m Ml wm ma mm ...... ; . ". ... ' : .. '. Tough Sledding Seen for HST's AAorris Request In TIkv lly FRANK JKNKINS This dispatch Ir from the lawn i Windsor, which surrounds the my al residence Hint In Windsor Castle. The towers ol Windsor cas tin ut practically within sight al Buckingham palace on a clear day. Alter reading the dispatch, I think you will agree Dmt It could have fome from NOWHERE IN THE WORLD save England: , "Britain Raid Iiirewcll to George VI today In great outpouring ol sorrowlul grnndeur, mid burlrd him hers ut Windsor with a hymn i-'it trlumphul faith. "Elizabeth IT, queen at 25, led the nation' final homage to her (nther. For 2'4 hour ihc rode In n horse-drawn csrrlago behind the collln to the dirge ol Urn bnndii, while more than million Briton, packed lightly along the chill street ol London, bowed In rever ence." , Why could Ihut dispatch have come only from Englund? Here la why: Because ONLY IN OREAT BRITAIN, In the world ot today, has there been a ruler, or a lend er, who commanded the Inllh and the trust and the utter renpect ol nln people no completely an to cal forth by hi death the sincere and genuine outpouring of aorrow hai that followed tlx death of Oeorge VI. Thl nlxth George wasn't a par ticularly great man. The thing that endeared him to hln people wan the unlvernallv recounted fact that he waa A GOOD MAN. Be cause he wan a good man. they trusted him. Because they trunted him. they loved him. Because they loved him, they aorrow deeply and genuinely because he la gone. Did voti happen to see a pic ture that wan rather widely print ed over the world In the dayn thnt followed Iho first full understand ing In Britain that the king waa p very nlrk man? It nhowed a man and a woman kneeling lust out side the gate of Buckingham pal ace. They were praying for the klng'a recovery. It wann't Just a denture. It wann't Just staged to .mnVe a anort nlcture. It Waa REAL. They WERE PRAYINQ FOR THEIR KINO. The expression on their facea left no doubt what ever of their atncerlty. That wan the way Oeorge VI wan regarded In England, In the United Kingdom and all over Orenl Britain. He wan loved and honored and renpecled BECAUSE HE WAS A C100D MAN. Britain In In a bnd way. She haa a peculiar economy. She must buy raw mnlerlaln abroad and fabricate tnem and sell them abroad. Only thun can nhe live, for with the exception of coal her raw materlaln are very acarce In deed. Two bloody and terrible wara have aapped her renourcea. But don't write her off. An long an the Brltlah people are capable of being an deeplv affected by the example OF A GOOD MAN an they have been by the example of this sixth George who came unexpect edly to tho throne, who aulfered under many handlcapa but never faltered In hln determination to do his duly an It had been given him to do. thev aren't through. You can't write off people who renpect SIMPLE GOODNESS as the British peoplo respected the simple goodness of George VI. Shot Wounds Iran Official TEHRAN, Iran lP) Hosscln Fatcml, 38, rlght-hnnd man of Pre mier Mohammed Mossadegh, was jihnt and wounded Friday by a oiuhtul Moslem terrorist who ' "dhoutod, "There Is no God but Al lah." Fnlcml. former, denutv -premier, wan felled by n single pistol shot fired at point blank range as ne waa addressing a crowd In a cemetery near Tehran. Ha waa sneaking on the fifth an. nlversary of the assassination of one of Iran's first Nationalist martyrs. NOT FATAL Fatcml was rushed to a Tehran hospital owned and operated by Mossadegh's son, Dr. Gholam Hos scln Mossaacgn. Hospital attend ant snld the the chest wound would not be fatal. The would-be assassin was seized by tho crowd, which scuffled with ponce in apparent anger over po lice failure to prevent the attack, , He told police only that his name wan Monnmmea. The Moslem terrorist organlza- tlon, Fcdnyan Islam, which has boasted thnt It assassinated the late premier, All Razmara, has publicly threatened Mossadegh and his followers with death unless the government frees Navab Safavl, ono 01 its lenders. GUARDED , Police have surrounded Mossa degh's residence since the throats, and the aged premier has not ap peared In public for two months. Fatcml owns and edits the Na tionalist newspaper, Bnkhtar Em rooz, one of Mossadegh's strongest backers. As deputy, premier, he se.rved as government spokesman and ordered the expulsion of four lorelgn correspondents. ...... . H.I..II IL Bfilif iv1 By B. I.. LIVINGSTON!? WASHINGTON 11 President Truman's request for fnr-renchliiK Investigative powers for UewboM Morris, his government clennup prosecutor, Friday faced prospects ol rough going on ua moi inn Key lawmakers were quick to term li "uiiprcceneiiiea ana " complete drpurluro from estab llshcd practice." So far an could be determined Congress wus being asked for the first time to cloak an Individual In the executive brunch with virtual ly unlimited nubpoena Powers, and tho tremendous added authority to giant witnesses Immunity from prosecution. The sweeping proposal, certain to run Into Congressional snugs. slaten In effect Where It In "necessary to the tiubllc Interest," wltiirw.es may not e excused from testifying or pro ducing records on grounds of self Incrimination and subjection to pos sible criminal prosecution. But when compelled to tcntlfy, niier claiming constitutional priv ileges against self-incrimination, the witness shall not be prosecuted NEW rOWKR This In a power never exercised by any committee of Congress, as ntr as coum ue doicrmincd. 'Ilie only power to enforce testl niony used by Congressional com nillleen In the power to cite a wit ness lor contempt and this Is sub ject to approval by the whole House or Senate. Similarly, the power to subooena witnesses and documents outside as well as Inside the government was considered somewhat unusual in tne present case. It was said, after a ouick check that not even In the Teapot Dome hearings of the 1920'a did Senate staff Investlgutora have the power io suupocna ouisiae Ilia govern ment. Mr. Truman told hi ni-u.-. nn. ference that he did not know If the executive branch of sovernmem had ever sought such powers be- iurc. uuv saia ne nau Ally. Oen. mcumwis tun oacxing, LIMITS Heretofore. Congress has nrnni. ed the power to subpoena witness es and documents only to Its own committees, and to certain execu- live agencies such an the Federal irnae commission, the Immigra tion Service and Federal Power Commission. 'We have never given It to an In dividual," said Chairman Cellcr. D-N.Y.. of the House Judiciary Committee, Four Perish In Home Fire 80MERVILLE. Mass. I A family of four the parents of two children they apparently tried to save perished Thursday night in a fire that damaged four tene ment buildings. The body of Anthony Carcarro, 52, was found with that of his daughter, Jeancttc, 3 a. clutched In his arms. Mrs. Eva Carcarro. 35, was found dead near the body ol a son, Richard, S. Some 30 persons, many of them children In nlghtclothes, were made homeless by the general alarm lire In aub-freczlng temperatures. Tuskers Shun Noisy Monks NEW DELHI (Pi-Three Siamese elephants riding high over India served notice Friday they would not stand any monkey business. Traveling Dy air to Britain, the trio snubbed all food while In the company of shrieking monkeys. The plane's worried pilot finally moved the monks Into a far corner of tho freighter. A radio message to British Over seas Airways officials here snld the relieved elephants quickly started .munching sugar cane. Pigeon lliik CIIATANOOOA, Tenn. IPI A cocky and determined pigeon strut ted through the door of a down town restaurant Thursday night. marched to the kitchen, and had a meal of peanuts and a drinks of water on the house. Then, Policeman Johnny Padg ett reported, tho bird sauntered over to a pnono Booth, laid an egg, and settled down for the night. Ike and Kef auver Draw Racial Attacks By The Associated Press Two ol the presidential sweep stakes runners were under fire Fri day on the touchy question of racial segregation, a possibly criti cal Issue In the - pre-conventlon campaigns of both major parties. They were the Republicans' Gen. Dwlght D. Eisenhower and the Democratic, Scnntor Estcs Kefau ver. Both were criticized by a Negro official for what he said was their attitude toward Negroes In the armed services. Clarence Mitchell, Washington bureau director of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People said Kefauvcr once voted for race segregation in the armed forces, and that Eisen hower had told NAACP that Negro soldiers mixed with white "would be at a disadvantage." The Tennessean's office said Ke fauver once' backed a proposal to r-" wiirtiniiOnn r vt tCrsnsiirT-i mymi&AMm,iarfnmmmnwvri m niriMiflSiM 1 1 Prlre Five Cents 12 Pages Yhousmds See King's Sports Bulletins HOCKEY WIN OSLO, Norway Wl The United States nosed out a surprisingly tough Norwegian sextet, 2-2, on Arnold Ohs' last period goal as the Olympic Hockey Hound Rob in Tournament got under way Friday night. ;i:rmanv wins OKLO, NORWAY lu-Daredevil Andreas Ostler piloted Ger many's twu-man bobsled to the Olympic and World champion ships Friday with two fast, final runs down the Icy, 1,500-meter course. O.K. LEADS OSLO 111 The United States clung to a slim lead for unof ficial team honors Friday after three events In the sixth winter Olympics. Team standings, bsed on a 10-5-4-3-2-1 point score for the first six finishers: Tnlted Slates M',4 Austria - 17 (ierrnany - ... M Norway ......11 Swltierland 8 Italy 3 France 2 Belgium - 1 Sweden .... 'i (Early story In Sports Section.) Forum Topic Interest High The coming Monday evening "Build the Basin" rndlo forum on the question of Klamath Falls city limits extension Is exciting unusual iuterest. In lining up the forum panel, advice has been sought from many persons and all have evinced keen interest In the annexation matter. The Question lor Mondnv eve- n'ng Is "Should the city limits of- Klamath Falls be extended to In elude principal suburbs thereby increasing the city's population by by approximately lo.ooo?" PANEL A round u ble panel of eight Is being formed for tills all-Important topic, with lour persons from suburban areas and lour from the ciiv. Since there are so many pnases ot the question, an attempt is dc Ing made to have persons on the panel who have specialized knowl edge of such things as schools. taxes, sanitation, etc. Each of (hose subjects and mBny more hnve a strong bearing on the an nexation question. if uie Aitnmont section sione were added to the city, Klamath Falls would Jump from the state's sixth city In size to fourth, pass ing up both Medford and Corvallls. The 1050 census showed Klamath Falls population as 15,875. MOOT POINT Tlie annexation question Is par ticularly Important Just now be cause of the acute sanitation-sew age condition in the suburbs. as usual, the Herald ana news and its radio station, KFLW, are inking no editorial stand in the anncxntlon matter. Persons being Invited to be a member of Mon day evening's panel are not be ing asxeu now uicy stand on tne question . . . But they are to be given every opportunity to express their viewpoints when the program goes on the air at 8:30 p.m.. Mon day. Weather FORECAST: Klamath Falls and vicinity, mostly cloudy with a few snow flurries Friday and Friday night, mostly cloudy Saturday. High Snturday 44, low tonight 25. Northern California, considerable cloudiness Friday and Saturday, changing to rain Saturday. Little change In temperature, High Thursday SI Low last night 27 Precln Thursday 01 Preclp since Oct. 1 11.49 Normal for period 7.41 Period lant yenr 11.71 (Additional Weather on Tage 4) HEREFORD SHOW PORTLAND Ifl The first Na tlnnnl Hereford Show to be held in Ihe Pacific Northwest will open at the Pacific International Livestock Exposition tills yenr. Manager Walter Holt snld $15,000 in premium money would be oiicrea. let men in uniform decide whether they wanted to serve In segregated or non-segregated units. No one offered any comment for the gen eral, who has said he would not take part in the pre-conventlon presidential campaign. Senator Tnft of Ohio Was tinder fire too for a statement that he has "no confidence" In the present chiefs of staff. Scnntor Morse (R-Orc.) snld, without naming him directly, that the OOP candidate should not shake public confidence In the military leadership. Taft himself was in tho Far West campaigning briskly and talking nbout everything from potatoes to lorelgn policy. Moving Into Idaho, Taft said the recent price order on white pota toesa hot Issue In Idaho was an example of "federal bungling In Industry." Speaking In Boise nnd Pocntello, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, Allies Rain Big Shells On Enemy SEOUL. Korea Wi Allied big guns poured a withering- barrage of shells Into Communist positions in ba&icrn Korea Friday. High explosive and fragmenta tion shells rained down on some Red slrongpolntn for more than an hour. A murderous 15-mlnutc bat mge battered Red positions above the Mundung Valley, springboard for one of Ihe heaviest Communist attacks in weeks Thursday nli'ht. Allied alrcralt were out Friday afternoon after being grounded bv i torms In the morning. One Red MIG was damaged In a lour-mln- utc biitllc between IB U.S. sabre Jets and 30 Communist Jets over northwest Korea, the Filth Air f orce, said. AIR SORTIES Flflh Air Force planes flew 289 sorties during the day In the cam paign to cut Red supply lines. Fog and low hanging clouds shrouded the results of the artillery oomoarameni. The U.S. Eighth Army said two companies ot Reds spearheaded Thursday night's attack. Thev stormed down the Mundung Val ley, with another 1.000 right be hind. An Allied officer said the Red at tack wns designed to drive a wedge through the main U.N. lines. Allied lighting men stopped It cold In a 49-mlnute battle, much of It at close quarters. AP correspondent Stan Carter, who watched the fight from a hill side bunker, said the Reds .lost at least 160 men. RED SUPPORT , Before the withering hail of U.N. firepower beat them back, the Reds had powerful artillery and mortar bupport of their own. Six Communist mortar shells hit the hillside where Carter was watching from a command post bunker. The concussion knocked one soldier -headfirst mto the bunk' er, and right on top of MaJ. James I. Epellman. 1720 Prospect. Olym- pia. Wash. The blast also knocked the hel mets oil Spellman and MaJ. John Petrelll. Rockviiie center, N. y. Petrclll commanded the Allied troops involved in the fight. Klamath Men Farm Winners Two Klamath Basin men were winners of the right to purchase homesteads in the Columbia Basin irrigation project at Moses Lake, Wash. Their names were among 38 drawn from a pickel Jar yes terday. Local winners were Paul E. Ste vens, Box 448, Klamath Falls, and Larry Llnri, Tuelake. The Herald and News was un able to locnte Stevens today for comment. Llnd, however. Is still living at Tulelake and doing farm work for J. I. Ott. TWO-TIMER He is a second-time winner. A year ago Llnd s name wns drawn lor a farm cn the Columbia Basin project, but he turned It down be cause ot poor soil, and put his name In for yesterday's drawing. "we icei line ns a miracle. Mrs. Maxine Llnd, his wife, said today. Llnd, 32 and a Navy veteran of World War II, has lived at Tule lake since 1946, and for a time operated a store there. He met and married Maxine in Australia while he was in the service, and they have two children, a girl, 5, nnd n boy 2'-j. NAMES There were 2.641 nnmes in the jar for the drawing yesterday, and 17 of the winners were from Ore gon and Washington. Others were scattered over the country. The first name drawn was that of Thomas S. Shank, Seneca, Ore, Other Oregon winners were Mel- vln F. Plnlsted, Springfield: Theo dore F. Inslev. Roseburg: Dale E. Tcrp, Bnndon: Lloyd G. Howdcn, Hermlston; Carol O. Polampa, Myrtle. Creek: and Gerald W. Ob lisk, Beavercreek. he said (1) workers and farmers deserve government aid, but only to give them equality under a free enterprise system, (2) the GOP won't win by using a "me-too" policy," and (3) the administra tion's Far East policy is wrong and the Chinese Nationalists should bo armed. Gov. Earl Warren of California, another GOP candidate, implied In New ' York he docs not believe Gen. Douglas MacArthtir Is the men to keynote the Republican convention this July. He said the keynoter should not be a candidate, and should not favor any special cnndldnto. MacArthur has been re ported leaning toward Tnft, but has neither confirmed nor denied this. Harold E, Stassen, former Min nesota governor bucking Taft, El senhower and Warren for the GOP nomination, salii in New York he favors a world-wide program to FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1952 If V Jfx TOM HESS ft- T GENE LOOMIS Assessor Race Entered by 2 Two men fllfil candidacies this morning for Klamath County As sessor on the Democratic ticket, assuring that party of a three-way local contest on the May 16 pri mary ballot. They are Carl E. (Gene) Loomis, 36, and Tom Hess. 29. The present officeholder, Otis Metsxer, lnea several days ago. He also Is a Democrat. There is one Republican candi date out, Austin Hayden, lor the $4,500 a year Job. SECOND TRY Loomis' filing for the Job is his second exactly two years ago, Feb. 15, 1950, he announced his candidacy for County Assessor, but at that time there was a mixup as to whether Metsker, who was elected in 1948, was serving a two yenr or -tour-year term. The Attorney General finally ruled he had been elected for four years, not for the unexpired por tion of a previous term, and Loom is candidacy was wimnrawn. Loomis has had considerable ex perience in assessment work. He was senior appraiser in the Mult nomah County Assessor's office seven years and also did some of that type of work lor tne eoerai Housing authority. He has lived in Klamath Falls four years and is one of the own ers of fhe Loomis Glass Company. He Is a Seabee veteran of World War II. mRrried and has three children. DEPUTY Tom Hess is a member of a well-known Henley area family, and lives at Route 2. Box 512. He has been deputy under Met sker for about three years, doing appraisals on farm land and build Imrs. Hess is a native of Posco, Wash., but has lived in Klamath Countv virtually all his life. He is a Navy veteran of World War II, married ana nas one son. MORE HARDBOARD Portland ifl Another hard- board mill now is In production In Oregon, a 2 'i million-dollar plant of the Oregon Lumber Com pany at Dee in Hood River County. combat Communism. He said he Is for neither MacArthur's "Asia first" policy nor Eisenhower's re ported "Europe-first" attitude In buildup of strength. In Washington, a sampling of Senate opinion indicated Democrats are sharply divided on whether President Truman should run again. Truman said Thursday he faces a "difficult decision" in mak ing up his mind. Nine Key Democratic Senators were- interviewed by Jack Bell, Associated Press political writer. His count: Two said Truman ought to run, one called him the "most logical candidate," two said he should not run, two predicted he will not, one said he favored Sen ator Russell (D-Ga) and one would not comment. Telephone till No. 2711 Mites Body Laid In Crypt At Windsor By The Associated Press JWZZSi .SJS. IS; " In a great outpouring of sorrowful grandeur, and burled him here at Windsor with a hymn of trium phant faith. Elizabeth II, Queen at 25, led the nation's final homage to her father. For 2 z hours she rode In a horse-drawn carriage behind the coffin to the dirge of 10 bands, while more than a million Britons, packed tightly along the chilly streets of London, bowed In rever ence. Then she entrained for Windsor with the body and saw It laid to rest in a crypt of Royalty already holding George HJ and nine other sovereigns. The Queen, tight-lipped but com posed, sprinkled earth on her father's coffin as It sank from sight beneath storied St. George's Chapel In Windsor Castle. I At the close of the 26-mInute , service the Royal family left the ; chapel by a side door. KISSES I Elizabeth TI and her husbnd. I the Duke of Edinburgh, kissed the ! Queen Mother on the cheek Just ! before they stepped Into a walt i Ing limousine. The King's mother, Mary, stayed ! in London with the weight of her ; 84 years, and waved her farewell i from a window of Marlborough House. I But the widowed Queen Mother i Elizabeth was here with the Princess Margaret to hear the choir sing the hymn she and the new Queen had chosen a hymn of victory, olten sung at Easter: me strile is o'er, the battle done: "Now Is the victor's triumph won . ... The Archbishop ot Canterbury voiced the Commits! the Church of England assigns to King and commoner alike: "Earth to earth, ashes to ashes, dust to dust, in sure and certain hope of the resurrection to eternal We ... " LOWERED A slab of stone had been laid aside in the floor, and the oak cof fin was lowered slowly to the side of the body of the King's brother, the first Duke of Kent, killed In a wartime air crash. Representatives of nations around the globe Joined royalty. nobles and lords in the funeral at St. George's chapel. mere was tne Duke or Windsor. who was a king himself when he laid ueorge V to rest here 16 years ago. inere were Winston Churchill. the servant of four sovereigns: there were seven sovereigns from other countries, Secretary of State Acheson representing President Tru man: and the ambassador of the Soviet Union. There also, was Gen. Eisen hower, who led Britons as well as Americans against the Nazis while George VI stood unflinching be side nis people in. this island Hilter coveted. And by the turn of time, the dignitaries Invited to the funeral Included the Chancellor of a new Germany. SILENCE Britain and all the Common wealth fell silent for two minutes at 2 p.m.. the hour of the funeral. Then thousands turned to their radios to hear the service. Earlier, the street processions had been seen on television. In London, more than a million people from all walks of life, had watched in reverent silence as 150 white-galtered British sailors drew the King's coffin mounted in a gun carriage from Westminster Hall to Padlngton Station. As Queen Mary waved her fare well from Marlborough House, the Duke of Windsor turned In the line of -march and saluted his' mother. Salutes came also from another son. the Duke of Gloucester, from the Duke of Edinburgh, and the Duke ot Kent, the 16-year-old nephew oi ueorge vi. Elizabeth II and the Queen Mother bowed toward the window where Queen Mary watched and checked each contingent in the line of march from the funeral pro gram. The body was carried out of Westminster Hall at 9:30 a.m. It left London for- Windsor at 12:35 p.m. As the Royal funeral train chug ged Into the black-draped station at Windsor at 1:10 p.m. an escort of guards and naval ratings snap Ded to attention. Elizabeth n sat In the front seat of the Royaj coach In the 10 car train, the place nearest the hearse car ahead. 1 A bearer party of guardsmen lifted the coffin, still draped in the Royal standard, from the train. DRUMS. DIRGE To the accompaniment of slowly beating drums and a funeral dirge the procession moved toward Wind sor Castle and St. George's Chapel. Elizabeth II rode in a black car riage drawn by two white horses that moved behind in coitin. na val ratings pulled - the carriage upon which the coffin rested. Gen. Elsenhower attended In uni form. Bureau's Market Anger By MALCOLM EPLEY JR. 4 Klamath potato growers last night tossed a lew bricks at the Office ot Price Stabilization's ac cusations that Klamath Falls Is a center of "vicious black market" activity. Klamath Falls and Twin Falls, Ida., have been slng'id out by the OPS as centers of Illegal potato sales activities, which the office said was at the shipper level. Earlier, Klamath shippers had protested black market offers from "outside operators," almost all of them from beyond the local po tato Industry levels. Said Pres. Earl Wilson of the Klamath Potato Growers Assoc. ut a directors meeting last night: We consider it unfair to have " POtatomen directly or In- Woman Hurt. Escapes Death PARKE RSBURG, W. Va. ' MV A 63-year-old woman told Friday how she lay outdoors in rain and snow lor two days and two nights aner nreaxrng ner nip. From a bed in a Parkersburg hospital, Mrs. Mary Morehead, a woodcutter's wife, said she left her rural home In Central West Vir ginia Saturday morning for a five mile walk to the home of a sister, where she planned to spend the weekend. En route, she opened a heavy metal fence gate. It fell on her and broke her hip. She lay there, clad In a heavy coat, until Monday morning. "I kept trying to move, but I couldn't even crawl," Mrs. More head said. "I hollered for a long time, but nobody heard me.' "I begged the Lord to send some one after me. I thought a time or two that if they didn't find me Monday they'd find me dead." An oil well worker, on his way to work Monday morning found her. Her husband, Thomas, and her son at home assumed she had reached her sister's house safely. Her sister was not expecting her. so no one was sent to search lor her. Mrs. Morehead said it rained and snowed during the time she lay helpless in the Held. And she said: I didn t get so hungry, but I wanted water." - Physicians- said- Mrs. Morehead is expected to recover. Man Returned To Death Cell OCALA, Fla. OP) Walter Lee Irvin is back in the Florida State Prison death house after his sec ond conviction for raping a young white woman. His lawyers plan a new fight to save him from the electric chair. A Jury of 12 white men late Thursday convicted the 24-year old Negro of helping three others seize the 17-year old girl from her farm er husband July 16, 1949, and rap ing her. There was no recommendation for mercy, which made the death sentence mandatory. Irvin was the last of the four Negroes who were accused of the crime which set off a series of mob demonstrations, shootings, and burnings of Negro homes in Central Florida, and brought about bitter exchanges between Florida officials and the National Associa tion for the Advancement of Col ored People. Pita' DOING A LITTLE B00KW0RK this morning at the Fred E. Barnett Company were employes Ruby Westfall, 1180 Crescent, and John Anderson, 2633 Vandergrift. Black Charges Ranchers directly branded with the black' mantel stigma without proof. The potato Industry continues to be a whipping boy.' Other growers wanted to know just what constitutes a black mar ket at this level. They refuted accusations by government officials and others that growers were hold ing back shipments of potatoes be cause they don't like the price ceilings placed on potatoes by OPS order Jan. 19. INDEFINITE According to County Agent Walt Jendrzejewskl. shipments lagged because specifications on the cell-" ing orrier are indefinite. For instance, he said, OPS of ficials in California maintain there is no celling to the grower, while the Portland OPS - office- Insists1 there Is only as soon as potatoes" are placed In containers. - And growers have been able only to obtain that Information In phone conversations; they say the OPS has yet to give them confirma tion in black and white. One shipper said, he was unable even to get a clear cut Interpre tation from the enforcement of ficers present here. "How can enforcement be pos sible with such vague rules?" he asked. Another shipper, seeking conf Ir. matlon and clarification of recent OPS adjustments, received a wire irom Kris Bemis, United Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Assoc.. Wash ington. D. a. which reported the extra 10 cents foi- No. 1 potatoes appiy omy lo size A spuds of two' inch or four-ounce minimum size. No confirmation has been received from local OPS sources. BAN DATE . The growers board of rllreetni. meeting last night primarily to set up a potato committee for the forthcoming agricultural confer. ence in Corvallls Mar. 27-29. also. recommended that the Oregon-Cal- . ifornia Potato Marketing Control1 Agreement Committee lift a ban on size d spuds immediately rath er than on April 1 as scheduled. ' Idaho has terminated Its whole marketing agreement program to. allow shipment of more spuds, they pointed out The marketing agreement ! a grower and shipper-sponsored and operated committee which recom mends the standards of potatoes to be marketed from each area to the Department of Agriculture. Truce Parley Slated Today. MuwsAn, Korea un Truce nev gotiators will hold an importune, full dress session at 5 p.m. PST Friday to hear a new Communist proposal for a Korean peace con ference. . Vice Adm. C. Turner Joy. chief U.N. negotiator, returned Friday from Tokyo where he has con ferred for two days with Gen. Mat thew B. Ridgway and two high ranking officials from Washington. Staff officers working on prisoner exchange plans reported some slight progress Friday. The session on truce supervision marked time. Col. Don O. Darrow said it looked as though the Reds were stalling until after the plenary ses sion. There has been' no hint as to what the Communists will suggest in their new plan for a post- armistice peace conference. TOGETHER BARNES, Eng. W) 'William Caudle and his wife, both about 70, collapsed and died within a few moments of each other Friday while watching the funeral proces sion of King George VI orj tele-, vision. V