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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 14, 1955)
PAGE FOUR HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. UrtKUOft SUNDAY, AUGUST 14, 1S55 Church To Hold Annual Veek Here KlRmath Baptist Association's annual Sunday School Improve ment Week begins tomorrow and will run until Friday. Classes will be held at 7 p.m. daily at the First Baptist Church and courses of study will Include cradle roll, nursery, beginner, pri mary, junior, intermediate, young people, adult and extension. Churches In the association are Calvary Baptist, South side Baptist, Btewart'Lenox Baptist, Trinity Bap tist Mission, First Baptist Church es of Till eluke and Dorris and the First Baptist Church of Klamath Fulls. Under the direction of the Rev. John W. Long, pastor of the South side Baptist Church, local and out side teachers will instruct at the school, The Rev. Robert Dove and HazeJ Rodgers, of the Department oi Re ligious Education of the Bapti General Convention of Oregon anui Washington, will instruct in Sun day School records and methods. Among other instructors will be Mrs. J. W. Long, Mrs. B. K. Rob inson, Mrs. Ira Gilbert, Mrs. Nor man McKeehan. Mry. Marge Thompson, Mrs. Walter Thiclman. Mra. E. M. Causey and Lalern Dauglier.y. Miss Daugherty is of the Han-nlbal-Lagrange College, Hannibal, Misscurl, and is an employ of the Southern Bnplist Home Mission Board. Classes for boys, girls and young people will be conducted at the same time. - . v Peacetime Use Of Atom Power Seen GENEVA W, Two American scientists gave the ntoms-lor-peace conference detailed reports Satur day on newly designed atomic pow er plants which they claim con pro duce electricity eventually on a paying basin. Neither ot the projects has yet gone beyond the planning stage but the designers of both expressed confidence that, once in operation, they will be able to compete with the prices of coal-produced powui in some areas. Clarke Williams of Brookhaven National Laboratory, N. Y., de scribed plans for what Is technical ly known as a "liquid metal lucl reactor" designed to produce 210 000 kilowatts of electricity. He estimated this plant would be able to turn out electricity at. a 1 cost of 7,8 mills per kilowatt hour. The cost of conventional power; in the United States averages from lout to seven mills a kilowatt, de-T pending on distance from the source of fuel. In many parts ol j the world, power production costs! considerably more. I No atomic power station now Jn I . operation comes anywhere near the level mentioned by Williams. All, however, are much smaller, , and Are experimental models. The conference also heard a rc port from P. F. Gast, of the enRl- neerlng department of General Elcctrlc's Hanford, Wash., atomic production operation, who read a paper giving full details of a pro- posed "graphite moderated nuclear lower plant." This also Is a large-scale project, designed to produce 223.000 kilo watt hours of electricity. Gast called it a plant "of broad poteiv tial application and said it Is "capable of producing electrical power at an economically conipett live level In many parts ol the world." Ho estimated It could turn out electricity that could sell lor less thp.n seven mills a kilowatt hour and sllll make a profit. F. I! " Ml ml x X ' v,...., , nam. Hi .! ,mm. , l,lkm&suli-&Mij& . Union Organizer Bound, Beaten SEBASTOPOL. Calif. Ml W1V Ham Oram), 28-yenr-old AI'X Teamster orxanlzer directing the union's strike against four apple processing plants hero was kid naped and beaten Friday, the 8 noma County sheriff's ofllce said Uraml, who lives In Santa Rosa, told ollicers ho was forced into car by three men as he left his olllco at 4 a.m. Friday. He said no was driven out ol town, tied to a utility pole and beaten with chain. He was treated at Sour. inn County Hospital lor back lacera tions and discharged. liratnt could not Identify his at lackers. The Calltornia Asmi'. uf employers, representing the plants, denied any responsibility and of mreu a i,uoo reward for arrest nira conviction ol the assailants. Communication Men Agree On Contract NfcW YORK ifi 'me Western tlcclrlc Co. and the CIO Communi cations workers of America, rep. rchenung umc 7.500 production employes In 29 cl'ies across the country, agreed Friday night on new urn-year contract, a com pany spokesman announced. The new contract calls for gen eral wage Increases of from 7 to 13 cents an hour and averaging about 9 1.., cents an hour for the 10-hour week. The new contract, elfective as ol Friday, also provides for reclassl flcatlons of several distribution houses Into the next higher wage scale and a seventh holiday at ceitaln locations. The old contract expired last July 30. IT WAS A ROUGH AND TOUGH JOB for the men handling the 26-car ship, ment of horned ranqo cattle here the week of August eighth, as these pictures show. The cattle were in a shipment of ZX cattle on their way to the Carstens Packing Company in Spokane and to the feed lots in Moses Lake, Washington. 700 head were loaded at Sycan Marsh and halted in Klamath Falls for inspec tion, vaccination and sorting. Shown here are a few of the cattle being handled in the SP cattle pens 1 1 ) and being run through the squeeze chute where they were taken care of by Fred Wedam, veterinarian, and J. C. Hunt, meat inspec tor, (2). The range cows were plenty glad to get off the train for a while, as shown in picture three, and were still wild enough to cause Clarence "Punky" Adams, Jack Griffin and Hunt, a little trouble at the chute. These are among the last of the horned cattle left in the area. They left for Spokane Friday ninht, August 12. If v -V VV 1 r ..W -f.':- v e f J sr? . IV 'itW- v 1 1 jH ..J..-.., J.. ,J Midwest Farmers Showing est Crops To Soviet Visitors At Staie Fair SPRINGFIELD, 111. (UP) Mid-; Tile Russians flew to Springfield west farmers at me Illinois state irom Chlcaso at the invitation of lair showed oil their best crops and livestock to the visiting Rus sian farm experts today. mtst AKc UUbT UA4 tor members of the Tulelake-Butte Valley Fair board of directors who are getting everything ship-shape for the big agricultural and livestock show on September 4-5-6. Above are II to rl Floyd A. rjoyd, Chester J. Main and E. Webb Staunton, all of Tule lake. Other member, of the board are W. E, Hagclstein, Dorris, president, Verne Hemstreet, P. C. Bergman, Paul E. Christy, Tulelake and Arnold Criss, Macdoel. Soap Box Derby Racers All Set AKRON, Ohio i.p, Each a NBC Correspondent Gets Red Pass MOSCOW i.fi The Foreign cnampiim in ills own home town. Ministry's press chief scld Satur uoys win scoot rlDwn 975-loot , ri.iv ihe Derby Hill in soap box racers Sun-1 day for the live college scholar- j ships waiting at the bottom for the ' viciois. The occasion is (lie 18th All- j American Soap Box Derby, lipid i here once a year for the boys who j used gravity best In the qualify-1 lug local races tthii'h precede it. I iizcs range Hum a $5,000 olarship lor fust place to a 1.000 scholarship or filth. rriday, 1 lie conkMiiis each took a trial run down Doibv Hill to lest the track and locate any faults 111 ineir Homemade vehicles. The first heat Sunday will lie at a 111. Pacilic Standard Time. Soviet Union will give living Levine. National Broadcast ing correspondent, a permanent visa to remain here and make broadcasts. Leonid F. Uychev. who handles picss matters for Foreign Minist er V. M. Molotov, made the an nouncement. Levine. a veteran re porter in Central Europe and the Far East, is now accompanying a delegation of U.S. farmers visit ing Tashkent, a city In Uzbekistan, 1,800 miles southeast of Moscow. Levine Is believed here to be the first Western non-communist radio correspondent accredited in Mos cow since Robert Magidoff, also an NBC reporter, was expelled in 1948. Magidolf also was correspondent for McGraw-Hill, a New York pub lisher of business magaaines. '55 CHEVROLET $1845 DUGAN & MEST 410 So. 6IH Ph. 4 US 9 People Read SPOT ADS -you ore. On The Record SUITS Ray Duijjman, also known as Ray E. Dmgman, husband mid wife. vs. Ber nice DcBarhecri and Angela DcBar, becri, her husband, equity suit for pay ment of asrecment of sale of S2.884.3I plus 6 per cent interest from April 10. 1033 or to bar defendants from interest in property, Ganong and Ganong, at torneys for plaintiff. Sandra Elizabeth Shields vs. William Julius Shields, suit for divorce. U. S. Balentine, attorney for plaintiff. MARRIAGE LICENSES LEWIS - VAN DOREN Robert Eu gene Lewis. 32. Gcrvats. and Carl U Van. n,iren. 22. Klamalh Falls. DENNY - CAMPBELL Gilbert L. Denny. 24. and Judith Ann W. Camp bell. 20. hoth of Klamath Falls. BRIGHT - MANN William J. Bright, in. and Vtrsinia F. Mann. 17. both of Klamath Falls. BIRTHS WEDMOHE Born to Mr. and Mis. I.croy Wedmore. August 12. at Klam ath Vallty Hospital, a boy weighing 7 lbs 41 07. , CAMPBELL Born to Mr. and Mrs. Tlnrold Camnbell. August 12. nt Klam Mh Valley Hospital, a girl weighing 7 bs. N'( or DeCH A1NEAIT Born to Mr. and Mrs. James DcChaineau, August 12. a Klamath Valley Hospital, a boy weigh ing 6 lb. 14', nz. Court Records Qov. William O. Stratton to ex amine the finest that Illinois larm crs have to offer. The visit was one of the most impromptu incidents of the Rus sians' current tour of American farmlands. Stratton extended the invitation to delegation leader Vladimir Mai skevitch when the Russian showed up at the governors' conference in Chicago yesterday. Mntskevich accepted and Wil liam Wood Prince, chairman of the Chicago stock yards board, put his private plane at the Russians' disposal. Stratton welcomed the Russians' visit, saying it, will give them "the greatest opportunity in the world to see collected in one place the machinery and the products of the farm and the people who have the know-how to operate the mach inery and the farms." Mntskevich meanwhile asked Stratton and other governors as sembled at the Chicago conference to visit a "great fair" In Moscow this fall. Gov. J. Bracken Lee of Utah said Matskevieh's visit to the con ference was "embarrassing'' to him. "I den't want any part of it myself," he satd. Returned POY'sTellOf Red Tactics Used In "Brainwashing" Captives FORT LEWIS Ufi The Com munist technique for brain wash- i cnlrliers WAS de- U1K niHCiivoii o..w.- scribed by former prisoners of war here this weeic as a ed program of starving the men into submission. Starvation, exhaustion, disease, exposure, torture, degradation and rumor were the instruments used by the Reds to reduce their Ameri can prisoners oi war to the con dition of depraved anunals. Then, following the technique de veloped by Pavlov's experiments with dogs, the Reds forced the n.v;.nnr ln enhcrihe to 010-COm- munlst statements that the OIs have since denounced. Pavlov was a psychologist who rang a bell each time he fed his hungry dogs. Over a period of Solons Said Dubious Over Red Army Cut WASHINGTON Ifl Most sena. tor3 said Saturday they are du bious about Soviet Russia's an nouncement that it is cutting its armed forces by 640.000 men be cause of lessened world tension. But Sen. Eilender ( D-La ) said, "We should meet the Russians half way. without bowing down and fraternizing." "There is too much suspicion on both sides of the Iron Curtain." Eilender said. "If we could just learn what Communist leaders arc thinking what is gnawing at them, we should be able to con vince them we don't want anything they have." Eilender, a member of the Ap propriations Committee, said an effective and safe disarmament program "would enable this coun try to save billions ol dollars. ' We could balance ihe budget next year." he continued. "All we need to do is follow up the pro posals of President Eisenhower and Sen. George ID-Ga). He referred to Presidsnt Eisen hower's offer to Soviet Russia to exchange military blueprints, with mutual aerial inspection. Chairman George of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee en couraged the Big Four Geneva conference and other recent moves of the kind. Sen. Neuberger (D-Orel said that he "hopes that tensions actually have been reduced, but in the ab sence of genuine inspection of arms, can we really believe what the Russians have to say about the size of their armed froces? Senate Republican Lsder Know land (Calif) bad no comment. Three Die In Blazing Auto SACRAMENTO, Calif. Wl Three members of a suburban North Highlands family were burned to death Friday night when an auto mobile crashed into the rear of the one in which they were riding. The Highway Patrol identified the victims as Mrs. Lillian Otter son. 63; her daughter, Mrs. Louise Walsh, 32: and Mrs. Walsh's son, Edward Wakh Jr., 8. Mrs. Walsh's husband, Edward 30, was not in the car. The High way Patrol first listed him as among the fatalities. The patrol said the Walsh car broke into flames after It was hit by another driven by George Dou sette, also of North Highlands. Dousette was hospitalized with minor injuries. lime the dogs learned to associate the bell with lood so closely that their mouths would water when, ever the bell rang, even though there was no food. The Communist technique along the same line was' exposed, piece by piece, by approximately 40 lormer prisoners of war who have paraded to the witness stand at ihe general court martial ot Lt. Jefferson D. Erwin. The pattern, as revealed by their testimony, was this: Upon capture, the North Koreans or Chinese Communist marched the American prisoners in bitter cold weather until they were ex hausted. Some walked as much as 12"i miles before they were placed in even temporary .prison er of war camps. Then they were starved and sub jected to sub zero weather in un heated mud-constructed buildings. They were denied the necessities of life like soap, towels, toilet pap er or adequate clothing and shoes. Their food was tracked corn, millet or a grain mush called go Uanf. Occasionally they received a few grains of rice. The men lost weight. Some cried If another prisoner got a few more groins of rice. Diarrhea, dysentery, berl-beri and pneumonia followed and there was no medical care. Hundreds of the prisoners died. Those who lived were desperate. At this point the Chinese start ed their Communist indoctrination program. Some of the men who resisted or attempted to escape were pun ished sufficiently to show the rest of the prisoners they meant busi ness. Some were tortured to death. Rumors were started to pit pris oner against prisoner, causing dis sension and breaking up the Amer ican's united front. Thus the Chinese "won over" through torture, threat of torture or other means a small group of prisoners. , It was enough to break the ice. Nobody wanted to be first to join the Chinese, but with an initial group "persuaded" to their cause, Ihe prisoners' unity had been brok en. The Chinese demanded every man in camp, however. The Initial small group did not satisfy them so they went after the rest. They harassed the others daily, repeating over and over and over again the same Communist line of propaganda that America was the aggressor in Korea. At private indoctrination ses sions, tile Chinese gave the pris oners a cigarette, a few peanuts or. an apple the reward of food that Pavlov had given his . dogs for performing properly. Gradually the weakened prison ers submitted and joined the orig inal small group the Chinese had "ncrsuaaed" to "their side. One by one the prisoners agreed with the Chinese that America was the aggressor. Fmally everyone in camp including the sick signed a statement that read: "Wo the liberated officers In North Korea, through study, re alize that South Korea invaded North Korea, with the backing of Ihe United States and that the United States is an aggressor in coming to Korea and we therefore leave the camp of the aggressor ano. join the camp of the peace loving people of the world." The Chinese mission .was ac complished but only tempor arily. Virtually every one of the 40 former prisoners who have pa raded before the Army court here hnvp tairnn the onnortunity to de nounce the Chinese Rads, declare hey never believed the statemem. tnd testify they never embraced Communism. Just a Moment! HEART? MINICir.M, COfRT Robert Dean Lwkwald. drunk. 523 Or Vernon Leo Joe, tecklfus driving. i Sanitarium and Hoipitol, Dnvtr, RuihCharlei. drunk. 3S forfaited Co,-' r Teitimonial Proof of rt- Airred Butler, drunk. $2i or ui davs. ! suits In arthritis, cancar, palio, apt I5?"31y..lu""w Nr,"' 523 or lepr. rh.um.ric htr, multiple iF ,L Wnrkl- violation of basic rule. sclerosis, cerebral palsy, muscular s f j- V -A W forfeited Hershal M Tnzer, no reglitration visible. S.1 forfeited. K. M. Hailey, no reRistratlon visible, to forfeited. dystrophy, strokes heart, liver, shin, stomoch, kidney and scores of otliei ailments. MAN WANTED Mob woMtJ iter.,tcd in co,n,9 J800.00 or mor. month ot di. triburor tor notionol firm ohoso products ore notionolly .dv.rtiled. fULU or PART TIME! Butincii operated from your homo, no em ploveot or office oiptmo. NO SALIS EXPCRIlNCt needed i wo turn ovtr to you eitobldhcd account who order from you wochly. Eiccl lent eorninui itort immodiotely. You con get into this d.iiroble huii neu wrth ot littlt ot $1,350. Which it protected by stock tnd need ier y equipment. Reliability and punctuolity ore mor Important then y pott buiineit experience. AGE IS NO FACTOR. If you ore inter, tied in a relloble buiinosi ond con irort ot once, write to BOX 296 core. HERALD I NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. (Not Vendin, Ma. chineil. JOE Building Contractor "Quality Work Quick" Rr. 3, Box 100 Phont 7835 OS You Are Invited To Come Hear Evan9elist Wayne Lowe ot the Church of Christ 2205 W.ntlond A... Klomath Foil., Or.. August 14 thru August 21st at 8 p.m. on KFLW 8:30 a.m. Sundays Th Truth will bt preached in Love.