MOT TWELVE HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON MONDAY, MAHC1I 24, 10!V2 0 ga pyx cv (7 FOUR-STAR PLAYMATE Gen. Jajnes A. Van Fleet, com manding general of the U.S. 8th Army, seems to be enjoy ing his young Korean "passenger" as they watch entertain ment at the Columbian Children's Home in Seoul, Korea. Gen. Van Fleet and other United Nations officials visited the home to present $11,000 worth of clothing purchased by the Far East chaplains with money contributed by the U.S. 3rd Army. Air Force Maintaining Island Near North Pole Weather Station On Ice ANCHORAGE, Alaska HI Two Air Force officers and a civilian scientist are maintaining a weath er station on a floating ice island 60 miles from the North Pole. They're living in tents In 50-below zero weather on an ice mass nine miles long and 4 Vi mUes wide that moves through the Arctic Ocean about a mile a day. Maj. Gen. William D. Old. head of the Alaska Air Command, who landed with the weather party Wednesday, gave more details of the project Saturday. The three-man crew planning to spend the summer on the ice is land is composed of Lt. Col. Joseph O. Fletcher, Shawnee, Okla.; Capt. Marlon F. Brinegar, Houston, Tex., and Dr. Kaare Rodahl, civilian scientist from Ladd Air Force Base. Fairbanks. Alaska. 1 Capt. Paul L. Green, Zenla, Ohio, Is expected to Join the group soon to handle communications, and 10 General Mum On Ike Plans WASHINGTON HI Gen. Alfred M. Gruenther flew in Saturday .from headquarters of the Allied Powers in Europe, bringing re norts of improvement in European defense against Communism but no news on wnen uen. uwigni jj. Ei senhower may come home. Gruenther, chief of staff In El senhower's command of the mili tary forces of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) is here for testimony to congressional committees. He was Invited to testify on President Truman's re quest for $7,900,000,000 in mutual security ffcnds. A laugh and an "I don't know" was Gruenther's reply to reporters who asked bim when Eisenhower might return, to take a more active part in the campaign to make him the Republican presidential nomi nee. Asked whether Eisenhower him self knew, Gruenther said that "if he does, he hasn't communi cated it to me." or 12 others mav be lnndwf inter Piloting the C-47 which landed on the ice island wns Pant t Ephart of the 10th Air 'Rescue Souadrnn T.nriri Aiv -ct. General Old as co-pilot. Three other Air Force planes accompanied the C-47 but did not land. Thpv nnr f. iu.i.. Greenland, thence to the North "oie area, because the Greenland base used is 200 miles nearer the floating island than Point Barrow, northernmost Alaska point. ( A Navy exposition now is based at BaiTaW And nlannmn ......... t..u.u.U,K V CMfllh iisn a research base nn nnnthor ice island. General Old. at a news -nnfr.' ence, gave details of the landing. 'Into the sun m,l1 cm 25 miles " h eoiri .,.! from it only about 10 miles. There woo oo similarity oeiween the Ice island and the ice pack. The island is nerfertlv flat n'hiltt tha nnv cut up and full of ridges." iuc maue a rest run, toucn- ing Skis liffhtlV tn rietormin tnna condition; then returned and land ed. The other planes. C-54's. dropped supplies by parachute but did not land because of ridees on the snow. It was 50 below when the party landed, with a light wind. The ice iwas covered yith one to two feet of snow. Korean War Quiet; Jet Battle Won By STAN CARTER SEOUL. Korea Wl U. 8. lei pilots Monday destroyed or dam aged 14 Russian-made Communist MIO-lSs In four clashes over North west Korea. Comparatively slow F-4 Thun dcrjets damaged two of elulit swept - wing MIGs that attacked them while they were cutting rail road tracks In the Sonchon area Monday afternoon. The U.S. Fifth Air Force said the Thunderjets escaped damage. In three morning fights, the Fifth Air Force said, U.S. F-86 Sabre Jets shot down three Red Jets, probably destroyed two and dam aged seven. Allied losses if any are reported weekly. Only small partol actions were reported across the 155-mile ground front. The U.S. Eighth Army said three Communist platoons fired on U.N. positions northwest of the Punch Bowl on the eastern front Sunday, but the Reds withdrew under heavy Allied artillery fire. U.S. B-29 Superforts dropped 30 tons of air-bursting bombs on Com munist front line positions Sunday night. Night-flying B-26 light bomb ers and shore-based Marine planes attacked Communist trucks mov ing troops and supplies to the front. Pilots said they destroyed 45 trucks. The Navy said the Carrier U.S.S. Bairoko returned to action olf North Korea a West Coast Sunday. Its planes destroyed or damaged 26 buildings, three bridges, one gun position, six small craft and five boxcars. Allied warships continued thoir patrol and blockade activities on the East Coast. The Navy reported a sharp in crease in Communist shore battery lire along the East Coast. The Reds opened fire on the minesweeper u.s.s. osprey Friday and shelled Allied warships inter mittently for the next 24 hours. Counter-fire silenced the Commu nist guns. The Navy said there were no casualties and no damage to any Allied ships. Tough Time For Manager LOS ANOFt ira in Aril,,,- v Douglas Is a native California!, and president 01 the new Los Angeles Statler hotel, nearlng completion, but he hnri A tnlioh ntwlttir his cltlBenshlp. uougias chuckled Sunday in tell ing how his difficulty turned up When he mnriM imillnailiw ti. hotel's bar and cocktail lomige licenses. A birth certificate whs required. "I was born In 1902 In Estrella, Calif., a hamlet near San Miguel, but When I Wmti. thur mv IkMk, was returned, unopened." he snld. i vne to uie county sent at Sun Luis Obispo and it had no record of my birth. . . . My mother and father ar rienri and all i.n of Estrella la one school, one cnurcn and one farmhouse. The farmer who lives Uiere never heard of me." But, finally, a brother, who was four when Arthur was born, lur- nisneo, acceptab.e proof. The brother is William O. Doug las. assnrlntA 1iiuti.-j nf th it c Supreme Court. Sled Dogs In Alaska Die IV 200 vnlnnhtn kIaH Hnna .n... jtA I ill a swift distemper epidemic in uuiusi Ainsna, oui atroorne drugs lielped save 300 others. only two animals have died since .MH.uii- it ui uie wave oi disease which began Feb. 8. al for native dogs, occurred in the ruiiu narrow area on tne Arctic coast where travel in winter is mrgeiy aepenoent upon dod tennis. Military authorities announced earlier this week that drugs rushed to the Barrow area by combined efforts of the Army. Air Force and Navv checked sm-enri nf thp disease. BREAK TOKYO HI Crown Prince Aki hito, who ' graduates from high school next week, will break a 2,-600-year-old imperial tradition by enrolling in a co-educational uni versity April 21. It will be the first known time in the history of Japan that an heir to the throne has begun his higher - education with both com moners and girls for classmates. The devout followers of the Aga Khan, Moslem leader, number more than 20 million. HOTELS OSBURN HOLLAND EUQENI, ORE. MIDFORD Thoroughly Modern Jtr. and Mrs. J. E. Earley and Joe Earley Proprietors Red Underground Said Operating TAIPEH. Formosa Wl The Na tionalist Defense Ministry Saturday said Vyacheslav Molotov. former Soviet foreign minister and premier is supervising operations of a re organized and expanded Commu nist underground in Japan, Indo china, Burma, the Philippines and other parts of the Far East. The ministry said, in a statement issued through its military informa tion service that Molotov had his main base at Chita In Siberia and that he traveled occasionally to "such key points as Peiplng and North Korea." Utah Reopens Battle To Sell Congress On Program of Small Reclamation Unit Work With State-Federal Plan WASHINGTON HI Rep. Bosone i (D.-Utnh). hones she can sell Con gress this year on her Idea of a program for the development of smalt reclamation projects. She Introduced a bill a week ago to set up a five million dollar lorn fund for the building of amull irrigation projects in cooperation with Uie sutcs. The measure is a successor to one that got stuck In Uie federal Budget Bureau last year, and It has been refined in the hope of getting the bureau's approval and of heading off a conflict between two departments. Under the bill, federal and stale governments would go 60-50 In Dul ling up money for projects each costing up to one million dollars and covering up to S.uoo acres. The Reconstruction Finance Cor poration, acting as agent for Uie Interior Department, would lend tne federal money, and the states would make repayment arrange ments with farmers and guarantee that the federal money is put bnck in the treasury within 40 years. Mrs. Bosone says her bill Is aimed at removing a "no-man's land" from the nntlonal reclama tion picture nn area of possible conflict between the Agriculture and Interior Departments. Through lis water facilities pro gram, the Agriculture Department has been doing some reclamation work on pro eels costing up to tou.- 000. Interior deals mostly with prot ects costing more than a minion. Mrs. Bosone says both depart ments "are making a studied ef fort to avoid competition, but there is possibility of conflict there, not necessarily because of the two fed eral agencies but because of laws which establish conflicting pro grams." This possibility of conflict prob ably Is one reason for the Budget Bureau's refusal to approve the bill Mrs, Bosone introduced last, year. The 1051 bill would have nrovlderi Uint the secretary of the Interior lend the money. The Budget Bu reau balked at the idea of setting up ins interior Department as a lending agency, while Uie Agricul ture Department has lending func tions under several of Us agricul tural programs. So the 1053 bill designates RFC as the lending agency. The Agriculture Department's water facilities program orluinnlly Included only projects Involving inrmsiena use oi wnter uy Iiumucs and livestock. In recent years the Agriculture Department has expanded Its pro gram to take in some Irrigation projects, which previously had been considered within the Held of the Interior Department's Reclamation Bureau. Department officials are anxious to avoid any conlllct like the cur rent dispute between the Interior Department and Army Engineers over tho proposed upper Colorado River storage projects' engineering and economic feasibility. Mrs. Bosone says President Tru man has approved Uie Idea of a program for development of small reclamation projects. She predicts her bill will win approvnl from the House Interior Committee, of which she is a mem ber. She expects to get help from Utah nnd Montana members of Congress since those two states probably would be the first to benefit from the bill. Utnh nnd Montana have been operating small project programs for several years, so their laws could be readily adapted to the co .operative federal-state program, The small project conuultlce of the National Reclamation Aaindic Hon. which In bucking Mis, Hosone's Iclt'ii, has enllrd Utnh and Montana accomplishments "hIkiiIU cant developments." Among those on Uie rommlttee are Htnto Engineers Fred Buck of Montanu nnd T, W, Jensen of Utah. The number of smalt projects proposed nationally In Uie pnsl few years nuggests the proponed pro gram would bo used. Tho Itei-liunn-tlon Bureau reports 4311 small proj ects Imvo been proposed by var ious nlnlo and federal agencies In the west nt an estimated cost of 300 million dollars. Our airnrv devoir Iturtf eirlu- lively to the liuliir of liinuraiiuf. IVf III NUT nave any iiiuriiiirn. 11 ui Innure you rla lit. Hans Nor land, 637 1'lne HI, riinne i-Mlft. 1 p i I r UoW drop- Unions Dicker For Wage Increase SEATTLE I A 25-cent hourly wage increase and improved work ing conditions were souRm oy iuin locnls of the AFL-Intcrnatlonal Brotherhood of Electrical Workers as negotiations opened Friday with the Northwest tne Constructors Association. , , c...iti. v.,iclnc mflnnoer Ltiuyu dill. ii. of Local 77, said 1,200 linemen and helpers In locals here, at Ta coma. Portland and Medford, Ore.. are represented. Journeymen wage scales are now $2.75 an hour. General Hans Frei BOOKKEEPING Service 12S4 Se. th Fhcna 2-0293 AN EASY WAY TO HAVE A PIANO To cm rent a lavalr new spinel lia frm the Lctal R. Mann Dan I'am panr. 12 N. lib. al law maathly rata. After a reasonable lima yon can. If yea with, chanie from rent ta par chase agreement. The rent already pal fa all credited t yanr purchase acceaat and ne atber dawn payment la nacee wry. The monthly paymenti can be llltle higher than rent. 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