PAGE 2 A
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
THURSDAY. Jl'LY 24. 135
Britons Elect Four Women
To House Of Lords Posts
LONDON (AP)-For the first
lime in British history, lour wom
en were named today to the House
of Lords.
They will hold special life peer
ases along with 10 men named
by Queen Elizabeth II to put new
life into the ancient, all-male
chamber.
Like all Britons nominated to
the aristocratic upper house ol
Parliament, the ladus hae dis
tinguished themselves in public
life. Four of the new male peers
were members of the present
House of Commons.
The new peeresses, who will
take their seats in November are:
Barbara Frances Wootton, 61-year-old
economist, author and
former professor. One of Britain's
leading intellectuals, she is a La
bor party supporter.
Dame Katharine Elliot, 55, three
time British delegate to the U. N
Aesembly. active
party worker, and
Girls' Clubs and a leader in the
ampaign to put women in the
House of Lords.
The Dowager Marchioness o!
Reading, chairman of the Worn
en's Voluntary Services for Civil
Defense, which she founded in
!!MK.
The wives of the male peers will
lake the title of lady, and their
children can u.se the prefix "The
Honorable." But husbands of the
peeresses will get no title.
The new lifetime peers are Sir
Ian Fraser, Conservative member
of Parliament who was blinded in
World War I; Sir Robert Booth
by. Conservative member of Par
liament and former parliamentary
private secretary to Sir Winston
Churchill: Daniel West and Victor
the Advisory Committee on Child
Care for Scotland.
Baroness Ravensdale. 62, chair
man of the National Assn. of
Collins, Labor members of Parlia
ment; Sir Charles Geddes. prom
inent trade unionist: Victor Noel
Paton. prominent layman in the
Conserv ative 'Church of Scotland, which is not
chairman for officially represented in the Lords
Youth Admits
He's No Burglar
. CHICAGO (L'Pl) - Gerala
Thomaszek. 19, admitted to po
lice he was no great shakes as
a burglar after:
Passersby frightened him
from a school he was looting.
Honorless thieves stole $4,000
worth of loot he had hidden in desi
i garage.
He was unable to peddle
$3,200 more in loot.
Police caught him hiding still
more stolen goods in the garage.
as the Church of England is: Ed
ward Shackleton, former Labor
M. P. and son of the antarctic
explorer. Sir Ernest Shackleton;
Dr. Stephen Taylof. former Labor
M. P.; Sir John Stopford. former
vice chancellor of Manchester
University: and Sir Edward Twin
ing, former governor of Tanga
nyika. Previously all seats In the House
of Lords except those held by ju
dicial and Church of England dig
nitaries have been passed on at
death to the eldest male heir.
The new law authorizing peerages
only for the life of the holder is
ned for porsons of achieve
ment who object to hereditary ti
tles in principle or don't want to
endanger the political careers of
sons who would have to retire to
the upper house when papa died.
'DENNIS THE MENACE"
'COES NEW MU.PAPBR COST VRV MXH ?
Ike Doesn't Wanf Meet
Says Top News Analyst
rsnTHIS SATURDAY
ALL NIGHT!!
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"FORTY GUNS"
AltURA IAMY
CX SUttlv.
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IICHNICOLOH
FOSTER fhtfU LYNN!
PIUS J CARTOONS
AUCTION!
't r . ' M S""",,i '" !' Club. All Nil
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UNION PACIFIC"
on J
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FRIDAY & SATURDAY!
ANNA MAGNANI ANTHONY QUINN
J? Their's was j
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SUSPENSE CLUTCHES YOUR HEAR!
IN THIS SPECTACULAR SAGA
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A poclit tuttleshtp . . . tft grim chast
...Oil flaming and heroic battli
ttuj climax that thrilled thi world!
WiYl90H 35 TEWNICOIOR .
JOHN GREGSON ANTHONY QUAYLE
PETER FINCH
fcafurc A 7:S5 and 11:50
TERROR! VIOLENCE!
DIRK BOG ARDE STANLEY BAKER
MICHAEL CRAIG - BARBARA MURRAY
k In IAITMAN COLON
Shawn At 10 $0 Ob'y
By JOHN M. HK.HTOH'ER
WASHINGTON (API Next to
an outhrcak of war the' one thing
the Eisenhower administration
least wants just new is a summit
conference- either inside or out
side the United Nalions.
But an effort to preserve U.S.
British unity and avoid a repe
titinn of the costly division of 1H5B
during the iue2 crisis has lorccd
the President to take a position
where Premier Nikita Khrush
chev seems to have the last word
on whether ,or not there will be
a summit meeting.
This point has hcen reached
moreover at the cost of a sharp
disagreement between the Lnited
states and Britain on the one
hand, and France on the other,
For Premier Charles de Gaulle
has said what President Kisen-
hower and Secretary of State
Dulles both actually think accord
ing to the word of some of their
top aides tnat this is no time
top-level meeting on the
Middle East and the U.N. Secur
ity Council at New York, with all
excitement, is no place for
calm discussion of the crisis.
Administration officials said
Wednesday there are several rea
sons why a summit meeting is
highly inadvisable at this lime
Khrushchev stands in the pnsi
lion of, an accusor and the United
States of defender in .the dispute
dver the causes and possible con
sequences of American and Brit
ish military intervention in the
.Middle East. From the U.S. point
ot view this is an upside-down
situation, one tint puts this coun
try at a great disadvantage in
trying to deal with the political
and propaganda ii.lerests at slake
in any highly publicized meeting.
there arc. in the U.S. govern
ment's view, two real villains in
Ihe Middle East tragedy. They are
Khrushchev and Egyptian Gamal
bdel Nasser. The State Depart
ment is convinced they intend to
do everything possible right now
and in the future to foment as
much trouble as they can against
ill the prn-Weslcrn governments in
the Middle East.
The risks involved in any sum
nut conference are so great that
no such meeting should ever be
held without the n-ost careful prep
arations that diplomacy can de
vise. These risks include dangers
of misunderstanding, or an illu
sion of progiess toward peace, of
ar exchange of Jchnte which could
inflame rather than calm the
tempers of governments and peO'
plos alike.
Eisenhower and Dulles did not
want to send troops into Lebanon.
But the coup oy pro-Nasser of
ficers in Iraq jn Monday of last
week brought Eisenhower to a de
cision tnat unless he put troops
into the Middle East a half dozen
countries might fall like cards in
an unslable'row.
Khrushchev's response to this
operation by denouncing it was a
natural. The United States had
iaia itseii open unavoidably in
two respects, it was subiect to
denunciation on the ground that
it was using military intervention
to preserve political positions. It
was open to criticism also on the
ground that it had created a risk
of war perhaps a nuclear world
war. ,.
Blonde Is
Miss U.S.A.
LONG BEACH. Calif. UPI
Lovely Eurlyne Howell, blonde,
blue-eyed -Miss Louisiana, reigned
today as Miss United Slates in the
7th annual .Miss Universe pageant.
The sweetly drawling coed from
Bossier City, La., was chosen
Wednesday night from five semi
finalists to represent the United
States in competition with 34 for
eign beauties for the title of Miss
Universe.
Choice of the 18-year-old South
ern belle, 5 foot, 6 inches of
poised loveliness, w as popular
with the-audience of 4.300 gath
ered in the Long Beach Municipal
Auditorium as the field was nar
rowed from 15 to 5 to Miss I
Howell.
Poised and dry-eyed after her
selection. Miss Louisiana, a Grace
Kelly-type measuring a near-perfect
36-23-35'i, said she was "very
thrilled and grateful "
Miss Howell, a sophomore in
speech and dramatics at Centen
ary College at Shreveport, La.,
was selected from five semi-finalists
all blondes and all from
Ihe South except one.
The others were Miss Alabama,
Judy Carlson: Miss Florida, Mar
cia Valibus: .Miss Georgia, Diana
Austin, and Miss Illinois, June
Pickney.
Miss U.S.A. competes tonight
against the foreign beauties in the
semi-final round of the Miss L'ni-'
verse pageant. Miss Universe will
be selected Friday night.
Scribe Tells The Long And
Short Of It For The Fall
By GAY PAULEY
UPI Women's Editor
NEW YORK (LPIi-Long car
rings and short necklaces that's
ihe long and short of it in cos
tume jewelry for fall.
Some of the new "slim jim"
earrings dangle all the way to
the shoulder, reports the Fashion
Coordination Institute which keeps
tabs on basic beauty and fash
ion trend. And the short bib.
choker snd dog collar necklaces,
with many strands twisted to
gether, have displaced the long
ropes which we women have
draped around our necks the past
few seasons.
If you still want to use your
rope supply, double, triple or
luaarupie it around the neck, so
il forms a fill-in for all those
standaway collars showing in fall
ready-to-wear.
"Next in importance is color
in jewelry," said Mrs.1 Charlotte
Thompson, the institute director.
"Jewelry shades go right along
with clothing shades. So all the
purples, including amethyst and
mauve, will be good. So will the
comDinations of green and blue,
red and rose."
BAR PIN RETURNS.
Some manufacturers suggest
that women blend jewelry colors
with suit or dress, but Mrs.
Thompson taid it'd be up to the
individual to decide whether she
wanted contrast or coordination of
colors.
New for fall is the bar pin.
which grandma wore (o hold the
tabs of her high-starched collar.
Today's bar pins are longer, some
of them measuring three inches,
and splashier, set with colored
in pairs, on slandaway collars of
stones. New way to wear them:
blouses.
The old time headache band,
which came back last spring, goes
right into fall. It's expected to be
especially popular with two ma
jor trends in hair-do's the bouf
fant or fluffy cut, and the empire
which has soft, flat strands at the
front and side but builds to a pile
at the back of the crown.
Some jewelry manufacturers
show small, lightweight pins in a
series of three, four or five to at
tach to the bands. Matching clip
on suit or dress is all the other
iewelrv necessary.
MASSES OF STONES
Pins have a new place in fash
ion, literally. Gone is the long
time placement on the left shoul
der: this fall, they come as globs
of fobs to be worn smack in the
center of a neckline or bodice.
Prof Plans
Russian Talk
PASADENA. Calif (AP) In
three weeks Dr. Henry L. Richter
of California Institute of Technol
ogy has learned enough Russian
to deliver a 30-minute speech in.
that language.
And he's going to deliver his,
speech in Moscow. -
Dr. Kichter, supervisor of Cal-,
tech's Jet Propulsion Laboratory,!
was assigned to present a paper
about Explorer satellites at an
International Geophysical Y'ear.
meeting in Moscow next month.
He read Russian-American die.
tionaries, listened to Russian lan
guage records and used a tape,
recorder to perfect his accent.
Yesterday a Russian - speaking
employe at JPL-listened to Dr...
Richter's rehearsal and pro-!
nouneed him ready.
Demo Given
New Term
Itely Shows
New Fashions
FLORENCE, Italy (AP) How
high is high? How far above (he
waist, how near to the bosom?
That is. the nuance being deter
mined at the Florence fashion
shows now that Italian' couture
has declared itself in favor of the
high demarcation line between
bodice and skirt.
Veneziani, whose collections re
ceived ovations last night at the
historic Pitti Palace, hinged her
skirts about the level of the sec
ond rib.
Veneziani's models seconded
other fashion trends noted here
and in the Rome showings: The
high unadorned neckline with
sleeveless or cupped shoulder, the
back decollete and fullness below,
the flattened, foreshortened front.
Skirts are either short or long,
wilh no middle ground between
knee and floor. For evening Vene
ziani makes them long. And wraps
to wear with them are of horizon
tal mink or ermine. Vertical pells
will never do.
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP)-Ren. l
1 1 ooy .Morns of Lawton today held
I Democratic nomination for annih-'i
er lerm in congress, penning an
official tabulation of votes in the
6th Dist.
Complete, unofficial returns'
from the western Oklahoma dis-il
tnct gave Morris a 52-vote vic-
lory over lormer congressman
Victor Wickersham the man he
unsealed two years ago. The vote
was 45.474 for Morris: 45.422 fori
wickersham.
If he receives the nomination.
Morris will be opposed bv Repub
lican Fred Coogan of Savre in the'
.ovemner election.
HARRY HAFTER'S
August Sale Continues
SAVE!
INNERSPRING
MATTRESSES
$1088
I
ACA Tickinq, Thick H e o v y Reg. $39.95 '
Padded, 100'$ of Coils. SAVE Vi
9th and Klamath
Phone TU 4-4878
J Bell's Hardware
Martin Senour
3000
Outside
White
Paint
"OUR VERY
BEST"
44
HARDWARE
528 Main
DOORS CPEN 6:30
P. M.
The
100
NO ONE ADMITTED ALONE
asruL
t
turns
Rismor Names
New Queen
HPJHBIb.hu. ui.
Pi'i-.?.! emf'i
CORNEL WILDE
JEAN WALLACE
' lA-i t H a
ABBE LANE
LEDERER,
axes' i
B FRANCIS
I
KOSpM
MHpn Di-to'lt m
C-xau.fMttatBl
LONDON (API Raven-haired
Lilly .Mythra Fallah has been
summoned back to Tehran from
an exclusive Knslish finishing
school, leaving behind a biuz of
speculation that she will be the
Shah of Iran's next queen. "
friends ol the beautiful 18-vcar-
old Iranian girl say she will fly
to Pans next week to choose a
trousseau for her wedding to the
handsome 38-year-old monarch.
ihe friends say the wedding
may be sometime in. October.
For weeks. Lilly's secret has
been kept at the Paddock Wood
Finishing School, winch lies among
rolling heathland and is surround
ed by lawns and liowers. There
are 48 girls mostly foreign
at the school.
"Only a few ot us knew about
Lilly and we did not think it gooii
lor the other girls to tell them,"
said the matron last night.
"Two weeks ago a chauffeur
drhen car arrived here from Ihe
Iranian Kmbassy and Lilly left to
catch a plane to Tehran."
Lilly is tall, olive-skinned and
the damhte.- of Re?a Fallah.
wealthy buss of Iran's nationalized
oil industry. He reportedly was
called to the Shah lour months
ao and told Lilly was among
those being considered to become
Ihe Shah's wife, succeeding ex
(Jucen Snraya. Tne Shah divorced
Snraya in .Varch because she had
not borne him an heir to the
throne.
Formosa Censors
Ban U.S. Movie
I TA1PK1 i.M'i The censnrs
,h.ie ordered showing of the film
if "The Brothers Kjramaznv"
halted on Formosa on moral
grounds.
I The cotunis said the film baed
nn the Instorski noel was "in
! .-ompatlble w:lh Chinese ethical
te.uhintts. They nhjocipd partic
ularly to a father and sun lovmc
the same woman and a harlot to
boot .
The picture his been pla.ung to
lull houses on Fonncvt.
THIS OS DTTH
FINAL SUMMER SUIT
la
Downtown and Town & Country
Town & Country
Open Till 9 P.M.
Hury! Take advantage now of the big savings on a select group of
Quality Suits and Sport Coats. Buy for now through Fall at Sale
Prices! Save for Back To School, too!
SUITS SUITS SUITS
Values to $50.00 in
Curlee flannels and
silk-look Avizzios.by
Ratner of Californ
ia. Some Curlee
"twosomes" includ
ed in this qroup.
Curlees from S59.50
to $69.50 including
several Ivy models
that are ideal for
back-to-school wear
Famous Hart-Schaf-fner
& Marx suits
originally $79.50 to
$97.50. Group in
cludes pure silks,
worsteds and flannels.
48. 63.
Sport Coats Sport Coats Sport Coats
Curlee coats form
erly to $29.50 in a
nice selection of
patterns and colors
for now through fall.
Curlee coats from
$35.00 to $39.50.
Soft, dark, tones
that vou will wear
Expertly tailored Hart
Schoffner & Marx sport
coats that usuolly sell
up to $52.50 now ot
this on, low, sale price.
19. 27. 39.
Dacronyl Siax,
by Ratner of California
Always a sale-like price on these fine
slocks. A skilful blend of Dacron, Rayon and
Nylon brinq you the finest washable slack
you ever wore and at this low price, too.
$095
Nunn-Bush, Edgerton Shoe Sale!
Here's tremendou savings on
a special group of discontinued
styles ond potfertvs in both our
fine Edgerton ond Nunn-Bush
soes. Lock ot thest sale-prices.
Edgerlons
9.
Nunn-Bush
14.
t W In.'' w
ARRIVING DAILY!
Full Shipments of Bock-to-School Clothet
Shoes Sweaters Ivy Tapers
Bulky Knit Sweaters Fall
Sport Shirts
COME IN NOW . PICK 'CM OUT
AND LAY-AWAY
Nothing Down and
6 Months To Pav On Our
REVOLVING CHARGE
PLAN!
DiEWS M
anstore
733 Main
'l ' mm