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About The Klamath news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1923-1942 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 8, 1937)
The Klamath News WEATHER NEWS WIRE SERVICE Tlia Ilral4 and Nw uUcrtl to full IivimnI wire wrvlr of h Auos-lMtw. PrM ml thm tnlld I'rma, ih world's ifmImI itKMTMgNlltrrlng organlMllont. For IT hour ilnlly world rtim Into Th Him)4 Nwi nfflr on tclvtjrp machine. Fair High t)7 Low M At Midnight 4 M hours to 8 P-m. , eason to data l.aM year to data Normal precipitation IN THE SHASTA-CASCADE WONDERLAND -11.77 ..1A.01 ..ll.M gtnoP KLAMATH FALLS, ORE., SUNDAY, AUGUST 8, 1937 Vol. 14, No. 230 Price Five CenU u SECTIONS (Every Morning Except Monday)' Editorial! on tha Day's News lly 1'IUNK JKNKISH EJVKHY effort onitlit to be mane ' in act to tha bottom of tint lory (ahlrh to far ! vague and Indefinite) about tha dlaappear anra of K. Hlrffen, secretary of tha restaurant employes' union al (Irani! Pass. TIIKIIK ara ugly Intlmailoni that Hteffen kldnapad by r.ranta Pass hualneas man and run out of town and told thai It wouldn't ba lafa for him to coma bark. Tha whola lala, is lhaia words ara written, la aadlr larking In corroborative datall, but tha Im plication la that Hteffen hi unionising tha raaiauranl workan, and that tha employers didn't Ilka It, and rruirird to direct anion. Thrae Intimation! and Impll ration! ought to ba traced don and either verified or definitely disproved. IS' TIIK rotation! between am plo)ia and employers, thara li no plara for violence or for dtsre gard for la. If a tolerate Ibraa Ihlnn. ara ara heading alrallhl for trnuhla. and tha Irouhla will Arrr.cT everybody. TIIIH Urania Psae rplaode. what ever It really la. hai dlsturb Ing posalhllltlee In tha war of arousing III will. It ihould ba Investigated thoroughly, compe tently and IMPARTIALLY. ir Hteffen r rally was kldnsped and told to gat out of tow. and warnad not to coma bark, lha self appointed vlgllantea who did It ahould ba run doan and mada to fral tha atarn hand of lha law. We want none of that aort of thing In Boulhirn Oragoa. DOCTOR DIES SOON RAFTER CONVICTION FOR SEX CRIME HEI. AIM. Mrt.. Aug. T (AP) !r. Armen Greenhut. convicted by a rlrrult rourt Jury of rrlmlnal attack on a U-yeer-oId arhonl girl padant, waa found daad thla morning In bla call. Sheriff Granville C. Boyle found tha prlionar daad In hli bad when tha fnrmar rallad him for breakfast thla morning. Attar a coroner's Jury viewed tha body, Msglstrate Stanley 8. Spencer ad journed tha Inquest until Monday. Tha )urr mada no atatamant. Sheriff Doyla and Frederick I.ee Cnhourn of tha defense coun sel said Greenhut prohshly dlad In hla sleep. Tha ailornty addad ba thought "ha dlad from naryona excitement and tha atraln of tha trial." Ha did not raquait an autopay. WAR VET HIT ON HEAD; HITCHHIKER HELD FOR ATTACK urrviTrnrR Wash.. Ana. 7 (AP) W. P. Warden. 41, dis abled WOna war Tularin, anon. (Ira., waa In tha Vatarana' hospital at Walla Walla today auffarlng from aayare head In Jurlce alleged to hava baan In- iit-,l h rhat-ln Bchnnlrier. 17. Aurora, Ora bltch-blkar, near Soap laka yeatarday. Schneider waa arreated hara late yesterday by Deputy 8harlff Ray True In possession of War den'! car, apparently beaded for Heattie. Moody Informs Job to Enforce SALEM, Aug. 7 (At The dii trlct atlorneya and not the at torney general are reiponilble for the enforcement of the criminal alalittea In their reapactlve coun tlea, Aaalatant Attorney General Moody today advlaed Leland T. Brown, dlatrict attorney of Waico county. Moody'! letter wai In reply to one from Rrown urging the at torney gennral'i office to take the Initiative In enforcing the crim inal lawi of the Hate agalnit marhlehoard, plnhall machinal and other ilmllar device! operat ing In violation of the lottery and gambling lawi of the atali. i'p to n. a. "Yott inggent for the alornoy general to take the Initiative In the enforcement of fhli phaae of the criminal law heratue thla of fice haa borne tha brunt of the proaecttllon of theie caiei,'" Moody aald. "The attorney general li with out power to direct tha diitrlct attorney In tha performance of hla dnl lea and cannot act In the capacity of a diitrlct attorney an lee directed by the governor." Moody then pointed out two tamtea which authorlie the gov ernor to act la criminal proiecu Uoni. i SENATE PASSES COURT REVISION Changes In Only Lower Court Procedure Pro vided in Federal Bill WASHINGTON. Aug. 7 (AP) The aanata endad It! bitter ill month court controveriy today by passing a compromise bill, prorldlng only for procedural change! la lower federal tribu nal!. A lubitllute for the president's original bill which Included en largement of tha luprema court If justices over 10 did not re tire, the measure approved did not even mention the aupreine court. No Itecord Yola It waa passed without a record vole after a prefunrtory debate. Admtnlstrsiion apokeamen had agreed to the bill In principle, following tha rollapae of their auprema court enlargement pro gram. Immediately arter the hlll'i passsge Senator (iuffey (1). Pa.), asked that hli opposition ba re corded. Vice Prealdent r.artier per mitted blm to note bli Hand In the record. The only opposition volred on the floor came from Henator Lewl (D.-lll. ). He contended the meaaura waa unconstltuilon al because It would prevent a alnila federal diitrlct Judge from reatralning the enforcement of (Continued on Tiga Three) NOT GUILTY PLEA EXPECTED FROM SHOOTING SUSPECT AI.TURAS, Aug. 7 Tha case of Byron fitch who la accuied of tha killing of Earl C. Smith near Tulelake on July 10. .will bava Ml bearing before Justice William Armitrong Tueaday, Au il at 10. Hardin Barry of Susanvllte and J. T. Sharp hara been retained by Pitch ai attorneys. Sharp thla morning laid: "Our client will plead not guilty when tha hear ing la held." Vigilant watch li being kept over Fitch owing to the feeling over tha ehootlng of Smith In tha Tulelake section, Sheriff Sharp having deputlea en guard night and day. MYSTERY MEETING CALLED BY MARTIN ON "VITAL MATTE" " PORTLAND. ORE. Aug. 7 ll'P) A meeting ahrouded In my!tery haa been called for Mon day night by Oov. Charlei H. Martin, reportedly for the pur pose of nominating an Oregon candidate for the office of Bonneville power admlniatrator, It waa learned today. Invltatlona received by aeveral prominent Oregonlana reportedly dlecloied to recipient! that Gov ernor Martin " wtabei to hold a private conference of Oregon leadera on a matter of vital In tercut to the welfare and develop ment of the ante." The Invltatlona were algned by Wallace Wharton, aecretary to governor. Nature of tha "matter of vital Intereat" waa not revealed, but ohaerveri laid there wai no doubt but It waa the Bonneville poat, to which the rumored ap pointment of J. D. Roel, Seattle, hai been a point of criticism with the governor. D. A. It's His Pinball Bans "The governor directed the at' torney general to Inveitlgate and proaecute the violation of the lani agalnat gambling In Marlon coun ty," Moody continued, "and In the performance of inch duty and anlgnment the aialatant attorney general conducted the procoedtnfti agalnit marbleboardi, plnball ma chine! and other ilmllar device! In Marlon county." Violation Cited Moody aald that from decree! entered In Ihe Marlon county cnei the operation of marble boardi, plnhall machlnea and aim liar devlcea violate! the lottety, gambling, nlckel-ln-the-alot and public nuliance atitutei of the atate. He alio averred that Ihe Oregon law, which purporta to llceme inch gamea and otheri or Ilka character la unconstitutional Iniofar aa It appllei to marble- boarde and plnball machlnea. "Consequently, Moody laid, any llceme of theie machlnea Is void and ahould be dliregarded. Moody's letter continued: "It would seem to me that your duly In the praroliei Is plain. If Injunction proceedlnga hare been Initltuted n your dlatrict enjoin Ing yon from acting, you ahould promptly have the court dismiss (Uoallnued on rage Three) When Nonie Smashed the Bottle saaaaaaaaaaaa--v-aa-T''C , n irl i nisaa' m i -X -- ' Uueen Nonie MiCarlle of Klamath Iluckaroo days donned her ufflclated at the rhrlmenlng of a merce. That blur ataliiM the wheel li the camera a record of the clear Crater lake aaler. Nome named the bus, "City of Klamath Ka FARM BILL MAY LEAD CALENBARwlr Demo Leaders Consider rian To Speed Up Ad journment of Congress WASHINGTON'. Auk. 7 (TV- I)morratir tadcri coimiderwl to day maktnic formal announce ment to th arnatft and house that farm Ualilatlon will he the fltt. butlnrta. of tha 1938 con freMlonal aotulnn. They bad a trljile ptirpone: 1.- To Mprdlte adjournment and rmov th ponHlbiltty of a aptxial fall Psnlon. 1. To ran concern of farm- hAlt IrnlnlHtorn lhnl Indimlrial area reprpentatlvts would Rive if aupport to a farm bill once wMBft-hour and homing meaaurei are enacted. 3. To aaiture the president con- ireM will provide crop controla no that he mleht fAl free to auth orize prire-jjtahiliftnir crop lounH ihroiiKh the commodity credit cor poration. lnftltenr Kadea The lnnlntence of farm-belt con- Kresmnen for enactnienr of a farm hill Immediately appeared to be fadlnx. Hoiine leadera were apeaklnE optlmliitlcally of adjournment prospect. Majority header uay hurn, mentioning datoa for the first time, told the houie the (Continued on Pace Three) Night Wire Flashes DKAI'll MAUV 11IKH lHH,AIhl.rill A, H.indav, A us. II iVV) "Ih'nth Itaby" l-Ynrii nry lion-aunt nl, taken fntm her mother's body In a minute Ht mortem oHratlon, aucciiinbrtl toilny after living leen than Inn ln-. The hahy dled aa a direct result of her 27-year-old mother' death, . wh Ich nt ppwl com plot h in of her development n month short of scheduled hlrth. FATIIKR CIIAKKKD CLINTON, Okla., Mtg. T l!.l) Thnrley Hammock. Mt Thomas, Okln., relief worker, waa charged tonight before ft jiintlce of the peace, with assnult wltii Intent to kill. The charge asserted that the father attempted to throw matches on his sun, lit, whose clothes were eonked with kerosene." CIO HKT-IIACK nM)()N, Ore., Aim. T. (UP) Ormvth of Ilia I Kt Mnvcmcnt In snulluvcatcrn Ore Ktn received a cttack wllh tmlay'a announcement that members of llnnrton Local No. 2HIIM, l.umlirr and Haivnilll Workers union, have voted to retain affiliation with tha American Federal Ion of lalor. NIIKRIrV PIUS roHTI,ANI, Ore., Aug. T (IT) Allan o. Ilordrn, fill, power miupanr employe and ( laikamaa enmity sheriff, died late today from an accidental Kunahot wound, Inflicted, hla wife aald, when he waa ex amining; his ,4.Vcallbre aervlre revolver. MA V HKTAMATK IIKHI.IN, Auk. 7 (IP) Germany will not accent the expulnlnn of three Herman nawnnaper correspondente from tondnn without taking some retaliatory art Ion, It waa re liably reported tonight, vr Greyhound btia on Main street in BusPia,hed The City of Klamath Falli. Pacific Greyhound Lines' fine new streamlined bUa. was dedi cated here Saturday morn fug at Impressive ceremonies conducted on Main atreet in front of the chamber of commerce building. The bun came here from Med ford earlier In the day, with W. H. Kcgert, district manager for the Pacific Greyhound lines from Salem, and C. M. Shores, district I passenger agent from San Fran cisco, aa paaaengora, - The dedicatory cere monies opened at 10 a. m.. with Frank Jenkins, president of the Klam ath county chamber of commerce, presenting the address of wel-1 come and appreciation for the bus. He was followed on the program by Tom Stanley, man-1 ager of the Shata Cascade Won- j derland association, who made a brief talk and introduced Mlsa i (Continued on Pag Three) SHERIFF REPORTS NEW LEADS ON STEVENSON BANDIT STEVKNSOX, Wash., Aug. 7 ( a P Sheriff M. T. Borden said todsy "we have a couple of new leads' on the bank robber who looted the Stevenson Nation al hank yesterday of nearly 20, 000. "We cant aay yet what they are but we may have aomething tomorrow." Borden aald. He indicated that one of the leads had been developed through an express package but declined to discuss It. No trace of where the robber stayed last night nor the automohtle he presumably used In tha getaway has been found. WEATHER, MEN LICK WOODS FIRE POtlTLANn. Aug. 7 OP) For est service officials began releas ing men from the lines surround ing the disastrous Spud hill fire In the Columbia national forest, and described conditions as "sat isfactory." Weather conditions, cloudy, with a prevailing west wind, aided some 2000 men In controlling the flames, but the forest service said "that situation will exist only so long aa we have no east wind." An east wind probably would spread the fire broadly. Water Tank Upset Kills tmmmm I " -s-.iaj!...f V-. Thla picture, taken at Port Klamath Saturday morning, showa tha water tank truck which turned on Ha side to crush fatally tha driver, Glenn Erl. Erl, driving at night on tha logging road. apparently went to sleep, Bharllf white cowgirl outfit Saturday and front of the chamber of com amaahlng of a bottle of cryatal- I la. 0. B. PROTESTS Strong Note Sent to Reb els Over Attacks By Unidentified Planes MARSEILLE, Franca. Aug. t.P) Radio Marseille announced tonight It had Intercepted a dls tresa call from a steamer declar ing It had been bombarded by an airplane It mllea west of Algiera. ..Tha faster St isms, .apparently garbled in transmission, waa given as tha Tklsukia. Tha distress call placed the at tack In lha general area where threa ships were attacked yester nsy. The latter wera of French. Italian and British registry. The captain of tha Italian vessel, the Mongols, died of Injuries re ceived In tha attack. LONDON. Aug. 7 (AP) Great Rritaln dispatched a strong note today to Spanish Insurgent au thorities at Palms. Mallorca. protesting yesterday'a "mystery" plane attack on tha tanker Brit ish Corporal. The protest followed a report from the British consul general at Algiers that the machine gun and bomb attack "probably" was executed by "anti-government" aircraft. Three monoplanes of uniden tified nationality dove at the British Corporal In the Mediter ranean, 30 miles northwest of Algiers, sprsyed Ihe decks with machine gun fire and dropped bombs close to the vessel. The same three plane wera (Continued on Page Three) LANDMARK BURNED AT SILVER LAKE SILVER LAKE. Aug. 7 (AP) Fire destroyed another landmark here last night, burning the restaurant of Mrs. Myrtle La ater. Albert AVatcrhouae. brother of Miss Lillice W'aterhouse, who was operating the cafe In the absence of the owner. 111 in Portland hospital, discovered the fire burning an outside wall about midnight. He aaid he be lieved the flames were of in cen diary origin. Besides the cafe, the fire de stroyed some service station equipment but the Lasater rest dence and a group of automobile cabins were saved. .J N4 Uoyil Low ma y ba aaan among JAPAN COLD ON CHINESE PEACE PARLEY OFFERS Nippon Evacuates Civil ians From Hankow Under Warships' Guard By KOHKKT ItKKKOV I'nlted fren Kff Correspondent (Copyright, 1937. United Preaa) SHANGHAI, Sunday, Aug. S. The Japanese army bombed Chi ts troop concentrations along the Peiping-Suiyuan railway again today while Tokyo's ambassador to China. Sbigeru Kawagoe, re ceived coldly an official an nouncement of the central Chi-1 nese government in Nanking that It was ready for peace by nego tiation If Japan is so disposed. The general opinion of unof ficial Japanes waa that military operations would continue until China U humbled. Bombers Active The Chinese, It was said, have not proved their "sincerity" and their unquestioned determination to "cooperate with Japan (or the betterment of Asia Torrential rains which hare been Impeding military opera tions In the Petplng area, were subsiding and Nippon's big, three engined bombers araln took to the air from the field at Eng tai and bombed China's SSUh and 184th divisions which continued to bold their strategic positions astride the Peiping-Suiyuan rail way, about 1 S mile northwest of Peiping. Japan must gain control of this whole area, between Pelp- ( Continued on Pag Three) FRENCH EVOLVE OWN VERSION OF STRIP-TEASE ACT NEW YORK, Aug. 7 (UP) Now lt'a tha can-can (pronouno- ed "tan-ah ) witb the noaa held tightly. . . With License Commissioner Paul Moss' farewell to the strlp tesse still echoing on Broadway. Mile. Andrea Rapo arrived from Parla and the Follea Bergere with tha announcement that aha was going to make America "kah- kah" (hold that nose) conscious. What Mile. Rapo has In mind Is not tha can-can your grand father uaed to applaud in tha daya when Queen Victoria ruled It out of the empire but a mod ernised version which she de scribed aa follows: "The can-can it Is tha dance that makes the Joys. It makes you excite. It Is like the strip teasewith the clothes on. It la tha tease-dance. It makes yon feel so ooh." Mile. Rapo la pilled at tha In ternational Casino, a costly music hall venture about to blossom un der one of tha big signs on Times Square. She la captain of a troop of French girls who will dance the dance which, tha encyclo pedia aays. Is "accompanied by violent leaps and Indecorous con tortions of the body, originated by the demimonde of Paris and resembling tha old Bscchic dancea." The word "Indecorous" mada Mile. Rapo pretty mad. "Non. non. non." ahe said: "It is not In how-do-you-eay-lt decorous. It Is merely excite." Time and Licence Commis sioner Paul Moss will tell. MOTHER GIVES UP "KIDNAPED" BABY CHICAGO. Aug. 7 " The real mother of little Donald Horst, Lydla Nelson, gave him up today to his foster parenta, well-to-do Mr. and Mrs. O. O. Horst. Atorney John E. Johnson, who said he represented "all parties, announced she signed a consent of adoption permitting tha Horata permanent custody ot tha 31 month-old boy, spirited away from the Horst horn last Tuesday. Driver ssnTavi V Investigators at th wrack. Vet Jumps To Death Off Gate Bridge 8A.V FRANCISCO, Aug., 7 (UP) Harold B. Wobbar, 47, war veteran of Palo Alto, Cal., leaped to hla death today from tha center of tha Golden Gate Bridge. Hla was tha first autcide from tha span. The plunge ended Wobber'a J-year-flght to regain hia health. He had Buffered ehellshoek over seas. Since 1930 be had been a patient In the veterans' hos pital at Palo Alto. Friend Laaghe Wohber arrived at tha bridge gate on a bus. He had coma to Han Francisco on a 14 hour pass from tha hospital. On tha bos he had made tha acquaintance of Louis H. Naylor. a Professor of Trinity college, Hartford. Conn. Tha two men walked out the bridge together, aa they walked commenting on the high neaa and Immensity of the span over famed Golden gate. As they neared tha center, which la nearly ISO feet above tha water. Wobber said to Naylor: "I'm going to jump over." Naylor laughed, thinking bis new acquaintance waa Joking. Suddenly Wobber took off hia (Continued on Page Three) NATIONS FAVOR PEACE POLICIES Hull's Statements Meet With Approval of 40 Powers; Others Silent By HOWART C. MONTF.E United PreiM staff Correspoadent WASHINGTON. Aug. 7 (UP) Forty foreign nationa ' notified Secretary ot State Cordell Hull tonight ot their unqualified ap proval of hia "foarteen point" policy for promotion -awl- areaar ration of world peace. The assurances were forward- ed to the slate department in response to diplomatic aolicltlon by United 8tatea represents tires abroad asking for the reaction of world powers to Hun s restate ment or American foreign policy, issued July It. War Powers Absent Among the foreign govern- menta responding to the Inquiry wera Great Britain, France. Sov iet Russia, the Scandinavian countries, practically all of the American republics. British em pire dominion governments, and many othera. Noteworthy among, tha absen tees were China. Germany. Italy, Japan and Spain nations whoae bellicose actions or declarations are causing concern all over the (Continued on Page Three) JAP PARLIAMENT ENDS SESS' N IN PATRIOTIC FURY TOKYO. Aur. 7 (AP) Japan's parliament ended ita two weeks' session In a blue of patriotism and excitement tonight after vot ing funda for hostilities In China- Chief among tha measurea adopted wera war appropriations of 419.000.000 yen (about fill 500.000). which General uen (CO.) Sugiyama. war minister. declared would be "eufficienf unless the scope ot the conflict idened. An acnte shortage of coast wise vessels supplying Japaneaa cities with basic commoditlea suited from tha concentration of all available shipping to back tha Japaneae army's north China campaign- TODAY'S NEWS DIGEST GENERAL Japan turns cold shoulder on Chines proposal! of peace nego tiation. Jananese eltlsens evacu ated from Hankow. Page 1. Forty nations express approval of Secretary Hull's statement of American peac policies. Ger many. Italy, Japan, Spain send no answer. Page 1. British dispatch strong not to Spanish insurgents aa aftermath of bombing and machine gun at tack on British tanker oft Al giera. Insurgents report an archist rebellion haa started In Spain. Pag 1. Senate passes compromise court bill, which touches only upon lower court procedure. Supreme court unmentloned. Pag 1. Assistant Attorney General Moody informs district attorneys that It's their Job to enforce criminal statutes. Statement mad in connection with plnball and marble gam situation, Pag 1. LOCAti City of Klamath Falls, new atresmllned Pacltie Greyhound hue, dedicated asr Saturday WATER TRUCK UPSETS, KILLS Glenn Eri Crushed After Falling Asleep at Tank er Wheel Near Fort Glenn Erl, 10. water truck driver for Updegrade Brothera, logging contractors for Algoma Lumber company on tha Yawley tract, was crushed to death early Saturday when hla truck went off the road, hit a stump and overturned three and a half mile from Fort Klamath. Erl hauled water to lay dust the logging road a. making hia trips at night. It la believed that ha went to aleep about 9 a. Saturday, according to Sheriff Lloyd I Low, since tha road waa smooth and level and there waa no other causa for tha fatal ac cident. Tha water truck eaaed off th road, which was 30 feet wide, and hit a two-foot atump. Er4 apparently wakened, opened the door of the cab and got out. only In time to be crushed to death aa tha truck toppled over. He waa found at 7 a. m. Sat-.' urday by tha flrat man who went up tha road to work. Tha water wagon wss beard to pass Fort Klamath Junction about 1:10 o'clock Saturday morning, and aince tha accident occurred a short distance from thla point It la estimated that the time waa about S a. m. Grace N. Whlta reported to nolle bureau Friday afternoon that a pedestrian walked Into her automobile at th Intersec tion of Fourth and Mam atreet. Ha hurried away from th scene of the accident, apparently uninjured, before hi nam could be learned. LOYALISTS LIFT . BAN ON CATHOLICS FOR POPE'S AID VALENCIA. -Spain. Ang. " t (CP) The Loyalist government tonight sought the support of tha Vatican by issuing a decree per mitting th celebration of re ligious services throughout all Iti territory. t Services throughout the terri tory controlled by the Loyalists, estimated at one-third ot th country, will be permitted for th first time aince th early daya of th Civil war. Manual d Irujo, minister of Justice, Informed the United Press that he had received th cabinet's authority to begin dis tribution ot license to 14,000 Catholic priests and nuna re maining In Loyalist Spain, per mitting them to officiate at pri vate aervlcea. Upon receipt of th licenses, the priests and nuns will be ensbled to wear religious robes. Tha cabinet's decision repre sents the first concrete step to ward atrengthening of Catholic ism In republican Spain, wher thousands of priests, nuns and worshippers hare been killed. Thousands of churches hare been destroyed and religious articles of tremendous wealth stolen. DIVORCE SUIT BRINGS ! DEATHS BUTTE.MON., Aug. 7 (UP) Robert A. Marshall, SO. Great Falls, smelter worker, shot and killed his estranged wife. Mona Lowney Marshall, 10 with a .21 caliber revolver, and then fatally shot himself through th head late this afternoon. . Marshall, despondent hecaus divorce proceedings had been Instituted against him, died at St. James hospital about flv hours after he had sent a bullet crashing through his brain. morning with appropriate cere monies at chamber of commerce. Story and picture on Paga 1. Stat forestry crew begins con struction ot firebreak from Old Fort road to Olene. Plan to ax tend same work to California Una to protect grass areaa, scenes ot big fires each summer, Pag 7. Glenn Erl, 20, employed oil water wagon at Algoma logging operatlona near Fort Klamath, crushed to death under truck. Apparently went to aleep. Story and picture on Paga 1. Judge Jamison affected by sentencing ot Harry French of Alturaa. It waa th first time In 17 years on the bench he has faced necessity of giving death sentence. Page I. i IX THIS ISSUE CUT Brlefa Page I Church News .Page 7 Comics snd 8tory......Page t Editorial .Page 4 Family Doctor. .. Page 4 Local Cartoon ...Page 4 Market, Financial News..Page I Society - ..Page t Sports ........ ,l..Ps South-End New Pag 4