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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 14, 1952)
PAGE FOUR HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON SATURDAY, JUNE 14, 1032 PRANK JENKINS alitor entered as lecond clan matter at the post office of Klamath Palls, Ore on August 30, 1906, under act of Congress, March t, 1879 MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press Is entitled exclusively to the use' for publication st ax" the local qewa printeo In this newspaper as well a all AP new. SUBSCRIPTION RATES MAIL BX CARRIER 1 month $ 1-35 1 month 1.M 6 month t 8.50 6 months J J 10 1 year $11.00 1 year l 30 BILL - By BILL An election year ought to be a (rood one for the people to turn back to the land of fairy talcs. It should serve as a balance to keep the world even, for when elso would vou find an era, a people and a world bo tilled with the won derful creatures of fantasy? The Wizard of Os, the Mad Hatter, The Tortoise and the Hare, the Jabber wockv. The Giant and the Ogre can be found In their natural state and habitat during any real good election year. But I doubt If It will be any of these that the little people will yearn for. For the vision of the little people is being dimmed and their outlook twisted and distorted by the crushing weight of world events. Like the wonderful looking glass thst threw back the equally wonderful images. The glass we have today is just as mythical as that one, but the Image it throws back is neither wonderful, accurate nor Imbued with magical qualities of prognostication. No. I thUik ihe fairy tale the people would turn today is of fey origin. Back to the days of the Leprechaun I If you don't know what a Lep rechaun is or if you don't believe In them then you won't have read this far anyway. And you'U have missed out on a lot of fun. But If you don't know, a Lepre chaun is a tiny little Irish mite (sprite if you prefer, but I take the more personal view of it) who spends his life making shoes, grinding- meal and in many ways being kind and thoughtful toward humans who treat bim with equal dignity and respect. In addition to these sterling qualities the tiny CAPSMT In One blustery noontime, last win ter Ernie Kolbe, the big shot West ern Pine Association forester who used to be stationed here: Dale Prentice, the present Western Pine forest protection engineer here: and Ted Durment of Weyerhaeuser offered to buy this column's lunch. We knew there'd be a catch to it, but accepted anyway. The catch turned out to be-porcupine. That's right, the pincushion rodent of the genus Erethizon, the fat, ambling porky of the woods. Here's the way it is. they said. The porcupine is the greatest ene my of the woods there is. These pesky critters destroy more timber than anybody ever dreamed of har- vesting. And the trouble is that no- Dody realizes it. When you mention porcupine. most people think of the old myth about the porky being the lost nan's friend the one animal he f$n always kill and eat for suste nance. How many persons that were lost in the woods ever saved them selves by killing and eating a. por cupine? None. Not one. But people still think they're good for that rea son and so actually protect them. The predators that are the natur al enemies of the norkies are kept down, and the porkies multiply and they're eating up our trees. It's awful. If It's that bad, we asked mildly, why don't you kill 'em off. That's Just it, they said. To keep the porcupines down we need the help of every man who enters the woods every fisherman, hunter, picnicker and hiker . . . and that's where you come in. You are hereby officially dele gated, Kolbe said with finger point ed our way like a six shooter, you Collins Speaks On Pact WASHINGTON (fl Gen. J. Lawton Collins told the Senate Fri day he doesn't know whether two new pacts with West Germany would give President Truman the rights to order American troops into an International army. "That's out of my field," said the Army chief of staff. He was testlfvlnsr before the Senate Foreign Relations Commit tee, which is holding hearings on the agreements that would tie West Germany into the free world de. tense setup. One committee member. Sen. Hlckenlooper (R.-Ia.) served notice earlier in the day that he would make a, strong move to tack onto the agreements a provision deny. ing the President the right to assign American troops without the con sent of the Senate. Collins told the committee there are no plans "under present condi tions" of sending more American troops to Europe. He was not asked whether those plans would be changed if world conditions worsened. Another witness, Frank Nash, an assistant secretary of defense, said the two treaties "make no change in the status quo" on the contro versial troops-for-Europe issue, the Issue that set eft "the great de bate" last year. Thus. Nash seemed to line up with Secretary of State Acheson who told the committee earlier he believes the President has the pow r to send American troops where ever necessary to protect the Na tion's security. Both Collins and Nash urged swift enaotment of the two pacts, one a peace contract with West Germany, the other an amendment to the North Atlnntlo Treaty that would give West Oermanv securltv guarantees along with the other I BILL JENKINS Managing Editor BOARD JENKINS little people possess the secret of wealth and will reveal it to you if you hold them in a steady stare without letting your glance waver for an instant. So that is why I think the Leprechaun would be the leader if we were to dip again into antiq uity and mythology. Where else In the world will you find the com bination of kindliness blended with the eternal secret of untold weatlth And where else could there by a more fruitful unification of ideas and materialistic embodiments? Wealth without kindliness leads but to sorrow and death and de struction. Kindliness without wealth is an impotent shadow against the wall of the world Of course, for some of us it isn't a matter of turning back into the phantasmagoria of fairyland. Kot in th case of the Leprechauns It isnt For they're not myths. That's why you so often see us walking with bent head and at tentive ear. We're listening for the sound of the tiny cobbler's ham mer as he works away at his shoe making. Joie Chitwood and his auto dare devils were In town the other night and I don't remember reading of any mishap occuring during their thrilling (they tell mel show at the local fairgrounds. But legally they didn't fare quite so well. Spotted one of his cars the following morn ing parked on Main street and sporting one of those yellow ban-r-rs ihe noUce use for calling cards Vou might survive a crash but you can t get away with parking without paying for it. T m ROUNDS; are delegated and charged with the job of popularizing the porcupine as a game animal, a food animal if you please. All you have to do is to tell how succulent and savory a roast por cupine really is. Just give the reci pe like for sourdough hot cakes or rare pot roast that s .all there is to it. Just Is a porcupine good to eat, we interrupted. How do you cook one of the things? Do you skin 'em or pick 'em? Well ... uh ... of course they're good to eat. You can get a recipe for cooking a porcupine easy enough. Or. better yet. kill one and cook it yourself. You'll become famous. The lunch was fair: the talk was I persuasive. We agreed to take the matter under advisement. The only trouble is. we've not been able to pin anyone down to admitting that he ever killed. cooked and ate a porcupine, or if so. that the dura thing was even palatable. A hard working newspaperman hardly ever has a chance to get off the pavement, of course, and we've not been able to conduct the experiment first hand. That's the way it stands. That's the way it stands except that Just this week Dale Prentice, whose Western Pine domain in cludes all of our Southern Oregon and Northern California country, showed up with some scientifically compiled data on porcupine dam age. He has just taken actual tree counts in sample areas on the re production trees that have been chewed up bv Mr. Porky. On re production and second growth trees clear up to 24 inches in diam eter, here's the percentage of trees that show porcupine damage: Greensprings area: 6.5 per cent, i Thomas Creek area, northwest of Lakeview: 26 per cent. I Westside Mill area in Lake Coun- ty: 28.2 per cent. 1 vfemitv-'g e,a'eer,rP " Road vicinity: 33.6 per cent. Rosa Creek area, north of the : Warner Valley road beyond Lake- "ul d rfJ the 2.500-word declar view: 58.8 per cent. ; ar.m ?h Britain and other nations . ..... I That's a fact over half the young growth damaged by porcu-1 nines in some places: Many of the larcrer trpfs wprn orlrrileri near thlr I tops. Prentice said. Some of these showed the dead tops blown out, some had grown to "umbrella" shape, none will ever produce a sawlog. So, Mr. Fisherman and Woods man, you in turn are herewith charged with killing every porcu pine you come across. If you have the experimental turn of mind, and if you fancy yourself as an outdoors cook, skin the bugger and cook him and then give us a report. Snake River Dredging Ok'd BOISE. Idaho Iffl An annlica. tlon by S. K. Atkinson. Boise, for approval to dredge the Snake river near the proposed Hells Canyon Dam site was approved bv the Idaho Land Board Friday, subiect to approval by Oregon authorities. In making the application, Atkin son estimated that dredging opera tions from a point 10 mile', north of Welser, Idaho, to 40 miles down stream from Welser would yield approximately 171 million dollars in gold, monazite and other metals. Edward Woozley. state land com missioner, said a similar lease would also have to be approved by Oregon ana would be subiect to any federal approval necessitated by statute. Woozley further ruled that Atkinson could not Issue stock without the land board's go-ahead. Oregon has tentatively turned down Atkinson's dredcrlncr annllea. tlon, but Atkinson has appealed and hearlntr Is scheduled In he held at Anient tnmi irta iUlm month. They'll Do It Every UTTLE I raJf " "I "M L8! fUEti UTTLE BISMUTH WAS MISSlHQ, THE FAMILY THOUGHT THE WORST AtiO CARRIED OM LIKE SO- QamM prnw wive nTvn !". -. "- " j" " 1 " u u- ty littm of tRRV' ADC, WASHINGTON Lr President Truman is about the only politi cian having a good time. Since he says he wants to vacate his present premises and has no thing to lose personally, he can sit oact ana enjoy tne snow. It's a show the like of which hasnt been seen in these parts in 20 years. Tne Republicans, especially the Tnft and Eisenhower fans, are beating one another over the head with sticks that get harder every day. Since that is an occupation which, if pursued with enough gusto, might wreck the Republican party, it can hardly displease Truman. He wants his own Democrats to win, of course, but at the moment the Democratic would-be presi dentsat least those out in the open are busy beating their gums. Truman is lettine them beat and hasn't named a favorite. He can afford to wait because his Demo crats have at least one advantage over the Republicans in this cam paign. They hold their Chicago conven tion to pick a candidate almost two weeks after the Republicans have chosen theirs in the same place, a bit of political luxury enjoyed by tne uemocrats every tour years, Tnis year, with tneir own race Grange Critical Liquor Control Commission T.A GRANDE Ifl The Oreirnn Liquor Control Commission and the Knox liquor control law were targets of Oregon Slate Grange criticism at Friday's convention session. The Grange approved lesolu- tions calling for amendment of the Knox law to ban all liquor adver tising in Oregon. Other resolutions asked: The Legislature or the governor to investigate the commission to determine why liquor revenues are falling and why "good men don't want to serve" as commission members. An inquiry into why taverns witn bad reputations are reported to be Laborites Lash at U.S. LONDON W Britain's out-of- office Labor Party struck out anew Friday at some major U. S. for eign policies out neagea on me party's own ranks. A party foreign policy statement. Issued Thursday night and due for debate at the annual parry con ference this fall, called for Unit- V.linr, numluNhll, for Pom- ,n,i m- irne iaik nn ; ' .i.-n. nrt new .,,., . wt Germany before " - VS";'. .,m,miiu beizlns. the United States and Britain's Conservative government take a different line on all three questions. .re"ii " .v.. enntrnverslal "which support United Nations ac- .,wmc SHJ?. Ji ',,!,,. mt. g eV mT itttry strength "av JVI ,hm f fulfill their In- w . temational obligations under the United Nations." . The statement blamed Russia s "uncooperative policy" for the fail ure of the world to gain peace, but said the party "firmly believes that all differences between the Soviet government and the rest of the world can be resolved by peace ful means." The party also supported coop eration with the United States and called for more rapid economic and social development under the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Water Users May Save Huge Sum HERMISTON Wl Hermlston Irrigation District water users will be given an opportunity July 14 to save themselves one million dol lars. The chance will come when they vote on a new Bureau of Reclama tion contract which proposes reduc tion of delinquent payments and Interest. Assessments would be reduced from $?.05 to 30 cents an acre under the contract. The district, formerly known as the Eastern Division of the Uma tilla Project, was established and for a number of years operated by the government. Then the water users took over the district and agreed to repay the government, But during depression years the district fell behind in its nivmpnn and has been delinquent ever since. The new contract would reduce the amount still due. Time VYlakhw wide open, it may be quite a help to them depending what the Re publicans do to be able to make a choice to fit the situation. In fact some Democrats still hid ing in the bushes with their sup pressed desires for the White House may come charging out if they think the man the Republi cans pick is one they can whip. Once the conventions are over, Truman promises to take to the road for his parly's candidate. He knows the road pretty well, having been over it in 1948 with much success. And If there's a gleam in Tru man's eyes when he wakes up these days It may come from having dreams the Republicans, by their preconveritlon and con vention tactics, may split them selves beyond repair. The snarls exchanged between the Taftites and the Elsenhower fans get a little uglier every day. Thursday Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge. Eisenhowers campaign manager, accused the Tafl forces " i , Ul .u- 'r-,uE5; "..EZlDlvMon of the Department are "shyster. Taft himself got IntO the fight,,.,,. Mnre orrils-ert the Nevsdan j by saying the Elsenhower people ore ruuutss uu mcj ",c 1 opjxiriunuy. of State's still in operation. I A probe to determine what in- fluence. if any. rambling has had on liquor commission policies. The Grange reaffirmed Its op position to the School Reorganlza- Hnn Rill inri vnteH in flnnnei and conduct a strong campaign to de-; fest the measure. The bill was passed by the last Legislature but was referred to voters in a Grange-supported re - ferendum Action on other resolutions in- eluded: Support of severe penalties. In cluding life imprisonment, for nar- cotics peddlers. Limiting official grange recog nition to three Insurance organiza tionsThe Grange Mutual Fire In surance Co. of Oregon, the Orange Insurance Association of Washing ton and the Grange Mutual Life of Nampa, Idaho. Abandonment of support for the so-called blanket primary election procedure which would permit vot ing for candidates from either party in primary elections. Refuse to endorse a plan call ing for a two-term limit for elected state and county officials. Urged federal construction of Ice Harbor and Hells Canyon Dams. Opposed private construction of the proposed Pelton Dam. Jury Fails In Slot Case Trial GRANTS PASS I A case stemming from the seizure of 154 slot machines in a raid on a chick en house has been dismissed. A six-member Justice court Jury, after 45 minutes deliberation. Frl- i day was unable to reach a decision on whether Clifford G. Martin owned 18 of the machines. District Attorney Max McMlllin i said Martin will be tried again. Also to be tried on a similar charge Is Vein V. Helblg. His case , was to have followed Martin's but was set back after the Martin Jury deadlocked. W. A. M,oore, who pleaded guilty to possession of the 154 slot ma chines, drew a suspended $250 fine at his trial last week. Progressive VP Choice to Talk PORTLAND OB Mrs. Charlotta Bass, a Negro, the vice presiden tial candidate of the Progressive Party, Is to give a campaign talk here June 22. Mrs. Bass, one of the founders of the party, is a former editor of the California Eagle, a West Coast Negro newspaper. The Progressives' presidential candidate Is Vincent Halllnan. a San Francisco attorney. Halllnan is serving a six months prison sen during the 1950 perjury trial of Harry Bridges. Lake Buildings Hit by Snow ROSEBURO Ml The Forest Service reported here Frldav that last winter's near-record snows had damaged several buildings at Diamond Lake. Ranger Don Allen said the 100-foot-long YMCA dining hall had been crushed under the weight of nine feet of heavy, wet snow. A Forest Service warehouse also had Hatlo Passport Head Defended WASHINGTON .ri -Sen. McCar ran iD-Novi Frldav defended the Passport Division of the Stnte De partment and Its chief. Mrs. Ruth B. Shipley, against charges of tyrannical action. "Mrs. Shipley should be com mended for efficiency, courtesy and fair play." McCurran told the Senate. McCarran's defense was In reply to a speech made la.it week by Sen. Morse (R-Ore). Morse sain the Passport Division operates so tcc retlv that no one Including a II. S. Senator can find out whv an application for a passport has been re.iected. Furthermore. Morse said, anv ore. morse niu. anv- on. who hn been liirneri down has no.wav to ask for a review. More jumped on what he called the Passport Division's "tyrannical, arbitrary and capricious exercise of discretion " MrCarrrn said- "If parsoorls have been denied in certain cases In which the lunlor senator from Oreeon (Morsel Is Interested, then the embarrass ment Is his and not the Passport of State Replvlne dlrectlv to McCarran ot u;slnlf intentional Innuendo to -"'leave an Imrresslon that would an 'great riamaee to a colleamie." Whot he was proposing. Morse reiterated, was that an Independent board of review be set up to de termine If a passport request hrd been 'urned down on reasonable grounds. House To Get Control Bills WASHINGTON tfi The House Friday hod two bills to continue epirnig Majt-pntc-reni comroia. I one passed by the Senate and the 1 other approved by Its own House : Banking Committee. I The government's present au- i thorltv for all antl-lnflatlon curbs expires midnight June 30, two weeks from Monday The Senate bill, passed 58 to 18 I and sent to the House Thursday, would extend this power eight months to next Feb. 28. It would also add a full year until June 30. 1953 to authority for credit checks and allocation of scarce materials to Industry. The House legislation, a one year extension to June 30, 1853, was reported favorably bv a 15 to 3 Banking Committee vote. But It would end all curbs on consumer and real estate credit, a point at oods with the one-year extension of credit restrictions voted by the Senate. Rep. Spcnce (D-Ky), chairman of the committee, said he expects prompt action on the House bill debate probably beginning Wednes day and winding up by week's end. In final action on the measure Thursday night, the committee add ed no major provisions which hud not previously been approved. Its most important action reportedly was a new provision, adopted 17 to 5. to drop a price regulation requiring certain reports from dealers who sell at below-celling prices. The Senate action was swift af- ter efforts to tack on amendments 'bearing on the steel strike were abandoned. The bill as it stands ! contains a request to President Truman that he Invoke the 80-day anti-strike inlunctlon provisions of tne rail-Hartley law in tne steel dispute. The Senate measure generally would continue control authority about as Is, but for eight months Instead of the two years the Presi dent had asked. The House version Is for one year. This and any other conflict between the two bills would have to be worked out at a Senate House conference, If the House ap proves the Banking Committee version. One change voted by the Senate would limit dispute-settling powers of the Wage Stabilization Board (WSB), whose steel proposals evoked considerable criticism in Congress. Woman's Body Found In River COHVALLIS 11 The body of Mrs. Charles Mix. her wrist watch still ticking, was pulled from the Marys River nere Friday evening. Police said thev were Investi gating the fatality but had not learned under what circumstances or at what time the 50-year-old woman had died. Three boys who were fishing first sighted the body Just inside the south Corvaills city limits. BULL SERVICE Whifefsc. Registered Hereford Phone CECIL DREW 3924 Dy Jimmy dial NF.W YORK (fi Ovnn Ivnn ovlch la going to the Olympic. And Ihe entire spoils world is uniting with gosnlp about what will happen to I ho Russian trams at Helsinki next month. The dec Mun to let Soviet ath letes compete In Ihe International games puln the Polu'wo to It supreme test. The Cor.munl.sl lead ers have held that .heir Ideology has given Hussla th i world's great, est science, art, and literature. Now they are g'.ing to show that Ideology also builds better bodies. Is a -Conur unlst muscle neees sillily better than a llberty-lovlmt muscle? Tne Soviet alhlrlca are being aei to prove this. And It's not a n'.casunt spot to be In. They must Jcel like Id Komnn gladlu tors, told to win or face I lip con sequences a down-turned thumb. Soviet athletes take their train ing seriously. One report Is that Ihey keep In shape by reoillug Karl Marx all morning, and then timer off in the afternoon by wrestling live bears. Before going to bed thev relax by doing lull knee bends wllh a ropy of Ihe Life ol Stalin on each shoulder. They will be alerted to any pos sible Western trickery. In this re spect Ihey run get a lew tips from Comrade Mikhail Uolvlunik. the world chess champion. Uolvlnnik ordinarily gets reuclv for a bw mutch in Riivm by walk ing, running and cycling. Hut he takes extraordinary measures to prepare himself lor competition outside his own country. A Russian chess expert recently described his strange methods us lollows: "Before Botvlnnik ploys a match In a Western country, he spends Northwest Plagued By Five Industry Strikes By The Associated Press ! uallon as It stood Frldav: Neurly 30.000 per.sona were Idle ! Lumber Some lU.lHK) members Friday In the Pacific Northwest as of the International Woodwork a result of strikes in the bakerv. I era of ,,,-n.. u.r. .,- ,.. , , . I 'i, MapBun ana news- , P Sl, .1.1 - ,. a i ! ,.M0S 01 ,"' trlke-caused layoffs rre 'n Western Washington and ' ',V.C,!,r .f n t" a' mo,',r ' u Nr",l"lor' 'dl worked at the I bargaining table In an effort to ; brl" "DoulJ feulementa In the lurg. " ' ' . . , menl remained uncertain Here Is the Northwest strike slt- uf Multiple sclerosis Is disease which of the nervous system was formerly considered rather rare In this country, but seems to be becoming much more com mon. It Is said that there aro nrnhithlv elnsj. In InO OOO nersntls afflicted with this disease In the I I Dnrfrir j v'Saysr--A;" United Slates alone. "ere rcponco siymica in nun r ran. The cause of multiple srlerosli 1 d'eo, union headquarter". Hie ship remains unknown and there Is no 1 pers' demand for a one-year no specific treatment lor It. ouch as i strike clause Is the main banter l. available for oneumonla or lu- to agreement. 1 pendlcltls. However, a group ol interested . nwee ocauie sicci piams nave rjeen citizens and dociora have formed "out" since the CIO steelworkera the National Multiple Sclerosis 1 Union called a nation-wide strike Society, 270 Park Avenue, New after government semire of the York '17, New York, an organlza- ; mills was called Illegal by the Bu tton aimed at raising funds to pro-' preme Court. mote research and to Improve Ihe I Nrwspopcr About 300 employes care of those wno are stricken with of the Tacoma News-Tribune have this unfortunate malady. thud no Jobs since April 12 when Before discussing multiple scle - i rosls further. It should be empha sized that no one should Jump to the conclusion that he or she nas this disease merely because some of the aymptoms ere present. The Diagnosis is not always simple, and must be made by a skilled physlclnn: I was told that when I discussed this disease on a previous occasion, the society re ferred to was deluged wllh letters from people who did not hove multiple sclerosis at all It attacks several parts of the nervous system and It Is for inn reason that It Is called multiple. meiu o( , dpbl (or American aid The symptoms vary, depending on nPr vvorld War I what parts of the nervous systcni n,, treasury said $21,132 18 went are Involved. 0 reduce the debt originally about Since the location varies there ( $8,400,000 lo Its present 7,442. are no completely typical symp- 1 304.64. The other 1120,905 was for toms. though seeing double, 11 interest trembling or tremor when trying to pick up some object, and a gnlt jinnd. spends the money from that (Const ruction Co., Eugene, submit which looks somewhat like that , country on educational projects led the lowest ot live bids for of a drunken person are probably I carried on between America and construction of the Leaburg Trout tho most common. One or all of tnesc may oe aoscni. Many theories have been sug gested about Its cause but none ol them have held water so far. Also, many treatments have been tried Including artificial fever, the use of drugs to delay blood coagula tion, attempts to desensitize lo allergies, vaccines and others. It appears that long rest Is the best from of treatment during the acute stage of multiple sclerosis. The disease tends to go through periods of great Improvement. If these good periods can be length ened and the bad ones shortened, It Is a good sign. A warm climate and freedom from colds an-; other Infections ol the nose and throot may help to prevent the downswings of the disease. The hope for conquering multiple sclerosis lies in research. Man Killed By Dynamite EUGENE Wl A dynamite charge exploded prematurely here Friday killing Karl Lcntz. 68. Wll lamina. He was Clearing stumps from a tract of land five miles southeast of Springfield, police reported. The ao-stick cnargn gouged a hole 8 feet deep and 20 feet wide. I OPEN TUESDAY Under New Management Snappy Service Cafe 1008 Main St. Hourt 6:00 a.m. to 1 1 :00 p.m. Polly Tipton invites you for Free Coffee and Donuts Tuesday Morning oifh three weeks wllh a companion, working uiil problems while a radio blares III Ihe backgrunud and hi companion blows smuko III his luce." Soviet lenders must he already a bit wurrli'd about the possible elfecl contact wllh the Western world will have on Ihrlr athlolcn. And not without reason. Let us Imagine, lor example, what happens when Ivan Ivunnvlih a Itu.viiini weight llfler, moots up wllh ,11m Biceps, nu American contender. The first thing Ihey do, of course. Is Icol each others muscles ginger ly. All weight inter do thui. 11 Is their way ol saving "hello." "Well, what will happen It you win the chuinploieihip? suys Jim. ' I will get a loiomuna Jub III my (ai'torv perhaps alio t Hi ii Hit medal," replies Ivan, "what will be your reward K you win'' and adds hastily "Not that It Is possible." "Oh, I'll turn pro," says Jim. "What does that mean?" utks Ivan. "Oh," says Biceps, "Il means I'll probably get u Job playing Tar sun In the movies, I'll also start mamilncturliig bar bells under my own mum', and u correspondenci course In muscle building. Then there nre the breakfast inod en doiemenls, television apnearnnccs, and a book on weight lining. "All In all, 1 suppose I will clear 1100.000 the first year." "That ain't rubles." sighs Ivan, enviously. But he will wander oil, a Communist tainted for llle. wondering why he can't get a chnnco to pluy Yurxan, too. Once horse ,ees h.y' It Is hard to get him lo eat sawdust and like It. - v '.." "-i jm , Northwest Washington Olid the tln," "arbor area Ihe principal issues Is a union demand for an employer-paid health and welfare ! I'1"" Negotiations were scheduled m Seattle Friday afternoon. Union ! locals recently rejected three alter- native proposals by employers. The sirixe nos oeen on six weeks. Bakers API, bakers struck wholesale plants In Seattle. Tacoma and Portland on May 2, throwing about &.000 iiersons out of work. New management proposals were rejeriefl inursday In Portland and laroma. Latest negotiations In orniue wrm lino llieir llliru flay without agreement Friday. Main Issue Is the union demand for .Saturdays and Sundays off. Instead of Saturdays and Tuesdays. I Sailors About 1.000 elewiuen of i "hips were "put on the beach" In Seattle when their vessels were lied up by Ihe West Coast strike ol the AFL Sailors Union of the Paclllc. Hundreds of other persons wnoso iivrunooa nepennea on this "hipping were Idled. Negotiations I Sleel Nearly 1.700 workers In lAi - i, pressmen struck in support ot wage aemanas. negotiations. i held for the first lime lust werk- cno, oroxe aown yesierauv over i retroactivity of any wage Increase, I Uanoct Cinnc i il WIHSST rllin Pay on Debt WASHINGTON Wi Flnlnnd has ; sent the United states SI42.127.I8 to j ,,,,, rncor( 0, brln the'oidy country never to -default on pay Th- ir n , . rrwnra to Fin. lnc Finns. Private Gets Death Sentence FORT BRAGG. N. C. I An Army private has been sentenced to death for killing an officer In his company during maneuvers In Tex as last March. A general court murtlal. compris ed solelv of officers, Frldav night found Pvt. Michael Kunak of Balti more, Md., guilty of shooting 2nd Lt. Harold B. Williamson of Wash Ington N. C. Kunak did not exer cise his right to have enlisted men sit on the court. The shooting look place In a mens tent near Fort Hood during Exercise Long Horn. Kunak testified that he "had nothing against Williamson," but added that he was driven by a "strange impulse" which he found himself powerless to resist. The sentence Is subject to review by higher authority. WTC OPENS MONDAY Wcyoihacusor Timber Company's plant and woods operations will be resumed Monday on regular shifts after being down for two weeks for Ihe annual vacation period. ii " i ii ii iniiiin ' ''i";,''V' v . ' ?iv ,,Vi ' I Y)irY iilniiiV -fiiMi iitmtiil illli ii n" Knlerpi'lslng groups tntorrntcd in keeping America nlerl lo daunir might do Ihe country a sorvlee by prpparlnii a sort ol llvo lool shell of books and other materials which expose how Communists really operate. There has been an extraordinary growth In the lust year or so lii the documentary evidences of Com. munlst activity, Fortunately a hlg'i proportion ol It appears wholly lelliible. Some prime examples are Whltlnker Chambers' iilnbtngru phv. "Wltncas." Herbert Phil, brick's story of his double llle as Communist I'urly nminbrr ami Fill agent, and the current series in Ihe futurduy livening Vm on Ihe espionage arllvlles of Klaus Kurhs, (leriuun born Ilrltinh atom ic scientist who gnve the ltussiuns the alom bomb. No rntnlng of llrst-rnle materials In this field would bo quite com plete without a copv of the new American llliu, "Walk Kii.m on llrneon." which presents In an un adorned, nlrulghllorwnrd manner not only 1'oniimmlnt methods but Mil tethiiHitips In tracking down Red spies In an actual case. U thinking Americans could lako advniilugo o full these materials, lin y would be III a tar belter posi tion to Judge Ihe nature and extent ol the Communist threat wlliln our bor Icr.v They would be clear on one liu poruht fiiudameutul which now Is clouded In cuiidusluu. lliat It thai the spy and the pollry-lnfliicajjri' are seldom If ever the same. All the tluugs which a man has to do to Ihlluciife policy, openly advo cutiuti pro-Hovlet views, sabotaging I American tt'tudn.. are emulated to arouse au-spieton ot him. The good spy Is In the business of not arousing ausplclnn. Klaus Fuclis la a perfect ex ample. He was Communist, wiin ileiimie convictions. At first lui kept Die fact quiet In his adopted III itn In because he saw It as n handicap to his developing career us a scientist. But once ha began spying lor Itunslu, he had a belter reason. Kucha became almoat a model for a scientist working on a secret wartime project, lie not only did nothing to stir suiplclon. lie allgnrd himself not too ostentatiously - wllh those who were "lough about security." He usually spoke agalimt leleuaiug classified Information lo the public 'fills pose helrd make him a perfect "sleeper" a spy whose hablls are so circumspect that hn virtually never araws attention. A spy net functions best with a host ol sleepers. Alger Ill's was one. That's why character testimo nials In Hie Hiss trial and similar proceedings are really beside Urn point Of course Ihe spy oan pro- nuce men to altest lo hli character. ' u. would not' be a snv If he could . , I( he wcnl around arousing everybody's suspicion, spouting Soviet propaganda and the like, his usefulness lo a potential enemy would be zero. Ihe pallcy-lufluencer has his role loo, but It Is a distinct one. Those who see the Iwo roles as Inter changeable are simply Ill-informed about Communist methods. They need lo read tho five-fool shelf nt documentary materials. They do not know the enemy or where he might be found. , S Air Crashes Kill Four PHOENIX. Ariz I Four U. 8. Air Force filers are dead as the result of two crashes In Arizona Friday. Three died when a B-28 tow target plane collided wllh a F-lt thunderjcl near here. Pilot ol the bomber, Capl. Herman Peters. Fresno, Calif., parachuted to ssle- : ly' I Dead are Capl. Howard A. Fair banks, pilot of the F B4. Eaton H i puis, Mich : Sintf-Sgt. James O Malley. Providence, R. I, and Stall Sgt. Charles II. Bowtn, Tay lor City. Mich. In an earlier acldent Aviation Cadet John E. Trnhsn. Iowa, I.s , i'1"""d.,"rh'" ,nl,Ul ln n AT-B Low Bid In For Hatchery PORTLAND i.tl W. H. Shields Hatchery, the Corns of Engineers renorlcd Friday. The Shields bid was 1411225 compared wllh government esti mates of 13011.777. The hatchery, expected to pro duce 600.000 yearling trout and 417,000 flngeillng trout each year. Is one ol the key features In Ihe il ma E(W- Willamette Kiver ziasin trout gram. It Is lo be built below the burg Diversion Dam on the Mc- Kenzle River and Is expected to offset trout losses through con struction of Collage Grove, Dore 11a, Detroit, Lookout Point Dams and the Dexter and Big Cliff re regulatlng dams. I SWIN9 CUT OM SAW, 10" ovtreul with ilatl lnm, lisaairi, ltm cylinder td control, bolt, olc. 1 SWIN4 CUT OM SAW, 70" ovorcut with iImI form, hanoorl, loom cylindtr (tad control, bolt, olc. i-swma cut om saw. o" ovorcut. Model Jo, wllh 1 H.C S. E. Motor, magnetic iwlleh, oil. lie available DIS. CAMIAOI, STIAM IN9INI1, IIIAM PUMPS, COMmillOSS, 0US, SOtl CASH, ITC. TaUnhAna! Dlrl Ala, at Cottage Grove 943 Oregon) Or Wrlla-Wlroi DULIEN STEEL PRODUCTS INC. OF WWH. 9265 Es,t Marginal. Wf Seattle 8, Washington collapsed, he said.