PAOB FOURTESf HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON -' , t ,' s ) -aw . - . , .4 (NEA Tthphotet ICY BEACHHEAD J0?8' Canadian regiment troopers alight from their boats to establish a beach head on the enemy side of the Imjin River in North Korea. The river is presently held by United Nations force tot because of atrategic withdrawals, counter advances are necessary. (Canadian Army photo.) Eldorado Heights Section About Ready To Go; City Works On Ground Owners Eldorado Heights, proposed new city residential section, has about battled its way through a series of hitches and actual start on the tint development area may be made before long. The modem, picturesque develop ment in the rolling hills behind Pacific Terrace, who conceived severl months ago and overall layout work done by Morrison and How- , ard. architects and city planners. The City Planning Board and Council both approved the plans and then turned over several legal problems to City Atty. Henry Per- . kjns. One major hitch was overcome when Perkins himself bought a big block of lots in the area from the county. Since then, Perkins has been busy trying to get 63 per sons who won some 2O0 other lots in the area to agree to replannig. ' Now Perkins says all but five of .these lot owners have been . reached and have agreed to go 1 alonsr with the new development. Eldorado Heights, as planned by 'Morrison and Howard, is to be ' modern residential section with , shopping, school, park areas and over 1100 building lots. By employing contour planning rather than the common gridiron method, the architectural engineers cleverly avoided steep street ' grades. Steepest grade in the en tire layout wiu oe two snort sec tions with about the same degree Faculty Yives Name Officers . : Faculty wives met March 3 at the home of Mrs. Vem Speirs and the following officers were elected: Mrs. Maurice Anderson, vice presi dent; Mrs. Roland Krieb, secretary-treasurer. Hostesses for the meeting were Mrs. Gary Robertson, Mrs. Lowell Kaup and Mrs. Calvin Bonney. Mrs. Griffith appointed Mrs. Jo seph Keuter as telephone chairman assisted by Mrs. James Palmer. Mrs. John Drysdale, Mrs. Lowell Kaup and Mrs. Robert Hender shott. Mrs. Buell Ward is chairman of the April meeting at the Leonard curies, 4430 Laverne. ... . Students Take Over Store UNIVERSITY OF OREGON Eu mme.TVMIr fnrinta frnm 1T1.M 8th Falls, on a staff of 54-university students, took over manage ment of Llpman, Wolfe & Co., re tail store of Portland, Friday. Retail merchandising students of the University of Oregon operated the Portland firm for one day heading the departments and the activities of the concern for the annual upman-wone day lor stu dents. fitllripnta fmm Wlamalh and the positions' they held: Roy xi. uiuorecni, son 01 Mr. and Mrs J. F. Glubrecht, 701 N. 11th St., A Spnlni In hualriBe. omlnl.t..!! in charge of the linen and bedding department; James L. Griggs, son i im. uiiu ivirs, n u, -tjriggs 4305 LaVerne Ave., a senior in bus, iness administration, restaurant manager; Cletus G. Hover, son of Mr. and Mrs. M. W.- Hover, 315 Alameda St., a senior in business, cashier superviser; and Mary L. Stanbery, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. O. R. Stanbery, 2159 Kiln St., senior in business, neckwear buyer. Oil Industry Strike Called Off WASHINGTON (fl An oil and gas industry strike scheduled for midnight Sunday was postponed friaay at tne government s re quest. . The leader of the 'coalition of '22 CIO, AFL and independent labor groups which had threatened the walkout said It was being called off to let the Wage Stabilization Board recommend a solution. Approxi mately 250,000 workers are in volved. : of incline as the Main Street rail way underpass. The first area to be developed is to be a triangular section bor dering Van Ness Street and offer ing a little over 200 building lots, Under the present plan, this area is cut up into more than 200 25- loot lots, wnen tne area is re- platted as an Eldorado Heights section, lot sizes will vary from a 60-foot minimum to well over 100 feet. Lot owners who agree to the re platting, are to turn their lots over to the city for the replatting and when the replatting is completed, receive in return lots of as nearly the same area and size as possi ble. - i Once the replatting is done, lots wiu go on sale. 5 V ' ' 'N 1 Mrs. Baldwin Passes at 66 Mrs. James Baldwin, the former Mrs. Margaret Thoma of Merrill, died Friday in a Sacramento hos pital, sne was 6S years old. Mrs. Baldwin came to the Klam ath country in 1913. and left in 1923 It was her wish that there be no funeral. . Survivors include a daughter Mrs. Burford Kaylor. Mt. Lakl: a son, Walt Thoma, Tacoma; her husband, James Baldwin, five grandsons and a granddaughter; a sister, Mrs. A. E. Wank, Port land: and two brothers. George and Fritz Strauch both of Portland. She had been ill with cancer about a year. Slides Close Parts Of 199 EUREKA. Calif, (fl U.S. high way 199. which runs from Yreka across tne mountains to Mediord, Ore., was closed at intervals Fri day because of slides. The highway department said It did not have information on the exact location of the slides. But It said that U.S. 101. the Red wood highway, was open all the way 10 tne Oregon border. MORE PROBING WASHINGTON tfl The Senate Rules Committee. Friday, voted to provide S100.000 for an investiga tion of the Alien Property Office, a division of the Justice Department under Atty. Gen. McGrath. seriate approval is reauired be fore the probe can be started. 1 WITNESS Blonde Mrs. Olga Konow of New York City, had a bright smile as she arrived in Washington to testify in the senate probe of surplus oil tanker deals. Mrs. Konow, vice president of the American Viking Corp., has been named by several witnesses as the person who showed a group of public figures the way to a $450,000 profit on $1,000 invested in a firm which bought and sold three of the tankers, ob tained from the old Mari time Commission. FBI Nabs Tax Dodge Suspect TACOMA UK John F. Loughran formerly of Buckley, Wash., and formerly manager of the Cumber land Lumber Co. was arrested Thursday, by federal agents at Sheridan, Ore, on a secret Indict ment charging that he understated gross receipts of the business dur ing 1945, 1946. 1947 and 1948. Assistant VS. Attorney Harry Sager said the indictment return ed by the federal grand Jury here a week ago accuses . Loughran of underestimating on partnership tax statements the company's gross receipts for 1945 by $14,000: for 1946 by 123.000: for 1947 bv SliM and ior 1U4, su.uou. In addition, Sager said, he Is charged with padding expenses In 1947 by $2,000 and In 1948 by $3,000. Loughran was released on 12.500 bond alter nis arrest. SATURDAY, MAIICI1 8, 10(52 Business Outlook Not So Bright As Veek Ago; Some Good Points Registered H RICHARD FISKE NEW YORK Wl Alter looking over the soft spots In the economy mis week businessmen iook a aim mer view of the weeks ahead. Industrial nroductlon was at a high level on a nationwide basis thanks to defense orders. But the weak snots were becoming more pronounced and more widespread. Poor business in the textile and shoe Industries was especially no ticeable. Factories rut back their nroductlon. Work weeks were snort ened. In some case mills were closed. Durum the week Morjlllser Charles E. Wilson directed the De fense Department to cnannoi ne gotiated war contracts to "substan tial unemployment" areas. These areas, no snio, wouio kci Klamathites Hurt In Wreck SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. I Two Klamath Falls, Ore., women and two young children apparently were recovering Friday from ser ious injuries received in an auto mobile accident. Thev are Mrs. Julia Nelson. 43: her daughter. Mrs. Betty Erlcks. 20, and Mrs. Erlcks' two children. Katherine Brennan, 3, and Edward Brennan, 2. All were injured seriously last Monday morning when the auto mobile driven by Mrs. tricks went out of control four miles south of here. Mrs. Nelson was the most criti cally hurt with broken legs and head injuries. She since has Improved, and the others also reportedly were Improv ing. All are in Ule French hospital here. A NEW CAR APPEARANCE! People DO TOO read small space ads - you ore! , , ...for the price of a paint job! 45 Fay Montgomery, our thorough ly . esperienced body-man in chore of our madam Body and Point Department, WORK GUARANTEED! Let' ut '"manicure" the dent end scratches your car's picked up this win ter. Free estimates cheer fully given. If Your Credit's Good... It's Good With Us! Anderson Auto Service 632 Walnut (By the. Post Office) Ph. 8166 Bids Due On Palisades Dam DENVER VH The Reclama tion Bureau announced . Frldav it expects to call (or bids this month for construction of the huge Pali sades Dam in Idaho. Bids may also be called on sev eral jobs in the Columbia Basin Irrigation protect in Washington State. The Palisades projects In Eastern Idaho Involves an earth-fill dam that will be 2,100 feet long. 2,300 last wide at the base anri 260 feet high. Columbia Basin bid invitations are expected on these projects: Construction of about 48 miles of unlined laterals canals and sub laterals and l.S miles of pipe line Drilling of 40 drainage, nheprva. tion wells to a 60-foot depth near Moses Lake. Installation of Uchtine stnnrtorrf. for street lighting in the town of Construction of twn mllee. nr ,,n. imeo wasieway near Moses Lake. Fir, Hemlock Ceilings Revealed WASHINGTON tB Sen. Macr- nuson said Friday that the Office of Price Stabilization had advised him the order for uniform price ceilings for West Coast douglas fir anu ncmiocK lumoer wiu oe ef fective March 18. The OPS has not announced the provisions of the order. The Wash ington senator said two days ago uiai me oraer nan been signed w Administrator Arnall. The OPS said at that time it would not be ready to announce the provisions until tne middle of next week. preference provided contractors there can meet the lowest negotiat ed price obtainable anywhere else. The notion excluded plants mak ing textiles, shoes and apparel in tho depressed areas until industry wide hearings have determined the Impact of such aid on other geo graphical areas. Malcolm McNalr of the Harvard University Business School said the retail sales picture for the sprins looks a lot less rosy than It did two month ago. He told tho Executive Committee of tho National Retail Dry Goods Association, Unit he had been over opttmistlo in January when he pre dicted retail sales would show an Increase of five per cent over last spring. With the economic changes in mind. McNalr said It now anueared sales would rise only one per cent or Just "break even". Dun and Bradstreet, the busi ness reporting service, said retail ers In most lines were unable to match the sales figures 01 a year BThe week did have its good point, however. Steel production, for in stance, set a new weekly produc tion record of 2.104.000 tons. Tne highest previous output was 2.087,' 000 tons in tne weeK 01 Liec. if. On the New York Stock Exchange prices gained ground during the Ui past ignt monins. .1 week, with a lusty shove on Tues day by the strongest advance in the past eight monins. Truman Rests In Florida KEY WEST. Fla. Wl President Truman settled down 8aturday at his favorite camp to limber up for the 1952 political championship 1IRM. He Intends to stump the coun try, virtually state by slate. In tms years election campaigns, el' titer as a candidate for re-election or the champion of the Democratic party's national and congressional candidates. The President, who flew here from Washington Friday, took to the beach for a swim in the Atlan tic and a sunbath at the enlisted men's beach of this Naval sub marine station. He plans' to slay here for three weeks, unless there should be a change for the worse in the con dition of Mrs. David W. Wallace. Mrs. Truman's 89-year old mother who is seriously 111 at Blair House in Washington. Truman's close associates think he definitely will announce his can didacy for re-election, or his In tention to give up the Presidency, in an Important political speech in Washington March 39, the day aft er his return to Washington. The occasion will be the SlOO-a-plate Democratic Jefferson-Jackson dinner In the National Guard armory. AAundt Predicts Success r In Killing Truman Bill To Reorganize Tax Unit llv .101': HAM, WASHINGTON Ml Sell. Miinelt (R.-S.U.) predicted Saturday Sen ate opponents n( President Tru man a plan to rcoiuanlso tho tux- collecting service will muster the necessary 49 voles to kill it. He said In an Interview Hie Presi dent's letter sent to the Capitol Fri day In support of tho plan was a "brazen cllorl to divert attention from conditions of grull" in the administration. Other senators opposed to the plan to reshuffle the hciiiuIiiI plagued Internal Revenue llureiiii were not so certain It could be de feated. One privately told a re porter It would bo possible to mus ter 61 votes against it it all 61 members opposed turned un when the showdown comes next week. But this same source milium out It utmost never was possible to get all senators In attendance anil tlmt ovory absentee In effect was u vnlo tor tho pliin, 'ilio law uovernlng reonanlsa Hon meusurcs requires a majority ni 1110 11111 ineiiiueraiup, or 4U votes, to reject a presidential pro. posai. A second tart letter the Prest dent wrote Friday met milder re action on Capitol Hill. In it he In lormed Hep. Chelf (D-Kyl that the Justice Department had neither lime nor personnel to nrovldo Chi'lf's House subcommittee with a long list of tlula It requested on nix cases. Trillium said he was barklnit At tornry General MoOralh'a refusal 10 supply sueli information bv derlnu all government agencies to uiiu down any sucn requests oy ina si ucomm nee. The subcommittee Is Invcstlgat. Urn the J11.il co Denarlment. ac (used of laxity In prosecuting tax Insv vlolallons. The subcommittee luul asked for a list of all cases Car Pools Cut Into Bus Profit PORTLAND 1 Portland com muters have Increased their car pools and that Is one of the rea sons Oregon Motor Stages lost S50,- 651 last year, a spokesman for the bus firm said Friday. The company has annlled for a fare Increase. At a Public Utilities Commission hearing on the bddIi- cation, D. W. Wilson, comnany con troller, said last year s loss was nearly twice as big as 1950 s. Fare increases ranging from 6 to 65 cents were asked. 'll'l';'ljjrS PIN SWALLOWER Here's 20-month-oltl Shnron Fuchs of Los Angeles, holding an X-ray of her lungs which shows how a straight "pin was lodged in a bronchial tube. It was removed with out surgery through use of a stereo-fluoroscone, an X ray instrument that gives three-dimensional view of the body's interior. Doctors described it as a rear opera tion in which the surgeon, unable to see what he is doing, is directed by a second medic who views the fluoroscope. In the 14th Century, some peo ple Uiought eyeglasses were an in vention of the devil. Not Ready, Case Closed ,NEW YORK 'iK "I guess she nisi wasn't ready for marriage," William Hebrlmt. odverllslmr sales- man. Informed Magistrate Cornlim Ait'Kennee. "Really I'd like to get that stulf back from her." The '.'D-ycar old Sebrlng was re ferring to three pairs of black lace panties at $25 a pair and a cl- Kiiret Hunter he said he nave his former fiancee, 33-year old Linda Aaron, In pluce of an engagement ring. "Well," said the pretty stenog rapher. "I'd like to keen the rl. gurct lighter, your honor, Just as 11 token of fond recollection. But If lie wunks the panties back, I'll give thorn to him. I didn't wear the panties." case closed, ruled McKennee, Voice Held To Be Getting Through NEW YORK I A BOvernment official soys that about one-lourUi of tho Voice of America's pro urams are getting through to Mos cow and Leningrad despite Bovlet JiitiinitniT attempts. Dr. Wilson Complon, hesd of Uie lecenllv formed Internniinnal in. formation Administration, added lhal the Voice broadcasts are reachlnu un to 75 ner cent of nlhr Russian areas. Complon spoke Friday nluht at service commemorating the 1 0 J birthday anniversary 0 f Thomas O. Masarvk. founder and first President of the Czechoslovak Kepubllc. AN EASY WAY TO HAVE A PIANO rm en rnl a Uvcl? mw tplml plint frant lh l.nli a, Mana run cm p.tir, 1-0 N. 11k, ai , u naalhlr rat. After a rcaioaabla lima vaa iib. If torn Willi, (-Sanaa fram rani la pur rnaia airarmanl. Tha rani alrraO Pala is all rrtdllaS la yanr parrtaaia arcaanl arr. Taa manlhly parmanla ran na llllla hlfbar Iban rani. Or, II yap pra. In the pant six years which the do pilllliicnt I111U fulled III prosouilln, delayed notion on, or sent back to 11 10 agency which oiluliiully rec ommended action. , The President wrote Chelf that ho had "no wish to obstruct" any "legitimate Inquiry ... I am Jui.t as unxiuus us anyone rise prob ably more nnxliins than anyone else . to find out" If there la any thing wrong in the Justice Depart ment "and correct It." Hut Trumiin said Chelt's requent "Is su broud and nwnrnlnu in m-onp lhal It would M-Hounly Interfere with the conduct of the govern ment's business ..." It would cost "millions of dollars." he add ed. Chelf said the President's action would delay Hie slx-moiilh dead line he Hull placed on Ills Inquiry, In iiunllier action In the Invcntl- gallon in-lit, the Senate Itules Com. millet) I'Yhliiy voted 1 1)0.01)0 to Ntudy rliarues of huge prollta. fat lees, "Bravo mlsmanimeiiienl" and favoritism" in the alien properly office which controls millions of ' dollars In war-selrcd linnets. BUS SERVICE mmm af hi raiiNOU sua iini 04 KIpimip. Ave. kpp 07 To Portland: Lv, 9:15 a.m. Arrive Portland 6:15 p.m. Lv. 4:00 p.m. Arrive Portland 12:35 a.m. To Boiie, Salt Lake and Eaiti Lv. 9:15 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. To The Dallei end Spokane: Lv. 9:15 a.m. Skeletons found In northern Alaska prove that musk oxen ranged there less than ISO years ago. Dry Skin... turns soft in seconds! Oranse Skin Cream No need to put up with dry skin (and Its threat of lines and wrinkles)! 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