Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, March 07, 1952, Page 14, Image 14

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    AGE FOURTEEN
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
FRIDAY. MARCH 7. 10B2
17 JF
17 4r -y.r
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FIRST SIGN OF TROUBLE The clenched fist Communist salute greets British offi
cials as they turn back a Chinese Chamber of Commerce "welcoming committee" from
Hong Kong at Fanling, 10 miles from the' Chinese border. The "committee" was enroute
to greet a "Communist Comfort Mission" bringing money to aid Chinese victims of , a
; squatters village fire last November, which had been stopped at the border. When
, word reached Hong Kong that the "Comfort Mission" had been stopped thousands of
Chinese workers started riots which lasted 40 minutes, during which foreigners were
stoned. Other members of the "welcoming committee", remained aboard the train.
Government Milk Market
Plan Leads To Baffling
Moment After Court Rule
By OVID A. MARTIN
Associated Press Farm Editor
WASHINGTON Wl A recent
U S. Supreme Court decision has
left Uncle Sam wondering how he
Is going to pay the bill for his
milk marketing programs in Day
ton, Springfield and Cincinnati,
Ohio, and in Boston and New York.
" Dairy cooperatives have been
Belping conduct the programs and
the Agriculture Department has
beeh paying them with funds ob-
win ea oy aeauciuig bihvuu
from the money wnicn mm naim
fcrs and distributors have paid for
Hie milk uiey use.
The deductions were taken from
milk suDDlled bv non-members as
ffell as members of the coopera
tives.
Five Boston area dairymen con
tested the legality of this deduction
arrangement; . and the Supreme
Court ruled this week that the law
providing for mUk market regula
tion does not authorize such de
ductions and payments to coopera
tives.
The government's problem now
Is to find some legal way to reim
burse the cooperatives for their
assistance, or to find new help
ers. In any case, it will go right
ahead with the milk marketing pro
grams. .
They are carried on not only in
the areas involved in the litigation
but also in 40 other urban areas.
Through the programs the depart
ment seeks to stabilize prices and
supplies of milk by setting mini
mum prices which handlers must
pay dairymen. It does not set re-
tall prices.
- In operating these programs.
there are a lot of chores to be
done. In certain periods of the
year, for example, there is more
milk offered lor sale than con
sumers will buy for drinking pur
poses. -
In some of the markets, the de
partment has set up arrangements
under which dairy cooperatives
operate plants during these periods
for diverting the surplus mUk into
butter, dried mUk and other dairy
products.
'The department has also ar
ranged for the cooperatives to do
marketing research work and to
make economic studies relating to
the demand lor milk.
. Officials said' arrangements ' may
be worked out under which -cooper
ative members will themselves
make regular payments to the co
operatives ior carrying out these
marketing services.
So that the full burden would
not fall on cooperative members,
the department - probably would
have to devise a method of assess'
Ing non-members.
Funds obtained in this way might
be used to pay salaries of govern
ment workers who would function
ior the non-members of the cooperatives.
Or they might be paid in turn
io me cooperatives,
officials emphasized that the Su
preme Court decision would not in
any noticeable way affect opera
tion of the price stabilizing ma
chinery of the milk programs.
They were fearful, however, that
whatever method is devised to fi
nance the marketing services rend-
Jop Fishermen
Banned From Area
TOKYO (iB A government spo-'
seaman auiiuuijceu rriaay Japanese-,
crab -fishin? vessels- will, ho
banned from the North Pacific this
year Because oi adverse American
reaction.
Kozen Hirokawa. minister of as-
riculture and forestry, reported the
tenon, several Japanese compan
ies had been competing for the
right to fish the area, untouched
by Nipponese since World War n.
Hirokawa- said -the government
would not recompense any of .the
concerns ior josses tney suffered
because of the change of plans. ,
red by the cooperatives might be
more expensive than the one that
the court -knocked out.
Of greater concern to ' the co
operatives, is the possibility that
many dairymen will sue the co
operatives for-return of fees paid
them in the past.
This would involve several mil
lion dollars and successful suits
might well wreck the. cooperatives.
The department wants the co
operatives to continue in existence.
They have. been effective in getting
dairymen, -to back the- mily pro
grams programs which the de
partment, believes have worked to
the mutual benefit of dairymen and
consumers- . . I
Reds Charge
Secret Pacts
MOSCOW LB . Izvestia, organ
of the Soviet government, assert
ed Friday the U.S. administrative
agreement with Japan contains
numerous secret clauses which are
being kept from the Japanese pub
lic. This was the Moscow paper's sec
ond bitter attack this week on the
agreement, which gives the United
States bases in Japan.
The published clauses alone. Iz
vestia said, make clear that the
U.S. is, perpetuating its occupation
of Japanese indefinitely. It said
me agreement gives full extra-ter-
MUNPAN, Korea l.fl Commu-
unlst truce negotiators Frldny
souum to forestall a possible naval
blockade of the Red China coast
or nn Invasion of the mainland.
The Reds proposed writing a ban
into a Korean armistice.
It seems thnt what they are
trying to do is to stretch the armi
stice agreement to any place In
ritoriality for Americans on Japa
nese territory.
Izvestia asserted the ' Japanese I document
people already hate the agreement Surrogate's Court by Mrs. Mabel
and said all "progressive human-1 s. Ingails. Mrs. Hater lee s sister,
ily is on the side of the Japanese, who received nothing.
Figure In
Will Dispute
Shot In Leg
NEW YORK t.fi Sol A. Rosen
blatt, society lawyer and disputed
heir to a J- P. Morgan grand
daughter's fortune, was wounded
Thursday night by a mystery gun
man as he entered his Park Avenue
home.
The attorney, one-time general
counsel for the Democratic Na
tional Committee, was struck in
the left thiiih. bv one of three shots
Ured by his assailant, who escaped
in a car wun anoiner man.
The par renortcd stolen, later
was found abandoned four blocks
north of Park Avenue.
Rosenblatt, 51, a key figure In
the currently contested will left by
Mrs. Eleanor Morgan Sallerlee, kin
of the late J. P. Morgan the eider,
said after the shooting:
"I wish I had something to tell
you. but I don't know anything."
His wound was described as not
serious. A policeman was assigned
to guard him at New lorn no
n ta .
Rosenblatt, besides handling the
leeal affairs of numerous society
Ilgures, is impartial cnairnian 01
the New York cioac and sun in
dustry, often a storm center In la
bor relations.
He served as an administrator
of the National Recovery Adminis
tration under the late President
Roosevelt.
The shooting came six hours
after hearings on the disputed will
had been postponed without ex
planation until Monday.
The will of Mrs. Satterlee. who
died last April 11. made Rosenblatt
the chief beneficiary to an estate
estimated from $35,000 to several
hundred thousand dollars. The
is being contested in
have any territory under; their con
trol," said Col. Don O, Dnrrnw.
He said tha Reds held that "any
military action would be prohib
ited, not only In Korea, but In any
other plaoe."
The Communist maneuver came
during a discussion of withdraw
ing naval forces from Korean wa
ters during a truce.
Harvard educated Col. Pu Shan
proposed deleting specific refer
ence to Korea.
narrow said Uie nronosnl anuar-
cntly was designed primarily to
prevent an Allied blockade of the
Minnortcd Invasion by Chlunir Kai-
Shek's Nationalist forces from
Formosa.
There has been unofficial talk
that the U.N. Command might at
tempt to enforce a Korean truce
by threatening to blockade the Chi
na coast and bomb Chinese Indus
trial centers if the Reds violate
the armistice.
Dnrrow Intimated the Commu- ln bo "permltlcd and tumbiled" 33 yiur old KtiMtlim mid hor 31
nlst move could hv far reaching to return to the other side after nn ,0nlhs old diiuulilor They mo In-
eltorta on the truce negotiations, armistice If they no desire. ,, " "., 1 1 1 y 0
Hut he emphasised the Hedn might The U.N. Command holds onlv a "'""a 1,1 1 "m111' vj
bo "Just exploring tho idea."
Another truce group negotiating ti"?; 1 '
prisoner exchango mot for alnio.il MIRROR ft Dl. Trtft
nn hour. It made no headway to- B -v I'linnunj i' People UO I VKJ
ward ending Die stalemate over 1 r" ' v
voluntary repatriation, f U Wtm in tht Homel i rOOQ Small SDOCO
Communist negotiator did ' c- I 1 9UAof.'i ti f
cept n revised version for exchnng- R Vff&Z LMtWUn A t ad$ VOU are!
lim interned foreign nationals. ! M-"" t Main "
It provides that all foreign civil- ZwwmVWVMiimmmlt$ '
lity should I try
another siW?1
9th and Pine
CM.
Phone 3188
V?i-?rr?7r
Simplicity
- - No. 3436
'
Watcher Tells
Of Murder
tOS ANGELES tfl Police held
William Kllnk. 37 year old refrig
erator repairman, on suspicion of
murder Friday and said they hnd
a witness wno saw him strunglc
a nurse to death In a downtown
hotel room.
The victim was identified as Mae
E. Mathls, about 40, formerly of
Oragerlon, Utah. She was a special
duty nurse, on call by various
hospitals.
Jordan Jones of Sacramento, Cnl
told Lt. Bob Reed of the homicide
detail:
"I looked through ' my window
and saw the couple' enter their
room. There was a brief period of
love making. Then, suddenly, the
man looped a belt around her neck
and began dragging her around
the floor.
"He kept pulling the belt tighter,
then started going through her
handbag and clothes, hauling the
body around as he did so. When lie
needed both hands he would take
the belt in his teeth, still holding
lt taut."
Jones said that for a time he
was dazed and unbelieving, then
he telephoned the clerk, who noti
fied police. Officers said the man
still held the belt In his hands
when they broke Into the room.
A fire department rescue squad
tried to revive the woman and a
doctor gave her adrenalin Injec
tions, then pronounced her dead.
Lt. Reed said Kllnk told him he
met the woman in a bar.
A good question with a good answer.. .that will
add to your whlikty-wlidom and enoyment.
We don't blame you one bit for not buying every
new brand of whiskey that comes to town.
Ounces are you're fairly well satisfied with what
you're now drinking.
Why change?
lint, honestly, can't there always be the possibility
that yon might do better? In the past, you've prob
ably chanced your brand in eolfee, or cigarettes,
fur example because you tried something that you
were told was better . , . and it turned out that way!
Well, that's just what happened to thousands
wlicii they tried Carstairs lor the first time.
Here' what they discovered I
They found Carstairs tasted smoother and mel
lower , . . that it cost less than other fine whiskies,
III 1 i- rrt.-nc envs: r i 1
fifes'! A 3tfsF"m
Try it and convince yourselfl
When vou want fine whiskey try Carswirs.
. You'll find it's a better drink at a better price!
45 QUART
CARSTAIRS BROS. DISTILLING CO, INC, NEW YORK, N. Y. BLENDED WHISKEY, K PROOf, 11 GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS
9th and Pine
Phono 3188
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