Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, June 30, 1958, Page 2, Image 2

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    PACE 2 A
HERALD ANT) NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
MONDAY. JUNE 30. 1953
Western Scientists Study
Plan To Enforce Ban On 'A'
Weapons Testing By Powers
GENEVA IAP) Top-ranking j policy for the talks were the four
vtestern scientists planned a mect-ichiel Western delegates: . Dr.
ing here today to work out their
stratesy for the monihlon? con
ference on ways to insure com
pliance with a han on tests ex
plosions of nuclear weapons.
Although the United States still
refused to asiee that a lest ban
itself would be the chief aim ol
the conference opening tomorrow,
there was every expectation that
scientists from the Soviet bloc
would participate.
Mteting today to plan Joint
Car Smashes
Through Rail;
Five Injured
SAN FRANCISCO IUPI) -Five
persons were hurt, four critically
sunaay nignt, wnen their brake
less auto smashed through a
guard rail on Potrero Hill and
hurtled down a 300-foot cliff.
In critical condition were Mrs
Irene Addison, 32; her son, Ray
mond, 6: Joseph Brooks, 34; and
tstelle Lawson.
The filth occupant of the car,
Booker Mclnlyre. 44, was able to
walk when extricated from the
wreckage. Nevertheless, he was
taken to Xlission Emergency Hos
pital, along with the others, for
examination. .
The 'crash took place about 9
p.m. With Mrs. Addison at the
wheel, the car headed down the
hift. The group had been to see
llrs. Addison's mother.
Suddenly Mrs. Addison
icreamed, "the brakes are out!"
The car crashed through t h e
guard rail and straight down the
hill. When It hit the bottom, it
rosed over.
Mrs. Addison, Brooks and Miss
Lawson were trapped in the front
seat for more than 30 minutes be
fore police and ambulance stew
ards could get them out.
RESCUE
SAN FRANCISCO (UPP A
Coast Guard helicopter rescued
Dennis Bosch, 15, Santa Venitia,
Sunday when his motorboat be
came disabled in choppy waters
two miles from shore in San
Pablo Bay.
Young Bosch went out for a
day's ftshing In the morning.
Shortly before noon, his motor
failed. Another fisherman tried to
help him, but the waves were too
v rough. The man went to shore and
called the Coast Guard.
A helicopter piloled by Lt. Glen
N. Parsons lowered a basket and
picked up the youth. He was un
.lames B. Fisk of the United
States. Sir John Cookcroft of Brit
ain. Prof. Yves Andre Rochard ot
France and Dr. Ormond Solandt
of Canada.
A seven-member Soviet advance
parly arrived last night. It in
cluded the delegation chief, Prof.
Yevgeni K. Fedorov.
Eleven more scientists and
aides were expected from Prague
today. Presumably they were to
include delegates from Czechoslo
vakia, Poland and Romania,
rounding out the Communist
group.
Arrival of the Russians raised
Western hopes that Moscow would
not carry out its threat to boycott
the conference unless the United
States in effect committed itself in
advance to a suspension of nuclear
weapon tests. But Fedorov. asked
whether his group would take
part in the conference, would only
say, "we wiit wait and see. Please
be patient."
The United States has main
tained all along that the confer
ence must be concerned only with
the technicalities of enforcing any
test ban and not with the political
issue of the ban itself.
Fisk, the American delegation
head who is vice president of Bell
Telephone Laboratories, has rec
ommended that the talks progress
through three states.
The first would take up a scien
tific and technical review of
methods for detecting nuclear ex
plosions in far-distant places. In
the second stage the delegates
would seek to work out how and
where inspection posts would have
to be set up to insure that no
secret tests were being conducted.
Only in the third stage would
there be discussion of political
proltjcms involved in the establish
ment of a warning system. Chief
among these is the participation
of Communist China, which is not
represented at the Geneva meet
ing. Secretary of State Dulles has
pointed out that inspection posts
might have to be set up within
lied China to make any ban on
tests workable.
'DENNIS THE MENACE"
WhY DO I me TO PRESS UP TO COMB HERE-?..
WHO AM I TRY1N' TOKIDI'
Emotional Disturbances
In College Students Now
Major Educational Problem
GIFT
NEW YORK (AP) - John D.
Rockefeller Jr., who has dispersed
many millions of dollars for pub
lic purposes, has given five mil
lion dollars to the Lincoln Center
for the Performing Arts.
The 84-year-old philanthropist s
gift was announced yesterday by
his son John D. Rockefeller 111
president of the center, and Clar
ence frraneis, chairman of its 75-million-dollar
campaign.'
Lincoln Center, on Manhattan's
West Side, will include a concert
harmed. A cutter lowed his boat hall, a new Metropolitan Opera
to snore. mouse and olher cultural facilities.
New Film Will Depict Star
As Glamorous, Disturbed
By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD (AP)-Lana Tur
ner's return to the screen will
show her as a glamorous, trouble-haunted
actress.
Her first film since her daugh
ter's slaying of John Ktompnnalo
will he "Imitation of Life." It's a
remake of the HUM Clatidette Col
bert starrer which was a sensa
tion in its time.
VAetually, it was before Its
n
DOORS CPtN 6!30 P. M.
LAST 2 DAYS!
WINNER 0F' ,
BUT UKUSID) MHWOTf CUFT
ftmtute 7:20 - 9:40
DOORS CPEN 1I3D F. M
NOW SHOWING!
ANTHONY
QUINN
a Mult the Hun'
SOPHIA
LOREN
brought tne H jn to his knees'
lime," said producer Ross Hunter
"Its treatment of race relations
was loo advanced for that era
Today, I think the story will be
moro readily accepted.
The story concerns a widow
'Lanal who moves her daughter
from a small town to New York
The only work she has done is in
her late husband's little theater.
so she tries to get work as an
actress. She hires as housekeeper
a Negro woman who also has a
daughter, a girl of light skin.
The relationship between the
two mothers becomes strong, and
Irauody occurs when the light-
skinnrn daughter rejects the Ne
gro woman.
"It's a real tcarjerker." Ross
admitted, "but I think it can he
very effec'ive not as obvious
as '.Miigniticenl Obsession' I which
he also reproduced'.
"And 1 think Lana can do a
groat job in it."
He conceded he had a hard time
persuading her to do the role. She
turned down the script but agreed
If talk to him about it. Hunter
went to her house, script under
arm.
"I rend the whole script to her.
it ins; out all the roles," the pro
ducer s;iid. "I'm a lousv aclor.
Milt by the end of the script, we
were holh in tears. She was sold.
SMI iiuselllrd is Lana's accept
.ihilily at the box nllice. "Peyton
rlave. which was in release at
I he tune of the tragedy, did
linrkbuMiT business. But "An-
olhi-r Tunc, Another Place" did
poorly
"I think that was because of
poor planning." Hunter ohsened.
"It wasn't a bad picture. But they
threw it out into release without
any advance publicity, hoping the
headlines would help sell it. That
timer works "
OPEN DAILY T.OO P. M.
,f t tMuincl! .r. i
vmms
.J m
ENDS TONIGHT !
if
"PARIS HOLIDAY"
mmum
mimcuii
CLEVELAND (API Emotional
disturbances among college stu
dents has become a major educa
tional problem, an expert in the
field declared today.
Dr. Dana L. Farnsworth, direc
tor of Harvard University's health
service, said at least 10 per cent
of all college students have seri
ous psychological difficulties, se
vere enough to warrant profes
sional help.
In an address prepared (or the
annual convention of the National
Education Assn., Dr. Farnsworth
said the disturbances could result
in scholastic failure, apathy, de
pression, excessive ' anxiety, com
pulsive behavior, obsessive think
ing and even physical illness.
There are no reliable statistics.
he said, to indicate how many of
those who drop out of college do
so because of emotional conflicts.
But. he added, "in my own insti
tution we have good reason to
believe the proportion is consider
ably more than one half."
The ultimate causes go back to
the home life, community life and
the social environments from
which the student comes, he said.
"1 am among those," he said,
"who believe that the present -gen
eration of students has ideals fully
as good, if not better, than those
of earlier college generations. I
see no signs of a moral break
down originating in our colleges.
"What I do feel strongly about
is the massive assault on the in
tegrity of our young men and
women of college age in the form
of examples set by their elders.
Our young people are as often
disappointed in representatives of
their parents, generation as they
are m rebellion against them.
Grasshoppers Mean Woe
To Siskiyou County Farms
By BETTY ROW
YREKA Jess R. Grisham.
Yreka, agricultural commissioner
c Siskiyou County, announced last
week that grasshoppers could pre
sent a problem to larmers of Sis
kiyou County. At the present time,
the situation looks no worse or no
better than it did last year at this
time.
Spotted infestations are showing
up in pasture and alfalfa fields
long the foothills. Farmers are
cautioned, he said, to keep a, close
watch on their Holds so that it an
infestation should become heavv
they will have adequate warning
so they may, be able to treat their
fields before too much damage is
realized.
At present, the hoppers over
most of the county arc young and
have not developed into winged
adults. This is the time to con
trol the hoppers, he said, since
not only are they confined be
HALF-SIZE DELIGHT
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Feature At 8:05 & 10:40
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Printed Pattern 'il.M: Half
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plainly name, address with lone,
size and s!lc number.
cause of lack of wings, but they
are more susceptible to the insec
ticide. The grasshoppers usually start
showing up along fence rows and
in weedy areas and are not too
noticeable at first. As they begin
to grow, however, they move into
crops and can cause a great deal
of damage in almost any crop.
Portions of the county which
should be watched most closely
for grasshopper infestations in
clude the McAdams Creek and Mc
Connahue Gulch areas in Scott
Valley and the Southwest Sump
area of Tulelake. Other areas
which had light infestations last
year should be particularly
checked.
Several materials can be used
to control grasshoppers, depending
on the crop in which the pests
are active. Heptachlor at three to
lour ounces of active ingredient
per acre has proved successful in
California. One to one and a half
pints of the two-pound per gallon
Heptachlor emulsiliablc concen
trate mixefl with one gallon of
dicscl oil or two to three gallons
of water per acre will give the
desired mix. This is the recom
mendation for aircraft application.
When using ground rig, it will be
necessary to use enough carrier
to get sufficient coverage. At this
dosage. Heptachlor may be applied
on pasture and alfalfa up to seven!
nays before harvest or feeding.
Where hoppers are abundant
along fence rows or in weedy are
as which are not pastured or fed.
any of the lollowing four materials
may be used: Aldrin, at two to
rotir ounces of actual material per
acre (one and one-half to one pint
of the two pound gallon emulsi
tied concentrate': Chlordane at
one pound of actual material per
acre, itwo pints of the four pound
gallon emulsiliable concentrate per
acre'; Dioldrin at one ounce of
actual material per acre, (one
third pint of one and one-half gal
lon emulsifiahle concentrate; Tnx-
ophene, at two pounds of actual
material per acre.
A slightly lower dosage may he
used when in short vegetation for
the control of the young hoppers
first to fourth instar stage'. The
higher dosage listed must be used
in dense vocetalion. or where long
residual action is needed for the
control of the adults.
The above materials should also
he used with the diesel oil or wa-:er.
Internal Troubles Gnaw At Foundations Of NATO
By CHARLES STAFFORD
Associated Press
Kewsfeatures Writer
"If a house be divided against
itself, that house cannot stand."
This bit of Biblical wisdom is
being tested within the framework
of the North Atlantic Treaty Or
ganization. For NATO is a house with di
visions.
France has internal troubles,
Greece, Turkey and Great Britain
disagree over the future adminis
tration of the island of Cyprus. Den
mark and Norway refuse to play
host to NATO forces, other than
their own.
The prime question is whether
the fear of the Russian bear that
united the 15 nations of NATO
nearly a decade ago still is strong
enough to over-shadow these differences.
President Eisenhower believes it
is.
At a NATO meeting last Decem
ber, he said: "Because of our fun
damental unity, we either sur
mount our difficulties or accomo
date them.
The weeks ahead will tell wheth
er these were prophetic words or
merely those of a coach trying to
pep up a losing team.
NATO came into being in the
spring of 1949; by 1954 its mem
bership had grown to 15 nations.
Today, it forms a huge wall of
deterrence to the (Jommunist-bloc
nations.
Turkey, Greece, Italy and Gcr-,
many are in the forefront, France
is the keystone. In the rear, the
United States provides most ot the
manpower and armament.
Plane Smacks
High Peak
DEL NORTE. Colo. (AP) A
Texas couple survived cold and
hunger for 31 hours beside t h e
wreckage of a twin-engine private
plane on a 12. 958-foot mountain
peak in southern Colorado.
The pilot, Bernie Groce, Hous
ton, Tex., was killed when the
craft struck Mesa Peak Saturday
One of more than 30 Civil Air
Patrol planes searching the rug
ged area spotted the wreckage at
noon Sunday, and at 5 p.m. an
Air Force helicopter landed near
by and rescued the survivors.
Mr; and Mrs. Wallace Davis of
La Pryor, Tex., flown here, were
in good condition despite shock
and exposure.
Groce was president of Sky
Travel Inc.. of Houston, and was
a former Air Force captin.
Davis is president of a Houston
advertising firm and the author
of two books, "Corduroy Road."
oased on texas millionaire Glenn
McCarthy, and "My Home Town."
Justice Court
Defense Set
PORTLAND (AP)-The Oreson
Judicial Council will fight any
efforts ' to break up the state's
justice court system.
The council Saturday opposed a
proposal that would turn over to
district and circuit courts the work
of the justice courts.
The council is composed of state
Supreme Court and circuit court
judges.
Circuit Judge Lvle Wolfe of
Baker said it would be an "infer.
nal nuisance" if circuit courts had
to handle traffic cases.
Several judges said, though, that
citizens --are losing faith in justice
courts because of a lack of uni
formity in fines.
The proposal for change ' was
made to the council by a subcom
mittee of the Legislative Interim
Committee on Judicial Administration.
The U.S. 6th Fleet patrols the
Mediterranean. The U.S. Strategic
Air Command mans eight bases
in France. 12 in Germany. 16 in
Rritain. three in Greenland and one
in Iceland. It also has five in Mor
occo and four in Spain, nations
which do not belong to NATO.
Gen. Lauris Norstad of the Unit
ed States, NATO's supreme com
mander, reportedly has recom
mended location of launching sites
for intermediate range ballistic
missiles missiles with a range of
1,500 miles in Britain, The Neth
erlands, France, Italy and Turkey.
These nations have agreed to at
least discuss the idea.
Marketing Service Says
Harvest Time Prices Of
Wheat May Be Lowest Yet
WASHINGTON (API The Ag
ricultural Marketing Service said
Monday harvest time prices of
wheat may drop to the lowest
levels in 13 years. '
Factors pointing to such a de
cline which would be about 25
per cent below a year earlier
include prospects for the fourth
largest crop of record, a lower
government price support level
and ineligibility of part of the crop
for price support aid.
A report on the wheat situation
Grass Fire
Squelched
said average farm prices as low
as SI. 45 a bushel are possible this
summer. The last time harvest
period prices were that low was
in the summer of 1945. A year
ago. summer prices ran around
$1.90.
This prospect was expected to
lead many farmers to store their
wheat under price support loans,
which will average about $1.82 a
bushel. The support rate aver
aged $2 last year.
The marketing service said,
however, that a considerable quan
tity of wheat will not be elegible
for price support loans because
it was grown on acreages in ex
cess of allotments. Loans are lim
ited to farms complying with al
lotments. The report said wheat prices
may strengthen after the heavy
market movement slackens fol-
City fire department crews re
sponded to a call at 3:09 P-m..iowin harvest,
on Sunday and extinguished a Prices of durum wheat, the kind
grass fire in the 1B00 block on.used jn making macaroni, spa
Worden Street. There were no in-Uheiti nH iiw fnt r ri.
juries and no property damage.Ld t0 average higher than most
On Saturday afternoon at 1:02 other types because supplies of it
p.m.. the South Suburban Fire De-lare not large.
partment was called to the home, The marketing service said it
of L. C. McSilbray, 2208 Wiard
Street , after his motorcycle had
caught fire. The motorcycle had
overturned causing gas to spill
and ignite. The only damage was
to the wiring and tires of the ve
hicle. At 3:35 p.m. the South Suburban
Fire Department put out a house
fire at 2200 Patterson Street. Own
er and occupant of the building
is Mrs. a. R. Humphries. The lire
had started in the shed building
attached to the rear of the house,
firemen said and the blaze was
extinguished before much damage
was done.
Accident
Injures Ear
A freak accident involving a for
mer resident of Merrill, destroyed
the hearing in one ear. The young
woman is Mrs. Tom Patton, Har
rington, Washington, the former
Connie Reeves, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Verle Reeves, Merrill
and Klamath Falls.
Mrs. Patton, the mother of two
young children, was lying on a
davenport when her 16-month-old
daughter, Becky, started walking
toward her with a rat-tail comb
n her hand. The child stumbled
and Mrs. Patton turned her head
to prevent the comb striking her
face and eyes. Instead, the point
ed end of the comb was thrust
into the young woman's ear, punc
turing the ear drum.
The injury destroyed Mrs. Pat-
ton's equilibrium for a time. Doc
ors Said she will not lose the hear
ing in the other ear.
ROCK 'N' ROLL DIES
JACKSON, Miss. IUPI) Radio
station WJQS is giving away its
000 rock n roll records and in
the future will concentrate on
adult music." General Manager
Lew Heilbroner said the disks
would be hauled to a. department
store in a coffin, signifying the
death of rock 'n' roll, and given
lo teen-agers.
l'NANTFl M.MSK
DAVENPORT. Iowa UPP A
food market expected new custo
mer today especially for its
annrd fish department but
wasn't sure heiher lo t pleased!
or worried. A burglar took ciga
rets and IM: from 11 market the
other day, then left a note prais
ing the management for keeping
Its money elsewhere. The note
also said. "I did find your hernnc
wore excellent and I shall recom
mend them to my friends."
DR. V. E. BURRIS
Chiropractor
134 No. 3rd St.
Wiihtt to Announce that
Contrary to Rumor, Ho Hoi
Not Rttirtd Practice This
Summtr.
USUAL OURJ
KLAMATH BASIN CELEBRATION COUNCIL
DANCES
KLAMATH FALLS
FRI. and SAT.
JULY 4-JULY 5
ft aturing tfia music o4
SMOKEY
wmm
"M vytw lack Roll to P
PMtir m tfcMM TT fiows
Ot tCKatlf MOV 6A 9L OPftT
C0UWTIY AM1KICA TOW It HALL PARTY
mi Mt WKSTIRN CARAVAN
Direct from 7 years Bostonia Ballroom, San Diego
feoturing
LE ROY HARRIS - CACTUS - BUCK WAYNE
TOMMY TURMAN PEDRO and others
DANCING Fri. JULY 4 - 10 until 2
Sat., July 5-9 until 1
$1.50 PER PERSON (Tax inc.)
iW
appears domestic markets will
take about 59.1 million bushels of
all wheat and that exports will
take about 375 million bushels.
This would leave reserve and
surpluses of about 1,200,000,000
bushels a year from now. which
would be a record high. Most of
it would be held by the govern
ment under price support programs.
MEET
PORTLAND (API The organi
zational meeting of the Oregon
Democratic State Central Com
mittee will be held in Portland
July 20.
The announcement was made by
committee chairman David Epps! quarters in Izmir.
ot iweet Home. Lpps said he will
he a candidate for reelection. So
far, Epps is the only candidate.
Denmark and Norway refuse to
accept any missile sites. They ob
jected at first to establishment of
launching sites anywhere in Eu
rope, but later agreed in principle
to the plan.
With NATO's defensive wall
sketched out (see mapi, it is eas
ily apparent how loss of France
or disunity between Turkey and
Greece would gnaw at the founda
tion of the alliance.
France is quiet at the moment
in the aftermath of the Army up
rising in Algeria which propelled
Gen. Charles de Gaulle into tha
pii-iiiitriMiip. uui ii is an luieasy
,quiet.
De Gaulle works to accomplish
three things: Find a graceful way
to end the Algerian war, rewrite
a French constitution that has giv
en an overbalance oi power to the
government's legislative branch,
and get France out of its financial
difficulties.
His plan for Algeria already the
target of Algerian, Tunisian and
Moroccoan criticism includes full
French citizenship for all Alger
ians, election of an Algerian As
sembly, and then discussions on Al
geria's future. An end to the five
million (rancs-a-day war would au
tomatically solve the financial prob
lems. The test of De Gaulle's suecesi
in solving France's problems prob
ably will come when his new con
stitution is laid before the public.
If some of his supporters in the
assembly find themselves unable
to accept his reforms, new and
dangerous battle lines may be
formed.
The three-way Cyprus problem is
a knotty one. Britain has admin
istered the island stronghold now
its principal air and sea base in
the Mideast since 1878. The pop
ulation of 500.000 is 80 per cent
Greek and 20 per cent Turkish.
However, the island is 600 milej
from Greece and less than 40 from
Turkey.
The Greeks want the island for
Greece. The Turks want it par
titioned. England has offered "an
adventure in partnership" Greek
and Turkish participation in the ad
ministration of the island for seven
years during which a "representa
tive government and communal au
tonomy will he worked out."
Greece and Turkey have reject
ed the British plan. The serious
ness of the breech was underscored
June 14 when Greece recalled all
of its personnel from NATO's
Southern European Command head-
D1ES
PORTLAND (AP) A Dallas.
Ore., farmer, pinned beneath an
overturned tractor on his farm
Saturday, died Sunday in a hos
pital here.
Harold Keith, 44, suffered mul
tiple injuries in the accident.
Odahl
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