Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 23, 1958)
MONDAY. JUNE 23. 1958 HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PAGE SEVEM By Demo Primary Marked Fist Fights BOSTON (AP) - Fist fights, foot stomping, hissing and shout ing broke up the Massachusetts Democratic pre-primary conven tion before completion of business Sunday. The outbreak came during bal loting for endorsement of a candi date for state attorney general. Three veteran campaigners were seeking the party's endorse ment for that office in the Sep tember primaries. Two of the candidates hurled hitter charges at each other after the convention recessed hastily to preve.it further outbreaks. Endicott Peabody, one of t h e candidates, accused supporters of second candidate, Boston City Councillor Edward J. McCormack of trying to steal the party en dorsement. He said in a statement: "Throughout the convention and increasingly so during the final ballot several McCormack dele gates were openly voting empty seats as delegates. "During and before their first ballot there were numerous stances of money being cut on the floor." McCormack retorted that Pea- body's statement was "complete Lv false." The Republicans on June 14 en dorsed Christian A. Herter Jr., a member of the governor's com cil, for attorney general. He is the son of a former Massachu setts governor now U.S. undersec retary of state. McCormack is a nephew of Rep. John W. McCormack (D-Mass), the House majority leader. Pea body, a former Harvard football ftar, is the son of the Rt. Rev. Malcolm E. Peabody, Protestant Kpiscopal bishop of central New York. McCormack was only nine votes short of endorsement on the third ballot when the ruckus broke up the meeting. Joseph D. Ward, Bos ton and Fitchburg attorney, was second and Peabody trailed in the balloting. Gov. Foster Furcolo, Lt. Gov. Hobert F. Murphy and U.S. Sen. John F. Kennedy were endorsed (or second terms. OPEN SEASON (Cam iijfciTu "May I interrupt?" 'Planned Parenthood' Move Gains Strength In Protestant Bodies Today Boiling Controversy Of Littie Rock Bubbles Up Again; Suspension Queried LITTLE ROCK. Ark. (AP) - The stage was set today for an other legal round in the boiling controversy over racial integra tion at Central High School. Negro attorneys were prepared for another appearance in U. S WRONG -MILWAUKEE. Wis. - When radar speed Imp failed to trap any violators attcr a reasonable time, police decided the thing was wrong. TTiey found the trouble four blocks away in the person of Jer- old Picard. 23. Heard had a pla card which simply said radar In court Picard protested "I can't see what I did wrong." But the judge did and fined, him S100 for disorderly conduct. Dist. Judge Harry J. Lemley's. Wiley Branton of Pine Bluff, at-lie schools on account of race; butimight smooth integration at the court, this time to ask the "4- tornev for the National Assn. tor year-old jurist to stay his own or- the Advancement of Colored Peo- der for a 2'i-year suspension of desegregation at the big school. The motion for stay pending ap pear was a move to keep seven Negro sludents in classes with ap proximately 2.000 whites when Central High begins its next school year in September. RUi LOS ANGELES i.VPi-The new Mr. America is a brawny weight lifter from New York City who brasts a 51-inch chest. Tom San- sone, who tapers down to a 31 inch ' waist, was selected from among 40 entrants in the annual physique contest. pie. said that should Lemley re ject a stay, the motion could be arncd to the U. S. 8th Circuit Court of Appeals in St. Louis and if necessary to the u. S. hupremc Court. A stav by any of the courts Rranton said, would mean that the racial situation at Central High would he just as it was when the l!).i-38 school year ended. In granting the school board's petition for a delay of integration until mid-semester 1951. Judge Lemley conceded that "the Negro students in Little Rock district have a constitutional right' not to be excluded from any of the pub- the board has convincingly shown that the time for the enjoyment of that right has not yet come. Lemley in a 35-page opinion Sat urday, said his ruling did not con stitute yielding to unlawful force or violence but was an exercise of discretion and good judgment. A breathing spell could permit a change in community attitude and easing of racial tensions which later date, he said. The judge noted too that Horace Mann High School for Negroes here was considered on a par with Central High and thus the seven Negroes could still obtain a good high school education. Vac. Cleaner Repairs Specialised Service on all makes Ports Bags Filters DEAN'S STARK'S 122 So. 9th TU 4-7193 RUGS CLEANED IN YOUR HOME All Hand Work. No Shrinkage Guaranteed HOMI RUG AND UPHOLSTERY SERVICI Ph. Til 4-113 Dy or Sight American Pigs Draw Crowds At World Fair POZNAN, . Poland m Ten little pigs proved the star attrac tion of the U.S. exhibit at t h e Poznan Trade Fair. At times they won more visitors than the two giant sputniks in the rival Rus sian pavilion. More than half a million Poles visited the U.S. pavilion before the fair closed Sunday. They saw American production line methods in action and their first color TV. But the old rural pastime of leaning on a rail and looking at hogs held its own against the mar vels of science. Some animal fans flood for hours watching one pen ef piglets with a new-style me chanical feeder and another fam ily with an old-style sow. Thirty-nine nations packed their products into the 26-acre fair ground. Western exhibitors reported a definite-slackening off in business. Unofficial accounts said Polish import-export agencies cut turn over with the West by up to 4n per cent as compared with last year. Businessmen blamed the na tion's hard currency shortage, Sixty-three American companies eooperated with the U.S. Com merce Department in mounting the American pavilion. By LOUIS CASSELS United Press International Until recently, Lhe prevailing Protestant position on birth con trol could be summed up in the words; silence gives consent. Now a strong movement is un derway in major Protestant bod ies to take a forthright stand in favor of "planned parenthood." Behind this movement is a growing conviction among Prot estant leaders that birth control is a clear moral obligation in sit uations where unrestricted fertil ity may expose an individual fam ily to severe hardship or an en tire nation to disastrous over population. A declaration to this effect .as already been drafted by leading theologians of the Church of Ens land. It will be presented to, and probably approved by, a confer ence of Anglican and Episcopal bishops from all parts of the world who will meet at Lambeth. Eng land, this summer. The American statement notes that rapid population growth is exerting serious pressure on the resources of many undeveloped countries, lt says no church should "seek to inhibit" by religi ous sanction" the efforts of un developed countries to "save themselves from disaster" by in troducing effective birth control techniques. At a recent meeting at Buck Hills Falls, Pa., the U.S Confer ence for the World Council of Churches officially commended .0 its 34 member denominations report urging Protestant bodies to challenge openly the Roman Catholic teaching that "artificial methods of birth control are immoral. Dr. Richard M. Fagley, execu tive secretary of the Commission of the Churches on International Affairs, said in submitting the report that efforts to raise the living standards in undeveloped countries will be largely futile until explosive population growth is checked. "That means the development and extension of effective and in expensive methods of birth con trol," he said. Fagley cited Roman Catholic opposition as the "major" reason why many countries have shied away from the problem of popu lation control. He said Protestant churches also must share the blame for "inaction" since most of them have failed to spell out their views. Without getting into a "con tentious" argument with Catho lics, Fagley said, Protestants should take a positive stand, theologically grounded in Christian concern for human wel fare. , . His report drew a sharp reply from the Rev. John E. Kelly, di rector of the Bureau of Informa tion of the National Catholic Wel fare Conference. Denying that many Catholics disagree with their church's teaching on this subject, Kelly said: -"Artificial birth control is re pugnant to the moral sense and the family tradition of not only Catholics, but to men of good will of all nations- where birth control advocates wish to introduce their contraceptives and chemicals. Pope Pius XII has stated mat regulation of offspring" is mor ally defensible if and only if it s accomplished by the so-called 'rhvthm method" which involves abstinence from marital relations during the periods when concep tion is most likely. Science has made significant progress lately in this direction. U. S. medical researchers have developed a simple test providing an improved method ot aetermin ing when a woman nas entered tne ovulation period in which preg nancy can occur. The comparatively lew Protest ant denominations which have taken an official stand on birth control reject the Catholic dis tinction between "natural" and "artificial" methods. The United Lutheran Church, for example, declared last year that "irresponsible conception" is as wrong morally as selfish lim itation of the number of chil dren." It said that when a cou ple decides, on unselfish grounds, to space or limit their offspring, their "choice as to means ot con ception control should be made upon professional medical advice." Prices Effective , r Monday - Tuesday - J- , L'""! Pin ' T A AtjOW V ixpvi I 1 its a i MISTAKE CHICAGO Leon Groce, 21 tried to elude police by jumping into Lake Michigan, but instead bis pantsleg caught on a piling and he dangled half in and half out until rescued. Groce, arrested on suspicion of tampering with telephone coin boxes, admitted he made a mistake when he tried to jump in the lake. "I can't swim," he told police. BALLET "LITTLE ROCK" BERLIN (UPI) A Commu nist ballet troupe in Dresden, East Germany, is performing i ballet about race discrimination in the United States, the Commu nist press reported Sunday. The ballet is called "Little Rock." ILL HOLLYWOOD (API Cecil B. DeMille is in Cedars of Lebanon Hospital for observation and treatment of a circulatory disor der. The 77-year-old movie pro ducer became ill several days ago with what was at first described as a virus infection. The hospital listed his condition as satisfactory. your silver dollar ever made! Coming your way in the Herald-News, June 26th Watch for them! z FHWUJEGT EGO.GT PimmSB Klamath Falls to No Band-Coos Bay $1 1 30 ft-; 2 FLIGHTS A DAY For Reservations & Information Call 4-7332 LOOK AT THESE PAY DAY SPECIALS At Oregon Food Stores! Famous White Star Tun chunk style Vi tins 4-RolI PKG. PAPER PRODUCTS SALE Extra Special! Waldorf Tissue MD Tissue Paper Napkins Zee Tissue Waxed Paper Paper Towels Zee Sandwich Bags 2 Chiffon Tissue 2 Facial Tissue Paper Napkins BedS fang tew Nolley's Hoot and Eat! 15-oi. Cans Nalley's Salad . Dressing NuLade Farm Fresh "A A" Large Hi Doz PUSS 'N BOOTS KARO BRADLEY Frozen CAT FOOD SYRUP PIES ZQc 2 No. 1 5Qf Blue Label OQ Apricot, Appls, Peach g Tins l'i-lb. Tin Pintoppla 4-Roll Pk. Zee, white 80 Count 4 roll pack Zee i ISO count roll rolls Chiffon -400 count Chiffon 50 count SCOT - SCOT TISSUE TOWELS NT,N3s00 ! Rolls 29c Roll 23c A 1 jrfffir Field grown, vine'ripencd sS"? ffl Tomatoes 10 II Onions 3191 I Mar? titcbe Ctra4 Aw? Roasts tZ. 49l l Perk Steaks 591$ FRESH OOc jw( VAN CAMP'S vVV tamales Trend"'"""' -53 "!;J 385c ,,c,,u 0J TINS w w Y J Liquid Detergent " I renu c nf 5 - m Al Liquid Detergent JA ininon For all VAN CAMP'S 6 TENDERONI PKG. 225c VAN CAMP'S SPANISH RICE 20c NALLEY'S CHILI . Si 3 85c 12 ox. woolcnt 5 az. Pkg. Liquid Starch Woolfoam Elastic 1 Argo Corn Starch Argo Gloss Starch Bruce Snow's IS Viot. tins Clam Cowder Cleaning Wax GREEN GIANT No. 303 Cons PEAS 21c NIBLETS CORM 12-ci. TINS 53c 53c 43c 31c 29c b16c m ib. (C "$119 29c I? y not (hopping here, you're sp3fof too much! IICKY LEAF PIE FILL Apple, Cherry, Peach, Raisin 22-oz. cans $1 for EMM