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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 20, 1952)
PaGR four FRANK JENKINS Editor Entered second class matter at the post olfice of Klamath Falls. Or., on August 20. 1908, under act ol Conpress. March I, 187 MKMBKRS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Anoclated Press Is entitled exclusively to the use (or publication of all the local news prjnted tn thu newspaper as well as all AP news. , "' ' ' '. 81BSCRIPTION RATS8 MAIL .. . v Bl CARRIER . 1 month ', $ 1.55 1 month '. S l.Sa I months . , t 6.60 6 months t 1.10 . I year IU.00 1 year 1J0 f fetLL&OARD By BILL JENKINS Tal- arouna the town hiuis that the memorial shaft on the court house lawn may get a refurbish ing. The idea was started a couple of years ago and fell Hat due to a general luck of both Interest and money. Now the scheme is In the talking stage again, some mater ials have already been picogca ana !?Wsa be brichioned UP It is certainlv no addition to the looks of the town right now. As long as we are going to have such a monument we might as well have one that we can be proud of. Bill Duncan, the contractor chap, tells me that the Newell school project is coming along and that most of the framing is up already. Progress has had the boot poured to it. Always encouraging to seel""'" J ."".'i": new hitildinr In our neicnbormiz towns. You can always find a few in teresting things in almost any con versation. Shooting- the breeze with a bunch of fellows the other day and came across couple of con versational gems.- HAt BOYLE NEW YORK Wl Many women have married a man because of his bankroll. But did any woman every marry a fellow solely be- j cause of his mustache? j Did she ever, crumpling shyly against his manly bosom murmur: i "You yourself have an utterly ' resistible personality, my . dear. Sit. mnnctflrhal . Ah T ran ,Iignl against it no longer, ii nas swept me quite off my feet." A bov. rubbing castor oil on his upper lip to stir the slow growth of the reluctant fuzz thereon, may daydream of such situations. But I have never heard in real life of a mustache with much ro mantic influence. What is the actual social impact i of the mustache? . This question arises because It appears that this form of male fac ial landscaping Is getting . more popular. . ii seems 10 me i see more ana more mustaches around. I would ! like to believe this is only because there are more people In the world as I like to look at the bright aide of things, - I would hate to sec mustaches become a badge of valor or a measure of achievement, as in society in which that Were true I would have to become a hermit. Men grow -mustaches for only three general reasons: ' I. They have an Inferiority coin preg. 2. To pay an election, bet. 3.1 Curiosity. ' The first of these reasons Is the most widespread. And the aver age mustache carrier will admit 1 If pressed. J'l grew mine to prove io my self that I could do something the other guys in my crowd hadn't done." one said. "It helped me overcome a lifelong feeling of in feriority, and gave me an immed iate sense of security and personal victory." The boy or man who rears a mustache out of curiosity or to pay an election bet be has lost soon finds the novelty wears thin, and off comes the mustache. The time and trouble It takes are no longer worth the effort. , 1 JAMES MARLOW v.. -e. stc. By ARTHIR EDSON (For James Martow) WASHINGTON Wl The guess ing game, begun before the elec tion returns had a chance to cool, will continue uniil Dwight D. Ei senhower announces his choice: Who will be in the new cabinet? Already the rumors have piled up enough names to fill the cab inet, with enough left over for a - f t w. niiviiuiK irn in Among those mentioned: John Foster Dulles. Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. of Massachusetts, Sen. Frank Carlson of Kansas, Harold Stassen, John J. McCloy, Patrick J. Hurley, Paul Hoffman, Gov. Dan Thornton of Colorado, Gov. Arthur Langlle of Washington. Oov. Jherman Adams of New Hampshire, Oov. Earl Warren of California and Arthur Summer, field, the Republican national chairman. In picking his cabinet, a presi dent may consider such things s Does It satisfy all factions of the party? How about those who originally backed gen. Robert A. Tail? Taft talked with Eisen hower yesterday, and later said he had made two or three recom mendations, ., . .' How does It stack up geographi cally? Are all sections repre sented? Should a Southerner get a cabinet post? Sen. Harry F. Byrd of Virginia, for Instance, has been mentioned as a cabinet pos sibility. Have I paid off my political debts, rewarding those who ran political rlska, by supporting me? It ' could be argued that Lodge might have been able to keep his NEW TRAILER HOMES Aqeincy for ' SPARTANPONTIAC ft . CLIPPER NOW ON DISPLAY I Balsiger Motor Co. Mai at ffptaneda Klamath Fells BILL JENKINS Managing Editor Vcrn Svhorlgen 'came up with the first one when we were dis cussing Insurance and thefts and things. Seems that the only thing Vern ever had stolen from his house was a ladder back antique chair. Whoever took it walked in. selected the old relic and walked out with it. Ignoring all the rest or the things including- a valuable : Never can tell about things, can you? Jack Roper, the painter, gave out with the post war tale of the month. Seems that he took his old . uniform out of the closet the other day for some reason or other and was looking it over. No llcea that the moths had left It alone with the exception of the Asiatic-Pacific campaign ribbon. That one . they had chewed up. "e uciui F.-.c the A-P theater of OOei- ations. If they did I wouldn't blaine 'em any. ' Jack didn't mention whether It . would StlU fit him Or not. Most of us have gained a pound or twO;own lace 0 th president-elect since gettine out of our pre-select- ed year round ouuits. But one who grows a mustache to cure wmseii oi inienorny win; has won many new converts since never yield it until death. In case ithe election. One is Assistant De of fire he places its safety before .ense Secretary Anna Rosenberg, thai ol women and children. U-h-, herself has just concluded a It is his hairy manner of sue- tour f the Korean battlefronl. Re cess in the battle every man fights ! po-t, fr0m Europe Indicate that in i5-i. u ".iirst alarms over possible expan- world. Behind every mustache lurks a mouse that has been turned by this symbol into a lion. Ever walch a man with a mus tache? Notice how . he toys with it, reaching up now and then to be comforted by the fact it is still there? - . He never Is safe from the fear someone will take it away from him. or shave it off while he is asleen. A mustache automatically turns a man with an Inferiority complex' into a man with a superiority com plex. Secretly or openly, he becomes a snob about It. Often he will take more trouble to discipline it prop yl iiiu iiic uiuiiutiy fjajcilh uuca to curb a wayward son. He couldn't sell it for a cup of coffee, but. lo him it Is a patch of real'estate more valuable than all Uie foiests of Canada. In-his case clothes don't make the ma l but bis mustache does. That, I believe, is why wives put up with husbands' mustaches. Being kissed by them mast be vaguely like being hit in the mouth with a toothbrush. But a woman my little man feel taller, I'll go along." And that's what the mustache does do. It gives the fellow the same feeling he had when he wore suns as a boy. What I have against mustaches is that I once tried to grow one out of curiosity and found I couldn't. It didn't grow. It drooped and ariDOiea. How do you cure an Inferiority complex arising from the discov ery you can tear a telephone book in half, but can't grow a measly. pmaiing, wortniess, unstgntly. out- of-date, impractical thing like a mustache that nobody really wants anyway? . Senate seat had he been working for himsell when he was working1;", nr , 1 WTlterS. Is each msn'capable of organ-!. C- Wright Mills, associated pro L'.m and handling his dnmi- fessor of sociology at Columbia effectively? In short, does he have executive talent? Every president-elect has faced the same problem, but Eisenhw er's may be the toughest of all. For one thing, the Republicans have spent 20 years stressing waste and mismanagement in the federal government. They have said they could manage it much better. Now that they have their chance, they know they'll be eyed critically and probably hyper critically. For another, look at the size of government. A cabinet officer not only must offer expert advice on policy matters, but he also must head an organization of tremendous size. In a department like State, it's an organization which Is world-wide. " DIABETES Nov. 16 to 22 Are you one of the one million undetected DIABETICS in the United States. . . " FIND OUT NOW BY: 1. Coniultinq your doctor. 2. By brinqing urine specimen to Klamath Valley Hoipital ' r ' ' The ebeve Services ere seise Conrrlb.it.if ky members of Klemerii County M.eic.l Seclety la tha interest ef Notional Diob.tic Weak. ITER ALT) They'll Do It Every TO LIKE TO TWE PKfESS- ASEMT CvtUE AiP I HEARD OU MO AH ofemis'o- r WAS EDITOR OP MY COLLE62 FUkER, AND"; BRUCE During the heat of the presiden- T-Emrr-ri V- ON W? A OFF IN CONCERT. 1 ,; rr i y rv, k fusses and bank iwv -li.MKn. -.n uiacn urn aii blotters y i vx. -- I I t'l'i'wxtyii I irirai If '-V N ' u.v 1 L'l tf J1 lial campaign. General Eisenhow- jreal substitute lor seeing a sltua er's proposal to go to Korea was tlon first-hand. Why take wriiirn assailed by the opposition as a or verbal reports, altered through grandstand play" and a "cheap I ' t-"" " 'e low Republicans saw nine ,;;.!. .1.1 . . i pr.sl(i.t Truman coulrt not resLst f(nll naiin..! ib. oflnrmcr hisllhi in ii. nr unlrlrd snluLlnlM If you still desire to go to Korea." I Now, oeset by crowding prob-'edse lems related to the January change over in government, Eisenhower is under some pressure to abandon the trip for reasons -of time. And he hears again and again of the physical rises involved. xei, wnn an tms, tne trip mea sion of tne war have given way to sober thoughts that the 'rip migh prove extremely useful, even In daily Jeopardv. Concern lor if not productive of a settlement, them is business that takes prece One prime arguments for the 'tience over all other. SAM DAWSON By WALTER BRKKDE JR (For Sam Dawson) NEW YORK Wl Who's better off the white collar employe in the front office or the production worker in the shop? Business leaders disagree. Some say the accountant, bookkeeper, stenographer and filing clerk never had it so good. Others point to the higher pay of the tool and die maker or the man behind the tur ret lathe. i According to this ' school of , thought the w hite collar man is . industry's poor relation. I People who see hard times ahead for trie oince lorce cue tne arowin . , . OI Ollice mecnanizauun. Electronic business machines of ' are making many clerical skins unnecessary, they assert. A case tn point: The Bell Tele-! phone Manufacturing Co. Ant werp Belgium, has perfected an electronic mall sorter. Mailing ad-1 dresses pass before the operators ' on a pneumatic system and me operators press little levers Indi cating the distribution route the mall should take. What It means Is this: Four ma chine operators can do the work formerly accomplished in the same length of time by 70 mall sorters. Similar labor-saving features are provided bv new and more effi cient dictating, billing, account-ting-bookkeeping. check writing, addressing, duplicating and tabu lating machines by pushbutton operated filing systems that en able a clerk to select one of many hundreds of thousands of cards in a split second, by postage meters. machines ana electric type- University, recently told an office management conference here that office mechanization has put an end to the prestige, security and favored financial position once en joyed by the white collar worker. Before mechanization, he said, the white collar worker made about double the income of hourly rated wage earners but today his Income is "only slightly above, and in several Important cases lower than, the average Income of varl-1 ous wage-working groups." On the other aide of the fence, the American Management As sociation presents In Its monthly I magazine, "Personnel," tlu. fol- lowing results of an employment . survey in the Cleveland Industrial ares: The while collar man In Industry I DETENTION WEEK ANT) NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON Time BIOSSAT .general's visit Is that there Is no other mintls. when you can tae " 'V """ ' . .. ii is n le": ! ' - " i.'hmHitarv cene who ta k,.v will result when such a coinman- der applies all his expert know I. to a close-up review of Ko- rea? A second sound point Is that the trip is certain to prove a tremen dous morale booster for our troops on the peninsula. For long months, during the stalemate that accom panied the futile peace talks, Ko rea seemed a forgotten fighting line. But off soon. now. if the trip corneal soldiers moving into a bitter winter will know they arei again remembered. Th nrecs nt hnni.frnnt husineu ' notwithstanding. Eisenhower ought to stick to his resolve to go. In Korea the lives of free men are is happy and content, says survey. the He has more freedom than hi: colleague In the plant. Usually he Can smoke when he wants to. He can make personal calls on the office phone. His work is cleaner and safer: There Is less danger of getting an are amputated or a leg smashed. The office employe Is more like- ly to get a Christmas bonus and I he's more certain of a steady an nual cwage. The plant worker is constantly subject to layoffs and temporary unemployment, When the union wins a pav raise for the men in the shop, the non - - w,ve uu-i,y lr.lt. Inn rccsue ne s closer 10 manage ment, the office worker has better But his average pay, the article concedes, la lower. Telling The Editor OUTSIDERS KLAMATH FALLS Having read mast all the letters to the editor and also articles pro and con on water fluorldldation. It seems to me It 1 hard to give an honest answer on which Is right. Both pro and con come from supposedly reliable sources. One group of scientists says It la dan gerous to us and another group says It's altogether safe for every one. The consumers In the city arc not the only users. We people out sice the city use It too but never have much aay in the matter. I believa It only fair and in a de mocracy the only right way. Let the people decide. One simple way and at the same time a great service by your paper would be for you to print a smsll ballot for the people to use. Or better still, the water company could mail one with each bill and let the consumers send It with the bill. I for one don't believe In mass medication and this system surely is. J. R. Larimer 1331 Harlan Drive PUBLIC SERVICE Mimeegrephinf one1 Meiliaf Utti at Reasonable Prices. FliaM 4740 Wsrk guarntd. Klamath luilneii Ctllag, 731 Pine . -v.'' .. . X- -' Dnr4En;n Ayil wvur&U 1 W phut '...ttj IT ;l HE COULD HARNESS i I J1 I LL LOOK AT KXJR- f SITTlMO BULL INTO T V. LATCH ON TO A FEW f U STUFrTKJTJJE-( DCs MS ORTV ) CUENTK,OR HE'LL OCT 1 FV4STIN6 OPAiy SCRAP- I Sh- PSftSSg5 r7TTCe.J 1 D.-k-,wr -n cct-... n rv AW-niK ccjljj TilPDirVrV rr I A).m Di rTTlUiC tub W itl WAVCl-T ODFkllkJfi I L(7 FILE TO RrtHTS- f IVwiTU AKJrtLElsORM IS A CW 6E Sr OUt M WOMrscI I E 41 I I t W H"CUJhfc We KATa -S I UT' V V By Jmmyatlio WSTEAD OF ASSISTANTS, AN4.VOF!M "P BETTER LATCH On TO A FEW cuentk.or he'll get A MENTION ON DfSTOSSESS NOTICE HE COULDnT THE K3URTH ML A LIKE Irs THE FIREWORKS 7WM Avoa rtooe ft) 7t.S HATUi HAT TO 2600 W.SOOT., CHICAGO 32.XLL. No Mandate Says Harry WASHINGTON I The Rcpub. lican victory at the polls. President iruman sa)s, was no mandate to H'e governmeni to cut down on Its uuouo ncaitli aciiviues Truman said President-elect El senhower's administration will llnd lixelf "lar behind the times" 11 it tries to slop wiuu he called "lie social and economic progress made under the Democrats. Ana, In delense against what he termed politically iuspire.1 attacks on his public health program, he declared thai "anyone who Inter prets the election as a mandate to stop the elloru we have been making for social and economic "--- " y. irumun s defense of his recoid, - vuu iur imuicr govej-nmeitt I action in tne controversial field of Public health. came durill,. Peech delivered last nigiil to the Association of Milium- s,ir.,-i,. ..,.?'.""" 'o."PP Congicas lor n pi uk i ess in tne neaith Uriel Current shortages ol doctors and nurses have not been met, he said, "despite repealed eflorts to per suaae Uie Congress to adopt a pro gram of federal aid to medical ciiucalion." Rosenbergs' Death Nears NEW YORK i.n-An execution dale lor Julius and Ethel Rosen, berg, convicted atomic spies, may be set tomorrow by Federal Judge Mng R. Kaufman. U. 8. Ally. Myles J. Lane Said yeslerday he will ask Knulman to set the electrocution dale. ine couple have been In Sum Sing Prison's death house since tuu.ii.iiun mnicn ivji 'nn rh.r... a! .i..i. - ui i.jniiiiK aiuimc secrets to Russia. Un Monday th IT S Knnr.m. Court lor a second time reiecied appeal for. a review of the conviction. Red Magazine Warns UN Group MOSCOW A The Soviet maga zine New Times today warned tlie Western Powers that In consider, ing a successor to Trygve Lie as U. N. secretary general they must steer clear oi attempts "to put the U. N. in the service of the im perialist interests of the Atlantic bloc." If this is not kept In' mind, the New Times added, the result will be "sad (oris are clared. Any such Western destlned to fall," it de-1 J. W. KERNS OFFERS This Christmas Special International 15.8 Freezer AMAZING Dri-Wall Cabinet Canitruetion UNBELIEVABLE Quiet Operation and Dependability Remember , . . Our Quantity Food Purchait Plan Ii Available With Any Freezer New Communist Purge Nets VIENNA, Austria W-Ttia foim..0lher purged 'h him have been I er aecretary general of the Caeeli o.iluvak Cmnmunlt party, tough Moseow-lialurd Rudoll Blansky, was listed fur trial In Prauue to day with other purged leadrra of me Hcd Cieeii regime a mass hearing some diplomats expect will rival the lOJfl Moscow trials. Announcement of the hearing was made earlier today by Prague radio, m broadcast an d that Hlnusky would be tried together wltli "nls group." but It gave no Indication of how many delendenls would face the court or who the others might be. The radio also made no men tion of the charges but Blanaky and Chinese Praise Russians In Friendship Week Fete SAN FRANCISCO I Chinese CoinmiiiiiHi radio broadcasts this month have pulled out all the ntopa In lavish praise of the military, political and ecoiiomlo alliance be tween Red China and the Bovlel Union, The Red propnganria has boen geiircri lo an oflicially pioclulmed "Sino-tjovlct Friendship Mcinih." With every facility at Its command tie I'eiping administration hns sought lo show Us appreciation (ur Russian aid and lo popularise II among China's own peoples. From various Chinese cities nine come reports ol mass rallies, lour, nig song and dance tenuis, cultural missions and wreath-laying ceie ninnies "In honor of Bovlet martyrs who heroically aacrlllced llieli lives In the war of liberation of Northeast China I Manchuria i." During the civil war, the Chinese Communists earlully refrained from acknowledging any direct Russian military help, although It wus termed a war of liberation, Tlie reference lo liberation of Man cnuria apparently was to the clos ing week of World War II when Marshal Mallnovsky's Second Uk rainian Army swept through the Japanese defenders Into Korea. A flood of Soviet pictures have been released throughout China. In Segregation Said Illegal RICHMOND. Va. -Segregation ol while and Negro passengara on .buses ruunini ig between atatea has " .S n',' d Illegal by a Federal District Court here. The decision yesterday rame a week alter the U. S. Supreme Court declined to review another ruling by Ihe same District Court which invalidated segregation on inter state railroad travel. Tne prior ruling established the precedent that led lo Judge ei.cr ling Hutcheson's decision In the bus segregation case If euch regulation (requiring segregation) Issued by a railroad Williams, said the decision will Is Invalid, It necessarily follows bring, about the abolition ol aegre ihat lis adoption by a bus company gallon on common c a r r 1 era would not make It valid," said throughout the South, Jinige Hulcheson. The company positioned a deel- Tlie decision resulted Irom a slun on whether lo appeal the rul case brought by J. H. Williams, alng until a formal order Is entered Negro of Spring Hope, N.C. Wll- in a few daya. Polar Flight OK To Thule I COPENHAGHM. Denmark iVi-A Scandinavian airliner winged lrrn..tl1 lnt nf the MlftrXA tOflllV' i . . . . .. . . , I . i Thule. NnrUi (reen- i ? "rfc " . i n- " 11"""' ..,.,, OVer the north Dole. ,h-! klnK.... The Arlld Viking, ma: first of to exploratory flights Irom Los Angeles to Copenhagen, landed at Thule at lai a.m., Eastern Standard Tune, the Scan dinavian Airlines Byatem, opera tors of the plane, announced. The VUWg carried M passen gers, a crew of 13, auch erclie survival equipment as sleeping bags sltls, snowshoes, snow shov els and rifles, and KM pounds of mall. Her operators hope to In augurate regular commercial aery Ice on the lop-ol-the-world route between Los Angeles and Copen hagen soon. The polar airliner touched down at the new 2M-mlllion-dolIar air ef-!bas the first commercial alr liner to use the big field an hourlsjesv York I ahead of schedule, alter a 1.SH3- UNIQUE... All Over Interior Quick Fretxina Wall MAGNIFICENT New Stylinq J .W Kerns OHIO., ITD. publicly aicused of high lirason Th radio itald It would broad, east dally report ol the oouil proceedings. There have been no Western news corresnniidritta III Chechoslovakia sine the convlc tlon last year of Associated Press Coiiespoiidem William N. Oalls on "spy'' rharge.-a trial de nounced throughout tlic non-Coni' anunht world. Rrd-hali'cd Slnnsky, one of the architects ol the lied Cr.'oh regime, waa arrested In Nov., lOnl, along with acorea of oilier top gov ernment and parly offlrlala In a ttill-aclae purga of Coininunlst ranks. Miikdnt 10 theaters showed Soviet vulni pimures exclusively. One Red radio cumiueiilary not. ed that Irirndly relations dating back more lliau 30 years lind been bulwaiked by the 1I1M) sliio-Bovlel Treaty of Friendship, Military Al liance and Mutual Assistance. The liraly Is aimed primarily at Japan. Pelplng died the following ac complishments from Ua binding lies with Moscow: 1. VSHll lias consistently tiiilir'.d the in: IH of China to participate in the United Nations and opposed I lie U. 8. "invasion' of Korea and "occupation'' of Formosa. .. China and Russia Jointly re jected the pence treaty with Japan. 3. Russia lent China 300 million dollars lo restore its economy. 4. Russia handed over to China, without payment, buildings of the (miner military cantonment in I'tiping, property acquired from the Japanese In Maiicnurla, prop erly In Dairrn under lease to the Soviet Union. By the end of this year the Russians are due lo trans ler all Installations and properties ol the Jointly oK"mled Changchun Hallway in Manchuria. 6. At the reo.ue.st ol China. Rus sia agreed lo extend Joint use of the naval base al Port Arthur "to pi event new aggression from U, 6 -lostered Japan." llama charged he was put off a bus operated by Ihe Carolina Coarh I Company better known as Trail ways Lines when he reiusea lo move his seat while on a trip to Norfolk Kept. 4. 11)60. Arrested on a charge of violating North Carolina's segregation ordi nancethe charge later waa dlv missed Williams aued for 140.000. Judge Hulcheson awarded him 1311 in compensatory damages. Martin A. Martin, Richmond i Negro attorney for Ihe National I Association for Ihe Advancement I of Colored People who represented nille hop from Edmonton. Alta. Kiyum time lor Uie arctic Jumpi . .. . ' was three minutes over aeven I hour,. For the enl.r. J.gsJ-mlle trin. tin i . in tilts air Mllm-trd orlglnaliy at .., heira. Airline oliiclals figured the plane would reach .h. Itanish e.nil.l ,?"!" .L?C5,.',H"..C?'1. after the 2.3R6-mlle lump from Thule about 10:10 p.m. it 30 pm. ESTi. Yesterday, the big akyllnrr cov ered the I.S23 miles between Los Angeles and Kdmonton In six hours and 46 minutes, taking off for Oreenland alter a reluellng atop of almost two hours. The flight's successful comple tion will make the Viking ihe lirsl commercial airliner to fly Irom Ihe West Coast of the United States lo Europe over the north pole route. This route, giving the Pacific Coast Its own gateway to Europe and making Los Angeles an over night hop from Scandinavia, cuts - 1.000 milea otf the trip by way of HAVE YOy ITS FULLY AGED! Whiskey at its iW. -,-t ' w,sM, -. ' pi ena-;,', -.. - . - -. ,--ak. i-ew ,'. -Hfce...-, JaJs.cfaaaA-," Famous from cooif lo coaif JJJJJP KENTUCKY STRAIGHT , BOURBON WHISKEY THIS WHISKEY IS 4 YEARS OLD. 86 PROofif THE H ILL AND HILL COMPANY, LOUISVILLE, It V. THURSDAY. NOVKMRKK 2(), 10,12 Rudy Slaniky At ''V1' . Vl'i .JLV'T.? "t Kloinent Uotlwalri accused him ,,l "anti-state activities" and hnkni bnlh lilin and lonner Foreign Min ister Vlndu dementi logclher as "Tltulsl" traitors lo Moscow. Cleiuriills, also an uld-tlma Com. muiilsl, has brcu III Jnll "walling (rial fur almost two years on charges of mantel niiiiiiiiig a pint lo overlluuw the It' ll regime anil Hun the country over to "Western Imperialist!!. " Unillt: this year, Hlelan Hnl, Crch mlnlsler ol justice, said that Hlan-ky and Clrnientla would ha tiled along Willi Ol'- Hllng one time political neorelary of Hie Communist party in the city of 111 mi. and oilier purged flumes on charges ol plotting to mtinier Pres ident tintlwald, Vienna reports In it March nalil Dial Hlaliskv mid a score ol oilier liiiiurd Oi'cli Ciiminunlsta hail been taken to Muncuw mid ther" lorced to "coiiless" lo alleged crimes In preparation lor a mass trial, Crrch newspapers null radio broadcasts have publicly accused scores ol former prominent figures of being "traitors," Among those mentioned are: Vllent Now. lonner editor ol the Communist newspaper Ituilr pin vo: 1,1, licit. Ilrilileli Iteioin, or nier deputy delense niinlsler; Ar thur Loudon, former deputy lorrign minister; Fnven l.eobl, Inriiirr drnuiy mlnlsler ol luieifii traile; Oxnr Kllugrr. a fiirmer ilrpuit ment duel in Hie Fotclun Mliilsiry, and Maria Hverinova, lonner parly secretary In Prague, The Czech public has been told Ihnt the punted leadern were inrin. bcr ol a "Trolskyile Zlonlst" con nplrary aimed at overthrowing th government with the aupiwrl ol ilia Western Powers. Willi' ky and muiiv nf the olheis arrested ale of Jewish origin. Some Western sources interpret ed the Pin lie as a smashing blow In the bluer atrugute lor power from which Clottwnld is emerging as 111" Stalin ol Ciechnslovakls personal and pollltral boss o tha party and nation, with his rivals and their followers In Jail. Oregon Gets Seismograph COR V Al l. in in A ronereia and alee) building burled In a hill- iiof two miles west of here holds the new Oregon Blate College seis mograph. The new equipment Was lent by Ihe University of Calllornia sa1 Ilia new structure waa lor lea A an'l bull! at a aite which would not be allecied by tralllo and other eur face Jarring. Tills Is Ihe only completely equipped recording aiiparatus be tween the 8an Francisco Bay Ares and the Pug'l Sound Area, where Ihe two active Paclfio Coast faults are located. New Trial For Army Sleeper PORT MEADE, Md. (-The Ar my s.ld Uxlay it will start a new trial "In the nest lew daya'' fur Pie Warren MrConnelL 31-year-nlil Midler from Alloway, N. J . who was previously sentenced to 10 years at hard labor for going lo sleep on ma post In Korea. Tlie previous convictl n,, previous conviction and sen- ...... lence as set asid bv the Court of : Military Appeal, In W.s.,i,lon Hilary Appeals in Washington McConnen was accused nf going to alerp Nov. 14, IBM. at his post on a main line ol resistance held by ,lw Dlv,",nn "nd ,r"'rt ibv a 7th Division general court martial in Korea Dec. 10, 19.M. He also was sentenced lo a dis honorable discharge and the for feiture of all h pay allowances. MrConnell Is now under restric tions here and his case In the hands of Second Army headquarters at Ft. Meade. He Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. D. E. McConnen of Allowsy. UNI PHOTOGRAPHY 7 t yooiwoooi STUDIO PHONE 4526 TRIED IT ? f a)- - f 1 nnnnn fptni a. mult II I - ' '-'yllt V"' J t V $410 A 7 Tv 5 Qt. j