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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 23, 1952)
PAGE FOUR HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH KAMA OREGON SATinWAY, AUGUST W, 1881 FRANK JENKINS editor Entered a second class matter t th post office of Klamath Falls, On., on August SO, 1(06, under act ot Congress, March t, 187t MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tht Associated Press la entitled exclusively to the us tor publication o all the local news printed In this newspaper as well as all AP news. SUBSCRIPTION MAIL 1 month a 1.35 i months 6. SO 1 year 11.00 BILL - By BILL The birds do it. The animals do it. Women do It. What's the matter with the American male? " I refer, naturally enough, to the aad decline of the sartorial splen dor, display of. by the average . American man today. Look around you. The male ducks are coming out in brilliant plumage that flashes and glitters aa be arrows across the skies or floats in smug complacency on his private pond. There ain't a more gorgeous vi sion in the world than a big China pheasant in his fall d umage. A big buck deer turns out with . a rack of horns on his brow to shew the world that he is strictly top-drawer Dragging material. And the shop windows are full ' ef colorful fall fashions for milady fashions to cause her to stand out m a crowd, to fit her moods of gaiety, of happiness, of any mood she wishes to cnoose. And what does the old man do? He trudges off to the corner hab erdashery and outfits himself with the latest thing- in sack cloth suit ing, piain wane siuro wun pro cessed collars and black Knit lies. A suitable costume no doubt for bread winning, but somewhat on the dun side for rest or relaxation. The old saying that all work and no play makes jack is true. But these days you might as well spend a lime oi it tor tun. It's about time Mr. American broke awy from the constricting roles of business and society that says he must be drab to be respec table. IT you deign to enter one of our marts ot trade without being choked by a stiff collar and tie you take the chance of being snubbed by your colleagues. Creep mio an upper register restaurant dressed In a sports-style ensemble and you will probably be led out and stoned in the streets. Rever ence, of course, has always de manded black suit and stiff brimmed hat. Politician's claw hammer coats and string ties are but barely out of the picture. In fact a few of them are still ling ering in the halls of congress, flit ting from cloakroom to cloakroom en their clandestine deeds. But I say it is time for rebellion. Let the gutters overflow with the van output of lethargic tailors. Down with Bond Street. Vive the Red Pants. Arise, peons I Toss out the autocratic rulings of the 400 ana give we country back to the common, man. It has taken 300 years to break down the American male. Enough ef oppression and despotism. The American Indian was a colorful tent when the first Puritans land ed on our shores. But even his chromatic spirit has been quelled by the unceasing labors of the gloomy and low in spirit. Enough! Strike now while the time is ripe. Aa another writer in this paper has often (aid "too much power, aa too few hands too long." Let's Oh. . (p. A distracted mother writes that the is at ber wit's end about her seven-year-old boy who still wets the bed at night. To add to the fliirieuity, she has been advised to give the child a good spanking af ter each accident, but wonders About this since the boy feels bad ly enough about it anyway. Now involuntary urination, or enuresis at night, is by no means a rare problem during childhood and youth. Since, in many cases, It appears to be closely tied to nervous and emotional factors, as wm oe pointed out later in the column, spanking would ordinarily seem to be about the worst kind oi treatment. Several methods are helpful in treating enuresis. It is usually well to cut out fluids as much as pos sible after lnr 4 o'clock In the afternoon. Another suggestion which has been made is to give a level teaspoon of table salt with a little jam on a cracker at bedtime. But remember, this is advisable only if recommended by the doctor, Good results are obtained some times by awakening the youngster at definite periods during the night ta order to urinate. When control over the urine dur ing sleep is not obtained by the time a child Is one-and-a-half years eld, or when bed-wetting occurs I Confederate Daughters Renew Civil War Fight rtJfS?1- m - Indignant United Daughters of th. nnT,f. erjcy fired heavy verbal artillery J - -swuu same ot MODUe And their purpose is just the same as It .was when Confederate guns aimed shot and shell at an invading union neet in 1864. They're trying to keen Adm, farragut's flagship, the Hartford, from entering bay waters. A proposal to bring the Hartford here from the Norfolk, Va Navy Yard drew prompt counter-battery fire from the UDC yesterday. Why, that might me si that Far- ragut flagship wou.d be an chored within easy rifle range of tha statue and home of the great uorueaerate naval nero, Adm. Ra phael Semmes. Farragut became a national hero with his reckless attack on Mobile Bay Aug. 6. 1846. "Damn the tor pedoes! Full speed ahead!" he aried. - Semmes commanded the Confed erate raider Alabama, which dealt heavy blows to Union shipping. I BILL JENKINS Managing Editor RATES BY CARRIER 1 month . 6 months I year t l.M t (10 116.30 BOARD JENKINS take the power away from the blue noses and give the right of deci sion to the taxpayer. I seem to be filled with tales of hunters these days. But I was re minded of the pure spirit of those who worship the red gods again yesterday when I ran into Archie Huff. Archie is the local long arm ot the law in cnuoquin and one of the most ardent of the Nimrods. Believe it or not he was in town to hurry up the tent maker who is repairing ms portable home. Rea- son? Elk season is only two months away and Archie wants to be sure everything is in readiness. Summer's over fellas. That's the straight dope. If you don't believe it just taite a look, saw unarne Riley going down the street the other aav wearing a leoora instead of his summer attire of a light straw skimmer. As soon as Paul Landry abandons his we'll know tor sure that winter is Just a step around tne corner. I suggest that It might be splendid thing if the city were to sponsor a parade for SeDtember tne tirst, wmcn happens to fall on a Monday. For that is the great day, long awaited by the faithful, when the clocks will turn back to God's time and the universe can carry on with its cosmic time keep ing on a normal basis. It should be a joyous day. One of great rejoicing. The fatted calf should be slain, the wine cooled and the ovens fired for a feast. Just think you'U know what time it is! When you have to catch a train or plane you can do so with out naving to consult a timetable and then phone to find out if you'd rather be an hour earlv or an hour late. You can drive over the hill to Medford and Ashland and arrive there in the standard two hours instead of getting there an hour earlier than you had planned The sun will sink behind the hills at a respectable hour and you can nestle your tiny little head in the pillow in darkness before the night is half over. I strongly advise a gathering of the clans over this. I. also advise General Ike to make a strong stand on the issue. Carry the flam ing torcn tnrougn tne Bills in favor of standard time, Ike, and you'll quickly gather a stanch army of supporters. Since that la labor dav anvwav. at least observe a moment of si lence for this return to sanity. My office is being painted again. This time It's the ceiling getting the treatment. And once again I find that being without an office, having to use a strange typewriter and sit on strange chair is al most as great a handicap as los ing one s right band. With luck It should be finished by the middle of next week. Then I'll have to find another excuse for not working. gjohdcui after being absent for several years, there is a great deal of emotional distress not only in the youngster out in the parents. Parents not onlv resent th. iron. ble caused by bed-wetting, but are sensitive to the fact that their child does not seem on the par with oth ers of the same age. When the enuresis continues be yond the age at which it should disappear, it is probably because oi one or more oi three psychologi cal conditions in the child. The first is that the child has not yet grown up with reference to control of the bladder. The second is that subconsciously tbe child wishes to remain in or return to the protected, irresponsible atate of Infancy rather than to assume the normal difficulties ot his age. Finally, there may be a subcon scious resentment against the par ents in which bed-wetting becomes a way of getting even with them because of too much criticism. Recently, an authority suggested that parents be given the following advice: a child should not be .-.. cused of enuresis until he is well past the age when he could normal ly be expected to control this func tion. In other words, not alt ehiirfrn develop bladder control at an equal rate of soeed. anv more than thv uu utiici junctions. One irate UDC momW ciaimca mat Semmes' statue tne toot of Government Street "might well fall off Its pedestal if v h i . ,laBSWD brought to The Mobile American Legion post and Knights of Columbus Council proposed Thursday that the Hartford be returned here as a nistorical snrine. Legionnaires said the old war ship is deteriorating and in danger of being scrapped. While individual rauohLr. nf the Confederacy kept up a steady me ai targets oi opportunity, a UDC official took the matter up with leaders of the organisation. Mrs. V. G. Hiernnvmus. rilrpr.tnr of the Mobile Bay district, said she was conferring with Mr .in Cooper of Huntsvllle, Ala., atate UDC president, and Mr. ril.n Long of Newton, N. C, UDC pres ident general.. If they agree, there will be an other Confederate effort to tor pedo the Hartford, They'll Do It Every SlOWBCRRy put 4W4V A 816 XSVSZJF0 He TOOK OFF ON HIS OvOSS-COLWTRy flight.... ABCTs WASHINGTON I The middle of the road Is getting crowded with presidential candidates. With in a few hours of each other Gen Eisenhower and Gov. Stevenson both claimed It aa their natural habitat. Its not surprising. Both were considered fairly conservative at the time of their nomination. It's one of the reasons they were cho sen. No one expected radical prom laes from either of them. And at this point in American history it woman t be politically wise for a candidate to express anything but a philosophy of mod eration. It's the mood of the coun try. In 1953 the center lane looks like the only road to the White House. The country is prosperous, there is plenty of food, the people are still undergoing a reflex action against communism and Commu nists, and war doesn t seem too close, all of which encourage con servatism. Nevertheless, neither candidate can convince everyone he is a middle of - the - roader. Steven son himself said yesterday the middle means different things to different people. Any differences between the two men should ap near when thev begin their cam paign speechmaking. So far both nave oeen verv cautious. But the fact that Eisenhower and Stevenson claim the center as their favorite place which might indicate that any differences be tween them are differences about details may limit the range of issues. Tor example: not whether some do! lev or program of the Democratic administration was right or wrong but whether it was weu-nanaiea. When that occurs, if ft occurs, dial NEW YORK 11 Some weeks ago A. P. Cooke, editor and oub- i Usher of the weekly Plant City (Fla.) Courier, learned some bad news about one of his readers. The reader was himself. Should he print the news or keep silent? Cooke hisitated, then eat down and typed out his regular column, "Just Roaming." "The word cancer Is an ugly word," be began. "It Is, to most folks, a cruel word, a despairing word because the very thought of it brings despaire to anyone close to one so afflicted. "I have just been told that I have a cancer in the tissues of the mouth, but I am not despairing. "You see, medical people say that early detection Is half the battle, and medical science has ad vanced rapidly in the treatment of this affliction." Editor Cooke recalled wrvlv how often he, like his readers, had dropped a dime Into the little boxes that appear on store counters dur ing the American Cancer Society's annual drive boxes that say: Cancer strikes one of every five." "I thought if I ever gave it a thought that I was one of the other four. But I was wrong. "I have become a statistic . . . not altogether a pleasant thought Cooke then told his readers how a dentist had first noticed the sus picious lump in his mouth, how his doctor had diagnosed it as can cer, and of his Intention to fly to New York to see the specialist his own doctor recommended. If I can, I will keep you in formed . . . meanwhile, good luck and God be with you until we meet Pig Slaughter Action Sought PORTLAND (jT) A circuit Court action was filed Thursdav in an ef fort to force destruction of some 600 diseased bogs in the Portland area. It was filed bv E. L. Peterson. director of the State Department of Agriculture, against J. w. Bige low and the Portland Union Stock yards Co. He had ordered the swine killed because of the presence of vesicu lar exanthema and the court ac tion said the defendants wouldn't do it. Blgelow earlier had aald he op posed the order without compen sation from the atate. The federal frovernment will pay half the cost f the states pay half. Oregon's attorney general said this state haa no law allowing a payment and Blgelow asked for a new ruling. SEWAGE WORK LEBANON in Lebanon Is go ing ahead with plans for a sewage treatment plant. Construction Is expected ta start as soon as an en gineering firm list specifications. Time - . , the voters are not given a choice belween policy or program but a choice managers. between two kinds of Republicans or Demo- crats. There is no doubt, judging from his fast denials, that Stevenson la sensitive to the Republican charge he is under Truman's thumb. The latest to bite htm with it was Els enhower himself who said vestenlny Stevenson was "handplcked'' by Truman. Stevenson has gone out of his way-by relerring to the "mesa" in Washington and promising to be "ruthless" with corruption to suggest the country can get a truly new management with a clean broom without changing par ties at all. In turn the Republicans hnve tender ears when the Democrats hoot "me, toolsm." at them. The implication Is plain: thev have no quarrel with Democratic programs and policies, so why change tne management of an old business which the Republicans seem to think Is all right? Stevenson must have been ach ing for a chance to fling this charge at Elsenhower, whom the Reoubllcans picked after they themselves this year had put the me too. ' label on their own ishb candidate. Gov. Thomas E. Dewey. When Eisenhower said the coun try should keep social security and some other measures passed under since 1933. Stevenson was Johnny-un-the-spot with a "me, too," crack at the general. Meanwhile, the voters are wait ing for both men and their follow ers to start the actual campaign ing when, instead of merelv being each other's critics, thev offer con- strnrlive nnri snerifie notions nf their own. (Boijh again." On his arrival here Cooke met further bad news. The specialist recommened Immediate surgery. Cooke had to make up his mind in 20 minutes whether to be operated on two days later or wait another week. As he hesitated, the special ist said: "When your garage is on fire. put it out before it burns up your car." "Operate," said Cooke. The next day he was In the hospital, and the day after that he was operated on. He spent more than four hours under the knife, required three blood transfusions, but 12 days later be left the hospital. Today Editor Cooke has a happy ending story for his readers. The stitches are out of his jaw, he feels the surgeon is as optimistic over the results of the operation as he is, ana he is on nis way home. Before he and his wife left, I visited with them on a park bench in Greenwich Village. "I feel aa it I had been through a tremendous nightmare," Cooke said. "The hospital code word for my type of operation Is 'Commando,' and I can truthfully aay that after going through II you feel like you've been on a Commando raid. But now I feel like I've got. a life expectancy of 80." He -expressed gratitude that his own doctor had told him promptly the full truth of his ailment. "It's a hell of a shock," he said. "But It was almost as hard for my doctor to tell me as It was for me to bear It. He hated to. "But I'm glad he did tell me. Pussy-footing . . , bumfoozling , . , doesn't do any good. It'a like the specialist said about your garage. If It's on fire, you want to know it and do something about it quick." Lakeview To Stay On PDT LAKEVIEW Lakeview will re main on daylight time through the Roundup It was decided by Town Council. The change to standard time will be 12:01 a.m. Tuesday morning, Sept. 2. When the town went on daylight time, It was agreed to return to standard time with Klamath Falls. However, Klamath Falls la return ing to norma) at midnight, Aug. 31 and the Lakeview council decided It would be better to remain on daylight time through the Round up, t Smart Jontzen T-Shirts 1.99 at DREWS llatlo Rotarians Host Chief LAKEVIEW Lakcvlew Rotnr luns and their Rotary Anns enter tained 11. J. Brunnier, San Fran cisco, president of Kolury Interna tional and Milan D. Smith, Pendle ton, governor of Rotary District 154. at a special dinner meeting In the Methodist Church dining room Friday evening. John E. McDonald, president of Die Lakeview Club, and his com mittees planned the meeting for al most two niuutlis. Guests came from Giants Pais and Bend, and members of the Klamath Falls, Alluras and Cedar vllle Rotary Clubs were invited. Brunnier has been a member of the San Francisco Rotary Club since 1908 and has served aa Inter national vice-president and district governor. He has been a consulting structural engineer since 1908 and is a specialist in eaitliquake and difficult foundation problems. When the San Francisco-Oakland Bay bridge was built, he was a mem ber of a five-man board of consul ting englneera. He has served as president of numerous associations of engineers and serves on several highway and automobile associa tion boards. Smith Is principal owner and gen eral manager of three large froz en foods companies of the North west, with headquarters at I'endie- ton where lie pioneered tne produc tion of frosen vegetables In 1943. He was the first Junior Citizen of Oregon In 1950 and serves many offices of leadership In his church and community. He has been a Rotary member at Pendleton aince 1943. New Additions At Malin Park MALIN Newest additions to the Malin Park for the convenience of picnickers are two attractively con slruclcd outdoor llrcmace ,uul a drinking fountain, both ot colorful red stone. One fireplace Is of double con. structlon, with a fireplace at each side, and one Is of single construc tion. The drinking fountain was made possible from monev donated by the Malln VFW Auxiliary and has been built near the steps to the Pool building. It has been attrac tively built of the same red stone as the fireplaces, and petrified wood and Indian relics donated by Mr. and Mrs. Earl Ervln, have been used for decoration. Placed on the front of the fountain Is a bronze plaque, which dedicates tt to service men who have lost their lives. As long as a year ago. the dream of the addition of these stone pieces was originate-! b" Pa-I: "lonr1 members. Rocks had to be hauled some sixty miles from property owned by Mr. and Mrs. Loyal Tav lor. who donated them to the park. The rock hauling crew, led by M. M. Stnstny. gave their time and efforts voluntarily for the beautlflcatlon of the park. Thanks for this terrific Job must go to Emll Pollvka. Steve Ktidr. Rudv Sostak and Clarence Kolkow, as well aa Mr. Stastny. Alter the rocks had been hauled and piled. Emll Schelsel. was hired for the construction of the fire places arid fountain. At present the cement is drying and the new1 additions should soon be ready for use. Park Board members are croud to announce that the proposed pro gram as planned at the beginning of the season, has been completed. New playground equipment. Includ ing a small merry-go-round, was Instnlled early In the season, roads were graveled and oiled and new lawns were established. Croquet sets will arrive shortly and croquet grounds and a baseball diamond are now ready for use. APPROVE PACT MONTEVIDEO. Uruguay 11 The Foreign Affairs Committee of Uruguay's Senate Friday ap proved a military aid pact with the United States by a 8-2 vote. By Jimmy THINKING OF CARPET? Hiqh Styled Wools Luxuriant Cottoni Wall to Wall or Room Size WE WILL SAVE YOU MONEY 4 1945 So. 6th '4 "We're Floor Leni ml if J Ike Promises 'Qualified1 Support To Wisconsin's Senator McCarthy By MARVIN I,. AllllOWUMrril DKNVh'H lift Dwiullt D. Klsen- hotter says he would support Sen, Joseph It. Mi'Cerlhy as a Repub lican nominee but will withhold blanket endorsement from "any man who does anything I believe to b un-American." I he Republican presidential nominee's asowlalps aaid privately tlmt meant Eisenhower will give only nominal backing of McCarthy If the Wisconsin senator la renom inated. The anti-Communist crusader's name came up In a news cnnler- I'nce lato yesterday alter Elsen hower a attention wak called to a statement by his vice presidential Voice Says Red Nome New Communist Leaders WASHINGTON W Prime Mlnla- tcr Stalin's motive In vailing a formal Communist party Congress In Moscow Oct. 5 may be to re place tiO key Communist lenders who have died or been purged. nie voice ot Amnion, ouicla Slate Department radio, hinted that this may bo Stalin's motive In summoning Communist bosses to gether lor the (list lime ill 13 years. It was the first thing ap proximating uny ofllclal comment Hum the biule Department on tins move by Slallli. A broadcast commenting on Moscow's announcement aald ul the 13 full Central Committee members: "At least 36 have tin the past 13 years) died or been purged. Another 34 have not been men tioned in the Soviet press In the last few years. ' I his Uidicates the high mortal ity rate iwlltical as well aa literal attached to membership in Hie Central Committee.'' The Central Committee Is the top-rank organisation of Commu nists elected at each arty con gress. It In turn electa the 13-man Politburo which actually runs Rub sis. The Voire broadcast, a seclal commentary by analyst Harry Klelschnian. was beamed to Rus sia and Iron Curtain countnea and was feutured in nearly all foreign Economy Recovering From Steel Strike Damage NEW YORK I Industrial pro ductlon hit the high spots this week. Tile economy waa all but back In lta pre-steel strike stride. But as the factory wheels in creased their pace, tlie country moved rapidly toward a new In flation spiral. Freight carloadings were the highest since December 1, electric power production was at a high since January: and construction awards hit a record 8 1.3(10.068,000. More than a billion dollars of the awards was for atomic energy con struction. But It all meant lota of work for more people. It was a pretty plcturt. But aa business and Industrial activity climbed tho cost of living also ad vanced. The governmenl'a cost of living Index hit an oil time high in July. It reached 190 8 per cent of the 1935-139 averoge. ' The Index waa 13 points above the June figure and cost of living for moderate Income city families was figured at 12.1 per enl over prc-Korea prices and five per cent above the level of last January when federal price and wage con trols took elfcct. The biggest factor In the rise from June to July was a aharp Expert Predicts New Red Terror Tactics This Fall TOKYO i An authoritative Japanese expert on Communist tactics predicted today the Reds will launch a scries of guerrilla terror raids this fall, designed to discredit America and lure more Japanese to the Red camp. He expressed conviction that such a plan Is being worked, out In Moscow during current stra tegy talks with a Chinese Com munist delegation as part of the Red "hale America" campaign. The exiiert. who cannot be Iden tified because of his high posi tion, said the Reds hope their guer rilla security forces will be called In to help. The Reds then plan to charge that American troops are suppressing the Japanese peo ple. The Reds also plan to exploit resentment at the continued pres ence of foreign troops In Japan. The Japanese Communists will use the dissatisfied leftrWlng Korean minority In Japan to atagc i ' . . r i; VT , ; javaiiMaki THANKS KLAMATH FALLS We would like to thank the people of Klam ath Falls and neighboring towns for the helping hand they gavjs us for our daughter Charlene. In San Francisco she had four doctors and they decided an opera tion would be fatal. They said she had the beat of care by her doc tor here that was possible to give her. Thank you so much. Mr, and Mra. Hugh Radsplnner, Kathlene anil Charlene 3104 Blsbee STAN PARK FOR CARPET PRICED TO YOUR BUDGET "A phone call will brinq samples to your home" W. WAYNE MARTIN Ph. 8370 Coverinq People bv Trade" running mate. Ben, Richard M Nixon of California. Nixon 'old a Washington reporter he and Elsen hower will support McCarthy, It renominated, without necessarily endorsing lila views and methods. Elsenhower took on Hit look of an angi-y man when reporters, t,,w4,lkit tni. ilntall. kit- llll Ini tial r a a p o n ae, asked what he thought of McCarthy's accusations agaiiut Ueu. George C. Marshall. The Wisconsin lawmaker, In a sen ate speech, linked Marahall, Elsen hower World War II auperlor and one-time aecrelary ot atate. to what he called a "consplrary" aimed at weakening the United Stales and alrenithtnlni Ruaala. Congress To broadcasts Thursday. In commenting on the Russian plan to abolish the Politburo, It said "one thing can be aafely pre dicted" even when this happens: "The Soviet Union will remain a dictatorship, run by J o s a p b Stalin." Moscow haa announced that a "nresldium" will be organised to leplace the Politburo. Top diplo mats believe wnoever geia ine jnu of chairman of this group will be In line to succeed Stalin at prime minister. The Voice broadcast made no mention of tills. Some American experts believe the whole congress meeting haa been called by Stalin so he can give this Job to Oeorgl Mulenkov, fat-cheeked Politburo member. Mulenkov, a 60-year-old party wheelhorse. la scheduled to give the main address before the 1.300 lower-echelon Communists who will attend the eongreaa aeaalonj. Tbe highlight of the laat oongresa meeting In 1939 waa a apeech by Stalin which aocused the West of Irving to foment a wsr between Natl Oennany and Sovltt Russia. "Thla statement turned out to be of great algnlflcance," aald tha Voice. "Seen In retrospect. It waa an obvloua bid for negotiations with Hitler. That bid paved the way for negotiation which led to the Nasl-Bovlet pact.' Increase In food prices. - The rising Index gave another three cents an hour to more than a million auto workers whose wag es are tied to the rise and fall of the consumer price Index. Walter Reuther, head of the CIO United Auto Workers, aald. how ever, his union doea not welcome the circumstances of the automat ic pay hike. - The wags Increase, he said, "doea not compensate for all the damage done to the people and our nation by runaway inllallon." Iron Age. metalworklng trade weekly, referred to "the next round of Inflation" and aald the en tire oycle waa started by "tha super-generous wage rise 'aufyealtd' by the Wage Stabilisation Board" In the steel Industry. Retail business waa reported a little above the level of the pre vious week and somewhat baiter than a year ago. Dun and Bradatreet, the buaineaa reporting aervica, said ahoppera re sponded to aummer atock clear-tng-out aalea. There waa a allrrlng of Interest loo In fall gooaa aa atoreseepera began featuring baok-to-achool and other aeaaonal promotions. terror raids on police posts, gov ernment offices and U. 8. troop In stallations, the expert declartd. At tacks on police posts have already atarted on a tentative scale. But that la only part of the mas ter plan now being worked out, the expert asserted. Tbe Reds hope to create better feelings among the Japanese toward Com munist China and Ruaala, The lo cal party will echo every propa ganda atatement from Moscow and Pelplng, calling for peace treaties and renewed trade with Japan. Only 28.598 Japanese are now re gistered with the government as Communists. A good guess, how ever, would be that there are really - between 60,000 and 70,000 confirmed Communlats In the coun try, plus about 200,000 fellow trav elers. U. I. Intelligence sources say that up to three fourths of the 600,000 to 800,000 Koreans In Japan will follow the Communist party line. Browns Lose Appendices Mrs. Rudy Brown, 1S33 Want land, had known she was to have an appendectomy for more than a week, and the operation waa scheduled .for yesterday morning. Prior to entering the hosnital Thursday, however, her father, I John Stark, 1938 Wantland. ' be-, came III. A diagnosis showed Stark needed an appendectomy. So, Stark underwent an operation Thursday evening, his daughter, Mrs. Brown waa operated on yea- j terday. Both were reported doing well today. I GENE WOODS, Insurance ' Charter Lift Uneerwrrler, CKartcree1 Property ana Catuttty Underwriter 122 South Ninth Phont 4369 ' KUmwrh Felt, cVrts INSURANCE ACCOUNTS SOLICITED ON AUDIT AND ANALYSIS BASIS Fire . . Casualty . . Auto . . Lift Top Old Lint Compani.t Only Elsenhower got to hla feet and. In hot terms, described Marshall as a patriot and "a man of real elfleaanfM. "I have no patience." Elaenbow ar said, "with anyone who eta find In his racoid of service lor this country anything to criticise." The flrat tiling Elsenhower aald about Nixon's statement waai "I would aay to you that I would aupport him tMcCarthyl as a member of the Itnpubllcan organi sation. , , , I am not going to campaign for or give blanket en dorsement to any man who does anything that I behave to be un Amarican In It methods and pro cedure." Then reporters kept after him tor details. It would be a HIM more clear, a uewainan persisted, II Elaan hower would atate apeclllcally whether he would give blanket en dorsement to McCarthy at the nominee. "Actually, I ha vi told you people many, many times,' the general lepllcd, "that 1 am never going ui mention a proper nam In Ihla campaign. If you cannot lake what I have just aald and apply It ta the (acta, I do not aae what I eaa do about It." At Iron River, Wla., McCarthy commented. "So lr as I'm con cerned, 1 will aupKirl the Elavil-hower-Nlxou ticket regardless of th amount of support they give nit," "I dou't ak or expect any other Republican necessarily to approve 01 everything I do," McCarthy add ed. "I Intend to do what 1 think la right and the only people to whom 1 shall aiuwar are the peo ple of Wisconsin." Aa lor tha "support" he aald Mc Carthy and other OOP nomi nee lor Congraa will get limn him, Elsenhower reiterated that auch aupport would not mean h sera eye-to-eye on Ul Issue with th candidates. It would mean, he added, that aa a firm believer In parly respon alblllty h leelt the presidential nomine inuat aupport all Republi can noiiilneea in a mov to captuiae control of Congress from the Dem ocrat. Again Uieie was an attempt t find out whether Elsenhower, un der Uui oircuuiataiicaa, would give blanket endorsement to McCarthy. Tlie general waa asked whether he Intend to support McCarthy who, aa Ui reporter put It, had In ef fect accused Marshall ot being a traitor. Elsenhower replied: ' This la a two-party system, and you have got to have single parly authority In Washington. You have got to talk to people maybe you are going to have to reason with thm and lead them Into other line of thinking." But Elsenhower said there waa "nothing of disloyalty in Oen. Marshall' aoul." And th accus ation against Marahall riled him. him. Th news conference started out quietly nough, with llaenhower relaxed behind hi desk. But he walked out In front of It and paced up and down when McCarthy and Marahall were mentioned. Elsenhower aald he had not changed his mind one lota about th ned lor routing any Commu nist out of government. But he still believe, h aald, It can be don without damaging th reputations of Innocent people. Camp White Railhead Due WASHINOTON IJt Tha Imf aid rrlday It will establish a ralt- neaii on tne lormer cantonment and warehouse area of Oarnp White, near Medford, Ore., "In tha near future." It will acoulre about H4 acre at land now privately owned. ine laciiity win o usea eniy In the event of mobilisation." the announcement aald. "It la not planned to station any troop at Camp Whit at thla time. under present plana, oaaio un- llty ayt"m':, ai-ce i roaof, amir rail lines and communleaUona syaum win b rehabilitated or eonslrusi- "Thla will be done ao Wt lime required to construct an emergency type canm In the event of mobilisation will be reduced to a minimum." Csmn White originally waa es tablished In 1943 for the training of armored and Infantry dlvlslona. At that time the Installation to taled more than N,000 acrea. , The camp waa declared exewff to army needs in 1046. and was moony uisposea or aa surplus. FOOTBALL SHRINE GAMI Oreqen All-Start VI. Portland All-Start Saturday :1S P.M. SO00-WATT KFJI ON &ft KFJI j!