PAGE TWO -II I " ' I 1 1 jl " ," .j,'"J KFJI 11H He P8T , Monday Evening, March II ( 00 Gabritl Hastier MB3 e:15 Klamath Theater Qulg JO Around Town Newi 8:48 Bam Hayea. Newm MBS 8:55 Bill Henry MBS 1:011 Prcudly We Kail '30 Brtfht Star , :00 Let Oeorfe Do It MBS 8:;.0 Hnllvworm Theater Mnft 8--00 Glenn Hardy News MBS . 0 It Fulton Lewie Maws UBS 9:'JO Mutual Kevsreel MBS 8:45 Sports Mnal 8:SS S-Mlnute rinsl MBS 10.-00 I Love A Mystery MBS , 10:19 Survival 10:.-!0 Crowell Nert MBS 31:00 Night Owls News 11:05 Nllhl Owls Club i ' -13:00 Sin OH . KFJI 1150 Ke. PST Tuesday, March 11 a 00 Musical Reveille . C:43 arm Reporter S:55 Beelonal News ' 7:00 Hemingway Newa MBS 1:15 Breskfest Gan MBS :30 Heedllnes and Bylines T:45 Bert Buya 1:00 Cecil Brown MBS IS Breakfast Ganf MBS 30 Haven of Best MBS , 8:00 Homemaker Harmonies 9:15 Garden Guide 8:30 Plstler Party S:5 ramtllar Favorites 10:00 Glenn Hardy. News MBS 10:15 Tello Test MBS 10:30 La Polntea 10:45 Concert 10:50 Currlns . 10:53 Ken Carson MBS 11:00 Ladles Fair MBS 11:23 News MBS 11:50 Queen for a Day MBS 13:00 Name Bands 1:15 Noondav News 11:30 Your Dane Tunea 1S:45 Music Box ., .. 11:50 Market St Livestock lm.lS Klamath Notes 1:00 Jack Klrkwood MBS 1:30 Take a Number MBS 3:00 News MBS 1:05 News MBS 1:15 Two at 1 15 3:45 Answer Man MBS 1:00 Ricky's Request , 4:00 Behind the Story MBS 4:15 Hemlnrway Newa MBS 4.30 Curt Masrey Time MBb 4:45 Sam Hayes MBS 8:00 Sergeant Prefton MBS 8:30 Sky King MBS 8:55 Cecil Brown MBS COO Gabriel Heatter MBS (:15 Klamath Theater Quls 8:30 Around Town News :45 Sam Hayes News MBS :55 Bill Henry MBS 7:00 Black Museum MBS 7:30 Peter Salem. MBS SM Count of Monte Crista MBS 1:30 Roving at. Rudy's 8:45 Heidelberg Harmonalrea 8:00 Glenn Hardy News MBS 8:15 Fulton Lewis News MBS 8:30 Mutual Newsrael MBS 8:45 Sports Final 55 5-Mimrte Final MBS 10:00 I Love A Mystery MBS 10:15 Here to Vets 10:30 Ooera Concert MBS , 11:00 Night Owls News 11:05 Night Owls Club 13.-00 Sign Off KFLW 145 Ke. PST Monday Evening, March 1 AO Sports HUrhllghts f :15 Home Town News , :1S World News Summary , :S0 Suburban Serenade 45 HVadtina Edition ABC 8:55 Coming Attrac. on ABC 7:00 The Lone Ranger ABC ao Henry J. Taylor ABC 7:45 Preview Of Tomorrow 80 The Big Hand ABC 8:30 "What are the Most Important Tacta Concerning our Basin Wa ter Resource?" JOKM 10 P.M. Headlines 40:15 Navy Star Tim 10:30 Insomnia Club 11:00 News Summary 11:05 Sign Off KFLW 145 Ke. PST Tuesday, March 11 00 Sign On .News Summary 8:05 Corn in the Morn C:45 Farm Fare 1M Newa. Bkfst Edition 7:13 Charlie's Roundup 7:30 Bob Garred. Newa ABC . 7:40 Top of the Morning 7:55 John Conte ABC 8:00 Breakfast Club ABC . 8:00 Hank Henry Show 8:30 Break the Bank ABC J0.-00 Chet Huntley ABC . 10:15 Lone Journey ABC 10:30 My True Story ABC 10:53 Whispering Streets ABC 11:15 Stop and Shop 11:30 Against the Storm ABC 11:45 Musical Roundup . 11:55 Market Report IMIIMi.lli.i.'fl CONTINUOUS FROM 1:45 FROM THE SMASH STAGE MTf KIRK - ELEANOR WUIW DOUGLAS- PARKER BNDLX aWlLlIAM WYIER'S owns SIDNEY KiNGStfrS NOW. Continuous "UW8 Dally from 1:4S Let 1 1 NPWIss-aW ADVENTURE T .HEIGHTS! I mm umn-mm atuta umiii MfMELUHUSH VMTtt tttsUM Mtr-MlfN FKATMir- . hAwH'WraTil I 11:00 Noon Edition Newa 11.15 Payless Sidewalk Show 11-30 Lucky V Paneh BC Utt Paul Hrrvey ABC 1.15 Better Living 1:30 Standard School BdcsU 3:00 Bssin Briefs 3:15 When A Girt Msrrlss ABC 3:30 Jovca Jordan. M.D. ABC 1.45 Rom. Evebn Winter! ABC. n-nn nttv Crocker ABC 3:15 Ted Mslone ABC 3:30 Desn Csmeron ABC 3:45 Mary Merlin ABC 4:00 Requestfully Youra 5:00 Tom Cornell. Space Cadet ABC 5:25 World Flight Reporter ABC 8:50 Chet Huntley ABC 5:45 Voice cf America 8:00 Sports Highlights :1S Home Town News 8:35 World News Summary C:30 Suburban Serenade t:45 Headline Edition ABC 55 Coming Attractions on ABO 7:00 Greatest Story ABC 7:30 Nesvatend Theater ABC 8:00 Met Auditions of Air ABC ::10 United Or Not ABC 8:00 Town Meeting. ABC 8:45 Paul Carson st Ute Organ. 10:00 10 P.M. Headlines 10:15 Dream Harbor ABC 10:30 Insomnia Club lt:00 Newa Summary 11.-05 Sign Off VaterPanel Slated For KFLW Today The- first of what probably will be decisive series of discussions of the Klamath area's water prob lem Is to sired over KFLW at 8:30 tonight, on the "BuiU the Basin" forum. Panel members scheduled to take part in the discussion are A. N. Murray, regional planning engi neer of the Bureau of Recla Uon. Sacramento; E. L. Stephens, Klamath project manager, LSBR; John Boyle, Copco vice president and general manager, Medford; Tom Horn, Tulelalce Wildlife Ref uge manager; Charles siricauen. Oregon State Engineer, Salem; Llovd Gift. Langell Valley rancher; and Frank Jenkins, publisher of the Herald and News. The Klamath water problem, in simplest form is this: There is Plenty of water, but will it be taken away unless the present surplus is put to worst lor irrigation, power and other uses very Quickly? Several panel discussions on the wnoie general subject are planned, so tonights forum is to be limited to getting a basis of fact upon which all factions can agree. Pri marily the discussion will be of the past and present uses of mater, the sources and supply. Listeners are Invited to parti- cipate by asking questions of the panel, but the questions should try to bring out facts about the pres ent situation of water use con trol, costs and the like, rather than going into future planning. Questions may be telephoned to the Herald and News, (111. while the program is in progress. Escaped Con Recaptured SALEM lH A trusty, who walked away from the state prison farm two months before he was to be paroled, was caught Friday at Oceanslde. Calif. The convict. Walter H. Edwards. 27. was picked up on a traffic charge. Warden O'Maliey said Saturday. - Edmonds was serving a five year sentence on a Lincoln County auto theft conviction at the time of his escape Feb. 29. He was to have been paroled in June. Another convict, George Frede rick, escaped St the same time. Prison authorities still are seek ing him. Exile Back In India PORTLAND W Stephen Darie, who arrived in Portland last No vember a stowaway aboard the Steamship John Owen was put ssnore in India Feb. z. That was the report Sunday of w. j. scnaae. captain of tne John Owen which returned from Calcut ta Sunday. Dane said he was a self-exiled Romanian who had wandered the world lor five years in his flieht irom communist dominated Ro mania.- - - He was not nermltteri to enter uie u.b. wnen uie ship docked here. Schade said "India didn't accept him, but we made them take him." Darie will not be eligible to enter this country for a year from the time he was deported Dec. 4 of mas year. Two Perish In Stote Weekend Accidents By The Associated Pr Weekend fatalities in nM. claimed the lives of two. Leonerd E. Fisher, 17, of the Lower Highland district of Clack amas County, was faulty injured when a tree he was chonnino fell on him. The mishap occurred on his farm. LOU S Gen Ornver M nt Port land, was killed early Sunday when he was thrown to the navement of Barbour Boulevard as his car rammea a concrete railing. He was Portland's 13th traffic fatality this year. 0 and C Timber Goes On Block PORTLAND W Some 20.920. 000 board feet of timber on O. & C. lnd. in the Medford area were auctioned Monday. The s&le was the first of some 48 million board feet valued at 11.818,761 which will be sold this week. Tuesday 7,240,000 feel will be of fered for sale in the Coos Bay dist rict. Four tracts In the Roseburg district With 8.702.000 feet nil ha sold Wednesday. On Thursday Eu gene win oner six tracts totaling 11,064,000 feet. CASUALTIES ' WASHINGTON ( A Defense Department list No. 817 1 Monriav added 68 names to the Korean War 37 wounded, three misslne In an- casualty list. It Included 17 dead, tion and one injured in a battle zone acclden;. km mm SMILING SUITOR WAITS SEVEN YEARS Harold Louis Samu, 26, (left), of Seattle, Wash., met Franca Cas tellani, 26 (right) in 1943 at Empoli, Italy when he was on duty with U.S. Army. They became engaged a year later and in 1945 Samu was returned home for discharge before they could get married. Recently Samu received a letter from Miss Castellani saying she was working ten hours a day trying to forget him. He put in a phone call to tell her he was about ready to send for her. Late his spring she will travel to Seattle to wed Samu. Arms-For-Drugs Plan Told In. Tale From Thailand By JACK MACBETH SOMEWHERE IN NORTHERN THAILAND I Chinese National ist troops who have taken refuge in Northeastern Burma are being supplied regularly through an opi-um-for-guns smuggling arrange ment in Thailand. i This correspondent spent five days looking around the area ex tending from Chiang Mai 75 miles to the north and within 10 to 20, mnes east 01 tne Burmese corner. Thailand's capital, and the Nation Sources in most cases cannot be alists in Burma, identified for publication, but they Hls Job is to funnel supplies re include teachers, missionaries, of-' n.n.i,v t... .t. ficial foreign observers, leading merchants, local newsmen, army officers, senior Thai civil servants Plane Wreck Yields Bodies POMONA, Calif. Wl Five bod ies have been recovered from the wreckage of an ambulance plane that crashed on a llight from Nee- dies, Calif., to Los Angeles, Wreckage of the single engine craft, object of- an extensive air and ground search since last Tues day, was found on a mountainside near here Saturday. The dead are: John R. Flick, 11. who was being flown to Los Angeles for an eye operation; his mother. Mrs. Eileen Wilson, 42: Albert Fleming, LaFitte, La., oilman and uncle of Mr. Wilson: Pilot William Natte. 42. Needes. and Bob Tracy, 45, Needles contractor and pilot. Pend Oreille Tests Off WASHINGTON I Indefinite postponement by the Navy of ex plosive tests in Idaho's Lake Pend Oreille was announced Sunday by Rep. Wood (R. -Idaho). Wood said Secretary of the Navy KimbaU had written to Gov. Jor dan of the decision. The proposed explosions of im dlSJMSLYtSSiJS: position of sportsmen's and civic groups in the area and Spokane of ficials who feared the city's water supply might be jeopardized. Omak Lake in North Central Washington has been suggested as a substitute, but there was no In dication whether the Navy was con sidering it. Pilot Lands Plane With Crippled Gear DAYTON Wl A four-hour drama in the skies ended safely early Monday when a skillful pilot belly-landed his Lockheed Lode star airplane with four persons aboard. Pilot Carl R, Siemer, 31, of Cin cinnati, brought the craft down on the fiar-Iit grass of Dayton's Munic ipal Airport at nearby Vandalia while a crowd of several thousand looked on. They had been drawn to the field by radio announcements telling how the plane had a jammed land ing gear and was circling the tied trying to get the gear down. At the same time the plane burned up gasoline to lessen the danger of fire in event of a crash landing. The five persons aboard were shaken up but not injured. MARGARET RESTS LOS ANGELES ( Margaret Truman has begun a two week va cation tt a seashore cottage st near by Mallbu Beach, play, spot of a number of movie stars. The President's daughter arrived Sunday accompanied by Secret Service agents and Mr. and Mrs. John Horton of Washington, ROYAL VISIT OSLO, Norway I1R King GusUf VT and Queen Louise of Sweden arrived In Oslo Monday for a four day official visit. They were met at the station by King Haakon and cheered by thousands of Norwe gians. MINE EXPLODES ARLES, France Wl A work man used sledge hammer Mon day In trying to remove a brass ring from an undersea m'ne In a pile of scrap Iron here. The mine exploded. Killing live worsmen ana inuring a sixth. The Sierra Nevada Mountains run down through Inland California roughly parallel to the Pacific coast. WURLITZER A majalflcaat plans. Many lovely stylo nd finishes to cbooM from. LOUIS R. MANN PIANO CO. 120 No. 7th I1ERAI.0 AND NEWS, KLAMATH and police officials. Aluiough" their information var ied in detail it outlined a general pattern strongly supported by evi dence which could be observed. This is how the barter arrange ment works: A Chinese posing as a merchant, colonel, maintains headquarters In but reported to be a National army Chiang Mai as the link between the Chinese embassy in Bangkok, . .. i.ni.rl,-i food and clothing, across the bor der. He has several assistants. In exchange the Chinese Nation alists in Burma send raw opium to Chiang Mai for forwarding to Bang kok and onward. The opium Is grown in Burma's Shan states and the Yunnan Province of China. It long has been an important though illlcut Industry in this part of the country. Since 1949 It has been stimulated by the presence of about 10,000 ill equipped and hungry Chinese Na tionalist forces who were pushed over the Burma border by the Chi nese Reds. An Informant claiming to be fam iliar with the situation on the Bur ma side of the border said re cently he had seen brand new. American-made arms in the hands of the Chinese there. (In Washington the State De partment refterated Saturday Its denial that the United States was assisting Chinese Nationalist forces in Burma in any way.) Air Force Plane Crashes OMAHA HI An Air Force C-47 crashed and burned early Monday at unuu Air rorce Base near here, but all 12 men aboard escaned un harmed. Arm fwr.tt ; -I u. n"'try transport f plane, based at Mountain Home. Ida., had Just tak en off for Hill AFB. Ogden. Utah, when it crashed on the parade ground at the end of the runway. A board of officers hss been called to investigate the crash. The Air Force spokesman said the men "just piled out" after un fastening their safety belts. The plane, on a routine flight, was completely destroyed. It was the second Diane crash within two weeks at Offutt. On Feb. 26, a B-60 bomber crashed while landing, killing five airmen and injuring 12 others. Yietminh Blast French Train SAIGON, Indochina Wl Fifteen cars o! a sabotaged railway train tumblb'l into a ravine in Cam bodia Monday, killing 85 persons and injuring 23. The accident occurred along the route from Pnompenh, Cambodia's capital; to Battambang, at a point about 30 miles northwest of Pnom penh. All the victims were Cam bodians or Viet Namese. Officials said rails had been loosened and mines planed In the loosened and mines planted In the train passed over. The French Union forces are fightinor the Communist-led Viet minh in Indochina and Vletmlnh fiabeteurs were believed re sponsible for the tragedy. ' NO Ft'TUBK HERE SPRINGFIELD, 111. Dr. C.W. Holz Is now serving his 28th term as secretary-treasurer of the Springfield Elks Bowling Associa tion. He has seen the group's bowl ing activities expand from one eight-team league into five 12-team leagues, all restricted to lodge membership. The Dismal Swamp, a half mil lion acres in Virginia and North Carolina, has a permanent popu lation of Just one family. Introducing Qf&i 1i $75 FALLS. OH.EC.ON New Detector Spots Metals - NEW YORK MV- Tlie govern ment has a new, lasler ami more accurate means 01 detecting de posits of uranium, the baslo metal used In the piuutuMoit of avumlc energy. The Atomlo Enemy Commis sion's operations olllce here said Sunday its -engineer have devel oped a new . "sotntlllatlon probe and detecting device" which will help speed up the hunt for under ground minerals in the Colorado Plateau and other, western states. Mounted 011 motor vehicles, the device Is contained In a 3 j loot long cylinder, two Inches in di ameter. It Is lowered Into test drill holes and then gradually brought to the surluce. it 'indicates on a pen line recorder the pretence of Uaimna rays, given off by uran ium and radium. Dr. Phillip lj. Merrill, head of the AEG exploration program, said in a statement that the new device compared with older methods is 10 times more efficient, two or three times more precise, ftvo tunes as fast, and more versatile. Chiloquin Is Speech Champ Chiloquin won the county Junior high school ' speech festival trophy for the first lime in many years Friday when the annual event was held at Altamonl. Some 357 Stud ents from ten schools participated in the all day schedule. Mrs. A. R. Dickson of Henley was general chairman of the event and judges were Mrs. Clarence Humble for serious speeches, Mrs. Lloyd Miller for poetry. Addle Mne Nixon, story telling and the radio speaking was Judged by Mrs. Wal ter Mclntyre. All four judges of ficiated for both humorous and choral reading. Chiloquin placed 43 points fol lowed closely by Altamont with 40 and Henley with 38. Gilchrist and Falrhaven tied for- fourth place with 35 points each. Bly, Keno. Malln, Merrill and Bonanza placed sixth through tenth in the county. While the judges' decisions were tallied the host school put on a clever program which featured the band, glee club and boys chorus. A vocal olo was given by Terry Fawver and a duet by Sharon Bowen and Frances Walker. Danc es were done by Barry Minion and by Myrna Heaton. The two outstanding events In the festival according to those who attended were the masterful chor al reading done by the Chiloquin eighth and nineth graders. "The Mountsln Whlppoorwlll" with Mrs. rrank Bell directing and the clever humorous reading given by Wally sunder 'of Altamont entitled "Pho netic Puncutatlon." Multiple points were given for both choral read ing and humorous this year as the youngsters must speak before an audience of some four or five hun dred while all other divisions are given In small rooms with only a few listening. The superior ratings of 4 points, one to each event, were as follows! Choral reading-Chiloquln. story tell- ing-jonn Layion 01 Keno who told "Jack in the Well." radio sneak. ing 8th graders who discussed student government; serious orig inal Kay O Donahue. "The Basis of Life," poetry interpretation Beveriy Martin of Malln, humor ous Wally Wunder of Altamont. and special speeches of Introduc tion and emceelng Jane Brader of Gilchrist and Judy Crawford of Bo- nanasa. By JEAN OWEN'S We're In I The second year in a row in which the Pels have earned the trip to state basketball towns men, March 18-22 in Eugene. KU students can well be proud of their team, and we're hoping for success In Eugene. Pelicans are sure to have fine backing at the tournament. Educational messages approxi mately 150 words in length and running about 65 seconds are the current projects of the radio speech classes. These messages are aired on KFLW at 9 and 9:15 a.m.. Mon day and Wednesdays. 11:20 and end 4:00 and 4:15, Thursdays. Marian Pfefferle and Oakley Summers are the editors of these short narrations. Teachers have been asked to contribute Informa tion concerning their particular subject. Pelicans scripts have been writ ten and the program should go on the air In the near future. "Moods in Music," a program of organ music, with Janice Larson as organist, and Denelce Kenvon as announcer. Is now on KTEC. OTI's radio station at 7:30 every Wednedny evening. iff KLAMAfM fU.Lt. Ms . AMERICAN CHINESE eatl tvt these bestf ht. 4M 'f (Men T Tea 0 en B..Lie, Mgr. fir Hsseesoi saa teas eensselleo tatlees atallaale at aaessrats ;trs cssl. IASV , PAYMtNTS. 715 Main Srrtt Next Move Up To Reds, Savs m By ROltI RT n. TUCKMAN MUNSAN, Koieit Ml Allied ne gotiators warned tho Cnmmunlnis Monday that I limits mid Inttinlris Hon will. not force the U.N. Com mand to accept lied terms (or a Korean armistice. 1 "You cannot tllcluto tho terms of an ariulHtlce and you cannot hope to achieve any progress in threats and unfounded accusa Ihese meetings by resorting lo tlons," snld ileal' Atlin. R. . Llbby. lie inkl U.N. negotiators did not propose lo "sit and listen any furiher to unfounded elm rues au.1 Gales Claim Three Ships LONDON if Weekend gales In the North Sen are believed to have token the lives ot 00 seamen. Only one survivor hits bceu found from ihi-re missing ships. He was First Mme Willi Sunky man. of the 447-ton German trawl er Tlior, which cnpslted In heavy seas and 70-mlle-an-hour winds near the Orkney stands. The body of a dead sailor wn sfound In a III 0 boat Willi him and 17 other crew men were reported lost. The 820-ton Finnish ship Adna had radioed she was sinking and iier 18 crewmen were leared lost. Search continued from Norway, however. Lifeboats and a coastal com mand plane reported a fruitless search for the 1.353-ton Swedish ahlp Rosso, with 24 persons nbonrd The ship sent an SOS from off Scot land. VA Pays Off Korea Vets WASHINGTON l.f-The Veterans Administration reported Monday that as of Dec. 31, 1051. it was paying death compensation or pen sion benefits to 17.001 dependents of 8.895 deceased veterans of the Korean War. The VA noted that as of Jan. 31. 1953. a total of 655.000 military per sonnel who saw service since the Korean conflict started on June 27, 1950, had been returned to civilian life. It said 135 veterans who were disabled In service since the Ko- habilitated as of Jan. 31. and Va hospitalization was being provided iur anomrr 1,00 J veterans. Twins Born To Mother Of Sixteen SCR.NTON. Pa., 1 Twin sons were delivered Sunday at Carbon dale General Hospital to Mrs. Rex ford Oakley, of nearby Childs. They were the nth and 18lh chll- dren for the 43-vear old woman end nor. ntuband, an unemployed mines. I Seventeen , of . the Oakley chll .dren. 'ranging up to 25-year old James wnn is married and a la ther, ale alive. "I'd like to get up lo 24." com mented Oakley, He didn't Indicate why. SALT LAKE CITY W John H. Schenk of Logan. Utah. Is the new chairman of the western Reg ion American Farm Bureu Associa tion, j He was elected here Saturday to succeed Marshall Swearlngen, ' Salem. Ore., president of the Ore-' gon Federation. Haters Jewelry Co. ,137 Main, Klamath Falli, Ore. I tfNB ma tha 8IO IS etata Iflt.ka- e-lla j l(47J set at me salt price ef sv.TT. I em encloilna 8 1 as clewn tMymenl and aeree te pey 50c wees I me rvu amewni n pais. I New tiieoal n Oiorje lull ameunt ladentl I Aedreil aCily. less llale I O New s. Q diara. T. Mv a.at I I A K WaSMIASAIAZ V UAS I 1 Allied Truce Boss repented arciisnllons Hint Hie Al lied delemilun was "telling lies." l.lbbv oinnhnalsrd later, however, Dint ho did mil lluenlrn lo Inenk nil the tightly dendlnoketl niHO nuw entering tne ninth llntlniu, month. lie said Uie next move Is up lo the liens. Another group of truce negotia tors debating truce supervision met only long enough to ugrro to meet ngnln Tuesday, lliey adjourned afler only six mlniitea four minutes mora than Buiiduy's two-mlnutn scsMun which set a record for brevity, LlbUy's sharp warning followed two days of Communist attacks on Allied irruliueiit ol cnplurod Com munist soldiers. N01 Ih Korean MnJ. Gen, Lee Sang Chn, In an obscurely worded warn ing, first declared the Issue might go "beyond Uie scope of the Ko rean question." Sunday he warned that "serious Incidents are in the making." "We cannot envlenne that your tluents of the pnsl two (lays have any other purpose than to attempt to Intimidate us," snld Llhuy. "You denied that you hold In Koren any morn. Uian 11,500 pris oners whose mimes you gave us," the admiriil continued. "You de nied that you every hold any nf our cuptured personnel oulslde Koren. . , . We have evidence which clear 4y convlcls on both cnunu." Last week the U.N. Command accused the Communist nl accretly imprisoning captured soldiers, In cluding Americans. In Red China. A spokesman quoted a Chinese prisoner as saying he saw about 1.000 men at a processing center near Harbin. In Central Manchuria. Brig. Gen. William P. Nuckols, U.N. Minkesinnn. said there was no way of knowing whether these men were among thaxe whose name failed lo appear on the Reds' offi cial prisoner raster. Last week the Reds were asked to account for another 173 O.N. prisoners Identified through Com- Road Work Bids Due Bids for grading and paving a' 261-inlle section of U. 6. 97 from Modoc Point to Barkley Springs, north of Klamath Palls, are to received by the Stale Highway Com mission Thursday. The planned Improvement lies along the present road and calls ' for 24-loot asnhaltle concrete pave 1 ment three and a half Inches thick, heavy rock base wllh eight- foot rock shoulders. Over 7UO.0O0 cubic yards of earth nnd rock are to be moved lo widen the present rondway, but comple tion Is planned for next Fall. At the Modoc Point end of the Job plans call for widening the road to four-lane to facilitate use of the Intersection with Ihe Wll leamson River rood. If You DID NOT HIGH SCHOOL Tsa I'sa Slea ra f el-ma Im Sears rarrsar. so let reiieae er i.esr a tisae- ota csADLATrs navr. SNTiarn ovr so coi.urati AMERICAN SCHOOL Dept. Klo-J-10 175$ iro.tiwe. Oakland, 12, Calif. Name . Age Addrtu ..,......... - Clv ' arnrf ei.awa Ta My aneuat Q Itatf CO B. """ J 837 Main I 1 1 1 w m 11 n r i iff 1 .llasiVCl MimmSSMe 2 sS I " : MONDAY, MARCH 10, 10.-52 'A iiiiihlal biiindcn.ils, idlers to rel atives or other sources, Tim Communists have been ar cunnd of fulling to niTount lor mora Ihan 80,000 Allied prisoners, 1110:4 of (hem Bolilh Korrnn. Both gi'iiuiis of urgiilliitiii-N will meet nunlil at It a.m. Tuesday 18 p.m. J'ST Monday) in 1'iiiimuu Juiu, German Boss Wins First NATO Vote BONN, Oermanv West Ger man Chancellor Kolirtd Adrniiuer hnd a mnlorllv endorsement nl his re-armament program; Moiulav Irom Its first lest nt Ihe nulls and was rxpeclrd In props full steam ahead to Put Onniiti soldiers Into ihe projected Eurwinnn nrmv. Tho voting okuy came In the new oulhwosl stale's Mist elections Sunday, in which inenibi-rs ol Aden auer's pro-reiiriiiiiiuciil Kovriuinriii t'Oiillllon be.ilrd the alitl-niiiiv Mo dal DcniocTni ol Dii Kurt Schu-L Complete uiiolllriiil returns show ed the voters In the stale formed by Ihe merger of Baden, Wuert ti inberg-Biiden and Wurrllemuerg Hohenwillrni gave WJ,(H bitllms to Adenauer's Chrlitlon Democrats nnd 401,587 lo (lie Allied Freo Dem ocrats. ; flrhuinnrher's Socialists polled only 70,857, The Socialists hnd stressed Ihelr opposition to the gov ernment's program ol rr-itrmainen'. and co-operation wllh the Wcsl. 'Ilio new stale is West Germany's lourih largest. political observers her said the victory for Adenauer's coalition would be a big boost loward ap proval by the West Gorman Par liament nf the proposed European delenso force in which German lorres would loin those of Fiance, Iialv. rtelgluin, Holland, and Lux embourg. rlna the fena for coffee .1 CnffiEDCEnD or CANNOT Finish Time aai Sara Nlsh Srhesl Dlplerae .......... - . - . Phone 4663. mmwamim 9