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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 31, 1954)
TUESDAY, AUGUST 31, 1954 HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON PAGE NINE 9, I C' -5 I Arm o o 1 "x "?45: i. ELLINGTON LUMBER CO. pure day evening which climaxed the son,' (right) Malin; representing lingson Jr. Bid price was 48 cen ihased the FFA grand champion steer at the auction last Tues- aiI I a i i I ff . r- I, r r I i i I . I I Ytn annual t-n viuo, rr ran rair. cxniDiror was Jim jonn- U....;Hh .AmnAn, I. Pola .An t U, nJ Mr. Pka PL its per pound, a total of $465.60 (or the 970 pounds of beef. Segregation Ends With No Violence HOBBS, N.M. m Wllh the possible exception of the kids who regret the end of vacation everybody breathed easier today as studies began in earnest at Hobbs? desegregated schools. About 6,000 children, 400 of them Negroes and the rest white, trooped back to ' class without incident yesterday, easing the fears of adults that violence might come with the end of segregated schools. "I thought the people would abide by the law," said the Rev. William Carter, Baptist minister who led the anti-desegregation fight. "There was no trouble whatso ever," said Chnrles L. Mills, super intendent of the seven-school sys tem. , Carter had predicted last week that this southeastern New Mexico oil community of about 15.000 pop ulation would "explode into vi olence' if the desegregation plan was put into effect. Even after Friday's registration passed quietly. Carter predicted. Inere1; is definitely going to be trouble." - He ihad been1 warned "by Dist. Atty. ;Pat Hanagan that he would be held responsible if any vio lence occurred. He claimed he was bring 'held hostage" and that "if a Negrp stabs me, I can't object." His change of heart came Sun day when he urged his followers Committee to find "God's way to members of the Hobbs Segregation settle our problem." At one time, he claimed to have 8,000 signatures on a petition urging continued segd regation. The furor at Hobbs was in sharp contrast to the end of segregation in other New Mexico schools at Artesia, Clovis, Las duces and Carlsbad. School boards in those communities, like the one at Hobbs, had decided to end segre gation on the basis of the Supreme Court's recent ruling outlawing the practice. Only one school system still has segregation, the Roswell system, which has desegregated higher grades and is expected to follow suit In the lower grades. diomu fcximslon ALTAiMONT Members of the Altamont Ex tension Unit held a picnic at Wiard Park on Tuesday; August 24, with 25 members and guests present. During a short business session the following committee chairman were appointed for the 1954-55 year: Membership, Mrs. Glenn Brumble; hospitality, Mrs. Wesley Harsey; luncheon, Mrs. Ernest RUtten; recreation, Mrs. Pete Col ley; 4-H Club. Mrs. Charles Larson; legislative, Mrs. Graham Berry; publicity, Mrs. Joe Schuh, Tne following officers will serve during the coming year: Mrs, Donald P. Groves, chairman; Mrs. Frank Peyton, vice chairman; Mrs. G. C. Hodson, secretary;' Mrs. O. B. Thurman, treasurer. Mrs. Groves reported that she and Mrs. Herbert Faulkner at tended a meeting on July 15 and 16 on embossing metals, demon strated by Jessalee Mallalieu, Sate Recreation Specialist. , Mrs J. A. Overton and Mrs. H. L. Wil ley will attend the leader's train inn meeting on creative embroi dery which will be one of the demonstrations to be presented during the year. It was decided to cancel the us ual September meeting due to the conflict with the opening of schools. The first regular meeting will be held the first Tuesday of October at Joan's Kitchen. - Fur ther details as to the demonstra tion to be presented at that time will appear in later publicity. A number of guests were pres ent at the picnic including Hope Holbrook county home demonstra tion agent and Mrs. H. V. Borton, chairman of the county committee. French Action Against EDC Called Blow To Free World FILED ' EVANSTON, 111. 11 Western Union Telegraph Co. says news men so far have filed a toUl of 1.149.000 words on the World Coun cil of Churches Assembly. This file is second only to that of the 1952 presidential nomination conven tions in Chicago. Grange Plans Water Tour Final arrangements have been completed for the Water Conser vation Tour, sponsored by the Ore gon State Grange and the Pomona Grange of Yamhill county. The tour is to take place in Yamhill County, Wednesday, September 1. Guy S. Shumway of McMlnnville, general chairman of the event, has ; announced that two separate tours ! will be made by bus; will be con- ducted to points of Interest in Yamhill County during the day. n laic ui iu ictus win uc uiiaigiu for each of the tours, for each passenger. Headquarters for the show will be on the Ed Cole Farm, one mile north of Lafayette on Highway 89-W. Parking facilities will be provided for visitors' automobiles. All the exhibils of the participating agencies will be set up .on the farm and luncheon will be served at the farm by the ladies of the participating granges at a cost of 75 'cents a person. Grange officials are anticipating an attendance of some 5000 people for the tour. State and local law enforcement ! agencies are uniting to provide trainee control and the Yamhill County Chapter of the American Red Cross is establishing first aid facilities under the direction of E. Wayne Lofton, chairman of the first aid service group. : Participating agencies include state and federal groups interested in water and soil conservation. These various groups will have exhibits of current practices set 'up at the farm and will conduct demonstrations of water and soil conservation practices during the days. . All persons interested In water and soil conservation are urged by the granges to see the many interesting projects both public and private which are In use in Yamhill County today. DENVER Wi President Eisen hower last night called the French Parliament's scuttling of the Euro peau army project "a serious set back." But he declared the United States never will quit the light for free world security against aiiy Communist threat. "We have our setbacks, we are disappointed. But we must not be discouraged," the President said emphatically In a speech at Uie Iowa State Fair in Des Moines. Eisenhower learned of the Fiench Assembly's rejection of the European Defense Community pb.n for a six-nation army as he and Secretary of State Dulles were in conference on another matter in Washington yesterday. He and Dulles immediately agreed that the chief executive would discuss the development in a general way in his Des Moines address. They also agreed that Dulles would iabue a statement in Wash ington today setting forth in more detail official U.S. reaction to French shelving of EDC. FLIGHT The President then flew from Wellington to Des Moines, where state tail- officials estimated a crowd of about 25,000 persons heard him speak off the cuff. Eisennower spoke of EDC as "a device whereby the free world could establish, without indulging hi the traditional fights among themselves in Western Europe, se curity from any threat from with out." Then, with former President Hoover on the speaker's stand be hind him, he said: "This proposal was established to allow Germany Western Ger many .to enter into defensive alliances without any danger what- MEET LAZY SUE "Queen of Potato Pickers" AT LEWIS MFG. CO. Philippines Ask US Defense Pact MANILA MP) Ironclad guaran tees of immediate U.S. assistance in case of attack or . invasion will be asked by the Philippines in its mutual- defense talks with the United States here Sept. 4, in formed sources reported today. The Philippines is placing prime emphasis on its defense pact with the United States because of the slim chance such guarantees will be provided in the Southcsat Asia collective security alliance to be forged by eight nations starting Sept. 6 in Manila. soever that it would be in a posi tion to start a war or, indeed to engage in any kind of aggression. "'Because of these characteri ses of this 'plan, the U.S., Great Britain and all the Western nations stood for it and approved this great French plan. SETBACK 'Now, there is no disguising the fact that tins is a.';erious setback. But what I want to say to you people is this: The free world is still overwhelmingly strong, as compared to the Iron Curtain coun tries, in the people we haven in their levels of intelligence and un 'derstanding, in their skills in agriculture and in industry." The crowd jammed in the grand stand and the area to cither side of it listened quietly and intently when the President declared: "We must never be discouraged." And there was a round of ap plause when he said: "America has never quit, in something that was good for her seli and the world. We will not quit now. We shall never do so." The President and Hoover got a standing ovation when they mounted the speaker's stand after spending about 15 minutes inspect ing prize livestock. In his speech Eisenhower sffid the United States must have friends because "we know that the central core of the great world problem is the aggressive intent of international communism." SECURITY Hammering at the importance of collective security in .the face of that situation, he said: "If the free world does not hang together, then the uaity of commu nism, achieved by force, by the use of the police outside your door and the spy inside your home, thui unity will take one nation at a time, beginning With the most ex posed, and subdue it." Then; repeating what he told the American Legion convention in Washington earlier yesterday, he said such a course would lead eventually to isolation of America. The crowd cheered when he added that must never occur "We shall not let it occur." And he de clared: 'All this world needs all this free world needs to be safe is a united approach to the problem of security and' defense," -. He also appealed for unity at home on American foreign policy. -i -, ' 5"' V ' i TROOPS LISBON, Portugal M Troops have arrived in Goa aboard two Portuguese liners to reinlorce the local garrison in Portuguese In dia, a defense ministry commu nique said Monday, The number was not disclosed. ' When wc reduced our Automobile Insurance Rates, we did not reduce (he quality of the coverage. Hans norland, 627 Pine St. Enjoy heolth, reit, comfort ond hoipitfllit emidit ploiont urroundings. Complatelv Furnished Sleeping ond Homckcepino Cabins, with oil moaern iaamie. HOT MINERAL and MUD BATHS for Rheumatism, Arthritis. Neurllli, Sciatica, Nervousness CARBON DIOXIDE VAPOR BATHS Art excellent for Eeitmo, Sinus, Skin Erup tions, High and Low Blood Pressurt "Your Heolth Is Our Business" Fer Reservations and informaHon Addrew Buckhorn Minerrl Sprint, Rt. 1, Ashland, Oregon ar Phone Lone Distance, Or. Herman Wexler, Director Chiropractic Physician IT TAKES A DRAGLINE to produce jumbo haystacks in Poa Valley. Haying operations on a big scale are pictured at the Lost River Ranch of Mabel Lis key. Lost River Ranch, one of the show places of the Klamath Basin, is a beehive of activity these days., Japanese Bomb Dumps Found TOKYO I Bomb disposal spe cialists have cleaned up 30 bomb storage caves which were over looked in the general confusion of IM5, the Air Force said yesterday. The explosives were found at Misawa Air Base on northern Hon shu. In all, 90 live bombs were discovered in 30 well-hidden under ground nests.' Chapel Bv The Garden O'Hair's Memorial Chapel Service Far All Incomes 6th and Pine Phone 345A Keith O'Hair, owner LVSU ASK LYNN ROYCROFT STANDARD'S Representative h help At no obligation or cost to you, you can get experienced guidance in planning your insurance program. 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