Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, June 12, 1958, Page 2, Image 2

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HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 1958
UJe En Casbab Today
(Ste Of MyirdeB', Fear
By ItEI.MAN MORIN
ALGIERS (API An Arab wom
an, shrinking into the deep sha
dows of her dank little room,
gestures impatiently.
"Go away," she says. "No, 1
don't want a cigarette. No, 1
won't talk to you. Just go away."
In a hole-in-the-wall shop, Mo
hammed Mikin, the merchant,
starts to answer a question.
"De Gaulle? Well, . in my opinion"
He breaks off abruptly. Two
red-hatted trench Zouaves, car
rying tommyguns, come down the
narrow alleyway, heavy boots
clattering on the ancient cobble
stones. "As I was saying," says Mo
hammed Mikiri, smoothly chang
ing the subject, "business is slow.
So many people buying on credit."
Even alter the Zouaves have
passed, he says no more.
Doors slam shut as you ap
proach. A Moslem woman pulls
her veil up to the level of her
dark eyes! You decide not to talk
to a fruit vendor. His son was
killed here last week.
This is the Casbah.
The Algiers Casbah, locale for
romantic movies and scene of
countless love stories, Is a place
of fear and festering hatred now.
It smells of death.
French paratroops went through
it in effect with fire and sword
hunting down members of the
Moslem revolutionary force that
has been fighting for nearly four
years to shatter French ruc in
Algeria. That was last year, and
the patrols and barbed wire bar
ricades are still in the Casbah.
The paratroops blew up great
chunks of the tawny thick-walled
jumble of buildings, killed some
people, wounded others, carried
still others olf to prison.
WESTERN AUTO
SPECIALS
OPEI FRI. .NIGHT TILL 9:00
Bar-b-q-GriISs
this flnt m
lit tailing foi
4.98
Comport thll tint model with
other; grills wiling for 8.951
High Quality, Hot Burning
CHARCOAL
J BRIQUETS
10, k.79'
Big Vi Gallon
Picnic Jug
- Reqular 2.19
1.44
BIKES
Enqlith or American itylt. Full
26" tlie. Buy now for ium
mtr fun!
39.88
OPEN FRIDAY
TILL 9:00
Western
Auio
1 lrh and Main
So the Casbah is quiet now ex
cept that murders still take
place there, whether for personal
or. political reasons you never
know.
Casbah means fort In Arabic.
You can see why the one on the
hill in Algiers was an ideal fort
lor the Moslem rebels.
It is a fantastic maze of twist
ing alleys and passageways barely
wide enough for two persons to
pass. They coil into each other
like serpents through tunnels and
secret doors that pierce the walls
of this vast pile of masonry, in
terconnecting houses and dwell
ing places. You could travel miles
in the Casbah and never be seen.
Hordes of half-naked children,
as thick as the swarms of flies.
play in the cobbled alleys, slimy
with water and refuse. The pite
ous whine of a blind beggar min
gles with the sound of students
intoning the words of the Koran.
Ugly, raddled women beckon from
the doorways.
Time stops in the Casbah.
In 500 years little or nothing
changed there until recently.
Then, when the savage Moslem
rebellion flared against France,
nnd ghastly reprisals came in re
turn, the tort became just that.
Today, on the walls you see the
French propaganda posters.
Let s talk together about our
lives," says one. A knife has mu
tilated this poster. i
The rebel leaders are having a
good time with your money," say
another. It is ripped in half.
The whole world knows the
rebels are abandoning you," says
still another. It is spattered with
refuse.
Today nobody in the Casbah
will talk about the possibility of a
reconciliation between the Mos
lems and the French. French ef
lorts in that direction, and the
Actresses In
Theater Duel
NEW YORK (AP) Actress
Lynn Fontanne, one of the first
ladies of the American theater,
almost got upstaged last night by
a star from another world Mari
lyn Monroe. Miss Monroe got the
oohs and ahs, but Miss Fontanne
got the applause.
Clad in a backless orange dress
and trailing a mink stole from
one shoulder so it almost swept
the floor, the blonde screen ac
Ircss diverted between - the acts
chatter to herself as she traipsed
hack lo her scat during the first
intermission of The Visit, which
stars Miss Fontanne and her
husband, Alfred Lunt.
Several patrons at the rear of
the orchestra rented binoculars so
they could get a belter look at
Miss Monroe. Others stood in
their seats during the next inter
mission to catch a glimpse of her
in the third row next to her hus
band, playwright Arthur Miller.
Some Inched down tho side aisle
while the curtain was down.
When it wont up again, atten
tion quickly went back to the
stage, and the play won the audi
ence s enthusiastic applause. Alt
er the final curtain Miss Monroe
and her husband went backslngc
tor a courtesy call on the Lunts,
WASHINGTON (AP! -President
Eisenhower's House-passed recip
rocal trade agreements program
hit a snag in the Senate Republi
can leadership today.
in the face of a lon-sidcd 317-98
House vote yesterday to continue
presidential control over tariffs
for five years, Sen. William F.
Knowland (H-Califl announced he
will back a move to reduce the
extension to three years. The
House rejected a two-year limit.
However, Knowland, the Sen
ate Republican leader, said that
while he reserves the right to sup
port other amendments to the
House bill he believes the Senate
eventually will pass a measure
generally satisfactory to Eisen
hower.
The bill would give Eisenhower
authority to reduce U.S. tariffs on
imports as much as 25 per cent
over the five-year period in re
turn for similar concessions by
other countries on U.S. exports.
senate Democratic Leader Lvn-
don B. Johnson of Texas, tradi
tionally a supporter of the trade
program, said the House bill will
be given top priority in the Sen
ate.
Chairman Harry F. Ryrd (D-Va
LONG TRIP
ATLANTIC BEACH, N.C. (AP)
Millon Santina brought a live
325-pound, 7'i-foot porpoise by
station wagon from Marathon,
Fla., and deposited It in an aquar
ium here claiming it was the long
est car trip ever made by a por
poise 25'a hours and 1,02(1 miles.
BEAUTY SALON
TOWN & COUNTRY
Coll TU 2-5671 or drop In. Ev..
ningi by appointment , . . Al
wayi the belt.
words of Gen. Charles de Gaulle,
new French premier, appear to
have had no impression whatso
ever on the people here.
Things arc quiet again, they
say. Lite goes on.
And that is all they will tell
you.
SCHEDULES
Reminder
Radio and TV program
loqi far the entire week
were carried in Sunday's
magazine section of the
Herald and News. Readers
are urqed to retain this
section for refeience
throughout the week.
These oroqeam loqs will
be carried hereafter in
the Sunday magazine
section.
Reciprocal Trade Agreement
Bill Hits Snag After House
Passage; Compromise Seen
asked 'the Senate Finance Com
mittee to set hearings, probably
beginning next week.
While most interested senators
regarded the House measure as
a boundary beyond which the Sen
ate! would not go in permitting
tariff reductions, Sen. Paul H.
Douglas (fMll) said he will try to
reduce the amount which tariffs
could be raised under the bill in
cases where imports are found to
be adversely atrectmg locally
produced merchandise.
Sens. Edward Martin (R - Pa)
and John J. Williams (R - Del),
members of the Finance Commit
tee, said they are not happy about
it but will go along with the five
year extension. Martin forecast
committee action to "tighten up
some of the provisions of the bill
to prevent ruinous competition
with U.S. industries. '
Sen. Frederick G. Payne (R -
Maine) said he will offer amend
ments to provide for import quo
tas on some items. Sen. Edward
J. Thye (R-Minn) promised "com
plete support" for the program.
Sen. Leverett Saltonstall (R
Mass) predicted passage of a
"satisfactory" bill.
9A$Xj3L t.m. A o"-
"May the twins play with your children this morning?
My maid is housecleanlng and it upsets her
with them underfoot!"
Suiy Parker's Spouse
Admits To J 955 Marriage
ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla. (AP) -Suzy
Parker's 1M5 wedding to a
French count is no longer in
doubt.
French writer, admitted it Wed
nesday nicht alter New York
newspapers dug up city and
church records of the marriage
and found the minister's wife, who
remembered it well.
When he first came here to help
his lovely movie actress wile re
cuperate from injuries in the
Let us put YOU behind this wheel!
June Is
BONUS MONTH
and we're out to sell
30 NEW
OLDSMOBILES!
BIGGEST TRADES We vc ever of,ered!
D8CEC B. MILLER CO.
DEAL
I o.l" A New . I
L OiPSMOBHF I
7th and Klamath
Ph. 4-4154
"DENNIS THE MENACE"
Finding Of Porgy's Goat
Ends Long Talent Search
' Did you wash aiv dessert platts yet? I could
SURE USE AMOTHB? PIECE OF PlEI
Jeweled Garters May Be
Newest Fashion Gag Now
HOLLYWOOD (AP) Another,
great talent search is over.
They've found Porgy's goat.
Samuel Goldwyn needed a very
special animal for the goat who
pulls the cart of the crippled
Porgy in the film version, of
"Porgy and Bess." It had to b
strong enough to pull actor Syd
ney Poitier, have stage presence
and not offend the other actors
with its aroma.
Clarence Jones, who supplies
animals for film makers, came
up with 5-year-o!r Mr. Faust, a
huskv. deodorized, talented goat.
The new actor was located pulling
a wagon lor children in an bast
em carnival and was shipped here
via air.
Whv the name? Because Mr.
Faust butts like the Devil, say tne
whimsical studio aides. -
At any rate, the goat has a six-
month contract and the use of a
stand - in. Mr. Faust will be
watched closely. No scenery chew
ine in a Goldwyn picture. . , .
It s ironic that the factor that
prolonged Deborah Kerr's mar
riage helped to sink it in the end
She and Tony Bartley faced prob
lems after the war when she came
here as a star. He had nothing
to do for a year, since immigra
tion restrictions stopped him from
taking a lob.
The situation of a famous wife
and a . nonworking husband has
By GAY PAULEY
UPI Women's Editor
NEW YORK (UPD The longer
the chemise stays in style, the
happier are one bustling garter
manufacturer and one conserva
tive jewelry store on Fifth
Avenue.
The two. figuring that the ab
breviated hemlines of the che-
mise focus new attention on legs.
have combined to revive a fad
from grandma's day. Gems for
our gams.
Tiffany's, recalling that jew
elled garters enjoyed a boom in
the 1880's, decided they were just
the thing for fall, 1958. The store
reasoned that the short, slim
skirts show more leg. especially
when a woman's getting on a bus
or out of a car, and that some
decoration would help.
The store provides the jewels
and Mrs. Hortense Hewitt, the
manufacturer, makes the garter
setting. Presumably, the w e 1 1-
heeled male will carry on from
there for some of the garters cost
as much as $12,000.
Let's face it," said Mrs. Hew
itt, "a garter is a sex attraction.
When a man knows a woman has
one on; he won't rest until he
sees it."
Mrs. Hewitt, an atfable woman
who got into the garter business
during World War . II, claims to
turn out more garters than any
other manufacturer some 25,000
dozen pairs a year. Many of these
are bought for brides, and come
in traditional blue and white.
But come fall, her line will in
clude budget-priced jewelled gar
ters, with detachable clips or pins
of rhinestones and other fake
gems.
Tiffany said its files showed
that in the 1880's, an average De
cember sale weuld be 500 pairs
of garters, costing anywhere
train-car crash which killed her
father, De La Salle denied he was
married to Miss Parker.
She had let it slip when she
registered at the hospital as Mrs.
Pierre La Salle.
Suzy and De La Salle were mar
ried Aug. 6, 1955. in New York
City s Greenwich Village.
Why did they keep it secret?
De La Salle gave one version
of the answer to a. reporter here
and an attorney released a dif
ferent version of it in New York.
Confronted with the time and
place of his wedding, De La Salle
told John Carroll of the St. Augus
tine Record "it's true."
He said he, Suzy and Edward
G. Nelson of Paris, a witness at
the ceremony, swore they would
never reveal it.
"I did not want to reveal my
private life," De La Salle said.
"1 did not think it was anyone
else's business."
A New York attorney issued a
statement in the count's name
saying:
"Suzy Parker and I have been
happily married since 1955. It was
Hollywood press agents who sug
gested that it be kept secret so
that it might advance her career."
i Miss Parker was unable to at
tend funeral services Wednesday
(or her lather. George Lofton
Parker. 63. retired Jacksonville
businessman.
Her mother also remained In
the hospital, where she is recu
perating from an operation. Suzy
and her lather were on the way
to the family home after visiting
her mother when the'r car col
lided with a freight train Satur
day. Nelson, the witness at the wed
ding, was killed last May in the
1957 Milie Miglia auto race in
Lurope.
Rail Rate Cut
Hearing (Asked
WASHINGTON (AP)-Hearings
should be held at once on the
Southern Pacific Railroad's pro
posal to slash its lumber freight
rates, Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore)
said Wednesday.
The railroad's proposal to cut
the rates on lumber shipments
from Oregon to California and Ne
vada was rejected earlier by the
Interstate Commerce Commission.
The ICC said it would hear the
proposals again in about seven
months.
Morse said that the hearing
should be at once. The senator
said he had received scores of let
ters on the matter.
from $2,000 to $5,000 a pair.
The fad spread then, as Mrs,
Hewitt hopes it will this fall, to
less -expensive numbers decorated
with silver buckles, antique coins
or enamelled flowers..
The jewelry firm said one of
its best sellers in the other gar
ter era was a band of ribbon in
scribed "honi soi qui mal y
pense" (evil unto him who evil
thinks). These were the words of
King Edward HI to a tittering
court throng in the 14th century,
when Edward's dancing partner
lost her garter.
Edward gallantly picked it up
put it on his own leg. and thus
England s "Order of the Garter
was founded. The garter became
a badge of chivalry, with knights
in jousting tournaments wearing
their ladies' garters on their
sleeves.
Sabotage In
Blast Found
NELSON, B.C. (AP) Evi
dence confirming sabotage has
been found at the site of two ex
plosions which ripped apart sec
tions of the West Coast Trans
mission Co. pipeline last Satur
day, investigators report.
Supt. R.W. Wonnacott of the
Royal , Canadian Mounted Police
at Kamloops told the Nelson Daily
News that remains of wire and a
battery had been discovered near
the explosion scene, 55 miles
south of Williams Lake, in the
Cariboo country.
"We do not have any concrete
evidence linking the blasts with
any particular person or group,
he added.
The 30-inch natural gas pipe
line, which services the British
Columbia lower mainland and Pa
cific Northwest states was torn
apart by two blasts about 11 a.m
Saturday just before another ex
plosion ripped up Canadian Pa
cific Railroad tracks near Prince
ton.
Wonnacott also said the type of
explosion "is so close" to others
in the West Kootenay region in
years past that "we have reason
to believe the same terrorists are
to blame.
The other explosions have been
linked to' the fanatical Sons of
Freedom Doukhobors.
EUGENE (AP) A panel says
there is an easy solution to the
problem of farm cooperatives.
Farmers should patronize them
more, the panel, headed by J. R.
Beck of Oregon State College, told
the annual Oregon Grange meet
ing Wednesday.
If enough farmers patronize the
co-ops, the business could be
doubled. Beck said.
The grange s annual meeting
will end Friday.
WET SLIPS
NORWAI.K. Conn. Police
caught a policy ring suspect but
the evidence nearly got away. The
suspect tossed policy slips into a
nver and police had to comman
deer a rowboat to retrieve them
SOLUTION
always been a dangerous one lq
Hollywood. But then Bartley be
gan to find his own success asa
producer of TV films. The troiA
ble was that his career kept him
in Africa and England much of
the time while Deborah was work
ing here. Hence the draft in their
marriage, once considered un-
breakable. ...
Shelley Winters wonders where
the money is coming from. Her
husband Anthony Franciosa has
been paid for 10 weeks on "The
Naked Maja," though the picture;
hasn't even started yet. The same
goes for Ava Gardner. The delay
is apparently to find a script tha.t
will please Ava. ; j
i .
RESULTS , ' J
McCLOUD Unofficial results of
the balloting committee of Local
6-64 International Woodworkers ol
America AFL-CIO of McClotiel
were announced June 10. Results
of the election for union officers
held at various dates last week -in
the sub locals were as follows
James Thompson was reelected
president; Jack Sterling, vice pres
ident: Laurence Gardner, sec
retary - treasurer and . business
agent; Russell Brickell, recording
secretary; Edgar Dodwell, conduc
tor; Frank Natt, warden; Wayne
Gill, three year trustee and Lee
Miller, District 6 executive board
member.
n n
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DOORS CPEN 6:3Q f. M.
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Record Set For
Bridge Travel
SACRAMENTO (UPD-Another
traffic record on the San Fran
cisco - Oakland Bay Bridge was
set last Friday when 118.000 cars
and trucks crossed the span.
The Department of Public
Works reported 'Wednesday that
the previous high of 115,232 vehi
cles lasted less than a month. It
was set Friday. May 9.
Department officials noted that
last Friday's record came dur
ing the now settled Key System
strike.
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