) TIILMIKIMY, FEBRUARY 14, 1052 HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PAGE EIGHT ' HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14. 10S2 PAGE NINE Parley Set To Ponder Steel Strike NEW YORK Ml Top policy makers of the CIO United Steel workers will meet In Pittsburgh Feb. 21 either to prepare for a nationwide steel strike after Feb. 2.1 or to extend the current truce period In order to reach contract agreement. Philip Murray, president of the CIO and of the Steelworkers Union, said Wednesday the union's 36-man executive board and Its 170-man wage policy committee will meet in the steel city next Thursday. Both the New York Times and the New York Herald Tribune said Thursday the meeting was to de cide on the length of truce exten sion In order to effect a peaceful settlement In Uie steel contract dis pute. The Feb. 23 strike date Is the expiration time of a 45-day dead line set by the union. The union. In acceding to President Truman's request for added arbitration, fig ured the truce started with the beginning of Wage Stabilization Board hearings here Jan. 10. During Wednesday's hearing, Murray berated Bradford B. Smith, a U.S. Steel Corp. economist, for calling the steel workers "econom ic royalists." Smith used the term while argu ing against a union demand for a guaranteed annual wage, which he called a socialistic nouon. Red with rage, Murray called Smith's statement "the most rep rehensible, filthy, lying, deceiving presentation that has ever been presented to a government agency in my lifetime." Overtime U.S. Pilot Missing STANDISH, Mich. (P) A young wife whose Air Force pilot husband was sent out on more than 100 Ko rean combat missions due to "some mistake in the records" tried to be bravely optimistic Thursday after learning he is missing in action. Irs. Daniel G. Metiva's husband wrote that he had completed 101 missions, although pilots usually are sent home after 100, and was expecting to return by next month. After receiving a Defense De partment telegram, she refused to think her husband is dead. Mrs. Metiva was elated last Fri day when she received a letter Irom First Lt. Metiva dated Feb. 3. "I have Just completed my 101st mission," he wrote." Due to some mistake in records, I have been sent on an extra mission . . . I'm just sitting around waiting for my orders to come through so I can come home ... All the boys here are trying to complete their 100th mission as soon as they can so they will be able to return to the United States." Then on Sunday, came a telegram from the Defense Department. It saW Lt. Metiva "has been missing since Feb. 9. while participating in Korean operations." Coming Show Curbs Thefts CHAPPAQUA, N. Y. Ml George Williams, station-master at this suburban railroad depot, was only SI instead of the usual $2.50 short in his newspaper collections Thursday morning. George operates the newspaper concession at the station on the honor system, with a money box where commuters can make their own change for the purchase. For months his weekly shortage has run almost on the nose of (2.50, all lost to riders of one train. Last week George bored a small hole in the ceiling over the change box, spotted the pilferers several well-dressed men and one woman and the next day was ready with a motion picture camera. He informed his customers Wednesday with an announcement written on a blackboard, that he was prepared to stage an "early show" of his films. "Obviously, when someone took a buck this morning, one of these birds can't read, he said. Food Output Biggest Task GEARHART Wl Increased food production continues the principal task of this country's farmers, some 200 Oregon production and marketing administration comlt teemen were told Wednesday. Speakers at the state meeting in cluded H. L. Manwaring. deputy PMA Administrator from Washing ton, D. C, who said a record out put of food and fiber was asked. The needed total, he said, Is 6 per cent higher than last year. If the feed grain production goal Is not met, he said, then it will be necessary to reduce livestock pro duction. Some shortages of farm machin . ery, insecticides and fertilisers may occur, Alvin V. McCormlck western regional PMA director, said. He recommended that orders for these things be placed early. Housework Easy Without Nagging Backache Nirvipff bcliaeh, loss of ptpandcocrrr headaches and dizziness may b due to slow down of kidney unction. 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His current speaking tour, through which he hopes to pick uo Republican convention votes with out enunglnif In primary election campaigns In the West, takes him next to Eastern Oregon, and then Into Idaho. CONFIDENCE He told overflow crowds In two speeches here Wednesday nla-ht that ho knows how to run a cam. alfm without a "me-too complex." "I am confident that if I can guide the campaign, the Republi can Party can and will win," ho told the largest crowd, an estl mated 4,000 who paid $3 enoh to hear him at a box-lunch dinner. His other speech attracted 800, who paid $5 each for dinner at a church. The formula he gave for his cam paign: 77c "An all-out attack on the im- ijioramy oi mis aamimscrauon, on the unlimited spending and taxing and bureaucratic regulation of the Fair Deal, and on the disastrous war." APPLAUSE He picked uo his biggest ap plause on foreign policy, when he called the Korean fighting "a Tru- ' man war," when he accused the present administration of Incon sistency In foreign policy, and the biggest applause of all when ha said, "It has become more and more clear that Oen, MacArthur was right. . . , Gen. MacArthur was dismissed primarily because he wanted to win the war against. Communist China.. The administra tion does not." Law Enforced By the Parson LOS ANGELES W "Thou Shalt not steal,", says the eighth Com mandment, and the Rev. Edward F, Rice was only trying to enforce it when he hauled out his 12-gauge shotgun. Rice, pastor of the Ascension Lutheran church, grabbed the gun when be heard a noise In the church early Wednesday. He told his wife to call police and went outside to wait. When a man came out Rice kept him covered until officers arrived. Later they booked Charles H. Roll on suspicion of burglary. Wasn't Rice taking a chance on breaking the sixth Commandment, "Thou shalt not km?" No, sirl The gun wasn't loaded. Woman's Age Fools Mate san francisco Ut Sure, a woman may lie about her age. And it's a man's fault if he's fooled, especially if he's already been married tnree times. . That's what Superior Judge Mel vyn I. Cronln said Wednesday granting Max Kornhaber, 67, a di voce instead of an annulment from Anna, 72, whom he married four months ago. Kornhaber, a painter, told the judge his wife said she was 60. Judge Cronln snapped: "A man of your experience should be a better judge of a wom an's age." Students Give Lots of Blood SAN LTJIS OBISPO. Calif, w Students of California State Poly technic College Thursday claimed a collegiate record percentagewise in donating blood to the Armed services. In a three-day drive, Cal Poly students gave 879 pints. This was 43.1 per cent of the 2,036 member student body. Idaho previously had claimed a student body of 3,040. This was 38.8 per cent. A Cal Poly student spokesman said 200 prospective donors were turned down-, because uiey naa colds. Boy Fatally Shot at Play VALLEJO, Calif, m Alan L. Dempewolf, 13, tired of simply playing dead when Steve Sawyer, 13, fired Alan's rifle in a school boy game Wednesday. "Why doesn't someone believe me when I say I'm dead?" Alan cried. The sheriff's office continued the story: "I'll make sure he's dead," Steve remarked to James Burgess, 13 and aimed at Alan, lying beside a railroad track. The .22 rifle discharged accident ally, killing Alan. Steve, alarmed, shouted, "I might as well finish this" and swung the rifle toward his own head. James wrested lt from him. Sheriff's officers, after extensive questioning of Steve and James, called the killing purely accidental "The result of boys playing with a rifle." V