Ill Tins an Day's lews 0 JV By 1 HANK JENKINS ir this piece sounds a little Jumpy ind disconnected, I Imva a good ulllil. I vo Just finished shovel liiK the Minw off about night acres o Houthrru Oregon real entitle. THAT I DONT advlwi as beforr bronkf nut exrernl.se. H Mini evil thoughts, mill evil thought nt tlmt liuur tin uit to poison tlia day. ., An unfortunate thing happened. About liullwuy tin nuuh the Jab, Just aa I hit n drltt Unit was liurd 1'iiikrd, the Hint ntmiii nt John Whlliikrr Wutnoii's ballrd Ilniulllul Snow bobbed Into my mind. You know. U hocr like this: "O, the snow, the beautiful mow, "l'llliiuj the aky mid the enrth below. "Over the house-tops, over the street. "Over the heads ol the people you meet. "Untieing, "Flirting. "Skimming along, . "Bt-autlful miow, U can do nothing wrong," The heck It cun'tt H ciin cover the sidewalks ump teen Inches to umpteen leel deep. It can miow In the entrance to a Kuruga till you can't got your car out mid l( you ain't net your car out you ciin't net to work and It you can't net to work you can't earn money enough to pay your 'iixrs and If you ain't pay your rfcxes the Lord only known what v.lill hiippen to you In these dnyii. Besides, when you've lout your goloshes and haven't anything but luw aimed It iieta your feet wet and anybody knows what wet lect can do to you. Friend Watson wrote that iiem buck in 181)11. Hack In 1800. there were men-of-nll-work who were al ways hoping lor snow o they could net a Job shoveling olf walka ao thev could have a good appetite lor the nlco food the product of their labor bought for lliein baron and auch, at about a nickel a pound, garnished with fried eggs al six cent tho dorm. I ll bet be penned It silting In bin plt-atiml living room, with a hickory lire blazing on the heartli hi hickory wood probably coat hi m all of alx blta a cord, chopped and delivered In hla woodshed.) I'hooey on hlml lie didn't have the faintest Idea what anow could be like about a century later when the world had changed. Another irlpe. I jee in to have been tapped on the ahoulder the defender of the water here In the Bualn. Ootta aave it from being atolen by covetous neighbors In Southern Cal ifornia and Arltont. Shucks! About one more anow like thin and when It begins to melt water will be running out of everybody'a eara and you couldn't Rive the atuff away for free even If you delivered It on the spot with all transportation charge paid. 1 I think I'd better turn thla off. I fear I'm not In the beat ol mooda. My back, muscles are be ginning to ache. And we have ta gat the paper out early so our carriers tan get all over the Baxln iti time for the subscribers to read the news before It goes rancid with age, aelahl ' Truman Tells Tax Unit Plan WASHINGTON 11 President Truman aent to Congress Monday his plan for reorganisation of the Internal Revenue Bureau. It would abolish the offices of Die 64 collectors and place all tax col lecting employees under Civil Serv ice except the top man. . In a message, Mr. Truman told the legislators: "The most vigorous efforts are being and will continue to be made In expose and punish every govern ment employee who misuses his ollicial position. "But wc must do even more I ban this. We must correct every detect In orgaiitr.ullon that con tributes to Inefficient management and lima affords the opportunity lor Improper conduct." F.ven as Mr. Truman's message reuched the capllol, a meeting of revenue collectors from all over the country was being held here to discuss the plan, and a move ment developed In tho senate lor a substitute proposal. Relative Of Paul King Sought Here . m The coroner's office at Sacra mento Is trying to locate tho broth er of Paul A. King who died Fri day In the California city. Coroner Edward A. Rcutor of Sacramento anld Albert King, tsrnther of the dead man, was last Vnown to be living In or around Klamath Falls. Anyone knowing of Albert King's whereabouts la asked to contact Renter or City Police In Klamath Falls, . The future of the Klamath Ba sin lies In It's Junior citizens of today. The doctors, lawyers, mer chants, policemen, firemen, and what have you. of tomorrow's era are today's teenagers. JAMES L. BROWN ::'?jJC-k:-'-' r ) v, : -a J rS : auFZSk Trie Hve Cents 10 Pages ', ' . KLAMATH FALLS, .... MONDAY, JANUARY 14, 1152 Telephone 8111 No. 2713 t-;;C t': j: ; ,:: ''.rm .Jj;iJ!L7J 3 'S Claude Fetters E.R: Simmons Dies In Korea Cpl. Eldrcd R.' Simmons, 19. member of the 70th Tank Baltal llon, 1st Cavalry Division, has been officially reported killed In Korean battle action. He Is a brother of F. J. Sim mons, Klamath Falls. Young Simmons had been re ported missing since Oct. 10, 1951. He had enlisted In the Army In May, 1950 after graduation from Myrtle Creek High School. He was shipped overseas a year later. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. R. .Simmons, live at Myrtle Creek. They were notified of their son's death bv Defense Department tele gram which gave no details. Carporul Simmons Is also sur vived by seven sisters and four brothers. League To Eye Reapportion Three unit meetings of the League of Women Voters have been scheduled for study of a pro posal to reapportion tho State Leg islature. Tho proposal In question would reapportion tho Legislature princi pally on a population basis, and provides that If - the Legislature did not do the work the Supreme Court would assume tho authority. Meetings are to bo held Tomor row at the homo of Mrs.. A. Ivan Thompson, ' 002 Pacific Terrace; Friday, Jan. 18, at the homo o Mis, Coral Snbo,. 400' 3 Conger; and Monday, Jan. 21, at tho home of Mrs. iL. H. Wollonberg, 5303 Bryant. All are scheduled for 1:30 p.m. . II What kind of clllzens they will bo and what kind of a country the Klamath Basin will be de pends on how our children, arc raised In tho home and taught In school. That Is why "Build the Basin." a scries of panel discussion radio programs, sponsored by the Her BOB BONNEY (left) and Gordon Weaver Bloodmobile To . ' Be Here Jan. 22 (The Red Crass bloodmobile will be on duty at the Klamath Falls armory Jan. ' 22, and the register Is wide open ror donors, accord ing to Exec. Secy. Virginia Dixon. Appointments should be made by calling Mrs Hugh Swaney, 3213; Mrs. Orlh 8lsemoro, 4393; or the Red Cross, 7184. Mrs. Dixon Raid 300 donors would be necessary to fill out this month's Quota of 225 pints of blood. NavylSsOf Battle Death WASHINGTON tffl The Navy reported Monday that the mine sweeper Dextrous was hit by enemy shore fire Friday and that one man was. killed and two. others wounded.. The Dextrous was operating near Wonsan when Red batteries, be lieved to be made up of 75 mm guns, opened fire. A Navy spokes man said two shclbrhlt the mine sweeper. One exploded against the mast, carried away the radio an tenna and caused the casualties. Tlic Navy listed the victims as: Killed; , Fireman - Apprentice ' Gerald Lee Swan, son of Mrs; Letllcla Armlnta Swan, box 192, Mill City, Ore. Injured; A ' Barnes;' son of Mrs. Teresa Maude Barnes, Cassclton, N.D. . Seaman Apprentice Woodier Rhea Little, son of Mrs. Mabel Cora Little, .Redwood City, Calif., The vessel sustained no serious damage and proceeded under Its own steam, the Navy said. How Can We Better Build Tomorrow's Citizens?" ald and News and Radio Station KFLW, has Chosen as its first topic, "How Con "We Better Build Tomorrow's Citizens?" Tonight from 8:30 to 9:30 p.m. a panel of seven persons will dis cuss that topic and answer ques tions telephoned to the Herald and News (8111) from the radio au FRANCIS L. MATHEWS . . t' 9 O'clock Spscicd US Aid Pact Hit By Reds LONDON UP) The Moscow radio announced Monday that another of ficial Communist complaint against the U.S. Mutual Security Act has gone to Washington. Poland, following Russia's lead, sent a second protest note Satur day, the broadcast said, after get ting a curt U.S. reply to one of Dec. 1. Two Russian notes also have been rejected by the State Department. The latest Warsaw note charged America with "brazenly" attempt ing to meddle In the internal af fairs of Poland and showing an aggressive policy toward her. The Reds object to tho appro priation in the act of 100 million dollars to help refugees and exiles from behind the Iron Curtain and to the authorization for. their serv ice In the armed forces of the North Atlantic Defense Pact. One Hurt In Knife Battle A 48-year-old Mexican SP sec tion hand was reported In good condition at Klamath Valley Hos pital this morning despite multiple cuts suffered in a knife fight ear ly Sunday morning near Chemult. Juan Ramlrea reportedly re ceived slashes n round! the head, face and hands following a drink ing bout at Paunlna, section camp, about 3:30 a.m. Sunday. Slate Police arrested 48-year-old Miguel R. Oarcta, Ramirez' al leged assailant, on charges ot drunk and disorderly conduct. He was placci.i In the county Jail here. dience. James L. Brown, KUHS princi pal; Rev. David Barnstt, pastor of First Presbyterian Church; Bob Bonney, city recreation director: Francis L. Mathews, Klamath County Juvenile officer; Mrs, Dale Baxter. Klamath County PTA president and Beverly Eclls and MRS. DALE BAXTER SS, liad snowy work this morning Weather FORECAST Klamath Falls and vicinity and Northern California: Occassional snow through tomor row. Low tonight 16, high tomor row 25. Low last nleht 23 llligh yesterday 25 Prerip past Z4 Hours .ui Prerip since Oct. 1 9.22 Same period last year..- 8.87 Normal for period 5.53 Pope Appeals For "Change" ' VATICAN CITY .HI Pope Pius Monday urged members of Rome's nobility to devote themselves to so cial reform and to realize that "a page of history has been turned." Receiving the noble families in a traditional annual, audience the Pope said: "Italy's new constitution no long er recognizes you as a social class, or as having, in . the state and among the people, a particular mis sion, attribute or privilege. "A page of history . has been turned, a chapter has been closed. A period has been Jotted, marking the end of a social and economic past. , t "A new chapter has been opened that heralds very different forms of life. One may think as one wishes, but that. Is; the fact." OVERHEATED An overheated ventilation system motor on the roof of the Willard Hotel about 9:30 am. today sent the smell of smoke down Into the hotel's mezzanine floor and first floor dining room. City Fire Chief Roy Rowe and another firemen were called and traced the smoke to the overheat ed motor. It was disconnected till repairs could be made. No damage was reported.1 Richard Geary, KUHS students. "Build the Basin" program will be a weekly series of programs dedicated to pointing out the prob lems of bettering tho Klamath Ba sin and bringing experts radioside to discuss those problems. During Inst week an opinion poll was taken of students in Junior REV. DAVID BARNETT iiNii C'TTa?trTi It' 1 fincf Pravu TAIPEH. Formosa l.ft The Kuo mintanu Sunday kicked out Li Tsunq-Jen. long absent claimant of Chiang Kai-Shek's title of Pres ident of Nationalist China. In New York. Li called the action comical and clownish. "The- whole thing illustrates very well how far a dictatorship . . . can go, ' Li said. The Kuominlang is the ruling rarty of Nationalist China. It is headed by Chiang. Chiang stepped out as President on Jan. 21. 1949. when Communist ! forces were swteping through Chi ;iia. He named Vice President LI as : acting president. I Li went to New York for medical treatment in December. 1949, and Chiang resumed the presidency on March 1, 1950. I The Kuomintang disowned LI on ia technicality. It said he failed to register when the party was re organized, in I960. KF Will Host Legion Confab Klamath Falls is to be host this summer to the American Legion state convention, expected to at tract some 2000 delegates. The convention, according to an Associated Press dispatch from Portland today, will be held either July 25-30 or Aug. 1-6. depending on dates of the national ivention. Charley Hahn, Legio: t com mander here, said O. D. -tthews hnd been named gener. onyen tion chairman. Various cc... littees are now being appointed. Last state Legion convention held here was In 1933. high and high schools in the coun ty. ... Results of the poll, as tabulated so far by KFLW staff members, were very unexpected and reveal mg. At the end of tonight's "Build the Basin ' program, KFLW man- BEVERLY EELLS " Ice Skating Off For Tonight No Ice skating has been sched uled for the Moore Park Rink to day and tonight, according to City Recreation Director Bob Bonney. Nightly surface-restoration work was Just getting underway last night, Bonney said, when high winds and snow hit the surface of the pond. It Is like a washboard today, he said. Bonney said skating should be okay for tomorrow night, but a later announcement will confirm this. Truce Talk Bitterness Grows Today By OLEN CLEMENTS MUNSAN. Korea. (Tuesday) tP Communist negotiators accused the United Nations Command of "en gaging in lies" In proposing pris oner exchange Monday, and the charge brought a prompt Allied demand to prove the charge or re- iraci n. Additional heat was added to the stormy session by Communist char ges that Allied planes flew over several cities in Manchuria on Sun day. Allied negotiators on the truce supervision subcommittee switched tactics Monday alter tailing for three straight days to tret an oral statement of the Communist stand on airfield reconstruction. Instead the U.N. asked the Reds to agree to restrictions. The request got a chilly recep tion. The Reds charged that Allied planes flew over Mukden, Wushien and other Chinese communities but did not say any were attacked. A U.H. spokesman at Panmun jom said "We assume the charge is similar to a lot of other allegations they have made and completely Ir relevant to uie meeting." A Fifth Air Force spokesman at Seoul denied that any Allied planes flew over Northeast China Sunday. The outburst of Communist tem per came after Rear Adm. R. E. Libby explained that the Allied vol untary nrlsoner .repatriation plan would Be advantageous lo tne neos as well as the U.N. "If vour statement has been ore. pared in order to deceive a part of the people of the world who are Ig norant. It would be all right," said North Korean Maj. Gen. Lee sang Cho. "But It would not suit us. "You had better not say any more that you would do us any fa vors. "Should you continue to say so. It would mean that .you teU a big lie." ' - --.;:.?- - Admiral Libby retorted; - "I do not know whether I have personally been called a liar, but I got a strong Inference. I shall study the record and make sure." Both subcommittees agreed to meet again at 11 a. m. Tuesday (6 p.m. FST Monday.) Newell School Vote Slated TULELAKE Possibility of es tablishment of a camp for subver sives at the former WRA camp at Newell, need not Interfere with plans for building a new grade school, according to Paul Christy, chairman of the Newell Union School Board. Voters go to the polls from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday to ballot on the proposal to bond the new district for the maximum 5 per cent allowed by state law to raise $152,000 for a much needed build ing. A favorable vote will qualify the district for state aid totaling S160.891. Cost of the building Is es timated at $312,891. Christy stated today that con firmation has been given by the state board of planning, Sacra mento, that in event the camp Is occupied, a new site can be chosen and the school built elsewhere than on the present acreage avail able to the board. This area is on the site of the building now being occupied. Passing of the bond Issue will guarantee a re-survey by the state and a review by the Newell Union school board. A change in location will not effect use of the funds voted. There are roughly 400 eligible voters in the district and the pro posed issue must be passed by a two-thirds majority of those voting. Members of the board are Paul Christy, ' Tulelake. chairman:, Per ry Hawkins, Tionesta, clerk: Paul J. Rodgers, Amos Bierley and Earl Parsons. Newell. rsger Bud Chandler, moderator of the program, will announce results of the poll. Subsequent radio programs will delve Into such problems as the potato ceiling war, future of the lumber Industry and possibilities of power development. RICHARD GEARY' -:- Road South Closed By Deep Drifts This winter's heaviest snowfall. driven by gale-force winds, blan keted the Basin last night and this morning. The Northern California area suf fered the brunt of the storm and travel south on U.S. 87 was being stopped at the state line this morn ing. To the Kaat, the Lakevlew highway was blocked by drifts at Beatty. Dunsmuir, Yreka, Weed and Mt. Shasta this morning reported snow falls of from 30 to 50 Inches with winds up to 65 mph. At Municipal Airport ncre, tne Civil Aeronautics Authority said Klamath winds last night wera sustained -at 40, with gusts to 50 mph. Many county scnoois were ciosca but city schools opened on sched ule. However, several city school .buses ran behind schedule and late this morning, -two of the buses were still bogged down. TRAINS LATE Snow shovelers were busy throughout business areas this morning. The State Employment Office sent out eight shovelers and eight more were sent from the City Jail. - The Southern Pacific's north bound Cascade, doe here at 2:45 a.m., didn't arrive until 9:40 a.m. Railway officials said all available snow clearing men and equipment were battling to keep the rails open. Greyhound bus travel was prac tically at a standstill and bus pas sengers were being rerouted by rail whenever possible. Twelve buses were reported marooned at Weed and three southbound buses were stopped bere. Barometers were still low at noon today and weather reports In dicated more stormy weather might blow Into Klamath from tho South. As an Indication of tough travel ing conditions to the South, three cars were observed entering the city this morning chained together. The drivers had apparently pooled their power to overcome heavy drifts. CarlsenOn Honor List Gets Medal By ROBERT JONES LONDON Iff) Capt. Kurt Carl sen, hero of tho Flying Enterprise saga, received a decoration Mon day, from' the King of his native Denmark. Crowds of shoppers and Sight seers outside cheered so loudy the presentation speech could barely be heard. The stocky little Danish born hero from Woodbridge. N. J.. spoke only one sentence when he received the Order of Danneorog for sticking to his sinking shiD until she went down last Thursday in the stormy Atlantic. "I don't know how to express my feelings, but please accept irom me just a simple seaman s 'thank, you.'" Carlsen murmured after Count Eduard Reventlow. Danish ambassador to London, pinned the gold cross of the order, one of Denmark's highest, on the skipper's lapel. arisen, wno lost all his clothing when his ship went down, was dressed in a brand new Merchant Marine uniform with four gold cap tain's stripes glittering on the cuffs. He looked spry and alert after a week-end rest, showing no sign of the rigors of his two weeks of bat tle with the raging sea. Members of London's Danish col ony thronged the club and cheered as Carlsen entered. Banks ot film and television cameras and bat teries of news cameras were train ed on him as he shook hands with the ambassador. Britons Said Held By Reds BERLIN W! A diplomat re cently returned from the Soviet Union said Mondav that tvn Brit ish Foreign Officers missing since iiusi may are oemg neiu m prison in Moscow. , This authority, requesting anony mity, said it was almost "common knowledge" in the diplomatic corps in Moscow that Ouy Burgess and Donald MacLean, the two Britons are in Lubiyanka .1:11, reserved for high priority prisoners. MacLean was head of the Amer ican department in the British For eign Office and Burgess was a former secretary at the embassy In Washington. Their disappearance, acknowl edged June 7 In London, stirred speculation at that time they might have voluntarily gone eastward, carrying top policy documents with them. Royal Party Has Guest LONDON W The handsome Earl of Dalkeith Joined the Royal family at a . shooting porty Mon day amid ' fast-spreading rumors that he and Princess Margaret will wed. According to the gossips, the for mal announcement of their engage ment is Just a matter of picking the most propitious time. The 28-year old Scottish earl rode all night on a train from Bowhlll, the border home of his wealthy parents, to the Sandrtngham es tate of King George VI in Norfolk. Margaret herself had cut short a gay round of partying with Dal keith In Scotland last Friday to make the same Journey,