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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 23, 1958)
TWO MONDAY. JUNE 23. lflsa HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON "Dennis the menace" I I I . 'SQH80W HAD TO GET We CAT Patricia McKennie, daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Clem Bortis, 640 Roseway Drive, graduated from the Uni versity of Oregon Dental School, Portland, as a den tal hygienist on June 12. Pat, a 1956 graduate of KUHS, is a member of the National Honor Society, and past queen of Bethel No. 6, International Order of Job's Daughters. She is also a member of Alpha Kappa Gamma sorority and was treasurer the past year.( She has accepted a posi tion at dental hygienist in Corvallls, where her hus band, Dale McKennie, plans to finish school. Photo by Wong CRUSHKD CAN'BY (API A farmer toppled irom a traclor Saturday and then was crushed to death beneath It In his field near here. The victim was Andrew Kehrll, 6ft. Police said he apparently fell off the tractor as he was backing It up. PEN DAILY 7:00 P. M ENDS TONIGHT ! GLENN FORDsS; JACK LEMMON 'lifllial'J ANN HASH Feoruro at 8:15 & 10:40 TOMORROW i 4 j. t M nir mm wrwin DODUB CPEN 6:3Q P. M. HOW SHOWING! ' Foohir l& 9:45. Soft's fiJTflE ACRE"! The Story fj They Said Couid H, 1 1 NEVER BE FILMED! M i . r now The Screen Fw alanLADD Is Big Enough... lt f AlA"7Auu into hri iTTrtt-itfr ' l"T" CUM THE TffEE.OrDMr THEy? Reds Stone Red Embassy LONDON (AP) - Several hun dred Russians stoned the West Germany Embassy in Moscow Monday and roughed up two American newsmen. Moscow Radio said the crowd demonstrated in retaliation for an attack on the Soviet Embassy in Bonn last Friday. The Germans were protesting the execution of former Premier Imre Nagy and other leading figures in the Hun garian revolt in 11156. Independent reports reaching London said nearly every window in the West German Embassy was shattered. Moscow appeared to have clamped a strict censorship on news of the demonstration. One Associated Press corre spondent reached the London bu reau by telephone Monday after noon and dictated the start of a news story apparently reporting the ruckus. He said: "A crowd of several hundred banner-waving demon strators Monday attacked . . . At this point the telephone con neclion was cut. The Moscow op erator said the caller had com plcted the call. School Boards Meet Tonight Elementary and high school hoards of education meet tonight at 7:30 In the high school. Roth boards arc slated to dis cuss publicity methods to inform voters of the Issues Involved in the election June 27 for the elemen tary budget and that of July 7 for the high school budget. Also occupying the boards will ho authorization of the hiring of new teachers and administrators for next school year, including an elementary music supervisor and elementary physical education su pervisor. Yreka Wins Safety Nod YllKKA -r- The American Auto mobile Association rocontlv an- rutuncod that Yreka has won an "excellence of pedestrian protec tion" award for its achievement of no pedestrian deaths in li57. Yreka competed in. the annual nationwide pedestrian protection ronteM sponsored by the Calilornia State Automobile Association in northern and central California and Nevada. A total of 1,708 cities participat ed in the contest, and competition was htRh. hatnhlies in -pedestrian tralfic drooped to the lowest point on record last year, the t'SAA reporting that there were 7.1HH1 pedestrian tratfic deaths in l.'.'7 compared with the previous luw of 7,!.i0 in lit.tti. mis WHEELER lAPi - Gordon F. Law. 71. business manager of The Oregon Journal at Portland until his retirement in l!Vi2, died here of leukemia. Euneral services were set for Monday in Portland. Although Law had been ill for some time, he entered the hospital only Friday and died a lew hours later. DOORS CPEN :30 P. M. Ends TUESDAY PROUD REPEL FMlure 7.0.;40 New Evidence Case Of Missing Ore. Flier WASHINGTON (AP) Rep. Charles 0. Porter D-Orel showed new papers Monday which he said "back up to the hilt" a connec tion between U.S. flier Gerald Les ter .Murphy and Dr. Jesus de Ga lindez, who disappeared in 1956. Porter showed the documents to reporters in his office. They were papers which the New York Times Flurry Rises Over Tests CHICAGO (UPI) - A L'niver sity of Illinois physiologist has charged discrcpencics and er rors" in the testimony of two Cal ifornia scientists questioned on the merits of krebiozen, a cancer drug. Dr. Andrew Ivy asked the Cal ifornia Senate Interim Committee on Public Health to investigate testimony offered by Dr. Paul Kirk and Dr. Arthur Furst of the University of California. The scientists told the commit tee May 8 that ampules contain ing krebiozen consisted of noth ing but mineral oil. The commit tee at that time was studying a proposed bill to regulate medical quackery in California. In a letter to the committee re leased Sunday, Ivy said the scientists testimony tended to im ply that the krebiozen ampules were a fraud. He said both scien tists had detected krebiozen in their lests. "I don't know why they ignored it alter they found it." Ivy said "We must stop these false charges against krebiozen. Krebiozen is a white powder which Dr. Steven Durovic. a for mer Yugoslav doctor now in the United States, claimed was pro duced from the blood serum of horses. It was rejected by the American Medical Association as worthless. Kirk and Furst tested the drug at the request of the Cancer Committee of the California Med icai Association. Ike Calls For Atom Power WASHINGTON (AP)-Presidcnt Eisenhower Monday called on Congress for swift approval of a multi-million dollar international agreement providing for construc tion of six major nuclear power reactors in Europe by 19(53. Terming the project urgent, Eisenhower sent the lawmakers a special message asking for ap proval at. this session. The President described the pro gram as "a first step toward mu tually beneficial co-operation in the peaceful applications of atomic energy." Under the program, the United States would sell to the six na tions which make the European Atomic Community (Euratom) about 30.000 kilograms of uranium 235. The present price for that much of the material is about 480 million dollars. The 350-million-dollar cost of the construction of the nuclear power reactors will he borne bv the Euratom nations, the White House said, with provision by the United Slates, through the Export-Import Itank. fur a long lerm line of credit up to 135 million dollars. The European nations and the United States also plan to estab lish a jointly-financed research program to improve performance of the reactors. James C. Hagerty. White House press secretary, said he had no information on the cost of that phase of the program. CONFAB SALEM (API The Oregon Slate Pharmaceutical Convention opened here Monday with 250 per sons attending. Dean George Crossen of the Oregon Stale College school of pharmacy spoke at the morning session. A golf tournament was sched uled lor allernoon. Yreka Residents To Vote On Bond Issue, Loan For School YRKKA A $113,000 bond issue and a $295,000 slate loan for the construction of a senior elementary M-hool will be voted on by resi dents in the YrcKa Klementary School District on July 15. The proposed $400 000 building would be dcMgned to handle some ;'00 seventh and eighth grade pu pils besides rooms lor special sci ence, shop, homemaking. arts and cralls. A 22-acrc silo abutting the present Jackson Street School is the pniosed sile for the school. It has been pointed out by Rub er Reynolds, superintendent ol the Yreka Klementary School District, that the Yreka Elementary Dis trict tax rate. :tH cents last year, would not be increased According to slate regulations, a school district must assess a minimum tax o 40 cents in order lo get a slate loan, local bonds to be paid lirst. the state receiving Ihe rest of the tax income, if any. The expedient eftect ol the regu lations would he lo furnish a $295, OOO loan to Ihe Yreka school riis Irut Irom the stale which would not hae to be repaid until local bonds are retired, and then only is much as can be repaid within the next lo years. The remaining slate apportionment alter 30 vears becomes an outright grant to lje local nisirict. The local bond issue of $lU.D0o Uncovered In I said earlier were In Murphy's handwriting. "I have no doubt and the Jus tice Department has no doubt as to their authenticity, he said. Porter long has been interested in the case, particularly since Murphy s parents live at Eugene, Ore., in his congressional district. Dr. Galindez. an opponent of the Trujillo regime in the Domini can Republic, disappeared in New York on the night of March 12, 1956." There have been reports that he was flown to the Dominican Republic by Murphy, who himself later disappeared. These reports were rejected by Morris L. Ernst, who was hired by the Dominican government to make an investigation of the Ga lindez case. The State Department said con sular officials found the newly disclosed documents in a steel file in Murphy's apartment in Ciudad Trujillo. capital of the Dominican Republic. Porter wired Ernst Monday say ing: "Be pleased to make Gerald Murphy papers available to you in my office your earliest con venience. Hope you will examine them." "I'd just like to see what he says to them. His report was so fantastic. Porter added. He commented that the new papers were not available to Ernst before Ernst made his re port. Porter said he was going to ex amine the papers closely himself "they're going to be part of my refutation of the Ernst re port." He said he had a letter from Murphyjs parents empowering him to receive the newpapers and he received them from the Jus tice Department Monday morning. The papers will go to Murphy's parents, Porter said. Adams Will Not Run HANCOCK. N.H. (AP) Sher man Adams Monday declined an invitation to seek the Republican gubernatorial nomination in New Hampshire's Sept. 9 primaries. I feel 1 have a job to finish here, the top presidential assist ant wrote from Washington to a former federal judge who asked Adams to re-enter the political arena in his home slate. Adams served as New Hamp shire governor from 1949 to 1953 In a letter to. Albert Levitt of Hancock, Adams said: ' Words are inadequate to ex press my appreciation for your telegram. The thought is indeed nattering and heart-warming. However. I feel I have a job to finish here. Thank you never theless. Kind regards. . Levitt, a former U.S. District Court judge for the Virgin Islands, wired President Eisenhower's chief aide last Tuesday: 'Will you accept nomination for governor of New Hampshire.' Hundreds ot your admirers who believe in your honesty and prob ity aro ready to nominate you and work for your election. Tokyo Rose To Stay At Home PORTLAND (AP) The 41sl Infantry Division Assn. apparently will have to get along without Tokyo Rose at its convention here next month. The association had extended an invitation to the woman who made broadcasts for Japan in World War II, but her attorney said she had been advised to stay at home. I he woman, Mrs. Iva D Aquino, has lived in Chicaco since being paroled from a federal prison, where she served a term for treason for making the broad casts. The division had said that, des pite the propaganda, the broad casts bad been refreshing and amusing to U.S. soldiers on island campaigns in the Pacific. must be passed before the loan n( $295,000 can be received, although boih will be listed separately on the ballot. Reynolds stated that construction of the new senior elementary school is urgent due lo "the big gest kindergarten signup we've ever had." and the elementary population increasing at the rate of 60 to 65 each year. The pres ent figure ol Yreka Elementary School students is 1070. According to Reynolds, the all purpose room of Ihe Gold Street School has already been prepared to use as a makeshift classroom lor this coming semester, and the schools will go o.i double sessions the next year, unless the new facilities are available. TV SERVICE COMPLETE All Malin All Moeh Call BARABOO'S 133 I. Mala PK 4-4614 Motorola feolr DELEGATES to Girls State, chosen by the Melin American Legion Auxiliary Unit No. 84, were Susie Wilson, left, alternate delegate, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hab Wilson, and Susan, Chernabaeff, right, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sam, Chernabaeff, 'all of Malin. Susan attended the annual Girls State activities at Willamette University, Salem, June 16 through June 22. Photo by Blohm Death Rate In Diseases Up SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) A California health officer reports that the death rate from a group of serious bronchail and lung ail ments has increased by half dur ing the past six years in Califor nia. ' - Dr. John R. Goldsmith of the California Department of Public Health told the American College of Chest Physicians Sunday that the death rate from one lung ail ment has multiplied four times in the same period. And, said Goldsmir air pol lution is the No. 1 suspect for this unpleasant development. The disease which increased four times is emphysema, a con dition which causes thickening of the lung tissue and loss of lung elasticity. The other ailments are, he said, bronchitis and bronchiec tasis, a chronic bronchial disease. Goldsmith said these ailments now cause more sickness than tuherculosis in California. Dr. Albert Roberts, head of the U.S. Public Health Service's air pollution research program, agreed with Goldsmith that pol luted air has been proved to have a bad effect on health. Roberts said: "The evidence is striking. Our Pocatello Wins Praise TiMP.rcni.tNR t.nncp rv 'API The example of Pocatello. Idaho, was hpld lin tn a chnnl meeting here as the way an all our. nopeiess school problem was ucKea. The Weclprn raainnsl m..tinn of the National Citizens Council for Roller Srhnnlc was Inlrl oi lie closing session Saturday! that ptreni groups were joined at rocaieiio in raising tunos by civic, labor and business groups. SlIDt. Harrv Wallace caiH that when a student testing program could not be financed from avail able school monev. nrivntu citi zens helped set up the program. volunteer teacmng help came, Ino, he said, from scientists, doc tors and cnlleee nrnfpssnrs ihe result, he concluded, was a curriculum in which we have confidence." City Workers To Get Insurance PORTLAND (AP) - City work ers will be able to sign up soon for a medical insurance program arranged by the League ot Oregon Cities. The league's executive crtmmil- tee, which met here Saturday and Sunday, gave final approval to the program. It provides medical and hospital benefits for city employes and their families. The committee also: Kndorsed continued federal aid lo cities for construction of sewage systems, urban planning and air port improvement. Opposed a plan by 16 telephone companies which would shift Ihe burden of franchise fees from operating expense to subscribers' bills. OKI. SCATS SALEM (APi Oregon's dele gates to Girls Nation in Washing Ion. DC, next month will be Edith Brown of Salem and Char lene Snider of Portland. They were chosen Saturdtv t Ihe closing session of Girls State, the annual citizenship tr..iinj event. , Alternates are Jo?i Aldahl of Hood River and Shcrne Fraser of Moro, NOTICE Party Now Formulating 24 Hiarfttafe Patrd m with ta munlcation fMHQ M to contact ... Ranchers BuiineS HfMa Property Owncri Phont TU 2-4787 P.O. Box 921 Bronchial In California efforts to give men longer lives and keep them healthier in their old age may be defeated by con taminated air." When the question of cigarettes came up, Roberts suggested that cigarette smoke may not differ too much from smog in its effect on bronchail and lung tissue. Goldsmith termed smoking a torm ot personal air pollution. CITY BRIEFS Girl Scouts Attention. Registra tion for August 2 to August 12 ses sion at Camp Esther Applegale is filled. The second session, August U to August 22, is still open for Established Camp Registration. Sojourners The regular meeting will be held at the Willard Hotel Wednesday, June 25, at 1:30 p.m. There will be no luncheon but cards will be played as usual. For further information call Mrs. Marv Reed at TU 2-5444. Meeting The Order of Rainbow for Girls No. 57 will hold a meet ing tonight, June 23, at the Scot tish Rite Temple. All Masonic and Eastern Star members are wel come. All Rainbow Girls are urged to attend. Postponed Merrill Lost River Garden Club tour has been post poned on account of the weather, Initiation Women of the Moose Chapter 467 will have an initiation meeting Tuesday, June 24, at 8 p.m. at the Moose Hall. Potluck Klamath County Farm Bureau members will entertain at a potluck luncheon, 12 noon, Fri day, June 27, at the Henley Grange Hall. All farm women in the Basin are invited to attend. The 3-R Club will meet Tues day, June 24 at 12:30 p.m. at the grange hall, corner of Shasta and .Vadison streets for luncheon and cards. Neighbors of Woodcraft Thim ble Club will meet at the home of Ruth Novotny, 4407 Barlett Street. June 25 at 8 p.m. Members and friend:, are invited. Meeting Aloha Chapter. No. 61. OES will hold a regular meeting Tuesday, June 24. at 8 p.m. All members are cordially invited. CLEAN BLOOMFIELD, N. J. (AP) William Lair said he would like to clean up for today's appearance in Magistrate's Court. A policeman took him to the prisoners shower room in the basement. Then the guard stood outside the door, listening to the shower, waiting. finally he decided Lair must be clean and entered. He found the room empty, the shower still run ning. Police figure Lair climbed through an unlocked basement window. """""U""" """"'"""'""llt...UIII.i,1,U,U, IlltllillUIIUIIIUIIIIII.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,!,,,,,,,,, ,, mMmmilli America know ! fawnte is Light, mild 86 proof Old Crow by I far outsells any bourbon in the land Riaht To Work Initiative In i aiifArma rarnc nanru nnr VUIIIVIIIIM SACRAMENTO (UPI) - The secretary of state's office an nounced today that the right to work initiative measure naa qual ified for California's Nov. 4 gen eral election ballot with a total of 354 153 signatures. Deputy Charles J. Haggerty said supplemental petitions submitted today contained 132.6B5 signatures. The original tiling coniaineo. mr 45S signatures. The initiative has helped widen a breach between two top Repub licans running for election in the November election. Gov. Goodwin J. Knight and Sen. William F. Knowland (R-Calif.L Knnwland supports the initiative and this has become one of the major issues in his campaign for the governorship against Demo crat Edmund G. Brown, who op posed the issue. Knicht. making a bid for the Senate seat being vacated by Spud Committee Members Named PORTLAND (AP) - The U.S. Department ot Agriculture has announced appointment of new members of the Oregon-California Potato Committee. The new members will serve two-year terms beginning July 1 on the committee which adminis ters the federal marketing agree ment on potatoes grown in all Oregon counties except Malheur. The producer members are: Dis trict 1 John McLauchlin, Bend, and F. J. Carpenter, Madras; Dis trict 2 Edwin Petrasek, Malin: District 4 Wendell Schey, Tule lake, Calif. New handler members are: Dis trict 2 Wesley McKaig, Klamath Falls: District 3 Phil A. Livesley Portland. FIRE FLORENCE (AP) Damage was estimated at $75,000 in the fire that swept through a business block of this Oregon coastal town Saturday night. Cause of the fire, which dam aged a sports wear shop, a station ery store and the town's liquor store was not determined. The .blaze broke out at about 11:30 p.m., and fanned by 20 mile-an-hour winds, shot flames 75 feet into the air. It was brought under control two hours later by Flor ence fire fighting crews. Go G&UWflOiJLlL MARTIN -SENOUR SHAKE PAINT Never Before Such a Wide Array of Colors for: ShafcM Hand-iptH iMnalM Rough Burfactd lumtxM Regular wood shfnglaa Smooth turfaco siding Flowi on avanly and uniformly.,, covart sharp, rouoh wood adgea , . , safeguards against sun, storms, dirt, dust. Glamorous colors otvs your noma dazzling naw beauty. Sm mm today I YOUR. MARTIN-SEN OUR DEALER HARDWARE 528 Main TU 4-5482 -w w w CF 4 its boumon and if s m Wig lx r.. Ate :- mr--r-.s , . K. BY Ml. D,SI. proo. CO. KENTUCKY STRAIGHT 60UOON WHIS BTMIIWI VI Knowland, opposes right fo work and as a result apparently has refused to give his full support to Knnwlanri'c ramnnion Los Angeles Teamsters Union memhpr Howard R U'uott .... nitii'A CMTfflarv nt tkA r;: Committee for Democracy in La bor Unions, asked Brown's Sacra-, mento office tn title and summar ize Ihe proposed constitutional. amendment Jan. . The names of the committee's membership were not made public. Brown's title was issued Jan 23' but the initiative was not called by the name "right to work." The summary and title is a iiiuiiiuua,, utraenpuun oi ine ini- tiative. Brown titled it "Employer-' F'mnlnvA Rolalinne Initio,:. slitutional Amendment." jc ou.Minaijr Bclm Uldl mB prO- nosed constitutional amendment. umnlH "nrnhihit a j employe organizations from en tering into collective bargaining, or other agreement which estab- lish membership in a labor or ganization. . . as a condition ot employment. . ." OREGON CITY (API Reginald Rogers Rhone II, 23, of Portland. was killed Sunday when his motor cycle plunged off the road into a tree near here. Police said he was beheaded when the cycle skidded 4 leet into tne tree. He was Oregon's seventeenth traffic fatality this month in the Associated Press tabulation. So far this year there have been 159 iramc aeains. ' NOTICE TRUCK OWNERS IF YOU HAVE A PICKUP TO TRADE GET IN TOUCH WITH US AT Duqan & Mast CHEVROLET IMMEDIATELY WE HAVE 11 BUYERS WAITING FOR GOOD USED PICKUPS. ; WE'LL PAY, BIG EXTRA ALLOWANCE j j FOR YOU TO ! j APPLY ON A j ! NEW '58 j I CHEVY I PICKUP ! STEPSIDE i j OR NEW FLEETSIDE ! ! ' MODELS ! UNUSUAL OPPORTUNITY SEE US FOR DETAILS Dugan & Mest Chevrolet 410 So. 6th St. Ph. TU 4-3101 OLD CROJJ