iff f n s i In Tin Day's km y I'll AN K JKNKINH From Washington: "Aniinuticpil U, H. buttle ciwunl tit's In Korea reached 105.B41 on Wednesday, nn Increase of 311!) since nst week. Tho new total are: killed In action, lil.4a7; wounded, ni,7ii4: missing, la.oao." Kveiy time I reud tho Korenn rnsuiilly figures, it my teeth n cdun, Il' bud enough to have men klHcd In notion when we know what they're ly lnu for. But when we hnve no Idrn whnt we're fight Iiik for, It seems to be about ten times nn bud. And when, on top of ell Unit, we reunite Unit It's a wnr we can't win, we wind up with a feeling of frustration unci futility. Here's nnothcr one that gives you the shivers: The Oregon Voter (published In Portland mid usunlly pretty reliable In Its futures) estlimites thut the total tnx bill on Oregon people for X he fiscal yeur 1U63 -federal. etAte, lornl, direct mid Indirect taxes end lees of every kind will be 728 MILLION DOLLARS. I err a the stinger: 'Hint ninount of tnx money, the Voter's (Uitrmenl adds, riiunls the nviessed vnlun of ALL OK THE I'HOI'KKTV IN ALL THK COUN TIES OP OHKOON SAVE ONLY (Million, Columbia, Tlllumook, Washington, Ynmhlll. Miiltimmnli, Clackamas, Hood Itlver, Wnsco, Kliermnii, Ollllurn, Morrow nnd IJilinlllln. Let's put It iinother way: 'Mia tnlitl fihSennrd Vlllue of nil vus property III Oregon ln.it yenr w si.ous.uuo.ouu. ACCOrUHIK ui the vmrr's esllnintr. our tolnl of ALL tuxes In the final yeur thst Is Juki coming up will be n28.ooo.ooo. Thst is to suy: The total of ALL of our Uxes I (he next IikhI yenr. If this estlmn ik anvwhitm nritr Brrurnte. Is KOll to nmouiit to VtS per cent of the nuesed vulue ur au, i nr. rnur i.-o-i-v im st r. rtv nuifiON. One more thought nlong this highly miplenimnt line: In the old dnys il almost mid the ClOOD old dnysi wnen Uiought eboul the totnl of nil ..... . .. w.. u.. u'rA ihlnkins we of In f f ill lkaii, v " - terms of 75 per cent locnl tnxes nnd only 25 per cent icoerni m. In other words, In those dnys. 16 f auitm flnllur of our lux money stayed at home nno wis spent It nome lor wnsi " -could see and understand. only about 2S per cent of our tax money is speni ui nuim i . where near homei and 75 per cent of It Is shipped on u wnuiira to be spent lor iraiw never even hrd of. I . turn Hkui when tlu) Hrmrinuvi t,w .-ii ... politicians first began to 111 us tlml money irom vybmiiik like manna that falta from heaven -thnt li cost nobody anything and we might as well have It because If we didn't gel our anr """' body else would? Well, the aystem Is beginning to BITE, now i Ridgway Hits War Doubters Bv HAM 81'MMEBI.IN TOKYO l Oen. Mntlhew B. Ridgway said Tliursdny night It Is deplorable that many Americans ..I. .u ,-iiii.u uM In Korea? ' HUH Utilk hiij " " Hie supreme Allied commander rieclnrea tne pauvru - inlentloiw In "now ipread across Hie world where even tho blind can ""or hla part, Hldgway aald there can be no question of the "validity nnd purpose" ol U.S. lighting- In Koreu "ngalnsU that dellberntcly pinned, unprovoked aggression. ItKI'IDIATION "To have done" otherwise," he aald, "would hnve been a repudia tion of every principle wo had pre viously professed." Ridgway apoke nt the annual con vention of the Fnr East Depart ment of the Reserve Oftlcera Aa noclntlon. Ho mndo no mention of the Ko rean armistice tnlks at Panmun Jom. j , The address was devoted largely to rcmnrks on Mllltnry Reserve of tlcera nnd Ocorgo Washington, who was born 220 yenrs ago Frldny. Ridgway snld the snme situation ' exlsti todnv that Washington found In 1715 when he wrote thnt one of his hnrdest Jobs wns to Induce peo plo to believe there wns "danger until tho bayonet Is pushed at their breasts." lNKXCUSABLK "Our country," nitlgwny said, "still has today many people whose Intelligence level offers no slightest excuse, for a similar mental out look on this problem. "With tho pattern of Communist intentions now spread across the world whero even the blind can see neither the aecmlnir Insula tion of distance, nor the nntlve born of a sheltered life, enn plead the slightest excuse, nor abate one Iota of our Individual responsibility, "To do otherwise than oppose nggrcsslnn In tho future, within knowledge as sterile evorv sncii flee America has made alrico it obtained independence. "We hnve heard and we still hear at times, and I regret to say from Americans referring to Ko rea, 'Why are wo there?' I think the question discredits him who auks It." Weather FORECAST: Klamath Falls and vlelnly, fair tonight and Thursday, but eolder, Low tonight S. High Friday 35, Northern Callforna, lit tle change In temperature. Cloudy Thursday night, possible rftln or snow, showers in mountains V High Wednesday . 20 (4w last night .......' 5 Vrei'lp Wednesday .05 1'reelp since Oct. 1 .12.87 Normal for period 7.11 1'erlnd last year rr .I,. I ' - . . '-!.'' b : i EENIE, MEENIE, MINEY AND MO, four lambs (two girls and two hoys) wero born Wednesday by Caesarian section performed at a local animal clinic. The purebred Suffolk ewe was brought to the clinic by Paul Hatchctt, foreman of tho Lis key ranch. The lambs weighed about 10 pounds each. Next Week's Forum On Law Enforcement A long iwnltrd and many times reouested "Build the Basin" nnnel discussion on law enforcement will be heard over KFLW next Tues day night. Postponed several times to allow formation of a representative panel. 'Build me Basin win pose tne It wax 20 below aero this morn ing at Chemult, up there in the Icelxnt of BouUieastern Oregon. The reading was believed to have been Uie lowest of this winter at Uiat conimunlly. . At Bly Uie low reading waa 4 below and at Keno 1 below, Here In Klamath Falls the low was 5. reached about 7 o'clock this morn ing. Liz Toyor, Wilding Wed LONDON VH Movie Stars Elizabeth Taylor and Michael Wilding were married shorUy be fore noon Thursday In the midst of a lively mob scene. The 18-year-old bride and her 38-yenr-old groom, arriving sep arately, slipped almost unnoticed Into the Caxton registry hull through a side door but a crowd of hundreds descended upon them as they emerged alter the 10-mlnule civil ceremony. Elizabeth rndlnted hnpplness aa she waa Jostled by hundreds of persons In the corridors of the hall and In Caxton street outside. Seem ingly the cooler of the two. she recognized friends In the milling crowd and shouted greetings to mem. Only about a dozen persona saw the ceremony, which was the sec ond marriage for both Liz o:id Wilding, Alter their escnpe from (he crowd, tho couplo headed olf to a reception, with champagne. VIRGINIA BENOIST, Route 1, was today's subject for the 9 O'clock cameraman. She is helping out : at Muriel's. !. ' p Li. IT' -if-' ! '.1, V J. fc..' it ! question, "How Can We Better Support Our Law Enforcement Of ficials." It will be aired at 8:30 p. m., Feb. 20. "Build the Basin" is usually heard cn Monday nights, but to fucllltato presence of several city officials on the program, il was de layed till Tuesday. fcilnco the program originated last month, many letters directed to it hnve requested thai a program be dedicated to the problem of law cmorcemeni. Severnl weeks delay resulted In getting a panel of participants that could adequately answer questions concerning law enforcement prob lems inni are phoned in by the radio audlcnee. ' Members of the panel wlD be an nounced In newa stories on the pro gram inter Uils week. In today's Herald and News a series of U questions has been printed concerning many problems facing law enforcement officials. Herald and News readers are re quested to answer the questions posed and return them either to the paper or to Station KFLW. Results of tne poll will be an nounced on the "Build the Basin" program next Tuesday night. U.N. Refuses Russian OK MUNSAN. Korea Wl The U.N. Conimnnd told the Communists Thursday Russia's "record of past participation In Korea" bars the Soviet Union as a neutral fit to heln police a Korean truce. simultaneously General Head quarters in Tokyo warned that every step forward in truce talks "will bo followed by a step buck ward until Moscow Is convinced that tho flnnl decision Inr Korea must be made without further de lay." An information bulletin compiled Irom "Voice of the U.N. Command Broadcast" declared: "It seems to be their plan to raise two additional disputes to take the place of every one that has been settled. , "Like the hydra-headed moaster of mythology, Uiere will be new entanglements following every set tlement lust as long as tne Krem lin thinks there Is still something to gain by prolonging the talks." At Panmunjom, nn Allied spokes man snld U.N. reasons for reject ing Russia were "clear, cogent nnd Irrefutable." Ho did not spell out the reasons. Secession By Lcrkevfew? RENO Wl Some Lakevlcw, Ore., residents want to secede from Oregon and put their town under Nevada Jurisdiction, a Nev ada assemblyman said here Wednesday. Don Crnwford of Vyn, an as semblyman who long has advo cated that Nevada tnke over Uie eastern slope of the Slcrrns in northenstern California, snld five Lnkevlew residents wrote him thnt thev wanted to Join, too. They suggested thnt a 30-mile atrip along the southern otUc of Lake County should be included In the border-shifting plan, he said. Ho said they added: That the Lake County sent, now at Lnkeview. could be moved some 50 miles north to Pnislny, "which nas always wanted it anyway." That "Lake County menns noth ing to tho State of Oreuon. Lake- vlow is approximately 350 miles from Portlnnd and 235 mlleq fiom Reno. Although certain portions o U.S. 305 are. terrible. . . Wo still get to Reno four or five times a year. We drive to Portland per Imps once a yenr row." urawtord said he would welcome them. There is no official enthus iasm nt Sacramento nnd Carson City, however, and none Is ex- pectea in anicm, eitner. """""11 r- -ii in mil -ir" 'in ,"r"-r'H"(rmntiftltmmmm sMKiiTiiriTriiiiiriiii ' - iiirnii riini.i Price Five Cent il Pain Senfc Eisenhower Entered In Oregon Race SALEM. Ore. Wl Oen. Dwlght Elsenhower was entered Thursday in OruKon's May 16 presidential prlmury with the filing of petitions bearing 1,088 names. The petitions, brought to the stnte elections division by State Hep. Mark Hatfield, Snlem, sec retary of the Oregon for Elsen hower Committee, contained 68 more names than the 1,000 that are required. Hatfield aald the signers come from 16 of the 36 counties. Bo l.ir. Elsenhower and Gen. Ouuglas MacArlhur are the only names on the Republican presi dential ballot, the filing period clos ing March 7. No Democrats have been entered yet. Hatfield snld In separate state ment that the state Etsennower committee will bring the general's record clearly to the voters ol Ore gon. , "He docs not need even a week to campaign In Oregon because what he Is and what he stands for have already been defined." Hntlicld made puonc a leiegram from U.S. Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge R.-Mnss., national campaign manager for Elsenhower. Lodge requested In the telegrnm, received Wednesday, that Hatfield file the petitions immediately. Sabres Blast 2 More Migs SEOUL. Korea I American Sabre Jet pllota shot down two more Red Jets Thursday bringing their toll this week to ten. The two MIO-15S eliminated were blown out of the air during a 20-muiute battle in cloudy North Korean skies between 21 American Sabre Jets and 20 MIOs. The kills were credited to Lt. Bllley B. Dobbs of Fontana. Calif., and Cnpt. Brooks J. Llles of Eliza beth City. N. C. American losses, if any. were not announced. The Air Force dis closes U.S. plane losses only once a week. On the ground a Red ambush pinned down an Allied patrol and Its rescue force tor more than an hour on the frozen Eastern Front. A second United Nations rescue group broke the trap and freed both Allied units In sharp fighting. The action occurred northwest of Kansong, on the east coast. Among the few planes in the air Thursday morning was a Jet that bombed "Freedom Bridge" linking Allied truce headquarters at Munsnn with Panmunjom. site of armistice talks. It dropped, two bombs. Eyewitnesses said It resembled an American F-80 shooting Star. One soldier said he saw USAF (United States Air Force) on the underside of one wing. No damage or casualties were reported. Only one bomb explod ed. Navy Upholds Public Right WASHINGTON (iB The Navy reminded Its officers Thursday that "tho Navy belongs to the pub lic," and urged them to give when ever possible "frank, honest ans wers to questions from newspapers and wire services. A public relations newsletter to nil anmrnantare nvannllifA inrl staff officers said "too often news papers are met with evasiveness, doublctalk or outright refusal to cooperate." The newsletter. Issued by Navy headquarters, said lt is difficult to be completely frnnk with the facts "when you know that the editorial Interpretation may not agree with the Navy's opinion," but lnid down the rule thnt telllnfr the truth Is the best policy "even when the truth hurts." Sporis Bulletins SWEDEN WINS OSLO 0V) Sweden, (he Euro pean champion, ended the un beaten run of the United States In the Olympic Ice hoekey tourna ment Thursday night with 4-2 decision In a bruising contest. BUTTON AGAIN OSLO m Darlnr Dick But ton won his second Olympic, gold medal for men's figure skating; Thursday night, unofficial calcu lations showed. Button thrilled a small crowd of about 5,000 persons at Blslett Stadium with a bold and Imagin ative program of free-skating that was- flawlessly executed, . KLAMATH FALLH, OREGON, !F rs me hi ' Polar Air Base ..' f.T' ' i ..Mi- l'v:A'H.wrt V i,,; x 2,zje'm v LAW'S LONG ARM FINALLY CATCHES UP Bank rob ber Willie (The Actor) Sutton (right), who eluded the FBI for five years is questioned in New York by Ass't. Dist. Atty. Louis Andreozzi (left) and Dist. Atty. Thomas Cullen. Andreozzi holds two guns found on Sutton, along with 77 one hundred dollar bills (on desk), when he was captured by two New York patrolmen. The officers recognized the fugitive when they stopped to help him fix his stalled car. Jocular Truman Lets Down Political Hair By ERNEST B, VACCARO WASHfclOTON I President Truman told a Mnsonlc gathering Thursday that he works all day and nearly all night as President, "but Just between you and me and the gatepost. I like it." The President confided this at- 'B' Potatoes Shipping OK'd Tlie Oregon California Potato Marketing Agreement Control Com mittee decided yesterday In a tele phone vote to Immediately release size B potatoes for shipment to commercial markets. - Earlier recommendations by the committee had called for size Bs to be held back until April 1. However, the enrlier recommenda tion had suggested the Bs might be released sooner If conditions warranted. The Committees release recom mendation must go to Washington, D. C, for approval by the Depart ment of Agriculture. Assistant Com mittee Manager Bill Huse, Tule lake, snld this morning the release order should be announced as ef fective Monday. Sprout High Lease Bidder The Bureau of Reclamation has announced high bidder for one lease and advertisement for anoth er In the Tulelnke area. Project Manager E. L. Stephens reported yesterday that Dale Sprout, Tulelnke. was high bidder for lot 105, 28 acres of public land near Newell, Sprout reportedly bid a totnl of $1,431.08. Stephens said sealed bids from veterans of World War II will be accepted at the Bureau of Reclam ation office, airport, until 3d. m. March 11, at which time they will be opened. The Bids arc on 36 acres of public land lying. Just south of the Tulelnke city limits. Detailed information may be ob tained from the Bureau office at the airport. An Arresi Can Be Nice LELAND. Miss. Iff! Getting ar rested nbout noon on Thursday is one of the nicest tilings happen ing to motorists passing through tills Mississippi Delta town tnese days. Some unwary couple travel ing witn out-of-state license plates la pounced on by Police- Officer W. O. Ray. "Youre under arrest,- Kay an nounces. "Why?" the motorists ask in bewilderment. Parrying the question, Ray asks if they are in a hurry. Most al ways ine worrying coupie saye No" and off to "trial" tney go. Destination is not the jail house but the Lelnnd Lions Club's weekly luncheon. The couple are told that for "punishment" they must. en- Joy the luncheon and accompany ing snenamgans. Afterwards, "sentence" Is pro nounced the couple must promise to "come back this way. again." THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1952 IRiOQ -f mr - we titude In n- off-the-cuff talkt to Grand Mailers' of Masons attend' inr a nationwide conference. Cabinet members and White House staff representatives also attended the hotel breakfast at which Truman defended his aides against the description of "Mis souri Gang," which he said has been given them by his opponents. He noted that Lincoln. Jefferson. underwent a lot of criticism and that it was some years after Cleve land left office that it was said ol him "they loved him for the enemies he made." 'I hope you love me for that same reason," the President said. Truman did not identify the "thev" in the remark about Cleve land. DONT CARE' He went on to say that If he thinks he's right in what he does, "I don't care if anyone likes it or not." At one point, the President said with a crin "this year is leap year, a most Important year in the history of the government of the United States." He called attention to attacks made on George Washington by 'a leading Philadelphia paper" and said this was "one reason why he retired instead of running for a third term." At his news conference Wednes day, the President declined com ment once again on nis political intentions. He has said he faces a difficult decision and hasn't made up his mind yet whether he will run again. ine presiaent tola uie oreattasi meeting he snends most of his time Being Kind to people and mat his Job is primarily a "public re lations one," in which he seeks to get people to do wings lor ine government. such gatherings as tne oreaa.- fast, he said, give him rare oppor tunities "to be myself." Turning to the criticism of past Presidents, Truman said: 1. It has taken ISO years to de termine the greatness of Washing ton. 2. Thomas Jefferson was once described as a "Jacobin" which Truman said is about the same as being called a Communist today. 3. Two papers -tne New York Tribune and Chicago Tribune in reference to Lincoln's Gettysburg Address said tne tresiaeni aiso spoke and made the usual ass of himself." This, of course, was noi . true, Truman said. FCC Chairman Coy Resigns WASHINGTON (flv-Wayne Coy resigned Thursday as chairman of the Federal Communications Com mission. Coy told reporters he was quit ting because he could not afford the personal sacrifice of continuing In the $15,000 a year Joo. Cov added that he had asked President Truman to relieve him of his post so that "I can cegotlate for a job In private industry." The FCC supervises operations of the-radio and television indus try among ether duties. Coy, 48, was nanicd chairman of the commission, in December, 1947. He left a Job as assistant to the publisher of the Washington Post nnd as manager of Radio Station, WINX. to-become a -member of the FCC. K-v ' Ml -.k.-V I 111 I !,. -.-w v Telephone 8111 No. 2748 n f - Mis Top Secret Work Near North Pole WASHINGTON Wl A Senate In vestigation heard Thursday that workers on a super-secret air base construction program near the North Pole collected more than three million dollars In wages be fore even reaching the Job. Lt. Gen. Lewis A. Pick, chief of Army Engineers, defended these payments as. well as salaries at a rate of 13,000 a year for laborers and 17,000 a year formechanics on the project. Questions by Downey Rice, coun sel for the committee which was bet up as a watchdog group on military spending brought out the salary figures. Rice did not Indicate how many workers shared the three million dollars, but said thev drew the pay while en route to the Job by ship and airplane. DELAY He said some of them left Nor folk, Va., by ship, expecting to be at the Job in 15 days but actually were 42 days on the way. The project was known by the code name of "Blue Jay" pre viously publicized .as being In Greenland. Rice said this project and anoth er - air base construction Job in North Africa, known by the code name of "Atlas", already involved expenditures of about 100 million dollars. Gen. Pick recently has returned from a tour of these overseas bas es, including those in French Mo rocco In North Africa. Rice asked: Pick why workers had been recruited at "premium pay," sent to a center and- then sent 'back home to await orders while getting "stand-by pay" that amounted to $317,000 at the rate of $4 a day a man. Their regular pay Began wnen tney iett for tne Joo. CAUTION Pick explained that It was nec essary first "to carefully screen" each worker after he had been re cruited, sent to a center to be briefed and then sent home to await orders after clearance. "This was hazardous beyond any thine ever encountered in construc tion." Gen. Pick said, apparently referring to the North Pole work. He said it was necessary to trans nort the workers bv both ship and airplane and that the ships needed icenreaiters to get tnrouga. Top Criminal, Wife Sought WASHINGTON Wl An expriie- flghter who aUegedly used his wife as an accomplice in a series of robberies, car thefts and jail breaks Thursday was put on the FBI's list of "10 most wanted men." He is Thomas Edward Young. 34, with many aliases. His wife. Mar garet Rita Margie young, 32. is also a widely sought fugitive. Both are charged with the bur glary of the State Bans of santanta. Kas.. on the night of Dec. 30, 1951. Young was put on the "most wanted" list as a replacement for Harry Burton, wanted for murder at Los Angeles and taken Into cus tody at Cody, Wyo., Feb. 7. BLIZZARD 'HITS NEW ENGLAND Residents of Port land, Me., walk along Congress Street after a northeast blizzard, worst of the year, had paralyzed all transporta tion, industry and business. Storm deposited 20 inches of snow. Mobs Battle Police In Tokyo Brawl TOKYO, Friday. Feb. 32 Thousands of Japanese Commit nlsts and sympathizers rioted In Tokyo Thursday in a demonstra tion against colonization" of Ja pan by the United States. At least 14 Japanese policemen were Injured In stone-throwing and tear gas melees before order was restored. . An estimated 11,300 police pa trolled the city to prevent further trouble. Other demonstrations Were re ported in Yokohama, the big In dustrial city of Osaka, Nagoya and elsewherej OPEN SHOW The Japanese) Communists, In , their most open postwar demon stration of violence, had set Thurs day as "Antl-Colonizatlon-of-Japan Day." (Even before the demonstrations subsided, the Peiping Radio was reporting that Chinese Commnnlit youth had sent "messages of sol- iaariiy- 10 me "Japanese Youth against colonialism.") There were no reports of iniorv to Americana and other foreigners. One mob stormed a railway sta tion demanding free ri0-s, threw tear gas bombs and forced their way onto a train. Another which included unlvirl. ty students battled into a nnllr. station demanding release of a schoolmate arrested last month for an anti-rearmament demonstra tion. Twenty-two of the students were arrested but later released. The Injured policemen were stoned by 400 demonstrators in tha Omorl District. Kyodo said. Three hundred students . and workers clashed with 300 nolle in a northwestern suburb. ATTACK Kyodo said 300 demnutrabira tacked two policemen In a Tokyo University auditorium and shouted ineres a aog in Here"; and Throw him out." The agency reported seven Hem. onstrators arrested in Tokvo and 18 Koreans picked up In Osaka. 1 UMT Bill Sets Cut of Forces WASHINGTON Wl The Senate gets a Universal Military Training bill Thursday with a built-in pro vision designed to cut 'down, the size and cost of the regular armed forces. . .v. .. . ,. Chairman Russell (D.-Oa.) re ported a 12 to 0 favorable vot by the Armed Services Committee for the measure Wednesday. "I hope to see actual training get under way before this year ends." Russell told a reporter. "This Is completely workable and fair legislation.' House debate on a similar meas ure is expected to begin Tuesday. Powerful opposition to the pro gram of six months basic train ing for 18 year olds Is being built up in Congress by leaders of farm, labor, educational and protestant church groups. Unless the house runs into lonor delays in passing its bi!, Russell said the Senate probably will hold off until action is completed there. The only surprise in the Senate bill was a section calling for a mandatory reduction in the regular or standing forces as UMT builds up a backlog of reserves. Russell explained it this way: As soon as UMT has Produced 300,000 graduates of its 6asic train ing and put them in the reserve, the Secretary of Defense must be gin semi-annual reductions in the regulars. There would be one less regular for every three trained UMT re serves until the regulators had bew reduced to 2,006,000.' LYDDA IS NOW LOD . LOD. Israel Wl This Is the new name of the Israel town form erly called Lydda. Lod Is the an cient Hebrew name for the place and is so mentioned In the Bible. Lod Is the site of Israel's central airport, and here St. George Is said to have killed the dragon.