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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 30, 1949)
fo) u Hv rKANK JKNKINH JKNATOH OLCN TAYLOR Idnlio, who ran (or vice presi dent last lull on Uie Progressive ilirury Wallace nil Jim HUtlim Urkri, says lit Waahlngum Uiat ha will run again for senator this tuna AM A DKMOCKAT. "I'm prally thoroughly convinced," he says, "that our political destiny ieli with tht two major poliural parties, that tha American people do nut want any PL1N IIH uarUca." CO, you aa. Taylur It now a good Democrat. Ha will remain a food Democrat as lom aa being a good Democrat pays olt In voles. II tha tlma oomra whrn It doesn't pay to ba a Democrat, hall be meUiltif else. FRANKLY. I hava uo use whatever 1 (or that kind of cattle. I'm aurh a tap aa to believe Uia tlma ha arrived in tha United Hiaict of America whfll W( MtlHT HAVE .H1NCIPLKM IN OUR POl.I1 ICU prliuiplet In which wa believe to fiercely tlial wa ara willing to dta lor them, II necessary. IDONT know thla Marlon L. "Mike" Elliott. Multnomah county aherlff who la In hot water, t nrvi-r an much aa laid ayea on him. Hill ha la lacing a recall election, and Jie clalma Uial ha la beliui "perte culed." Experience hai taught ma that a politician who claim, that ha la being persecuted la usually a phon). Y Inclination "and yours, too. 1 11 wager) would ba to go all out lur anbudy who really waa being petaacuted. Politically tpeaking. b. Ini persecuted amounU to Ilia aama lliini a being Uia under dog . It la practically an a Horn uf American piilltlca that It you can eatabllan ynursell aa Uia under due you ra in tha clupa. NOTHINO can atop you. Tha aama principle worka In Uia Mitrt-TE EV Zweybruck arrived by plone ara brim persecuted, you hava no from New York Friday evening, reody to open the OTI sum lurther wornea in puliuca. All you i mer yrorkshop for ort students ond ort instructors. Registro LSu, u,. ".""1?" t.on for dosses is being held open ond those interested or. It aounda very much to ma like j invited to coll the registror ot 9168 for further information, that la what Utia fellow Kiliou i j Mrs. Zweybruck wos met ot the plone by Verne Swonsen, 'aiming at. ... j president of the Art ossociotion; Catherine Brumbough, sec- rtO you recall Uia labia ot Uia boy ! retory; Mrs. Merle Swonsen, Robert Banister, Mrs. Annily who cr led won? Uherek ond Mrs. B. B. Blomquist. A reception for the pro- Ai I remeinbrr It. Uiey had him i fessor ond her doughter, Nora Zweybruck, olso on instructor to walcniiu a nana oi mrep. n. , . iw,.h. ui.. hit hnn ua took a deep breath and yelled "Wolf I Wolf!" at the top ot hu yoke. It worked. Tha eldert of tha village came running. The kid told them a cock-and-bull tale about a big bad wolf that had threatened Uie llleep BUT UK HAD RUN THK WOLF HAO OKD OUT OF THKRC and saved tha sheep. Tha elders made over him to beat the band and went bark to their duura In the village. L-r J If ' Itlaa T-ia V-fxf f ' It VZ. ih, r ,.i h.rt 1 been made over him to well U..I he ...in .nd keot on dome It until the village lost all confidence In him. eventually a wolf did come and he yelled Ilka a Comanche, but no soap. Tha elders, having h!s number, didn't come, and tha wolf a is him up along with a lot ol Uia sheep. P1II5 moral? 1 Well. I HOPB lha time will coma when we'll get onto these phonies In politics and when the big bad woll really does come we 11 (it tight and let them be eaten up. II we can't somehow gel rid ot tha phnnlea In poliura. our country and Uia way ol Ufa that wa value will eventually ba gone where tha woodbine twlneth. Woman Murdered On Busy Street IDS ANOKLES, July 30 UP) Bennett Rlrkard. SVyrar-old ma chinist. Is held today on autplclnn of murdering his wife while driv ing down a busy street. Hherlffs Lt. Vic Finland laid Donna V e r g e n e Rlckard, 'it. estranged from her husband for aevrral months, waa stabbed 13 timet In uie head, neck and back with a butcher knife. Her body was found on the front seat next to Rlckard after the car cranhed Into a parked truck, the officer aald. Rlrkard aald he was taking hit wife home from work when he sud denly "blacked out." He admitted owning the knife, England aald. Argument In Hay Field Leads To Fatal Shooting An argument In a hay field be twrrit half-brother wna rllmaxrd by Hie death of 30-year-old Marx Loyd Brown nrnr Uenliy early Uila morning. Perry Chorktoot, 17, was brought Into Klamath Falls to the county JhII In mklinornliiK and la booked for murder end held for federal au thorities. Mnlh boys are Indians and live Willi Uirir moliirr at Beatty. The shooting took place at a hay camp on a ranch Uiree miles from Beatty. Brown waa shot In the head and apparently Instantly killed. At the county Jnll Chockhmt aald he and lila llnlf-brntlicr were pitching tiny end engaged In an argument, but did not say what the argument waa over. No drinking was Involved. Chorktoot aald till htif-hrolhar I .tMMMrjar . j I'HK'K rivr. CENT. l-t- ..' e-AIJ.ll, OKr.'.ON. ATI RIMY, Jt'LY 30. II9 , ,h .umm-r school who will will be held from 2 to II be held from 2 to 5 p. house Ot OTI, Sunday US Consulate In Shanghai BesiegedToday 8HAN0HA1. July 30 iP) Tlw " cuhaulate wss be- aeiged again today by about ISO for- mer Shanghai employes ol uia U.8 navy. . Tha mob, like tha ona yesterday, demanded aggregate back pay and severance allowance equal to ' months pay. It waa made up of Chinese muelly. but there waa a sprinkling of Indiana and while Huuiana. Consulate members were not per mitted to leave Uie building. They Included Acting CoiimiI Oenerin Waller MrCnnaughy, Naval Aturna Cmdr. Morgan Blayton and Ad ministrative Attache Reuben Thomas. Others were permitted to come and go but only esaenUal personnel reported for work today lest a general lock-In develop. Thirteen staff members remained In tha building last night. The dispute goes bark to awlft withdrawal of navy units here be fore Uia communists arrived. The workera claim Uiey were not proper ly discharged, thai they received no formal notice. One-Line Air Service Favored PORTLAND. July 30 l1 The Portland rhamber of commerce was on record today as favoring a single air line between Portland and Klamath Falls. West Coast Alrllnea has requested permission to serve Klamath Falls, which la now on United Air Llnrw' route. The Portland chamber did nut specify which airline It pre ferred. altnrked and "tiled to kill me" Willi a pilclidn k, "I ran about 7S yards lo the camp and got my rifle and shot him once," the young Indian aald. Chocktoot described Maix Brown as "hol-hcadcd." After the shooting, young Chock loot rode his horse to Beatty and gave himself up to Dice Crane, well known Indian rancher, and Crane brought him to Klamath Falls and to Jail. Indian Service Officer John Arkell was called from Klamath Anency to Investigate Uie alinntlng and a fed eral bureau of Invrsl Igiitlnn officer waa called In from Kluniath Falls. Deputy Coroner Wlllard Ward took chargo of Brown's body to bring It lo Ward t Funeral home. 0 arrive bv D one Ihi evenirw. m. tn the icmng. of ttte guest Baseball Scores AMERICAN PHILADELPHIA. July 30 (Pi Virgil i fire i Trucks ended a s:i game winning streak ol the Phila delphia Athleuca with an 11 to 0 shutout today as his Detroit Tiger teammates blasted two A'a pitchers for I hits. It waa Truck's Duh vic tory against seven losses. Detroit .. Ml 004 0oe 11 19 0 Philadelphia 000 000 000 0 a I Trucks and Robinson; Swift ii Colman, Bliants t6i, Harris it) and Ourrra. NEW YORK, July 30 i1 Jack Onslow Juggled his Chicago White Box lineup today and the mote nayrd off as Don Wheeler drove home four runs and Floyd Baker ! three and Charley Kress scored lour I lions" Jrssup aald: to pace the Sox to a t-3 victory "The defense In being In Western over uia New York Yankees. I Europe, which would be made pot Box score: R. H E tible by Uie military assistance pro rrtlr.ro A'M IHO 3nl-B 14 New York 000 300 000-3 1 1 Wight. Klriman it) and Wheeler; Rani-Ill. 8anlord 4i. Marshall l7i Buxton t7 1 and Berra. Taft-Hartley Opposition Told SPOKANE. July 30 (Pi The republican party s tiale chairman said last night that "If I had been In congress I would have voted against the Taft-Hartley labor law." But he added: "I would also have voted against Uie Wagner act." J. M. i Bud I Dawlry. In Spokane on a tour of county OOP orgnnlu tlons, explained he was opposed to the enactment of laws that would "control business' because "I think such laws are destructive to the American form of government. I am opposed to the control of labor on the same basis." Dawlry said Ills statement was an explanation ot his defense of two Western Washington republicans In congress who voted against the Taft-HarUey law. They are Russell V. Mark, Hoquiam, and Trior C. Tollefson, Taconia. Explosions Rock Jerusalem Today JERUSALEM. July 30 (PI Two thundering explosions shook south ern Jerusalem curly today and a large blase was seen on Mount Zlon, Just outside the arab-heltl oil city wall. Israel officials had no explana Inn for the blasts. Some sources said they believed a fire on the Arab side of the boundary Hue exploded land mines. Mount Zlon la the side of an abbey where a Joint Jewish-Catholic Investigation commission began work this week examining war dam age to church property. If Wot 91 At 1:45 And Going Up IHIeaf Claims 76 Lives Guns Roar Over Texas Murder Case Al ice. Tea. July Ml) f ive men la Iwa automobllea uaed thai I una ta Maal a dlme-adanra palaea here laat nliht, Teiaa Kancer Bea Krweier aanauneed tadav. The plaea waa ertUrlird kf W. H. IBIIIl .Ma mi a. radl commentatae, la a braadraat. ha day aefere. Ha waa hl u death. Ten thou wera 'fired, Kreuaer aald. and eUihl hit tha eatabltah ment. Tha Ranrho Alero wai denertad at Uia Uma. Maaon had crIUctied the moral tone ol tha place and had atated that It waa owned by a deputy ahetiff. Bam SmiUiwtrk. Bmithwlck turrendered followinf Maaon'a death Thurtday. He haa been charged with murder. Dlitrlrt Attorney Ham Reama aald. dryly: "I think If I wei-a Bmithwlck. I wouldn t mind etayini in Jail a lew daya." Maaon, who often ttated on hu radio broadcast that ha received! UireaU by phoua or mall almoat dally, waa ahot to death yeaterday at the aoutliweaiern eo ol Alice. Reama aald today, Irom nearby Kallurnaa, tliat: "lean tell you that we hava atatemenia Irom eyewiu neaaea." Ona alatement waa made by Ave- 1 lino Baena. 1 ho waa with Maton in ' an automobile at tha time ol the j ahooung. ttaena narrowly escaped Uia bullet. Reama alto divulged that "aa lar aa i can una out, omnnwic put ( By Ute morning. Klamath ?,mj? u V1 ll,.r M"", ' Purest Protective aiuwcieUon olfi kiUed. Hi lud i key to the Jail and cllU nporwi ,u forest flr;. ,W hV" sere being mopped up. and no new On Thurtday. Maaon. program dl- i . Ti.. i ' rector ot tUUun KUKI. had. criti - .v v. i h. and ,ute4 that Bmith.w owned Pact Defense Still Matter Of "Time" WHITE SULPHUR 8PRINOS. W. , Va.. July 30 1-A top assistant to Secretary of State Acheson said to- day that five or aix years will be required for "Uie full-fledged de velopment of an Integrated defense among Uie North Atlantic allies. This opinion was expressed by Ambassador Philip C. Jessup, Ache ton's trouble shooter and a trusted adviser, before a meeting of the Vir ginia Bar association. Discussing President Truman a program ot anna aid for free na- gram, is oesiguea to meet suaaen w concentrated pressure ItBtiue uii; euttewB iuuii t j tn vt-eiri words, to thwart the technique of conquest on Uie Installment plan which successors have employed successfully In Uie past, "The existence of compact, mobile, well - trained and well - equipped forces In Western Europe would compel any would-be aggressor to attack In force If he attacked at all. with the sure knowledge In ad vance that this would array Uie full power of the whole Atlantic com munity against him." Mac Clamps Down On Jap Rulers TOKYO, July 30 (P General MarArthurs headquarters was re ported today to have sent Premier 8hlgeru Yoshlda a letter which has had the effect of slowing the pres ent government trend toward re strictive measures. Informative sources said the let ter has spiked efforts by Yoshlda'a conservative regime to renew the pre-war police aystem, modify the strict American suggested economic recovery plan and permit wholesale "pardons" for purged ultra nation allots and buslnesa monopolists. The government was told to make a distinction between communism and Uie Japanese communist party. The Implication waa that the party Is a legal entity and should not be Illegally suppressed. No doubt was allowed, however, opposition to communism waa distinctly the gov eminent ! business. Elderly Man On Missing List An elderly Klamath Falls man. Edward Dchm, 86, waa repor'ed missing thla morning from his home at 3138 Cannon, and state police are on the alert for reports of his hereabouts. His disappearance waa reported by hit daughter, Mrs. Jessie Morgan, with whom he has been making hit home. Split Season Of 40 Days For Ducks Waterfowl leaiom for the Pacific Coast and Northwest states were an nounced today by the U. S. fish and wildlife service. Oregon and the Tulelaka portion of California will have a split season totaling 40 days, the halves running October 21 - November 9, and December 19-Jonuory 7. Washington has SO days straight. Bag limit on ducks has been set at five, ond on geese raised from five to six, with only two Canadian geese allowed in the six. (For details see sports page). Lightning Touches Off 10 Fires Here Lightning cut through Uie skies ' Htni, in invMi , t r I In lu w ake In Klamath county s wooded areas. Murky clouds and a' i brief spatter of rain accompanied Uie fireworks. 1 . " 1 The first irrne was reported to I this mornuig. All 10 blazes were on the west side of KFTA territory, four were on the Keno-Worden I rosd, one on the Chase mountsir. road, one north of Indian ridge three In the Clover stauon road, and one in the Oaunan lake sector. Fire tighten were out all night on) the job. coming in this rooming only ! long enough for food and coffee oeiurs guius uul w auiv auj Haul oi me tires were out. I The mercury rose to 0 degrees Friday afternoon, with the minimum &3 UM menu The forecast calls for fair and warm weather today and Qunrlaa avrant lor ar-a f fsvrawri t r"ilinHr storms in the mountains. Probable msximum today is 92. says weather bureau, and tomorrow. Uie 90. Sportsmen's Club Raided In Portland PORTLAND. July 30 (in Fifteen persons were arrested early today in a raid on the Sportsmen's club. Jack Englart was charged with conducting a gambling establish ment and Illegal sale of liquor. James J. Wright was charged with Illegal liquor sale, and Jane Johnson with conducting a gambling estab lishment. Three plain clothes officers gained admittance to the club shortly after midnight and later signalled five vice squad officers lying tn wait outside. Fire Danger In Oregon Mounts PORTLAND, July 30 (ffV-Ore-gonians were warned to be careful in the woods today, as fire danger again rose in the state. A return of hot summer weather and falling humidity Increased fire hazards. A few lightning storms struck Uie Deschutes and the southern Cascade area during Uie night, but started no fires. Several small grass and brush flrea broke out in the Portland area yesterday. A lire In Eastern Lane county, believed to have started In some slabs that were being burned, spread to trees and slash and destroyed C. J. Marcus' small sawmill near Trent. The temperature soared to 98 at Medford yesterday. It reached 96 at The Dalles, 93 at Salem. Eu gene, and Lakevlew. 0 at Rose burg, Klamath Falls and Burns. 88 at Baker and La Orande, and 87 at Portland. BULLETIN WASHINGTON, July it (lay Brewer, IT, of Lexington, Ky today won the National Junior Amateur golf championship, de feating his It-year-old links buddy, Maaon Rudolph of Clarke villa. Term, ( and 4, Imlt PalK aa vlalellri Vale lk..at.r.M bitter iMftf UIM ikta aflar..... Ntfto t.a M. Low laalfbl . af a....r M. Has. '!! .. M Mis M r rala llatlaa taat M taara Ta. Trlepbana fill Cooler Air Moves Into Middle West By The Aaaeclated' Preaa Kixzling temperatures kept the eaatern aeabaard raaplne Codav. with at leaat 7S peraona dead la the rx tended heat wave. But. evea aa the mercury reached new beiihta la some localities, a atorm-atadded cool front moved Irom the anldweaf toward the north east with relief expected tonight. The weather bureau aald the middle Atlantic area would be cooler aamewhal bunday. bat there wasn't much help la alght lar the south esaf. Portland. Me., recorded a swelter ing M degrees, a new high lor the year and seven degrees above the 40-year record for the date. New York, the thermometer read ing waa S3 at noon compared with M at the same time Friday, but dropped a degree by 3 pm. It appeared yesterday's high mark of ' 974 wouldn't be equalled. j A new heat death was reported ! at OoldAboro. N. C. sac rrenca i an j a tan air arose crvanea aeon two antics away. . the week-loaf aaetl of hot, sticky j In Washington, navy of I iclala weather over the central states yes- I said that a navy FP Hellcat fight I terday and last alght. It waa awv- I er which left the Anaoosua air ata j lag eastward front 15 is t miles i tion there thla morning for Quonaet aa boar ana waa expected ts eavtr I Point. P. I., is overdue. They pre the eaatera heat belt tonight. The ' turned that thla plane waa over the federal weather bores, at Chicago m on c.iarca anneal an. mm air ta knt" the bat eeatbern "tales. . awn u tooitea use another day of , out acsuicr ior moot 01 uie eastern states, ex lending the heat wave to two weeks In some areas. With the arrival of the welcome cool air, it waa a pleasant midsummer day tn uie central plains, the upper Mis sissippi valley and the upper Great a-aca trsaaunu ru-vqm Kmpeis-l lures w ere In prospect and there I waa a sharp reduction In humidity. The torrid c a tern slates can ex pect similar pleasant weather to night and tomorrow, federal fore- Eaiieri s.ig. The mercury waa la the apper u, i c hieo earlv tod a. iM ' arek at hat aad humid weather. she death tool ta the eaatera stales mounted as temperatures soared Into the Ni snd broke ree - i . j. a ucav p.ar.Mooaw doss- Bus! onaninnaiTBis in T n ietssrd and sent rmnanvo. horn. ho. ...',.., -, I . .k r , 1 L I vssviaWsatiiVaUJ ux nautlUltWII at IIU I , J" un He and hu staff left Uie Ml degree capital temperatures for more com fortable weather at a mountain-top hideaway In Mary land. Some 70.000 government employes were sent home early because ol Uie heat. keaterday'a MV2 reading la Wash ington equalled Taesday'a mark I he high far the year and the fifth , consecutive day the mercury climb ed above 93 in the current two-wees heat spelL Five deatha eaased in direcUy by the hest were reported t yesterday and there wera nine heat deatha Thursday. At least 11 per- ! sons suffered prostrations. The July average temperature haa exceeded the 80s high record for recent years, set In 1934. and is within a few fractions of the high est on record, 81.1 degrees In 1873. ' fo tA IhV vf; i . M & - tit CAMP 4 WRECKAGE A twisted moss of steel ond timber resulted when a string of 24 cor loaded with logs broke loose ot 4 a. m. Thursday morning near Weyerhoeuser Camp 4 and came to a stop in jumbled wreckage after rolling six miles. The loaded cors were set out obove the loading ramp the day before, preparatory to shipping. It was not known what caused the cars to start the wild roll down the six-mile incline. Several of the cars were almost completely demolished ond 11 of them spilled their loads. No one was Injured. Photo by Mr. John Kalynych. Sixteen Killed When Planes Hit Near Fort Dix FORT DIX. N. J, J.lr I An r.aetera Air Una DCS eraahea and burned aesr art-e today, and tha Una reported It Uvea were lost, Tha airliner collided with a military plane, TM aald. Tha line aald tha eaaualtlea Included tha It passengers, tha throe crew membrra and the pilot at tha military era ft. Tha southbound DC-1 "disintegrated la tha air" after tha eollieisa, EAL said it waa advised by aersaaa who went to tha scene. First reports had lilted 11 psaaeagera aa tha airliner. But IAL aaal a child also wss aboard whs waa ant Included la the first list. All of tha paaaeagers boarded tha plaae la Hartford. Conn, er la New York. Latiuardia field aathorlUea aald they ware advlaed the military plaae waa a aavy I if Hellcat, bat that It was aa badly eauahed M could not not be IdenUfled Immediately. Mrs. Mildred Morris, whose farm adjoins tha field into which the airliner plume ted, said the heard tha bis nlane roar In r.. ! to her window to see H psaa with what looked like a large hole In He rear fuselage. She aaid the raa eat of the boose but found that lha plana already i had crashed Into the nearby field, plowing a wide ditch out of tha farmland and then bursting into a tower of flame. Firemen from the Fart Ills military reservation aad nearby esta. "unities rushed reaeae apparatus to tha farm elta bat wen unable la i get Inside the plane tor almost half aa hour. State police aaid everyone aboard the plane waa killed. I The big airliner crashed n' I ' burned on the farm of Peter Mun- gua on the Chesterfield-Sykeaville road. Bute police aaid Identification ot the vlcUma would be diflkult be cause the fire destroyed the craft. Ne Eyewitness No eyewltnesua could be located who aaw the actual crash. Several persona told police they noted the DC -3 gliding down, apparently from n easterly direction. Suddenly, the witnesses aald, they saw the OOdr Of the nlane hehlnil the wings seemed to split In ball. Then a wing ripped off. More and more parts were torn off aa the airliner plummeted earthward. Farmers reported hearing, a loud cipiosaoB ana uea saw names reaching lee feet lata the air. The military plaae. Identified aha by state police as a aavy crafL ' area of the crash at the time. The n.w avnn it nn -.w ...... . . i pilot a name until next-of-kin had 1 been notified. Hawaii ILVU I Strikers See Ship Loaded HONOLULU. July 30 i-Pi Activity in Hawaii's (1-day longshore strike stepped up today, both alone the waterfront and at the confer- ence tables I A non-union stevednr. firm off Uie first cargo to be shipped out ! since the CIO International Long- 1 shoremen s and Warehousemen s . union nit uie piCKCt une Ml? 1. An atl, crew manned the freuihter IWO IOD level inrttitrv anil kn, i i. ... Z ' " . "I 'or uirrci peace tails. ; now tney made out wss not dis- clorf- Tnf conference over- shadowed the legislature s efforts to I making hostile attacks against the reopen Uie six strike plugged Hawaii j Yugoslav people and the Tito fov Prt. eminent. In San Francisco. Matson Naviga- uon uo. announced It will move a ship to a loading berth there next week and take on cargo for the Islands. Matson Is the major mainland-Hawaii water carrier. "Obvious and simple strikebreak ing." the ILWU retored. The union ted atrikers will be flown to San Francisco to picket vessels Involved ! Meanwhile, a Yugoslav uiplo in attempts to bring canto to Hawaii. ; malic source reported the Czech Support is expected from San Fran cisco ILWU local 10. The Isthmian freighter Steel Flyer pulled out late last night with 8300 tons ot raw sugar and 900 tons of general cargo loaded by the open shop Hawaii Stevedores. Inc., tination: Philadelphia. des- KF Barber Shops Open Again Today "-tomath Falls barber shape Peaett on schedule this morning I mlXrr 1 ahopa bad been closed for a I 'rw "oars yesterday aiternooa ever ' waaia membership dispute. KeprrsentsUves of tha Master Barbers' association and the aeymea anion Ironed sat tha situa tion at leaat temporarily at a meet ing late yeaterday afternoon. Journeymen returned to work and the shops reopened on the same conditions as prevailed before the walkout. The decision waa to let Uie matter rest until the Journeymen ! JnfTn,tlonl 110100 utf a look tnu Big Crux of the dispute leading to yes. terday'a walkout waa a union eon- tentlon that master barbers (shop owners) actively barbertng should i belong to the journeymen union but I as non-active members, without vol in union affairs and restricted from ; holding office. At noon yesterday "union shoe" earns B fo.r shops were picked ap I aad Joarmimia anil work. Tea shop owners decided la close their doses. According to Portland source, the 1 e controv"TT existed In Port- i noous iwo years ago and ended " ""f owners actually doing HaiKTuig m union anope joining the union. ' CtOCFIC Pss!ar4 livwX Yugo Demands DDIMm .., 30 i-P The ; ciechoslovak government rejected today a demand from Yugoslavia tnat It atop the Czech press from In Uie sharply-worded rejection. Uie Czech foreign ministry accused Yugoslavia of waging a continual hostile policy against both Czecho slovakia and the Soviet Union. It also accused the Yugoslav em bassy here of using an unusually rude tone In making lu represen I tationa against the Czech press. .uiviiiiiicut ii.u viuereu uie x Ulto slav commercial attache here. Ive Barbalich. to leave the country within 34 hours. For months Uie Czech press has been hurling charges and answering what It has termed injustice, and Insults from Tito's Yugoslav regime.