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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 19, 1958)
ffST.E 8 A HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON THURSDAY, JUNE 19. 195.8 FRANK JENKINS Editor BILL JENKINS Managing Editor FLOYD WYNNE City Editor Off Again By FLORENCE JENKINS I knew it would happen. I sup pose it just had to get worse be fore it gets better. Our doss' favorite breakfast ce real is now being discontinued and a new, improved, full-meal type of canine confection is slated to replace it. A slip of paper fell out of the package this morning as 1 was fixing breakfast for Sunny and North. Sunny lacks one day of be ing a year old and is still grow ingwe hope. North, the legiti male son of Jupiter Narey, will eat any time there is food, so long as it is often. They enjoy their breakfast food with milk, during June Dairy Month and every other month, and come about seven o'clock they ask for breakfast, not a full meal type mixture that they get in the evening. Dogs are like people, except maybe smarter. They like a var led menu to add enjoyment to their food just like the rest of us They are staunch supporters of Klamath Basin's agricultural econ omy, too. Sunny has a special wag for bits of leftover roast beef for dinner. They know Klamath Grade A milk is tops and you oughta sec them go for fried po tatoes. How am I going to explain to them that there isn't any more of the usual for morning? They are the ultimate consumer in this case and there wasn't any consum er survey before Ihe manufac turer decided on a change. They're not going to take kindly to not .being consulted about this and I'm going to have trouble convincing them that the new stuff is better and oven more full of ingre dicnls. After all, there is the language barrier. I'lifrozcii Ry HAL ROYLE NEW YORK (AP) Mnny life long scholars of the great Amcri can frozen female face have thought it could he improved Their varying approach to the problem probably measures their age and optimism. Being older and perhaps there fore more cynical, I leaned to Ihe theory that it was belter to get along with life than fight it and I came lo accept the great Ameri can frozen female face as inevit able. I came to feel it was natural lo shake womanhood by her lifted nose rather than her withheld hand. American girls! 1 Then 1 met Sophia Lorcn. . A living bonfire. A tawny surprise. A girl with an unfrozen face, a tall-stemmed girl cursed as she walked away with a rearward muscular schizophrenia, some muscles going clockwise, some counter-clockwise. A male human heart could only extend sympathy lo her in her handicap. Her walk, though, had a mix lure of crticlness and kindness nail-pannier, nall-gazelle. It was all the art of llaly, ambulant She had the presence and se curity of a sunrise. Her expres sinn from moment to moment was a race of rainbows. "1 am slill young," she said "Life is always exciting lo me. 1 am never bored. "I have worked since 1 was 15, 1 have worked hard. 1 have made 2(i pictures. "1 don't know what it means to have a holiday. 1 don't know whether 1 want one. Rut yes. now that I am married. I want a holi day." t'nlike most American women, whose conduct is ruled strictly from a cerebral Irvel ias every feller knows1. Sophia moves as the amoeba does. "1 neer look a lesson in act ing." she said. "1 am very in st indue. "If I leel siunelhiiii;, I can dn it. If I don't feel it. it is very difficult lor me. "Rut rerthing is still new to pw It is nice when you can le.un somelhini; ne every day, I have just started li(e I haven't lived " As she l;i . d Sophia npi"d fia.mtilts of lined with long .'ndr In (' i s and st.cd her-all Mh I li in. Iha ctusit of famil itniy m lit hour wiih I'm "I a. it veivthug and t!t" sir laid. "Hut tie eB'i tawicin (: I lv i.irago 8J1H fruit a0 I 0 "1 d t 1 t lo if cn I work; tt-we 'to 4o 9 :tko us '.i,i Mi ' " es ww icHca'snR her lestt fifei. "IBS' V) Oil Tna." bnegj ' ag b e?ai fo'.J a M of ;ie sj: aff Boae i The eC (f lhG .nJovj (g) halirB) 9 rig) S nnl mat Mq I O Enured u atcond claa matur il uv pou oifiw ai Klamath Pall. Ore., on Aututt 30. 190. under art al Corwnsa. March I. in EftVICES: ASSOCIATED PRE88 UNITED PRESS AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Serring Southern Oregon Ad Northern California "Nothing bores me. Acting is an excitement to me. I want to do more. . .not because of ambi tion. . .but because it is a pleas ure to me. . .a release." Her honey-warm eyes widened. There was this sudden indefinite feeling, the eternal tug of awe and surrender that a man feels in facing a leopard, a leopard sud denly intellectual and without claws. There is something vital and alive and warm and human and near about the face of Sophia Loren. And there is only one difference between it and the great set fro zen American female face you can see every day on any street. One looks alive. IiikI ion Ry JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON (API-Just how much friendship was involved in Sherman Adams' free-loading at the expense of Boston millionaire Rernard Goldfinc should come to light in Goldfinc's income tax re turns. Adams, President Eisenhower's right-hand man, calls Goldline, a textile manufacturer, an old-time family friend. But a key question is this: wnen uoldlinc paid the more than $2.00(1 in hotel bills which Ad ams charged to him, did he do it as a friend or did he deduct the money from his income tax as a busjness expense? Adams in the picture emerging from a House subcommittee's in quiry into the Adams-Goldfine re lalionsnip does not appear as a fast man with a buck. A subcommittee invesligalor re ported that Adams, while slaying in Goldline's hotel suite at Gold fine's expense, not only charged lo Goldfinc one dollar for a bowl of Ice but a 25-cent lip for the bellboy who brought it. Adams told the subcommittee Ihis week that Goldline had invit ed him lo use without cost hotel suites in Boston, New York and Plymouth, Mass. and Adams did Friend or not. Uoldfine in turn used Adams who cooperaled in being used lo obtain from the Federal Trade Commission infor mation w'hieh Ihe subcommittee counsel says should nol, by FTC rule and by federal law, be re vealed. When Gnldfine got In trouble with the FTC for allegedly mis labeling a fabric instead nf go ing to the agency to find out what it was all about he went to Ad ams and asked him. . Adams asked the FTC for infor mation, got It, and turned it over to Goldfinc Subcommittee coun sel Robert Lishman savs DTC rules and law forbid giving nut this information. It contained the name of Ihe company complaining against Goldline. Goldfinc Is supposed to he called before Ihe subcommittee. I.ishman then will he in a position to ask him whether he deducted Adams' hotel bills as a business expense. The Intern. il Revenue Service will not reveal Ihis kind of infor mation to newsmen. Sometimes this information is given to a con gressional committee, but only with presidential consent. At his news conference yester day Eisenhower was asked if b would order the Internal Revenue j service 10 release Hie Goldline in come tax returns. He avoided a direct answer. Adams denied he knew he was violating otljier an FTC rule or federal law in giving Ihe FTC in formation lo Goldline. He plead ed inexperience, although he's tin one Msenhovver depends on most in running Ihe gov ernment. I Poqo Ot HAM VtJu, Tag Fl-fA ON WHO V.B PC6sCP R3 NATIONAL. SOO-PCSAVACV ift KACB to TUB, MOOM-'W OUT. tMK, ttow ct kw-1 KB Th , a? pea jcv VCVU. IUV0 ytpm 3 tt. to" 1 (I Eisenhower let it be known yes terday he would nol fire Adams. He said his No. 1 assistant might be imprudent hut he was honest and besides, Eisenhower said, "1 need him." It's still questionable how long Adams will stay. Republicans run ning for reelection to Congress this year will have the Adams Goldfine case wrapped around their necks by the Democrats. They're not happy at the pros pect. (joldfine appears to be a man who not only does a lot of talk ing but brags about his relation ship with public officials and the gifts he gives them. It remains to be seen what the subcommittee gets out of him. Popular l;isliiii Ry SAM DAWSON NEW YORK Next to guess ing when Ihe nation's new busi ness boom will he born, the most popular pastime today is naming the industry that will be the proud papa. This week spokesmen for vari ous lines have predicted their in dustry is destined to lead the na tion out of the recession. A farm equipment maker says sales are so much better this year that a revival in production of tin machinery can set the pace, nol only by paring unemployment rolls in that industry but by giving the metals companies welcome or ders. Tied in with Ihis is the belief throughout the farm belt that the rise in farm income has both thwarted the recession in those slates and set the stage for the next big push upward for the en tire economy. A spokesman for the construc tion industry says the mantle of new leadership clearly is falling upon its shoulders. Another. speaking for the housing segment of the industry, says that the first stirrings of better days ahead in that field show clearly that more home building is already charting the course for a general advance. Another construction division, highway building, holds that the big spending of public money just ahead will start things rolling for everybody. n Detroit where optimism about Ihe sales allure of forthcoming models is always a standard com modity, ihe cause for and the tim ing of the next big advance is con sidered to be the unveiling of 195!) models and Ihe expected crush of buyers. Air conditioner makers say all that this country really needs is a series of heat waves. They and Iheir brethren building house hold appliances see the signs of a home building revival as pointing the way to good times. A slock exchange leader says that what's needed is a reform of the tax structure so thai people would have more money to buy securities, thus generating enough public confidence to pull Ihe econ omy up by its bootstraps. Some old sobersides continue to think that consumers in general will dale the upturn. Let them start in large numbers lo spend more and save less, and factories will run full speed again. The fact that consumer spending was cut back only slightly has kept the slump from snowballing, it's true. A new buying spree would gladden many hearts. The trouble with consumers, however, is that you just can't tell what they're going lo do or w hen they are going lo do it. They make up their individual minds about what they can and will buy. One spur to the economy that somf see coming soon is Ihe in- creased pay amounting to one billion dollars a year that will 1 but u iNfcn ' PONT fiOTTA 60 , rut onuv 0M?4 WHAT VMM. j8ivf SOu9 WILL TAJCI j IM iff rtiij-f ii i mi o SUBSCRrPTION RATES CARRIER I MONTH I I 80 MONTHS t 9 00 I YEAR 116.00 MAIL I MONTH ( I 50 I MONTHS ITU I YEAR 112 00 soon be in the jeans of federal workers as a result of a coming pay boost for some and an ac complished one for others. Some of the new spending money will be in a lump sum under retroac tive provisions. That could hit the market place quickly. There are even a few observers of the passing scene who say the chemise will lead us down the re covery path. They argue that if it continues lo sell in the new fall lines, it will make old wardrobes out of date. And when a year from now the chemise is out of date itelf, why. still another outfit must be pur chased. All that money changing hands will make everyone feel better everyone but husbands. KHfcr Soil By ELMER C. WALZEIl NEW YORK (UPI)-Better sell bonds, says Arthur Wiesenberger. head of the stock exchange firm that bears his name. He doesn't expect an early de cline in the bond market compar able to the first half of 1957, bul he thinks that bond prices may sag over a period of months and then resume their long-term downward trend, probably some time next year. Last September this expert said "Better buy bonds." That was a time when money rates were easing in favor of bonds and the bond market was getting into a rise that has carried on for some time, Bonds enjoyed a sharp advance the sharpest on record with interest rates in their sharpest decline on record, according to Wiesenberger. "We have been in a broad de cline of bond prices since 1!)46 and wo see no reason for believ ing the long term trend has ended." says this expert. "There have been, as in 1953-54 and recently, rallies against the trend, and there will be more But the long trend is likely lo continue downward, and we think the recent rally has about run its course. "Tbo very weight of Treasury offerings in the period ahead will act as a damper to further ad vances in bond prices, and the Treasury will endeavor to extend maturities at every opportunity. Once business activity revises, late this year, or early next, the corporale demand for funds wi again start to rise. Mocks are, of course, more attractive and more efficient long term investments than bonds; bul the latter can afford temporarily favorable and profitable, havens for investment, as in recent months." Wiesenberger does not believe there is reason for expecting an early decline in the bond market comparable to that of Ihe first half of 1957. But he believes that the bond prices may sag over a period of months and then re sume their long-term downward trend, probably some time next year. At the same time Wiesenberger anticipates continuing inflationary trends over the years. These alone would work against the bond market and in favor of stocks. He admits that his view does not rule out the prospect of siza hie reactions and declines, as the past quarter century has demon strated. Rut it still appears part of vvisnom. wnen making selections for long-term holding to empha size industries, corporations and Storks ill nnsilinn In hnnnfit I from, rather than to be hurt by. Ihe Ions term "process of inflation Such nitrihules as debt, leverage, grow lb. low labor cost, low turn over ami unnertirounn reserves are still desirable. "It is important to rememher however, that, as the history ol all inflations shows, there is ne automatic means of hedging against or prohting by inflation Earning power will still be the chief criterion of v price." and By I'nited Press Intel -national TORONTO Greta Gxt, . German immigrant maid arrested lim Wednesday as the suspected ranirxn kidnaper of little Ji Keilnun It om his suburban Mrnit real home, clauririi ii the victim of nnr.itn identity "1aNe aonietnaty is usieg m naiv.e s.meriud rray hate frr ,win:rre i ant mj oaviie f CB Cd " tW VORh. (ljvft lau Cif Wa'IJ'' .':e.!itlr t, 4. W.li attcr rev('iij that 'ii t.iay bad been broken I Mh Ihe striking Marine gtf4v9 R?neticial Assertion: I "I told them we'ie ail thro 'talking' They'll Do It Every It H4PPENS AT EVERY 8I& SHlMDIG-THE IMVITE TO THE SPECIAL LITTLE P4i?Ty Away FROM THE M4DDIN0 THRONG"- Dominican Congress Asks Withdrawal From All U.S. Aid; Sulks Over Rebuke CIUDAD TRU.IILLO, Domini can Republic (AP) Stung by crit icism in the American Congress of young Rafael Trujillo's play boy habits, the Dominican Con gress has asked the government to pull out of all U. S. aid agree ments. Under one of the pacts the United States maintains a station in the Caribbean republic to track its guided missiles. The Dominican Congress, a rub ber stamp for Dictator-Generalissimo Rafael Trujillo Sr., made no mention of the fancy presents Lt lien. Trujillo Jr. gave to movie actresses Zsa Zsa Gabor and Kim Novak. Instead in its resolution Con gress said- "the attacks that some lu. S.) congressmen have direct ed against the Dominican Repub lie in terms offensive to her na tional dignity would not have oc curred if U. S. aid had not been accepted. . The resolution forwarded to President Hector Trujillo. Ihe gen eralissimo's brother, asked for an end to agreements providing U. S. military aid of $(i00,000 a year; technical assistance, and cooper ation on peaceful uses of atomic energy. If the Trujillos cancel the missile-tracking agreement, the Unit ed States could look next door to Haiti, which has offered to serve as a tracking base. Young Trujillo at 2!) is head of the Dominican air force and thu week was made head of the com bined chiefs of staff. U. S. con gressmen first criticized him for his lavish expenditures in Holly wood when he was supposed to ne attending the u. o. Army s Command and General Staff School in Leavenworth, Kan. The Dominican government countered that Trujillo was a rich man and was spending his own money. Things might have calmed down PLEA Wendell J. Eggsman, accused in a grand jury indictment of assault with a dangerous weapon against James Campagna March 31 near Chiloquin. will enter a plea in circuit court June 30. in a.m. Eggsman was arraigned Wednes day afternoon hefore Judge David R. Vandenherg. The grand jury returned an indictment against him Tuesday. DANCE! SHOW! ARMORY WED. JUNE 25 In Ptrson The Nation'i Most Versatile Entertainer JOHNNY CASH and the TENNESSEE TWO pluf WALLY LEWIS DOT ttCOIDS "WhitB Bakki 'tllMl,, DON DEAL ttA 8K4BCIS Wa" "IffiMt polo ' aw4 "THI raMlKS,'" MTKMH ""I 9 1 12 00 Par Orien Ot ic : : . j 3 m Time TO MV SUITE"" J TU AT r IIPT Ll'L I THIS IS IT- r wp'i i .frTmiTOP II .... .,r V 13-r y.i I this rat pjce-justI 1tp' Jfi,T ,c ""v" sr" 'yt PHOBIA AH' ME- M J4MMED WORSEn, 'vX J JUST THE FOUR OP It TH4M THE M4IN JV Nx 2H i US FOR A QUIET I B4LLROOM " Yf2iC I if Rep. Charles B. Brownson, an Indiana Republican, hadn't re vealed last week: that Trujillo Jr. vvas-n t graduating from Leaven worth because he hadn't finished the course. The generalissimo re taliated with an anti-U. S. blast. ordered 30 Dominican cadets and officers out of U. S. military scnoots, and summqned his Con gress to act. Young Trujillo. who Is divorc ing his wife, has returned to Hollywood. Zsa Zsa said she would try to find him a new spouse and would throw a parly for him. aboard his family yacht, which came to California to sail him home. AMERICAN BAPTIST -CHURCH Muilo Rinm. AlUmont Jr. Blab Snno South oth Sunday Servfcei 1 1 a.m. J. J. J C. rrirwrnWr $wg ffle il 1bWb feft?ffeaiW0 4nt"t By Jimmy Hatlo THIS I REGULAR LONDON (UPII-James E. Nib- lock commits his burglaries like clockwork. Police said Niblock confessed breaking into about .121) homes "between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. from Monday to Friday, as I never go out stealing on Satur day or Sunday." True Fruit the taste 7A CANADA I family Size. Quality Value. Have you heard? The following stores are It's convenient, quick and easy to shop down town on Friday nights! Theis stores ara staying open for your convenience; it enables tha wnola family to shop together at a time when you can really look around for your best values. It's a high time to do that summer shopping, too, and selections are good now. Saa you downtown this Ffiday night! Block's Shoe Store Hartfield's Market Basket Newberry Penney Co 8th Montgomery Ward F.W.Woo!wartKC$t, Bank Theft Falls Flat PORTLAND (AP)-A dishwash. er was arrested here late Wed nesday, moments after robbing a downtown Portland bank of (A20. When three guards surrounded him near the door, Howard Borck Hansen. 33, Portland, meekly gave one of them all the money. Everybody else gets away with murder. Why can't 1?" he wailed as police and FBI agents question ed him in the lobby of the U. S. National Bank of Portland. Hansen was jailed without or- -mal charge. , Teller Audrey Ryan said a man had stepped up to her cage with one hand in his pocket and said, "This is a holdup." Mrs. Ryan said she asked if the man were kidding. The robber added that he was serious and wanted all of her $20 bills. Mrs. Ryan scooped out the money. As the robber dashed across the bank lobby with it, sha motioned wildly to the guards. The guards stopped Hansen only a few steps from the door. Vac. Cleaner Repairs Spicialixed Servici on all makes Parts - Bagi - Filters DEAN'S STARK'S 122 Sa. 9th ' TU 4-7193 ' TloHer not 9 " V one s never ORANGE flavor with of tree-ripened oranges. 71 1 Main St. 8th & Main Sts. 9th & Pine Stj. 825 Main St. 8th & Main Sa 9th & Pir fft 81 1 Main St. mem