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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 26, 1954)
PAGE FOUR FRANK JENKINS BILL JENKINS Editor Managing Editor XnUrcd as ueond class matter it the-pott office t Kltmath Fallg, ' i Or., on August 90, 1MM, under act of Congress, Mtrch g, 1171 MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press ia entitled exclusively to the use for publication of all tool newi printed In this newspaper aa wall aa all AP newi. . SUBSCRIPTION RATES MAIL BT CARRIER 1 Month I 1.35 1 Month 1 Si Moothi 1 g.M (Months 1 10 , 1 Tear 411.00 1 Tear J IIS JO BILLBOARD Bj BILL JENKINS What with our sultry weather over here the past couple of days wt might as well of taken Bert Hall up on his offer of Thursday. Said he waa coins over to Brookings and would be glad to take a few breiths of aalt air for us. We turned him down on the grounds that the air over here was just what the doctor ordered. Of course, it still is. But a few gulps f that old ocean breesc would go pretty good right now, at that. An old friend has been In town the past few days. Chuck Seavey, one-time boss of the PTiT here. A likeable guy and one we miss. Anyhow, he wss taking me to task over the Isst time I mentioned his name In this column by refer ring to him as one of the rottenest duck shots In the state of Oregon. Perhaps I even said West of the big muddy. The conversation got around to ducks and we asked him how be had made out with his shooting up In the Portland area. His answer was discouraging. Seems that his total bag for the season was one owl, shot just to see If the gun would still fire. He . went out to Sauvle Island, the big hunting area In the Columbia, but aid that on the way they ran Into ee much traffic that he got disgust ed sad they repaired to a tap room ALONG NATURE'S TRAIL by KEN McLEOD As one reads back Into the his tory of relationships between the white man and the red he cannot become Impressed with the mock ery In the pretensions used by the federal government in drawing treaties with the various Indian tribes. Did we not lay claim to these broad and vaat acres by right e( conquest, treaty or purchase with other European Nations? Then with a few presents and a mailed fi?t we sought to quiet the aboriginal inhabitants under the guise of treaties. Joaquin Miller writing of his im pressions in living in this age of conflict a century ago, wrote with considerable Irony: "I know very well what I do; how unpopular and unprofitable It is to speak a word ' for this weak and unfriended people. A popular verdict seems of late to have been given, against them. Pate. too. seems to nave toe matter in hand, for in the last dec ade CIMO-TO) they have lost more ground than In the fifty preceding years. Cannon are mounted in their atrong-bolds, even on the summits of tne nock? Mountains, sayoneu bristle in their forests of the north, and sabers flash alone the plains of the Apache. There is no one to apeak lor inem now, w one. u there was I should be silent. "Gun and fish have their sea- sons to come and go, as regular as tha flowers. Now the game go to the hills, now to the valleys, to winter, now to the mountains, u bring forth their young. You break la unon their habits by pushing settlements here and there. With lien you do the same by buuoing Crews Work John Day There's a buss of activity along the John Day River these days, and both fish and fishermen stand to benefit from It. A xo-man game commission crew under the direction of Ken Ooebel of' the. screening department is busy msking screen installations. There's a lot of game commission equipment in the area, and u s au being put to good use. Four dump trucks, six pickups, a flat bed truck, two power wagons, and sev eral good sized concrete mixers are being used to hurry the Job along. A warehouse has been provided at John Day to handle the ma terials necessary for the project, for the Installation of more than 100 screens. They will be of the rotary type and will vary in width from two feet to 30 feet. This is only a etart because the complete pro gram Includes tha screening of well over JOO diversions. Preliminary survey work and location of the screens wss car ried out by Fred Larmle, fishery agent assigned to the screening program. Thirteen screens are la operation new. Concrete boxes sre being poured and new screens installed aa rapidly aa possible. Most of the work so far has been In diver sions from the main river. . The project Is financed through federal funds made available for fisheries development of the lower Columbia river tributaries. , The excellent cooperation of landowners of the area has aided greatly in the accomplishment of the acreenlng. The majority of the screens are located on or must be reached through private lands, end without the helpful spirit of the local residents, the program would be seriously hampered. Third Street MOTEL Just off Main at Third A Geed lace H Stay instead. The next time he went out it was with a second cousin by marriage who knew of an old deserted mill pond back in the hills that the mallards particularly liked. "After building about five miles of pole road and hauling the Jeep out of a million mudholes, when we Anally got to the pond It was too late to shoot," lamented Sea vey. A pond, he says, with a two duck a day average, rents for as high as 1150 per year. Too much. We'll try and ahow old Chuck a little sport if be oome's down here this season. Frank Fleet, the ice king, seen wandering around town with his wrist in a sling. Nothing recent, however. Seems thst when he rode his brakeless truck down the Oreensprings a month or so ago. he cracked the bone in the wrist and didn't know it. Now he's threat, ening the doe with a horrible fate it he doesn't have the cast off by Hart Mountain time. Congratulations to Baldy Evans for his hosting the roundup queen and her court at his Lake of the Woods home. The (iris will have a crack at water skiing, boating, maybe a little fishing. And we can assure them from personal experience that Baldy Is a wonderful host. dams sad driving steam-boats, and you break up the whole machinery of their lives and atop - their in crease, men we and lan must starve, or push over on to the hunt ing ana tuning grounds of another tribe. This mskes war. The result is they fight flint like dntml almost like Christians I Here is the wooie irouoie wiut this doomed race, in a nut-shell. "Let us, sometimes, look down into this thing honestly, try and ua w ituuj, ana understand. "Even the ocean has a bottom. "These rude red men love their lands and their homes. The homes for which their fathers foua-ht for a thousand generations, where their nui.rs ue ounea wttn their deeds of daring written all over the land. every mountain pass a nan of his. tory; every mountain peak a mon ument to some departed hero every mountain stream a story and uuuiuou. joey love and cherish tnese as no other people esn, for meir lands, their leafy homes, are all they have to love." Joaquin Miller looked upon the red man as a vanishing race at this point In the history of the de velopment of our country, this, of course, never came to pasa other than in an allegorical faahion for it was the civilization of the red man that perished and not the in dividual. Joaquin had no good to aay of the Reservation system es tablished by the government snd the O r e g o n Coast reservation comes under his lashing pen. "True," writes Miller, "there are Reservations over on the ses, 40 or 50 miles away from the valley (Willamette): but the Interior In. dain had as soon descend silently into his grave as to go there to live. Hundreds have so chosen and acted on the choice. The aee-eosst Indians are 'fish-esters.' "They stink!' say the valley Indians, 'while we of the Interior est veni son and acorns.' "Their feuds and wars are fierce and reached farther back than their traditions. Fancy these valley In- asins being induced to go ever there on their enemies' lands to make a home. Their own sense ef justice revolted at It. Besides, they knew they would be murdered one by one, m spite of the promises sna nau-exiended protection of the Government. "The Indian agent of this Reser vation by the sea, who had In dians gathered In from a thou. sand miles of territory, could not understand why Indisns would fight among tnemseives. An i out tney are a vile set,' he said: 'they fight among themselves like dogs. They are a low set They will soon kill each other off.' And so they did. "The miserable heathens were as bad as the Christians of the North snd South." Joaquin could not re sist a fling at the Civil War as a comparison In presenting his esse, then returning to the Indian again with Irony: "They fought amongat each other. The ungrateful wretch es I To fight among themselves af ter all the Government hat) done for them I Why did they not keep quiet, and die of small-pox end in the little pens built for them, all at tne expense ef the Government? If the Government Invites set tlers to a place, and sells or Elves away land that does not yet belong to the Government, and a difficulty arises between the immigrant and the Indian, and the whites get the worse of it, why, send In a thou sand young lieutenants thirsting for glory, and they will soon bring them to terms, at a cost to the Government only a few hundred times more than It would take to set the Indisns up comfortably for me. PALMIST READING will rail veer east, preaeet end A eeatplete tS Mfe leeeiao tar f I aad this e. 21(4 Se. lh St. . Hearst II e.ss, to II p.n. HEKALU AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OKEGON I They'll Dm"iHoi TeVwi tub crbo ndntafie pictures WAUTlRJUy LAST CHANCE TO NAME THE PONY Name submitted for th pony that arc pest marked net later than Saturday, June 26, will be) submitted t th Judges Monday. A complete cowboy or cowgirl out fit will b awarded to th 1,2-year-old or younger bay or girl who names th Fourth of July Pony. There's still time far a chance at tha priia far naming him. KLAMATH (CURBSTONE KOWPOKIS, P. O. BOX Ml, CITY. I submit tha name My nam ...... Address .... My aga THE DOCTOR SAYS By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M.D. Rarely does the writer of this column receive a letter which shows so clearly as the one which follows the effect of the emotions on bodily behavior. . I am is yesrs old snd for the paat four yeara every time I start writing an examination, go to a dance, show, or out for dinner I get sick st my stomach. I can't throw up but I do gag. I cannot sleep the night before and I shake all over. Should I be this, way? M. S. A It is evident that this 11-year-old youngster is suffering from an exaggerated form of emo tional upset whenever faced with excitement or anticipation of stren uous events. The writer of the let ter should be encouraged to go right on with her activites as though the emotional reaction cen tering In her stomach did not ex ist. By constant repetition and with the help of growing older this un pleasant reaction to emotion should gradually become less and less severe. Q I had surgery on both my eyes 3' yeara ago for glaucoma. Now I have cataracts snd the doc tor wants me to have one eye op erated on. What chance do you think I would have? Mra. M. A It la certainly bad luck to have ao much trouble with the eyes. One gsthers from the letter thst the operation for glaucoma was successful and there should be a good chance that the operation for cataracts would also come out well. HAL NEW YORX CH It isn't true thst to be a Hollywood star you have to own three swimming pools labeled "His," "Hers, snd "Theirs," "We don't have even one," aald Van Johnson, who has made 50 pictures since 1941. Johnson, now hitting the peek of his career, la a cheerful relief from the breast-beating type of actor who predicts the West Coast film colony will become a ghost town. 'I've never felt more excite. ment In Hollywood," he said "They have a new feeling out there. They are concentrating on quality pictures, and tney are turning out better pictures all the time." Vsn hit s new top himself re. cently as Lt. Steve Maryk In "The Caine Mutiny," a role that may make him a candidate lor an Academy award. Oee. that would be something. wouldn't it?" he remarked. "In this business you generally wind up with nothing but a scrap book and some by 10's. But If I ever should win sn Oscar my wife, Zvle, would prob ably make a lamp out of it." Van ha had to surmount three handicaps to gain serious recog nition as a film actor: (1) red hair, (3) freckles, and (3) a "face like the boy next door." "In my first picture, a crime short," he recalled, "they Insisted dying my hair black and covering my freckles. Then It atarted rain ing, and the dye ran all over my face and darn near washed me right out of Hollywood. . MCTUuninUtEro 7 Bur ANy RB6BMBUNCE 8ETHESN CCNE-'AUDWLHrJI ' "wwfci ANU ..;..... far tha Shetland pony. hone . Q Would the passing of pure blood In the Intestinal waste two or three times a month be considered a symptom or Indication of Im pending ailment? 3. P. A The ailment is not only Impending, It is there. This Is a serious symptom and ateps should be taken immediately to trace the source of the blood and take ap propriate steps at treatment. Q Please explain the meaning oi paranoia. p. p. A Paranoia Is a mentsl di. sease one of the principal charac teristics of which ia tha develop ment oi suspicion tnat one is being persecuted by others. The same kind of unjustifiable suspicion of persecution may be present In other mental disorders. Q About five months sgo I had an accident hi a dairy when mux oottie disintegrated in my hand while en a fast-moving ro uting brush. The neck of the bottle remained on the revolving brush with a razor-sharp piece of glass which cut the end of my Index fin ger, nearly cutting it off. It was stitched up snd I can now move it almost ss well ss before but the end tingles and I wonder If this effect Is likely to be permanent. D. T. A Apparently the results of the surgery were excellent and it is not surprising that there are atlll some unusual sensations at the end of the finger. This tingling will probably dlssppesr In time aa the nerves become completely restored. BOYLE "I wss ready to leave town, but Lucille Ball and Desl Ames talked me out of It, and helped me get another chance." "As "the boy next door" Vsn clicked quickly and became a nation-wide bobbysox idol. "I still hate that term," he said, wryly. "But the bobby box ers all grew up and became moth ers. I had the problem of grow ing up, too. I got pretty tired of being the boy next door with the spple pie face. "But I have never been one to try to twist events too fsst, and I don't believe In pounding on producers' desks. I've taken things as they csme along, and I've gradually worked out of the apple pie face roles." He will tesm with Deborah Kerr in his next film, "The End of The Affair," to be made in England. One of the ateadiest workers in the Industry, Van doesn't want to become a plcture-a-year actor. "What would I do the rest of the time?" he asked. "I go orasy if I have more than two weeks off." Johnson Is thoroughly re laxed, and never haa become a vic tim of Hollywood tension. His secret: A nap every day after lunch. v "Even on the set I sometimes can get In an hour and a half," he said. "And when I'm working I make It a rule to get to bed by :W at night. "Even when I'm not working, I can't get used to staying up late. What can people gain by staying up until 4 a.m.? "All that can happen to you after midnight Is trouble." Dr. R. T. Lindley OPTOMETRIST 510 Mad -Dent. Bldg Ph. 42 IS Eye Examination Visual Training K1C9IS NOT aTvEN Grandmothers Club Planned Grandmothers of Klamath Fills will be Invited to Join a grand mother'a club at a meeting to be called In tha near future by the local president, Mra. Dolly cox, JIM Wlard Street, i Interest here In the club, which I hss become nationwide, followed a I recent visit of the national preal I dent, Dorothea Sullivan. I The national federation was on ; ganlr.ed 16 years ago and there are i now 17,000 members with Mo at i filiate clubs. The organisation la social and educational and is planned to bring together that ' group of women whose families are i raised and have time for relaxation ! and interests outside the home. The second Sunday In October nas been aet as "Orandmother'a Day." The organization la non-partisan and non-aectarian. There la no age limit for membership. Offlcera plan to ask Congress to declare tha October date a national holiday by legislative act. The 13th ennual convention was held In mid-June In Seattle and Mra. Sullivan and the national treasurer, Mra. Minnie Mather, stopped In Klsmsth Falls enroute to the east. Jl permanent national headquar tera has been established for the federation at 4434 N. Monitor Ave nue, cnicago. The federation publishes Autumn Lesves. a quarterly magasine con taining newa of Interest. Segregation To Continue RICHMOND, Vs. t-Gov. Thom as B. Stanley has pledged to use "every legs means" to continue segregated schools In Virginia and has suggested the elimination from the atate constitution of the pro vision that requires the mainte nance of a public school system. The governor Issued a SCO-word statement last night setting forth s course of action for Virginia for the first time since the U. S. Su preme Court ruled May IT that seg regstlon of the rices In public schools Is unconstitutional. Stanley said he ia convinced "the over whelming majority" of Virginians want to retain segregated schools. Stanley added, however, he does not wsnt "to destroy the public school system." He ssld he wants to enable the Virginia legislature to "deal with all phases of the complex problem now confronting us." Former Sears Leader Honored Julius Rosenweld, merchsnt and philanthropist, who headed Sears, Roebuck snd Co. for more thsn 3 yesrs, hss been elected to the Merchandise Msrt ball of fame In Chicago. According to Bob Eggs, manager of the local Sears store, the se lection of the late Mr. Rosen wald to a place In the hall of fame was announced at a ban quet In Chicago Thursdsy night. The election of Mr, Reeenwald to the hall ef fame was bssed largely on Ihe Important contribu tions that he made towards lower ing the cost of consumer goods while at the ssme time vastly Im proving quality standards. The Merchsndlse Mart hall of fame waa Inaugurated last year. Nominees to the hill of fame are selected by a committee- of 134 merchants throughout the nation and the election committee com prises 100 Individuals Including journalists and marketing author ities. LEE IIEIID3ICKS Yanaakt av ..... "S-ssrw nVfyavaraSPsv essSSarsr ma to. th Jit iayl . . . ft JWE ARE OPENjEir "'H P Every Sunday JrrSLA L 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M. InfflM VvP IT Ut Ysiir yV I V $htls CesvesUses Je. f jraiJ J i. Sam Dawson NEW YORK Wl Business enters the hot weslher alowdown season with a show of confidence. Stock prices rise ss traders ss. seaa the chances of Inflation to out weigh deflation In the months ahead. Leading businessmen axpreaa faith In the future of their own conipanlaa and industries. New plants are being opened, and atlll othera planned, hi spile of a year of elackenlnf la general Duaineae activity. More new businesses are being Incorporated than at any time since IMT. Businessmen are aelling their eights on tall. For many of them July will be a slow month. Whole planta will close for vacations. Peo ple will atlck cloae to the lana at home and make fewer trips to the atorea. But there Is sn Impressive list today of predictions of more pros perity on the wsy and of Indus try's plana to grow so It csn meet new demanda. Oeneral Eelectrlo'a chairman, Philip D. Reed, aaya his company expects to sell more In the next 10 yesrs than It did In all the past II. Ford's vice president, Benson Ford, aaya hla motor company Is considering the "longest range plan for expansion and moderni sation we have ever undertaken." Both of these companies are In the bualneas of making and selling consumer goods. And in express ing optimism both men are acting In their role of salesmen. But both the appliance and the motors In dustry have been putting much of thla optlmlatlo talk Into concrete form in the way of expansion of plant and equipment. There are many algns of Indus trial health right at the moment. Electrlo power production haa been rising since tha end of May hot weather helping to boost power consumption for air condlltontng systems snd refrigeration. Power use is now alx per cent higher than this time laat year. Some 41.000 new businesses were formed In the first five months of Ihe year, Dun k Bradstreet re port i. This topped Ihe 1963 figure by six per cent. Business failures have been higher this year than laat, too. The general slump haa taken Its toll of marginal firms. But faith In the future burna bright in at least 41.000 corporate brcaats. The food Industry la Hated among Ihe optimists. Grocery store sales are topping even last year'a rec ord volume. Food processors aay their salea ahould continue to grow a rising population and fairly prosperous one cheers the hand lers of vlttlea. The farm outlook seems better, too. The department of agriculture says the demand for farm pro ducts Is holding high. And makers of farm machinery aay aales vol ume Is healthier now and helping them to work out of the slump that bothered them in former months. So confidence in the days ahead ia strong. Everyone seems to ex pect an upturn the question being when? Game Laws Change Made In their most recent meeting, the Oregon State Game Commission approved a new type of hunting synopsis for this fall, Instead of the familiar booklet, used for many yeara, the regulations will be printed on the back aide of a map with hunting area boundaries marked for clarity and easier un derstanding. The regulations for 1W4 will not be available until about the first of September since they cannot be printed until after two public hear ings are neid in July and final adoption of the 1M4 hunting regu lations oy tne commission. The commission asks thst per sons desiring Information on hunt ing sessons welt until alter that lime to make inquiry. The eynop ala of the hunting regulations will be distributed to the license agen cies ss soon as available. Legal Notice ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICI OF FINAL ACCOUNT IN THE CIRCUIT COURT or KLAMATH COUNTY niHinM fH th Mattar Af the fatatc mt St.. seret Bella nutcnle. DCMrid nouca nereey givan that r nava mva mj unai account at aaminuuilftr f tha utate of tlarfarat H.llc Ri. tanle, Dacca Md, and In court hai aal Jul? 30th. ISS4, il IS 'clack am. a, tha tlma far haarln a, AhLcllnn. Ia such final atcaunt and fir thi tattle- mam inaraor. A. C. Vadcn Aemlnlitrator. No. 4 June SO, July t. i. IS iCTfcri learfe.ll SltCh Iflel Ikli fart at Ik laat. atatal aae MeniMiie' Off an Ckr4 Ortae LOUIS H MANN PIANO CO. Ill Ne. 7lb nistilmcisiTrf Russian Demands Ignored By U.N. Security Council By WILLIAM N. OATIS UNITED NATIONS. N. V. ITt Ignorliig Russian demands, the U. N. Heourlly Council decided lust niiiht to delay at tiun on Die quick ening Guatemalan war until the Organisation of American Btatea makes lis own Investigation. The ll-natlon Council declined to adopt an agenda listing Uuate mail's complaint that Honduras and Nicaragua were atlll condon ing aggression In deflnnre of the Council's cease fire call of last Sunday. The procedural motion lor lis adoption needed seven voles to pass. It got only (mil', while live votes were cast against It and twu OTI Loan Fund Drive Planned To Mr. and Mrs. Carl C. Over eem of 714 tierlmas, go the honors lor making the Initial contribution lo the current loan luml drive at Oreuon Technical Institute, accord Inn to announcement made todity by v. D. Purvlne, illrwlor. Mr. and Mrs. Overrent have effectively demonstrated their linetesl In the problems confronting livMllute stu dents, and the holldny seasons since 1P4Y have always found at lenal ' one needy studrnt Iwmlly benrlil-1 tins: by then thougtitfuliioss. Mr.) Overeem has been the storekeeper i since the Inslliute ua established The drive for additional student j loan funds was launched m untlcl-. pation of Increased enrollment al ' Oretion Tech and the resultant need j for emergency financial assistance. me majority or students entering Ihe Institute during Ihe last year or two ha been (llrrt'lly out of high school and without any al benefits to assist In their determi nation to secure an education. Tu these aludents the temporary loan of a small sum of money to meet an emergency situation often means the dlllerrnre between abil ity to complete the school term or being forced lo drop out even though It might be just prior to achieving graduation. Institute personnel have begun a ' concentrated effort to acquaint llir general public with this opii tunny j for service, as well as to promote Interest anions civic and service groups .for thier contributions oi additional loan funds or the rstab llsnmenl of schtnrshtp funds. Do nations to these funds are accept able In any amount, and stipula tions aa to their use are al the discretion of the donors. Jet Pilots To Get Liquid Food LOS ANGELES OP Liquid meals which Jet pilots can siphon throuKh their oxyucn mask tubes during combat are amain new types of military rations being devised, del egates to the Institute of Food Technologists were told yesterday. Mnj. William n. Levin, chief of the budget and planning branch ol Ihe Institutes research section. told the delegates experiments also are being made on bite-alivd pieces of food which a pilot can toss Into his mouth by removing his mask Hap a few aeconds. New combat rations fas, field sol diers to replace the present C-ra- tlona will come in about a dosen different menus, MaJ. Levin said, consisting mainly of meat, bread and dessert and including auch dishes as chop auey, chocolate nut rolls snd fruit cake. ATTENTION! DANCE FANS DANCE THIS SAT. NIGHT AT THE RED BARN DORRIS. CALIF. e Dance to the Red Barn's regular music. Pee Wea Slid ham regularly draws tha goad crowds to tha Red Barn. Tha Rainbow Melody Boyi play music that appeali to all dancers. Relax and hare fun at the Red Barn avery Saturday night. Dancing 9 till 1 Oregon Time 10 till 2 California Time Admission $1.00 tax inc. COMING ATTRACTION! SATURDAY, JULY 3rd BOB WILLS hi, T.g pi0boy,. America's No. 1 Western Swing Banc tOieMisMiaAsssW'iseeAa COMING ATTRACTION! SATURDAY, JULY 10th The Capitol City Jazz Band Music for dancing. and listening by a 6 place band compoiad of format noma band musicians from tha wait coast. Featuring Dixieland Jan and swing music, this band that hag bean together for five years now, promises best to appaar hara at tha SATUHDAY, JUNK .20, .saBnaataHSMaaMsi 11)54 Council members abstained. This uoMpoiieri tlebalo Indefinite, ly und gave the 3 1 -llatlun OAH lime lo Investigate the Otialemulnn cliariies Ihiniiuh Us flve-memliri Inieiiiellonal Peace Committee. lliasll oild Columbia with U s. support had proposed this course. But Ihe Soviet Union, backing Coin, miuilst-inlllliatrd Ounlemala, hud demanded "measures to put an end lo aiiKieasInn III Central America." The vuto found Husala, Denmnik, Lebanon and Mew Zealand In favur of Hie Guatemalan agenda, ,'llia Unlled Sillies. Ul aril. Colombia, Noilonuli.l china and Turkey volrd ugalnsl It and llritem and Franco abstained. The Soviet Union also tost on a malum lo lirvlle Guatemalan Del egate Ktluardo Castillo Amola lo the Council table, 'lite other 10 members apparently feeling that Ihe Invllatiun to A nomnember would be promaltire, since no de bate had begun, volrd no. The liilei national Peace Commit tee, meellng 111 Washington, had set up a commiaslon lo Investigate Iho Guatemalan situation Wednes day. Honduras and Nicaragua hnd 11 1 unled Ihe commission, made up like Ihe committee of Argrntlnn, llrntll, Moalco. Cuba and llin United Stales, permission to enler their lorrllnry, but Guatemala lent niuhl linally denied auch permis sion, llunu lloulhler of Mrnill and Cur ios Bclievorn-Cortrs of Colombia told the Council that In view ni Ihe rmiimlltce'a work, It should not debate Ihe mailer. . They argued that under chnrlrrs ol tne U. N. and GAS, Ihe Ameri can organisation had priority when It came to dealing with Western liemlsphcie dlsputea. Hemyou K. Tsnrapkln of the So viet Union said this argument meant, "if aiiuresslon lakes place In the Witstrrn Hemisphere, the Security Council ahould not deal Willi II." He said this would remove a whole continent from Ihe U. N.'a purview and leave the International omanitatlon "an empty shell." Henry Cabot Lodgo Jr. ol the Unlled Slates. June President of the Council replied that latluro lo adopt the Braslilan-Calombla pro. Iiosal would be "a grave blow In the enure aystem of International peace." Ho said Ihe Guatemalan-Soviet move was an eflort of International communism to "create Interna tional anarchy" by gelling the mat ler out of the velolesa OAS Into the Council,, where the veto ap plies, He reported that the V. 8. Sen ale "today declared that the In ternational Communist movement must be kept out of this hemis phere." Tnarapkiu khot back that the Senate "in ellecl told the Unlled Nations and the Security Council lo stay out ol the Western Hemls phere." He sold Latin American stales bv backing Ihe OAS were putting themselves at the mercy of Iho United Stales, "atrong enough to Impose Its will" on them all. Ag gression today against Guatemala, he aald, mlitht be followed tomor row bv naaresslon against Hondu ras, Colombia or Costa Rica. "Guatemala City Is being bombed,'' eluded Tsnrapkln, "and we all around the table and de bale whether this agenda ahould be ado;tlrd." He evidently had gotten his word on the bombing from Castillo-Am-ola, who Inter told a reporter he hnd learned while telephoning his capital around 6:30 p.m. that three planes were bombing the city then. to ba ona of tha vary Rod Barn.