Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, June 01, 1958, Page 2, Image 2

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    PAGE 2 A
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
SUNDAY. JUNE 1. 195
"DENNIS THE MENACE"
S1WK? AW, I THOUGHT WB WBf GONNA HAVE HCTDOQS'
Sad To Watch Caesar End
3rd TV Series Says Scribe
By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD (AP) It was
cad to watch Sid Caesar close bis
third TV series this week.
Sad hecauso Sid. Imogene Coca
Carl Reiner and Howard Morris
have provided many of the most
delightful moments in the brief
history of television. I can think
TODDLERS' TREAT
Printed Pattern
of dozens of their sketches that
draw a smile simply upon recol
lection.
Yet the show has failed, sinking
another nail into the coffin of
comedy on the homo screen.
Except for the second coming of
Milton Berle, which is due next
season, the comics have had a
steady decline in TV. Numerous
theories for this have been ex
pounded the narrowing of siib
jecls that can be kidded, the gen
eral humorlessness of our times.
the difficulty of being funny every
weeK.
All these have an effect, but 1
think the real reason is that other
bugaboo over-exposure. Still, it
is more than that, it s my notion
that the American public Is full
up to hero with entertainment.
We're simply getting too much
of it. You can watch old movies
nil day and all night on TV, and
the cost is only a few pennies in
electricity.. Any time you want,
you can have your senses dulled
by watching a variety of entertain
ment, or what passes for it. Mil
lions do so.
That's what is wrong with the
movie business. Not the high
price of baby sitters. Not poor
pictures. It s just that most peo
ple are saturated with mental
images of actors, singers, tap
dancers, quiz contestants, etc.
The nation's teen-agers are sup
porting the movie industry oniy
because they refuse to sit In the
living room and watch the homo
screen. They want to break away
from the nest, so they go to thea
ters.
That's the theory, anyway. Watch
the scientific journals for further
details.
See our pint-sized translations
of the Paris news the chemise
playsult and dress! Fun to sew
with our Printed Pattern gay
anti fresh in crisp cotton iced
witn lace or eyelet frosting.
Printed Pattern 923.1: Toddler
Sizes 1, 2. 3 years. Size 2 play-
suit takes 1V yards 35-inch; dress
takes yards.
Printed directions on each pat
tern part. Easier, accurate.
Send thirty-five cents (coins) for
this pattern add 5 cents for
each pattern for lst-class mai ine
Send to Marian Martin, care of
Herald and News, Pattern Dept.
232 West 18th St.. New York 11
N. Y. Print plainly name, address
wun zone, size and style number
Actress Reveals
Estrangement
VIENNA (AP)-Deborah Kerr,
the British movie star, said Satur
day she and her husband, Anthony
Hartley, are estranged.
They are trying to resolve their
difficulties, she added.
Miss Kerr is making a film here
with Yul Brynner about the 1056
Hungarian revolt.
Bartlcy, a World War II RAF
hero who is now a film and tele
vision producer, lives in London.
They have been married twelve
years and have two girls, 11 and
MEMO
DALLAS (API Memo to the
thief who rifled the trunk of a
sedan:
That tire and wheel you stole
belongs to Dep. Police unci
Charles Balchelor, boss of every
patrol squad cruising the city
fawiny Cah
IIKILj"
Since 1929 Generol Motors hai built the won
derful OPEL in Germany
Sold and serviced only by Buick dealers through
out the U.S. . . . Not just "another foreign ear"
of old desiqn but alive with features, wrap around
windshield, wrap around rear window, beautiful
up to dote styling, tremendous trunk capacity, full
5 passenger seating, a number of accessories as
standard equipment . . . heater, defroster, etc.
$
2197
00
Delivered In
Klamath Falls...
OPEL . . . See It . . . Drive It TODAY!
JIM
WINDE BUICK
CO.
1330 MolnSf. (jhone TU 4-3141
In Tribute, People Come
To View Memorial Rites
ARLINGTON, Va. (AP) - Two
sisters, both in their 60s, came at
noon and sat in the hot sun to be
sure of seats for the burial cere
mony of the Unknowns of World
War II and Korea.
They arrived at Arlington Na
tional Cemetery Friday some
three hours early, but they didn't
mind. They sat erect on stone slab
seats, waiting quietly.
One was Mrs. Estelle Hughes
67, who said she was the widow of
Race Plane
Trio Dead
BAKERSFIELD, Calif. (AP) -,
Three men were found dead Sat
urday in the wreckage of a light
plane they were flying in a holi
day race from Hayward, Calif.,
to Las Vegas, Nevada.
The Kern County sheriff s office
said t h e bodies of William H.
Hooker Jr., 42, Hayward: Donald
Lee Carter, 28, Hayward, and
John Francis Maulsby. 45. Oak
land. Calif., were found in t h e
wrecked plane in mountains 40
nines auuiii ui Dattersneiu.
Hooker was piloting the plane
on the second leg of the annual
race sponsored by the 20-30 Club
when his Cessna 170 apparently
developed engine trouble, sheriff's
investigators said.
The plane was unreported after
refueling at Bakersfield and head
ing for Palmdale, Calif. The sher
iff's aerial squadron began a
search Friday afternoon and the
wreckage was spotted about 6
p.m.
College Fetes
Publisher
TACOMA (AP) Bennett Cerf.
New York publisher-humorist-television
panelist, ranged' from a
defense of the pun to a dig at
the secretary of state in his ad
dress to the 70th College of Pugel
Sound graduating class.
Cerf was honored Friday with
an honorary doctor of literature
degree. Also receiving honorary
degrees were W.W. Kilworth of
Tacoma, chairman of the board
of trustees, doctor of laws: and
Norton Clapp, Tacoma-Seattle fi
nancier, philanthropist and civic
leader, doctor of civil law.
The pun, said Cerf, has long
been slighted. It is not intended
to draw laughter, he said, only
a deep groan irom the audience.
I wish our secretary of state
would smile, instead of always
looking as if he had a stomach
nche." the humorist added.
"Winston Churchill once said
Dulles was the only bull who car
ried his own china shop."
At the commencement exer
cises, Dr. R. Franklin Thompson,
college president, also said the
former upper class hall (women's
dormitory) would henceforth be
known as Harrington Hall.
Mrs. Edward Harrington, Seat
tle, who made the dormitory pos
sible, was presented an orchid
corsage by the college s associ
ated students.
Peron's Return
Ruled Illegal
BUENOS AIRES (AP) - A fed
eral judge has ruled that ousted
Dictator Juan Peron is not en
titled to a pardon under the am
nesty law recently passed by Ar
gentina's Congress.
The ruling Friday by Judge
Hector Ayarragarny that treason
charges against Peron still stood
had the effect of barring his re
turn to Argentina. In exile in the
Dominican Republic, Peron has
said be was waiting legal clear
ance to come home.
Peron also is charged with
numerous common crimes. He
was ousted by a revolutionary
regime in Was.
OFF TO nl'I.GARIA
LONDON (API Soviet Premier
Nikita Khrushchev went to Sofia
Bulgaria Saturday to attend the
seventh congress of the Bulgarian
Communist Party, Radio .Moscow
reported.
a World War I soldier. The other
was Mrs. Virginia Gormley, 63,
who said she has a son who's a
colonel in the Marine Corps.
Both women live in the Wash
ington area, but many of the 4.000
persons wno later filled the gleam
ing marble amphitheater had
come considerable distances.
For example. Mr. and Mrs. J.
L. Mclntyre of Houston. Tex., who
have no cmldren of their own
were outside the amphitheater
hours before the interment rites
Mrs. Mclntyre sat on a wooden
box.
The hot sun beat down on the
crowds. Before the day was done
more than 400 persons were treat
ed for heat prostration or faint-
ness.
One of those felled by the heat
was Supreme Court Justice
Charles E. Whittaker. An Army
doctor examined him and sent him
home.
Among the throng In the amphi
theater were Girl Scouts and Boy
Scouts, their merit badges as
bright as the decorations worn by
the military men around them.
There were Gold Star Mothers
dressed in white.
The crowd for the most part
was quiet, except for some chil
dren who didn't realize it wasn't
a picnic in the park. One child's
cry broke the stillness as the as
semblage stood for two minutes in
honor of the dead.
There were few tears, no uncon
trollable outbursts.
Forty-eight American flags
waved gently In the breeze amid
the huge marble columns around
the circular amphitheater. Color
ful wreaths, carried in eight mili
tary vans lrom the Capitol, were
banked in front of the domed
stage of the amphitheater and be
side the tomb of the Unknown Sol
dier of World War I.
An electronic carillon of English
chimes and Flemish bells played
solemn notes during the ceremonies.
After the ceremonies were over.
the thousands filed slowly out of
the cemetery, passing rows of
gravestones marked by tiny Amer
ican flags and the red poppies tra
ditional to Memorial Day.
Scrawls Labeled
Work Of Vandals
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Police
have labeled as the work of van
dals the scrawling of the words
"Hell Hitler Latins are lousy
lovers" across the front door of
the home of Dominican Republic
Consul General Adolfo Camarena.
The wife of the consul general
dismissed the incident Friday as
just some young children trying
to play a joke " She thought it
probably was prompted by "all
tne bad publicity given her coun
try in recent months.
Dominican Republic Lt. Gen.
Rafael Trujillo Jr. attracted world
wide attention when he visited
Hollywood recently and allegedly
gave expensive gifts to film stars
Kim Novak, Zsa Zsa Gabor and
Juan Collins.
Annual Maneuvers
Scheduled By NATO
PARIS (AP) Annual man
euvers of North Atlantic Treaty
forces in Europe will be held next
Tuesday through Thursday over
an area ranging from Norway to
Turkey.
I he supreme commander of
Atlantic Alliance forces, U.S. Gen
Lauris Norstad. announced that
the exercise, dubbed Full Plav,
will involve all the Air Force
units assigned to the allied command.
FINALLY
ROME (API The composer of
the song has finally tossed three
coins into the fountain.
American Jule Styne is here
writing music for a new movie
about the Italian capital.
Friday he went to the foun
tain of Trcvi, the one in his song
hit, "Three Coins in the Foun
tain." He threw in three 10-lire
coins worth about 5 cents in all.
In Rome, legend says visitors
throwing a coin in the Trevi foun
tain will some day return to this
city.
Street Cleaner's Alertness
Aids In Jailing Car Thieves
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Thanks
to the alertness of a street
cleaner, an organization of young
automobile thieves with a special
affinity for Chevrolet Corvettes
was put out of business early Sat
urday, police reported.
Three suspected members of
the club, called "Corvettes, t'n
limited.'' wire jailed and two oth
ers were sought.
Officers said the young men
stole and stripped 13 of the ex
pensive spots cars in the McLar
en Park are in the past three
months.
According to police, the gang's
membership consisted of skillful
young mecn.mics able to strip a
Corvette down to its frame and
engine blocx in three hours or
less. The parts then would be
peddled to youthful hot-rodders
who would install them in any
Chevrolet of a model later than
1H.V1.
Mauricio Caldcron, 19, a mem
ber of "Corvettes, Unlimited." po
lice said, spotted the frame and
engine block of the 13th stolen
Corvette in front of hu house,
and suspected that a fellow gang
member was trying to "frame"
him.
With his own auto, Calderon
was towing the frame and engine
block away when an unidentified
street sweeper s curiosity was
aroused and he jotted down Cald
eron's license number. Calderon
snw this and phoned police to re
port his license plates had been
stolen.
Officers weni to question him.
found the plates' concealed in his
garage and then obtained from
Calderon tne name of his col
leagues. Early this morning. Dan
iel liiolitli. 20. and Robert Galindo,
22. were taken into custody.
The thrcj were booked on a var
iety of chaic.es including suspicion
ol auto theft and conspiracy to
commit such thefts.
Rsy' vv"' tm
' -
De Gaulle Man Yith Mind
On Future Say Cronies .
S-3V
T U .U Pat. OH.
C '"I tf l Urn, t.
'"This 'permanent' business Is a pretty sharp Idea, Mom
how come thev haven't Invented a permanent hath?"
- -
Useless Jackrabbits Have A
Very Puzzling Life Pattern
By JACK HEWINS
Consider for a moment Mr. Rab
bit. First name: Jack.
One of the world's most useless
animals is J. Rabbit. He divides
his time equally between (1) eat
ing and (2) snoozing under a
clump of sagebrush.
About the nicest thing ever said
of the jackrabbit was voiced by
Milton Webster. Predator & Ro
dent Control Branch, U.S. Fish &
Wildlife Service, Seattle.
Hes very cyclic, said Web
ster.
The jackrabbit has gone all out
on this cyclic kick in the Colum
bia Basin region, where he has
been thicker than mites on a field
mouse for as long as most of us
Old Settlers can remember.
But this year the long eared
leaper has become a scarce arti
cle. His absence was noted first
by hunters who like to get out in
the late winter and knock off a
few jacks just to sharpen their
shooting eyes. Not ' classed as a
game animal, the beast can be
bagged without limit.
This is the total value of the
jackrabbit. He is not rated highly
as an article of food, even by the
coyote. He is a bearer of tulare-
Bailee Vanishes
Through Floor
MIAMI. Fla. (AP) Charlie
Roberts, 23, needed $2,500 for bail
on an aggravated assault charge.
Bondsmen frank Hull and Mur
ray Singer said they bailed
Roberts out Friday after he
promised immediate repayment,
saying "I got the money at home
in a hole in the floor," and offer
ing to wear handcuffs for the trip
home.
The bondsmen looked on as
Roberts pried away at floor-l
boards. Up came a section of
flooring. Down into the hole
popped Roberts. When last seen
he was running down a street, still
wearing handcuffs.
Weather Table
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Max. Mln. Prcip.
Baker v 76 40 .02
Eugene 72 53 .24
Lakeview 70 48
Medford 78 53 .02
Newport 64 53 .24
North Bend 65 55 .24
Pendleton 81 55 T
Portland Airport 72 55 .24
Redmond 76 48 .58
Roseburg 73 55 .12
Salem 74 53 .16
Billy Graham Plans
To Extend SF Tour
SAN FRANCISCO (ITP-Evah-gelist
Billy Graham told a Me
morial Day crowd of 15.000 at the
Cow Palace Friday night that his
San Francisco Bay Area crusade
will be extended one week, and
possibly two.
The exteisidn will carry through
June 15. and Graham said he
would decide Monday whether or
not to continue for a week after
that.
By United Press International
Temperatures and rainfall for
24 hours ending at 4 a.m.
High Low Rain
Albuquerque 90 56
Atlanta 87 69
Bakersfield 89 61
Boise 79 58
Boston 78 56
Brownsville 88 75
Chicago 86 66 .21
Denver 86 57
Detroit 84 65 T.
El Centro 1W) 75
Fairbanks 80 56
Fort Worth 95 73
Fresno 87 57
Helena 56 51
Kansas Ciiy 86 75 .09
Los Angeles 81 62
Miami 82, 75 .05
Minneapolis 76 Bt .02
New Orleans 90 73 .11
New York 78 69
Oakland 71 61
Oklahoma City 89 54
Phoenix ' 104 74
Pittsburgh 79 55
Red Bluff 85 59
Reno 78 54
Sacramento 82 56
Salt Lake City 86 48
San Diego 71
San Francisco 65 57
Seattle 69 53 .16
Spokane 75 54
Stockton 80 56
Thermal 105 72
Tin-son 98 64
Washington 83 61
mia, a sickness a human can
catch just by handling the rabbit
he has killed. Perhaps old J.R.
hasn't been snoozing under the
sagebrush, but brooding. Brooding
about his life as a target and dy
ing out from pure embarrassment
Jackrabbits do this. Die out,
that is. Year by year their cen
sus builds up until the sagelands
are leaking rabbits into farms and
orchards. Then the farmers and
orchardists get mad and organize
rabbit drives and kill off a batch
which really doesn't do any good.
Sooner or later nature will
agree with the pestered humans
that there are just too doggone
many jackrabbits and the bunnies
will disappear.
Wendell H. Oliver, district game
biologist for the State Department
of Game at Buena. Wash., be
lieves nature uses disease as the
executioner.
"As the rabbit populations
build," he says, "diseases spread
and soon reach epidemic propor
tions. A large percentage suc
cumbs to the disease or to preda
torr animals and birds which find
the weakened and sickly rabbits
easy prey.
There are two Rabbit families
in the region, as anyone knows
who has sighted a rifle on a run
ning hare, lt is generally accept
ed that the heavier white-tailed
jackrabbit - was the original settler.
"Sometime in the 1920s the
black-tailed jack crossed the Co
lumbia on the ice and got into
hear the story, you'd think t h e
black-tails were lined up in pha
lanxes along the river, waiting for
the freeze.
At any rate the black-tail, which
also has black ears and longer
legs than his pale cousin, moved
in and took over. The white-tail
now is growing rare and has been
crowded off into the Southeastern
Washington counties.
The black-tail is rare, too, but
that's only a matter of the mo
ment. Big families are a Rabbit
habit and both Webster and Oli
ver predict the tribe will be back
in force in a few years (1) eating
and (2) brooding in the shade of
the sagebrush.
As Webster says, they're cyclic
PARIS (AP) - Gen. Charles
de Gaulle's associates picture him
as a careful thinker with his mind
on the future but always ready
to listen to any opinion about the
present.
The business of human relation
ships has never come easily to the
tall, aloof soldier who sees him
self as France's man of destiny.
Addressing a rally comes easier
to him than sitting down to a man-
to-man chat. His favorite diver
sion is playing a complicated
form of solitaire.
Although millions of French
men call the World War II leader
of the Free French their national
hero, scarcely a dozen call him
their personal friend.
One of his close associates is
Philippe Ragneau, wartime com
rade who now serves De Gaulle
as publicity officer. "He is a man
whose mind is always on the fu
ture," Ragneau said. "His mind is
always several jumps ahead of
everyone else."
Ragneau claims De Gaulle's
public frigidity is really based on
the fact that he is a thoughtful
person who "ponders a question
until he is absolutely sure of the
answer. Never will he make a
snap decision."
'Whoever wants to offer De
Gaulle advice will find him a
courteous and attentive listener,
said another aide.
Although the Communists were
in his cabinet during his 18 months
as head of the postwar French
government and offered De Gaulle
advice, he would be certain to
keep them out now. The Socialists
kicked the Communists out of the
French government in 1947 and
they haven t been in since.
He also drew heavily on other
shades of political opinion in
194o-47, choosing as cabinet min
isters such political leaders as
former Socialist Premier Paul
Ramadier; Jules Moch, Socialist
interior minister who broke the
Communist strikes of 1948; Catho
lic party leader Pierre-Henri Tiet-
gen, and former Premier Rene
Mayer, a Radical Socialist.
The parties which these men
represented have been furnishing
the main opposition to De Gaulle's
returning to power now.
De Gaulle's private friendships
are restricted to a tight little
circle of tried and trusted com
rades, many of whom fought with
him under his Free French Cross
of Lorraine.
Closest to him is Col. Gaston
de Bonneval, wartime aide who
is now his chief of staff. Former
resistence leader Olivier Guichard
heads De Gaulle's civilian staff,
and one of the general's leading
advisers is Andre Malraux, one
of France's leading authors.
President Eisenhower wrote in
his boolt, "Crusade in Europe."
that he personally liked De Gaulle
a statement he repeated dur
ing this week's political crisis
but Eisenhower's book continued:
'We felt, however, that these
qualities were marred by hyper, j -sensitiveness
and an extraordinary 1
stubbornness in matters which
appeared inconsequential to us.
My own wartime contacts with
him never developed the heat
that seemed to be generated fre
quently in his meetings with many
others."
And Winston Churchill has been
widely quoted as saying: "Of all
the crosses I had to bear, the
heaviest was the Cross of Lor
raine."
Ku Klux Klan
'Visits' Judge
NEW ORLEANS (AP) An
eight foot wooden cross soaked
with kerosene was burned Friday
night on the lawn of Federal Dis
trict Judge J. Skelly Wright who
signed the orders to end segre
gation on the New Orleans buses.
Judge Wright blamed the inci
dent Saturday on "just someone
looking for publicity." But he
added. "I figured it had to be a
Ku Klux Klan thing. It wasn't
done by an amateur."
Segregation on public transpor
tation facilities officially ended in
New Orleans at 12:01 a.m. Saturday.
POOR REVIEW
PARIS (AP) Moscow's world
famous Bolshoi Ballet opened a
Paris run Friday night. It got an
enthusiastic review from the Com
munist newspaper Humanite but
nobody else seemed to like it very
much.
"Dowdy,' "Old-fashioned" and
"too long" were some of the ad
jectives used to describe the three
hour work based on Shakespeare's
"Romeo and Juliet" with music
by Sergei Ptokofieff.
Once
in 50
years
suspense
like
thisl
TYRONE
POWER
IR1EKE
DIETRICH
miBfEC IT'S; .skti
UUGHT0M Jtgf I
WITNESS K!
Prosecution
A MAN IS WITHOUT HONOR . . .
NEW YORK iT Robert B. An
derson, secretary of the Treasury,
confided in a speech here that he
had a critic at home. The secre
tary reported that some of his
speeches had been read by his 17-1
year-old son. who commented:
"You know, it's a shame that you
can't say some of these really I
smart things around the house." j
fMtiirt At 7:15 I 10:40
PLUS
rotor "tiinidad;
UNO OF UUGHTir
Sport SHwt
"WILD WATCH"
OMN DAILY TIOO P.
CONTINUOUS FROM 12:45 P.M.
IYIJrJ
PARAMbuNT PRESENTS
U
JAMES STEWART
KIM NOVAK
IIMILFREOHITtHmCS.
Iira7vm
TECHNICOLOR
VERTIGLX
K (Mi rot mm Sferax m. m i
NOW SHOWING!
CONTINUOUS FROM 11:45 P. M.
All the force... ambition and lust of
John O'Hara's hotly-discussed
winner of the National Book Award!
e r j.
GARY COOPER
DIANE VARSI
SUZY PARKER
Ten North
Frederick $(r
GERALDINE FITZGERALD TOM TULLY