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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1961)
e Nen Law Would Prohibit Transportation Strikes Sen. .trust law to make it unlawful for any labor union to act in concert WASHINGTON' (API - John L. McUellan, D-Ark., warn shoremen alliance, has introduced1 'th any therlabr P- even OUR ANCHORS legislation to prohibit interstate transportation strikes. He said Tuesday James R. Hot- if it is a sister local of the same national or international union" to engage in any strike against fa's Teamsters Union and Harry: an employer encased in the trans- Bridges' West Coast longshoremen of persons or property are forming an alliance which, byj. lu,Mn ,, mnro . r using transport strikes as a weap on, would challenge the power of government and threaten to bring or more overseas. The bill would punish violators the rest of organized labor to itsii,h uP .l a 'ear in J"'1 and a knees. ju.uw mie. "Harry Bridges," said McClel- lan, "as we all know is reputed DwimAiit to be one of the top Communists LeOSe rymenT in the' United States and one of j . t;v most important from the Nat SPCUTIV . - m stancipint of the interest of the Soviet Union." Many persons, he added, "ap pear to feel Jimmy Hoffa is no match for Bridges and are ap prehensive the Hoffa-Bridges as sociation will open opportunity (or Communist infiltration of the teamsters with the strong proba bility Bridges ultimately will dom inate both unions." He warned the AFL-CIO if Hoffa and Bridges achieve their alliance without federal checks "it will swallow up the AFL-CIO.' 1 SALEM (API A lease on real estate deposited with the state treasurer does not meet the state requirement for security asked of I an out-of-state company, Atty. Gen. Robert Y. Thornton said to day. State Treasurer Howard Bclton requested the opinion after the Railway Express Co. deposited- a lease in place of a title to real property. State law requires out-of-state companies to have unimpaired HONOIIIW i n .... k ; Will SIM WW jntfcy. "I'm glad we've finally broken them of wearing-those disgusting grass hula skirts!" Atom-Conscious City To Build Fallout Dens As a check, McClellan's bill title to real estate deposited would amend the Sherman anti-lsecurity, Thornton said. LIVERMORE (UPD Engineers! in this atom-conscious city today began work on plans for nuclear fallout shelters" to house the com- munity's 17,000 residents. Livermore is the home of the Sympathy Given Cowardly Lad By DICK WEST ton as scheduled. Most of us arelout-of-town relatives had died. WASHINGTON (UPII-If I hadlchicken. (21 Falling down the steps of a stenographer, I would shove her Remembers Own Wedding my apartment building in hopes off my knee and dictate a letter I well remember the eve of my to that young fellow in Georgaiown wedding. I stayed awake un who took a powder on his wed-1 til dawn thinking up schemes by ding night I would like for him to knew that there is at least one person in America (me) who views his conduct with sympathetic under standing apd even a certain amount of admiration. According to the account I saw in the papers here, the bride groom decided at the last minu'e that he couldn't go through with the ceremony. So he headed for the hills, leaving behind carefully' I which I might forego, or at least postpone, the trip to the church, short of actual desertion. It wasn't so much the idea of "being" married that panicked me. I was sort of looking forward to that. It was "getting" married that I dreaded. There is a world of difference between "being" married and "getting" married. i At first V thought of pretending was sick. But, on second rigged evidence to make it appearithought, I realized the doctor he had been kidnaped. I would immediately spot me as a Some people who read about hislmalingerer. I had tried faking ill- iiigni may nave marked it downness in the Army a few times and as a case ot cold teet. But that I always got detected. is patently absurd Anyone , who has ever faced matrimony knows that it takes a lot more courage to get out of it than it does to go through with it. That is why most weddings go In my midnight desperation, I concocted and then discarded a number of other evasions, sucn as: ( 1 1 Sending a bogus telegram to myself reporting that one of my of breaking a leg. (31 Acting as though I had been struck dumb and was unable to say the vows. No Never Deep down, I knew that none of them would work, amainly because I lacked the nerve to attempt them. The only thing I could do was pray for a real catastrophe, such as war breaking out so I could rush off and enlist. Frankly, the idea of kidnaping myself and persuading a friend to tie me to a tree never occurred to me. Had I done so, I mig.lt still be a bachelor. Some five years later. I learned that my wife had spent our wed ding eve in similar fashion. But she also lacked the courage and or the ingenuity to find a way to back out. So here we are, two cowards, still . going our craven ways to gether. Sometimes, bravery doesn't pay. University of California's Law. rente Radiation Laboratory and employes of the laboratory were among the leaders of a citizens committee which advocated con struction of municipal shelters. At a town council meeting Mon day night, city officials ordered a study of the feasibility of con structing shelters. A half dozen persons picketed the meeting with signs that read "Civil defense is no defense," "Stop bomb tests" and "Peace or the world in pieces." But 300 others at the meeting voiced loud approval of the pro posal. Leo von Gottfried, a Lawrence physicist, explained how life would be in one of Livermore's public fallout shelters. Everyone in the city would be assigned a shelter, he said, and each shelter would democratically! elect a cadre. Religious and school activities would be conducted dur ing the estimated two weeks that the residents would be required to live underground. , He said youngsters would be given courses to help "adapt to the rough new world ahead. It was estimated that the cost of protection per person would range from $103 to $127. De Gaulle To Give Up Big Powers PARIS (UPI - President Charles de Gaulle has announced that he plans to surrender his emergency dictatorial powers at the end ot this month. IX- Gaulle made the announce ment to his cabinet just before leaving for a four-day grassroots speaking tour of the French prov inces, j The president took full powers to rule the country under Article 16 of the Fifth Republic's consti tution at the time of the Algiers: revolt last April. He has been heavily criticized recently for continuing his one man rule five months later. At the same time, in a concil iatory move to discontented French farmers, the government announced a small increase milk prices. ine iwo announcements were made as the government mobil ized helicopters, mine-detector cars and thousands of extra police to guard De Gaulle against anoth er possible assassination attempt during his provincial whistle-stop tour. w IHKiQd A.NN'EHS. Klamath Falls, Ore. Thursday, September 21, 1961Q PAGE A UF OFFICIAL George Hitcraft, state representa tive, of Klamath Falls, has accepted the chairmanship of the Professional Divi sion, 1961 United Fund campaign. His responsibili ty will be to solicite physi cians, dentists, attorneys and ministers. To date, the Professional Division has contributed 10.7 per cent of its quota. Quota System Needed PORTLAND lAPi-Former U S. Sen. William F. Knowland told a Japanese and American audience j today that a quota system for im- ports should be Adopted to ward off "pressures for far more dras-i tic action." ' In an address prepared (or the i ixth Japan-American Conference o( Mayors and Chamber o( Com merce Presidents, Knowland said that pressures from manufactur ers "have been building up over the past several years. Not to rec ognize this fact is a failure to face reality." It should be possible, he said, to take a year or a combination of years which American manu facturers and Japanese exporters both found profitable, and estab lish a percentage ratio from them, varying (rom product to product. "As the market grows, as it will," he said, "both the domestic producers and the foreign pro ducer exporting to us will slre in that growth." feople Read SPOT S you art Lost Plane Clue Needed MEDFORD (API Planes re sumed a search today after get ting a new clue on the Mcdford flier who vanished Friday on a flight (rom Boise, Idaho, to Med-ford. Brian Douglass, the air searchj chief for the Medford area, said the hunt this afternoon for Max Terzenbach, about 50, would be1 concentrated in heavily timbered country northwest of Ml. Mc- Loughlin. The latest clue came late Tues day from the U. S. Forest Serv ice lookout at Blue Rock, who re ported hearing a plane Friday night, about the time the Terzen bach plane would have been over that area. Boll) Aristotle and Demosthenes ded torture as the surest means of obtaining evidence according to the Encyclopedia Bntanmca. FAMILY SIZE HOME FREEZER , r , Tsssssjn Holds Over -Sn!!..;! 300 IbsJ - -h,l..:a ;: ; and -at a :tefiStt' n"" ONLY F I ; , L- .! FREEZING1. I MORE Easy Terms, Ted vou c el SUWf ...ifiri Wstinghousc MORE QUAIITY! CONVENIENCE! WI GIVE GREEN STAMPS Ask About Our Poyment Protection Plan KNKRATBKK5- 9 a&I Side Clppliancsi Corner of 7th & Klamath TU 4-8886 Home of Fine Quality oVeitinghouie Appliances Pay As You Go Parking CHICAGO (AP) - Donald H. Kahn, 37, a real estate salesman, is going to pay his parking ticket fines on the instalment plan $50 a week for 53 weeks for 106 tickets.' The weekly payments were ap proved Tuesday by Traffic Court Judge Alphonse Wells after he fined Kahn $2,650 for ignoring 106 parking tickets issued by police since 1959. Wells fined him $25 on each ticket. Usual fines for park-! ing violations are $3 to $5. ! Kahn told the judge that most of the tickets had been accumulated hy persons to whom he had lent his car. But Wells told Kahn that he was alone responsible for the tickets and must pay the $2,650, which was believed to be a record I fine in Chicago for parking viola tors. Kahn told Judge Wells the tick ets had snowballed so fast he found he was without money to pay them. He appeared in court with an attorney after police had sought him on warrants issued for the tickets. Moose Sale Set Women of the Moose, Chapter No. 467, will stage a rummage sale Friday and Saturday at Clyde's Towing Service. Hours will be from 9 a m. to 5 p.m. Iftortga$ LOANS for Look in t for money to borrow? Commonwealth off en mortgage loans on homes, commercial and industrial property, apartments and projects for senior citizens. We represent 17 life insurance companies, eastern sav ings banks and pension funds. We have the money, term and rates to meet your requirements. Quick, efficient, courteous service. Contact our nearest office ; Commonwealth, Inc. 300 tqoilabk lailWkt. 411 S. W. Ml Av4 ttnitti in tfety srmi, s. I, sU lilt Vis Avhw, lolM. Matu FREE INSTRUCTIONS For Junior and Bantam League Bowlers - Boys and Girls, Ages 8 thru 18 10 A.M. SATURDAY September 23 and September 30th FREE SHOES and BOWLING while receiving Instruc tion. Classes supervised by Klamath Falls J.B.C. instruc Sign Up Now! 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