HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 10r2 PAGE FOUR ! FRANK JENKINS Hiltor Entered M second class matter at the post olltce of Klamath FaHs, Ore., on August 20, 1906, under act ol Congress, March 8. 1879 MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for publication of all the local news printed in this newspaper as well as all AP news SUBSCRIPTION RATES ( months 88.50 By mail ..... By Mall X. Bv BILL JENKINS Sitting here tills morning doing a Job that has to be gotten over wlUj .about once a nionw. uoing uirougn the file of letters to the editor and 'weeding out that that couldn't be used. Always a sad task for us because so many of them are on Interesting subjects that we would really like to see brought to the public attention. But also so filled .with libel that we wouldn't be pub lishing a paper long if we ran them. Such as the ones that accuse cer tain persons of various crimes. Or label other persons "sadists, brutes, degenerates, etc." Or take a whack at a public official and are prob ably exactly right but fail to sign their names or give any concrete proof of dereliction to duty. There are occasional times when We step out of line a trifle and bend a rule slightly. Every time we do we get in hot water right off the bat. So. so help me, never again, If we lay down the rules we'll stick to 'em. It will mean tossing out a lot of letters, Just as we're doing this mormmr. but it will i i , By DEB ADDISON It becomes evident now that Ba sin potato men got only what they Reserve, iney re ime potato grow crs, but they're lousy politicians! .Potatoes is politics. Our potato representatives. Scott Warren and Louis Lyon, went oack to Washington armed with potato marketing nisiory, costs ol proauc ing spuds and other pertinent data, and on the basis of it asked for a fair pitch, what happened? The 39 cent pen alty (the denial of the historic open market 19c. premium for Ba sin spuds plus the arbitrary 20 cent r.remium to Idaho) has had another 20 cents added to it. So now the penalty on Basin growers is 59 cents per hundred. What they should have done is thrown away all their data on po tatoes and substituted affidavits that Klamath County favored Harry S. Truman over Thomas E. Dewey by vote of 7620 to 6953 on the first Tuesday of November in 1948. If THAT wouldn't call for a "dts--aster adjustment" I ?don't know what wouldl "'is.' -: ., Of course, this colyum will have to confess to just as stupid a blun der. After the Klamath Basin Potato Festival last fall we "took in" the Deschutes-Central Oregon potato section as the North Suburban Area of the Klamath Basin. Hindsight is always better than foresight, but what we should have Cone was to have humbly petitioned to be annexed to Idaho. Abject apologies herewith are tendered to the Bend Bulletin and NEW YORK IX) What is a Jun ior Executive? You hear more and more about this character. But he seems to me a pretty mysterious and will-o'-the-wisp fellow, and I am not sure he really exists at all. I am beginning to think he is just a figment of somebody's imagination. No one can tell me for sure what Junior Executive really is, be cause nobody ever seems to have met one in the flesh. Go up to anyone you know who works in an office for a living and ask, "are you a Junior Execu tive?" He may flush with embarrassed pleasure or turn upon you in cold anger, but he is certain to answer, "who, me? of course hot." Everybody has heard of Junior Executives, but nobody will admit he is one. That's why I don't think there really are any. Opinion varies as to just what a Junior Executive is. Some people think of him as a fine clean modest alert young man who has climbed the first rung of the ladder of suc cess. Others see him as merely a J'oung stuffed shirt, a petty officer tyrant who tries to get ahead by aping the real executives. That's part of the mystery of the Junior , Executive he's anything you want to believe he is: a would be boss In rompers, or industry's new type Horatio Alger. And nobody seems to know for sure Just what his job is except to sit around and wait for the Sen ior Executive to drop dead. The clearest picture of these new toy tycoons of the business world is given in the magazine ads. You see two fine old Senior Executives discussing a busy young man seated at a desk in the back ground. ! One says, "I've got Bill there in mind for a top management Job. He came to me and suggested, 'let's switch to using Blotto type . writer ribbons.' Well, I did as he suggested, and that's why our bus iness tripled last month. Keep your eye on Bill." This romantic vision of the Jun ior Executive as a bright young man with simple, but overwhelm ingly successful ideas is becoming more and more popular. Clothing is being designed to - I m UP Lmn'ii!iniij.i,,!.ugiM-m .i.ii.LL4ii,.i.Lmiiw impiiu lu.lv. ii-Lji pij i mn h j n mi .. . .taaia "give that Junior Executive look." Banks are pleading: "Are you the Junior Executive type? Borrow from us anything from $50 to $100. more or less, payable back in two lifetimes." Even motor car models are now "styled for the Junior Executive." "Before long girls' finishing schools are going to Join the trend and give courses such as "the Junior Executive's wife: Her role in the communistlty." As I see it, however, this present BILL JENKINS Managing Editor year. 1 11.00 also mean a lot more peace and quiet in the office and fewer Irate phone calls. But It does seem a shame to be missing so much really interesting news. " All of which reminds us that a year ago this column made an of fer to open up the space to anyone who really wanted to write an ed itorial. More than that. We offered to pay cash money for the best of fering. To date only one editorial has been sent in and that one ran about two thousand words and was accompanied by a note saying that if so much as one word were changed the writer would sue. It seems that the wish to blast the pants off someone editorially is a wish that is only voiced and never taken further than that. I'd like to see a few of the opinions of Klamath Falls citizenry ex pressed. Just a reminder that the offer still stands. So sharpen up your pencils, bovs. and lav on. You'll never get read without writ ing. ? i1 the potato growers up thataway for Having tarred them with our brush. Now those good people also are auuermg under tne 59 cent penalty Any and all arbitrary ' political subdividing herewith also is reclnd ed, and the North Suburban Area of the Klamath Basin is no more. That, at least, should give them a fighting chance. We won't even comment nn ToVo. view's move to secede and join Ne vada, other than to commend them on a move in the right direction. Frank Tucker, the Chamber of Commerce man, said we missed the deeo significance behind the city's move to get in the adver tising business via the parking me ters. Frank said a lot of Deople have deplored the need for cluttering up the town with ad gadgets on the meters, but that that's not the im portant thing. The fact that the federal govern ment not only has skimmed off all the tax money cream but has taken most of the milk too leaving a municipality in the position of hav ing to scramble in a marble game to meet operating costs is some thing to think about. Brother, you're so right. So the next time vou start in vote for an official who is advocat ing bigger and better things (like the planned economy of the OPS) pause and remember that the citi zens of Oregon right now are faced with pungling un next year tor a tax bill that "amounts to almost half the total assessed valuation of all tne property in the state. legend will someday become a re ality. Sooner or later there will be created an actual live Junior Exec utive. And I predict he will meet disas ter by trying to live un to the rosy legend. It will happen like this: He will marry an expensive Jun ior Executive wife, make a $5,000 Junior Executive bank loan, and with it buy a Junior Executive suit and put up the down payments on a Junior Executive type house and a Junior Executive model car. . Unable to live on a Junior Exec utive salary, he will go up to the boss and say, "why don't we switch to Blotto typewriter ribbons? It'll triple business." Well, the boss will switch to Blotto typewriter ribbons and in three weeks the firm will be bank rupt, because nobody really can read letters written with Blotto typewriter ribbons. The Junior Executive will be tossed out of his swivel chair, and he will lose his wife, his home and his car, and be forced to pawn his suit. That's the danger of being a real life Junior Executive. One lousy idea and you're just the man in the street again. Army Cuts Mac's Staff NEW YORK IB An aide to Gen. Douglas MacArthur says the former Far Eastern commander has been forced to cut five mem bers from his eight-man personal staff. The Army, says the reduction is routine. MacArthur's aide. Col. Laurence E. Bunker, said Friday nlRht that orders from Army Secretary Frank Pace Jr. came through Feb. 12 di recting that the five be transferred within 60 days. Bunker added that, in addition to the five, the resignation last month of Lt. Col. Anthony Story, the general's former pilot, also was forced. In Washington, the Army said the staff reductions hod been made in line with treatment accorded to other five-star generals who like MacArthur were not assigned to any specific duly. . MacArthur had no comment on the matter, but Bunker told news men In New York that his chief did not agree to the reduction al though he obeyed the order. U.S. AID TO ISRAEL TELAVIV, Israel W Israel and the United States began Friday to negotiate a formal agreement for n million dollars in U.S. aid which already has begun to arrive under provisional arrangements. They'll Do It Every cop out op to the depot n . J I wstfr eo rSLrW n. . i. . nn n.i iui mm ii,hiWW k. m,,. iuWiM,,iii,,gu,i .mi.,-. I Bjiiitw'BnA Aaf The stockpiling of vital strategic materials as a aeiense precaution is an accepted part of this coun try's program of nreoarednrss Now government officials are work ing on a new plan that seems to have at least equal merit: the building of a reserve of tools, presses, special furnaces and other heavy industrial equipment. unoer me plan, a live-member commission with about $3 billion to spend over a four-year period would shop around to accumulate this stockpile of critical machine tools. The equipment purchased would be stored in warehouses not Installed In plants. It would be protected against rust and other deterioration. According to the Wall Street Journal, which first disclosed the plan, matters would, not end there. The buying commission would con stantly review its inventory, weed ing out ODsoieie tools ana buying new ones more adapted to the latest weapons. There are two big arguments for the program. The most Important is that a tool stockDile. added to already existing or projected indus trial facilities, would give the Unit ed States about 80 percent of the equipment it would need to fight an all-out war. TOOLS ' Should war come, only 20 percent of the nation's equipment needs would have to be supplied by last minute ordering. These would be mostly the tools that are subject to lots of changes to fit specifica tions of particular weapons. rnus industry could concentrate on these emergency Jobs rather than turning out large' numbers of the standard tools which are inev itably required in great volume when war production bits full scale. The bottlenecks which plague a na tion converting to war would be reduced to a minimum. There s a very close relation be tween availability of machine tools and top production, of course. And it takes a good while to reach production peaks after the tools are in hand. Heart Association Aid Makes A Better Life By WADE JONES Medical authorities estimate that about 10 million people in the Unit ed States have some form of heart disease. Illnesses of the heart and circulation are our leading cause oi aeatn. Such obvious facts certainly are enough to establish the enormity of the purely medical aspects of the disease. Less oovious ana mucn less understood, however, are the social aspect. What place is the cardiac to have in society? Can he hold a job? Can he earn a living? Doctors say that people with heart disease are generally better off working than worrying, provid ing the work ls not beyond their physical capacities. In fact, according to latest infor mation, a suitable Job may actual ly improve the cardiac's condition not make it worse. The cardiac has his limitations, of course. He can't do heavy work, he can't move fast for extended periods of time, and he shouldn't climb steps unless he can do so slowly and without carrying a heavy load. But these limitations are some times misunderstood. For Instance, some believe that workmen's com pensation rates go up when car diacs are hired. According to the American Heart Association the rates do not in crease when the condition of the handicapped worker is known, be cause he can then be placed in a suitable Job. At least one extensive survey has shown that cardiacs In 50 dif ferent industries more than held their own in competition with un- handicapped workers doing the same jobs. With most other results about even, the survey showed the car diacs actually produced 2.4 per cent more than the unimpaired workers. Apparently they produce moro to prove their worth In industry. All tne facts are not in on tne case of tne cardiacs. More must be known about the energy required to do certain tasks and run cer GENE WOODS, Insurance Chartered Life Underwriter, Chartered Property and Casualty Underwriter 122 South Ninth Klamath Falls, Oregon INSURANCE ACCOUNTS SOLICITED ON AUDIT AND ANALYSIS BASIS Fire . . Casualty . . Auto . . Life Top Old Line Companies Only - i' In World War II. the nation's war output reached Its highest lev el one year after the peine In ma chine tool output. This time the machine tool makers expect to hit the top this summer. Actual pro duction isn't figured to attain the maximum until at least nine months later. With assurances that full produc tion could be rapidly attained, the aeiense establishment would not need to keep so large a number of tanks, planes and guns on had in case of war. They would not have to figure on a long lag before new war equipment would be available. DOUBLE VALUE This has a double value. It means we would not be so saddled with so much equipment that might prove obsolete by the time actual combat began. And It means that a safe minimum defense could be had at much lower cost to the tax payer. For tools and other facil ities would not be as expensive as a big backlog of tnnks. planes and guns. When war came, we would get brand-new equipment fast. The second argument for the plan is that it would go far to ward solving the basic problem of the machine tool industry. As now operated, it is a feast or famine proposition. It booms in times of military preparedness, and lan guishes in normal peacetime. If the industry is to be "healthy" and its health would seem to be crucial to the future of any nation dependent for safety on today's costly and complex weapons, then it must have more stability. And the steady accumulation of a tool stockpile is a sensible means of providing that steadiness. ' The admitted risk of loss through obsolescence of tools in the stock pile appears relatively minor when set against the huge advantages tn safety and economy which the pro gram promises. The plan merits the fullest study by Congress and all others Interested in giving America security without causing lasting harm to its economic foun dations. for Cardiacs tain machines. Better tests must be developed to determine the in dividual's ability to work. Behind the efforts to determine these tilings is the American Heart Association. The goal of its an nual national campaign being held this month is $8 million. In addition to your dollars you can make n valuable contribution by making an attempt to under stand the many problems presented by heart disease. Such a contribution on your part can make "New Hope for Hearts" more than just a fund campaign slogan. Truce Parley Still Stalled MUNSAN. Korea 11 Allied and Communist truce negotiators of fered each other compromise pack age deals on troop rotation and ports of entry Friday. Each side said "no!" But their differences were nar rowed to only one port of entry and 5,000 men in the monthly ro tation celling. Originally the difference was nine ports of entry and 70,000 men. Once again the U.N. rejected the Reds' nomination of Soviet Russia as a member of the neutral in spection commission. Repercussions of the Communist led riot which left 69 Koreans dead and 142 wounded in an Allied com pound for civilian prisoners were expected in the. truce talks on pris oner exchange. Observers said Red delegates probably would try to use the Koge Island incident as a lever to get their own way in the delicate ne gotiations for exchanging prisoners and displaced civilians. Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep come down from their lofty crags only when forced by heavy winter snowdrifts. Phone 6369 Time ' V 1 I By Jimmy Ilatlo JACOBY on Canasta "In one of our regular afternoon games," writes a New York cor respondent, "one of the players put down an Initial meld consist lug of K-K-K-2 and 4-4-3. She then discurded, whereupon everybody pointed out that her meld counted only 80 points instead of tho 90 points that she actually needed. "The next pluycr asked: Do you hove another deuce In your hand?' The meldcr looked at her hand and said: 'Maybe I have a deuce and maybe I don't.' She then picked up the curds that she had melded and announced that she had made an insufficient meld. "The penalty was Unit she or her partner would have to meld 100 points (instead of only 90) as an initial meld in that hand. "This caused quite a fuss. It was clear thut she did actually have another deuce in her hand, so that she could have made her meld suf ficient by adding that deuce to the kings or to the fours. "She claimed she had the right to pick up the cards instead ol making the meld sufficient. The op ponents claimed that she was sup posed to make the meld sufficient if she possibly could. "Who is right?" The lady was perfectly within her rights in picking up the cards. The laws very cleurly slate that a play er in this situation "mav correct the Irregularity by melding addi tional cards from his hand" or "may return to his hond tho cards put down In error." When this law was written, we very carefully used the word "may" rather than - the word "must. We wanted to allow a choice In this situation. It is quite true that Ihe offender sometimes gains an advantage by putting down an insufficient meld and then picking up the cards. Her partner kows Just what to save for use later on. But sometimes the Insufficient meld puts the of fender at a great disadvantage. The penalty of having to meld an additional 10 points may be a se vere handicap. The laws commission assumed that honest players would very sel dom make this kind of mistake certainly nover deliberately. The purpose of the law, therefore. Is to correct the error without undue severity. Hence the offender Is al lowed to choose freely whether or not to make the meld sufficient. "What method of scorlne do vou use in a Canasta tournament or in a progressive game?" several cor respondents have asked. The best method I know of Is to start each round with a score of 1400 for both sides. In this wav. both sides start with a required count of 50 points. As the round gees on. howevtr, they go un to u ana izu points very rapidly. A round usually lasts a set time. rather than a set number of hands. When time Is culled, everybody gets one more chance to play, and then the hand Is scored even though perhaps nobody has melded out. At the end of each round, the .icore of each side Is counted In the usual way. Then the score of the lowerpalr is substractcd from the score of the winning pair. The winners take the difference as a plus; and the losers take the dif ference as a minus. For example, suppose the Smith have 4500 and the Browns have 3890 at the end of a round. The difference between the two scores is 610 points. The Smiths write plus 810 for their score; the Brown write down minus 610 points. I At the end of the evening (or laltcrnoon) the score for all the rounds is added up. You add up all the plus scores and subtract the total of all the minus scores. The pulr with the largest net toal is the winner. It's a good idea to limit the score during any one round. You can't win more than 2500 points no matter what the actual differ ence happens to be. The losers carry forward, the actual differ ence ns a minus, the tho winners get only 2500 points. For example, suppose the Smiths have 4500 points, and the Browns have only 1600 points. Tho true difference is 2000 points. The The Merrill Fire Department Presents Their 45th Annual Fireman's Ball Proceeds to be used to purchase new equipment MERRILL SATURDAY, FEB. 23 Music By BALDY'S BAND "Just Good Dance Music" Dancing 10 p.m. till 2 a.m. - $1.00 per person Is US Overplaying Its Indonesian Hand? By JOHN M, IIIOHTOWlIt WASHINGTON i The United States is In danger of "losing out." us some htuhly placed diplomat put It, In Indonesia probably hr cause it ovrrpluyed Ita hand there. This country hit sought to per suade the Indonesian government, which acts friendly but tulkx neu tral, to stand up and be counted on the side of the Western Ueinnc racles In the struttgle against Com numlsm. It has, according to the best In nirniullon available here, pressrd American aid mum Indonesia wild Ihe best of Intentions but In Mich ii wuy ns to mouse Ihe suspicions of a newly Independent people. These moves are regarded here as being at the root of the explo sion in U.B.-lndoncslan relations which occurred Thursday when Foreign Minister Achiued Soeliunl to resigned after oilier Cabinet members and much ol the Indo nesian Parliament refused ta back Ls lirst step toward a military aid agreement with the United Stales. Ureal Importance Is aiucltril to the Incident because the Indonesian Republic holds a highly strangle position In Iho Far Fast, siltliu: atop Australia and astride vital sea and air routes. It Is moreover ebmil the richest of the Fur Eastern territories In rubber, tin and on. And It Is a country which har. named independence from Us lorni er European masters and at the same time put down Communist forces which quickly aroso to elr.e Mine The situation described In tho first question Is. I four, all loo common. Some people will endure a toothache many times more agon izing Ihiin any llcellng puln n den tist might Inflict. It's a self-defeat-tug stute of mind that can and should be licked. "I have never been a coward." writes T. C. "but now I find I ant. "I have to gel a lot of denlul work done, and I have the moat awtul lear ol starting. How can I overcome this tear?" A So lur as I know, no one: looks forward with pleasure to hav ing denial work aone. However, alter all. when lt Is necessary, n is lor our own good, lt Is best to try to conquer tne tear much us possible, and to go right ahead. Q I'm five moiHlu prcgiiuiil, ana 1 would like to have my lop teeth pulled. Somo people suy it is aangerous and some say go ahead. What do you think? Mis. p. S. A This ' is a question which should be decided by your dcniusl and obstetrician Jointly. They can probably decide over the telephone whether or not It is necessary for you to have your teeth taken out at this tune, whether they should all be taken out at once or not, and what anesthetic you should re ceive. Q I would like some Informa tion as to whether so-called Jungle rot should be treated, or if thcro Is no cure for It? Mrs. D. M. A Jungle rot is probubly not a distinct skin disease. It seems to be a peculiarly bud condition ot the skin which comes in association with any one of several kinds of specific skin diseases In people lo cated In tropical countries. Some cases of Jungle rot nave been extraordinarily difficult to cure, but most of them huve re covered after appropriate manage ment and return to a more mod el ale climate. Q My doctor has Just told me that I have cerebral arterioscler osis. This horrillcs me because 1 understand lt leads to insanity. Is this true? Mrs. F.L. A Nearly everyone alter the age of 20, starts developing a cer tain amount of cercbrul arterios clerosis, or hardening of the ar teries. You should certainly give up wor rying that this will produce Inaunlty though you may notice that your memory Is not ns good as It used to be but whose Is? Q Through medical tests such as a bronchoscopy I have been told I have bronchiectasis. Please advise 11 there Is a cure for same? A. W. C. A Bronchiectasis ls the result of a long-continued chronic cough, usually resulting from infection in the sinuses or the breathing pas sageways. If the case is not too severe, good results are oltcn obtained by conquering the infection respons ible by administering penicillin or some similar substance, or other wise treating the basic cause. If the bronchiectasis Is advanced lung surgery offers tho best hope of satisfactory results. Smiths get credit for only 2500; but the Browns have to write down minus 2000 on their score. If the evening ends in a tie. It is customary to let the tying teams play one hand to breuk the tic. This doesn't take long, and most of the players crowd around to catch the tie-breaking hand with great excitement. Some players like to limit the effect of red threes in auch a tour nament. They give credit for only 100 points tor each three allow ing 800 for all four. If this rule l.i followed, It should bo announced at the beginning of the game. ONCK A DAV WASHINGTON tti V.B. Ro man Catholics may ba permitted to cat meat once a day on Wed nesdays during Lent this year, ex cept on Ash Wednesday. iiowcr In the new From .liikili'lu, Indonesia, Ah MKlnlrd Press stall wilier Dob Kroon imported aiilliorllallvc mine es predicted Premier Hoekliuan's in it, mill, tl,l uiivoriiment will I'A. slmi within a few days ns n result ol tno row over u n. am, In an Interview Friday former Foii-luii Minister Suebiirdlu aulrl the iimiimenienlH he hud iiiudr would net iiHinnenin - severiii mil lion dollars worth" ol military equipment. Hut ho Indicated they Involved only tliu strcnutlitnliiK ol Indone sia's constabulary and Us UIW.OOU man Kiinrrlllii-liiinlliiK army lor In ternal security mid did not lilntl Hie counliy to anv Mutual Dctcnse agreement with Iho United Hlates. He, said the U.M. hud ugieed to drop a class In MHA agreements er.lilng on Hie recipient nation to ....I.. nr. .1,111 ...III,..,-., ..Iillual lillt,," IH ll IIIIIIU LIL"1 iisMinicd by the United Stales. Ha suld the Unlled Hlates also hud agreed to replace the refer ence to using aid to strengthen the "tree worm against uiiwiiuinsiii win, the words. "Independent and sovereign niillnus. Sorb.irdlo said wnn tnese amenti nients the agreement did not "In irlnno Indonesia's Independent po sition." lie thought, therefore, that op position wan "not sincere, bill based on domestic power polllles. T...,.,Mir,-N MHilnimllNt nnlltlclltlis rhaiged the agreement violated In donesia S neilllUl polity mm steered the nation Into "the Amer ican orbit." Airsick Elephant Passes LONDON tfi Booiinia, nil ele phant who wanted to Join the elicits but couldn't stand tho heights, died ol ulrsicxness una out-nic tiniiniyacho nl London air port Saturday despite zoo dues and three bottles of brandy. Zoonien, who sal up all night In a heated hut with their patient, said flying Just didn't agree with the Siamese pachyderm. Their diagnosis: Colic. When Boonma tottered wooilly off a plane from Tripoli last Mon duy on Ihe next to Inst leg of n Journey from Thailand to Brussels the docs bedded down their charge and raided Ihe airport cock tail bur lor brandy. "Wo gotta wurm 'lm up," one bustling nurse explained. Handlers templed the sullrrer with rice puddings specially cooked In the airport kitchen and weighing five pounds apiece but Boonma Just sighed and looked awuy. They tried cabbugrn, Iresh grass, baled hay, and even oranges but Boonma turned up four feel of nose. When the brandy bolllea started arriving the elephant brightened a bit. Alter the third, Bnonina burped and came as near to smiling as possible under Ihe circumstances. A bedside bulletin sold "danger ously HI but there's still hope." But there was a relapse. And Boonina died. Soviets Say Prisoners Used MOSCOW im The Soviet press said Saturday Americans are using Chinese and Korean war pris oners for atomic bomb experi ments. The papers said the charges ori ginated with tho Chinese Commu nist organ, Jen Mln J In Pao m Pelplng. The Chinese Red paper also claimed Chinese prisoners nre be ing used fur bncterlolnglcal war fare experiments. It said a whole shipload of prisoners recently was taken away In a British ship for these purposes. Firemen Seek Cause of Blaze ASTORIA I Firemen Satur day probed through the wreckage of a lour-story hotel to find the jcause of Friday night's fire which I did an estimated $200,000 damage, I The building was the Slddall lin tel. The Humes were discovered in the basement of the building at &:45 p.m. Six hours Inter the blaze broke tnrougn tne root. The hotel's 25 guests were noti fied in time to make nn orderly departure. Patrons In a next door theater were asked to lenvc when firemen thought Iho blaze might spread. Rolling Log Hurts Camp 6 Worker O. L. Saknllch, 67, Weyerhaeu ser Timber Company employe In jured at Camp Six Inte yesterday, was reported In "fair" condition at Klamath Valley Hospital today. Saknllch, Injure! by a rolling log, may have suffered Internal Injuries. Further examinations were to be made today. Kalcr ambulnnce brought, Sakn llch to the hospital nt 6:30 r n., yesterday. o o J It 1 PAUL PATTERSON JR., son of Mr. n'ntl Mrs. II, V. Patterson, 524 N. 2nd, Is taking basic training at Lackland Air Forco Uaso, Sun Antonio, Tex. lie grad uated' with tho class of 1052 KUIIS and was attend ing Southern Oregon Col lege, when he enlisted In December. Unification , Cut Probed "' WASHINGTON Lit Becrelary of Defense l.ovelt will be called before Congress upon his return from l.lbson In explain what some Legislators, Mild was a plun lor further scparallng the Armed Serv ices. Chnlrmnn Homier iD.-N.C.) suld his House Kxpcntllltire subcom mittee has seeu u Pentagon docu ment in Berlin directing Uie Air Force to establish Us own supply system. Its own corps of engineers unci oilier special services. These have been furnished III the pail by the Army. Rep. llrownson (II. -hid ,) said the, cost of setting up separate Air Force services "runs Into billions ol dollars." The chairman said the subcom mittee will hear l.ovetl, Chairman Small of the Munitions Hoard and the three servlro secretaries In a closed session. It will be held two or three duys niter l.ovelt returns, Uonner told newsmen, Ihe subcommittee probed a wide range of subjects Friday In con tinuing Its eflort to locale wast and duplication III the military es tablishment, lt will continue hear ings next Wednesday, wilh Km I K. Bendetsen. assistant secrelury of Ihe Army, as the main wilncil Jet Halves Light Plane ANCHORAGE, Alaska 11- Two military men whoso light plane wus sliced In two at 1.300 feet by ai Jet fighter were leured dead Satur day. Air Force spokesmrn suld Uie Jet F-04. piloted by MuJ. Warren Putterson. was approaching Kl mendnrf Air Force Huso under reg ular landing procedure Thursday when It struck the i'lper Cub plana over Cook Intel west of Anchoruge. Major Patcrson. veteran of the Koreun and Second World Wars, landed Uie Jet plane safely de spite damage In Uie collision. Aboard the light plane were two military men who had rented It for on afternoon flight. Their names were withheld until rela tives are notllled. Search plane pilots sighted the wreckage on the beach. There were no signs of life. At 40 miles above the earth the temperature reaches 170 degrees above zero, snva the National Geo graphic Society. 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