Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, September 21, 1958, Page 1, Image 1

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    New Soviet Mote B
Rejected By Ike
NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) Presi
dent Eisenhower Saturday de
nounced Soviet Premier Nikita
Khrushchev's latest note as abu
sive and intemperate and fired the
message back to Moscow tagged
"rejected" a probably unprece
dented move.
The United States called the
School Crisis
Moves Closer
To Showdown
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Southern school crisis Sat
urday moved another step toward
a showdown test between power
o( the federal government and lo
cal public opinion.
Federal authorities, taking the
position that resisting areas must
eccept racially integrated public
schools or no public schools at all,
adopted a waiting policy.
They counted on pressures f
- aroused parents in Arkansas and
Virginia areas where schools have
been closed after being ordered to
integrate.
In Little Rock, 61 attorneys in
cluding the son of Rep. Brooks
Hays (D-Ark) signed a public
statement saying that in their
opinion the city's four closed high
schools cannot legally be opened
on a private segregated basis.
The statement was ir the form
of a paid advertisement to appear
in Monday's editions of the Arkan
sas Gazette and Arkansas Demo
crat. The text was released to the
press Saturday.
In Little Rock, a group of pro
segregation mothers launched an
attempt to remove from office
four members of the Little Rock
School Board who have clashed
with Gov. Orval E. Faubus over
his massive resistance to force in
tegration. In Virginia, where Gov. J. Lind
say Almond Jr., has closed three
white schools and may close six
more next week, the situation ap
peared at an impasse. One attor
ney said, "It looks like an impos
sible situation."
It has become apparent that the
government plans no immediate
move in either Arkansas or Vir
ginia and will take no action prior
to tne oept. 17 relerendum
Little Rock.
In Washington, a government
spokesman commented, "We are
under no pressures in this connec
tion. The pressures are on the
other side, where local school
closures have aroused parents
who want to see their children in
school. There is bound to be a
growing realization that a choice
must be made, and without too
great delay, on having legally
operated schools, or no schools at
all."
Mishap Kills
Local Woman
One woman was killed and her
four 17-year-old girl passengers are
hospitalized in the Ashland General
Hospital as a result of a one
car accident near Lincoln on State
Highway 66 about 5:33 a.m. Satur
day. Mrs. Bessie Marjorie Smith, 39,
1921 Sargent Street Klamath Falls,
was driving a 1954 Lincoln sedan,
returning to Klamath Falls from s
Mcdtord ballgame when the ac
cident occurred, according to in
vestigating officers. One of the
girls, riding in the front seat, is
said to have reached over to turn
on the radio dial and inadvertent
ly switched olf the headlights. The
car left the highway, crashed into
a tree some 15 feet from the shoul
der and rolled 50 feet off the road.
With Mrs. Smith were Helen
Kathrine Smith; Judith Marie
Frasier, 1237 California; Josephine
Ann Krok, 703 Lincoln, and Ethel
Florez, 426 North Seventh Street.
They said that at the hospital
one of the girls reported that the
car's lights had failed momentar
ily, and when they came back
on a large tree loomed directly
in front of the vehicle. Officers
noted too, that there were no skid
marks from the highway to the
shoulder of the road.
Former French Colonies
Backing Algerian Rebels
PARIS AP) The former
French colonies of Morocco and
Tunisia put Premier de Gaulle's
government into a diplomatic
quandry Saturday by backing the
new Algerian rebel government in
its war against France.
The two newly independent na
tions flanking France's big North
African territory defied the
French warning that any country
recognizing the Exile Republic of
Algeria would be committing -n
unfriendly act.
If De uaulle follows up the
warning by breaking diplomatic
relations with Tunisia and Mo
rocco, he will eliminate them as
possible intermediaries in any fu
ture peace talks to end the 4-year-old
Algerian fight for independ
ence. France has refused up to now
to negotiate with rebel leaders, al
though President Habib Bourguiba
ef Tunisia has always hoped to
kring tfc" two sides together for
a peaceful settlement. Bourguiba
--? v v-i trie --!, t
Kremlin leader's tough 13 page
letter "unacceptable under estab
lished international practice" and
ordered the American charge
d'affaires in Moscow to return it
to the Soviet government.
James C. Hagerty, White House
press secretary, said at Eisenhow
er s vacation headquarters neither
he nor the State Department can
recall any precedent for rejection
of a Soviet note by the United
States.
In his letter to Eisenhower, re
ceived by the President Saturday
morning, Khrushchev warned that
the United States must abandon
Formosa or face "expulsion" by
Communist China.
Referring to the Soviet note, the
White House statement said:
"This communication is replete
with false accusations: it is
couched in language that is abu
sive and intemperate; it indulges
in personalities; it contains inad
missible threats.
All of this renders the com
munication unacceptable, under
established international practice.
Accordingly, it has been re
jected, and the United States
charge d'affaires in Moscow has
been ins'ructed to return the com
munication to the Soviet govern
ment. In a separate, second statement.
the White House called it "tragic
that Soviet military despotism
should support the use of force to
achieve expansionist ends" of Red
China. The statement termed the
Soviet viewpoint as expressed by
Knrusncnev grotesque and dan
gerous.
In response to questions, Hager
ty said both statements were per
sonally approved by the President
and that he personally had ordered
the Khrushchev note fired back to
Moscow.
Steelworkers
Unite Front
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP;-
The United Steel Workers Union
presented a united front to Lie
basic steel industry Saturday after
voting unanimous confidence in
its leader and crushing opposition
to his program.
David J. McDonald, 55-year-old
usw president, emerged from the
ninth constitutional convention,
which ended Saturday, with tight
control over the 1.2-million-mem-
ber union. ' '
In beating down the opposition
at every turn, the great majority
of the convention s 3,523 dele
gates finally recommended expul
sion for the protest committee
leaders.
The opposition was headed by
Donald L. Kanck, a Mcheesport,
Pa., mill worker. He said he and
others in the committee will fight
the expulsion move.
In its final session, the giant
union adopted several resolutions
calling for improvements in the
existing health and welfare pro
gram.
One resolution recommended a
broad study of the health plan
and suggested setting up union
operated hospitals and clinics in
areas where the study would show
a need for them. The resolution
said:
We are confident that a united
and determined membership can
win the goal of full medical secur
ity for all steelworkers through
the process of collective bargain
ing.
The union indicated it expected
the money for the medical im
provements to come from com
pany funds already established for
medical and hospital care plans.
The resolution was one of some
5,200 acted on by the delegates,
many of them demanding a wage
increase and more benefits in the
contract talks with basic steel
firms next spring.
McDonald referred to the pos
sibility of a long and bitter strike
several times during the conven
tion. At one point, he said "The
industry will try to ruin me if
need be to weaken us at the
negotiating table."
PLAYING IT SAFE
PATCHOGUE, N.Y. (UPI)-Al-
though it was unlocked and con
tained only $35, burglars walked
off with an 800-pound safe from
the office of an electrical con
tractor. cause it would lessen the chance
of talks, but he had to go along
with recognition to avoid danger
ous criticism.
A break with France also could
force Tunisia and Morocco to seek
support and financial aid else
where possibly President Nas
sers United Aran Republic or
even the Soviet bloc. France still
has some troops in Tunisia and
Morocco and contributes to their
economies.
Nasser was the first to rec
ognize the Algerian government
alter it was proclaimed Friday
in Cairo. The new Republic of
Iraq, the kingdom of Libya and
Yemen followed within hours.
Tunisia and Morocco already
have teamed up with the Algerian
rebels in laying the groundwork to
unite the western part of North
Africa called the Maghreb with
a permanent secretariat and con
sultative assembly.
With establishment of a formal
government for Algero the three
md tm mht coo pO tr ggg
Price Iten Cents 58 Pages KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON. SUNDAY. SEPTEMBER 21, 1858 Telephone TU 4-8111 No.6180
iww ty) pwFHfe fwwsawt -in m mis?:-- r' 1 "1 1
iff' r t
INDIAN LAND SALES plan was detailed for Rotary Club members at their weekly Fri
day noon meeting at the Willard by Earl Wilcox, head of the new sales office in Klam
ath Falls. Wilcox, far loft, was introduced by T. B, Watters, center, Management Special
ist who has worked for four years on the Indian problem. Far right is Adolph Zamsky,
Kotary Club president.
Weather
FORECAST Klamath Falls and
vicinity: Fair and slightly warmer
Sunday. Highs 67-72; low Sunday
night, 32-37.
High yesterday 62
Low last night 34
Northern California Fair Sun
day with increasing cloudiness In
north and increasing fog on coust.
Coastal winds northerly to north
westerly, 10-20 miles an hour.
Lebanon Boss
Departs Land
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) Pre
mier Sami Solh slipped quietly out
of Lebanon Saturday. Two attempts
nad been mauc to kill him during
Lebanon s tour - month insurrec
tion.
One report said he had gone to
lurKey. Another said he had head
ed for Switzerland.
. Unrest seethed throughout Bei
rut Saturday, only three days be-
lore a new Lebanese regime as
sumes power. .
As time for the government
changeover luesday approached,
the rebels were increasing ten
sion, apparently, purposely, with
Kionapings ana other lawlessness
This has forced the authorities to
clamp a curfew on Beirut and its
suburbs beginning at 8 p.m. Mon
day "until further notice." It
probably will last 24 hours, per
haps even longer.
By that lime retiring President
Camille Chamoun will have left
office. President-elect Gen. Fuad
Chehab will have moved into the
palace and been sworn in before
Parliament.
Solh, whose term as premier ex
pires Tuesday, left behind a writ
ten resignation to take clfect Mon
day. He had been premier nearly
two years one of the longest
terms in Lebanon s 15-ycar his
lory as a republic. He is a Mos
lem. By custom in half-Christian,
half-Moslem Lebanon, a Moslem
is premier and the president
Christian.
Apparently increasing tension
Beirut spurred his departure. On
Sept. 10 Solh said he planned to
go abroad for a holiday and re
turn when tempers calmed down
His departure, however, was kept
secret except to a few friends
Twice during Lebanon's current
troubles assassins tried to kill
Solh. On July 29 he escaped death
by a split second when a car
parked at the side of a road blew
up as he drove by in his car. A
wire running down from a road
side hill had been attached to the
parked car. Eight persons per
ished.
Pacific Chief,
Chiang Confer
TAIPEI, Formosa (AP) The
top U. S. commander in the Pa
cific said Saturday considerable
progress had been made in getting
supplies to Quemoy during the
last two weeks. As he spoke, the
supply convoy had cracked the
Communist blockade.
Adm. Harry D. Felt flew in for
conferences with Nationalist Chi
nese President Chiang Kai-shek at
the start of the fifth week of the
Formosa Strait crisis. Felt de
scribed the situation as serious
but said "I am not discouraged,
Asked whether the United States
had sufficient forces in the Pa
cific to deal with any situation,
he replied "The forces are very,
very strong and quite adequate.'
reit declined to comment on
whether the American military
buildup on Formosa would con
tinue.
The Nationalist Defense Minis
try did not say how many cargo
ships reached Quemoy Saturday or
how much cargo they discharged.
The Communist shore batteries
poured in 1,034 shells while the
ships were at the beach, but the
Nationalists said they withdrew
safely.
Earlier the Nationalists claimed
a naval victory over Comnunist
Timberland Sales Program
Outlined For Rotary Club
By FLOYD L. WYNNE
"Withdrawing members of the
Klamath Tribe should receive their
first payment in late November or
early December," Earl Wilcox told
questioners at the Friday noon
meeting of the Rotary Club at the
Willard Hotel.
Wilcox was introduced by Tom
Watters, Management Specialist,
who styled himself "a black Re
publican." Watters outlined brief
ly the setting up of the Manage
ment Specialists and summed up
by stating, "We black Republicans
now find ourselves tabbed as new
dealers."
Wilcox carefully outlined prog
ress of the termination plan from
its inception, pointing out that the
Management Specialists had been
instructed to do four things (1)
make an appraisal, (2) hold nn
election to determine wishes of
tribal members, (31 select areas
of reservation to be sold and (4)
set up a plan of management for
those members not electing to
withdraw.
He pointed out that 25 per cent
of all the forest .anas in the Kiam
ath Basin are in the reservation.
"Fire billion board feet have been
removed from the reservation in
the past 47 years," he said. "This
is enough lumber to have built
Drunk Charge
Jails KF Youth
A 17-year-old Klamath Falls
youth' is in city jail charged with
drunkenness and facing the pros
pect of possibly more serious
charges as the result of an inci
dent reported to cily police at 11:25
Friday night by Mrs. Edith Dyer,
2744 Altamont Drive.
Mrs. Dyer walked inlo the city
police headquarters to report that
she was seated in her car on Ala
meda near KUHS with the hand
brake set and the motor running,
waiting for her son who was at
tending a high school dance.
She reported that a youngster,
obviously intoxicated, opened the
far door of her car. climbed inlo
the front scat with her. She start
ed to take off the hand brake and
get the car moving, but the youth
warned her to leave the car alone.
She renortcd he then put an arm
around her neck and proceeded to
choke her. When she broke free
and tried to get out the car door,
the youlh followed her, grabbed
her by the hair and started drag
ging her.
Some other teen-agers nearby
noticed the commotion and came
to her aid, .she told police. The
17-year-old (led.
The vouth was identified, how
ever, by spectators, and police
went lo his home ana louna mm
in bed. They finally located his
clothing on the back porch of his
home. It was wet, and police spec
ulated that he may have fallen or
jumped into the canal to escape
apprehension.
The boy. however, told city po
lice that all he could remember
was that he went to the high
school dance earlier in the eve
ning, got into a fight with another
boy from Eugene, and was either
knocked or Jell into me canai.
World's Airlines
May Slash Prices
LONDON (AP) The world's
airlines were reported Saturday
considering fare cuts in a drive to
persuade more people to fly.
The air correspondent of the
usually well informed Financial
Times wrote that many airlines
feel air transport has reached Its
maximum market at current fare
levels.
TOUCHY PASSENGERS!
LONDON 'LTD - Having 40
policemen as passengers was iio
help to the ariver oi a aounie-
decker bus Friday night. The
driver made a wrong turn and
sheared off the top of the bus on
a low railroad bretge. Four of the
pohccgien, members of a choir en
route to a performance, were in
jurcd slightly.
homes for all the people ih San
Francisco, Portland, Seattle, Spo
kane and you can throw in Oak
land."
Under terms of the first ter
mination law, he said, it would
have been necessary to sell some
three and one-half billion board
feet in less than two years time.
"To have done so," he stated.
"would have removed timber vi
tally needed by local industries,
and would have drastically re
duced timber prices."
Speaking of the recently enacted
amendments to the termination
law, Wilcox enumerated the four
things it will accomplish. He said
(1) it will give a time extension
from 1960 to 1961 for the sales
of timber, (2) permit the govern
ment to acquire title to the Klam
ath Marsh, (3) permit an apprais
al review and (4 allow sales of
unus on a sustained yieia Dasis.
"These amendments." he said.
will assure continued contribution
of these timborlands to the econo
my of the Basin. '
In dptni!in& the land snips nrn.
gram, Wilcox stated that the area
to bo sold has been divided into
large units which will be sold only
lor sustained yield purposes, and
30 to 40 smaller units which will
be sold with no restrictions.
The smaller units will bo sold
within the next 45 days, he slated
This will provide funds for with
drawing members for the next
year to year and a half," he said,
and by then, some of the large
units should have been sold.
"It is quite possible." he warned
lhat no private buyers will agree
to purchase the large economic
units because of the sustained yield
restriclions that go with them."
He also pointed out that the re
cent sale of some timber has pro
vided adequate funds for those
tribal members remaining in the
management plan for the next five
years.
Indians remaining in Hie man
agement plan should receive
ibout $1,400 per year for the next
live years, he said, while the vir
gin timber stands were being cut.
When they switch to the cut-
over areas, he continued, that
annual income may drop to $800
to $900. '
Wilcox pointed out lhat the con
eluding act of the Management
Specialists will be to arrange a
trust agreement for the trib.'i
members remaining in the man
agement plan.
Three banks Jiavc indicated
interest in handling such a trust,"
Wilcox said.
This, he pointed out, would end
government control over, all the
Klamath Indians. The trust would
be subject to a reviewal and vote
each five year period, he said,
and anytime that 50 per cent or
more of the remaining members
elect lo dissolve the trust they can
do so.
Wilcox is to head the new Klam
ath Indian Land Sales oilicc in
Ihe process of being set up
Klamath Falls.
Gen. De Gaulle
Wins Acclaim
PARIS (AP) Premier Charles
de Gaulle was acclaimed by thou
sands on a political swing through
Brittany Saturday, but police and
soldiers guarded against possible
Algerian nationalist attacks.
Stumping in support of his new
constitution, De Oaulle was out
wardly unperturbed and at one
point left his party in Rennes to
shake hands with crowds lining
the streets.
Nevertheless, heeled up police
forces were spotted all along the
route. At Bordeaux, next stop on
De Gaulle's flying weekend trip,
police were spotted every 25 yards
along his proposed route.
Emphasizing his role as a pol
itician, the general toured in a
gray, double breasted suit rather
than the wartime uniform he fa
vored earlier when his primary
concern was to re-establish gov
ernment authority in troubled
France.
New Proposal
Offered UAW
By Auto Firm
DETROIT (AP) General Mo
tors, object of a Sept. 30 strike
deadline by the United Auto Work
ers, Saturday offered the UAW a
new three-year proposal which it
said contained 19 specific improve
ments.
The UAW, which Friday night
announced it also would strike
Chrysler if no contract agreement
is reached soon, got the new con
tract offer from GM as ncgotia
lions resumed Saturday.
GM said the new contract would
he effective as of Sept. 1 ard
would carry three annual pay in
creases totaling at least 21 cents
per hour during the life of the con
tract. The first increase would be
effective as of last July 1.
GM also proposed 8 cents an
hour additional for skilled trade
workers and an increase of 3
cents an hour in cost-of-living al
lowances to compensate for cost-of-living
increases during the last
four months that GM workers
have been without a contract.
GM told the union "a prompt
settlement on the basis proposed
by GM cannot fail to make a vital
ly important contribution to eco
nomic recovery at this critical
lime. On the other hand, it is ob-
ious that a major automobile
strike would have the opposite ef-
lect.
There was no immediate com
ment from the union on the offer.
UAW President Walter P. Rcu-
ther assumed personal command
of the UAW's negotiations with
Chrysler Saturday and told news
men that "If Chrysler would get
down to serious collective bargain
ing we could have an agreement
by Monday."
Chrysler declined comment on
Reulher's announcement that the
union s 25-man international
ccutive board had sanctioned
strikes against GM and Chrysler.
GM also declined comment.
The Chrysler strike time was
left to the discretion of Reuther
and other ton UAW officials in
light of what progress if any is
made in ellorts to reach contract
agreement.
In the case of GM, the unionhn0 ground.
was much firmer. It set a Tues
day, Sept. 30, deadline for the
walkout. Reuther saiff llin GM
problem is much tougher since it
has four times as many auto
plants as Chrysler and hundreds
of unsolved grievances in local
GM plants.
Keulher made it plain the UAW
would not accept at GM or Chrys
ler carbon copies of the three-
year contract worked out with
Ford Wednesday. That agreement
came after a seven-hour strike in
volving Ofl.OOO Ford workers.
The UAW chief also said that
if the union should get gains at
Chrysler or GM over and above
those obtained from Ford, it would
not go back to Ford and ask for
further concessions. "We made a
contract with Ford and we'll slick
by its forms, he said.
Times Listed
For Orb View
PORTLAND (AP) If skies are
qlear enough, the rocket that sent
the Soviet Union's Sputnik HI aloft
can be seen over Pacific Northwest
skies in early mornings this week.
Here is the schedule, wilh all
Hie passes from southwest to
northeast:
Sunday, 3:48 p.m., 65 degrees
above horizon in northwest sky.
Monday, 3:0.'l a.m., 33 degrees
in southeast sky, 4:43 am. very
low in northwest sky.
luesday, 2:17 a.m., 10 degrees
southeast sky: 3:57 a.m.. 15
degrees in northwest sky.
Wednesday, 3:10 a.m., 45 de
grees in northwest sky.
Thursday, 2:22 a.m., 40 degrees
in southeast sky.
Friday, 3:13 a.m., 10 degrees in
soulheast sky.
Education Plans Readied
For Displaced Students
RICHMOND, Va. ( API-Plans
were readied Saturday for the pri
vate education of pupils displaced
from schools in at least one Vir
ginia locality under the stale's
policy of massive resistance to
racial integration.
At Charlottesville, where the
1,050-piipil Lane High School and
Ihe 650-pupil Venable Elementary
School were closed by stale order
Thursday, two groups pushed
plans to open classes in private
recreation rooms and lodge halls
this week.
W. M. Pope, chairman of the
Charlottesville Educational Foun
dation, said his group would reg
ister pupils from Venable Monday
and seniors from Lane Tuesday.
Plans coll for tho Venable chil
dren to attend their first classes
sometime during the week.
Mrs. Nancy Manson. chairman
ol the Parents Committee for
Emergency Schools, said registra
tion would be held Monday morn
ing for pupils from Venable nd
Lane. She said her group hoped
to begin classes Wednesday.
Several groups in Norfolk are
working to set up private schools
to eg car$Qf childrO that may
II .w. . t ' f '
-. . a: .-.
SI 50,000
Fourteen - Year
Confesses Beating Girl, 9
NEWARK. N. J. (AP)-A 9-
year-old - girl was found lying in
the street Friday night, burned,
beaten, teeth knocked out and her
hair cut.
Police said a 14-year-old bov Sat
urday confessed beating the girl
with a rock but denied burning
her. His name was not announced
since he is a juvenile.
The girl. Theresa Mclluch. was
in serious condition at Marlland
Medical Center. A physician there
said she either had been set afire
or held over a roaring blaze.
She returned from school Friday,
finished her homework and went
out to play in a park. A passerby
found her on a nearby street Fri
day night.
Theresa was rushed to the hos
pital suffering burns of the back,
chest, arms and head. She also had
a deep gash over the left eye and
bruises on her face. Several teeth
had been knocked out and most of
the others loosened.
Police said the 14-yoar-old boy.
a resident of the same apartment
development, broke down alter
three hours of questioning, admit
ted hitting her with a rock, but
sobbed repeatedly: "I don't know
why, I don t know why.
He told police he met the girl
outside the apartment building,
accompanied her into the park.
watched her light a cigarette and
than nllarWprl hfr lnnvin0 hpr nn
Une ot the girls shoes was
found beside a pool of blood In
the park. A piece of burnt cloth
Ins, believed to bo her blouse,
was 100 feet further on.
The boy was among 10 Juve
niles rounded up in Ihe area after
superintendent told police the
apartments had been the scene
of several fights and vandalism
recent ly.
The medical center said there
was no evidence of a sexual at
tack.
Theresa is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Francis McHugh Jr.,
who have lived for three years in
the Ivy Hill Apartments, a large
middlc-incomo development. Her
father is an auditor for the New
Jersey Blue Cross Plan.
All the kids liked hc-r, Mrs.
McHugh said. "I can't imagine
who would do anything like this."
An attractive brown - haired
youngster, Theresa came home
from school, finished her home
work and I hen went out to play
in Ivy Hill Park.
An umdentilied woman alighting
from a bus found the girl lying in
a street near the park.
I'inkerton Dct. Louis Sferlazzo,
watchman at the apartments,
asked Theresa: "Who did it?"
"Boys," she said.
"How?"
"With a rock."
Then she lapsed inlo uncon
sciousness. The statement about
Bloodmobile
The Red Crnns Hloodmnliilc
will be at the Veterans of For
eign Wars Club, 515 Klamath
Avenue, Tuesday from 4 to 8
p.m. and Wednesday from 10
a.m. to 2 p.m. Donors should
make appointments by phoning
the Red Cross office, TU 4-4125.
be displaced from schools within
the week, but no firm plans have
been announced.
At Front Royal, whore the 1.000
pupil Warren County High School
became the first to come under
the state's school closure law, no
plans have yet been announced for
privato schooling.
Gov. J. Lindsay Almond Jr.,
who had nothing to say publicly
on what the state's next step
would be. met Friday with olfi
cials of the State Department of
education and Ally. Gen. A. s
Harrison Jr. A spokesman for the
governor said no break In the im
passe was expected over the
weekend.
State closure of six senior and
junior high schools at Norfolk was
postponed for a week Friday as
the school board decided to wait
until Sept. 29 before opening the
city's secondary schools. The
board's attorneys will seek a stay
of a desegregation order and, if
that fails, will then assign 17 Ne
groes to the six schools. The as
signments would bring the auto
matic closure of the schools and
the idling of tome lO.ufju ttcito.
- .i , p. i i -i v.- At -- '
'.rv -' -T?1 ."-T--. ..m
- Old NY Boy
a rock apparently explained a cut
on her head.
The girl's shoes were missing
and her blouse either had been
torn or burned off. Searching the
nark, police found one shoe be
lieved to be hers and also traces
of blood.
Charred Body
Found In Fire
CIIILOQU1N An unidentified
man lost his life in an early morn
ing fire on Saturday which de
stroyed the shack in which Or-
mand (Huckleberry) Leighton had
been living on the west side of
Chiloquin.
The Chiloquin volunteer fire de
partment received a call at 1:10
a.m. from Marlcne Norris, a fresh
man at Chiloquin High School,
who saw the blaze from her win
dow two doors away. At 1:25 a.m.
the firemen had succeeded in re
moving the body of a man from
the two-room .house.
Charles Rogers, police chief, and
Alvie Youngblood, deputy sheriff
at Chiloquin, were still investigat
ing the cause of the fire and seek
ing to determine the identity of
Ihe man on Saturday afternoon.
The body was clad in Levis and
a partly mimed comb was in a
back pocket.
Rogers said lhat Leighton,
thought to be in his mid-thirfies.
had not been seen since Friday.
Ho added that Melvin Billy, next
door neighbor and great uncle of
Miss Norris. stated that he had
smelted smoke and thought some
one was burning rags in the neigh
borhood about 9 p.m. on Friday.
but had been unable to discover
a fire so had dismissed his con
cern over the matter.
The house is said to have been
owned by Nora Hawks, mother of
Leighton's wife, the former Myra
Captain. Mrs. Leighton was
thought lo have spent the week
Klamath Falls and was not
available for a statement on Sat
urday. Citywide Caucus
Held In Chiloquin
CIIII.OQUIN-The citywide cau
cus held Friday evening in Chilo
quin resulted in the nomination of
two candidates for mayor and 12
nominees for six other positions.
Lcroy Gienger, rancher and mcr-
chant, and Bill Barnes, a partner
in the B&M Lumber Company
here, will oppose each other on tho
November ballot for the position of
mayor of Chiloquin. The term of
Bert Albert is expiring.
Lloyd Peters, incumbent, was
renominated for tho position of wa
ler collector, secretary - treasurer
and judge-recorder, lie will have
no competition on Ihe November
ballot.
At press time on Saturday the
complete list of candidates for rity
council posts was not available.
3
UF-RC TOTAL TO DATE:
$53,018.23
CHURCH CONFERENCE SET
DENVER (UPI) - About 10,000
persons are expected to attend the
annual assembly of the Interna
tional Convention of Christian
Churches hero next summer. Del
egates will come from every stats
and 64 other countries to attend
the meeting Aug. 28-Sept. 2, ac
cording to the lev. Maurice F.
Lyerla, cxeeuliw; st trelnry ot the
Colorado1 Cerist SftsfiANV fo
c.ew.
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