Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, June 17, 1958, Page 2, Image 2

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    ?AGE TWO
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
TUESDAY. JUNE 17. 1953
ADOPTED through the Fos
ter Parents Plan by Mr. and
Mrs. William Opie, 4630 "j
Crosby Street, is 10-year-eld
Giovanni Maschietti of
San Gregorio de Sassola,
Italy. Through the plan the
Opies' pledge to pay $15
per month for one year in
order to supply the lad with
the necessities his family is
unable to afford.
Arrest Try
Hits Snag
SACRAMENTO (API A man
charged wilh publishing obscene
material won a round Monday
mgnt in nis light against extra
dition to Oregon.
Gov. Goodwin Knight said he
will not issue a warrant to extra
dite Sanford Aday to Eugene.
Ore., unless the Fresno publisher
first is placed under Arrest.
After Aday appeared at a hear
ing in the governor's office, a
spokesman for Knight said he has
no objections to the extradition.
As a matter of policy, though.
Knight will not issue the warrant
until Aday is arrested, the spokes
man said.
Aday was indicted by a Lane
County, Ore., grand jury "on a
charge of publishing obscene ma
terial. The material in question
was t h c book. "The Strange
Three." which deals with incest
and homosexuality.
Similar charges earlier were
filed against Aday in a Kresnn
municipal court, but they were
dismissed.
ROUGH
CHARLOTTE, N. C. (AP) A
driverless 11-ton bulldozer lum
bered 180 yards from a construc
tion plot, mowed down six oak
trees, .slammed through a station
wagon and halted in 0. W. lied
rick's kitchen. Officers figured
teen-agers started it but couldn't
(top it.
OPIN DAILY 7:DO P. M
OOS TONIGHT !
jMhif At 8:10 & 11:10
TOMORROW
a CI
9 Dy oLua f
pA-y ' I VOLT AT
TARAM1E
World War Two Horrors
Stirred Again In Trial '
Of Accused Croat Butcher
'DENNIS THE MENACE"
LOS ANGKLKS U'PIi Stocky
Andrija Artukovic, 57-year-old fa
ther of five, was the key figure
today in a recounting of World
War II horrors when tens of thou
sands of Serbs and Jews were
butchered in Yujjoslovia.
The former interior minister of
Croatia, a state created by the
Nazis in Yugoslovia. went before
a federal hearing Monday to de
termined whether he shall be ex
tradited as a "common murderer."
Kxtradition of Artukovic has
been sought by Yugoslovia for
nearly seven years on charges he
ordered the deaths of 200,000 Jews
and Serbs on Croatia.
Road Building
Projects In
North Slated
SACRAMENTO (UPD The Di
vision of Highways has called for
bids on three multimiilion dollar
road building projects in Northern
California as well as several
smaller jobs.
The largest of the projects, r
$1,450.00(1 job in Shasta County, in
volvcs grading and surfacing two
sections of U.S. 209 between .2
mile east of llillcrest and three
miles west of Burney. A total of
S3 miles of highway will be built,
eliminating the remaining steep
and winding sections over Hatchet
.Mountain.
A total of $1,370.1100 is available
for construction of an interchange
on the liayshore Highway at
Mountain View- Alviso Road in
Sunnyvale. The project calls for
construction of a bridge, ramps
and sections of roadway to pro
vide the interchange facility.
Another project calls for con
structing the southbound freeway
lanes on U.S. 9tt-50 in Sacra menlo
County between 1.8 mile south ol
the Consumnes River and .2 mile
south of Elk Grove Road.
A total of $1,1(10,000 is available
for the project. The northbound
lanes on the same stretch of road
are already under construction.
Bids on all projects will be
opened here July 16.
Bids also were called for on
these projects?
Calaveras County: $311,000.
grading and surfacing 3.3 miles of
Road 1150 on Murphys Grade he
tween 3 .1 miles northeast of Alta
ville and Murphys.
Nevada County: siB3.son, stir-
lacing 3.4 miles of Brunswick
Road hetween Route 49 near Town
Talk and Route, 25.
San Maleo County: $02,000. land
scaping 2.2 miles of the Bayshore
rrecway in han Maleo.
POORS CPEN 6:3Q P. M.
LAST 2 PAYS
ff M-6-M Pitmitt 1
hi MM JUGSXIJH PntaHon
THE 'BLACKBOARD JUNGLE
INVADES A "NICE" SCHOOL!
CINfMASCOM
H11SS TAMBIVN UN SIWLINC
I I0HN 6ARRYM0RE M fa
I Mll van D0BN JURY III KWIS
and
"COUNTRY MUSIC
j HOLIDAY"
D JUNGLE' I
" SCHOOL! 1
i sm'm i
w I an M
mu urns
DOORS OPEN
TODAY AT 5:15
Masterpiece of all motion
pictures I
"THE GREATEST
' MOVING PICTURE
I HAVE EVER SEEN I"
"i run w
REVERENT
AND MASSIVt
Coca. E. Da Maun
i
- 1 w-l-u -..m -x.a i t-w x .v aval mm M at
Rival attorneys Monday pic
tured the graying ex-official alter
nately as a cold-blooded, merci
less butcher and as a simple ad
ministrator with no control over
what the police and army did in
the "independent State of Croatia."
On the decision of whether Ar
tukovic shall be extradited or not
rests the man's life, or so he
claims. He said other members of
the government of Croatia were
executed as soon as they were
caught by Marshal Tito's Commu
nist government.
Attorney George E. Daniclson
representing Yugoslovia, painted
a picture of butchery and rape
with Artukovic's active participa
tion.
The lawyer said he would pro
duce documentary evidence in the
hearing to prove his charges. One
of Ihe proofs, Daniclson said
would he a deposition from a
young man who watched his en
tire family as they were tied to
gether and shot.
'Danielson said he would prove
that Artukovic had ordered the
killing of an entire family, rang-
inn in age from 3 years old to
92, and the tieing of a family to
gether and burning them alive in
their house.
The attorney claimed Artukovic
was directly responsible for the
slaughter of 47 Orthodox Greek
priests and 48 Jewish religious
leaders and an order to kill all
gypsies.
Artukovic's attorney, Edward J.
O'Connor, said his client's service
wilh the Croatian government
from April. 1941 to laic 1942 had
nothing to do with killing. The at
torney said that if there were at'
r o c i t i e s they were political
brought on by a civil war hetween
the Croats and Serbs and were not
Artukovic's doing.
O'Connor said he would produce
14 witnesses, including two Cath
olic priests, to support his con
tentions. Artukovic came to the United
States in 1948 -and now lives in
Seal Beach, a community near
Long Reach, Calif, His extradition
was first sought on grounds that
he was a war criminal.
Later, the charge was changed
to "common murder" when it was
found Artukovic could not be ex
tradited as a political criminal.
The U.S. Supreme Court recently
ruled he might he extraditable as
a common criminal.
Planes Kit;
Two Perish
MO.IAVE. Calif. (AP) A Jet
bomber and a supersonic fighter
smashed together high over the
Mojave Desert Monday. Two men
in the bomber died.
The F100C fighter returned
safely to its base with one wing
badly damaged from the collision.
Its pilot was unhurt.
Lt. Col. Boyd L. Griibaugh. 40.
and Capt. Edward C. Gahl. 34. of
Edwards Air Force Base,, tried to
bail out of their stricken B57 as
it plunged earthward from 32.000
leet. They apparently ejected too
late.
The plane smashed to hits in
rough desert country. A helicopter
found the two bodies five miles
away.
Capt. CD. Crahh. pilot of the
jet lighter, said he didn't see the
B;i7 before the crash. Crahh and
a wingman were flying a training
mission from George Air Force
Rase at Yictorville, 60 miles to
the east.
Gruhauch was chief of flight
test operations at the flight lest
center.
Great Lakes
Xool Area'
WASHINGTON (API - The
coolest area in the nation during
the next 30 days will be the Great
Lakes rrgion, the Weather Bureau
forecasts.
The bureau's prediction from
mid-.lune to mid-July said:
"The Weather Bureau's 30-day
outlook lor the period from mid
June to mid-July calls (or tern.
peratures to average below sea
sonal normals in the northeastern
quarter of the nation with coolest
weather in the Great-Lakes re
gion. Above normal temperatures
are anticipated in the area west
of the Continental Divide and in
stales bordering the Gulf of Mox
ico. In regions not specified tem
peratures are predicted to aver
age not far from normal."
Way
'1'"M'W iflftMWlHWW.
e ,
Children (until S f 3Jc
mmmmamaiimfa
Stays W3s N
Un In B?c!i Rami
Of &849 rarW
in K mi is Hir! Si-floors l!Mt class
were baifc at their old hangout
yesterday. inking sodas -id
swapping stones.
The (our werethe only hoys in
a graduating' class of Ih. Raik in
l;Ul they used to hang out in the
Knnis Prus Store. It's now Hesser
Urns, hut it's in the sany spot.
the group oecinen to nuKe me
reunion an annual aitair.
They are lesk Sgt Kmory Shel
ton of the Athens, Ala , police de
partment. .Mat in I'erry. a con on
huyrr from Corpus Chnsti. Tex.:
Vivian Kurkhead. retired division
Mipenntentendrnl ol the Southern
lril . I.iImijH i,lm T.-Y
and John Mil.ain. retired Internal
Revenue Service cmploe ol Mid
GE WrliZ.MQVI! CAN'T M ItMZ AM POOVt jATURALV
Senior Truillo Gnashes
Teeth Over Son's Flunk
CIUDAD TRUJILLO, D R. (UPD
Dominican strongman Itafael L.
Iriijillo charges that the U.S.
Command and General Staff Col
lege, by flunking his playboy son.
branded itself a "political tool"
and proved the good neighbor pol
icy is dead.
Trujillo said Rafael Jr.'s failure
will not hurt him in the eyes of
the Dominican people, who revere
him for his "honesty, industry, in
telligence and high sense of re
sponsibility and dignity."
President Hector Trujillo, young
Rafael's uncle, appointed him
chairman of the Dominican joint
chiefs of staff the day it was an
nounced he "did not successfully
complete the course" at Ft. Leav
enworth. His father's yacht is now
FORGIVENESS DAY
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (UPD The
Charlotte public library declared
forgiveness day in an elfort to
get back overdue books. One per
son showed up with a copy of
Jock the Scot which was due
July B, 1933.
on the way to Los Angeles to
bring him home. .
"The good neighbor policy of the
late President Roosevelt has suf
fered and deteriorated completely
and there is now no hope? that it
will be restored," Rafael Sr. said
"A diploma granted by a mili
tary school, converted into a po
litical tool at the service of pas
sions and interests alien to its
purely technical mission, cannot
constitute an honor for anyone."
Young Trujillo. a lieutenant gen
eral in the armed forces com
manded by his father, left Leaven
worth last spring for a Hollywood
rest cure after a minor operation.
He made headlines by lavishing
fur coats and sports cars, bought
out of hit $50.00ft-a-month allow
ance, on such film beauties as
Zsa Zsa Gabor and Kim Novak.
He is in the process of divorc
ing the mother o his six children.
Everett Peery. supervisor of spe- Washington,
cial education in Klamath Counts-
left Saturday morning for the L'ni
tersity of Hawaii in Honolulu
where he will join the summer
staff as a group leader of a five-
unit Graduate Credit Aviation Edu
cation Workshop sponsored coop
eratively by the Civil Air Patrol
of the Pacidc Re&ion, the U.S. Air
Force and the University of Hawaii.
Captain Peery. commanding of
ficer of the local Civil Air Patrol
will work with a staff of experts
and experienced aviation educa
tion personnel who will explain
the rapidity with which air power
developing and the scientific
principles basic to flight to ap
proximately 150 elementary and
secondary school teachers and
CAP members who are seeking to
keep up with their pupils' knowl
edge of air power. The staff will
also examine the social, economic,
political and scientific implications
of air power in terms of their
relationships to elementary and
secondary school curricula and
problems.
Among the outstanding aviation
personages with whom Captain
Peery will be associated as work
shop staff member include Dr.
Wernher von Braun, top U.S. space
expert who put the Explorers into
orbit; Maj. Gen. Walter R. Agee.
CAP national commander; Dr.
Mervin K. Strickler Jr., chief,
Office of Aviation Education, CAP,
!' SEE THE j!
; FORTUNE COUPON
j; PAGE 12 1 !;
RUGS
CLEANED
' IN YOUR HOME
All Hand Work. No Shrinkage
Guaranteed
HOME RUG AND
UPHOLSTERY SERVICE
Ph. TU 4-8667 Day or Night
Don't
miss...
""K i
THIS SPECIAL
MERCURY SALE
W WtKTttN OS CmiT3, MOHTCIAIRS,
TATKM VAOOKI kU COMVIRTIILES
Vi'Ac-AaWMiao V.d ftillivan's 10th Anniversary on TV
ith our biggest money -saving event of the year. The
Mercurys we're offering are the biggest, most powerful
cars you can buy at such low prices. Sale lasts through
month of June only so act fast! u
MERCURY
0m t ant U Sullifii t
tpicill lot liwiwtlrf
$ti Jut 12i.
SEE THE OtlOCURY DEALER IN YOUR COMMUNITY
Everett Peery Leaves For
Hawaii Where He Will Be
Education Workshop Aide
jThe shot hit McKenzie in Ihe side.
Furbay, director of r World Kdu-i dentally stepped on the gun's tng-
ral on Tran-i-Wor d Air nes. New'"- i"u'"K "
York; Dr. Kraafte Khrk-ke. tech-
nical director. Astronautics Divi
sion. Convair. San Diego. Californ
ia: and Dr. Roland H. Spaulding,
professor of Aeronautical Educa
tion, .New York University.
John V. Sorenson. CAP aviation
educationist for Pacific Region and
workshop director commented thai
Captain Peery's experience with
the Civil Air Patrol makes h i m
especially valuable to the workshop.
PILEUP
ASHEVILLE, N.C. (AP) An
official for Carolina Trailwav
nuses says tourists in the Smoky
.Mountain National Park stop their
cars when they see bears cross
ing the highway. The bears stop
to examine the tourists and traf
fic piles up. The buses sometimes
are delayed as long as an hour,
the official says.
DC; Dr. John II.
DOG SHOOTS MA.V
SYDNEY, Australia UPI A
dog shot his master dead during
a hunting trip, authorities report
ed today. William McKenzie. out
hunting kangarous .Monday with
his pel dog. was standing outside
bis truck with a loaded shotgun
lying on the seat. The dog accl-
Cldahl
BEAUTY SALON
TOWN & COUNTRY
Call TU 2-5671 or drop in. Evt
nings by appointment Al
ways tho belt.
always delicious ... made with Smirnoff
ft 3
GET ON
THE
VODKA WAGON
WITH
to
- - - j
B the preatest name In
TltlYHOff VODKA
10 i 100 Full. Distil ltd lum (nil. Sti. Finn Smireott Fit. (Oil. Il Hiubliii), Hirlliid, Cms,
i'f J r v , 48
GUARDING VOICEWAYS WITH A!R-how we pump telephone
cables full of dry air to make phoning more reliable for you
PNMiK-dtKTtjN-E--OO
if v
SW9.1WS!P'-
T
-
. '
S.v 1 1 '
As your pt U flsh through
many of today's telephone rallies, they're
protected by dehydiated rompressed air.
Reason: If even tiny hit of riisture gets
inside a cahlc it i interrupt y ir service,
perhaps ruin the ible. So phone men like
Bill Hamilton, top picture, keepcahles tilled
with dry air. Thisiuts out m ture. The
II or kin? to?ctd;cr
to senr you Letter ....
air does another job, too. Should much es
cape, the drop in air pressure sets off an
firm. This helps us find the damage fast,
heads off possible trouble before it affects
your calls. Using compressed air to protect
cables is another way we bring you better,
mrge dependable scr ice. Service you enjoy
mure because you can always unt on iu
The men and women of
Pacific Telephone
in Klamath Falls
y.,f .iati .(,, 9;o it., TU 3-3401
west uiy, Ukia.
o