Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, February 10, 1963, Page 1, Image 1

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    U.OF ORE. LIBRARY
MStSPAPER SICTION
0CM.REP.AN9 BOCUMSST3 OIV
coap.
Ih Th-
Day's Sews
By FRANK JENKINS
Theme (or todav:
WHAT'S IN A NAME?
The line is from Will Shake
speare's Romeo and Juliet. It is
spoken by Juliet, who precedes
it hy saying:
"0 Romeo, Romeo! Wherefore
art thou Romeo?"
Juliet then adds:
"What's in a name? That
which we call a rose
"By any other name would
smell as sweet.
"So Romeo would, were he not
Romeo called,
"Retain that dear perfection
w hich he owes
"Without that title. Romeo,
DOFF thy name."
Why all this quoting from the
Bard of Avon?
Well, it fits, rather patly, an
Incident in the early history of our
fair city, which originally was
y-clept Linkville.
Linkville was logical enough
hack in 1867 when Uncle George
Nurse moved his sutler's store
down from Fort Klamath, and
thus started our town.
It was located on Link river,
which links Upper Klamath lake
and Lake Ewauna. Viewed in that
light, Linkville was only logical.
It was not unmusical. It had a
good reason for being. So, for a
couple of decades, it remained
Linkville. and everybody was hap
py enough with the name.
Rut
By lffii-
The town was beginning In feel
Its oats. In that year, a bill was
introduced in the Oregon legisla
ture to incorporate the town. R
failed on the first try, but at the
next legislative session, in 1889,
a charter was granted.
That did it.
Linkville might have been good
enough for an unincorporated vil
lage. But for an INCORPORAT
ED CITY it just didn't tinkle
pleasantly enough in the ear. So
the search began for a more ap
propriate name.
The first suggestion was Klam
ath City. It sounded pretty good,
but alter a few weeks of vigorous
chewing it over the town's news
paier, the Klamath County Star,
came up with a better one.
Quoting a prominent citizen of
the time, the Star said:
"Isa Leskeard, who has been
In Portland most of the time since
last summer. Il. nks the name
of this town should be Klamath
Falls. The name advertises the
fact that there are FALLS here,
and thus gives the town an ad
vantage fully recognized as such
by other towns simi'ary situated.
There is a great deal of advan
tage in a town situated by a
heavy cataract."
The name caught on. and in
February of 18! a new charter
was granted to the town and its
official name became Klamath
Falls. And so it has icmained for
these intervening 70 years.
We like it. We wouldn't change
It for ANYTHING.
Rut the falls are gone.
They went the way of progress
Where once the falls were, there
is now a dam. The dam raises
the former level of Klamath lake
and makes it a more beautiful
lake. And it diverts the stored
water down the valley over tens
i.pon tens of thousands of fertile
acres. It has added immensely
to our prosperity.
ftut the tourists still ask:
WHERE ARE THE FALLS?
It keeps us busy answering, or
trying to answer, their question
Maybe we'd belter put up a bill
board at the Link River bridge
telling the whole story.
It would save a lot of explain
ing. Cuban Tells
Of Rockets
MIAMI il'PI'-One of 140 Cu
ban refugees who arrived Friday
on a Red Cross mercy flight from
Havana said the Russians have
turned Orienle Province on the
tfluthcastrrn tip of Cuba into a
rocket stronghold.
The t' S. naval base at Guan
tanamo is in Oriente Province.
Alberto Ferrer estimated there
Here .WflOft Snviet troops m Cuba
"Evervwbere you go, you see
Unvsian " he said.
Ferrer said he had tw.ird "re
liable reports'' of a hidden mi
aile base in the Mavon Jne o
northern Oriente. He etimalrd
that rne-third of the Smicts tnop
ere in Oriente
Ferrer, who came here with hi-
iff and their to Amrnran-hnrn
chikireo and nfber Cubans and
Cuhan-merian on two Par,
American Wnrid A:ra IK'sB's
Mid there werf ' InH" o; Soviet
Jet fighters in Orienie.
1
Weather
Niffft Yftttrt
taw fruity nihf
Mih fttr 9
tow ytr $
Mtflft pitt M
tow pait 14 wart
Prtcip. pail 34 Iteurt
Sifttt Jan. 1
Sma ptrrod last yiar
v. . t mm
HEADS REBELLION Anti-Communist military officers revolted against Iraqi Pre.
mier Abdel Karim Kassam at dawn Friday, seized Baghdad Radio and proclaimed
he overthrow of the regime. Heading the rebel government is Col. Abdel Salam
Aref, left, shown with United Arab Republic President Gamal Abdel Nasser en an.
other occasion. Aref had helped Kassem during the revolt of 1958, but later was
arrested on charges of trying to bring Iraq into the UAR. The UAR and Algeria
quickly recognized the new regime only a few hours after the lightning coup d'etat.
UPI Tetephoto
Deposed Premier Executed
As Rebels Take Over Iraq
TEHRAN. Iran ' UPI Deposed
Iraqi Premier Abdel Karim Kas
sem, w ho came to power in 1958
by revolt and executions, was
shot Saturday by a firing squad
of the nation's pro-Nasser revolu
tionary rulers, the rebel - held
Baghdad Radio reported.
The radio, only source of infor
mation from Baghdad since young
Army and Air Force rebels
struck at Kassem's Defense Min
istrv with Soviet-built jets and
tanks Friday, reported no new
fighting Saturday.
(But Ankara Radio reported
without confirmation fighting in
the Iraqi capital between "para
troopers and Communists."!
The rebels claimed Friday that
Kassem was dead, but he or his
supporters apparently held out
most of the day in tierce Hgniing
for their defense ministry strong
hold. Friday night, the rebel
broadcasts said the MM men in
Rusk Prods
Reds To Fill
Cuban Pledge
WASHINGTON l!Pl Secre
tary of State Dean Rusk Satur
day asked Soviet Ambassador
Anatoly F. Dobrynin when Rus
sia plans to keep its promise to
pull its military units out of
Cuba but got no satisfactory
answer.
Rusk prodded Dobrynin on the
issue in the course of a one hour
and 15 minute State Department
conference during which they also
discussed Uios. disarmament and
a nuclear test ban.
State Department press officer
Joseph W. Reap said the "ques
tion of Soviet troops in Cuba was
discussed" but he gave no de
tails. Other officials said Rusk asked
the envoy just what Soviet Pre
mier Nikita Khrushchev meant
when he promised some weeks
ago, following withdrawal of his
offensive missiles and bombers
from Cuba, that the military
personnel would be removed in
due course.
Dohrynin was understood to
have replied by saing the Rus
sian forces were simrly "a train
ins mission" to m-truct the
Cubans in how to handle conven
tional weapons supo'ied Premier
Fidel Castro s troops.
He cave Rusk the same sort
of an answer thai
Khrushchev
gave visiting Canadian newspa-1
per executive Roy Thomson iniian leader ami his party, already
Moscow- earlier Saturday, au-j faced with an uphill battle in the
thnritative sources said.
Thomson quoted Khrushchev as
saying the troops wfrf "weapon
instructors' and hente there was
no reason for grow ing I. S. con-1
ern oer their presence.
President Kennedy told s news sopjiorters.
conference Thursday that the con-i The fnllnued, Defriw Minister
:inued presence of some 1",ooo Douglas Harknes dri-mon last
Soviet military personnel inweek In quit the cabinet m pro-
Cuba, im hiding ahout .K) in
regular combat units. as a mat -
er ""f concern to us. The land in rxirojie to niK-iear arms.
President added that h wanted j Hees also announced he ill not
to crt ' a more satisfactory del- run in the election
mtmn" of mhat Khn"hchev had' There was no immediate viord
,n mmd when be said the forrfjlrmn the prime minuter, ho him-jSalerno operations and in Smith
would be pulled out "in due self could he birred into re-igns- ern France, He is the first Ameri.
i-nitrsf or due time '' jtmn hv the la'est developments 'can ever to receive the Degree of
Price 15 Cents 43 Pages KLAMATH FALLS. OBKGOX. fiCXDAY. FEBRUARY 10. Vm
the defense ministry, where the
bachelor premier kept an apart
ment and often stayed, were
crushed.
The radio said Kassem and
tnree of his henchmen were
seized by the rebels, speedily
tried, "and the executions were
carried out by a firing squad this
afternoon." Shot with Kassem
were his cousin. Col. Fadil El
Mahdawy. president of the Peo
ple's Court, which handed down
scores of death sentences; Brig.
Wasft Taher. a known Commu
nist, and Lt. Raman Haddad
secret police officer, . - - -
It was not known who ordered
the executions, but presumahlv
the new rebel president, Abdul
Salam Aref, gave his consent
Aref, Kassem's former top aide,
was once under death sentence
himself until Kassem spared him
The action probably cost Kassem
his life.
Aief was tried for treason hy
Kassem's courts for advocating
union with President Gamal Abdel
Nasser's I'niled Arab Republic,
Now that he appears firmly
back in power, the pro-Nasser
line of the new government is
clear to see. and the repercus
sions of the sudden change of the
balance of power were felt
throughout the Mideast.
Aref also is believed to be of
Kurdish descent and was reported
making peace moves with the
totish Kurdish tribesmen who
fought Kassem for nearly four
vears.
Aref appealed" to neighboring
states for support, and the warm-
Two Resign
Canada Jobs
OTTAWA iUPl Two more
members resigned from Prime
Minister John Diefenbakor's crisis-riddled
cabinet Saturday. Other
departures were expected within
hours in a wave of revolt against
the conservative government's no
clear arms feud with the I'nited
States.
Trade Minister George Hoes and
acting Defense Minister Pierre
Sevigny submitted their resign
tions to Diefenbaker in letters
that took sharp issue with what
they called an indecisive stand on
defease and a dangerous dispute
with Washington over nuclear
weapons for Canada.
The resignations, handed to Die
feobaker during a brief morning
j meeting at his home, dealt a
sledge-hammer Wow to the Canad-
April t general election
I They came only three days after
Diefenbaker apparently quelled
an open cabinet revolt against his
leadership by winning a key rwi-
i fidonee vote from his conservative
te-t oter Diefenbaker ' refusal to
rommit Canadian forfs at home
J
est appeal of all went to Cairo
Nasser responded with broadcasts
backing the rebels and was the
lirst to recognize their regime.
Other neighbors also extended
recognition, but at the same time.
troops were placed on alert or
moved to the borders in Jordan
Iran, Turkey, Syria, and the oil-
rich sheikdom of Kuwait, which
Kassem once tried to seize.
Even as far away as Lebanon)
tanks rumbled through the streets
of Beirut, and pro-Aref demon
strations were banned.
Sytia recognized Arefs govern
ment but Cairo's Voice of the
Arabs radio station appealed lo
Hie Syrians to rise up and over
throw their leaders.
The military leaders of (lie re
volt, led by Brig. Abdel Karim
Mustafa, 35-year-old paratrooper.
faded into the background as
Aref. himself a former colonel.
took charge.
l !, "s ' via
fi-nm,$-. isi 'j "v . . .t '-.4 m ji
lMhV ' i f -4;if
V ffiJ.
V
LINCOLN DAY SPEAKER John Davit Ledge, brother
of the Republican vie presidential candidate a h
election, will be he principal speaker at h Lincoln Day
Dinner Thursday, Fab. 14, at fhe Winema, sponsored by
three Republican organiiations si Klamath County. Lodge
is shown here at hit desk when be wa governor ef
Connecticut.
Lodge Scheduled Here
For Lincoln
The uiwertamlv of American
foreign policy in the world will be
(sit under an experienced light
Thursday, Feb 14, when John
Ixidge addresses the Klamath
County Lincoln s Day dinner a
the Winema.
Iidge has a tremendous back
ground in politics and diplomacy
(irandvMi of the late Sen Henry
Cabot Mae and lineal heir to two
Connecticut governors, one Mas
sachusetts governor, sis t' S sen
ators, a secretary of the Navy,
a secretary of state and an ad
miral and a general, Lodge com-
t:
iiled a distinctive record ot his
own as governor of Connecticut.
I'S congressman, and ambassa
dor to Spam
II i esnecled that M& will es -
amine the Kennedy foreign pnhryjseating arrangements tickets will
with an exneiieroed eye based onihe sold first to throe making
first hand knowledge of its eifert
He served in the Navy during
World War II in the Sicilian 8nd
Labor
By I'nited Press International
The nation's troubled labor
scene snowed no signs ot im
provement Saturday.
A federal mediator worked all
night to head off a threatened
strike of II. MS Souiliern Pacific
Railway clerks in seven Western
states and an Interior Department
spokesman warned that s six-
months strike st Ie;trt and zinc
mines in Missouri could have dis
astrous effects on I S. metal
stocks.
One thousand lnit.-d Auto Work
ers staged a wildcat walkout at
General Motor's Fisher Body plant
at Willow Springs. 111.
An 80-day cooling olf period ban
ning a macnimsts union strike
against the Boeing Co. at several
plants across the nation threat
ened to turn into an 80-day boil
ing period.
Marathon newspaper strikes in
New York and Cleviland contin
ued and no progress was made
toward ending the second transit
strike to plague the Philadelphia
area within a week.
Strikes at a glance:
Railway Officials of the
Brotherhood of Railway Clerks
broke off talks with Southern Pa
cific negotiators Friday night but
federal mediator Frank O'Neill
worked through the night to get
both sides back together. The It,
OM member union ?s sched
uled to strike last Thursday in i
dispute over automation which
would idle Southern Pacific opera
tions in Oregon, California, Ne-
vada, Utah, Ariama, New Mexico,with William Mrtjovent, personal
and west Texas. Negotiationslrcpresentativeof George Harrison,
Legislature
Question By 'Surplus' Fund Ruling
SALEM UPt , I-eRisIatm-Sjhond
mav finally decide the IS.S miiliun
question this week to climax a
"yes-you-can, no-yoti-can't" squab
ble that bepan last December.
The monev is needed in keep
the state out of the red lot the
next five months.
Gov. Mark Hatfield in his oudR -
let messace called for transfer
$55 million from the veterans'
Day Talk
tlrand Olfn-er of (he Order of
Merit of the Republic of Italy
one of the highest orders that
country ran bestow.
In addition to service in the
t House of Representatives and as
goiernor of Cimneeticiit, I,relge
was President r.isenbower spec
ial amba-sador on Presidential
Missions In Panama, ("ta Hica
and Puerto Him
While much of the nation won
Hers if it is getting the true and
lull storv on the Cuban situation.
Ijodge is a man in position to
better analvre what has and what
Is hapeniog in this vital theater
of the world.
Reservations for the dinner may
be phoned to the Winema H"tel.invsi( prisoners last December
jtV 4 IBI Because of limned ere voluntary, and, if so, wheth-
rrvation
Lodge will he introduced hy'mg a bearmn on a suit Med hy1
filenn Jackson, vice president nflMiami realtor Douglas Vnnrhees
Pacific Poer and Light, snd.to halt shipments of r it torn
chairman of the Oregon Sla te goods to Cuba. Voorhees claimed
Highway ComrnMton.
t
U
west
have proceeded on an hour-to-hour
basis,
Mint's A six-month strike of
live 81, Joseph Lead Co. plants in!nandine a 15-eent pr hour wage
souincast Missouri aiew a siiarp
rejoinder from an Interior Depart
ment spokesman Friday. Joseph
;McKasktlt, an aide o' assistant In
terior secretary Jonn M. Kcily.
told the House Minerals subcom
mittee in Washington that if the
walkout continued much longer
the nation's stock of lead and zinc
would he "exceedingty low." Mc-
Kaskul Warned the Missouri stnto
lor a 5ftO(XI-ton reduction in on-
Rail Clerk Strike Stalls
In "Last Ditch' Peace Try
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI "-Chair
man Frank O'Neill of the Federal
Mediation Board met for two
hours Saturday with an official
of the Brotherhood of Railway
Clerks in a last ditch effort to
avoid a seven-state rtrike against
Southern Pacific.
Reporting that "there's still an
opportunity to get together,"
O'Neill then left for a meeting
with management Negotiator K,K.
Schamn,
The lederai mediator said hr;
was certain that the union would
not call a strike until it had
heard from him.
O'KeiH met Saturday morning
Handed S5.5 Million
fund to holster skidding
sife! revenues.
Atty. Gen. Robert V. Thornton
said such a transfer would be uo-
1 const ttutional.
The Joint Ways and Means
Committee asked Thornton for an
otner opinion, boo tie dumpert rt
lhai k in the legislature s I a pi
ofjTbarsday by ruling the legislature
could take "surplus' funds.
He said the legislature ttmiiri
have to decide what was surplus.
This question. Hatfield's sudden
out-of-state trip, and (ax programs
dominated last week's activities to
Salem,
Hatlield maiie an unscheduled
visit to the Oregon congressional
delegation in Washington, I). C
to iron ont dilficiifties over the:
proposed Boardman space age de-i
velopment.
He came back alter announcing
progress" had been made.
Hatfield left Saturday for South
ern California where he is slated
to make several s perches Monday
and Tuesday. He is espected barkl
Wednesday.
Ihinkey Installed
Senate President Ben Musa in
stalled a ceramic donkey on fhe
governor's desk while Hatfield
was gone. He said he was getting
to like being governor.
The House Taxation Committee
held live days of hearings during
which all mainr revenue b i 1 1 si
were explained by their sponsors.
The committee now will begin de-:
Ransom Dee!
Said illegal
MIAMI H'Pfi i,S Distrirtlhut made little impressiwi on leg-j
-lunge r,me i noaie r relay saMiisiators.
the t! million ransom deal for
thf release of Cuban invasion
prisoners possibly was illegal and
should be investigated by a fed
erti grand jury.
"If citizens made voluntary
gifts to Fidel Castro, they've vio
lated the Logan Art, There's bo
doubt about it," declared Choate,
The Logan Art, in effect, pro
hibits private cilia from deal
ing with foreign governments.
The W-year-old Republican jur
ist said he had "great doubts
about his jurisdiction in the case.
"but somebody should have the
authority to find the farts."
He called for writlen arguments
within n davs on whether the
contributions to Castro in ex
change lor the release of f.IIJ
er 'I have juriwlirtion to do any
thing about rt
Choal issued his challenge euf
(the deal amounted to treason,
Telephone
mm
hand supplies of the metals. About
I.S00 members of the AFL-C10
Sieelworkent Union are de
boost m a one year contract
against management's proposed
$!.04 per day boost over two
years.
Auto One third of (lie em
ployes at General Motor's Willow
Springs, III., fisher Body plant
staged an unsanctioned: walkout
late Friday night. A United Auto
Workers spokesman said the wild
cat strike occurred because "man
agement wmU not Uil us whether:
union president. He also had been
expected to latk with James W.
Weaver, general chairman of the
union's Southern Pacific Division,
hut Weaver did not attend the;
session.
Weaver declared Friday that
JFK Aid Asked
SALEM UPI Cm, Mark
Hatfield has urged President Ken
nedy to assist in averting the
threalened Southern Pacific Rail
road strike.
The telegram to the President
said the rtrike "threatens serious
economic and humar.rtarian hard
ships."
termining which plan, r combi
nation of plans, will h submitted
to the legislature..
Hie proposals included a ciga
rette fas, and several income and
sales las plans, some designed to
- Lavp property taxes.
l-cgislators desks were groaning
mder a flood of mail in opposition
to a proposed Sunday closing law.
More than ,Wn letters has been
received hy legislators Monday.
The bill was at expected to pass.
hut it was r peeled to produce
some stormy hearings.
Shouting and gavel - poundim?
Wboed from a House Planning
and fievehwneitt Commrtlee hear
ing on a bill to limit racing. A
few hours later the state Racing
Commission denied an application
to build a dog track at Wilson
ville. The hearings on the MI will
continue nest week hut will be
anticlimactie as the hill was de
signed to prohibit the Wilsons-tile
track.
Education and civil defense con
tinned to reel under attacks from
many quarters.
Sen. rdward Fadcley, fl-F.u
gene, asked an attorney general's
opinion on whether superintendent
of public instruction In Minear
held his Jim constitutionally, if
Minear's election by the Board of
(education Is unconstitutional. Fa-
dcley w ants to know "Is the gov
ernor the superintendent at public
instruction, or is the portion va
cant?" Civil Defense AUm-M
The Ways and Means Commit
I
re began reviewing the rivii de-
'ense budget. Critical lawmakers
charged the agency was doing
nothing, ami had proved worthless
during the Columbus Day storm
Hatlield's administrative assistant
Warne Nnn defended the agency,
The Senate Military Affairs
Committee also began a review of:
Oregon Civil Defense activities
Senate President Musa called
for a change In distribution of
Baic Sehiwi Support funds, and:
said the prngram should not be:
on a rontusuing basis, hut should
be voted upon each hienniwm by
legislators.
Higher education continued its
fight for funds before a Ways and
Means Subcommittee.
A bill to give the legislature
power ta review regulations of:
state agencies was intrortweed, as
was one which would have the
slate confirm appointment to all
major commissions, lawmakers
were openly concerned that many:
agencies had become too power-;
hi)
A detailed review ef Oregon
proprtsed new constitution rontin-:
ued, but many legislators said
hey doubted the plan wnuld he
referred to the voters this session
Hatfield's voluntary labor - man
agement relations proposal got
support fmm the teamsters, but
the AFWIO opposed the Mr: '
TU Mill Kfc ?tN4
jit was going to discipline a fore -
man" tor breath of safety rules,
were were no pirtets at tfte (Kantian SMay moling ml period, tt t
and General Motors refused los going to he an KMay boiling pe-
comment
Aerospace A I'.S. district
judge at Seattle Friday denied a
union motion asking that mainte
nance of union membership be
continued during the SSMay in
junction which bars a strike by
the International Association of;
Machinists against several Boeing
o. missile and aircraft plants
across the nation, Plato Papps,
urunn general counsel, said the
"we will not talk to them (Soatb-j
era Pacific! any further."
But that was before he met late
into the night with McGovem, who.
flew in from Cincinnati.
McGovem said Saturday morn
ing that, despite repeated indica
tions a strike was imminent, no
action would be taken nnfd after
the meeting with O'Neill.
The li.OM-mranber union otiei-
nally was scheduled to stop work
any time after midnieht Westaes-
day but O'Neill prevailed opa the:
clerks to hold up in the hpe
stepped up r.e-;;r.iations could
avert the walkout which would tie
up Southern Pacific's operations
in Oregon, California .Nevada,
Utah, A r iron a, (tew Mexico and
West Texas,
- :
SIGNS PROCLAM ATION Mayor Robr Voatcfc
ertisialty put th stamp of approval on Fbrury it
American History Month at th raquctt of Ms. Will
Wood, Eulabnc Chapter DAR rajent, Uff, md Mrs.
v?uy oarron, psr regent. Mrs. Bro wat reqanr n
t fhe tim History Month was proclaimed for Fbrury
6y tt nafioiwf UAK.
j
National Hisiory Month
February has been designated
National History Month by the
National Society, Daughters of:
the American Revolution in cam
paign to make all Americans,
particularly school children, awe
conscious of American history.
Filly DAR rtaJe organ ifMians.
plus the District of Columbia Bid
the Canal Tone, thiough more
than I. charters, have ar
ranged for various means of nh-j
servanees of historic even:
ciimng in F'ehniary since
ly days ef this sat ton.
"The purpose nf this observance
hy the DAR is to further safe
guard, through knowledge ami ap
preciation, our American Heri
tage," say the sponsors.
An historic event en this first
day of American History Month,
was the first meeting of the Su
preme Court of the I nited Sates
on Feb. t, rm with Chief Justice
John Jay presiding.
On Feb i, wm, Mexico signed
treaty ith the United State.
thus ending the Mexican Wsr. A
a rwuM of that trrsty the southrrn
hnuniUry of the US. Is much
an It is, today. Although the VS
sjwas the victor in the war, they
agreed to pay Mesico 112 million
dollars for the land reded to
them. That hsrluoed Tesas, New
Mexico. California and much of
what is now t'tah. Nevada, Arf
wfta, Wyoming and fokjto,
On Feb. 3, I9U, four chaptobBi,
ww I Jewish rahhi, two Pwles-
Weather
Klamtfh Fall, TsMaU mm4
Ijikfvjci Variable eJaediafsc
ad antSiwti mild tfa&ygfe Man
day with m rfeasee far light show
ers today. Variable winds MJ
m.p.fe. at time today,. Highs to
day as4 Mwtdar tb-mi 54. L
tonight 32,
mmon mmU nuke
ais emergency
(appeal el the ruling. "Instead f
riod. Papps said,
Newspapers NogBliatiora In
tne costly, SJ-day Se York news
paper fclacbwt were scheduled to
resume Saturday after a maratlma
meeting fnday between reprc
sentathres of the publishers and
striking printers. Basic wages and
the length of the week were
; believed to be the major issues
titocking a semcmeol New Vork
Mayor Robert F. Wagner said
the strike had put tbc people of
New mk in erase hardship'
and he Brii negotiators to reach
a settlement with "justice to bom
sides."
In Cleveland, where two news
papers have been dosed down for
7i days by an American News
paper Guild strike, Mayor Ralph
Locher said: "some p.--cress" had
been made la negotiaBoits to set
tie the dispute. Me said money
issue were all that blocked
settlement at the Plain Dealer and
the guild's demands that a!! com
mercial employes oe mm mem.
hers was the major MambliBg
block at the Cleveland Press.
TrsBjis Union awl manazemeci
negotialors met Saturday at Upper
Harm , pa,, m an aJtempt to set
tie a week-long strita fcy rartroaJ
trainmen aganst ths operators el
the Red Arrow Bus sad Trolley
Lines, Tne walkout over wage a
creases has deprived ! 20,010 sutt
urban Philadelphia commuter e
transit service. State Mediator Ed
ward Feehan reported "no prog-:
ress at all after oath side ta
the dispute met FHday,
tant wintiri and Calholie
priest, linked arm hi rm. their
voice raised i pi aye-, went dowa
with the sinking tramport, Dnr
Chester, IW miles elf the ciat
of Greenland. They had gives
their Bfe preservers le soWiers
who bad none: Such self sacrtfk
and heroism has mart this reus- -
try great.
f
i f nh-!fc
sReds Burn
Yarehouse
CAIWCm Veneres H?PI
Communist eomrnamios, working
with mililary preciswM, overpos.
ered three guards Sinby mat
burned dnwi c li miBion Sean
Roeiock warehwue.
It was the blest Communist
mov 'm a siepprd-op Jerronjm
campa,;n in t deciared "total
war" against Preideat Borauto
Betancourt in an effort to fore
the president ! caned his sched
uled Fefc, M iut to tha United!
Sates.
The niiders, identiW by polio
as an ttfhra commando uut of
lb Cwwast "Armed Forres
of Lerti" FAW, snipped
their through an outer few
to casta Una guardt and sea
delrtwjy truck.