Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (March 13, 1959)
1 - la The Day's News President's Okay Certain On Hawaii By FRANK .IKNKINS For hours, as this is written, we've been reading and hearing of the JOY UNRESTRAINED with which the people of Hawaii are WASHINGTON 'AP ThejHagerty said the President is de greeting the news of their admis-1 Hawaiian Islands will become the ; lighted. ion to the Union as an Ameri-! nation s SOIh state within the year. ! n lour to six monihs Hawaii; can state. iongres answered me icrri- COuld be a full partner ui the un it seems not much more than ,tor' s half century of pleading for ion. It will lake that long to set h..p h. ... ..... iu- statehood Thursday with a re-Inn ele.i,n f.,. u. no.irlv uum ing to similar outbursts of jov 1 soundinu vote in the House, j people to choose their first state from the people of Alaska lor! The Senate assented a day earlier, ofticers. their two I S. senators the same reason " volc ia"d one representative KI.A.MATII FALLS, OREGON, FRIDAY, Pri.e Five Cents 30 Pages MARCH U. 1959 Trlephonr IT 4-K1 1 1 Why are they joylut? In an effort to answer that question, let's do a little suppos ing. Suppose we hadn't bought Alas ka at the right time. Suppose we hadn't annexed Ha waii at the right time. Let's do some more supposing. Suppose Russia had KEPT Alas ka Suppose Russia had swept down Into the mid-Pacific arid had TAK EN the Sandwich Islands. with a .b-l.-i ote. ,and one representative in the I President Kisenhower gets the House Hawaii will qualify for a bill today His approval is certain. second House seat alter the 10 Presidential secretary James C. census Jubilation Runs Rampant In-New State census There is a maximum time schedule set out in the state con stitution which the people of Ha waii, tired of waiting, adopted in lH.sn The maximum is 160 days between the date the President signs the bill and the date of the general election. The actual time could be less. Gov. William F. Quinn. 12th and last prcsidenlially appointed gov ernor of Hawaii, said he is inclined I HONOU'U' (API (Uppy Ha-Uo fa"" a schedule on the slow1 waiians cranked up a second I side. He said he thought that round of celebrations today for-wuld be preferred by political their newlv acquired statehood. (leaders ol both parties to get good Disregarding Fridav the 13th J candidates in the field. Quinn is a they planned a five-hour show at1 KepiHHican ana a cano.naie ior L.LM t I IIUI . 11 IK up III Mill IU ci Well In that event The people of Alaska and the FAR LESS HAPPY NOW. They "-'"1 ":!SeT io date wood entertainers and 200 grass- skirted hula dancers. would have very little to be happy about, for they would now be a Dart of the communist svstem. As a part of the communist m 5 1?Ia"ds- J as " tern, thev would be little better Thursday when Congress oled than slaves long-awaited statehood for the ler- ' ritory. .John A. Burns. Hawaii's Demo- rl.1l.,.,n'n t rnnffur . ..,el It was a holiday again through-ne favored ;hr hortP5t nnoiM. The boiled-down conclusion: THE V N I T E D STATES OF AMERICA IS A PRETTY GOOD PLACE TO LIVE. Ifs little wonder that the peo ple of Alaska and the people of Hawaii are so happy. The days program also called for a religious thanksgiving sen ice in Honolulu and a big concert by the Royal Hawaiian Band, joined by the bands of the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marines. Also on the program was a 50- un salute to the 50th state fired preliminaries to the ultimate proc lamation of the President formally admitted the islands to statehood. "Hawaiians are tired of living under the shackles of the appoint ive governor system." he said. Burns, undoubtedly a candidate for something, has not said which office he will seek. Hawaiians will have other things to vote on. besides officers. They must decide: 1. Whether they want statehood, 'they voted for it 2-1 in a plebis cite 19 years ago, but they must vote again. 1 2. Whether to accept the boun daries defined by Congress. 'This Asks Solons Foreign Aid WASHINGTON I API President! funds Kisenhower asked would go Kisenhower asked Congress today lor military programs military for t3 9M.nno.nnn in loreign aid He equipment and munitions includ said the spending is essential to j ing missiles and ' defense sup sun i al in the late of a "growing port" as aid to nations which Communist potential to iaunch a ' maintain hig military forces of war ot nuclear destruction " ! their own The remainder would go for de velopment help, technical assist ance and low interest loans, es pecially in Asia and the Middle East What of Hawaii's historyT bV artillerymen from howitzers on The Islands are generally sup-1 lolani Palace grounds, posed to have been discovered' Thursdays celebration began by Captain .lames Cook Captain j noisily w ithin minutes alter the Cook was a famous English navi-l House completed passage of the oatnr Hp manned Ihn Saint Law- .statehood bill fence river and the Newfoundland1 It exploded in a discordant din;''"'"' Palmyra Island, a tiny, coast. Then he tackled Ihe job of of sirens, church bells, ship's privately owned, coral atoll 960 mapping the South Pacific In theiwhistles and motorists' horns. miles south of Honolulu ' course of this job he theorized I At nisht there were street danc-! 3 Whether to accept the federal that there must he a new COYTi- bonfires and fireworks. land grants and reservations speci- NENT somewhere in the South! Military pianos dropped (lares at;l' .the statehood ML It wasn't until a sia 0,1 " hikiki ueacn, tne island It -'' "'" nest known resort sno . .isianus aim a iiuiimjci oi sniduri Pacific region. century later that discovery ol heir talcs at a niornin" session M Waikiki. throngs jammed the ones with a total land area of 6.434 o( more than two hours. Only an Australia pruvevi nun lu ie iiiiiu. . : ' " . a ti tj u. , '-.Tree v In en nniMlfl tn- ...it.-.n RIUITt II vs n, Hdl " mu.i i.e uir ... ..,.,.... In 1T76. he tackled the fabled L,.' .i.n. lu-ro u.ad'he icstivitics. Native Hawaiians no direct route by water from thchrhor.,J:,r " ss 8 lll's,nc of Pacfic to Hudson Bay. It was on! ,C'd'!' . ' .f 8 Kood omen Ve,,U'.i. MS ? MKa , T ' Servicemen at liberty joined the that job that he stumbled onto thei,housamls crow island group bat has just become a 0nc servic(.nlan ,arrled a the State of Hawaii. .cardboard sign from his neck He named it for Lord .lohn Mon-lcadmE -Mania,,,! welcomes Ha tagu. the fourth Earl ol Sandwich. ,,aj.. gn( anolner had a sign Hence Ihe name Sandwich Islands. wmc, "Iowa votes yes." He then headed for home. The largest bonfire was a tow- icring blare on an island adjoining While Cook is generally credit- Honolulu harbor. Logs from many ed with the discovery, it is fairly states and foreign countries had Samoan and Hawaiian maidens. '47th state in size, bigger than Liaht showers failed to damnan Rhode Island. Delaware and Con GIRL AND BROWNIE SCOUTS in Dunsmuir ara shown as they are setting up the table for a coffee hour following the I I a.m. service at the Methodist Church last Sunday. The scouts had attended the service in obi?rvance of Gi'l Scout week. Carol Lockart, a scout, it fixing the centerpiece; Betty Wright is the Girl Scout looking on, and Susan Wright, the Brownie. Photo by Peggy Walsh London, Bonn In Accord On Berlin BONN, Germany (API British od ot considerable German cool- nullan trip as useful, but now it Prime Minister Harold Macmillan ness and misgiving oxer Macnul- regarded it as having been "ex and Chancellor Konrad Adenauer lan's isit to Moscow. tremcly useful." have reached full agreement on Some West (ierman sources had t he British prime minister ad Berlin. vthe German question and indicatod privately there was (ear mll,od on arriving in Bonn Thurs- Macmillan might give wav on 2SJ"" e "pslorn mvr are some point other Western part- "s",n J " w lrom ln01r W' ners regards as vital without get-M ? a, P0'11. 10 lh; ling anything from the Soviets in W1 'hr,cat to a've them out of West Berlin. rc rn With I S Secretary of State Asked about the Bonn COVn-Joha Koster Dulles ailing. Macmil- iv.ent s attitude. 'nn Eckardt Saidl;,n h;is t;tkpn n or Iho rnlr nt rni - inuisaay it had always regarded the Ma In a special mesage Kisenhow er cautioned against reckless cuts, lest the I'nited States become "the richest nation in the graxeyard of The President said the full j amount is urgently needed to thwart "a fanatic conspiracy ol international communism" which ' I maintains 6'. million men under arms in .tbout 400 dmsions around i the world. Singling nut the Soviet drive to 1 force Ihe WtsJ nut of Berlin. Ki senhower said. "In Kurope today the Soviet I'nion has made de mands regarding the future of Berlin which, if unmodified, could1 ihave perilous consequences." ! "The resoluteness with which IWfl and our allies will meet this issue has come about in large measure because our past pro grams of economic and military assistance to our NATO allies have aided them." he said, "lo stand firm in the face of threats." Spe. iking of the worldwide Bed threa' against free nations. Kisen hower told the legislators: "Two fundamental purposes of our col lective defense effort are to pre vent general uar and to deter Communis! local aggression. "We know the enormous and xrnuino t i r,,tt nnf.il In I launch a uar of nuclear destruc-uin 01 Mn riancisto. was noin tion and their willingness to use Wltn a complete transposition of this power as a threat to the free 1,10 h,ood VMtfl of his heart, a world condition which prex ented his "We know also that even local 'blod from getting enough oxygen, aggrosions. unless checked, could As a result, his skin had a hlu absorb nation alter nation into thc.ish tinge and ht.s development waa Communist orbit or could Name stunted. He lacked the .strength to into world war. , ' 'The prut ect ion of t he free world against the threat or Ihe reality of Sov iet nuclear aggres- Skilled MDs Give SF Lad Life Chance CHICAGO rUPI Thousand of -malt contributors and the skilled hands of physicians teamed up to give httle David Stewart a chanct today for a normal life. Doctors at Children's Memorial Hospital said David, a 30-month-old "blue baby." was in satisfac tory condition after a delicate, lour-hour heart operation Thurs day afternoon. Although they termed the sur gery a "relative success." doctnn cautioned that the next day or so would be "crucial" in David's de termined struggle toward recov ery. David, of Vallemar. Calif., a sub- Kuropean security, a C.erman gov ernment spokesman said today. The statement came after Mac millan and Adenauer wound up walk or sit up because of the de tect and laced an early death Rut that was before David's plight became known to thou- sion or local attack resls on theisands of friends and well-wishers common defense elfort e.slab-1 around the country. His parents, lushed under our collective secun- Mr. and Hn Thomas Stewart, Macmillan arrived population. Hawaii jIVaiKf rrcnen rresiaem necticut. In now outranks Alaska, Nev ada. Wyoming. Vermont, Delaware and New Hampshire. certain that a Spaniard named .Inan Gaetano was the original discoverer. He was wandering around out m the Pacific in LSS some 200 years before Captain Cook's day. He is believed to have sighted the island group that has just he come an American state, but he hnd learned by then that the Pa cific Ocean was speckled with is lands been collected for the blaze. World News In llrief United Press International LONDON - Mikhail A. Sutlov, Russia's No 2 Communist, arrives and it didn't seem likely to. for an unofficial ln-dav visit to him that there" would he any' Britain flOLD there in those days Spain WASHINGTON Dulles' partici r like a lot of people now was j pat ion in Eisenhow er - Macmillan chiefly interested in the Quick! talks next week pronahly will be Buck and there seemed to him (limited. to be little likelihood of anv Quick BONN Adenauer - Macmillan the. nieet again today Board Mulls Relief Slate YKKKA Wilbur M. Van Over. Siskiyou County's new weffare di rector, asked Ihe county board ot supervisors if they wanted a tight, liberal or medium relief pro gram set up. whereupon the board directed Van Over lo draw up a formal county general relief pol icy for consideration by the board. It was suggested by Supervis or S. C. Jackson that the county should continue to follow its past practice of having a broad plan, leaving considerable discretion to the director. One present practice that could be considered controversial, brought out by Van Over, was that onlv in nroDeitv. which includes a car, is allowed general1 NICOSIA, Cyprus 'AP'-KOKA relief clients, and his suggestionl,he Grcek Cypnot underground Charles de Gaulle in Paris. He goes to the United States next week for conferences with Presi dent Kisenhower. Apparently the French and West German governments overruled any ideas the British may have had to ease the Berlin crisis by proposing a wholesale withdrawl of troops from central Kurope. Macmillan obviously sought to quiet West German (ears that his recent mission to Moscow had raised the prospect of "disengage ment" as an Allied policy. Bonn press chief relix von Kekardt told a news conference) that the two heads of cn . kpthflW Off GPS were agreed on the procedures in111 MWTT Wl " the coming weeks. Piiloc Rovicion "No differences exist." he said IvUICb leviaiwn British Foreign Office spokes man Peter Hope concurred. The agreement lollowed a peri BULLETIN A call from Srnatnr Harry Rnivin jhnrtly hrforr presi time today informed the Herald and News that the loaded gun legis lation proposed under H R 1 id has been tabled in committer, which moans that no further aelion will he taken. Thr hill would have made it illegal In carry a loaded gun in an automobile. ing coordinator ol Western strate- Ile is flymg to the I'nited Slates nexl week lor conferences with President Kisenhower. The Soviets kept up their hot-and-cold propaganda. The Soviet Communist party newspaper Pravda said this morn- inc I hat Khrushrhrv s i prnl istl to Communist Flast Germany jcrf.ase's. ty agreemcnls. The suir. requested is about 12 million dollars less than sought last year It would continue mas sive military-economic assistance to some 7n fnendlv nations into a 13th consecutive postwar year Kisenhower' s aid requests hav e been cut sharply in past years. Democrats, urging more spending man me aaminuirauon plans on couldn't alford to bring David to Chicago, where the operation for his condition was developed. A friend began a modest collec tion lo help the family, a San Francisco newspaper took up tht cause and soon a "dollars for Da vid" campaign snowhalled into a $10,000 fund to finance the trip and the operation The Stewarts flew to Chicaga nation's own defenses, have been " S?n Sunday and eyeing the loreign aid lund as place to offset nme of the tl:niH tni-nl I'hc nnvt fui A -. uiuivi ousci i ai itsn mm K'UHg; ac quainted with the hospital. opens clear prospecls lor a peaceful settlement with Ger many." While Pravda tended to play down the prospects of war explod ing out of the Berlin crisis, the Sov iet gov ernment new spaper Iz- vestia editorially altacked the West s attitude toward Berlin and declared "things cannot go on like this any longer." "While Ihe Soviel I'nion is striv ing lo lay the path towards peace. war mongering representatives of the West threalen to lay the path Weapons Ceded By Cypriots Rucks in the form of enld on volcanic islands that loomed up BERLIN Khrushchev's visit was that in a county as large as off the bow of his Spanish Galleon.' to Bast Germany leaves barely a i Siskiyou, vehicles of less than S-SOO So he made an entrv in his r'PP'e on nves ' 2.20O.noo West diary, and went on his way. Superstitious? Beware; Today's Friday The 13th Berliners he wants to "liberate." JOBLESS - Washington Re publicans rally behind modified i Democratic plan to prevent cut off in jobless pay for 300.000 per- I sons. should be exempt He further said that a more lib eral relief policy is the present statewide trend, but admitted that B Iringe area like Siskiyou Coun tv "could break itself" through an increased transient case load if SAILING Kincsport. Tcnn. :its program was loo liberal XKW YORK 'AP- One of two surviving Confederate veterans in hospital with flue. NUDE Washington Con Are nu af- gross to investigate question of The board also authorized that the bids for paving at the Weed Airport should be postponed until March 31. instead of March 17 flic'ed with triskaidekaphobia? when is an artistic masterpiece just as originally authorized. Oscar Well, if you are. today 'rakes it: plain cheesecake two months in a row that you LITTLE DAVID Chicn Thou have suffered Ihe slings and ar sands of small donors and skilled rows of Friday the 13th We had hands of physicians team up to one in February too. (correct boy's heart defect. But cheer up Two Fridays the, CIGARS Washington Reve 13th in a row will not happen again jnue serv ice wants some companies for six years. to s:op avoiding taxes by making Oh yes. this triskaidekaphobia: i small cigars that look like ciga It's fear of the ligure 13. ref Picmme, consulting engineer for Siskiyou County, stated that he re quired more time to receive ad ditional bids. The eighth grade class of the Montague Etemtniary School, vis ited the Siskivou County Board of Supervisors during its Tuesday morninc session to observe them in action today began surrendering the arms with which it won independ ence for Cyprus from the British. The arms turn-in had been awaited since Britain. Turkey. Greece and the leaders of the Greek and Turkish Cypriot com munities agreed Feb. 10 on a plan to make the island independent SALKM AP'-A proposed CM- toward Berlin with their tanks stitutional amendment to change j izvetia said. the line of succession to Ihe gov-j ernor was introduced today by- . Rep. John Kerhow D-Klamath WVf CI II W I JIUnS Nearly fi2 per cent of Ihe new Swim Pool Near Reality Weather FOR ECAM Klamath Falls and i v icinity : Considerable rlnutllnpst wHl snow showers and sunnj pe riod today. Stormy 'In the n eades. Clearing tonight with morn ling freeze. Mostly sunny Salurday MOCNT SHASTA A swimming and bit warmer. High today 4ft. New Speed Law Falls' It as requested hy t.ov. I Mark Hatheld. t. I.J ' Ik. Hm nt c.l. I wiiuiu i nniiK" ! jio ti i SACRAMENTO UPI -Califor-cession to secretary of stale, pros- . . . , ... . ... Stent ol the Senaie and speaker "!a J"- ft" "h '111' I VI. u """ " e I plicated 55 mile per hour prima ol the House. (acj(, 5p0M, ,imj, wj b(l M(, p It BO is presmeni ol ine sen- .ay nfx, jan , ,0 coax another i member, and ate. speaker, secretary ol sta'e in miles per hour out ol their cars and treasurer. on n(, (lprn roa(t hut no more The governor said he thinks that Qov Kdinund O. Brown late the man first in lihe of succession Thursday signed into law a hill should be a person who has been setting the state speed limit at 'elected in a statewide election. a flat 65 miles an hour. Cuba Proclaims Day Of Mourning HAVANA 'APi Ftdel Castro's government prm tanned a day ol I mourning today lor the 2.1 students Governor Brown's 'Little Wagner' Act Passes First Test Despite Objections Bv JAMF.S r. ANDERSON SACrHMFATO 'ITI' -Gov Edmund G. Brown's proposed "little Wagner act " tn regulate union-management relations today was past its first lest in the Leg islature despite strenuous objec ttons from farm and .employer groups. Five Democrats on Ihe Indus tiral Relations Committee Thurs day night voted solidly Ir favor of Democrat Brown's bi'l The nr'y "no" vote came from R"nubMctt Lou Cusanovieb of 'a Vis As explained hv tai Heining. a former FL-C O ofucial ap pointed by Brawn as directar of the Department of Industrial He lattons. the bill would do three ma.ior ih.o Rei nn ze the right of work art! to form unions of their own choosing, to hargain collectively ith manage. nent. and to select their own representatives Repeal the jurisdictional Strike I a w which Hennings aid some "unscrupulous employ rs" had used to recognize unions af strike breakers " Set up state machinery to term!nf if conflicts between un ions were real iiirisdictional dis fyu'es nd provide for set'lement by the departmcnl of work as-. the next two years." Hagerty said signment disputes hetween unions "and w-e'll accept it without op The measure. AB41!i by Assom- posing it as long as tt stays in blyman Allen Miller 'D-San Fer- its present form." r.ando1. ran into a fierce attack Other developments in the Leg- lirom tbe Vvsociated rarmers. thejislature. California Farm Bureau Fedora-' Cadet Corps: The governor's tion. and from Rowland, rep-, budget suffered another blow in lesentinc emo'over groups in San Ways and Means when the lower Francisco and Sacramento ! house finance committee over-rode Miller contended the bill did notjthe administration's rer ommenda "ihange in any way" existing tion In cut out Won nno to support laws concerning the rights of the California Cadef Corps, a high unions to organize or not to or-Uchool military organization The. r.nize larm workers committee restored to the budget M obhvists lor the f a r m I J22.non to keep the corps in bus- -c.. a-- mi. "iirted neither domes-i mess another year. lie workers nor agricultural work Cancer The Senate Public c-s nor agricultural workers were Health Committee approved a con- icxempt. although they are exclu-itrov ersial bill to regulate cancer' oefl under 'be latt-Hartley Law : quacks. It would prohibit unli- Rowland said if the bill becomes i censed persons from treating can law "you will turn over to unions eer or from claiming they can the absoute power to organize treat it or cure it unless they every small business in Califor , coule prove Ibeir treatment was nia ' leffective. "There is absolutely no reslric-. Patrol ears Rills to permit the tion on anything the uniots want Highway Patrol to use unmarked to do ' he contended. prowl cars ran into a roadblock in C I Hagerty the AfL-CIO'Sjan Assembly committee Bv a frjj principal spokesman, said theivote the Transportation Cnmmit r ire was not sponsored hy or-, tee refused to approve a hill to' :anized labor but we have no ob- 'et the palrol make one out of v- jTvuui. iv ii. ri j iuui udiiui i.n a gnuM I "I think we can live with it lor, car." I 1 al I U aV M pool tor M0US1 Shasta, long a dream of people here, appears now to le within reach. More than $10,000 worth of material and some cash that is dedicated for that purpose will he lost if a pool is not built This money was raised several years ago through community ef fort. A pool was started in con nection with the high school dtt t net , hut the locat ion carried a water tahle so high that the plan and site had to be dropped. The new high school location would be suitable. George Thcboll, school trustee, swimming commission member of the board of Ihe recreational district, favors such a project, if it meets with approval of the public. At a hearing at the high school Wednes day evening no opposition was voiced, but several questions on financial plans were raised 45; low tonight Li-Ul high Satur dav i i High vehterday SI Law last night . ZS Preeip. last 24 hourn 0.02 Since Oct. I 1.77 .Same period last year 13.2.1 Northern Calif orpia Mostly fair through Saturday but ennsidrrahl cloudiness on the eoant with a few scattered shower likely from Kureka northward. Partly cloudy in mountain areas. Cooler inland. Northwesterly coastal winds Kv.10 miles an hour tonight, becoming 12-2$ Saturday. CRATER LAKE West Coast Telephone servic wan out of order this morning be tween Crater Lake National Park and Klamath Falls and Medmrd. State police advi.e carrying rhaina for travel on Highwav 12 througb Thebolt stated that he believed '"p park because of snow rondi- a matchina-funds contract with the high school could be arranged. About $25,000 would be needed in addition to what is now on hand The trustee said a 2,-cenl levy for one year would supply suffi cient funds for Ihe purpose The (ions to the north and heeausa there was ruin and fog In the park on Thursday lorenoon which prob ably turned tn snow, MOUNT SHASTA Snow pack measure M lnthf killed in an IIIIIIIH Mfl attrn.pt I pool would he self supporting on "l 'he Mt. .Shasta Ski Bowl. Sid to assassinate ('resident r ulgen uo Batista March 13. 1957. The would be assassins got into the presidential palace and alinoM :o the door of Bat i sin s otliee be lore gu.:rds shot Uwn down a use haail mndilinns spring corn snow. E With the hacking of Ihe public frill Highway was clear and dry the pool will bet nine a reality and 'l!h no chains required and park will save having to send the swim- Ing for BOO cars on blacktop al the ming clataci lo a neighboring 1 lodge. Generally fair weather waa town each summer. forecast for the weekend. Prosecutor Writes Four Names On Board Which Comprise Mrs. Duncan's Defense KATHY WALSH. member of Hm Browni. Scout Troop in DiMimuir, is shown in htr uniform at tht want into the St. Barnabas tiscopal Church in Dunsmuir last Sunday in obfarvanca of Girl Scout waak. Tha unidantifiad dog is a ham, according to Kathy's mothar Peggy Walih, Herald and Newt corretpondant in tha area, and wanted to ba in tha picture. VKNTI RA. Calif 'LTI' Four I names written on a court black board today formed Ihe skeleton ol Elizabeth Duncan's ti,-!.T.-e against charges of paying M3.' to have her son's prejrnant wife killed. The names were 'Luis' Moya and 'Augustine Baldonado. con fessed killers of Mrs. Duncan's daujzhter-in- law. Ksperanza Ks quivel. operator of a Santa Bar bara cale. and hmma Short. M. Defense attorney S. Ward Sulli van wrote the names on the black board Thursday in opening his fi nal arguments He was expected In conclude before noon today, with the case possibly going to the jury in the alternoon. lollow ing closing remarks hy District Attorney Roy (iustafson Resides the M-year old delend- ant. the lour were central hgures in the "for hire'' killing last No vember of pretty Olna Duncan. K. wile of Frank Duncan. .10. an i attorney Sullivan VI. walked on stage " ' with a pointer used as a cane, swung like a hat and carried like i .I - . f ' 'tic He wrote "Moya and "Raldo jnado" on tht board almost im mediatelv He said their testi mony that Mrs Duncan had hired their services with an offer of ss.noo to kill OI:a should be viewed with "caution." Alter explaining that testimony of an accomplice must be cor roborated. thr defense attorney argued that if the jury accepted the prosecution s theory then Mrs F.squivel was an accomplice be cause she had introduced Moya and Raldonadn to Mrs Duncan. Mrs. Esquivel's name was add ed tn the list and tbe deiense at tornry took up Ihe subject of Mrs irayed against Ihe deiense wm nearly two score witnesses, soma n( whom had testified that Mrs. Duncan had approached them to kill her daughter-in law. And. there was District Attornej (iustafson. a deliberate, method! Ctl prosecutor, whose approach mntrasted sharply with that of Sullivan. (iustalson denounced Mrs. Dun can as a vicious murderess, mo tivaled. by intense love lor her son and hate for anyone whf would lake him away from her. As he walked across the room Short, once a constant companion on completion o( his arguments of Mrs Duncan. Mrs. Duncan said. "You son of Sullivan said the elderly woman j a hitch " Gustalson said, "par had been lied in with the sup- don." He said he wanted her t posed plot to murder Olga Dim- repeat it so everyone could hear can lrom the beginning Her name She didn't. was added to the board These Sullivan argued, formen; vol Nt; Rl NAWAYS a nucleus of the district attorney's case against Mrs. Duncan who admitted she didn t like her daughter-in-law. but denied hav mg her killed Regardless of whether you be lieve it or not standing alone that testimony must be rejected." Sullivan said to the jury of eight iwomep and (our men. lit NSMt'lR Two young run aways from Los Angeles were rer tified lo the .luvenile luUtorttha on Monday after a hearing tl Dunsmuir Justice Court on chr rs of trying to wreck a train The were arrested by Sowflien Pacific special poller on susplclof of having placed obstacle ta to railroad track.