(Qeirinnioini Le) .oee - .... . a I "ivTxt, im J l' .X unlit V. J DELIVERY MEN James 0. Hoberson flefl). 415 Michigan (Ave, ond Gaylo I'ickerill, 2011 MonleliiiK .St., were caught by the photographer this morning as they started work. They are employed by City Delivery Service. Frank Drew Elected 1952 President of KF Merchants i Tile Klumitth Merchants Assoel n Llcjn did ft lull round nt business ul tin nnnuiil ninnllng In Hip Poll i mi Cnla Inst night It elected Frank Drew oh II new president. n-plitcliiK Hov Murphy; It learned Us 1 1161 budget wns riding l.'I.M In ttirr blink, mid It referred It luur lop promotion program lo a coinmlltoa lor development. Lnt year's budget chairman. Curl MpttrkN, reported Hie KM A hud totnl Income of Mm .24 it TIms DavVJ'ews By FIIANK J ION KINS In Portland, whero those words urn writlon. I've been Killing all lay In meeting ol clmmber ol commerce people, who lmvo been dlncuMlnir tiie problem" ol modern i-ommunlly- Hie one ol which In tho conlrlbullon ol money to worthy cause. I think tlmt nothing perhaps could lllustriilc better the growing complrxllleii of our pros- nl.fln.i A...Mrlfi.n wnl'ltl. All of us, I imagine wltl the exception ol our teon-ngerM. win recall the time when tho commu nity chest was NEW Idea. The thought back ol It wan Hint by combining Into ONE "drive" ALL ol the request lor lunds for praiseworthy churltnblo and char-Rclcr-bulldinir enterprises much lime and energy could be nnved. It was a good Idcn. nnd tor a number of years we did Just that. We all got together at one time and dragged the streets for money. When wo got through, we appor tioned what we had collected out among what we culled Uio "bene llclarleB," and that was that. We dusted olf our hands nnd called It a dny and wero all through until the next year. Well, limes have chnnged. Come community chest season, wo still kct out and drug the streets lor money, but when tho campaign Is over we aren't all through lor an other yenr. When the next week begins ANOTHER DRIVE BE GINS. And so on throughout the ear. Whnt hns happened Is Hint worthy causes lmvo burgeoned and bloomed at a rnto much inoro rapid Hum the existing community chests have expanded to tnko them In. The result Ik Hint we'ro prao licnlly right buck whero we started from. That Is to any, athnugh we linvc an annual community chest lo end all drives tho drives go right on through tho yenr, Just as they used to., r 80 f ' The idea Is now being born thai wo snouia rcsiiiiiuc me cuius nun start nil over ngnln, Inking In all tho NEW worthy cuu.scs, so that ngnln wn enn roll It up Into a ncnt pneknge and tuck It nwny nil in one super-effort nnd bo nil through ngnln for another' year. To ulvo It the necessary nspect ol newness. It Is proposed that n if.cw namo bo ncloptcd. Various iiow nnnies are being proposed United Front, United Causo, nnd no on. This proposal wns chewed over nt considerable length by the chamber ol commerce peoplo this morning. No decision wns renched, nnd I I egret to add Hint nearly every body snomcd more at sen when (ho discussion ended than when It begun. You know what I'm nfvnld of? I four tho Idea is spreading that theso worthy onuses nro becoming loo much professionalized nnd donors ' nrn beginning to believe that too much ol their money goes for OVERHEAD. Along about noon, the subject (.hanged to water and power prob lems, nnd nt luncheon that topic was covered by a panel that in cluded two high-up officers of the army engineer corps, n chambor of commerce socrotniy nnd n com mon, ordinary ucwapnpor mnn. Water wns dealt with In terms of millions of ncre foot and power in terms of BILLIONS ol kllowntts. There wiva a curious paradox. The Inlk wns 'almost wholly of GOV KRNMENT dams and GOVERN MENT appropriations to pay lor Ihcin wllh nnd how to dragoon A h'rowlngly reluctant congress Into digging up more govorninont money with which to build thorn. And yet In tho nudlencfl there wero m niwotiH representatives of private power Interests who were almost panting with cngorncss to BUILD 'Continued to Fate 4) 9 O'dacfi Sped? from lis mnny projects', Its out lay, at tho same time, was SM42.4U. Hptirks called for Increased sup port ol conventions which come lo Klamath Falls, pointing out Unit last year's live affairs brought an estimated 1260,000 lo the commu nity. , The .association decided to ob serve all holidays except Armi stice Day kept last yearJ-Memor-inl Duy, July 4th, Lnbor Day, Thanksgiving and Christinas. Whether or not KMA merchants will keep their stores open Arml slice Dny will be decided later. Members pointed out many cities 110 longer nbsrri,ri Mnu If a. holiday. Klamath Fulls Public School Di rector ol Music Education Andrew Loncv Jr. explained to tho group the lorlhcomlng KUHS Music Fes tlval, slated Apr, 4 and 8, with trumpeter Ralsel Mendrz and Movie Producer Jesse Laskev due lor nimpsmnr-AM ri, rnufiui t- , raise funds lor' 20 more KUHS nana unilorms. William W. Patterson was mimed new budget chairman; Earl Hamilton is the new treasurer. A vice president will be elected later, as Sparks, In line for the position, turned it down on the grounds he felt ho could not handle Uie Job, Tho four promotional events car ried on.Jflsl yoarwlll be carried on again Uils sesacm If KMA plans work out. They are Spring Open ing. July 4th Rodeo celebration, Back lo School and Christmas. Dates for the nelehrntlnnN u'lll h set Inter. In each case. It was decided new and better Ideas should bo added or replace the Ideas lor promotions In the past. Coining events as ronorleri at Hie meeting: Apr. 4-5. KUHS Music Festival, Delta Kappa Clamma state conven tion; Apr. n-n, atnie Lutheran Youth rnilff.-lnr, Mnv 9.1 Rlnl Junior Chamber of Commerce con vention; May K-ii. Business and Pro Irsslonitl Women's convention; .lime 36-28, Oregon Association of Ptlhlln ArrnnnlnnlB ni.H lulu la-la American Legion slate convention! Ohio Flood Recedes Today CINCINNATI Ml Th swollen Ohio River pushed Its waning strength slowly southward Thurs. day, with 10 deaths recorded nnd heading toward an st.lmntfH to-i . 000.000 In properly damage because of Its outbreak. Col. Paschal N. Strong, chief of the Ohio River Division, U.S. Engi neers, niado the tentative eslimnts of damage before going to Wash ington to Join President Truman In nn aerial trip over the Hooded areas. They flew along the river's course Thursdnv afternoon. The river's strength centered between Portsmouth and Cincin nati, approximately 100 miles nwny. At Portsmouth, Mavsvllle, Ky., New Richmond, O., and Clnchiiiali, Hie river was above flood stage and rising. It still was above Hood Mage between Miuicltn, O., and Greenup, Ky., but wns falling. Cities below Portsmouth and as Inr as Cincinnati reported condi tions wero more of a high water typo than n Hood. Tho b6ttoms land In Hint area wns covered, ond many families left tholr homes temporarily. Game Commission Looks Out For Young Anglers With Special Areas For Sport PORTLAND (IF) The Oregon State Game Commission, Its eye out for tho bnrofoot boy with his homo-cut polo, is getting braced for a flood of proposals for Juvenile angling arena. To koep Hint flood under control, it hns set up standards which it calls rigid enough to hold down on tho number ol speclnl areas but (lexlblo enough to have a constant ly Increasing number f good fish ing spots for tho kids. The thing that started It wns the law passed by the last Legislature authorizing the Commission to Set up areas restricted to children under 14. , ' Salem's Mill Creek has been Oregon's only children's stream limited to them by law. There have been some other fishing wntors from which adults havo been barred by community Creek near Milwaukle and Baker Ik rail Frlce Five Cents 22 Paces Pigg Death Reason For Suicide Try EL PAHO, Tex. I An Oregon woman, despondent over the death ol a man who drowned' In an at tempt to save her last June, faint ed on an El Paso street Wednesday i.ner nixing cignt sleeping pills. Revived In an El Paso hosnllal. June Alsbrook 22, told police that sue killed Willis Plgg ol Klamath Falls, Ore. Plgg drowned June 21 In an at tempt to pull her from the Link river, Into which she had Jumped during an argument wllh Plgg. outers saved her. Dclcci.lve Copt. R. H. Lessor i.nld the woman told that her family paid a Klumnth Falls policeman fHOO If she agreed to leave town. Part of the agreement, she said, was that no charges would be filed. However, Klamath Fulls police Informed Lessor that Miss Alsbrook Is not wanted, and he said she would not be held. Her story of the S800 was discounted. She was ex pected to be released from the hospital late Thursday. Willis Plgg was drov.ned In Link River here last June 21 as he at tempted to rescue June AlsbrooK alter she had Jumped Into the river from the Main St. bridge. Both District Attorney D. E. Van Vactor and Police Chief Or- vllle Hamilton today branded the El Paso woman's story as com pletely lalse. A witness to Plgg's drowning, Muuon Smith, told police this story shortly alter the young mail's death June 21: SnilUi said he saw June Als brook walk out on the Main St. bridge. A moment later, Plgg drove alongside her In a car. The young woman suddenly removed her shoe and leaped Into the river. Plgg alighted from Hie car, ran down on the river bank and plunged In to rescue the woman. The woman e screams attracted two members of the Klamath Ciema' baseball team. Jerry Dodds and John Pa.yne, who wero at Payne's nearby apartment. The two ballplayers and Smith managed to rescue' the Alsbrook woman but Plgg drowned and his body was recovered three hours later. The Alsbrook woman told nolle she was staying at the Empire Hotel here and Uiat her home was In Malln. Police Chief Hamilton said todav he had notified pi Paso author- Hies mat tne rigg death case had been closed here as death while attempting to stop a suicide (Miss Alsbrook's). r Egypt War Setup Cools CAIRO Ml Reliable Informants said Thursday orders have been is- suea to ' tgyptian commandos" in the Suez Canal area to stop their guerrilla activities. It looked like an attempt by the new government of Premier Aly Mahcr Pasha to restore order. At the same time, two leading Egyptian newspapers credited the new premier with a receptive at titude toward Western overtures for a settlement of the bloody Brit- ic-n cgypnan aispuie. Mnher Pasha held a long meet ing Wednesday night with Gen. As ia Al Mlsrl, appointed by the form er Wnfdlst government last Decem ber to organise and run "libera tion battalion" activities. There seems to be a trend to ward cooling off Egyptian passions, healed to fever pitch under the Wold government. Western diplo mats seem agreed that such cool ing off Is essential If any new talks are to begin. NOMINATIONS WASHINGTON lPi President Truman hns sent to the senate these postmaster nominations lor Oregon. Arthur B. Scarseth, Camp White; Chnrlos W. Onrllck, Gladstone; Velln A. Harlan, McNary; Russell F. Cooper, sutherlln. Creek near McMlnnvllle have been among these. .. -; But now the Commission Is going to set aside lakes or streams with the Intent of building them up and holding them permanently tor the plonsuro of children. Since that sort of thing Is an attractive project for civic groups, the Commission thinks there will bo mnny Inquiries. But Inquiries and Interest alone won't get nn OK from the Com mission, This Is what the Commls- Lslon reports It hns hi mind: It will give approval to an area only after a responsible sponsoring body arranges for supervision of the angling, there must be enough children In tho area to make tho project worth while, and there should be a lack of already estab lished lishlng-areas which children KLAMATH FALLS, OHKOON, Lowell Stockman To Quit; Giles French Seeks Post im LOWELL STOCKMAN GILES FRENCH Draft Galls To Be Doped WASHINGTON Wl Draft Di rector Lewis B. Hershey Thursday predicted a sharp ' Increase In the number of . men to be drafted be tween now and June 30. Hershey nade the statement In testifying in support of Universal Military Training legislation. He told the House Armed Serv ices Committee present estimates are that the Armed Forces will fcall upon Selective Service for 430,- 000 men during uie seven-montn period ending June JO, vjo-i. This Is an average of slightly more than 60,000 monthly and con siderably more than the February and March .Ilgures. . . Members did not question Her shey about the planned Increase In inductions, but the figures them selves indicated that if the 430,000 are to be inducted, the draft rate will rise sharply starting in April. City Papers Boost Price SAN FRANCISCO lift The prices on three of Snn Francisco's four dally newspapers will go up in some categories Friday. The single exception is the after noon Call-Bulletin, which said that no price change arc contemplated mere. The other afternoon paper, the Dully News, announced that ef fective Friday monthly rates by carrier would increase from $1.25 a month to $1.50 a month, both in side and outside San Francisco. There -will be no change in street saie prices. The i two .morning- lfltpcrs. the Chronicle and tho Examiner have announced increases to 10 cents irom 7 cents for papers sold more than SO miles outside the city. understanding. Sections of Johnson can use freely.- The Commission will give its em phasis; to establishing- .warm-water game fish because they generally hold more real enjoyment for child ren than do trout. It will glvo pre ference to ponds over streams. Game Director P. W. Schneider Solnts out tlyfc once perch, bass, liicglll and other warm water fish become established, constant re stocking will not be necessary. Sponsoring groups are . told . to pick a stream or pond in a natural setting, with length of stream or area of lnke small enough that It does not encroach unduly on adult angling, yet will not crowd the children Private ownership should not border the stream if this can be arranged since the private ow ners would have the right to fish, nullifying the purpose of the . pro gram,, the. Commission says. THURSDAY, JANUARY 31, 10.12 WASHINGTON Wl Rep. Lowell Stflckman Is getting out of public office. He will not run again this year. The Republican congressman from Oregon made thai, announce ment hero Wednesday, almost sim ultaneously wllh the announcement in Oregon that State Rep. Giles L. French would be a candidate lor Stockman's Job. Stockman, who is comDlctlng his filth term as representative ol Oregon's second dlstrct, said he considered 10 years "to bo a rea sonable time for one Individual to contribute lo public service." "I feel the time has now come when I would like to return home and give attention to my private ailalrs," the Pendleton wheat rancher said In a prepared state ment. Meanwhile In Oreaoa. French. who has been a member of the State Legislature 17 years, an nounced he would sock Republican nomination to the congressional scat. French Is publisher of the Sherman County Journal at Mora, ore. Siockman was elected to the Con gress which convened in January,! ivn. Ho nas ocen re-elected four times. Now 51, he Is the only Ore gon congressman ever named to Hie powerful House APoroDrlatlons Committee. Siockman said he would not sup port any particular candidate to succeed him. Besides French. State Sen Sam Coon. Baker, has been mentioned as a possible Republican candidate for the Eastern Oregon congres sional seat. , Iran Closes US Offices TEHRAN, Iran (P) A U.S. em bassy spokesman said Thursday Iran has ordered immediate shut down of all American State De partment Information and educa tion centers here- except the one in Tehran. Trio order also Applied toTBrltlsh and Russian cultural centers out bids the capital, it was reported. Drafting of the closure order was reported unofficially yesterday. The Iranian action was based on a 1949 decree permitting foreign cultural activities only In Tehran. The decree had not been enforced, however. A month ago, Moslem Leader Ayatullah Kashanl, whose word oft en has great weight with the gov ernment, "suggested" enforce ment of the decree In a note to Premier Mohammed Mossadegh. US Men Face Extradition WASHINGTON Ifl The State Department has cleared the way for the Italian government to try to extradite two former American soldiers charged with murdering their commanding olficer during a secret wartime mission behind en emy lines. A certificate testifying to Italy's demand was given the Italian em bassy last Friday, the department said Thursday, thus allowing Ital ian representatives to seek war rants for the arrest of the two men. U. S. military authorities say they have no jurisdiction since the two men are no longer in the Army. Attorneys for both say they will fight the extradition move. The accused, former Lt. Aldo Icardl, formerly of Pittsburgh, and lormer Sgt. Carl G. LoDolce of Rochester, N. Y., have denied the charge. The Defense Department accused the two of the cloak and dagger killing of Mai. Wlliam V. Holohan on Dec. 6, 1944. All three men were part of a secret mission team parachuted behind enemy lines in Italy. German Bride Home Again STRAUBING. Germany Wl A German war bride suffering from an- Incurable illness was home Thursday from the United States to spend her remaining days with her family. Sgt. Albert L. LeGault, of Elma, Washington, who accompanied his sick German-born wife here, said her "morale Jumped 100 per cent as she .neared home. ' The couple began the 7,000 mile meroy flight from McChord Air Force Base, Washington, three days ago after Air Force author ities snipped red tape and granted the sergeant 60 days leave to ac company his stricken wife. They arrived at Erding Air Bnse Wednes day. . LeOault met his wife while he was stationed In Germany in 1946 They married two years later and went to the United States. In 1949, physicians discovered she wns suffering from an Incurable condi tion, ,.. i. ,.. FILES " .' " SALEM Iff! Mike M"DeCicco, Portland tire dealer, filed his can didacy Thursday for Democratic national committeeman. - The job now Is held by Monroe Sweetlandx Portland. , Telephone Sill No. 2728 Allies Push War; Ships Blast Coast By STAN CARTKR SEOUL, Korea Wl Allied war planes ripped up Red rail lines in 132 places Thursday In heavy new attacks on wobbly North Korean transport routes. American Jets saw 140 Commu nal Jet lighters during the day. There were two brief fights but the U.S. Fifth Air Force did not report any Reds damaged. Allied pilots said they blasted a tank, nine artillery pieces and 20 supply buildings in addition to their raids on rail and truck routes in 662 sorties flown during the day. Communist supply lines and troop Installations along both coasts were brought under the heavy guns of U.S. warships. The U.3. Battleship Wisconsin threw more than 135 tons of 16 lnch s;lls at rail targets near be sieged Won.ian on the East Coast. A Communist troop transport was attacked by the guns of the British Frigate Cockado off Haeju on the West Coast. Red shore guns on the West Coast opened up on the Canadian destroyer Sioux and the American tug Apache doing salvage work near Chodo Island, southwest of the North Korean capital of Pyong yang. The Sioux returned the fire while the tug got out of the way. Neither ship was hit. On the ground, U.N. Infantrymen clashed In a few minor patrol skirmishes. A U.S. Eighth Army Communi que reported two small Red attacks behind mortar barrages were beaten back before dawn along the Pukhan river In the central sec tor. Search On For Plane VANCOUVER. B. C. W Air and surface craft Joined Thursday in an Intensive search on both sides of the U.S. & Canadian border for a smalKplane and the two men aboard. Both U.S. Coast Guard and Canadian . craft were engaged in the search. There has been no re port from the plane since it left '.he International Airport here late Wednesday on a non-stop flight over Vancouver Island, Port Ange les, Seattle, Everett and Belling haln. The two men aboard were Harry W. O'Reilly, 33, tlight instructor for the Aero Club of B. C, and Flight Lt. Jack Welch of West Vancouver. The club owned the plane, which was listed for a prac tice flight. Canso Hying Doats toot ott at dawn from here and from Patricia Bay on Vancouver Island. The Coast Guard reported at Seattle lt had sent a PBY plane to scan the Strait of Jaun de Fuca and adjacent territory and three 83-foot patrol boats to search the northwest San Juan Islands. The plane took off at 4:56 p.m. with enough fuel to last until 10 p.m. Weather was reported favor able at tne time. All ships in the area were asked to keep a lookout for any sign of the silver-colored plane. PICTURED AT PORTLAND where they are taking part in the Oregon-Washington Cham bers of Commerce meeting are (1 to r) Erank Jenkins, James Kerns Jr., and Frank Tuck er,. Jenkins is past-president of the Klamath Chamber, Kerns the current president and Tucker is Chamber manager. Tucker was elected vice-president of the. Oregon Chamber executives. Jenkins addressed a joint meeting of the Chamber executives and the Port land Chamber on-"Water Development in the Klamath Basin"; v , Records Seized In Crackdown On Subversives By BRACK CURRY BONN, Germany Wl Hundreds of West German police raided of fices of the Communist party and Nazi-type Socialist Reich party and seized their secret records Thurs day. The police struck at dawn, act ing on orders of the Federal Con stitutional Court, which is seeking evidence of subversive activities. The government has filed suit In the court to outlaw both parties as hostile to the state. There were no arrests and the raids took place without incident, authorities said. Police grabbed slacks of propaganda, bank rec ords and confidential files. . Concern over the growth of the Nazi-like Socialist Reich Party has been expressed bv both the govern ment of West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer and the U.S. oc cupation authorities. Just 10 days ago U.S. High Com missioner John J. McCloy said a public opinion poll taken by his staff disclosed that onlv 20 ner cent of the Germans would do anything to prevent rise of another Nazi party. The survey showed that 13 ner cent would support such a party a situation McCloy said was 'in comprehensible." He saw no im mediate threat of a rebirth of Nazism, but admonished the Ger mans against political apathy. Spud Boost Move Delayed PORTLAND Wl An Office of Price Stabilization official here says there is no decision vet on whether to allow a ceiling price increase for Oregon potatoes. A spokesman said OPS officials here checked with Washington. D.C., after Roy Snable, Powell outte. ure., and Scott Warren, Klamath Falls, representing Ore gon potato interests, bad presented their proposal there, calling for a 76-cent increase above the present ceiling of $3.65 per 100 pounds. The Washington officials said only that the proposal still was under consideration, the-spokes man said. . Party Bosses Facing Probe WASHINGTON lfl The Senate Investigations subcommittee told the Senate Thursday -Republican National Chairman Guy G. Gab rlelson and William M. Boyle, Jr., his one time Democratic counter part, engaged in activities "bound to lead to charges of impropriety." Sen. Hoey, D-N. C, said the find ings were approved unanimously by the four Democrats and three Republicans of the subcommittee he heads. Neither Boyle nor Gabrlelson was accused of any illegality. The report denounced the Amer ican Lithofold Corp., St. Louis printing firm, for paying fees to Boyle, several government olficials and others in high places, and giv ing them costly gifts and "lavish entertainment." It recommended that "any firm or individual who seeks to bring improper Influence to bear on gov ernment departments or who has a background of inlluence seeking should be barred from further busi ness with the government." , The Communists have made no secret of the fact that they are out to wreck the West German govern ment. Their latest move la a threat to call a strike in the rich Industrial Ruhr and Uius cripple any role West Germany might take In sup plying materials tor Western Eu rope's defense against possible Sov let aggression. Police swarmed into the big Com munists' national headquarters at Duesscldorf In the Ruhr and In each of their 11 stale offices, the Interior Ministry said, Gtistav Gundclach, a Communist member of the Federal Parlia ment, denounced the raids as an "unconstitutional arbitrary act." Czech Says Oatis Trial Legitimate PARIS iff! A Czechoslovak del egate told the United Nations Thursday that his country's con demnation of William N. Oatis, As sociated Press chief of bureau In Prague, exnosed and nut on h to an important spy network. The delegate. Frantispk spoke in reply to a slashing attack uciverea in me ueneral Assem bly's 60-natlon Social Committee by U.S. Delegate Channlng Tobias Wednesday night. . Vavricka told the committee it was witnessing an American at tempt to abuse th IT n hv ..lad dering Czechoslovakia and bring. " "Hiiier wrucn was strictly within the domestic Jurisdiction of the Prague government. uatis is a trained spy," he said. 'His post in the Associated Pro. was only an alibi." . loDias had told the committee Oatis's trial was "staged" to In timidate all reporters and shut off news from behind the Iron Cur uim. ne insisted Oatis was guilty of nothing but trying to do a good Job .as..reBoreR-T ..-'.'" tne Oatis case, Tobias said, was ' not merely a case of one man In prison as a result of a forced con fession and a very clumsily-staged trial. It was a calculated attaelt on freedom of information." vavricka asserted Oatis had been tried by a legitimate court In an. cordance with normal trial proce dure. Vavricka said Oatis had con-, fessed he was trained as a spy by U.S. Military Intelligence schools. He said Oatis also admitted he was taught new methods of spying by a Col. Atwood, military attache at the U.S. embassy In Prague and that Oatis often sent notes to At wood. Tobias had offered to give any delegate a word-for-word record of tne trial, saying "this record is an indictment of the government of Czechoslovakia, not of Oatis." Weather FORECAST Klamath Falls and vicinity and Northern California: Few showers Thursday aud Fri day. High today 45. Low tonight 27. ' High temp yesterday 40 Low last night 28 Precip. Jan. 30 - .03 Since Oct. 1 10.53 Normal for period 6.6J Same period last yr. 10.21 ' (Additional Weather on Page 41 I t