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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 18, 1958)
FRIDAY. JULY 18. 1958 HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS OREGON PAGE 7 A Significant Points In Tobacco Industry Noted By ELMER C. WALZER I PI Financial Editor NEW YORK. (UP! i - Wall Street notes two significant points in the tobacco industry an ap parent insulation against cancer scare talk in connection with cig arette smoking, and the prospect that there could be a swing away irom liners to conventional ciga- rettes. Value Line in its current invest- ment survey says that in the last 1 year and a half tobacco consump- tion has regained the lofty heights attained before the great cancer core. 'These gains may be perma nent." says Value Line. "The public may have become relative ly insensitive to health scare talk." That service believes that fu ture scares may do little more than accelerate the shift to filter tips. MAGAZINE REPORTS . The current U.S. News World Report has an article entitled: "Cigarette Story: Sales Go Up Despite Health Studies." "People are puffing cigarettes faster than ever," says the arti cle. "Americans, it seems, are difficult to scare off smoking." U.S. News also finds more and more Americans are turning to filter tips. ' Wall Street is paying more at- i tention, however, to a leading ar ticle in the July Reader's Digest on "The Cigarette Industry Changes Its Mind." - This article also talks of the i "filter-tip revolution" of 1957-53 ! how the tobacco companies pro ,! duced filters that cut down tars ! and nicotine. But it adds a new slant: i "The development which may A have the farthest-reaching effect Senator Sees For Nation's Armed Forces WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen., ' Richard B. Russell (D-Ga) said today that Congress will support the U. S. armed forces with au thority and money in the Mideast crisis, wherever they are. . He said the Senate Armed Serv ices Committee, of which he is chairman, will stand by to await developments and to consult at any time with the top defense command. Russell told a reporter he thinks DOUBLY SMART Printed Pattern i Fashion's wrap V tie blouse sue . . r . . . eessnow, with its own 4-gore sKirt o look like a dress one day. sep arates the next! Beginner-easy lo cut, sew. fit with our Printed Pat tern. Choose shantung, voile, Dae mon, pique. Printed Pattern 9309: Misses TO j 9309 hvr . 12-20 1 I i In lflSifclfl?t Sizes 12. 14. 16. 18. 20. Size 16jCjl l0 ,et up an international takes 4s yards 39-inch fabric. lroop force to ,ake over frnm tne : Printed directions on each pat-f Marines. tern nart. Easier, accurate. I " Send thirty-five cents (coins) for i this pattern add 5 cents for each pattern for lst-class mailing. Send i to Marian Martin, care of Herald j and News. Pattern Dept.. 232 West i 18th St.. New York 11. N. Y. j Print plainly name, address with tnne ci7 and itvle ntlmher. J 1 ' on cigarette making is Lorillard's reduction of the tar and nicotine in the smoke of plain Old Golds. "Now called Old Gold Straights, the new 80-millimeter cigarette yields 41 per cent less tar than the former King 185 mm size, 'shorter length obviously accounts for some of this reduction'. The regular ("0 mm) size yields 28 per cent less tar than its prede- cessor BLEND CHANGED "This improvement has been 'achieved entirely by a change in the tobacco blend. However, from a health standpoint, the tar and nicotine reduction in plain-tip cig arettes directly benefits the mil lions of smokers who have not switched to filter-tips." Market men recall another ar ticle in Reader's Digest a year ago on "The Facts Behind Filter tip Cigarettes." That one gave Lorillard's Kent filter a boost. Kent sales soared and the other tobacco companies quickly brought out filter-tips or revamped the filter tips they had. The filter-tip revolution was on. The financial district recalls that it took a bit of time between the period the article was re leased and the demand increased for Kents. It scents a similar move in the Old Gold Straights and wonders if this article will set off a new change away from filters. wall Street estimates that smuKers win consume nearly u billion cigarettes in l!b8, about three per cent more than in 1957 and a new record high. Keen competition among the various companies is making for heavy advertising outlays which are expected to continue, and pos sibly grow if a change away from filter-tips. comes Mid-East Aid it would be unwise to reduce any of ihe armed forces below exist ing levels, as is contemplated in budget requests now before a De fense Appropriations subcommit tee. Bin-col! eairl lliat uthen Cnnaface winds up its work, it should be subject to recaU by its leaders, so it could act in any unexpected emergency. ine iinexpecieo ovennrow oik. the pro-West regime in Iraq and ine suaaen aipann ui u. o. troops to Lebanon have bolstered the case of advocates of increases in Army and Reserve and Nation al Guard personnel. Sen. Stuart Symincton (D-Mol told the Senate the call for U. S. troops came at a time when ef fective defense efforts were de creasing. "Our government continues to place soft living and budgetary considerations ahead of national security." Symington said. He and others are advocating a stepup in administration requests for long range bombers, missiles and oth er weapons. Sen. Allen J. Ellender (D-La), who has visited the Soviet Union several times, said in a separate interview, "I personally don!t be lieve the Russians will step in." Ike Reported Aid JCCIl U H U 7 TOKYO (AP) - Unconfirmed reports circulated that Pres-' ident Eisenhower has sent Prime Minister Kishi a message Ti. tLj L .1. 7, sam.'M this Orange County community Fiem cri... .stern crisis. isyoao iew5 oervice, quoting unidentilied informed sources, said the American Embassy de livered the message to Kishi yes terday. An embassy spokesman said he had no immediate information on the report. Japan's delegate in Ihe U.N. -Security Council yesterday termed !" American landing in Lebanon "inartnrnnnato and r-OBrdllah e inappropriate and regrettable and "liable to aggravate the sit uation." He was reported planning lo propose to the council that the U.N. observer corps in Lebanon be increased so that the U S. Marines could withdraw. The Vnilf6 s,.te. has asked the coun. PROFESSIONAL RODEO KLAMATH FALLS July 25-26-27 "mm WW C mi k, t .-. i. tu lit u ... e "Herbie's on my mind a lot I keep thinking how he must be missing me!" New Zealand Catile Ship Due Shortly In San Diego SACRAMENTO (AP) A ship, bringing 1230 live cattle from Nw 7olnrfiho (iri ,,rh hm. ment in history is due in San Diego next week. How can Californians afford to bring animals 7,000 miles to market? "Meat orices here are hiuh." explained an agriculture depart- ment spokesman, "and we're going through a period of rebuild ing herds." A California calileman bought the steers in New Zealand: and plans to fatten them in the Im perial Valley. If it proves profit able, a lot of down under steers pan expect a long ocean voyage. Choice steers bring 28 cents a pound in California markets. That price has held fairly steady since March. It zoomed up in September. 1957, when the market began to feel the effects of a seven-year "Rni " ine aomnwesi siaies. ure naa oecome so poor cs ,bn slaughtered and h"t"T .... K, .!,.,. ; .u. hi,j! s,ates a record 534.000 head 0fi14-yead. b,!y tiay admitted ....... .r..t.A ; r.tn...;. feedlots on July 1. But only 9 per e.nt harf ho.n nn (ho Inl (nr 00 cent had been on the lots for 90 days or more. That means they won't be hitting the market for a few months. The expected shipment from New Zealand isn't a drop in the bucket. Cattlemen say they re not worried about it. But they are concerned about another type of shipment from New Zealand Store Planning To Reset Clock PARAGOULD, Ark. (AP A I department store advertised that it will turn back the clock, price wise, to the good old days. As part of a 75th anniversary celebration, West's Department Store today and tomorrow will sell a suit for a 100-pound hog, a pair of men's shoes for a bushel of tomatoes, a pair of dress trousers for a bushel of fresh peas and a straw hat for a gallon of molasses. .FUST A BARN I FLORIDA, N. Y. AP) The irPlaee of the man who bought A,a5,ta frorn Russia for the l nit - ed States in 1867 now is iust a barn. William Henry Seward, for- mer secretary of slate, was born in 1801. A marker designates the barn gt he rMr of g hous(, OPEN SEASON La a , DANCE died Dorrii, lie v :i I;v..'tJfc''cI7t " I V 7-ia frozen low grade beef. High prices in the United States have meant a bonanza to New Zealand cattlemen. They expect lo ship about 30 million dollars worth of frozen low grade beef to America this year nearly tri pie their 1957 exports. Will increased domestic produc tion and low-grade imports mean lower beef prices at the corner store? Nobody will say. Nationally California cattlemen, with a 325-million-dollar-a-year business to protect, hope the high price for good beef will hold. But sometimes, they say, the sale of their cull cows, boner bulls and old beef can make the difference of profit or loss for them. They don't want New , Zealand to corner that market. Boy Admits Killing Pal ni" ". mien. n n ANN ARBOR. Mich. (API - A Kvlvly uenung an u-year-oia j r: ' '1 j , : , ' " ' , ' "" V ": ! bUnd " 8 P0nd nMr their homes. Sheriff Robert E. A. Lillie said Frank Hogan Jr. of nearby Pitts field Township was being held for investigation of homicide. After almost six hours of ques tioning, Hogan admitted beating and drowning John Thomas Wins low. Lillie said. He said Hocan told him he and Winslow went into the pond on a raft after they had quarreled on shore. "There was a lot of bitter blood between the two kids." Lillie said. "Hogan said he struck Winslow with a homemade paddle and then pummeled him Lillie said Hogan bound Wins low's hands behind him with his own belt and tied his feet with a rope. "Hogan then held his head un der water and probably choked bim. bul saw that didn't work too well." Lillie said. "So he tied Winslow to the raft and pushed it over him." Young Winslow was found face 'up in three feet of water by his ; father George, 44, about three 1 hours after he was last seen last night. Lillie said questioning produced no eviaence oi premeaiiauon. "I rinn't know. I just suppose it was just what kids 11 and 14 fight about." Saturday Nfght Barn California Music By PEE WEI I STIDHAM and the Butt Valley Ranaers N IncraaM I dmiultn priM Donelni 9 rill 1 90c Per Took Just Seven Hours For Baghdad Rebels To Secure Power Over Iraq WASHINGTON I API It took seven hours last Bastille Day for the Baghdad rebels to seize and secure power over Iraq. And then, for the rest of the day, Ihe mobs took over. That was the picture of the Middle East's fateful July 14. as shown in a chronology based on the best available publishable in formation here. Officials informed on the situation assembled the pieces, some admittedly sketchy, this way: Baghdad was sleeping. It was 5 a.m. and the first faint rays of another sun were just beginning to appear, swimy ana silently, week he supplied Kassem's bri Bng. Gen. Abdel Kanm el-Kas-jgade with ammunition to march sem led his 20th Brigade into the ,10 Jordan. There, it was to help unsuspecting city. Whispered orders. Detachments dropped off at the railroad, at the bridges, at the telegraph office, at main street junctures, at the post office, at Baghdad radio. Quietly, efficiently, the troops took over without firing their rifles and machine guns. More whispered orders. Thisinuhtic huilrlines the U.S. F.mhas time, names of those to be ar - resiea. umcr aeiacnmenis goinguhe British Embassy. More army around to the specified addresses, knocking and arresting, with or ders to shoot if resisted. In an hour the secrecy, locked in the hearts of fewer than two dozen men for two months, was no longer necessary. It was 6 a.m. The first phase of a classic coup was over. Baghdad radio blared the city awake with the news: "Citizens of Baghdad, the mon archy is dead, the republic is here!" And then, the names of 15 men mostly young army officers. Theiing out the word, with appeals 12-man cabinet, headed by Kas sem as premier, and the three- man Sovereignty Council, the new strategy-making supercaBi net. lopped by Lt. Gen. Najib el Rubai. A detachment, led by two offi cers, went to the royal palace. By new, a mob was gathering, mysti fied, curious, excited. With the mob trailing, the soldiers forced their way into the palace. They were brought up short by Ihe sight of their young King. The 23-year-old Faisal, a pistol strapped to his side, stood beside his 46-year-old uncle Abdul llah. crown prince and exregent. With them, rifles drawn, were two members of the palace guard. They were ordered to surrender. Abdul llah. also armed, was disdainful. He and Faisal had arisen early to fly to Ankara, Tur key, for a Baghdad Pact meeting not to he arrested. He ordered his guards to shoot. The soldiers fired first and the guards fell dead. Abdul llah went 'for his pis. tol. Another fusillade and both he and Faisal crumpled to the floor The King was dead. But Ihe prince might have been still alive. The mob surged forward, kept a respectful distance from the King hut seized the prince. Abdul Hah, a meticulous man who liked pink shirts with gray pinstriped suits and hated crowds, was dragged through the streets of Baghdad behind a jeep. His body was hung on a building so all could see he was dead. The King's body was exhibited later, probably on a marble slab. But the big prize got away. Premier Nuri Said, "Ihe Old Fox," caught wind of the coup and fled to the suburbs. Angered. Man Promotes Hawaii Measure SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - In a truck carrying a Liberty bell rep lica. Jackson McBride of Honolu lu plans a one-man motor march lo Washington to promote support for immediate statehood for Ha waii. McBride. 35, begins his drive with a one-hour appearance with1 the Hawaii Liberty bell at City Hall today, McBride, Atlanta-born advertis ing and radio executive, said Ihe Hawaii bell march is supported by Hawaii citizens protesting any further delay in Hawaii statehood. Congress voted admission of Alas ka last month. IT MEANS STOP OAKLAND. Calif. (LTD It will be four days in the cooler lor Manuel Fernandez, who was un able lo pay a $20 line levied on him Thursday (or running through a red light on his bicycle. Only 11 Days Left To rake advantage of Our Terrific Introductory Offer On MOHAWK CARPET To clbrat our Appointment at Eicluiivt Mohowk Car pet Doaltr in Klamath Falls, wt will include LAYING CHARGES FREE (Including Tackiest Sfrippinq) Plui Our Regular 40-Oz. MOHAWK PAD . FREE Wllh any woll-to-wtll corpttinf or mom llta rual pur hand from our rtaular Heck. Hurry (till offir will ntver be rapeoted! Most Mohawk Carpet Patterni from 5.95 to 11.95 N Down Paymant 1 Yaari Ta Pay BUSH Furniture Co. Next ta Willard Hotel Open till 8:00 each evening the military junta slapped a $28, noo price on his head. It was not until two days later that he was found, disguised as an old woman with a black scarf covering his Lice. He shot it out and fell dead. His body, too, was hung in dis play. Nuri's reoorted lament to Pres ident Eisenhower in Washington last fall cninej back now with pro phetic irony. "I am a strong man." he told Eisenhower, "but I am 70 years old and there is no one to succeed me." Ironically, too, Nurl apparently I sealed his own doom. Only last Faisal's cousin King Hussein keep order after the June 22 smashing; of a similar coup with Ihe arrest of so Jordanian army officers. But Kassem marched on Baghdad in stead of Amman. It was 8 a.m. Baghdad radio was pumping out news of the coup. Mobs demonstrated outside jsy. the U.S. Information Library. units were reported pledging sup port of the rebels on the plains, in the mountains, outside Bagh dad. A fire broke out at the British Embassy. A British colonel was killed or manhandled. The rebels blamed the fire on the British. They said the British were trying to burn secret documents and the fire got out of hand. By noon, things had simmered down. Soldiers were everywhere and Baghdad radio was still roll for public cooperation. All of Nuri's Cabinet were either dead, in jail or hiding out. There was no organized resistance. The coup had succeeded, alter weeks of se cret hatching outside Iraq re portedly in Jidda and Mecca Saudi Arabia, and Bern, Switzer land. The mobs, possibly joined now by Communist agitators, spent the afternoon venting their spleen against real or imagined ills sut fered under the old regime. About 8 p.m. a mob laid siege to the new Baghdad Hotel, to root. out royalists there. Two Americans were killed, probably because they just happened to get in the way. Free! Buyer's Guide to auto insurance Free Buyer's Guide shows what each auto insurance coverage can do for you. Tells of the broad protec tion features built into the Allstate Policy. Explains why Allstate's rates are lower than rates of most other companies. Get your free copy. Stop in or phone today. Fred Lowrtnc and Art Grlgg IUrl. Fnrhurlc and ra. nirtf. m . Ilh SI. Ph. 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