Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, May 13, 1953, Page 3, Image 3

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    Cep Breeding Project
Wings Tone explained
I.;,
IIKHAU) ANIJ iHw., .I.A.ilAiH lAI.LS, OUKliON
on
,,, rMii'linii'iil Ilia 1iy. R it I h deilm-a Kill nuke
11 . . .. i uri.n.. nf r.i... M .till..-...,
Mil be irrejt a aire or 11 lamb. FirM
bi
f r -
. mull j . n
'if 1- 1 ,.,'., m Hlntr riil- 'l aeeonn ciom nnmnav, untviot.
ii'fl i nrlil thy Mny 0nptl i-eieesur aim umpitnur
yep hjrriin.1 tpwc, vm t, compared (or At lamb
limrllli'l lull
.UII1 ,"m''!'1U',''."l!.',,ir!!l Wixil production Jrom eye, ol
..... .liorit III I)1' I ll' I' ..i....- i i .... ...nt .., .
olfflilim , ,.,.,.,. ivnlk 1 "I"-"!! uiwcj urn ur nn
"M 1 1 , .."i i-illiw In Vwra ""n. A- K.
rlrlliunn' . wniiucK will mia on m imnnrtunie
lluuni t. I'M' i"'1'1"" "m fertility In 11 Imnb prortiiriioii.
uiril. , a rnmi inmn iiiurueon, prepoiru
.,t )' in'1 " " , .,, , ny A. w. Oliver ann ine wiinyroinor
,,,!, nl l''riM',""l1 ' " club, will be held Hie college
Mcnluu. ,r'"' ""PVlllll pasture. Al I 111 I lime F. H.
driiH'"'" '," . i i Pi Ire, deun or agriculture, vi lli
',5nH" P""-)lri1 h1' ul" .ipek.
inl. , ,..,,,,,.... ,! alternnnn nekton will (el
,j r. MrKeii'l. li.t . "I U,rl,v Willi denion-.tr.llun o(
.C '"' l'""'"""' '"''"'J,' ' exiiei lineiiul nheep. The remainder
mix m "" Hie afternoon mil he turned over
.. riiirllll! Mi lll"Hllnir rl- , .., .nhi.lv. I f t.i i.-,-. h..
I"1 . I...H mill nilmr ;. ..: ... .. .. ' " "
L, ttiinvroiiie I, ti i. l-""""" "i Valley Parklnf
UN Proposes New
Truce Plan But
Forces Find
Red
Faults
Reds Play Up Rift In Europe Plan
By (irolllii: A. MrMtmrn ireluHnnl prisoner.
PANMIINJOM The II. N.
Oliiumnd tudny handed lllr Coin
liuinWi a per.- blueprint Inr un
rinl.illre In Korea. 11 wnii
MVreplnu ll-pmnl plnn lor ex
ellniiKlliK prlnoner of war, liml biff
roadblock In ti trun-.
'Hie Communists culled Ihe pro
posal a "Mrp backward" anil ald
Hie Allied tlllinle "lluealrni Ibe
piiipe.'ii ol ihe whole arniLillce
I Harrison told newsmen the de-
odvIoiimv," Mum went on. iius taii"d Allied pin "would coimtl
li not an nultude that iihonld be tute Ihe churter" lor the neutral
l.'iken In ihe negotiation, but one nations' dutici,
lliat llueatena Ihe prnapeEla ol ho j He m,!d Ihe U N. Command
whole arininlce nCKolintohK.'
Kenny Keeps
;f,wr mil -P-iik '''" i, .uim,.y:n. n. iio. sale,,,: johS n,.1?il'1'",",r , , iAWtfMI P l4lf
" .jlaoder. OHO extension aervlre. '''.' , fh'?" tou""lro- PrPV I ITU
. i i. ii ,rae. . .u!:, l ' " "dvanted by ilir JCI JLI 111 W
Civic Post
II MT MJ
I r
J.H. Johnson. OHC animal husband
man.
4-H Keepi Busy
On Many Projects
COUVAI.I IS -- OrcRon 4-H
Cl'ih mPinijrifl workttrl on 34,o;.3
iMojfcis IhM ypr mid coinplctfd
H;( pi"r rent o( r, Burton Hue on.
Kl.m..h f.lli. 0i 'lflJe club Irfttlcr rrPrlcd Wdnp.i-
LMrtlCAN CHINESE I lie aald It was the hlkheftl per-
nw,f aw"' i:i-inaKe oi ronipiruona in n vears.
KM Fa' (Men To Taka Out There were S1.029 club member.!
Id I. Ice, Mqr. 'niirliif Ihe year.
ConimiinlMs is bp.sed on the. lonp
landlnK Allied position that no
prlsonrr mil be icnt home auulnst
Ills will.
Alter iho leiiitthv donmienl wan I
rend and the Communist com-j trnqrv r-rrv . ,..
mellleri ai lillv Ihe Irm e flel. oa. .'-" s-l I Y, N. J. W
- .-.t- .lull,, w lf.t.... f-i - ... I
lounu "k major portion" ol the
Coinmtiul'.t plan acceptable but
(here were portions "we cannot ac
cept In their present lorm."
The Allied counterproposal rules
out the postnrmi.'itice political con
lercnce as a Una) court to decide
Ihe late ol prisoners, .sets 60
day lime limit durlltif which pris
oners may be given "explanations"
and spells out the function of the
live - nation repatriation com
mission. Epcakini! of turning prisoners
who refuse repatriation over to the
neutral nations commission, Harri
son said:
"The United Nations Command
accepts Hits point lor noli. Korean
prisoner' of w.ir. Prisoners of
9
jKe if from me
frW . ' V'H ux w h,ani r
liiCVvX A e tcipM over
KLAMATH BASIN GRADE
PRODUCERS ASSOCIATION
Mayor
Hon, adjoin ned until 11 a.m. to- " " , ":,, ",,y "''"c0 P'
morrow. " ' cUy commission in a close-
l.t Clen Will-,,, K ii,,i niii.ni ipai election 1 uesdny,
Jr senior Allied dekaale. pre- , r in s nirsnt his re. i itorenn nationality who have elect-
sen'ted the plan to his Communist , ' i. '""I"" fniained In rd not to avail themselves of the
euiiiuerpari. Nonh Korean (Jen. " , "'x'" e repatriated should be
Nam II In a one hour and 40- , election result, a bin sur- released to civilian status on the
minute sej Ion i " 10 " wbich had not cleet. dnle the armistice becomes ef-
Brlell". the Allies proposed- ! ", sl"" llrlt1 " nwrly lour ! Icctlve -
1. Repatnatlan 01 prisoners Im- ' Is almost certain lo be " ""M Korean who sub
mediately after an armistice, ex- ulsnu- I ,eouentlv desired to be repatriated
rept H10..C relu Inr lo 110 home. under New Jelwy l.iw, Ihe fue uld be free to do so and would
Releasing to civilian statu, alii""-" receivini! Ihe Inreest number i be siven "all assistance In so rc
prlsonera ot Korean nalloiiiility tin-1 ,v0,cs r' elected Thirteen can- lum-iiR."
wtlllnir to relurn to Red rule. Re-i didates were in the held, three "Your side followed this proce
ssing all non-Korean prisoners i 01 "mn Independents. dure throiiKhoui the course ol the
who peislsl In refusing to relurn Eiders' campiilun m a 11 a e e r, Korean War," Harrison said, re
to Communist control alter 60 davsj fil"'c Sen. Edward J O'Mara (D- '0 Communist aitiumeius
in custody of a neutral commia-1 Hudson 1 pointed lo the unolllcla! ! thal mnny prisoners they captured
sion. ' volc results which placed an Unit-! I'"rl' '" lhe W !lr 'el Heed t
2. Conditional acceptance of the m' candidate Thomas Ciuneeml Hie front.
Coinmunlsl nomlniilion ol India, in stxth place by only 2.'2 votes 1 "Tn? "nited Nations Command
Poland Chechoslovakia, Sweaell '""I 'd: 1 accedes to the viewpoint of your
and Swltterland as members of "l'in sure there'll be a leeheck." i ' 'd" ,hu'" explanations be maae lo
ihe custodial commission but only The vote result also was unique Pr,sone''i provided It is clearly
if India heads the body and pro- In Jersey City-In that two R?pub-! "lltl.('''slt"d "m lhc Prisoner Is not
vldes any troops needed. , llcans were elected In Ihe Demo- i ,0 De subjected to force or coer-
3. Rejection of the Reds' propo- cratlc bastion but each was on" !?" ' "n.v klnd to prevent or to
sal that a political conference de- a rival ticket. j , s r,Patrialion."
termlne the IMe of prisoners re-! Joshua Rinele. only OOP run-1 H"r'50" s"itl MUca acceptance
fusinir lo bo home alter being in nniK mate ol ERpers and a lonj-' , J5 po1"' as clearly condi
eutral custody. time Hatue loe lopped Ihe lield 1 , on c lnu,":1 acceptance
The Allied plan voiced no oblec-1 with 63.176 votes. Eceers followed 0 'f which will insure that the
lion to the Red proposal that rep-jwitn ti.'.BOJ; Bernard Berry, a
reaentatlves of the Communist rov ; Kennv man, 62.491 : Kenny. 01,738,
ernment be permitted to explain t and Donald Suence, the Kenny Re
thlnits to rclucinnl prisoners. How-: publican re-elected to office, 16 -ever,
the Allies warned against 397.
any effort to Intimidate or force! Rinisle and Sience are on oppo
the DrUoners. site sides of lhe Hudson Couniy
"It Is an excellent basis for an GOP fence In an internal parly
armistice." Harrison told Nam. He! squabble.
asked the Communists to study it TV five-man commission will
MOHCOW 11 The Soviet press
Wednesday reported on Prime
Minister Churchill's foreign policy
speech Monday to the British
House of Commons. There Is plenty
of reason to believe Moscow Is In
terpreting the mixed reception to
the speech as an Indication of
widening differences between the
United States and Britain.
The approval of Churchill's idcat
in certain sections of French poli
tics apparently also Is not lost upon
the Russians. The development of
conlllct of opinion between the
United Stales and Its European
partners often has been predicted
here, and reactions In England.
Ihe United Slates and France to
lhe Churchill speech may be looked
upon by the Russians as the be
ginning of a series of such con
flicts. 1 A Joint study by the American
Council of Foreign Relations and
Ihe British Royal Institute of In
ternational Affairs says Soviet
peace offensive could intensify dif
ferences between the Americans
and British. The study wa3 pre
pared before Georgl Malenkov suc
ceeded Stalin as Soviet premier,
and announced Wednesday.
Ht says that If the USSR re
frained for a time from muddying
international waters, perhaps in
expectation of such conflicts among
Western powers, "disagreements
that would otherwise have been about 600 words to the Churchill
suppressed may be allowed to speech, by no means embraced his
come to the aurface." Stalin, In irteas. The account raised the Issue
his last essay before his death, pre- f western support for the rearm
dieted the development of auch I g 0( western Germany and made
conflicts.) 'clear that the USSR objected t
The Soviet press, while devoting I this.
The prettiest
cottnn-piekin'i in town I
explanations are not coercive in
nature."
The Allied counterproposal was
Mown to Korea Tuesday bv Gen.
Mark Clark, u. N. commander,
.ollowing Us approval in Washington.
Harrison snent an hmir nn-i
half reading the plan to the Reds.
Weed Honors
Athletes
WEED A banquet honoring- the
athletes of the local high school
will be sponsored by Weed Lions
Club Wednesday evening May 13,
according to Chet Maishall, Lions
president.
The affair will be held at the
Sons of Italy hall and an approxi
mate seventy five members of the
various teams wil be given this
special recoRnition.
Speaker of the evening will be
Ernie Bush, head footballr coach
at the Chico State College. .
The Weed high school athletic
program includes football, base
ball, tennis, track, boxing and
wrestling.
The ladies of the Lions club and
the High school mother's club will
assist in serving the banquet.
in the same pirit of constructive
negot tat Ions in which 'e have
studied your eight-point proposal
on whtch H W based."
Nam observed coldly that the
Allir had not accepted the Com
munist proposal, which the Reds
hud put on un '"all or none" basis.
Nam "aid the new Allied proposal
was step backward from the
three-point propoHln put forward
in the letter of April 16 by your
.tide,"
Thr Allies had nominated Swlt
.eilund as a neutral to handle all
Make the TV tide 'by -tide tttt . . . turn on any other $tt firnt .
turn on a Cro$hy. You'll be convinced
then
ii
You can see it
BETTER
on a
crosieyW
ill
CAN OWN A NIW IIO-SCRIIN CROSLIY PO At LOW AS $2.05 A WIEK
meet Tuesday to select a mavor
Kenny, asked who will be mayor
under his controlling three-man
bloc, replied. I don't know right
now. but the three of us will UK
it over."
Hudson County Sheriff William
Kelly acted quickly to place police
guards over the voting machine
t in the 312 election districts.
He said the move was decided
"in view of high tempers and a
split ticket."
The total vote was 135.000 8. OOP
under the city's record vote ol
143.000 in 1949, when 9 per cent
of the 165. ellclblcs turned out.
Kenny, himself once a Hague
lieuten.'.nt. and Eggers c.ich knew
their political futures were st
stnke.
The dominant overtone of yes
terday's election was four years l
waterfront violence which set off
politicpl fireworks on both sides.
Sordid reports of waterlront
crime, corruption, racketeering,
bombings, beatings and slaymgs
along the pier-studded Hudson
River waterfront attracted inves
tigative spotlights from state tn
national levels.
Kenny has countered the attacks
with the contention that the water
front problems were inherited from
the Hafrue-Eggers era, which held
sway for 32 years.
But his foes pointed to such in
stances as testimony beiore the
New York Stale Crime Commis
sion linking Kenny to waterfront
racketeers. Kenny described th
testimony as politically moiivated.
NOT THE SAME
Jesse Brown, Route 2. Merrill
highway, says he is not the Jesse
Brown listed in yesterday's Mu
nicipal Court Records as being sen
tenced to $15 fine or days in
jail for intoxication.
2076. Breathe
in finetit eotfon
Frenrh-rtirrl
fot marvflfui firming
Whiirnniv V B Oup.
12.25 Drup $2 05.
fftiN
WARNER -WONDERFUL BRAS
You're cool, cool beauty when Warner's plays up
your chirm' With breeiy cottons, nimbly stitched
to take the prettiest shape en you - hold their fown
through tubbings From' 1.50 to 5.95.
Coo
so
Cotton Lingerie
fresh next to your skin- " !
Switch to cotton slips, petticoats and nighties that
feel cool as a breeze and launder like a dream . . .Cotton
feels so fresh next to your skin . . . and stays fresh
longer. . . Stock up now during cotton time at Millers . . .
The styles are dreamy . . . The prices thrifty.
The most popular Kentucky whiskey because it's...
A ft
oh
Try famous Old Sunny Brook whiskey
and see for yourself why millions,
since 1891, have called it the whis
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mm
F&ffUCKY .lEN0E0 WHSKSV . u'HBOr&fn'GIMH NEUTWAt Sf miTT!! WlW)NV,lOOICCOMrANy;iOUISVILli;KINTUCK
98 I ;i 4
98 -M(
GOWNS 3:
SUPS 3.98
PETTICOATS 2.98
SHORTY P. J.s 3.98
BED-JACKET 3:
National Cotton Week May 11-16