Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, April 21, 1952, Page 3, Image 3

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    MONDAY, Al4ll21, J052
llKIMU) AND NKWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
PAGE TOREK
If M.K
STUDY REPORTS ON POLIO DISCOVERY Dr. David Bo
(llan (left) of Johns Hopkins university and Dr. Dorothy
M. Ilorstmann of Yale university study reports they made
in New York City that polio strikes first In the blood
stream Instead of nerves. The discovery already is used
to prevent polio in monkeys and chimpanzees. The re--ports
wcro made to the Federation of American Societies
for Experimental Biolojjy.
Is Census Out of Kilter
Or People Out of Hand?
Ily IIAU; Kt'AltllltOl'fiH
The Ilurriiu of Census. In tabu
lating Its 1050 cuunt ol the cile.
has already Untrtl Klamath Knll
as one o( Uie lew cities In Uie
West that hud i declining popula
tion between 1040 mid IBM.
And now the liuieau comes up
Willi ntntlillrH to nhow llml Khun
ftlli Fulls has more married turn
than It hns married women
I low Hint In poailble Hip nuieuu
dnqnn'l explain, unless there's some
polyandry going on
1111 KIHI HON
'Die nnrmnl ratio In one hiiMintiri
In one wife (iind who Is lo miv
Ihnt thntVliot an emlnenllv fair
distribution?) do If there are fewer
wives In Klamath Falls tliiin thrro
are husbands. It stands to reason
that aome of the girls are . . . Well,
Women Plan
Turkey Feast
MAUN Turkey with all the
Irumnlhtfii; enouuh to teed around
two hundred people, was Uie topic
if dlscuvdnn Thursday afternoon,
April 11, when the members ol Uie
Malm Ladles Aid Society met at
the church.
The turkey dinner, which In an
annual affair, will bo served from
five o'clock until 8 on April Si
(Thursday i. AltlioiiKll tlckela need
juil be -purchased In advauuei'thrf
Jiiy be obtained from any Indira
ad member.
'the afternoon's meeting was con
ducted by president Vesta Bhogren.
liuesl speaker was Mrs. Tom New
Ion, who snoko of a weeks training
class which she odd attended at
Lewis and Clark College In Portland
aome time bark. The claases were
pertaining to church work and are
hlffhlv reromiiieilned bv Mrs New-
Inn I
Following the program refresh
ments were served by Mrs. Llda
Klrkpatrlck and Mrs. Milo Smllh
to the following: Mrs. Emma Wll
aon. Mrs. Ollie Ratllff, Mrs. Mabel
Cunningham. Mrs. Teresa McConib
Mrs. Oeorgn Shumitn. Mrs. Vesta
Hhogren. Mrs. Mllo 8mllh. Mrs.
I.eah Street, Mrs. Florence Wilson,
Mr. Shumnn and guest Mrs.
Mitchell from Tuleluke.
The serving of the.Jiinlor Senior
Banquet on May sixth will nlso bu
hnndlcd by the Lndles Aid.
Ike Confined
With Cold
PARIS 11 A heavy head and
tltront cold will keep (Jen. Dwlght
Klsenhower In bed for another
day.
Informant said his temperature
has dropped lo normal but another
day of rest Is needed to lick an
'upper respiratory Infection."
The general was ordered to bed
by his doctor on Saturday.
KRA IU'KI.
TOKYO Ml Tho U.8.Nnvy said j
tile high-speed minesweeper Enrii-1
coM-', was straddled more thnn 30
tlnn-s Siiturduy in a duel with Red
shore batteries nt BongJIn, North
Korea, but withdrew without casualties.
(ASH IN YOUR
MILK BOTTLES!
we are running short!
W need those extra bottles right now.
We don' t want to buy more new bottles
as we will be using paper containers
June 1st. All Crater Lake bottles glad
ly bought at creamery.
KLAMATH FALLS CREAMERY
It lust slnnds to resson.
Anyhow, the Ilurrau of Census
reports that Its 11I&0 count showed
4.3(H married men here In town,
and Just iJUfl married women.
Here are some other figures
about un neonle. as renorted bv tho
Bureau:
Klnmnth Falls' population fur
I DM w as 15,816, and that Includrd
8,011 inulrn and 1.H04 females. It
lab.o Inrluded lfi.730 while people,
DO Negroes and 84 persons of oth
er races.
Our average was 3 I Years, and
ft 4 per rem ol I lie townspeople
mere over lift. There were 1.6&0
' yoiiiiKiiers undrr 0.
j our average income i jrr fain-
II vi whs K.MS per year (lor 1049),
and our avernge education was
' something Hint a little bit better
Uinn the llth grade.
We were set up III 5.S44 house
holds, and the avernge hounehold
was populated with 1 86 souls.
LAIIOKKHM
AIm. ol the population over 14
years old, 81 S per cent of Uie men
were In the labor lorcc (either
holding a Job or looking for onei
and 35 4 per cent of the women
were also In Uml category. The
labor force totaled 7.115 persons.
The report savs that while Uiere
were only 4.380 married women,
there were 4,300 married couples
living together.
Oh. well . . .
Death Claims
State Pioneer
Dentil Bnturday look John P.
Jendisejewski, an Oregon resident
for tho past 4(1 yeurs.
fir was (id years old.
An active farmer, he had lust
recently Joined his .".on Bernard in
n limning onerntlnn near Bonanza.
Another son. Walter is a KlumaUl
county agent.
Jendriejcwskl was a past presi
dent of the Eastern Oregon Tur
key Growers Association and past
president of the Eastern Oregon
Fnlr Bonrd. He was long active
In various cooperative marketing as
sociations. Recitation of Uie Holy Rosnry
will be held at 8 p.m. tonight nt
O'llnlr's Memorial Chapel. Funeral
services will be held In Portland
Wednesday, wllh mlermcnt In Mt.
Calvary Cemetery, Portland.
K" 1 "Jf int. wfk
J j Mad. lair
KENT A TVrtWglTll
r
snniNo MACHINI
Itelrls ar Rsaa
Lail maalh'i rrnul t apsl!s la lb
parchaa prlct.
Pioneer Office Supp
Tragic Crime
Growth Noted
WAHIIINCITON I Ciiino In In
creasing In (lie nation, says the
Fill mid a tragedy of our
limes" the accent Is on youth.
FBI Director J. Edgnr Hoover
Sunday released a compilation of
statistics from police departments
throughout the country. 'I hey show
rate mercuries for MM ol 63 per
cent In cities ami 6 per cent In
rural ureas,
Of perilous arrested during the
year, fie suld most wcro aged ;
14.4 per cent were under 21; there
was a 1.1 per cent Increase among
the under-1 8 group, and 44 II per
cent of ao-yenr-olds hud previous
fingerprint urrest records.
Truce Talks
In Same Rut
MUNSAN Korea I Euch side
Moii lay refused to recognize tnul
problems exist on the two dead
locked Issues In Korean truce talks.
There was no hint ol compromise.
ooi. Lion u. Uurruw, u UnilrU
Million Command stuff officer,
suld the Communists refused to
"discuss or even acknowledge" the
Issue of military ulrllcld construc
tion In Korea In the event of un
armistice.
Hie UNO wants lo bun the build
ing of military airfields during a
truce. The Rods have called this
Interlerenrn In the Internal affuirs
of North Korea.
A UNO' communique suld I he
mutter of which nations shall su
pervise a truce "hns been solved"
by the UNO suggestion thul only
four nations Sweden, Kwllwr
lond, Poland and Czechoslovakia
lorm the neutral nations supervis
ory commission.
The Reds want Russia on the
list. The Allies do not.
Staff officers discussing truce su
pervision stayed In session an hour
and four minutes Moudny.
Other slufl officers conferring on
firtsonrr exchange third slumb
Ing block to truce agreement
held an hour nnd 47 minute oil
the record dli.cus.Mon.
Both groups plunnrd lo meet
again Tuesday at II a m (fl p.m.
Mondny PS'I'I.
Demos' feud
Gets Hotter
PORTLAND I Another Demo
cratic parly leader has attacked
Oregon Democrats National Com
mitteeman Monroe Bwertland.
The current dispute was touched
off Friday when Slate Treasurer
Waller J. Pearson, spcsklng at a
Rnsaburg Jefferson-Jackson Day
dinner, said party harmony was
Impossible under Uie "Sweetluud
group."
Sweetland Inter replied thut
Pearson had aligned himself wllh
a "disruptive clement" In Uio
party wllh which he said Stale 8eu.
Thomas Mnhoney is associated.
-
yj :r - . . , - , ,
,.." I ".r' ." ' " - iff-"-1 't'.!,),; v. 1 .4
! F miles ?
i "I per
: gallon
i i J to u;
XL
"" jx,.
(NIA Ttltphoto.
FLYING PRINCE-Pnnce Bern
hard (right) o( The Netherlands
tries out the controls of a Miller
rnm Jel helicopter at Polo Alio,
Calif. Stanley llillcr, president ol
the compony !s at left.
Queen Keeps
Old Promise
WfNDSOR. Eng. i!'i Queen
Elizabeth 11 mudc good Monday
on u proiiiiso she hud given the
Orenndler Guards 1U years ago
that they would be the first troops
she would inspect as sovereign of
Uie reulm.
It was the queen's 26th birthday,
her real one. On June 5 the British
people will celebrate her birthday
by decree.
Dressed in black nnd with her
bowler-hntu.l consort, the Duke of
Edinburgh, close, by, the Queen re
viewed a Cirensdlcr Ounrds con
tingent of 60(1 men on the castle's
(piadrungle.
A drizzle cancelled out much of
Hie p.igenntrv that usually goes
Willi such a review. The men car
ried no regimental colors nor arms.
Orcv capes shrouded their b r 1 1 1 1 u n t
scarlet tunics.
But three-year-old Prince Charles
at a window overlooking the quad
rangle, enloyed tho show.
Dellghledlv he beat lime to the
guards' band music with his fist
and at the end of the parade he put
up a creditable imitation of a real
guard's salute.
... : "Jf
KFJI-.9
MUTUAL NEWSREEL
t
! AP Chiefs Believe U.S.
Seeking Oatis' Release
NEW YORK tfl The board of
directors of the Associated Press
taid Monday II Is confident the
United States government "will ex
plore ana exploit any opportunity
lo end the unjust confinement" of
AP reporter William N. Oatls In
a Czechoslovaks Jail.
Oatls was 'ailed a year ago this
week April 'it on charges of
esplonnge. lie was sentenced last
July 4 to 10 yours Imprisonment.
The AP directors said the trial
allowed he was guilty "only of en
deavoring, honestly und objective
ly, lo gather and report Informa
tion which In the western world
Is legitimate and ejuientlal news."
One effect of retaliatory meas
ures Invoked bv the United States
against Czech trade, the directors
Paper States
Strike Policy
TACOMA I The Tacoma
News-Tribune said Saturday It took
the position In the week-long AFL
Pressmen's Union strike that the
hourly scales of wagers in Taco
ma should not be higher than those
paid In Senttlc.
In a public statement, the News
Tribune said It hud Informed Fed
eral Conciliator Harold R. Conn
lhat "It standa on two fundament
al Issues as follows:
1. No pay lor the work not per
formed and
2. The hourly scales of wages
In Tacoma should not exceed Se
attle's." The services of the Federal Me
diation and Conciliation Service
were called upon Friday by the
pressmen's union. Conn said Sat
urday he planned exploratory
work before attempting to arrange
a Joint union-management meet
ing. HOME A(i AIM
SAN FRANCISCO lit! The
transport Oen. C. G. Morton ar
rived from the Oiient Saturday
with 1155 combat veterans from
Korea and 37 alien war brides. I
r Hi.b..
(fmr low
v e r a o e
CAeri
of your
(These fieur represent the
miles pir gailon
CHEVROLET Slylelme . . 20 571
CHRYSLER Windsor . . . j9359
OE SOTO Firedome 8. 6 pass. 21.277
FORD 'S" Mainline . . . 25.453
HUDSON Hornet "6" . . 2082,
MISER De luxe ..." 24 648
LINCOLN Capri m
under hich a f: r ine
I
1 IsA .
i
d uiynauon. . J 'w cars
'oga. 8 pass.. 17.65 mpg;ciASSi rhrPg "i" Chrysll SariT
mpg: Spectol t9s(w,,jaV"cw ei cn Imperial 1623
The Mercury Monterey took tS f ymou,h Concord, 23.07 mol
vanaV '
cted w.th Mobilgreases 8 ' "nd
eiNMAi PtraotiuM coRPosarioN
said, has been a substantial de
cline In exports Irom Czechoslova
kia. These drooped, the board said,
the first quarter of 1051 lo slightly
more than 12 V4 million In the last
three months of 1051.
The AP directors reviewed the
Oatls case In their report lo the
annual meeting of members of the
Awoclated Press, worldwide news
giuherlng cooperative, held In the
Waldorf-Astoria Hotel.
The AP business meeting and
luncheon ushered in newspaper
ncek in New York.
Meetings of the American News
paper Publishers Association will
be held Tuesday through Thurs
day. In discussing the Oatls case, the
AP directors said:
"The United States government
appropriately termed the Oatls
'trial' a mockery and travesty on
Justice. Throughout the free world,
expressions of shock and revulsion
against Oatls treatment have been
almost universal,
"The directors, officers and man
agement of the Associated Press,
supported by strong public senti
ment everywhere, have done ev
erything within their power to as
sist Oatls and to obtain his free
dom. "The President of the United
States, members of Congress, the
Department of State and other
agencies of the government have
energetically sought his release,
along with that of other American
citizens Illegally held In other coun
tries. "Retaliatory measures have been
invoked against Czech trade, com
merce and transportation, and oth
er efforts, necessarily confidential
In character, are the subject of
discussion with representatives of
the Czech government.
"The Associated Press will con
tinue lis efforts and your directors
HOTELS
OSBURN HOLLAND
EUOINE, OKI. MEDFORD
Thoroughly Modern
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Eaxley
and Joe Earley
Proprietors
4u EASY
a.IUSK. st watisls ,AYMNT$
7 IS Main Street
o f 26
cars
fWorife
bei -.Uee .f eb make) .
HUES PES CA110N
MERCURY Monterey ,
PACKARD "200" .
PLYMOUTH Cranbrook
25.409
19.227
23.522
STUDEBAKER Champion .
27.822
SPECIAL LIGHTWEIGHT CUSSES
HENRY J Corsair "4".
30.855
PLYMOUTH Concord .
23.079
"inercnt economv r iom w
runniK 8r was lubri.
are confident that the government
of the United Suites will explore
nnd exploit any opportunity to end
the unjust confinement of our re
porter." The board noted also that Frank
Noel, AP photographer, Is a prt
soner of war In Korea, and It com
mented that he "has the unique
distinction of having been able to
continue, at least temporarily, his
professional work for the Associat
ed Press while in enemy hands."
As a prisoner, Noel took pictures
of other U.N. prisoners.
The AP has a larger staff of
foreign correspondents today than
it had before World War II and
Is spending nearly three times the
1938 figure for. obtaining and trans
mitting foreign news, the report
said.
Newspapaer membership during
FOR JUST
30c
We'll wash and
damp-dry 9 lbs.
of laundry
30 MINUTE SERVICE
Soap and Bleach
furnished for iuit
a nickle each! ..
THE
LAUNDERETTE
South 6th and Owens
MThe' ;?S
pfl Boss
. IjKal avay.
M We're
Ijq( sticking ;
Jm.heclafi:
iWoutill:
Pimm sale
I STARTS THUS.
' See our Ad ', ' ' ' . ,
gi'""" in Wcdneidav
the yenr Increased bv IS to total
of 1.733.
There waa a net Increase of U
radio station memberships, bring-
uig tne ioisi to I. us.
In 73 countries outside the Unit
ed States, 2.105 newspapers, radio
stations and periodicals received
ap news and newsphoto services.
At their business meeting, AP
members will elect six directors
and act on the applications ot 19
associate members for regular
membership.
Tele-fun
by Warren Goodrich
"Hullo Sorrv I waa aa lana
BnawvrinBr Din I m tiii ust i
llttlo horsol". .. You won't!
risk missing important calls if,
you always answer your tele- j
phone promptly . . . Facing 1
Telephone.