Chinese Banned, But Neighborhood Isn't Lily White SOUTH HAN rilANOIBCO lfl Tlis Southwood District, which last week voted against admitting it CIIiIiipho lumlly, found out Friday nlKhl It in nut in oll-C'uucumun ncigiiDorhood. i no illsclosurA win made ill n hitler, disorderly nicotinic nf 2110 persona who mot In n chinch com munlly center at thn request of tho ail properly owners who voted lO Hiimii tling Bheng to Ilia tmcl. A tntnl of 114 voted against tho former Nationalist army officer, now in nlrllnr mechunlc, Hohniir U, Hhcpley, dressed In Army punts nml u fluid Jacket step Pod to the speaker's ntmid mid mi Id: "You've had me among you for Home time, you have put up villi me. I have put tin with you." He described himself no it "hupn lmolo n hnlf Iluwallun." He mild ilit wife wmi it Polynesian, a full blooded Hawaiian. "Hhe I not an fitlr mi you," he "Hid quietly on he looked over tho audience, lu THe- Ily 1'ltANK JENKINS Duck In Missouri, a Republican by the name of William C. Cole In campaigning for congress. The other night, he addressed a gather Hue of Republlcnn women In St Joseph (St. Joe, to everybody who mew up hack In that part of the country. i He said: "If I'm elected, I won't slop at Just checking on Brain and auaii shortages. I'll demand an Invent Katlmi TO HF.K II" ANY OF" TUB ' IIOLB STORKS AT KORT KNOX bus fallen out of the bottom of the vault. Now there'! a allocking thought. i (i oeen no busy keeping tip on mink coiit.n and deep frccnes and free-for-nothlng vacations for the right people at luxury hotels In Florida that It hadn't occurred to me to wonder what's happening at Fort Knox. How Ioiibt hoii It been, do ynu reckon, alnce lomeboriy counted the lioid in the Dusement there? Here's another allocking Incident in me newt: A Cleveland (Ohio) woman tcle- phoned the police yesterday that Mic naa leu 11.400 in her old cornet at a downtown department (tore. "' She anlfl aha honaht a new eor. xscl and left the old one AND FOR GOT THE MONEY 811K HAD HIDDEN IN IT. Why l that allocking? I'll tell you why. As government geU worser and worser and fnollshcr. and foollaher and scrcwballcr and arrcwballer, Yxo been losing confidence pro gressively In the men aa practically Bole oixratora of our governmental machinery and have been coming around to the Idea UiM maybe after all the thing to do la to give I lie heave-ho to the men and put women Into the positions of trim! In our government. For one thing. I've said to my. self, they COULDN'T do any worse than Hie men have done. They MIOHT do better. In the average home, you know, the woman Is the balancer of the budget, Maybe. If we had enough women on the Job, they could AND WOULD balance the budget of the fr.leral govern, ment of the United States. It Is thus that my thinking has been hopefully running. Then comes till utterly shocking affair In Cleveland where a woman slashes all her loose money away Ui an old corset (Instead of putting It In the bank) and eventually goes down town to buy a new one, and puts the glamorous new one on and tosses the old one Into the store waste basket with no thought of the 1400 slmolcons and goes on her . wav. Why, even a man couldn't da any worse than man So, you see, there goes the Idea that Wfc might EASILY AND EF FORTLESSLY get rid of all our sAvernmcntal Ills by tho simple process of heaving the men out and putting women In In their places Poofl Just nxe a riiDDer Dm loon that has been touched by a lighted cigarette, I fenr there Is no easy and of .forties way. If we want better government, we'll have to get It he hard way. What is the hard way? This Is It: If we go about It the hard way, we the people will have to work a lot harder and more Intelligently at this business of government than we've done In the past. The way to get good government Is to get good leaders. If were to get tne kind of leaders we need, we the people will have to give real and construct Ivo thought to the candi dates who como before us socking our votes, We 11 have lo dispense with such political luxuries as pre indien and Intolerance and petty backbiting gossip and get right down to the brass tacks of getting GOOD men to do our Job of gov erning for us. WE'LL HAVE TO BE AS PARTI CULAR ABOUT THE KIND OF MEN WE'RE WILLING TO VOTE FOR AS WET) BE ABOUT THE KIND OF MEN WE'D BE WILL INO TO HAVE OUR DAUGHTERS MARRY. Something like that, I'd say, Is the hard way. I fear It's about the ONLY way we'll get really good government. Weather:-: FORECAST! Klamath Falls ami anil Saturday nlghti cloudy Sun day. High Saturday 35 1 low ftot ilay night 25i high Sunday 3R. Northern California, scattered light rain lint clearing later Saturday uivll becoming fair Saturday night. High Friday 27 Low last night .. 20 'Additional Weather on rag 9.) He auld he won a dlsublod war veteran who pin-chimed hli homo In 194(1. After living thoro a year, he mild he rented the home and moved to colinu, a nearby com muiiuy, "I like It here. Thiit'a why I In. vesica my money. Tlio property value huvo not decreased, huvo Itinu'J " Tlie audience applauded when he iminiicu. iho meelliiK broke up without any action nfttir Felix C, Burmont rend a atiilcinctil opposing the oiicngs as neighbors, "Mr. shong requested an opln- ion. no received one," burmont BIIUI. Alter the meollntr. Itnver i?nn, slllo, a local businessman, auld he in uuuiiik nm aiv.uou house, larg est In tho tract, tin for mile Ruinr. day "lo any person regardless of color, natloniillty, or creed." "I do not want to continue lly Willi a DUnch or h ontm Daiii. allle auld. Dog Fight Produces Ace Pilot SEOUL, Korea (TWA let f(-i,i over North Korea Saturday cost the Reds one MIO-15 fighter plane and iiroduced a new American Jet The new ace ! mi wnn.M w Whlsner,-' Shrcvepnrl, La Ho brought his MIO total to five and one-half kills Just in time 10 save a fellow nllm Ui.l !l. All,m Mount Clemens, Mich., whose plane had been hit and couldn't avoid enemy fire. Whlsner knocked down the Red awc,,t.w,ng fighter In a battle b1W 8' 8"br,, J"1" llnd Red MIOs. Two olhor MIGs were damaged In the light. SIX DAMAGES ...-'VSn.f'"" I"9 P"nl M ace. Whlsner Is credited also with damaging tlx MIOs. V His latest kill came on his 84lh mission. Air Force policy Is to re sign a pilot after he flies 100 missions. Pilot of propcllor-drlven Marine Corsairs and Panther Jet report- ?r,hcy. "i"ed nt lcBat 50 north of Kumsong hi an attack against 300 Communism camou Halted in white. Allied wnrpliines ron up a score of at least lo-o In their swirling Jet battles with Communist MIOs over North Korea last week, the i.;.. mr rorc reported. PILOT CLAIMS U.N. pilots claimed in Knn. stroyed. one nrnhnhiv and nine damaged. No U.N, planes But Red Rrounriflrn took another heavy toll. The Air Force's weekly summary said Communist anti-aircraft lire knocked down five Al- ncu pinnes. rive others failed to return from flights over Red Kn. rcn. .i.An,,Alr Forc spokesman said the pilots of some planes destroyed by grounriflre were rescued. Fighter bombers and light bomb ers spotted about 1,700 Communist miens rriaay night. Pilots claimed InO destroyed. GROUND QI'IET The ground front was quiet, even for these days of twilioht u. The biggest action across the front Involved only a lew Red platoons. Snow fell all along the front, but temperatures were relatively mild. A U.6. Eighth Army briefing of fleer said Allied ground troops killed, wounded and captured J.979 Reds during the week ended Feb. 21. That Is almost twice the figure iwi uiu previous WCCK. Portland Has Slush Trace PORTLAND M Cnlnmhln Oorge areas were snow covered Saturday and the lover ranked from a slushy trace In downtown Portland to five feet In drifts along the Columbia River lllolivi-av of here. The Woothor Bureau Raid warm er temperatures would be followed oy ram dummy and the grip of winter would be brief. East winds down the day night brought the snow and held back warmer weather waiting off the coast. While Portland's West Hills area toss reporting a near bllznard Friday night, Oregon City Defense Orders are Of Motion's By RICHARD rtsKK NEW YORK I Overall in. dustrlal production was high this week but the soft spots In the na tion's economy stuck out llko a soio thumb. It became Increasingly annnrent defense orders were the main stay of the nation's business. Production schedu cs sufferer! when military orders were cancel led, defense specifications changod or delivery dates stretched-out. There Just wasn't enough civllan otismcss to laKo up the slack. some Businessmen sain material restrictions for civilian production wcio nt tho bottom of their trou- nics. But there wero manv who doubt. ed civilian business would pick up to any great extent even if controls were relaxed. It took a lot of selling nnd some protly aggressive promoting to catch the shopper's eye. The con sumer was choosy and bargain conscious. He sought his purchases in me medium ana low-pricea lines, Dun and Brad.slrcct tho business pikm Two Demos Eyed as Candidates Hy The Associated Press A showdown fight for tho Demo cratic presidential nomination ap peared In the making Saturday be twoen Senators Kcfauver of Ten nessee and Kerr of Oklahoma- provided President Truman de cides nut to run. But Gov. Adlal Stevenson of Illi nois and Vice President Barklev still were prominent In the specula- UUII, nerr gained atronitth bv an- parently lining up Democratic lead ers In his own state behind a "favorite son" campaign. Senator Monroncy to.-okla.) said he would not oppose Kerr, and Gov. John ston Murray Ih expected to issue a statement supporting him. Carl V. Rice, Kansas national committeeman and a Kerr backer, has claimed Kerr will gain Okla homa's 24 delegation votes and enough others to have 200 before convention time. This first big test between Kc fauver and Kerr will come in Ne braska's primary April 1. in LiiA.-u.r.n Kerr'a chances depend partly on when Truman announces his plans. Tho Oklahoman says he will back the President If he runs. On the other hand, Kefauver says he will seek the nomination regardless of Truman. Senator McMahon ID. -Conn.), a Truman supporter, said Stevenson and Burkley were the two leading alternates to the President. Campaigning In Ohio Friday, Kefauver suggested "Congress could really assume control of the nation's purse airings" through the aid of a budget commission work ing with Congress. He praised the Presidents stand on Korea and said, "our foreign policy Is right In taking a stand with the nations of Western Eu rope." ntODI'CE WAR Senator Taft of Ohio, campaign ing in Vermont for the Republican presidential nomination, said the acnnmiMraiion loreign policy is "as likely to produce war as peace. He said he would reorganize the Stale Department If elected. Norway Leads Winter Games OSLO If! Here are unofficial team standings after 20 of 22 events In the winter Olympics (points based on a 10-5-4-3-2-1 score for the first six places): Norway 107 United States 84 y2 Finland 72 Austria AO Germany 48 Iialy 25 Nethcrlonds 24 Sweden 21 Switzerland 21 England 13 France 10 Canada 8 '4 Hungary 4 Belgium 1 Japan ' 'i II- nal hockey standings. Cable Cars Roll Again SAN FRANCISCO Ifl Cable cars, trolleys and buses are rolling again on San Francisco streets. A strike which had Immobilized the municipal- transportation svstem lor the past three days ended at midnight Friday. Even the Powell-Jackson cable line, seed of the strike which blos somed Wednesday, was back in operation. The entire system was Rtruck early Wednesday morning forcing some 2S0.0OO passengers to walk, hitchhike, or drive downtown. Tho strike ended when members of the AFL Carmen's Union unani mously approved a settlement their officers reached with city officials. Trouble began last week when six men on tho Powell cable line protested their schedules called for working their eight hours m more than 11 hours. Mayor Elmer E. Robinson said there would be no retaliation against the men. He said work schedules also would be (educed immediately to the 10-hour maxi mum. V reporting service, said shoppers curtailed their -buying slightly even In the face of aggressive promo tions. Unemployment continued nt the nation's big automobile centers. Stocks of new automobiles were reported up slightly in January In Uie field even In the - face of low production at the factories. Automotive , circles . pondered whether s car shortage or a cus tomer shortage was in the wind. In the steel negotiations things were touch and go. The CIO Staci workers' Union cancelled a week end strlko threat In order to give the Wage Stabilization Board more time to recommend a settlement of the dispute. But unless there Is a settlement, the .Walkout may come March 23. During the week Defense i Pro duction Administrator Mnnly Flol sclunnnn snld recont reports of growing metal surpluses are "com pletely erroneous" but he said an easing In supply of sheet steel and a few other commercial steel pro ducts will make some relaxation of controls possible soon.. Business Economy ilium aC sal , mmteiUvrflivtTiut irriftn tVt'f 'Hi '!m niiiii'iiii i ninwn h'ii t Wrin immrnrrairirni nnrrjiair tiim irnrrii irini n Price Five t'enU-14 Pages ieds MAPPING OUT possible location of missing Cessna with four Air Force men aboard are KASRU members (1 to r) Jerry Short, Lloyd (Pappy) 'Newlun and Eldon Alt. Newlun is State Board of Aeronautics Air Designee for Area 12, which includes most of South Central Oregon. . Kidnaped Baby Is Found Sat e MONTREAL. Wl Kidnaped three-year-old Barbara Nemeroff was returned safe and unharmed to her parents Saturday. Police found her on a downtown street and the parents demanded "fullest prosecution' for a 16-year-old boy who admitted the abduction. , The boy, nn employe of Morris Nemeroff, Barbara's father. In his leather goods manufacturing firm, was seized by two detectives as he shuffled along St. Catherine Street about a foot oenina tne attractive, dark-haired Utile girl. The kidnaper, who stole the child from her home Friday night In the absence of her parents, had de manded 50,000 for her safe re turn. The parents, reunited with their child at detective headquarters. Indonesian Cabinet Out JAKARTA, Indonesia Ml Pre mier Soektman and his 10 month old government quit Saturday and left for their unnamed successors the hot political issue of whether Indonesia should keep taking U.S. old under the Mutual Security Act (MSA). ' . ' . President Soekarno accepted Soe kimans resignation soon after It was submitted and prepared -lo name someone else to form a riew government. Soekiman's coalition government was the third to fall since the is land republic won Independence from the Netherlands 26 months ago. The Cabinet's fall became In evltablc after the premiers own party, the Moslem Mnsjumi, de cided Friday night to withdraw its support because the foreign minis try had agreed to U.S. help. Meanwhile, the mining Industry worked on a plant expansion pro gram Involving expenditure of two billion dollars. It was outlined by James K. Richardson of Kenne cott Copper Corp., at a meeting of mining and metallurgical engi neers. . ' . He said annual capacity of. the three leading non-ferrous metals will bo Increased by 1055 by the following amounts: Copper, 225. 000 tons: lead, 36,000 tons;- and zinc, 230,000 tons. During-the week the government reported people living on farms received rocord incomes last yeBr but the figure still was 40 per cent below the average of the non farm, population. . Income from, all sources of per sons living ' on farms averaged $1,020 compared with $1,707 for those living off fnrms. In the prev ious year the farm Income average was $829 and non-farm average was $1,563.- Prices on the . New York Stock Exchange showed . sharp declines most of tho week,, , Main Stay KLAMATH FALLS, ORKGON, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1952 tharge M&ssmre wept with happiness. Little Barbara, still hugging her "sleeping" doll named "Rosalyn" which she took away with her when kidnaped, was taken to po lice headquarters first to be with her parents and then was given a medical examination. The kidnaper, whose name was withheld by police, told reporters he had taken the child because he "likes girls." He said he had not molested the tot. Dark-eyed little Barbara was In the care of a maid, " Alice . La Chance, 19, when the snatch oc curred at the Nemeroff home. The abductor forced his way into the Nemeroff apartment Friday night, while the parents were away and ordered the 25-year-old mold, Alice Lachance, to dress the child. As he left with Barbara, he handed the hysterical maid a crudely hand-printed note in French warning against calling the police and demanding $50,000 ran som money be delivered to the shoe department of a Montreal de partment store. Unable to reach the parents, 'the maid Ignored the warning and called police, who immediately set off one of the biggest manhunts In Montreal history. . , Police said they had received a telephone tip Saturday from a woman who saw Uie little girl and the man and recognized them by broadcast descriptions. They were found Jn the bustling shopping crowd on one of Montreal's main downtown streets. TREATMENT 'X' Caught in a relaxing moment at the airport this morning were Lou Schneyder (standing) and Jack Kellum, 2050 Auburn. ;l , ' :. Rubber Back To Importers WASHINGTON-IAV i- The TJ.S, RovernmenCannounced Saturday It is turning back the nation's import ing of rubber ,to private industry. The government has been the sole importer of rubber since Dec. 29, 1950. It took over purchasing of the vital defense material in order to build a stockpile and at the same time check runaway prices charged by overseas produc ers. The Genera Services Adminis tration announced that the na tion's stockpile now has reached a safe enough level to allow a return to normal purchasing methods. When the srovernment took over. rubber - was selling in the world market at almost 80 cents a pound. It now is bringing around 38 cents. Jess Larson, General Services administrator, said the market is being returned to private hands "now that the conditions which im pelled the government to act as exclusive buyer and importer on lumber exist." Fired Employe Sues Board SALEM Wl A dismissed former Elate Liauor Commission employe sued the commission Thursday lor SllB.ouo damages. He is Charles p. Fontana, wno said the commission fired him without cause. Fontana. an investigator., was fired several months ago after working for the commission seven years. X v Telephone Sill No. 2748 Riot Basis Of Claim By General Br GEORGE A. MeARTHUR MUNSAN, Korea W) The Corn munlsts Saturday accused the Unit- ed Nations of "barbarously mas sacring large numbers" of prison ers in the U.N. prison camp on Koje Island. "Tne latest massacre tuny testi fies to the brutal inhumanity with which your side treats our person nel captured by your side," said Col. Tsai Chen-Wen. The Reds had been expected to Inject into the truce conference the Monday riot in which 69 Ko rean civilian internees were killed and 142 wounded. In an adlolnlne tent at Panmun- Jom the Reds accepted the U.N.- proposed monthly troop rotation ceiling of 35,000. Previously the Communists had insisted 30,000 men was sufficient. CLING TO DEMAND However, the Reds clung to their demand that only five ports of en try on each side be opened to in spection by neutral teams during an armistice. The U.N. Allies in sist on inspection at six entry ports. Col. Don Darrow said that after an agreement is reached on norta of entry "there still are quite a number of minor items. But they snouia not present much difficul ty unless the Communists become obstinate." However, the staff officers arent even discussing the biggest issue of all in the truce supervision con troversy whether the Reds may build and repair military airfields uuruig an armistice. communist staff officers again demanded that the UJ. accept Russia as a Communist representa tive on the . neutral inspection committee. WONT ARGUE United Nations negotiators again rewsea to oe orawn into debate, but accused the Reds of violat ing an oral agreement that mem- vers oi uie commission oe accept able iu ooin siaes. Despite the Red protest ovef the Koje Island riot, staff officers working on prisoner exchange plans made some progress Satur day. They now have reached virtual agreement on all but the key ques tion whether prisoners should be forcibly repatriated or given a cnoice. Fight Kills Six More KOJE ISLAND. Korea IM Of ficials of the United Nations pris oner of war camp said Saturday six more Korean civilian internees had died, raising the death toll in Monday's Communist-led riot to 7t!, including one American sol dier. They confirmed that one U.S. soldier died of a fractured skull and another was injured critical ly. The soldiers, part of a guard were beaten by the prisoners. Officials said the total of pris oners injured now stood at 139. Thirty-nine American soldiers were treated for wounds and 40 others suffered minor injuries. The rioting broke out when 750 members of the "Wolfhound" Reg iment of the 25th Division moved into a Communist-dominated com pound to quiet prisoners who were hurling insults at non-Communist prisoners in a nearby compound. Approximately 1,500 Communist civilian prisoners fell upon the sol diers with clubs, iron rods, tent stakes and flails made of barbed wire. The soldiers fired in self defense. Rulings May Settle Strike SAN FRANCISCO Wl Settle ment of San Francisco's citywide transit strike may hinge on two court rulings expected late Friday, Superior Judge Albert C. Wollen burg promised a decision on ac- lions by both the city operator of the municipal railway system and the striking AFL Carmen's Union. Now in its third dav. the shut down has forced some 800,000 dailv riders to wane, arive, hitchhike or stay home. Traffic congestion was evnerteri to ease Friday with most business es and offices closed for Washing ton's Birthday. Contending a strike against the city is illegal, the railway man agement seeks a restraining order against picketing by the 1,300 strik ing afl carmen. This would let 1.100 CIO carmen return to work. BIG BOND ISSUE ROSEBURG Wl The Roseburg School District will ask voters here to approve, in a March 14 election, a million and a half dollar bond issue. HARD TO BEAT PORTLAND lD The Geological Society of the Oregon Country held its 17th annual meeting here Fri day night and elected officers. The president: No.rls Stone. Lost Craft Believed Near Here By WALLACE MYERS Prom the evidence, a plane miss ing since yesterday morning with four servicemen aboard, probably Is down fairly near Klamath Falls, Four Air Force men on tnree day leaves took off from Redmond yesterday morning at 6:12 for a flight to Sacramento, where they all reside. The four-place Cessna cabin ship . has not been positively reported since but reports from persons here strongly indicate the plane flew low over Klamath Falls about 9 o'clock yesterday morning. Several people in the South sub urban area have reported seeing a plane flying low in the driving snow headed In a general south-, east direction. And a few minutes after the silver and green plane was seen here a plane was heard flying a bit south of the Chet Bar-, ton ranch in Poe Valley, i An air search base has been act up at Municipal Airport here. A McChord Field Air Rescue Team arrived here from Tacoma this morning. The Klamath Air Search and Rescue Unit, under authoriza tion of the State Board of Aero nautics, set up the search base last night. RESCUE GEAR McChord F i e 1 1 dispatched a snow weasel here on a truck late yesterday. The weasel is used for rescue work in rougn terrain or heavy snow that blocks ordinary vehicles. The four men aboard the miss ing plane were all members of an Air National Guard unit recently reactlviated and ordered to Geiger Field, Spokane. They were en route home for brief visits. The four men are: Pvt. Harley Pallette. Cpl. Ernest Kldwell, Cpl. Bruce Prinz (all of Sacramento) and Cpl. James Sims, Fair Oaks. Pallette was piloting the single engine plane when the party took off from Redmond yesterday morn ing. Apparently the plane carried no radio or its radio was not work ing. Civil Aeronautics Authority at the airport here said no radio check was received from the plane. STAYED AT REDMOND A second chartered plane, car- -rying five more of the Sacramento Guardsmen, did not take off from Redmond yesterday morning due to mechanical trouble. Aerial searching today was to be concentrated first in the Stukel mountain range. The missing plane was sliver with green trim and bore the num ber NC-1689D. Anyone who saw a km all cabin plane answering that description yesterday should Immediately phone the information to either the air search base at the airport, phone 5580, or to the Herald and News, 8111 or 8115. Four KASRU planes took off from the airport here late this morning, and plans called for a search to be concentrated in the area around Tennant where a tim ber faller reported he had heard a plane about 9:30 a.m. yesterday flying low and apparently In cir cles for about 10 minutes. The KASRU aircraft included planes piloted by Harris Brown. Ed Scholer, Jerry Short and Betty Gant, with observers O. D. Reeder, George Wardell, Jack Kellum and Joe Madarus. U.S. Has Lost 531 Varplanes TOKYO ffl The U.S. Far East Air Forces Saturday set its total combat loss of the Korean war at 531 aircraft. With non-ocmbat losses an nounced recently, this brlmrs the ever-all war loss to more than 1, 100 planes. These totals include losses to the Air Force, attached United Nations air units, and to shore-based Ma rine planes. It does not include Navy losses. During the same ceriod. with their much smnller air force, the Reds have lost 360 planes shot down in combat. Of these. 225 were MIGs. Burns Man Gets Award VALLEY FORGE, Pa. IPI An unpublished essay entitled "My Country" brought one of the Free dom Foundation's 11 top awards to Henry L. SlaJ;er. Burns, Ore. Each of the 11 winners received $1,500 checks and bronze plaques at ceremonies here Friday In the converted colonial barn near the; fields where George Washington and his armv spent the winter of 1777-78. The Foundation said they had made "outstanding contributions to the American way of life," and noted "a buoyancy and resurgence in the ranks of those who are speaking their ideas on freedom and God." The third annual prize list also Included cash awards to 47 other persons and organizations, includ ing 32 high school, publications. Canadian Gas Imports Fought SALT LAKE CITY W) A 10- state conference was told Satur day that Importation of Canadian natural gas into the Pacific North west would be a "calamity." Br P. Manley, executive secre tary of the Utah Coal Operators Association, made the statement at a protest meeting called by Council. "The Importation of natural gas from Canada," Mauley . said, 'urobablv would displace eight million tons of coal used annually In Idaho, Oregon, Washington and Montana. Utah alone ships about two million tons of coal each year Into these states and large ship ments also come, from Wyoming."