Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, June 13, 1958, Page 1, Image 1

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    COIP
U OF OREGON LIBRARY
EU3ENE, ORE.
In The-
Day'siews
By FRANK JENKINS
Election year note:
The house of representatives to
day rejects three major changes
in the defense reorganization bill.
President Eisenhower had backed
these changes strongly, contending
,that they would strengthen our
military establishment and make
it more efficient. The house sup
ported its own armed services
committee against the President,
Uirned down the changes he asked
for. passed the bill and sent it on
to the senate.
The vote, this morning's dis
patches report, generally followed
party lines, with Republicans for
and Democrats against the Presi
dent's proposals.
Who is right the house or the
President?
I wouldn't know. The issues in
volved are highly technical, and an
ordinary layman isn't competent
to pass an 'opinion of , them.
But
President Eisenhower is general
ly accepted as the world's fore
most soldier. It stands to reason
that when it comes to military
matters he knows what he is talk
ing about and isn't playing elec
tion year politics.
Foreign affairs note:
Rebellious FRENCHMEN gath
ered in Algiers this morning to
spread their revolt against
Be Gaulle to the French mainland.
With the right win rebellion
growing in strength, Premier
De Gaulle will appeal to the na
tion late this afternoon in a "fire
side chat" broadcast by radio and
TV.
What's it all about?
This is the issue:
In Algeria, a million French col
onists have been running the af
fairs of NINE MILLION Algerian
natives. The nine million Algerian
natives want to run their own af
fairs. If Premier De Gaulle's
promise of EQUAL VOTING
RIGHTS for Moslems and French
men means what it seems to
mean, the nine million Algerian
natives will be able to run their
own affairs.
That's about the size of it.
We'll see what we'll see. '
Vacation note:
The American Express company
which keeps its finger on the
pulse of vacation travel, both at
home and abroad says Americans
will spend some 18 BILLION DOL
LARS sightseeing in the United
States this year.
Hmmmmmm.
A lot of Americans apparently
haven t heard about the recession.
Tornadoes In
Midwest Still
Pose Threat
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
More wet weather was the
damp prospect for nearly all sec
tions of the country today and
Midwest areas yesterday and dur
ing the night. Warnings of torna
does and severe weather were
posted in sections of Kansas, Mis
souri and Illinois.
A small tornado struck La Cen
ter. Ky., near the Illinois border,
injuring three members of one
family and damaging several
homes. Several funnels were re
ported in eastern Kansas and Mis
souri. Heaviest rains pelted areas
from northeastern .Missouri and
eastern Iowa eastward across
central Illinois, with amounts
measuring up to about two in
ches. Rain also fell in the flood
area of Indiana and possible
heavy falls during the weekend
threatened serious floods along
the Wabash River.
Showers and thunderstorms
-were general across the northern
. tier of states from Washington
and Oregon eastward to the upper
Great Lakes. Isolated thunder
showers hit areas in Texas and
showers and thunderstorms were
reported in southern Florida.
The Weather Bureau forecast
showers and thunderstorms for
nearly all parts of the country
during the day and night.
It was warm and humid from
Texas. Oklahoma and Kansas
eastward to the south Atlantic
Coast. Southerly winds fanned
warm and moist air from the
Gulf of Mexico into Illinois. Indi
ana, lower Michigan and into
parts of Ohio, increasing both
temperatures and humidity.
Death Flight
Plane Sought
SHREVEPORT, La. LTD Au
thorities resumed their search at
dawn today for a young airman
whose broken romance sent him
on an apparent suicide flight.
Still unsupported was a report
that an airplane crashed about 50
miles southeast of Shreveport
Thursday around the time Air
man 3C Don Keeton. 19. of Dal
las. Tex., would have run out of
fuel.
Keeton. despondent because his
sweetheart called off their mar
riage, look off in a single-engine
Cessna HO Thursday from an air
port at Gulfport. Miss. The Civil
Aeronautics Authority CAA said
the plane was last seen in the
vicinity of Monroe. La., 104
miles east of Shreveport.
The airman took off at 10: is
a m. e.d.t. Thursday, taxiing past
Gulfport manager W. H. Chevis
"like he didn't recognize me."
Keeton landed at Alexarfia. in
an apparent attempt to refuel, but
caretaker ' M. Mayo said he
apparently became suspius and
took off again.
Price Five Cents !0 Pages
Lebanese Rebel
Chiefs To Carry
On Savage Fight
BEIRUT, Lebanon (API Leb
anese rebel leaders vow they will
fight on against pro -Western
President Camille Chamoun de
spite the intervention of the U.N.
Security Council.
The vanguard of a U. N. observa
tion group made plans today to
carry out a becunty Council di
rective to watch for the arms and
men the Lebanese government ac
cuses President Nasser's United
Arab Republic of sending from
the neighboring Syrian province
to help the rebels.
After a lengthy meeting last
night, rebel leaders said if the
council really wants to end the
five-week crisis it should bar
arms for the government from
the United States, Britain, France
Turkey, Iraq and Jordan.
"It is these arms which consti
tuted the primary cause of the
tragic turn of events in Lebanon,
a rebel statement said.
The United States and Britain
have made no secret of their
arms shipments to the Lebanese
government, a legal regime and
an ally.- But there has been no
evidence of shipments from the
other nations the rebels named,
and the idea appeared to be to in
cite pro-Nass'er elements against
favorite targets of U. A. R. prop
aganda. The rebel statement said at
tempts to cut off arms supplies
from Syria "will not affect our
movement or deflect it from its
declared objective" of overthrow
ing Chamoun. The U.;A. R. has
denied aiding the rebels.
The Syrian border is 150 moun
tainous miles, and military men
estimate that at least 5.000 men
with reconnaissance planes would
he needed to close the border to
infiltrators; But the Council's
hope was that the presence of its
representatives would deter help
to the rebels from the U. A.- R.
government. ... t .
A leading Beirut newspaper,
O'Orlent, said the TJ.N. observ
ers "would probably suffice to
slop active intervention." Gov
ernment officials have hinted that
once this was halted the Lebanese
army which so far has not gone
all-out against the rebels would
take stronger measures.
Five officers borrowed from the
U. N. Palestine Truce Organiza
tion arrived yesterday to make a
cuiick show after the Council ac
tion Wednesday. In New York
Secretary General Dag Hammar-
skjold recruited observers from
U. N. members.
Hammarskjold appointed Nor
News In
Brief:
PAY BOOST
WASHINGTON (API The Sen
ate passed a compromise bill Fri
day giving a 10 per cent pay
boost to the government's 1,021.000
Civil Service and other employes.
Action came by voice vote adop
tion of a report agreed upon
Thursday adjusting Senate and
House differences over the legis
lation.
With the House in recess until
Monday, final congressional action
was put off until next week.
The bill's annual cost is about
542 million dollars. But the first
year cost will be closer to 800
million dollars since the boost is
retroactive to January 1.
FLUNKS
WASHINGTON (UPD Lt
Gen. Rafael Trujillo Jr., playboy
son of the Dominican dictator, has
been denied a diploma from a
U.S. Army Staff School, the Army
revealed today.
Rep. Charles B. Brownson R
Ind. I said the Army had reported
to him that the young Dominican
general did not successfully com
plete the course" at the Command
and General Staff College at Fort
Leavenworth,, Kansas.
UPTURN
WASHINGTON (API - The
Federal Reserve Board announced
Friday that May brought the first
upturn in the nation's industrial
production since June of last year.
Economic activity firmed in
May following eight months of de
cline." the Board reported in its
monthly summary of business con
ditions.
FARM BILL
WASHINGTON (API The
House Agriculture Committee ap
proved Friday a voluminous catch
all farm bill which appeared head
ed toward a presidential veto.
It would establish new commod
ity programs for wheat, feed
grains, milk, cotlon. and rice. The
wheat program, calling for a two
price system, was vetoed by Pres
ident Eisenhower in 1H5S.
ELECTED
CINCINNATI (API-Mrs. Wil
liam L. Reagan. Salem, Ore.,
Thursday was reelected recording
secretary of the National Council
of Baptist Women.
The women met here is connec
tion with the American Baptist
convention.
KLAMATH
wegian Maj. Gen. Odd Bull ' to
head a permanent military ob
server team of 26 officers. Bull
was also named to a supervisory
commission with a former pres
ident ol Ecuador, Galo Plaza
Lasso, and a former Indian am
bassador to the U. N., Rajeswar
Dayal.
KLAMATH RIVER CLOSES
The summer fishing season
on Klamath River closes Sat
urday evening, June 14, The
river is closed to all angling
from June 15 to September 30.
An error In the closing date
was made In Thursday's Herald
and News staling Sunday was
the final day. But fishing will
stop Saturday until October 1.
Paratroopers
Guard Peace
In Nicosia
NICOSIA. Cyprus (API Britain
is flying paratroopers to this Med
iterranean island colony to
strengthen forces trying to end
continuing clashes between Greek
and Turkish Cypnots. Eleven
Cypriots have been killed since
Saturday.
British plans for the future of
Cyprus to be announced Tuesday
are expected to intensify the
violence by failing fully to satisfy
either the 400,000 Cypriots of
Greek descent or the 100,000
Turks.
The Greeks want the island an
nexed to Greece. The Turks want
Cyprus partitioned if the British
leave.
The situation approached civil
war yesterday with the bloodiest
battle yet. A gang of 300 Greek
Cypriots tried to raid a Turkish
village near Nicosia and was met
with gunfire. Three Greeks were
killed and nine wounded.
British troops headed off part
of the Greek mob, arresting 30
and disarming the rest, but one
group set fire to crops and was
attacked by hidden Turks. Seven
teen Turks were arrested.
In another clash, club-swinging
British troops broke up a Turkish
mob trying to storm a Nicosia po
lice station. Authorities clamped
an earlier curfew on the Turkish
section of town.
Off and on for several years
Greek Cypriots have attacked
British troops in a terror cam
paign for independence and a
chance to join Greece. Now the
British find themselves in the
middle as the Turks strike at
their Greek neighbors in opposi
tion to the campaign.
The War Office in London said
the situation on Cyprus is deter
iorating and more troops are need
ed to bolster the British forces
that make this an East Mediter
ranean strongpoint. About 500
paratroopers are expected to be
flown here tomorrow. Other troops
in England nave been alerted.
Turkish Foreign Minister Fatin
Rushtu Zorlu said in Ankara he
had received a copy of the new
British plan for Cyprus and he un
derstood Athens also had been in
formed. Zorlu refused to reveal
the provisions but said the Turk
ish government would never back
down on partition demands.
Greek Headers have been equal
ly adamant in insisting on self
determination for the island but
have indicated they would settle
for self-government if a definite
date was set for an independence
plebiscite.
Thor Missile
Tested Today
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (UPD
A big Thor intermediate range
missile, which the Air Force will
use as the main stage of its moon
rockets, roared up from Cape
Canaveral today on a routine
test flight.
The towering Thor. some 65
feel tall and five or six feet thick
at its base, was launched without
the two additional high-p oner
stages it will have mounted atop
it tor tne moon snots.
The firing appeared to be suc
cessful. The missile, its heavy ice coat
ing making it look like a giant
ice cream cone, roared off the
launching pad at 8:06 a.m. p.d.t.
It was visible for about four
minutes as it streaked into a part
ly cloudy sky and disappeared
over the Atlantic.
Officials said before the launch
ing that today's test was a "rou
tine test" of the Thor as a ballis
tic missile, not a moon vehicle.
But technicians probably would
get valuable information to help
them ready the missile for the
space launching.
FALLS, OltF.GON, FRIDAY. JL'NVJ 13, 19.S8
Jf k Mwnif '
A BLACK CAT, a ladder, Friday, 13, put 'em all together
and look out! Today, in case you didn't think of It, is Fri
day the 13th, the unluckiest of days in the year, if you're
superstitious, end who isn't, just a little bit? Cat above is
"Thomas," whose mistress is Mrs. Kethy McDonald, pro
prietress of Kay-Mac Kennels on OTI Road where Photog
rapher Don Kettler snapped the shot. ' -
Friday The Thirteenth Is
Today Watch Your Step.'
By JIM PHILLIPS
Better watch your step todav.
It's Friday the 13th, and all
kinds of things can happen when
that combination comes up.
In the first place, the day Fri
day itself is thought to be un
lucky, ...
Its biack reputation dates back
to the death of Christ which oc
curred on a Friday. Eve also was
said to have tempted Adam with
the fatal apple on a Friday. And
hangings were customarily held
on that day.
In olden days, it was common
belief that 12 witches and the dev
il always met on Friday to discuss
evil-doings. The witch theory is
Graham Fears
Communist
Dedication
SAN FRANCISCO (API-Com
munists are out - dedicating the
Christians and will "sweep the
world" unless non - Communist
youlh is willing to dedicate itself
to Christ and "march in His ar
my." Billy Graham said here last
night.
The evangelist told 18.500 people
mostly teenagers jammed into
the 16.500-seat Cow Palace that
"These people In Russia aren't
slaves. Millions arc dedicated.
They're out to change the world."
With all aisles crowded with
standees and an estimated 2.000
turned away, Graham asked his
audience:
"Are you willing to change the
world for Christ?"
"Will you stand and be dedicat
ed? Will you say 'I'll go where
you want me to go, dear Lord.
I II do what you want me to do?
"How are are you ready to go
with God?
"Are you willing to change the
world for Christ?
When he asked them to stand.
an estimated five or six thousand
stood again, most of them young
people.
The "decisions for Christ"
the end of the sermon numbered
1.067, bringing the total for the
Crusade to dale to 23,285. Count
ing the 2.000 who couldn't get in
last night, total attendance now
stands at 637,725. The crusade,
now in its seventh week, ends Sun
day.
Oldsters Still
Stick To Bike
BOGATA, Tex. (API Age
means nothing to the Davis
brothers, who cranked up thfir
motorcycle and had a Joyridc
through this north Texas town.
Charlie Davis is 7.1. Albert Da
vis of Deport is 82. Their motor
cycle, with sidecar, is 42 years
old.
Charlie was a motorcycle racer
and was a racing promoter from
1912 lo 1017 at Iowa Park. He has
kept his 1016 vehicle in perfect re
pair since he moved to Bogata 20
years ago.
In September. Charlie hauled
his motorcycle to the Labor Day
races in Dodge City. Kan., and
won two first place trophies. One
was for being the oldest rider, the
other for the economy run
which he averaged 00.62 miles to
a gallon of gasoline.
also tied up with the Norse goddess
Freya, identified with Friday, who
was banished to the mountains as
a witch.
Friday was thought ati unlucky
day to be horn on (unless, iron
ically, it r-ll on the 13th). and a
poor day. 10 court,, marry and cut
uiigei nans, v ,. ?
As for the number 13, It also
has a religious connection Christ
and his faithful 11 apostles made
12, but Judas, the 13th, betrayed
Him.
Hundreds of years ago, people
firmly believed if 13 persons ate
at a table, pne would die before
the year was over. The supersti
tion was specially prevalent in
France where even now there are
few street addresses or hotel rooms
containing the number "13."
Today is especially a day to
avoid black cats. In the Middle
Ages, they were thought to be mas
cots and friends of witches. After
seven years of such service, it
was believed black cats them
selves turned into witches. Thus
lo cross their path was to invite
trouble.
Egyptians, respecting the cat s
ability to land on all fours, were
certain black ones had more than
one life and finally settled on
nine.
Also today, steer clear ot lad
ders. A ladder leaning against a
wall forms a triangle, which long
ago was symbolical of the Holy
Trinity. To walk under a ladder
was thus to defy the Trinity and
play into the hands of the devil.
In ancient Asia, criminals were
hung from the seventh rung of a
ladder. If you walked under a lan
der, you were thus apt to "catch
death" from those who had de
parted via the rope.
A sure-tire remedy, nowever,
was to cross your lingers im
mediately and keep them that way
until you saw a dog.
Labor Control
Bill Warning
Issued Today
WASHINGTON (AP) Sen
John L. McClellan ID-Ark) told
Senate colleagues Friday they
might wreck the labor control bill
if they load it with controversial
amendments.
The chairman of the Labor Rack
ets Investigating Committeec said
to those seeking even tighter con
Irols, "We can load this bill down
with things I favor and others
favor and we'll get no legisla
tion at all."
He said the Senate Labor Com-
miltee had made 22 changes in its
original bill in line with sugges
tions he made or favored and the
pending measure should be enact
ed to make sure "we have made
some progress."
McClellan took the floor after
Sen. Barry Goldwaler (R-Arizi
called for "plugging more loon
holes" in line with suggestions
.McClellan has made for tighten
ing union controls.
As the senate plugged away in
the second day of debate. 44 new
amendments, mostly offered by
Republicans, put in their appear
ance. Eighteen represented a pack
age of Eisenhower administration
proposals, offered by Sen. H. Alex
ander Smith iR-NJi. Some cov
ered major offoits to rewrite the
bill lo put in more stringent provisions.
Telephone TU 4-8111
No. 6094
Weather
FORECAST Klamalh .. Falls
and vicinity: Fair Friday night
and Saturday. High Saturday 70-
TS. Low tonight 36-43.
High yesterday 59
Low last night 42
' Preclp. last 24 hours
Since Oct. 1 16.68
Same period last year 14.99
Normal for period 11.83
'Not Sporting'
Says Oxford '
OXFORD. England (UP)
Viscount Encombe, expelled
from the university here, for
shooting deer on the campus,
saw himself out in style Thurs
day night with a going-away
party at which champagne
flowed like wine.
The 21-ycar-old heir lo the
137-year-old earldom of Eldon,
with a pet snake draped around
his neck, entertained Ills guests
by beating out jive on a guitar
while Ihey guzzled 30 quarts of
champagne and a dozen or so of
other wines.
Police broke up the parly by
arresting two of the guests who
got into a fight In the college
yard.
Encombe outraged university
authorities by shooting a deer
In the Magdalen College park
and eating choice bits of veni
son broiled over a campfirc.
They gave him his walking pa
pers Thursduy.
The ex-student's futhcr, the
earl of Eldon, has been a lord-in-waiting
to the British crown
for 21 years. He is a graduate
of Magdalen.
Soviets Veto
Return Of
US Airmen
BONN. Germany (AP) The
Russians made it official today
that the United States will have
to deal directly with Communist
East Germany to get buck nine
American Army men and their
helicopter who strayed into the
Red satellite.
The Russians delivered a letter
lo the U. S. Embassy in Bonn
declaring that return of the Amer
icans was not within the com
petence of the Soviet forces."
The letter referred the U. S. au
thorities to the East German gov
ernment. Presumably the United
States now will make some sort
of approach to the satellite offi
cials, since Secretary of State
Dulles said earlier this week that
negotiations with them to secure
the return of the eight officers
and one sergeant would not imply
diplomatic recognition of the Red
German government.
The United States and its allies
do not recognize the East Ger
man government on the ground
that it is an illegal regime im
posed by the Soviet army. The
Americans had asked the Rus
sians as the postwar occupation
authority in East Germany to re
turn the men.
The helicopter got lost in a
thunderstorm Saturday. The Com
munists charged it with violation
of East German air space. East
Berlin newspapers, which are un
dcr light government control,
have accepted Dulles' contention
that negotiations would not imply
recognition of the eastern govern
ment.
TASTY JOB
TUCSON. Ariz. UPD Lillian
Goldstein received at least 200
calls for an ad placed in the
Tucson Daily Citizen but she still
hasn t found the job she wants.
The 4-year-old's ad asked for a
job "tasting pics, all kinds. In-
eluding mud pies, expert advice,
LATE JULY has been set at a target dote when residents of the Sunnyland Addition
may be able to hook up to the city sewer system. Shown here it a portion of the con
struction work being done by the Trio Conttruction Company of Eugene. The sewer lag to
Sunnyland Addition it being built at a bid eott of $19,664.95. Photographer Don Ktttler
happened by when work was progressing at this spot along Shatta Way juir east of fH
intersection with Washburn Way.
Hie lacks Up
Chief Aide In
Influence Ruckus
WASHINGTON (AP) The
White House said Friday President
Eisenhower has no intention of
firing Sherman Adams, his chief
aide who is a target of House in
vestigators. At the same time, press secre
tary James C. Hagerty said there
will be no White House reply to an
earlier question by a reporter as
to whether Adams' good friend,
industrialist Bernard G o 1 d f i n e.
once gave Adams a $700 coat.
Hagerty also said Adams has
rejected reporters' request for a
news conference at which to ques
tion him personally regarding his
relations with Goldfine.
Adams acknowledged Thursday
l-hat on three occasions he con
tacted federal agencies regarding
Goldfine business troubles with
the agencies. Adams said Goldfine
got no favored treatment from the
agencies in return, and that he
Adams sought none.
Adams also acknowledged that
Goldfine paid hotel bills for him
during a period when the wealthy
Boston industrialist was in trou
ble before the Federal Trade
Commission and the Securities and
Exchange Commission.
He- said, however, that it was
only a matter of accepting hospi
tality from an old friend, and that
he had thought Goldfine kept the
hotel quarters on a permanent
basis.
The affair had prompted Rep
Peter F. Mack Jr. (D-Ill) to say
Eisenhower should lire Adams.
Mack said that would be in keep
ing with an Eisenhower campaign
pledge for a government "clean as
a hound s tooth. '
Asked if he could say whether
Eisenhower has any intention of
firing Adams, Hagerty shot back
Sure I can. The answer is of
couse not."
At a news conference Thursday,
Hagerty was asked whether
Goldfine ever gave Adams a $700
vicuna coat. The press secretary
replied he had no information on
that, but would check into the
matter.
When the matter was raised
again at his news conference Fri
day. Hagerty said Adams had set
forth his position in his letter
Thursday to Rep. Orcn Harris ID-
Ark), chairman of a House In
vestigating subcommittee, and
Adams would have nothing more
to say.
The Adams letter to Harris did
not deal with any question about a
coat.
As for the request . that Adams
hold a news conference Hagerty
said that of course, he relayed
that request to Adams, and Adams
rejected it.
Another reporter quoted Maj.
Gen. Harry Vaughn, who was Ar
my aide to President Truman, as
saying on Aug. 31, 1949, that he did
not regard his acceptance of a
Bubbles Will
Have To Wait
For New Mate
PALOS VERDES ESTATES,
Calif. (UPD Bubbles the whale
is going to have to wait a while
longer for male companionship in
her big tank at Marineland.
But for a tunc Thursday, it
looked as If the search for a boy
friend for Bubbles had ended.
A 2,500-pound male pilot whale.
just Bubbles type, was found on
the beach at nearby Torrance.
The news sent a Marineland crew
rushing to the scene.
The big mammal was lashed to
a raft and hoisted on a truck but
died on the way to Marineland's
tanks. Specialists said the whale
was sick and would have died if
he had stayed in the water.
Bubbles, a likely specimen as
female pilot whales go with meas
urements of 72-72-72 from left to
right, sings, dances and shakes
flippers for food in daily perfor
mances at the marine attraction.
Marineland says Bubbles seems
happy enough in captivity but that
undoubtedly in the 1,700-pound
body beats a heart longing lor
male companionship
Z T-iit4 T'XTSh MtoM&fl
freezer unit as a matter involv
ing influence "because I received
it from a dear old personal friend."
l ruman administration critics
had made a big point of such
gifts.
Hagerty was asked whether he
saw any similarity between the
Vaughn incident and the Adams
Goldfine matter.
No." the Dress secretary re
plied.
As for the possibility of Adams
testifying before the Harris invest
igating committee, Hagerty said
he has heard no discuAn of
that.
Mack had at least implied back
ing for his fire-Adams suggestion.
De Gaulle On
March Despite
Army Caution
PARIS (AP)-Premier de Gaulle
today pressed his campaign to
strengthen the constitutional, eco
nomic and colonial sources of
French power. But his army of
ficers in Algeria remained on the
insurgent committees of public
safety which are attacking his
government.
The soldier-premier gave no
signs of knuckling under to right
wing extremists who want him to
disregard the civilian spokesmen
of France s moderate political
parties.
De Gaulle pointedly snubbed
Jacques Soustelle, the darling of
the Algerian insurgents who ar
rived here late yesterday aboard
a special military plane after a
summons from De Gaulle. Aides
said vaguely that Soustelle might
get to see the general sometime
today or tomorrow.
De Gaulle spent yesterday ex
plaining his plans for constitution
al reforms to various national
groups. Today he summoned his
top Cabinet aides to discuss still
secret proposals for ending the
parliamentary chaos that hastop-
piea 25 postwar governments..
He also huddled with his eco
nomic advisers on a new nation
wide bond issue to replenish the
country s depleted store ol foreign
exchange. , .
De Gaulle himself was to kick
off the bond drive with a nation
wide radio and television appeal
tonight. The bonds reportedly will
be sold for gold or hard currency
which Frenchmen hoard in
times of crisis and pegged to the
gold napoleon for eventual repay
ment. De Gaulle's continued associa
tion with such political leaders as
Socialist chief Guy Mollet and
MRP leader Pierre Pflimlin. de
spite the screams of the critics
in Algiers, showed his new aware
ness that their support is needed
to put his plan for constitutional
reforms across with the voters.
On the colonial front the pre.
mier scheduled a conference with
Felix Houphouet-Boigny, a West
African Negro who is one of his
vice premiers.
Crater Road
Will Open
The north entrance road to Cra
ter Lake National Park on High
way 230 will be opened lo traf
fic on Saturday, Tom Williams,
park superintendent, said today.
Official date for the opening of
the lodge is June IS, but the cafe
teria at the rim will open on
Saturday.
Pacific Trailways announced that
it will resume daily bus service
to the park from Klamath Falls,
Bend and Med ford for the 1958
season.
The rim road around the lake
will not be opened until the end
of June or first of July, Williams
said.