Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 5, 1952)
In Thru- Sill fKVVW, '' By FRANK JI.NKINH Rarney Bartich, elder lnlcninn mid park bench philosopher, buck I nun a two-mouths trip lo Kurnpe, tells reporter) at Uio duck In Now York: "I wnnt to let which rrosldon Hal candidate linn the greater WlfMXiM AND FORTITUDE; to lirnt Inflation before I dnclite whom to buck t Words alono won't do It , , . It will take lorlltude." lie added: "Inflation. If not beaten, will do troy any economic or foreign poll cv we make." He nilulil have added Uint It will destroy all ol ua II we don't got II under control, lie would Imve plenty of historical backing for jiucli t tatemenl. Because It la ao pat, I'd like to tell hern the story of John Law and hln Mlaalaalppl Hubble, Hut It'll loo long, Suffice 11 to aav thai he nold to Uie governing power ol Frame laonie two oenturlea ago) l he Idea Uiat his scheme would help to pay off the Iiuko public debt thai Louis XlV'a wara and foolish extravagances had saddled uin Uie nallon, i In essence, hla aoheme was baaed on spending more than was taken In and using printing preu minify to make up the difference. It DID N'T pay off the Trench debt. In stead, It ran up an astronomical NEW debt. The final result of It was that a very lama part ol the iieople ol France lost everything thev had whrn Uie bubble llnnlly burnt. This waa the traurdv ol It: 'I lioi,o who lost llirir all were lh WORKING. PRODUCING peo pie of France. Those who cume out ahead wera the apeculators, I he sharpies, Die last-buck boys, the smartles who made It quick and tailed It away In Hold which they burled or shipped out of Uie country. It will be that way here If we lack the fortitude to atop uilluilon boforo It la loo late. Our mountlna inflation bas lis tragedies already, , who are they? Do you know any pensioners cither those who have retired on company pensions or on social ao curliy? Do you know any wldowa whose sole support la bond Inter est, or soma other form of FIXED Income? Or anybody who retired on fixed Inoome from aavlnira? If ao, you know someUiIng ol the tragedy that la beginning already to stalk, our land. These people thought they were comfortably fixed for life. Instead, they find themselves facing comparative pov erty. U will be REAL poverty aa the buying power of their dollars shrinks still further under growing Inflation. Cruel things like that shouldn't happen to a dog. Dut that's what inflation doea. We've forgotten John Law and hla Mlestsalppl Bubble. But a slml ( lar character la closer lo us In time. He was Lord Maynard Keynes, Ho sold to our governing powers that Idea that ws could spend ourselves ricb and pay olf our debt by deficit financing. He nM lh Bunta trlfk In ftrllnln. Keynea has been gathered lo his fathers, but we are beginning to pay the bill for the goods he aold us. The bill la being paid by the i.sme kind of people who paid It In France a couple of centuries ago. Payment Is being DODGED by the unit kind of people who dodged payment In France two hundred years and mora ago. That la what Bernard Barurh means when he says Inflation will DESTROY us If we lack the wis dom and the fortitude to beat It while there la atlll time. Personally, I'll take a chance on Ike as the Presidential candidate most likely to possess the fortitude to brat Inflation before It destroys us, He knows the hard way Is often the best way. That's how he won the war In Europe. The way he did It wasn't easy. But It worked. I'm afraid that Stevenson, with all his charm and hla tolerance and hla decency and his seeming middle-of-the-road philosophy, has fallen too much under the Influ ence of our leaders who bought the Keynea somethtng-for-nothlng scheme. Wreck Kills 1, Injures Eight ROBEBURO l.fl A vacationing California woman waa fatally in- liir.l anri ailfrhi nil,..,. ...... ........ ........ ...... .B" wmu, j.u, nuna, in cluding four children, wero hurt viiuii a car ana a station wngon crashed Mondoy night tour miles aouih of here. Mrs AnrnhAll Ur Wllr on Bhaftor, ciilif., died in a hospital' rl Intact..,! li.i..u. i. . ...,..,. ixjuiica mi nour alter the accident. Hor husband, Charles Wesley Wl koff, 33, car driver, was hospital lacd for severe shock and internal Injuries. Their 18 - month old daughter, Cathy, waa token by ambulance to Docrnbcchcr Hoapltal In Port land for treatment of critical skull Injuries. The six occupants of tho station wagon, driven by Erwin Merle Smith, 26, Camas Valley, suffered minor lnlurlos. Most seriously hurt was- Uollocn doyoo Smith 3, who suffered a broken leg. Others Included Mrs. Smith, 24; two other Smith children Bruce Allen, 6, and James Erwin, 2, and Mars Bouthwlck, also of Camas Valley. Btato police quoted witnesses as saying the accident occurred when tho Wlkolf cor, pulling a camping trailer, made a left turn near "Kel ly's Korner." Mrs, Wlkoff was pinned In the wreckage Attendants at Dooinbocher Hos pital In Portland roported Tuesday Ihe Wlkoff child wks In "very cri tical" condition with skull frac tures. . TRANSPORT ARRIVES SEATTLE m The Navy trans port Clcn. Hugh J, Oaffey arrived here Tuesday with 1,017 passeng ers from the Far East. The arriv als Included 372 Army men, 416 of the Navy and 176 military do-pendents. City Council Okays Recreation Field Sale Another cltv okay for the aale of Recreation Field to Sacred Heart Areflemy tor use at an athletic field was voted by the City Council last night, and seem ingly that ends what In the past uoune or three months nss amounted to something of a con troversy. fiucrcd Heart, expanding Its school Incllltlps to lake csre of an expected Increase la enrollment mid also planning a atepped-up ath letic program, aome lime ago ankrd the city to sell the old bsll field, and ollered 12,611). the ap praised price, On June 2 Ihe Council okayed the aale, but objections from var ious quarters, particularly from the Recreation Committee, held It up. The Recreation Committee ob jected on grounds thst the aale would leave the cltv one plsv field short, with no replacement In sight. NOTHING DONE tjn...-.i. tiinfm llil. l!m nnth. Ing has been done lo make any- ii...... ..I lh- lltttrt mnti mmtihem of Uie Council feel that Bacred Heart can make more and belter use of It than can Ihe city in tne near luture. s nii,.. rrri.ll Miller, who Initiated the June 2 move to sell the Held to Bscred Heart, alto pro posed lant night thai Uie asle be none shead with, and the Council agreed. Since. Ihe notary uiuo oriK'"y X-Ray Survey Nears Klamath rm.. ...,iv.Bjlri, V.rav survey . .1..... In irimth Fttlla t day aa It neared the 2.000-mark In number of chest picture aireauy taken, . .... - V .... I 1a ! 11 OR) i NO uiivv. w - .--- --. Klamath residents over 16 years ol age between now ana oww. had marked up 31173 X-rays to dste. The town of Ely alone, under the direction of Mrs. Dsve Camp bell. Mrs. J. M. Kendall and Mrs.. William Hatal piled up a total of 428 pictures in an eight-hour period. tu.n . (hntiKtriH women- one for each IS homes In Klamath Falls began maaing cans In every residence thev can reach in mn attetnnL tA vet DOOPle tO 1 ,V0 chent X-rays. They are empnasising win nu appointments aro necesssry. no un- X-Ray Box Scar Yeslerday-ue4 Tat Date-t.m ' Gonl-M.eoO Tomorrow's Rchedulei Cast Hide pharmacy. 80S E. Msln. It to 1 p.m. Weyerhseuser Mill, 11 a.m. te t p.m. Griggs Stewart Lenox stare I p.m. to 1 pxn, dressing or walling or cost. The PTA la organising the canvaas. Mrs. H. A. Moore and Mrs. Paul Buck are co-chairmen of the home committee. Mrs. F. R. Williams Is chairman of a committee of some 300 wom en who arc to serve as clerks uurlng Uie X-ray visits in Klamath Falls and the nearby auburban areas. Each one has been assigned to do at least four hours work. Still another 300 hostesses are being organized by Vo-chalrmen Mrs. Elisabeth O'Oleblyn and Mrs. .elms Howard, while Mrs. Cliff McClellnn handles Uie churches. The X-rays are not only for Uie discovery of tuberculosis, but also often reveal other chest disorders which otherwise may go unnoticed until too late. The survey Is being carried on by the State Board of Health under the direction here of Mrs. Bertha Parkhurst, In cooper ation with Uie Klamath County Tu berculosis and Health Association under the direction of Mrs. Erlo Majors; The Klamath Medical So ciety under Dr. Richard Currln, chairman of the Medical Policies Committee and Dr. Seth Kerron, Klamath County Health officer. Mrs. Earl Sheridan Is over-all chairman of the aurvey. Police Judge Pay On Ballot The proposition of raising the salary of tiie Klamath Falls pollco Judge from Its present 8325 a month to $375 Is to be placed on tne city oatiot to oe voted on Nov. 4. A resolution putting the proposal up for vole was adopted lust night by the City Council. Since the salary of all cleottve Klamath Falls officers Is estab lished by charter, a charter amend ment Is necessary to raise the pay and the charter can be amended only by popular vote. If adopted, the higher pay rate would bo effective next January, Tho title "police Judge" for the Job Is something of a misnomer. In addition to the function as pre siding Judge of Municipal Court, the Klamath Falls police Judge actu ally Is city clerk, charged with responsibility for most of the city's official bookwork and money hand ling. He Is Iho practical head of the city's front office, Tho proposed pay raise doesn't entnll any tax levy. The salary would be paid from the clty'a gen eral fund. -BULLETIN- REDS CONVICTED LOS ANGELES lP) Fourteen California Communist leaders were convicted Tuesday of con spiring to teach and advocate violent overthrow of the I'. S. government. gave that piece of ground to the city, the Council stipulated that Ilia money obtained n the sale be earmarked for a apeclal Rotary fund lo be used for recreation pur- posea at the club's direction. Also on June 2 the Cltv Council voted to place lots In Trailer Park, located at Radcllfle and Washburn, on aale aa residential property, but that waa likewise objected to by the Recreation Committee and more recently by some citizens of Ihe Mills Audition area who pe titioned against II, So that property, bv vote of the Council last nluhl. wss ordered taken off sale again and held for recreation use. ZONED PROPERTY rilu.Aflm. nmnMrlu In 111 amS between the Southern Pacific trsck and Richmond, extending Horn Darrow to Just below E. Main, which was recently retonrd from Class II residential to Industrial, was ordered on sale, and a rider clause was added to guard against anvone buvlna the property for speculation. All contracts of sale will provide lhat Uie purchaser get started with uihnlava, .rll rllrLInn h mllM-m- Plates within six months of the dste of the sale, n construction Isn't started the city can, at Ita option, cancel the contract and re fund the aale price. One olfer lo purchase lots In tne rezoned district, by Troy V. Cook lor a warehouse, was accepicu. other Cltv Council activity last night Included: Annrovsl nf 117.700 Worth Of building permits. KLAMATH BUS Referrsl to the Utilities Commit tee a request of the Klamath Bus Company for permission to discon tinue bus service to the Oregon Avenue. California and Hot firings area and Increase in tne cnuaren a faro from seven to 10 cents. Approval of a private aewer pro ject being undertaken by ownera of alx lots, five ol inem duui upon, In Ihe 1700 block on Eldorado. Authority for Uie DAV to hold Its annual Forget-Me-Nol sale Aug. 16. Consideration of plans drawn by City Engineer E. A. Thomas for extending a storm sewer from El dorado and Oak down Eldorado adlaccnt to Uie Southern Pacific fence aome 800 feet, to Improve acuities for carrying off water from the Main Street underpass and the lower end of E. Main. Thomas estimated the cost would be 13.400. STANDARD TIME Introduction of ordinances call ing for Uie establishment of Stan dard time aa of Sept, 1, and to reouira oeraons excavating In un paved atreets or alleys for sewer Jobs to obtain city permission and pay a fee. Introduction of another ordinance outlawing the practice, If any, of allowing cattle, horses, mules. sheep end gosts from running at large in the city, ana providing for Ihe Impounding of any caught doing so. $60,000 Suit Filed In KF A 860,000 damage suit against Uie Southern Pacific has been transferred from Multnomah Coun ty to the Circuit Court here on change of venue. The suit waa brought bv John T, oumn of Portland, who claims that he was roughed up and taken off Ihe SP's northbound Cascade here in Klamath Falls July 22, Qulnn Is suing for $10,000 per sonal Injury and $50,000 punitive damages. E. A. Culp, who was conductor of the train and who Is now dead, also Is named as a defendant along with the railroad. On Uie night in question, Qulnn approached Ucket agent at the depot and said he had come In on an earner train, naa gotten oil but had left his through ticket to PorUand aboard, and the train had gone off without him. He wanted to get on No. 12, the Cascade, next norUibound train out. He was Informed that he should buy another ticket for No. 12 and that wncn he got to Portland If he could prove he had a previous ticket lie would get a refund. However, Qulnn got on No. 13 without buying a ticket and when Culp. the conductor, came around he found that the passenger had neither ticket nor reservation. He asked Qulnn to leave and when he didn't, called City Police Who look mm off tne train. He was taken to the police sta tlon, but was not arrested, and the police officer who took Qulnn off the - train said he wasn't beaten and no force was used to remove him. Qulnn filed the damage suit In Portland Oct. 23, 1951, and the mo tion for change of venue was made by Oordon Gearin, SP attorney, on grounds that It would be more feasible to bring the trial here than to bring several witnesses for the railroad from Klamath Falls to Portland. . Weather V FORECAST Klamath Falls and vicinity and Northern California: Fair Tuesday through Wednesday. High both days 85. Low tonight 55. High temp Yesterday 89 Lew laat night- 55 Preclp yesterday T Slnoe Oct. 1 17.29 Normal for period - 12.40 Same, period laat year 14.81 Additional Weather en Page S ; .O : Price Fire Crniy 12 Paies September (oal Strike BUSES COLLIDE Rescue workers probe ihe Twitted wreckage of two Greyhound buiei which collided head on near Waco, Tex., killing at least 29 persons. There were 22 sur vivors, all of whom received emergency treatment. Klamath s Sky watch Meeds More Spotters Klamath's "Operation Skywatch" Is In dire need of volunteer help evcrywnere In trie county, Director Wallace Reed announced today. The operation, which should be functioning full time now and which Is to participate in a state, wide practice alert later this month is running on only a part-tune and under-mnnned basis as far as ci vilian spotters are concerned. Many posts aren't operating at all. The forest lookout spotting sys- Grain Hardest Hit By Storm Crop damage from halt storms last weekend apparently' Inflicted serious damage to several rancnes in the Langell Valley area, especially to grain crops as was orlglnlally reported, The County Agent's office said today early reports had been veri fied, wlUt from 50 to 60 per cent loss to several barley fields. How ever, It could not make an esti mate of actual dollar losses. Plrst reports of extensive dam age In the Lower Klamath area may have been more serious Ulan the actual situation, Uie office said. However, there were reports of some damage to fields of grain In mat area, potatoes, wnicn were reported earlier to have been bad ly damaged apparently were not hard hit. Meanwhile, the scries of light ning fires started by the week end's electrical storms were all re ported either out or under control, with several new ones showing up as "sleepers". The KFPA, Forest Service and Park Service cooperated on a small blaze on Uie Yawkey tract right where Crater Lake National Park, Rogue River National For est and Klamath Forest Protec tive Association patrols meet. The fire never had a chance. A sea breeze - brought relief to most of Oregon Tuesday from a heat wave Uiat pushed the temper ature over tne century niorK over a wide section of the stale. The cooling began Monday after tcmperotures climbed . to more than 100 degrees at scattered points over the state Sunday. Jess Z. Smith Plans to Vote For GOP's Bv HALF. SCARRROUGH Petitions for two men who want to set their names moved about on Uie November general election ballot for Kiamatn county are now being circulated, and another fel low whose name Is going to be on tho ballot Is asking people not to vote for him. He is Jesse Z. Smith of Malln, who last Mav In the primaries won by write-in vote a, position as Democratic candidate for tne state legislature. Klamath county has two repre sentatives In the legislature, Hank Somon and Ed Geary, and conse quently each party has the option of making two nominations at tne primary. Semon Is a Democrat and he got one of the Donlo nomina tions unopposed. Geary, a Repub lican, aot ono ol uio two ujf nominations without opposition, so to all intents Mid purposes tney both are as good as elected in No vember. However, a good many Demo crats wrote In Smith's namo on the primary ballot, enough to give him one of tho two Demo nomina KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, tern appears to be the only one wrucn is carrying on uie program as was originally set up. in many outlying areas, Reed said, there are no helpers at all lor those appointed to head obser vation posts, only about one-third ol the county's ground posts are operating anywhere near where uicy ougnt to be, ne asserted. In Klamath Falls itself the direc tor said there is an opening lor two observatiofi lMnt supervisors and lots of volunteers. Reed can be reached by phoning 8059. Other areas where help Is need ed include Chemult, where volun teers should report to Mrs. Sally J. Dnmon; Algomn. Scott Warren; Bonanza, D. J. Bliss; Chiloquln Fred G. Markwardt; Dairy, Don ald Rice; Fort Klamath. Gus Page; Laplne Uackpine Motel), William Schubner; Keno, Harold N. Rose; Klamath River Store, Mrs. Henry Buckingham; Merrill, Clyde Ham mond (Phone Merrill 3811); Wor den, Ira L. Davis, (Phone 5970); Obenchaln Ranch, Harry Oben chain. Many other posts which were selected as sites by the Air Force more than a year ago have been found almost impossible to estab lish actively. Reed said he has driven several hundred miles at tempting to get the operation un derway, and he estimates he's got a thousand miles more to go be fore it will be properly operating. Housewife Ends Mystery ALBUQUERQUE OP) Univers ity of New Mexico scientists got out their Geiger counters, their lab oratory equipment and their mi croscopes. For days they studied the mass of black, porous material sent- to them as the possible remains of one of the mysterious green fire balls. Finally, desperate, Dr. Lincoln La Paz, head of the university's Institute of Mcteoritics, showed the stuff to his wife. Mrs. La Paz looked and sniffed and settled the problem and proved: You can puzzle a scientist but you can't fool a housewife when Ht conies to burned toast. Out of State Contest; tions, along with Semon. So his name will be on Uie print ed ballot. There will be Geary, Se mon and Smith, vote for two. Smith isn't running. He doesn't want anybody to vote for him. He asked the Herald and News to please thank the persons who thought enough of him to write in his name on the primary ballot and to ask them not to waste their ypte on him In November. It's not that he would entertain any great hopes of winning, any how, even If he wanted the Job. Semon in one of the real Veterans of the Oregon legislature, having been elected 10 straight times in the past, Bnd Geary will be going into his third term. Jesse Smith ran for the job in 1950 and although he put up a pretty stiff race he lost. He says he Isn't running now and Is going to cast his vote for Semon and Geary. Also, he says, he is going to vote for Elsenhower and Jones (Dwlght Elsenhower, Republican candidate for President, and John G. Jones of La Orande, Democratic candi ail if?te TUESDAY, AUGUST 6, 1851 Authorities Probe Crash WACO. Tex. Wl Authorities worked Tuesday to determine Just how many persons died in the flam ing crash of two Greyhound buses near here Monday. Meanwhile, civilians working lor the military barred newsmen and others from Uie morgue where Uie bodies are held. Shortly thereafter, the executive editor of Uie Waco Times-Herald, angered at what, he called "cen sorship." telephoned Washington authorities and got :he ban against reporters and others entering the morgue lifted. At; least 28 bodies have been recovered from Uie collision and flame wrecked buses, but a pile of charred flesh and bone re mained for classification and identification. Only seven of the dead had been positively identified by mid-morn-ng, 30 hours after Uie wreck oc curred. TWehty-five persons were listed as injured but none were reported in -critical condition. Executive Editor Sam Wood of the Times-Herald said one of his reporters, Mary Ann Jennings, was barred from the Compton Funeral Home morgue by a Waco police man. The policeman said he was act ing under orders to bar persons from entering Uie morgue. The order came, Wood reported, from two civilians, an identifica tion team from Wright Patterson Air Force Base, Dayton, O. They were R. L. Trask and R. W. Rals ton. James LaBlond, head of the Mc Lennan County (Waco) Civilian Defense Agency and himself a mortician, said he was barred from the morgue. Wood said he believed the morgue was closed so that no identification of military personnel would be made until military au thorities released Uie names. "This is no longer a matter of military courtesy," Wood said. "Too many civilians are involved. We'll play ball with them on their military posts but not In this situ ation." Meanwhile, one more victim was identified through dental work, fingerprints, scraps of paper In his billfold and his weddhi band. He was Charles W. Wright, sta tioned at Carswell Air Force Base, Forth Worth. He was en route to the base (Continued on Page 3) Eisenhower date for Congress). The petitions being circulated are for, D. E. Van Vactor, who wants to be elected district Judge, and M. A. (Nick) Carter, who would like to be elected district attorney. Both must get 775 registered vot ers to sign their peltitions by Aug. 24 if they are to get on Uie No vember ballot. Van Vactor was district attorney until last week, when he resigned and was appointed to the Judge ship. He was to have been on the November ballot as the candidate for district attorney for both the Republican and Democratic par tics, but has withdrawn his name lrom that section of the ballot and now wants to get it on the non partisan section for district Judge. carter was district judge up un til last week, and was Uie unop posed candidate for election to that oiiice. But he has withdrawn as a candidate for the Judgeship and Is circulating petitions toward get ting on tne ballot as the Kepuou can nominee for district attorney. Rather confusing. Telephone 8111 No. 288S Looms Lewis Says Miners Yant Agreement WASHINGTON W The specter of another Industry throttling strike before the steel mills have had a chance to get back to full blast production arose Tuesday as John L. Lewis served notice that ins united Mine Workers' con tracts are ending next month. Lew-is. president of the mine workers union, wrote Joseph E. Moody, president of the Southern coal Producers Association, that his present work contract will ex pire Sept. 30. That's 60 days from the date on Lewis' letter. Terms of the exist ing contract provide termination upon 60 days' notice by either side, SHUT DOWN The notice to Moody, following by 10 days similar word to the Bit uminous Coal Operators Associa tion. Is certain to mean a shut down of all but a small portion of soft coal mining the end of next month unless Lewis. Moody and Harry M. Moses agree on new con tract terms. Moses heads the Bitu minous Operators Association, re presenting an estimated 240 mil lion tons of annual production. much of It owned bv the steel in dustry. The Moody group pro duces around 100 million tons year. Lewis, it was also learned Mon day, has served contract termina tion notice on the anthracite, or hard coal Industry, which employs 100.000 miners. The bituminous dig gers number 4M.000. WESTERN OPERATIONS Still not a party to the series of recent Lewis letters are operators in Indiana and the Far West, with an estimated 40 to 50 million tone a year and a scattering of soft coal producers in a dozen ether states. In the last 10 years or more. Lewis and the soft coal operators have reached a contract agree ment without a strike or slowdown only once in 1951. The 1951 agreement, which was signed Jan. 18 and boosted miners' daily wages $1.60, was influenced by knowledge that the government was about ready to slap a wage freeze on the nation. The freeze came a weeK later out because ol 1951 agreement had already been signed Lewis is now entitled to a minimum of 10 or 11 cents an hour wage boost for all his bituminous miners to compensate for cost of living increases since Jan. 26. 1951. A soit coal industry olllcial said there is little likelihood of any full- scale bargaining talks for several weeks.' Rough Road Scrambles Eggs AMSTERDAM. N.Y. Ul He was hauling eggs, so Vernon Thom as, -33, of Charles City, Iowa, braked the tractor-trailer he was driving Monday when he saw a rough patch of pavement ahead. The truck skidded and over turned. Thomas was not injured, but he 11 never put ms cargo to gether again. -M -,"- I-.. MR. AND MRS. LEE H. BISSETT. Fair Oakt, Calif., stopped here thit morning en route home from a vacation further north. ' , Allies May Launch New Korea Raids SEOUL. Korea. 11 The U.S. Fifth Air Force said U.S. Sabre pilots ahot down four Communist Jets and damaged alx in aerial dog fights over North Korea Tuesday. The smashing U.N. air victory. announcement came only a few hours after the U.N. said it had warned 78 North Korean towns bousing Communist military Instal lations that they are doomed and advised civilians to get out in ad vance of air raids. , . The sixth Mid was hit by an F-U Thunderjet pilot. The Air Force said the Red fight ers ventured farther south than they had In recent months. The program of heralding air raids Is designed to spare non combatant lives, SUPERIORITY . It also has the effect of flaunt lng the Allied air superiority over the Communist North. Korean and Chinese commands. At least two of the forewarned towns have; been hit. Lt. oen. Glenn O. Barcus. U.S. Fifth Air Force commander, said the warning program has been under way in Korea since Mld juiy. ' Millions of leaflets telling- of fu ture combines have been dropped on nortn Korea by B-29s flying out of Okinawa and Japan. Shortly before an attack begins. Radio Seoul advises the civilians ' in the target area to get out im mediately. Tne broadcasts continue right tin until the time the attack begins. BOLD PROGRAM The bold urogram was an nounced as Fifth Air Force fighter bombers swept Central and -Eastern North Korea Tuesday morning, bombing- and shooting up . targets . behind Communist front lines. Pilots reported destruction or damage to 24 rail ears, nine build ings, a supply dump and one ve hicle. Fighting- along; the ground fronf f was limited to small-scale) ski)' ishes. A frontline officer reported no contact during the night with Reda in the vicinity of the Western front hill Old Baldy, the battle line's hottest spot in the past few weeks. . U.N. Naval headquarters in Tokyo said the British light cruis er Belfast was hit by a Communist mg m we vicinity oz uie west coast port of Chinnamno. Four Chinese - ratings were " n uuuum, vi iuou. A w ll suffered only minor damage and was able to continue its patrol duty. , . t Free Movie : Slated Friday We hate to mention it boys and girls, but about a month from now it will be Back to School. By way of softening the blow, and in order to add a pleasant feature to your summer vacation,. Uie Klamath Merchants Associa tion is offering a big. free show Friday for all pre-teenage boys and girls. The show will be at the Pelican Theatre Friday morning; doors open at 9:30 and Uie show starts' at 10. - - Ken Murray '8 famed "Bill and Coo" will be the feature movie. And there will also be a Cartoon Carnival, with seven of the color cartoon films. "Bill and Coo" is a highly en joyable movie featuring trained, birds: In Uie two years since it was released, it has won world wide acclaim. A special section of tomorrow's Herald and News will be devoted to Back to School. , f V f w i . a