Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (May 24, 1952)
SATURDAY, MAY 24, 10B2 PAGE FOUR HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, ORKGON frank mnnNi Ddiior Entered M Hoond elan mittar at on August M, 1S0S, under act ol Congress, Hard) s, 1B' MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Preu Is entitled exclusively to the use lor publication cf all the local news printed In this newspaper as well as all AP news, ' . SUBSCRIPTION RATES MAIL BT CARRIER I month . $ 1.S5 1 month . $ 1-35 ( months ' $ 6.50 6 months S.10 1 year $11.00 1 year tlt-M BILL-BOARD By BILL Yesterday's warm weather seems to have lillrd most of the populace with lov. The farmers are nanny Just to see Rood weather at this time of the year. The cattlemen welcome it because the warm Jays and mints will bring on tne grass The merchants love it because peo ple set out and walk around in all that nice, fresh, sunshine-filled air and occasionally stop in and buy things at the store. The students like It because it means that the end of school Is nearing. With finals under way at the nign scnooi ngni now there are a lot of teen-agers to be seen during tneir time on, Worries fade In the face of a sunv mer sun. And we like it because we happen to come from a long line of sun worshipers. Let's hope there is a lot of it. The American Legion boys are Using our Basin weather as a sell ing point in bringing the big con clave to Klamath Falls in July. Whereas much of Southern Oregon suffers from not. humid w earner. our salesmen spread the word abroad that In Klamath Falls even if it does get a little torrid during tne day, and. tnat is unusual, you can nearly always sleep comforta bly under a light balnket at night. Which Is really quite a selling point. Takes a lot of the worry out of your convention activities If you know that you are going to be able to cock un a tew nours oi gooa sleep as a protection against the following day. With summer and warm weather comes the vacation period. And with the vacation period comes the inevitable ad campaign put on by the airlines, railroads, gasoline companies arid summer resorts. All well and good. Advertisers get the red carpet treatment around here. But we could wish that a trifle more originality were shown in things than we have at present. There is one standard travel ad that eems to hold good for all classes and geographic areas. The husband staring wistfully at a bro chure describing the beauties of a mountain fishing resort while his wife dreams away her time in per ABCV WASHINGTON UFI Sometimes, walking around in broad daylight, the little man felt it was 4 o'clock in the morning, still dark outside, and ha was lying in bed. wide awake, "listening to the night sounds, waiting for daylight to come and clear things up. It was an unreal feeling. It made him fuzzy in the head. He always felt all right when he could figure two and two make four, particu larly when everybody else agreed at the same time that two and two make lour. He was trying to tell himself: I feel all right when I can follow the rule book. But now, somehow, everything aeemed at sixes and sevens. Too many big things were happening for him to keep them all clear in his head and some of the old rules weren't any good any more. They seemed out of date. Like war. War used to be simply war. But not war with Communism. STALEMATE . Only Thursday Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway, fresh from running the war in Korea, told Congress fur ther bargaining is out of the ques tion and the issue of war or peace is up to the Communists. For 10 months Ridgway's men have been talking truce with the Communists and now, Ridgway seemed to be saying, there was not much left to talk about but both sides might keep talking be cause neither seemed at this min ute anxious to start a full-scale war going again. To the little man this was a strange war, not at all like the old-time -wars. But Ridgway was on his way to Europe to relieve General Eisenhower who was try ing to build an army where a shooting war with Russia hadn't started but might. But the army was getting built over there. And this week end Germany was going to sign up with the American league against Russia); an . achievement brought (Da. . p. Rocky.- Mountain spotted fever js an. acute infectious disease wnich has been found in all but 'wo or inree states and In Canada Mexico and other parts of the world. It is caused by a tiny agent called a rickettsia and is spread by the bite of . ticks. The spring and cany summer are um time when It Is most Common. The 'death rate from spotted fever varies from place to place mm seaeon to season ana formerly about one in four of those stricken died. As in so many other di seases, prevention Is important. In places in which ticks are com mon, the wearing of protective clothing; (high boots and one piece enter clothing) Is advised. The destruction of ticks. Is, of course, highly desirable, and since the disease can be carried by dog ticks, as well as the more com monly Involved wood ticks, care against .Infection from this source should be carefully planned. Thos who are exposed to tick should search themselves care fully at least twice a day and re move any ticks with ether, chlo roform, or by using forceps. Re moval by bare fingers Is danger put. The. disease develops suddenly bill nuKm Managing Editor the post office of Klamath Palls, Or, JENKINS suing the public relations man's outpourUigs about life at the sea- snore. A good ad. Probably sells a lot of tickets in various capacities. But I'm Just a little skeptical about the whole thing. Seems to me that if an impartial survey were made it would turn out that men and wain- en are about evenly divided be tween wanting to go to the seasncre inn uie mountains. I nouoi mat au women prefer the ocean and that all men Drefer the mountains and their wool shirts, fishing gear and days In the open. But as long as the good gentle men wno run rauroaas ana air. lines and resorts and what have you are willing to run their ads at space rates there will be nothing but a broad and tolerant smile from this writer. (Ad manager please note.) Note noted in brief: Not long ago. issue before the last one I think, in Life I came across this letter to the editor: Sirs: Your reproductions of Marcel Duchamp's works ("Dada's Daddy," LIFE, April 381 clear ly illustrate the wide gulf that exists between inspired and or iginal art and self-conscious, rationalised imitation. "Nude Descending a Stair case" is as fresh and stimu lating today as it was in 1913. It Is one of the world's master- pieces. The rest of "everything important that I have done" ranks from schmaltzy to phoo ey. Gino J. Siml Washington, D. C. Which Is probably all wen and good. But I wish to put over a personal idea to Mr. Simi. I have spent untold hours staring at "Nude Descending the Staircase" includ ing tne original, and if there is anything fresh and flowing about tne picture I will willingly stand stilt while Mr. Siml explains It to me. Until then 1 11 stick to staring at the girl on the calendar who. while not completely nude, still has more of the requisite items us baser humans prefer. about only after months of talking between Germany and this country and this country's Western friends. This build-up In Europe brought the little man's tiinktn,r k.v home to this country where Con- J? worl"ng on a foreign aid bill which President Truman says is the backbone at thi m.mi,.'. foreign program. .E1.nnower said Cotwress might cut the money the President asked lor a bit, and thines wnnM mn come out aU right, but he said if billion dollars it would hurt .nrt I cut of more than a billion might DaI"?r mihtary build-upm. , But Sen. Taft, campaigning here f; home against Eisenhower for the Republican presidential nomin ation, said he favored a two billion dollar cut. The -mfA v. ki leaguers. Eisenhower and Taft. so the little man couldn't tell this early who was right. There was no rule book on that one. TAFT SWPORT But Thuradsv nioM - Ma 4.lt.. in the House seemed to side more with Taft than Eisenhower be cause the House voted a cut in foreign aioV closer to Taft's figure than to Elsenhower's. All thin foreign stuff got the little mm twisted in the head but not so much as things at home. After two weeks nf tr ih Senate passed the immigration bill wnich President Truman might veto, thus knocking two weeks' work into a cocker hut and th President himself was in the midst of stuff the little man got dizzy trying to follow: ine steel case, the clean-uo of government corruption which never seems to get started...The little man got out a pencil and began to write down everything that has him puzzled. He used up two note books and was start ing on a third as this was being written. . , $joAdan after an incubation period of about two to 10 days. Chills, lever, and severe pains, especially in the arms and legs are characteristic, The fever is high from the begin ning. A curious rash, which has given the disease its name, "spotted fever," appears between the sec ond and sixth day. The skin is often swollen and bleeding may occur into or under the skin and nucous membranes. Laboratory tests are Important In the diag nosis, ; A preventive vaccine has been found useful In human beings as well as In animals. It probably Is not practical or advisable for everyone to receive this vaccine. but those who are likely to be ex posed In areas where ticks and the disease are common should probably receive it. until recently treatment has been rather unsatisfactory. Now, however, two relatives of nenlcil- Un chloramphenicol and aureo- mycln have been found of 'the greatest value. If diagnosis Is made early and one of these antibiotics is em' ployed, recovery Is the rule and few deaths occur, but care in pre vention Is still worthwhile. They'll Do It Every Offer vour m.s a rah THEY'RE AULGOHS TO THE SAVMi spot you xkc." HELEN JACKSON m ijrrJflT ottl9 1 Mji 3 f up im I YliFT? -A V h ClRTOVy-.V?R?!5!s I STREET." p Hotels Face fJ " .- Strike Threat 2 Klamath Falls Students Win College Two Klamath Falls students at the University of Oregon have been announced as winners of 1952-53 Standard Oil scholarships of 500 each for their next year in college. They are Helen Jackson. Route 2 Bex 503, a junior in English, and Ronald J. (Ronnie) Lowell. 326 N. 10th, a pre-med sophomore. Miss Jackson won the award for her senior year at the University of Oregon. She is vice president ol the university student body for the died AUBURN. N. T. Wl Some American communities, on losing their chief industry, dwindle 'mill they become little more than ghost towns. Auburn is an example of a town that faced this problem and fought back. As a result of inspired action bv Its citizenry, this Central New York larm trading ana manuiacturing center of 36.600 population today faces a more prosperous future than ever. In more than 150 vears Auburn had grown from a pioneer village to a weu-oaianceo, pleasant communi ty with some 26 'varied industries. It also is the site of a state prison, where in the 1820s the first ceu blocks, were built that later become the pattern of American prison architecture. . THREAT Disaster threatened the town when its leading industry, the In ternational Harvester Company, decided to pull out. That meant tha Another Ball Toss For HST ANNAPOLIS. Md. Wl Presi dent Truman gets to throw out another baseball Saturday. His left-handed toss from a Grif fith Stadium box In Washington to open the major-league season last month wasn't the last, after all. for the man-who Intends to walk off the presidential mound next January. The chle'f executive cruised over from the capital Saturday to see how things are going at the Naval Academy, esoeciallv snortswlse. He picked a good day, for It marks the annual spring athletic encounter of Army and Navy. The Truman overhand southpaw, pitched Irom the . open stands of Lawrence Field, will inaugurate the 46th baseball game . between the service academies. After congratulating the winner, Truman and his braid-studded party will' take In a -track meet between. West Point and Annapolis squads. Few Fail Civil Service Exam SALEM (A Of Oregon's 10,163 state civil service, employes, only 22 got unsatisfactory ratings last year, the State Civil Service Com mission said Friday. There were 3,207 rated excellent, 6,022 good, and 313 fair. The ratings are used as a basis for salary Increases, which gener ally are given to those who. rate good or better. Those rating un satisfactory are dismissed Of the total, 689 were rated out standing. ', horse show EUGENE ( The Eugene Hunt Club . will .hold its 14th annual spring horse' show at the county fairgrounds this week end. The first, events will be Friday flight. Other 'shows will be Satur day afternoon and evening and Sunday afternoon. Entries are ex pected from all Pacific Coast states. Time r im i : RONALD LOWELL Scholarships coming year and has been outstand ing in campus activities for her three years at the university. Lowell recleved the Phi Eta Sig ma scholarship award last year as the outstanding freshman in schol arship. The Standard OU awards are pre sented to a student In each class at the University and are renewa ble yearly If the student maintains a high scholastic standing. fioyh loss of 1.500 Jobs and a (5,000.000 annual blow. The firm gave IB-months' notice of its intentions. Every civic at tempt to save It proved futile. In 1950 International Harvester shut down its plant here, and as a ges ture oi ftooa win soia us ouuaings for $1 to a group ol citizens who organized an industrial develop ment committee. Local leaders raised 150.000 to finance the committee's eflort to lure new industries. At first some businessmen held back, saying, "why should we help get new firms here that will com pete with us for the labor supply?" But they soon decided they didn't want to oe part oi a dying com munity. Tbey pitched in, too. There wasn t anybody to sell our community except ourselves," recalled Frank S. Smith, utilities executive who headed the commit tee. "We couldn't afford Just to sit back and wait for the right guy to come along. "And one of our handicaps was that we were known as 'that place where the prison Is.'" FORLORN Smith will never forget his first insoectlon tour of the vacated tl plant facilities, which had become run down. 'I know of nothing more forlorn than an abandoned plant," he said. 'In the damp and cold of 800,000 square feet of rambling buildings tne nan aarx oi ine sneni oia structures, sooted with the smoke of the forge and foundry, worn with floors, crumbling here and there with the ravages of time and use, we plodded our way. "I wondered whether we had made an ill-advised bargain at one dollar. T wondered wnetner tne irost- heaved floors, the leaking pipes, the dripping roof, the wind-blasted corners and crannies could be given again to Industry In return for Jobs ana a payroll. But tne committee swung mo action. BParkplugged by Smith and Karl A. Adams, head of the cham ber commerce nere, it contacted scores of outside manuiaciurers, hundreds of industrial realty deal ers. Resolutely the committee avoided the temptation of selling space to fly-by-nlght small concerns that paid small wages; stubborn ly fought to get tne kina oi urms wanted. The expansion drive has paid. General Electric has built a new plant here. A laundry machinary lirm took over much of the old, abandoned plant and spent millions to renovate It. Three other indus tries have located here. Railroad freight trafflo Is higher than ever. VICTORY NEWS In a recent victory dinner Smith announced that the new firms were hiring 1.800 workers, more than re- nlaclng the lost 1.600 jobs, and that tncy naa a potential oi i.uuu jnon and an annual payroll of 612,000,000 to 614.000.000. When the development committee attempted to return 11,000 remain ing from the 650,000 expansion fund, most contributors said, "keep the money and continue your work." Smith gave this summary of Auburn's successful fight against economic disaster: "It took a major Jolt to rouse our community out of a false sense of security. It brought the people together as nothing else could." By Jimmy Hatlo Until tm cy get into tue r-dp. DIRCCTIOM BUT, . VICTORIA. B.C. I Employes of the two biggest hotels on Cana da's Pacific Coast say they will strike II nccossary to back up wages and hours demands. Workers at the Empress Hotel here Thursday Joined Hotel Van couver employes In endorsing strike action. The vote here was 97 per cent In favor 322 for and 11 against. A union spokesman said any strike plana here will be in con Junction with those of the Vancou ver group. In the Vancouver vote, the count was 409 for, 38 against. No deadline has been set by the union Involved, the Canadian Brotherhood of Railway Employes (COL). The Empress Hotel Is operated by Canadian Pacific Railway, while the Hotel Vancouver Is operated Jointly by CPR and Canadian Na tional Railways. Army Demotes Two Generals WASHINGTON Wl The Army Friday demoted two generals involved In the Koje prison camp incident. It Informed the Senate Armed Services Committee that Brig. Gen. Francis T. Dodd, who was seized by the Red prisoners of war. and Brig. Oen. Charles F. Colson, the man who agreed to demands by the prisoners, had both been "brok en" to their permanent grades of colonel. The Armv also directed that Oen. Mark Clark, the new United Na tions commander In the Far East, formally reprimand Brig. Oen. Paul F. Yount. the commander of the Army base section of Pusan Army base section. A letter, announcing the Army's action and giving some account of J the incident, was delivered oy Ar my Secretary Frank Pace to Chair man Russell (D.-Ga.) of the Armed Services Committee. The Army also said that U had directed Gen. Clark to "lake ac tions within the principles of the Geneva convention, which princi ples have always been recognized and practiced by the United Na tions command to Insure against lawlessness and disorder on Xoje Island." Woodworking Peace Sought PORTLAND Wl Federal Medi ators moved into Northern Cali fornia Saturday In an effort to reach another local agreement In the CIO Woodw o r k e r s strike against the Pacific Northwest lum ber Industry. Latest concern to report a local settlement was the Coos Bay Lumber Co. on the Oregon Coast. Mediators reported Friday that the firm had agreed to a 12 r cent hourly pay Increase the sole union aemana. Most previous local settlements have provided for a 1 "2-cent hour ly wage Increase and other con tract benefits. The Coos Bay agreement, like most of the recent local settle ments, provides for the workers to continue to finance their health and welfare program by payroll deduction. The workers are to decide the amount of the deduc tion. The 12'j-cent formula Is similar to agreements reached by AFL employes of the plywood Industry, mediators said. Nurses Injured In Car Plunge PENDLETON I Two nurses at St. Anthony hospital were also patients there Friday, They were seriously Injured Thursday when their car plunged off U. B. High way 30 some 11 miles west of here, overturned and burned. Ilene Newberg, a student nurse, suffered a fractured collar-bone. Mary Barbouletos received a frac tured skull ana otner injuries. Doctors said both were In satis- factory condition, . Musa Spends $437 in Loss SALEM MFI State Sen. Ren Musa, The Dalles Democrat who was defeated for Congress, report ed Wednesday that he spent (437 on nis campaign. Pianos and Band inifrumentl for rant. Rent to Apply en Purchase, kyle morgan pianol "yours for e happier future through music" (Bauxji (BioAAcd ' Threa-tourtha of the delegates to the July 1 OOP national conven tion have now been chosen. Though the totals recorded for Senator Taft and General Elsenhower shut almost dally, oarelul projection ol remaining selections indlcatea both will tench Chicago with blocks ol from 426 to ,&0U. Nomination re 14 u Ufa tU4. The calculations suggest Taft In likely to have the higher figure of the two" candidates, but not a wide margin over Elsenhower. Neither top candidate aeems des tined to get really close to the maglo 604 In advance ol the con vention assembly. Unforeseen de velopment could upset this out look. No one can accurately foresre what the -effect on delegates will be when Elsenhower returns from Europe next monih. He might vastly boost his stock, or be might hurt himself. But If nothing does nullify the present figuring. It means that the nomination will actually be de termined on the Chicago scene. Aside .front delegates openly committed to the two lcadi-ra, there Is a present prospect that some 300 will come to Chicago either pledged to other men like Governor .Warren and Harold Sin-.-sen, or uncommitted to any candi date. This floating group will be the prize In the great tug ol war. LKAMNO . Some of the uncommitted already lean pretty strongly one way or the other. Some belong to big delegations like Pennsylvania's where Governor Fine Is trying earnestly to pick the winning horse. A good many In this cate gory could get off the fence in the final days before convention. Delegations often caucus en route to the convention city, or shortly after they arrive. A marked trend In convention eve maneuvers of that sort could virtually end It all before the gavel falls. But If these leave the Issue still unsettled, then a totally different factor enters the picture. According to current predictions. Morse Says Government Must Break Balky Union WASHINGTON I Sen. Morse (R.-Ore.) said Friday Ihe govern ment "must break Ihe back of a union" If Its membera refuse to work under government aelsure of a plant for national security rea sons. But Morse oulcklv added that he thinks organlied labor la "wise enougn not to maneuver lueu Into a no-work position under such circumstances. Morse expressed himself In an exchange with Cyrua 8. Chlng. dl lector of the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, at a Sen ate hearing. Chlng had said that "no method or orocedure had vet been devised Former Race Driver Lost prtmrrvrLLE I Larry Moore. 42, former West Coast automobile race driver, has been missing from his home here more than a week. Hla wife said he sometime! blacks out, a result of war injruies. Police believe the trail may lad to Indianapolis, Ind . where his uncle. Lou Moore of Los Angeles, has a car entered In the Memorial Day 500-mlle race. Larry Moore's wife notified po lice here after he failed to return home from a trip to nearby Madras. Mrs. Moore said they came Vre month and a half ago from Mnrvsvllle. Calif. He had been working as a mechanic In a Prlne ellle garage. Mrs. Moore said her husband, a former Air Force cap tain, was subject to blackouts as a result of injuries suffered In a plane crash. Klamath Man Busy Judge James O. Emmons, Klamath Falls field representative of the U. 8. National Bank, is currently Judging one of several horse shows scheduled for him this season, This weekend, Emmons fs Judging the annual show of the Sacramento Riding Club. The banker's services are much In demand because he Is one of the few senior Judges on the Paclllc Coast recognized by the American Horse Show Association. Earlier this month. Emmons iudged at the Richland, Wash., lunt Club show. Collegiate Raid Pattern Changed PORTLAND There was a pantv raid of aorta at Lewis and Clark college nere Friday. But It -was not marked bv riot ing and violence such as has been reported at other colleges through out the nation recently. At Lewis and Clark someone stole a full clothes line from the women's dormitory laundrv room and hung It across the campus' main driveway. Fund Cut Aimed At Defense PORTLAND 11 Civil defense funds would- bear the major brunt of budget cuts proposed Friday bv Portland Finance Commissioner Ormond R. Bean. In lopping nearly one million dollars from the city's proposed U,fj05,000 budget, Bean proposed that funds for civil defense he slashed from the requested figure f t3D2,30t to $25,000. ForTliaflNKfl BREAD 'n PASTRIES Shop Th Ki.AMATII -FaHTHV Slim liv.rlrlln V Hlrlhrl-v f.'.kai an flrrlir Inao Miln Ph. Mti sows 60 delegates In five southern tutus will be In the uneommlttrd category. They will be there be cause there Is no other plaot to put thrm. Thetr problem la nut uncertainty: It's- that there will be too ninny ol .them. . A It looks as II Texiiti'.' OvAryli, Louisiana, Alabama and Mmln alppl will each send two rival delegations to Chicago, one lor Tin i. the other (or Ike. ObvlouMy (hero are enough delrgalea In tins bundle to Up Ihe no ilea decisively lor Hilar man. - Not since 1912. when '354 acuta were conteslril, has Midi a large group headed lor the convenllon under a "clouded title." IK ltDKN The burden of deciding whuh delegation, la sent will (nil lo l lie Appeals may bo taken llrtt lo the Credentials Coinmlltee ol the con venllon, and then lo the convent mil floor, where all the eligible dele gates will vote on any uiuclllrd mutter, II the contests are bitter, as ni.iy be the case, It will be the convi-fl' Hun liocli which will cast Ihe critical weight. An lor that pur-IIU.-.0 H will behoove auuorlar ol both Tall ami Klscnhuwrr lo iimi-alinl not only all Ihelr pre-' Chicago delegates, but all Ihe addi tional Nirciiglli lliey tan irinn eitlier uncommitted ranks or Ihe barkers ol other candidate1). This dramatic let. khuuld It come oil, may well prove Ihe clliniix ol the convention, reduc ing all succeeding events to mere routine. But there Is Just a chnnre that party leaders, in the Interest of later harmony, may dodge this light by ulleruig lo divide all contested seals equally between Tad and Elsenhower. In that event, the strength oi both would be evenly augmented, and the real billol-by-ballo strug gle would be on. And then the winner would be the man with Ihe greatest secondary pulling power among delegates not originally favoring nun. which could compel such employes lo work against Ihelr will. The hearing waa by a Senate Labor subcommittee on a Mors bill to authorise the government to take over plants for 00 dsvs when deadlocked labor disputes threatened the national security. The bill la one of a wide variety cf measures proposed In Congress under the stimulus of the contro versy over President Truman's seiiure of Iht steel Industry. Morse i backs the President's action. And the hearings represent a ! fragment of the continuing debate which was given a fillip yester day bv Uie President's declaration that nobody can lake away his pow ers of selsure. - On Monday, the House Judiciary c6mnilltee is to vote on a propos al that would put Congress on rec ord as believing the President has no inherent power under the Con stitution lo scfce private property. The provision was written by a I subcommittee Uito a war powers extension bill Thursday. It was sponsored by Rep. Pick ett (D.-Tex i. It stemmed directly from Pres ident Truman's selsure ol the steel mills lo avert a threatened strike. Thai Issue now Is before the Supreme Court tor decision. .. , Meantime. Sen, Bridges Ol.- N.H. challenged President Tru man's news conference statement he has power to aelr.e private In dustries in an emergency and that nobody can take It away from him. ' But Sen. Morse said Truman was absolutely right In declaring Thurs day he has such power. t And the Oregon lawmaker indi cated he believes the Supreme Court will rule in effect that, the President can't be deprived of II. Latourette Now ' A Republican OREOON CITY i Howard Latourette, a former Oregon Dem ocratic National Committeeman, has ault the party and changed his registration to Republican. "I have had just too much of the Truman administration," he said Friday in explaining hla TuesV uay registration switch. In 1850 he was the Oregon Demo cratic nominee for V. 8. aena'or, losing to Wayne Morse In the fall election. In 1B3S he was speaker oi me state house of representa tives when It was controlled by Democrats In a special session. Asked If he were mad at the Democrats, he reolled: : "There are so few of them left." Thursday night, at his home on the Clackamas River, he .Was mar ried to Mrs. Rose Turner of Port land, His brother, Supreme Court Justice Earl C. Latourette,' offici ated. . STRIKE PEACE SOUGHT PORTl.ANn IA I - . iMiiuna between the slrllrlner AVI. union and major wholesale baker ies here resumed Friday. Federal mediator ueorge walker was con ducting the talks In the dispute over a union demand for Saturdays and Sundays off. . '. i r cmsmi stifitE rteciAU ' i COLUMBIA CHURCH KOF THE AIR. JJj.- IKKOT ou "1 MAtlONt so (KCBS no i' Un 'mum . '' t . . I THI TtfJTN WIHCI HUU' J Clark Orders, Tight Control " TOKYO W). ' Oen. Mark Clark aid Friday h bad given orilti. to the U. S. Hh Army ''lo obtain uncontented poutiol" nf the United Nations jirlnutier Ol war on nipt at Pusan ul ,KJe Inland.' "The hiild core of the l'l'bellluiu lenders at. Piimiii already have been Isolated trum III" ulhnr tirla oner." the 'United Nations coin, mnmlcr siild In hln first Interview since taking over from Gen. Mm. Ihew 11. Hiilgwey. . . ' When Clark assumed roinniMid Mav 12 he learned Ilia CoinniutiM pilsiineis in the comnoiuKln weir running (he ramp almost in vm Ihrinvlve.- Several riots had m be inn ilnn'n by lnroe. "ilie prisoners' flagrant disre gard of our Inatruclloiu will tint be tolerated any longer," Clnik aald "II was an Intolerable situation "The prlsonera of war have cer tain obligations and e exnr.i them lo ruaiuly. It w in fiuihei. sues of (Ills policy Hint 1 ordmril the 191th Airborne Itegiment In nuje iMsna - The lamed paratrooper unit ftnnt lo Kola laal week aller Rod PtjWs had held Brig', Gen, Francis T. :Uodd, former camp mmmandei . In hiMlngn IH hours and his aur ceasor. Urlg. Oen. Charles Colson I won his relenne by promising run 'Cenilonrt. First Dodd. Ihen Culnon was r lleved as Koje commnmlnul assigned lo nlher posts with 4,v Klithlh Army Clark repudiated Colsnn'a pruuilaes to the Hed POWs. Clark expressed hope the I'OWs would "comply with our ntsuur. lions so that force won't be neces sary." Bui If they dn not. he atfd'il Oen. James A Van Fleet. Eiutnh fArmv commander, has ordrieil guaids to use concussion a-reuadev tear gas and riot squad ladles. Giant Bridge Spans Joined DAl.TIMOKK tr T)i last span went into place Friday to complete steelwork on the Chesapeake Ilv bridge, at four miles the third lnn eat suapcnaion crossing in the world. Bethlehem Steel Company hom ed Into place on Uie 21.218 foot long bridge Ihe last section, s 400 ton deck cantilever truss span. Ihe State of Maryland Is toot ing ihe bridge coal of tt million dollar. Under a tentative ton Khtdula. private car will be charged 11.40 plus 24 cents for each passenger and truck from 42.2 to MM de pending on Ihe number of sniea. The Oolden Gate bridge across San Francisco's Harbor and the James River bridge near Newport Newa, Va. are the two longer Ihnn the Uhesaiieake Bay crossing from shore to short. Woman Hurt In Collision ' Mrs. Darrell C. King of Merrill Was lrnati1 i VI., ..!, Hospital early this morning for nuns reccivea .in en eutomotiue accident on 8. th. Her Injuriei r reporieo to oe minor. An ii I ,m n I. IT j41i.m i.u t... husband, operator of Ihe Merrill Billiardn. struck a parked ear OWnefl hU Marl. D 1 1 W 8. Mh. parked near the Homo bumurr company nuucimg. The accident occurred about J 4S a m ffi, k.nM l, . . , hla head to speak to Mra King. was rioing in ma bark wat, when Ihe accident occurred. in anotner early-mornlnu arc I oem. eara driven by Putt R nnlteptv 9nni i i , -" wwi ni-i mmni inn, sua Frsiteu t u.l. i. im, t, .--.... , otiuiirvn, ham fnnr, Collided at 8. sin and Shasta Way. v-ny r-onee reported Sehmei-k. going OUt Ath. ' mlln un turn onto Hhusta Way. and lr.ul Roberts' car waa coming up 0th. Skidmarks on the pavement indi cated RnhArta' u.kl.U .Ijl.l M feet belore swerving Into the nun ienaer ana aide ol tne Bchmeck car. . Roberts uu tiA .. ,,ii..,.n of the basic rule. That accident wurrea snoniy after midnight. Children Smother In Ice Box Ijnd BovrtV Ftnuree, both 6. rr ,.,- nr,n Honnnnnen jre ox Thursday night, eight hoVa aiier ineir parents had reported them missing. (Pollen salri tit. .......r. enlly had climbed Into Ihe box in i, nciKiiuor a yard wnne playing jiwu.-io nnu me nnor-s ammnn inui. aiuiocaung Hicm TA 9:3 1.4' -;, ttHHiftt.HM mid Hi At