Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, June 21, 1954, Page 6, Image 6

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    HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALUS, OREGON
MONDAY, JUNE 21, 10H4
PAGE SIX
Herald an&Sete
FRANK JENKINS
Editor
Entered as second class matter st Hie post office at Klamath Falls,
Ore., on August 30, 1906, under act ot Congress, March 8, 1879
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated Press Is entitled exclusively to the use for publication
ot all local news printed In this newspaper as well as all AP news.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
MAIL BY CARRIER
1 Month 135 1 Month .. 1.35
6 Months S-50 Months 1 8.10
1 year IU.0O 1 Year S16.20
ALONG NATURE'S TRAIL
by KEN McLEOD
The white man had very little
Inclination or desire to understand
the civilisation of the red man and
when the rising tide of the white
man's civilisation swept across the
land, the red man had to conform
to the dictates of a regimented civ
ilisation. Chief Joseph summed up
the philosophy of the red man when
he said: "Let me be a free man
free to travel, free to stop . . ."
but In a white man's civilization
the red man was to find no free
dom. The white man did not care
to understand "A dead Injun was
a good un."
Joaquin Miller dared convention
to speak for the red man "Let
me not here be misunderstood,"
writes Joaquin. "An Indian is no
better than a white man. If he sins
let him suffer. But I protest against
this custom of making up a case
this custom of deciding the case
against him In favor of the white
nan, for ever, on the evidence of
the white man only: even though
that custom be, In the language of
the law, so old 'that the memory
of man runneth not to the
contrary.'
"The white man and the red man
re much alike, with one great dif
ference, which you must and will
eel down to the advantage of the
latter.
The Indian has no desire for
fortune; he has no wish In his wild
state to accumulate wealth; and it
Is in this wild state that he must
be judged, for It is In that condi
tion that he is said to sin. It
'money is the root of all evil,' as
Solomon hath It, then the Indian
has not that evil, or root of evil,
er any desire for it.
"It is the white man's monopoly.
"Again, I do vehemently protest
taking the testimony of border In
dians or any Indians with whom
the white man comes In constant
contact, and to whom he has taught
the use of money and the art of
lying.
"And most particularly I do pro
test against taking these Indians.
Indians turn-skins and rene
gades who affiliate, mix, and
strike hands with the whites, as
representative Indians. Better take
our own 'camp followers' as respec
table and representative soldiers.
"When you reflect that for cen
turies the Indians in almost every
lodge on the continent, at almost
very council, have talked of the
whites and their aggressions, and
of these things chiefly, and always
with that bitterness which charac
terizes people who look at and see
only one side of a case, then you
may come to understand, a little,
their eternal hatred of their hered
itary enemy how deeply seated
HAL
i PARIS (A Leaves from a tour
ing notebook:
Cooking is a form of poetry in
France, and her fine restaurants
are almost as famous as her great
cathedrals.
But the average tourist coming
here isn't a gourmet on a pilgrim
age to a culinary paradise. He Just
wants a good meal that Is typical
of the country.
To many a diet-starved Ameri
can there is no greater taste thrill
here than big chunks of tough
crusted French bread spread half
an inch deep with yellow Nor
mandy butter.
It takes a man back to the days
of childhood, when coming home
hungry from play, bread was the
golden food.
A French waiter, watching a
group of us put down plate after
plate of the wonderful bread here,
asked:
"Don't you have bread in the
United States?"
It was a bard question to an
swer. In Germany the best food buy
Is bratwurst. It is a section of pork
sausage about a foot long and so
heavy it takes two small boys to
lift one.
This teutonic hot dog Is broiled
over a charcoal fire nd, served
with a bun, cost less than two bits.
Owners of American baseball
clubs wishing to lure fans back to
the ball parks might try replacing
their present anemic hot dogs with
these St. Bernard lengths of Brat
wurst. Alter downing one, a Ian
would be too sleepily satisfied to
complain about the quality of the
mustard or the pitching.
The U.S. Army garrisons on the
continent of Europe still live pretty
much to themselves, creating
small islands of America largely
Isolated from the lite of the coun
try around them.
The same people meet the same
people every day, and get as
bored with each other sometimes
as do the members ot some coun
try club sets back home.
"It might have been necessary
to do this right alter the war,"
said an ottlcer. "But the war has
been over a long time now. "
"We are making a mistake by
not getting out and mixing more
. with the people of the country In
which we are stationed. They re
sent the tact we don't. We need
U the friends we can make
and you don't make friends Just
talking to yourself,"
Along with the group of former
war correspondents who visited
the beaches of Normandy ten years
after the landings was a key In
vasion figure, Benjamin A. Dick
BILL JENKINS
Managing Editor
this is, how It has become a part
of their nature, and, above all, how
low, fallen, and how unlike a true
Indian one must be who leaves his
retreating tribe and lingers in a
drunken debauched fellowship with
the whites, loosing all his virtues
and takmg on all the ices of his
enemy.
"A pot-house politician should rep
resent us at the court ot St.
James, if such an Indian is to be
taken as a representative of his
race.
"The true Indian retires before
the white man's face to the forest
and to the mountain tops. It is very
true he leaves a surf, a sort of
kelp and drift-wood, and trash, the
scum, the idlets. and the cowards
and prostitutes of his tribe, as the
sea leaves weeds and drift and
kelp.
"Judge not the sea by this. I
Implore you. This is not the sea,
but the refuse and dregs ot the sea.
The misfortune of it is. however,
that this is about all that those
who have written and pronounced
upon the character of the Indian
have ever seen.
"And, again, why hold the whole
race, from Cariboo to Cape Saint
Lucas, responsible for a single
sin? Of course we may deplore
the death of the white man on the
border. But for every white man
that falls the ghosts of a hundred
Indians follow. A white man is
killed (half the time by. a brother
white man) and the account of it
fills the land. Telegraph and printing-press
reiterate, day after day.
the whole details, and who shall
say that they grow less as they
spread to every household? The
artist is called in. His Ingenuity Is
taxed and tortured to put the hor
rible affair before the world in
flaming illustrations, and a general
cry goes up against the Indians, no
matter where.
"All right enough, no doubt: but
who tells the tale when the Indian
falls, or who tells bis side of the
story? A hundred Indians are
killed in cold blood by the settlers,
and the affair is never heard out
side the county where it occurs.
"If we wish for justice let us, at
least, try to be Just. If we do wrong
it seems to me to talk half the sin
away to be brave entugh to admit
it. At all events, it shows that if we
have one great sin we also have
one virtue Valor."
Thus writes Joaquin MUler who
participated in the stirring events
of the white man's conquest of our
region a century ago. and, who
writes at a time when the white
man's anger against the red man
was at the height of its intolerant
passion.
BOYLE
son, who had an unusual story to
recall.
Dickson, 57. a retired colonel
lrom Paoli, Pa., was chief Intel
ligence officer of the U.S. Army
on D-Day, June , 1944.
"During the landings a copy of
our battle plan was washed over
board and floated to a section of
the beach held by the Germans,"
be said.
"They recovered it. Here they
had a document giving the actual
battle lineup of our Invasion forces
an intelligence agent's dream.
But the document was so com
plete and detailed they thought It
must be a trick to fool them, and
they failed to act on it."
American staff officers had ex
pected 35,000 casualties In the first
few days of the Invasion.
"Actually we had fewer about
28,000." said Dickson. "But had
the enemy accepted on Its face
value this battle plan that had
accidentally fallen Into their bands
they could have quickly moved re
inforcements down from Calais,
and I'd hate to think about the
result.
"But they couldn't believe their
own good luck. They were afraid
it was a trap."
That's always the problem, in
war or peace what can a man
believe?
SHOOTING
CASABLANCA, French Morocco,
W Ocn. Mane-Antolne D'Haute
ville. French commander ot the
Marrakcch, Morocco, military re
gion, was shot and seriously
wounded by a terrorist yesterday
while en route to church at Mar
rakech. He Is expected to live.
The terrorist escaped.
QUICKIES By Ken Reynolds
"Guess who we know that got that
announcer's Job advertised in the
Herald and News,?"
IIP
They'll Do It Every
CXrrwDtKi6vrMiWE
MISSUS.TREA8LECMIN
APPRECIATIVE EVE NEVER
MISSES A rttSSUS FEMALE I
,VIFEVi5 OUT SHOPPING
AND THE GREAT MAH
m
ZOOMS BY-'TUATS,. foi 'J-o
DIFFERENT H f(S&KHS'-"
NAME THE PONY CONTEST
HEY KIDS! A complete cowboy or cowgirl outfit will
bo awarded to fho 12-year-old or younger bay or girl who
name fho Fourth of July Pony. Ht't a little Shetland pony
gelding. See him with the Queen Contestants. Thin sand
in your favorite name. There's still time for a chance at
the prize tor naming mm,
KLAMATH KURBSTONE
P. O. BOX 941, CITY.
I submit the nemo
My nemo
Address
My ego
JAMES MARLOW
WASHINGTON W While still
fresh in office last year President
Elsenhower set up so many com
missions to study and find answers
for the problems facing him that
critics jokingly called it "govern
ment by commission."
He is now learning that when a
commission gets all through rec
ommending, he still has to deal
with Congress, and Congress can
do as it pleases.
Last January a 17-man commis
sionheaded by Clarence Randall,
steel manufacturer wound up a
six-month study by making a list of
recommendations on foreign eco
nomic policy.
Elsenhower had taken office at
a time when it was clear this
country was going to have to cut
down on the amount of the aid it
was shoveling out to other coun
tries. Yet, once the aid was shut
off, they'd have to fill the gap
somehow to survive, and one of
the ways was in more trade with
this country. The Randall commis
sion was set up to look for answers.
The perfect commission would
be one in which all the members
approached their problem with an
open mind and wound up with an
answer so obvious that all the
members were in complete agree
ment. The Randall commission didn't
come close to the ideal group. In
dividual members had strong, per
haps lifelong, opinions on foreign
trade which apparently didn't
cnange.
Among other things, the com
mission majority recommended
that the reciprocal trade program
be extended for another three
years and some tariffs on foreign
imports be lowered sharply over
that period.
Under the Reciprocal Trade Act
the President can lower tariffs on
certain foreign goods coming here
if a foreign, country lowers Its
tariffs on certain American goods
sent there.
Two of Elsenhower's own Re
publicans on the Randall commis
sion, key men In Congress, at
tacked the commission's report on
specific details and termed the en
tire report "vague, Indefinite and
unsatisfactory."
These two were Rep. Daniel A.
Reed of New York and Rep.
SAM DAWSON
NEW YORK Wl-The sun pushes
as far north today as it can. and
tor many Americans this may well
known as the summer of decision.
Problems galore will re forced
upon you world-shaking or Just
plain shaking. They range from
the male form un-dlvlne and the
new rag-bag hairdo for women to
the question of how many resort
bound autos can squeeze 4nto one
highway intersection.
Already city streets are seeking
the first bare male knees of the
torrid season. Clothing men think
this will be the summer to decide
two of the burning Issues of our
day. Will walking shorts emerge
from the suburbs to become stand
ard summer wear? Will long hose
or the ankle sock be the American
male's final choice?
In the industry some also see
Uiit, as the summer of decision
for the fibers made by man. Use
of synthetics in hot weather cloth
ing may continue to Increase at
the Impressive rate of former
years. Or it may have about
reached Its peak of general ac
ceptance, t
Another vital question: the trend
toward casualness In dress, Some
refer to It bitterly as the trend
toward slopplness, How much
more Informal can the grown male
and the adolescent female get? Or,
to put It the way the subjects of
the Inquiry would, whose business
is It but theirs?
What's worrying merchants now
mm.
D B6NW HCN NK'V
?; I tT - -
KOW POKES,
for the Shetland pony.
..
Phone .
Richard M. Simpson ot Penn
sylvania. Reed is chairman
and Simpson is a member ot the
House Ways and Means Commit
tee, which gets first crack at all
tariff legislation.
Another Republican commissi
member Sen. Eugene Mlllifin
of Colorado, who as chairman of
the Finance Committee Is Reed's
counterpart In the Senate put
in a long letter that was tar more
dissent than agreement.
Reed and Simpson took the posi
tion that tariff lowering, as rec
ommended by the Ranoall com
mission, would hurt American bus
iness because of the competition
of Imported foreign goods -and
cause unemployment.
Elsenhower, following the ma
jority recommendation, asked Con
gress to extend the Reciprocal
Trade Act three years and let him
cut tariffs a per cent in each ot
those three years.
But this request landed In the
lap of the Reed-Simpson commit
tee. Eisenhower backed up. He
agreed to accept a one-year ex
tension, without added authority to
cut tariffs. He said he'd work tor
more Improvements In foreign
trade next year. The House passed
the one-year extension. The Senate
Is expected to do so this week.
There is nothing unusual about
this year-to-year extension of the
Reciprocal Trade Act. The practice
has been followed regularly In tc
cent years In the face of much
strong opposition in Congress
against cutting tarllfs.
In 130. although more than 1.000
economists protested, President
Hoover signed Into law the Haw-ley-Smoot
Mil passed by a Repub
lican-controlled Congress. It aet un
the highest tariffs In history
againsi loreign imports.
Within two years 25 countries
retaliated against this country with
nigh tarllfs of their own on Amerl
can goods. By that time the de
pression, which had started In 1928,
was going full speed.
When President Roosevelt came
in. Secretary of state Cordell Hull
per.uaded the Democratic
controlled Congress, In 1934. to
pass the Reciprocal Trade Act In
the hope of reviving world com
merce. It's been on the books
since.
Is this: some men may decide to
sweat out the Asiatic crisis in last
year's suit. But there's a good
chance others will go whole hog
tor an entirely new summer ward.
robe meaning, "If the roof's go
ing to fall in anyway, why not
splurge?"
The first vacationers, mean-
wnue, are taking to the country
side.
By the Fourth ot July, resort
owners should have an Inkling on
this decision: Will this summer be
their biggest? Has the winter's
business recession thinned . the
ranks of the trippers? Has It made
tnem more penny conscious?
To get down to the facts of life,
will Papa buy Mama a new Rum
mer formal and take her to a
swank resort for a fling? Or will
they stay home and paint the
house themselves?
The first benefits one set of bus
inessmen. The second moves stocks
of others off shelves and out of
factories.
Resort owners say reservations
MSI aa Ml SWT GrntnUr Mm fettr
Time
r75 SlP SGETALOAOOPTWATBWNETTCy- II
isnvtfA' Lvtf yy- lUvr 1 1
By Jimmy Hatlo
- ff
The Doctor Says
By KDWIN P. JORDAN, M.l). .
A letter from Mrs. B. says that
five years ago the end Joints of the
small lingers on each hand seemed
to be getting larger. She says that
she was told that this was a form
of bone arthritis, but that since she
had no pain or discomfort she has
no' worried about It too much.
Now, the same thlnir la starllnir
In the end Joints of some ot the
other lingers and sho wonders If
there Is any way to arrest the
spread ot this condition. She says
she Is nearly fifty years old. and
ahout ten pounds overweight.
This Is really typical of a condi
tion which Is sometimes known as
osteoarthritis, but which Is really
only a mild degeneration or wear
ing out ot some of the structures
which go to make the Joints. It Is
a sort of aging process of the Joints
and occurs in the knees or hips
about as often as in the lingers
since thp.se joints also gel a great
deal of work during life.
In the lingers the enlargements
are called Heberden's nodes alter
the Fnqllsh physician who first de
scribed them. They are sometimes
accompanied bv a little stiffness
and soreness, but this usually dis
appears after the Joints have been
loosened up.
The exact cause or causes of
this condition are not entirely un
derstood. The cartlllage and bone
of people In some families may be
particularly susceptible to early
degeneration or osteoarthritis. Re
peated injury also seems to pro
mote the development of this con
dition. Poor posture, fatness, and
disturbances ot blood circulation,
are other conditions which contrib
ute to the development ot osteo
arthritis. Because so many people with os
teoarthritis are overweight, reduc
ing is often advisable. This Is
peclally Important If the knees are
ln"oived. If they have to carry
more weight than they are built for
there will be too much wear and
tear of the Joints.
People with osteoarthritis are
rarely incapacitated and can usual
ly move around, though often with
some discomfort. They do need
frequent rest periods as this seems
to relieve some of the stiff feeling.
The use ot heat, massage or spe
cial supports depends on what
joints are Involved, the age and
physical condition of the person
and the severity of the condition.
The treatment of degenerative
changes In the Joints Includes gen
eral measures aimed at relieving
the discomfort and Improving the
over-all physical condition. Heat,
bandaging, and other measures are
also used. Occupational strains
should be eliminated whenever pos
sible and posture should be correct
ed. Osteoarthritis Is almost always a
mild disorder which should be con
sidered as an aliment rather than
as a serious or dangerous disease.
It docs not cause serious crippling
as some other forms of arthritis do.
Indochina Red
Prisoners Riot
SAIGON, Indochina in In
formed military sources reported
Monday 500 Vlctminh war prison
ers held by French Union forces
near Saigon smashed out of their
camp Saturday with the aid ot
savage attacks from surrounding
guerrillas.
Authoritative sources said about
100 of the war prisoners were
killed, wounded or recaptured but
about 400 succeeded In getting
free. The camp la at My Tho,
about 30 miles southwest ot Sai
gon. BANDIT ADDF.D
WASHINGTON 11 The report,
cd leader of a bandit trio who
murdered an Iowa farmer during
a robbery Feb. 22 was added to
the FBI's list of "10 Most Wanted
Mon" Monday.
Ho Is David Daniel Keegan, a
iugitive wanted In the alaylng of
William Edward, 61, In his farm
nouns near Mondamln, Iowa.
Keegan takes the place on the
"10 Most Wanted" list of John
Alfred Hopkins, arrested by the
FBI June 7 at Beowawe, Nev.
and traffic In the first Junes weeks
Indicate a lull summer of play
ahead. Sellers of cars snd gasoline
and of all the trappings of sport
and recreation are counting on
It too.
BUHACH Btst
For Insect Pests
Ants, Itoachiw, Hedbuga or Mosqui
toes around the hoimn-Klena on oat
or dog Lice on plants or birds.
For Real JJeiuM Q II II All
Geffasf.AcfJng DUIIAvll
At Drtf, Cretin; Stem end Pet Sketi
IT pfj
PAUL MID, MAYOR OF ALTURAS. receive! inttructioni from
Klamath's Mayor Paul Landry on the technique of milking a
cow. A challenge wai issued to all mayort contacted on tht
chamber of commerce KUmbimador tour Wedneiday to par
ticipate in a cow milking conteit to be held at the July 4th
Rodeo,
Risinp Nationalism Racks
French Colonial Empire
Editor's Note The tides of opi. I
slllou beat fiercely asulnsl the em
pire France built on two sides of
tin world. Indochina Is all but
adrift, and North Africa Is shaken
by the waves of Nationalism. Wil
liam L. Ryan has surveyed Hie
prospects In both areas, as well a.s
in France Itself. Tills Is the first
of a series of articles this week In
which he portrays the tottering
empire and how It weakened.
By WILLIAM L. RYAN
AP Foreign News Analyal
TUNIS I'll Nguyen Nguoc tolls
In an Indochina rice Held.
Mohammed Aly herds goats in
Morocco.
Political turmoil swirls about
these peasants at outposts of the
French empire, but It means noth
ing to them. They are Illiterate
and care little who rules them
They want to be left In pence to
eke out a living the way their lore
lathers did for ages before them.
They are In the vast majority.
In contrast Is an educated crust
men like Hablb Bourgulba of Tu
nisia, Mohammed Klouane of Al
geria and Allal el Fassl of Moroc
co. These are nationalist leaders
dedicated to driving French politi
cal domination out of North Africa.
It Is ironic that France educated
them.
Even Ho Chi Mlnh, Communist
leader who aelted the nationalist
movement In Indochina, owes
much ot his education to France.
Once native leaders looked upon
the French as miracle workers.
France was strong and promised
them a better way of lite. The de
struction of French grandeur In Die
wake of two world wara produced
cracks In the French empire that
are still widening. Indochina Is
slipping away In the East. A new
Indochlna-llke problem, this one In
North Africa, Is brewing.
In today's world of swift com
munications, propaganda, subver
sion and rising nationalism, the
methods of half a century ago.
when France was at the height of
her power, do not sulllce.
"Force no longer irignt-ns us,
a North African nationalist told
me. "The French moss their troops
and play the 'Marseillaise' to Im
press us witn their glory and tneir
power, but we aro no longer Im
pressed." The misfortune of France Is this:
II displays less and less ability to
cope with the complex problem ot
defending Its Important position In
today's world.
The misfortune ot the people of
Ihe French Union who aspire to
national Independence Is this:
they are subject to being used by
outside forces. No matter how just
their aspirations sound to sympa
thetic ears In the West, tliclr tu
ture is bound up with the struggle
of Western civilisation lor survi
val, Political Instability In areas
Important to defense Is an expen
sive luxury from tho West's point
of view.
France's splintered politics, the
tug and pull of ancient tears and
prejudices, tho fallhlul service to
Moscow by Communists In Paris
all these havo served to delay
Western defense plans so much
that the European Defense Com
munity may never come to pass
with the unity In which It was
conceived.
Moscow plays with French poll
tics skillfully. In Geneva, Soviet
Foreign Minister Molotov made a
tough, unbending speech, and the
French government fell, to be suc
ceeded by another likely more will
ing to appease Its way out of diffi
culties. Many French politicians, cars at
tuned to grass-roots wcnrlncsa
from eight years of warlnro In
Southeast Aslu, announced them
selves willing to write off Indo
china. "Let's make the best of 11"
became Uia slogan.
Zcmo Great for
Dry Skin Itch!
Zemo a doctor's soothing antU
acptic promptly rcllovos Itch of
lurfnca akin rashes, eczema, psorl.
asis. Zemo stops scratching and to
Ids faster healing. Buy Elra
MrinttK Zemo for stubborn eases,
How did It all come to pans?
France consolidated her empire
at the height ol her power and
Bloiy. Alter her deleal by I'rusMs
In 1870, France was determined to
world power. 8lw pinned down her
authority in the for East. She
turned to North Africa and made
Tunisia a proleclornle. Hhe moved
Into Morocco and by 1913 citlabllah
cd her authority.
The Miow was lm;irriuo.
Prance put an end to tribal war
fare, built roads, harbors. Indus
tries, great while cities. She
brought health and hygiene so that
local populations now are more
than doubled. She even brought
education, though belatedly and to
a relative lew. Native Icadera
looked up to Uie French as wonder
workers, miracle men who could
make a wilderness flourkih and
even make native Icadera richer.
French preatige remained little
damaged In the eyes of such peo
ple until France lay proslrato at
Hitler's feet. The Allies' slogan of
"self-determination." an expression
of conscience amid a wor lor sur
vival, lound attentive ears In col
onial arena. There was little dis
cussion then whether such areas
were ready for sell-rule.
The postwar period brought fur
ther splintering ol French politi
cal factions, rising Communist
power In metropolitan Hrance, In
decision In Paru, coincident with
the growing tide of nationalism.
In the East, the sweep of Red
power permitted communism to
capture the nationalist movement.
In North Africa, the rise of the
Arab Lenguo gave the once tiny
nationalist force the Idea that hun
dreds of millions of Arabs backrd
Its aspirations.
Concessions might have satisfied
nationalist demands particularly
the demands ol modcratea who ad
mitted they would need French
help lor a long time to come. But
tew political concessions were
lorthcoming, and the number ot
moderates grew less.
Today France moves lrom crisis
to crisis. The French lound that
weapons, no matter how modern,
and soldiers, no matter how nu
merous, were not enough. It was
Impossible to bomb an Ideology.
In Indochina, the French retreat
ed Into their Mnglnot Line Idea,
defending what they thought they
could and lighting against a steady
attrition of harassment. When the
r
Chinese Proverb
uears. Fortunately this Is no longer
a problem under our present
enlightened sijstem of health care.
We always carry, a complete stock of
blologlcals. which can be dispensed
according to qour physician's orders.
Ihe friendly drug iter) whar
?th end Main
Death Of
Young Heir
Investigated
CHICAGO l.tl Authorities to.
day liitrusllied their investigation
of the iiiysUii'linis tlenlli of tho 'J0-
ycnr-old heir to a million tlollnia
after bolng told tho young mini
revised l,ls will recently lu ninkn
Ilia (latioen )I'Iik'Iiii1 bouellcluiy
and had expresnrd doubt he would
live to come Into his own lulieil-
tlllK'C.
Montgomery Ward Thorno wua
lound dead In Ilia atiullo apartment
Saturday. Coroner Walter K. Mo
Canon aald Ihero wera lour nnvdle
marks on his urma but no evidence
he was a user ol narcotics.
The coroner ordered an aiuilytli
ol vital organs.
He Haiti he also han sent Invcnti
galors to lllrmluglium, Mich., to
Interview the 2t-yeur-old daughter
of a prominent Uliinlimliiiin linn
lly. lie said tho girl, an nil student,
oucuplod an apartment adjoining
Thome's until Friday. McCarruu
did not name her.
Ji.y Htoiiuh. who said he hud
bt-'rti young Thoriic'a lawyer tnr
.some Unit . turd Detective Cunt.
Hairy Pciuln thin 'Illume lens Hum
10 days ago dimmed bis will to
mnko Mlns Maureen Itagen, IS.
chlel benellclary and executor.
I'entlii quoted Slough as auylng
Thornc. grandnn o a lormcr
president ol Montgomery Ward K
Co., "was alio hi he would never
live lo collect his Inheritance. Ha
asked mc lu assure that there
would bo a very thorough Investi
gation ... If ho died."
Slough unlil Thome would have
begun receiving II. 000 a mouth In
come from the e.slutc uf his father,
(loidnu C. Thome, alter this 'Jim
birthday In October. The lather s
will provided Ihe Income would
Jump to $3,000 a month at age tio
and the son would bo allotted the
principal of his Inherltanre esti
mated at a million dollars at
age 3o, the lawyer said.
Mlsa Itagen, to whom young
Th'imc'a new will left half of hia
estate, la the granddaughter ol the
late James M. lUgcn, raring news
.service publisher who was shot
down by gang awasMus lu 1046.
The new will directs the re-
mainder of young 'Piorne's estate
he divided among relatives. Includ
ing one righth lo his mother, Mrs.
Marlon Thome.
Mia. Thome. lourlh wife of Gor
don C. Thornc, whom he married
in lOra after she, a nurse, cared
for him through an Illness, was
sole beneficiary Under the aon'a
original will. Slough said. Thai
will, the lawyer said, was drawn
soon alter the boy'e lath birthday.
Young Thornc, a treahman at
Fordhum University.' and Miss
Ragen had been planning to be
married In December, Slough said.
APPOINTMENT
TOKYO 1 Prlmo Minister
Slilgeru Yoshlda Saturday appoint
ed Naoshl Ohara. wartime head
ot Japnn'a Thought Police as Jus
lice minister.
enemy decided to come Into the
open and light. It was on his terms.
France lost a great battle at Dtrn
iilen Phu. Tho tide waa running
aaainst her. Politically, aha had
nothing to llll Ihe vacuum. The
only native organisation waa Conv-munlsi-controlled.
France had per
mitted no effective political organ
ization to Counter It.
Today a large section ot French
opinion hopes lo salvage the rest
of the union, lluslnessmen quietly
withdrew lrom Indochina, llrsl
hopefully setting themselves up In
North Africa, and then, seeing
there too the seeds of trouble, shill
ing to the more solidly held sec
tion of the empire In west Africa.
Once again a pattern takes
shape, in Tunisia a "liberation
army" already la In being. One
cannot say lor sure how nationalist
It Is, Just how much loreign Influ
ence Is In It. But It requires only
a small group of disciplined oppor
tunist to change a nationalist
movement Into a Communist one.
The world learned that In Indo
china. Tomorrow Terror rulei Tunisia.
"To understand the present,
one should examine
antiquity."
It is obvious that things
' would not be as theu are
now had it not been for dis
coveries made In the past
Smallpox, for example, was
the first disease for which
Immunization was available.
However, Ignorance and
prejudice often prevented
health authorities from
giving mass Immunizations
durlna the ear u
i
cvitomtri tend their ftlendi
Ph. 2-3473