TAGE 2 A
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
FRIDAY, AUGUST 1, 1958
Recession Recovery Not
Over, But Recovery Due
WASHINGTON (AP)-Ts the re
cession over? Not yet, by a good
many months.
But the recovery definitely Is in
prospect, government economists
believe, and so far it has been
stronger and clearer than they
had expected.
One White House adviser now
expects total national output to re
gain its prereccssion rate about
445V4 billion dollars a year
around the turn of the year.
Some others, it should be noted,
foresee a slower climb. But there
is a growing disposition to believe
the recession will be over this
winter or next spring, in the sense
that the business barometers by
then will be back to last sum
mer's historic peaks.
Even that will not mean a full
employment economy. At least a
year and a half of economic
growth will have been lost the
growth that is necessary to ab
sorb the steady increase in the
size of the labor force.
Also, productivity, or the rate of
output per man, will have risen
co that fewer workers will be
needed to produce the same vol
ume of goods and services.
For both those reasons unem
ployment is expected to remain
high for some time after business
activity begins to establish new
records.
"It's possible we'll see full em
ployment again by the middle of
19d9, or pernaps by the third quar
ter," said one top administration
adviser privately.
It is conceded that all forecasts
may have to "be revised if the
United States becomes more
deeply Involved in military opera
tions in the Middle Last. But bar
ring a shooting war, the rate of
military buildup is not expected
to accelerate sharply.
Some metal prices have risen,
hut the general reaction to the
Middle Last crisis has been one
of calm and restraint.
The business upturn has been
stronger than almost any govern
ment official had been predicting.
"Even the optimists have been
surprised at the actual rate of
pickup," one ranking economist
said.
Many had expected July to pro
vide a major test. It is tradition
ally a month of "lull" and, in
some industries, of mass vacations.
Though most of the July statis
tics are not yet in, it already is
obvious that there was little if any
letdown.
April apparently was the bottom
month of the recession, and the
rebound in May and June was ro
bust: business has been recover
ing even more rapidly than it
slumped earlier in the year.
However, a relapse would not
be surprising. In the two previous
postwar recessions, especially that
of 1949, there were brief sags in
industrial production, personal in
come and factory orders after the
recovery apparently had begun.
Since the end of World War II
the U.S. Army has increased the
technical school programs avail
able to recruits to about 150.
Boy Disappears,
But Dad Locates
Him In Car Trunk
GREENSBORO. N.C. (UPI) A
Lynchburg, Va., business man
opened the trunk of his car at the
end of a l!6-mile trip Thursday
ana was startled to find his
4-year-old son fast asleep on a
suitcase.
The youngster apparently had
crawled into the trunk and dozed
off before his father, Martin Paul
son, left home a few hours ear
lier.
Paulson's wife had noticed her
boy was missing and had notified
police, who issued a statewide
alarm. But by the time the au
thorities caught up with Paulson
he had found his son.
ENDS TONIGHT!
OPEN DAILY 7I0O P. M.
r8W4ll.'MH!t.MTCMl.,I.IHI.7M'ma
KLAMATH FALLS LIONS CLUB
ir AUCTION
Sat, 7:10 P.M. or Shasta Drive-In Cam Early!
Loti of New Merchandise or Ridiculous Prices! Pro
ceeds Used for "Sight Conservation" of Underpriv
iliged Children.
TWO
MS
HITS!
STEWART RHONDA
GRANGER-FLEMING
w ROUGH...
I RUTHLIIt...
-CHILL WILLS
Cinema Score
Mrrffocoi-o
( GUN GLORY At 7:55 It 11:25 2nd Ftolu.t At 9:45 Only
UAKtULVILS Or . Cinemascope
tuc neeni
DAN DAILEY-grS
"CLAIRE KELLY
SUNDAY AND MONDAY
46
MONTQOMERY
s BRANDO CLIFT-MARTIN
I ClNgwSeopg
Bumper Sign
Said Tipof f
OKMULGEE, Okla. (UPI) -
With a flair for the unusual,
three bogus check passers from
Tulsa. Okla., rode through Arkan
sas and Oklahoma this week in a
car equipped with an eyecatcher.
Now, they wish they hadn't.
Morion Earl Forster, 20. Alfred
Earl Foster, 20, and Clarence
Lorenzo Turner, 23, outwitted ser
vice station attendants in Ft.
Smith, Ark., and three Oklahoma
cities Bartlesville, Okmulgee
and Tulsa.
They succeeded in cashing
pnony checks totaling S700.
But two of their victims re
membered the eyecatcher.
They told authorities about i
sign on the back of the check
passers' car.
It read: "If you can read this,
you're too damn close."
And police were close enough
to nab them.
DOORS CPEN 6:30 P. M
LAST 2 DAYS?
ROBERT TAYLORA
RICHARD WIDMARK
f THE I I od MtTtOCOLQK 1
LkjAW AND J
JAKE WADE' II
o.ini PATRICIA OWENS M
JAMES ROD INGER
MASON -STEIGER -STEVENS
a
pim,uni P.IHKII Th Don Hartman
t EUGENE O'NEILL'S
DESIRE
THE ELMS
SHIILIT AN I HON Y
BOOTH QUINN
HoT
SPEl-
SHIRLEY MtcLAINC
EARL HOLUMAN
TOMY!
Cantinuom Saturday Ir Sunday From 12:43
L, j ' RED BUTTONS"
Six Niir & H11 APAflFMV
KJ3 AWARD' B
SEE
I wonderful jfory of o I If Iff
himself to a general j I I
. and led his army of 1
12 sad sacks fo the most 9l 1
hilarious victory of il? '
TJJp
DOORS CPEN 6:3D P. M.
THAT "DON'T GO
NEAR THE
GUY'
FeoBit
7:37 . 9;54
Glenn FORD
in U ft MV
0 III IM'U'III O
Imitation
General
in CINEMASCOPE co-sforring
Red BUTTONS-Talna ELG
vith
DEAN JONES
"DENNIS THE MENACE"
11 if " f cFk
y
Red Boss Places
Love Tale Order
BERLIN (UPI) East German
Communist leader Walter Ulbricht
has ordered Soviet Zone authors
to write socialist love stories to
keep youth from reading Western
trash, it was disclosed today.
In a speech to Communist youth
leaders, Ulbricht complained East
German boys and girls are read
ing too many western novels. Con
ceding that girls want love stor
ies, he urged Communist authors
to deal with the matter and not
leave it to the "trash manufac
turers."
&e whiz.! tbu wbkt OUT the FRONT ooori
Soldier Dies After Shots,
Long Drills Under Hot Sun
FT. JACKSON, S.C. (AP)-The
commanding general of this Army
infantry base was quoted by a
dead recruit's father today as say
ing that trainees no longer would
be given medical shots and then
sent out to drill in hot weather.
Hobart L. Brinsmade of Bronx
ville, N.Y., said his son Hobart
Jr., 21, died after being given
booster shots for typhoid fever
Wednesday and then being made
to drill for 3Vi hours in the sun.
Young Brinsmade, only two
weeks in the Army, played right
tackle for Princeton's football
team in 1956 and 1957. He stood 6-3
and weighed 230 pounds.
The father said he talked with
World Yar II Gl Goes
On Trial For Desertion
Hot, Wet Air
Storm Cause
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Strike a line from northwest
Texas to the mid Atlantic Coast
and you have practically a drafts
man's drawing of today's storm
pattern.
The weather front extended
across this vast region and ac
counted for widespread showers
ana thunderstorms.
The storms were caused by
warm, moist air below this line
sliding over cooler air. When this
happened, it rained. In some spots
such as western Kansas it
rained hard wilh falls measured
at up to an inch and a half.
In the area from the Ohio Valley
eastward to the Atlantic, the rains
turned torrential in some places
Indianapolis got 2.86 inches: Co
lumbus, Ohio, 2.18; and Canton
3.77. Providence, R.I., received an
inch in the space of an hour.
bringing the 24-hour fall to 2.85
inches.
Church Group
Plans Dinner
A potluck dinner noting the ar
rival of the 20 young people from
Fresno. California, who will build
the Christian Center at the mi
grant camp at Malin. will be held
luesday evening, August 5, at
Peace Memorial Presbyterian
Church beginning at 6:30.
The dinner is being planned by
the migrant committee of the
Klamath Basin Council of Church
Women.
Members of the work camp from
First Presbyterian Church of Fres
no, California, will be accompanied
by their assistant pastor and two
other adults. They will arrive
during the afternoon of August 5
and will be quartered for the night
ai reace Memorial Westminster
Hall. They will set up camp at
the migrant camp at Malin the
following day. The group will re
main at Malin for the balance of
the month providing all the labor
for the construction ot the 30
hy 32 foot structure. Materials are
being supplied by donations from
businesses and individuals of the
Basin.
A general invitation is extended
lo all Basin residents to join in the
potluck dinner honoring the work
camp team. Bring a dish of food
and own table service. Coltc-e will
oe provided.
Groom, 72, Dies
In Wife's Arms
BRISBANE (API-A .vr.
old American who married' last
Saturday died in his wile's arms
last msnt.
Fletcher Kerkhoff of Atllchoro.
Mass.. had a heart attack a ho
and his 69-year-old bride, the for
mer Mrs. Sylvia MacAuliffe of
Sydney, watched the sunset at
Coolangatta. W) miles south of
Brisoane. lie died within seconds
Both Kerkholf and Mrs. Mar.
Aulifte were widowed. Thov met
on a Pacilic cruise and were mar
ried in fcyaney.
Kerkhoff was buried today !n
iwcea neaas, near loolanjatta.
NO WEEKEND TRIP
WASHINGTON iL'PIi Pr.c
dent Eisenhower plans in crm
tho weekend at the White House.
Press Secretary ,Ianies C. Hag
crty said there was no particular
reason (or the President nnt omn
to his Gettysburg. Pa. farm as
the Ft. Jackson commander. Brig.
Gen. Christian Clarke, about the
incident and that he was "most
sympathetic."
"The general assured me,
Brinsmade said, "that the idea of1
giving the shots and then sending
the boys out to drill right away
would be discontinued in hot
weather."
Young Brinsmade died last night
in the base hospital.
"I don't blame anyone," the
father said, "but it does seem
funny that this should happen to
sucn a strong Doy.
"I hope my son's death puts an
end to that crazy Army business
of giving a boy booster shots and
then having him drill under a hot
sun."
Earlier, Clarke issued an order
calling for less strenuous drill
activity during the hot weather.
Temperatures the past few days
have hovered near 100 degrees.
Brinsmade, his wife and a
daughter rushed to the boy's bed
side after they were notified of his
collapse. He said the youth never
regained consciousness.
Davis L. Drake of Baltimore,
another trainee, also collapsed
from the heat Wednesday. He was
in serious condition at the hospi
A base spokesman said that
both Brinsmade and Drake col
lapsed after duty hours.
Almond Crop
Sale Asked
SACRAMENTO (AP)-The Al
mond Control Board has recom
mended to the secretary of agri
culture that the federal govern
ment declare the entire California
almond crop salable. The crop is
estimated at 27 million pounds.
The board unanimously adopted
the resolution. A board member
said the action was based on the
opinion that grower prices will
equal or exceed parity.
The June 15 parity price for
almonds in the shell was S62a a
ton.
The board adopted a 1958-59
budget of $33,000. That will mean
an assessment for growers of
17 cents per hundredweight on
shelled nuts, or about $1.70 per
inshell ton.
The board re-elected Chairman
Benjamin F. Goodwin of Manteca
and Vice Chairman C. Irvin Jones
of Durham.
Missile Shot
Test Slowed
CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. (AP)
The Air Force ran into tech
nical troubles again in its latest
attempt to shoot a 1,500-mile Thor
ballistic missile.
The postponement of the launch
ing yesterday followed in the wake
of an Atlas intercontinental ballis
tic missile scrub earlier in the
week. .
The Air Force said both mis
siles would be rescheduled for fir
ing at an early date.
The last launchings of both the
Thor and the Atlas ended abrupt
ly with blowups shortly after take
off. The Thor, a 65-foot war weapon
developed by Douglas Air Co., is
expected to be operational by
December. The first units will be
assigned to the Royal Air Force in
England.
Train Derails,
Injuring 53
MILWAUKEE (AP) A speed
ing cross-country streamliner sud
denly began to rock and sway and
in a matter of moments 11 cars
careened off the rails, injuring 53
of its 497 passengers.
The last six cars of the Milwau
kee Road Olympian Hiawatha
whiplashed off the tracks and slid
down a 20-foot embankment as the
train raced into southern Milwau
kee County at 90 miles an hour.
About 1,000 feet ahead, the diesel
powered engine ground to a stop,
five more cars tilting off the rails.
All the cars remained upright.
Head brakeman E. C. Holden,
34, said, "The train just started to
shake. The 13th car went into the
ditch and everything followed. The
rest of the train just wriggled and
bumped along."
A small fire started in one of
the derailed cars but was put out
quickly as emergency vehicles
Irom six communities converged
on the wreck scene in the quiet
farm countryside.
Fifteen ambulances conveyed
the injured to four hospitals. Au
thorities said most of the injuries
were minor.
The four-unit diesel and remain
ing cars went on to Milwaukee,
where six more cars were added
to provide accommodations for
the uninjured. The train was
bound from Chicago to Seattle,
Wash.
The cause of the wreck was undetermined.
VERDUN. France (AP) Wayne I
Powers, the timid GI who hid in
his French common-law wife's
house for 14 years after disappear
ing during the war, went on trial
for desertion before an eight-man
military court today.
The trial was half an hour late
starting because Yvelte Beleuse,
who sheltered Powers, insisted on
giving their five children a good
breakfast before bringing them to
court as possible witnesses.
The defense attorneys Lt.
James Singleton, Detroit, and Lt.
Leon Avakian, Newton, Mass.
expressed belief that Powers
would get off with a light sen
tence. The maximum is death.
The 37-year-old defendant him
self said: "If all goes as it should,
I hope to be back home In a month
or two." Powers is a native of
Chillicothe, Mo., but home is
Yvette's house in the village of
Mont D'Origny, near the Belgian
border.
Powers' strange tale started In
Observers Spot
Four Satellites
WINNIPEG (AP)-The Royal
Astronomical Society of Winnipeg
today claimed another new North
American record for artificial
satellite sightings four in one
night.
A spokesman for the group said
the nose cone of the rocket that
boosted Russia's Sputnik III into
orbit was spotted on the night of
July 29 at 11:45 p. m., 1:02 a.m.,
2:46 a. m. and 4:35 a. m.
The old record of three sight
ings in one night also was held
by the local society, which oper
ates the northernmost station re
porting satellite paths over the
continent. The new mark was
submitted to the U. S. Naval Lab
oratory in Washington, which rec
ognized the old one.
PLAN CRIME INSTITt'TE
LONDON (UPD - Cambridge
University has agreed to set up
Britain s first Institute of Crimin
ology with government financial
aid. Home Secretary R. A. Butler
told the House of Commons Thurs
day he believed the school would
'make an indispensable contribu
tion to the study of the problem
of crime and the treatment of
offenders."
Taylor's
Income Tax, Our
Specialty
Opn 9 A.M. lo P.M.
Monday thru Saturday
Pham TU 2-2772
Government
Seeks Discs
WASHINGTON ' (AP)-The gov-
ernment appealed today for help
in locating and preserving half a
million bronze discs 3Vi inches in
diameter. They're scattered all
over the countryside.
The discs are imbedded in con
crete or rock and represent sur
vey marks which are the basis
for making and engineering measurements.
At least 1,100 of these marks
disappear each year, the Coast
and Geodetic Survey reported.
The discs cost only 72 cents each
but the Survey figures it spends
$40 to $65 to do all the survey
ing necessary to put in place an
ordinary bench mark, one which
gives the elevation at a given
point.
Another type is the triangulation
station mark which gives precise
latitude and longitude. These cost
$1,500 or more in remote regions.
Vandals and souvenir hunters
make off with some of the discs.
But the Survey said most of the
marks vanish in the course of
road construction work.
Each of the bronze discs carries
this legend: "$250 fine or impris
onment lor disturbing this mark.
Dominicans
Down Plane
NEW YORK (AP)-A U. S.
Navy transport plane was report
ed forced down yesterday by fight
ers of the Dominican Republic's
air force. The plane was released
after being searched and held for
an hour in Santiago, on the north
coast of the Dominican Republic.
The Dominicans were reported
looking for smuggled arms but
there was no immediate explana
tion why they went after a clearly
marked u. s. military plane.
Ray Camay of radio station
KIOA in Des Moines. Iowa, tele
phoned the news from the U. S.
Navy base at Guantanamo. Cuba,
after the plane's return. He gave
this account:
The plane, a twin-engine Alba
tross carrying a crew of five, was
returning to Guantanamo after
delivering a Navy athletic team
to ban Juan. P. R.
Near Santiago it was intercept
ed by three F5ls of the Dominican
air force and forced to land at
Santiago, lt was kept there for
about an hour, then allowed to
proceed on to Cuba. None of the
five crewmen were harmed and
nothing was taken.
Naval authorities at Guanta
namo base had no immediate
comment on the incident but in
dicated a statement would be is
sued later today.
FIRST SHIP ARRIVES
LONDON (UPI) Moscow
Radio reported today "the first
ship flying the flag of the United
Arab Republic has arrived in
Leningrad. The ship was identi
fied as the 7.000-ton Al Mokattam
and was said to have catried a
cargo of cotton to the Soviet
Union.
Heard the news?
Guess who's
coming back to
Klamath Falls?
1944, when he was 23 and a pri
vate first class driving a truck
with the Army in France. His
truck disappeared and he faced
court-martial.
Powers escaped from the Army
stockade and went for help and
solace to Yvette, whom he had
met before. That was the begin
ning of a bizarre life which con
tinued for 14 years.
They settled down together with.
out marrying. (Powers had a wife
in Missouri who later divorced
him for desertion). Yvette went
out to work in a textile mill to
support their growing family;
Powers stayed home to do the
housework.
He ventured out only at night.
When the doorbell rang, he ran
to a cramped hiding place under
a stairway with a false step.
The villagers saw almost noth
ing of Powers but kept close
track of each new baby with an
English name Dorothy, Tilly:
Douglas, Harry and Freddy.
The neighbors maintained a
close-mouthed silence in the pres
ence of outsiders. But Powers
was his own undoing last March.
Regional gendarmes investigat
ing a traffic accident in front of
the house noticed Powers peeping
through the front window curtains:
They questioned him as the only
witness, and his furtive behavior
aroused suspicion.
Investigation turned up evidence
that he was sought as a desertert
On March 22 he was taken and
handed in to a U. S. Army prison.
Powers became a cause celebra
in France, which overflows with
sympathy for affairs of the heart.
After a radio appeal, 100,009
Frenchmen flooded the U. S. Em
bassy in Paris with letters de
manding a lenient judgment for a
man who was faithful to one wom
an if not to the Army.
Why did he do it?
Powers said after his arrest: "I
was afraid of the result if I turned
myself over to the embassy. I was
scared for the children. I was
waiting for I don't know exactly
what."
"Why don't they leave him
alone?" asked Yvette. "He's al
ready served 14 years in prison.
He's so frightened, so very frightened."
Doctors Fail
To Save Boy
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) A
youth who received a kidney from
his twin brother in a rare oper
ation died last night.
Doctors discovered last year
that Leon Masden, 20, of nearby
Shepherdsville had diseased kid
neys. They gave him only a month
or so to live.
There was one chance, however,
and the family took it. Leon re
ceived a kidney transplant from
his twin Leonard at Peter Bent
Brigham Hospital, Boston, in June
1957.
Leon's diseased kidneys later
were removed. Physicians said his
death was caused by disease in
the transplanted kidney.
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.MAILMAN RETIRES
PARIS, Tenn. (UPI) Alex
Irion, the man who has carried
rural mail longer than any other
employe in the U.S. postal serv
ice, made his last round Thurs
day. Irion, 70, who has covered the
same route since 1906, retired aft
er 52 years of carrying letters.
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