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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (April 5, 1954)
PAGE TWO South State JACKSON, Miss. tPI Misslsslp - pi's Legislature is groping today toward a watered-down program to equalize Negro . and white schools, still fearful that the U. S, Supreme Court will abolish racial segregation. The queslion In the 13-wcck-old legislative fight is how to maintain DOORS OPEN 6:30 P M. (MURE BLACK IAGOOH RICHARD CARL?ON JULIA ADAMS PROJECT t COLOR CARTOON NEWS NEW LOW PRICES ADULTS 50' .KIDS 20c OOORS OPEN 6 30 NOW PLAYING! M-GM's FIRST GREAT MUSICAL II INemaScopE All new and In COLOR GLORY! .-ANN til! Ill .ftps r -. x X r NEW LOW "jip PRICES' IHC KIDS', ADULTS 25c DOORS OPEN 6;30 P.M. LAST 2 DAYS! CHAHltON flUNOt HESTON PARKER NEW LOW PRICES ADULTS 50 LAST TIME TODAY1 tKKKOlOt MU1IOUI 8 VI IS1HB WUIMIS TOMORROW! VICIOt ma? MATIiBf Rliuruisr. I i -.imnv SHORTS-CARTOON-NEWS NEW LOW PRICES ADULTS ' 50 C KIDS 20c wl ymiVLU IT mm T ICHN ICOtOR Faces Jim Crow Issue 1 segregation, not whether to retain It. -. . Hovering over the conflict is the Supreme Court and its declalon on live school segregation cues. If the court bans segregation, a special legislative session looms. Mississippi's answer probably would be to abolish public schools and furnish tuition for private, segregated schools, In line with plans in Georgia and South Caro lina. Resolutions to abolish schools are pending in both houses, but they do not go into details. If the court upholds segregation under Ine "separate but equal doctrine. MisslsstDoi realizes It N.Y: Piers Cleared By Dockworkers NEW YORK i.n Longshoremen from rival unions worked side by side Monday to move huge piles of cargo piled up on port of New York piers during a 39-day strike of dock workers. It was the first day of full-scale operations since the old Independ ent International Longshoremen s Assn. called off Its strike Friday afternoon. Police said that at least 11.009 dock workers were busy, about double the best single day turnout during the strike. At one Hudson River pier four gangs totaling 125 men went to work on the Argentine freighter Evlta. A line spokesman said some of the men were members of the old ILA, and others be longed to the rival AFL union, The oattle between the two for dominance sparked the tie - up longest In the port s history. The ILA, whose long rule over dock labor is challenged by the strike March S, demanding recog nition as bargaining agent and a contract with shipping firms. The old union apparently had come out ahead of the AFL in a bargaining election held in December, but enough ballots were disputed to place the final count in doubt. Competition between the ILA and the AFL began last September when the AFL ousted the old union for being racket-ridden. The strike ended after the Na tional Labor Relations Board set aside the December election be cause of ILA strong-arm tactics to Influence voters and warned that unless the ILA went back to work it would be ruled out of a new election. Secret Union Ballot Urged WASHINGTON Ml Secretary of Commerce Weeks said Monday the Eisenhower administration Is "firmly behind" a controversial proposal for secret strike ballots ns a matter of "common justice' and "democratic procedure." Many union officials have spoken out against the proposal, made by President Eisenhower in his suggestions for revising the Taft-Hartley labor relations act, but Weeks said in a copyrighted Interview with the magazine U.S. News and World Report that polls snow - an overwhelming major, lty" of workers want it. "It's a democratic right to have ft secret oailot, weeks said, "and it particularly ought to be extend ed to a strike situation where the voter's own pay check and his own Individual liberty are directly aiiectea. . . "It certainly is the one instance where a worker ought to have the right to walk in and cast his vote according to his conscience and desires In secret." Secretary of Labor Mitchell has not pluRgod for approval of the proposal now, saying it should be Riven study. The Senate Labor Committee did not include it in a bill proposing Tail-Hartley revi sion, but the companion House committee has voled tentative ap proval. The House provision calls lor strike polls among workers un der supervision of the federal med iation and conciliation service. Weeks, who reportedly had a major role In having Eisenhower make the suggestion to Congress, said in the interview . that "In many instances, II not in most in stances." there is not an accurate expression of opinion by workers Involved before a strike is started. Princess Dies In Norway OSLO, Norway W Crown Princess ilrth ol Norwuy. 53, dlrrt Mnnrtav Rh. h.ri .iff.4 for thrpc years from chronic hep atitis, s liver miment. The Princess, Ue of Crown Prince Olnf, was taken to the stale hospital March 13 following severe hemorrhages. For time she ral lied but suffered a serious net back early Sunday and lapsed in to coma. She hn1 vl.ltitrl tha ITnio et.i.. several times and spent five war yen ai Beinesaa, Md,, in exile irom the Nails. her bedside were her father in law. Norway a M . year . old Klnir Haakon VII. her hiiah.n their three children Prince Ha. ram, la. Princess Rajnhtld, 13, and Princess Astrid, M. rae popular 8wedlsto-born prln Cess naxKoH h , ..v. vu.m wi.Miuny jusv last week and a week earlier she ira vnav nan oosered their SStti weddinif- anniversary, since the summer of 1M3 ,he had rarely "Ppeared In public. must lift Its sub-par Negro schools to the level of white schools or face co-mingling of races "by fed eral force from federal courts," ss Gov. Hugh White phrased it, A solid group in strategic House committee posts blocked attempts to raise taxes to finance the sweep ing equalization program, passed but still lacking money. School sup porters now realize they must take less than they wanted. TO House iinauy approved compromise pvogram, scheduled to go Into effect July 1 if passed by the Senate, where It faces ac tion possibly today. Supporters predict a narrow victory in the Senate. Under the compromise, construc tion the major equalisation item would be delayed until after the first year of the plan, while teacher's salaries would be equal ized and a start made toward equalizing transportation. A 30-million-dollar appropriation, with 34 million for the first year and more needed for the second, would finance it. The original program called for 8$ million for two years. Br. Guiana Arrests Told GEORGETOWN, British Guiana (A This restive British colony's government alerted troops, secur ity police and police reserves for emergency duty Monday following weekend arrests of former Prime Minister Cheddt Jagan, his U.S. born wife and eight other top leftist politicians. Officials snid they expected Jagan's followers lo launch an anti-British disobedience campaign a snow down fight with the government. They particularly feared an attempt to sabotage the colony's dike system and send Atlantic salt water sweeping over sugar and rice fields along the! coast. ; The security forces also prepared for the possibility that Communist-; led unions controlling sugar and rice laborers might call sympathy 6trilr.es. Jagan and the other jailed lead- era of his people's Progressive Party PPO were slated to appear! Monday before a lower court magistrate. The former government chief. who has vowed a campaign of boycott and strikes since his ouster from power last October, was picked up Saturday at the coastal village of Mahtwcony, 40 miles irom nere. He was chamed with violating an order by Governor Sir Aured savage, forbidding him to leave Georgetown. lagan's wife, Janet, and eieht 6ther leftists were arrested Sundav lor leading a protest demonstration tn defiance of a ban on political gamer in gs. Van Fleet Son Listed Dead WASHINGTON W-Capt. James A. Van Fleet Jr., only son of the former U.S. 8th Army command er, was officially listed as dead Monday two years after his twin engined bomber vanished behind Communist lines In Korea. Young Van Fleet's name was Riven out by the Air Force, with out elaboration, along with 36 others carried as missing In ac tion for more than a year and now presumed dead. Retired Oen. James A. Van Fleet Sr., who led Allied troops in Korea from April 1951 to Feb ruary 1953, expressed belief last fall his son was still alive and was amontr 3.000 or more U. N. prisoners whom he said the Reds had not accounted for. The Pentagon for a lime listed Capt. Van Fleet among 944 Amer icans it believed still in Commu nist hands, saying it had an un verified report he may have sur vived a crash to become a prison er of the Chinese. The Rcneral himself was report ed to have asked many released POWg for any news of his "Jim my." Monday's Air Force announce ment said no new information to change the status of the missing 37 had turned up, so they were "presumed dead on March 31, 1954." Thus cuts the remain ing Air Force missing list to 67. Also declared; dead were the two crewmen who went down with Van Fleet: Trie navigator-bombardier. Capt. John A. McAllister of Portland, Ore., and the cnglneer-gumier, s. Sgt. Ralph L. Phelps, Bemidji, Minn. APRIL iKUr. -j-,-t,. L HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON en. ittKc par Monday Even in r, April S fl:M Lux Rftdio Theater CBS t;0O Hit I -one Ranter ABC 7:25 Us Griffith. New ABC , 7:M Henry J. Taylor ABC 7:iS Women's Bowling Tourn. 8:00 Suspense CBS 8:30 Lowell Thomas CBS 8:43 Tennessee Ernie Show CB 1):00 Beulah CBS B IS Julius La Rosa CBS :M Preview of lorn ox re 9:15 Forward March , irso 10 p.m. Headline 10:1 Lum it Abner ABC 10:30 Kilocycle Klub 11:00 Slam Off Ntwa Summary 11:03 Sifn Off KFLW 1450 Kc.. - PST Tuesday, April 00 Car It Bird News 8.05 Alarm Clock Ctufe t 8:30 Hattar's Almanac 6:43 Ride lb Bill 8:35 Music 7:00 News Bkfit tdl.to 7:13 Charlie Roundup J JO Frank Gom CBS 7:43 Harry BacbiU CBS S:M Breaxfast Clufe ABC 9:00 Blue Skies 9:13 Chet Huntley ABC 9:30 Helen Trent CBS 9:43 Our Gal Sundav 10:00 Better Living Club 10:13 Ma Perkins OSS 10:30 young ur. uaione uvs 10:43 Marion from Miliar 19:U Writs per ins Streets ABC li:i3 ferry Mason tns 11:30 Nora Drake CBS 11:45 Brighter Day CBS IS 99 NHn Kdition News 1S:1S Payltsa Sidewalk Show 12::i4 Rouseparty CBS 1:00 Sam Ha ABC 1:15 Arirtur Godfrev CBS 1:43 Hank Henry Show 2:00 Arthur Godfrey CBS 2 45 Ted Malone A!C 3-W Wizard of Odds CBS 2:13 Ruth Ashton CBS 3-20 Dorese Bell ABC 3-.-iS Murtc 3:30 Hank Henry Show 4:00 Campfire Serenade. ABC 4:13 Phil Norman CB 4:23 Basin Briefs 4:30 Sam With tnne ' ' 4:43 When a Girl Marries ABC 5 99 Edward Murrow CB 3:13 Heart of America 9:30 TodaT'i Sport fllalllB9J 8:48 Frank Goes CBS S 36 Hometown News 6:00 Jobnny Dollar CB5 6ut0 My Friend Irma CBS 7:00 People arc Funny CBS 7:30 Mr aV Mrs North CBS 8 00 Two Tickets to Broadway 8:30 Lowell Thomas CBS 8:43 Tennessee Ernie Show CBS EASY TO SEW! 9238 l?-20 30-4? Five days out of seven, this Is the dress you'll reach for! It's easy to sew Jiffy lo iron always looks crisp and fresh even when the tem perature soars way up in the nine ties! Make it all one color or have top and skirt contrast for a sepa rates effect. Pattern 923B: Misses" Sizes 12, 14, 16, 18. SO; 30, 32, 34, 36, 38. 40, 42. Size 16 takes 4 yards 35-icch. This easy-to-use pattern gives perfect fit. Complete, illustrated Sew Chart shows you every stco. Send thirty-five cents in coins for this pattern add S cents tor each pattern for lst-class mailing. Send to Mnrian Martin, care of Herald and News, Pattern Dept., P. o. Hot 6H0. Chicago 80. 111. Print your name, address, zone; size, style number. 97 SUPPER CLUB Weed Athland Jet. I T-BONE dinner $000 Salad Soup , Roquefort Dressing 4:30 P.M. te 10 P.M. OPEN SUNDAY 2 P.M. Cocktaili Hon d'otuvrt W I! IN J RUG EVENT! Choose Stock in Rcq. $9.95 NOW "' ' 9:00 Beulah CBS 1 9:13 What Do You Think? '.. 9:30 Buddy Morrow Orelu , ' 19:99 19 tvm. Haaditnea 10:15 Lum b Abner ABC i, ' 10:30 Kilocycle Klub 11:00 Sun Off News Summary , 1105 Sim Off etUl - ll&S t9. fST Mondar Evrninr. April I 8:00 Gabriel Hcatter MBS Kvemnc Edition Local NWS 8:25 Hollywood Kifhlifhl , k JM Viritl Plnkley Naws DUES 8:43 Sam Hayes Newt DiaBS 8 98 Bill Henr UBS TOO Red Skelton Show 7 j Sports Report 7:40 Derby's TV Report TB Perry Como Show altiS ' t: The ralcon MBS 8 .10 The Railroad Hour NBC 9.00 Newspaoer ol the Air DLSJ 9 13 Fulton Lawis Jr.' MBS rV.m McwnliiM Me'ody I nn 9 33 Robert HMrleijh Ktwa MB lOtM President Eisenhower MBS tn :m hd Side of Jdldnicht li-oo Sin off Kifji ate. Tuesday. April I IN 5unme Serenade c . rarw Reporter 8 43 IVf vee Sttaham and the Rain bow Melody Bosyf 7 CO Frank Hemlnaway Newt OLBS 7 13 Breakfast Cant ULBS T 39 Today's Best Buys 7 First Fdition Loral News 7 33 Something to Think About OLBS 8 09 Cectl Brown UBS 8 13 Bob Greene News OLBS F-:0 Melodic Interlude MBS a 33 Holland Cngla Nawa UBS 130 Breakfast Gang DLBS n O Slrietly Feminine TOO Morning. Melodies 9 .XI Hatel Mark el MBS 9 30 Carnation Milk Time UBS 9:4.3 MUSIC or iwnniin li)00 Newspaper of the Air DLBS 19 13 Tell" Test DLBS From My Heart 10i5 Music , , i 10 43 A Vu:t to La Point 11.00 Cliff Enile News ULBS 11:10 South Sixth St'eet Vmellei ll:M Queen for a Day MBS 13 00 lips from The Town Shop 12:15 Noonday Edition Lo:al Nawa 12 30 Best on Rtcord 12:43 Xoies From the Scoopcr 1:00 Matinee Melodies 2 00 Matinee Melodies .1.00 Matinee Melodies 3:15 Sm Hayes News DLBS 3. .10 Guest Star 3.43 Tello Test DLBS 4-00 Join the Navy 4 IS Frank Hemingway Nwj DLBS . 4 39 Curl Haste? Time MBS j 4:43 Sam Hayes News DLBS 3 00 Sargeant Preslon MB 5:30 Sky King MBS 8:38 Cecil Brown MBS 89 Gabriel Meattar MBS 6:13 Evening Edition Locil Nawa 6 25 Hollywood Highlights 8:30 Virgil Pinklev News DLBS 6:43 Sam Hayes New DLBS 6 55 Bill Henrv MB. 7:00 Red Skelton Show 7:30 Sports Report 7:40 Derby's TV Report 7:43 Eddie Fisher Show MBS 5 00 That Hammer Guy MBS -8:10 Is Brown Show - 8:45 Heildelberg Harmon aire 9:00 Newspaper of the Air MBS ft:15 Fulton Lewis Jr. MBS 9:30 Moonlight Melodies 953 People Helping Each Other MBS 10:00 Music Box Medley Time 11:00 Sign Off. Channel 5 KBES TV Medford Monday. April S 3:50 Devotions 4:00 Feminine Fancies 4:,10 On Your Account , 5:00 Vncle Bill Show 5:30 Val Rogue Show :00 Arm Chair Theater 7:00 Badge 714 7:30 Victory at Sea 8.00 Burns and Allen B:TO Hank McCune Show 9:00 Dennis Day 9:W Red Buttons 10:00 I Love Lucy 10:35 News 10:40 Weather 10:49 Sign Off Tuesday, April 8 3:50 Devotions 4:00 Feminine Fancies 4::t0 On Your Account 5:00 Uncle Bill 0:M Val Rogue Show 6:00 Western Theater 7:20 Let's Kirk it Around 7:30 Greatest Dram 7:44 The Big Playback 8:00 Milton Berla -r t:00 Captured ' 9:30 Best Theater 10:43 News 10:50 Weather Forecast 10:33 Sign Off Polio Vaccine Tests Planned PORTLAND Wl Tests of the Salk polio vaccine are expected to start here April 19 in 34 Multnomah County public, private and paro chial schools. Only second graders will be innoculated and then only at the request of parents. Dr. Sydney F. Hansen, county health of.'icer. said. There are some 2.000 pupils in the second grade of the 34 schools. Portland Police Seek Gunmen PORTLAND tn Police were looking Monday for two gunmen who robbed the" proprietor of a bar here of $1,860 Saturday morning. Sam Alhadef, 41, the proprietor, said the pair held him up and forced him to hand over a money bag. It was early morning and there were no customers in the bar. NO CHARGE FOR PLANS OR ESTIMATES ON New Construction or Remodeling FHA Terms No Down Payment Gallowayi Building Service fhone 2-25M Evenings t from the largest Southern Oregon itrated ... CORDE TYPE $795 Sq. Yd. A handsome pottern in wool and carpet rayon for long wear. Beige, qroy or qreen, Pay only 10Bo DOWN! Expert Installation! LUCAS FURNITURE -195 E. Main French Riot Breaks Up Ceremony parts li Premier Joseph Lanlel nursed sore shins today and Defense Minister Rene Pleven a slapped face after a yelling nub set, on them In protest at the pro posed European Defense Commu nity. Hie 100 or so rioters Identified as supporters of Oen, Charles de Gaulle, Monarchists and possibly some Communists broke up a solemn ceremony yesterday at the Arc de Trlumphe honoring the. de fenders of Dien Bien Fhu, the Communist-besieged fortress in Indo china. With only a thin line of police and a handful of troops on nawl, the demonstrators rushed the offi cial party as it started to leave the ceremony. Somebody kicked Lanlel in the shins. A police flying wedge got birr, to a police car wnlch the riot ers then tried to overturn. The straining policemen counter balanced the pushing throng and the chauffeur finally rammed the car through the crowd, Pleven was stranded under the arch alongside France's national shrine, the tomb of the unknown soldier and Its perpetual flame honoring the nation's war dead. Screaming "Resign I" the crowd hurled stones whicn missed him. Two or three knocked off his hat and glasses. Someone slapped him twice. Another grabbed a handful of his hair, Pale and seething, Pleven stood with the police In the center of the crowd until reinforcements finally arrived almost half an hour later. The rest of the crowd of about 1,000 watched the attacks with de tachment and made no move lo intervene. They dispersed after Pleven departed. Polico arrested seven of the demonstrators. The rioters tossed anti-EDC leaf lets In the air. shouted anti-EDC slogans and yelled "Vive (long live) Juin." This referred to Mar shal Alphonse Pierre Juin, who was dismssed from his French military posts last wefk for falllns to meet with Laniel and Pleven to explain an anti-EDC speech. Boy Recovers From Poison GRANTS PASS n, a in year-old John Johnson apparently has recovered from the effects of putting a poison-dipped begonia bulh in his mouth. The bulb had been treated with an Ineclicide containing a phos phate ester a poison similar to that which recently took the life of Michael Ogden, 8, at Hood River. ,.. Mr. and Mrs. Donald R. Johnson rushed their son to the hospital Saturday after she saw fhe boy put the bulb in his mouth while playing at their dairy farm near here. Within 30 minutes the boy's stomach was niimiwri mil ani was given an injection of atrophine ouipnaie, & arug wnicn acts as an antidote. This quick treatment probably was a factor in the poison having such a mild effect, specialists at the Univrsitv . nrnnnn , School in Portland reported. mere was apparently no impair ment of breathine. This is th feared symptom of the poison, which attacks the respiratory system. SMUGGLERS HEIDF,LBRRn r.,rm.n ,r. The U.S. Army says sweeping n.us ouuuay in j-Tance and West Germanv hav maehui n, .n lion dollar a year smuggling ring. On FAMOUS PHILCO Ranges, Refrigerators, Freezers REVOLUTIONARY NEW PHILCO REFRIGERATOR ! sHii Com In and St this Brand New Philca "Ooldtn Automatic" Nowl Spud Report Bill Case, executive director of the National Potato Council brings out come very important Informa tion on potatoes la hs last spe cial potato report, according to C. A. Henderson, county agricul ture agent. A brief summary- of this .information shows that by in creasing the nations quantity of potatoes 10 per cent, the gross re turn to growers Is cut In half. As examples he shows the years of 1824-25. In 1924, 3.1 million acres sold for $263 million. In 1925, 2 8 million acres had a gross sale value of (505 million. Again In 1932, 374 million bushels of potatoes sold lor 38 cents a bushel with a gross income -of $141 million. In 1933 pro duction dropped to 343 million bu shels and the price Increased from 38 cents to 82 cents a bushel and the gross income doubled from $141 million to $282 million, To further strengthen this state ment, Case shows the production and sales value in 1935, 1936 and 1937. In 1935, 378 million bushels of potatoes brought 59 cents a bushel, or $224 million gross. In 1936, 323 million bushels sold for $1.14 a bushel, and returned growers a gross Income of $370 million, but again in 1937 production was 376 million bushels, price was 52 cents a bushel and the growers' Income was $219 million. RABBIT SHOW DALLAS li The ihrce-day 1954 Dallas rabbit show set a record. It started with 600 rabbits on hand. For the first time in nine years, it ended yesterday with the same number. WURLITZER BUILDS TO LAST FOR LIFE HERE'S A FINE SPINET PIANO Sturdy Oak Back and Six Solid Oak Posts Full Metal Plate Soundinq Board of Finest Mountain Spruce Material and Workmanship as fine as money can buy. Some basic improvements found in , t no other Spinet Piano at any price. , i - DELIVERED WITH BENCH 591.00 TERMS $15.00 DOWN - 15.00 MONTH Or rent it for 9.75 monthly, then you may for a .' reasonable time apply rent toward purchase. Many other lovely models to choose from LOUIS R.MANN PIANO 120 No. 7th OPENS ever before in TOW! NEW iws mum MONDAY, APRIL 5, lflM Summarized In making further comparison between the -years 1952 and igjj here at home, Henderson said. In 1952, 19,961 acres produced 6,31 1 218 cwt., ana soia lor (16,405,849. au ivw, ai.ijijo awes proauced a total crop of 4834,205 cwt., and sold for 7,544,7S7. Again this fig. ure checks very closely with tha above figures given by Case, even though this Is a local figure. Now the $64 question Is hov many potatoes will be planted la the United Staes this year? Guides vrnnAi-n ic,irf V... tu- , ... . with normal production, should ' produce about 350 million bushels. If tho acreage is increased 10 per cent above the guides recom mended, the 1954 crop could easily total from 375 million to 385 mil. lion busiiesl. Again applying m yardstick In relation between pro. ducllon and price, the year 1954 ' would be very similar to 1963 n gross returns to growers. In speak lng of net returns there would b none, except in red figures. its CLOSED MONDAYS j (en 8. Lee. Mgr. ' COMPANY Phone 7182 Saves Hundradt of Slept a Dayl ftt) S A Prtnt Appltwl For ill JS RIGHT OPENS LEFT The world a flrat refrifterator that opens both ways. Directly acccaaible from either aide with Ha unique 2-way handle that open door the way you want left or right. No Hffrnitini ... no rfiala to not'. . . it auto matically achieve, the ideal temperature and proper humiditv to wn ri. V .1 a refrigerator. PHILCO 1149. 409 So. 6th Ph. 2-3429