MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE FIVE
hukov Seems Long; Way Off -- Sf ii Gomes
Thursday, February 10. 19S5
Between Eisenhower and 2
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V
' -i aSj Sulganin was officially named as successor
BulganiH (left) is shownwith 2nup o Sr 5iS5n?nS Sn S10n of the. Supreme Soviet in Moscow. Here! '
! Joseph Stalin, Georgi Maleiov to right Bulgani
Treat ypWMftothe
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Hunt for Missing
Cowboy Uncovers
Stolen Postal Safe
Pasco, Wash. U.R) Two
Kennewick men, acting on a tip
received in an anonymous
scrawled note, went looking for
a missing friend yesterday, but
instead dug up a safe which may
contain as, much as $140,000 in
negotiable postal money orders.
Postal 'authorities' identified
the safe as one stolen from the
Boardman, Ore., postoffice Feb.
27, 1954, and said it then con
tained 1,400 money orders which
could be filled out for amounts
up to $100. The number remain
ing in the safe' had not been
counted today. .. , .
Louis McHenry and Arthur
DeWitt found the safe buried in
about one and a half feet of sand
in a gravel pit two and a half
miles northeast of here.
They were searching for Mil
ton Simmons, an amateur rodeo
performer known as "Cowboy"
Timmons, who they said had
been missing "under mysterious
circumstances' since Dec. 15.
Henry said a note had been
slipped under his door about a
month ago telling him, "if you're
looking for Cowboy, look in the
gravel pit near Kahlotus." He
said he had ignored the note
until an amateur geologist found
a red bandana belonging to Sim
mons in the pit last week.?' :
McHenry said he - believes
Simmons is dead "as a result
of foul play." . , ,
The Franklin county sheriff 's
office, FBI and postal authori
ties were investigating with the
case to be taken over by postal
inspectors from Pendleton, Ore.,
today. ,
1
Busy Schedules
Would Hamper
Both for Travel
Washington - (U.P.) Any
reunion between' two old com
rades in arms President Eis
enhower and Marshal Georgi
Zhukov seemed a long way
off today. .
When Zhukov was' promoted
on Wednesday to Soviet defense
minister, observers wondered
whether he and Mr. Eisenhower
might not get together and some
how work to relieve East- West
tensions. .
Invitation Recalled
The President recalled at his
news . conference that he once
invited Zhukov to ( visit this
country when the two were
army occupation commanders in
Germany after World War II.
Mr. Eisenhower also said, in re
ply to a question, that he would
ask his advisers about renewing
the invitation.
Without predicting the Pres
ident's action, some officials
doubted that an Eisenhower
Zhukov meeting could be ar
ranged because of the busy
schedules of both men in capi
tals thousands of miles apart.
Zhukov in Middle
Zhukov, it was pointed out,
may have power exceeding his
new position as defense minis
ter, but he is not the chief of the
Soviet state . the job Marshal
Nikolai Bulganin got in the lat
est Kremlin shuffle. .
Moreover, Zhukov appears to
be still in the middle of the un
easy Moscow power maneuver
ing. He might be reluctant to
take the chance of letting his
chair get cold. The best bet here
is that Zhukov has been a very
busy man since Josef Stalin's
death and will become busier
as his power grows.
There has been considerable
diplomatic interest in Zhukov
since his return to the Moscow
limelight after Stalin's death in
1953. After Zhukov returned
from the obscurity to which
Stalin had assigned him, world
interest in him was whetted by
the possibility that he and Mr.
Eisenhower might get together.
'Dreamed' of Visit
This interest zoomed when he
was made minister of defense.
Zhukov, just before the appoint
ment was announced, had told
some - American newsmen in
Moscow that he dreamed of vis
iting the United States some
day.
The President at his news con
ference spoke in glowing terms
of his friendship with Zhukov
in Berlin. He mentioned Zhu
kov's abilities and recalled a
bearskin ruk Zhukov gave him.
Once in 1945, the President said,
his airplane and son, John, were
put at Zhukov's disposal for a
trip to this country. However,
the trip didn't come off. -
Meeting To Study Sewerage Problem; Said Health Menace
X V
5 T
North Korea SSip-up
Admits Violation of
Armistice Agreement
Washington u.R) : The
Communists . have admitted
through, an apparent slip-up that
North Korea violated the Kor
ean armistice, .'American offic
ials said today.
' The slip came when the Reds
admitted that two MIG15s blast
ed into the sea by American
Sabre jets last Saturday belong
ed to North Korea.- Under the
armistice, North Korea should
not have jet planes '. because
there were none in the Com
munist territory' at the time the
armistice was signed.
Could Send Protest,
The United States could send
a protest to the North Koreans
complaining about the incident,
but officials think the matter
probably will be handled
through the Military Armistice
commission in Korea. . ' '
The incident ' occurred when
12 American Sabre jets and a
reconnaissance plane were at
tacked by eight MIGs off the
coast of North Korea. . Two of
the MIGs, which were not car
rying identifying markings,
were shot down. The American
planes were undamaged.
U.S. Saved Trouble
The United States was saved
the trouble of identifying the
planes when the North Koreans
admitted yesterday that the
craft belonged to them.
The armistice bars both sides
from bringing new equipment
into Korea but permits replace
ments with equipment of the
same type. Thorough U. S. re
connaissance showed the Reds
had not jets in' North Korea at
the time the armistice was sign
ed. ' " i
Dead line for Sunday Classified is
at noon Saturday.
mm
Minerals
MThe
Mtamuis, All The Food Energy
OF THE'HIGH-PRICE" SPREAD ARE IN TODAYS
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vitamin A each pound, the year
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It's wonderful for your family. And
you'll love it. For every pound tastes
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. The most serious local public
health and sanitation problem
that tf improper sewerage in
the fringe areas - will be dis
cussed at a meeting of the Jack
son County Public Health assoc
iation next Thursday, Feb. 17, at
1 p.m., according to Mrs; A. C.
Uridel, chairman of the assoc
iation's sanitation study commit
tee.' '
The meeting is to be held at
the St. Mark's Guild hall on
North Oakdale ave. in Medford.
A panel consisting of Robert
Hart, Jackson county's new san
itarian, Dr. A. E. Merkel,- health
officer, Vern Thorpe, Medford
public works director, and Mrs.
Uridel will present phases of
the problem, with suggestion for
solutions. v
"This affects everyone in the
county and particularly the
areas surrounding the cities of
Medford and Ashland," Dr. Mer
kel stated, "and rapid growth
of this section makes . solution
of the problem imperative. -
"Since the knowledge and as
sistance of many individuals and
this, we urge everyone inter
ested to attend the meeting next
week," Mrs. Uridel stated. r
CLAM BREAK . , - -
Mystic, Conn. (U.R) A large
clam,T dropped by : a seagull,
broke a second-story office win
dow and hit Mrs. DorothyBail
ey on the head. ; .
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