i PAGE 2 A
Trust Fund
To Be Held
Until 1991
BOSTON (AP) A trust fund ol
1,000 pounds sterling established
for "young married artificers" in
17J0 by Benjamin Franklin must
be held and allowed-to grow until
11)31.
The Massachusetts Supreme
Judicial Court so ruled Tuesday
in refusing to terminate the trust
fund which now has grown to
$1,578,098.
The entire amount will be divid
ed between Boston and the Com
monwealth "for public works" as
Franklin directed in his will.
It was established to provide
loans, at 5 per cent, to "young
married artificers under age of 25
years" for establishment of their
own shops.
' Franklin willed that the original
1.000 pounds given to Boston and
Philadelphia be allowed to grow
for 100 years when payments for
public works were to be made
both cities.
The remainder, Franklin stipu-
lated, must be retained for an
other 100 years and then be abol
ished and the money divided be
tween Boston and Massachusetts.
The Franklin Technical Institute
in Boston was founded in 1891 with
share of the funds.
The Franklin Foundation ' of
Boston had sued the Common
wealth, the attorney general and
the city of Boston, asking the city
and state be authorized now to
pay the funds to the Franklin
Technical Institute. The institute
is a technical school operated by
the Franklin Foundation.
The suit contended it no longer
is practicable to carry out Frank
Jin's original plan,
The court, in an 11-page deci-
mon written by Chief Justice Ray
mond S. Wilkins, denied the plea.
Raul Castro
Sheds 'Badge'
HAVANA (AP) Raul Castro
reportedly has shed his ponytail
the revolutionary badge he grew
instead of a beard
A Havana radio station said the
Prime Minister's younger brother,
who Is minister of the armed
forces, got a haircut in fulfillment
of a promise to trim up once
Cuba's land reform program be
came a reality.
The broadcast said tle shearing
ceremony took place in eastern
Cuba's Orienle Province, where
bearded Fidel Castro launched (he
revolt that overthrew Dictator Ful
jrencio Batista on New Year's Day
1959.
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Court Records
KLAMATH FA1.I.B
MUNICIPAL COURT
Dewey Thompson, drunk, 25 or five
daya. ,
PhyMil Hood. arunK, a or nv amy
Ionard Mackey, vagrancy, disor
derly conduct, escape, continued.
Frederick Hoy bmun, arunK ana an-
orderly conduct, SO.
Harold Mtirrii Hooeriion, larceny.
released to Air Force police.
Glen Stevcni, diunx, 3 or iiv
days.
Robert E. rindley, drunn, tzs or nve
day. ...
Rudolph cneraiao, arunK, a or uvr
days.
Max Jackton. drunk, $25 or five day.
Marvin Tupper, drunk. $25 or iivt
One Juvenile wa taken into tem
porary custody (or questioning con
cernlna larceny.
Robert Btckham, held on warrant
from Chiloqutn.
Randolph Tupper, drunk, $25 or five
davi.
Rudlne Virgil Oavli, drunk, $25 or
five days.
KI-A MAT II COUNTY
DISTRICT COURT
Albert James McCollum, giving li
quor to minor, dismissed motion dii
trict attorney.
Marvin Carl Marler. no PUC permit,
dismissed motion district attorney.
Burl Andrew Heavllin, fail stop at
slop sign, dismissed motion district at-
tornry.
Clarence Henry L-arktns, fail dim
headlights, dismissed motion district
attorney.
Anita Madeline Kirk, fail drive right
half of highway, enter plea of not
guilty; request trial without Jury set
January 27 at ID a.m.; Dan ki ai
remanded to sheriff.
Anita Madeline Kirk, driving while
right to apply for operator's license
suspended, enter plea oi not guilty;
trial without jury set January 27 at
11 a.m.; bail set at $500; remanded
to sheriff.
George Adam Pickar. driving while
intoxicated, found guilty by Jury; 60
days and $250 fine and costs or 49
daya in lieu of fine; committed.
John Charles Ferrell, violation bas
1c rule. $7.50.
Catherine C, Baker, violation basic
rule. $10.
Leo Nelson Young, no operator'! 11
cense. $7.50.
Robert Naylor Wilson, defective
lights, $5.
Paul Lambert Irsfeld Jr., fail sig
nal right hand turn, $5.
Delbert Lccroy Bonham. driving
while rleht to annly for operator a li
cense is suspended, $150 fine and
costs paid; five days suspended; re
leased.
David Leon Jackson, Inadequate foot
brakes, dismissed motion district at
torney.
John Lester Barnes, excessive noise,
$5.
Jack Wayne Mctz, violation basic
rule. $12.30.
Larry James Nelson, violation basic
rule, $10.
Donald Schulz, fall display license
plates, $7.50.
Leora Florence Bryan, fall atop at
stop signal, $5.
Frank Jesse Maize, waste of water-
fOWl, u.
Chester Emanuel Klock, violation
basic rule, dismissed motion district
attorney.
Francisco Molina Reyes, truck speed
ing, dismissed motion district attor
ney.
Elmer Donald James Jr., over width.
dismissed motion of district attorney.
Chester Leon Golden, fall drive right
half, dismissed motion of district at
torney, Will Ncubcrt, fall Identify equip-1
ment, $10 forfeited.
Harold L. Clark, vagrancy, three
months and $100 fine and costs or
19 daya in lieu of fine; committed.
Harold L. Clark, false statement ol
age, ttO days and $150 fine and costs
or 29 days In lieu of fine; committed to
run consecutively with above case.
Carl Lcroy Gibson, fall stop at stop
sign, $5 forfeited.
Leon Harold Bell, trespassing, dls-
William L. Jack ion, , tandem axile
overload, ?:w forfeited.
Gerry Edwin Backanen, violation
ba.slc rule, $12,30. ,
Delbert Ray McLaughlin, violation
bic mi. io.
Gary Lee Kitt, fall atop at stop gign,
'$3.
Arthur Peterson, reckless driving,
request time to consult an attorney.
set January il at V:.Q a.m.; released
after posting $100 bail.
Tom Dunn, fail stop at atop sign,
$3.
Henry Fred Stark, fail yield right of
way, $10.
Carl Oscar Murphy, fall, stop at stop
sign, $5.
Dim no Chnrlra Holmes, over
length load. $13 forfeited.
Robs Edwin Newman, overlength,
dismissed.
nonald Leroy Klrkpatrlck, group
axle overload, $47 forfeited.
Charles Sidney Judkins, axle over
load. $20 forfeited.
Vonnic Rollins, axle overload, $20
forfeited.
Steve G. Kaliman, tandem axle ov
LTload. $27 forfeited.
Glenn Thomas Down, fall drive
rinht half of highway, $7.30 forfeited
Mark Earnest Slillwell, violation
basic rule. $3.
Leonard Thomaa Powers, assault
and robbery armed with a dangerous
weapon, request preliminary bearing;
net January 11 at 10 a m.: bail re
mains at $3,000; remanded to sheriff.
Roy Wendell Billings, violation bas
ic rule. $7.30.
Drlberl Lerov Bonham, driving
while rlcht to apply for operator's li
cense suspended, five days and $130
fine and costs or 29 days tn lieu or
fine; commuted.
Joseph Vincent LaClalr, overwidth,
S7.50 forfeited.
Larry Jerome Corbet, fail stop at
stop sign, $.1.
Doyle Deane Sacher, fall dim head
llslils. $5.
Jackie Baker, Intoxicated In private
plare. :tO daya suspended; released.
January
STOREWIDE
SHOE
CLEARANCE
Now In Progress!
Women's
Men's
Children's
ALL SIZES!
DOZENS
OF STYLES!
Entire Stock
s I
KUDDer
Footwear
Va off
HERALD AND
Compromise
By Demos On
WASHINGTON (AP) Dcmo-
cratic leaders, worked today.
against some handicaps, to get
the party-splitting civil rights is
sue out of Congress early in this
election year by passing a middle-of-the-road
bill.
There was immediate response
in the House to the broad hint
Speaker Sam Uayburn (D-Tex)
gave civil rights advocates Wed
nesday to get moving. Within a
Ike Message
Boiled Down
WASHINGTON (AP) Here are
the main points covered in Pres
ident Eisenhower's Slate of the
Union message today:
The Soviet Union Has ex
pressed interest In reducing peril
of war, but we must not "be mis
led by pleasant promises until
they are tested by performance."
Economic Outlook "1960 prom
ises to be the most prosperous
year in our history."
Space U. S. expenditures will
be practically doubled in 1961;
military program not suffering
from lack of big rocket engines
needed for deep exploration of
space; development of large rock
et engines is being pressed for
ward.
Free World Other prosperous
countries should join the United
States in giving urgently needed
help to developing nations.
Defense Long range bombers
are being supplemented by Atlas
missiles, missile submarines; but
the United Slates will never turn
loose Ihis destructive power ex-
cept in self-defense.
Strikes The President will en
courage discussions between man
agement and labor to consider
public interest artd avoid crip
pling strikes such as the steel
strike.
Agriculture The President
urges Congress to enact legisla
tion to reduce surpluses and in
crease farm income.
Civil Rights He hopes Con
gress will consider his civil rights
recommendations in last year's
message as well as additional rec
ommendations by the civil rights
commission; says right to vote is
one of the strongest pillars of a
free society.
Inflation No person, city,
state or organized group can af
ford to evade the obligation to
resist inflation. 1 shall present to
the Congress for 1961 a balanced
buded." .-, .
Education The administration
has proposed a program lo slim
ulale classroom construction by
encouraging state and local ef
forts.
Congress Although faced with
the opposition party in power
again, the President said he looks
forward to a close and construc
tive association.
Slay Charge
To Name Man
TANGIER, Morocco (UPI) A
26-year-old Englishman was ex
pected lo be charged today with
the slug-and-smother murder of
Barbara H. Mueller, of New
York, whose mutilated body was
found in the woods near here last
month.
Slender, red-haired William E.
Moore will appear before a Mor
occan examining magistrate to
bear the formal reading of the
charge. Police plan to present a
statement obtained from him dur
ing three days of interrogation,
but they would not say whether
he had confessed the crime.
If Moore is . found guilty, he
could be sentenced to death be
fore a firing squad.
Miss Mueller, a 19-year-old col
lege student with a yen for ad
venture, arrived in this tradition
al center of smuggling and inter
national crime Oct. 17. She dis
appeared about a month later.
'TIS EASY
PARSIPPANY, N.J. AP Po
lice can simply follow their noses
today to find a truck stolen from
behind a 'market. The truck was
loaded to the brim with garbage
Klamath Falls. Oregon
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NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore,
Bill Sought
Civil Rights
few hours, another 16 members
added their names to a petition
to pry a pending measure loose
from the Southern-led House Rules
Committee. The petition had been
hanging over from last year's
session.
Members promoting the peti
tion said the number of signatures
had reached about 140. They
claimed sufficient support to get
the full 219 names needed. Several
Southerners said they had no rea
son to doubt this.
There were broad hints, how
ever, that if the petition appeared
certain to succeed, the Rules
Committee would beat a strategic
retreat and send the bill to the
House under conditions as favor
able as possible to the Southern
ers.
In the Senate, meanwhile.
Chairman Thomas C. Hennings
Jr. (D-Mo) said the Rules Com
mittee will hold hearings within
a month on legislation to provide
for appointment of federal voting
registrars.
The Civil Rights Commission
proposed such legislation last
year to prevent discrimination
by state voting officials against
Negroes and other minority
groups. Southern opponents consi
der the proposal unconstitutional
however, and the administration
reportedly is not planning to sup
port its enactment. ' . .
Hennings talked of completing
committee action on a registrar
bill by early February, well in ad
vance of scheduled mid-February
civil rights debate in the Senate.
Rayburn said the House can get
action on civil rights, if it wants
it, in about two weeks, indicating
a decision by the parly leadership
to let the fight open there. The
major delays, however, were ex
pected in the Senate, although
Democratic Leader Lyndon B.
Johnson publicly recalled an
agreement to bring up civil rights
for debate in that body about mid-
February.
But both sides appeared in
agreement to this extent: Con
gress almost certainly will pass
some kind of civil rights legisla
tion this year. And the present
hill is probably as much as the
House will agree on, at least ini
tially.
Some Southerners who were
willing to discuss the measure
without attribution, indicated it
had the advantage to them of be
ing much less drastic than it
might have been or than it ws
before Southerners and their af
lies in the House .Judiciary Com
mittee pruned it.
Yet supporters of a strong fed-
oral civil rights stand could say
this for the measure: It does break
into the school integration area
by making it a federal crime to
oppose by force or threats the
carrying out of court desegrega
tion orders.
The bill also would facilitate
FBI investigation of bombings and
would require registrars to pre
serve voting documents for in
spection by federal officials.
The floor leader of House Demo
crats favoring strong civil rights
laws disclaimed any intention of
seeking to strengthen the pending
bill through floor amendments.
Hep. Emanuel Celler of New York
said that while he would not ob
ject to such amendments, he has
no plan to offer any.
Fight Vowed
By Trainer
MIAMI (UPI) - A young ani
mal trainer vowed he would
'fight to the end" to keep a tal
ented chimpanzee he raised like
a son.
I'm not going to let him go
again not if 1 can help it," de
clared Robert Tomarchin, 27, as
he cradled "Mr. Moke" in his
arms.
Both Tomarchin and Mr. Moke
appeared at an identification
hearing here Wednesday. The
chimp wore a polo shirt.
Tomarchin has admitted steal
ing Mr. Moke from his cage in
the St. Louis Zoo Dec. 21 and
leaving a check for $i,ooo with a
note promising $2,000 more later.
Tomarchin, a native of Phila
delphia, said he sold the chimp
to the zoo for $1,500 because he
had lo go to the South Pacific
and did not want to take Mr
Moke along. But he said when he
saw his pot in the zoo, he knew
he had made a mistake.
For the present, Mr. Moke and
Tomarchin will remain together.
Peace Justice Francis Christie
said bond had been posted to al
low the monkey to remain in To
marchin's custody pending further
action.
Catagoriied
MONTGOMERY. A!a. (AP) -Wanda
Bush, librarian for the
Montgomery Advertiser, says she
uses four catagorics in filing pho
tographs of the state's 67 sheriffs:
t Those wearing tuts.
2. Those with bushy hair.
3. Those with receding hairlines
4. The bald ones.
Thursday, Januajry 7, I960
MDN:NSH&:MENACE',
' joEy swvs m the house a tor wen rr sNoivy tit's afraio
OF FOUK BEARS.
Several Answers Missing
Though Steel
PITTSBURGH (AP) The long
steel dispute is settled but some
of the questions it raised about
productivity, inflation and pricing
policies may rage on for months
perhaps years. .;
Even in agreement, the United
Stcelworkers and the industry dis
agreed whether the new contract's
terms are inflationary.
USW President David J. Mc
Donald told the union's 500,000
members in basic steel mills it
is "the greatest contract ever."
But he said it was not an infla
tionary agreement.
Roger M. Blough, board chair
man of U.S. Steel Corp., said the
pact "could hardly be regarded
as noninflationary."
The differences over inflation
just about boil down to the ques
tion of whether prices on steel
should be increased. And that is
a question union and management
have been disputing for years.
Blough said his firm, the world s
biggest steel producer, did not
plan any immediate price in
crease. Just about everyone inter
ested in steel drew a red circle
around the word "immediate."
McDonald and his union long
have argued that most of the in
creases in steel prices were not
necessary because of labor costs.
Blough used percentage figures
and said labor costs have gone
up an average of 8 per cent an
nually for the past 20 years while
steel prices have risen about o'A
per cent annually over the same
period.
The union takes the opposite
view. Before the settlement, Mc
Donald used figures taken from a
survey by Secretary of Labor
James P. Mitchell and said:
'In a period of the last Vk
years, all of the hourly wage in
creases and improvement benefits
of production and maintenance
employes raised the cost of a ton
of steel by only $12.
'But in the same period the
price of steel was raised $48 a
ton or four times as much.
Which set of figures is correct?
Probably both. As for the Mitchell
report each side union and man
agementused parts of it to back
up their points. But the arguments
raged on.
The Mitchell report said the pro
ductivity of steelworkers increased
2.6 per cent between 1947-1957. In
dustry made an offer which it said
represented a 2.6 per cent increase
in employment costs. The union
rejected it.
When steel company economists
examine labor costs they delve
deeper than the union does. They
take into consideration the in
direct as well as the direct effects
of a wage increase.
That means that industry csti
mates of labor costs include anti
cipated increases in goods and
services they must buy as well as
the labor they must pay.
Not many years ago companies
figured that every cent increase
in wages upped the cost of pro
ducing a ton of steel by 40 cents
They figured it this way: it
takes 20 man hours to produce a
COMING JAN. 22ml
A CTlQti Co -H iTj
iTwTTTTTrtM a 1 1 1 . 1 11 f -
GET YOUR SHARI
Strike Over
ton of steel. Therefore, there is
an automatic increase of 20 cents
a ton on production. The cost of
goods and services bought from
outside will gradually increase
productions costs another 20 cents
a ton on steel.
It no longer requires 20 man
hours to make a ton of steel but
the firms still use the same for
mula with new figures. There's' no
accurate estimate available but to
day it probably would require
something like 15 man hours to
produce a ton of steel.
Crowd Views
Cons' Arrival
GARDEN CITY, Kan. (AP)-A
curious, quiet crowd of about 500
watched the arrival Wednesday
night of two men charged in the
Clutter family slayings.
Two cars carrying ex-convicts
Richard Eugene Hickock, 28, Per
ry Edward Smith, 31, and their
police escorts were quickly sur
rounded by 21 officers.
Hickock and Smith, handcuffed,
then were hustled from the court
house square into the Finney
County Jail. There was no demon
stration from the crowd.
The men are charged with mur
dering four members of the well-
liked Herbert W. Clutter family-
Clutter, 48, a prominent farmer;
Mrs. Clutter, 45; a daughter, Nan
cy Mae, 16, and a son, Kenyon, 15.
The bodies bound,, gagged and
shot were found in the Clutter
home near Garden City Nov. 15.
Hickock, 28, of Edgerton, Kan.,
and Smith, 31, were picked up
Dec. 30 in Las Vegas, Nev. Both
have confessed the killings, Coun
ty Atty. Duane West said.
GOPer Elected
By Demo Group
OSWEGO, Kan. (AP) The
Democratic majority on the La
bette County Commission Wednes
day reelected the lone Republican
member as chairman.
The two Democrats couldn't
agree which one of them should
have the chairmanship. So they
settled the matter by reelecting
Dale Westervest.
That's how he got the job last
year.
CAL EN DAR POLICE
BERLIN (UPI) Communist
police are swarming over East
Berlin newsstands trying to re
cover calendars which mark
June 17 anniversary of the
East German uprising in 1953
as a holiday and "day of Ger
man unity."
An East German state - owned
printing shop printed the calen
dars for export to West Germany
where the day is a legal holiday.
By mistake, some of the calen
dars also got distributed in East
Berlin.
$1,000,000 CONTEST!
NOW PLAYING!
FiVfe
a ToUbiL
DOLORES MICHAELS
PATRICIA OWENS
A "NEVILLE BRAND
OniuaScoH A T to QNi-Y
ll I iTH 1 1 1, 1 Kl I L
1
m
OF PRIZiS JAN. 22x4
Bodies Of Air Victims
Awaiting Identification
BOLIVIA, N.C. (AP) - Three
rows of shrouded bodies, victims
of 1960's first airliner crash, lay
in the Southport High School gym
nasium today awaiting identifica
tion by relatives and an FBI fin
gerprint team.
Thirtv-four persons were aboard
the National Airlines DC6B which
apparently disintegrated in the air
and cast wreckage and bodies over
a 20-acre area early Wednesday.
None survived.
Searchers found 32 bodies by
nightfall in the plowed fields and
mnrshv Dinev woods where the
New York-to-Miami flight fell.
Darkness and foul weather de
layed the search for the remain
ing two victims overnight.
C. Lester Trotter, an assistant
director of the FBI, came here
from Washington with a 4 -man
team to help identify the 29 pas
sengers and five crew members
on the plane.
Relatives also began arriving to
identify and claim their dead.
Another federal official, David
L. Thompson of the Civil Aero
nautics Board's New York area of
fice, was dispatched to direct the
investigation into the cause of the
crash.
The plane "apparently disinte
grated in the air from an un
known cause," said John L. Mor
ris, a National Airlines vice presi
dent. "The plane was in good or
der and was in the hands of a
veteran crew. There was nothing
from the pilot prior to the crash
that would indicate any malfunc
tion." However, the altimeter in the
wreckage of the cockpit showed
an elevation of 1,500 feet. And in
struments indicated the right wing
may have been down as if the
plane was banking.
It appeared that the crew and
passengers may have known the
piane was in difficulty. A National
Airlines spokesman said, "judging
from the fact that some of the
victims had on life jackets, it can
be presumed that the captain had
informed the passengers of an
emergency situation and was try
ing to make an emergency land
ing."
Four bodies wore vest-type lift
jackets and several victims were
strapped to their seats with safety
belts. An inflated' 25-man life raft
was wrapped around some pine
trees. But it may have inflated
itself automatically.
There also were indications that
the pilot might have been seeking
a refuge in the murky, rainy night
A chunk of metal was found at
Kure Beach, 25 miles east of the
crash scene, or about five min
utes away at the plane's normal
cruising speed. The craft's south
bound route would not have
crossed both Kure Beach and Bo
livia.
"It was very definitely part of
the aluminum skin of an airplane.
presumably this plane, said an
HELD
GARY GRANT
TONY CURTIS
SUBMERGED WITH 5 GIRLS ...NO WONDER
THE S.S. SEA TIGER TURNED A SHOCKING PINK1
sL OPERATION
bikisf
JOAN O'BRIEM DINA MERRILL
NAL spokesman about the Kurt
Beach discovery.
Another indication that the air.
craft may have been off its coursi
and coming back was the reccj.
lection of residents at the crash
site.
Mrs. Richard Randolph, 37-year,
old mother of 11, said the noise
of the descending plane awoke her,
She first heard it from a direo
tion generally south of her home,
and later heard an explosion to
the north. And Clyde Galloway,
who lives about half mile north ol
the site and who described himself
as a light sleeper, said he heard
nothing.
The engineer's log, found in thi
25-foot nose section of the wreck
age, bore a notation that the flight
had checked with the Wilmington
Airport at 2:07 a.m. Twenty-four
minutes later the crew reported
the flight was south of Wilming.
ion, thus beginning the 550-mili
leg over the Atlantic to Florida.
A stopped watch on one of th
victims, and eye witness reports,
set the time of the crash at 2:4
a.m.
But it was some four hours later
before the location was reported
by Richard Randolph, owner ol
the 82-acre farm where the wreck
age was strewn. Shortly after day.
break, Randolph walked into hit
field and saw the debris.
"I yelled, 'hey! hey!," he said.
"But nobody answered."
Fox Terrier
Doing Well
FORT WORTH, Tex. (AP)
Butch, a hitch-hiking Fox Terrief
with a ready paw, not only gift
a ride but may have a new home.
Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Lance of Fort
Worth noticed the dog waving
frantically at cars on a snow
blown highway in North Texas last
week.
They stopped and Butch hopped
in their car. His name was on hi
collar, which listed his home as
Midwest City, Okla.
"The veterinarian at Midwest
said he belonged to an airman
there who hadn't brought him in
since 1958, Mrs. Lance said. I
may keep him if we can't locate
the owner.
"He kept standing on his back
paws and waving his front ones,
Mrs. Lance said in explaining how
he attracted their attention on the
highway.
ACT OF PROVIDENCE
GREAT YARMOUTH, England
(UPI) Harry Boyle explained
Wednesday that he had taken the
bicycle he was charged with steal
ing because his feet were aching
and "it seemed to me that Provi
dence had placed the cycll
there." He was fined $5.60.
OVER
20,000
LAUGHS 4
UNDER
THE,
SEA
COLORS
GENE EVANS rt DIM StfftHT
culaUoa Man agr at TUxedo 4-4 Ttt.