Senatorial Talk On Interest Sparks Inflation Discussion By ELMER C. WALZER UPI StaH Writer -NEW YORK (UPD-Senalorial discussion of wayi and means lo lower interest rales has set ofl a lew inflation discussion in Wall Street. - Wall Street is convinced that tinkering with interest rates to bring them down can only be done through manipulation of the government bond market. If the Federal Reserve banks buy government bonds the credit supply can be blown up to fan tastic heights. As the money sup ply is built up money rates will go down. t Thus the aim of the senators would be accomplished. But the result would be the purest kind Of inflation. Many refer to it as an exact equivalent of printing CAPTAIN BRA VES STORM BEARING MORE BAD NEWS By FRANK ELEAZER UPI Staff Writer WASHINGTON IUPI Capt Roger ' Ghijs, braving storm, calm, and a l'otomac River bridge too low for his mainmast, has just brought the Belgian sail ing ship "Mercator" across the Atlantic bearing more bad news about Russia. The lutest disquieting word is that when it comes to ships under sail, the Russian navy is fust pulling out ahead of the world. The United States isn't even try ing to keep up, although Capt. Ghijs is too diplomatic to say Slave Ring Smashed In Pittsburgh . PITTSBURGH. Pa. (UPD- A white ' slave ring involving 31 "glamorous" young ladies was smashed Friday with the arrest of an ex-convict who allegedly Used a gun, in some cases, to force girls to work for him. Nicholas Silia Jr.. 24. Pitts burgh, who has served time on forgery and fraud charges in four federal penitentiaries, was held without bail in Allegheny County Jail. Silia's arrest climaxed an in vestigation by the FBI and county and local authorities. Silia was charged with pandering, rape, vi olation of the Uniform Firearms Act, pointing firearms, and con tributing to the delinquency of minors. The suspect, according to De tective James V. Oe Stout, em ployed girls ranging in age from 17 to 38 and paid them about $125 a week. ' Authorities said he used news papers and business cards to ad vertise 24-hour "escort service' with "glamorous young ladies" for conventioneers and visiting businessmen. Also arrested in the case was William E. Thompson, 25. Pitts burgh, on charges of adultery and contributing to the delinquency of minors. Authorities said he was involved with one of the girls. Both suspects waived hearings Friday night and were held for court. Thompson was freed under iS.OOO bond. At least six tecn-ased girls signed statements claiming Silia lured them into the ring, detec tives said. One girl said Silia forced her at gunpoint to submit to relations with a customer and that he also forced her to have relations with him, De Stout said. Crippled Marine Saves Three Men MALIBU, Calif. (UPI I A chair bound ex Marine was credited to day with saving the lives of three persons whose boat overturned 12 . fillies north of Point Dome, near Zuma Beach. Lifeguards said the paraplegic veterun, Robert Gross, 40. and a companion, II. W. Van Wagner. 90. San Diego, were fishing aboard Cross' 23-loot cabin cruiser Friday when they spotted the overturned skiff. Clinging to the IB foot craft were Owner Frank Whitehead, 28. and his passengers, Willingham II. Chalmers, 42. and Chalmers' niece. April. 12, Kansas City, Mo. . Gross, confined to a wheel chair radioed to Paradise Cove (or an ambulance alter taking the trio aboard his boat. First TV Marriage Ends In Divorce LONDON UPI America's first television marriage ended In a divorce court here Friday. English actress Eunice Gray son, 28, and scriptwriter 1-ciuh Vance, 37, were divorced on (rounds that she had deserted him. They were married in a New York TV studio in July, iwm. with a nationwide TV audience I guests. They received wedding gifts worth about (2.000 from press money which never has been tried throughout the world without disaster. Cooler heads in (he financial district do not think the govern ment would tolerate such an ex pedient to make it easier fur the Treasury to refund bonds. But the mere mention of ' a possibil ity it might be tried had an ef fect at first of putting stocks into new record high ground. Railroads, Utihtitt Suffer And as those things go, the railroad and utility issues which would suffer from inflation failed to keep pace on the upside with the industrials. Speaking of the belief that money rates can be cut by fiat. Hubert Van Cleave, of the firm of C. F. Childs 4 Co.. govern ment bond specialists, says: anything about that. Ghijs eased his 2K0-foot three master barkentine into Pier 5 here Sunday under auxiliary die sel power. He had wanted to come in under sail, for better ef fect. "But I ran out of wind," he explained. "Mercator" is a training ship for Belgian naval and merchant marine cadets. Fifty of them la bored 12 hours daily for a month to accomplish the lutest crossing, with the help of 30 other crew men and 13 officers. Bridge Menaces Matt They were under caivas 14 days, relying on the engine to buttle a blow between Hambur and the Azores, and to combat a calm between Bermuda and Norfolk. On the approach run to Washington, when the 136 foot mainmast was menaced by a 135 foot highway bridge, the cadets scrambled into the rigging to un stop the top section. The cadets are mostly 18. The officers are several years older. Capt. Ghijs, who is referred to by one and all, including him self, as "the old man," is 36. The captain has been aboard the "Mercator" for 13 years, the last five in command of the ship. He says nothing beats a few months before the mast for train ing young naval officers. . Appar ently the Russians agree. Anywuy. Ghijs said he is ad vised the Russian navy currently has 30 vessels under sail in her cadet training program, with three more sailing ships now on the ways. Barring the prospect some forward-looking sailpowered devel ments of our own may be hidden under a secrecy label, a survey of defense agencies indicated in fact the United States now is down to one sailing ship for ca det training, and that in the Coast Guard. But enough of bad news. Capt. Ghijs, who views himself more as an ambassador than a mere sail ing ship captain, broke out cham pagne for an official welcoming party that boarded the ship in midmorning. Additional corks were popped for the press some time later. 1 believe showing the flag abroad is a means of personal contact between people," he said. beaming. "Well, cheerios!" Trapeeze Artist Hurt In Fall ONTARIO, Ore. UPH A trnpeeze artist who performs without a net was in a Ontario hospital Friday with multiple in Juries after falling 20 feet. Princess hlame in real life Mrs. Helen Henrichs, 3t was doing a show for a predominately child audience for Rudy Brothers Circus at the Malheur county fair. She was hanging by her heels when she lost her grip and piling cd toward the ground, striking a set of stage lights. Officials said she narrowly mis sed being impaled on a wire fence near the grandstand. Her condition was reported fair Gregory Peck's Son Booked For Violation WEST LOS ANGEI.ES ( ITU Actor Gregory Peck's son. Jona than, 15, was arrested Friday and booked for a violation of the health and safety code in connec tion with the possession of fire works. Young Peck was arrests after pclice found firecracker in the back yard of his Brent wood home. Another 15 packages were found in his room, police said. The youth w;u questioned about complaints of mail box explosions in the neighborhood. He denied anv knowledge of the incidents Peck was released to the cus tody of his parents. CZECH SOLDIERS DEFECT IENNA U Pll - Police re ported Wednesday that two Czech soldiers have defected to Austria and asked for political asylum be cause "political pressure in Czechoslovakia has become un bearable." The Cieihs, both 20 turned themselves over to Austri an authorities Wednesday morn ing at Klein lluugsdurl. The people, shaking through the mouths of their elected represen tatives, thus can order all things as they desire. . . Assumptions May Be Wrong "Two assumptions underly the arguments in (he upper chamber both of which may be wrong and therefore dangerous to the con tinuance of a free society in this nation. First, the voice of the people demands lower interest rates; second what the people want, the people must have, no matter at therefore dangerous to the con tinuance of a free society in this nation. First, the voice of the people demands lower interest rates; second what the people want, the people must have, no matter at what cost." Wall Street knows a great deal about the law of supply and de mand. And it knows a lot about the cost of money. The cost of money is interest. It rises and falls as the supply of money fulls and rises. If mon ey is scarce, rates are high. It it is plentiful, rates are low. The same applies to wheat. People will pay $1.06 or more for the use of a dollar for a year. Back on Oct. 23. 1H07 when the Knickerbocker Trust Co. sus lended payments. Wall Strecters paid $2 2 for a dollar with call money at 125 per cent. Thirty Par Cent In 191? They paid $1.30 for a dollar for a year of call money on Nov. 15, IHI9. paying from $1.10 to $1.25 for a dollar was common in 1929 when call money lent as high as 25 per cent. When the bottom fell out of the stock market in the 1930s, you could get call money in 1933 as low as 4 of one per cent. That meant you paid $1.0OH for a dol lar because the dollar went beg ging in the money market. The current problem before tne Senate is whether the govern ment can pay an Interest rate of more than 4'4 per cent for its long-term bonds. If the Senate sees fit to vote down a rise in the interest limit, the Treasury simply will not be able to sell long term bonds, say the experts. But the Treasury probably could worry along with short term stuff and things wouldn't be too bad for the market or for business. Forcing interest rates down through bond manipulation, however, could do some unusual tricks. Moscow Really Jumping WASHINGTON tUPH Moscow is a throbbing, pulsating, not to say jumping city. Twice a day it rises straight up more than a foot and a half. This semi-daily performance is due to "elastic earth tides, ac cording to Soviet acamedician A N. Nesmeyanov. Earth tides, like those of the sea, are caused byj the gravita tional pull of the sun and moon Nesmeyanov, president of the Soviet Academy of Sciences, noted the effect of earth tides on Moscow in an articla published by Pravda on International Geo physical Year UGYi research The article has been translated and distributed here. New Method Of Study Investigation of these ripples in the planet's crust, Nesmeyanov said, is "one of the comparatively new methods of studying the in ternal structure of the earth. "It is known." he said, "that In Moscow the tidal wave in 12 hours can reach 50 to 60 centi meters (1.65 to 1 98 feet). "This means that the whole city is raised in a vertical direc tion by half a meter each day." Such tides, of course, affect the whole of the earth's crust and not just that part around inland cit ies like Moscow. Hard To Observe But the crust al effect is much less apparent than the great li quid tick's in the world's oceans and so may be hard to observe n its own right near the sea shore. Study of earth tides during the G , Nesmeyanov said, "showed the importance of conducting ob servation at points remote from oceans." This work, he suggested, could lie done with special profit "in Central Asia where the indirect effects caused by the shifting ol the water masses of the oceaits are not felt." This and other research done during the IUY. he said, will lead lo "substantial expansion of our knowledge of the earth. Housewife Collapses, Dies After Wasp Bite BIRMINGHAM. Ala. UPI Mrs. Frances MeWillic, 48, died Friday night shortly after she was bitten by a wasp. McWiine said nis wite com plained of stomach ache after the wasp stung her on the head and then collapsed. Observer, La Grand, Or., Among Valley Farmers By County Agents Tad Sidor and Charles Gavin Probably one of the strangest looking wheat fields in Union county is located on the farm of Henry Simoms, on the foot hill road. Henry planted Burt wheat, which has a red chaff. What hap pened, we are not sure, but It looks as if one side of the drill si wed deeper or his fertilizer ap plicator placed more fertilizer on one side than on the other. The net result is that he has strips of white headed wheat banded with red headed wheat. We are sure that stage of ma turity when the frost came or when our exceedingly hot wea ther came, it stopped the maturi ty of the wheat, hence part white and part red. It would probably be prettier if we could get a strip of blue in the field. At least in part, our barberry control program was a success. Several of our farmers that have had black stem rust every year or. their spring wheat indicate that for the first time they can not find the black fungus. This appears to have been a commun- ty project that has paid off. We keep getting inquiries concerning the new morning glory killer, TBA or PBA. We nave found in our trials that time of application or method of tillage after application makes no difference. In our applica- ions, we have had one failure. This was applied on compara tively shallow soils on one of our hill farms. We are recheck- ng on this particular farm and will have the answer in a short time. At the present time we are try ing a new material that has the same basic ingredient but is in gianular form. In some cases it will be handier to use. Price-wise it is expensive, how ever, when priced with sodium chlorate, when used at the prop er rate of 3 pounds per hundred square feet it comes to over $200 per acre, while the Benzoic acid material is slightly over $100 per acre. Morning glory is an expen sive weed. For grass seed growers who plan to or are combining fields direct, we certainly advise let ting the sacks of seed set in the field for a few days to complet ely dry them out. Louisa Jensen, head of the seed testing laboratory at Ore gon State College, tells us that we are getting a rather bad re putation concerning the keeping piality of our grass. Evidently hen the seeds are not cured properly before processing, the germination deteriorates quite pidly under storage. Here is a couple of notes we nicked up from some of the sour ces sent to us: This is the hottest month of the year across the country ... a time when yields f meat, eggs and milk drop olt 15 per cent to 25 per cent or ven more on many farms. Live ilock and poultry suffer more from the heat than you and there's less they can do bout it. Army To Save Island From Surplus Brew WASHINGTON tUfli A Ilgnt little island in Alaska is having so much trouble with some Army surplus beer that the Army has sent an airborne platoon to polish off the brew. They're supposed to destroy it. not drink it. however. The matter came up in the hall of Congress where Sen. E.L. Bart lett ID-Alaska revealed Friday that the Army is sending troops to dispose of what is left of 7.000 cases of beer abandoned by Amer ican military forces on St. Law rence Island in the Bering Sea Hart lett said he got the Army on the job after residents of Gambell, a small native commu nity on the island, complained the situation had them ove ra barrel. Islanders tried immediaely aft er the U.S. troops left to destroy the beer. They tossed it into three pits, doused it with oil and gaso line and set it afire. The process was repeated three times. Then a tractor ran ove rthe remains and the pits were covered. But three months later the Gambell City Council said "ine briates have attacked several per sons in their homes and much vandalism has occurred." The beer was left when the military closed a resupply mis sion and two bases in 1957. High transportation costs and difficult loading conditions made it too costly to take the brew home. The village council has posted a 24-hour guard awaiting arrival of the paratroopers. OFFICIAL CON CAME NEW YORK (UPD-Police ad mitted sheepishly Thursday that "tow away tone" signs on mid town no-parking streets are only good to "intimidate the timid." The city closed down its impound ing yards, and stopped towing cars away from no-parking zones a year ago lo sav money. Sat., Aug. 1, 1959 Pag 6 Keep your profits up with plenty of water, shade and cooling. Cool drinking water is the easiest thing to provide. Make sure animals and birds have all they need, all through the day. State college tests show that hogs gain 8 per cent faster and use lest feed per pound of gain with a continuous water supply . . . milk cows produce 10 per cent more milk . . . steers boost gains up to 20 per cent and hens lay up to 25 per cent more eggs. It doesn't take long to pay for automatic waterert, a pond in the pasture or a tank trailer to haul water to the range with those kind of savings. Good shade aids gains too. University of Arizona steers un der roof put on 100 pounds of gain for $3.85 per hundred less than steers in the sun. Dairy cows standing in the shade while feed is hauled to them every day have very little loss of produc tion . . . Barn fans help too . . hens with cooling sprays on the roof or in the house laid IS per cent more eggs in Georgia tests and hogs with cooling sprays gained -3 of a pound per day faster and did it on 10 per cent less feed. Feed up the wheat surplus? Kansas tests show that wheat can be as good as grain sorghum in fattening steers. Sorgo silage sup plemented with 1.75 lbs. of rol led wheat produced 27 per cent faster gains. Wheat at $1.83 per bushel was a better buy than grain sorghum at $1.80 per cwt. The Union Experiment Station probably has more and better in formation on the feeding of w heat. Field corn versus legume grass silage. All research to-date with corn silage with well dented corn indicates that: Field corn has slightly more TDN and net en ergy. Legume-grass has more pro tein and carotems. Legume grass equals to corn silage for milk production when slightly more grain is fed. Corn silage requires less grain but a higher per cent protein so the two roughages are about equal. The trend in milking machines seems to be narrow bore liners for teat cups to reduce tissue in jury. These liners were used or iginally in early milking ma chines and investigations at Cali fornia, bring out that Mastitus due to tissue injury can be cut down by their use. GOING ON I'LL SAVE o! Al No Extra OBSERV In Yonr New Vacalion-Pac See Me, Yonr Carrier WHILE YOU WERE AWAY LAST YEAR... The OBSERVER Beporled . . . Local Newt And Happenings Births And Deaths Covered Society And Club News ' Sports Events Entertained With Your Favorite Comics You'd Never Guess What No, or any other day for that matter. The Observer contains such a wide diversified assortment of local news and advertising, it would be impossible to make even an approximation of its contents . . . you must READ it to be fully informed concerning the activities of your community, your state and your nation. In order to keep up on local happenings, many of my subscribers have asked me to save their copies To Phone 3 Nikita Apparently Is A New Price Tag On Berlin Truce By PHIL NEWSOM UPI StaH Writer After Geneva what? Aa plainly as it can be put into words, V. S. Secretary of State Christian Herter has told Moscow and its East German satellite: The U. S. promise to defend West Berlin is "a binding com mitment and the U, S. will abide by.it." In words Just as unequivocal, Soviet Premier Nikita Khrush chev has said the West can rely upon the fact that he never will consent to any German reunifica tion except one that assures a German Socialist ( Communist state. Therein spokesman for the world's two most powerful na tions thumbnailed the positions which have made the Foreign Ministers' Conference at Geneva! a useless round of oratory. Gives Breathing Space What has come out of the Ge neva conference so far has been another brief breathing space for DENNIS O'KEEFE PUMPING OUT NEW SERIES IN FALL By VERNON SCOTT UPI Staff Writer HOLLYWOOD I UPD Dennis O'Keefe. long absent from the movieland scene, is pumping out a new TV series for the fall sea son. Its a situation comedy. And in this era of westerns and detec tive thrillers situation comedy is as risky as fan dancing at a PTA meeting. With such shows as "December Bride" and The Bob Cummings and Phil Silvers programs biting the coaxial dust this year it would seem unreasonable to buck the trend against rib-ticklers. But O'Keefe is confident his sit uationer about a New York col umnist will strike pay dirt. He is committed to film 38 segments. "The other situation comedy shows had four or five brilliant years before they went off the air," he said, "and I think we can do the same thing. People want to laugh. That was proved when several sponsors offered to buy our show." No Hers Opera Asked why he didn't attempt a horse opera or private eye series, O'Keefe had. an immediate ex planation. "1 played dramatic roles, ad venturers, detectives and straight parts in movies for years," he ex plained. "But the only pictures of Every Issue Your Cost To Yon get your Vacation-Pac started tee me today or call - 3161 for the 2.200,000 West Berliners who still manage to relax under con ditions of maximum tension and with the knowledge that 200 Rus sian tanks and 22 Russian divi sions stand just outside their iso lated city. Last February, this corresond ent talked at length with West German officials. There was certainty in West Berlin then, just as there is cer tainty there now, that a Khrush chev driven far enough is capa ble of signing his separate peace treaty with East Germany and turning the land and air controls for West Berlin over to the mercies of the East German Com munists. The result could be an other Berlin blockade. Against such an eventuality. West Berlin is stockpiled and ready for siege. West Berlin Pawn West Berlin is a pawn but not the chief prize in a plot of vast international complications. The immediate prize is an in- mine the public remembers are the comedies." Where has Dennis been fur the past four or five years? "In Europe making movies for my own company, Tendennis Productions'," he said. "1 came back to Hollywood to establish a future for myself in TV some thing like Dick Powell and Desi Arnaz have done. Hopes For World-wide Series "Eventually, I hope to return to Europe to make the first true world-wide television series. I plan to collect 39 top scripts and shoot them in different locations in Africa, South America, Europe and the Orient. It will be titled 'Johnny Paris.' but I won't act in the series. I'll produce and may be direct a few of them.' As of now, O'Keefe has his hands full turning out one seg ment a week for "The Dennis O'Keefe show." The comedy is based on his an tics with celebrities and charac ters he encounters as a columnist. Dennis portrays a widower with a 10-year-old son who is badgered by his housekeeper, hatchet-faced Hope Emerson. "I have a few girl friends, too," O'Keefe said, "but I'm not a Robert Cummings-type wolf. It's a wholesome program with lots of laughs, and I'm convinced kit will be a hit." . VACATION? Is In The Observer Today of the paper and deliver them after they return home ... in one convenient bundle, of course. As an OBSERVER Carrier boy I am a "Little Mer chant." I buy the papers outright and sell them to you at a small profit. But like other merchants I, too, am anxious to be of service to a customer . . . that's whv there is NO EXTRA COST to this VACA TION PAC Service. VACATION-PAC Preparing ternationally recognized Commu-' nist East Germany untroubled by thoughts of freedom. However, failure now at Geneva does not necessarily mean an end to negotiations nor to immediate pressure on Berlin. Khrushchev's recent petulance in Poland, his public arguments with Vice President Nixon and his cancellation of his visit to the Scandinavian nations, all indicate dissatisfaction with recent events. He also needs a breathing spell. So it is possible he already is preparing a new price tag on Ber lin. It could come in the Geneva Conference to ban nuclear weap ons. It also could come in a re newed drive for increased trade with the United States, which he needs if his own economic plan is to be a success. Nixons Look Well-Dressed During Trip SVERDLOVSK, USSR. UPIt The Richard Nixons are' still managing to look fresh, well dressed and pleasant in the in-, leiior of Russia despite little sleep and no quick laundry serv ice. Their schedule ii gruelling jet plane i to a city, straight from, the airport to factory tours, and unning from banquet to ballet. But Vice President Nixon's well- tailored suits, of grayish blue or brown for day and dark blue for night look as neat as a maga zine ad. Mrs. Nixon also is a good ad vertisement for the United Slates as she steps from the airplane, usually in a printed silk dress, or a silk suit, a small hat ad black bag and shoes. At night she appears in a black dress, even though, as in Novosi birsk, she had only 20 minutes to change for the ballet. "A.'tcr touring 54 countries, I've learned to pack our clothes so they don't wrinkle," she ex plained. "I always buy non-crushable clothes. I didn't eve bring a travel iron with me. And at night I wash out my stockings and lin gerie." In addition to being treated to Russian hospitality, the Nixons are being almost smothered with another local custom at least four meals a day. the show's sponsors. 1