unable to pin down the exact source of the broadcast. But thev said it came from a radio station almost due east of Munich, which could place it in embattled Hungary, in the Soviet Union, or in satellite Romania. The broadcast was picked up on a 6765 kilocycle band but shortly afterwards monitors said- there was heavy jamming of . the hand. Then the same voice began shout ing the message over the 6650 kilo cycle band. The voice shouted "Give us our homeland back. Death to the Rus sians, we want our Romanian lands back. Bessarabia. Bucovina. Give us our homeland back." Most of the former Romanian orovinces of Bessarabia and Bu covina were taken over by the Russians in the 1940s and, incor porated into the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic. British Broadcasting Crop, mon itors in London picked up similar broadcasts in the Romanian tongue. The BBC monitors said the station was evidently a clan destine broadcaster. The Munich monitors declined to be identified. Romanian Communist leaders currently are in Belgrade conduct ing talks with Yugoslavia's Presi dent Tito similar to me ohm Hungarian leaders engaged in. The talks preceded Hungary's cur rent disorders. Motorists Hurt In Bus Crash PORTLAND Wl Three Salem men received hospital treatment early Saturday after their car col lided with a city bus at a down town intersection. Injured were Frank Hadlcy, 23, the driver, and Robert F. Martin, 21, and Dean Power, 20, his pas sengers. The bus crashed through a store front. Several passengers were shaken up but unhurt. READ Frank (Pop) Hurd's ONLY PROMISE If Elected Judge of Klamath County In h Herald N.w Fridor, Novimbtr 2 Pole Ait. Frank Huri Escaped Convict Caught In North PORTLAND m Oregon Slate police reported that a motorist stopped on U.S. Highway 99-E south of Portland Saturday morn ing turned out to be a recently escaped convict from Washington State Prison. They identified him as Lloyd E. Enfield, 26, who was serving a three-year sentence on a grand larceny conviction when he es caped earlier this month. Enfield also is wanted in pout County on a bad check charge, officers reported. They said this charge resulted from the purchase of a new automobile Monday at Dallas. HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON PAGE SEVEN Poles Ask Return Of Tod Prelate WARSAW I Leading Polish Catholics Saturday demanded in print for the first time the return to duly of Poland's Toman Catho lic Primate Stefan Cardinal Wysyn-ski. A letter splashed over the front page of Warsaw's Catholic news paper Slowo Powsechne said "In all conscience we appeal to the government to sort out differences between tho church and the state "In accordance with the views of all Catholics, we request the return oi cardinal Wysynski to his duties as primate of Poland as quickly as possible. We appeal to the government to accent the church's jurisdiction over church attairs. We demand that the gov ernment help settle the nroblem of spreading Catholic ideas, es pecially the problem of teaching religion in the schools." It was the first published re quest for the primate's release- it was signed by a score of prom inent Polish priests and laymen. It included a promise of support for the political and economic pol icies of Wladyslaw Gomulka. Wysynski was removed from his duties in 11153 and confined to a monastery. , The military newspaper Soldier of Liberty carried the routine army order of the day which for, the first time was signed by the newly appointed Deputy Defense Minister Gen. Marian.Spychalski. It pointed up his new import-1 ance. Normally, such orders are signed by Defense Minister Mar shal Konstantin Rokossovsky, Polish-born Soviet marshal. Rokossovsky's future has been a matter of. constant speculation here since his removal from the Polish Politburo during the uphea vals which restored Gomulka to supreme power. borne Polish observers believe Rokossovsky soon will be trans ferred back to Moscow as com mander of the Warsaw pact mili tary alliance. Any outright dismissal was con sidered unlikely. Prime Minister Josef . Cyran kiewic, speaking in Parliament. denied rumors of Rokossovsky's influence over the Polish army and said he accepted Polish gov ernment orders during the last Polish Soviet crisis over the last weekend. Radio Warsaw said Spychalski presided over a political confer ence of Polish army and political leaders, attended by Gomulka. De tails of the discussion were not given. Rokossovsky's name, was not mentioned. ., , - ft- J?. B.f V : ,vmm -www .,? ... F t if ' in? 4 ' ft Assault Motion Denied By Judge McMINNVILLE in Circuit Judge Ralph Holman Friday dis missed motions filed by three de fendants challenging constitution ality of a 1955 state law providing penalties for assault to do bodily harm. The judge ordered the trio. Troy Henley, Portland, and Ira Don and Lloyd Henley, Newberg, held for trial on a charge of beating State Policeman James Finney in a tavern parking lot near New berg. The Hcnleys had contended they could receive a heavier penalty for unarmed assault than that provided for assault with a deadly-weapon. 5 fcSii.3M 1 h u4 11 i Ml' THEY DON'T LIKE THAT RED STAR In this first photo received from Budapest since heavy fighting broke out, an arrow points to the hole in the Hungarian flaq after the Red star was cut out y rebel demonstrators. The rebels were reported to have seized new strong points in flaming Budapest as fighting continued. NEA Radio-Telephono Russia Charges U.S. With Aiding In Revolt Areas MOSCOW Wi The Soviet Union's official newspapers charged Saturday the Hungarian revolt was incited, supported and financed by the-United States. Bri tain and othef Western powers; - Moscow radio also blamed the West for the uprising against Hun gary's' Communist regime,, saying "Fascist counter revolutionaries supported by 'the American dollar took advantage of temporary eco nomic difficulties to stir up the oy Killed Bv'Brother SALEM Wl A seven-year-old boy was fatally wounded here Sat urday morning by a bullet from a .22 caliber rifle held ' by his brother. Richard Gullickson and his brother, John, 10, sons of Mr. and Mrs. Duane E. Gullickson, found the rifle in an attic storage space above the garage of the home where the family has lived for about three months, investigating city and state police said. While playing with the gun. Richard was shot through the low er chest. He died less than an hour later in the emergency room of a balem hospital. After hearing the gunshot and the boys crying the mother called police and a first aid car. The distraught mother and John were in bed under a doctor's care later in the day. Russians Trade Guns For Bread NICKELS DORF, Austria W - Hungarian soldiers told Austrians at this Austrian-Hungarian border village last night that Russian soldiers in Hungary had traded guns for bread. The Hungarians said a small Russian garrison near Gyoer was unable to get supplies from rebel ling farmers who forced them back into their barracks. The rebels then proposed 'a deal guns for food. The Russians accepted. Knowland Scores AdSai's Ability ELY, Nev. Wl Sen. William Knowland IR-Calif) told a Republi can rally here last night Demo cratic presidential candidate Adlai Stevenson "is to naive to be presi dent if he is not aware of Rus sia's "history of treaty violations." The Senate minority leader listed the countries he said the Soviet Union betrayed and re iterated a Republican contention against Stevenson's proposal to end H-bomb testing: "Any agreement with the Soviet Union without adequate inspection proposed by President Eisenhower is meaningless and could jeopard ize the safety of our republic." population against the govern ment." The Communist party newspa per Pravda said President Eisen hower's "inflammatory" Christ mas message to the peoples of Eastern Europe last year was part of the Western campaign to overthrow Communist satellite governments, The newspaper and radio do nounciations of the West were the first official explanations of the Hungarian revolt to the Soviet people. They followed the usual Com munist formula of blaming "im perialist agents" for the insurrection. Pravda said "long underground. work, well armed and carefully prepared by imperialist powers" preceded the Hungarian rebellion. ! The Soviet government newspa-! per Isvestia said Bela Varga, president of the Hungarian Nation al Council in the United States, even predicted the uprising in Bu dapest at a news conference In New York Oct, 23, the day before it began. - . It said Varga had visited Eu rope two weeks earlier "just in order to check final preparations for a counterrevolutionary putsch with his overseas masters." Both newspapers said 100 mil lion dollars appropriated by the U. S. Congress last year to aid the peoples of Eastern Europe was spent in subversive activities In the satellites. j "A considerable share of this notorious fund was spent on the Hungarian counterrevolution ary underground," said Isvestia. "It is with this money," claimed Pravda, "that spies and diversion- isls are sent Into the people s de mocracies, that release of balloons with provocative literature is or- agnized, that lying, provocative leaflets are published and an in tensive campaign carried on by radio against Socialist countries." The newspapers admitted the Hungarian people were restive over shortages and injustices, but claimed that on their own they would not have risen against the Communist government. YalterReed Check Due Eisenhower WASHINGTON. ( - President Elsenhower checked in at Walter Reed Army Hospital Saturday for a pre-election physical examination. The President started in with chest and heart X-rays as he headed through the head-to-toe examination which he told the American people he would under go before the Nov. 6 balloting. Eisenhower has said that he would step out or the political race instantly at any "time that his health wasn't up to taking on another term in ' what has been called the world's toughest job, SMILING . ' The chief executive was smil ing and joking as he walked into the hospital. His press secretary, James C. Hagcrty, said Eisen hower was feeling "fine." Eight physicians, four military and four civilians, were in charge of thecheckup along with heads of various departments and clinics at the hospital. The medical men were to test the President's condition from all standpoints, but especially in view of the heart attack he suffered Sept. 24, 1955 and the major sur gery he underwent for ileitis June 9, 1956. TESTS They expect to finish their tests today and Eisenhower plans to leave the hospital shortly after lunch and return to the White House. A report from the doctors on their findings will be issued then, from the White House. There wasn't any doubt in the minds of Eisenhower aides that the physicians would pronounce the President in satisfactory health. The aides have set up three days of -campaigning for him next week, starling Monday with an aerial jaunt into Florida and Viriginia. ..... Nixon Met In Medford By OOP Candidate Group By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS , A number of Republican state' candidates were in Medford Fri day to welcome Vice President Nixon and appear later with him at a GOP rally. Gcv. Elmo Smith and Douglas McKay, Republican senatorial candidate, were at the Medford airport when Nixon's plane ar rived. A crowd of several hundred persons was on hand to greet the vice president. Democrats continued their cam paigning in other parts of the state. Sen. Wayne Morse, opposing McKay for the Senate, said in a Eugene speech that the farm support program is one of the cheapest insurance premiums businessmen have ever paid. He said it results in more pur chasing power for farmers "re-i fleeted In the cash registers of businessmen. Engineers End Annual Meeting .PORTLAND Wl The annual convention .of the Professional Engineers of Oregon ended here Saturday night with the presenta tion of the "Engineer of the Year" award to Eugene'Caldwell of Portland. New officers, headed by Harry Csyzewski, Portland, will be In stalled at the session. At Friday's opening meeting. L. L. German, an executive of General Electric Co., which oper ates the Hanford atomic works, was principal speaker. His topic was "The Civib Responsibility of the Professional Employe." Morse also said he favored Adlai Stevenson's proposals for ending the ' H-bomb tests, and added: "We're well on our way with a weapon that's so much more powerful than, the H-bomb that it compares with the H-bomb as the H-bomb compares with the A-bomb." Charles K. McWhorter, chairman of the Young Republican National Federation, said in Portland ha expected President Eisenhower to run as strong, if not stronger, in November as he did in 1952. The Al Sarena controversy drew comment from Charles O. Porter, Democratic nominee . opposing Republican Rep.. Harris Ells worth. "Al Sarena has now become the Republicans' election mine," Por ter said, "and it would not sur prise me to learn the state GOP party, hurt by the truth of the timber steal from our Rogue River National Forest, is finan cing the mining operations." Use Our LAY-AWAY PLAN FOR CHRISTMAS... Giftwore Furniture Lamps Oriental Rugs KORENIAN'S Imported 413 Mola . Ph. TU 4-5316 TOOTHY DIVORCE ISSUE SAN DIEGO, Calif. (UP)-Mrs. M a r J o r i e Lee McClurken, 48, charged in a divorce suit she was forced to make five sets of false teeth for herself in the last 10 years because her husband re fused to pay for professional dentures. - Join Our CHRISTMAS CAMERA PLAN $1 Down. $1' Week HOLDS ANY. 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